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Reagan may compromise SS plan
WASHINGTON(AP)-Keymem- !lllvlng the Social Secur!ty syste111
ben of COngreaa, convinced the from bankruptcy by cutting overall
White H~ Is ready to negotiate, benefits 10 percent by 1986, include
are trying to produce a substitute added penalties for people who
tu: cut plan while a rsnklng retire before age 65 and tighter
Republican !lllya President Reagan eligibility requirements for
also will have to compromise on disability checks.
Social Security cuts.
"The.short tenn, yes, we'll make
Sen. Robert Dole, R-Kan., the some changes which will not affect
chainnan of the Senate Finance benefits,"·Dole said. "Long term, I
Conunittee, said Sunday that think we'll make change8 that may
Americans now near retirement age affect benefits - maybe we'll
"probably don't have too 1J1Uch to • change the (cost of living adworry about" and added, "I think justment), maybe we'll do other
you'll see a lot of compromises In the things."
president's proposals."
Interviewed on the CBS program
Reagan's · proposals, aimed at "Face the Nation," Dole !lllid Health

bv Dick Cavalli'

WINTHROP
HEY, LI6TEN TO THIS
6-RE..A.T RIDDLE ·
I JU5T THOUE;;HT UP•.•

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MAINTAIN A DI&amp;NIFIED 5/L.EN&lt;:F- •••

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TEETH-

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Will probe Columbia's decision

GOSH, "rrU REALLY
LOOK VOWN, CARLYLE -'

LL BET IT

FOR
HAVING YOUR CLOTHES STREWN ALL OYER
THE
I

COLUMBUS, Ohio- Gov. James A. Rhodes has announced the for. mation of a task force to investigate a Columbia Gas of Ohio Inc.
decision to not purchase any OhiG-produced gas for 60 days.
Rhodes said that beginning today, Columbia Is shutting off Ohio.
produced natural gas which it buys at an average price of $2.08 per
thOU!IIInd cubic feet but will continue to purchase gas costing $7.23 per
thousand cubic feet from other sources.
"Colwnbia's decision appears to be contrary to the best Interest of
Ohio's conswners, and I Intend to do everything within my authority to
protect Ohioans from needlessly high prices for gas," Rhodes said in a
letter to Colwnbia Gas President W.F. Laird.

HOW

Dll/ L(()U

Columbus leaders very upset

KNOW?

COLUMBUS, Ohio - Franklin County officials are upset that the
Colwnbus area has been selected to receive 1,000 Cambodian
refugees.
The county was notified that the city was one of 10 in the United
States chosen as a relocation spot for the displaced Cambodians.
County COIIUllissioner Jack Foulk !lllid he thinks 1,000 refugees are
too many1and he'd like to see the burden spread to more conununities
in the natton.
Commissioner Michael J. Dorrian said he would not oppose resetUement of some refugees here but said the figure the government bas
given Ia too high for the area to absorb.

··Dispute may simmer awhile
I WONC/ER WHAT
FINALLY SET
HER OFF"'

I THINK IT WAS
HER HEADACHE .'
WHEN TI-1E' ASPIRIN
Dl DN 'T VvO?K"'

... SHE
SOMETHING STRONGER
IN THE MEI/ICINE
-CABINET"·~
· -

... ANI/
5HE SURE .
I=OUND IT.'

MARIEMONT, Ohio .,.. The labor dispute that erupted into a
teachers' strike In the Mariemont school district may simmer at least
unW the school board election In November, board and strike leaders
~ct.
.
'lbree ~~ehool board memben are up for J'eo1!lection in the suburban
Ctnctnnatl system where more than half the teachers walked off the
job Jan. 26. The 51 striking teachers have been fired and replacements
hired aa classes continue for.the district's 1,385 pupils.

A PAIR
OF DIRTY
$WEAT SOX .'

Audit reveals funds mi&amp;used
ATLANTA -A 13-month audit has revealed that victims of natural
dlaaaters misused mllllons of dollars In federal lOIUIS intended to
replace uninaured crop losses and rebuild damaged buildings.
"GI'OIIS lultles" were found in federal Small Business Administration offices In Atlanta and Boston, the Atlsnta JournalConstitution reported Sunday.
The newspaper !lllid auditors discovered irregularities in $6.6
mllllon worth of SBA disaster loans In Georgia between August 1976
and August !979.

Weather

•

House announced the Socjal Security
proposal too soon, although he added
that he did not believe it would
damage efforts to pass Reagan's tax
and spending cuts.
He said House and Senate tax
writers of both parties are nearing
agreement on a multiyear tu: cut
somewl)at smaller than Reagan's
proposed 10 percent a year for three
years.
"The difference of opinion is
whether it ought to be a 1().1().10... 8-88 or some combination," he said.
"So in my view, we're fairly clOSe to
some agreement."
White House chief of staff James

•

at y

A. Baker III told reporters later Sunday that after being told of Dole's
remarks on taxes, Reagan
telephoned him "to reiterate his
strong support for his program and
to make the point he h~s he (Dole)
will hold to the president's position."
While Reagan " is not actively
seeking a compromise," Baker said,
he is willing to listen to proposals in
an effort to strengthen support for
the basic idea of steep tax cuts
designed to give businesses and individuals incentives to save and invest.
On Sunday, Treasury Secretary T.
Donald Regan cut short a planned

Periods of rain through Tuesday. Thunderstorms possible tonight
and Tuesday. Rain may be heavy at times. Highs Tuesday in the mid60s. Low8 tonight around $0. Chance of rain 90 percent tonight and 90
percent Tuesday. Winds easterly to northeasterly 16-25 mph tonight.
EDeoded Olllo Forecast- Wednesday through
Friday: Generally fair weather through the period. Highs from the
mid-801 to the mid-70s. Lows in the 4011 and low 50s.

"IT SEEMS ONLY YESTERDAY HE GRADUATEQ PAOM HIGH
- ' SCHOOL, AND HER~ ~E IS, $39,684,40 ~ATEAl"

three-day visit with Saudi Arabian
leaders and returned·to Washington
a day early to help defend the
president's tax proposals before
Congress.
Dole said possible compromises
on the tax bill would be discussed
today when he meets with Rep. Dan
Rostenkowski, chairman of the
House Ways and Means Committee;
Rep. Barber Conable, the ranking
Republican on Ways and Means;
. and Sen. Russell Long, the ranking
Democrat on the Senate Finance
Conunittee.
It will be at least another 10 days
(Continued on page 12)

en tine
! Sections,

. Pomer_~.'f:-Middteport, Ohio, Monda_y, Ma_y 18, 1981

.'•,

Priscilla's Pop .

and Human ServiCfS Secretary
Richard Schwelker Is "looking for a
compromise" onSoclalSecurity.
"I would guess, just based on conVer!llltiona with my colleagues on
both sides of the aisles, that we're
probably not going to do very much
very soon as far as the early retirees
are concerned," Dole said.
He said a phased-In reduction of
benefits may be neces!l8ry, and that
it should be started before 1990. "But
beyond that I would gueB$ that those
wh~ are gOing to turn 62 in the next
few years probably don't have too
much to wotry about,'' he said.
Dole said he thought the White

12 Pages

15 Cents

;... Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Addresses
highlight
graduation
By BOB HOEFUCH
AddreSS!lS by Peggy Bush, class
valedictorian, and Charlotte Ann
Pickens, salutatorian, highlighted
the annual commencement for 73
seniors at Southern High School Sunday night.
"All everyone is concerned about
is the problems that we are encountering and we fail to look at the
wonderful privileges and rights that
each and every one of us possess.
America-land of the free and home
of the brave are famous words that
nobody takes seriously anymore.
Our country was founded by great
men and women who gave every
ounce of strength they bad to make
us what we are today. They ha(l
dreams as high as mountains and
they believed In God unfailingly.
They worked bard and made those
dreams come true. We are a blessed
people; we have something to be
proud of," Miss Bush said.
Miss Bush cited the ~portunities
offered by America emphasizing the
freedom that its pe~le have. She
named the great inventions of
Affierica.
While Miss Bush cited the
problems of today such as the dwin-

dling of natural resources, deficit
government spending, pollution, and
inflation, she also pointed out steps
that are bel g taken to correct these
problems.
"We are the ones who must create
and invent ways of coping with the
crises of the future and must find
ways of bringing our ideas to life.
The outcome of the future lies in our
hands", Miss Bush said to the class.
Miss Pickens traced the historical
events that have taken place since
members of the cla~~S were born and
began their studies. There was Vietnam, the assassination of President
John F. Kennedy, the naming of
Johnson as president, the
aSsassination of Robert Kennedy
and Martin Luther King, Jr., in the
first years.
As class members moved through
the elementary grades America tandCd on the moon and the feminist
movement bad begun, Miss Picken
reported. The inflation problem
grew and Richard Nixon became
President of the United States. Miss
Pickens hit upon the disappointment
of Americans as the Watergate
situation developed leading to the
(Continued on page 12)

/

•

/

I

SENIORS-Charlotte Ann Pickens, left, Southern High School
salutatorian, and Crista Beegle, chat briefly before the start of the
Southern High School commencement Sunday night. Both are members
of the school's Natlooal Honor Society.

Provision said 'cornerstone to agreement'
WASHINGTON ( AP)
panies and negotiates the national
Negotiations to find a strike-settling coal contract for some 980 others.
soft coal contract are resuming with
Striking UMW members said they
one United Mine Workers bargainer planned to picket Consolidation Coal
caUtng the union security provision after a union picket complained of
still in dispute "the cornerstone of being knocked to the ground by a
the agreement."
vehicle as he entered a company
Jack Perry, president of District parklnglotSaturday.
17 in Charleston, W.Va., the UMW's
Consolidation Coal officials said
lsrgest, said union bargainers they found no evidence that anyone
assessed their position over the was struck.
weekend while talks were in recess.
There were no other reports of
The UMW and the Bitwninous \ strike-related violence over the
Coal Operators Association were weekend.
· scheduled to resume their talks
today.
Negotiations recessed on a disco.dant note Friday when the union
rejected an Industry proposal on
contract language governing the
conditions under which subBy The Associated Press
contracting work could be done by
Ohio's weekend traffic death toll
non-union personnel.
of 13 included five penons killed in
Union officials said, however, that two wrecks, the Highway Patrol
they were encouraged by said. Also among the victims were
management's discussion of the three motorcyclists and a
security issue.
pedestrian.
With the coal strike in its 53rd day,
Tbe patrol counts traffic deaths
UMW members planned mass from 6 p.m. Friday to midnight Sunpicketing today at the Pittsburgh day.
headquarters of Consolidation Coal
The dead :
Co., the nation's second largest.
.
SUNDAY
Bobby R. Brown, president and COLUMBUS - Elvin King, 32, of
chief executive officer of Con- ColW!)bus, and his daughter, Elita,
aoUdatlon Coal, Ia the t~ bargaining 12, when their pickup truck swerved
representative here for the BCOA, across the I-70 medlsn strip and
which represents 130 member com- collided head-on with another pickup

On the bargaining front, union
president Sam Church had indica fed
that UMW negotiators were willing
to talk through the weekend but said
some industry representatives "had
things they had to do."
In a telephone interview Sunday,

Perry said, "We've been more or

by the 160,000 striking miners, who
voted down an earlier contract
proposal by a better than a 2-1
margin.
"I'm somewhat enlightened that
they accepted this concept," Perry
said of the BCOA negotiating team,
adding :

less assessing our position and what
offers we've had so far."
Last Friday, the BCOA made an
"This is the cornerstone of the
offer on the union security issue that agreement. There's no use in going
UMW leaders see as crucial to win- any further (on other issues) until
ning ratification of any new accord we have this in place ."

13 die on Ohio highways
truck on Columbus' east side.
COLUMBUS - Shawn Jacobs, 18,
of Columbus, when his motorcycle
slammed into the rear of a truck on a
rural road east of Columbus.
HAMILTON - Paul Hubbard, 39,
of New Miami in one-car accident on
U.S. 127 in Butler County.
MEDINA - George Ribar, 25, of
VaUey City, in a car-motorcycle accident on a Medina County road.
TOLEDO - Charles Fitterer, 50,
of Toledo in a motorcycle accident
on a Lucas County road.
SATURDAY
MARlETTA - Isaac Croston, 73, of

Cutler, in.a one-car accident on Ohio

555 in Washington County.
WOOSTER - Mary Rerko, 68, of
Big Prairie, in a tw()-{:Br accident on
a Wayne County road.
MARlETTA - Donald Dupre, 16,
Gary Hinton, 15, and Jerry Dupre,
It, all of Waterford, in a two-car accident on Ohio 676 in Washington
County.
PORTSMOUTH - Clifton Baker,
14, of Wheelersburg, in a carpedestrian accident on a Scioto
County road.
FRIDAY
MEDINA - Lillian Gilbride, 63, of
Wooster, in a two-car accident on a
Medina County road.

Accident hospitalizes Minersville woman

I

''DEAR, I'D REALLY APPRECIATE IT IF YOU QIDN'T KEEP
SAVING IT'S SILLY TO '*LL AT JN~NIMATl OUCTSI"

OUI'ITANDING IDIIOII-

......... OPM I

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A Minersville woman was
hospitalized following a Ofte.W'
crash in Meigs County Saturday
momtng, the Gallia-Melp Poll ci
the Ohio Highway Patrol reported
today.
The accident waa,one of two In the
· Melp area over the weekend Which
raulted In Injuries.
Accordln8 to the report, Ida M.
8tnart, •. waa IOUthbound on
TowD tDU Road at 10:10 a.m. Saturda7 w'- she lOll control of her
vehicle IMI 1 curve and collided with
I IN, IUiiJit ftiC!derale dlmage to

lbeCII'.
Slnart WU inJ...S aJcq with I

passenger, Barbara J. HendrickS,
Syracuae. Both were taken to
Vetenna Memorial H011Pital by the
Pomeroy emergency IIQwid, where
Hendricb waa treated and released
and Stewart admitted. She waa
reported In good condition this morning.
The patrol said a vehicle driven by

Qregory S. Cole, 18, Tuppers Plains,
waa driving w dbnund on SR 341 at
n:15 p.m. SatUrday when lia
vehicle reportedlJ went left of ~
ter on a hil1crwt and collided with an
..tbnund auto driven by Palrldt C.
Clifford, 30, Long Bottom.

Both Clifford and a passenger,
Cathy D. Clifford, 23, Long Bottom,
were Injured. A passenger in Cole's
vehicle, Mary B. Hibbs, 15, Chester,
was also injured In the crash.
Patrick Clifford was not treated,
the report said. Cathy Clifford was
taken to.Holzer Medical Center by
the Meigs EMS, wHere she jVaS
!rested and released. Hibbs was
taken by private vehicle to ·
Vetenna, where · she was also
!rested and released.
Clifford's vehicle wu severely
damaged In the accident and Cole's
auto suffered moderate damage .
Cole waa cited for left of center.

The patrol investigated two minor
accidents in Gallia County Sunday.
The report said Joseph F. CaldweU, 47, Colonial Heights, Va., was
westbound on CR 30 at 4 a.m. when
his vehicle went off the right side of
.the road and collided with an embankment, causing Slight damage to
the car.
Troopers noted Bobby L. Elkins,
46, Rt. I, Bidwell, was westbound on
SR 554 at 10:30 a.m. when hia car
collided with a deer.
The deer left the scene, the report
said. Elkins' vehicle was
moderately damaged.

�May 18, 1981

Commentary

Page--2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday,
May 18, 1981
. ,• .
-

Rhils, 'hot Dodgers' meet
in World Series type game

•

Mrs. Kirkpatrick's four distinctions______Wz_,ura_·m_F._.B_u_ck_ley;...._J_r.
In a single speech, delivered in
early March to the Council on
Foreign Relations in New York,
Jeane Kirkpatrick, U. S. ambassador to the United Nations, shed
more light on the subject of hwnan
rights and national policy than all
·the candlepower of the UN Hwnan
Rights Commission has shed in a
generation. Her _ statement has
liberating force. Such is said about
thse few statements that cause the
scales to fall from one's eyes, even
as it happened to St. Paul. Mrs.
Kirkpatrick talked about four distinctions "crucial" to a consideration
of human rights and national policy.
They are worth memorizing.
The first of these is the distinction
" between ideas and institutions."
If you will read the United Nations
Declaration of Human Rights and
the accompanying documents you
will find a classic confusion of the
two. The declaration speaks about
everything from the right to a fair
trial, to the right to choose one's

profession, to the right to self·
government. Mrs. Kirkpatrick
correctly insists that to have, let us
say, democracy, is entirely different
from envisioning it.
A society in which the minority,
defeated at the polls, declines to accept the political authority of the
majority, mandated at the polls,
cannot practice democracy. It can
only dream about it. In such a
society, the idea of democracy
exists, but its institutionalization has
yet to be. The heresy of supposing
that ideas can become institutions
merely by affinning them is correctly depicted by Michael Oakeshott as
"rationalism" - "making politics
as the crew flies."
The second distinction is between
''rights and goals." The most recent
session of the United Nations Human
Rights Commission affinned , a
" right to development." In order to
have that right, all you have to do is
take an undeveloped society, give it
peace, orde, an ethos, economic

The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Slrett

Pomnoy, Ohlo
614-992- 2156
OE: \'OTED TOTiiE INTERESTOFTII.E MEIGS·MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

PATWHITEHEAD

BOBHOEFLICH

Assistant Publ!sher/Cuntroller

Gtnenl Manacer

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.

By Associated fresi

Mike Schmidt of the Philadelphia
Phillies says "it sure ain't the World
.Series," but the attention that will be
focused on tonight's meeting with
the Los Angeles Dodgers aod rookie
phenom Fernando Valenzuela might
make it seem so.
"We've got everything to gain and
nothing to lose," Schmidt said. "The
best way to approach ' a game like
this is to not get excited.''
Valenzuela, a left-handed
screwball pitcher from Mexico,
brings an ~ record with five
shutouts and an 0.50 earned run
average into the game at Dodger
Stadiilm. The 20-year-old Valenzuela
has yet to"face the 1980 World Series
champion Phillies, and Schmidt and
his teanunates would like nothing
better than to put the first blemish
on his record.
Schmidt cracked his major
league-leading lith home run of the
season Sunday to help the Phillies
beat San Diego 6-3 and win the rubber match of their three-game series
with the Padres on the West Coast.
Phils right-hander Nino Espinosa

That such a person should be
liberty aod capital. Such indeed are happen is worse than what had been which we would hardly encourage.
noisily
rejected as a conunencement
the goals, or should be, of all coun- happening.
Things like annaments, treaties,
speuer
by much of the student and
tries. But getting from her~ to there
And iinaily, there is the diStinction balances of power, propaganda,
faculty
at Trinity College,
is a problem. :·such declarations of . between "personal morality and dlsinformation, war ... All these, in
Washington,
Is .a moral lesson ollts
human rights," said Mrs. Kirk· political morality." To define virtue proper context, are expressions of
own.
Trinity
College will at last
patrick, "take on the character, as for an individual one need look no political morality - which, sue. one critic said, of a letter to Santa further than to the Bible. But cessfuUy arranged, promote the achieve public identification - as
Claus." With mischievous practical political morality requires any num- possibility for the exercise of private the college that rejected Mrs. Kirk·
patrick.
effect. "When the belief that one has ber of things, the privatization of morality.
a right to develop coincides with the CT"flllezl 1g&lt;g 1 fOJI:T"WO~ 'n.R-1Ei.U~
facts of. primitive psychology, of t\ V&amp;.Mf;
caste systems, social hierarchies,
t-1-€~.
societies based on ascription, on dictatorships - and those are, of cour·
se, the characteristics of very many
societies in the world that claim the
right to development - then the tendency to blame someone is almost
overwhelming." That someone is
generally: the West, and par·
ticularly the United States.
The third distinction is between
"intention and consequence." Mrs.
Kirkpatrick gives as a concrete
example El Salvador. There,
fighting side by side with the insurrectionists, are men and women
whose intentions are in no
significant respect different from
those of President Reagan or
Secretary Haig. But to intend
something - in this case, such
freedom and justices as
· Salvadorean institutions will sustain
- is not to achieve it. Accordingly,
responsible policy asks, What is the
likely consequence of a policy - not,
merely, what are the intentions of its
supporters. Experience establishes
that, when communists are in control of the dissident or in"Mark the time- it's Happy Hour. Let's give them two for one."
surrectionary movement, what will

PITTSBURG!l (AP) - Things
seem to be falling in place for the
Cincinnati Reds, while the Pit·
tsburgh Pirates are battling to keep
their season from falling apart.
"This is a good, solid ball club, no
. question," Manager John Me·
Namara said Sunday after the Reds'
ran their winning streak to six
games with a 4-3 victory over the
Pirates.
"We've been going uphill. We're
trying like heck, and maybe we're
trying a little too · hard," said
Manager Chuck Tanner of the injury-ilepleted PirateS, who lost their
seventh game in nine outings.
Ken Griffey drove in two Cincinnati runs with an inside-the-park
homer, Ray Knight's solo homer
was the margin of victory, and
Mario Sota notched his second pit·
ching victory in a rOw for the Reds.

