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Wednesday, May 20, 19!1

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.Mayor's Court ________

Area deaths

JameS R. Roye, Point Pleasant;
. forfeited a ~ bond posted on a
siBter, Mrs. Alice Brickles, and a charge of driving while lntoxlctited
brother, WUllam Atkins, both of and a $25 bond for falling to have an
Middleport, and four grandsons, operator's llce1111e in the court of
Richard (Rick), Michael Todd and Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
David Lee Vance and Dwayne Keith Tuesday.night.
Black, all of Long Bottom.
Fined in tbe court were Bill
Private funeral services will be Reeves, Pomeroy, $100 and costs
beld at 2 p.m. Friday at . the and 10 days in jail, public Indecency;
.Rawlings-Coats-Blower Funeral David Manley, Middleport, $100 and
Home with the Rev. Mark McClung costs, petty theft; Ray L. Walsh,
officiating. Burial will be in River- Middleport, $50 and costs, disorderly
view Cemetery. Frienda may call at manner; John F. Aelker, ·MiGthe funeral home from 2 to 4 and 7 to · dleport, $100 and costs, destruction
9p.m. Thursday.
of property; Charles M. Walker,
Cheshire, $225 and .costs and three
days in jall, driving while in-

Cora Ella Vance
Cora Ella Atkins Vance, 73, Route
I, Middleport, died Tuesday evening

at Veterans Memorial HOiipital.
Mrs. Vance was born Jan. 16, 1908
in Addison, a daughter of tbe late
RObert and Mary Jane Atkins. She
was also preceded in death· by a
sister, Emma, and a brother,
Charles.
Surviving are her husband, Glenn
George Vance; two sons, Robert
Earl Vance and Glenn Eugene Vance, both of Route l, Middleport·; a

toxlcated.
Seven persons forfeited bonds in
the court of Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews 'fl!esdaY night when
they failed to appear to face
speeding cha!'ges.
Forfeiting were Timothy TbornaB,
Pomeroy, $2e; Gerald Myers;
PomeJ'!IY, Pll; Raymond Cassady,
Tupper1 Plains, $30; Betty McClelland; Pomeroy, $31; Leah Pear·
son, Gallipolis Ferry, Pll; Stanton
Craddock, South Point, Pl. and
Joseph Donohue, Racine, PJ.

r.=========;;-AUTHORIZED GATALOG
SALES MERCHANT

Meigs County happenings . .
Veterans Memorial

Filing for dls:solution of marriage
were Joan s. Culp and Carl F. Culp;
Harold E. Hysell, Rl. a, Pomeroy,
and OdesSa B. Hysell, Rl. I, Por!land.

Admitted-Lucille Wise, RuUand;
Dale E. Riffe, Racine; Clarence
. Alba
Hanmg,
ny.
Discharged-Harold Brannon, Ura
Morris, Clarence Proffitt, Brenda
Ballard, Earlene Kenned:,:, Opal
Cwnmings.

Emergency calls

RETffiES- Henilao L. "Hobe" WiiUs of Apple Grove, Dorcos Road,
retired from Columbia Gas Traosmlsslon Corp. otter 34
years service. Wlllls was ao engineer-in-charge at Lebanon Compressor
Station upon retirement. He joined Columbia In 1947 at South Point as an
operator In the Compressor Department.
A native of South Point, WUlls and his wHe, the former Rosa Lee
Howard of SalyersvUJe, Ky., have two daughters and one son.
Rac~e, has

Reagan, staff
(Continued from page 1)
to submit "our ideas and that's what
we did. We think it's the best route to
go ... but whatever Congress will do
with them, you know, we'll certainly
state our position as we go along if
they want to make changes in our
plan.''
Speakes said it would be
reasonable to conclude that.the administration is more flexible about

Addresses •••
(Continued from p.ge I )
knowledge on io the new, so that
each consecutive chapter can be
even better than the last."
James A. Diehl, Jr., principal,
presented the class and David
Gleason, superintendent, accepted
the class. The presentation of
diplomas was made by Larry
Powell, president of the board of
education.
The processional and recessional
were played by the Meigs High
Band.
Prior to commencement baccalaureate services were held with
the Rev. Wilbur Perrin, minister of
the Trinity Church, as the guest
spea ker. The invocation and
benediction were given by the Rev ,
Perrin.
Introductions were made by
Laura Ann Rupe, president of the
graduating class.

compromising on Social Security
than it is on Reagan's call for tax
cuts.
During a closed party caucus
Tuesday, Senate Democrats
unanimously adopted a resolution
saying "no change in the Social
Security benefit structure shall be
made which would precipitously and
unfairly deny those men and women
approaching retirement ... benefits
on which they have planned and to
which they are entitled."
After the meeting, Senate
Democratic leader Robert C. Byrd
of West Virginia called the Reagan
proposals "precipitous, , unfair,
inhwnane."
"We will stand against them,"
fighting "to the last ditch" and using
" every rule at our disposal," Byrd
said.
He said Reagan's advisers should
not be fooled into believing that tbe
president's popularity can be used to
" unravel the Social .Security
syste·m.''

Money a~tion filed

-~

th

Sears·..

.

A suit in e amount of $9,216.78
was filed in Meigs County Collll1lon
PI
c rt by Bank One "'_.
eas ou
Pomeroy, NA, RuUall!l Branch, forMarriage licenses
merly Pomeroy National Bank,
RuUand, against Jack Spires, Jr.,
A marriage license was issued to . administrator of the estate of Jack
ClYde Carter, 20, Reedsville, and K. Spires, deceased, Rt.l, Racine, et
Tina Fay Chevalier, 18, Reedsville.
al.

Phone992-2178

.

~i::;~~~~·

1

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Jack &amp; Judy Williams

BY

Open:9·12,
Mon.Fri.
thru
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Sat.9-5
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ELE~RFELDS

Four calla were answered by local
emergency units Tuesday, the Meigs
County Emergency Medico! Service
reports.
The Middleport Unit at.2:07 p.m.
took Jeff McKinney from Seventh
Ave., to Pleasant Valley Hospital; ·
the Syracuse Unit al10:55 a.m. took
Tom Weston fnm his home to
Veterans Memorial Hospitsl ; Tuppers Plains Unit, 6:41 p.m. took
Gladys Shumway from hmle to
Camden- Clark Hospital, Parkersburg; Racine, at 8:50 p.m., took
Harry Hill from his horne on Route
338 to Holzer Medico! Center.

To end marriages
Kathy S. Seth, Rt. I, Shade, filed
suit for divorce against Brinley F.
Seth, Pomeroy.

'•

20°/o OF ~:.~

Voi.30,No.l6
Copyrighted 1981

Selected Popular Styles

BICYCLES
• COASTER BRAKE
•10 SPEED

• BMX
Grill Out This
Memorial Day Weekend

• GRILLS
•CHARCOAL
Many Other Items

MOORE'S
fiMERICfltt
HfiRDWfiRE
PHONE P92·2848
124 W. Main St.
Pomeroy, OH.

RED-PartlclpaUng In a statewide "Schools Are
Seeing Red" Campaign, Meigs Local teachers, I to r,
Mike Wnfond, Bob Oliver and Mike Gerlach, prepare
the red and white van in which a number of local

•

at y

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, May 21, 1981

•••
Jury convicts lottery official
HARRISBURG, Pa. - Former television emcee Nick Perry and
suspended lottery official Edward Plevel have been convicted of
rigging the Pennsylvania Lottery in a scam that generated a record
$3.5 million payout.
The Common Pleas Court jury returned tbe verdict Wednesday
night after 6~ hours of deliberation. Plevel was acquitted of a lesser
charge.
II was the first time anyone had been tried for rigging the state lot- ·
tery. Defense attorneys Tom Livingston and Tom Ceraso said they
would appeal.
• The state accused both men of rigging tbe Ap~ 24, 1980, Daily Number drawing, which paid the record amount when the winning number
~was drawn.

NEW YORK- Miss New York Stale, ejected from the Miss USA
pageant for padding her bathing suit top, was going to court today in a
last-ditch effort to get back into tonight's contest.
~borah Ann Fountain arrived in New York Wednesday night and
charged at an ai11Jort press conference that "at leastfive" contestants
have enlarged their breasts with silicone transplants and as many as
20 others a!Bo used padding.
Miss Fountain said she would tape two talk shows before returning
to Biloxi, Miss., for tonight's pageant.

Groups plans picnic
Preceptor Beta Beta Sorority will
hold a picnic at the state park on U.
S. 33 ( on the right side of the highway going towards Athens) Thursday, May 21, at6:30p.m.
Persons are to bring a covered
dish and their own table service.

Fo~r hurt in building collapse
TOLEDO, Ohio - Four men plunged four stories to the ground and
were buried in rubble Wednesday after tbe roof of a building they were
renovating collapsed.
Three of the men were hospitalized. The fourth apparently was not
seriously injured, authorities said.
The accident occurred about 10 a.m., Fire Chief William Winkle
said. ~men were In a crew ren()\!aling a building that is part of the
Fort Industry Square Project in the downtown area.

Sheriff face indictments
OTTAWA, Ohio - A special grand jury has handed down 20 bills of
indictment on 38 COiillts against Putnam County Sheriff Robert Beutler
as the result of a special probe that began a year ago.
Special Prosecutor William Owens said Wednesday that Beutler had
been served with indictments on charges of felonious assault, theft in
office, dereliction of duty and violation of civil rights.
In addition, Owens said three deputies in the sheriff's department
were to be charged in six indictments. They are Lambert Rodriguez,
Tom Kurdy and special deputy Bernard Blankamier.

Let's Not Forge
To Remember

May 2.5, 7987
-cut FloweiS
•Monument Sprays
•Potted Plans

Another striker bites the dust
BELFAST, Northern Ireland- IRA hunger striker Raymond Me~ died at the Maze Prison near BeHast early Thursday in the 6lst

day of a hunger strike for political prisoner status. He was the third
hunger striker to die at the prison in just over two weeks.
·
McCreesh, 24, had become totally deof and blind, Sinn Fein, the
Irish Rapubllcon Anny'e political branch, said earlier he had become
totally deaf and blind and had not moved all day.
IRA hunger striker Bobby Sanda died May 5 and Francis Hugbes
followed him May 12.

•Wreaths
•Arrangements in
bolh real and
permanent flowers

.

~.

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Given the stote of today's economy. more and more people ore
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so~ an important new concept In banking
coli II~
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POMEROY
FLOWER

yo.xtheckingteoir~

Winning Ohio lottery number

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SHOP
"The Way America
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.....

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CLEVELAND- 'Ibe winning number selected Wednesday night In
the Ohio Lottery's dally game "The Number" 1.1279.
'Ibe lottery reported earnings of f451),401 from the wagering on the
drawing. Lottery offlda!J uld ulea prior to 'the drawinc totaled
.-,010, and holders of winning tlckellare enUUed to share .-.1112.

Weather
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1 Section , 10 Pages
15 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Wagonseller
will speak
Memorial Day

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
---·,__

teachers traveled to Columbus Wednesday evening for
a statewide rally held to demoostrate educators' concern for the critical conduction of educational funding
in Ohio public schools.

en tine

Sale ends: June 13, 1981

Miss New York goes to court

106 Butternut Ave.
Pomeorr, Oh.
Ph. 992-2039
or992-5721

funding in Ohio is in a crisis.
The governor did not attend the
rally, but Franklin B. Walter, state
instruction superintendent, assured
teachers he's on their side.
"The schooiB are going to have a
fiscal disaster unless we do
something about funding immejliately,'' Walter said.
Sen. Oliver Ocasek, D-Akron, a
longtime supporter of increased
·;ehool funding, said, "we've met
and we've talked."
"Now, let's vote," he told his
colleagues.
Walter has said the state needa to
boost funding by about $1 bi!Uon, instead of the $759 million proposed
last week by Rhodes' budget director, William D. Keip. Tbe schools
would get an increase of $300 million
under Rhodes' original proposal, as
passed by the House.
. Walter repeated an earlier call for
Ohio to retain the .temporary sales
and other tax hikes enacted in
December, vowing they would end
June 30. The raises would provide
the needed $1 billion, he said.

e

Cross Your Heart Summer Sale

opens Saturday

HUFFY

ribbons and corrytng posters, banners and balloons decrying the
"red" in Ohio schooiB' budgets, tbe
teachers, administrators, school
board members and concerned
citizens form~ a sea of red on the '
statehouse lawn demonstrating to
legisllitonl and the people of Ohio
that ~JChOOI employes are concerned,
frustrated, and angry about the
financial plight of Ohio schooiB.
Speakers at the rally included
Senators Oakley Collins and Oliver
Ocasek, Don Hill, president of the
Minnesota Education Assn., and
Franklin B. Walter, state superintendent of schooiB.
Officials said the mass protest,
which includect scattered lawn conferences between teachers and their
elected senators , and representatives, was designed to convince
lawmakers and others of the need
for immediate action to solve
schools' money problems. _
John Hall, chief lobbyist for the
83,00G-member
Ohio Education
~"activities.
Association,
which
organized the
Chanting "Save Our ~hools" and
"Up Your Budget", wearing red event, said local school officials
clothing, badges, hat, armbands and have no other choice since school
I
.
Representative Ron Jalllfs spoke
with a contingent of Meigs Local
school teachers Wednesday evening
during a "SchooiB ATe Seeing Red';
campaign rally beld on the
statehouse lawn in Columbus.
"Representative James seems to
feel the legislature will take some
positive action this summer to improve school funding in Ohio"; according to Meigs Local Teachers'
Assn., president, Bob Oliver, one of
the lllocal educators who made the
trip to Columbus.
James a!Bo charged those present
with the responsibility .of "going
back home and selling the people on
the necessity for new taxes" to be
used to fund schools.
The Meigs representatives were
among an estimated 6,000 persons
from across the State of Ohio who
were greeted by Nancy Luddeke,
president of the Ohio Education
Association which sponsored the
nll!f .as,P8rt of the May 1&amp;-22, "Red

PLAYTEX"

Middleport pool
Park Director Pat Kitchen announced today that the Middleport
Pool will open the 1981 season Saturday, May 23 with free swimming
from 12 noon-.'i p.m.
Pool hours are May 24 (Hi p.m.),
May 25 (12 noon-.'i p.m. ), May 2&amp;-27
and28 (3:30-5:30 p.m.).
Starting May 29, pool hours will be
12 noon-.'i p.m. Monday-Friday, 1~
p.m. on weekenda. Admission for
students is $1 and for adults $1.50.
Season passes are: single, $20,
family, $30 plus$5 for each child.
Rental of pool is $35 per hour, $25
for two or more hours. Night swim is
25 cents with season pass. Without
season pass 50 cents students and 75
cents adults. Season passes may be
purchased during any pool hours.

James, Collins address teachers

BIRTHDAY HONOREE Fred W. Crow, Jr., Pomeroy attorney, will be honored with a birthday celebration on May 31, at6
p.m. at the archery building at
Royal Oak (llrk.
Tickets
to the event may be porcbased at
Simon's Pick-A·Pair, New York
Clothing House and the office of
the chamber.

SPEAKER - James M.
Wagonseller, Lancaster, Past
National Commander, will be
speaker at annual Memorial Day
services to be held at 9:38 a.m.
Monday on the upper parking lot
in Pomeroy.

Social Security
•

•

zssue szmmers
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Reagan administration is run~ing
into a virtual insurrection in
Congress over Social Security, sler·
nly rebuffed on stiffer early
retirement penalties and challenged
to justify cutting all benefits twice as
much as necessary.
Wednesday's rebukes by the
Republican-controlled Senate and
House Democrats came even before
the administration could make its
first official pitch on Capitol HiU in
defense of the cuts that President
Reagan proposed nine days ago.
That task fell today to Health and
Hwnan Services Secretary Richard
S. Schweiker, the chief architect of
Reagan's package, who was called
before a hostile House Select Com·
mittee on Aging.
The panel's chairman, Claude
Pepper, D-Fia., opened the first
congressional hearing on the plan
today bY blasting the Reagan
proposaiB, saying, "The magnitude
of these cuts is staggering."
Pepper noted that a White House
spokesman had called the Jiackage
"bold and courageous."
Reagan did win one round Wednesday. ·Senate Republicans
defeated a Democratic-sponsored
resolution to condemn the proposed
cutbacks as "a breach of faith" with
older Americans. The margin on
that one, though, was a single vote,
49-48, and it was to be Reagan's only
Social Security victory of the day.
The Senate followed by voting
unanimously to assure older
workers "that Congress shall not

James M. Wagonseller, Lar~­
caster, Past Natinal Commander of
the American Legion, will be guest
speaker at the annual Memorial Day
services to be held at 9:30a .m. Monday on the upper parking lot in
Pomeroy.
Sponsoring the services again is
Drew Webster post 39, American
Legion. The Eastern and Meigs Hi gh
School bands will be present for the
services as will be a voc
al group from Meigs High School.
Wagonseller served a full term,
1975-76, as national commander of
the nearly three million-member
American Legion. He is also a past
national vice commander and prior
to that served on the Legion's
· National Executive Conunittee for

Ohio. He has also served on a number of natiOnal committees.
At age 33, Wagonsellcr became the
third World War II veteran to be
elected state commander of the Ohio
Legion which now comprises over
132,000 wartime veterans affiliated
with 686 posts He has through the
years served in his post. county and
district Legion organizations in
capacities of leadership and held
other state offices prior to being
elected sta te commander in 1954.
Wagonseller served five years
with the U. S. Air Force. Prominent
in Lancaster civic affa irs, he is a
partner in the real estate firm of
Wagonseller and Rife in Lancaster.
He and his wife, Mary, have two
sons and a daughter.

London Pool passes on sale

precipitously and unfairly penalize
early retirees" or reduce benefits
more than "necessary to achieve a
Season passes to London Pool are
financially sound system ahd the now on sale Mayor Eber Pickens anwell·being of all retired nounced at a special meeting of
Americans."
Syracuse Council Wednesday night.
On the other side of the Capitol,
The passes may be purchased at
meanwhile, the House Democratic the pool which is open daily until 4
Caucus unanimously adopted a p.m.
resolution branding the stiffer early
Aseason pass for a family of two is
retirement penalties as "an un- $35; family of three, $38; family of
conscionable breach of faith with the four , $41; family of five,$44; family
first generation of workers that has of six, $47; family of seven, $50;
contributed to Social Security for · maximum, $51; individual passes,
their whole lives."
$22. Swimming lessons ar $12 for 10
Pepper, a Florida Democrat, lessons. The daily rates are, pr~
released a 57-page staff study that school, 50 cents; students, 75 cents;
provided the first estimates of how adults 18 and older, $1.50; parties,
many Americans would be affected two hour minimum, $35 per hour.
by each of Reagan's proposals to
The pool will officially open to the
slash $81.9 billion in Social Security public on Saturday, May 30. Pool
benefits over the next five years.
hours will be from I p.m. unlil7 p.m.
Pepper said the administration's
Paige Cleek, pool manager, anown figures show that over the next nounced the hiring of the following
75 years, the Reagan plan amounts as lifeguards, Carrie Guinther, Jay
to a $37 billion-a-year reduction in Ord, Christa Beegle, Kim Follrod,
benefits, more than twice the Kim Morrow, Steve Souder and May
system's long-term deficit of $18 Beth Slavin.
billion a year.
Cleek announced that swirruning
In addition to sharp cuts in early
retirement checks and disability
benefits, tbe Reagan package would
reduce benefits for all future
retirees an average of 10 percent by
James King, 29, Rt. I, Middleport,
has been arrested and charged with
1987.
Pepper's staff study said 18.1 the April3, breaking and entering of
million persons now aged 56 to 61 the Pomeroy Motor Co., and the
who retire over the next five years breaking and entering of Pal Hill
would be hit by that cut. And it said Ford, Middleport, on May 15.
King was taken before Judge
more than 7 million workers and
spouses would lose on~lhird of their Robert Buck on a biU of information
promised benefits bY 1986 under the and tbe case was referred for a presentence investigation.
early retirement penalties.

lessons will be given with the date
and time to be announced bilef,
Cleek and Ord will be in charge til ln.
structions.
It was also announced that Mayor
Pickens will be setting up a Cl&gt;R
course for all liefguards.
Naomi London will assist Cleek for
at least two weeks with the selling of
season tickets and the ordering of
supplies.
Council, in other business, voted
not to rent the property most recently purchased. It was determined
that the house located on the property is in need of extensive repair and
until council can afford to pay for the
remodeling the property will not be
rented.
Attending were Mayor Pickens,
Janice Lawson, clerk, George
Holman, treasurer, Willie Guinther,
Mick Ash, Mike Struble, Jack
Williams and Katie Crow, council
members, Jean Hall, April Smith,
Paige Cleek and Robert Wingett.

Police book Middleport man
The tools and property taken were
valued at approximately $9,000.
Three-fourths of the property has
been recovered and additional
recovery is expected. Making the
arrest were Sheriff James J. Proffitt, and Middleport Police Chief J.
J. Cremeans.
Tropper Fred Backus, W. Va .
(Continued on page 10)

Eastern graduation service Sunday
. Rev. RObert Saundera, pastor of
the MI. Hermon United Brethren in
Christ Church, wW deUver the sermon at 2 p.m. Stnla)' when blccalaureate II held for the 73 aenlors
of th1a year's IJ'Idaatlng claas at
Eutern lli8h Sdlool.
'Ibe Rev.lleltlert Orale, pastor of
the Chelter Pint Charch of the
N....-, will liVt the inVOcaUon
and the benedlcU'lll and IDUiieal
numbers, "Morninl 1111 Broken",

and "I Believe" will be presented by
the IIIIth grade chorus, directed by
Mrs. Maxine Whitehead.
Commencement will be held at 8
p.m. Sunday evening In the high
liehool audllllrium with addresses to
be given by Marcy AM Sexson,
valedictorian, and Melanie Kay
Root, elulllllutatorian. .
Llela Renee Blake, class
praldent, will puunt the welcome
w1lh Grecory Lynn Wigal, clasa vice

president, introducing the speakers. recessional. Mrs. Maxine Whitehead
Principal James D. Page will will direct the sixth grade chorus
recognize the 10 top scholars of the singing "Lei the.Whole World Shine
class and will present the class to for You" and "It's a Beautiful Day."
Members of the grduating class
Superintendent Richard L. Roberts.
Diplomas will be presented by Dor- are:
Jame 1 LeRoy Bahr, Brenda ICily Bailey, Brtasel Larkins, vice president of the
da Lee s.U.rd, Rlchlrd Scott Belrhl, Cynth(•
Eastern Local Board of Education.
Ann Smllll Bing, Llela RonH Blaile, illdlon!
InvocatiOn and benediction will he Kevin Boring, Jioeoll Edward Bowen, 0 , Aniia
Smlltt 8rook1, Slephen Doqia) .
bY Rev. Grate. The band, directed Louise
Brownin(l, Kenneth Leller Buckley, Ttftla Ann
bY James Wilhelm, Jr., will present
(Continued on Pqe71
the prelude, the processional and the.
~~

�.·

'·-

Thursday, May 21, 1981

Commentary
.

