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                  <text>Page-lo-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Area deaths
WUliain F. Boyd
William Foster. Boyd, 70,
Washington, 1). C., fonnerly &lt;i
Meigs County, died Sundsy of an apparent heart attack.
Mr. Boyd was bam at Mt. Moriah
on March 17, 1911 the son of the late
Charles Foster and Nellie Boyd of
I..etart Falls.
Following hls graduation from
Racine High School in 1929 the
family moved to Washlngton, D. C.
In addition to hls parents he was also
preceded in death by hls first wife.
Mr. Boyd was employed by the
government his entire life.
He Is survived by his wife; several
step children and two coW!ins, Emma Hayman of Syracuse and
Mildred Ripley of Charleston.
·
Funeral services and burial will
be in Washington, D. c. Wednesday.

Jesse Melvin Howard
Jesse Melvin Howard, 61, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, died at hls residence Monday.
Mr. Howard · was preceded in
death by hls parents Seymour and
Elizabeth Rigsby Howard.

Mr. Howard was a pi~itter, attended the Methodist Christian
School in Salyersville, ~y; served
from 1938 to 11141 in the c. c. c.;
·veteran of World Warn hsvlng served in the European, African , and
middle eastern campaign; meniber

&lt;i Udge 461 F&amp;AM Iince 1964;
rriember of York Rite Bodies and

Alladlll Temple of Columbus.

He Is survived by hls wife, Anna
I..ee Howard; four sons, Melvin
Howard, Jr., Dayton; Da!tny, Frank
and Craig Howard all of Harrisonville; one daughter, Mrs. Bob (Debbie) Miller, Pomeroy; six grandchildren: five brothers, Elwood, C.
C. and Gillespie . Howard all of
Harrisonville; Henry Howard of
Gratia, Ohio, and Cleatus Howard of
Clay City, Ky.; five sisters, Effie
Howard, Peachle Phypps and Rule
Hughes all Huntington; Merlene
Knobs, Xenia, Ohio and Betty Caldwell Salyersville, Ky.
Funeral services will be held
Thursday at 1 p.m. at Ewing Chapel
with the Rev. RQbert McGhee of·
· ficiatlng. Burial will he In Wells
Cemetery. Masonic services will be
held thls evening at 7 p.m. Friends
may call at the funeral home
anytime.

Meigs County happenings...
Emergency ralls

[Five hurt in area,mishaps

Files for support

· Ute t)le reat

of~ nation during

.

Free clothing day will be held at
The Salvation Anny, Pomeroy, on
Thursday, May 28, from 10 a.m. until
· noon. All area residents in need of
clothing are welcome.

In

~alllaeMemM
~~ Oay ~end, the modera~!l&amp;mage.
• e..,.areiuawmorethanlts
J111111 H. Jarrell,.

a1wa CGUDty at I: II pm/·

'

. Rt: 2, r-~~~~~~~~U~.s~.~~~~tbe~~~~~~!!~~
17,
shsre ol !raffle accidents between GaWpolla, wu IOUtlibound on SR 211
Saturday and Monday. ·
inGallla County at3:30a.m. Sunday
The state hlghway pltroJ ·unJt in '!fben Iii vehicle went off the rlglit
. Ga!Upo.. reported five people were side of the road and collided with •
injured In weekend wrecks.
state algn.
The P.trol said a vehicle dl'lven by
His vehicle wu slightly damaged,
Christopher T. Wolfe, · 19, Rt. 2, t11e report said,
·
Racine, Willi westbound on SR 124 in
The patrol said Larry D. Tucker,
Meigs COunty •t 1:08 a.DL Sunday 18, Rl4, ~eroy, wu northbound
when the vehicle went off the right . on U.S. 33in Meigs Cfunty at 6 a.m.
side of tbe road and collided with two Slinday wben he collided with a deer'
Ohio Power Co. poles.
running acroas the road, .causing
\Volfe's vehicle was severely slight damage hls vehicle.
damaged and he was taken to
Troopers returned to ·tbe Meigs
Veterans Memorial H011pltal by the area a~ 6:17 p.m. Sunday w~ a
Meigs EMS, where be was admitted westbound auto driven by Ann· D.
for treatment of a skull cut. He was Biron, ~. Middleport, went through
later released, and the patrol cited a iltop sign at the intersection of CR
himforreckleuoperation.
21 lind SR 7, proceeded across the ~========;;;;;;;;;;;==;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
Troopers said Walter C. Hodge, 34, road and went into a ditch'.
1
Cleveland, was injured wben his
The accident was sWI being inmotorcycle went off the right side of vestigated today, troopers said.
the road on a sharp curve while east· Biron was
injured, but her
bound on SR 681in Meigs County at 1 vehicle was sl)ghtJy .damaged and
p.m. Saturday and landed In a ditch. she was cited for DWI.
Hodge was not treated at the
The patrol was also called across
scene, and his ·mqtorcycle was the line into Jackson County at 10
'
.
moderately damaged.
p.m. Sunday when ·a deer collided
The patrol said a vehicle driven by with an eastbound auto driven by
Gerald Mayse, 44, Columbus, was James C. Strafford, 34, Columbus.
westbound on U.S. 35 in Gallia Coun- · His vehicle was slightly damaged
ty near Rio Grande at 11:25 p.m. in the collision, the report said.
Saturday when It collided with a horAccording to the report, a vehicle
seownedbyBobEvansFannB.
driven by Stepheri P. Henkla, 21,
Mayse and twd passengers, Rutland, was southbound on Meigs
Phyllis A. Campbell, 40, and Lori A. CR 3 near Rutland at 11:10 p.m: SunCampbell, 4, both of Columbus, were day when it went off the right side of
injured but not treated. Mayse's the road on a ·curve and drove into a
Big Selection of
vehicle was moderately damaged.
creek.
Styles and ColorsThe patrol was also' kept busy inHenkla was not injured and hls
All Sizes for Men
vestigatlng. numerous other minor vehicle was slightly damaged.
an~ Boys.
accidents over the weekend.
The patrol investigated a slng)e
Troopers said a vehicle driven by accident Monday wben a deer
Barry W. McCoy, 34, Syracuse, was collided with an eastbound auto
northbound on SR 7 in Meigs County driven by Paul D. Marshall, 50,
at 9:25 p.m. Saturday when hls car ·

'

Midwest. .

Saudi Arabia once again turned out to be the
motorilts' friend. The Saudis refused Tue8day to increase their oil prices and forced other members of the
Organization of Petrolewn Exporting Countries to accept a price freeze for at least siJ: months. The Saudis
also declined to join 10 of the 12 other oil ministers in
deciding to cut petroleum ou\put by at least 10 percent,
starting June 1, in an attempt to relieve the global

•

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•

•They a1ao recogniZe their efforts 'to brake oil-price
hikes could be appreciated by the U.S. Congress, which
Is considering a Saudi request to buy five ~ophlstlcated
radar aircraft, known as AWACS.

'

The overall reduction in daily output by the 10 OPEC
countries wu not expected to exceed 1.5 rnlllion
barrels - roughly equivalent to the amount the Saudis
· produce beyond their official target levels.
The price-freeze declalon - the cartel's first since
June 19'18 - means OPEC oil will remain in the range
of $32 abarrel - the Saudis' price - to $41 a barrel Libya's price. U.S. analysts say the decision means
pump prices will remain stable or decline.
"Saudi Arabia will hsve to cut back in order to cure
the so-called glut," said Constantine Fliakos, an
anslyst with r,Jerr.lll Lynch, Pierce, Fenner x Smith
Inc. In New York. Without such a cut, be said, "You
basically will see flat prices, but there may be some
declines."
John Uchtblau, executive director of the Petrolewn

at y

!II 7!fJ!f31fitYJMI

Voi.30,No.Z9
Copyrlphled 19•1

''

Pomeroy-Midd',~g~r!, Ohio,

Industry Research Foundation, said some countries
might base their cutbackS on sales levels before the
glut, meaning the real reduction mlgh! be well below
the 1.5 million barrels-a-&lt;iay estimate. Llchtblau,
however, did not foresee price reductions at the pump.
"The market won't permit price increases; politics
won't permit price decreases, so you end up freezing
the price where It is," Lichtblau said.
The OPEC countries produced about 25.2 million
barrels a day in March, the latest month for which
figures were available. Saudi Arabia provided 9.85
million of that.
• Already in the United States, price wars have flared
up, with prices·dOWn to $1.10 a galion in some places,
compared with highs of$1.50 a gallon in others.

•

enttne
1 Section, 12 Pages

Wednesday,May 27,1981

lS Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

@i

Show Your Form This Se11111

The Farmers Bank
•Is your community
•
minded bank
•
serving
Pomeroy
and
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County.

SWIMWEAR

No one killed in prison riot
JACKSON, Mich. - . Up to 1,000 inmates, many anned With
makeshift clubs rioted for t'h hours Tue8day at the Southern
Michigan ~. taking over a ceUblock and setting fire to
prefabricated donnitorles.
.
The riot the second in five days at the world's largest walled prison,
Willi que~ed by several hundred stste police and. prison guards
wearing gas masks and anned with rtnes who moved mto the exerciSe
yard to herd prisoners into cellblocks.
No fatalities were reported, and authorities said no hostages were
taken.

Two slightly inju~d

Two cars received medium
damages and three persons received
minor Injuries in an accident on Buttemut Ave., Pomeroy, at 12:12 p.m
Monday.
Pomeroy Police said a car driven
by Janet Oiler, Middleport,
traveling north on Butternut atlemptejl to proceed to the left up Lincoin Hill Road and ran Into the path
of a southbound car driven by Yincent.Mossman, Pomeroy.
Janet Oiler, Debbie Dorfer, a
passenger, and Ruby Mossman a
passenger in the Mossman car, w~re
taken to Veterans Memorial
HOI!pital by the Pomeroy Emergell'
cy Squad. They were treated for
minor injuries. No charges were

13 hurt in Michigan prison riot
MARQUETI'E, Mich. - A riot earlier in the day at a prison downstate apparently prompted about 200 inmates at Marquette State
Prison to go on a four-hour rampage in which three buildings were set
fire and 13 people were hurl, authorities said.
II was the second time in five days that a riot at Southern Michigan
State 'Prison in Jackson apparently sparked a disturbance at another
state pri8on.
.
' TWtnty.:me people were hurt, including siJ: guards. Deputy Warden
Loula C. Ulellll said the riot may hsve been caused by a feud between
realclenta of two mediWJHecurlty cellblocks and occupants ol less
restrictive modular housing units.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
.

r~fil~ed;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;~~;;;;;;~;;;;~;;;;;;;;;~~~~~;;~;;~

State suggests alternate route
LIMA, Ohio - The state has been' suggested as a possible alternative route for six shipments of highly radioactive nuclear waste
from a Canadian experimental reactor.
The Nuclear Regulatory Commission reconunended the alternative
route after officials in New York closed a bridge to nuclear shipments.
The only other IIJl8l1 approved for the importation of wastes Ia in Saulte
Ste. Marie, Mich., according to the NRC.
Aspokesman for Nuclear Assurance Corp. of AUal)la, which Is transporting the spent fuel, said if the new route Is approved, shipments
would travel along interstate highways in Ohio. The shipment would
be accomp11nied by anned guards, he said.

.·Fingerprint bolsters chances
TUESDAY, MAY 26TH- SATURDAY MAY 30TH

WASHINGTON - The FBI's linking of a fingerprint and a bUllet
casing to two Salvadoran national guardsmen "bolsters" chances of a
conviction In the killings of four American churchwomen in El
Salvadol' last December, a State Department official says.
The official, who asked not to be identified, said the FBI has determined that a fingerprint found on the churcllwomen'a van belongs to
one of alx Salvadoran national guardsmen currently held on suspicion
of the murders.
The. official also said FBI balllstlcs tests have matched a bullet
casing found at the scene of .the killings with a gun registered to
another of the guardsmen.

Diplomats will resume talks

A·~
t:'.-•. .·.~
,.

GREG BUSH

DICK KING

DAVID HOFFMAN

.

MARK McGUffiE

Feeney-Bennett. P.ost names delegates
Feeney·Bennett Post 128,
American Legion, has named
delegates and alternates to Buckeye
Boys State to be held next month at
Bowling Green University.
Delegates are Greg Bush, Mid·
dleport, son of Mrs. Celeste Bush,
Middleport, and Charles Bush,
Springfield, and Dick King, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Jack King, Rock
Springs Road, Pomeroy. ·
Alternates are David Hoffman,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Hoffman,
Middleport, and Mark McGuire, son

·of Mr. and Mrs. Dallas McGuire,
Route 1, Langsville. All have just
completed their jwlior year at Meigs
High School.
Bush has bee" active In football at
Meigs High School. He has been in
the vocal music department and
department musicals, and was
basketball manager for one year. He
has taken part in the baseball
pr\Jgram and has served as a class
. officer.
He is a past master councilor of

the Meigs Order of DeMolay and
won the outstanding DeMolay award
for the 12th Masonic District. He is
an actolyte at Grace Episcopal
Church in Pomeroy. He was a Daily
Sentinel carrier for several years.
King has been in electronics at
Meigs High School and is active in
the history and advanced American
history programs. He is a member
of the VlCA Club.
Hoffman is a college preparatory
student at Meigs High and is a mem-

her of the National Honor Society.
He has played football for three
years. Maintaining a four-point
average in high school, Hoffman is
also on tbe Middleport fire department reserves and attends the Middleport First Baptist Church.
McGuire is a member of the
National Honor Society of Meigs
High and is a member of the
Hillbillies 4-H Club. He has special
interests in reading and creative
writing.

Loader accident kills Pomeroy man
Eugene (Gene) Franklin Eskew,
48, 128 Lincoln Hill Road, Pomeroy,
1was·kllled in an accident in Hocking
County Tuesday afternoon.
Mr. Eskew, an employe of the
Jaymar Coal Co., Cheshire, for the
past 15 years, was working In an
area between Laurel Run Road and
SR 328 In Starr Twp. when the accldent occurred.
Acconllng to the Hocking County
Sheriff's Department, Eskew and
otber employes of Wharton Supply
Co., Logan, which was subletting the
·strtp mine site owned by Jaymar,
were working on a front end loader.
A tire, measuring 7'h by 3'h, hsd
been removed from the piece of
equipment and was standing upriglt
as Eskew walked between the tire

and the uke. The tire fell striking
Eskew in the head as workers were
preparing to secure it.
He suffered extensive head injuries and was taken by the Hocking
EMS to Hocking Valley Community
Hospital in Logan, where he was
pronounced dead upon arrival.
Meanwhile, three persons have
been arrested in connection with the
operation of a still in the Portland
area the Meigs County Sheriff's
De~rtment reported.

Arrested were Jeffery Friend, 25,
Long .Bottom, Thomas Scally, 23,
Middleport, ,and Jimmy Flick, 26,
Pomeroy, who were operating the
still at the time of the arrests.
The still was 'dismantied and samples of the finished product and the
mash were all confiscated by liquor
agents. Chsrges are expected to be
filed sometime today by the liquor
department in Meigs County Court.
On the raid were agents of The
State Liquor Control Department,

deputies Manning Mohler and Keith
Wood and investigator Gary WoUe.
Sheriff Proffitt reported that
James Stout. Tuppers Plains, is in
possession of a 1970 Honda 90 motor·
cycle.
Stout found the bike one-half mile
below Washington County and the
Athens county line while camping.
The motorcycle is painted blue
over yellow. Anyone wishing to identify the bike is urged to contact the
sheriff's department.

'

Commission
employs
dog warden

BANGKOK, Thailand - Three U.S. diplomats left for'Hanoi today to

reaunfe taib ob the fate of some ·2,500 American servicemen missing

ALL REGjJLAR.LY PRICED MERCHANDISE

inaction in the Vietnam War.
The U.S. Embauy described the discussions as "lechnlcal talks on
the humanitarian illue of servicemen rnls8lng in action."
The Pentagon has reclassified mOBt of the milllng 'servicem~ from
r rnls8lng to killed in action.' The meetingl date back to the 1973 Paris
peKe agreement that led !o U.S. withdrawal from VIetnam.

. INCIIIIES SUMMER lDYS • GARID • PATIO
·ADDITIONAL SAU ITEMS AT SA

Off fake Fur

~.-....

LOONG£ atAIRS
Rtg. $13.95

PROM

%·5 % DOLLS 30!»
t-S-AV_E_3
....0
........
%-I WINTER WEAR

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Winning Ohio lottery number
•
CLE:VELAND ..,.. 'Die number aelected Tuellday night in the Ohio
I..alter7'1 dilly pme "The Number"la fl!ll.

The JGetery raported eaminp of •1&amp;,107 from the ngering on the
drawlnl. LOtWy ofticlall aald ulee prior to the drawing totaled
fll6.•, and bolden of winning tickets are entitled to share $138,'liS.

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Weather

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Sllowtll. thandelllllOIU8llllely tonilht. Lon In the mid to upper
101. a_., 1o par~~y doady Tlunday. HIP in u. 1ow to mld-'11111.
0111a of rain Ill .,._ ~ and :10 J)II'CIIII 'l'!lunday. 'Winds
Yll'lablllNalllln 10 qll tmi...
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Farmers
.\1&lt;-mlwr I I&gt;IC

«,.........._

FrldaJtllrqb ......y: ""nctof
I alllardlj .....11111. IIPIIII till IIppa'
'Ill IIIII'H Ill FrldiJ...a 'rt diJ ..a In tile 'Ill ......,, Lowa It
ldlbtln tllellallliJ , _ - . . . . . . . . . ..., . . . .
dlj.
Ill

awaa ... l"u '

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Marriage licenses were issued to
Joe Quentin Welker, 26, Pomeroy, Meets Wedn~sday
and Julia Ann Mourning, 17, MidThe Wildwood Garden Club will
dleport; Michael I..ee Roush, 18, Rt
meet
Wedne8day at 7:30p.m. at the
2, Racine, and Beverly Sue Crouch,
borne of Mrs. Mary Holter.
17, Tupper Plains.

Bank

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oversupply. The excess supply IS calculated at 2
mlllion to3 mlllion barrels a day.
Iran and.Iraq, whoee exports are growing u their
war stagnates, joined the Saudis in not agreeing to the
reduction.
The Saudis, whoee average daily oil production iS
10.3 mlllion barrels, hsve taken credit publicly for
flooding the~ market with oil as a means of attaining
price stability and stemming inflation in the United
States and other Western countries where they hsve
substantial investments.

