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The Saving
Place~

.e

ave
.Our Reg. 4..97 to 7.97

Your Choice
~tnlllil'l Handbag

Event Now
,...... Day Savings

touch for Mother's Day, a handbag .
lp8&lt;Cial-whether It's a nylon beach bog,
clutch, tailored quilted nylon
wood-handled pouch. We hove
your Mom at a price to prove it.

By BOB IIOEFUCH
Parents of eight learning
disability students who charge that
their children have lost the entire
year of school at the Pomeroy
Elementary School will take their
problems to a special meeting o{ the
Meigs Local School District Board of
Education Thursday morning.
Parents of seven of the students
met at the Middleport Pentecostal
Church Tuesday night to discuss the
problems the;v have · encountered
with the class their children have attended at the Pomeroy school for the
past year.
Rev. WiUiam Knittel, presiding
over the meeting, charged negligence on the part of administrators of
the school and the central office in
not seeing that the learning
disability class was properly conducted.
Rev. Knittel said materials for the
class were two months late in being
ordered and charged that Supt. ·
David Gleason and Asst. Supt. Dan

Morris were negligent in this delay.
He said the classroom was not conducted properly and related incidents involving the claas' teacher.
He said the teacher repeatedly said
she had no books or materials with
which to work. Rev. Knittel said,
however, that Dan MlllTis did take
the teacher to Lattas in Charleston,
W. Va., where materials were purchased. To sum it up, Rev. Knittel
said materials "disappeared': from
·the classroom during the year. He
said his ·wife had visited the
Pomeroy Elementary School 13
times during the year and that she
had been told by Principal Robert
Morris that tlie classroom situation
would improve. Rev. Knittel said
early in the school year a tragedy
had occurred involving the financee
of the teacher and that "we backed
off" for a time for that reason.
Rev. Knittel told of having several
meetings with administrators of the
central office, the elementary
school, the county office and others

'

Judge grants King's request
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lhe'll Love rhele No Iran Prlnllheels

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Our 3.57, 22x42" Bath Towel

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Our 2.47, 16x26"
Hand Towel ... 1.67
Our 1.47, 12K12"
•
Washcloth , .. 1.07
Jocquanl Pattem lrlghtene Her lath
Absorbent, unsheored cotton/polyester terry.

Polyester I cotton. 128 ttveads per sq. Inch.
Our 6.64 Double 111ze Sheets • ........ .
OurlO""'Queen-llzeSheeta• ....... 1.1•
Qt.!r 4.57 SlandOrd Nowcasea .... Pr., 3.64

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LOS ANGELES - Ajudge has granted a request from tennis star
Billie Jean King to temporarily bar her former homosexual lover from
selling some 100 letters that Mrs. King wants to keep "forever private
and confidential."
Documents filed by Mrs. King's lawyer allege that Marilyn Barnett
had been threatening for two to three years to publish personal letters
Mrs, King wrote to her during their affair " if Billie Jean King did n&lt;X
give Marilyn Barnett what she wanted.''
The docll!Jlents say M~. Barnett claimed she had been offered
$25,!100 by the National Enquirer for rights to some 100 letters which
Mrs. King wrote to her during their love affair.

Plea could have ramifications
SALT LAKE CITY - The Mormon Church's plea lhat the MX
missile system not be based in Utah and Nevada, could have "enormous ramifications" on proposals to base the missile in the area, two
governors say.
Church President Spencer W. Kimball; 86, revered as a prophet by
4.7 million Mormons, urged Tuesday that President Reagan not base
the giant mobile missile system in Utah and Nevada, as the Air Force
proposes.
In Washington, Air Force Lt. Gen. Kelly Burke said the effect of the
statement by the mostly conservative and staunchly anti-corrununist
church hierarchy would be "not inconsiderable."

Word led to McNairls dismissal
CINCINNATI - Lawrence McNair's use of a four-letter word during
a work-rules dispute at Diamond National Corp. led to his dismissal
hearing In which four executives were shot, two of them killed.
William Geers, 46, plant superintendent wounded in the Incident,
testified Tuesday during the second day of McNair's trial in Hamilton
County Conunon Pleas Court about the evenll11eading up to the Feb. 25
shootings.
.
McNair, a boiler room engineer, is charged with two counts each of
aggravated murder and attempted aggravated murder.
Killed were John Prewitt, 49, plant manager, and Raymond R.
Leach, 49, powerhouse foreman. Geers was wounded in the neck.
Ralph Francis, 59, is on a life support system.

Widows want recognition
BElFAST, Northern Ireland - The " widows of terrorisrri" are
crying out for recognition.
Amid the worldwide wave of sympathy for IRA hunger striker Bob-

a:a

PI'OIIy IIJIIetln."MMnc81ACryiC lllanlcet

5" nylon eyelet binding at lop; lulh colora.

Save••

by Sands, a Protestant woman whose husband and brother were killed
by the Iriah Republican Army has opened a campaign on behalf of the
relatives of victims of terrorism in Northern Ireland.
The 47-year-old mother ol five children wants tQ bring her own case
and those of others who have had relatives murdered to the attention
of the European Human Rights Commission in Strasbourg, France, to
publicize their plight.

Winning Ohio lottery number
CLEVELAND - The number selected

Tuesday night in the Ohio

UJttery's dally game "The Number" is060.

The lottery reported earnlnp of $7Jl,503 from the wagering In the
drawing. Lottery officials said sales prior to the drawing totaled
$858,182, and holders of winning tickets are entitled to share S237 ,659.

Weather
Rain gradually ending this afternoon. Breezy with a high in the low

to mid 8011. Clearing and colder tonight with a low of 40 to 45. Sunny
Thunday with a high In the mid to upper 8011. Ch8nce of rain, 80 JM!I"
cent 1hia momlllg, 40 percent thla afternoon 10 percent tonight llld

10:97

llelriii'O'I'hursday,

OIFIIuflfll*l•. . lllrllllliiiR

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recently in attempt to work out a
solution to the complaints of the
parents.
Several parents told of eK·
periences involving their children in
the class and of visits to the
classroom. Several stated also that
they were told when they gave permission for their children to attend
the learning disability class that
their children would attend that
class only for help with the particular field of study with which they
were having problems. However,
they said, as it turned out they were
kept in the classroom for the entire
day throughout the year. Parents
charged that little was accomplished and that coloring
seemed to be a major activity.
It was noted that report card
grades for the last six weeks were
considers bly . improved over
previous grading · periods. This ' occurred, Rev. Knittel said, after he
had voiced objections to the conduct
!Continued on page 12) ·

REPAIRS BEGIN- Work crews from Chesapeake
and Oblo RaHroad began working Tuesday on
replacing ties and upgrading track on a 24-rnile stretch
of Chessie raU between Gallipolis and Mlnerton. The
Improvement Is for easier rail transport ol coal from

the Meigs Mines area in Vinton CountY to the American
Electric Power Co, plants in Cheshire, New ties were
being welded Iabove) along Bob McCormack Road
near Gallipolis Tuesday.

Conrail officials hopeful

~ •.•IN THEW

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I Seclion, ll Page• . 15 Cenls
A Multimedia Inc. NewS 1

School problem
upsets parents

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Save 20% to 36%

en tine

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesda

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Voi.30,No.15
Co yrjghtod 1' ' '

Handbags

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EDaded Foreeui-Friday through Sunday-FairFriday and
Saturday. Chanee of showers or lhunderatonna will half Sunday.
Hl&amp;hlln the upper 11011 and lonrllll. Lowa In the 401 Friday and In the
low ID mldiOI Saturday and Sunday.
·

WASHINGTON IAP) - Represen·
tatives of labor and management
are expressing hope that a Chryslerlike agreement for some $228 rnillion
a year in wage concessions will
provide impetus for legislation to
continue federal subsidies for
Conrail.
Under tenns of the accord announced Tuesday, railway labor
unions would sacrifice some $200
million a year and Conrail
executives would make wage concessions in the range of $28 million a
year.
At the same lim~. the govenunent
would con\inue to subsidize the Nor·
theastern and Midwestern railroad
freight service to the tune of S600

million a year for the next three
years under legislation being pushed
by Rep. James Florio, 0-N.J., chairman of a House transportation subcommittee.
Earlier this year, Conrail, in a
report to Congress, asked its employees to give up $200 million a year
for the next five years.
Fred Kroll, president of the
Brotherhood of Railway Clerks, and
Staniey Crane, president of Conrail,
declined to 'set a time frame for the
concessions announced Tuesday.
The Reagan administration wants
to slash federal subsidies for Conrail
and eventually break it up, selling
remaining lines to private interests.
Conrail officials have said the

railroad needs $2 billion in subsidies
over the next five years.
Administration officials had no
immediate reaction to the
agreement between labor and
management. Ed Dale, spokesman
for the Office or Management and
Budget, said the matter is now in the
hands of the Transportation Depart·
ment and the U.S. Railway
Association.
The total Conrail payroll now is
about $1 billion a year.
Florio hailed the agreement as
"an important milestone" in labormanagement relations.
Under terms of the accord, which
Kroll said has been approved by the
leaders of a dozen rail unions, the
approximately 70,000 Conrail em-

ployees would forgo $200 million a
year in wage increases.
Kroll said the employees' wages
would not be cut, but that the
sacrifice would involve increases in
future years.
Florio said he felt the agreement
would fu rn is h momentum for
legislation he has introduced that
would continue .Conrail subsidies for
the next three years, to the tune or
about S600 million .
Kroll said that leaders of 12 unions
have expressed support for the wage
concession, and that two leaders
have yet to be heard from. He said
the agreement is subject to approval
by union rank-and-file members and
predicted that would be forthcoming .

Study shows Reagan energy proposal
will hurt needy· Gallia-Meigs people
CHESHIRE
President
Reagan's plans to cut energy
assistance programs for Ohio's low·
income and elderly families could
place hundreds ·of thousands of
needy households in an unmanageable and desperate situation
next winter, according to a study
issued today by the Gallia·MeigS
Corrununity Action Agency and the
Ohio Association of Corrununity Action Agencies.
The study, titled "The Impact of
Rising Horne Energy Costs in Ohio:
1976 a~d 1981" finds that Ohio lowincome households heating with
natural gas spend-~early 411 percent
of their monthiy income for natural
gas and electricity during the
coldest month of the year.
The report also finds that lowincome households spend three
times more llf their monthly:family

.

budget on electric and gas costs than
do middle-income households, and
seven times more than do high·
income households.
" This massive burden of
skyrocketing energy costs will force
an estimated 350,000 low-income
Ohioans including many residents of
Gallia and Meigs counties to seek
federal energy assistance this
year," according to Joseph Barsotti,
Executive Director of Gallia·Meigs
Corrununity Action Agency. " These
funds are already spread far too thin
to give low-income Ohioans a decent'
or safe energy standard of living, yet
President Reagan wants to slash the
energy assistance.
The Reagan Administration has
announced its plans to cut the Home
Energy Assistance Program
(HEAP) and other programs by 25
percent, eliminate the Energy Crisis

Interve nti on Program , and
eliminate the loW-income Horne
Weatherization Program funded by
the U. S. Department of Energy.
While
low- in come
home
weatherization would be allowable
under the community development
block grant program , funding would
be cut 20 percent and there would be
no requirement that any or these
funds be used for low-income
weatherization.
"The cutback in HEAP will red uce
the average national payment from
$110 to $82," said Barsotti, "and this
is to pay the average low-income
Ohioan's bill of $900, moe than
double what a low-income paid only
five years ago."
" Perhaps the least logical cut
proposed by the Reagan ad. ministration is the elimination of
low -i ncome
weatherization

programs. In 1980, nearly 20,000
Ohio homes were weatherized
through these programs, with 176 of
these in Gallia and Meigs counties.
"All in all, these cuts will be a
disaster for low-income Ohioans
next winter when they look at their
utility bills, their income, and then
hnd there is no possible way to keep
their energy serv1ce on," said Bar·
sotti. " We are urging everyone ci tizens, community and neighborhood groups , utility and fuel companies, and local businesses to make
their feelings known."
The study is based on actual gas
and electric rates and fuel charges
for 1976 and 1981, and on infonnation
obtained from the Ohio Residential
Utility Usage Survey. Usage data in
the survey were provided by Ohio's
major gas and electric utilities for
4,234 households throughout Ohio.

Despite request, Bell won 'i resign
DILLES BOTI'OM, Ohio (AP) - A
truck carrying non-union coal from
a strip pit, just north of the United
Mine Workers district headquarters,
was pelted by rocks today, according to a sheriffs deputy.
The Belmont County sheriff's of·
lice said the windshield of an Ohio
Coal Co, truck was shattered.
Law enfortement officers said
three personS in a brown van
followed the truck from the strip pit
east of St. Clairsville and hurled
rocks at the truck when it reached

-Bridseport.
Meanwhile, UMW District 6
President Ed Bell says l)e won't bow
to a caU by 'nine striking members
that he mlgn. .
.
The nine miners, including the
prealdents ct twu locala, said
Tuelday thai Bell violated the
UMW'a Ctlllllltutlon by not supporllnc p11111e of the tentative
qreement rejected by mlnen Mil'
ch 31, four dayufter they walked off
. the job qalnll the BltuminouB Coal
Operator. AlloclaUon.
The nine uked Bell to mign,
saytnc they will raquell the Dlllrlct
8, n:ICUIIw board to remove him
fnrm olflcd nee ery.

District 6 represents about 15,000
miners in southeastern Ohio and tlie
northern West Virginia panhandle.
. The nine miners work at the three
Southern Ohio Coal Co. mines in
Meigs and Vinton counties and
Peabody Coal Co.'s Sunny Hill complex in Perry County. They include
Local 1886 President Gene Oiler,
Local 1890 President Terry Moles
and Local 1340 Financial Secretary
Wayne Clark.
· Bell said he hasn't seen the
charges in writing, and he refused to
answer the charges in detail, saying
he turned the issue over to his attorney.
The nine miners signed charges
that Bell worked against
ratification, They said he violated a
provision of the union's constitution
requiring thai he urge miner:111o apprvve the qreement.
According to the nine, Bell
aUesedly dlltributed lnfonnation
sheets they. say undennlned the
purpoeed agreement. They said he's
become "a political intraDiigent"
who bu deviated from UMW poUcy.
. ~.Belmont County eom.
lllQII Pleu Jqe WWiam Irwin
III'IIJiad Tuelday a Cadiz coal com-

pany's request for a temporary
restraining order against striking
UMW miners. The order limits
picketing and prohibits violence at
Cravat Coal Co.'s mining site in
Holloway.
Cravat's employees are not members of the UMW.
On May 4, the UMW entered "an
unlawful alliance" and conspired to
"injure and destroy Cravat's
business," the company said in its

request for the court order.
Cravat is seeking a permanent injunction to prevent striking miners
from picketing at the company's
mining sites, threatening company
employees and interfering with its
business operations.
Glass and nails were thrown on
roads near Cravat's Holloway site
Tuesday, the Belmont County
sheriff's office said.

Police arrest Racine man
POINT PLEASANT - A Racine
man baa been arrested in connection
with a March accident here and
charged with negligent IKmicide
"
accOrding
to West Virginia State'
TrooperC.W.Kimball.
Kimball .said Stephen 0. Jenklli8,
211, was arrested Monday at the John
Amoe Power Plant in Putnam County, WNa., In connection with the
March 15 accident lri which he was a
driver.
The driver of the other vehicle In
the accident, April Panona, ~. New
Haven, wu critically Injured in the
accide.~t. and later died of ber lnJurlelln Huntington, W.Va. hospital.

••
t'

Ertradition proceedings have
begun to transport Jenkins from
Ohio to face charges, but accof!~ing
to Kimball, he and Trooper · Joe
Tyree of Putnam County arrested
Jenkins at the plant.
He was arraigned before Putnam
County Magistrate JO!eph Payne
and bond was set at 12,500.
Jenklrur was brought back to
Mason County where he is in the
county jail In lieu of bond.
According to Muon County
Maglatrate Paul Smith, an appeal
date will now be let fll' Jenkins to

enter a plea.

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WtltiamP.BuckterJr.

~------~----------------------~~--------------~-----

• A while ago, in aU innocence, HHS
; chief Richard Schweiker nominated
· ! Warren Richardson for a post as one
.~ of his assistants. Said Richardson
~ had been for four years (196!1-!973)
~ the chief lobbyist for an outfit called
! the Liberty Lobby. Said outfit is a
: hotbed of anti-semitism and name~ calling centered around
the
• mysterious Willis Carlo, who
; regularly poisons the wells of
~ polemical discourse. Mr. Richar·l jlson said that his association with
1~e Liberty Lobby was forced on him
~ by economic hardship, and one must
!·be charitable to such cases, whether
• )lealing with a Richardson or an Ab; scam defendant. Moreover, since
' Richard Schweiker is a man of
splendid character one is disinclined
to believe that he would consciously
surround himself with such persons
as had been associated with Carta.
Perhaps in the interval since 1973

But they are as despicable, not- their midst who .would destroy the
Caldwell was murdered in Camwithstanding which dozens upon best features of their country in or- bodia. Either by Pol Pot, whom he
dozens of Washington bureaucrats der to militarize it ·against an admired, or by the North Vietand congressional aides associate in iUusory enemy." Egball\lunad, an namese, whom he admired: it isn't
various ways with the ISP, and such IPS associate, in 1976 praised China, . clear which side did it. Both could
senators as Mark HaUield and jour- Cuba and North Vietnam as "the for- have done so .without noticing. They
nals as The New Republic sen(! ces of liberation." Malcolm Cald- don't keep figures on solitary
valentines to the IPS. The outgoing well, IPS: fellow, in 1976 denounced executions. Such activities as murhead of the National Endowment for "Laotian and Cambodian reac- der call hardly sl!ock IPS types like
the Humanities, which distributes a tionary refugees," while his Saul Landau, IPs fellow head who
cool $100 million of federal money to colleague Garath Porter, described says that Castro puts Huber Matos
scholars bent on studying this or by IPS head Robert Borosage as "a "in jail'for corTect reasons." Matos,
that, refers to Marcus RaBkin, the
brilliant scholar," wrote a book you will recall, wu tortured for 2G
dominant figure at IPS, as
describing Pol Pot as "only the years when he resisted his formet
"America's most important inlatest victim of the enforcement of companions' totalitarianization of
tellectual." (If this were true, then
an ideology that social revolutions Cuba.
we'd be in such condition in America
he portrayed as negatively as
With this clubable group of men
as Germany was at a time when one possible." Presumably a previous and women are associated, in
might, in all truth say, that Goebbels · such victim was Adolf Hitler.
various but by no means intangible
wabsl. Gestrmany's most important ifi'A @19~1 l'OitTWO~ 5T,.,R·TELE'6RAN'N .E.A,
pu lCt .)
HULME
.
The New York Times Magazine, in
a revealing compilation done on the
IPS entitled ''The Think Tank of the
Left" by Joshua Maravchik, tells us
more than we need to know to conclude about IPS what a close reading
of almost any publication by the
Liberty Lobby would tell us about
the prejudices of that organization.
IPS is funded personally by Cora
Weiss, the heiress of the Faberge
fortune , who went repeatedly to
Hanoi, as did Marcus Raskin, to
whoop it up with the conununists.
Two years ago both Weiss and
Raskin refused o join Joan Baez and
others in reproaching the North
Vietnamese for their slaughter of
the boat people, hailing instead
Hanoi's "extraordinary effort to
achieve reconciliation among all of
its people. "
Richard Barnet, senior fellow at
IPS, took the line that the U. S.
government was composed of "war
criminals," determined to "create
widespread civilian casualties." An
IPS publication explains that
Americans face danger not from the
Soviet Union but "from those within

Warren Richardson traversed the
road to Damascus. But if he did so,
he was silent about it. There is no
public record, made available to the
committee, wherein he pointed to
the iniquities of his former
associates - until it became convenient to do so during his hearings.
Anyway, recognizing that he
would never get a Senate confirmation, Richardson withdrew,
and the case wiU be forgotten by
next weekend. Which brings to mind
the interesting difference in the way
in which association with the Liberty
Lobby is treated in Washington, and
association with the Institute for
Policy Studies.
The only difference worth noting
between the two institutes iB that the
IPS people tend to be more literate,
more erudite. They're not as literate
or as erudite as Lenin or Trotsky.

The Daily Sentinel
Il l Cuurl Strt•t• l

l)hw
ll4---99i-m6

Pum t· ru ~· .

ll t-; HITt:IJ l"IITHE INT EREST OF THE

MEIG S. MA SI~ N

AH F.A

ROBERT!.. WINGETT
l' uhlis ht•r

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH

A ~~ i s tarll l'uhli ~tu:r / ( 'unlr•1lkr

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
'l t· ~ s

Edilnr

,\ . \1 ~: ~1R F. H ,,f Tht' A!oStK'ia lt'd Prt'SS. Inland U a il ~ P rt·'i~ Ass•w latiun a nd thr
Aml'rlnln ~r v. Spcl p1·r l' ublishrrs A .~ .'iu!' i a l it m .

ri~1: Common burgla-r
Committing a felony.

