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                  <text>Coal negotiators face midnight deadline
:, Dick Cavtllli :

WI THROP
r

I&lt;NON YOU'R E HIDI Nef

IN IHERE,'8J'YOIJ MieiHT
Ae WC:L.l- ~~ c:uT.

OKAY. .. I'LL. uL.Iei
5T.AND RLC$-HI
HERE AND WAIT.

WASHINGTON (AP) - After a weekend of intense
bargaining, the United Mine Work.. ·· . ud the soft coal
industry are battling a midnight d•t ..i 1~ in the search
for a tentative contract settlement in hopes of averting
a nationwide strike.
Union and industry sources said Sunday night it was
impossible to speculate on whether a settlement was
within reach but agreed that negotiations continuing
today were at a critical stage.
Negotiators adamantly refused to conunent publicly
on the progress of the talks - in contrast to the ill-fated
bargaining of 1978, when the two sides sought to win
public support for their positions.

•

Voi.29,No. 231
Copyrighted 1981'

I c:.:::AN .STAND HERE ALL
DAY IF I HAVE 10..•
OR EVS'-J lCNqSR.

.

••• IN THE.W LD

Proposes fund merger
WASIDNGTON - Health and Hwnan Services Secre!Bry Richard
Schweiker proposed Sunday that three Social Security trust funds be
merged temporarily to help put the system on more solid financial
footing.
In an interview on ABC-TV's " Issues and Answers,'' Schweiker said
Social Security trust funds for Medicare and disability are running
"rather significant surpluses," while the trust fund for old age survivors benefits is running a deficit.
The $138 billion Social Security program pays monthly benefits to
nearly 36 million Americans.

b Ed Sullivan

Priscilla's Po
STUART.'
WHERE ARE
YOU HE'ADING?

I'VE BEEN TAKING
CARE OF MY COU5f N '7
CAT FOR A WHILE. AND
I'M TAKING HtR BACK.'

IN A! .:;;
I'LL GIVE YOU A RIDE .1
WeLL.

DO YOU MIND II= I
STOP AT THE CAR WA?H
BEFORE f T CLOSES 7

HECK NO.I

Charge cover-up in porn case
LONDON - A Conservative member of Parliament has accused the
goverrunent of a cover· up for refusing to prosecute a retired diplomat
implicated in a child pornography case. But Britain's attorneygeneral said the man's offerute WllS " trivial" anct didn't corrupt
children.
House of Conunons member Geoffrey Dickens claimed the e1·
diplomat's involvement with an organization advocating legalization
of sexual relations between adults and children made him "a tremendous security risk ...and open to blackmail."

Kill threat led to hostage release
DAMAsOllS, Syria - Pakistan "caved in" to the hijackers hqlding
more than 100 hostages on a Pakistani airliner chiefly because of the
hijackers' threat to kill the three men with American passports, Third
World diplomats in Damascus hell eve.
·
·
These sources said the Reagan administration told the Syrians and
the' Pakiltanis goverrunents should not give in to terrorists, that
hijackers should be brought to justice - but that the United States
hoped the ordeal would end without loss of life.

Hostages fl.yzng to Saudi 4rabia

I'LL 'SAY 1
ALWAYS LEARNING
THAT WA'S
SOMETHING NEW
EI&lt;PERfENCE-'
~-,--:;;::::;__...;...._ABOUT CAR WASHES-'

A"'

DAMASCUS, Syria - Most of the 101 freed hostages from the
hijacked Pakistani airliner were to be flown to Saudi Arabia today on
the firnt leg of their trip home. Moslems among them were offered a
free side trip to Mecca en route home.
One of the two Americans among the hosts~es, Frederick Hubbell of
Des Moines, Iowa, was expected to fly to Frankfurt, West Gennany, to
meet his wife , who was freed by the hijackern in Afghanistan, and his
parents.
'
The plans of the other American , Craig R. Clymore of Laguna Hills,
Calif., were not known. He is wanted on drug charges in the United
States.

Commuters must find own way
PIDLADELPHIA - Some 400,000 conunuters, many of them
veterans of previous transit disputes, were finding their own ways to
work and school today as the third strike in six years shut down much
of the public transportation in the nation's fourth largest city.
And with a «-day 1977 transit strike stili fresh in their minds, city officials were taking steps to ease the conunuter crunch.
For motorists, 2,500 off-street parking spaces and 800 on-street
spaces were opened in the downtown area for the first workday affected by the strike.

Economist says U.S. will prosper
ANN ARBOR, Mich.- If President Reagan's tax and spending cuts
are implemented, and if the Federal Reserve maintains a tight money
policy, the nation's economy will begin to prosper ne1t year, University of Michigan economists suggested today.
"By the spring of 1982, business investment activity begins to reflect
the investment incentives in the tax cut program, conswner spending
continues to reflect lower pel'llonai tax rates, and the economy begins
to experience substantially more rapid real growth," the report
predicted.

fEDe~AL MmA'tlON
~1ttl

HlATtJN&lt;; 1&amp;0~~~
"MARTHA! YOU CAN'T MAKE A SEALED BID IN DIAMOMlSI"

"NOW I GIVE THE BRIDE AWAY! AFTER I SPENO $4,000 FOR
HIR ORTHODONTIA, $7,000 FOR FINISHING SCHOOL AND
120,000 FOR COLLEGE, I SI'IOULD SELL HER!"

Police probe triple homicide,
UMA, Ohio - Police are investigating a triple homicide Sunday
night that left three members of the same family dead and another in
critical condition.
Uma police said the bodies of Pelham Thirkiil, 47, his wife Sarah, 47,
and their (-year-old granddaughter Latrinna Jones were discovered
by friends around 8:43p.m., at their home in a residential area in
Uma's north end.
A second grandchild, S.year-oid Melvin Jones, was reported in
critical condition after two hours of surgery for a gunshot wound and
lacerations to the head.

Weather

"TH! MEDIATOR WON'T COME BACK UNTIL WE PROMISE

WM 'rWO WEEKS' PAID VACATION, 30 DAYS' SICK
I FAVE, A CREDIT (.:ARD AND SENIORITY!"

"PULL YOURSELF UP BY YOUR BOOTITRAPS, FELLAI
GET ON WELFARE UK! I DID!"

Scattered snow flurries tonight. Lows in the upper 20s. Mostly sunny
Tuesday. Highs in the upper 40s. Chance of precipitation 30 percent
tonight and 10 percent Tuesday. Winds westerly 10.20 mph tonight.
Extended Ohio ForecastWednesday through Friday:
Fair Wednesday and Friday. Chance of ruin Thursduy. Highs in the
40s. Low• in the 20s Wednesday and in the upper 20s to mid-30s Thursday and Friday.

- ---- -

enttne
1 Section , 12 Pages 15 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy ' Middleport, Ohio, Monday, March 16,1981

ToDAY

I HAVE NOTHI~
5E:TTER
TO fA:?,.
.
I
eo I L.L.. &lt;JUSI. •.

•

at

e
.

Both sides have maintained ail along they want to
The current contract doesn't expire until March 27,
but both sides agreM on tonight's midnight deadline to . avert a strike, thus reversing a trend that started in the
allow ttme for the UMW's 10-day contract ratification mid-1960s and continued through the record 111-day
process in the coaHielda. Some union sources indicated strike of the winter of 1977-78.
the vote could be completed in nine days.
Sources on both sides said the major obstacle to the
Among the remaining iasues are :
current talks is the pension proposal.
Church has said the 39-memtier UMW bargaining
- An industry proposal to replace the existing multi·
employer pension plan with company-by-company c~cil unanimously opposes it. The BCOA expressed
plans handled by private insurance companies.
concern about smaller coal companies folding and
- The union's demand of wage and benefit increases leaving the pooling of the pension costs to the larger
coal operators remaining in business.
totaling about 50 percent over the ne1t three years.
- The industry's desire to retain an arbitration
Some 25,000 UMW minern in the East and Midwest .
have been furloughed because of mine closings.
board.

· The bargainers recessed Sunday's talks arowui 8:30
p.m. EST, hourS earlier than bad been expected.
A union source, declining to be identified llecause of
an apparent agreement by both sides to avoid public
conunent, cautioned reporters against reading
anything into the early break.
"We've still got a long way togo," he said.
An industry source said it was "extremely iJ'I'Io
portant" that a strike by the 160,000.member UMW be
averted, but he added that "things are going slowly."
The industry bargaining is being handled by the
Bitwninous Coal Operators Association, which
represents some 130 coal companies.

-- -- - -

2,500
attend
Atlanta
march
ATLANTA (AP) - As police
examined jacket like,the one worn
by the latest young victim, scores of
demonstrators from across the
nation brought their prayers, their
money, their friendship and their
sometimes hostile frustration to the
city stalked by a child killer.
About 2,500 people, including
busloa~ from Connecticut, New
York City, Boston, Detroit,
Washington, D.C., Iowa, Virginia,
Indiana, New Orleans, Houston and
Fiorfda, joined Atlantans In a
memorial to the 20 slain children
Sunday.
Hostility rippled through the
crowd, with several local speakern
heckled as they spoke of marchers
united in peace and ha'nnony.
~:we need action, not talk, " one
dissenter yelled, drawing applause.
Andrew Young, fonner .U.S .. ambassador to the United Nations and
an Atlanta resident, left the stage
with the first catcalls and 'when he

a

was 11 introduced/ ' his car had long

since departed.
The crowd booed entertainer Ben
Vereen, who, like Corella Scott
King, rode the final miles of the march.
"Certainly we have differences,
but there's one thing we must ali
agree on, we must bring un end to
this killing," the Rev. Joseph
Lowery , head of til! Southern
Christian Leadernhip Conference,
told the gathering.
Meanwhile, hundreds of volunteers joined weekend search parties
seeking clues that might lead to the
elusive killer or killers.

Fire causes
$2 '()()() d amage
Damages were set at $2,000 as the
result of a fire at the F. and A. Sun·
shine Center Laundromat on W.
Main St. , Pomeroy, Saturday, at
3:30 p.m. Pomeroy Fire Chief
Charles Legar said the cause of the
fire was probably electrical and
started in the boiler room. There
wus insurance coverage.
The Pomeroy Fire Department
was busy fighting brush fires over
the weekend. It assisted Racine
Saturday afternoon near the high
school and at 10:38 a .m. went to til!
Pratts Fork area for a brush fire and
at 3:43 p.m. Sunday extinguished
another brush fire in the Enterprise
area.

MRS. KING IN MARCH - Coretta Scott King,
wearmg glasses , leads a march through · downtown
Atlanta Sunday accompanied by entertainer Ben

Grass-forest fire burns
100 acres in Dorcas area
By SCOTI' WOLFE
Saturday afternoon a grass-forest
fire burned approximately 100 acres
of timber and grass land outside
Racine before four local fire departments and the forestry departmen~
brought it under control.
At 1:05 p.m. the Racine Volunteer
Fire Departmant were sununoned to
a brush fire at the George Wolfe
residence, one mile east of Racine
between Southern High School and
the village of Dorcas. Four trucks,
24 men, and eight members of the
Racine Emergency Squad responded .
Upon arrival, a fire covering an
acre had spread into an adjoining
field beside the Wolfe residence. .
Racine firefigbtern quickly extinguished two sides of the fire ,
protecting the Wolfe home and
another neighboring struct~re. .
Dry weather and very gusty wmds
made conditions potentially
disasterous . A change in wind direc-

l
'

1,.-&gt;o.

I
~

.

l

l

'&lt;

pered somewhat by a Jarge crowd
which lined the highways congesting
the area . The Meigs County Sheriff's
Department was called along with
the Ohio State Patrol to monitor traffic conditions
The Pomeroy Unit was stationed
on County Road 28 where the fire
jwnmped the paved road and started buming in another wooded area.
Pomeroy firefighters quickly
brought this battle front under control.
At approximately 2:30 p.m. the
forestry department . arrived with
firefighting equipment and a dozer
to fonn a fire line on the southern
side of the fire . ·
On the southern front, several
homes were endangered, but
throqgh the efforts of the firemen
the fire was routed in unother direc~
lion and brought under control.
According to the forestry depart·
ment, at least 100 acres of tim·
(Continued on page 12)

f'

-·
"h·- .~

'.

r

lion and high gusts of wind caused
the raging fire to spread at a high
rate of speed over a grassy terrain
and into a nearby wooded area.
Racine firefighters then received
mutual aid from the Syracuse Volunteer Fire Department, as the fire
raged toward the Trent residence
and barn.
The Racine Unit and Syracuse
firefighters concentrated on protecting the Trent home while the
Pomeroy Depa11ment was called for
assistance. flames came within
several feet of the Trent home, but
at that location, the blaze was sue- ·
cessfuily extinguished.
Indian Tanks, fire rakes, flappers,
and other equipment were used to
fonn a line along the northeast side
of the fire .
Besides the three fire departments
and squad members, several volunteers were now assisting to fight the
fire .
Fire fighting efforts were ham-

I

Meigs, Eastern bands
compete in district
Meigs High school's symphonic
band under the direction of Douglas
H. Hili received a two rating Satur·
day in the 1981 District XVII Band
and · Chorus contest at Gallia
Academy High School.
Competition is held under til!
authority of the Ohio Music
Education Association with approval from the Ohio State North
Central Conunittee and the Ohio
Associalion of Secondary School
Principals.
Rod Tolliver, Galiia Academy
High School band director, was in
direct charge.
Adjudicatoi'S were Peter Costanza, Cheryl Graham, Leon Brooks.
Anthony Violi, Tim Duncan, June
Webster, and HeFman Larson.
Eastern's concert band under the
direction of James L. Wilhelm, Jr.,
received H three ratinl! . It junior
high band 1lso rc&lt;•cived a three.

Vereen, upper left. The March was o~ganized in
memory of the 22 missing and murdered children of
Atlanta. IAPLaserphoto).

0
Ml.

.I

'
'U

.' \A I. r
.

I,

vt
.

'

..

WARM WELCOME HOME-A warm" welcome
home" greeted Slejlllen Eugene Smith, U, Kingsbury,
S.lurday as he arrived home from Holaer Medical Ceo• f.Uowlng ao eight week stay. Signa, yellow ribbons.

aod flags had been placed along the blglaway to bli
~idence by his friends and neighbors. SboWII wt.. a
large sign on the garage door at his home Ia hll wife,
Becky. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Gene Smllh.

-~~----·----

---

·- ...--... ~----~- ----.--·---~

�pomeroy-MIDDIIIporl, unou

MUhaay, Marcn ••· 1¥11

Commentary

Page-2- The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy.-Middl~port, Ohio
Monday, March 16,1981

Legal semces: death by
•

RUERVED

The Houseman memorandum
outlined a comprehensive lobbying
effort to preserve not only the Legal
Services Corporation but other
social programs also. He suggested
battle plans for opposing Reagan appointees who might he " hostile to
aggressive legal services." He anticipated ·" severe problems \vith the
Senate." He charted strategies for
effective lobbying,· and in a companion memorandum he ,proposed

BACON

69t
r:.Rggt

WHOLE
HALF

specific lobbying assignments for adhering faithfully to the hwnble but
members of the LSC staff - for Dan, important duties for which it was
Mary, Mario, Judy, Bruce, Bernie, created. The Houseman memoranda
Gerry, Steve, Alan, Andy and raise almost lnsurmoWJtable doubts.
The concept is worth saving.
others.
.Observers differ on whether the Heaven knows it is! I wiU cling to the
law prohibita the corporation from ideal willy-niUy. But perhaps some
using public funds for such lobbying. other mechanism - block grants to
That issue is almost immaterial. the states, or pro bono services by
The question is whether the cor- private attorneys ~ would be better.
poration, under present law and II the corporation dies, the need will
present leadership, is capable of stiU be there.

PER LB.

SLICED

CHICKEN HO DOWN·I

l

"PitK

WHOLE
FRYERS

OF
CHICKEN"

OR
MIXED FRYER PARTS.

PuiJijlber

PAT WIDTEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH

Aailstaat PubUaber/CoatroUer

Gc:Deral Maoager

News Editor
.4. MEMBER of Tbe Aaaoclated Pnss. lnlaOO Dally Prna Anocilltloa ud 1M
Americu NeWipaper Pa.blbhen As~iaUon .
LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcomed. They slllloa.ld be less tbu :110 worda loag. AU
leUen are tab}ett 1o cdltiq aDd mUBt be signed wUh u.mc, Mklral ilDd kltpbOH
Dlla:lbtr. Noa..Jped ldkn will be pubUtbf'd. Ldttn should be In good lisle, acldressillg
- · ooi penooa!Na.

Pick a war, any war
The subject is El Salvador.
Again. Sorl')', but it will not go away. Worse, the more attention it
· receives, the more confusing the developing civil war in that tortured Central American nation becomes.
. To the point that depending upon which newspapers you read or commentators you follow, entirely different conflicts can appear to be under
discussion. Which isn't actually so strange since there are, as a matter of
fact, three wars under way in El Salvador.
.
To start with, there is the war being waged by the governing junta,
publicly conunitted to social and politial refonns, against leftist guerrillas
seeking to seize power by force.
There is also the war of a loose coalition of political groups, ranging
from dissident Christian Democrats aU the way to hard-line Marxists, against an entrenched oligarchy of a few dozen immensely wealthy families and
their allies in the army officer corps, the latter alliance defending a position
of economic power and social privilege enjoyed since the Spanish colonial
.era.
And then there is the war of the far right within the military and the jun.
ta intself against most of the rest of the country, a war or terrorism waged
through torture and murder with the country's large peasant population supplying most of the victims.
All three wars are going on simultaneously, which is enough in itself to
explain the confusion. But it is further compounded by the insistence of most
concerned observers in focusing on only one of the wars, downpiaying if not
totally ignoring the others.
The United Ststes government is providing an excellent case in point.
The first is the official war and has Washington's backing, a conunitrnent
initiated by the Carter administraiton, which energetically encouraged the
jWJta's refonns while carefully limiting military assistance, and now even
more firmly endorsed by its successor, with less emphasis on reform and
more on hardware.
But the Reagan administraiton is doing even more. It is internationalizing the Salvadoran crisis, making it a litmus test of sorts for
relations with the United States, good or bad and for allies and adversaries
alike.

