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e
Vol . 29, No. 203
Copyrighted 1981

•

•

enttne

at

1 Section, 12 pages . 15 ~ents

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio Friday, January 30, 1981
•

'(

A MuiiLmodia Inc. Newspaper

a

Earthquake shakes Aleutian Island
PALMER, Alaska - A strong earthquake in the Bering Sea has
shaken the westernmost Aleutian Island, officials report.
Scientists had warned of a tidal wave after the quake occurred Thur·
sday night, and the National Weather Service in Palmer, near An·
chorage, issued a tsunami warning for low-lying Alaska coastal areas
in the Aleutian Islands. But the warning later was canceled.
A tsunami is a liuge sea wave caused by an underwater disturbance
such as an earthquake or voicanic eruption.

Unemployment claims down
COLUMBUS, Ohio - The number of newly unemployed OhioanS
filing claims for benefits under the state Unemployment Compensation Law lllst week was down 22 percent from the previous week.
Albert G. Giles, of the Ohio Bureau of Employment Services, said
Thursday that 24,122 initial claims were filed during the week ending
Jan. 24, down 7,152 from the previous week. More than 1,700 of the
claims filed last week stemmed from layoffs in the auto and 1111to-parts
industry, with nine out of 10 for one week's duration, Giles said ..
Initial claims filed under other programs last week totaled 4,824, accounting for overall initial claims of 28,946.

Steubenville enjoys quiet night
STEUBENVILLE, Ohio- This industrial city, plagued by a week·
long sickout by public employees, spent a quiet night after several
dliys of vandalism and theft.
"It was extremely quiet. There were only two or three calls all
night," a police clerk said this morning.
City law director John Mascio said he would seek a temporary
rest~aining order in Jefferson County Common Pleas Court today to
get employees back on the job. About 290of the 350.,city workers, including pollee and fire employees, have been calling in sick en masse
)O pressure the city grant pay raises.
·

Bill offers tax incentjves
WASHINGTON- Rep. Jim Dunn, R-Mich., introduced a legislative
package today to help steer the auto industry out of its (lnan~ial
doldrums.
The two-fold package designed by the freshman congressman offers
tax incentives to buyers of American-made cars and offers the auto industry tax breaks and relief from regulatory burdens.
Buyers of domestic cars would be allowed to deduct $500 from their
federal income taxes and gel special credits of up to $400 to compensate for ~urrenl high interest rates.
-

Board issues mass firing threat
MARIEMONT, Oh\o - Sixty-one teachers, 14 of them alrearly fired,
vowed to continue tbeir strike today despite the threat of mass firings
by the school board.
"Some of these teachers are giving up 'their homes, everything
they've worked for for 20 and 30 years. but they cannot look themselves in the mirror ill the morning unless they do this," said Richard
Eiche, a representative of the Mariemont District Education
Association.
But Superintendent Donald R. Thompson said Thursday evening
that truant teachers would be fired and replaced.

Winning Ohio lottery number

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CLEVELAND - The winning numbers selected Thursday night in
the Ohio Lottery's daily game "The Number" and Its weekly
"Pyramid" game were :
The Number - 1-3-7
Pyramid- 3-5; 2-1-ll; 6-9+0
The lottery reported earnings of $95,389.50 from the wagering on the
dally number game drawing. Lottery officials said sales prior to the
drawing totaled $7:il,677, and holders of winning tickets can share
$656 ,287.50.

Weather
Clear tonight. Lows 1&gt;20. Sunny Saturday. HJghs in the low to mid30s. Chance of precipitation near zero percent tonight and Saturday,
Winds light and variable tonight.
Extended Ohio Forecaot- Sunday through Tuesday:A chance of
rain or snow Sunday and a chance of snow flurries in the northeast
Monday. Otherwise fair weather Monday and Tuesday. Highs in the
4lls Sunday, in the 30s Monday and in the 20s Tuesday. Lows in the uJ&gt;per 20s and 30s Sunday and Monday and in tbe upper teens and 20s
Tuesday.·

THANKSGIVING - Meigs CoiiDiy joined the rest of the naloo Thun. day In a day of thanksgiving for the return of the 52 former hostages from

Iran as requested by President Ronald Reagan. Flags waves In the winter wind and all2 oooo beDs across the county rang In tribute to the former hostages.

Southern to survive
despite money woes
Bob Ord, superintendent of the
Southern Loca I School District,
today explained the effect of recent
.cuts upon his district made in Governor Rhodes' state budget. Ord said,
based on the nwnber of recent
inquiries, there appears to be a lot of
concern among residents of the
Southern Local School District about
the effect that the recent cuts made
in the state budget by Governor
Rhodes will have upon their schools.
Southern Local, as the other public
school districts in the state of Ohio,
had their state funding cut by three
percent retroactive to July I. 1980.
This amounts to a $40,403 loss of

state funds for the Southern Local
School District which will be deducted from the state foundation
payments over the next six months.
The loss of $40,403 does present
problems for the school district. It
will mean the delay of desperately
needed repairs to facilities that have
been neglected too long. It will also
mean that important areas of expenditures such as textbooks , supplies, equipment repairs, and equiJ&gt;ment replacement wi)l have to be
curtailed or discontinued for the
present.
Another concern which questions

are being asked is what effect will
the increase in properly taxes have
upon the schools' finances . To do
this, the concept of "shared experience" must be explained. The
state guarantees Southern Local a
set sum based on its enrollment and
its operating millage.
·
Monies raised on the local level
through property taxes are sulr
tracted from the amount that the
state guarantees and the difference
is paid by the state.
Southern Local will receive $25,980
less from the slate betw.een
January, 1981 through June, 1981

than was anticipated due to the increase in local property taxes.
However, there will be no loss of income as this amount will be offset by -··
the current increases in the properly
taxes brought about by the increases
in the assessed values of the
district's taxable property.
If there are no unforeseen major
expenditures and by being prudent;
Southern Local will survive financially until July I, at which time the
Ohio General Assembly should have
a new funding bill that will,
hopefully, resolve the current financial crisis.

Reagan might extend Soviet embargo
WASHINGTON (AP) - In power
only 10 days, President Reagan is
not ready to spell out a new policy
toward Iran, except to rule out
revenge, or to plunge into decisions
on a broad sweep of domestic
problems.
·
At his first news conference since
into the White House,

Reagan refused to take a stand
Thursday on whether he will abolish
draft registration, lift the partial
grain embargo against the Soviet
Union or call for his proposed tax
cuts to be retroactive to Jan. 1. ~
Instead, he hinted he might consider extending the embargo to
items other than farm ~oods. He ac-

cused Moscow of using detente as a
"one-way street" to attain its aims
and, in unusually harsh 'the right to
conunit any crime, to lie, to cheat, in
order to attain that."
Reagan said his first days in office
have been devoted to Cabinet
meetings on economic proposals,
and that decisions on other matters

will be made "down the road some

place. "
While sayU his administration is
still studyin; future policy toward
Iran, Reagl!" declared, "I'm certain.ly not thinking of revenge and I
don't know whether reconciliation
would be pdllsible with the present
(Continued on page 12)

Former school head
faces court· trial

MEF.TING TIIF.

