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                  <text>Page-8-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy

EMS runs reported

'Fire truck contributors listed
Anew lightweight fire truck which
is the first dispatched to scenes of
fires has been secured by the Orange
Twp. Fire Department headquar·
tered at Tuppers Plains.
The truck was made possible
through donations by individuals
and businesses. Contributors include:
Cindy Schneider, James Carpenter, James and Ileen Swain,
Henry Smith, Ronald Robinson,
Warren Van Meter, Roland Torrence, Larry Baker, Wayne Brickles,
Harold Henderson, Roger Pullins,
Clara Follrod, Roy Rollins, Gary
Wright, Garth Sovel, Bess Webster,
Marvin Murphy, Delma Dotson, Don
Landon, Clyde Sanders, Jim Duvall,
John Boyd, Dale Boston, Charles
Craft, Joe Mitchen, Clifford Wood,
Raymond Salse~. Jerry Hawk, Wm.
Wells, Joyce and Elton Ritchie, Tom
and Lucille Burroughs, Clay E.
Green, Jeff Needs, Tanuni Barber.
Eula Ward, Homer and Oneita Cole,
Gordon Caldwell, Carl Barnhill,
Fritz Goebel, Rubal Caldwell, Okey
Connolly, John Tillis, Edward Tan-

ner, Lyne Showalter, Alvin Myers
Jr., Wallace Damewood, Guy Spencer, Howard Caldwell, Jr., A. F.
Gainer, Brian and Kathleen
Manicka, B and J Service Station,
Robert Edwards Sr., Mr. af¥1 Mrs.
C. B. Lamp.
Libby Sayre, Linda and John
Damewood, Charles Chaffee,
Josephine White, B. F. Uptbn, Liz
Winebrenner, Dora May Caleway,
Michael Guess, Gordon Ridenour, S.
R. Findling, RobertS. Burke, Helen
Dorst, Don Sprague, Virgil Cozart,
Denzil Huffman, Bob Edwards, John
Arbaugh, John Hensley, Marvin
Murphy, John Rice, Darrell Landon,
Bob Murphy, Gary Murph; , Clyde
Headley, Jackie Gaddis, Ina Van
Meter, Carl Reed, Jim Ferrill, ·
Leslie Scarbrough, Roy Reed, G.
and G. Auto Sales, Jack Farrar,
Ulah Swan, Edith Harper, Tony
Jones, Robert Ellis, Ina Massar, ·
Harold Barnhart, John Smith, Cecil
Caldwell, Gary Warner, Keith Chaffee, Starling Massar, Bulah Maxey,
Oscar Batx:ock, Mr. and Mrs.
Chester Carson, Grace Kuhn, Conkel

Kindergarten registration

0

Antizues, Jeanne Baker, Paul
Roush, Garth Sovel, Bob and Helen
Dorst, Mr. and Mrs. Harley Rice.
Beryl and Linda Wilson, Gordon
and Jill Holter, Roland Glenn, Benny Upton, Carl Findlin~, Maxine
Wiener, Cookie Cassady, V. C.
Waters, Lewis Miller, Terry Swartz,
Nina Robinson, Lindsey Lyons,
Terry Talbort, Paul Gerlach, Doug
Bissell, Ed Murphy, Jim Smith, Ted
Connolly, Paul Brooks, Wilbur Rice,
Morty Sanders, Jim Stelter, Ray
Craft, Ronnie Barnett, George and
Jane Ratcliff, Roger,Spencer, Violet
Millhone, Mrs. K. R. Young, Nonna
Newland, W. C. Blake, Flossie
Dillion, Maxine Chapman, Bernice
Mollohan, H. A. Sedgwick, Rita Fortney, Mrs. Veri Tuttle, James Stout,
Donald Harris, Aruella Frecker,
Wade Leonard, Rufus Cline, Madue
Gray, Leota Massar, Dana Hoffman, Wm. J. Probert, Jessie Dodderer, Harry Lodwick, Helen Cald·
well, Ken Caldwell, Homer Brown,
Terry Talbott and Mr. and Mrs. Hernard ShriversJr.

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial

set at area grade schools
Registration for kindergarten for
the next school year has been set at
three locations in the Meigs Local
School District.
Parents may register their
children for kindergarten or as new
enrollees in the first grade (those
who did not attend kindergarten in
Meigs Local this year I on the
following schedule:
Pomeroy Elementary School,
Monday, May 4, 8:30 to 11 :30 a.m.
and from noon to 4 p.m.; Middleport
Elementary, Tuesday, May 5, 8:30
a.m. to II: 30 a.m. and from noon to 4
p.m.; Rutland Elementary, Wednesday, May 6, 8:30to 11 :30 a.m. and
noon to 4 p.m. Kindergrten age
students from the Harrisonville,
Salem Center and Rutland areas to
register at Rutland.
Any children whose fifth birthday
falls on or before Sept. 30, 1981, may
be registered for kindergarten and
any child whose sixth birthday falls
on or before Sept. 30, 1981 may be
registered for the first grade.

Parents at the time of registration
are to provide a record of un·
munization which includes four
DPT, three polio Sabin ; one measles
I Rubeola-after first birthday I; one
Rubella (Gennan Measles, and a
recent tuberculosis skin test (within
one year before entering school, and
the child's birth certificate.

Admitted--James Jones, Middleport; Felix Alkire, Pomeroy.
Discharged-Dora Heaton, Mae
Lambert.

Retail sales up
Retail sales tax receipts in Meigs
County for March, this year, were up
71.62 percent over receipts for March, 1980, but motor vehicle sales tax
receipts in the county were down
33.67 percent, State Treasurer Gertrude Donahey reports.
Retail sales tax receipts for March, 1981, totaled $103,262.45 compared to $60,167.10 for March, 1980,
an increase of $43,095.35. Motor
vehicle sales tax receipts in March,
1981, totaled $53,802.80 compared to
receipts of $81,122.95 for March,
1980, a decrease of $27,370.15.

·

Area Dea th
I Onn
. Smi'th
s

also preceded in death by four
brothers and three sisters.
A teacher and a school ad·
ministrator for 41 years, Mr. Smith
was well known in Meigs County. He
and Mrs. Smith had observed their
51st wedding anniversary on Aprill9.
He was a member of Heath United
Methodist Church, the Meigs County
Retired Teachers Association, the
Meigs County Retired Senior Volun·
leer Program and belonged to Middleport Masonic Lodge 363, Free andAccepted Masons. His hobbies were
fishing and gardening.
~urviving are his wife, Lillian
McAllister Smith, a retired teacher;
a daughter and son-in-law, Lois and
Richard Rosenbaum, former local
residents now living in Danville,
Calif.; a daughter, Mrs. Mary Sch·
wab of Charleston, W. Va., seven
grandchildren and four great- grandchildren.
Services will be held at 2 p.m.
Friday at the Rawlings- CoatsBlower Funeral Home with the Rev.
Robert Robinson officiating. Burial
will be in Gravel Hill Cemetery at
Cheshire. Friends may call at the
funeral home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
p.m. Thursday. Masonic rites will
be conducted by Middleport Lodg~
at 7:30p.m. Thursday at the fWJeral
home.
·

A revival is now in progress at
Freedon Gospel Mission, Bald
Knobs, county road 31, through May
2, at 7:30p.m. nightly.
Evangelist is the Rev. Robert
Kromer of Colwnbus. There is
special singing each evening. The
public is invited to attend.

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Tornado injures two persons
SWANTON, Ohio- Atorna~o touched down aboutfive miles west of
here TueSday evening, damaging at least six mobile homes and
causing some injuries, the Fulton County sheriff's department said.
Although details were sketchy, a spokesman for the sheriff's office
said the funnel cloud dropped out of a thunderstorm system moving
through tbe area at·about 5:30p.m. The twister touched down twice.
Two people injured, identified as Sberi Borck, 18, and her 11-monthold daughter, Tamara, were treated at Fulton County Medical Center
Jn Wa~n . They were hurt when the tornado struck their mobile
home, officials said.

Activists gear for protest
WASHINGTON - In an echo of the Vietnam era a decade ago, antiwar activists are gearing up for their first major national protest
aganst U.S. military involvement in El Salvador- a ll)arch Sunday on
the Pentagon.
While hesitant to give a finn prediction on how many people will
take part, organizers for the People's Anti-War Mobilization said they
expect "tens of thousands" to participate from as far west as Tel&lt;l!S
and as Iar north as Minnesota.
Smaller marches are planned Sunday in San Francisco, SeaVle,
Denver, Kansas City and Tucson, Ariz.

Prime minister faces big test
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa - Prime Minister P.W. Botha's
personal prestige faced its biggest test today in parliamentary elections that his National Party was certain to win.
With South Africa's black majority barred from vottng as always,
the Nattonalists were expected to win more than three-fourths of the
165 seats in the lower house of Parliament. It will be their ninth
national election victory Jn an WI broken string that began in 1948.
However, the popular vote was likely to be reduced by the
dissatisfaction of ultra-conservative Nationalists with Botha poll~ies
• they consider too liberal.
'

'

COLORI·· BOOKI

IIS

,::.$,69_

WNDON - Truckdriver Peter SutclJIIe pleaded guilty to manslaughter today in the Yorkshire Ripper klllings of 13 women in the
· north of England between 1975 and 1980.
The M-year-old Yorkshireman entered plea5 of innocence at the Old
Bailey Criminal Court to charges of murdering the 13 women but
pleaded guilty to manslaughter on the grounda of ''diminished responsibility ," or lack of full mental competence.

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OPTIONAL .BLADES
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NYLON CUTTING LINES
GOGGLES
ENGINE OIL

ClEVELAND - The nwnber selected Tuesday night in the Ohio
Lottery's dally game "The Number" Ia lll.
The lottery reported eamlrigs cl P32,5Z9.50 fran tbe wigertng on
the drawing. Lottery ofttciala sald sales prior to the drawing totaled
·$1127,329.50, and holders ol winning tickets are entitled to share
$294,ml.

Wf'Ather
Cloudy and cooler with IC8ttered showers tonight and 'l'!lw1daY
mornJng, then clearing In the afternoon. l..4ws tonight
60. Highs
'I'bundaY In the miHII.
~ raiD 10 percent tonight and Thurlday. W!Ddlnortherty .....S IOqb tmlglil ·
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The World'• wrgelt:hlliag Chaia S..w.

MEROY HOME &amp; AUTO
606 E . MillO
' Ph . 991Fronl End Alignmenl- 5

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Pleads guilty to manslaughter

U 11 hk e all .the conventional b~u shc utter s / tnm ·
1ners you can hnd, St1hl" brushcl,ltters have an ex·
elusive advantage. Our Polycut lMhead .Tougher than
any hne lnmmer. 11 blazes through heavy growth.
And blades au tomal1cally retract to allow the
closest cutttng aro und trees, fences - even up
1gamst walls.
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So wh ether you want a lightj,veight tnmmer for
p ur garden or a btgger model fcir mat or land clear ·
mg. get the add ed clittmg perf ormance of a Polycul.
Gel th e strength of St!hl.

-

Pomeroy,
Most Passenger Cars

"It is more destructive in terms of
its impact on the cities, the poor, the
dissdvantaged, the minorities and
the elderly," he said.
While attacking Reagan's
economic proposals, Stokes said the
speech was a moving appeal which approach to tax cuts," Glenn said.
"We need to consider the cuts very
undoubtedly will have an impact.
"I'd give him an Oscar on the carefully to make sure of their
basis of his performance," the targeting to stimulate business."
"The president wants to cut taxes
Cleveland Democrat said.
Sen. John Glenn, D-Ohio, said it of middle and upper income tax·
appears Congress will go along with payers so they will come back in inReagan's budget-cutting efforts but vestments. But estimates are that
that the tax cut proposals "will unless it comes back on the order of
50 to 70 percent it won't achieve the
generate much more concern.''
"I have a substantively different objec~ive.' '

•

at y

He said he thought things like investment tax credits and reduction
of capital gains taxes would be more
advantageous to business and
stimulate economic growth more
quickly.
Rep. Donald Pease, D-Ohio, who
has made his own budget proposal,
said he wished Reagan had "spent
more time with the question of inflation and budget deficits."

en tine
1 Section , 14 Pages

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Chessie system crews upgrade tracks

•

REG. RET. 14.28

own."

HEAVY APPLAUSE FOR REAGAN - President Ronald Reagan
receives heavy ~jpplause from members of a joint session of Congress
prior to addressing the group Tuesday nlgbt on Capitol Hill. At left is Vice
President George Bush and rtgbt Is Speaker of the Hoose Thomas F.
O'Neill. (AP Laserpboto).

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, April29, 1981

32~· ''

REG. RET. $5.64

said.
Rep. Clarence J. Brown, R-O!Uo,
also predicted that the GOP version
would be approved by the House
rather than an economic proposal
worked out by the Democratic
leadership.
"If the standing ovation he got
when he called for a new direction in
the economic affairs of the nation is
any indication, a majority should
support him when the vote comes
next week," said Brown.
Rep. Louis Stokes, D-Ohio, said it
appeared from Reagan's speech
that he has abandoned his own
economic program for the LattaGranun bill, which Stokes charged
was "worse than his (Reagan's)

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39

1Continued from page I)

1
·
not want to meet with th e Umon.
hope we can sit down and end the enure problem ror the county. The
county corrunissioners acted in the

CARDS

WASHINGTON (API- President
Reagan's appearance Tuesday night
may give his economic program the
impetus it needs to push it through
Congress, said Rep Delbert Latta,
R-Qhio.
Latta, who is ranking Republican
tnerilber of the House Budget Committee, is co-sponsor of the economic
program being offered by the GOP
to counter the one proposed by the
Democratic leadership.
Reagan credited Latta's budget
work and said his administration is
fully behind the alternative offered
by Latta and Rep. Phil Gramm, DTex.
"Our count (of votes I this afternoon shows we're going to win,
and alter that speech we may win
bigger than we anticipated," said
Latta, of Bowling.Green.
"I'd hate to be the Republican who
would vote against that (economic)
package after that speech. And
some Democrats who claim to be
conservatives will have a 'hard time
explaining to the people back home
why they opposed it.
"I think we're in pretty good
shape," Latta continued.
One sign of the strength of the
GOP position, be said, is that Rep.
Jim Jones, D-Okla., chairman of the
House Budget Committee, is "at·
tempting to modify his packa~e.''
"That tells us something," Latta
•

REO . RET. 16.15

" As of Monday the engineer did

PLAYING

REG. RET. 12.39

Board.. .

"!think the county conunissioners
acted in good faith in finally sitting
down and working things out. I rna
hopeful at this point that the Meigs
County Engineer will sit down with
the Union and work out the work
stoppage al the county garage.

'

CLEANER

. RET. 12.40

CONVENTIONAL TRAVERSE RODS

Fred Haynes, regional director of
the American Federation of State,
County and Municipal Employes,
made the following statement :

Reagan's speech ·may
•
~ve Ian big push.

Revival in progress

K.irsd~ superfine

The clinic will be held every
Friday in May starting May I from
11 a.m. to I p.m. at the Chamber of
Commerce office in Pomeroy.
The public is invited.

Couples seek licenses

I

ELBERFELD$

dl~~~~~~c~~~~~~~h4lt.y=~~ ~!~ny~~~estofthecitizensofMeigs
after becoming ill at his home.
died
Monday evening
Theunexpectecliy
Middleport Emergency
Squad
transported Mr. Smith to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. He was dead
upon arrival.
BornSept.l9, 1904,atRodney,Mr.
Smith
was Wonner
a son of the
late John
H.
and Mary
Smith.
He was

To end marriages

Six emergency calls were an·
Rita L. Harmon, Middleport, filed
Marriage licenses were issued to
swered by local units Monday, the suit for divorce in Meigs County
John
Randall Thomas, 23, Pomeroy,
Meigs Emergency Medical Services Common Pleas Court against Terry
and
Cheryl Lynn Kennedy, 21,·
reports.
J. Harmon, Middleport.
Pomeroy;
. James M. Fink, 31,
The Racine Unit at 6:40 p.m. took
Janice Kay Grimm was granted a
Wade Johnson from Greenwood divorce from James Robert Grimm Rutland, and Vietrois L. Fink, 'll,
Road to Holzer Medical Center and and the marriage of Jane M. Shaffer Pomeroy; Clair Eugene Reed, 24,
at 6:42p.m., the Syracuse Unitt~ and Donald C. Shaffer was Reedsville, aM Janeen Ailsa Swain,
18, Reedsville; Douglas Edwin
Carl Schultz from Route 124 to dissolved.
Browning, 21, Rt, 3, Pomeroy, and
Pleasant Valley Hospital. The other
Terri
Lynn Pullins, 19, Rt. I, Long
four calls were answered by the Mid· Ask to wed
Bottom.
dleport Unit which at 12:29 p.m. took
Marriage licenses were issued to
Russell Robinson, Jr., from his Ronnie Dean Anns, 25, Rt. I, Long
residence to the office of Dr. James Bottom, and Charlotte Marie Mar- Dissolution asked'
Conde and at 1:50 p.m. took James cinko, 29, Long Bottom; Clifford
Cynthia Lynn Ord, Millersville,
Johnson from Beech St., to Veterans Longenette, 45, Rt. I, Reedsville, and Verne Alvin Ord, Millersville,
Memorial. At 4:06 p.m., the unit and Ruth Ann Griffin, 35, Rt. I, filed for dissolution of marriage in
took Joshua Blair from Coal St. to Reedsville.
Meigs County Common Pleas Court.
theofliceofDr. Conde. At5:36 p.m., r - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - the unit took Orin Smith from his
home on Beech St., to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where he was •
pronounced dead upon arrival.

Six hundred customers of MinerHOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
sville and Syracuse were without
DISCHARGES APRIL 'l1
power for approximately one hour
Angla Barrett, Margaret Bennett, as the result of an automobile acEunice Blackburn, Karen C~mpbell, cident at appreximately I a.m.
Dickey Christian, Thornton Cox, today. A car struck a power pole
John Hale, Mrs. William Hash and near the Roy Armes residence,
son, Noah Haskins, Tara Hughes, Minersville, Ohio Power officials
.
AU parents expecting to have Mrs. donald Lewis and son, Glenn reported.
children enrolled in the fall as kin· Little, Paul Ours, Marie Payne, Curdergarten students or as new tis Remy, Luverne Rockholt, Garnet
enrollee students in the first grade Smeltzer, Ola White.
BIRTH
are urged to register their children
A 1' ·
'lahl
attheappointedtimesand locations.
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Carlisle,
PP Icabons avru
e
Questions concerning registration daughter, Jackson.
Carleton College Scholarship
may be directed to the principal's of·
grant applications for residents of
lice of the respective school: 'Mid- C
. .
Syracuse, who plan to attend
dleport Elementary, John Arnott,
OllilliiSSIODers to meet college,arenowavailable.
992-3387; Pomeroy Elementary,
The Meigs County Commissioners
Those interested are to contact
Robert morris, 992-2710; Harrison- will meet in regular session Friday PoliceChiefMiltonVarianforanapville Elementary, Greg McCall, 742·
beginning at 10 a.m.
plication.
3000: Rutland Elementary, Doug , - - - -- -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1
Behnke, 742-2666, and Salem Center
Elementary, Charles Holliday, 7423114.

Blood pressure clinic planned
During May, the Meigs J:;ounty
Health Department and the Meigs
Mental Health Center will have a
free Blood Pressure Screening
Clinic.

Tuesday, Apri128, 1981

Middleport, Ohio

nev

E«t ietOiileN ••t-Frldaytllroulhflllkll7: ratrandmlld
Friday. Wanner with~ chance of showen Sabarday and SUnday.
Highs in the 11011 Frida)' and in the 70a to lower 101 s.turday and Sunday. Lows In the 401 early Friday and In the 501 to low tiOa Saturday
and Sunday.

Crews of tbe Chessie System bave
begun work to upgrade a portion of
the C&amp;O Pomeroy Subdivision in tbe
Gallipolis-Vinton area. Crews started work shortly before Easter using
a locomotive and ·spreader to clear
trackside brush to allow dumping of
newcrossties for later installation.
The new ties ' are arriving in
Chessie System and Family Line
System gondola cars and are

unloaded from the slow moving
work train by a specially equipped
end loader riding atop the cars.
ebessie System recently received
permission to abandon most of the
line which extenciB from Oldtown ·
YardnearLoganthroughMcArthur,
Vinton, Gallipolis, Cheshire, and
Middleport to Pomeroy. However,
the company has not actually abandoned the line and has continued

freight service between Hobson
Yard and Bidwell. The present track
upgrading iS apparently related to
an expected increase in traffic over
at least part of the branch.
Last year Chessie crews performed work in the Hobson yardCheshire area , installing approximatelyfivemilesofcontinuous
welded rail and performing other
upgrading work. The Ho~on Yard-

Kanauga segment is also used by
Conrail trains under a trackage
rights agreement.
The Chess ie Sys tem is a.n
operating unit of CSX Corporation
consisting of the Chesapeake and
Ohio, Baltimore and Ohio, Western
Maryland, and related railroads ,
CSX also operates the Family Lines
System.

Progress made for independent pact
CAMBRIDGE, Ohio (AP) - An of.
ficial 'from an eastern Ohio coal
company who met with United Mine
Workers' leaders says some
progress was made toward reaching
an independent pact that could get
the company's striking miners back
on the job.
"I think the meeting went in real
good faith," said Abe Bryan, director of employee relations for Boich
Mining Co., after Tuesday's session.
"Most of these mflltings, first
meetings, are spent on procedure
and fonnality."
The four-hour meeting, held at a
Cambridge motel, was attended by
company officials and \JMW leaders '
,from District 6, including its

president, Ed Bell. District 6 now," he said. "We're trying to get was not ready to negotiate independently of the international
represents about 15,000 miners in something where we can work."
southeastern Ohio and the West
Boich must wait to learn from union. He said he expected to keep
Virginia panhandle.
UMW officials when the next independent bargaining on the same
level as international talks.
Boich, with offices at meeting will be held, Bryan said.
Bloomingdale in Jefferson County,
Before the meeting, Bell said be
operates a nwnber of coal mines, including surface mines in Crown
City, Coshocton and Steubenville. It
is not a member of the Bituminous
Three breaking and entering in- school for the mentally retarded on
Coal Operators AB:tociation, which
cidents
in Pomeroy have been Apri!l3 stealing a stereo system and
UMW miners struck against March
solved and items recovered, tapes. In addition two bicycles were
'll.
Bryan said the company, which Pomeroy Police report.
taken lrom Landmark on April 24,
Police said three juveniles, and three radios from an Ohio
employs slightly more than 300
UMW miners, will accepi "anything allegedly involved in the incidents, Power Co. storage building near the
negotiated with the · UMW and have been turned over to Meigs Meigs Stadiwn in Pomeroy on April
County Juvenile Officer Carl Hysell. 28.
BCOA."
(Continued on page 121
The trio allegedly broke ·into the
"That's what we're working on

Police solve thefts

$1.2 ~ million
"We're very, very· proud," said
one official who participated in the
groundbreaking ceremony for new
residential facilities at Gallipolis ·
Developmental Center Monday,
Wben completed, the buildings
will be located on Mill Creek Road
on the site of the old QDC fannhouse
and dairy bam. Construction will be
finished by June,l982.
The building is designed to provide
community living for older GDC ,
clients with mild-to-moderate levels
of mental retardation, according to
James Middleton of Ironton,
president of the Parents VolWJteers
Association, for whom the land was
purchased.
The land was bought from the
state on Nov. 22, 111M, after special
legislatioo introduced by State Sen.
Oakley Collins (R-lronton) and State
Rep, Ron J8111111 (D-Proctor:vllle)
was pused by the general Usembly. The purchaae price was $1 for
tbe whole 10 acres, Mlddl.eton said.
The bulldlnp will COIIIIal ol four
eight-bed residenlial units, with a
holl!emanager's quarters. Each
building Ia de!igned to be 1\feclicald
certifiable, and will Cllllt $300,000
. each to construc:L Total cost for llll
four luet at $1,2&amp;1,7'12.
The- for thllldnd of prop 1111
hu been tn Jbe~~~Neallnce
It'll, ~ to MlddJetm, wi!o
noted some cllenta at GDC have
been there ever Iince the facility
wu known aa an epileptic hollpllll.
Since GDC's emphaaia later
changed to a mental retardltion

GDC project underway

unit, some of the epileptic cases
have since been classified as retarded.
With these new buildings, these
moderately dissbled clients will be
able ,IV care for themselves, Mill-

dleton said.
Part of the problem in location, he
continued, was to lind a spot near
the center grounds which hadn't
been flooded in almost 100 years.
The dairy bam spot was finally

111UtAD1G GROOND - !llael Ita OUier Calu.
(It peJI m) • II tile llpeden at 1 p .....
bJ ..... tel ::we.)' far I HW let If Nkleatlli
lleiiHiea far ellelta II GIUJpolla Developmealll C..
.... Tile lite II 1t Jbe old G0C farmJmee ol dllry

decided on, he said.
The buildings are designed James
J. Foley, a Colwnbus architect, and
construction will be handled by Ken·
ny Construction, Chillicothe.

