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                  <text>Commissioners adopt new landfill rates
.

!!lew rates for the Meigs County
(.,andfill were adopted Tuesday by
the county coi'IIIllillsioners.
The rates, eff~ve May 18, are as
foUows: cars and station wagons,
$1; . one-half to tpree quarter ton
trUcks, $2.25; one to three ton trucks,
$5; packets; $1.25 per cubic yard;
seJill-loads, $20 minimwn.
The landfiU hours will remain the
same, 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday
through Saturday. Non-residents li
the. county will not be aUowed to

'

Ot,arll'lf-s.llng
ltHI lelted
Radial
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Our Reg. 52.88
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In top- or side-terminal style.
For many cars and light trucks.
S£Rvtets INCLIJOE,

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Sale Price

7.47

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Each
Hecwy-Duty ShOCk" !natal~
!3/16': piston. lfz'' shaft tril:&gt;le-

P165180R13
Plus F.E.T. 1.73

.

dwnp at the .landfill due to limited
space left at the present site.
!Jpori the re~ommendation of
County engineer Phil Roberts,commissioners voted to accept the
Syracuse Flood road In Sutton Township and Happy Hollow road in
Rutland Township as part of the
county highway system effective
May18.
Roberts alsdo dlscussed various
road and bridge projects that will

undergo repair in the near future.
Frank Lee, architect; Manning
Webster, Mental Retardation board
chainnan, and Chris Layh, MR coor·
dinator discussed the construction of
the Mental Retardation Training
Center In Syracuse.
Lee reported that the request for
additonal state funds for the project
would be reviewed by the controlling
board on June 8, and if approved, the
bids could be awarded and con·

•

Tires, 8aHer( And Service In
Stoles With Service s·ays Only

Voi.30,No.20

·-·--......
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•

'

) . Wl~l tront callper1

trustees and staled that a committee
has been appointed to reconunend
some changes in the EMS con·
stitution and by-laws.
The board approved a bond for
Donna Koehler to accept bonds for
Meigs County Court.
Attending were Henry Wells,
president, Richard Jones and David
Koblentz, commissioners, Mary
Hobstetter, clerk, and Martha
Chambers.

enttne
Pope shot
2 Sections 14 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, May 13, 1981

Copyrighted 1981

err- tNt

The board appropriated the
following money to the Youth Subsidy Grant; $2,413.32 to tutorial
classes; $5,911.66 to work experience
program and $4,659 to counseling
services.
Bob Bailey, EMS coordinator and
Kathryn Russell, secretary, met
with the board to discuss EMS
operatons.
·
Bailey reported on the recent
meeting of the EMS board of

•

at y

e

welded l'nOU'lls. Many U.S. cars.

struction could get underway by the
end of June.
The .commissioners named
Clarence Taylor as dog warden at a
salary of $4,500 annually. He wiU
serve a 60 day probationary period.
The commissioners awarded the
bid for the purchase of bitwninious
materials and dust control for the
county highway for the balance of
May to Mar-Zane Materials Co.,
Marietta .

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15 Cents

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Additional ports and services

are el&lt;tra. For many

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cars.

Sale Price

16.88

VATICAN CITY,(AP)- Vatican radio said today that Pope John
Paul U was shot by unknown assailants as he entered St. Peter's
Square for a general audience. Vatican radio said lbe pope fell into the
arms of his secretary and the jeep in which the pontiff was riding
drove off at high-speed.
Witnesses said blood could be seen flowing near the p&lt;tpe's neck.
Vatican security guards apprehended one man who was armed with a
pistol, witnesses said.

IIIVICIIIICLUDI:
L Colitpulw~allnctol
two front .......
I. ""' tlld alignment

Vatican radio reported that the
pope was rushed to a Rome hospital.
There was no immediate word on the
pontiff's condition.
John Paul, 60, the fonner Cardinal
Karol Wojtyla of Poland, became
pope in the fall of 1978 at the age of 58
- the first non-Italian pope in 455
years.
The Itali an news agency A,NSA
said two shots were fired at the poP\!
at 5:21p.m. (11:21 p.m. EDT).
A few minutes after the shooting
the loudspeaker which broadcasts
over St. Peter's Square announced

I. II C..ICIIely clllck

· Alignment and Whllllalance
Additional ports and services

are extra. For many U.S. cars.

READY TO ROLL- "Kids Day" will be observed In tbe viUage of
SyracWie Friday begloolog at 5:30 p.m. according to BUI Arnott,
·president of lbe SyracDlle-MioersviUe Baseball Association. Youngsters
from Minersville and SyracWie are Invited to parttcpate lo a bike parade
tbat will begin on Dluky Street (behind Larry's Markert) at 5:30p.m. and
travel vUiage streets up river to tbe Syracuse Baseball Field. Three $5
prizes will be awarded, one to lbe youngster who has tbe prettiest

decorated bike, most unique and most original. Youngsters may ride
bicycles, miDI bikes or g~carts. Following the parade aT-ball game will
be played on diamond one and a minor league game on diamond two at
6:30, pee wee at 7:30 and little league game at 8:45. There will introductions of all vlllage officials and players. The event is being sp&lt;tn·
sored by Syracuse-Minersville Baseball Association. Ready to roll are,
front, l·r, Jason Arnott and Amy Moore ; back, Shawn Arnott, Clyde Sayre
and Mike Kloes.

Southern names honor students
Peggy Bush has been named
valedictorian and Charlotte Ann
Pickens has been named
salutatorian of the 1981 .Southern
High School graduating class.
A daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Bush, Racine, Miss Bush
has been a member o! the French
Club for four years and the drama

club for two years. She was a member of the scholarship team for three
years, band for two years and choir
for three years, She served on the
Echo, the school newspaper staff,
for a year and was a member of the
senior play cast. Miss Bush is listed
in "Who's Who Among Arneric~n
High School Students" and served as

River navigation
is chamber topic

'

...

.
....·&gt;.'
.'

'I
'I

BYKATIECROW
Allan Elberfeld, chief of
navigation, economics division, U.
S. Corps of Engineers, Huntington,
spoke on Ohio River navigation at
Tuesday's luncheon meeting of the
Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce.
Elberfeld spoke on river
niivlgation's past, prosent and
future.
"Today, as in the past, the Ohio
River is one of the great arteries of
commerce of the United States,"
~berfeld said. Elberfeld's talk was
enhanced by slide pictures. "The
Ohio is formed at Pittsburgh by the
junction of the Allegheny and
Monongahela Rivers, and has a
length of 981 miles to its junction
witb the Mislliasippl at Cairo. The
airUne distance from Pittsburgh to
CairO Ia some 560 miles.
:;'l'he first steamboat to navigate
the Ohio Rfver was the New Orleans,
built at Pittaburgh in 1811.
"Tile Jacob Strader, of 906 tons,
built In Cincinnati In 1853 had a
length of347 feet and was the largest
boat on the river.
"1onnage movement on the river
increaaed from 7.3 million In 1915 to
151.4 nillllon in 19'17, while tonmUeage lncreaaedfrom 1,• million
to:a7,476mllllon In theaame period.
"Dams convert the river Into a
lllllel of llep8 or )10011 which eue
!btl' movement of ton along the
letf&amp;th ol the river. The loclul, built in
connection with the dims, make
poalble the ralalng or lowering of
the vmels from one pool to the
nOt," Elberfeld commented.
Elbelfeld delcrlbed the numerous
boalll that have been Uied oo the
river beginning with CBIIOelllled by
the Indian.
Be a1a0 told ol the flooclll that have
·oceumcl over the yean. He llated
- the 1937 flood wu the mOlt
• lrOiJI ever aperleneed but the
!tit Oood In Pomeroy t1 tvJ 1.4

feet higher than the 1937.
He showed nwnerous slides of the
1937 flood in Pomeroy.
"No local' flood protection works
have been built in Meigs County.
However, 32 major multi·p)ll')lOse
reservoirs are now in operation in
the Ohio River basin upstream from
Pomeroy, serving flood control as
weU as other purposes.
"Under these changed conditions,
a flood as great as the 1913 flood now
could be produced ooly by storm
conditions far more severe than
those that occurred In 1913.
''The unlikelihood of the recurrence of a flood ol 1913 proposition is,
however, but small consolation.
Severe damage can be produced by
flOOds of much lesser proportions, as
is indicated In the sUde showing the
1964 flood. The 1964 flood was only
the 14th largest to occur at Pomeroy
during the present century,'' Elberfeld commented.
In other business, it was announced that a dinner will be held
May 31, at .Royal Oak ~ark In observance of Fred Craw's birthday.
Tickets may be purchaaed at
Simon's Pick-A-Pair, Chamber ol
Commerce and New York Clothing

House.
Paul Gerard, of the Meigs County
Jayceea, sponaors of the Big Bend
Regatta, told ol the many actlviUes
that are planned during tbe event
whlcb will be held June Z through

the28 .
'J'hiB year's theme Is "Rainbow
Connection." There will be an arts
and craft.s ahow, a pretty baby contest and local entertainment on
'l'hunlda)'.
The Smith Fun and Amusements
will be located on the lot behind the
lonner junior high building. On
Friday the Regatta Queen will be
C111Wtted, there will be a hamburger
contest, a cheerleading contest and
(Continued on page 14)

a Candystriper at Veterans
Memorial Hospital for a year. She is
a member of the National Honor
Society and attends the Fellowship
Church In Racine. She has a four
year scholarship to attend Rio Grande College.
Miss Pickens is a daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. John Pickens of Portland.
She has been a c&lt;Hlditor of the
Southern High yearbook and a
feature writer of the Echo staff. She
has been a member of the French

and Drama Clubs and is a member
of the National Honor Society. She
was the SoutHern High School win·
n e~ of the Daughters of the
America n Revolution , Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter, good
citizenship award. Miss Pickens is a
member of the Portland United
Methodist Church and the Meigs
County Historical Society. She plans
to attend Ohio SLate University
where she will study law. Southern High School will
graduate 73 seniors Sunday.

that the pope had been injured.
The voice on the loudspeaker
asked the crowd, estimated at
10,000, to pray for the pope by
reciting the Our Father prayer and
the Ave Maria.
Vatican Radio reported the pope ·
had been taken to the Policlinico
Gemelli, Rome's largest and most
modern hospital.
Dozens
of
ca rabi nier i
paramilitary cars, sirens wailing,
streamed into St. Peter's Square.
They were joined by Rome police
cars.

Congress ·gets
test with plan
WASHINGTON (AP )- President
Reagan's call for an unprecedented
10. percent cut in Social Security
benefits by I!MI6 sets up a major test
in Congress amid charges that he is
rnaking a "wholesale assault on !he
economic security o! America's
elderly. "
Reagan wants to couple the
benefits reduction with penalties for
early retirement and - eventually
- lower payroll taxes to save the
Social Security system from going
bankrupt inside two years. Benefits
for those now in the system would be
prese rved, although th e ad·
ministration wants to postpone next
year's schedul~ cost-of-living increase.
Senate Finance Committee Chairman Bob Dole, R·Kan., promised to

hold early hearings on the Reagan
package, and Rep. J.J. Pickle, [).
Texas, chairman of the House Wa ys
and Means subcommittee on Social
Security, pledged bipartisan
COOP\!ration.
The plan outlined Tuesday
proposes to save nea rly $53 billion by
1986 by cutting disability checks,
early retirement and other benefits.
At the same time, restrictions that
penalize people over 65 for working
would be eased, at a cost of $e.5
billion.
About $24 billion of the cuts would
come by slicing benefits of futu re
retirees. No American president has
tried thai before, and Reagan's
proposal immediately elicited
charges that he was breaking cam(Continued on page 10 )

Winning Ohio lottery number
CLEVELAND - The number selected Tuesday night in the Ohio
Lottery's daily game "The Number" is 792.
The lottery reported earnings o! $384,704.5() from the wagering on
the drawing. Lottery officials said sales prior to the drawing totaled
$779,913.5(), and holders of winning tickets are entitled to share
~.~.

Weather
Showers or thunderstonns likely tonight and Thursday. Lows
tonight in the low 5()s. High Thursday in the low 70s. Chance of rain 60
percent tonight and Thursday. Winds variable 10 mph tonight and
Thursday.

CHARLO'ITE PICKENS

· PEGGYBUSH

Extended Ohio Forecast- Friday through Sunday : Achance of
showers Friday. Fair Saturday and Sunday. Highs in the 60s Friday
and in the 70s Saturday and Sunday. Lows from the mid-40s to mid-50s.

Money sought
•

•

0

lR tWO SUltS
Two suits for money have been
filed in Meigs County Conunon Pleas
Court.
·
Horace and Dorothy Karr, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy, and Karr Construction
Co., Chester, filed suit in the amount
of $152,790 against International
Reaources Development Corp., Pepper Pike, Ohio and American
Uranlwn Exploration Corp., Pepper
Pike.
Tile plaintiffs, Karr, charges that
the defendants maliciously and wilb
purpoee to defraud the plaintiff, Induced plalntiffa to uecute leases
and deUvered to plaintiff their check
In payment and thereafter cancelled
payment.
Herbert L. and Marie Grounds and
George M. and Janla E. Grounds,
Albany, et al, fUed suit in the amount ·
of $20,000 against Prior 'Oil Well
Dri11lnll !)&gt;.,Parkersburg, etal.

HONORAIUANS
Honerarll• al lhe 1181
lfllluU.. clu1 at Melp Hllh Sdloo1 are, ft11111, 1-r,

Ullda ~ llllella tteny, Jlfce Joey; back, Aldllt
Lee, O.vld WDRI, Belli PerriD and Lori Rape. Alllent

wu Brian ltbl&amp;-

�Wednesday, May 13, 1981

Commentary
I

·Good

-

strongholds, including the counties
of Cumbria, Cheshire, Derbyshire
and Staffordshire. The results were
interpreted as a rejection of Mrs.
Thatcher's economic problems ..."
~) "House Approves Budget
Plan/Supported by Reagan, 27().
!54/Resounding Vote on Budget in
House Presages/Wide Support in
Setting New Course for Nation."

The Daily Sentinel
Ill Cu urt Strnl
Pum l• ruv, Ohiu
su.H i-2156

IJHOTEO TO HIE INTEREST OF TIU: ME IGS.MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WING ETT
Publishl'r

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH
Gt·nrra l Managl'r

DALE ROTHGEB. JR.
~· t· ~A~

Etlltur

A 1\fEMRf.!l nl Thr A~ ~ nriatt•d Prt&gt;~ s . Inland Oail\' l 'r t·s~ A s .~ orfation and thr
Amrrh·an Nt•\ol spapt·r Publisht• rs Assu£'iatittn.
·
I. F.Tif. RS ~lF 01'1"1 1 ~1~ a rt· ~o~rlcu mt•rl . Tht·~· ~ huulrl ht• ln., thld tt .'llln ~o~unls lung. ."-II

h·ttt·r~ arl' ~u hjt•c· t In t•d!lml( :~ nd mu ~ 1 ht• .~ i~ rlt'd 'Aith namt•, addrrss and tt-kph 11n1•
~\Umht• r . .~n llnSI):!Ilt'd ll'ltrrs '&gt;'ill ht• puhlbht•d. l.t·t ltn ~h nultl !w in ~ twtd Ul !i lt•. addrrssin)(
IS~Ut'S, 1111( !)l ' f~tl/ll:llillt• S .

First the had news.,
then the had news
The bad news for the Republicans is that President Reagan could well lose
his campaign to gaW1 congressional acceptance of his proposal for a threeyear, across the board reduction in income tax rates.
The bad news for the Democrats is that House Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill
Jr., ]).Mass., al ready has lost much of the confidence and respect he needs to
serve effectively as the highest-ranking Democrat official in Washington. ·.
Although a nwnber of developments, many of them beyond O'Neill's control, have diminished the power and influence of the speaker in recent years,
he now must be counted as a victim of Reagan's economic-recovery
program.
House Democrats have become increasingly critical of O'Neill, not
because he tried and failed to beallhe Republicans in the battle of the budget
but because he never offered any serious resistance to the GOP and, in effect, walked away from one of the year's most important political struggles.
The president's prospects for success in securing legislative passage of the
other half of his economic program-the Kemp-Roth 'supply side' tax reduction package-are far less favorable than was his success in the budget vote.
The broad and deep grass-roots support for slashing the size of the federal
budget is not matched by similar publci enth usiasm for a tax cut widely-and
correctly-perceivedas being skewed in favor of the wealthy.
Even the president indirectly acknowledged the growing resistance to the
controversial tax cut when he made his late-April speech before a joint
session of Congress.
Although Reagan was aggressive and upbeat in pushing hard for adoption
of he budget reductions, he turned uncharacteristically defensive when he
noted that "the tax portion of the package has been of concern to some of
you."

With the exception of a relati vely small band of firmly committed 'supplyside' advocates , there remail very few economists or politicians who accept
the untested theory that tax cuts can stimulate work, encourage investment
and generate new business activity on a scale broad enough to pay for themselves in added tax revenues.
The uncertaintu about the economic impact of a 'supply side' tax program
makes members of Congress especially uneasy about committing themselves and the nation to a protracted three-year experiment.

Letter to the editor
Helms-Hyde response
This letter is in response to the article by Mr. Lowell Wingett entitled:
He~ns-Hyde Bill is real can of worms.
The only unfortunate aspect of the
Human Life Bill or a Human Life
Amendment is that it has become
necessary in our "civilized" society.
Regardless of how many "extreme
conclusions" some people will draw
as a result of such legislation, the
real truth remains that human life
does indeed begin at fertilization and
the rest of our lives is a process of
stages of development. Birth is simply one of those stages and the most
recognizable and easiest stage from
which to determine statistical data.
We have never had a need for
knowing "when" someone has been
conceived; only "that" someone has
been conceived. There is ample
testimony of thjs in the fact that a
woman happily announces that she
is going to have a baby as soon as
she knows that she is pregnant. No
one reaDy cares, nor ever will, about
the timing of the pregnalley in terms
of when it took place. The charge
that the "H-H bill puts government
smack-dab in the middle of the bed·room," will never be taken seriously
:by the great majority of people.
:What Is obviously going to happen as
a result of such legislation If passed,
'is that people are going to be confronted about the seriousness of
pwnan sexuality, the appropriat~
ness of it, and the consequences of
Ureir own acts. Hwnan beings have
the advantage of intelligence.
reason and moral judgment with

regard to all hwnan activity. What
they will find in the middle of their
bedrooms i5 their conscience, not
the government.
There is increasing need for us to
make a profound distinction between "free will" and a "moral
right. " We all have a Free Will to
use as we please, for good or evil.
God respects this freedom and trusts
us in the exercise of our wilts regardless of whether or not He agrees.
Thus we have the capacity to do
wrong and commit sin. There is no
such thing as a "moral right" to do
something which is objectively evil
or subjectively sinful. The only
Moral Right we have is to be a
human being in the image and likeness of God. It remains the proper
domain of the Church to. address
moral issues, rather than the
prerogative of the press. That's the
purpose of a teaching church. What
each church or denomination
teaches about moral issues becomes
a matter of their own credibility.
The real value of hwnan life, born
and unborn, comes from God. We
need to work together to solve
serious problems like rape and incest and others in some realistic and
wholesome fashion; the ·solution of
abortion 1is an evil which is totaDy
unacceptable. We are not able to
celebrate "Happy Conception Day''
as was suggested, but we certainly
can celebrate the fact that this is
how and when we beRan Our life.
Father William~· Myers
Pastor. Sl. Louis Church

Page-2-The Daily sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio.
Wednesday, M;~y 13, 1981 · '·'

:

but Only a

Three items from the news:
1) "Labor, in Comeback/Wins
Council Voting/In Major English
Cities ... The Labor Party took con·
trol from the Conservatives in Lon·
don, Manchester, Liverpool, Birmingham and Leeds. The Party now
dominates the councils in all of
England's most populous areas. In
addition. labor staged some surprising upsets in rural Conservative

~'' '

beginnin~....,;;z~·_________:__Wi_il_lia_m_F._. B_u_ck_ler_
· J_r.

Selected items from the Reagan
budget, in billions (compared to
current budget) : Military $189
($159). Agriculture $4.4 ($2.1).
Transportation $19.7 ($19.7) .
Education and Training $25.7
($29.8). Health $73.3 ($63.1). Income
Security $241.2 ($225.5 J. Veterans
Benefits $24.0 ($21.7). General
government $5.0 ($4.4). Revenues
$657.8 ($605.0). Deficit$31.0 ($27.4).
3) It is probably now safe to say,
however sadly, that in Great Britain
the only true reforms brought on by
the government of Mrs. Thatcher
are categoricaL She says exactly the
right things. But the politics of her
government
are
hardly
distinguishable from what one might
have expected from a socialist
government.
Item. Although the inflation rate is
coming down, it has in fact only just
recently reached exactly the same
level that prevailed when Labor lost
the election to ihe Conservatives.
Item. Last year's deficit wsa 80
percent higher than officially
predicted. Half the differential is attributed to worldwide depression.
That leaves one-half attributable to
the Thatcher administration.
Item. Public sector price increases have been three times as
high as wage and price increases in
the private sector. In other words,
inflationary increases, at the only
level over which the government has
direct power, have not been controlled.
Item. Taxes are higher today,
when you count in the Value Added

Tax, than they were at the time Mrs.
Thatcher was elected.
Item. The notion that the
monetary theories of Milton Friedman have been attempted in Great
Britain is a superstition. They have
been enunciated, not attempted:
The government either doesn't have
the power necessary to effect the
relevant discipline, or the will to effect it. A House of Commons committee recently put it succinctly:
There has so far, been "no monetary

experiment."
Item. The municipal authorities,
which have considerable economic
power, have ignored Mrs. Thatcher's pleas for responsible
economic behavior, · increasing
propertyh taxes and spending more.
Item. The labor unions' power the principal impedinient to orderly
parliamentary government - has
not been curbed. Writes Anthony
Lajeune from London: "Certain key
groups of workers are virtually out-

side the law, IIke medieval barons.",
Item. Huge govenunent subsidies
continue for car manufacluren,
nationalized railroads and airltnes,
nationalized steel. Strike threats by
(nationalized) coal miners against_
the closure of uneconomic pits
recently resulted in a .Thatcher
.capitulation.
.Conclusion: Mr. Reagan is off to a
good start. But inuch, much more ~
needed to avoid a Thatcherite e~
ding.

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Meigs bombs Dragons
FAIRLAND - Natalie LamFairland had its bats quieted
bert pitched a one hitter and pam all evening long as Meigs conCrooks smacked three hits to lead Unued to build its lead. In the
the 1\f'eigs Marauders to an 11-4 second frame Kris Snowden
win over the Fairland Dragons doubled, Pam Crooks doubled,
here at Fairfield High School in and Lambert hit a sacrifice fly to
the opening round of the class account for two more runs.
"AA'' girls' softba!Vsectional.
Meigs went to work in the third
Defending champion Meigs when April King walked and stole
jwnped to an early lead and second, then went to third on a
coasted home for the win, behind wild pitch. King scored on a
a great performance by Lambert ground out, followed by another
and a timely eight hit attack. free pass to Snowden. Snowden
Meigs is now 4-12, but carries stole second and rode home on a
momentum into the next round of Pam Crooks single.
tournament play.
Through six innings Lambert
Lambert went the distance appeared to . be getting unpicking up the win, while striking creasingly stronger and was well
out none, but allowing 10 free · on her way to a no hitter. With
passes. Nelson started for the two out in the last inning Crager
Dragons, but was relieved by hit a loop single to shallow right
Fuller in the second, and by field, spoiling Lambert's hopes.
Turley in the fifth round. Thjey
Both clubs corrunitted three
combined to fan six and walk 13.
errors.
Leadoff hitter Pam Crooks got
Meigs hitters were Pam Crooks
the first inning started for Meigs with a double and two singles,
with a bunt single, followed .by April King two singles, Cindy
walks to Cindy Crooks and Paula Crooks a single, Paula Horton a
Horton.
single, and Kris Snowden a
Lambert he!Jied her own cause double.
in the frame when she knocked
Tonight Meigs hosts Wellston,
home a run with a hard-hit groun- then returns to sectional tourder. April King followed with a nament play at 4 p.m. Thursday.
two-run single, while Robin Buf- Meigs will play on the road againfington brought horne Lambert st the winner of the Warrenon a grounder.
Gallipolis game.

The Daily Sentinel-Page-3

Marauder gals take second
OAK HILL - The Meigs High
School girls' track team scored a
second place finish in the Oak Hill
Invitational.
Andrea Riggs scored a first place
finish in the high jump and the 400
and ROO meter relay team won first
place honors to boost Meigs' total to
84, behind Waverly's 134.

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

: V. D. EDWARDS INSURANCE AGENCY, INC. :

!
Thus far, this season Riggs is undefeated in the high jwnp event and
is one of the premier jumpers in the
area. Riggs and many other outstanding efforts by the Meigs' track
team have boosted the school's
record to an impressive 61~ mark.
TheMaraudergirlsofCoachGordon
Fisher will compete in the SEOAL
League meet this Friday at Ohio
University,thenreturnthefollowing
weekforthesectionaltournament.