PRES.~

- President Ronald Reagdn faces rcport.-rs
Rulldu•~ a.-rus~ from thr Whih·

Thunday in thr Old F:xt••·ttiiVI' Olflrt•

•

~·---

lluu•c f11r his flr•l .prt•ss &lt;Hlnflncnwnt as prcsldt•nt. Nt·w_guldellncs fur th••
l•r&lt;•ss •·unf~r.-nrc kept prur•••'dln~ ' 11nh•lt-r than usual. I AP l.ascrphulu I.
J

A three-count secret indictment
was returned earlier this week by
the Galli&gt;~ County Grand Jury against the former superintendent of the
Gallia -Jackson-Vinton
Joint
Vocation School.
The three-count criminal indictment charges Clarence Thompson, Gallipolis, with theft, theft in
office and falsification .
Those charges allegedly stem
from the results of a special investigation into the district's financial records for a period convering
Jan. 1. 1976 through August 31, 1980.
That investigation was requested by
the joint vocational district's board
of education.
In a report issued in November,
the state auditor's office charged
that 63 checks made payable to the
district for cmrunissions from .vending machines maintaine&lt;j in the
district were cashed by Thompson
instead of being deposited into the
proper school account.
The checks totaled $5,587.43 and
were allegedly cashed by Thompson
between March 15, 1976 and May 23,
'19111J, state eKaminers said. None of
the checks were recorded on the

.

school district's records, nor were
they deposited, according to
examiners.
Additionally, examiners alleged a
$220 check sent by the auditor of
state to the school district for reimbursement of In-service training
meals was cashed by Thompson and
not deposited. A $50 check for rental
of the school cafeteria was cashed
by Thompson in the same manner,
examiners charged.
Findings for recovery were is.Sued
against Thompson in the amount of
$5,857.43.
Results of that special investigation were reviewed with
members of the joint vocational
board and Gallla Prosecutor Joseph
L. Cain on September 29.
On Oct; 4, during a special Saturday morning meeting, the tri-county
board unanimously took action to
suspend-pending final action to terlninate-Thompson from his superintendency:
That action came after Supt.
Thompson refused to tender an immediate resignation as requested by
(Continued on page 12)

.

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�.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

January 30, 1981

Commentary

January 30, 1981
The Daily S~ntinel

•

2. OSUwins on strong defense
By GEORGE STRODE
AP Sports:Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
Wisconsin had the man to shackle
Herb Williams, but no one to match
up with Clark Kellogg, Ohio State's
other main scoring threat. .·
At least, that's how Badgers '
Coach Bill Cofield saw a 7Hi7 loss to
the Buckeyes Thursday night, a victory that kept O.hio State tied for the
Big Ten Conference b~sket ball lead
with Iowa and Indiana.
Larry Petty outscored Williams 16
to nine, halting the Buckeyes'·6-foot1.0 senior center's scoring streak of
87 games in double figures. But
Kellogg broke loose lor 25 points and
14 rebounds against Mike Kreklow .
" We chewed on Larry a little."
Cofield said. "He corrected his
mistakes against Williams and
played an outstanding game. You
have to keep Willia1ns from catching
the ball in close. Larry did that. "
Cofield said of the other '&lt;ey
pairing: "We needed Kreklow for
his scoring purposes, but it was difficult for him to match up with
Kellogg. Clark was very, very
aggressive tonight. He went after

Can we now change the subject?
•

WASHINGTON- II may seem a
churlish thing to say, but it has to be
said: Now that the White House
reception is over and done with, can
we forget about these former
hostages for a while" It's time to
change the subject. ·
We have now been through 10 days

assets in the United States or in U. S.
instrwnentalities abroad . We are
conunitted to creating an IranUnited States Claims Tribunal with
authQrity to. arbitrate whatever
claims may be submitted to it. We
owe it to the Algerians. whose goud
offices must be respected. to honor

James ]. Kilpatrick
or purple prose and yellow ribbons.
The families of the prisoners have
been interviewed not . only ad
inifinitum but also ad nauseam. In
one banal lonn oc another, the
penetrating question has now been
asked 10,000 times: How does it feel
to be home" Not since Three Mile
Island has a story been so massively
overblown?
The notion that the 52 are
"heroes" ought to be quietly abandoned. With the exception of J erry
Plotkin, the California businessman
who was seized by accident, these
were professionals in the State ·
Department and the · armed services . Theirs is a high-risk •
profession. And the trouble with high
risks, as any insurance agent will
tell you, is that now and then one
pays a price for taking them. The

other provisions that go directly to
official relationships between Iran
and the United States.
:aut compliance, I submit. should
stop there. The agreements contain
provisions as tu private individuals

so blatantly unconstitutional as to
shock the conscience. A charitable
asswnption is that Deputy Secretary
Warren Christopher consented to
these provisions knowing they were

not worth the paper they were written on .

Consider, · if you please, this
brazen clause : "The United States
will order all persons within U. S.
jurisdictioi1 to report to the U. S.
Treasury, within 30 days, for transmission to Iran. all information
known to them, as of Nov. 3, 1979 ...
with respect to th&lt;" ·property and
prisoners suffered an agonizing or- assets of the fonner Shah' or any
deal but not a novel one. Let them close relative of the former Shah.
Violation of the requirement will be
now go in peace.
One aspect of this wretched story subject to civil and criminal
cartnot be yet put aside. What should penalties described by U. S.law ."
It is inconceivable that Mr.
President Reagan do ·about the
agreements? My own thought is that Reagan should issue any such ·'orpart of the settlement should be der. " If the time has come when one
honored. Much of it should be may be unprisoned for violation of a
presidential "or der "
or
repudiated out ol hand .
As a nation, it seems to me. we are " requirement." due process of law
honor bound to carry out the com- has lots its meaning .
By the same token. Mr. Reagan
mitment to bring about the transfer
or all remaining Iranian financial should repudiate those provisions

The Daily Sentinel
111 CDUrt Strftt
Pomeroy, Oblo

n&lt;-m-na

DEVOTED TO 111E INTEREST OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

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tslffi~

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......__..._-.-. ,.,.....o:::;:~,'"""

ROBERT L . WINGE'IT
P\ablllber

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH

Anlltaat PUblJther /Coli troller

Gellel'lll MliUJIIer'

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
NeW'I EdJCor

A MEMBER of The Woda&amp;ed Prett, J.Dlllad O.Jiy Prnt A11ocladoa .... lbc
Amerku Ntwtpaper Publllben AtiOCIIUta.

LE'ITERS OF OPINION are •eltomnJ. ney tltcNld De let~ diu . . wonk loq. AU
lenen an: tabjed to ed.llbl&amp; aDd matt be atped wtlb ~&amp;me, aclclrne aDd &amp;elepi!Gae

lltllllber. No . .!pH lencrawW be pub!llbed. Lencn oboold be llllood II ole, oddmolll(
llna,DOt ptnoaalJUn.

that purport tu prohibit our own
courts from hearing claims filed by
our own citizens. If federal courts
are to be prevented from hearing
certain causes of action, the
prohibition will have to be imposed
by act of Congress. No president has
power to barter away the civi l rights
of the people, including the right to
sue for redress of damages.
By renouncing these intolerable
prov1sions. Mr . Reagan may
salvage some shred of national se lfrespect . The assets of Iran are one
thing; the. rights of American
citizens are something else entirely.
As for the rest, let us cool tt. This
has not been a glorious chapter in
the history of our land. No amount of
champagne will make it so. Let us be
thankfu l - deeply thankful - that
the prisoners survived their burial
captivity. Once that gratitude h~
been expressed. let tile cheering
stop.

International Agenda
for the eighties

"A lot of the fun of working here would be gone
if they actually cut out waste. fraud and abuse ...

