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                  <text>Decontrol leads to higher prices
WASHING TON IAP ) _:_ The for other petrolewn products such as stantial increases in prices of
largest gasoline price surge in more motor oil and coolant.
· household fuels were partially offset
than a year pushed the nation's cost
The largest previous price in· by a decline in house prices" caused
of living up at an annual rate of crease for gu.soline was a 7.4 percent by high mortgage interest rates.
about 12.7 percent in February, the climb posted in January 1980.
- New car costs fell about 0.1 per·
government reported today, as con·
Overall inflation had risen 0.7 per· cent, primarily due to large rebate
swners began to feel the effects of cent in January, a 9.1 percent annual programs being offered . by U.S.
President Reagan's decontrol of rate, after climbing 12.4 percent for automakers.
domestic oil prices.
aU of last year.
All the increases are adjusted for
!lor the month, prices rose at a I
The figures released today by the seasonal variations.
percent clip.
. Labor Department, show :
The LabOr Department reported
Moderate price increases for food
- Food and beverage prices rose that its Conswner Price Index rose
and housing were overwhelmed by 0.3 percent in February after to 263.2 in February, which means
tl&gt; large energy price increases, in· remaining stable in January.
that goods and services costing $10
ctuding 6.6 percent for gasoline, 7.9
- Housing costs rose 0.6 percent, in 1967 cost $26.32last month .
percent for fuel oil and 1.8 percent the Labor Department said, as "sutr
With prices going up again in

e
Vot.29,No. 2l7
Copyrighted 1981

February, the department also is still well under that for the same
reported today that inflation· two months a year ago.
adjusted, after-tax earnings of an
&lt;The conswner price index rose I .4
average wage-earner fell about 1.5 percent in each of the ·first three
percent.
months of 1980 - an annual rate of
Most of that declirle was due to more than 18 percent - before
fewer hours worked in the month ·declining to 12.4 percent for the en·
rather than a lower hourly wage oc tire year.
..
lower salaries, the report said. The
Administration officials have said
"real spendable earnings" figure is gasoline and home heating oil prices
for a married worker who has three have risen 10.12 cents since
dependents.
Reagan's order Jan . 22 lifting all
The 1 percent increase, although remaining price contols on domestic
high, was slightly less than some crude oil. They attribute at least
economists had predicted. And the part of that jump, however, to
rate for the first two months of 1981 higher prices of imported oil.

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enttne

at

2 Sections, 14 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, March 24, 1981

IS Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Church requests
tradition change

TODAY

••• IN THEW

400 overcharge cases involved
WASHINGTON - The Energy Department is trying to settle 400
cases of alleged overcharging for petrolewn products, most of them
against independent jobbers selling gasoline to dealers, for 30 cents to
50 cents on the dollar.
The defenda!tts would have to agree not to contest the charges. If so,
the government would get $100 million of the total $267 million in
alleged overcharges, from which refunds would be ma&lt;le to those who
can prov~ they paid too much.
I

Donald Ratajczak, director of
Georgia State University's
Economic Forecasting Project, said
big energy increases accounted for
about one-third of the overall price
rise In his survey for February.
Food and housing prices showed
''modest'' increases, he said.
, Meat prices continued to decline in
the month, but the Florida freeze apparently caused "a one-month surge
in prices for fruits and vegetables,"
Ratajczak said.
· Housing prices rose only
moderately, "although mortgage in(Continued on page 10)

l

'

Record gasoline supplies
WASHINGTON - U.S. gasoline supplies are again at a record, the
Energy Department reporl•. Stocks in the four·week reporting period
ended March 13 stood at 286.9 million barrels, up from 285.8 million
barrels for the period ended March 6, the previous record . That is 3
percent more gasoline on hand than at the same time last year and
should mean enough for the summer, barring interruption in foreign
oil supplies, energy officials said Monday.

Ohio will receive EPA funds

-·

· CHICAGO - The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency says Ohio
und three other states are to receive $1.3 million in gr~nts for deter·
mining the effects of toxic cheniicals.
Valdas V. Adarnkus , acting administrator of the EPA's Midwest
Region, said Monday that the $180,512 grant for Ohio will be used to
detennine if there is any relation between cancer mortality and
acrylonitrile . The chemical is used in making plastics. surface
coatings and acrylic fibers .
Illinois, Michigan and Maryland also received funding .

Will step up picketing
Leaders of 1,000 striking Youngstown teachers vowed to step up
picketing at schools today as officials readied to ' re-open classes
paralyzed by the walkout for the first lime in 2', w&lt;:eks.
School board officials urged parents to take their children to class
today. But teachers, off the job for the 23rd school day Monday in
defiance of court orders to return to work. asked parents to keep
children at horne.
Teachers' walkouts in Rav~nr-w and M~:~riemont continued Mond~:~y,
meanwhile , without talks . Classes in both districts have been conducted by non-striking teachers and sub•titutes .

Won't release lab tests

WASHINGTON (API . ~ The
governing councils of the United
Mine Workers are being asked by
the union's president to break a n&lt;r
contract, no-work tr'ition and
derail a strike by 160,000 mine1·s set
to begin Friday.
"I think it would probably be bet·
ter for us to go ahead and work,"
UMW President Sam Church said
Monday, following overnight
bargaining in which the union and
the Bitwninous Coal Operators .
Association reached a tentative contract settlement.
"I can't see really anything .
positive happening by having a
three-or four-day strike that you
really wouldn't need to have ," Chur·
ch said.
Under union rules, miners are to
walk out at 12:01 a.m. Friday
because the tentative agreement has
yet to be ratified . But Church said he
would ask the miners' bargaining
council today to skirt the UMW con·
stitution's prohibition against
working without a forrnaily signed
.contract. ·
Church and B.R. Brown, the chief
industry negotiator, jointly annoutlced Monday 's surprise accord '
after the two sides had returned to
the bargaining table at 2 a .m.. six

days after angrily hreaking off
talks.
Brown said it would be "inappropriate" to give details, but Chur·
ch said the proposed three-year contract included a 36-percent wage and
benefit package.
Church, who is negotiatin~ his fir·
st contract as UMW president, also
said the union had squelched in·
dustry efforts to open mines on Sun·
days and alter the pension plan.
Even if miners accept terms of the
agreement, a strike of three or four
days still could occur because it will
take about 10 days for the proposed
pact to be ratified.
For a walkout to be avoided, the
3!1-mernber bargaining council and
the international executive board
would have to agree to set a•ide the
n&lt;reontract, n&lt;rwork rule .
Only during World War II - when
the nation was critically in need of

coal - have union miners worked after their contract expired .
Church said he didn't know
whether the bargaining council
would agree to extending the current
pact. "f would agree togo along with
it if the rest of the bOard did and
providing the operators would say
for these four or five days
everything would be retroactive ,"
he said.

Council discusses problems
By BOB HOEFLICH
Problems dealing with drainage
and dogs were aired · when Middleport Village . Council met in
regular sesion Mo11day nlght .
Councilman Allen Lee King
brought lwth matters before council.

rnunity .

King also discusst!d seventl
drainage problems including one
near the Lowell Price property on
Vine St. Water is flowing from Ule
lulls onto the Price property. Mayor
Hoffman said that steps are being
taken in an attempt to correct the
situation but staled that he doubts if
it WJll ever be possible to confine the
flow of all of the water from the hills.
King also said a drainage problem
exists at the corner of Coal and N.
Front St., during rains. Street
workers have dug a diteh nearby
penmtting that excess water to
i Continued on page 10 I

Klng reported he is receiving com-

plaint calls as the result of dogs ap.
parenlly being turned out between 4
and 6 a .m. in the mornings. King

warned that problems will increase
as warm weather approaches . He
urged that a dog confinement law be
enforced. Mayor Fred Hoffman
replied that he will request services
of the county dog catcher in the corn-

COLUMBUS, Ohio - Mayor Torn Moody, Involved in a three-vehicle
accident late last week , says he won't approve release of laboratory
tests Ulken at University Hospitals following the crash.
' According to Moody, officials at University Hospitals collected
blood and urine specimens following Friday's accident. He was
hospitalized there briefly before going to Doctors Ho,;pilal North.
where he remained for part of the weekend .

Trust offic:er remains free

MANTRIP- A miner watts In shuttle car which wW carry blm to a
working section of New River Coal Company's Stanford mine for the
evening shill Monday. An agreement was reached yesterday mornlug In
the new United Mine Workers of America contract but 180,000 miners
may still strike when the present contract expires at midnight Thursday.
tAP Wirephoto).

Leader not sure
about approval
By The Associated Press
A United Mine Workers' Ohio
leader Said he is not sure the union's

bargaining council will approve the
contract tentatively agreed by
negotiators Munday.
The bargaining council was to
begin discussing the proposal at 10
a .II\ . today and take most of the day
to work it over.
Meanwhile, miners in Ohio waited
anxiously for the opinion of the
bargaining council.
The union and the Bitwninous
Coal Operators Association len·
tatively agreed Monday to a contract calling for wage and benefit
boosts of 36 percent over the next
three years. UMW President Sam
Church said following the pact's ten·
tative acccptanc'C that it might be
better for members not to go on
strike Friday, when the current pact
expires.
"I can 't see anything positive happening by having a four-day strike
that you really wouldn 't need to
ha ve.'' he said.

Ratification of the pact, which
Church called "decent," is expected
to take nine or 10 days. But it wasn't
known whether the 3!1-member
bargaining council would be willing
to seek an extension of the old con·
·tract during the ratification process.
Jon Prout, vice president of
District 6, said early Monday that he
had not heard much from the 42 local
presidents comprising his area.
District 6 represents 15,000 miners in
Ohio and West Virginia's panhandle.
All members of District 6 were ex·
peeled to report to work today.
Larry Vucelich, president of UMW
Local 1810, representing 715 miners
at North American Coal Co.'s No. 6
mine at Powhatan Point, said early
Monday that he heard the industry
let up on a few issues which had
bothered rank and file meljlberS. He
earlier predicted a long strike if in·
duslry negotiators won in efforts to
initiate a seven-day work week and
change the pensioo policy to
eliminate retention of benefits when
arnlner changes employers.

Fire causes heavy damages

CINCINNA Tl - A former trust officer of the Clinton County
National Bank &amp; Trust Co. remains free without bond after he was
arraigned Monday on embezzlement charges in connection with the
•loss of $101.000 atthe bank.
'
· U.S. Magistrate J . Vincent Aug Jr . released Vic Dun, 38, of
Wilmington on his own recognizance following the Cincinnati hearing .
TcrryW. Lehman, assistant U.S. attorney, said the funds were convertc'&lt;l between F'eb. 21 and AprlllO, 1980.

A two story frame home at 291
Sycamore St., Middleport, in the
pro cess of being remodeled,
sustained heavy damages in a fire at
2:54p.m. Monday.
F'ire Chief Jeff Darst said that the
fire started fr·orn a short in an electric heater being used in the horne.
The house owned by Pat Mitchell
had r·ecenlly undergone extensive
remodeling which was practically
t•ompleled .
The fire Was kept confined to two
rooms , Chief Darst said, but smoke
damage was heavy throughout tt.!

Winning Ohio lottery number
CLEVELAND - The nwnber selected Monday night in the Ohio Lot·
tery's daily game "The Number" is067.
The lottery reported earnings of 1643,503.50 from the wagering on
the drawing. Lottery officials said sales prior to the drawin~ totaied
$991,951.50, and holders of winning tickets are entitled to share
$348,448.

•

Racine man faces charge
Negligent homicide charges have
been filed in Mason County against H

Went her

RQ clne man as the resuJt of an a t"-

Mostly sunny Wednesday. Highs in the mid-50s. Clear and cool
tuni~ht. Lows 25-30. Probability of precipitation near zero percent
tonight and Wednesday . Winds northwesterly less than 10 mph tonight.
Extended Ohio ForecMRtThunday tbroqh Saturday:
Fair Thunday aDd Friday. A chance of showers wc•t Saturday.
Highs m lire 50o Thal'lday and In the 10s Friday and Saturday. J.ows
from the mld-301 lo low 4011 Thursday aDd ~'rlday and In the fils Saturday.
.j

remainder of the house. There is in·
surance coverage ,• Chief Darst
rep&lt;irts.
At 3:24 p.m. the Middleport Fire
Department went to 640 Grant St.,
where a grass fire was extinguished
and at 5:43 p.m., the ·department
went to Railroad St., where a house
owned by Bob Fife was being razed
and burned, the fire getting out of
hand .
Meanwhile, Pomeroy's fire depal'
t.ment went to Chase Road between
Darwin and Albany at 6:23 p.m.
Monday to extinguish a brush fire.

erdcnt which daimc'&lt;l the life of April
Petrsur1s, 20 1 New Haven .
Mason County sheriff 's deputies
filed U1c charges Monday against
Stephen 0 . Jenkins ; 26, Racine.
Jenkins was the driver of one
TOP LEGIONNAIRE- Paul Taylor, Sprtq Ave., lru·beea named
"Legionnaire of the Year" by Drew Webster Pool 39, American !..eglon.
l'he honor wa• bellowed becaulf ol Taylor'• all-around work In Legion
aclivllh·s.

•

vehicle in a two-t:iir accldt!nl Sun-

day. March 15, on Rt . 62, near Point
Poeasant. The driver of the other
vehicle. April Parsons, 20, New

·~

Haven, died Thursday morning in
St. Mary's Hospital, Huntington,
from injuries sustained in the accident.
•
A passenger in the Parsons
vehicle. Jenny James, 20 , New
Haven, was injured in the aecident ,
as well as Jenkins . Both .have been
released from the hospital.
Charges to be filed have not yet
been disclosed by the sheriff's
department.

�f
0

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Commentary

The Daih Sentinel
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l'umt nl\ hhw

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ItU II I"CI I H~. IN I EH~ :-;T t!J THt- 'It-

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ROBERT L. WIN(;ETI
Pi\ T WHITEHEAD

ROB HOEFliCH

fees have gone up by 205 percent and
the cost of a hosp1tal room has
soared by 444 percent. :ren years ago
the natwn's outlay for health care
was estimated at $74.7 b1lhon. Now
1t's placed at $245 billion.
No disagreement here. Then we
rude off m different directions My
able and d1stmguished OpR&lt;ment had
no explanatiOn for these mcreases,
though the explanations are not hard
to hnd Hospitals must mamtam a
staff or nurses, orderlies, cooks, interns, residents and technicians 24
hours a day , seven days a week. Fifteen years ago these staff salaries
ere deplorable; they 're mucti better
now, though nurses still are jn
desperately shurt supply .
There have been other reasons for
1 ncn~ases in hospital costs. Hospitals
are the most regulated InstitutiOns
111 the nation - more regulated than
atom1c energy. or steel. or the stock
market A 1978 study of New York
hospitals found 164 separate agenl'les of government mvolved tn their
operatwns. their cost of f11ling out
fonns and reports was placed at $128
nulhon a year. Someone has to pay
the&gt;e costs And when hospitals are
not fully reunbursed for Medicaid
and Medicare patients, someone has
to close the gap. It's the private
patient, directly or md1rectly, who
pays.
My able and distingUished, etc ,
had a solution : natiOnal health Ill·
surance. Her proposal would be
umform , comprehensive and compulsory It would also 1k fearfully

expensive, but that was not Ms Air
zug 's c~ncern. In rebuttal I argued
the unwisdor'n of turning over health
care to the same marvelously ef·
ficrent people who have g1 ven us
Amtrak and the Postal Serv1ce. I
ar~ued the advantages of vane!y
over unformity. of voluntarism over
compulsiOn
Roughly 94 percent of the
American people now are protected,
lfl varymg degrees, by some form &lt;i

J._am_es_J._.K_ilpa-::--tri-ck

health and hospitalizatiOn coverage.
Virtually all new mdustnal con·
tracts carry prov1stons fur Insurance against "catastrophic"
tllness. M()re than 1,200 compames
now offer Insurance tailored to m·
d1v;dual needs This voluntllry
system IS not working perfectly , but
Ill terms of cost tt 1s workmg at least
as well as Canada's system.
lncr~ase the federal role? Heaven
fol'bid ! A far bett~ r course would be

to decrease the federal role, just as
Mr. Reagan recpmmends, with a
v1ew toward returnmg many responslbihlles to the states and localities,
and to the pnvate sector.
1
The gentleperson from New York,
to.be sure, disagrees with that View,
but the voters who last Novemikr
anesthetized Jinuny Carter may be
thankful that for a tune, the gentleperson will 1k bellowing in the
wind.

Ltr ME 1YlAP our WR MIP EAST
&amp;~ 1 cy FeR. Ycu IF mr
~OVI fT) '}IO!Jt"P DtSTVRB THE

)fA1t)j ()iJO flfR£ , OR, 9\Y
HfRf Vlf 'ltOUtD FORCERJUY

(OIJNrfR fi£RE AND HER.f
AND fVfN HER£ ..

5AME 7h1NG GOE5 ~
£t )AJ..YA.it?R.

• NEW YORK !AP) - Syracuse •nd
" Tulsa, two teams with identity
., crises, are solvmg them m t he
,. National Invitation Tournament
Syracuse, snubbed b~ the NCAA
self\C(ion conunittee, advanced to
the hnal of the 44th NIT with a gritty
7lHl3 victory over Purdue Monday
night. In the opener of the senufmal
doubleheader, before a crowd of
14,995 at Madison Square Garden ,
unheralded Tulsa edged West
Virginia m7 .
Syracuse, 22·11, w1ll face Tulsa.
~7. for the Iitle Wednesday night
after Purdue, 2().11, meets West
Virginia, 23-9, in a consolation game
Syracuse labored through a
, mediocre lf&gt;.ll regular season, then
won the Big East Conference tour·
ney only to be snqbbed by the NCAA
selection c01runittee.' And when the
Orangcmen won the1r first three
NIT games, the cnlics were to qu1ck
to pQint out that all SIX postseason
wins had come on Syracuse's home
co~rt,lhe 26,()()().seat Carner Dome
.. A lot of people sa1d we were win·
mng only because uf the home-court
advantage and playing ikfore all our
fans," said Syracuse guard Ench
Santifer. " But we've iken playm~
great ball We're gl•ymg as well as
anyone m the country - home ur
away "

......:

I rn f- R:-i 4U- tiPI\10" an "''It urn, rl Th, , .n..ultl h, lo,, 1h;jn IOil , .. ul • lun t! \II
lo•lto •r, art •llhjttl Ut t'riiiHl ~ and llUI"'I llt' 'l to(I U'd \O tlh tla/1\t ;uldrt'' ' a nd to •lt•phoollt'
numtwr ~~~ Ull,i)(ll\ tilt llt' T' 1.1 til ht JJUhlhho •tl I• th P• •hutJlll '1• 111 Jo(•llloll ~ ~ t•· .Jdrlr••..... tn~
'" u•·•. nut pt r• .. uahltt •

Less labor at Labor
You had better start dmng your busmess w1th employees of the Labor
Department at 11 a.m. on Tuesday, Wednesday or Thursday
That 1s the only hour at wh1ch you have a bt,tter than even chance of
catching the bureaucrats at the1r desks under the contract recently
worked out by the department and tts unwmzed workers The contract
covers most department employees up to uuddle-level managers
The department has adopted the mcreasmgly popular concept uf
"flexltlme, .. which enables employees to set their own hours as long as
they are at their desks durmg a midday ·core" penud and put m the
reqUired nmnber of hours per week
So, a workmg mother can start her day early cmd be hurne Jn tune tu
greet her children when they return from Sl'hool Or, a ·mght person"
can catch another hour or two of slrep and work a little later 111 the

,

evemngs.