Oak Hill was third with S6 points,
Mtnford followed with 45 points,
Jackson 42, Chesapeake 27, Wellston
26, Western 14, Synunes Valley four,
and Southwestern one point.
Riggsleapedtoafivefootoneinch
victory in the high jwnp, Laura
Smith placed third in the discus with
a 105 foot throw, Paula Swisher
gainedsecondinthelongjwnpwith
a 14 foot nine and a half inch jump,
and Vicky DeBord finished sixth in r - - - -- - - -- - - - - t
the !ongjwnp.
Kristin Anderson raced to a ~USTAHLOERSI-~z-_t:E~R' ~c~·H'· ·A;,.N
· .LTO.G
second place finish in the 400 meter
dash, while Laura Smith came in
sixthinthe800meterrun. TheMeigs
relay team of Smith, Anderson,
Renee Willis, and Krista! Sisson ran
third in the 3200 meter relay. In
other relay action, Anderson, Rupe,
R1ggs, and DeBor d teamed up for a
third in the 1600 meter relay.
The Meigs gals put it all together
in the 400 meter and 800 meter
relays, as they beat the entire field

(Sears

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HAVE YOU REGISTERED ?
FOR
The
Holzer Medical Center
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Letter to editor-- - - - - - - - - - been said and if the people of Meigs
County want better schools, they had
As one of the eight parents of the better start coming out to thein and
children ol the L.D. program at seeing what their kids are doing.
Pomeroy Elementary, the facts that Help our schools help our kids to obhave been brought out about the con- tain the best education possible. ditiOI]S in the classroom by Rev. Mr. and Mrs. David Acree.
Knittel are true.
At a meeting with all parents
present "except for the Aleshires,"
In reply to the letter to the editor
the conditions were discussed by all titled "Parents Respond" published
parents. Rev. Knittel was asked to May II , I would like to say that I can
speak for the group because he as certainly understand why Mr. and
well as others had seen the con- Mrs. Aleshire have a misunditions in the classroom. All derstanding concerning problems in
statements that were presented to the L.D. classroom and my presenthe school board had been discussed tation to the parents of that class.
and agreed upon to be presented to
On May 4th and Sth, all the parents
the board by all of the parents were contacted a bout a meeting to
present at that meeting.
be held at 7:30 p.m. on May 5th,
The action of the school board to where we discussed problerns that
replace the teacher was left up to it. existed in the L.D. classroom. All
The board made the chrge. If the the parents who were in the meeting
board had not felt the parents had showed great concern for their
been right, then why would they children. All the parents were
have acted?
present at the meeting except for the
All facts that were presented by Aleshires. ·
Rev. Knittel were the truth, not one
Not being present, Mr. and Mrs.
thing said was an untruth. I per- Aleshire did not hear my remarks to
sonally think that Rev. Knittel did a the other parents, nor did they hear
very good job at the board meeting. the corrunents of the other parents. I
There was a Jot more that could have do not understand how they can say

Told the truth

Can't turn back!

that I was 100 percent wrong in my
presentation to the others when they
were not even in the meeting and did
not hear what I had to say.
They were at the school board
meeting and were one of the first
families to show anger and relate
how they thought their child had
been mistreated. Jt really made it
difficult to discuss the problerh with
the school board. I certainly am
sorry that things have to be the way
they are. There are times we turn
our backs on problems, but as they
persist, how long do we turn our
backs to them? Our children are involved here and their education is
being affected.
I am glad to be an American. The
book of Psa ~ns says: "Blessed is the
nation whose God is the Lord, and
the people whom he has chosen for
his own inheritance." Many of our
leaders have forgotten the truth of
this verse. Greatness will not
manifest itself pursuing the avenues
we are now traveling.
We still believe in a free
democracy. America still has the
same Declaration of Independence.
America is a great nation, but its
greatness could be something of the
past. Its greatness will wane if its
people can no longer resist cir-

cwnstances that affect the wellbeing of the people, particularly our
children.- Rev. William Knitlel, 10
East Street, Pomeroy.

As parents of a student who attends the L.D. class at Pomeroy
Elementary, we feel compelled to
reply to the recent attack on Rev.
William Knittel.
Rev. Knittel has expended CODsiderable time and energy to brillg
to light serious shortcomings In the
L.D. program at Pomeroy. He ll&amp;'l
presented his fmdings to the parents
involved and to the school board In
an honest atlempt to rectify this
deplorable situation. His only concern, as is ours, is to obtain for the
children the education they are entitled to.
We are very pleased to have Rev.
Knittel as our spokesman, ·our
leader, our representative. Thank
you very much, Rev. Knittel.
Mr. and Mrs. Aleshire feel they
have been misled, and indeed they
have. We suggest they look in
another direction because Rev. Knittel certainly has not misled them. •
Sincerely, Gary T. Terry, Marcia
M. Terry.

Blacks represent six of the nine
districts that have lost 20 percent or
more of their populations: Another
, of the nine is .the Bronx district
· represented by Robert Garcia, a
Hispanic.
.
Meanwhile, 28 congressional
districts that suffered population
losses of 10 percent or more will be
reapportioned out of existence.
Thus, most of those 32 Democratic
incumbents will be forced to run
against fellow Democratic incumbents into whose districts theirs
will be placed. So, the watchword for
many House Democrats will be
political survival.

legislators dozens of advantageo~
reapportionment plans. The computers can also anal)'2e Democratic
proposals to show their weaknesses
and provide data for court
chaDenges should they be rammed
through Democratic-controlled
legislatures.
And ramming is the basic game
plan of the Democrats, who lack the
staff and the money of the
Republicans but still control a
majority of state legislature (17 to 15
with 18 split). They hope to win
redistricting battles by the use of
old-fashioned political muscle.
This strategy· Is being used in
Missouri, which must give up one of
Its 10 House seats. That seat should
rightfully come from the city of St.
Louis, whose population has decined
27 percent. The city is currently
represented in Congrw by three
Democrats.

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

•
SETS RECORD - Kent Wolfe
of the Southern Tornadoes set a
new school record for most hits in
a single season last night against
the Wahama White Falcons.
Wolfe, who went two-for-three
last night, has compiled an impressive .476 batting average,
reaching base safely in 30 of 63 attempts. Wolfe's 20 hits in 18
games breaks the fonner record
of 28 hits by John Mark Sayre,
during the 1976 season. Sayre
went 28 for 81 to compile a .348
batting average In 21 games. Not
only is Wolfe's effort one of the
best In the area, but it also is one
of the best in the entire Southeast
region.

To1, passt•r
The Pro Football Hall of Fame
rates Otto Graham as the top
passer of all time. He had 1,464
completions in 2,626 attempts.

WE'VE Ci()tlf-

10,000 METERS

MAY 16-'10

/

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APPLIANCES
REDUCED
TO THEIR
LOWEST

THE DAILY SENTINEL POMEROY, OHIO
ELBERFELDS POMEROY, OHIO
heritage house MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
NEW YORK CLOTHING HOUSE POMEROY, OHIO
DAN'S BOOT SHOP MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

SAVE 1100 - 1150 ON
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SALE

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FREE
COFFEE &amp;DONUTS

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HOOVER
COMPANY

$

from both. Most of the city's black
vote would remain In a single
district, thus protecting the seat of
Rep. William Clay.

The
only
Democratic
congressmen pitted against another
incumbent would be Rep. Richard
Gephardt, whose district would be
combined with that of Republican
William Emerson. But Gephardt,
one of the rising Democratic powens
on Capitol Hl\1, Is extremely popular
in Missouri and is conaidered an
almost sure !let to defeat Emerson.
So, the Democratic plan would
result in the loss of one Republican
seat even though the state's
The Democrats are coming into
population Is shifting away fi'Oll)
the reapportionment fight at a
traditional Democratic areas (the
distinct disadvantage. The past eleccities) and into Republican areaa
tion strengthened the Republican
(the suburbs and the rural comParty in most state legislatures, and
munities).
the national party Is running a
The Republicans in the state
sophisticated, weD-financed real&gt;'
capital of Jefferson City are fighting.
portlonment campaign.
But the DeniocratiNOntrolled" the. Democratic plan. Republican
The Republican National Com- state legislature has offered a real&gt;' Gov. Kit Bond 18 threatening a velo,
mittee has 20 staffers working full- portionment plan that would not only which would force all n1ne corrg.._.
time on reaportionment. Included In protect the IJemocrats but posalbly men to be elected at Jarce. The ba.,
this group are political experts, ad- cost the Republicans a seat. That tl~ In Missouri ill typical of
tO
vertising experts and, perhaps most plan would split the Republican be waged In many state legialalluw,
Important, computer experts.
strength In St. Louis County between and the · outcome will lhape the
They have programmed their two dlstrlcts, vlrtuaUy guaranteeing House of ReprelentaUves for yean
computers to give Republican state that Democrats would be elected to come.

AND THE

ROAD RACE

Parents not mislead

Redistricting begins"---____&amp;_b_Wc__...::as=----7'18_n
ST. WUIS ( NEA) - State
legislatures across the country are
witnessing the opening shots in
political battles that will greatly affect the composition of the next
House of Representatives. These
battles concern the reapportionment
of congressional districts based on
the 1980 census.
As previously reported, the
preliminary census figures showed
that states In the Northeast and Midwest would lose 17 House seats to
states in the South and West. Other
states will have to redraw
congressional dil!tricts to reflect internal population shifts from cities
to suburbs and rural areas.
Republican hope to influence this
redistricting so that the lost seats
wiD be those currently held by
Democrats and the new seats will be
in predominantly Republican areas.
This would go a long way toward
giving the GOP control of the next
House.
Later census data contains even
worse news for the Democrats. Each
of the 32 House districts that have
lost 10 percent or more of their
populations Is currently represented
by a Democrat. Worse BUll, 11 of the
32 are represented by black
Democrats.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

·Fl

FIRST SERVE

RIVERSIDE AMC I JEEP I RENAULT
195 .Upper
River Road-Rt. 7, Gallipolis • &lt;6141 446·9800
.

•

j

\;

�he Dai

Sentinel
1981

JOHN A. WADE, M.D., INC.
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

For the
record• ..

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

AMERICAN lEAGUE
EAST
.
W L
II 8
17 12
II II

-

Cleveland
New York
Ba!Umore

Milwaukee

OHice Hours by Appointment Only

...

Detroit
Toronto

CALL (614)-992-2104

CaUfomia
Minnes&lt;11a

Of · (304)-675~1244

14
13
13

13
.519
14
.481
16 . .4411

10

19

.345

14
16
15
16

8
12
12
16

.750

-

II
10

17
20

.556
.lOO
.393
.333
.:1Cl4

"'
8
II
L1
12\1

\!EST

Ookland
Te:us
CbJcago

Se•tUe

KllliOICIIy

Pet. GB
.lll6 .586
"
.560
I \; ,

.m

7 16

Tu~y'1 Games

·STORE HOURS:
Mon.·Sat. 8 am-10 pm

' 21&gt;
31&gt;
II;

Sunday 10 am-10 pm

'"

6

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.

Toronto 5, BaltimOre 2
~.

New York:

Oakland 1

Detroit 6, SeaUle l
Chicago 7, Cleveland 4
CAIWornla 4, Milwaukee 0
Kansas City 3, TeXas 2
Mlrulesota 4, Boston 3, 10 innini!!:S
WeUesdiy'IGim.el
( MI.'Gre~or

Baltimore

2-1)

at

PRICES EFFECTIVE THROUGH SAT•• MAY 16, 1981

Toronto

(Bomback 3-11, In)
Ooldand (Keough ~I a1 New Yorl&lt;
(John 4-2), (nl
Seattle (Clarl&lt; ~ I at Detroit (Petry ().
2), (n)
,
CalifCinlia (Renko 1-2) at Milwaukee
(CAldwell J.l), (n)
Cleveland (Denny 2-t ) at Chica~ ( Ba~
rioo 1·2), (n)
Boston (Torrez 2-2) at Minnesobt (Ar·
royo 2-1), (n)
Texas (Medich ~2) al K11nsall City
(SpUttorff ().2), (n)

KAHN'S KRISPY SERVE

Tbundly'• Gamet~

Boston al Minnesota

cautomla Bt Milwaukee

Baltbnore 11t Toronto, (n)
Oakland at New York, (n)

Bacon................·.~a~

Seattle at Detroit, (n )

Teut1 ot Ka118as City, (n)
~~:ames

Only

scheduled

NATIONAL lEAGUE
EAST

W L

St.LoW.
PhilAdelphia

Montreal

Plt.. burgh
New York
Chicago
Los Angeles

AUanta

Cincinnati
San Francisco

Houston

WEL!.STON - An evening of
hard-hitting and a good outing by
pitcher Roger Kovalchik propelled
th~ Meigs Maraudt'fs to a 3-9 win
over the ho~1 Wellston Golden
Rockets last evening. Meigs is now
8-~ on the season after the win.
Although Kovalchik gave up eight
hils, the talented Marauder struck
out II and walked just five, while
going the distance to pick up the
triwnph. Cox started for Wellston
aril was relieved by Simpson in the
si~th inning. The duet combined for
nine strike outs and five walks.
Troy Brooks and Mike Miller were
integral parts of the Meigs attack as
Brooks pounded out four hits and
sc&amp;red three times, while Miller had
tw'o hits and scored lour times. l/1
the first! nning Miller walked to
start a Meigs' rally. All-district
Jerry Fields walked, and Jeff
Wayland singled to bring home a
ruh. Wellston knotted the score in
the bottom of the inning, when a
Rocket batter struck out on a bad
pifch, then reached safely after the
ball caromed away from the cat·
cher. After a fielder 's choice ad·
vanced the runner, Montgomery hit
a !l)lcrilice fly.
Meigs regained its lead in the
second when John Cremeans walked
and Boyer sacrificed him to second,
before Brooks singled, Miller
doubled, and Fields doubled to
produce three runs . Wellston fought
back to again tie the score at 3·3.
Trace walked, Parsons singled,
Patrick doubled, a run scored on a

sacrifice fly , and Jeff Derrow
singles.
Meigs took its third lead of the
game in the fourth on stngles by
Brooks, Miller. and Fields, and
doubles by Terry Wayland and Jeff
Wayland, the score now 8--4.
Roger Kovalchik ca~ned down
and retired the side three straight
times, while Meigs added five big
runs of il~ own in the fifth . Boyer and
Brooks singled, and Miller reached
on an error to let in a run. Roger
Kova lchik harrunered a three run
horne run to straight-away center
field, while Jerry Fields fo llowed the
same path and blasted a towering
shot over the same fence for back·t(}back horne runs.
Parsons and Grey hit home runs

Local bowling
M~y

5, 191H

Ttam

l,ts,

Swuuuns Old~ &amp; C'&lt;idillar
G. &amp;./.1\ utu Purts

lli4

158
llfi

Tw,1':. Ct ,lllpwry
C. &amp; D. Perm~. tlll
Suj.!&lt;H 1\unt\:ihlcmd
v,.u~h ar i's

l lt ~h

110
9\
Bl

rardeual

rnd . ~cu m· - llctt y Whltlil tch2.12.192. 181

lhgh rrhl

thrct··~ arnc s -

Brtty Whi llalt'h605 :

Jurrc [.!l lliiX'rt 4!14 : BHrbara Wl1 it tit l ~\ un 492.
l hgh team g&lt;illll' - G . &amp; J. Autll pt~r l.s 859 :
Sllll/TIUIIs Uids &amp; Cadi1Jm· lll5 : G. &amp; J. Auto Pnrb
Hu~h l !!am thl'l't'-gurm.•s
G. &amp; J Auto Parl.s
2.1/i:t ; S IIU I IIUIL.~ Old:-. &amp; Ccnliii&lt;H" 2273 : r~- ,·~cum­

p;ttl}' 2186

A11-ti 1111' lt•adt·r
Fran Tarkenton is the all-time
leader in NFL touchdown passes
with 342.

,,
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oz.
.
Fran k1es........... :~:.
12

4
51;
6\1

.m
.35:i

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10\1

New York lslanden 6, MinnesOOI 3.
N._ew York leads series 1.0
11nrndly'tGame

7
"

fRJl&gt;AY THE 13
FART2

R

?nd JI EEK~ 7:20 &amp; 9:00P . M.
AT &amp;SU ~ MATINEES 1:20 &amp; 3:

JAN I
IIIN IJA

2:04.

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IXJLLV
I'AUfiiN

f.O!JI

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IIIMII N
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[JiG!
Jnl WlEK : 7:10 &amp; 9:15P.M.

The winner paid $3.40, $3.40 and
$2.60.

Sat. &amp;

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Minnesota at New Yort l!landen

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EXCITING TIMES

COLONIAL CRESENT

$849

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The crowd of 3,350 wagered
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(

Sentinel Ads

Boston 1011, HOUlton IKI,
Boston leads !Jerles 3-2
T'llll'lday'• Game
Boston at HOWJton, .(n)

PIRATES
Plae«t
CAndellrla,Jliteher, on the 2t-day
disabled u..t. R.called Pa!ICU8l Perez.
pttcher, from Portland rl the Pacific
C"""t League.
BABKETIIAIJ.
John

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BOISE STATE - Nomed E. Michael
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DEPAUW - Named Mike Steel~ held

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Named Lynn BleviiiS goU
·
MAin!ArrAN - Announced the reslg·
notion of Brian Mohoney, heod basketball
coach, 10 he COilld return to St. Jnlvt's 8.!1
an Ulllatant coach.

The Daily 'Sentinel

P06TMASTER: Send addreu to The Dally
Sentinel, Ill Court St.. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
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19

MIRACLE

5 LB.

Margarine ...........l:;

10 Qt. Size

I Month ..•....•.. .•.•.........•.. ltO.Itl

Cheese.!~~

.flour....... ~ .......... !!G••

No IIUirlcl'llltl... b)' 111111 permlu.d In t......
where b:me Clrrier 11rvife i11,1U1bJe.

Six.- .. .... ...... ............ 117.111

--- ~--------------------------------------------...
\,

Cottage

SINGLE COPY
PltfCflB
DoUr. .. . ..... . .......... , . : .. ·: tlc.ntJ

$

HAWTHORNE MELODY

cooch.

FLDRJDA cooch

Member: The Auociltecl Prm, Inland Doily Pr. AlloclaUon ond the American
N"-per Publlahero._tatlun, National
Advertlalnl Representative, Branham
New~p~~Jper S.lal. n.1 Thifd Avenue, New
' York, Now York Jw11.

992-2156

Cabbage ............. ~;

HOCKEY

Nou.al-., Lnpe
.
COLDRAIJO ROCKIES - Signed Otrist·
er Kellgrtn and Peter Gustavuon, for.
wards, to mWtl-year contract&amp;.

Pub!- every llftemooo, Monday throul!h
Friday; lfl Coori Street, by the Ohio Valley

*Garden Seed

*Rakes

.•••

contract.
PIT!SBURGH

(ti1P81-I
ADtritlol 11-IJic.

CALL TODAY FOR HOME DELIVERY

*Wheelbarrows

Grou-nd Chuck....L~
BOCKU
.
$ 29
Cube Steak .........L~·

BASEBAll.
Nou-ll.npe
ATLANTA BRAVES - Sfgned Chris
Cbambllas, flrst baseman, to ll five-year

Pllblllhing Comoony • M!lllimedia, Inc.,
r.mer.y, Ohio IS711, lll-111itl. Second cia.M
poo&amp;qe pold ot l'omtroy, Ohio.

BULK

Ground Beef.......~~ ..

••

Batotse,ea
TlaeldaJ"•G•me

Weal, purMer.

shop the bargains ·
· in the
\
SPRING GARDENING

$

PHOENIX SUNS - Slcned Joel Kra·
mer forward to a multiyear contract.
WAsHINGTON BULLETS Signed
Jeff Ruland, center, to a multiyear ~n­
tract.
FOOTBALL
Natloaal F•U.U League
SAN DIEGO CHARGERS - Signed
N11te Wr~ht, cornerback; Rob Preston,
q111rterblci; Ervin Cobbs, safety ; Stun
et.plwn tackle; Richard Peot punter,
and ~ Blake, kick return specialist.
SEAn'LE SEAIIAWKS - Signed Jeff

The ninth race trifecta, 9-5--1, paid
$948.30.

~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::::::::::::::=:::::::::::::::::::::::;1

Lunch
Meats
.....
L!·••
39
.

29

'tllndlly'• Sports TrauacUou

~r~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

1

$

SUPERIOR

$ 59

NaiJOIUII Berkey League Playoff•
Slallley Cap FlaaiJ
BntefSneu
'l'letdiJ'• Game

lleeza moRE ~

M~SON,

13

SUPERIOR

-

New York at San Diego
PhiiBdelphJll at San Francisco
ChJcago at Cincinnati, (n)
!l.I..oub at Holl!rton, (11)
r.tontreal at 1m Angeles, (n)
Only M•mea scheduled

Three $5 prizes will be awarded :
most unique, prettiest and most
original. The parade will proceed to

Tee off time is 2p.m. and the event
is open to all golfers. No advance
registration Is necessary. ,Cost of
participatlon has been reduced to $3
lor club members and $7 for non·
cl$ members. Proceeds will go
towards the choir robe fund which
sta.nds at about midway in its goal.

17

.700
. .561
.511
.41!

nurtdly'a Games

The Syracuse Ball Association will
open the swnmer activities with a
parade on Friday, May 15. The
parade will start at 5:30 p.m. on
Dusky Street behind Larry's
grpcery. All Syracuse youth are in·
vlted to participate by decorating
their bicycles, big wheels, wagons,
etc.

The second annual Meigs Choir
Golf Classic will be held Saturday,
May 16, at the Riverside Golf Club at
Mason, W. Va.

9

(Webh 1·2), (n)
Montreal (Sanderson 4-1) at LOs Angeles (ReWIIl 3-1). (n)

baseball activities

(;olf classic set

2t

"""""" l·l), (n)
ChiCIIIO (Krukow 1-2) at Cincinnati
(Seaver 3-1), (n)
1
SLI..Ou.ls (Shirley WI at HOW!Ion tSut·
ton 2-4) , (n )
New York {Lynch 1 ~1 at San Diego

Parade opens summer

the
park
where atprizes
6 p.m.will
there
will ball
be an
invocation,
be
awarded and team members and
cD!Incil members will be introduced.
At· 6:30 T·Ball and Minor League
teams will play, at 7:20 Pee Wee
team, and Little League team will
play at 9 p.m. The refreshment
stand will be open and everyone is
eni:ouraged to come out and support
th~ youth program.

13
17
211

WeUesdly'a Gamn
Philadelphia 1By•trom 2-11 al San
Francisco (Ripley 1-3)
Pitts~Nrrdl (Bibby 1·21 at Atlanta (Mon-

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP )
Domition, driven by Terry Holton,
won the featured eighth race by a
nose Monday at Scioto Downs in

$6.20
and $3.60,
Jockey
Tomar
Annies
Rocketandwas
second
lor
was third lor$3.00.

11
11

17
11
8
5
WEST

St.Louil 3, H[)IJ!I&amp;OO 2, 10 innings
San Diego 3, New York. 0
Los Anijeles $, Montrtal o
San Francisco 4, Philadelphia 0

for Wellston in a late game comeback effort, but the effort was too
late and Meigs claimed the 13-9 win.
Troy Brooks had a perfect four·
for-four night including two singles
and two doubles. Mike Miller had a
single and duble, Jerry Fields a
single, double, and horne run,
Kovalchik a home run, and Jeff
Wayland a single and double. Terry
Wayland, Steve Ohlinger, and Jim
Boyer also added singles.
For Wellston Parsons singled
twice and homered , Grey homered,
Campbe ll singled twice, Derrow
singled and Patrick doubled.
A double-header is planned for
Thursday night at Meigs High
School against the Gallipolis Blue
Devils.

7&amp;1

18

Pd. GB
.696 .621
1
.&amp;07 l\1
.451 51;
.31ll 9
.200 12

Atlanta 2, Pltt.sbufllh 0
ClncinnaU 2, Chicago I

Wins ft•aturt• raet'

POMEROY BOWLING LANES
Mumlng G\nrit•s

7

15 t4
15 17
t4 17
II 211
Tuesday' 1 Games

San Diego

Kovalchik paces victory

16

,..,_~I

I\

·-·..
'

...,.

