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                  <text>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

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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. "
·

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~~

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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,

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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
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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
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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
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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.

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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.

�The Daily Se ntinei- Page- 3

Comfnentary
-

.

-

--

Missing the point on
WASIDNGTON- The results of
the Great Laetrile Study were made
public a couple of weeks ago, and
what do you know? The study found
Laetrile "not effective" in the treatment of cancer. So chickens lay
eggs, and two plus two makes four,
and what else is new?
This particular frittering away of
taxpayers' money cost us $500,000.
For nine months the study diverteol
scores of doctors, leclmicians, lab
attendants and statisticians from
projects on which they might better
have spent their time. The results
were as predictable as the phases of
the moon. The results also were
irrelevant to the only point that matters.
For the record: Laetrile is a formulation of amygdalin, a substance
found widely in nature. It is most
easily extracted from apricot pits.
Forty or 50 years ago the notion took
root that Laetrile, in combination
with various vitamins and enzymes,

Laetrile~------,....--Ja_mes_J._.K_
. il_pa_trtc_·
k

was effective in treating some forms produce even temporary respite.
of cancer in some victims. The Food
and Drug Administration declared
Laetrile worthless, but many hopeless patients kept demanding it anyhow. In an effort to settle the
question of efficacy once and for all,
the FDA in 1980 commissioned the
Great Laetrile Study.

Under the direction of Dr. Charles
G. Moertel of the Mayo Clinic, the
study went forward under ail impeccable protocol. Four institutions
cooperated in testing Laetrile on 156
patients, TIOSt of them with cancer
of the colon, lung or breast. These
were patients who had not responded, or were not likely to respond, to
conventional treatment by surgery,
radiation or c)lemotherapy. While
not precisely on the verge of death,
they were terminal patients. Of the
156 victims, 102 are now dead; the
other 54 are dying. In only a handful
of cases did Laetrile appear to

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Slrt!t!t
Pomt'my. Ohio
61~9n·21S6

DE\"OTEDTO 1lfE INTEREST OF THE MEIGS. MASON .4.REA

ROBERT L. WINGETI
Publisht'r

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH

A!islsLIInt Publisht'rfControllt'r

Grneral Manager

Nt'I'"S Editor

A MEMBER uf Tht' Assoclall"d Prtu, Inland Da ily Pr"~~ Assnciatlo11 and tht'
Amt'rlran Nt'14spapt&gt;r P\lbiJsht'rs 1\nociatlon.
LEITERS OF OPINION art' l'"tlrtJmt!d . Thry shuuld bt' lrss than 300 words hmg, All
td ltinl( and muMt be s lt~nrd "Hh rutmr. wddrt'~~ and tt! ll'JlhURI'
numlwr. Nu un si,~tnt·d lt'llt'NI ..-·Ill bt' publbhrd. l..dtm ~ huuld IJto In ~uud la!dt', addrr.~sin~
I~!~&gt;Ut•~. not J)t'f!!oiiRilllllt•ll
lt&gt;ltt·r~ Hrt· ~ubjt&gt;t't t11

•

U. S. industrial
might
Because it almost always managed to weather crises and remain
profitable and confident, the domestic automobile industry was for years the
symbol of U.S. industrial might.
Last year the mighty took an awful spill, and so did the confidence of
Americans who had taken U.S. industrial leadership for granted.
The industry lost more than $4 billion, saw imports reduce its market
share, and was forced to lay off some 200,000 workers. It lost its invincible
image, too. Japan, it was said, could do things better.
Having accepted the grim reality of its fall, the industry now seeks to
prove that the past few years were an exception rather than a trend. And F.
James McDonald was here to demonstrate it.
McDonald, General Motors Corp. president, chatted in his New York ofrice
before showing the new "J-cars," which GM hopes will boost profits and
prove the U.S. industry is headed for better times.
After the Iranian revolution, he said, the domestic market was permanently changed by the threat of fuel shortages. Customers chose smaller
cars, a part of the market "where Japan has always been." The Japanese
were, he said, "silting there with that product line."
GM, he continued, had been "downsizing" since 1974, but that required
time. The company was in a transition where,'in a few years it sought to convert facilities to building front-wheel drive cars. When you do that, said McDonald, you "change all the components and gut your assembly plant."
Still, he said, GM had until recent months been able to hold its place in the
market (Ford Motor Co. and Chrysler Corp. did not), accounting for 46 percent of all cars sold in the United States. And now with the J-cars, he said, "I
say we ought to get a better share of the market."
The strategy, he said, recognizes that fuel efficiency, quality and price are
the three most important factors detennining a customer's choice. The
American industry, he insists, is competitive in all.
Some might question that beUef. They have, in fact, and nothing proves it
like the decline in sales of domestically made cars. The market seems to
have spoken, especially abOut quality and prices.
In long-term durability American cars are getting better, and in ride and
perfonnance U.S. cars match any, he said. The perception of poor quality,
he contends, boils down to "fit and finish." The fit of doors and the finish of
dashboards, for example.
Are American workers the equal of Japanese? " If we producee the proper
tools, designs and environment, I say American workers can be motivated tb
do the same quality job the Japanese do, " he replied.
McDonald discerns more cooperation between industry and government,
although he gripes that regulations shown to be needless remain on the
books, adding to the price of cars.

Today in history.

Quod erat demonstrandwn, and all
that sort of thing.
Dr. Moertel's report to the
American Society of Climcal On.
cology set off a splendid chorus of"!
told you so." Dr. Arthur I. Holleb,
chief medical officer of the
American Cancer Society, said the
news confirms what the society has
been telling cancer patients for a
generation - that Laetrile is of no
proven value. The New York Times
weighed in with a smug editorial
denouncing Laetrile as quack
medicine. How many desperate
patients, asked the Times, will continue to squander their money on the
stuff? The findings , said the Times,
certainly should dispel "the
misguided belief that patients
should be free to choose their own
medicine. "
In that revealing line, the Times
almost had the point and let it slip
away. For the only controversy that
rnaters is not the controversy over
the effectiveness of Laetrile. The
only controve rsy that matters deal
with individual freedom in a free
soceity.
Why are governments instituted
among men? Jefferson answered
that question 200 yea rs ago. Government~ are created to keep our rights
secure. What rights? The ri ghts to
life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. In the matter at hand, no one
seriously charges that Laetrile is a
danger to life; the drug is about as
toxic as Tums. This being so, it simply is no business of government in a

free society to deny a citizen acce8s The right to tile is involved.
to it.
.
Beyond that, no. The terminal canThe goverrunent's resfx&gt;nsibility, cer patient, having tried every fonn
as I see it, begins and ends with the of conventional therapy, haa every
issue df safety. If there is botulism in right to "squander his money" oo
the vichyssoise, by all means let the Laetrile or gum drops or an extract
Conunerce Clause be invoked. If drawn from the eyes of frogs , Gover·
meat is .c ontaminated, or nments may wam, and governments
automobile .tires are fatally defec- may inform, but in a free society
ti ve, or a drug is found to have governments should have no JAtwer
highiy' dangerous side effects, the to block a human being's pursuit of
goverrunent's obligation is clear. his own Idea ot happiness.

• •

In 1787, a convention met in Philadelphia to draw up the United States
constitution.
In 1804, Meriwether Lewis and William Clark set out from St. Louis on
their exploratory expedition to the Pacific Coast.
In 1972, Okinawa reverted to Japan after'!/ .years under U.S. jurisdic·
lion.
In 1975, the United States announced that Marines had recaptured the
U.S. merchant ship Mayaguez, which had been (leized by Cambodians.
Five years ago: India and Pakistan announced they'd resume
dlplomatic relations, which had been broken off in war over Bangladesh
in 1971.

Backs Rev. Knittel
As an individm1l wl10 knows Knit:

tel as a preacher who lives what he
preaches, I know that Rev. Knittel
dues nut rnalicioosly go after institutions or individual s. He is a kind
individual who gives anyone the
benefit uf the doubt and will stand
with someone lung after others
would give up.
Neve rtheless, he is not one to fail
tu recognize a situation for what it's
worth. He will be candid about what
he perceives and it is refreshing to

the rightness of his position.
·
Knowing the way he is and how he
eonducls hirnself, I'll hang my hat
011 Rev. Knittel knowing what he is
talking about.
Respectfully, Thomas Kelly, 683
Chestnut St. , Middleport.
1

Let s be heard

person says when something like
this happens is ."What can you do
about it."
If we would have taken this attitude when the Japanese bombed
Pearl Harbor, what kind of a life
would we he living today? We are
living in the land of the free, and if
we want to keep it this way let the
people be the govenunent once
again, not just a few individuals. Let
your voice be heard in this matter.
Thank You
Robert Burton
.
26 Cave St., Pomeroy, Oh.

Get lawyer first .••
I am writing this for a Meigs CoUJI.
ty man who gave 20 years of his
young life to this nation in the Navy.
His wife died of cancer several years
ago.
He has two sons- one who served
in the Navy and one who is a game
warden now and a daughter nnarried
to the sheriff's son. All this man
asked wa.s just to have a home to live

"But why should we want a wellregulated militia in this day and
"The Constitution of the United age? There are no more Redcoats
States," he replied. "You never around."
"To fight crime and make the
know what you're goind to find in it.
Listen to this, 'A well-regulated streets safe again," Robinson safd
militia, being necessary to the excitedly. "Look, we all know there
security of a free State, the right of are not enough 'police to do the fob.
the people to keep and bear arms What we need to protect our citizens
are foot soldiers, willing to patrol the
should not be infringed.' "
streets
after dark. People who wish
''So?"
" There is something here that to bear anns should be willing to
we've all overlooked, ·which may protect the law-abiding citizens of
solve constitutional problems of this country."
" It sounds like you have a plan."
dealing with handguns. This is the
"!do,"
he replied. "When a person
amendment the National Rifle
Association always uses to justify purchases a gun, he is immediately
sworn in to his·local militia.
the ownership of guns."
"Then the gun owner is given a
''We all know that."
" Let's follow it to its logical con- month's intensive training In the use
clusion. anyone who wants a gun can of anns by qualified members of the
have one. However, the buyer mus! National Rifle Association.
sign up and be sworn Into an c "Upon graduation from the courorganized, well-regulated militia to se, he or she would join the active
militia force in the neighborhood.
gel his or her weapon."

in here where he was born and grew
up.
At a tax sale in Pomeroy, he
bought what wa.s listed a.s 4.62 acres
of land. In the Treasurer's office it is
listed as 5.32 acres which they
charge taxes on.
The new Land Map (drawn to
scale) shows less than on&amp;half acre
but it is listed a.s 4.62 acres. After
checking all available records, what
is shown on the land map is in fact
part of Route No. 7. From all aP'
pearances he has bought and paid
for and paid taxes oo part of the
highway.
·
He has been infonned that his
money cannot be returned that he
paid (and if he wants to change
records the officlala say they cannot
change it) that he should hire a sUI"
veyor and a lawyer) . In 19'19 taxes
were $6.94, in 1980 they,were$28.46.
His advice to any one buying land
like this: get an attorney first and
you won't he in trouble. - ·Goldie
Clendenin, Rt. I, Portland, Ohio,

Interest rates go up on certificates
WASHINGTON(AP)-Beglnnlng tment reported Monday after the
Tuesday, banks and thrift in- auction. The new figure was the
slitutions may pay 88 much a.s 15.781 highest since the record 15.7 percent
percent interest on their slx-mooth reported on March 24,19!KI.
savinls certificates, which have
The previOIIf ceiling on the UO,IXMl
rate ceilings 0.25 percentage point mirnlmurn-depoelt certificates had
above the rate on six-month been 16.354 percent.
Treasury bills.
The average yield on three-month
.- At the Treasury Department's · bills I'OIIe to 1M33 percent from
weekly auction, six-month bills aold 15.963 percent last Monday,
at an an average discount rate ci reaching the highest level since the
15.S31 percent, up from the 15.104 record16.1167percentoflaBtDec. 15.
percent of a week earUer, the depar-

The unit would be divided into two
sections; half patrolling from SUJ1.
down to sunup on odd nlghta, and the
other half patrolling oo 'even nights
of the week. Saturday patrols would
be turned over to owners of Saturday
night specials...
"How tong would they have to stay
In the militia?"! asked.
"As lol)g 88 the pei'BOil wanted to
bear anns. If he or ahe decided the
patrolling was a drag, that person
would have to turn In the weapon.'.'
"But wouldn't this con.stltute a
vigilante force which is dangerous In
a democratic society?" I asked.
"Not tl we abide by the constitutional amendment, as it Ia written. The key wonb here are wellregulated. Thill means that JDeJil.
bers of the militia would have to answer to the ·leglllauthoritiea lor their
actions. The militia persons would
be subject to militarY dlsclpUne' and
be required to conform to all the

Seoul,Southlt-.uiDtHnartlallawprotestamounted.
.
Today'a blrthlt.y: Opera sinler Patrice MUillella 5e years old.
'J'houlht tor today: '111ere Ia no education Uke adversity. - Benjami.J
OlaraeU, llrllllhllllelman (IIM-1•1).

fiJ UJ' 01'

five games

fifth innin!:!, 'Jil L'U ilscculive doubles
by lvau DeJ&lt;•sus an&lt;l Bill Buckner·
and Leun IJurhom's home;, run.

Seaver held the Cobs hitless th e rest
of t,he wuy, re~·unli ng his 249th

" ll was nice to get a lot of runs
early like that, " Seaver sa id. " You
can win a game even if yo u make a

l!llsloke."
Every one of the Reds' starters exeept Seaver hHd et least one h1t.
"Tha t's what •.ve hml ~·&gt;d o," sa1d
Heds catcher Joe Nolan, who had
th ree hils. "ll's good to get George
goin g. Ile can carry the cl ub a long

way when he gets hot."

earccr victory.

1

not competin g against

scored from second base when teammate Dave Collins
hit a double inlo right field. Oester also extended his
hitting streak to 15 games, lhe longest in the National
League this season. I AP Laserphoto)

LIFESTYLE FURNITURE'S BIG MAY MATTRESS SALE

Pirates end Braves ' jinx
By Associated Press
The Pittsburgh Pirates haven't
had much good fortune in Atlanta
Stadium of late, but f1nally got
something going their way in a lucky
13th inning Wednesday night.
The Braves opened the dour fur
them with three wal ks !rum Tommy
Boggs and then Tony Pena got two of
them home with a single to provide
the Pirates with a 7-5 victory.
" I don't know what the trouble has
been here," said Pittsburgh third
baseman Dale Berra, who slugged a
three-run homer for the winners.
"(But) now we know we can eomi! in

here and win - and that's going to
help us."
.
The Pirates had lost II straight
games to the Braves and hadn't wnn
at Atlanta Stadiun1 si nce July 15.
19'19.

Whil e the Pimtes were breaking a
jinx, the Montreal Expos conWnued
to be frustrated ·by one at Dodger
Stadiwn. The Dodgers stopped the
Expos IHi for their eighth straight
victory over Montreal and IBth m the
last20 games in I .us Angeles.
ElSewhere in the National Leagu e.
it wall' Houston 3, St. Louis 0; Cincinnati B, Chicago 3; San Francisco
5, Philadelphia 2 and San Diego 5,
NewYork O.
After Boggs walked th e bases
loa ded in the Pirate 13th, pena
delivered a bounce r over third past a
drawn-up infield fur the wi nn ing
run::;.

Boggs, J.; , had entered the gan1e
in the 12th as a pi nch·hitte r after the
Braves had exha usted all their nonpitchCI' pinch-hitte rs and singled tn
center, but Rafael Rami1·ez was
thrown out at the pl ate attempting lo
score from second base.
Ramirez had reached
'

mind."

on

r1

Pirates.

Dodpers S, Expos 6
Run Cey hit a two-run homer with
two outs in the b&lt;&gt;ttom of the ninth to
ca p a furious four-1·un rally as Los
1\ ngclcs came from behind for a wild
victory over Muntreal.

Giants 5, Philaes 2
Milt May slugged a two-run double
in the second inning and Darrell
Evans hit a three-run homer in the
third to lead San Francisco past
Philadelphia .
With one out in the second, Larry
Herndon singled off Marty Bystrom,
2-2, and took third on a double by Joe
Morgan. May then doubled for the
game's first two rons.
Enos Cabell and Jack Clark got
tw(}-out singles in the third before
Evans slammed his fifth homer of
the season. San Francisco sta rter
Allen Ripley, 3·3, allowed II hits in
71-3 innings, but was supported by
three double plays.

The Expos had scored five times
in th e lop of the ninth to overcome a
4-1 deficit and move in front G-4. But
the Dodgers tied the !score when
Steve Garvey got a tw(}-run single. A
tw(}-OUt error by Montreal shortstop
Dt•.Jt•st~s convic ted
Chris Speier OQ Reggie Smith 's
grounder - his fifth error in two
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico .(AP) nighL~ - opened the door f01· the
Former world lightweight champi on
Dodger rally .
Esteban DeJesus, the first man to
Cey, who hit two home runs beat Roberto Duran, was in jail
Tuesday night, then followed with today following his first-degree rnurhis sixth homer of the season.
del· conviction for killing an 111-yearAstros 3, Cardinals 0
old construcllon worker.
Don Suit un gained his first shutout
Superior Court Judge Elpidiu
in il H o u~ ton uniform with a five- Batista sen tenced DeJesus to life
hitter and Art Howe slugged his imprisonment, in additi on ·to
thi rd home run of the season to lead separate se ntences of fi ve vears and
the Astl·os past St. Louis.
six month:; for violations of two arSutton, obtained by the Astros as a ticles of the firearms law.
free agent before the season , raised
DeJesus' Ia wyers said they would
his record to 3-4. striking out four appeal the decision to the Puerto
and walking one. The former Los Rico Sup re me Court.
Angeles Dodger hurlei· retired 12
DeJesus was convicted of the mursll·a ighl batters over one stretch en der of Roberto Cintron Gonzalez,
route to his first complete game as who died of gunshot wounds in the
an Ast1·v.
head Dec. 1.

.'

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A sla~\M·h\l.l " Mlbrest penalty fs r8quired 101 early ,;,tndrBwal. · Eltective annual yreld Is based on retn11es tment ot principal ano interest at
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CH OCE

Howe's two-run homer in the third
inning gave Houston a 2-ll lea d and
all the runs Sutton needed.