·

What La bur Department employees asked for and gut wa:; not sunply
flex1tnne but somethmg that 1s bemg called max1flex " by some and
"superflex" by others The new contract requll'es only that employees
work a 4().hour week and be at the office between 10 a.m and 3 p.m. on
Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays
Otherwise, they can choose their own hours If they cw1 figure some
way of puttmg 111 4() hours iktween Tuesda) mormng and Thursday
evemng, they can enJoy four-day weekends every week
The Labor Department has trad1honally set the pattern fur the U S
govermnent's relatiOns with its employees So, many federal personnel
ofhc1als see the new contract as a mudel that the employees of other
departments and agencies w1ll try to emulate when the1r own contracts
come up for negohahon.· It will be mterestmg to see how the cost·
consciOus Reagan aduumstration handles these bargammg sessiOns

WASHINGTON 1 API - At least
une Republican leader 10 Congress IS
havmg second thoughts about the
w1sdom of President Reag•n's tnps
to Capitol Hill.
it's not that he doesn ·t enjoy the
tiltentwn . says House Mmortty
Leader Rub.rt H Michel, R-!11., but
the food 1s better at the White
House ..
··They have po~ched eggs on toast.
scrambled eggs w1th bacon or
anythmg else you want ··

NEW YORK 1API - The popular
mood of the marketplace, wh1ch now
seems to be charactenzed by a good
dea I of famtheartedness, may
provide a real test for the leadership
of President Reagan. the opt1m1st.
The markt( doesn't seem nearly
as confident as the president seems
to 1k about the future. Investors st1ll
act cautiOus . The b1g money and the
b1g plans are bemg held 10 abeyan·
le
Such tnmd1ty could diSGppe•r
and. 111 VIew of the president's ability
tu dehver a convim:m~ message, a
matter hardly u1 dispute, the
p()SSibllity cannot be underestiJnated
Still, scores of large compames
are seek1hg ~realer pruduct1v1ty m a
more conservative directiOn : By

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1 t11dn t know th1s was a special
occasl\ln,' one of the guests said
Meredith Brokaw replied, "It
1sn't. but every once m a while Tom
and I get the urge to splurge and we
treat nurselves to a luxury ."
I whispered to my wife, 'There
IHU.'5l be money o.Hl her s1de of the
family. ikcause I know Brokaw
could never afford a J•r of peanut
butter on what he makes ...
She &gt;aid , ·Hush. they 'll hea1· you
Anyway . what difference does it
make ' Yuu only K&lt;l to eat peanut

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~: Today IS Tuesday. Mard• 21, the 113nJ day tJI l!llll Tlic'll· ale W2 da)&gt;
• • left m the yea 1
;.
Tuday's htghlight m history
,.
On March 24 , J603, the l'rowns of E~gland and Scotland wen• Jomed un' • der James VI of Scotland, who began h1s re1gn as Ja!lles 1
1:: On this date
:;
In 1683. Rhode Island WHs purchased frum the llldial" ,
•.;
ln17H:I , Spain r ecvgmzed the mdcpemlerl('e uf the llml&lt;'d Stall'S
ln J~.l-1. Greeca:: was prodaJIJJrd d republu
In 1Y'i2, Bn41m luok uver cJu·eet l 'Ofltrulul Nurth.:r n lrtlalld tn r•·:"~ tur 1
: order

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in history. ..

beg111 the pane l' s schedul ed
meetmg
Filla II} , Jat:kson had to leave for
another meetmg . So he nudged tile
Democrat sitting next' to tum , Sen
Wendell Ford of Kentucky. and sa1d
" I have to go Will you hold down the
f011 furmc 7 "
Furd surve)ed the depleted ranks
around the ne(:lr-empty ili11 s
I can 't hold down any fort," Ford

The former chairmctn of lhe
Senate Energ) Couumttce. Sen
Henry M Jackson. [).Wash . waited

sa1d ·'I haven't got any ammuJUtiOn ..
House Speaker Thomas P Q'Ne1ll
Jr wasn 't inv1ted to breakfast w1th
the president last week , although he
had been wel comed to "" earlier
session 111 the sptnt of btpartlsanshm
But O'Neill said he had felt out of
plat·e in the room full of so many
Republicans and had told Reagan
so

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cuttmg mefffc1ent operatiOns rather
:spa wrung bad news. and that few 111than makmg them eff1c1ent thruugh
vcstms really belwve that stable.
heavy cmrunitrnent of money .
productive. gruwmg economics arc
Stock market tnvestors seem to
on the hurtzun
pull back from the market each t1me
So111e fmanoa l peuple spet.·ulcttc
1t approaches or exc""ds 1,000 point.
th&lt;:~t l ' UI nmt readJnt:;s only reflect a
on the Dow Jones.
\\'all -and-s ee
attitude
about
In credit markets, the decline 111
Reagan's prognuns, and that atinterest rates now IS widely ikheved
titudes could change 1f the prograiiiS
to be the forerunne1 of tugller rate:;
shows signs of SUl'ceeding.
later 111 the year. a prophecy that
They say that after havmg dealt
could , as others lutve ~en, self- , w1th murc than a decade of vulat1le
fulfilhng .
ecunormc condJtwns, tnvestors arc
Corrunoditles, tou, are mvulved
adoptmg a " show me·· attttude. mwith the SGme psychology. Most SJ&gt;tlng that they be given results to
pnces took a fall late last .year , and
buttress the prouuses
they rematn relatively low But
If so. 1t 1sn't the first tuue that at·
many analysts s~~· demand soon w1ll
t1tude has been seen
push pnces higher agam
During President Nixon's years .
In each mstance 1t can be sa1d that
the public wearied of as.urances
mvestors \1ew good news as from Herbert Stem, chainnan of the

counl'li uf economic advisers, that
the worst of mflat10n was behmd
them. Antlclpatmg more pnce in·
lT•'a&gt;es. they bought 111 advance of
net'&lt;l and destroyed Nixon's hopes.
Early 111 his admimstration .
President Johnson won investor 's
fa1th, and the stock market soared
When he sought to pay for Vietnam
th1ough budget def1cits he lost their
c·onfidence and stocks plunged.
In contrast. President Kennedy
seemed to win and retam the confidence of those who bet on the
future. although the aith was
dmuuished by what some lhou~ht
were mtumdatmg attacks on
busmess .
That retentiOn of confidence, even
If dummslied , helped h1s tax cut
program succeed

great to he richc,.________Art
_ B_uc_hwa_l_d

WASHINGTON - Anyone who has
~ken to the grocery stury lately
knows whal a rare and expensive
dehcac·y peanut butter has become .
Thererore 1t comes at a reHl sur·
pnse when the Brukaws brought out
an entll'e Jar of it for cocktJuls the
olher evemng. The jar, which
we1ghed •t least a pound, contained
the extra-crunchy kind·that you can
fmd 111 unly the finest restaurants It
wa&gt; sitting 111 a carved figure of 1-e
surrounded by tuast and pats of jel·

•

45 HHIIules for tls nt!Y. duurnum.
Sen James A McClure. R·ldaho, to

Marketplace may provide rest for President

Berry's World--__, lt~s
•

When Reagan JOurneyed to the
Capitol last week to meet "lth
Republican leaders. M1chel !amen·
ts, ·'•ll we had was Damsh pastnes
and coffee ...
Reagan's breakfast meet10g l•st
week kept some Dernoc rats coohng
the1r heels in l'lluumttees Waitmg to
start work

:NNi 1/C, : ~ .' l

~.,

boner Olll'~ 111 )OUr l1fe Let's rnake
the most of 1t "
We all ~athered around as Mrs.
Brokaw started sprcad1ng the
ltOiden subst;mce on toast and
passmg 1t to her guests
Some people asktod for Jelly w1th
theirs, but a few purists like myself
wantt'&lt;l it wuhout an y condiments.
We all " Ut&gt;hed" and ·ahhed" as
w&lt; tasted it .

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We didn 't need to be asked twiCe. f
put two large teaspoonfuls on a pu!LC
of toast.
'Don 't make .a p1g .of yourself ,"
w1fe whiSpered You act as 1f
It 's the f1rst tune you ever Cjtc pecmut
butte1. "
" It's the ftrst lime 111 months ," I
wluspered back. "If the) 're crazy
euough to serve it, why shouldn't we
gel our share'' "
I wus onc.:e on the Queen
Elizabeth and they gave you all the
peanut butter you could cat ..
"They alw•ys make a big deal of
l!Jat on luxury liners ." someone else
sa1d
We dlllau~hcd •s we kept d1g~mg
111tu the J31

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" This 1s the real stuff. " I s•ld
"Where on earthd1d you hnd it , ..
" We have a c·onnection at the
Umted Nations," Brokaw sa1d " He
gcts 1t throu~h 'the diplomatiC
pouch "
"Old you knoll It takes tlircc poun·
d:; of peanuts tu make one Jar uf
peanut butter' ··
· Nu wonder no une (;an affut d tt'1 "
I said
One of the guests sa1d. ·1 remem·
ber when I was a k1d , my mother
used to keep a jar 111 the closet and
after school we used to spr~ad 11 nn
bread hke butter ..

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Another one sa 1d, · l recall those
,days. I didn 't know what I had and
used to trade my peanut butter and
Jelly sandwiches at lunch hour for
ham on rye."
'Help yourselves.' ' Meredith
Brokaw said "We don't want 1t to go

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Ont• of the guests sa1d, " Does
anyone here remember when we
used to feed peanuts to the elephants
atthezoo 7 ''
,
"[recall when we ust'&lt;l to eat them
at baseball games "
Mrs . Brokaw brought out more
toast and Jelly .
" I went to a bar when I was m
college and you'll never believe this,
but there was a bowl of peanuts on
each table," I sa1d. " We used to
throw the shells on the floor ."
, By th1s time the jar was eh1pty
and the toast and jelly were ~nne.
I tried to lrck the 1nside of the top,
but my wife stopped me
It was an evening I'll never forget.
I've been to houses recently where
there have been a few canapes of
peanut butter flUxed in with the
smoked Sll~non sandwiches. Bill
I've never been m a home where
someone actually brought out an en·
tire jar of it, and passed it around
like it was caviar.
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DOONESBURY

The Daily

Middleport, Ohio

workout Monday mormng so they
could adJust to the Garden's wooden
floor - Syracuse plays on a harder,
sprmg~er artificial surface at horne
- and it a~nost cost them their center, 7-footsemor DanSchayes.
&amp;hayes stepped ou a ball durmg
the workout and spramed h1s left
ant.le!, He limped noticeably
.-roughout the Purdue game and of·
ten trailed the other players on the
translllon, yet he came through with
come dutch play down the stretch to
help the Orangemen pull away.
"He's a blue-chipper and blue·
chippers have to learn to play w1th
pain," sa1d his proud father, former
NBA great Dolph Schayes.
"Danny was unly half a player out
there, but we needed h1m and he did
the JOb," SGid Boeheun. "We went to
a zone defense to protect hun
because he couldn't keep up With h1s
man one-on-one. But we needed hun
Ill the middle."
&amp;hayes playc'&lt;l the ent1re second
half and f1mshed w1th mne pomts
and four rebounds. But he had three
points, two rebounds, an asstst and a
blocked shot 111 the fmal nunute to
help narl down the VIctory
Leo Raut1ns led Syracuse w1th 19
points.and II rebounds, Sanhfer ad·
ded 18 pomt. and Tony B1·um scored
16 before fouling out w1th 2 55 to go
Sant1fer. Rautms and Schayes each
lut lie-breakmg baskets down the
stret ch. Schaycs puttmg the
01 •n~emen ahead to stay 63~1 w1th

Sen1in.,i-?ag~3

a basket from the low post with one
minute left.
Forward Mike Scearce led Purdue
w1th 18 points and 13 rebounds.
"It was ' a heartbreaker." sa1d
Purdue Coach Gene Keady, whose
team fell be~md by nine pomts early
111 the second half but fought back to
he three times In the final 5''
rrunutes before fadmg "When 1t was
close they made the big plays and
that was 1l. Neither offense played
very well, but they hung tough You
helve to g1ve them credit.' '
Cred1t 1s sumethmg that should
also ,;o to the Tulsa adll)llllstrator
who decided that the road to basket·
ball success led to Snyder. Texas.
That's the ~1te 'of Western Texas
Jumor College, which compiled a 37·
0 record under Coach Nolan R1char·
dson last year and won the natiOnal
Juco title .
Tulsa, conung off a 8-19 season,
h1red H1chardson li::ist swruner and
Richardson had the good scn~e to
brmg four of his Juco stars w1th him
- center Greg Stewart, forward
Dav1d Brown and guards Paul
Pressley and Phil Spradling. And
the 6-5 Pressley was the hero 111 the
Golden Hurncan e ·~ VIctory over
West V~rgm1a .
Pressley scored II of h1s team·
h1gh 20 pomts 111 the fmal 7 50 and
played the pomt 111 Tulsa's fulkou1t
press that thoroughly disrupted the
Muuntameers down the stretell

.'·

Food better at White House

\ ME,UU.H nf Th• ' ' " KI41 tt•d l'r ,. ~ . lnlan.;l llou h Pr~" ~""' t&lt;lll"ll &lt;~Uti tlh
o\mt•ru :~n "'' """P&lt;~ P•· r rubll"h• r ... '" '"' " HUwn

•

But leavmg the1r home flour
a~nost proved disastrous f01 the
Orangemen. Coach Jun Bocheun
ran hi&gt;&lt;' pl•yers through a short

Despite loss, Reds find pitcher

1, , Ill ra I \l111na~•· r

DALE ROTHGEB. JR

Pomeroy

Syrac·u se, Tulsa advance
to
..
NIT championship game

Pag~2- The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, March 24, 1981

A debate with Bell""a_____:______ ____,._ _ _
KANSAS CITY, Mo. - We are tt forensic exerctse. for no one ex·
doing all right, Bella Abzug and l, peels to see the role of the federal
behavmg ourselves ntcely , speakmg goverrunent expapded any ltln~
the parliamentary speech, unt1! the :soon. President Reagan has recomlast four minutes. That was when mended maJor slowdowns in projec·
she sa1d that "Canadians never have ted spending for Med1ca1d and
to pay a medical bill," and when I Mcd1care : he wants to trim some of
tried to mqmre who was paymg the the programs of the NatiOnal In·
Canadians' bill if the Canadians st1tutes for Health : he propOsed
themselves weren't paymg them, major changes tn medical scholarshe got to hollermg and. I got to ships: he would get nd of the
hollermg , and we wound up Professwnal Standards Rev1ew
bellowmg at each other like a pa1r of . Orgaruzatwns : and he has other
foghorns at four paces. It wasn't 1deas along the!le same lmes
genteel, but it sure was noisy
We flew out to Kansas City at the
Ms. Abzug, you Will correctly sur·
mv1tation of the Midwest Health 1111Se , round thiS prospect
Congress to debate this questiOn
depressmg She came anned wtth
Resolved, that the role of the federal statistacs un the horrendous mgovernment m health care should be creases m the cost of medical care,
increased. My able and and on that Sl'ore she was plainly
d1stmgmshed opponent, the gen· nght · The mcreases have m fact
tleperson from New York, had the iken horrendous. Over the past' IS
affirmat1ve. l had the negalive .
years. wh1lc conswner pnces have
In one sense, our debate was only mcreased by 162 percent, doctors'

Tue5day, March 24, 1981

By Associated Press
The Cmcmnati Reds IO&gt;t a
ballganlf Monday but may have
found a pitcher.
B1!,1 Bonham , the 32·yeal··old nght·
,, hunder who had surgery on h1s
1 elbow last Octolkr. pitched to a
.. ll)lljOr league batter for the f1rst
, tune m nearly eight months H~
worked two scoreless lilllUlgs in the
Reds' 5-t loss to the Clucago Wh11&lt;'
Sox. surrendermg one hit and
•, walkmg two
Paul Moskau. also trym~ to come
., back from shoulder surgery .
followed Bonham and pitched two 111·
nings. He gave up two h1ts, one walk
and one run while stnkmg uut two m
his second appearance of the spring
Another · convalescent Pilcher.
•, Philadelphia 's Larry Chnstenson.
as the
,,. hurled five shutout mnmus
b
Philli.,.-!Jeat the.St l.oui&gt; Cardinals
.: f&gt;.l. Chnstenson. hunted to H appe~ranccs m 1980 by arm nusencs
1 and a recurrtng gro111 IllJUry. ~ave
, up three hits and strut·k out three.

Meanwlule , Doug DcCmces drovl.:!
111 three rull:i With a trtple and smgh~

and Mike Flanag•n p1telied SIX 111·
mn~s as the Baltunore Orwle:s
defeated the Montre•l Expos 9·3
The Onoles played without Manager
Earl Weaver, who l&gt;cgan a thret..~.,
game !Hl!:ipen.ston for pulling hl!'i
team uH the f1eld agamst Kan~as
City l•st Wtiek In a dispute w1lh the
wnptre:s over the hneup card.
Rookie .Jorge Bell , drafted from
the Plullies' urgamzation, and Otto
Vele-l ea ch belted hw home runs as
the Toronto Blue Jays hammered
the P1ttsbur~h Pll'ates t2~
Rookie outfielder Terry Harper
drov e Ill three runs wtlh tt double
and two smgles, leadmg the Atlanta
Hrtt vcs to a 7-5 vtdory uvcr the New
Yurk Yankees.
"
Sttn Franc1scu center f1elder 13tll
North misplayed a fly ball for "
threc•run error wtth two out 111 the
top of the mnth imnng that allowed
the Oakland A's to beat the G1ants -1.1.

::; Lawless not fast
.,, TAMPA, F!a 1AP I
Tum
; Lawless. dubbt'&lt;l " Mr Speed' for
. , 1 hi!'i
base--stealing in the Ctncmnatl
t., Red:; fann sy1tern, !lays llc isn 't cx:r cept1onally fast
, , " I'm not the fastest play er 111
tr:aimng camp, that' !'I fur sure," Siltd
"' Lawless, a second llaseman frum
1., Enc, Pa . " Dave Colhns and Gary
Rcdu~ arc faster . Even Ill the
mmurs, I'm sure tht!rc arc fastc1
play ers
··Mayik they put that label '"' ru e
bt.-cause I stole 124 bases the last twu
years. But I don't steal JUSt because
uf my speed "
Lawless, once tuld by a major
• league scout that he laekcod the
' talent to become a b1g lea~ue
baseball player. led the Cia» A
Florida State League with 60 stolen
·' bases in !979. H1s 64 stolen bases at
Waterbury . Conn. ICJsl season Wll S
· the sccund ikst in the Class AA
F..asternl.c~:~guc .

1

'

Lawless IS a cumpal'l 6-foot, 164
pounds who depends nn Ius head
more than quick feet fur h1s steals.
Workm~ w1th forme&amp; Cmcmnah Hed

Joe Morgan Ill th~ m~ lrUl'tlunal
l.cCJgue taught tum the unpurtaru:e
uf a good leadnff and knowmg pit·
chcrs' rnuve~ .
· Last year, I stolt! 64 bases and
wa:-. thrown.uut only about 17 times , ..
llt: saul " I'm tryurg tu scl a goal uf
stealtng on c1ght out of 10 atlcrnpG I
tlunk that's a good percefllage. The
average IS ttbout 61 L ur !5CVCII out of
10 If you steal 6l bases and get
lhwwn nut 30 lillh:!~ . y uu ' tc nut
h~lp111~ the team ··
Lawless IS pruutl u£ cuwthct
stut1stic - h1s .979 ficldmg avcra~c
last season. second best all!ong
SCl'Ulld ~semen 111 the Eastern
League He led the Plol'llla State
League a year earlier with a .976
llli:lrk and won h1s team's Must
Valuable Player award
' I' vc been one of the II JUst con~ rstcnt players around :-10 far," scud
Lawless , who hit 276, .2ti9 and .275
the last three years
The Pittsburgh Pirates were not
very Impressed With Ius potential
when he attended a nwnbcr of thCII'
tryout camps

CASTLE or
COTTAGE

Alan Ashby drove 111 tht! wmmng
run wtth a fourth-mmng sm~le a!:! the
HtJustun A~tros snapped a :stx-game

losmg streak with a 3-2 tnwnph over
the Boston Hed Sox Wuuung pitcher
Nol•n Hyan allowed one hit and an
uncc.~rned run in fnur mnings
Con~e t!utlvc hom12 run~ by Dan
Ford and Dun Baylor plus
Ben1que7.'s flfst smgle gave Calif or·
m~ a 3-1 lei::ld HI the first nuung and
the Anngels went on to defeat the
Seattle M•nners 11·2

Team m~mbers were first row, 1-r, Jay Carpenter,
Steve Sams, John Miller, Jim Weber, Ron Hensley, and
Jeff Bissell. Back row - Coach David Weber, Paul
Collins, Mark Shrlvers, Keith Stout, Bi!t Smith, Kevin
rick, Kevin Collins, manager. Absent - John Edwards.

SUCCESSFUL SEASON - Eastern Eagle eighth
grade baskelball team recently completed a successful
season wilh a 1._:; overall record. The hustling Eagles
finished th1rd m the Federal Hocking tournament. Two
Eagles, Ja) Carpenter and Paul Collins. "ere named
to the all-tournament team fur their outstanding pl•Y·

B on h am J.f.eelS career far from over
SARASOTA, Fla 1API - Cm·
cumatl Reds p1tcher Bill Bonham,
buned 111 the nunor leagues last
season by shoulder problems, th1nks
Ius maJor league career lS far from
dead
The 32-year-old nghthander laun·
ched Ius resurrectiOn bid Monday,
suJTendering two walks and JUst one
h1t 111 two lnmngs agamst the
Chicago White Sox.
It was the f1rst time 111 nearly eight
months that Bonham had pitched to
an opposmg major league batter. It
•lso marked Ius first 1·eal test smce
shoulder surge• yon Oct 28.
"I feel I'm able to throw,''
Bonham sa1d. "My arrn felt good . 1
threw all my pitches. I hope to p1tch
agam m three or four days."
The shoulder problems !muted
Bonhc:tm to ju!'it four appearances
w1th the Reds last year He had a
lh1ec~week stmt "1th the team's

Class A f•rrn team at Tampa, un·
successfully trymg to p1tch back mto
sh•pe
Two of h1s four rnaJOr league ap·
pearances in 1980 were 1mpress1ve
v1ct0r1es, a pomt not lost on
Bonham.
"I felt last year that I was gomg to
pitch well," said Bonham, who had
elbow surgery m 1978 to remove
bone ch1ps. " I pitched 111 four games
I keep brmgmg that up because to
me, 1t wasn't a lusl sei::lsOn . .1 wo1 ked
on a lot of thmgs

·She said to go for broke. She said
that 1f I had to get out of baseball ,
she could take 11 too," Bonham sa1d.
Doctors removed an mflamed
lubri catmg pad m h1s shoulder
Bonham showed up at tratnmg camp
set for one more try

.