NEW YORK (AP)- MOtorists taking to the road for
8111111111!1' vacatioN 'lf()n't hsve to worry about hlghelprtces at gasoline pumps and might flnil some
barpina, thanks to the failure of the OPEC cartel to
ellmlnate a market glut of oil, U.S. anal)'ll.l say.
Price wars already hsve broken out ill ~ areas,
with competitiOn especially intense throughout the

EtBERFELDS

not

A number of calls were answered
Edith l..ee Rose, Marlon filed for
by emergency units over the support under the Reciprocal
weekend, the Meig~ County Agreement against Lawrence Eldo
Emergency Medical Services repor- R~:c:kher, Pomeroy, filed
tsThey include:
suit for divorce against William L.
Butcher, Middleport.
Monday, 8:54 a.m., Racine Unit,
The marriage of Paulette Butcher
Velphs Boggess from Route 338 to and ROdney Butcher was dissolved
Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Pomeroy Unit, 12 : 13 p.m. Janet and Gloria Diane it3Smussen was
Oller, Debbie Dorfer, Ruby granted a divorce from Phillip
Mossman from auto accident to Rasmussen.
Veterans Memorial; Pomeroy, 10:24 Tournament set
a.m., Elisa Roush from parking lot
A men's slo pitch A. S. A. sane- Veterans Memorial
in Pomeroy to Veterans Memorial.
tioned softball tournament will be
Saturday Admissions-Leona BahSooday, 2:17 p.m., Middleport, held May ~I at the Syracuse ball cock, Pomeroy; Linnie I..eifhelt,
Darla Stewart, treated at home; park In Syracuse. .
Pomeroy.
Tuppers Plains, 8:39 a.m., Clyde
First, second, third and fourth
Saturday Discharges-Annette
Morlan, Route 7, to Camden-Clark place trophies will be awarded. Fif· Boyd, Homer Young, Pauline
Hospital, Parkersburg; Racine, 1:09 teen lined sport jackets will be awar- Roush, Marilyn Morrla, Clarence
a.m. Christopher Wolfe to Veterans ded to members of the winning Haning.
Memorial; Pomeroy, 12:15, ·Paul team. Fifteen letered caps will be . Sunday Admisslons··Mary
Burns to Veterans Memorial.
given to the second place team. ·
Grueser, Shade; Christopher Wolfe,
Saturday, Middleport, 2:25 a.m.,
Entry fee is $65 plus two softballs. Racine; Paul Burns, Pomeroy;
Gary Hart, Hamilton St., to For further information call 992- El1Jie Cross, Racine; Opal Barr,
Veterans Memorial; Pomeroy, 2:15 3495, 992-7777,992-2909or992-7046.
Ewington; Lu1a Phillips, Pomeroy.
a.m., I..eona Babcock, Pomeroy T
l
ff'
Sunday Dischsrge&amp;-Lizzie AnHealth Care Center, to Veterans
0 e ect 0 leers .
Memorial; Pomeroy, 4:56a.m., LinOfficers will be elected at both the drews, Elsie Cross, Hollie Friend,
nie l..eifheit, Pomeroy Health Care . American l..egion and its Auziliary,' Christopher Wolfe.
Monday Adlhillioi!&amp;-Loulse BarCenter to Veterans Memorial; Tup- Feeney-Bennett Post 128, Mldpers Plains, 7:05 p.m., treated dleport, at meetings to be held at the tels, Pomeroyi Mgela VanCooney,
Walter Hodge on Route 681 for in- hall, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday. A 6:30 Pomeroy.
Pomeroy; Ruth Ann Smith,
juries received in a motorcycle ac- p.m. dinner will precede .the
Mondliy Dlschsrges-Wilbur Hall'
cident.
meetings.
ning, Floyd E. Williams, Mary
Mamage licenses
Grueser.

Free clothing day

coiUded . wiib a . deer, cauaing

Good news--Saudis refuse oil hike

.·..

•

Clarence Taylor, Bone Hollow
Road, Middleport has been hired as
the new county dog warden the commlsal~rB announced Tue8day.
T~ylor may be reached by calling
99U782.
Phil Roberts, county engineer,
meeting with commissioners
Tuesday dlscllllled raod projects hE
' department II working on.
Roberta reported that all roads
are in 111\ed of repair and that
~. plltchlnR and paving Ia in
progreu.
Roberta allo said the mo-trim has

not been deUvenld and therefore no
JllOwirW on the Jilhnya has been
ltarted pel that dust control
material would be placed on u
1111111 roedl llli poalble under the

pr 11111 COlli.
I
Cmlmlaalonln lll'eed to awud
the bid ol Mlr-Zane Nateriala Col,
far the pardilfe of bltumlnoua
111111ti11a clliriDI
moatb of June
fartllecountr lllclrn1dlplrtmenl
A!tencl!. lfallry Wella, .
pu lUll, Ridllrd -.,11111 Dlrfid
KotlleaCI,
a. Mary
H&lt;ol..etter. clat, . . Malthl
a.mbera.

tbe

CC""'••

to deu 11ptlie anpd tilt qe •'- marter; .
... plut fltwen. . . . . . . tbe II'VIeel _, ,.... .
1111 ud ltalllrya am., U. Plllllal, Apdl ClaJt, ud
8De Fl')' willa tllelr Ieeder, Mn. Marprel Parker.

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�Commentary
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Pag-2-The Dally Sen1inel •
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
'ednes~ay, May 27, 1!81
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The Hayakawa amendment. . . .__________,.Wi_m_ia_m._F._Buc~1der_·Ji_r.
A few days ago men and women
concerned for the maintenance of
the New York Public Ubrary
gathered at a symposium of literati
who pondered the question of
English-English and American·
Engliah. The traditional wiaebracks
were trotted out ("England and
America are two countries
separated by a common language"
... "The most difficult task confronting an American is to learn
Engliah"). But real concerns were
voiced c~ntering on the great
paradox. It is that in an age when,

roughly speaking, everyljodY listens
to the same people, whOle accents
and enunciation are interchangeable
parts, what was apected simply
didn't happen. We were aU suppoaed
to end up taUW\g like Walter
Cronkite. But differences .have persisted; a Yorkshireman has maybe
even more difficulties than a centory ago In communicating ,with a
SouthCarolinlan.
If it's a problem as between the
United States and Great Britain, the
internal problem is of a graver or-

The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Stnet
Pumt!roy,Ohlo
614-19~21~

DEVOTED TO THE INTEREST OF THE MEIGS. MASON AREA

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ROBERT L. WINGETI
Publisher

PAT WHITEHEAD
AK!il!~lant

BOB HOEFLICH

Publbher/Contruller

General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
Nrws Edllor
A MEMBER 41f Thr Auociated Press, Inlaid Dall)' Prt!ss AssodaUon aod th e
Amukaa Newapapt!r Publl.dtt•r.~ AMsociatlun.

l.f.11'ERS OF OPINION 11rt&gt; "''t'lrumrd . Tht&gt;y ~huu ld bto lrss than 310 wttrd!ilung, All
lt•Llt'l'li ilrr ~ubjtrl 111 rdlllnJ( and mU/11 bt• ~ ll(nt'd 'o!olth llllml', »ddms ttnd lt&gt;l!!phmlt'
numhu. Nn un~l~t;nt•d lt•tlt'n! 14'111 bt publlshttd, l~ ltrrs shu\lkt lk·ln IIIHICI taslr. addrrsslm:
lssut•N, nnt (M'I'lwrutllllt·.~ .

Inflation: No. 1
Of aU economic Issues affecting small-business people, inflation seems to
be No. 1 in the survey, made for the National Association of Independent
Business.
It probably is No. 2 and 3 as well, judging from responses studied by Pur-·
due University's William C. Dunkel berg and Southern Methodist's Jonathan
A. Scott.
Consider this response from a California manufacturer: "Have not been
able t,o expand as inflation simply destroyed capital set aside. Have only
been able to get help (personnel) by taking in parlner. To have hired him
(and covered workmap's comp., health insurance etc.) would have
eliminated capital totally.
"We want to expand, but cannot bear burden of high interest on loans and
high Inflation as well. Will walt and see what Reagan, Congress, etc. accompliah."
But there is good news too. According to the professors, inflation ·will
diminish substantially over the next six months. And, lis if to confirm it, the
April Consumer Price Index fell to an annual average of 5.1 percent,' a ninemonth low.
Such good news from small business has been rather rare during the years
of double-digit inflation, and the reasons why are obvious, as Dunkelberg
and Scott indicate in their analysis.
Big business has better control of the situation. It enjoys economies of
volume; sometimes it can finance from within; when it borrows, it obtains
lower rates than small business; and it can more easily pass on costs to its
customers.

Letter to the editor
Levy is important
The Middleport street and street
lighting levy is very important and
in the best Interests of the citizens of
Middleport. This I~ mill street levy
is necessary to have street lights.
In tjmes past, the electric company had been collecting for the
street lights, they discontinued this
service. At that time, the cost of the
street lights had been added to the
citizens' electric bills.
The cost of operating the street
lights has greatly increased over the
years, but the levy is the only means
COWICil members have of financing
street Hghtlng. The levy has not increased the cost of the street
lighting, but is only a change in the
method of funding this service.
The other 112 mUis will provide a~
nually approximately $13,000
necessary for street maintenance.
We know that the streets have been
better maintained because of the
streetlevy.
Council members have only the
best Interests of the community In
mind, and the support of the Middleport citizenry In this effort will be
greated appreciated. This will not be
an additional tax.
RespectfuUy, Marvin L. Kelly,
President, Middleport Village Council, Chairman, Finance Conunittee.

Please, no more lies
In past weeks we have heard of
new proposed projects to be constructed here in Meigs County. That
is good news, but we surely hope the
government doesn't fund au of them.
The people of Meigs County have
been lied to enough. We want It on
the line, tell it like it is.
The public will think more of a
person who lays it out in down to earth facts and doesn't make a round
about way of a story. I, for one,
beHeve that to be In public office and
to tell people that we are going to do
this and that, build this and that,
then after six months say the money
Isn't there, well, to me, that is a
story to the public. Like election
time, sure your gravel road is
graded and county road is fixed and
tar put on for dust control, but after
the election the lie is done.
The public should run them out on
a rail. This lieing in public office has
to stop and the people that elect
those who do this should do just that.
New is good for our county but
governmented funded is not. We'd
rather It be private business, that
way we know our hopes of jobs are
here to stay for a while. - Floyd H.
Cleland, Box 223,,Rutland.

Today in history.

••

Today is Wednesday, May 'll, the 147th day of 1981. There are 218 days
leftin the yea.r.
Today's highlight in history:
On May '11, !941, the German battleship "Biamarck" was sunk by the
British navy off France, with a losa of 2,Jl0 Hves.
On this date:
' .
In 1860, a force under Italian patriot Giuseppe Garibaldi Invaded Sicily
and captored the city of Palermo.
In 1937, the Golden Gate Bridge acroaa San F"'nciBco Bay was.opened.
In 1964, India's Prime Mlniater Jawaharlal Nehru died In New Delhi.
And in 1974, 'Valery Giscard d'Estalng was inaugurated preeldent of
France . .
Ten years ago: The Soviet Union signed a !$-year pact with Egypt,
pledging auiBtaJ1Ce in the recovery of aU Arab territories occupied bY
Israel.
F(ve yeara 'ago: Syria agreed to eltend the United Nations oblerver
force on the strategic Golan Helgbts for another siJ: months to avoid a
Dell' cOUftontati"'! with Israel.
·

der. Suddenly - before, really, we qulntesaential example.
be accullurated by ~ to
'lbe ~ lilllelldmenl goea oa
sat down and gave It our corporate
But more ~n than not there are English-speaklng, ErlgilBIHriented · to say ,.hst any Hlllible 8lllelldmellt
attention- the United states seems difficulties, and tile deep division In practices and curricula, or we'!Lgo 111 the subject would be apecled to
to have become not a polyglot sub- Canada Ia the Closeal example. The the I'OIId to blllngualiBm.
say - aucb things u that notbing In
nation on its way to joining the com- bitterness that arlaes rroin the comSen. Hayakawa, who as an 1m- the amendment should be CCIIIItrued
munity - but something else. The petition .between French- and migrant not only lUflled English as frowning on the teacblng of
..........,.tlon ~
first we have always been. Mr.•and English-speaking Canadla· ns but ..-·'-'--'
.....,.,.. It, ..__,M
-.w•~.,. ·a foreign '•"m••~e
_.,._ or the r-·Mrs. Igor Trotsky !lfrlve at Ellis threatens to sunder the Common- professlonalphilologlat,believesthe of~critualsor~ebrations.
Island speaking only their native wEalth.
·
problem to be worth therapy no.less
Count me ln. The lliapanlc .
tongue. FLASH. One geQeration
If )n America 'we hSd a com- grave than a constitutional amend- population Ia estimated at 1211)i]llon
later, Igor ill complaing to Vanya parablehistoricalsituation,perhaps ment.
.
ln1881l.In1990,1101liedem~phera
that the kids are speaking pnly'-ln there would be no escape. But
"Resolved by the Senate ' and predict, It will exceed In size tbe.,
Engliah, forgetting their native whereas In Canada the&lt;problem of House of Representatives of the black population. Imagine if we .
tongues. That ~bow it went for a bilingualism is organic, in the United States ... (1) The Engliah could converse with our black
couple of centunes: But the modem United States It is - for a brief · language !lhall be the ciflclal brothers only through Swahlli. Don't
inctlnatlon, for reasons Sen. Slim historical moment - merely in- language of the United States. (2) laugh! Sen. Hayakawa has a point of ·
Hayakawa of California deeply choate. Soon it will be too late. The Neither tbe United States· nor any singular Cultural COnsequence, ·and ,
deplores, motivated prlmsrily by problem, of course, is that of the State shall make or enforce any law if you don't beHeve it, ask a ,
politics, is to preserve the language Hlapanlc Invasion. Either the which ~uires the use of any Canadian. Address your letter In two
of the immigrant by granting it con- Spanislrepeakin immigrants will language other than Engliah ... "
languages.
tinued lnununities, through school,
on to college; conceivably through
even to professional life. In 19'15.
Congress amended the Voting
Rights Act to allow ballots to be printed in various languages. Thilt symbolic gesture suggested that the
achievement · of ' proficiency in
Englis.~ ·was no longer a conscious
cultural objective of the American
republic. Those who worry about
Americans communicating with
Englishmen have something closer
at home to worry about.
Minutes after achieving office,
Ronald Reagan repealed the socalled "Lau" regulations, which
would have required school districts
to teach non-Engliah speaking
students academic subjects In their
native languages. Sen. Hayakawa
has no objection to transitional
teaching In any foreign language provided the clear purpose of the enterprise is: an English-speaking
republic. The alternative is a
polyglot society. Such societies do
work, Switzerland standing out (as
Switzerland perversely does) as the

Reagan's man
WASHINGTON (AP) - There
never was any doubt of President
Reagan's intent to markedly alter
the high-profile human rights policy
of his Demqcratic predecessor. He
said he would, aU campaign long.
An adminjstration job which
didn't even exist until four years
ago, has become a celebrated
position now, thanks to Reagan's
nomination of Ernest W. Lefever.
His nomination is embrolled in
controversy, and may be in jeopardy, over his past pronouncements on
bwnan rights policy and assorted
other items - ranging from communists to infant formulas.
At one point, when President Carter was pressing a human . rights
policy that led to U.S. complaints
againSt authoritarian allies, Lefever

h~lieves

'
said that cause was . none of ·
America's business, a position he
since hils disavowed.
He argues that U.S. protests onght
to be aimed at gross violations of
hwnan rights "by adversary states,
notably the Soviet Union."
Hemalntainsthatquietdiplomacy
is tbe most effective way to work
with American allies.
Those points reflect what Reagan
had been say,ing all along. He
criticized Carter's human rights approacb as out of balance, saying it
emphasized the shortcomings of
regimes friendly to the United States
and didn't stress the sins of cornmunlat nations.
Reagan always said he bowed to
no one In his advocacy of human
rights. But he also said the natiohal

.

interest had to come first.
On policy, Lefever's views are in
tune with Reagan's. Were it otherwiae, he 'Nouldn't be around for long. ·
But his problems don't end with
policy. If that were the case, he
would face criticlam ·from Senate
Hberals who want a Carter-style
poHcy pursued - and know they
won't get it. But he wouldn't have
RepubHcans sniping at him, and his
confirmation would not be In doubt.
Hill problem Ia that he said three
years ago Congress should erase aU
human rights atatutes from laws
governing American dealings with
foreign governments, a position he
now says was In error.
It is that he wrote that the United
States has neither the responsibility
nor the authority to promote human

Kennedy look-a-like may not he
seemstobedolngsowellonCapitol
Hill that the television commercials
probably are not needed, several
GOP sources. said.
The ads were to help solve a GOP
dilemma: whattodowithmiUionsof
dollars left over from the 19110 campaigns.
Since their "Vote Republican For

Phone 446· 4524

BAROA/N MATINEES ON SAT &amp; SUN
AU SEATS JUSJ S 1.50
ADMtSSION EVERY TU£Sa.r .S L.SO

r

FRIDAY thru THURSpAY!

rights In other nations.
.
;
It' is that two senators, one of each
party, say he told them opposition to
his nomination 'was "communlat ini
spired." Lefever said he hadn't,
said he didn't mean to suggest a con,
.
'
sptr8cy.
Those issues and others point to
Senate controversy tbe ad1
rninlatration rully doesn't neecJ;,
although the White 110UH and thS
State Department both say that the
president isn't budging m tht
Lefever nomination.
·
There are threaia of a Hberal
filibuster when and If the nominati~
reachee the Senate Door. There alao
ill the poulbillty of a divlaive fight
between moderate and conaervatlvc
RepUblican senators over what il
really a less-than-central issue.
;

then

a

~e,cessity

•'

SPECIAL OF THE WEEKI

HAMBURGER ••••••••••• 64e
For All Occasions

t

the one featuring an actor resembling House Speaker Thomas P.
O'Neilf Jr. - the Republicans
decidedtocontlnuethecampaign.
Rep. Guy Vander Jagt, R-Mlcb.,
chairman of the National
Republican Conll,ressional CoJDo

boosting Reagan's budget and taxcutting plans.
'&lt;
While the earlier ads were run ~

help elect Republicans to Congress!
Vander Jagt said there's nor~, .
why the Idea wouldn't work as wed
inpromotingReagan'sbUis.
J

many, where he was known to be at
one time but which was unable to
locate him despite repeated tiiJII
from the Turks.
For their part, the Germans say
they tried. But the fugitive, using
false names and forged identity
documents, had the advantage of the
protective cover provided by the
more than a million Turks in Germany's' foreign labor force. Under
the circumstances, anyone with any
skill at aU in tea·ding a clandestine
existence could be expected to elude
detection In an open society.
A point supporled by other interested parties, including U. ·S.
State Deparlment officlala charged
with monitoring terrorist activities
and Interpol, the international pollee
organization that Ia prlmarlly an information-exchange operation. The
latter notes that the sheer volume of
travelen within and between countries, with few border formaUUes
any roore, enables wanted individuala to move about with virtual
Impunity.

not

It is a point that does
Impress
the Turks, quite likely In part
because theirs Ia not an open society
these days.
Turkey has been under a military
government since last September
when the generala stepped In - for
the third time since World War II to halt the civlilan government's
descent from democracy Into anarchy. Assassination of public figures
and political foes had become
epldanlc. Strife between religious
groups - the dwindling ChriBtlan
minority, Moslema and aecta within
the majority Moslem community was approaching civil war. Beset by
inflation and an imrnenle and
unrepayable foreign debt, the
economy wu apptoaching collapae.
To give them their due, the
generala have slowed lnllati111 and
curbed Internal terrorllm. But at
price.·PoHtical prlaonen number In
the tens cif thouundund there have
been IIUbllantlated. reporil of tor-

a

tore.
And there Ia

·

no lndicati111 that

they have made any laating prOgresa
toward solving Turke)" s real
problem- the country's inability to
complete the revolution beguh bY
Kemal Ataturk more than half a century ago with the goal of tran&amp;o
fonning Turkey into a WtlllenHty!e
secular democracy. Periodically under the pressures ·of religiOIIIi
fanaticlam and political extremiam,
the rule of law breaka down and
gives way to the rule of force.
The pope's assaiLant II very much
a product of his troubled country., a
religious and political atremilt
releasing the hatreds arillng from
Turkey's national contradicti0111
and conflicts · in violence upon a
world figure.
.So loag u there are open SOCieties
In which public penonalltis l!llke
themaelv• available to the public,
and 10 loag u there are lroubled

societi• and IIOCial aituationa
producing ·troubled penonallti•,

lhere can be no JU1f1111ee1n8 the
MC:IIrity at pnlident or pope.

DOONESBURY
Ill..

ON5t

l!J:H:r.\
Nfi5,

EXCITING TIMES

·$849

With
sq. yd. Pad

a Change" tele~on spots In 1980 rnlttee,saidanlnitiall2millionwasl
were something of a hit- especlaUy to be spent for the commercu

f·

COLONIAL CR~T

$1107

With

P.ad;.

sq. yd.