�·- .. ~

Commentary

..
Page-2~ The Daily sentinel . .

Polt1eroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, April29, 1981 ·

College talk...___________-,----___
The hotel room telephone rang.
My hosts were in the lobby, waiting
to take me to dinner before the
speech. I was mildly startled,
having thought they would be calling
for me at6: 15, and it was only 5:59. I
promised to change clothes iJn.
mediately, and fficked oo the
television while reaching for a fresh
start.
"Are you planning to mortgage
your house or your farm to send your
child to college?" A youngish
woman, sitting behind one of those
studio desks, smiled. "Well, not so
fast. William F. Buckley, who is
here to lecture tonight at the Univer·
sity of Arizona, says that a college
degree isn't worth it. Details at 10
o'clock.''

Flashback to press conference
that afternoon at the airport. What
did I think about general conditions
in American colleges? Well, I said,
one thing I think they lack is a sense
of mission. Thjs is a problem that
traces to a doctrine called academic
freedom . It is, really, a doctrine that
tells you that you can't ever learn
anything, because you can't

"prove" that something is right, and
therefore that something is wrong.
Under academic freedom all ideas
are theoretically fated to start even
in the race. If that is so, then
epistemological progreas is not
possible, and the psychic rewards of
learning are substantially vitiated.
What's the other objection?
Well, I said, too many Americans
feel they have to go to college in or·
der tO quality as legitimate citizens.
By the standards · of France and
Great Britain, about eight times as
many Americans (including blacks
and Hispariics) go to college. For instance (I said) it is estimated that to
profit from a college education you
need an IQ of 110 or higher. About 25
percent of ArnericaDB have such an
IQ. But about 40 percent go to
college. The fjgures would then
suggest that about 35 percent of
those attending college aren't get·
ling much out of it. What they do get,
often, is personal frustration and
family indebtedness. The American
community should stop looking for
college degrees as prerequisites to
useful and complete lives. Often

The Daily Sentinel
111 Ct~ url Str~:d

Poml.'ruy, Ohiu
614-992-21SC
OE\.OTED TO THE I N TEKF~'T Of-' THE MF.IGs- MASON AR E A

ROBERT L. WINGETI
Publisher

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH

Assistant Publisht'r/(onlrollt-r

Genua! Ma1111ger

The [)ally Sentinel-Page-_~

people who aren'f ready .to go to
college at 18 develop intellectual in·
leresis later in life and can satisfy
these by later learning.
All of the above reduced to:
"Think twice before making such
sacrifices to send your child to
college." Give that reporter a Pulil·
zer Prize.
·
And, at .another college, a
question: "Do you support President
Reagan's cut in aid to education?
Our tuition is scheduled to go up 11
percent next year." (This is at a law
schooL)
Answer: I regret the rise in
tuition. Even as I regret the rise in
lawyers' fee~. But suppose that
someone were to appear before you
and announce that your tuition fees
would be cut in half next year. (Applause.) Well, that's what you would
be paying for tuition if the dollar had
held its purchasing power during the
pasi!O years. Its failure to do so is
the result of the government's
having got into such ventures, as,
well - federal aid to education.
(Sullen silence, tiny smattering of
applause.)
" But doesn't everyone in fact need
to have a college degree, because
employers won't look at an applicant
who doesn't have one'"
Answer: If there is justification in
state laws denying employers the
right to inquire into an applicant's
age, sex, race or religion, we might
toss in a prohibition against asking
whether there is a college degree,
except where directly relevant. The
lady the other day who won the
Pulitzer Prize, however briefly, and
said she had graduated from

Vassar, in fact, had not. No one,
however, doubts the quality of the
prose that got her the prize, never
mind that she was writing fiction,
not non-fiction. A college degree is
an adornment of sorts, but the
currency is debased by· the
prodigality with which degrees are
handed out. It is no safer to assume
that an applicant with a college
degree is bright than to assume that
the applicant without a college
degree is dumb.

=Bu=ck=ler~Jr.

.........:.:...w'=·uia=:;m:=....;F.::..;:...

AI the reception after the speech ·
someone threw a pie at my face and
in the ensuing commotion escaped
unnoticed. The New York Times
tried to hunt me down the next day·
for ocnunent. I'm glad ·I wasn't
avallable, becaWie I'd have said:
"Yeah, Somebody recognized the
guy. Told me later he was a homo
under treatment. Apparently before
the speech he winked at me, and was
sore because I didn't wink back."
But it turns out the young hero was _'

Editor

a

merely creature doing a rite of
passage to jotn "Animal House," so
l'mgladldidn'ttalkwiththeTimes.
Besides,~ eplaode W1lll worth lt .
beeause the next riight, at the dinner
with the law school people, a huge
pie was brought In and placed
ceremoriiously In front .of me. On It
was inscribed, ·"The right of the
people to keep and bear arms ahall
not be infringed."
I now have a counterforce
capability.

..,,,,

...

...
~

'

/

•
'••
'

TOUGHING IT OUT - Clnclmlatl Reda plkher
Tum lle.ver wipes sweat from his face between pltcllea u be weal tile dilluce wltb tbe SaD Diego Padres
to reeerd Ida flnt complete game of the season In Clu-

u

:. Reds continue Padres mastery

Examines juv~nile bill .

be lr11s th~:~nlOO wurd~ l!lllj!. All
lt&gt;lh'rs ll rr subjt'l'l tu rd itlnJ.( and mu ~ t lk s l~n r d wiUt namr, addrt&gt;ss and te ltphllllt'
numtwr. ~•ltut~ii(IH'd lrt l rr~ Vo illlw publblll'd. l ~ t h' r~ ~ huu l d lw In Nnod tll8lt', addrt'ssln"'

LF.TiE.RS OF OPINION art" 1nlrumed. Tht"y

~ hnuld

i~Mlt'S, All( ~t' fS IIrtilili t'S .

Someone has to
sacrifice
Lives there a person having no relative who receives Social Security
benefits' Yes, but there aren't many. And that explains in part why benefits
surge against a tide of conservatism.
It probably also explains as well as anything why the feelings of 90 million
workers, most of whom grumble about the tax bite from their paychecks,
are politically neutered while their burden grows greater.
Beginriing early in July, benefits to Social Security recipients will rise 11.2
percent lor about 4lJ million Americans, bringing the monthly average to
$374, more than $100 higher than il was in early 1979.
That was before increases of 9.9 percent in July of that year and a 14.3 per·
cent raise a year later, paid for out of the checks of workers who sometimes
tried and failed to receive increases half that size.
Therein lies the seed of another weed in the economic garden. If recipients
can get hefty raises - top benefit to a ~year-old retiring this year jumps
$75.90 to $752.90 - shouldn't workers expect the same?
There follows a torrent of other questions, some white hot, some cooled for
the time being.
Aren't raises to beneficiaries potentially as inflationary as those for
workers?
With workers and employers each paying up to $1,975.05 a year in Social
Security-Medicare taxes, and with further increases probably on the way, is
the limit of ability and tolerance being strained'
Is the Consumer Price Index a fair measure of living cost increases?
Of all questions, the final one probably is examined more than all others
since percentage increases in the CPI automatically lead to identical
creases inSociai Security benefits. It's the law.
Is it a good measure? By most reckoriing, it is not. You could search
among academic, labor, business and government economists and probably
not find one who would give it his unqualified support. MaSt feel it distorts;
many feel it unfairly favors Social Security beneficiaries.
The criticislll5 are many: that it Ignores a natural tendency of people to
avoid foods whose prices rise temporarily for seasonal reasons; that the
housing component, which rises with mortgage rates, is flawed in assuming
everyone is at all times a homebuyer; that the national CPI often varies
greatly from the regional or local price index.
What the country is doing now, or so it is said, is merely atoriing for
damage done to those wh~ assets and Ideas about financial virtue were
swept away by a new, swinging financial style.
The r:esolution~ .if it exists, is buried beneath a mound of festering
econOJTUc and political controversy that nobody seems anxious to stir up. It's
like an old, unresolved family issue that smolders on.
Sooner or later the two generatiODB, recipients and payers, mll8t reach an
accommodation with each other and reality. Someone must sacrifice, an unpleasant prospect when each feels lt has sacrificed enough.

m: ·

Today in history.

••

Today is Wednesday, April29, the II 9th day of 1981. There are 246 days
left in the year.
Today's highlight in history:
On Aprtl29, 1945, American soldiers in Germany liberated 32,000 Nazi
victims at a concentration camp in Dachau during World War II.
On this date:
In l.f29, Joan of Arc led French troops Into Orleana and won a victory
over the Engllsh.
.
In 163t, thecolonialseWement of Newport, R.I., wufounded.
In 1882, New Orleans fell to Unioo forc:eaclurinll the Civil War.
In !987, President Lyndon Johnson pve tbe go«head to begin the c&lt;lllrBiructlon of two piototypee of a glai1t .upenonlc tranlport plane.
Ten yean ago: Pmident Rlchanl Nmon said • l'lllldull force~ U.S.
troops would rem1in In South VletMm Indefinitely if North Vietnam
refuled to releue ArneriCIII priiOIIer8 of war.
Five yean ago: The c:irliWI head of the Soviet mllltary·industrlal compies, Dmitri Ustinov, was n8med mlnllter of defenae, succeeding the late
Marshal Andrei Grechko.

'

Dear Editor,
House Bill440 which is now before
the Ohio Legislature has been get·
ling considerable favorable at·
tention in the media. However, this
bill would have many negative consequences on the juvenlle justice
system in Ohio, and I feel that the
public and the legislators should be
aware of the far reaching effects of
this bill.
First, the bill seems overly
puriitive and supporis the philosophy
of ''lock them up and throw away the
key." It also seems to be in favor of
mass punishment; that is, "punish
all of them because of the serious
crimes of a few." The bill requires
that a youth committing a felony
would be institutionalized for a
minimum of one year. This could be
a greater penalty than would be
given to an adult for the same of·
tense.
The bill also requires that the
courts have complete control over
the intake (commitment to in·
stitutions) and complete control
over releases. The courts would also
be given the added responsibility of
parole supervision after release. It

is evident that the courts .are not
always successful in working with
the youth currently under their
supervision on probation, and· there
is little reason to believe they would
be any more successful if given additional responsibilities.
Each juvenlle court in · Ohio
presently has its own philosophy and
practices in regard to when to institutionalize youth. Therefore,
som~ youth may be committed after
one or two appearances in court,
while other youth may not be ·committed until they have been in
trouble a dozen or more times. If this
inconsistent treatment of youth were
extended to releases and parole
supervision, there would not be a
uriiform justice system for youth in
Ohio. ·
Another consideration is the financing of House Bill 440. At this time,
the state subsidizes each juvenlle
court with a minimum of $50,000 per
year to provide services to youth. If
additional state money is not made
available to the courts to provide
parole supervision, would local lax·
payers have to pay for the costs?
House Bi11440 would eliminate the

Was 'hero cop' .at
WAS!llNGTON (NEA) - The
Secret Service has been studying the
Reagan assassination attempt in
minute detail to determine whether
the shooting was due in any part to
the performance of ils agents or to
its system of protecting the
,President.
Those close to the inv~ation
say that no fault has been found with
Secret Service methods or persoMe!. However, the investigators
have concluded that the attem~
might have been prevented had the
Washington Metropolitan Pollee and especially wounded Officer
Thomas Delahanty - performed
better on the scene.
Delaflanty W1lll assigned to a spot
inunediately in front of the area that
had been roped off for the press and from which John Hlnctley fired
his gun. In fact, Delahanty was standing almost directly In froni of HJn.
ckley at the time of the shooting.
Another pollee ciflcer, Herbert
Granger, was to the Immediate right

clnnatl Tuesday nlgbt Seaver struck out five Padres
and gave up eight hill! as the Reds beat the Padres ll•2.
(AP Laserpboto).

'

CINCINNATI (AP) - It doesn't
make aenae to San Diegp Padres
Manager Frank Howard.
· "I think Cincinnati reads our (pit·
ching) staff well. We've played them
four limes, and we haven't come
close to beating them," Howard
said, alter the Reds bombed the
Padres 11·2 Tuesday night.
"We've done a pretty good job·of
playing everybody else in the league
though. We have yet to play a good
game against Cincinnati. Why, 1

Leuerstoeditor.-----------------------

A MEMB ER nf Tht&gt; Assi.K'Iated Prus. Inland Dailv Prt'ss AssO&lt;'Iallon and the
Amt"riran Nr lnpaJX'r PubiiNhrn Anociatlon.
·

ALBANY ~ The Southern Tornadoes dropped a I~ decision to
Alexander Tuesday, deapite some
fine defensive plays and an im-·
pressive five-hit pitching per·,
formance by aeriior Bryan Wolfe. '
Southern drops to 9-5.
Bryan Wolfe pitched his best high
school game of his career, giving up
only one unearned run and scattering five hits across seven innings
of work.
Despite two miscues by Southern,
its fielding produced an ilverall sup-

•

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
Ne~o~· ~

Southem beaten 1-0

"

of and slightly ~hind Delahanty.

Secret Service agents are trained
never to turn their backs on a crowd
or to let their concentration wander
from those around the person they
are guarding. But pollee officers are
not so trained, ani! it is only natural
to turn to gawk at a president,
especially if you have never seen
him In person.
Thla 8eel1lB to have been what happened outside the HUlon. Pictures of
the scene clearly show that Delahanty turn~ his back on the crowd and on Hinckley - to stare at the
president. That is why the officer
never saw the would-be •••utn
raise his gun and why he Willi hit in
the back of the neck.in the first apray
of blillets'

At. a Secret Service official close
to the !1\lernal invelllgation put It:
"Had the officer (Delahlnty) been
facing the crowd bead-on, Hinckley
would have had to pull · his 81JII
~ in the officer's lice. Maybe
the officer could have reacted in

about this bill.
Sincerely. - John E. Kemper, !59
North St., Logan, Ohio 43138.

conunuriity services division of the
Ohio Youth Commission, including
parole supervision and direct commuriity placement programs. It
would also ellrnlnate a state-wide
system of foster care, Wilderness
skills program, tutorial and other
educational programs, job
readiness, day treatment, alcohol
and drug abuse programs,
psychological services and others
such as volunteer services. it seems
unrealistic that. eighty-eight (88)
courts could provide these services
to the youth in each county without
increased taxes.

.

Dear Editor:
Two erroneous statements have
appeared recently ·in the press
regards what was said at the forum
and open meeting held last Thursday between the citizens' group and
the Meigs County commissioners.
One statement was in the Dally
Sentinel and the other was a U.P.I.
release in the Columbus Citizen
Journal.
I was there and I think I know'
what was said by the various
speakers.
The Sentinel referred to a
"majority" of citizens speaking in
support of the commissioners. IT
WAS 100 PERCENT - 'PERIOD.
The Journal referred to these
citizens urging recognition of the
union. No such urging ws made. At
least not in open forwn. ·It might
have been so some place else but no
speaker expressed those sentiments.
In the interest of people who read
the press and look to It for information I humbly submit the
above corrections. - Gayle Price,
Portland.

Aiso, if House Bill 440 results in
youth being locked up for longer
periods of time, then there would be
an abnost inunediate need to build
at least two more institutions. It has
already been estimated that it would
cost the taxpayers $ro million for
construction, and an additional $4
million a year to operate these in·
stituUODB. I do not believe that the
taxpayers of Ohio should be asked to
pay for such an eiJ)ensive program.

There are many other issues at
stake in House Bill 440. I strongly
suggest that concerned citizens contact their representatives and
senators to express their feelings

fault?.._____~Ro..--be_rt_J._w.--==agma:.___n
time to have prevented the attempt
or maybe just the f•ct that a pollee
officer was looking almost directly
at him might have dissuaded Hinckley and made him waltfor a better
day. It Is something that we'll never
know.
"Maybe the only difference that it
would have made Ia that the officer
would have taken the round In the
throat Instead of the back of the
neck. But had an agent been standing there lnsteld of a Metropolitan
Pollee officer, he would have been
screening the crowd, not looking
backatthepresldenl"
The Secret Service official
stre..ed that the Metropolitan
Pollee acquitted lllelf well ~ the
shooting began: "Our lllml show
thatatthelnatlntoftheshootlngtwo
officers, G1'1118er and Leon Swain,
moved toward Hlnctley IJid were
the first to reach him. In f1ct, Jim
Brady unwittingly llepped In front
of Swain u he wu gobti for HJn.
ckley or else SWIIn would lltely

'

have taken the round that struck
Brady. Those two officers acted with
bravery In the face of the attacker
andmustbecommended."
. The official also stressed that
Delahanty could not be "blamed"
for what happened. "You can't
really fault a man for not doing what
he Is not trained to do," he pointed
out. He also Indicated that the final
Secret Service report would
probably not contain any ~
criticism of Delahanty.
"The man Is a hero to his fellow if·
fleers; he took a bullet meant for tl!e
president," explained the Seer«
Service official. "For us to lay
blame on him would loot Uke sour
grape!! or buck puslng, so I doubt
wewlllendupdoingit.
.
"What we have to look at jB
whether In the future we give lillY
' c;l~in perimeter uslgnmenta \0
local officers or 111e only our own
, people. This may well be a change~
,the method of protection that com4s
out of this Incident."
'

don't1mow."

t&lt;4

Thl! Reds' unexplainable mastery

.

Seeks correction

bander registered his 28th career
victory over San Diego against just
seven losses with his first complete
game Tuesday.
"He didn't seem to have a good
fastball," said Reds catcher Joe
Nolan. "He relied on moving the ball
around. He challenged the hitters
when he had to, made the good pitches when he had to."
Seaver's off-season training
program, designed to prevent the
nagging, injuries of recent years,
seems to he paying off.
"I feel fine. I'm very happy," said
Seaver, 2-1. "I feel I can throw
strikes with three, four or five dif·
ferent pitches."
Behind 3-2 going into the bottom of
the fifth inriing, the Padres sealed
their fate with a variety of mistakes
that led to eight Cincinnati ruDB.
·Tbe Reds added up five hits, three

lsn1t a recent phenomenon. Cin-

cinnati toot 15 of 18 games from San
Diego laat season, and hasn't 1081 a
, aeason aeries .to the Padres since
; 19'12.
, , H the Reds have been tough on the
• · dlvillon rival, starter Tom Seaver
. ,~ has heel' merciless. The right·

portive effort, however, the Tornado
bats were struck by the liad luck
plague again, and remained dead
behind Wolfe's pitching.
WoHe fanned three, didn't walt a
batter, but hit two Spartans. For
Alexander Burton fanned five,
walked five and hit two to pick up the
win.
Southern hitters were Dale
Teaford and Zane Beegle with
singles. For Alexander Jordan, Bur·
ton; Burnhouse, Fraley and Coe
each had singles.

Alexander scored the only run of
the game in the first on an error, a
ballr, a Farley single, another error,
and an RBI single by Coe the
designated hitter.
Southern travels to Eastern
toriigbt.

lmescore:
Southern
000 000 0-2 2 2
Alexander
100 000 x-1 5 I
Batteries: B. Wolfe and Rees. Bur·
ton (WP) and Jordan.

WATCH FRIDAY'S
NEWSPAPER
FOR
TOM'S STEREO CENTER'S
FIRST TIME EVER
12 HOUR
ANNIVERSARY SALE

walks, a hit batter, a wild pitch and a
tw!l-run error by third baseman Luis
Salazar for eight runs as 13 batters
went to the plate. Reliever Tim
Lollar, 1·1, was charged with five
eamedruDB.
"II was just one of those nights,"
Howard said. "If you really analyze 1--~-------------------------------­
it, Luis (Salazar) had a rough night
in the field. He (botched) a couple of
double-play balls that led to big in·
riings. We're not the type of club that
can make mistakes and hope to
win."
SALE ENDS 5/31/81

Second baseman Ron Oester, ben·
ched for several games last week as
he slumped, 'paced the Reds with
three hits and one RBI in five at·
bats.
Oester said batting instructor Ted
Kluszewski helped him work flaws
out of his swing before the game,

:.. OU signs 6-7 player

.

'

ATHENS, Ohio (AP) - Ohio
Unlvel'!llty apparently has wrapped
., up ·Its ·basketball recruiting by
r' signing
Victor Alexander,

°

9

0

o

0 6

ADMISSION: S2.50
STUDENTS $1.00

Community Scope Presents
·
·
I

=~~·s public school Player ~~r~d~untii !O~m -·~1 '

.

~

The &amp;.foot·7 Ale:llll1der averaged

Saturday

1 ~jl_[~~

ATHENS
ANTIQUES
fA
1 2

'&lt;1 ~~
10 a .m. until9 p .n , #
''"
(R
!su nday :
·,
·~ •', •, ~ ~
lla .m. unti!Sp .r
ay , an
1
• Dan Rowldball Classic, a Pittsburgh
Dealers Offering Primitives, Furnlt ure and Decorative
. poet.teason alklar game.
'
Alexander chose the Mid- · cces&amp;ories For the Beginner and the Advanq1d Collector.
: : American Conference school over
Chairman : Naomi Mayer · b l4 ·C'94 · 144 3
·
Manager: Jim Reynolds · 614·885·3891 or 888·7173
,· ; Temple, becoming the fourth recruit
; ·, this season of Bobcats' Coach Danny
A .I Ohio University Convocation Cenler. Ath ens. Ohio

:,' , 17 points and 13 rebounds last
,
earriing
first Heteam
.... aeason,
Pennsylvanll
honors.
was All·
the
. : MostValuablePiayerintheDapper

"Aieunder can help our program
".. Nee.
Immediately," Nee said of Alexander, sought by SO colleges.

1

•

M

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;•.Wins featured race
LEBANON, Ohio (AP)
Canadian Lila captured the $1,100
• featured pace mile at Lebanon
'•·before allllall crowd of 978 Tuesday
·'·nilht ltl..ebenon.
The winner Plidt8.4lJ, $3 andf2.60.
. 'Capl.oln Joeh placed, returning $4.:a&gt;
'and P.20, and Ancindy, third, was

SPICIAL OF THI WEEKI

' worth P.40.
'' Flir t111ef combined 5-3 with OK
"Dotlmlte for S112.80 In the double.