Riffe accessible
COLUMBUS , Ohio (AP l - House lor being accessible. However,
Speaker Vernal G. Riffe Jr., D-New · because he is one of the busiest men
Boston, will be more accessible to in the Statehouse, hours ran go by
the news media this year than ever before a phone call is returned.
before.
Ohio is not the only state exWhen the newly convened
Legislature gets into full sway next periencing serious budget problems,
month. he says he will begin holding the National Conference of State
weekly news conferences, probably Legislatures says.
on Thursday afternoon or Friday
It notes that legislatures in most
states convened this year to find that
moming.
Riffe is a possible candidate for the recession had made it necessary
governor in 1982, and hi·s mov.e may to cut expenditures to maintain their
be the start or an effort to make his constitutionally-required state
name better known around the state. budgets.
However, he makes the point that
Ohio and the other Great Lakes
when weekly sessions of the House states were the hardest hit due to
end on Thursday , his office is their reliance on manufacturing,
deluged in the afternoon and on especially automobile production,
Friday with calls from reporters the national conference said.
It said Michigan was the hardest
wanting to know about legislative
hit, with a general fund gap of $700
activities for the upcoming week .
Reporters agree that this is tlie million. Ohio was close on its heels,
case, and they JH'Obably will with a shortfall of about $600 million.
welcome the chance to be better
The conference listed other states
briefed before writing their weekend experiencing major revenue shortstories.
falls as being Wisconsin, Minnesota,
Riffe gets along well wtth the Indiana, Pennsylvania, and Illinois.
media, and good marks generally

DOONESBURY
OONT 8t AIAIIJ,'ll), MR

Art Buchwald

SPtCIA/.. AKtrlY HOSPI 7AL INGtiiWWt.IW
11115

Tanks for the food
WASHINGTON - Every once in a
while, someone cpmes up with a
magic word that will end the energy
crisis. The latest one is "gasohol." It
is now possible to make fuel for rars
!rom grain products, potatoes and
practically anything that can be
grown on a farm. Several major oil
companies are starting to get into
the gasohol business. Since we are
the largest food-producing nation in
the world, energy experts are very
optimistic about the future of the
new fuel.
But food experts are pessimistic,
and with reason.
This is what could happen in the
next few )~ars on a farm in
Nebraska:
A buyer from an oil refinery and
one from a grain dealer show up at
the same time.
, "We'll take your whole crop," the
· refinery buyer tells the fanner.
" Wait a mmute, " the grain dealer
says. "We need that whea t for
bread."
: "Gasohol is more important than
bread," the refinery buyer insists.
. "The more fuel we can make at
home, the less we have to order !rom
. abroad."
· "People need bread more than
· they need gasoline," the grain buyer
protests.
The fanner finally says, " I don 't
· care what you're buying it for . What
are you paying ?"
•
The refinery man says, " We 'II
give you $li a bushel."
The grain merchant says, "We'll
. give you $0.50 ...
The refinery man 'ays, ''We 'll
, give you six and we don't even ca re
. what the wheat looks like.''
The grain man is getting nervous.
"Wr'll pay six-fifl)'. but that nJc&gt;uJS
the price of bread will go right

through the roo!. You ca n't let
people go hungry this winter."
The refinery man says, "People
would rather have a full tank of gas
than a full stomach. You ca n'I waste
good wheat qn bread."
The fanner says, '' Keep talking
price. I ain't interested in any other
argwnents."

NHei&lt;&amp;THc
HfU IS MY

The refinery man says, " We' U
give you $7 and throw in two large
harvesting mac hi pes as a bonus.''
"We can't compete with that," the
grain man says. "Well, OK, we'll
pay $8 a bushel and paint your

WALUT~

I

house. ''

The refinery man says, " We'll
give you $9 a bushel and a tw&lt;&gt;-week
vacation in Acapulco."
The Iarmer says, " Do I hear $10 ?"
The refinery man says, "Ten
dollars ."
The grain man is about to slug the
refinery buyer. "You people are
crazy. If we can 't feed the
population, this country will go down
the drain."
"Not if they can drive their cars."
the refinery man says.
The farmer smiles. "This is getting to be a lot of fun. I think I' II
resign from the farmers' union and
join OPEC."
The grain man says, " All right ,
Howell, for/let the wheat. Let's talk
about your cor11 .''
The refinery man §ays, "You
mean you have corn, too' Why
&lt;lidn't you gay so 1 We can use all the
eorn yuu'vegot."

"I usually sell my corn for cattle."
"Forget the cattle. Give us the
corn crop and we'll make you
anutherJ. R. EwiJ,g."
"So what do people do lor meat""
the grain man asks.
Tlw refinery man replies. " Let
'emea t ecdw.''

(Seventh and final in a series l
The President's Conunission for a National Agenda for the Eighties
concludes th•t the goals and conduct of the U.S, foreign policy in the
1980's must take into account emerging global interdependence and the
continuing dispersion of power. particularly in economic affairs.
The Cmrunission sees no itrunediate propcct for the easing of internation tension in the early 1980's; foresses that any decline of tension
will probably result from U.S. initiatives as the leader of conununal efforts ; and stresses that progress of the U.S. in foreign affairs will, in
large part, be a measure of our success in restoring growth to the
American economy, containing inflation and developing energy independence. The report contains the following recmrunendations.
In U.S. relations with the advanced industrial world:
- Maintenance of strategic stability in the Northwest Pacific (Japan ,
South Korea ) and. Europe ~ with greater local assimilation of costs. .
. - Reduction ol dependence on oil imports, through support ol Venice
Swrunit targets and cmrununal assurance of access to the Persian GulL
In Middle East policy :
- Continuing support for the peace talks and for any other mechanism
leading to a permanent Mid,dle East settlement.
In policies toward developing nations :
- Recognition of the extremely precarious positions ol . the oilimporting developing countries, the necessity for a concentrated northsouth partnership, and the importance of being prepared to renegotiate
the tenns of raw material production and processing, as well as converting short-term 'debt to long-term debt.
In poltcies toward the Soviet Union :
- Agreement that there can be no fixed percentage of budgetary increase Tegularly assigned to defense, but that the budget should provide
the quantity and quality of v.s. forces necessary, not merely to deter
Soviet nuclear expansion, but to ensure effecti ve U.S. response to all contingencies of the 1900's.
- Exploration ol economic cooperation with the U.S.S.R., as well as arms control.
In hwnan right.. policy :
- Recognition that experience since 1!177 has been mixed and that a
multi-lateral approach in an agreed framework is preferable to
unilateral action.
The Pr.,.ident's Conunission for a National Agenda for the Eighties
was established by President Carter on Oct. 24. 1979, to examine
emerging public issues of the coming decade and to reconunend to the
President-elect and Congress approaches to those issues.
The Conunission was composed of 45 private citizens from industry,
labor, public service organizations and academe.

Looking fo.Ward to the springtime of the year, when the administration
will be two months old and showing its first few blosso!ns, one sees also
the ravages of winters past.
·
Which is to say that any new economic beginning, which every
President offers, drags along economic debris that fouls the scenery and
clogs the machinery. By this year's spring the burden should be obvious.
It will be a time when ca nnakers make perhaps their most Intense
sales effort ever, not just to move inventories !rom the lots but to remain
solvent. For one, Chrysler, it is do or die or merge with another. .
The problem, which includes General Motors and Ford to le55er
degrees. and which concerns the economic fortunes of millions of
Americans. is not of Reagan's making, but it is his to deal with, for food
or bad.
He didn't create high interest rates, lor instance, but when the big sales
push comes, so also may come costlier financing . The ingredients
already are in place, just waiting to be activated by demand.
The car companies received a painful lesson !rom those rateS' last fall :
When inte~est rose into high double digits, as they did, people simply postponed buymg cars. The industry is interest rate-sensitive .
Now add in this situation: The after-tax buying power of American factory workers declined 4.8 percent last year because ol inflation. IJ'hat
situatl~n is~'t changing; workers continue to lose buying power.
Cons1den~g these problems - rising interest and shrinking buying
power - wtll boyers ba1l out the autmnakers? And il they don't will
Reag~n be able to step in to help, if only to save his own programs? '
Spnlll!. ts also h?me-b~ymg time, but the latest government ligures
show netther housmg pnces nor mortgage rates falling . Those housing
people who claun to know sav they're ~etting ready for a dismal year.