'

.,

End run around high
WASHINGTON (NEA)
Congress and the federal judiciary
appear to be on a collision course
that does not bode well for either
branch of government.
Dozens of bills ~ve heen introduced in the House and Senate
this year to strip the federal courts
of jurisdiction over controversial
subjects such as abortion, school
prayer and busing - all issues on
which previous Supreme Court
decisions have created deep and of·
ten bitter divisions.
Lacking the volf,ll to overturn such
rulings through conventional
procedures, frustrated lawmakers
now are attempting an end run
. around the high court by seizing
upon a seldom-utilized provision of
the Constitution that gives Congress
the right to restrict the tribunal's appellate jurisdiction.
The pending bills, introduced by
legislators unhappy with court
rulings oh busing, prayer and abor·
lions, would bar the federal courtsincluding the Supreme Court - from
reviewing all state laws affecting

those topics.
Sen. Orrin G. Hatch, R-Utah,
chairman rl the Senate subconunittee with jurisdictloni in the
field and a leading advocate of the
court circumvention strategy,
argues that "the federal judiciary
has heen courting constitutional
disaster by reading its own predlleclions into the nation's fundamental
document."
·There is, of course, an eye-of•thebeholder problem with Hatch's
argument. He may consider the
Supreme Court guilty of ".QI(~
reaching" in its rulings, but otbers
applauded those decisions as wise
and reasonable interpretations of
the Constitution. Who is to say which
side is right?
Legal scholars disagree as to
whether Congress does in fact have
the right to strip the court of its
power to review the constitutionality
of state laws on any subject: But
even if the legislature has such a
right, that doesn't mean it ought to
exercise it.
This is not the first time, after all,

The Daily Sentinel
Ill Courl Strff't
Pomeroy. Olllo
614-992-2156

DE\'OTF:D TO TilE INTEREST OF THE MEIG&amp;-MASON AREA

Publl :; h ~r

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH

Publlsht"r/Controllt'r

Gent'ral Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
Nr""~

co~rt~.__-'----,..------..c.._----R-o_bert_Wa_lte~r:s ·

that substantial segments of the
What Is important is that sooner or for a moment, they might notice that noted. However, the "election retlli"
population have been deeply. upaet later the court modified Its positions the walls they are attempting to ns" on isSues such as aborijo61Bte
by Supreme Court rulings. In the in response to changing times and breach already are beginning to not yet very clear.
We do not shoot the umpire simply
1920s, liberals were frustrated wben sentiments. In each insta~e. It has crack.
the high court struck down laws done so of its own accord - not
In its own peculiar way - with because we disagree with his Calls.
aimed at curbing some of the most because Congress took away its pomp and dignity and denials of any Neither should Congress,try to strip
rapaciouspracticesofbigbusiness.
power to decide certain issues.
s~ch crassness- the Sgpreme Court . the Supreme Court of fundamental
In the 1930s, when the "nllle old
Indeed, if Hatch and his allles does. "follow the election returns," 'authority merely becaUSe some
men" wiped out. much of his early would put down their battering ram . as the inimitable Mr. Dooley once leglslators.afewdeclsions.
New Deal legislation, President
Franklin D. Roosevelt was so
fruious that he tried to push through
Congress his Infamous court·
. packing scheme.
· • :r'he South was in lum,loil for..JIH!ll ,
191ter ' the · court' 8 1954 sehooi 1 ·
desegregation decision, while liberal
criminal-law rulings of the 1960s
provoked noisy "Impeach Earl
Warren" crusades.
Despite the passions aroused, the
court's right to decide those issues
never was successfully challenged.
But when it bas found itself too far
out of line with the public and
political counsensus of the day, the
high court has retreated from unpopular positions.
Sometimes such turnabouts have
heen abrupt. Even as Congress
debated the Roosevelt court-packing
scheme, two justices suddenly
reversed themselves and began finding merit in New Deal legislation the "switch in time that saved nine."
Sometimes the retreat has been
gradual, as with the shift In interpretation rl criminal law in
recent years.
"Psssst... Now ask him for the space shuttle."

Justice bill goes to subcommittee

· ROBERT L. WINGEIT

A s~ i s tant

·Page-..2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, May 21, 1981.

F:dft,lr

,\ . MEMBER uf Thr ASSIICiB it'd Prt'SS, Inland Daily Prn5 AnuclaUon nd lhe
Amrru·an Nrwspapt•r Publl."htr~ ASSII&lt;'ialion.

l.f.TIE R."i OF UPINIO.N art• ~-rknm.-d . Thl')' .~huu ld bt- Ins than 300 wnrd~ lnnjt. All
.llrt' :oillhlt'l't lu. t&gt;dllm~_ and mu~t bt· s i~n"d 111ith namt', Mddrt&gt;h und ldcphunr
numlwr. Nu un .~l~nlod lrltrrs "'llllw publl.~h,·d. l .l'lkr~ ~huuld IM• In t(t"Nitaslt'. addrrsslnJt
t~s u t·~. "''' ~ · rsnnulltlt• s.
h'lh·r..

There comes a time

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Major
legislation revamping Ohio's
juvenile justice system beaded for a
subcommittee after supporters were
handed a surprise defeat in the full
House Finance Corrunijtee.
The measure, giving juvenile
court judges more control over
delinquents, ran into trouble during
what was to have been its final
hearing before the panel. An amend·
ment gutting the bill by deleting a
key section apparently was a~
proved in a close vote, prompting
Rep. Myrl H. Shoemaker, committee chairman and co-sponsor of

the bill, to send it to a subcorrunittee.
Shoemaker, [).Bourneville, lear·
ned the amendment failed but stood
by his original decision to put the bill
into a subpanel for redrafting.
"There would have heen a substitute bill anyway," Shoemaker
said. He earlier said he planned to
complete action on the measure,
clearing way for a vote by the full
House that would send it to tbe
Senate.
'' I wasn't ca,unting votes,' ' he said
of the tally on the key amendment.
"I know this was the most heavily

·In the beginning, the intention was relatively modest.
The idea was to provide some insurance for the elderly working
population against unanticipated financial need. "Working" was defined in
the most basic sense of the word, meaning jobholders in industry and com·
merce, no high-salaried professionals.
BLADENSBURG, Md. (AP) Congress.
And even so coverage was far from comprehensive. Initially no more
Steny
Hoyer
stood
on
Emerson
Democrat Hoyer and Republican
than 60 percent of the work force participated and benefits were limited, supStreet
and
looked
at
the
row
rl
Scott
are knocking on doors,
plementing an individual's own savings and whatever might be forthcoming
modest
houses.
The
blue-collar
greeting
commuters, addressing
from other sources. Participants financed the program through deductions
neighborhood
is
the
sort
of
civic
groups
and spending big
from their paychecks. But they were not thereby investing in an annuity,
l!·aditionally
Democratic
area
money
on
television
advertising, the
paying in money that they would be entitled to withdraw later.
where
President
Reagan
often
finds
routine stuff of congressional cam·
The idea was not to establish a national pension system. The program
surprising
support,
a
fact
that
paigns.
was structured not as a cwnulative trust fund but as a simple transfer
causes
some
uneasiness
in
the
But Tuesday's vote in Maryland's
mechanism. Money paid in by the participating portion of the active work
Hoyer's
congressional
campaign.
5th
District, easy conunuting distan·
force was immediately paid out to the eligible portion of the retired
A
few
miles
away,
Audrey
Scott
ce
from
the White House and Capitol
population.
stood
at
the
top
of
the
escalator
Hill,
may
be more than a routine
That, briefly, was Social Security as conceived and instituted in the
carrying
homeward-bound
comelection to fiU one of 435 seats in the
Depression '30s. That is not Social Security in the inflationary '80s and to a
muters
out
of
the
Capital
Heights
House of Representatives.
considerable extent because the program has changed so much in the last
subway station. Most of the people
Professionals from the White
half century it is in trouble. Again.
she
greeted
were
black,
habitual
House
to the Democratic National
So now we have President Reagan and Congress revving up for the third
Democratic
voters
unlikely
to
supConunittee
see the vote as the first
rescue operation in approximately as many years. What makes this time
port
a
Republican
candidate
for
potential
electoral
test of the
around different is that for the first time retrenchment Is being seriously ad·
dressed as essential to keeping the system solvent.
Tbe administration proposals - principally to set back annual cost-{){.
living increases frorn July to October at a savings of billions a year,
discourage early retirement, revise tbe formula for computing future,
benefits and tighten eligibility requirements for some- are in part a hurryup effort designed to head off independent congressional action. Both houses
WASillNG TON (NEA) - Most ministration on many of them.
are looking at more drastic pruning because the Social Security system is in political observers expect a match
This may not do much to bring
such clearly bad shape, in real danger of running out of funds.
race for the 1984 Democratic about the defeat of the president's
In a sense it is a victim of its own success. From the very beginning the presideRtial nomination between proposals in the Senate. But Kensystem functioned not merely as intended but better. So much better than former Vice President Waller Moo· nedy Is gathering valuable IOUs
not only did participation multiply, benefits proliferated. With an e~panding dale and Sen. Edward Kennedy, [). from Democrals across tbe country
economy and a growing population, the nation could afford It, particularly In Mass.
by leading the defense of the
the boom '80s wben a number of expensive additions were nnade to the
Mondale has decided to maintain a programs and positions that tlrey
original benelils package.
low profile during the cornintl moo- hold dear.
The good times came to an end in the sagging '70s, however. Partly it is tm while he concentrates on
Kennedy and his staff have
demographics - a declining birthrate, meaning fewer newcomers to the building a strong campaign carefully chosen the isSues on which
work force, and more Americans living longer, meaning more retirees to be organization. He is adhering to the be will oppose the administraiton
supported. In the 1930s, the payroll taxes of 11 workers supported one traditional political wisdom of not and the Senate's conservatives.
beneficiary. The ratio Is now about 5-t()-1, and some projections see it hitting getting out in front too early.
They Include IJillltary aid to Saudi
3-to-1 or less within another half a century.
Kennedy, however, has opted for a . Arabia and El Salvador, reThe growing problem has been addressed to dale through quick fixes very high profile. He is attempting establlslunenl of close ties with
that come down basically to raising payroll tax rates to meet recurrent to position himself as the keeper rl right-wing regimes such as Argenbeneflt payment gaps. Any more fundamental restructuring of the program the Democratic fait!) In a party short tina's that have leu-than-glowing
has been regarded as politically impossible given the growing and politically of leaders and u the mOll outspoken human-rights records, reduced
active population of retirees.
·opponent of the Reagan ad· federal support for health-care
But there comes a point at which the Inescapable can no longer be mlnlstration in the Republican· facillties and hospital cost conignored. Such as now. Aprogram such as Social Security cannot be Isolated dominated Senate.
talnment, abolition of the Leagl Ser·
from the society and more immediately the economy in which it emts. It
Kennedy is using to grea~ ad- vices Corporation and cuts lri spencaMot pay out more in the long run than that jconomy Is capable of putting vantage his position as ranldng ding on school lunches, education
into it.
f
Demoerst on the Senate Labor imd and fuel-cost aaalstance to the poor
The proposals now on the table are only the beginning of a long overdue Human Resources Conunlttee. He and the elderly.
reconsideration of tire entire system. There are plenty of.others to fuel the has defined a whole range or illlues
The contrast in the approaches or
debate, such as spinning off costly Medicare as a separate program and on which he th1nka hla paey should Mondale and Kennedy could not
taxing benefit payments above a subsistence level.
oppose President Reagan' and .hu have been more clearly shown than
The important point now is that a start has been made. Social Security won agreement from committee · when they recenUy addmud a
may not have been intended as a national pension system, but Americans Democrats to vole against the ad- ·
rl Democrats In Manhave come to regard It as such. I( despite the political complications the , . . - - - - - - - - - - , ~-....__ __._ __,::-::~
Reagan administration succeeds Jn restoring .the system to IIOUIIdnellll, the
achievement could well rank in history's final &amp;CCOI!Dtlng as Its mOll coo-

lobbied bill that has heen in my com·
rnittee.''

Confusion over the vole abruptly
halted a nnarathon hearing in which
the committee waded through
nearly twodozen amendments.
Sponsored by Rep. Thomas A. Pot·
Ienger, R-Cincinnati and
Shoennaker, the bill would give
juvenile court judges a stronger
hand in the sentencing, release and
post-release supervision of young
people convicted of serious crimes.
It would require delinquents com·
milling first or second-degree
felonies to be sent to institutions for

at least one year. Delinquents who
corrunit third or fourth-degree
felonies would have to be corrunitted
to an institution for at least six months.
As amended Tuesday, it would
have given counties the option rl
taking over responsibility for
delinquents on parole or contractinl
with the Ohio Youth Corrunission fo1
such services.· Under current law,
the commission has exclusive control over parole, or alter-care.
The bill also contains the agency's
approximately $67 million budget
for fiscall982, which begins July I.

Reagan's support causes uneasiness
Reagan economic program, the
issue both parties are certain will
dominate the 1982 congressional
elections.
Mrs. Scott supports the Reagan
program, but with reservations
tailored to local concerns such as
mass transit. Hoyer says he supported the alternative budget
proposed by House Democratic
leaders, but he discounts the idea
that the vote will be a reading on
Reagan's economic policies.
"I'm sure if we win ... that the
Reagan people are going to say,
well, it's just a Democratic district
that stayed Democratic," Hoyer
said. "Now, if we were to lose, I

Kennedy prepares for

structlve.

Today in history• •..
Today Js Thursday, MaY 21st, the i4lst d8y or 198l.·n.,.,e are 2zt days
left in the year.

Today's highlight In hl.ltory:
On May 21, 1JI56, the world's flrat hydrogen bomb wu exp.lodeo!JI.JII
United States over Bikini Atoll in the Paciftc Ocean.
Onthlsdate:

•

1

In lSU, Spanilll e~plorer Hernando de Solo died while seat clljnl '~if
,gold
along lhe.MIIIIJisJpplj River.
·
·'•
'
•

-

pr~ume

they would jump up and
down and scream that it wifs the
president."
Nevertheless, the election is the
first real contest for a congressional
seat since Reagan was inaugurfted,
and both parties have dispatched big
money and big names.
Democrats wasted few resoilrces
un the recent election in the solidly
Republican district in Michigan formerly represe~ted by White House
budget director David A. Stockman.
The Maryland election is to succeed Democrat Gladys Noon
Spellman, whose seat was declared
vacant after she suffered a heart at·
tack that left her in a coma.

Easler pumps fife
back into Pirates
By Auoclated Preas
With Dave Parker on the disabled
list, Willie Stargell playing
sparingly and Jason Thompson
struggllng, the Pittsburgh Pirates'
offense hasn't been in the best of
health this season.
But Mike Easler has suddenly
pumped some life into it.
Easler, who has replaced the more
celebrated Parker in right field, is
hitting .340 with five home runs and
20 RBI. Two of his rouncl·trippers
came Wednesday night, along with a
double, as he led the Pirates to a 6-1
victory over the Atlanta Braves.
"I feel no pressure," said Easler.
"I just want to do what I can do and
help the team winY
In other National League games,
it was Houston 4, St. Louts 3 in II innings; New York 4, San Francisco 3
in 10 innings; Cincinnati 10, Chicago
7; Montreal&amp;, San Diego 2, and Los
Angeles 3, Philadelphia 2 in 10 In·
Dings..
Easler's three-run homer in the
first inning gave Pittsburgh a 3-0
lead off losing pitcher Bob Walk, 1-3.
Easler's blast followed walks to Tim
Foli and Jason Thompson.
Winner Rick Rhoden, fMJ, who had
missed two prior starts with a sore

· elbow, allowed siJ: hits, struck out
four and 'waJked one in six innings.
He left because of fatigue and was
replaced starting the seventh by
Enrique Romo, who earned his fifth
save while pitching hitless ball over
the last three innings.
Astros 4, CardlDala 3
Rafael Landestoy ~alloped a tw()o
out RBI trjple in the 11th inning,
leading Houston over St. Louts. Landestoy's hit came off relief ace
Bruce Sutter, 1·2, the third St. Louis
pitcher and gave the victory to Joe
Niekro.
Niekro, 5-3, pitched the first 10 innings and scattered 10 hits while
striking out eight. Joe•Sambito pit·
ched the last inning for the Astros,
recording his third save.
Sutter retired Art Howe and Danny Heep to start the Houston lith
before Alan . Ashby singled and
scored on Landestoy's triple. The hit
broke a 3-3 tie \hat existed since the
third Inning, when the Astros
deadlocked the game on Jose Cruz's
RBI triple.
Mets 4, Giants 3
Alex Trevino's sacrifice fly with
the base loaded in the loth inning lif·
ted New York over San Francisco,
snapping a nine-game losing streak.

Bair's blast beats Cubs
CHICAGO (AP) - Home runs are McNannara juggling his lineup, Bair
not the stuff of relief pitchers' was batting Sj!Venth when he faced
dreams, according to Cincinnati's Chicago's Dick Tidrow.
Doug Bair, even when the pitcher is
"The ball was in the middle but it
doing the hitting.
was up high," Bair said. "I knew
Bair chalked up the first home run right away it was hit real well."
of his major league career Wed·
Gales of laughter greeted Bair on
nesdliy, s three-run blast that helped his return to the Reds' dugout, but
lift the Cincinnati Reds to a 1().7 vic- McNamara said he was neither
tory over the hapless Chicago Cubs. amused nor surprised at his pit·
But the object of his post-game cher's new-found power.
musings was the save that got away.
"He's a pretty good hitter," McTom Hume faced two batters in the Namara said. "When he gets his pitbottom of the ninth to pick up the ch, he knows what to do with it."
save for Cincinnati.
Nor was McNamara surprised by
"Sure, I'm disappointed that I the seesaw scoring hattie whi~h saw
didn't get the save," Bair said. "I'm the Cubs fall from a 5-2 lead to a 1().5
a short relief pitcher. Believe it or deficit, then bring what woUld have
not, I'd rather have a save than a heen the tying Min to the plate in the
homerun."
ninth. It was just a typical day at
Bair's homer capped a ninth- cozy, breezy Wrigley Field.
inning eruption that slammed the
"On a day like this, with the
door on Chicago's hopes for an end to breeze blowing out, and in this park,
a horrendous losing streak. The you can go through a pitching staff
Cubs suffered tbeir eighth loss in a like nothing," McNamara said.
row while the Reds picked up their "Sure, we were down 5-2 after the
eighth consecutive win.
first, but we can come back and
With Cincinnati .~nager John _sco.re. We had eight innings togo."

'84..s.;..._R_o_be_n_J._W~_agma_~

dale's home state of Minnesota. The
former vice president gave 'a safe
speech in which be talked about the
need to reunite the party before 1984
and to formulate new programs in
light of the co1111ervative shift in
national opinion.
Kennedy gave a rip-roaring
speech that was much more liberal
In tone than Mondale's. "We will be
ready with new Ideas," said Ken·
nedy, "but they will not be retreada
of the reactionary nostrums of this
day. they Will be rooted in the timetested values of the Democratic Par·
ty ... Let us resolve that we will not
run from great political convictions
fortheconvenienceofthe bour."
Kennedy's speech was well
received by party activists Jn Min·
nesota, as it has been at other
Democratic gatherings around the
country. Its refusal to back sway
from traditional party values is
clearly becoming .Kenpedy's tbeme
for the future.
But KeMedy has a major obstacle
to overcome before be can begin his
1984 presidential campaign : winning
re-election to a fifth Senate term
next year. Conservatives, especially

Cub Manager Joey AmaUitano, on
the other hand, probably wished the
game bad ended after the first inning.
''Finally we scored some runs and
got some hits," Amalfitano said. "It
looked like things were going
somewhere."
Cincinnati third baseman &amp;y
Knight agreed.
"My feeling was that this might be
the day they would break out of it,"
Knight said. "When they score five
runs, you have some playing to do.
But we can come back against
anybody."

NABBING IT - Chleago Cubti shortstop Steve
DUiard snares throw from catcher Tim Blackwell, a
Uttle late, as Ken Griffey of Cincinnati Reds steals

Commission fines horseman THE TIME
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
Ohio RBcing Commission fined one
horseman and suspended two more
during its regular monthly meeting .

modified his indefinite suspension to
!Odays.
In other major action Wednesday,
the corrunission:

The corrunission modified its
decision last month and reduced
harness trainer George Polk's ~
day suspension to a $200 fine . Polk,
from Toledo, had been suspended af·
ter medication and needles were
found in a Toledo Raceway
tackroom.
Charles Barnum, a harness owner
and trainer from Vincent, Ohio, had
all but two months of his one-year
suspension converted to probation.
Traces of medication were found in
one of Barnum's . horses at Nor·
thfield Park on Aprt14.
The commission upheld a
RBceway Park's steward's ruling
against James Luongo, a harness
driver from Wilkes Barre, Pa. But it

- Approved Grandview-at-Northfield harness dates from June 2
through Aug. I, but took no action on
a Grandview racing request through
Aug. 18. The latter dates, in conflict
with the Painesville-at-Northfield
meeting, are involved in a lawsuit.