Berry's World

"Your budget cuts are a good idea, dear, just
as long as you don't cut mine. "

Today in history.

~E MEDICAl.. !XP'iRT'S AKE ALWAYS "nf£ LAST

ro

• •

Today Is Monday, March .16, the 75th day of 1981. There are 290 days left
in the year.
Today'a hlghllgbt in history:
On March 16, 1978, Italy's former Prime Miniser Aldo Mora was kidnapped In Rome by left-wing guerriUas. His body was fOWid several
weeks later In a car.
On this date:
In 1521, Portuguese navigator Ferdinand MageUan reached the Philippine Island&amp;.
In 1534, England severed all relations with the Roman Catholic papacy.
In 1968, a Venezuelan airliner crashed on takeoff from Maracaibo,
ltilUng 166 people.

NEW YORK (AP) - Does the
United States need to reindustrialize?' A little reminder might
help you answer.
The auto industry spilled more
than $4 billion in red ink last year.
Ita share of the market is shrinking,
forcing supplier cutbacks. Chrysler
Corp. still bleeds, losing $140 million
in January.
Passenger trains probably are a
thing of the past, commuter lines are
losing money, and aU but a few
airlines struggle to remain aloft.
Meanwhile, the cost of energy to
drive them rises relentlessly.
So do interest rates. One consequence is that many savings
banks and savings and loan
associations, which have long-tenn,
low-rate home loans outstanding,
are losing money every day. Many

could fail .
Meanwhile, some are effectively
out of business. The housing industry is a disaster. The demand is
there, but the ability to fill it is not.
Housing and cars are basic industries. So is steel. Steelmakers are
managing, despite accusations their
production facilities aren't competitive, but mainly because they
are diversifying.
· Small business also is hurting.
High interest rates, taxes, paper·
work, regulations and frequently an
inability to compete for labor are
harassing it. Small business,
remember, is the vocational school
for many trades, the apprenticeship
system for jobs.
So, does the United Ststes need
revililization? Of course; the system
has broken down. Beyond the

generalization, however, the details

aren't clear.
Some critics maintain that with
services dominant we shouldn't try
to re-ilstablish smokestack America.
Some fear reindustrialization ffiight
be turned into a return to the past
rather than an attempt to crack new
frontiers . Some claim the break·
down of the old economy should rWJ
its course because the new economy
is being desjgned.
If the old economy should be left to
die, however, tile question arises
about how to accommodate the
death throes. If other fuels are to
propel cars, what is to be done with
Chrysler until then?
If steel inevitably moves to the
nation with the latest equipment and
low labor costs - for example, from
the United States to Japan and. who

PLAINS, Ga. (AP) - ())ce again,
Jimmy Carter is an outsider.
Given only the barest recognition
by the national Democratic Party
organization and embarrassed by a
squabble . among Georgia
Democrats, Carter is back in his
rural hometown far from the power
and panoply of the presidency.
No longer the principal actor in
national and world affairs, Carter
watches fr&lt;1m afar as Ronald
Reagan calls for reversing many of

the policies of the ousted
Democratic administration.
Aides and friends describe Carter
as consumed with preparations for
his memoirs, a book that could bring
him a $1 million advance. They say
he also is determined to maintain a
low, Political profile and to avoid
early partisan clashes with
President Reagan.
The former president attended a
Georgia Democratic Party fundraising dinner in Atlanta Friday

night, but he rejected belated
suggestions that he deliver a speech
or accept any special tribute.
"We kind of wanted to have a little
hoop de da, " said state party chairman Marjorie Thurman, who has
long been at odds with Carter.
"They've told us he doesn' t want
anything. He prefers to just quietly
come as a guest."
When the Democratic National
Conunittee met in Washington two
weeks a~o to elect Charles T. Manatt

radi08?

years ago, that affirmative action
should he abandoned and that victims of racial bias should be
required to prove the discriminatory
intent of their persecutors before
receiving relief.
He says that the Rev. Jesse
Jackson is "a loser," that school
busing is an evil failure and that
black leaders are ignoring the most
important issue- national security.
Many, if not all, of Parker's views
are shared by SoweU, Williams and
an unknown number of other black
Americans. ThoSe who promote
such opinions are threatening to upset the delicate legislative, judicial
and philosophical machinery that
has enabled blacks to record aome
successes in education, employment
and government.
Parker was the chairman - and
the only black member - of the
Reagan transition panel on the

Equal Employment Opportunity
Commission, which he blames for
having ''created a new racism in

which every individual is judged by
race."

The panel urged that the EEOC
budget be reduced, that a one-year
moratorium be imposed on .EEOC
lawsuits, that the Office of
Management and Budget be given
review power over EEOC
regulations, that supposed victims
of discrimination be required to
prove intent and that a " privatesector advisory conunittee" be formed to provide the EEOC with input
from the business community.
Eleanor Holmes Norton, who
chaired the EEOC during the Carter
administration, quickly circulated
Parker's proposals for showing an
Ignorance of anti-discrimination
law. The Reagan administralton,
she said, should be "embarrassed"

-

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of Los Angeles as the new party
chairman, Carter's name was conspicuously absent from the speeches
of party leaden.
Only outgoing chairman John C.
White referred to the former
president and that was to respond to
criticism that White had turned all
committee resources over to the
Carter re-iOiection effort to the
detriment of other Democratic candidates.

by the report.
Then there is Williams' contention
that the minimum wage is a barrier
to the employment of black youth.
Few economists, however, think
that a two-tiered wage would compensate for lingering racism in the
job market and for the marginal
skills of too many yoWlg blacks.
Dr. Herrington Bryce, an adviser
to the NAACP, says that the wage
would have approach zero before ·
black youths would obtain a substantial number of jobs.
Sowell and Parker oppose school
busing, as do many other
Americans, black and white. Yet, no
other method has proved successful
at Integrating U. S. education as
ITlllndated by the Supreme Court.
Study after study reveals that the
academic perfonnance of black
children Improved at the end of the
bus route.

.

$1 19

CUT, WRAPPED,
FROZEN

FOR THE POTATO LOVERS
U. S. DOMESTIC

ICEBERG HEAD

SUPERMARKO

Should the nation return to coal, of
which it has an abundance? Or
should it nurture the embryonic
solar industry, in which thousands of
innovative entrepreneurs are now
seeking breakthroughs?
Should stickbuilders - those who
build houses board by board on site
- be encouraged, or should we seek
to develop the construction of homes
in factories, with possible advantages in productivity?
Everyone. it seems, is encouraging America to get the lead·
out of Ita pants. It's a very safe
position to take, and it 11111kes for
.great public relations. But where
should it get moving to? And how?

.

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Black right marches on...______.l_ul_ian_Bo_nd
The neo-conservative Negroes
who have leaped into public view
foUowing the November election
seem intent on eliminating the
welfare state that they hold responsible for the plight of black America.
Their leading academician, Dr.
Thomas SoweU, has already announced plans to organize groups of
sympathetic blacK conservatives in
several U. S. cities.
Dr. Walter Williams has become a
distinguished scholar at the
Heritage Foundation, whose
proposals for the next four yean
make David Stockman, the budgetslashing budget director, look like
Franklin D. Roosevelt.
Now comes the Lincoln Institute
for Research and Education, a
three-year-old black think tank.
Its founder, J . A. "Jay" Parker,
asserts that black Americans are
better off now than they were 10

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defined in terms of "legislative and
administrative
repesentation ,
litig~tion
and community
education. "' He 'foresaw possible
restrictions that would prevent the
lSC lawyers from suing local governments.

BEEF

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WASHINGTON - This is a hard but no matter. We ought to strive for bewildered resenbnent. They never
heard of a garmishee. "Judgment
column to write. For the past seven the Impossible now and then.
The idea behind the Legal Ser- granted ... Judgement granted ...
yean, in lonesome opposition to
fellow conservatives in Congress vices Corporation was to put some Judgment granted." Ordinarily the
and in the press,! have been sticking element of bala~ce in those famous poor feUow never stands a chance.
Thus in 1974 came the Legal Ser·
up for the Legal Services Cor- scales of justice. The idea was to see
poration. Now President Reagan that the poor person got a fair shake vices. Corporation, with a mission to
wants to abolish it. It hurts to aban· ·in his encoWJters with the civil law. help. And it has helped. Through 323
don a favorite cause, but maybe the Was he being wrongly evicted from local programs employing 5,000
his home? Was he being unfairly lawyers, the corporation has gone to
time has come to let it go.
If Congress concurs, it will be said persecuted by a creditor? Was he bat for thousands of poor persons in
oi the Legal Services Corporation being denied some public benefit need of legal assistance: domestic
that Mr. Reagan and the New Riglt that rightfully was his? Was he trap- relations, child custody, housing
" lUlled it off." Don't believe it. This ped in some impenetrable maze of problems, welfare checks, divorce,
employment. Such humble causes
would be a case of suicide, n&lt;X regulations?
are overwhelmingly the business of
'*niclde. The Legal Services CorAlmost 40 years ago, as a young thel.SC.
pOration, through its own failure to
But the corporation is heavily and
reporter, I covered what were
~ repeated warnings against ita
01"' activism, will have done itself known as the Civil Justice Courts. Wlhappily influenced by ideological
in.
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Here a rough form of justice was ad- activists who have grander ideas.
:The concept was so good. CaU me ministered, rubber stamp style. They see their role as a remaking of
a:starry-iOyed idealist if you will, but Every city has such tribunals. Here society. Many of the yoWJger lSC
Slime American ideals deserve a merchants and doctors and loan lawyers are fresh caught from law
siarry-i!yed devotion. One of these is sharks sue for unpaid bills. Lan- school. Often their energy is surcarved in stone above the Supreme dlords seek eviction orders. Many passed only by their immaturity.
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It is an impossible ideal, to be sure, Other defendants stand in humdrum fuel of a custody case.
1bey want to be ''aggressive.''
One of the corporation's oldest
hands, research director Alan
Houseman, circulated a firebreathing staff memorandum on
l1l CourtSftet
·Dec. 29. He feared for the survival of
Pomeroy, Oltlo
"committed , aggressive and
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�The Dail

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Sentinel

TUCSON, Ariz: (API - The
problem is simple, yet it will likely
provide the most intense drama of
the spring in the Cleveland Indians'
training camp: How do you fit 10 pitchers of comparable ability into
three spots on your roster?
Manager Dave Garcl~ has already
named seven of the 10 pitch~rs who
will travel with him to Cleveland for
Opening Day, leaving 10 pitchers in
search of the other three spots.
Named to the staf! previously
were Len Barker, Bert Blyleven,
Rick Waits, John Denny, Wayne
Garland, Dan Spillner and Sid
Monge . None was a surprise .
Vying for the remaining jobs- all
in the bullpen - are Tom Brennan,
Bobby Cuellar, Ross Grimsley, Gor. dy Glaser, Steve Narleski, Mike
Paxton, Nate Puryear, Mike Stanton, Sandy Wlhtol and Eric Wilkins .
Three other pitchers originally in
camp have been · sent to the
American League club's minor
league facility .
"Competition sometimes brings
out the best in people," Garcia said.
" They know they're fighting for a
job. I don 't think it would be fair to
say anybody's ahead of anybody

HIGH STEPPING- Ctnclnnatl
short stop Dave Coocepctoo (131
does a step over Pittsburgh Plr;atel~oJrtao Boyland 1121 In tbe fifth toning of lhe exhibition game at
Florida Suoday. Boyland was for·
ced at second as teammate
grounded to second. Cooccpcloo's/throw to first was not
for the double play. lAP Laserphoto).
'

Pirates
"I'd like to think it is ; I'd like to
TAMPA, Fla. (AP) Nolan
contest
for it," O'Berry said.
seems to be heir apparent" Johnny
•·coming
into spring training, Joe
Bench's throne behind hone plate.
had
to
be
the choice to pick Johnny
Bul Mike O'Berry isn't ~ng to let
·
up.
But
Fd
like to think I have a shot
Nolan be crowned withouf' fight.
O'Berry, seeking the third cat· atit."
Bench the dean of National
ching spot on the
roster,
~atchers, is holding to his
League
thinks the role
Bench 's
request
to play behind the plate no
replacement is wifo,
more than twice a week. He says
-----~/---------, he'd like to play another position
regularly, but the Reds have
squelched
that idea .
The Uaily ntinel
Nolan, acquired by the Reds last
A
season as a free agent, hit .307 while
catching :i3 games for Cincinnati.
1'1lbllshed mry •Her • except Sunday.
The 26-year-old O'Berry, obtained

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in 10 years of Major League play, including a 21}-11 season three years
ago in Montreal. He's also one of
very few people in camp w~o ha~e
tasted championship play, w1th Cm·
cinnali and Baltimore.
Then there's Wihtol, the right·
handed youngster who has per·
fanned creditably in brief Major
League stints tbe past two years. His
fastball occasionally exceeds 90
mph.
·
Preswning those two are heading
north in April - and that's far from
i safe presumption - there are still
eight hurlers seeking the final spot
in the pen.
Of them, Glaser has compiled the
most impressive statistics thus far,
and Garcia has been visibly impressed . l.n three separate Cactus
League innings spanning three appearances, the sinker-ball pitcher
hasn't allowed a hit.
" He came off the mound with a
grin that wide," Garcia said after
Glaser finished off the San Francisco Giants in the ninth inning Sun·
day with a strikeout, converted into
a double play when Chris Bando nair
bed George Bjorkman on a steal.atte!npt.

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BUCS EDGE REDS
TAMPA, Fla. ( API - Four former Cleveland Indians figured
prominently in the Pittsburgh
Pirates' 2-1 Grapefruit League
eKhibition baseball victory over the
Cincinnati Reds on Sunday.
Reliever Victor Cruz earned the
victory
pitchingstriking
hitless out
eighth
and
ninthby innings,
one
baUer .
Bob Owchinko, who is seeking to
become the fifth starter on the
Pirates' staff, threw two innings,
allowing just one hit.
Gary AleKander, one of five catchers in the Pittsburgh camp,
homered off Doug Bair to tie the
game in the eighth inning . .

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Yet what Garcia has said may
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�The Oai

leport, Ohio

Sentinel

Alabama who? tops Wildcats
By Associated Press
Knock, knock.
Who's there?
Alabama-Binningham.
Alabama who?
Well, it may soWJd fWJny, but
there are Gene Bartow's Blazers
knocking on the door of the Mideast
regional championships in the
NCAA basketball tournament.
How they :ot there is no laughing
matter to Kentucky, however. The
nation's eighth-ranked team was
beaten by the UAB upstarts 6~2
Sunday in T!!Scaloosa, Ala ., as U(&gt;"
sets continued i ~ Wlderscor.e this

Oregon State, No. 10 UCLA and No. '
12 Louisville all went down.
Glenn Marcus converted 12 free
throws in the final 5'h minutes to
pace UAB's conquest of Kentucky.
The Blazers, playing in only the
school's third year of varsity basketball competition, blew a seven-point
lead midway through the second half
before rallying to beat one of the
coWJtry's most honored teams.
. "We couldn't get the ball inside
and couldn't hit from outside," said
Kentucky Coach . Joe B. Hall.
"That's a tough spot to be in. They
played a tough, inspired game .
year's crazy-q~: 1 ~ ,ournament.
They're a good ballclub."
"Without question," said Bartow,
The victory sent the Blazers
"it was the biggest win in UAB against Indiana in Bloomington,
history. It may be the biggest win in Ind., in Friday night's Mideast
Gene Bartow history."
semifinals. Boston College will meet
Bartow could become the first St. Jor.eph's (Pa.) in the other
coach to lead three different schools Mideast game. The Eagles got there
to the Final Four. Previously, he had with a 67~ conquest of Wake Forest
brought Memphis State and UCLA to SWJday, a result that did no harm to
that level.
the eastern basketball Image.
· Thirp-ranked Arizona State, No. 11
"We've been kicked around in the
Wake Forest and No. 13 Iowa also East a little bit, ·• said Boston
were upset in Sunday's second College Coach Tom Davis. "Folks
round. That continued a dark trend say we don't play good basketball,
for Top Twenty teams from Satur- but I'd have to disagree ..."
• day when No. I DePaul, No. 2
Leading the way for the Big East

I
'

UP FOR TWO- Jameo Worthy, of the University of North Carolina,

goes up for two points against Pittsburgh's Darrell Gissendanner, right,
during their NCAA West Regional second round basketball tournament in
El Paso Sunday night. The Tar Heels defeated the Panthers 74-&gt;4 to ad·
vance to regional 5emiiioals. ( AP Laserphoto) (See AP Wire Story I.