Nl'I''SEditor

The state of
the economy

In aU likelihood, leaders say, the family, and recipients would !011e
neither measure will make it .their benefits if they alated falsely
through the, Legislature. But they that they had a such garden.
serve .to show the kinds of things ' There are some escape hatches in
lawmakers think about as they try to the bill, for those who can't find the
deal with the tremendous drain of needed land, for instance. But the
·measure directs the transportation
welfare on the state budget. ·
Damscbroder, interviewed by department to provide land for
reporter Mike Wallace on the CBS welfare gardens when" it can.
television show "60 Minutes" with
Galbraith said his bill could perregard to his earlier bill, would mit latge savings in cases where
require able welfare recipients to welfare mothers might waot aborplant fruits and vegetables each tions but can't afford them.
year between May I and Oct. I.
Abortions, which can be had for
The size of gardens would have to about $250 in many areas, he said,
be 36 square feet for each member of are a lot less than pre-natal care,
delivery, aod post-natal care which

adda up to about $2,500 and must be
paid by the state. .
'"!'his is a money Baving bill, that's 1
all," Galbraith aaid.
When abortiOilll were n!quested, ·
under the bill, county departments '
would refer the woman to a pubUc or
private clinic, physician or appropriate agency for counseling.
Afterward, the recipient, upon
request, would be referred to a
physician, cllnfc or holpital for the
operation.
Galbraith said abortiOilll cost
"only one tenth the cost of a
deUvery. This is only for thole who
want toparllclpate.''

working majority in the last outpost
of Democratic control in the capital.
Yet Manatt fights on and claims
that belp is on Its way. Tbe
Democratic chalnnan lnsista the
lide will turn as soon as the
American people accept his
argument that the Reagan program
is hurting the poor and middle
classes aod benefitting only the
wealthy.
'
He can take some comfort from
signs that the president's 1111 cut
program will encounter the kind of
serioUB opposition in Congress that
never materialized on the budget

Today in history.

••

can take."
"I got an overdose last week wben
I saw an interview with the people
are are making Lady Diana's dress.
The wedding's two months away and
I think I've reached my pain
threshold already," said Healy. "My
problem ts when I refuse to read
about it- my wife reads it to.me."
Novak, who was trying to rescue
ao onion from drowning in a tumbler
· of vodka, said, ''I believe our biggest
mistake would be If we voted never

to read another word about the
Royal Wedding again. It's too hard
to keep such a promise. What I
suggest is that we talte a page out of
Alcohollcs Anonymous, and every
morning when we get up we each
pledge for the next 24 hours to ignore
Prince Charles completely."
"What about television?" Shlelda
wanted to !inow.
"If Prince Qlarles aod Lady
Diana appear on our screens," said
Novak, "we must promise to stand
up and tum our backs to the sets."
"I'D drink to that," said Oliphant.
Dwnbarton, who follows the
raCes, asked the committee, "Suppose Prince Charles lalla off his horse again? Do we have to Ignore
that?"
"It's a good question," said
Nelson. "It really doesn't have
anything to do with the wedding,
4loesit?"
"Yes and no," said Tuck. "Until
Prince Charles announced his
engagement, no one much cared If

~~~

Unser, Sneva pace Indy qualifiers
;.Jj•

cuta.

Meanwhile, Marlatt is in the uncomfortable spot of Ieiding a party
tha~ appears surrounded, oulgwlned, outmamed and unable, 10 Ill',
to offer the sort of credible alternative that might tum the tide.
There's UtUe If any sign tbat
Marlatt has IIIICCeeded in firing up
his own lroopl, not to mention the
population at large.
The Democratic Party executive
committee met the day after 83
Democrata joined RepubiiCBIII to
provide a aolld maJority for the
Reagao budget blueprint

'

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Zoeller
captures
Colonial

more

he feU off his hone or not. But now
everyone Is very concerned when he
taltes a spill, u it could affect the
date of the wedding.''
"Then," Bald Willde, "does that
mean we can't watch Prince Cllarles
fall off his hone aoymore?"
"I think it's best not to," sald
Novak. "At least until the couple
returns from their honeymoon."
"July Ia goiDg to be the toucheet
time for everybody," I sald. "I dlln't
aee how we can keep our von until
then."
"Why don't we all go deer IJm..
ling?" Ollpbant sald. "H we go deep
eiiOU8h into the hUla and no one
brlnp a radio, we won't know if they
got married or not."
.
"That's a bully Idea," aaid Tuck.
"I've always wanted to go deer IJm.
tlng out of MUOn."
Nelloil rliled his slua- "Gentlemen, to the Royal Couple. May
they live happllf ever after - u ,

knows
Loans

Cit~

~~~.!'-'to read about :

what
busm
us
knows

\

l

:"'

INDIANAPOUS (AP) - Paced during the final frantic efforts by have to start the race in the 33rd spot · original qualification line a week
when he replaces Dallenbach. An- earlier.
by the :lllO mph runs of pole-winner soine drivers to get into the lineup.
All II rows were filled on Satur- dretti was in Belgium for a Grand
Bobby Unser and Tom Sneva, the 33
Takes $20,000 race
cars that will start next Sunday's. In- day, leaving Sunday's windup of Prix race.
t)'nser qualified at 200.546 mph.
dianapolis 500 qualified at an time trials for "bunoping,'' while
CINCINNATI (AP) - Wartime
Tbe
fastest qualifier, however, was Admiral held off a late charge by
average 191.3"mph, some 5.7 miles drivers of the slower cars in the
Sneva, who averaged :lll0.691 but was Charlie High to win the $20,000per hour faster than last year and lineup waited nervoUBiy.
Starting next to Unser on the front not eligible to win the pole position added Green Carpet Handicap at
the third-quickest lineup in Indy
row will be veterans Mike Mosley, because his car was not in the River Downs on Sunday.
history.
"The speed probably was the who qualified at 197.141 mph, and
Ridden by Gene York, the horse
biggest surprise of qualifications," four-time winner A.J. Foyt, who
covered a mile in 1:39 4-5 to win by a
said defending champion Johnny averaged 196.1178 for the four laps
length and a half, returning $4.20,
Ruthetford, who started from the around the 2~·mile track. Former
$3.20 and $2.60. Charlie High paid
pole position a year ago but had to winner Gordon Jolincock will atart
$9.40 and $4, while Sad Fitz returned
settle for a second-row start this on the inside of the second row, with
$3.60 for show.
time. He qualified 3 mph faster than Rutherford in the middle and 22The 3-6 daily double combination
hia pole speed in 1980 but still more year-old rookie Josele Garza of
· of Foolish Abby in the first race and
Mexico on the outside.
than 5 mph slower than Unser.
Billy Mike Jr. in the second paid
"Nobody had any idea we'd be . Bill Alsup, Wally DaUenbach and
$196.40.
running this fast when we got here or Gordon Smiley qualified for the
Acrowd of 8,001 wagered $939,090.
even the first few days after practice third row, although Dallenbach was
began," Rutherford said Sunday subbing for Mar;io Andretti who will
FORT WORTH, Texas (AP)
"Golfs crazy," says Fuzzy Zoeller,
who spent a long, turbulent day
proving it.
He suffered and survived most of '
the game's sensations and breezed
to a four-shot victory in Sunday's
wind-swept 36-hole windup to the
~.000 Colonial National Invitation
tournament.
The happy·g~lucky Zoeller gunned down half a dozen challengers
with a topsy-turvy 68-70 spiced with
strings of bogeys and birdies, highs
and lows, ups and downs.
In the end, he stripped three shots
from par from the dOlling seven
boles of Colonial's par-70 Trinity
River treachery to IICU!Ue aU threats
and halt a two-year slwnp dating
When )'ou find yourself with a
bact to his memorable 1979 Masters
biumph.
money problem, you naturally tum
"Really," be sighed, "It's a great
feeiiDg."
to people you know and trust for a
Hil8-under-par 274 beat runnerup
solution. And in Ohio, that means
Hale lnrln by four strokes, eamed
him P4,000, overshadowed his
City wan and Savin~.
chronic blct prOblem and, sent him
We've been helping people
IICIII"I'Ytnc off to 1 champagne
celebration.
since 1912. With morley to fix up a
Aller Frldiy's thundenliowers
room. Or take care of bills. Or for
neceuitaled • 38-bole finale, Zoeller ·
· bepn the day at ~. a
unexpected expenses.
stroke ahead of Irwin lnd two better
It all comes down to trust.
than Tom Kite and Keith Fetpa.
He carted four slrllght birdies
It's
we've built our
during tile JDOrllin&amp; round, opened
on. And when you come
up I lllz-tbot lead and appell'td en
__ I'IIUie to • runaway. Jllllu quickly,
talk to about a loan, you'll see it for yourself.
be bogeyed tine In a row, f~
Nobody
you and your needs like do.
with • thinkound 88 and lnvlted •
fnlb lllries ot chal1encel with a
lhaky atut on the flnal18.
Ray FloJd mounted the J11Qrt .
_... t1n1t, l'llllllll olf five bir12S E. Main St. • 992· 2171
dies tla'aalb l8ftll holel while
Zollllr . . *'!llllllltwo.JDOreahatl
to Jill'. , . , .... tied It .......
one point.

DOONesBURY ·

,

heads tournament

,a.u SEATS JUST S 1.50

The wedding poopersU-____Art_Buc_h_wa_ld
the real problem is can we do the
same with television?"
Nelson said, "I have a remote control on my TV. I cao tum them off
any time they come on the screen."
"That's fine for you," said Shields.
"But what about the rest of· us who
have to jump out of our seats and
reach for the knob every time they
appear?''
"As I see it," said Tuck, "we can't
control what the media will do with
the story. But we have to decide how
much wedding hype each one of us

Eastern Michigan

ADMISSION E\IERY TUESDAY $1 .50

Why is the Democratic leader talking tough?
Democratic National Committee
last February, the outlook was
bleak. Three months earlier, the
party suffered Its worst defeat sm
the 19208. Ronald Reagan was riding
high. The Republicans were tasting
power in the Senate and hungering
for more.
Then things started getting worse.
Reagan presented a budget.cutting program that Democratic
leaders were convinced would prompt cries of outrage from around the
nation. Instead, party conservatives
joined forces with House
Republicans to give Reagao a

'

tossed a seven-hitter for his first vic- Bingle.
notch his fourth straight victory, and
tory since Aprll19 aod second in five
Ron Cey provided. the firepower the Astros capitalized on some wild·decisions.
· with his fifth home run in six games. ness by Cubs pitchers.
In other NatiD~~AI League games · The Dodgers scored all their runs in
Chicago lefty Mike Kurkow
Sunday, Los Angeles clobbered the the fourth off Pat Zachry, 3-S. The in- walked six batters in his 21-3 innings
New York Mets&amp;-1, Cincinnati edged ning included doubles by Derrel as Houston marched to a 4-0 lead.
Pittsburgh 4-3, St. Louis got by ThOmas, Dusty Baker and Pedro Twice, Krukow, 1-4, walked a man ·
Atlanta 4-3, Houston belted · the Guerrero and singles by Bill Russell, with the bases loaded. Terry Puhl
Chicago Cubs 6-1 aod San Francisco Reuss and Thomas.
and Craig Reynolds each drove in a
trimmed Montreal iH in 12 innings.
The Mets have lost seven in a row pair of runs for the Astros.
The Phillies scored five runa off .and 22 of 30. Brooks' RBI hit snapped
Padres atarter Juan Eichelberger, a string of 19 innings in which New
Giants 5, Expos 4
3-2, in the first three innings. Pete York has failed to score.
Jack Clark cracked a basesRose aod Del Unser had RBI doubles
Canlloals 4, Braves 3
loaded. single in the bottom of the
in the first inning, Espinosa singled
St. Louis scored all its runs in the 12th inning to help San Francisco
home a run in the second, and Man- first inning, two on a single by Ken hand the slumping Expos their fifth ·
ny Trillo and Larry Bowa drove in Oberkfell, and held Off the Braves. loss in six games. The Giants, meanthird-inning scores. Schmidt's . Oberkfell's hit was the fifth straight while, have won seven of their past
homer, with none aboard, came in single off 41-year-old right-hander . 10.
the fifth.
Gaylord Perry, 3-3,
Mike Sadek led off the San FranPinch-hitter Bob Porter smacked cisco 12th with a walk off Bill Lee, 1·
a tw~run double for Atlanta in the 2. One out later, Enos Cabell singled,
Dodge!'!! 6, Met&amp; 1
The Dodgers, the hottest team in eighth to make it 4-3.
sending Sadek to third, and Joe
Bob Forsch, 3-2, went five innings Morgan walked to load the bases for
baseball with seven straight victories and 10 in II games, got still . for St. Louis, holding Atlanta to Clark.
MOUNT PLEASANT, Mich. (AP)
another fine pitching ilerfonnance three hits before his shoulder stifto beat the Mets. Left-bander Jerry fened.
San Francisco came up with a run - Eastern Michigan is heading to
in the ninth on a two-out single by the NCAA regional baseball tourReuss, 4-1, scattered 12 hits and
Aslroll6, Cubs 1
didn't allow a run until the ninth
Houston left-bander Bob Knepper pinch hitter Jim Wohlford to send nament, but it took some breath·
holding and three pitchers in the nin·
when Hubie Brooks hit an RBI yielded four hits in 71-3 innings to the game into extra innings.
thinning to assure the trip.
With two outs and two men on base
Saturday, reliever Mitch Zwo!ensky
got Doug Scott to ground into a
gam~;-ending force-out that secured
the Huron's iH victory over Central
After Dave Collins tied the game
Knight, the Cincinnati third
John Candelaria and Don Robin· Michigan in the Mid-American Conat 1·1 with a RBI double in the third ·baseman whose second-inning error son are already on the disabled list, ference baseball championships.
inning, Griffey hit a sinking liner to led to a Pirate run, hit a solo homer and Scurry is expected to miss his
Eastern, 35-27, won an automatic
left.
to give the Reds 4-llead in the seven- next turn.
berth in the NCAA regionals as the
The ball skipped by Pirate out- th against Pirate starter Eddie
Tanner said Pirate pitching has MAC representative. But the Chipfielder John Milner as be tried a Solomon.
been solid despite injuries - and he pewas, 36-11 and the regular season
shoestring catch and rolled to the
In the Pirate eighth, Easler's tw~ noted that Pittsburgh scored just conference champion, could gain an
wall. Griffey rounded the bases and run homer cut the margin to 4-3. Soto four runs in three weekend losses to at-large berth in the tournament.
scored standing up behind Collins to went on to pitch a complete game, a the Reds.
The Hurons were leading 5-2 when
give the Reds a3-llead.
seven-hitter that raised his record to
"The pitching has been good. We reliever Jay Davisson gave up a tw~
3-S.
just haven't been able to get some run homer to Central's Randy
"When be missed the ball, I was
"After Easier hit the home run, I run production," said Tanner.
Meier. Davisson then walked one
thinking home .run· all the way," was able to come back," said Soto.
batter before being replaced by
Griffey said. "The ball took off when "I felt like I pitched a pretty good
In the Pirate ninth, pin~h hitter Jason Hansen.
it hit, Milner's momentum was game.''
Willie Stargell drew a tw(H)ut walk
going forward and I know be's noc
Meanwhile, the Pirates' pitching and was replaced by pinch runner
the quickest guy in the world."
got another jolt.
Matt Alexander.
In the bottom of the third, Griffey
Pitcher Rod Scurry, a loser to the
But with Ornar Moreno at bat,
· made a long run into the left· Reds Saturday, arrived at the park Alexander was thrown out trying to
centerfield gap to caich a drive by Sunday with a sprained ankle. He steal second to end the game. Tbe
Mike Easler. "That's too far to run said he sustained the injury in a fall throw was made by Reds' ·catcher
531 JACKSON PIKE ·Rt.35 WEST
after running all the way aroWtd the down some stairs at home Saturday Mike O'Berry, a ninth-inning defenPhone 446· 4524
bases," Griffey kidded.
evening.
sive replacement.
IIARGAIN MATINEES ON SAT I SUN

Cincinnati posts sixth straight win

Two Republicans have unusual ideas

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Two of
the most conservative Republicans
A MEI\IHER ol Thr Associated Prus, Inland Dail}' PrtSs AIISO&lt;'iation and Ult
Aml'ri&lt;'an N,.,_·spapt!r Publisht&gt;n Association.
in the Ohio House have some
unusual ideas about welfare.
!.ETTERS OF' OPINION art&gt; wdcumrd. Th~)' \'hotdd ~Ius than JtO wurds long. All
lrllrrs itrt sub)rrt tu t'dl lln~ and m~~t ~ sil(nt'd wiU1111mt', uddr~s and telepho!W
Rep. Gene Damschroder, R·
numbt'r. Nu un~t~nt'd ll'llt'n will bt&gt; publbhl'd. l~ llt'rs shnuld bl' In M4100 Iaiit', addrt'nln~
Fremont,
who became a national
issut•s, nnl pusnnall\lt's.
celebrity a few years ago with a
highly publicized but ill-fated
welfare birth control bill, now wants
welfare clients to grow fruits and
vegetables to qualify for benefits.
One of his colleagues from northwest Ohio, Rep. John A. Galbraith,
R-Maumee, has a bill that would
allow county welfare departments to
pay up to $500 for abortions for
Among the baskets of statistical confetti tossed at us each month are a few welfare mothers requesting them.
that require no special training or insight to interpret but which say a lot of
things about the state of the economy.
Is there anyone who without thoughts on why mortgage delinquencies are
rising? Or why the rental vacancy rate is so low? Or why new-home construction is weak? Or why the savings rate is so low?
WASIDNGTON (AP) - Why is
In each instance the reasons lead an inquirer relentlessly into other Charles T. Manatt smiling, talking
problem areas of the economy, and demonstrate that nothing in this tough, trying to sound like a winner?
economy of ours is isolated from other factors.
He is, after all, cbainnan of the
Federal Home Loan Bank Board and the Mortgage Bankers Association Democratic Party, a politician with
statements, for example, now show increasing tardiness in home loan reason to know how Gen. George Arrepayments. The bankers say more than 370,000 mortgage repayments are mstrong Custer felt when be noticed
overdue by more than 30 days. Sixty days isn't rare, says the board.
something wasn't quite right at the
One reason why is obvious: Many Americans, especially in aut~assembly LitUe Big Horn.
areas of the Midwest, are financially strapped. Inflation is one culprit.
Manatt's troops are deserting in
Layoffs are another. Credit over-extension also plays a role.
droves. His generals surrender
The consequences spread. Many thrift institutions - savings and loan before the fighting begins. The opassociations and savings banks - are in dire financial trouble. In the first position claims to have won the
quarter of 1981, the 10 biggest savings banks in New York City lost nearly hearts and minda of the people.
$112 million, according to the State Banking Conunission.
When the Los Angeles lawyer and
Their plight helps explain why the national rental vacancy rate is so low. banker took over the remainll of the
At 4.8 percent, lowest on record in peactime, it seems clearly to represent
the inability of builders to build at a profit.
Why can'tthey build at a profit? For many reasons, to be sure, but one important one is the high cost of money, and the rough state in which lenders
find themselves. And why is the cost of money high• Inflation is one reason.
It's hard to save at today's prices. The savings rate in the first quarter was
A group of some of the world's
4. 7percent, lowest since 1951.
greatest minds in the back of the
Lenders also must charge dearly for their money, and builders say that
"Class Reunion," a noted think-tank
those extra charges cannot be recaptured in rents. Meanwhile, pressures for in Washington, to fonn the "Royal
apartment units builds against a static, or even declining, supply.
Society to Ignore the British Royal
Once upon a time those who could not rent or who found rents too high were
motivated to buy. But high interest, inflation, and the inability to save make Wedding."
The idea was inspired by the conit difficult for builders to build or buyers to buy.
troversy a few weeks ago over
It also ruins their confidence. The University of Michigan's measure of
whether United s•~tes Chief of
consumer confidence shows buying attitudes near record low levels because Protocol Lee Annenberg should or
of all the pressures mentioned previously. And when confidence is low,
should not have curtsied to Prince
economic activity tends to be low also.
Charles as he got off the airplane on
In its January-March surveys, the university's Institute for Social Resear·
ch found "consumer sentiment" at 68.3 percent, down 3.8 points from the American soU.
One of the members of the stanprevious quarter and 31.7 points from the base year of 1966.
ding committee, named Wilkie, said
after his fourth martini, "I don't see
how it can be done. We're talking
about the heir to the throne of
England. Every newspaper in the
world is going to go bellyup over the
Today is Monday, May 18, the !38th day of 1981. There are 2ZI days left
in the year.
story."
"Anything can be done if we Just
Today's highlight in History:
put our minds to it," Oliphant said,
On May 18, 1804, Napoleon Bonaparte was proclaimed Emperor of
"but it's going to talte fortitude to
Fraoce.
iguore the royal nuptials. We can
On this date:
easily keep from reading about them
In 1860, a Republican convention in Chicago nominated Abraham Uncotn for president.
in the newspapen and magazines In 1863, the Civil War siege of Vicksburg, Miss., began in the Union
drive to split the Confederacy.
In 1941, Itallaoforces in Ethiopia surrendered during World War D.
And in 1974, India setoffitsfirstatomic blast, becoming the world's six·
th nuclear power.
Ten years ago: Canada's Premier Pierre Trudeau met with top Soviet
officials in Moscow.
Five years ago: President Gerald Ford asked the Supreme Court io
review busing as a means of integrating schoola.
One year ago: The biggest eruption In 123 years shook Mount St. Helena
volcano in Washington state, prompting the evacuation of residents up to
JO miles away. ·
·
Today's birthdays: Baseball star Reggie Jacbon is 35. British
ballerina Dame Margot Fonteyn Ia 82. Singer Perry COmo is 88. Writer
John Updike ia 49. And former New York Sen. Jacob Javlts is 77.
Thought for today: H we are not ashamed to think It, we should not be
ashamed to say it.- Cicero, Roman IICholar (100B.C.-43 B.C.).