Watson behind
1980 golf pace
DUBLIN, Ohio (AP) - Tom Wat·
son is nearly $50,000 behind his pace
at this stage in 1980, a year in which
be collected $530,000, unprecedented
in professional golf.
Watson's performance at this time
last season was mind-boggling. He
won five of the 12 tournaments be entered. He finished in the top 20 in all
of them and the top 10 in all but two.
His earnings of $273,000 were far in
front in the money race.
In contrast, the game's greatest
player in the past four years ranked
third in 1981 winnings with $226,1100
going into the Memorial Tour·
nament which began today. That
isn't important to him.
" I think more of my performance

second Jn ninth inning Wednesday at Chicago. CJn.
clnnaU won, 1&amp;-l.IAP Laserphoto)

second in putting with 28.93 strokes
per round.
Nicklaus, winner of the U.S. Open
and the PGA last summer, was loth
in driving distance with 269 yards.
He ranked 13th in driving accuracy
with 71.6 percent of his tee shots Ian·
ding in fairways.
Watson said his game is not where
he wants it.
"I haven't had an extended period
of playing particularly well this
year," he said. "But in the last four
yers, I've had extended perioda and
they all started around this time."
That might be a poor omen for
Watson's challengers.

-Granted Northeast Ohio Har·
ness a nnakeup date May 26 for the
loan dale lost March 20 because of
poor weather at the Northlield
meeting.
_ Tentatively approved $150,000 in
capital improvements sought by
Thistledown. The Cleveland
thoroughbred track will use the
money to install a telecom·
munications system.

CAPSULE

!

RADIO 14
8•10 am and
'
' '
4:10 p.m.
Sponsored by

BOB'S ELECTRONICS
GALLIPOliS

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FAMILY CLINIC

ALLERGY AND DERMATOLOGY
What is Psoriasis?
A chronic skin disease that affects some 8 million people in th is
cou ntry.

What C••••• P•ori••is?
No one knows. Skin injury , emotional stress and some form s of
infections are said to trigger its deYelopment .

Who Gets Psoriasis?
Men and women In eq ual numbers at any age , but most often

between the ages of 15 and 35 . Psoriasis has been diagnosed for the
first lime In peop le of advanced age . It also strikes chil dren . About
150,000 new cases of psoriasis are diagnosed each year .

Is Psori1sis Contagious?

No.

What Does Psoriasis Look Like?
It appears as silvery skin patc~es , often on knees and elbows , but
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Is There .a Cure for Psoriasis?
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DAVID L. CARR, D.O.- OFFICE, 675·6971
Oftice Hours
2924 Jackson Ave.

by

Appointment
Point Pleasant, WV 2Sll0

than
thewhen
money
I make. I'm much -.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
happier
I win a tournament,"
said Watson, who's done it twice this
year, including the Masters.
The money list Is not Watson's
way of judging the sport's best
player.
"You put greens In regulation and
putting together, and you can deter· 1
mine who the best player is," be ad·
vised a writer over a pre-round cof·
30-Month Money Market Certlficat
8·Month Money Market Cartlflcrte
fee Wednesday at Muirfield Village,
the site of the Memorial TOW'
nament. "Putting statistics alone
are not important. If you miss a lot
of greens, you have a Jot or short put·
ts. If you hit the greens, you have a
Effective Annual Yield On
lot of long ones."
The 31-year-old Missourian said
another pair of PGA Tour statistics
carries importance, too. ·
"Combine times in the fairway
No minimum investment is
$10,000 minimum. Interest
with driving distance. You will find
required. Interest will be
may be paid monthly, quaroutwhothe best driver is," be said.
A year ago, Watson and Jack • terly; at maturity or trans·
compounded continuously
Nicklaus, the host for this week's
from date of deposit to date
ferred to a savings account.
$400,000 ·tournament, led the comof withdrawal.
binations.
Federal regulations prohibit
Watson ranked ninth in hitting
compounding of interest.
greens, doing it 69 percent or the
time in regulation. He Willi tied for

1

No

the National Conservative Political
Action Committee, have targeted
Kennedy for defeat in 1982 and will
spend millions of dollars trying to do
so.

Most . political observers in
Massachusetts say that Kennedy
should have little trouble defeating
any candidate that the Republlcalllt.
put up despite his losses in the IJI8D. ~
presidential primaries, the rednt
break·up of his marriage ·and 'ihe
continuing burden of Chappaqulddlck.
,
But the senator and his staff ate
working not for a mere victory but ·
for a landslide. They realize that
Kennedy's biggest problem Is the
opinion among many Democrats be
caMot win the general presidential
election, especially at a time wben
the nation Is becoming more conservative.
·
Kennedy's pollticaladvlaers know
that this notion will be one of the
.wongest factors working for Moodale and agalnat Kennedy In 1984.
They bope that a massive re-election
vlctorr wlll go a long way toward
dispelling it.
.

fpr the Mets.
Lee Mazzilli's leadoff walk
triggered the winning rally off Greg
Minton, 1-2. Mazzilli took second on
Joel Youngblood's single and Dave
Kingman's single loaded the bases.
Trevino then hit a fly to center,
driving in Mazzilli. Jeff Reardon, I·
0, pitched out of a jam in the bottom
of the inning to gain the victory.
Expos 8, Padres 2
Andre Dawson hit two solo homers
and scored four runs and Willie Montanez singled in two runs to lead
Montreal over San Diego. Steve
Rogers, 4-3, snapped a personal tw()o
game losing streak with an eighthitter. Loser Steve Mura, 11,
surrendered five walks and four hits
before leaving in the fifth.
Dodgers 3~ Phillies 2
Rick Monday slugged a leadoff
homer in the loth iday, batting for
winning pitcber Steve Howe, 4-1,
slugged his second homer of the
season, offloser Tug McGraw, 1·4.
Howe had relieved Dodger starter
Burt Hooton while McGraw took
over in the ninth from Steve Carlton.
Philadelphia's Pete Rose surpassed Henry Aaron's all·time
National League record for career
at-bats in th,e fifth Inning with his
11,629th.

15.275%

PICKING A NEW ONE - Geller Tom Wat1011 talb over a new
club wllb eqalpmeat ulet repmeatltlve Gary Dlebl on tbe practice
tee at Malrfleld VOiage Golf Club ID Dllblln, Oblo, Wedoesday l'ld1e
P"iJeriDI for tbll weekend'• Memorial Toamament. Wallloa, right, il
l'llllll1lqJ oearly $10,010 bebiDd bb recard W1liDp pace of la1t year ·
wbea be collected $5JI,IIOO, unprecedented la profeeslollll goB. (AP
Luerplloto)

·,

Golf foursome set
The Men and Women's
Alsociatlon at tbe Jaymar Golf
Coune, Pomeroy, will hold a Scotch
fOUI'IIOIIIe Sunday, May 24, beglnnlng
at4p.m.

Members and pests are Invited
and are uked to bring a covered

dl.lll.

111e Men'• .wOd.uon w111 ....

twO man 1at ball Mondly,
May :JI.IAielt lee time Ia IO:liO a.m.

1101' a

12.937%
12.00%

,

A tubtllrllllllnler"t pttnalty II reQuired tor eirty wllhdrawal. • Eltec l lve annual yield 111 b.ased on reinvestment ot Pllncipal and in te1est at
maturlly. Thla la 1n annual r1te tubltC t lochange at rtoe••l.

Ask about Pay-by-Phone/NOW and VISA.
No minimum balance. No service charges.

DIAMONl SNNiS
AND LOAN CQMPii'NY
People Count .. The DU.mond Difference
Hours : M., T., W. 9·5, Th. &amp; Sat. ' · Noon
Fri. 9:6
POMEROY, OHIO
216 W. MAIN ST.
992-6655 .
'•

.,,

�Page--4-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

All SEOAL

Today's

Campo casts a large shadow. And if
that isn't enough, he provides his
own sound effects. He telegraphs his
punch and then connects. He is
playing his chagrined rivals on a
psychological string as if they were
y().yOS.
Before the Wood Memorial, a
prime Derby test, Campo stood in
front of his colt's stall and told
everybody within earshot, "We'll
win the Wood. You can go to sleep on
it." Then they did it.
Before the Derby, it was the same
refrain with some added frills for the
enlarged press corps. Pleasant
Colony made it
look as he had occult powers.
At last Saturday's Preakness, the
scenario was the same. Three-up,
and the Belmont to go.
"If that SOB doesn't break a leg,

I'm home," rasped the self-styled
Fat Man. "Triple crown? Nothing to
it. It's a cinch. What more do you
want me to say?"

Meip' Pam Crooks has been
given honorable mention honors on .
the aU SEOAL Girls Softball team
selected re(:ently.
Here is the all star squad.
FIRST TEAM
Player
Pam Lee
Kelly Kyie
Shirl Stoney
Janet Walker
Rose Stillier

scnoot
Athens
Athens

Ga lli polis

Ironton
Jackson
Logan

Tricia Riggs

Logan

Yock Emerson
Sue Robertson

Waverly
Wellston

Lori Vickers
SECOND TEAM

Team

School

Jennifer Jelfers
Karen White
Shari Howard

Athens
Athens
Gall ipolis

Charlene Koons
Jackie Johnson
Bobby Sowers
· Carlene Wroten

Ironton
Logan
Waverly
Waverly

Sonya Hatton
Wellston
Cindy Bragg
Wellston
HONORABLE MENTION
Player
School

Teresa Chorney
Renee HaIley
Lisa McDaniels
Cindy Wilson
Ki m Cottr ill
I"" am Lroo~&lt;s
Robin Thomas
Beth Potts

Athens
Ga II ipol is
Ironton
Jackson
Logan
Meigs
Waverly
Wellston

Andretti must start from
rear of Indianapolis pack
INDIANAPOUS (API - For the rule. Dallanbach could start the race
second time in his last three In- in Pat Patrick's Wildcat and be
dianapolis 500s, veteran Mario An- replaced during a pit stop without
dretti will find himself starting Sun- penalty, but Andretti said no conday's race at the back of the 33-car sideration was given to that
field.
possibility.
A conflict between his Grand Prix
"Wally's retired. He just qualified
driving schedule, which kept him out the car absolutely as a favor to Pat,
of the 1979 race, and his com- his friend and former car owner, and
mittment to drive Indy-style cars to me, just as a friend," Andretli
sent him to the rear of the lineup.
said. "We just brought him out of
The l).foot-6 driver was unable to retirement and you could see be had
qualify his own car for the race after no other intentions.
rain washed out most of the opening
"We knew he had no intentions of
weekend of qualifications. He had to doing the race. And this i.s one of the
drive for Alfa Romeo in the Belgium reasons we picked him. We knew we
Grand Prix last weekend and hi.s In- would not be laking anything away
dy car was qualified by old friend from him, while some of the other
Wally Dallanhach.
drivers might lose a ride by
DaUenbach, retired as an active qualifying the car for us."
racer since mid-1979, put the car in
Andretti was in the same situation
the middle of the third row. But race in 1978 when Mike Hiss qualified his
rules require the placing of a car at Penske-Cosworth and Andretli
the back of the field when the driver finished 12th after experiencing
who qualified it is replaced.
engine problems.
There is a way to get around the
He says the poor starting position

doesn't ca ll for quick heroics in an
effort to get to the front.
"I'll just try to stay out of trouble
at the start," he said. "I'll tell you
that. There's nothing more disappointing than when you have a good
car and jeopardize your chances
because of early mistakes. Early
mistakes are very easily made here.
So I'm going to try and do my part.
I'm going to start just as easily as I

can."
Today, Andretti and the other
drivers had their only chance this
week to test their machines during
Carburetion Day. The day had its
start when it provided an opportunity to test carburetors, and
the name hasn't been changed even
though today's Indy cars don't have
carburetors.
Mter today's brief practice, the
only pre-race activities for the
drivers are a meeting to go over
race procedures Saturday morning
and the annual 500 Festival parade
later that day.

For the record. • •
NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST
w L Pel GB
:Jj)
10
.667
st.LOuis
Z1 I&lt;
.6!2
Philadelfhia
.ISS
20 16
3
Montrea
16
.467
Pittsb~
.273 12 \;
9
New Vor
l 'll
.156 16
Chicago

,.

"

WEST
27

Los Angeles

II

"'13

ctntinnali

San Francisco

21

'

.711
.611
.5!2
.500
.500
.385

H
:Jj)

18
19 19
15
San Diego
WediiHday'• Gamet
Clncirmali 10, Chicago 1
S.n Francisco 3, 10
New Vorl&lt;
Allanli

Houston

"

-4

'"'8

8
12 ....

••

ninlj:.s

"'

ill'

Pittsburgh S, AllBnla I

HolJStOn 4, St.L.oui.s 3, 11 innings
Montreal 6, San Diego 2
lal Angeles 3, Phlladelph!a 2, 10 inninlj:.s
'Maunday'sGamN

HOllSlOO !Ryan 3-1) Ill St.Louis fMartin
!Hl l

Cincin nati

!Pastore

l-ll

al

Chicago

{Martz l-2)

Only games scheduled
Friday'• Games
Montreal at ChiCHgo
PhHadelphia at Pittsburgh, ( n)
San Diego at Atlanta, fn)
New York at St.Louis, fnl
~ Angeles at Cinclnnali, fn)
San Francblco at Hol.L'lton, (n)

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS! ..... )
ADMtloa ol Muldmettll, lae.
Publi&amp;hed every afternoon, Monday through
Friduy, 11 1 Court Street, by the Ohlo Valley
Publishing Company • MulUmtdla. Inc., ·
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, 192-2156. Second claaa
pattage paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.

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MAILSUIISCRIP'I10NS
OIIJoudWnl VlrJ)all

3 Monh .......... . ............. .. 110.50
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ud Weol Vtrpdl

3 Mmth .......................... 111.00
•Mmth .. , ....................... 12Jl.IIO
,1 Year .. ....... , ................. . ..110
(

AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST

W L

Baltimore
Oevelllnd
New York
Milwaukee
Boston
Detroit
Toronto

"'
19

11
11

22

Pel GB
.1167 .633

.611

I\',

.559
.i43
.lOO
.3!6

3\',
I
5\',
!2 \',

.825
.559
.i43
.SilO
.ll3
.314
.300

3
3\',
5
11
ll lta
11

H

19

w

19

16

18

13
:IJ

12

l 1-1

WEST

25 1~
19 l5

Oakland
Chicago
Texas

19

16

California
Seattle
MlnlleSOta
Kall.'ili1J City

2(1

jl)

12
ll

24
24
2l

9

Wectoe.d.ly'• Gam~
Boston 5, Oakland 3

Baltimore S, California 3
Chicago 6 Toronto 5
Seallle 3 Cleveland 1
Detroit a, Teua 4
New York ~. Kansas City 4, ll lnn!J)_gs
Milwaukee 6, M!Mesota 1
Tbanday'1Galllel
Mlnne.W (Redlem l-3) at Milwaukee
(V uckOVich )..2 )
Oakland (KingiTlln Z-2 ) at Bostoo (Eclt·
ersley 3-3), (nJ
California (Rau Q.l)
at Baltimore
!Palmer Z.l ), In)
SeaUle (BaMister +3) at Cleveland
/Garland 2-3), (n)
Dnly l!&amp;mes scheduled

rrom Colwnbi.IS of the International
League.
BASKETBALL
NaUou.l Blsketball AuociaUoo
NEW YORIC KNICKS - Traded a first·
round 1981 draft choice to the Cleveland
Cavaliers for RaOOy Smith, guard.
PORTLAND
TRAIL
BLAZERS
Signed Billy Ray Bates, guard, to a riveyear contract.
I'OOI'BAU.
Natio~~o~IFtotbaU Lurue
GREEN BAY PACKERS - Signed Don
Sweet, placekicker.
HOUSTON OHERS - Signed Adrian
Edwards, kick retumer; Tommy Harper,
defensive end ; Curtis Jennings, tsckle:
Gre~~: Johnson , running back; Kelly Monk,
center; George Walker, tiglt end, and
Thomas Vouny, comerback, to free agent
cootr.act.!.

MEIGS SOFTBALL TEAM - Memben of Ibis
year's Meigs reserve softball team are, front, 1-r,
Robin Barrett, Beth Gloelmer, Cindy Parker, Paula

Norman, Valerie Jeffen, ADDette Jolmson. Baell row
-Lori Maynard, Wendy Tillis, JeDDY Meadowtl, Angle
Hatfield and Barbara Grueser. The Marauden were
coached by Coach Kim Grueser.

.

'

Players reject latest proposals
NEW YORK (AP) - Comments
from players and one of their union
leaders indicate that major league
club owners will have to further
modify their free-agent compensation plan if a May 29 strike is to
be headed off.
pon Fehr, general counsel to the
Major League Baseball Players
Association, said Wednesday the
owners' surprise proposal "does not
provide the basis for negotiations, if
I read it correctly. The cover letter
says that nothing has been held hack
and that it (the proposal) removes
the need for lith-hour negotiations."
Fehr said the owners in presenting
their proposal Tuesday didn't offer
to continue bargaining but said they
would meet "to answer questions. If
this is take-it-or-leave-it then, in my
opinion, the players are not going to
lake it."
Ray Grebey, chief bargainer for
the 26 clubs, commented at the time

that if this initiative wasn't acWhile Grebey's visit to
ceptable, then the owners' more Washington put off an expected
stringent compensation plan that response by the player association's
they unilaleraly implemented to the modification proposal, players
earUer this year would stand.
on at least two teams already had
The players were expected to made their view known.
respond to the owners' modified
Players on the Montreal Expos
proposal today at a meeting of both and San Francisco Giants voted
sides with federal mediator Kenneth unanimously Tuesday to reaffirm
E. Moffett. Fehr, however, wouldn't the union's executive hoard decision
say what the union's next move three months ago to call a strike for
would be.
May 29. The Expos' voice vote also
Grebey was in Washington Wed- gave the executive board the power
nesday to meet with William Lub- to make last-minute decisions when
bers, general counsel for the it meets here next Thursday.
National Labor Relations Board,
Steve Rogers, player represenover the players' complaint seeking tative for Montreal, said Wednesday
financial data to determine whether by phone from San Diego: "We wan-·
the owners are suffering a hardship ted to show that we thought the
from the free-agent system.
owners' new amendments on comLubbers would not comment. pensation were insignificant and not
Grebey said: "I don't want to com- aimed at correcting the problem.
ment on anything that's in the The players dismissed it (the
capable hands of a government proposal) as word ~ames .
agency."

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
cocaine possession trial of female
jockey P.J. Cooksey opened amid
claims by defense attorneys that the
drug was planted on her.
Cooksey, 23, of Chester, W.Va.,
was the first woman to be the
leading jockey at a meeting at an
Ohio thoroughbred track. She posted
49 wins at Beulah Park's 191io fall
meeting.
Cooksey was charged with
possession after a surpri.se inspection of the Beulah Park jockey's
quarters on Nov. 5, 1980, revealed a
small quantity of cocaine in her purse.
In his opening statement Wednesday, prosecutor Dave Winters
said Betty Downey, who was acting
as an Ohio Racing Commission investigator, discovered the cocaine in
a perfume-like vial, along with a
container of several pills later !dentified as illegal horse medications
Ritalin and Placydyl.
Winters said Cooksey told Downey
that the cocaine had been a goingaway gift from a friend at West
Virginia's Waterford Park race
track, where she had been riding.
ButCooksey
defensedidattorney
said
not knowBob
whatSuhr
was

in the vial or the container of pills.
The jockey thought the vial was a
perfume gift and only identified it as
cocaine after examining the powder,
he said.
Suhr said Cooksey knew the
powder was cocaine because she had
taken college law enforcement courses that enabled her to make the
identification.
Winters said no one could have
planted · the cocaine in Cooksey's
purse. But according to Suhr, any
number of people could have had the
opportunity and reason to do so.

r;;;;;~;;!~!!~;;;;~~
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Great

Hockey Leape Pblyoff1
Slalley CUp Fillllll
Bet:t.-&amp;rna
Tlundly't Game
Minnesota at New York Islanders, (n)

DAN'S BOOT SHOP
, Middleport .

Aflower arranging demonstration
by Mrs. Betty Dean of Chester Garden Club, and a program on the
medicinal and food value of herbs by
Paul Strauss of the Rutland community highlighted Ute spring
meeting of Region II, Ohio
Association of Garden Clubs held
recently at the Hamden United
Methodist Church.
Using "Inspirational Designs to
Enjoy" featuring religious
figurines, Mrs. Dean made 5 flower
arrangements entitled ."Mother's
Day", "Take Up Your Nets", "The
Stone Rolled Away", "Joyous
Easter", "23rd Psalm", "Our
Jesus", "Bells in the Chapel" , "No
Room in the Inn", 11Serenity",
"Light that Shines", "Thoughts of
God", "Our Lady of the Future",

Athlatlc Shoes

BEACH nMElS
AND
'
'
SUMMER SHOES
~·

JOX • NCAA • PONY ~ KANGAROO

heiitap house of shoes
Middle

POPPY DAYS - The Racine American legion
Auxiliary will observe Poppy Days Friday and Saturday. Auxiliary members will be in the business area
both days and some house-t&lt;rhouse solicitation will be
done. Mayor Charles Pyles signed a proclamation

Racine American Legion Post 602
will hold Memorial services Sunday
at 10 a.m. at the Greenwood
Cemetery and at II a.m. at the
Letart Cemetery. Harry Wilfor.d will
be the featured speaker and the
Southern High &amp;hool Band will
provide the buglers.