�fiage-6-The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday. May 13,c1981

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Niekro two hits Pirates, .Dodgers·win again
By Associated Press
After a blistering power mower
accident at home, Phil Niekro
wasn't sure he could pitch.
• " I couldn't throw a fastball," he.
said. "The blister on ·my finger
touched the ball when I tried to
throw it. But it didn't affect my
knuckleball."
Actually, that was just about all
Niekro needed Tuesday night in pit·
ching a two-hitter to pace the AllanIa Braves to a 2-0 victory over the
Pittsburgh Pirates.
" Iwasjustfortunateenoughto get
the knuckleball over and when I do
that, I can get them to swing at some
bact pitches - and they did," said
Niekro, who used about 90 per cent
knucklers in controlling the Pirates.
The shutout, incidentally, was the
40th of Niekro's career and was also
his 235th lifetime victory.
Niekro, 2·1, never allowed a run·
ner past second base. He walked
three and struck out five and yielded
Only singles to Phil Garner in the
second inning and Tony Pena in the

ftfthc

The shutout was the first of
Cardinals 3, Astros 2
E;ichelberger's career and the first
Tonuny Herr's suicide squeeze for the Padres this year.
bunt scored Gene Tenaae from third Eichelberger didn't walk a batter
with the winning run in the lOth in- andstruckoutflve.
·
ning as St. Louis edged Houston.
Meanwhile, Perkins, now batting
Tenace led off the lOth with a double .422, extended his hitting streak to 11
off Joe Sambito and Ken Oberkfell gamesc The Padres scored twice in
bunted Tenace to third before Herr's the first off Pat Zachry on Perkins'
squeeze play put the Cardinals on · two-nm single. Perkins then gave
top.
the Padres~ three-run cushion in the
Bruce Sutter pitched two innings fourth with a horner.
in relie( of starter Bob Forsch to get
Giants 4, Phi!Ues 0
the victory. Jim Kaat pitched the
Enos Cabell and Larry Herndon
10\htogethissecondsave. ·
had RBI doubles in the first inning
The bunt by Herr was picture per· as San Francisco beat Philadelphia
feet. All the charging Sambito could behind the combined nine-hit pit·
·do was shovel the ball with his glove ching of Doyle Alexander and Greg
towards catcher Alan Ashby, far too Minton.
late to tag Tenace.
The Giants got four hits and three
runs in the first inning off Nino
Padres 3, Mels 0
Espinosa for all the runs they
Juan Eichelberger scattered needed.
seven hits and Broderick Perkins,
Dodgers5, Expos0
the major leagues' leading hitter,
Ron Cey knocked in four runs with
smashed a home run, double and two homers and a single and three
single and drove in three runs as San Los Angeles Dodgers pitchers comDiego defeated New York.
bined to shut out Montreal. Burt

Hooton ea&lt;uou . mo uuu Hew.,
without a loss, pltci)Jng the first 6!·3
.
innings. aobby Castillo and cSteve
Howe followed Hooton, with Howe
recordinghisfourthsave.
R. H. BILLMAN II, O.D.
Ray Burris took the loss for Mantreal, which has not won in Los ·'
Provides S1,1ch Services As
Angeles since 1979.
Tim· Raines, the major league
VISION EXAMINATIONS
leader in stolen bases, notched his
HARD AND SOFT CONTACT LENSES
29th and 30th of the season for MooOPEN M.·T.-W.-F. 9·5
treal. But he suffered an injury to his
CLOSED THUR.· SAT.-SUN.
right wrist when he was picked off ,
992·2920
Pomeory, 011.
base in the fifth inning by Hooton () 113 Court St.
Above
Clark's
Jewelry
in
Pomeroy
and was removed and taken to a
hospital for precautionary X·rays.
»..:::&gt;.::&gt;&lt;&gt;&lt;~:&gt;..::&gt;..::&gt;..:::&gt;&lt;::&gt;&lt;::&gt;&lt;::&gt;o&lt;:;;&gt;-o..o..o..o..o..o..o.o.o.o.&lt;J

With Cincinnati's Ray Knight on
first base by a walk from reliever
Dick Tidrow, 1-4, Ron Oester grounded a single into right fielder, where
Leon Durham was ready to retrieve.
" ! ju&gt;t ran all the way," said
Knight, who slid hard into third
base. "With one out, I was going to
be aggressive. I knew Durham was
playing deep. He's got a good arm,
but he has to make a good throw to
get me out."
The right fielder made a quick and
hard throw. but the ball bounced
past third baseman Hector Cruz and
Uu·ough the narrow opening in the
dugout rai ling. Knight was awa rded

Martha Hay Evans best overall
winner in 'Pictures ofMental
Health' contest photography fare

6

Elsewhere, the New York
Yankees downed the Oakland A's 41, the Kansas City Royals nipped the
Texas Rangers 3-2, the Chicago
White Sox beat the Cleveland In·
dians 7-4, the California Angels
blanked the Milwaukee Brewers~.
the Minnesota Twins edged the
Boston Red Sox 4-3 in 10 innings and
the Detroit Tigers trimmed the Seat·
tle Mariners 6-2.

Martha Hay Evans' black and
white photograph of her small son
exploring the seashore was judged
"Best of Show" for the Gallia County
segment of the "Picture of Mental
Health" amateur photo contest. The
contest was sponsored by the Ga!lia·
Jackson-Meigs Mental Health Board
as a Mental Health Month activity .
Jackson County "Best of Show"
winner was Dr. William K. BUtler.
His color photo of a mother and child
dressing alike as Raggedy Ann dolls
for Halloween was judged as best
depicting good mental health.
Meigs County "Best of Show" was
awarded to Rebecca Baloy for her
color photo of a group of friends get·
ling ready for an exciting sleigh
ride.
other winners were: Gallia Coun-

It was the Cubs' eighth loss in nine
horne.
one-run
games. They have the worst
"I saw the ball just as it was going
into the dugout, " Knight said. "My winning percentage in the major
first'thought was that it was going to leagues, and have failed to posra
hit the railing and and stop, so I got complete game or save by a pitcher.
On the other hand, Reds' starter
up quickly. But it got through
Mario
Soto, 2-5, considered it a long·
there.''
overdue
bit of good fortune. -The
Cruz asserted the ball hit Knight. ·
right-hander allowed five hits and .
The third baseman differed.
" If it hit me, I didn't feel it," said struck out 10 in his second complete
game.
Knight.
"If I had lost this game, I would
" It hit Knight on the elbow or
have
gone crazy," said Soto, who got
shoulder," Cruz insisted. "He was
little
offensive support in several of
sliding as I was going to get it. I
his
starts.
"No matter how you win,
thought we had a play."
Cruz added, "That's how baseball it's important to win."
Catcher Joe Nolan agreed.
has been going for us lately."

Board play gives Boston 3-2 lead

HUBBARD'S

GREENHOUSE

GeHing bock lo
the business.
of dressing .up
Is only port
of this
Footworks
story. In
addition to
lerrlflc
tailored
looks on
a more
tlaHering
heel height,
these
Footworks
shoes look and
feel terrific
wherever

CHAPMAN'S SHOES

I
I

--- --

•

I
I
I

SPECIAL OF THE WEEKI

Rivalry corJs ract•
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP )
Rivalry, driven by Ray Paver Jr.,
won the fea tured eighth race by
three lengths at Scioto Downs on
Tuesday in 2:02.3.
The winner paid $6.00, $3.60 and
$2.80.
Awful Time was second for $9.80
and $4.00. Garrison Lopez was third
for $3.20.
The ninth-race trifecta, 7-2-0, paid
$180.30.
The crowd of 3,947 wagered
$340,303.

Save40¢
on new
fJI'andos Coffee

CHUCKWAGON •••••••• 89~
WITH FRIES •••••••• •1.29

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second Summer Term July 20 - August 21
Contact yo ur Gulaance Counselor
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Or C:all

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even more!

I

'

'

~

'
JUDGES PHOTOGRAPHY CONTEST - The Rev. William Middleswarth, Pomeroy, selecting winner In the "Picture of Mental Health"
Amateur. Photo Coolest sponsored by the Gallla-Jacksoo-Meigs Mental
Health Board.

Infant Richard

Health Review

The sun and your health.
By Robert G. Stockmal,
dangerous misconception is that any
D.O., Ph.D.
loti on, oil or butter promoted by
Assistant Professor of
modern advertising as a suntanning
Family Medicine
agent will offer protection from bar·
Ohio University College
mful sunrays. In reality, the only ef·
of Osteopathic Medicine
fective substances tha.t can do the
QUESTION : With warmer job is one that will block out that
weather almost upon us I thought 1 part of the ultraviolet light spectrum
would ask why I never get a tan that catLqes most of the burning,
when I go to the beach. I always while allowing less dangerous
burn. What can I do to improve the ultraviolet and visible light that
chances of getting a tan?
promotes tanning,to get through.
ANSWER: Getting a tan without a
sunburn, the whole point of a sunOne of the best screening agents is
bathing ritual, has always been a member of the B complex
more difficult tha n it seems. A vitamins ... pa ra-aminobenzoic acid,

Clip Ihis 40C-of[ coupon fo r Gra ndos
Coffee now! lfs our inv itation to you to
lry Grandos - the ~rand new coffee from
Eurupu. New Gra ndos Cofffle is a European
blond of specially selected fin e coffees
fro m around Ihu world. You 'lllove the rich,

deeply satisfying flavor. Serve Grandos
proudly to your family and friends.
Grandos is available in Freeze
Dried or Instant. Regular or
Decaffeinated. in popular 2, 4,
. and 8 ~unce jars. Try it today!

Rio
Grande

College

STORE COUPON

ANY SIZE

Grandos

and
Commun11'1 College

4

know how.
POLLY
AUCE
DEAR MARY AND AUCE - A
gardening expert tell5 me that
today, many sweet potatoes are
sprayed with a chemical that will
prevent them from sprouting
naturally. If you're really deter·
mined to start a sweet potato vine,
you'll have to just keep trying until
you find one that will sprout. Just set
the potato in a glass of water and
leave it there until the strongest
sprout is about a foot high. Then
trim off all other stems and plant in
soil by burying the potato com·
pletely, so that only the stem is
above the surface. Sweet potatoes
need plenty of light and water.
Avocado growers are a bit luckier.
Generally. eight out of 10 avocado
seeds will sprout. Juat poke three or
four toothpicks Into the seed around
Its diameter, and put it into a glass
of water, so the toothplcb rest on
the edge of the glass and the bottom
(Oat) and of the seed Is submerged.
When your seed has sprouted white
1'0011, plant the seed In soli, covering
It completely. You needn't wait for
the tdem to ltart growlnc befort!
planting; It will sprout !lOOilef or

'

'

•

or "PABA." A five percent solution
of PABA in alcohol was found to be
the most effective agent among
several dozen tested by scientists
way back in 1969. The alcohol base
washes off very quickly in water, so
it has to be reapplied periodially.
But, if you'll read the labels when
selecting a lotion or oil for tanning,
you'll find the most effective sun
screening preparations will have
PABA listed among the ingredients.
While these will stay on the skin
longer than the alcohol preparation,
you should still reapply them from
time to time while you're in the sun.

Legion Auxiliary wins awards at
Dept. of Ohio junior Conference
Action" and the veterans affairs and
rehabilitation program.
others attending from here were
Mrs. Pearl Knapp and Mrs. Mary
Martin, president and secretary
respectively of Unit 39, Robin Camj}bell and Anita Smith.
Brenda Creque, junior Depart·
rnent of Ohio president, presided at
the meeting which opened in
ritualistic form with April Flowers
of Columbus giving the welcome and
Jennifer Kanton of Cincinnati, the
response. Mrs. John Killgore,
Department of Ohio Auxiliary
president, brought greetings and
also spoke of her pride in the junior
program.
Robin Litton, Ashland, wsa elec·
ted new president.

...

,.

STATE AWARDS- Mrs. Veda Davis, sea jed, junior activities chairman for the juniors of the American Legion Auxlllary, Drew Webster
Post 39, Pomeroy, displays the Dorothy McCullough trophy which sbe
won for the best Americanism program In the state. Pictured to her left i•
JenoHer Cross, who won the Tiny Tot Award, and back row, left to right,
Kim Patterson, first place ·Winner In the foreign relations scrapbook on
Thatland, Mrs. Pearl Knapp, president of the Pomeroy Awdllary, and
Robin Campbell, junior president, who also attended the conference.
Several trophies and awards were
won by the Ameri can Legion Junior
Auxiliary of Drew Webster Post 39,
Pomeroy, at the 3oth annual
American Legion Auxiliary, Department of Ohio, Junior Conference,
held at the Bexley American Legion
Post 430 Saturday.
Mrs. Veda Davis, junior activities
chainnan for Unit 39. won the

A mother-daughter banquet was
held Friday night at the Rock
Springs Uoiled MethOdist Church.
Recognized and presented corsages were Mrs. Grace Glaze, the
oldest mother present, and Mrs.
Coonie Little, the youngest mother.
Aprogram following the dinner included readings by Lottie Leonard,
Ethel Grueser, and Thelma Jeffers.
There were two songs, "Build My
Mansion" and "He Touched Me" by
Vicki and Tammy Adakins and
Geraldine Sexton. Connie Little,
Judy Marshall, Sally and Nancy

Dorothy McCullough trophy for the
Arurnrnage saJe was set for June
best Americanism program, and 8, 9 and 10 at the Trinity Church
also took second place for the junior when the Happy Harvesters Class
activities award.
met recently in the church social
First place awards went to Kim room.
Patterson for foreign relations, and
to Jennifer Cross for the tiny tots
Miss Enna Smith presided at the
program, with Mrs. Davis receiving meeting during which time it was
the scrapbook award and the unil noted that meetings will be held the
getting second place in "Juniors in first Friday of each month at 1 p.m.

May 14, 1981
This coming vear can be .an im ·
portant one for you where your
car eer Is concerned. If you let

your bosses know that you are not

afraid of responsib ility , you ' ll be
gi1.1e'n more of it , but a ilia you ' ll b~::

paid well for it.
TAURUS !April 20·May 201
You may have to work a btt har·
der than usual today to advance
your self . interests nominally ,
However, these small strides will
be important.

GEMINI (May 21 ·June 20) Lit·
rte th ings mean a tot toeoy where
toved ones are concerned. A
thoughtful card or gilt wttt go a
tong way in maktng points.
CANCER (June 21-July 221
Your plans coutcl be disrupted
today by the necessity of being

helpf ul to someone. Even thou gh
you m ight be inconvenienced ,
you'l l tat er tee t good that you

like to be around a lot of people

assis ted them .

whom you truly .-:a re.

is handling some th ing in a way

with correct ing advice.

Others m ay look at work today as
meret; work , but not you . You ' ll
take pride in your tasks, even
those of the most mundane
nature.

probabilit ies for personal gain

will be evident to those in your

LED !July 2J·Juty 22! A frie nd

lhat you know by personal ex·
perience to be wrong. You ' II have

the opportunity today to help him

VIRGO (Aug. 2J·Sept. 221 Your

are good loday, but your yield
may not be quite as large as you

anti cipated . Neverthele ss it ' ll be
worthwhile.

LIBRA (Sept. 2!·0ct. 231 You

have good leadership quallties

today and you c•n get others to do
tasks

w hi ch

they

fin d

disagreeable, because your way

ot asking ts so tactful.
SCORPIO !Ocl. 2•-Nov. 221
What makes your gOOd deeds so
admirable today il that y~u go
about assisting others without
seeking cred tl. Strangely enough,
you witt benefit.
SAGITTARIUS !Nov. 23·Dec.
211 tnttiolly you may feet you'd

Zuspao
Mr. and Mrs. Francis A. (Frank)
Zuspan of Mason are announcing the
birth of their second son, April 18, at
the Holzer Medical Center.
The infant weighed seven pounds
five ounces and was 20 inches long.'
He has been named Wesley Thomas.
Mr. and Mrs. Zuspan have another
son, Todd. Maternal grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs. Thomas A. Blaine,
Middleport, and the maternal greatgrandmother is Mrs. Fay Abrams,
New Castle, Ind. Paternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. William F.
Zuspan, Mason, W. Va.
Roush
Mr. and Mrs. Kenny Roush of
Bailey Run Road, Pomeroy, are announcing the birth of a son, Justin
Paul, May 2 at the Holzer Medical
Center.
The seven pound, eight ounce in·
!ant was 20 in ches long. Mr. and
Mrs. Roush have another son, Jason,
two. Grandparents are Mrs. Myrtle
Nonnan, Hysell Run, and Mr. and
Mrs. Albert Roush, Bailey Run
Road. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Coleman,
Pin son, Ky ., are greatgrandparents. They have been here
for the past 10 days with their granddaughter and family, returning to
Kentucky Monday.

Radford, sang "Sweet, Sweet
Spirit." Angie and Karen Sloan did a
pantomime to ~'Excuses. ''
Nancy Radford narrated a
hwnorous style show with the
models being Judy and Tara Humphreys, Helen Blackston, Judy Marshall, Thelma Jeffers, Tracy O'Del~
Martha and Marsha King, Shirley
Sisson, Angie Sloan, Ann Evans,
Ethel Grueser, Sharon and Lisa Dar·
st, Pam Evans, Susanne Richmond,
Susie and Lisa Pullins, Christy
Blackston, Sally Radford, and Connie Little.

Rummage sale in June

•

ASTRO
GRAPH

Mr. and Mrs. Lester Richard, the ·
fonner Renee Parker, Long Bottom,
are announcing the birth of their fir·
st child, a daughter, Leslie Renee,
on March !6 at the St. Joseph
Hospital in Parkersburg. The infant
weighed eight pounds, 14 ounces and
was 21 inches long. ·
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Albert Parker, Pomeroy,
and the paternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Ri chards, Long
Bottom.

Mother-daughter fete Friday

1

(

ALSO PHOTOGRAPHY CONTEST JUDGE - Sallyalme Holtz,
Tribune lifestyles editor, makes her selections in the "Picture of Mental
Health" Amateur Photography Contest sponsored by the Gallla-JacksooMeigs Mental Health Board.

later. Meanwhile, the roots can get a
better start if they grow in soil. HapPY growing! - POLLY
DEAR POLLY - Did you ever
buy a package of a new flavor of
snack crackers, only to find out no
one in the family likes them? They
won't go to waste if you grind them
into crumbs in the blender, then use
the crumbs to bread pork chops,
chicken, or in stuffings, etc. A real
tasty treat! - HELEN
DEAR POLLY - Hope someone
can use the following Pointers :
Minor scratches on watch crystals
can be removed by genUy rubbing
with toothpaste.
Lipstick stains on cups can be
removed by l)lbbing with salt.
A stopped-up stnk can be unclogged with three cups of boiling
vinegar. Takes about 10 minutes. BETTY
DEAR POLLY - When making
Parker House rolls or any kind of
roll or bread recipe that uses eggs,
beat the eggs with a hand beater or
electric mixer before adding them to
the liquid. The finished rolll will be
. much Ughter and nicer.- VERBA
DEAR POLLY - If you freeze
English muffins, take ,them out of
the package before freezing,
separate the halves and replace
them in the package face-to-back.
Wrap securely and freeze. You can
then remove any nwnber and pop
the halves into the toaster while still
frozen. - GEORGE
Polly will send you one of her
. signed thank-you newspaper coupon
clippers If she IlleS your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem In her
colwnn. Write POLLY'S POIN·
TERS in care of this newspaper.

drafting.
After returning to Ohio, he set·
tied in Lorain and a!tended
Lorain Community College
where he studied portrait pain·
ting. He now pastors The Church
of God of Prophecy on 0. J. White
Road in Gallipolis where he as
resided since August 1980.
The art display consists of oils,
pastels, and charcoal portraits of
noted personalities to include
Elvis, Jimmy Carter, and Clark
Gable to name a few. All works
are for sale from $25 to $225.
The dispaly will be open from J.
3 p.m. on May 13.

•

hf

avocado, but don't '

~---------------------~
,.

1

"~&amp;: ":"' '&lt;(f;: •• :&gt;&lt;.

By Polly Fisher
Correspondent
DEAR POLLY - I have tried and
tried to start a sweet potato vine,
without any luck.
Can you or any of
your readers give
me any help? MARY
DEAR POLLY
- I want to start a
plant from an

:r--- -------------------Save

..
•

I
I
I
I
I
I
1

Open to Ju niors in upper hall ol class

6141245-5353

It

Potato and avocado tips

I

Open to graeluotlng seniors .

The Admls•lons Office
llo Grande C:ollogo

t

RIO GRANDE - The portraits
of Nathania! R. Jeffery,
Gallipolis, are presently on
display in the atrium of the Fine
and Perfonnin'g Arts Center at
Rio Grande College and Community College.
1
Born and raised in Chaprnanville, W.Va., Jeffrey entered
the ministry and pastored chur·
ches in Phoenix, Arizona,
Boulder City, Nevada and
Oregon. While in Boulder City, he
worked as a sign and picture
painter with an outdoor advertising agency. He also attende d Salem Community
College in Oregon and studied

Polly's Pointers

SUMMER SESSION 1981
:

,~;:;

' !•

County; The Rev. William
Middleswarth, Meigs County; and
Steve Keller, Jackson County.
The Gallia-Jackson-Meigs Mental
Health Board invites the public to attend an open house display ot "Pictures of Mental Health" on Sunday,
May 17, at the board offices on
Jackson Pike from 2 to 4 p.m. Cer·
tificates and ribbons will be awarded at that time.

" Located at the End of the Pomeroy·Mason Bridge"

ADVANCED
SCHOLARS PROGRAM

;,;

!, · ..,I L'
I ·,.,. it '

Galli~

New arrivals

Art display at RGC

I
I
I
I

ADOLPH'
S
DAIRY
VALLEY
570 W. Main
PH. 992·2556
Pomeroy, DH .

l)epartureTime: NOW!

I

!:'

~

The Future

r

'

'11:1''
.(
f

DESfiNATION:

, I"' .

ty - tarnestine Spriegel, blue;
Vada Mayo, red; John B. Johnson
and Donna W. Shato, honorable
mention. Jackson County- Patricia
Tope, red; Theresa Tucker, yellow;
Kenny Leach, honorable mention.
Christ House took Jackson County
first place in black and white
photography.
For the under 18 years of age
category, Dixie L. Beair was awarded Meigs County first place for
black and white and Mike Gibbs took
first place in Jackson County black
and white.
The brother and sister team of
Todd and Heather Madden took first
(Heather) and second place (Todd)
for color entries from Jackson County.
Judges were Sallyanne . Holtz,

, (' I

BOSTON (AP) - After posing for ding advantage for the game and after the opening quarter was 12
nearly three week!ll as a mistake- snared a series-high 35 defensive points.
Ph. 992-5776 Syracuse, Oh.
prone group that struggled to rebounds to prevent second shots by
NOW OPEN FOR
unleash its running game and Houston and kick off their own Iran·
The lanky Maxwell had his best ofSPRING SEASON
dominate the boards, the real Celtics sition game.
fensive game of the playoffs. His 28
t Potted Plants
resurfaced Tuesday night.
Boston had not played a solid points set a career playoff high and
t Complete line of bedding
In the first quarter, the Celtics game with running and rebounding his 15 rebounds tied one.
plants and hanging
raced away from the Houston spurts since April 22, when it
Moses Malone led Ho111&gt;-ton with 20
baskets.
you·re headed.
Rockets 109-80 to charge into a 3-2 defeated Philadelphia 118-99 in the points but had only 11 rebounds, his
All Dozen Packs 95C doz~n
lead in their best-of-seven National second game of the Eastern Con- lowest total of the series.
Hours: Open Daily 9 to 8
"Next To Elbelfelds In Pomeroy"
Basketball Association cham· ference fina ls. Even when the
Sun.1tos
pionship series.
Celtics won the last three games of
Guard Tom Henderson was the ~~~:::::::::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The Celtics can wrap up their 14th that series, they had to battle back only starter to score more than his
NBA title in Houston Thursday from big deficits.
series average. The other starting
P•••••••••••••••••••••~
night. If the Rockets bounce back
As in Saturday's easy 94-71 win in guard, Mike Dunleavy, fouled out
from their second decisive defeat of the third game with Houston, there with five points in 14 minutes after
the series and win, the seventh game was no need for a Celtic comeback pouring in 28 points in Houston's 91·
would be here Sunday.
Tuesday night. Their smallest lead 86 win Sunday.
Boston Jed 34-19 after the first
quarter, when five of their 14 r---------------~----------1
baskets came on fast breaks and the
·Celtics outrebounded the Rockets 13·
7.
The Celtics held a 54-41 reboun·

•

Wednesday, May 13, 1981 -Page-7

BEND AREA OPTOMEMETRIC CENTER

Cub manager can't believe latest 2-lloss
. CINCINNATI . (AP) - Chicago
Cubs Manager Joe Amalfitano had
trouble believing his ballclub's
latest loss.
"We can't catch a break,"
Amalfitano lamented of a 2·1 loss
Tuesday to the Cincinnati Reds.
"The ball hits the runner's elbow
and goes through an opening in the
(dugout ) railing. If it doesn't go
through there, the ballgame's still
alive."
Amalfitano was referring to the
statistically improbable and
somewhat mysterious turn of events
that decided the game with one out
in the bottom of the ninth.

By The Bend

.