HOG.G &amp; ZUSPAN .
• .-

l
.,

• MATERIALS COMPANY

L:H. 773·5SS4

Rome and beyond'-&amp;,.______Do_nG_ra_ff
The shooting of Pope John Paul U
demonstrates a grim lruth about
violence directed at public personalities: The problem is worldwide; It Ia by no means an Anlerican
speciallty.
lt also makes several points about
the difficulties In dealing with the
probleni, beyond the obvious one of
providing some reasonable degree
of security for the powerful and
celebrated without isolating \hem
from the public entirely.
The pope was scarcely out of
surgery before several governments
with good reasons for tating special
Interest were at discreet odda over
aspects of the situation other than
the victim's cOndition.
The would-be UIU!IIn Ia a Turkish
national, wanted· for .murder at
home, who spent the last year and a
half underground In Western
Europe. Turkey, making the point
that It 'actively sought his apprehension, seema to think the
, Europeana were lest! active In
aulatlng. In particular West Ger-

· . MASON, W.VA.

~

ROUSEL CONFECTIONERY
Ph. 992-6342

Two big boots!

Jl7 N. 2nd

Due to inanTuesday's
editor's sporls
error, sectwo
headlines
tion of the Sentinel contained errors.
Meigs' girls track team captured the
~tiona! not the district as stated
and Carl Yastrzemski played in bis
3,000th game marking a baseball
milestone.

L~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~!!~~~~~~~

''

12.937%

15.925%
$10,000 minimum. Interest
may be paid IT)onthly; qU'arterly, at maturity or trans·
ferred to a savings account..
Federal regulations prohibit
compounding of interest.

Effective Annual Yield On

.

.

Sentinel Ads

12.00%
I

No minimum investment is
required. Interest will be
co.mpounded continuously
from date of deposit to date
of withdrawal.

CAU TODAY FOR HOME DELIVERY

992-2156

'

A "'bltlnt~ lnltml ,.,...,, It rtQulrJCIIor ,.ly wttMtrtWII. • Elltetlvtl annUIII yM6d ll tJned on reltMIItnenl ol grtncl~l af'd lnttrett •t
lftllutlly. Tnltl1-"1n"ualre1e tUOitel toe~ •t riMWII.

'

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Ask about Pay·bY·PhoneiNOW and VISA.
No minimum balance. "o .
charges.

THERE'S ACARRIER NEAR YOU!

""Ice

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People C.lllll •. file' Dlalflond 04/ferfllte
..
Houn: M., T., W. t·S, Th, &amp; Sit, 9·N--~~~~llr,II.IC. I
IIrl. t-6
- POMIIOY,OHIO
216W.MAINST.

•

Middleport

Main
PH . 992·2556
Pomeroy, OH .
"Located at the End of the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge"

30-Month Moner M•rket Certlflc.i

I·Month Moner M•rket Certlflcl'te

' . .

I

570

WITH FRIES •••• ~ ·• •••• $1.04
ADOLPH'S DAIRY. VALLEY
w.

No one·pays you more than
.DIAMOND
•

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.;

l

_MAY 22 thru 28_

1n quiet diplomacy :

&lt;

WASHINGTON (AP)
Republican campaign leaders, in an
attempt to blast Democrats in
Congress and drum up support for
GOP-sponsored legislation, hired a
Ted Kennedy look-alike for al'leries
of commercials. Now, they're ~0
longersuretheadsarenecessary.
Reagan's economic program

531 JACKSON Plt&lt;E ·At .35 WEST

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'The .Daily .Sentinel
,.-L~J.~
~~~~.-....:.· !le:..l/lf~

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�IV27, 1911

Daily Sentinel

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AMDIICAN LltA(lUE

Booton
Dotroit

Toronto

oakland

II

14

22
21
21
23
21
13
WEST
30

14
II
II
11
21
31

Pet. GB
.liill .111
2
.Ill
3\1
.Ill
3\1
.148 4
.100 · I
.•
Ui

11

Texaa

14

II

Z3

18

Calilornla
Seattle
Kansas City •
Mlnnesota

22 :JI

.&amp;31
.11110
.1110
.411

12
12

.333
.293

Chka&amp;o

I~

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:JI
29

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The Daily sentlriei-Pa
~J

BENP MfA OPTOMEMETRiC CENTER
R. H. ·BILLMAN II, O.D.

wltbboJdlna ftnlnclal

lnfomiatlon NI,Rg INk an lnjWICtlon In federal they are to llrike at all dlll'ing the
nee '"Y for the ·playen ulllon to ·.coart ordlrlnc the ownen to releue life of the bulc agreement. ,
COIIduct me&amp;nlngfal barplnlng Uie financial data, ·
·
"'l'heomically, a judge could
laiU.
. .
/
~
if Lubben, u expected, recom- grant the lnjwlctlon within 24 houra,
Lubben llid bi WVIild uk the full · mends IIIII the bol!'d leek 1D In- llld 'Nl,RB IIJ(Ikelman l1lornas
bol!'d tcldl)' to requNt that lbe · jiiiiCUon, lbe tl!realenecl May 28 Mlller. ''And all we really wanl is to
ownen lo ~ over flllanelaJ data ~ likely could be pGI1Iponed beat the strike deadline."
chlrainllllljor league club ownen voluntarily and, barring lbat, 11f011ld without the playen giving up their
··

,••.
,•

992·2920

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13

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298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.

12\1
t5

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

I

l•

Provides su~h services As ,

Wlfali- labor pnclice, · aCt on lite playen' request that the · right to strike no later lhiJI June 1 if

wltb an

'

. ....I

Sunday 10 am-10 pm

2\1
3
7\1

.349

WASHINGroN (AP) ,.. . Major.
league bueball plarers,
IJI'IClll'fOIIIIIIuldiJI8 on the edge of
a llrtb ~. were !brown a
lifeline 'llleldly by National Lab9r
l'elltiCIIII BaiJ'd general COW1Iel
Wlll!amA. Lubben.
l.Aibben laaued a complaint

SlORE HOURS:
Mon.·Sat. 8 am-10 pm

UBT

W L

'

Decision cou!d ·d~lay ·strike

For the
record. •
BaltimOre
Cleveland
Milwaullee
New York

'

'l'lleldly'l Gamet

Cleveland S, Boston 2
Balt1more 6, New York 4
Milwaukee 7, Detroit 3
TWUJ 2, MlnnesoCa 1
Ollcogo I, OUJand I
Torooto a Calilornio 4
Kanau dty ~. Seattle 4
WeciMIUy'f GamN
Ollcqo (BaWIIIartA!n 4-1) at Oakland
(t.rl«for&lt;l 5-41
New Yort (John 5-41 at Bailimore
(Flanagu th!), (nl
ClevelaOO. (Blyleven 8-l) at Bostm (Tu·
dor 2-1), (n)
Detroit (Roz.eman 2-4) at Milwaukee
(Lerch 2-1), (D)
Minnesota

(oOrwtn W),
Torooto

(Koosman

at

U)

PRICES EFFECTIVE THROUGH SAT., MAY 30, 1.981

SAYI Ult 10 40% o•
SOOitlaCOS'I CUni•S
COIPAIED TO OTHEI IIUDS" AT . . . .

'Fil-E-

• ITIO IIAII.IIf STDCIEI

Texas

(n)

(Sielb

Cali/ornla

at

).5)

ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY

(Fonch 6-2), (nl

Ka""" City (SpHitort! 11-41 at Seattle
CBanrti&gt;ter 4-3 I, CnI
n1ll'ldly'• Gamtt
Detroit at Milwaukee
Minnesota at Texas, (n)
Only &amp;ames lJCheduled

, FRENCH CITY ·LANDMARK

.
. oz.
W1eners............ :!G~.

EAST
st.Loui.o
Philadelphia

~

17

Monlrt61

23

Plilsburl&lt;h

11
12

L!
29

9
WEST
31

21

New YorK

Chicago

Loo Angeles

CIJicJnnaU

II

12

24

San Francisco
Hoostoo

.721
.571

18
2'!

23
22

AUant.

Pel GB
.611 .595 .561
I II
.486
4\1
.316 11
.1.'1'7 14

22

.500
.175
.386

19 21

San Diego

'l1

17

Tuetdly'a Games

9
i ll
10\1
14 ~

$

. OSCAR MAYER

Sin Franciaco at CincinnaU, ppd., rain

PhUadelphla 7, New York 5
Houston 1, San Diego 0
Weae.day't Games

Pittsbur11h
(Pem
Caudill o.a I
SU.ouL! (Martiner.

1.0)

at

Chicago

1-3)

at

Montre•J

C

(Lee 3-1) , (n )
(..Qj Angeles

( ReWl.!l

4-11

at

Atlanta

(Jlogg! 1·1), (nl

San Francixo (Alexander ~2) at Cin·
cinnati (LaC.U 2-1 ), (n)
Phillldelpht. ICllrbtenaen 1-41 at New
York (Zacllcy 4-1 ), (n)
San Diego {WeLsh ~2 } Bt Houston
(Knepper '-'! ), ( n)

nWidly'• camea
Sin FrancUco at Cincinnati
PIU.burgh at Chicago

USDA.CHOICE BONELESS

.

$·

Chuck Roast...... ~~ ..

l...08 Angeles at Atlanta, (n)

49

NATIONAL LEAGUE

BATTING (!10 •
ball): Youngblood,
New York, .368; A.Howc, Houston, .365;
Euler, Plttsbursh, .~; Perkinl, San
Diego, .JU ; B~ . N~ Yot:k, .341 .
RUNS: Schmidt, Phlladelplua, 33: CoJ.
llns, Cincinnati, 32: Raines, Montreal , Z!l:
Hendrick, St.Louis, 29 ; Dn800, Montreal ,
27; Hernandes, st.Louil, '11.
RBI: Sclunidt, Phlladelphla, 34 ; Co~&gt;
ctpelon, ctncl.nniU, 32; Garvey, Lo! Angeles, !2: Foater, Cincinnati, 29; J .Cruz,
BOUillon, 21; Cey, Los Anseles, 29.
JUTS: A.Howe, Housto~ 511: Rose,
PhUadelpbJa, 53; Hcmdoo, San Francisco,
53; Rainel, Montreal, 50: Griffey, Clncinnati, 50; G•rvey, Los Angeles, 50;
Loe A.nReJes, 50.
DOUBlES: Buckner, &lt;llicago, IS ; ~
cepclon, llncJnnaU, II; RIJ. Jones, San
Oitgo, 12; Ro.e, Ph..illdelphia.' II ; Her·
nandel, St. Louis, 11 ; Chamblis!, Atlanla ,
II ; A. Howe, Houston, U; Garvey, Los
Angeles, 11.
TJIIPLF.'I: flo)DOicla, llollaton, 7; Herr,
St:l..oull, I ; Templeton, St.I..outs, I; Rlcb.
ard:l, Sin Die1o. 5: Durham, Chica~o. ~ :
Flynn, New York, 4; Griffey, Cincmnati,

COP'UIGHT ltii - THI KIOGEI CO . lllMS AND ,.ICES
GoOD SUNDAY MAY 24·SATUIOAY MAY JO. "II IN
POMEROY ANDOALL.IPOL.II STORES.
WI IIIUVI THI ltOHT TO LIMIT QUANTITJIS. NONE
SOLD 10 OIALIIS ,

Bacon ............,......'-!l~ ••

Cube

EMBASSY

I
lu
If.

LIIIT 3 PIIGS. WITH COIPOI

LIMIT ONE COUPON PIIFAMllV
- - • .•• !1#1. 1.11 M. IMI

~~~ ....... ~~~c·$14~

U.$.