Ohio

,,

,_---::-=:7.;;-J

we

I •.

•
I

�P;tge-4-,-The paily Sentinel

..

Pomeroy=-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, May 18, 19B1

Pomii'Oy-Middleport, Ohio

Indians on warpath·
· By Associated Press
The Oakland A's have finally
come doWn to earth - now it's the
ClevelAnd Indians who are flying.
Off to the hottest start in major
league baseball history with an 11-0
record, the A's have since cOOled off,
losing their fourth straight game
Sunday, &amp;-2 to the Milwaukee
Brewers.

e~ victory gave

the Brewers a
sweep of a three-game series with
the staggering A's.
An3ela 7, Tltlen 1
Brian Downing's RBI double
keyed a three-run first Inning and
right-hander Ken Forsch pitched.a
five-hitter as .Californta defeated
Detroit. It was the third victory on
the J"OBd for Forsch, &amp;-1, who came to
the Angelli In a spring trade with the
Houston Astros of the National
League.
WblteSox9,RangenO
RosS Baumgarten buried a fourhitter and Wayne Nordhagen and
Mike Squires supplied the batting
punch to lead Chicago over Texas.
Baumgarten retired the first 13 bat·
W. before Leon Roberts beat out a
bunt single with one out in the fifth.
Nordhagen drove in four M1DS with
three singles and Squires had three
singles, scored twice and drove in a

10innlngs.

''As long as our pitching stays consistent, even two or three runs is
enough for us," said Cleveland righthander Bert Blyleven of the staff
that leads the league with a 2.39 earned rilll average. "We have the type
of pitchers who are competitive, and
we know that our hitters are going to
bust out pretty soon."

Royals 5, Red Soll4
RBI singles by U.L. W115hington
and Willie Aikens in the ninth inning
capped a Kansas City comeback
that carried the Royals over Boston.
Dennls Leonard, 4-4, got the victory
despite giving up 15 hi\S in eight innings. Dan Quisenberry finished up
for the Royals.
The Royals rallied after two were
out in the ninth. Lee May singled and
Cesar Geronimo ran for him. Willie
Wilson then singled Geronimo to
third before Washington drove in the
go-ahead run. Aikens' RBI single
· provided the eventual winning run
as Boston fell one short by scoring a
run in the bottom of the ninth.
Orioles 8, Twins 3
Eddie Murray had three hits and '
Jim P11-lmer scattered seven hits

Elsewhere in the American
League, it was California 7, Detroit
I; Chicago9, TexasO; KansasCity5,
Boston 4; Baltimore 6, Minnesota 3,
and Seattle I, New York 0.

I •

.

'.'

allowed three M1DS and was relieved
by Tim Stoddard, who earned his first save.
Marlllen 1, Y~ 8
· Floyd Bannister and two relievers
combined on a seven-hitw as Seattie blanked New York. Gai"Y Gray
drove In the game's only run with a
sixth-Inning sacrifice fly against
loser Ron Davis. Tom Paclorek and
Jeff Burroughs, who. had two hits
apiece, cracked singles In front of
Gray's sacrifice fly.
Davia had relieved Yankee shu
starter
Ron Guidry, who pitched
tout
ball for five innings but he was for·
ced to leave the game due to .a bone
. bruise on his right foot.

run.

Blyleven was one of the winning
pitchers Sunday, scattering seven
hits as he went the route in the nightcap. The curveballing right-hander,
acquired in an off-season trade with
the Pittsburgh Pirates, improved his
record to f&gt;.l.

J.

FAMILY CLINIC
David L. Carr, D.O.

(USPS 145-960)

'•
:·

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•
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•

For the record. • •

AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST
W L
Pet. GO
Cleveland
18 9
·667 Baltimore
19 11
.&amp;ll
1,/z
New York
19 14
2
.S76
Mllwauket'
17 15
.531
3~
Bo:rton
16 16
.500
4'&gt;
Detroit
16 17
.485
5
Toronto
II 7A
.3\4 II

WEST

Oaklantl
Texas

25
18

Olicago

California
Minnesota
Seattle

n
14

11
19

14
18

II
II

22
22
18

Kansas City

9

.676
.&amp;63
.543

4Y.z
5
6

.514

.333

12
12

.333

II

.:w

Cincinnati

14
16
19
18

.583
.529
.500
.500

5\1
7\1
8\1
8\1

22
Saturdly'a Games

.389

n11

Atlanla

San Francisco
Houston
San Diego

Cincinrtali 4,

20
18
19
18
14

1

ALLERGY

TesliDC aad Trealmeat

Test for: Inhalants

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Food
I
Chemicals
''
Shoe Derm ititis I'
Cosmetics
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DERMATOLOGY
Tumors Removed
Acne
Psoriasis
Exzema
All Skin Diseases
GENERAL PRACTICE

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Office 675-6971

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SWH11y'1Games
Cinclni\8U 4, Pittsburgh 3
St.Loui.s 4, Atlanta 3
Houston 6, Chicago I
Los Angeles 6, New York l
Philaclelphja 6, San Diego 3
San Francbco 5, Montreal 4, 12 innings
MODday'1G1mes
Montreal (Sanderson 4-1) at San Diego
(Welsll 2--2), In)
Phlladeblhla (Bystl&lt;tm :t-2) at Los Angeles (Va1enzuela &amp;-{!) , (n) ·
New York (Lynch 1·1) at Sar1 Francl!Jc(l

Pitl!Jbur~r:h

0
Montreal S, San Francisco 0
St. Louis 6, Atlanta 2
Hotuton 6, Chica~r:o I
Los An~r:eles 9, New York 0
San Diego 2, Phihtdt!lphia 1

~

MEIGS INI\I
PIZZA SHACI&lt;

•

A l&gt; lvlskm of Multimedia, In&lt;' .

.'

Brewers 6, A's 2
Offke_Hoan by Appollllmot
Ted Simmons lined a two-run
ztM JacbGa Ave.
triple to spark a five-run Milwaukee
. Pt. Ple&amp;llllt, WV 251M
sixth inning, leading . the Brewers
over Oakland. Loser Rick Langford, r----:---------~---------4--4, carried a 2-1 lead into the sixth,
•
•
•
•
4 4 4 4 4 4 4 A A A 4
4 A
•
•
but walked Jim Gantner and Charlie
~
Moore with one out. Gantner sc!lred ~
the tying run when second baseman •

successful season are (1-r), Andrea Riggs, Lori Rope,
Shari Drehel, Jean Horotn and Carla Smith.

Th e Dail y Sentinel

Pomeroy, Ohio
OPEN:

, Mon .. Tues., WPd., Thurs., 4:00 11 00

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Fri. and Sat., 4:00-1·00
Sunday 4:00-11:00
t
PHONE 992 -6674
~~·~y·················~·

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(Ripley :!A), (n)

\

Saturday's Games
Toronto 4, Oeve land 1
Detroit 7, California $
Baltimore 7, Minnesota 0
Kansas City 7, BOston 6

Research generates consistent proof that low tar
MERIT matches taste of higher tar brands.

WHAT'S SO COOL

New York 7, Seattl e 5
Milwaukee 6, Oak.land 5
ChiC&amp;JIO 9, Texas 1

ABOUT THE ADD-ON
ELECTRIC

SuOO.y's Gamet:
~r:ame

Cleveland 1·2, Toronto 0-1, 1st

10

i nnin~s

California 7, Detroit 1
Kansas City 5, Boston 4
Seattle \, New York 0
Chi ca ~r:o 9, Texa ~ 0
Baltimore 6, Mirrnesota J

HEAT PUMP?

Milwaukee 6. Oakland 2
NATIONAl. LEAGUE

EAST

w

St.Louis

L

19
21
18
12
8

Phuat~elria

Moptrea

Pittsbur~h

NewYo r
C hi ca~o

9
13
15
16
22

5 lli

,.

Pet. GB
679
618
I
r.4S
.129
1
.261 u
161 II

-

Five years ago, low tar MERIT sparked
a whole new era in smoking by deliver,
ing taste way out of proportion to tar.
Until MERIT, no low tar cigarette had
been able to prove it could match the
taste of higher tar_brands.

'"

WEST
Los An~eles

9

.H3

Vaughan's
.

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PROVIDED LEADERSHIP- Senlor members of
the Meigs' track team that have led Meigs to a very

Page-s

Dave McKay "let Cecil cooper's · ov~ T2-3lnnliigs to lean lll!ilimore
,grouDd ~- skip past him for an over Minnesota. ~abner, 2-1,

The Indians, meanwhile, are
currently playing the best ball in the
American League with 17 victories
in their last 23 games, including a
doubleheader sweep ·Sunday over
the Toronto Blue Jays, 1-0 and 2-1 in

MARAUDER SENIORS- Meigs Marauder senlor Ohlinger, Richard Dean, J eff Wayland, and Jerry
baseball players this season are Mike Miller, Steve Fields.

The Daily Sentinel

OPEN 7 DAYS
8 AM TlllO PM
CORNER OF LOCUST
&amp; PEARL ST.
MIDDLEPORT, OH.

Millions Endorse
. MERIT Thste
•

..

SUPERMARKET
Where Friendliness &amp; Savings Go Hand in Hand

SUPERIOR 12 oz.
WI EN ERS••••.!.~9;.- .69
HOMEMADE HOTDOG
SAUCE (From The Deli)
$119 LB.
ALL YOUR PICNIC SUPPLIES
INCLUDING- ICE

We VVIII le Open Memorial Day,
- f t V 25th
9 A.M• • 6 P.M.

.••In 110t

It'S a·eoo1 pamp•1

.. .•_____

You probablY already know that the Add-on
Electric Heat Pump can be an energy-saving
partner to your existing fUrnace no matter
what fuel It uses. And-that It could save you
money, conserve energy and lower your winter
heating bill.
But what you may not know Is, In hOt
weather the heat pump reverses to become a
"cool pump"- hlgh-efflclencv-central air condJ.
tlonlng that cools and dehumidifies your home.
So If you're looking forward to saving
energy costs next winter, while taking care of
your summer cooling nH&lt;IS, find out how to
do it with your all-weather friend, the Add-on
Electric Heat Pump. The facts you need are In
our free booklet. SAVE.• It's vours for the asking
•
If you mall ·In the attached coupon.

I

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•save America'S VlluaOIIIInlrO'I

we
OHIO
t

_,

1would like to 111Vtmorwl11fol 11•t1on on
the Adei-On EleCtriC Hilt Pump. Pltlll
IIIICI me vour fret SAVE booklet.

Name
AddnKS

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:phone

state

Zip

I
•'·

I

Mll~s':v1ees
Department
Ohio PoWer comoanv

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P.O.IOX400
301 Clevelancl AY!. S.W.
canton, OhiO .Wt\U

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It our belt

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Switching studies con-firm it 90% of smokers
switching to MERIT are
~- coming directly from
higher tar cigarettes.
Fact: Since its introduction, MERIT has gained
more smokers thari any
other ·low tar brand!

' ' ' · ., . . .. , ••"1

.

\
MERIT
Filter

MERIT: Taste Success
MERIT continues to win higher tar
smokers with its unique combination of
taste, ease of switch, and long,term
satisfaction.
A combination that
appeals to million~ of
smokers who" have
MERIT switched to - and stayed
with- the first proven
Menthd
taste alternative to higher
tar smoking.
The momentum builds:
MERIT is changing the
future of smoking.
" N t •~s- ~r

........., -r .. •&lt;:o ...

.

LO,W TAR --ENRICHED FLAVOR"

· LOW TAA-'ENRICHEO FLAVOR"

OPh~ Morrlllnc:. t~ll

Kings: 8mg "tar:' 0.6mg nicoline - 100's Reg: 10 mg "tar:' 0.7 mg nicotine100's Men: 11 mg "ta( D.Bmg nicotine av-. per cigarette, FTC Report Dec:79

~-'

Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Ypur Health ..

Kings &amp; too's
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�Mondly, Mav 18, 1981

Zion Church hosts .
mother-daughter fete ·

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

Page-6-Monday, May 18, 1981

A mother-daugher banquet was
held recently at the Zion Church of
Christ.
The welcome was given by Mrs.
Harley Johnson with Mrs. Gene
Lambert liiving "What is il Grand-,
mother?"
Mrs. Dan Arnold, Mrs ..
1
Bill McElroy, and.Mrs. Ron Riffle ·
sang some popular songs with a
' comedy routine. Charlotte Lambert
presented a pet flea act and Melanie
Arnold and Christie HaYJ!OS gave an
exercise routine. Mrs. Robert Purtell and Mrs. Harley Johnson gave a
skit. "Berth ol an Upper or
Howareya?"
There was a poem by Mrs. John·
son, a reading, 'ABride's Dilemma"
by Mrs. Gene Lambert, and a song,
"A Mother's Task" by Mrs. Lambert and Mrs. Purtell who also had
the devotions. Mrs ..Johnson, Mrs.
John Murphy, and Mrs. Howard
Thomas had the program on hobbies
and talents with many crafts being
shown including sewing, ceramics,
crocheting, quilts, macrame,

Linda Eason takes John P. Sousa Award New approach in
I\ ..... .
teaching Johnnie
how to read. , •
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Po~r

Toys, a new approach in the
struggle to ~cb Johnnie to read,
have been added to the Middleport
Public Ubrary's list of thtngs to
lend.
The wide array of toys purchased
for use in Meigs County has been
funded by OVAL (Ohio Valley
Association of libraries) through a
$1,000 grant.

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WGHEST - The blgbest award given at the annual Meigs lfigh
School Band Banquet Thursday nlght went to Undo Eason, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Eason, Route 3, Pomeory. Linda, who will major In
music when she attends college in the fall, won the John Pbillp Sousa
Award as weD as four other awards. Presenting the Sousa Award to Miss
Eason is Director Doug Hill. Miss Eason is a senior.
ROCK SPRINGS - Linda
Eason, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Eason, Route 3, Pomeory,
won the John Philip Sousa
Award, the highest award given,
at the annual Meigs High School
Band Banquet held Thursday
night at the high school.
Miss Eason, who will major
music when she attends college in
the fall, was the top award winner of the band this year. Besides
the Sousa Award for outstanding
performance, Miss Eason
received a senior trophy, the
most outstanding senior award,
the best brass instrumentalist
award and a pin lor participation
in the jazz band.
A junior, Lynne Oliver,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Oliver, Union Ave., Pomeory,

won the coveted Arion Award
given also lor outstanding per·
formance and musicianship.
Miss Oliver also was presented
the most outstanding junior
award and a junior award, a pin

in the replica of the instrument
she plays, a trombone.
Receiving other special awards
were Paula Swindell, most outstanding freshman ; Cindy
Crooks, most outstanding
sohomore; Tammy Eichinger,
best woodwind instrumentalist;
April King, best percussionist,
and Bill Browning, the director's
award.
Pins lor jazz band participation
went to Helen Slack, Rita
Rhodes, Angie Hatfield, Barb
Chappelear, Becky Long, Brenda
Chappelear, Sherri Hysell, Karla
Brown, Kim Birchfield, Deena
Neece, Vaughan Spencer, Unda
Eason, Chris Richmond, Gerald
Spencer, Ronda Mitchell and
Kelly Brown.
Receiving freshmen awards of
lour inch chenille letters were:
Bill Anderson, Sherry Amold,
Tammy Black, Megan Cale, Barb
Chappelear, Carl Davis, Charlie
Davis, Penny Dewhurst, Patty
Dully, Lynn Epple, Jeff Gilkey,

ARION - The coveted Arion Award for outstandlDg musiclaosblp
went to Lynne Oliver, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Oliver, Pomeroy,
at the annual Meigs High School Band Banquet Thursday night. Lynne
was named also the outstanding junior class band member. Presenting
the Arion Award to Miss Oliver is Band Director Doug Hill.

Scott Hysell, Rhonda Jeffers,
Todd Johnson, Dawnette Norris,
Angie Pratt, Christie Quivey,
Becky Rile, Cheryl Riffle,
Christina Riggs, Paul Riggs, Joy
Sauters, Amy Sisson, Vaughan
Spencer, Paula Swindell, Terri
Thoma, Melvin Van Meter, Zandra Vaughan, Jeannie Welsh,
Sonja Wise, Anita Hannon and
Lisa Jarvis.
Receiving sophomore awards
of six inch chenille letters were:
Jamie Acree, Robin Baret!,
Karla Brown, Cindy Crooks, Kim
Fraley, Karen Goggins, Edie
Grimm, Barb Grueser, Angie
Hatfield, Paula Horton, Roxanne
McDaniel, Margery Miller, Ronda Mitchell, Cindy Musser, Steve
Patterson, Rita Rhodes, Chris
Richmond, Krista! Sisson, Kris
Snowden, Julie Spencer, and
Joyce Stewart.
Juniors receiving pins made
with a replica of the instrument
each plays were: Kathy Blake,
Vicki Boyles, Kim Birchfield,

Pam Crooks, Susan Danner,
Teresa Dorst, Tammy Eichinger,
Mark Friend, Brenda Fry, Mary
Hawley, Scott Johnson, Robin
Kitchen, Lynn Kloes, Rochelle
McDaniel, Jell Nash, Lynne
Oliver, Dan Riggs, Helen Slack,
Laura Smith, Melinda Thomas,
and Becky Tillis.
Seniors received 12-inch
trophies and they include:
Angela Baker, Ruth Blake, Kelly
Brown, Bill Browning, Jill Byers,
Brenda Chappelear, Linda
Eason, Bob Evans, Lori Faulkner, Sheila Horky, Jean Horton,
Sherri Hysell, April King, Katie
Lewis, Beckie Long, Deena
Neece, Beth Perrin, Carla Smith,
Camille Swindell, sue Taylor,
Barb Thomas, Jean Welker, Debbie Woodyard, Dean Colwell, Bill
Dyer and Gerald Spencer. ·
Awards were presented by
Director Doug King. Parents of
bandsmen were guests for the annual affair. Barbara Thomas
gave the band history.

They may be checked out of the
library, juat like a book, two per
child lor a month at a time. Parents
will be held responsible for maintaining the condition of the toys they
borrow, and l'llturning them to the
library withtn the allotted time.
Once a toy is on loan and returned

to the llbrary, it will be cleaned and
sterilized before going back into the
lending area, Ruth Powers, Middleport librarian advlaes.
Patty Asbeck, a resource person
lor the Meigs libraries, discussed
the role of toys in child development
at a meeting of parents and children
Thursday afternoon at the Middleport library.

Mrs. Asbeck stated that play
provides a base lor language
building and eventual mastery of
reading.
.
"Words come only from a foundation of play experiences, from encounters with people, objects and
events which make up our world.
Play nourishes reflective thinking,
associative memory, and the
naming and labeling necessary lor
the eventual mastery of reading,"
she said.
Noting that "play is a child's way
of life from infancy to his eighth
year,!' Mrs. Asbeck, a teacher, said
that it is the most natural way for a
child to use his Cllpscities, to grow
and to learn many skills.
She described playtime as an aid
to growth, giving a feeling of

strength, relief from powerlessnesi
in an adult society, a chance to play
plans, to judge what is best In each
play situation, to create and control
the sequence of events.
''Activity begins in delight and ends in wisdom," Mrs. Asl&gt;eck commented, as she discusaed bow a child
puts his ideas and feelings Into action through self-choice Inherent in
play and resulting in confidence as a
young child moves into the role r1
decision maker.

quilling, plants, latch hooking, and
paintings in acrylics, oUs and water
colors. Melanie Arnold had a skit,.
"Mr. Mfldovit."
Attending were Mrs. Ardis
WaggOner, Linda Riffle, Bonnte Arnold, Sherrie Arnold, Viola Haning,
Fred Elam, Carolyn Elam, Paula
Haynes, Mabel Michael, Kristi
llaynes, Kay McElroy, Jessica
·McElroy, Kay Proffitt, Helen Johnson, Virginia Wyatt, Iva Johnson,.
Lindo Darnell, Dorothy Reeeves,
Gladys Tuckerman, Ida Murphy, 1
Tyson Eva!l8, Evelyn Thoma, Mabel
Oliver, Ruth Underwood, Virginia
UnderWood, Kim Hamm, Tina RH·
Fie, Marjorie Purtell, Ann Williams,
Kathryn Johnson, Ann Lambert,
Charlotte Lambert, Cannel Evans,
·Mary Hamm, Pat Arnold, Melanie
Arnold, Barbara Davis, Ashli Davis,
Rhonda Haning, Cheryl Halley,
Tammy Johnson, Peggy Murphy,
Carrie Wears, SUZI!nne Wamer,
Kimberly Warner, and Sherry Abbott.