The Daily Sentinel

today , but what you really need is

just the companionship of one of

· at tne church. It was noted that the
church will serv~ refreshments on
Regatta Weekend, June 25-28.
There was group singing of "What
a Friend We Have innJesus"
followed by a welcome to Hilda
McLain of Lancaster, Mrs. Stella
Kloes and Mrs. Genevieve Meinhart
who has been ill. Officers' replirts
were given and a thank you note was
read from Mr. and Mrs. Ed Kennedy
for serving the wedding reception of
their daughter, Cheryl.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19)

AQUARIUS !Jan. 20·Feb. 19) It

charge today that you mean
busi ness when you lett them

something. Howt'ver, your nice

way of stating il witt take out the
sting .

.

PISCES (Feb. 20·March 201
You may not be too persistent In
personal matters today, but you

w ill be extremely r eliable and
tenacious in handling things for

others.

AlliES (March 21 ·Aprit 19) tn

rela tionships whi ch you deem to
be valuable, make it a point todlly
to let these persons know how

much you think of them. Kind
words make solid tInks.

Devotions were given by Mrs. Ed·
na Slusher using Mark 4, verse 35,
a~d a story, "ASafe Journey" along
With several poems on friendship.
She concluded with a reading " U
Flowers Talked." . There was group
singing of "Bless Be the Tie" and the
Lord's Prayer in unison. Mrs.
Wilma Terrell will have devotions
at the June meeting. Mrs. Eva
Dessauer and Mrs. Ruth Massar will
have refreshments.
Homemade ice cream and cookies
were served by Mrs. Meinhart and·
Mrll. Slusher to Mrs. Mrs. Kloes,
Mrs. Terre~, Mrs. McLain, Mrs.
Dessauer, Mrs. Edith Lanning and
~S11Uth.
'

�•
JA:~

~t:t.{f.J ...~ ·

Pag~8- The

Daily Sentinel

MASON :... The Mason Historical
Society made additional plans for
the Rhododendron Tea set for May ·
17, from 2 to 4 p.m. at the historic
Virgil A. Lewis home on Brown
Street, Mason.
Mrs. Lots Test, president, announced a work day Is scheduled for
Thursday and Friday, May 14 and
15. All members are asked to help in
getting the home ready for the tea.
Thanks have heen extended to the
VFW Post ~ for the new
American Flag which was placed on
the pole by Charlie Sayre of Post
9926.

Mrs. Fred Taylor presented the
devotionals which followed the
Pledge of Allegiance. Her theme
was on Mother's Day.
Mrs. Vernon (Ruth ) Grinstead
·read a story on Ann J arviB, founder
of Mother's Day.
Attending the meeting were Mrs.
Catherine Smith, Mrs. Helen Barton, Mrs. Mildred Gibbs, Mrs.
Bessie Ingels, Mrs. Ruth Grinstead,
Mrs. Lucille Swackhamer, Mrs.
Lilah Zerkle, Mrs. Lea Belcher,
Mrs. Delores Taylor, Mrs. Joyce
Carson and Mrs. Sarah Spencer.

Social gathering
set for Saturday
The congregati on of the Middleport First United Presbyterian
Church is planning a social
gathering with light refreshments
for Saturday night from 6 to 8 p.m. to
meet a prospective clergy couple.
Members are to take sandwichess
and cookies.
The clergy couple will be
preaching in the Middleport church
on Sunday at 11 a.m. to the
.congregations of the First United
Presbyterian Churches of Harrisonville, Syracuse, and Middleport, and
all members of the churches are
asked to be present.

Hove coffee break
The sixth annual coffee break of
the Big Bend B. Club will be held
Sunday from 10 a.m. to 5 .m. at the
Royal Oak Park recreaton building.
There will be free coffee and music
by the Charlie Lilly band.
Miscellaneous items will be on
display, door prizes will be awarded
and food will be for sale. The public
is invited to attend.

c:

OES to meet
Pa&amp;t Matrons Club of Evangeline
Chapter, Order of the Estern Star of
Middleport will meet Friday at the
home of Mrs. Grace French.

.

Church has banquet
"A Mother's Touch" was the
theme of the mother-daughter
fellowship held recenUy at the
Pomeroy Church of Christ.
The welcome was given by Mrs.
Eileen Bowers and prayer preceding
the dinner was by Mrs. Evelyn
Woodford. Mrs. Betty Spencer had
devotions and prayer, and Judi
Grogan gave "To Another with
Love."
The speaker was Debbie Melton
who talked on the fellowship theme.
Charldene Alkire and Janet Venoy
had a song, and the closing prayer
was given by Anna Davidsoh.
~oami Ohlinger registered the
guests. Pianist for the meeting was
Elizabeth Duffy.

TOPS news reported
A demonstration on stitchery will
be given at this week's mee~g of
the TOPS ClubOH 570 of Pomeroy.
Mrs. Delores Long presided at the
meeting which opened with the
TOPS pledge and roll caD. The 22
members weighing in showed a net
loss of 15 pounds. Frances Haggy
was the weekly queen and VIrginia
Dean was the runner-up. It was
noted that the spring wardrobe contest will be held May 5 to June 9, and
the funny money contest will continue 8 to 10 weeks. lnfOmlation on
the club may be obtained from 99274.15.

Back from Florida
Mrs. Erma Roush of Minersville
has returned home fNrn a three
week trip around the state of
Florida. She toured with her
daughter and son-in-law, Frances
and Bob Weber of Columbus, They
visited relatives and friends and enjoyed the attractions from
Tallahassee to Key Largo, the
Everglades, and taking in Disney
World before corning home.

Revival to begin
A revival will be held at the Ash
Street Free Will Baptist Church,
Middleport, beginning May 18, at
7:3G nightly. Robert Grubb of
Gallipolis will be the guest speaker.

Return from trip
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Dixon of
Pomeroy have returned from Victoria, Texas, where they visited
their son, Roger, and his wtfe, Suzy.
They also spent the weekend at Corpus Christy with Mr. and Mrs. Buddy Harrell, their daughter-in-law's
parents. Roger is a petroleum
engineer with Quintana Petroleum
Corp. in Refugio, Texas.

Registration now
Registration for the Gingerbread
House pre-school is being held now
with Mrs. Sandra Luckeydoo, 992-

•

Hove weiner roost

Trudy Williams sho~r "ho#ore~

recognition. Special certificates
wiD be presented to those persons
attending Senior Citizens Day activities who give us their names
byMay.5.
A program will be held
following lunch featuring "guest
stars," music and a puppet show.
Ruth · Dixon, Editor of the
publication, "Ohio's Heritage,"
Ohio Commission on Aging, and a
representative of the Area Agency on Aging will also take part in
the day's program.
Meigs County co-chairwomen
for Senior Citizens Day activities
are Mary Frances Baumgardner
and Marcia Denison and they exrend an invitation to aU senior
citizens to be at the Meigs County
Senior Center on May 19 to take
part In the day's events.

Mother's !;lay guests of Mr. and ·
Mrs. Albert · Roush, Bailey Run
Road, Pomeroy, were Mr. and Mrs.
Virgil Parsons and daughters, Kim
and Lois, Becky and Lanny TYree
and son, Charlie, Mr. and Mrs. Kenny Roush, Jason and Justin, Mr. and
Mrs. Larry Flowers, Pickerington;
Doug Roush, Reynoldsburg; Dal~
Roush, St Albans, and Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Coleman, Pinson Fork, Ky.

ROSE TRElliS
• Porch Boxes

FAMILY CLINIC

ANNOUNCING

··

THE OPENING OF

. THE OFFICES OF

No.

STORY &amp; STORY
AnORNEYS AT LAW
Steven L. Story ·ancf Karen H. Story
236 w. 2nd, Pomeroy, Oh.
(Formerly Meigs Gen. Hospital)
Home Ph. 992: 352:
Office Ph. 992-U24

Whit Ooes Psorl1sls l..ooll Uket

.

It appears as sll ..ry skin petchel, often on knHI and elbows, b!Jt
can be found on any ~I of the body. The patches, or plaques, are
composed of dead skin cells which accumulate In leywa.
·
Is There 1 Cure fOr Psorlllll?
.
No, but for many victims of the dlse ..., cOntrol Is ponlble. Some
psorlatlcs m•y ha~e reml~tlont of the disease for long perlodl of
ilme. In rare ea..,• sometllnes fht disease may dlteppear entirely.

DAVII) L. CARR, D.O.- OFfiCE, 675-6971
Office ttoun by Appiilltment

.
ltoTI't Plqtent, WV 2JSH

1:24 J1ck1011 Ave.

...:;

COMPARED TO OTHER BRANDS" AT KROGER.

•rot SOlE SOOPfl COST

R. Johns has t reated that
~pecial Idea just for you .
• We've taken a tradition and
given it a personal touch. •
Your'"name on one side and
your loved one',; on tht other,
'bound together with a
Sparkling Diamond . Available
in Valadium or lOK Yellow
Gold. ,

CEMETERY
VASES
MEMORIAL DAY
IS MAY 25th

•

MOORE'S
AMERICAN
HARDWARE
Ph.

.

~- 11&amp;m!l IS f8QU1red ID be
rlllldily •va1llbM for lilt 1n e.ach Kroger Store. e,cept 11
~ noted lf"'l tt. ad 11 we 00 run rut at an atMn!Md
hem, we ~II oHtf vou vour chOice of a comparllble 1tem.
when 1vaUble. rBfiect1ng t~ s.ame IIVIf'I QI Or a ratncheck
Vllhich wtll tntttle you to purcl\ul!l the itdvert..::l item 11 t~
.tvtrtiMd pnce withm 30 davs.
Of

.,

Wf RESUVE THE ltiC HT TO liMIT QUANTITIES. NONE
SOlD TO OEAlUS .

KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON

Dressing
A\JON OA.lE

Sweet
Peas .

Whole Boneless $189
Smoked Ham ... lb.
fRESH PICNIC
C
Pork Roast ............... lb .

1000 ISlAND fRfNCH OR
IT AllAN liQUID

li£11011 lOW II ICE

C

Kroger
,. .,
Dressing ... ' "

95

C

Kroger
Gelatin

lb .

:

89c
33c

'"
.,.,,$149
"'

Tea
Bags .

9· 11·LB. AVG .

IN THE PIECE KROGER

OSCAR MAYER

~

992-2848

1 f OJ

EMB ASS Y

79
99
Mecit Bologno ....... ...
3 $7 99
Canned Ham. .. ... c~~· ·~~~~D

.. .,....

'~::

Solad

COP YtiiCHT 191 1 THE l&lt;ltOGU CO . ITEMS AND PliiiCU
GOO D SUNDAY MAY 10 THitU SATURDA Y MA't' 16 n1 1
IN POMEROYANOGAI..l.IPOI..IS STORES .

~~1~24~W~·~m~a~i~n~P~o~m~e~r~oy~,~O;h~.~~i~~~iiiiiii • :~

AVONDA LE CUT

Green
16 ·01
Beans ..... ''"

C
c;

A \IO N( AH

DEPARTMENT
STORE

Country Club
Ice Cream

•

••

•

i

Phone 742-2100

•

Eckrich

JUMBO BOLOGNA ...........L.b~.!1.79 ·

I

.••

....

Eckrich

OLD FASHION. LOAF. •••••••••:b}1.97 ,.

. ,.,.

e

79
$} 69

MARGARINE:.....

New

CHEESE .. r,~.~~.

11

•

$'

ClOVU VAllE 'I

29

Margarine
l ib
Quarters "'
COUNTR 't' OV EN

Angel Food
I
Cake .. . "'

.. I'IEW EVUVDA Y lOW PRICE ..

~;~ $159
e
Grade A Large Eggs. 69

COlO CRESl

~~r

2% Milk

~.$
Paper

88

Ctn.

s lb. Bag White

Single_Siiced .

Ground Beef

Flake
Coconut

ooz .

2
$1
Margarine ............... P~ 9 ;.
69¢
MAIKIT SASkfT 5H ECT GRADE 14.14. lARCl ECCS ... DOZ . 7l

QUARTERS EATMORE

•

l -Ib

Marshmallow
1J o r
Creme .
'"

Kroger
White Bread

KROGER

RADISHES.......... ~~.~-.19'
GRAPEFRUIT.. ....~~~. '1.29

.. S}89

'----v----

~ROCU

Kahn's Meat
Wieners .. .... .

Pack Red

12 oz. Kraft Pimento

Genuine
Ground Chuck

3$ 29
20-oz .

Lvs.

OR

Country Oven

' .,

Pretzels .. "• .
KELLOGG 'S

Special K
Cereal . ..
GOlD CREU

...

Marsh·
1-lb
mallows ....,,,

CABBAGE ............~~:.19'

. Bag

$1.29

19112 oz. Chef's

·SPAGHETTI DINNER ~.~=:t~~~$1.39
12"x:is ft.

REYNOLDS WRAP FOIL. ••••••••.59e
10oz. Vienna

PORK BARBECUE •••••••••••~~~.$1.29
ARMOUR CHILl ••••••••••••••••••$119
•
16 oz.

AVAILAIU ONLY IN
STORES WITH
DEll DEPTS.
HOTFDODS
AVAILAILE I lam

Embers
Charcoal
GULF liT~ CHARCOAL
Lighter Fluid .. ·~,~~ ..

••

•-

$2 49
$2
49
Orange Juice . ·l~~!·

Fri;d

VASlLtNE INTENSIVE CARE

$139
Btl.
Lotion ... .. .. ..... . 10-ox.

Strawberry Pie 9ti':h

•

FRESH MADE

'

FRESH lAKED HAMBURGER
OR HOT DOG

Salad.Size
Tomatoes

ONION SOUP. •••••••••••••••••• .2/&amp;ge ~~
GRAPEFRUIT SECTIONS •••••~~~.69' ~
16oz. Del Monte

.

KOOL·AID •••••••••••••••••••••••.&amp;/89'

Sandwich Buns .. a-c•.

15
C
Sweet Corn ... .. .
4 ggc
Apples ............ k,· .
10
C
Oranges ............
99c
Pineapple ... .... ~ .
89
C
Drinka _3 1..~~·
IN THE HUSK. NEW CROP,
WHITE OR YEllOW

Ear

WINESAP

•~
•

.023 Regular

$499

AV ONDAU

Mandarin
Oronges

Chicken .... .. Buck•t
AMRICANORMUSTARD
$109
Potato Salad ......... lb .
LONGHORN
$299
Colby Cheese ....... lb .

fROZEN KROGER (3-PAK )

)

HI LLCREsr

Maraschino
. . . ' '""
Ch errres

READY TO EAT. WISHBONE

NoBeans, Can

10112 oz. Campbells

Pear
lt ·Ol .
Halves ..... '""

59¢
49¢

TIL 7pm

(U ·OZ . flUID .. . SI.J' )

,,

69c

, .,. $129

AV O ND ~U

•,,

IEIIIIDillOW 'IICI)

REGULAR OR JUMBO

HAM SALAD••••••••••••••••••••~~~ $1.39
&amp;oz.

Any Size Pkg.

Pork 'N'
I S s.,.
Beans ...... ' ' "

&amp;· O!

Homemade

lib. Blue Bonnet
Quarters

REGULAR OR CHUB PAK

49

$

••

Prices Effective Thru Saturday, May 16th

lb

113 CALifORNIA NAVEL

IUNI AVAilAil~.

KROGEJI

Vienna

Sausage

I I or

''"
S·ot
.. Con

KIOGfl

Lima
16 · 01.
Beans ...... ' ' "
IIUIIA! LtW "ICE

$299
DAYTlMl

$4 79 ,
sgc
••L
ggc

Comfort . . '.!,·t,•.
Diapers. ..
KIOGU

Worcelfershire

Sauce ......
KltOGII

Steak

l6 ·u1 .

.
Sauce ....... 10·0&gt;
"''·

I:C:'"a .ct. $109
Cups ..... ...

,k,.

Each

PRDH

\

Each

16 oz. Del Monte

TRO,.CANA ASIOITIO FLAVOH
1

THIN SPAGHE'IT1.. ••••••••••• ~:~.79'
32 oz. Wagner's

IIG VAlUl

Vanilla
Wafers ...

12·01.

log

KIOGU

Tomato

6 •01 .

Paste ...... ''"
O&amp;C

ORANGE DRINK •••••••• ~ ... 21'1.29

Onion Rings ~=~

~~ndale

.

...'

59c ,.
79c
'

32, .

.... sup ... ... ' ''·
•,

•

EMBAHf

TOTAL SATISFACTION GU ARANTEE

..

(

I

1hele

Evlf"(thu-.g vou buy 11 Kroget" •s guarameed for vou• total
lllii11Ctl0n reotrdltlt of t'P'IInuflcturet If you 1re not UhS·
fled, krog. will rept~ee yOYr 1tem W11h the same br1nd or a
comctrlflbie brand Ot ralund t'O\JI purchaae PfiCI .

·'~~

,,

, NO OTHU llANOS ARE STOI:KtD

ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY
be,

The personal promise rin&amp;,

•Aower Pots

Sentinel Social Calendar

--·-----------------·-·-·-·-

'•

REDWOOD

The congregation of the Middleport Nazarene Church enjoyed a
7177.
·weiner roast and hayride recenUy at
the Monte Good home in Racine.
Correction
There was a "hay throwing" and
Mrs. Dixie Beair who was presen- singing on the ride. Snapshots were
WEDNESDAY
Reed, W. Main St., Pomeroy.
ted a flower at the recent meeting of taken of each one and later hung on
AMERICAN LEGION, Feeney- Anyone with questions may call
Chester Council 323, Daughers of the bulletin board at the church.
Bennett Post 128, Middleport, 7: M Reed at 99U723.
America, received it for being the .
p.m. Wednesday night. NOmination
PAST MATRONS CLUB,
youngest grandmother and not the
Evangeline
Chapter, O.E.S., Midof officers.
youngest mother as was earlier Reports for duty
dleport,
Flrday
evening, home of
POMEROY - MIDDLEPORT
reported.
Uons Club, Wednesday at noon at Mrs. Grace French.
Marine Col. Johnny A. Johnson, Meigs Inn.
whose wife, Colleen, is the daughter
POMEROY CHAPTER 80 Royal Receive gifts
Gifted Children hear
of the Rev. and Mrs. Robert L. Per- Arch Masons Wednesday, 7:3G p.m.
Homer Smith was awarded a
Rio Nigerian student
sons, Long Bottom, has reported for Bosworth Council 46 Royal and Weed Eater and Pat HiiJ, a hedge
RIO GRANDE - Martha Juryit, a duty with 2nd Battalion, 2nd SelectMasters8p.m.
trimmer, In the Meigs County
student studying food service Marines, Camp Lejeune, N. C.
THURSDAY
Jaycee program.
technology at Rio Grande College
ROCK 8SPRINGS
GRANGE,
and Community College, spoke to
Thursday,
p.m. at the Grange
hall. Irr------~I
talented and gifted students Friday, Free clothing day
Baking and sewing contests will be
May 8, at the Point Pleasant Board
The 'Gallla-Meigs Community Ac- held.
of Education.
LAUREL CUFF Better Health
tion Agency wiU hold free clothing
For All Occasions
Approximately 2:/ students heard
Club,
Thursday, 7:W p.m. at the
day for low income persons from 9
Miss J uryit discuss several topics
home of Mrs. Ann Mash.
which included : the Nigerian a.m. to 12 noon Friday. The clothing
MEIGS IDGH Class of 19'16 will CAROUSEL CONFECTIONERY
bank is located in the fanner high
Education System, the Nigerian conmake plans for a five year reunion at
school at Cheshire.
cept of marriage, Nigerian social
Ph. 992-6342
a meeting to be held at 7:30 p.m.
life and life in general.
317
N.
~nd
· Middleport
Thursday at the residence of Bruce
The Point Plea511nt School Board Undergoes surgery
.
'
ts hosting Miss Juryit who plans to
Kenny Grover of near Chester unearn her bachelor degree in
derwent
open heart surgery Monday
Business Management before returat
University
hospital in Colwnbus.
ning to Nigeria. Prior to attendin8
RGC&amp;CC, she studied,. at State Carda may be sent to Room 300,
ALL,IRGY AND DERMATOLOGY
University of New York at Farming- Means HaU, University Hospital,
Wh1l Is Poorlnls?
,
Colwnbull, Ohio.
dale.
A chronic skin disease that affects some 8 million people In this
country,
What C.uses Psorlull?
No one knOws. Skin Injury, emotional stress and some forms of
Infections are sold to trigger Its development.
Wllo Gets· Psorlisls? ·
'
Men end women In equal numbers at any age, but most often
between Ihe ageo·of 15 and 35. Piorlasls has been diagnosed for the
first time In people of a~vanced age. II also strikes children. About
llO,OOO new cases of psorlaslsare diagnosed each year.
Is Psoriasis Cont1glous?

Games were played with prizes
going to Vicki kennedy, Jayne
Coleman, and Brenda Kennedy.
Cake, nuts, mints, punch and coffee
were served.
Attending were Esther and Sally
Kennedy, Teresa and Heather Wood,
Beatrice Dugan, Teresa Houdashelt,

IAYI UP TO 40% ON
IOOPIR COlT CUTTERS

~

gossip, an eavesdropper and drinks
too much.- WANTS PRIVACY
P.S. Would it help if I was
especially sweet, taking Dad's side
against his son, so that my b.f. would
decide he didn't like "two against
one" and ask his father to leave?
They say honey catches more flies DEAR HELEN:
than vinegar.
DEARW.P.:
I'ma-azy
42 and about
should this
know 32-year-old
better, but
I'm
Honey might persuade this fly in man. He goes out quite a lot, usually
the ointment he's a welcome guest, with older women. l don't think he
never mind occasional disputes with pays his own way very often, but
his sOn.
he's so gorgeous, who worried about
Forget sneakiness and try for money?
honest discussion with your boyI call often, and occasionally he
friend: he's probably no happier accepts. We have dinner and see a
about the situation than you are. show (on me) and he spends half an
Surely you two can manage a tactful hour with me later. He never says he
eviction, as in "Look, Dad, we've got cares for me, but at least be doesn't
problems we need to work out alone, stand me up. Do you think we could
okay?"
ever be a real couple? - RITA
(And you may just be right: Men DEARRITA:
.
who slug their women aren't exjctly
This gigolo sounds as personally
perfecj.) - H.
involved as a busy signal. Stop
wasting your money. - H.
DEAR HELEN :
My fiance had a vasectomy 13
Got a problem? An a4ult subject '
years ago. We'd like one child, no for discussion? You can talk it over
more, and would rather not go in her coiW!Ul if you write to Helen
through a reversal which might not Bottel, care of this newspaper.
work anyway. (I'm told success rate

A bridal shower honoring Susan .
Kennedy, bride-elect of J~mes
Stephens, was given by Marlene and
Florence Barrett at the Barrett
home recently .

SPECIAL
OCCASIONS
CALL FOR .
SPECIAL IDeAS .

Hove guests

ts around 50 percent for men whose
operations are less than 10 years old,
but chancier for earlier ones.)
How about spenn withdrawal via
a needle, since spenn are still
manufactured in a vasectomized
man? Then I could be artificially inseminated. Seems to me I read of
this somewhere. - L. C.
DEARL.:
Sperm withdrawal, from a collection device Implanted in the groin, is
still in the experimental stages, and
you might have to visit West Germany for the procedure. I understand this is one of the few places
where It is currenUy being done.
U a vasectomy reversal doesn't
work for your man, why not consider
artificial insemination via a spenn
bank?- H.

Decaaled Cakes

Bridal fare ·
honors Miss
Kennedy

A shower was held recently for Church of Christ.
Games were played with prlzea •
,Mrs. Trudy Willtams and her
daughter, Kasey Michelle, at the going to Mrs. Doi6thy Roach, who :
home of Mrs. Cathy Cooper by the also woq the door prize, Mrs. Edna
. primary teachers of the Middleport .· Ji;vana, and Mrs. WUllams. Others '
attendWII were Mrs. ,tlora JUce, ·
Miss Tfleli!la il!!yer, Miss Rayanne.,:
Spring concert
Cole, and Mrs. i')ebbie Meltan. "'Sen- :
3 p.m. Suhl:loy
ding gifts were l'f!rs. Debbie :
Honaker,l\frs. Debbie (1'lach, Mrs. :
The vocal music department of Jane Hess.~Mrs. Sharon Stewart, '
Meigs High School will present its and Mrs. Jennifer S~.
•
annualatspring
at 3 p.m.
Sun- r·;::·:::::::~::=·==:::=:; "
day
the concert
"Pomeroy
United
Methodist Church.
The varied program Is open to the
public. There will be no admission
charge but a free wiU offering will be
taken.