GOV'T GRADED CHOICE
IUF CHUCK ARM

I

~~~~~~ - ~

_j!

I

·

'

$199

. Boneless Boston _
Roll Roast ....... lb .
u.s.
S319
Top Sirloin Steak .... lb .

Kroger
Drelllllt
I.
• ' .. "It····

GOV 'T GRADED CHOICE . IONUUS

IN TH' P.IICE KIOGEI

Meat Bologna .......... lb.
·oz.
.~I Wieners ................ Pkg.
1

1000 ISLANO , FltENCH 01

ITALIAN liQUID

511\ll'N' SAVE

12

99 C
69C

HOllY'"-· U.I.D.A.
INSPICTID

Avonll.le
flour .... ...

.
Beans ...... "c·oa
..

AVONDALE

$189
.

9·1 1-11. AVG . WHOlE
(ROUND 01 FlAT)

$ 29
Steak.........~~.

•.

'

Boneless
Smoked Ham ... lb.
7
9
C
Pork Roast .............. lb.
$119
•
d
Ba
1-lb.
511ce con ....... Pkg.

liMIT • PLIAII

ggc

723

~rd Aven~Je,

Vort, Nn Yort 10017,

POSTMAS'I'ER: Send·- to The Dolly
Sentinel, Ill C..rtst., Pomei'O), Oblo457111.
IR1IIIICIUPTION RA TE8
II)' c.rler• Mocat Roale

One- ....... .. ................. ll.lil
One Monlh .... ..................... 14.40
One Year ........ ............ ..... ~%.111
SINGLE COPY
PIIICF.S
Dody ............. , ......... ... tac.nts

Bat.crlben not deltriJ1! to pay the camer
rftay remit In odvance cllrect lo The Dolly
SenUnel on 1 J, I or 12 mooth bull. Cr!dJt
wm he pve11 carrier each monlh.

No lllhocrlpllcn b)' mall pennltted In towno
wt1ere home c1n1er aemce II available.

.

IUO.IVBICIIIPI101'18
OW. ... Weal YlrPII

lllonth ............ .... .......... 110.110
Sis......,. .... ...... ............. . 117.M

,_ . . . . . . . . . . . . . :!·

I Yilt ........ ...... ............. IIJ,IIO

-a.-1*1
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,I VMr ........ ....... ·. ...........

..
110

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KIOG!I

Flllke
Coconut ..

'~-;~·

39

c

s119

"···· $J4~
Pltg.

GOlD CRESt

MlrsllmiiDw
Cr1111e ..... ll·••·
Jar

BUnS ........... I·Ct.
Pkg.

=:r.~;:;.
KELLOGG'S

79~

69c

$139

GOLD ClfST

Minh_ ...,,

CALIFORNIA

_

KRAFT AMERICAN •

$

..

29

BANQUET

Miracle Whip....~2i~
DETERGENT

Tide..........'......... !~~.~

19 Ex-Large' E

KOOL 81D

PAPER TOWELS

10/99~
No. 4132-2.07-030
Limit One Pir customer
Goad Only at Powell's

J:o 2/$1

'

09

· Limit One Per Customer
GDOCI Only It Powell's
Otter ExplrH MIY M, .,.,

3L8.

•

CAN

$179

flOZIN ICa&lt;IGII

:IIGIAN.TS SENTRY V
CAT I DOG

flea 1Collar ........ Each

S2 00

~.... .(

'

,
.....

.... .
l,'t;

$5~
•

Lhnlt One Per Cuatomer
Good Ollly It Powtll'l
Offer lxptr• Mly ,M, lfll

AVAilAilliiTil7pM

IIA[).Y TO

;;ir.r

I

.

Potato Salad .......... lb.

(IIGUIAI HICI $1.09)
SWill 01 CIIAMY

1~. $139
$129

PIISHL

01

.

I

s.lwlch Buns .. Pi.~:

·• I "j _"

~·.

· DOZEN

AYONDAll

M•llarin

••II'•··· c-

0

87C
87 C

Cole Slaw .............. lb.
MADI p•
26-ol. s119
emon
18 .. ... .. . PI•
I'IIISH MillO HAMIUIOIR
HOTDOG

Mlnachlno
•
•....
Chtmes ... Jor

s499

Chicken
..... aucket
(IIGULAI I'IJCI Ll . S .09) AMERICAN
OIMUITAID

HILLCIIST

, IPiiiCH

ONLY AI

'

,. .•• •

DELIDEm.

PlUS DEPOSIT

·

P•
....L..

H..wel ...... c..

HOT FOODS

$ 89

s

5 199
French Fries... ~~=·
llCTRA STIINOTH TAilETS
$199
60·Ct.

CIINICtl CUT . .

.... Qt.

as........

CORONET

Pkg .

STOIIIS WITH

. Sprite, Tab
or Coca Cola

. ....

.VALLEY FARMS .GRADE A

2 QT. UNME£TENED

,16-oz. ,

tylenol.. .. ... ... .. •...

19

Fried

Cheese
Food ......

AVAILAIU ONlY lfl

PINT IETUINAILE IOnLES

KROGER INDIVIDUAlLY WRAPPED
SLICIS AMERICAN

Cheese Smgles.~~.~···
29

Hb .

. . . . ... lo;

AVONOALI

Strawberries.......·.~·

KRAFT.

New

~

Spe~~l II ,. .••
Ce.-- .... ...

' I

Nenp~per S.les,

COUNIIF:::.N

:'..d~i.l~.3 ~=~·

RIWI8r

West Cclut IICOUI.

Advertialng Repreaenlltlve, Br1nham

Margenne ,.,~.
lhaners .. .. ,.

KIOGIR WltnE 01

IIIIi..

camr.

Newlll'lper l'llblllhers AJaoclatlon, Nottonol

CLOVUV~lLI'

noOn SANDWICH 01

FOO'I'BALL
Na-IFooll.nl..ape
HOUSTON OILERS--Siped' Jot
beU, guard ; P1ul Miller, wide. receiv!f';
Mlb Glbborll, oflenolve tactde; and Mike
Locklear, tight end. Named BlU Young

Meml&gt;&lt;r: The AJaoctated Preas, Inland Dilly Preas AllodaUon and JIM! American

29C

THORN APPlE VAllEY

· 1-lb.
..... Roll.

1'1letdl)'a Sporta tn...-

Publ ~hed every olte..-, Monday throuiih
Friday, Ill Court street, b)' JIM! Ohio Valley
Publlllllng Company · Multimedia, Inc.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 4S7M, m..2158. Secood claM
pootagepaldotPomeroy,Oilio.
,

Pork 'N' 15 .5·01 .
hans .. .. ... c.,

FlESH PICNIC .

.

14: Dlwaon, Montreal, 11; Foster, Cincin·
011U, t ; Cey, Los Angeles, 9; Kingman,
New York, I ; GIH!rrero, LOs Angeles, s.
STOlEN BASES: Raine!, Montreal, 411;
R.Scott, Montre1l, It; North, San Franciaco, 19; Durham, Chlcaa:o, 14 ; D1waon,
Montreal, 13; Millrr, Atlanta, ll; Puhl,
HOUlton, 13; Lopeo, Loo Angeles, 13.
PI'l"CHfNG
(5
Decl.s.lons) :
Carlton,
Phlladeiphla, 7-G, 1.11110, 3.01; Hooton, 1m
Ango!... 7-G, 1.0110, %.111; Rhoden, Pittaburgh, 5-&lt;1, 1.000, 2.12; Valenzuela, Ule
Angeles, ~1 , .a , 1.24; Sr.ver, Cinclnnatl, 5--1, .133, t.t6; Shirley, St.Louis, ~~.
,. ,, 3.41; Camp, Atlanta, H , .11110, 1.11 ;
S.Howe, Lol Ana:eles, ~1. .800, 0.40.
STRIKEOUTS: Carlton, Philadelphia,
77; ValeruueiJI, lJJS Angeles, 71; &amp;Ito,
CIJicinnaU, M: Ryan, Houston. M; Gul·
'lickson, Montreal, 45.

iUSPSitwlli
A Dlvtoloaof Moltlmedla,I.D&lt;.

••a

AVONDAlE CUI

4; Herndon, San Franciacc, I. ,
HOME RUNS: Sclunidt, Philadelphia,

The Daily Senrinel

5.,.

Green

. _·co.-ntry Club
Ice.-..

Mixed

· ·01 .

..... ao.

.

I

1IIIRl It llft!Cialllllll LU IWI

95 C

Kroger

1'! ... 1-...•
v~mnln

...............1111····· ~~~
I

Ground Beef.......~... . ·
BUCKET

AVONDALE

Sweet
.
Peas ... .,.. , 17·va
CGn

Cooked Ham

$ 39·

Only games ocheduled

Dressing . . J1'•·'"'

I

$

.

So lad

bel tthifiQ yOu buv It K,oger it Qulfanteld for y&lt;~Ur t«**
IIWKtion ~ of mtnufactuf'lf. If vou 111 not util·
flld, KfOIIt will r~P~~ce vovr 111m with tht 11m1 bt~ or •
.,..~ brw.d or ,.,und vour purct\IM P,OCf. ·

,

69

EMIAUY

TOTAL SATISFACTION GUARANTEE

Plllsburfh 6, Chicago 4

Mootrea t, St.LOWs 3
Las Aflseles at Atlanta, ppd,. rain

bt

wll-""'·- -

Boneless Hams..·~~ .. ·

6\1

.511

IO

ot. -lOom....
... .-.,. ""..,. ,..;ng,
or •, . .- _·
oaNch'. tntidl ¥OU to puret.e the ICt4rtiMd item If " '
•::ellwdprict.-., J)dlv'l.

LANDMARK

-

iiii'T'II iJ • IIQUir.:i

llldl1y ....... tor . . in NCh Kroger Stort, . . . •
......,,....it,.ld. Jfwtdorunou!dend:,...._

12

NATIONAL LEAGUE

W L
22 11

Eich of .,.. achtf1illd

ggc

KJIOGER

Vie...
, .., .
- .... ... c.,

r--

....u..

KltOGIIt

DAYTtMI

( lfti!NT LIW PIICI)
V"
-

. . S4

~::: ~~· 79
Wriltti ulrh t 89 C
S.C. ...... "....
1

ltiOGII

- .,. . '\;.··ggc
=
Ill.

E:~~~~~ s109
IIG VAUII

SUGAR

'•
I
• ....

, $149

••

....,.

. .... .. c...

RMOIITE

. HI.

ll ·o• .

.... . . .

11....

l!fiCM!II

...... . .
fl

••

~·

22~:

59e1
c.•• .Ia
,,......'It' 78~I
O&amp;C

hltlllllp~'

Aut

~

'

•

�Paae-6-The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, Mlly 27, 1911

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

-·

Banquet honors :Marau.Her·adilete,s:

SPECIAL AWARDS- Special Award wlllnenln
girls' track were Paula Swllber, Most Improved Field:

SENIOR TRACK - Senior members of the Meigs
Girls' Trscll team were bonored Tuesday eveDIDg at
the aDDnal Spring sporll banquet. Tbese four Selliora

Laura Smllb aDd Alldrea Riggs, Most Polnll Field;
Sbari Drebel, Most PoiDia Rnnnlng; ud Krllllll 0.
denon, Most Improved Boning,

To strike or not to strike

lfiiO\IiJI

,

. ,I

Bf
Th~
.
Bend.
·
.
.

'

.

.-:

.

dividuals who can stop a diamond
strike.
There is someone eLse ... Bovle
Kuhn, baseball's puppet cornmissioner who plays it cool during
the cold nights in October's fall
classic, The World Series. (Remember In years past when the commissioner showed up in short sleeves
when the rest of the stadiwn crowd
shivered due to the cold autumn air
in Cincinnati, Baltimore and Pittsburgh.)
However, don't look for Kuhn to intervene. Maybe, it's just as well,
but, after all, he Is supposed to look
out for the good of baseball, or at
least, that's what he said when he
cancelled the Vida Blue trade to Cincinnati in 1977.
Besides, Kuhn Is employed by the
owners - would you bite the hands
thatTetd you?
One thing's for sure - if nothing is
settled by Friday, all games
scheduled that day will be cancelled.
Saturday afternoon's NBC and
ABC's first Monday night telecast
scheduled June I will be replaced by
golden old movies, something my
colleagues would appreciate but I
·would rather see baseball, even if it
is the New York Yankees.

Samford coach dies
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP)
Samford University basketball
coach Cliff N. Wetu; died at a Birmingham holpi~ alter suffering a
heart attack at hll home earlier In
the afternoon. He na 63.
The Clnctnsttl, Ohio native came
!D Samford In 1971 II a111istant
athletic dlrec:tor and was named
head buketball coach In 111'19.

Singapore's Tiong

· has one stroke lead
, KUALA LUMPUR, . Malayala
(AP)- lliniiJIOI"'i Um Klan 11onr
laC • one . . . leld In the first

1:;::~~~'::
wldea'JIIl•·

Tied ,.. - lid I&amp; 71 ....
81rw:" Lim.... Web, A.llpan
If~. IIIII 0118111 If TlhJu
and ..... II... Hltll If lhe Np-

...

\1

'

Wednesday, May 27, 1981
Page-7

.

Voters haf!_e opportunity to improve conditions at Meigs Local
'

~- Stadeldl of tile Mef&amp;J Local ScHol Dlltrlet bave
a.b as dda ~ ceiUIIg at !he Rutlaad ElemeDtary

er-

ud lheae lllallaM 'IliUM eorreeled wHit lbe _ , bolld~.

Scboo1

FLOoR - Tbe Door of lbe gymnasium In lbe Rutlaud Elementary
Sehool-l!led for mauy functloaa- Is sinklog and Is In need of extensive
repair.

Residents of the Meigs Local
School District will have the OJ&gt;'
portunity - and with very little effort - to improve the lifestyle of
theirstudentsonJune2.
On that date, voters of the district
will go to the polls to cast ballots on a
2.5 mill bond issue which will be used
exclusively to upgrade school
buildings which have been going,
downhill consistently since the
district was formed.
The bond issue has been tagged
"An opportunity for a million dollar
free ride" for the district by Meigs
County Auditor Howard Frank who
has repeatedly pointed out that the
issue, if approved by voters, will
provide the Meigs Local District
with one million dollars without any
Increase In taxes. The money can
only be used for buildings and groun-

bave led Meigs to a secUo1181 cbampiODiblp ud a berlb
In lhe Dlllrlct Plelllred are Alldrea Rlgga, Sbari
Drebe~ Jeau Horotn, lllld Lori Rupe.
·

Sports Desk
BYDALERO'n!GEB
Friday is almost upon us ... That's
the day players of the National and
American baseball leagues have set
as a strike date
team
owners.
No one knows
the outcome of
such threats, but,
to strike over just
one big issue
seems a little
trifle, although to
the players, it's
their big hope of
remaining free from
slave
drivers of yesteryear.
As avid of a baseball fan as I am, I
just can't for the life of me, support
the players in this issue.
Maybe, it's true this is just a way
the owners are taking to discipline
themselves for the pampered
prirnadonnas they' have created with
those multi year, no cut, no trade, no
production contracts.
No matter what happens - in the
end - the ones to lose are the hard
gut fans making a pittance of a
living compared to those ~ailed
'superstars. '
It might kill our favorite pastime,
but, to see those multi·millionaires
on the picketlines and forced to
make livings outside their environment draws everything but sympathyfromme.
In this bad ecQnomical time when
thousands are out of work, coal
miners remain on strike, and in·
nation continues to bite a . bigger
chunk Into the 30 cent dollar bill, it's
very reassuring that some players
will lose as much as ~.ooo In income alone.
Club owners, although somewhat
better off by their Insurance funds,
still could lose milllona in gate
receipts, loa of televillon and radio
revenue and other club related functions.
At ilsue is free agent compenaation. Club owners want
10111ethlng ln return 011 lbe major
league l'llller for a player JOlt in the
free agent market ln Nov11111ber.
OWners feel that player lhould be
scmeone who can help their club~
mediately not an w*nown dnft
quality, wNcbbu been thacunin·
ce free ageney came Into eliiUnee
ln Jfll.
.
•
Only Ray Gnbey, chief JIIIIJtialor
fur lhe butiW'J OWI!e.'land
MOler, cbltf negollator for the
players' uniGn, .an to be the ~

ROCK SPRINGS - Melp lllch RiiP II undefeated In the blgh.jump Wayland&gt; Steve. Oh!ln;er. Mike
end Richard Qean.
,·
School athletes were honored event. Several i1lembers ~ llie Miller,
AII·SEOA!. ...: Jerry Fleldt• Terry
Tuaaday evening with an u:~ ' ' Melli tra~k team ·received wayland, and Jetf.W.IIYiand. R-dinner and awarda ceremony at numerous honon and awanla for ves - Brian Will, Scott Karrlton~
Nicky Riggs, Randy Stewart, Chris
MeigsHighSchooldurlncllieannuil outstanding achievement and Burdette,
Ed Bishop, Alan King,
Spring Sports banquet. 'The fete leadenbip during their high scllOOI Fred Colburn, c&gt;e«oe HObSon,
hllllored both boy and girl athletes, l:areen;
Darrel Jenkins, and FrankMIIrt!n.
varsity softball - Pam CrOOks,
whopartlclaptedlnSpringatbletlca. · Coach Jeaae van Introduced the
Cindy Crooks, Paula Horton, Natalie
Dick Rupe aerved as master of . Junior lfllh track teama and noted Lambert, Krls Snowden, Mel
ceremonies for. tile event and iJi. that the teama broke 1211Cbool recor, Dillard, Jarille Acree, TammY
lro!iuced coaches'of ~ve IJ)OI'· ds overall.
' Aclklns, Tl!ll East, Robin But·
flngton. April King, and Beth Perrin.
ta. ·
·Awardwlnnersarell8tedbelow;
' .
· · Dale Harriaoil, v~ty ba-.eba,ll ·
Girls' ·tra¢k ·_; !.orl Rupe, 'shari
Reservesoftball- BethG!obOkar,
coach, liltroduced members of the Drehel,
Andrea Riggs, VIcky Robin Barr•"· Barb Gru-r; Anet·
1981 Marauder baseball ' squad. DeBord, !.aura Smith, Kristin An· te John~. ~orl Maynard, Paula
Jeri'y Flelda was recl!gnlzed as· an derson, D,lxle Eblin, Paula Swisher, Notman, Cindy .Parker, Wendy
allileague selection and aJI.dlatrld Kim. Fraley, KriSta! Sisson, !'lenee Tillis, Jenny Meaoows, Angle Hat·
"'aron Goggins, susanne field, and Valerie Jeffers.
player, Terry Wayland gained ill- Willis,
Wise, Tina Allen, .Jean Horton,
,
( .
league hOIIors and Jeff Wayland Rowena Aver ion, Amy Sisson, cathy . Boys Junior High frock- seven·
th grade), Brian Korn, Mike Chan·
gained honorable rnent1011. ·Asalltant Dean, and Kim Roush, manager.
Special track awards _ Pa·ula · cey, Brad Robinson, Chris Kennedy,
Coach Bruce Wilson Introduced llle Swisher,
Most Improved' Field; David Averlon, Kevin Meadows,
reserve team.
Kristin A~derson. Most Improved Sco" P.u!llns. ~lghlh- Doug Prld·
Coach Steve .Lones after · in- Running; !.aura Smith, 1671f• , and dy, Bobby Spires, Randy Jewell,
Andrea· Riggs, 166'1•, Most Polnl$ James Acree, rna" Riffle, BObby
troducing the Melga boys' track scored;
Shari Drehel, 139'h, Most Staats, Bobby Foster, SCot Gheen,
team and talking about the im- Points Running; and Laura. Smith, Ed Miller, Joe Hu~phrey, Tony
Welch, Bobby Geyer, Dan Thoma~.
~ aeuon that the .trBckaters Andrea Riggs Most Points Field
Undefeated' season Plaque_ ·An· Steve crow, Jerry Brenlk, Jackie
.produced, Softball coach Rita Slavin drea
Riggs. senior accomplishment Welker, Allen Terry, Joey Pullins,
introduced the 1981 so!tb&amp;ll club and and Recognition awards - Lori Bret Korn, and Mark Ha~monds.
recognized Pam Crooks as an alJ. . RuP.,~ Andrea Riggs, Shari Orehe!.
Girls' junior high track- Seventh
league selection.
Boys: track ~ BOb Ashley, Troy grade, Rhonda, Neece, Cindy Souls·
•. Ed Blount, Rick Chancey, by, Anita Smith, Chlrmelle Turner,
Girls' track Coach Gordon Fisher Bauer
Rob Davis, Shawn Ead5, Mike Ed· Jody Harrison, !.lsa Riggi;" and
praised hll team for a great S!l880n wards, David lannarelll, Chris Daphne Dillard. Eighth - Karen
before Introducing 'members of the Judge, David Kennedy, Mike Ken· Spencer, Suzie Bryan, Ruth Fry,
1181 sectional championship team. nedy, Gary Nakamoto, Jon Scott Rhonda Haddox, Gleda Hanning,
Stout, Brian Swann, Greg Taylor, !.lnda Stewart, Jody Miller, Jolene
Several members of the Marauder Dennis Thornton, Kyle Woods.
Mood!spaugh, !.lnda Noel, Brenda
club are currently making blda for a
Boys' beseball- (Varsity). Jerry Cunningham, Debbie Werry, Amy .
trip tD the State Track meet. Senior· Fields, Jeff Wayland, Steve Erwin, Teresa Pra", Mary Moore
Ml,ke Miller, Richard Tr!na Reeves, Denise Stegall:
track stars were honored and Ohlinger,
Dean, Troy Brooks, Terry Wayland, Kr!stan Belley, Debbie Porter,' !.!sa
· &amp;peclal awards given tD outstanding Roger Kovalchik, Jim Boyer, Randy Ashley, !.Indo Riggs, !.!sa Baxter,
performers on this year's team. Murray, John Cremeans, and Dave Lisa Hoffmim. Managers are Tam·
my Landers; .Pevgy Cremeans, and
Going Into the district meet, Andrea Reuter.
Seniors - Jerry Fields, Jeff Merle Averjon.

' '

The Daily Sent.ine.l

ROOFS - Roofs of several oflhe schools In the Meigs Local School
District are deteriorating and 1o need of extensive repair or replacement.
Pictured Is a roof portion at the rear of the Bradbury Elementary School.

ds.
Actually, the bond issue is just a
decision by voters as to where they
want to spend their money. They can
pass the bond issue on June 2 and
keep the money for local use. Or
they can tlll'll it down and continue
sending their money to the State
Department of Education for expenditure In some other location .
Whatever the decision of voters,
for the next nine years they will continue to pay four mills of taxahon in
accordance with provisions of a 23year bond issue passed In 1966. Ac·
cording to the plan, and this has
