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•

Meigs commissioners threaten to·quit
By BOB HOEFLICH
Two=Meigs County's three commiss!
have indicated they will
resign ,
y if they do not reach
a dec:llton to recognize membership
In a Wllon by striking Meigs County
deputy sheriffs.
Some 80 residents In support of the
' deputies attended a meeting of the
commlasioners Tuesday night
urging !that the membership of the
deputies In the American Federation
of state, County and Municipal Empleyes, be recognized.
· It was reported the teachers and
carpenters' unions were represented
in the group attending the meeting

With tempers becolning heated
during the dlscuasiOIL Spokesmen
for the deputies were reported to be .
Gary Wolfe, a deputy; Chester
Wells, a former 1 county commissioner; Sam Boston of the Carpenters Local and ~ Dixon of the ·
Teachers Aasociati!J!l.
Commlsslonen ~chard Jones
and Henry Wells, it is reported, indicated theY will resign if they do not
reach a decision to recognize the
Union by Thursday.
Deputies
resumed their . picketing at the
sheriff's office on Monday afler they
turnild down an offer made bf the
commissioners to Sheriff James

•

Proffitt on Monday.
They had earlier been on strike
and returned to their jobs on a five
day good faith arrangement after ·
having negotiated a contract with
Sheriff Proffitt. The deputies gave
the commlasioners five days to approve the contract.
That five day work agreement explred last Thursday, but deputies
remained on their jobs to give the
commissioners longer to approve
the contract.
The deputies voted down the com-·
missioners offer extended on Monday. The commissioners offered an

hourly wage Increase of 25 cents plus
on&amp;-half of hospitalization costs.
Deputies had negotiated with
SheriH Proffitt for 50 cents an'hours
increase, health and welfare
benefits and one-half of
hospitalization on the first year of a
two year contract.
The commissioners have contended 1hat the sheriff should
operate on funds appropriated the
first of this year. The commissioners
reported deputies were given a 25
cent hour Increase in January and
would have an additional25unts an
hour with Monday's offer making an

•

•

at y

e

•

increase of 50 cents an hour this
Meantime, Mildred Gaul, a
year. They have contended that the Chester business woman, urged
operation of the sheriff's depart- residents of Meigs County who are in
ment is the function of the sheriff support cif the county COIIIJ'IIisllioners
who, they have stated, must stay to express themselves inunediately.
within the budget guidelines.
Mrs. Gaul commented that the of.
Contacted this morning, Sheriff fer of the commissioners appears
Proffitt had no comment on the fa,ir to her since the 25 cent Increase
current situation which appears to would make a 50 cent an hour inbe threatening the resignation of at .crease for deputies this year. She
least two of the commissioners. The stated that commissioners are spenthird commissiolier is David Koblen- ding taxpayers money and should do
tz. Koblentz could not be reached so wisely. She contends many
this morning for any comment on residents in support of the Comwhether he plans to resign if the missioners are not making themother two commissioners do so.
selves heard and urged them to show
that support.
•

enttne

I

Ohio,

1981

2 Sections, 16 Pages
A Multimedia Inc.

1981

15 Cents

·'

REGISTRATION
Richard SwaDBon, Jr., left,
Meigs Hlgb School, senior,
undergoes registration at
Meigs Hlgb School
Tuesday afternoon when
cltizeDBbip day was observed. The Meigs County
Board of Ele,ctioDB had
personnel available to
register all seniors who
will be eligible to vote this
year. Approximately 161
were registered. Handling
the registration were
Jackie Brickles and
Sharon Manley, right. In
addition, Dean Kabler,
field representative of the
Secretary of State, ex·
plalned and demonstrated
the use of the votomatic to
~baron Johnson, Judy
Alexander and Tim Gore, 1
to r, Meigs Hlgb School
seniors, during the observance of citizenship
day. Instruction on use of
the votiDg equipment was
given In small groups by
Kabler.

.

LD,

...
Court convicts Akron man

MERCER, Pa. - An Akron, Ohio, man has been convicted in Mer·
cer County Court of third-degree murder in the death of a 27-year-old
woman.
After seven hours of deliber~tion Tuesday, a jury in Mercer returned the verdict against Stephen Paul Rafalko.
The victim, Debora Shealy, also of Akron, had been hit in the head
with a tire iron and run over and dragged by a car last September. Her
3-month-old baby was found several miles away along a rural road.

Ohioan will be appointed
.

.

I

COLUMBUS, Ohio - State Rep. Donna Pope, R-Parma, was on the
telephone to the White House when reporters sought her reaction to
word she will be named director of the U.S. Mint by President Reagan.
Later Tuesday, the 4~year-old housewife and mother of two
daughters said she just found out about it.
The appointment still is not official, and the FBI stili must complete
its investigation, she said. But she thinks she will enjoy the duties of
the director's office.

48 people face court suit
TOLEDO, Ohio - Forty~ight people were in the work-release
division of Lucas County Common Pleas Court are being sued for a
total of $11,206 by county Prosecutor Anthony Pizza.
Pizza filed the suit in Toledo Municipal Court seeking to recover

money for room and board.
People assigned to the work-release division are required to pay
$7.50 a day for expenses. They work or attend training programs
during the day and return to the county jail at night.

Return occasion for rejoicing
''

Reagan lobbies for program
WASHINGTON (AP)- President
Reagan is out of the public eye but
not out of earshot as he lobbies from
the privacy of the White House for
his economic program.
What started out as another
routine telephone call to a
congressman Tuesday ended up as a
rare bit of public insigbt into the
president trying to sell his tax and
budget cuts.
Live- on radio station WBVP in
Beaver Falls, Pa., was Reagan chat·

tlng with Rep. Eugene Atkinson, 0Pa., about the health of both the
chief executive and his program.
The imprOmptu, two-minute conversation was Reagan's first public
statement since he went home from
the hospital Aprilll to continue convalescence from a gunshot wound in·,
fllcted during a Marc, 30
assassination attempt.
" He's been most receptive, which
proves . that Democrats and
Republicans can get along on things

I

that are good for the country," the
president told the radio audience.
"I'm very grateful to him and he
mentioned the fact you were having
this show and offered me the opportunity through you to say hello to
your listeners and I'm delighted to
do so."

Atkinson, who supported Sen. ~
ward Kennedy for the Democratic
presidential nomination last year,
didn't need any more prompting.
"We're certainly delighted here,
Mr. President," the congressman

said. "I am supportive of your
programs."
Atkinson said he was prepared to
vote for the revised budget plan
Reagan is backing lnatead of the one
offered by the Democratic leadership in the House. An aide to Atkinson explained later that the
congressman still favors restoring
some of the proposed cutbacks In
unemployment
compensation,
Conrail, synthetic fuels development
and f!!deral programs to benefit the
coal industry.

Injunction do.e sn 't upset UMW leader
Bumbico referred to a decision ·
ST. CLAIRSVILLE, Ohio (AP)AUnited Mine Workers official says Tuesday by Bebnont County Comhe's not overly upset with a mon Pleas Judge Harold Thomas to
preliminary Injunction limiting grant the Injunction sought by Ohio
picketing at an eastern Ohio coal Coal and Construction Corp.
company site. ·
Laywers for the firm told Thomas
"I don't think the decision was that striking UMW. nilners inthat unfavorable," said Anthony stigated violence In eastern Ohio
Bumblco, International executive coal fields two weeks ago.
In one Incident, Norman Trucking
board reptesentative for District 6.
The district repi'esents about 15,000 Co. trucks carrying non-UMW coal
nilners In southeastern Ohio and the frun Ohio Coal and Construction
-Btrlp· mines were damaged. A ternWest Vlrglnla panhandle.

porary restraining order against the
strikers was granted following the
Incident, which has since expired.
In his Injunction, Thomas limited
pickets at one of the company's sll.eiJ
to four and prohibited any destruction to its mining operations.
"I (also) enjoined placing foreign
substances of materials on public
highways, such u naila or glass, and
enjoined threats that were made to
drivers of (non-UMW) coal trucb,"
the judge said.

Bumblco said there have been no
authorized piCkets at any Ohio Coal
and Construction sites in recent
weeks.

DALLAS - His disappi)arance has not been explained but Rafael
Delgado's return to a hospital was an occasion for rejoicing to his doctors, his family and the police.
The month-old child, who suffers from seizures that result from a
brain infection, was abducted from his hospital bed shortly about 12:30
a.m. Tuesday, 10 minutes after a nurse had checked his crib.
He was missing most of the day, and police and doctors issued warnings that 24 hours without medication could kill the infant.

Winning Ohio lottery number
CLEVELAND - The winning nwnber selected Tuesday night in the
Ohio Lottery's dally game "The Nwnber" is 871.
The lottery reported earnings of $561,664.50 from the wagering on
the drawing. Lottery officials said sales prior to the drawing totaled
' $931,664.50, and holders of winning tickets are entiUed to sllare
$370,000.

Weather
Showers or thunderstorms tonight, ending Thursday afternoon.
Lows tonight In the mid-50s. Highs Thursday around 70. Chance of rain
90 percent tonight and 60 percent Thursday. Winds southerly to southwesterly 1()..20 mph tonight.
·
Exteoded Ohio Forecast- Chance of showers statewide Friday and
in the northeast Saturday. Fair Sunday. Highs in mid-50s to low~
Friday and Saturday, warming to the mid-&amp;O,s to loW 70s Sunday. Lows
in upper 30s tO low 40s Friday morning, in the 30s Saturday and war·
ming to the 40s Sunday.

I

_'P air hurt in Meigs Wreck
\

· Three people were injured In area
traffic accident• Investigated
Tuesday by the Gallla-Melgs Post of
the OIBo Highway Patrol.
· Two of the injuries were the result
ola two-car accident In Meigs Copnty In the late afternoon,
1be patrol Aid a westbound
vehicle driven by lAil M. Bailey, II,
RL 3, Racine, coWded with an eastboUnd vehicle driven by Tamara
l\lldnl, II, Syracuae, on SR 124 at
5:11p.m.
1be report Aid AdJdna was attemptinl to make a left turn when
tile cruh occumd. .Jnjured , were ·
two Jllllllllen iD tbe Bailey auto,
Pbyllla M. BailtJ, 11, and Jom o.
Bailly. 11, bcC o1 Rt. a, RadDe.
111ey wen taken· to Holler
Medical Center by the Syracuae

emergency ~~quad, where Phyllls
Bailey was treated and released for
leg bruises and John Bailey was
treated and rel-.1 for brullea.
Both vehicles were moderately
damaged and Adkins was cited for
failure to yield.
'

(

private vehicle, where abe wu
treated and relealled for brul.les to
the anna and handll. Her vehicle was
moderately damaged In the crub.
'lbe patrol allo inveltilllted I
minor two-car accident In Gallla

County 'l'llelday DI8IL

Accardlni to tbe report,

1

I ,.-.

The patrol IBid a vehicle driven by bound vehicle driven by Richard S.
Marlene J. Baker, 11, RL 2, PatriOt, o,ntell. 17, RL I, Bidwell, Wlllt
was nor1bbound oo SR ,3211n Gallla around a dilabled car driven by
County at 11:116 a.m. when abe 1olt RebecCI J. Lewla, .. Rt. 3,
controf, went olf the rlgbt side of the Gelllpolil', ooSR• at 1:01 p.m.
An llltbouDd vel*:le driven by
road and came ..ck onto the road.
1be wblcle then went left of cen- Patrick E. Broab, 8, Galltpolll,
ter and went olf tbe left side Ill tbe briDd for Dlnlell, weat olf tbe
roed, to!l!cMDI with a fence and con- nett aide Ill tbe rGid, bldl• apln
tiDaiiJC oo when the car bit e em- and CGilklld wllb tbiJAWII..taide.
.....,.. and overturned, the
,_.. were no IDJuriel• bad!
the Broca and Lewla autol were
npartllld.
Babr wu taken to HMC by ~damlpd.
y

f

TWOINJVIIID-'Iwiii&amp;.I,Ba • rnl' •waoe
......... a
cnll• a1111a 1111 1 1 Twp.
........... ill; a."CL ......... Clel"g" ...... " tile
CJMa ....., Palnl llld I Cll' ....,. lly ~
A..,., •· S,t._..e, etiiWed wltiJ a nlllde drha by ·

a"'' •

...._.... Bailey, •· RL I, Radtle at 1: U p.m. lajared
wwe I'IIJIIIIII. BaOey, a, IIIII ." * 0. llalleJ, ·11,
r 1111•• 1a tile ..._ Baae, n111e1e, n. were ..._
...... Medleal Celdir by tile 8)11ft.111e em&amp;IIWJ
llqllld ~treated IIIII rJmed lwl111bea. (
•

.'

�.

·.

Commentary

·....Knepper cools Dodgers, 1-0

. Pagt-2-Th•DIIIY Stntlntl
Pomeroy-MiddlltiOrt, Ohio
·WednesdiY, Aprll22, 1911

'

1~. the Atlanta Btaves harrunered club as a free agent. The 2l•year-old
Canlluals 8, Cubti.
the Cincl1mati Reds 1!1-1, the St. left fielder boosted his average to
Gene Tenace and Tom Herr drove
Louis Cardinals blanked the Chicago .444.
in two runs apiece in St. Louis' sixCubti &amp;-4 and the San Diego Padies ·
run third inning to back the five-hit
shaded the Sail Francisco Giants:!-!.
pitching of rookie Andy Rincon.
Braves 10, Reds I
New York and Pittsburgh had the
George
Hendrick also had two RB!s
Tommy Boggs pitched eight
day off.
with
a
double 'and triple. Rincon
scoreless inning and drove in two
Elpoi!O, Pbllllea 3
retired
17
of the last 18 batters as the
Rookie Tim Raines rapped out runs and slugger Bob Homer, Cubs suffered their eighth confour hits, including a tw().run single, without a run batted in this season, secutive loss and ninth in 10 games.
and tied a club reqord by stealing drove in four, three with a homer in The Cardinals have won five in a
four bases while Scott Sailderson the Braves' seven-run ni'nth. row.
scattered 10 hits. Raines broke a 2-2 Claudell Washington, who had three
tie against loser Dick Ruthven in the hits, got Atlanta's first one off Mario
fi,fth when he scored on Rodney Soto, a single in the fourth. He stole
Scott's single and the Expos poured second and continued to third on ca\Padres 3, Giants I
five runs across in the sixth, in- cher Johnny Bench's throwing
Chris Welah posted his first major
cluding tw().run singles .by Raines error. Horqer followed with a league victory by allowing an unearand Ellis Valentine. Gary Carter sacrifice fly. '!'he Braves made it :H) ned run and three hits in seven inhomered for Montreal's first two in the sixth when Ed Miller singled, nings. It wes the second start for the
stole second and scored on
runs.
26-year-old left-bander, obtained in a
Washington's
single.
The Expos are counting on Raines
trade last month with the New York
to replace Ron LeFlore, last year's
Yankees. The Padres snapped a
NL stolen base leader, who left the
The loss was the Reds' third in string of 21 scoreless innings in the
four meetings with Atlanta, a team fifth when Oaie Smith dlivered a
Cincinnati dominated last year by two-out, tw().run double off Doyle
winning 16 of 18 games.
Alexander.

By Auoi:latedPreu

'I'holle modernday hitless won• ders, alias the HOUilton Astros, came
• up with a new way to record a milch-

Gro~gup absurdu------~·------~------~Wa~m~~m~~~
·
~
~~J~
·
~
can
I have been traveling about because to do so means one If. body
colleges and remit information and . against which to c:Jaim the annual
~onsofgeneralinterest.
subsidy fromthestatecapito ·"
College A. The university in
"So what happens to them~·:
question has a considerable
"They are put on ~prohapon. It
enrollment, and it traMpires that tt isn't easy for a student bere lmow
is an open ad\nissJons institution. what the difference ia
being
That means the,t in order to gain ad- on probation and not being on
mission it is only required that you probation. J.ife goes on e~y as
produceahighSchonldiploma.
before. After about two an a half
. "I was disappinted," I said to a years they have to weed o t. The
· the everung,
·
· student leaves ' and he's ma1:!t the
professor later m
m
isolated circwnstancea, "that there college, mad at his teachers, d at
weren't any black students at the the state, and probably mad at the
lecture."
truck driving firm that ~v~ him a
''They won't .:orne 011tin any nwn- job. An unhealthy Situation, !Mit one
bers other than for Jesse Jackson or that reflects social impepttives
Co tta King They ..,..,,.,.;.,. ~ per- Ronald Reagan hasn't even ~gun to
re
·
·--r· - .
be ..
cent llf the college population. At pro . ·
least the same pe. ,.......,e of white
College B. An infonnal,siwation,
studenIs are 1isUesa. I..Would guess
that half the blacks and ' half the before the main event. ~estion
lower qwntlle whites cant a) a~d period. A student asks whe r the
lractions,orb)readanewspaper.'
state isn't "wrong" in ~x 1 cising
'-"" e..
g,
sueh powers as were exerc"""',
"You'rekiddiDg."
"lam not kidding."
by Franco and Allelllltl! to mllintain
"How do they pas11 their exams?" power.
1 aDSwet'ed: States are am~ral ind
" They don't. But the a · · Irati d
't
1 th m stitutions. In a "state" inheres the
liWWI
on QeS!I expe
e •

-·••n

The Daily Sentinel

Pericles.' ADd

...

ask?"

Pumt&gt;ru)' , Ohiu

"Yes. But before you do that, walt
one minute. Let's Bllllwne that these
college seniors did once know that
Pericles was a famous Athenian
general, that he became the ruler of
AtheDS, was widely regarded for the
grandness of his rul~, indeed giving
rise to the designation, 'The Age of

IH4-99%-2156
0£\;0TEDTOUIE INTERF.ST Of' TH E MEI GS-MASON AREA

• ROBERTL. WINGETT
Publishu

BOB HOEFLICH

Editor

A MEMBER fll Tilt Anodal~ Pr~~s. Inland Dally Prt"Ss Association and lht
Amt'riciANtwtpaper ~ht'rs Asso&lt;'ialion.

LETTERS Ofi'iOPfNION art' v.·tkomtd. Thry .~ huuld Itt' It'll!! than 300 wurdslool(. All
!t'ttl'rs ttrt' ~ubjt'd liJ edttibtt and muN t lw !ii«rtt'd '11ilth namt'. addrt&gt;llll and Lrll"phurw
INmbt-r. Nu un.iaQrd lt1ttnwill bto pubUshrd. l ..t&gt;tlt'r.; shnuld twin )(t~ t..1h·, addrt'~sin~
I~Nu.-~. nut pt'rttmUIIHil'~· •

Letters to editor
~l~e~-------------I have recently been baffled by the
letters to the editor urging people to
support Vetera.ns Memorial Hospital
and some of our physicians in this

.area.
I do not see why people need to be
asked to support physicians or
hospitals that are· good. Any public
service that provides good service
should be well supported simply by
its reputation, thereby eliminating
the need to beg for support.
I do feel that at present we have
several good physicians in this community - that is evidenced by their
following.
It seems that the fact that the
hospital is not prospering should be
a primary community concern, and
rather than ask people to support it

blindly perhaps we should ask why it
doesn't prosper.
One hears many things in a small
conununity and I have heard that a
new surgeon was suspended without
any hearing and without even being
allowed to see what he was charged
with and that the medical doctors in
this area supported this type of action. I have heard that even the most
popular physicians we now have are
concerned about the way our
hospital functions and upset with its
administrator.
Even though we a~ from Gallia
County, we and many of our friends
doctor with the physicians of Meigs
County.
Sincerely. - Mr. and Mrs. C. T.
(Bill) Jewett, Rt. l, Gallipolis, Ohio
45631, Phone614-367-7844.

hnportant bill ____________
Recently there have been several
articles printed 11bout the proposed
legi.'llation concel'llin« the juvenile
justice system in Ohio. House Bill
440 is the budget biD for Ohio's
juvenile correcti01111 system, the
Ohio Youth Cornrniuion, and that
bill contains several lines that would
drastically alter the juvenile justice
system in Ohio. Legislators sbould
carefully review the eJ1tire bill, and
the public should be made aware of
the results of its pa··se. There are
two provisions that eepecially concem me:
First, H..B. 440 would require that
youth convicted of fellllly offenses be
committedtQastatecornctionalinllltutlon for a llliJlm-llf one year.
nu means that a lealaerious felony
apinBt property ~be given the
IIJile punishment (CIII year) u a
more Hl'iOUil felony apinst persons.
While the bW may llUnd to provide
for Joncer terms for 11111re serious offender a, It does not adequately make
thltprovlalon.
•.
Slelndiy, H.B. 4il~' IIOU!d also
pial» aftercare (paliile) services
andlr the jurisdi~:OI the local
,·

Challenge•time

'··
Itwd with dilgult 111Jmetime ago
·whln our electJd oBidila in Colwn-

juvenile courts instead of under the
Ohio Youth Commission as It now Is.
This would result in the eighty-eight
(88) juvenile courts having to bin
additional staff and fund programs
for the youth on parole in each county. At a tiJDjl when courts are
already overloaded it would n(t
seem reasonable that they could
properly assume the additional
responsibilities of parole supervision. It would seem that the COIUlty
should oonfine themselves to the
judicial process and leave the
provision of social and correctional
services to the agencies that can
specialize in both.
Since there are several other important issues at slake in this bill, I
would encourage concerned cllilenl
to contact their legislators llld
lJII¥tOrs llld·a4J
to carefully
(l!v\ew H.a . 440 befon voting onlt. I
would also hope that the members llf
the HOUle FinanCe Committee would
attend the upcclliJina bearlnga on
this bill in order to be l*ter able to
decide what ia beet for the State of
Ohio. - JerryGrlfftth,McArthur.

want to ltill off • mOIII'n!nl he helped kill off our beaullful
dDYtl (turtle dove or 1J1n crow) u duvwl"
we call them.
~ '~~
lt'a Ilia to qn.,llt our Cllmipt
Gonmor Rhodes
he willli&amp;n . olflclala "' l!tiP - .iDto oflke!
tile bill ... if It cornea l4lllm. I wrote They lmpO.e diJIJ&amp;ht llvinp•lime ·
• ..-y hot letter ti 0..11- on • ... llld Wlllt to kill our dovtl,
RholliM. Mr. lion Jamit·a d utben etc. Abuman-'dlllltldhOOYe,a
woUd .. hut~~-·-,·~ nut WOUld! Dovellovewtldbinheed
towrlte·tbem. ·
·
... we leed tbem ... Aa- iWoCIIr
RaJ-runsanillllwll&amp;lll'lt llid. "It's barllarlc to~ theml" I
.... l*beauUfulcN't . . . ...., ...... liOpatwit!
.._._ ... It 11)'11 'g 2 I J Wille
lt'a lime for.-people to llpllil up.
. . , ~ thil, "We
Daa'l nil for Gearse to do lt.lwt
11r dlildd7, llt'u.&amp;Milt ,"lk.
wilbea.- JGIIDMclllllr, MJU IU llrt.
lfllilliectlon (If*·.~ htlpa
baa

'·

· ~

Astroa,

wpe

,
..
;

' '
' '
"' .

Sports .World

..•
•

... Buy. 111e some peanuts and
Cracker Jack.
I don't care If I never get back...
That line from baseball's national
anthem wasn't mant to be takim so
serious!*. But the other night, 20
hearty rans at the International
League1 game between the
Pawtuc~et Red Sox and Rochester
Red Wings very nearly never got
back.
That was the night the two minor
league teams played 32 innings.
They quit at 4 o'clock in the momirig
and by 1/le time the weary players
and club officials staggered out of
the ballpark, the sky was beginning
to brighten with the first signs of
daybreak.
It was a game for the history
booka - the longest baseball game
in terms of innings and time ever
played. . .
"We shGuld have known it was
going to lie a long night,'' said Mike
Tamburro, general manager of the
Red Sox. "We were scheduled to
start at 7:30, but about 10 minutes
before gametime, one light after
another went out in two of our light

'
Democrat or a wavering Republican
to stick with the administration in
·the key budget votes ahead.
Members of the Cabinet got their
lnstructi01111 Monday: Make every .
public appearance p&lt;Uible and pay
special heed to members of the
Houae who are straddling the fence.
They reportedly were told that polls
conducted for Reagan show support
for his spending cuts rEmains strong
and that the Jne18118e should be
stressed to CODgrelllllllel as evidence
tbat their conatltuenta want them
voting with the president.
Reagan, his schedule limited by
convalescence, hu been on the
phone to members llf Congrels. He is
seeing governors and otber pollllcal
leaders at the White HOWle as part of
lbe effort to rally bacldng.
Vice Preeident George Buah and
former President Gerald R. Ford
have been enlllted to speak for It,
too.
Four Reagan lobbying teams are
handling that phase fl. the cam'

paign.
One White H01111e fl.ficlal, who
Bilked that his name not be uaed,
lllid the effort Ia concentrated on
about 45 ~~~~~~~ distrlcta,
IJIOit fl. tbem in the South. He Aid
Reagan aides figure that If they can
cement 2fi,to 28 wavering votes, they
can win oo the budlet cuts.
The baWe over tu cull may
prove the more difftcult. Reaian

Wanta a cut of about !I percent over

plan.
"We don't anticipate comthe next three years, with Congress
prcmillng
oo the budget or the lax
committing ltaelf to the package
cuts,".
Aid
deputy White . H01111e
now. The Democrats have countered
with a Oll&amp;Ye&amp;r tax bill, Qfferlng . pre~~~ aecretary Larry Speakea.
reductions somewhat arnaller than "We're encwraged by our aenerai
those in the first 1-'ear llf the Reagan discuulons with members ci
Cmgreu.''

TodAy in history.

••

toWers."

Today Is Wednesday, Apr1122, the !12th day ci !1181. There·are 253 daya
left in the year.
.
Today'a highlight in hlatory:
On Aprll22, 1888, the first shot of the Spanlab-American War waa fired
when the "U.S.S. Nashville" captured a Spanlah merchant ship olf Key
Wl!lt,Fla.
.
On this date:
In 1541, St. Ignatius de Loyola was elected first head ci the Jeault
religious order.
·
In 11114, Congrela authorized the U.S. mint to use the motto "In God We
Trust" on coina.
In 1•, what came to be known u the "Oklaluna land ruah" bepn
when tholunda of homelteaders swanned iDto the temtory and IIWd
out claims.
And In 1815, during World War I, pollon gu first wu uaed by the German army.
Ten years ago: Haitian President Francoll Duvaller died, and 11111011,
Jean-Claude, wasii1IIJI'II into olflce.
Five years aso: The Well German manufacturer ci the Volbwqen anllOUIII:ed it would lovell~ miWon In a car lllelllbly plant In the United
States.

in. your balbrobe llld rwd it under
the street lmlp?"
"Ob, my God. It's CGilliD&amp; bact to
me now. l.m't that the girl who
gaduated fUgna CUm Laude ~
Vauar?"
Redford llld, "Would you believe
Mqna Cum lllllblnc laude fnm the
Unlvenlty of Taledo."
.
"i lllld I drink," Rablrda Aiel
"Wbo- "-'about trill?"
''JIIIl mpelf llld Ilultln Half·
IIIID,'' Redford Ald.