I.ETI'Eil"' OF H l' l "'i l~l \' &lt;HI" •,u•ll'llmt•d_T h l'~ -~huu\d hi.• II·"" lhlln 300 14urds lun)l. All
h·t h' r' :H~· ' UhJ_t·t ·l \11 t•dl\1111( _and mu•t bt• ~ia:m· d 11 ith rti1m t·. a d d rt·~~ and trlr phunt"
numht •r. ~~~ u n." ~ m :tt_ lt· n , • r, 14111 hi.• puhl l~h.- d . l.i-lh • r ' , huu\d lw m j~u•ld u.~t.- . a ddr l'.~s in •
~~~ Ut'~. IIH IJII' r~u llah t u-' .
)(

ways, ·such as fonner State DepjiJt.
ment advisor Anthony Lake; former
Treasury official Gene Godley; former principal domestic advisor to
Jimmy Carter, Stuart Elzenstat;
Patricia Derlan, formerly of State;
fanner Sen. James A~, the
Israel-hater; Paul \, arnke, the
SALT negotiator; Douglas FJ'IIller of
the· UAW: Sen. Paul Tsongaa of
Massachusetts and Reps. John

Today in history.

.

national polls for the past several
years have found strong support for
cutting federal spending and
reducing federal taxes.
But Americans have many
questions and doubts about
Reagan's program and its specifics.
For example, the public supports
Reagan's budget cuts as a package,
but that mandate fails apart on
specific programs.
They support cuts in food stamps,
but they are generally opposed to
cuts in the school lunch program and
federally insured loans to college
students, a recent Associated PressNBC News poll said.
In philosophical terms as well,
contradictions abound in the public's
perceptions of Reagan's plan.
They say his proposals will hurt
the poor and they say federal
benefits for poor people should not
be cut, whatever the nation's
economic situation.
The public says the federal government has an obligation to provide
medical and legal services to those

Africa's forgotten

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WffA!
MY f'f'£65
fll'I.EA5c,
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eliminate the Legal Services Corp.,
cut Medicaid and make substantial
reductions in other programs
designed to help the poor.

Letter .to the editor
A big thank you
Our annual Hike-Bike for 1!1111 has enforcement people maintained the
passed. For those of us who par- safety of our children throughout the
ticipated in the planning and day. We sincerely thank them allfor
organization we are relieved and their outstanding effort. I would also
happy that this year's event was suc- like .to extend my personal thanks to
cessful. Again the people of Meigs the ·people who actually make the
County have pulled through with Hike-Bike successful "THE KIDS."
This year we had over 325 people
generosity and support.
I wish to thank each of the many . (mostly kids) ride in the Hike-Bike.
I wish to thank each and every
people who supported our efforts for
rider
for their efforts over the 'rf.
this year's Hike-Bike with .donations
mile
ride, Each participant
of money, time, food, etc. I would
especially like to express thanks for cooperated, helped each other and
the boors ct hard work and maintained safety, The. Hike-Bike
organization .that the Meigs County Committee gratefully acknowledges
the efforts of all participants.
REACT Team supplies.
Sincerely, Carol Layh, Hike-Bike
The REACT Team and all the law
Chainnan.
, .•

they offered proof to Ute West that
Fidel Caatro's efforta to remake
Cuba on the Russian model were
bankrupt.
· At a recent Geneva .conference,
the Reagan adminlstraiton pledged
$236 million In aid to African
refugees, and tr· N. Secretary
General Kurt Waldheim announced
that $560 million had been raised by
members of the world organization
to assiat African reaettlement efforts. Nell year, African refugees
will receive half of the United
Nations: funds for refugee assistance.

The U. S. pledges are especially
welcome during this time of. oncertainty over the Reagan administration's policy toward Africa.
African leaden are !earful of a l(. s.
tilt toward South Africa and an acceptanceofthatraciat~te'sanned

inv81ima of Ita nelghbon. (!bose invui0111 are contrlbutlnc to the increase in Southern African
refugees.)
But the number of refugees - in

r-------_;_.;.;..;,

1/lU, I 1/itS

OF
lf5TIIINN6 70

Africa and elaewhere - will corltlnue to rise as long 81 their home
countries are Wllble to 11111a1n
them. The ranks of African
homeless will only swell if the
budget-cutting Reaganltea renege .
on the long-tenn development
assistance promised by their
predecesson.
Africa's future reata largely on UU,
abiUty of U.
policy llllkerl to
discern the dlfferelng needl ol the
African states and to aeparate Eat.
Weal tenalona from the real
problema of hwnan deve!Gpllellt
and economic growth 818 continent
that wlil eventually be able to feed itself and provide the world with
valuable natural reiOIIl'Cel If aid
from the induatriallzed world CCJIIo
tlnuea.
The Reagan admlniltralton's gift
to the African refuc• ill much appreciated. But the cmditl0111 that
produced their miNry will not· be
COtTected unlell eiuqency 'aid II
coupled with developlllent ••tstance.

s.

the winning run as Philadelphia
rallied for two runs in the ninth to
defeat Los Angeles. Mike Schmidt
doubled horne the tying run before
Trillo delivered his game-winning
sacrifice fly off reliever Steve Howe.
Earlier, Pedro Guerrero's two-tun
hom~r featured a five-run rally in
the t\lp of the eighth inning that
propelled the Dodgers into a 7-a lead.
In the bottom of the eighth, TriUo got
a run back for the Phillies with his
second homer of the season.
Expos 4, Padres 3
Pinch-hitter Willie Montanez
singled home Warren Cromartie
from
with two
out San
in theDiego.
ninth
to liftthird
Montreal
over
Cromartie singled off Steve Mura
leading off in the ninth, advanced to
second on a sacrifice bunt by Larry
Parrish, took third on Chris Speier's
groundout and coasted home as
Montanez drilled a pitch from
reliever Gary Lucas into the gap in
left center field.
Woodie Fryman tossed two innings of one-hit relief to gain his
second victory in as many decisions.

I ...

By Associated Press
r.· Wayne Gross is finally hitting his
Iii weight. Don Baylor, on the other
" hand, still isn't hitting anyone's
weight, but at least he's starting to
hit.
After a week's absence from the
lineup while Oakland faced a diet of
left-handed pitchers, the 20:&gt;-pound
Gross boosted his average from .143
to .11WI Tuesday night with a solo
homer, two doubles, a single arid
three RBis as the A's tritnrned the
Detroit Tigers 6-2.
Baylor, California's 21().pound
designated hitter, jwnped from .083
to .ll8 with three singles and three
RBis in four at-bats to lead the
Angels to a 6-2 victory over the New
York Yankees.
In other American League action
Tuesday, the Baltimore Orioles nipped the Minnesota Twins 3-2, the
Milwaukee Brewers downed the
Seattle Mariners 4-1, the Texas
Rangers whipped the Chicago White
Sox 6-1 and the Kansas City Royals
edged Boston 2-1 after the Red Sox
took a 12-inning 8-7 decillion in a
game suspended after 10 innings
Monday night by a league curfew.
The Cleveland-Toronto game was
rained out.
The A's bounced back after drop-

.

Rain giws Collins
anotht'r resting day
CINCINNATI (AP) - What was
another' day of soothing rest for soreshouldered Dave Collins translated
into another pitching headache for
Chuck Tanner,
Rain , forced · the cancellation
Tuesday of a game between the Pittsburgh Pirates and the Cincinnati
Reds, the second game lost to rain at
Riverfront Stadium this season. It
will be made up as a double-header
Thunday.
Collins, the Cincinnati right
fielder, wasn't in Manager John McNamara's starting lineup Tuesday
because of a sore right shoulder.
The National League's leading hitter at game time with a .378
average, Collins said he strain~ the
shoulder trying for a catch SundBy
in St. Louis.
"I could play on It. But there's no
sense in playing if you've got
somebody to Ct)me off the bench like
we do," Collins said.

ping a doubleheader to the Yankees
Sunday and in!proved their record to
21-a, best in the majors. Gross tied
the score in the fourth inning with
his second double of the game and
Dwayne Murphy put the A's in front
with a solo homer in the fifth. Gross
connected an inning later and
singled a run home in Oakland's
three-run eighth.
Meanwhile, Mike Norris scattered
eight hits to run his record to 6-0,
matching Fernando Valenzuela of
the Dodgers for the rnajor league
lead. .
Orioles 3, Twins z
Rich Dauer drove in two
. Baltimore runs before being forced
from the game with a rib injury . It
was the sixth victory in the last
seven games for the Orioles, who
have beaten the Twins eight straight
since last July, and Mike Flanagan's
ninth consecutive triwnph over Minnesota since 1977.
Brewen t, Mariuers 1
Robin Yount drilled a three-run
homer to back the six-hit pitching of
Pete Vuckovich, Jerry Augustine
and Rollie Fingers. Yount, who ham'tnered two homers Monday nigh~
lofted a pitch from Jerry Don
.Gleaton into the left field seats in the
third inning. '

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without a loss.
The victory was the Cardinals'
12th in 14 games.
Astros 4, Cubs 3
Alan Ashby 's pinch two-run double
in the ninth powered Houston over
Chicago. Jose Cruz opened the
Houston ninth with a single. and
moved to third 011 an infield single by
Art Howe and an error. Two outs
later, Ashby lashed his gamewinning double to erase a 3-2
Chicago lead.
Dave Smith was the winner in
relief of Joe Niekro while Lee Smith
took the loss.

BY: BLUEGRASS

18" to 22" CUT

~--------::;;~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~;;;;~~~i~~

Car Care MOI1U1
l'twt.III,!J

Cardinals 4, Braves I
George Hendrick and Darrell Porter belted solo homers in the fourth
inning, powering St. Louis over
Atlanta behind Lary Sorensen's
seven-hitter. The blasts by Hendrick and Porter represented two uf seven
hits off Tonuliy Boggs. Sorensen
didn't walking a batter and struck
out one in winning his fourth game

Oakland defeats
slumping Tigers

Fig:2: fBI agent acting on a hign principle.

who cannot afford them, the recent
AP-NBC News poll said.
Yet the public backs Reagan's
spending cuts, which would

. ......_... t:..,UI . . ......

Before it was over, the Mets were
able to put seven runs across to
jeopardize Griffin's second victory
of the season. But the Giants
managed to hold on and win 9-7.
Griffin, 2-2, had pitched just two
days before, getting pounded by .
Philadelphia before exiting after
two and a third iMings, so he didn't
complain too loudly when Manager
Frank Robinson lifted hinn after
seven innings with a 9-0 lead. Griffin
had given up but four hits to that
point.
In other National League action
Tuesday, Philadelphia nipped Los
Angeles 8-7, Montreal edged San
Diego 4-3, St. Louis beat Atlanta 4-1
and Houston trinuned Chicago 4-3.
Rain postponed the PittsburghCincinnati game.
Phillles 8, Dodgen 7
Manny Trillo's sacrifice ny scored

refugees~__J_ul_ian_B____;o!&amp;~d

It has been just a year stnce. the The United Nations and voluntary
Cuban "boat people" began arriving agencies last year spent~ a person
on the South Florida coast. They on Asian refugees but only $22 a perhave since been the topic of con- son on Africans.
Five years ago the world had one
. siderable media attention, as were
the Cambodian and Vietnamese million homeless people. Today it
has more than five million. The
refugees who preceded them.
Most of the recent arrivals from figures - and the deatha - continue
the Caribbean, Southeast Asia and to mount each week.
This vast increase Is a result of
other troubled lands are being accepted into their new conununlties, famine, drought and .war. And it Is
although some are encountering being exacerbated by Cold War
hostility in competing for jobs and politics.
social services with Americans who
have forgotten their own immigrant
The Soviet Union, for example, inorigins.
sists that it has Uttle role to play in
But Americans seldom see or hear international relief efforts. The
about tlie vast majority of the current glut of refugees, the
world's refugees. These are the Russians say, Is a direct result of
homeless people of Africa who can colonialism and Western exnever hope to see U. S. shores.
ploltation of the Third World and
Their plight Is an international · therefore ls not a matter of Soviet
scandal, and international efforts to concern.
assist them have been shamefully
The Haitians who Oed to the
meager.
'
United Slates at Ute same time as
The African homeless received the Cubans were refused inunedlate
only one-fourth of the monies spent entry partly because they had ·not
during 1980 by the United Nations come from a pro&amp;viet state. The
High Corrunlssioner for Refugees. Cubans were welcomed because

••

Today iB Wednesday, May 6, the !26th day of 1981. There are 239 days
left in the year.
Today 's highlight in history :
On May 6, 1910, the Edwardian era came to an end with the death of
Britain's King Edward VIII.
On this date:
In 1697, Trinity Church was founded by British colonists in 'New York
City.
In 1861, Arkansas withdrew from the union.
In 1889, the Eiffel Tower was officially opened in Paris.
In 1937, the German dirigible "Hindenburg" exploded and burned as it
approached Lakehurst, N.J . Thirty-six passengers were killed.
Ten years ago: The Food and Drug Administration warned against
eating swordfish because of high mercury content.
Five years ago: An earthquake struck northeastern Italy, killing
nearly 1,000 people.
One year ago: The charred bodies of the U.S. COIJIIJijjndoa killed during
the hostage rescue effort in Iran arrived at Dover Air Force BaSe in
Delaware.
Tod41y's birthdays: Retired b8seball star Willy Mays Is 50 years old.
Actor-dlrector Orson Welles is 66 and author T.H. White is 66.

r

WASHINGTON ( AP ) - As
Congress tries on President
Reagan's budget plan, politicians
glance worriedly over their
shoulders at a public seemingly
demanding budget cuts, tax cuts and
changes in Washington,
The message from Reagan and
other Republicans to doubting
Democrats is that Americans overwhelmingly support Reagan's
economic plan and that those who
oppose it will face the public's wrath
in 1982.
" I believe that the people you and
I represent are ready to chart a new
course," Reagan told Congress in
his April28 speech to a joint session
of the House and the Senate.
While Reagan has the overall
public mood pegged well, thafs not
the whole picture. Public opinion on
federal spending and taxes is laced
with contradictory currents.
Americans do support Reagan's
tax and budget cuts - as a whole by substantial margins.
This is not surprising, since

IU. 1

By Associated Press
T0111 , Griffin was in the shower
when he heard that his nine-run lead
was going down the drain.
"There I was taking a leisurely
shower when I heard a lot of noise on
the radio i!t the dressing room," said
the San Francisco Giants' pitcher,
"I paid little attention at first but
when the roaring kept o~. I left my
shower to find out what was going
on.
"To my amazement, I discovered
the Mets were scoring like crazy and
had the tying runs on base before
Greg Minton finally put out the

Conyeril and Ronald Dellums. It is
absurd to say that these folka share
the central position of the IPS. But
Richardson swore that he shared
none of the aberrational positions of
the Liberty Lobby. He was given the
hack of Congress' hand.

A deadly consistency Americans support Reagan's proposal
To everyone's immense relief, President Reagan should soon be back on
the job full lime.
And to almost everyone's relief, he is already almost his old self. The exception being one interest group that has been given cause to feel that he is if
anything a bit too much the old self.
They got the message in the interview with representatives of the wire
services with which he resumed direct contact with the press and which he
concluded with a fe wwords on his current thinking on the subject ol gun control. ·
It hasn't changed. He is as opposed now as he was during the campaign
and long before to "&lt;~ddi ng another law that probably will be just as unenforceable" as existing prohibitions against carrying concealed weapons
such as, he pointed out, that one that was involved in the attempt on his life.
Presidential consistency on this issue comes as a disappointment to the
proponents of strengthened regulation of the private possession of arms who
had hoped this latest outrage would advance the cause.
But not an unexpected one. It was anticipated by the advocates of control who did not, as on grimly similar occasions in the recent past, lm·
mediately begin pressuring for sweeping new legislation. Even as deter·
mined a campaigner for the cause as .Sen. Edward Kennedy is backing a
modest package of proposals foc using on banning imports of foreign-made
handgun parts for assembly in this country, requiring a waiting period between application for and purchase of a hand weapon and mandating prison
sentences for fel ons conunitting crimes with handguns.
Registration, the centerpiece of most previous control plans and the red
flag for the gun lobby , is not included.
The chances of enactment of much or any of the package do not appear
to be much improved by that omission as long as the one thing that might
have made a difference this time around - a favorable word from the
president himself - IS also missing.
To non-Americans, this stand-off is - and has been for some time - in·
comprehensible. Weapons control is taken as a matter of course in other
developed ,countries. And although other sociological and cultural considerations are undeniably involved, it has to be a significant factor in comparative crime rates.
In Britain, where apprehension with an illegal weapon means six months in gaol and 14 years if a crime has been committed with it the murder
rate is roughly a tenth of that in the United States. The contrast is even more
striking in West Germany, where the numbjer of annual homicides is on the
order of a hundredth of the American toll.
Similar statistics are available from France, Japan, Italy and
elsewhere.
A counterpoint made by opponents of control is that only a minute
proportion of the guns in private hands in the United States ever figures in a
cpme - less than I percent. Minimal, it would appear, to the point of insignificance.
. But translating percentage into real numbers, you get a very different
ptcture of the problem. Wtth more than 50 million guns in private American
hands, that works out to something approaching half a million at some time
put to criminal use.
Some small part of current control proposals may yet be legislated. The
ban on imports being a promising candidate since it was a .22 assembled in
Florida from German-made parts that felled the president.

1

Mets' rally interrupts
leisurely shower

Pag-2-The Dally Sentinel
:· Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
·Wednesday, May 6,1981

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Pomeror

Middleport, onro

Eastern ousts Pirates in Class A tourney
SYRACUSE-In the Class 'A'
Southeast sectional tournament
Eastern's Eagles bombed North
Gallia's Pirates 20-1 behind a solid 11
hit attack. Eastern, now 16-4, advances to the tournament fin als,
playing the winner of the Southwestern-Southern game that is
slated for tonight.
.
Eastern jwnped on North Gallia
starter Don Shupe in the Iirst inning
to put two runs on the scoreboard,
while Greg Wigal shut out the
Pirates in the first four innings.
In the second, Eastern blasted
North Gallia for eight runs on six
walks and a series of three's three

After the big inning Eastern conhits, three errors. three stolen bases,
tinued its dominance and coasted to
and three balks.
Ray Werry lined a double to start the, lopsided win. Wigal got the win
the inning, Charlie Ritchie reachecl as he went four near-perfect innings
on an error, Johr\ Beaver added an before being relieved by Smith, RitRBI single, Gary Griggs walked, chie, and Jeff Jones who each hurled
and Greg Wigal slammed a two ron , one round apiece. The quartet
single. Darrell Shaw came on in waiked jsut one and struck out six,
relief of Shupe and issued four free allowing just four hits and a run.
passes to Mike Bissell, Rob Smith,
Shaw who came on in relief of
Gene Cole, and Werry, also comShupe,
pitched twcrthirds of an inlflitting three balks that allowed
ning
to
finish up the second. They
three more runs to cross the plate.
Roger Gaul and Charlie Ritchie gave up 11 hits, 15 walks, and struck
reached on a fi elder's choice and out three.
another walk to add to Eastern's
Griggs led the Eastern attack with
total.

I
I
I

I

Hannan Trace bitters were James:
out.its schedule of SVAC games by
defeating Hannan Trace 17·ll in a with two doubles and a single,
· Waugh two doubles, Bays two
slugfest at Hannan Trace.
.
E;asl!!ni's league record is now 7-3, singles, and Barnes, Beaver, Webb,
Southwestern's is 6-3, and and Petrie each with singles.
Weather pennitting, Eastern wtn;
Southern's record 7·2 within loop
play. .
return to tournament play on Thur·1
Smith went ~ and twcrtbirds sday, however, if . today's South-:
iM,ings,l\;hile Ritchie came on in western-Southern game is rained.
rellef to do an outstanding job and out, it will be played on Thursday,
Pirate hitters were Paul finsih up the game. The duo walked and the finals will be on Friday.
Hollingshead with a single and six, and struck out two in the ou.ting. - -----"-----......,......,...;
.
Waugh, Brumfield, and Petrie
double, Barry Marcum a single, and
each took tlu'ns for Hannan Trace,
Shupe a single.
completing two and a third innings
each.
That trio walked .thirteen,
Defeat Wildcats
which
proved
to be a deciding factor ,
Monday night Eastern rounded
and fanned five .
Eastern hitters were Beaver with
in Auto Parts
a long ho111e run and a triple, Grlggs
Al)lerican &amp; Foreign
a double and single, Bissell a triple
and single, and Gaul a double and
Cars .
single. Rob Sinith drilled two
1
singles, Ritchie smacked a double,
while Werry and Wigal singled.

a towering home run over the left
field fence, right at the 345 foot
roark. Wigal pounded out three
singles, Werry a double, Beaver a
single, Bissell a single, Smith a
single, and Holter a single. Deron
Jewett and Nick Leonard also
banged singles for . the victorious
Eagles.
·

...snce
.

Big Bend

Center In Racine

Controversial play gives Logan 4-3 victory
LOGAN-The Meigs Marauders,
coming fresh off a big win over Ironton, came very ·close to defeating
league leading Logan, but had its
chances fade away in the ninth inning as Logan scored a hard-fought
4-3 victory in extra innings here
Tuesday.
Meigs' freshman Randy Stewart
started on the mound and hurled five
and twl)-thirds innings of tw(}-hit
baseball before getting into trouble
in the stxth. Stewa rt pitched a great

game, striking oot three and the first, Hartman hit a soft squi[&gt;.
walking, six. Jeff Wayland came on bier down the third base line that hit
m the fifth and finished up the game, Meigs' third baseman in foul
also striking out three and walking territory and bounded into fair
two.
territory and was ruled a fair ball,
Veldt and Berry hurled for Logan, allowing two runs to score.
evmbming to strike out seven and
Meigs scored one in the first When
walk four.
Kovalchik tripled, Fields walked,
Meigs outhit Logan, 10-3, but and Terry Wayland singled. Meigs
couldn 't take advantage of several took the lead in the fifth when
opportunities to score. A highly Kovalchik doubled, Fields doubled,
disputed play in the first produced and Jeff Wayland lined a twcrrun
two runs for Logan. With two on in single.

Jeff Sopher started for Southern
and suffered the loss despite a fine
effort. Robbie Cunningham came on
111 relief in the fifth . They teamed up
to strike out two and walk seve n,
scattering only three hits. Fields
picked up the win for Wahama 1
while Van Matre picked up the save
Southern took a H&gt; lead in the in the final frame. They fanned
second inning, when Joe Bob Hem- eight, walked moe, and scattered
sley walked and Kent Wolfe singled. three hils.

Wahama came back in the third to
take a 2-l lea d on a Van Meter walk,
a Gibbs double, and a Zuspan single .
Wahama scored two more 111 the fifth on a Fields wa lk, a Hesson tr1ple,
and a fie lder' s choice, the score 4-2.
Southern plated one run in the top of
the seventh inning, but a relief effort
by Van Maire thwarted Southern 's
chances by striki ng out the side with
the bases loaded.

The Wolfe boys produced the
Southern hitting attack , led by
Bryan Wolfe who doubled and
singled, and cousin Kent Wolfe who
added a si ngle to account fur
Southern's only hits. Fur Wahama,
Hesson tripled, Gibbs doubled, and
Zuspan singled for the only three
hil,,
Southern is scheduled to play 1n

.kt~ ink W playt&gt;rs
NEW YORK lAP) - The New
York Jets signed 10 college free
agents Tuesday and also picked up
three players who had been dropped
by other National Football League
clubs.
The NFL veterans added to the
Jets' roster were wide receiver Tim
Cotton of Xavier, waived by the
Houston Oilers ; center Russ Hubert
of Texas, waived by the Oakland
Raiders; and defensive tackle
Michael Williams of Texas
Southern , waived by the New
OrleansSaints.

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PhUadt~a a, Loct Ailg'eles 7
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St.L&lt;W 4, . Atlanta I

Pittsburgh at Cincinnati, Wd.. rain ·
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n1

San Francisco at New York, (nl

Provides Such Services As

.
.
·.
1

TONY DORSETT TO'S

Cleveland Browns.
Miller was the fifth player chosen
in the 1978 National Football League
draft , when the Oklahoma State
player was runner-up to Earl Camp.
bellfor the HeismanTrophy.

.

.BEND AREA OPTOMEMETRIC CENTER

score.
VISION EXAMINATIONS
Meigs hitters were Jeff Wayland
with three singles, Roger Kovalchik
HARD AND SOFT CONTACT LENSES
a double and triple, Terry Wayland
OPEN M.-T.-W.-F . 9-5
singled twice, Mike Miller singled
CLOSED
THUR .-SAT .-SUN .
and tripled, and Jerry Fields
992-2920
113 court St.
Pomeory, Oh.
the Class 'A' sectional tournament doubled. Trucco and Hartman
Above
Clark's
Jewelry
in
Pomeroy
collected the only Logan hits. Trucco
tonight, weather-permitting.
doubled and singled, while Hartman 1-_:._:__ _:_....:___:______ ...::._..:__.....,______--:-Hrown~ ohtain Mille r
hit the controversial single.
._
~- _
I
Meigs is scheduled to play y
BEREA, Ohio (AP ) - Terry Gallipolis tonight.
'
Miller, a fonner thousand-yard . - - - - - - - - - - - - ,

~~~~~l~~:tb~~:rr~~;;!~~n~~

. NATI()ll(ALLEAGUE

'nlul'lday's Gama
Atlanta at St.Louis

White Falcons drop Southern, 4-2
MASON-The Southern Tornadoes
dropped a 4-2 decision to cross-river
foe Wahama here Tuesday eveing
despite a combined three hit pit·
ching performance by Jeff Sopher
and Robbie Cunningham. Southern
is now 10-6 overall.

li'or the
record. ••

Al~~u~~~ ~~~~it~\~~~~~!~t A~ tt

FAMILY CLINIC

The
' peal. 2l·Cieat Outsole for Better Traction and
Performance.