" I kne11 I could slill pitch and ~et
!utters out So 1thought if 1 could get
the shoulder to where it doesn't hurt.
I'd be back th1s year"
· Still, surgery presented" nsk that
Bonham we~sn 't sure he wanted to
take. H1s w1fe, Dona. pursuaded

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MARCH 20 lhru 26

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'

Foley does things different
TAMPA. F'la . 1API - In an or·
derly profeS.'ilOII that'mststs on dum~
Uungs by the book, Cmcmnall Reds
horlefu l Tom Foley 1s a renegade
" I'm a we1rdu." Foley says. ·[
bowl r 1ght·handed , shoot pool nglithandeti and throw " baseball right·
handed . Everythmg else I do left·
handed ...
Amb1d~xtrou:-;
athletes aren'l
unusual. But It's rare to fmd one like
Foley. who starred Ill different ~por­
ts by us1ng different •rniS
In lugh !Sehoul in M1ami. F'oley was
a standout left-handed qua1·terba ek
When it cai JIC to baseball. Foley
chuse tu usc Ius uthcr ann Tht•
nght·ht:tnded shortstop - wlh) Udb
left-handcxl W'd s gO&lt;&gt;d enough to U..•
the Rctls' Scvt.•nth 1.h aft d1o1n' 111
June 1977
When I was fwst lcal'l\111~ tu play.
I lrted tu copy ::~ on1ebody else whu
was" catcher, ' Fu!ey smd He had
a right-handed catcher 's null , su I
t '.i.llllC uut nght-hctrld~d . ' '
Flllcy's unusual tndoctrmat1o11
d1du't cud thl•rc
While SUIIlC rllaJ Ur leHgucr:-; ruu sh
their ~tn·cer.s 111 JCJI&gt;Wl, Foley .started
tus there Ills father wa:s a lJ.S Army :scrgee~nt who was shipped tu
Japan when Ius .sun was s1x years
uld. 11ntl thl! ranuly spent fuut· years
thmc

"We hved un the f!Ji)itary base,"
Foley sa1d. " All aro\ind us were
Japanese towns I loved Jl They had
baseball there . the Tokyo Giants .
"That's where I sa•• •ny f1rst
maJOr league gatne I must have
been about seven years old. The S•n
Francisco G1ants came over; to play
the Tokyu G1ants. I sal" Juan
Mancha!. Willie Mays and Willie
McCuvey .' '

1

The Army base had a base ba II
league for children of nulitary per·

r
§

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MASON FURNITURE
Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Fnday &amp; Saturday
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'

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· NOTICEI

~onn e l

·1 played serv1ce ball up unlil I
was 111 tugh schn()lm M1am-'," Foley
sa1d. "The caliber of baseball we
played was a httle weak We played
a goodwill game a gamst the
Japanese kids once. and they beat us
badly."
W1th cuadung help from his
father. Foley became one of the top
players in the m1htary league and
later 111 h1gh school. After bemg
drafted by the Reds, Foley was the
best-heldmg shortstop m the Class A
Western Ca1olmas League w1th the
Shelby Tenn .. farm team 1n 1978.
He lut .249 last se•son wllh Class
AA Waterbury , Conn ., and expects a
prmnot10n to the Class AAA In·
&lt;lianapolis team this year
With Dave Concepci'W connng off
elbow surgery. the 21-year-old Foley
played frequently th1s spnng

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Tuesday, March 24, 1981

Middleport, Ohio

Tuesda , March 24, 1981

Floyd captures biggest golf payoff
PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. veteran, a fonner Masters and PGA
( AP ) - A couple of early sea~on champion, scored his 13th ca reer
disappoinbnents were the spurs he victory in the Dora I-Eastern Open.
needed, Ray Floyd said, to send him
Then. in the day-late windup of the
to two consecutive victories and the · storm-delayed championship of
biggest payoff in the history of golf.
golf's tournament. players, he came
" In a way," Floyd said after from six shots back with a no-bogey
collecting $72,000 plus a $250.000 68, tied Barry Jaeckel and Curtis
bonus, for his playoff lriwnph in the Strange for the top spot at ~ and
Tournament Players Championship won the sudden death playoff with a
Monday, .. it was like a young fellow par on the first extra hole.
out here. Maybe the first time he's in
The first prize from' the total purse
~posi tion to win a tournament , it gels of $440,000 was $72,000. In addition.
away from him . Maybe the second there was a bonus of $250,000 put up
time it gets away, too. Then, maybe by the sponsors of three Florida
on the third time. he gmsps it."
tournaments for any man able to win
F loyd let a couple get away in two uf them in o row .
California, then reaped a massive
· Floyd did it. He won hi s 14th
harvest when the PGA Tour reached career title w~th a one--foot parFlorida .
sav ing putt on the playoff hole. Both
A week ago the 38-year-uld Strange and Jaeckel missed the

green, and each failed on a 3-6 !oct
par putt.
Floyd, ,who said he hadn't really
thought much about his one-footer,
suddenly was faced with 12 inches ci
real estate to cover for a total of
$322,000.
.. All of a sudden the cash register
started ringinij and I had to back off
and think about it a little.'' Floyd
said.
He tapped..it in on the green still
wet from the inch of rain dwnped 011
the tough Sawgrass links by the
thunderstorms that washed out Standay 's play.
" I'd by lying if I said I wasn't
thinking about the money.'· Floyd
said. "Bnt coming back and defen·
ding my title in Dora!, then winnng

WATCHFUL EYES- Ray Floyd chips to the green ol the 18th hole of
the $440,000 Tournament Players Championship Monday. Floyd won the
tourney in a sudden death playoff "'itb Barry Jaeccel and Curtis Strange.
Floyd look a par on the first hole of sudden death. while Stra nge and Jae•·eel took a bogey. Floyd won $75,000 first place money plus a bonus ol
$225,000. ( AP l.aserphoto).

r

Today's ·

Sports World
By Will Grtlllliley
AP Correspondent

One of the confusing aspects of the
tlu-eatened big league baseball
strike is the reaction of the man on
the street.
To the average guy, generally, the
players are overpaid , greedy and
selfish: There ought to be, a limit. he
says, on heir salaries. Marvin
Miller, executive director of the
Players Association. realized that
most fans would take such an at·
t.itude when he marshalled his clients into a solid bloc resisting any
surrender of players' hard-earned
bargaining rights.
Marvin is as perpleKed as anyone.
We were intrigued by the responses given to the New York Daily
News' Inquiring Photographer. who
took to the streets to ask the
following question:
" Do you agree with Atla nta
Braves owner Ted Turner' that top
salaries fur athletes should be
$300,000 to $400,000. with the average
about $100,000 to $150,000?"
The vote was five-to-one ··yes.''
" Salaries a re outrageous:· commented a supervisor . " If the trend
continues, some tea1ns will go
bankrupt. "
A r redlt controller said: " No one
player deserves Sl million a year. In
a way, I hope Dave Winfield rthe $20
million Yankee! fl ops to show that
he isn't worth that kind of money ."
" Turn er is right," sa id a
housewife. " While the fans don 't
resent high sala ries, they can't
relate to real life."
A h1gh school student said. " It 's
going to turn spurts into a money
market ruled by the rich teams." A
credit manager, conceding that a
superstar should be paid according
to his talent, added, "Turner's

average salary uf $100.000 to $150,000
is too high. The average player isn't
worth that much ."
Only one man . a customer field
representative, took the playe rs'
side, arguing, "Th e owners have
have ma de millions . The players are
entitled to all they can get."
This is· a strange socia l
phenomenon . One would think that
the average citizen. the bricklayer,
truck driver. accountant or mill
hand would hoist their cudgels in
defense of baseba ll' s working stiffs.
The fan still looks upon baseball as
a ga me played by men in
double knits - a fun game learned un
the corner tot. Work 1 Hogwash .
He fails to grasp tile whole p1cture
- a hard-knuck led business run by
corporate executives, dominated by
television , infested by conunercial
wheelers and dealers. all out for the
big buck.
For mu~ t players. it's a short ,
hazardous career.
It 's a well-worn cliche - but a
hard truth - that the ballplayer.
while a worki ng -man in one sense. is
a show business personality in
another . He is paid oiot just for his
skills but also for the nwnbcr of
people he can pull throug h the tur·
nstiles.
Turner's proposal uf a lid on
ballplayers' ea rning power is pa tently unconstitutional. It is about as
logical - and workable - as ask111g
Turner to lirmt the prof1ts un his
curm JJunicati ons enterprises. stripping oil barons of their billions and
telling General Motors how much 1t
can pay its vice presidents.
But to the little guy with a weekly
pay envelope, it's a hard sell.

J11ellston sponsors biddy tournament
The Wellston Recreation Department is sponsoring a double
elimination Biddy Basketball Tournament beginning Friday , March 27 .
Tournament playing dates are Mar·
ch 27, 28 and 29 and April3, 4, and 5.
Each team may have 10 players.
All-Stars teaons are pennitted. The
entry fee is $30.
Team tro phie~ will be awarded to

TUCSON , Ariz. I API - Come
Opening Day, on each Major League
roster. there will be no onoo·e than 25
names.
Clevelcmd Indians Manager Dave
Garcia. with good reason, isn' t yet
saying which ilames will fill each
~put on his roster. But conunon sense takes care uf part of the job and
so m e deduction, perhi:tps
premJ:tture, lakes care of the rest.
That said . here are the people who
are absolutely, without a doubt.
barring inj ur y, ret urning to
Cleveland with the Indians for their
April II opener against Milwaukee:
Pitchers : Len Barker. John Den·
ny, Bert Blyleven. Rick Waits.
Wayne Garland. Dan Spillner. Sid
Monge.
Infie lders : Mike Hargrove, Alan
Bannister. To111 Veryzer, Jerry Dytr
zinski.
Ct1tchers : Hurl Hassev .
Outfielders : Joe C'ha1·bonea u,
Rick Manning, Jurge 0 1ta, Miguel
Dilone. Pat Kelly .
That act·o unts fur 17 names. and
doesn't inrlude a tht rd baseman.
Ei ther veteran Toby HaoTah. if he's
healthy. or rooki e Von Hayes. if

Miller Barber, Jim Colbert, Bruce
Lietzke and Jim Simons tied for
fourth, two shots out of the playoff at
287 . Ba1·ber had a closing 68, Colbert
and Lietzke 71 's, Simons 73.
Defendi ng champion Lee Trevino
was another two shots back at 289 after a 73. Jack Nicklaus fell back with
a'76 and finished with a 293 total.

Catchers : Bo Dii:lz, Chris Bcmdu .
Barri ng a tradt• of Diaz. both may
make the club. " Bando is a Major
League player.'' Garcia has said.
Preswning either RoseUu or
Bonil la makes it. we're · at 24-25.
without at'counting for injured infielders Duane Kuiper and Andre
Thornton . Kuiper, partituli:irly, is a
long shot as far as being hea lthy for
the sti:lrl of the scasl,ln.

Both the Ohio Valley Conference
buys and girls tt!allls won the AllSta r game over SEOAL senior AllSta rs in Ironton Monday night.
The boys won, 11-59. while the gi rls
took it uri the ~ hin, -19-45 .
Box scores :
BOYS
OVC (71) Jlflll'lly J ohnson ,
Fa1rlilnd
7 6 20 , Allan Burns ,
Fa1r1ano, 3 5 11 . Donn1e Ad k1ns.
South Po1n1 . .t1 2 10 ; M1ke Boggs ,
Rock H il t. 3 2 8; Dav id Kipp ,
Chesapeake, 3 3 9 , Ty Sp urlock ,
F.:n rland , 2 0 J ; Roger Turley , Coal
Gr-ove , 1 2 J ; Terry Mdler . Symmes
Valley , I 1 J ; Tony Pcwne , South
P om r . 1 0 2; David Adams , Sourn
P01 nt . 0 0 0. Totals 20 -19· 59 .
SEOAL { S'i'l - Cn r1S Barnes, Iron
t on , 8 410 : R1 c k Te e ters , Wdvei'ly , 3
1 7. Jeff Jac kson , lron l on, 'J 1 6.
R1 ck Milburn, Jack son, 2 2 6; Steve
Ohlinger . Me1gs, 1 J 5: Scorr R iggs,
A thens, 1 3 5. K ent Pr1ce , Gallipolis .

e~:ctpe

Sunday,

Mooday through f'riday, 111 Cow1Sb'eel. by

the Ohio· Vallfy PubUshinc Comp~~ny -

Pomeroy, Ohio
Mt!mber: The ~sociated Preu, Inland Daily Press Associ11tiafl and the American
Newspaper Publishers AssociaUOfl, National
Allvertisllljo\

Hcpruentativt .

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CANTON. Ohio 1AP I - Ken
Newlon is abdicating his Litle as li~
wmmngest w.:livc coach m Ohw tligh
sc hool boys basketball.
Newlon. 55. The Associated Press'
Class AAA State Coach of the Yea r
after leadin g Ca nton McKinley to
the sta te pol! title, announced Muu·
day he is resigning. effeetive March
31.
"I'm going to lake It easy and play
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Coming ... One· Day Only .... Sat ., March 21
Times: 11 a.m. tit 4 p.m.
vaugnan•s Cardinal Sup,rmttrket
408 Locust S.t. in Middle port

them ,"

"The periodic health checkup and
tbe cance r-related checkup is
preveptive medicine," Cleland observed, "and it's a wonderful feeli ng
when the doctor giyes you a clean
bill of health. But if there is a
problem, your doctor will have.
foWJd it in time. You are are indeed
the key to cancer control."
For a copy of the complete
guidelines for a cancer-related
checkup call 992-7531 or come to the
office on Mulberry Hts.

Head start to college available
at Rio Grange College this summer
A head start toward college is now
avai lable to high sehoul students in
either un~ or both of Rio Grande
College's two swnmer sessions.
Students must be a high school
senior or junior with a gr ade-point
standing in ·the upper half of the
class and must be ~ resident of
Gallia. Jackson, Me1gs, or Vonton
counties.
With the advanced scholarship.
one can, take up to nine credit ho ur~
from any course offered on the sum·

mer sc hedule, that the student is
eligible to enroll. All one hour
phySical educatiOna l activoty classes
will be excluded .
Only the $4 per cred it hour institutional fee will be charged. the
tuotion fee will be omitted. Students
are responsible for the cost uf bouks,
supplies, and lab fees. Parking is
colnplilnt!nlctry .
The first term uf the s wruner
session begins June 15 and ends July
13, 1981. The. second terms begins

July 20 through August 21. The advanced scholar certificate must be
shown at registration.
College credit can ·be used toward
a degree at Rio Grande College, or
may be transferable .to other
colleges or Wliversities.
Interested students may contact
their high school guidance counselor
or the Office of Admission and
Records at RGC&amp;CC, 24frfi351 , ext.
·208 .

Pictures of mental health- where to focus
Amateur photog1·uphers urc in·
vitcd to focus thetr viewfinders on
Mental Health in the three-county
" Pii:lures of Mental Health" contest j
sponsored by the Ga llia-Juekson1
Meigs Mental Health Board. The
contest begins M1:m.:h 30 and
dce:ulhne £or entries is April 24.
Hlbhons and l'CI'tlficates will be
awarded by a pa11el of three judges.
Ahlllg with first, second an d third
plaee ribbons. judges will name a
" Best of Show " fur each county. No
age rc~trictiom; have bee n imposed
on ent nmls.

"The odea behind the contest is to
involve people in a healthy activity
- laking pictures," Maxine Plummer, executive director of the Mental Health Board, said. "The pi cturetakers will be out looking fur healthy
images - activities like sports,
famil y reunions, graduations .
They'll be laking pictures of people
handling tough situations in healthy
ways - embr acing at a funeral ,
holding hands in the dentist 's office.
crying and being comforted when
the team loses.··

"Health isn't just smiles,' ' Mrs.
Plwnmer noted. "We all have
angry, sad and fea rful feelings. All
emotions can be healthy when expressed at an appropriate time.
"You can 'use anger to kill yourself
or you can use it to improve yourself
or your situation," she s aid.
"Hopefully, we want loca l amateur
photographers to find healthy ex·
pre.ssions - people exe rcising,
polling weeds, putting in gardens,
speaking up at meeti ngs, working on
political campaigns, cleani ng up the
environment. "

WEDNESUAY
Wl!.l&gt;WOOD (;AHDEN CI.UB .
7::10 p.111. Wednesday at Uw home or
Mrs. DurisG rue.!:lcr .
MIDDLEPOHT I.ITEHAHV
C' l.U ll, Wedn esday, 7:30 p.111. at the
homt• uf Mrs. Hctruld Sauer. Two
book reports. " Wur Within and
Without" by Mrs. Sibley Slaek. and
" l.ost Hoo·izuoos" by Mrs . Carl
Horky. Hull ca ll will be giving a
('OII IIIlCil t fi ' UIIl {fJIC

or Ulc butlk S.

HEV IVAI., P"mcroy Wesleya n
Holiness Chureh. Harnsonville: 7::10
111ghtly through April5 . Hcv. Nadine

nesday at 7 : :~0 1&gt;.111. S!Jt.:L'WI meeting

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Df Pumcruy ( 'lwpkr all. Hllyal Arc h
Masons at 8 p.m. Ho~ al .'\ rvh Degrt.'t'
tu IJc l'Uilfcr rl'd .
SOUTHF. K N .I liN It IH I h ~il SdlUu l
IJ&lt;II'CIItS tu IIICCI fll 7 IU II. WediiL':H IH}1
atlugh s~..: huul tu llltl~t' plan:-; fur ser-

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:-.lllglllg !llghlly . Hcv . De wey King,
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. OHI O VALLEY l'OIIIIIlantlry Wed-

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physician

Cleland and Hollon said. " The
society's first objective is to detect
ca ncer as early in its natural history
as possible to achieve the greatest
possible reduction of illness and
death," they sa id.

Setl l'!'Jilan .

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PRESENTATION - Mrs. Uda Hampton, left, the 19!0 st•raphook
•·halrman for tht· Melg• Sulun 110. Eight und Forty. rriduy prr•scntt•d lh&lt;·
scrapbook to Mrs. Veda IJavts, 81llon's ('hapcau last year. Tht• buuk in·
dudes 8('('0UlltN ur lht• various at'livilics or the Salon. MrN. J)uviN t•arlicr
rece ived tht• history book on th&lt;• Salon pn•pared by Mrs. Marjorie F&lt;'lty.

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Wt're

gua rdian (.'uu ncil mcm~rs. Sue
Starr, guardian, Bar ba ra Dugan,
gua r dian secretary: Linda
Mayer, di rect ress uf musie;
Mary Wise. pru111oter of
h0$pile:tl ity : Virginia Buchanan,
l'Ustudia n of paraph ernal ia:
Curol Sisson, promoter ur
sociability ; tt nd Enuna K. Clatwoo·thy, director uf finance. Mrs.
Wise a nd Mrs. Clr~twurthy are
past guardians uf the Bethel. Also
attending was B1 ll Quickie. a past
" "'"date guardia n, who had the
prayer preceding lhe dinner.
Favor~ were Bible markers, cmd
place ca rds were miniature
stars. (~i ft s we re pre!:ien tcd to
Miss Carsey, Mrs. S(_'ott, Hnd
Beth Mayer .
Meetings uf the Bethel are held
tw1cc a month ::.~ nd girls between
1t ctnd 18 with the proper Masonic
affil ia tion are eligi ble to petition.
lnfo rlllaliun ca n be obtained
from M1·s. Sw rr. guard ia n. at 742·
22l0.

TUESDAY
PAS'!; Ml\ TRQNS.Pomeroy Cha(}te.r Ordu of the Eas tern Star ,will
meet all he home of Mrs. Ella Smith,·
7:30Tumid ' evcni tt~ .
MIDDlE 'ORT C HAMB~~ R o~·
C MMER .. 7 p.111. Tuesday at the
Co 1bi· ~as Cu . offll~ c .
GO!. ;N AGE Cl.UB. Harrisonvoile, 7 p.m. at the tuwnllal l. Potluck
dinner to fo lluw. All members urged
llJ r.t ltcnd.
KACINf~
I.ODl;J-~
jlil F 'AM
Tu~sda y at 7.30 p .11 1. Work 111 th~.: entered ttpprentll'l' lkgrL'l' .

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A nHJmcn l11f si len t prayer was

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a past associHle gucu·dian.
Prt:scnt for the banquet

L----------------------------------------~----------------------------------~
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IHU~.IU f

Dame II , paslttssociate guanh;Jn .

.'

STORY &amp; STORY

Main Clinic facilities
Near Gallipolis
Call 446-5287
In Advance

~n l

l.urkeytlou. !961 : Linda Da rnell
Mayer. 1!164 : llerky Anderson
and Pam Dludlc. 1961: Mickey
Hubark and Kathy .Juhnsun. 1969;
llcbbie Finlaw. 1968: Twila
Childs and Brenda Hill , 1!171 :
Ooana l 'arsey. 1973: Deb bie
Glaze. 1974 : LiSa Morris, 1975 :
Mcrn Ault CJild Angie Sis!:iOll,
1976; Mandy Si"-''"'· 1977: Jenni fe r Har·risun 1:!11d Pau la
F:ieh in~e r , 1!178; Dollie Rousey .
1978; Susa nna W1sc and .Julie
Byer. 1979: and Teresa Starr .
1!180.
I.cttenl uf regret were 1'catl
fnHil
Irene Ba rnes, .Jemnfcr
lllakcslec Sheets. Sandy Putts
'!'ate, .'\ rmetle Warnt'l' Hubm:;un ,
CH I'I Ili.lll
Salser prkc, Mill sa
Hi1cr, Mary Be til Tuney . Alita
Carpenter Cm·ol, S::~ r&lt;Jh Bet:h tlc ,
an d Alfred 'l'llney , H I ~J :; t
a:;.'iocw tc guartli~ul. Also sending
ref.\rels were K~nny Wigglrls.
as,'iol't~t e guardia n, and Paul

.:;l\

THE OFFICES OF

Monday- Friday 5 P.M.-9 P.M.

RADIO SHACK HAS OTHER TRS -80 COMPUTERS
TO FIT EVERYONE 'S NEEDS FROM $249 TO $10 ,000

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Past honored queens of llelhel
62, International Order of Job's
Daughters. were guesbi Ht a
banquet stagt.."tl in theic· honor
Friday night at the Middleport
Masonic Temple.
The purple and white l'olurs uf
tht! Bethel wen1 carried out in lhc
table dccor·ations with center
streamers a11t.l bouquets of lill ct;
of the valley. An hnnurcd quet•n
replica adorned the registration
table. A cake, baked by Mrs .
Mary Wise, past guardiH n. was
,decura tt..-d in tht&gt; Bethel Ct) lors
and inscribed " Wekumc Pust
l-lunured Quccfls. "
The current Bethel uff1cers
were introduced - Te resa StmT,
honored qut..~ ll ; Za r1dra Vl:l ug ha tl .
senior princess; A111y Slssun.
junior princess: f&gt;ixJC Dugan .
ma rshal; Palty Neutzli ng, guldl' ;
Mandy Hill. treasurer : 'l;unva
Cwmuins, rcl'on.lcr ; Beth Blail;l',
chaplu in. cuul Hl'l h Mo yl'r.
IIIUSiciwn .
Past hunured 4u c~ns pl'cse nted
und spca ki11g bridly 111duded
Bcl'ky Scott an d Sa nd y

...

. 133.00
. 111 .00

lYur

527 triumphs H~ul 227 defeats.

Job's Daughters' queens
:~ are guests of Friday banquet

110 . ~

........... 120.00 '
.. .. .. .. 138.00

Johnson.

..-~ Past

. 117 .50

..,

Eichinger, Merrl Ault, Reeky Anderson: setond row.
Angle Sisson, Twlla Childs, Lisa Morris, Julie Byer,
J.inda Mayer, Becky Scott. Dollie Rousey, and third
row, Mickey Hoback, Diana Carsey, Brenda Hill, Pam
Diddle, Sandy Luckeydoo, Debbie Finlaw. and Kathy

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20 YEARS OF HONORED QUEENS - A!lending a
banquet held Friday night at the Middleport Masonl&lt;•
Temple honoring past honored queens of Bethel 62, International o'rd&lt;&gt;r of Job's Daughters, were left to
right, front, Susanna Wise, Mandy Sisson, Jennifer
Harrison, Teresa Sta rr, Debbie f:la1.a . Paula

'.

Holzer Clinic LTD.'s
NIGHT CLINIC

educational and fund raising Cancer
Crusade is 'You Are the'Key to Can·
cer Control," they said.
Chairman
The crusade moves into high gear
.. Never before has the pen odic because on March 30 will be the
cancer-related health checkup been Crusade Training F'rogram for all
so important for cancer control, " ' American Cancer Society volunteers
Enna Cleland and Opal Hollon , co- for the door-tlHloor crusade which
chairpersons fo1· the door-to-door will be held in April. It will be held at
crusade of the Meigs County Unit of Veterans Memorial Hospital at 8
the American , Cancer Society sa id p.m.
today .
Recently th e American Ca ncer
"New adva nces in treating cancer Society reevaluated its recom·
with surgery, drugs, and radiation mendations concerning the cancer·
or combinations of these methods related health checkup - the tests,
have improved the long-term sur- procedures, and health counseling
vival and cure rates for various for- fur the prevention and early detec11
I lei uf cancer,
Cleland and Hollon tion of cancer.
sa1d. "The key is finding the ca ncer
" These new reconunehdations
before .it has spread."
have been widely publicized and we
"That is why the theme of our 1981 ur_ge that eve ryone consult their own
By Sharon Michael
Public Information

Multimedia, Inc., Pomeroy, Oh!o e7IUI,
992-2 156. Second class postqe Plid at

pos t

call

F',..