Kitchen .Cousins highlight
Chester Gardeners gathering

The Importance of a child having
freedom of action through trial and
error activities without fear r1
ridicule or failure was discussed by
Mrs. Asbeck. .
Shedescribedplayasatimewhen
a child imitates, symbolizea, and
fonns attachments in that it has a
unique power lor building interpersonal relations. II encourages
opportunity to investigate the
material world, to develop concentration, to further interests, and
to team about mastery of the
physical self, she concluded.

There are rag dolls, with shoe ·
strings that tie, zippers that zip, and
buttO!I8to button. There are puzzles
which teach colors and numbers,
games that teach rhythnn and coor- ·
dination, bags of blocks lor building,
pull toys, telephones, cash registers,
trucks and trains.

.

.

Janelle HaptonslaU was installed
as president of the Ohio Eta Phi
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority
at a meeting Tuesday night at the
Meigs Inn.
Others installed were Pat Circle,
vice president; Jenny Smith,
treasurer; and Johanna Shuler,
secretary. Plans were made for a
picnic to be held on May 26 at the
home of Mrs. Lois KeUy, 6:30p.m.
hosted by the loaing attendance

president. F~!f the cultural report,
Lynn Crow and Carol Crow presented Meigs Local Superintendent
David Gleason who spoke on the
bond issue. The Chapter endorses
the issue. Mrs. Haptonstall and Mrs.
Cummings served refreshments . .. _

To attend seminar

- Miiiibeii.cilehOVih'a Wltnessei

in the Mlcldleport ar. will be attending 1 Billie lll!1liJiar May 18 and
17 at the MeliiOrill· Field House in ;r:;=:~.~;¥.;
Hun11J1810n, W.Va.
. ,

I

Revival to begin
liiili&gt;L!PORT-A revival wiD be

blld lit the Alh Street Freewill llap111&amp; Olilrdlln Mlddlep0i1 be8lnnlDI
• 'MGIIIIIJ with llobll1 Grallb u the

IM....

'liJDJ!
TOYS FOR LOAN - Emny Albeek aad Billy
Crue play with MVenl ol the 111J1 lor lou alllle Middleport Pabllc Ubraryt Tbe educalloaal ~ wblcb can

be borrowed two per cbBd lor • moath at. lime can be
cheeked oat just llte a book.

r

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LENDINGTOYI-MNdhpvrtl+ +at~yt.
A811•et. 1llkwJ

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122 I , . . . . taeldldde\11 b 11hl1m1

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a!Md my sulto bt lffrred 11 Columblt Ohio. t~rs dar aiMI ~Itt. Acbe11
J ~ttMord J1., 5u~. ollnsunnCA! ol OhiO.
fSta122&amp;l

Stale of 01110. Otpartmtm ct tns~rtnct. Celtrlieate ~ CofiolpUIICt - Tilt
under~lfll!d , 5upl!rlfltmdtnt Dll~wanCA! D4 the Sllleol 01110, fief~
cMhts 11\11

ftOWTY UrE ASSN AMUT llGALIIU CO
ollonl GfM. !bit oii.IIOIIo, hM complied Willi tile laws Cll!IIS SUit
IPPablo! 1o ~ 1od II IM11mnd dunna tile c~rten! Y9f lo trntct r~

tnis lUll its 1!19"1Piill! lrllsirwu ol•nsurance. Its Fr111nclll arnd~10n 11
~ h' m1MU11 staleiMfiC 10 hive been aloiiDMon lleumtler 31,
tm·, Admrtlfd asseb S1 5U~9.21UO, lrlbllrtits. Sl44,02.206.00,
Surplus~ JIUfi1.07! 00. lntonrt. S~ 2. m.822 00, bPtndl!gres,
IJUb~

3.00

IN Wl rNESS WHUtHlF, I ~awe htr!Wnto sulls.c:ubed my name and

CMMdllly Wllkr btllfil!diiCOII/I!Itrui, C411G.IIIISiJIJ IIMI llltf Rcbef1

J Rlllbltlld ) ., SuQI. ol l n~urance ol OhMl

!Sut 2l~J

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A total of $10,111 in pledges was
reported lor the hike bike at the
recent meeting of the Meigs
Association for Retarded Citizens
held at the Melg,'l Community
School.
Pat Carson, president, extended a
special thanks to the React team,
the merchants and individuals who
pledged funds, 'and to Carol Layh,
the hike bike chairman. Plans were
made for an open house to be held at
the school on June 4 at which time
prizes will be awarded to the winnefS and recognltlon will be given to
others who helped. The staff at the
school will have charile o1 invitaticm.' Refrelhmenla ~han­
dfed by Peggy Harris, Gladys
Brothers, Nora Rice and Phllllll
Sklmer.
.
A report was given on the special
olympicl held Saturday In Next
l.exJnllon. The Qle olympics will
be held June 2&amp;-28 in Columbus.

'•

IP~Iublt Ul it 11111·• Mltllorlltcl di.Jinllltl! current'"' lo lllnSiclrn
tfltt illlt it! IPPfOill'llle I)WntssafiMUitnCe lis FIIIII'ICIII COIICirt~ IS
5/lown Ill ih1nnllll Jllkmenllllllvtbten n JoiiOW!. DriOHtrt~ber Jl.
1979 ..millfd awb. S214.~8. 506.00. LJ•~•oo . SI 92.51UJ2.oo,
Sl.lfplus, S20.816,16..00: IIICOfllt, ~ . 314.981.00: [r ptnd~ur es.
$4li4J,274.00; Net us&amp;, S22.119,m .OO, C.~tll , SU6l,SID.OO
IN WITNESS Wtt£REOF , I liM fttra.rlhl SllbSCIIIIN my NIM tM

till WIOIE SS EREOf. I hWI! ~eunto IWscribed my n1rne an4
Clllstd l!lytUIIO bt llfilld II Cotvrnbus. (Ill~ . !till dlf n datt. Rober!
J Rlltb~d.Jr . Sirfl. DIIIISIIIII\Ct 01 Olllo.
(Sui2Sll

MARC reports!~~~~!
hike bike take I~~

'

Paul Harvey always talks
about this traveling microphone.
I wonder what peripatetic
librarians have - other than
bookmobiles.
Some of my travels have been
. up to Athens to get sanders .lor
Pomeroy Public library's floor.
. Brian and Robbie and I were
supervised and assisted by Barco
Chemical sales director Keith
Rhndes, whose mother-in-law
lives in Pomeroy. We had two
sanders, an edger, and hands as
tools. Mter we sanded the floors,
' we put on an apoxy finish (hnade
. by Barco, of course). We didn't
have time to use the line sand·
paper, so the floor is rougher than
we wanted. Even so, it looks
much better than it used to.
Another trip was up to Colwnbus, to the annual conference of
the Ohio Community Education
Association. Last laD I made a
mistake. I said I'd chair the Ohio
Library Association Task Force
on Community Education if they
were desperate. They were. So I
got the job of tabulating the Task
·Force's survey of public libraries
and reporting the results to
anyone who wants to know. Since
I'm really not certain what the
raw data means (except that I
·can see that libraries have a lot to
offer and already are u~ed to :

s..SH.1!ll
..... ~~
...~IK! ......
IK! ,,,...,• .
. He!: mets. S6B.239. ss.oo. Clplt!, suoo.ooo.oo

-1 =~

.

Ubrartaa

o1 GIMIII Ill~ SUII oi iiiiCh'lln, hH tor~~pbed • •lh lhe llws of thl\
$bit IDOklblt It ~ ancllllllti!Or!Md ~~~~~~the tlllflnl yutlo tr IIISICl
n thiS lhle rb IP!JIII!)mle busrnest olr~UII'I'\Ct. Its FN\ftiCialcond~IOn
II~ boj ibtn~ullstlll!lllfllltolllwt bMnMiolcrWIOIIOectmbetJI.
197t AlliN~ IISftS, S279,(K,U2,00; lilbi!OI, 1211,256.167 00.

Kathy Cornmlngs presided at the
meeting and thanked the members
lor courtesies ol · her year as

\

By Ellen BeD

Shteo!Otlio, DtDartmentollnsurtnCt, Ctrtikalt o!Ctrnp\Wice- Tilt StatttiOtrro, ~MIIIMI ottnwranct, Ctrtbcllrol Coro'*-nte- T~e
~. Sltptrlllllndtnl olinwr IMt ol 1M iilll crl 01110, 1\t!eb¥ llftlltnllt*l SuPtllftltMeftl ot l~llllet Gillie Strlt rri Ollro. hrreli!'

team:

'

Your
Libraries
cooperating), there will have to
be a meeting of the Task Force in ,
June to draw up an official
·analysis. I hope I'm not the only:
one at the meeting!
This is the time of year that the
OVAL libraries start planning the
grant proposals lor next year.
Last year's planning resulted in
100 toys at Middleport library as
weD as a continuation of OVAL
book deposits in our libraries,
lihns to borrow, reference an in·
\erlibrary loan service from Ohio ·
Unlverslty, and more. So spending time on OVAL pays off. Now
ill could just figure out some way
to get the same results in half the
time - and half the trips to
Wellston.
The trip I'm really looking lorward to is late in June, when I'D
go to San Francisco lor the
American Library Association's
annual conference. One of my
best friends from junior high
·school lives nearby and we wiD
spend the evenings together cat·
ching up on all the time since we
last met. So I will have enjoyable
evenings alter educational days.
Most likely this column will not
appear for three or four weeks in
late June and early July. When
that happens, you'll know your
roving librarian is on the move,
picking up new ideas to bring
back to your libraries.

Sentinel Social Calendar

Name Haptonstall as president

While the toys will be loaned from
the Middlepori library only for the
next six montha, part ol the collection will be moved to the Pomeroy
Library alter that.

150 attend OES
Inspection Thursday

posed.
For roll caD members named their
favorite flower grown from a bulb.
Mrs. Mae Mora gave devotio!l8 on
the 18 Psalm with a meditation and
poem on "Having a Good Day."
Snips of wisdom were given by
Mrs. Eleanor Knight who talked on
the rubber plant describing it as the
perfect howie plant with overa
thousand varieties. She said it can
remain in the same position year af.
WINDING . TRAIL GARDEN
MONDAY
ter year, but that it needs to be kept
CLUB,
8 p.m., at the home of Mrs.
REVIVAL
be~g
Monday
.
at
out of direct sunlight and misted
Wilma
Terrell.
frequently. Repotting should take Ash Street Free Will Baptist Church
place in the spring and propagation at 7:30 p.m. nightly. Robert Grubb,
Ice cream soci4l set
Gallipolis, will be the speaker.
is made by air layering.
PoMEROY-The Meigs Rowdies
MEN'S FELLOWSinP of Meigs
II was noted that members made
4-H
Club will be holding an ice
16 arrangements for the Eastern County Churches of Christ Monday
cream
social and bake sale across
Band banquet with Mrs. _Virginia at 7:30 p.m. at Pomeroy Church r1
from the Meigs County Musewn on
Chadwell and Mrs. Clarice Krautter Christ.
Saturday,
May 23, beginning at 12
as chairman. Four members at·
noon.
tended the County Association
meeting. Associate members were , - - -= :---- -- - - . , - - - - - -Stile~~ Ohio, O!p"t~t ~l lnwrJBCt, Cerlr iiCiteolt.np••nce- Tne
remembered at Easter lime.
Sllltal()hro,OI!parimentollnsuranu. Ce!llliCIItoi Compllance- h·,.
u~der$1(ntd, Supenn!e'ldenl ollnl~r~nce ol t~r Slltt ~ Otuo. hfreb,
un~&amp;r!ltntcl , ~ptnntl!llderrl ollll!urance clllle State oll)llro. l'lertlll'
Mrs. Macblr and Mrs. Betty Dean etrtr!ies tn~MIW.llMPU UFl ASSURANCE CO
urtrtrn lhl\
served refreshments.
(II Ll)lll (if[Wt Sllle d IHr~. hn oompkcj 111th the laws of tins g,le
UNITED .WER INS CO

"Kitchen Cousins," an
educational exhibit and explanation
of plants grown from fruits and
vegetables, was presented by Mrs.
Maurita Miller and Mrs Ada Holter
at the recent meeting of the Chester
Garden ·Club held at the home of
Mrs. Jennie Machir.
The program leaders told how to
make hanging baskets with carrot
tops, talked about bean sprouts, and
gave the dlrectiO!I8 for an avocado
tree. For the tree, they said the
avocado seed should be washed in
tepid water and then three toothpicks should be driven through the
seed to be used in suspending the
seed, broad and down, over a jar.
Only half of the seed should be
covered with water and then the jar
s~d be placed in wann spot out of
direct sunlight. II takes two to six
weeks to root and once the stem has
emerged about seven inches, it
should be cut back so that the tree
will branch out. When the plant has
leafed then it should be planted in
potting soil leaving the seed haH ex·

Mrs. Asbeck displayed the ap;
proximately 50 educational toys
which are lor loan at the llbray.
Each comes in a plastic pouch,
many with several pieces, and are
suitilble lor boys and girls from inlaney.

Tile Daily Sentinei-Page-7
. ·r

Pomeroy- Middleport, Olllo

Tllere wtU •be ..,...,
,.,... lldl ..... with Bid '

Clrol Sl~n on Monday,
a.1 " w, .Jodie 11111 ~ on
.... ..,, the Mln1ll8n Ill Love
Weda 111, Nina and the Alb llnlt
stq 1 Gil 'I'JiwiiiiJ, LDiund RubJ
Cll l'rldq, and Grlllll I'IIIIIIJ..,JD I
llidaadiJ... view wiD 11111111&amp;7:•
llth,p inl. The public II invlta

Stilt of Oilier, Oeparllll!lll ot l~surlll(f. Certthute c!CotntMIICt - 1M
lllldmllf*l, ~pennltndenl olln11111nr:e of 1M Stilt ri Ohln. lief~ ,

""''"'""'

ol rhrtn, Shte ot lnH, hn co~ with the! 11-sollhll State •pella·
tH . ~ IIIIJ II IWtfl«lltd d~llft(IM CUI !tnt rur101!1nuct n tlrllltltl
~••llPIIIDflllt IIUS~AtU ofiiWiffl(.l. ns rr11111Ciat CGfldlllon 11 ' IIOWII trr
lis lflnual sllltmtnl 1o hffl bttllulolow\ ~ December 31 , 197~
AdmittKia~. S116.570.586.00: babll!lt!., W

.411,.415_00; Su•pl.n.
$30,191,170 00, Income, 111,!71,001.00 ; hpend•lurn,
$59,0'JS,527.00; He! assets. S32.0'H.I10.00; Clprlal, $1,200,000.00
IN WITNESS Ml(R[Of. I ~Itt hert~~nto subscnbec! nty l'llllf 11\d
c.aused rnr wal Ill buffind 11 ColumbuJ. OhiCl. t~rsda,o aod date. Rtbeft
J.lbtc~l~d •~ Supt of lnsllfNict ot Ohn
(Seal E6!1!

StattoiOIIro. Otpartmentollnl~rlr~«, Ctrtilrate ottomplranee - Tilt
urrdrrsf:ned. Su~l'inlenCtnl ollnwrance tl the State al OhiO. lltftbr
tertries ttrll
AIJTOMOI:ILE INS CO Of HUTf(MI) CONN
o1 Hartford, Shte o1 Coru~ectrcut. ~" oornllhtd wrtrr tnt 1m ot !IUS~~
~bit Ill it IIWI lllltflcwued durrr1lhr! urrMI yw to tranlld in
ll'IIS state rb ~pp-QPllle Mnm d
It! finiOCIJl condibM il
siiDwft llr It!. 111"1111 $111ernenllll ~m M • ltM1 onOteemiMJ 31.
1979 Adlnltltd 1$Stlt. $64, 332,~!.00 llll*tles J24,l 59,34700;
Sur!II Us, $]7,523.233 00: lrKomt, 12~485.~. 00: UpeMirturn.
Sl4.1SU6600, Nft mfl~ $'0.113,23(00: Captll. S1,650.000.1Jl
IN WITNESS 'MI(f«:Of, l n1w treftuniO WIKCflbld mr "lmtlnd
uustdmy 1tallll bel~lutd llCol~mbus . OIIIO,Ibrsdlylod Nte. R*"
1 ll:llthford Jr., Suo!. of1nswrtl1ce ol Direr.
ISuiiU

"""'Jra

HARRISONVILLE
Ap·
proximately 150 attended the annual
inspection of Harrisonville Chapter
255, Order of the Eastern Star,
Thursday night at the Masonic Temple.
Inspecting officer was Estelle
Ankrum, deputy grand matron.
Presiding officers were Joan
Kaldor, worthy matron, and Chester
King, worthy patron. Dr. Howard I.
Shull, past grand patron, was
presented beblnd the altar and
escorted to the east by the conductn!ss, Stella Atkins.
Other grand officers presented
were Donna McLean, representative
to South Dakota, Jo Arm MeHaffey,
representative to Vermont in Ohio;
Wfkie Whitley, representative to
Nova Scotia; Joyce Malisher, grand
page to the deputy; Chester King,
grand aide; Barbara McKibben,
grand page to Grand Esther.
District officers present were
Jean Moury, president; Barbara
Lowery, vice president; and Bernice
Hollman, state secretary. AlSO
presented were honored Masons,
Bob King , Jim Wallace, Jim
Buchanan, Bob Reed, and Wilbur
Conklin, nine visiting worthy
matro!l8, eight visiting worthy
patrons, Lois Pauley, a grand chapter conunittee member lor the heart
lund, Elsie Schoenian, representative of the O.E.S. home, Ruby
Diehl, a 50 year member, and 34
visiting past matrons and nine
visitine past patrons.

Past matrons of Harrisonville
Chapter present were Bernice Wlnn,:
Allegra Will, Marjorie Rice, Ber-·
nard Hollman, Frances Young, .
Ruth Erlewine, Lois Pauley, Joan :
Kaldore, Pearle Canaday, Janice :
DeBord, Lois l'hompson, · Gracie ;
Wilson, Pauline Atkins, stella ,
Atkins, Donna Nelson, and Avanell :
George.
Past patrons present were Harold :
Rice, Nonnan Will, Dallas DeBord, .
Charles King, Dana Hol&amp;nan, Fred .
George, Stanley Kaldor, and Don.
Wilson .
The sunsblne pages were Miss .
Diehl, Helen Johnson, Avanell
George, and Rosalie King.
Candidates were Debra and Bob
Miller.
Donna McLean brought greetings
from the South Dakota worthy grand
matron, and the deputy grand
matron thanked the chapter lor support. She was presented an honorary
membership by Chester King, grand
aide.
A potluck dinner was held
following the meeting. Music was
provided by organist, Jane Wise.
The haD and dinind area was
decorated with spring flowers.
Chapters represented were New
Marshfield, Athens, Valley, Mariet·
ta, Evangeline, Albany, Lowell,
Minear, Webb, Pomeroy, Glouster,
Wilkesville, Serena at McArthur,
and Mason Chapter 'JJJ7 in Mason, W.
Va.

FHA -HERO elects officers

Officers were elected lor the 1981·
82 school year when the Eastem
FHA·HERO Chapter met recently at
the school.
Elected were Sherry Myers,
president; Margery Myers, vice
president; Karen Jacks, secretary;
Pam Davis, treasurer; Tarruni
Sayre, parlimentarian; Treasa
Wilson, historian; Robyn Pitzer,
news reporter, and Tina Spencer,
recreation.
Plans for a mother-daughter tea to
be held on May 20 were made with
the freshman. to have charge of the
room and program, an~ t.he

sophomores the refreshments.
Named to the lair booth committee
were Tina Spencer, Kathy Pierce,
Sheila Harris, Margery Myers, Pam
Davis, Sherry Myers, and Helen
Myers.
The FHA-HERO wiD have charge
of the pet show and patrol at the
Meigs County Fair, Aug. 18-22, with
aU FHA members in the county to
participate.
Others attending the meeting were
Kathy Pooler, Sherri Putman,
Kathy Pierce, Laurie Lance, Mary
Hibbs, Sheila Harris, and the advisor, Janice Kestner.

�Page-a The Daily Sentinel'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

DICK TRACY

.Monday, May 11, 1911

Scholarship presentations highlight Southern assembly

SCHOLARSHIPS - These three Southern High School senlOJ'll were
awarded scholarships during the annual awards aasembly Friday. They
are, I tor, Sonja Hill, scholarship to Hocking Technical College; Peggy
Bush, four year scholarsblp to Rio Grande College and Mark Simpson,
the Ohio Board of Regents, $1,000 scholarship.