NEW YORK tAP) - Ev~n some of
the staunchest advocates of cutting
back on big government were a bit
startled the other day when advisers
to President Reagan waved a
scalpel in the direction of the
Securities and Exchange Com-

Mutual lund managers orten complain that the SEC has loaded them
down with so many rules and
regulations that they are barely able
to compete with other kinds of financial-services companies.

mission.

llut when someone starts talking
about slashing the SEC's budget,
and drastically changing its basic
missions - as a report of President
Reagan 's transition team did mnny Wall Streeters quickly change
their tune.
"~'rom what I can see, this report
was badly conceived and badly
don~." said one tup executive who
requested anonymity.
.. In my experience,. these things
life often written by people with u

tll!ia3tcr arcl:l /.

..

special axe to grind," observed
another industry leader. "I don't
think very much is ever going to
come out or it.~·
The report itself acknowledges
that the SEC has a history free of
scandal, and a "deserved reputation
lor integrity and efficiency." But it
also contends thaI the agency
needlessly interferes with and hampel'li the functioning of the nation's
capital-raising machinery.
"The SEC can and does raise artificial barriers In certain circumstances to the free accwnulatlon and fonnation of capital
,.. thro"'!h regulations requiring excessive, unnecessary and continuing
dillclosure requirements," It says.
On that basis. the report suggests

day call for Dayton to play at Detroit
were not falling," he said.
and Farleigh Dickinson at Cleveland
After the Buckeyes' good start,
Wisconsin whittled its deficit to 22-18 State. Xavier, another major Ohio
late in the first half by outscoring the team, has the day off.
Youngstown State entertains NorBuckeyes 14-2. Ohio State led at halfthern Michigan in the Mid-Continent
time 28-21, but never moved closer
Conference and Ashland goes to Inthan five points alter that until the
diana State-Evansville in the Great
end.
Lakes Valley Conference. Wright
Ohio State outshut Wisconsin 4f&gt;-36
State
bids for it.. 16th victory in 18
percent and outrebounded the
games at Northern Kentucky and
Badgers 41-38. Cla ude Gregory 's 17
Kentucky State plays at Central
points led Wisconsin. Todd Penn
State .
came off the bench to score 13 for
Otterbein tries tu protect its Ohio
Ohio state, 11 of them in the last eo
Conference
lead at Denison while in
minutes.
,
other
OC
games
Baldwin-Wallace is
Meanwhile, Toledo tries to keep a
at
Heidelberg,
Ohio Northern at
share of thtlJt Mid-American ConCapital,
Kenyon
at Muskingwn,
ference lead against invading coWooster
at
Marietta
, . Oberlin at
leader Eastern Michigan. The two
Mount
Union
and
Ohio
Wesleyan 'at
are ' ied with Northern Illinois and
Wittenberg.
Western Michigan at f&gt;-2. Northern
In the Presidents' Conference,
Illinois entertains Western Michigan
Case
Reserve plays at Allegheny,
in the other big contest Saturday . .
Bethany
at John Carroll and Hiram
Elsewhere in the Mid-American,
at Carnegie-Mellon.
Ohio University plays at Miami and
Hanover, with a 2t ga111e bulge
Bowling, Green at Kent. State. Cinover
Defiance for the Hoosiercinnati has a Metro Conference date
Buckeye
Conference lead, visits Finwith visiting Memphi s State and
dlay
while
Defiance is traveling to
Akron goes to Austin Peay in the
Manchester
and Anderson to BluffOhio Valley Conference.
ton.
Major independent games SaturIn the Mid-Ohio Conference,
Walsh and host Rio Grande clash to
see who will rank as leading Cedarville's prime challenger. Cedarville,
at home for Ohio Domini can, paces
. the league with a 7-1 record while
Walsh and Rio Grande are tied foc
second at S-2. Malone plays at Mount
Vernon Nazarene and Urbana at Tiffin .

Collins not interested in
four year Reds' contract
CINCINNATI ·(A P ) - Centerfielder Dave Collins says he wan'ls to stay in Cincinnati but he isn't interested in a four-year contract with
the Reds.
''Win or lose the arbitration, I
won't be happy. I'm not happy about
going to arbitration," said Collins,
who will be eligible to become a
veteran free a~ent aftc1· this upcoming season.
Collins, pitcher Paul Moskau, outfielder Mike Vail and infielder
Junior Kennedy were notified 'fhul'sday by the Major League Players
A.ssociaion that their contract arbitrations will be held in Chicago.
The tentative schedule is Feb. 9.
Under the terms Of the ma,ter
contract. when there is a salary contract dispute, both sides submit their
proposals to an indepellllent arbitrator who selects one or the other.
However. a player can agree to a
contract in the meantime. endi ng arbitration .
"The Reds never made me an of-

fer''" a one-year contract. They did
make me one offer on a four·yeur
deal, but it wasn't what I wanted. I'd
like to sta y in Cincinnati. but I'm
just not happy as far as the business
end is cmtterned. I really hoped that
I wouldn't have to go to arbitration
this year." said Collins.
Collins, who coaches the nea1·by
Mason High School basketball team
in ttie off-season. won an arbitration
&lt;lispute wi(h the lleds last season.
Collins batted .30:1 a nd stole 79
bases in t980 but the club hinted
about his selfishness on the
basepaths. Coi'lins has also been
Jihkcd to 1\UJilCt'OlL'i trade fumors.
"The Reds have never said a word

to me about a trade," Collins said,
however.
The players association also informed the players Thursday of the
oilers the Reds would make to the
arbitratm·.
" They came in lower than I
thougllt," said Collins, who declined
to discuss the figures .
"Actually, I'm kind of glad they
came in low," said Rich Bry,
Collins' agent. Bry said he felt this .
would put Coll ins in a bettter
position before the arbitrator .

LEBANON RESULTS
LEBANON, Ohio (AP) - Sunrise
Pebbles romped to her fourth
straight victory at Lebanon in the
$1,000 featured pace mile Thursday
night by a length in 2:05.4-5.
The winner, claiming her, fifth victory in her last six races, paid $3.40,
$3.80 and $2.40. Skipper Goose
placed, $3 and $2.60 and Joe's Duke.
third ,.$3.
The 6-4 double of Kellytuck Mel
and Norton Star Mite paid $12.40 and
the crowd of 1,044 bet $105,404.

Marauder junior high girls
enjoying successful season
MIDDLEPORT
The Meigs led the Meigs team with 10, Stegall
Junior High girls ' basketball team, had two , DeLong one, Moodispaugh
coached by Gloria Alexander, is en- · two. and Eblin two. Payne led the
winners with six points.
joying a :successful season, ceimThe second game of the season
piling a S-3 rec-ord .
The Marauder team consists of agaiJJSt Southern started out close,
both seventh and eighth grade girls. but after Southern's Lori Adams left
which play a full schedule in tile the game with a broken foot in the
first quarter, Meigs had clear
surrounding area .
sailing.
Team members are Ruth Fry,
Meigs won the game 22~.
Rhonda
Haddox .
Jolene
. Rut11 F1·y poured in eight, Jolene
Moodispau gh. Ca thy DeLong,
Moodispaugh and Denise Stegall
Denise Stegall. Kim Eblin. Sherry
·
Russell , Trina Reeves. Cindy each had four.
Meigs then downed Wellston 2().11,
Souls by, Kristin Bailey, Julie Sisson.
led by Fry 's six, DeLong ,
~honda NL&gt;ece. Julie Pierce. and
Moodtspaugh and Stegall with four ,
Diana White.
The leading score1; lot· the julllOI' Russell with two. Wellston was led
by Jones' seven.
high Marauders has been Ruth Fry,
Meigs won its third game of the
who has averaged eight points per
year, 29-12. over Shade as Fry again
game . Next in line is Denise Stegall,
Jolene Moodispaugh, Cathy DeLong led the way with 10 points. Pierce,
and Rhonda Haddox, averaging two Ginther and Reeves hit the scoring
column with two points each.
points per game.
In the fifth game of the year Meigs
· The team's leading rebounders
have been Jolene Moodispaugh with &lt;lopped a lG-15 heartbreaker to
an average of eight per game, Gallipolis. Moodispaugh led Meigs
DeLong and Stegall both with 7 per with six points.
Meigs dropped a 27-12 dectsion to
game, Mild Eblin and Fry each with
Logan, then rebounded with an 18-9
an average ol five per game .
Meigs has been averaging 34 per- win over Wellston, and a 2&amp;-35 win
cent frmri the free throw line, hitting over Athens.
In its last outing Meigs defeated
a total of 2t out of 61 attempts.
Meigs dropped its opening contest Southern 26-4. Fry had her biggest
2!1-17 despite a fourth quarter outing with 13 points. Southern was
led by Judy Harris' three and Lyons'
comeback that fell short allowing
Albany to claim the win. Ruth Fry one.