Committee to the Mayor llf

Wulinchn, D. c."

' NotbiJI8.

He jllll pve me a

-·t

,....,?"

That delayed the start of
baseball's longest .night by 30
minutes and when the game started
at 8 p. m .~ it was witlt only eight of
the 10 e t towers at McCoy
Stadiwn operation.
So, pia
in sort of a twilight
zone, the Red Sox and Red Wings
went at Pawtucket wu trailing 1:
0 in the bottom of the ninth but
staged a thrilling rally to tie the
game. Chico Walker, who was to go
1-for-13 for the night, doubled, advanced to third on a wild pitch and
then scored on a sacrifice fly by
designated hitter RIIIIS Laribee, who
was on his way to an !1-fur-11 night's
work.
The home fans- there were 1,740
In the $nda when the game started
- cheered the dramatic comeback.
But they didn't !mow what they were
gettini themselves Into.
The two teams struggled into extra Innings with an occasional threat
• here llld there but notltlng resem!. . bllng a run. Wilen the c(ock Pushed
. put midnight, Tamburro consulted
his International League bylaws and
" discovered a rule co~erlng

ttj

burro.

But they didn!t go home.
"Jack Leitz was the umpire crew
chief and he said there was no mention · of the 12:45 .We In his instructional guide,"1amburro said.
"He also said he ha to go by his instructional guide."
So the game went n. And on, and
1
on, and on.
Rochester scored ~ run in the 21st
inning but the tenacious Red Sox
came back to tie it again in the hottom half of the inning; tying it at 2-2.
"At one point, around the 25th inning, I think, we tried to find an
alternative," said Tamburro. " It
was getting cold and we suggested
the wnpires might call it on the basis
of the weather. "
Leitz didn't buy tbat either and so
they played some more.
Beginning at about 1:30 a.m.,
Tamburro had been trying to reach
Harold Cooper, president of the
league, hoping for a way out of the
marathon. It was 3:45 a.m. when
they got him and he gave Leitz permission to .suspend the game,
provided the teams were stlll tied after the current inning, which happened to be No.32.
Rochester's Jolmllale made it to
second base in the top of the 32nd
· and tried to score on a hit. But Sam
Bowen threw him out at the plate,
preserving the ti~.
Then, mercifully, Itt was over.
Twenty hearty fans:T: in the baU
park were rewarded for their perseverance with seas passes, courtesy of the Pawtucket club.
Among those most grateful for the
end were Rochester center fielder
Dallas ,Wllliams, who went G-for-12,
and third baseman Cal Ripken, Jr.,
who had a 1-for-12 night. .For
Pawtucket, Laribee, who struck out
eight times, Walker (1-for-13) and
Lee Graham (l-for-f4) had the
longest nights.
Nobody, however, was happier to
see the end come than Denny Cregg.
He was the home plate umpire.

By Associated Pre!is
Dave Stieb has enough gooso.-eggs
to whip up a major-league omelet.
But it's leaving a bitter taste.
Stieb has started three games for
the Toronto Blue Jays this season.
He has also lost three games this
season.
In the 21 innings he has pitc~ed,
the Blue Jays have given him no
runs. None. Zero. Zilch.
He pitched seven against

Milwaukee Tuesday night. Toronto
scored one f1111 in the eighth. And one
in the ninth. Not enough. The
Brewers beat the Blue Jays 6-2.
In other American League games, ·
Seattle llilenced Calllomia 3-(),
Boston blasted Texas IIH, New York
defeated Detroit :Hl, Chicago beat
Bllltimore 1~. Cleveland clipped
Kansas aty 4-1 and, in 10 innings,
Oakland ecJ&amp;'ed Minnesota 4-3.
Marblen 3, Angels 0

BY SCOTT WOLFE
ROCK SPRINGS - Behind a 14 hit
offensive attack and solid pitching
the Meigs Marauders bombed
Ravenswood's Red Devils 13-4 here
Tuesday evening in a non-league
high school baseball contest. Meigs
raised its record to 3-ii, while Ravenswood dropped to 6-3.

Roger Kovalchik pitched four inDings in picking up the win.
Kovalchik left the game because he
is scheduled to pitch a league contest
·later this week. Freshman reliever
Randy Stewart was a big plus for
Meigs, coming in to finish the game
in an outstanding perionnance on
the mound.
In his first appearance, Stewart
struck out the first batter he faced.
The Meigs duo combined to fan four
and walk three overall.
1
MacMI)sters suffered the loss for
Ravenswood, being relieved by
Rhodes in the fifth. they struck out
five and walked four, while hitting
one batter.
Meigs took a three-run lead in the
bottom of the first after Kovalchik
shut out Ravenswood the first inning. Meigs scored when Mike
Miller singled, Roger Kovalchik was

VOLKSWAGEN

VOLKSWAGEN .

•20•

hit by Wayland
a pitch, Jerry
FieldS·
Terry
singled,
11nd singled,
another rr;::::::::;;;;;;:::::!;;;;;;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::==;;;;;;;;;~
run came in on a ground out. Ravenswood came back with two in the
second on a single, walk, and double
by Belue, the score now 3-2.
In the third, Meigs plated a single .
run when Fields reached on an error

~---~ i ~-.-

Vikings nip Southern

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~
Big Bend Semce
Center In Racine

and Jeff Wayland doubled. In the contest against Athens.
' Specializes in Auto Parts
fourth Meijpl had its big inning
Linescore:
for Amer ican , &amp; Foreign
which started on a butn single by Ravenswood
020 001 1- 4 5 1
Cars .
Troy Brooks. Jim Boyer reached on Meigs
301 603 x- 13 14 4
a fielder's choice, Mike Miller
949-2894
Batteries : Kovalchik (WP), R.
walked, Kovalchik singled, Fields stewart fifth, and T. Wayland. Me......-......
reached on an error, and Terry Masters, RhOdes (fifth) , and Morris.
...-,.
Wayland doubled. Wayland followed . - - - - - - - - - -- -- ' - - - - - - - - - - with a long shot over the left field
fence for a home run, complemented
by another towering shot in the same
SERVICE SPECIALS
place by Steve Ohlinger for back-t().
back home runs.
Ravenswood plated single runs in
the sixth and seventh innings. MarTuneup Spe&lt;;iai
pie slugged a home run in the sevenOil and Lube Special
• points • valve cover
th for the visitors.
• oi 1 • washer sol ve11•
gasket • plugs • fuel
In the sixth, Meigs crossed the
• oil filter • body lube .
filter.
plate three more times on a Boyer
single, Kovalchik walk , and a long
PIUt Tax
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JerryFieldshomeruntoleftcenter.
' Meigs hitters were Terry Wayland
NO OTHER
two singles ·and a double, Jeff
Wayland a single, double, and home
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Oil and Lube Special
hoii!e run. Troy Brooks had two
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filter ewasher solvent.
and Miller, Kovalchik, and Boyer
THESE SPECIALS
singles.
-.
PIUS :TaX
Coach Harrison, pleased with his
team's fine perionnance, said, "We
were finally hitting the ball with
authority.'' The Marauders hope to
carry their hot bats into toni ~ht's

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

"'

Floyd Bannister's tw&lt;rhitter and place to pitch. In his career the
RBI singles by Richie Zisk, Jim An· Boston southpaw is 1·1 in the band·
derson and Bruce Bochte enabled box and J..() away from it. Against
the Mariners to beat Calllornia. It Texas, he scattered nine hits and, of
was a remarkable turnaround for the Rangers' runs, one was unearBannister, whose last start ended in ned and two others came by way of
a 16-1 pounding by Oakland. This walks.
time he retired the final2() batters he
faced.
Red Sox 10, Rangers ~
John Tudor, a left-bander, is
unique. He finds Fenway Park a fun . - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Marauders rip ~ed Devils

SYRACUSE - Visiting Vinton going the distance to fan four and
Counfy .edged host Southern 3-2 at wallt three.
marathons.
the Syracuse Mullielpal Park here
Jay Rees and Jeff Sopher led the
•· "It says in the bylaws, no inning Tuesday in a non-league higl! school inconsistent Southern offense with
lhalhtartafter !2:45a.m.,'' he said. baseball contest. Southern, who had two hits each. The hard-hitting Rees
OK. Simple. Show the bylaws to the tying run picked off base in the hit a double and single, Bob Lee and
laat inning, falls to 7-4.
the wnplres and we all go home.
· T~rryMcNickle.
Bryan Wolfe went the distance for
Juon Keffer, ,Joe Lame, Wolmen. . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , Southern in an outstanding pitching dori, Terry Radikin and Richie Grifperformance. Wolfe'! efforts, fithall singled for Vinton County.
however, were not enough as TorSouthern hosts league foe North
The Daily Sentinel
nado
fielding
pennltted
three
unearGallia tonight in a double header at
· (UIPII-l
ADI•-IIMrtt ilo,ioc,
ned runs that piwlded the winning Racine.
edge.
Unescore:
Wolfe struck out seven and walked Vinton Co.
000 210 G--3 5 2
just one ·Vllting batter, scattering Southern
000 2)) G--2 7 2
five hits. Jolm Wobnendorf picked
Batteries: Bryan Wolfe and J.
up the win for VInton -County, also Bees. Wolmendorf (WP) and Cox.

-... ... a,earu--Cndft

..

"That's what I did," said Tam-

•

BREAKS IT UP - Pblladelphia Pblllies Mike Schmidt Is out at
second but breaks up the double play at firslhl!s e by forcing Montreal Expos Chris Speier off balance during the fifth inning of their National
League gaiDe in Montreal Tuesday night. (AP Laserpholo) .

Blue Jay's Stieb tough luck loser

By WW Grlnuley
AP Correapoadeal

·~·

Have you got a minute?.______An_.Buch
__
.._ld
WASHINGTON ·_ JUOIIIIobards
waa in his office genUy IJIOOiin&amp;,
wben Robert Redford, bla opl..tant
managing editor, came in to see
him.
"Have you got a minute?" Redfordsaid.
"Whatislt?"Robardsaskedlnbla
gravelly voice.
"The good news II thet one of our
reporters won the Pullber Prbe."
"That's greet," llid Robards.
"Put it on the front page. Wbat'1 tile
bad news?"
"The bad news Ia the *'7 she
-ltforisn'ttrue."
"On second lhDii8bl you'd better
putlt in the food lll:tloa."
·
"I dGn't know 'What bapponed,"
Redford Aid. "Siie awwuvery fact

Today's

. ." .

Tax campaign.enters hard sell phase
WASHINGTON (AP)- The campaign for President Reagan's tax
and spending cuts is into tile hardsell phase as his aillea seek to reverse a slump they say was inevitable
even before he was sldeUned.
They figured that the early surge
of support would fade a bit and ttJBI
there would have to be a lobbying
drive to regain momentum.
That has been made more difficult
with the president's own role limited
as he recuperates from the bullet
wound he suffered on lllarch :.1. But
public opinion polls alSo Indicate
that Reagan's Job approval rating
increased after tile assassination at~
tempt.
As the House and Senate approach
May action on the budget-cut pll84f
of his ecomlmic program, Reagan ia
expected to take up the campaign in
a broadcast address which likely
will be his first major public appearance since the assassination attempt.
l1is strategist.! would Uke to make
it a televised speech, for impact as
the budget votes .near. But that
depends (II the extent of his
recovery. U the pl'esident ia not fully
fit and looking it by the end of the
month, the speech probably will be
limited to radio.
Over the next two weeks, the administration will be diapatching
every emis!lary who might be able to
help persuade a conservative

~-:= =~~ ·.~:

dQeS!I't matter how; we just needed
to win."
The
•defending champions
in the !National League West, not
only ended a four-game losing
streak but beat thl. Dodgers lor the
fii'St
in five meetingl and handed thefn just their second loss in 11
games. 1
·
ElseJ here, the Montreal Expos
trowJcef1 the Philadelphia Phlllles

-:::;::::==::::::--------

Alii

_..,..to'*

::

1C01't-.

Bnlnl ijliijlbei I)."
"I 1oteha, boll. If tliere'a a
"Atleutyouinowwboyourfrlell.
lliiiOkln, IUD we'll find It," Redford da are when you lliiM 1 bloaper,"
lllid.
Redford Aid.
.
"Do you 111111- 'Deep·'lbfoet'?"
"People foraet 111 - , " Roblnll
Robarduued. .
Ald. "OK, let'a cet blct to Wnnn
"All the time. He workl In the I
llccept 1111 facta onlloir we
pr~~e when I park my car."
blew it, lliiJ.alt'a COIIIIrmed bJ two
"Well, .. at be 1mon about IOiilCIII."
the Pullller pnc. Find out where .
.
the IDOIIeY'I COIJIIDc from for II» . "Don't 110ft7, - . 'ife - ' t i'lllt
Prire. Talll to aD tbe wlvw ~ the · 111it11 we set to the ba1t11n of IIU. I
editon, and flnd M wben tbey haft I frllllll at tbe rBI wllo "Well, that glvea UJ time wwe the ni&amp;M tbe ltOry wu printed. 1111 a fawr. He . _ ,be wiiiiDc to
()le of them bu to inlk."
Clplllllil m. for Ill."
.
lllfWIJ·''
"I'm not 10 1111'11• Ilultln now
"I juat fhoorcht of I'II'IV"Nnc. I
''Good," RabardnalcL "U ~
-a for ABC llld lbey're 1oln8 to Uled to datnllrl wboworbd In the ... you wbat you'rt dcq, t.n 111m
.... with It lllllllbl 011 the mniD&amp; city room. Maybe iibe knon lloir tbe you're~ Clll 1t0ry 111ont bow
•
article aot In the Jlllll!'."
·1111111 hull.niia C1'ot•. Caref• wife
wutrue.''
' "Good Idea. Tille ber to dinner reaJq bE."
"Why didn't you checlllt out with
and whatever."
"rD pt on ll rfcbll'fiiJ," Jle6.
mefirst?"Roberdlllld.
The 11cretary came ln. ford ald. '.'Wba&amp;areyoupinttoclo
"We did. You were the noe wbo
"Pr"WNiltm'IOIItbepbane."
now?" '\1
lllllllr* pldiad It ap. He llltad for
"Me?" llld RoblrdL "rm IUfl·
OK'd tbe ltory. Don't JW · -·
ber, we CIIDI to )'OUr J.- Jal8 at
• • '"'a, 111111'-l ap.
to call1117 .... llld Mlf I Clllllt
.-and you Cllllt . . . . . . . Ina
Rdard IIIII, "Wbatclld
~of llllllaal'1 IliON."
..
kill our doves) rll suaat an ad for ·
_ _ _ _.......,..._.....,
Iii chiWrln, ''Don't vote for daddy,
• • •
::1.: :'

u.n

needed viet~")'.
"It 111'88 l .t.standing pitching by
the pitclier and out.standing hitting
by the pitcher," Manager Bill Virdan said Tuesday night after Bob
Knepper fired a ~tter and
doubled and scored the only run as

onlyinlact,aDcswentoutwitbpaper
and pend! to llllijlab bow 1111111
students knew.Periclllllilll cau,wa
and the diffenlllllt betwua tbmL I
did nol 11et ber aplll, but • firw
minutes later llbe Milt word tlwoucb
· an uitennedJary that ber
so far, follr out of four__; _wbo didn't
know the difference.
I don't believe it. But If lt'a true,
shall we all jtiat asree
fata1isllcally - tolliveltaDup

'.

.

DALE ROTHGEB. JR.
Nr¥1•~

student's pree11e knoWledge of
hlltory to be_ satiBfled that If .he
apeakuuch 1aentence U. 'l.rrelpeclive~ .,J1etber you're talkinc about
Ado it Hitler or Florence
NI8JIIInpJe,' the student will know
that one of the above characters wu
a bad guy, One 1 good guy, and will
probably &amp;11'111 i!Y the rhetorical iiO'
cents of the .aj,euer which wu
which?"
·
The lady Aid she waa interested

authority to preserve ltaeH. My sym- even before tile Penthoule people
pathies, obvi~, ~ wl~H= made a grilly movie about the EmWashington, but if
B
peror caJl8ula he wu known 0 , a
~ptured George WlllhlilltoD, tried !ldl8tic maniac, as well-lmown 811
him f~and ~~
. ': Nero _ who is sun1y nil-knoWn If
one
. 111'1 any
only
. becalllil we can't think who e1ae
pbilosop~~~lusJ:!i':!f: ·ha":r ';: llddled whilellfllle burned?
a caae a,.....~.
Vlor
"ADd IJIYWI.Y, In a rhetorical forBrits wbo,~ed the Fa~r of Our mlllation In which the speaker is
~· A state eDI'CISell power, ciolety reecbing for antipodes, he
111'1th the _same authority, ~r _......._,t ......,, '1'--'utely on a
the
state
P
... Jim.J
... "IS governed by Pericles or • ..:'=""""'~ -:;:.~~"""'r-.:._:._____________
....,__.
.
~@tilt~ll!rBJg scene, after the epiaode above
recounted. Wo~ . reporter ap.
proa.ches speaker., Just .w~ d~
you g,et ~ ",l""tiOIIIIlll ~
and Pencles wben talking to
college students?"
"E
me ma'am'"
xcuse uestion
'
.
Repeats
Q
•
"I was talking to 50 seniors in a
college that ranks among the top ~
. th United Statea. Just what is
m e
yourpoint?"
"My point is that there is no
reason whatever for you to suppose
that these students have ever heard
ofCaligulaorPericles.''
- For want of another formulation: "Youmustbeltidding."
"I am not kidding."
"I don't believe you.''
"Would you like me to go out and

lJ l Cuurt Strt't'l

PAT WHITEHEAD

we grant tbat'

992-2156

..

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THERE'S ACARRIER NEAR YOU!

..The Daily Sentinel
-~J.~
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• "--------- _ j

t
s~
tl

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Page-:-4-The Daily Sentinel

Wednes~_lly,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Eastern to pick up the win, striking
out 11 and walking six, while giving
up just one run. M. Smith suffered
the loss for Federal Hocking, fanning four and walking seven.
Eastern hit paydirt in the first
when Gary Griggs was hit by a pitch, Greg Wigal walked, and Mike
Bissell singled to plate one run.

In the second, Roger Gaul walked,
Nick Leonard walked, John Beaver
laid down a sacrifice bunt, and Greg
Wigal walked to load the bases. An
error on a Mike Bissell infield shtt
let in one run, before an error on a
Rob Smith drive let in two more.
Smith quieted the Lancer bats
over the first three irmings, allowing ·

Horner, Boggs lea~ Braves to third victory over Reds
· eluding the game-winner In p1e four- • "I was struggling early and didn't leading the National League with a
th inning off loser Mario ~to, 1-2, feell had good stuff," Boggs said. "I .487 average.
and a three-run homer In the ninth.
did .make a few good pitches when I
"It's hard to believe I'm hitting
"We got the big hits ~hen we had to. This is the third good game .487 but every time I get up to bat, I
needed them. I'm a notorious slow I've pitched this yar.· My arm was just feel I can hit the ball," said the
starter," Homer said.
SOfl! in the ninth and (Manager)
Reds centerfielder.
Braves winning pitcher Tommy Bobby Cox made a good move when . . Claudell Washington, the only
Boggs, 1-1, had hiS shutout ruined by be lifted me."
Braves hitter over .300 when the
a ninth-inning Cincinnati run after
Boggs gave up three singles to the game started, rapped out three hits.
he was relieved by Rick Camp.
hot-hitting D~ve Collins, who is new 1f!s first was a single in the fourth 'in-

CINCINNA11l (AP) - Bol,l Horner
describes ~U as a "notorious
slow starter," \but he went into high
gear agalrist Cincinnati Tuesday
night as the Atlanta Braves
walloped tbe Reds 10.1"
.
"I was worried because an of us·
· were flat at te same time," said the
third ba.s!!man who batted in four
runs, ,his first of the seaSon, in-

ning. He stole second base and took
third when Reds catcher Johnny
Bench threw the ball into center
field. Washington scored on Horner's sacrifice fly.
The Braves scored again in the
sixth when Ed Miller, who singled,
came home on Washington's single.
Boggs batted in a run in the seventh inning and the Braves erupted for

..

'

BLUEGRASS GENTLEMEN
AND CONNIE
To Perform At 7:00pm
&amp; 9:OOpm Saturday,
April 25th. In Front Of
The Silver Bridge Plaza
Kroger Store

.

.

I • '

•

'

.

'.'

EAch

of

lh""' advemsed

rlem s 1$ 18Q U1190 fO
r&amp;adr l ~ a v~rlable tor sale 1n eac h Krage• Store e ~ c ep l as
~ noted wr lt6 ad tl ~ do rtJn OU I ot an cKlV8Itlsed
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99
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Whole Frying Chicken lb.
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KROGER IN THE PIECE

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All 'UII"OH

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on

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COPYittGHT tnt - THE KIOGoEit CO . ITEM~ AND PRICES
COOD MONDAV APRil 20 THRU SArURD.AV APRil 2S

•

1

Kroger
Welcomes .
Your Federal
Food Stamps

OPEN 24
HOURS
,.
WEEKDAYS*
*Monday 7:00am Through Saturday 12:00 Midnight

EYerythn1y vou OOy at Kroger tS guaranteed tor your total
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FlOWERING

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SOOPER COSt CUTTERS

COUNT ON KROGER

seven .more in the ninth off Cincinnati relief pitchers Paul Moskau
and Doug Bair.
"With our run production as it is,
I'm grateful that our record iB ~."
said Cox. "We only beat Cinc\flll8ti
two times in 1980 and we alteady
have won our third over them· this
year." Atlanta had only scored 21
runs in nine previous games . .

ALL KROGER STORES

ADVERTISED ITEM POLI CY

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·---------:;:~------~---=~----~~::~--~P:o=m~er~o~v::M~id:d~le~p~o~rt~,~O~h~io~----~~----------~--------------~T~h~e~D~a~i~ly~S~e~n~ti!ne~I~P~a~g~e~s

Eastern hitters were Rob Smith a Creek at Eastern · High School
double and 'triple, Mike Bissell a . tonight in an important SVAC consingle and double, Gary Griggs a test.
Unescore:
double, and singles by Johnny
IXXI100 11--1 3 3
Beaver, Gene Cole, and Rogie Gaul. FH
130 212 x-9 8 1
For Federal Gilliwn doubled, while Eastern
Batteries: Smith (WP) and
Green and Smith singled.
Griggs.
Smith (LP) and Green.
The high flying Eagles play Kyger

just one run to score in the fourth.
Eastern came back with two in that
inning on a Bissell walk, a Smith
double, a Cole walk, and an RBI
single by Rogie Gaul. A single run
scored ~ the fifth and in the sixth
two more crossed the plate. A Johnny Beaver single and Gary Griggs
double highlighted the attack.

. . ..- ..•

Wednesday, April12, 1981

Aprll22, 1981

Eastern defeats Lancers for 11th victory
EAST MEIGS - The red-hot
Eastern Eagles continued its
domination against ar:ea foes he~
Tuesday, when they downed Federal
Hocking ~I in a non-league baseball
contest. Eastern raised its record to ·
11.,'!, aided by a great pitching effort
by Rob Smith.
Rob Smith went the distance for

•

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$J49
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$

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Ground Beef

. Kroger
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1

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OR CAOROT

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99. . C

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2
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KIOGU FIOZIN CAUllfLOWII&amp;IIOCCOLI . ITAliAN
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IEGULAI 01 IUTTIIMK.k

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Rawhide Chew Bars •••
Cl ose· Up.... ... .... .. ... ·,~.bo··
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•
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MIOGII SHo"P . PIZZA 011
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SJ89
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2
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INHANCI

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$2

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7

EACH

......

lo&lt;h

3'75 SHEETS PER ROLl

Mayonnaise

s7 99
Fish Bucket .. ...... 1"'"'
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:!~-149

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White Cloud
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!$109
Pak

•

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tu,era.' allowance• .

C ·~

Master·Blend
CoffeeNOW
WAS

S72~S625
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Lipton
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WAS

NOW

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WAS

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f
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.$ 59

KltAFf

A lUND Of liEF I HYOU, TEO fUTURED
VEGlT AIU P'IOTliN KltOGU'S P'.O

Paper
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Fresh Picnic
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40C

WITH C~~~001N
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!814.1·11. JAIS

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- - - - 1 1. 1.1

- I t llftiCIIU

n•n•-

TlliJ

�'
;Pag-6-The Daily Sentinel

'

wednesday, Aprll22,1981

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

122,1911

Toledo tops Clippers

;..\Philadelphia, Rockets wm
!.~ playoff games Tuesday
t

•

By The ~lated Prell
Shortatop John Walker drove In a
run-scoring sinlle .in the 13th Inning
for Toledo, leading the Mud Hena to
a 3-2 victory over the Columbus CUppers in International League

when !bey told me I'd be pitching In
relief because I never did It before
(be was a starter)."
"Whatever they want me to do, I'll
try to do."
Rocbesler3, TldewaterO
basetiall.
Brooks Carey pitched a two-hitter
In other !L. games Tuesday, for Rochester to lead the Red Wings
Roc~ upset Tidewater ~ and to victory. Carey, who got hla !!..Richmond beat Syracuse 6-3. · A win of the season against two loeses,
. game between Charleston and gave up one hit in the first inning and
Pawtucket was postp!lned due to another in the eighth.
cold weather.
Charles Puleo, 0.1, was the losing
Terry Felton pitched seven and pitcher.
one-third shutout innings and struck ·
out nine for the Mud Hens.
Rlebmond 6, Syracue 3
"Thla ill the best cOntrol I've ever
Brett BuUer scored three time!! for
had pitching for Toledo," Felton Richmond, stealing four bases, Tbe
said. "I didn't like It very much winning pitcher was Ken Dayley.