David L. Carr, D.O.

ALLERGY

'

Testlag aDd Treatmeat

Test for: inhalants
food .
Chemicals
Shoe Dermititis
CosmetiCS
DERMA'~'OLOG
' y·
I' ·
Turiiors Removed

Ideal For Little League
Baseball and Pop warner
Football.
Tought Vinyl One· Piece Upper To
Resist Strett. Extra
padding For Protec·

A.
'
'

·

Acne
p
•

SOIIlSIS

Exzem a
Skin Diseases
G£N ERAL PRAcTICE .
~:g .

A
'

Tony Dorsett All Purpose

F1eld Shoe

()lllte Roan bY APIIIIIllmellt
zt!t Jaeboa AYf'.

'

-

Store Hours: 9-S Daily
Open Fri. Nighttil8:00 P.M.

..,_

.--:-----~-~=====~~ f
Dependable Rood King AII·Season
Radials For Road Hugging Traction
In All Kinds of Weather.
SAVE UP TO '31.00 PER TIRE

ANY SIZE

-

-

FLOOR COVEIRING

''

.

A
·'
'

A

'
'

t

t
t
t

'

t

'

t

t

ARMSTRONG VINYL

P&lt;'t. GB
10 i
66'1 ll 6
6!9
14 9
.6011
II
9
.550 p.,
10 13
431 • .
1 13
3815
I 14
.364 51'11
WEST
II
5
.IIIII
12 9
,571 61"i
12 9
.571 . 6 L.~
.462
g'
12 14
9 14
.391 10 1 ~
6 12
.333 ll
6 II
.250 14
Tuacbly'• Gamtt
3, Minn~Wt 2
at Torooto, ppd ., rain
Kansas City · 1, 12 mninf!(:~,
of
Mondl:ly'"
!iuspended

Cleveland
Milwaukee
New York
O,ltb .....

Detroit
Boston

Toronlo
O.khmd
Oll.cago

r ...,

CallfQI'Ilia

Minneliolil
Kanus ctly

S..llle

BaiUmore
Cleveland
Boston 8,
wnpletiun
same.
, Kaluiall City 2, Boliton I
Texas 6, Chica~~:o 1
·eaurumta 6, New York :!
O.klllnd ! , Detroit 2
• Milwaukee 4, SeatUe 1

Wedaeaclay'• Gamn

Cleveland · (81yleven Z.ll at Toronto
!Todd 1-21. In)
Minnestta IArTO)IO 2-1) Hl Baltimure
jP11lmer I..(I J, (n )
Chicagu 1Burn11 2-1) HI T~ us t Darwin
2-21, In)
Buston (Eckersley 2--21 111 Kunsal! Ci ty

flejJn&amp;nl $.!), (nl
Detro) (WUCOI 3-2) at 08klalll

rmr

t LUIIIt"

H I, fn)
·New York !Guidry 2·21 at Cal ifurnii:l
tWIU 2·1), In )
MilWMukee (Lerch 2-I 1 at Sea tt ~ t Pa rrott 1).21. fnl

n.na,'aGamea

!Mruit al O.klllnd
Cleveland at Toronto, t n1
Chicago at Texas, (n)

;. Nt!w York at California,

!n l

Milwaukee at "SeatUe, 1n 1
Only ~a1rws sched uled

'
•

't

f

AR78-12 thru LR78-15

-

EAST
W L

1

'

H~~d!~~!e~ ~~~~~:y. !~C.

'

All

Offi'Ce 67r:~ 7 l

tion.

'

CHUNK BOLOGNA ••••••~·.

AMERICAN lEAGUE

Chicken ............... ~~Chicken Thighs.. ~.
Chicken Breasts
$
79 or Drumsticks •••••....•L~.
Chuck Roast .......L~~
BUCKET
t
29
Cube Steaks....... ~8;~
USDA CHOICE BONELESS

••

HOMEMADE

TODAY'S MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS
NATI()ll(ALLEAGUE
BATI'JNC 140 at billa): Culllm, Cincilt~ti.
.318; Rose, Phibtdelpl:lia, .368 ;
Flynn, New Yurt, .8; H endt~on. Ctli·
t •go, .364 ; Herndon, Sa.n Fnmcill('tl, .359
RUNS' Collin&gt;, Clnc111111ill, 20; Sdunld1,
Phllodelphla, 19 ; Raina, 1\lonlreol. 16 ;
Landn!MUl, lm Angele/J, 18; Clrter, Mon.
\~~1 . 16; Roae, Philadelphia, 15;. Hendr~k . St.Lotoi.a, I ~.
RBI'
CUncopcloo,
Cincinnati,
23 ;
Sclun.idt, Pbilldelphia, 20; Garvey, l m~
Antlele$, 17i Umdrealll, 1.m Angele11, 17 ;
~ urphy ,

GRADE AWHOLE

Sandwich Spread~

Allonla, 16.

'. Hrt'S: Rt~~~e , PtJiladelphW, »: Her11dtN\,
Sin Francbco, 33; Ctii(IM, CincimutU, 31;
Bltker, lAIII Angeles, 31; l.andrMuJL: , J,tl!;

-P!!!eles, 30.

DOUBLES:
Buckner,
ChicaKu. 9;
McBride, l'lllladelphla, 9; R..., , 1'1111•·
delphia, I ; Hernandez, St.l....... a, C01&gt;
l',fl)ctoo, Cincinnati, a. .

~;

;,tftli:U..ES : Herr, St.Lwb,

Durham,

t'hlcagl)1 4;
Templeton, St.IJ.JUill , 4;
P'lynn, New York, S; -Baker, lJJ8 Anl!leietl,

3; Rlcllllnla, Son Dlegu, 3.
HOME RUNS : Sclunldt, Phfllldelpliil,
I ; DlwMl, Monlrul, &amp;; Kingman, New
Yotlt, ,: Hendrick, St.LooiJ, 5; J.Cnu,
.Ill/Ilion, 5.
STOLEN BASES : Rairiel, Mootre11 l, 21;

IJJpeti, Los AnM:eles, 11 ; North, Sun FrMntikv, 11; Miller,
\!11111relil, 9.

Atlanta , 10 ; R.&amp;:utt,

FLORIDA

, PITCIUNG 13 DtdiiOOII ' Vol&lt;n&amp;,..lo.
Anfes, W, 1.000, 0.33; Olrltoo,
Phlladt
,, 5-0, 1.000, :t•; ~n . . Sl.
fJJuiJ,
, 1.1100, 2.21 ; Rhoden, Plll!iburgh,
S:oO, ueo, uo; S'lirtey, 91.LouiiJ, u ,
MOO, 171; Hooton, Loo Anlf&lt;les, H ,
Loo

1.1100,

U4 ;

.p . 3.12;

Rull)ven,

Ailladelphla,

D.Aieunder, San

Tomatoes............L!·.

4-1,

Fron&lt;l.o.~.

4-

1, .100, 1.07.

MOUNTING

FREE - SALE ENDS SAT. NOON
*All

Tires

Plus

F.E.T.

992-2101

TOUGH GOING - Houston Rockets Moses Malone has some tough
going as he trtes going through Boston Ceitics Larry Bird during fourth
quarter National Basketball Association action Tuesday night at Boston
Garden. Bird had the high score for the Celtics with 18-points and also had
Zl·rebouods. Bird was named Most Valuable Player lor the game. The
Celtics meet with Houston Thursday night lor tbe second game in the
best-of-seven series for the NBA championship title. I AP Laserphoto ).

A

ACCOTONE

.

CHICKEN SANDWICH ••••••89~
WITH FRIES ...............•1.29
570

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY
w.
Pomerov,

Main
PH . 992·2556
OH .
"Located at the End of the Pomerov·Mason Bridge"

Camdeat
'ParJt
.

Ca•d•ll'Pari\,
wlilbe.,...rved
Saturdar, Mar ttla
lor an oatln• for tlae
••PIOJen of Union Carbide
Teeh Center. We wlllbtt
open to the pabUe at 4*» i11n.
Hantla~ton,

W.Va.

•

,

RUIBERIACK CARPETS
I

tATRADEWIND ......:..•...:...;............. '4.56 sq. yd• .
·

' KITCHEN/BATH~M PRINf........ss.58 sq. Jd.

INDOOR.ouTDOOR CARPET cGrass)
EXCmNG nMES

sa. yd.

Mol-

fUSPII-1
Alllrioloo ol

Joe.

•Publ;.h&lt;d ever} ollarnoon, Mundoy tlio'uuf!h
•frtdlly, 111 Cuurl&amp;n!el, by tile Ohio Voll&lt;y
Publohlng Cumpony - Muillm&lt;dlo. lr~ ..
Purneruy, Ohio t571t, -.21&amp;1. Second elM~~~
fM'Illijlo Pllld at Pumeruy, Ohlu.
Meu.b.!r: The AIIWctlted Pn!u, Inland DM1·
tiY Prw Aauci11Uon 1nd Lhe Amtrk.'lln
NtoW!Ipllptr Publi!lhen Auocir.Uoo, NIIUUflll
Advertillin• ' Repn:/JenWtlve, Br1nlwm
'New1p1per ~In, '733 Third Avenue", New
Yotlt, N&lt;w YIII'IIICIII7.

POSTMASTER' Send addniurto Tht Dolly
,Serrlii!OI,IIf Court St .. Pooneruy , Ohiu467111.

'One week , ... , .•.. .• , , ..•.....·•', .. , fl.to

Munlh .. . .... . .. .. ............. fl.40 .

-on. Ym .. ........ .... .. .. .... , .. 111.111

SINOLE COPY .
I'IUCII
Dolly ........... : . .. .. . .. ...... IICenlro.

"*Y rouul In !ldviiiiCt rllnod tu The Dolly
.8orrlinel "' o I, 6 IX' lltnonllo bulrr. crtdll
bl cJvrn Clnier UC:IIInunlh.
'IN ~I'"' by rnoll poruullld in - .
wlwrwtut.lr c1rrlrr 1trvft iiiYMIIIbh!.· •

With
sq. yd. Pad

•

IIAILIIUIICIUPriONII

1'

...... w..tv....,..

lflloojll ... , . " .... . , ......... IJI.:

HOGG &amp; -ZUSPAN
MATIRIAU COMPANY

~.=H. 773·SjJ4

.

. . . . . . . :........
'•.=. .--·-........ ... ... ,,,,, . , ,., ,, ,. , .'J . JIY,

~Yw .. --~ow;,· • ·

.

MAIO,N, W.VA.

Yw

,,

. iSI.III

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

. MOUR TREET

·$ 19

.

Lunch Meat...~2•0!....

.
1
Motor 0I ...............
.

11 .111

MAXWELl HOUSE

COFFEE
AU..GRINDS

QT.

'I

$599

3-1.8. CAN

COUPON

KOOL AID
31 oz.
CANNISTER

2% Milk ••••••••••••••••

GAL$

~179

4K37 -2 ~030Tl

Limit One Per Customer
Only at Powell's

Limit One Per Customer
Good Ontv at Powell 's

9, 1981

9, 1981

..

,,

69

$ 29

Ice Cream ........ ~.:A~..

.

COUPON

r- rJ t J P rl '"'l

DARI FRESH

~ BORDEN'S ELSIE

VALVOLINE

10W40

SIIIISCRIPI101'i IIATES
_lyCanifr• ..........tr l

. t

•t•lir&lt;n nul 'rlel!riqj to fillY tile &lt;'lrri&lt;r

t *849
f

Margarine ........... ~

The Daily Sentinel .

,

~~~~'
I ~

Kt.60'Wnt

(

'

Rubberblck (Scotchgard)

SP.ECIAL OF THE WEEKI

FLAVORITE

'

l'

MEIGS TIRE CENTER
~

• STRIKEOUTS ' Valelwela, Loo An~"
t,l, 10; fllrl).on, Ailladelphla, 46; SJto,
Cln&lt;innoll, II; Guilkbon, Montroal, 21;
!i\'&gt;ver. .Cinclnnoll, fl.

----

c

'

.I

CHARM IN

FLAVORITE

TOILET TISSUE
4 ROLL
PAK

•I

COUPON

99~

Limit One Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Ex~ires May

9, =9:1!:!

SUGAR
5-LB.

BAG

$159

Limit One Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer EKpires May 9, 1981

'i

.

.!,
I

'II .

•
1

�Pave-~&gt;-The

Dally

~enTmel

l'omeroy-Middleport, Ohio

DAR meets Friday
''

.·.

..

' '

.

:,'~

'

''

..

.'
'. '
'
....
..
. Prizes announced
'

'

BALANCING- Precision balancing In the center
ring of tbe big lop will be performed by Justlno
Fer."elra when he appean&gt; with the Great American

'.

' .

Circus behind the Pomery Junior High Schoolat3 p.m.
Sunday under the sponsonhlp of the Meigs County
Jaycees.

'

,.

James Thomas, Jr., manager of
; · : Ohio VaUey Lumber Cmpany, Mid·
:: • dleport, announced the winners of
· prizes given away at the grand
opening of their new quarters last
weekend. No purchase was
necessary to participate.

Alumni fete set
May 23 at Kyger Creek

The Cheshire-Kyger Creek Alwnni
Association will have it.s annual
banquet and dance on May 23 at 6:30
p.m. at the Kyger Creek High
School.
Price of the dinner is $7 with $5 to
he sent with the reservation and the
. Winners and what they !NOn were balance paid at the door. The
Helen Hood, Pomeory, window ; banquet, catered by Bob Evans, will
Lester Bowers, Middleport, 10 boxes be served in the gymnasium and
of Z brick; Faye Watson, Reedsville, special entertainment is being planrototiUer; Martha Chambers, Mid- ned. Reservations are to be sent to
dleport, garden hose; Robin Hawk, Donna Reynolds, Route I, Bidwell.
Classes scheduled for reunions are
Middleport, 10 pieces of paneling ;
1931,
1951, 1956, and 1971. A dance
Frank Shoemaker, Gallipolis, weed
will
be
held following the banquet.
eater; Came Wears, Rutland, window fan; Leona Lieving, Miners- To meet Thvrsday
. viDe, K. V. spice racks ; Teresa Hoff: man, Middleport, power roof vent; • . The Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter
Gerald Spires, Ewington, garbage of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority will meet
disposal.
at 7 p.m. Thursday at the Meigs Inn
for a dinner meeting.

At State Bee

trips may not be of long duration

bill they snould be lut\ and olle;

vou some _Interesting adyentUr~ ~

~

•

1

ounplo· to•

1111111

•

o\iiJIJII• JUII /t•l ;lli i.II ,JJIII't '

\I" t:-.{ l1.t- ,, ,,.,, ., '' "II"'

~

I I' ro bO, h.uull •l• "" '"' ''
I I o\11 /r •It li la&gt; ,/,1/ rh

I

/ ri•I · I J/1 1 1 1110 ill !II• IYI I'•

l!•lt•l I'IUOl

t '!l lo •t t,llillltt ·ll l o t 'll l i' l

Kl t I PII U"

.,\~I I

""'

!lllu

l'n• h ,,,,, ,,, /m1 ,r, S 1 7 ~ ) II(}

th 1· lt m •• t • LII• ' · HI llw ,111 p.u, tl •ulu ,u \l t'lllloll'

.. .

~nd tolllpo&gt;Olo' t ll

I'•''" .11 llu·

I''" '''

t, , ..,, ,~ r

~~ dd ~l o h ·

ANNOUNCING

0lll lt .lltlt'd 11.11 1

11d l

t .. •lto IIIII 1 lh,.o oo•

'

tho•

THE OFFICES OF

s.ears

l,,,r ,, loi o•lu t u·

or Your Money Back

l ll lj loll l,l lll ' I( ' ' ''' ' ' '''
I IH' 111'1 ' 1" 'o! lotd.ll , 1\ io l

•'

,..

.

'

•

•'

'

- --

w Dt
Sl9"l. e•oept •
cotfr ,.._. 11'1 . . . .ct. H 'M CID M OUI of M1 ~WI will off.r ';Ou yOur ctlOQ of I Compatible rtem
11 •equlftd

11em$

..., ......_ !0' lell WI Meh Kroger
I

iltm.

wt'lft Milllllli, rwftec1.ng the lolmll Mvtngl Of 1 r~

which WI . , . you to pure~ rhe ldvtn.-1 1tem 11 rht
- - p r i c e ....... JOdoys. '
'

Good Thru Fri., May 8, 1981
TOTAL SATISFACTION GUARANTEE

I p)

l~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

COl, . . . . . brlnd 01

MAY DAY SPECIALS

Salad

refund 't(IUr pure tiMe P'ICI

Cetlter llladt Cut

EVERYTHING ·FOR YOUR
SUMMER SEWING NEEDS

.. $159

WI IISIIYI fHI liGHT 10 ~IMil QUANliTII:S . •NONI

1010 TO DIAIIIII.
I

RETCH $349 Co";.':are SIMPLICITY lL
TERRY
YD. $5.98
PATIERNS 72

5--7-ll. AVG .

~~::: -~.~~~.~~

... lb.

14 .. 17-ll. AVG. WHOLE

Fresh Ham ..... .. ... .. . lb .
KROGER MEAT OR

ALL NOTIONS 20%-50% OFF
THE SEWING CENTER

Beef W1eners .... ..
I

12·01 .
Pkg.

IN THE PIECE KROGER

Meat Bologna ..... ... lb .

,. -- '
'

'

JV/1

LIVE.
MAlliE

MOll' ••uw IJ s 0 ...
''""CTIO GtAOf A
U'f'lffG

Chicken

-Tirighs

•ggc

HYGRADE

MOTHER'S DAY
SPECIAL WITH
AGIFT SHE'll
TREASURE ALWAYS.
·RINGS, PENDANTS,
BRACELETS,
EARRINGS. GET HER
THE GIFT OF LOVE.

~~~::~~.....

1-lb.

$J49

~~uc!'la~~~b. . ·~.c~~~.SJ49
C
•
Banquet D1nners .... . 69
s109
69

KROGER SANDWICH OR .

12-Ct .
•
.
W1ener 8uns ...... ... ... Pkg .

~

~I Food •:;~·

PlEASE

tiRO C. Ell

Buttermilk
Bread

3$ 29

PrtiiiIs .. . ""•

KILLOCG 'S

Special I

Cereal ..

Salad Bar, Choice of Sliced Baked Ham, or
Turkey 8. Dressing, Sweet Potatoes, Limas,

__

'691
.....

._

.

Plus

r

sgc
49C

lib.

~:::" ·~~·:

HOT FOODS

AVAilAillllTil7plll

•'

Chemes ... •••

Fri
:
d
$499
Chicken ...... Buc~at

12-oa.$149
Cheese Food ... Pkg.
·
ANTI-,EIISPIRANT SPEED STICK .' s159
Mennen ....... ..2.5·01,
Ctnr .

AVONOAU

Mandarin

GrantII ...

99 C

AMERICAN OR MUSTARD

MIOGEit

v-.

FHSH lAKED
IN THI HUSK. NIW CROP,
WHIU Ott YILlOW

·

Sweet Com ...... Ear

·llfelfrtll'a 'DCUJ

15 C

.UG AI

lOll ..slle1~. ,...

u...

~
79

I ...... C•n

$4
89C ._.,.....
age
'tf.'· 99c
b~IN s109
c..............
DAVTIMI

Comfort IO·Ct .
Dlepers .... "'•·
KIOGIR

S.C.

111001

.. .. .. ,•.••.
....

Steak
S.C. .......

'

-.cr.

4

AIIOITID COI.OIIS, ~-WIAPI'III ~

OIILY AT YOUI

Con

KIIOGIR

,

'RI••
, ,,

.ASSOIYID, fOIL-Gin WIIA":~.

Bread .·....16-oz.
Loaf

...

KIOCII

s

FIIESH

l l ·o&amp; .

Sa UIDgt . . . sCon
.••.

·Potato Salad ........ lb.
SliCED OR :y THE PIECE
$299
Amer1cqn Cheese lb.
FRESH lAKED
169
o
8·1nch
APpie Ple .. .. ...... PI•

9·9C

63C
49c
43c
...... 39c
f

Mamchino
'
l ·oa.

READY TO EAT. WISHBONE

DOl. 73

California
Broccoli

HIUCitUt

89

sgc
Tro*
Putt
..... 22c
59c
c!'
a.......
c..,
. . 79c
IIG YALUI

v. .

. . . ...

.....

•p~:h$178

KIOOa

12....

...... c..

Coffee. Tea, Milk or Soft Drink .

ALL FOR ONLY

...