·:·~----------.
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Paptt-4-..,The Daily Sentinel
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.

Eastern bombs v·

Today's

.

Sports World
_By Will Grlmlley
liP Comlpoadeal
Eddie ArCaro has traveled that
mile and a quarter at Churchill
Downs enough times to know what's
required for 11 hol'!le to win a Kentucky Derby.
''It takes a tough dude,'' the Hall
of Fame jockey said the other day.
"A real tough dude."
ArCaro rode a record-tying five
Derby champions and will be ABC..
TV's expert commentator Saturday
at the 1981 run for the roses. He sees
it as a wide-open race, especially if
the field is as crowded as it is expected to be.
Right now, Arcaro figures Proud
Appeal, winner of last ~iqn, ?W 0
Grass Stakes, must rate the role of
favorite. But he's keeping an open
mind about Cure· the Blues, who
disappointed his backers with a
lackluster third-place finish in the
Wood Memorial.
"I don't discount Cure the Blues
yet," Arcaro said. "I think you've
got to throw out that one bad race.
He'd done too good before that. But
in hol'!le racing, it's a case of 'What
have you done for me lately?' Still,
stopping as bad as he stopped, with
no explanation. It doesn't jibe. I
think you've got to give the horse
another chance.n
The horse, perh8ps, but not the

Weclntsclay, 4er1129,1911

Po:eroy-Middleport, Ohio

jockey. Trainer LeRoy Jolley has
yanked Jacinto Vasquez off the Derby ride on Cure the Blues, opting for
Bill Sboemaker.
So it could be that Jolley's jockey
switch from Vasquez' short rein hold
to Shoemaker's longer rein grasp
will be important to Cure the Blues,
and to the big race. There are other
imponderables, too. Arcaro is interested, for example, in trainer
Horatio Luro's Tap Shoes, scratched
from the Blue Grass because of the
muddy track.
Then there is Pleasant Colony,
who won the Wood wben Cure The
Blues staggered to his third-place
finish .
·
If the Derby field reaches the 20
horses they've been talking about,
Arcaro thinks it will affect those
candidates whose style it is to come
from behind.
"Coming from behind isn't easy
when you've got 12 or 14 to beat, let'
alone 20/ ' he said. " You've got to

take chances and that can be
dangerous. With that many horses,
winning takes a lot of strategy and
some luck, too."
Arcaro's first Derby victory,
aboard Lawrin in 1938, came in a
large field. "There were 16 entered,
I think," he said.

Pirates edge Eagles

.

McARTifUR - The EaStern
Eagles bombarded ~ Vinton
County 1ii-5 here Tuesday evening In
a noD-league van!ity baseball coDlest. EaBtern raised its brilliant
record to 1+3.
Charlie . Ritchie came off the
disabled Iilii to pitch six full innings
before getting relief belp from Rob
Smith in the seventh. Ritchie fanned
four and didn't walk a single batter
in the inning.
.
Jeff Wolmendorf struck out three
in five innings of work. Priest came
on In the sixth for the Vikings. The
pair combined for three KO's and

eight costly wa)ka.
. .Eastern had a healthy nlght at the
plate, , scoring 15 runs on 15 bita, ··
while reeording a near jlerfect night
in the field With jllBI one error. Ray
WelT)' carried the big stlct for
Eastern as he doubled and bipled .
for five RBis. ·
Following Werry w~ Jolmny
Beaver with three singles, Gary
Grigga a double and single, Greg
Wigal a trip!' and single, and Rob
Smith, Mike BisBell with two sll!gles
each. Gene Cole and MarkHolter addedonesingleeach.
·

- I

.g.s, 15-5
.

Vlnlol) County hitters were Daney
with three.idJI8lea, Priest a double,
Lowe two alngles, and Cotterill,
Cecil, Coen, and RediJdn each with
singles.

Eastern bad Its. big .IJm!l,lclD the
third when It had 'seven stral8bt bill
sandwiches around two Walb and
an error. With one out Jolumy
Beaver started It all with a lllngle, ,
Gary Griggs singled, and Greg
Wigal tripled horne two nms.
Bissell, &amp;nlth, and Cole hit con· secutlve singles, Holter reached on
1111 errOr, and Ray .Werry belted a

c..
.
...
!drOOg biple.
.·
.. .
. A110 ridlnl llllue Cll tile birdhitting attack were RotPe Gaalllld
Beaver wbo coUected waiD. Wilen
the dUII1 had ~ ll"iiuDDl tbe
t.epatbl Eutem had ICIII'IId lmlll .
ruila to break open tile glllll and
eout lmll for the wll\1
,
:
.. Eutem bota Soulheni tllllgbt. .
Llnescore:
Eastern

Vinton Co.

1111 0011-11 D.l
101! SIO ~ I tO f

· Batteries: Rilcbl8 (WP) Smith,
and GriggS. Wolmendorf,- Priest and

Cotterill.

.

Cleveland sele~ts defensive players, kicker·· .·
BEREA, Ohio (AP) - With the
Cleveland Browns' defense and
kicking problems ri the 1980
National Football League season
still fresh in their minds, the BroiVIIS
brass selected three defensive
players and a kicker in the first day
of the two-day NFL draft.
The draftees are:
- Hanford Dixon, first round, 6
feet, 170 pounds, cornerback from
Southern Mississippi.
-Mike Robinson, fourth round, 6foot-'1, 255 pounds, defensive end
from Arizona.
-Steve Cox, fifth round, 6-foot-'l,
!90 pounds, punter-kicker, Arkansas.
- Ron Simmons, sixth round, 6

feet, 230 pounds, tackle-linebacker
from Florida State.
The Browns had no selections In
the second and third rounds due to
previoUB trades.
The Browns were noted as an offensive-orlented team last season as
they captured the American ..Conference Central Division title with
an 11-5 mark. The coaches admitted
that inconsistency in stopping opposing quarterbacks and in punting,
place kicking and field goals were
concerns.

in

Dixon, 21, has "all the qualities
you look for a eornerback- size,
speed, Intelligence, good hands and
athletic ability - and I also think he

Galbreath wants to

CINCINNATI (AP) - Pirates
President Dan Galbreath, who filed
suit against the city to chaDge or
North Gallia's track team walked Queen in discus.
break the lease at Three Rivers
away from Eastern Tuesday afBob Blackburn won the 440 meter Stadium,maintainshewantstokeep
ternoon with a 72-55 win over the dash in57:8.
the team in Pittsburgh-if city fathers
Eagles.
Mike Mays placed second in the will only listen.
Billy Blackburn lied the school 880, while Tim Lee took second place
Meanwhile, New Orleans and
record in the high jump at six feet, in the high jump. Eric Penick was other cities are !ifering their
scoring 20 points.
second man in the 220 meter dash.
facilities if the team does move from
Blackburn also won first place in
Lee scored third in the 880, while the city where the club has been
the 880 meter dash, the mile run and Bruce Shriver placed third in the low located for nearly a century.
the two-mile run.
hurdles and high hurdles. Jeff
"As long as representataives from
Also placing first for the Pirates Cisneros tied with Shriver for third New Orleans want to talk, I've got to
were Keith Payne in the 100 meter in the high hurdles.
listen," said Galbreath, here
dash, Tim Lee in high hurdles, Matt
North Gallia track Is scheduled to Tuesday for the grand opening of the
~emper m the shotput and Mal!__ meet Symmes Valley away tonight. ... new $38 million Westin Hotel, which _

is one of our type of people," said
Coach Sam Rutlgll8no,
Dixon has been 'clocked at •U5
seconds in the 40-yard dash and had
nine interceptlo1111 in f5 eolleglate
games.
"I'm very excited and more than
happy to be plcll:ed by the Browns,"
Dixonsald.
A Cleveland native became ·the
n~xt Cleveland choice, when the
BroWIIB tabbed Robinson. The big
iinelllllll was disappointed only in
that he had hoped to he selected
sooner in the draft than the fOW1h
round.
"I fee! I should have been picked
higher, but I'm glad to have been
drafted, and to be going baclt home.

k~ep

Eveeybody can't be a flnt or aecond
rounder, so I'll do Ule· beet I can,''
Roblnaoo laid.
.
· Cox, wbo had a 46.5-yard ~
average iaat season and has IOIDe
. lliJIIldence with field
will
likely be given a chance to dllplaee
resident punter Johnn,y Evans. Col:
can &amp;lao kick off, a chlre bandied
without much success lor the
BrownslutseaaoilbyDonCockrolt.

g.

The stocky Simmoni.JriU preeent a
problem for the BI'OWIIII COichea whereto play him. Hewua Uneman
college but phylli:aJJy may be
suited to Unebacker In the pi'QI. The
Browns ll8e four Unebackers In their ·
three-lour defe1111e.

in

team in Pittsburgh

his family developed.
Orleans people lmow tliat. I've told they won't IIBten," Galbfeathsatd.
"No one willlillten. All we want is the people In 'Pittsburgh that, but
something we can live with ... or r~~~~~~~~~~~:;;:;;~;::;;;:;:;;:::;;:;;;
we'll get out," he said.
;
.
.
=
.
Galbreath accused the city of
reneging on a promised "super high- ~
n;
way" system to the stadium and not
R H BILLMAN II1 0 D
. ~
'
giving the team help in maintaining
' '
'
'
,•
construction problems in the '·
Provides Such Services As
-·. lstadium.
V.'SION
EXAMINATIO
. NS
4
As prime tenant, the Pirates must
maintain the stadium but the repairs
HAID AND SOFT CONTACT LENSES
are 111Ming "about $2 million a
OPEN M.·T.·W.·F. 9·5
li
year. We cannot continue to pay that
,
CLOSED THUg.-SAT.-SUN.
price. We have been in Pittsburgh
992-2920 . ~
'1 113 Court St.
Pomeory, Oh.
(ownership) since 1946 and we do not
Above Clark's Jewelry in Pomeroy
want to leave Pittsburgh. The New·.