.•
'

Malone, held to jusi!O points in the
BOSTON (AP) - '!he first battle from Southwestern Louisiana
is over. With cool Andrew Toney's averaged 12.9 points per game this first half, unleashed a 1~int effort
final salvo, the Philadelphia 76ers season, but averaged IS against the
captured their thrill-filled opening Celtics. In the season finale he third-quarter surge to put the
confrontation with the Boston poured in 35 points and Tuesday Rockets in control. Houston took
charge for good with a 16-8 run at the
night he led the 76ers with 26.
Celtics.
Certainly, the second engagement
"It's nothing personal against start ofthe fourth period that turned
them, but anytime you feel your shot a 7~ lead into an 86-71 bulge. •
here tonight can't be as intense.
" I got more aggressive ~ith the
going
you have to go with it." the
''I think it will be more so,'' said
ball
in the second half," said
Philadelphia's Cald.well Jones confident rookie said.
With four seconds left and (loston Malone. "I started going to the offollowing the 76ers 1()1;.104 victory in
the opening game of their National ahead 104-!03, Toney, Philadelphia's fensive boards and that opened up a
Basketball Association playoff first choice to get the ball, took tbe lot of opportunities for me."
Game lwo of the series is tonight
inbounds pass. He was fouled by
series.
in Kansas City.
" It will be all-out war, like the war Cedric Maxwell.
"It was a very ilpportant win,"
of the worlds. Everything's on the
While Caldwell Jones said the
said
Malone. "It's up to them to )Yin
line. We can't afford to let them get 76ers, who wrapped up a seventomorrow
(tonight). We're going to
their confidence back," Jones ad- game series with Milwaukee Sunday, "are really in shape for this," come back here and play the same
&gt; ded.
• Confidence may not be as im- teammate Bobby Jones said the way."
The Kings pulled a surprise move
:: portant a weapon for the Celtics to Celtics "may have been stale. I
: resore to their arsenal as good foul think they were missing the shots by starting point guard Phil Ford,
who had not played since he suffered
· shooting, a productive running they normally make."
an
eye injury Feb. 22. But although
: game, or crisp ball movement.
Boston had fought back from a 100the
Rockets admitted they were
: . All were in short supply Tuesday 91 deficit to take a 104-103 lead with
·. (light when Toney calmly canned four seconds to go Q,n two free throws caught offguard, Ford was 'obviously
:· two free throws with two seconds by Larry Bird, who topped all rusty, winding up with only five
points and committing five of the
scorers with 33 points.
&lt; left.
turnovers.
; Though the Celtics weren't sharp
"I was hoping we'd get some
Never in their long history of
·: entering the best.of-seven Eastern
cheap
buckets early in the game,
• Conference final after a nine-day National Basketb8!1 Association
: layoff, Boston Coach Bill Fitch said, playoff games have the Houston and then walk it down," said Fit. . "No one should get much momen- Rockets mel an opponent as zsimmons. " It really came down to
tum from tonight. They still have to generous with turnovers as Kansas some carelessness on our part,' ' said
Fitzsimmons.
win three more times. No one should City was Tuesday night.
Forward Robert Reid, who scored
Twenty-five times the Kings turfeel inferior or superior after
19
points for the Rockets, credited
tonight's game."
ned the ball over. Kansas City's slopThe setback cost Boston the home- PY ways, plus Moses Malone's 29 Houston's pressure defense with
court
advantage it gained on the last points, triggered a 97-78 victory that throwing the Kings out of rhytlun.
.,
"We never did let up on the
day of the regular season by beating gives the Rockets a 1.0 advantage in
the 76ers here, 911-94. That triumph the best·of-severi Western Con- pressure," he said. "Phoenix let Er·
had given them the Atlantic Division ference finals between the only two nie (Grunfeld), Sam (Lacey) and
crown over Philadelphia.
sub-.500 teams to make this season's Scotty (Wedman) shoot the ball and
those guys can flat-out shoot. We
However, 76er Coach Billy Cun· playoffs.
"I didn't think our club was as pressured the ball and made them
ningham said, "I just don't tllink the
home court is going to make a big ,prepared as it could have been," use the clock."
Grunfeld wound up with 20 points
difference. The reason l say that is, said Kings Coach Cotton Fityou look at the way these teams zsimmons. "I think they were a little while Wedrnan had 19 and Lacey six.
"Now we have a little bit of
played all year. We both were 62-20. better prepared thl)n we were. They
breathing
room," added Reid. "But
You don't do that by not doing well were aggressive, and caused many
this
game
is over and we 'have to
of the turnovers. But we made a lot
on the road. ''
One ill Toney's favorite road stops of mistakes. We'll play better next come out more aggressive than we
did tonight."
·; has been Boston. The 6-foot-3 guard game."
.'
:
:
•
:
.:
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•
:
:
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:::
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·.
•
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:~
'

NEW ORLEANS (AP) - Tom
Watson is on hand to defend his Iitle,
, but officials still are fuming about
the absence of Lee Trevino in the
$350,000 USF&amp;G New Orleans Open
golf tournament.
" I just hope whatever he's doing is
•, worth more than $163,000," said
Jack Weiss, tournament director for
the event that gets started Thursday
on the .7,08().yard, par 72 Lakewood
Country Club course.
Trevino, a fanner winner here,
took the title last weekend in the
.. prestigious Tournament of Champions but declined to enter the New

Orleans event.
"I've played very well in New
Orleans," he said. "I won without
making a bogey and I was second
last year, but I've had some commitments in Phoenix and Tucson
this weekend and, I'm sorry, but I
just can't play in New Orleans."
His absence nullified the $100,000
bonus the New Orleans event had
put up for any player able to win
both the T of C and New Orleans
titles.
And, with the last minute decision
of Ray Floyd to take some tinie off,
it left Watson, Bruce Lietzke and Andy Bean as the only members of the
top 10 money-winners entered in the
!56-man field that will be chasing a
$63,000 first prize here.
Lietzke, who has won twice and
played well all season, moved into
second place on the season's money-

.

298 SEaJND ST.
"*ER0Yt 0.
PRICES ·tFFl'CTIVE THROUGH SAl., APRIL 25

I

bowling

f~Hmclllal

IIIII e~~lcMI
been nil. Lui
'nland8y, Darlene lalcbed on to
IIIII t% poaad bus at a local
fum poad.lt's beiDg maanted.

AKRON, Ohio (AP) - Securing
his . second Professional Bowlers
Association tiUe in three weeks,
Wayne Webb appears to he tuned up
for defense of the Firestone Tournament of Championships this week.
Webb, of Tucson, Ariz., upset topseeded Mark Roth of Spring Lake
Heights, N.J., 22'1·199 in the title
game and claim the $12,000 first

Pill.
69

sa
&amp;4

Ruyal Crown
62
G. &amp; J . Auto Parts
51
Team Four
t6
High series men - Ray Roach :)88 ; Darrell
l&gt;u)(an 5511; Bill Qfr~wcll ~7 .
High series wOmen - Sharon Hensley ~79;
Beck)' Kloes ~76; Helen Phelps565.
High game· men - Ray Roach 224; c. C.
Uoward216; Larry Dll8an 212.
High game women - Sharoo Hensley z:ti :
Becky Kit"' l)(j,lj ; Helen Phelp:; 204.

~·

~
IAAII(eles

-

..
'

'

VICTOR McKAY

Banquet honors
'
'

basketball star

''

''

Victor McKay, grandson of Mr.
•; and Mrs. G. V. Rupe of Bradbury,
:;
.;
:·
;:
::
;:
r'

Warren
for recently
his basketball
efforts
was honored
at banquets
in
this past season. The 61&gt; sophomore
atWarrenHardingRlghSchoolwas
named to the All-Trumbull County
and the All-Ohio Big Eight Conference basketball team.
~;
McKay was the leading scorer and
rebounder on his varsity team which
!1 advanced to the AAA Regional Tour~i ney at Canton before losing to Wad·
sworth High, eventual Ohio AAA
r· runner-up, 61-'6.
't:; Victor had individual game
scoring highs of 30 points against
Meadville, Pennsylvania and 'll
:1 poiniB versus Warren Western
il Reserve in his team's 17 victory
(·: season. He also placed in the top five
,. in three statistical categories ...., · scoring, rebounding, and field goal
, . percentage - in the Big Eight con·
' : ference.
::
Victor Is the son of Dr. and Mrs.
:; J011eph D. McKlly.' of Warren, Ohio.
His father is well known in this area,
; : · having played four yean for the Rio
:: Grande Colle11e Redmen in the late
r' 501. VIc's mother, the former Ann
; Rupe, tl-ained at the Holzer Hospital
.: School of Nunlng. VIc's gralfd.
[llrellt8 are retired Meigs County
, • . educators.
.

n

1;

,.
,.

201 521 1·12
Southern
1112 444 O'x-2!i
Batteries : Mearns, White,
Cummins. Wills, McKibben,
Woodard.

Playing Wednesday · Saturday Each Week, 9 · 2 a.m.
HAPPY HOUR 5 P.MT08 P.M.
All Legal Beverages, 2,for the Price of 1
THURSDAY IS LADIES NIGHT

I

New Sunday Restaurant Hours

10

U a.m. To 3 p.m . .
Try our wide selection of steaks at reasonable ,
prices,·prepared to your specifications.

t;

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'

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11
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7

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a...Jand !Garland 1.01 11 ~ a~y

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SooU1o (Clay .. 1) II Cai1IGmla lfoncll

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$398
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snPPurt

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Chunk Bologna....~!

.825
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llolhonl, 1nt - - co-· fto.
-" 1110 Brant, lint '
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WAIIIJNGTON STAlE - ~ Horo

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SHOEs
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COttage Cheese .. .'.o:.
HEINZ
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$
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Orange Drink... ~.2';

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DmiOINT
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$ 69

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TASTEE TREAT

AIO!IIICAN LEAGUE

,_,,.,...."""e•m'JJ.

IN STOCK

RESERVATIONS OPTIONAL 675·6276

EICIC:Clll.: ...... ~ ..........~~

1lal11moro 11 Cll1cop

LIVING ROOM
BEDROOM
.KITCHIN
BATHROOM
~·

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WALLPAPER

Steve Yules

CRISPY SERVE

!Griffin J.lll at San
0.1 or Wlle . 0.2), 1n1

Qac~Moti
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Son Die&amp;• It Loo ""tela, In)
&lt;mly MaiTIOI IChoduled

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BUDGET PRICED

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PIIUIJurch

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Ground huck.....L!·••

Mon-

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Now · Yarll
Pllllllor!lh

'Q'J••elers

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PADS~~

Point Pletsant

VERSATILITY IS THE NAME
Of THE GAME AND THE
. STEVE YATES BAND
COVERS IT ALL.

Yarll

llloco (E1cl&gt;olboTpr

~&lt;»

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Now

(RJ-. M ), (n)

AND OTHER FIGURINES AND MUSIC I»XES

'

Ctnrlnnati li.o-

Balllmaie (II&lt;G.._
I (Dot.~
0.1), (nl

Located in the Point PleaSllnt Inn .

$

FRESH

lA Allploo (V-Ia :HI at H.,..

amiOnd t,

SHOWCASE

Rt. 62 North

.m

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and

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55
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Loin Pork Chops.~

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ROAD

BIR~ CRYSTAL ANIMALS ~ mENS

5
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.500
.500

69 :

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SELECTION INa.uDES:

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l'llllldelohll I~ 1-1)
lnll !GulllWon 1.01

Webb, however, strung four
strikes in the fifth through eighth
frames to put the game out of reach.
Roth and Webb gained some
ground of the tour's money leaders,
but Earl Anthony of Dublin, Calli.,
and Marshall Holman of Medford,
Ore., continued to lead the•tour with
$104,700 and $89,500 respectively.

ii============;:===;;,~===i1-:;;;;;;;~=====;:;======:;;;;;~1
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.
,
THE MUSIC
C.~.
WJ.IIIng ... NO eEiltR.TIME fOR

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and triple.
Michelle McKibben had three
walks and a home run to lead Vinton,
while Hart collected three singles,
Woodard two singles, Wills a single,
Hale a single, Keffer two singles,
Wolmendorf two singles, and Norton
two singles.
Coach Connee Enslen's girls were
tuning up for tonight's SVAC game
at North Gallia.

1
WEST
i

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1\i
2\i
IIi

A1laala It, Cloclanlti I
I, Lll Anlelol 0
Son llloco I, San tnondoc:o I
&lt;mJy- IChodlled

Goebel
Glftw·a re
•
Price

.1111
.500
.500

1
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SliAIIo

$~1CIAL ASSORTMINT OF

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•
I

SanFl'II1CIICO
San llloco

•

RACINE - The Southern Tornadoes breezed to a 25-12 romp over
Vinton County here Tuesday evening
in a non-league girls' softball contest. Southern is now 7-3 overall.
Traci Mearns whs the winning pitcher, relieved by Deanna White in
the fourth. Wills suffered the loss,
being relieved by Michelle McKibben.
Amber W•rner hit two singles and
a double, Debbie Michael a single,
double, and triple, Renee Smith a
triple, Laren Wolfe two singles and a
double, Missy Cummins two singles,
Jenny Bentley two singles, Traci
Wearns a single, Deanna White two
singles, and Della Johnson a single

7
•
4

-CladMaU

prize in the Greater Hartford Open.
In the tiUe match between the two
top bowlers of 19110, Roth displayed
championship fonn early, with a
double and a baby split conversion of
the three and 10 pins to take an 1}.
pin lead after three frames.

CENTER CUT

"':{' L
Prl GB
1 2
.n1
6 2
.750
\i

MlllllrUI
SI.Loulo

$

CUT

R1b Pork Chops !8; ..

Major._.._
NATION;,J.IJ!AGUE

winning list with his third place
finish last week in the T of C.
SV AC banquet to
Watson, the outstanding player in
be held Saturday
golf for the past four seasons, appeared to be suffering a mild lei· Moure beats Cox
The Southern Valley Athletic Condown from his Masters triumph last
ference (SVAC) annual banquet will
BOURNEMOUTH, England (AP)
week, but scored well in his last two
be held at 6:30 p.m. Saturday at
Ray Moore of South Africa beat Buckeye Hills Career Center, Rio
rounds.
Grande.
,........•____________
"!like Lakewood, and I often play Mark Cox of Britain u ·, 6-3, 6-2 in
pretty well on courses where I've the opening round of the British
John Lawhorn, Rio Grande
I ZED CATALOG
Hard Court Championships.
won before," Watson said.
College basketball coach, will be
In other matches, Jeremy Bates guest speaker.
SALES MERCHANT
In addition to Lietzke and Watson,
defeated
Jan
Norback
of
Sweden
6-2,
the 1981 tournament winners here inTickets for the event are $4.50
clude Bean, John Cook and Dave 6-4; Gabriel Urpi of Spain downed each' and are on sale at all conEichelberger, who won last week's Cliris Mayotte 6-4, 6-0; and Guiller- fenince high schools, including
mo Aubone of Argentina beat Robin Eastern, Southern, North Gallia,
Tallahassee Open.
Phone 992·2171
Other standouts include 1979 New Drysdale of Britain 7-6, 4-6, 6-0.
.Kyger Creek, Southwestern and
101 w. Main St.
Orleans winner Hubert Green, Ben
·.1
Hannan Trace.
Pomeroy, Oh.
Crenshaw, John Mahaffey, Lanny ,-----:-- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , . . ; OWNED AND OPERATED IIY
Jilek &amp; Judy Wlllloms
WAdkins and Nick Faldo of England,
~ ....._..._
.... thru Wed. 9·5
a two-time British PGA champion.
9·5, sat. 9·2
..
The tournament is sponsored by · ?
the U.S. Fidelity and Guarantee Insurance Co.

Tornadoettes take 25-12 win

CE~TER

For the
record .,

Webb ready for Firestone event

Early S•oday MUed
Bo"'liiii! League
Aprll S, 1981
Friendly Tavern
PoweJI'sSuperValu
Roach's Gun Shop

FIRHlNG
die HarriiiMviiJ!e

f-

Local
St.aadlngs
' Team

I

ROCK SPIUNGS - The Meigs Kristin Anderson, II; x .: Laura
Marauder girlll' track team under Smith, 11; X - Vicky DeBord, 11; X
Coach Gordon Ftsher has been per- -Brenda Chappelear, 11 ; Jean Horfonning quite well so far this seaaon, . ton, 11; Carla Smith, 11; x - Susanrecently claiming first place 'in the ria Wise, 1.0; 1 - Kim Fraley, 10; x
Rotary Relays at Rio Grande
Karen Goggins, 10; x - Renee
College.
Willis, 10; x - Krista! Sisson, 10; x
Conai.stency has led to a succes8ful .!.. Paula Swisher, 10; x - Dlxle
. Meigs season, exemplified by last Eblin, 10; 1 - Rowena Averion, 10;
week's showing when Meigs scored .Tina Allen, 10; Cathy Dean, 9; Amy
in 13 of 14 events. In claiming the Sisson, 9.
Rotary Championship, Meigs
x- Denotes lettennen.
dethroned reigning champion South
Marauder Schedule
Point. In the competition Meigs'
April 23, at Federal Hocking with
Paul Swisher placed third in the long Alexander, 4:30p.m.
jump to set a new school record of IS
April 25, at M inford Invitational
( 19teams).
feet·nine and a half inches.
April 28, at Belpre with Parker·
The Meigs girls travel to Federal sburgCatholic,
4:30p.m.
Hocking on .Thursday in a final tune
April30, at Wellston, 4:30p .m.
up for the 18 team Minford InMay 4, et Waverly with Athens,
vitational on Saturday. Below is a 4:30p.m .
May 8, at Oak Hill Invitational,
team roster and schedule.
4:30p.m.
Name and grade are listed.
May 16, SEOAL Meet at Ohio
X - Shari! Drehel, 12; X - Lori
University, 10 a.m .
May 2H3, Section Meet-0 . U.
Rupe, 12; x- Andrea Riggs, 12; x-

CABLE TV ' ANNOUNCER John Gordon, Columbus; former
voice of the C::olumbua Clippers
and at one time an announcer for
the Baltimore Orioles, Is ex·
peeled to be named as tbe new
play by play ·announcer on lhe
Clncbmatl Reds' cable television
network. Gordon currently works
for Warner QUBE and hosts a
talk show on WTVN-AM, Columb~s. Gordon' was recently the
featured speaker for the
Gallipolis Chamber of Commerce's annual banquet at Rio
Grande. Ritter Collett, sports
editor lor the Dayton Journal
Herald, will serve as color com·
menta tor.

'

Sunday 10 am·10 pm

Consistency helps Meigs gals

Trevino's absence irks officials

'

SlORE 10JRS:
Man..sat. 8 1111·10 pm
I

Limit One Per Customer
GOod Only at Ptwtll's
Offer Expires
25, 1911

GAL

69~.

PLAVOIITI

SUGAR

$169
Llmltone Ptr Customer
Good Oftly at Ptwtll's
Offtr ••JIIrts Aprll25, 1911

BUIY

49

CIOC~II

CAKE MIX
18.5 02

3j$ 200

Limit On• Per Customer
GOOd Only at POWIJI's
Offer Expires April 25, 1911

I

'

" I

�Pa~IG-TIIt

:: ,
..,..

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United Methodist Councils meet locally
The

Meigs County United asslpd chalrpel'llll of'the Youth
Methodlit Coundlllil Mialltri.IB llllt Clmmlttee of tbe Cvw~&lt;;Councii.Jn
recently at tile Mlnenvllle United Ilia rtport, It waa noW t.hat the
Methodiat Cburdl witb the holt "Bible Bowl" Is schedliled for April
pastor, the Rev. Stanley Merrifield, :ae at 2 p.m. at the ~ Cllirch. A
leading devotions.
sheet IO!Icltllljl 11111111 of key youth
Following prayer 8lld group IIIII youth leader~ frm1 thoae
singing, Rev. Richard 'l'bomu, ~t provided a I'Oiter ol names
pariah coordinator, led the executive for a future COUDt;y youth council. .
. session.
Rev. 'l'bomu "'JJO''ed for the
On April 2, the minister!l and homlnatlng committee 111 the vacanfamilies honored the Rev. Carl cy of county vice pnsidenL Mrs. •
Hicks with a covered dlah ~on Cordelia Benu
elected
the occuion of his 50th year in unanlmoualy.
ministry. Since retirement, Rev.
.Hicks has preached from two to four
Following the lntrQductlon of Mrs.
times each Sunday.
Bentz as vice pesldent, committee
Mrs. Hazel Hilt, widow of Rev. reports were given.
.
Wilbur Hilt, is leaving Rutland soon
RepcdJng on EvangeUsm, the
for a new residence In Willoughby. Rev. Florence Smith noted the
Rev. Thomas ezpresaed best wiahes availability of Conference
to Mrs. Hilt from the body in her Evangelist James Bondourant
time of transition.
Augult ZS.OO. The C4unty Council apThe County Council voted to seek proved the concept of holding the
membership in the National United meeting in each of our three
Methodist Rural Fellowship, pen- clusten. Other details are to be
ding voluntary donations. The coet is coordinlted througb Rev. Smith's
approximately '100. The Rev. David committee.
Harris, RBcine charge, is president
Rev. Robert McGee of the
of the West Ohio Conference chap- education committee reminded
ter.
tho8e present to continue promoting
The Rev. Mark Flynn was the "Teachn Cultivation

wa•

-

DRAWS
FOR CONTFSI'- Tracy L)'llll Card'ftU, r, of
Wellst.o drawl a ,...ter f01r the Commlllllty Mealal Healdl Center's
"llelplllg Myself -l'el!l'al others" Poster ContesL Clllldnn from preacllool tbroagh sillltnde may enter a poster by April 3D. Prizes of cash,
teys, 11:8lllel 111111 ilt cerUflcates bave been eoatrlbuted by area
- - - .. Call £Will f*5SOO, Meigs !lt2-21921or more IDformation.

Dogwood Festival to
be April 24, 25, 26
PIKETON - The llrills and songs
of bygone years Will be seen and
heard again in this-southern Pike
C01111•.~ village ApriJ.:at, 25 and 26.
Festivals have beelme a way of
life in lhill country, Pike County's
Dogwood Festival IIIII the distinction of being one or the first of the
season. It is alwa)'8 lleld during the
1a8t full weekend M ' April. This
year's festival, the IJdi, falls on the
dales of April24, 25 and 26.
More than 30,000 people are expected to attend the tbree-day Pike
C01111ty Dogwood Fl!!lliv8J in lhill
historic village founded 167 years
ago.
Self-taught craftsmen, many of
them from the hil of Pike and neighboring counties, will demonstrate·
the skills which were important to
the life of early pioneers.

The festival 's avowed purpose is
to perpetuate its heritage by
showing and demo1111trating arts and
skills of the past fon the pleasure of
those who know them and for the
education of young people who don't.
There will be games and contests to
heighten interest. "We are inviting
you to help us by sharing talents and
skills. We also provide a market for
your finished products," say
representatives.
The Festival has become a community affair, a pleasant meeting
place for present and former
residents, a gathering that is typical
of this Appalachian region.
,
For additional infonnation, contact Pike County DogwOOd Festival,
Box 335, Piketon, Ohio 45661 ,
telephone 6141289-2637.

BIRTHDAY

Angeh Williams

Child christened
POMEROY--Angela Rochelle
Williams, three-montJ).old daughter
of Michael C. and Vidi L. Williams,
Middleport, was christened recently
at the Pomeroy UIUI Methodist
Church.
Attending w;ere the Rev. Robert
McGee, Mr. and Mrl. Dave Miler
w Candice, Pat Vtlllhan, Mr. and
Mrs. Dale Walburn, RMI Vaughan,
Franl1: Vaughan, Mr. ..a Mrs. Andy
Vaachan and A. J. llr. and Mrs.
a.rtes Williams 111111. Linda, Mr.
8lld Mrs. Sam ~. Mrs.
Eftlyn Goidberry, Atllils; Mr. and
Mrs. Wilbur Willi- Colwnbua,
and several other ftiends of the
fmly.
:
Jollowlng the chrislililng service,

a Jecheon wa.s serve4 to the group

IAiiiD
by rraai
ball.Vaughan lllbe Pomeroy
AI1CIIa was born 011 Jan. 1% at the
0'" san Hospital, Nblos. MaterJill IIJ'BIIdparentl 1ft Franll A.
V C n, PCHOOOJ; ~!in Vaughan,
!' M p rt, 111111 the piMmal grandpa I are Charlel .E. Wllllaml,
. . . l, Shade, t1lld Maxine

:n

ll8l ~
~· sre lk'MtlMriL Sam
;: - - . ~:~ . . . and
A.
Sauten, AlliiM.
-

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• Watch that sidad

OBSERVED

The birthday of Mrs. W. o_Barnitz
was observed Sunday with a family
gathering at her home in Pomeroy.
A carry-in dinner Wlls served
along with homemade ice cream and
a birthday cake. Attending were
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Young, Galion;
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Nelson,
Kalamazoo, Mich., who were
weekend guests; Mrs. Robert Wells,
Lynn and Kay, Warsaw; Mr. and
Mrs. John Young, Phil, Robin and
Lisa, Lancaster; James and Jay
Carpenter, Coolville; Mr. and Mrs.
Wilson Carpenter, Ponneroy; Mr.
and Mrs. Hayman Barnitz,
Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. RobertBarnitz, &amp;ott, Jeff and John, Mason;
Mr. and Mrs. Rick Barnitz, Mason;
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Bamitz, Clifton.
Other callers were Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence Struble, Patty Reiley, and
Anna 'Parsons.

Montgomery graduates

CCIUid-..... ..,

.IIJ ;I lj... the vlctiiO to ...... and leaving tilt Gralllt in I
'

.. ; *I·

'

situa tions. Properly used, your
log jc and intuition spell profit
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20)
You' re vey capable today in
dealing with difficu lt persons or

.ANNOUNCING
THI
Of
THE OFFICES OF

STORY &amp;
. STORY'

AI LAW
Steven L Story.•ntl K•re• H.ltory

'

Pl~-brtng

:ck
·~.:p~~
t2

registration cl to cover espenaes.
' In the area of IIOci8l c0ncerna,
chairpel'OII! Rev. Robert Robinson
gave a IIWI1IIIIlY c1 activities for
11180: three llelllinars, food bar!k,
food CCHlll- reorganization, .and
greter levels of awareneu and need;
The food COoOp II growing steadily.
Vernon Nease, reporting for the
United Methodllt Men, noted a suecessful SaUSIIIe aDd Pancake Supper, with proceeds going toward
student miniaters' assistance.
01ecb were preaented by Nease to
Rev. Mary Flynn, Rev. Stanley
Merrifield, and Rev. Ric bard
Rlthemlch, all of whom are student
ministers at the present ilme.
The county men will meet quarterly, witb the next •scheduled
meeting oo May 4 at St. Paul (Tuppers Plalna) at 7:30p.m. Mack Hor·

· tad~~: ~
.'
,__
Methodllt Men's - .. RObert McGee will Ill llldJnc I
.,..m lo the lllbatDc Jn earlf July.

~~ :0~~
M.............
Men. The ..._.._.R_
""""""'
- -...

---------------~·~~~-=----~----------------------~~~--

·~

proceu will be open lhroaaboat Qc.

Iober, 111111. The Heath United
MethodlatMen are allo ~the move,
witb significant !uncti0111 Including
a P~ bonNhoe court.'

The next meeting of tli8 Council
Council on Mlnllirillla lilt for Mcmday, May 11, at the JO!lPI United
Methodlat Church, oft S.R. Ill between Reedsville and Tuppers
Plains: There will be no met1nc In
June. There will be an attemoon
mlnl~erence m June :18 to
'provide an overview of the annual
conference June 1~19. Tilt minlslen
to the county will also be wei~
onJune28.
'
The host church furnlahed refreshments.

The national security report and the
cha~'s report were_
glven.
Mrs. Richards presented a
program on Thlaland which Ia the
fllrelgn relationa country.of the year.
She allo talked on children and
youth IIIII the unit made a donation
to CARE. A contribution wu also
sent to Mrs. _Lorrene Snyder, district
president, for the drapery fund at
Department headquarters.