been approved by the State Department of Education, voters can &amp;J&gt;'
prove the bond issue and keep two
and on~half of that four mills on the
local scene. If they do not approve
the issue, residents still have to pay

the four mills tax for the next nine
years but it will all - as it has in the

past - continue to go to the state
department of education in Colwnbus.
At this point in time, it appears
that the bond issue should have
smooth sailing at the polls on Julie 2.
Numerous civic and fraternal
organizations as well as individuals
have come forth with endorsements.
Meigs Local teachers, school affiliated organizations, board of
education members and ad·
mlnistrators all have indicated aJ)'
proval of the bond issue.
Certainly, one would have to go to
considerable length to figure out a
reason for voting to continue sending
the district's money to the state
when it can do so much good at
home.

'

AU-LEAGUE - AIJ.8EOAL leagae lluellall
plllyel'l were boilored at the aDDu! Melga 8prlo«

Tekulve snaps back; .whips Cubs, 6-4
By Asaoelaled Pma
Enrique Romo nailed down the singled to snap a ~ tie. Pete Roee
Two years ago, Kent Tekulve of . decision for Tekulve.
later IJ!t a qne-bop grounder to
the Pittsburgh ptrates was one of
In other NL action, It was Kingman and the first baseman let
the hottest relief pitchers In Philadelphia 7, New York 5; Mon- the ball g\ance off hll glove for an
baseball.
trea1 4, St. Louis 3 and HOUlton 1, error as Gn.seon!d.
But something snapped near the SanDiegoO. Twogameswererained
'fhe winner wu Ron ~. 1.0,
end of the 1980 aeason, and he out - Los Angeles at Atlanta and who pitched two perfect Innings of
couldn't win for losing.
San Franelseo at Cincinnati.
· relief; while Tug McGraw pitched
"There were times I was wonMike Easler's leadoff double the Dintl! for hil fourth uve. NeD
dering if I would ever stop 1061ng," trilll!ered Pittsburgh's four-run n1n- Allen, $-2, was the loeer. •
he says.
th and Omar Moreno single4 aCI'OIII
Espoa t, ~I
Tekulve dropped seven games at the lead run for the Pirates, Easler
Warren Cromartie's RBI single
the end of 19M and three more at the doubled and scored on a single by capped a tw~run rally In the aevenstart of this year. That aU ended Phil Gamer. AnRB!aineie bYWillle th lnnlng, leadlng Montreal over St.
Tuesday when the sldnny, bespee- Stargell later tied the sCore before lAlUia. Jerry White started llie
tacled reliever pltched two IICOI'ellisa
innings In a 6-4 victory over the
Chicago Cubs. ·
"It's a ·good feeling," said
Tekulve, who bad 31 saves and 10
victories In 1979 and 21 saves and
eight victories before going Into his
ltorrendOUB slump beginning Lut
Aug. 8.
,
Tekulve came In with the Pirates
traillng 4-2 Tueaday and allowed two
hits In tba' aevenlb and elghih ~
Dings. The J'lrates raiUed for four
runs In the top of the ninth and

Moreno singled aCI'OIII the lead run
wilb two out. Bill Madlo.;k's single
brought aCI'OIII an 1naurance run.
Pblllles 7, Meta 5
.
Lonnie Smith slapped a · tiebreaking RBI flngle In the ninth lnnlng, and another run scored 011 fb'lt
bueman Dave Kingman's third
error of the game, 'booattng
Phlladelphlaove~NewYork.

Bob Boone g~ things staroed with
a. one-oot single and took third on
Greg Gn.' single. Smith tben

.'

'

the road thil season "
'l1le veteran riKiihancler bu won'
aU three of hll declllona with • nitty
1.011 earnid run average on lhe road.
However, he II ().4 with a fill 8.16
ERA with a total of II innlllp. In
Clevellad'1 MunldpaJSIIdlum.
Wltb tbe 3-4 record, G.rland .. - ·
If the big te10111 the Indllal~niM
on lhe road and H at home u the
team NIDiinl In lhe tldck of tbe
Al..-leln lAipeEast.., . hMIIa• jwi4*l .on Dlnnll
lltinllr fGrlhelr 1M . . IIi the
-... twld.... If lhelr II IIIII
Cllllhe IGiton

*
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lft'OI',

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llalllllllper . . . . . . - ·

·-·~

Allroll, Pllllrell
tblrd baaemah Joe Plttman, geWng hll first major league
start; clubbed three hila, including a
rwHCOring triple in the aeventh inning, to lead Houaton over San
Diego.
Pittman got Into . the lineup
liecause Art Howe, the NL'sleadlng
hitter, suffered a ham.trln8 pull in
Friday night's game, Plttman
' aeven1h wilb a single, advanced to· responded with singles In the third
aecopd on Chria Speier's sacrifice and fifth innlngl and a triple In the
and scored one out later on an RBI seventh, scoring Alan Ashby wbo
single by Tim Rllnell off reliever hadalngled.
'
Jim Kaat, 2-1.
Pittman's game-winning bit came
Rodney ScoU then pulbed Raines off loser Juan Eichelberger, 4-3, who
to second with alinlle al'!d Cromar- had yielded only three blta prior tD
tlebroughthlmhomewithallingle.
the seventh. HOUlton starter Nolan
Steve Rosen, wbo l"tched the llr- Ryan, 4-2, pitched himaelf out Of
ataevenlnr!lngl;elrllildhllflfthvlc- several jams to get the victory.
. tory In eight deelllons, with relief Ryan was relieved after the aeventh
help from Woodle Fryman and Ellaa by Joe Samblt
Sosa,wbogainedhilthlrdaave.

Ind~ns

Reds rained out;

The Expos had a H record on
their recent road trip before winnJng
two straight at home against the
Cardinals.
~e

top Boston.

;May senior citizen socifll Thursday
everung soew will be held
tburlday, May 28, .at the Senior Center. There wll1 lie a potluchupper at
5:30 p.m.; everyone attending is
asked to bring a cOvered dish and
their own table aervlce. To help with
the COIIt of meat and beverage, there
will be a 50 cent fee for each person
attending. The evening BOCial is open
to anyone wilhlng to attand, not just
aenlor cttilena..
FoUowlng IIIPPeT. a Memorial
O.y program will be presented. The
1111

Senior Citizens Chorus and the Kitchen Band will have several
patriotic numbers. Paul Casci,
representing the Drew Webster POll
of the American Legion, will be the
guest speaker.
Home Delivered Meals
The Home Delivered Meals
Program, sponsored by Sellior
Nutrition Program located at the
Meigs County Senior Citizens Center, is in need of volunteer drivers to

deliver meals to elderly shut-ins In
the county. This program caMct
function without volunteer drivers.
MUeage is reimbursed and the actual time involved In delivering
meals is approximately one to one
and a half hours. Volunteenl can be
of any age and can be scheduled to
deliver one day a week or one day
every other week. If you can volunteer some time to help with the
Home DeHvered Meals, can the
Senior Nutrition Program, 992-2161.

Students attend·science. training
Four Southern Junior High studefl. Loll Ihle, eighth grade, daughter of on the weekend each week for the
ta have been chosen to participate in Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ihle of Route four-week period.
the Student Science Training · I, Racine, and Teresa Shuler, aeven- . In addition to learning to work
Program at Ohio Unlverslly for four th grade, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. with various types of microcomw.lal beglnnlng•June 22.
Ernest Shuler of Route 2, Racine.
putera and studying special topics In
The pnlllllll, under the cUrect~on
All students participating In the science and mathematics, they will
of Dr. Len Plkaart, Mortori program will be living oil campus also participate In various athletic
Prof• ill of Matbematlcl, II funded durlri. the week and returning I\Orne and social activities.
by the Nitional iletence Founilatlon.
·

·:u:;:::tlcs=:r.~ Dance recital Saturda1,'J
Clll'l'tlltb' In Jl9entb ud elcNh
...... In aDd around Soutllelaiei'D
Ohio. Althougb lben _.. over 100
appllcanb, anly .. CGUld be~
Out of the to, four are from the
Southern a-!Sehool Dlltrlct. 'l1ley

'

Carpenter's Dance Studio, imder the $'ection of Mrs.
Shirley Carpenter, will bave a dance recital this Saturday
evening, May •· at Southern IDgh Schoo!, beginning at 7:30
p.m. Age groups dancing will be from three yean to 28 years
are:
, Karen Hlllllley, eighth fli'Bde, of age. There will be dancen In ballet, Tap and Jazz, plus
d!l•flbler of Mr. and ...... JimmY Country and Western Swing. The public II InVited to tbe
Joe Hemllly of , ODII111 Road, recital, which will feature many talented studentl from the
Syrac;uae; Dlv1d Po!iell, eighth area. Emcee for the evening will be Janis Carnahan.
grade, ... If Mr. and ...... O.vld
Powell ~ Bllhln Road, RadDe;

AsTROGRAPH

I

FEA1URED IN RECITAL- Plelllred left to rtpt lie fealllred iD ~alllrday's recital at Southern Hilb
are Valerie Co8ly, Cbad Diddle, ll!d Jedllloblll, all Scbool. Tbe trio wiD ~ to tile tUDe, "011 tbe Good
YGIIIII""Wheft Ill Cupenr'1 lluee Stodlo wilD will !Wp·Ltlllpnp.''

�j

•
I,

I

Television
.
•

•

VIewmg
IIAY2t, 1111

I!YI!NING

e:ob

(I)

e tll e CIJIIID (fl) e

~=011 IAGLiY SHOW
(COIITIIIUI!D

FROII

~YTIIIII
(J) MDVII! -(COMI!DY)••\1

..,.. .,...,..,."

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NOT

_I!U't-.lluoota: ,
Vopalloto Jocklt Cain ond Roy
Krol . Hoot a: Hugi',Oowno and
Flank
Blair.
(Ciooed·
111!91!!d; U.S.A.)
8:30
NBC NI!WI
'101 NEWHART SHOW
A!II!YAIIIFFITH SHOW
(I) (II CBS NEWI
WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
IU.UAS, YOGA AND YOU
• AICNEWS
· 8:68
CJN UPDATE NEWS
. 7:00
• PI!IMAGAZINE
NEW BIBLE BAFFLE

IBABRYCI

•w

1

AUTHORIZEDCA 'ALgQ
SAL.~S MER CHAN"~:

Vicki DeBord
Brenda Chappelear one! Robert Petr:ie

April King and Britt Dodson

I

and Robert Ashley

june--the month of 'weddings, brides, grooms'
June may be the month of brides,
but it was May at Meigs High School
when three mock weddings took
place a.s a part of experience in the
family living class taught by Mrs.
Bennita Ktng.
The many traditions and all the
excitement were there for the mock
weddings which included wedding
gowns and tuxedos, a full court of atlendanll! in appropriate attire, and
the usual reception with tiered wed-

ding cake.
The brides and gi'OOIIIB were Vicki
DeBord and Robert Ashley, April
King and Brill Dodson, and Brenda
Chappelear and Robert Petrie.
For the DeBord-Ashley wedding,
nuptial music was provided by Unda Eaaon and David Kennedy performed the ceremony. Her attendanll! were Betsy Herald, Connie
Atkins, Sherry Holtz, and Angela
Harmon. Scott Stout was best man

:..IITHEFAMILY

!Ill. FAMILY FEUD

7:30

...

-:.

7:68
8:00

Cassell, played the piano, everyone
sang "School Days," Betsy Bryant
gave the Brownie scout pledge,
Sarah Philson, the girl scout pledge,
and Susanne Cassell, Valarie Baker,
Mary Byer, Lee Luckeydoo, and
Susanne Houchins, sang "I Have
Something In my Pocket."
For the third stage, "Church
Membership," the Rev. Robert
Robinson, Sarah Philson, and Susanne Houchins sang "The Church in
the Wildwood," and for the "Teen
Years," there was a vocal solo, "Six·
teen Going on Seventeen" by Mrs.
Robinson, and a prom scene with
Susanna Wise, Angela Houchins,
Jean Horton, Stephanie Houchins,
and Paula Horton.
"Graduation," the fifth stage in a
woman's life was presented with
"Pomp and Circwnstance" and a

New arrivals Social Calendar·
JolmloD

Mr. and Mrs. Steve Johnson of St.
Alballll, W. Va., formerly of
Gallipolis, are announcing the birth
of their second child, Dustin Roy.
Dusty was born April 17 at
Charleston Area Medical Center and
weighed eisht pounds ten and onehalf ounces. He was welcomed home
by his brother, Cory.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Roy Blankenship &lt;i
Gallipolis. Paternal grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs. Leo Johnson, also
of Gallipolis.

K.arr
Roger and SUiie Karr, Long Bottom, are announcing the birth of
their second daughter born on May
17 • at the O'Bienesa Memorial
H~pilal, Athens. The eight pound,
10 :ounce Infant has been named
Valerie Suanne. Mr. and .Mrs.
Katrs' other daughter, Jesaica
Michelle, II three.
Maternal grandparents are Mayor
an~ · Mrs. Clarence Meadows,
Pomeroy. Paternal grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs. Paul Karr, Long
Bollom. Great-grandmothers are
MJ1. Purley Karr, Long Bottom, and
Mrs. Clyde Andrews, Pomeroy.
I

'

WEDNESDAY
AMERICAN LEGION AND ITS
AUXIUARY, Feeney-Bennett Post
1211, Middleport, meetings, 7:30p.m.
Wednesday at the hall. Election of
officers by both groups. Dinner
preceding at 6:30p.m.
LONG BOTIOM COMMUNITY
ASSOCIATION, 8 p.m. Wednesday
at the community building.
.
'niURSDAY
TWIN CITY SHRINETTES, Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at the home of Mrs . .
Gertrude Mitchell. Members to take
Items for hospital.

graduation parade in cap and gown mother.'' For the ''Second Career,''
· by Jean Horton and Angie Houchins. Beulah Jones talked on her ex·
Mrs. Vicki Houchins gave thoughts periences 88 a newspaper reporter.
on graduation.
Euvetta Bechtel depicted the
"First Love," with thoughts of "Retirement Years," and Nan
love being given by Jennifer Moore with a hwnorous verse, "The
Harrison, and a piano solo, "Love Golden Years."
Theme from Romeo and Juliet" Wllll
The program closed with a tribute
presented by Twila Childs. Sandy to all mothers by Mrs. Fultz. .
Luckeydoo with daughters, Lee and
Amy, presented "Marriage," and
Donna Byer singing "Nine to Five" r----~-------l
with Sharon Hawley and Helen
Byer, secretaries, and Pauline Horton, a reading teacher, depicted
11
BY
Cai'eerTime."
Ma~ine
Philson presented
"Motherhood," Mary Wise,
"Physical Fitness," Sharon Hawley
singlrig "Sunriae, Sunet," the"~
ty Nest," and Beulah McComas
. surrounded by children, the "Grand-

.

OFFICE PH. 992-6624

CALL (614)-992-2104
or (304)-675-1244

ALLEYOOP

•

'

HOME' PH. 992-3523

OFFICE HOURS: MON..flll. 8!30 10 4:30
.SAT. 8:30 10 12:00 NOON

EQUIPMENT OPERATORS
DROn 40 or CASE 110

and JOHN DEERE SU

GASOUNEAUEY
I

.

• ,.'

Sl~

riq

.,,'
I'!

t

here!

if we discusses
it over some

.We had decided
on that fiqure.

...fer stock

wrtn sech

' Mrs.

purt4 curlicues on it!

Bump!

EXPERIENCED ONLY. NEED APPLY
.

EXQLLENT PAY

CHAPMAN
SHOES

WINNIE

~

RACittE, OHIO

)OU

I

"Ne1t To bJ.telds
In

~

. ·'

---....~~# GBC ,..,.
PROVIDES
THE TRA'INING YOU NEED
FOR THE BUSINESS WQRLD

PROMI9fP TO PlJl
'!O.Jil9fl F IN MY
HANDS Ct:ltf •

tl

"-ETS.Y/

l'

'
....
'
.,....
...

FACE THE MUSIC

• Cil REAL PEOPLE John
Barbour via ita Prince Mongo,
who claima that he came from
the planet Zambodia, 1 trip to
the Arizona Sheep Dog Show in
Phoenix, a 71 year old woman
who makaa an out of junk, and
Sarah Purcell reports on Terry
Fox, a young Canadian who lost

MORE Cl.EAALY NOW.
'IOU I.EFT !!UENAVENTUii'A
FOR 'THE PACIFIC
ANt' THE' 'SHIP WENT
rowH AT

7!X!_CLUI

!Ill. AMERICAN DREAM

(H) FAIULOUSPHUD!L· ·
PHIANS: FROM ORIIANDYTO
MUTI 'Ormondy ond ilylona
Jenaon' Nineteen year old
award winning violinl.t Oylana
Jenaon make• her • debut
through tho Phllodolphla Or·
cheatra'atradltionotpromoting
young talent. Priortotheperfor·
mance Eugene Ormandy ie
seen working with tne young
tJI.IIllfUBO mlno.l
8:30 llJ.I!JTHEFACTSOFUFI! .
Jo'oboytriond,Eddlo,arrlvoaot
Eastland School and convinces
her to run away with him anctoet
morrlod. (Conclualon) ·
(J) MOVIE ·(W!STERN) ••

•••

•'
•'
'·•'

.''

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,

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1180

IIOmlno.l
·
()) TIIIIYfNtNG NEWS

VOU LOOK

TERRIBLE BAD,
AUNT SUKEY

r BETTER PUT OFF
PLOWIN' ANOTHER
'T'WO·THREE DAYS

oM~a.)

+9 54

WEST

EAST

+s

+J7

'QJ101741

'K2
tK9654
+J732

t83

+AQIO

SOUTH
+A i0!113!

•s

t72

+K86
Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: West
·West

Norlb

East

3'

Obi .

Pass
Pass

Pass

Pass

Soutb

4+

We want to congratulate
Mark on seeing a play we had
overlooked in the column. We
hope we we"'dn't overlook it .
in a rubber Jge game.

ZS Norm

greeting

!STea
MOceanlc
Fat
1'1 Grecian shopping places .
.

-Ire.

~

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.A86
t A Q J 10

Opposite
of stet
Contributed
Walked
In a rut
Bard's
river
Ear part
Author
Deighton
River in
N. Car.
Sl Scrap
sz Caesarean

oplto tho knowlodQt thol tho

(I}.AIICHPORAU!XANDI!R
Till! GIII!AT 'Thl Laii.Monlh' ·
Aloxartdlr-to croatoallllltld Orotk and Porolan
but hla Irrational bollawlor
cau!IOO tho doath of hla boat
ond hodlao of grief. (10

~

8

times

trallofaki4n~Pf&gt;ediMir-.dl·

death in I nigllllllarovtlloll. (eo

1·27-81

ACROSS
38 Bacteriolo1 Scandal sheets
gi8t's wire
5 "Your Cheatin' 38 Type &lt;i race
- "
40 Belgian
river
-Harbor,
DOWN
Guam
1Wentwild
More
%
SwifUy
undulatory
S
Traffic center
Old English
for space
Yestenllly'a Alllwer
prison
shots
9 Had a general N Foreshadow ·
Not agree4
Man's
tendency
2ll Dike
able to
niclmame 11 Singer
%9 " - Foolish .
Medieval
POII8eS8
Newton
Things"
5
shield
S
Time
of
15
Fearless
30
Horse opera
15 Cricket
day
11 Numerical
3% Guatemalan
gal-tie run
7 Heroics
suffix
fruit
One of the
involving
%1
Asian
desert
:15
Author
Trinity
downed
%Z
ObservaLevin
17 Texas city
pilots
tory site
31 Chinese
11 Ancient

&lt;IXII8liEOAIOonroluctontly Jolno fO&lt;coo with a boautlhll
poycl&gt;lctofollowthoclonvorouo
~or hu wltn•uad Dan' o

NORTH
+KQ9

~~M•.~•r
by lHOMAS JOSEPH

oood·Coptlonod)

10:00 llJ.I!J QUINCY Quincy folio
hordfon beoutKulyoungwldow
whoM huaband diod In 1 night;
club fire, though a peralatent
Insurance lnvaatlgator ac ~
cu111 her of murder. (Repeat;

- \

CALLa (614) 446~i67
NOW INIOLLINO

the Reverend Jim Jones from
the concerned leader of a
movement tor aocial juaticeto
• the charismatic personality
who led the aettlera of Jones'town, Guyana, into death are
examined In !hie triglc account
ofthl Guyane ma111cra. Stars:
Powera Boothe, Ned Beatty.
(!!.opool; 3 hra.l
·
CIJ WORLD ·Agalnot Wind ond
lido: A Cub on Odyuey' This
atory at tour people wno fled
from Cuba In t9BO,Iollo ott heir
raaett lement difficultiee, and