"'o one pays you ·m ore than

rules and regulations of our anned
forces. Although they would not be
paid, we would give them ribbons to
wear on their cheats after a certain
number of patrols, and of course PX
privUegea. To make lUre they don't
take advantage of their stat111, they
would not he pennitted to patrol In
areas where they don't reside. We
ce!Uinly wouldn't want strangen
patrolling other people's nelgbborboods."
"I can't see the NRA objecting to
your plan," I told Robinaon.
"No one can object to lt. We Jmow ·
the pollee would welconJI the manpower, and the people who own guna .
would feel they were doing
something worthwhile.
"It's a good plan," I a.sked.
"What do you mean 'good'? It's a
great plan, and eractly what every
founding father who had 10ythlng to
do with the Constitutloo had In

ba~e

disputed play that resulted in the expulsion of Pittsburgh Manager
Chuck Tanner . Umpire Steve Fields
ruled that Ramirez' si nking lin er tu
left had been trapped by Lee Lacy.
Th e Pirates also had a man
thrown out at the plate in the 12th,
when Lacy singled, stole second,
was sacrificed to th ird and was cut
down on a perfect throw from Terry
Harper on Tim Foli's fly balL
Victor Cruz. 1.{), was the winner,
pitchin g 01ree mnings for the

Today is Thursday, May 14, the !34th day of 1981. There are 231 days left
In the year.
· Today's highlight in history :
On May 14th, lHI, the independent state of l~rael wa.s proclaimed as
Britain ended 1&amp;1 rule in Palestine.
On thls date:

One yeaup: Some 30,000 students poured into the lllreets of downtown

I'm

Jl lll &lt;JIJ]e to put

together and hit the ball hard. I'm
able lo dr·i ve thl' ball more consistently.
Seaver, ~-1 , losl his shu tou t in tile

anybody but myself," Fosler said,
then added 'with a grin : "Davey
realizes and I reali&lt;f it's only a temporary thing ... "
l'oster's home run off Mik·'
Krukow, 1·3, gave Cincinnati a fourrun lead in the third inmng that
right-hander Tom Seaver made
stand up.
" It's always good to be able tu hit
home runs, hit singles and knock in
runs. That's something that's expected of me," said Foster, who
thinks he's rounding into form .
"Four of my fiv e times up thert
tonight I felt good. More consistent ly

The right to bear armii.L.s____Art_B_uc_hwa_ld
"What the devil are you rea,ding?"

11

SAFE AT HOME- Cincinnati Reds base rmmer
Ron Oester slides safely into home plate ahead of the
tag by Chicago Cubs ca tcher Tim Blarkwell in the fifth
inning .of a gHme Wednesday In Cin cimm ti. Oester

Well, the working class of people
are going to get the shaft again, if
Mr. Reagan gets his way when a person takes early retirement and takes
a cut· from BO percent to 55 percent
find a person who can spei:lk hi s from Social Security. This is money
mind freely and he will seek out the we have paid in for as long as all of
good in aiL
us have worked, •not something ive
Rev. Knittel is one of the businest are getting for nothing. If they would
men I know, and he would not have quit giving our money away to
time to pursue social concerns people who are too lazy to work and
unless he knew them to directly to never pay taxes, they would have
affect him and the people he loves. plenty of money as theyh have had
He 1s not soc ially unconcerned, but years ago.
he is going to do what he is to do and
Alot of my friends have been plannot let the others do what he has to ning to take early retirement, but if
do.
Reagan gets this bill passed, we will
Knowing him as I do, he would nut all have to work until we die, which
have become involved in a situation is what he wants anyway.
if he were nul satisfied of the inReagan doesn' t know what it is to
j ustices in the ci rcUJn/:itance.
have to work for a living, or what
Rev. Knittel truly has a regard for hard times are. He was a movie star
God and what is approp riate before and a poor one at that. Lot of people
him. Therefore, I know that he have called our leaders of the coun.
would not misrepresent a situation try crazy and a fool, but if Reagan
knowingly. If a possibility arose that gets this cut in Social Security for
he thought he may have been early retirees, we are the fools for
mistaken, he readily admits his ' pulling up with this crap.
error and makes efforts to correct it.
The people better wake up and
If he persists with a belief. you can quit standing around and just
count on him havi ng confidence in talking about it. The fi ... thing a

l asked Robinson.

CINCINNATI (AP) - George
Foster isn't used to playing second
fiddle as the Cincinnati Reds' top
run producer.
He took three strides toward
remedying that situation Wed·
nesday, knocking in three runs as
the Reds dwnped the reeling
Chicago Cubs, 11-3. His two-run
homer gave him a team-high seven
for the season, but he's still five RBI
behind Dave Concepcion's 21!.

It occurs to me, finally, that the
doctors who are giving forth with
snO{t&amp; of triumph have mighty little
to crow about. The death rate from
cancer haa gone up from 149.21n 1900
to 181.9 in 1978. For all their vaunted'
"conventional treatments," cancer
stiJJ claims tOO,IXMl Uvea a year. If an
informed patient li'Ould rather die on
Laetrile than die on chemotherapy,
isn't this his precious right of
choice?

Letters to editor. . ·-------------------------------------------

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.

Foster, Seaver pace Reds
to 8-3 victory over Cubs

Pag-2-The Dally Sentinel .
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio .
,T,hursd.ay, May 14, 1981 . • "

6.

POMEROY, OHIO

~

FURNITURE
SHOWCASE

•Hide-A- Beds
• Salas
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Ope n 9·5 Daily
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Cdrner Th!r\l and Olive, Gallipoli s

�Ohio

Grange forms
ritualistic team

Yaz paces Boston victory :
lly Associated Preu
Life in the 1981 season has finally
begun for 41-year-old Carl YastrZe'1\Ski.

The only player in American
Lf:ague history to collect 3,000 hits
and 400 home runs, Yastrzemski is
finally hitting his weight - barely thanks to his first home run of the
season Wednesday night, a threerun shot that powered the Boston
Red Sox to a 5-2 triumph over the
Minnesota Twins.
"Maybe I'm on the way to putting
something together, I hope so," said
Yastrz~rnski, who boosted his batting average from .181 to .1116, one
digit above his listed weight.
In other AL action, the California
Angels downed the Milwaukee
Brewers 6-3, the Oakland A's edged
the New York Yankees 5-4, the
Cleveland Indians shaded the
Chicago White Sox 4-3 in 16 innings,
the Baltimore Orioles blanked the
Toronto Blue Jays W and the
Detroit Tigers nipped the Seattle
Mariners 1_.. The Texas-Kansas
City game was rained out.
Yastrzernski's 420th career homer
carne alter Jerry Remy and Dwight
Evans singled with one out in the
third inning uff Fernando Arroyo.
Jim Rice doubled and Tony P~rez
then singled, with Rice scoring on a
grounder by Carney Lansford to
give the Red Sox a W lead. In the
seventh, Yastrzemski walked and
scored on a double by Perez.
Angels 5, Brewers 4
Bobby Grich's two-run homer

in this Saturday's Preakness. Pleasa~tr Colony is an
early favorite in the Preakness Slaktos May 16. 1liP
Laserphoto )
·

LAST BIG WORKOUT- Kentucky Derby winner
Pleasant Colony, with exercise rider Muffle Mauger
up, is led passed the finlsh line by Sis Tammaro on a
pony after finlshing his last big workout before running

Derby winner gets early
nod in Preakness Stakes
BALTIMORE (API - The Fat
Man is in town with his skinny horse.
The Fat Man is Johnny Campo,
!ramer of Kentucky Derby winner
Pleasant Colony, who is at Pimlico
fur Saturday's 106th Preakness
Stakes.
While the Derby May 2 drew 21
starters, Pleasant Colony's presence
wasn't expected to reduce the
Preakness field considerably. As
many as 15 may be entered this morning for the 13-16 mile second leg of
the Triple Crown.
They include Woodchopper, Par-

tez and Classic Go Go, the 2-3-4 has several hairless spots on his
finis hers in the Derby. Other right fla nk, apparently results of a
poss ibilities were Pass the Tab
vin1s suffered this winter in Florida.
Flying Nashua, Bold Ego, Doubt~
Souic, Top Avenger, Bare Knuckles
The usually loqacious Campo
Thirty Eight Paces, Highland Blade: won' t ta lk much about the marks on
ARun, Paristoand Escambia Bay.
the colt, saying they happened
Pleasant Colony, a Virginia-bred before the took over the l1orse March
owned by Buckland Fann, is an 16.
unlikely looking champion, appearmg ga unt compared to his . "He's just losing some hair,just
rivals on the Pimlico grounds.
hke you and me Jose hair when we
The cult has a red mark on his left get older" said Cam po,a 5-foot-7,
fla nk, reportedly from knocking 250-pounder tak ing off his cap to
over some chemicals in his sta ll, and show a balding pate.

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD
AME RICAN LEAGUE
EASt'
W I.
Pet. GB
15 8 .6S2 15 II
.sn
17 IJ .567 I 17

Cleveland
Balt imore
New York

Trailing 5-4 at one time during the
evenin g, Coach Bill Trent 's
Gallipolis Blue Devils fin ished
strung at Tank Memorial Stadium
Wednesday to ca pture the 1981
Southeastern Ohio League track and
field championships.
Final team S&lt;'O res show Gallipolis
with 109 points. Runnerup Ironton,
which led the entire meet until the
final event, finish with 107 points.
Athens was third with 97, follow ed
by Waverly with 116. Logan had 59,
Jackson 22, Meigs 15, and Wellstoo 2.
Third Crown
It was the Blue Devils' third confer ence title since the boys meet
began 25 years ago. Previous GAHS
crowns were won in I970 and 1976.
Three league marks and four
school records fell in the meet.
Ironton's Jim Morris, individual
scoring champion with 34 points, set
a new loop record in the long jump.
Rick Conley set a new league mark
in the 300 meter low hurdles and
Morris set a record in the tripl e
jump.
Four School Marks
Gallipolis school records were set
by Brian Hunter in the 100 meter
dash; the 400 meter relay team of
Bob Marchi, Aaron Sa unders
James Griffin and Brian Hunter:
Mark Phillips, in the 300 meter low
hurdles and the GAHS mile relay
team of John Ackennan, Barry
Nelson, Brian Hunter and Doug
Hoke.
The old GAHS mile relay mark

b

·as set Y Chris Fisher, Leon Smith.
Rod Ferguson a Ken Wamsley in
· 3: 35 · 7· Wed nesday 1s effort
1972 Ill

Milwauk.l&gt;t!

which actually won the meet for
· 3:33.4 .
GAHS wascomp Ieted m
Gallipolis trailed Ironton, 104-99 1
· · t th f ' I
gomg il1 o e Uta event. When an·
chorman Doug Hoke passed lwn
other runners m
. the rm')e relay, it
assured GAHS 10 points and its third
conference tl'tJe.
"Every boy scored his best or
d 1.
f h
secon uest 0 t e season ," said
Coach Trent followi ng the meet.
GAHS will now prepare for the
sectiona l tournament a week from
S t d
• a ur ay.
MeigsParticpanls
Meigs County participants placing
were Rob Davis, fourth in 800 meter
. Sm1'th , fourt I1 in the long
mn ; Kevm
J?"'P and fourth in the high jwnp;
hrrs Judge carne in fifth 1.n the hJ.gh
JUmp and Bob Ashley carne in sixth
in the 110 high hurd les.
c.

Gr iffin,

Brian
Hunter .
DI SCUS - Mall Mara, Logan 1 37 ~
10" · W'll
'
1 ie Wood, GAHS , second .
400 ME TER DASH - Doug Hoke,
Ja mes

3. )

-- Mark Phil lips,

GAHS,
2; Jeff Phi llips, GA HS,
POLE 1VAULT
second , 12 fee t .
200 METER DASH - Brian Hun·
: ~~~'G A H S, 23 3' Doug Hoke, GA HS,
3200 ME
TER9 :59
RUN
- Eric Hager·
man, AIhens,
.6 . Andy Plymale,
GAHS. fourth .
MI LE RELAY - Won by
Gallipo li s in 3 : 33.4 (new schoo l

~~n~~~·f~~~~-rty, l :

.Rick Wav er ly

.S. Todd Nibe r t,

86

7~~:~an

~~

. 100 METER DASH - Brian Hu n· Meigs

:.:~·ord~~Hs.
1600 METER

(New

: 11. 3

RUN -

school

Rick

t5

8

ll1ica~o

Ca liftlrnla

17 16

.500
.500
.467

-~

12

.JZ3
z1
.304
16
Wedlleflday'sGames
Ba!Unwre 4. Toronto o
O•k laml 5, New vork ,
Dclruit 1. Seattle 0
Cafi f,lmiu 6, Milwaukl!4! J
Clevela nd 4, Chicagu 3, 16 inning!!
Bo!iton ~. Minnesota 2
Te~~:as ~tt Kansas City, ppd., rain

14

11

Scaltle

18

11

Kao~"City

7

8(lstlll

I Tanana ()...4) at MinnesoUI

rSiulun 2·11

IZahn

4-3 1

at

Bultirnure ( Fiu.nt~g8n l-3)
I Glancy 1-21, (n)
Oakland (Norrl.!l 6-1) al

BeChic.11go

I~Angele:t

W~

Allanta

17

IReuschel

1·3) at

C1ndllllllti

St.Louis !Sykes

1).(1)

at Houstm (Sprowl

Sl.l..oui.s 11t Atlanta fn)
Chit.'Sgo at Housto~. (n)
PhiladelphiJ. at Sa n DieyD, (Ill
New York at l..os Ant~eles, ( n)
Montreal at &amp;In Fnmci!ICU, (n)

(Wil·

JANE
fONIJA

at

Torunto

I'J\~TON

Ne~~o·

York

Wednn dlly'sSportl'frl.ulctlou

N.atlonal~~=~_!;otllllon

~
18
!I

9
14

UTAH JAZZ-Signed

Pau.J

Dawkln.,

r0,..

r~w~ur~d.~to~a~on~..~e~ar~ro~o~r;c~.~~~~· ;~~~~~!!~!~~~~'

·*

.UO

.30!

:~:
.548

1
~~

DAY
3
suIT s'ALE

,:

''

~~

9
12

5

lwrel:l':'o~n=~===~~;;:;~2;;:;:~:'::~:~~:·~:\sc~·~~='~1;~:;~~::~~~~~

Of SUITS AND SPORTCOATS!

Bowma n, Wav er ly , 4 : 29 .6 . Any
Plyma le, GAHS, fourth
HI G H JUMP Bruning
~lt.h e n s , 6·0. Todd Nibert , GA H S, SiX:

FLAG
POLE
SET

• Haggar

6~

4

so,un Loot

The

HEDGE
CLIPPER

3•5-ft. couo n flag

has double·sewn stripes,

We're Proud
Of Our Record
Our staff of registered phar·
macists work hard to merit a
reputation for depend ab le and
accurate service. Rely on them!

VILLAGE PHARMACY
PH. 992.0669
MIDDLEPORT, Ott.

....
' '

mets. 6-ft. aluminum polo
has eagle ornament. Easy

AFP-06

• QUAIITIRES UMMD

&lt; - '

REDUCED 15"

~,, I

~oup to

considered for prize selections.
Donations not collected at school
can be mailed to Pat Carson, 747
Broadway, Middleport, Ob. 45760; or
dropped off at Meigs Community
Clalses, 346 East Min Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio (the old junior jhlgh
school building) . Any questions,
pease phone 992-6025.

Mrs. Betty Spencer, president,
had a meditation to open · .the
meeting and there ' was group
siriglng of "l.Dve Lifted Me" Ielt by
~IIZ&amp;beth Duffy. · Prayer was by
Woodle Woodford and Frances
Eskew had devotions on . love
reading several scriptures.

Officen' reports were given by
La Donna ·Clark. Nell meeting w11
be a picnic at the home of Olive and
Melvin Smith In Auglllt. Conrad
l)hllnger had prayer. Mrs. Spencer
served IBOdwichel and coffee to
Gertie Bau, Olive Smith, Elizabeth
Duffy, Eileen Bowen~, Conrad
Ohlinger, Woodle aDd Evelyri Woodford, Frances Eakew, and LaDolUIB
Clark.

POSH
PUFFS

ONLY

59

Many Styles and Colols to Choose From

JOHNSON'S

Pulllilhed every lftemoon, Monday thl"wctt:
P'rldoy, 111 Cow1 street, by lhe Ohio VaDey .
PulJIIIhlns ~J - llullJmedla, In&lt;.,
' Ponwoy, Ohio 46711, -.me. Second clus·
pootqe paid II Pomeroy, Olllo.

BABY

t.'::

3nd \lon"''

••t"l"' : u•u•oc: •~n•

WHITMAN'S AIR BONS 41h OZ.

~

l-UFFED
ONLY 57~
CANDY REG. 79'
ANTACID
SUSPENSIO'\I

ASCRIPTIN

LOW SODIUM

1.49'

1

FOR PAIN

1211 oz

100 TABLETS

-

Jllll'l'llbllahon Arlociallon, NatiOIIII
Advertlalq Rtpl'tlentltivt, Branham '
~Jill" S.lu, ISS Thlnl Avenue, New ,

IUTMAS11:R: Send oddrea to The Dolly
Sentinel, 111 Cow181 .. ~roy.Ohlo4i711.

REG. '2.79

14 Ol
REG. 12.92

ONLY

ONLY
121102

tiVIIiCIUPTION IIAT!II
ByCwrrit&lt;w--

.One-" "" """' "." .. , .... ' 11.00
OneMontll ............... .... ...... ...111
One Year ........ : ....... .. .... ,,, $lUI
SINGLEOOPY

THERMIC

KOTEX
MAXI PADS

PRICIII

Dolly ......... ·r ..... .. ... ..... IICenta

COPPERTONE
SUNTAN
OIL

TAN PAD
32 Inches by 72 Inches
For A Faster- Deeper - MoreE ven Tan

to 'l1lo Dally

.,.,.__month.

ileliallllll ~Ill' IJ . - - . cn.til'

--.homewrtoriii'Yteellavallable.
IWL11111C1UP110118

Na""""

fo&lt;
OIJZII"e""~\nc.

.; lilt: (II \. "'C u;:"

POWDER

Member: TheArlocialedi'MI, Inland DolAIMIIUon and lhe American

No ..-.;pti11111 bJ mall ponnlllod Ill towns

Pflf VHH TRA'w'fl 'iiCKNFSS

--------

ONLY

125

IUSPII-)
ADlvl414o oiMal-.lllc.

will be lP""

~~

12 TABLETS

The Daily Sentinel

DliJ romft In odvlll&lt;e -

''

JRS., MISSY, WOMEN'S SIZES
S, M, L &amp; XL

PREVENT TRAVEL
SICKNESS
REG. '2.12

ONLY

GALLIPOLIS

INFANTS ............... l2-24 MO.
TODDLERS .................... 2T-4T
GIRLS ..•.....•.............•.... 4-14

DRAMAMINE
TABLETS

30 FREE W'rth 100

BOB'S ELECTRONICS ·

12's
·

REG. 16.95

OR

ONLY

LOTION

LIFETIME

REG. 11.69

40l

FEVER THERMOMETER

Olllo ... Woot Vlrcloia
I Month .......................... 110.101
Six month ........ .... .. '.... " ... ' 117.10 '
1Y•r ........... l •• •••• : . . . . . . . . . . . $33.001
11114o-OIIIo
... Wert Virplw

REG. 12.79
ONLY

"Lifetime Replacement Guarantee "

Or at or Rectal

•I Monlh .......... .... ....... ..... 111.00
I Monlh .....................,..... I:IO.tltl
IYear ........... , ............... $11.00

\

••

$164

ONLY

';'
••

·DISPOSABLE TOOTH BRUSH

•

Toothbrush and Toothpute in one unit.