BEND AREA .QPJOMEMEJ'RIC C£Nft.R

~

clubs seek more gems
'"'. . . .dary ·draft round ·

•

m

no George Rogerses,
l.awrerjl · Taylors, no Kenny
grabs - at least not
· than a few lowselei~OD4 stick in the NFL
vea1r.Li~l81'Q Tyrone McGriff,
ago (No.333), not
the Pittsburgh
st::~:11~rw to injuries
to his
te
starting by
season's
But the W•~rc1und rookies, the
free-agent
, they are the
rarities. ' · ·
The
I'B show up inin:~~~:~ camp with
high hopes ar
odds against
them. Often are cut early and,
th4raini11g camps, cut
Not so the ~ie-chit&gt;per·s, the instant
the eollege kids
with agents
They are all but
guaranteed
only to make the
roster but to
and to be paid
handsomely
so.
Rogers,
is as sure a
thing as you
in the NFL this
year. Bwn
turned Houston
into a
winner when the
Oilers
Campbell three
years ago.lf
happen once, why
not again?
So, after

~~~~~~~i

because a1
games,
coach New
Reisman
,picked
selection '""'"v.
pound
1'rnnhv
he's not a
pbellhas
titles in

~.81
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Sponsored by the Holzer Medical Center and The Ohio Valley
Publishing Company, G.,~ llipolis, OH.

..

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Sf1.Tl1RDf1. Y, Mfl Y 16, 1981

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bypassed
America

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Registration Opens At 8:00

.. ,..,,,1•. -.,,dic!ttion that all the

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A one mile Fun Run (Dinosaur DashJ will begin at 10:00.
The main event, 10,000 meter (6.2 mileJ race, will begin at
10:45.
Both races .will start and finish a·t the Rivf!rfront Park
Area i.n Downtown Gallipolis.

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An.trJor:dAvie, the Derby wintet
,,.,,,,.,. was sidelined earlier
uusyea, Cure the Blues emerged WI
favorite. But his disappoillllnl thlr'lj-place perfonnance in
Memorial has
bue!llor18 about the colt's
one and-one fourth,

~

+'

p:::

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I
E-&lt;

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"I got 8 ,chance in all the bowl
games to show what I can do. It
means a lot to me to be the No. 1
receiver chosen. The passes I did
catch were pretty good catches, but
nobody knows about it because of
our record,'' said the 6-foot-1, 200
pound receiver who caught T1 passes
for 1,476 yards and 11 touchdowns.
Collinsworth, son or 1958 University of Kentucky basketball star Abe
Collinsworth, caught 120 passes for
1,937 yards and 14 touchdowns.
"It's obyious from last year that
we need to score more points,'' said
Anderson, delighted with the new
receivers. "And there are a lot of
quesio1111 about wide receiver. I .don't
think anyone knows what the
situation with Don Bass' knee will
be. It's going to be kind of interesting to see the new guys at
rookie camp this weekend.
"At last, they didn't draft a quar-

.. .

\

Pit,.l_:-,;:_-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---

tsburgb,
'Wllll selected
Benjl Pryor,
a tightfifth
end and
fromplace
kicker Rex Roblnsm or Georgia
came leVenth.
The draft continues today.

CamdeJt
'ParJt
Now open lor
198Jaeuon
We regre t construction delayS prevent Log Flume opening at this time.
Watch for special announcement - soon .

at. 60 Wnt

Hantln~ton,

W.Va.

ridect~ding~Sa~turda~~y~'s~wlnner~~·iiijiiij~iiijiiijiiijiiijiiij~~~~~i~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii

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24;.,. ••••~··········~·······.····.········· '31.11

Story and Karen H• .Story
136
)rid, Pomeroy, 011.
1J:armrtrlv Meigs Gen. Hospital)
. . """' Pll.

'!..,

26.••••••••••••••••••••••••••.
••••••••••••• •33.37
.. - -,

AT LAW

•

U£E LOCATION: RIVERFROIIT PAa ·MfA

)fie

Decolated Cakes

OPENING OF

10,000 METERS

_;;0!: , _ ,

terbeck In the first round, so m a y b e , . . . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - _ _ _ ,
that means it wasn't our lault," Anderson joked.
Gregg laid his third round selection, defensive back Jobn Sinunonl,
was not picked because be werit to
Southern Methodist, Gregg's old
school.
"He's j1181 one nice guy to have
around with good speed and size. He
has good range, and he's a hitter.
His vel'BIItillty could help UB," Gregg
said.
.
WylmingtinebackerGregFruer.
'Wllll picked fourth and "may be
fastest linebacker we'll have,'' said
assistant coach Hanlltlullough, but
doubted that the 1!-foot-2, 213-pound
player would be a starter this year.

Blues ranks No.8 among Derby this year's Derby since Heavenly
challengers.
Ca1111e, the top money-r among
What did Jolley think after Cure $-year-olcls, will run Friday lrwtead
the Blues "stopped" after a mlle of in the Kentucky OUs for flllies.
the 11-8-mile Wood and ,was passed
But there will be plenty or others
by Pleasant Colony, the winner, and passing through the entry box nturthe runnerup, Highland Blade?
sday.
"It was scary," he said "I won- ' Uke Cure the Blues, there will be
dered what happened. Such a good some speed hones. Among them
horse with great ability. It 'Wllll will be Proud Appeal, wlmt Jolley
totally not him." . .
de8cribel as "a very tough borae,''
The blistering early pace and Arkanlaa Derby winner Bold Ego
several cuts the eolt suffered on hill and Illinois Derby runnerup Pa.sa
left hind hock were 1111101111 the foe- the Tab,
· tors, Jolley added. Cure The Blues
Alao, there will be stretch rwurenr
also was coming off a narrow 19ss to Pleuant Colony, Santa Anita Derby
Proud Appeal, now the Derby victor Splendid Spruce and
favorite, in the Gotham.
Flamingo winner Tap Shoes.
After the Wood, Firestone and
The UBUai Derby turnout orl30,000
Jolley decided to bring in Bill !!gum to have a tough time
Vasquez u thetoeolt's
rider. Jacinto
Shoemaker
replace
"The situation (with Vuquez
aboard) was not working out,''
Jolley said. "Finishing second in the
Derby is not good enough.
Shoemaker II a great rider and be'll
lmow what to do. He has a1mo1t 8,000
victories. I'd like to seem him win
(at least) one more time."
There will be no filly rwmlng In

Qj

....1-&lt;

'

~ ~~\t

.,

Southern gals win two

the Blues is derby
. favorite

lllq!..l::
1-&lt;

.. ..

don 't know what
about,'' said VerSer,
the first squad All·
He said he wasn't
surprised
tbe first wide
receiver ,..,.,n rn• draft.

~(.)0

CJ

. ,' "
! It;: '
!" ~· ..- '*
·' '"'

•

'l· - ·! ...".

Athird "name" quarterbact, Purbut he's as close to one you'll find in
due's Mart Hemnann, didn't go unthe draft.
"I don't think I'm an Earl Camp- tll the fourth ~ when Denver .
bell," Rogers said. "I can't turn it selected him. Hla lnOblllty II hlchlY
&amp;rOIIOd by myself. I'm nota one-man IIIIBpeCI- which makes the BI'OIICOI'
team. I play with a team. As an in- pick even than more lntereatlqg Iindividual, I can't do it. It has to be the ce their No.I quarterbact, ' Craig
Morton, also can't get anywhere
team that'll do it."
He was one or sill running bact. very fast.
Easley, the UCLA safety lar and
picked in the first round and one of
20 to go among the 166 players away the star ot the defqve bacQ,
choeen in Tuesday's six rounds. was picked by the defense,poor Seat,.
Defensive backs led the first-ilay Ue Seahawks. Hugh Green, the Pitt
ranks with '!I being picked, fQllowed defensive end projected as a
by linebackers with. 23. The first linebacker In the pi'OI, wu the
linebacker to go was Taylor, rated favorite or man or the New Yort
by many as the "best athlete Jets' fans cr'owded into the draft
· available." The New York Giants headquarters at the Sheraton Hotel.
got the North Carolifia star with But it was Tampa s.y which got
their No.2 pick.
him, four picks after .the Jets had
The first quarterback to go WIB .used· their No.3 selection to clafm
Rich Campbell of California, selec- FreenJjlll McNeil, the UCLA running
ted by Green Bay, which has been back.
Perhaps the beat offemive
looking for a really good one since
IN SAINTS COMPANY - Former Soulb CaroliDa John Mecom Jr., In New OrleaD8 1uesday afternoon.
Bart Starr, now Its embattled coach, lineman to go 'Wllll Keith Van Horne
l'lllllllllll back George Ragen amlles at rlgbt as be II Tbe Heilman Trophy winner was tbe flnl player
retired after the Packers' halcyon of Southern Cal, the tackle who led
pltked In Tuesday's NFL draft. (AP l.aserpholo),
preaeated a New Orlea111 Salata jersey by team owner
the Troj8118' famOUB "llludent body
days of the 1980s.
right" sweeps. The Chicago Bears
figure
to put him to good 1111e paving
Just before the Pack made its fir·
st-round pick (No.6 overall), St. the way for Walter Payton to roam
Louis chose Alabama linebacker where he wishea.
Another top offensive tackle to go · The Southern Tornado girls' soft. Trace with four slngles each.
E.J. Jwiior. It was a mild surprise.
For All Occasions
in
the first round 'Wllll Mark May or ball team recently recorded back-toThe Cardinals' faM have been wonAgainst Meigs, Southern grabbed
dering just how much longer Jim Pitt, winner of the OUtland ~ back wlnl over Hannan Trace and
an
early lead and held off a late
winner
as
the
nation's
best
Interior
.
.
Meigs
on
the
Southern
High
diamond
CONFECTIONERY
Hart can be their quarterback.
game
charge
by
Meigs
to
claim
a
20lineman
in
college.
He
was
one
of
11
in
Racine.
The last time St. LouiB went for a
Ph . 992-6342
12victory.
quarterback in the first round, it was Panthers picked in the first six rounSOUthern
romped
Hannan
Trace
317
N.
2nd
Middleport
Steve Pisarclewi~. He never pan- ds, the most any school lOIII to the
16-12
and
defeated
Meigs
20-12.
ned out and ultimately became the pros.
The Washington Redakins took
cause celebre · over which Bud
May
shortly after they had sWWJg a
Against Hannan Ti-ace, pitcher
Wllklnson, the Cards' gentlemanly
with Baltimore, giving away Tracl Mearns picked up the win.
trade
coach, was fired by boos Billy Bidthree draft choices In exchange for SOuthern hitters were· Amber Warwill.
ner with 'three singles and a double,
If St. Louis made a calculated all-purpose bact Joe Wasblngton.
In the other trade of intereat, Tony Della Johnson two singles and a
gamble this time, it paid off. When
the Cards' choice in the second Reed, a fine blocker and 1,000-yard double, Renee Smith two singles,
round came up, the other blue-chip rusher three years ago but stopped Elaine Smith three singles and a
quarterback, Portland State's Neil in his tracks by imee surgery two double, Laren Wolfe a single,
Lomax, was still available. They seasons back, 'Wllll dealt to Denver Michelle Johnson three singles, JeDby Kansas City' also for draft picks.
ny Bentley three singles, and Traci
Southern freshman Laren Wolfe
took him.
Mearns two singles.
went six and 8 third innings to pick
up the win, whlle Debbie Michael
· SUit and Triplett led Hannan came on in relief.

.

UJCJ

+'

111

,

Ill

::r: --.o"'

Q)

Prizes: A First and Second Place Trophy will be awarded
to both male and female winners in the 10,000 meter race. In
addition, A medal for the winner in each age group for males
and females will be awarded (i.e., 10 and under, 11-14, 15-19,
20-29, ·30-39, etc.J. A First Place Trophy will be awarded to the
male and female winner in the Dinosaur Dash. Entry Fee:
$5.00 ($5.50 day of the race). All runners pre-registered will
receive a T-shirt for the race.they run in.
Refreshments will be furnished for all registered runners.
Come dressed to run, as there are no dressing room or
shpwer facilities.
· You must check in at the Registration Desk on the day of
the race to pick up your "Runners Package."

.,.,....,
1
ow;!~! I. ..~..
.

catch .two wide receivers

\

ROilD RilCE

/...

'

m-asu

�-·

.
..
~a~· ~~~~--------------~~~~~~----~--------~~~

i~astrzemski, Evans unhurt in fiery three car crash
\, ;':JL
~d
(A,!') - Boston Red Solt

~,·p1ayers

Carl Yastrzemski and
~'Dwight Evans emerged unhurt' but shaken up - after being involved in a fiery three-car colliBon
Tuesdaynightthatleftthreej)ersons
dead and four critically injured.
The'. players were returning to
Dallils after a ~ lOBS to the Texas

Rangers ·tn Arlington Staudium
An Arlington taxi cab, in which the
earlier Tuesday night. Police said · two playe~ were riding, was struck
the accident occurred around 11 when one of the other cars spun
p.m. a&gt;T, when one car travelling around, police spoke~ Ed Spenwestbound in the eastbound lane of cer said. Yastrzemski, contacted at
Interstate 30, collided with an east· his Dallas hotel room, said he and
bound vehicle. Three occupants of wEans wre not hurt, but ''shaken
the eastbound vehicle were killed in- up."
stantly police said.
The two players w~re not taken to

a hospital. "We

a cOWlty sheriff

and exploded," he said.

(deputy) drive us bsck t() the hOtel,"
"We ran Into the car that had been
Yastrzemskisaid "Itiva.SreallytOO lnfrontofusandslidtotheside."
quick ..It happened so suddenly," he • As the two cars collided, Ya$'said of the.accident. ,
zernslti said he. saw "bodies flying
"We wewe sitting in the back of outOfthecarsinfrontofus.
the car talking about hitting when a
"Two bodies flew put us one on
car in front of us and another car the left side and one on the right
coming the wrong way hit head on side,'' he said. "It WBillke someone

ASTRO
GRAPH

put dynamite In the
blew It
up. The debris that flejjast us
unbelievable.
8ti1l can't
"We were SO luckyV
bellevelt,''hesald.

was

Aprll20, 1981
This coming year you · could
meet someone Who IS very
progressive and inventive, Th is
individual may come up witt.
some profitable ideas in which
· you can participate bY. helping to
Qel them to the marketplace.

"We're still
about ltn

TAU II US : (April 21i-May 20)
Your friends will judge yol,o 7
today, not by whet you hove but :
by Whet you are. Affectations and
pretenses will turn them off
rather than on.
'
GEMINI (Miy 21·June'20) Per·
sons associated with you today
will not be Impressed by wnat you
promise, only by toow ·you· per·
form. Be a doer. Let your ac·
compllshments speak for them· ·
selves.
,
CANCER (June 21·July 22) It's
important to try to bring a little
into your work

SCORPIO COci. 24·Nov. 221

You are ente~prlsing and
imagina1ive tOday, but there is a
possibility you won't capitalize on
vour opportunities. Focus on the
substance, nOt the fOrm.

discussed today in the presence
of gossipy types. What you say

will be ,distorted if. it's repeated
tater • .
VIRGO (Aug, 23-Sept. 221 It's
not likely you'll fOrget to fulfill
promises made to friends today,
but you could do just that where

your mate is concerned . Tie a
string around your finger.
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0cl. 23) You

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec.
21) You're capable of handling

I

work well todaY on things with a

For the
record• ..

ROOF
COATING'S

NATIONAL LEAGUE

EAST
W L P d.GB
92
.8181
Montreal
12 3
.100 Philadelpllla
ll
6
.647
1
Pittsburgh
I 6
.eli
I
NewYod;
4 a
.:w &amp;I&gt;
Chit11g0
I 13
.071 10\;
WF1IT
"""Angel..
14 4
.T/1 Cincinnati
9 7
.563 4
Atlanta
.529
4\;
9 a
SanFranciaco
a ~ .400 7
San Otego
6 12
.333
8
Houston
I 12
.294
a ~;
'1'\trsday'tGama
St.Louis at Chicago, ppd,, rain

St.UJuis

z..o and Sorensen

5 GALLON

21. 2
Montreal

(Rogers Z..O l at Philadelphia
(Ca rlton ~ ), (n)
Houston (Ruhle 0-1 ) at Atlanta (Walk 11l. lnl
San Diego (Curtis 0-2) at Cincinnati
~)

fRobei"Ls 0-0) , ( D) '

ALUMINUM

'

Sa n Francis&lt;.o (Blue 1·2) at 1M Angeles (Welch 1-0), (n )
ThUI"'ddy'• Gamet
Houston at AUanta, {n)
San Diego at CincinnaU, (n)
Pittsburgh at New York, (n)
AMERICAN LEAGUE
W

Nl'W York
Milwaukee
&amp;.!loo

ll"roll

Bultlmore
Turonto

L
Pel. GB
7 4
.63!
\;
10 6
.625 a6
.5711
7 7 .5002
7 10
.412 3~
5 8
.385
'"
6 11
.:153 4\;

17
11

Chicago

a

Tt= ~

California

10
5

Minnesota

.850

TRUCKLOAD
PANELING SALE

i

9
12

Seattle

5 13

KmiSII.sCity

3

-

.733

31&gt;

.533
.526

61;
6\1

.294

10\;
ll
10

.2'18
.250

9

Co me in and see our com ple te collecti on of high quality
paneling . We feature co lorfu l woodgrains, deco rator
prints, t e~e tures. and patterns.

he.ily'1 G1JDn
Minnesota 4, SeatUe 1
Toronto 6, Milwaukee 2
Chicaga 8, Baltimore 6
Kansas City at Cleveland, ppd., rain

'12 "X4'x8'

Ne w York 4, Detro!! 1
Texas 9, Boston 0
California 3, Oakland 1

WedDetclly't Game•

al

LQe~ltlON
·ST., .
, OHIO
.'

Maintenance tree solid vinyl siding in
JWOod grain finish. Resistant to rust,
, corrosion, termites, tire, scratches and
, dents. 40 year warranty. Availilble in 8''
. and double 4" horizontal and 10" ver·
· tical .

Cali£omia Cl.ahn 3-1 ) at O&amp;klal1l (NQIIo
ris 4-Cl
Kansu City !Splittorff 0.1 and Gale 1-1)
Ht Clevebuld (Waits 2-G ad Denny 1-l), 2

I -"'

A.M..TILL 5:00 P.M.

SATURDAY......,.,•••••

Chicago (Trout 1-o or Lamp IH J at 811-

&amp; SA11111Y.
...

ADMTMLE

LA-READER

NATIONAL LEAGUE

. . . . .... '11111 III'Cillon
• • • Rt!QIIIIp 011/rflllllllc:ll
IIIII ~ CGIIIIndaft.
fttl 21-tnc:lt patlt. 14/7141

BATTING (25 It boll!) ' CollinB, ClncinIUiti, .403; Rose, Philadelphia, .384 ; He!).
der!on, Chicago. .3111; Ra~ . Montreal,
.379; Flynn, New York, .372.
RUNS: Collins, CinclnniU, 14; Dawson,
Montreal, 13; Sctlmidt, Philadelphia, 13;
Trillo, Philadelphia, 13; Carter, Montreal,
12; Raines, Montreal, 12; Templeton,
St.Louis, 12; C~pcion, Cindnnati, 12.

~"

.lftll

geles, 12; Cabell, San Francisco, lZ; a
'Ned With 11 .
HITS: ROH, Philadelohla. 211 : C.Wno,
ClncinnaU. 25; Raines. Montreal, 22 ; Herndon, S.n Francisco, %2; Maddo1:, PhUadelphia, 21 ; Baker, Los Angeles, 21; Salazar, San Diego, Zl ; Cabell . San Fran-

r '"''

iCUIIP-

l1gltt ...... CMrl 11100

. iq. ft. 14114G5/4SI .

01101 IRJ IIIUI IIWI tr

w ••

"Ill lVI ...
.14/aJ.I/fJ7J/MI

&amp;:IIISJVE

Philadelphia,

......

lj

Concepcion, Cincinnati , a; Hemandn:,
St.Louis, 7; Flynn, New York, 6; Roee,
Phtladelpllla, 6; Olambll!a, AllanlO, I;
Washlnl{ton, AUanta, 8; Glll'Vey , lm Angele.s, f.
TRIPLES: Herr, St.Louil, 4: Templeton, St.Louis, 4; Baker, Los Angeles, 3;
Durham, Chicago, 2; Henderson, Chicqo,

-·

.........

2; Rlcllanla, Son Diego, 2.
HOME RUNS: Daw100, Montrea~ I;
Schmidt, Philadelpllia, ~ ; carter, Montrea~
4; Kingman, New Yort, 4;
J.'l1lomllooo. RttllbU11h, 4; Homer, N,.
lanta, 4,
STOLEN BASES' Rolnet, Montreal, II ;
North, S.n Francisco, It ; Lopes, Los An-

ACRI.ICOTEX

--·

HOI&amp;IWNT

Pflllo.
RU.

$

WEED FEED FEI1I.IZEI

4:00 TILL 8:00 AND SATURDAY 9:00
TILL 1:00 TO ANSWER YOUR
INDIVIDUAL QUESTIONS. WHEN

CONCR.ETE
60 LB. BAG

Old llwnl

or 111 u ling IMn

. . . 14/47508

slow·r•lllsn1hl nllrlfllll rotr

lawn ..... c.ntnll .. 'tv ...
40 Dill• ltrHdllaf IIIII viiiRt
...... lllld . . . . fttrnUI .
1

_, ......... t4/22.W/3-3

Unique tam 411•011111alon
mull.
~,

p,_,...,....

'-.~Aj~-..,.~~\ Hllh hldint. ltliiii·Millhll

TO BE GIVEN AWAY AT hOO ON
SATURDAY

$269

Great for those do-lt·
yourself projects
around the house. ,
JUST ADD WATER

8

FOR PAnO AND CARPORT
ROOFS

GREEN, WHITE AND BROWN
AS LOW AS

t

3 It

No.

300 8' PC.

RBI : Annat, Oakland, 22; FlaK,

Sample, Tew, 7; Snoioton, B;l~~mon:
8; Gritlin, Toronto, I ; II.Jf01odeo""l, OU·
la nd, ~; Pacloret, Seoute, a.
TRIPlES,

Coillno, - -,"

4;

ters, DeirUt 3; Coweu, Detroit, 2;

""'•
Col!loirlio, 2; R.llendenca;
2: Pulnaln, Tnu, l . · ·
:

~

~kland,

R.- .

~

lond, 14; J.Cnlz, Sullie, 10; Rondolpli,
New Yori~ 4; Gardri, Toronto, 4; Camr,
C.lllmUI, 4; M..,.,., .lllklaM, 4; BobfU,
~!i. l'lct.... Seollle, 4.
" •
PHU1J11U (I DoriofOO)I)' 1-h, .. _
land, w, 1.1111, 1.111; ... Norrtt, OUlond,.
U, 1.000, J.M; Foncfl. : OIUiomJa, M,
1.000, 114; a.,t. aa.o, H, 1.. ., 1.8;
W•lt&amp;, Clevtland, M, -~~000. l.Ot; Lfrdl.,
MUnllbe, J.O, J•, U4;
Ode~~o, H , 1.000, UD: ~ Carner, Te:us, U,

.&amp;o.fT. NYLON HOSE
· Orange colored hlgh·pressure
hose. Brass couplings. Nylon
reinforced . 5/ 8 in . 1.0.
12/T886:6A

Reg. $17.49

1.000. 3.11.

'

j --

M•.f. 7:00·tl5:00
SaL 7:00 tl 3:00
SPECW. HOURS RJR'
- 7:00 tl taOi

*

'

••·-

'

PAB1stt
'

I

PH. 992-6611
;JHE suPER STORE

'

SlbrdiJ 7:GO tl 5:11

a.m.,

.

'

I

IOJRS:

f&gt;e.

HOME RUNS ' Zilt1 ' Suttle, '' Sqfo.
IOn, BIIIUmore, f ; Annu, ~nd, li
Smalley, Mini= 1;. I 11od , With .4.

STOlEN

3.45
5.15
6.87
7.08

'

.JiiNGO
AU -VINYL " INAP·TOGlTHEI! "

QUTTI:Iil. OOWNIP'OUT IYITlMI

• OUTP'EAFOftMS MH•L GU TTtfl S 'I'ST£MS tN
EVERYWA'I'.

• SNAP TOGETHERS'I'STEM CAN IE EA.SilY

tHST.IllEC IV ONE PERSON
• GUA.RANTEED A.G.IINST RUST. ROT. ANO

COMOSION.
• COMPITIJIVU'I' PRICED
WITH METAL GUTTER

W1th a handsaw and 11 screwdriver. the
system "snaps .. tog ether. A do-it-yours-elfers dre am' Come In and we'll show
you how.

7•

-

16

DO-ITYOURSELF
AND
SAVE!

.,.,.. 14; Mun&gt;by, a.tJand. 14· l.¥M
Ca ~ornla . 1,11 ·Sniolity , M.._., !I. '
HITS .:
Arm•1,
Olkland,
27;
R.H~•. Oakland, 2'1 ; Zflk S..ute,
311 ; Bornlun!, Chicago, 21: I 'hod 'lllth

Annu,

-

12

CEIUNG . TILE

13.

7.1.
0011BlE8:

10

4.59
6.87
216 3.44
9.15
2x8 4.58
9.44
4x4 4.72 5.90
3" RD. FENCE POST 7'........... '2.75
4" RD. FENCE POST 7' ••••••••• '3.35
2x4 2.30

PLASTIC
PANELS -

QUIKRETE
READY MIX

Suprtnt1-quallty lawn flld tut

SeatUe,
RUNS:
ea...,., California.
Annu, OU!and,

AT OUR DISPLAY FRIDAY EVENING

CORREGATED

W/Ka;.III-IN
....._ _ _-1

suny blend. 14/49066

Special mlx1ln lor rtlluildlng

.40 RETENTION

MILL FINISH

'
Get a lull· grHn cover In
moderate or lu.ll shade.

Fall Filla.

This
pressure·treated
lumber is ideal for patios,
decks, fences, benches,
planters or walkways .
Now you can have all the
beauty of natural wood
grain, plus the built·in pro·
tection of preservatives.
This treatment furnishes
lasting protection, and
. gives the wood a hand·
some light green cast that
weathers to a natural,
driftwood gray.

'

gtl". a; Coutna. CtnctnnoU, 6; 7 n.d
With 5.
.
PITC!llNG
Valonauela,

&amp;.,;;;,.-;-:-··St•

WINDOW
2020 ........ ~ ....'24.80
302.0 .............'27.64
3030.....
- ·........•34.20

1M ....... lltr)IUIIII, 01111 . .

cisco, 11.

ALUMINUM SLIDER
'

-·•• ......

Splclll . . . . . . . . . .

SlltldlupiD -In -

.....

• Ill ..... ""' .. 11111111

RBL Schmldt, Phlladelpllla, 14; Cooctpclon, Cincinnati, 14; G'arvey, Los An-

PRESPJlto:WIN

............
..............
PLAY.IEED

.............................
-"
. "'"' ...-.,..
_, .. ""'. ,..,
Ill?

FACTORY TRAINED ANDERSON
WINDOW REPRESENTATIVE WILL BE

PRESSURE-TREATED -LUMBER

P.M:~DAY.

Spllld ... 111*11..,.., ...

TODA V'S MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS

WE CARRY A COMPLETE SELECTION
OF LUMBER FOR ALL OF YOUR
BUILDING NEEDS.

I'

•

Milwaukee at C.lilomia, lnl

Detroit at Seattle, In)

DURING THIS SALE

'YOU VISIT THIS DISPLAY SIGN UP

I

w

On ly game! scheduled

regrets.

FOR THE FREE ANDERSON WINDOW

Lawn&amp;

1'bundly'1 Gamea
Toronto at Baltimore, (n)
Minnesota at Boston, rn)
Chicago at OeYeland, (n)
KansaJ City at Twu, (n)

McBride,

PRE-CUT STUDS

.r

•

'53 95SQUARE

2" X 4"-·ECONOMY GRADE

lr-=~
- ~
~- ~

(Darwin 1·

portant matters should not be
evaluated today on cursory information . A failure to probe
deeper may later cause you

25% OFF

'26.95 GAF ASPHALT
'27.95 J. M. FIBERGLASS

HOUBfGR THIS SALE
FRIDAY............. ~ ..:Mo,AJA. TILL 1:00 P.M.

Toronto (Garvin 0.1 ) at Milwaukee (Sla·

DOUBLES :

Many colors and different weights to choose from. ll's
and easy. The right materials to sa"Je time and money.

Y fSJUJRDAY

ALSO AVAILABLE IN GREEN, G~
GOLD AND TAN

~

t on 2-1), (n)

tlmore ( O . M~trtinez 1).1), (n)
Boston (Tudor HI ) at Ttus
2l, (nJ

first and think later will fall flat.
AlliES (March21·April19) lm·

~~-The beautiful way to save fuel@&gt;

RE.SHINGLE YOUR ROOF!

REFRESHMENTS

IN
SQUARE WHITE

•329

Mmn..ota (K,...

'

$4995

EXTERIOR

INSULATION BOARD

Ne\A' Yort (May 3-1 ) at Detroit (Monis
1·2)

Sealtle IAbbott lH I
man 1-3)

20% OFF

PISCES (Feb. 20·March 20)

Your possibil ities for success-are ·
good today, provided you plan
wisely. Situations where .you ac:t

These are the same hi gh.qual ity windows Andersen has
built for over 75 years. With features like: Natural . .
insulati ng wood core. Energy-saving double-pa ne onsulatmg
glass. Optional triple glazing, Complete weatherstnppmg.
Lon~ life. low maintenance vmyl extenun; Easy. fast•
installation intu virtually any wondow open1ng

'

1

w&gt;m
Oakland

$2895

VINYL SIDING ·
GAF VANQUARD

EAST
Cleveland

ASHEET

$}}95

an unexpected source.

Andersen
PermaShield"
Windows

.

loa ALL 0' fOUl HABWAII
AND ..,..,.. NRDS

•
'

14 STYLES
IN SIOCI
TO atOOSE FROM

25.% OFF

19)

counting on might be delayed,
while a windfall could come from

WITH FIBRE

SEE OUR KITCHEN CABINET DISPLAYS

New York

at

o. x.
$845

AQUAIII US (Jan. 20·Feb.

F inances may be a mixed bag for
you today . A situation you' re •

5 GALLON

Factory representative in our store on C::&gt;&lt;;,;r;:.,.;.
May 2nd to answer your individual question.

IPastort'! 1-4), (n)

(Bibby

lly to the offending party. He
is the
one
·

your displeasvre . .

Replacing
windows?
We have e:xacth'
what you need:

PLYWOOD

WITH OR WITHOUT ·
FIBRE

BLACK

--YE 40%
KITCHEN CAll

3-8 )

ut Chicago (Krukow 0-1 S.nd McGlothen 0-

Pittsburgh

Rather than discussing with
others any grievances :;ou may
nave with a triel)d, take it direc·

· 4'xl'x%"

Montreal 6, Philadelphia 3
Houston ! , Atlanta 1
Cincinnati 11, San Diego Z
PH1Sburgh 8, New York 0
San Francisco 6, l..Al:s Angeles 1
Wednetday't Gamet
St.Louis (Rincon

c~

responsibilities today, but your
first inclination may be to duck

them because you could lack
. fa ith In your abilities.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)

profit motive, but you may not be
so
in matters where there
is
in it for vou.

You could become too

bored' when

routlne ,tasks.
. .'
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) Family
financial matters should not be

RAINGO VINYL
GUTTER NOW
ONLY$4.99 PER 10FT.

Girl scout
troops join
for bike hike
Junior Girl Scout Troops Of Meigs
County joined for a bike hike Satur·
day traveling from the Ohio Valley·
Christian Assembly Grounds to the
Rock Springs Fairgrounds, a distance Of over six miles.
Before the bike hike began, the
bicycles were inspected by Bob
Bauer, Jim Hysell, Jack Frederick,
Domle Stewart, Paul Sinclair, Dana
Turner, and George Wright.State
Highway Patrolman Hunter talked
to the scouts about bike safety, and
the Big Bend C. B. Club furnished
trucks With drivers, RandaU Gibbs
and Pat ~iker.
After reaching the fairgrounds, a
luncheon was served to the riders by
Susie Stewart, Mary Bentz, Susie
Pullins, Janet Peavley, and Barbara
Fry. Royal Crown provided sofi
drinks for the scouts.
Participating were Christi Hysell,
Jodi Brown, Cylinda Fredericks,
Tracy Michael, Rgina Eblin, Mlssl
Peltry, Pam Smith, Rhonda Gomez,
Kay Frederick and Pat HyseU ri
Rutland Troop 1291; Michelle
Capehart, Gina Gibbs, Becky Bauer,
Shirley Gibbs, and Susan Bauer,
Chester Troop 1049; Rhonda Rathburn, Elise Meier, Lesley Carr, Kim
Stewart, Amy Luckeydoo, Kelly
Stewart, Doozi Stewart, and Marilyn
Meier, Middleport Troop 1039.
Jennifer Swartz, Sherrie Wright,
Angie Davis, Lisa Patterson,
Dreama Bentz, Debbie Downie,
Amy Satterfield, Nellie Wright, and
Marlene Swartz, Pomeroy 1256;
Kim Cogar, Wendy Fry, and Shirley
Cogar, Syracuse 1204; Brenda Sinclair, Joan Simpson, Traci Casto,
ShaMon Slavin, Sue Fry, Lisa
Pullins, and April Clark, Syracuse
1204.
In the afternoon, the members Of
Senior Troop 1208 and Cadette Troop
11110 held a bike rodeo for the scouts.
Handling that were Susan Jell, Shari
Cogar, and Tanuny Capehart and
Carolyn Casto .

60 years
celebrated
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Eddie Guinther
of Gallipolis hosted a diMer party on
April 23 honoring Mr. and Mrs.
Joseph Cook, 4 Lincoln Terrace,
Pomeroy, on their 60th wedding anniversary .
Present were Mr. and Mrs. Cook's
dsughter, Mrs. Edward Corcoran,
and ber son, Jim, South Windsor,
CoM.; Mr. and Mrs. Guy Guinther
and daughter, Karen, Mr. and Mrs.
Willie Guinther and son, Chris, Mr.
and Mrs. Malcolm Guinther and
dsugher, Nita, and son, Malcoim,
Syracuse; Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Guinther, Mrs. Gertrude . Johnson,
mother of Mrs. Eddie Guinther,
Mrs. Caryl Kiser and daugher, VanNessa and son, Sean, Mrs. Debbie
Bevan and son, Gabriel, ~ . and
Mrs. Bernard Guinther and son, L.
A., and daughter, Mary Lee and
husband, Gallipolis; Mrs. Clayton
Faris and grandchildren, KeUee,
Troy, Autwnn Griffith and a friend,
Angie, Parkersburg, W. Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Cook were married
on Aprill4, 1921 in Catlettsburg, Ky.

New arrival
Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie Overs, the
fonner Cindy Matheny, Jacksonville, N. C. are aMouncing the birth
of a ·son, Justin Ryan, March 22, at
Jacksonville. The bsby weighed
seven pounds, eight ounces.
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence Overs and Mr. and Mrs.
Bill Hudson, Jacksonville, N. C. and
Donald Matheny, Wilmington, N. C.
Great-grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Albert Roush, Bailey Run
Road, Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs.
Henry Matheny, Leon, W. Va. and
Mrs. Ethel Overs, Jacksonville, N.

c.

Jeffen
MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and Mrs.
Joe Jeffers (Mary Ann Miller) are
81Ulouncing the birth of a son, April
19, at the Holzer Medical Center.
The eight pound, 14 ounce infant
! was 21 Inches long and has been
named Bryan Joseph. Maternal
grandparents are Mrs. Jane Huff.
man, Middleport, and George W.
, Miller, Middleport, and the matertill great-grandparents are Mrs.
HIIIJa Harris, Pomeroy, and Mrs.
Juanita Miller, Middleport. Mr. and
Mrs. Dick Jeffers of Pomeroy are
the paternal grandparents:

Honor rolls announced

�Daily

iiiiiiiiiii;:;::;:=:;::;;;;;;;;;;iiiiii"""-;R:ev~J:vol begins here

Gary, Ethel johnson party honorees
Mrs. Sharon Johnson entertained Mrs. Clarys Johnson and children,
recently with a birthday party Jay, Barbara and Tommy, Lorain;
honoring her husband, Gary, and Mr. and Mrs. Fred Sayre and sOil,
Mrs. Ethel Johnson.
·
Eric, of Bowerston; Mrs. Rhonda
Guests at the party were the John- Sharp and children, Mike and Jeff,
son's children, Ty and Jessica, Sherrodsville; Debbie LaValley,
Racine, Mr. and Mrs. Robert John- Racine; Larry Babbit, Racine; Jeff
son and children, Teresa and Becky, Sopher, Racine, and Mickey
Racine; Rita Johnson, Racine; Mr. Mugrage, Letart. Sending gifts
and Mrs. Bill Dickenson, Logan; were Mr. and Mrs. Bernard

Mrs. Johnson seryed sandwlcbes,
punch, miniS, c'ake and ice
cream at the party. ·

' A weekend revival will be held
t1wraday'c through Swxlay evenlngll
at 7:30 p.m. each evening at the
Faith· Tabernacie Church on
Bailey's Run Road. The pastor, Elllrnett Rawson, invites the public.

Trustees meeting set

Ice cream social

l,..aValley, Racine.
chips,

·W4at A Great Way .To Sa~ ·

•

Regular meetiilg of the Salisbury

'

An Ice cream social will be held at
Trinity Church Saturday, 10 a.m. to

TrusteeJ will be held
Friday at 7 p. m. at the home of the
clerk, Mrs. Wanda Eblin.
Township

?p.m.

Gary and Ethel johnson

IAYI.It10.1%0N·
IOOitiiiCOIICUnl•l·.:

MOTHER'S DAY.
1Mt ·

CIIIPMOTI1110 UM• IT IIGC£1.

.,.·--~~
IA· lHB.

reauired 10 bo

rMditv 1Yiill06t for ula in eech Kr09ff Store, a!IICIPI 11

~ II:JIId in lh111:1. If .,.. do

fUfl

AV(i.'

Whole Fresh
Pork Loin

ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY
£oc:h ., . .._ _,_,
•
iteme

SHOWIHER
YOU
CARE

out ol ., ~

$ 19

item, we Ml oH• you your chOice of a comoerlb'e itwn.
when I'Jaileblt, rl'l"'leling the ....,.. Nvi"VV 01' 1 rlincntdl
llfWhich will tntitll 'fOU 10 Pl-lrchlle the adveniled item lllhl
o&gt;rictwithin 3D .....

MAY10
•

( llllltll liW

suao FREE
INTO ONE
CONVENIENT
TAKE HOME
PACKAGE

TOTAL SA TIS FACTION GUARANTEE
Evtrything 'fO',I buV It Krogt~ It i\*IOI.:i lor your IOtll
llti111C'tion 'IQII'~ of ~n~nurtctu,. . II vou ''' not lltil·
'-t, Krogw wil ~ your it~ with tht ume bflnd Of 1
oon'lpllilble brtnd cw rtfund ';OUt I)Urthlle pra .

IS

-

NIC9

V'

-

I - I NOUN

Mlppld
Tlpp I11- ... a.....
••.

•••

AVCIHDAU

COPVIIGHT IHI-T~E kiOGII CO. ITEMS AND f'ltiCIS
GOOD SUNDAY A,.llll 26 THIU SATUIDAV MAY 2, ltll
IN P OMEROYANOGALLIPOL ISSTOR ES .

1•-17-LI. AVG. WHOLE

WI IISIIIVI THE ~IGHT TO LIMIT OUANTITIIS. NONE
IOLO TO DIAUII.

...

C

......_.,, \ 'co.~/

29:

$

SAVE

40'

m PIIC.

$379

95 c .

1-lfi.ANO. PllltCII 01

i:;r
........'tt.···
LIQUID

YOUR OWN MESSAGE ON THIS PAGE
ON MOTHER'S DAY, MAY lOth. WE WILL
SEND MOM A SPECIAL CARD, TOO!
IT'S A THOUGHTFUL AND UNIQUE WAY
TO TELL JiER HOW WONDERFUL SHE IS.

.,...,

G1llfll.. _.. t:·
AVOHDALI

~~-l'·l:i,

01

AVONOAU CUT

Grittl

I

16-oa;
. . . . " • • " C.n

liZ

I

lka.

Cefftt' .. . ••

Gunnoe's 'se 1
5259
Round
Roast
.....
·
.....
lb.
Country Sausage :
IN THI PIICE KIOGU
C
Meat Bologn~ ... :·~ .....lb. 99
·
FISCHER'S REGULAR
JUMBO
s
J3 9
I
l·lb.
•
l ·lb.
Meat Wteners.... Pk 11 .
I
Roll

•,.....a...;·.;:

I
I

99

U.S. GOV1 GIADED CHOICE ,
IONElESSIOnOM -

I
I
I
I
I

Semi-Boneless
Smoked Ham ... .. lb.

Plltul. ··- -· ·. ·~·

Df

,....,

....
110011

•••

Country Club
lc:e Cream

LIVE

MAlliE

1

weeK for plc:t. up at your Krotor

ttoro nut Thuudoy thru Soturdoy MGy 71h ·Moy tth . Now
ovollolllo ot Kroger ot our unt tldt wMk of S$ .00 Ill . plut
1fl'
pay $5 .50 lb . whn 'fOU pkt. up JO&amp;H lo6nlor ,I
"$mol O.OOtlt lequ lrod .

rou

STOlE PACKAGED

Country Style
Sliced Bacon .... , lb.

99
•

Vz·GII.
Ctn.

Mixed
Fryer ·Parts

~tn.
KltOGU 0 . 5~~ LOW,AT MilK
GAL . ltLASTIC CTN •... IJ.n

... ... ·~·

,.c49c

......

liMIT • I'I,IASE

IEVLON FlEX BALSAM
CONDITIONER OR

Shampoo.........

l6•oz.

I

You are ve.rv

Day to a

Prttzeb ... ....

KIUOOG'l
s,ullll
, $129
·
,.__.
I -ea.

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

...

~.. ..

GOIDCIIIIT

DIUDIPTS.

You are the best .

Love,
Kids and
grandkids.

very dear.
Chr istopher
and Becky .

'5.00

'5.00
AD NO.3

ADNO. 2

'5.00
ADNO. 4

ALL DISPLAY MOTHER'S DAY MESSAGES WIU BE RUN IN COLOR

.

...

·,....

.

_

YOU i&gt;\RE SPECIAL, you
are sWeet, loving and
giving. \YOY can't be beat .
We lov~ you.
Happy
Mother' ~ Day_
Hattie,
Tony, Bonnie, Carrell and

. . . . . . ..... Coo

HOTPOOOI
AVAII••Ell-

111,..

lb.$

SWEET 01 CIEAMY
5HIEDDED

$ J69

.

Cole Slaw ............... lb.

AVONDAil .

M tu II

.--

ggc

0. 111 ... '~·

IIADY TO EAT, WISH lONE

3

I ·PIECES

Fri~d

•

$499

.

Chicken .:.
iR:liAKEDCaCHOCkOLATE
l•lnch $499
_,er e....
fii5H IAKID
Kaiser Rolls ....... .

U.S. NO. I

ivcket

Genuine
Idaho Potatoes

ggc

63c
49c
".......
43c
u.
' 39c
..... . .
Muuc•1111

Q .rri
.....
. . . . . Jer

. ( lftlftiY ....NICI)
Dt.YTIMI

Cellftrt
D11Jer1 ....
IIOOU

-

f:·

V'

,. ~·

J im, Mary, Janice, Alice,
Harold and Sandra .

best Mom
is.
J.R.M .

'7. ()()

AD~O. 5

·~·

'7.00
ADNO. 7

ADNO. 6

aw

$471

CLASSIFIED .

..

:=.
~~~..
. t. 89~.
....
... . ·ggc