·When boyfriend's dad moved
zn, love got 'knocked out': ..

cruel? Oh, yes, our " visitor" is· a

•

•

Helen Help Us

BY HELEN BOTTEL
Specla1 correspolldenl
DEAR HELEN:
I've been living with my boyfriend
for two years. Everything was great
until his dad moved in last June, supposedly for a few months. He's
causing rifts: my guy has hit me
twice recently. Before, we never
even had an argument.
Should I pack and leave, just sit
back and take it, or let "Dad" know
he's overstayed ,his welcome. If the
last, how to do it without seeming

e

Wednesday. May Jll, 1981

May 19th proclaimed
Senior Citizens·Day
Tbe state of Ohio has long
recognized the value of its older
citizens. Tbe third Tuesday in
May has been designated as
Senior Citizens Day since 19'17
· throughout Ohio. ·
Senior Citizens Day for 1981 ts
scheduled for May 19. Tbe theme
for this statewide event Is
"Senior Citizens - Ohio's
Greatest Resource.•'
Activities at the Meigs County
Senior Citizens Center will begin
at 11 a.m. A potluck lunch will be
held at 12 noon. The Center will
furnish the meat and beverage
and those attending are asked to
bring a diah to share and table
service.
Couples married 50 years or
more and those persons·90 and
over wiD be receivin~ special

•

• ;,

·Pomeroy-Midcll!!10!11Ohio

In and around Meigs
Rhododendron Teo
set May 17

. •~~
..li
~~.; .

�,

I

FERROALLOVS DIVISION

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, May 13, 1981

I

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Page-10- The Daily Sentinel

Television
•
•
VIewmg

I

GRAHAM PLANT

,.,.;'··'

The. Daily Sen

:(.

:'.- \

MAY 13, 1981
EVENING

fllti}Nl ID'il

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to form
lour ordinary words.

NEW BIBLE BAFFLE
SHOW
Cllil2JGI FAMILY FEUD
(!) WILD KINGDOM 'World of
the Pennipede'.
0 Cll TIC TAC DOUGH
IIJ Cfil MACNEIL·LEHRER .
REPORT
®!NEWS
7:30 CIJ O BULLSEYE
(1) AT HOME WITH THE
BIBLE
IIJ BASEBALL Atlanta Br.,e s

I have t{l stud y
mv par1

I

I.._,_
I

· • ·..-c...- · · -~·

7:00 (1) 8 PM MAGAZINE

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
byHenrt ArnoktandBoblee

r:!J ~ ~~ '"

........ . . ,

(1)

CAPTAIN EASY
MY ~EW !!U51NESOS ......... 1-JOW THEI&lt;t .. L HOPE
AS'!70CtATe-- THAT'S
TH I~ ACTUAL PHOTO
ALL YO U NEED
·OF YO U BREAKIN &lt;'i
TO K~OIII!
INTO BISON OIL WILL
co~v 1~ce You L'M
NOT ~LUFFtN(;!

FROM MY PRIVATE INVESTI(;ATOI':-- ~
WHO'S HAD ~U UNDER SURVEILlANCE
EVEFI; SIN CE VOYT A5516NED YOU TO
IIIITERFERE WITH ,y.,y AFFAIRS! e.ur
DON' T WO F~;FI;Y-

BcCAUSE
iT'$ VOYTt'M
IIJTERE5TED IIJ ·~OT YOU, ~ROXTON!
AM I (;Of TIN(;
THROU6H ~

SAFETY AWARDS PRESENTED-The "A" Shift of the Production Department at the Foote Mineral Plant
was presented with awards for safe years worked this past week. Shown above first row left to right are William
Cruickshanks, Virgil Lee, Louis Johnson, Orval Wiles, Dorsey Roush, Harry Reitmire, George Blankenship,
Emmett Rawson, Uoyd Thornton and Cliff Northrop; second row, Gary Freeman, James French, George
VanMatre, Ronald Willdnson, Dale Proffitt, William Rorrer, Harold Hood and Paul White.

DAY SHIFT RECEIVE AWARDS-The Foote Mineral Plant presented day shift workers In the Preduetlon
Departmenl with awards for years worked .ltthout lost time due 1o lajnry. Slto'll'll above flrlt'row left to rtgbt are
Earl Morris, Donald Shinn, Arthur Gibbs, James GUmore, John Oldlker, Bryele Sayre 1111d Ted li.Dey; secend·
row, Rondls Taylor, Paul Hudson, Sherman Buskirk, Joseph Varian, Clinton Sw!Jber, Kenneth Keefer and Cheryl
Kropka.

BORN LOSER

Foote Mineral Plant presents employe safety awards
Cliff Northrup, General Supertendent at the Foote Mineral Plant,
Graham Station, made safety
award presentations this week to
employees for safe years worked
without lost time due to injury. The
awards were presented to the Yard
Department a nd Production
Department.
Those employees receiving
awards were presented with a tw&lt;&gt;point diamond for 25 safe years, a
sapphire gemstone for 20 safe
years. a numera l with the Foote
Mineral logo for l:i, 10 and :; safe
years, and a decal for those with
only one safe year.
Those employees receiving safety
awards and decals in the Yard
Department were, James (Woody)
Burdette, Wilbur Hood, Kenneth
Durst. Charles Frye and Clyde
Gerlach, 28 safe years: Junior
Hoschar and George Adams. 27 safe
years; Robert Rollins, Lawrence
Connolly. Theron Workman and
Harold Parsons. 26 safe years; Paul
Goodnite. Gerald Pullins and Harry
Kearns, 25 safe years; Cecil Hill
and Otmer Knopp, 24 safe years;
John Donohue and H. Wilson
Johnson. 21 safe years: Bernard
White, 19 safe years; James Casey,
18 safe years; Robert Keppen, 17
safe years; Ernie Roush, 15 safe
years; Robert Quillen. 14 safe

yea rs; Law re nce May es and
Wilmer Anderson, 13 safe years;
Conley Marshall, Larry Johnson,
William Anderson, Charles Riffle
and Harvey Bush, 12 safe years;
Arthur Keefer, Roger Barker and
Charles Turner,ll safe years; John
Mulford, 8 safe years; Robert
Sherry and Arthur Roush, one safe
year.
Those employees receiving
awards in the Production Department ,"A" Shift wer e William
Cruickshanks, Virgil Lee and Louis
Johnson, 28 safe years: Orval Wiles
and Dorsey Roush, 26 safe years;
Harry Reitmire, 25 safe years;
George Blankenship and Emmett
Rawson, 18 safe years ; La.rry
Lanier, Uoyd Thornton and Gary
Freeman, 16 safe years; James
French, 13 safe years; George
VanMatre, Ronald Wilkinson, Dale
Proffitt and William Rorrer, 12
years ; Harold Hood, 9 safe years;
Donald Warth, 8 safe years; and
Paul White, 7 safe years.
Those employees rece ivin g
awards in the Production Department on Day shift were Earl
Morris, Donald Shinn, Buddy
Kearns and Arthur Gibbs, 28 safe
years; James Gilmore and John
Oldaker, 27 safe years ; Brycle
Sayre, Ted Riley and Orland Floyd,
26 safe years ; Rondis Taylor. 19

GHAHAM ·~

~I

l).os:r - r11GPL£ ~
Jug A.AI~
5Tl.lP1D!

PLANT

ANNIE
OH, 6EE- 1 CAH'T
T' DAY, "OfiDOY"! l
PIWM15EDAH6ELA
I'DHELP HER,
Tfl.AN5PLANT SOME
5TUFF ...

VEI\,Y 'N ELL ... EXCEPT TH~T
BE BACK 'NELL, OF COUR5f ...
AfWUNO
IF YOU HAVE A
THE GIJAI\lJG ARE HOT
D/NNEI?- PREVIOUS APFtllHTI!!'NT~.[
SURE 'NHETHEK THEY ARE
TIME,
I G!fCIJLD !*: INGPECTIN6
THEII.E TO PROTECT HIM
OKAY'? THE u!NSTALLATION''
B:E~!!FR~OM STRANGEftS ..·O~

STRAN6ERS
FROM HIM·"

"'""'

RECEIVE SAFETY AWARDS-The Yard Department at the Foote .
Mineral Plant, received safety awards lor years worked without any lost
time due to Injury. Pictured first row left to right are James (Woody)
Burdette, Wilbur Hood, Kenneth Durst, George Adams, Robert RoUlns,
Lawrenee Connolly, Harold Parsons, Paul Goodnite, Harry Keams,
Joseph Varian, 12 safe years;
years; Paul Hudson, 16 safe years;
Clinton
Swisher, BiUy Murphy and
Sherman Buskirk, n safe years;

ALI.EYOOP

Cecn Hill; OI!Der Knopp, John Donohue ud CUff Northrop, Genenl
Superintendent; llei!ond row, WUson Johnson, James Casey, Robert
Keppen, Robert Quillen, WJlllam Andenon, Charles Riffle, Rocer
Barker, Charles Turner, Harvey Bush, John Mullord and Robert Sherry.

liE NO MORE I!ARlERING OF
GOO()$. FROM NOW ON. WE'U. USE
BOOZLE'S BONES, HERE, FOR TRA.DtN'!
~&amp;R~'U.

Kenneth Keefer, 11 safe yean; OScar Roush, 8 years. ·

Practice nuclear
medicine at VMH
The practice of modern nuchilr
medicine is being carried out at
Veterans Memorial Hospital which
is this week observing National
Hospital Week.
Nuclear medicine is the use of
small doses or radioactive material
to help diagnose a wide variety of
diseases and disorders.
Skilled professionals use special
equipment, the gamma camera and
procedures along with the radioactive materials to learn how certain
organs function and to diagnose and
detennine the extent of certain

TECHNOLOGIST- Roger Roush, nuclear medlcine tec ~noioglst, is
pictured with the gamma camera, a vital part of the nuclear medicine
program at Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Middleport has 43 arrests
Forty-three arrests were made by
; : the Middleport Police Department
· during April, Middleport Police
Chief J. J . Cremeans reports. Of the
43 arrests, 12 persons were charged
with driving while intoxicated ; II
for disorderly manner and 10 with
. speeding.. Other arrests were open
container charges, two, and one
each for failure to stop after an ac·

cident; illegally burning of brush;
contempt of court ; reckless
operation; open fire; hitskip; wrong
way on a one way street; following
too closely. Two cases were
dismissed and charges were dropped in one case. Total mileage
driven for the month was 3,672 miles
and parking meter collections
totaled $714.85.

Village funds total $419,390
All Middleport Village monies as
. of April 30 totaled $419,390.44, ClerkTreasurer Jon Buck reports. Reciepts and disbursements, respectively,
for each village fund during the
month and the balance of each fund
, at the close of the month follow :
Genera~
$1 3,280.07, $12,238.76,
)11,454.33; street light, no receipts,
$1,016.97, $7,509.90; cemetery,
$715.15, ,$991.45, $780.96 deficit; fire
. equipment, $150, $1,302.37, $1,781.29,
· deficit; swimming pool, no receipts,
$38.4~. $2,750.66; fire truck, no
receipts, no disbursements,
$22,335.76; planning commission, no
receipts, $5, $251 .73; street maintenance, $4,607.04, $6,354.57,
$2,557.53 deficit; street levy, no
receipts, no disbursements,
$4,627.28; federal revenue sharing,
$3,580, $1,716,44, $5,232.49; HUD,
$30,000, $30,187.16, $2,033.72; general
'(

bond retirement (fire house), no
receipts, no disbursements,
$16,245.56; sanitary sewer, $7,144.44,
$7,254.46, $12,166.02; sanitary sewer
escrow, no receipts, $21,019.98,
$159,213.19; water, $6,609.99,
$12,140.97, $38,618.19; water meter
trusts, $200, $201.20, $8,036.93; water
tank, $1,000, no disbursements,
$134,969.24.
Receipts for the month totaled
$69,489.69 while di sbursements
amounted to$94,465.80.

Israeli art
NEW YORK (AP) - A retrospective of 20th-century Israeli art, " Artists of Israel: 1~1980," ls being
shown at the Jewish Muse.un
through May 17.

Truck owners must get tags
Sarah Gibbs, deputy motor ve hicle
registrar for Meigs County, announces that all owners of commercial trucks and trailers must of&gt;.
lain their licenses this month.
Midnight on May 31 is the last time
they can drive their vehicles on their

present stickers.
The person or persons who own the
vehicle must obtain .their own
stickers this year or stop by the
registrar's office and pick up a slip
for the owner to sign.

(!) HOLLYWOOD SOUARES

CIHID

DICK CAVETT SHOW
Guest: Novelist Stanley Elkin.
®l $100,000 NAME THAT
TUNE
ID FACE THE MUSIC
7:58
CBN UPDATE NEWS
8:00
8 (!) REAL PEOPLE Avisil
with a 90yearold man who buill
a stone castle and founded the
Knights of the Golden Trail, a
fraternal club whose members
vow to keep the Ten Commandments, an Ohio man trieat ojump
an M-5 tank over five automobiles, and a look at a man
who is a human echo capable of
repeating what another person
says alm ost simultaneously
and in a variety of languages .
tf3epeat; 60 mina .)
(1) SPECIALS
C1J MOYIE · (DRAMA) ' "
"Onion Field" 1979
CiJ G:2JID THE GREATEST
AMERICAN HERO Ralph tevs
up his unpredicta bl e super
powers , rac ing to Pam's
defense when her cov ete d
promotion to jun ior law partn er
becom'ee a death sentence
after the bright young attorney
diacoversherboaaisentanolad
in an underworld bribe ry
schemeJ.60 mins.)
Ill Cll ®l ENOS Catharine
Bach guest stars asOeisyOuke
when Enos and Turk take on a
super international jewel thief
known as 'The Cat.' (Repeat ;60
mins.)
(]) ANSEL ADAMS: PHOTO·
GRAPHER To ld in his own
wo rds , this film portrait of the
life and work of one of the grea test ph otographers is an in ·
timate personal view of the arti st and hi s perspective on pho tography, baaed on shc.ty yea rs
in the medium. (60 mina.)
illJ ALL CREATURES GREAT
AND SMALL 'Pig in the Middle'
A vet 's night oil duty is someth ing to look forward to, but th inQs
can be complicated when everyone wantalhe same night . (60
mins.)
8:58 ffi CBN UPDATE NEWS
9:00 (I) 1J (!)
DIFF 'RENT
STROKES Wil li s, the star
pitcher of his baseball team. is
wooed by the coach of the toea I
losing team and hi a riva l, th e
co ach of a winn ing sq uad
acros s
town.
(.Qiose d·Capt ioned)
(1) 7!!9 CLUB
(i) i12l ID
ABC MOYIE
SPECIAL 'California Suit e'
1978 Stars : Jane FondB, Alan
Aida.
0 lJl@! CBS WEDNESDAY
NIGHT MOYIE 'Stand By Your
Men ' 1981 Sta rs : Annette 0 '·
To o~Tim Mcintire.
(]) I]J) KENNEDY CENTER
TONIGHT ' A Salute to Duke '
America ' s lines! jazziHiists
pay tribute to Duke Ellington,
the man and the music. Among
the twenty+five to th irty artists
expected will be Sarah Vaughn,
Billy Taylor, Joe Will ia ms and
Max Roa ch. (60 mina .)
9:30 CIJ U (!) THEFACTSOFLIFE
The girl a resort to shoplift ing to
get Mrs. Garrett a birthday pr esent, but the theft is soon dis·
covered when she tries to 8)1·
change th e gi ft at the store.

ffi

(fte~eatL

10:00

W U l!J

QUINCY Quincy

becomes angered and de·
pressed aHer his investigation
of a terrible air disasterreveals
that airlines are not faci ng up to
problema that occur when s
plane Ia forced to creah land on
water. (Repe&amp;li 80 mlno.l
(1) MOYIE ~ADVENTURE ) "
"Big Red One" 1i80

IIJ TBSEYENING NEWS

BLOOD PRESSURE- Dr. J11111ea WithereD receives a free blood
pressure ch~k from Margaret Ann Johnson during Sunday'• opea boule
at Veterans Memorial Ho&amp;pltal held le ldck off NaUoaal H01plllll Week.
Some 175 residents attended yesterday's observance. Dilplays by tbe
local cancer unl~ the tuberculosis clinic, bloodmobUe, heart aaoelation
and county emergency medlcal services wen! also featured alone with
hospital tours. Refreshments were served by employes.

0V SEARCHFORALEXANDER
THE GREAT 'Tho Young Con·

SO l'OJ TOOK ~ TO
)Q(JR FRIEND, ROBERTO
CORTES, AAD HE HIRED

:
;
;
•
:
;

I'M AFRAID YOU'LL
HAVE TO GO TO
E!UENAYENTURJ&gt;. FOR
THE ANSWERS YOU
SEE!&lt;'!

lfE I$ A SEAMAN?

queror' Alexander rea ches the
borders of Egypt where he is
welcomed as a conquering

hero. (80 mino.)
NEWS

~
tt :oo ~ •

10:28
10:30

CBNUPDATENEWS
MAX MORRIS
OUTER LIMITS

~BNUPDATENEWS

10:58

mrn a m®J Cia! m

NEWS

ffi

PROGRAM

~!!!ANNOUNCED

IN Ht9

MERCY SAKES!!

THEY FOUND

I SEE REVENOOERS ·

IT!! ~

LOOKIN' FOR
:v..:::;~, 1 \fORE STILL,

Carter's information misleading

PAW!!

NEW YORK - President Carter's decision to admit the ihah of Iran
to the United states for medlcal ~teatnient - a move that helped spark
the seizure of·AmeriCIIJIS hostages- waa a "calculated·polltlcal gamble" and was b8sed on 80IIIe misinformation, The New York Tlmea
said today.
The Timel said an "extensive examination of \be Iranian crtaia"lndicated Carter was rnlsinfllfTJled about the 111ture and urgency of tbe ·
Ulnesa of the Canc:er-strtcken shah, wbo died Jut year In Egypt.

,
: PEANUTS

.

Attorney given prison term
FINDLAY, Ohio - An attorney who admitted lltea1lng money from
hiJ cllenta wu sent to prison to begin serving a six-to 1&amp;-year aentence.
Vllitln&amp; Judge A. Roll Selverllilg, alttlric In Hancodl Count7 CIJm.
mon Pleu Court, lgllored plea Tuelday from the wilt ol ROJ S...
lllld hla attomey thet Binion be put on probation.
The FJndiJy attorney pleecled guilty to U... CGIIIil ol pul theft'
liJid two forgery charpa. Selverling ordered ~ Ill belln
tence~tely.

CARE!

BARNEY

READ MY
TEA LEAFS,
MAW ··

'*-

T~E

r

SATTl£ OF
L\ll\5 WON

' WATERLOO

,

ON THE f'LAI{ING
RELDS OF ETON!

W~AT'S-mAT

SUI'POSEO
1b MEAN ?

I DON'T KNOW ..

~

DAVE ALLEN AT LARGE
CBN UPOATE NEWS
1 1:30
U (!) THE TONIGHT
SHOW
(1) ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
@ MOVIE ~DRAMA)" \\ " In
Lovea~Wer" 1858
Cll il2l 1D ABC NEWS NIGHT·
LINE Anchored by Ted

11 :28

llEFT YOU

ATLANTA - Police say the death of a 17-year-old black youth found
strangled with a cord was a "different-type ~" from a string of 28
slayings of black youths, and they considered today whether to assign
the case to tbe special chllikleatha task force.
Uke 15 of the youths killed in the series of slayings, William Bahrett
was small, died by asphyxiation and apparently didn't struggle with
hiJkiller.

)

(J) NIGHT GALLERY

Fl&lt;'ANKLY.
l DON'T I&lt;NOW.

.

replacement rate would drop from
41 percent to 37 percent or 38 percent. And, for tht\ worker paying the
maximum Soc:ial Security tax, the
replacement rate would decrease
from 28 percent to 25 percent.
The administration also envisions
rebating the long-term savings to
workers and their employers in the •
fonn of lower payroll taxes in 1990
and beyond.
Health and Human Services
Secretary Richard S. Sehwelker
maintained that the Reagan administration's plan could save Social
Security from going broke.
"Everybody keeps asking
questions as if we had a fund that
went through the ceiiJng and could
pay everybody everything," he said.
"We're trying to stop the old lady
from having no chect atall."
Social Security faces twin flacal
criJes; a sbort-term shortfall in its
old age and survivors' trust fund,
which could be depleted u early as
the !aU of jfl82, and a far more
serious imbl!ance 30 to to yean
from now when tbe pcllt-World War
n "baby boom" generation hita
retirement r ge.

its complete
could become ...
er.. quite
costl4!

appears t.~o.=:..T

Different type murder case

Congress •••
(Continued from page I)
paign pledges and tearing a hole in
the safety net that the administration claims to have strung
together for the poor and the elderly.
Rep. Claude Pepper, [).Fla., the
60-year-old chainnan of the House
Select Committee on Agi ng,
deplored the proposal as "nothing
short of a wholesale assault on the
economic security of America's
elderly population."
"The president has betrayed his
own campaign promises and has
broken faith with current and future
retirees by proposing IIIU8ive
' reductions in Social Security
benefits which older people have
counted on add earned by their contributions to the system," he said.
Reagan proposed an acrosa-theboard 10 percent cut in the way
future benefits are figured • by
reducing the replacement ratio - or
how much of a worker's last
paycheck is replaced by hi~ first
benefits check. ,
The low-income worker would
receive 50 percenl of hiJ final earnings, compared with :ill percent
now. For tbe average worker, the

Althouqh

diseases.
Nuclear medicine is important
because it helps physicians diagnose
disease earlier so that early .treatment will be more effective.
The basic tool in nuclear medicine
is the gamma camera which
produces an image of the area of the
body in which the radioactive com·
pound has concentrated. This image
is displayed on a film and is in turn
interpreted by the radiologist. The
brain, lung, liver, thyroid, bone and
other parts of the body can be
imaged.

118 Pittsburgh Pirates

CIJ Q Cll JOKER'S WILD

Kop~ .

8 llJ

CBS LATE MOVIE
'MurderByOecree ' 1979Stars:
Ch rist opher Plummer , James
Mason. 0V ABC CAPTIONED NEWS
IB!MOVIE ~DRAMA)"\\ ''Kid
Gall hod" 1H2
1 1:55 (1) CONSUMER REPORTS
PRESENTS: THE CAR SHOW
Through documentary, anima lion and parody , th is special
helpa con aurn era make the bast
Cholcea when buvlng a car.
12:00 Cll il2l ID LO.VE BOAT A
woman izer, accompanied by
hia mate aecrerary and hit cur,..,, llama: Ia aurpriaedwhen he
!ln. II~ get a what he' a looking
for·and a youn~ lemelagymnaat
mu'at come to term a with her
l ather .
overprotecti ve
(ft..,ut ; 70 mlna.)
•
12:28 (!) MOVIE ·(IIOMANCEJ "
~loW

IHE
AC.."TR:E56 WAG

IH INI&lt;ING

tRINOAT

IIJ

I

A~U'T.

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surprise answer. as suggested by the above cartoon

I I
Answer: HER "t I I I I XI I 1 r
[Answers tomorrow )

YeSie•day's

I Jumbles HOARY

EVENT

TEMPER

STRONG

Answer: One isn't tree to go un;jcr th is-A RREST
Jumble Book No. 15; containing 110 puzzle s, Is available for $1.75 potlplld
from J1.HT1ble, do this newspaper, Bo:ot 34 , Norwood, N.J. 07648. Include your
name, ad&lt;lress, zip code and make checks payable to Newspaperboolt:s.

BRIDGE
Sound limit raises
By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

NO RTH

North and South were play,
ing limit raises. but good
sound limit raises so South

was fully JUStified in bidding
three notrump.
West opened the jack of
spades. East played the deuce
on dummy's king. The queen
of diamonds w•s led. East
played the deuce and you
ducked. A second diamond
produced F.ast's eight and
South's king. You had to take

5-13-81

. AK
'1 2
t QJ 1075
• 10 7 4 2

.J

EAST

WEST
109 5
" QI083
t A4
+ A 96

+8 62
"9 765

+82

+K J 8 3
SOUTH
+ Q14 3

. AKJ
t K 96 3
+Q ;

your ace.
There is no reason to cont inue the spades and a shift is

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

mdicated. A heart looks like

We-sl

North

East

Soulb

Pass
P&lt;t ss

3+
Pass

Pass
Pass

3 NT

your best. but your partner

It

must produce both the ace
and kmg if a heart shift will
beat the notrump game. Note
that partner can't really hold
both those cards. If be did. it
would be hard to find an open·
ing bid for South. much less a
three-notrump rebid. Also.
your part ner h•s played
deuce-eight of dtamonds in

that order. That might well be

Opening lead:+J

Play ..

some sort of suit-preference

You must lead the nine of

signal.
So, you decide to play a club
and here is whcr ~ we get

clubs! Partner takes his king

away from partnership con-

"'' hen you lead the six your
partner 1s sure to score his

siderations and get down to
what is known as a "Book

and returns the three. Your

ace pickles South 's queen and
eight and Jack.