Save 20% on any suit or sportcoat In
the store. Choose from our new. spring
and aummer atock of Ha~t SchaHner &amp;
Marx, Johnny Canon, Palm Beach and
Haggar.,Donrt ml~ this sale- 3 Daya
Only.

ONLY

~

SWISHER LOHSE

21~

Phor,nccy

•••
•

lt-"!McCwt....... • "'·
CMrlftltiltlt, lt. ,ll.
• ..... t4 .......... 11 . 1"tl.

I'Mfl, "'"' hi, • •••·"'·

,llllCIIti"TtONS
fi:r~l f ' ""ICI

~

•

'

t.' '·"'·

,..,..., li :Mit II :M ,,_lit t ' ·"'·

~

'

VAtlEY LUMBER &amp; SUPPLY

Hike-Bike donations will be collected on Friday, May 15th at each
sdtiool. Carol Layh or a represenof the' Hike-Bike Conunittee
visit the schools and answer
q
ons if necessary. The final day
to.be eligible for the prizes will be
F-'day, May 22. Any donations
c'11ected after May 22 will not he

1 , M.llfl

o,tol Mlfi'IIJ Ill I

IIM . m ·HS!I
~tAf o 0 .

i.
•~
•

SS5 Park St., Middleport, Oh.
Ph. 992-6611
Hours : Mon.-Fri. 7:00 to 5:00

7:00

b•y

SIZES

LETART FALLS - A Memorial
Day dinner will be held at the Letart
Falls Community Hall on Stu1day,
May 24, with serving to begin at 11
noon. Serving will lie cafeteria style
with a set price for adults and
children. Proceeds will go towards
expenses in maintaining the all.

HIGH POTENCY VITAMINS
FORMULA WITH MINERALS

~:.......!ed·

..,..,."""

FOR ALL

Dinner May 24

THERAGRAM·M

8 10 a.m. an d
4•}Q m

· :

SU.NDRESSES .

Cecil Wise will be preaching Sunday at 7:30 p.m. at the Nease Settlement Church. The public is invited.

served at tables decorated in the red this weekend. Fourteen beds will be
and white colors of the 8aton, Mrs. endowed by the Eight and Forty,
Lula Hampton gave ·grace and the with Ohio providing three of the 14.
It was also noted that Ohio leads
pledge to the flag was given by Mrs.
all other states in scholarship ftu1ds
Eunie Brinker.
Mistress of ceremonies for the an- donated to date.
niversary dinner was Mrs. Florence
Games were played with prizes
Richards, a past ·department going to the winners. Corsages were
Americanism chainnan for the presented to the distinguished
American Legion Auxiliary and four guests, with Mrs. Pearl Knapp
time Americanism chainnan in the presenting a gift to each one.
district.
Each of the officers, nationale and
departmental, lrought greetings
and commended the Salon for their
work.' Mrs. Aichholz, active in the
American Legion Auxiliary for 31
years and the Eight and Forty for 23
years, spoke on ber project for this
year which is providing playground
equipment for tbe National Jewish
Hospital in Denver, Colo. She noted
that she will be among those attending Chapeau D~y at the hospital

RADIO 14

r;;~;;;;;;;;~;:;;;;;;;;;;===~===~~~~~~~~

Announce Services

- - not il4llrlnl to poy lhe Cllrier'

,..,

Foatures8-in. high carbon
blades, serrated and
notched for eaav trimming. Cushion-gripped
tubular hendlet.
~

printed s1ars, brass grom-

mount.

·'

All RORSHEIM SHOES

66 s.....
.....

le secretam!; Joycelyn Bowman of Gallon, natlonale
pouvlor member; Lucille WoodUng, Grand Rapids,
departemental Ie deml chapeau; Grace Shade,
natloDBI pboto book cbalrman; Mary Martin,
Pomeroy, national constitutlou and by-laws cbairman;
and Unda Edmundson, Columbus, departementall'arcblvlste.

von:, NewYortt0017.

.I

now

The 16th anniversary of Meigs
Salon 710, Eight and Forty, was observed Monday night with a dinner
at the Meigs Inn with national and
state officers as special guests.
Vi9Iet A,ichholz of New
Washington, chapeau of the national
organization, was presented along
with Jocelyn Bowman of Gallon,
national pouvior member; Mary
Martin, P~meroy, national constitution and by-11\Wl! chainnan;
Shirley David of Luckey, departemental chapeau, Ohio; Pauline
Mason, McClure, deparlemental le
secretaire; Grace Shade, national
photograp~y book chairman;
Lucille Woodling of Grand Rapids,
departemental le demi .chapeau;
and Linda Edmtu1daon, Columbus,
departementall' archiviste.
· Zuelella Smith, chapeau of the
Meigs Salon, welcomed the members and guests preceding the dinner

of•the church was taken on by the
A.ult Class of the Pomeroy Church
oftchrist at a recent meeting beld at
u;church.

'

• Hart Schaffner &amp;Marx
• Johhny Carson

Logan in :45 .7. GA HS second in

steward; steward;
Emma Ashley,
lady
assistant
Patty Casto,
chaplain; Kathy Parker, treasurer;
Becky Rife, secretary; Kevin
Napier, gatekeeper; Opal Dyer,
ceres; Carla Rife, Pomona; Patty
Dyer, flora; Dr. Dennis Randolph,
executive committeeman; Vicky
MacCumber, executive committeeman; La rry LaCorte,

fiight and Forty celebrates 16 years

~ project of rebinding the l)ymnals

steve

400METER REL AY -· Won by

' ANNIVERSARY CEIXBRATION- Mrs; Zuelella
Smith, seated right, chapeau of lbe Meigs Salon 710,
~.Eight and Forty, wekomed diJIIDguished guests at the
16th annlvenary dinner of the Meigs Salon. Tbey were,
left to rigb~ seated, Shirley David; Luckey, depu-)emental chapeau, Violet Alcbhoh, chapeau DBIIouale,
,1md stand!Dc, PauliDe Muon, McClure, departemeotal

lluild hymnals

'

executive committeeman . and
Catherine Shenefield, pianist.
The team competed in the contest
at Jackson, Ohio, !&gt;11 March 15'against hte teams from Fairfield Cotu1ty
and University Grange of Columbus.
Several other Meigs County
grangers attended including the
cotu1ty deputies, Mr. and Mrs. Mendal Jordan. The team received a
score of 969 out of a possible 1000
points. This was accomplished after
six practices. Star and Rock Spriilgs
Granges furnished tbeir halis at no
expense to tbe team for practices.
This is the first team to compete
since 1976 when the Meigs County
Pomona degree team won fifth place
in the state.

oftt::S

'

'

CHOOSE fROM ALARGE LOT

• Palm Beach

N. 2ND AVE.

''

AT. NEW YORK CLOTHING HOUSE
fRIDAY • SATURDAY .• MONDAY

GB

The Meigs County. Pomona
Grange recently formed a ritualistlc
. team.
This team was organized in
December to perfonn in tbe district
ritualistic contest set up by the Ohio
State Grange. Star Grange provided
12 members for !be team as well as
the pianist; Rock Springs Grange
provided one member; Laurel
Grange provided one member and
Ra 1 G
0 •ded t 0 11\emC ne range pr VI
w
bers.
Th
be of the team ahd
thei:
:ere: Keith Ashley,
rnaster and team captain; Larry
. Montgomery, overseer; Myla Ran'
dolph, lecturer; Linda Montgomery,
steward; Bill Dyer, assistant

Hike-bik·e donations to
be collected tomorrow

IJUlLV

Milwaukee

~ L Pd.
1: J :
j

7~
10 ~

0-tl), (nl
Mool real (Gullickson 1-3) at UJs Angelt!!i (Vu !enzuela 7-&lt;H, (n)
Only ~ames scheduled
Fridly'a Gamel
Cincinnati at P l ttsburt~h (n)

B1:1ltimore al Minnesota, I n)
NATIONAL LEAGUE

g8

.l75

I renyl 3-1/, (n)

tsgullorfr 0.21. (nl
oly g'"'" ~~';!.~!~omes
Kartsas City 111 B0stoo, ~nJ
Turonlo alat New
Cleveland,
tnl
&amp;:ollie
Vork, tnl
C.lifornlo al Detroit, tn)
Oakland
ol Milwaukee, rn1
Teus at Chicago, (n)

Pi~~~~~~gh

.f69

Thul'lday'• Gamew:
New York (M.Scutt 1-3) at Sa n Diego
ICurUs 1)...2)
Philadelphia (Ruthven 4-1) at Sa n Francisco /Blue 3-2)

13

&amp;!Httle ( Pnrou 1·2 tJ" Allard O-IJ at
Detroll
IMuy 4-2tMorris
), (nl 3·31, tnl
Tnus tMedich ~Zl al Kansas City

NewYork
Chlcag"

17
I)

Cindnnali 8, Chicago 3
Hou!itOO l, St.l.ouis 0
San Diego 5, New York 0
I ~ An~eles ~. Montreal 6

Thunod•y'• G•mn

liarn.~ 1-31
Caltfurniu

15

12

""""" &gt;W3·452o4

Wedrtea:day's G1mct

71.0:

.379

Mit1r1e.:~ul.a

~;:~~~~fhla

107
97

.m

B
12
13

me n, Ba rry Nelson, Brian Hunter

PO IN~~

GL-lr:

16

16
JS

recor d) . Runners we-re John Acker·

TEAM SCOR ING

.758
.57!

14

14

m

Bob Marchi,

TRIP L E JUMP - Ji m Morris
lronton , d4 ·1. ( New meet record .) '
BOO METER
RUN - Ray
Bowman, Waver l y , 2 :01 .2; John
Ackerman, GAHS, third ; Barr y
Nelson, GA HS, fifth .

.3l3

14

TcxHs

GAHS, :51.2 .
300 METER LOW HURDL ES _
Ri ck Con ley, Waverly, :38 .5. ~New
m ee t record }. GAHS, tho'rd. (New

;f:'l~o l rec ord, ; 41

10 '"

,..,
,..,
·~
8'"i:

WEST

DB kl&lt;111d

Sa unders,

LONG J,YMP - Jim Morr is, Iron • Ironton
ton ,222 1 , ~ . ( Newmeetrecord)
Atl1en s
5

Tumntu

reco r d.) GA HS
March i , Aaron

~~re are the 1981SEOAL winners : ond Doug Hoke.
lront~n~ 4:.~T - Dennis Beacon. ~~l~i~olis
llO·YARD HURDLE S -

Detn1it

(New scl1oo t
runners were Bob
:45 .8.

14

I~

Houston

San Diel(o

531 JACKSON PM.E ·R1 .35 WEST

~n Frgncisco 5, Philadelfhla 2
Pittslrur~ h 7, Atlanta 5, 1 inning.,

1..,

B~tt111

Gallipolis captures SEOAL meet

sparked a four-run fifth Inning and· Lamp broke a scoring drought tbf!
existed since the White Sox Ued U,
leading the Angels to their fourth game in the bottom of the sixth QO
consecutive triwnph behind the singles by Harold Baines and JiG~
eight-hit pitching of Steve Renko and Morrison piUB Mike Squires' grounand Aridy Hassler.
der. Cleveland's Mike Stanton, 1_.,
The Angels trailed 3-2 entering the who pitched the final five innings,
fifth but tied it on a btu1t single by was the winner. He allowed three
Rod Carew, a single by Rick hits. The game would have been
Burleson and a sacrifice fly by sUBpended by an AL 1 a.m. curfew
Baylor. Grieb followed with his tw~ had it not ended in the 16th inning.
run horner and a double by Bobby
Orioles 4, Blue Jaya8
Clark chased loser Mike Caldwell.
Scott McGregor hurled a threeBaylor had an RBI single in the hitter with a Qll'lll!1'-blgh nine
Angels' two-run first inning.
strikeouts and J'llhn ,Lowensteih
A's 5, Yankees 4
drove in two r;uns, Olie with his fi~t
Unbeaten Matt Keough held New homer of th~ season. The Orioles got
York to one hit over the first seven a run in tbe second inning on Eddie
innings. Keough, 6-0, kept the Murray's single, Terry Crowley:s
Yankees hitless ~ Willie Ran- double and Lowenstein's sacrifice
dolph doubled with one out in the six- fly. Baltimore added a run In the fifth. The Oakland right-hander was th when Doug DeCinces doubled,
kayoed in the eighth when the moved to third on Rick Dempsey•_,
Yankees scored all their runs, two single and scored when Bob B~
on a double by Dave Winfield and hit into a forceout. Murray's Infield
two on a homer by Reggie Jackson.
hit got a run home in the eighth and
The A's scored In the first inning Lowensteinhomeredinthenlnth. ·
when loser Tonuny Jolm balked a
Tigers I, Mariners 0
run horne. Mike Heath singled in the
Rick Peters singled home the •
second and scored on Dave McKay's game's only run in the bottom of the·
double. Fred Stanley's RBI single in ninth to support Dan Petry's tJu-ee.
the fourth made it ~. Johnson hit pitching. Champ Swruners
homered in the fifth and the A's ad- worked reliever Dick Drago for a
ded 'what turned out to he the win- leadoff walk, pinch runner Kirk Gi&amp;
ning run run on a bunt single by son stole second and Richie Hebner
Tony ·Annas, a sacrifice, two walks was given an intentional pass. Thi!
andMcKay'ssacrificefly.
runners advanced on Lynn Jones'
Indians t, White Sox 3
sacrifice btu1t and Lou Whitaker was
Jorge Orta led off the top of the walked intentionally to load tilt
16th inning with his first horne run of bases. Peters then lined a 1,1 pitch
the season. Orta's homer off Dennis into left for tbe winning run.
r---------~--~Don Baylor drove in two r;uns,

00

c.

\1 •·

I·

�Page-6 TheDa ily Sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Round Meigs Local. . '

Thursday, May 14, 1981

The'Dail

Has birthday

Meigs H. S. graduates 183

.....
CENTER

Open Daily 10-9
Sunday 1·6

" ' Frl,, Sat.,

'

Sun. Sale

The Saving Place SM

GARDE

'

.

for down- to-earth prices •

DAR elects officers
for two-year term
New officers were elected for a
twl}-year term at the recent meeting
of Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter
of the Daughters of the American
Revolution, held at the Meigs Inn.
Elected were Mrs. Clyde Ingels,
regent; Mrs. Robert Ashley, vice
regent: Mrs. Clarence Struble,
chaplai n; Mrs. Emerson Jones,
recording secretary; Mrs. Vernon
Weber, coresponding secretary;
Mrs. George Skinner, treasurer:
Mrs. Pearl Mora, registrar; Mrs.
Joseph Cook, historian, ·and Mrs.
Dale Dutton, librarian.
Mrs. Patrick Loehary, chairman
of the nominating committee,
presented the slate of officers to be
installed at the June meeting.
Others on the conunittee were Mrs.
Paul Eich, Miss Eleanor Smith, and
Mrs. Jones.
Grave marking ceremonies for the
late Nancy Reed, a chapter member, were scheduled for June 12 at 5
p.m. preceding the picmc to be held
at the horne of Mrs. Daniel Thomas.
Mrs. Thereon Johnson presented
the program, a rev iew of
"Washington's Woods" written by
D. W. Moore, a native of Ravenswood and a graduate of Ohio
University . The author used
material from a diary kept by
George Washington on a tour of the
Ohio Valley searching for good land.
In searching the Great Bend and
Letart Falls area, it was reported
that Washington and his men walked

Save

across the river at its most narrow
point. The land being researched by
Washington included the stretch between Blennerhasset Island and
Gall ipolis. The author describes
Washington's meeting with the Indian chief, Kiashuta, aft er whom the
Boy Scout camp near Chester was
named. He marked parcels nea r
Rave nswo od la ter cal led
Washington's Woods, a name still in
Mrs. Mary Yost, regent, conducted the opening ritual with Mrs.
Lochary as chaplain. She read the
monthly message from the president
general in Washington.
The national defense report was
given by Mrs. Emerson Jones and
included a plea that patriotism stiU
needs to be instilled in our children
through infonned and concerned
citizens and schools. She pointed out
,:1at if Americans have a respect for
their country, they will want to
protect it and see that it stands for
other generations.
It was reported that the papers of
Mary Grimm Wi nni ngham of
Maryland have been accepted and
she will be a non-resident membe r of
the local chapter.
The hostesses, Mrs. Eich, Mrs.
James Brewington, Mrs. Roger
Luekeydoo and Mrs. Robert Craig
served a dessert course. Mrs.
Clotine Blackwood of Harrisonville
was a guest. Spring fl owers
decorated the refreshment table.

the congregation's Bi ble quiz team,
the team which currently holds the
Meigs County United Methodi&gt;1
Bible Quiz championship.
The pastor of the churches, the
Rev. Mark Flynn, will be attending
an Eagle Court of Honor in
Charleston, W. Va., to be a part of
that ceremony at whi ch his youngest
brother will receive Scouting's
highest award.

Sentinel Social Calendar
dleport, Firday evening, horne of
THURSDAY
ROCK SPRINGS GRANGE, Mrs. Grace French.
Thursday, 8 p.m. at the Grange hall.
THURSDAY
Baking and sewing contests will be
SHADE
RIVER
Lodge 453, Free
held.
and Accepted Mason, Thursday at
LAUREL CLIFF Better Hea lth 7:30 p.m. at lodge hall in Chester.
Club, Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at the Work in fe llow craft degree.
home of Mrs. Ann Mash.
FRIDAY
MEIGS HIGH Class of 1976 will
OHIO VALLEY Comrnandery 24
make plans for a five year reunion at Knights Templar Friday 7:30 p.m.
a meeti~g to be held at 7:30 p.m. The order of the temple to be conThursday at the residence of Bruce ferred.
Reed, W. Main St., Pomeroy.
SUNDAY
Anyone with questi ons may call
COUNTY WIDE prayer rqeeting
Reed at 992-jj723.
Sunday at 2 p.m. Bait Knob Gospel
PAST MATRONS CLUB, Mission. Glenn Bissell, class leader.
Evangeline Chapter, O.E.S., J'v!id-

Anniversary Sunday

3-H.P. Rotary Lawn Mower

John David Edwards, son of Mr.
and Mrs. V. D. Edwards, Pomeroy,
underwent major surgery Tuesday
at the St. Joseph Hospital in Parkersburg, W. Va. Csrdlj may be sent to
him there at Room 4:lo.

The ooth birthday anniversary of
Mrs.Nonna Custer will be observed
Sunday with an open house from 2 to
4 p.m at the horne of Torn and Mary
Rose, 211 South Third Ave., Middleport.

Features Briggs &amp; Stratl on· engine.
recoi l start, 7" plasl ic wheels. side
discharge: controls on the handle.

Visit locally

With Har,of'Oro.-

67

C

(51)

Ea.
Hanging Baskets
Pl ast i c. 8" d i a-

meter. Save now!

33

(52)

3 Days

2.97'

SEED

Our Reg. 3.27

"Ca mpu s
Gre e n" ·
seed for q uic k cover .
lb .