...•.. $129

M~s&lt;h~ST

· K~GEII

Pantyhose ......... . Pair

Plr.'i) .

Country Oven
f ·Ol .

¢·

i

SHEIR TO WAIST 'NO-NONSENSE

1• ·01

Mcnhmallow
Crelle ..... 13Jor·01

O&amp;C
1
Oliofllillp

Reservations m•v bt
made bUt are not
necttury, m·H:It.

' l\,1~·

'I
~

COUNTR Y OVEN

AVAilAill OHt. Y IN
STOHSWITH
DEliDEPn.

Ro. . . . . .~n"'t

ON THE MENU

• Ph. 614-992-2644

...... .. - . ....

l ·lb
QuarteTS .. ,.,

GOLD Clt(Sf

Do•.

MAikll IASIIll GRADE '-A \ll(CI 'AlGI EGGS

IS MAY lOth

(

·~·

Margarine

. 49c

G;;de
A
· 69c
..
Eggs .. ..
~arge

43c
79c
29C
29C
ClOVf.IV.l.ll£'1

mallowa .. ...

·MOTHER'S
DAY

11 a.m. · 3 p.m.

..

- Mixed
Fryer Parts

95C

.....

tlllllg .. '"·

Coconut ..

.
N"bl
1 et Ears .... .... ..... •·Ct
Pkg.

In Colo. CALL 221· 1451

THE MEIGS INN

" -·-~·

Pork 'N' 15 .5·01 .
Be InS ....... Con

Kroge~
Dr

Flake

11·01.
Pkg.
FROZEN GREIN GIANT (CORN·ON ·THE·COI)

'

.,'

' u1il, i 1!11.

AVONDALE

HOtlY FARMS. U.S.D.A.
INSPECTED

liMIT 4

FROZEN

S.lf'llilf' lec:rplion Sytlf'mi
11 ::,u nhon 1\ ~ t' ll ll l'
P. Q Hu\ \r\
Al~wn ~. O h ! u 4 )7 01

li ll ..d wit h

......

Beans .... coo

/ IO,Itll m .~ ,1\,ll l.tlll t •

DINNER AT

·•b

Green

,.., • lui" ,. .,r,u rr,HII• .

TREAT MOM TO A "HER DAY"

5

Rour ...... .. •••

INDIVIDUAllY WIIAP,ED SliCES .

I h1 • hl ''l

I. MAIN • POMEROY, OHIO "'151"

Avondale

AVONDALE CUl

. c.n (614) 594-2S24

tl•kwidt dhtribulotthlp ....
in•~rmlp lnquirW\ ~ttkomt .
1

Mom. it'&gt;

AQI(LJ,/4.J' FLORI8T

Kroger
Ge l...:
tUnA .... . •lo•
·•• ·

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IIEIIDII lOW ,IICI

89 C
99

Co"

l(KJ() ISlAND . fltENCH Olt
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17·01 .

EMSA.5S Y

6999c
.

89c
33c

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'"

AVONDA LE

Sweet
Peas ..

Chuck Steak

IN POMEAOY AND GAlLI POll~ H OWES .

' 1

J2

Dressing .

COft'tltGKI 1tl1 · THE ,ICIOGll CO . ITEMS AND PII(ES
GOOD SUNDAY , MAW l , tHIU SAtURDAY . MAW 9 I til

•

JEWELRY, THE
PERSONAL, LOVING
GIFT. MAKE HER

EMBASSY

E~ ¥0u buw 11 K[OQtt !1 QUiflfllttd ror' ~~ IOYI
u 1 elliott,...... . . of menultc!urtr II you .,, not Mltl·
r.t, K"'lf wl ~ .,our rtem With the"'"' brlrcl Of 1

•''' ' 'l•••t~IIO 'O II oo 1111' 1'1 r:--::7'--="-'--'.-'--'.:---1
II 1\!\ )IUHl\\

Sun. 1 to s

ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY

ot

I

tlw ''" 1,.,,, ,. I I D
hand-dt'l lll.ill·d

JIJ.a

•

\IIU ,

SRS k

Mother's Day is
Sunday, May 10..

ccr(m1i1

~,,.,, ,,

Hours : Open Daily 9to 8

•f

1,111.1 &lt;' · •• " ''"' I I •,
•

t ,.I I mn~ lou ,, ' '"'"'""'" do •trum •ll.r!lwr
·•PP"'nlm• ·m \\h ,o! ''"I,,.,. ... ,u ou mtllt •·

Hug l:louquef.
h• ·.rutilu l ln·•h

ARIES (March 21·Apri1 19)

Th is is not a good day to discuss
budgets or ,:~tl owan c es tor fam ily
members. InStead of r eso lv ing
issues, more could be creat ed .

IIWJif 'l ll'&gt;l &lt;11111/I,J/I Htll h"

\oul 1!1'"'

It's time to send Mom our FTD

i&gt;l'h ~ ht 111 '1 lli lh

i mport~ n t .

Steer clear of situation s at work
tod'ay whi ch smack of company
politics. You might get drawn in·
to · something from whi ch you ' ll
have diff iculty extricating your·