,

Today's

•

Sports World
By WW Grlmlley
AP Correopoadent

G

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (AP )Whitey Herzog wears two hats for
the St. Louis Cardinals and he may
have to pull rabbits out of both of
them if he is to master the jigsaw
puzzle he has laid out for himself.
"If the pieces come together,"
says the 49-year-old general
manager and manager, " we could
be a contender. I won't know WJtil
we get started.
"I am fully aware that baseball is
a 'now' game and Cardinal fans are
restless for a winner after 12 years.
But when I made the moves I did, I
felt confident that we could be back
on top in 1982."
Cardinal watchers - and, like
Notre Dame and the Yankees, they
are national - were shocked into a
state of dizziness when Herzog
began wheeling find dealing at the
winter meetings in December.
Before he was . finished with his
sleight-of-hand, he had dealt away 13
players who wore the redbird insignia at the end of last season and
had brought 10 new faces onto the

scene.
It was Whitey Herzog, with virt~al
carte blanche authority,
choreographing a cast which he
hoped would revive memories of the
old "Gas House Gang" and other
champions of the past.
''It really wasn't as big a shakeup
as everybody made it out to be," he
said over the weekend as the Cards
opened their exhibition season
against the Mets.
Wasn't it, really?
t1 He dispatched a longtime St. Louis
... hero, Ted Sinunons, in a sevenpll!yer trade that brought him pitchers Lary Sorensen and Dave
LaPoint plus outfieldeJ;S Sixto Liiz·

r,

I

cano and David Green.
To replace Simmons, he signed as
a free agent the star catcher of the
Kansas City club which Herzog had
led to three American League West
titles, Darrell Porter. He also picked
up Bruce Sutter, the ace relief pitcher from the Chicago Cubs.
Herzog is considered one of the
most astute managers in the
musical chairs game. He began his
dugout career with Texas in 1973,
skippered Kansas City for five years
and last year replaced Ken Boyer as
manager of the Cards in midseason .
''When John Claiborne got fired in
August, Augie (Owner August
Busch, Jr.) asked if I would take
over as general manager," Whitey
explained.
"I told him I didn't think it would
work. Augie said, 'Try it. If you don't
like it and we can find a good man
for general manager, you can go
back on the field.'
"In September
decided I
wouldn't be satisfied sitting aroWJd
all the time. Then we found out that
Joe McDonald, who was an- experienced man with the New York
Mets, was available. We grabbed
him. That solved the problem.''
McDonald moved in as executive
assistant, Whitey, whose nickname
stems from his sun-bleached hair,
kept his GM post and donned the
unifonn of skipper.
"The beauty of it is that I've been
able to mold a team to my liking and
then manage lt. I think it's a good
team. It's now a matter of jelling. I
think our pitching will surprise the
critics. We've got a lot of strong,
young arms.''
It's your toy, Whitey. Spin away.

1981 NCAA Betskertbla~Tournement

Pomeroy Wright, 34-15, as Don Dorst
carried the hot hand by scoring 28
important points to lead the winners.
For Pomeroy Smith had six while
Fielda added five points.
Pomeroy Green Machine rolled
past Salem Center, t:i-16. led by NO!'·
rnan with 22 points and Tracy with 14
for the winners. McGuire and Fetty
each had six for Salem Center.
Rutland claimed a 39-29 thriller
over Harrisonville as Mike Bartrwn
canned 25 and Mike Roush six for th e
victors. Scott Williams netted 14 and
Jason Rupe five in good efforts for
Harrisonville.
Syracuse slipped past Pomeroy
Powell in an exciting barnburner.
26-24, led by John Riffle with 18 and
Chris Baer with eight for the young
Syracuse club. Hot-handed Barry
McCoy scored all. but one point for
Pomeroy despite leaving the game
early in the fourth period via fouls ..
McCoy had 23 points.
Letart kept the action in the fa st
lane with a 27-25 thriller over Brad·
bury Hood. Hupp canned 12 to lea d
the winners, while Hill netted II
points. Chris Becker had 10 for
Bradbury, while Scott Haning added

CLABSAAA

CLABSAA

Culwnb111

l-lar1ley

21-4

Thu~y .

0 11yrnoot 24-1.

vs.

Urichsvllle

7:30 p.m .

Cindnru.ti Readin.s 2&amp;-0 vs. Canton Celi·
lral Catholic 23-3, 9:30 p.m.
CluunpiOtUhip Saturday, 3 p.m.
CLASS A
v:s. Old Washint:tlln Buck·
eye TraLI 22-3, 2:30 p.m.
Ed~l'!rt,un 23-1

Anna

24-0

vs .

t :JO p.rn.
CtuamplmlMhip

Ashbtrd

Silt~n.h&amp;y ,

MHpleton

11

~­

, 111.

Tull!do Mat.'tlmber 20-3 V¥. Cui.

A1Cautoo Auditorium
'i oun~ s t uwn
Rn ycn 2().4 \'S . O cvt" lomtl
Central Uitllollc 14-9, Fmlay , 6 p.m
Warrt&gt;n Kenn roy 22-2 Vfl . Orrville ZIH .
Fr1duy , ~ p.m.
Charnpiun.shlp Saturd1:1y, 7·:KJ p rn .
At Rnwl!nl( Gr~:en Unh·en lty
Wlll t~ nJ 24-(1 v.s . F:l y r~~:~
Cathull l· 2:1-1,

Fr irWy, 6 p.m.
Nupult.&gt;Qn 24-tl
Friday, 9 p.m.

\'!1 .

Kunsa.'i

I.;_tkota 22-2.

CharnpLtJnship _Sa turda)' , 7·30 p.m.
At Ohio Unlver1Uy
. Dresden Tri-VHIIey 21·2 Y!i. f'olumhus
C.: ntennial lfl-7, Frid1:1y , 7 p.m.
Ironton 14-10 Y!l llill:~buru 22· \. Fruh1 y.
9 p.m.
Ch.unpiun.ship St~turdu y . 7::10 p.m
1
At Uayton Areuu
Carll:~lc 20--4 v:~. Oixic 21·2, Thursday. 7
1 ~9
~ :JO

CI.As.•;; A

Clevelomd John Marshall 21 -2 vs. I.JJrltl/1
Southview 22·2, Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.
Cleveland John Adam5 22-2 vs. Clevt...
IMnd St. J01eph 1~. Thunsday, 7;30 p.m.
Owunpioruili!p Saturday, 7-30 p.m.
At Caatoa Auditorium
Warren H111rding 16-1 Y!t. Wath.wurth I~
~ - Wednead.y , 7:30 p.m.
C.11ntoo McKinley 2Hl V!t . Clullu~uthe 220, Thurst.IMy, 7:30 p.m.
Championship Salunhiy , 7::10 p.m
4t Toledo Cealfllllilll H•ll
· Nt!wark 21-.1 vs. FindiM)' 1~. Thur~d/. y .
7 p.m.

North--

land 18-4, Thur!KIII)' , 9 p.m .
Ctu.mplufllihip Saturday , 7:30 p.m.
AI DaylBD Areu
Kettering Alter 21·3 vs . Hanulton 24-0 ,
Wedneiday , 7 p.m.
Daytvn I(Olh 2'l· l vs . Sidney
18-5 ,
Wedne!ldiay, 9 p.m.
Ulltmp!un.shlp Suturdny, I p.m .

'

•

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1

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r

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..
~·-_1
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SEEDING 01\0J•: n IN NCAA CO!.l.F.GE BASKE BAU.. TOUR·
NAM ENT - llri s is lht• sr•cding rrrder fr)f the four reglo · tn the NCAA

Cmchuwti ML-NH.:hulii.s
IH. Thurs..lu)'. 9 p .111 .
CllitlllPIOtt'ihiJI St~ lunlay,

CI..ASSAAA
AI Ke~atSUik Unlvrnill}'

19 Athtnlll

In the last game of the night
Salisbury Hunnell rolled over Bradbury Whitlatch, 3:i-16,led by Hunnell
with 14 and tearrunate Brothers with
12 poinis. Cassell led Bradbury with
12.
Tonight action reswnes with
Racine meeting Tuppers Plains at 6
P .M., while Salis bury-CullumsYoung meets Pomeroy Barton at
7:30. The next round continues on
Thursday evening.

p.m .

Resloul Tovrumeal P•lrln.c•

Notr• Oeme

six.

CI..ASSAA

Ed t1evebmd Shaw 2$-1 vs . D11ytoo
Patterwn 2$-41, Friday, 7 p.m.
Tuled o I..lbbcy 21-3 vs. Cuiwnbus Wat·
t.t nron 11·3. Friday, 9 p.m.
Gtlirnpioruship Saturday, 7 p.m.

•

\' llla no••:~ 's

Tournament pairings
Ohio H.S. Girl• Baskrtbllll
S&amp;ate Tounumcat
AI Oldo St.a&amp;t- Ualvenlty

•

BOARD GRABBER - Virginia' s Ralph ,s:,:i~:::· !iO, towers above
.J nhn l'inum• while pulling down a
In Virginia's 54-50
\•ktur} 0 ,·cr \ ' i \l ~nH n a in the NCAA serund
tournament game
played S und :~ y at th•· l' h:~rl ut!&lt; Colist•um .
game high seorer
with 1; l:hli nls. and had 12 n •btmnd s. I AP l.&gt;~&lt;o't'tlh.olttl

Opening round
•
•
action gtven

·"'•

lmP-Ot tant news for ultra low tar smokers.

team was John Bagley, who scored "I was elated."
35 points, including four big ones in
Wichita State and Kansas will play
the final minute.
each other in the Mideast semifinals
"We got impatient," said Wake Friday night at New Orleans. In the
Forest Coach Carl Tacy; whose other game, Louisiana State will
team was forced into 22 turnovers by meet ArkanSas.
the BC press. " We made some menSunday's other second-round
tal errors that hurt us in crucial par- results went according to form ,
ts of the game.''
although fifth-ranked Virginia and
Arizona State was upset 88-71 by No. 15 Tennessee both had tough
Kansas 'and Iowa lost to Wichita times with their opponents in the
State 60-56 in the Midwest regionals East Regionals at Charlotte, N.C.
at Wichita, Kan. Tony Guy scored 36 The Cavaliers struggled past
points to lead the Jayhawks' sur- Villanova 54-50 behind Ralph Sam·
prisingly easy victory over the Sun pson 's 17 points while Tennessee
Devils.
edged Virginia Commonwealth 58-56
" The problem was we did nothing on Dale Ellis' mediwn-range jumon the offensive boards," said . per with two seconds left in overArizona State Coach Ned Wulk. time .
"Guy just murdered us early and
The Cavaliers came back from a
played an outstanding game. They five-point dificit in the second half
were definitely more up for it than and Virginia Coach Terry Holland
we were. We seemed to get down on said the deficit was "the best thing
ourselves.''
for the team" because it fired up his
Arizona State thus became the players.
third and last Pac-10 learn to be
" It was a hard-fought win for us
knocked out of the tourney, with the and we were a little tentative in the
earlier exits of' Oregon State and first half," said j:Iolland. " In the
UCLA.
second half we got the good shots
In the other Midwest game Sun- early but the best thing for the team
day, Wichita State beat Iowa with was that we missed them, got five
the help of a technical foul call on points behind, then threw caution to
Hawkeye Coach Lute Olson near the the wind and played like the devil to
end. The Shockers were awarded stay in the game ...
two foul shots after Olson irtadVCU Coach J .D. Barnett thought
vertently called a timeout when his his unheralded team stood up ·well
team had none left, and Randy under playoff pressure.
Smithson converted them for
"I thought we took it pretty well
Wichita State with five seconds for most of the ballgame - 58-56 is
remaining.
not much of a difference, just a little
" We had a communications break- crack between who wins and who
down on the staff," said Olson in ex- loses," noted J3arnett .
·
plaining the mistake. "I was told we
The results sent the winners to a
had one timeout remaining."
meeting in Thursday night's East
Smithson said he was aware that semifinals at Atlanta . In the other
the Hawkeyes were out of timeouts game, Brigham Young will play
at that point of the game and when Notre Dame.
he heard gu~rd Bob Hansen call one,

Opening round action of the single
elimination fourth and fifth grade
division of the Meigs County
Elementary Basketball Tournament
along with a semi-final game of the
Sixth Grade Tourney were reported
today by John Mora.
Friday evening, Tuppers Plains
clinched a berth in the sixth grade
finals by defeating Bradbury Kitchen, 43-25, .tn' -win the Losers
Bracket of the double elimination
tourney.
Eddie Collins had an outstanding
game to lead T.P. with 20 points,
while Jeff Caldwell netted 15 for the
winners. J.R. Kitchen poured in 17
points for Bradbury Kitchen, while
Jeff Nelson added six.
Tuppers Plains will face Bradbury
Qlssell, undefeated in the winners
bracket, in the Championship game,
Tuesday evening at 6 P.M. If Bradbury Cl!ssell is defeated another
game will be needed to decide a
Champion, and it is tentatively
scheduled for Wednesday night.
Saturday, eight games were
played in the opening round of the
fourth and fifth grade tournament at
Meigs Junior High School.
In the first game, Racine handily
defeated Harrisonville, »19, behind
Marty Cleland's with 16 points.
David McMillan had 10 points,
and Donnie Riffle canned eight points for the winning Racine team. Wes
Howard had 15 for Harrisonville.
Tuppers Plains, led by Jeff Caldwell's 15 points bombed Bradbury
Baker, 59-25. Brett Bissell had 14
points, Allen Tripp 12, and Brian
Durst with eight. Matt Baker zipped
in 21 for Bradbury.
Salisbury-Cullurns-Young downed

The Oail Sentinel-Pa e-1

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monda , March 16,1911

Atl:antcm fo"lt&gt;ldhuU!!e

vs
p, m

lh·xlt•y

&lt;·ollcg t· has kt•thall tnurnament shnwlng pairings Ill he regional•
semifinals. l AP l . wwrphnlo) .

Tournament resulls-----1---ll htn• t I

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At M ! t rh· U.~t C ull~ ·~ t·
\'hilh~·utllt' li2 , St ~ · u i~• I WIIJI' $7
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l 'antun Mr KIII It•y Hfl, I ·,tllhlll !'Iouth :vi
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HeiKhb 1&amp;--7, F'ri ll &lt;iy. 7 p.m.
T,..-Vttlh •) ~ . ('rlshut:tun --47
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11·7, Wednesdlly , 7·:11l p.m.
Htll' kt•yc I 'c rtii'J II 63, Mm ls St l'~h'r {Jf;
V IHl Ruren 1$-.8 vs. K ~:~ lldl:l 2.1· 1, ThursAlt 'nnlnn Fll'ltlhoull t' ·
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MHri•Jll l.rJu•l ~ ~ - ~tla ~ ~
At Oaytnn Arru
A I ND j~tlt•un
Cuvinl{\1.111 24-{) v ~ .
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Monday.; March 16,191~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

:age-8-The Daily Sentinel

FHA -HERO names
Miss Lance girl of montb

.Helen Help Us

Does the habitual liar
lie to protect himself?
BY HELEN BOTI'EL
Special Correspondent
DEAR HELEN:
Our 21-year-old son, living at
home, lies to us constantly. When he
.was small, I could punish him, but
what do you do with an adult child
:who persists in this old and
, dangerous habit?
I've gotten to the point where I
,ignore him because of the fights we
get into. It does no good to tell him
repeatedly lying will get him into
very serious trouble. .
.
He's a faithful reader of your
colwnn. Your answer might shake
him up. -UPSET MOM
DEAR MOM:
Before I make a blanket
statement: "Habitual liars require
professional help," I must ask a
question: Does your son avoid the
truth with everyone, or are his lies
mostly for parents?
If the former, he is either
"avoiding consequences,"

taking

the easy way, or has a Walter Mitty
urge to substitute fantasy for
reality. A therapist might uncover
basic reasons for lying, and that's a
giant step toward a cure.
But first, your young man must
admit he bas a problem!
What if he fibs at home but
:(usually) not abroad? Perhaps this
. is a bid for privacy, and two ap.proaches could work: Stop asking
questions, and-or give him a gentle
·push out of the nest. At 21, he's ready
.tony.- H.
· DEAR HELEN:
· I'm a divorcee with two children,
and until recently had a beautiful
relationship with a man I met at
work.
Then he got it in his head that I
' was cheating with his best friend. I
swear it never happened, but
nothing I say has any effect. He has
no cause for doubting me. '
· Yesterday he sold his truck and
asked me to take him to the county
seat where he'll stay until spring and
. then "hit the road.'.' He gave me $30

., .
I,.

·'

'·'•
''

•
; ., .
~:

"'• •

)
COWDERY
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Cowdery
(Linda Brown) of Knoxville, Tenn.
are announcing the birth of a son,
·Bradley Allen, on Feb. 5. The infant
weighed nine pounds, four ounces

~... ~ and wsa 21 inches long,

Mr. and Mrs. Cowdery ha ve two
other sons, Christopher, five, and
Jason, three. Maternal grand:- parents are Mr. and Mrs. Walter P.
: . Brown, Reedsville, and the paternal
'
grandparents are Faye Cowdery,
: ; · Parkersburg, W. Va., and Dale
Cowdery, Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Brown spent a week
in KnoKville with the family.
r•

.,

Host Christian dinner
RACINE-Mr. and Mrs. Waid
Hayman Racine, hosted a Christian
fellowshlp group for a dinner at their
home Thursday. The evening was
spent singing hymns and in prayer.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs. Ed
Voss and Tony, Mra. Agnes Mowery,
Mr. and Mrs. Sid Hayman and
'daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Carroll
Knight and children, Mr. and Mrs.
Carl Loomis, Harry Hayman, and
the hosts.
I

,o•'

I

''"''"' ...

II
A
R

•"

•...'

y

R

..

' ~

~\ou\.

A
R,

,, ,,

y

Helen, I can't bear life without
him.
Have you any suggestions?
ALONE
DEAR ALONE :
Yes: get suspicious!
My I.G.A.P. ("I'm Guessing
Again Perception") says this man
needs an excuse to break up. so he's
putting the blame on you .
Sorry I can't be more optimistic,
but I'd say he, and the money he
owes you, are gone for good. - H.
DEAR HEI.£N:
I could never divorce my husband
as it would hurt him too much, but I
feel so trapped sometimes. Other
times I realize I'm doing as well as
most married people - which isn't
so great!
Lately I'm worried, as I find
myself thinking about how it would
be if I were a widow. I don't want my
husband dead, but there it is: If he
died, I'd get a second chance.
I'm ashamed of these horrible
thoughts: What really worries me is
that I'd feel so guiliy if something
happened to him, as if I willed it.
Does anyone else have these unwanted fantasies, and how can they
. be stopped? - 35 AND DRIFTING
SILENTLY
DEAR35:
Many marriage-drifters can't
quite block of! fantasies about " the
easy way out." When. mates stop
talking, unwanted thoughts
sometimes fill the void.
My Rx' Get honest. Break the
silence. Ask your husband if he's as
bored as ~ou are, and then work for
change, one way or another. You
may be surprised to discover he also
has difficulty suppressing those
"suddenly single" dreams.- H.
Got a problem' An adult subject
for discussion' You can talk it over
in her column if you write to Helen
Bolte!, care of this newspaper.

members for the food and kind·
nesses extended to her at the death
of her mother, Mabel Van Meter.
The hostesses served refreshments.
Mrs. Hayes and Mrs. Goldie
Frederick conducted games. Door
prizes were won by Thelma White
and Mrs. Damewood. Others at·
tending were Letha Wood, Ethel
Orr, Mae McPeek , · Pauline
Ridenour, Marcia Keller, Dorothy
Myers, Ada Morris, Betty Roush,
Mary K. HOI.t er, Opal Hollon, and
Inzy Newell.