Our Reg. 29.97

l·
fl.

String Trimmer
Cuts 13" swafh. %-

HP.automatlc feed.

Look.
ALSO LEVI'S,
BENDOVER PANTS
FOR WOMEN.

BAHR CLOTHIERS
2nd Ave.

Middl eport

Your PTD Flo r ist

•Automatic
Rewind
*Deluxe 9 pc .
Tool Set
*Power Selector
•Bag Guard
*"Automatically
Adjusts to All
carpet Heights

our 5.37-6.97

( 61 )

REGULAR PRICE
1
219.95

NOW
ONLY

•Our Reg. 9.97 Bog
I

Long-handle Tools
Bow ra ke . hoe,
round-point shoveL

20·1tt. 'Weed 'n Feed'

Long-lasting K-Gra®

.SAVE 54500

25-3-3 fertilizer.

''THE ULTIMATE"

Play

SAVE •3CJOO • •7000

sand

ONE DAY ONLY, FRIDAY 15th

For The Lady
Who Cares About
Her Ca rpel

BIGGEST
(66)

(63)

2.99 f~;
Bark Nuggets

'--.,::::;=

133
Sand
I

Play

Larg e
d e co ra tiv e
ba rk nuggets.

(64)

01.1' Reg. 3.37

4~98

w~

Our
6.86

(65)

any play Lawn weed killer. Con·
ns

2.47

Pint Weed Killer
For dandelions and
broadleaf weeds.