Poppy Day to be oblerved In May
wu dlscuaBed. Mn. Srnitb is
general chainnan.
Mrs. lAlla Hampton, legislative
chalnnan, reported on new bllll pending for veterans. She requested
that letters be sellt to the President
concemlng funding for Veterans AdminlBtration hoapitals. Pledges on
energy conservation were ~ in.
Mrs. Richards served re!real\menta.
•

. By Mrs. Fraatil Morris
decorations in keeping of the Easter Kenny and Kevin, and Mn .. Gladys
The Esther Circle held the April season
Turley spent ovemlght witb Mr. and
meeting with Mrs. Wanda Powell,
L. cj,J. Larry WUcosen of Quan- Mn. Dale Ball at St. Albans, W. Va.
hotltess, at her horne. The singing of tico, Va., Capt. and Mrs. Ed Brown and went to tile clrcua at Charleston
'"l'beWayoftheCrollsLeadsHome" and son of Hampton, Va., Mr. and Civic Center.
opened the rDeet!n, and prayer by Mrs. Rockl Yount!, Andy and Erin,
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Krider of
Mrs. Dorothy Badgley. "Joy frOm of Columbli.!l, Helen WllcoKen It Colwnbuaweregueat.sofMn.Grace
the Stone Rolled Away" wa.s the · ColwnbU.s visited their father, Mar- Krider Easter weekend.
theme of devotions by Mrs. Mildred tin Wilcoxen over tbe Easter ' Mr. and Mn. Brian
Lljla
Hart. Her scripture wa.s _Mark 16:3- weekend.
· and Darin of Baltilliore apent a
t. Poems were "Easter" and "Since
Mr. and Mrs. Solon Butcher of weekend with Mr. IIIII Mrs. Ralph
Christ Arose." A buainesa session Spencer, W. Va. apent Easter Badgley.
, preceded a program presented by weekend'with Mrs. Gretta Simpson.
Mike Brewer and son ot Muon, W.
DorfJthy Badgley. "Take My Ufe
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Wigal of Va. spent a Saturday with Mr. and
, and Let It Be" wa.s sung by the Pro6pect and 110111, George It Mra. Kenneth Turley.
'
group. Scripture was Psalm 97. Westerville and Brian of Marion~~~~::::;;~;;==;;;
Prayer was by Gretta Simpson. spent Easter weekend with Mr. and I
.. IIIDIIMWI
!ladings were given by all and Mrs. 0t1a BaUey.
nuiRIRIUI ,)
closed by singing "Blest Be The Tie
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Sayre of
That Binds" and The Lord's Prayer Bewenton .spent an .rternoon with
Pll. 992-sn6 Syracuse, Oh.
· in unison. Delicious refreshments his slsler, Mrs. Ura Morril.
were served by Mrs. PoweU to 10
Euler hoUday gue11ta of Mr. and
NOW qPE,.. .FOR.
members )l'el1ellt. The Easter Mrs. RalPh Badgley were their
SPR lNG SEA~M
theme 'wa.s earned out in the table famify, Mr. and Mrs. Steve Badgley
• PoHid Plants
1
terpi
'
and
children
of
Col
,_
__
and
Mr
•
com ......
,cen
ece.
wn......
.
""""' line of bidding
1 The lloo8ter Swlday School class
and Mrs. Brian SimpiOil and three
plants ·. lftd hinting
met at the home of Mrs. Gamet Er- children and Gar Phillips of
baskets.
,vine Thursday evening, April 16. Baltimore.
All Daztn PICkS .9fc.tlOl.41
'Group SIDglng
. . of """'Mr. and Mn . Ke••
__.,..,
__.L Turley,
H.. i's: OpenDollytlal .
ue Llly of the

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'"

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'GREEfii)USE
t

eeting. andA prayer
business
session
:Valley"
lipened
the
llowed. Roll call wa.s arwwered
th a scripture verse by nine rpembers. Carda were signed to send to
!he HI. Aprogram preaented by Mrs.
bra Hill was titled, "Springtime and
~r." "ln the Garden" wa.s sung
~ prayer was lly Mrs. El"line.
1\(rs. Hill read the Easter Story from
tfleals. Readingll by members fn..
cluded "The Hand ol God,'' "111ese
~ the 'l'binp," "The Beauty In a
Day," "Kneeling in tl)e Garden,''
"l"fy Savior Uv1111." A duel was
SI1JIII, "Becauae He Lives," by Marjclrte·Grlmm and J"lorence Adams.
. 0\her readJnp "In His Steps" and
"His Hands." t'Blllllt Be the Tie"
wjls sung, cllllina with a Prayer for
HUmlllty. Mrs. Ervine, boetesa, served lovely rafrelbelnnta with table

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RBcine Alumni ~nquet will be
held May 23 at Southern High School
with a dance following the dinner.
Tickets to the turkey dinner are
$5.50 and may be purchased at
Cross's Store, Village Cut Rate and
Spencer's Fas--Chek. The dance is
open to the public.
'

The annual ina~on of RBcine
Lodge 461, Free and Accepted
Maaona, will be held at 7:30 p.m.
Saturday. Work wljl be In the entered apprentice de~ee.

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.:.• Social Calendar
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WEDNF.'!DAY
REGULAR MEETING Ohio
Valley Conunandery 24, Knights
Templar, 7:30p.m., Wednesday .
SPECIAL MEETING, Pomeroy
CIJapter, 80, RAM, with the royal arch degree to be conferred, 8 p.m
Wednesday.
•
MIDDLEPORT , Literary Club,
Wednesday, home of Mrs. Forest
Bachtel. Mrs. Ben Philson to review
"Last Things" by C. P. Snow. A
modem miracle worker for response
toroUcaU.

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:
:

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT Lions
C)ub, noon Wednesday, at Meigs
Inn• .
2 MIDDLEPORT UTERARY Club
- 2 p.m. Wednesday st home of Mrs.
Nan Moore witb Mrs. Ben Phl,lson to
present book review; ron call,
modern miracle workers.
'
'DIURSDAY
MIDbLEPORT WDGE 363
FIIAM Thursday at 7 p.m. Work in
master mason degree. All master
111810111 are Invited to attend.
REVIVAL now in progresa at
Church of Chrlat in Chri8tlan Union,
Middleport. 'ibe Rev. Roeco Thorne
guest speaker. Services 7:30 p.m.

We reg1et construction delays preven1
Log Flume oponing at lhiS lime. Walch .
for special annou.ncement - !loon .

Camd~q_tparl\_

openi lt1 ltll.
••••• Satardar,
·

Banquet set May 23

Mr. and Mrs. J:&gt;fn Jolmson en: tertalned a nwnbea!relatives here
: for tbe funeral of
Ella Mae Welt
: ; attbeirhomeinP , d.
: : The group included Miss Dolores
:, West, Parkersburg; Mr. and Mrs.
: ' ' Richard Noblett, children, Debora.

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CALL {614)-992·2104
--·- . .. -·
or. (304)-675-1244

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.EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
'
GENERAL AU.ERGIST
Office Hotlra by Appointment Only

By eluiiJale
coliiiiiiiiJt
This
am featuring an
article su tied
by our e
ntary princlpBI at
Salisbury, Mr.
John
Llale.
Though John ;Is a
young man, he
has lieen in · igs
Local for qui a
few years. He has
LISLE
worked hard t Salisbury and the
results are q te evident. We are .
proud of Jo
and Salisbury
Elementary. 1
The following Is an article written for you by ~ohn Lisle.
"I'd Uke ~o take this op. portunity to sli,are with you some
infonnation ~bout Salisbury
Elementary i l .
lAcated, on oute 33 (close to
Meigs High hool), Salisbury
Elementary is a graded I~ school
with a present' enrollment of 166
students. The class enrollments
a~ ihe building range from 23 in
the second grade to 33 In the fifth
grade.
The building is staffed with the
following personnel: First, Martha Hoover; second, Kim
Ohlinger; third, Rosalie Story;
fourth, John Li.!le; fifth, Dorothy
Chaney; sixth, Ed Bartels; Title I
Hading, Karep Walker; vocal
music, Ed 1Harkless; .instrwnental music, Dave Bowen;
P.E.,JimCrow i art,DebhieHill;
speech, Janeq Call; nurse,
Sharon Birch; ~retarial aide,
Donna Ohlinger; cooks, Sylvia
Neese and Vellha Douglas, and
custodian, Russ~shebnan.
As mentioned artier, a graded
type program · provided for aU
students with emphasis in
reading and
th. A departmentalized pr~gram is our
educational set-up for students in

:• Funeral draw~ relatives

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

_nlgbtly.

RIVERVIEW GARDEN CLUB,
home of Janet Connally: ThUI'llday' 8
p.m. Barbara Knight to speak on
"Woman and the Law."
TWIN-CITY SHRINE1TES, Thur-

Aprll21tb

.y,
7:30p.m.Cheater
at the home
Mary Stewart,
Rolld. of Mn.
WILLING WORKERS CLASS of
Enterprile United Methodist Church ·
'l'hurldaY at 7:30p.m. at the church.

........................................
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JIIUDAY
LONG BOTTOM Community

.Woclallon will stace a bake llie
Jl'ridly ~ at 9 a.m. at tbe
CGIIIIIIIIIIIt7 ~- '
niJ1, "Hat LMd 1111 Cold Feet"
llllll PwMOJ I'
School

. . .._ M Wed lliaatl.,.-, W.Ye.

,_llatt
JP'41111l«&lt;!I,Pl'A, 7:ap.m. Friday.

HOlM P'll. 992-UU

AIBIIIIa1l,

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The Dail Sentinel-Page-11

Marriage
approaching

Rourtd Meigs Loc I

Mason inspection set

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Pomeroy- Middleport, Ollla

grades 4, 5and 6. To go along th
our depaftmeptalized progr a
ne.w actlvicy, called Enrl
has been added to our
curriculwn.under the superv on ·
of Ed Bartels. The emphasiS in
this program for lhill year is in
the subject area of 1118th.
Another very important ancl fn..
tegraJ part of our school is~
- our
Parerit-Teacher Organizat on.
Meeting the third Tuesday of the
month, our PTO is one of sup rt
and cooperation. Thro gh
varioUB activities, our PTO has
provided the school throughout'.
the yeara with varioUB kinds of
materials and equipment. This
year alone, the PTO has
benefited our school with approxitely $2,500.
To
strengthen
the
comunication with parents,
another activity that was started
several years ago is that of our
Communication Council. This
council, which is a select nwnber
of parents, meets once during
each six weeks period to discuss
education and various activities
thereof. Our goal Is to facilitate
school, 'community' districtcommunity communications.
Afeature that is being added to
our school and will be In
operation the beginning of next
school year is that of a school
library. A small room has been
renovated with the help of our
PTO.
So, readers, many positive happenings, besides those mentioned, are constantly occurring
at Salisbury.
In closing, I say, "Thanks" 'to
you - the students, the staff, and
parents for your continuous support and cooperation."
H 1 can be of any assistance to
you, please feel free to call at 9922153.

In and around Meigs

Simpeon;

CFormertyM1191G.,. ..H....hlll

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and~ ·

2U W, 2nd, fl~meroy, Ott.
Office Pll. mM24

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Racine Social Events ________

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c:lla

w ith your common sense in
business
or commercia l

Fairview
News Notes

schooltechenuftllasnewer,leM
aperienced leaders. The event will
feature Dr. and Mra.·Oonald Flynn
of Charleston, IIIII Is planned for tbe
Albury United Methodist Church,
1" 10
" ' - - - Time
'
2 .,.

NEW HAVEN - Judy Montgomery, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Don Manuel, Donlta and
Harry Hoffman of New Haven Robin, spent a recent weekend with
recently graduated from the school her son, wyatt South in Columbus
of practical nursing at Mary and attended the weddiJii or Manila
Washington Hospital, in Wlllb and James lloww. Robin
Fredericksburg, Va.
I '" Manuel was flower llir~ and Wyatt
Mr. and Mrs. Harry lloftman at- South Will usher at the ncldlnctended the exercises that wete held Mrs. Manuel and dlua!Un allo
at Stafford Senior High School at visited Mrs. Patv Willis and flmily
Fabnouth, Va.
and Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Hart.

.

!p 1 loll powers ...-ittribu~ to
. . . . . in R=•' t t , ......
11111 _. SldiJ, It -lllltlftd·d-

Plans for the Buckeye Girls State
to be held at the Mount Moriah
Baptist Church in Middleport on
Sunday 1:30 p.m. were made when
the American Legion Atalliary of
Lewia Manley Post 283 met recently
at tbe home . of Mrs. Florence
Richards.
Mrs. Ernest Bowles presided at
the meeting with Mrs. ZueleUa
Smith making a report on a fund
drive which the unit had conducted.
lea

April23, 1911
There' s a possibility that you
wi II take on greater respon·
sibilities and duties this coming
year , Accept that which is nan·
ded you cheerfu lly, because the
rewards Will be commensurate.
TAURUS (April 20.May 20)
Utilize your hunches today along

I

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Girls State tea on Sunday

ASTRO
GRAPH

situations . You' re able to un ·
derstand that which they find Ob·
jectionable and smooth things
over .
CANCER (June 21 -July 22)
Your ambitions can be fulfilled
today , but it may require a little
extra push. You must operate at
ful l throttle in order to get what
you want.
L E 0 (July 23-Aug. 221 Persons
in your charge today won't have
any doubts as to who is the boss,
yet the( II respect you tor the ius I
way you handle confl ict and com·
pi ications.
VIRGO (Aug. l3-Sept. 221 Give
financia l and business maMers
t op priority today , l t'i to your ad·
'Vantage to attend to them now.
Delay s could lessen their
benefits.
LIBRA 1Sept.l3·0ct. 23) Strain
and tensions can be avoided in
important relationships today by
being cooperative. not deman·
ding . Give a tittle now and you'U
get a lotlater.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 221
Possibilities for adding to your
resources could come through
several channels today . The
largest return might be from
someone you shared wifh in tt)e
past.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Be optimistic today, but also
be prepared to work hord so that
you can make your dreams a
real ity. Mere wishful 1hink ino
isn' t enough .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·J~n . 19)
The key to success today is to try
to do things which w ill benefit
othero as much as they' ll benefit
you . Put their needs on a par with
yours.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20· Feb. 19) It
you are seeking adv ic~ today
about a matter Whi ch concerns ·
you, go to mdre than one source
for counsel . Diverse opinions
may be needed .
PISCES (Feb. 2G-March 20!
You're likelv to be luckier than
usual today in career and tinan·
cial matters. You ' ll have to root
around a bit, however, to uncover
opportun ities.
ARIES (March li·Aprit 19) Be
a good listener today . You have,
the ability to take others· poorly
constructed ideas and get the ,
most from them .
·

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Worbhop" on April :15. 'l'he tl!l1 will lie tile.- ipiUer, .
1IOI'bhop 11 geared tonn1 bOth pr tnhtian an CGIIII of the
elder, more npertenced Sunday Rev. 'I'1Iomll will blv. dmb

W.eclnesday, Aprll22, 1981

.1.

Gerald and Freda Freeman,
Route I, Cheshire, are announcing
the approaching marriage of their
daughter , Almena Hardwick,
Pomeroy, to Thomas Kline, son of
Virgie Kline, 158 Mulberry Ave.,
Pomeroy. The, wedding will take
place on May I at the Wesleyan
Holiness Church on Route 143.

4-H news
The Alfred Angels 4-H Cl ub met on April 5 at

Dean Colwell

Board to meet
The BOard of TruStees of Beech
Grove Cemetery will hold a public
meeting at 7:30 p.m. Friday at
Pomeroy Village HaU to discuss
operations and get public opinion on
improvements at the cemetery.

Revival now in progress
'
Revival now in progress at Church
of Christ in Christian Union, Pearl
St., Middleport. Guest speaker is the
Rev. Rosco Thorne of Pt. Pleasant.
Services are at 7:30 p.m. nightly.
The public is invited to attend.

Schohrship applications

.

now being collected
Children or grandchildren of
Pomeroy Alumni fliiiY make application for a scholarship through
the Pomeroy Alumni Scholarship
Fund, Sue Zirkle announced today.
Persons who are interested in
making application for the seholar·
ship are asked to send a picture,
reswne of grades, extra activities
and aHillations to Sue Zirkle,
Peacock Ave., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

Society to meet Sunday
The Meigs County Genealogical
Society will meet at 2 p.m. Sunday at
the Meigs Musewn. Mrs. Helen Scott
of Albany will speak on the Douglas
Atkins and Gorslin families.

Have Monday guests
Monday guests of Eula Mae
Odegard were her brother and his
Wife, Mr. and Mrs. John Hood of
Danville, Ky ,, and her siater-fn..law,
Mn. Donald Hood, Poca, W. Va.
Mra.. Odegard IIIII her guests spent
the evening with Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Demo.key, Middleport. Mn.
Odegard and Mra. Demoskey are
Mr. Hood's sllters. Vlaltlng SUnday
with Mra. Odegard and Mt. and Mrs.
Demolkey were Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
AsburyofNitroW. Va.

]elf Moore

visors and 13 members in attendance.
Final project selections were made and a
d.iscussi.on was held on a Stanley sale. A safety

Colwell, Parker, Moore to receive ·
state FFA degrees in Columbus
Dean Colwell, Kathy Parker, and
Jeffrey L. Moore of the Meigs Chapter, Future Farmers of America,
will receive their state degrees at
the fourth session of the 53rd Annual
State FFA Convention to be ~eld

Saturday in'Columbus.
Colwell is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
John Colwell of Vinton. Miss Parker
is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Leland Parker, and Moore i.s the son

of Mr. and Mrs. Freddie' Moore,
Cheshire. Miss Parker is the third
FFA member at Meigs to earn the
degree. All are seniors at Meigs
High Scbool.

Rap groups help Vietnam veterans
RBp groups of Vietnam combat
veterans talking with each other can
be successful in helping vets to deal
with some of the problems they are
still facing due to the war. " The
Vietnam combat vet may not realize
that many of his job, marriage and
drinking problems today may stem
from his war experiences," Said Jim
Altho!, Pt. D., a therapist at the
Conununity Mental Health Center.
"However, the unemployment,

alcoholism, divorce and suicide
rates of Vietnam vets are significantly higher than the general
population's," he said.
"Many of the vets have never
talked about their combat experiences," Althof said. "There's a
feeling that they can't trust anyone.
Many vets are feeling cheated and
angry,"hesaid.
Families of Vietnam vets re often

quicker to admit to the problems. At
the Comunity Mental Health Center
in Gallia, rap groups have been formed to help with some of the
problems. One group is for Vietnam
combat vet.s who can talk with each
other. Another group is for people
who live with Vietnam vets. One-tGone counseling is also available. For
more information call the Community Mental Health Center at 4465500.

Polly's Pointers

Tim, Rick and Renee, Summitt, N.

J. ; Pam Noblett, New York City;
Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Collins, and
children, Becky, Steve, Jimmy and
Jeff, Parkersburg; Robert
McKelvey and son, Robbie, Vincent;
Mrs. Frankie McKelvey, Belpre;
Mr. and Mrs. William A. McKelvey,
Portland, and Mr. and Mrs. Marvin
McKelvey, Syracuse.

Kathy Parker

the home of Dorothy Calu·ay with three .ad-

TOPS

Club

news

Water mark on wood

rtport w&amp; given by Sherri Myer.!l and a demon.!i lration on Breads was given by Tarruny
Calaway.

For refreshments the older girls made cookies,
the younge r g1rls made pWlch, and Debbie
Brooks provided IJ(ltato chips. - Teri Stout,
Reporter.
The Hillbillies 4-H Club mel CKl April ~at the
home of Ca rla and Betky Rife with six members,
two visitors, and one adv~or attending.
The members discussed t.hetr projects. Becky
Rife gave a demonstralion on Creative Arts and
House Plants; Carla Rile gave a demonstration
on Creative Arts.
For recre tttion Lhe members drew rabbits on
the tops of their heads. - Kevin Napier, Repor·
ter.

The Merry MaKe rs+ \! 4-H C1 ub held their fir·
st meeting on March 29 at the horne of Tom
Pullirus. Ten members ;t~~d three advisors attended.
The group discu.s.sed dues, a bake sale, and
held election of officers. Officers elected were 115
follows: president , Renee Tru~~SeU ; vice
president, Rocky Pitzer ; secret.a ry , Becky Lee ;
treasurer, Tom Pullirus; ne w~ reporter , Scott
TnJSSell ; historian. An~ie Spenc-er; health, John
Hem; safety, Robyn Pttzer : recreati on leader ~ .
Chris Sp!!m:er and Brenda Benu.
For recreati on the members played Dodge
ball. Mrs. Becky Pullins served refrestunents. Scott Trussell, Reporter.
The Zoo-H-ers 4-H Cl ub mt!l 011 April 6 at the
home at the home of Bill and Barba r11 Mill er with
five members and two advisors in attenilimce.
The members discussed due:;, projects, and
conununity project. Bill Miller, a d vi~ors , gave a
report on pi~ buyinl!! and ra1 sing .
For recreation the members played CHtch.
Mrs. Mitler served refreshmen~ . The nex t
meeting will be April 22 at the home of Scott)"
WillaJil.!i. There will De a demonstration on
chi ckens and a sa fety dcmon.stratt on. - Melvin
V11.nMeter, Reporter
A new +H club, the Metgs Rowdtcs, met on
Apri 113 at the home of Margaret P11rl!: er, ad·
visor. There were l5members 1n uttendancc.
The group elected officers as follows :
president, Kathy P&lt;i rker: v1ce president, Jim
Parker; secreta I'}', terl'}· Smith ; treasurer,
David Beegle ; news reporter, Joe Parker :
recreation leaders. Art Hunlll':l and Paul Will ;
safety chainrum, Tr&lt;tci Castu: and health chatr·

Phyllis Clay will be presented a
"Tops" statue for maintaining her
. KOPS status for a full year by the
man, Mike Will.
tons and then tie between each egg TOPS OH 1466 Club, Rutland,
Appointed to serve on the Money Making Comcup. For the bottom tie the middle of
mittee were Charlotte Hart. Traci Casto. Art
Hwmel tHK.l DH vid s~gle . Appointed to the Cama carton to a foil plate. These can be
Meeting Wednesday Paula Myers ping Corrunittee were Kathy Parker. Jim
1118de aU in one color, or two colors was honored as the week's best Parker, Terry Smith and Kristin Ki n ~ .
For recrea tion the members played tag. Mrs.
could be alternated. I keep a brown
Parker served refreshments_Thr nut rneetmg
loser.
She
was
presented
a
dollar,
a
paper bag with the top turned down
the club wiU be April 27 at 7 p.m. al the Parker
ribbon and members sang in her ofresidence.
- Joe Parker , Reporter
to fit inside mine. - MARY BELLE
Eight Is Enough 4-H Club met on Apnl I{
DEAR POLLY - 1no longer have honor. Runner up for the honor was at The
the home of Mrs. Pat WoU. There ~~o· ere e1ght
members and two jtu1ior leaders in attendance.
to buy an expensive satin pillowcase Lynda Adkins.
Items of business discussed durin ~ the meetmg
to sleep on, so as not to ruin a new
w~re +H camp and money malting prOject.5.
hairdo or permanent. I have
For the project lesson lhc members made pin
Nellie Haggy explained the bid
Pam Riebel , junior leader, gave a
discovered an old nylon or satin slip game noting that each member will cushions.
demonstration on how to make half-knots and
pulled over the piUow works just as bid on how much weight they will whole-knot.'l for macrame. Angie Chapman and
Melissa Miller served refreshments. The next
well. I pin (with a safety pin J the slip
meeting will be April21J at the home of Pt~ t Wolf.
to my pillow at each end, so it stays lose for the week. If the member advisor.Melissa Mill er, Reporter
on straight and firm. When I get up gains, she will have to pay a 2li cent
in the morning my hairdo is in place . penalty. For losing her weight, she .--------------------will receive a gift for the week. If
-ANNE'J'TE
,
the
member shows neither a gain
DEAR POLLY - I have found
that putting a dry bth towel in the nor loss, then she will still have to
dryer with nylon curtaina removes pay.
For All Occasions
the static.- MARTHA
Polly will send you one of her
Members were reminded to !'ake
signed thank-you newspaper coupon in their towels for the towel contest
CAROUSEL CONFECTIONERY
clippers if. she uses your favorite
which
is
to
be
concluded
on
May
20.
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in her
Ph. 992-6342
The TOPS pledge opened the
column. Write POLLY'S POIN317 N. 2nd
Middleport
meeting with Mrs. Haggy presiding .
TERS in care of this newspaper.

By Polly Cramer
Special correspondent
DEAR POLLY - My Early
American maple deacon's bench has
a white water
-.
mark on it. I have
tried to remove it
every way I know,
but with no luck.
Could you help? ~
UNSIGNED
DEAR UN SIGNED - If
your bench is
CRAMER
waved, you might try removing it
with ;Uquid wax that may take the
water mark with it. If so·, relax.
Also, you could wring a s'!ft cloth out
of water, to which a few drops of ammonia have been added. Rub dry
with a soft clean cloth and polish as
usual. Good luck. - POLLY
DEAR POLLY AND ROSEMARY
- Anice waste hasket can be made
with egg cartons. Use just the part of
the cartons that have the cups.
Using a darning needle and a double
strand of yarn, tie together six car-

Decorated Cakes

Harrisonville Social News
Mrs.. Lola Clark was Tuesday
evening dinner guest of Mr. and
Mrs. Larry Clark of Middleport.
Miss Robin Gibson, Colwnbus,
spent a week with her grandparent.s,
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Alkire recently.
Mr. and Mrs. K. C. Welsh have
returned home after spending the
winter in Florida.
Mrs. Leatha Cowen who spent
several weeks in Zanesville with her
daughter and son-fn..law, Mr. and
Mrs. Theo Hinda, returned home
recenUy.
Mr. and Mrs. Darrell Napper and

children of Chillicothe visited a Sunday with Mrs. Mae Mason.
Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Kenneth Payne were Mr. and
Mrs. Sam Steinmetz and family, Mr.
and Mrs. Joe Carsey and Catherine
Weaver.
The Lend-A·Hand Circle met
recently at Frances Alkire's with
Margartl Douglas as co-hostess .
Mr. and Mrs. James Payne and
family, Newark, visited Saturday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Payne and faniily.

son,
Kenny,
spent a week's vacation
in Florida
recently.
Dr. and Mrs. Don Gibson,
. Maryland, Gay Lynn Gibson,
Columbus, Mark Gibson, Chicago,
spent a weekend with Mr. aitd Mrs.
Bud Douglas and Mrs. Lana Gibson.
Mr. and Mrs. Junior Gibson
visited a Sunday with Mr. and Mn.
Allen Gibsen and son in Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Clinton GUkey retur·
ned home recently after spendingthe winter In Florida.
CecU Morris,r Canton, vlaited his
.sister, Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Carr a
recent Sunday.ln the afternoon they
visited their brother, Loyde Morris
al West Jefferson.
Mr. and Mn. Larry McGrath and ,
family, Shade, were dinner guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Earl McGrath a recent
Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Masoil.and

.-------------.....J---------:---------r------------

'

HOUSE PAINT

R. H. BILLMAN II, O.D.
Provides Such Services As

VISION EXAMINATIONS
HARD AND SOFT CONTACT LENSES
OPEN M.·T.· W.· F. 9·5
_
CLOSED THUR.·SAT.·SUN.
113 Court St.
Pomeory, Oh.
Above Clark's Jewelry in Pomeroy

992-2920

1---------

r-...;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.-1
DUTCH BOY

BEND AREA OPTOMEMETRIC CENTER

•

$}}99

· 1700 Sarles

MOORE'S AMERICAN HARDWARE
"Use Our Convtnltnt 2nd St. Entrance"

.