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BRAND COATINGS

something close to a 18(klegree shift
in the emphasis of the SEC's
1nissioo. Rather than concentrating
on enforcing securities laws as a
kind of Wall Street poliee force. it
says, the SEC should work to limit
regulation of the securities industry,
In order to create the freest possible
environment for encouraging
private investment.

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"Encoura~ement

of capital formation Is a very desirable objective," ilald Arthur Levitt Jr.,
chain nan of the American Stock Exchange. However, he said, deemphasizing the watchdog role of
the SEC could well reduce inve~ton~'
confidence In the markets, and thus
lead to precisely the oppoelte result.
J

BOILERMAKERS BOILED - Iowa Hawkeye forward Vince
Brookins (32) pulls a rebound away from Purdue Boilermaker forward
Greg Eifert (45) in first half action Thursday action at the Iowa fleldhouse. The Hawks defeated the Boile'l'lakers 84-67. (AP Laserphoto).

Co-leaders will
battle Saturday
By The Associated Press
Hurons if they could beat the MidEastern Michi gan, trying to shed American's two glamour names,
its image as a perennial loser, bids Northern Illinois and Toledo, within
for its fifth straight Mid-American four nights. Eastern Michigan .
basketball victory at Toledo on shocked the Huskies, the pre-season
Saturday night in a battle of con- title favor ite, 62-52 Wednesday
ferenc·e c&lt;&gt;-leaders.
night.
The Hurons had never finished out
of the second division until Jim
Boyce, a former University of
Boyce took ove1· the coaching ,·eins Mi chigan assistant coach, knows the
last winter , guidi ng Et:~stern stakes are high Saturday for h1s
Mi chigan to a tie for fourth place in team .
the Mid-Ameri can.
Now Boyce and his surprising
tecun, picked lu £inish eighth this
season, is bidding for bigger games . . - - - - - - - - - - - - If the HurO\lS could upset the
defending champion Rockets on

their own floor, Eastern Michigan
would keep a piece of the MidAmerican lead with the Western
Mi~liigan-Northernlllinois victor.
Eastern Michigan, Toledo,
Weste rn Micl1igan and Northern
lllm ois share the top spot with f&gt;-2
rccurds.
It would be some week lor the

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OH, WELL - Northwestern's John F.gan overruns Michigan's Marty
Bodnar as he goes up for two Thursday night at ~:vanston . ( AP Laserphoto).

DON'T JUST PAINT IT

Reagan's scalpel at SandE Commission

Like any other regulatory body,
the SEC. created :n the 1930s to
prevent the kind uf financial chaos
and abuoes that helped lead to the
Great Crash uf 1929, has its critics.
Stockbrokers cried " disaster! " in
1975 when the SF.C prodded their industi'Y to give up lixcd cmrunission
schedules in favor of open pricecompetitiun 1altltuugh six yeurs
late r Wall Sired JS anything but a

ball and went to the boards."
It was a sweet victory for the
Buckeyes, their filth in seven league
games and lOth in 16 overall starts.
Wisconsin nailed Ohio State twice
last year, keeping the Buckeyes
from the Big Ten title .
Eldon Miller, Ohio State's coach,
did not see many good points in the
victory . " Turnovers cut into our
defensive intensity/' he said. 11 We
were very careless with the ball for
a stretch in the first half and in the .
second half.. The only great team
thing is that we won.''
Miller, however, called \he
Buckeyes' defensive play at the
start une of their best efforts of the
season. Ohio State held the Badgers
to one basket for more than the first
nine minutes, rolling up an 1&amp;-21ead.
"We couldn't buy a basket at certain times," Cofield said after watching his team slide to 2-5 in the
league and 8-7 overall.
" We Jni.ssed six or seven la yups
and some of them were uncontested.
You can 'I miss those shots and win
on the road in the Big Ten. Even
thOUHh we had a poor offensive
showing, we got our shots. They just

The economic burden
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swertome.' '
Jackson laughed heartily and
gave her a big hug.
"The Yankees are my favorite
American League team," said
Byron Janis, world-renowned
pianist, "But, being from Pittsburgh, · I live and die with the
Pirates."
"He certainly does," added Janis'
attractive wife, Maria. 11 When the
Pirates won two of their most ex·
citing World Series Byron was over·
seas - in Russia in 1960. and in
Poland in 1979. He almost went mad
· trying to find out the scores."
Maria is the daughter of Cooper,
who played the role of Lou Gehrig in
the movie, "Pride of the Yankees.''
Here, on the stage of famed Car·
negie Hall, were four people of
varying backgrounds and interests,
pulled together by a single thread.
That thread is the dread disease,
amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. which
took the life or Gehrig June 2, 1941
and yearly claims tens of thousa nd;·
of others. Henry Wallace, Ezzard
Charles and columnist Hal Royle

"'"'\"

~·~ ··

,a~ -.;

vallis. Ore. l and they shoot that
well, you're in trouble ,'' said Larry

Brown, coach of the lOth-ranked
Bruins. " They have Steve Johnson
sun's a great offensive player.''.
Miller: " It was defense and ball
handling, the same old keys. To hold
a team as good as they are under 70,
that's good defensive work ."

monic or piano concert in my life, ..
said Reggie. "I've always wanted to.
I went to a theater once. I got so
swamped by people wanting
autographs at intermission I never
went back. I got turned off. I thought
it degraded the show: ;

Elsewhere in college basketball,
13th-ranked Iowa defeated Purdue
SW7 ; No. 17 Michigan whipped Nor·
thwestern 77-:;2; Indiana downed No.
19 Mmnesota 06-53 tn overtime and
Rhode Island upset 20th-ri;l nked Con·
necticut 78-7:;.
The Beavers, tied with Virginia
for the No .l·ranking in The
Associated Press poll, never fell
behind in the contest. UCLA traileq
by asmany as 16 points early in the
second half but rallied to pull within
six, 57-51 , un Darren O· 'ye's inside
basket with 9:44 remaining.

There was nobody around willing the
purchase the club loca lly."
Seattle will retain some flavor uf
local ownership. F our former
owne rs will each retain 5 percent of
the club. They are entertainer Dan·
ny Kaye. Stan Golub. Lester Smith
and Walter Schoenfeld .
.. Danny O'Brien will remain
presiden t of the club and I will be ac·
tive unly as an uwner,'' said
Argyros. "Our goal is to make the
tea m a contender.but it's too early to
talk about changes.
" It's our obligation to tnake the

..,

~ hour.