By Ellen Bell
Ubrarlan
The following item was " lifted"
(almost word for ivord) from
"Footnotes," the Ohio Library
Foundation newsletter.
Let" your money do the
working I How? Mrs. Smart wants to do it this way. She and Mr.
Slllart don't need all the life insurance coverage they have. Sh~
wants her husband to transfer
one of his policies to the library.
The policy has a face value of
$54),000. If Mr. Smart makes the
gift he will receive an inunediate
income tax deduction of $25,000
(fair market value of the policy
at the time of the gift). Since hs is
in the 34 percent tax bracket, his
federal tax will go down $8,000.
(If he were in a higher bracket,
his tax would go down more).
If Mr. Smart d!'Cides to continue paying the annual

\''•"""

~ ~ ·~li'o

,..

~ '\'''"' '

Removing decals
By Polly Cramer
Special correspondent
DEAR POLLY - I hope someone
can tell me how to remove some
decals
the
children put on
furniture without
marring
the
finish. I have tried
shortening, toothpaste, etc. and
nothing
ha's
worked.- MARY
DEAR MARY
Cramer
- You fail.ed to say what sort of
finish the furniture has, so anything
you try must be tested in an inconspicuous part. .You might try
wanning a big corner with your hair
dryer and then giving the decal a big
tug. Any adhesive that remains
might come off by rubbing with linseed oil or even wann while vinegar.
-POLLY
DEAR POLLY - I have back
trouble and arthritis in my anns. I
have discovered a couple of aids that
1 would like to share with others.
Everyone knows a mattress slj!&gt;uld
be turned end-over-end one week
and side-to-side the next. The turning end-to-end posed a real
problem for me until I found it could
be turned side-to-side and then
scooted around to change the foot to
the head of the bed. This gives the
mattress more wear.
My second ~ointer is a help in put·

Social Cakrular

1911

!he Oail Sentinei-Pa

DI&lt;ITRACY

Television
•
•
VIewmg

THEiN SHE
ISN'T SEEKING

PUBLICITY?
HER ART,
GENTLEMEN-

Laurie Lance, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Michael Lance, Route 2,
Coolville, has been named "girl 11
the month" by the Eastern FHAHero Chapter.
Miss Lance was selected for the
honor at a recent meeting of the
Chapter held at Eastern High
School. Her hobbies are horseback
riding, watching baseball and
rodeos. She is a sophovrore at
Eastern High School and has been a
member of the Fu'tur~ Homemakers
of America for two years.
During the meeting delegates to
the state convention to be held in
Columbus, April 10 and II , were
named. They are Margery Myers,
Miss Lance, and Sheila Harris with
Pam Davis as alternate.
The chapter members have been
invited to attend the spring rally
May 9 at Canters Cave, 10 a.m. to I
p.m.
The Chapter will sponsor a dance
March 27 at the school. The sock hop
is open to the public. Plans were
discussed for a tour of Children's

AND ACTING
WITH

VITAMIN
FL.INTf.IEART

CAPTAIN EASY
"WE;~DIGO,'SOMr= C ACL IT·- THE)'
9A'I IT LURr&lt;S OUT I~ THt:; WOODS!
VOU'~c H!AR ALL SORT' OF SPOOl&lt;)"
YARIJS. A&amp;OUT IT

6:30

6:56
7:00

Laurie Lance ,.
Hospital and a skating party. dates
to be announced later.
.
Next meeting was set for April 6
with a speaker on hair styling.

7:30

Group plans Easter bazaar
I

p.m. on the Pomeroy parking lot.
The ritual of jewels tea was an:
nounced for April 26 at the home of
Johanna Shuler.
Sheila Reeves, service chainnan,
presented a plaque from the March
of Dimes received by the chapter for
participation in the Mother's March.
Jaqei!e HaptonstaU had the cultural
report and presented David Baker,
personnel manager of the Southern
Ohio Coal Co. who presented a series
of slides.
Refreshments were served by
Mrs. Shuler and Mrs. Reeves.

POMEROY-Ohio Eta Phi Chapter
, of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority meeting
Tuesday night at the Meigs Inn
made plans for an Easter bazaar to
be held at the Pomeroy United
Methodist Church on April lB.
Baked goods, colored eggs and
homemade candies will be for sale
and the Easter bunny will be the~ to
greet the children. Lori Warner is
the ways and means chainnan.
Kathy Cumings presided at the
meeting during which time the
group arranged a bowling party for
March 22. Members are to meet at 2

'~

.
7:56
8:00

I

0

I

1

.•I

YEG- \'liTH THAT
PRIVATE DETECriVE
HE ~IRED ltiC:.HT

Grange banquet April 24
lle a potluck dinner at 6:30 that
night. Reported ill were Leona
Lieving, Bertha Lieving, Ruth
Euler, and Homer Radford.

Ohio was the theme for the
program presented by Mrs. Ethel
Grueser, lecturer. Readings in·
eluded " Why is Ohio Called the
Buckeye State" by Barbara Fry;
"Ohio's Flag" by Lottie Leonard:
"What is Ohio's Flower?" by
Dorothy Long ; "What is the Great
Seal of the State of Ohio" by Nancy
Morris; "In Love With Spring" by
Mary Shaeffer; "Legend of the
Jonquil" by Susie Pullins; "Showi"l!
of tl)e Green" by Helen Blackston.
There were riddles by Sue Fry and a
closing song. " Beautiful Ohio."
Refreshments were served by
Mrs. Fry and Mrs. Morris.

I

8:30
8:5B

8:00

Social Calendar

parent can only guess what
the child's friends are like .
What happens ·in the child's

MONDAY
REVIVAL at Hysell Run Holiness
Church, county road 15 off SR 124,
Monday through Saturday at 7:30
p.m. nightly. Norman Taylor will be
the speaker. Pastor Theron Durham
invites the public.
BAND BOOSTERS at North Gallia
H.S.,7p.m.
PLANS FOR spring carnival on
April4 will be finalized at a meeting
of Racine PTO Monday at 7:30p.m.
at elementary school.
MEIGS MEN'S FELLOWSHIP,
Churches of Christ, chili supper
prepared by Pomeroy Church of
Christ men at 6 p.m. at Pomeroy
Church. Special music, devotions .
All men of Meigs County invited .

room is private and a mystery .
Television commands most

9:30

The

fact that mar ii d.,, ,,,
alcohol have e. d ,.,1 ,I
junior high schuol.

1976 showed that one of every
prime time advertises some

form· of drug or chemical.
The parent, sitting down

have failed him , he is in grave

need of perspective. Perhap•
parents

need

Lo

ask

them·

selves some questions .

In the first place. whos in

SPECIAL OF

NOW.

THE DAY.'

I

grealt!SL
c harge urnund here '! W hn
pays tht! n•nt'! Who po y.s the
telephone bill'! Whu hought
the television set'! Who cleans
the h o u ~e? Who g1Vc!:J the
allowance'! Who ded&lt;.led to
have kid s. anywuy'!
Parentul uuthority doc!'; not
have to he totulitnrian . It (.'Un
he patient, opNHnindud, us
gentle and undcrsll.mding U:i

you"d like to muke it. Hut
it sl arts from

h ouse, und lhe house rules ex ·

tend

LO

that room . I r there' s

something amiss g:oing on i n
that room, or yo u suspect

he

lin · lolt • nT

BARNEY

:I GOT 'fOU A

','

PLUMB GOOD
SEAT TO SEE
TH' SUN GO
DOWN,TATER

' ''

thing: A clear

emanate from th u hn, nc i'4 tlw

for tmlcring. A knn&lt;.·k on the
door will do. It is nuL meant to

greolesl s tont:hion :.1 fh ild t'Uil
huve . ll is one of rhc Lhinj{,H

he a murijuanu purlor.
Parental authority hus

that help s a kid
those rules will he

wcokencct over the
decades. and many

b een

luML
force~

SORR'r' I'M LATE, MA'AM ..
I f1AD ALITTLE PROBLEM
WITH M'( TERM PAPER ...

and paronls nood n clt·M lino
of comrnunkalion wi th 1IH.:1r

own .··

Out that room is part of a

who helped kids with their

fii \C .."+

PEANUTS

••Y
"'' lint
t h n llt •n,_~ ~· tl.

JlrtJ!IN

vido, "a roum of

u~·r,. ,. ,,11 •u1t"
tiC l of r u lt · ~ 1 hAl

tivc . You don 't need u warrant

to

lil t! I' I

1 ho!o!U'

c hallengcs.

,•

Copyri~ h L I !)Hl . 1'1111 ·\ ~·,• tl l o d

Nt.'XT· lll•hiti (J f},
I )uor.

(

,.

'{owr l
'•

AN'r'WA'r', f.IERE
IT IS:

MO~E

·(HISTORICAL-DRAMA) "l'o
''How,_rdeofVIrglnia'' 1840
(jJ I!ZI
ABC NEWS
NIGHTLINE
Q (f) CBS LATE MOVIE ' QUINCY:
Requiem For The l 1~i ng ' Quincy
and Sa m are taken hostage by a
group of mobsters and lor the first
time Quincy musl perform an au·
' topsy on a living person. (Repeat)
'HARRY 0 : Double Jeopar dy ' A
wealthy businessman takes outs
contrao ton Todd Cof'!wa y. believed
to be his daughter's killer.
(Repeal)
@) MOVIE ·(COMEDYJ "\'1
" Rom•nce of a Hors• Thl•f"
1971
12:00 i]) @ ID FANTASY ISLAND A
would ·be attorney laces the ut·
11mate co uru oom challenge when
he must defend himself against a
murder charge, and a cons uuctlo n
worker seeks to fulfill hts greatest
dream by romancing two ol the
world ' s mos t beautiful woman .
(Reoeat. 70 mlns .)
12:30 lJ l U I t ) TOMORROW COAST·
TO·COASTGuests: Mike Douglas,
s1nger John Phillips and his
actrass ·dauQhler Ma cke nzie (90
min&amp; .)
12 :58 {j) CBN SPORTS REPORT
1:00
D. JAMES KENNEDY
CAROl BURNETT AND
1: 10 101
FRIENDS

m

-•

1ere

m

cnu .

there is, ca ll the hou se dctec·

thut idvu f'JUL lhe window .
PurcntR u~cd lo be t.hc ones

totulituriun bu~w .
,
Every r hild would likt•, und
fonuna t~ fu ndli ('s ru u pro·

,, II

10: 15

·

LOU GRANT Rossi gets

a real insider's report on an 8)CCiu sive tabor dispute when he ·s asked
to publicize the plight of strik ing
I arm workers and winds up behind
bars himself. (60 mins .)
(l) THEWAYTHEYWEREAgolaxy
of stars go home to their alma - mate~
Northwestern University presents
this t)Cfraveganzaot music, drama ,
and comedy. Stars: Claude Akins,
Ann·Margaret .
i1ll NEWS
(!) COUNTRY MUSIC: A FAMILY
AFFAIR Tammy Wynette and
Roger Millerhost this livelyjambor ·
ee fealturing country music's mos t
famous kinfolk .
C1J CBN UPOATE NEWS
C1J RISE AND BE HEALED
GlJ OUTER LIMITS
C1J CBN UPDATE NEWS
m U Cilm O Cil®HHl iD
NEWS
C1J FESTIVAL OF PRAISE
ffi NIGHT GALLERY

ffi

The experl:;

offspring

1:1

i:-.

m w m soAP .

Ro••"

.. FRONT ROW
BALCONY

fid encc . uto limtJ ~ llt'n lht• rp
are so muny fur ttJl wo1h. i n~
ugain!1l it.

worked at the weakening.
Purunts wen! Lo ld to be palw Lo
i. tu:! ir kid s and many currlud

never for,l{el ,

nc1~d

m

11 :28 ill ~BNUPOATENEWS
11 :30 m U m THE TONIGHT SHOW
' Best o l Carson' Guests : Eydie
Germe , Stelle lawren ce, Dudley
Moore. Charlie'Callas. (Repeat : 60
mins.)
llJ ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
(!) MOVIE ·(DRAMAI'' I&gt; "Tho

•

tllh l

rationut , fun ctlru11 1 1J ~ adull.
That can bet:ouw It ;·hlljl 'tt
grvatest strenglh 11·•· li •&amp;L
common sense IH!a 1 ~ n1. 1l•ll ·
in¥ . AnJ th e 1(', ~~ · .lt,;• ·r ~

with a before dinner drink in
the evening, discovers he is

to do?
If the parent loses perspec·
tive on parenting, if he feel s
the schools and the churches

GOTTO GO

...'

Still the purctl l . ,..n· tU:•1!
Htrength is ('O II l ll lo' .1 "h ·ll :•a·.
and the conrident:t' 11 f b,, i, .~· a

commercials shown on

pressures is to throw up one · s
hands and say what's a parent

~ESTAURANT.

10:58
11:oo

the II and l:l·yca1 .11.1 ", J&amp;,..; t
too much for )nan•, 10 l~th'

set. Furthermore, a study in

warp his child's personality?
The reaction to all of these

THE

HONESTLY, IT'S NO
FUN PLAYING SE"CONt&gt;
FI~I?LE" TO THE
..A~' ~~~
6LUE P~ATE

10:28
10:30

day may well 1. l'l •t-' t 11 •.t
trend . Many p,ar .·n~ .., r..- · ht
coming more as ·1rt' l 1
.u l ..!
here and there in .\ .lu •" ·' ·
they ore formin 1 , 11 , ·I· .
neighborhood gwup '· 1.. t :l; 11 1
the problem whtl ,. 11 , • l'h,

of the child's free time - by
graduation from high school
the child will have devoted
II ,000 hours to school and
15,000 hours to the television

of abstinence so as not to

J:'VENING ... PLAYING
C'A~{}S ... !JUT I'VE

to

FOR A WHILE .. .
AFTER HE CLOSES

The real thre111 •l1n ,J., .,a
abuse poses in Y''' u'l' IJ, , ' '- l1 1

time to communicat.e. The

Should he lead a monk 's life

WELL , THIS WAS A
VERY EXCITING

responsibility.

parent has little of the child's

substances.

z:u1

abd ,,:l lt
Lhro•.
authority , and •' tr li of ll. t i.'
urged

reaching seventh graders in
increasing numbers . The

not relaxing as Ill! thought he
was, he is pattern·setLing for
his child, legitimatizing the
child's use of mood·altering

~H&gt; [J r

jamin Spock pnim : · •HI in
"Raising ChildrPn 111 1 111f
ficult Time: A Ph Jin ,,• pl . uf
Parental Leader~ hip .11ul , ; ,,., h
Ideals, " parents u11• · t.w' '"

so much to watch for in their

six

)

.

trouble~ ~

THE WHITE SHADOW
Singing great Ella Filzgerald guest
stars In a nostalgic look at some of
Ca rverHigh' sill us tri ous ba sketball
alumni. (80 mins.)
(]) STARRING KATHARINE HEPBURN This program follows
Katharine Hepburn ·a cin ematichla·
tory from her debut in' A Bill ofDivor·
cement', up to the soon to be
released 'On Golden Pond'. lnaddi t ion toe xc erpt s from Ms .Hepbum' s
films, this special will also include
rarel)l seen newsreels, stills and
lntervlewswiththoaewhoknowthe
actr.eaa well.
Gl)
SANDBURG'S LINCOLN
ART I)
NEW BIBLE BAFFLE SHOW
~BN UPDATE NEWS
u m MONOAYNIGHTATTHE
MOVIES 'Madame X' 1981 Stars:
Tuesda)l Weld, Granville Van Du·
sen.
,
C1J 700CLUB
CiJ(il) ID DYNASTY Blake bagifls
toplayacruetcat -and -mousegame
with Kryatle overt he pawned neck ·
lace, and Fallon uneJCpectedly
comes to Krystle's aid by alerting
Matthew to Krystle 'a prec&amp;!rloua
existence with Blake . (60 mine .)
llJ (I) ®) M.A.S.H. Hawkeye
begins sneezing and can't stop,
causing Colonel Potter to turn the
40771h upside down to lind the .
·cause.
Gl)
SANDBURG'S LINCOLN
(f'ART ~
llJCIJ®J HOUSECALLSArliclea,
both valuable and of questionable
~alue , are being stolen from Ken ·
sington Hospital and a kleptoman ·
iac is obvioual)l at work.
IIJ TBS EVENING NEWS

D C)) (liD

homework, n!mt'llii.. · l . u • ·I
to be a kind oft l m·~ ~ "' " . 1hll t
nership b~tween the. l:rl •l , 1lu•
parent and the J 1' hj ,, n . t J. .a •tl

much anymore.

I

FeL.L. OVER HIM-

SELF TO HAVE: A
DAY OUT I)IJ THE ·
C.OUN'TF&lt;::y.

IATTREY±

Now arrange the circled letters to.
lorm the surprise answer, as

s.ug~

gested by the above cartoon.

Print answer here:[
Salurday's

I

I XI ] Dr I XXj

(Answers tomorrow)
Jumbles : HAVEN BEGOT AROUND CASKET
.
.
Answer : Sounds hke money for an mexper\enced
foolball player-A "GREEN" BACK

JumtM Book No. 15; containing 110 puulea, Ia •~allabft for $1.75 pattplld
trom jumble, clo thlt. MWipaper, Bo1 34, NoiWood, N.J. 07848. Include your
n1me, acklrftl, zip code and mah chiK:k1 payable to Newapaperbooka.