Reuni'on Saturday

ASTROGRAPH
May 22, 1981

Your possibilities tor success
thi s coming year are very good .
However, your progress might '
not come as quickly as your im·
patience demands. Be satisfied
w ith steady grow th.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) This
is not a good day to offer un ·
solicited advice. Even if others
ask for your co mments, weigh
what you have to say with care.
CANCER (June ll ·July 221 For
expeditio us r easons you may feel
obligated to make p romises to
associa tes todav l&lt;eep in mind :
Commitments 1 au make now will
have to be keJ)t later .
LEO (July 23· Aug . 221 There
ar:e certa in tasks which should be
attended to today and. even
though you're aware of their im ·
portance, you m ight took for
reasons to postp one d oing Them.
V IRGO !Aug. 23· Sept, 22) At a
social gather ing today one may
be present who has a tendency to
goss ip . Try to avoid thi s per son ..
He or she may attempt to pry in·
formation from you .
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) Be
very carefu l today r egarding
with whom you discuss fam ily
secrets . If you talk to the wrong
pers on, it could be broad cast to
the neighborhood .
SCORP IO ( Oct . 24 -Nov . 22!
Someone who is a taker may tr y
to aopea l to your more com·

One of the largest groups to attend
the annual Pomeroy High School
Alumni Reunion at Meigs High
School this Saturday evening will be
the class of 1931, observing its 50th
anniversary. Prior to the dinnerdance at the high school cafeteria,
members of the class and their
spoases will meet at 5 p.m. at the
Meigs Inn.

pass ionate in st incts today in or
der to get you to part wirh
something that he or she wants .
SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 2l· Dec.
21) Should you be selli ng a
pr oduc t or service today, don ' t be
afraid to as k for what you deem
to be a f a ir pri ce . II it's worth it,
th ey' l l pay.
CAPR I CORN IDee. 22- J an. 191
Today yo u m ay have to co pe with
negative impulses whi ch cou ld
hamper your best efforts . Ac t f ir
st Worry later .
AOUARIUS !Jan . 20 -Feb. 191
Normally , you enj oy gelling ouT
and mixing w1 1h oTh ers . Today ,
you could spoi l your fun by bein g
a Tr ifle too withdrawn and
reclusive . Go where the action is .
PISCES I Feb . 20-March 20)
Don ' t be afraid of competitive in·
volvements today . Above al l,
don't v iew yourself as th e un·
derdog . Your chances f or win
ning are just as good as those of
oth ers.
ARIES iMarcn 21 ·Apnl 19)
List en cilfetu lty to wha T others
have to say to you Today . You
could r ead m eanings into th eir
wor ds whi c h actuallY weren' t in
tended .
TAURUS (April 20-May 20 )
Check a ll fin ancia l receipls or
busin ess documents wiTh extra
care today . The poss ibtlit1 es lor
sma ll mistakes in these areas are
st r ong .

F'LORJST

PH. 992 -2644
J~l

E . Ma1M , Pomeroy

Your FTO Flonst

5.31 JACI&lt;SON PIKE Rt 35 WEST
Phone 44 6 · 4524

social
SOCl.al Calendar IceThecream
Meigs County Rowdies 4-H
THURSDAY
PRECEPTOR Beta Beta Chapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, Thursday ,
6:30p.m. at the Route 33 Roadside
· Park. Members are to take a
covered dish and their own table ser·
vice.
TWO.MAN team scramble beginning I p.m. Thursday at Jaymar
Golf Course, Pomeroy. Fee $10.
Proceeds to Meigs Unit of Ameri can
Heart Association.
MEIGS COUNTY Democrat
meeting, Thursday, 8 p.m. at Carpenter's Uni on Hall, E. Main St.,
Pomeroy .
FRIDAY
WINDING TRAIL GARDEN
CLUB, 1:30 p.m. at the Meigs County Infirmary to plant flowers.
ROUND AND square dance,
Friday. 8 to 11 p.m. at Meigs Senior
Citizens Center in Pomeroy; music
by String Dusters; public invited.
SATURDAY
SATURDAY, 1:30 p.m. Winding
Trail Garden Club members to take
flowers for arrangements for the
Pomeroy Alumni banquet to the
Meigs High School cafeteria.

Club is sponsoring an ice cream
social and bake sale Saturday across
from the Meigs Musewn, Butternut
Ave., Pomeroy.

JEANS
NOW AVAILABLE
AT

TWO'S CO.