the attitude• of Americana
towerda them. (80 mine.}
(H) ALL CREATURES GREAT
AND SMALL 'Bo Prepared'
Slog tried ond Jomoa pion tor on
evening out, while Triatenplana
tooptorioln In, while on dUly. (BO
mina.)
1:68 Cil Clll UI'PATE NEWS
8:00 IIJ •
I!J
DIFF'RENT
STROKES D1ummond buya
uniforms for a Pee Wee football
to om to gotArnold on thoaquod,
but the coach atill refuses to let
tho youngator ploy. (Ropoot)

'l,OIHIB~dero"

~

.

~S, I ~MEM~R

SEA.

BARNEY

INQUIRE NCM: ~ra'!:lni a.....

-lAWN MOWERS

MY

JU~fNTf )QU

~

,-

This hand was published a
year aco. The game was
duplicate . South took
dummy's ace of hearts,
played the king of spades and
a spade to his ace. Then he led
a diamond and finessed the
ten. East was in with the king.
1 East had a chance to beat
:declarer. A club shift was
obvieus, but in order to get
three club tricks East had lo
lead the jack and play his
partner for the exact holding
that he had.·
Mark Melchiori of Jackson,
Michigan, who writes a week·
ly column for The CitizenPatriot to appear on the day
our column doesn't, saw us in
Detroit recently.
Mark points out that a rubber bridge player would have
a sure thing play for four
spades.
,.t trick two he would ruff a
heart. Then he would cash
dummy's king and queen of
:spades to draw all trumps.
Next would come the lead of
the last heart on which South
would throw a low diamond.
That would leave East with no
way to get in since his diamond king would be subject lo
a ruffung finesse.

!:_liN UPDATE NEWS

~

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CONTACT: ONTA.IO PIPELINE
FRONT &amp; SECOND ST.

Not Years Prepare Yov
To Earnl

18" to 22" GUT

Nc;&gt;w._if 40u'll

..,.'

Mantlls .

BY: BWEGRISS

By Oswald Jacoby
aad Alaa Sontag

The event a that tranatormad

'

HELP WANTED

Ell DeMI!on Post 4&amp;7, American
Legion, Rutlahd, will'sponsor a fiea
market l)aturday, June 6, from 9
a.m. to·f :30 p.m. and Sunday, June
7,from9 a.m. to&amp;p.m.
Spaces• and tables are available
and anyone interested may contact
Joe Andreoni at m-2713 or Drexel
Lambert at 7«2-2878.
The nea marketa Will be held
twiCe each month until October or aa
long 88 weather pennlts.

OHice Hours by ·Appointment Only

1

Evenings Bv Appointment

Flea market here

,,

..

f. .

236 W. 2nd., Pomerov, Oh. 1Formerlv Meigs Gen, Hospital)

FRIDAY
POMEROY CHAPTER 186, Order·
of tbe Eastern Star, annual inspection, Friday, 7:30 p.m. Estella
Ankrum inapecting officer.

.EAR, NOSE &amp;THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

''.
't'

Steven L. Story
.Karen H. Story

ROAD PADS'"

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

Perceptive play produces

BUL.LSI!YI!
AT HOllE WITH THE
I!_BLE
llJ BASEIAlL Atlanta Braveo
va Loa AngelI I Dodger a
.())JOKER'S WILD
HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
(H) DICK CAVETT SHOW
Gueet:
Gunther
Gebel·
WIHI•ma, circua atar,
!IDl RICIIARQ SIMMONS

ffi

AnORNEYS AT LAW

..

DGE

SPECIALS
.
MOVIE ·(COMEDY) n II
~alt~wnU.&amp;.A." 1878
llJ (j2) U1 THE GREATEST
AMERICAN HERO Relph end
Maxwell 's desperate search
for a top aacret U.S. gun sight
hljacke~
by mercanar!aa
· becomea astoundingly com·
pllcatad when Ralph's su it
makea him unpredlctablyinviaible , a vanishing act that alao
throwa hia introduction to
Pam'a vialting parents into
chaoa._lRepeat; 80 min a.)
.())(JD) GUYANA TRAGEDY:
THE STORY OF JIM ~ONES

.

.

•

alegiocancerandranamarath·
on acroas Canada to raiaa
money for cancer research.
epeat; eo mine.)
~

STORY &amp; STORY

r

III

Yostorday·a l Jumbles: UNIFY ELDER BOUNCE MUSKET
Answer: Tenoo obout whet's Ia como-FUTURE

l 'lwa

. IQYI
W

-

Now arrange the clrdocl lottoro to
lorm the IUipriH .,._, u oug·
gHted ill' l h t - cartoon.
.

Prlntans~erhere; AN "( I

~

80 attend mother-daughter fete at Heath ·
Approximately Ill attended the annual mother-daughter banquet held
at Heath United Methodist Church
Thursday.
Tables were decorated with rose
arrangements provided by Belly
Fultz and Nellie Zirkle. Favors were
nut cup May baskets made by Mrs.
Liillan Smith, and potted plants
were given as prizes. A iano prelude
was given by Mrs. Joan Robinson.
"Stages of Woman's Life" was the
theme of the program narrated by
Mrs. Fultz.
The first stage, "Birth," was
depicted by Mrs. Nancy Cale singing
"Rock-a-Bye Baby" to Jessica Cale.
In the second stage "Childhood," the
children sang "Jesus Loves Me"
with Julie Byer; Valarie Baker and
Amy Luckeydoo danced in ballerina
costumes, Mary Byer and Susanna

II

WILDKINODOM'AOayWith
tho Sandhill Crane'
• ()) TICTACOOUGH
()) (H) MACNEIL-LEHRER
REPORT

and the uahers were John Cremeans,
Jim Boyer, and Dale Brickles.
In the Chappelear-Petrie wedding,
Laura Ohlinger performed the
ceremony following music provided
by Gina Welker, Jill Byers and
Deena Neece. Phyllls Davis was the
maid of honor, and the brldesmaida
were Jean Horton, Kenda Braun,
and Becky Tillis. Jeff Smith was
best man and ushers were Tony
Scott, Bob Evans, and Ed Daniels.

~ue;y-"UT

HE C.OUL.C' 8E
.. I . lli:IL..ED IF
II .
. "C'IS'TUR8el:'- .

6--1--1--1-H

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It;
AXYDLBAAXB
LONGFELLOW

II

fOI 'NIW YIIM

One leiter almply atanda for another. In thla sample A Ia ::
tiled for the tllne L'a, X for the two O's, etc. Sln1le 1eltel'l, "
apoetrophea, the len,U. and formation of the words are all ~
hlnta. latll day the code !etten al'l! dif!erent.
·'

lusiMII ~mllllantlon
Eucullvt ltcretary

ltcrttir'

'·

.••••
~
L

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•

Jr. AccfUIItlal

'""'*' Office

catP'I'OQtJOTI8

J Z·

. . . . rMNml

QP XI

IZQEZB

R D I,Z
1'-IX

'~.'~_ SZBftHBillW..
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Yfi1Wday'1 Cftp'yte: AVOID POPULARITY; IT HAS•
MANY SNARES, AND NO REAL BENEFITS.-WIWAM•
PENN
~,.

�•
.

.

I

· Weclnesclay, M•y 27, 19•1

HomeoWners should
get .house· numbers
'

.

'

area

Anyone uwlg In a rural
wbo
Roger A; Michael, Meigs County
11 Jl)annlna to, or hu JUII con- · Houle Numbering Project, also
structed a ._..- boule, jJurcbued a urges resldenll to place their niiiJ)o
mobile hllme or who hu moved into ben on their homes or llllllbol. Tbls
a home fonnerly CJI91l8ll or rented will help operatprs o1 emergency
lh9u1d contact the Meigs County 'l'u vehicles , alid utility company of.
Map Office to rtCelv, a Five Digit flclals to. locate thelr realdenees.
HOUle Number.
Michael would alao Uke to point out
Tbeae nwnben are to be used as a · that all . Incorporated . VU!ages
' · mailing addrela, · and are now (Pomeroy, Mlddl~. Syracuae,
required by the Electric Company, · Racine, l{utland) have tlwiir own
Phone Company, etc. wllen applying numbering systems. .
.
for service. The Tu Map Office 11
Anyone living in theae villages
located in the Masonic Temple on · sllould, contact their reipectlve post
Mulberry Ave. IQ Pomeroy, phone office for their complete address.

MEIGS COUNTY HEART FUND BENEn'l'""' Wbu!en alllle RC-110
Golf Toaruameatstaged Tbanday aftel'IIOOII atllle Jaymar GGif CGane
sponsored by Mr. and Mn. Fel'IIWI Moore of Royal Cron BotiiiDg Co.
were from 1be left, Paul Barnett, el01estto die piD; Jim O'Bri~ aod Bill
Nelsoa, secood place wUb Nela011 also m•kiDg tile longest drive; aod

SPONSORS TOURNAI\IENT - Mrs. Fel'lllllll Moore, pictured, aod
her bu8band, not only sponsored the golf lournameat as a Hearl Fund
benefit, but alao provided all the prizes aad beverages for the event. Sbe
Is pictured bere with the two second place wlnnen, Bill Nelson, left, and
Jim O'Brien, both of Pomeroy.

.

'

Six defendants forfeited bonds and
six others were fined in the court of
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
Tuesday night.
Forfeiting were James Searles
Colnmbus, $50 posted on a charge oi
failing to have vehicle under con·
trol; Arleff D. Casto, Robertsburg,
W. Va., $30, speeding; Glenn L.
Rice, Point Pleasant, and Brien
Rolling, Point Pleasant, $100 each on

disorderly manner cbarg\s; Brei A.
Wyatt, Pomeroy, $36, speeding;

Rick~

assault;
L. Yost, Middleport,
$50 .and costs, open flask 1ft motor

Legion sets meeti.ng

Got some free time? Slarl ·
own business. · Start
1~'!'"'"_Avon. Be your own
your own hours.
harder you work, the
more you' II earn. For
details, call 742-2354 or 742·

Modified A-frame with 3
bedroo'l'•• 2 balhs, car·
peled, stone circular
fireplace, spiral • stairs,
utility room. Private. 8
acres. 992·7741.

' ' '' " ,,_,

' '

'

Legion, baa set a meeting for 8 p.m.
on June 2 for the purpose of readihg
and new ~nstitution and by·law
amendments for approval All mem·
bers are asked to be present.

I'

•

CLASSIFIED
AD INDEX
.
eRENTAlS

IANNOUNC~MENTS

1- C.ra ol Thtnk•

41 - HOUIUiorRtl\f

l - In MtmiM'tl""

41- MoDIII Homtl
lorltut
·

J- Announc:tmenfl
4- GilltiWay
s'- HIPPYAdl
~L0111n• Founa •
1- YINI Slit
1- PuDiic SliM

Jamora, Ruth Lahaie, Hope Roush,
Miller, Heidi Montgomery, LaDonna
Pyles, Tracy Raynor, Danette and Kim Webster; Saxophones David Blevins, George Gibbs, Allen
Thomas, Mark HoUey, Paul Huff·
Icenhower,
Lisa Tawney, and Mike
man, and Dennis Jamors; Baritones
- David Blevins, Pat Casto, Brent Tawney; Trombone - Dennis
Coburn, Dan Lahaie, Lonnie San- Jam ora; Trumpets-Cornets Claire Adams, Kevin Hager, Eric
ders, David Scouten, and Mike
Keenan, Eric Thornton, and Traci
Tawney.
The school band, under the direc- Waller; Drum - Tracy Stewart.
In the Booster's Club meeting
tion of Mrs. Sue Murray, played a
following
the concert, the school
broad ranre of songs; ranging from
traditiona to the school pep song. Music Department was praised by
Booster President John .VanMeter.
The school band featured the
VanMeter commented that "the COI}o
follojing members: Clarinets cert was another ell8fllple of the ex·
Scotf Blevins and ~eff Wetherholt;
cellent overall program of the Ohio .
Flutes - Melissa Black, Marypeth
.
Valley Christian School."
·
Brewer,' Rachel Danner, Gina

Address _ _ _ _ _ _ __

By Owner 5s acre farm
with 9 room house, barn,
and minerals. Morning
2 bedroom house, large lot, Star Area. $65,000. 949·2630
full size basement. 992·7791 evenings.
weekdays afler 4.
lots &amp; Acreoge
35

41
Houses f~r Rent
Small unfurnished two
bedroom house. 6 miles
east of Chester otl SR 248 . .
985-4244.

Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding
•Insulation

•Storm Doors
•Storm Windows

Winctows
Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph. 992·2772
H ·lmo.

J&amp;R
.TRASH SERVICE
Bo:Jt 65, Portland, OH .

I
I
I
I
1
I

NEW liSTING - 49
acres more or less with
livable home. Several
buildings, farm pond,
plenty of spring water.
Minerals Included, ask·
lng 542,000.00.
RANCH HOME - Fully
carpeted, total electric,
3 bedrooms, 2 balhs,
equipped ·kitchen and
full basement wllh
woodburner. Sllling
prelly on l'h acres,
Hysell Run Road. ONLY
$.42,000.00.
GOOD BUY - L.ovely 3
bedroom Windsor home.

Centr•l air and stereo.
MICro-wave oven, fur·
niture
included .

Situaled on 1.93 acres
with dwarf orchard and
barn. only $27,600.00.
NEW liSTING - 80
acres ot · prime
farmland. ,2 callle
barns. 1 horse barn,
equipment shed, 2 milk
hous,s. Rolling spring
fed paslure. Sturdy
home built of California
Redwood . Located on
Eagle Ridge Rosd. Has
additional troller hook·
. up . Call for more
details.
COUNTRY LIVING with in·lown conve·
nlences. Lovely 2 yr. old
home with equipped
Kenmore kitchen . 7'h
acros with pond and ex·
Ira .septic sySiem and
water lap lor frller
hookup. In Rutland
Village, but private and
secluded. Sells for
$.45,000.00.
NEW liSTING Building lots. Call for
more details.
Ctteryl Lemley, Assoc.
Phone 742-3171
Velmo Niclnsky, Assoc.
Phone 742-3092

11- II'IIUrlfiCt

ss-luUIIi~tl

tt- IIIISintiiTrllnint

,._Pttl fiN' lilt

n - wuted To Do

eFINANCIAl
~~ -

61

r

·

.
eTRANIPORTATION

t4-H1';' &amp; Grah'l

,,_ s.-• l'tMIIIllr

21- Prtftsllonal
S.rvin•

•REAl ESTATE

I

•

.-

MODERN -

remove for trailer site.

Ji- H.mttl.,.llltl

J For sare
J Announ~ement
I . J For Rent

rooms

$4,000.00.
JUST OFF THE
BYPASS - Approx. 14
acres plus qld house
with well . Good home
site. 18,500.00.
NEAR REEDSVIlLE
- 2 acres and a 2
bedroom ranch home
with kitchen appliances
and woodburner. Block
garage. $24,900.00.
WE ARE PlEASED TO
SHOW THE ABOVE CALL, NOW FOR AN
APPOINTMENT.
REAlTOR
Henry E. Cltllnd, Jr.
992-6191
, ASSOCIATES
Jean Trussel94t·2660
Dottle &amp; Roter Turner

&amp;tB

n - Aitft Jt.,.lr

J4- IUiiftMI IUiNUI'Ifl

J7- INIIOr'l

•SIRVICI!S

.

N-lllfiYitlltt
tl-llktrtul

IHHIIMI
2: H P .M. DIIIJ

nN._I,_..,
twM_..r

..., ,.

11-NtfMIM...tvtrMMI
11-P"'MIMtt 6 IICI~IURt

Went-Ad Advtrtllint
'

......

M-M.H. ItHir

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....

......,.,.

.

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IHft..,. l\ltfltlt mill I~Mill II ...... II. Mlfl W

··~ ·

.

.

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I

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.

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1
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....,.,. .... -.. ..... .......... ,.c.,.!'!ht

-

MIIITtllaCouponwlthRtmiHince
T..- .... 5 tl I
.,. .,.lly • nt

' lo!c72t

worm.&lt;~ .

Meigs Humane

electric a I work

Musical
Instruments
Picking up a plano In your

l

•

•

•

'7.99 &amp; up

SHAG .

From

m.t.s

12.95 &amp; up

1

Plumbing for

sewer ltne connections,
and anv in house
changes that have to be
made. Back hoe and
doser service available .

992·2036
520·1 mo.

ALL STEEL

•

••

Farm Buildings

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Sizes

"From J()xJO"

U.S. At. 50 East
Phone 614·U2·3121

SMAll

Utility Buildings
Sizes from 4x6 to 12x40

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt. 3, Box 54

'•

Racine, Oh .

•.

Ph. 614·843·2591
6·15·tfc

lnstofltd

3406.

Bl25 Allis Chalmers Power
Unit. 8~·342lafler 5:30.

.....
.... ....
......... ."
~.

'

luy Now &amp;

1976 Ford
Elite. am·fm,
Locel
owner.
New trans.,
I track, elr·lllt. Good tires,
excellent lllepe. 12.100. 94'1·
1969 Z2t Camero. 992·3647.

·

AI II 1971 Meidl Station
Wegan. Rotary entlne. In
good llllpt. N- a lltfle
...,..,, f92·7613.

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

Guller
RemOdeling
serving Your Ar" for
20 Ytars
Roofl~l &amp;

EUGENE LONG
. Free Esllmoles
can Collect
Pit. 143-3322

s-1-2 mo. pd.

r~==~~~~=~~
&amp;niiMD
nun

ROTAVATORS

742-2211

'

'·

4 9 1 mo. pd .

H. L WHITESEL
ROOFING ·
All types of roof work,
new or repair gutters
and downspouts, gutter
cleaning and painting.
All work guaranteed.

Free Estimates
R'easonable Prices
Call Howard

L£0 MORRIS
Rl. I·Sidt Hlll.d.
Ru-,01111
PH. 741·MSI

\~

.

.

.. ...
',,J.,',..,. t/:)•,
~

\

,·

'•

Closed Thurs.

3 29 3 mo .

tHE
KOUNTRY

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

KWB

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

'·i

scout camp Ra .

Chester, Oh .
• Short game practice
• Putting &amp; Chipping
Green Open

" Beautiful, Custom
Built Garages"
Call for free siding
estimates, 949· 2801 or

*Hole-In-One

relini\hing, new grips

949·2860.
No Sunday Calls
J·ll ·tfc

lengttt change,
weight ch1nge
• Fast service

Ph. (614) 985·3961

Quality Built
Economically Prl&lt;ed

mo.

REESE BUILDINGS
Garages - Buildings
- Barns- Equipment.

J&amp;F

Sheds
POlE BUILDINGS

CONTRACTING

IS' x2D ' upto40' x100'

PORTABLE STEEl
STORAGE
BUilDINGS

e BICkhoe

• Excaviltlng

eSeptic Systen1s

(4' x16', 8'x8', 8'x10',
lO' XlO', 10' X12' &amp; Up)

eWater, Sewer&amp;

Gas lines
eDumpTruck

• Trencher
licensed &amp; Bonded

Any size built to your
specifications. Models , ·

In Meigs, Gallia and
Mason Counties.

FREE ESTIMATES
All Buildings
Guaranteed

PH. 367·7671
or 367·7560

MillER ElfCTRI
SERVICE

CHESHIRE 4·12·tfc

your preserit e lectrical
system .
Residential
&amp;Commercial

Roaches ,

Lewelll Dout Hlllllllt
OW11tn-O,...tfllrl
H~· 1

mo.

B ir ds,~

'

ROdents, Spiders, Fleas,
Ants and other small in·
sect control .
FREE ESTIMATES

Caii742· 319S
or 992·7680
H ·ttc

PH. 304-773-9521

'

TERMITE and
PEST CONTROL

For all of your wiring needs.
let George MII ler check

MECHOIC &amp;
IODYMAN .
011 DUTY DAILY-

.
' \••

Hours :

Mon .· Tues . 9·6
Weds. · Fri . 9-7

Sat. n

All Medtls Avtlllbte

'

AlHENS SPORT
CYa.ES
Stimson Ave. Athens,

H ·lfc

MASON TEXACO

trll. A..lllltl l1,7JD. flttane I...=====:5-:1:1·=ffe=~
ffl-11111ftw5.
1973 Ylllllha 1115MX Dirt
lllke. MIO. Ml-4133.

Effective 4·6·81
MON . lhru SAT.
9 to s
Closed Thursday

992·5682

HJW'-20-JOH.P.

HAW'-2HOH.P..
HEW'-4HIH.P.

MIMI CtCIII
Y1m1h1 750S.E.
11*'-1. Ooodconcl. plus ex·

NEW STORE HRS

5·2Hfc

PRODUCTS
Siding

74

322 N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

PH. 992·7l01

SUPERIOR
VINYL

1971

RIJ11AND FURNITURE. '

I·

1973 Plymouth Duster.
Slant' auto. trans., p.s.,
p.b., body rough. Good
work car. Alklng SJSO. 992·
5785 after s.

Yd. '

••v• S2-S6 Per Yard

12.•
GI'HIIIIId lrown,

needS

211().

U rolls Clrpet In stock to pick from.
IIIUIIr Ncktd, carpet lnstallld ft'lt
Wlttlllld. Good HIICtlon Roll &amp;nds !temlllntl
up. Gr111 carlltt 14,,; 'fd,

Pomer oy, Oh,

1-:==:::::;::;:;:;==:::;i
ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
New Homes · ex·

61
Farm Equipment
For Sale, International H·
tractor and 45 baler. 992·

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

* R'epair : Cleaning,

992-6215 or99H314

area, looklno for respon·

Sq.~

DriYI A Little- SIIVt A Lot

\r

'

Don't wait. Contact Ohio

Valley

BOGGS

• Pro-Golllessons
for all ages

V. C. YOUNG II

slble party to fake over
payments, ask for credit
manager for delails, call It
collect i92·5122.

19n Audl 100. 4 cylinder, 4

2 ROlli
Rubbtr ilock •

•