~i

llJ (I) ®)

10:00

child's development, and so
little time to watch.
The evidence is distressing:
The epidemic of drug abuse is

RAINBOW FACTORY
CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
(jJ ABC NEWS
CIJ 3~2·1 CONTACT Programming
may be interrupted due to
eJ!tdging . ,
UlJOVEREASYGuest:CarlosMon·
toy a, the undisputed master ol the
flamenco guitar . Host : Hugh
Down~ . .
(Closed-C aptioned;
U.S.A .)
m u m NBC NEWS
ill THE DOOR
&lt;lJ BOB NEWHART SHOW
(jJ F ACI' THE MUSIC
0 (I) Cim CBS NEWS
(])
WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
GlJ LILIAS, YOGA AND YOU
(j}) • ABC NEWS
ill ~BN UPDATE NEWS
m U PM MAGAZINE
ill NORMAN VINCENT PEALE
ffi ALL IN THE FAMILY
(I) il}J II) FAMILY FEUD
m NASHVIL~E ON THE ROAD
llJ (I) TIC TAC DOUGH
.
(]) GlJ
MACNEIL·LEHRER
REPORT
®)NEWS
m U BULLSEYE
WORDS OF HOPE
NFORD AND SON
(I) JOKER' S WILD
m
HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
(!) GlJ DICK CAVETT SHOW
(j})m FACE THE MUSIC
ill CBN UPDATE NEWS
m u m PROJECT PEACOCK
'Donahue And Kids' Em my Awa rd·
winning broadcast journalist Phil
Donahue talks wilh youngsters
whose experience with lila·
threatening illness has helped
them develop an extraordinary and
sitive outlook on life . (60 mioa.)
AMERICAN CATHOLIC
MOVIE ·(ADVENTURE)""
"North By Northweat" 1959
ffi MOVIE -(DRAMA) " "Secr•tl11 1977
(j)(j})m THAT'S INCREDIBLE A
courageous patent owner risks
electrocution to demonstrate a
revolutionary lilesaving device. a
man who is allergic to almosl
everything in the modern world, and
the Harrier Jet - an aircraft that can
fly backward and sideways and
land on a dime are featured . (60
min~

•

By JOHN BARBOUR
Tbe Aosociated Press
SIXTH OF A SERIES

Unscramble thes• lour Jumbles,
· one Isner to each square, to form
four ordinary words.

BRIDGE
Keen attack cues success
Alan: ''There are a lot of

tQ1076!2

ways to reach the fairly good
slam. Still. if it were played in
a pair game. very few pairs
would get there."
Oswald: '.' If the heart

+K5

finesse

NORTH

3-16-81

+A 3 2
.AQ

ffi

BEHIHD HIM!

MONDAY
The Grange banquet to be held
WINDING TRAIL GARDEN
April 24 at the Salisbury Elementary
CLUB Monday will tour Barnitz School was announced when Rock
Greenhouse. Meet at Ohio Power Co. Springs Grange met Thursday night
at 6 p.m. Following tour will have at the hall.
dinner at Soney's Restaurant.
It was noted that the steak dinner
REVIVAL at Ireland Co1rununity
to
be served by the Salisbury PTO
Church beginning Monday at 7:30
will
be at 7:15p.m. Tickets are $4 for
p.m. nightly. Evangelist is the Rev.
adults
and $3 for children.
Eddie Boyer. Pastor is the Rev. EdThe
women's activities chairman
ward Hickman. Public invited.
announced that contests will be held
TUESDAY
at the April meeting. The baking
MIDDLEPORT Elementary PTA,
· contest will be on oatmeal "'''Jkies
7 p.m. Tuesday at the school.
and the sewing contest on appliance
GROUP 2, Middleport First covers. The legislative report was
United Presbyterian Church, 7:30 given by William Radford. A comp.m. at the horne of Mrs. Myron munication was read from the state
Miller with Mrs. Eddie Burkett. CQ: master, James Ross.
hostess. Mrs. Myron Miller will have
Hemlock Grove Grange will visit
the devotions and the program will Rock Springs at [he April 9 meeting
be a religious play. The thank of- and present the program. There will
fering will be taken.

byHennArnoldandBoblee

ill
&lt;lJ

HARM!

M'IST!~Y

~ THATSCRAMIILEDWORDGAMI!

!VENING

DO HER NO

THe

001"f

e-;

ffi D CZJ CJ CIJ@j(j))G) NEWS

8 :00

ON THE
LEGITIMATE ·
STAGE CAN

Dl!iPfiJS OVER
'WHO ATTACKED
EASY ON THE
TRAIC ... ~AR'I
SATEen IILAMe$
AN !VIL SPIRITTHE: we.:;r1e0:

ll\r~Nl

~ ~ ~~ ~

NAIPO

MARCH 16, 1981

Try being a parent
If you think growing up is
tough these days, try being a
parent. At no other time in re·
cent history have parents had

A " fun money" auction was held
at a recent meeting of the Rutland
TOPS OH 1456.
The 16 members attending spent
over $168.25 in "fun money" with
each dollar representing a pound
lost by a member. For the week,
Nancy Vance was the best loser with
Belva Schuler as runner-up. Mrs.
Vance was presented a dollar and a
ribbon. Registration fees for the
Area Recognition Day program
were collected.,
·

ling on pantyhouse or support hose
that are more difficult to put on. I
cannot stoop and pull, but I find if I
lie down on the bed on my back and
raise my legs, I can do it without too
much pain and without help. Just
work them up like you would if you
were sitting up. Put the foreleg and
foot in first, as they are the worst.
When you get them to the knees.
stand up and finish pulling them up
as usual.- MRS. R.O.F.

u

Marijuana and your child

The wine and cheese tasting party
for the American Cancer Society
was a financial success. Held at the
Meigs Inn the fund raising project
was co-chaired by Mrs, Pat Ingels
and Ralph Werry. Workers who
donated time to the event were Mrs.
Don Anderson, Mrs. Jim Anderson,
Mrs. John Anderson, Mrs. William
Baronick, Mrs. Virgil Brown, Mrs.
Kenneth Cooke, Mrs. Hugh Custer,
Mrs. Paul Eich, Mrs. Clinton Fisher,
Mrs. Bill Haptonstall, Mrs. Don
Kelly, Mrs. Ferman Moore. Mrs.
George Morris, Mrs. Patrick
O'Brien, Mrs. Ted Reed, Mrs.
Richard Rupe, Mrs. Tom Smith,
Mrs. Robert Tewksbary, and Mrs.
James Witherell.

TOPS news reported

premiwns through the library, he
will get an·additional income tax
deducation eaoh year for the
prerniwns .
In addition, Mr. Smart's gift of
life insurance remov~s the
$50,000 policy proceeds from his
estate. That's a $17,000 saving in
his 34 percent estate tax bracket.
Mr. Smart was worried that
giving the library his insurance
policy would take a way some of
the estate he has been building
for his children. Mrs. Smart
showed him that he could take the
$8,000 in saved income taxes and
give it to his children right now,
free of gift taxes. He could also
invest the money and increase his
annual income.
A similar opportunity is
available to some folks in Meigs
County. If you value your
libraries, it might be worth
thinking abut !

Polly's Pointers

ACS party success

New arrival

I;_

L.

t.t0"1

~~Good-bye ."

members Wednesday eve

.......,'..

I
B

of what he owes me, and said,

~ Past Councilors initiate new
Lora Damewood was initialed into
club membership when the P~~!t
Councilors Club of Chester Council
323, Daughters of America, met
Wedilesday evening at the home of
Mrs. Erma Cleland. Mrs. Ada
Bissell was co-hostess.
Charlotte Grant presided at the
· meeting and opened by reading St.
Matthew 5. The pledge to the nag
and the Lord's Prayer in unison was
followed by reports from Leoha Hensley, secretary,
and Elizabeth
Hayes, treasurer.
Laura Mae Nice thanked the

L.

Your e
Libraries ...

~o'

Mond• , March

WEST

EAST

.JI0982

9 K

tH
+Q 912

t KJ 83

+94

+765

7! 4

+J6
SOUTH
+KQJl08
3

•stA

hearts and goes nght · after
clubs.''
Oswald: "He plays dummy's
king of clubs, a club to his ace
and leads a third club. Now
comes the key play. He dis-

Vulnerable: Both ·
Dealer: North
North

lt

Pass
Pass

Pass

.

Pass

2t

3.
s+

on. the slam

be a far better suit to work on,
so he takes dummy's ace of

+A 10·8 7 3

West

were

would .be a cinch. The jack of
hearts lead implies that East
has the king, so South tries to
make it without benefit of the
heart queen."
Alan: "He sees the need to
set up either clubs or diamonds and clubs appears to

East
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

cards the queen

of hearts

from dummy."
Alan: "If clubs break 3-3 he
has complicated things, but
this way he guards against a
doubleton club in the East
hand. He is going to be able to
ruff his little heart with a
small trump. the fourth club
with the ace of trumps, draw

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

trumps

Oswald: "Here is a hand
from the ACBL bulletin and
Easley Blackwood. I have
changed a couple of spot
cards and provided the
bidding. It is a hard hand to
bid so Easley just put declarer
in the spade slam,"

and make

his

slam

trick with his fifth club."
Oswald: "In other words.
instead of trying to ruff two
clubs in dummy - a play that
couldn't succeed :- he substi·

lutes a heart ruff with a low
trump and a club ruff with the
ace and makes the slam.·•
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)

tS~~.,,._,,.,
by THOMAS JOSE'H
ACROSS
41 English
1 Marshall
river
DOWN
or flight
s Tire style 1 Intrigue
II Song refrain 2 Hawaiian
12 Reveal
veranda
clearly
3 Eventually
13 Lone
4 Negative vote
14 Drunk (sl.) s Pistol sound
IS lndo-{;hinese 6 Eschew
tribe
7 Surnamed (Fr.&gt;
16 Hawaiian
8 Way back when
food
9 Man-made
17 Call·- day
fabric
18 Toward
10 Escorted out
the center 16 TV Jack
20 Gullet
19 Mrs. R. Wagner
21 Fall guy
22 Greek letter
23 Animal track
25 M.D. in
TV reruns
211 Trampled
27 Arduous
28 Fez color
2ll Infrequently
31 Likely
3% Hipster
33 Collar
35 Proved
a bust
37 Cotton
fabric
38Fur
39 Black
40 Become
abstruse

Yesterday 's Answer
1!2 Company
30 Massenet
23 Bombarded
opera
24 Pave the way 34 Talus
2S Baltimore pro or carpus
27 Heavy
36 Back
2ll Bad manners
talk
:n Penni!
display

o·AILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
AllYDLBAAXR
It LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for another. In th is sample A it
used for the three L's, X for the two O'.s, etc. Single letters.
apostrophes, the length and rormation of the worda are all
hints. Each day the code letters are diffcrerit .

CRYPTOQUOTES
NLG
KC
y H'

JHHD
JHHDC
CLG

RKC

K

y H;

KVM

RG

vN

I

YHHM
KC

L.

L .

J H H D,

JHHD

I BVE H

Yeskrday's Cryptoquole: FACTS THAT ARE NOT FRANKLY
FACED HAVE A HABIT OF STABBING US IN THE
BACK.- HAROLD BOWDEt&lt;

'

�Small investment, large
returns, Sentinel Want Ads

to reduce tax b urd en
1980, contribute 15 percent of last
year's earnings to it and then deduct
the contributiOn from your 1980 income at filing time.
"You thus delay paying taxes on
the amount you contributed until you
withdraw it, usually at age 59~ or
after. You can set up an IRA
whether you are self-employed or
not, so long as you weren't covered
during part of 1980 by another taxdeferred rellrement plan."
An IRA account can be set up
through a bank, savings and loan or
brokerage finn.
Standard Mlleage Rate
" For business driving in 1980 you
can deduct 20 cents a mile for the first 15,000 miles you drove and II cents for every additiOnal mile. The rate
is 11 cents for the first 15,000 miles if
your car or truck is fully
depreciated.
" Remember, though, that if you
use the standard nuleage rate, you

But then came buzzard encounters
of every kind.
" AU of a sudden there were a lot of
buzzards. The most seen together at
any one time was 17, and the crowd
was very excited/' said naturalist
Kenneth Gobel. "Some swooped

NOTICE FOR
APPLICATION
UNDER THE
UNIFORM
DEPOSITORY
ACT OFFICE
OF THE COUNTY
TREASURER
MEIGS COUNTY
POMEROY, OHIO
45769

can't take separate deductions for
your vehicle's depreciation ,
gasoline, repaii"S, insurance or other
dnvmg expenses."
Fuel Credits
"You can take a credit for federal
exciSe tax you paid last year on fuels
for farming. A credit is subtracted
from the actual taxes you owe,
whereas a deduction is subtracted
from your taxable 1ncome.
"The amount of credit depends on
bow much excise tax you paid - 4
cents a gallon or 2 cents a galion.
The credit for tax paid on gasoline,
diesel fuel, spec~al motor fuels and
av1ation fuel used on the farm in
such operatiOns as plowing, crop
dusting, combining, building
terraces or digging irrigation ditches, packing, grading or stormg a
crop.
"You can also take a !kent credit
for every gallon of lubricatmg oil
you used for similar purposes."

Applications

I

l'

f
I
(

,

Public Notice

Oh io until 12 noon on the

NOTICE TO
BITUMINOUS
VENDORS:

of March, 1981, for the furnishing of all kinds and
sizes ot aggregate that may

I

Wtll

31st day of March, 1981 ,
and the b1ds w111 be opened
at2 . 15 P.M. on the 31st daY

be

the Board of Metgs County

Commisstoners, Pomeroy,

1981, from any f•nanctal tn·
stltution legally ehQtble
whtch may desire to submit
a written ap,P.IIcatlon to be
public deposttory of the Active and Interim deP9Sits of
Public Monevs of said
Board as provtded by the

made '" conformttY wl1h
resolution

pass•ng February 2~ 1981.
" BE IT R ESOLVt:D lhat

the estimated aggregate

maxtmv-m.

amounts of
publtc funds subtect to the
control of satd Board to be

ACTIVE depostts at any
t1me dur~ng the period of
deSt?natton
ts
Three
Mil l•on F•ve Hundred
Thousand
Dollars
(S3,500,000 OOJ and Ihe
probable
ma xt mum
amount
of
INTERIM
depostts ts Two m i llion,

YOUR

in satd County and such
other Banks as may be
g1ven

Commiss.oners reserves
the n9ht to reject any or all

btds '

Awar(ls of the ACT IVE

deposits of Publ 1c Moneys
subtect to the control of
said Board wtll be made on
March 24, 1981, for a period

com

said.
"Often they don 'I know where to
turn for the answers. .It's becommg
so complicated that you need t~
help of experts and computers," he
said.
His bill stipulates that the
assistance offices would provide
education and training to employees
and elected officials of small government units. In additiOn, they would
conduct research on solutions to
problems of public administration in
local government.
Under his measure, the boards of
trustees at each of the four univer-

_,,,,,

sale will be held at the of
f1 ces of The Central Trust
CO., NA of M iddleport, Oh10
to sell for cash the
follow•ng collateral to w1t .
1 1978 Ford Courter PU

and earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Sen·
t19el route carrier Phone
us nght away and get on
the eligibility list at 992•

2156 or 992·2157

LADY or girl to live in, 992

2686 .

-------

TICKETS to Memoria l Golf
Tournament, May 18 24.
Call992 ·5574 after 6 p m

Ser

No

SGTBU¥14719

CHRISIE POWELL

The Central Trust Co , NA,
Middleport, Ohto reserves
the nght to btd at this sale

FAMILY:

Mar 15, 16, 17

I
I
I
I

U - Moflllt Homu

lor Rtnt
u - &amp;per utttnr tar R tnt
4J- FRoomt
..- $ptu for Rtt1t
H - Wtnttcl IO lttnl
41-Equlpmtnt tor Rent

5. _ _ _ _ __
6 _ _ _ _ _ __

7. _ _ _ _ _ __

8 _ _ _ _ _ __
9. _ _ _ _ __

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II. _ _ _ _ _ __

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1
1 14 . - - - - - . - - - - -

26. _ _ _ _ _ __
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1

f 15------------

1 16. _ _ _ _ __
I
I

'

utilities
HUNTING

bedrooms, all electric. 1971

Skyline , 12s)( 6), two
bedrooms, bath &amp; 113, new
carpet.
1970
PMC,
12 x 60, two bedrooms, new
carpel. B x S Sales, Inc.,
2nd x Viand Street, Point

Real Estate

7 rooms &amp; bath, full size at

In

out butldings , barn ,
pasture land. farm land,
gOOd timber Located on

sso,ooo.