PubliShed every jl.fttmoon

One Month .

ANNOUNCEMENT

munitles1· streams, lakes, parks,

schools, churches, cemeteries and
other named natural and cultural
features.
All place names appearing on t~e
7 .5-minute topographic maps
published by the U. S. Geological
Survey are listed by COWJ!y and in
alphabetical order for quick reference. Also listed is the particular map
on which that place .name or feature
ca n be found.
The publication will be useful to
residents of southeast Ohio, and to
historical and ~enealo~ ical rescar-

chers and others wanting to locate a
particular feature in the area .
Copies of Infonnation Circular 49,
" Place Names Directory: Southeast
Ohio," can be obtained from the
Division of Geological Survey, Ohio
Department of Natural Resources,
Fountain Square, Columbus 43224 ,
, for $1.74, which includes postage an&lt;l..
handling. Checks or money orde~-::
. should be made payable to the ·
Division of Geological Survey.
A simi lar publication, lnfonnation
Circular 45, " Place Names Directory: Northeast Ohio," can also be
obtained for $1.16. An Index to
topographic maps for Ohio will ;,.; •
sent without charge upon request.

You are key to cancer control

1USPSI45-. . I

AOlw llloa oiMWdmedii,IK.

SUBS(.'RIPTION RATES
Hy Carrier ur Mo&amp;or RCKiie
Ont' ~·t't!k ,.
. ....... , ..... 11 .00

OVC (49 ) - M1fZ1 How a rd . South
P o1 nt , 4 S 13 ; Susan Nance, Coal
Grove . 4 2 10.
Brenda Gil la nd ,
Fa1rtand, 50 10. Candy McCorkle .
Oak Hilt. 3 1 7 ; Denise C1 r c 1e. Oak
Hill. 0 3 3 Total s 19-1-49 .
SEOAL (45 ) - K1m Kellar. Logan ,
.:1 o B: Lor 1 Vickers , Well sto n, 2 3 1;
Laure n Tr ip lett , Ironton , 3 0 6 . Shirl
Ston ey , Galli poli s, 1 J 5. Margnret
Evan s, Ga llipolis, 1 2 4; Jack1 e
Copeland , Wave rly , 2 0 4 ,
L1sa
Bland , Ironton , 1 I 3: Sheryl H awk ,
Logan, 1 0 2; Andrea Rig gs, Me1 qs ,
t 0 2 , Jane Stoney , GallipoliS, 0 2 2 .
Rose Stiffler. Jackson, 1 0 2 Tota ls
17· 11 ·45.
Score by Quarters :
ovc
10 6 11 21 49
5EOAL
9 12 11 12 45

Circular 49 , " Place Names Directory : Southeast Ohio,'' includes
townships, cities, villages, com-

The Vuily Sentinel

The other long shuts un the current
Indians roster :
Pitchers: Eric Wilkins , Nate
Puryear, Steve Narleski. Mike Paxton, Bobby Cuellar .
Infie lders: Angelo LoGrande.
Wayne Cage.
Outfielders: Larry Littleton, Karl
Pagel.
Among the long shots, Littleton
gets the best odds, thanks tu 'his ex·
ccllent fi elding and surpriSing hit·
ting this spring.

Nt',~ Inn rt·&gt;oi~ns

COLUMBUS - A detailed directory of natural and cultural features
in 17 southeast Ohio counties,
designed for use with topographic
maps of the areas, Is now availa ble
from the Ohio Department of
Natural Resources (ODNR).
The g uide, essentially a
geographical dictionary, is the
second in a series which will even·
tually encompaSS the entire state. It
covers Athens, Belmont, Carroll,
Coshocton, · Guernsey, Harrison, ·
Hocking, Holmes, Jefferson, Meigs ,
Monroe, Morga n, Muskingum ,
Noble, Perry, Tuscarawas and
Washington counti es.
The director, en titiPfi fnfnrm::~tion

$35,200.

OVC All-Stars triumph

the first, secund and thi rd ptace
teaons . Individual trophies will be
awarded tu the first place team. An
MVP trophy will be awarded . A
trophy for the most points scored in
the tournament will also be awi:lrded.
further infonlUition
Lowell Settl es I614 l 384-3628.

Ha rrah isn't. or both will make the
triP. back.
That bri ngs us to at least 18, and
maybe 19.
Now, heo·e are the people who are
more likely them othe'rs to earn a
job:
Pitchers : Mike Stanton. Sandy
Wihtol. Gordy Glaser, Tom Brennan. Ross Grimsley . Only three will
return. i!nd Grimsley, the veteran, is
gradually pitching himself out of
contention this spring.
We're up to 21-22.
Infielders: Dave Rosello, .Juan
Boni lla. If Harrah is healthy and
Hayes sticks with the club, perhaps
neither ur the~e will make it.
Outfielders: None .

e-s

Natural, cultD:ral directory
also inclu~es Meigs County

two tournaments back to back that's something I've never done
before - that's reward enough for
me. The monetary reward is just
icing on the cake.' '
" I don't feel like I lost the tournament," said Jaeckel. " I feel like 8
great player won it with one helluva
row1d of golf. I have no regrets. I'll
have a couple of drinks tonight and
get down the road smiling."
Jaeckel and Strange each won

Garcia not sure about his roster

The Dail Senlir.;;; - ·Pa

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohoo

•

\'lllg alumnt lJanqud

POMEHOY-MIJ)IJ I.El'O HT I ,III IlS
t 'lub regular lllt..'l'llll ~. t1uun Wed ·

nc!'l day. ut Mc1gs 11111.
U.M W. SU I'i'Olrt'E HS
ll tt:dHtg .