79

4

~~~fl

Potltng loll
For healfhy Indoor
plants. 8-qt. bag .
. DO 11IE CHARLESTON
: • Chorallen' dancer, Tere1a
Barrett, brought dcnna the boule
wllb ber Charletttoa roalme.

(68)

Deadline - turday

3'12-HP, gas-powered mower with fhrot!le control on handle. recoil start engine. '
side discharge. loop hcrldle.
Lawn ·mow.rt mov ~ i:llp•ldll ~g on

99

cno

Save
KM•ooo

·8.09

•

'
Saturday, May 16, iB the deadline
for the purchue of tickets for the
Racine High School Alumni Banquet
to be held on Saturday, May 23, at
Southern High School.
Alwnnl q~M«t candidates thla
fU'e Bonnie Bolo, Beclly Rhodes,
Teresa Holateln, Denlle Manuel and
Janet Mlddlettwart. The lith Paul H.
Oamlhan . Memorial Scholapblp
will be awll'ded. Duel of '1 are Ulld
for the~ and may be Mill
to Barbera Pierce, Rl. 2, Bolt M,
!Wclne, rOr thole • do not plln to
altllnd the dinner or dance.
Tlc:kttl for lhll year'a reunloo aie
oo llle at the CrGIIStln, r...a.,
• V1lllae Cal IIIII ar 11111 be
: • bJ ...... paJIIIII1t to Mn. Pl«ee.
'

-

AMILY CLINIC

.
••

••'!II

Telllq Uld Trealmeat

Jasl for: Inhalants
Food

~~rv

DERMATOLOGY

G£NERAL PRACTICE

Office 675-6971

-

Olllee.Bt!tn ltr A1i2

Model
1254

Reg. 5199.95

Chemicals
Shoe Dtrmititis ·
·Cosmetics

__

* Complete Set of
Attachm ent s
*Automatically
Adjusts
To All Ca~He ights
* Life'li me Lubricated ·
*A 11 Steel Construction

•819 is llftitned 10 trap dust 180 lim••
sm1ller thin dl1meter of ahuman ~air . , , ,
OUST FREE ClEANING!
•Huge 6.0 AMP motor tiv" unrlv1led clun·
ing plt'form•nc• .
•Wide lens htld,lltht •VI BRA GROOMER II
•EDGE KLEENER Cleans up to blsebcNrcls.

David L. Carr, D.O.

Tumors Re111ton11tJ
Acnt
.P111ri11is
Exzema
All atn Dlsiases

E.S.P.

UPRIGHT WITH
.TRIPLE-FILTER BAG

AUERGY

22" Self-propelled Mower

ONLY

DELUXE 2-MOTOR
POWER TEAM

With Tools
NEW

our Reg. 1

149;88

insole, green Neoprene sole
and heel, Goodyear welt

" The Place to Shop for Work and Western"
Middleport, Ohio
992·3614
Open M·S 9-5; Fri. 9·1

Fashions In
The Denim

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
EUREKA SWEEPER SALE

(58)
~ Our
84c

·~wt.

CU .•

boo ~ plain toe, cushion

5~of'

The Finest

Budget priCed
upright ONLY

T~rn ls hed tan leather, 8 inch

.a3oot

And Women.

18.88 24.88 4.86ea. 6.97

Wheelbarrow
Rugged gardentyp e . . 3-c u. ft .

IDDIE SHQPPE

111 w, 2nd Pomeroy, Oh.

For Men

(53)

Our Reg. 24.97

SHORTS &amp; TOPS
20% OFF

LEVI DENIMS

REG. '259.95
(60)

ALL

r~B~ut~te~rn~u~tA~v~e::_.,!as~w~a::_s~~~~~:._j_~~~~~~~~~~~

FLORIST
PH. 992-2644
'
uz E. Ma in, Pomeroy

~wtULBS.

.11!1398

~a~'s

Mrs. Ben Reapp and Cheryl of
Merritt Island, Fla. visited Wednesday with Mr. and Mrs. Osby Martin and Adam. They had earlier
visited in Gallipolis with Mr. and
Mrs. Harry Reapp . and in
Chesapeake with Mrs. Inez Ellis.

Cl ass ic clay flower
pots let plants grow
naturally.

White Bird Bath
Decorative, plastic.
17x25". Save now .

GRASS

Grass Seed

The DAV' Field Service Unit will
be located at 114 Mulberry Ave., not

Flor ist Si nce 1957

Ea. Covera 5000 Sq. Pf.
(62) •

(S9 )

Correction

Yo ur "E~e tr ll Tooch"

' '

2.17

The Rutland Elementary School
will be open from 8 a. m. to 10 a.m.
Saturday with Doug Behnke, principal, to be there to answer
questions on the two and one-half
mill bond issue to be voted on in the
Meigs Local School District next
month. The public is invited to visit
the school sometime during those
hours.

6" Clay Pot

1000 RPM

• Stratton®
Engine

$42

National Nursing Home Week was
obrJerved at the Pomeroy Health
Care Center Wednesday with entertainment, tours of the facility, a
talk by Kennit Walton, and a buffet
dinner being highlights of the day.
The Francis Andrew band of Long
Bottom, Ed Harkless' and The
ChoraliersofMeigsHighSchool, the
musical Robinsons, Bob and Joan, of
Middleport,
and Skip
Logan with for
his
guitar
provided
entertainment
the residents of the Center and the
many visitors.
Kennit Walton spoke from the
community to the Center residents
using as his theme "How Much is a
Hiunan Being Worth?" He said "less
than a dollar chemically, but a fortune to God." Walton spoke of kindness and love, one for another, and
the difference in man's judgment or
one another and God's judgment of
man.
Following his talk, he presented a
flag to George Foss, a veteran
residing at the. Center, from Drew
Webster Post 39, American Legion,
Pomeroy.
· Posters made by elementary
students of the Meigs Local School
District were on display. Prizes had
earlier been awarded to the winners
in the poster contest which carried
outthe theme, "Love is Ageless."

In hospital

4" Clay Pot (54) . . ....... . . .. .... 20cea.
6" Clay Saucers (55) . ....... ..... . 35c ea .
8" Clay Pot( 56) .... . ........... . 1.36 ea .
8" Clay Saucers (57) ... . .•. , .. .... 93cea .

Lay speaker to preach
Jean Trussell, a Jay speaker from
the Sutton United Methodist Church,
will preach Sunday at the Bethany
United Methodist Church at9 a.m. at
the Sutton United Methodist Church
at 10:45 a.m.
Mrs. Trussell is the wife of Ralph
Trussell and resides in the Bashan
Community. She is employed at
Cleland Realty. She is a youth Sunday school teacher for the CarmelSutton Sunday School and a coach of

THE CHORALIERS of Meigs High School &amp;Cl- Canoo, SheBa Horky, Adam Martin, Jeanne Horton,
eompanied at the piano by tbelr director, Ed Harkless, Danny Riggs, Carla Smith, Fred Young and Saudy
presented a program of pOpular m01le Wednesday af· Herdman. Tbe Meigs Musle Department of wbleh lbe
lernoon at the Pomeroy Health Care Center. The lively CboraUen Ia a part will be presenting a publle spring
group eoDJiated of, left to right, teresa Barrell, Jell contert at 3 p.m. Sunday at lbe Pomeroy United
Metbodiat Choreh.

KMlOOO

(50)

use.

To answer questions
on bond issue

Ed Harkless and Choraliers entertain at
Pomeroy Health Care Center Wednesday

6.0AMP
Motor

COMI .. TODAY FOii .
1

FREE POWEJ'

DEMONITRATtOHI
-·

$12995

With

·

Toals

2·MOTOR
POWER TEAM

1.2PEAK HP

SHOPAND~OMPARE

EUREKA FACTORY
REPRESENTATIVE
WILL BE PRESENT

. LIMITED QUANTITIES ON
SOME MODELS - ALL MOD ELS
IN STOCK WILL BE SALE PRI CE D

I

-..Pt.

.\

..

''

�-·

-

~-··

.,...,_.

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

----- ---,

--- ----,---------,----------------

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday. May 14, 1981

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Home Health services being offered
.

patient to recuperate at home,
creating a considerable savings ,in
expense. Patients of all ages are
seen through tlie hom@ health
program when services are needed
and niferrals are made to the agen- .
cy.
Veterans Memorial Hospital's
Home Health Service proyides nur-

Home Health Service is offered
Meigs Countians through Veterans ·
Memorial H011pital which is ob-·
serving National Hospital Week. ·
Home Health Service often makes
it possible for a patient to ·be
discharged from the hospital and
continue to receive necessary
professional care. This allows the

$3,()()() goa l

0

•·
f l.evy COmmzttee

c
The C1·u ' F'
- zens mance Ommittee
to support the Meigs Local No Cost
to Taxpayer Bond Issue met in the
Superintendent'sOfficeforthethird
time Tuesday afternoon at 4 p.m.
Members elected John Arnott as
chairman of the finance committee

STAFF- A part of tbe staff of the Home Heallh Service offered
through Veterans Memortal Hospital includes, Ito r, Edna Russell,
R.N., Isabelle Couch, secretary, and Elizabeth Smith, R.N.

Testing program available
Children who are developing
rapidly, well above their grade
level, may be considered for early
entry into kindergarten and the first
grade, Meigs County Superintendent
of Schools Robert Bowen said today.
Parents may obtain information
by-calling the Meigs County Superintendent of Schools Office, 992-3883 or
992-5592, and stopping by the office
to pick up an infonnation brOchure
and registration fonn. The superintedent's office is located in the former children's home building,
across from Vet~rans Memorial
Hospital, Mulberry Heights, in
Pomeroy.

A child's fifth birthday must fall
between Oct. I and Jan. 1, inclusive,
to be considered for early entry into
kindergarten. For early entry into
first grade the child's sixth birthday
must fa ll between Oct. 1 and Jan. I,
inclusive.
An evaluation will be conducted to
confirmthechild'sneedforearlyenThis program is aimed at
try.
identifying those children whose

'

and established a $3,000 campaign
collection goal.
As in all school levies, it should be
noted that no public funds can be
spent towards the campaign, and
theref~re, the committee must raise
.

I

Area Death
Arthur T. Banks
Relatives have received word of
the death of Arthur T. Banks,
Louisville, Ky., at a Louisville
hospital Wednesday following an extended illness.
Surviving are his wife, Helen
Roush Banks, a former resident of
Racine; a son, William Banks; a
granddaughter, Rebecca, and a
grandson, William Banks II, and a
foster son, Robert Martin.
Funeral services will be held at 10

sufficient fW:ds to promote the
passing of the bond Issue,
Any person wishing to·donate for
this No Cost to the Taxpayer Bond
Issue may make check out to the
"Citizens Cqmmittee for Passage of
the Meigs Local Bond Issue" and

RllbertAllen Harrmm, DavidS. Hartinger, Robin

LyM Herald, Sandr11 D. Henrum, cathy A. Hess,
John Ray Hoffman, 01ef)·l Johnson Holley,
Floyd Kenneth Hulllday, Sheila Edna Horky,
Jtan Ann Horton, Jo A~eht Houchins, Jvyh
Maree Hud!lon, Donna Kay Hysell, Sherri Rena
Hy:tell, Joyce A. JBney, Ricky A. Jeffers, Terry
Let Jewell , Gregory Todd Joh1111on, Lydia Annette Johnsoo,Stoney Lee Johnson, Chris Judge,
1'1mKauff. ThornaBlawrence Kelly, Jr., Angela
Irene Kennedy, David Craig KeMedy, Randal E.
Kennedy, April Lorailll' King, Brian Jvan King,
Undl Ann Kovalchik, Hoby M. LHnders, Robert

sing, :physical therapy and home . Forflirther inforn)atioo regarding ·;
health
vislts .to residents living home health care, call Veterans
in Meigs County. Three nuraes, two Memorial Hospital • Home Health '
aides, ime physical ther&amp;Rlst and one Service at m.210f, En. 44.
secretary serve on the Home Health r;;;;;;;;;;;!~~~~;;;;;;;;i

mde

Staff.

'

Since the service was initiated in·
19'11, 22,2!1 vialts have been ·made
and 284,379_miles, thoughout Meigs
County, traveled.
A Home Health Advisory Com.
mittee made up of members fonn
the tommunity along with members
of the hospital staff, work cl~ly
with Supervisor, Edna Russell, in
the COntinum·g growth· "'
"' this·
program. Mrs. Russell, R.N. is
director for the Home Health Agen-

·
,

·;_·G·

IIJBIIRD'S ·
REENLIN
IU .
r,uu-

THEY'VE SENT FOR A
AMBUL-ANCE FOR PUSHYHE'S GOING TO NEED

o

WISH !

SUPPORTIVE SPLINTS, AND

CAN'T RISI'&lt;
TI-lE WAIT,,

7:00 (]).PM MAGAZINE
(]) WEEKENO-GARDENER
CD REMEMB!R WHEN: WAY
OUT WEST Dick Cavell hosts

Ph. 992-5776 Syracuse, Oh.
NOW OPEN FOR
SPRING SEASON
• Potted Plants
·
I'
,1 .....,d.
'Complete lne·,O~J~:-,.
, lng
· plants and hanging
basket•.
..• _
• o1u_\J¥i
I! _!:Jt_
"'
All Dozent~C:Rs . 1Sc doze
Hours: s.::::~ ~~~ly 9 to I

thiselght·part monthly aerie a
on United States ' life . Th ia
opening episode sweeps
through the lusty high -spirited

saga olthe American cowboy,

eur A:&gt; vovr·~ TOP
GOOI\J, YOU'Re IN A

YOUR B07:&gt;, DE~MOND
VOYT. HIRE'D 50MSONS

AN O:L MAP

TO 6TE'AL

P051TION TO CLUE
IN ON AN'I S HADY
TRICK HE PULLS !IV
THE OIL 8U51NS!O!O!

OF MINE';~

ARE YOU
OFFSRI'-1' ME
:&gt;OMS KIND A
OEALr

~

Cavett via ita the Sidney Janis

Gallery, Part I.
1M) MATCH GAME
01 FACE THE MUSIC
7:58
CBN UPDATE NEWS
8:00
8 Cll REAL KIDS
(})
PRIORITY
ONE
INTERNATIONAL
CD MOVIE -(CCMEDYI" Y.
"HIQh Anxiety" 11177
CIJ
MOYIE
·(RONAijCE·ORAMAI " ' Y,
''Roman flollday" 1853
CIJ !l2J Cl MOAK AND MINDY
Mark, whon home planet ia

6€al~20

Mlu.JT65!

FOR MAKING OUR TRIP TO THE ZOO
OF MIDD~PORT ILIMINTAIY SCHOOL

ioua heart condition shatters

Rose's life and provokes her

I'D BEmlt DRIVE I~
~N ~D 6ET GOME!

CASPAR.'

LOOK OVT.'l

KEEP AN EYE ON

This ia the story of what it 's like
to have an act ivevolca no in your
backya cd. The program follows
f.At. St.' Helens from 1830
th ro ugh the big eruption and
beyond, into 1981.

l

Cil

SOUND OF TRUMPETS
BOSOM BUDDIES
Kip and Henry declare a war of
wits when they deci de to ruth ·

8 :30

;

ClJ !l2JGI

'

COULD STARVE
T'DEATH IN THIS

'

JOB!

··';

leasly compete with their con·
niving rival at the ad age11c yfor
an ambitious doctor' s account.

epeal)

8 ;58
8:00

40°10
Off

·.:: - cE.RIU.LL

·-

S"· l'i

CJ (J)@I MAGNUM, P.J. When

It could be . Mr. Pert, I is jes'
quite costl4, a po' desty-tutt?
Mrs.
widda' woman!

41~

r hasn't a...

sniff..red cent
t'm4 name!

TC Ia arraated by the Coast
Guard and thrown into the brig ,
he refuses Magnum 's help and
intends to plead guilty.
lBepeat; 60 mine .)

There! There!

Perhaps

we. er..

Cll (j])

work

some·
thinq
out!

~th .

Cllll2JGITAXIThe cabbiosdie·
cover that lila on the outelde Ia
not so rosy when the Sunshine

SHE'LL PROMEILY CON9UELO ANt&gt;

. _,

W!Ntl UP BEING
A 10P MC)I7!;L
ANI' A HUGE
SUCCESS.'

..
."

MARINK'A

PE5ERVE EACH

(I) GOOO NEIGHBORS ·
(j]) THIS OLD HOUHTho kit ·
chen 0111 a ceramic lilalloor

~RAAIIL LQ,

1--- =---'\

YOU'VE ElEEN Af()$;
KIND TO US.

and the fireplace gets a new
atone
face.
(Closed ·

OTHER. THEY'LL
GET AWN6

CaRIIonod; U.S.A.I

FAMOU91.Y/

10:00

'

11'1 ••

ment. (60 mlna.)

....,

~-

··~·

Rise 'n shine to FM stereo music, your favorite AM
station or a buuer. J;:ach tap of the snooze button
gives you a few minutes extra rest. Set'the auto-shutoff and relax with your favorite music - radio tums
........11 off automatically. Featurae twin 3" speakers. stereo
headpflone lee~ . "t2·1530

. (i)(jj LADIES AND GENT·

lj

L!M!N ... BOB NEWHART,
PART II Bob Nowllart will ago in
display hla unique comedic wit
In "'ne of hla famoua mon·

•1 r,
1

\ill! ••

~~ ~~
I' I~

--·.

ologuea, and will joinhla gue1ta
in a varlet._, of aketchea that
poke tun at many aape cta ol
American lite. Gueat etara: Don

, ~ rl
; J

'

High Performance System
at a Great Low Price

ri

Rlckleo, Doon Mort in and Dick
Mort ln. (eo mint.)
COUSTEAU ODYSSEY

BARNEY

GV
IS OJ: POT'S
GOTTO GO!!

No dial. nopotnllr-aPNCilt~oouiMiiiiCil&amp;D
dlapiay show exact frequency tunadl And excluatw AutoM!I;ic: lOcka FM atltlons on-llequency for cllll'llll IOUIId.

25 wattt per cl!annel, min. rma Into 8 ohms from :Z0.20}l00
Hll, O.OK THO. Sllm,.llne (OIIIy ~· high) llylfno.lll1·1ill1

'The Nile ' Part l . ln thie apecial;

WHV DON'T 'IE
TRV JOGGIN'?

Cut
33°/o

Save1
'100

Cll rBJe 20.20 Hugh Downs
anohora this weekly magazine
prorlllng noteworthy eventa in
newa, aclence, and entertain·

/)

-'

' '•'"' It

....... !.! ~- t ...
V Ill I
...... _................

Part II .'

11:30 l!JMOVIE1COMEDYJ" "Oio
l,!lqhln;" 11110

Cab Comp any shuts down, and
they all and up hilariously at ·
tacking new careers, with Alex
as a night watchman, Bobby as
a kid a' entertatn&amp;r and louie as
New York ' s moat detestable
stock broker. (Conclusion),

'22'?7

·..:..

SN!AK PREVIEWS

Hosts Gene Siskeland Roger
Eberl show scenes from the
new movies in town Inc luding
reviews of 'lion of the Oeser1 ,'
'Death Hunt,' and 'Friday the

can

-Save

:.

UPDATE NEWS
THURSDAY NIGHT
AT THE MOVIES 'Dreculs '
197S Stars: Frank Lange !Ia. Sir
Laurence Olivier .

Cll

(gloaed-Capt ioned)

Radio Shack was the first to Introduce a
completely portable computer and now you can
buy it at 20% off I As easy as 'a calculator to use,
yet it's fully programmable in easy-to-learn
BASIC. Or you can use our ready-to-run
CHARGE IT
programs. With batteries and case. Better hurry!
IMOST STORES) *26-350t .

~ ~

~BN

•

with the fact that Harris, Die ·
I rich andWojo want to leave the
12th for a promotion at another
district, the whole squad get a a
laugh,out of a self-proclaimed
ra inmaker who ' abeen arrested
for roas ting a chicken in thepark
in r!ln attempt to see d clouds .

~

248.00

-

ffi

MILLER
Whi le Barney struggles to co pe

With Full-Size
Feitures·
,
CTR-48 by R...lltk:e

STA·720 by Aaallallc

Jacquea Cous1aau charta the
Impact of modern man's in·
creating technological lntru·

alononlltealongtheworld'alon·
at rtver. (80 mlns.)

NI!WS
CBH UPDATE NEWS
ntELE180H
TU EVI!NING NEWS

t0:28
t0:30

OUTIR LIMITS

:~::

r~a.TE~~~.
IWI

II' o'

'

. ·' 0

IIIII

i'ii' ·,

11:11

tt :30

Dllpley AMIFM ltwH Ra011Yar
IP II-III bell with ..... Wooter and
~ V.,., Porlld lnolllllfl
with Dual
&amp;1111
111 -~~ c:.r..at•l

c...

I

1

l •

WHAT DID YOU PUT
DOWN ABOVT MOUNT
EVER~ST, MARCIE?

I

Now arrange the circled letters to

(J

form the surprise answer, as sug -

gested by the above canoon .

'T I I I I I I I J-ITJ"
(Answers tomorrow )

I

Jumbles: DECAY

COACH

~

PROGRAM

ANNOUNCI!O

DAVI! AUEN AT LARGE
~IIPOATENEWI

•

C!J

ntE TOftiOHT

BUMPER

RATION

Answer : What the actress was thinking about -

HER "CHARACTER "
Jumble Book No. 16, containing 1tO puzztes, Is available for S1 .75 potlplkl
trom JI.Nntllt, cJo thlt n.wtpaper, 8011 34, Norwood, N.J. 07648. lncludt ,our
name, acklttu, zip code and mike check• payable to Newspaperbook t .

BRIDGE
Playing high-low
By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

One of th e tradition al

NORTH

de(en siv ~

signals against a
suit corltract is to pia v highlow to show a doubleton. It is

'I' QJ3
+ K 10 g

abnormal to pla y high-low to
show any other even number
of cards in partner's suit, bUl

+ A Q5 4

WEST
+9 2
'I'AK n
+ 53
+ 109876

ship ca n make. but he knows
thai there should be enough
amm unit ion

for

six

and

decides to hid it.
West opens the king of
hearts. The dummy hits the
table. If Sou th holds a singleton heart and doubleton club,
East wants a club sh1ft. If
South hol ds two hearts. West
wants his partner to cash th(&gt;
second heart winner.

How can he get his partner
to shift to a club if he holds

fiv P hearts and rash out 1f hr
has four " Simple_ East plavs

EAST

+B

'1'10 642
+ 8762

+KJ 32

SOUTH
+K QJ106 5 4

... .
'1' 16

South's six-spade bid is a

know H seve n is a lavdown or
if fiv e is the best the partner-

5· 14-81

+ A73

+ AQJ4

Vuln erable: North -South
Dealer: Norlh
West

No rtb

East

Soutb

Pass
Pass

6+

Pass

I NT
Pass

Ope ning lead:•K

his I0 of hea r(s. West can be
sure that Eas t doesn'l hold a
doubleton. Henre. he is sho w- ·
ing an even number and a sec-

ond heart play will be a
w1nner .

~VH:d'
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
3 Turkish city
1 Applaud
4 Fencing
5 Hidden supply dwruny
10 Tease
5 English

Fish sauce
13 Elliptical
IC Vegetable
15 Skin problem
16 Entreat
17 Sty
18 That is to say
20 "The Gold
Bug" poet
Zl Before
%Z Bangtail
%3 Colonel

Klink's

essayist
6 Peppery
7 Suffix
for drunk
8 Style of
painting
9 - it (argue )
12 Quit a deal
16 Swiss city
19 Spiteful
22 Bluenose
%3 Laurels

Yesterday 's Answer
24 Ham it up
25 Recover

26 "Last Supper"

in art
28 To the point
30 Vladimir
Ulyanov

31 Baffle
32 Hill
36 Look
38 Ending

for dent ·
39 Gennan "

article

nemesis
%6 Greek island
27 Hot spot
28 'Agnus - "
1

29 Ultimate
30 Tarry
33 Spanish gold
34 Generation

35Sass
37 Narrow

valley
39Fop
40 Picturesque
41 Brll'lk
4% English river
43 Smell,
as a stogy
DOWN
1 Boast
%Invigorate

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:
4XYDLBAAXI\
Ia LONGFELLOW
I,
One leiter simply stands for another. lrt. t.bi&amp;. 1110ple A Is .....
used for the three L's. X for the two O's, etc. Slnete letters, · '·
apoatrophes, lhe leneth and formation of the words are all
hlnu. Each day the code l•tters are different.
CRYPTOQUOTES
EVPVNGCZ,
JQVBZV

QGOV

X WZ C

NQWRVLZ,

RUVP

CUVM

Wl-lAT 0117 VOV
PUT OOWN,SIR?

..

-BLV
NLVZU .
BPWPMXWI~ .
Yetfenlay't Cryptoqaote: A BUSINESS, LIKE AN .• •
AUI'OMOBIIE, HAS TO BE DRIVEN, IN ORDER TO GET
;
RESUL1S.- BERTIECJIARIESFORBF.S
~

PIIONIAG!.IY SHOW

I

Roy Cl11k hoete 1 routing

:

ttl COUNTIIY MUIIC U.S.A.

PEANUTS

'•

country mualc feattval from In·

dapandtnce, Kanaaa. Gueat
porlormero lncludo Morlo Hag;ard, Qlo~lo Rich , Johnny Lee
lltd Lacy J. Do~on .
(J)MOVII!-(DIIAIIA)•• Y. "Oe-

II!IJ!tWr TIM 111M" t5111

&lt;II 1111•
UN1!

Check Your Phone Book for thtiBIIII"'IIIlSioreorDIIIIrHIII'tltYou

Yesterday's

CIJ 700~LUB
ClJ !l2J Cl BARNEY

Personal-Size CasseHe Recc

Digital Display StereO Receiver
Auto-Mag~ FM Fine-TUning

Am:

Gel PAID.

good exam ple of th e "bid 'em
h1gh and tell 'em nothing"
school of brid ge. So uth doesn't

OMEGA

'Visitat ions' The unit iS called in

GADFRY! A GUY

Display reads hours, minutes.
seconds. Also shows !'lonth, date,
day even 24-hour military time.
StoPwatch 1unction and eas::~
24-hour alarm. With battery·

tMUHLIEI

HOW THOSE TOP
MALE MODELS

tohelpSpecia iBranchtrace the
source of une xplained voices
being re corded on tapes in one

Cil

I

Reg.

IDANNECt
. I r) IJ

FACTOR

min s.)

WHILE I'M

J

experts do find very occesJonal use for that play .
Today·s hand is an example
of thi s eo un t signal from
·' Part nership Defense in
Bridge."

into hiding the ailment from her
family and fian ce even if it
means sacrific ing her ~ong
awaited wedding day. (60

mine.)
(j]) LIFE WITH ST. HELENS

AGREAT DAY.
FROM THE STUDINTI &amp; STAFF

thrg,ygh hia Orkan powers.

0 liJ@I THE WALTONSAeer·

ALLEYOOP

Kevin Scutt Stout, Bryan SwaM, Richard Eldon

TO JHE PARENTS MD BUS DRIVERS

emotionleaa·, learns the deep
meaningoflovelromMindy, and
out of his new understanding
gi..-es her a pricaleu gift

C~PAR

r

I I

1

'b.J've. QJLy

Super 60th
Anniversary

Randall J. Osborne, Angela KayeP11yne, Jeffrey
0. Peckrnon, Elizabeth Lynn Perrin, Robe!t

SwBnson, Jr., ClmllleSilletteSwtndell, Barbara
TaMer, Tonywr Sue Taylor, Hoblrt Templeton,
Dunlel Roy 'Otoma. Blrbal'l Jean Thomu,
Phillip Allen Thompooo, Kelly Lyn Tyrte, Jolvo
M. VAnmeter, Nancy Jo Wolla,., Jeffrey A.
Way!Jind, Cynthia LyM Weaver, Jeffrey T.
Welch, Jen11 Rene Welker, Judy 1AVert11 WeU,
Harvey Gene lflllllald1, Jr., Dorta K. Wllcot,
Jooeph Bryon Wllm, Dovld W. Wllkos, IJnda
Kay Williams, Robert D. Wllllanw, Jr., Dorio
LyM ll'lllla111100, Kimberly Ell"" Wll~ Jackie
Dole WoWe, Dobonh Koy Woodyord and JaOlf
Ann Wyalt.

ANNOUNCED

of their ·safe' houses. (60

Anita Lou.Ue Lee, Kathy Arm
Lee, Edward Darrell Le11ter, Katie Mae Lewis,
Don!UI Jean l~ l ttl e, Rebekah J. Long, Mary MatliOn, Terry Mayes, Troyh M. McDaniel,
Christopher T. McKinney, Jeffrey Ray
McKnight, Randall J. Might, Michael Miller,
Patricia Sue Mitchell, Jeffrey Lorn Moore, Carol
El.il.ine Morris, John Michael Morris, Ne!Jon
Morrillon, JuliA. MoumlnJ, Barbara L. Mll'L'Itr,
Deena Louise Net&lt;:e, Nonnan Douglu Neece,
li!ura LyM Ohlinger, Stevenm PBUl Ohlinger,

Stewart, Sheri Stewart, Tammi Jo Stoblrt,

City and Tomb1ton8.
(l) ALLINTHHAMILY
CIJ!l2JCI FAMILY FEUD
(1) BACKSTAGE AT THE
GRANO OLE OPRY
0(1) TICTACDOUGH
I1J {jj) MACNEIL-LEHRER
REPORT
1M) NEWS
7:30 (]). BULLSEYE
(])
PROGRAM
!&gt;ANFORO AND SON
t:J(J) JOKER'S WILD
(1) HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
11J (j]) DICK CAVETT SHOW

Tremendous 20% to 40%
Price Cuts!

Eut~ene l..ander~ .

Petrie, Joseph Michael Powell Steven Dt!wayne
Pullins, Mary MBrie Ridfj:way, Carla RayneU
Rife, Andrea Chri!Une Riggs, Kimberly Irene
Roush, Terry L. Rowley, Laura Ann Rupe, Harvey Gr&amp;nt Rtl'1'1fll Jr., Timothy VaughnSallten,
Thornas A. Schoonover, Jr.. Anthony R. Scott,
Mllrtln L. SearleB, An~ela J. Sinclair, Carla Sue
Smith, James C. Smith, Jeffrey S. Smith, Kevin
Eugene Smlth, Michael Ray Smith, Theresa
SmithLDavid R. Spangler, G~ra)d M. Spencer,
Jotm uavid Staatll, Theresa Starr, Charles R.

evoking such legends as Wyau
Earp and Calamity Jane and viailing the trail towns of Dodge

ANNIE

license plates, and $20 and costs, expired driver's license; William
Foley, Syracuse, $150 and costs.
fleeing a police officer, and $100 and
costs, reckless operation; Richard
Caruthers, Jr., Pomeroy, $15 and
cOsts, s~, and $50 and costs,
disorderly, and Nancy L. Dunfee,
Middleport, $10 and costs, stop sign
violation.
Six defendants have forfeited bonds in the court of Pomeroy Mayor