SPECIAL OF THE WEEKI

·~PtZZAaURGER ••• "• •••• 9,$
."

WtlH FRIES . ......... '1

39

ADOLPH'S DAIRY. VALLEY
PH. 992-2556
Pomeroy, OH .
111e End ol the Pomeroy·M•son Bridge"

OH
l•

'I

•

I '

�•

'

.Annual mother-daughter
banquet set May 12
Plans lor tne annual mother·
daughter banquet on May 12 were
made and observance of "A Day
Aprt" on May 14 was noted at the
recent meeting of the United
Methodist Women of the Pomeroy
Church.
Mrs. Faye Wildennuth is chair·
man for the mother-daughter
banquet which will be a carry-in din·
ner at 6:30 p.m. Special gifts will be
presented during the social hour.
Mrs. Y/ildennuth will name com·
mittee~ for the affair.
The 'iA Day Apart" will be held at
the Asbpry United Methodist Church
fr~m 10,a.m. to 2:30 p.m. on May 14.
Mrs. Robert McGee announced the
meeting and urged attendance.
The spiritual life retreat to beheld
at Camp Otterbein this weekend was
announced. A letter was read from
Mrs. Ffllnces Spencer thanking the
group (or responsiveness to her
product display at a recent meeting
and enclosing a gift. Mrs. Dorothy
Downie, vice president, read a list ol
several projects which the district
president would like the UMW to ac·
complish and it was noted that the
Pomeroy group is now working on
several ol these.
The least coin offering was taken
by Mrs. Ada Warner, who requested
that members remember five
special missionaries with prayer
and gifts on their birthdays. Several
shut-ins were remembered with
prayer by Mrs. Thelma Dill. A
report was given on the illness and

death in the Roy McKinley family.
Mrs. McGee noted that she had
received a memo from Elizabeth
Jeffers, a district officer, suggesting
that each member read the book,
"And He Had Compassion" by
William Barkley. A total of 08 sick
and shut·in calls we'e reported.
Mrs. McGee said that she had purchased some material for making
chrismons. Areport on the traveling
basket sponsored by the group was
given by Mrs. Polly Eichinger.
To open the meeting Mrs. McGee
read the "Legend of the Larkspur"
and "The Legend of the Drooping of
the Leaves of the Willow." Mrs.
Eichinger had scripture from John
17 and the meditaon, "The Day of
Overcoming."
"20th Century Emmaus Walk"
was the program topic presented by
Mrs. Clara Thomas. There was
group singing of " Blessed
Redeemer" and a meditation en·
titled "On the Road to Emmaus"
based on the gospel of Luke, telling
of the two men walking from
Jerusalem to Emmaus and talking
of Jesus when He suddenly appeared
in their midst.
There was a discussion on the
event and several members told of
events which they had experienced.
There was a hymn and prayer to
close the meeting.
Mrs. McGee and Mrs. Warner served refreshments in keeping with
the Lenten season.

I

Humane Society to
close animal shelter
on Hysell Run Road
The Meigs County Humane
Society is announcing the closing
of its animal shelter on Hysell
ltun Road. The society is in the
process of hiring a full-time coordinator-answering service.
Meantime, Meigs Countians
are requested by the society to
please try to assist animals in

trouble. They are asked to try to
find a pennanent home for any
health and placeable stray which
might come to their residence.
The society reminds residents
that a call to the dog warden
generally sentences the animal to
a premature death or worse.

--:-

Form~las for

'

Kindergarten registration
to take place Friday here
Kindergarten registration for
.the Southern Local School
District will be held Friday from
8 to 11 a.m. and 12:15 to2:30 p.m.
Registration will take place in
the kindergarten room next to
Southern High School. Parents
are to take their child's birth cer·
tificate and record of im·
munization plus a proof of a skin
test taken within the last six mon-

BY BETHSTOI\If,:
Spedlil corresponde~t . .
(Copyright Beth Stone, 1981)
· Dear Beth,
My kids love the "T" shirts and
jeans which. are so popular today
with decals and embroidery.
However the additions of the
· decorations can become very ex·
pensive. We have just discovered we
can make our own designs, using our
own creative abilities or tracing
from coloring and cartoon books. We
use GLAD RAGS colored felt-tipped
pens by Sanford Company. These
colors wash more successfully than
the iron-on-decals at the store. The
children are proud to wear their own
creations.
Dear Reader,
The GLAD RAGS pens are also
great for use on neddlepoint canvas
because they do not bleed. When
used on garments the colors stay
bright after many washings.
Sanford also makes another set
worth knowing about: CrayPas
Colors. These are bright co}ors
which can be blended on paper for
rnarveloils shading effects. they are
also ·a good medium to use for
teaching children about mixing
primary colors to make secondary
colors : fred and blue make purple;

ths. Children must be five years

old by Sept. 30, !981 for entrance
into kindergarten.
As required by law, children
entering school must have the
OPT series and booster; polio
series and booster; measles and
rubella vaccine and a recent skin
test.
Regular kindergarten classes
will not be held on the day of
registration. .

Pomeroy PTA contributes
to safety patrol trip
POMEROY-The Pomeroy PTA,
meeting Monday night at the
Pomeroy Elementary School, voted
to contribute $150 to the school
safety patrol's trip to Washington,
D.C.
Bob Barton presided at the
meeting during which time several
activities were planned including a
dinner honoring the teachers, a
skating party for the entire school ,
and field day.

New officers installed by Dina
Gryszka, a past president, were Bar-'
ton, president; Mrs. Sharon Wrigh~
first vice president; Mrs. Bernadette Anderson, second vice
president ; Mrs. Susie Tracy,
treasurer; Mrs. Janice Haggy,
recording secretary; Mrs. Delores
Hawk, corresponding secretary;
and Rita Fields, historian.
A.Ppointed to the ways and means
corrunittee
Mrs. Mrs.Barbara
Anita Bean,
Mrs. Annie were
Chapman,
Smith, and Mrs. Ruth Spaun.
Named to the membership committee were Mrs. Hawley and Mrs.
Barton. A request for citizen band
radios for the kindergarten buses
will be considered in the fall, as will
a request for new basketball unifor·

.·

drive for funds to aid heart victims,
the residents of the Pomeroy Health
Care Center recently "rocked and
rolled" and greatly assisted the
Meigs Chapter of the American
Heart Association meet its goal for
1981.
The residents under the leadership
of their Activities Director Terry
Stotts were assisted in their efforts
by several people and it is "Hearts"
purpose to thank them at this time.
Most important of all was the
residents themselves who did the
rocking in rocking chairs donated by
Baker's Furniture Store of Middleport and in wheel chairs. In
chairs were Mary Bird, Delbert
Bruch, Jesse Carr, Gertrude Taylor,
Malvera Wheeler, Ida Burns, Doris
Kaiser, Maude Rolf and Nona Rit·
chie, but the resident to roll the
fongest was Unda Willis who logged
in two hours straight. For each
minute these residents rocked and

Fun

red lll!d yellow make orange; blue
and yelb1w make green). CIJ!ldren
think mixing colors to make new
colors' is "magic" lind tbey will
Ieern m~~h through this kind or
pia). . CRAY PAS Colors are. also
greatfor scra\ch art: (color heavily
on a paper with a bright color. Tben
completely cover it with black.
Using any' pointed object, seratcb a
design or picture in the black. The
bright color will shine through,
making a neon effect.)
Dear Beth,
For a teenager's party, or any
time you need to serve a crowd 61
thirsty chiidren for minimal ex·
pense, try this tasty punch recipe,
-for only· slightly over $1 a gallon: 1
package of cherry flavored
powdered drink mix, I cup sugar,
one half of a large can of pineapple
juice, a half cup of try Tang, water
to make one gallon.
·

f

APR. 22, 1Q81
EYEN&gt;NG

s:oo

"MyFalrLady" 1964

(J) CAROL BURNETT AND

CAPTAIN EASY
OOt.J'T P,! AI!I~URD! I HAVt:N'T .
A~ErP TO PAY THOSE 1NDIAN5i

·

AND WHAT'!&gt; MORE, I'M
NOT AOOUT TO~ YOU 5EoM
TO FORGe:T•• THEY DON'T
OWN THE; 01~ R&gt;6HT5 TO
THI!i ~AND!

ANYTHIN&lt;; FOR WHArEV~R 01~
I DRI~1. AROUND HERE':

THo CANADIAN
pOV~RNMENT
DOE!I! AND THAT!;
NOT THE' ONI,Y
THIN6 YOU'Re
FORGETTING ,
YANKEE&gt;
60Y!

~HATEVER IT

1!7,

I 'M SUitE. YOU ' ~~
SOON RE'MIND
ME-~

Mrs. Howard (Ruth) Ebersbach
transferred from Veterans
Memorial Hopsltal where she bas
been a patient for the past three
weeks to the Pomeroy Health Care
Center.

The St orms Of Winter'

s i~n
to

a

® MACNEIL-LEHRER
REPORT
(liD NEWS
7:30 CIJ O BUL,SEYE
ffi AT HOME WITH THE
BIBLE
® SANFORD AND SON
III O @ JOKER'SW&gt;LD
CD HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
IIJ(jj) DICKCAYETTSHOW
(liD NAME THA TTUNE
G2J CD FACE THE MUS&gt;C
7:58 ffi CBN UPDATE NEWS
8:00 CIJ 0 CD REAL PEOPLE An

•
G

i

r

!

.

order ot monks in Oklah oma
wh o serve aS the town 's volun·

I

I

teer fire de~artme nt , an Ohio
co uple who keep all igat ors .
wolves and skunks in th eir
hom e, a doo that skis , and a

i

ANNIE

Call or vi sit us
t oday \Ne'll de-

wi lt' show how
muc h yo u
d lliJH'Ciclt t•

profile of a handic apped cow ·

boy .

(Repeat ; 60 mins .)
U.S.A.}
W S&gt;GHTS AND SOUNDS OF
LIFE
® MOVIE ·(WESTERN) " \o
''Violent Men '' 1'9 55
IIJ il2J OJ THE LOVE BOAT
Captain $ tubing's womanizing
brother . Marshall , boards the
ship to marry his wealth y !ia n·
cee, but may have a change of
heart when he rekindle s a flame
~l a sed - C apti o n ed;

YES.. ! SUSPECT HIGH BLOOD
· PR.ESGUftE. I CAN CHECK YOU INTO
THE HOSPITAL
RJGifT ~OW IF
YOU LIKE.

bo uquet

fit her

personal it¥

lwr.

with a Iarmer love. (Repeal: 60
min s~
0 (.!) ENOS En os Strat e

be co me s a one man police
force when an epidemic of 'Blue
Flu ' strikes th e dep artment and

he's left alone to prote ct a pre I ·
ty woman judge from a kill er 's
wra th. (Repeat. 60 mins )
Ci) WORLD 'No More Moun ·
Ieins: The Story of th e Hmong '
Thi s film tells the story oi l he
Hmon g , or 'tree people'. a tr1be

Ph. 614-992·2644

AILEYOOP

FLORIST
l'lfa E. "AIN • PO"EROr, otiiO •.S16'

of LAOT&gt;AN MOUNTA&gt;N PEO·
PLE , FROM THE&gt;R EARLY
TOME S TO THEIR PRE SENT
STATE OF HOMELESSNE SS &gt;N
REFUGEE CAMPS AND FOR·
EIGN COU NTRIE S. (60 m; ns.)
!liD
BILLY
GRAHAM
CRUSADE
(jj) ALL CREATURES GREAT
ANDSMALL 'E&gt;Jery OogHasH is
Da y' James ha s a d 11ticutttime

sat~ it right.

, treat ing a bo.~ter fri end, a pig ,
and young David Woodl ey, who
wants to be a &gt;Jet.

WHAT'S SO COOL
ABOUT THE ADD-ON
ELECTRIC
HEAT PUMP?

rolled money was added to the heart
fund.
Meantime, entertaining in the
dining room was the Stoney Creek
Blue Grass Band that volunteers its
services every once in awhile. Also
enjoyed was the Meigs High School
Choralee /s.
But thi singing group was not the
only one of Meigs High to assist the
Pomeroy Health Care residents in
their annual project - the
cheerleaders were on the road at the
same time asking residents of the
community for contributions or
pledges to encourage the residents
to both rock and roll lor Heart.
Thanks to all of these people,
almost $100 was added to the
growing amount contributed by the
people of Meigs County to try and
combat the number one killer in the
nation.
Donations may be sent to P. 0 .
Box 100, Pomeroy, 4o769.

8:30
8 :58
9:00

4 - ).")..

Eas4, Clov i.a' I
,
notthe kids fault'

That

woman

l'm sorr4, Rover'
I li~e 40u,
'

Kin I have

some hotcakes?

thinks
I'll sit
her kid

...'

highlight this spe ctacular in conce rt special; Ma c performs
hitslrom his latest album . as
well as chartbusters ' Baby
Don't Get Hooked On Me ' and 'I
BelieOJe In Music .'