RACINE - Three scholarships
were presented along with other
awards at the annual Southern High
School awards assembly held
Friday morning.
Receiving a four year scholarsblp
to Rio Grande College was Peggy
Bush, class valedictorian.
Mark Simpson received the Ohlo
Board of Regents Scholarship which
amountsto$1,000a year, renewable.
Earlier he was awarded a $500
Stocker Scholarship at Ohio University. Receiving a scholarship to
Hocking Valley Technical College
was Sonja HiU.
Dale Teaford was presented a
large trophy as Southern High
School Athlete of the Year by Coach
Carl Wolfe for his work in baseball,
basketball and football.
Coach Wolfe also reported that
Teaford bas been awarded a
scholarship worth more than $7,000
at Marietta College.
Awards presented included: Bob
Lee, the DeKalb award; Albert
Holman and Bob Lee, the
agriculture award; Charlotte
Pickens, the class salutatorian, and
Mark Simpson, social studies; Tammy Bable, home economics; Paul
Cardone, Jr., and Mark Simpson,
science' Steve Circle and EMc
Harris, industrial arts; Sandra
Evans, typing; Teresa Rice, shorthand; Bonnie Boso and Peggy Bush,
English; Peggy Bush, French; Bonnie Boso and Teresa Holstein, vocal

Television
•
•
VIewmg

..

music; 'Roger Jones and Darrell
Johnson, special awards, work
study; Della Johnson, activities;
Janet Middleswart and Paul Cardone, Jr., citizenship; Darrell Johnson, perfect attendance; Peggy
Bush, Della Johnson and Mark Simpson, honor awards for honor roll
through the year with attendance
high. The 21 seniors of the National
Honor Society were recognized and
will be presented pins later and band
awards were present.
Melissa Yonker won the highest
band award given, the John Philip
Sousa Award with Becky Rhodes
winning a new award "Semper
Fidelis" for musical excellence.
Presented trophies were the five
seniors of the band, Miss Yonker,
Miss Rhodes, Mary Slavin, Peggy
Bush and Arrnintha Holter.
The Arion Award for outstanding
mu.'!icianship went to a junior,
Melinda Sabnons. Miss Sabnons and
Kent Wolfe were named the junior
class ·Danforth winners as the outstanding girl and boy of the class.
Kent this year broke the Southern
High School record in baseball for
hits and was named to the
All-8VAC basketball team.
During the ceremonies Peggy
Bush, class valedictorian, and
Charlotte Ann Pickens, class
salutatorian, were presented
medallions significant to their
positions in the class.

EVENING

e:oo

~E GiVE!O

OUT '-/0 INT6RV IcWl',--ANP
N&amp;VIi'R P0l'e9 FOil. PMOTOGRAPH:;;L
IIUT JUDe lNG F~OM HI:; RECORD

BAND- Top senlors of the Southern HIP Baud reooplled at tile 1111"
nual awards usembly Friday were MelliA Yonker, left, wiDDer ollbe
John Philip Souaa Award, the highest honor given, and lledy Rhodes,
winner of a new award "Semper Ffdeles" for maafCIII excellence.

ANNIE

topic at conference
Featured speaker for the May 9
closing session of the state conference of Mental Health
professionals was John O'Kane,
Executive Director of Metro Atlanta
Mental Health Association, who
spoke on "Atlanta-Linkages for Service in a Community Crisis."
"Every year in America's cities
children are murdered. Children
and the elderly have always been the
most vulnerable among us," he said.
Fonner first lady, ROIIBlynn Carter,
once applied the same phrase "the
most vulnerable among us" to our
country's mentally ill population.
Kane's vOice broke as he spoke ~
the tension in Atlanta, adding, "L!n't
it too bad it takes something like thls
to make a community concerned
about its children?"
The conference titled, " Unkages
for Service" - Working Together in
Mental Health was held in Colunr
bus, May 7-9.
It was sponsored by the Ohlo Com-

HONORED - These three seniors of Southern High School received
recognition wllh s~tal awards Friday at the annual awards usembly.
From lbe left are Janet Mlddleswart and Paul Cardone, Jr., lbe good
citizen boy and girl of lbe graduating class and Della JobDJJoo for outstanding activities.

~re :

AH, THERE YOU ARE, ;516H.'- YEG,

BOYS! HAS THE

I'IAitBUC~~~

"PROFE550ft"
Al!.ltiVEO FfWM

THiS EQUIPMENT?! TELL ME
H0¥1 'M I 5lJPI'OSEO WHAT ELSE
T' '1/0R.K Willi
YOU NEED,
DADe!JRNED IJII!IIt II
JUNK.?!

HIG QUARTERS

munity Mental Health AMociation,
Maxine S. Plununer, President; the
Ohio Coullcll of Community Mental
Health Centers; the Ohio Department of Mental Health; and · the
Mental Health Asloclation of Ohio.
Annatte Levtne, Jackson County,
of the Mental Health AMociaUon
wu cllllrperson for the event attended by several hundred mental
health professionals.

YET'?

Y' CALL

YEG •• JUGT

H~!lHAT

Programs, dllplays and work-

MEANS WE'LL

shope focused on the "Unkages"
theme ar.d emphasized the State

Department's challenge to "do more
withlesll" in light of budgetcuta.
Integration of Mental Health with
other human services was dilcusled;
with speclal concern on the .-11 of
those discharged from Institutions,:
children and the elderly.
:
Services for the mentally ill of-·
fender, perspective on advocacy,·
and the clergy u counaelors, were:
also t"iCB of workshop sessions.

NEED A
BURI'AU OF
IN\!10S11GATION!

Shade Valley Council
stages flower show
Junior exhibitors displayed
specimens and arrangements in the
recent home flower show of the
Shade Valley Council of Floral Arts
held at the home of Mrs. Jackie
FI'OIIt.
Larissa Long won the sweepstakes .
· award in the horticulture classes,
while Donna Curtis took best of show
in tbe arrangements, with Larissa
receiving secood, and honorable
mention going to Susie Francis and.
Debbie Frost. There were 10
specimens and four arrangements
ond!!play.

GASOLINE ALLEY

See if these
wi II fit!

Among the many things that springtime brings to mind Ia spring
cleanlng, and Pomeroy Postmaster Jim Soulsby has a reminder to Include your mailbox in this annual spring rite.
Mailbox Improvement Week, May 18-23, provides tile perfect op.
portunltyto clean, repair, reapint or replace your mailbox.
"Neat, attractive mailboxes add to the overall appearance of the
community and aid in the delivery of mall,"lbe Postmaat.er said.
Boxes should be within easy reach for letter carriers. On rural
routes, the carrier must have access to the box without leaving hla
vehicle. Mailboxes on rural and contract routes must be located on the
Mght hand side of the road in the direction traveled by lbe carrier,lbe
Postmaster said.
"Rain or snow leaking into the mailbox could ruin the apeclalletter;
so box aeams should be tight to prevent the 101111 or damage of mall
placed in the box," he said.
Box numbers and bouse numbers should be clearly vlllble on lbe
box, but Including the owner's name Ia optional. All mailboxes must
meet certain requirements for size, strength, llfety and location.
These guidelines are available from the local )ICllt office, Poltmuter
Soulsby said.

MFt. JI\RAMILLO
SAil:' HI!&gt; SHIP

.

CIOCKEOIN
SUENAVENTUAA

•

THE OTHER

OM!

'•

'•

~

L-----------------------------------~ 1
VOU GOT A
LETTER FROM
B~RNEV GOOGLE,
PAW

\

RECEIVE TROPIUES - Fm Millan al lbe

S.tllera Hllh Sebeolllaad received lnl*ielll lbe ...
Sllawarda 11R1111JfY Friday. Tiley are, freal, I to r,

\
Me1111a Yanter, Mlr)' Slavin; ._, Beet)' lUI d
Peay Balli ud ArmiDtlla Holler.
I

.

@@@@

''

J

ITAJECK I

I I rJ rJ

FRIENDS
(I) ABC NEWS
CIJ
. PADDINGTON BEAR
Paddlngton sends away for a
bo dy -building kit end bakes a
birthday cake lor Mr. Curry.
@ OVER EASY Guest : Dick

DON'rvou

WHAT'S

DARE OPEN
MY MAIL,
WOMAN!!
rr;

HE SAY?

rI

@@@

CBS LATE MOVIE
'QUINCY, t.t .E.' A Queatlon Of
Death ' An accident 't'iotlmiacer·
tilled dead by Quincy to ••ow a
kidney transplant, but a mal·
practice lawyer convince' a the
victim ' s family to bring a muhl·
million dollar lawsuit against
Qu incy. (Repoot) 'HARRY 0 :
Lester Two' Harry gets 1 gift of
French co logne from a
stewardeea friend, but suspects smuggling when ahela
euddenly kidnapped . (R•P"•tl
CJl
ABC CAPnONED NEWS
0
@I MOVIE ·(THRILLER) "
"EIIIplro Of The Ani•". 1877
'
12:00 CIJIDJ .FANTASYISLANDA
couple disenchanted with
tOday'a violent permlaalve

aociety and 1 young man with a

••'*' " •

NATJOIW. IIONCil - ne u
Nau..l .._._II I II •RIP ldllll_..
p. upulll nupl'l I&amp; ......,•• _ . aw•
1
'1)1. Plellrid an fnl&amp;, lit r,
1M, .... eu.-, Jr., secr11, I It r, ,. ..., .....,

Dill.,....., ...

dream of becoming a major
league beeeballaiiPeretar are
the gueate Ol'l Fantasy leland.
(R-at; 70tnlno.)
12:30 (l) •
aJ TOMORROW
COAIT•To-cOAIT Gueoll:
Ted Turner, awthor Alexandra
Penney. (90mlna.)
· 12:65 CJl IIICHAIID PliYOR: UVE '

J

Now arrange the circled letter&amp; lo
form the surprise answer, as suggest~ by the above cartoon.

I

A

Prlntanswerhere:

r I I I I XI I ]
(Answers tomorrow)

Saturday's

I

Jumbles: CHOKE

LURID

WHINNY

.

TARGET

Answer : How electric ee ls swtmWITH THE CURRENT

Jumbkt Book No. 15; containing 110 puz:zlet, Ia IVIIIItJAt 10111.75 ~tpMd
from Jumble, C10 ttit fMWIPiptf, Box 34, Norwood, N.J. 07&amp;48. lnctudt your
nlmt, lddmt, lip code 1nd mike ct.da PIYible to Newapaptfbookt.

BRIDGE
Using the redouble
By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag
NORTH

Alan: "Today when the bid·
dmg begins with one of a suit
and a double by second hand it

S- 18·81

+K s
,.KJ 5 4

t A8
+KJ84 2

is almost universa l expert

practice lor third hand to use

WEST

EAST

a response at the one level as

+AQIU811
,. 7 3

+J4

a

forcin~

bid and

hi~he r

responses as rather weak and

• 73

non-forcing. The redouble is
then used to show most good
hands. How long has thJS been

+A Q6

,. a s
+KJ I096 4

+7 53
SOUTH

+9ti3

expert practice ?"
Oswald: "I started using 1t
in late summer of 1935.
Today's hand shows why I did
it then. I was West, Mrs. Jaco-

,. AQl092

• Q 52

+10 9

Vulnerable: Both
Oealer: West

by East and the bidding proceeded as shown. I opened a
trump and after drawing
trumps decla rer had no trou-

ble playing me for both ace
and queen of clubs and mak-

Wesl

North

Eas t

1+

Dbl.

Pass

4¥

Pass
Pass

3'

Souttl

Pass

Pa!'is

ing an overtrick."

Opening lead:•3

Alan: "It doesn 'tlook like a
tragedy. He was always sure
of game."
Oswald: "It was the fi nals
of the life masters' mJXed. At
the other tabl_e, East bid two
diamonds over the double.
The late Mrs. Emory Clement
got to four hearts. A diamond
was opened and she could only
make her contract. We lost
the board instead of lying it.

.

won by half a point."
Alan: "Your opponents way
back in 1935 were already
playing the modern style and
as you sa id, you started louse
it immediately afterwards."

Our opponents won the event
by one half a point. If we had

Oswald: "Right. bul one
tournament too late."

tied the board we would have

~u•~w

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
41 Wheat
I One kind
disease
of cracker
42 Ethereal
5 Donizetti
DOWN

heroine

I Ice tower

10 Heroic
II D.C. group

2 It has

12 Was Sophie

3 Killed
4 Berlin

Tucker one?
14 Greek
nickname
:15 Luau treat
·16 Time period
17 Mexican
tavern
19 "Welcome"
item
20 "-

a Price
outcry
5 George Sand
novel
6 Numero 7 Troglodyte
8 Repeat
9 Spray
gun's kin
II Inflexible

Wednesdsy" 13 Think
(Fonda film) 18 Biblical
21 Japanese
weed
statesman

Yesterday's Allswer
21 Door

feature
22 Gennan
street
23 Table
protector
24 "Sweet
Adeline,"
e.g.
Z5 Late movie

!7 Phase
29 Melt, as on
30 Habituate
31 Tijuana

Utle
3% Roosevelt

orKeMedy
37 Greek

island
38 Japanese

river

,....;.;..;;;..:;..,.....,....

22 Crosa

home plate
Z5 Earth
worker
!S Decorative
metal
%7 Mineo
Z8 Energy unit
29 Clothes
designer

33Burro
34 Ella Morse
35 Weddingnotice word
!lUke
S4lllle flour

Kop~el.

G (])

WHA1' iHc LADY
E!JOXE~ WA&amp;,
AeSOL.UJE LY!

IHUNGOEI

Cap tioned ; U.S.A.)
6:30 IIl U C!J NBC NEWS
([J BOB NEWHART SHOW
(I) ANDY GRIFFITH
O CIJ@) CBS NEWS
CIJ WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
(jj) LILIAS, YOGA AND YOU
@) Q) ABC NEWS
6:58 Cil CBNUPDATE NEWS
7:00 IIl D PM MAGAZINE
ffi
NORMAN VINCENT
PEALE
(l) ALLIN THE FAMILY
@@ OJ FAMILYFEUD
·CLJ NASHVILLE ON THE
ROAD
O CIJ TICTACDOUGH
i]J (j]) MACNEIL·LEHRER
REPORT
@) NEWS
7:30 IJ) IJ BULLSEYE
(l) WORDS OF HOPE
Ci) SANFORD AND SON
® O CIJ JOKER'S WILD
ffi HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
(j)(jj) DICK CAVETT SHOW
®I
RICHARD SIMMONS
SHOW
(U) Q) FACE THE MUSIC
7:58 Cil CBN UPDATE NEWS
8:00 IJ) 0 C1J LITTLE HOUSE ON
THE PRAIRIE
Cil AMERICAN CATHOLIC
(!) SPORTS ILLUSTRATED:
THE FIRST 25 YEARS
(j) MOVIE ·(MYSTERY)'"IO
® (U) CD THAT' S INCRED~
BLE A mysterious Mayan
'c ry stal skull' used by the ancien ts to strike terror into the
hearls of worshippers during
biza rre rites , and a devoted
father who save d his diabetic
c hild 's lila by inventing a port·
able insulin pump forherarethe
incredible new segments. (60
mins.)
0 (j) ®I THE WONDERFUL
WORLD OF PHILIP MALLEY
CIJ(j]) SHAKESPEARE PLAYS
'All's Well That Ends Well ' In a
generational clash ot standard s. th e Co untess teaches
her son that emphasis on ap p e aran c es and honor is less
val uable than the quality of love
and fide l it~ off ered to himbythe
Countess's ward. Ce lia John so n, tan Cha rleson and Angela
Down star in th is production . {2
hrs., 30 mins .)
8:30 Cil
NEW 'BIBLE BAFFLE
SHOW
8:5a Cil CBN UPDATE NEWS
9:00 IIl D C!J MONDAYNIGHTAT
THE MOVIES 'Bitler Harvest '
198 1 Stars: Ron Howard, A.rt
Carney.
11J 100 CLUB
(]) MOVIE ·(DRAMA) •••
"Onion Ftotd " 11179
(j}) 01 MONDAY NIGHT
MOVIE 'Freedom ' 1981 Stars:
Mare Winningham. Tony Bill.
0 (j)@) M.A.S.H. Kl inger
saves Winchester' slile when
an explosion rips through the
~era ling room. (Repeat)
9 :30 U C1l@J HOUSECALLSWhen
the nurses andorderlies at Ken aingt on Hospit a I go out on strike
for h ig her wages , it leaves
Charl ey Michaels and the other
doc tors scrubbi ng floors and
carrEn'l_bedpans . (Repeat)
10:00 0 W (1Q) GRAMMY HALL OF
FAME A.ndy Williame hosts the
fir st special honoring the
recoromgs setectea TOr mouelion into the National Academy
of RecordingArtsand Sciences
Hall of Fame, and their per·
formers . Peter Allen, Count Ba·
sie, Nat ali e Co le, Andy Gibb ,
Bob Hope and John Raitt are the
Q.!!est sta rs. (60 mins.)
1D:25 W TBS10VENING NEWS
10:28 [J) CBN UPDATE NEWS
10:30 Cil
@
PROGRAM
UNANNOUNCED
CIJ A DIVINE MADNESS Julio
Harris narratestl'lie true story
profiling the life and work of two
of the pe rfo rming arts most
dedicated professionals. Par·
l ia Mansfield and Charlotte
Perry , founders of the famed
Perry -Mansfield Dance Camp.
10:58 Cil CBN UPDATE NEWS
1 1:oo IIl D ®CD
CIJ ®&gt; (J}) 01
NEWS
aD
PROGRAM
UNANNOUNCED
(]) MOVIE ·(COMEDY) '10
" Uo,dCara" 1880
CIJ DAVE ALLEN AT LARGE
(jj) OUTER LIMITS
11:28 Cil CBN UPDATE NEWS
1 1:30 CIJeillTHETONIGHTSHOW
'The Best of Carson' Guests :
Ri ca rd o Montalban, Judith
BleQen,
Jackie
Collins.
(Repeat; 60 mlns .)
Cil ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
&lt;Il MOVIE ·(DRAMA] '"'
"Long Hot Summer" 1158
CIJ (J2) OJ ABC NEWS NIGHT·
by Ted
LINE
Anchored

"' ...,_ ""

rJ r []

a

BARNEY

\ w

wm

CIJ ®&gt;
NEWS
(l) ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
(CONTINUED
FROM
DAYTIME)
(]) MOVIE ·(COMEDY) "10

CIJ

slated this week in nation

provement, American Angus
Association, 3001 FredeMck Blvd.,
St. Joseph, Mlssonri 64501.

' Al*'"'Cllo&lt;oiiO'....i -

" Charade" 1964

Mailbox improvement

Langsville dairy farmer given recognition
top cows in this herd are identified published fn the May issue of the
!rom these records.
.Angus Journal. For a copy contact
In summary, the qualifying cows John Crouch, director of breed im·_
must produce a calf at a young age
and continue to wean a heavy calf on Honor roll announced
The honar roll for the fifth !ix week! yradin~
an average of 12 months. Each calf period
al the Salem Center Elementary School
must have a weaning weight ratio of IWI been anllOUJ\ced. Students makJng a "B" or
105 or hlgher with at least 10 herd- aOOve in all their 1ubjects and named to the roll
mates evaluated each year. A
nrst - Shayne Aapin. Andrea Hale, Matthew
Hayes, Danny Ltwls, Teresa Holden, Michele
minimwn production of three calves Scott,
Darcy Stone, Kathy Williams.
is required for a cow to be listed in
Second - Raena Eblin, Dennla Edmiston,
Michael JacU, Jeanette McDonald, Tina
the Report.
Molden, .\pril Napper, Jenny Peyton, Richard
Peyton, RebeccaSilamblin.
Third - Wendy Gllke~. Mory Hale, Ti'oresa
In the !981 Pathfinder Report a Philli~,
Jeremy Stone. Anne Williams, Tanuny
total of 2,526 cows are listed. That Lambert.
.
Fourth - Sherry Blain, Tam Clsrit, Midwel
represents less than one percent of Fetty,
Steve Gilbreath, Catlly HObstetter, Robby
300,000 head reviewed for Jacks, Ben Bell, Jody ~ton, Cindy
Mayn.~~rd, Renee' Youn~ Kelly Ogden, Kevin
publication. In addition a total of 78 Oller,
Trlna Rhodts, Bob Shamblin.
bulls that have sired ftve or more
Fifth - Miay Blac , Angel McDaniel,
Mt!r~aret Rhodes, Laurie Shenefield, Elizabeth
Pathfinder cows in the Report are Thornton,
Brandy Sweat, Angle Writ~ht.
listed in a Sire Summary.
Slxth - Erin Anderson, Michelle Barr, Jon
The Pathfinder Report is Bell, Dawn Bini, KrloU Haynes, Krls sexton.

0\-1, WE:U.,"THeFB'~
/!&gt;J..iJJA'{~ IJe;'(f ~AR.

II

I I.