li.:m

HtvcriJoat
!

~~~1:1~.A~Q~U:E~-

Mrs. Mary Martin, rlghl, ,.,.
&lt;'halnnan for thro·ounty·wldt• drive fur &lt;"YHII&lt;' flbrusis. prt•seuted a plaqu•·
from the Cy.tk t'lbru•ls F'oundutlun tu Mrs. Zu&lt;·l•·lla Smith. &lt;'hapt•au uf
Mel~· salon 710, t:l~hl and t'urty. t'ridu) . Th&lt;· Jl;aque wus ~lven lu tlh·
Salon by tht• Fmmclatiou lu aiJIH't•duthm fur tht• uwr $2,000 t•nlh•l•h•d h1·n·
by the p11 rtners.

t'l ub

w ~·d llt'sda .'

Hou11 1, I ) l ai!IHIId

11 11d L11a n l 'u.

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at

Sm 111g;.;

l'~l lllt ' l' u)

TJIIJI\SII •\ V
I·:V r\ i'H ;t-:I.I NI-: 1'\ 1:\l''l'I·: H

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( ti·:S. :truHWI IIISIJI' t'll11ll , Tllllrsda) .
i ' \Op111
J(l)l'K ,.;J•Jii~l:s lkll &lt;'l' llcalll l
1'lu ll. 1 t:J IJ. II l l'htll ...d.t \ 111ll l lt' .. 1
\ 11' I ,t ' IIIII'H l.l'li'll\'11
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plu f, I , HII.

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SWAI.LOWS' NEW HOME - The fumed swallows
111 San Juan Capistrano are getting a ne" home . A $2.o

mlllimo .-tour"h with n

1~84

t•omplelion date wlll haVl' a

104-loot bellow tower which Priests hope wiU lore the
tiny birds back. They've abandoned 205-year-old sign
in recent years. I AP I..aserphotol.

�Tuesda

. .,0:. Pap~6-The o.aily Sentinel

March 24, 1981

Pomerov-Middle ort, Ohio

DlatTRACY

T

Television
•
•
vtewmg

Art demonstration
highlights
.
meeting of Philathea Women

MARCH24, 1e81
EVENING

Eleanor Lohse were welcomed into
Miss Frances Roush presided at
An art demonstration by Delores
membership. Refreshments were
Long and Betty McKinley the meeting with Mrs. Debbie
by Mrs. Sharon Stewart,
served
Melton giving devotions on the
highlighted the recent meeting of the
Mrs
.
Melton,
Mrs. Margaret LaUantheme "Spring Cleaning of Me."
Philathea Women at the Middleport
ce,
Mrs
.
Louise
McElhinney, and
Thank vou notes were read from
Church of Christ.
,
Mrs
.
Lula
Mae
Quivey to those
Mrs. M~rtha Childs and the Charles
It was decided during the meeting
·
named
and
Mrs.
·
Farie Cole, Mrs. ·
Boyles family. Reported ill were
to retain the same officers for
Clara
Conroy,
Mrs.
Cathy Erwin,
Mrs. Childs, Mrs. Pearl Reynolds ,
, another year and the installation
Clarice
Erwin,
Mrs. Grace
Mrs.
Mrs. Lena McKinley, Shawn Baker,
· was set for April9 with a potluck dinHawley,
Mrs.
Helen
Reynolds,
Mrs.
Mrs. Mary Harris, Mrs. Trudy
ner at 6 p.m. Mrs. Clyda AllenRoush,
Miss
Nina
Russell,
Beulah
sworth, Mrs. Regina Swift and Mrs. · Roach, Mrs. Martha Searles, and
Mrs. Mitzi Saltzman, and guests,
Mrs. Bernice Grueser.
McKinley wiD have charge of the
Jared
Stewart and Mrs. Long .
Mrs. Becky Loving . and Mrs.
tables.

By Robert G. Stockmal,
D.O., Ph.D.
Assistant Professor
of FamDy Medicine
Ohio University College
of Osteopathic Medicine
QUESTION: My ear has been
aching and I was told that I have
o\itis media . ·
Whatdoesthatmean?
ANSWER: " Otitis media "
literally means inflarrunalion of the
'
middle ear. That's the part of the ear
·~
just inside the drum. The middle ear
,·
•'
contains small bones which transmit
the vibrations of the drwn to the "in. •,'• ner ear" deep within the skull. The
middle ear is also connected to the
back of the upper throat
(nasopharynx) by a passageway
called the eustachian tube. The
·,' primary function of this tube is to

star Peter M 1 rshall and his wife Sal·
1~.

6o30

SORRY. MI\/I:Y! I JUH
CAME UP 1\JOIUH FOR

allow the atmospheric air pressure

to balance on either side uf the ear
drum. You have probably felt the
eustachian tubes working when yowears popped as you went up or down
in an elevator, a plane or a car over
the mountains. If the pressure
' .. doesn't balance, the ear drum will
be pushed in or out. This is often

MY 50S~ IN THE STATeS
--WH!!-U THE J013'S OOU~ .

fM

Senior Nutrition Day will be observed at the Pomeroy site, Meigs
County, at the multi-purpose
building on Mulberry Heights at
11:30 a.m. Wednesdsy .
There will be special guests,
speakers, and entertainers: The
group includes the Rev .. William
Middlesworth, Meigs' County Commissioners Rich Jones, Henry Wells
and David Koblentz : Joe Barsotti

This condition is more often seen

,in pre-school children and in those of
early school age. Its presence can
cause a serious learning handicap

and may at times be responsible for
behavioral problems.
QUESTION The doctor said that
my condition could develop into
acute purulent otitis media . What is
that?
ANSWER: Purulent implied the
presence of pus which is usually
associated with bacterial infection.

and Hazel McKelvey, director and
assistant director, respectively, of
the Gallia-Meigs Conununity Action
Agency and musical entertainment
will be by William McKelvey and
Paul Sayre.
At regular senior nutrition lunch
will be served at noon with a reservation and reservations are to be in
rio laterthan 9 a.nl. Wednesday .
Cost of the meal is a donation for

Tips on wine keeping
given by area group
Members of the Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority enjoyed a wine and cheese
tasting party recently at the Riverboat Room of the Diamond Savings
and Loan Co., Pomeroy.
A program on 50 years of vintage
wine was presented by Bob Marchi
of Marchi's Distributors of
Gallipolis, Allen Ford, a representative of Paul Masson wines, and
Jim Stewart of the 'Pomeroy Wine
Store. They served a selecton of
table wines noting that for the best
flavor wine should always be taken
,• with a little something to cat. Marchi pointed out that wine compliments food and food compliments

wine.
.
Ii was also noted that red wine
should be laid on its side since it continues to age and will keep when
open. Storage temperature should
be around 60 degrees. Ohio has 14
wineries, it was reported.
Donna Jbnes and Ann Rupe were
hostesses for the party which was
preceded by a business meeting. A
thank you note was read from June
Freed for a yellow rose sent her
during her recent hospitalization. A
contribution was made to the Meigs
High School choir robes. Mrs. Jones
and June Van Vranken were appointed to present a sketch at the
Founder's Day dinner ne•t month.

''

r: Polly's Pointers

Bkach spills on rug
;.,
,
;:
,-,.

..

..
,.

By Polly Cramer
Special correspondent
DEAR POLLY - By accident a
leaky bottle of bleach was spilled on
a new carpet.
There are about
twJ&gt;odozen spots,
the size of dimes,
that have turned
white. The carpet
is shades of tan
and brown. So far
no cleaner or car·
,,
pet company has
CRAMER
been able to help me, so I trust you
or one of the readers can suggest
something. -EVELYN
DEAR EVELYN - If the color is
bleached out of your carpet, I do not
think there is anything you can do
except try to dye the spots. The carpet's "shades of tan and brown" will
make the job easier than !f rt was a
soUd color.
I would try using regular dye
1following directions on the
package I in the proper colors. Dampen the spots so the dye will
penetrate and then apply with a
medicine dropper so as not to put on
too much and go beyond the spot. An
old toothbrush could then be used to
make sure all the rug pile is colored.
This would be a slow a11d parnstakin~ job, but well worth rl r! your
carpet could be saved. Try an inconspicuous spol first tu be sure the
rug fibers take the dye
POLl. Y

(301N' ~ACK

r A~r&lt;

TUIOO'IO'

~

Pain and fever are ·pronounced
features of this middle ear infection
1purulent otitis media ) and are
usually so severe that inune&lt;liate
medical help is sought regardless of
time of day or night. In this instance
the products of infection build up
within the middl~ ear and cause the
ear drwn to bulge out (rather than
in ) and to hurt. The pressure as it
continues to build will ultimately
burst the drum and the products of
infection will drain out of the ear.
However, before the ear drwn
breaks the pressure could force the
infection into the mastoid bone. the
inner ear and even 'into the brain .

These are all, obviously, very
dangerous conditions.
QUESTION: What should be done
about an ear ache ?

ANSWER: You were right in consulting your physician. Serous and
purulent otitis media are not the
only pOSSible explanations for ear
ache. Causes range !rom a foreign
body in the e.ternal canal to life
threatening twnors. Re.Jnember,
your hearing is too precious to gamble away on a home remedy or a
watch-and-wait attitude.

HALLY HEI.J}-Approximalely 150 persollll attended
the 54tb annual Daughters of America District Rally
held Saturday at Syracuse Elementary School hosted
by Guiding Star CouJioll 124, Syracuse. Taking part In
tbe activities were, front row, 1-r, Dorothy Rlleble,
dlstrtct deputy; Blanche Moldloey, state councilor:

Isabel Wooda, junior past slate councilor; back, Janice
Lawson, district couDcDor; Rosalle Mtboll, state
associate coUIIcDor; Ada Pbersoo, deputy oadoual
councilor, and Fay H08olton, junior past asaoclat'
slate couocllor

DEAR POLLY - I find my best
money saver and maker at home is
my pocket calculator. Like many
people, I was lazy about computing
household finances, but now find
myself checking cost per serving,
miles per gallon, interest charges,
etc. Because my hands are shaky, I
lind the eraser end of a pencil faster
and more accurate than my clwnsy
fingers .
I use freezer wrap for shelf and
drawer liners. I cut it to fit, with
waxed side down , and have a 'sturdy
inexpensive liner that does not slip.
I make cracker crumbs in a
plastic bread wrapper laid flat.
Leave the end open and crush with
the rolling pin. A bread sack works
well because it is long enough that
the crumbs do nut splash out and
transparent enough to see the size of
the crwnbs. Also, such bags are
readily available and clean.- MRS.
W.E.M.
DEAR POLLY - A good way to
('are for leather boots in the wrnter is
to stuff newspapers in them. The
paper will soak up the water overnight and let the boots keep their
shape. 1Protect the boot linrng from
newspr·int 1. - SHIRl .EY
Polly will send you une of her
signed thank-you newspaper coupon
dippers if she Jllies your favorite
Pointt'r, Peeve ur Problem ln her

colwrur. Write POLLY'S POINTERS in carP of this newspaper .
I

persons 60 and older with those under 60 paying a contribution fee o(
$2.25. Reservations can be made by
calling 992-216l.
Roger Patton, chairman of the
board of trustees of COAD, made the
official designation of Wednesday as
Senior Nutrition Day, siating that it
is intended to increase the
awareness of the importance of good
nutrition for the elderly of today's
society . The day will be observed
throughout the 26 county area served by the project. Many programs
will host open houses, entertainment
and informative programs about
nutrition for the elderly will be given
and a new menu eontest will be
kicked off.
One of the purposes of the menu
contest is to involve participants into
thinking on how to plan well-

D -of A hold$ spring rally Saturday
The spring rally of the District 13,
Daughters of Amerrca was held
Saturday at the Syracu~e Elementary School.
Final pl~ns were made at a
meeting Tuesday night of Chester
Council 323 held at the hall.
Registration for the rally be~an
at 9 a.m. Charlotte Grant, councilor,
presided at the meeting during
which time balloting was held for
three candidates to be initiated at
the rally . •
Letha Wood was reported ill .
Quarterly birthdays were observed

•

'

Ric/Jard johnson

with .the honorees being seated at a
spec1al table Gifts were at ·each
place and there wa,s a decorated
cake. The honorees were Margaret
· Keller, Fem Morr~
·
Tuttle, Marcia
Goldie Wolle, Opal Hollon and
Clarice Allen.
Pianist was Mrs. Allen. Refreshments were served by Julie Rose,
Thelina White, Mary Hayes, and
Mary K. Holter.
Others attending · were Dixie
Beair, Charlotte Smith, Anna
Taylor, Virginia Lee, Ada Neutzling,
Ada Morris, Mary Showalter,

Dau•rt Jobnson

Birthdays celebrated locally
Richard Keith Johnstm, sun u(Mr.

and Mrs. Richard Johnson, Letart.
W. Va . celebrated his fir st birthday
recently with a party at his home.
A Winnie-the-Pooh the111e was
carried out with ·cakes being baked
by his great-aunt. Shirley Meadows.
and ~baron Stewart. Others al·
tendin}l lhe party were his rilaternal
grandparents. Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Surlace, his great-grandmother,
Mrs. Eula Odegard, Mr . and Mrs.
Ernie Haggy , Pam and Kirruny, Mr.
and Mrs . .Tack Haggy. Oeanna and
balanced rnt:'als which meet their' Alicia , Mr. and M1·s . Harold
daily requirement needs. Rules of Meadows and Troy, Art Johnson. Otthe contest will be announced on tie Roach, Alice Roach, Mr. and
Wednesday. Dieticra"" from the Mrs. Steven Hupp and Jody .
Ohio Conunission un Aging will ser·
Sending gifts were paterna l grandve as judges and winners will be parents. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Johnpresented prizes in July .
sun, Mr. and Mrs. Edward !hie, DonThe nutrition program is funded na and Debbie, Keith Lynch, his
under the Older Americans Act.
Funds are granted under the
auspiCes of the Ohio Commission on
Aging and the Agencies on Aging
Seven. Eight and Nine . Corrununity
Action Agencies implement the
10 Ease., Leading Creek Cons.,
program at the local level.
Pomeroy .
Wednesday Menu-fried chicken,
Mary A. Smallwood, nka Mary A.
mashed potatoes, cole slaw, but·
Nonnan, to John Roy Norman, ·
tered corn, peaches, bread, butler,
Mary A. Norman, 2.72 acres,
milk .
Hutland.
Thursday Menu-Salisbury steak,
Ernest Newlun, Virginia Newlun
buttered noodles, buttered peas, ice
to Monongahela Power Cu., Ease.,
cream, bread, butter and milk.
Olive.
Friday Menu-Pork chop, buttered
Martha V. Moore, Estill Moore to
carrots, green beans, apple cobbler,
Martha V. Moore , Ruth Croush, Parbran muffins, butter , mrlk . cels, Syracuse · ~on,

great-grandmother, Mrs. Mae Lynch. and Mr. and Mrs. Butch Brown,
Renee, Charity and Kortney .
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Johnson entertained ~ecently with a party
honoring their daughter, Dawn
Michelle, on her roth birthday.
Cake, ice cream, Kool·Aid alid
potato chips were served to Mrs .
Ethel Johnson, Mrs. Betty Combs.
Cleveland; Darrin Proter, Becky
Evans , Joyce Foreman, Kathy
Swarn, Donettc Talbott. Amy
Wagner, Junie Beegle, Tricia and
Sheri Roush, Nancy Hunt, Kim
Wilford. Michael Boso, Ryan Evans,
Neil Barber, Greg Widdle, Mr. and
Mrs. Aaron Sayre, Stephanie and
Jessica. held a party for Dawn at
their Syracuse horne Thursday
evening .

Margaret Amberg~is!'Jda~:~~
Betty Roush, Ada
'
P~~· Esther Sml~ ~W~:;'~
V1rg1rua Newlun, e en
•
F ae Kimes, Linda Beasley • Thelma
.
McMa~IS, Joe Bissell, Goldie
Fredenck, Leona Hensley, Sandy
White, Lora Damewood, Enna
Clela~d, Carolyn Holley, Dorothy
Ritchie, and Alta Ballard.

C. E. Lashley to James E . Hunter,
Judith A. Hunter, 1.0'2 acres,
Chester.
The Rock Springs Better· Health
.
Alfred V. ~· rank, Helen L. rrank
Club will meet Thursday at I: 15 p.m.
and
Thomas E. Mankin, Rebecca L.
al the h0111e ol Mrs . LenorwLeJfheit.
Mankin,
Boundary Line Agree .,
Mrs . Leifheit will have the program
Chester.
and the contest wrll be conducted by
Tamela K. Bradford to Anthony
Mrs . Judy Hwnphreys
Bradford, Lots, Lebanon. ·
Clara B. Dorst, dec . to Howard
Free clothing day
Dorst, Dale Dorst, Woodrow Dorst,
Rose Marie Shaw, All . (or Trans.,
rree clothrn~ day will be held at
Chester.
The Salvation Army : 115 Butternut
Howard Dorst, Martha Dorst,
Ave., Thursday , March 21i, fn.n 10
Dale
Dorst, Mildred Dorst, Woodrow
a.111. until noon. All area r~sidtmt:::; in
Dorst,
Evah Dorst, Earl Shaw, Rose
need of clothing are wckurrre .
Marie Shaw to David Kautz, Alice J.
Kautz , All. for Trans., Chester.
To present pmgram
Virginia M. Hindy , Affidavil.
The "Spiritual Sounds" w1ll present
Carl R. Stewart, Martha Stewart
a pn1gram at the Ash Street Freewrll
to Paul Stewart, Parcel, Salisbury.
Baptist Church in Mrddlcport at 7:JO
Earl P Cross, Geraldii1e M. Cross
p.m. Saturday. The public is intu Geraldine M. Cross, E:arl P.
vited .
Cross, Parcels, Sutton.
Ear'I Denny , Earl !Jenny Jr ., Betty
UI:S to' meet 1/mrsd,l)' ' Dl:nny to Erk Gryzka 1Gryszka 1,
AlllllWl lu::;pcctton vf Evrmgeline Dina J . Gryzka JGryszka). Lot.
Chapter 172, Order of the Eastern Pomeroy.
Eli White, Evelyn White to Wm . D.
Star. will"" held at 7:30p.m. ThurJlllltire,
Sonja Justice. Par&lt;•els, Suts&lt;la) at the Middleport Masonic
tun
.
TclllPit! .

Lorna Hall, Margie Hall to Herald nie S. Freeman, parcel, Minersville.
Osby A. Martin, Mary A. Martiri't9
Oil and Gas Co .. R.W., Scipio.
Adam
Martin, Pt. Lot, Middleport,
Mary A. Webster, Manning WebDonald
W. Mayer, Linda Mayer to
ster to Herald Oil and Gas Co., R.W .,
Donald
W.
Mayer, Linda Mayer,
Salis bury.
Lots,
Pomeroy
.
Kenneth Eblin, Donna J . Eblin to
Lawrenee
Vance,
Jean Ann Vance
Herald Oil and Gas Cu., 42 A.,
to
Tommy
Mason
Pennington,
Sr.,
Rutland .
Pamela
K.
Pennington,
Pa.wi,
Stephen M. Stiglil'z, Janet A.
~
Stiglic-l to Don B. Cull urns, Forma K. Rutland.
Ashley
J
.
Bishop,
Marilyn
Bishop
Cull urns. Parcels, Bedford.
to Stone Woods Litnited, Ohio PartRich Valley Dairy Co. to Adam F. nership, Sewer ri~hts, Middleport.
Gary L. Ellis, Dorothy E. Ellis to
Wilson, Nelma M. Wilson, Lot, MidStone Woods Limited, an Ohio Partdleport.
Raynwnd E. Boice, dec. to nership, Sewer Rights, Middleport.
Herman L. Willis, Rosa Lee Willis
~= ~nora E . Boice, Raymora C.
to Orion W. ROush, Kate Roush,
Young', Parcel, Me1gs.
Parcel, Sutton,
Dale V. Queen to Denver Queen, 14
Merle T. Evans to General'
acres, Colwnbia.
Jeffrey J . Dziah, Patricia T. Telephone Cu., Ease., Lebanon.
William T. Hart, Ethel Zeigler
Collier, Patricia I.. Dziah, aka
Palricia I.. Dziah, to Jeffrey J . Hart to General Telephone Co.,
,
r:niah, Patricia 1.. r:niah, Parc-els, Ease., Bedford.
SCipio.
·
Roy S. Sansbury to William ,M,
Richard A. F'inlaw, Gertrude M. Weaver, Betsy E. Weaver, Lot 172,
, rinlaw to Floyd Carusn, Esther Car- Middleport.
•
son, Lots, Pomeroy .
Tl1eria Marie Hendrix to Arthur
Chrisie E. Powell, dec. to Clara
Ed Hood, Lot, Middleport.
.
Mae Powell, Cert. of trans., Sutton.
Terry Scott Brown, Pamela Jean
Mary J. Clark to Gloria d, Manuel,
Brown to James E. Borders, Kathy
Roger T. Manuel , Jo Ann Manuel
Borders, Lots, Salisbury.
Willford, John W. Manuel, ' Parcel,
Jellle E. Brinker, Naomi H.
Sutton.
,
Brinker to JeS.se E. Brinker, Naomi
Harriett E. Thompson, Lydia A.
H. Brinker, Lot, Racine.
Del '"'ll to Herald Oil and Gas Co.,
H. Glenn Brown to Talbott Oil and
Hight ol Way, Salisbury.
~ Gas Co., Right of Way, Rutland,
Charles Goeglein,
Maxine
Emmett McCaskey, Evelyn Mc(;ueglcrn, Albert Goeglein, Ida
Caskey to Talbott Oil and Gu Co.,
· Su:;an Goeglein, Avery GoeKlein,
Right of Way, Rutland,
Helen Goeglein to Herald Oil and
Beatrice Brenda Douglu
Gas Co., Right of Way, Salisbury.
Nemecek, Edward J, Nemecek to
. Gary E. Freeman, Bonnie S.
John R. Boyd, Eleanor M. Boyd, l.liO
~· reernan to Gary E. Freeman, Bon- 1 acres.'I)Ippen Pial"•- Qllu~.

~

7o58
BoDO
1

one of the moatnotorlous hit ·men in

the country. but he feels lessheroic

0

ANNIE

MCCL observes
husbands' night
POMEROY-Husband's night was
observed at the Thursday night
meeting of the Middleport Child Conservation League held at the
American Legion Hall in Pomeroy.
The group enjoyed a potluck 4Jnner and games preceding a business
meeting conducted by Mrs. Peggy
Harris. Devotions were given by
Mrs. Clarice Kennedy with the
reading "Wonderlul People" by
Helen Steiner Rice. Officers' reports
were given and Mrs. Harris reported
on the products party held in
February . A thank you note was
read from the Karen Grover family
thanking the group for a valentine
gift. The CCL will send a note to .the
Toddlers to Tasslers Club in appreciation for 1he St. Patrick's Day
dinner at which members were
guests.
Several fund raising projects were ·
discussed and it was decided that a
white elephant sale will be held In
April and a bake sale in May for the
members. The spring conference to
be held on May 23 at 3 p.m. at the
Bob Eva"" shelter house was announced. Taken in as new members
were Peggy Wood and Kay Logan.
Two traveling prizes to be awarded in April will be provided ID'
Eloise White and Jean Whobery. AI
the April meeting to be held at the
home of Mrs. Susie Souls by, At·
torney Douglas Little will be the
guest speaker on wills.
Attending were Helen and Harold
Blackston. Gene and Peggy
Houdashelt, Ann and Dale Colburn,
Susie and Roger Abbott, Susie and
Jim Soulsby, Peggy and Kenneth
Harris, Clarice Kennedy, and Nancy
Morris.

l SI-IALL.. FltJD
I.W~T '!He '5€C.~.ARI6'5
St&gt;,'( 13€1-lltJD M'( &amp;.a&lt;.!

..

SURE, SURE·BUT OR. CHOOI!S
MAKES SURE YOU 'N' HER
~E C OME BUDDIES! YOU KNOW
HO~ MUCH UXJI\ !'lAKES A&gt;
HEAD OF WARBUCK&gt;' MEDICAL
COMPLE! ':'

[ ... DON' T UNIJER6TAND,1 I
'10U1VE BUILT n\10 TIME
MA.CHINES, THEN YOU
ALRE... DY H ....VE ll&lt; ...T

..,

- OVER AHUNDRED 6RAHD.
AND HALF AGAIH THAT ,--' - - ---._
IN PERKS!
,.,'fOU 60NNA
~

TELL ME 0~ . GUE
CHOOR&lt;; DON'T
HAVE HER EYE ·
ON THAT JOB?!

WE LEFT ONE
FACT OUT L.)l'
OUR SCENARIO

5,30

OF UFE I N

INFORMATION!

THE FUTURE ,

DOCTOR ..
•,

S: 58
9 o00

Hab1t.

r quess'

Will LjOU
like

Maybe 4ou .
cauqht dandruff'

Dadd4

l)J

even tf
he itches?

WINNIE
1 GUESS C UI'.
LITTLE CONNIE
CAUSED QUI1E ..\
.STIR ARO UND
' HERE EH 7

r KNO\v r rtr'N T

\\ ..RINKA, I HINKS
S HE HAS THE 'AAKINGS
OF .l, GRE..\T MODEl
. . ..\NO -\L L THE I OUNG

riA'v E

rc

T::: .sE~

'11\\

· .&gt;, ~ ErlER

T~'

~R\'

1 .STI LL DC'N'T

TI\11£-T TIPPve

rc

1'-.NOY..· WH'
:-"lrN

h :'IJ

1 :;.:: wtrH
I HE~\ .

\ lEN \1..\N T TO

9 :30

K NO W WHO

SHE 15.

9 o45
10,00

., BARNEY

-- AN' THEN SAIRY

WHACKED HER
MAN CALEB ON
TH'SETTER
WITH HER

BRESH
BROOM

after the killer escapes andtargets
him tor extinction . (60 mins .)
(]) ORAL ROBERTS
(!) MOVIE ·(ADVENTURE! "
''Klondike Fe•er''
(j)IJ2&gt;Q)HAPPY DAYS Alie rl acIng
a mutiny by hi s students on his first
day as Jefferson High's auto
mechanics instructor , Fonzie wor nesthat he'slost h1s mag1c touch .
(Bepeat)
llJ (j) @) PALMERSTOWN
Bessie's frequent and often late night viSitS to town patriarch Rick
Bragdon 's estate has the tongues
of Pa lmerstown wagging with the
worst k1nd of scandal. and when
Bragdon is found shot , circum ·
stancespointtoBessie 's husband .
(~_0 mins .)
CIJ NOVA 'Voyager : Jupiter and
Beyond' On November 12 , 1980 .
the spacecraft Voyager I made its
long awailed ' fly -by ' of the planet
Saturn. yielding more information
than ever before poss1b le on the
maJestic ringed p lanet . NOVA
documents Voyager 's jOurney
through the outer solarsystemahd
looks to the .future ol spa ce e:w.plor ·
aliOn. (Cioaed-Cap!IOned; U.S.A.)
@ FAST FORWARD
(]) GOOD NEWS
(j)IJ2)QJ LAVERNE AND SHIRLEY
Laverne and Shirley get a rathet
unsettling welcome to California in
the form of an earthquake while
they are recovenng from the ·alter·
shOck of meeting their new neigh bors, a handsome stuntman and a
sexy but sarcastic actress.
(Bapeet)
Clll MONET N1nery of the master 's
works are displayed . In this show
hiS paintings 8re themati oafty
structured and their visual beauty
intensified by the music ol the 7th
mphonv inC of John Sibelius.
(;BN UPDATE NEWS
•
II ill 8J AND THE BEAR A
gangster kidnaps BJ 's seven lady
truckers with the help ofRuthertord
T Grant : but when Grant discovers
hisdaughter IS one ott he viCtims . he
te~ms with BJ to save the girls '
l1ves (60 m!OS )
(]) 700 CLUB
r
IIJ IJ2&gt; OJ THREE ' S COMPANY
Ja c k unleashes a double dose ol
madciip c omedy by posmg as his
oWn twm to romance Furley'S at·
lra ctive v1silmg niece, only to have
Furtey name both brothers Tripper
as guests ol honor at a trent ic,besh
(gtosed ·Captioned; U.S.A.)
CJCIJ ®J GONE WITH THE WIND
1939 Stars : Clark Gable , Vivien
Le1gh . Cia ss1c taleoftheOid South.
the Civil War, Reconstruction, and
the pass1onate conflict of wills
between Rhen Butler and Scaflett
O'Hara (ConcluSIOn, 2 hrs .)
l] ) (fil MYSTERY! ' Rumpole and
the Age tor Retirement' Rumpole's
best cl i ents , the T1mson family ,
seek Rumpole out when ag•ng
Per cy Timson IS caught with a
stolen religious art work worth hat!
a
m•llion
pounds . (Closed·
Captioned; U.S.A.)
l f11J2&gt;QJ TOOCLOSEFORCOM·
FORT Henry and Muriel'slovelyan mverSary dinner plans are hifar·
10usly allered wf'1en they w1ncf up at
lhe poli c e station try1no;~ to spring
Sara and her funny and flaky new
tuand . Mo nroe . who ' ve been
tossed
•nto
the
stammer
LAttpeat)
L&amp;/ TBS EVENING NEWS
IV 8 i1'l FLAMINGO ROAD
Danger'O us c hem• c ata !rom the
Weldon Mill contaminate Sam Cur ·
t1s ' hope thai Fjeld will repave poll ·
l1cal favor and allow the mil l to
reopen (60 mins .)
(4} MOVIE ·(DRAMA) ' ' '
'.' Ag!)c.J!yple Now" 1Q79
I Ol&lt;12JUJ HART TO HART An inler·
national mastar criminal smuggles
amull• ·m1lllon dollargoldcache mto
the u S by melting ll Into a 300·
pound barbell. then swit ching rtw1th
the barbell o f an internationally
~nown bodybUilder who c arries rt
into the c ountry (60 mins.) '
I fJ SOUNDSTAGE 'SoulhS!de
Johnny and the Asbury J ukes '
(S;: Ioaed -Captloned, U S.A.)

~

ltE NEWS
CBNUPDATEioEWS

10o28 l
10:30 I.
10:.. ~
10:58

11 :00

",.....-

PEANUTS

"1t'o•II
~ J•Hf

-. ·!.
·~ \

OKA'( CHUCK WHAT WE
WANT 'IOU 10 DO IS ::&gt;ELL
THES~ SAGS OF POPCORN
TO THE PEOPLE WHO ARE
WATCHING OUR GAME

'IOUHAVE
PEOPLE

WATCH '1001&gt;:
6AME5'

OF cOURSE
LHULI., ...

WHAT f'ID
'IOU T HINK ~

NO ONE

ANVWAY, GO

WATCHb

TO IT. ( HUe K .
SELL THE
POPCORN

EVER

OUR

.v..~

PITcH!

GAMES...

~~
~

.

. ' '1.!l, '· •.

J

' '

v

, ___.. 1_ '-

li, J" j

-~

YOURl SURE SELL THE
'IOU DON T
POPCORN
i.VAN1 METO CHUL), !

---~

' l'
&gt;

~

tI I

L

•"

'

(J

(] I

I DOLBIE± .

r J

II

eXPECTED 1'0
MAINTAIN A Hle&gt;H
&amp;TANDARD.

IYARDOPj
rJ r

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surpr}se answer. as sug·
gested by the above cartoon .

PrlntanswBrhare:
~ esterday's

I

A(

J XXI I J X]
(Answers tomorrolfol)

Jumbles AUDIT MESSY INNATE FIDDLE
Answer Samellmes seen on cars when the traftic

has been dense- DENTS
Jumble Book No. 18, ·r;:ontaininv 110 puzzlas, is available lor S1 .7S_pa.tpald
from Jumble, clo this newspaper, Bo.: 34, NOfWood. N.J. 07648. lnchd your
name, address, zip code 1nd mlkt ctledts p1y1blt 10 Newsp1perbook1.

BRIDGE
· Greed defeats declarer
By Osw•ld Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

There

IS

.'r 1 'HTU

:l-24-81

.QJJOA

an old Wall Street

9 AQ74

expression that "the Bear gets

t7 5

a lillie. the Bull gets a lilLie ..

.,

• .J72

and the Hog gets nothing ."
South found hi,-nself in four

WI::ST

E.~ST

+K7 4

spades after a Stayman

• 8 I) :l
t AJ9
• Q 10 ~.

Sl't!Ut.•nn· He won Uw st.•nmd

('lub with h1 s k1ng and
promptly led three rounds of
hearts to disc&lt;Jrd his lasl clUb .
Then ht• lt•d a diamond to h1s
kmg und West's il(' t' West led

• 10 9 5 :l

tJ084:1
+A tl 5
SOl iTH
• A 962

9KJ
t K Q o2
• K 4:1

a third elub .
South ruffed and ('CJ s h ~ d his

Vulnerable: Both
Deal er: South

qu·een uf di a monds. He had

lust two lr~t·ks and ~ ·uuld
afford to !uSe a trkk to the
king of trump s smn~ ht.• wa s
now re&lt;.~dv to ruff h1s l ast two
diamonds·.
llnfurtunately . he was a
match point plilver 1n a rubber bndge gamri and made a
silly play to try to score ctn

Wes1

Nurth

East

South

Pass
Pass

2+

i 1ass

2.

Pass

Pass

4+

I NT

I-' ass

overlrick. We call 11 &lt;illy

beca use only a hog wants to ·

. n sk game for an overtri(·k.

S&lt;Juth led a low diamond
cmd

cctrefully

ruffed

with

dummy's 10 of trumps_ Then

last diamond with dummy 's

he led the jaek and let it rrde

last trump and made that

for &lt;1 finesse . The finesse
worked and Soulh was readv
fur operation overtrick. He
led dummy 's eight of trumps
and &lt;:overed wifh his nine Tf

overtrick.

Unfoflunately for South and
poor North. West proceded to
produce the king and lead a
third trump . Now South had to

b:ast had held the I rump krng.
South could have rufred h1 s

lose his last diamond and was
down one.

~ ..C(Jr,a'
by THOMAS JOSEPH

. ACRUSS
t Wilson
of comedy

2 Liberace's
coat fabric
3 Like summer
drinks
t'A tc-;lr
5 Famous name
in chapeaux
4 Encircling
to Contest
1prefix 1
1t Conceited one
5 Scrawl
t3 Hebrew measure graffiti
14 Senori.ta 's
6 Nimble
celebration
7 College
Yesterday's Answer
15 Involving
in Iowa 22 High - kite 33 French
treatment
8 Spatlish 23 Jump the cheese
t 7 Safety or hat
9 Appraisal 24 Cowardly
34 Blue
18 Golf score
12 Japanese 25 Gratify
serge's
19 M.D.'s group
wild dog 27 Actor
bane
20 Irish county
16 Find fault McGavin
35 Upper hand
23 Strain
20 ~·elonious 29 Heat source 37 Time period
2t Scholars 32 Place to shop (abbr. )
at a 24 Brief: terse
25 Retinue
26 Singer
Coolidge
27 Pavao, e.g.
28 Wooden core b-t-- t----t-29 Perched
30 Man : Lat.
31 Quake
36 Enthrall
38 Dull
39 - Dancer.
1953 Derby
winner
40 Writer
Lardner
41 Cambric
42 Head
DOWN

1"- seato
shining sea

1
'

DAILY CRYPT0(1UOTE -llere's how to work it:
Ia

AXVDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

FAITH 20
TWILIGHT ZONE
LOVE AMERICAN STYLE
CBNUPDATENEWS

One lelter aimply stands for another . In this sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc Single letters,

a: II \ 0J I7J U Lt J U.W®W

apootrophes. the length and formation of the words are all

~

NEWS
i , TODAY IN BIBLE PROPHECY
I, NIGHT GALLERY
, l l MORECAMBE AND WISE
11 o28 .J) ~BNUPDATEN!WS
1 UO f ) U · ?-r THE TONIGHT SHOW
Gue sts Gore V•dal. B 8 Kmg (60
tn lnS J
1 ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
$ MOVIE · !ADVENTURE!" '•
" Oettlnltlon Gobi" 1953
0
iz, Ill
ABC NEWS
NIGHTLINE
1
8 · ~ CBS LATE MOVIE ' LOU
GRANf Scam Whllti!IOOklnQ lor a
pla &lt;.:u to mv eSt a wmdfall , lpu un~.;o v er s a .... nile coii.H co ,....uam8
(R " ._,ttctt)

'

FIRGE

~

7 o30

~W

axt.E:IZ.~!

Meigs Property Transfers ·

Leifheit has program

I

BORN LOSER

UTILE: CO~'{ t&lt;J.O.V
I-lAD lAAT 1/J,.\.Tal- __~--:.~-

actrese . Host : Hugtl Downs ..
f!l.Od·Captloned, U S A )
•CD NBC NEWS
20th CENTURY GUIDELINES
BOB NEWHART SHOW
FAct: THE MUSIC
'
CIJ (II) CBS NEWS
WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
LILiAS, YOGA AND YOU
IDABCNEWS
!;.BN UPDATE NEWS
D PM MAGAZINE
(])
GERALD
DERSTINE
PRESENTS
(!) RED SKELTON'So 'FUNNY
FACES'
CIJ ALL IN THE FAMILY
CIJIJ2)Q) FAMILY FEUD
(!) TV HONOR SOCIETY
QCIJ TICTACDOUGH
(f) @
MACNEIL-LEHRER
REPORT
NEWS
·
II BULLSEYE
·FAITH THATLIVES
(1) NBA BASKETBALL Atlanlo
Hawks va Detroit Pistons
Cfl8CIJ JOKER'S WILD
(!) HOLL VWOOD SQUARES
CIJ@ DICK CAVETT SHOW
MATCH GAME
18 FACE THE MUSIC
CBN UPDATE NEWS
(IJGCD LOBO Depurv Pefkins
becomes a hero when he captureS

l

J

Senior Nutrition Day Wednesday

.,'

WHAT WAS THAT
TENDEI't LITHE
,PART/I\J6 SCENE
ALL A80UT. MAY

6o58
7o00

painful and it also prevents the drwn
from vibrating freely, which in turn
reduces hearing.
QUESTION : I think my doctor
said I have serous otitis media . What
kind is that?
ANSWER : "Serous" otitis media
is a condition .in which the
eustachian tube is blocked. This
allows the air in the middle ear to be
absorbed by the surrounding tissue.
As a result the middle ear pressure
then drops and draws the drum inward. The low pressure also draws
nuid into-the middle ear from the adjacent tissue. The tight drwn and
fluid-filled middle ear cannot conduel sound well and hearing suffers.

NEWS
BACKYARD
CAROL BURNETT · AND
FRIENDS
ABCNEWS
3·2·1 CONTACT
OVEA!ASYGuests :Television

~

HEALTH

Otitis media and earache compatible

~BClJGCIJi'iOJi'HiGJ

6o00

hints. Eaeh day the eode letters are different.

CRVPTOQUOTES

UJIPZUQ

ZI
·T L F

zw

FYZWIW
VUJNU,

VUJ N U

MFATKWF

MKI

MFATKWF

IPZUQW"
I P F X

FYZWt
H.
I
PJMPJKWF
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: SILENCE IS NOT ALWAYS TACT,
ANO IT IS TACT THAT IS GOLDEN-NOT
SilENCE.--SAMUEL BUTLER

�·------ ---- ..

--~

•

Small investment, large
returns, Sentinel Want Ads
Public Not1ce

ADVERTISEMENT
FOR BIDS

KIT 'N' CARLYLE

1"

by Larry Wright

Separate sealed BIOS for

OVER ONE
· was lbe scene on
floor of the New York Stock exchange Monday
gainers outnumbered losers by a ratio of 3-2. on

(AP I- fl wlll be
However, Block made no hnkpge
least another week before detalls between the current le~tslatton and
the Reagan adrnmistrahon's new the delay m offering a new farm btll.
btll wtll he ready for Congress
" I want to read 1! and study tt and
Secretary John R be sure I'm sattsfted wtth what
had been scheduled to unvetl we're tak10g up there I to
admuustratwn btll today 111 Congress!," Block satd " We're not
te~tunony
before thl:! House ready . I want to have 11 nght when
Agnculturc Conumttce.
we go
jThe Flxxl and Agncullurc Act of
Block added, "When the btll
I!f77 exptres thts year and Congress comes out and when you look at 1!,
•S: putttng together a ne" package, you're gumg to ftnd that the btll ts
tncludmg baste pnce supports for what I' ve been say10g "
IOaJOr crops and datry, as well as
It has been rwnored that the adfQod stamps and some other numstratwn btll may mclude a
p~grams handled b) the greater emphasis on US .
A nculture Department
agncultural e&lt;ports. one of Block's
o spectf1c reasons for the post- fa vonte top1cs before and stnce he
p~nements were g1ven, but Block
JUIOed the Cabmet.
!l;jtd Monday there had not been
Abu, Block has spoken frequently
enough tnne to complete \\Ork on the agamst the target prtce concept m
l~tslatton
the 1977 act, the system of pay10g
-The crush of budget cuttmg and fa.rmer.s subs1d1e!!! when Crl1P pr1ces
cther testunony on Cap1tol Htll fall below certamlevels.
J.tely were chtef reasons, Block tuld
WASHINGTON I APl
Dry
~meet1ng of magazme farm echtors
weather thts wmter has brought a
• Block sa1d the btll has 18 major surge m the land area damaged by
rts or ttlles and " we JUS! don't wmd eroston tnlhe Great Plams, acve them all done yet, that's all."
cordmg to the Agrtcullure DepartOne of the hang ups. he satd, ts the ment's latest survey
l's htle on da1ry programs Block
Through the !trst four months of
Jas not spectftc on what the problem the current wmd sea.son, nearly 4 2
J~volved
mtllton acres were damaged, an Illhe delay ratsed some speculauon crease of about 34 percent from a
t t the adimmstralwn wants to see year ago, of!tctals satd Monday
ngress complete act10n on a
Nunnan A Berg. chtef of the
asure scrapptng an April I da1ry department's Sot! Cunservalton Ser~port tncrease before unrollmg a VICe, satd that through February of
~eneral farm bill.
last season, wmd damaged about 3 I
I B1lis to sk1p the Apnl I 10crease Jnt!hon acres tn the !!}-state reg ton
re ~eaded for f10al actton 10 both
Berg sa1d lack of motsture was the
uuses and could he on Pres1dent major factor contrtbutmg to the nse
eagan's desk by the end of the 111 wmd damage this season
eek.
States 10 the northern Great

!:

€

~

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fillage funds
at $465,497

lhe cunstitutionahty of a Utah law
challenged by "H.L. " and several
other umdenttf.ed gtrb represented
by Salt La~e Ctty lawyer Davtd S.
Dolowttz.
The rultng satd the state law ts
consttlutwnal spect!tcally as applted
to a mmor female livmg w1th and
dependent on her parents and who
has not shown enough matuflty to
make her own dec1s1on

It left open the ophon uf perfurmmg an aborhon wtthout nottce
to the parents tf the g1rl IS conI
Sidered mature enough, or ts
marned, or is livmg on her own
ln fact. Dolowttz satd m an mlroia; of all Middleport
fun· tervtew, "H.L ," who was 15 at the
-as of Feb 28 was $465,497.57, ac· tune. eventually got a legal abortton
ordmg ·to the monthly report of m another state and arranged to pay
lerk-Treasurer Jon Buck
fo~ tt. Her parents never were told
Rece1pts and expendttures ,
about tl.
especttvely, from the vanous ac·
Dolowttz satd a federal Judge has
ounts and the end of the month authortzed legal abortions tn Utah,
lance IJl each follow : General, on a case--by-case basis, for sev~ral
,962:47, $9,259 58, $15,971.27; street more of hts umdentifted plamllffs
i~ht,
no recetpts, $1,031 58, e1ther because they were "mature''
9,546 50 , cemetery , $1,002.50, enough to dectde or because tt would
1,067.18, $856.14; fire equtpment, no ' be "m lhe1r bes1 interests" to avotd
eceiJ?_ts, $1,018; ~9 03 , swuruning telltng their parents.
I, 11" rece1pts, $274.10. $3,227.23;
tre truok, no recetpts, no disbur:lllnients, $22,335.76; planmng comMc·igs gt'ls $12,500
tOn, no receipts, $5, $256 73 ;
tree! mamtenance, $3,068.23,
State Audttor Thomas I:;
,902.33, $3,624.67 (deftctl ); street Fergusoo reported the Ma1 ch
vy, no receipts, no disbursements.
dlstnbutiOn of $12,630,316.37 tn local
,627 .28; federal revenue shartng,l government money to OhiO's 88
o receipts, $487 69, $11,089.70; HUD,
counties and 424 c11les anct vtllages
o • receipts, no disburs!'ments , levying local tncome taxes Of the
,357.45, general bond retirement,
total. Metgs County received $12,500.
receipts, no disbursements.
16,245.56; samtary sewer, $6,275.17,
,848 75, $15,933.43; samtary sewer
Food stamp hig topic·
scrow, no recetpts, no disburernents
$188,392 24.
water,
POMEROY- A meellng of the
w;~n .69, sa.iMs n , $39 ,598.29, United Mtne Workers Supporters
water meter trusts, $288, $123 13,
Club wtll be held at 6 .10 p m Wedlll,1166 39; water tank , $1 ,000, no
nesday at the Diamond Savmgs and
disbursements, Sl32,969.24.
Loan, W Mam St , Pomeroy , The
Recetpts for 1he month totaled
food stamp proj\rarn w1ll be
$32,408 06 whtle disbursements
discussed Wtves of mmt:r.s an• 111amowtted to $34,063 II
vtted

Vtlla~e

'·

CONTRACT

li ce of Burgess and N1ple ,
L1m1ted, located al 5085
Reed Road , Columbus,
Oh10 43220. upon payment

ot $15 00 . NONE OF
WHICH WILL BE REF UN

OED .
By orde r o l I he Board ol
Public A It a ~r s
Th1 S IJfh d ay ot Marcn,

IYBI

E F Rob1nson
Pres1dent

tJI II, 14, 3 1, 31C

NOTICE ON
FILING OF
INVENTORY AND
APPRAISEMENT

The State of Oh10, Me1gs
County, Court of Common
Pleas, Probate DIVISIOn
To the Executor or Ad
mu11strator of the estate, to
such of the tollowmg as are
res1dents of the State of
Ohto, v1z - the surv1v1ng
spouse, the next of k1n the
ben ettctanes under the
will. and to The attorney or
attorneys representmg any
ot the ator e ment .oned per
sons,
Name of Decedent an d
Res1dence are l •sted
K 1mes, 238 12
Elsa B
South Second St . M1d
dleport, Ohto, Case No

Damage m 1976-77. for example.
was reported on nearly 8 nulhon

acres, and 111 the drought years of
the 1950s damage was even greater,
1 angmg up to 15 8 nullwn acres m
1%4-55.
Accordmg to the the four·munth

total, damage from wind eroston Illeluded:
NorlhernGreal Plams
Montana , 889,000 acres and 400 ,125
acres fur the same period tn 1979-80,
Nebraska. 155.695 and 34,135, North
Dakota , 817,705 and 277,750; South
Dakota. 901.500 and 620.948. and
Wyonung, 28,475 and 11 ,530
Southern Great Plains
Colorado, 102,520 and 10,180 , Kansas, 872,250 and 442.140; New
Mextco. 64 ,170 and 146 ,900 ,
Oklahoma , 113,545 and 180,450 ; and
Texas. 269 . ~ and 989 .247

233/5

'

Your are hereby notrfted
mat the Inventory and Ap
pnasement of the estafe ot

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1
1
1
1
1
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Se al ed b1d s w il l no
rcce 1ved1 by Bu c k ey~ Com
m v n 1ty S cr~o~ 1ces a! 11~ of
h cc at 166 Pearl ST P 0
Bo;.: 604, Jackso n, OH vn1 11
t JO p m ru esday . A pr d 7,
1981 and at t ha r t 1me
opened d prov1 ded oy l aw ,
tor
th e
t u r n,sh1ng
necess ary
l ab or
and
m a teri a ls requ~r ed l or rne
r enovat ion ot tn e to11 ow 1ng
pro tec t

ltl 4 Jl

on the lOth day of Apnl,

1981. at 10 00 o' clocK AM
Any person des1rmg to
hie e)(cepttons thereto
must f tl e them at least f1ve
days pnor to the date tor
hear.ng
G1ven under my hand
and seal of sa1d Court, th1S
19th day ot March 1981
Robert E Buck

TRACT

DOCUMENTS

may be obta 1ned at the of
flee of the Arch1tect loc ated
a! 131 West State Street,
Athens, Oh1o upon payment

of $25 00 for each set
(3) 24, 31, (4 17, 31C

Judge

(J)

cent of the Btd , or, a bond
tor the full amount of the
B1d .:,s Surety for the
executton of the contract,
and a performance bond
and a payment bond ' " the
amount of 100 percent of
the contract pnce shall be
requ•r.ed
Coptes ot the CON

By Janet E Morns
Ch1ef Deputy Clerk
24 , 31 , 2rc

6260

you past, present and
future. gives advise on love
affairs,
bus1ness
&amp;
marriage . tf you are
unhappy &amp; don't know
whtch way ro turn, come 1n
for advice, one vistt w•tl
conv1nce you there tS a bet
tcr way Rt 2, "3-40 Oh1o
River Rd ,
Huntington,

GIGANTIC Church yard
sale Mitrch 27 &amp; '18, Fn &amp;
Sat 9 5 GOOd usable mer
chand•se Ram cance.ls 43
Coal Sf , Middleport. Next
tor rver ,

w v.

l 304 523 7121
Read1ng $!0 Save $3 .00

~

w1th ad
By phone on
questton answered free .

AUCTION every Fr tday
n1ght 7 p m Hartford Com ·
munlty Center Hartford.

Maternitv Clothes at af

W

fordatlle prices Nursing
bras and gowns Water·
melon Patch, Sth and Main,
New Haven, West V~rg1n1a

Phone) 304-882 3410

59 N 2nd Ave , Middleport.
Oh 992·2751

OLD CO I NS , poc ket wat·
ches, c lass rmgs , w edd1ng
banos, d1amonds Gold or
silver Call J A Wams ley ,
Tr easure Chest Co•n Shop ,
Ath ens, OH 59.4 .c2ll

Problems or Questions·
about Lawns or
Gardens? For Answers
Bring Them To

1 PAY h ighest prices
poss1ble lor'gotd and sliver
coms, r1ngs , rewelry , etc
Conta c t Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, M1ddlepor1

The
CONTRACT
OOCUMENTS may be

exammed at the tollow.ng
1ocat1ons
..
Archttect'!l Off• ce
131
West State Street , Athens ,
on 1o, 45701 A b1d guaran

RACINE

I
I

I

GUN

SHOOT ,

PIANO

2082

.gold S•lver co•ns, pocket
watches Call Joe Clark at

9'12 2054 at Clark's Jewelry
Store, Pomeroy , Ohto-45769

Free Sotl
Test
while you wait.
March27, 19'81
9 a.m.-4 p.m .

POMEROY

LANDMARK
POMEaoy

Too

valuabl e to neglec t , expert
tun1ng &amp; and repatr Lane
Oan,els, 742 '1951 or 992

stamped, !OK , l4K . or lBK

aJNIC

RaCine Gun Club , every
Frtday n 1ght starttng at
7 30 p m Fa c tory c hoke
guns only

YOUR

wanfed to Buy class nngs.
weddi ng bands , anythmg

LANDMARK'S
LAWN &amp; GARDEN '

Announcements

Pr t[l f one word 1n each ~
spat e betow Each 1n
1f1al or group of ftgures
counts as a word Count
name and address or
phone number 11 used
You II g e t better results
II you descnbe fully ,
g1ve pr 1ce The Sent1nel
reserves the nght to
class1ly , ed1t or ret~CI
any ad Your ad will be
put '"
th e prop e r
clas,h c at,on If vou ' ll
check th e proper box
below

1- 'forcl hit
1- Pubh&lt;

&amp; AUChOn
9- Wwntfd to 8uy

ti - H..,.IIthold GOCMII

n- ca, tv

1 ! _ Htlpw 0 n!~tcl

I ~- SChOc:lll ln&amp;1rUCI!On
11~
R.ICI!O, TV

I Wa nted
I For Sat e
I A nnouncemen t
I F o r Renr

I

11- wonttd To Do

n
4 _

_ _ _ _ _ __

5 __________

6-------81. ----------------____________

.~

-----------

11 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - --_
1 11
IJ ____________

I 1&lt; - - - - - - - - - - - - 1
1 1s - - - - - - - 1 16 ------------1
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.:

I

24
25
26
21
28
29
JO
31
32

• TRANSPORTATION
11-AIIIOI tor 'Oit
1J- Yinll4 W D

ESTATE

I
I
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larlelt
IOf'

rm with sliding glas
dOOrs to the patio Good

14- Mo..,crcttt

IJ- Mo•ll• Hom••

~~-

(

u. . . ,.,m, s•'•

,At.llO

dnlled well and large
barn

POrll

I Acuutnu
H - Awft

Jt- lwstntu llllld•nt•
H - l.OII I Acrtotlf
16- Rttal Eu••• Wontlll
l1- lttallln

NEW

lt~t..-ir

•SERVICES

W1nt·Ad Advtrtistng

Dtodllnts

11 - Homotmpra¥tMtnts
IJ - ~Iumlthtt &amp; l•cavtUnt

Js

Mail Tnts coupon with RemJttance
The DailY Sentinel
Bo• 729

IL-----~~:'"~Y:_C:~~~~-------

I
I

M--M H ••tilt
1'- VttiiOIIftry

. ...

,,'"
IN

J •• ..,,
6cllyl

'"

C"-tll
1.11
UJ
UJ

111 m•mor., , car• ot ulnlt• 11111 Delt\lar., • ctfltt
lftlfti"'Uttn

,.,

fors~-

1973 Crown Haven, u x 65,
three bedrooms, new car
pet 1971 Cameron, 1" )( 64,
two bedrooms, new carpet
1972 Champ1on, 12 • 60, two
bedrooms, new carpet 1976
Cameron, 12 x 60, two
btfdrooms. all electr~c 1971
Skyline, 12sx 6 ).
rwo
~drooms , bath &amp; 1tJ , new

carpel

1970

PMC.

12 x 60, two bedrooms, new
carpet B x S Sales, Inc ,
2nd x Vtand Street, Potnt
Pleasant, WV Phone 675

4424

Real Estate -----

Cttlt lit lllvlnU ,

----

1

•

L

RavenswOOd bridge. &lt;;all
after 5 p m

5272

at 1· 30" 273

3 bedroom mobde home
Approxtmately S mlles
from Pomeroy or Mtd

1972 Regency 12 x 60 two
bedroom mob1le home, new
stove and refngeralor , new
carpet, natural gas heat,
washer a~d dryer 992 6711

MOBILE HOME for rent
Completely
furn1shed
Adults preferred Deposit

TRAILER LOT tor
$&lt;,000 00 992 2511
Acreage One acre and one
hall of ground located bet
ween old Rt JJ and new Rt
33 tactng the Me1QS
Fairgrounds S4000 00 992

2511

992 2749

2 bedroom Mobtle Home,
total electr1c
Syracuse
Washer ,
dryer ,
refrigerator, sto~o~e , pull out
ltvtng room, porch, no pels

992 3904

19 acres of Oh10 R1ver bar
tom land to lease tor far

11'12 5869 .

44

Call Ken Young

,1 -- -F.a7mEqUijmeni~ _

985-1561

45

Furnished Rooms
. ..- - Sleeptng rooms, by the
week
Ktlchen ,
and
televiSIOn lounge Carryout
and restaurant wtth1n

Sp~ce

PARTS ANO SERVICE

D•sc , fert auger , 1 set
snap on IS 5xl8 dual ttres,
N H 367 Manure Spreder;
Dunham 14' Harogator ,
tnt tractor, 986 304 ·675

All.

TRAILER spaces for rent
Southern Valley Mobtle
Home Park, Chesh~re , Oh

-'

Just

what you' re looktnO for
- ntce 2 or J bedroom,
1•r1 bath, home an a good
street •n Mtddteport
Large level lot , base·
ment , w b t p , carpet
1ng, manv new teatvres

n

pay cash or cer11t1ed c heck
for ant•Ques and collec
t 1btes or enttre estales
Noth1ng too large Also,
guns , pocket watches and
corn collecttons Call 614

bypass, approx 1matel y
1-4 acres of n•cely rolling
land , plus old house w•th
well , excellenr
for
mobile homes or home
s•tes sa,soo

767 3167 or 557 3411
54

NEW LISTING - Close

63

$30 .

load

••th the sheer
beaut1 of lac1 topptnes
P1neapple scarf 11 beaut1ful on
lndulae yourself

LISTING

stdeboard or table mats are lowe-

ll for luncheon se~me Pat 7290
mat abtMit 14• 18 · on No 30
Scali 14 •28 01 destred lenrth
lJI&amp;el on bedspread cotlon
$!.00 fo1 each pat101n Add SOl
uch patlern lor hrst class atr
matl and handltni Stnd to:
AIICI lftllb
l I
lltocllocr~lt

Oopl

The Daily Sentinel
ios 163, Old CltohM Sll., lin
lll!t, Nl 10113: ~not 11-.
Ad*-. Zip, ~alltm ll1111ltof.
Calch on lo Ihe mil boom' Send
NEW 1981 NHOLECRAfT
CATALOG Ove1 171 deSJ&amp;RI 3
i01 OUI

00
AU CRAFT IIOOU.. $1.75 uch
134-14 Quick llachlno Qoulb
uH•lan 11ornt Qoiltioc
.
llZ·Quill Orlctna'!
13U41f I IlK' Quilts
1Jti.Swtotll f.,_SimlJ.$6
Jzt.Ciuid 'n' IIIJ frtnsfWI
1!1-£....... ~lllth.... Quilb
free panerns 1ns1de Si

OFFICE 99Z-2ZS9
REA~ TOR

1ZHialtHS 'n' Doilill
lZHilrilty Ctalty FlfwWI
1Z5-Ptlll QuHll
1!1-Plllow
111-trochtt ••Ill ~11Hat ~If illlill!*nl
114-CGIIIploll Afallttts
I1H1111 Afalllns
11l·liiY Art Ill Halrpon Ctoclltl
llll·llliiiJ lop

,._.Qfls

Henry E , Clel•nd, Jr,

"Hitl

ASSOCIATES

'

lB.

IJII.I-IIIIICI110J.I-t S..lo&amp; '
1116-11111111 f.,iilt
104-lllllattlllwt
IOl·lS QuHb lor fodl!

STORAGE Clearance We
w111 be clos1ng our storaQe
and retatl sales for the
season soon Apples at S3 75

per bushel and up

.,mu I til

One
Holstetn
bull,
Paclamar Astronaut, bree
d1ng , second generatton
667 6418

-Auto and Truck
Repair
-Transmission
Repair

BULLS for sale
Polled
Herefords
12 14 months
old Phone 614 247 2704 or

COWS for sale Bred
open pol ted herefords
247 2704 or 614· 247 2702

71

Hrs

Au1os

Man Frt .
JO PM

LED MORRIS
Rt 1 S1de H1ll Rd
Rutland, OtJ

1