HARDWOOD FLOORS
- A lovely home with a

Gener•l

family room, 2 bed
rooms, 2 fireplaces, full
basement, 3 lots~ and
unattached garage. This

t-----------1

Fabulous HaiKIKnit

~J - CI

w ith

3 bedroom

home, bath , lllrge living
room, equipped kitchen,
wrap around decking,
over double garage and

42

Phone 742-3092

Rul Estote

tor Rt"t

~~~eg!~e;;~;S ~;~~Is

SUBSTITUTE Bookmobile
Driver Clerk . Occasional
work on short notice to
drive bookmobile, do sim
pie clerical ta sks, and work
with the public Must ha\le

lV. Ittdlolquipment

high school diploma, valid

chauffer's license, and ex ·
perience driving large
truck . Pick up or write for

10b appllcaiiOn al OVAL
Bookmobile, 922 E. Mao n
Sl . Pomeroy •5769 .

.
eTRANSPORTATION

~omple•

,1 - AuiO, f&lt;lr hit
n - v•n• a' w D

area.
No
experience
rtequ lred; will train . Apart

U - Mobtlt Homtl
lor illt
l l- F•rmtlor hit

U - Mottrcycltl

l4Uu l7-

H - Auto Rtp•tr

11-

Resident Manager couple;
part time, smllll apartment

~ re

looking for a mature
married couple This IS an
excellent opportuni ty for
retired or sem1 r etired

*e
couple

looking for ad ·
d•ltonal lmcome. 1·614-864·
1186 from 9·4 only

eSERVICES
11 - Homt lmprovtmtnh

Want·Ad Advertising
Oe•dlines

.,_ Plum ltl nt &amp;

l •lOPM Dttly
I 2 Noon S•turCI~
lor Mond•'f

' lttfrteeretlon

••c• ., I lint

ll-1-.uv.,lnt
14- lltdr iul
15- Gtntrel

WANTED · The tollowlng
musicians to form a rock
band - Lead guitar, second
guttar, organ or plano
player, drummer, trumpet

Hevllnt

" - M H, ltf.eir
17- upttotntr.,.

Plover, tenor sax. Must be
able to play rock and soul

Rates and Other Information

music .

Cit It

1 CIIY

'"
tH
I.H

1 d•Y•
l dlyl

''"'
••w•

In mtmarw , Card of • r~ enk~ encl Obituary
min1mum Ceth tn actY•nu

'"

ment . Serious parties Cllll

Cfllrtt

1·30H75·2210.

l.tl

'·"

Ill

:1.71

••w

12 Sltuollons wantod
TREE TRIMM ING and
removal . 9&lt;9·2129 or '1'17
6040 .

t etnlt ,., .,.,,,., n .M

MMIIt Homt 1ele1 ent YMCI telet trt ecctptM only wlttiC..fl WI"'
ltf'"der 2J ctflt ctlarlf tor edt cerrylnt lo• Numrtt r
tf Ttlt

''"""''

Interested people

must have their own equip·

I J Wordt or Uncltr

.

In lhe Middleport

menl and ultlltles pa id we

,Auto P1rt1

.. o\([ft.IOI'Itl

lll''"'" lulldtntt
l.ott &amp; &amp;t:rtlll
•••llst•tt Wenttd
Rultort

'"c.,,

o

1'/ork In doYllme helping
elderlv pecple. R.utland·
Pomerov·Middleport area .

742·2288.
I

•

7264

tx, Aew aM.i,
Thot fobulous hondkn~tted look
nfhl nowl
KDit thiS friCefu dress w1th 1
lcm~ly honzontol dt!lln of s,n
thetiC bob1 11rn oil 1n one II'ICO
Smort lot oil 101sons, pocklble,
ond wearable' Pottem 1264
M1sses Stzes 8·14 Included.
$2.00 fonoch pattern Add IOC
each pattern for f1rst class atr
m111 and handline. Stld 11:
Alic1 ~~tab
. t .
NIICIIecroft Dlpl
•1 •
1S smart fashton

The Daily Sentinel
.,. 163, Old Cllobel 511., Mew
Yort, NY 10113. Prilll N11111,
MdnD, lip, Pottom Numllor.
Catch on to the craH boom! Send
for our NEW i98i NEEOLECRAFT
CATALOG Over 172 destjns. 3
!tee patterns 1n11de SI 00
All CIMT lOOKS. .$1.75 uch
ll4-14 Quick llochl111 Quiltl
Ill-f.,........ Quilti•l
UZ.Quill Ortlflllll
Ill-'" I lleck Qlliltl
130-S.IIIII r••SI•ll-51
IH.Qui&amp;i 'n' boy T-"n
Pmlnrool Qollb
IZ7·.,._ •n• Dalllll

ua.r.....,.

I Zf.T1lrifiJ

Cnllr F1awtn

IZS.I'Itll Clllllll
IZ4-EIIJ Cllll 'n' h-11
IU·Siitdi 'n' Plldt Cllllltl
12Z.SII" 'n' Pu" Clllilts
ImracMt Yau1 ,..,..
II f.EIIJ Art rl , _ Cltcl1tt
111-NIIIJ FIIIJ Clllllll
115-EIIr Art rllillil Cledltt
IU·C.-CilfW
lOW.+ btl (liiii: lllllllndl
IK-IIlllllt CllcMI
10!-11- Qllilll
IOI.QuHt llaak Cllltctlan I

3 bedroom, all electrtc
home in Eastern district
can be yOIJrs with a
down payment and a
9112:% assumable loan
Excellent
buy
at

$34,900 00
TWO ACRES - and o 2
bedroom rllnch home
with range, refrig·
erator,
and wood
burner . Also nlce block

garage . S24,900.00
JUST SIX YEARS OI.A')
- 3 bedrooms, kitchen,
dining area, llll on one

floor . Could have lull
basement

H finished

$19,500.00.
OWNER WILL HELP
FINANCE - This 3
bedroom homeon ap
prox. 1 acr, lot 1n coun·
try. Close tb the mines

Need a small down pay
menl. $13,500 00.
MINI FARM - Withap·
prox. 15 acre and a 2
bedroom

home

Four room apartment for

rent. 992 5908.

Plymouth
air

Valor.

1973 Buick Tro!'lnsmisston
completely overhauled.

Sleeping rooms ; by the
week
Kitchen,
and
television lounge . Carryout
store a ncr restaurant within

500 feet. 992·6370.

S ace for Rent

46

etc. E•perienced. with
references. Phone 992-3941 .

French

City

Painting

Res1dent1a1,
I nterior ,

commercial,
exterior

Spec ializing

in

~1.1

~1 ·~
' '

hi J ·:·

~

'

Push &amp; sell pro

AlLAS- T1Uer s

WEED EATE A- Brustt cuUer

&amp;

tr~mmert

STIHl.- Brush tulten I tnm

men

YAZOO- Ht wheelmowert
We )t' t VI(t' what we se ll I
Smottl Engmes-Dur Specttlty

104 condor St
Pomeroy, on
PH 992 2975
J 5 1 mo

ltou~~~Rd.
c:hn ter

o"

•,...... ""'" ••
G,.t•n How Op1n

• Gollleno"' ForAtl Agu
Wt oil ... lor Ult, t ~, qua lo!y baoh lnd
" ' " ' lrlnlln;rmn ll~t
IIUIOWHING

~1/nl•nt

'Nor- ho kin g,

111111111 booll AIIQ Pro Sh

torma la nll totl"'' 'h&lt;HI
Wt a"o u•rv a cDm lllf1t

•n• !iHr~~t~•Gooo•

J&amp;F
ENTERPRISES

KOUNTRY
''""G•m•
Spu l1 h1!1

• •' ,

or

fOil, Ctl ull ,

lont ot

1•-"

dttN

REESE
TRENOfiNG
SERVICE

•
•
•
•

Backhoe
Excavating
Septic Svstems
Water, Sewer &amp; Gas
lines
Licensed &amp; B.onded

DUMP TRUCK
Ph, 992a7201
3·5· 1 mo .

All types of

Gas Line-Ditches
water Ltne Hook·ups
Sept1c Tanks
County cerhhed
Roush Lane
Cheshire, Oh .

Ph. 367·7560

H. L WHITESEL
ROOFING
roof work ,

new or repa~r guners
and downSpouts, gutter
cleanmg and patnting .
All work guaranteed .

wa ter·S ewer · E tectr•c

Free Esttmates
Pnces
Call Howard

~easonable

949·2862
949· 216(1

24

l-7·tfC

Valley

Mobile

tic

Oh ,
Ph. 992 •3804
2 23 1 mo.

KITCHEN
CARPET

CARPET
ITH PADDIN

From

From

Reg . $1S.9S

7.99 &amp; up
Installed

'12.95 &amp; up
lns1alted

SHAG

$799

SQ.

Yd.

Cash·n·Carry

Buy Now &amp; Save $2 -$6 Per Yard.
25 rolls carpet in stock to pick from.
Regular backed carpet installed tree,
with pad.
Drive A Little- Save A Lot

RUTLAND FURNITURE
Main St.
742 -2211

...
_,

: ::0~ 1~,0~~-:.,~·Pnae;:,

&amp;Wiring

Industrial , Commercial
and Residenttal

Ph. Pomeroy
614-992-7038

~

3· 11 · 1 mo.

~~========~1=~~~~~~==n~fr=========~
CUNNINGHAM THE DABBLE SHOP
GALLIA
&amp; ASSOC.

Mortgage Bankers
992-7544
VA loans no money down

Federal Hous1ng 3% on $25,0()0
5% on balance.
Convent•onailoitns5%
down
call for 1n1ormat1on

AIR CONDITIONERS
&amp; HEAT PUMPS
Ph. 614-992-7038

build

2 Rolls
Rubber "Back

.~c;;~r.c~~~~~::"Far"
,... Re"tal

ProtMrlltt

PACQUALE
ELECTRICAL CO.
eHeat Pumps
• Electric Heating

eW•then
•OrspGHII
• Dryers
• Or,hwuhers
• Rtntll
eHot Wat•r Ttnks
Repernn1 Srnu 1953

Syracc~~~:~eRd.

I.replaces. 304-773·5131.

Cash 'n' Carry

1

985-3561

Rheem, Amana
&amp; Carrier

SPRING CARPn SALE

Call Ken Young

PARTS AND SERVICE
All.MAI&lt;ES

WILL lay brick, block,
con crete,

APPLIANCE SERVICE

~"Oplies

painting, paper hanging &amp;
textured ce ilings
Free
estimates. 367 7784 or 367

pour

Keep ThiS Ad IGr F11tu,... Reltnnu

JOYCE ELECTRICAL
SUPPLIES

992·7l44

311-1 mo

Rutland Furniture Carpet Shop

out -

·-m

I

mowers, nchng t rt ctors.

Quality Products
Reasonable Pnces

REFRIGERATION
INC.

Interior

7160.

Home Park , Cheshire, Oh.
992·3954.

"2-11tl

betllnd

mowers
SNAPPER -

PH. 992·2882
'1'12-2606
992-7861
3·11·1 mo pd

Rest.dent1al &amp; Ltght
Commercial Electrical

TRAILER spaces tor rent.
Southern

ASSOCIATES
DaHle &amp; Roger Turner
"2-5492

ELECTRICAL
SUPPLIES

pentry work , Including
paneling, ceilings, repairs,

t ing Free estlmll1es. CALL

Furnished Rooms

building, hot water heat,

Jean Trussell 90·2660
OFFICE "2·2259

el\tew Homes - ex·
tensive remodeling
• Electrical work
• Roofing work
12 years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583
223·lmo

chquard 992 6309 or 742·
2211

Interior or exterior
992·6190or949
2614. pa in·

$29,500.00.
REALTOR
Henry E. Cltllnd, Jr.

GRA'o'El.Y - Wtl~

• Small Citrpenter Jobs
Darrell Brewer

- ·

CONSTRUCTION

Gene's Carpet Cleaning,
deep stream extraction.
Free
estimated,
reasonable rates, scot·

45

and a water softener .

GRAVEL¥ TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE

"Specializing In
Re-ROOfing"

Utility Buildings

ROUSH

Home
Improvements

W1ll do carpenter work and

5621 .

home with 3 bedrooms,
room,

3 11 tic

nclmg tratlon Puth &amp; ull· pro

!'.1, ~

Rt. 3, Box 54
RICine,Ot\,
Ph · 61 • •8"•J~ 2591

conditioning,

Three room and bath apar
tment in Pomeroy 992

llcres and ll 1'12 story
family

No Sunday Calls

tfc

· ROOFING

SMALL

P&amp;s BUILDINGS

WILL DO ALL kinds of car·

~

range and carpeting .
Electric
baseboard
heal . $24,000 00.
AT THE EDGE OF
TOWN - Approx. 6

"Beautiful, Custom
Built Garages"
Call tor free stding
estimates, 949· 2801 or

etc.,
very nice
$1500.00.
Glen Bissell
al 949·2801
or 11-~======6=15:c:1f:c::!+=====~2:2:6:·:1:m:o=+=========~
949·2860

81

at 992 7787.

with

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Apartment

Unfurntshed one bedroom
apartment for rent . Ren·
ters asslstllnce available
for sen1or cit1zens contact
V1llage Manor Apartments

HOW ABOUT A 9'12'!o
LOAN? This ranch style

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

949-2860.

2 8

Sizes from .. X6 to 12x40

. _.._ . ~ ,I

$100. 985·4351.

3 AND 4 RM furniShed ap
Is Phone 992 ·5434 .

ca ll

•

Autos for SAle

wagon ,

for Rent

lime 10b I GOOd pay, good

U - l.tnttock
u - Hey &amp; Grtm
u - Steel &amp; Ftr!illltf'

Jl - Homtt lor Seltt

11
1976

'-"

S!F''IEBS

llhe West VIrginia National
Guard is no ordinary part

7 lie

Si1es
"From 30X30"

Mobile Homes
for Rent

44

Call 742-3195
or 992-7680

Int . tractor, 986 . ""'30.C·675

992·3324.

school diploma
graduate. you may qualify

,J- Trucktlor hte

·•REAL ESTATE

auger; 1

72
Trucks tor Sale
2 bedroom Mobile Home 1979 DODGE 050, l1ke new
Adults only .
Brown ' s cond. $4,600 . 992·2882

Gonoro1

12 Park St.
Middleport, Oh.
Ph. 992-6263
Anytime
3 2·1 mo.

For all of your wiring needs.

99H21S or 992-7314

....... .····-· ......

without ground 843 2791

Velma Nlcinslcy, Assoc.

Mlu.ER ELECTRIC
SERVICE

992-5682

Farm_Buildings

-~·

S room house &amp; bath on
good rollds with ground or

Cheryl Lemley, Auoc.
Phone 7o2·l171

215·1mo.

V.C. YOUNG II

month with SSO 00 deposit .
Located on Nye Ave. Call 1978 FORD Fiesta. Front
367-7811
wheel drive 35m p.g Good
cond. 992 5170.

on front street. Owner
will ftnance at 10% .
Give us a cafl. We have
several L~nd Contract
properties.

Pomeroy ,Oh . 45169
Domest1c, Japanese &amp; ·
European
Cars &amp;
Trucks.

remodeling
-Roofing and gutter
work
-Concrete wortt
-Plumbing and
electrical work
(Free Estlmt_tes)

2245

Six room house and bath
Wtth ut ility room . Ctty
wllter and gas $150 .00 per

Ing Ul ,000.00
LAND CONTRACT Large two story home

Free Estimates
Call992-l421

- Addonsand

~U~h~~ ~~~ur~a~~rg~~6~:

Houses tor Rent

41

c911ege tu111on1 If you are

" - F•rm IIIU•Itmtnl
n - W•ntttl to luv

IUt!nfU
OpporluntiW
11 - Monev to lotn
2l - Proltttl()ntl
S.rvo( tl

D1sc ; fert

3

bedroom, living room,
dlning kitchen comb.,
bath,utility, carport on
laqrge corner lot Ask -

&amp;

1&lt;1ngsbury Rd., 2 m1 .

snap on 15.5•38 dual tires.

homes and 10 acres for

$87,500.00.
NEW HOME

p1nstnp10g

vinyl tops.

"YOUNGS
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

" T• •

'

Expert painting, body

work,

61
Farm Equipment
~=========~-;:==::::===~:;;;:=:;!lr=========,
Kuker 400 gal. spray; lnt lhlr--------~
~
THE
540, 4•16'' plows ; M.F. 13.5'
ALL STEEL
1 )J~

Housing
HeadquartPr&lt;:

large workshop. Asking
S-16,500.00. Or buy both

......

Body Repair - Insurance

Pomeroy, Oh.

&amp; pad, on Rt. 124 West
Asking just $6,500 .
WANT TO KNOW THE
VALUE OF YOUR
PROPERTY? ASKING
FOR AN APPRAISAL.
WANT TO SELL? ASK
US. CALL 992-:1176.

bath, central air, ullllly .
Ask ing $49,500. Also, ap·

..1

Trailer Court, MinersV"il le

eFARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

e FINANCIAL

-.. •

OtJ. tf c
29

KAUFF'S
PWMBING
AND
HEAnNG

work · Collision Repatr.

Hrs .. Mon.· Fn .

10

-··· .. --··· .... . . .

AI most level Plf-1 acres of
land, drilled well, Oh to
Power, utility building

acres with lovely home,
1,487 sq . ft. comfortable
living, 3 bedroom, 111.
acres

call992·7471

YOU Will like.
TRAILER LOT

ACREAGE - Appro• . 6

4

Two
At&lt;C
reg1stered
cocker spaniel puppies.
Black females Alter 6 p.m.

H&amp;R BODY SHOP

west Co. Rd. 18.

9 A.M .·S: 30 P.M.

51
Pets for Sale
Come get a beautiful puppy

within one mile . Good
fences and several
buildings
Bedford
Township

Rutlan~.

Let George Miller check
your present electrical
system.
Residential
&amp; Commerc1al

Pomeroy

from
your
Humane
Society All SIZeS, labs,
collies, poodles, setters
looking for homes. 992 -6260.

Avattabte

LEO MORRIS
Rl 1 Side H1ll Rd.

2 19·tfc

992· 2181

E. Mcun 51.

'

All Models

KEN SOLES
245-9113

POMEROY

l ••

HJ S0"-2o-JO'H.P.
60"-25-60 H. P.
60"-45-80 H. P -

Free .Estimates

~LANDMARK

ACRES
ALL
MINERALS - Leased
with good wells drilled

GeorgeS . Hobstetter Jr.
Broker

beautiful

I.'Ji!,.._

-

~

OFFICE 742·2003

prox.

LAND

Good location for hunting cabin with 14 acres.
Lots of game and as
close to Forked Run
Lake as posstble .

bedrooms, new carpet 1976
Cameron, 12 x 60, two

HOBST£ITER REALTY

home . 7:30a.m. 6 p m Call
atler 6:30, 992 6233.

U - An11quu
U - Mitc Mtrch•ndilt
U - luiiCIIng Supphtt
U - Pett for hit

14 - IUiti'IUI Tre1n1nf
U - Schoolslnslruchon
It Atd tG, TY
&amp; Cl 1t1~1r
11-W•nttd To Do

rill

It------~~~~~~~~~~-------

1n Pomeroy with V'iew of
the river Has all city

some part t ime tobs 1n Pt
Pleasant come with a
Sl ,SOO bonus ! Plus free

I uti wortl OYtr '"' mlnlm11m IJ wttcll 11 • un11 " ' wwl,.r uv
Adt rwnn•nt oUter lhtn cansecutlvt
'llri'IIIIM cttirtH "'tiM 1

Mali ThiS Coupon with Rem1ttance
The Daily Sentinel
Bo~ 729

Beautiful three bedroom
ranch br ick home tn Baum
Addition, Pomeroy, Ohto.
Gas heat, central air. Cllll

good gravel road .
949·2589

Only $18,500.
NICE \/lEW - 9 acres

1973 Crown Haven, 1.. x 65,
three bedlooms. new car-

Pleasant, WV Phone 675
4424

Homes for Sale

t1c , 3 room basement

Mobile Hom as
for Sale

32

DENNEY
CHAIN LINK
FENCE
.

-Auto and Truck
Repair
- Transm iss1on
Repair

nace, wood cabinets .n
kitchen, and garage

Babysitter wanted in my

eMERCHANDISE

11-

4 . _ _ _ _ _ __

5858.

Caro l Day. 518 489 8395

si - HCM.Itttlollf Gooctt

tJ- Inturenu

24.
25 ~-----_ _ _ _ _ __

Wanted to Do

Parties now in our 26th
year, 15 expanding and has
openings for managers &amp;
dealers Party Plan ex·
perience helpful Guaran
teed toys and gifts No cash
investment. no coilectmg,
deli~o~ering . Car &amp; phone
Cali collect,
necessary

eRENTALS

l - Announcemtnh
4- 0t••••••
, _ Htppy ,t,ll\
• - loltud Found
1- YerdS.IIt

Htlp wentfd
11 - Situtltd Wtnttd

3------

room house on level lot

~lgh

2- tn ,_,tmor••m

1t_

2.

bedroom home on S.R. 7
nellr Memory Gardens 2'h
acres. Terms. 992· 77-41.

~

t;=::;========:t;===~:;::::===::;t====::::::::;==~

ROGER HYSEll'S
GARAGE

Phone
1- ( 614) -9'~-3325
'
NEW LISTING
- 6

3

pet 1971 Cameron, u x 64,
two bedrooms~ new carpet.
1972 Champion, 12 • 60, two

Furnace repairs, !lectrical
work, plumb ing, mobtle
home or residence. 992·

11

sett1ng,

E. svcond Street

age 17 or older, a junior or
senior in high schooL or a

e EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

19 _
-20
______
21 _ _ _ _ __
n _ _ _ _ _ __
23. _ _ _ _ _ __

celled?