while

she
sleeps? ro-...--....
~~~

IIJil2J W

ALOHA PARADISE
Debbie Reyno lds pla ys a dual
role as Syd ney and Sydney's BO
year ol d grandmother, an eccentr ic grand dam e o f th e
theatre, and Fran falls in love
with a dashing young man who
sends her notes written by
another man. (60 mins.)
fiJ (l)(!ID CBS WEDNESDAY
NIGHT MOVIE 'Outlaw Blues'
1977
l])(jj) FABULOUS PHILADE~·
PHIANS: FROM ORMANDYTO
MUTt 'The Verd i 'ReQu iem"
Riccardo Muti leads the
Phi ladelphia Orchestra and the
Mendelssohn Cl ub Chorus in a
performan ce
of
Verd i's
'Manzoni Requiem', from '
Philadelphia's
Basilica ·
Cathedral ol Saints Peter and
Paul. (90 mins.)
9:30 CIJD CD THEFACTSOFLIFE
Alter lour of the girls get drunk. at
a bar and wreck. the school van,
they are put on probation, living
In cramped quarters above the
kitchen and wa iting on tab!es in
cafeteria.
(Repeat)
the
{Conclusion)
10:00 Cil D CD QUINCY Qu incy
ruehes to an Arizona Indian re·
servatioo where his foster son
and two othera are stricken by
bubonic plague , end efforts to
halt the di sease's spread are
hampered by gree dy re sort
owners. (Repeat: 60 mins.)
GJ MOVIE ·(DRAMA) .. \;

WINNIE
THEN lOU Klif!W TWIT
COM!&gt;UflO CARRIED

•

MY PASSPORT AND

••
•..

an

PtoTO~

9HE

WA9 LE.'FT 00

OUR DOORSTEP

MOST AI'WlDONEO

WE SUSPECTED THE
1'¥\PERS WERE A PLOY,
BUT WE HAO NOTHING

WITH YQJR PAP'E~!S CHILDREN ~VE
A!.ONSSIOE
NO li:&gt;EiiiTIFICA·
TION AT AL~,

ELSE TOGO ON .

F'OR OE!VIOU9

•

I/N711. HER
7Rt!E MOTHER

SHOWEP UP/

•
•••
•

•

LOOK AT LITTLE TATER·HE'S TH'SPITTIN'IMAGE
OF HIS PAW
,

...In hOt weather, It'S a"cool pump·I

MA¥BE HE'LL
OUTGROW IT

.. ·---

You probably already know that the Add-on
Electric Heat Pump can be an energy-saving
•
partner to your existing furnace no matter
what fuel It uses. And that It could save you
money, conserve energy ana lower your winter
heating bill.
But what you may not know Is, In hot
weather the heat pump reverses to become a
"cool pump"-hlgh-efflclency central air condl·
tlonlng that cools and dehumidifies your home.
so If you·re looking for'Ward to saving
energy costs next winter. while taking care of
your summer cooling needs, find out how to
do It with your all-weather friend, the Add·On
·electric Heat Pumll. The facts you need are In
our free booklet, SAVE.• It's yours for the asking
•
If you mall In tl'}e atta~hed coupon.

_________________________

Address - -- - - - - - -- - -

Cltv'- - - - r - - State_· _ ·_ zip _ _

Teiepnone_· - - - - - -- - - - Mall COUPOn tO:

1

10,000 METERS

IIJil2J GI

VE(,lA$ Dan Tanne
linda hlmaelf back in Air For ce
·'
blue temporarily when a Rus·
alan defector lands a super se ·
cret plene outside Las Vegas .
and Dan tries to protectthepilot
and his craft from a deadly trio
dedicated to their deatrucllon.
mino.)
10:28
CBN UPDATE NEWS
10:30
MAX MORAIS
AGAM AND ... The work ot
laraellartiat Viakov A gam is
the
aubject
of
this
documentary .
N£WS
10:58
!:_IN UPOATE NEWS

the AdcHln Electric Heat Pump. Please
send me your free SAVE tlOOklet.

I
1

•save Amerlca·s va1uaD1e lnergy

"Lun•" 1878
(J) TBS EVENING NEWS

1would like to have more Information on
~me

.

customer services Decartment
Ohio Power company
·
P.O. Box400
301 Cleveland Ave~ s.w.

I
I

•

I

'

I
.J

·
we give It-----·
our
canton. Ohio 4470•

•
GLASS STAATS IN

num~~~

11:00

·- - -----

m• IIJCD CJ (])®Jil2JGI

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Answer hare:

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"K I

CA~

WHEIIJ YOU

ltDARZAH

FII&lt;JD

SOMETHIN6 A'T A
DOWN -'TO- EARTH
P~ICE I'T SHOULD
~E 'THI6,
Now arrange the Circled letters to
!orm !he surprise answer. as sug gested bv the at&gt;ove cartoon.

xI J r I I I 1 J
(Answers tomorrow!

Yesterday's

I Jumbles
An swer

t:~ umble

T~Ul Y AFOOT GRATI S BANANA
What that crazy space man was . AN " AST RO-NUT"

Book No. 15; cOntaining 110 puzzle&amp;, is available lor $1.75 po1tpald

·.,rom Jumble. cJo this newspaper, 80.11 34, Norwood, N.J. 07 s.a. Include your
n•me, address, zip code and make ctMM:ks payable to NewspaperbooU.

•I

BRIDGE
Two and a half hearts?
By Oswald Jacobv
and Alan Sonlag ·
Dia mond

Feld es man

'

'

•

~

rn en :hant

won

Ph tl

play regu larly in the Cavend. osh Club bndge game where

a

+ A Q :12
WEST

EAq

thP chmce bPiween the ve ry
conser vatJV(' call of tw o and
thl• slightly optimi stic jump to

three. Ph il bid three as
expected and North took Jl im
10 ga me.
West opened the k1ng ol
spades ;md sbifted to the
queen of trumps after receiv·

• 52
• !(I 7 ti 4

• K Y a5

~Ol'TH

+ ~ B ti :1

play the dummy so as to make
up for the overbidding.

ca lled lor the impossible bid
of two and a half hearts. W&gt;th

+75 2

+ ., K\110
¥ \)J !!
• ~a
+.I Ill~ -t

he. tends to overbid and then
His ju mp to three hea rts
wasn 't real lv an overbi d. It
was just a h'and which reallv

4·22·11

• IU
t AQ.IH2

st!v e r cd

Vanderbilt cups in the Si xties.
but has not plaved an y tourna ·
ment. bridg{' at all in the last
seven or ei gh1 ye ars. He does

. A K Bj6 ~

.,,

t K:I

Vul nera ble North-South
Dealer Nonh

I.

West

I J&lt;.~ s~

Pass

1\orth

East

Suulh

2••+

Pass
Pa ss

:1,

P&lt;t ss

P&lt;iss

4.

t•

Open1n g lead + K

ing the dis&lt;·ouraging deuce ol
spades from Easl
This gave Ph il an excellent

his &lt;'U nt r act was in the bag

t: hance to throw game and
rubber awav. II he took that

w1th an overtnek West &lt;·on-

first trump' he was go ing

10

lose h1s con tract rega rdl ess of

what line of pl ay he tn ed

Howeve r . Ph il si mpl y
du(·ked that first trump and

Actuallv. l'lul wound up
unued w 1th the JU&lt;'k of hcil rt s
Now Ph il was able to draw

trumps omd disC'&lt;t rd all hts los·
mg spades on dummy's long
diamonds

~e'iii.Wt-{
by THOMAS JOSEPH
- ACROSS 41 Bolivian
I Planted
6 Muslim

prayer
II Maltreat

city
42 Praise I Fr.)
43 Giggle
OOWN

.12 Dennis the
I Voice
Menace 's
2 Direction
mother
on ship
13 Shake·
3 Prone
Yesterday's Answer
Speare's
4 Written
spelling
letter
17 ..... - I
28 Strain
of "hurry '" S Blind alley
saw Elba"
- gnat
14 Marble
6 European 20 Rows of seats 31 Glorify
IS - and Fox
river
21 Cereal
33 Au nature!
16 Gennan
7 Math study
products
3S Fencing
article
Iabbr. 1
24 Menu term
foil
18 Except
8 Prone
25 "- Bogey
37 Albanian
· 19 Measuring
9 Set in motion March"
dialect
apparatus
10 Grows
26 Mass
39 "Sunbonnet
21 Nonsense (sl.) incisors
meeting
22 Languish
;--~"1':':"'...,....,,...,
Z3 Network
24 Trod
· the boards
·26 Heads
!7 Dormouse
!II Italian
river
Z9 Religious
vestments
30 Puccini
heroine
3Z Flat (mus.)
33 Hit
UThirst
quencher
3i Soviet
lake
38 Prevent
(law)
40 Dissuade
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - ·Here's how to work It :
AXYDLBAAX .I
Is LONGFELLOW
One l•tler oimply otandl lor another. In this sample A II
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Singlr leiters,
apostrophes, the length and formation ol the words ue all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
CRYPTOQUOTES
BU BM
UYEU

NCJSGAUAGI
BM

LYI

DVBJSCPUEVU .
BU

BM

MC

BVUAPAMUBVW . - EWEUYE NYPBMUBA
Yalerday's Cryploquote: A COLLEGE EDUCATION DOES
NOT MAKE AN EDUCATED MAN.-MORTIMERADLER

Young named

PROGRAM
ANNOUNCED

HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) - Gary M. Young of Portland, Ore., has been appointed executive director of
the Connecticut Commission on the Arts.
Young had served as executive director of the
Oregon Arts FOWJdation alnce 1975.
In his new post he succeeds Anthony S. Keller.

NIGHT GALLERY
MOA£CAMIIE AND WISE
OUTER LIMITS
CIHUPOATt:NEWS

11:21
11 :30 ~THI!TONIGHTSHOW
Gueat hoat: OIVid Letterman.

, Gulltt:TeriGarr,JoeGraedon.
(110 min a,)

•

.~O RTII

• J1

national titles mduding two

NEWS

I])

OHIO POWER COMPANY
'

CIJ JOHN WESLEY WH&gt;TE
CIJ CBN UPDATE NEWS
CIJ 0 CD DIFF 'RENT

STROKES When A'rnold and
Willi s learn that Kimberly has
be en t o a n obstetri c i an . they
prepare to be uncles . (R epeal)
l&amp;losed·Ceptioned: U.S.A.)
W TOO CLUB
C!J STAND&gt;NG ROOM ONLY :
MAC DAVIS Speci al effects .
backup si ngers and dan cers

GASOLINE ALLEY

[]

I.._
I,_r J

0 @ TICTACDOUGH

Secretaries Day is Wednesday, April 22..
oi !lowers

Daily Sentinei-Page-13 .

IIJ

She~ aVI.P. Give her f.T.D

New arrival

FRIENDS
III ABC NEWS
I]) FREESTYLE
® OYER EASY 'The Widow '
Host: Hugh Downs. (Closed ·
Captioned: U.S.A.)
6:30 CIJ O CD NBC NEWS
(]) BOB NEWHART SHOW
III
PROGRAM
UNANNOUNCED
O @l!ID CBS NEWS
Cii WILD W&gt;LD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
® LILIAS, YOGA AND YOU
G2JCD ABC NEWS
6:56 ffi !;,BN UPDATE NEWS
7:00 CIJU PM MAGAZ&gt;NE
ffi NEW B&gt;BLE BAFFLE
SHOW
® AU IN THE FAMILY
IIJil2J W FAMILY FEUD
CD W&gt;LD K&gt;NGDOM 'Belore

·Ebersbach transfers

A IH•a utiful giit

m
IJ iil o ® lliD ll2l m
NEWS
(]) ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
(CONTINUED
FROM
DAYTIME!
C!J MOV&gt;E ·(MUSICAL) , .. \;

Secretaries Week is April 19-25.

The money for the safety patrol
was requested by Sandy Korn, ad·
visor, and will be used to transport
the children to Athens where they
will take a train to Washington, D.
C., provide breakfast on their return IllS.
to Athens, and the expenses of the
The Rev. Floyd Shook gave
bus trip back to Pomeroy.
devotions . The room count went to
Mrs. Patty Barton anmd Mrs. the third grade. Refreshments were
Janice Baggy were named co- served by the fourth grade room
chainnen for the dinner to be held on mothers.
May 29 honoring·the teachers of the
school. Field day will be held on
May 8 with Mrs. Korn, Miss Becky
Triplett, and Mrs. Sebert in charge.
The PTA will purchase the ribbons
King
and provide refreshments lor the
LETART, W. Va.- Mr. and Mrs.
children.
Thomas R. King of Preston burg, Ky.
It was decided that the skating are announcing the birth of a
party will be held on two different daughter, Rissie Renee, on April10,
nights, one for the chldren of the at Lady's of the Way Hospital, Kenlower grades, and another for the tucky. Mrs. King is the former
children in the fourth, fifth and sixth Pauletta Randolph of Letart, W.Va.
grades. Dates will be announced
The infant weighed nine pounds
later.
and three ounces.
The unit voted to .give each
Mr. and Mrs. King have two other
teacher $10 for classroom supplies children, Alia Mae, age two and a
and also designate half of the son, Thomas Jeremy, age five.
proceeds fcom the spring program
Grandparents a r~. Mr. and Mrs.
for teacher use. AU bills from the ' Paul Randolph, Letart; Mr. and
spring program must be presented Mrs. J. R. King, Pl. Pleasant, and a
to the PTA immediately for great-grandmother, Mrs. Rissie
pa)'Jllent.
Hancock, Tennessee.

~~e

Television
•
•
VIewmg

Wi:'L.L. TAI'I'c ITl L.cS.WE'Rt;: ONL.Y A FEW .
MINUTES FROM

r--::===================~--

Health care residents
rock, roll successfully
As an important portion of the

Ohio

Wed'!esday, Api'll22,1981

].. Pomeroy-Middleport,' Ohio

Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

.1

I•

... ,,

�Page-14-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

· Property Tran$fers
Thelma Meadows, Richard
Meadows, Linda Meadows to James
. E. Diddle, dba J. D. Drilling Co.,
· Ease., Ru!Iand.
John R. Murphy, Ida M. Murphy
_to. James E . Diddle, Right of Way,
Rutland.
Colwnbus and Southern Ohio Elec.
Co., to J. D. Drilling, Ease. ,
.Lebanon.
James Fugate , Affidav it,
' Pomeroy.
D. W. Ferrell, Marjorie L. Turrell
to Ohio Power Co., Ease., Sutton.
Ruth A. Hill, Billy C. Hill, Sr. to
Ohio Power Co., Ease., Sutton.
Wesley United Meth. Church to
Ohio Power Co., Ease., Sutton.

!WaNES WHEN

&gt;QIPCJII'rKNow
7HE C41.i.·"'
QUIZ

Al'fSWEFl ....

Swlday.

· Mr. and Mn. T&lt;m Swnmerfielil,
Candi, We;ndyandCrystalofMedlna
were weekend viJIIon of Mr. and
Mrs. Robert RuueU, allo Mr. ~
Mn.•steve HaW and family, Mr.
and Mrs. RonalaRU&amp;Sell and f~.
Mr. and Mn. Donald Rusaell and
Bertha Russell and Earl Ruuell.

8n-""""'

;Of( PO
Mtlf¥71/E

ANSIWG!l-WHAT

€JIVES?

uerman W. Hacjdox, dec. to Bei!Sie
M. Haddox, Cert. of Trans., Middleport .
Edward Baer, lltuby Baer to Bruce
E. Dounn, DonnaiT. Dourm, 5acres,
Olive.
Wayne King to1\.. uy Russell, Norma Russell, Oil and Gas, Salisbury.
Guy A. Russell, Norma Russell to
Lawrence Vance, Rebecca Jean
Vance , Deed of Correction,
Pomeroy,

Bryan Reeves of Chester Ul
visiting ~Vandmother, Do~thy
~es.

Parker, Mrs.' Harold Talley, Texas,
Mrs, Hennan Kasper, Dayton and ·
Mrs. Polly Mathew, Alabama.
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Alkire and son,
Kevin Alkire, and Miss Cleo Parker,
Colwnbus, visited Sunday with Mrs.
I\~rtha Parker.
j&lt;evin Alkire, grandson of Mrs.
Parker, was awarded his diplo11111
from Ohio University March 20.
Mrs. Audrey Hayes, Shade and
Mrs. Grace Richardson, Athens,
visited recently with Mrs. Della
Stahl.

Laurel Cliff
News Notes
The Meigs Ministerial Lenten services, held Thursday evening, was
well attended. Rev. Albert Dittes
was the guest speaker.
Mr. and Mrs. William Davis,
Columbus, visited recently with
Mrs. Davis' mother, Mrs. Tina
Jacobs. ·
Pastor Shook visited recently with
Mr. and Mrs. Percy Frick and Mrs.
Della Curtis.
Wyatt Schaefer, Mt. Vernon, spent
a weekend with his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. NormanSc~efer .
Mrs. Bertha Parker was surprised
Friday evening when nine members
of the Laurel Cliff Health Club came
to her home for a birthday party.
Mrs. Della Curtis, who is 89 years
old , sang a solo. Ice cream and cake
were served. Mrs. Parker received a
telephone call from her son, Cedric

William R. Cuckler, Phyllis
. Cuckl er, Patricia L. Cuckler White,

ewsNotes

Mrs. Danl~l Worley, Stacy d '
Daniel, of DanleJJ, W. Va. ive
weekelld viJiton of Mr.. and
Charley Smith. Allo vla!Ung .we
Mr. ~ Mn. Doyle Knapp,
Kevln.and Cbar-., .and Iva J

~~NBIIS&gt;f

Jack R. White, Oebra C. Cuckler
Keller, Charles Keller, Randi G.
Cuckler!o Raymond E. Cuckler, 164
acres, Bedford.
Brynn K. SutPIIin, Cindy F. Sutphin to B. Eugene Hunter, Patty J.
Hunter, I acre, Salem.
George Casto, Lucille Casto to
Ralph E. Cundiff:Jr., Sheila D. Cundiff, .64 acre, Sali;lbury.
Alma Peterson to Homer Hysell,
Ease., Rutland.
Alina Peterson, to Homer Hysell,
Meter site agree.,IRuUand.

· Minnie R. Wooten to Dean R.
Wooten, Parcels, Salem.
James E . Ferguson, Jo Ann
: Ferguson to Wiliiam Ray Williams,
. Iris Maxine Williams, 7.22 A.,
: Rutland.
Mary H. Hoffman, Aff. of Death,
Middleport.
Otto L. Hoffman aka Otto Hoffman
to Mary H. Hoffman, Cert. of Trans.,
Middleport.
Otto L. Hoffman aka Otto Hoffman
to Mary Hoffman, Cert. of Trans.,
Middleport.
Charles R. Karr Jr., Mildred Karr
to Jack M. Hawley, Elizabeth M.
Hawley, Audra Edna Hayes, Lot,
Middleport.
Audra Edna Hayes, Aff. , Bedford.
James W. Stockwell to Rhonda J .
' Stockwell, 5.07 acres, Scipio.
· James W. Stockwell, Rhonda J .
Stockwell to Ivan R. Kacir, Betty
Kacir, Lot 19, Harrisonville.
Walter W. Blackford, Sr. to Carl
Richards, Melissa Richards, Lots,
Scipio- Pageville.
Gregory L. Bailey to Tri County
·, Bank, 1.334 acres Sec. 5, Orange.
David J. Craig to Carolyn Shields,
Parcel, Salem.
Ernest H. Qlvert, Virginia A.
Covert to Thomas Earl Ewing, Heidi
Denise Ewing, 25 acres, Chester.

Wolf Pen

They'll Do It Every Time:

Attendance at the Free Methodist
Church March 29 was 75. Choir
members present were 12. Joseph
Sayre was guest · minister Sunday
morning.
Attendance at the local church
April 5 was 75. ChOir members
present were 15. A duet by Steve
Eblin and daughter Becky was
present. Cecil Wise was guest
minister in the absence of Pastor
Shook who with Mrs. Shook was
visiting in Colwnbus and Newark.
Mr. and Mrs. William Davis
visited recently with Mrs. Davis'
mother, Mrs. Tina Jacobs. Mrs.

-

Jacobs returned ;to Columbus with
Mr. and Mrs. Davis for a two week5
visit with relativ~s.
Mrs. Jenny Ward spent several
days r.ecently with relatives in
Colwnbus.
Della Curtis was able to attend the
morning services at the local church
Sunday.
Attendanc'e at the Free Methodist
Church Easter was 107. Choir members present were 20.
.
The Sunrise Easter morning service was held at the roadside park on
Route33.
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Higgenbotham, Columb/J,s, and daughter
Erin, visited recently with Pastor
Shook and Mrs. Shook.
The Free Methodist' Sunday School
had an egg hunt Saturday afternoon.
A large number attended the event.
Mrs. Edna How\!U, Colwnbus, formerly of the cornmwiity, was in a
Colwnbus hospital for several days.
She has been returned to her home
1
much improved.
Mrs. Tina Jacobs is able to attend
services at the local church.
Mr . and Mrs. Wyatt Schaefer, MI.

981

Mr. and Mrs. William Russell,
Minersville, were recent visitors "
Mrs. Bertha Russell and Earl
RuueU.
.
'
Mrs. Joseph Evans, Tyson ~
Racine were recent visitors of MJ1 .
J. R. Murphy and Peggy.
A surprise birthday party W11o
held at the home of Mrs. Clair Gil~
for Mr. GOes. Those attending
Cecil GOes, Swnmer, Donald 111\d
Neil, Frank Giles and Cheri St_at
forth, also his Sister, Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph Rhoten (Metta) ofDayton.
Mrs. Iva Johnson spent a weeker...
wtth Mrs. J. R. Murphy and Peggy.
Mrs. Daniel Worley, Stacy anp
Daniel of Daniel, W. Va., were
recent weekend visitors of Mr. ani!

Wef

1

Vernon, recently spent a Sunday
with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Norman Schaefer.
Mrs. Jeraldine Ferguson and·son,
Jones Ferguson, Columbus, spent
Easter with Mrs. Bertha Parker.
Mrs, Mildred Jacob&amp; was hostess
for the Laurel Cliff Health Club
recently. The May meeting will be
with Mrs. Ann Mash.
Pastor and Mrs. Shook recently
called on Mr. and Mis. Percy Frick
and Mrs. Della CUrtis.
Mrs. Emma Fox, Mr. and Mrs.
Roy Howell spent Easter with Mr.
and Mrs. John Douglas, Byesville.

Situations Wonted
seeking em·
olo·vmt•nt. Hospital, Dr. of·
lc · as recep·
l..tinnt•+ or Medical records.
Any .shirt or days. Know
med ical
terminology .
References. 742·2030.

Mn. Charley Smith and Mr. and
Mn- Doyle Knapp , Kall, Kevin and
Olatles. .
.
,
Mrs. Bertha Ruuell returned
!nne from Plea88111 Valley Hospital
Monday Jllld ia imprOved. Mn.
WiiiJamBoyce and William Venoyof
Columbus visited Sunda,J.. at tbe

boi!Pital.
Mr. and Mn. Jack Downs, Adam

and Eric ·or Jacksonville were Wednesday overnight guests of Mrs. J.
R. Mw'phy and Peggy. Adam and
Eric stayed until Saturday.
· Ida and Peggy Murphy, Adam and
Eric Downs were Thl!fSd.I!Y overllight guests of Mrs. Joseph Evans
and Tyson.
Barbara Davis and Asbli were
Th\lnday afternoon visitors Of Mrs.
J. R. Murphy and Peggy. •
Zion Circle of Helping Hancm beld
its meeting last Thuraday at the
home of Mrs~ J. R. Murphy.
Mrs. Iva Jobnson spent last
weekend with Mrs. J. R. Murphy
and Peggy.
Bryan Reeves of Chester was
weekend visitor of his grandmother,
Mrs. Dorothy Reeves.
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Haggy,
Stephanie and Brad, were weekend
visitors of her sister, Mr. and Mrs.
TOin SUIIllllerfield, Candi, Wendy
and Crystal of Medina.
Mrs. Larry Barr of Rutland was a
recent guest of Mr. and Mrs.
Howard Thoma and Mrs. Iva Johnson.

Carmel News,
By the Day
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Earl Johnson
and daughter Sheryl.LeAnn spent
Saturday evening with Mr. and Mrs.
Douglas Johnson of Racine.
Mr. and Mrs. Keith Circle and
Casey of Princeton, W. Va. visited
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Circle and family of Morning Star
Tuesday and Wednesday.

$185.00 to$5110 weekly doing
mailing work. No ex·
pertence required . AP·
·PLY : Circle Sales, P.O.
: BOll 22~· 0, Richmond Hill,
NY 1U18.

992·2143.

WANTED : high school
graduate over 21 with
pleaunt phone .voice for
answering service In own
home for Meigs Co.
Humene Society. You
"""ld serve only as coor·
dlnator advising publ ic
correct method to handle
animal related problems.
Applicant must be someone
who sincerely carts for
wellfare of enlmals &amp; have
most of time available to
phone. If interested write
Bo~ 682, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769. Salary negotiable.
Someone to mow banks
throughout the summer.
. ApprOKimately every 3
weeks. After 6 call992·2647.
Need someone to move, in·

tact, 2 •mall buildin~s . I,
,10Kl0 the •OIIM'r 10x30. 992·

- ---·---

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
LINDA BELIVEAU,

Public Notice
-----------

a defendant in a legal ac·
l ion entitled Linda·
Bel iveau , Plaintiff , vs .
Michel Bel iveau, Defen·
dant . This action has been
Plaintiff ,
assi9ned Case No. 17,887
-vsand 1S spending in the Court
MICHEL BELIVEAU
of Common Pleas of Meigs
.
uetendant.
No. 17,787 County, Pomey, Ohio ~5759 .
The obiect of the com·
NOTICE BY
plaint is the obtaining of a
PUBLICATION
TO : Michel Beliveau , divor ce and the ter ·
whose address is unknown : minat ion of a marriage

1'1:--•--------------------,
b I nfl a tlon.
•
I
1
r
U
I
I
I
1
I
P ay Cas h .f Or
~
I.

c

I
I

Classifieds and

Save I I I

1
l

Public Notice
contract between the par· be scheduled by the Court.
ti es and lhe settlement of
Larry Spencer,
the property rights of the
Clerk ofCourt
part 1es .
c
t
0f M .
You are requ ired to an·
elgs 0 ~fO
swer the complaint within
28 days afl er th e Ias I 141 n 29, !51 6, 13, 20, 27,
publication of this notice, 6tc
h.tc h Wil 1be pub lis hed on· ·w
~ each week for si)( sue·
Public Notice
C'essive weeks. The last
publication will be made on
NOTICE TO
May 27, 1981, and the 28
s\~~1RJ'FCJ~r6
days
for answer
DEPARTMENT OF
menceon
that datewill
. com·
In case of your failure to
TRANSPORTATION
·
Columbus, Ohio
answer or 01 herW ISe
Aprltl, 1911
se~rond~~~~;qul~&lt;jd b~}vhl~ ContriCISiiiiLegal
Procedure , the final
CopT No.l1'263
·
hearing on this matter wil l UNIT PR CE CONTRACT
be held after the eKpiration
F-Hm •
of 28 days after the last day
Sealed proposals will be
of publicat ion 01 this notice received at the office of the
Director of the Ohio Depar·
or as soon thereafter as can tment of TranSI&gt;Qrtaflon,

You are herebv notifi ed
that you have been named

1

1!
1

ColumbUs, Ohio, unlll lO~Oo
A.M ., Ohio Standard Time,
Tuesday, May 5, 1981, for
improveme['ts in :
.
Athens and Meigs Coun·
tv, Ohio, on ATH·S.R. 7·
.00! - State Route 7, and
~ · 22 87)
~EG
·sA
· · 7-!18 ,..,.
· State Route 7, by ·resur·
fating with asph•ll
con·
r
crete.
·
Pavement Width -

v'll'~~fectand war~ L~nn"'

.- 35,6J9feel or6.75 miles.
The Ohio Oepar\ment of
Transportation hereby
notifies all bidder~ that II
will affirmallvtiY insure
that In any contract en·
tered Into pursuant to this
advertisement, rlllnorlty
buslnessenterprl!le$wlll be
aHorded full opportunity to
submit bids in response to
this Invitation and :will not
,--- --------~--------~1 be discriminated against
on the grounds Of race,

PHONE 992·2156

I

or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept.
tSt p
0 45769
111 Cour
·• omeror, "

I Name
I

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

Address

,

1

1

I

a ANNOUNCEMENTS

Phone

1- C. rd oiTt~•n•u

l

·1 Pri nt one word

in

:1 itia l or group

of

in ·

figu res

I

·!
·

·. I
I
I

1
I
I
I
I

name and address or
phone number if used .
You'll get better results
if you d e~c r i be tull y,
give price. The sentinel
reserves the right to
cl ass ify, ed it or reject
any ad. Your ad wi II be
put in th e proper
clasific ation if you' ll
che ck t he pr oper bO)(
be low

) Wanted
·J r ) ForS ale
I
I Annou nce ment
I
l For Rent
1

I

,I
I
I

I 2· - - - - - -- . 1 3. - - -- - -- I · 54. - - - - - -- I , 6 ·- -- - - -- I· · - - - -- - - -

1

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aMERCHANDISE

ll-""'' "''" 0,.., .

u - euslntuTraining

ca . TV . hclioEquipment
sJ- Anliquu
s•- Mhc. Mtr(hflndiu
U - lu itding Suppllu
5 P
1
1

!S- sct~oolstnSiru( hon
10RodiO,

a FARM SUPPLIES

.

Thesec ashrates
inc lude di scount

•-: etl or • •

11- wuturcoo

f
17. - - - -- - --I'
,
18 -- - - - - -.
I•
19
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71- Trl.lcklforS.!t

s•

U- Proltuional

U - li''lntoc:..
U-H·~ &amp; Onin
u - Seftllll .. - •a =·.er

eREAL ESTATE

aTRANSPO.&lt;TAT,ION
,,_.,,.,,,s.,,

l !- HomU torSI It I

1J- Vans&amp; 4 W.D.

32- Mabllt+iomes

14- Motarc,des

""'"'

lor hie

H-

Jl- Farrnstorhlt

22' - - - - -- 23.- - - -- - -24 ,_ __ __ __ _
25. _ _ _ _.....;.___
26.- - - - - - -27. - -- - - - -28.________
29.________
30._ _ __ __ __
31._______
32._ _ _ _ _ _ _
33._ _ _ _ _ _

Mail This Coupon with Remittance
The Daily Sentinel
Box 729
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

u - wanted to luv

IUi inus

ODDOrtunlt~
lJ- Money to LOin

- -- -

16. - - - -- - -

• 1-Fum Equ ipment

• FINANCIAL
11-

I

lO.

&amp;LIVESTOCK

&amp;.ciiRe,.ir

I
I

the office Of the: District
Dell:::ty
Director.
Director I 1reserves
the '"'"'
right tO reject any and
all bids.
OAVIOC. WEIR
DIRIECTOR
Rev. B·17·73
C~ l 13, 20, ~tc
P bll N0 II
u c
NOTICETO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF

s

rv

&amp;Atctnor ,..

ll-Loll' • .,,.,,

lf-Re11 Est1tt Wnted

, _.,.,...

•SERVICES
01 - Homttmpmomenll

Wan!·Ad Advertising
Dud lines
1:JOP .M. Di l l~
11N~ Satwrll~

" - "'"'"'"•• "'""""'
u- 111"v1 u"'
,._.,..,,,.,,
llitttr lttrallon

::::~~':!:.~~ 11 " 1

forMono•v

11- Upholsltrr

. RatesandOtherlnformatton

\lW""'"' Un"'
1• .,

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1.11

~""'"
'·"
1.10

1·

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Afl rllrmlnt other thin COAIKWtiYt dlyl WIIIIM ctwlrf'llll II Ute111ty

1.10 .

liI :::;:

:::

:::

IIC:h word ovtr ''"minimum 11 worllsl'4 cent• Hrwtrd "' tay.

notlflft aiJ bidderl

""·

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tn '"''""'·

Ctrl .. . """ ....., ...,,I""",... wort, 01.11

M"'" Hom•••ttseMY.vll~et•••rt•cc•pllfCI Of1 1Y•tUtuthwltn

~:~~~~~~ ctttr c~t~rtt ror 111 urrvt"t

I;

~t

are on file• In lhe PtPart·
men! of Tre~etlon arid
the offl~e of fhe Olllrlct
Deouty Director.
· The Director r--.es
the right to reject any and ·
all blcfs.
.
DAVIDL.WEIA
DIRECTOR
Rev. 8· 17·73
!At 13,20,21, ___ ..
Public Notice

Need Money? Need
Clothes? WhY. not get your
wardrobe at
cost to you
and earn e•tra dollars too?
For Information or in·
terview appointment call

·no

992· 39~lbetween9-9.

,':P:an'

lo• N11tnbtr "' care., TM

•

Fashion Consultant needed
NOWI "Ladles fashion firm .
Average $8.00 per hour.
For appointment Interview
call 992 · 39~1 between 9·9.

Garage sale: Thursday,
April23 from 8·5, located at
241 Lincoln Street, Mid·
dleport. Swivel rocker, pic·
nlc table and benches, curtains, sewing rocker, lamps, pictures, bedspreads,
clothing and misc. Rain
dale Is the following Thur'
sday.
· 1

wanted to Buy: class,rlngo,
wedding bands, anything
stamped, lOK, l~K. or 18K
gold. Sliver coins, pocket
watches: Call Joe Clark at
99~· 205.4 at Clark's Jewelry
Store, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
CHIP WOOD. Poles max.
dia.meter U" on largest
end. $12.50 per ton. Bundled
slab. S10.50 per ton.
De.llvered to Ohio Pallet
Co., Rock Springs Rd. ,
Pomeroy 992·2689.

IRON AND BRASS BEDS·
Old furniture, desks, gold
rings, jewelry, sliver
dollars; sterling, etc. Wood
LOST : Grey Schnauzer Ice bo)(es, Iars, antiques,
that.answers to the name of etc. complete households .
Schultz. Lost In the Rock· Write: M.D. Miller, Rt. A,
Springs
vicinity. Pomeroy, OH 45769 . Or
REWARD. Phone Dick 'Clll992-7760.
Owen at 992-2651 or 992·
5627.
used, end antique fur·
nlture. No Item to large or
FOUND: White male doG to small. Will buy one piece
with red patches. Some or complete househOlds.
type sporting dog. Has let· Martin's General Store at
tars. K.J . , lalooed Inside 992·6370.
right eir. Found on Sliver·
svll le-Bald Knob Road, Now buying gold and
Long Bottom, Oh. Ph. 843· sliver, old poekej watches,
347~.
.
chains, diamonds, sliver
money an~ coins. ,Marlin's
LOST : Small black and General Store, Middleport.
white dog, 3 miles pest Fort 992·6370.
Mllgs.on ·Side Hill Rd. 742·
29A9 or 742-2601 or contact Color TY that doesn'l·wark.
Gloria' Malone or John and 992·203A.
.
Pal Moore.

11
HtlpWaLOST' Reward offered for
a grey •114 whitt long Wanted. Share ride to
haired 1tm11t .cat 10.1 In Athens, hrs. 8·5, Mon.· Fri.
the Balhan·Bald Knob Call992·3390 after 6:30p.m.
Kerrs Run area.
lret.9t5-429S.

Wil l do housecleaning. E&gt;1 ·
per ienced Call985·386l.
Rug weav ing . 9925971 .

21

'

Business
Opportunity

- --'= ===-- -

LOG HOM~S . lactory
direct ,
dealersh i p
ava ilable,
investment
required, unlimited income
potential. Call Mr . Stocey,
1·800·.138·9528.

RNIIotete- General

h

..

011 '&gt;in r

Ht.'.IC lcttt.trWrs

l

iA

Household Gooch
USED COUCH, S20, 1¥1
Brownell Ave., Middleport.

.

Antiques
ATT-ENTION :
(IM ·
PORTANT TO YOUJ Will
pay•cash or certified check
for antiques and collec·
tibles or entire estatu.
Nothing too large. Also,
guns, packet w•!Ches and
coin coll"tions. Call 614·
767·3167 or 557·3A11 .

S4
Mise, Merchenlse
POOLS :
SWIMMING
PRE · SEASON
SALE : $999.00
IN ·

: "YOUNGS
CARPENTER

1

TERMITE agel

Sl

~ERVICES"

PEST CONTROL

-Addonsand
remOdeling
- Roofing and gutter
work
- Concrete work
- Plumbing and
electrical work
(Free Estimates 1

Roa c hes ,
Birds ,
Rodents, Spiders, Fleas,
Ants and other small in·
sect control .
FREE ESTIMATES
1 or s ye11r termite
guarantee tt
Located in Gallipolis
·Ph. 614-446-2801
3·27·1 mo.

ATHENS SPORT
CYQ.ES
Stimson Ave. Atl\ens,
Hours:
Weds.·Fri . 9-7
Sat. 9·S
Closed

Mon .· Tues. 9-6

V.C. YOUNG II

992-6215 or 1&gt;92-7314
~omeroy ,

Oh.

~L~~~~~e~~vrn~~~~~ t:====:::;===-:::t";========:::-t=========

0

..,,.,..h

~~~~
~iiiiiD
732 ___
• ReaiEState
M_o~
bileHome$

4

for Sale
31
HomestorSale
--· .. ·- - · - Brick house on wooded tot. .t acres ~ with 2 bedroom
Three bedrooms large k't! trailer 7Q)(U , 2 car oarage,
chen,' family ro~m . doUbl~ 3 miles from Racine on Co:
garage, deck . Mid·Sixties. Rd . 28. Bflorel2 noon or af·
992·5420.
ter5pm . 949·2618.
Si)( room house on Rosehill .
Beaut iful 1.12 acre selling.
Basement and garage. Low
fifties . 61H78·2513.
'
Beautiful three bedroom
ranch brick home in Baum
Addition, Pomeroy. Ohio.
Gas heat. central air . Call
992·2511, ·9S5·4U5 or 1-687·
6429.

Three or four bedroom
house,: carpet , fireplllce
sundetk, two car garage, 2
and o1e ha lf acres. Lovely
settinq on SR 7 North. 992·
7741.
32

Mobile Homes
lor Sale
1973 l.~wn Haven, 14 x 65,
three djooms, new car·
pet. 19 1 Cameron, U • 64,
two bedrooms, new carpet.
1972 Champion, 12 Kl&gt;il, two
bedrooms, new carpet. 1976
Cameron, 12 x 60, two
bedrooms, al l electr ic. 1971
Skyline. 112SK 61. two
bedrooms, bath II. t;, , new
carpet. 1970 PMC ,
12 x 60, two bedrooms, new
carpel. B x S Sales, Inc.,
2nd x Viand Street. Point
Pleasant, wv Phone 675·
.U2~ .

IO'x48' trailer with 2 added
rooms 12')(42' on lot in
Syrac.use. $11,000 .. 99~· 5065
or 992·5886.

starting al$999.00. Price In·
eludes pooL deck, fence,
under liner
normal
con·
filler.
andground
Installation
dt'l1"ons. Free •hop
at home
;;o
service. CaiiHIIIO·m ·8511.

Two month spring Special
for upholstering furn iture.
Richard Mowery, Sr .
Owner. 615·415-t.

AT
POMEROY

35

Lots &amp; Acreage
8 acres more or less for
sale. S11 ,000. 992·2292.
Five acres of land on
Hysell RuQ Road. SJOOO.OO.
992-7237. .
Real Estate- General

DILLON
.REAL ESTATE
4 ACR E5 of vacant land
on hardtop road. Ideal
building site or trailer
19t.
I ACRE on han;ltop
road, 1 mile from Mid·
dlePOrt . All set up for
trailer or home site.
2 5TORY duplex . Close
to schools, shopp ing and
pool.
2 OR 3 BEDROOM cot·
lage with 2 acres of
land, just off Rt. 7.
Fay Min ley
Branch Mgr .
I' hone 992·2598

Houses for Rent
2 bedroom house, stove,
refr igerator, carpeted ,
remodeled kitchen &amp; bath
In Pomeroy. 5195. mo. plus
util. Call after 6 p.m. 992·
2288.
~I

LANDMARK
AWIDE SELECTION

-

~LANDMARK

E. Main St.

985 _3561

AL LMAt&lt;ES

• Cili)Os.ls
eohn ..u.t~en

eoryers

•Hotw~Terhn~s

•R•nt•s

56
Pets for Sale
Put a cold nose In your life.
Contact the Mei~s County
Humane Society at 992·
6260 . One english setter,
shepard . collie type pup·
pies, 4 weeks old .
Miniature shephard dober·
man type, black and tan
coon dog . Lab type. Two
adults cats. 992·6260.
Purebred
German
Shephard puppies. 6 weeks
old . 669·5061 .

--·.····-_.... ... .
'

,., '

I. ""' ""
..s,.'"'"""'""

'''" "'""''"

elnsulation
•Storm Doors
• Storm Windows
tR enlacement
W;dows
Free Estimate
James Keesee

Ph. 992 -7583
3-24 1 mo.