~~~~~~~~~~~0~7~ll~c~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~2~9~1f~c~

614 ~
and

J&amp;C
SANITATION
SERVICE

iOr Sale

Pm

1975 Datsun BltO Call 992

KAUFPS
PWMBING
AND
HEATING

DENNEY
CHAIN liNK
FENCE

Trash P 1ckup In
The Village of
~Jddleport, Oh.
Ph. 992-5016
or 992· 7505

Free Estimates

12 Park St.
Middleport, Oh.
Ph. 992-6263
Anytime

KEN SOLES

2'45·9113

2

6250

stereo rape, elecrnc Will
dows, p s , p b 992 3219 bel
ween 10 4
!966 OLDS F85, 4 door.

Ij,~=====~3~ll=l~m~o=~t~;=~~~~~~2~1~9~rt~c~Pr==~~~~3~
i· ~lim~o~~
Dl ftiiN
H L WRITESEL
J&amp;L uwn
REESE ~~
~.
• ROOfiNG
INSU'"'II
anoN
w

w _

Vinyl &amp;

TRENQtiNG

sma 11
v s. good gas
m11eage, body 1n extra
good cond SJSO firm 992

SERVICE
water sewer· E tectnc
Ga s Lme· D•tches
water Line Hooll · ups
septiC Tanks
county Cerhfted
Roush La11e
Cheshire, Oh

5006
1975 Ma~o~ert c k , 4 door, 6
cyl 1975, Ford Landau , 4
door , power brakes, power
steennq , a1r cond , am tm
r ad1o, c rutse
control.
power dr1vers seat 742

Ph . J67 /160

2501

All types ot roo/ work ,
new or rep,l.r gutter s
.t~nd downspouts, gutter

cleaning "nd patntmg
All worll guaranfeed

2 4 ft C

Truck~ for Sa!!