But Oregon State reserve guard
William Brew responded with a
three-point play moments later and
UCLA never got closer than sev~n
after that.
Rod Foster paced the Bruins with
19 points, 14 in the first half.
"Oregon State plays with con·
fidence,'' said Brown. "We didn 't
seem coMident and I told the kids
that. I don't want. to see that agailt .
We lost patience in the second !taU
when we needed it ."
Noted Oregon State guard Ray
Blwne : "We had a scare in Seattle
1a 97·91 overtime victory again~1
Washington). We came back here
and went to work ... 1Bl ume hit eight
of 10 fi eld goal shots and had two
steals. )
Iowa beat Purdue with the help of
a 1f&gt;.point streak in the fir st half
sparked by Kevin Boyle and Steve
Kralci sin. Boyle scored 21 points
and Krafcisin came off the bench to
net 20 as the Hawkeyes retained a
share of the Big Ten lead.
' ·Our ce nters came out th i~k i ng
aggressively," said Iowa Coach
Lute Olsen, refet-ring to Krafcisin
and Steve Waite. "They got 1:;
rebounds and 28 points. That really
was the d.Jfference.
·· we have not been consistent in·
side. For us to have a chance to play
lot· the title, we have to play con·
sistently well inside for the times
when our shots are not dropping." .

team excltin~ for the fans,'' said'
Argyros. " We ha ve a manager in
Maury Wills who was an exciting

: The White Sox were bought for $20
~· e
·
by a group headed by Jerry
;·
orf and Edd1e Emhorn wht!e
fl-. l!'tge Argyros purchased 80 per:fenl the Mariners for $10.4 million.
·~1-JUJinsdorf, 44, is a Highland Park
h~ estate developer. Einhorn. 4:;, is
\ ~ Paterson, N.J., tele vision
; ~utive who plans to resign his
i
tion with CBS next month.
' · Argyros , 43, is a self-made
: ,rullionaire land developer from
:Newport Beach, calif.. who only 31
~~eal"S ago was the manager of a
l "Wjiermarket.
' With the White Sox. Reinsdort will
t-un the baseball end of the operation
and Einhorn the business end . They
'1fill be equal and general partners
but are taking on nwnerous limited
pat1ners.
· 'They bought the club from a group
. headed by Bill Veeck after the
American League owners twice turned down sale of the team to Edward
J. DeBartolo Sr., a Youngstown ,
Ohio, developer.
DeBartolo was turned down partly
because the league opposes absentee
. ownership, and American League
president Lee MacPhail was asked
· why the league allowed Argyros to
buy the Mariners.
. "Because there was a local bid for
· the White Sox," said MacPhail.
"Such was not the case with Seattle.

player. but he came on the scene in
the last half of the season."
Argyros added he would "take one
step at a time and look at the whole
ma rketploce. I beli eve in a strong
farm system.''

Reinsdotf echoed that.
'·o ur goal is to win a nd to remain
competitive. You have to build a
farm system,'' he sai d. "Free agen·
ts offer a shot in the dark ami if you
have one or two holes to fill we 'll do
it. The Sox do have a farm system
but it needs to be expa nded. It is not
deep en ough.' ·
Veeck apparentl y wilt be offered a
position with the new organization
but might decline. " I haven' t had a
vacation in a long time." Veeck said .

Transactions
DASEHAI.L
Amt'rlun I .I'Rij:tU'
M U . WA L'KF. Jo~

BREWERS - S1~ned

T1111

.Crews. IJlil'hcr : Mtkt! Felder , ::&gt;L'Culld
b.ast'llla n. -.ral Mike Samurl. :sl1o r~top .
t~n tl .t»Si,l!ned them tu Hurhr1_gtun of the
M l th~·~·st I""H~uc . Sold llw nJ!hls 111 Cr11 1 ~
Hv&lt;111. uutfH.!Idt•i, tu t he Kmtd .su Buf·
f;.;luc:o. ,,Japan !
Natinnal Lngul'
H 0 US T 0 N ;\ STHOS- Si!o:nt!d
Vern
HuhlL' . pilclwr. tmd Julin Gtrm.tlh!Z, ill·

Schlichter quits

fielder
MO~ Tiif.AI.

F:XPOS Am1uunn'tl
mfJcltk•r
ll&lt;ld r.·ornc

lh&lt;~l

St•uu.
w
a u J W·~cur c mur~l'\ .
.
NEW
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~1F.TS - Announ t: l'tl
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, Pat 7.-..dwy. Jl llehcr. had cumc \r.1 lenm
un a fJ\'t'-\'Car cum ract.
P I'PI'SH lJ Hlill
P I HA TES- Aun ou rl t.'t!U
tt~t F.nnqut· Rumo I:Jrld John Ca11&lt;Jdar1a .
lh ll.lncy

tcnns

till

p1lL'hcrs:
C&lt;l l t•hNS,

amJ Slc&gt;'t' NK'I.ISld illltl
had :1).11\~t!d H1 h'rtiL'&gt; .

ST .I.OUL'i

The Uail y Sentinel

CAUDINAI.'i - Ntmlt!t!

cxet·utivc
busua::o..'i.

Blase

IUSPSU~"' )

HSSist&lt;Jnt

111

Ed Ott.
GH I'}'

d\i.lr ~l!

A Dh lsi on of Multimedia, lac.

National f'ootballl..n l(ue
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NEW YORK GIANTS Amunult'l!l l ihe
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&lt;IIli i Jnt• Wt~ ll un qu&lt;~r·

ON THE JOB- Bum Phillips, the new head coach
for the troubled New Orleans Saints, gets to work in his
new office. Phillips, formerly with the Houston Oilers.

now.

PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. I AP) Tom Watson's here. So is Jack
Nicklaus. And· fonner Pres ident
Gerald Ford.
And there's a horde of show
business celebrities - Bob Hope,
Clint Eastwood, Jack Lemmon,
George C. Scott.
None, however, get quit e the at·
tentiun accorded the pt!rson who so
often rules the Bing Crosby National
Pro-Am Golf Tournament - the
weatherman.
Another in a se ries of winter stortns fureed a postponement of Thur·
sday's fi rst round in the famed tour·
nament and set back the schedule by
a lull day . It now has a Friday·
through-Monday run .
Even that delayed schedule is
very much subject to the weather .
Tournament officials, with one eye
on the gloomy clouds rolling in off
Cannel Bay, were extreme ly
ca utious and non-cununital in
making long-range plans.
" Perhaps," sa id Clyde Mangum in

•

Schlichter, apparently worn out
from jwnping from football to
basketball with no time off. has withdrawn from the basketball squad, at
least for the 1981 season, a univer·
sity spokesman said Thursday.
Schli chter, a reserve guard on the
basket ball
te am
fr om
Bloomingburg, Ohip, "never has had

t-: rb::lclo. cooc h.

RACINE - The Southern Tornado
freslunen claimed a 34-29 win over
the Eastern Eagles here recently to
record its eighth win of the year
aga inst just one loss.
After Eastern broke the scoring

third period's buzzer, 23-18. Both
clubs played even the last round as
Southern slipped in for the 35-29 win.
Jim Newell led Coach Buddy
Moore's Eagles with a game high 16
points , while Mike Collins added
ice in th h first quarter C:l set....sctw bat- seven. Larry Cowdery added two for
tle developed between the two talco· the Eagles.
ted, yhoung rivals and the score was
Big Dennis Teaford led Bill Hen·
deadlocked at ~ when the initial sler's Tornadoes with 13 points, and
buzzer sounded.
Kevin Curfman added eight.
In the second period Southern
Southern hit 4:; percent from the
started to take the upper hand, but field (16-35 l and hit 2 of 5 from the
could never break away from the line for 40 percent. Southern had 29
hustling Eagle defense. After, rebounds as a team led by Teaford
Southern buill up a five point lead and Riffle with seven each. The
Eastern tied the score, then drOpPfd hosts committed 15 turnovers.
behind one of at the half 16-15 .
Eastern hit 9 of 21 from the floor
Southern, despite getting mto foul for 42 percent and ca nned II ot 18
trouble , built a five point lead at the from the li ne for 61 percent.

a chance to rest, " Dr. Robert Mur·
phy, the team's physician, said.
Murphy said he's been treating
Schlichter for several weeks .
" I think it is best to let him settle
down for the next eight weeks and
then get into fspring) football," he
said.
Murphy said Schlichter talked
with him Wednesday before . telling
Miller of his decision.
. The 6-foot-3, 2 l~pound junior had
made four free throws and ltad two
rebounds and two assists in three
games this season.