STARTS FRIDAY
1. Leg end ol th e Lon e Ranger
2. Four Seasons

3. Tess
POMEROY, OHIO
~~~~~~=====~~-=-:-:-::.:.:-:.:-======-

No more shoes
The American alligator is protected under stale and federal laws, but
poaching still threatens it in some
states.
'

celebrate your next
MEMORIAL DAY
with each roll of Color Print F11m
Developed
&amp; Printed
.

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Annex To The

225 N. Second Ave.

Memorial services set

declaring the h.o days as Poppy Days and pictured ·
here with him are from the left, Little Miss Poppy, Jennifer Johnson, Junior Miss Poppy, Sheryl Johnson and
Poppy Princess, Angela Carleton, held by Jo Ann
Willford, the Auxiliary's poppy chairman.

SWISHER LOHSE

WATCH FOR GRAND OPENJNG
.,

women.

11

SWIMSUITS IN AU ~_IZES ·
LADIES, JRS., GIRLS, TODDLERS,
YOUNG MEN &amp;·BOYS

219

It you're looking lor a great mul II 1 gl'll1 clllll,
Kentucky Fried Chlcktn'l the anawer. 'Finger llckln'
g9C)d' Kentucky Frltd Chicken·and til the ftxln'a. All
that mul ... and whit a dllll Set lOr yout'Mif.

salve, dandelion, rich in vitamins A,
D and C, with the greens being
suitable for salads and the root for
Uver medicine, violet leaves and
flowers for salads and with sugar to
make a soothing tea, blackberry and
raspberry leaves which are high in
iron.
He also talked about trilium root
tea which is used by midwives, chicweed which make excellent salad
greens, ground ivy tea which
removes lead from the system after
painting, along with several other
field plants.
The Vinton County Garden Clubs
hosted the meeting with members of
clubs from a six-county area attending.
Mrs. Carol Cottrill gave the
welcome with Mrs. Grace Nun·nemaker presenting devotions. The
luncheon was served by the church

Mrs. Frances Titus, state
president, told of the museum sponsored by the Ohio Association of
Garden Clubs at Waukeena Park
near Lancaster. She also announced
the
annual convention to be held
"Holy Family", Cradle", ncross
Aug.
4, 5 and 6 at Denison Univerand Crown" and "Peace on Earth."
Strauss showed sUdes of wild her- sity, GranviUe. Theme will be "East
bs and noted that Southeastern Ohio Meets West" and Mrs. Janet Bolin is
has more medicinal and edible herbs the convention flower show chairthat most any place in the world. He man.
Reports were given by Mrs. Mace!
spoke of the vitamins and nutrients
Barton,
Mrs. Dorothy Bender, Mrs.
which wild plants have, many times
Bolin,
Mrs.
Mary Lou Capps, Mrs.
more than garden fruits and
vegetables, and are usually discar- Sheila Curtiss and Mrs. Alice Thompson, regional chairman.
ded as weeds .
Regional officers, Mrs. Pot
Strauss told of the various uses of
Holter,
Mrs. Sally Andrews and Mrs.
plants which he identified in the
Eva
Robson
presided at the
slides and discussed how to prepare
meeting.
The
Shade
Valley Council
them for food or for homeopathy
medicine. He stressed conservation of Floral Arts won the attendance
for these plants and told how and award.
Mrs. Holter introduced Mrs.
when to gaUter them.
Dorothy
Bender of Washington
Some he listed were golden seal,
County
who
was elected by club
the _plant foremost in medicine,
presidents
as
the
new regional direcmullen oil for earache and healing
tor. She will be installed at the fall
regional meeting to be held ln Meigs
County.

SUMMER SUN FUN

Deal!

!. F. Howell of Columbus, former of Meigs County, writes
above of Downington, in Meigs
County. He is a World War I
veteran, his son sened in World
War II and in the Korean War,
· and his grandsons served in the
Vietnam War.

I

Betty Dean gives program on herbs

./

Transactions

'

Meanwhile the rest of us children, fathers, mothers, and
old soldiers' widows - gathered
flowers from yards and gardens,
One of the chief concerns was
whether or not the flowers ,
especially the peonies, would be
at their best.
The cemetery was about a mile
away, at the top of a hill. Most of
the old soldiers, the mothers and
fathers, aJI(! the children were
able to walk the distance. One old
soldier had a surrey, and ·one or
two buggies appeared. So most of
us walked, and the few who could
not were carried.
At the cemetery one of our
part-time preachers · spoke
brieily and said a prayer. No
original muskets were left among
the old soldiers. Nor as any of
them able to be an alert member
of a firing squad. So four younger
men . were chosen, donned
borrowed Modern Woodman of
America Lodge blouses and fired

The annual banquet of the botham, Marge Fetty, Robin CampWomen's Missionary Fellowship In- bell, Linda Van Inwagen, Ruth Grinternational was held recently at the dstaff, Janice Haggy, Deanna
Laurel Cliff Free Methodist Church. Haggy, Brenda Haggy, Pam Haggy,
Attending were Emma Fox, lola Mary Braley, Linda Beliveau, Linda
Howell, Ruth Douglas, Janice Mash, Roberts, Iva Powell, Betty Dill,
Sharline Mash, Leigh Ann Mash, Sharon Folmer, Michelle Folmer,
Susan Mash Pullins, Tammy Mash, Gina Scarberry, Melissa Foster,
ChriBtie Mash, Betty Stewart, Ann Linda Foster, Kathy Scarberry,
Mash, Donna Gilmore, Judy Wolfe, Evelyn Young, Jean Wright, Sbaron
.Wanda Eblin, Rosalie Sayre, Diana Wright, Tammy Wright, Beulah
Ash, Mildred Jacobs, Janilee John- Ocher, Becky Anderson, Karen
'son, Doris Shook, Sherrl ·Higgen- Stanley, Kristin Stanley.

Nadoa~l

WESTERN
SUITS
30% OFF

drwns.

shotguns on command.
Each family werit to its own
graves, added its own flowers to
those already growing and
visited beiefly with others.
Somehow we all believed the
last war had been fought. We who
were children then could not
know that, within a few years, in
the prime of our lives, most of us
would go to another war and not
all would come back. Still less
could we envision a time when we
would send our sons and grandsons to still more wars.
Now, from our own experiences, we who are old and
frail remember. And we wonder
now how many more generations
will bave to endure the ordeal of ·
losing our finest, the ordeal of
putting flowers on the graves of
our young deal whose love was
ours, ours theirs.
So now we remember, as we
knew so many years ago, that
war i.s a terrible, deadly thing,
but that valor has its own grace
and glory.
Let us remember always.

Church holds mother-daughter fete

Hockey Playoffs

I '

shade lot, our doctor's home and
office, a harness shop, the post office, the school. house and a
blacksmith shop.
On Decoration Day morning we
all met in front of the store. One
of the old soldiers had already
begun to play Marching Through
Georgia and Dixie on the fife
while others "tuned up" the

SPRING CONVENTION - Ml'!l, Frances Titus, president of the
Ohio .Auoclation of Garden Clubs, left, spoke on the OAGC convention
In AuguJI and the museum al Waukeena Park at the spring regional
meeting beld recently at Hamden. Demonstrator for the program was
Mn. Betty Dean of Chester wbo made i5 orrangemenlll on fnspiratioual deslgas.

Fridi)"•Gamet

1 GROUP

The time was the early years of
our century, before 1914. The
place was our small southern
Ohio village, midway between
two county seats, isolated from
both. The event was our simple,
informal observance of
Decoration Day.
The term Memorial Day, comprehensive and appropriate !l!i it
is, had not yet come into general
use, at least not in our neighborhood. Our old soldiers had
reminded the rest of us of what
Gen. John A. Logan had said
about strewing flowers on the
graves of fallen comrades. We
joined them in this act of remembrance. About a d02en of them
still survived in our area.
In our time and place, old
soldiers were by definition those
who had served in the Civil War.
This was before tragic and costly
global war had become man's
chief occupation. Few of our old
soldiers still had any parts of
their old unifonns. But one had a
file, another had a bass drum and
still another had a "tenor" drum,
the small kind we now call a trap
drum.
. The one crossroad in our
village was "Downtown." On one
comer stood the general store.
Within a block in different directions were two churches, one parsonage, the township hall on its

Cocaine trial opens

Oeveland at New Vorl! , {n)
Baltimore at Detroit, (n)
Boston at Milwaukee, (n)
Minnesota at Kansas City, (n)
Chicqo at California, (n)
Toronto at Oakland, fn)
TeiW at Seattle, (n)

Wetblndly'l Sport~ Tn~~o~ed.a.
BASEIIAU.
AalertcMLeo...
NEW YORIC YANKEES - Trolled Jim
Spencer, flnt bueman, and Tom UnderWOOd, pJtcher, to the O.tllnd A's for
Dove Roverin(j1 flnt bueman; Mike Pot.lenOn, ouUJefaer, ond Chuck Dougl-.rly
pit&lt;he&lt;. Aol!fl'l'd Pollel'lllll 10 Coiwnbui
of ,lnlemaUonal Iague, •~&gt;~ Ooual-.rly to
Fort Louderdole ol llle FlorJila State
WI!IJO. llecoUod Dove Righetti, pllcller,

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, May 21, 1981

The strewing offlowers

softball
team chosen

Sports World
The horse and the man. Look at
the horse run. Watch the man eat.
Hark, listen to the man talk.
One would think that the horse
would draw more attention than the
man, particularly since the horse
has just won two of the biggest
plwns in thoroughbred racing - the
Kentucky Dtirby and the Preakness
- and is favored to become only the
12th in more than 100 years' history
to complete the Triple Crown by winning the Belmont Stakes June 6.
The horse is Pleasant Colony.
Pleasant what? Colony who? The
man is Johnny Campo, the horse's
rotund trainer. Oh, everybody
knows Johnny Campo. What's he
saying today? What a card, that
Johnny.
He's horse racing's Muhammad
Ali - the oval man of the ovals,
"Mr. Popoff," the mouth heard
'round the turf world.
At this particular point in time as they say at those Washington
hearings - the man has upstaged
the horse.
.At 5 feet, 7 inches and 250 pounds.

Thursday, May 21,198i

Pharmacy
lttt~~tt!tl McCYUtv~. ll

I

"Your Friendly Shoe Store"
POMEROY, OH 10

rt

,

CNt ..tllltllt. •

l"ltllUI,.TIDNl

1
~-li~ ~:

'

1"11.

It on• If HtMofl'l, lt. l"h,
Mtfl, tl'lr"$'1. I :H t m. lot ~J , Irl ,
h'"'trltMtoii :Muflltt.,.on,

___

P~

I'H f1J HIS

F~onodtl' Suwou

:"~ N•th.Tt tilt

Pomua, , 0

\

�Page--6-The Dally Sentinel

Services slated Friday_ _ _ _ _ _ __

The mouse in the library

Adventures of
A /bert E. Mouse
Part VI
I, Albert E. Mouse, am angry.
Every day has its, how do you
humans phrase it, 'Black Sheep''
My family is no exception. Let
me tell you about him.
His name if Rillrarr Rat and he
Jives in Arizona. From the very
beginning we knew there was
something ... not right with him.
Riffraff is a packrat. Packrats
are traders by nature- they take
one thing and leave another. Riffraff has never shown any inclination for trade, not any
honorable trade anyway ... He
only takes. Pieces of jewelry,
loose change, nothing is safe with
that rascal Riffraff around.
I recall one Christmas when he
was very young. He took all the
Iitle fairy lights off the tree and
refused to tell the fairies where
he had put them . Scoldings, bed
with no supper, even the Jump of
coal in his stocking next morning
failed to make him produce those
Ughts. Those little fairies were
highly put out. .
Come to think of it, we never
did recover those lights.
Then there was the year he took
all the labels off of all the cans of
food in Aunt Dru 's cellar. After
that when we were invited there
for supper it was truly " potluck".
When she opened the can we
never knew if we would have
shell fish or shoe polish.
We even sought professional
help for him. He didn 't stay with
counseling long enough to let it
help. His problem eventually Jed
to him being expelled from

Havarti University in Cambridge. Instead of studying his
textbooks he shredded them for
nests, then abandoned them. The
dean ordered him to work in the
college bookstore for a time to
pay for the damage, but he shredded the books there also. After
that they just expelled him.
I hadn't heard from Cousin Riffraff since then until I got this
telegram. He s;~ys he is coming
here- he heard about the project
and we can discuss old times over
a few ... shredded ... books.
NOT IN MY lJBRARY HE
WON'T!
All these lovely books - that
everyone has worked to hard for.
Shredded? Can you imagine how
disappointed Blue Eyes and the
children would be? I hate to admit it but I've grown rather fond
of the little beggars. After all, if
she has this'compassion for them,
they must be all right.
In my laboratory is a beaker. It
has a secret formula that I've
long kept hidden. I was not·able to
ask the fly I tried it on about it ...
because he vanished. I tried it on
a pansy from my window box and
it vanished . I could feel the petals
and stem of the flower ; but I
could not see it.
Riffraff will be here at dark. If
that beaker holds the key to invisibility then I must see il
Drinking a formula of your own
concoction is very wrong, but I
must do something. I have to
save the library!
Sincerely,
Albert E. Mouse

Tbe Rev. Howard Hellwig, newly
appointed Assemblies of God
-missionary to Paraguay, will speak
at a special missions Service at 7:30
p.m. Friday, Mason Assembly, Dudding Lane, Mason, W. Va.
During his first term as a
missionary, the Rev. Mr. Hellwig
will be part of an evangelistic task
force with the primary responsibility of preaching in remote Indian villages in Paraguay.

The Rev. Mr. Hellwig studled at
Central Missouri State Univel'l!ity In
Warrensburg and the University of
Arkansas in Fayetteville. He also attended the Wycllffe Bible Translators Summer Institute of
Unguistics · at the University . of
Oklahoma. He received his B.A.
degree from Southeastern College of
the Assemblies of God in Lakeland,
Fla.

Television
•
•
VIewmg

Large Selection

Prior to hi:! appointment as a
misslolll!ry, tlie Rev. Mr. Hellwig
pastored a church in Galax, Va., as
well as serving as a youth pastor in .
several churches. During his
education at sOutheastern College,
the Rev. Mr. Hellwig went to Brazil,
as a missionary Intern. The public is
invited to attend the Friday evening
service.

The Daily Senline!- Page--7.

PD!llerDy- Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, Ma . 21 1981
DICK TRACY

WESTERN

HATS
straw, Suede, Deoim
For Men &amp; women

7:00

SIMON'S
PICK-A.PAIR

EVENING
W IJ"PiliiAGAZINE
ffi WEEKEND GARDENER
ffi MOVIE -!COMEDY) ' ' l'a
" North Avenue
1979

FAMILY FEUD
CD BACKSTAGE AT THE
GRAND OLE OPRY
(j) CIJ TIC TAC DOUGH
(j) !llJ
MACNEIL-LEHRER
REPORT
(iiD.NEWS
7 :30 CIJ O BULLSEYE
CD
PROGRAM
UNANNOUNCED
(q) SANFORD ANO SON
C[l (j) (j) JOKER'S WILD
IIJ HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
liJ!llJ DICK CAVETT SHOW
:J]J
RICHARD SIMMONS
SHOW
il%J lil FACE THE MUSIC
' 7:58 ffi CBN UPDATE NEWS
. 8:00 (l) 1J MOBIL SHOWCASE
NETWORK PRESENTATION
(j) ~ Ql

..........
GARDEN CENTER

NOT A!'OUT

T~~"CON·ARTI~T'S

OIL¥ !IMIRK;' YOU C&gt;ID~ ' T--OR
THE ' LARCENY IN HIS HfART'I

The Saving Place SM

for down- lo-earlh prices -

m

PRIORITY ONE
INTERNATIONAL
® MOVIE -(COMEDY) "l'a
"Girls! Girls! Glrltl" 1962

BORN LOSER

@ (j2) Ql

10% OFF ALL FLOWER ARRANGEMENTS

~AI THAT
fRICE~

LARGE ASSORTMENT TO CHOOSE FROM

1'/ELL,
Gl~~ EK··
60ME
COLOGNE?

Not

exactly
as illu.strated

Our Reg . 1.47

Our Reg . 1.47

c harming young lum be rjack
galvanizes Erin , arousing a ten·
der ness sh e held only 10
memory, but wh en anoth er side
o l her suito r 's pe rsonality is
revea led, Erin 's romance turns
mto a nightmare . (60 mins.)

COL06HE? ME?.' YE ~
WHAT'S THE HATTER Willi
YOU TODAY, OTTO? NEXT
THIN6 I H.HOI'i YOU'LL BE
I AHAIRHET!

191 OMEGA FACTOR 'Night

Game s' Tom dec ide s to tall ow
up on a see mingtv crank letler
which has been received at th e
Uni t from Caithn ess.

il!J SEARCHFORALEXAN!IER
THE GREAT ' Co nqu es t ol th e
P er sian Emp ire ' Al eKa nder .
now 25, lea d s his armies out ot
Egypt and becomes Lord of all
As ia, bu t his own troopsbeginto
d istrust him. (60 mins .)

8:30

1.11

1.11

40-lbs." Top Soli
Gardener's dressing
soil for enriching lawn
or garden . Save now'

4CHb. • lag Peat
Michigan peat or organic peat for lawns.
gardens and shrubs.

·Nelwl

' Ne1wl.

by weekend guests

8:58

NO, THAT WAS 10
IIOJRAW! THIS GOES

Surprise weekend guests of Mrs.
Hazel Hayes, Syracuse , were her
son and daughter-in-la w, Bill and
Betty Hayes, Metropolis, Ill. While
here they visited their children and
their families, Mrs. Debbie Wolfe,
Chris and Marshall, Bill Hayes, and
Jeff and Brenda Davis and
daughter, Serena.
Mr. and Mrs. Hayes had spent the
101eek in Colwnbus with Mr. Hayes'
brother, Virgil Hayes and his wife,
Kay, and with Mrs. Hayes' aunt ,
Beulah Circle. While there they also
visited with Dr. Bob Seiple who
practiced medicine in this area approximately 24 years ago and is now
an established physician in Columbus .

Imogene Dean and Betty Sayre
were the weekly queens with Donna
Aleshire as runner-up when TOPS
OH 570 met last week. This week's
meeting was cancelled due to the
Meigs High School graduation
Tuesday night. There will be weighin from 5:30 p.m.· to 6:30 p.m.
Anyone interested in joining TOPS
may contact 992-7415.

10 THE BUREAU OF
NII.'TURAL RESOURCES
AND WATERWAYSf

" Whol~ Moses"

Mrs.Bump
ma4 be

BARNEY MILLER It' s
th e kind ol day the squad can
live without when a newsstand
o wner is arres t ed f or walking
thr ough a const ru cti on si t e on
th e way to work , and a man in

-Observance set
{or Burlingham

what she says!

movinq?

1.97

(9](jj) SNEAK PREVIEWS 'The
lite and Deat h of the Black

Movie' In a spec ial 'Sneak
Preview s ' p ro gram co -host s
Gene Siske l and Ro ger Ebert
disc uss why we' ve come to th e
end of an era of films by, for and
about bl a c k Am eri cans . and
show scenes from 'St ir Crazy,'
'Th e Blues Broth ers.' 'li lies of
t he Fi el d.' 'Shalt ,'· Sound er,'
and 'The Wiz. ·

(74)
Our 2.87

Cow Manure

Composted, odorless,
burning. 40 lb.

weed-free,

non-

9:30 !lJ!l2Jlil

SEEMS HE FELL
HtAI7 OVER HEELS
FOR HER ' HE ~s
NO TIME FOR
ME ANYMORE !

Our Reg. 10.97

8.88
Rose Trellis

our Reg. 79c

(75)

69$

Ea.

caeranlums
'
Healthy. colo rful
plants in 4" pots.

Aluminum
hanging trellis.
REVIVAL SPEAKER - Tbe Rev.
Betty Malone of Maraball,
Mlcblgao, will apuk for
ev8J18ellatlc ervlcet lo be cODdueled at the Duvllle We~leyiiD
Church, 7:31 p.m. eacb alpt, beefDDilll! tomorrow lbroqb May 31.

Model8127

t

(

THE SKIP
THAT ll&amp;J'S~ro

(i) GOOD NEIGHBORS
111) THIS OLD HOUSE This
wee k t he ol d met al garages
come down and the b arn Ii ghting
goes in. Themalnh ousegetsair
condit ioning and window cas·
mos.
(Closed -Caption ed :

C'OitT/fS IS

lIS!~~~~~ SUPP0$$7
roM
. oN-'1-' ·

4.97
Potted RoseBushes
Hardy N1 bushes In
1-gat. pots. Save.

~ ·
'"

38~Ea.

f9J

(78)

leddlng Planfs
Assorted annuals
In good selection.

hoi!l you lo!O excm
wetglll IIUe \o '""' Wlllf rllttltiGn

"""''0 lhe pro·mons~ual cycle
-

-lhe "Nalufal" Wator

Pr!

contains naturllhtf1)S: In a ta!)let that

and last Kling.
To lilt WliGIIt Ill monlh long IIY tnt
......u...tteOglfl . . _ . Ao·
~ ~ftctive

dtldllg PIMI. 8otn lOIII Will "*"Y DICII

guar~ELSON'S DRUG

loor ordinary wonls.

I VUSEA
I I I

BARNEY

1~1~10

vou'RE

NANNY!! STOP CHAW IN'

Long lasting, nonburning.

m

10:15
TBSEVENINGNEWS
10:28 r!1 CBN UPDATE NEWS
10:30 [3 ) TH£1-ESSON

MAKIN'
TATER

UP THAT Ot: HOOTIN'
HOLLER GAZETTE

ltlJ OUTER LIMITS

r

NEWS '
W
PROGRAM
UNANNOUNCED
RICHARD PRYOR: LIVE IN
CONCERT The Imaginative,

Our Reg. 37.97

28.88

Cordle11 Trimmer
6" cut nylon cord
grass trimmer.'
"WIItl ChQrptl

(84)

(81)

29.88
Hedge Trimmer
16" dpLibte-edge.
double Insulated.

explores some 01 h i a favorite
t opics before alive audience at
the L ong Beach Theatre Center
in Ca lifornia .
(J) DAVE ALLEN AT LARGE
.11:15 [)) ~tGHTGALLERY

(83)
Our Reg. 9.88

ldger-Trlmmer
6'11'' blade. adjustable trim height.

6.88

10' Outdoor Cord

50-ft. HD cord for .
In/outdoor use.

11:28
11:30

PEANUTS

. 2 ·.
For

$J

NEEO TO WRilE IIIlTH UE
FLAIR ... LOOSEN UP...

33" Picket F. .
White plastic
classic style.

L

TEELA

I I I tiJ

t

IGINTHK
I I I IJ
rENGos

J I I

1

.I

Yesterdays

Tf.lAT'5 BETTER ...

SMUD6E WllH FLAI~!

1•

~ 1!11.
epeat ;

60 mine.)

ROSS BAGLEY SHOW

arrange the

Now

drcted ~era

to

lorm the surprioe ana-. aa auggosted by !he abOve canoon.

r I I ] ( I XI)

..
as
"
Answer: What someone who's a roar1ng succe

might a&lt;peclto be - LIONIZED
Jumble Book No. 16, containing 110 pum.., II •waU•ble for $1 .75 poelplkl
from Jumbl•, do this newapeper, Box 34, Norwood, N.J. 07641. lnctucll 'fOUl'
name. llddrell, !lp code and make c:hlekl p11y1ble 10 Newspapwbaab.

BRIDGE
When to redouble
By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag
You don't have to redouble
when you have a good hand
opposite partner's suit opening whrch has been doubled.
Here is a hand from an IM P
match to illustrate th is point.
The bidding in the box took
place at table one. South
elected to respond one spade.
He knew that East and West
held a lot of hearts and saw no
reason to give them a chance
to preempt before he could
show spades. From then on
there was no trouble getting
to four spades. It made easily
since all the defense could collect were two clubs and a
heart. Of course, East-West
could have tried five hearts.
That contracl would only be
dow n two and minus 300 is
better than minus 420.
At the other table East and
West wound up with a plus
score. The bidding started the
same way. but South chose to
redouble.
West bid the same two
hearts. North passed. East
jumped to four hearts and
South tried five dia monds
The defense collected three
tricks for a delightful 50 point
plus.
We don't blame the redouble entirely for this debacle.
. North might well have trt ed

NORTH

5·21 -81

+A Q 10 4
• 74
tK J953

tQ 6

WEST

EAST
• 852

t 73
9QJ 965

.AKt083

• 10 7 2

+6

+K 10 4

+A 9 8 5

SOUTH
tKJ9 6

•z
t

AQ84

+J 7 3 2

Vul nerable: Neither
Dealer: North
West

zPass
•

Norlb

East

tt

Dbl

1e

2+

••

4+

Pass

Pass

Seutb

two spades over two hearts

and South might also have bid
four spades rather than five
diamonds, but the redouble
got North-South off to the bad
starl that led to their immersaon in the soup .
I

•

~~
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
41 English
1 Poker verb
river
5 Brazilian 42 Caribou
seaport
DOWN
10 Butter
I Desire
substitute 2 Existing
11 Type of
3 River flood
hemp
protection
12 U&gt;ng live! 4 Mauna 13 Those
5 In an
not chosen
ineffectual
11 Time of day manner
15 Wire
6 Tennlnate
measure
7 Barely
16 Ragweed
perceptible
genus
8 Promote
17 Unstable
9 Dugout
19 Bangtail
VIP
20 Cultivate 11 Watered
land
fabric
Z1 Deck officer
22 Have a

Yesterday's Alllwer
15 Feline talk
%7 "Julius
18 "My Country
Caesar" role
'Tis of -"
29 Emulate
21 Pooch
Mary
22 "Harvey" star
Cassatt
Z3 Deity
30 French river
24 Rudolph's
31 Amalgamate
feature
3% Blunder
(2 wds. )
37 Mrs. Gump
25 Hasten
38 Sheep tick

- loose
25 Potentate
28 Links hazard
27 "Stop

the action!"
28Moslem

Easter
29 Hobby
33 Pallid
34 Rowan
35 Sun. talk
38 One kind

of power
38Deborah
or John
39 Almaviva's
love
40 Therefore

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
It

AXYDLIIAAXa
LONGFELLOW

One letter simply stands lor another. In thlo oample A II .
used lor the three L's, X lor the two O's, etc. Sln11Ie letters',
apostrophes, the length and !ormetlon of the wordo ere oU
hints. Earh dey the code letlers are di!rerenl
'

CRYPTOQUO'I'BS

TFF

R XF X YDT G X M

J XEJ F X

F E Z X'
I.

ABC NEWS NIGHT-

UHf Anchored by Ted
KopJ!OI.
elll CBS LATE MOYIE 'THE

Loulao'o

oaya 'no.'(Ropoeti'McMILLAN
AND WIFE·

MSUQSGH

EQ

QT J E F X E Q

·r

RFEZX

K S XN -

Y E Q T J T D G X·.

Yiiterda)''•

.

.

.,

Cryptoqaole: EAT, DRINK AND BE MERRY, · •.
FOR TOMORROW YE DIET.- WILLIAM GILMORE

BEYMER ·
C) I Bit

,_

GOL-F.

GeOrge Segel, Conrad Janis.

coyera the friend 11 a man, he

.,

HOI..t'UP tN

(AnswatOiomc«ow)
Jumbles: INEPT LUCID TERROR SIZZLE

a.IJTNETDNIGHTSIIOW

JEFFERSON$:

Pomtroy, OH ,

FOR MANYA

(J) .!;II!IUPDATE NEWS

Friend' Loulae flnda 1 new
frie'nd, but when George ttla·

In

~E5PON51&amp;LE

[]

Prfnranswerh11rs:

' The But of Carson' Gueate:

VOUIZ WRITING IS TOO .
51006V, 816 BROlla ..'tOU

our Reg_1.17

(J

.........

10:58 r!1 CBN UPDATE NEWS
11:00 [f) . [j) C!l 0 Cll ®I~ ·

H01\16RY

Modetl215.

8ltlok
siJ«JJttr

I

~&gt; ::.;..~-~ · -

often con troversial comedian

(80)

c;.,

(79)
3.99

K-Gro

COUSTEAU ODYSSEY

'The N1le' Part II. Ca ptain Cous·
tea u co ntmue s h is 4 ,000 mil e
JOurney down the Ni le to the
g rea t Delta , which c onta ins
SIKty perce nt of Egypt ' s cui·
tivated land . (60 mins.)
(il ) NEWS

m

with OORINIL
-Nature's way
-

2D-20Hugh Oowno

anc ho rs th is weekl y maga zine
pr olil ing not eworth y events In
news, sc ience and entertain·
men!. (6 0 mins.)

Lose water bloat

The Chester Volunteer Fire
Department will sponsor the annual
Memorial Day barbecue and aervit:CS to be held May 25.
Serving will begin at 11:30 a.m.,
tractor pull at 10 a.m., parade to
cemetery at I:30 p.m., and chain
IBW contetlt approximately 112 p.m.
The menu indudea barbecued
chicken and spare ribs, homemade
Ice cream, pies and cakes. Everyone
is *elcome t• attend.

MeANWHILe, Ill' BI.2'N&lt;!Ve!VIZIRA, azCIHSIA ...

10:00 (i)(j2) QI

(77)

TAXI Wh enLatka is

rebuffed by a bea ut y whi ch
prompts the mechanic to go on
a cra sh course of swinging sin·
g l e ja rg on r es ulting in his
b eco ming a m od · talk ing bore
wh o begins to turnoff hi s ca bbie
lri end s.

U.S.A.!

The 89th annual Burlingham Church Memoria l Day services will be
held Monday, May 25, at 1:30 p.m.
Military rites at the cemetery will
be conducted by Feeney Bennett
Post, American Legion, Middleport.
Members of Modem Woodmen of
America, Burlingham, will par- --~----------t
ticipate. The Rev. Thomas Gladeau
will be the guest speaker.

Barbecue May 25

PAGEANT The 198 1 Miss USA
P ageant,th c 30th annual()vent.
1n whiCh 5 1 of th e most beautiful
women in Ameri ca representing
I he 50 states and the District of
Co lumbia will compete for th e
coveted Id l e o t M iss USA.
Hos t s: B ob Bar ker and Elk e
Somme r. ( 2 hrs.)

---' 1hat's

.Alumni banquet
·slated Saturch.y ,
Harrisonville Alumni Banquet and
dance will be held at Harrisonville
Elementary School Saturday, May
23, at 7 p.m.
· Reservations may be made by
calling 742-2757 or 992-7830. Tickets
to the dinner and dance are $6 and
tickets to the dance only $2.
" Trailing Light" from Athens, will
provide music. The public is invited
to attend.

1980

[8)@ W

GASOLINE ALLEY

Tubs
4-cu.-lt. Contractor's Wheelbarrow
Sturdy steel barrow wilh seamless tr oy .
16x4.00 tire. Red
Save a t K mart.

' II

(j)[8)@l THE 1981 MISS USA

Wonder
Wood

Plastic redwood
look planter. Great
tor house or patio
Iants .

MOVIE -(COMEDY)

th e rap~ sings his way into jail.
(Closed-Ca ptioned)
(7) THURSDAYNIGHTATTHE
MOVIES 'l e t' s Do It Again '
1976 Stars: Sidney Po itier, Bill
Cos by.

4.88(73)
38.88

BOSOM BUDDIES

m CBN UPDATE NEWS
I 4l

Our Reg. 6.37

TOPS club meets

( 6 )(~J QI

9:00 I 31 700 CLUB

Reservations asked
Reservations to attend the annual
Middleport Alumni Banquet and
dance may be made by contacting
Ca rolyn Grueser, 1625 Lincoln
Heights, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 or
calling 992-3853.
The event wiU be held May 30 at
Middleport Elementary beginning
at 6:30 p.m. Tickets for banquet,
dance, and dues are $8 and guests $6.

m SOUND OF TRUMPETS

When Henry arra nges a sur·
pri se eKhibitio n ol Kip ' s paint ·
ings , a teu d be twe e n the two
pa ls deve lops a ft er art cr iti cs
crucify Kip' s pa int ings, and Kip
bl ames Henry for making a tool
o ut of him . (Repeat)

In and around Meigs
Mrs. Hayes surprised

THE WAL TONS A

(j) l.ll@)

dleport levee; 9:15a.m. Riverview
Cemetery; 9:30 a.m. Bradford
Cemetery; 9:45a.m. Middleport Hill
Cemetery; 10:15 a.m. Addison;
10:30 a.m. Gravel Hill at Cheshire;
II a.m. Gravel Hill Cemetery at
Middleport; II : 15 a.m. Legion Park
in Middleport; 11 :30 to 12:30 dinner
at the hall, prepared and served by
the Auxiliary, and 1:30 p.m.
Birlingham Cemetery.

Unocr..mle -lour Jumbleti,
one lettef to each square, to form

MORK AND MINDY

M indy , hire d bye smalllel ev •·
si an station, h as a disastro us
on -c amera debut wh en Mark
leap s tothe resc ue with his zany
Orkanpres ent at ion of the even·
1!!9 news. (Re pea t)
[7 ) NBC MAGAZINE WITH
DAVID BRINKLEY Thi s weekly
ser ies offer s a blend ol current
ne ws storie s, top ical reports
and profile s. Host Dav id Brink·
l ey i s join ed b y co nt ributing
re porter s Garri ck Ulley, Ja ck
Perkins. Doug las Kik er and
Bet ~j_ Aaron . (60 min s.)

BUT f.IOIJJ MUC.H
PI&lt;OFIT CAl-l '{ou

A O!Me FQ2.
Tf!OSe R.o.l€R5 '?
lf\A.l''o5 QUI\~ f.. vt.r\.'-QJl.'(

(71)

~fli}Nf fii}'il ~ THATBCRAMIILED WORD GAME
~ ~ ~~~
byHenriAmokf and Bobl.,et

' Why Didn' t They Ask Evans? '

MEMORIAL. DAY SPECIAL.

(70)

Irregular~"

(5) AlLIN THE FAMILY

Fri. Sat.
Sun. Sale

Open Daily 10-9
Sundays 1-6

Announce visitation schedule
The sc hedule of visits to
cemetenes in the area by the
American Legion of Feeney-Bennett
Post 128 has been announced.
Friday night at 5 p.m. the legionnaires will visit the cemeteries to
place flags on the graves of
veterans.
On Memorial Day the following
schedule will be followed : 8:45a.m.
will leave the legion hall, 9 a.m. Mid-

Thursday, May 21, 1981

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

K"e FM\u* S - . lne

'

~

'

. .. .

�Page-a.,...The Daily sentinel

POJ'f!eroy-Middleport, Ohio

1.~~~Clllc-

Area deaths
Eher R. Brewer
Funeral 9\!rvices for Eber R.
Brewer, 83, who died May 15 at East
Liverpool, Ohio, were held Monday,
May 18. Burial was in Columbana
Memorial Park.
Mr. Brewer was born June 9, 1896
at Spiller, Ohio, son of the late David
and Emma Ervin Brewer. He was
also preceded in death by a
daughter, Beulah Brewer, a grandson, Carl Grimes, one brother,
Allen Brewer in 1973 and a second

Kerunnelh Chapmon, Maurice 8coU """"''""·
Coria C.y
llldloM Mldloel Cline.
Homer Ellloile Cole, Jr., Trocl Ann S..ne eon.
de, Carla l!tllncla Morp~~ Ccnnolly Tlllllllll
O.rl- Court, n.. Marltlle Court, Jerry Let
O.viM, DenniM Wllllom Dvot, Lauro Jeon

brother, Gus Brewer in 1976.
He lived most of his We in Meigs
County before moving to East UveJ'.
pool. He was a retired employe of a
steel mill. ·
He ill survived by his wife, the former Martha Bell Talbott, Portland.
They were married Oct. 24, 1916 and
had celebrated their 64th wedding
anniversary last October. Other survivors Include one daughter, Leora
Grimes; three grandchildren, eight
great-grandchildren and one great·
great-granddaughter.

EIChlnKer, Larry Ert\elt Grlllln Jr., Gil')' lq'nn
Griua, Charleo Larry lllmo, Jr., 0e1n Lalle
HoW(, ""'"" Polio Hoymoil, Roborl Let H,...
dei'IOII, lll1ondo Jan Hnllln;er, Juditll Lynn
Mura Hooclilr, Bonnie Gllll.foclul, Vlclley Lee

Jacluton, Rodney Lee KeUer, Anthony ScOtt Kennedy,ScotAion Klrna, Kenndh WayneLarklno,
Lori AM Lonaenette, Marlo Ei&lt;nl Marrll*o,
BN!II Wllliom Malthowa, Helen Elllllce Mym,

Kenneth Blaine Newell, April Gtyle Parker,
Cllntun R- Pllur, Jr., kotlly lq'nn PoOler,

Kellle Renee Powell, Glii')'Gene Pullilan, Fonda
Goll Ropp, Belh AM Riebel, Ellzobeth Aru1 Rll·
cllle, Mellnle Koy Root, Brendl Sue Ruder, Jef.
frey Carl Saunders, Greqory Eugene Scariln&gt;ugh, Marcy AM Seuoo, Bondy Gene SillIa,
Tammle Lynn stareh!r, Araki Renee Orale
St.ew1U1. Corulk Kay Stool, Jll1l!el'l Alillll Swain,

Pomeroy police make 181 calls
The police department report for
the last two weeks showed that the
department answered 181 calls and

Market report
OltJo VaHey l.JVHtock Co.
.
Mullet Repor1
&amp;tie every Saturday at 1 p.m. Prlcts taken
from t~ aucuon Of ~turday, Mily 16 Trendli ·
Veal calves$$ to $10 hll(her, cows ste~~dy Feed@r
cllltll'$2 to$3Iow~
Feeder Steen~: Good and Choict! 2$0 tu 300 lbs
64.50-72, 300 to 100 lbo. 51-74; too to 500 10,. 6().
73.50; 500 to 600 lbs. 57.~2; 600 to 700 10,. 5362.:i0: 700 to 000 Ill!. 51SNl ; b:l 1md aver S0-

53.50

Feeder Heifers . Good and Chotce250lo 300 lbs.
S&amp;-71 . 300 lu 400 lh'l 55-tl7 ; 400 to 500 Jbs. ~.0064.50: 500L0600lbs.51).60, G00to700lbs. 48-57 ; 100
to lkXllbs. 47-S4; 800andover~ . 25.
Fetder Bulls: Good 1md Choice~ 10 300 Ills
62.50-74.50; 300 to 400 IM. 60.00.71; 400 to :.00 lbll.
:iH7; 500t06001~. 54-BJ , 600to7001M 52-54 .50;
700 to800 1~ . 56-SI; 8»and over 42-61
Holslein steen~ and bulls 300 to 800 1~ . 4S-6J.50.
Buill; 1,000 100. and up 47~ ; canners and
culers 34-38.
Spnn~er cows by the head~.
Cow::~ and calves by the heHd 415-560.
Veal calve!! - chruce and prime 115-11)2 · "ood

~nso.

&amp;bycalve~ 4&gt;9'1

rll

'"

TOp hO!I• 210 to 2:JO lbo. 41~2
Boan33.3UO
P1gs by the head 21-37.
SowstOO lb.'! 11ndover 3.&gt;-38.

complaints, made 20 arrests and
drove 2,672 miles.
For the month of April the depart·
ment issued 949 parking tickets,
collected $1,494.50 from the parking
meters, made 60 arrests and drove
4,993 miles.
The Mayor's report for the month
of April, showing receipts in the
amount of $3,273, was read and all'
proved.
The meeting was opened with
prayer by Mayor Andrews. AI·
tending were Mayor Andrews, Jane
Walton, clerk, Betty Baronick,
Larry Wehrung, Reed, Young, Anderson and Brown, council members.

Marriages end
In Meigs County Common Pleas
Court, the marriage of William
Maynard and Evelyn Maynard was
dissolved and Alice Faye Curtis was
granted a divorce from Larry Curlis.

ROAnna ~ TnweU, Richard Grant VanMeler, Dnkl Allen Ville1'3, Barbl111 Ann Wei~
J•mea Lorey Welch, Michael Allen Welch, Philip
Raymond Wm-y, Oenile Elalne Whlte 1 Gl'ellory
Lynn Wlsal and Elmer Gerald Young, Jr.

Thursdi!Y• May 21, 1981

Reagan prepared for compromise
WASHINGTON (AP) - Tbe
Reagan administration Is
prepared t~ accept a three-year,
25-p!!rcent reduction In Income
tax rates with the first installment to start on Oct. 1,
congressional sources said Wednesday.
The agreement to abandon
President Reagan's insistence on
a :JO.percen\ c.ut was obtained by
four conservative Democratic
congressmen during a discussion
at the White House. The
arrangement could open the way
for &lt;;ongress and the ad·
ministration to agree on the tax
cut bill.
The development carne hours
alter Reagan refused to say
publicly whether he was willing
to compromise but it followed a

Emergency calls

signal by Murray Weldenbawn,
Reagan's chief ~omic adviser, that a compromile was
·possible.
. Rep. PhD Gramm, IJ.TeXBJ,
one of the four COilgl'eSSmen who
took pl!rt In the dlaCusslon, stopped short of characterizing the
arrangement as an agreemeat by
the administration.
"OUr meeting was an effort to
understand just what the White
House will negOtiate on and what
is not negotiable," Gramm said.
But others familiar with the
meeting said administration of.
ficials put their stamp of approval on the basic elements of a
tax bill as outlined by the four. In
addition to Gramm, the others
were Democratic Reps. G. v.
Montgomery of Mississippi, and
Kent Hance and Charles

Stenholm of Teus.
The proposed compromise
. would Include: -A 5 percent cut
in personal tax ra!eS on Ocl I,
and additional cuts of 10 percent'
on July 1,1982 and July I, 1983.
-A significant reduction in gift
· and eatate taxes in an effort to
improve the economlc position of
family farms and small

you'll

earn.

2755.

Wanted: someone to board
cats for the Meigs Cou~ty
Humane

·Legion to practice
The Meigs American Legion
Baseball team will practice at 6 p.m.
Friday at the 1'\{eigs High School
field. Team members are to take
gloves and shoes. Any hoy interested
in playing on the team may sign up
Friday.
.

Wednesday's medical bulletin
from the hospital said the pope was
continuing to recover normally.
"Yesterday morning and af·
temoon the Holy Father took a few
steps and he rested in an armchair
for a short time, " the bulletin said.

Society

while

homes are sought for them .
Cages, litter boxes,
medication, lood, and liner
are supplied. You need
good draft free clean
building or room, where
you can show animals to
prospective owners. Must

be In the MiddleportPomeroy area, salary
negotlonable. Phone 992·
5421 alter .5:30 p.m.
Part lime situation. Selling
up displays and helping
with sales. Ideal lor
mothers. 3 days or 3 nights
a week . Part lime; $75.00,
full time, $150.00 minimum .

Call anytime including
Sunday. 247·2875 or 949·
2296.

12 Situations Wanted
Will do roofs. 3 years e•·
perlence. Free estamites.

Call 742·2109 and ask for
Don.
Will care lor the elderly in

dation, BernarcJ Futtz
trustee, 1s a~Jaila ble tor
publi c inspection at Ber
nard Fultz, Law Offtce, 2nd

St.. Pomeroy, Oh io 45769

entitled William H. Loy,
etal , Plaantifts, vs D M .

Shields, etal, Defendants.

This action has been
assigned Case No. 17824
and IS pending in the Court
of Common Pleas of Meigs
County, Pomeroy, Ohro,

during regular business
hours for a pertod Of 180
days
subsequent
10
publlcarton of thts not 1ce.

45769.

(5) 18 19, 2&lt;1, 21 , 22. 24, 6tc

pi a i nt rs to quiet title by ad

Publ ic Notic:e

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY ,
OHIO
WILLIAM H. LOY, ETAL,
Plaintiffs,
vs·
D. M. SHIELDS, ETAL,
Defendant's.
No. 17824
NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION

TO : 0 . M. Shields, if living,
and his Wife, lt any, and fo
the
Widow,
He1rs ,
oevtsees,' and Next of Kin

.

The object of the com ·

verse possession on the
rea l estate descnbed as
fo llows .
The following rea l estate
situated 1n The Township of
Olive, County of MetQS, and
State of Ohio, and in Range
11, Town .4, and Section 35
of the Ohio Company Pur
chase and more par
Tic ularly described as
fo llows : Beginning 20 rods
east from the northwest
corner of Sectron 35 : thence
east 60 rods; thence south
80 rods ; thence west 80 rods
to the west ltne of Olive
Township , th ence north 60
rods ; then ce east 20 rods;
th ence north 20 rods to the

·---------- -----------,I

Public Notice
place of beginning, con·
tai ning 37 acres, and 80

I
I

aforesaid and 1n Range 11 ,

Athens, OH . 59N221.

rods, butsubjeclloalllegal

Town 4, and Sect1on 35 of
the Ohio Company Purchase and bounded and

described as follows :
Be~inninf,l at the center
of satd sect1on ; thence nor-

th 60 rods; thence east 80

rods , thence south 60 rods;
thence west 80 rods to the
place of beginning, con·
tain ing 30 acres, more or
less.
Reference Deed : Volume

140, Page 217, Deed Recor
ds~Meigs County, Ohio.
~XCEPTIONS :
11) Except 30 acres sold
by deed recorded in
Volume 159, Page 441 of the
Deed Records, Meigs Coun·
ty, Ohio.
121 Except Lots17, 18, 19,
20, 21 , 22, 23, 24, and 25 of

I·

r

1:

22 . _ _ _ _ _ __

j

2 _ _ _ _ __
3. _ _ _ _ __

J ::______

I 6. _ _ __ __
I 7. _ _ _ _ __
I 8. _ _ _ _ __
I 9. _ _ _ _ __
I • 10.
--_
-11. _
_
_ -

12. _ _ _ _ __
1
1 13. _ _ _ _ __

1 14. _ _ _ _ __

41-HOUIH

(

.

1t - Holpw1 ntect

J.l-Hou.."-ld Good1
n - CI, TV, . .ct6o lctr..lpmtnl
U - AnlltiVH

n-SituatM Wntt'CI

f4-MIIC. MtrCNIAdlst

JJ-IvUcUn1 Supplltt

14- lusintU ,,.,,..,,,

16-

M--lltlt lor hit

e FARM SUPPLIES
I LIVESTOCK

lacuo, TY

&amp;CI ll:ttalr

These cash rates
include discount

tt-Wanltcl To Do

I
I
11. _ _ _ _ _ _ 1
I'
18. _ _ _ _ _ _ 1
19. _ _ _ _ _ _ 1

•1- ll:trltl l•ui11mt11t

eFINANCIAL
21 -

n-Waftttttolur
11-

aYIIIIHI

Truck&amp; lor Slit

6J-Livtstocll
..- HI'f &amp; Grlln
.S- SHtl I Ftrtlllltr

OllltOftullllh

n - MOf'ltyttLotn
1)- Proltnlentl

Services

eTRANSPORTATION
ti-AV ... tor Salt
&amp; • w.D.
14- Mtttrcycltt

e REAL ESTATE

u-v•n•

JJ-H.,.flttr hit I

. n- Mottlt'"'"'"
for Salt

n-

_..,,,

,.,h

&amp;AcctiiOI'IOI

J)-flarllll ftr lttl
:M-IuSIMtl lllllfiltll
u-Loh &amp;Acrtttt

23. _ _ _ _ __
24. _ _ _ _ __
25. _ _ _ _ __
26. _ _ _ _ _ __
27. _ _ _ _ __
28._ _ _ _ __
29._ _ _ _ __
30. _ _ _ _ __
31. _ _ _ _ _ __

- '

eMERCHANOISE

n - AuttRtNir

'

u.--ltallstalt Wtfthel

eSERVICES

U-Rttllort

11-HHIItlm"''"""""

Wont· Ad Advtrllslnt
Deodtlnts
t lO .. .M. Ot•l'

12NIIOfllaturftv
fttMIN&amp;V

11-'IVMitlftt &amp; lacawatlftJ

u-IAC&amp;Yiriftt

M-llectrktl
&amp; •ttrtttratlt.

Rates and Other Information
II ....... ., Ur!Wr

Ut"

JUyt

, .. Yt

....

....

I,M
, J,M

et•rll

us

'·"
Ut
Ul

v.

lad• •"' over HttmlnlmwM 11 wtnh 11 t Clftfl ..,..,. ,., ..
.U. rYMiftt ttfittf' tHn CllftMCWftwt Mys Wtll ......... tl tM 1 fly
·rllt.

Mail This Coupon with Remittance
·Tile Dally Sentinel

Box 729
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

6.----------------------,

1,
1
1'

I

J

''

o

ooo

' '
-, ..,, ,

.
I

'
'f

"
I I F'

2
lnMtmorlom
In loving memory of Gar·
net L. Moore who pasSed
away, May 21, 1979. This
month comes with sod
regret, II brings back days
we will never forget. You
fell asleep without a good·
bye, my memories of you
will never die. I mlu you
more than dnyone knows.
As each day passes our em·
ptlness grows. The tears 1
shed I can wipe away, but
the ache In my heart will
always stay. Some may
think I'm not lonely when
they see me smile. LIHie do
they know the grief 1 bear.
You left me suddenly your
thought unknown. But vou
left me memories t'ln
proud to own. Sadly miSled
by husband, Robert E. 2 adorable black kittens. 6
Moore,
-ks old. 949·2430.
Allllounctmlftts
I PAY highest prices
poulble for gold and silver
coins. rings, ~lry, etc.
Conloct Ed Burken Barber
Shop; Middleport,

ar-u,..,,.,

Cat"

. ....

J

11-0tMral HIVtlnt
M-M.H. R.,.lr

32. _ _ _ _ __
33._ _ _ _ __

34._ _ _ _ _ __
35. _ _ _ _ __

'
''

'" '""""'· c.ro 11 ,.,., ... 001,...,, , """,.. - · "·"
,.,,........c... ,.........
,.....,.,......... ttsaMv,,..,,"."acc••'" ~,, .,..,,....,..,.
11
1" ....... "c ... " Ttto
""'·
... '"'"'"'
Jottflowt. ''"' '"'""..,
•
.

IT'S BEELINE'S Show llod
Tell Tlmelllll Our new
spring 11111 summtr line Is
,_ IVIIteble lnd II It uno
bttltvtbltlll t Give us e
call for more lnformttlon
about this Interesting work.
Phone 992-39.111'1!"' 9·6.

Collie pup to giveaway. Approx. 3 months old. 143·

3443.

Working fuel .oil furnace
frH to anvone whO will
pick llup.ll2-3173.
6
LottandPOUIId
Found: In Mlddl-' lrtl.
l.lght tan &amp; while femalt
puppy, Tttl hat liNn flab.
bed. Gill Humane SOCiety,
992-6505.

Ground Hotl Canttst. Ftrsl .r_--....!Y.:!'e:!:nl~la!!:ltL...__
fll'lze: $51111.00 Cllh. Trl·
COUnty Sport Shop, Pl. Six ftmtly Ytrd lilt In
Pl..llnt. Stop fn for
Brodbury. Thuradtv,
dtlollt. 1·3114-675-atll.
Frldor, Satunlay N,

'L------------- --- ---'1 --...-------

lw

9
Wanted to Buy
~~~&lt;~
.l.i~ •' II tj~
( {.
' I
WANTED TO BUY :
~ .' \ _--J~,
GOLD,
SILVER ,
IJ-&gt;.-..c'
I
'
I'
PLATINUM, STERLINGCOINS, RINGS,JEWELR·
/7
"-;~ ~ t' ).':\. ' '
Y, MISC. ITEMS. AB·
MARKET
SOLUTE
~.·~ . ~ .'
PRICE GUARANTED. ED · · · .~:~,/
·
-·--~-3
Announuments
BURKETT
BARBER "Everybody ot sc:hool holes ,.,
me
SHOP, MIDDLEPORT, bec1Uif I'm 10 popular."
The lnack Walton Regular OH 10 992·3•76.
meeting has been post·
polled from Monday Mey
25th to TueSdey, May Uth IRON AND BRASS BEDS :
at 7 p.m. There will be a Old fur~ilure, desks, gold
fishing movie presented at· rings, jewelry, sliver
dollars, sterling, etc. Wood 11
Help Wonted
ter supper and meeting ,
Ice boxes, tars, anllques, Fashion Consultant needed
etc. complete households. NOWI Ladles fashion firm .
Aucllofn, Frldca.v 7 p.m. at Write: M.D. Miller, Rt. 4, Average S8.00 per hour.
Hart ord
ommunlty Pomeroy, OH 45769. Or For eppolntmentlntervlew
Building, HorHord, WV. call992-7760.
call992·3941 between H .
Lots everyone
of Items, . something
for
Howard tl...:======:::=;..l:========:.
Beesley, auctioneer.
I
Public Sole
I Autllon
Givoowoy
4
Mixed breed puppies,
Humane Society, 9'12-6505.
Also many klnens, all
colors and sizes and
snapes. Humane Society,
992-650.5.