19/4 Olds 4 door

sedan, runs good , good
t1res $999 2 brand new
G7Bxl5 rad•al trres, SSO ea
1 Myers waler pump w1th
tank, like new
742 '1511
davs , 142 2246 n.gnts

"Spectalizingln
Re-Roofing"
• small carpenter Jobs
Darrell Brewer

PH 9!2-2882

1968 tnternat.onal
1600
Loadstar : 20 tt van body , 5
speed, 6 c yl , 45,000 mtles

992 ·2606
992 · 7861
3 11 1 rn a pd

eM&lt; cond $2,600 614 9Bl
4205

etnsulatiOn
• Storm Doors
eStorm Windows
• Replacement

Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph. 992·2772
3 23·1 mo

J&amp;F
ENTERPRISES

ROOFING

1973 Ford 1• ton p1 ckup

Alum1num Siding

W1ndows

Free Esttmates
Pnces
Call Howard
949-2862
949·'2160

~ensonable

1 7 ri c

Get

•
•
•
•

Backhoe
Exc.avat1ng
Sept1c Systems
Water, Sewer &amp; Gas
L.mes
LICensed &amp; Bonded

DUMP TRUCK
Ph. 992-7201
3 S l mo

•GOI+

L eHDni F~r-.UA . . I

wo ~ ~~ .. ,.,,

• ~••

\1\0tl l r•no
IROWHINO

n~m•t

t. ! ~ o nt -~~

IOlJt

Wor~

o ~•l•l 1

llaolt •M

I'"''
~okont ,

.l ito Pro lllu

1\~llllnt

tr

ttll UIU,II

lo;~nn•t•~lft09q•n9lllMI

W' •I•• u rry d COnlpillt lint Ol lrOWII

'"' !iPOrh~t Goud1

2·26-1 mo

yours now Fitzpatrick Or
chards, State Route 689

669 3785

SWIMMING POOLS IN
STALLED $999 00 Com

Home

It

I mproveme'!!_s

pany has pools jeff over
from last yellr 16 Xll o d
15 x 2'4 swtm area Pnce 1n
etudes pool , ftlter , decK,
bench, ladder, and in
staltatton
on
normal
ground cond1tions Also In
ground pool kits start•ng at
11695 00 BanK ftnanctng
available Cali collect at 1

Gene' s carpet Cleaning,
deep stream extrac t1on
Free
e s timated ,
reasonable rates , scot
chquard 992 6309 or 742

304 776 6333 or 1n Ohoo call
1 800 624-85!1

992 619Q or 949 2614

WEDDING Gown, SIZe 10
btand new with-ve1t , slip &amp;

garter. orlg S200 ; sell for
$125 . 773 5631
RUGER new model

22

22ll
W1ll do carpenTer work and
tntenor or e&gt;&lt;terlor pam
t l ng Free esttmates CALL

French C1ty Pamt 1ng
Res•dent taL cammerc1al
1nter1or ,
exterror
Spec•ai 1Z1ng in
lnter1or
patnting, paper hang1ng &amp;
te)(tured ce111ngs . Free
est1mates 367 7784 or 367

single St)( Wtth holster &amp;.
carrier extra cy l1nder

/160,

New. $150 /42 3010.

82

Plumb1ng

_! Hea11n9

·-"'P"ot"s' for ~it-

WATER

- -----

Put a cold nose tn vour
future Contact your Meigs

Countv Humane Society at
992 6260

WELLS

Domest•c and comm er ciaL
pump sales and serv1ce
Tom
Lewis
Drrll 1ng
seasonal discount on pum

Available now ;
two labrador type ml'les,
one
miniature german
Shephard, mate, terrier

ps l 304 895 Jll02 or 1 304
B95 3641

type ,

1~

chesapeake

bov

retrtever, collie types,
black Doberman , water
span1e-l Calico cat, female ,
two
male Hger c ats ,
Amrrican dom~stic cats

'192 6260

'.

All Modets
Available

992-5682

roof
Am tm casselte
stereo, wore nm wheels.
gOOd '"es . •n verv good
cond1110n 992 mo after 5

$675

loans no money down
Federal Hous1ng J% on SlS,OOO
S% on balance
con~o~ent1onal LoansS%
down
can tor tnlormat1on
99'2-7544
VA

J 50"-20-30'H.P.
HA 60"-25-60 H.P.
60"-45 80 H.P.

9 A M.·l

1977 Cougar X R 7 wtth
white top w1th red landau

72

&amp; ASSOC.

Mortgage Bankers _
992 -7544

Ltvestock
-----

Split &amp; delivered 992 52 ..0

Panaramtc V1ew of the
Plus approx
R1ver 1mately 3 acres river
frontage on this 75 acre
farm Wl th a 3 bedroom
home, barn, and small
POnd wtth ttllable and
wooded acreage
De
velopment potential as
prlmtttve camp sites
and butld1ng s1tes Near

OFFICE 992 ·22S9

Misc . Nter~h~nts~

F IR'eWOOD

1n 1 8 acres le~o~el land
with a beautltut newer 3
bedroom, 2,.x60 double
wide w1th 2 baths , eqUtp·
ped Kttchen ana utlltty
and an added on family
room wtth a wood
burner Large deck area

Dottie &amp; ~oter Turner
"2· 5692
Jean Trussell 949 -2660

Af!t19_ues

ATTENTION
liM
PORTANT TO YOU) Will

JUST• $24,900
NEW ~!STING - Rt 7

NEW

'

D•~flw.as"er s

eHotW;~t e rT.anki

R e p.o~+nng

992 3954

.... ' .._.... ....
" ..
............

•

• Dryers

•Rdngn

• Heat Pumps
• Electrrc Heating
&amp; W•rtng
lndustrtal. CommerCial
and Restdent•al

2245

after 5 P m
1978 FORD LTD Landau,
velour mtertar. am fm

tor Rent

MAKES

•W.asl'len

....................
. ......... . . ,. ,.'

bedroom
apartments
avattable
Equal
op
portun1ty houstng 992 7721

ELECTRICAL CO.

ForfasiServ•ce

540, 4xl6" plows, M F 13.5'

Apartment
for A:ent

3 AND 4 ~M furnished ap
ts Phone 991 5"34

CUNNINGHAM

PACQUALE

APPLIANCE SERVICE

614 247 2702

Farms
- - tor- Rent
- -

4J

m1ng Sr Rr 3J8 992 7330

SEVERAL chotce bUilding
lots. Eastern O•stncf, Tup
pers Plains Chester water
Owner wil l help ftnance

eep l"+s Ad lor Future Rc.'lerenu

Kuker 400 gal spray, lnt

Two
bedroom
mobile
home Ut111t1eS patd One
child accepted No pets
John Sheets, 3 c:nd one half
miles soutn of Middleport
on Rt 7

&amp; Acrea1.e

---------------

For sale or rent
ap
prox1mately 34 acres with
thl"ee bedroom modular
home m Portland, Ohto
area Nine mtles from the

dleport . 9'12 5858

Lor~

ACCORDIAN , made
10
Italy , full s1ze Key board,
with case &amp; books $125

773 5631

11'12 7479

Dottre &amp; Roger Turner
"2-5692
Je•n Trussell949-2660

Ht•iuif u.ut"t ·'

Tratler Court, Mtnersvtlle

992 3324

Park, Route 33, Nortn of
Pomeroy Large lots Call

Reasonable home with
acreage 'l bedrooms,

Housmq

--------

12 x 52 mob tie home 1n good
condition w1tn the un
derp•nn~rtg
Included
Located at 162 Loscust
Street, Upper MonKey Run ,
Pomeroy Oh1o

35

MU51C.al

51

!nstrum~~t~ _

COUNTRY MOBILE Home

Has J bedrooms. 2
balhs
Garage , and
lai'Qe yard A ntce home
for IUS I $..3,500

TOWN

~-

2 bedroom Mobtle Home
Adu Its
only
Brown' s

46

$29,900.
REALTOR
Henry E Cleland. Jr .
992-6191
ASSOCIATES

OF

plavground

- - --------

General

meon a targe country41ot
with full basement, that
tncludes wood burner.
Insulated, carpetd, also
storage
building

Total

--

Mobtte Homes
for Rent

992 6370

baThS. LOOkS liKe new.
Also has a ut111ty room

WantStO,OOO
YOU MAY NEVER
SEE THESE ANO OUR
OTHER PROPERTIES
FOR SALE AGAIN.

M . .llt Home'''"'"'""'' llltltrttcctttH 4ntw

hntlntl

=·=·-=-,=:-=.-.;c.-=
Mob1le Homes

32

Luxury of Lace!

Situations Wanted

Cute little 2 bedroom ho

state route Would make
an teleat mlnl · farm

w.,., N.lt

Wttllulfl wtrtt
ordtr 1J unt cllorlf for Ht urrylnt ••• Nwm••• I" Cart tf TN

College Rd.
Syracuse ,

3

Phone 11'12 1156 ~---------""'i RIVERSIOE APTS 1 8. 2

upkeep on this house\

of good bottom tand on

tlllt mlnllllwm 1J warll1 II I Cfflft HI' W.,., " ' ..., .
ACil ruM•,.. 01111r tfiU Conltcuth,re 11~1 will Itt CPier. . . If HNI IU
rtf I
II&lt;~ worcle'f'ltf

AWG , P 0
Box ~9204 ,
Allanta . pA 30359

New Bridge $57.000.
NEW LISTING - Little

Iorge living, and 2 por
ches. on SR 7 Onlv
$!2,000
ACREAGE - 10 acres

IJ Worlll or Ul'lfer
Cat II

87 hr We needs
aSSIStance ' 1n evaluat1ng
and respondtng to da1ly
work reports subm1t1ed by
our t1e ld agents throughout
the state No exper•ence
necessary , Pa1d tram1ng
program , Work full or
part t1me at home For '"
format1on
send
sell
addressed, stamped en
velope 91f:;o 10ches long to

Hdlcrest mobile home

OUT
Rates end Other In format jon
I clly
J .......

sett1ng,

So~~

with J bedrooms and 2

pool and

33. ______________ ,

34 _____________ 1

EARN

- 1978

electnc home near the

1 Jttlrl,.rollofl
U- Otntrtl H•ullnt

llf MOndiV

~tHING

built on
SYRACUSE

U- l~untlnt

M-IIKitkll

1 JD P M Oa•l y
ll NIMH! hlwrfft

LISTING

Modern 3 bedroom
home with 2 65 acres
Builtin kitchen, central
heat. and large llv1ng

..- Hoy &amp; GUll\
n - St.GI F~trflhaor

J l - HOmfiiGt Ultl

21 -------~----22
I

NEW

U - Livutoc:ll

S~trv , cu

•REA~

RACINE
Large home
W1lh S bedrooms Looks
nice and has character
appeal Has a large 101
and ts near schools and
stares

u-w.nttclte '"'"
11- Trwcllt for Sol•

81111n1tn
0DPOffWflltr
n - Mone, to Loen
Jl- ProftU+OfiOI

19 _ _ _ _ _ __
20 ______________

Phone

H 6141 -992·3325

6! - Fir"' 1q1upmont

•FINANCIAL

17-------18 _ _ _ _ _ __

ltldtolt~llltm•nt

•FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; ~IV ESTOCK

•celhNu

These cash rates
1nc lude d i scount

LOCAL
t1nanc•at
'"
st1tut1on needs md1V1dua1
wtfh bank experience to
work Fr1day even1ngs,
Saturdays , and ~.~acatlon
t1 me Send resume to Box
729 G, c o The Dally Sen
I meL Pomeroy , Oh "5769

NEW LISTING -

16 E Second Street

Jt- Mhc Mtrct.ondtlf
U- Jylktlnt sw,.lltl
St-Pth lor Sale

11- IIUIHinU
u - Bulmltn Tro'"'"'

I 30&lt; 675 2210

REPAIR or remodeling
work , floors , doors, wall
pane11ng, ce•llng or floor
t•le Sldtng 992 27S9

u - antlt~u••

11- S+IU.Itcl W.lnf!CI

mus1c1ans to form a rock
band Lead gv1tar , second
gu1tar, organ or ptano
player , drummer , trumpet
player, tenor sa)( Must be
e~bte to play rock and soul
mustc lnt~rested people
must have the~r own equ•P
ment Senous part•es call