Shawn. Host a: Hugh Down aend
Frank
Blair.
(Closed·

~ MffiHirt&amp;,

Curtis Balthaser and son, Langsville, has been recognized nationally
by the American Angus Associaton
for having one cow listed in the
As soc iaton i98 ! Pathfinder
Recognition Report.
The Pathfinder Program identifies superior Angus females in the
breed based on important production traits including regularity of
calving and weaning weight production, according to Dick Spader,
executive vice president. Superior
Angus cows based on performance
records are listed in a Pathfinder
Report published annually by the
American Angus Association, with
headquarters in St. Joseph,
MissouM.
To qualify the breeder must have
been actively involved in Angus
Herd Improvement Records. The

OUJ VVLTIJRE LIKe YOUR 60S£- M,KfE
.. WITH A CON·ARTI5T'5 OILY 5MIRK
AND LIIR&amp;ENY ir.l HI:; H!ART ~

OF St.J51N!i&gt;l&gt; Pi!tACY·-

Linkage for service

TOP ATHLETE - Dale Teaford was named Southern IHgh School
Athlete of the Year during the annual awards assembly Friday. He holds
a trophy which accompanles the honor.

•.. HE'5 PROIM~LY A BEII()Y·EYEI&gt;

THATSCAAMBLEDWOADOAIIE
byHennAmoldandBoblee

tour ordinary words.

"North Avenue lrr•gulart"
1979
Ci) CAROL BURNETT ANO

1 FOROOT:,

~

m o C!l a

~

Unscramble these lour Jurro.es,
one letter to each square, to form

MAY 18, 1981

WLLY,

fi

ftfliJNl ID1t

~ ~ ~~ 41

:38 Aged

,tO Trampled
'

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It :
AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW

Oue letter limply •tanda for another. In Ibis sample A b

uaed for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc:. Slnale !etten,

apoalropbes, the lencth and formation of lbe worda lfe all
· hlnt1. Et&lt;h day the code letters are different

CIYPTOQUOTBS

P

TWRKMY

VNF

FBY

AXDWRK

VEYPCYE
FWQY
WR

WT

DPU

EYAYQ~

YHWQYRFMU
DPAPNMYU

\'eateidlla Clntaqull!: A DECENT PROVISION FOR 'niE
POOR IS THE TRUE TEST OF CIVILIZATION.- JOHNSON

�Meigs property transfers.
Carl M. Smith, Dottie L. Smith to
Jack 8atterfleld, Jr., 8 acres,

CheSter.
Donald Edward Whaley, Ida
Coleen Whaley to Donald E. Whaley,
Ida C. Whaley, parcel, Bedford. ,
Betty Patterson to Charles Patterson, Parcels, Scipio.
First Fed. 8avlngs andiLoan Assn.
to Guy Andrew Spencer, Nora
Evelyn Spencer, Lot 4, Hickory
. Acres Sub., Orange.
John M. Argabrite, Mary Jo
Argabrite to John L. Argabrite,
Mary Jo Argabrite, I acre, Olive.
Uoyd G. Monroe, Carrie Monroe
to Uoyd G. Monroe, Carrie Monroe,
31.75 acres, Scipio.
Harry G. Brown, Terry Brown,
Dorothy Brown to Columbus and
Southern Ohio Elec. Co., Easement.
Chester.
Stone Woods Umited, Ohio to
Columbus and Southern Ohio Electric Co., Part. Ease., Salisbury.
Cecil D. Smith, dec. to Mable M.
Smith, Cert. of trans., Salisbury.
Harold G. Blackston, Helen E.
Blackston to Fred Michael Hoffman,
Vicki Lynn Hoffman, Ease., Meigs.
Raymond F. Hatfield, Bertha E.
Hatfield to lttlmer E. Payne, Julia
M. Payne, 1.041 acres, Rutland.
Opal Harper, Guy Harper, Crystal
Keaton Ervin to Claw E. Mitchell,
Pat Mitchell, James Large, Thomas
Crisp, Parcel, Sutton .
Marjorie E. Salser to Murphy Oil
Co., Right of Way, Sutton.
Grover C. Salser, Jr. , Dortha P.
Salser to Murphy Oil Co., Right of
Way, Sutton.
Raymond W. Larkins, Nancy J .
Larkins to Lawrence Johnston ,
Denise Johnston, .364 acre, Olive.
Alfred Stitt, Ethel M. Stitt to
James E. Diddle, Right of Way, Sutton.
Charles R. Houdashelt, Mary E.
Houdashelt to James E. Diddle,
Right of Way, Bedford.
Kenneth L. Cozart, Patricia W.
Cozart to James E. Diddle, Right of
Way, Lebanon.
The Free Methodist, Aimual Conference of Ohio Inc., formerly Hysell
Run Free Meth. Church, aka Free
Meth. Church of Hysell Run to
Hysell Run Holiness Church, Inc.,

Monday, May 18, 1'81. -.

-·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Pag-1_o -T~ Daily _Se_n tinel

. Apple Grove News N_otes
I

• •

Deborah T. Hensley, 'l1 acres,
Chester.
Leonard Barber, Shirley J. Barber
to
Howard L. Barber, Barbara J ..
ford.
Dave McDonald, Velvie V. Mc- Barber, 43,264 sq. ft. , Olive.
Charles H. Stalnaker, dec. to Or-,
Donald to Julian L. Welch, 1.35
acres, Salem.
· pha S. Brown, formerly Orpha M.
Margaret I. Amberger to William Stalnaker, Cert. of Trans., Lebanon.
Robert E. Richards, June I.
R. Amberger, 1.33 acres, Sutton.
Richards,
to Herald Oil and Gas Co.,
Grace Wolfe, dec'd. to Shirley
Ri~htofWay,
Salisbury.
Wolfe, Cert. ofTrans., Salisbury. ,
Larry R. Thomas, Donna L..
Thomas to James E. Diddle, Ease.,
Kenneth H. DeLong, Ruth Ann
Salisbury.
DeLong to Herald Oil and Gas, Right
Roy Lee Sigman,- J ualiita Sigman of Way, Salisbury.
to Roy Lee Sigman, Juanita Sigman,
Patrick H. O'Brien, Mary E.
Parcel, Rutland.
O'Brien to Steven R. Van Meter, Int.
Ernest F. Powell, dec. to Iva P. in lot, Middleport.
Powell, Marjorie Ann Fetty, Mary
J. B. O'Brien, Adm., Ronald HarK. Braley, Ivan P. Powell, Robin bour, dec. to Henry Cleland, Jr.,
Lynn Campbell, Michelle Stump, Kathleen M. Cleland, Roger C. TUrCert. of trans ., Salisbury.
ner, Dottie S. Turner, Parcels,
Robert Eugene Robie, Clara Scipio.
Lugene Robie to Timothy R. Conner,
Albert Goeglein, Ida Sue Goeglein,
Thelma Conner, .412 acre, Avery Goeglein, Helene Goeglein,
Salisbury.
Charles Goeglein, Maxine Goeglein
Carol F. Pierce to Vivian Pierce, to Charles R. Riffle, Ruth A. Riffle,
1.134 acres, Salem.
Deed of Correction, Salisbury.
Rodney L. Spencer, Margaret A.
Lewis E. Harris, Affidavit,
Spencer to Robert D. Hensley, Pomeroy · Salisbury.
Parcels, Rut)lind.
Virgil C. King, Mary D. King to
Royal Pet. Prop. Inc., Ease., Bed-

Projects up for discussion
MARIETIA - The Review Committee of the Area Six Health
Systems Agency, Inc. will meet on
Wednesday at 7:30p.m. at the Hotel
Lafayette here. The Cllnunittee will
discuss four Certificate of Need
(CON) applications. Buckeye Community Services has submitted two
CON applications for cost overruns .
Last summer, Buckeye Community
Services (BCS) received approvals
to build two ICF/MR facilities.
An adult facility is under construction in Logan and a children's
activity is being built in The Plains.
The actual costs of building both
facilities is over 25 percent of the
estimated costs estimated by the
BCS in the summer of 1980.
Echoing Hills Village has submitted an application to CQnstruct
tw!H!ight bed IFC/MR group homes
for higher functioning physically
handicapped young adults in War·

Cambridge has also applied for a
CON to expand by three beds. There
are currently 224 nursing home beds
in Guernsey County and the Area Six
Health Systems Agency's Health
Systems Plan estimates that there
exists a need for additional nursing
home beds in the county.
The Review Committee will also
be discussing and acting soon upon
the Appropriateness Review of Computer Axial Tomography (CT) units
in the ASHSA health service area. At
present, two ASHSA hospitals
operate CT units. However, an additional mobile unit has been
proposed for Cochocton County
Memorial Hospital. Several other
area hospitals have also expressed
interest in acquiring CT scanners.

saw.
The Red Carpet Nursing Home in

Meets We,fnesday
RACINE-The Southern Local
School District Board of Education
will meet at 7:30p.m. Wednesday in
the school cafeteria.

'

_Kingsbury
News Notes

By Mrs. Herbert R0111ll .
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Roush, Other
Mr. and Mrs. l)orsa Parsol18 w~re vl.iltors during the day were Mr. and.
Mother's Day dlnller g~1 of Mrs. ~ge Thaxton and son,
.
Donald and Mary Barnette of Lllngs- Kmn, of eottaceville, and Mr. and ·
'
Mr. and Mrs. VIrgil King had as ·•
ville. Other guests were Mrs. Mrs. w-aiter lifcDitde of Troy.
recent
visitors Mrs. Mary Fellll and ~;;
Dorothy Cain and Don Barnette, Jr.
Mr. and Mr8. Herbert Roush, ·
daughter,
Mrs. Barb Heinlen and _r
of Vinton.
grandchildren Klffi~rly and Jen- '
son
of
Bucyrus.
Spending lbe · - ~~
Mother's Day guests of Mr. and · nifer Rouah visited Mrs. Edna
weekend
with
the
Kings
were Mn. ~:
Mrs. Jack Ables, Vicki and Michael, Roush and Mrs. Gladys Shields
Rose
Strong
and
son
and
Grace
were Larry Ables of Columbus and recenUy at Racine.
-~
Mrs. Alice Balser.
Mr. and Mrs. George Thaxton and King.
Spending
Sunday
with
Mr.
·
and
•_
Mrs. Anna Wheeler returned home son, Kevin, of Cottageville visited
Friday after ·spending the winter Mr. and Mrs. Roger Roush and Mrs. Kenneth Martins at Racine
with her children, Ed and Norma daughters a , recent Sunday af· . were Mr. and Mrs. John A. Dean,
Mr. and Mrs. John Walter Dean, .,
Morris at Bowling Greene, Mr. and ternoon.
Jeremy,
James and Sarah, Mr. and "
Mrs. Bill Wheeler at Fremont, and
Recent Sunday. guests of Mr. and
Mrs.
Walter
Terrell of Pataskala,
Mrs. Frankie Foster at Columbus.
Mrs." Andrew Cross wete Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs. Dorsa Parsons were Mrs. Clarence Yeager, Mr. and Mrs •. Mr. an&lt;! Mrs. Jllll Spaun and SbanSaturday evening guests of Mr. and Harlan Casto, Mrs. Eva Carver of nori, Pomeroy, Mills Juanita Terrell '
Mrs. Eddie HuJ!p arid Jeremy at Ripley, Mrs. Eula Wolfe, Mrs. Mary of Athens.
Saturday guests of Mrs. Neva
Portland.
OrdofLetart, W.Va.
King
were Marie Williams and Nell
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Hart of
Mrs. Phyllis Young of Middleport
Kendrick
of Portsmouth also Neva's , Columbus were recent weekend visited Mr. and Mrs. Gerald .
._
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Don Bell and Hayman Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Sld- sister, Jessie Carr.
Staff Sgt. Richard Dean of Brooks
attended a cookout at the home of his ney Carpenter of Wellsville vislle!J
parents, Mr. and 1\irs. Robert Hart tbe ·Haymans. Mr. and Mrs. Air Force Base, San Antonio, Texas •
at Racine and attended the variety Hayman visited Mr. and Mrs. Milo and children, KeMetb Matthew and
MicheHe spent several days with his '; ~:
show at Southern Local High School. Richardson Wednesday evening.
Mrs. Unda Jewell of Letart, W.
Recent Sunday dinner guests. of parents, Mr. and Mrs. John A. Dean
Va. spent a Sunday with her parents, Mrs. Kathryn Hunt were Charles and also visited his brother, John W.
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Hayman.
and Marge Burri, Butch, Betty, and Dean and family on Sunday. A party ._
Mrs. Rhonda Craig was hostess Cheryl Wison, Bill Harris, David and was held at. tbe home of Mr. and · ·
for a Dutch Maid clothing party at Robin Vance, Ronald Wilaon, Tressa Mrs. John Walter Dean. Those at- ,
her home Thursday. Demonstrators Ervin, Till Webb, William, Beverly, tending were Mr. and Mrs. Rosco : · ·:
were Mrs. Wanda Shuler. Guests Scott and Kyle Wickline and Ardel Fife, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Thorton and '·
were Rita Boggess, Terri Shain, Braden of Parkersburg. Each guest Steve and Tonya, Jeff Ward, all of _
Cheshire,-who make up the gospel ''
Mae Jones, Sue Davis, Wanda took potluck.
group, The Soul Finders of which .;
Shuler and Rhonda Craig.
Mary and Donald Barnette of
John
is a part. They provided music . •
Mrs. Rita Boggess was hostess for Langsville, Mr. and Mrs. Harry
and
singing
following a cookout at ..
a house wares party at her home StaatsofNewHavenvisitedMr. and
noon. Others attending were Mr. and
Friday evening. Demonstrator was Mrs. Dorsa Parsons recently.
Mrs. Kenneth Martins, Mr. and
Mrs. Sandra Walker. Guests atMr. and Mrs. Dorsa Parsons, Mr.
Mrs. Frank Cleland of Racine, Mr.
tending were Mrs. Ora Bacon, Sue and Mrs. Russell Roush called at the
and Mrs. Robert Wed, Rodney and -.
Davis, Dorothy Sayre, Agnes Casto Funeral Home at Evans to pay
David, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Terrell,
Boggess and son, Don, Mrs. Leah respects to Mrs. kathryn Farra
all of Pataskala, Mr. and Mrs.
Brown and son, Mrs. Herbert Roush, Comba, and visit her family. Mrs.
Linda Turley, Cindy Allen, Tressa Combs was a former resident and at- Garold Gilkey, Tanuny and Amber, .
Hoschar, Crystal Craig, Kenny tended school at the one-room
Mr. and Mrs. Jason Hanning of, -~
Hoscbar, Tammy Boggess, Wanda schoolhouseatAppleGrove.
Athens, Miss Jaunita Terrell, also of··
Athens, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Sapun and ·
Lyons, children Jeremy and Sissie,
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Ables and Mrs.
Shannon of Pomeroy, Mr. and Mrs.
Rita Boggess, Sandra Walker and Mary Ables of Columbus spent a
Mrs. Miller.
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Harold Well, Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Casper of Ables and helped Mrs. Ables
Well, Jr" of Cheshire and the Ward
Brothers Trio of Logan, Mr. and
Columbus were Mother's Day celebrateherbirthday,
Mrs. Rowland Dais, Mr. and Mrs.
weekend guests of Mrs. Dolly Wolfe Fund received
John
A. Dean, Mr. and Mrs. Don
and family.
POMEROY - State Auditor
Skinner
of Athens, the honored
Mrs. Anna Wheeler visited her Thomas E. Ferguson reported tbe
guest, Richard ~n. KeMeth and ·
mother, Mrs. Bessie Stilts at Racine May distribution of $10,659,442.46 in
Michelle of San Antonio, Texas and
Mother's Day.
local government money to Ohio's 88
the host and hostess, Mr. and Mrs. ' '
Mr. and- Mrs. Roger Rouah, counties and 433 cities and villages
John Walter Dean, Jeremy, James '
daughters Kimberly and Jennifer, levying local income taxes. Meigs
and Sarah.
were Mother's Day dinner guests of County's portion was $12,500.

Monda'f, May 18, "81
HelpWenled ·
Real Estate .
Female roomale lo live In
trailer near Harrisonville.
Can be seen on Co. Rd. 19.
Ha rr lsonv 111 e- K1ng sb ury 3._,1__-..2H~o~m~e:.:os..':fo~r_;S~a~leL·_
Rd . lsl. lraller.
Beautiful three bedroom
11

Room, board, and laundry

Public Notice

..

PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
The fo llowing persons

They'll Do It Every Time

Public Nollce

Public Notice

Name and Address, and
Case Nu mber are listed.
Bever lv Ann Ridenour,

PROBATE COURT
Eug.e ne H. Holliday,
OF MEIGS
Route 1, Dexter, Ohio
COUNTY, OHIO
45726, Executor, April 28, ESTATE
OF INA B.
Route I, Box 202, Pl. 1981, Mary V. Holliday,
MASSAR DECEASED
Pleasant, W. Va. 25550 , Route 1, Dexter, Ohio case
No. 23409
Executrix, April 24, 1981 , 45726, 23321.
NOTICE OF
Charles
S.
Beller,
36687
dr ess and Titl e, Date of Ap·
Larry E . Olmstead, ~20&lt;4
APPOINTMENT
Peterson Hollow Rd .. P. 0 . Kelly Ave., East Liverpool ,
wer e, on th e dates shown,
OF FIDUCIARY
._ pointm ent, Decedent' s Box
266. Rulland, Ohio, Ohio 43920, Adm inistrator,
On May 12, 1981.~-. in the
gs County .-robale
23421.
r·
April 29, 1981 , Hilda M. Mei
Court,
No. 23409,
Freda
M.
Sm
ith,
Rt.
3,
Olmstead. R. D. 1. Long Thomas Case
I
E. Mankin, R. D.
Al bany, Ohio 45710, Ad- Bottom, Ohio, 23429.
No. 3, Pomeroy,_ Ohio 45769
I
mini stratri x, Aprill7, 1981,
wa s appointed t )(ecutor of
I
Lewis L. Sm ith, Rl. 3, 15) 4, 11, 18, 31c
theeslale of Ina B. Massar,
Albany. Ohio 45710. 23411 .
I
deceased, late of R.D.,
Reedsvill e, Ohio45772.
~
Rober IE . Buck
Probate Judge/
Clerk
1 May 18
appoi nted to admini ster the
followi ng
d ece den t s'
estates pend ing in the
Meig s County Pro bate
Court :
F iduciary's Na me, Ad·

lerested call992-7314.
Repair

or

.___________ _________ _
,

CIIUMPI£'{---!M eJVIN'ltlU

AU. OF ~C/!GSTEJ&lt; .
'JHf:Y'i!C RIP6 FOP! OW&lt;

AU70MAiiC

,

Curb Inflation.
Pay Cash for
Classlfleds and
Savell I

WANT AD INFORMATION

SAG~·

SCAAiCH&amp;~S UP

'THERe ....

tile, siding. 992-2759.

13

Insurance

AUTOMOB ILE
IN SU RANCE been can ·
celled? Losl your

operator' s license? Phone

992-2143.

II
Wanted to Do
Would like odd jobs. Lawnmowing

&amp;

Real Eslate

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

HOBSIEIIER REALTY
Office 742·2003
GeorgeS. Hobsleller Jr.
Broker
NEW LISTING - Middleport Excellenl
starter home or invest·
ment property on river

front. 4 bedrooms, 1
bath, living room, din·
ing room , kitchen, utili·
ty, new ga s furna ce.

126,500.00.
NEW LISTING
Assumabl e 11% mortgage, ranch 3 bedroom
home, 1 bath, liv ing
room ,

din ing

home. 2 balhs, living

room with f ir ep lace, oak
and pine woodwork
throughout, ai r condi ·
t ioned, garag e with

OLD COINS, pocket watches, class rings, wedding
bands, diamonds . Gold or

eRENTALS

2- ln M•mor11m

J-Announum• nh

Print one word ,in each

4- G iYUWI'f
J-Happv Ad5

space below. Each initial or group of figures

sil\ler. Call J . A. Wamsley,

Treasure Chest Coin Shop,
Athens, OH. 59H221.

7- Y l rd Salt
I - Public 5•1•

name and address or
phone number if used.
You ' ll get better results
if you describe fully,
give pri ce. The Sent inel
reserves !h e right to

ll-StfUIIK W•ni.O

cl assify, edit or re ject

l l - lniurlrtet
14- luliMtl Trlirtlng
1s-School•ln struc:tietn
16-RICtiO , TV
&amp; Cl R•,_l r
11-Wanltd To Do

any ad. Your ad wl.ll be
pul In the proper

clasificati on

If

you' ll

check lhe proper box
below

These cash rates
include dlscounl

21-

l Wanted
) For Sale
) Announcement

) For Renl

17. _ _ _ _ __
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19. _ _ __ __

ll- flrofnsltntl

5trYicts

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Mail This Coupon with Remittance
1
1
The Daily sentinel
I
Box 729

I

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uav

I

'

'·"
'·"
'·"

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ldl'fl

'
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• 01

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• 'I

IRON AND BRASS BEDS Old furniture. deSks, VOid '
rings, 1ewelry, sliver•
dollars, sterling, etc. Wood l
leo boxn, Iars, antiques, I
etc. complete houteholds.
·Wrlle: M.D. Mllltr, Rl. 4, 1
.Pomeroy, OH 45769. Or
call 992·1760.

r

Announcemonls
Announctmtnts
3
I PAY hlghesl prices
poqlble
for gold and silver
Flowers for Memorial Dav. coiM, rings,
lewtlry, etc.
Faye's Gill snap located 111
Contact Ed Burkett Barber'
lower Middleport.
Shop. Middleport,

17--UjtMtltvy

c...