'

••nt

ll-lntvranco

. ,,

tl" .

4.-S,.ct tor hnt
47- Wint.- to II tnt
41-lqulpmtt~tlor

~. -·

\..)

.

45-,Roomt

15-Scttolllllllntlructic.n

,1, 15.- - - - 16. ----'----"'-

·

I t.:

9-W•nttdtoBuy

'dly

I
I'
J
I

r~
: ,..~ 1. :•::·- J 1-:J Iii
I
1/ &gt;.
I II

lor •tnt
42- MI)bllt Homtl
ltr R011t
44-Apt,.mlf!Jtor RtM

eEMPLOYMENT
SE;RVICES

20 . _ _ _ _ _ __
21. _ _ _ _ __

• L------

LAFF- A. DAY

I Aucll.n

I'
I
I check the proper box
I below
I
t
) Wanted
I
) For Sale
I
) Announcement
I
I For Rent
I'
I
1:

1I

WANTED TO BUY :
HARLEY DAVIDSON,
preferably older mOdel.
Must be In QOOd running
condition. S1500-S2000 price
range . Call 9'12·5006 or 992·
5126 after 6 p.m.

992~2156

1- C:.,.d ol Thanh

1-Pubtlc Sate

Will mow lawns. 742-2755.
elderly. Reasonable. 992 6022.

1S

/ !tc
.

·'·

PUBLIC AUCTION
SAT., MAY 23-11:00 A.M.

Silting the estolt of the lole Colley Motheny
Loclton: Toke 1.0 South out of Wilkesville, Oh. •P"
proa. 1'12 milts, turn toft on township r01d, go 1 mile
to townshiP road J3. wotch tor signs.
Wringer washer, Gibson frost·free 14' refrigerator
freezer &lt;• mos. old), S pc. dinette set, pink depresSion glau, Shirley Temple stvle blue sugar &amp;
creamer. lots of collectable gtan, lots of dlshe•.
pots &amp; PIM, Sll\lerwlrt, tlec. mlxtr, can opener,
old otk lldtboard dresser, POrcelain lop cabinet, 3
pc, secllonol couch with 2 end and 1 coffee tables,
New Home trtadlt -lng machine, AM·FM table
radio, d r - with mirror, 6,000 BTU bottle gas
IlPKe liNter with blower lllke new), .blonde 3 pc,
beMoorn sulle complete, 2 onllque SQUare trunks,
Haowr upright .-per, 2 metal wordrobes, wing·
type vanity dreswr, Hlfhboy otk drHSer, • drawer
mthOglnY dr-r, metal single bad complete, cane
rockl!', bltnktl chett, dOuble wood bed, rotary lawn
mower, handm•de quilts, pillowcases, towels,
bltnktts. throw ruoa. clocks, rinse tuba, many mtsc.
Items.
ADMINIITitATOR DONALD METHENY
Terllll Cash WCIItcll wllll POIItiVII.D,
Net lt=lllll ltr Accklttlts
AUCTI lllllt IILL lltDWN

Insurance

AUTOMOBILE
IN ·
SU RANCE been can·
celled? Lost yo ur
operator's license? Phone
992·2143.

35
Lots I Acreage
Accepting bids on one and
one third acre mobile home
lot at Tuppers Plains. All
utility hook·ups available.
Phone 667·311.5. Tri·County
Bank. Coolville.

- s7fo-r"'Ro-e-n"'
t4"1---,Hc-o-use
Small unfurnished two
bedroom house. 6 miles
east of Chesler on SR 248.
98.5·4244.

Real Estatl!
31
Hom .. for Sale
Beautiful three bedroom
ranch brick home In Baum
Addition. Pomeroy, Ohio.
Gas heat, central air. Call
992-2571, 98.5-4145 or 1-681·
642'1'
Br ick home on wooded
acre .

Three

bedrooms,

fireplace, unique
room . finished
garage, deck .
Sl•lles. 992-5420.

family
double
Upper·
·

Modified A·lrame wltll 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, car·
peted. stone circular
fireplace , spiral stairs,
utlllly room. Private. 8
acres. 992-7741 .

8 room house with bath and
shower. Full basement,
aluminum

siding,

storm

windows &amp; doors. Big buill
In porch, big lot parllelly
fenced In, metal building.
992-7453. Wit consider land
contract with down
payment.
·
House for sale or rent.
' Located on Roush Lane In
Chethlre. 367-7221 or 992·
5286.

~~.

Mobllt Homes
lor Sole
1973 crown Haven. U x 65,
• thrH badiooms, new car·
pet. 1971 Cameron, U x 64,
two bedrooms, new carpet,
1972 Champion, 12 x 60, two
bedrooms, new carPI!. 1976
Cameron, 12 x 60, two
bedrOOms, elltltclrk. lnl
Skyline, 121x 61, two
l bedrODfTII, both &amp; I'll, IIIW
carptl. 1970 PMG,
! 12 x .a, two bedrooms, new
carpet. I · x S Salel, Inc.,
l 2nd X VIand SlrHI, Point
PIHIOnl, WV Phone 675-

4d..

.

1975 VIking tr1ller, 12 x 65
two bedroom, big Jiving
~ room. Located In Country
, Mobile Home Park. 2D·
39ol2.

i

--------~

Ktep HIS Act lor Futun Relerence

3 bedroom house. $180.00
month, SlOO deposit. 7422126.
42
Mobile Homes
_ _ _;.:fo,_r.:cR:.::e"'nt'-- 2 bedroom Mobile Home,

• Backhoe
• Excavating
• Septic Systems
• water, sewer &amp;
Gas Lines
• Dump Truck
• Trencher
L•censed &amp; Bonded

Deposit. 9'12-2749.

PH. 992-7201

funished, adults preferred .

608
E. Main.-POMEROY,o-.
992·2259
NEW LISTING - Real-

Two
apartment. 992·5434 or 130H82·2.566.

~====:::=::==~==~====~.,=·•:•:'"~'=~~
61

rent. 992-5434 or 1·304-882· 5=o1--cH"'_o u_s-eh,-o"ld:;-:;;:G-::ood=s2.566.
Full size maple bed &amp;
dresser for $100.00. 667·
45
Furnished Rooms
3074, Vera Weber, Tuppers
Sleeping rooms; by the Plains, Ohio.
w~ek .

K i tchen , and
television lounge. Carryout
store and restaurant within

500 feet. 992·6370.

$23,000.00.
REDUCED TO SELL!
- A 2 year old, one
bedroom home, ideal for
retired coupl e or newly
marrteds. Approx . Jlh

For Lease

49

A., close to bypass.
Large garage. REDUCED TO $15,500 00
SYRACUSE
A

refrigerator. One and one

hall years old . 992-7501 .

2

story frame, 6 rooms, 3
bedrooms, woodburn tng
firep lace,
r ecentl y
remodeled, really cute.

$18,500.00.
ENTERPRISE RD . -

11/:z A. lot with nea t 3
bedroom home, good

SWIMMING POOLS .
PRE ·SEASON SALE :
$999.00
INSTALLED! !
Above ground pool com·

der normal ground con·
ditions . Free shop at home

service. Ca lll -800-624-8511 .

JEFPS
CARRYOUT
1 !:========~ '

1o

Ouilt of Rowers

ground

condition .

Free

shop at home service. Call
1-800·624-8511 .

Lathe, William Seller &amp;
Company , Philadelphia ,

A complete 51 piece set

English language. Very ex·

cellent condition. $800 out·
fit asking only $175. For
complete information call
985-4111.

Phone
H .614 )· 992·3325
RETIREMENT - 3
bedroom trailer, 1'h
baths,
s tove - r e frigerator, gas forced
air furna ce, carpeting,
added room and sun-

lANDMARK
SERVICE STATION

deck overlooking the
Ohio River . Drilled well
and 3.7 acres . Good for

THIS WEEK'S

SPECIAl.

summer home. Can you

beat the price of only
$13,500?
FORKED RUN - 14
close lo the take on good
gravel ·road . All kinds of
wildlife such as deer &amp;

All For Only

MOBILE HOME 14X70

Hillcrest, 3 bedrooms,
2'h baths, furnace, nice
carpeting and extra
room . Can rent lot or

Also register this week
for 550.00 worth of Free
Gas. Drawing to be Friday Noon. Come in. You

Laroe

square cistern, Leading

Creek water available.
ONLY $24,11011.
VERY PRIVATE One large bedroom
stone home with bath,

woodburnlng flreplece,
IJlodern kitchen, cedar
lined cloth closet,
wesher·drver hookups,
and 2.5 acres. Loll of
trees. Only $21,500.
WHEN YOU RENT,
YOU PAY FOR THE
HOUSE YOU OCCUPY,
BUT NBVER OWN.
SAVE YOUR MONEY
AND GAIN A HOME.
IUY,IUY,BUY.CALL

m-wwm-llrt.
lfr•u·.t:&gt;•f

I ll '.lr , ,

II .lilt 'I.',

van, 1st $1,000. taKes it.
1964 International truck .
Sleel dump bed, $1 ,500. or

Gatner a bouquet ol beaublul
for this show quilt.
Paint 'n' embr~deo big, bold
!lowers in tou..t(Jonalure colors
on thiS collector's quilt oi!S.in.
blocks. Pattern 70~0: tissue
ttansleo ol 12 molils, chart lor
61 X 80" quilt; dioect~ns
SZ.IO for' each pattern. Add
~01 eacn patteon lor postaae
and handlina. Sond to:
co~rs

lllceiiiMI
3 .1
N111111111 Dopt.
The Dally Sentinel
loa 113, Oltl a..t SIL, NIW
Yilt, IY 10111 l'rllll 11-.
...... ~ Plllln1 ......
Catch on Ill the craft boom! Send
for 011r NEW 1981 NEEDlECRAFT
CATALOG. !Mr 112 dtsi&amp;n~ 3
fiee Pltteml inside. $1.00
MI. CMfT IOOIS. .$2.011 AI . . . . . CI= 11111 2S4

~m:a::1!·Q:f·•

IH:'.oz:-.
UO·Saa&amp;F ., 'ladl·!ll
mL I 11 l'*tal Qdtl

1='tDtla

l24-&amp;tr

::'!tOr

'*E

1111111

I

,..=

11. . . llrt 11
II._
111

llllllalc lllallttdl
CUcMt

... ..r=,

tl

I

lANDMARK
'\(,..._

SERVICE
~ STATION '
· 99i·l932

Radiator Specialrst

NATHAN BIGGS

JS Yr s. Experience

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS INC.