•

l j!lro /l p• "J:•III"'' o•,u h

•

\\o • ,., ,., l t.l \0 ' .111 o·.t •l h•

~~~ !"' 1t" · t t,lll•hnt,U I

236 w. 2nd, Pomeroy, Oh.
(Formerly Meigs Gen. Hospital 1
Office Ph. 992-6624
Home Ph. 992-3523

....
',..

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)

~e

car eful todav in business matters
which could affec t oth'ers as well
as yourself. Dpn' t strike out on
your own In areas wher e you lack
their support,.

SPRING SEASON
• Potted Plants
• Complete line of bedding
plants and hanging
baskets.
All Dozen Packs 9Sc dOl_~.

Phone 992-2171
IDB w. Main st.
Pomeroy, 011,
OWNED
OPERATED BY
JackAND
&amp; Judy Williams
Open: Mon. thru Wed. H
Thur. 1-12, Fri. 1-5, Sat.t·l
Satisfaction Guaranteed

~/II III• ' \I oiii\ t ' \ l ' llh ltl ol

I

II I I Il l ! ! I' l l! I" 'I ~ II \1~ ,,, . ,lj•\ll( rlO 't!

....,.,,IJh·

Steven L. Story and Karen H. Story

.• ..

,JIIr/

There is a possibil it y today t hat
you may take too ser iously activities Wh ich should be fun . If it 's
a spor t, don' t m'ake win ni ng too

Ph. 992-5776 Syracuse, Oh ..
NOWOPSN FOR

"

.n.ul. rhll · , '" , ''""''''" t,rl I I

I h, ., ,. ''
Ill! "'""'I "' I'•" ,. " .... t, l ~ .. , .lllh ' \111.11' ·"' .•• II
" , ·,,, h1 ., , , ., ,,, · '"' •.I"'"""" n ,,.,,I hI" •r); 1,,.. !• ,

AnORNEYS AT LAW

·...
'-..

,rn&lt;l

ll) Wpen dealing With your peer
gr oup today don' t try to im ·
plement changes agjl inst the wUI
of the majority . You may find
yourself out on a I imb .

HUBBARD'S
_GREENtllUSE

PISCES !Feb. 20·Marcn 20)

.... . rl .. ·o , " "" II\ ·'"d ol &lt;u ,,! 111111 '" !lll t lt l

STORY &amp; STORY

Big

lt llt \ 10 ' • . &lt;11'11 ' ·

malty you have preTTy good
judgment in financi al m arter s,
but today you may le-T one: wt1o
knows iess than you · dO nlc1K e
deci sions for you.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec.

Sometim es you r innovat ions are
real time and stepsave rs. but
tOday vou' d be wise To stick to
proven methods. Save untested
ideas for another day.

~
.

I /r o/o / Ji'I J' • fll&lt;o)!/JIJ I IIIIUI(
I

t,tnli •o• ''"' •I oh '"

~0\ l it

ho our

rt•/J)!I &lt;&gt;II
/ 1/J1110 . 1'1~~10 ,JI H lllol/

•

" ' '''Ill olo·•tl(tiO"d '",, .,.,I '"Ill m·o ·d • \\o · II
h.uullt · •ll• · pi,,.,,.,., .: I·, ,, .,., ., . , '" '' .utto·nrl .t
tlw lwot H'''"i''"" ' ,,.,.t ,,,·lltn•t.ill ,md ~,,,, .

THE OPENING OF

~~

I

you' s~e that your· listeners aren' t
in acco f d with 1deas important to
you , forego the hard sel l today .
Instead of swa ying them, you
mi ght awak~n more oppositi on .

VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sepl. 22) Nor.

. LIBRA ISept 23-0ct. 231

self.
SQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 19)

SCORPIO lOci. 24·Nov. 22 ) II

. LEO ' (July 2l·Aug, l l l Vour
Image f!l ~ ttlfl e traglt e today, so
don'J do anytlllng out ot liile to
give one wtlo doesn' t ·lhmk of you
in glowing ter ms som ething to
talk about .

rUTHORIZED CATAI.OG ,
SALES MERCHANT

Present This Ad.
One Person Admitted
FREE With One Paid '
Adult Admission. Also
One FREE PEPSI.

~--;===================---i

' " 1\\ I Ull I .I ll lui !I 1 oU ll IH IIIli'

20) .

· CANCER (Ju•e ll ·July Jl) .Be
carefut •tod'ay r egarding the types
of . frfends vou ' br,ing hbm ~.
especially if they're at odds with
some .rnember of yovr family.
' Unoleasantries could result.

is. likely this coming year. Your

WITH THESE GI"S

"Space-•ge Technology •t Down·IO·brth Prices"

21 -J~ne

Think Twice today befor e putting
an y more t money into . things
whi ch have thus fa·r proVen 19 Qe'
lose rs. Look ·around insfead for
better possi bilities .

·May 7, 1981

the Meigs Community School.
'!;;;;;;;illiiliiliiliiliiliiliiliiliilii!i!i!i!i!!!!!!;;;;;;;~
TIIURSDAY
I
PRECEPTOR BETA BETA Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, 7
p.m. Thursday at the Meigs Inn, dinner and meeting.
FRIDAY
HAPPY HARVESTERS CLASS,
Trinity Church, I p.m. Friday . .

Tammy Landers, Meigs County's
spelling bee champion, was at
Fawcett's Center of Tomorrow
Saturday to participate in the state
competition. She was acC&lt;lmpanied
by Mrs. Judy Stewart, Major Glenna
Rummel (retired) and Sally Landers. ·

GEMINI (May

, A substantial amount of trav el

..

Eli Penison Post 467, American
Legion, meets at 8 this evening at
the.post home. Refreslunents will be
served.
AMERICAN LEGION Post 467 Eli
Dennison, Rutland, Wednesday.
.There wiD be election of officers and
refreshments will be served. All
members are urged to make every
effort to attend the meeting.
REGULAR MEETING, Pomeroy
Lodge 164, F&amp;AM, Wednesday, 7:30
p.m. work in feUowcraft degree.
MIDDI.EPORT FIRE Department Auxiliary will not have a May
meeting, scheduled for this. Wednesday. The next meeting will be
held in June.
TIIURSDAY
MEIGS ASSOCIATION for Retar-.
ded Citizens, 7:30p.m. Thursday at

.

GRAPH

s:::~:;~~~.W~III~~m~~~~~~~-~~~Ja~~~~~~~~
WF;i)NESDA Y
HOBSON · Church of Christ in
Christian Union, missionary service. Pastor {lev. Keith Eblin, 7:30
p.m.
ADDISON UMW 7:30 p.m. at Mrs.
Lewis Hughes.
NOMINATION OF officers when

. lAU.RIJ ,S I A·pril l00May •QOI

Cowotkers mav be a bit m ore Cltf
ticult than usual f a Qt! t along W1th
today , espe ci all}' if they teel you
are foi stin g things on them which ..
you $hould attend to voursell .

'ASTRO -·

I

Return Jor~~~than Meigs Chapter p1
the Daughters ol the American
Revolution will meet at I: 30 ·p.m.
Friday at the Melg• Inn. The
program wiD be a· book review of
"Washington's Wood&amp;" by Dean W.
Moore presented by Mrs. Thereon
Johnson. Hosteues will be Mrs.
Paul Eich, Mrs. James Brewington,'
Mrs. Roger Luckeydi!D, and Mrs,
Robert Craig.
·
•

OtrmANDINGTEACHER-A "teacberollbemolllb'' award was
recently p~,"e~ented tO Mn. Tel'e8li'Sbaffer for ~ the mosi outstapdlng
ldclier Of tbe month. Sbaffer Is oae of six teacben In \be Sunday acbool'
at tbe Middleport United Peatecoslal Cbarcb. ~h inonlli an award will
be presemed to one of tbe all teachers. Th~ JuUillment ol responslbilltles
as a teacher, falthfableu io Soliday schoohind church, frequeat use of
the prayer room, clauroom displays and cleanup are among the
evaluation points: Alao considered In lbe judging Is the development of
new Ideas, tea
, c•••«
....,.. method varleUes, liSe Of vlsuls, and w.....,.•••ln
-....... harmony with tea~ membera, demoDitratlng hoillleU both In spirit and appearoce, and having a burden for her dan. Each month a teacher will be
~ogolzed. AI the year's end, a "teacher of tbeyear•laward will be given

.••-.

· --

•
W.IKinetaay, MAY e, ""

(

'

�Page-8-The Dail Sentin.el

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

wednetda
1 ne

Meigs Junior
.High Spring
·concert Friday

The Mouse in the Library

Adventures of Albert E. Mouse
PARTV
Hwnans seem to set such great
The must dreadful thing has
store by their children. I figure, if
happened. In my entire life I have - you cannot be a mouse, why
only seen one hwnan who even
bother?
acted like it was worth even half
When this library gets open and
its salt. Most of them don't even
all the new furniture is moved in,
know one brand of cheese from
there will nut be enough room for
another. This hwnan not only has
Blue Eyes to have her classes, so
panache, she has blue eyes too,
she is being allotted a new room.
and I arn WILD about blue eyes.
I spent the rest of last night and
I was going to the kitchen
most of today examining the
yesterday to pick up some leftwalls and other classrooms. The
overs I The food here at Midonly other place I could find to indleport Elementary is terrific)
stall my telephone was in the
when I saw the two male hwnans
teachers' lounge, and I could not
coming. I hid by one of the doers
find a good place to move my
until they got past, but the things
laboratory to.
they were say ing made my blood
This.is enough to drive a mouse
run cold. I followed a little way
tudrink.
until I was ~ertain I had heard
It appears I shall have to stay
aright. then I ran all the way
here and content myself with an
back to rny den.
occasional glimpse of her. Ah,
It seems that some new furme, it would have never worked
niture has been ordered for the
oot any way. Our backgrounds
library. Bothersome thing, I
are much toe different. Hwnph .. .
knew it wou ld be trouble.
Being a hwnan, she's probably

married any way .
I do hope these people appreciate the library. It has certainly caused enough trouble. I
wonder if that bottle of root beer
is still in the lounge ...
Oh, cheddar, someone is at my
door again. "Yes? "
"Telegram for Albert Mouse."
"Sign here. "
"Thank you." l do not like
· telegrams. They make ine
uneasy. I have 149 brothers and
sisters - l always fear
something has happened to one of
them and ...
Oh, my, this is dreadful. The
news about Blue Eyes was bad
enough, but now this' I didn't
think he would dare show up
here.
But wait ... At long last I know
what l can do to help here at the
library ...
Sincerely, Albert E. Mouse.

'

9tl'l1l BIR111DAY ~ Mn. Cora
Pullen · of Palmer Street, Middleport, W!lfi slll')lrfled 011 her 90th

.

~

OUT
DAUGHTER."

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

'

.

"'

'

The Meigs Junior high ieh001 will
be presenting ita Spring Vocal Music
concert Friday, May a, at 7:30 p.m.
The program will take place lrJ the
audltoriwn at the Middleport Junior,
High building.
.
'
· ., Admission is 50 cents per person.,.
Tlie progrwn is under the directio11
of T. Edwin Harkless, . music
teacher.
The public is invited.

HlO 1 ~ 1 11 PM MAGAZINE

. •'
.•'

I~I

NEW BIBLE BAHLE
SHOW
l 5 · ALLIN THE FAMILY
lt li1il m FAMILY FEUD
111 WILDKINGDOM ' Th el sland

•

Aaron Wolle has erected a new
barn on his farm at East Letart.
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Hill of Moore
Haven. Fla. are spending thei r
Easter vacation with their famil y,
Marvm Hill and family, Michael Hill
and family and Dale Wallace Hill
and family, and her mother, Mrs.
Dolly Wolfe and family and Dale's
sisters, Violet Crinun and Margie
Roush and brothers, Harry Hill, Clif·
rord Hill, Dallas Hill and John Hill.
Easter ~ unday dinner guests of
Mrs. Dolly Wolfe were Mr. and Mrs.
Dale Hill of Moore Haven, Fla .. Mr.
and Mrs. Michael Hill and family,
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Hill and
fa mily, Mr. and Mrs. Dale Wallace
Hill.
Easter Sunday dinner guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Hill were Mr.
and Mrs. Marshall Roush, children
Joey and Cortney, Mr. and Mrs.

Darrell Norris, Tracy and Ryan, Mr. Becky Hensler and children, Mrs.
and Mrs. Art Hill, Mr. and Mrs. Patty Hensler and children.
Dean Hill , children Deanieand HarMr. and Mrs. Bruce Hart of
mony.
Colwnbus spent Easter weekend
There were 74 in attendance at the with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Don
local Methodist Church Easter Sun- Bell and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hart
day morning. Rev. Davis Harris at Racine.
brought the message, and an Easter
service followed with Dallas Hill as
Easter weekend guests of Mr. and
leader.
Mrs. Andrew Cross were Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Smith of Mrs. Edward Cross of Chillicothe;
Millvale, Pa. spent the Easter Mr. and Mrs. Paul Cross of Huron,
weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Robert 0. Mr. and Mrs. George Albert Hill
Smith.
and family were Easter Sunday dinMr. and Mrs. Dorsa Parsons at- ner guests of the Crosses.
tended the Easter program at
Freedom Gospel Mission Church
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Miller spent
Sunday evening.
a recent weekend with their
Mr. and Mrs. Don Bell were Sun- daughters, Mr. and Mrs. David
day dinner guests Easter of Mr. and Hadley and family at Cincinnati.
Mrs. Raymond Hensler at Racine.
Mr. and visited
Mrs. Jeff
MidOther dinner guests ere Mr. and dleport
the Miller
Millersof WedMrs. Harold Grirrun, David and nesday evening.

P tiAO ALL T~i:'

AT HOME WITH THE
BIBLE
.
I 5) SANFORD AND SON
,ij ;Q i. { ) JDKER'SWILD
I 71 HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
:Il l ill DICK CAVETT SHOW
Guest: Gore Vidal. Part II .
1jQI $100,000 NAME THAT
TUNE
~21 m FACE THE MUSIC
7:58 ill CBNUPDATENEWS
8:00 121II &lt;rJ REAL PEOPLE A

VfNTURE~!

JANE
fONUA

profi le ot a handicapped rang er
m Yose m1t e Nalio na l Park, a
man who loves to play his violin
m a B everl y Hil ls men ' s room.
and Sarah Purcell e.w.periences
the fun and pe ri l ot auto racing
(Repea t: 60mi ns .)
q ) SPECIALS

II= '1t).J llfoliet.l'T &lt;tOr AA'&lt;TiliOO

TO A

Offlf? HE WI\ ~ BC~N
TH' POOR liTTLE
THAT l'ir11·
•1 HOI'I 'D IT
ANNIE. IT'~ LlUITE
HAPPEN?
.COMMON AJo'OtiS

·we Have

\ '.\

·.. -~~\.
., , ~ ""
Many ·.Modest \\
Diamonds
\'\.\

f'UI\E I'IHITE MALE
CATS'"

... THE l'iA~ TRI·CO!.OREI' CAT6 Al.E
ALMOGT ALWAYS FEMALE. IPS THE
WAY THE 6EHE5FOR THOSE
CHARi\CTE RIGTICG HOOK UP
\'iiTH THE SEX DETERMINM'IT
6ENE5 ..

APOlOGIZE FOR
5ANDY.1 HE
U5Ut1LL) 6ET:'

'.

ALONG FIHE
l'iiTH CATS...

ROWF! ~

lJV

ALL CREATURES GREAT
AND SMALL ' II Wi s hes We re

·l '

~

Horses ' To st an, smitten with
Debbie Mo unt. finds h1s efforts
frustra ted by her father. unt1 1he
trea ts the1r horse. (60 mins .)
8:30 l ~l BASEBALLAtlant a8raves
vs St. Lo u1s Ca rdinals

{',&lt;~':if'

See o ur unusudl group
of lan ey diamond ftnger rings
specially priced fo r modest budgets.

;l

f:

.1:7

1,

'l i

&lt;!

.

9,58 l1J CBN UPDATE NEWS
9:00 @ I) I j )
DIFF ' RENT
STROKES When one of his
schoo l c hum s is la ced wit h
being sen t loan orp hanage, Ar ·
nold h1des h1m m 1he Dr um·
mend 's penthOuse until he can
ask h 1s stepfather t o let his
fr1end
stay
(Qiosed·Caplloned)

EASY, NOW~ BRING 'EM RIGHT
,
IN HERE , FELLII.S !

.__ ___ -.

--

f

liJ

Danny and Donna Novak exper ·
•en ce t he angu1sh of a miscar·
nag e otth e•r tourt h child, and
st 1ll another disappoiritmen t
wll en their handsome 17 year
o ld son. Casey. fall s deeply •n
l o't'e with a woman 10 years his
se n1or and announces h1 s plans
tomoveinwilhherandheryoung
son. (60 mins .)

~ MOTHER'S DAY SPECIAL

....

,,\&lt;4;\h · . , .· ·. ,/:.

Unusual Value

0 lO)lW

GASOLINE ALLEY

CANDY'S CLASSIC COLLECTIONS
INGELS FURN. &amp; JEWELRY
Middleport, Ohio
Ph. 992-2635

- ............ . -.. ,,

At least the I YOU, IS ... 1ne &gt;
firm e~ Jst s ' t t'he'pme '

r-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,

IIJ) HALL OF FAME 'Casey

••

Stenge l' Charles Durning por -

tra-ys Casey Stengel inthis one·
man cha racte rizat ion of th e
feisty ex ·manager of the New
York Y ankeesand theNew York
Mat s. Writers Sidney and David
Carrollrevee iCes ey' SJrrepressibte personality and coto rfu·l
c areer ttl rough a se ries of monol o~es . (60 min a.)

'I{INNIE

moRE~

•

•

V:JO lfl U C1.l THEFACTSOF LIFE

10:00

GO VAGUE !

~· '·

,,,,

&amp;llimat•on , f ilm footage and still
photo graphs, t his special ex ·
piores the careers of histo ry 's
greatest spies: Mats Hari, Fran ·
cis Ga~ Powers, Klaus Fuchs ,
and others.

[j) li2J ID VEGAS Dan Tanna

takes ch1 rge of a bizarreelttor t ion and murder case for his
daah ing French detective
lriend,N icholuR imbaud, when
a pl ot to blackmail a ring olmale
prostitutes elt pl od es into
violence . (80 mlna.)

B~RNEY

"

'
I

'. ''
'
'
'

LEDBETTER··
HAVE '(OU SEEN
MV Ot:HOUND
DOG?

HE AIN'T HERE··
THAT'S FER SHORE

0U SEARCHFORALEXANDER

THE GREAT 'The Yo ung Lion '
Th is mini -series. hosted by
James Muon, re ·ena cu the
extraor dina ry life oi th e man
histor i ans h ave ca lled th e
world ' s greatest leader . Th e
production atara Nic holas Clay
aa Ale u nder, Julian Glover aa
hiafather and Jane Lapotaire
a a Queen Olympiua , h1s proud
and jealous mother . (60 min a.)

'

992-2156

RIVERSIDE AMC I JEEP I RENAULT

195 upper River. Road-Rt. 7, Gallipolis • 1614) 446·9800

QUINCY To 91op

neighborho od crime , 1wo
broth ers organ ize a vigilan 1e
commillee , but it is o nly afte r
one of them is slain that the sur·
vi't'or w1ll heed Qui ncy ' s adv ice.

(60mins.)

I

w.ua.

ClJ U l1J

W SUPERSPIE SUalng special

Sentinel Ads
CALL TODAY FOR HOME DELIVE.RY

Tool!e falls •n l ove lor the lirs1
time and begins to e.)C perience
d oubt s about herself and her
school friends. (Repeal)

iOU LOOK ' IKE
50MEONE 1 S\'OI~IV I
KNOW, BUT iTS

shop the bargains
in the

CBS WEDNESDAY

NIGHT MOVIE 'The Gentl eman
Bandif ' 1981 Sta rs : Ralph
Wa ite , Jul •e Bov asso.
( 9] WORLD 'The Red Army' Pre sident Reagan ts me rea si ng
defense sp endin g, bu1 iust what
are we defending ourse i'V&amp;S
agamsr? Th is mves1iga t1ve
report e1ammes the strengths
and wea knesses of the Ru ssian
m•tllary , wtlh some su rpri sing
res ults . (60 mina.)

'

cash In on 10% price rollback on base price of all new '81 models AMC and Renault passenger
cars ana Jeep vehicles. Limited time only. see dealer for details.

700.J;LUB

(§J!Wm AMERICAN DREAM

® NEWS

10:21 tiJ CIN UPOATE NEWS
10,30 ~
· MAX MORRIS

'THERE'S A·CARRIER NEAR YOU~ ·

OUTER LIMITS
C.IN UPO.ATEm
N~~.., .

10:58

· 11:oo

• CIJm

""' u..

NEWS

I} )

PERHAPS 'f'OIJ I-lAVE A
S15TE!i: AT ~OME WHO
Mt6HT CARE TO MEET
A BRAVE FL'f'tN&amp; ACE ...

PROGRAM
\!.NANNOUNCED
l~ ) MOVIE ·!DRAMA) ' " ..

A COUSIN? AN

":1;;~;;~~QA~:;:"

.AUNT ?A GRANDMAMA
11:28

; 1,30

~
1

~NUPDATENEWS

) •

l.

c? l

THE TONIQHT .

IHOW
l) . ROIIAGLIYIHOW
&gt;ilal
AIC .-ws NIGHT·
Lilli! All&lt;hored bi Teet
KQPpel

•

:t J CBI LATE MOYIE

·oemcnSttd' t8 77Stars Julit _
Chn 1118 Futz Weaver

Now arrange the .cucled :eners to
form the surpnse answer . as sug··
gested by the above canoon

XI I ]"

Pnnt answer here : " [

(Answer s tomorrow I
Yesterday 5

I

Jumbles QU IRE

TA WNY GAMBLE RATHER
A h1dden desire she found 1n I he su rgeon AN " URGE "

Answer

Jumble BOOk No. 15; containing 110 puules, is available tor $1 .75 poitpliel
from Jumble. c/o thi s newspaper , Bo• 34, Norwoocl. N.J. 07648. 1ncludf your
name, add ress, zip code Bnd make

aod Alao Sontag

Stenge l' Cha rles Durn1ng par·
1rays Casey St engel•n th1s one ma n charecte n 2a t10n o f the
l e1st y e1 ·mana ger of th e New
York Yankeesand1h eNew York
Mats . Writ ers S1dney and Dav1d
Carroll revea l Casey' s1 rre pres·
s1ble p ersona lity and colorful
career through a series of mon ·
olog ues. (60 mi ns.)

~ i

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'~\

:~

.

Make the slam

191 HALL OF FAME 'Casey

6EE, l HAVE T'

rJ 11

""T-&gt;

menl knowh ow and Pam 's legal
tac ti cs bl aze intoa ction to wa rd
all th e CIA, th e lA S, tr easury

Q 1 8 I U~ ENOS Enos Sllaie
bec~ m es a on e man police
force when an ep idemic of 'Blu e
Flu ' st rikes his department and
he 's left alone to pro tect a pret ty wo man judge from a ki ller's
wrath. (60 mms l

ANNIE

I LADVAN -1

i 41 MOVIE ·(COMEDY) "
''Young Frankenstein ' ' 1974
1~ I NIGHT GALLERY
1SI 112J m THE GREATEST
AMERICAN HERO Ralph ' s
sup er powers , Bill's go&lt;Jern -

mms.)

~·
·,,,,
.·.. ,./

LOOK IN VAIN
FOR: A
RU55I:'AN.

I~ )

HEARD ~&amp;OUT

. '

agen t s and the toea lp olicea lt er
one ol Ral ph 's student s
becomes the prime sus pect 1n a
se nes o1 dr amatiC fires (60

v&gt; .:kt~F

I I I

7:30 I }~ U BULLSEYE

TtiA1" ~~eA -·

CW'T "SA.'( .
N.l'1'Tt\l f..)(o!

&lt;:

ORBIL

. l!W NEWS

~.

'I"... .

.. ,

REPORT

ft):;tf\1/~ TO S~'{

Paul Strauss gave a program on
the food and medicinal value of.herbs and showed slides at the Tuesday
night meeting of the Auxiliary of
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Mrs. Carrie Kennedy, president,
called for a moment of silent prayer
in memory of Mrs. Ina Massar. A
report was given on the . recent
hospital auxiliary convention held in
Columbus. Attending were Emmogene Sirruns, Mrs. Clara Burris,
Mrs. Mildred Fry, Mrs. Katheryn
Metzger, and Mrs. Louise Bearhs.
Refreslunents were served by
Mrs. Katie Anthony, Mrs. Judy Anspach, Miss Mae Weber, Mrs. Eva
Hartley, and Mrs. Margaret Parsons. A centerpiece of dogwood was
used on the refreslunent table.

.,

Q ,i.J TICTACDOUGH
il :· ll.lJ MACNEIL·LEHRER

pr~e.
Attending were Mrs. Carol Gheen, 1~;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::;

Apple Grove News Notes _ _ __ __

~-

Tha1 Time Fo rgot'

·~·

n.......aled Cakes

Veterans Hospital
Auxiliary shows
slides of herbs

-

..........
. ..... __... ,. . . ... ..

EVENING

Robbin Reyhl, bride-elect of Doug
Behnke, was honored recently with a
bridal shower hosted by Mrs. Ruth
Young and Mindy Young.
Refreshments Included an embrella decorated cake, mints, nuts
and punch. Garnes were played and
prizes were won by Eva Howard,
Robbin Reyhl, Debbie McCall, and ·
Joyce Seelig who also won the door

ners were, 1-r, David Lawsoo, secood place, Steve
Souder, third place, Peggy Bush, first place, Susan jell
aod Darla Combs, both honorable mention. Judge was
Robert Fox of Ohio Unlversity.

by HenriArno!dandBoblee

Unscramtlle these tour Jumbles.
one lener 10 eacn squar e, to l orm
. fo~r ordinary words

MAYS, 1981

,,.

.~~

bfrtbday Saturday wltb a
' .
gatherillg of "oelgbbon at the . rr;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;t1
bome ol Mr. and Mn. Dwight
'
wanace for a party. A card
shower Wlil beld for Mn. Pulleo,
~
·
affectloaately called "GraaclFor All Occasions
ma," and f!l(reslunenll ol blrtltday cake and eoftee were served.
Mrs. Pullen remaw acUve, a
ROUSEL CONFECTIONERY
dUng ber own baoklng and olber
Ph. 992·6342
baslnell affairs, mafntalna her
317 N. 2nd
Middleport
own bome, aud attends church
regularly. Her dangbter, J~rry.
resides at home and operates a
beauty shop lbere.

Mrs. Debbie McCall, Mrs. Carolyn
Snowden, Mrs. Joyce Seelig, Mrs.
Eva Howard, Gloria Alexander, and
BonnyChapman.
Sending gifts were Mrs. Margaret
Parsons, Mrs. Nancy White, and
Mrs. Linda McManus.

\9 ~~ Q!I

'l'l!.. .

Reyhl honoree
of shower

POETRY WINNERS - Under the direction of
Donald .Salmons a poetry writing contest was held
re&lt;·enlly at Southern High School in Racine. The cootest was open to any student at the high school . Win-

Television
•
•
·VIewmg