!Free Estimates I

57

1....1111111 . . .
IIJ.15 (111111 ,.l...,

1: mlk- 1'....- Shop
Ru...._.ol
U.IU f'U IURW _ , _

remodeling

- R'oofing and gutter
.work.
-Concrete work
- Plumbing and

'

I

94 101
No sunday Calls
H ·lmo. pd.

tfc

-Aadonsana

Society. 992·6505.

speed.

frem

CLOII TO' TOWN an Rt. loG, tills mobile I*M 111'1
IV.. I«:,... lilt Ill .n IMif'lll. HGme In llllt- CCIIIIII·
tton, carpeltd •'"' totetty fumlllled. Por GillY
S1UDO.

'I
I
I
I
1
·1.
I

IJ.If ( l'f.\

Purebred american pup·

107-lllflltllallt
lalllllllt ,.....,

lnatEJ
CARPET

---'l·t_____ !.!!!'!"!':.!'!~!?!L ____ ~wj
.t

GLENN nBISSELL

949·2862
949·2160

''YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

pies. Tan &amp; white female,
with bob tall about 5 mon·
ths old. Male brown mix
about 10 months, female
black sitter at 1 year old.
Good lempramenl. Shots &amp;

71
Autos for Sate
1969 Oot;lge Dart GTS.
Asking $2,000. Call anytime
al 949·2121.

CARP.. I SALE '

.

t.ll

t.:

~

IIAUTIFULLY LAit_DICAPID - Thil mobile
hOmtJII Wlllint tor tile llmt lOft lnd Clrl II Is UMd
to. Many IXCIIItnt fMiunt: I' IR'I, ~- BR
1.tx16'l HI-In kltcflln. covered pello, outbUilding.
mucll more.
y-. tor only U2.000. '
.

35. ; -- - - -

'1.11'

Ht •oltlt

1·1-1

Pets for Sale

S6

some work. Asking $350.
~;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 992·5715
Body
afler S.r011gh,

NIW HOMI - Rt. 554 Gallla Co. Spill enlry,
lj)ICIOUI L.R. archway Info formal D.R., kllchtn
equlflllld. 3 I .R. and 2 belfll. carpeftd throughOut,
tull bisement. Could haw extra I.R.'a or family
room. rNCiy· tor 3rd beth If needfd. Gat.,. alld
llorllle aru. Call !01' apt. l62,ooo.

;u, _ _ _ _ __

........... CIIIilllt.....

Ohio Val/8y Christian School choir

ttome, l't• balh, 3 B.R.'s,
hardWOOd 11-s,. fireplace, clean neal, and ready
tor 'YGU to move Info. Many extras. 1091o Mort. can be
IllUmed. Alkllllll3,5,9110.

4-00K AT THII- lrld

31.__,_,_....;.--'--32
....:''_
- '_
- -_
--_33.._
_

Altt nHMIIAfMt'ler Hllft C.WIIYflfltiiYI ............ ., . . · ~

I

27.=~===

11-u.-..twv

......,,.

19.- - - - - - - 1

21.
29. _ _ _..;...._..:,_
30. _ _ _ _ __

I._...,II MIWUfll

Ritts ltld Otlltr ~nf~rm•tiOfl

i:~:~Tnc:.. =~

bath, modern kitchen
I
Hollo Qlll1ltlc
and large lot for S3S,OOO.
. NEAT - Retirement
Qllll
home of 7 rms., high and
130-S....FIItl SI•J&amp;.!I&amp;
' dry. Nice carpeting, din·
12ttictl 'rl Elllr Jlllllsn
lng, sleP"nver kitchen,
I~ hll:t:al Q1itt1
nat. gas forced air fur·
12f.l'111tftr
naco, 3 bedrooms with . 121.,..
Slitdfts
closets. Asi&lt;lng 127,500.
IIHnallllllll
S..
SPRINGTIME
15.
117-r.t Ifill I 1 11111
CLEANING, PAIN·
IIU.IIk.,_
TING AND MOVING
ll2.Pillt .......
TIME. LIST YOUR
It!., ...... CNdtll
SELLING AND FINAN·
CING PROBlEMS 11.. 1, llllr ....
1..1..........
WITH US.

HrJI/\'illC/

22.
--:---:----23, _
_ _ _ __
24. _.....;;..__ __
25. _ _ _ _ __
26._ _ _ _ __

U- LtltiAcr""
,._.HIIttlftWIIIttf

Formica

Septi&lt; Tanks
county Cerlifiect
Roush lane
Cheshire, Oh.
Ph. 367-7560

SHOP TODAY

ed air furnace and lar.ge

front porch. $37,500.
C.leb~ale baby's birth with
NEW liSTING - Buy
happy
quill ol party·ROing pels!
this one, paint then
lhe easiest of embroidery
resell . 1 rooms. plain
stitches eteate these charming
kitchen, electric
sketches. Emb•oider 7'1&gt;' ' blocks.
baseboard .heat with
then jilin into 34')45" crib
cool furnace, fully In·
c.,.r. Pattern 7495: t1ansfer
sulated, st. drs . &amp;
wdws., fu II basement, of 9 motils; easy directions.
large porch, garage and
$2.00 lor each pattern. Add
5 lots. Just $12,000.
501 e~eh pattern lor PGSIIC•
FAMilY HOME - 4 1nd handline. S11d le:
bedrooms, 2 ~ub baths,
1111111
carpeting, full base· Allee
•
.._,.
Dtpt..
:. 47
men!, nal. gas forced
The Daily Sentinel
air furnace with w.ood·
burner attached. Front
. . 163, ON C111bu 511., I•
and back porches, cop·
J... IY IOlll. ,riel · per plumbing and level
AMw, ZJ,, ,attn .......
lol 144x220 . Asking
Cltch oo to the crah boom! SetHI
$75,000. .
f01 our NEW 1981 NEEOLECRAFT
NEW LISTING- Nlce3
CATALOG
. . 0.... 172 desi1ns. 3
bedroom home In
free patterns inside. SI.OO
Po~~;~eroy .
Has large
AU CUff IOOIS. .$.1.00 11C11
porches and a.J..rec.
rbom~ ·· f'otaf elec. on . UW.IHCI= a.25t
Ohio Power. Nice

OFFICE 992-:IISt

Water-Sewer· Electric
Gas line-Ditches
Water line Hook-ups

ROSE BUSHES.

closets,

bath, nice kitchen,
dishwasher. stove. tun
basement, nat. gas fore·

992-5692

17.- - - - - - . : . 1
18.
I

----21. - - - - - ' - - : -

•

&amp;ACCHIOI'IH

U- farms ftr Slit

with

Ill...,

20,1

''rtt

fOr hit

HAS AWIDE
SELECTION OF

bed·

~

TRENatiNG
SERVICE

LANDMARK

Phone
1·(614)·992·3325
-

I

J Wanted

I
1

JI-AIItftt 1tr ....
7J-VIfti&amp;4W. D.
74-MIItwc,c:lel
1f- ~wtt

Jt- MoiHit-Homtt

-w:~~Fil.)B.IISRII).~I~I
I ~16
'

These cash ra!es
Include dlscoun!

12-Truclutor 1111

to $1SOO

$1211

GARAGE

REESE~

POMEROY

E. Second Street

63-Linstoctc

11- Moner to LMn

Two month spring special
tor upholslerlng furniture.
Richard Mowery, Sr .
Owner. 675-4154.

c..- """'

12--Winttlll tl lvr

IUIIn•U 1
op,.,.tt~nlly ·

SILVER &amp; GOLD
COINS

ROGER HYSEll'S BAILErS SHOES

12 Park St.
Middleport, Oh.
Ph. 992·6263
. Anytime
H ·lmo.

Headquarter:.

SuJIIflts

_,.,,.. • .,,,....,_,

RACJNE·SYRACUSE
AREA
RESIDENTS

New Holland, Bush Hog

KAUFPS
PLUMBING
AND
HEATING

Misc. Merchanise

ousing

home, completely fur·

nlshed, 3 car garage,
basement, gas heat.
$33,000.00.
· HUNTING ACREAGE
- Forked Run .- Ap·
prox. 13 acres of
V(oodland1 great camp·
lng area. close . to
boating and fishing .
$8,000.00.
IN TOWN - Small
house on • city lots.
House needs work or

e FARM SUPPliES
&amp;liVESTOCK

RHia, TY
I Cl Rtptir

992·2174

.- Apt. HOUitOvnters

Harrison

Household Goods
· piece twin maple
bedroom suile. $200.00 882·
3168.

Reel Elllft- General

tt-Scttooll Instruction
,.,_

;.

...

Ph. •

Pomerov, OH .

"" Rtnlll ProptriiU

farm equipment dealer .

~

1968 12x40 Community
MObile Home. Good cond.,
partially furnished, ' like
new carpet. 1 bedroom.
$.4,000. 985-4133.

CENTRAL REALTY

1 MERCHANDISE
Jl-HMMho1410tMI
12 - CI , TV, l_.lo llllulplfttnt
SJ- Atiii..UH
Jt- MIIC. Mtn:hlndl•a

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS INC.

" SjMCIII R1t" For" ·
...-Coin L•undrles

Serving the following
townships : lebanon ,
Sutton, letart, Olive,
Orange, Sal isbury, Bed·
ford, Chester, Salem,
Scipio, Rutland and

51
POMEROY,!).
992·2259
NICE HOME IN TUP·
PERS PlAINS Ranch with 3 bedrooms,
carpet, patio, storage
building, In good loca·
lion, on a level 34 acre
lot. $32,500.00.
RACINE - 2 bedroom

carpeting,

tl ~Htap Wtrlltcl
11- SilulfiiCI Wlnled

I HOI WAftr T1nks

Ph.143-49ll

S5.11C Monthly

•••
,,L- ....
...' .
'
'

41-14!UiiM'\tftf ltr Rlftt

•EMP'L.OYMENT
SERVICES

.'

NATHAN BIGGS
ExPerience

35 Yrs.

ReP.IrintSinct IUJ

Author ized John Deere,

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

Office 742·2003
GeorgeS. Hobsteller Jr.

&amp;AIICtion

t-W1nted to Buy

eDrytrs

For Silver Dollars

• Aeplacement

3 bedroom house. $180.00
month, $100 deposll. 7~2·
2126.
.

.HOBSTETTER REALTY

•

It tnt
H - WirrtH Ia hfll

Radiator Specialist

• Dispos•ls
t Dishw1shen

BUYING

INSULATION

Situations wanted
Will care for the elderly In Six room house, .basement, For sale by owner. 2 acre
4
Glvoowoy
our 'home. HBve vac~ncy . garage. 1.2 acres. Rose building site near Tuppers
Hill. Upper forties. 614-678·
5 klnens. '185·3301 days or Men &amp; women. If In· 2513.
Plains. 667·3484.
2 bedroom
terested
call
992·7314.
667·:U93 afler 5.
basement, garage. No
children or pets. Deposit
Repair or remodeling House In Chester. 7 rooms,
and lease required. $225
6
Losllnd Found
work, flooring, doors, wall balh. Clayton $chartlger.
per month. 614·678·2513.
Can be seen till Friday
Found:black puppy with paneling, ceiling, 'or floor evening.
41
Houses for Rent
while paws and while lip on tile, siding. 992·275'1.
44
Apartment
tall. 949·2704.
2 bedroom house In Mid·
for Rent
Room, board, laundry tor 32
Mobile Homos
dleport. 992 .2131 between 8
for Sale
Wilt the party who found elderly. Reasonable. 992·
a.m. &amp; 6 p.m.
Furnished 2 bedroom UjimY billfold, lost In the 6022.
New 3 bedroom all electric 1 ,;;:;;:;;:;;:;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;~ stairs apartmenl. Adults
Tomelson Run area, please
double ' wide, furnished . I'"
only, no pets. Middleport.
keep the S40. ·550. that was Will do roofs, good rates, One and one half acres· of
992·387~ . '
In It and mall !he Olher con· free esllmales. Call after 5 land. $32,500.00. 992·2571.
;:;==~====~===
Ienis lome al Box 274 New at992·5825.
t5
Furnished Rooms
H'aven or call 882-2881 and
1975 12 x 60 cameron
I' II pic~ II up. Thank you.
Special Designer mobile
Real Eslate- General
home. 992·3523 or 992·6624.

U - A,Ir1flltlllltr RfiU .

•~F•~•
,._,,.ct..,.

..."""'

.WAStltrt

,;

Real Estate- General

Curb Inflation.
Pay Cash for
Classlfleds and
·Savell I

PHONE 992-2156

ALL MAKES

ft~:::::;::::::::~t;:::•M:•:":"~H=om~,~~='~"::::~~==========~5·~7-~tf~C~ .:

arty pets!

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

WANT AD INFORMATION

..

Largest Radiator ·

PARTS AND SERVICE

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

p

0 11 1 1 1

1

1

..

SERVICE
From the Smalle•l
Heater Core to the

house,~========~~==~~========~~~~~;:::::::::::::::~

vehicle and~ an~ ?OSts an~ thr.ee t-:=::;;,;;,=;;;;.=::-r==;;;;;;~=:r==~~;;:;;~==-1-==:::::::::===day~ In jail, drivmg while . m- 1
toxiCaled ; Emmett Bostick,
Public Notice
Public Notice
. Public Notice
Public;,Nollce
Galli~lls, $'15 and costs, reckless
coM~No1H/lEAS
·~n~~~~~·~P.~~ ·~~~~! answer or otherwise be scheduled by the court.
operation; James V. Hockman,
COURT OF
counly, Pom~y. Ohlo45769 . re~nd asrequlred bt'he ·
Larry Spencer.
0
01
1
Cheshire, $50 and costs: ~Dssto~d
MEIG~~?JlNTY,
plrl~~ ~b/fiit0b"ta ~%gc~m~ hPe~aor~len,g~ornu~fehslstmhe . er'lw~a i
of ,S~~~ ~.;,'i:ly~
of an open beer contamer; avt liNDA BEliVEAU,
divorce and !he ter · be held after !he expiration
Ohoo
Ma.nley, Mi.ddleport,, $50 and costs, ·vs- Plaintiff,
mlnatlon Of a marriage of 28 days alter the last day 1•J 22 29 151 6 13 20 27
fatIure to yteld thenghi of way
contract
the Par·
• ' '
• • • •
MICHEL BEliVEAU
lies and between
fhe sell Iemen'!
ol of PU bll ca tl on of lh is notice 6tc
Detenaant.
the r.roperty rights of the or as soon thereafter as can
No. 17,717 paries.
NOTICE BY
y ou are required to an·
PUBliCATION
TO : Ml&lt;hel Beliveau, swer !he complaint within
28 days after !he last
.
whose address Is unk1111wn: publication of this notice,
You ·are hereby notified which wi 11 be published on·
NACD sponsors Soil Stewardship
clothe, and shelter more people with that you have been named
h
k
a
defendant
in a legal ac· &lt;e eac wee 1or six sue·
Week in cooperation with the
fewer resources than ever before. tlon entitled Ulnda cesslve WHits. The last
nation's 3,000 soil and water con· Some of the factors are ur· Beliveau. Pia inti fib vs. publication will be made on
Michel &amp;eliveaUI efen· May 27, 1981, and !he 28
servation districts.
banization, aad loss of prime far· dant. This action has been days for an•wer will com·
· use o1 assivned 9se . No. 17,887 menceon
date.
mlan d, management and wtse
"With our own population at 220
In case that
of vour fo ilttr,. tn
million and growing and with many
available water supply in the face of lr---------.!....------- ..
regions of the world depending on
rising demand, and a need for con'
the United States to supplement - servation of other renewable resour·
'
their food supply, the need to main·
ces.
lain our productive capacity
Soil Stewardship Week is observed
becomes increasingly apparent,"
so people can take time to become
according to NACD.
more aware of· natural resources
· Write your own ad and order ~Y mail With tnls
This year's event focuses on
and be more thoughtful of their con·
or Write Daily Sentin~l c ·lassified Dept.
coupon. Cancel your ad by phone w .en you get 1
"Society's Pressure Points." Man's
tinuing impoi1ance and preser·
lll ·Court St., Pomeroyo, 0., 45769 .
resul)s. Money not refundable.
1
main pressure is to produce more
vation. Planning for the future is as
I
and more food and fiber to feed,
important as planning for today.
John Manley, Middleport, $25,
squealing tires.
Fined were Perry R. Hill Mid·
dleport, $225 and costs,' and
three days in jail, driving
while intoxicated; Mickey Hut·
ton, Point Pleasant, $50 and costs,
disorderly, and 0 100 and costs,
'

- Call ken Young

J&amp;L BLOWN

Nallonal shopping service
seeking , area represen·
tallv~ part lime, work,
Irregular basis. Varied, In·
terestlng comparison shop·
ping. No Investment. 1n·
elude phOne number with
response. Shop•n Check,
Box 28175, Allanta, Ga.
30328. Allenllon Barbara.

..

'''""u

APPLIANCE SERVICE

SANITATION
SERVICE

2755.

The Meigs Counly
Museum, 144 Bullernut
Avenue, Pomeroy will hold
open hours ori May 23, 24,
and 25 and May 30 and 31
from 2·4. ·
12

Drew Webster Post 39, American

.Small investment, large
·_·
·
.·
.r eturns' Sentinel want Ads

0 V Christian School presents concert
The Ohio VaUey Christian School
Choir and Band recently presented
its annual Spring Concert as part of
the school Booster's Club program.
The choir, under the direction of
1\jrs. Barbara Stewart, delivered a
program of patriotic and spiritual
songs featuring solos by LaDonna
Pyles, Dan Lahaie, and a duet by
Valerie Miller and Mercy Valencia.
Members of the choir include :
Sopranos - Michelle Beaver, Nina
ljush, Gail Jones, Sherry Jones,
((beryl Taylor, Grace Valencia,
Mercy Valencia, and Kim Webster;
Altos - Susan Archer, Trends
Crawford, Amy Davis, Valerie

31
· Homeifor Sole
Brick . home on wooded
acre. Three bedrooms,
fireplace, unique family
room-, finished double
garage, · deck. Upper·
sixties. 992·5420.

Broker

Soil stewardship week set
POMEROY - Soil Stewardship
W!!"k will be held nationwide this
year May 24-31, according to Rex
Shenefield, Cllairman of the Meigs
Soil and Water Conservation
District.
Since 1955. Soil Stewardship Week
has been recognized in millions of
c~urches and schools across the
nation. It is designed to focus on the
nation's natural resource problems
and to consider ways to solve them .
"This country must, at whatever
cost, maintain the capacity of the
land to produce food and fiber,"
cites the National Association of
Conservation Distri cts fNACD ).

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

Announcements
Ground Hog ConieS!. First
prize: $500.00 cash. Trl·
County Sport Shop, Pt.
Pleasant. Slop In for
details. 1·304-675-2988. · '

A Bedford Township Scholarship
Fund bas been established with the
first scholarships, one on academic
perfonnance and the other on financial need, to be awarded Ibis spring.
Attend re.cenl session Four emergency runs
The fund was established with the
Four emergency calls were an$20,000 received from the sale of,the
Members of the Pomeroy Volun- awered by local units Tuesday, the
former Bedford Youth Center and leer Fire DePartment have attended Meigs Emergency Medical Services
· only the in~rest will be used each two oOUt-of-i:OUilty lralnlng sessions · reports.
year.
Only graduating seniors recently.
At 11:19 a.m., the Middleport Unit
residing in Bedford Township for at
On May 17, Ollef Charles Legar, took Joe Ro\vley from a Middleport
least three years prior to graduation Tom Werry, Jim Sl89on and Gary restaurant to the office of Dr. James
will be considered for the scholar- Snouffer were in Middletown where Conde and the same Unit at4:53 a.m.
ships.
· they attended a bazart\ous niaterial took Emma Wayland from her home
The scholarship program is being seminar. On May 24 a group at· on N. Secoild Ave:, to Veterans
administered by James Diehl, Meigs tended an t.Ji'. gasscbool at Athens. Memorial Hospital. The Pomeroy
High School principal, John 'I'hoae. representing the department Unli at 3:09 p.m. took WIIUam King
Redovian, guidance counselor, Rick at the latter ·event were Randy fl'lllll Ball RUR Road to Veterans
Crow, county prosecutor, John Rice, Murray, Greg Tbomaa, Mark Boyd, Memorial Hospital and at 6:15p.m.
Meigs County extension agent, and Rick. Blaettnat, Jamie. Ash, Allen the Rutland Unit took Reginla Smith
John Karschnik, the student loan of, Seth, Gary Snouffer, Bill Miller.and from Salem Center to Veterans
ficer at the Fanners Bank.
Steve Hartenbach.
Memorial.

~ases

27, 28, 29, 3tc
_,.,

.

Clean-up week In Pomeroy has
beell set to begin on June 1. Trash
must be al the curbings and in trash
bligs to be picked up by Village
workers. The .schedule Includes:
June I, first ward; June 2, second
ward; June 3, third ward, and June
4, fourth warll.

fund established

Mayor terminates 12

15)

' '

Help W1nted
$185.00 to $500 weekly doing
mailing work. No ex·
perlence requlr~ . . AP·
PlY: Circle Sales, P.O.
Box ·224·D, Richmond Hill,
NY 11418.
11

Meigs County·happenings

Bedford scholarship

Mlcb. on Tuesday. ~tes took-over pari of the prison
and burned several bulldlngs Including the prison
scboolduring the rioting. (APLaserphoto).

'

3

. Clean.up week set

PRISON CONFRONTATION - Inmates armed
with clubs confront a woman prison guard armed with
a shotgun at Southern Michigan Prison In Jackson,

•••w•-. ~'

992-2904.

BlaJne aad Boyd CoraeU, flnl place.

J&amp;C

.. ·----. ....

tCHt This •• fer Future

1 or 5 yur termite

gu•rantee

Located in Gallipolis
Ph. 614-444·2101
3·27·I mo.
71

Camplnt
EqYipmtnt

1

Cleon 1976 travel
men!. 20 fool mini
home. Chevy chiUII.
of ...0 Grant Street, M
dleporl. 992·317~.

.

..,
'

'

lxcavall,.
, ·~
••
DOZER work. Small lallli