~a.~te
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
41 Powwow site
I "The Forsyte42 Pester,
with "on"
5 Sauce staple DOWN
lllrish islands 1 Cincture
12 Laundry
2 Field
worker
3 Clothing
13 Spanish
4 Opposed to
painter
5 Screed
14 Blew the
6 Be a spellYesterday's Answer
whistle on
binder
21 Foreword 32 Imprudent
15 Place of
7 Witticism
22 Swiss river 33 Nick
abode
8 Daughter
23 Favoring
Charles' dog
17 Suffix
of Oedipus
24 Drum roll 34 Equipment
for labor
9 Wobbled
2!i Frost
35 Famed gun18 Poem
10 Called for
27 River in
fighter
19 Native of
16 Riven
Nebraska 37 DisapBonn (abbr.) 20 Part company 29 Overweight pearing seat
20 Extra
23 Word with
finger
or hand
24 Telecast
anew
25 Sharpened
Z6 Mimic 1
27 Studied,
.
with ~~ over "
28 Chinese
pagoda
29 Palm leaf
30 Issue
weapons
31 Gunfire
36 Paper pad
38 On a voyage
39 Finally!
40 Headliner

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work
AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW
One letter aimply stands for another. In this sample A II
used for the three L's. X for the two O's, etc. Single letters.
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
CRYPTOQVOTES
F

ITDNOMDD,

BEINJM ,
NO

GFD

EXAMX

JNSM
PE

PE

FO

IM

UMP

FTPE-

AXNWMO,
XMDTJPD.

IMXPNM
LGFXJMD
REXIMD
Yesterday'• cryptoqaote: THE BEST mROW OF THE DICE
IS TO THROW THEM AWAY.-soURCE OBSCURE

Fgct" 11180

ClJ TOMORROW
COAIT·TO·COAST Guut o:
Mlurttn Reagan, John and

12:30 CIJ •
·

12:58

1:oo

-L

~egRice.(IIOmino . )

CBHII'ORTIREPORT

;oouc

1:10
Ht!WS
1:30
K~IAOTHERS
N•O \1) ATLANTA IIIAVES BA·
.

IEIALL JIIEPLAY Atlonla

Replaces gaslights
In 1879, electric street lamps replaced gaslights
along Broadway in New York City.

eravta va Pltteburgh P!ratea

'

1

�•

•

•
1981

Page

12 The Daily Sentinel

Expect hefty

Pomeroy
WASHINGTON (AP) - Conditions appear favorable now for a ·
hefty boost in crop productton in the
United States and in the Sovtet
Umon, according to the latest
studies by the Agriculture Depart-

supply and demand sttuation and
took a further look at Sovtet grain
import and domestic use
requirements,
Even wtth improved harvest
prospects, the Soviet Umon is likely
to continue importing grain on a
large scale through mid-1982 "to
help meet domestic consumption
goals" and to "replenish badly
depleted stocks" of grain.
The Soviet Union, burdened by
poor harvests in 1979 and 1980, drew
heavtly on reserve gram supplies
and, after the United States embargoed additional shipments early
in 1980, paid high prices for grain
from Argentma and other alternative suppliers.
President Reagan lifted the embargo last month. It was imposed by
former President Carter on Jan. 4,

ment.
If weather

condillons are
favorable, the larger crops in key
producmg countries may lead to a
signiftcant buildup m world grain inventories, department offictals said
Tuesday,
A day earlier, the department
reported that a record U.S, winter
wheat crop is about ready for harvest and that the Soviet Union ts expected to boost its total gram
production sharply from depressed
levels of the past two years.
The new reports on Tuesday
assessed the overall global and U.S

boost in
production

12 •SituaUonsWaB!ed ,
Will dO' loots. 3 vears experle~ce. Free estamites.
Call ?42·2109 and ask for
Don.

Wednesday, May 13, 1981

Middleport, Ohio

1980, in response to Soviet military the report said, "Ar~entlna, the to the high levels of three years
moves into Mghanistan. However, United states and the European ago," the report said.
It also said total meat output,
Carter let stand a 1975 agreement Community, are about the,only areas
which specified that the Soviets with 11Jinifieant quantities of old- which declined during the U.S. emcould buy up to 8 million metric tons crop graln·{froin previous harvests) bargo, could recover to the levels of
of wheat and corn a year through that COiild lie made available to the 1978 and 1979.
Sept. 30, 1981.
Although the early-season projeL'U.S.S.Il"
No official moves have been reporRecellt · rllarket reports "have tiOns for U.S, crop production could
ted that the five-year agreement will suggesfe11 th8t the Canadians and be altered dramatically by weather
be renegotiated.
the SWI~. lliight also be con- developmenis in coming months,
A metric ton ts about 2,205 pounds . sidering fOille form of a long-tenn another report showed American
and is equal to 39.4 bushels of com or , grain agl-eement" but so far there farmers can expect a record total
36.7 bushels of wheat.
has been no official confinnation, it grain output this year if production
The report said total Soviet grain said,
trends stay on keel.
imports in the 1981-32 year beginning
For example, the projections
The department estiJilated this
July 1 could reach 35 rrullion metric' year's SOviet total grain harvest at showed a 1980 U.S. com crop of 7.73
tons, surpassing the record 34 210 million metric tons, up from billion bushels is possible - give or
million tons estimated this year,
189.2 million In 19M,
· take 775 million bushels, depending
"So far, only modest purchases
"Current record livestock In- on weather - compared with 6.65
appear to have been made by the ventories and expected larger sup- billion in 1980 when hot, dry weather '
U.S.S.R. for early 1981-82 delivery, plies of grain would boost overall shriveled the crop. The record was
with Argentina the principal seller," domestic uaage of grain for feed use 7.94 billion bushels in 1979,

13
tllfurance
t1 U'tO , ~O BILE
I N·
SURANCE been eaoJ
celle~?
'1-ost your
o~rator's license? Phone
992·21.(1,
•

Public Noti"c,e_ _

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY.
OHIO
LINOA BELIVEAU,
Pla'"t1fL
· VS·

MICHEL BELIVEAU
uetendant.
No. 17,787
NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION
TO : Mtchel Beltveau,
whose address •s unknown ·

You are hereby not1f1 ed
that you have been named
a defendant 1n a le'tal ac
t 1on
ent1 tled
1nda
Bel1veau
Plamt1ff, vs
Michel Bel1vea u, Defen
dant Th1s actton has been
ass11~ned Case No
17,887
and 1s spendmg 1n the Court
of Common Pleas of Meigs
County, Pomey, Ohi045769

-

3

Datly round tnps Jack
Nicklaus Golf Memorral
Tournament. May 18 2.4.

vs

Thomas L. F11ch and Sonya
R. Fttch, and Vtola Long,
Defendants
Case No. 17,7 111
By v~rtue of an Order of
Sa le •ssued out of th e Com
mon Pleas Court of Meigs
County, Oh10, 1n th e above
ent1tfed
c ase,
upon
IUdgment betng r endered, 1
wrll offer for sa te, af the
front door ot the Court
house 1n Pomeroy, Me1gs
Count(, OhiO, on the 6th

&lt;t1
aomes for Sale
8 room house wltn bath &amp;
shower, full basement,
alummum

o'c lock AM ., the follow1ng
lands and ten ements, to

of publ• cat1on of this noltce
or as soon th er eafter as can

be scheduled by !he court

Larry Spencer ,

'

.

Clerk of Court

of Me1gs County,

OhiO

141 22, 29, 151 6, 13, 20, 27,
6tc
Public Not1ce

Announceme-nts

Shop, Middleport

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

Curb Inflation.
Pay Cash for
Classifieds and
Savell I
Wnte your own ad and order by mail w11h l h1s
coupon cancel your ad by phone '~-~ en you get
results Money not r efundabl e

Name----------

Address&gt; _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Pnnt one word •n each
space below . EC!ch •n
1ltal or group of f1gures
counts as a word . Count
nam e and address or
phone number tf used
You'll get better results
1f you descnbe full y,
g1ve pnce The Senttnel
reserves the r 1ght to
class1ty, ed1t or r e1ect
any ad . Your ad wi ll be
put 1n the proper
clas•fic a!Jon 1f you'll
check the proper box
be low
Wanted
For Sa le
Announcement
For Rent

I
I
I
I
I
I,
I
I
I'
I
I
I
I

1
1
I

I
I
I
I
I
I

6 _ _ _ _ _ __
7 _ _ _ _ __
8 _ _ _ _ _ __
9 _ _ _ _ __

10 _ _ _ _ _ __
11 _ _ _ _ __
12. _ _ _ _ _ __

--·

Yard Sale

c Garage sale · May

GARAGE SALE on En- 16 o4 wheel drive truck, car,

I

terpnse Rt 33 Furniture,
auto parts, d1shes and all
s1zes clo1hes 51artmg May
II 15, From 10 5 Ra1n or

shme 992 7673:
r

He was b~ rn on July 1, 1922 . He attended
Chester Schoo l bu t graduated fro m Ol1ve Orange
Htgh School, Tuppers Pla1ns, w 1th the c lass of 1940
of wh1ch he was pres1dent
On December 19, 1942, he was Inducted .nto t he
U S Army . He served 3.4 months in the service of hrs
country, of Wh 1ch 28 monthy of th at 11me he spent in
the As1atic Pacifrc area as a Surg1ca1 and Med 1ca1
Techme~an He was m th e 1st Calvalry d1V1S10n w1th
battles and campaigns tn the Southern Phtltpptn es ·
Luzon, New Gu 1nea, and B1smark Arch rpelago Rtb·
bans that he ea rned 1ncluded Astat•c·Paci fi c
Theater Rtbbon w/ 4 Bronze Stars per WO GO
11'33/ .45, Phllrpprne Lrberati on R1bbon w / 2 Bronze

Stars per WD GO #33/45 ; Good Conduct Rob bon per
19 Dec 44, Bz Sv Arrowhead 20 Oct 44 and The
Bronze Star.
On August 24, 1946 he was un1ted .n marrtage to
Caryl Van Meter and to th1S un1on was born 4
children 2 sons, John Byron, San Bernardtno,
Cal•forn 1a, and Daryl William, Hou ston, Tex.as, and
2 daug hters, V~ek1 V1ola Woods, Rt. 3, Pom eroy, and
Rhea Ann Yonker, De R1dder, La, all of wh1ch sur ·
VtVe He al so leaves
grandchil dr en, mcludmg
Valerte, Tara, and Phil1p Woods, John ny, Bryan
and Shart Pooler and Janelle and Rober t Yonker, 2
sons 1n law, Gtlbert A Woods and Ray L Yonker
and 1 daughter 10 law Ela•ne Pooler . 2 s1sters, Viola

a

Teegarden, Portsmouth, Oh10 and Sally Pool er, Rt

3, Pomeroy, several nieces and nephews, and a host
of re lat•ves and frtends .
Bes1des his father, he was preceded tn dea th by
4 brothers, Roy , Wil liam , Alber t and Lawrence
Pooler
Hts last employment was as a custodia n at Oh10
Un•vers1ty Several years of his ltfe was as a ttmber
cutter and sawmtll work er
On hi s 56t h b1rthday , he surrendered h1s life to

!he Lord Jesus Chnst and has been fa ,thful to the
teachmgs of the Bible ever s•nce . He was an active
member of the Chester Church of the Nazarene, was
on the off• c•a l church board, espec ially loved
s1ng,ng gospel songs and sang frequently at local
churches He had fin1shed stngmg at the Mt Her

Yard Sa le Friday, May

15 from 9·4 at the B1ll Cross
res1dence on Matn Street,
Rac1ne. Oh1o Dresses, cur·
ta1ns, bedsp r eads, rugs,
1eans of all k1nds and StZes
Women's an d men's
clolh •ng .

HIS newfound ltfe tn Christ of Love, Joy, Peace,
and Blessmg to us down her e, 1t seems so short,
But to Jesus up 10 Heaven,
It has only jusf begun .
How Brad loved tos•ng God's Pra1ses,
And to us, it was great joy,
Little d•d we know, he was just rehearsmg,
Gett1ng ready to sir.~g 1n Heaven's Choir

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

signs Rain or shine.

' 4 family yard sale, Don
Rea's

restdence .

May

13, 14,15 from 10-4. State Rl,
124,
Th~rd

li ne
Yard Sa le: one mile
above Racme Locks and

•t

Paul

Athens, OH , 594-4221.

H11l

GIGANTIC back yard sale
Let art Fa lis
new
&amp; used baby &amp; residence,
Tuesday
thru
Friday, 9-5,
c htld rens clo thes, fur
ntture,
large men &amp;
womens clothes, Thurs. &amp;
Fr. 128 Park Dnve, Pt.
I Pleasant, from 9 to 3

Wanted to Buy· class rings,
wedding bands, anything

stamped, !OK, 14K, or 18K
gold . Silver coi ns, pocket

Gorage Sa le May 1&lt;·15 at

watches. Call Joe Clark at
992·2054 at Clark's Jewelry
Store, Pomeroy, Ohio45769

the Juhn Keck residence,

Mulberry
· Heights ,
Pomeroy. Lots of real gOOd
G1gant 1c back yard sale . dresses, shoes, handbags
Baby &amp; childrens clothes, and some new shirts, bed
new &amp; used Furntture, clolh~ng, rad10, 2 electnc
large men's &amp; women's
clothes, m1sc 128 Park
Drtve Pt Pleasant Thurs .
&amp; Fn 9 4

on l argest

Yard Sale 3 family , Sat.
May 16, 9·4 Syracuse,
5 fam1ly &amp; youlh groupd Rush c Hills. 1st yellow

comb tned
yard
sale . house on right after
Chtldrens, adults cloth 1ng, passmg church .
furniture, rugs, household
ttems Across from Tup·
per s Plains Post Offtce
Frt &amp; Sat 9 30 ? Ram
cance ls
Yard Sale. Fri. &amp; Sat, 5. 15
Yard Sa le. College Rd., &amp; 16. 1.2 miles above

sewing machine, children
adu l t clo th tng, bedroom
su1te, coffee , end tables ,
chair, ottoman, EtectroluX'
swee per 9 4.

PRICE
REDU~ED,
$19,200,
LANO CONTRACT

consider

992·5694, 152 Bu t

3

IT 'S BEEL INE'S Show and
Card of Thanks

--- -

With grat1tude and
thankful hearts, the fam,ly
of Bradley B. Pooler thank
the Chester Church of The
Nazarene, our neighbors,
fnends, and re latives for
thetr
prllyers, ca rds,
flowers, g•fts of money,
food and all ktndness

shown us at the t1me of the
sudden

death

ot

our

husband and father .
Spec1a1 thanks to our
pastor, Rev
Herbert
Grate, Evangelist Richard
Jaymes,

Tuppers

Plains

Tell T1me!!!!' Our new
sprmg and summer line tS
now available and IS 1f un·
believable ! !!! Give us a
ca ll for more Information
about this interesting work .

Phone 992 3941 from 9 6
Ground Hog Contest First

prize S500 00 cash. Tri ·
County Sport Shop, PI
Pleasant. Stop 1n for
detailS, 1·304-675-2988.
Flowers lor Memonal Day ,
Faye's Gift Shop located 1n
lower Mlddleporl ,

EMS , Veterans Memorial
Hosp 1ta l

and

Ewings

Funeral HoMe. May God

I Bles. You All

Potted tomalo plants. An drew Cross, 247 21157

TlcMto: Frf..$8, S.t.·$10, Sun.·SS ...AD\IANCE TICKETS: 3 Davo-$1$, 1111 May
17tb ..1\T GATE $20.·.Chlldnn unrJer 12 FREE wllh poreniL

Jonctl

••

Advonco llckota by Cuhlor Chock"'
Onltr·-No Pmollll Chod&lt;Htnd •I
•ddrened envelope to:
o~· Pilat, .....
S400DidlewAM.
16101
Rancb 614·9!19·2827
Office 104-411-5011

, ........... wv

~L-

I

1

1

~
'w"·a•
I

........
.. ---------o----

-

-=" •1

Itt Aooul Mhl h••er
Joly fl-Ail• loll, I til 1

'~ •~ .)
,t

2d Aoaool Foil Rooodof

t•

AI ""h top .~-tnm.

Porklng lot plcktro wok:ornot.

24 Hour Socurlly
No Rtfundt
S.bjc&lt;t

IO cMOge wlthoul nollct.

'

~-1
f
I
-·- 1 --

"

-

I

a..----

!' ~:.:"J~'
' '
I'
I

~

, 0
n
:.ltn!.

·--....

31h

miles

tour bedroom

992 3090,

Mobtle hom e, 4 bedroom,
uttl ttt es pa1d, no pets, 1

Three bedroom house 742
2126,

ch1ld accepted. John Sheels

Sel ls ' for

$26,500
FARM - Appro•. 72
acres w1th bog-two story
farm home, good barn
with electric and water .

Asklng$44,000.
RANCH HOME - Just
off New@ Lima Rd
full

110 ACRES -

ma1hng work . No e)C ·
perlence required. AP ·

GOOd

fences, 2 farm ponds,
bedroom

ranch

home

with full basement New
gas well with free gas.
$70,000.
31.5 ACRES - Rolling
land on paved road w1th
rural water available.
Will make a n1ce small

wardrobe at no cost to vou
and earn extra dollars too?
For Information or in·

farm or development,
MIDDLEPORT

LArge 7 room home
with 1112 baths, new nat
gas furnace, central air,
new shingle roof,
garage and mce corner
lot. Can move right in
after closing.

7 ACRES - Free gas
supply, Leading Creek
water , little one
bedroom home and two
small bldgs, Asking only
$11,500,
340 ACRES, M or L New fences, plenty of
locust for posts, free
gas, about 40 acres of
crop land Good 5

Community Services
worker to work with In·
diVIduals with mental
retardation , Port-time
position. Contact Beverly
Johnson
at 388·8195., ,
Buckeye Community Ser•
vices · Is an equal opportu""y employer.

7
1

home,

two

baths, nat. gas furnace
on St•te Route. ASking
S225,000, but will con ·
Sider offer ,
BUILDING LOT- l'h
acres on Rl. 124 with
drilled well, electric and
pads for trailer Only a
few miles from coa I
mines. $6,500.
EXCELENT HOME Immaculote 3 bedroom
ranch home, 2 full baths
(ceramic), very nice
kitchen with dtnlng,
mostly carpeted, storm
doors and windows.
patio, garage and large
l,ot. Only $.(1,500,

Housing
Headc uarters

,
•
•
•

basement,

Phone 742-3171

medication, food, and litter
are supplied. You need

t

~
~

good draft free clean
bUilding or room, where 11
you can 5h0'\V animals to ~~

prospective dwners. Must
be In the MiddleportPomeroy area, salary
negotlonable. Phone 992·
5&lt;127 after 5:30 p, m.

~.
"•
~

,.

~

Female roomale to live In ,.
trailer near Harrisonville, ,z
Can be seen on Co, Rd. 19. ~
Harrisonville· Kingsbury ' I
1

,:d

::t~:::::,

Repair

work,

or

Wanted

remodeling

flooring,

doors,

well

E. Ma1n St.

Phone 742-3092

Furn•sh ed thre e room
apartment. Qutet netgh·
borhood No pets Depos1l

Real Estate- General

Jj
,

11.

paneling, ceiling, or floor "
tile, siding, '192-2759.
' I

NEW LISTING story

frame

rent 992 5434 or I 304-882

and wormed
Me1gs County

All types of roof work,

w1th

Contact
Humane

new or repa1r gutters
and downspouts, gutter
cleantng and patnttng.
Alt work guaranteed.

tal property $16,900.00 .
NEW LISTING
RACINE
12x65

an apartment, end a

store building that br
extra

money.
All
for
$36,000.00,
CENTRAL AIR FOR A
HOT SUMMER - Is
just one of the nice
features of this 3
bedroom home

full

Has a

basement,

3

bedrooms, patio, new
siding, and is all

carpeted.
Just
S21. 500,00,
JUST 6 YEARS OLDAnd has a large kitchen,
nice li ving room, and 3
bedrooms, all on one

floor. Could have a full
basement,

just

needs

the floor . $19,500.00
FARM-113 Acres with
se'Vera l

bottoms,

pasture land , and
timber land, has 2
hOuses, several barns,
and mineral rights. Nice
location.
Asking
568,000,00,
REALTOR
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
992-6191
ASSOCIATES
Jean Trus•el 949-2660
Dottie&amp; Roger Turner
992-5692
OFFICE 992·2259

Am

'

SOCiety, 992 7416.

week .
K rt chen,
a nd
television lounge Carryout
store and restaurant wtth•n

Allee hill
:; 1
IIINIIctlft Dlpt.
The Daily Sentinel
.. 1&amp;3, Old ChlhN 511., lllw

Yft, flY 10113. Print 11-,

Adti!W, ZIJ, Pllllm N•mlllr.
Catch 011 to the craft boom! Send
to&lt; our NEW 1981 NHOLECIIAFT
CATALOG Ovtr 172 dest&amp;ns, 3

free

AU

=r••

mStde. $1.00

IOOIIS. .$2.00 ..U

Ca'=J

All WIIN
1ld4 Z54
udl lw ,.... IIIII' lllndll111o
134-14 Qllcl w. Qlllts
UWIII!ilfl lflltl Qllllllc
UZ.QIIII Odai..
131-W I liicl Qtills
13~S•talt

f.._SGII3..56
129oC)IIcl '1' E11r TIIMM
I~ PaldiwtNk Qlllts
126-TilrlfiJ ~ f1olltts
121-Pllllw Sfllti.Gifs

llUtwcltlf •1111 s.117.£111 All " ........nt
114(1•fllll ilfaWs
11Z·Prlll Atpans
111-&amp;IJ All " Hlirpi• CrociMI
llii-IIJHIJ ....
1.11111111 lllac't07·1MIIIt s.lt1&amp;

1Df.lllfllt Flllili

114 IISiaal lltllf
103-15 Qzlla Ill T..,

Merebandlse

53

Ant1ques

PAATSAND SERVICE

AT TENT I 0 N
(I M- 63
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
pay cash or certified check
for ant1ques and collec
tibles or entire estates
Noth1ng too large Also,

guns, pocket watches and
coin collecfiOns. Call 614
767·3167 or 557·3411.

One yearling quarter horse
stall ton. 949·2154.

Misc . Merchanise

1r

Acetylene weldtng torch

with 75 foot of hose Heavy
duly gauges, and welding
and cutTing tips, Chesler
Fouttv , P1g1ey Ridge. 985
4209,

• D1sposah

• Or ren
eRangu

• Ois hw.Jsl'u!n

evenings at 101 Second St,
outstde of Lamar's Beauty
Salon Owner lives above

2nd floor apt. 5425.

2 Rolls
Rubber Back

KITCHEN
CARPET
From

'7.99 &amp; up

From

12.95 &amp; up

1

SHAG

i]W15,95

lnstatted

Buy Now &amp; Save $2-$6 Per Yard
25 rolls Cilrpet in stock to pick from.
Regular backed, carpet Installed free
with pad. Good selection Roll Ends Rem·
nants $2.50 up. Grass carpet $4,99 yd.
Green and Brown .

Box 6S, Porltand, OH ,
Ph, 843-4912
SS.OO Monthly

Drive A Little- Save A Lot

RUTLAND FURNITURE

Main St.

742·2211

J&amp;F
ENTERPRISES
eWater, Sewer &amp; Gas
L•nes
1 Dump Truck
L1censed &amp; Bonded

PH. 992-7201

Home
Improvements

Does your hooSl! need a
face lift? Or just a little
makeup? Call me &amp; l"tt
have II lOOking young again
In no lime, Will do all types
of .i~lerlor work; pao\ellng,
ceohngs, flooring, etc ., plus
exterior work, painting,
shingling roofs, work olng

~hlnglinf any size •nd
shape 30 years experience

reasonable rates, scot· In carpetry References
chquard, 992-6309 or 742· provided upon request. 992·
2111
6293.

' '--- -- ---·- · 1 · .~------

10·7·1fc

Utility Buildings
SIZes from

~•6

to 12x40

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

J&amp;L BLOWN
I"SULATION

Rt. 3, Box 54
Racine, Oh .

Ph, 614-843-2591
6 15 fllj

Vinyl&amp;
Aluminum Siding
•Insulation
•Storm Doors
•Storm Windows
•Replacement
Windows

KAUFPS
PLUMBING
AND
HEATING

Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph. 992-2772

5-6 1 mo

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

GLENN BISSEll
949-2801
No Sunday Calls
5-B-1 mo. pd,

992-5682

SMALL

For Silver Dollars

81

estimated,

- Auto and Truck
Repair
-Transmission
Repa ir
Hrs. : Mon.· Fri.
9 a.m.-5:'30 p.m.

Stzes
"From JOxJO "

$1SOO

•"1976 Suzuki RM250. Good
condition. 247·3861 ,

ree

ROGER HYSEll'S
GARAGE

Farm Buildings

SILVER &amp; GOLD
COINS

74
Motorcycles
1978 Honda 750S Supersport. Under 7,000 miles, In
gOOd condition. $1500.00.
Phone 1-30H75-6550 or 675·

S1de Hill Rd.

PH . 742 -2455
5 11-tfc

ALL STEEL

BUYING

$}~ · to

I

Rutland, Ohio

4 15 1 mo.

Harrison

low mileage, needs some

Gene's Carpet Cleaning,
stream extraction.