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ObJoaac! Wnl Vlrtlali
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IAJmonlh . . . .. . . . . . ..

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110 . ~
1 17. ~

I Yt~r ....... ,, ..•.... ........... 133.00
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'
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rounds to be played as in some tour·
naments.

r-------------

A Spwd Gijt
~"'

fOUA

Sper.id

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GOODTHRU FEB . 14th

CANDrS CLASSIC
COlllCTIONS
INGEL'S FURNinJRE
• 2nd Ave.

Middleporl

) PU l,\ll l \.l lllll l)ll llllf l ,lf~ E'

.., t' 1t ' l t Ill

n

11 11

d , p t' r ~ 1' n ,11

!o l ' r\ \\( '

Ou r la x preparers have bee n ca relul ly trained to unde rstand in·
come taxes related to the s mal l business siluati o n. At H&amp;R Block.
we want to make s ure you pay I he lowest legitima te tax .

H&amp;R BLOCK
2ND &amp; BR(MN ST.

A demonstration on how to make a
collage using plant material and tips
on pest 'Control highlighted the Mon·
day night meeting of the Winding
Trail Garden Club held at the home
easier ways of doing things. This
of Mrs . Cora Beegle.
colwnn has certainly helped make
Mrs. Alice Thompson gave the
my life less difficult.
To get a child's snow boots on : collage demonstration using a large
board to which she attached a sheet
easier, I just slip a plastic bag over
of white tissue paper with glue. She
the child's shoe and the boot slides
then applied small pieces of colored
on like magic. I always save the
paper before putting on the plant
plastic bags that things from the
store come in.
material. Mrs. Thompson explained
When cleaning the bathroom and
that collages must be abstract or at·
kitchen ceilings, I used to get on a
tractive when turned in any direc·
ladder and it was a long, tedious job.
lion.
When'! was finished I was dizzy and
The program on pest control was
had a headache, but now I have
given by Mrs. Jackie Brickles who
discovered I can do such jobs with
conunented that unless you know
my sponge mop. I find this works
what to do about pests, they can
beautifully if I change suds and rinse
haunt your plants forever . She
water frequently.- PEGGY
talked about the favorite locations of
DEAR POLLY - Buy a grease
pests on plants naming the leaves
pencil. Put your leftovers into those
and
the point where the leaf and the
little plastic freezer containers and
stem
unit, and suggested cleaning
label them. Stack in the refrigerator
with
a
mild detergent and spraying
with the labels out fro nt and your
with
an
insecticide as methods of
family will eat the leftovers . I used
control.
to throw out too much spoiled food
Mrs. Brickles suggested "quaranthat was hidden ir. various con·
teeing" a plant for a time after
tainers and forgotten. No more. The
acquiring it so that pests can be
grease pencil labels will rub off
checked to avoid infecting other
when you wash them. - BETH
Polly will send you one of her
plants. She talked about " foreign"
signed thank-you newspaper coupon
pests, such as the Japanese beetl e
cl ippers if s he uses your favorite
and gypsy moss, and the "cozy"
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in her
places for pests on plan!s.
colwnn. Write POLLY'S POIN·
As for control, she suggested first
TERS in care of this newspaper.
bathing a plant covering the soil
with foil and then holding it under a
spray of water before washinB each .
In a
leaf with a detergent.
discussion that followed members
gave their owh suggestions for pest
progralll will l&gt;c lrullalt!d. · Hccent
control which included putting plan·
weekly queens h;;ve been Donna
L' in a large plastic bag with a pest
Smith ancl Trina Faulk. with runnerup for bnth weeks bein~ Donna
Aleshi1·e. Information on the club
ca n be obtained by ca lling 992·3319.