. {
,,

............•tr- .
i:C::~SJOI
•········ .....
\

nom•

ond

moiled.

'

89•

CLASSIFIED
A
DEAREST MOM.
special message for our
special Mom on her day.
We love you very much .
Charles ond Judy .

HAP~Y

MOTHER'S DAY
MOM . I love vw so much.
YOY 're the best mother In
the world. Connie.

12.00

•2.00
Be sure to ln~utle lh•

.:.:... ~se·

.CLASSIFIED

DEAR MOTHER,. this Is fo
sav we love vou In ~ verv
special woy. Love, , Judy
and Julie

wnoin you

I

you thought I
torgol about this
day, but now
1 forget about the

i~(j{J

•

DEAREST MOTHER , the
kindest ,
most
un ·
derstanding mother .
Always there for her
children . We each numbly
send all our love today and
always.
Bonnie, Joyce,

MOMMIE.

e""··

IIIUCIIIIT

::::e~'f::m ..... 3~

C

_.Cake

(

months a.

all of us you are

Jerry, Judy
and Shane

'5.00
ADNO. 1

12

year, because to

verv much .

69c

c. ,,, Ow~..

iS

and - we love you

CIOtD CIIST

STGalwmt

atl .
2

love yc4J very
much.
•

Moth~'s

WI --· ...

s
J29
White Bread _. ~~~~·
KROGEI

speci31 Mother. We

MOTHER ERMEL. Hope .vou
have a nappy day .

1~~:- SJ49
Mal •••
,._
........ . ....,,..,,

GOLDEN QUARTERS

~;.;,~L.~lQ.~
69
Wiener Buns._.Pkg.

1·1~.

: : :•• ••

KIOGEI

'
12·Ct.

.

.c
..,.......... 39
=~~:~·"·~~· SJ ~ 9

AVOIIDALI

KIOGEI SANDWICH 01

'

.'
C10VII.YA1UV

Mrs.
Filbert'·
s 16·01.
'
•
.
Margarme ....... Pkg.
51.o;;dded Cheese 2 ti.;~·. 5129
fiOZEN
3 SJ09
Morton Pot Pies . ~~~·.
FIOZEN
SJ79
Saluto Pizz:as .. ... .. .. . '/i.;~·

68

Paper

•ggc

C

2% Milk

Gal~

Chlcbn
Drum•tlch

$

....___ . lOBSIERS

•!tlctu your outor th

HOLLY PAlM$. U.S.D.A .
INSPECTED
.

od ress lo
wonl "'• cord

1.

'2.00

8.

4.
9.

5.
10.

12.

13.

14.

15.

U. ·

1l

19.·

20.

6.

2.
-7.

n.
16.

3.

-PRINT MESsAGE CJ.EARLY AND MAIL WITH MONEY
' .

.'
I!

..

The-DaiiY Sentinel 111 ~ourt St., PO.eny, Ohio 45769 -•

..-

�\

'

- Tile Daily Sentlnel-Pa -11

Television

The Mouse in·the library

VIeWing .~. ·

Adventures of Albert E.. Mouse

9

PART IV

April27, 1981

Dear Mr. Editor:
Once again I deem it necessary
to write. Tl!iB latest outrage has
got to be the last! Humans are
such an inferior lot. H you give
them a meter they feel it is their
right to take a kilometer.
·
Long ago I gave up my sleeping
quarters In the name of science.
Alter au, what good is degree In
chemistry if one does not have a
laboratory? I converted my
bedroom into a lab, and moved
my belongings Into one of the
81111111 file cabinets.
Now, the file cabinets are being
filled. I have never seen so many
cards. My space is dwindling as
day by day the cards increase.

a

Surely even you, a hwnan, can
understand that I must have
somewhere to sleep?
Oh, cheddar, who can that be at
the door? ... "Friend Roach, do
dome in. I'll make tea."
"TIJere' s no time for that,
Albeti. Come, I must show you
something."
·

"Is something wrong?"
"No, I just need to show you
something. Come with me."
"AU right then." I snap off the
light in my den and follow. We
stop outside the door of Roach's
quarters.
"Are you ·ready for this,
Albert? Here goes." With a grand
gesture he throws open the door. I
can hardly believe what I see ...

,

For the rooni has been re-®ne.
My lamp and prayer book are on
the stand, my guitar is in the corner, and my bedroll is on the bed.
"Friend Roach, what Is this?"
"Face it, Old Chap, you have to
sleep somewhere."
•
"But this Is your room, Roach,
what of you?"
"Albert, you are my dearest
friend. I dO!l't mind roughing It on
the settee a bit, truly I doo't.
You'ddothesameforme."

11:00

to ret urn h imto his riGhtful place
aa heir to the throne.

(jJ). ABC NEWS
11:58 (]) CBN UPDATE NEWS
. 7:00
PM MAGAZIN£
(])
NEW BIBLE BAFFLE
SHOW
CII MUMBO •JUMBO, IT'S

Cll.

· BORNimER

(

&gt;

planter plalltllll area ud preveal tile dirt fnm fllllag tat.
Neue ... three doleD idrawberey plaDII 1D 1111
structed by Paul Neue, Pomeroy. The u..-fool pyramid already wltlullllll &amp;rea berrlel. A liMe wttb
square, fom-fool blgb planter Ill of pyramid detlgo wttll boletlu It n1111 don tile middle of the pluter far IIIII ill
abelvee arOUDd the edges to serve as dividers for the waterlag tile plaDII.

TitS IS THE
"EXPERIMEIITAL~
STIITIOH. ·ilf H&lt;XisE 16

TUNE

to the annual grape teatival in
Sonoma, CalifOrnia; the 'Mana·

Pauaea,' a group of mldd"'·
aged women in Albanv. QeM\
gia, wh_, won 't give In to age; a
vlalt to th8- town of Boring,

w.orld nllddleweight champion
but can't get allcenaebecauae
of hisllge. (Repeat; 80 mine.)

CIJ

IIOVIE -(NO INFORIIA·
TION AVAILABLE) " Why

WouldiUe?"
(I) il2l •
THE OR!A TEST
AIIE.RICAN HERO The Grea·
teat American Hero puta hla
powera into gear to stop Maxwell'• beat friend, a policeman,
from pulling off a major jewel
haiat. (eo mins.)

C361l WARM PINE
FINISH, FLORAL
DESIGN

lNG Mlckev Rooney stars aa
Jack Thurn,with guest star Anne
Jackson and special guest star ·
Red Buttons , aa Roland, lnthla
drama baaed on the trueatory of
a Chicago clown and hi a devoted wife Shirlee, who cared for
dozens of home leu children
while he struggled to filld more
frequent employment in his
P!_ofeaaion. (2 hra.)
llJ THE DAY AFTE~ TRINITY
'J.RobertOppenhelmerandthe
Alomic Bomb' Physicist Op·
penheimer' a role in the birth ot
the atomic aoe and hia fate at
the hands of the U.S. Govern·
ment are the focus of thla
documentary. (90 mins.)
. Ill) ALL CREATURES OR_Eq
•ND SMALL n1u1 o t me Dog'
Triatanattemptahouaekeaplng
In Mra. Hall's abaence. Jamea
and Siegfried operate on Granvilla Banneu 'adog, Phoeblll.
-.nltlnerantworker'adognHda
an emergency oper11tlon. (60

services
available
to all, Mrs.

Syracuse, 011.
NOW OP~ N FOR
SPRING SEASON
t Potted Plants
t Complete line of becldil~gl
plants and hang
baskets.
All Dozen Pa,cks
Hours:

Bump! '·

~~liii~~~~~~=~~;;;;~~~~~~~~ii~~~~ii~~~~
.SENnNEL AVAIWI.£

AT FQLLOWING

SENTINEL

I

LOCAOONS

.

•

8:58 (]) CBNUPDATE NEWS
11:00 (J) •
Cll
DlfF'R!NT
STIIOIC!S Afterlk. Dnimmorld
IUffeni Hrioua injurteattanac-~~~. Amold oftd Willlotrvto
dul wilh tho pouibiHty that
th~ may once again! be· or·
phono. (R-1) (Ciooed·
C.plioned: U.S.A.)
'
I

YOU MEAN
COOSUEI.O'S !ITORY
!WAS A COMI'LE'IE
f"ABRICAilON!
I

~Jr.CLUI

ParadiHVI!Iagearev'-ltedbya
IHtle mon with great oxpocla·
tiona who helpa an ex-footblll
player real ize hla dream: a
father autrara growinG paina

hio lillie l. .g_ bloo·
aoma Into a pretly young
woman. GttHt atara: Red But·
tona, Roll)' Grier and ..Gene

Borry. (IIOmino.)

"'"

fOR THAT LITTLE

¢APER, VOUN6 MAN, VOU

I

CAl\160 10 BED WITHOUT I
'
VORE ·SUPPER

J

~1

iD) 'IME DAY AFTI!III-TY
'J.AoMrtOpp 1nM6Miandthe
Alorlllc · Phylicllt Oppenhe-1 role in lilt birth or

FRIED CHICKEN .
SMASHeD IAIERS

the atomic ogo and hlo tllo at
the hlodl or"" u.s. Oo¥trn·

ment are the focu1 of thla
doc-ary. (110 mino.)
11::10 (J),unvALDFIWIDS:TitE
tiii.KIN TENT Tllll Ullique 001·

WITH THIO&lt;EMN'
GRAW fORVOU

"TONIGHT

.

1_, __ .. _ --

(

(

---

..:.~------·-·-

t82

t65

+3

.Jl0974
SOUTH
• 8 6 43

•2

tAKQJI04

+AS

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: South

w...
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

Non~

Eut

2+

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

3+

4 NT
Pass

dummy's king of hearts at
trick one, but because if Squth
does let that queen hold tiH!
first heart trick the chance
that any West in real life
would fail to lead a second
heart is infinitesimal.

aotor J11on Robarda, Jr. and
1he Theatrtof the Oeafcreatea
a ~oving performance baaed
on a Robert Froat poem. Thla

progrom will Introduce hearing
audlenc;:ee to the tAprtallve
I!Q_Wilf of algn laftgUige,

1o:oo

w•m OUWCYWIIIIIwortt·
lng 11 a tec~ntcalltlvioor on a

'I

movlt baaed on a famoua
homicide, Quincy bec.omea
convinced that the aoc:lallte
convicted of the 'Crime Ia In·
nocenl and he procttda to

HOME DELIVERY

.

CALL TODAY

Z7Whlp

!ll&gt;c
. ,

ZIMenace
UBreak
One'l bondl
35 Spenlllb
compoeer
• Get fluillUI ln--1---1--+S'JFootww
31Ttap
31New
Roebelle
college
41Gennan

river
41 Water
pitcber

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- :aere's how to work It: ,
AXYDLBAAXa
, II LO!IIGFBLLOW
One letter liMply otando for another. In thio umple A 1o:
· used for the three L's, X for the two O'o, etc. Sinrle !etten. :
apoatrophet, the lenflh and formotlon ot the word• are aU ·
hintl. Each day t)le ~e letters are different.
';

.

CUPTOQUOTEII

CIIIIOYII...,....._)••• "Hitlh

' PAOTKJI.

.R A V R W A

(I) '!JUYIMING .WI
(I)
YIGAt Dan Tanno

· OKAUYB

YCPAOTKA

.

P Q E K A•
I' .
•

_..,.,.......,.. 1114

'

1111•
IHNOII..Inlrigulatbuldtodly

. ...~-he'lhirodlo
protoct oinger Wayne Nowlan
trom,a myatertoue antaoontat
Whollll-olllo!HIIto bt 1111
., _ , . , ,....inlr.ndlhlllhl
Newton io an impootorwho 1

Sentinel
'

·.

___j.._

IICutoff

provo It wilh tho holp ol 1
. dtdicaltd IIIW}Itr. (R-1; 110
mila.)

\

queen, e.g. 1.--1-4--l--

llboration- accio-

,

Vista, Les' carryou·t; Mason Lauiiilrcimat, Mason
Solo &amp; Amaco- New Haven; Fowler's Groc., W. Columbial 1
Codners Texaco, Syracuse
10
.
.
J

The

.9

Zl~or

I

Theon:..~=w:::;,~:

Swisher &amp; Lollse
. Nelson Drug
Super Valu
BeiCon
Sentinel omce
Kr09ers
crow's Family Restaurant
Jones Boys .·
Veterans Memorial Hospital

FOR·.CONVENIENT

+KQ8&gt;2
WEST
EAST
+QJS 2
7
.QJI0513
'A987

ACROSS
DOWN
I Fastener
I Goddesses
5 New !lamp- of the
shire river
seaaons
9 Turkish
2 Fruit of
weight
the oak
10 In company 3 Change
with
locale
12 Annoy
4 Intimate
13 Scratched 5 Inviolable
Yeotent.y'a Alllwer
15 Dog talk
I Auk genus 19 -Terminus 38 N« a aoul
11 Eye part
7 Layer
2! Stray
31 Dismal,
17 Dinner
of paint ·
loek
to a
course
8 Trouper's Z3 Campsite
poet
!I "The mot.to
debris
33 Rananian
Drum"
11 Amiable Z4 Pursuils
city
Zl Gravitate 14 Italian poet %5 Cap
34 Father,
2! InterIll American Z7 Gennan
in France
ropUve
burled In
art
31 You, In
a Plined
the Kremlin

8:30 (])JOHN WESLEY WHITE

POMEROY

IN
'RMN.

.K6
t97 3

t!iMtM-.trt'
lty THOMAS JOSIPII

mlno.)

'·WINNIE

FOR lHE BEST

BUYS

1-Zi·ll

0 (])1JD) LEAVE "Ell LAUQH.

Pll.

THE DAILY

.

(]) SIGHTS AND SOUNDS OF
LIFE

Prairie Flower

OHIO VALLEY COMMANDERY
24 Knights Templar Thursday 7:30
p.m. The order of Red Cr06B and the
order of Malta to be conferred.

The Picture P.n.ct Bou~

·surely be declarer at some
ootrump level and would only
make six if East opened a
beart. Ron bas South play in
1 siJ: diamonds and let West
1hold the lint trick with his
queen of hearts. West shifts to
the five of spades and South
rises with dummy's ace,
draws trumps, goes after
clubs and is down one wiH!n
the suit breaks 5· 1.
Ron ~"lints out~ South
should nse with d
y's king
of hearts at lriclt o . East
·. can do no better tban lake his
'ace and lead a sl!cond heart.
South will tben find out about
the bad club break and will
have to fail bsck on the 24
percent chance that West will
hold both the queen and ,. ack
of spades. Not much o an
extra chance, but one worth
taking after that disgusting
club break.
- As mentioned earlier, this is
a contrived band. Not that
there is any reason not to play

·'

Oregon ; a children's rodeo )n
Ne.~ t.te'xlco; and a 51 year okl .
man w~o wanta to become tbe

THURSDAY
REVIVAL now In progress at
Freedom Gospel Mission, Bald
Knobs, through May 2. The Rev.
Robert Kromer, Columbus, is the·
evangellat. Services are 7:30 p.m.
nightly. There will be specill! singing
each evening. The public is invited
to attend.

h'•rh,· ["l'rl,-,.1 hl.nJ, &gt;I ~n ·•.- .1nJ ,.•r.rm.•m.

U this hand appeared in a
duplicate game, Nortb would

(jJ). FACE Till! 111\lSIC

SOLID WOOD WAU CLOCKS

scotts Groeery·; cheihlre

," fMWiyAIMNCI . . . . LM"'
P ... "HIJt
IN .........

"Winning Bridge - Trick by
Trick."

(!) HOLLYW~REB
(J) iD) DICK CA TT SHOW
iJal 1100,000
THAT

BULOVA

NORTH
+A K 10

Today's hand is baaed on

va Houaton Aatroa

I

. CALL (614)-992·2104,
.or: (ICM)-675-1244

one shown by Ron Klinger in

7:58 (J)~UPDAn-s
· 8:00 CD•&lt;DREALPEOPiEAvillt

Mark v, Dutton. Drug; Lazy Oayi Cali
va.ughan's Cardinal

POMEROY
FLOWER IHOP
""\'"''"'
.......,.,.

ffi WILDKINGDOII'TheCheelaha Shal SUrvive'
• (]) TIC TAC DOUGH
(J) liD MACIIE(L-I.EIIREII

we(]) JOKEA'swu

AWAYM

MIDDUPORT

·••• Anw••••••te

alld Alan s.a~a,

C1J BASeBALL Atlante Broveo

A'SIOO' PISliiHCE

As a young man, Winston Churchill had red hair.

otflce HCHWs by A,polntment Only

By Olwald Jaeolly

C1J AU. ill 'IME FAIIIILY
CIJ()Z. FAMILY FEUD

...