Rt

• Backhoe

Sutton, Letart, 011ve,
Orange, Salisbury, Bed
ford, Chester, Salem,
Scipio, Rutland and

Vans&amp;4W.D,
1977 Chevy Blazer 4 • 4 with

Home

LEO MORRIS

1 Excavat•ng
1 Sept•c Systems

Serving the following
townships : lebanon,

Pomeroy.

Improvements

HJ 50"-20-30 H,P,
HA 60"-25-60 H,P,
HE 60"-45-80 H,P,

eHofW&lt;~l e rTan ks

J&amp;R
TRASH SERVICE

at 24S Mulberry Avenue,

81

HOWARD
ROTAVATORS
All Models Ava1lab/e

1

has good transmission See

1498,

Pomeroy, Oh.

2 8 ti c

... Aental Properf1es
... ~t . House Owners

72
Trucks tor Sale
1911 Chevy truck for sale.
$350.00. Has no motor but

body work. 992 ·6114 after 4
p,m, or 992·2377 anytime :

992-6121 or992-7314

" Special Rthn For"
... corn Liu ndnes

73

Rutland Fumfture
Shop
SPRING CARPn SALE

V. C. YOUNG II

Call742 -3195
or 992-7680

711976 Chrysler Cordoba, all ;-~=~-~M~··~·~'•:H•~m=•~•=·~,,~,==~

Two month spnng spec1al $1600 00. Phone949 2145
for upholstenng furniture .
Richard Mowery , Sr .
1962 Comet, 1980 Tw1n Star
OWner 675 4154.
Honda , Color TV . 992-3732,
SW IMMING
POOLS .
PRE · SEASON SALE: 1974 Pontiac Fireb~rd , 400
S999.00
INSTALLED!! automatic. Call anytime at
Above ground pool com- 1·304-773-9170,
pletely installed starting at
5999.00. Price includes 1972 Townsman wagon ,
pool. deck, fence, filler, runs exc. Can be seen
liner, and mstallatton un

• w.uher s

......... . .... . . . . . ·····
......................
power, onl y 22,000 miles

der normal ground con·
d,t,ons. Free shop at home
serv1ce. Cai11 ·800·62H511 .

MillER ELECTRIC
SERVICE

Repalnng S1nce 1953

Autos for Sale

S4

- Addons and
remodel1ng
- Roofrng and gutt er
work
- Concrete work
-Piumbtng and
electncal work
(Free Est1mates1

3 11 tfc

ALL MAt&lt; E S

Livestock

Ph, 614-446-2801
3271mo.

No Sunday Calls

Keep This Ad lor Future Relerence

&amp; shel ler And John Deere
60 traclor 985 3646

1 or 5 year term1te
guarantee
Located 1n Gallrpolts

949 2860,

pd

Call Ken Young

FREE ESTIMATES

"YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

Let George M1ller check
your . present electncill
system
Res1d enflal
&amp;Commerc1al

APPLIANCE SERVICE

Roaches,
B•rds,
Rodents, Spiders, Fleas,
Ants and other small 1n
sect control

"Beauftlul, Custom
Built Garages"
Ca ll for free s1d1ng
estlmate 5, 949· 2801 or

322 N. 2nd Ave,
Middleport, Ohio

A 9 1 mo

TERMITE and
PEST CONTROL

BISSEll
SIDING CO.

Effect! ve 4-6-81
MON. thru SAT
9to 5
Closed Thursday

14,000 gallon tanks
TRAILER spaces for rent, 4localed
abov.e ground a1
Southern Valley M ob•le Athens, Oh , $3,000. each 1
Home Park, Cheshire, Oh 304-422 2781,
992 3954
- - - -- - - - - FARMHAND feed grinder

ATHENS SPORT
CYCLES
Athens,

Vmyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

BAILEY'S SHOES

46
Space for R•.e'-'n"-1__
Four lS,OOO gallon tanks
COUNTRY MOB ILE Home loc ated above ground at
Park, Route 33. Norlh of Athens, Ohio $3,000 00
Pomeroy Large lots Call eac h Phone 1 304 422-2781.
992 7479.

CHESHIRE 412 tfc

4 26 1 mo

For all of your wtrmg needs,

Farm Equipment

61

It's SEW-SIMPLE to ma~e thiS
glamourous new fashiOn yoursl
Jdst two ilat p1eces lor d&lt;ess,
then patnt beauhlul des11n on
vmd colors, emb1order
hlihltihts Pattern 7568 tiSsue
l!ansfer lor dress with mot1fs.
Stzes 8· 14 oncluded.
$2.00 for each pattern. Add
501 each pattern lor I)OS!Jie
and handltnQ . Send Ia:

2 4 tfc

NEW STORE HRS.

500 feet 992 6370

rooms, 4 bedrooms. A
lo1 of remodeling has

been done and would
make a nice home. Also

949-2862
949·2160

PH. 367·7671
or 367·7560

tensive remodeling ,
• Electrical work
• Roofing work
12Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph, 992 -7583

Free Estimates
Reasonable Pn ces
Call Howard

Sleeping rooms; by the

lot. Nice at $11.000.00.
NEW LISTING - 2
story frame home wlth7

some

pa1d.

Furn1shed Rooms

45

mobile home with 2
bedrooms, underpinned,
wood storage building,
and comes with a big

in

FurniShed

utt!1t 1es

• PuppieS
Available
bl ack f emale setter, s1x
mont hs
o ld,
good
d1sposit1on. collie, female,
6 months old, shots and
wormed Humane Soctety

One bedroom apartment
992 7416
furnished 1n Midd leport
A1r cond•t 1oned, ut111f1eS
paod $200 00 per month M • Put purr power rn to your
ltfe Female ca lico k. ttten
F from 8 3ca l1992 5545
Me1gs County Humane

l'h
6

rooms, 2 bedrooms and

ings

all

$235.00 per month, 992 3190

some new Windows.
Would make a nice ren·

CALL US TO BUY OR SELL
N1ncy JuP!rs-Assoclate
PH, 143-2075
Virginia HIYmltt-AIIOclotlt
PH,tls-4197

,,

beagle type puppy Shots

wtth

POMEROY,O.
992-2259

lSI!! ACRES and 2 B.R, home. 1 mile •bove
Reedsville. Beautiful view of river . Extra possible
building sites Asking $27,000.

Will do painting and all Odd
jobs, Call9&lt;19-2145.

Needs a good home Small
Efficiency apartment fo r

All Butldmgs
Guaranteed

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
New Homes - ex-

Pomeroy

56

Mlddleporl.

CLOSE TO TOWN on Rl. 1.(1, thiS mobile home on
1'13 acres offers Its own pond, Home In like-new con·
dltion, carpeted and totally furnished. For only
$12,500.

i

1 7 llf c

required Phone 949 2253

For rent new l y remodel ed
one bedroom apartment m

BEAUTIFULLY LANDSCAPED and well cared for '
-Just like new, This mobile home is wailing for the
same love and care II Is used to. Many excellent
,features: 2 B.R.'s lone B.R. 14'x16'l. eat·ln 14•16
kitchen. Covered large patio. Barn type outbuilding,
and much more end yours lor only 522.000.

and llundry
Reasonable. , ~

Ph 367-7560

H. L WRITESEL
ROOFING

2566

NEW HOME on la~re. Rt. 5541n Gallia Co. Split entry, spacious L.R. Archway into formal D.R. Kj_l'chen eaiJiooed, 3 B R and 2 baths. Carpeted
throughout, full basement, Could have extra B R.'s
'or f•mlly room, ready for 3rd bath If needed,
Garage and storage area . All Of this and more for
S62,000. Call tor appt, to see,

.

County Certtfted
Roush Lane
Cheshtre, Oh

Pets for Sale

Any ~me bu1lt to your
spec1hcattons. Models
tn Metgs, Gallta and
Mason Counf1es.

4 17 tfc

SeptiC Tanks

Q"- POMEROY
~LANDMARK
..,.._,

only, no pets . Middleport
992 3874

Velma Nictnsky, Assoc.

Water-Sewer·E lectric
Gas Lane·D1tches
Water Ltne Hook· ups

FOR LANDSCAPING
YOUR LAWN

furn1sh ed

Furnished 2 bedroom up
sta1rs apartment. Adults

Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.

CENTRAL REALTY

the'm. Cages, litter boxes, •

bedroom

ihJ/

REESE
TRENCHING
SERVICE

A WIDE SELECTION
OF SHRUBS
&amp; ROSEBUSHES

apartment 992-5434 or I·
304 882-2566

carport, storage bldg
Asking $45,000.

Real Estate- General
©Wanted : someone to
board cats for the Meigs
county Humane Soc1ety
while homes are sought for

Apartment
for Rent

Ph. 16141985-3961
1 mo

SoCiety ~1992 7416

drilled well, old barn, 4

PLY : Circ le Sales, P.O,
Box 224-D, Richmon~ Hill,
NY1W8

3112 m11es south Middleport,
Rt, 7

Two

ly 3 bedroom home, 2
baths,

949 2253

44

One-of-a-Kind!

General

Phone
1-( 614) -992-3325

$185,00 to $500 weekly doing

OTHER FESIIVAL QAIEI

Itt Aooool , ..........
Joly S, 41&lt;5, 1911

severa l

16 E. Second Street

SALES POSITION · Local,

- Arlilouncemen-ts- -

2

2 car

T~~~~~.~~ui

fast growtng business, is

NO GLASS CONTAINERS PLEASE!
All roods """' 20' .,. wllh 11ott ,
Ovor 100 loan C.mplng " -" 14000 Sq. Pt Building In C.. ol Rain··
7000 Sq, Ft Concrm Floor ond Htat.. llllkl'! &amp;.go
FREE CAMPING with -lwnd -~$ton.. Coocoooton Stind
City Waflr..llring ~ tholn

He has safely made the Crossmg,

or

bedroom

BOYS FROM INDIANA
HILLBREED
RAYMOND FAIRCHILD
Plot More top ocb A
.Ia• SUllo•'•

have

Sheets,

Only $2,650 down and

*

POMEROY
LANDMARK

Furnished two bedroom
mobi le hom e on private lot
No pets Depos1 t requ1red

4 rooms and bath, stove
and refrrgerator furn1shed
Newly decorated Dep req

Headquarter5

Rock In _ylfanch

THE GOINS BROTHERS
JIMMY MARTIN
OVTDOOR PLVMBING CO.
HOCKING VALLEY GRASS
YOUNG BLADES OF BLUEGRASS

acres,

Houses for Rent

41

;Housing

details, call 742-2354 or 742 ·
2755

F~otur1ng

•

rentaL

I

Slore

Large two story brick
home on Condor Street
10% interest

2

bedroom

Reol Estate

The harder you work, the
more you'll earn . For

Gatoo ()pea Flldov 8:00A.M.
M.... llllto 7:GO P.M.
Souall lr Oullloor Pl••llln• Co•,.••

land con

Brick home on woqped
acre. Three bedrooms,
ftreplaCf, .un,que family
room, fin1shed double
garage, deck
Upp er ·
SIXtieS, 992 5420.
f

taking applications tor a
gOOd, matured sales person
in the Gallipolis and
surrounding areas, Salary
experience,
1----------..l-------~--..l..-----------l based
plicanton must
have Apa
minimum of two years
college and two years sales
experience. If you qualify
send resume to : Rl, 1, box
287, Gallipolis, Ohio. 45631.
AnE.O.E .

Now he's watch1ng and walftng tor us on the Ot her
Side.

-----------------------J

3 bedroom house, full
basement, 2 car garage

-

8'M10',

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

*

992·3885 even1ngs .

bldg,, with apartment,

house, carpet, fireplace
sundeck, two car garage, 2
and one half acres Lovely
selling' on SR 7 North 992
7741 , •

m-

H1ll. Rt. 3, Pomeroy, Ohio

two bedroom, b1g llv1ng
room. Located In Country

• Short game pract1ce
• Putttng &amp; Chrpptng
Green Open
Hole I n-One
• Pro· Golf lessons
for all (lges
Repatr: Cteantng,
refinishtng, new gnps
length changt:.&amp;,,
wergh1 changF
*Fast serv1ce

'c Pony saddle, cart, oth er

ta ck. House plant sot I Hor
se manure, sack or truck.
Collector 1tems. Eskey

Mobole Home Park. 247
3942.

101, 742-2047.

1

DepOSit 992 2749

Rentals

$25,000,
RUTLAND

Bedford

J&amp;C
SANITATION
SERVICE

Scout Camp Rd.
Chester, Oh,

Misc. Merchanise

54

5 7-tfc

B'x8',

lO'xiO', 10'•12' &amp; up)

FREE ESTIMATES

I,

funished, adu lts preferred

Total electric 3 bedroom

in

situated on 2 acres, love

your own business . Start
sellmg Avon. Be your own
boss. Set your own hours .

2nd Annual Bluegrass Festival
On Twp. Rd 151 Milo Put Portorftold Baptflt Church
Porterfiel~, Ohio
Off Rt 339 011 Rt 7&amp; 50
June 5, 6, 7, 1981

Pomeroy.

2 bedroom Mo.bile Home,

Township 985·4194

Three

Got some free time? Start

sun , May 16 17 5 miles out
Forest Run Rd off Rt. 7.

$20,000

Garage for sa te 1n Dex.fer.

bedroom,
all
el ec.
home, detached garage,
ntce garden ' space,

south Middleport, Rt 7

ca ll992 -3941 between 9-9.

Yard Sale at Harrison
Smtth residence Set &amp;

STING- Nice

Homes--

--i.lo'blle
far Ren:c:'~-

1975 Vikmg tra iler, 12 x 65

Genera l Store, Middleport.
992-6370.

For appointment interview

Syracuse May 14 15. H1gh Eastern High School on Co,
chair, car seat, toys, sink, Rd 28, Riggscrest Manor ,
stove, . refrigerator, bar Mostly toddler clothing, 10bells, d 1shes, fypewr,ter, 3p.m

!he

I
I
I
I
I
I
I

acres

~I

4l -

•r: 39

John

end. $12.50 per ton, Bundled
sla b $10.50 per ton .
Delivered to Ohio Pallet terview appointment call
Co., Rock Springs Rd ., 992-3941 between 9-9,
Pomeroy 992-2689
Fashion Consultant needed
NOW! Ladies fashion firm ,
Average $8 00 per hour ,

irons, some ant1ques, lots
more items

Business Buildings

NEW LISTING- Two

p1eces of property8or sale
1f you want a good buy.

Need Money?
Need
CHIP WOOD , Poles max . Clothes? Why not gel your

diameter 14"

34

Pomeroy .

chatns, diamonds, silver
money and co1ns. Martin's

2156 or 992-2157.

Broker

(4'xl6',

Ph.

992-2114

KDUNTRY
KLUB

information ca ll992 5583

Lots &amp;Acreage

bedroom

as a young business person
OLD COINS, pocket wat· and earn good money plus
ches, class rings, wedding some great gifts as a Sen·
bands, diamonds. Gold or tinel route carrier Phone
si lver. Call J. A. Wamsley , us r~ght away and get on
Treasure Chest Coin Shop, the el,g ,bilitv list at

Mmersville, Ohio.
house 1n corporation

Dam at the

Clouds, When together we should rise,

35. - - - - - - - -

Mail Tllis Coupon with RP.mittance
The Daily sentinel
Box 729
Pomeroy, Ohio45769

Rt . 7 to Forest Run Rd. to
Mornmg Slar. Watch for

He spoke often , of the Rapture, of Chnst Com1ng in

23 _ _ _ _ _ _ __
24 _ _ _ _ _ __
25 _ _ _ _ __
26 _ _ _ _ _ __
27 _ _ _ _ __
28 ._ _ _ _ _ _ __
29 ._ _ _ _ _ _J.__
30. _ _ _ _ _ __
31 . _ _ _ _ _ __
32 _ _ _ _ _ __
33._ _ _ _ __
34._ _ _ _ _ _ __

15. - - - - - 16. _ _ _ _ __

guns, furntture, en ·
cyc!oped1as, clothes, e1c

Officf 742-2003
GeorgeS. Hobstetter Jr.

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS INC.

THE

window in front. For more

35

3

9
Wanted to Buy
wood. 992·5833 or992·5050
WANTED TO BUY
GOLD,
SILVER,
PLATINUM, STERLING
COINS, RINGS,JEWEL,R ·
Y, MISC. ITEMS, AB ·
SOLUTE
MARKET
PRICE GUARANTED. ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SH0 P , MI DDLE PORT , 11_1_1-~H~e'!.!t!!.P_!!W~a~nl!.!ed!!__
OHIO 992 3476
GET VALUABLE training

13 thru

HOBSTETIER REALTY

35 Yrs. Expenence

Pomeroy, OH .

Buoldongs

Sheds
POLE BUILOINGS
1S' •20' up to 40' x100'
PORTABLE STEEL
STORAGE
BUILDINGS

NATHAN BIGGS

tor

Call Collect
Ph. 843-3322
582mo pd

ho! water tank lncludmg
tn sale, o4 sets of anchors,
blocks, concrete sets Cen
tral atr conditioner, has a
circular k1tchen Large bay

Garages -

- Barns-Equipment .

Rad1ator Specialtst

Free Estimates

Bo• Holder, P.O. Box 249, For Sale 197614 x. 70 wl1\
Pomeroy, Oh1o 45769
dsor mob1l e home. Has new

REESE BUILDINGS

from the Smallest
Heater Core to the
Largest Radiator

EUGENE LONG

Rd 28 Before 12 noon or af

ASking

•

iCJStandmg timber or chtp

Yarct Site

ter 5 p m. 949 2618.

$20,000, 742 ·2025

ternut Ave., Pomeroy.

lc )JO inch gas range in gOOd

----~----

We will not ask why , but we have a
Loving Heavenly Father far , yes, far
too wi~e to make a mistake

13. _ _ _ _ __
14. _ _ _ _ _ __

!

7

Composed by SISter Lucy Gaul;
Brother Brad, you lefl, oh so QUIC kly, but

22 _ _ _ _ __

4 _ _ _ _ _ __
5 _ _ _ _ __

I

acres of level ground.
Double garage, other out
buildings. 992·2588 or wr,te

NEW

tracl

condotion. Ca11949 2833
7

trailer 70x14 &lt;J car garage,

A · Frame commercial
building, Main Street.

Will

cal ls. 992 2Q34

4694

mon Un1led Brethren In Chnst revival when he sud

------------19 _
20
_ _ _ _ __
21 _ _ _ _ _ __
2 _ _ _ _ _ __
3 _ _ _ _ _ __

!

4 acres with 2 bedroom

Quality Built
Econom1cally Pr.(ed

RADIATOR
SERVICE

Roofing &amp; Gutter
Remodeling
Serving Your Area
'20 Years

'§)

Owner will finance down

home with util ity room &amp;
garage. Sttuated on a large

Wanted to buy : color
telev•sions tllat no longer
work A Iso home service

w1th whtte paws
Ap ·
proxtmate l y 6 months old,
male. Found 1n th e Bald
Knob Portland area 843

denly beca me dl and went to be w1th th e Lord about
11h hours later
He was a devoted and fa1thfu l husband, fath er,
grandfather and Wtll be m1ssed by many
In memory of Brother Bradley Pooler and hts contnbution to the Chester Church of the Nazarene.

These cash rates
•nclude dtscount

Schnauzer

' FOUND large black dog

1981.

PAY highes t pr1ces
poss •bl e for gold and silver
co 1ns r1n gs, 1ewe lr y, etc
Con tac t Ed Burkett Barber

Grey

2nd x Vtand Street, Pomt
Pleasant, WV Phone 675

4424.

COMPLETE

SUPERIOR
VINYL
PRODUCTS
Stdtng

carpet. B x s Sales, Inc.,

bUilding, Naturalgas fur
nace Three fourths acres.
paynoent. Located in
Bashan. 1-614-985·4395.
App 6 miles from RaCine &amp;

Now buying gold and
Silver, old pocket watches,

REWARD
Phone DICk
Owen at 992 2651 or 992 ·
5627

Bradley B. Pooler, 58 years, 9 n1onths, and 19
days, son of Mrs. Lena Kmg Pooler and the late
John Pooler wen1 to be w1th the Lorcl on Apnl 20,

1

LEGAL NOTICE
COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS ,
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
THE RACINE HOME
NATIONAL BANK, Pla~n-

LOST

OBITUARY

1516,7, 8, 31c

Lost and Found

that answers to th e name of
Schultz Lost in the Rock
Sprtngs
vtc•n•tv.

$21,000 Cannot be so ld for

less than two t hirds of the
appratsed prtce
Terms of Sa le. Cash 1n
hand
James J Protfttt
Sheriff
Metgs County

bedrooms, 2 baths, car-

garage.
6

storm

peting, extra large storage

992-6370

W1f

siding,

Nice two story house, 4

New, used, and antique fur ·
niture. No ttem to large or
to small Will buy one piece
or complete households
Mart1n's Genera l Store at

Vanety of k tft ens now
available MeigS County
Huma ne Soc tefy, 992 ·7416

day o June 1981, at 10 00

pet 1971 Cameron, U x 64,
two bedrooms, new ilrpet.
1972 Champion, 12 x 60; two
bedrooms, new carpet, 1976

S,Unrise Park mob1le home,

windows &amp; doors, b1g buill
in porth, big lot part)Y fenReal Estate-General
ced in Metal building, 992
-========~:,,
I
7453.
r

etc complete households.
Wnte M.D. Miller, Rl. 4,
Pomeroy, OH 45769 , Or
ca ll992·7760

4 __ ___GJ_Ve'!~~y-~-

Business Services

1973 Crown Haven, 14 x 65,
three bedjooms, new car·

111tated on 3 and one fourth 3 m1les from Racine on Co

r1ngs,
j ewelry,
Stiv er
dollars, sterling, etc Wood
ice boxes, jars, antiques,

Cleland Greenhouse now
open
Vegetable plants,
tama ra plants, pots and
hangmg basketS Geral d•ne
Cle land, Rac1ne.

by larry Wr~ght

KIT "N" CARLYLE'"

2 story home, 3 bedrooms, 1 Cameron, 12 x 60, two
bath, full basemen!, good bedrooms, all electric. 1971
location, Pomeroy. Cafl af· Skyline, 12sx 61, two
bedrooms, bath &amp; 'h, new
ter 6, 992 7284 .
carpet. 1970 PMC,

.,

Wanted to Buy

9

ranch brick home in Baum

Addition, Po'llftroy, 9hio.
Cas heat, central air. Call
992 2571, 985·4145 or 1 687·
6429,

18
'' Wanted to Oo
32
Mobile Homes
would like odtl iobs, Lawn1;/or Sale
mowing &amp; m•sc!'. lobs ~ust off Rl. · 248, 3 m11es
working around homes, from ·c hester. Good con992 65'15
~
dilon, 3 bedroom 1969

IRON AND BRASS BEDS ·
Old furn,ture, desks, gold

l'i4S7EST M.&amp;l /1'1
711£ WliST Wf/'16 ...

Cal 1614 985 3961

S1tuate tn Lebanon Town
sh1p, County of Me•gs and
State of Oh 10, to w 1t beg1n
n1ng at a po,nt on theW A
Postt ewa tt or Anna Powell
north fence li ne, wh1ch IS
The ob tecl of tne com 288 teet west from the cen
plaint is t he obtam1ng of a fer of old state road leadr ng
d•vorce and the ter
from Chester to Buf·
m.nat10n of a marr1age f1ngton 's Island , thence
north 31 11h fee t to a
contra ct between the par
f1es and the settlement of marked rock, whiCh sa1d
the property r1ghts of the marked rock is the place of
beg 1nnmg of the r eal estate
part1es
You are requ,red to an
tran sferred here1n, thence
swer the com pla •n t W1fh1n due north 229 4 feet to the
28 days afte r the last center of t he old State Road
pubhcat•on of th1s not1cc, leading from Chester to
wh1ch wdl be publ1shed on
Bufftngton's Island, thence
ce each week for stx sue 10 a westerly d~re c t 1o n
cess1ve weeks The last follaw tn g the mea ndenngs
publ•cat•on will be made on of the center ot satd road
May 27, 1981, and the 28 190 feet to a rock, thence
days for answer will com
due south 229 o4 feet to a
marked rock; then ce due
mence on that date 1
In case of your faiTure to east 190 feet to th e place of
answer
or
otherw•se beginmng, conta1 n10g one
respond as requ1red bt th e ac re, more or less
Ohto
Ru l es of
C1V il
Deed Reference Volume
Proced ure ,
the
f1nal 187, Page .421, Metgs Coun
hear mg on th1s matter Will ty Deed Records
be held after th e exp1rat ,on
Prope rty appra•se d at

of 28 days after the las! day

very Time

Announcements

31
Homes lor Sale
Beautiful tl\'ree' i;;droom

12 x 60, two bedrooms, new

Small investment, large returns, Sentinel Want Ads
Pubhc Not1c e

The Dai

5·6·1 mo

83

Excavating

COMPLETE sever In·
sta llatoon &amp; backhoe ser ·
81

Home
Improvements

v1ce for Raclne·Syracuse
sewer distr1ct. Doter work

French City Pa lnt1ng .
Res,dential, commerc1al ,
i nterior ,
exterior .
Specializing in Interior
paontlng, paper hanging &amp;
textured cei lings. Free

--== =::;::;;=;=::::===
a4
Electric•l

esti mates. 367-7784 or 367
7160,

makes1 992 ·2284
The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy ,
Authorized Singer Sales
and Service. We shorpen

82

Plumbing

----~
&amp;2H~e:.!a~~tl~n~gc__

WATER

wELLS

Domestic and commercia l,

pump soles &amp;nd service.
Tom Lewis D"lllng ,
seasona~ discount on pum·

ps, 1-304 895-3802 or 1-3041195-3641.