Ph. 992 ·2772
3·231mo.

BAILEY'S SHOES

J&amp;C

322 N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

ROGER HYSELl'S
GARAGE

SANITATION
SERVICE

-Auto and Truck
Repair
- Transmission
Repair
Hrs.: Mon .·Fri.
9 A.M.·l :lO P.M.

Trash Pickup In
The Village of
Middleport, Oh.
Ph . 992·5016
or 992-7505
4·17·tl c

. 992-5682
10· 7 ti c

ARD

I &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

BISSEU
SIDING CO.
"Beautiful, Custom
Built Garagesu
Call tor free siding
estimates, 949-2801 or
949·2160.
No Sunday Calls
·
31 1 tic

All Models

A v a.table

LE O MORRIS
R t. l Side Hill Rd .
R utlarld . 01'} .

2 9 tic

.... . .

&amp; LIVIS!Itk

197~

AluminumSiding

lensive remodelin4 '
eEiectricalwork
e Roofing work
12 y ears
Experience
Greg Roush

PARTSANCSEAvt c e

.w..htr'

J&amp;l BUMN
ON
Ill
INStJlATI
V1"nyl &amp;

Pomeroy

~

- ··. . -....

For'P'ut Sl!rV i(l!

YOUR LAWN
G... _ POMEROY

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

l:'~'Z.: ti,\~:~~~~n'!~"':Y:'::"~~~

Call
" Ken Young

Effective 4·6·81
MON. thru SAT.
9 to 5
Closed Thursday
4-9· 1 mo. pd.

·nuick Tops!

CENTRAL REALTY

"

ROUSH
.CNew
ONSTRUCTION
Homes - e),: -

"""''"

SERVICE

NEW STORE HR

61

t,./1.. .... -1/.t-$

'PPU 1 NCE

OF SHRUBS
FOR LANDSCAPING

Farm Equipment
3 bed•oom house . $200. Used R·&gt;IO Ditch Witch
\II ROIL I. ~~~~
1---------~ month , $100. deposit . Trencher. 1-614·694-7842.
f1• E. Socond Street
References. Close Ill mine
1. 742·2126.
NEW
LISTING
12K70"
Four 15,000 gallon tanks
Phone
mobile home with buill·
located above ground at
l:.(!!4l ·99.2-3325
42
Mobile Homes
on addition on 5 acres,
Athens. Ohio. 53,000.00
tor Aent
2-3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
NEW LISTING - 112
each. Phone 1·30&lt;1-422·2781 .
central air, garage,
acre cattle farm . Good
2 bedroom Mobile Home.
small pond. Owner will
mostly new barb wire
Adults only . Brown' s 4 14,000 gallon tanks
help fi nance. $26,900.00.
. fence . 4 bedroom ranch
Trailfr Court, Minersville. located abOve ground at
SOUTHERN DISTRICT
home, full basement,
992·3324:
Athens, Oh . 53,000. each. I·
- Nice 2 bedroom home
woodburnlng furnace,
30~ · 422 · ~781 .
on Iaroe lot. Fully in·
free gas, large barn,
Two
tra
il
ers
for
rent
,
fur
·
su lated, wood burner to
gralnery and some stan·
nished, alr conditioning,
supplement forced air
dlllg'tlmber . $10,000.
cable
tv. 773·5651 .
heat.
Full
basement.
................
AT. 33 NORTH - 3
$29,900.00.
bedroom ranch, bath,
NEW CONSTRUCTION
Forseleor rent ; 3 bedroom
&lt;lty water, nat. gas fur·
- 3 Bedroom ranch
mob ile home with expando 71
nace, wood cabinets In
Autos lor Sale
home on 1 acre lot. Elec.
on latge rented lot. SR 1.13,
teh kitchen, hardwood
baseboard heat, 2
furn ished, with washer and 1979 Corvette; mint con·
floors and abOut one
garages. $39,900.00.
dryer, new carpet and dition; low mileage with all
acr~&gt; $30,000.
·
Reasonably
R~CINE
Furnished
5
aluminum
bu i ld i ng . options .
POSSIILE - A nice
r~m house with 3 car
$5400.00. H2·3025 or 992· priced. After 5 call 378·6117
subdivision on small
or 378·6293.
basement garage, 2
3027.
farm . Over 30 acres of
bedrooms, gas heat.
nice laying farm land.
$33,000.00.
Ideal for diVIding. Good
2 bedrOO&lt;TV Mobile Home. For Sale: 1979 Trans Am
MULBERRY AVE . for lnvnlment minded
with western wheels,
Racine area . 992·5858.
An elegant H bedroom
raiSed white ie»er redia Is,
person. $53,000.
home, full basement,
loaded lor $63110.00 or best
SHIP·SHAPE - 7 room
2 bedroom Mobile Home, offer. 992·5620.
50X100 lot. Many extras.
Insulated older ome
tun !Shed, adults preferred.
$33,000.00.
'
with l bedrooms, built·
Deposit. 99~ · 2749 .
MIDDLEPORT - Han·
In stove, dishwasher,
dyman's Special , 2
fumace, basement and
powerNovasteering,
Hatchbackpower
35(),
bedrC&gt;Om hOuse on large
lots of carpeting. 2.65
brakes,
body's
In
real
good
tot. Could be trailer $ile.
acres of level garden
44
Apartment
9926786
1'/,000.00.
land. Neat for &amp;.43,000.
for Rent
~~~-~~~'
offer.
1
WE
HAVE
OVER
10
. 1"1 HILLCREST - 2 h
TWo bedroom furnished
PROPERTIES TO
baths. 3 bedrooms, nice
"apartment . 992 - s.IJ~ or 1· 1973 Chevy' Impala. Small
CHOOSE FORM. STOP
carpellft9, exlro room
V·8, new paint &amp; tires.
B'f AND LET US HOW
30H82· ~566.
and nlco equlrpld kit·
Asking S950. 992-5388.
THEM
TO
YOU.
chen . Wll
take
. REALTOR •
Sl2,1100.00 for quick sale.
Furnished 2 bedroom up·
Henry 1! . Cleland, Jr .
" MODIA·N HOME Trucks for Slit
stairf apartment. Adults 12
ASSOCIATES
Nicely carpeted 3
only, . no pe1s. Middleport. 1977 Ford pickup with
Joan Trussell 949-lMII
bedrooms, 2 biths, lovo·
992 · 387~.
32,000 miles. 6 tires, good
Roger &amp; OO!tlt Turner
Jy kitchen with dining,
topper, 6 cylinder. 9A9·20A8.
"2· U92
and gillS door to 1~•~6
11bedrOQm furnished apart·
OFFICI! "2-2259
pella. Gar age and 'h
ment in Middleport. All
acre of lend. Only
utilities paid. S200 . month. 7,.4,__..!M!!o~t~o~rc!&lt;.ly~c!!le'!.s__
$.13,500.
Days 992·55.45. even ings 1978 Yamaha .SO Special In
949·2216.
Ht11tsim1
good condition. 7,900 miles.
$1300.00. 7f·302.5 or 992·
45 . , Furnisftod Roams
Ht.'.Jt /q11.1rters
3027.
SIZES 8-20 10 ~-20 Y2
Sleeping rooms; by the
week . Kitchen , and
RNI EStill
television lounge. Carryout 11
camping
store and restaurant within
Equipment
500 leet. 992·6370. '
Camper for Hit: 1917
.
Private sleeping rooms, per.
Palomino
Folds folddown
out to 22 cam·
foot
with cOOking facilities, air with all equipment. 742·
IEAUTIFUL HOME .IN RACINE, OH. - Well kept,
of IIIIUIIIIon tor Konomy, tlll·out · easy clean
conditioning and cable tv. 2336..
· ~~. 3 flnllhld floors of living spate.. Call and
173·.5651 .
you this- · Asidng S57 ,5110. ·
111 us~
TWD
N•W LISTINGS - Both elklng)21,500. Tup·
46
Speu lor Rent
pen PIIIM erN . country hOmes. I
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
OWN.RS LEAVING AR•A - 3 BR brick hOme
Hontt
Perk, Aoufe 33, North of 11
kiM to New Ravenswood Bridge ' Kaiser Plant.
Pomeroy. Lorge lots. Call
•· Improvements
~hll 1101\le II tltln, hal F. P. end much Of lhl fur·
992-7479.
nllure lnd IPPIItnces can bl negotiated. 1~ mor·
Gene's . Carpel Cltlnlng,
can
be
IllUmed.
ASking
$39,9110.
.
19101
de9P stream extraction.
C:I41ST.R ARIA_ l mile off At. 7. 3 BR home,
TRAILER spiCes for rent. Free
estimated,
lit-In ll'ltchtn, formal OR, extre sp~clous LR fo~
Southern Valley Mobile reuonebl' retes. scot·
Home Perk, Chtlhlre, Oh. chquard. 992-6309 or 742992·3tSI.
2211 .
countrY . cloNIO town 11VIft9. Hal ftnced In er~ :;
lmels lbOVI! ground swimming poo' •
Clmpeltes for rent on French City· Painting.
: ; '~•tr..l. oWner may help finance. Prictd at
scenic riverbank. Ullllllos Rnldentlll, commercl~l,
peld. Small trailers only. Interior.
ullrlor .
~~~IS PLAINS - we1i kepl3 B. A, ranch on
P-773·.5651 .
Sptellllzlng in Interior
, . - 1111 Feetures wood burner In brick selllf111.
cir';t, Oak trim, IJIIriiJI, wltto low treating bills.
1':~~~':,~ Pl~n::rv'~!
Pricwd In !hi low 30's.
3 IR
ntlmeltl.
·:M7-771A or :167·
"
'
. . .DIVILL. VILLAG• ~ 1'12 storY
fOi
rtmDdlltld kllehlfl, with IOIICIS of cabinets. Large
71.0.
.
'
wtm 11rc11n~u~!fo\uv oR sELL
S1
WILL do plumbing,
NIIICY Ja....,.- Assocllle
,
roofing,
Jllnllng,
PH.IOII7S
Comlllnellon radio end remodeflnt a elec1r1CII
record player In good cond· worlt. F- esllma'-. Cell
Vlrtltlla Hayllllft- AsSOCiate
tlon.llS. 992·3079.
PH.~1f7
'·

..

Sentinel-

Business $ervices ·

Full slzo bod, 175.00. Phone
1·30H82-'2755. .
'

24 acres with Ohio River
frontage,
furnished 4 room
ALTERATIONS &amp; general
sewing, experienced, work house. fuel oil furnace &amp;
guaranteed . M. Meier. 992· · drilled well across from
Kaiser. 949·2296.
5983.

Flnanelal

Yard Sale

Yarct Sale : at 137 Pearl
Street in Middleport. Thur·
In memory of my dear sday and Friday, April 2A,
father, Ben Eblin, who 25from 9to ?.
would have been 75 years
old, Aprll17, 1981. ·
Ladies AUKiliary at the
Although you are gone, the Rutland Church of God Is
memory of "/04J is very having a yard sale at
close in hellr1 .
Stanley Ounc&amp;n's farm i"
Happy Birthday Dad.
Bradbury on Friday, April
Your loving Daughter, 2Ht9a.m.
Mrs. Bonnie Krautter,
Pomeroy.
9
Wanted to Buy
,.---~---~-- WANTED
TO BUY :
3. -~A~n~n""ou..,n~c_..,em,_.e....n.._,t,._
sGOLD ,
SILVER ,
1 PAY highest prices PLATINUM, STERLING·
COINS, RINGS,JEWELR ·
possible fa r gold an d s·lve
1
r Y, MISC . ITEMS. AB·
coins, rings, jewelry, etc.
MARKET
ContactEd Burkel! Barber SOLUTE
PRICE GUARANTED." ED
Shop, Middl~port.
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP, MIDDLEPORT,
Racine Volunteer Fire OHIO 992·3~76.
Department sponsors a
shot gun &amp; rifle match
every Sat. night 6:30 p.m. OLD COINS, pocket• wat·
at their building In Bashan. ches, class rings, wedding
Factory choke 12 guage bands, diamonds. Gold or
shot guns only. Open sights silver. Call J. A. Wamsley,
Treasure !=hest Coin Shop,
22 rifle.
Athens, OH. 594· ~221 .

. . PUBLIC NOTICE
The Tuppers PlainsChester Wafer District Is
now accepting sealed bids
on the following :
A 1975 pick up truck, F·
150, long bed, stylestde; 4
Giveaway
Automatic transmission,
6050 BFW; 360 V·8, using Calico cat, female;
regular fuel; western beautiful to good home. 74~·
mirrors; power brakes, . 3164
step bumper, mud ana
snow !Ires, 8 ply, with
delu•e Interior, red In 6
Lost"and Found
color.
.
,
.·
Bids will be accepted at LOST : Male light brown
Water office and· will be and white cat wearing a
oepened at 12:00 noon on white flea collar. Lost In
May U, 1981. the TP·CWD . the Middleport aree on
reserves the right to reject Saturdaynight. Ph. 992·
any and all bids.
6376.
(41 22.29 (51 6, 3tc
LOST: Gold wedding band
with
an Inscription inside
.. ''
_,.,,' '
bearing a 1800's date .
REWARD. Phone992-7315.

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

7

ff

,l------------------------J IL------,----::--~- - --.,--....if 'be dllcrlmlrw~l ..-lnst
I