PYRAMID PLANTER - 'Ibis pyramid

Sunday, May 10.

• H~4nlllfHo • PottN Mu1111
•Ho....,. , ...,.;a •P..nton '
•COIIIIt.... tlon Poto t A•looo
• COI"'IIII .,.,._...nt Plowen
• Cut flowon •

I

7:30 WeiULLIIEYE
(J) AT HOME WITH THE

wbere gardenblg Ill "up Instead of oul" wu co•

WEDNESDAY
WilDWOOD GARDEN CLUB
Wednesday at 7:30p.m. at the home
of Mrs. Mary Nease.

to NewtpaPtf'books.

Playing by \the book

®I NIWS

Social Calendar

pt~yable

wortd'a meat era ot illusion in
tl'llaapeNbindlng evening of en-

REPORT

He was a redhead

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

DAWNED

IIACICI Tom Boaloy hoatalhe

Cc&gt;pparliel4.

I Pic·rur.. a Perfect Mother's Day.

•l,llhl ".! ·•:·· t•t.. ... .. :-:.. ••.•11 ...... ftllt.' " \ ' " ' ......,
. ~w ... .~~ An.l hdr ,,..,~~ ).1-~h&lt;'l"· l \I', J'i- wr.o 1"1'"'-""'·

Jumbles: NOBLE GROOM BAK ING
An swer: Why is e~eryone so angry?IT'S ALL f HE " RAGE " NOW

name, add,..., zJp code and m1k1 Chlckl

.chantreaa, Dick Zimmerman,
and apec~l oueat alar David

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

·vETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

(Answers tomorrow)

Jumble~ No. 15; contllning 110 puzzles, 11 tvtlllbte lor $1.75 postplkl
,from Jumbtt, cio thl1 newsp~per, Box 34, NorwOod, N.J. 07648.1rlCIIIdl your

tertainment. Featuring Mark
Wile on, Shimada, Diana the En·

OWNED ~o,:,•r:~E~TED BY

·" II l'il'l!&gt;lnr ,lff, tll~•'llllml m ,, h-oiiJI IIIII
" l u r ~ f"'''d~ •n , ,.11f,llll• ' th.or ~ .Ill l.u,•r "'-• •t~o.'l.l
h' 1~·1,1 ,, rl1n1 oll'kl ,lhrl.~l 't.t\-otfllt'

I

ANIMALS

lot W. Main 51.

JOHN A. WADE, M.D., INC.

'festerday·s

r

"aJ-[ XI I XI

liD LILIAS, YOGA AND YOU

PINineH2"2171

A round and square dance will be
held at the Senior Citizens Center In
the multipurpose building Friday
from 8 p.m. to 11 p.m. MUBic will be
by the Stringdusters. The pubUc is
Invited.

BOB NEwtiAAT SHOW

ANDY GRIFFITit
.(]) ilDl ClsNEWS
CIJ WILD WILD WORLD Of

Bible Bowl at Alfred

Dance set Friday

Nlswerhere:

8:30 Cll .Cl) NIICNEWS

Judy Runyan of the Ohio Depart- hospital.
Th Pr · KISS
. men! of Highway Safety will present
e OJect
program cona program called KISS, (Kids in sists of two parts, Basic Education
Safe Seats), at the Meigs County about Infant Child Care and a Infart
'Farm Bureau Federation Women's RestraintLoanerProgram.
Tea, which will be held Thursday,
The Department of Highway
from 1:30 to 3:30 p.m. at the Safety is providing assistance in the
Diamond Savings and Loan River- development of programs as well as
boat Room. AU Farm Bureau
making trning
commWlity
In Willis,Enroute
Va. with
Mr. they
and
providing and
in-service
for visited
Bill Hudson.
home
Women and their friends are invited volunteers
Mrs. Covy Sowers. Sowers · and
to attend the meeting.
presentations about the program.
Roush were service friends.
Highlights of the meeting will be
Miss Runyan will be giving ~ .-----------~
Mils Runyan's presentation of child detailed and Important program
Safety, starting from the day the relative to child safety. AU women
AUTHOR I D CATALOG
child is brought home from the are urged to attend.
SALES MERCHANT

Genesis.

~

Picon. Hoat : Hugh Downs.

C1J
CIJ

rJl

L....L-L....C.--"J~d.._J

[Qioaed·Coplioned; U.fl.A.)

day at the Mt. Moriah Baptist Church in Middleport and hosted by the
American Legion Auxiliary unit of
Lewis Manley Post 263. .
Delegates and alternates selected
for Girls State, their parents, and
.presidenls of the sponsoring Wlits at.
tended the tea which opened with a
welcome from Mrs. Margaret
Bowles of the host unit. Mrs. Lula
Hampton had the opening prayer ·
and Mrs. Helen Harper, unit
Americanism chainnan, led In the
pledge to the flag.
Mrs. Margaret Drake, director of
government at Girls State, Jackson,
conducted the orientation and answered questions. Also present and
giving remarks was Mrs. Lorrene
Snyder, Eighth District president.
Mrs. Bow.les presented a gift to Mrs.
Drake from the Wlit. The closing
prayer was by Mrs. Hampton.
For the social hour, Mrs. Harper
presided at the punch howl. Members of the Eight and Forty Meigs
.County Salon 710 assisted by
providing some cookies.
Registration was by Mrs. Florence
Richards and Mrs. Annette Johnson.
Following the tea Mrs. Snyder was
presented the centerpiece from the
refreslunent table.
Girls State will be held at Ashland
Colege in June.

Jack &amp; Judy Wllllom1
Open: Mon. lhru Wed. ,_,
Thur. 9·12, Fri. t·S, Sal. t·2
Satisfaction Guaran.,. vour Monty Bac~

..

,, THIFESf
. 1· Now arrange the circt8d letters to
V
J
form the·surprise answer, as sugI I
gosllld by the above cartoon

(]) CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
C1J ABC NEWS
CIJ FIIEESTYJ.E .
liD O.V!R EASY Gueot: Molly

,,

1

IRfPrurj~ r)

Bollovlng thr,ttho boy iatruly of
royal blood1tha ooldlor alrivea 1

Return from vacation

Brooks, Thelma Henderson, Nina
Robinson, Janet Moore, Dorothy
Calaway, and Wilma Henderson.
The next Bible Bowl is set for Sunday, June 28, 2 p.m. at the Mornln••tar United Methodist Church.
.,.,
The quiz will be on the Book of

rJ

LawOtThe~ing' PrinctEdward

Over 90 attended the Buckeye
Girls State orientation tea held Sun-

. Appromnately 55 persons attended the Bible Bowl, sponsored by
the Meigs County United Methodist
Youth, under the leadership of the
Rev. Mark Flynn.
Youth groups represented included the following : Alfred, Carmel-Sutton, Morningstar, Long Bottom, Portland, and Bethany. The
winning team was from CarmelSutton. The runners-up were from
Bethany.
The gathering opening with
welcome by Rev. Flynn and group
singing, followed by prayer by the
host pastor, Rev. Richard Thomas.
Lloyd Brooks served as
Umekeeper. Donna Rice and Blllle
Rice were scorekeepers. Refreshinents were provided by Ruth

CJ!•

Cll • i1i ®l (jJ) •
NEWS
ill . ROSS 8AGL£f SHOW
(CONTINUED
FIIOM
DAYTIII!)
CIJ THE PRINCE AND THE :
is rescued tr:om a band of
t~ie'4!1es by a a01dler &lt;lf fortuiMi .

"Yes, Friend Roach, I wouid."
"Good, then lt~s settled. I will
make the tea tonight, Albert."
As he closes the door lt OCCIIrs
to me that hwnans could learn
much from my Friend Roach.
Sincerely, Albert E. MOU!e.

Mr. and Mrs. Albert Roush,
Pomeroy, have returned from a
three week vacation. They visited In
Indianawithherbrotherandsisterin-law, Mr. and Mrs. John Miller.
They drove through Tennessee, the
Smokey Mountains and the Black
Mountains, and then went to
J •-ac..,.,nville, N.C. to visit their sonin-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.

EVENING

PAUPER, PARTI'TheMorcllul

Buckeye
Girls State tea

KISS--Kids in Safe
Seats--topic of tea

•

' APR . ~~. 1881 ".

90 attend

KISS- Klda lD safe seala, sucb as the baby lD an auto, will be amoag
·the pro8J11m pretentatiODJ at the anoual Farm Bureau Women's Tea to
be beld Th111'!!day.

•

•

..

•

I

... killtd. (110 ,.,.• .)

•

,,

.

YB.- EWEC

R A V R W A:

Q.

SA H A KJ.

.

.

Ywlaclay'i·c:;;,.~~~
....,.,....l: PARKINSON'S LAW: WORK EX-)
PANDS W FlU. .m E TIME AVAILAB~ FOR ITS)
OOMPIETION,-C. NOR'l'HOOTE P~·
•
. •.!

-.

�.

.

'

t

Wec!Dftd'¥, April 2Sclfl1
•

I

President's farm·progra1n
runs ~to majo~ ptoblellls
'

./

GAILIA RECEIVES OUTDOOR RECREATION
AREA AWARD - Josette Baker, Director of the 0 . 0.
Mclutyre Park District, left, accepts the 19ll0 Outstanding Outdoor Recreation Area Award from Ohio

Police •••
(Continued from page I)
The Meigs CoWJty Sheriffs Depar·
tment investigated a two-car ac,. cident Tuesday at 8:30 p.m. 9n SR
.· 124 near the intersection of Bailey

Parks and Recreation Association awards committeeman Dan Rodesky. The award waa lor the
category of $200,1100 and over development lor Raccoon
Creek County Park In Gallla County. (AP Wirephoto).

RWJRoad.
According to the report, John E.
Hite, 62, Middleport, was traveling
east attempting to make a left turn
when a car driven by Randy J .
Hysell, 24, Rt. I, Middleport,

traveling west attempted to go
aroWJd the Hite vehicle on the left.
Hysell's right front fender struck
Hite's right rear bwnper. There
were no injuries, moderate damage
to both vehicles and no citations.

1.

.

W~GTON · ( AP)
The
Reagan administration's farm
Pl"08J'IIIII is nlllllinlllnto inCreaaln8
trouble on· Capitol Hill, and the
chalnnan of the Senate Agriculture
Committee bea begun Wlll'llin8 his ·
collespes of the consequences..
"If we send a bill down to the
'White House that doesn't have a.fair
relationablp to the (allriculture)
secretary's; It's going to get vetoed
· and then we wind up with nothing,"
Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N.C., said: ·
Helms' COf1lllli\leC On Tuesday ad- .
ded a multlbillloJH!ollar !!IPOrl loan
program to the 1981 farm bill after .
administration officials said the
government couldn't afford the
initial expense. ·
Thecommltteealsoseemsbenton
approving major commodity pricesupport loan rates above those
.AIIrlculture Secretary John R. Block
thinks are ecanomically feaaible. A
straw vote among the members
showed substantial support as well
for retaining the crop target prices
President ~gan wants eliminated.
"Tbla conunlttee ls going to act
within . the parameters of fiscal ·
responsibility and what we are
allocated," Helms said. "I can tell
you now that adjustments are going
to have to be made at the end."
While some.farm programs may
get more money than the president
wants, "I'm hopeful that in other
areas of the bill we can cut down expenditures," Helms said.
In the House, where Democraticdominated subeonunlttees are still

drafting their lleCUona of the new
farm bill, Raallllil IOBt fights over
price-eupport loan rste,s and target
priceslorwbeatandsubltantlalcuts
in dairy lllhlldles.
The Asrtculture DeJN.irtment
estimates tholle Items alooe would
cOal billiona of dollars more than
Keegan wants to spend over the
fOUI'year life of the farm bill. The.
full House Allrlculture Committee
will be8ln considering the (arm bill
late th!s week.
Sen. Bob Dole, R·Kan., who baa
been warning othet 1!4!118\9r8 about
excesalve spending, said he briefed
Resgan on jhe farm bill's progress
Tuesday.
"He did not look too happy," said
Dole, the second-ranking
Republican on the Allrlculture Committee and chairman of the Finance
Committee.
The only substantial victory
Reagan could claim Tuesday was in
the food stamp program, where the
HoUBe subconunlttee on nutrition accepted bla proposal to reduce .the income limits for benefit ellglbillty,
eliminating about 1 million current
recipients at a savings of t275 mi1lin
next year.
That same subcommittee,

however, rejected the administration ·propoea1 to
t800 .
mllllm In 11182 food atsmp CCIII by

saw

reducing benefits to famiJ!el with
cbllclren receiving free .00001 lUI}~-

'

. Emergency runs
Eight emergency calls 1l'el:e answered by IOC$1 units Tuesday, the
Meigs Cowlty Emerllency Medical
Services reportS.
·
The Middleport Unit at 9:68 i.m.
went to the Waffle S00p to ·treat
RomanUes Tunstalle on the scene ·
and at 3:211 p.m. toot Alma Young,

from Golf Club Hill to VeteJ'IIIIS
Memorial Hospital. Tbe Middleport
Unit at,4: 11 p.m. toot Wayne Jarvin
from Hysell St. to Holzer Medical
Center and at 9:31 p.m. took Tom
Jll.!ltitl!, South Second Ave., to
Holzer Medical Center.
At 1:11 p.m., the Pomeroy Unit
took Cynthia Hanning and Jaaon

Plains Unit took Warden Ours from
his
residence to Holzer Medical CenMeets tonight
ter and at 9:56 took Caryl Pooler
The Long Bottom Community from Route 7 to Veter&amp;Jis Memorial.
Association will hold a regular The Syracuse Unit at l:IK a.m. took
meeting at 7:30 this evening at the Curtis Holllday to Veterans
LongBottom Community Building.

... _____

_

• sewing, experienced, work

'_' guaranteed.M. Meier. 992·
...5983.

'
c would like Odd jobs. Lawn·
.,. mowing &amp; misc. jobs
working

992·6595.

around

homes.

Hanning from the scene ol a moto....
cycle accident oo Hamar Hill to.
Veterans Memorial Hospital with
Cynth!s Hanning later being transferred to O'Bleness Hospital in
Athens. At 9:47 a .m. the Tuppers

Memorial.

Homes for Sale

For sale if you are looking

·· for a home to buy . I have
) several

below

market

price. John Sheets, 31/ 2
" miles south of Middleport.
•Rt . 7.
;24 acr.es with OhiO River
frontage, furnished 4 room

'house, fuel oil furnace &amp;
drilled well across from
Kaiser . 949·2286.

Located in Rutland
VIllage. Price reduced
to $38,700.00.
LOT - Approx. '4 acre
with water tap. Would
make excellent tri!tiler

spot. In harrisonville.
Sells tor $2,800.00.
JUST LOOK AT THIS 1979 Windsor home.
Vinyl underpinning,
central stereo are
among the many
features to this home.
All of 1.93 acres with
20'x14' building and
fruit trees. A good buy
al$27,600.00.
RUTLAND - 4 yrs. old,
·total electric, 3 bedroom
home on approx. 1 acre .

1'12 baths and carport
with utility shed. Asking
$32,000.00.
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.
Phone742·3171
. Velma Nicinsky: Assoc .

Small investment, large ·returns, Sentinel Want Ads
.

Pub Iic No._r,.,
._,·cco_e_ _

Public Notice

IN THE.
COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY ,
OHIO
LINDA BELIVEAU,
Plaintiff,
· -vs. MICHEL BELIVEAU
LJetendant.
No. 17,787
NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION

Public "otice

Public Notice

ties and th e settlemerit of

PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY , OHIO
ESTATE OF ERNEST F.
POWELL, DECEASED
Case No. 23423
PUBLICATION
OF NOTICE
TO ALL PERSON S IN ·
TERES TED IN THE
ESTATE OF ERNEST F.
POWEL L, DECEASED,'
LATE OF R. D. 2,
POMEROY , OH IO 45769,
MEIGS
COUNTY
PROBATE: CO UR T CASE
NO . 23423 . An application

lhe property rights of the

part•es.

You are requ ired to an ·
swer the complaint within

28 days after the last

publi ca t ion of this notice,
which will be published once each week tor six successive weeks. The last
publ ication will be made on

May 27 , 1981, and the 28

days for answer will com ·
TO : Michel Beliveau, mence on th at date .
1 n case of your failure to
whose address is unknown :
or
other wise
You are hereby notifi ed answer
that you have been named respond as required b\' the
Rule s of
Civil
· a defendant in a legal ac - Oh10
th e
final
. t ion
ent i tl ed
Lin da Proced ure
; Beliveau, Pla intiff vs. hearing on fhi s matter will
. Michel Be liveau,
efen- be held after the expiration
, dant. Thi s action has been of 28 days after the last day
· assigned Case No. H ,887 of publication of this notice
· and is spend ing in the Court or as soon thereafter as can
· of Common Pleas of Me igs be scheduled by the Court.
Larry Spencer,
: County , Pomey, Ohio45769.

has been filed ask ing to
relieve the estate from administration, say ing that
the assets do not exceed
$15,000 and the creditors

0

PUBLIC NOTICE
The Tuppers Plains-

Chester Water District is

now accepting sealed bids
on the following:
A 1975 pick up lruck1 F150, 1on9 bed, stylesode;
Automatoc transmission,
6050 BFW; 360 V-8, using

regular
mlrrprs;

fuel ; western
power brakes,

step bumper, mud and
snow tires, 8 ply. with

deluxe
color .

interior,

red

in

Bids will be accepted at
Water office and will be
oepened at . 12 :00 noon on
May 14, 1981. the TP·CWD

reserves the right to reject

any and all bids.
(4) 22.29 (5) 6, 3tc

3

Announcements

Rac ine Volunteer Fire
Department sponsors a
shot gun &amp; rifle match
every Sat. night 6:30p.m.
at their building in Bashan .
Factory choke 12 guage
shot guns only. Open sights
22 rifle.

3,___,A~n~n~o!!'u:!!n:!:!ce~m~e~n~ts!__

1 PAY highest prices
possible for gold and silver
coins, rings, jewelry, etc.
Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, Middleport.
4
Giveaway
Three ·month old black and
white beautiful kitten .
Housebroken. Give away to

name; to those who sent

Tomato, cabbage, and pep· good home. 991·2531 .
flowers and cards, gifts per plants. Also broccoli,
and letters, and visited me;
sweet potato Snow fence . 992-6208.
and to those in the news cauliflower,
May 15th .
plants
around
media who kept everyone Spencer's Greenhouse,
posted as to where and how West Shade Rd. 3 miles 5 adorable pups. 3 males, 2
I was. We appreciate it all northwest of Chesler. No females. Ready togo by the
very much.
weekend. Can be seen alter
sunday sales.
Janet &amp; Jake Kern
5:30 p.m. at 289 Mulberry
And George Korn, Jr. ·
Ave .• Pomeroy, Oh.

WantecUo Buy ·
WANTED TO BUY :
GOLD,
SILVER,
PLATINUM, STERLING·
COINS, RINGS,JEWELR ·
Y, MISC. ITEMS. AB·
MARKET
SOLUTE:
PRICE GUARANTED. ED
BURKETT
BARBE,R
SHOP, MIDDLEPORT ,
OH10992·3476.
9

OLD COl NS, pocket wat·
ches, class 'r ings, wedding

bands, diamMds. Gold or
silver. Call J. A. Wamsley,
Treasure Chest Coin Shop,
AIhens, OH . 59&lt;-4221.

Wanted to Buy: class rings,
wedding
bands, anything
will not be pre iud iced
stamped, 10K, UK, or 18K ·
r
'
therebv . A hear tng on the
_, , , ,, .,"'
gold. Sliver coins, pocket
application will be ·held
watches. Call Joe Clark at
May
12,
1981',
at
1:30o'clock
IT'S
BEEL
INE'
S
Show
and
.
~
==:;
P::
ub;::l
;
;:
.
,
c::;S~a:;:le
=
=::.
. The obj ec t of the com Clerk of Court P.M. Persons knowing any
3, ----'~ne!!n!!'o~u!!nc~e~m~e~n~s
A
I !__. T
"'· new
992 -20~ at Clark's Jewelr'f
summer · e11 r ·'me 11",
.... · vor
&amp; Auction
of Me igs County, reason why the application Skate·A·Way
, pl ai nt is the obtaining of a
Store, Pomeroy, Ohio-45769
schedule.
Open
Wed
·
STOBARTS
Greenhouse
is
spring
and
summer
line·
Is
• divor ce and the ter Oh10 should not be granted
. m ination of a marriage
nesday, Friday, Saturday now opened. Ills located on now available and Is It un· Farm Equipment Auction, CHIP WOOD. Poles max .
should
appear
and
inform~
: contract between th e oa r· [4) 22, 29, (5) 6, 13, 20, 27, th e Court. The Court is nights from 7:30 to 10:00. Racine Rt. 2&lt; C.R. 100. believable! 1!! Give us a Sat .. May 2, 10 a.m. Siders
61c
diameter U" on largest
located Probate Court , Ava ilable tor private par· Hanging baskets&amp;bed~ing call for more Information Equipment co. 1 miles. of end.
$12.50 per ton . Bundled
"'
l"""G..-~••--------------------1 Meigs County Courthouse, ties, Monday and Tuesday plants. Vegetables &amp; plants aboutthis interesting work. Pt. Pleasant on U.S. 35. 675· slab. $10.50 per ton .
Pomeroy , Oh!045769.
ni
ghts,
Saturday.
mornings
olatlklnds.
Phone99N941from9·6.
3440
.'
Consignment
I
Delivered to Ohio Pallet
Robert E. Buck
Co., Rock Springs Rd.,
lnfl
IOna
I
By : Carolyn G. Thomas or afternoons, or Sunday '-======::==::::==;;:~!::;:;:::;~======~ welcome.
1
Public Sale
;=.=:;::::=:=::::;:;:::=;:=::,. Pomeroy 992·2689.
1•
Deputy Clerk afternoons. Phone 985-9996 r
~
I (4) 29, (5) 6, 2tc
or 995-3929.
~:;;;:;;;:;;;:;::;::;::;:::::&amp;:A:U:C:II:O:n======-=i16'---.::L:::O:::Sic:a:::n:::d.:.F.:::OU:::n:::d:.__ IRON AND BRASS BEDS I
Found : Linde star ring at Old furniture, desks, gold
Vaughan's Cardinal. 992· rings, jewelry, silver
3139.
dollars, sterling, etc. Wood
Ice boxes, llirs, antiques,
l:
complete households .
etc.
LOST : gray and white
I
~
M.D. Miller, Rt. 4,
female cat, Bashan area . Write:
Pomeroy,
OH 457119. Or
Long haired but has been
cut short. Approximately call 992·7760.
sATURDAY,MAY2'andsuNDAY,MAY3
I
•
STARTING EACH OATAT10:DOO'CLOCK A.M.
one week ago. No collar. New, used, and antique fur·
I·
•
PENNSVILLE,
OHIO
985-4295.
1 Write your own ad and order by mail wi th this 1: 1
ON ST. RT. 3771N MORGAN co.
nlture. No Item to large or
or Write Daily s·e ntinel Classified Dept.
to small. Will buy one piece
1 coupon. cance l your ad by phone w'10n you get 11
Lost: Red tick hound, or complete hOuseholds.
I. resu lls. Money not refundable .
IJ
111 Court St., Pomero.,, 0., 45769
Take St. Rt. 60 South out of Zanesville to Me·
broken collar. Raclne- Martin's General Store at
1'
(, 1
Connelsvllle cir take Sr. Rt. 60 North out of Marlena
Bashan
Rd . area. 992-6370.
I)
to McConnetsvile, cross river through Matta on St.
1 N
Reward.Jim Circle. 9~·
1
ame - - - - - - - - - - - 1
CLASSIFIED AD INDEX
Rt. 78 west for 2 miles - stay leJtattop of hill onto
2573.
Now buying gold and
st. Rt. 377 to Pennsville at the Bill Janes Farms. lO
sliver, old pock.et watches,
I Add res1
I
miles northeast of Athens or 90 miles southeast of
LOST : Small brown &amp; chains, diamonds, sliver
l
'
----------- I
Columbus, Ohio.
white male dOg. Park money and coins. Martin's
1
t Phone
~~.N,.N,?,~,",c,,EMENTS eRENTALS
ANTIQUE FURNITURE, GLASS, CHINA,
' .
Pekingese. Answers to General Store, Middleport.
1
Bear. 8&lt;43·2815. Around Por· 992·6370.
I
·-------------l- tnMemo;:,m
'cLOCKS, FIGURINES &amp; STATUES, &amp; MISC. OLD
tland.
I
I
l - Announnments
torRtnt
ITEMS
I Print one word in each
I
•- Givuw•v
44-•p•rtmentlor Rent
space below . Each inI
s- H•ppyAds
o -- F Rooms
This,will be a large 2 day sale - Contents out of old
·7
Yard Sale
itial or group of f igures
I
•-Losun• Found
46-S~~tct tortttnt
homestead from the state of Maine, one from

1

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~ ··· ~ ·

lil.-----'-'------'--~-

Pay Cash for
Classifieds and
Save1 ·1 I

1

~

at •

Curb

I

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

PUBLIC AUCTION

WANT AD INFORMATION

l

2 DAY SAL£

PHONE 992 215.6

:~=~~~~::~o;m~~"'

I1

1.

counts as a word . Count

1

name and address or words
I phone
number 1f used . -~~~..!!!.r4~~~~! ·

I

You' ll get better r esults

I

reserves the right to
classify, edit or reject
any ad. Your ad will be

( if you descri be fully ,
.J give pri ce. The Sentinel

!

o put

in

the

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J

For Sa le
Anno ncem

) For Ruent

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13
·
14. - - - - - - - -

eFINANCIAL
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28.