Pom er oy, OH .

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

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE
U.S. Rl. SO East
Phone 614-662-3821
Aut horized John Deere,

New Holland, Bush Hog

farm equ ipment deal er

eso New
Holland round hay
balers, both in excellent condition.
2 used No.

514 1 mo

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

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

992-2174

Ph.

5 7-tlc

RACINE·SYRACUSE
AREA
RESIDENTS
Don ' t watt. Contac1Ohto
Vall ey Plumb1ng lor
sewer line connecttons,'
and any rn hou se
ch anges that have to be
m ade. Back hoe and
do se r service available .

992·2036
5·20·1 mo ·

ALL STEEL

Farm Buildings
SIZE'S

" From JOxJO "

SMALL

Utility Buildings
S1zes from 4)(6 to 12x4 0

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt . 3, Sox 54
Rae me, Oh .

Ph. 614-843-259 1
6 15 ti c

992· 5682

SeHer, medium size, one

year old. Also Shephard
collie mIxed breed puppy.
Humane Society, 992-6505.

'

...

H. L WHITESEL
ROOfiNG

~G&gt;

TRENCHING
SERVICE

All types of roof work ,
new or repair gutters
and downspouts, gutt er
clea ning and patnhng .
All work guaranteed.

Water·Sewer-E lectnc
Gas L tne-D•fches
Water line Hook-ups
Septtc Tanks
County Cerflf1ed
Roush Lane
Chesh ire . Oh

Free Estimat es
Reaso nabl e Pnces
Call Howard

949-2861
949·2160

S800.00. l~======':7·:1:tt=c~~=======2='=":::c::.l

1978 Kawasa ki IK E 125) in
excellent condition, 1800
miles, new st. tires, new
windshield, new luggage
carrier, and sissy bar .

Ask ing $650. Call 992·2036
or 247·2724 alter 6 p.m.

16

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

Topper lor sale. In very
good condition. SlOO.OO. See
at400Lasley St. Pomeroy .
78

Camping
Equipment

Eight fool sell contained
truck camper. $900.00 .

25 foot camping trailer.
Wilderness. Fu lly sel f con·
tal ned, with tub and
showers. 2 holding tanks.
$2800.00. 992-6259 .

81

Home
Improvements

Gene's Carpet Cleaning,
deep stream extraction
Free
estimated ,
reasonable rates, scot-

Quality Built
Economically Priced

BAILEY'S SHOES

REESE BUILDINGS
Sheds
POLE BUILDINGS
1S'x20' upto40' xl00'
PORTABLE STEEL
STORAGE
BUILDINGS

Elfective 4·6-81
MON . Ihru SAT .
91o 5
Close d Thur sday

10' M10', ID 'M 12' &amp; up!

Any size built to your
speciftcation s. Models
1n Me,gs, Gallla and
Mason countie s.

41 9 1 mo pd

FREE ESTIMATES

ROUSH
OONSTRUCTION

All Burldings

Guaranteed

PH. 367-7671
or 367·7560

New Homes • ex·

11

==c~H~E~S~H~I~R~E=4~·~12~·t~lc~ te
·ngn s i ve
&amp; A tuminum
Sl 01 NG

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

rem ode I·
I
•
• E lectrica 1work
e Roofing work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583
4·26-1 mo.

" Beautifu I, Custom

949·2860.
No Sunday Calls
3- 11 1tc

SUPERIOR
VINYL
PRODUCTS
Siding

MILLER ELECTRI
SERVICE
For all of your wir·
ing needs .
Let George Miller check
your present electrical
so;stem.
Residential
&amp;Comm erctal

call 742·3195
or 992· 7680

Rooling &amp; Gutter
Remodeling

H ·tt c

serving Your Area tor

20 Years

EUGENE LONG
Free Estimates

call Collect
Ph. IU3322
. 5·8'2 mo, pd.

•

0

I

'"'

'

r

12

Ph . (614 ) 985·3961

4 23 1 mo

ATHENS SPORT
CYCLES
St 1mson Av e. Athens,

Oh

Hou rs :
Mon .· Tues . 9·6
Wcd s.· Fn . 9-7

Sal.9·5
3 29 3 mo

Clo sed Thurs .

"YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICES"
- Addons and
remodel•ng
- Roofing and gutter
work
- Concr ete work
- Piumbmg and
electrical work
(Free Est1matesl

Electrical
I Relrlgorallon
SEWING MACH I NE
Repairs , service, all
makesl 992·221&lt; . The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Soles
and Service. We sharpen
SCissors.

99Hl15 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Oh.

J&amp;C
SANITATION
SERVICE
Trash Pickup In
The Village of
Middleport, Oh.
Ph. 992· 5016
or 992-7505
4 17 ·11c

1M

13
E•cavotlng
• Ptumlllng
COMPLETE sever In·
IHNIInt
slollallon &amp; backhoe ser· ELWOOD
BOWERS
WATER
WELLS . vice for Raclne·Syracuse
Domestic and commercial, sewer district. Dozer work REPAIR - Sweepers,
61
Farm l!gutpmlftl
toasters, irons, all small
PIII'I,IP Illes and service. If needed. 949·2293.
.- 14,000 utlton tanks Tom Lewis Drilling .
appliances. Lawn mower .
located above ground at Stesor)al discount on pum·
Next to State Highway
Athens, Oh.' $3,000, each. 1· ps. 1·30H95·3102 or 1-304· DOZER work. Small lobS a Garage on Route 7. 985speclelty. 742·2753.
30N22·2711.
3825.
"5-3641. .
'

• • ••

J

Scout Ca mp Rd .
Chester, Oh .
*Short game practtcc
• Puttmg &amp; Chi pptng
Green Open
• Hole-In-One
• Pro-Golf lessons
tor all ages
• Reparr : Cleanmg,
refl nr shing , new grips
length change,
weight chang e
• Fa st ~en•ice

V. C. YOUNG II

Buolt Garages"
Call lor free siding
esttmate s, 949-2801 or

..

NEW STORE HRS.

C4'x1 6', 8'x8', 8'x 10',

~ Vinyl

THE
OUNTR
K
Y
KLUB

322 N. 2nd Ave .
Middleport, Ohio

Garages - Butld1ngs
- Barns- Equtpm ent_

0oes your house need a

face 1111? Or just a little
makeup? Call me &amp; I'l l
have It looking young again
In no time. Wilt do ell types
AKC registered cocker of Interior work ; paneling,
spaniel puppies, show type, ceilings, flooring, etc.; pius
bleck and parties. 843·268.4. exterior work, painting,
shingling roofs, work olng,
Doberman plncher pup- shlngllnf any size and
pies: AKC registered . shape. 30 years experience
In carpetry. References
Block or reds . 992-7988.
provided upon request. 992·
62'13.
57
Muslcol
Inslrumlftll
Franch City Painting .
Picking up plano &amp;organ In Residential,
your area. Take over low Interior, commercial,
exter ior .
monthly payments, Can be Spoclollzlng
lri 'lnlerlot
seen at your home. For In· pelnllng, paper hanging &amp;
formallon call cOllect 614- t ..tured ceilings. Free
773-5125. Ask for credit estimates. 367-771-4 or 367·
manager.
7160.

-. .

REESE

Ph. 367-7560

chquard . 992-6309 or 742·
56
Pets for Sale
2211 .
Lovely &amp; lonely Gordon

-

Cllllltl

Motorcycles

may be the lucky win·

ner!

-.

12WIIdl't
122..... 't hfl
IK tJ•
IINIII llrt t1 fllllr CIICitol

74

Four steel belted radial 14
inch tires . $80. Spare $20. 1·
304-882·2571.

'sn.95

outbuildings.

One good used 1973 Chevy

Motor and transmission for
1973 Nova &amp; other parts.

Oil Change
Lube Job &amp;
Oil Filter

acres, more or less, of
woods for camping,

bedrooms, carport and 2

7•_;3!..__V!:a~n~s~&amp;~t:!..W!!:J.D
~·--

1972 Suzuk i GT for
992-5065.

ternational Dictionary of

.

3

$12'll to $1f'

of

encyclopedia Ameri cana &amp;
New Book of Knowledge.
Included is 2 piece new
Grolier
Webser
In ·

_ 16 E. Second Street

land .

COMPLETE
RADIAT.OR
SERVICE
From the Smallest
Heater Core to the
Largest Rad1ator

GLENN BISSELL

KAUFPS
PLUMBING
AND
HEATING

F·600 dump

Patent; Feb. 10, 1868 &amp; best offer . Pomeroy Landmark . 992·2181 .
Call 995·4124 anytime. Also

.TV~R~~~~:u~

of

PH. 142-2455
5 11 tt c

I~========~~========~~=======~

2545

Dec . 28, 1869. Works good.

H eadquarters

cellent corner location
on 2 state routes. Ph

Rt. 1Sode Hill Rd .

r~~====~==:;i~~~~==~lO~I=I~Ic~~=;:;=:::;;~==~

ousing

plumbing, gas firepla ce
and basement. Will sell
on lime. Asklno $8,500.
NEW LISTING - .Ex·

LEO MORRIS

~

standard , good shape. 949·

Ford

HJ S0"- 20·30 H.P.
HA 60"- 25·60 H.P.
HE 60" -45-80 H.P.
All Models Available

SILVER &amp; GOLD
COINS
For Silver Dollars

Servin g the foll owi ng
township s · Le banon,
Sutton, Letart, Oli~Je,
Orange, Sa lisbury , Bedfo rd, Chester , Salem .
Sci pi o, Rutland and
Harrison

Phone 1-614·367-7671 .

truck. Good condit ion. With

h.p., works good. Call 985·
4124.

home with bath, copper

am
-lm window
stereo
rear
tape deck , cruise control,
black leather 1nter 1or ,
aluminum wheels, very low
mileage, stored during the
w inters, show room con dition. Collectors Edition.

BUYING

Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding

HOWARD
ROTAVATORS

Rutland, Ohio

Properttu

,.. Apt. Houst Owners
,.. MObtll! Home Parks

Ph. 843·4912
$5.00 Monthly

POOLS : hauling contract. $3,700.00.
SWIMMING
PRE ·SEASON SALE :
$999.00 INSTALLED!!!
I
Above ground pool COM- Phone985·4395.
PLETELY INSTALLED 1971 Chevy truck with no
starting at$999 00 . Price in- engine. Automat ic. $350.
cludes pool, deck, fence, Also new parts lor 283
filter, liner, and in · engine. See al245 Mulberry
stallation under normal Avenue, Pomeroy.

small riding lawn mower, 5

venient to town. Asking
$27,500.
NEW LISTING - '12
acre of land, old 2 BR

telescopic steering, power

1971

oo

bedrooms, bath, dining,
basement, natural OlliS
F.A. furna ce, St. drs. &amp;
windows, nice carpeting, city wa te r and con-

... cou'l Launclr. es
""' Rental

Bo x 65, Portland, OH _

plefely Installed starting at
$999.00. Price includes
pool. deck. fence, filler. 1·~2'-~T.!.r~
uc~k~s.!.f~orc..;S~a"'le,___
liner. and installation un 1948 Chevy pickup. 283

AT

·
m
A ...

• Dl5hwashers

• Hot Wille r Tank 50
RePa ,rong S1nce uu
" Spec1al Riles For"

J&amp;R
TRASH SERVICE

Dart GTS

antenna,
Sr. defogger,

Richard Mowery.
Owner. 675-4154.

CONTACT JEFF

•

t Orren
I Ranae!

5·6·1 mo.

1.~1--'A~u~t~os~f~o~r=.
S~al~e__

OtSPO!als

t W.nhers

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

Y.• -&gt; ~ t.n '

Asking 52,000 . Cal l anytime

Two month spring special
for upholstering furniture.

FOR
LEASE
RAINBOW
INN

beautifu l ran ch home on
lev el lot, 3 bed rooms,
ba se me nt,
at ta che d
garage, built-in kitchen.

You must see for lust
$12,000.
ARCHAIC
3

• ..a..• ' "'

53
Antiques
al949-2123.
ATTENTION .
I IM ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Wil l
pay cash or Certified check 1974 Monte Car lo 350.
for antiques and collec - Headers, good ti res. $1400
tibles or entire estates. Phone 949-2602.
Nothing too large. Also,
TRAILER spaces for rent. guns, pocket watches and CORVETTE 1918 Si lver
Southern Valley Mobile coin collections. Call 614- Anniversary Edition . L82,
Home Park, Chesh ire, Oh 167 3161 or 5.5].3411 .
t -top, aufomatic tran ·
992-3954.
smission, air condition ing,
power steering, power
54 Misc. Merchanlse
brakes, lilt whee l,

A. with gard en space, 2
bedrooms, cellar, many
features .
ONLY

AL L MAkES

Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph . 992·2772

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

1.5 loot frost lree Admiral

46
Space for Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy. Large lots. Call
99H479.

port. la rge leve l lot, .15

move. Low heal bills.

located above ground at
Athens, Ohio. $3,000 .00
each. Phone 1-304-422-2181.

1969 DOdge

to Midd leport, nice
home w ith good bl ock
garage and cement car·

PARTS AND SER\'ICE

•Insulation
•Storm Doors
•Storm Windows
•Replacement
Windows

Farm Equipment

Four 15,000 gallon tanks

Efficiency apartment for

YOU MU ST SEE!
$25,900.00
NEW LISTING - Close

condi lion. $25,000.00.
REALTOR
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
992-6191
AS.50CIATES
Jean Trussel949-2660
Dottle &amp; Roger Turner
992-5692
OFFICE 992·2259

LeJ
'

for Rentfurnished 1~
bedroom

ty nice 1 f loor plan
home, rem odeled with
beautiful built·in kit chen, large modern
bath , dining area.
enclosed front por ch, all
car peted with many
new fea tures plus a
house full of furn1tur e,
which is new and
mod ern , level
lot,
storage building. TH t S

$43,000.00.
MIDDLEPORT -

Apartment

Call Ken Young

5·21 -tl c

mobile home. Racine area.
992-5858.

44

APPLIANCE SERVICE

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

\

House for rent. 2 bedroom,

For rent, 10 x 50 2 bedroom

acres

32

Business Services ·

"(~~ IN M~ f~ CooKINI:l

wild turkey .

Nice 2 story home for sale,
In Bashen. 4 bedrooms, 2
baths, netural gas furnace,
three fourths ecre. chain
link fence, extra Iaroe
storage building, owner
will finance down payment
or ·accept troller or land as
down payment. S2B,OOO
Phone 98.5-4395.

by Lari-y Wright

W~Y ~Tib.I6AT'l£1€'
~~. CA~'fU:~ 1/foN£

deposit required. 992·3090.

Real Estate- General
18
Wanted to Do
Would like odd lobs. Lawnmowing &amp; misc. lobs
working around homes.
992-6.59.5.

General Store, Middleport.
992·6370.

eRENTALS

s-HappyAdt
· - Ltsl tncl FDUnd
7- Yard 511t

Room , board, laundry for

chains, diamonds, silover
money and coins. Martin' s

e ANNOUNCEMENTS

4-0IVNway

tile, siding. 992·2759.

CHIP WOOD. Poles ma• .
diameter 14'' on largest
end. S12.50 per ton. Bundled
slab. S10.50 per ton .
Delivered to Ohio Pallet
Co., Rock Springs Rd .,
Pomeroy 992·2689,

Now buying gold and
silver, old pocket watches,

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

2- ln Memor.am
J-Aitnounctmtltll

Repair or remodeling
work , flooring, doors, wall
paneling, ceiling, or floor

Will care lor the elderly in
my private home . Good ex·
perience.
Reasonable
rates. Call 667-632'1 or 6673402.

to small. Will buy one piece
or complete households.
Martin's General Store at
992-6310.

or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomerov, 0., 45769

Address. _____________

Men &amp; women. If In·
forested call992-7314.

Wanted to Buy: class rings,
wedding bands, anything
stamped, lOK, 14K, or 18K
gold. Silver coins, pocket
watches. Call Joe Clark at
992-2&lt;154 at Clark's Jewelry
Store, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

niture. No item to large or

bo; deed r ecor ded tn
Volume 240, Page 695 of !he
Deed Records, Me1gs Coun
ty, Oh io.

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

9

New, used, and anllque fur·

McCune's Second ACidition
to Tuppers Plams sold bo;
deed recorded in Volume

PHONE

7

Treasure Chest Coin Shop,

ship, county and State

Wnte your own ad and order by mall w1th this
coupon Cancel vour ad by phone v. en you get
results. M011e o; not refun dable.

tf vou describe full-; ,
gi'lle pri ce. The Sentinel
reser11es the r ight to
classify, edit or reject
any ad . Your ad will be
put in th e proper
clasificat ion if you ' ll

Yard Sale

h1ghwao;s.
Also the fOIIOWtMQ real
estate situate in the Town-

WANT AD INFORMATION

I
I Print one word in ee~ch
I space below . Each inof figures
I itial or asgroup
a word. Count
I counts
name and address or
I phone number if used
I You'l l get better results

our home. Have vacanco; .

Wanted to Buy
OLD COINS. pocket watches. class rings, wedding
bands. diamonds. Gold or
Silver. Call J . A. Wemsley,

188, Page 127. and Volume
191 , Page 191 of the Deed
Records, Meigs County,
0.
I Oh1
( 3) Except one acre sold

Curb Inflation.
Pay Cqsh for
Classlfleds and
Savell I

J

They'll Do It Every Time

Public Notice

even ings.

KIT 'N' CARLYL~ "'

For

deteils, call 742-2354 or 742·

Small investment, large.·returns, Sentinel Want Ads
Publtc Notice
Public: Notic:e
01 Decedent and to Mary
PUBLIC NOTICE
The annual report Form Dewev. if living, and her
990 PF for the Kibble Foun· defendants 1n a legal action

33
Farms for Sale
By Owner 55 acre farm
with 9 room house, barn,
and minerals. Morning
Star Area. $65,11011. 949-2630

Got some free lime? Start
your own business. Start
selling Avon. Be your own
boss. Set your own hours.
The harder you work, the
more

The Daily Sentinei- Page-9 .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Need Money? Need For sale by owner. 2 acre
Clothes? Why not get your building site near Tuppers
wardrobe et no cost to you Plains. 667·3484.
and earn extra dollars too?
For Information or in,tervlew appointment call
992-3941 between 9-9.

-A OIHHitep reduction from 70
percent to 50 percent in the
maximum tax rate on such in·
veBiment income as interest and
dividends. The administration
had been proposing a three-step
reduction.
-Increased tax incentives for
individual savings.
-A business tax cut based on
the faster depreciation plan
recommended by Reagan.

Pope improves rapidly

11
Help Wanted
GET VALUABLE training
as a young business person
and earn good money plus
some great Ollis es a Sentinel route carrier. Phone
us right away and get on
the ell.glblllty list at 992·
2156 or 992·2!57.
$185.00 lo$500 weekly dol no
mailing work. No ex·
perlence required . AP·
PLY : Circle Sales, P.O.
Box 224·D, Richmond Hill,
NY 1W8.

businesses.

The Syracuse EJnergency Squad
at 12:09 p.m. Wednesday took
Lucille Garten to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. At 4 p.m., the
Pomeroy Unit took John Thomas, in·
ROME (AP)- PQpe John Paul D ate a thin soup and a mashed boiled
jured in a motorcycle accident, to
is
improving rapidly' eating some pear, one of his doctors, Francesco
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
soft food and taking a few steps Crucitti, told reporters. A d~n of
around hill hospital room. But in- the pope's 26 stitches were removed,
vestigators questioning Melunet Ali he added.
Agca, the man accused of shooting
John Paul's prognosis is still
the pontiff, are more baffled than "gusrded," · which means doctors
Veterans Memorial
ever.
are not ready to predict a full
Admitted·· A I bert
Jesse,
"The further we go, the more recovery.
Pomeroky; Barbara Taylor, mysterious he gets," said a police of.
Dr. Luigi candia, director of
Ewington; Erma Floyd, Pomeroy; ficial· who asked not IQ be identified. Gemelli Policlinlco, the hospital
Beatrice Rairden, Hartford.
" It's possible he ~d it for the treating the pope, said the "guarDischarged-Lucille Wise, Marvin reasons he said, by himself. It's also ded" prognosis might be lifted today
Doddrell, Clarence Swauger, Bessie possible someone paid him to do it."
but cautioned, "It ill not something
Sellers.
For lunch Wednesday, the pope you can make a firm prediction on."

Thursday, May 21, 1981

TERMITE and
PEST CONTROL
Roaches.
Birds ,
Rodents. Spiders, Fleas,
Ants and other small in·
sect control .

FREE ESTIMATES
I orS year termite
guar•nt"
Located in Gallipolis
Ph. 61H46·2101
3·27-1 mo.

�.'
Page-l o- The Daily Sentinel

ELBERFELDS ·1N:poMEROY

Bidwell girl
hurt in wreck
A Rt. 1, Bidwell resident was in·
jured in a one-car accident in Galtia
County Wednesday morning.
The Gallla·Meigs Post of the Ohio
Highway Patrol said Vicky L. Cam!&gt;"
bell, 16, was westbound on SR 554 at
11:20 a.m. when she reportedly lost
control of her vehicle and travelled
off the right side of the road.
The vehicle then collided with a
fence and an embankment, and then
overturned, causing severe damage.
Campbell was injured and taken to
Holzer Medical Center by the Gallia
EMS, where she was treated and
released for multiple bruises.
The patrol investigated a tw()vehicle accident in Meigs County
Wednesday.
According to the report, a vehicle
driven by Ruth D. Frank, 49, Racine,
pulled from a driveway along SR 124
at 9:10a.m. and into the path of a
vehicle driven by Eber 0. Pickens,
45, Syracuse.
Frank's auto was slightly
damaged and the other suffered
moderate damage. Frank was cited
for failure to yield.