'\J\11}1.\,{} fii}'ft 1~ THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~

chec ~ s

pa yable to Newspaperboeks.

BRIDGE
By Oswald Jacoby

H ·81

NORTH

South has no problem at
trick one. He ruffs the spade.
Then. if he is worth his salt he
slops to co nsider the wa y to
proceed. He doesn't think
about making seven. His problem ts to find how to ma ke hi s
slam contract.
A ; .o trump brea k will

almosl surely cook his goose
so he must concentrate on 3·2
and H breaks. He sees that
he can lose a finesse lo the
queen of hearts and still get
his 12 tricks if he can ruff one
more spade in dummy or if
the diamond finesse is on .

Th en he decides that he should
assume that West holds the
diamond king.
If he pl ays oul his ace and
king of hearts he can keep
control or the hand if trumps
break 3·2 and come tu 12
tncks so his fi rst thought is to
do that. Then he sees that if
trumps are 4· t this play will
lose. On the other hand, if he
cashes dummy's king of
trumps and then fin esses for
lhe queen. he will only .be abl e
10 come to II tric ks ,( West
was deall the queen and two
small since Wesl will take his
queen and lead a third trump.

••

• K 7 12

• 10 6 4

+ AK J 91 4

WEST
+AK Q964

EAST

+J B 2

.3

• Q B6 4

t K B3
+ 653

• 9 711

+a 2
SOUTH
• 10 7 53
• A J 10 9

t A 1.1 J
+ Q 10
Vulnerab le

,.

~ast · W est

Dealer North
Wes t

I+
Pass
Pass

~or tb

East
Pass
Pet ss
Pass
Pass

2+

••

Pa :\s

,.

South

lt
6•

Opemng lead +K

Finally. he sees the cinch
play. He leads a low hearl
from dumm v a nd fine sses .

Win or lose

t~ e

finesse he has

retained con trol and ts sure of

his slam

~a•Wd'

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
I "Let I Character·
eat cake"
istic
5 Easy to
2 Therefore
follow
3 Ca rl Reiner
10 Nevada city
work
11 Indica te
4 Extinct bird
t%Brazilian
S Bruce
beast
6 Merkel
Yesterday's Allliwer
t3 Tooth
1 Cra sh
substance
th e gates 2t Invent
28 Brandish
14 Kind or pa ck 8 Repeat
22 Any German 29 Uf
IS Forbid
9 Postponed
street
Norway
16 Generation 11 Distributed, %3 Annihilated 30 Garson
11 In few words as cards
24 WOOllland
:t5 Contend
19 Baffin
IS Inclination · 26 Vermont
l6 Mountain
or Subic
18 - qua non
city
1prefix 1
20 Blue ser,ge's:r:--,.;--r,"""l'l:-

portrait
25 Undeniable
26 Enticement
%7 Toupee (sl.l
28 Admonition
31 Timber tree ~+-+-11-32 Exasperate !-::-:-+--+-33 And not
31 Quake
36 Bugbear
37 Of old age
38 Ascend
39 Moved
sideways
40 Blow

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work
AXVDLBAAXI.
II

LO~GFELLOW

One letter limply stands for another. In lhis sample A is
used for the three L's. X for lhe two O's, etc. Single letters.
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
CRYPTOQUOTES
YJL

I RA

YJOACG

J0G

LK LG

FJV
YV
W0

FROYG

YPMA

QL Z

VA

W VM

PH

J RC

J0C

Y V L C.

- XMLGFLTT
IRX
TRPCJTOA
Yesterday's Cryptoquote : BREAD OF DECEIT IS SWEET TO
MAN, BUT AFTERWARD ~S MOUTH SHALL BE FILLED
WITif GRAVEL,- PROVERBS

Silver shuw
LOS ANGELES (AP) - An exhibition of more than
:/JXl siver objecta Illustrating the role of silver In
American life is being shown through May 10 at the Los
Mt~eles County Musewn of Art. ·
The museum says the exhibition "in addition to Its
artlstic and derol ative appeal, is unique in Ita exploraUon of the multi-faceted role silver has played in
the cultural and technological history of this country In ·
the pu1300 years."

�Page-l~ The

Dally Sent1ne1

Carpenter Personals

Help Wonted
)

Wooten. They were m the area to atlend funeral serv1ces for Martha
White, w1dow of John White, fonner
res1dents here Mrs White died m
Georg1a and was bUrled near Bambndge, Ohio Mrs FranclB Rife IS
the fonner Hazel White

Mendal Jordan, local Other callers
were Mr and Mrs Dwame Jordan
and Sarah Faye and Mr and Mrs
Kenneth Crabtree, local, and Karen
G1lkey Athens
Mr and Mrs FranciS R1fe and
son Kenny, and grandchildren, and
brother-m-law, James Grant, of
Baker, Loutsl8na, were overmght
guests of Francis R1fe's mother,
Mrs Orley Rife, and brother-m-law
and sJster Mr and Mrs Donald

Abna Wood, Racme, 1s spendmg
some time here w1th her son and
daughter-m-law, Mr and Mrs
Carrol Woodgerd and fam1ly
Mr and Mrs Bruce Dav1s and
son, Dayton were weekend guests of
her grandparents, Mr and Mrs Vernon Perry
Sunday dmner guests of Mr and
Mrs Walter Jordan were the1r
parents Mr and Mrs Chnton
Gtlkey, Albany and Mr and Mrs

I

Murl Gallaway underwent maJOr
surgery and IS reported to be unprovmg satisfactorily at O'Bieness
Memonal Hosp1tal m Athens
Mrs Reed Jelfers Js at her horne

after being confmed to O'BieneBIJ
Memor1al Hoapllal for observatton
and tests for several days.
Those from Colwnbla Grange who
attended the annual Grange banquet
at Salisbury School mcluded Mr and
Mrs Earl Starkey, Mr and Mrs Arthur Crabtree, Mr and Mrs Eldon
Barrows, Mr and Mrs Mendal Jordan, Bertha Cnppen, Ava Greenlees
and Rtlla Lowen&gt; The Slone Family
from this area fuMU8hed mus1c for
the evening

Long Bottom News Notes ' \
Mr and

Mrs

Sleven Holter and
daughters, Stacy and Stephanie,
were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Holter, Judy and Mark Stepharue
Holter's second birthday was
celebrated with two Easter bunny
decorated cakes
She rece1ved
numei'OUB gifts. The Steve Holters
are from Gahanna.
Reminders The Lo~ Bottom

Senior CitiZens are meeting 10 tbl!
Long Bottom Methocllst Church
basement the second and fourth
Tuesdays of every month The fourTUesday a free blood }lreSSilJ'e
clinic Is held The Long Bottom Com-

th

wea:

mwuty Assn meetB the last
nesday 10 the Long Bottom Corn-.
munlty bwlding, at 7 p m

Public Not1ce

Public Not1ce

LEGAL NOTICE
COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
THE
RACINE HOME
NATIONAL B~NK, Plaon
loll
VS
Thomas L Frtch and Sonya

Truss Rafter Company and
L1nda Shepard
Defen
dants bemg case No 17617
I W•ll offer for sa le at publrc
auct•on at the front door of
the
Courthouse
•n
Pomeroy Me•gs County
Ohto on the 16th day of
May
981 al lO 00 o clock
R F 1tch and V tola Long,
A
M
the followmg goods
Defendants
chat1els to W1t
Case No 17 719 and
1 house tratler
By v1rtue of an Order of
l - 1967 Chevrolet Fleet
Sale ssued out of th e Com s•de
p/ u w1tt1 racks
mon Pleas Court of M!'tgs
1- Truss trailer
County Ohto '" the above
1 ~ Atr co mon~c;c;nr
entttf ed
case
upon
1 ~ 12 tnch power saw
JUdgment be tng rendered 1
1 - 1974 Ford Statoon
w II otter tor sa le at th e
front door of the Court w~gon
M 1scellaneous tools
house 1n Pomeroy Me gs
Taken as the properly ot
County Ohto on tl1e 6th Rona
ld G Shepard dba
day of June 1981 at 10 00
0 ClOCk AM the fOllOWing Soutt1eastern Ohto Truss
Rafter Company and Lmda
lands and tenements to Shepard
Defendants to
wot
Sr tu a te rn Lebanon Town sat•sfy tUdgement '"favor
of The Ra c1ne Home
sh tp County of M etgs and NatiOnal Bank and The
State of Oh10 to w•t beg1n Central
Trust Company
n1ng at a po1nf on the W A N A Pla1nflffs
Postlewa•t or Anna Powell
Items may be seen by
nort h fen ce lme wh1 ch 1S contact.
ng John T Wolfe
288 feet west from the cen Pres td ent
Th e Ractne
ter ot old state road leadmg Hom e NatiOnal
Ban k
f r om Ches te r to Buf · Ractn e Oh10
t.ngton s I stand
tt1en ce
Terms of Sale Cash '"
north 31 1' 7 feet to a hand
marked rock. WhiCh sa 1d
James J Prottrtt
marked rock 1S th e place of
Shenff
beg •nn •ng of I he real estate
Me•gs
County
transferr ed herem thence (5) 6 ltc
due north 229 4 feet to th e
center at the old State Road
Public Notice
lead .ng fro m Chester to
Bulfmgton s Isla nd th ~ n ce
IN THE
'" a westerly d1rect10n
lollow .ng the mea nder ngs
COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF
of the center of sa 1d road
190 feet to a r ock th ence
MEIGS COUNTY
due south 229 4 feet to a
OHIO
marked rock thence due Ll NDA BELIVEAU,
Plamhff,
east 190 fee t to the place of
VS
beg.nn.ng conta tnmg one
acre more or less
MICHEL BELIVEAU
uerendanf
Deed Refer ence vo ume
187 Page 421 Me1gs Coun
No 17787
NOTICE BY
ty Deed Records
PUBLICATION
Pro,:er1 y appra1sed at
Mtchel Bel1veau
$21 000 Cannot be sold for TO
tess than two th•rds of the whose address 1s unknown
appratsed pnce
You are hereby noflfteO
Ter ms of Sa le Cash 1n that you have been named
hand
a defendant •n a legal ac
James J Proff tt ! to n
entt tle d
L1nda
Sher •tt Bel •veau
Platntlff
vs
Me•gs Coun t y M1chel Bel tveau Defeo
(51 6 7 8 3tc
dant Th1S actton has been
asso~ned Case No 17 887
and IS spendtng tn the Covrt
of Common Pleas of Metgs
Public Nohce
Counly Pomey Ohoo 45769
The ob1ec t ot the com
plamt 1S the obta1nmg of a
LEGAL NOTICE
d1vorce and the ter
NOTICE OF SALE
Pursuant to an ORDER m•nat.on of a marrtage
OF SALE oSSUed out of the contract between the par
Common Pl eas Court of t•es and the settl ement of
Metgs County Oh10 •n th e th e proper ty rognls of the
Case The Rae ne Horne par t1 es
Ra c•ne
You are requtred to an
Nattona l Bank.
Oh o and The Central swer the complatnf W1fh1n
Trusf Company N A M1d
28 days after the last
pub1tcat10n of th1 S not 1ce,
dleporf Oh10 Pla•nftffs
aga nst Rona ld G Shepard wh1ch will be published on
dba SouTheasTern Ohto ce each week for SIX sue

~~- -------------------

Curb Inflation.
Pay Cash for
Classifieds and
Savell I

6

cess tve weeks The la st
publlcatton w II be made on
May 27 1981 and tne 28
days for answer W1 l l com
mence on that date
In case of your failure to
answer
or
otherw1se
respond as requored by tne
Ohto
Rules of
C1vil
Procedure
the
final
heanng on th1s matter wtll
be held after the exptrahon
of 28 days after Jhe last day
of publlcatton of thts not1ce
or as soon thereafter as can
be scheduled by the Court
Larry Spencer
Clerk of Court
of Me1gs County
onoo

- -

-

PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY OHIO
ESTATE OF ERNESr F
POWELL , DECEASED
Case No 23423
PUBLICA fiON
OF NOTICE
TO ALL PER SO NS IN
TERESTED
IN
THE
ESTATE OF ERNEST F
POWELL
DECEAS E D
LATE
0 F R 0
2
POMEROY OHIO 45769
MEIGS
COUNTY
PROBATE COURT CASE
NO 23423 An applocaloon
has been ftl ed ask• ng to
rei eYe The estale t ro m ad
m.n.strat•on say•r'lg that
the assets do not exceed
515 000 and the cred•tors
w•lt not be pre1ud•ced
ther eby A hear.ng on th e
appl•cat1on will be held
May l2 1981 all 30 o clock
P M Persons know•ng any
reason why the appllcat•on
should not be gra nted
shou ld appear and tnform
the Court The Court os
loc ated Probate Court
Me1gs Cou nty Courthouse
Pomeroy Ohoo 45769
Robert E Buck
By CaroiY.(l G ThOmas
ueputy Clerk
(4 29 !51 6 2tc
Pubhc Nottce

PU BLJC NOTICE
The Tuppers Pla1ns
Chester Wafer D•stnct •s
now accept1ng sealed btdS
on the followtng
A 1975 pock up truck, F
ISO ion~ bed stylesode
Automattc
transmiSSIOn
6050 BFW 360 V 8, usong
reg u lar fuel
western
mtrrors
power brakes,
step bumper mud and
snow ttres 8 ply wtth
red 10
deluxe mter•or
color
Brds w• ll be accepted at
Water off.ce and wil l be
oepened at 12 00 noon on
May 14 198 1 the TP CWO
reserves the nght to re1ec t
anv and all b•ds
! 41 22 29 ! 516 3tc

- Card ol Tt1an1t1
J- Annovnuments
~ - G veaway
S- Haptlly ACII

1 lo ________
1 11 _ _ _ _ _ __
1 12 _ _ _ _ __
I 14
13 -_
- -_
. ._
. ._
, -_- 1
_
I

1

1
I
I
I
I

I

- -- - - --

STOBARTS Greenhouse os
now opened It ts located on
Racone Rt 2 C R 100
Hangong baskels &amp;. beddong
plants Vegetables &amp; plants
of all k.mds
Skate A Way
summer
schedule
Open
Wed
nesday Fnday, Saturday
noghts from 7 30 to 10 00
Available for provate par
toes Monday and Tuesday
ntghts, Saturday mornmgs
or afternoons or Sunday
aflernoons Phone 985 m6
or 995 392'1

eRENTALS
• - HOIIIH lor Rtnl
U- Mob1lt Homu

Ground Hog Contest F~rst
proze ssoo 00 cash T n
Counly Sport snop, PI
Pleasanl
Stop on for
detaols l 304 675 2988

tor R11nt
44-Aplrtmont tor Rtnt
4$--F Aoems
u - Spact for Rtfll
47-WanttOtoAtnt
4t- Ett1.11Pmentlor Rlnl

• - Lot land ~DIHid
1- Yard hie
1- Publtc Salt

Flowers for Memortal Day
Faye s Gott Shop located In
lower M oddleport

I Auchon

9-

W~:tnted

lo Buy

eMERCHANDlSE

e EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

'1-Houstl'lold Goods

U- CI TV Rid tO Eq~tlpmtnl
U- Antlqu•'
54- Mise Merctl•ndist
sr-lu•ldlnt SwppUos

wanttd
1, _ Sttuatod wanttd
ll- l"svranct
l~ - lu11ntn Tratnm9
~~- Scl'laol' lntlructton

1 - ""'

R•d•O TV

It-

eFARMSUPPLIE5
&amp; LIVESTOCK

1 ca Repatr
11- Wanlt&lt;l To Do

These cash rates
nc lude d•scounf

•t-~arm lqWIPmef'll

n - wenttd ro lwy
for Salt

eFINANCIAL
Ius neu

72-Truckl

U -LI VIUOU

0PIIOI"IUAIIY

M- H•v I Grain

11- Monoy lo Loan

17

U - Sttd &amp; Jlort llltr

1l- Proltntonat

18 _ _ _ _ _ __
19 _ _ _ _ _ __
20 . _ _ _ _ _ __
21 _ _ _ _ __

StrVtCfS

•TRANSPORTATION
JI -AUtOt, lOr Slit

eREAL ESTATE

73- Vans 1 4 w D
74-Motercycltt

JI - HOm" lorSaltl
J1- Motl1lt Homos
for Sate

22 _ _ _ _ __
23 _ _ _ _ __
24 _ _ _ _ _ __

We are trytng to keep the
cemetery at Letart Falls 1n
Its present condition bur
must depend on your tn
terest and help To 1nsure
tho! your lot woll be kepi
clean thos year, please send
check cash, or money or
der to Clarence Norris,
23262 Hill Road Racine,
Ohoo 45771 SlO 00 for one
lot, S5 00 tor one half Jot
Thank you The Letart
Falls Cemetery Trustees

!i._Pors tor Slit

1-

I 4 _ _ _ _ __
I s _ _ _ _ __
I 6 _ _ _ _ __
I 7. _ _ _ _ __
I a.._ _ _ _ __
I 9 _ _ _ _ __

1 w tsh to thank the many
people who were so kind to
n 1ov1ng m emory of my me while I was til
beloved husband Paul L espec oally lhe doctors and
at
Veterans
McDanoel Sr and daddy nurses
the
and grandpa who passed Memonal Hospttal
away 2 years ago today ones who VIStted me the
flowers
g1fts,
cards,
May 6 1979 at Jhe age of 49
Tne oay the month the donors of blood and the
prayers of so many people
year we Will never forget
For •n our hearts you will May God bless you
Stella Grueser
alwaysn our heart stay
loved and remembered
The cal l was sudden Paul,
we would loke to thank
the shock severe
everyone for the many car
Woth lo ttie thought that ds rece.ved for our 60th
death was near
Weddong Annoversary
We d1d not know the pa•n he
Mr &amp;. Mrs Joe Cook
had
And early 1n the mornrng
We would like to thank
when you had to leave
everyone for the many
God gave us strength to sympathy cards receiVed
face ''
on behalf of my brother
And courage to bear the Bernard Gu•nfher
blow
Mr &amp;. Mrs Joe Cook
Bur what 11 meant to lose
you
No one w tll ever ever know J
Announcements
In life we loved you so
1 PAY hoghest proces
dearly
passoble tor gold and s1 1ver
In death we do the same
For no one will ever take co tns nngs 1ewelry etc
Contact Ed Burkett Barber
your place
There 1S a link dea th ca nnot Shop M1dOiepor1
sever
Love and remembra nce ITS BEELINES Show and
last forever
Tell T•metlltl Our new
Sadly mtssed by w•te spr.ng and summer ltne 1S
Margare t, daughter Joyce now available and •S tt un
and famtly son Paul Jr believable••• • G•ve us a
and fam•IY and relattves
call for more mformatton
about th s mterestmg work
Phone 992 3941 from 9 6

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

7f-

4 __

,Auto P1rt1

n--.ufa R•!Nir

3~ - lustnou

luilchnts
li-l.ots &amp; Acrt• ..

H - Aullstatt Wanltd

•SERVICES
It- Hom• I mprcwem~nts

17 - R•alton

25 _ _ _ _
26 _ _ _ _ __

~-

W•nr Ad o\dvertlslnDeadflnes

27 _ _ _ _ __
28'·29•._______

I JO PM

Call

35

Rates and Other Information

I
-----1

15·. - - - - - - - - -

Marl Thts Coupon w1th Remtttance
The Da1ly Sent mel
BOJ 129

1

Pomeroy, Ohto 45769

____

~-----------~------J
I

_____ -

...... c.....,..
...

Cetfl
I d•y

I
I
I

16 _ _ _ _ __

I

IS Worts tr UftW

5

that answers to the not~te of
Schultz Losl on the Rock
Springs
vlclnlly
REWARD
Phone Dock
Owen at 992 2651 or 992
5627

32: ._,..--_ _ _ __
33 ._ _ _ _ _ __
341. _ _ _ _ _ __

---~,.

acfler

Loshnd Found
--------- LOST
Grey Schnouzer

6

Houllnt

N- M H Ro,. lr
17- Utt!Mt+otery

31 . _ _ _ _ _ __

992 3128

---

14-IIICfriCII
U-G~t~oral

12 N~ S1turd-v
tor Monday

301 . _ _ _ _ _ __

5 pups 3 male 2 female

12-Piumli"' I IICUifi"'
U-1 ''tvltinl

llhlrilltltlon

Da~ly

---------__Govt•_w~'t __ _

To good home 3'h year old
German Shepard II. Collie
dog Gentle &amp; gooct with
choldren 985 4356

1 Accouorttt

ll - ~•rmstor 1110

Ill

2fly$

I
I
I

Reward Any lnformltien
concerning the loss of a
boat out of the Ohio River,
across from 1301 plant No
Questions atked If rlttur
ned 949 2025

... ...

, dtyl
'diVJ

lit

ltcft wort ovtr "'' m1n1mwmu wertl u • ctrltt " ' wtn1 ,., " '

- --- - --

raft

•nil• •nO Ollttulr\'

In momory C•rd ~:tf
mu•lmum (tll'l•n lfYifiCI

II

o ctrtfl !tlr •IHf, UM

Mot le Homo ..... •rtdl YuG saltl are • tcoototf
y"'"'Cit" wtM
ordor U ctnt c1tar11 tor tdl urrytnt I Y• NuiYlb tn Ctrt ef flit
Ul'ltnel

I
J

I

I.

Beaut•ful three bedroom
ranch bnck home tn Bavm
Addotoon Pomeroy Ohoo
Gas heat, central atr Call
992 2571 985 4145 or 1 687
6429

9

•

PUBLIC AUCTION

4 family yard sale Wed
neS&lt;fay lhru F'loday trom 9
4 at 112 Brock Streel
around from the l •scense
bureau Will be held tn the
back yard
Lots of
everythmg Look for s1gns

- ------.---vard saJe Lot

4 famtly

besode
Vosla
Slatoon
Mason Fro &amp; Sat 9 &gt;
Hugh Garage Sale May 7
8 Forest Run Road, Mor
nong Slar Area Follow
stgns off Rt 7 Many 1tems
of gOOd clothong Don t
m•ss thts one
2 day basement sa le GOOd
buys W1ll bargam Roger
Coates res•dence 3 miles
north ot Chesler oft Route
7 Thurs &amp;. Fro
YARD Sale May 811. 9 9 5
P1ano go cart aQuanum
scnool desk, silk flowers
d•shes,
clothes
toys
FREE plants Joyce &amp; Don
Manuel res1dence Letart
above Racone On Follow
Rl 338, turn left on gravel
road before commg to
Ractne locks &amp; Dam
Follow sogns
Yard Sale Fro &amp; Sal 10 4
Sycarnore St bv l mpenal
Electroc
_l_ ___ _ _ _

5 Famoly sale at Charles
Kongs May 7 &amp; 8 On Wolf
Pen Rd Follow soons Raon
or sh.ne
3 famoly yard sale, Thurs
Frl
Sat 133 Butternut
Ave D•nette Wtth 4 chlllrs,
dehumldoffer
992 3079
Rain cancels
4 famoly yard sale Thurs II.
Fro only Rock St 4th roght
hand Jurn off Sprong Ave
Follow Sogns
Yard Sale Thurs , Frt
Sat Color TV clotnes,
toys, household 11ems Raon
or shone Eagle Rodge Rd
by Memoroal Gardens 949
2793

Yard Sale One day only
Froday May 8 1st house on
roght on Leadono Creek Rd
off Rl 7 WalCh tor signs

9

wantecllo Buy

WANTED
TO
BUY
GIOLD,
SILVER,
PLATINUM, STERLING
COINS RINGS,JEWELR
V MISC
ITEMS AB
SOLUTE
MARKET
PRICE GUARANTEO EO
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP, MIDDLEPORT,
OKlO 992 3476
OLD COl NS, pocket WI!
ches, cfns rongs, wedding
banda, dlamondl. Gold or
tllvtr Cell J A Wamsley,
Treasu· Chell Coin Shop,
A lhens, 0 H 594 4221

Insurance

---- - - - -

AUTOMOBILE
IN
SURANCE
been can
celled?
Lost
your
operator's license? Phone
992 2143

$185 00 to $500 weekly doong
CHIP WOOD Poles max
No ex
doameter 14' on largest ma11tng work
AP
end Sl2 50 per ton Bundled perience requtred
PLY C1rcle Sales, P Q
slab
$10 50 per lon
Lost Bluelock female Has Delivered to Ohoo Pallet Box 224 0, Rocnmond Hill
brot&lt;en name plate on her Co , Rock Sprongs Rd , NY 11418
collar Last seen at Pone Pomeroy 992 2689
Grove Horse Cave area
Need-Mo~;y.J - -N~;d
Contact Oscor Smolh at 992 New used, and ant1que fur
Clothes&gt; Why not get your
5594
n•ture No 1tem to large or wardrobe at no cost to yov
to small Woll buy one poece and earn extra dollars too?
or complete households
For mformataon or '"
Mart1n s General Store at tenttew appomtment call
992 6370
992 3941 between 9 9
Yard Sale
810 South
L --------Second
Avenue, M1d
dlepart Ohoo May 4th thru Now buyong gold and Fashton Consultant needed
9lh
Clothing, beddong Stiver old pocket watches &gt;NOW• Ladtes tash1on ftrm ~
chatns dtamonds, St iver Average $8 00 per nour
I mens, dishes avon, silver
stoq~
small appliances money and co.ns Martm s For appotntment mtervtew
dtni'hg room set other fur General Store, Moddleport call992 3941 between9 9
noture toys 1ewe1ry lots of 992 6370
m tsc Come see
Now taK1ng applications
Wanted to Buy clctss nngs
for lofeguards
Apply
weddong
bands,
anylhong
Yard Sale
women's
weekends at Royal Oak
mens, chtldren s cloth1ng stamped. lOK l4K, or 18K Park
household otems c R 10 gold Solver coons pocket
Dexter Road from 9 9 from watches Call Joe Clark at FRIENDLY Home Partoes
m 20S4 at Clark s Jewelry
May 5 thu lOih 742 2668 ,
Store. Pomeroy Ohoo45769 now tn our 26t h year 1S ex
pand1ng to your area and
Yard Sale, May 4 lhrought
has opentngs for managers
9th Located on 681 at
and dealers Part-; plan ex ,
Alfred Reeves res1dence
peroence helpful Car &amp;.
Needlework books, recor
phone necessary
Call
ds magaz10es, and more
Carol Day collect 518 489
9395
11
1-!_elj&gt;_V!_a~l~-Grey Garage Sale Thurs
Fro May 1 &amp; 8 Arbaugh GET VALUABLE traonong Gtrl to ltve 1n 992 2686
AOdotoon, Tuppers Plaons as a young bus1ness person
and earn good money plus
Goff place
Receptton1st bookkeeper
some great Qtfts as a Sen
lor
doclor s offoce Ex
ttnet route earner Phone
Large yard sa le n1ce clean
1n
btlltng
us nght away and get on per1en ce
clothes for all Toys, rugs
medtcare med•catd des.re
the elogoboloty lost al 992
drapes, nock nacks plenty
d Call992 6601
2156 or992 2157
of fru1t 1ars Ftrst house on
i.
left past ratlroad,tracks at
Cheshore May 6 1 8 9
Pubhc Sale
8
Four famtiY yard sale on
&amp; Auctton
51 Rt 68lon Alfred Lots o f t - - - - - - - - - . . . . . . : = = = ' - - - - - - - . . , . . . ,
choldrens clolhong baby
1tems appliances Ram or
shone Fro day May 8th and
Salurday May 9

I RON I\ NO BRASS BEDS
Old furniture, dnks, VOid
rongt,
jewelry, Silver
dOifan, sterling, etc WOOd
Lost
ton end while fee boxes, tars. antiques,
marked femole dog Lookt etc complete houMtrofda
loke colloe In her face 20 to Write M D Miller, Rt 4,
45769 Or
2~ onchs I all Answers to the Pomeroy, OH
Clll992 77MJ
nam~ of Duchess 6117 3762

Ath rwnnlnt 011'111' ltlan ClftiiCiffi¥1 HYI will II Cftltllf lt.IM I ,..,

Qepatr or remodetmg
work floor•ng, doors, wall
t)aneltng ce1hng or floor
!ole sodlng 992 2759

-----:===

------ ---

In Memortam

or Wrrte Daoly Sent mel Class1f1ed Dept
111 Court St , PomerO'f, 0 , 45769