Clarence Andrews. They are Joseph
Lish, Mason, $26; Patrick Guinsler,
Newark, $27 ; Samuel Boston,
Letart, W. Va., $38; William Chapman, Tuppers Plains, $31, and John
Arnott, Pomeroy, $36, all posted on
speeding charges, and Britt Dodson,
Middleport, $150, reckless operation.

Television
•
•
VIewmg
EVENING

'

Marriage license

chronological age and who would
benefit substantially by early entry
intoschool.

THANK YOU

1

I

10% OFF ALL
NURSE'S SHOES

(Continued from page I)
• ------~------~~~---

Blulftam, Brian Bauer, Janette MH ri~ Betziny,
Tlm9thy Allen Bishop, Rulh AM Blake, Kend.a
Je11nne Braun, Bruce E. Brlckles, Denise K.
Brickle~. Kelly Dawn Brown, Rich11rd Lee
Brown, Billy Joe Browning, Larry Eugene Byer,
Jill Rene Byers, Chris A. C11pehart, Wayne L.
Capehart, Stephen Keith Carson, Freeda L.
Chapman , Marilyn VIrginia Chapman, Brenda
Kae ChaJ~pt; lear, lka n A. Colwell, Ben R. Coppick, Pt~tncia Anne Cremeans1 Angelo Ben~amm
Croga, Paula Ann Cunningham, Ben amln
Fr~:tnklin Davidson, Jr., Delmar G.
avi!
Robert A. Davis, Richard Lee Dean, Jr., David
Matthew Demosky . Frances D. Dick em, Britt
HendeDon D:ldson, Debbie Doerfer, Rebecca
Sue Dorat, Shari Ann Drehel, Robert Wayne
Duckworth, Patti Kay Du~ean, William R. Oyer,
Todd EaW, Linda Rae Ea!WI'l, Tina Marie East,
Robert Charles Evans, Ellora Rae Faulkner,
Sheila J. Fetty, Teresa Elaine Felty, Jerry
Fields. lArry R. F'ox, Walter Fredridt Games,
IJI, James A. Gheen , Ke\'ln Lee Gibbs, Timothy
Allen Gorf, Kellee IUmae Griffith, Patrick Barry
Grueser, Katrena Hale, Kenneth E. Haning, Jr.,
Rhonda Jl:!an Haning, Tamara Jayne Harden,
RI&gt;Wn A. Harder, Michael Edwrd Harmon,

I DON'T KNOW.1.

\

NURSES, WE. SALUTE YOU!

Mayors end 19 cases

.

'

btfitagt b01tet
A marriage license was issued to
-~
- '
of ·.t)ot.G
Roger Lee Atkins, 26, Middleport,
and
development
a half
is more
beyond
than a their
year ~-~a~
HomeinLouisville.
. l~n:-~F~ri!da~y~a~t~t~he~M=cM:e:e~F~u:n:er:a~l~a~n~d~Lo~re:t:ta~Ly:n:n~A~tk:in~s,
dleport.
:23~-~M:I:·d-J~~~~~:::::::::M~i~d:d~le~p~o~r~t,~O~h~io~~~~~~~~~

Maplewood Lake, to Holzer Medical
Veterans Memorial
Center, and at 6:35 p.m., the Racine
Admitted-Victoria Fink, Rutland; Unit took Winnie Dailey, County
Brenda Ballard, Long Bottom; Road 35, to Veterans Memorial
Clarence Lee, Pomeroy; Kathryn Hospital.
Evans, Portland; Jeremiah Allison,
Middleport; Winnie Dailey, Racine.
Discharged--Herman Ferrell, To meet Monday
Lula Belle Murray, Martin McCoy,
The Meigs County Swine 4-H Club
Benjamin Fields.
will hold a meeting on Monday
evening, May 18 at 7:30 p.m. at the
Two emergency calls Extension Office.
Any boys or giris, between the
Two emergency calls were an- ages of 9 and 19 who are interested in
swered by local units Wednesday, taking a swine 4-H project this year,
the Meigs Emergency Medical Ser· is invited to attend, according to
vice reports. At 3:48 a.m., the Wayne Upton and Carolyn Ritchie,
Syracuse Unit took William Morris, advisors.

Southern.

DICKTR~CY

send it to the Superintendent's Office ,;cy~.;
- ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;d~~;:;:~~~~~=~
or to any of the corrunittee members.
C. Arland King, Treasurer, reported that collection totals to date are
closeto$500.
The next meeting will be held May
19 at 4:00 in the superintendent's of- .
Introducing Supra' !
flee.
·
Supra means freedom from pastes .
Committee members are Larry
·and polishes. It cleans wlth soap ·
Powell (board president), John Arand water. And nevei needs
polishing. New Supra
nott (Middleport principal), Don
breathes,
looks and feels
Hanning (Bradbury principal), John
like
good
glove
leather
Lisle (Salisbury principal), Jane
.. ' .
Wagner (school treasurer), Lynn
Brown (area business person), l:len
Slawter (teacher) , Mary Lou
Hawkins (teacher's aide), C. Arland
King (campaign treasurer ), and.
David Gleason (superintendent).

Meigs County happenings..

Eight defendants forfeited bonds
and five others were fined in the
court of Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman .
Forfeiting were John E. Partlow,
Pomeroy, and Randall Lee Midkiff,
Barboursville, $350 each on charge
uf driving while intoxicated; Fn~nk
W. Houser, Lynchburg, Va., $29,
speeding; Cha rles G. Cox ,
Gallipolis, $25, passing in a nopassing zone; Regina Butcher,
Pomeroy, $2B, speeding: Jeffrey
L. Dilcher, Albany, $25, spinning
tires; Ira G. Roach, Racine, $25,
stop sign violation.
Fined were Bailey Dugan,
Rutland, $225 and costs and three
days in jail, driving while into~icated, and $30 and costs,
sp~edin g;
Robert Alger, Jr.,
Pomeroy, $20 and costs, expired

.

'

The

~IC

NEWS NIGHT·
by Ted

Ancll&lt;'red

l'!lrtll
LATE MOVIE OR
NIA CHAiriON.II GAME

~

Romanian artisls
CIUCAGO (AP) - The first American tour of the
work of the Romanian artists Ritzi and Peter Jacobi is
being shown at the Musewn of Contemporary Art
through June 14.
The museum says "the Jacobis have gained world
recognition for their revolutionary use of fiber in~
dimentlonal forms. Thil exhibition shows the pei'IIOilal
llructures and techniques they have developed over
the put decade since their emigration from R«nlnia
ll West Germany."
'

.••

�14, 1981
Page

10 The Daily Sentin e l

Pomeroy

Thursday, May 14, 1981

Middleport, Ohio

Foote· Mineral

GRAHAM PLANT

Foote
Mineral 1 Company's
uraham Statton Plant, preaeoted
the employees of the ProdUction
· Departnlent's "8" Shift and the
Shipping Department with safety
awards and decals for safe years Of
work without any time lost for injury.
.

I'HESENTED AWARDS-Pictured above are Foote Mineral Plant
' hipping Department empioyces who were presented with safety
., , anls for safe years worked without lost time for injury. First row left
1.. 1 i ~hl. Opha Offutt, Carl Morris, Norman Patterson, Charles Pyles ;
'o hipjllng Department Superintendent, William Boston, George Lowery,
!\• 'nard Livingston, Howard Young, Carl Durst, Donald Sayre, Delmer
'·:• r&gt;Jl•s, William Swisher, Delbert Durst and Melvin Rollins; second row

The awards are gold plnll ahowlng
the Foote Mineral Company logo
encircled by the words "Foote
Mineral Safety Award."

lelt to right, Brycle Durst, Robert Oliver, Denver Meadows, Jack
Spencer, Harold Long, Richard Maso•, James Bland, Marvin Little,
Robert Sham bien, Edward Ihle, Charles Higginbotham, Gary Gibbs and
Ronald Erb; third row left to right , James Cooper, Eugene Davis, James
Rollins, Grover Fultz, Terrance Blankenship, William Southall, Cindy
Roach, Karron Lambert, Mary Rou ~h, Richard Stewart, Bette Hill,
Sandra Halfl111l and Barbara Stroud.

Awards are presented to employees upon completion Of each
five-year period of safe employment. Those working safely for
five, ten or fifteen years receive
plllll showing the corresponding
number of years. Employees
completing 20 safe years recelveplnll containing a sapphire gem~tone and those completing 25 to 30
years receive plllll with two-point or
four-point diamonds.
Each employee also received a
hat decal showing the number of
years of safe employment.

stove,

HE• EIV F: SAFETY AWARDS- The employees of the Foote Mineral
l h 11t Prmlu etion " R" Shift were prese11ted with awards for safe years
\ \ 11 1 ~ 1·\l " ithuut any lost ttme injuries. Pictured firs t row left to right are
"'"" Withrrs , Lloyd Riffle, Rov MeKinney, llryeie Stephens, William

Wright, Fra ncis Dunlap. Ernest.Reed, Robert Gardner, James Hall and
Dick Rupp-Produclion Superintendent; second row left to right, Jesse
Cllirkc, Gene Wolfe, Roy Armes, J ohn Wolle, Kenny Smith, Pearl Searls '
and Levi Caruthers.

Receiving awards and decals In
the Shipping Department were
Opha Offutt, Carl Morrill and
Norman Pati@WJ91\, ,~~ years;
Charles ~U~;
Boston,
Epbrum , . 1,1~~4ffian ;
Cleon
Livingston; · George Lowery, Bernard Livingston and Howal31
Young, 'll years; Shirley Tucker,
Carl Durst and Clarence Rouah, 26
years; Glendon Faulk, Donald
Sayre, Richard Thomas and
Delmer Games, 25 years; William
Swlaher and Delbert Durst, 2~
years; Melvin Rolllnll, 23 years;

W\ffiBm

George Roush, Brycle Durst,
Denver Meadows and Ovle Knopp,
21 years; Jack Spencer and Harold
Long, 19 year9; Richard Mason and
James Bland, 17 years; Dennis
Wayne, 16 years; Marvin Little, 14
years; Robert Shamblen, Leonard
Bass, !3 years and Edward Ihle, 13
years; Thomas Anderson, Charles
Higginbotham, C)ary Gibbs, Ronald
Erb, Robert Oliver and James
Cooper, 12 years; Eugene Davia
and . James Rollins, 11 years;
Grover
Fu,ltz ,
Terrance
Blankens_hipand Brady Bonecutter,
9 yearB; William Southall, 7 years
and Robert Dalley, 6 years.
Those receiving decals only were
Cindy Roech, Karron Lambert, and
Mary Roush, three years; Richard
Stewart, Bette Hill and Sandni
Halfhill, twa years; and Barbara
Stroud, one year.

- .---·-r----r-----,-------,--=--::-=:--::-::-~-:-:--,----===:=r===~~
They'll Do It Every Time
'

and rs per · ng rn th e Court
of Co mmurr Plea s of M eigs
Coun l y, Pom eroy , Ohio,

IN r H E
: r,,,,M ON PLEAS

( UURT Of

45769 .

r:1[ I GS CO UNTY .
"JI'

I

I• f

OHI O
1{11\ H I LOY,E TA L,
f' I;J:I'!td l._,

The objec t of the corn
plarn t is to quict lrtl c by ad
verse possessron on th e

SI! IF \.05 , ETAL ,

f ollows .
Ttlc foll owr ng rcil l es tate
~ r tuated rn 111e Towns hrp of
Olive, Coun t y of M eigs, and
State of Ohro, and rn Ra nge
11 , Town d, and Sec t ion 35
at 111c Ohr o Compurw Pur
chase and m or e par
trcularly descri bed as
IOI! ows : 8cgr nnrng 20 rods
l]clS I fr om the nort hwest
corner of Sec t ron 35 : t hen ce
cas t 60 r ods; th ence south

real eShl lc

No . 17824

I:OI ICCBY

l'lJRt ICA ri ON

o

1&gt; ,..,, Sh ,elds, 1f li~ing ,
i\ll d II·~ Wde, d a ny, and to
1

H e 1r s,
U•"{l'}f't'~, .HH.I Nex t O! Km
of f'l.,r • rl• •11t rllld to Ma r'f
n ....... ,, l,v ,nq, and her
I I •
• 1:. &lt;11 ,li(' ChJI ilCf10 n
··1tl
li!ll! -trll H
Loy ,
. I~·
~ '· •!•tdft., V'5
D M
"" 1
'trl•, t)1•lnnat1n ts
111
,, t t111
ll .-1 &lt;;
b een
-1'-' 'If''
..,-..,;,1 ( •c, j· No
1782 4
11\P

Vv! riO '-'"•

cJ e s c r~ bcct

as

80 rods . Thence wr. st 80 rods
to the wes t line ot Olive
Towns tl ip; Then ce north 60

___ ____ _ ---- -------:
Curb Inflation.
Pay Cash for
Classifieds and
Savel l I

I

I

I
I
I

I
I

I
I
I
I
I

I
I

\'I

'

Pub lic ~otice
McC une's Second Addition
to Tup pers Plains sold by
deed recorded in Volu me
188, Page 12 7, a nd Volume
191 , Page 191 of the Deed
Recor ds, Me igs County ,
Ohio .
(JJ Except onP acre sold
by deed r ecord ed 1n
Volume 240, Page 69S of the
Deed Reco rd s, M eigs Coun
ty, Oh io.
t4) Except 1 acre so ld to
James A. Fultz and Janet
Fultz as desc r ibed in deeds
recorded in vol ume 239,
Page 13, and Vo lurn e 238,
Page 439 of the Deed
Record \:., Meigs Count ·r ,
Oh10 .

7

dresses, shoes, handbags
and some new shirts, bed
clothing, radio, 2 electric
irons, some antiques, lots
1more items .

3 family yard sa le. 789
Maple St., Middleport.
Gravel Hill. Rain cancels.

Most Slimming!

151 Except 11.625 ac res

8vr-THE

ns sold and conveyed in

Volume 213, Page 34l oil he

NeXT

PHONE 992-2156

I

N fP l'lf&gt; - -- - - - - - - - - , , . . . -

ess _____________

Af l ~

I ANNOUNCEMENTS

•R ENTA LS

t- Cil rdoiThilnks

41- H OU I U lOr il: enl

l - In Memonarn

l - Ann o un c~ menl \ ..

.•,unJ tn

Each in
, 1
,r ,,_,tJ of f1yures
1· tl word Coun t
,1nr1 ·lddrc&gt;ss or
It· fliJ rl d•flr d US('lf .
11 ,, ·t l!r&gt; tt r&gt;r results
r 1bP fu ll y
r l lt' &lt;;rnfinel
'h p r 1ahf to
t,
&lt;ld or rP1ec1
' • ( ,l(t will hP
th.
prop er
11
J!. 1
I you 'll
1t
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fJI c. p &lt;: l hox
• ,,.

~

•&lt;

4- G oVI!'iiWIY
1- H.tppy A!n

t' clCtl

1o

lr

·VJ

6- l otland Fo11nd
1 Y i'rd Sal ~
e- P11bltl Sal e
&amp; AIICIIOA
~ ·· W &lt;~ ntedt oB•ry

1

,,_ Helpw,nti!d
I 1 - ~II U .III!d Wli AII! (!

rl l

I

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•t- Equ•pm e r~t

I MERCHAN DI SE
- HouteOOtd Good t
5l - C8 , T~ , Rild!O Equ1pmen1

)!

Merc h;and •H
Supplitl
for S1t~

~4 - M I H ,

Mai iThisCouponwithRemittance
The Daily Sentinel

Box 729

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I·I

I•j

1- ---------;--------------J
Pomeroy , Ohio45769

C8 1hpilltr

• FINANCI AL
8U\rn e u
OpportunJIY'
ll - Monev 10 Loan
ll - f&gt; ro fuu on.t l
Servout
11 -

I REAL ESTATE

•FI\.RMS UPPUE S
&amp; LIV ESTOCK
" - ~llrm

Equtpm ent
U - W•nted to Buv
n - True~' tor sate

61- UvutoCit

U - H1y &amp; Cr11n
U- Seecl &amp; l=erh!lnr

It - Auto, fOr Site
IJ- Vanl&amp; 4 W.O .

l

, _,,,

....

'

You are requ ired lo answer the complaint within

publication of this notice,
whi ch witt be published on ·
ce each week lor six sue·
cessive weeks. The last
pu blication wil l be made on
May

nlture,

Announcements

28, 1981 , and the 28

days fo r answer will com ·
mence on that date.
In case of fa ilure to an·
swer or otherwise respond
as requi red by the Ohio
Rules of Civ il Procedure,
rendered aga inst you for
the reflef dema nded in the
complaint dated April 2tl ,

mlnlmum. Ctsll tnld vtnc..

pl al nf.

Mobllt Home SIIU '"' y .udllltl .,, ttctpltd f)rlt, wllftU ih with
or!IIT. 1J ( 1111 Clltrfl tor Ut Clrrylnt l o ~ Numbtr trl Clrt ,, fM

Patrick H. 0 ' Brien

9·4.

4652

'--~..-.-'

t.,-1/-.._ -1/J.._s

Raymond J. Mlchaell Rustic Hills, 1st yellow

- --

---~\'!

Plaintlf

Attorneyfo Pl ai ntiff
fS) 7.14.21,28 (6)

.c, 11,6tc

house on r1Qh1
passing church.

after
I

1~-­
~--ldtf254

lith fGI .... lnd hllldliftl,

ceramics
&amp;
guns,
glassware, woodburner &amp;
misc.

'
want.edtll Buy
WANTED
'/j'UY:
GOLD,
' SI(VeR,
PLATINUM, STERLING·
COINS, RINGS,JEWELR ·
Y, MISC. ITEMS . AB MARKET
SOLUTE
PRICE GUARANTED . ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP, MIDDLEPORT.
OHIO 992·3476.

Til.

.
OLD COl NS,

pocket wat·
ches, class rings, wedding
bands, diamonds. Gold or
sliver. Call J . A. Wamsley ,
Treasure Chest Coin Shop,
Athens, OH. 594-4221 .

Wanted to Buy: class rings,
wedding bands, anything
stamped, lOK, 14K, or 18K
gold. Silver coins, pocket
watches: Call Joe Clark at
992·2054 at Clark's Jewelry
Store, Pomeroy, Ohio45769
CHIP WOOD . Poles max.
diameter U" on largest
end . $12.50 per ton_Bundled
slab. $10 .50 per ton .
Delivered to Ohio Pallet
A:.o., Rock Springs Rd.,
Pomeroy 992-2689.
'I RON AND BRASS BEDS ·
Old furniture, desks, gold
rings, Jewelry, silver
dollars. sterling, etc. Wood
Jce boxes, tars. antiques,
etc. complete households.
Write : M.D. Miller. R1. 4,
:Pomeroy, OH 45769 , Or
caii99H760.

.New, used, and antique fur·

niture. No item to large or
to small. Will buy one piece
or complete households.
Martin's General Store at
992·6370.
Now buying gold and
silver, old pocket watches,
chains, diamonds,

sliver

money and coins. Martin 's
General Store, Middleport.
992-6370.
Wanted 1o buy: color
televisions that no longer
work _ Also home service
calls. 992·2034_

30 'tnch gas range In

good

Standing timber or chip
wOOd . 992-5833 or 992·5050_

Help Wanted

Female roomate to live in
trailer near Harrisonville.

Can be seen on co_ Rd. 19.
Harr Isonville· Klngsbury
Rd. 1st. trailer .
Babysltler needed . In Mid·
dleport ,
Pomeroy ,
Syracuse area. From 8:30
to 4:30 Monday ·thru
Friday. Call after 5, Kathy
Cumings at992-5117 .

l!Ef~

Nice yard sale; Saturday,
May 16th from 10 a.m. t9 5
p.m. Variety of nice Items.
Two ·miles off Rt. 7 at '5
Points on F Ia !woods Road,
follow the signs. Bob &amp;
Kathy Davis.
··
., I

~

•TWo' ~~' 'tard sale,
fot(l!.'Ml
q frbm Dalr\1
Queerf-1 ,- pers Plains.
GOod ~idthlng, 'etc. Satolr·
day, May 16.
Garage Sale o cut Iron
sink, doors one never hung,
beds. 10. gallon ,fish tank,
shutters, houMhold Items,
toys, baseball shoes, lots o.1
teen boys teens, ancl
smaller sizes. baby clothes,
women's c:IOthlng,

sonle

never WOt:n, loll more.
Behind sugar R.u.n Mill ~t
Mill Garljlfl&amp; on Butternut
Avenue, "omeroy. Monday
1:30 ·3:00 and Tuesday 1::111

to1

"

BtG EVENT · ·Car Willi ,
yard Nit - furnltul'll&gt;
clothes.
nl Dllltd
~
May 16th.,
9 · to
PttllualecJ•IPOIIW
1or hatH monlton. ,

or

rftibA'{!

A WIDE SELECTION
OF SHRUBS
&amp;ROSEBUSHES

Fashion Consultant needed
NOW I Ladles fashion firm.
Average $8.00 per hour.
For appointment Interview
call992·3941 between 9-9 .
Got some free time? Start
boss. Set your own hours.

1----------"T----------.,

The harder you work, the 1.~3:----;1-:::n:csu""r"'a'"'n"'"ce-:---more you'll earn. For
details, call 742·2354 or 742· AUTOMOBILE
IN 2755_
SURANCE been oancelled? Lost your
operator's license? Phone
SALES POSITION · Local, 992·2143.
fast growing business, Is
taking applications for a
gOOd, matured sales person 1:::8- - "w'"'
' a"nt"e"'' d-;:t0::-.:
0 -:-0
in the Gallipolis and
surrounding ·areas. Salary
like odd job•. LaV(nbased on e)(perlence. Ap- ~~::~~ &amp; misc. jobs
pllcant must have a w
around homes.
minimum of two years 1'1'12-6.595.
college and two vears sales
e)(per ience. if you qualify

Ileal estate

send resume to: Rt . 1, box
287, Gallipolis, Ohio. 45631 .
An E.O.E .

Homes tor Sale

Beautiful three bedroom
ranch brick home in Baum
Addition, Pomerov. Ohio.

Gas heat, central air . Call
992·2571,, 985·4145 or 1·687·
Johnson at 388·8195 . 6429.
Buckeye Community Services

is

an

equal

op-

portunity employer.
Wanted : someone to board

Three or four bedroom
house, carpet, fireplace
sundeck, two car garage, 2
and one half acres. Lovely

cats for the Meigs county setting on SR 1 North. 992Humane Society while
homes are sought for them . 7741 .
Cages. litter boxes.
medication, food, and I itter Brick' home on wooded
are supplied. You need acre. Three bedrooms,
good draft free clean fireplace. unique !amity
bu ilding or room, where room. fin ished double
you can show ~nimals to garage, deck . Uppe r·
prospecti ve owners. Must sixties. 992-5420.
be . in the Middleport·
Pomerov area, salarv 2 story home, 3 bedrooms. I
negotionable. Phone 992 · bath, full basement, goOd
5427 after 5: 30 p.m.
loca tion, Pomeroy . Call af·
ter 6, 992-7284.

r

room house with bath 1!.
Situation• Wanted
shower, ful l basement,
~luminum siding, storm
Repair or remodelin g windows &amp; doors, big built
work, flooring, doors, wall in porth, big lot partly fen·
paneling, celttng, or floor ced in. Meta l building. 992·
1ite, 3idlng. 992 -2759.
7453.
12

110 1\CRES -

G00&lt;1
fences. 2 farm ponds,
drltted well, old born, 4 ·
bedroom ranch home
with full basement. New
gas well with free gas.
$70,000.
31.5 ACRES - Rolttng
land on paved road with
rural water available.
Will make a nice small
farm or development.
MIDDLEPORT
LArge 1 room home
with 1'12 baths, new nat.
gas furnace, central air,

new shingle roof.
garage and nice corner
lot. Can move right In
after closing, ·
! 1\CRES - Free gas
supply, Leading Creek
water , little one
bedroom t&gt;ome and two
small bldgs. Asking only
111,500.
• .
:141 ACRES, M or L -

New fences~ ~l!l~!llY of
locust few PI'J,\4. fr~
gas, about 4!lj acr~ of
crop land . Good 5
bedroom home, two
baths, nat. gas furnace
on State Route. ASking
1225,000, but witt con·
alder offer.
BUILDING LOT - 11'1
aero on Rt, 124 with
drilled Mil, eloctrlc and
peds for trailer. Only a
few m11n from coal
ml"". suoo.
IXCILINT HOME Immaculat. 3 bedroom
ranch home, 2 full baths
(ceramic), wrY nice
kitchen with dining,
mostly carpeted, storm
_ , ancl , WlnciOWI,
NtiO. ga~ and large
lOt. DniYICUIIO.
,'1.!/tf'·l

J{, ,1(/t

· ~Plains.

rl

jj,

lilt.,·.

farm

r;-(,.,- POMEROY
~ LANDMARK
-..

Houses for Rent

41

FOR LANDSCAPING
YOUR LAWN

"-- ==="-'=.:_-

" rooms and bath , stove
and refrigerator furnished .

Newly decorated . Dep. req .
992·3090.

Three bedroom house. 7422126.
Small unfurnished two
bedroom house. 6 miles
east of Chester on SR 248.
985-4244.

...

E . Main St.

Pomeroy

Pets for Sale

56

Room, board, and laundry Nice two story house, 4
for elderly. Reasonable_ bedroon:'s, 2 baths, car·
992·6022.
peting, e)(tra large storage

3

bedroom

house

I have several

.

Duplex house, bBsement ,

NEW LISTING - ;•h
story frame wifh 6
rooms, 2 bedrooms and
some new windows .
Would make a nice ren·
tal property. $16,900.00.
NEW LISTING
RI\CtNE
12X65
mobile home with 2
bedrooms, underpinned,
wOOd storage building,
and comes w ith a big

lot. Nice at$11,000 .00.
NEW LISTING - 2
story frame home with 7
rooms, ~ bedrooms. A
lot of remodeling has
been done and would
make a nice home. Also
an apartn:'ent, and a

store build ing that brings

in

some

eMtra

money .
A II
for
536,000.110.
CENTRI\L AIR FOR A
HOT SUMMER - IS
just one of the nice
features of this 3
bedroom home. Has e
full basement, 3
bedrooms,

pa11o, new

siding, and is \ all
carpeted .
Just
$21,500.00.
JUST 6-YEARS OLD And has a large kitchen,
nice living room, and 3
bedrooms, ali on one
floor. Could have a tuli
basement, lust needs
tho floor. $19,500.00 .
FARM- 113 Acres With
several
bottoms,
pasture land, and
timber land, has , 2
houses, several barns.
and mineral rights. Nice
location .
Alklng

S68,poo.oo.

· REI\LTDR
Henry E. Cllllnd, Jr.
4fH1fl
A OCIATES
Jun Tru1111 94f·2Ne
Dottta &amp; Rottr Turner
"2·N92
. OFFICE "1-2259

AlB

large storage building, 10
rooms, 2 baths, wall to wall

'-

"

Nice 2 story home for sale,
in Bashan . 4 bedrooms, 2
baths, natural gas furnace,
three fourths acre, chain
link fence, e)(tra la rge
storage building, owner
wHI finance down payment
or accept tra iler or land as

Bird dog puppies. Half ger·
man shol hair 1!. half
Eng lish Pointer. $50.00.
992·7212 .

Water·Sewer·E lectric
Gas Line-Ditches
Water Lin e Hook ·ups
Septic Tanks
County Certified
Roush Lane
Cheshir e, Oh.

H. L WRITESEL
ROOFING

located above ground at

Furnished two bedroom
mobUe home on private lot.

No pets. Deposit
949·2253.

requi ~ed .

Mobile home for rent. Very

Efficiency apartment for

new or repatr gutter s

and downspout s, gu tter
cleaning and pa1nting .
All work guarant eed.

949 ·2862
949·2160

New Holland Haybine,
seven inch cut, 68 New

Ba ler .

Myrtle Holler, 949·2558.
63

............
. .. ····
. . ,....,•........
~

NEW STORE HRS.
Effective 4-6·81
MON. thru SAT.
9 to 5
Closed Thursday

For rent : newlv remodeled
one bedroom apartment In

Middleport.
with

all

Furnished

utilities

paid .

$235.110 per month . 992·3190.

12 x 60, two bedrooms, new

carpet. B x S Sales, Inc .•
2nd x Viand Street, Point
Pleasant. wv Phone 675·
4424.
.

MtFEIIIRdiSt

1\ntlques
ATTENTION :
(IM ·
PORTANT TO YOU ) Will
pay cash or certified check
for antiques and collet·
tlbl¥ or entire estates.
Noth ing too large . ·Also,
guns, pocket watches and
coin collections. Call 614·
767·3167 or 551·3411 .
53

Just off Rt. 248, 3 mites
from Chester. GOOd con·
dlton, 3 bedroom 1969
Sunrise Park mobile home,
located on 3 and one fourth
acres of level ground.
Double garage, other 0111
'buildings. 992·2581 or writ~
Box Holder, P.O. Box 249,
"omeroy, Ohio /JI69

::=::;::;:;:::::::;:=::;::::::;==

SERVICE

PARTSANC SER Vt CE

wagon ,
runs e)(t. Can be seen
evenings at 101 Second St.,
outside of Lamar's Beauty
Sa lon. Owner lives above .

ALLMAI(ES
ewa ~ h en

• Dt ~ p tna l s

• Dr ven

•

eR .Jnges

•H o~ Wate r

PH. 992·7201

O • s h wa~h !rs

r anks

415·1mo.

2nd floor apt. $425.

Rates For "

... coin Lau ndnu

1970 Chevelle in good condition . $3110.1111. 992·5971.

v Re nlai Properlle s
... Apt . HouuOwners
..- Mobile Home Park~

Trucks for Sale
1971 Chevy tru ck for sale .
$350.00. Has no motor but

ALL STEE L

Farm Buildings

72

has good transmission . See

at 245 Mulberry Aven ue,
Pomeroy.

Heater Core to
Largest Radiator

Radiator Specialist

low mileage , needs some

35 Yrs . Experience

74
Motorcycles
1978 Honda 750S Super·
sport. Under 7,000 mi les, in
good condition . $1500.1111.
Phone 1·304-675-6550 or 675·
1498. .

French

City

PRE · SEASON SALE : textured ceilings . Free
$999 .00
I NSTALLEDII estimates. 367-7784 or 367·
Above ground pool com· 7160.
ptetely Installed starting at
$999.00. Price Includes
house need a
pool, deck, fence. filter,
Dr just a little
liner, and Installation un·
Call me &amp; I'll
der normal ground con·
again .
dltlons. Free shop at home
types
service. Caii1·800·62H511 .
~~~~~.
·
~:;~~~~~~~·
paneling.
l.li
I etc.; PIUS
work,