L6st
your
operator's license? Phone

FRIENDLY HOME Toy

a.m .

U - HttUUI

Corn. '1'12-7625.

Bath, nat . gas F .A fur

IN
can·

2755

3440. Sal March 21sl. 10

1- Ctrf ot Ther~ltl

Misc. Merch~nlse

-w:~~~L~.~~t
Ji
I ~16

Insurance

13

AUTOMOBILE
SU RANCE been

Avon Call 742·235-t or 742

equ1pment auctton, Sat.,
March 21st. at Siders
Equtpment Co , on U 5
Hwy
35 ,
Henderson ,
W VA , call for defa•ls 675

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

9- WIIntedl o Buy

17. _ _ _ _ _ __
18. _ _ _ _ __

PRIVATE

WANTED : 3 people to sell

AUCTION · Large farm

or Write Daily Sentinel Cla"ssilied Dept.
111 Court St., PomerO'f, 0 ., 45769

1- Pobloc ,tilt
&amp; Authon

Wanted
For Sate
Announ ce ment
For Ren t

siding and pamllno. 992·
2759 .

6&lt;19· 4.535.

Public Sale
&amp; AUCtiOn

PHONE 992-2156

e ANNOUNCEMENTS

below

1.12 acres . SS2 ,500. 1·614·
678·2513

please phone 992 39&lt;1 or

'

WANT AD INFORMATION

Address _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

These cash rates
mclude discount

MALE 8 month old Blue
Tick Lost VICin iTy Gold
Ridge, 681 west Anyone
flnd.ng phone 992·63"1
8

We w1sh to express our
stncere apprectatlon to
all of you who prayed
for us during this ttme of
grief . Thank you for
showtng to us your love
and concern.

Nama----------

Prmt one word in each
space below Each in·
1tia 1 or group of figures
cou nts as a word Count
nam e and address or
phone number 1f used
You ' ll get better results
1f you descnbe fully ,
g1ve pr ice The Sent1ne1
reserves the right to
c1ass1fy , ed1t or re rec t
any ad Your ad wilt be
put 1n the proper
clastf1 ca f10n 1f you 'l l
c heck the proper bo)(

Attractive part t1me work
for
well
gro omed
homemakers who love
pretty fashions and want to
keep up on curreflt styles
Average SIO.OO per hour
plus free wardrobe for
those
wh o qualify
Management opportunity
open For free infomation

,- -Lost and Found

FROM THE

workshop, full basement .

Repair or remodeling
work . Floors, doors, wall
panel1ng, ceiling tile,

ARD
r
AVA TORS ••

Trash Pickup In
The Village of
Middleport, Oh,
Ph. 992-5016
or 992-7505
3 11 I mo .

ween old Rt. 33 and new Rt.

PLY : Circle Sales, PO Pomeroy. 992 7001
Bo• 224·0 , Richmond H1ll ,
NY 11418
65 acre farm , 6 room house,

2583.

~ '

hall of ground located bet

992·2571 or 1-687·6429.

S185 00 to S.SOO weekly doing
mailing work . No ex
penence requ ired
AP

card of Tha'nks

Write your own ad and order by mad w1th this
coupon Cancel your ad by phone w1 1en you get
results. Money not refundab le.

I
I

Help Wanted .
GET VALUABLE lralmng
as a young business person
11

Decorated cakes for all oc
cass1ons Character cakes,
sheet cakes. and weddmg
ca kes Call 992 6342 or 992·

1981 at 10 :00 A M a pub lic

Curb Inflation.
Pay Cash for
Classlfleds and
Savell I

I
I

Serv•ce ,

T1red of penny ptnching??
Housewives and mothers,
change spare time 1nto S$SS
Flexible hours, excellent
earnings, free wardrobe
Two eventngs a week For
more Information call 992

. ............
.....,. ... .......
.... . .

Acreage: One acre and one

18

882·2079

NOtiCe IS hereby QIVen
that on Fnday , March 27,

54

992·2143.

Master Keymg, Com
binat tons, Bonded . Call .
New Haven , w va (30.4 f

-- ---------,-·-----------~

municipal·servlce issues," James

992 6370.

2360 or 992·2639, Histories
for
sale
Pomero y
Middleport Libraries .

NOTICE OF
PUBLIC SALE

Sealed btds Will be
recei ved bY the Board of
Me 19s
County
Com ·
m 1SS1oners at the County
CommissiOners
Off1ce ,
located in the Court House,
tn the V111age of Pomeroy ,

sities would be required to create an
office on small governments adnumstration as part of an academic
department designated by each institution's president.
The offices would be required,
among other things, to g1ve university students and faculty educational
opportunities relating to the
development, administration and
evaluation of public services and
programs.
Each of the university presidents
would also appoint a 13-member advisory committee for the new office.
The comm1ttee, composed pnmarily
of local government officials, would
assist the offices in identifying
problems and needs of small governments
As originally drafted, the bill
carried an appropriation to the
board of regents of $510,000 to ~up­
port the new offices during the next
two years. But James concedes the
chances of findmg that much money
in view of the state's current financial straits are " pretty slim."

Now buymg gold and
silver, old pocket watches,
chains. diamonds, silver
money and co1ns . Martin' s
General Store, M iddleport.

appointment January·Mar

Public Notice

NOTICE TO
AGGREGATE
1/ENDORS :

costs on soaring expenses for nursing home and hospital care.
In 1975, nursing home payments
amounted to $112.8 million and
hospital payments at $139.5 nullion.
But by 1980, nursing home costs
were $268.9 million and hospitals
$255.3 nuliion, 80 percent of the total
medicaid benfits paid.
In 1975, 1156,268 Ohioans received
$253 million worth of food stamps.
That was an average of $24.62 a month for each recipient. By 1980, the
number of recipients decreased . to
826,122, but benefits climbed to
$359.2 nulhon, an average of $36.3a
for each person.
In the last decade, Aid to Dependent Children benefits increased
from $130.8 miliion to $521.9 million.

992-6370

ch. 992·2264, 992·2802, 992·

LOCKSMITH

guns, pocket watches and
Lots &amp; Acreage
coin collections. Call 614·
TRAILER LOT for sale, 767 ·3167 or 557·3411 .
$.1,000.00. 992 2571.
35

New, used, and antique furn iture No item to large or
to small. Wtll buy one piece
or complete households .
Martin 's General Store at

3941 or 669·ol.l35

Public Notice

Sunday In Hinckley. Till' JacksoDI and huodreds of others made the altoual "pUgrlmage to the small Ohio Iowa to awatl the large black birds'
return every March 15. (AP La8erpholo).

Too

MEIGS MUSEUM·open by

t3l 16, 23, 2tc

ME IGS COUNTY
COMMISSIONERS
MARY HOBSTETTER ,
CLERK
(3 ) 2, 9 , 16, 23, 4IC

SCANNING 'niE SKIES- Daa Jacboo of Columbo• holds a pair of
~ blooculani for his son, Erie, as" the youogster attempts lo spot a buzzard

PIANO

Ra ci ne Volunteer Fire
Department sponsors a
shot gun &amp; rifle match
every Sat . night 6 30 p m.
at their butlding In Ba shiln
Fac1ory choke 12 guage
shot guns only, Open Sights
22 rifle

Mary Hobstetter,
Clerk
Meigs County
Board of
Commissioners

menctng on the f trst day of
April, 1981 Awards of IN
TERIM deposits of Public
Money will be made March
24, 1981 , for a pertod of time
provided by the County
Treasurer commenc1ng on
the first day of Apri I. 1981.
AppllcattOns should be
sealed and endorsed " Ap
pl tc atton
under
the
Uniform Deposttory Act "

SHOOT,

2082.

5 - On the envelope con·
ta1ning the bid, the name
and address of the vendOr
must be shown and plainly
marked "Aggregate Bids'
6 - Proposals are to be
returned on bid forms sup
plies by the vendor, and
will be opened on the dl!lte
and place spec1f1ed abOve.
7 - The Meigs County
CommiSSioners reserve the
rtght to accept or reject
any or all bids and / or any
part thereof

the 24th day of March, 1981,
and that nottce to all Banks

GUN

valuable to neglect , expert
tun1ng &amp; and repa1r Lane
Dan1els, 742 2951 or ~2

b1d year .

received until 12 noon on

YEARS,

RACINE

Rac1ne Gun Club, every
Friday · n 1ghf starttng at
7:30 p.m. Factory choke
guns only

4 All bidders. must
agree to furnish any
aggregate materials as
requested in Item 1, at the
same price to all townships
of Metgs County during the

($2,500 ,000 00).
BE
IT
FURTHE
RESOLVED. thai b1dS be

highest prices

J&amp;C
SANITAnON
SERVICE

53
Antiques
ATTENTION :
( IM·
PORTANT TO YOU! Will
pay cash or certified check

&amp;

Contact Ed Burket! Barber
Shop, Middleport

fromAprill , 198lloAprlll,
1982.

F1ve Hundred Thousand,

of TWO

possible for gold and silver
coins, rings, jewelry, etc.

..

"' " 4·
,.
···· · ~··

33 facing the Meigs Massey-Ferguson 8 h p.
Fairgrounds. $4000.00. 992·
riding tractor
mower,
electric
slart.with
ssoo.
992·
2571 .
CHIP WOOD. Poles rna• . 3 lh
7663
diameter 14'' on largest
end. $12.SO per ton. Bundled
SEVERAL chol,ce building
slab. SI0.50 per ton .
lots, Eastern Dlstrict,Tup· FIREWOOD. $30. load.
Delivered to Ohio Pallet
e~ .. .., • .pers Plains-Chester water . Split &amp; delivered . 992·5248
Co., Rock Springs Rd .,
OWner will help finance .
ALL STEEL clear·span
Pomeroy 992·2~.
t;=~~:;;~~~:;.;=::-r.;;==~~~;.:;,;::;:=19_9_2_·5_9
86 ______
buildings! 24'x44'x10' for
12 Situations Wantod
31
Homes lor Sale
$2,995 .; 30'x48'x12' for
IRON AND BRASS BEDS ·
Rut Estote- Generol
$3,992 . 40'•72 'x l4' lor
Old furniture, desks, gold
5 year old ranch style
$6,339 ., 48'x96'x14' for
r ings , ,ewelry, sliver Will care for the elderly In home, 3 bedrooms, equip$8,881. Call collect today 1·
Housing
dollars, sterling, etc Wood our home. Women, men, or ped
kitcheh , garage,
614-294·2675til8 p.m
ice bmces, jars, anttques, couples. Trained and e)(· basement, large lot Price
negotiable . 992·7841
etc complete households . per lenced '1'12-7314
Headquarters
Write : M.D. M1ller, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, OH 45769. Or Have vacancy for elderly. Rose Hill, attractive SIX
Room lind board, laundry, room house with a
ca ll992·7760.
5HP
Reasonable. 992·6022.
detached
garage,
TILLER

Announcem ents

I PAY

o.f

estimated quan·
tit1es, the vendors shall un·
derstand that no guarantee
1S ~iven to the actual quan
tit•es of aggregates to be
furnished, but each vendor
shall be r equ~red to furnish
any part of the actual
requirements, as ordered
during the btd year .
3 - Pr tc es on this bid
shall be firm and In effect

Revised Code of Oh to
Said application shall be

be

aggregates that may be
required, whi.ch will conform to the pertinent State
of Ohio Department of
Highways Construction
and
Materials
Specifications, excepting
pea or shot gra\lel , wh1ch is
an ungraded material.

sizes

aforesllid ~

Secfton 135 01 et seq . of the

down low near to the ground. and
everyone could get a good look "
Gobel said the buzzard-sighting
tally for the day came to 169, a figure
he said could reflect several
sightings of the same buzzards, but a
taiiy he called "above the
average.'',

3

2 - With respect to the

Uniform Oeposttorv Act,

following

f.o.b . loaded at the ven·
dar's plant for the various

Business Services

for antiques and collec·
t1bles or entire estates.
Nothing too large. Also,

Wanted to Buy : class rings,

CommiSSIOners

(3) 16, 23, 2tc

and

HarrisonVIlle fild.

wedding bands, anyth•ng
stamped, IOK, 14K, or 18K
gold Silver coins, pocket
watches. Call Joe Clark at
992·2054 at Clark's Jewelry
Store, Pomeroy, Ohio ol.l769

pr~~fTcW:~:&gt;tlo~f~oR

kinds

al 2:30 PM on March 24,

necessary

Rep. Ronald H. James, !).
Proctorville, said the govennent administration measure he is sponsoring would require the new univerSity offices to aid cities with less
than 80,000 population, counties with
Jess than 250,000 and townships.
"Local governments, especially
small rural governments, always
have a problem dealing with water,
sewer, financial and other

1971 Hillcrest Mobil e
Hqme . 1St troller on

Athens, OH 594 4221

Board of

....... .

11/J acre ground $11 ,000.

742·2208.

Treasure Chest Coin Shop,

Mary Hobstetter ,
Clerk
Meigs County

46
Sp1ce for Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy. Large lots. Coli
992-7479.

1973 House tra iler, 12X60

silver. Call J. A. Wamsley,

THE BIDS AS FOLLOWS:
1 - Bid price per ton

Ohto, until 12 noon on the
24th day of March, 1981 ,
and opened and read aloud

the

I

]2

1969 PMC 3 bedroom
trailer. 12X6&lt;l. 992·3954.

ches, class rings, wedding
bands, d ia monds. Gold or

1 - The Me,gs ·c·ountv
Commissioners reserve the ~
right to acc:ept or reject
any or all b ids or any part
thereof

be required by the Meigs

publication as provtded by
law . Said Board of County

ds, children's welfare, soc1al serVICes, emergency assistance and adrrunistratlve costs.
Welfare cost each Ohio resident
$28.50 m taxes in 1970, $120.37 in 1975
and$175.92 m 1\1110.
The b1ggest increase occurred in
Medicaid costs, with expenses more
than doubling while those receiving
assistance decreased, according to
welfare department spokesman
Jerry Collamore.
In 1975, 6&amp;1,000 Ohioans received
Medicaid benefits of about $359
milliOn, or $45.06 monthly on
average. By 1980, recipients had
declined to 648,342, but benefits had
more than doubled to $751.2 million
That's an average ofloo.50.
Coliamore blamed the h1gher

WANTED TO BUY ·
SILVER ,
GOLD,
PLATINUM, STERLING·
COINS, RINGS,JEWELR ·
Y, MISC . ITEMS. AB·
SOLUTE
MARKET
PRICE GUARANTED. ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP, M IDDLEPORT,
OHI0992·3476.

PubliC NoftCI

County Highway Department .
Estimated quanttties of
all a~gregllte r~ired , ap-

recetved by the understgned at the off ice of

Cities could tap universities
for problem-solving assistance
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Officials in Ohio's small cities and
counties would be able to tap state
universities for problem-solving
help if a bill now in the House
becomes law.
II would establish an Office of
Small Government Administration
at Bowling Green, Kent State,
Miami and Ohio universities to give
technical assistance on public services and programs to small government units.
Members of the House Local
Government Committee are to
examine the bill at a hearing
Tuesday as legislators begin a week
of hearings on a variety ri
measures.
Representatives are scheduled to
hold floor sessiono Tuesday and
Wednesday; temporarily discontinuing Thursday sessions to give
the finance conunittee more time to
work on the fiscal year 1982 state
budget. No Seoate floor sessions are
scheduled, although some upper
chamber committees are to meet.
'-

Public Notice

Public Notice

Ohio welfare costs jump sixfold
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Percapita welfare costs m Ohio jumped
six-fold while the benefits for some
Buckeye weHare recipients increased more than the cost of living
during the 1970s.
Figures provided by the Ohio
Department of Public Welfare to the
Columbus Dispatch show the cost of
all welfare programs, including administration, increased from $3(MI
million in fiscal 1970 to $1.9 billion in
fiscal1900. During the decade, Aid to
Dependent Children recipients saw
benefits jump 137 percent while their
cost of livmg increased 116 percent.
The statistics reflect money spent
for the three largest areas - Aid to
Dependent Children, Medicaid and
food stamps, plus general relief fun-

by Larry Wright

OLD COl NS, pocket wat·

30,000 people see buzzards return
HINCKLEY, Ohio (AP) - Buzzards, their wings cutting V-shapes
in the sky, swooped through the Hmckley Metropark Reservation to the
delight of hundreds of avid "Buzzard
Day'' enthusiasts
The black, long-necked carnon
eaters associated with death are the
harbingers of spring in Hinckley, 25
miles south of Cleveland.
Their appearance Sunday marked
their traditional March 15 migratory
return to Hinckley, a small northeastern Ohio community which
cashes in on an Influx of curious
tourists each year.
About 3,000 VISitors took part m a
traditional pancake breakfast at
Hinckley Elementary School, where
the Hinckley Chamber of Commerce
presented "Geek," a captive buzzard, or turkey vulture.
A few miles away at the park, a
crowd of 30,000 came to watch the
buzzards. Many buzzard watchers
gathered in a woods known as "The
Buzzard Roost," where park
naturalists kept a tally of buzzard
sighllngs.
Last year, the first buzzard wasn't
seen untU 3:28 p.m. But with the