lptCialtv. 742-2753.
••

13

�Pase-:-12-The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday. tM'y '¥1, i,.1

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Area.deaths

JFour

people hurt in Tuesday wi-~cks ,

Four people were iDjlll'ed in traffic . e d .
Hls vehicle. then C1'll8bed into a
·
·
accldenta investigated by the GalllaThe report aald an auto driven by sign, a power pole and a parked
Harry A. Manh, 94, Cynthiana, Meigs Poat ot the Ohio Highway Steven R. Betz, 33, Rt. 1, GlllllpolliJ, · vehicle owned by Edward J. Klilc,
Ky., father of Mrs. Gay Perrin, well Patrol Tueaday.
was .uuthbound. on SR 7 in Gllllla 40, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, the report aald.
Thepatrolaaidavehicledrlvenby Countyat8:40p.m.whenbelostcon- · Cottrill's vehicle wu severely
known Pomeroy resident, died
Tuesday at Cynthiana.
Paul deLamer8na, ~. Rt. 2, Vinton, tro1 on a curve, went off the right damaged and the King auto was
moderately dmnaged. Cottrill Wllll
Preceded in death by hiB wife, was eaatbuunll on SR 564 in Gllllla sldeoftheroadandoVerturned.
Laura, about one year ago, Mr. Mar-. County at 10:40 a.m. when an
The car was demolished and Betz injlll"\ld, but not treated, and cited
sh is survived by a son, Jack, and Wlknown westbound vehicle went was treated at the scene by the fur OWl.
five other daughters, Mrs. Margaret left of center.
Gllllla EMS. ·
The patrol investigated one minor
Smith, Mrs. Virginia lien, Mrs,
The deLamerena vehicle then
The patrol went to Meigs County tw'o-car cruh In Gallla Collnty !ate
Emily WilcOx, Mrs. Joy Rlce lind went off the right side of the road, hit late Tuesday nlgbtto investigate the Tuesday afternoon.
Faith Marsh, 23 ghmdchildren and an embankment and.overturned, the third Injury accident.
The report sald a vehicle driven by
13 great-grandchildren.
report sald. h
··
~rding to the report, a vehicle Tammy IJ, Angell, 19, 1\t, 2, Crown ·.
Funeral services will be beld
Both deLamerens and a driven by Roger Cottrtll, 22, Rt. 1, Clty,stuppedatastopsignonSR180
Friday morning at Cynthiana.
paaaenger, Do~ P. del.amerens, · RuUand, was .uuthbound on SR 684 at 5:05p.m. and then backed Into a
19, Rl 2, Vinton, were injured, but at 11:20 p.m. wben be went off the vehicle driven by Arthur Ritter, 37,
not treated. Hls vehicle was severely right side of the road.
Rt. ~. Bidwell.
HOSPITAL 1\EWS

Harry A. Marsh

Eugene F. Eskew

Eugene (Gene) Franklin Eskew,
48, Pomeroy, fatally injured in an
accident Tuesday in Hocking County
was preceded in death by hiB parents, John William and Roxie Lee
Myers Eskew; an infant daughter,
Joyce Eskew, and a stepdaughter,
Shawnetta Faulkner.
· Surviving are hiB wife, Margaret
Kinch Eskew; a son and daughter·
in-law, Carl Al!drew and Rose Mary
Eskew of Charleston, S. C.; three
daughters, Carolyn Jean Marie
·Eskew, St. Augustine, Fla.;
Margaret Ann Eskew, Philippine
Islands; Mary Elizabeth Eskew,
Homestead, Fla.; six stepdaughters, Crystal Darlene Rich,
mond, Rutland; Charlene Lavina Veterans Memonal
Jorgensen, Wichita, Kansas ; Admitt~Ross Kent Addison·
Mel~e Dawn Forbes, Pome~oy; Emma Wayland, Middleport;
Jen Sue Matson, Langsv11le ; James Harris Gallipolis· Shirley
Beverly Ellen VO!jS, Peebles; Ell ora . Harmon Midctleport· Marr Searles
~e Faulkner, ~t home; his lathe; Cbeshi~· Otlllia Ro:rune Rutland: .
lll-law, Fred Kinch, Pomeroy; siX
'
.
'
'
granddaughters and three gran- Clare~ce Hanmng, Albany; Gladys
dsons. Also surviving are slx sisters, Blackwood, Pomeroy; Bertha OutGladys Frye, Pomeroy; Eileen Hat- to?, Pomeroy; Rebecca Amberger,
field, Rutland; Mildred Withee, Mmersv11le.
.
Pomeroy; Leona Webster, Dayton;
Discharged-Opal Barr, Edith
Margaret Andrews, Pomeroy; Burton, Albert Jesse, Emma
Maxine Marcinko, Tuppers Plains; Wayland.
three brothers, Charles Eskew,
Pomeroy, William and Dwayne Free clothing day
Eskew, both of Dayton, and several
nieces and nephews.
Mr. Eskew served with the U. S.
Marines during the Korean Conflict
and he was a member of the
National Rifle Association.
The Ewing Funeral Home is in
charge of arrangements.

•

Angell. .then' ~ left ~
scene.
. wu IRiffered
lllptJy
dlnJa8edHerllldvehicle
lUtter'•
moderate &lt;Wnage• .\JICell ,.. cited
for lea"'"" the scene of an accident.

j

Vot;IO,No.30

Albany; Jeffery Carl Saunden, 18,
Rt. 1, 1..008 Bottom, llld Uu Ann
Wlllon; 18, lit. 3, Pomeroy.

J

.

ay((ee8

will meet

I

614/992~2133

MelgsCountyJayceeswlllmeetat
a p.m. Sunday at the Pomeroy.
meeting room.
I

OFF

lor Father's Day
'
' .
BURNED SAILORS - Oae of four burDed ..Oors .ntvell at
· Brvob Aimy Medle.J Ceater at Fort~ H. .wa for trealmelrt of fD.
jarlel received Ill aa a~t aboard tile VSS Nlmlll. (AI'~
plloto)
.

PICKLE &amp;PIMENTO LOAF..Lb: .~l.97
Eckrich

OLD FASHION LOAf ..............~.~·-·$1.97
Homemade

HAM SALAD.............................~-~~.5 1.39
lib. Parkay

New Green

1.99 CABBAGE............. ~~: .19'

1

·

60Z.Red

CHEESE.. ..... -.... ~.b: . 12.29

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

3 Dozen Small Pack

16 oz. Cello Pack

ar

ria.

earner

One adult, six juveniles
arrested in hike incident

•
·~·

CASH &amp; CARRY

Officials expect ~emwus peace
WASHJNGTON - U.S. offlciala are emphasizing they expect a
tenuous peace lletween Israel and Syria to hofd wliue President
Reagan's special Mideast envoy is in Wuhlngton plottinc the nest
move in U.S. efforts to defuse lensions between the two countries.
Pirt of the stral!lgy in temporarily recalling Philip Habib appears to
be designed to give Sauili Arabia ~t least a temporary free hand to
negf,ltlate a .uluUun.
·
Habib llp8nt Wednesday night in Paris and was due In Washington

WHERE: WAYSIDE FURNITURE
241 JHIRD _
AVE., New·Location
WHY: REMODEL UPSTAIRS
TIME: 2 PM TO 10 PM

Amtrak expects compromise

DATE: THURSDAY, MAY 28, 1981

Cardinal Wyszyn,ki dies

thill'evening.

WARSAW, Poland - Cardinal Stefan Wyszynski; leader of . the
Roman Cathollc Church in Polaild during more than 30 years at eom1111111iat rule llld mentor of Pollsh-bom Pope John Paul II, died bere
today, a church sp0ke11111811 aald. Wyszynski was '19 and had been ill fur
about lllx weeks.
Wyilynlkl, who was suffering what church officials call.ed a
"gutric alllnenl," died at his realdence here at 4:30a.m. -10:30 p.m.
EDTWednelday- the church spokesman said. ·

STOCK OF LIVING ROOM,
DINING
ROOM AND BEDROOM
.
'
FURNITURE AT 1h PRICE.. WE MUST MAKE ROOM TO
•
REMODEL
OUR
UPSTAIRS.
•

Pontiff progressing slowly .
ROME - Pope John Paul II's recovery from gunshot wounds is
to the Vatican
this Week, his doctors aald tnday
"The generaf. condition of the Holy Father Is progreuing, but
slowly·" aald the first medical bulletin l88ued since Saturday. "It is
noted
there are some signs of tiring !II the course of the acllvity
that 11e hu .wted and maintained. It hu been decided, therefore, to
continue oblei'Vation of the paUent in the hoapltal."
·
~slowly, and he Will not beallowf!! to return
0

!hat

•

ALL PURCHASES ARE CASH &amp; CARRY

CULVER CITY, c8lif. :_A contingent~ H91lywood'a old guard, in. chtdlng Red BuUons, George BurN. Janiel ~and Milton Berle.
bid an lllectlonate farewell WedMM!ay to the lite George J - ' at"
funerallervice lttended by some 300 rnounser..
J-.1; who Karted out.aa a 11011g4fld.dance man more t11u 70 f'lln
180 IIIII iltaJT8d on Broadway In the - . veniGn of "'l'lw Jm
Slnpr," beclme 10 popnler U I spNbr Ill the l'1llllteM:Nc:b drcul
that former Pnlldellt Barry Truman nidmamed 1M! "Toutmuler
Generl1 of tbe United states."
'

ALL PURCHASES HAVE tO BE PICKED UP BEFORE JUNE 1
WE WILL MAKE DELIVERY AT AN EXTRA CHARGE

VIENNA SAUSAGE ................ 2f'1.19
2 lb. Smuckers

GRAPE JELLY.. .~ .................... ~.~~...Sl.49
40 oz. Showboat

PORK-N-BEANS ..........................~. 99•
16 oz. Lucky Leaf

APPLE SAUCE ........................... 2/994
20 oz. Del Monte

CRUSHED PINEAP·PLE......... :~~ .. 7'1
i

6 Roll Pack CharmilJ.

TOILET TISSUE. ................... !-~!: ..51.89

WAYSIDE. FURNITURE
•

NEW LOCATION •••

II . . l..!.J_x_----+i
Milstead

Blkti'Y

.

~

0

'

si

'

'

0

JJibanlllgOhio lottery number '

46 oz: Del Monte

PINEAPPLE JUIC£ ..,...........~~.~ .. ~1.29

,_at

•

Third Ave.

§~P!"'dAve.

TUW, &lt;*Ia. - ~Wheeler, tha ~ cblirmlll Olf*l
Olrp., bad jlllt flnilhel! a nund of golf at an eldualn ..-w., dab
anc1 ... ....._ .. hilau when 11011110111 shot~ 1n 111e
dale .
, l'illllt, ~lllln, Ol"c'* IIY· .
·' l'tll,....n, wllo pilllat llid wielded a lOIIf'bamled, llri....Uber
......., ~lttd 11&amp;11 1 111r OCI.'IZpilll by alleUI • dlblr a. aad
........ Iiiii PallalltL ...., 01'1111.
0

~~ ~ :g·-~-----ti

~

Millionaire shot to 4eath

0

•

241 THIRD A VENUE
f G&amp;J 1
LAII1ILJ

..

~------

-

Jeaaette

Freemaa, 11, daugbter of LIDda
Free111111, ZU · Ulllon Ave.,
PCIIIlmiY, lw been mluiJIItbtce
Muday, accordlq to ber
...... Iiiii _ . . -at tile
• - - ... tile ••• f) Clllll

AjMibbllla · ud ~ · 1llepdly
plebd liP Ia 1 car. Slit lllllllrt
bllr, bllle eyes, weiPa betwftll
Dill poaada ud H. Slit weariDI bllle jeaM aad I BPI
eeiGred tap. .0,0. uy ....
formiallal • tile mlnlle lfrl II
aUed .. cllllllrry LJ-. pollee
cblef, at IIJ.Za7 er tbe allerlfl's
deplrimetlt at IINI'Il.

Paul E. Wllaon, 19, Racine,
arrested on May 14, for stealing
gasoline from a bus owned by
Southern Local School District has
been sentenced by Common Pleas
Judge John C. Bacon to serve a term
of not more than six months to flve
years ln a proper state penal institution.
·
WUson appeared earlier, following
the May 14, Incident, before Judge
Bacon on a bill of information
charging grand theft due to the fact
that be had a prior theft conviction.
At that time sentencing was
de(erred.
\TiliOII had been -leneed earlier
thls year on a charge of
unauthorized uae of a motor vehicle.
He was sentenced to a term of slx
months to five yean but was given
shock probation after serving 30
days in a state lnsUtution.
wu.on is alated •to be transported
to the Reception Center, Columbus,
by sheriff deputies.
Charges against m juveniles and
one 11 year old will be filed as a

result of an incident at Ree$ville,
recently the sheriff's department
reported.
According to the report, two
bicycles owned by Lowell Chevalier,
Reedsville were stolen. They were
located last weekend hanging on the
sign at the main entrance to Reedsville Locks and Dam.
ln other activity, investigated by
the Meigs County sheriffs department, tires on a car owned by Mrs.
Marvin Reed were flattened while
parked at Sugar Camp and boats
owned by Maurice Reed and Alvin
Reed were set adrift at Sugar Camp
Dock.
The Alvin Reed boat was caught in
the roUers at the dam, while the
other craft was caught In the lock
chamber and recovered by lock employes. The i~cident is stu! under investigation.
Three Racine RD youths has been
charged In Meigs County Juvenile
Court with the theft of radiators
from the Tom Holter farm at Morning Star. The radiators were taken

within the last two months.
Tbe youths were released to the
custody of their parents pending a
hearing the juvenile court.
The department investigated an
accident that occurred Wednesday
atl2: 55 a.m.
David Powell, 37, Rt. 1, Racine,
was traveling south on county road
28 when be fell asleep. Tbe car went
off the road on the left into the garden of Tom Wolfe, Rt. I, Long Bottum. There were no injuries and no
citation was issued.

Emergency runs
Thr.ee emergency calls were answered by local units Wednesday,
the Meigs County Emergency
Medicai Service.reports.
At 1:51 ·P·!'I·· the Racine Unit took
Jason Crabtree to Holzer Medial
Center; at 7:15p.m., the Middleport
Unit took Gary Hart to Veterans
Memorial Hospital, and at 10:09
p.m., tbe Syracuse Unit took Inez
Nash to Aolzer Medical Center.

Negotiators optimistic about settlement
...

On Tuesday, Church and hiB threeWASHINGTON (API- Union and . UMW Presl~t Sam Church, in the issue that had proved most difan effusive mood, said an accord ficult up until Tueroay - the member union negotiating team torIndustry ~~e~~otiators, freall from
their lonceat ~op bargalnlng could be reached today if the two question of unionized coal com- ned down a contract package from
session in recent weeks, are finally sides resolved their remaining dif- panies subcontracting work to out- the industry corrunittee.
making optlmiltic soundl about ferences, which be suggested were side, non-union personnel.
Church said he was giving the inreaching an agreement that could minor.
The chief industry negotiator, dustry representatives 24 hours to
"We made a lot ri progress," Bobby R. Brown, is reserved by come up with a package that union
settle the 2-monfb.old COlli sbike.
Nearly lllx hours after ~ Church told reporters after :Wed- nature and has been reticient about leaders and JliO,tnl rank-and-file
tatives at the United Mine Workers llelday's lung session. "We've still talking with reporters during the miners could accept. If that didn't
'and ~ Bltum)nous Coli Operators got some unresolved problems but contract talks.
happen, he said, the union's
.\IIOclaUon went behind closed I'm optimistic. I feel much better
Hls reacUons to questions Wed- bargaining council, kept on standby
docin ln a downtown hotel suite Wed- than I have In quite some Ume."
nesday was decidedly different. here since last Friday, would be sent
One day earlier, Church had in- "We're making progress," be said . home.
111!4daY, both sides emerged with updicated agreement was reached on 11 l'm not pessimistic."
beat repotta.
Church's 39-member ba~gaining
The industry's , latest proposal
council was scbeduled to meet after came in the form ri a package
today's negotiations.
responding to demands made by the
The BCOA, tbe industry union after rejection by Its rank and
by the Department of Houslrig and bargaining group representing 130 file of an earlier tentative accord.
Middleporl Mayor Fred Hoffman
Urban
Development.
announced today be hu received
member coal companies and some . Besides the "work standards" job
Resident. are advtaed that the full B others, had faced a threat by security provision - limiting the ex·
notlfleaUon that the vllllge'• apo
pllcaUon far Flleal Year 11111 CCIII- application Is available lor review at Church to break off the talks il tent to which unionized coal communlty Develupment Blacll Grant. tha mayor's amce Monday through management failed to Improve i&gt;s panies can hire outslde, non-union
Small Cities Prosnm runda hu Frldaybetweeuh.m. and4 p.m.
contract offer.
labor for certain work at mine sites
been aftlclaUy ICI.'epted far review

HUD will·review application

Jessel gioon last farewell ·

VIENNA BARBECUE ..................'1.39
5 oz. Armour

MISSING

·

WASHINGTON- Amtrak ~t Alan S. Boyd says he espects i
CGIIjp
~-· budcet c:ilmprlniM to Jll'IIYI\Ie the .,..... rallnlad
. . . • • .,. IIIGI1Iy to ~ ojleratlnc at leallt of Ill klntdlllanee lriiDL
He told Amtrak's board of directors Wem-lay he Is opllmiltic
beclue of 1J111r0Y81 by the House Energy and Cormnerce Committee
at li fill qllllloniiJIPI'Oprlatlon for the railroad in filcal 1882, which
belinl Oct. I.
.
,
.
'l'lw lllure 'Ia $112 mllUon more than propoaed by the Reapn adrninlltralkllllld upected to be autburiied by the Senate,

FOR 8 HOURS ONLY WE WILL SELL OUR ENTIRE

CARROTS •••••••••• ~~~·••. zt

10 oz. Beef

!'

Racine man gets prison term

'

Eckrich

.

tod&amp;r

..

.20%

.

~

(AP) _ menl One crewman, listed !D · Medical Center in San . Antonio, juries.
U8S Nimitz. criUcal condlUon, Will at St. Vin- Teus, a spokesman there aald. The
Twenty-seven 'of the injured
lteaJned tow8rd ttl h!lme ipot:t of cent's Hospital fu Jadt!onvllle, ·and others were lreated.at the Naval remalnedintheship:~ ~ickbay. · ·
~ortolk: Va.
w1tb 20 ClanJit&amp;ec! fOUl' bam ~ were alrUfted to Regional Medical Centet' at
Tbe Marine EA,jjB Prowler, made
planelandafuDiiclt'btQ'.nerajit the bam unit at Bf!!Oke Army Jacksonville, none with critical in(Contlnuedonpage10)
c:i'Ubed inlllmel on~~ killing
14 people and injurina •.
Dilplte the damage io tlie air- .
~ atlmaled at more than. teo
mll.llon,· damage to the nuclearpowet ed lhiP IIMlf wu "not atraordlnarily heavy," according to
Capt. Larry Hamilton; chief public
affairs o(flcer fur the Atlautic Fleet.
"The carrier will m011t likely will ·
be able to do a quick turnaround,"
beaald. .
.
'!be NaV)' aald reaulta of an official·
ipvestlg&amp;Uon into the •cruh of the .
'electronic wa~ jet may not be ·
available lor m months. But a Navy
spoke11111811 who wed not to be Identified aald the jet apparently "landed ~ little right of the center line
..pd on a carrier decll there isn't any
roorplor an error like that"
NIMITl CRASH scENE - Tbls II an aerial view to several aircraft last nlgbt wben ·BD radar-jamming
~.Gfle crewmen 1JC1re airliffrom lite bow of lite VSS Nlmllz showlug damage done jet crashed killing 14 persons and llljuring 4S. (AP
ted~~ hollpltals for treatLaserphoto)
JACKllONVIu.E,

Tbe 1itCr1ft

Hanes Comfort 8Jend4t underwear

IMPERIAL
GLASSWARE
1f2 PRICE

. ,.

15 Conh

A Mulllmodlo Inc. Newspoper?.
.
l

.

Airel-aft crash costly

aao-e~

Marriage u - were l8aued to
Allen Bret Allman, 22, Rt. 3, Albany,
and Jeme Sue Jurdal), 18, Rt. 3,

•

BANK ONE OF POMEROY. NA

EGGS.••••••••••• ••• ~:~~.

. . . - --

Ma-'a...,.lice
. nsee

.5 0% OFF

BUSINESS, INDUSTRY,
......-AND THE PROFESSIONS

Clearlleld Old &amp; Sharp

I

·~.,.

l ..

1 Section, It Pllges

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

ELBERFELD$

THE FINEST

---=-.
.
.
~TO

MARGARINE.':!~~.'.'~;~ ...

e,n ttne

'

· COfiYrl!hlld 1911

.

•

Bid opening
sei June 23

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