painting,

shingling roofs, work olng,
shlngtlnf any size and
shape. 30
exparlence
In
References
request. 992·

EUGENE LONG
Free Estimates
Call Col lec t

Ph. 84l -JJ22
5 8·2 mo . pd .

ROGER HYSELL'S
GARAGE
- Auto and Truck
Repair
- Transmission
Repair
Hrs.: Mon .· Fri .
9 a .m .· 5:30 p. m .
992-5682

HOWARD ·
ROTAVATORS
HJ 50" - 20·30H .P.
HA 60"- 25-60 H. P.
HE 6D"'- 45 ·pD H.P.
All Mod els Available

LEO MORRIS
Rl. I Side Hill Rd .
Rutland, OhiO" -- PH . 742·2455
5·11 ·tlc

Far Silver Dollars

GLENN BISSELL
949·2801
No Sunday Call s
5·8-1 mo . pd.

J&amp;R
TRASH SERVICE
Box 65, Portland, OH.

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

81

WELL S.

Domestic and com me rc ial ,
pump sales and service.

Home

Tom Lew is Drilling .
Gene's Carpet Cleaning, Seasonal discount o~ pum·
deep stream extract ion . ps. 1·304·895·3802 or 1·304·
Free
estimated , 895-3641.
rates,

Sidi ng
Roofing &amp; Gutter
Remo deling
S er~ ing Your Area tor
20 Years

slro to slsoo

--~1m~pr~o~v~e,m"'e"-n,_h,___

reasonable

SUPERIOR
VINYL
PRODUCTS

SILVER &amp;GOlD
COINS

WAT ER
11

Pomeroy, Oh .

BUYING

5-7·11c

Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph. 992-2772
5-6·1 mo .

Painting.

V. C. YOUNG II
992-621.5 or992· 7314

Ph . 614·843·2591
6 15·tl c

•I nsulation
•Storm Doors
•Storm Windows
• Aeplacement
Windows

Improvements

- Addon s and
remodeling
- Roofing and gutter
work
- concrete work
- Plumbing and
electrical work
( Fr ee Esti mates)

Rt . J, Box S4
Racin e, Oh.

Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding

Home

81

3 27 1 mo.

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSUlATION

1976 Suzuki RM250. Good
condition. 241·3861.

Ph. 614 -446-2801

Ph.

Pomeroy , OH . •

992·2114

g u &lt;~ra nt ee

Utility Buildings

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS INC.

1979 Jeep pick·up, 6 cyli n·
der, 3 speed. 30,000 miles .
$4900.110. 773 -5055_

1 or 5 year termi te

Size s from 4)(6 to 12x40

NATHAN BIGGS

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

FRE E ESTIMATES

SMALL

the

Vans &amp;4 W.O.
73
1977 Chevy Blazer 4 x 4 with

Roa c t1es,
B irds,
Rod ents, Spiders, Fleas,
Ants and other small in·
sect control

Sizes
" From lOx 30 "

COMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERVICE
From the Smallest

Misc . Merchanlse

For Sale: 19761Hx 70 Win·
dsor mObile home. Has new
hot water tank. Including
In u1e, 4 sets of anchors,
blocks, concrete Nta. Cen·
tral air conditioner, has a
circular kitchen. Large bay
WindoW In front. For more
Information call 992·5533.
Acetyleno welding torch
with 75 fool ot nose. Hoavy
duty gauges, and \Widing
Ltii&amp;AcrNp
and cutting lips. Chester
39 acr" in l'edford Town, FOUlly , Plgley Ridge, 915·
lhlp. 91.5-4194.
4209.

\,

t Backhoe
1 Ex cavaf inq
1 Sept 1c Systems
1 Water, Sewer &amp; Gas
Li nes
1 Dump Truc k
L1ce nsed &amp; Bonded

Call Ken Young

1974 Pontiac Firebird. 400
automatic. Call any time at

Res identia l, commercial,
Interior,
exterior .
"--'=====~­ Specializing in Interior
SWIMMING
POOLS : painting, paper hanging &amp;

54

J&amp;F
ENTERPRISES

K!ep Tflis Ad tor fu ture li eh!renu

" Specie~!

One bedroom apartment
furnished in Middleport.
Air conditioned, u1ilities

2 8 ltc

4 9lmo. pd

A~PLIANCE

TERMITE and
PEST CONTROL

Call742 ·3195
or 99N680

~

1962 Comet. 1980 Twin St ar
Honda . Color TV. 992·3132.

Sal. 9·5

Closed Thur s

MILLER ELECTRIC
SERVICE
Let George M1 t1 er ch ec k
your prese nt electncal
sys tem.
Re sidential
&amp;Comm erc tal

power , only 22,000 mil es.

Hours:
Mon.· Tu es. 9·6
Weds.-Fn . rn

No Sund ay Ca ll s
3 II lf c

322 N. 2nd Ave .
Middleport, Ohio

$1600.00. Phone 949·2145.

ATHENS SPORT
CYCLES
St tmson Av e. Ath ens,

"YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

BAILEY'S SHOES

Autos for Sale
71
1976 Chrysler Cordoba, all

PH. 367-7671
or 367-7560

'' Beautifu l, custo m
Built Garages "
Ca ll for free si ding
estim at es, 949 -2801 or

One yearl ing quar ter horse

stal lion . 949-1154.

All Building s
Gua rant eed

BISSELL .
SIDING CO.

For a II of your wir·
ing need s.

livestock

An y size built to your
specilication s. Models
in Me tgs, Gal lia and
Mason Counties.

949·2860 .

2·A·1fc

s mall

cement mi xer, electric ;
fert i liz er
and
seed
spreader. 3 poi nt hitc h.

IO'x iO', IO 'x 12' &amp; up)

Loca ted in Gal li pol is

Free Estimates
Rea sonable Pr ices
Call Howard

Chevy truck , (heavy duty).
Holl aAd

Mobile home, .4 bedroom,
utilities pai d, no pets, 1
child accepted . John Sheets
J'h miles south M iddl eport ,
Rt . 7.

A 1t types of roof wor k,

truck,

8' X8', 8'X 10' ,

(4 'X 16' ,

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

l i l li e

2 bedroom Mob ile Home. Athens, Ohi o. $3 ,000 .00
fun ished, adults preferred . each. Phone 1·304·422·2781.
Deposit. 992·2749.
4 14,000 gallon tanks
1975 Viking trailer, 12 &lt; 65 located above ground at
two bedroom, big living Athens. Oh. $3,000. each. I·
room . Located tn Country 304·422-2781 .
Mobile Home Park . 247·
3942.
M Farmall tractor ,
In·
ton

4·26· 1 mo .

Ph. 367 -7560

61
Farm Equipment
Four 15,1100 gallon lanks

ternat ional

t e nsive remodel ·
ing .
t Electrical work
t Roofing work
12Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph . 992-7583

REESE~
TRENCHING
SERVICE

Mobile Homes
for Rent

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
New Ham e s · ex·

4·23· 1 mo.

AKC cocKer spaniel pup.
Ma le. Show type . Party
color. 992-5949 or 992-9975 .

41

POLE BUILDINGS
IS'x 2D' upto4D'x 10D'
PORTABLE STEEL
~TO
RAGE
BUILDINGS

CHESH IRE 4·12 tic

4· 17· tf c

Ph. (614 ) 985·3 961

&amp; bl, estaEIE

Garages - Buildings
- Barn s- Equipment .
Sheds

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

*

Farm Supplies

REESE BUILDINGS

SERVIC~

Scout Camp Rd .
Chester, Oh.
*Short game practic e
• Putting &amp; Chipping
Green Op en
Hole-ln·On e
*Pro-Golf lessons
for all ages
Repcur : Cleanmg ,
refinishing, new grips
length chang e,
weight chang e
• F c1st servic e

Pomeroy . $165.00 a month,
$50 deposil. You pay
utiliti es. Call992·6384.

carpet, gas forced air tur· paid. $2110.110 per month. M·
nace, suitable for home or F from 8·3 call992-5545.
business. Priced for quick
Furnished Rooms
sole; located at 2 Coal 45
Street, beside the Burger "'--'-=:.====:.::._Chef tn Pomeroy. See Osby Sleeping rooms ; by the
week .
Kitchen, and
A. Martin, or call 992·6370.
television lounge. Carryout
store and restaurant within
12 .
Mobile Homes
500 feet. 992-6370.
tor Sale
1973 Crown Haven, H x 65, 46
Space for Rent
three bedlooms, new car·
pet. 1971 Cameron, 14 x 64, COUNTRY MOBILE Home
two bedrooms, n-:w carpet. Park, Route 03, North of
1972 Champion, 12 &lt; 60, two Pomeroy. Large lots. Call
bedrooms, new carpet. 1916 992·7479.
Cameron, 12 x 60, two
bedrooms, all electric. 1971 TRAILER •paces for rent .
Skyline, ' 12sx 6) , two SOuthern Valley Mobile
bedrooms, bath &amp; '!,, new Home Park, Cheshire, Oh _
carpet . 1970 PMC , 992·39~ .

4 acres with 2 bedroom
trailer 70x14. 2 car garage,
3 miles from Racine on Co.
Rd . 28. Before 12 noon or af·
ter 5 p.m. 949·2618.

J&amp;C
SANITATION

KOUNTRy
KLUB

Put purr power in to your
life. Female cali co kitten .
Meigs County Humane

Quality Built
Economically Priced

FREE ESTIMATES

lllE

*

Puppies : Available : black
femal e setter, si)( mont hs
old ; good di spositi on :
collie, female, 6 mon ths
old, shots and worm ed.
Humane Society . 992 -7416 .

down payment. $28,000
Phone 985-4395 .

12 Park St.
Middleport, Oh.
Ph. 992-6263
Anytime
H -1mo.

5· 14· 1 mo

rent. 992·5434 or 1·304-882- 1·304-773-9170.
3 bedroom 2 acres, 2 2566.
1972 Townsma n
bedroom rental, 2 car
pieces of property for sale
If you want a gOOd buy .
John Sheets, 3112 miles
south Middleport, Rt . 7.

dealer.