'-In Mtmor•am

3 _ _ _ _ __

----

Card of Thanks

PHONE 992-2156

e ANNOUNCEMENTS

j

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

WANT AD INFORMATION

Address __________

2 _ _ _ _ __

Thrs 1s ca lled my tnllatiOn toss
Guaranteed to hit !he roo f and not come down

_

31

Real Estate- General

r

,HOBSTEmR REALTY
Oftoce 742 2003
GeorgeS HobSieller Jr
Broker

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

PubliC NOtiCe

Name-----------------

) Wanted
r ! For Sale
J Announc ement
J For Rent

I~

"'

lL_ ---,Solualoons Wanled

NEW HOME -

SATURDAY, MAY 9and SUNDAY, MAY 10
STARTING EACH DAY AT 10 OOO'CLOCK A M
PENNS VILE, OHIO
ON ST RT 377 IN MORGAN CO
'fake 51 RJ. 69 Soyth out of Zanesvolle 10 Me
Conne!Svllle or take St Rl 60 North out of Manella
lo McConnelsvlle, cross rrver through Malt• on S)
Rt 71 West for 1 moles-stay left at lop of holl onto
Sl Rl 377 to Pennsvolle atlhe Boll Janes Farms 30
moles norlheast of Athens or 90 mrles southeast of
Columbus, Ohoo
ANTIQUE FURNITURE, GLASS, CHINA, LAMPS
FIGURINES, COLLECTIONS OF SOAPSTONE &amp;
WELLER POTTERY, ORIENTAL RUGS, ELEC
TRAIN COLLECTION, CLOCKS, WATCHES, &amp;
MISC OLD ITEMS
SELLING THE FOLLOWING ITEMS ACQUIRED
FROM THE ESTATE OF VIOLET GUTHRIE OF
FOUNTAIN SQUARE, ZANESVILLE , OHIO MRS
GUTHRIE WAS A LONG TERM EMPLOYEE OF
WELLER POTTERY FAMILY HEIRLOOMS OF
SEVERAL GENERATIONS BEING SOLD ALSO
CONTENTS FROM VERY OLD HOMESTEADS
FROM CUYAHOGA &amp; MORGAN COUNTIES TO
BE SOLD AT THIS SAME TIME THE LARGEST
SALE WE HAVE EVER HAD
FEATURE OF SALE TO BE SOLD SUNDAY, MAY
10 WOOTEN ROTARY DESK, COMPLETE, HAS
WOOTEN TAG ON BACK
ANTIQUE GLASS &amp; CHINA TO ~E SOLD MAY 9
INCLUDES Cut glass water sel, 100 pes French
Llmoge china, Cambrodge, earn oval, molk depres
ston, ruby, Mercury, old Fenton etc Several pes
Havoland 2 lg copper Lustre Pitchers etc
!.AMPS TO BE SOLD SAT, MAY 9 INCLUDE Tof
fany lype slag, asst hanging tamps, brass and cop
per wall lamps, A cast ~ron outs1de lights, etc
J
COLLECTION OF 100 PCS WELLER POTTERY
TO BE SOLO SAT, MAY 9 INCLUDES lg Pop eyed
dog
COLLECTIONS OF HUMMEL FIGURINES,
ROYAL DALTON FIGURINES, STATUES, ETC
TO BE SOLD SAT MAY 91NCLUDES 19 Hummel
figurines, 15 Royal Dalton fogurones, 13 Royal
Dalton Mugs
COLLECTION OF OVER 40 PCS SOAPSTONE TO
BE SOLD SAT, MAY9
COLLECTION OF HAND WOVEN ORIENTAL
RUGS TO BE SOLO SAT, MAY9
MISC OLO ITEMS Wti-L BE SOLD BOTH DAYS,
SAT ,MAV9&amp;SUN MAY10
ELEC TRAIN COLLECTION WILL BE SOLD
SUN MAY 10
Over 40 pocket watches grandfather clocks, marble
mantle clocks, etc TO BE SOLD SUN , MAY 10
ANT FURNITURE TO BE SOLD SUN, MAY 10
INCLUDES extra nice walnut VIctorian etagere
w / mlrror end marble shelf w/drawer, lg , wolnut ',
hall tree w/morror, reverse painted glass at bojtom
and pink marble shelf, sleogh front dresser w/clawl ,
feet, French etagere w/chlna cabonet sides. curved
glass and morron, butternulsldeboard, carved, lg
mahogany wordrobe dressser w/broken arch top,
lg oak sideboard w/ornale grill separator, Vic ~
toroan walnut hall tree w/mlrrow, Art Deco chona
cuf)bOard. 5 dble chino cupboards w/secretary on
center, all In gOOd cond , sel6 cone bottom carved
back chairs, marble top washstands, two dressers
w/matchong washstands willie backs, walnut hall
tree w/umbrella stands and beveled ViliS and mor
rOI', walnul tfdeboard w/lg, Ioney top, beveled gloss
end china cuf)bOard center w/plnk marble, chona
cabinet w/wlnd up clock mollnted on top, hall tree
w/round beveled glass mirror, tile beck and marble
top, two ornate ook sideboards w/plnk marble tops,
exlro nice Empire sleigh bed w/matchlng dresser,
walnut dentol coblnet-has glass top w/aboul 30
drowers, two sq chine cabinets, walnut dropleaf
table, three boOkcase secretaries, VIctorian walnut
peer mirror w/marble lhelf, oak walhatand, Ml 4
hand carved walnut chairs, pump organ, Wurlltzer
elec organ, cnerry dropleof table, 5 lg ornate war
clrObeS. round walnut table w/Whlte casters
nts Is 011ly a partial list of tile extra nice antique
furniture In lhlt life Included In tills lltl ere many
Mrll to fitlll 1101111. l'lln now to lttotlll IIIII lar.. 2
dly life, May M'le to Ull 2 IUCI'-1 al-llml
to .., ev....,tlllllf sold In 2 dl!yt. lite l1lld rain or
shine lntldl aur new ftiMem IIUIIdilll 11 11M 1111
Jann Farm 111 P-tvllle, Olllo. 11111-contalnecl

owner 3 bedroom tolal
electnc on n1ce stze lot
~ Located m Rutland
V•llage Pr •ce reduce d
I0$38 700 00
LOT - Appro• '• acre
'Woth water lap Would
make excellent trailer
IASpot In harr•sonvtlle
Sells for $2 800 00
JUST LOOK AT THIS c 1979 W1ndsor home
Vmvl
vnderptnn1ng,
~ m•cro wa-ve oven and
central
stereo
are
among
the
many
features to th1s home
• All of l 93 acres wrth
, 20 Xl4
bulldong and
fruot lrees A gOOd buy
• a.s21 600 oo
RUTLAND - 4 yrs old
• total electroc 3 bedroom
' home on approx 1 acre
l lf2 baths and carport
wtth utdtty shed Asktng
$32 ()()() 00
Cheryl Lemtey,tASSOC
Phone741 ll7l
~ Velma N1cmsky, Assoc
Phone742 3092
Real Eslale- General

Housing
Headquarters

::-I-:~R~~~~~w
~16
E Second Street

Phone
1-(614)-992-3325

SYRACUSE - Modern
, 7 rooms woth 4 brms
bath nat gas furnace
n•ce kit , diShwasher
full baseJ'Ient lg frQnl
• parch st windows and
; drs
Near
schools
I $37,500
: MIDDLEPORT
Reasonable buy on thos 6
' rms near stores, but
one blk
from bus
1 street Wood ca btnets 1n
1 k1t nat gas furna ce
' and garage
Askong
: $18,500
, CHESHIRE Lovely
famoly home of 4
: bedrooms, on the nver
• front
A remarkable
place 19 love Has 2
, baths, mod k ol base

!~".:'' ~~~~e g~~vfe~rn~;:

$45,()()()
' 21 ACRES - Want to
live 10 the country and
: have free gas Waot no
, longer This os It Buold
1 your own abode Just
, SlS,OOO
• NEWLISTING - 1 Noce2
: bedrooms with ~at ' gas
1 furnace tt :.•t.~Dand full
tel lots,
1 basemer
one on 1ut: corner and
• garage 2 Jraoler spats
: $36,000
• MIDDLEPORT- Thos
; os a well proced 3
, bedroom home
Has
• bath nat gas heat, 2
: porches some remodel
• lng and lg storage on
; level lot ASking S16 500
o Give us an offer
: RUTLAND TOWNSHIP
, - Build your home 1n
1 the country on these 45
: acres L
water and
• electric Only SlS,OOO
: POMEROY - Modern
• perma stone home 2 or
' 3 bedrooms, famoly rm ,
; full basement and 2
i fireplaces New roof,
3 lots and
1 new kit
• oaragt 145 000
I

SO\:

c

PlloM '14 117-:1411

lh•9i -:l6fiiO.Humane

Three bedroom house
completely redecorated
appraosed at $19 ooo, make
offer Will take mob1le
home auto on trade 1n
Moddleporl
l 304 882 2466
anyt me
8 room house wtth bath &amp;
shower
full basement
alumtnum std.ng storm
wrndows &amp; doors btg but It
1n porth b1g lot partly fen
ced In Metal buoldong 992
7453
-~-

Real Estate- General

6]

8 ~t
!"llC(

AU Model s

Four 15 000 gallon Janks
located above ground at
Alhens
Ohoo
$3 000 00
each Phone l 304 422 2781

Available
LEO MORRIS
Rt 1 S1de H1ll Rd
Rutland 0~
2 Q tf(

4 14 000 gallon tanks
located above ground at
Alhens Oh $3 000 each l
304 422 2781

lliE
KDUNTRY

dozerB wtth
nopy and
Win
~=~:::=~~==~~=~;:;~~~~~~ 350
JohncaDeere
loader
en 949 2308

~

31

Homes for Sale

5 room house w oth
basemen!, ga/age
double lol aJ 280 7th
Moddleport Shown by
potntment Call after 5
1l43or9927ll7

46

full
on
Sl
ap
992

__S.e._ace f~n_
l __

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park Route 33 Nort h of
Pomeroy Large lois Ca ll
992 7479

62

Seoul Camp Rd
Chester Oh
*Short game pract.ce
* Puttmg &amp; Ch1pp 1ng
Green Open
•Hole tnOne
Pro Golf lessons
for all ages
• Repatr Cleanmg,
retmlsh1ng new gnps
length change
we,ght change
*Fast serv1ce
Ph (6141985 3961
4 23 I mo

__W__a_rt ted_to B
,_u
,._y. ___

WANT E D
Tractor, on
good repatr whtch e1ther
has or w111 accomodate a
heavy front end blade II.
rear mounted bush hog
Please call949 2071

"2 6191
ASSOCIATES
Jean Trussel N9 2660
Doltoe &amp; Roger Turner
"1·U92
OFFICE 992-2259

1974 Sprtng manor 12x65
Set up partly turn shed
$7 000 Call992 7479
1975 Cameron spec•al
destnger mobtle home 12 x
60 992 6624 8 30 to 4 30 af
Jer 5 call992 3523

JS

26 112 acres, mOb• le hom e
complete wtth coal rtghts,
off Un1on Ave $18 000 for
complete parcel Wtth all
roghts John Dudas Agen
cy Zanesv11te Oh 1 454
0229 or Lee Wonce l 452
4890 afler 5 00 p m Pro ce d
10 sell cneck ot out

41

OF SHRUBS

-

c;'P,..-

~LANDMARK

E Marn St

Pomeroy

Rutland

--Houses
-- --for Renl
--------

Rt. 124, Mmersv1lle
Ph 992-5587

- Mobile HOnleS
for Rent

Ro c me area 992 5858

From

7.99 &amp; up

1

1975 VIk ing traoler, 12 x 65
rwo bedroom bog l oving
room Located m Country
Mobole Horne Park 247
3942
Furntshed two bedroom
mob1le home on pnvate lot
No pets Oepostt requ•red
949 2253

,-

- - --- -----------Aparlmenl
_ _for

__ _

R~nl

CENTRAL REALTY
NEW HOME on l acre AI 554 on Gall Ia Co Sphlen
try 1 spocleus L R Arrhway Into formal DR Kif
chen eou looed 3 B R and 2 baths Carpeted
throughout. full basement Could have extra B R 's
or familY room, ready lor 3rd bath of needed
Gorage and storage area All of thos and more for
$62,000 Call for appt to see
BEAUTIFULLY LA~SC/IPED and well cared for
- Just like new Thos mob ole home os waiting for the
ume lovo and care It os used to Many excellenl
features 2 B R 's (one B R l4'x16 ), eaton 14x16
kllchtn Covered large paloo Barn type oulbuoldong,
en&lt;~ much more and yours for ontv ~2.000

Reg S]5 9S

12.95 &amp; up

$799 'Sq.

1

PARTS AND SERVICE
ALL MAKES

eR anges

eHo!W a l e rTan~ s

R~p.atr

Propert es
.... Apl Houi e Owner$
"' MODI II! HOme Park I
..- ~ental

CLOS! TO TOWN on Rl loll, lhos mObole home on
1'1.1 acres offers Its own POnd Home In loke new con
dlllan, carpeted and totollv furnoshed For only

$12.5110
IS~•

ACRES and 1 B R home, 1 mile above
Reedl\'1111 Beeutofut view of river Extra pa.slble
llilllding ~lfes Asking S27,000

Furnished lhree room
apartment Quiet neogh
borhOOd No pets Deposit
requored Phone 949 2253

1981 YELLOWSlONES IN STOCK
ENJOY ONE NIGHT OF FREE
CAMPING ON US
Come to our RV Accessory Store and
Save 10% on all our supplies. We also
have a good selection of used roll up and
stake frame awntngs at drast1cally
reduced prices, on a Cash-n-Carry Basis
Only.

CALL US 1'0 IUY 011 SELL
NltiCY JIIIMft-Anoclate

I'H.MI-2071

Ylrgtnll Hay!III-Anocl•t•

PH. 911-4197

'
'I

)

*

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rl 3 Box S4
Racme, Oh
Ph 6148432591
6 15 tfc

KAUFF'S
PLUMBING
AND
HEATING

ser aees
81

-

---;-;-:, - - - -

Home
Improvements

12 Park St
Middleport, Oh
Ph 992-6263
Any tome

Genes Carpet Clean1ng
deep stream extract1on
Free
es t1mated
reasonabl e rate s
scot
ci1Quard '1'12 6309 or 742

56 I mo

2211

81

French Coty Paontong
Residential, commerc•at,
tntenor
exter.or
Spec1altztng '" lntenor
paontong, paper hangong 11.
textured ceolongs
Free
eslomates 367 7784 or 367
7160

-

Tnplt~

A Aflll1ated
.t 6 I no

ROGER HYSELL'S
GARAGE
- Auto and Truck
Repa1r
- Transm1sston
Repa1r
Hrs Mon -Frt.
9am530pm

992 5682
10 7 tic

S1zes from 4x6 to 12)1.40

Free Est1mate
James Keesee
Ph 992-2772

AT

ON ALL

VICE

Utility Buildtngs

•Insulation
•Storm Doors
•Storm WindOWS
•Replacement
Wmdows

Spring Sale
SAVE 15%

110 5th St Racme Oh
PH 949 2777
* Complcfe Auto and
Truck Repa•r
*Rebuilt Automat1c
Transmtss•ons
on
most Amencan Model
Cars
* S115 00 Parts &amp; Labor
Plus Flu1d
* 24 Hour Wrecker Ser

S1zes
From 30)1]0
SMALL

56 1 mo

Furnoshed 2 bedroom up
staors apartment Adults
only, no pets Moddlepart
992 3874

C&amp;A AUTO REPAIR

Farm Buildmgs

vmyl &amp;
Alummum S1dmg

742-2211

West of Coolville, OH.

•92 612 1 or 9927314
Pomeroy Oh

ALL STEEL

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

RUTLAND FURNITURE

U S. R t. 50

V. C. YOUNG II

.4 15 1 mo

ng Slnte-l9SJ

Cash n Carry

BURDETTE CAMPER SALES

- Addons and
remodelrng
- Roofmg and gutter
work
- Concrete work
- Piumbmg and
elec tncal work
(Free Est1mates)

Spect.111htes For
.... cam lal.lndrt l!'5

Dnve A L1ttle - Save A Lot

Mam St

PH. 992-7201

Yd.

bedroom furnoshed
apartment 992 5434 or 1
304 882 2566

Two bedroom apartment,
unfurn•stled
stove
provoded
Located
In
Pomeroy C•rpered 992 ,
61178

• Backhoe
1 Excavat1ng
1 Sept1c Systems
• Water Sewer &amp; Gas
L nes
• Dump Truck
L •censed &amp; Bonded

APPLIANCE SERVICE

Buy Now &amp; Save $2-$6 Per Yard
25 rolls carpet m stock to p,ck from.
Regular backed, carpet mstalled free
w1th pad. Good selechon Roll Ends Rem nants $2.50 up. Grass carpet $4.99 yd.
Green and Brown.

_

2 bedroom furnished up
Slaors apt Sl50 monlh plus
utolltoes S50 depaslt No
pets 94'1 2875

J&amp;F
ENTERPRISES

keep Thti Ad lor Fulure Reference

l bedroom mobile home
furniShed washer dryer
a c, 2 children accepted
No pets Deposot 992 7479

2 B tt c

4 9 1 mo pd

SHAG

From

Installed

2 bedroom Mobole Home.
funlshed adults preferred
Depasol 992 2749

Call742 3195
or 992 7680

Effectove4 6 81
MON thru SAT
9 to 5
Closed Thursday

2 Rolls
Rubber Back

----- - --

------- -2 bedroom Mobole Home

NEW STORE HRS.

• 0 SPOSOJIS
• Onhwuhers

"YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

MILLER ELECTRIC
SERVICE
Let George M1ller check
your present el ect n ca l
system
Re stdCOtl ill
&amp;Comm erctal

eWaihen
• Or~er i

Roa c h es
B1rds
Rodents Sp ders Fleas
Ants and oth er small n
se ct control
FREE ESTIMATES
1 or S year termtte
guarantee
Located •n Galllpolts
Ph 614 446 2801
J 27 I mo

3 11 ttc

322 N. 2nd Ave
Middleport, Oh10

SPRING CARPET SALE

TERMITE and
PEST CONTROL

Beauttful Custom
Bu1tt Garages
Call for free stdtng
es t•mates 949 2801 or
949 2860
No Sunday Calls

BAILEY'S SHOES

Shop

Hours
Mon Tues 9 6
Weds Fn 97
Sat 9 5
Closed Thurs
3 29 3 mo

BISSEU
SIDING CO.

Call Ken Young

Fum~ure Ca~

Athens

For all of your wtr
mgneeds

Parts &amp; Accessones

POMEROY

ATHENS SPORT
CYCLES
Stimson Ave

Vmyl &amp; Alum mum
Sl 01 NG

Free Est•mates
Reasonable Pnces
Call Howard
949 2862
949 2160
2 4 l fc

KINGSBURY

YOUR lAWN

CHESHIRE 4l2tfc

4 26 l mo

A 11 types of roof work,
new or repatr gutters
and downspouts gutter
cleantng and patntmg
All work guaranteed

2.49 Each

PH. 367-7671
or 367-7560

CONSTRUCTION

H. L WHITESEL
ROOFING

Just 1

FOR LANDSCAPING

4 rooms and bath stove
and retngerator turntshed
Newly deco rated 992 3090
42

Just 79' Each
SIDE MOUNT
WINDOW
OPERATORS

Any s1ze butlt to your
spectftcat•ons
Models
1n Metgs Gallta and
Mason Count1es
FREE ESTIMATES
All Butldmgs
Guaranteed

New Homes - ex
tensove remodelmg
• Electrrcal work
• Rootmg work
12 Years
Expenence
Greg Roush
Ph 992 7583

Water Sewer Etectnc
Gas Lme Ottches
Water Ltne Hook ups
Sept tc Tanks
County Certtfted
Roush Lane
Cheshtre, Oh
Ph 367 7560
l 1 l lfc

'

AWIDE SELECTION

Lot!_~~c~ea~ _ _

Buoldong lots tor sale l
acre and up 51 RJ 248
Chester Ohoo 992 330 1 or
992 2689

METAL WINDOW
CRANKS
For Mob1le Homes

ROUSH

TRENCHING
SERVICE

SAUl
While They Last

POMEROY
LANDMARK

4 17 tt c

REESE~

- ----

Garages - Bu1fdtngs
- Barns-E qutpment
Sheds
POLE BUILDINGS
1Sx20 uplo40xt00'
PORTABLE STEEL
~TOR
AGE
BUILDINGS
(4x16
8x8
8ll:10,
tO xlO' lt'xl2 &amp; up)

Trash P1ckup In
The V1llage of
Middleport, Oh
Ph 992 5016
or 992 7505

*

-~

CLOSE IN - l 8 acres
level land w1th a
beaut1ful
newer
3
bedroom 24x60 double
W1de wotn 2 baths, equop
ped k1tchen and ullloly
Famtly room wtth wood
burner
Large deck
area $37,000 00
VA APPROVED - This
1'1~ story bn ck tn M1d
dleport has been ap
proved for a v A loan 3
bedrooms butlt tn k.tt
chen , dtntng room and
n1ce large l1v1ng room
V A Loan 14'12% lnt 30
yrs,
5274 52 month
Sellong Proce $27 SOil 00
I FLOOR PLA~ - Thos
smaller home 1s located
on a gOOd Slreel on Mid
dleport 2 bedrooms
dming room basement,
close to shopprng Want
$16,700 00
NEW LISTING- Nlce2
c ar ga rage and 2
bedroom home, n1cety
remodeled
w/ carpet
ong etc Storage buold
ong and level lot Only
$15,500 00
NEW LISTING - New
furnoture goes wllh thos
house• In Moddleporl
3 4 bedroom house tn ex
cellent condtt•on New
apploances on kotchen
New W1rtng, new fur
nace
N1ce
tot
$42 600 00
NEW LISTING
Would mak e a gOOd ren
tal tnvestment In town
2 bedroom house Needs
some repa ir MAKE AN
OFFER
EASTERN DISTRICT
R1verv1ew Grade
School Large level 2
acre lot woth
10
rooms-.c bedrooms, l lf:r
balh house woth full
basement Garage and
carpart - above ground
swommlng pool All for
$41 SOil 00
JUST WHAT YOU RE
LOOKING FORI
Noce 2 3 bedroom. l'tt
bath, nome on a gOOd
street on Middleport
Large level lot WB F P
carpeting
S24,900 00
RIVERVIEW
IN
POMEROY Conve
n•ent
locat io n,
3
bedrooms
full base
ment, Iaroe lot, dlnong
room and Uvtno room
Won I Last
Long
$35,000 00
REALTOR
Henry E Cleland, Jr

J&amp;C
SANITATION
SERVICE

KWB

TRAILER spaces for rent
~~uthern
Vall ey Mobtle
2 story home 3 bedrooms 1 ~lm e Park Chesh1re Oh
bath full basement good "" 3954
1ocat1 on Pomeroy Call ilf
Transgartatlon
rer 6 992 7284
Trailer lot tor rent Large
yard o:~ of a mtle off 143 up
Kongsbury 742 3122
32
Mobile Homes
72
Truch for Sale
for Sale
1976 Datsun Topper real
1973 Crown Haven 14 x 65
good
cond
992 5348
Three bed 1ooms new ca r
anytune
pet 1971 Cameron 14 x 64
S3
Anloqu,_.e,~
s_ __
rwo bedrooms new carpet
1971 Ford dump truck F600
1972 Champoon 12 x 60 two ATTENTION
liM
bedrooms, new carpet 1976 PORT ANT TO YOU I Will $3700 00 985 4395
Cameron 12 x 60 two pay cash or cert.fted check
Vans&amp;4W D
bedrooms all electnc 1971 for antiQUes and col lec 73
Sky lone l2sx 61 two t1bles or enttr e estates
bedrooms bath &amp; 1J , new Notht ng too large Also 1978 Ford Bran co 31 000
m11es Custom zed Call af
carpel
1970
PMC
guns pocket watches and
12 x 60 two bedrooms new com coltec t•ons CaH 614 Jer 6 p m $4 500 949 2324
ca rpet B x S Sales Inc
7673167 or 557 3411
2nd x V•and Street Potnt
_. --~M
=
ol,orcycl.=:
es,___
Pleasant WV Phone 675
54
Mtsc
Merchamse
1979 Yam~ha XS1100 Fully
1424
dressed l 800 actual moles
Two month spnng spec1al Exc
cond
992 5348
4 acres w•th 2 bedroom tor upholstenng furn1ture anyttm e
R•chard
Mowery
Sr
tratler 70x14 2 ca r garage
3 mtles from Ract ne on Co Owner 675 4154
Rd 28 Before 12 noon or af
78
Camp1ng
Jer 5 p m 9,f/2618
1 new Sears ttre GR 78 15
_ --~qUopf11~_
1 ___
$35 DA Sander S30 l 10
1968 Mountameer 9 foot
New Skyline sect1onal speed boke &amp; parts $25 1 p•ckup truck camper self
40
gallon
aor
tank
$100
hom e 24x56 3 bedroom
contamed full y equtpped
ca thedral cet llng n grea t Harold Dewhurst 742 3063
excellent
cond•t1 on
room, 2 full batns garden
51000 00 992 3301 or 992
tub &amp; many extras Lot Cleland Gre enhouse now 2689
model sale at 1ust $28 500
open
Vegetable plants
See at K1 ngsbury Hom e Tomato plants
Beddtng 1969 Truck camper $700
Sales 1100 E Maon St
plants
Pots &amp; hangtng 742 2025
Pomeroy
New sum mer ba skets
Geraldtne
hours
M an Thurs
10 Cleland, Rac•ne
am 8 p m Fn 10 am S
S4
M1sc Merchantse
p m Sat 10 a m 3 p m
Sun l p m 5 p m

twa

,.

REESE BUILDINGS

· -~ ----- -t _f'_a..o:_~_op_men_

Wti:- L-

A"f li'ASl ~n~
ST ILL IN ON(

44

D.

Socoety

1'--..,;._;:.__ _ _ _ _...J

--

_,.....__

Brock nome on wooded
acre
Tnree bedrooms,
f1replace untque family
room
ftntshed double
garage
deck
Upper
soxloes 992 5420

Quality Buolt
Econom1cally Pr1ced

\

0~

__

muced bred pupp1es
furn1sh shot and wor

(?_~~~
~,I~:
: J,.'jJ;)

Three or four bedroom
house
carpet
ftreplace
sundeck two car garage, 2
and one naif acres Lovely
sellong on SR 7 Nortn 992
7741

Housi11q
He,1d uarters

camper lpect IVIIflltle. l'tiiiiY ......tnt. Nollllnfl
shown IMiert dly Ill tale. Ter1111 - Cash or check
wtposltlveiD IACH dly ot tale.
Not rHIIOftllllle fer ICCidenll.
1111 Jannln ciYrtt If tale.
Auct._t - 1111 J1-, RIIIIIY Newsom I D
Smflll

Be thos

: ~ ttract•ve homes f.rst

1'

2 DAY SALE

~
~

Homes for Sale

~--

I '

~

\

~165

13

FOUND Red TICk female
hound To c1a1m call 992
7680

13 20 27

(4 ) 22 29 151 6,
61c

Wr te your own ad and oroer by mad w• th tt11s
coupon Cance l your ad by phone 11. en you get
results Money not refu ndable

Prmt one word .n each
space below Each 10
1t1al or group of li gures
counts as a word Count
name and address or
phone number 1f used
You 11 get beTter results
•f you oescnbe lullv
g ve pr• ce The .senflnel
reserv es the r ght to
Cl ass •fY edtt or re 1ect
any ad Your ad Wi ll be
put 1n th e proper
clas•f•cat on 1f you 11
check th e proper box
below

Lost and Found
----------

Business Services

Got some free tome&gt; Start
~our own busoness Slart
ae1110g Avon Be vour own
~oss Set your own hours
the harder you work, the
more you II earn
For
del ails, call 742 2354 or 742

Room, board, and laundry
tor elderly
Reasonable
992 6022

Small investment, large returns, Sentinel Want Ads
Pubhc Nottce

Sentt

"
wednesday, May6,1981

Pomeroy-M•ddleport, Ohio

--·- - ---

Home
Improvements

Back on busoness Ed Tem
pleton Rt 4 Baoley Run
Road, Pomeroy Painting
contract1ng roof work gut
ter downspouttng
etc
Drop a card to Box 18,
Pomeroy, Ohio

,... o~mb1ng
Does your houoe need a 81
"Healing
face l1ff? Or 1us1 a hllle
makeup&gt; Call me &amp; 1 11 WA1 ER
WELLS
have It lookong young agaIn Domesttc and commerc 1al
on no I• me Woll do all types pump sales and servoce
of onteroor work, panelong
Tom
Lewis
Oro ll1ng
cellongs floorong elc , plus Seasonal discount on pum
extenor work, piuntmg, ps 1 304 895 3802 or 1 304
shongllng roofs work olng 895 3641
Shlnglonf any Sire and
shape 30 years experience
In corpelry
References 1"3'------=
E.::X.:;&lt;I::_Y:..:I:..:I:.:In'-'g'---provlded upan rec,uest 992
DOZER work Small lobs a
6293
specoalty 1•2 2753

\

J&amp;R
TRASH SERVICE
Box 65 Portland , OH
Ph 843 4911
ss oo Monthly
Servtng the followtng
townsh•ps
Lebanon
Sutton Letart Olive,
Orange Salisbury Bed
tord, Chester Salem,
Setp•o
Rutland and
Ha rnson

-----------

81_ -~~!_C~ ~I ~!I___ _

COMPLETE sever on
stal!at10n &amp; backhoe ser
v •ce for Ractne Syracuse
sewer d•stnct Dozer work
of needed 949 2293
84

- - - Electro cal - &amp; R efrogeratoon

---------

SEWING
MACfiiNE
Repatrs
serv1ce
all
makesl 992 2284
The
F abroc Shop
Pomeroy
Authorized S1nger Sales
and ServiCe We sharpen
Sc issors
•
ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR Sweepers,