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29.
30
3

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32.
33.
34·
35.

Jt- Misc . Mercttlnllltst·..•

u - lultdlngSu.ptltt
56-PttstorSIII .

THIS HOMESTEAD

• FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

MAINE TO BE SOLO SATURDAY, MAY 2 IN·
CLUOES :
Victorian marble top furniture,

61- WoniOdlohy
F~rm •-.u 1,.,'"'
61n- r .. , •• ,.. s.o.

chairs and rockers. App. 100 pes. , He1sey gJass, j5

ll - Hom"'""'"

lor S.le

n - F•rm• tor hie

pes.

a Gr.11in

Wont·ACI Advertising
De•dllnes

"""'"'"'"
,,.......

• TRANSPORTATIPN
,,_.,..,,.,Solt
n- v..olfw.o.
7I- MoiO«v&lt;IOI ·

I' ,'

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. 11 '

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:::::

...,.

~hlna cupboard, Waterfall bedrootn suites, washltend, bronz:e .U. S. P.ost Office cabinet, Iron bed
w/braSS ·knobs, Ice cream chairs, oak, walnut and

mahogany furniture, 9 dr. optical cabinet, brass
floor lamp, signed Pierpoint lamp bose,, R. S.

11-H'"'''"'"'''"''"".

Pruula

~&gt;-•'"'""'""'''""""'

I;

bowl,

carnival,

Fenton,

milk,

black

amethyst, Mercury glass, Havllon, Bavarian,
Japanese, German, English and Ironstone china,
brass and pewter Items and much more.

,,_""'"""'
M- IIOC!rlcoo

,'."-ofrl,.rlltiHion II

~ '""' ""'

o.-M.H. .... ,,
l7-u,.."""

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ct.ll

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l.ll

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Norltake and·

THIS HOMESTEAD FROM CLEVELA'NO TO BE
SOLD SUNDAY MAY 3 INCLUDES: Nice Oriental

.SERVICES

I. /

Nippon,

cards, and many other nice items.

's;
Ace~:~::"•
n - Auto At"i'

Clift

Cambridge · glass,

several otd guns, spool cabinet, 25c clgareMe
machine, telephone, coffee mill, plano rolls, post

Rates and Other lnforni.ltton
nwonouru...,,

1'
I; ·

OF

1ronstone china, several nice clock,, watches, etc .,

l4- lustneululldlnu
l$-Lots
a Acr•••e

JO- Rtt&gt;hoa1twtno..
, _ • .,,..,.

FROM THE STATE

bookcase secretary, cherrv and walnut dropleaf
tables, Larkin desk, Ice cream chairs, children's st.

u - Livttttek

::~

llrhwordovtrfftllftll'lllftllrft1Jwtrfii14Ctnt1Hrwn,.,Mo;.
rUfllllntother '""' COf!IKIIIiwtllar• will .. dllr... ll"" ,..,

.....

I

THE HOMESTEADS FROM THREE COUNTIES
TO BE SOLD SUNDAY, MAY 3, INCLUDES:. pc.
pecan dining room suite, sideboards, VIctorian hell
tree, large cookie jar collection, a lot Of rugs, stone
jars, cOI)per ·kettles, dinner bails, app. 25 boxtl
·misc. Items not unboxed yet, some modern fur ·
nltureendappllancos..
THIS IS ONLY A PARTIAL LISTING OF THIS
LARGE 2 DAY SALE.
5111 htlel rtin or shiM IMICII our new ml-.1'11
bullellnl...., cent•IMII calliper
111
ull .., '--...
~ ...... "!!ykiiiiDf·
..
.......

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Lllu~~.IIOTn.,pretns ~c· ~

w/potltlvt ID •acH Clay Of .., •• Not rllpoftlllllt tor

l«ldltltl.

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'"'"'""'"·c.'"'""""''·

Mlttlt NOMe lfln .,.. y ,,,.. Ntnltt .re.,,.., only wtflil ,... ....

-------------J IL--''-"-'"-"-·--,.-------- ___

Pomeroy, Ohjo45769

:+-----~-:""'"--

FEATURE OF SALE TO BE SOLD SUNQAY, MAY
3: LARGE WALNUT VICTORIAN BOOKCASE
WI GLASS AT TOP, SOLID AT BOTTOM.

...

1

1

Box 729

n- co, Tv. 0 , 0101 quoJmono
SJ- •noooun

st - HousthotdOOOifs

u - sttei&amp;Fertithtr

11 .

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Mail This Coupon with Remittance
Th D . 1 S t ' 1
e a1 Y en 10e

Morgan counties. Never be able to sell everything
In 2 days. Must see to appreciate. High quality .

u - Profenlon•l
s.rvices

l7- MoblloHomn

Celveland, Ohio, and Musklngum, Athens and

• MERCHANDISE

H-H•y

1: JOP .M. D.11 Jiy

II

11;.
.

BUsiness1

·--~'-=--

:=::;1':!:~~1:'Rtnt

'"
12- Oppor'"'"
Money to La.n

eREAL ESTATE

1

26. _ _ _ _ _ _ __
27
·

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11- w•nttdToDo

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25.

76 .

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4

t4-8uslnusTr~ln lnt

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18.
19
20.

1
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These cash rates
inc lude discount

17

t

12- Situ•ttd W1nttc1
tl- tnsur•nce

I'
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1
1

) Wanted

1

9- WanledtoBuy
e EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
'' - ""' Wo""'

I,

pro per

check the proper bo)(
below

I
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19 .00 I1,

t clasitication if you'll

::::;::;~~.

"'"'·"''"' ,..,.. ,.,. .....,..,.., ... """'"'' """",.

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BIIIJI-IncMr.. ofllle.
Au~
1 - 1111 Janes. IIndy N - •
'"""'

PIIMI614-JI7·M11

D. D.

MOVING Sale. May 2 &amp; 3.
Tuppers Plains. Due to
"Definite" Air Force transfer. Large basement a.
yard sale. Ceramics,
clothes, Magnavox stereo
console,

tools, exerciser

11
Help Wonted
GET VALUABLE: training
as a young business person
and earn gOOd money plus
some great gifts as a Sen·
tlnel route carrier. Phone
us ~Jght away and get on
the eligibility list 11 992·
21~ or 992-2157.

with pulleys, flower pots,
misc. Items, Mother's Day
gifts. Rain or shine. Formerly Bakers Busy Bee
Ceramic Shop. Pauline
Baker, 667·3252.
$185.00 to S500 weekly dofng
mailing work. No ex·
YARD SALE. May 1. Co. f)erlence required. AP··
Rd. 34. Back of Memory PLY: Circle Sales, P.O.
Gardens Cometary. Hand !lox 224·D, Rlchmond Hill,
NY 11418.
tools, leans9·?.
Rutland, 33205 Happy
Hollow Rd. 30 April &amp;. 1
May. 9·5. Clothes, golf
clubs, books, g•rden spray,
misc. baby clothes.

Need Money? Need
Clothtl? Why nqt vet vour
wardrobe at no cost to VIMI
and earn extra dollan tooT
For lnformaiiO!I · or 111tervlew appointment caH
i.
BIG Garage Sale. Thurs., 992·3941 batwten 9-9.
Fri. &amp; Sat. Top of Bigley
'
)
Ridge Rd. Long Bo»om. 10. Fashion Consultant neteleil
5. '
NOW I Ladles fashion flrrrt
Average sa.oo per hour\
YARD SALE. Thurs. &amp; Fri. For eppolntmentlntervle\it · '
April 30, May 1. Co. Rd. 25 call \192-3941 baiWHn 9-9. % ·
jNst Meigs Hl!lh SchOOl,
tools. letz mill, roll bar, Now taking applicatlq
dltl, furniture, antiques &amp; for lifeguards. Appl
mueh more.
-'tencll. at Royal 0e
Park.
·
YARD Moving Sale. 1,2&amp;4
"·v. v
..,.
r
FRIISNOLY Home Partial
blc~n, PUIIh ~!ltlv•tors, , _ In our 26th VIII', II ~
tlo
I. mi.... Wandl pending to your trn, 1111
hal 011111111111 fOr m
'
IIIII dnllrl. Party plan e ;
l•ptltl Church. fe-2034.
perllflte helpful. Clr
phone neCIIIIry. Cal
GIGANTIC Yafd Sale. H, Clrol DIY collect S1.419i
..
Mev 1 &amp; 2. Tuppers Plaint, D95.
Ohio lllllcle of Post office.
Living room suite, NIICI Monlv? 3 ledltl
clOthing, Old gl.....,..,
10-11 houn • ~:
whtt nots, loll o1 ....- WWil
larnNO.toiiS.I

,.~ark. ~umlture,

=·

::'.:.~~"'Fr~t·

--...11 .._________.-,_...,...,_-..-,__, : OOOdl•. Rain c•nc•l•.

..

H o u c;in-_, ·

•

Headquarters

.·~TVIRGIL SR.~~

B.
_ 216 E. Second Street · '

. Phone
1-1614)-992-3325 '
. •
I
.
NEW LISTING - Sum·
mer home on the Ohio
River. 1968 FleetwOOd
mobile home with 3
bedrooms, 1'12 baths, ex·
cellent drilled well,
,.. stove and refrigerator,
gas F.A. furnace and 3.7
acres. Only Sl3,sao.
STATELY FAMILY ·
HOME - Distinctive 4
bedroom home will1 2
full baths, large rooms
'ilnd nice birch kitchen,
central heat and wOOd·
burner, ful l basement,

attached 2 car garage
and large glass enclosed
patio.
RACINE - 10 rooms
just remodeled. 5
bedrooms, new bath,
new gas F .A. furnace,
" dining, lots of cabinets
In the kitchen, flower
room and large lot.
$40,1100.
NEW LISTING - Only 2
yrs. old. Brick veneer
home, 2 full baths, base·
ment, Insulated, copper
plumbing, F .A. furnace
and 2 fireplaces. Almost
' A acres. Easy terms.

$60,000.
IN GOOD SHAPE 66x100 Jot/garage, 3
bedrooms, nice basement, good carpeting,

storm windows &amp; drs.,
natural gas F.A. fur·
nace, dining and nice
., view Of town. $27 .sao.
NEW LISTING - .Small
home, Sl)lall price. 4
room house with 4.75
q

acre. Needs

some

work

" but yours for only 57,500.
YOUR HOME IS YOUR
FAMILY· TRADEMARK. NEED A BET·
TER ONE CALL
•· "2-3325 or tH-3176.

..

Housi1151

Heaclc uarters

99~·2259
..
NEW LISTING- Near
Meigs Mine No. 1. 3
bedroom ranch on 2112
acre ground . Large
modern kitchen and llv·
ing room, storage -shed
and garden area. ALL
FOR ONLY $32,1100.00.
NEW LISTING - With
5% down this 2 bedroom
home In the country can
be purchased for ap·
prox. 12'11o lnlerest .
House has new siding,
new root, new septic,
new carpet, and front
and rear porch .
$24,1'00.00.
NEW LISTING ..,. In
Middleport. A 2 story
frame home with 3·4
bedrooms, dining room,

Cali742·319S
or 992-7680
'
H ·tfc

992·621S or99HJ14
Oh. -

H. L WRITESEL
ROOFING

REESE
TRENCHING
SERVICE
Water·Sewer-Eiectnc

J&amp;F
ENTERPRISES

All types of roof
new or repair gutters
and downspouts, gutter
cleaning and painting .
All work guaranteed .

Gas Line-Ditches

water Line Hook-ups
Septic Tanks

• Backhoe

• E ~tcavating
• Septic Systems
• water, Sewer &amp; Gas
Lines
• Dump Truck
Licensed &amp; Bo!lded

Free estimates
Reasonable Prices
Call Howard

949·2862
949-2160

PH. 992-7201
2-Hfc

4-15·1 noo .

NEW SlORE HR

AlltENS SPORT
CYa.ES
Stimson Ave. Atfiens,

Elfective 4-6-81
MON. tllru SAT.
9toS
Closed Thursday
H ·1 mo. pd .

Hours :

~;:::=======;~;::=======::t==:=::;::=~~===;
AtL STEEL

Fann Buildings

BISSEll
SIDING CO.

~

CONSTRUCTION

New Homes • extensive remodel·
ing.
• E lectrica I work
• Roofing work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583
1 mo.

SiltS
"From 30x30"
SMAL~

Utility Buildings

Size~ from 4x6 to12x4D

_........ ... . . .
--·.............

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

~

Rt. J, Box 54
Ricine, Oh.
Ph. 614·143·2591
6·'15·th

~~========~~;=~==;=~t=====~~=~
BUYING APPLIANCE SERVICE
J&amp;C
Ad lor FvMt Reterenu ·

SI''VER GOLD
COINS

Prettiest Don!

Hay

manure
COUNTRY MOBILE Home ·Spreader, bailer, horses &amp;

wagons,

Park, Route 33, North of pon'es
1 · 985·3891 ·
Pomeroy. Large lots. Call
992-7479.

...... . ............
. L 0 0 4 0 o -.O.. • • • •

TRAILER spaces tor rent.
southern Vafley Mobile
Home. Pork, Cheshire, Oh.
992·3954.

Call Ken Young

SANITATION
SERVICE

ForFutS.nict

985·3561

'121' TO 'lfl

PAIU S AND SERVI CE
ALL MAKES
tWnhers
•Dispouls
eDrytrs
oDishw.llslttn
oHot W.11t•r T.llnks
I
lfS3

For Silver Dollars

GU:NN BISSEll

" SIMCill R1tes For"
..- C1in Llultdrles
... """11 Properties

949-2801

H0t.1seOwnen

Mobile Home lot tor rent.
John Sheets. 31/2 miles
south of Middleport Rt. 7.
1970 Ford Mustang Mach 1.
Real good shape, p.s., new
' ..,' , , '" , ,.. ,
tires. $1 ,200. or best offer .
Must sell. 1976 Chrysler
Cordoba, afl power, needs
motor . Rear window
51. Houuhold GOOds
defogger $1,000. or best Of·
One early American sofa fer. 949·214.5.
and Joveseat . Floral
design, brown. gold, bilge.
$300.00. Phone 992·3703.

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

50"-2G-30"H. P.
HA 60"- 25·60 H. P .
60"- 45 -80 H: P .

~ ·

Cdppertone gas cook stove
and refrigerator In gOOd
condition. $75 eoch. Also
couch tor $20.00. Phone 9926196.

,._

13....tl.
From wide-brimmed hat to pert
panlaloons, she's a charmet.
This adorab~ old-IIShioned
doll wi1h1 iiiDPY lace will be the
slar of 1 little lirl's collectioll.
Pattern 7435: pattem pia$ for
doll abollt IJ~·inches and out·
fit easy directions included.
SZM f01 aach pattern. Add
504 ilch pattern fol ~
and htndlint. S11~ . It:

54 · Misc. Merclllnlse
SWIMMING POOLS :
PRE · SEASON
SALE:$999.00
IN ·
STALLEOII Above ground
pool ocomptetely Installed
starting at 1999.00. Price in·
eludes pool, deck, fence,
filter, ll~r and Installation
under normal ground con·
......
34 dltlons. Free shop 11 home
I 'I lllo.,t.
service. Caii1·100-624·85J 1.
·:-· ...
Deily Sentinel
Two month spring special
... 113, CJN ClltMt SlL, ... tor upholstering furniture.
Yilt, IY ltll3. Ptlll ..... Richard Mowery, Sr.
...... D,.l'ltln ...... Owner. 675-4154.

.

Jnn Trussell f4f-2UO

·'""lB

Tile

Caltha to 1M Clift boom! Secld
fol out NEW 1!181 NEEDUCRAFT
CATALOG. Dill 172 desiln~ 3
1t1t P1U11111 insiclt. $1.00

At .
,., llclllll .._a. POMEROY
IPF IW . . .
LANDMARK
.

.. ....
=·'="•
=·t
.
.
.
.
. -·- ......
......
......
..
wtl"
....
==I .
........ I~ ....

IM-14 ~

I

CLOSE TO TOWN on Rt. 1G, lhll mobile ~on
1'h 1eres Offen Its own pond. Home In IIIW-,_ can·
Clition, carpelecl and totally lumfllhecl. For an1v
112,500.

7 N

1Pll

lQIIII

Hf;jiJi:ii'"•

iM 11 . . . . . . :
lIHIIIMII
........
IW:I'-

15'\&gt;l ACRES and 2 B. R. home, I mile 111M
R-vllle. lleautltul view Of river. l!xfra fl"lllllle ,
'
building lltn. ASking 127.000.
CALL US TO BUY OR SILL
Nency J•spen '1-llfe .
I'H,IU-.7S
Virtlnll HaJIIIIft iiiiiiC..N
""· Nf-41"

~

.

.AWIDE Stl.tCOON 1
OF. SHRUBS.
FOR UIDSCAPtNG
POMIROY

=n..~

••

I,ANOMARK

..
' .

&amp; HOi! ling

WATER
WELLS . ~~:::~~;;~~~
Domestic and commercial,
pump sales and service.
Electrical
Tom Lewis Drilling . 11
Seasonal discount on pum·
&amp;Aefrlgerotlon
ps. 1-304-895-3802 or 1-304· SEWING
MACHINE:
895-36&lt;11 .
Repairs, service , all
makesl 992·2284 . The
1972 1411. tag·along camper
Exc~vollng
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
trailer. $1,200. 992·3423. See 13
Authorized Singer Sales
a190 Park St., Mlddl"'1t.
COMPLETE sever In· and service. we sharpen
staflatlon &amp; backlloe ser· Scissors.

·- . . ..

....

"

~· ~

Home
lmprovemlflts

vice tor
district.
Racine-Syracuse
Dozer work
sewer
If needed . 9~· 2293.

Equipment
Shecls
POLE BUILDINGS

speclflcollons. MOdels
in Mel'gs, Goflla and
Mlson Counties.
I
FREE ESTIMATES
Afl Buildings
Guaranteed

PH..367·7tl1
Or 367•7560

r-~gC~H~E~S~H~IR~E~,'~4~·~12~·tf~c~
Wefl's Trash Hauling . 55.00·
per month. Olive and
Orange Townships and
surrounding areas. 985·

t~====:::~=~±3S~18~.:;;:=::;;:==:::;

Furniture Carpet Shop
SPRING CARPET SALE

DOZER work . Smafllobs a
specialtY. 742-2753.