Need Money? Need
Clolhes? Why not gel your "''If
wardrobe al no cost to you
and earn extra dollars loo? ::1
For Information or In· ,:3
2 family yard sale on Wed- tervlew appointment call• ~
nesday May 20 from 1o-4. 992·3941 between 9-9.
1"Cir&lt;Uiale around and a111ure
At the Carl Weaver
palrOIIIIt wao llle BILL, not the
· residence, Rustle Hills, Fashion Consultant ne.ded ·
food !"
·Syracuse.
NOW I Ladles fashion firm , '
Average $8.00 per hour.'; l,
For appointment Interview
call992·39~1 belween t-9.
·•
me,
CHIP -WOoD. Poles max.'
but my life on earth
dlamtler W' on lj\rgest Gal some free lime? St.rt 1
~ done .
your own busln~s. 51111 : \
And now I' m sleeping a end.S12.50perton. Bundled !lOlling
Avon. Be vour OWII.1
peaceful sleep,
slab. · Sl0 .50 per ton . boss. Set
vour own hOUra. I
Waiting for Jesus to come. , Delivered to Ohio Palletl The harder
you work, the, •
Missed, loved, and rernern-11 ~~me~C:~-~:,i~s Rd., , more you' ll earn. For 1
bered. Mo"' and Dad.
details, call 742·23S. or 7112· , 1
•

M-lltctrlcai

lSWif'fltrUflftr

c.J~

1.21

'·"

J

Dally round trlpa ·Jack
NlckiiUI GOlf M'tmorlal
Tour..,rnent. Mey 11·1~ .
Ci1U\4;915-;w.1.'

2755.

q

'

1

wanted:

..

call.
for !~~)~fi.
Humane
homnere
Ca

f
1

naed l
clun :-

or room, wherei
you can lhow animals to"
prospectlvtt OWDel'1. MUll '
be In lf'le Mlddl"'"'l· ,
Pom,roy eree, 11l1ry ~· •
negotlonable. Phone m-'- . :
f •
' 5ol271fler 5:30p.m.

Naw, llled, end antique furniture. No Item to large or 1
to smell. Will buY one piece ,
or ~omplete hou"holds. '
Martin's General Stan at i

I,IJ
J.JJ

-----------------· :

i .

.

ill mtmtr.-, Card tf 1 naltll:• MMI o.ftvlry :
m l nlmt.~m .

Cllf! IIM¥111CI .

I!CIHI

~.

order. u ca•u cMrtt ttt ••• cerryl"' ••• Nv mMr 1" c.,. It 'flit

I

Opportunity
I

71

I

Em· ~
f -

-----+,____ r-•·'

• - - -.- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -·--Jl w..
·, __....:.:
'"':::'::;'":•':..
: · - --..,..--- - - - - - -- ......~--~ -~--------·
{

•

Experienced
auto
mKhefllc Wll!fW. -lllqull't
II Moore'l Slort, "-toy.

'ctnh,.,...,.. u...

M~ltH~tmtllln•MY.-.r•Ntnartecc.,ltllo"IV wlfll_.wtlfil

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Brick home on wooded
acre. Three bedroom s,
fireplace, unique family
room , finished double

dining ,

central

air .

I

r

Sizes

Sizes from 4x6 to 12x40

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

THIS WEEK'S
SPECIAL

Rl. 3, Bo• 54
Racin e, Oh .'

Ph. 614·843-2591
6-15-lfc

Oil Change
Lube Job&amp;
Oil Filter

tHE

All For Only

KOUNTRY

11.95

KLUB

1
Real Estate- General

. Housing

-

Headquarter:&gt;

t~~~~~~u3
216 E. Second Street

Phone
1-(614) -992-3325
RETIREMENT - 3
bedroom tra iler, llh
baths ,
s1ov e · r e ·
frigerator , gas forced
air furna ce, carpeting,
added room and sun·
deck over looking the
Ohio River. Drilled well
and 3.7 acres. Good for
summer home. Ca n you
beat the pri ce of only

$13,500?
FORKED . RUN -

14

acres, more or less, of

woods for cam ping ,
close to the lake on good
gravel road . All kinds of
wildlife such as deer &amp;
wild lurkey.
MOBILE HOME 14x70
Hillcrest, 3 bedrooms,
21J:l baths, fur nace, nice
carpetin g and extra
room. Can rent lot or
move. Low heat bills.
You must see fo r just

$12,000.
ARCHAIC

3

bedroom s, bath, d ining,
basement, natural gas
F .A. furnace, St. drs. &amp;
windows, nice carpeting, city water and con·
venient to town. Asking

$27,500.
NEW LISTING - 'h
acre of land, old 2 BR

home w ith bath, copper
plumb ing, gas fi replace

and basement. Wil l se ll
on lime. Asking $8,500.
NEW LISTING - E•·
cellent corner location
on 2 state routes. 1112

acres of land. 3
bedrooms, carport and 2
outbuildings. Large
square cistern, Leading
. Creek waler avai labl e.
ONLY 124,000.
VERY PRIVATE One large bedroom
stone home with bath,

31

Rentals

4-::lc____::H:.:O::::US:::e:::S..::fo:::r...:R
-'-e'::n::.l_
Small unfurn ished two
in porlh, big lot partly fen - bedroom house . 6 miles
ced in. Melal building. 992- easl of Chester on s R 248.
7453.
985-42«.

consider

cloth

LANDMARK
[\),._ SERVICE
~ STATION
-

base ment, 2 car garage .

Will

land

con ·

lract. 992-5694. 152 ·But- 42

-

ternut A ve., Pomeroy.

-

9927Jil32

56
Pets for Sale
Beautiful Peek-a-Poo pup-

Mobile Homes
for Rent
----===-----

2 bedroom Mobile Home,
3 bedroom 2 acres, 2 fun ished, adults preferred.
bedr oom r ent al, 2 car Deposit. 992 -2749.
gara ge. I have several
pieces of property for Sale 1975 Viking traile r, 12 x 65
if you wanl a good buy. two bedroom, big li vin g

pies, 2 males, 2 females.
Been worm ed. SSO. 247·

3863.
57

seen at your home. For in-

32

Mobile Homes
for Sale
1973 Crown Haven, 14 x 65,

Rl. 7.

th ree bed jooms, new car·

Gas Line· Ditches
Water Lin e Hook ·ups
Septic Tank s
County Certified
Roush Lane
Cheshire, Oh .

--•-'

pel. 1971 Ca meron, 14 x 64,

_.,., •

o tr . o

&amp; bl"esteelc

two bedr ooms , new carpet.

Ph. 367-7560

1972 Ch ampion, 12 x 60, two

bedroom s, new carpet. 1976
Ca mer on, 12 x 60, two
bedroom s, a II electr ic. 1971

Skylin e,

12sx

6),

44

1-7-l tf c

61
Farm Equipment
Four 15,000 gallon tan ks

Apartment

lor Rent

loc ated above ground at

H. L WRITESEL
ROOFING

lwo Two bedroom furnish ed Ath ens, Ohio. 13,000.00
aparlmenl . 992 -5434 or 1- each. Phone 1-304-422-2781.
PMC , 304·882-2566.

bedroom s, beth &amp; IIJ , new

ca rp e t.

1970

12 x 60, tw o bedroom s, new
carpet . B x S Sal es, Inc.,
2nd x Viand Street , Po int

1

Efficiency apa r tment for

Pleasanl. WV Phon e 675«24.

gallon

tan ks

ck~-nished apartment in Mid· 61:'_3___-=.L~iv~e~sl~o~
dleporl. Ulil ities included. 4 Hampshi re· York shore
Children acceptabl e. No hogs for sal e. 843-2451 .
pels. 1195. per month. After
6call992-7177.

trail er 7Dx l4 . 2 car garage,

3 miles from Racine on Co.
Rd. 28. Before 12 noon or after 5p.m. 949-2618.

By Own er 55 acr e farm
with 9 room house, barn,
and mineral s. Morning

Sta r Area. $65,000. 949-2630
evenings.

Eight Top Blouses

o.o '

' _.. ._, n

Household Goods

194!! Chevy pickup. 283
standa rd, good shape. 9492545.

vans i4W.D.
One good used. 1973 Chevy
Van, lsi 11,000. lakes it.
1964 International lru ck,
steel du mp bed, 11 ,500. or
best offer. Pomeroy La ndmar k. 992-2181.

stove, r efr iger ator, si nk,

Syracuse.

Horses, pon ies, 1 hay
ba iler, hay wagon's, pony
carl with harness, 1-3 pl.
pickup disk, like new, pony
saddles. 985-3891 .
SWIMMING POOLS :
PR E·SEASON SA LE :
1999 .00 INSTALLED !!
Above ground pool com·
plelely Installed starling al
1999.00. Pri ce Includes
pool, deck, fen ce, IIIIer,
liner, and Installation under · normal ground con·
ditions. Free shop at home

service. Calll-8()0·624-8511 .

24l .... 17 St. ... '"' .,
!Dill. 1'1111 ~E. IIIDIES$,
DP, $IJE, tiMI sml ......
We sllamlined the sewine to
1M IOU filM so IOU can ""

moniJI Stnd now for NEW 1!181
SPRING-SUMMER PAITERN CAT·
ALOG. 100 IIJft$. ltw peltlrn
coupon. ($2 Value).
Sir
11.1. CUll laS..
11.:11
IJ4.14QIIclQIItta
1Ufllllltti ... QIIIII
lJUa I Slni..W

C:J

IJI.QIIIl'Ea. ,_,_
llookl 1/ld c.illac - ldd Z51
lldl far postace and hanclll/11.

"

MIUER ELECTRI
SERVICE

(4'x 16', 8'd', 8' x10',
IO' x lO' , IO'x12' &amp; up)
Any size built to your
specifications . Models
in Meigs, Gallia and
Mason Counties .

FREE ESTIMAT ES
All Buildings
Guaranteed

PH. 367-7671
or 367-7560
CHESHIRE 4·12-lfc

ATHENS SPORT
CYCLES

Stimson Ave. Athen s, On
Hours:

Mon .-Tues. 9-6
Weds. ·Fri. 9·7

Sal. 9-S
3-29-3 mo.

Closed Thurs.

TERMITE and
PEST CONTROL
Ro ac h es.

B ir ds,

Rodenls, Spi ders, Fleas,
FREE ESTIMATES

1 or S year termite
guarantee
Located in Gallipolis

Ph. 614-446·2801
3-27 -1mo .

V. C. YOUNG II
992-6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy , Oh .

BUYING

SILVER &amp; GOLD
COINS

to 11SOO

For Silver Dollars

GLENN BISSEU

949-2801
No Sunday Calls
5-8 -1 mo. pd.

$5.00 Monthly

Orange, Salisbury, BedSale m,

Sc ipio, Rutla nd an d
Har r ison

COMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERVICE
From th e Smallest
Heater Core to the
Largest Radiator
Radiator Specialist

balers, both in excellent condition.

Set lees

Sheds
POLE BUILDINGS
1S' x20' upto40' x100'
PORTABLE STEEL
STORAGE
BUILDINGS

11ZX'

ford, Ches ter ,

NATHAN BIGGS

35 Yrs. Experience

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSUlATION
Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding
•Insulat ion
•Storm Doors
•Storm Windows
•Replacement

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

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS INC.

Pomeroy, OH .
992·2174

Pn.

5-7-lfc

HOWARD
ROTAVATORS
HJ SO"-!G-30 H.P.
HA 60"-25·60 H.P.
HE 60"-4S-80 H.P.
All Mod els Available

81

992-5682

Home
Improvements

Gene's Carpet Cleaning,
deep stream extraction.
Free
e st lmal ed, 11
reasonable

rates,

scot · ·

KITCHEN ·

CARPET

CARPET

11M PADDIN

From

From

'7.99 &amp;Ulf '12.95 &amp; up
lnst•llld

2 Rolls
Rubber Bock

SHAG
R,.$15.95 .
' 511 ,
'fd.
C•sll-'n-carry .

l

Buy Now &amp; SIVa S2-S6 Per Yard
25 rolls Cllrpat In stock to ·pick from.
Rqul~r bllcked, Cllrpet Installed free
1
1 with p.11d. Good selection Roll Ends Remnlnts $2.50 up. Grass car)Nit
yd.
. Green and Brown.
·
Drive A Little- Save A Lot

$4."

.RUTlAND FURNITURE
742·2211

Mlln St.

••

'•

tex tured

Painting.

ce ilings.

Free

esti mates. 367-7784 or 3677160.
Does your house need a
face lift ? Or iusl a lilli e
makeup? Call me &amp; I' ll
have It look ing young aga in
ln no time. Will do all types
of interior work ; panel ing,
cell lngs, floor ing, elc.; plus
exlerior work, painting,
shingl ing roofs. work olng,
shlngllnf any size and
shape. 30 years experience
In carpelry . References
provided upon toques!. 992·
62'13.
Plumbing

&amp; Healing

WATER

LEO MORRIS
Rl . 1 Side Hill Rd.
Rutland, Oh io

Home
Improvements

commercial,
exte r io r .
in Interior
painting, pa per hanging &amp;