Old furniture , desk~ . gold
r1ngs ,
1ewelry,
silver
dollars, sterltnQ, etc Wood
•ce boxes, tars, antiques ,
etc complete households
Wnte M D M111er, Rt 4,
Pomerov . OH
45709 Or

~~~~L~-~~.13
I~

•MERCHANDISE

eEMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

The following

12

Headquarters

4J - WintH 10 lhnl
4t-IIIWI!tmtnl fgr Jt.nf

hit

WANTED

IRON AND BRASS BEDS

Housing

u - fi'Jtoom&amp;
• ._,,.u tor wenl

6- l.OSIOnCIIIIounCI

SFC O'Neai67539SO

tor 1ntervt ew

Bedroom furniture, 1 v set,
and dm1ng room suite
Must be tn good condit1on
end reasonable 992 3941

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

~ - Hooo•Ach

Some part t1me robs in Pt
Pleasant come Wi th a
S1 ,500 bonus 1 Plus free
college tuttton! If you are
age 17 or older, a ,untor or
sentor m htgh school , or a
h1gh
sc hool
diploma
gradue~te , you may qualify
The West V1rg1n1a Nettonal
Guard 1S no ordinary parr
t rme 1ob• Good pay , good
benefitS! For detatls call

Pomeroy 992 2689

992 6370 .

or Write Daily Senttnel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomero.,, 0., 45769

t - G•ttOwt,

PRIVATE

bedroom home on S R 7
near Memory Gardens 2V1
ecres Terms . 992 7741.

Now buy,ng gold and
silver, old pocket wat c hes,
cha1ns. d1amonds . stlver
money and cotns Martm' s
General Store, M iddleport

PHONE 992-2156

41 - Hoo.tttl tor Jt..-.t
42- Molule H0111e1
ftr Jttnl
tt- A,.rlment ror R~tnl

AIR CONDITIONERS
&amp; HEAT PUMPS
Ph . 61 ... 92-7031

Ph. 992 ·3804
2 23

992 6370

WANT AD INFORMATION

1- Carct ol T"onlu
t - lnMitmonom
J- Annttvnctmtnll

NY 11418

requ.red

New , used, and ant1que fur
n1ture No 1tem to large or
tosmall Wltlbuyoneplece
or c omplete households
Marltn' 5 General Store at

Pomeroy

•RENTALS

JOYCE EUCTRICAL
SUPPLJES

Aheem, Amana
&amp; Carr•er

mailtng worK
No ex
penence requ~red
AP
PLY C•rcle Sales, Po
Box 224 0 , R1chmond Htlt.

Co .. Rock Sprmgs Rd .

call9'12 7760

m-m1

e ANNDUNCEMENn

Furnace repairs, electrical
work, plumbmg, mobile
home or residence 992
5858

$185 0010$500 weekly do.ng

Partt 1me l1ght secretanal
work
Oependablltty &amp;
pleasant telephone voiCe a
must
Good references

~ANOMARk

E. Main St.

!'"ophes
Quahty Products
R easonabte Prices

the eli01b1litv list at 992
2156or992·2157

CHIP WOOD , Poles ma)(
d 1ameter 14 " on lar~est
end S12 50 per ton Bundled
stab
s 10 50 per ton
De11vered to Ohio Pallet

G1neiAI

I

1

_v[ant~_!o Buy

WANTED TO BUY ·
SILVER ,
GOLD.
PLATINUM, STERLING
COINS , RINGS .JEWELR
Y, MISC ITEMS AB
SOLUT-E
MARKET
PRICE GUARANTED EO
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP , MIDDLEPORT ,
OHIO 997 3476

FmHA ! nstrvctton 1942 A

J

Va

9

NOW TILL EASTER 20%

\I v t'lltuunlt'r group doesn 'I
undPrsland mt' '

Public Sale
&amp; Auctton

8

Public Not1ce

V1llage of Pomeroy , Oh•o
Vdlage Hall , Pomeroy ,
Oh10 45769
Separate seated BIDS for
the
c onstruction
of
Weathenzat10n of the
bu rld•ng , former l y the
Pomeroy Htgh School
Work will 1nc lude furr1ng
and •nsulat1ng masonry
walls, 1ntenor f1n1Shes ,
repair and weathenzlltton
of wtndows, and a new 9as
fired forced a1r heattng
system , New rooting, will
be re cetved b y Honorable
Clarence Andrews, Mayor
10f Pomeroy at the Otftce ot
!he Mayor until Noon ,
Tuesday, Apnt21. 1981. and
then at sa1d off1ce publicly
opened and r ead aloud

-----_ Y,!rd ~I I!_
-~---

7_

otf patnt, 30% off green
ware Orehel' s Ceram•cs,

LAFF - A - DAY

Addreu. __________________

RENOVATION OF BID

Mrt ' •

the
aforementiOned ,
deceased, late ot sa1d Coun
ty . was filed 1n th1s Court
Sa1d Inventory and Ap
pratsement w•ll be tor
heartng before th1s Court

---tee rn the amount of 10 per·

Jl -

WE LL RE SID E N CE
Rt I, Box 398, ::. ra te
Rour c 160
81 dwett , Ga 111 c1 Coun ! y,
Oh10 45614

a; n a
~ p ec d1 c ai 1 0n s
may be
p .c k ect up at the Btdwell
Res tdence or the Ar ch1teL1
on d epos11 of Te n Dollars
&lt;SIO 001 lor earn se t Such
depos1t Wtll be r etunded
B1Js. shdll be scatl)d .:1 nd ad
dressed lo fhe Owner
Th e owner r ese rve., the
r•g h T lo rejec t any or a ll
b 1d s 1n who e or 1n part, to
Wd 1YC any lnlormaltl1 es .n
Tht-&gt; b•ds rrce1ved or acce pr
d i1Y b td Whi Ch 1l dee ms
t il v ora bt••

P~bllc Notice

Pubhc Not1ce

:

PUBLIC NOflCE

Plans

FOUND
In Minersvtlte
area , chocolate poodle 992

Name _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _....;..._

Public Not1ce

Athens, OH 45701

~----------"'T-----------1

Wr1te y our own ad and order by mall w1th thi s
coupon Cancel your ad by phone w en you get
re sults Money not refundable

teen·age g1rl afford
tu !tght such a case all the way to the
Supreme Court w1thout mvulvmg
her parents? Dolowttz sa1d he
donated Ius servtces, w1th the
Amertcan Civtl Liberttes Umon
paymg hts way to Washtngton to
argue the case before the Supreme
Court
Eve W. Paul, vtce pres1dent uf the
Planned Parenthood Federatton of
Amertca, conunented that most
pregnant gtrls voluntartly tell their
parents Of those who don't want
thetr parents to know, she satd, tnost
eould show suffTctent reason to con·
vi nee a doctor not to tell.

Box

Hope , Palm Reading. Tells

Curb Inflation.
Pay Cash for
Classlfieds and
Savell I

1
1
1
1

Llncoln Heights had been
on the front seat. May keep
the money , please return
rest, no questions asked
Lay on the front porch at
1638 or 1687 Lmcoln Heights
after dark or anyttme Per
son w•U be prosecuted IS
purse 1S not returned

LOOK for hand sign. Miss

------------,I

I
:

~.:an C:l

•n acc or ddnce w11 11 1n e
p lans anc1 SPCCiftCd t iOnS
and all Contrac t Docum en
rs
confatned
ne r ct n
pr epared by
Ko e Kromp ec h er
Ar
ch1tects
499 Rtc nlana A ve

Apple Grove Plant,

2143

Res1denttal &amp; Ltgtlt
Commerctal E leclrical

1-, - .. __w=""'""'te,_,d'-'t"'o"D"o' -

as a vouno business person
and earn good money pius
some great 91fts as a Sen
t1ne1 route carrier Phone
us nght away and get on

•

ELECTRICAL
SUPPLIES

GAU.IA
REFRIGERATION
INC.

IN
can

celled?
Lost
your
operator' s license? Phone

GET VALUABLE tra.n1ng

I

ween 12 and 12:30 at 1638

be no exceptions to thiS. A
watchman wiU be on duty

428, Racine, Oh

L.ost and Found

Stolen Purse. taken from
a Lincoln Conttnental bet

be prosecuted There will

1Gu1de 1911Attachment ll
ADVERTISEMENT
FOR BIOS

Pubhc Not1ce

6

tor
sale
Pomeroy
Middleport Libraries.

S1gned the Oravo Corp ..

Columbus. Oh•O 43220
COp1 es of the CON
TRACT
DOCUMENTS
ma v be obta1ned at the of

on record

And hu\\

ch 9'12 226-4, 11'12·2802, 11'12·
2360 or 992·2639 Hlstorles

must
perfo r med
a

DO Ct:JMENTS may be
ex am1ned at the foll owtng
locat1ons
Board ot Publi C Affa~rs ,
V 1llage Hall , Pom e roy,
Oh1 0 45759
Bur gess
and
Ntple,
L1m1ted , 5085 Reed Road,

Doctor must still tell ~ents
WASHINGTON fAP I - A doctor
sked to perform an abortwn on a
t-ager sltll dependent on her
parents fur support can be requtred
t~try to tell them about tt tf he thmks
tlie girlts too tmmature to make the
d~c1ston alone.
IThat ts the effect of a 6-3 Supreme
cpurt ruling Monday whtch upheld

MEIGS MUSEUM open bv

NO Tresspass1ng on the
Dravo Corp propertv (Old
Tristate Material Corp
propertvl All violators wit I

Th e

BabYSttter needed tn · the
Racine area , References
necessary 949 2846

appotntment January Mar

CONTRACT

be 11sted ' " the proposal
subm•tted
at the BID
openmg
T he
est 1mated
c on
stru cl 1on cost 1S S20 000 as
of May 1. 1981
A SITe VISif IS r ec Om
mend ed and may be
arranged
by ft r st Water
con
t ac11n9 Pomeroy
Supermrendent Re1d Wil t,
te leph one 614 99'1 3121

Plams accounted for 67 percent of
the damage. South Dakota accowlted fur more than one-ftfth of
the total
' Offtctals constder land damaged
by wmd ·1f enough soli has been
removed or depostted on it to subject
the land tu further erosiOn hazard, or
to uupa1r its producttve capac tty "
The agency keeps track of w1nd
eros1on in the Great Plams durmg a
seven-month penod begmmng on
Nov I and end1ng the foll owmg May
31 The report Monday was for the
!trst four months of the current
season
Last year, 111 the entire seven..
month penoJ, land damaged by
wmd totaled more than 5.1 nnlhon
acres. compared w1th 2 9 uulhon m
!976-79 - one of the nnldesl seasons

12 guage

DOCUMENTS 1ncludes the
1o11ow1ng
approxtmate
quant1ttes
Rehab1 11 tat1on of wells
and pumps as necessary at
v 111age Wells 1 and 2
tog e ther
wtth
th e
necessary
apperta1n1ng

1.!.:_ _~ Insurance

992

. ,,

•

AUTOMOBilE
SURANCE been

The MenNI Health Center 1s • Private, Non· Proflt
corporation a1d an Equal Opportunity/ Aff1rmat1ve
Action lifnptover,

22 rifle

PROJECTS and lhey must

etails of Reagan's bill
ot ready until next week

rifle match

Factory choke

have
mm1mum of f1ve S1m1lar

,.

shot gun &amp;

949·2285

Gallipolis, OH,4S631 . Phone NO. I614) 446-SSGO

shOt guns onlv . Open s1ghts

WORK
Ea ch BIDDER

.,;
issues set lbe pace at tbe stll&lt;!k market climbed past
the 1,000 level in the Dow Jones industrial average
Monday. 1AP Laserphoto ).

a

Business S.e rvices

WELDING done, 10 vears

using interdlsdpUnary approach, Postt.ve worktng
environment With excellent fringe benefi1s, en·
eluding contlnu.ng edutiltlon and tuetion reimbursement. Flexible scheduling with every other
WB!Jkend off (mmimum}, For more mtormiltion,
contact the Personnet Office, Galtla· Jackson·Meigs
Community Mental He1lth Centtr, .. 12 Vinton Pike,

Fire

sponsors

.

Sltuotlons Wonted

experience, equipped to do
steels, castmg, aluminum ,
in field or shop Located at
Maplewood Lake or call

R: ,N. pol1tlort in lG-bed 1cute care psychiatric Uftlf

every Sot. night 6:30 p.m.
at their building In Bashan

the constructton of Wel l
Rehabrlltation wtll be
r ecetved bY Pomeroy, Onto
at the off tee of the Board of
Public Affa1rs until 12 00
o' clocK noon (local t•me)
Apnt 1, 198 t. and then at
satd of fi ce publtc opened
and read a loud
T he WORK covered bV

t he

Volunteer

Department

12

COMMU\UTAL HtAI.TH

Announcemtnts

3

Racine

Board of Public Affa1rs
V•ll.age Hall
p 0. Box',3S1
Pomeroy, Oh10 45769

HetpWonted

The

MILLER ELECTRIC
SERVICE .

Farm Buildings
S•zes
"From l0x30"

For all of your w•r·
ing needs.
let George Mtller check
your present electnc.al
system .
Res1den11al
&amp; Commercial

Call742 -3195
or 992 -7680
1 8 lfc

83
Dozer work Small JObs a
spec 1a1ty 742 2753

84

Etectncal
&amp; Refrl¥era1!.!!'!

S EWING
Repa~rs ,

MACHINE '

ser" 1ce.
all
makes I
992
The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy
Author.zed S1nger Sales
and Serv•ce we snarpen
Sc tssors

na..

"YOUNGS
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

ALL STEEL

- Addons and
remodeling
- Roofing ~nd gutter
work
-concrete work
-Piumbmg ilnd
electrical work
(Free Estlm~tesJ

SMALL

Utility Buildings
S•zes from 4x6 to 12x40

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt 3, Box S4
R•c•ne, Oh.
Ph . 614-143-2591

V.C. YOUNG II

992-62!5 or 992-7Jl4

6 151fc

Pomeroy, Oh.

GRAVEL¥ TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE
GllAVELY

Wdlk

bel'ltrtd

r tdtn\f 1r.1c ton PuHI &amp;

~ell

&amp;

pro

mow e n , "dH1q lrd&lt;lon
AllA $ r111en
WEE OEAf E N- Ilrtt\ h C: uller&amp;
l r ommcr!o
S IIHL 81u \ h c utt en '

ln m

111 1!1 )

l' AlO O

We

Ht WfltiN
~~ · ~ · c e

~m&lt;411 E u~tul h

IIU Co!l{for St
t&gt;H

mowe n

wh ,ll we Sllll •

~n

Our Spec••llr
Pomuoy 0"
Jt/S

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
"Beautiful, Custom
Bu11t Gariges"
Call for lree siding
esttmates, 949-2801 or

949·2860.
No Sunday cons

J ~ lln O

~ x~ava!!".l.

COMPLETE sever tn
statlation &amp; backhoe ser
v•ce tor Racine Syracuse
sewer d1stnct Dozer work

if needed 949 2293

ELWOOD

BOWERS

R E PAIR
Sweepers ,
toasters, •rons, all small
appltances Lawn mower
Ne•t to State H1ghway
Garage on ~oute 7, 985

3825

EVERYBODY Shops the
WUTAD WAY

3 11 ·1!&lt;:

~

�Meigs County happening.s •••
amounts a're after deducations for
retirement of teachers and employes. In addition, the M'eigs Coun·
ty Board of Education received a
direct allotment of $288,901.90.
.....,

Court actions filed
A suit in the amount of $22,856.85
was filed in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by Buffalo Savings
Bank, Buffalo, N. Y., against Mark
A. Still and Pamela J. Still, Tuppers
Plains and Meigs County Treasurer.
A suit to quiet title was filed by
Vir'gil ,Parsons, Pomeroy, against
Tri-County Gas Co., Coming, et af
Jane M. Shaffer, Rt. 4, Pomeroy
and Donald C. Shaffer, Racine, filed
for dissolution of marriage.

Thursday mPeting st'l
The Women's Association of Mid·
dleport Presbyterian Church will
meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. There
will be a dedication of. the sewing
assignment .
Group I will s~rve cts hostess and
Grwp 11 will be 111 charge of the
program.

Will enforce curfew
Due to an increase in vandalism in
Pomeroy Vill'age, an 11 p.m. curfew
will be strictly enforced, Pomeroy
Police Chief Harry Lyons warned
today. Young people under 18 on the
streets after 11 p.m. at night will be
picked up by police and their parents
held responsible, Chief Lyons said.

Fir•' raust' gh'Pn
A fire Sunday at an unoccupied
house owned by John and Edna Hunnell . 421l Spring Ave., was believed to
have bee n caused by an
unauthorized person in the struc·
ture, Pomeroy Fire Chief Charles
l..egar reported .

Driver not injured
Mary J . Talbott, 39, Tuppers
Plains, was not injured when her
vehicle struck and killed a deer on
SR 681 in· Meigs County at 6: 45 p.m.
Monday .
Damage to the vehicle was minor,
according to the Gallia·Meigs Post
of the Ohio Highway Patrol.

Council••.
Continued from page I t
dra in over the riverba nk and this is
1

causing rnor~ erosion to the ' bank 1

•

Decontrol
1 Continued from page I t
terest rates continue to contribute
substantially to consumer prices,"
he said.
Because a sharp climb was widely
expected last month. Ratajczak said.
little market reactiOn to the
February report was anticipated.
In fact, several economists
already are predicting better news
in the coming months.
Ratajczak projects a 0,9 percent
inflation rate for March. which
would translate to slightly less than
12 percent for the first quarter of the
year.
Increases in food prices should
remain moderate in March. he said,
while "even with an acceleration &lt;i
mortgage interest because of
changes in FHA and VA rates. con·
sumer prices in March should slow
significantly from the energy·
induced February peak."
Economists at Morgan Guaranty
Trust Co. in New York are
forecasting ll .5 percent inflation for
the first three months of the year.
The Reagan admini strat iOn ,
which is forecasting an I 1.1 percent
rate for the entire year, is expected
to use the February figures as fur·
ther evidence that its economic
plans should be adopted quickly by
Congress to head off worse trouble in
coming months.

Valley UYfttod Cu.

MAII.Ktt REPORT

· Pnc~s Ut,k~n from the llUCtion uf Sa'""ds'd
March 21. Trertds: Val clllVt!:ii, stt:ady.
.cattle, l&gt;ie.&amp;dy to SJ lower .
Tollll Head SH
F'eedcr s~rs : GI)O(f and choice %10 to 300 1
63-75; 300 to 400 lbei. 6!.$().4i7 .SO; 400 to~
5.' · 500 to600 lbl:l . 58. ~7·; 600 &amp;o 700 lbl!. f6..64 .50;
700 w800 lbti. 5Z.50-tl2 : I!OOand over ~l . :i4l .
F'~r HeLfen : Good Hnd ct.Jice 7!Jttu300 Ibioi .
Ga-72 : 300 tu 400 lbti. 62-70; 400 to5001bs. 5.8-Q; 500
to 600 lb.s. 52~2 : 600 to 700 lbs. ~ . 5(1 ; 700 to 800
lb:s . 4~ . IIOO~:mduver4.&gt;-57 .

~·~'tkr buiU:i : Goud 11nd chuwe
52-74 : 300 lu 400 lt.. 6l.f7: lOOlo~Oib«
to 600 Ills. 54-62.50i 1100 to 7011
!kJO 1~ . 46-56: 8iJOlOOIII!r 46 . ~ . :wl .
Hulslem s~rs and bulls 300 to 800 lbti , 5&amp;8Z,:,O.
Bulls 1,0001~. and up47.:i044.50.
ShtU.:hter cow:s, utilities 41.$0-45.7fl ; c~tnncrs
antl cutt~rs 3S--40'. 25.
Cuw/ calf umLii. b)' tilt! ~lld 510to630.
Spnngt&gt;r L'UWS. b)' 11\t&gt; hea(! 405-5.:!0.
V ~iil l' iil\• e.s. &lt;·hoLl'l! and pmne 75-!H : ...:uuds ~
71 50.

\'•·t.-rans MPmurial
Saturday Admissions-Hilda Car·
nahan , Racine; Patsy · Spires,
Cheshire; Etta ' Cullwns, Pomeroy;
Mamie Hendricks, Middleport;
Larry Spencer, Racine: Jerrv Stone.
Rutland .
,
.
Saturdsy
Discharges--Jesse
Molden, Charlene Patterson,
Jodeena Hysell , Steven Lush.
Sunday Admissions-Laura Bond,
Racine ; Candace Lambert, Mid·
dleport ; Pearl Secoy, Syracuse:
Tracie Black, Pomeroy.
Sunday Discharges-Laura Bond,
Kathryn Felter, Garfield Pauley,
Jr., Jenny Williamson, Maggie
Gi~nore ,.Jerry Stone, Albert Smith.

*

King stated. He *gested that the
corner area being'lied into a nearby
stonn sewer . Council President
Marvin Kelly agreed to looktat the
problem.
During the discusSi on. Mayor Hoff·

Receive school fund s
The March State School Foun·
dation payment of $78,541,107.69 to
612 Ohio city, exempted village and
local school districts and 87 county
boards of education was re ported by
State Auditor Thomas E . Ferguson.
Of the total. Meigs County's three
local districts received a combined
$288,901.90 which included $75.385.18
for the Eastern Local District ;
$141,584.63 for Meig s Local. and
$71 ,932.09 for Southern Loca l The

O~o

man said

thete

are

numerous

loc1:1 tiuns in town wlu:re ·water stands ofter heavy rains .
At the request of the Middleport
Pl~nning Commi~ion ,

council a(}'

proved the reviston uf the housing
land use plans of the village. This
will be a language change only but
will not change any zoning . A
request to transfer a carry-out
alcoholic beverage license from
Twin City Gateway Supennarket to
the Meredith Oil and Ice Cu. was
- tabled for study.
Council went on record commending Middleport firemen who
washed the streets Sunday. Cuun·
ci ~nan King suggested the establish·
ment of a bicycle path and a request
was heard from one resident asking
that a yellow no-parking area near
hJs horne be reduced so that he can
legally parktng close to his residen·
C'e.

Attending the meeting were
Mayor Hoffman. Clerk Jon Buck,
Counci~nen King . Kelly, Dewey
Horton, Ca rl Horky , William
Walters and Jack Satterfield.

The Meigs County Sheriff's Depar·
bnent is investigating the theft of a
rotatiller from the Elberfeld fann
near Tuppers Plains that occurred
sometime since the first of March.
Yvonne Garten, Syracuse, informed the sheriff's dejlartment that
· sometime within the last two weeks
a house she owns on Mile Hill near
Racine had been entered and
several pieces of furniture was
taken. She also reported windows
had been broken.
Sunday at 8:35 p.m . a deer was
killed when it ran into the path of
vehicle driven by Robert L. Ritchie,
32, Rl. 1, Minersville, as he was
traveli~g east on SR 124.

(;•·I marriag•• li&lt;·•·nst•
A rnarrJage lieense was issued to
Gregory Thomas Hayman , 19, Rt. I,
Lung Bottom, and Patricia Kay Ed·
wards, 16, Rt. 1, Reedsville.

Admitted··Melania
Holman .
Pomeroky; Orvil Holter , Long Bot·
tom ; Trenton Qualls. Pomeroy ;
Nannie Radcliff, Rutland .
Discharged ..Sandra Darling ,
Lucy Spencer, George Dean.

A.

Ellen Jennifer Fisher,19, of 6220
South West 9th Street. Plantation ,
Florida died March 21, as the result
of an automobile accident.
Ms. Fisher was a freshman at
W~stern
Carolina
University.Cullowhee, North Carolina, and
was a member of the Phi Mu
Sorority there .
Survivors include her parl!nts ,
George and Edith Fisher, one
brother , Greg Fisher. all of Plan·
tation , Fla .. Also su rviving are her
paternal grandmother,
Mrs .
Theresa F isher.Minersville, and her
maternal grandmother . M'" .
Amelia Cooper, of Rushtown , Ohio.
Memorial services were held
today at the First Pres byterian
Church of Ft. Lauderdale, Florida.
In lieu of flowers the family requests
that donations be made .to the Ellen
Fisher College Scholarship Fund in
care of the l'irst Presbyterian Chur·
ch, Ft . Lauderdale .
Arrangements were rnade by the
T.M. Ralph Plantation Funeral
Hume 1 Plantation .

Mrs. Mary A. Harris , 77, · well
known Meigs County resident,
Minersville, died Tuesda y morning
at the Holzer Medical Center.
Mrs. Harris was a daughter of the
late John and Lena Sclunitt Bartels.
She attended a non-denominational
church.
Surviving are her husband ,· Lewis
E. !Smoke) Harris; a daughter,
Mrs . Denver 1Nora 1 Hice, Middleport: two sons, George 1.. and
K~nneth E. Hetrris, Pomeroy ; five
grandsons,
twu
~rci:ltgra nddaughters,
one
grea t·
grandson and several meces and
nephews .
Funeral services will be held at I
p.m. Thursday at the Ewing Funeral
Home where friencl' ma y ca ll after 7
this even ing . Burial will be in the
Minersville Hill Cemetery.

~hrim'llt's

nwding sl'l

The Twin City Shrtnettes will meet
at 7:30p.m. Wednesday at the home
of Cora Beegle, Racine.

~

.

.

.. .. . .......

..

'

Carol Burnett walks
through aowd outside a I.Als Angeles courtroom on her way io to hear
closing arguments by attorneys in Miss Burnett's $10 million lawsuit
against the National Enquirer Monday. The case is expected to go to the
jury late Monday or Tuesday. I AP l..aserpholol .

Harris

l\1arv

Pomeroy-Barton with 10 markers.
In the nighcap, Rutland defeated
Letart 21J..H led by Mike Bartrwn
with 16 points and Joe Snider six for
the winners. Hupp led the Letart
qUintet with five .
Following tonight's championship
game there will be an awards
presentation. Individual a wards will
be presented to the first and second
·
place tectm members.

.

I

Ellen Jt'nnit'i--r Fisher

f)

• • ;ffatob IUIIJi · · · · ,

Vt•lt•rans Memorial

Area deaths

Tuppers Plains, Rutland 1 winners
In the semi·final round of the
Meigs County Elementary Tour·
nament Tuppers Plains and Rutland
clauned wins to advance to the
championship game, thrs evening at
7:3() p.m. Letart and Pomeroy•
Barton will square off ar 6 p.m. in
the consolatton game of the tournament .
Last night , 111 the upener, l'uppers
Plains bombarded Pomeroy Barton
· 44-12 . A well-balanced attack led by
Jeff Caldwell was the main
lllgredient in the win . Caldwell net·
ted 14 points , Brian Durst 10 points,
Jeff Johnson 8 points, and Mark
Griffin added sLx . Nonnan Led

Probe complaints

(400)

NOTICE

(401)

Save

Anyone doing any repair
work on the
Clifford
Longenelle property in
Olive Twp . without my
consent will be considered
trespassing and dealt with
accordingly .

l.r~o

),,,,~

1
, ,, tlu pitl't• t lr1 ilr dr• •
111 ilr• ,, , "'' I ,, l1 ur "tl r• .~
l••l~b•:lr

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,',

t looiiHII

4 lo 6X
7 lo 14

tr ul·l! ,,, r ,, I, I1111LIIr• d

,•,rlhloll

•tlr1 1

l11"\

ollidtl•r •rl •' '

\Q.

t

16.88

Our Reg.
20.47
16-pc. Ccnlle • Dinnerware
Service four 41s oven'·ond dish·
washer safe. resists breakage.
• 5afe .., COlt¥• MoiiCJI and miCt~ o-.,.ns

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

CLIFFORD lONGENETTE

97

$0urReg.
1.47
611«1lr Pkg. Nylon Kn...hl'a
Mist-tone or Suntone shades.
Nude heel. Misses' sizes 8'h·ll.

Sold in
Auto
Depl

Umll2

7.97

(403)

1.58

Our Reg.

Bog
Our Reg. 2.18
Fun·llze Candy Favorlt" ··
Milky Way·. Three Musketeers·
or S~ickers • bars. I· lb.' bog.

9.97

lois' o.alls/Shirt Set
Bib·front suspender overalls.
Cotton/polyester, 2·4.

3·oz. ·
Ombres
4-oz.'

Full (Uncondlllonal
Durallon) Warranty

Solid
Colon

(Oelarlsln Store)

WEEKEND AT MEIGS INN
- - - - - - F j l i D A Y SPECIAl. -...-"'fa~

Salad Bar, 8 oz. New York Strip

"GUESS WHAT YOU
CAN EATON
1HENEW1981
WEIGHT WATCHERS"
FOOD PlANS:'

Vegetable, Potato, Soft Drink,

$725

Plus Tax

'

68~

Entertainment
Friday &amp; Saturday

Flor1ne Uar~
O..•n•• ut .,.,,.,..,., Wd' cr.e•~ .,. tn-t\ ~oed

(404)

Save on 21·,c. Socket Sel
1/4' ond ~ " · drive Heal treated
precision molded. chromed

Llmlll2

Skein
Our Reg. 1.27

"Love Kn"" Acrylic Yam
4·ply, knitting·worsled·lype
yarn; machine wash and dry .
'Nelwt

67
46~~~.!
.
2

Or
•
40x63"Ea.
No-Iran Panell 01 Dacron·
Puffed dot weave in Dacron '
pa,lyester. Decorator colors
C&gt;.#ont

. 1M

'2 $5

Our Reg.

Por
3.97Ea.
Latch Hook Rug Square1 ·,
Acrylic yarn. canvas. instruc ·
lions. 12x 12" finished size.

.

~not InCluded

K mart' ADVERTISED MERCHANDISE POLICY
Open Daily 10· 9
Sundays H

Ves

.All LEGAL
BEVERAGES

CHOC lAVE~ C-'K E.

fl0Mf8"KED BREAD

SWEET PO TA fO

Ye5

N!:!

I

No

Wone Peanul Buner Poocorn 't'es e~ en hOrnebaked bread On lhe ncw We.gtlL Wa.t t tler s l=ood Plans
-,.ou can team 10 eat tnem aLl - w1ltl•n l•m•IS ol course - and Sl illlearn LO lose wo•ghl
P S Vou guessed •L the choCol ate cake •S st•ll a no-no

$1499VALUE PACKAGE IF YOU JOIN NOW!

SERVED

SAVE 14• oo 1ST meohngand reg•Siratoon le4) btltvot~en March B alld Marcf1 2B 1961
GET $10.11 desogne• tote oag .t .,.ou atlel\d etgtll cunsecul•ve paldweeili'y' meet•ngs

beTween Apr•l5 and May 30 1981
"Aitgu&amp;lr 1•1 meeting •ncl r.ti•tr•tlon fHI12 . w.ekly IMtiflngfMI!.

[LASTWEE~l

THE MEIGS INN

GALUPOI..IS
St louil C•ho~c Ctourdl
Ill Sldlll !:&gt;1
lue~ 1::1

J O pn•
-- ·---

CALL: Toll Free 1-800-582-1399
I 5~1------~8G~~-~~~~~~~~~D-~-----rs~lr
p
MORE PEOPLE LOSE MORE WEIGHT THAN
. ~~
1

FOR FUATfJEA INFORMATION

ANY OTHER WEIGHT LOSS PROGRAM IN THE WORLD.

J

I
I S..olll)

L&amp;ft
-

S4 OFF

r)lfl n I' AI r, ( ,..~&gt;

I

"iU~Il~ ""'~''".., 'o.~"'o r,1-j.,, o wr' ~'ll
,.~lPtfL~"''
'I+V""Al"'S'~'s 11,A~ll20. ..a, 70, an~1.-' IJ
tt-~~"'"
oosc~t

· ~ I)~(-""'! I •NO 1.u~ NOilll

" lf

• _(}l,ltjt!.ll

O• ttt ll

OFFER GOOD FROM MARCH. TO MARCH .. 1911
C Wt !UHT """' ll t!tiiStNiliNC I!*!Uo"'l'lll!&lt;

I IH

oo SJ't C•Al

W~IGH1 .,AtCo~ll51ll,t.Ot_l,l,o. . . _

(54!
'4 I

----------OfllaROOOD,OIILYWITMTMIICOUPOM•---------:---::.J

Phone 992·3629

Pomeroy, Oh.

You must be 21 or accompanied
by parent or legal guardian.

Oui!Wm intention 11 to hOVe every octveftlsecl Item In stock on 0\j( lhetves. • on adverltsed Item LS not ~tor
purcno.e due 10 ooy
reaiOf'l.k mart wlluue o !loin Check on rBQUeJI tor the merchondile (one Item
or reaiOI"'Ibie lomilv quantity) to be"pyrchalld at the soteprlctwMM._et ovaiklble or will lei vouocomporoble
at o comparable rtcl.dton in prict .

....,.Of.SMn

quality,._.,

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