toasters trons all smllll ~
appliances Lawn mower
Next to Slate Highway ,
Garage on Route 7 985
3825
,..,

____ __ _

~~eneral H•uflhlL_

Well s Trash Houlmg SS 00
per month
Clove end
Orange Townshops and
surroundong areas
985
3518

'

�2- The Dai

Meigs County happenings
Insulator failure causes outage
Approximately 2,500 Meigs
County homes were without
power Tuesday night and early
Wednesday morning due to an in·
sulator failure on Union Ave. , according to Ralph Neigler,
foreman for the Ohio Power Company.

Plan variety show
A variety show, "That's
People" will be staged at
Southern High School in Racine ,
Saturday, May 9, at 8 p.m. under
the direction of Mrs. Lee Lee.
Featured will be a variety of
music, dancing and comedy
skits. The event is being presented by the senior high choir.
Shirley Carpenter is in charge of
the choreography.
Admission is $2 for adults and
$1 for students.

Wet•kt-nd

Neigler reported that some
residents were without power up
to three to three and a half hours
while other.s were without power
approximately five hours.
Power was off in Pomeroy,
Minersville, Syracuse and
Racine.

Truck found burned
Meigs County sherifr s deputies
report the theft and burning of a
1973 truck owned by Terry L.
Brewer, Portland.
Brewer reported the truck
stolen from a local bar on May 4,
at9:06 p.m.
·
The truck had been stripped of
its tires, wheels and other accessories prior to the burning.
The truck was discovered burning on county road 32 by a
passing motorist. The incident is
under investigation.

nweti ng

There will be a weekend
meeting at Red Brush Church of
Christ, Bashan Road, Saturday at
7:30 p.m. and Sunday at 10 a.m.
and 6 p.m. Denver Hill will be the
guest speaker. The public is in·
v1ted to attend.

W illmt'l'l Monday
The Meigs County Refunders
will meet Monday, May 4, at6 :30
p.m. at the Diamond Savings and
Loan, Pomeroy .

\lillmet•t Thursday
The Bend 0 ' the River Artists
will meet at 7 p.m. Thursday in
the .basement of the Crafty
Ladies Handicraft Shop 111
Pomeroy.

Vt·tt·rans 1\'ll'murial
A1lnitted- Lisa Pierce, Shade;
Opal White, Reedsville: Vebna
Winebrenner. Pomeroy: Roger
Adkins, Sy racuse: O'Dell Blake,
Middleport.
Discharged-Oscar Imboden ,
Curtis Hollida y.

To t•nd marriages
Two suits for divorce were filed
in Meigs County Common Pleas
Court.
Filing for divorce were
Deborah D. Millhone, Reedsville,
against David E. Millhone, Tuppers Plains; Connie Ann Abbott,
Syracuse, against Jerry W. Atr
bolt, Pomeroy.

Enwr~ency

calls

Two emergency calls were answered Tuesday by local units,
the Meigs Emergency Medical
Service reports. At 4: 11 p.m., the
Rutland Unit took Berlin Mullins
from his Rutland home to
Veterans Memorial HospitaL At
5:56 p.m., the Racine Unit took
Mary Kerns to Holzer Medical
Center.

~1wrialmeetin~
A special meeting of the Meigs
Local School District Board of
Education will be held at 9 a.m.
Thursday in the office of the
superintendent.

--8chool problem ·
(Continued from page I 1
of the class and the lack of material~
and books for the class at a recent
board of education meeting.
One parent conunented that her
son had gotten a B in reading for the
past six weeks. "But he can't read",
sheadded.
'
Rev. Knittel charged that ad·
ministrators should have been on top
of the situation all of the school year,
and that the class should have been
set up with materials and books
before it was ever started with
federal grant money.
Meantime, Tuesday afternoon
Supt. David L. Gleason said that he
had requested the teacher of the
class to report to his office for the
next two days rather than to her
classroom at the Pomeroy Elementary School and . that a substitute
teacher would be used in her place
for at least the next two days.
Parents attending last night's
meeting said there were only three
of the eight children in the
classroom Tuesday afternoon and
they agreed to hold their children
out of school for the next two days.
They further agreed to check with
Ohio University to see if the university will do an evaluation on the
eight students to determine at what
level they are working.
The parents indicated they feel

their children have lost a year's
progress in education, but they did
indicate they do ~ot want their
children mainstreamed into regular
classrooms at this late point in the
year because of the peer comments
·
that could take place.
Attorney Charles Knight
suggested they outline their requests
and present them to the board of
education at Thursday morning's
special session.
The parents agreed to atiend and
they will ask for individual tutoring
in a home situation for one hour a
day, five days a week during the
swnmer months; supplies including
books, materials, parental aids and
transporiation, and for .a qualified
teacher to be appointed to serve in
the classroom for the remainder of
the year.
Parents indicated they believe the
learning disability program
generally is a good one but that the
one in which their children ' have
been involved has been entirely un·
satisfactory.
Supt. Gleason indicated this morning that the parents will be heard at
tomorrow mornning's special
meeting and that their meeting with
the board will probably he an
executive session since it will in·
valved personnel, the teacher who is
under heavy criticism by the parents of students in the class.

.

Additional
funding
sou
· ght
.

officer, and $225 and three days in
jail, driving while intoxicated; Dennis Ault, Pomeroy, $15 and costs,
speeding; Rowland E. Smith, Mid·
dleport, $225 and costs and three
days in jail, driving while in·
toxicated; Fred Stewart, Middleport, $50 and costs, disorderly
manner.

Area Deaths

Three defendants forfeited bonds
and four others were fined in the
court of Middleport Mayor Fred HofAnna Neutzling
fman Tuesday night.
Forfeiting were Terry Albright, ' Mrs. Anna Weiseman Neutzling,
Pomeroy, $24, speeding; Daniel 39, formerly cf Pomeroy, died
Taylor, Middleport, $37, speeding; Tuesday at Detroit, Mich. Born and
Robert Chapman, Middleport, $100 reared in Meigs County, Mrs. Neut·
intoxication and $100 possession of
marijuana.
Fined were Clifford Murray, Jr.,
Pomeroy, $100 and costs, fleeing an

zling is survived by five children and
several grandchildren. Funeral ser·
vices will be held Friday morning in
Detroit.

.

of Natlooal HOllpltal Week.

Tours wlll be• given
vlsUon as well as a free
blood pretJSiire elhile.
Besides employes·, the
( trH· I ], ''' l' r'
h•r .\ J, rhvr'· l lr1 . "'rr rr,Lt\, M:ry Ill
•I , ,
'I

,_ I ', 1 "'

I

1\

lifo tl "~"'

""'',,.,,1,,,
llh Ill

I 1 1•. • •I '"

1 .r·. I

,,,

.\.

" ' 11,.,,

.r... .. "" ~ ..,u
"'· •.. I tl,.,r,r'' ...

, ''·

•Hydrangeas

•Hanging

•Combination

Pots

Flowers

Mums

•Planters
•Ataleas

•Pe~manent.

•Corsages
•Cut

•Potted

Planters

We believe our Pay-by-Phone/NOW accoun t IS
second to none And since January 1, literally
thou sands of Oh1 oans have agreed by s1gning up
wi th Di amond
The rea son ts qu1te simple The re·s more to Payby-Phone/NOW than JUSt interes t-bea ring checki ng .
It 's Pay-by-Phone bill paying . Plus free VISA (with
credit approval) Plus 365/360 Continuous Compounding for th e highest yie ld allowable . Even
Direct Depos1t IS availabl e. And our 41 offices make
it ea sy to conduct busine ss in 21 ci t1es from Lake
Erie to the Oh10 River
Besl of all. the re IS no minimum balan ce required
No monthly serv1ce cha rge No " per-item" charges
Why wou ld anyone of fer such a unique deal?
Ea sy D1amond Savings is one place that real1zes
how 1mportan1 you are. In fact. we'd like 10 handle
all your sa v1ngs. credit and bill-paying bu siness.
Th ai s why we 're working hard to make our total
serv1ce package even better for you
So wheth er you ·re rea dy to open a NOW account
or review what you already have. remember what
only D1amond Savings has to offe r. Visit our nearest
of fi ce or give us a ca ll. We·re ready to put Pay-byPhone/NOW to work lor yo u

Any
Other

·

We Aue~t All M• 1or Credit C•rdJ•nd
We Wire Flower$ E'ler~whtrt

You'll find grand selections of perfect gifts
for your Mom - Wearing Apparel, Cookware, Furniture,
Television Sets and Radios, To Mention a few, plus
Hallmark Mother's Day Cards and Gift Wrap - Pay
Us A Visit.
MOTHER'S DAY IS MAY lOTHI I

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

f~~~~~~~~~~~~~ii~~~iiiiiiiiii~

PACKAGE BOLOGNA •••••••• ~~!-..'1.89
•
Eckrich

PICKLE &amp;PIMENTO LOAF••~~·.$1.98

No minimum balance

HAM SALAD................... ~.b;.$1.39

No servi ce charges

1-Lb. Parkav
Quarters

Pay-by-Phone

CARROTS .. ....--·-. ~~!·.. 29'

!·Lb. Bog White

GRAPEFRUIT ... ; ---~~ 11.29
20 lb. Maine Eating

-

••

POTATOES .......... ~~.1 3.59
l Lb. New Yellow

ONIONS ............. ~~-g•• 99'

Vot.30,No.t•
Copyrighted till

•

at y .......,enttne

e

IN Butternut
Pomeroy, Oh.

For Mother's Day Clfts.

CHEESE ••~~·~2.29

sbowp at rtght.

"'fheW•.,. Ameriu Sends ~on"
Ph . 9U·10lt
Ph . 9tf-SJ21 .

Malee Elberlelds Your Shopping Center

Clearfield
American Sharp

hospital's employes ilr.e ·

POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP

Homemade

No "per,-item "
charges

open bouse. Refresluilenta
will be se"ed at the public
event. Just a part of the

Ar-

MAl~ HE:R D.4Y SPE:CIAL

MARGARINE •••

Auxiliary and the
ca.ndystrlpers will be par·
tfclpatlng in the public

rangenien.ts

ELBERFELD$

89~

L&amp;df~

Flowers

•S1Ik

Eckrich l·Lb.

Compare Diamond Savings
Pay-by-Phone/NOW to any
other NOW account.

WELCOME
Em·
ployes of Veterans
Memorial Hospital wJil be
011 baDd to~ vtslton to
an open bouse to be held
from 2 to 4 p.m. Sun~y IB

obse"ance of, the opening

Manning Webster, chainnan of
the Mental Retardation board, met
With the board of county com·
missioners Tuesday to discuss the
construction of the mentally retar·
ded training center and workshop.
It was decided to request ad·
ditional funds from the state controlling board in order to award the
low bids.
FmHa District Director, Art Jones
and Archie Stegall met with the
board to discuss funding for the access road between Union Ave., and ·
Mulberry Heights.
Jones stated that the application
package was ready to be sent to the
-state FmHA office and if approved
the project could possibly go to bid
by June L
Attending were Henry Wells,
president, Richard Jones, and David
Koblentz, commissioners, Mary
Hobstetter, . clerk, and Martha
Chambers.
'l~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiilii
I

Five people forfeit bonds
Five defendants forfeited bonds in
the court of Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews Tuesday night. Four
were on speeding charges and include Roger Carson, Middleport,
$26 ; Lonnie Black, Pomeroy, $26;
Richard Herman, Middleport, $35,
and Bruce Hysell, Pomeroy, $25.
George Wright, Pomeroy, forfeited
a$25 bond posted on a charge of per·
1nitting a dog to run loose.

~ J:,k,· I kr H,·art Blussoni.

HOuse :ready to pass
Reagan's proposals
WASHINGTON (AP) - President
Reagan's budget-slashing blueprint
arrived at the point of passage in the
House today, with Speaker Thomas
P. O'Neill Jr. conceding that " only
the Lord himself could save this
one" for opposition Democrats.
The stage for today's showdown
was set Wednesday wlu!n the House
swept aside two attempts to boost
spending on social programs.
That left a choice of the
Democratic leadership's plan or a
.modified Reagan program thar
would outline deep cuts in social
programs, accelerated defense
spending and a three-year, 30 per·
cent lax reduction.
By nighUall, the Democrats' alter·
native was likely to be gone, too, putting Reagan within reach of getting
the first phase of his economic
program through &lt;;ongress.
The Senate wllli beginning debate
tdi!DY on' a spehding phin drafted by
lis own Budget Conunittee and endonied by Reagan, and that version

was expected to have little trouble
winning approval in a chamber
ruled by Republicans.
In the House, where most counts
showed defecting Democrats giving
the Reagan plan at least a 13-vote
cushion, O'Neill was left to question
not what the result would be, but the
wisdom of it.
··The Republicans may be unlucky
enough to win this one," the
Massachusetta Democrat said.
He charged thai Reagan's
economic program could send in·
flatiun "through the roof" and push
int~resl rates "into the high 20.."
The Reagan-backed plan, crafted
by Reps. Delbert 1.. Latta, R-Ohio,
and Phil Granun, [).Texas, would
spend $6811.8 billion and leave a
deficit of $31 billion next year while,
on paper at least, meeting the
president's goal of a balanced
budgft ih 1984.
•
Reagan used his first public a~
pearance since the March 30 at·
tempt on his life to tell a joint session

of Congress last week that he embraced the Latta-Granun measure,
slightly more austere than even his
own original package. " It moves us
toward economic vitality," Reagan
aid.
But O'Neill pleaded with
Democratic colleagues at a party
caucus earlier in the week to scuttle
the Reagan-backed plan.
"As I analyze the president's
budget, reason and concern for
people's needs have been suspen·
ded," O'Neill said. ··They are
dramatically changing the structure
of this government. They are culling
off the services for health, education
and senior citizens.''
The plan · pushed by the
Democratic leadership called for
spending $714.5 billion and leaving a
$25.6 billion deficit in 1982. It gives
Reagan what he wants on defense
spending, but calls for several
billion doilars more !fan the ad·
ministration wants for social
progra1ns. It also scraps the

president's three-year lax-cut plan
in favo r of a une-year, $33 billion
reduction.
Doubts about the outcome uf
today's vote diminished steadily all
week as Reagan personally courted
Democrats and Republicans alike in
the Oval Office.
"The strongest part of the
president's program has been the
president," said House Democratic
Whip Thomas S. Foley of
Washington.
The House virtually ignored the
argwnents of liberal members Wednesday.
By a ~9 1nargin, the House
killed a proposal by the IS.member
Congressional Black Caucus to
restore billions of dollars to a
variety of social programs such as
food stamps, public service jobs and
student assistance. The plan also
would h~ve rejected the ad·
ministration's aerosa-the-board tax
cut plan in favor of providing more
1Continued on page 8)

21 die. when air force. jet explodes
WALKERSVILLE, Md. !APJ Alr Force crews were searching a
remote barley field today for the last
of 21 jJeople wbo died when a missiletracking jet on a trainlng flight blew
up and crashed , scattering
docwnents and debris.
The are\.. was cordoned off and
state polict!"were scooping up the
papers amid conflicting accounts
about whether they were classified.
All those aboard the $50 million ad·
vanced range lnstrwnentation aircraft were killed in the Wednesday
morning crash, which occurred
about a mile from this western
Maryland conununity of 8,0110, said
Air Force Maj. WlUiam Campbella.
Twenty bodies, many dismem·
bered, were found before the search
was called off for the night, officials
said.

The cause of the crash was not
determined inunediately.
The Pentagon said the aircraft
was based at Wright-Patterson Air
Force Base in Dayton, Ohio, where it
was assigned to the 4950 Test Wing.
The flight , was to have been a
··routine training night" that ended
back in Ohio, said Air For.ce Lt.
Thomas Larock.
The EC-135 four-engine jet, the
military version of the Boeing 707, is
used to track missiles ~nd un•nanned satellite flights.
A Pentagon source said the plane
was carrying classified docwnents
when it went down, but Wright·
Patterson spokesman Maj. Edward
Robertson denied that report.
Papers from the plane were
strewn over the area, and state

police worked to retrieve the
docwnenli, which were sodden from
a light roin which fell throughout the
day .
Local radio stations were asked to
broadca~l state police requests that
resident. who found docwnents tum
them in, said Jane English of WZ'/QFM in Frederick.
Newspaper photographers at the
crash site reported having their film
confiscated by authorities. But the
!ibn later was returned.
Area residents who saw the accident said the plane was a mass of
flame before it struck the ground.
.. It Jnoked like a ball of fire," said
Edward Watson, vice president of
operatinns for the Maryland
Midiand Railroad , which.halted service on its line adjacent to the crash

site because a piece of wreckage fell
on the rail.
Nancy McCullough said she
.. heard this explosion that sounded
like a long, loud, thunder clap. "
"Within minutes, the entire
devel opment was covered with a
yellow substance that seemed like
fiberglass insulation," she said.
Aspokesman at Andrews Air Force Base said that all witness reports
indicated that the plane was exploding as it came down .
Campbell said an Air Force investigation of the accident could
take several months to complete.
The crash area in central
Frederick County was sea'ted off by
state police, and 1nilitary officials
from nearby Fort Detrick and An·
drews Air Force Base were on the
scene.

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Guild strikes New York Times
NEW YORK - The Newspaper Guild struck The New York Times
today after feverish negotiations through the night failed to produce a
contract between the Newspaper Guild, The New York Times and the
Daily News.
The Guild had delayed the strike 30 minutes past a 6 a.m. EDT
deadline. Because of a news blackout it could not be learned what
prompted the reprieve , but a source said the Guild eventually rejected
the latest proposal by publishers. Announcement of the strike was
made by federal mediator Robert Kyler .
The guild represents 1,900 reporters, editors, clerks and other em·
ployees at the Times. The paper says it will try to publish.

Unemployment climbs in Ohio
COLUMBUS, Ohio - Unemployment climbed in Ohio last week
from the previous week, but there were fewer newly unemployed
claimants.
The Ohio Bureau of Employment Services said 164,500 Ohioans
made claims fur unemployment for more than one week during the
period ,ending May 2. That compares to 160,192 such claimants the
previous week.
The bureau reported that 21 ,280 claimants were newl y unemployed
last week, down from23 ,368 the previous week.

McNair given life sentences
CINCINNATI - Afired boiler operator convicted of shooting four of
his fonner bosses, two of them fatally, has been sentenced to two con·
secutive life terms in the Ohio Penitentiary.
Lawrence McNair, 41, was convicted Wednesday on two counts of
aggravated murder in the deaths last February of Diamond In·
ternational Corp. plant 1nanager John Prewitt, 49, and powerhouse
foreman Raymond Leacli, 49.
Defense attorney Leslie Gaines Jr. said McNair had shot his former
bosses but asked the Ha1nilton County Conunon Pleas jury to find his
client guilty of a lesser charge since he was under emotional stress .

Earmark revenue for roads
COLUMBUS, Ohio - Administrators of the Ohio Department uf
Transportation told a Senate committee Wednesday they woul d use
most of the revenue produced by a proposed gasoline tax increase fur
road and bridge maintenance.
c. Clark Street, the agency 's assistant direi:tor, said the tax as nuw
proposed would produce Sl42 million more than the present 7-cen ts·
per-gallon state motor vehicle fuel tax.
.
.. .
The department would use $73.6 million for highway rehabilitatiOn
and $18 million for bridge repair and replacement. As passed by the
House, the department's budget incl udes no funds fOr either type of
capital improvemenls.

Teamster official dies
WASHINGTON - The lleath of Frank E. Fitzsinunons leaves a
Teamsters official accused of mob connections as the leading contender to head the nation's largest union, which has been tainted for a
quarter-century by allegations of corruption . .
.
Although maintaining publicly thai they did not want to discuss a
successor for FitzsiiTUnons, who died of lung cancer Wednesday 111 a
Southern California clinic, union sources said the top candidate appeared to be Roy L. Williams, head of the Central Conference of Tealnsters.
•

CLEVELAND - The nwnber selected Wednesday night ih the Ohio
Lottery's daily game "The Nwnber" is 403.
'
The lottery reported earnings of $624,783 from the wagering on the
drawing, Lottery officials said sales prior to the drawing totaled
$925,1189.50, and 'holders of winning tickets are entitled to share

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SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador - An American priest, missing in El
Salvador for 10 days and feared dead, has turned up safe at the U.S.
Embassy here and issued a statement criticizing U.S. support for the
embattled junta.
.
Embassy spokes1nan Howard Lane said the Rev. Roy Bourgeois, 42,
entered the embassy alone Wednesday afternoon and appeared in
good health. He was to fly to the United States today, the spokesman
said.
Bourgeois, a MaryknoU priest based in Chicago, vanished April 26
after he left the Camino Real hotel here, reportedly to buy med1cme.

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1 Section, 12 Pages
IS Cents
A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, May 7,1981

~ tlf ... lllle pellft Wlft II! I IF' . . . papen Ill
LUUifled •hln:. Tht ..... t.ldepll1ed .......
··ort'f IIIH 11 Dltyklll.

.....,....._.Air .

Tile- -

·-:--

--

·--- ·-- "1' - - -

Sunny today with ahigh in the low to mid 60s. Oel\r and cold agaill
tonight. Low around 4{]. Mostly sunny Friday. High 70 to 75. Chance of
rain , near zero today , tonight and Friday.
Oblo exteaded foreeul - Saturday through Monday - chance of
showers or thunderstorms Saturday and Sunday and over the eastern
half Monday. Highs mOIIIly in the 70s Saturday, ih the 80s Sunday an?
mid 50s to mid 80s Monday, Lows mOIIIly In the 40s north to 50s aoutn
Saturday and Sunday and 1n the 40JI statewide M&lt;XIday.

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