12

APPLIANCE SERVICE
Call Ken Young

chquard. 992-6309 or 742·
2211.
French Cily

Rutland FumHure Carpet Shop
SPRING CARPET SALE

KH P Ttlll Ad lor Fuhl rt Rtft rtnct

lo-T·tfc

---~~
- ~!.!!!!!!.!!...._

~~~~~~~;;±~~~~~~~;;~~ Specializing
iResident
nter i orial,
,

lnst•iled

Caii742·319S
or 992·7680
2-8-lfc

farm equipme nt deal er .

- Auto and Truck
Repair
- Transmission
Repair
Hrs.: Mon.· Fri.
9 a.m .·S: 30 p.m .

- Barns- Equipment.

- Addons and
r emodeling
- Roofing and gutter
work
- concrete work
- Plumbing and
electrical work
(Free Estimates)

3-11 -lfc

Serving th e following
tow nsh ips : Lebanon ,
Sutton, Letart, Olive,

1977 Palam ino fold-down
camper folds out to 22 ft.
with all equ ipment. 7422336.

.!

Buildings

No Sunday Calls

u.s. Rt. so East
Phone 614-662-3821
Authorized Jo hn Deere,
New Hol land, Bush Hog

ROGER HYSEll'S
GARAGE

Garages -

949 -2860.

Box 65, Portland, OH .
Ph. 84l-4912

5-14-1 mo.

REESE BUILDINGS

''YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

SALES &amp; SERVICE

2 used No . 850 New
Holland round hay

Ecanomici!IIV Priced

" Beautiful , Custom
Built Ga r ages"
Call fo r lree siding
estimat es, 949·2801 or

J&amp;R
Book
pr
ice,
$1.000.
will
sell
I
~========~
for 600 . Leona rd Bass. 992- r,
5006.
TRASH SERVICE
BOGGS
12
Trucks for Sale

davenport, batlery con·
verlor. $800. 992·5006,

Misc. Merchanise

Effective 4-6-81
MON . thru SAT.
9 to s
Closed Thursday
4-9-1 mo . pd.

1974 DOdge, p.s., p.b., a.c.,
318 engine, uses no oil , in
exc . cond . m echanica ll y,
interior in ve ry good· con d.
Body needs some wor k .

tibles or entire estates.
Nothing too large. Also.
guns, pocket watches and 78
Camping
coin collections. Call 614· ---=E~q~ui!I!P:!!m!!e:!!n!..
t __
767-3167 or 557-3411.
Cran k up camper, sleeps 8.

Plllln ~
The Dally Sentinel-

BISSEU
SIDING CO.

NEW STORE HRS.

pay cash or certified check
for antiques and collec-

491

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

46
Space for Rent
1976 Vega wagon. 4 cyl. ,
COUNTRY MOBILE Home auto., p.s., p.b., very good
Pa rk, Route 33, North of cond. 11 ,695. 1975 Ponli ac
Pomer oy. Large lots . Call Astre fastba ck. 4 cy l. , 4
speed. 1895. 742·2734.
9'12-7479.

Antiques
53
ATTENTION :
( IM PORTANT TO YOU) Will

.........

2-&lt;- lfc

,...---------.
..:
Quality Built

Ants and other sma ll in·
sect control.

L et George Miller check
your present electr ical
system.
Residential
&amp;Commercial

13

lhe lop styles are here.
PJinted Pattern 4711: Misse&gt;
Sizes 8, 10. 12, 14. 16. 18. Size
12 (bust 34) basic shirt 2 1/8
yards 45-inch fabric.
sz.oo "' lldl ptlllra. Ml 50t
Ill ltd! lfllln Ill . . .
tiMI . . . . StiMI tr:

949-2862
949-2160

'

992-5250.

~

tensive remodel·
in g.
• Electrical work
• Roof ing work
12Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph . 992-7583
4-26·1mo .

322 N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

set
with formi ca tabl e top. In
exc ellent condit ion . Call

fashion for now and now on!
f1om peasant-p1etty gathers to
classic to 1 uff~s to bow ties- all

CONSTRUCTION
New Homes - ex·

BAILEY'S SHOES

s pi ece c hrome dinette

PH. 992-2259

ROUSH

For all of your wiring needs.

51

POMEROY, OHIO

Trash Pickup II!
The Village of
Middleport, Oh.
Ph. 992·5016
or 992-7505
4-17 tfc

45 Furnished Rooms
Sleeping rooms; by lhe
week . KIt c hen, and 7:.ol_____,A~u"2t~os~f~o:!.r!;Sa!'l~e___
television lounge. Carry out
store and restaurant within 1969 Dodge Dart GTS.
Asking S2,000. Call anyti me
500 feet. 992-6370.
at949-2123.

TRAILER spac es for rent.
Southern Va lley Mobile
Home Par k, Cheshire, Oh.
9'12-3954.

608 E. MAIN

12 Park St.
Middleport, Oh.
Ph. 992-6263
Anytime
5-6-1 mo.

Fr ee Estimates
Reasonable Prices
Call Howard

.................... .
. _._,

Farms for Sale

It's the blouse above all in

All types of roof wo rk,
new or r epair gutters
and downspouts, gutter
cl eaning and paint ing .
All work guaranteed.

2 bedroom refinished fur-

4 acr es with 2 bedroom

33

4 14,000

loca ted above ground at

rent. 992-5434 or 1-304-882- At hens, Oh. $3,000. each. 1·
2566.
304-422-2781 .

Housing
Head uarters

.,

Water~ Sewer~ E lectric

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

Jl!:z m'lles south Middleport,

and 2.5 acres. Lois of
lrees. Only 121,500.
WHEN YOU RENT,
YOU PAY FOR THE
HOUSE YOU OCCUPY,
BUT NEVER OWN .
SAVE YOUR MONEY
AND GAIN A HOME .
BUY,BUY,BUY. CALL
992-l325 or 992-3176.

"2-5'92[9

REESE
TRENCHING
SERVICE

Musical
Instruments

formation call collect 614Mobile hom e, 4 bedroom. 773
-5125. Ask for credit
ulilit ies paid, no pets, 1 manager
.
child accepted. Jo~n Sheets

washer·dr yer hookups,

, REAlTOR
HENRY E. CLELAND, JR . tn-•191
. ASSOCIATES
DOER I DOTTIE TURNER
JEAN TRUSSELL f49-2NO ·
OFFICI! tn-2259

Ph. l6141 985·396/
03-l mo.

John Sheets, 31h miles room. Located in Country Picking up piano &amp; or gan in
south Mi ddleport, Rt . 7.
Mobile Home Park. 247- your area . Take over low
monthly pay ments. Can be
3942.

closet,

NICE 2 BEDROOM HOME ON LARGE LOT - Fully Insulated, Wood burner lo supplement forced air
heat. Full basement. S2'1,Wo.OO.
·
NEW LISTING - Really nice 1 floor plan home,
remodeled with beautiful built-in kllchen, large
modern bath, dlnlng area , enclosed front porch, all
carpeled wllh many new features plus a house full
of furniture, which Is new and modern, level lol,
storage bUilding, THIS YOU MUST SEE1125,900.00.
NEW LISTING - Close to Middleport, nice home wllh good block garage and cemenl carport, large
level lot, .15 A. with garden space, 2 bedrooms,
cellar, many features. ONLY 123,000.00.
REDUCED TO SELLI - A 2 year old, one bedroom
nome, Ideal for retired couple or newly marrieds.
Approx. 1'1• A., close to bypass. Large gara ge.
REDUCED TO $15,500.110.
SYRACUSE - A beautiful ranch home on level lol,
3 bedrooms, baMment, altached garage, bulll·in
kitchen. $.43,000.00.
.
MIDDLEPORT - 2 story frame, 6 room s, 3
bedroom!, wOOdbur'nlng fireplace, recently
remodeled, really cute. $18,500.00.
EASTERN DISTRICT - Route 611, 4 bedroom
nome, 2 baths, T.V. room. Full Basement. MANY
EXTRAS S.S,OOO.OO.
TUPPERS PLAINS - 3 bedroom home on large lol,
carpet, p!ltlo.l32.500.00.
ENTERPRISE RD. - W. A. IOI With neal 3
bedroom nome, good condition . $25.000.00.

Chester, Oh.
*Short game practice
*Putting &amp; Chipping
Green Open
• Hole· In-One
* Pro·Golf lessons
tor all ages
• Repair : Cleaning,
r efini shing, new grips
length change ,
weight change
• Fast service

ner!

house. full

woodburning fireplace,
modern kitchen , cedar

lined

Gas. Drawing to be Fri·

day Noon. Come in. You
may be the lucky win-

8 r oom house with bath &amp;
shower , fu ll basement,
a1u m in um si d i ng, 5torm
windows &amp; doors. big buill

3 bedroom

Scout camp Rd.

for 150.00 worth of Free

KAUFPS
PLUMBING
AND
HEATING

J&amp;C
SANITATION
SERVICE

'·,:

Also register this week

Homes for Sale

e

YARD SALE. May 18·19.
Corner of Cllege &amp; Locust
Rutland. 742·2233. Lois
children's clothing.

_ oooI o o

Rates and Other tnformltlon

I

H!t

Farm Buildings
Utility Buildings

SERVICE STATION

$185.00 to S500 weekly doing .l'
mailing work. No ex- ~
perlence required . AP- )'~
PLY: Circle Sales, P.O..
Box 224·0, Richmond Hill, ""~
NY 11418.
"t::i

WANT AD WAY

11 - Htmt lmiH'tYtmtntl
12- ll'IUMitlltfl IICCIYatlftl
IU-IlfC.WIIIftt

_

33._ _ _ _ _.,....
34 __ _ _ _ ____:,.,.'~
.,
35.

''l

YARD SALE. Thurs., Fri.,:
Sal., May 21 ·23. AI Bashan.
George Roberts. Lals of
clolhlng &amp; other llems &amp;
tools. Some antiques.

ALL STEEL

lANDMARK

Real Estate - General

Shops the

U - Oifltrll HIUIInt
N-M.H. ....Ir

forMOftAY

31 ._ _ _ __ _

home ,

Velma Nicinsky , Assoc.

EVERYBODY

&amp; lllfrlfiJf•ll•

2: lt P.M. Dill y
n NOOR S.tvrlll.-,

_

approved .
ACREAGE - 4 acres
m/ less with nice 3
bedroom home, balh,
equipped kitchen, large

$49,500.00.

..
-------

.SERVICES

Wani·Ad Advertising
DNdllnes

315 acre. $33,000. V.A.

modern kitchen, family

~

eTRANSPORTATIDN

31- Homtl lor SIIU
l 2-Moblti-Homt5
lor bit
n - Fermstor Slit
)4- lusl"'ss lulldlnt•
)$- LOll &amp; Aertltt
)6-Rtll Elfllt WIIIIH
31- Wttllorl

4

bath, living room with

'

71-'Yfts tor S1te
7J-Vani&amp;4W.D.
74-Motwcyc:tn
u~"'' P1r11
1 Aectssorlel
77--Autelepalr

e REAL ESTATE

20. _ _ _ _ __

1.
2. 3.

IUi iAIU

in

bedroom ome, 2 baths.,
livin g room, d ining
room, k itchen, utility on

r oom ,

LAFF · A-DAY

Pony saddl e. cart, other
lack. House planl soil. Hor·
se manure, sack or tru ck.
Collector Items. Eskey
Hill, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, Oh io.
992-3885 evenings.

" From 30x30"
SMALL

~

6t -Ji arm ltul,mtnl
u - wanttcllt luy
n - TrutkllorSIIt
61- I.. IYHtflell
..- Hay &amp; Or1ln
u- Sttllll Jltrtlllttt

Opporhm itv
n-Mont'l to t..o.n

Larg e

742-3111

e FARM SUPPLIES
I LIVESTOCK

eFINANCIAL

location

Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.

S1- t:IO\IUbOid OHCII
n- ee, TV, ••III Io lqul,ment
SJ- AntiCIINI
s.t- MIIt . Mtrc:hlncl lle
n - lulktlfll Sv.,.les
st- ll'ttiiOt lilt

, , _ Http w1nttd

Rutland .

firepla c e,

eMERCHANDISE

e EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

venient

742·3092

4t- !qulpmtnllor Rut

&amp; Auction
9-Wanted to Buy

NEW LISTING - Con -

bedr oom

Public Notice

44-Spact for Rt nt
u - wanltd tel Rtnl

6-. l..cUllnd ltound

counts as a word . Count

see this one!

$46,500.00.
APPROX. 6 acres coun·
try living with 3

,,

u - Housu tor Rt nl
42- Mollilt HOmtl
for Rtn l
44--A!Mrlmtrlt tor Rtnl
d-FRoom s

$53,000. Must

living room, double
garage and workshop .

;

eANNDUNCEMENTS

room ,

fami ly room , kitchen.
utility , on exira large lot
in. Rutla nd. Asking
$38,000.00.
GOOD LOCATION,

!1- Cird of Thlnki

General

spacious and in min t
condit ion . 4 bedroom

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

Address._ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

jobs

-;;;;;;:;~~

or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomero'f, 0 ., 45769

results. Money not refundabl e.

misc .

working around homes.
992-6595.

PHONE 992-2156

Wr ite your own ad and order by mail with lh is
coupon. Cancel vour ad by phone when you get

rem odeling

work, flooring , doors, wall
panel ing, ce iling, or floor

9
wanted to Buy
WANTED TO BUY :.
GOLD,
SILVER ,.
PLATINUM, STERLINGCOINS, RINGS,JEWELR -Y, MISC . ITEMS. AB ·
SOLUTE
MAR KET
PRICE GUARANTED. ED
BURKETT BARBER
SHOP, MIDDLEPORT , - ,
OHIO 992-3476.

7HE 816 ·HEA/l7f.IJ
SALES AIAN.46tf&lt; ....

Business Services

garage, deck . Uppe rWill do roofs. 3 years' ex- sixties. 992-5420.
perience. Free estamlles.
Call 742·2109 and ask for 2story nome, 3 bedrooms, 1
bath, full basement, good
Don.
location, Pomeroy . Call after
6, 992-7284.
Will care for the elderly in

our home . Have v'a cancy ,
Men &amp; women. If in·

Page--11 ·•

Two month spring spec ia l
for upholstering fu rni ture.
Ri c hard Mowery, Sr .

Owner. 675-41 54.

produce

for elderly , Reasonable.
992-6022.

The Daily Sentinel

· Misc. Merchanlse

54

ranch brick home in Baum

works~op.

Public Notice

r----::::::======::=---..,
by Larry Wright

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ••

Addition, Pomeroy, Ohio.
clerk, full time. 2 years ex- Gas heal, central air . Call
perience . Please send 992-2571. 985-4145 or 1·687·
resume to Dally . Sentine l, 6429.
Box 72'1-D, Pom~roy, On .
45769. Three or four bedroom
house, carpet, fireplace
12 Situations Wanted
sundeck, two car garage, 2
Repair or remodeling and one half acres. L ovely
work, flooring, doors, wall setting on SR 1 North. 992paneling, ceiling, or floor 7741.
tile, siding. 992-2759.
Experienced

Small investment, large returns, Sentinel Want Ads
Public Notice

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

WELLS .

Domestic and commercial ,

pump sales and service.
Tom Lew is Drilling.
Seasonal discount on pumps. 1-304-895-3802 or 1-JO.I895-3641 .

PAR TS AND Sl! •vt Cf:
AI..L. MA KES
• w estltn

• D!sponh

• DrYitl

• Dlshwlt hers

• RlrtGfl

• Hot Wat• r Tenks

RtP., trl,.gi tnct ltU
" SpetiiiRIIII For"
... Coin 1..1\lllfr lll
... thnlli ll'ro,.rtit J
..- Apt HOUH OWnen
,; Mobl lt Home P1ri11

ll
!!__....!E:!x~c!.
av!!•!!1:!!
in!llg'---

COMPL ETE sever Inslallalion &amp; beckhoe service for Racine-Syracuse
sewer district. Dorer work
If needed. 949-22'13.

PH . 742-2455
5-11-t1c

SUPERIOR
VINYL
PRODUCTS
Siding

ROofing I. Gutter
Remodeling

Serving Your Area for

20Years

EUGENE LONG
Free Estimates

Call Collect
Ph. 14U 322
5-8-2 mo. pd. ·

DOZER work. Small lobs a
speci ally. 742·2753.
Eieclrlc•l

a. Refrigeration
ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR - Sweeper!,
toasters, Irons, all small
appliances. Lawn mower.
Nexl lo State Hlghwav
Garaoe on Route 7, 9853825.

Electrical
Refrigeration
SEWING MACHINE
Repairs, service. all
makesl 992·2284. The .
Fabric Snap, Pomeroy .
Autnorlred Singer Sales
and Service. We sharpen
Scissors.
&amp;

..

. I

�Ohio

SUPPLEMENT TO: THE POMEROY SENTINEL

Approve two area projects

Area deaths
Clyde Coy

JOINS BANK - Bank One President, Paul A. Barnett, bas aonounced tile election of Bob J. Miller to the position of assistant vice
president in charge of the loan department of Bank One of Pomeroy.
Miller comes to Bank One after ZH': years of association with The City
Loan and Savings Co., the last 18 years as manager of their Pomeroy of·
flee. Agraduate of Ironton High School, Miller attended Morehead State
and Ohio University. Active In many community organizations, he is
presently a member of the Mid41eport·Pomeroy Lions Club, Lawrence
Lodge No. 198 F and AM, Ironton Commandery No. 45, Aladdin Shrine of
Columbus, and past chairman of the Meigs County Heart Fond.

Addresses highlight
(lJontinued from page I)
resignation of Nixon.
All the class began high school
studies, Miss Pickens pointed out
that the family structure was fall ing
apart and Gerald Ford was attempting to gain the trust or the
American people.
Civil rights and equal right.s
became issues of the country. Class
members learned of the outside
world or drugs, cult.s and strange
religious groups whic h led to incident.s such as the mass death at
Jonestown.
As their educational studi es
moved along the Southern seniors
became familiar with the gasoline
shortage and the hostage situation in
Iran, Miss Pickens related.
"We hope that we have a bright
future. During our last year or
school the hostages were released,
Carter lost the Presidency to Mr.
Reagan ; J ohn Lennon was
assassinated ; Reagan had an attempt on his life and just the other
day Pope John Paul II was shot.
Look at the world we are going out
into", Miss Pickens concluded.
Principal Jam es Ad a ms
recognized the graduating class and
the class was presented by Supt.
Bobby Ord. Mrs. Sue Grueser,

president of the board of education,
presented diplomas. Invocation was
by Paul Cardone and Della Johnson,
the benediction. Two selections were
presented by the band and the class
processional and recessional was
"Pomp and Circumstance" by Mrs.
Lee Lee at the piano.
Sunday afternoon, baccalaureate
was held for the graduating class.

Ask to wed
Marriage licenses were issued to
Orland Junior Laudennilt, 35,
Pomeroy, and Shaula Ann Roush, 36,
Pomeroy; Kurt Garland Naistetler,
21, Portland, and Anna Marie Baxter,l6, Pomeroy.

Veterans Memorial
Saturday Admissions-opal Cumrui ns, Pomeroy; Iva Stewart, Minersville.
Sa turd ay Discharges--Lois
Hawley, Kathryn Evans.
Sunday
Admissions--Wayne
Gilliand, Reedsville; Marie Young,
Pomeroy: Richard DeMoss,
Pomeroy; Har old J effers,
Pomeroy; Clarence Proffitt, Portland; George Smith, Reedsville.
Sunday Discharges-None.

Clyde Coy, 98, Rt I, Vinton, died
at home of his daughter, Reva Cardwell, The Plains.
He was born Aug. 13, 1882, in
Morgan Twp., Gallia County, to
Martha Greenlee and Jay Henry
Coy.
He msrri~ Levinah Shupe in 1927
at Bucyrus. She survives, with two
sons and two daugthers, WUllam
Coy, The Plains; Carroll Coy,
Gallion; Lucille Foy, Laverne, Ca.;
Mrs. Ivan (Reva) Cardwell, The
Plains.
One brother and sister Barton
Coy, Caledonia, Oh. ; and Mrs. Reva
Fugitt, Marion.
Fourteen grandchildren, 20 greatgrandchildren and several great •
great -grandchildren survive.
He was preceded in death by his
first wife, Emma Hughes Coy, two
daughters, seven brothers and two
sisters.
He was a retired fanner and a
member of the Danville Wesleyan
Church. Services will be Wednesday
1 p.m. from the Morgan Center
Wesleyan Church with Rev. R. D.
Brown and Rev. O.H. Cart. Burial
will he in Morgan Center Cemetery.
Friends may call at McCoy-Moore
Funeral Home Tuesday 2-4 and 7-9
p.m.
Mr. Coy will lie in state one hour
prior to services at the church.

Earl Yates
Earl Yates, 63, of Rt. 4, Oak Hlll,
was dead on arrival at Oak Hill
Hospital Sunday.
Born June 25, 1917, in Carter County, Ky., son of the late Ed and Fronia
Stanley Yates, he was a retired coal
miner, World War II veteran and
member of the Peniel Church.
Surviving are his wife, Dorothy; a
daughter, Janet Wilson of Olive Hill,
Ky. ; two stepsons, Bob Harden of
Racine and Don Harden of Rt. 4, Oak
Hill; several grandchildren; a
sister,EvaAdkinsofNitro, W.Va.; a
half-brother, Jim Yates of Seth,
W.Va.; and two half-sisters, Irene
Williams and Louise Runion, both of
West Virginia.

Proposed alterations to the Giula
County jaU were approved by the
Bessie A. Willett
Ohio Department of Industt-ial
~lations during April.
Mrs. Bessie A. Willett, 82, The
With an e9tlmated total cost of
Plains, died early Sunday morning t62,000, the alterations will cover
at Hickory Creek Nursing Center, 1,280 sqare feet, the department
~--:lains.
· , following an extend_ed said.othe
the de
aw..,..
In
r area projecta,
partMrs. Willett was born at Torch, . ment a1s o approv
· ed p1ans f or the
daughter of the late Campbell and construction of a storage building at
Anninta Boso Russell. She was also No. 2 darn at the Ohio Power Co.
precede&lt;! in death by four frothers hydro project electric generating
and three sisters.
She wali a nillred employe of the
food service department at Ohio Meets Tuesday
Unlve~ity. She had been a resident
oftheAthensareaslnt~~IMO.
nrew Webster Post 39, American
She is survived by her husband, Legion will meet Tuesday, May 19.

Mrs. Mary
Caster, Tbe
and
Olarles
F. Willett;
twQ Plains
daughters,
Mrs. James (Alma) Allen, Water·
ford; one brother, Nicholas Russell,
Athens; one sister, Mrs. Woodrow
(Grace) Colmer, Athens; one granddaughter, Mrs. Donald (Jean) Sycks
and one great granddaughter,
Lorrie Syckl! both of The Plains.
Funeral services will be held
Tuesday at 2 p.m. at the White
Funeral Home, Coolville, with the
Rev. Fred Shaw officiating. Burial
will be in Torch Baptist Cemetery.
Friends msy call at the funeral
home after 3p.m. today.

Reagan may

plant at Racine.
,
Estimated total cost · on the
building was set at • •ooo, and
when completed, will cover 11,:144
·square feet.

r-~=·

...,,

=;;;;;;;;;:;
IIJBBMI)5. :·.

GREENt«MJSE

Sale Starts Today
Good thru ·May 24, 1981

e

.Jlil,l_l(tt~L - . --·~.--...

All Dozen Packs Jlkc:IO~I!J

...

While quontitlet lost. Quantity rights reserved. We ore not responsible for typogrophlcoler•
rors .
Sorry, no deolen

Hours: OpenDatly9,1ol · •

ELBERFELD$
JUST RICIIVID
I

3 PC. PIOIIC
TilLE I BElCH SET

I

CHEF
'
.
BOY.AR-DEE ,·
' •. '

before the Ho~ Ways and Means
Corrunittee begins writing a tax-cut
bill. But Democratic members of the
panel, conservative Democrats and
other groups are expected to continue separate brainstorming
sessions this week in an effort to
narrow differences · as much as
possible before the lonna! work
begins.

' I!IZIA ....

wm ..•

JACKET .
ASST. COLOR!!

'
7~()z.

.

"

PUI'I'II'S IIlii

•
..&gt;f

•ChHZ

'

Boll•

'•Redwood-stained
""Ft. Long.
•5

t

____,.

---·-··~ 0:..

.........

•Folds lor easy 1toroge

1111111 ........

SEE THE COMPLETE SELECnON OF IHESE FAMOUS TANNING
COSMETICS- YOU'LL UKE THESE NEW PROOOCIS.

.&lt;

HU·N'I"·

jr~Jo~y~ce~Y~.~P~orte~r~wa;s~d~i·~·~ol~ved~.=d~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

1

N&amp;ION'IIIO. W

-CII!ITUNl

•

He Goldie
was preceded
deathand
by two
his
wife,
Likens in
Yates,
brothers.
' Funeral services will be held at I
p.m. Tuesday in the Kuhner-Lewis
Funeral Home, Oak Hill, with the
Rev. Gerald Brown officiating.
Burial will be in C and MCemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
homefrom2-4and6-9p.m. today.

81

0·

N~'IIIO.Mt,tt

ELBERfELDS IN POMEROY

, Y'OUI CHOf(l

49' lA,

'39''

COSMETICS-2nd FLOOR

NR.ION'I
110......

•Corn Chlpa
echHz Curls

0

•Outdoor

To end marriages

LY BEll

83•

it

UOz.

INTERNATIONAL TANNING SENSATION

Joanie Collins, Syracuse, filed for
divorce in Meigs County Common
Pleas CoUrt against David Wayne
Collins, Syrac~ .
Sharon Russell was granted a
divorce from Tetry Russell and the
marriage of Bobby L. Porter and

,

'· ·
1
,_ .
.
..
'·
,
Ph. 992·5776· Syracuse, Oh~
. NOW OPEN FOR
SPRING SEASON
e PoHed Plants
,
Complete line of bedding
. plants and hanging

r~AII~me~mbers;~a;re~ur;ged;to~a;tte~nd~.=~~~~~u~.!l~S~'~~~

'

(Continued from page 1)

___ .......________

IIIII PIOI
PUDDINGI

TLIIE

DOUBLE HIBACHI

BRAZIER

11"x1r'
•

,,

•24 'A"· Dlom•ter- · ~
•380 Squaro tn. Caokl"'l Grid

~

'

•Adiusts to

.t&amp;

heat level•

99

•Chocolate

•vanln.i.
itlanDna

•Coat Iron
•2 Adlustoble Grill•
•10"•17"

~luttencotch

•;aK
•

97$
............,.

CHARCOAL

•Just right for
tookouts

.,....

NILION'I 110

MATCHING
MULTI-POSITION

SMOKER WAGOI

LOU liE

WITH COVII

•290

NILION'IIIO......

CHAIR

Sq. lncllos Cook·

lng grid.

·

•3 Position tleat .adjust·
ment

MONDAY, MAY 18 THRU SATURDAY, MAY 23

'26''

..

L_ ~

.

Thinking about buying

.,,,

NILION'IIIG •

a new car?

ALL REGULARLY PRICED MERCHANDISE
THROUGHOUT THE STORE.
ADDITIONAL SAVINGS ON SELECTED ITEMSI
GLOVES
CHRISTMAS ITEMS
FAKE FUR
MlnENS
and
REG. '5.39
CAPS
MISC. HOLIDAY
THERMALS

ITEMS

WEWILLNOT
BE OPEN
MON., MAY. 25TH
IN OBSERVANCE OF
MEMORIAL DAY

SAVE 30%

Farn1ers

NO LAY·A·WAYS- ALL SAUS FINAL

POMEROY, OHIO

Bank

M&lt;•ml"" FDIC

.

Your .Communih Owned Bank

BASKETS

....,...

• • 11.17

PROM

'.

'•eo•y carrying
handle
· •lake olong
on plcnla
anywhere
•hold• 12 con•

Liptone
INSTANT TEA .
3.6 Oz• .
PLUS ONI QUART DICANTII

'2"
...........Ut

., • • • 1

WREATHS I

.

IISUUTED

•
MEMORIAL

4PACK

Come in and talk to us about our
competitive rates on new car loans.

'377
30 %OFF 50%OFF
BEN FRANKLINS

NILION'IIIO. t14.M

The Farmers Bank is making
new car loans.

NOW ONLY

'.,, ••
,

•••

21

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