1f needed. 949-22'13.
&amp;R

efrittrltion

SEWING
Repairs,

MACHINE
service,

all

SCISSOrS.

EL WOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR Sweepers,
toasters, Irons, all &amp;mall
appliances. Lawn IJ'OWtr,
Next to State · Highway
Garage on Route 7, 915·
3625,
.I

I~

�Pa e-14-TheDaily Sentinel

Area deaths'
Erm·stin•· .J. Li.-twil•·r
Ernestine J. Lietwiler, 64, wife of
Edward A. Lietwiler, formerly of
Pomeroy, died May 7 at Sewickley ,
Pa., following a short illness.
Funeral services were held at St.
Stephen's Episcopal Church in
Sewickley on May 9 and on May II at
Boundary United Methodist Church
at Edison, Ohio.
A graduate of Ohio University,
Mrs. Lietwiler is survived by her
husband; her mother, Dora Kelly,
Edison ; " daughter,Jane L. Baker,
Phoenix , Ariz.; three·sons, Thomas
ilnd Philip of Pittsb01·gh, Pa., and
Mark of Atlanta, Ga.; a granddaughter, .Jennifer, P1tlsburgh,
three sisters, Mrs. Vcldren Hartpence, Edison; Mrs. Hazel Mosher,
Charlotte. N. C., and Mrs. Maxine
Sherer, Richmond, Ind., and a
cousin, Miss Marie Francis of
Pomeroy.
Burial was in Ri ;•ercliff Cemetery
at MI. Gilead, Ohio.

Martha Phillips
Mrs. Mmtha Phillips, 68, Hartford, W. Va ., died Tuesday at the
Holzer Med1cal Center.
Mrs. Phillips was a daughter of
the late Marion and Lewflercie HaiL
She was also preceded in death by
her husband, .lames, two daughters
and two sisters.
Surviving are five sons, Earl,

Colwnbus; Ezra, Syracuse; Erwin.
Pomeroy; Cornelius, Rutland, and
Mathew of Hawaii ; three daughters,
Nolen McAlister, Haml er; Helen

I

Turn~ull, Hartford, and Lucille
Taylor, Pomeroy; two sisters, Mary
Dalton, Logan, W. Va., Harriett
Hall address unknown; seven
brothers, Alvin Hall, Mudfork, W.
Va.; Lloyd, Hann and Franklin
Hall, all of Mingo County, W. Va.;
Sampson Hall, Syracuse; Arthur
and James Hall, Logan County, W.
Va. Also surviving are 18 grandchildren, one great-grandson and
several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be held at
7:30 p.m. Thursday at the Ewing
Funeral Home with the Rev . Emory
Osborn officiating. Graveside rites
will be held at 2 p.m. Friday at the
Pridemore Cemetery at Shively, W.
Va. Friends may call at the funeral
home anytime.

River•••

(Continued from page I)
entertairunenl by the Voices of
Liberty.
On Saturday the annual parade
will be held at 11 a.m. The parade
will fonn on Mechanic Street, go out
Butternut to mulberry, down
Mulberry to Second Street, from
Second back to Butternut then on to
Main up Main to Condor Street
where it will disband.
Highlight of Saturday events will
be the annual frog jump and derby.
On Sunday there will be a great river
raft race and a chain saw contest.

Admitted--David • Harper,
Pomeroy; Ronald Jacobs, Minersville; JoAnn Conke. Cheshire.
Discharged--Douglas
Rees,
Eunice Nutter, Charles Blakes.

Two emergency calls

John Steven Stahl, 33, Stockdale,
was killed Saturday evening in a
motorcycle accident at Waverly.
Mr. Stahl was a son of the late
Mark and Louise Evans Stahl, former Meigs County residents.
Surviving are his wife, Judy;
three children, John, Jessie and
Julie, all at home; a sister, Mary
Lou Kerrick. all of Stockdale.
Surviving also are several aunts,
uncles and cousins including Mr.
and Mrs. Pearl Gilkey, Mr. and Mrs.
Norman Shaffer, John Stahl and
Mrs. Bertha Rife, all of Meigs County.
Those atte nding funeral services
held Tuesday were Bonnie Rife,
Diane Tami Milliron of Middleport
and James Milliron of Reedsville.
Burial was in Stockdale Cemetery.

Two calls were answered Tuesday
by the Middleport Emergency
Squad. At 5:56 p.m.., Clara Smith
was taken from her home on S.
Second Ave., to Holzer Medical Center and at 8:13 p.m., Shirley Jones
was taken from her home to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

This Camporee is open to all area
Cubs, Webelos and Boy Scouts.
Vi sitors are welcome to watch the
Ca mpfire events at 7 p.m. Saturday.

e
Voi.JO,No.21
Copyrighted 198T
I

...'
MERSMAn·

"TA"'Er'
SOMERS tnRPORATION

A. Poe Table .. ...... ... $129 .95
B. Lo Drawer Table .... "$199.95
C. SheW Cocktail ........ $199.95

How comfortable your home will be .wlth
these lovely maple tables by famous
Mersman.

Qualify Mersman tables have furnished
homes lor ,.ore than eighty years. Never
have tables been prettier than these In a
lovely stagecoach maple finish on maple
!olid woods. Tops are of matching high
pressure laminate to take care of those
spills that occasionally occur.
Beautiful tables lor your lovely home.

Bank One of Pomeroy, NA,
Rutland, filed suit in the amount of
$12,366 against Clyde Ferrell, West
Dundee, IlL, and George Collins as
treasurer.
Marvelea L. Dailey, Vinton and
John G. Dailey, Vinton, filed for
dissolution of marriage.

Jrd FLOOR FURN. DEPT.

Ask to wed
c

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

1&amp;-17.

Pomeroy

M•·•·t" Thur~day

Darst reports. Of the 38 emergency
runs. 30 were in town and eight out of
town. All vehicles were driven a
tota l ofB12.3 miles.

Prayer servi ces Sunday

Shade River I .odge 453, Free and
Accepted Masons, will meet Thursday, May 14, at 7:30 p.m. at the
lodge hall in Chester. Work will be in
the fell ow craft degree.

LD

•••

County wide prayer services will
be held Sunday, May i7, at 2 p.m. at
the Bald Knob Gospel Mision. Glenn
Bissell will be the class leader.

House defeats dove·bill
COLUMBUS, Ohio - The chief sponsor of a bill that would have ad-ded mourning doves to the list of hunters' game birds in Ohto blames
· emotional, not factual arguments, for the measure's defeat.
Backers of the Senate-passed bill saw it killed in the House by a 43-47
vote after being brought up for reconsideration without advance noti ce
and debate.
Fifty votes were needed for passage in the 99-rnember chamber.
Rep. Eugene Branstool, D-Utica, a leading opponent of the measure
in the House, said a separate bill with the same purpose concetvably
could be introduced. But he doubted whether House Speaker Vernal G.
Riffe Jr., D-New Boston, would bring it to the floor.

Syria missile downs plane

BANK ONE OF POMEROY. N A

614/992·2133

·CHTAURA, Lebanon - Syria fired three anti-aircraft missiles into
the sky over eastern Lebanon's Bekaa Valley today, Lebanese Witnesses said. Israel said one of the missiles shot down one of its pilotless
drone reconnaissance planes on a scouti ng flight over the valley.
The missiles went up as President Reagan's special Middle East envoy, Philip C. Habib, was in conference with Syrian President Hafez
Assad at the Mohajereen Presidential Palace in Damascus, trymg to
avert a Syrian-Israeli military showdown ovm· the missi le crisis.

Hearse object of thrown stones
BElFAST, Northern Ireland - The body of IRA hunger striker
Francis Hughes was carried home today for burial, but not before his
hearse was stoned by a crowd of Protestant youths blocking the road.
A Protestant member of the British Parliament from Northern
Ireland, John Dunlop, demanded thai pollee ban a military-style
funeral planned Friday by the Irish Republican Anny in Hughes'
borne village of Bellaghy in County Londonderry, 40 miles northwest
of Belfast.
If the IRA fWJeral is not banned, Dunlop said. " People will have to
look to providing their own protection. "
·

Save $52 to SS4

Winning Ohio lottery number

on sets of four!

CLEVELAND - The number selected Wednesday night in the Ohio
Lottery's daily game "The Number" Is 986.
The lottery reported earnings of.$632,508.50 from the wagering on
the drawing. Lottery officials said sales prior to the drawing totaled
$8'16,809.50, and holdet;a of winning tickets are entitled to share
$244,301.

II ~.::.:~~~.00
B78x13
67bl4

C7 b 14
E7 8x14
F78c14
G78x 14
H78xl 4
560x t 5
F78x 15
G78xl5
H78x15

38 .99
39 .99
39 .99
43 .99
44.99
46.99

49.99
35.99
47 .99
47 ,99
51.99

30.00
30 .00
33.00
33. 00
34. 00
37. 00
40 .00
38 .00
37 .00
37.011
- 39.011

PtusF .E.T.olll.S81oi2.S 7 each
.

SALE ENDS SATURDAY NOON!

~~

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

oxygen mask.
A spokesman at Rome pollee
headquarters said Agca has started
a hunger strike.
"He's not eating anything, he is
just drinking water. He is a real
stoic," the spokestnan said.
Special Masses to pray for the
recovery of Pope John Paul II have
been set at the Sacred Heart Church
in Pomeroy.
The first Mass was to have been at
12 noon today and the second will be
at 7:30 p.m. Friday evening at the
Pomeroy church.
The Rev. Father Paul Welton,
pastor of Sacred Heart Church, said
that he has received calls from
Catholics and Protestants of the
community expressing concern over
the assassination attempts upon the
Pope. Those of the community
unable to attend the Masses are
asked to offer their own prayers for
the Pope's recovery.
A swarthy, well-dressed man was
grabbed by police inunediately after
the shots rang out in St. Peter's
Square as the pope stood in a slowmoving white jeep, greeting a crowd
of 15,000 at his weekly audience.
Detectives reportedly said that the
man seized was carrying a handwritten letter saying the attack on
the pope was a protest against U.S.
and Soviet imperialism.
The Italian news agency ANSA
said the note read, "I am killin g the
pope to protest against the imperialism of the Soviet Union and the
United States.

f

,
BLOODIF.D HAND - Blood is on l'upe Joh n Pau l II '&lt; right haud
as hi' is helped by his sccrt'tary, S!.anisla" Oz~ iz ~. aftl' r hi' wa:; shot in
St. Prier's S4uarr Wednesday. IAP La seq&gt;hol~&gt; l

Southern· seniors graduate Sunday;
Meigs commencement se Tuesday
Officials at Meigs and Southern diplomas.
high schools have announced bacBaccalaureate and comcalaureate and cormnencement ser- mencement services for 183 seniors
vices for members of the 1981 at Meigs High School will be held
g radu~tiryg classes of those schools.
Tuesday, May 19, beginning at 7:30
The allnual Southern High School p.m. Rev. W. H. Perrin will del ive r
baccalaureate and cormnencement the baccalaureate sermon. while
is slated Sunday bt Southern High Darla Kay Wilcox and Camill e
School. Baccalaureate will be held Sueselte Swindell will give the
at 2 p.m. with Rev. David Harris va ledi cto ri an addres s and
delivering the sennon.
sal utatorian response respectively
Crista Beegle and Bob Lee, merrr- during the corrunencernent.
bers of the graduating class will give
Members of th is year's Southern grad untin~-:
incl ude:
the invocation and benediction, class
Rony Randall Adkins, TariUny Sul' Bable,
respectively. Speial music will be Dav id Allen Bilrnes. Paula Jane B.i!rnett, Chnst.a
Bcce~lc, Bonita Louise Boso, Vic ki Jean
provided by tbe Southern High Sue
Boso, Pc~gy Sue Bwh, Paul Domonic Cardone,
School choir, directed by Mrs. Lee .l r., StLoven Troy Circle, TerranCE Lee Clark,
Michael Franklin Collins, TcrcSll Lynn Crouch,
Lee will presen t sleections.
Owaytll' Lt.:- Curfn1.11 n, Shcrri Lee Curtis,
Commencement will be held at B Charle.\1 Ray Deem, Brian Edward Duffy.
Edward DuVall, Sandra Lee Evans,
p.m. with Peggy Bush delive ring the Douglas
Robin Dale FOrtW1c, John Oa\·id Frank, Tina
valedictorian address and Charlotte Marie Gibl.:. Nance, Flint Richard Greer, Jody
Lee Grueser Gwn, Eric Alan Harris , Eric Jody
Pickens, the salutatorian address. Hill,
Sonja Denise Hill, Albert Eugene Hoi.Ji-ulll.
Superintendent Bob Ord will present Teresa Lynn Hol!!tem.
AnninthB Lynne Holter, Phlllip M t~rc~\ Hnod,
the class to Sue Grueser, school Kevin
PetTY Holter, Do nn~:~ Marie HubOOrd Clay,
board president, who will award Darrell IA:onard Johnson, Del ill L-ouise Johno;on,

Hu~(· r IA't' J un e ~. f-]11.lil;•lll r\ lllo 1\.mL:h t . Hd .H.·r
1'&lt;1 l .t.•t• KOt·hltr, H·•\ ~t•li W1l11,,tr l A'I'. h a 1n
Rld Jartl 1.~ • 111.'&gt;, Jr. Tern\\ J"~t·ph \11'\i{kl l

'Jl'ICrcsu F a~ ~: \lanut'l . De lli~·· l.1 1111 .\:,wud
.I.Jt ll'l An ~t·la •:\l ald \r sllart Pal llt'lo• Ka;:h
Mllhnll l, IJa\'lrl t.u"''ll \ atilt". l&gt;amd S{'••ll
Nea~ t· M;1n Bt•th Ohit! '' 11d1 IA •• · I 'at f Pr•·•·r~
l'l~t ~llllll:,\nn l'll'kt·n:~. 1{,·1~'l!'l1 Etlo !I 1--'lo•ltle:s.
Ter1'M t.yn n H:rno ..-;11 '\1'11 ' rr:1o11 l{lfflt. L~ ·.~ l h
C:~rut Hol)t•rt.'&gt;. H t•ttJ\' '\ntt,w 1 Nlh•·r. Jr.
.l uw ~&gt;lt Let• So~11l'rf lt'hl. Su.~&lt;tll i •t:.ll,l .1\l'llr·r~.
,\1;Jrk All en Su nJIS••It. \ I ,H&gt; Fhl.tiJI•!tt Sln\'111,
Tnmm.1 K 11~· S11 111h .l l'ffrt•\ W.n111 "''flLl' r .

IH~,h·l

l'aul -l:~lllo !l !J,th· ('],~or "l rdl•nl .lr
1.11.11 ThrJfcr ll~.11111, t l;,no to· ~\ hilt'
\\uliam '.\ eslo•\ Whilltll.' k ,luhu \llllr••lo:tl
\\'illi;uu:.. l'cn11 1 ~ l &lt;n· ~ tbrJII. Ro•lun I •·rn1 \\ tl~,,;1
\ur•• Br•&lt;~n ~1.11 V. nlf1. M;,rk Dor•··.• " "l h
I .tlll.dt•ht; \\ •lf•· 1 ••rtwr o· \l!·th,ri ·\nr. YnJi k••r
\ It':!{.~ ~rnrltJnh:~ 1111 lwlt IHu u1~ l~e Ad klll.'o.
'"'' P'' 'ltdr•·•• •\ iu h ·r~•!ll, Ho·L,dll \' \ rnultl.
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!Ctllo t•ll B;ik t•r .

c..r.lllt'

Htd~&lt;tnl

I \lin Jladn

Given the state of Ieday's economy. mor~ and more people are
demanding more from their bonk With this in mind. we at Central
Trust recently took a long. hard look at what you wont. And in doing
so dev'31oped on important new concept in bonking We co li lt ThE;~
Rnoncial Center. And the 1deo behind it is really very simple To provide you with the widest range of cbnvenient. innovative financial
S91Vice6 you'll find anYWhere So if you·re looking for ways to make
smart use of your n'Klnev. stop by C\)ntrol Trust today and find out
h011.1 our many services con be of use to you You'll find all our .
people are committed to ne1p1ng you get the most tor your money
throUgh petSOnal. profess;onol service At Central Trust.
we think it's fine 1f you wont to call us your bonk But you
should really start th1nk1ng of us as your finonc;ql center
'

Some ot the many services

offered bv Centrolli\.ist Include
accounts that. pay Interest on
your checklng /Eosy-tCHEIQd
combined montl'ily statements/
A varie1y ot checking ond

savings plansi Money-makel
certlflcatesrEstoblished Trust·
servieesrMd o wlde.range of.
consumer loons.

1

Continued on page 81

Worker hurt in explosion
A worker on the fla cirlt' sewage S}slem receJved burns orer GO percent of his body Wi tht' ITSU lt nf an acc1dent while work ing un the
projert Thursday II JOI'Iong.
According to reports. the worker. James Flatter, emplo.\'Cd by a
sub-contrac tor of U1e Ontcll'lo P1pelt ne Co ., was Wl)rktng 111 a manhole
with a dnll. Spa rks ignited se wer gas and an exploswn necurred. Flatter was tak en to Vctera11s ~ l ern una l ll ospita l b) the Hac1ne Emergency Squad just after 9a.m.
Ac co rding to the Meigs County Emergeney Medi ca l Sem cc, Flatter
was expected to Ue rnuved 1110111&lt;'1ltaril.v by mech copter from Veterans
Memorial Hospital to a Cin cinn&lt;Jti hospital.

Three butt in .fiery US 35 accident
Three people were injured this
morning in a fiery , three-vehicle accident-involving a semi tractortrailer, a pickup truck and an aut~
on U.S. 35, just east of Rio Grande,
reports the Gallia-Meigs Post Highway Patrol.
Injured were: Louise E. Hamel,
31, Spring Valley Dr., Gallipolis;
Roger D. Page, 31, Sanford, N.C.;
and, Nikita R. Justice, 24, First
Ave., Gallipolis.
At 11 a.m., according to a
spokesman for Holzer Medical Cento!r, Hamel. remained in surgery for
treatment of Injuries to the head and
right lujnd; Page was being treated
in the emergency room for lacerations to the face and forehead;

Justice was being checked for back
and neck injuries.
Called to the scene at 7:25 a.m. ,
the patrol reports a pickup operated
by Justice and an auto driven by
Hamel were both stopped westbound
at the traffic light just east of the
bridge crossing Raccoon Creek. The
bridge has been closed to twG-Iane
traffic-and signalled for one lane
traffic-due to repairs, for the past
several weeks.
According to the preliminary investigation, a west bound semi,
operated 'by Page, burst into flames
upon impact as it failed to stop and
struck the rear of the Hamel vehicle.
The se!lli reportedly traveled over

the Page auto as both ,·eh1cle s
crashed through a guard rail anrl
rolled over an embankmen t to the
right of the roadway Overturni ng,
the semi sni lled a ful l load &lt;lf lumber
onto the bridge and down the embankment at Raccoon Creek.
The Justice pi ck up, struck from
the rear as the two other vehicles
passed off the high way, was forced
to the left of the pa vement where it
plowed over a temporary light pole
and was thrown over the guardra il
to the left. The vehicle carne tu rest
at the bottom of the embankment.
Accordi ng to in complete mfonnation, both Page and Jus li ce
freed themse lv es frum th eir

1·chlcles

H:u11el was extricated

from her i£tll'- 11Wdrl Mustang by
emergency rescm· wurk£'rs. Al l

three d1 splayed ns1ble s1gns of injury ami were transported to HM C
fl)r trcalln ent.

The cab uf the se nu wa; gu tted by
f1re. which 1g1nted when the diesel as
tanks ignited upon lt ll p Hct .

Ri o Grande Fi re Chief fl&lt;•b Brandcberrv said " ... columns of smoke
about 2oo feet in the air" l'ould be
seen from the v1llage .

loc :~ted

ObloEIIInded Outloot-Saturdaythrough Monday - Fair. Highs
in the upper 60s Saturday and.in the low 70s Sunday and Monday. Lows
in the upper 4011 early Saturday and again early Sunday and in the low
50s early Monday.

Road Race '81 supplement
appears in today's Sentinel

llltJ members.

aJr

proximately one nul&lt;' from the ac cident scene.
Brandellern said the fire was extlllqlllshcd wiihnl five 11 1inutcs of his
department '" arrival at the scene.

.

Today's Sentinel contains a 28-page supplement on Saiurday's
Road Race '81, CIHpOI'IIOI'ed by Holzer Medical Center and the Ohio
Valley Publllhing Co. Layout, arrangements, storiell and ph~ were
compiled and coordinated by Sallyanne Holtz, Galllpolls Tribune and
Sunday 'l'llnefilentinel Ufeatyle editor, with assiBiance from the
Puinl ~ Reglater, The Dally Sentinel and Tribune editorial

IC.o~

Barrlt'll. f•atnt ~&lt;• \u:r Harr··l l T1111"1h ,\ llt·n

Showers and thunderstonns tonight. Lows in the low 50s. Showers
ending Friday morning and cooler. Highs in the lower 60s. Chance of
rain 90 percent tonight and BO percent Friday. Winds northwesterly 1():11 mph tonight.

"

A. n~t·lt &lt;~

Hilku·, Kt•iml'llt

We~~ther

Road King Performance 78
Polyester Blackwall

Sturdy, durable, and mileage-proven
polyester cord . Special tread
compounds retard wear. Reverse·
mold•_rl_ In . ;.,;·d~ 78
REG .
SALE
SIZE

•

Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, May 14, 1981

operation within a month.
surgery to repair his intestines, said
An official statement said the a medical bulletin issued at 8 a.m.
pope's prognosis was "strictly guar- today, 2 a.m. EDT. "His mind is
d~d" because of the risk of infection.
alert," it said.
"The pontiff, wounded Wednesday,
Italian authorities today officially
spent a "tranquil night" . in an in- identified and charged the suspect
tensive care unit after emergency taken into custody after the
shooting. They named him as
escaped Turkish terrorist Mehmet
Ali Agca, 23, convicted in absentia
and sentenced to death in Aprill980
for murdering a noted Turkish
newspaper editor.
The suspect told police he was a
follower of George Habash, head of
the Popular Front for the Liberation
of Palestine, a Marxist faction of the
Palestine Liberation Organization .
"I am a comrade of the communist
Palestinians,' ' police quoted Agca as
saying.
Agca, who according to witnesses
was about 25 feel to the pope's left
when the shots were fired,. was
charged with attempted murder of
the pontiff, attempted murder of two
women wounded in the attack,
illegal possession of arms and
ca rrying false documents, police
said. If convicted, he could be sentenced to 'ife in prison. The death
penalty is banned in Italy. ·
According to the Milan newspaper
Corriere della Sera, the pope murmured, " How could they do it? " as
he was being driven to the hospital
after the attack, indicating more
than one assa ilant was involved. But
SHOOfiNG SUSPECT - Nehmed Ali Hagea, who was arrested
doctors
at the hospital said it was
and eharged wilh an attempt on the Pope's life, is escorted by a
unlikely
the pope could have spoken
policeman in a corridor of Rome pallce headquarters on his way to fursince
his
face was covered with an
ther questioning Thursday early morning. (AP Laserphoto)

Fire department answers 51 calls
The Middleport Fire Department
answered a total of 51 calls including
38 emergency runs and 13 fire and
rescue calls in April , Fi re Chi ef .Jeff

at y

VATICAN CITY (AP) - Pope
Jolm Paul n was alert and in good
and stable ~~on today when he
woke up .8(~. 5~)¥turs of surgery
for his bUII~t rtl\Wids, but he was
running a sllgt;t~ever and 011e of his
doctors said he may need 11.nother

Col1rt actionl'i filed

A marriage license was issued to
Brett Allen Wyatt, 22, Pomeroy, and
Kathleen Kay Sturgeon, 20,
Pomeroy.

•

Pontiff alert, stable

Veterans Memorial

John Sh•wn Stahl

Gallia to host spring camporee
Gal lia County will host the 1981
Meigs-Gall ia-Mason Spring Camporee which will be held at the Ga lli a
County Juni or Fairg rounds May 1!&gt;-

.

..

rear of a vehicle drtven by Louise E. Hamel, 31, Gallipolis. Also Involved 111 lbe accident was Nlkila R. Justice, U, Gallipolis. All three
were lakeD to the Holzer Medical Center.

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