wann, sunny weather prevailing for
buzzard day 1981 - the temperature
m the mid-50s - far more buzzards
than usual were spotted.
"When we came out here at 8:30
this morning, there they were in that
tree over there - two of them," sa1d
Karl Smith, a park naturalist.
By I p.m. Sunday, slightly
dismayed buzzard watchers had
recorded just six buzzards. The most
buzzards seen together were two.

..
KIT 'N' CARLYLE '"

Farmers may be able
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Agriculture Department is telling
fanners they still may be able to
reduce federal taxes on 1980 incomes
and should begin now to take advantage of some of the tax-savmg
options for 1981.
"Asswning that your final filing
date is Apnl 15 or later, you still
have time to save 1980 taxes through
several means you may have
overlooked," says a newsletter
bemg distributed by the department's Economics and Statistics
Service.
Those include: retirement plan
contributions, the standard mileage
deduction, excise tax credits for
fann fuels and lubricating oil and a
new credit for use of alcohol
straight or in mixture- as fuel.
Some specific tips include:
Retirement plans
"You can still set up an individual
retirement arrangement (IRA) for

, March 16, It 1

Mond

Pa -1o-The Daily Sentinel

82

13

Scissors

vice for Racine -Syracuse
sewer dtstrlct . Dozer work

If needed. 949·2293.

Tues. ·Fri.·Sat.

10 :00-5:00
Closed nwrsdays
Stop 1n and see our line
of plastercraft. You Cilln
en.ov maktnq vour aifts
and help light intlittion
Located next to Dale
Hill Ford Tractor m
Pomeroy

2 23 1 mo

E )(CiYiting

and Service . We sharpen

Excavating
COMPLETE sever In
stallatton &amp;. backhoe ser·

Mon.·Wed. 10:00·9:00

1 2Hic

Plumbing
Dozer work . Small jobs a
&amp; Heating
specialty 742·2753.
WATER
WELLS .
Domesti c and commercial,
Electrical
pump sales and service. M
&amp;
Refrigeration
Tom Lewis Drilling.
Seasonal discount on pum· SEWING
MACHINE
ps. 1·304-895 3802 or 1 304· Repairs, service, ell
895·3641 '
mokosl 992 ·2284. 1 The
Fabr ic Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales

ll

NOW OPEN

ELWOOD
REPAIR

BOWERS
sweepers,

SALE
20%-30% OFF
AU CAl£

DECORATING
SUPPUES

ANN'S CAKE
DECORATING
SUAPLIES

Osborn Rd .
Reedsville, 011.
3·16·1 mo.

toasters, irons, all small

appliances. Lawn mower.
Ne•l to State Highway
Garage on Route 7, 98.5·
3825.

t-

'
':....L. _....___.__.
'
SilTIS~Y YOI/R NU /JS

'·

'

,,

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-12-The Dail sentinel

I

--··

Mrs. Charles Lavender Orville Lee Jarrell

Peggy L. Hoffman
Peggy L. Hoffman, 53, Route 3,
Pomeroy , died Saturday at
Charleston General Hospital in
Charleston, W. Va.
Mrs. Hoffman was born July 28,
1925 at West Colwnbia, W. Va ., a
daughter of the late Jessie Coleman.
She was also preceded in death by a
half brother, Orville Coleman.
Surviving are her husband, Uoyd
H. Hoffman; her mother, Mrs. Emma Jones Coleman Green, Thurston; a daUghter and son-in-Jaw,
Carolyn and Keith Searls, Route 1,
Middleport; a son and daughter-inlaw, Ray Lee and Elizbeth Coleman,
Louisville, Ky.; two sisters, Mrs .
William '(Bessie) Mattox, West
Colwnbia; Mrs. Harold (Dorothy)
Thomas, Point Pleasant; two
brothers, Jessie Coleman, Bremen,
and Charles Edward Coleman,
Thurston; four grandchildren, Amy
Searls, Route I Middleport, and Til- .
!any, Tara and Trenton Coleman,
Louisville, and several nieces and
nephews.
Mrs . Hoffman attended the
Apostolic Church of Jesus Christ.
Funeral services will be held at 2
p.m. Wednesday at the RawlingsCoats-Blower Funeral Home with
the Rev. Emmett Rawson of·
ficiating . Burial will be in the
Chester Cemetery. Friends may
call at the funeral home from 7 to 9
this evening and from 2 to 9 p.m.
Tuesday.

"""'''

Five people hurt in weekend wrecks

Area deaths

Mr.and Mrs. C. E. Blakeslee,
Pomeroy, were called to Newberry,
Mich., by the death of their sister-inlaw, Mrs. Charles Lavender.
Funeral services will be held Wednesday at Newberry.

''" ~

Orville Lee Jarrell, 51, Route 2,
Racine, died Saturday at St. Joseph
Hospital in Parkersburg, W. Va .
Mr. .Jarrell was preceded in death
by his father, Corie Jarrell; a
daughter, Kim, and a brother, Troy.
Surviving are ·his wife, Jessie; two
daughters, Susie Pierce, Letart
Falls, and Norma Mills, Racine ;
four grandsons ; his mother, Marie
Coleman, Hernshaw, W. Va., three
brothers, Harold, ?renter, W. Va.;
Homer, Hernshaw, W. Va., and
James of Charleston, W. Va.; two
sisters, Betty Bowman, Horse
Creek, W. Va., and Joy Clendenin,
Rock Creek, W.Va.
Mr. Jarrell was employed by the
Pfaff.Smith Sand ;md Gravel Co. at
Apple Grove . He had served in the
U. S. Navy.
Funeral services will be held at I
p.m. Tuesday at the Ewing Funeral
Home with the Rev. David Harris officiating . Burial will be in the Letart
Falls Cemetery. Friends may call at
the funeral hon1e·anyfime.

Harold E. Swartz

Harold E. (Gene) Swartz, 60,
Beech St. , Middleport, died Saturday at the Holzer Medical Center
following a lingering illness.
He was born Feb. 18, 1921, at
Ohley, w.· Va .. a son of the late
Ruben C. and Cecil Gertrude Wartenbee Swartz. He was a member of
the Ash St. Freewill Baptist Church
in Middleport and had served as a
deacon at several churches over the ·
past 24 years. He was a retired employee of the Purolator Courier Co.
in Colwnbus.
Mr.Swartz was a veteran of World
War li having served in the U.S. Army . Besides his parents, he was
preceded in death by two brothers,
Mason and John Swartz and a sister,
Lucy Davis
(Continued from page I )
Surviving are his wife, Gertrude
berland and pasture fields , were lost M. (Trudy l, Middleport ; two
to the fire. Approximately 70
daughters and soos-in-laws, Joyce
firefighters battled the blaze to Marie and William McCool, Ketbring it under control.
tering; Sandra Edith and William
Racine had four trucks at the Darling, OStrander; two sons and
scene, Pomeroy two trucks,
daughters-in-law, .Roger E . and
Syracuse two trucks, and Bashan
Marlene Swartz, Pomeroy, and
two. The units left the scene at 5:30,
Jerry David and Cathy Swartz, Midnearly four and one half hours after
die port; Mrs.
nine Norma
grandchildren,
five
sisters,
Wilson, Mrs.
the call.
At 3 :3!i P .M. several firefighters of Elmo Lewis, Mrs. Ethel Roessler,
the Racine Unit were called from the
all of Pomeroy; Mrs. Merle Manley,
brush fire to.the Dave Crow residen- Middleport; Mrs. Pearlene Bradce for a house fire .
shaw, Goshen, Ind. ; three brothers,
Upon arrival no fire was present Ted, Letart. W. Va.; Millard of
Pomeroy and James of Colfwnbus.
although there was much smoke
Also surviving are several aunts, unwithin the structure. Electrical
wiring was determined as the cause.
cles, nieces and nephews.
Syracuse followed as a back-up
Funeral services will be hl!id at 2
unit to the scene. 3trucks and 10 men p.m. Tuesday at the Ash St. Freewill
responded, then returned to the
Baptist Church with the Rev. Noel
brush fire.
Herrmann and the Rev. Ralph ButSunday, at 6:45 P.M. the Racine cher officiating. Burial will be in the
Fire Department answered a call to Gravel Hili Cemetery at Cheshire.
a brush fire on County Road 31 on the Friends may call at the RawlingsBruce Flenuning property. Four Coats-Blower Funeral Home from
Trucks and 17 men answered the 3:30 to 9 p.m . today and until12 :30
p.rn. Tuesday when the body will be
call.
The fire was brought quickly un- taken to the church.
der control and property damage
By Tbe Assodaled Press
was at a minimum. Burning trash
Ohio traffic accidents over the
was determined as the cause of the
weekend killed nine persons, infire.
At 3:59 A.M. Racine answered cluding a &amp;-year-old pedestrian, the
another call for a fire I mile above Highway Patrol said.
The patrol counts weekend traffic
the Racine Locks and Dam which
proved to be a false alarm. Four deaths from 6 p.m. Friday until mid!rucks and 10 men answered the call. night Sunday.

.Grass-forest

cident, applied his brakes, lost con·
Five people were injured in tempting to turn onto CR 41 from SR
160 at 2:30 p.m. when another nor- trol aod collided with a sign.
weekend traffic accidents inOiler was not injured and his auto
vestigated by the Gallia-Meigs Post thbound vehicle driven by Clyde E.
soffered
moderate damage.
Ramey, 36, Vinton, attempted to
of the Ohio Highway Patrol.
Troopers
probed a th;ee-car acThe patrol said a Gallipolis volun- pass Fink and collided.
cident
in
Crown
City late Saturday
Moderate damage was reported to
teer fireman was among the injured
afternoon.
in a crash at the intersection of U.S. both vehicles and two passengers in
According to the report, autos
the Fink auto-Betty R. Fink, 34,
3!i and SR 160 Saturday afternoon.
driven
by William A. Biars, 23,
According to the report, Richard and Robert A. Fink, 4, both of VinGallipolis,
and Jerry A. Johnson, 37,
A. Long, 34, Bidwell, was eastbound ton-were injured and taken to
Chesapeake,
were both northbound
in an emergency vehicle at 3:50p.m. Holzer Medical Center. Betty Fink
on
SR
7
when
Biars
slowed to make a
was treated and released for head
when he failed 'to stop at the intum
onto
Gallia
Street.
right
tersection and collided with a car trauma and Robert Fink was not
Johnson
then
attempted
to pass
·
driven by Paula J. Phipps, 16, · treated.
Biars
on
the
right
and
collided
with
Ramey was also injured in the
Gallipolis.
the
Biars
vehicle
and
another
auto
Both vehicles were severely crash, but not treated, the patrol
John
V.
Moore,
21,
Crown
driven
by
damaged and the drivers injured. said.
While investigating the accident, City.
Long was taken to Holzer Medical
Moore's car was pushed into the
Center by the Gallia EMS, where he the patrol said a vehicle driven by
the report noted, and all three
curb,
Ralph K. Oiler, 29, Langsville, came
was treated and released for back
vehicles
suffered moderate damage.
over a hill on SR 160 at ·3:05 p.m.
strain.
tw....,ar
crash in Meigs County
A
when he saw the Fink-Ramey ac
Phipps was taken to HMC by the
Gallia County Sheriff's Department,
where she was treated and released
for head trawna. Long was cited for
failure to yield.
The Middleport Unit at 11:43 a.m.
The patrol investigated two acEmergency squads were busy
Sunday
took Harry Chesher to
cidents at the ·same location in over the weekend with calls, the
Veterans
Memorial and the
Gallia County Saturday afternoon.
Meigs County Emergency Medical
Pomeroy
Unit
at 10: 16 a.m. took
Robert 0. Fink, 39, Vinton, was at- Services reports.
the same
Evelyn
Hartley
to'
On Saturday at 5:38 p.m., the Midhospital.
VETERANS MEMORIAL
dleport Unit took Alva Reed, N.
AI 2: 10 p.m. the Pomeroy Unit
Saturday Admissions-Maggie Second Ave., to Veterans Memorial
look
Charles Cox from the Jones
Gilmore, Racirie; LoweU Collins,
Hospital and at 3:43a.m. the Racine
Boys
to Veterans Memorial. The
Syracuse; James Woodgeard,
Unit took Maggie Giimore to
Tuppers
Plains Unit at 5:41 p.m.
Logan; Rex Rathburn, Langsville;
Veterans Memorial. The .Racine
took
Thomas
Smith from Tuppers
Alva Reed, Middleport.
Unit at 4:48 p.m. , took Cecil
Plains
to
St.
Joseph
Hospital.
Saturday Discharges-Sarah Ran- Maynard, Jr ., to Veterans
dolph, Carol Wines, James
Memorial.
Woodgeard.
Sunday Adrnission&amp;-Evelyn Har-

was Investigated earlY Saturday
night, the patrol said.
Mary F. Halley, 32, Belpre, was
southbound on SR 124 at 8:45 p,m.
when sl]e braked for a northbound
vehicle driven by Kenneth R. Roberts, IS, Hockingport, and collided.
Moderate damage was reported
both cars and a passengers in
HaDey's car, Melissa F . Halley, was
injured, but not treated. Roberts
was cited for no operator's license.

SALE STARTS TODAY
IOOD THRU lARCH 22, 1181
While quantities las.!. Quantity rights reserved .
We ore not responsible for typogrophlcal errors.
Sorry, no dealers.

.'

Meigs emergency runs

,------------------------l

tley, Pomeroy; Harry Chesher, Middleport; Ella Roush, Letart, W.Va.
Sunday
Discharges--George
Greene, Kenneth Imboden, Curtis
Luckadoo,
Charles
Jones.

ELBERFELD$
SEE OUR NEW SELECTION

•• • e • • • • • • e e • e e e . .
:
e
:
•
Office Located On
•
Mulberry Heights
•
e
Pomeroy, Ohio
e
e
•
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•
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:
MON. &amp; TUES.
•e
ee
9
•
•
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:
WEDS.
:
e9
J 9••
:
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e

DR. NORMAN J.
EHUNGER, D.O.

OFFICE HOURS

:

••
••
•

to 11, 1 to 5, and tO
FRI.
9 to 11 and 1 to 5

PH. 992-6603

DRESS SLACKS
Polyester knit slacks in the newest
colors for Spring and Summer wear.
Featuring the new stretch fabrics
for . extra comfort . Waist sizes 29· 42 .
Choose your proper !ength.

•

to 11 and 1 to 5

•
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MEN'S

•

MEN'S KNIT SLACKS
Take time to see the new Men's Knit
Shirts- short sleeve styles- to wear
with Jeans, a clive sports and dress-up

HOLDER

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SPIIIE1111111E IIRTOI
NILSON'S IIG.

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With GrMIIII

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•Sliced he! In Grovy.
•Sollsbury Steok In Mushroom Souce.

HANG TUFF is a 4ft. heavy duty

track with 6 sliding tool holders .

YOUR
CHOICI

HANG TUFF can he mounted on

anv wall surface with screws or
anchor bolts. The track has 3/16"

ce
.--·--------•1
~aln 992-1143 Pomeroy, 0.

holes spaced 2" apart to provide
fle•ibility in mounting .

• Choice ol 3 btke styles.
' each wtth its own tnm
• Choice of 3 motocross

nders, each weanng a
dillerent ra cing outftl.
• Includes super-e1ficiefJ1
energizer and decal sheet.

CHILl

STATE
AUTOMOBILE

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COMPAN~

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SERIES ONF •uslnon Polley.

CAPTURE THE SUP!R
CHARGED EXCITEMENT
OF MOTOCROSS RACING!
DESIGNED FOR
ENDURANCE ON
ANY SURFACE

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NAME

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with mokhlng
handle

The Farmers Bank has
convenient banking
hours.

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Friday 9-3 and 5-7 (Drive In 9-7)
Saturday 9-12

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ELECTRIC ALARM
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PRIITIII CILCULITOR
•Hand held
•Duol readout
system
•Pioln paper
• LED Dlaploy

•5 Function
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Switch

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ACCESSORIES

CLOTHES HAMPER
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TRill

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50 Sheets

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•Holds up to 500 of your
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small or medium · slze
retail store, office, apartment .:~r church?
Then - you may qualify
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SERIES ONE Business
PolicY ... !I modern·as·
tomorrow package plan
that combines an array of
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Let us explain the
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of
SERIES ONE ... the short
time we spend together , \
could prove interesting
and rewarding to you.
Just give us a call or
mall the handy coupon.
DALE C. WARNER
INSURANCE
Aepre;enl•ng

Nelson's March coupon book Is valid
thru April 5th'or until on hand quantities are sold. See store for details of
coupon sale.

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)

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