The patrol said the vehicle, driven
by Joanne Gard, Rt. I, Reedsville,
was eastbound on SR 681 at 5 a.m.
when she swerved to avoid collision
with a deer.
The vehicle then collided with an
embankment, the report said. It was
moderately damaged and Gard was
iniured, but not treated.
The patrol said John T. Tiemeyer, .
27, Middleport, was not injured when
his vehicle collided with a deer on
Meigs CR 10 at 9:20p.m. Tuesday.
His vehicle was moderately
damaged.

BARGAINS

OPEN FRIDAY TIL

SATURDAY TIL 5:00"

Revival set tonight
Revival services will begin this
evening at The Salvation Army, liS
Butternut Ave., Pomeroy, at 7:15
p.m. not 7:30p.m. as was reported.
Speaker this evening and Friday
evening will be the Rev. Chuck McPherson Envoy Ray Wining announced. Services will be held
through Sunday.

ren 's sizes.

Reg. Sl2.00
Reg. Sl5.00

r-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::::::::::::;1

20% Off·

SHOPPE
111 W. 2nd Pomeroy, Oh,

Hush
lliPP.!~§.

blouses, slacks, jackets,
sundresseS, shorts and

rops.

Lady

Devon

I

I

\'

Cotton/poly blend blouses,

jackets, vests, wrap SkirtS,
tops and swea1ers in sizes

, ~ JB IO 46.

\; Reg. 517.00
Reg. S22.00
Reg. SJI.OO
Reg, S40.00

'
'

... . SaleSil.59
.... SaleSI7.59
. ... SaleS24.79
.. .. Sale531.99

-"''
'

'

~
I

\ iJ

r

i(

vol.l0,No.27
Copyrighted 1981

Friday &amp; Saturday.

'6\40
Men's S9.00
'6 80
Wembley Ties. •••• •• · •
Men's 510.00
O
wembleyTies ...... 17.6

Good selection of styles.
Sizes 29 to 44 waist plus ex·
tras 46 to 50. Polyester ·
poly cotton b lends - seer·
suckers.
Men's 514.95 Slacks
Men's 518.95 Slacks
Men's $21,95 Slacks
Men's $24.95 Slacks

$11.91
$14.21
$16.41
$18.71

d ·

SHIRTS

Long and short sleeve
styles in sizes smal l ( 14·
l.tl/.,), medium (15 -

15'12 1, large (16·161121,
and extra large (17·

"Paseants are stigmatized as
being a lot of hard work with tough
competition and cut-throat girls. But

171f?) . Solid colors and

plaids.

Men's s9.9S Western

Men's 516.95 Western

!:,!~~

•••

Death count begins tonight

REFUND

Fine quality · impact
resistant glass lenses.
Smart looking and comfortable styles for men &amp;
women.

by mail

from Hanes when you

buy any 6 Hanes underwear
garments for men or boys

Hanes makes you feel good all under.'"

2nd Floor-Jewelry Dept.

LLOYD FIBERCRAFT .

SPECIAL
MIRROR ENSEMBLE

Summer Furniture Sale
Fashionable Fibercraft looks like
wicker, feels like heaven and lasts and
lasts and lasts.

The ornate, imp_ressive look of wrought iron
grillwork. Float glass mirror in frame is
l7"x34". Sconces are 14'12'' high. REg.
$33.95.

Reg. 70.95 Lo·back Springbase Chair
Sale 56.79
Reg. 84.95 Hi· back Spring base Chair
Sale 67.99
Reg. 182.95 2 Seat Glider ••• Sale 146.39
Reg. 230.95 Lawn Swing ... Sale 184,79
AT OUR MECHANIC
EET WARE

$2495

SPECIAL

CIUCAGO - Between 450 and 550 motorists could be killed over the
Memorial Day weekend, according to the National Safety Council.
Millions of Americans will take to the l)ighways over the first warmweather holiday weekend of the year, which will last between 6 p.m.
Friday and midnight Monday.
The council said 496 people could expected to be killed in traffic.
Last year there 411 traffic deaths over Memorial Day weekend.

Outing turns into tragedy
Come in this week and stock up !

JAN in Burnished Camel

it's really not like that," said Miss
Seelbrede, who was Miss Ohio. "I've
gotten to meet a lot of super girls.
They're aU very nice. They're not
cut-throats Uke I had anticipated."
Miss New York, Deborah Foun- ,
tain, was a paying spectator in the
pageant audience Thursday night,
and no substitute was allowed to
represent New York State in her
place.
"I'm very depressed," she said as
she walked from her hotel to the
Mississippi Coast Colisewn, where

Shirts ...... ... . 112.76 .
Meri'H17.95 Western 11
Shirts .......... 113.46&lt;1:
Men's 519.95 Western
Shirts ...... . .. . 114.96

VANGUARD
SUN
GLASSES

Jrd Floor Furniture Dept.

'

SAUl

MEN'S

Our entire selection sale priced.
Terry cloth · cotton poly blends knits. Good selection of styles and
colors.

An excellent selection in·
sizes 8 to 18. Solid colors,
white and trimmed solids.

MEN'S 14.95 ACTION SHORTS......... 14.00
MEN'S 7.95 ACTION SHORTS......... '6.40

BOYS' $3.95

$

MEN'S 19.95 ACTION SHORTS ......... 18.00

ACTION SHORTS ••••••• .-••••••

MEN'S 111.95 ACTION SHORTS ........ '9.70

BOYS' '5.95

MEN'S 112.95 ACTION SHORTS ........110.50

ACTION StiORTS •••••••••

VAN HEUSEN

SALE

DRESS SHIRTS

WOMEN'S
SWIMWEAR

Short sleeve styles In neck sizes
14112 to 1llf2. Solid colors ~nrl
neat stripes. Qulanas, super
silks · and cotton polyester
blends.
Men's $12.00
VAN HEUSEN $HIRTS .•. • $9.60
Men's $15.00
VAN HEUSEN SHIRTS .•• $12.00
Men's $16.00
VAN kEUSEN SHIRTS ••• $12.10
Men's $11.00
VAN HEUSEN SHIRTS ••• Si4.40

Reg. S17,00 Sale 513.60
Reg. $20.00 $ale $16.00

Rl!f. S26.00 Sale 520.80
Rig. SJS.OO Sale S21.00

Y, MAY 25· POl MIMOIIAL DAY

IN

330
$ 00
5

I I •••

by Rose Marie Reid
and Dotty Mann
The latnt fabrics and
•tyles.
Jr. slz.. 516 thrU 15/16
Missesslzos8 thru 18
Extra Sizes .eo thru «

Jury will probe fraud ring
COLUMBUS, Ohio- 1'\llice officers plan to ask a Franklin County
grand jury next week to issue indictments for six people allegedly involved in a steal·ttHJrder and auto insurance fraud ring.
Ateam of detectives, who said the auto theft ring may have operated
from Columbus for more than a year, traced the operation through
Ohio, West Virginia, Kentucky, North Carolina and Florida. The number of people involved is expected to increase after law enforcement
agencies in other states receive information on the ring.

Senate approves proposal

Extend mushroom recall

1

MEN'S 18.95 ACTION SHORTS ......... '7.20

DAYTON, (&gt;hio - Dunbar High Sehool football players Lamar Ellis
and Darrell Perkins drowned Thursday during a senior class outing at
Madison Lakes Park near Dayton.
Witnesses said the two 18-year-olds drowned while trying to swim to
shore from a paddleboat they had taken out on the lake,
Robert Stealey, Madison Township direclor of parks and recreation,
said that the boat had been chained to a dock. The park was open, but
the lake was not supervised when the drowning occurred, he said.

WASHINGTON - A Reagan administration proposal to spend $20
million to help develop nerve gas and other chemical weapons was approved Thursday by the Senate, apparently clearing the way for final
coogressional passage.
The Senate adopted the measure by voice vote after barely
defeating a move to kill the spending measure..The proposal to shelve
the funding measure was defeated, 50-48.
The appropriation was attached to a $12.8 billion supplemental spending bill for this year:

BOYS'
ACTION SHORTS

ACTION SHORTS

seasonal variations.
The report said the W18djusted
consumer price index rose to 2e6.8 in
April, which means that goods and
services that cost $10 in 1967 would
have cost $26.681ast month.
The Labor Department also :iaid
real spendable earnings - after
taxes and adjusting for inflation dropped 0.1 percent in April for an
average married wage-earner with
three dependents.
Real spendable earnings were
down 2.5 percent from April 1980,

•

while the CPI was 10 percent higher
for that 12-month period.
In specific categories in April:
-Housing costs rose 0.7 percent,
with a 0.2 percent decrease in house
prices outweighed by a 1.6 percent
rise in mortgage interest costs and a
0. 7 percent increase in home fuels
and utility costs.
-Prices for clothing and upkeep
rose 0.2percent. •
- Medical care rose 0.9 percent,
the same as the previous two months.

The Reagan administration
predicts an 11.1 percent rate for this
year, but many economists say
overall inflation may be lower.
Some analysts say the Inflation
rate probably won't heat up much
until late summer- and maybe not
even then.
"Single-digit inflation may be too
optimistic a forecast for this year,"
said David Ernst, a vice president of
Evans Economics here. But a rate
just barely over 10 percent might be
possible, he said.

•

at y
Pomeroy-Mi~dleport,

BILOXI, Miss. (AP) - As Miss
New York sat in the audience,
"depressed" by her diBqualification
for padding her swimsuit top, a 2().
year-old modeling instructor
representing Ohio was crowned Miss
USA.
The winner, Kim Seelbrede,- gave
no indication that her victory was
marred by the padding controversy.

MEN'S WESTERN

Shirts ........... 17.46
Men's S14.95 western
Shirts .... . .. . ... m .26

cent in AJ)rll after rising 13.4 percent
In the lint three months of the year,
the report said. And economists say
a the worldwide oil surplus makes it
unllkely there will · be any big
energy-cost increases in the next
few months.
Transportation costs in general
declined 0.1 percent in April, with
the gasoline-price drop-off parily
balanced by a 1.8 percent rise in
new-car prices with the end of big
reb8te programs.
All of the figures are adjusted for

enttne
Pages 15 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

:z Section, 14

Ohio, Fridav, May 22,1981

Crown Ohioan Miss USA

Memorial DaY Sale!

MEMORIAL DAY SAU

Men's Dress· Slacks

qua lity.
100% polyester and cot·
ton/poly blend in slacks
and shorts. Sizes 30 lo 40.
\

$559

Sale111.99

Trissi

tour ·in-hand styles. Save

Wembley TieS••• •••

Sale Prices
Start At Only

Sa leS9.59

and

e

Men's 18.50

Sale $6.39

·SPORTSWEAR
SALE

COVER UPS
FRI. &amp; SAT.
ONLY

Our entire stock of pre·
teen
jeans, skirts,

WOMEN'S EXTRA SIZE

AND

July,
Ove111U food prices, which many
economlsta expected to rise substantially this year, remained
steady in April after gaining only
slightly in the previous two months,
according to today's conswner price
in~x released by the Labor Depart·
ment.
Prices for food at groceries actually fell 0.2 percent, but prices for
restaurant meals ·and alcoholic
beverages were slightly higher.
GI!Soline· prices declined 1.4 per·

New selection of solids and

Sale

Reg. SB.OO

"'\...~.,..-~

WASHINGTON (APJ- Gasoline
and grocery prices fell in April, .
ho~ the nation's overall inflation
increase to 0.4 percent - an annual
rate of 5.1 percent and the best monthly performance since .July, the
govenunent reported today.
Inflation is averaging about 8.4
percent this year, 4percentage points under the 12.4 percent rate for all
of last year.
The April flgure, which follows a
0.6 percent increaae in March, is the ·
best since the 0.1 percent rise in

PRE-TEEN WEMBLEY TIES
FOR MEN
SPORTSWEAR patterns. Ready·tied or

little boys' trunks and sPts.

Reg. 55.00

MEMORIAL. DAY SALE

SALE ·

SALE CHILDREN'S
· SWIMWEAR
Poly/ cotton and spa nut:..,. .
Complete range of ch ~ --!

Police. • •

Inflation rate down last month

*
Little girls' one and two
piece suits, coverups and

Awoman was injured in a one-car'
accident in Meigs County early I
Tuesday, according to the Gallia·
Meigs Post of the Ohio Highway
Patrol.

(Continued from page I)
State Police assisted in the recovery
of some of the items that were
located in West Virginia.
Sheriff Proffitt also reported the
arrest of William Long, 21, and
Larry Tripplett, 29, both of Portland.
The arrests stemmed from an in·
vestigation by Deputy Manning
Mohler of the alledged theft and burning of a truck owned by Terry
Brewer which occurred on May 4.
Both men were released following
extensive questioning. Additional
arrests will be made the sheriff
reported.

Thursday, Mav 21, 1981 ..,

Pomernv-Mictrlh•,.nrt . nhin

WASHINGTON - The Food and Drug Administration, extending a
recall begun last week, is warning residents of 30 states not to eat cer·
lain brands of foui'OIIIIce canned muahrooms packaged by Oxford
Royal Mushroom Products Inc. of Kelton, Pa.
The FDA iuued the warning Thursday night after tests by the
government and the Natiooal Food Processors Association turned up
several cans cootaminated with botulinwn toxin.

Winning Ohio louery numbers
CLEVELAND - The nwnbers selected Thursday night in the Ohio
Lottery's dally game "The Nwnber" and the weekly "Pyramid" and
"Pick4" games are:

The Nwnber- 090
Pyramld-35; 281; 1141
Pick4 - 2596

The lottery reported earninga of t894,611.50 fNinl the wagering on
the dally number game drawing .

No paper Memorial Day
The DaUy Sentinel will not be pubUahed Monday, Memorial Day, in
order that Ohio Valley PublliNng Company employes may ~
the holiday. Publiclltlon will reawne u IIIU811'uellday,

Weather
C1e1r tunlihl Loin In the low to Jllid.IGI. Sunny Saturday. Hlgla in
t!le miH11. Ollnce oll'lin
lei'O percent ~ and Saturday
Willdl u,ht and Ylriable lciniiiK.
.
Erl '1Uli!MI'Ia 111&amp;- llandaf&amp;llrou&amp;h"-11¥: Ollneellf
!lhowen ortbunderlliiw_., daJ. IIebi fnm the mld4ll to the low
• Lon from the mid Ill to low•

•r

the pageant was held.
Miss Fountain had filed suit to force pageant officials to readmit her,
but the suit was dismissed Thursday
afternoon by a New York Supreme
Court Justice who ruled there was
not enough first-hand information to
support such an order.
Miss Fountain also charged Wed·
nesday that at least five other contestants had silicone implants in
their breasts to improve their
figures and as many as 20 had pad·
ded their swimsuits.
Miss Indiana, Holli Dennis of Furt
Wayne, was first runnerup. Miss
Louisiana, Usa Lynn Moss of
Shreveport, was second runnerup;
Miss California, Cindy Kerby of Los
Angeles, was third runnerup, and
Miss Hawaii, Teri Ann Unn of
Honolulu, was fourth runnerup.
As winner, Miss Seelbrede
received $22,500 in prize money, a
car, a fur, jewelry and a year's use
of an apartment in New York City,
where she will participate in the
Miss Universe Pageant in July.
The other semi-finalists were Miss
Alabama, JoAnne Henderson of
Tuscaloosa; Miss Arizona, Cassie
Hill of Phoenix; Miss Georgia , Usa
Joyce Condrey of Decatur; Miss
Maryland, Unda Susan Lambert of
Baltimore; Miss Tennessee, Sharon
Kay Steakley of Nashville; Miss
Texas, Diana Louise Durnford of El
Paso, and Miss Virginia, Pamela
Elizabeth Hutchens of Newport
News,

()
(

~
/

MISS USA CROWNF.n -

Miss Ohio, Kim Seelbreede of Germantown, is crowned by Jloeane
Ford, as Bob Barker looks on at left. I AP Laseruhoto 1.

Jury trial

e~ds

with guilty l?erdict

Dorsey C. Burkhammer, 51, .- The charges stemmed from a
Coolville, was found guilty on four series of incidents which began on
different counts following a three the late evening of Feb. 28 to March
day jury trial.
I.
Burkhammer had been charged
T~ case was heard by Judge
with driving under the influence, Patrick H. O'Brien of county court.
resisting an officer (in connection I. Carson Crow , assistant
with the DWI arrest), disorderly prosecutor, represented the State of
conduct at the county jail a'nd . Ohio and Burkhammer was
resisting arrest at the jail.
represented by Pomeroy Attorney

Charles H. Knight.
Burkhammer was sentenced to
three days confinement on the DWI
charge, three days confinement on
the disorderly charge, which were
suspended, ten days confinement
(five of which were suspended) on
the resisting charge, all to be served
concurrently. He was also fined $600

and costs. He was placed on
probaton for a period of six months
and his driving privileges werr
suspended for 30 days.
Serving on the jury were Norman
Jeffers, James Hoyt, Anna Lambert, Niese! Duvall, Ella Osborne,
Joyce Bowen, Betty Codner and Lois
Walker.

Reagan not held by single answer
WASHINGTON (AP) - President
Reagan, stung by his first rebuke
from Congress, now is telling its
leaders he "is not wedded to any
single solution" for saving the Social
Security system from bankruptcy.
Reagan assured House Speaker
Thomas P. O'Neill and Senate
Majority Leader Howard Baker that
he is willing to compromise on his
far-reaching but unpopular
proposals to make Social Security
solvent, and he asked them to join
him in a bipartisan effort to rescue
the system.
But the conciliatory letter sent
late Thursday also warned bluntly,
"Unless we in government are
wilting to act, a sword of Damocles
will soon hang over the welfare of
millions of our citizens."
Reagan made no mention of the
most widely condemned feature of
his ,proposal to , reduce _Social
Security costs by $88.4 billion over
the next five years: slashing early
retirement benefits for 62-year-olds
starling next Jan. 1 by up to 43 per·
cent.
He said only that he would insist
that any plan to rescue the
beleaguered program be built
around three principles: holding
down the payroll tax, preserving the
integrity of the trust fund and
elinlinaUng "all abules in the
ll)'llem that can rob the elderly of
their ri8htfullegacy. ''
"For generations of Americans,
the future literally resta upon our actions," Reagan declared. "Thla
should ·be a time for sl.llellmanahip
Of the hlghelt order.''
· Aaenlor While House official uid
earlier Thunclay that the pnsldent
doeli nat want to raile the regular
retirement age above 86, 11111 out
Social Security with general
~.or raile the payrGIJiaJ:.
Tile alftcial, who albd not to be
identlflld, conceded that the White
House wu surpriled at the

vehemence of the reaction, which,
he said, had distracted Congress
from Reagan's economic plans.
But, he said, "There's no better
time for any president to do
something like this than when he's
strong politically."
An Associated Press-NBC News
poll released Thursday found that 74
percent of Americans have little
confidence that Social Security will
have the money to pay them
retirement benefits. Only 22 percent
expressed such confidence, and 4
percent of the 1,599 polled by
telephone were unsure.
. Many were unaware of Reagan 's
proposals. Those who were familiar
with them were opposed, 58 percent
to 28 percent, to Reagan's plan to cut
benefits for all future retirees. But
the cuts_in early retirement were OJ&gt;"
posed by 48 percent, compared to 43
percent in favor of the reduced
benefits. In both cases the rest were

unsure.
Reagan's Social Security package
caught most lawmakers by surprise,
and some GOP officials have complained bitterly about the
president's failure to consult with
them beforehand.
Reagan said he had instructed
Health and Human Services
Secretary Richard S. Schweiker,
who led the secret review thst
produced the original proposals, to
meet with leadera of Congress "as
soon as possible to launch a biparti8an effort to save Social Security. I
have also asked him to make the full
resources of his department
available lor this effort."
Reagan said the old age fund's
deficit could hit
billion in the
nat five yean.
"None of .. can afford to undereatlmate the a e r i - of the
probleml laclnc Social Security," he
uid. "In the dladel ahead, its 1111fl!nded obliptlonl eGuld run well in·

'Il

to the trllliCIII."

Reagan said his packagf, which
would sharply reduce the scope of
disability insurance, as well as cut

\

early retinnent and all future
benefits, offered "sound, sensible
solutions ."

Board fails to act
on group's request
A delegation of approximately 40 Syracuse Elementary School
parents and other interested persons of Syracuse met with the
Southern Local Board of Education last night in support of William
Baer as head teacher.
Eartier the board had not renewed Baer's head teaching contract.
The board listened to the delegation but took no action on the issue.
The school calendar for the 1981-82 school year was approved.
School will begin on Sept. I and the last day will be on May 28, 1982. The
resignations of Linda Fisher as EMR instructor, Unley Hart as maintenance man, and Anna Oiler as cook were accepted. Hart and Oiler
are retiring.
The board approved full participation in SEOVEC along with a ser·
vice agreement with the Meigs County Board of Mental Retardation.
Personal Service Insurance Co. was approved as the carrier for
student insurance next year. A leave of absence was appoved for
Michaela Hoback for the remainder of the school year.
Dan Riffle was employed to work nine weeks this summer as
assistant bus mechanic. Next meeting was set for 7:30p.m. on June 15.
Attending were Superintendent Bob Ord, Sue Grueser, president,
Don Smith, Denny Evans, Shirley Johnson, and Charles Pyles, board
members, and Nancy Carnahan, clerk.

·cyclist hurt in accident
Adeer was killed and the driver of
a motorcycle sustained injuries
following a deer·molorcycsle accidenl Thursday at 9 p.m. on SR 124
near Rutland the Meigs County
Sheriff reported.
Everett Schuler, 211, RD, Mid·
dleport, was traveling west when the
deer jwnped into the path of his
motorcycle. Schuler was taken to
Holzer Medical Center by the
Rutland ER Squad. Schuler suffered
lacerations, abrasions and a
pcllllible fracture ol hiJ right ann.
A 1977 Dalllun pickup was taken

from the Smith-Nelson Used Car lot
in Pomeroy sometinne after 7 p.m.
Wednesday the Meigs County
Sherifrs Department reported.
The vehicle is described as aking
cab vehicle, orange with dark
stripes. No license plates were on
the vehicle.
The 1977 Suzuki motorcylce taken
from the Amos Tillis residence,
Rutland, on May 10, was recovered
Thursday evening in a creek along
the l'OIId leading from Happy HOllow
to Hysell Run. The vehicle bad
moderate damage.

rl-&gt;

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