5525

will tfflrmellvelll lnaure
that In any conti1ect .,. STOBARTS GrltlllloUM II
ttrtd Into IIUI'IUI to IIIII now optnld, Ills locelwd on
~~~~-l:fljl~ R.c:lne AI. 2, C.A. 1110.
effordld full ~lty to H11191ng INIIkeh&amp; btcldlnt
plants. Veoetebles' plants
J::l:'l~~fr.'tTo!,"
~ olalt
kinds,

"''"'"''"'·c"hl"''"""·

J:
I•

on
raceI
color, or national orlglnt
In consideration of an
award.
"Minimum wage rates
·for thiS proJect have been
gredelermir;ied
n r~ulred
and •re
Y 1aw
• set f..-.
"""' in
thebldproposel ."
"The date set for com·
plellon of this wOf'k shall be
set forth In the bidding
pr="l .~ldder shall be
r-ulred
to file with hll bid
~ ...
a certified ch.c:k . or
cashier's check for an
amount equal to 11¥1 per
cent of ftil bid, but In no
tVI!nl more than fifty
lhoUIIInd dollars, or a bond
lOr ten per cent of his bid,
payable to !he Dlr~.
Bidders must apply, on .
the prOCJtr forms, for
quallflcaflon at lent ten
days prior to !he dele set
for opening bids In .c:·

Card of Thonks
Columbus!· Omo
Racine Volunteer Fire
Atrll3, n~
Department ~lshes to ••·
Contr1ct S1ln L~l
COiy
tend their thanks to the
UNlTNO.JilPRIC
people who helped out the
CONT"ACT
1'111
Fire Department In their
RS-fU(I) ,
gun shoot and hope to see '
S.ll~ pr~IS ~M~ you ell again this fall .
received atll\e office of the
Director Of the Ohio DtDai"·
lment of TranspOrteflon 3, . __A=nno=u.:.:nc;:;e,.,m:::en=ts,__
ColumbUs, Ohio, untlllO:OO A.M., Ohio Standard Time, IT'S BEELINE'S Show and
Tutlday, May 5, 1911, tor ITell Tlmelllll Our new
IT.cwementiln: I
. •Ill• end MilliS coun: spring and summer line Is
now available and Is II un·
t~'Jlf"!~· ff.~A~~:· J~ . believablellll Give us e
and MEG·S.A . 7-!a.oo- call for more Information
1.671 - State Routt 7, by about this Interesting w.ork.
riiUrfKI119 With lspllalt Phone992·39Al from J-6.
concrete.
,
Pavement Wldtn - ,
LOCKSMITH
Service,
Varl".
··
Master Keying, Com·
_;~~~~:~or~~~~~~ blnatlons, Bonded. Cllt:
Thl Ohio Daparjment of New H&lt;!VI!h, w. Ve. 304·112·
Tranaportltlon hereby 2079.
'

,Auto Parts

In Memoriam
In memory of my husband,
Charles H. Hensley, who
passed away April22, 1972.
ApriI comes with sad
regrets,
The ijay, the month, 1 will
never forget.
For in my heart you will
always stay,
Loved and rememOered
everyday .
Lovingly and lonesome
Leona.
~

TRANSPORTAl,ION

11-AIIIOAtPii ~

)4- Builneu Buildings

"Minimum wage rates
for thiS proJect have been
predetermined aslequlred
bY law and are set[forth In
the"The
bid proposal."
date set for com·
pletlonol this work shall be
set forth In the -bidding
prQPOSal."
Each bidder sMII be
required to file With his bid
a certified check or
cashier's check for an
amount equal to five per
cent of his bid, but In no
event more than fifty
thousand dollars. or a bond
for ten JMr cent of his bid,
payable to the Director.
Bidders must apPly, on
the prgper forms, for
qualification at least ten
dly$ priOr tO the date set
for opening bldsl In accordance with Ch..,ter 5525
Ohio Revised Code
Plans and spec:ilitcellons
are on file In the [)epart.
ment~Transpc&gt;rt,tlonand

,1-

I , _Hel~tw 1 ntMI

:I· 15.- - - -- - - I
I
,L

•a- Equ ipm ent tor Atnt

12 - Situatld Wlllftd
ll- ln1uranu

'I

·1

H - Wantfli to lhnt

SERVICES

7._ _ __ _ _
I . a·- -- - - - -1 9. _ _ _ _ _ _ _
I 10. - - - -- - I· 11 . _ _ _ _ __
,
1
• 12.
11· 13·- -- - --.,.-- - 35
34. --------~
_ _______
1:.
I' 14. - - - -- - '·- ·

------.=---

•s- F Rooms
.,_ Space tor Rent

9- Wante&lt;ltoBuy
• EMPLOYMENT

21. - -1. -----:-...:::- -

lor • .,...
H- AputmenllorRenl

1- YardS. Ie
t - Publ•( Salt
&amp; Auct ion

1 cou nts as a word. Count

I

42- MobUt Home~

• -G i ve•w~ y
s- Htppw Aas
6- lOl UnCI Fount!

each

I space below. Each

eRENTALS
t t- Houusto r Renr

Memomm
l - Announuments
J- rn

Public Notice
the grounos 01

~~IC:r~~~~·~fo;;gin~~
b&lt;::"~~·~~~='c~~
award.
,
Plans and ~lflcetlons

WANT AD INFORMATION

1

11

I1
1I Wr ite your own ad and order by mail wilh I hi s I'
couPOn . Cancel your ad by phone w'1 en you get f
·I results. Money nolrelundable .
1'
I
1
1
I·
1

- ·- Public Nofi~~

Public Notice

Will do all types of car·
penfer work . Experienced
and re!lponsibte. No job to
big or to small. Phone 992·
39~1 anytime.

7680.

Sm.all investment, large returns, Sentinel Want Ads

Public Notice

18
Wanted to Do
Furnace repairs, electr ical
work, plumbing, mobile
home or residence. 9925858.

TheDa

rK_rr-~.._c,A.R_h.:..Y.:.LE:.'_"_ _.._:..__by~La-rry.,;...W_n..;g:...,ht st

In need of work, Ex·
perienced
sk idder
operator ," ' bulldozer
· operator and truck driver.
Call992·5776 or 99i·32B8.

Will cere for elderly in ou"
WANTED. People to sell home. Man, woml!ln, or
Avon. work your own couple. Trained and ex·
·hours. ·Parl·tlme or full perienced. 992·73U.
tim. If Interested call 742·
Repair or remodeling
. 235.4 or 7A2:27r work. flooring, doors, wall
paneling, ceiling, or floor
Part time e~ployee needed tile,
siding. 992·2759.
. , by Humane Society for
emergency ~nimal re5cue
agent. fo\ust be over 21 , Hllve vacancy to care for
have vehlcl &amp; current elderly' or invalid .
- drivers lice se. Must be Reasonable. 992-1&gt;022.
,able to read &amp; write &amp; con·
verse Intelligently wilh
·public. Neat appearance a
· must. Mileage paid &amp;
. salary negotiable. Write In· ll
Insurance
·terests &amp; qualltications to AUTOMOBILE
IN ·
Box 682, Pomeroy, Oh su RANCE bee n can ·
.c5769. Prefer Middleport. celled?
Lost . your
·Pomeroy, . · Rutland operator's license? Phone
resident Phone necessllry.

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

---

Jeport, Ohio

ALL STEEL

REESE~

C&amp;AAUTO REPAIR

Farm_Bu(ldings

110 ' ttl Sl., R Aclne . I) h.

Sizes
" From JOxJO"
SMALL

TRENCHING
SERVICE

PH . 949·2777

• Complete Auto and

Truck Repa ir
Automatic
Transmiss ions on
most American Model
Cars.
• S22S.OO Parts &amp; Labor
P'us Fluid.
• 24
Hour Wrecker ;

• Rebuilt

Utility Buildings

water·Sewer· E lectric
Gas Line-Ditches
water Line Hook ·ups
septic Tank.s

Sins from 4d to 1211:41

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

county cert1f1ed

Rl. l, Box S4
Racine, Oh .
Ph. 61H43·2l91
6 15 ti c

Roush Lane
Cheshire, Oh.
Ph.l67-7S60 •.

. tJ ti C

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

Service

*Triple A Affiliated .
4·6· 1 mo .

Mlu.ER ELECTRIC.
SERVICE .

J&amp;F
ENTERPRISES

For all of your wir· :
ing needs .
Let George Miller check •

• Backhoe
• Excavating

a Septic Systems
e water, Sewer &amp; Gas

GOING BALD!

your pr esent electrical : '

system.
Res idential

Lines

Can't ht:lp you.

• Dump Truck

TIRES GOING BALD?

.

&amp; Commercial

Licensed &amp; Bonded

We ha\'f Firestone 721 s and"'

can htlp.

Call742-3195
or 992-7680
2-B·ttc :

PH. 992-7201

POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO

:

L------~~P:h:
. ':92=·=20=f4===2·=23=·1:m:o:. J~:;;:;::;4~·1;5:·1:m:o;.:j=;:=~=;~-Rutland Furniture ·Carpet Shop
SPRING CARPET SALE

ouallty Buill
Economically Priced

BUILDINGS

'n' Ca

2 Rolls
Rubber Back

KITCHEN
CARPET
From
1

7.~ &amp; up
Installed

speclflcollons. Models
In Melli, Galli• and
Mlson Counties.
FREE ESTIMATES
All Buildings
oueronteed

SHAG

From

Reg. S1S.95

12.95 &amp; up

$799 sa.

1

Yd .

Installed ·

Buy Now &amp; Save 52·56 Per Yard .
25 rolls carpet in stock to pick from.

Regular backed carpet installed free,
with pad.
' Drive A Little - Save A Lot

- -

PH. 367·7671
Or 367•7560

RUTLAND FURNITURE

~~=C:H:E:S:H:I:R:E:,:4:·1:2:·tf=c~.:::M:a:i:n:S:f:.=====t:=::::;;~74~2~·~22~1;1~

H. L WRITESEL
NG
ROOFI
All types
ol' root work,
now or re!l"ir gutters
1nct down5'pouts, gutter
cleaning and painting.
Allwork guoranteed.

1

Fr• Es1'"''t"
Reuonable Prices
Call Howard
949-216~

949·2160

~ + tic

12
Plumbing
_ _ _,&amp;""H,_,N
= " :::c
nt..___
WATER
WELLS .
Domestic and commercial,
pump ules and service.
Tom Lewis Drilling.
s..-.1 dlscliunt on pum·
pt. 1·30A·"5·ll02 or 1·30A·

"5-:..1.

E
t'
13
xcavo ong
COMPLETE sever in
stallation '&amp; backhoe ser·
VIC. fo r Racine-Syracuse
sewer district. Doze• work
il needed. 949-2 293 ·

84

Electrical

&amp; Refrigerollon

.,
SEWING MACHIN&lt;'
Repairs , service, all
makesl 99~ · 2284 . The
Fabric Shop, Pomero~ .
Authorized Singer Saleo
and Serv ice. We sharpen
Dltchtr work. Gas·Water· Scissor!.
·
Electric installed. 7~2· 2819
before9 :00 p.m.
Ava ilable to handle all yoUr
work . Small jobs a electrical needs. Repairs,
wiring, re·wlrlnt, 1 ~­
specl
7A2·2753.
stallatlon, modlflcaiiOfll,
revision•,
residential,
farm, business. No lob to
large or to small. Available
immediately. Bill Cadle 11
M
Electrical
992·7182.
&amp; Relrlgerollon

'
BOWERS
R~PAIR Sweepers,
toastors, Irons, all small
aPI'I lances. Lawn mower.
Ne•t to State HighWay
Gar age on Route 7, 985·
3825.

ELWOOD

85
Gtntrll Hauling .
Well's Trash Hauling. u:OO
per month . Olive Mid
orange Townshlpa afld
surrounding areas. 9153518.

�i.

16-The

Pomeroy-M

· ·-~F~ T~

·.,~.:;.;,

Village funds total;

~~%*-::::&gt;~

!;_,

'

The total of.aU Middleport VIUage

FE RROALLOVS DIVISIO~

monies u of March 31 amounted to
~.366.54, according to~ mCintbly

report of VIllage Clerk Jon Buck.
Receipts, expenditum, respectively, for the month and the balance
of each fund at the end of the month
follow: gener.al, $10,497.96,
$18,0611.21; $10,411.02; street light, no
receipts, $1,019.63, $8,526.87;
cemetery, $463.76, 11,827.56, $507.86
deficit; fire equipment, f150,
$1,42'1.59, f828.92 deficit; swimming
pool, no receipts, $35.75, f2,789.33;
fire truck, no receipts, no dl!bur·
8ements, $22,~.70; plannillg commission, no . receipts, no disbur·
sements, $256.73; street main-

GRAHAM PLANT
t

.Resignations still big question

Ohio

l

•

Commission given strong support

~. e1,383.11, t6;57UO, tllO.Ol
deficit; llln8t levy, no ~. no

dl!bur8ements, t4,827.:!8; federal
revenue · sbarlng, no receipu,
t4,720.'17, t3,38U3; HUD;
P4,1311.57; f2,D).81; general
retirement, no recelpia, no dli!Jur.
sements, ,18,2&amp;5.116; 18111tary ~.
S6,081.41,' $9,738.78, $12,276.08;
· sanitary alewer e!ICI'O'II', no recelpta,
$9,159.07) $179,233.17; water,
$10,1f1.21, $7,727.33, $42,012.17;
water rnMer lrwlta, $150, $176.26,
te;040.13; water tank, fi,OOO, no
disbursements, $133,1169.24.
Receipts for the month totaled
$70,877.~ whlle .dllbursements
amountecl to $81,606.38.

t3fQ

. - 11Y BOB H~EFUCH
Whether any Me!gs County Commlsaloners will restgO as a result_ of
problems. over a strike ~y deputies
of the Metgs Cowtty S~s Deparbnent remained a question at noon
today.
More than 100 residents demo~
strated strong support for the boa~d
of cnunty commtsstoners at a· pubhc
mee~ staged l!lte this morning in
the Metgs County.Co~room
When. the corrurusstoqers entered

the
.
they were giVen an
enthusiastic . ound of applause by
the larg~ cr d on hand. ~o of
them-Henry WeDs and Richard
Jones-had
cated ~t the~ would
resign from
posttions if, _they
could not agree to approve a work
union for the ~j!puties by noon todarThe third comrrusstoner IS Davtd
Koblentz.
· Several pet~S~ns . a~ssed
. ·t~e ·
crowd this mOft!ng. The gisj Pf thetr
comments was that they f~ that the

Commission
seeks landfill
.

..
SAFETY AWARD W~ERS - Pictured above are Foote
Mlueral Plant Production Department "D" shift employees who were
presented with safety awards for safe years worked wlt.houtlost time for
Injury. Front row, leflto right, George McFarland, Boyd McDaniel,
Charles Wheeler, Charles WUlelt, Martin Stanley, Jerry Cremeans,

Harvey VanVranken, Dallas McGuire, Joe Keathley and WHIIam Beard,
plant manager, who made the presentations; back row, left to right,
Kenneth Mllblbacb, Lester Taylor, Earl Mouman, Charles Byus, Dendi ·
Legg, Simon Johnson, Bob Bishop, Keanetb Impoden, Larry Hoschar
and Gerald Sellers. Not pictured is Conley Dudley.

Foote Mineral production .department
employees presented safety awards
WiUiam Beard, plant manager at
Foote Mineral Company's New
Haven Plant, presented the employees of the production depart·
ment's " D" shift wjth safety
awards denoting safe years worked
without lost time injw-y.
The awards are gold pins showing
the Foote Mineral Company logo
encircled by the words "Foote
Mineral Safety Award."
Awards are presented to employees upon completion of each

five -year p~rioa of safe employment. Those working safely for
live, 10 or 15 years receive pins
showing the corresponding number
or years. Employees completing 20
safe years receive pins containing a
sapphire gemstone and those
completing 25 to 30 years receive •
pins with two-point or four-point
diamonds.
Each employee .tso received a
hat decal showing the number of

years or safe employment.
Receiv ing awards and decals
were Joe Keathley,28years, Conley
Dudley, 26 years, George
McFarland, 21 years , Boyd
McDaniel, 19 years, Charles
Wheeler. 18 years. Charles Willett,
16 years. Martin Stanley, 15 years,
Kenneth Miihlbach, 14 years,
Lester Taylor and Earl Mossman,
13 years. Charles Byus and Bob
Bishop, 12 years, and Dencil Legg
and Dallas McGuire, 11 years.
Emp loyees . receiving decals

.

costs and three days in jail, driving days in • jail, driving while in· Pomeroy, $21 and costs each, speed;
while intoxicated; Cheryl Varian, toxicated; Dwayne Priddy, Man- Michael King, New Haven, and
Russells Point, $30 and costs, loud sfield, $225 and costs, three days in ' Brian Grindstaff, Hacine, $28 and
muffler; Bruce Miller, Parker· jail, driving while intoxicated;
costs each,
ThomasCurfman,
Pawley,
Ohiospeed;
and Timothy
sburg, $100 and costs, and Clarence Lucille Wise, Pomeroy, $50 and Sabina,
Henshaw, Parkersburg, $100 and Cilsts, disorderly manner; Tonya Hacine, $20 and costs each, speed;
costs, both on charges of public in- Moris, Rutland, $50 and costs, disor- Otis Short, Pomeroy, $1ii0 and costs,
toxication.
'
derly manner; Phillip W. 10 days confinement, seven days
Forfeiting bonds were Kathryn Rasmussen, Middleport, $15 and suspended, six months probation,
Hubbard, Syracuse, $30 ; Dennis costs, speeding, and $25 and costs, obstructing official business;
Wolfe, Hacine, $30, and John Han- contempt of court; Terry Hannon, William Davis, Long Bottom, $Zi
dla, Rutland, $39, all on speeding ,Middleport, $50 and costs, disorderly . and costs, fishing without a license;
charges; Wllliam Redoutey, ,Por- conduct, and Norman L. Cummings, Neil J . Donnelly, Columbus, $24 and
limouth, 30, left of center; Rita Rutland, $150 and costs, reckless costs, excessive speed; Timothy
Herdman, Pomeroy, $200 and costs,
Hughes, Pomeroy, $100, hit skip; $50 operation.
five
days confinement, license
bond, driving under suspension;
Forfeiting $2ll bonds, both posted
suspended
for 30 days, DWI; Steven
Melvin Hill, Apple Grove. $50, traffic on speeding charges, were William
Staten,
A
then,
$22 and costs, speed;
lig~t violation ; Karrie Masters,
T. Williams, Pomeroy, and Carl
Thomas
Weyer,
Vienna, $27 and
Reedsville, $27, speeding.
Hooten, Hartford, W. Va.
costs, speed.
Eleven
defendants
were
fined
and
Forfeiting bonds were William
Seven defendants were fined and
four
others
f9rfeited
bonds
in
Meigs
McConnick,
Pt. Pleasant, $35.50,
two forfeited bopds in the eourt of
C
ounty
Court,
following
too
close; James H.
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
Fined
by
Judge
Patrick
O'Brien
Woodyard,
Rt.
3,
Pomeroy, $360.50,
Tuesday night.
were
Clara
Welsh,
Dexter,
$10
and
DWI;
John
Davis,
Jr.,
Syracuse, and
Fined were Clarence H. Easton,
costs,
left
of
center;
Donald
Hapson:
Robert F. Jeffers, Syracuse, $40.50
Bidwell, $225 and costs and three
Parkersburg and Ronald Birt, each, speeding.

Area deaths
George Wilbur Young

number of years.
Arrangements are being made at
the Brandt Funeral Home in Wayne.

' in the shooting of two
NEW ORLEANS - A police officer involved

people during Mardi Gras has been disrni$Sed on charges of violating
departmental regulations, police say.
In a letter from police Superintendent Heriry Morris, Detective Or·
man Walters was accu ed of negligence, failing to register his weapon,
violating dress codes and falling to remain at ·hislpost. Police said
Wednesday's dismissal had nothing to do with Walters' indictment
March 9 on two counts of negligent injury.

· Brady undergoes more surgery
WASffiNGTON - White House press secretary James S. Brady,
wounded in last month's assassination attempt on President Reagan,
underwent surgery Wednesday night to close a passage allowing air to
seep into his damaged brain.
' 'Everything is going .OK," Dr. Qennis O'Leary, a spokesman at
George Washington University Hosp,ital, said. "I don't think he's in
any danger."
The surgery came a few hours after doctors inserted two needles into Brady's head to release air trapped inside his brat?- O'Leary said.

-AND THE PROFESSIONS
BANK ONE Of POMEROY, NA

614/992·2133
~;;;;;;~;;;;:;;;;;;;:;;iiij;;i;j;j;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilii
1

Sarkis orders cease fire ·
BEIRUT, Lebanon- Fibbetween Syrian troops and Christian
militiamen tapered to sporadic exchanges of sniper fire in Beirut
today, tiut raged without letup in the Roman Catholi~ city of Zahle, 30
miles~ tlle eut. • .......
•
A cease-fire ordered Wednesday evening by LeJtanese President
Ellas ~rkis appesred to be taking hold today in the qtpital, ellcept for
occastonal bursts from srupers; as Synan and Christian tanks and ar. tillery fell silent.
It wa8 the 19th truce ordered by Sarkis since Sy.-18)1 artillery at·
tacked the Christians in Zahle on April1.

Eckrich

Former hostage accepts job

JUMBO BOLOGNA ••••••••••• ~·.~1.79

MOUNT VERNON, Ohio- Fonner hostsge Bert Moore, who's been
enjoying his freedom, family and roses since his release from Iran in
January, has accepted a foreign service assigrunent in Spain.
"You've got two choices in this world. You can look back at the past
or look forward to the future. It's a brightfuture," said the 4&amp;-year-{)Id
Moore, cowtselor for administration at the U.S. Embsssy in Tehran
when it was seized in November 1979.

.

WIENERS •••••••••••••• .1.2.~.~~ ..$1.29
Homemade

HAM SALAD ••••••••••••••••••• ~·. $1.39

Ohio Colby

LONGti)RN

CHEESE ........~~:.'2.19

'

Winning Ohio lottery number
ClEVELAND- The winning number drawn Wednesday in the Ohio
Lottery's daily game "The Nwnber" was 527.
The lottery reported earnings of $258,223.00 on the game.
The earning~~ came on sales of $937,947.50, while holders of winning
tickets are entitled to share S679, 724, lottery officials said.

POTATOES .........~~~. '3.69
3Ib. bag Winesap 8
fl
7
APPLES •••••••••••••••~!.
2 lb. baJ 1\lew Yellow ,
ONIOI5 ..............~~~. 99'
6 01. Cello Pack

Weather

RED RADISHES .....~~~~.19'

Mostly cloudy and cooler with a chance of showers tonight and
Friday. IRws tonight In the rnid-408. HJghs Friday in the mid to upper
50s. Chance of rain 50 percent tonight and 40 percent Friday. Winds
northwesterly 1().211 mph tonight.

FILUS •••••••••••••• ~ •• $1.97

ExlendetiObloForecut-SaturdaythroughMonday:Fairandcool
through the period. Hlghs In the 50s and low 60s. Lows mostly in the
30s.

Gallon Rich &amp; Ready

16 oz. Armour

.

A small delegation of students and
parents protested the resignations ol
three North Gallia High School
teachers during the Wednesday
night meeting of the Gallia Cowtty
Local Board of Education.
Following an hour-long executive
session on the matter, the board
agreed to recess until? :30 p.m. April
29, to learn the results of a hearing
with one of the teachers.
The resignations were submitted
by Paul Pettit, varsity basketball
coach and educable mentally retar·
ded (EMR) instructor; Lanita Wentzel, varsity girls basketball coach
and physical education instructor;
and Roger Whitacre, band director.
As a result of l!lst night's action,
Whitacre's resignation was withdrawn, but he was not recommended
for contract renewal. A hearing is
scheduled sometime during the
week for Wentzel, the board said.
Discussion centered around Pet·
tit's resignation, in which two
separate petitions were presented on
his behalf llY students and parents. A
spokesman for the parents told the
bOard they· felt hlhestgnation was
"forced" because of what they termed a "mistake."
Pettit had said the issue was bas.d
on a "few doUars worth of phone
calls" made illegally on the schdol
phone, which was also the reason at·
tributed to the resignations of Weilt·
zel and Whitacre.
The parent spokesman said acceptance of Pettit's resignation
might result in a no vote In the North
Gallia area for the school bond issue
facing voters April28.
Supt. Gary Toothaker said it was
an "inappropriate" tactic for the
spokesman to try to connect the
resignation with the bond issue.
Students under Whitacre said he
should be restored to his job next
year, but Toothaker lnfonned them
every avenue of settUng the dispute
with the band director had been used
by the board to no avail.
The board agreed to recess a
decision on Wentzel untO a hearing
has been held sometime within ttie
next week with an Impartial refereJ,
Pomeroy attorney Barbara Knight.!
Meanwhile, .in Gallipolis,
delegation of 100 pecple proteste!l
the diamissal of high school Prirr
cipal John Dunn, assistant principal
Ed Dill and football coach Bill Treni.
Trent was let go·on his coaching co~
tract only by a 3-2 vote.

a

IS..'Teclfies' Week, April &lt;-v-&lt;- H

UNE OF. QUALITY
~~ .

,.., ,.. o..,. •, r~. s .. ,

10, 0 b•o~ •· • ~l ... e1 10 ·~•" ~

• •o•~•o.. ,~~·

•on-•o~ •

""' ' ' ' t on•••" ol a lo•• '' '"'

to"""

'f""•&lt;&gt;l

llokl&lt;tr &lt;&gt;rill
0.011 ot)\f! ,~. I&gt;Oilff' '~~'~' " ' ·ll lf(l .... ~ . ,,., • •
,..,, •• ,,l,llu~l~ p. ~ A n&lt;l ,,... " '''" ' ,r..,, ~...d • .,, • ..,.,,,
•eol. lo •• 'f ltohln e ~ •·•g'• •o•" 11• ~·"r
poo l• .. ..,nol vntt ' "~"'""ll 'y ~' """ io romtr&gt;, 01
ovl&lt;oro•rl••on•toon l~•flmni O.t O ~•'

•Ill '"'''"

1

I·'• o• '"" •'' "• • ••" '"''"'

Ph "HDU
Or f,2 ·57ll

'

Flo~eu

Evtryw,..rt.

'

WASffiNGTON (AP) - The
nation's cost of living increased at
an annual rate of7.5 percent in Mar·
ch, bringing inflation below double·
digit levels due mainly to
moderating energy prices, the
Labor Department reported today.
The department's Bureau of
Labor Statistics reported a 0.6 per·
cent seasonally adjusted rise in the
cost of living for the month, substantially below the 1· percent in·
crease registered In February and
the lowest one-month increase since
July 1980's 0.1 percent.
The bureau said the slowdown in
energy prices resulted in the
smallest increases in transportstion
and housing costs in seven months.
The Consumer Price lndell showed
that energy prices continued to rise
in March but not by nearly the
margin of the previous.two months.
Fuel oil prices rose 2. 7 percent in

Patrol

.

ELB!RFELDS

·· IN POMEROY

FOIL WRAP. ••••••••••••••••••••••••• ;.Sf
3.2Soz.

Uledtoit."
. But he added: "Vau IClllletlmes
wonder In your mind when and how
(t'a goinlto happen or any attempt
or wbatlhrould be like."

'

BEEF BROTH.••• ~ ••••••••••••,••• 2/7'1
2f oz. Del Monte v,llow

PEACit HALVES •••••••••••••• ~·····~·•

•

'

.

flcen pictured with lbe vehicle are ito r Tim Spencer,
chief; Roger WUlford, assistant chief; Lamar Lyons,
caplala, and Keith Miller, ftrsl Ueuleaant The departmeat Is headquartered Ia Tappen PlaiDs,

March, following increases of 7.5
percent In January and 8.5 percent
in February, department officials
said. Charges for nstural gas and
electricity rose 0.8 percent, com·
pared with increases of 1 percent
and 1.4 percent earlier in the year.
Reagan administration officials
and some private economists had
been predicting that energy prices
would moderate as spring arrived.
Prices had shot up in January and
February because of the lifting of
controls on domestic crude oil prices
and the high cost of foreign oil. But
the March figures were lower than
many economists expected.
Department officials said the Consumer Price Index rose to 265.1 in
March, which means that goods and
services costing $10 in March 1967
cost $26.32last month.
The figures released· today also

showed that the index increased by
11.2 percent from the first quarter of
last year to the end of this year's fir·
stquarter.
This means some 36 million Social
Security recipients wiD get an 11.2
percent cost-of-living increase in
July.
At that time, the average retired
worker living alone will see his or
her monthly check increase by $37,
from $337 to $374. Atypical couple's
benefits will go fnm $576 to $640 a
month, and the maximum benefit
will rise fnm $SI'Ito $752.90 a month. The minimum monthly Social· ·
Security check will increase from
$153.10 to $17o.ao:
Payments increase each ~uly if
the increase in the Conswner Price
Index exceeds 3 percent from the fir·
st quarter of one year to the first
quarter of the next.

wreck victim

A Meigs County man was right side of the road and collided
hospitalized following a ~ar ac- with an Oblo Power Co. utility pole.
cident early this morning, according
Clark was taken to Veterans
to the Gallla-Meigs Post of the Ohio Memorial Hospital by the Haclne
Hlghway Patrol.
emergency squad, where he was adThe patrol said Wesley D. Clark, mitted and reported in satisfactory
?Jl, Rt. 3, Haclne, lost control of his condition this morning by a hospital ·
vebic;le on rain-slicked pavement on spokesman.
SR12hti:I5a.m., whichranoffthe
His vehicle was demolished in the

Reapn said Wednelday in hll first
Interview Iince he wu shot March
30.
The convalelclng chief executive
"said COilllallt security threala are
part of the job and "you get a little

12"x26' Reynolds Aluminum

'

15 Cents

A Multimedia Inc . News: a er

cite~

'"'"'nation attempt.
"Then's not going to be any
change in the way we do things,"

SHO~TNING •••••••••••••••••••••• ~ ••.9'1

13:1fc oz. Swan1on

106 Butterntlf Ave .
Pomeroy , Otl .
Wt Wlrt

PORK &amp; BEANS.....................7'1

SARDINES
IN OIL•••••••·........ %/97'
.

POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP
" TfttWIV Amtrkl Sand• Love."

WRANGLER
SPORTSWEAR

2 Sections, 14 Pages

Nation's inflation rate
falls below double digits

WASHINGTON (AP)- President
Reagan, wondering why no one ever
tried to shoot him before, says he
won't be afrald to leave the White
Houe qain but "I have a hunch I'll
be more alert" afterlast month's

31 01. Van.Camp

1 lb. Crisco

e n t 1n e

By JAMES GERSTENZANG
Aaoclated Prea Writer

CHOCOLATE QUICK••••••••••••••.s2.~9
SEE OUR COMPLETE

f'llllllo....oj

DONATIONS..Through respoose of the pubUc, lhls
Ugbt flre-flgbllng rescue truck for the Orange Township Volunteer Fire Departmeat bas beea paid for.
. Tbl8 vehicle Is the first to move to the sceae of fires
wllb beavter equlpmeat following. Fire departmeut of·

32 01. Nestle's

''

•

crash and Clark was cited for no
operator's license.
A Gsllia County woman also suffered injury in a one-car crash in
Harrison Twp. Wednesday nigbt.
The patrol said Irene L. Lewis, 38, ·
Rt. 1, Northup, was westbound on
Hamilton Road at 10:20 p.m. when
(Continued on page 14)

Reagan says he 'II be
'more alert next time'

·

CHILl ¥1/BEANS •••••••••••• :~!~·~!!. 7'1

Your Clear

earlier meeting on Tuesday niglt
when some 60 persons attended the
commissioners session and
criticized the board for not accepling the union membership of
deputies.
On Monday of this week, deputies
voted down a proposal offered by the
commissioners and again went on
the picket Une. The commissioners
had offered the deputies 25 cents increase on the hour and one-half
(Continued on page 14)

Groups
protest
•
actzons

ORANGE DRINK ••• ~ ••••••••••••• $1.29

Emergency runs
Five calls were answered by local
emergency units Tuesday, the Meigs
Emergency Medical Service reporla.
At 3:22 p.m., the Middleport Unit
took Mary Casto from Hysell St., to
Holzer Medical Center, and that unit
took Jack Neff from N. Second Ave.,
tO Veterans Memorial Hospital at
4:57p.m. The Syracuse Unit at 2:51
p.m. took Cookie Dodson from
Maplewood Lake to Veterans
MemOrial Hospital and she was later
mond to Holzer Medical Center. At
· 1:11 p.m. the Syracuse Unit took
John Bailey and Phyllis Bailey from
Mlnenvtiie to Vetterans Memorial
11!J1p1ta1 following a motor accident
uid tbey were tater taken to Holzer
lfldlc.l Center. The Syracuse unit
lrtllld 1'lunmy Adldnll at the scene
of the ume accident.

Dismiss charges against officer

~Tb BUSINESS. INDUSTRY,

MARGARINE.....~~:. 89'

Four people were reportedly in·
today at the Foote Mineral Plant
near New Haven. According to the
. report, four workers were taken to a
doctor's office for examinstion. No
cause was given and details were
tacking at pre~time.

Veterans Memorial

LEASING
. .IQUIPMENT

meeting supporting the commissioners, the board was given a
standing ovation. The commissioners left the meeting with a
statement that something would be
decided in about an hour. The
meeting adjourned at about 11:45
a.m. They moved to their office in
the courthouse.
Cominissioners, at least two of
them, indicated Tuesday they would
resign today if they did not agree to
accept the union. This came after an

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, A ril23, 1981

.

Eckricb

at y

Voi.30,No.•
Co rl hied 1981

..BANK ONE . . -......

lib. Blue Bonnet
Quarters .

George Wilbur Young, ronner
Meigs County resident, died Monday
at Bradner.
He was a son of the late Dana and Bradley B. Pooler
Barbara Weyersrnille Young. He
Bradley B. Pooler, 58,37610 Pooler
wss also preceded in death by a Road, Pomeroy, who died Monday
brother, Clarence.
evening at ·Veterans Memorial
Surviving are his wife, Kathleen; Hospital, was a veteran of World
two daughters, Barbara Quickie and War II having served 28 months in
Ann Nelson; two sons, Charles and the Pacific. He served from June,
Gary; two sisters, Kathryn Hostottle . 1942, to September, 1945. He earned
an~ Reva Kabel; a brother, Noel,
the Asiatic-Pacific Theatre Ribbon
and several grandchildren and with four bronze stars, the Philipgreat-grandchildren.
pine Liberation Ribbon with two
Mr. Young was employed al bronze stars, the Good Conduct
Tony's Bakery at Fremonl for a Medal and the Bronze Service
Arrowhead during his military
Explosion hurts four
career.
jured in an explosion at 11 a.m.

.

res~. but ftnt them to continue m
offtce , Manning Webster, ~tto~y
and f~rmer probate and Juvenile
court JUdge r~~rked. .
.
Others votcmg similar op!"ions
were FranciS Andre~s, Mildred
Jacobs, Clarence Price, Frank
Cleland, Mildred G~ul, Howa~
Frank,_ Charles Knight, Denzil
Goeglem, James Carnahan, Dan
Smith and several ~thers including
members_of labor wuons.
. .
Followmg the enthusiastic

•

e.

priority ~:.be corrected as soon as
his t to work. .
y, EMS coordinator and
ntatives of Motorola Co.,
the blllings for radio
equlpm~t for the EMS operation.
Baily a~ to work out the dlf·
ference ~th Motorola.
The C(jmmisioner will not meet
Tuesday; AprU 28, since they will be
attending a meeting in Athens.
Attending 'were Henry WeUa,
president, Jones, and Dave Kobl~
tz. COIIUlllasloilers, . Mary · Hobstetter, clerk, and Martha Chambers.

only were Simon Johnson, one safe
Admitted-Cora Vance, Mid·
year, Kenneth Imboden and Harvey
dleport;
Hilda Camahan, Long BotVanVranken, two safe years; and
tom;
John
Jacobs, Rutland; Jack
Jerry Cremeans, three safe years.
Neff,
Middleport.
Foote Mineral Compsny's Safety
Discharged-None.
Awards Program Is a continuing
plant activity with a w a r d s , . . . : . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - presented annually as employees
become eligible .
Any department completing one
year of injury free service will also
be given a dinner at which time
other awards will be presented to
departmental employees.

Shooting incident draws jail terms
Two men were fined and given jail
sentences in the court of Pomeroy
Mayor Clarence Andrews Tuesday
night after being charged with
shooting through a window in the
front of the Elberfeld Department
Store recently .
Denver Bush, Pomeroy, was fined
$200 and costs on a destruction of
property charge; $50 and costs on a
charge of discharging a fireann on a
public highway and was given a 90
day jail sentence. Charged with
aiding and abetting as a result or the
incident was Kevin Hudson, Miner·
sville, who was fined $100 and costs
and was given a 30 day jail sentence.
Others fined in the court Tuesday
night were Walter Robert.'; ,
Pomeroy, $100 and costs, leaving the
scene of an accident; William T.
Williams, Pomeroy, $30 and costs,
!ell of center; James Patterson,
Syracuse, $30 and costs, speeding ;
William Moore, Pomeroy, $350 and

Commissioner Richard Jones at
Tuesday's meeting of the Meigs
County Comrnls.slon recommended
the board establish a time to explore
locations for a new landfill site that
will meet EPA specifications.
EPA has mandated that the board
locate a new site by Sept. I, 11181. It is
estilnated that the cost of re-locating
the landfill would 1'Wl in the neighborhood of $100,000.
· The board agreed to contact
Buckeye HiUs Hocking VaUey
Regional Development District
requesting if any grant money is
available for such a project.
Francis Andrews, Olive Township
Trustee met with the commissioners
and the county engineer, Phil Roberts.
Andrews reported there are
several slips on the road in the area
along Bigley Ridge. Roberts said he
had this . problem listed as first

commissioners have conducted ''a
good government and that they are
suPPQrtive of the commisBioners aclions taken by the c;onunissioners in
regard to the strike. They asked that
the three (lien stay on their posts as
commissioners.
"I support the county commissioners. I appreciate what they
have done and I want them to continue to rep~esent the cnunty for the
best interests of aU concerned.
Above all, I don't want them to

'

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

.._II

DIIICU88EII AM'""uTION UIIMPi p,...u 'RIMidRIIIUIIllii ... AIIIIIIIW"-

,.._ Ia lite 1'reMJ
lite Wli!l1e a-. Wef.
...._, II IIIII IIIII 1 1 otew 111ft . . . ...._ 'l'lle

..._ H - np1rter ,._ Oer 1 ..... UIIIW
p,.. I 1 MU..I Willie H - 1 ; Ia ....

... 10111 ..........

~ llld lbat Iince the lUick
~ II'DWICied l*n, WNie Houe

pr-. ..... ....., , _ 8. Bntdy and
two law o«Jeera, he hll - fiiml
zlq 111m lllillinlln crowdl"and

-:r ............. _

*

i11rwl" ... llea11Dfeell-pm. (APLIIta;l Ill

t

I find myself wondering, 'Well, why
didn'tthis happen27times before? '"
The president, interviewed by the
senior While House correspondents
of The Associated Press and United
Press lntenuitional, appeared ruddy-dteeked, his Igalt quick but
somewhat stiff, his handshake
strong, 23 days after he was wounded.
Under the ground· rules set by
While Houae deputy chief of staff
Michael K. Deaver, questions were
limited to the I shooting, the
president's recuperation, and·
related WplCII,
Reagan recounted hia reaction to
the !I"MlnaUon attempt, which he
llld "still aeerna kind of unreal,"
lind hll near-panic, gasping for air ·
88 the presidential llmouaine sped .
!ram the 1ICI!D' of the shooting outside the Willington Hilton Hotel.
Reagan said tbat ·mce he heard
lhoU "my flnt lnatlnct wu to take a
look and aee what wu going on !ram
where they were, but the Secret Ser-

..

vice man behind me had a different
idea and the next thing I knew I
found myself pushed into the car."
And then there was the pain. ·It
didn't occur as soon as the bullet entered his lell side and came to rest in
his leftlung.
"It was the most paralydng
pain ...as if someone had hit you with
a harruner," Reagan said. "Suddenly I found that I was coughing up
blood. "
On a cart at the George
Washington University Hospital,
"they found the wound and that I'd
actually had been shot," he said.
"The more I tried to breathe and
the deeper I trted to breathe, It kept
seeming as if I was geUing leas air
and you know that panic that you
can get if you're strangling on
something. I a1mo1t had the feeling
that It waa going to dlminilh to the
place where I wouldn't be &amp;ettln8
any and then they shut me • by
sticking a pipe dorm my tbrolt" to
aid the breathing.

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