Holland round hay
balers, both in e)(cellent condition .

in

Will do painting and all odd nl!ce . Three fourths acres . nice. Utili ties paid. 992·5949
jobs. Coll949·2145.
owner will finance down or '192·9975.
payment. Located in
Will do roofs. 3 years e)( · Bashan. H1&lt;f985·4395 .
Apartment
perience. Free estamites. App . 6 miles from Racine 1!. 44
Call 741-21119 and ask for Pomeroy.
for Rent
Don.
Total electric 3 bedroom Two bedroom furnished
apartment. 992·5434 or I·
Will care for the elderly in home with utility room &amp; 304-882·2566.
garage.
Situated
on
a
large
our home. Have vacancy .
Men &amp; women . If in· lot. 742·2047.
Furnished three room
terested call992·7314.
apartment
. Quiet neigh·
3 bedroom house, full
borhOOd . No pets . Deposit
basement,"
2
car
garage
.
Reo I Estate General
Will consider land con· required. Phone 949·2253 .
tract. 992·5694. 152 But·
ternut Ave., Pomeroy .

equipm en~

2 used No . 850 New

Soc iety , 992·7416.
11

Community
Services
Worker to work with in·
dividuals with mental
retardation .
Part·tlme
position. Contact "everlv

Headquarters

E •.Soconct Street

POMEROY

New Holl and, Bush Hog

LANDMARK

garage.

~~~~~~~u3
I ~16

Aut horized John Deere,

terview appointment call
992·3941 between 9·9.

your own business. Start
selling Avon. Be your own

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U.S. Rt. SO East
Phone 614-662·3821

in-

,Ho11sing

1-(614)-992-3325
.... . . .

Yard Sale , at Harrison
Smith i.esldence sat. &amp;
Sun,, May 16·17. 5 miles oyt
Forest Run Rd . off Rt. 7.

11-te. DAY

KAUFPS
PLUMBING
AND
HEATING

BOGGS

Collector Items. Eskey
Hill. Rt . 3, Pomeroy. Ohio.
992-3885 evenings.

Need Money? Need
Clothes? Why not get your
wardrobe at no cost to you
and earn extra dollars too?

Rnl Eotote- Gettorol

combined yard sale.
Childrens. adults clothing,
furniture. rugs, househOld
Items. Across from Tuppers Plains Post Office.
Fri. &amp; Sat. 9:30·?, Rain

j

PLY: Circle Sates, P.O.
Box 224·0, Richmond Hill,
NY 11418.

information

Business Services

Sr .

Pony saddle, cart, other
tack. House plant soi I. Hor·
se manure , sack or truck.

Rxb CDMMERC.IAI.S

No ex·
required . AP·

Two month spring s~c ial
for upholstering · furniture

Richard Mowery ,
owner. 675·4154.

wor~.

building. Naturalgas fur-

11

by lany Wright

~~STSHC\111~

5185.00 to ssoo weekly doing

For

Phone

Yard Sale. Fri . &amp; Sot. 5, 15
&amp; 16. 1.2 miles aboye
Eastern High School on Co.
Rd. 28, Rlggscrest Manor.
Mostly tOddler clothing. (ll3p.m.
.,

SIZES 34-48

GARAGE &amp; Yard Sale May
15, 16 &amp; 17. Rain or shine.
Call696·1227, 7 miles north
ot Pomer'oy ."off 'Rt . 33 . .
Watch tor signs. Toots,

5 family &amp; youth groupd

cancels.

:~·~-=

Syracuse,

~ ;:

clothes, misc . 128 Park
Drive. Pt. Pleasant. Thurs .
&amp; Frl.9·4.

4

16.

&amp;

new &amp; used. Furniture~
large men 1 S &amp; women's

Potled tomato plants. An·
drew Cross, 247·2852.

May

men

Gigantic back y&amp;rd sat!.
Baby &amp; chlldrens clothts,

Flowers for Memorial Day,
Faye's Gift Shop I!&gt;Cated In
lower Middleport.

Dally round trips Jack ·
Nicklaus Golf Memorial
Tournament. May 18·24.
Call 61H85·3961 .

large

Pleasant, from 9 to 3.

mu

s"""'·

Ohio:

womens clothes, Thurs. ,a,Frl. 128 Park Drive, Fl1i'

Glvoawoy
J1 - Hom tt tor Slttl
1981.
14 - Moltrctc tu
Few pattern parts, 'lei'/ eas1!
J2- MOI)!I t Homu
Larry Spencer! Variety of kittens now
~~,Auto !)iriS
lor Sate
Printed
Patte1n 46S2: Women s
Clerk of Cour available. Meigs County
&amp; Autuonu
JJ - F~rrnt for Salt
Sim
are
34 (38-inch bust with
ol
Meigs
County
•
11- Auto Rtpatr
• Humane Society, 992-7416.
l4- 8u\ tn•u Bu ll&lt;llng s
40-inch hip); 36 (40 bust, 42
Ohoo
l s- Loh &amp; Acruu
141 23,30 (51 7, 14, 21, 28, 6tc
hip); 38 (42 bust, 44 hip); 40 (44
14- Qul Etlatt Wtnted
J1- Ru lton
bust, 46 hip); 42 (46 ·bust, 48
eS ERVICES
Public Notice
----------hip);
44 (48 bust, 50 hip); 46 (50
11 - H ornt l mprovtrntnh
LEGAL NOTICE
6
Lost and Found
12- Ptum blne &amp; !•cavattnvr
bust, 52 hip); 48 (52 bust, 54
Want· Ad Adverti sing
Diane
M.
Mi
ch
ael,
whose
IJ- E o\UVilint
hi~) .
Deadlines
last known pla ce of LOST : Grey Schnauzer
t4- Etltclrint
resi dence is Micl"dgan, is that answers to the name of
1 R ttrlgtrt tlon
Uf P.M . Oitl y
hereby not llied that on the Schultz. Last In the Rock ,. .. !liiin ,. .....
U - G•nl!rll HIUI Ing
11 Noon Saturll_..
41h day ol May , 1981, Springs
vicinity , Mtl ...,. Slid II:
16M
.
H.
Rt
111
ir
tor Mondav
Ray mond J . M ic hael ,
11- Up!'IDIIItry
REWI\RD.
"hone
Dick .......
Pla1ntiff, fi led his com·
491
plaint agolnsl her as defen· Owen at 992·2651 or 992· ,.... 11!,1.
danl in the Court of Com· 5621.
The Dally Sentinel·
mon Pleas, Meigs County ,
Rates and Other Information
Ohio, case No . 17,834, FOUND : large black dog 243 w.t 17 ~J.~IiJ-'o 11
, demanding for divorce
ISWorctur Undtr
from the said Diane M. with while paws. Ap· 10011. Pilll liMit R1!D1DS,
IIIII..._
C1111
Clltrtt
Michael on the grounds of proximately 6 months old, DP, SUE, _,
' e~•v
1.00
1.2s
gro!!.s neg tee t of dutv and male. Found In the Bald We llrllmli~ tilt lfWilll to
2a . .. ,
J,Jet
' ·'"
extreme cruelty .
Knob-Por;tland arell. W· 1M IOU time 10 J011 C111 11V11
lda vt
2.00
1.21
This noti ce wi ll run once &lt;1694.
ll10INII Sind !lOW fGI fi£W 1981
u•v•
uo
us
a week fa~ six consecu11ve
SPRIHG-SUIIMER PATTERN CAT·
weeks. lhe last publication
lac !'I word ovtr lht mlnlm\lm II word l ll 1untuer word per dt'(.
bei ng on the 11th day of
ALOG. 100 frlt jllltlln
Ads r unning olhtr '"'"" conucutlvtdtys wlf! bt Clllrttct tl rna 1atv
June, 198 1. The defendand
COUIIOII. fl2 ¥1111). Cltllet $1.
'" '·
will have 28 days from the 7._____,Y_,a,_r,d_,Sa=t•' - - - MI. cwt . . . . SUflldi
day of 1as1 publication In -..
134-14~- .
tnm tmorv. Ct rdol r~• nk\ andObituar v . aunltlfl•rwont, n.oo
whlchtoanswersaidcom· Yard Sale. 3 family . Sat.

'.1.. 1, -- - - - - - - - - - --

Miners vi lie,

GIGANTIC baok ya&lt;d sale·
new
&amp; used baby &amp;
chlldrens clothes, fur ·

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

.281, Page 5, Meigs County pr ize : $500.00 cash. Trl·
Oeed Records, and to c ounty Sport Shop, Pt.
foreclose at interest owned Pleasant. Stop In for
by your and for cost s.
detai ls. 1·304-675·2988.

judgment by defau lt wil l be

I TRANSPORTAT ION

.........

_, .... . p

The gr antor ex pressly
conveys herein a ll his I PAY highest prices
nQhl. titl e and interest in possible for gold and sliver
arid to the minerals un- coins, rings, jewelrv, etc .
der lying said re al est ate, Contact Ed Burkett Barber
includ ing, bu t not limited ShOp, Middleport.
to, the 011 and gas and att
his interest in the lease to
Cart E. Sm ith , Inc., above IT'S BEEU NE ' S Show and
mentio ned.
Tell Time!!!!! OUr new
The grantees herei n· spring and summer tine Is
assume and agree to pay now available and is it unthe above ment ioned morlgage and to hold t he gran · bel ievable! l!! Give us a
cal l for more information
tor ha rml ess therefrom.
This conveyance is sub- about this interesting work.
ject to easemen ts an d high - Phone 992·3941 from 9·6.
way righ t s·ol ·way of
record .
Reference Deed : Volume Ground Hog Contest. First

28 days alter the last

U ·- Anhqu t~

H- ~ets

!n!lruchon
Radto, TV

lor ll f' nl

Garage sale : May 13 thru
16. 4 wheel drive truck, car;
guns. furniture, en :
cyclopedias. clothes, etc .
Rt. 7 to Forest Run ~d. to
Morning Star. Watch for
signs. Rain or Shine.

Racine Locks and Dam a\
the Paul Hill residence,
Letart Falls. Tuesday lhru
Friday.9·5.
-

suo,. ......... .., *

_

10 _, _ __ __ _
II _ _ _ _ __ _

••- Span• tor li l!nt
H - W1nteG to Rent

1 ~ - Bus t neu Tr .t tn tr~g

11- Wanled To Do

19
20------ ll

-·----

·~ - F Room~

n- au t uur~g

&amp;

rhe5e cash raf cs
•nclude discoun t

'11 '" l'l(l•fT1f' rl f
'1

lor 11 i!rll
U- Aparlmfrlt lor R ent

l l- ln ~ u r lrlct

It -

I 1:• '.,dt'
'

Homu

t i - \tl"lual~

d

l1

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

4 ~ - M obt ! r

__ X,u_!&gt;lic Notic:.:e' - - c
agreed by the gr antor and
grantees th a1 the c urre nt
ba la nce owin g on said mar·

bar

condition. Call 949-2833 _

---------·.
Yard Sale: one mile above

, tgage is Sl4,6116.16.

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

cloth ing .

li ne .

~,,

I

residence on Main Street,
Racine, Ohio. Dresses, cur ·.
tains, bedspreads, rugs,
jeans of all kinds and sizes.
Women's and men 's

124,

CHICA$0 1

or Write Daily Sentinel Cla ssi fied De pt.
111 Cou r t St ., Pomeroy , 0 ., 45769

Yard Sale: Friday , May 15
from 9·4 at the Bill Cro~

Third house In corporation:

-,/,a-If.&lt;~
G·M·Wt.EMAN .
847 C KXP"ST··

1

Yard sale

1

4 family yard sale. Don
Rea's res idence. May'
13,14,15 from 10·4. State Rt.

RINGEr&lt; IS
PERSISTENT ...

WANT AD INFORMATION

r

Yard Sate

Garage Sale. May 14·15 at
the Juhn Keck residence.
M61berry
He ights.
Pomeroy . Lots of rea I gOOd

Deed Record s. Meigs Coun
ty, Ohio.
EXCEPTION S:
Re terenee Deed : Volume
11 1 Ex cept 30 acres sold 260, P age 905 of the Mc1gs
by deed recorde d in Co unty Deed Records .
Volume 159, Page 441 of ltle
Sub1ect to an cxis l inQ oil
Deed Records, Me1QS Cou n nnd gas lease to Ci1rT &gt;=
ty , Oh1 0
Sm tih, Inc. , and an existmg
121 E&lt;ce pl Lois 17, 18, 19, mortg age at The Sec unty
20. 21 , 22. 13 , 14 , and 25 ol Bank 1n Ath ens, Ohio . 11 1!,

own ad and order by mall W1trl l h1S
lit' f'l your ad by phone w'.C'n you Qel
·r'ry not refund(lblr&gt;

,.,

r&gt;'·'

I
I

Pu bl ic No1ice
rods, thence cast ~0 rod s:
thence nor th 20 rod s to 1t1 e
place of beginning, con
tatnmg 37 acres. and 80
rods, but wb jecl to all legal
highways.
Also the fot1ow1ng real
estnte silua te in the Town
ship, Coun ty Jnd Stat e
aloresatd and 1n Range 11,
Town 4 and Sec tion 35 of
tile Oh 10 Com pany Pur ·
chase and bou nded and
descflbed as !allows :
B e$Jinnin~J at lhP center
of sa1d sccr,on; !hence nor
t h 60 rods ; thence eas t 80
ro&lt;Js, th ence south 60 rods:
thence west 80 rod s to th e
PI.Jce of beginning, con ·
Tainmg 30 acres, more or
less
Rcteren cc Deed : Volum e
IdO, Page 217, Deed Recor
ds, M c1gs Cou nty , Ohio

refrigerator,

mailing
perlence

Small investment, large returns, Sentinel Want Ads
Pu blr c Notice

HetpWanted
KIT 'N' CARLYLE TW
GET VALUABLE training
as a young business person
ilnd earn goOd money plus
some great gifts as a Sentinel route carrier. Phone
us right away and get on
-rfl~MH!'
the eligiblttty list at 992·
io~ALAW
2156 or 992·2157.
11

bells. dishes, typewriter,
sewing machine, · children
adult clothing, bedroom
suite, coffee, end tables,
chair, ottoman, Electrotux
sweeper. 9·4.

10 years; Pearl Searls, eight years;
~~ Caruthers, five years.

Receiving awards and decals In
the Production Department's "B"
Shift were John Withers and Lloyd
Riffle, 27 years; Roy McKinney 26
years; Brycle Stephens and
WU!Iam Wright, 21 years; Francis
Dunlap, 19 years; Ernest Reed, 16
years; Robert Gardner1 !3 years;
James Hall, Jesse Clarke, Frank
Holcomb, Conley Marshall, Gene
Wolfe and Roy Armes, 12· years;
John Wolfe, 11 years: Kenny Smith,

Yard Sale

Yard Sale. College Rd.,
syracuse. May 14·15. High
chair, car seat, toys, sink,

awards given
Wllllam Beaql, plant manager at

'7

Ph. 843·4912
u .oo Monthly

Serving the following
towns hi ps : Lebanon,
Sutton, Letart, Olive,
Orange, Salisbury, Bed·

lord, Chester, Salem,
Scipio, Rutland
Harr ison

and

scot·

chquard. 992-63119 or 142·
2211.
84

13
Excavating
COMPLETE seyer In·
stallatlon &amp; backhoe ser·
vice for Raclne·Syrocuse
sewe~ district. Dozer work
!l needed. 949·2293.
I

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR - Sweepers,
toasters, Irons, a ll small
appliances. Lawn mower.

Ne•t to State Highway
on Route 7, 985·
3825.
~arage

84

Etettrl"l

&amp; Refrigeration

SE WING
Repairs ,

MACHINE
service,

all

makesl 992-2284 _ The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Solos
and Service. We sharpen
Sc issors. _

�•
Page- 12- The Daily Sentin el

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

thursday, MJy 14, 1981

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY SALE

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
.

SATU,RDA YS TIL 5:00

OPEN FRIDAYS TIL 8:00
SALE
LITTLE GIRLS FASHIONS

SALE
LlnLE BOYS' .

HALLMARK

SUMMER
OUTFITS .

Dr esses ,
bubb l es,
pant
sets,
sleepers,
crawlers, sun set s, coal
and dress sets , short ond
top sets .
Sizes N B to 24 mos.
2 to 4
4 to 6x
7 to 14

REG. 13.75........ SAL£ 12.79
1

REG. 16.00 ....... SALE 4.49

'

ON

CIV\DUM IO N /lilY

,

SEE OUR SELECTION OF
HALLMARK GRADUATION CARDS

~~

REG. 19.00........ SALE 16.79
REG. 113.00...... SALE 19.79

AND GIFT WRAP ON

REG. 121.00 .....SALE 115.79

THE 1st FLOOR.

Pouplar styl es ~nd colors in stock . Patio turf, ru bber·
back carpet and jute back carpet .
ELBERFELDSWAREHOUSE
Mec hanic St.

.,,...,,

t.

lit

/"' (l

/ ~V"":~ ,
· ,,~-~ 1: .

l~:.-~
.• ' .

~

)

',

.

~

1/ Jl, l
)_!};

Famous Lane quality love chests. Oak, pecan, cherry,
cedar or pine.

SPECIAL
GRADUATION

MEN'S JEANS
• Basic denims in boot flare or
straight leg.
• Fashion denims in a fine style
selection.
eMen's fuller cut jeans in basic
and fashion l&lt;~oks.
• Men's dressier jeans in poly·
cotton blends.

An excel len t selec ·
lion of short sleeve
styles. Tank tops·
~i are included . Sizes
B to 20.
\

AND HALF SLIPS
REG. 15.50 ......... SALE '2.75

' BOYS 12.95 SHORTS ...12.49
BOYS 14.95 SHIRTS ... 14.19

REG. '9.95 ....... ~. SALE 1.4.95

BOYS 16.95 SHIRTS .. .. 15.89

Sizes 27 to 50 waist,
lengths from 30 to
36. Entire stock on
sale .

BOYS 18.99 SHIRTS ...• 17.59 .:

REG. '13.50 ........ SALE '6.75
SA
REG. 116.00...... •• LE 18.00

MEN'S 114.95 JEANS.......... 111.96
MEN'S 116.95 JEANS ......... 113.56
MEN'S 119.95 JEANS ......... 115.96
MEN'S '21.95 JEANS .........'l7.56

BOYS 12.95 SHIRTS. ... 12.48 ·- ·-·.

WOMEN'S

• VAN HEUSEN

WOMEN'S
SUMMER

JEANS
SALE

• CAMPUS
• WRANGLER
• MR. LEGGS

TOP SALE
Quality Dotty Mann and
Douglas Marc tops of po·
ly/cotton, terry or all cot·
ton texturized.
Sizes S·M·L·XL

Wrangler,
Lord
lsacc's, Long Time
Friend and March

39
·g.

Sale Prices ~
start At Only

I.

SALE
PRICES
FRIDAY-SATURDAY

14
oz . denim,
stretch den im and
poly / cotton in Jr.
sizes 3 to 15 and . ·
misses sizes 6 to 20.
St r a ight leg or
fl are styles .

·sALE
WOMEN'S
SHORTS
Poly/c~tton ~r terry

REG. 119.00 ..• SALE 115.19

In popular bermuda
or jogging styles.
··
Sl zes 8 to 20 and 30 to 38 • .

REG. 122.00 •.. SALE 117.59

THE GREAT

SPRING SHIRTS
. Topping it all ft~r ca~ u al com fori and
easy going style... our newes t col lect ion
of sport shirt s and kni ts. Stock up now'

SALE PRICES

SALE

BOYS KNIT SHIRTS

\

\ ·, ,

FOR THE GIRL GRADUATES

FRIDAY, SATURDAY SALfl

BRIEFS. CAMISOLES

RIVERFRONT PARK AREA DOWNTOWN GALLIPOLIS

LANE CEDAR CHESTS

REG. 112.50 ....•.••. SALE 110.00

ONE GROUP OF BRAS,

Sponsored by the Holzer Medical Center and The Ohio Valley Publishing Company

TRAVEL AND
ACCESSORY
BAGS

.

• Ji

'
. ..
Thursday, May 14, 1981

ROAD RACE '81·

SALE

REG. 18.50 ........... SALE 16.80

LINGERIE SPECIAL

..' . .

Suits, ball outfits, crawlers,
short sets, pant sets and
sleepers.
Sizes Newborn to 24 mos. and
2 to 7.

SALE

REG. 14.50 ....•..•.• SALE 13.60
REG. 16.50.••....... SALE 15.20

QUALITY CARPET AT LOW PRICES.

'

REG. ? .00.......... SALE '5.29
REG. $11.00 ••••••••• SALE ss.29
REG. Sl&amp;.oo.••••••••SALE sn.99
REG. $22.00 •••••••• SALE Sl6.49

The perfect travel com·
panions ... for overnight
or around th e world!
Jewelry
roll s,
cosme ti c
purses ,
hosiery rolls, travel kits
and many other styles.

~

~ Ou.'!,.l.~

REG. 126.00... SALE 120.79
REG. '30.00 .•. SALE 123.99

•

EL·BERFELDS· IN POMEROY

REG. '8.00 ........... SALE '6.79
REG. '9.00........... ~ '7.69
r~r·.: . 110.00.......... SAL£ '8.49
.. r:G. 111.00......... .sAl£ '9.39
REG. 112.00........ SALE 110.19

-

'

REGISTRATION
STARTS AT 8:00A.M.
.

SATURDAY, MAY 16th

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