Cash 'n' Carrv
~~~~~='l!l r--=---i~::.:....::.....:::::.:..~--:-;;:;;:----,

Qllll ·

QIIIIill

1•1 If II

1;2==::::;P;fu~m~b;fn;g==

71
C1mp1n1
_ _.2:E!I!au~I~P!.ft=en~t-f
Scollle camper or sale.
992 ' 3791 ·

11

' IU.Mf .... #MIICIJ

BEAUTIFULLY' LANDSCAPED and well Clredfor
-Just like now. This mobile home Is welling lor the
lame love and care' II 11 uNCI to. Meny excellent
features: 2 B.R.'s ( - B.R. 14'X16'), Hl·ln lo16
kitchen. covered large patio. BerntvpeoulbuJICIJng,
end much morund;sfor0111yl22,000. · . ·

1976 HONOA XL·JSO street
and trail 5600. ' 642
Brownell, Middleport.

BUILDINGS

Scout Camp Rd .
Chester, Db.
*Short game practice
• Puffing &amp; Chipping
Green Open
• Hole-ln·One
• Pro-Golf lessons
for all ages
*Repair: Cleaning,
refinishing, new grips
length cll.lnge,
weight chonge
• Fut service
Ph. (614) 9t5·3Hl

7435

CENTRAL REALTY

••

V.C. YOUNG II

' ):

ROGER HYSEll'S • BAILErS SII)ES·:.
322 N. 2nd Ave.
GARAGE
Middleport, Ohio

n

..

f. ~ommercial

I~~~~~~;~~~~==;=====~j~~~=~===~

chen, has new carpet
throughout . Home
comes with several
rooms full of almost new
furniture. Must see to
bi!iieve. Just 142.600.00. ·
LANDSCAPED F'OR A
TRAILER - .And has
water and electric
avalloble ..Thls 1.25 ecre
lot Is In the Southern
School District and Is
.only $3,sao.oo.
LARGE 2 STORY With 4 big lots end 4 big
bedrooms. House has
had a Jot of remodell ng
and has nice cabinets In
the kitchen . would
make e nice place for
children. Close to Mine
No.2. $26.900.00.
ALMOST NEW RANCH
- Approx. 4 years old
and has over o~ acre of
ground that Is land·
scaped
beautifully .
There Is 3 bedrooms, an
attached garege and
another
garage .
$39,1'00.00.
WE HAVE OVER 10
PROPERTIES
TO
CHOOSE FROM. STOP
BY AND LET US SHOW
THEMTOYOU • .
REALTOR
Henry E. Cleland, Jr•
"2-6191
ASSOCIATES
Roger &amp; Dottle Turner

NEW HOME on I acre. Rl. 554Jn Gallla Co. Split en·
try, lpaCIOUS L.R. Archway Into formal D.R. Kit·
chon eaulooed. 3 B.R. and 2 baths. Carpeted
throughout, IIJII basement. Could have extra B.R.'1
or •family room, reedy for 3rel ball1 If nnded.
Garage and storage area. All of 11111 lnd more fOr
162.1100. Call tor eppt. to see.

-Concrete work
-Plumbing and
·electrical work
(Free E•tim•tes)

1971 mobile home tor sale. Trailer Court, Minersyllle . tras for sale or trade,
$4000.00. Must sell at once. 992-3324.
S2,000.1XL Also good used
Cpunty Certilied
992·3724.
c.b.'s, 8 track tape players
Roush Lane
and
speake.,.
Good
por-.
Cheshire,
Oh.
2 bedroom Mobile Home. table black and white t.v .'s.
Ph. 367-7560
For sale: 1976 14 x 70 Win· Racine area. 992·5858.
See at Uncle Buddys Trade
l·nfc
dsor mobile home, 3
bedrUQms, full lengtl1 front
n Post., 92 Olive Street, r,
windows. Has new hot 2 bedroom Mobile Home, Gallipolis.
water tank. Central air tunished, adulls preferred.
conditioning. Unfurnished, Deposit. 99N749.
Corn for sale. $3.00 a
but has stove and
buschel. 667 ·3566.
refrigerator. Included also 2 bedroom Mobile Home
5 concrete step~. all cement utilities paid, 1 child ac· Potted tomato plants. An·
·blocks, 4 sets of anchors, cepted, no pets. Bachelor drew Cross. 247-2852.
and all the underpinning. apt . 1 bedroom. John
-Auto and Truck
Very good condition. One Sheets, 3'12 miles sout11 of
Repair
2 used chain saws, one used
owner. 992· 5533.
Middleport Rt. 1.
brush cutter, one demon-Transmission
strator moped. See at
Repair
lliew Skyline sectional
Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto.
Apartment
home 24x56. 3 bedroom,
Hrs.: Mon.-Fri .
992-2094.
for Rent
cathedral ceiling in great
9 A.M. -5:30P.M.
room, 2 full baths, garden Two bedroom furnished
tub &amp; many c:xtras. Lot apartment. 992·5434 or 1· Early American love seat.
992-5682
$40. 742·2258.
model sale at just S28,5QO. 30H82-2566.
10-7-tfc
See at Kingsbury Home
Sales, 1100 E. Main st ..
1
Pomeroy. New summer
Furnished
2
bedroom
up_
_,
P
_,
e
c.:
ts:.:f:::o'r
=S•
:
:.:
_ 1
years
hours : Mon .· Thurs. 10 stairs apartment. Adults 1 walker female, 4=-e_
a.m.. a p.m., Fri. 10 a.m.·S only, no pets. Middleport. old; 1 walker pup. All VKC
Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
p.m., Sat. 10 a .m.·3 p.m. 992·3874.
registered. Call 949·2657
SIDING
any day alter 4:30p.m.
Sun. 1 p.m .- 5 p.m.
2 bedroom furniShed upstairs apartment. $150. Young small miniature
month plus utilities. 550. coll ie type, female,
deposit. No pets. Available housebroken, gentle, good
'
May 1. Call 949·2875 after with children. Will furnish
4:30p.m.
shots and worming .
Humane Society, 992-768(1.
"Beautiful, Custom
1 room efficiency apartBuill Garage~"­
ment. 992·5434 or 882·2566.
Call for tree l'itlng
estimates, 949·2101 or
&amp; Ll¥tSIDEII 1 I
Apt. in Pomeroy. 992 · ~21.
949·2860.
No Sunday COils
3-lHfc
Apt. for rent. 1 bedroom all 6..l_ _,F'-'a"r"'m'-'E,_q,.u=:i:r:P:.::m:::e:.:.nl:__
Four 15,1100 gallon tanks
.
located
above ground at
bedroom house. 1200. electric. 992-2094.
Furnished Rooms
Athens, Oh iO. SJ,OOO.OO
month, $100 . deposit. 45
References. Close to mine Sleeping\ rooms; by the each. Phone 1·30H22·2781.
L 742-2126.
week. Kitch
and
television lounge.
• 14,000 gallon tanks
&amp;
store and restaurant
located above ground at
L
sao feet. 992·6370.
Athens, Oh. $3,000. each. 130-4-422-2781 .
Sp.~cefor Rent

living room, Iaroe kit-

992·5692

Let George Miller cheek
your present electrical
system.
..\
Residential

work

$J/

Beautiful red 1978
2 bedroom Mobile Home . Kawasaki Kz 650 Sr, low
Adults only . Brown's mileage, loaded with e)(·

For all of your wiring needs .

-Adclonsand
remodeling
-Roofingond gutter

•Insulation
•Storm Doors
•Storm WindOW$

SERVICE

I

·SERVICES"

Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding

•Replacement
Windovys
Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph. 992-2772
4-29·1 mo

~

t

. . . .01'10-2112•

•

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

POMEROY, 0~-

I MillER ELECTRIC

INSUlATION

~S6._

.

Card of Thanks
Many, many thanks to
Dr. Telle and the entire
staff at Veterans Memoria l
Hospltai for their care
during my stays at the
hospital. Thanks too, to the
E:merge~cy
Squad and
their members who helped
many times; to the people
of Gallla and Meigs Coun·
ties who gave blood in my

J&amp;L BUMN

electric on nice size lot.

micro-wave oven and

31

Business Services

HOBSIEIIER

Phone 742·3092
f

by Larry Wright

t2 Situations Wonlecl
Mobile Homes ·- · KIT 'N' CARLYLE"'
J1
Homes tor Sill
32
. for Sale
Repair or remodeling Brick hOuse on wooded I
work, flooring, doors, wall .Three bedrQOms, large kit- 1973 Crown Hilven, 14 x 65,
paneling, celllhg, or floor chen, family room, double three bcdlooms, new car·
tile, siding. 992·2759.
garage, deck . Mld·Sixtles. · pet. 1971 ·Camerl!n,. 14 x 64,
'992·5&lt;120.
two bedrooms, new.carpet.
Have vacancy to care for
1972 Champion. 12x,60, tWo 1 '?=;;;;~
elderly or Invalid . Beautiful three bedroo"' bedrooms, new carpet: 197~ 11
Reasonable. 992·6022.
ranch brick home In Beum cameron, · 12 · x 60, two
Addition, Pomtroy, Ohio. bedrooms, all electric. 1971
• ~' 13
Insurance
Gas heat, central air. Cell Skyline, 12sx 6), two
992-2571, 985·414.5 or 1-687· bedrooms, ·bath &amp; •I:J, new
' !' AUTOMOBILE
carpet. 1970 PMC ,
IN · 6429 ,
,;. SURANCE: been can·
12 x 60, two bedrooms, new
•, celled?
Lost your
carpet. B x S Sates, Inc.,
operator's license? Phone Three or lour bedroom 2nd x Viand Street, Point
house, carpet, fireplace Pleasant, WV Phone 675·
992·2143.
sundeck, two car garage, 2 4424.
and one half acres. Lovely
\
setting on SR 7 North. 992·
4
acres
with
2
bedroom.
7741.
18
Wanted to Do
trailer 70xl4. 2 car garage,
3 miles from R.aclne on Co.
Furnace repairs, electrical
Rd. 28. Before 12noonorof·
.,,
.. work,
home orplumbing,
residence.mobile
992· ~j~R~ea~I;E~s~te~lt~-~Gtn~~.,~~~~~ ter 5 p.m. 9~·2618 .
~~ 5858.
8x4~ 2 bedroom mobile
hom~. Reaf gOOd. $1,950.
Will do all types of carOffice 742-2003
Brown's Trailer Park. 992·
· penter work. Experienced Georges.
Hobstetter Jr.
3324 .
•. and responsible. No job to
Broker
·big or to small. Phone 992·
1
~ 39-41 anytime.
NEW HOME - Be this
attractive hom,·s first
· - - - - -,, ALTERATIONS &amp; general owner. 3 bedroom, total

deep stream
Gene's
Carpet extraction.
Cleaning,
Free
est I m a It d , 14
reasonable ratu, scot·
ChqUard. 9'12,630'1 or 7422211 .
~~~A~~D _ ~~:~~s~
toasters. Irons, afl smefl
French City Painting. appllancn. Lawn mower.
Rnldantlal, commercial, Next to State Highway
Interior,
exterior. Gerage on Route 7, 985·
Speclaflzlng In lntorlor 3125.
·
pelntlng, paper hinging &amp; - - - - - ' - - - textured ceilings. Free I
tlllmatn. 367·77&amp;1 or 367· ' A~all able to handlnll your
7160.
·
:electrical needl. Ropafr s,
wiring, re·w1r 1ng, 1n·
statlatlon,
WILL do · plumbing, revlstons. modifications,
residential,
roofing,
painting, farm, business.
No lob to
remodeling and electrical
or to smefl. Avafleble
_.k. F,.. ntlmltn. Call large
Jmmecllately. Bill Cecile at
992-7112.

.,.,11,

CARPET
ITH PADDIN

2 Rofls
Rubber Back

From

From

Re/.-$i5:is
S ·
q,
Yd.
Cosll-n·Carry

1},99 • Up
1n111118CI

12.95 &amp; Up

1

Installed

SHAG

S"fiJ

Buy Now &amp; Save SliJJ.$6 Per Yard.
25 rollS CAillt!t i" stock to pick from.
Regular backed carpet installed free,
Wltfl pad.
,
. . Drive A liHle- Save A Lot

.

'

KITaltl
CARPET

RUTlAND FURNITURE

~til St.

.

742· 2211

�I

_Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, April 29,1981

Dea~line for phone changes slated
May 7 is the last day for Genera~
Telephone Co. CusWmel'll in ·t~~­
Pomeroy area tO make changes in
their telephone dlf-ectory llatings.
According to Jim Parker, area
service manager in Athens, the .

Correction

Fliers describe

In the report released by Sheriff
James ) . Proffitt concerning t11e
strike settlement there were two options for the employes.
They were, 60 cents per hour increase or 25 cents an hour increase
plus one-half paid premiwn for
hospitalization.

hazardous waste
Fllel'll concerning dwnplug ~r­
dou.s waste are being diBtrlbuted as
well is petitions in opposition to the
problem according to Mary Hysell.
The flier states, "The State Senate

line of hardware and law supplies to oame a few.
James Thomas, Jr., Is the manager and be has olne
employes. The store Is open dally from 7 a.m. to 5 p.m.
and on Saturday from 7 a.m. to 3 p.m. During the grand
openlng the store will be open Friday from 7 a.m. to 8
p.m. and Saturday from 7 a.m. lo 5 p.m. The business
was located for many years at South Third Street, Middleport.

GRAND OPENING - Tbe Valley Lumber and
Supply Co. will hold Its grand opening allis new quarters, 555 Park Street, Middleport, on Friday and Saturday. Door prizes totaling $1,000 will be given away, no
purchase required. Refreshments will also be served.
The elegant new store has 10,000 square feet in the
sales area. They offer paint, lumber supplies, complete

Area deaths

• Mayot's

Bernard M. Guinther, 57,
Gallipolis, died unexpectedly around
noon Tuesday at his home.
He was born in Meigs County, son
Charlotte Evans
of tlie late William and Mary Francis Oliver Guinther.
Charlotte Evans, 116, Jackson
He attended Pomeroy High School Pike, Gallipolis, died at Pinecrest
and served four years in the U. S. Care Center Tuesday.
Navy.
She was born June 9, 1894 at
He began working at the Gallipolis Minersville to U1e late Walter and
Developmental Center in 1947 and Mary Green· Thomas.She married
retired from there in 1979.
the late Clarence Evans. She is sur·
Mr. Guinther has been employed vived by five daughters: Mrs.
at Rich Oil Company lor the past two Mariana Evans, Walnut Creek, Ca.;
years.
Mrs. William (Betty ) McMahan,
He is survived by his wile, Leota Zanesville; Mrs. Earl (Eleanor)
Walker, three children, Mary Lee Williams, Anderson, S.C.; Mrs.
Carlos (Rachel) Morrison, Stone
Stephe~s ; W. D. Davis, and Ella
Guinther. all of Gallipolis, and four Mountain, Ga.; ·Mrs. Robert (Clara )
grandchildren.
Haskins, Gallipolis ; lJ grand·
Mr. and Mrs. Guinther resided children and sevefl gr eat with Mrs GUinther's mother, Mrs. grandchildren survive.
Grace Fadley, Gallipolis.
One brother, Richard Thomas,
Other survivors include live . Pomeroy , also survives.
brothers, John of Winter Haven,
Eight brothers preceded her in
Florida ; Guy of Syracuse; Donald of death.
Crooksville; Edison, Gallipolis;
She was a member of the Bidwell
Shirley of Pomeroy; two sisters, United Methodist Church. A former
Caryl Cook of Pomeroy and employee of the central supply office
Fredreka Farris of Parkersburg.
ofHMC.
Mr. Guinther was an avid baseball
Arrangement. will be announced
fan and played baseball in his early later by the McCoy-Moore Funeral
years in Syracuse, the Ohio Valley Home, Vinton.
Baseball League and was a member
of the Gallipolis Queen Bee Team.
He was a member of the Gallipolis
Elks Club, Moose Club, and charter
member of the Ohio Activities
Therapy Association.
Funeral services will be held at 2
p.m. Friday at Miller's Home for
Funerals with Rev. John Jeffre ys officiating . Burial will be in Pine
Street Cemetery. Elk services will
be held at 7 p.m. Thursday.

.

Four hurt
m accident
r·our people were injured in two
I

separate accidents in Meigs County
Tuesday, according to the Ga!liaMeigs Post of the Ohio Highway
Patrol.
The patrol said the first incident
took place at I: 10 p.m. when a
vehicle driven by J ason L. Hanning,
22, Athens, went off the right side of
the road on SR 143 and overturned.
Hanning and a passenger, Cynthia
Hanning, 21 , Athens, were taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital, where
they both treated and released. No
damage estimate on the car was
available this morning, the patrol
said.
Troopers said a vehicle driven by
Oris A. Hubbard, 59, Syracuse, was
eastbound on CR 19 when he swerved to avoid a pothole, went off the
right side of the road and into a ditch.
Although the vehicle was slightly
damaged , Hubbard and a
passenger, Margaret Eskew,
Pomeroy, were taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital, where they were
both treated and released.
No citations were issued in either
incident, the patrol said.
The patrol reported Gilbert E.
Spencer, 39, Tuppers Plains, was not
Injured when his vehicle collided
with a deer while southbound on SR 7
in Meigs County at 4:55 a.m.
Tuesday.
The deer was not killed and Spell'
cer's vehicle was moderately
damaged.

Veterans Memorial
AdmitteJ.Roger Jordan, Letart,
W. Va.; Mary Klein, Pomeroy ;
OBcar Imboden, Minersville; Alma
· Young, Pomeroy; Anthony Heaton,
Rutland; Tara M011tgomery,
Rutland; Marlin Morris, Long Bottom; Caryl Pooler, Pomeroy.
Dtacharged-Frank ¥u.sser, Ernestine Werry, Margaret Yost,
Wesley Clark, Joan Conkle, Michael
Barrett, Kenneth Matson.

helps-ensure the customer's name,
address and phone nwnber are
ll,sted correctly in the new book," he
said.

Scheduled for delivery In July, the
direCtories will go to some 6,000
customen in Letart Falls, Mid- ·
dleport, Pomeroy, Portland, Racine
aild ruttand.
·

...

Big Bend Service
Center In Racine
ls~•eciait 1 es in Auto Parts

American &amp; Foreign

Ask to wed ·

has passed and Gov. Rhodes has
A marriage license was issu~ to
949-2894
signed into law a bill that Cl'eates a Dana Kelly Fick, 23, Long Bottom,
five member panel that will deter-, and Denise Gayle Mal'llhall, 22 ,
...
mine where hazardous waste will be
Pomeroy.
dwnped
state. circulating to r.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiii~.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,
"Thereinisthe
a petition
allow the citizens of the state of Ohio
to vote on a State Constitutional
Amendment that would allow local
governments to regulate the use of
their land regarding hazardous
waste diaposal.
"The dwnping of hazardous waste
will affect the citizens of Ohio for
generations. It ill imperative that

MOTHER'S
DAY

.

T!l,.clly, Ajlrll21, 1911

....._.

Open Dettv 10·9
sund•v• 1-6

Eight defendants forfeiting bonds Tuesday night.
in the court of Pomeroy Mayor
Forfeiting were Elmer Johnson,
Clarence Andrews Monday night Wheeling, W. Va., and Kimberly
were Wesley Smith, Pomeroy, $50, Jenkins, Racine, $350 each, posted
'quealing tires; Dana Kessinger, on charges of driving while inReedsville, $31, speeding; Mark toxicated; Daniel R. Taylor, MidHood, Pomeroy, $150, ·reckless dleport, $25, wrong way on a oneoperation; James Kiser, Racine, way street; Coy Nitz, Middleport,
$26, speeding; Richard DeMoss, $25, following too closely; Roger
Pomeroy, $27, speeding; Michael Roush, Pomeroy,$27, speeding.
Jones, Kenna, $50, disturbing the
peace; Dickie Gobel, Auxley, Ky.,
Fined were William Fry, Jr.,
$350, driving while intoxicated, and
Tampa,
Fla.; Ronald Armes, Long
James Peck, Cheshire, $50, no
Bottom;
Allen W. Holsinger, Westoperator's license.
Police
2-20 minister, and George Hoschar, Jr.,
Three breaking and entering in' Pomeroy, $225 and costs each and
cidents in Pomeroy have been three days in jail, aU on charges of
sol ved and items recovered, driving while intoxicated with
Hoschar also fined $100 and costs on
Pomeroy Police report.
an
open flask charge; Iris H.
Police say three juveniles,
allegedly involved in the incidents, Flesher, New Haven, $17 and costs,
have been turned over to Meigs speeding; Richard Friley ,
County Juvenile Officer Carl Hysell. Pomeroy; Bailey Dogan, Rutland;
The trio allegedly broke into the Roy Boggs, Middleport, Larry cimschool for the mentally retarded on dilf, Middleport, and Coy Nitz, MidAprill3 stealing a stereo system and dleport, each $50 and costs on disortapes; took two bicycles from Land- derly manner charges.
mark on April 24, and three radios .------------l
from an Ohio Power Co. storage.
building near the Meigs Stadium in
Pomeroy on April28.

TREAT MOM TO A "HER DAY"

TAKE
ADVANTAGE
OF OUR APPAREL

DINNER AT

•lnfenflwur

'

laltPrlot

Coffee, Tea, Milk or Soft Drink .

Til X

Rj!servations may be
made but are not
necessary, 992-3629.

86

c.·

(500)

480z.'
T. . lowt Cle91111
Vanish • blond crvslals dis·
Infect. remove stains Save.
'Nil'!! -

3FOI1u•"
laltPrlct

jp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;~j

(502)

Eckrich 12 01. Packaged

batiste in
mecJiey of delicate pastels.

BOLOGNA •••••••••••••••••••• ~:~~. $1.59.
Eckrich 1-Lb.
Roll $
ROLL SAUSAGE·················· 1.79
Eckri~

$

OLD FASHION LOAF ••••••••~~·•• 2.09
Homemade
$
HAM SAlAD.•••••••••••••••••·.~~;. 1•39

Vaughan's
OPEN 7 DAYS
8 AM TIL 10 PM
CORNER OF LOCUST

..

1-Lb. Teen OuP.en

Quorters

MARGARINE.

&amp; PEARL ST.
MIDDLEPORT, OH.

2/99t

POTATOES .........~~~.. '2.79
S Lb. Bag While

GRAPEFRUIT...·.....!W! 11.25
4 Lb.

t2 ••· Krall Single Sliced Swiss

•

. EESE •••••••••
. Pkll · $
CH

tna

Bag Colifornia

ORANGES ..........~~.~ - 1 1.19
-

Lb

.............. :.. lf

8 OZ. LARGE COOL WHIP········ 974

SUPERMARKO

Where Friendliness &amp; Savings Go Hand in Hand
32 oz. Krait

IN APPRECIATION FOR YOUR

GRAPE JEUY ·······~·········· $1.49

PATIENCE DURING OUR

INSTANT COFFEE ••••••••• ~::••• $4.79

10 oz. Nescafe
•

STARTING MAY 4TH.
Truckload of Meat

Sale Starts On
Tuesday, May 5th.
.

0

10112 oz. Campbell's

REMODELING
WE WISH TO REWARD
YOU WITH MANY BARGAINS
THROUGHOUT ·OUR STORE

CHICKEN NOODLE SOUP .... 2/694
Bath Sl1e

CARESS BAR SOAP •••••••••.2/$1.19
12 01. Armo\lr

CORNED BEEF ..... ~ ••••••••~~~ •. $1.89
16 !1_1. L!!,Cl!J Leaf

APPLE SAUCE .•~ .........."••••• 2/99*
SIZES: S, M, L, XL and
XXL. Solids and Prints.
Be sure to see all the
other styles of. women's
Spring and Summer
Sleepwear, 2nd ~loor.

ELBERFELDS
. POMEROY

\.:_'aP!l&gt;trl•lmen and boys

(503)

Your Choice

1.14 .~~·
Ultrl Rich Sblmpoo

Beauty formula shampoo"'
for dry, normal or oily . In·
stent hair condltlpner for
regular, extra body, or
blow dry h~lr.
Shoo end Seve.

'*!wl

1

iP'~IYElSIElr/cotton

•miJIInery ••porting UOOdl

ar Conditioner

· M 01.' A1U • Cleantr
.8leocbls out the. t~st
lood atdlns fostl Save rv:;w

ELBERFELDS

Ninhti••~of cool65/35

••hot•

~p~::::,;•leclltllnd glrla

Salad Bar, Choice of Sliced Baked Ham, or
Turkey &amp; Dressing, Sweet Potatoes, Limas,

Plus

'

'fll~lon otttl~Qrltl •hosiery

ON THE MENU

ALL FOR ONLY.695

......

lAYAWAY .PlAN

THE MEIGS INN
11 a.m. · 3 p.m.

t-----------------------

APPRECIATION
SALE

Wed. Thru Sat. Sale

IS MAY lOth

court_~_ac-ho-fus_a_cts_no_w._.. _ __

Five defendants forfeited bonds
and 10 others were lined in the court
of Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman

'

The Saving Place SM

]

Graveside services will be under
the direction of Pomeroy Post 37
American Legion and Gallipolis
Post 27.

Bernard M. Guinther

deadline appl!Elll to customel'll with
changes or corrections and phone
usel'll·planning to move or intending
to have telephone service installed
beloreJuly17.
"Knowing of changes in advance

May 7

4 Roll Pack· Charm in

TOILET TISSUE

' Pkg.

•••••••••••••••

'129
•

61,11 oz.

STARKIST niNA ............~~~ $.1.29
64 oz. Troplcana
· Jar '149
.
ORANGE JUICE
l t t f.6 t l l l l l l l t l l t

'

.

..

I

II oa. •,.llalllk · Cleaner
Wltl1 2-wov trigger sprayer
Mulfl-surtoce cleaner Save.
' A 01

7
c
·
9

(504)
4 Pock

. - .-!1-- · 6C&gt;~I·,IC»Watt bulbt

Kmort· orono. 2000 ovg
hrs. life. Inside frost. Save.

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      <name>guinther</name>
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      <name>thomas</name>
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