~ Dampness

•••
.....
•
•••

"'

~~~ IILJ

tH A!
IH !IA! '!I~

'

MASON, W. VA.

PH. 992-3795

PH. 773-9128

~"

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..•
~- TOPS

I !:&gt;Af\ ) l ·t,
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.
•
•

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All you need to do is bring the
books, records, pamphlets, etc. to
the Pomeroy Public Library, the
Middleport Public Library, or the
OVAL bookmobile between
February I and February 28.
Q. What's thecatch?
A. There isn't one. Just make
sure that you return all your
overdue library materials bet·
ween February I and February
28 - PLEASE.
Q. What If the building I go to is
closed when I get there?
There is a black box to the left
of the front door at the Pomeroy
Public Library. There is a former
mailbox in front of the Mid·
dleport Public Library. There is a
slot in the wall to the right of the
front door of the bookmobile of·
flee. You should feel free to
return library materials using
the boxes or the slot any time we
are not open.
Q. I'd rather come to the
libraries when I can get out more
things. When are they open?
Middleport Public Library is
open Monday, 12 noon to 8 p.m.,
and TUesday through Thursday,
10:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Pomeroy
Public Library is open Tuesday
through Thursday, 10 :30 a.m. to 8
p.m., and Friday and Saturday,
!0:30a.m. to5 p.m.

strip for seve{al days or spraying in·
to the bag with a pesticide.
Mrs. Margaret Parker presided at
the business. meeting using which
time it was noted that members won
17 ribbons at the Christmas flower
snow of the Meigs County Garden
Clubs Association.
Plans were
discussed for a flea market to be
held this spring with other garden
clubs to be invited to participate.
''Snowbound.''
was
the
arrangement topic for the month
with the displays to he a still-life

- BAUM'S TRUE VALUE
Chester_, Ohio

O!Jefl: 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Weekdays, 9 to 5 Sat.

•.__________....
Appointments Available

Rice presents fihn on
birds, feeders to garden club

·John Rice of the Meigs County Ex·
tension Office presented a fibn on
birds and feeders at the Wednesday
night meeting of the Rutland Friendly Gardeners held at the home of
Mrs. Marjorie Davis.
"Winter Wonderland" was the
theme of flower arrangements
displayed at the meeting by Mrs.
Margaret Edwards and Mrs.
Charlotte Willford.
Mrs . Lois Walker presided at the
meeting during which time a report
was given on bulbs planted at the
Rutland Elementary School and of
the tree for the birds put up at
Christmas time in Rutl•nn hv the
club members. The community tree
was decorated with corn, popcorn,
pine cones filled with peanut butter
and seed pods. Plans were made to
plant a live tree at the old Rutland
gymnasium when pennission is
secured.
For roll call members named a
bird they had seen at their feeder.
Joan Stewart was a guest at the

HAS BIRTHDAY - Adam
Triplett, son of Clyde and Debbie
Triplett, Syracuse, celebrated bls
fourth birthday with a party. A
"General Lee" cake was served
with lee cream, punch. Attending
were Jim, Sharon, Jimmy and
Ke!U Hubbard, Chester; Melissa,
Scott and Stacey Hubbard, BiD
Hubbard, Barb Bearhs, Ora Bass
aod Wendy Triplett, all of
Syracuse.

SATURDAY
CHESTER Township Trustees
Saturday at 9 a.m. at the Chester
Town Hall.
RACINE CHAPTER 134 OES
Monday 1:30 p.m. at Masonic Tern·
pie. Silent auction following the
meeting.

i1[iG.s-frjiiP"ifrifeol·

I

Going Ou~ of Business Sale 1
Now In Progress
1
1 Pomeroy,
0.
Ph
.
992·2176
1
1

I

Hour: 8·5 Mon.·Fri.

I

1

8· 12 Sat.
Closed Sunday

1

1

I International
I Harvester

New Idea
Equipment

I
I

SOMETHING NEWI

BREAKFAST
AT MEIGS I~NN
starting Monday, Feb. 2nd; we will be serv ng
·
breakfast from 6·8 a. m . Mon. · Fri .

THE MEIGS INN
126 M .a in St.

Pomeroy, Ohio

992·3629

using "Controling Our Lives" as her

topic . It was decided during the
meeting that instead of a traveling
prize a hostess gift will be used this
year. Members drew for secret
pals.
The garden calendar presented by
Mrs. Lewis suggested pruning late
flowering shrubs on mild days and
cleaning the leaves of indoor foliage
plants noting that the microscopic
openings in the leaves is how the
plant breathes. She also suggested
that since plants grow toward the
light that they be turned every few
days to keep thein straight.
For the February meeting members were reminded to take seed
catalogs for roll call. Mrs. Crane
will discuss growing under lights,

1980 OLDS 98 REGENCY SEDAN

DIESEL

Loaded with all options .

'9895 00
1976 JEEP C-J 5 RENEGADE
Low mileag e, 3 speed .

1978 OLDS 98 REGENCY CPE.
Load ed with all options. This price is $500 under average
r etail.

qNLY

'4995 00

1980 AMC SPIRIT CPE.
9,000 Miles. If you want a 1980 model priced below
average retail , this is a good buy .

ONLY

'4395 00

1979 CHEV. IMPAlA WAGON
Low mileage, clean throughout.

1979 CHEV. MALIBU CLASSIC SEDAN
Loca l1 owner , clean throughout.

'4695 00

1978 CHRYS. CORDOBA CPE........... ... ........... '3995111
1974 OLDS. 98 SEDAN ..................... .. ......... 11295111
L ow m ileag e, toea I own er . ,
9
1976 0LDS 98 REGENCY CPE. .. .............. ....... . 24 5
1973 CAD. DEVILLE SEDAN ....... ........ ... ........ .. '1295
1974 OLDS CUTlASS SUPREME SEDAN .. .... ........ '1295
1975 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME CPE.. .... ............ '2595
1977 PONTIAC GP CPE.. .......... ..................... .13795
1976 CHEV. CAPRICE WAGON .......................... 11995

I

SIMMONS OLDS.-CADILLAC INC.
You'll Lllce Our Quality Way Of
Doing Business

SUGAR RUN FlOUR MILLS
AVE.

I

"--------------...1

F y

1974 COUGAR ••••••••••••••••A.u~~~~~:;o.n2~. 51195
2 dr hordtop, auto .. ru ns good . $1095
1973 DODGE DART• ••••••••••••••••••••••
1976 FORD PINTO RUNABOUT•.'~~~:'::"•.'. '1995
UEVY CAPRICE • • • • • • • Pf•1
'[l'fee"·"rond•f1on
'""" . 52495
1976 I'W1
1974 PONTIAC LeMANS 4 DR•••••••••••• SU95
1974 MAVERICK 4 DR .•••••• :.u;~.~~~~6.c:~. s1195
1974 FORD F-150 CLUB CAB ••••••••••••.51695

MU~BERRY

•
I

SIMMONS OLDS.-CADILLAC INC.
MEANS A GREAT DEAL

1976
PONTIAC GRAND PRIX ••••••••••••• '2195
2 dr. hardtop. tull Y cq ufo. Like new
UEVY NOVA •••••••••••••••••••••••
4 dr .. JOS motor. auto, p. ~ .
1$1695
1976.I'~

lKO

'

f'

meeting. Mrs. Edwards will' host the •
February meeting at which time
Lois Pauley will · give a demon- 1
stration on wheat weaving.
Refreshments were served ·by the
hostess.

Social calendar

and Mrs. Lewis will give a demon·
slration on the "mori bana man·
ner." For the arrangement of the
month members are to make valen·
tine collages.
Mrs. Beegle and her daughter,
Shirley, a guest, served a dessert
course to those named and Mrs.
Wilma Terrell and Mrs . Ruth Moore.

•.

y

with a hobby incorporated. The blue ~pjiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil
ribbon went to Addalou Lewis, and 1
the red to Pat Thoma. Peggy Crane
and Mrs. Brickles judged the
arrangements. They also awarded a
blue ribbon to a specimen of a
flowering amaryllis displayed by
Mrs. Thompson.
For roll call members told what
they lik~ best about garden club.
Mrs. Beegle presented devotions

I

.' 1977 FORD MUSTANG. ::r~:c: ~~".d~·. :~:":~~ ! . '2895
et

I
8
R
A
.R

DOG FOOD HEADQUARTERS

BEST BUY IN TOWN

•

L _.,ct&gt;\.~~

tif- f...!

'I t J.IWISE LO~ I lJt ' U UJ.I LHIMNI;. Y

I

985-3301

news reported

Contests to begin in February
• were explained at the recent
meeting of TOPS OH 570 of
Pomeroy. It was n~ted that the fi~h
contest will end this week and that
, starting next week an exercise

Jo~

P B., P. S.• auto, Q(J(Id' WH I

WAS! I HEAT Clfl CU LA TOR
W~IJ

in basement

By Polly Cramer
Special correspoodeal
&gt;
DEAR POLLY - I am sure my
' problem bothers other apartment
dwellers, too. We
have a nice big
• basement but it is
r. damp, so could
,. you tell us what to
• put in our luggage
t so we could keep
• it down there. We
are travelers and
=· the big suitcases
Cramer
• take up so much room in the closets,
• but we need to beat the mildew
• problem.- CECIUA
X DEAR CECIUA - I really do not
~ think putting anything inside your
• cases is going to solve the problem,
• as nuldew may form on the outside.
: Will they go under the bed ? They
; will provide extra storage for things
• not used very often and is dust ruffle
will hide theJil. U it is absolutely
• necessary that they be kept in the
: basement, stand them on end on
: shelves and not too close to damp
: walls. If ther are no shelves, im·
• provise some with boards placed on
; bricks or cement blocks. (Editor's
l note: A de-humidifier for the
~ basement might also. help.) •"'~ POLLY
DEAR POLLY - I ha ve six
: children, so I'm always look i n~ fvi

The Daily Sentinel-Page-s

Collage demonstration
highlight of garden
club meeting .locally

•

....
:· Polly's
Pointers
'
.

I

POMEROY, OHIO

ByEIIeaBeU
Meigs Ubrarlaa
The big news at the Pomeroy
and Middleport Public Libraries
this week is that Februsry, which
starts Sunday; is FINE-FREE
MONTH.
.
Q. What is FINE-FREE MON·
TH?
It's a whole month when you ·
ean return overdue library books,
recorda, etc. and not have to pay
a fine.
Q. Why do you have a month
like that?
We have found in the past that
some people will not pay a fine
for returning materials late.
Some people Ulink they are too
poor to be able to alford it, I
guess. Other people seem to feel
ashamed and don't want to face
us' But we need to have our
materials back sp we can lend
them out to other people.
Q. Why do you charge fines,
anyway?
Many people say that they
might forget to return our
materials if they did not have to
pay a fine. other people want to
pay fines because they say it
relieves their consciem.-es.
Q. How do I take advantage of
your offer?

special solo and fourth in novice
solo.
April is a member of the Riggs
Rangerettes Baton Corps which won
top honors at both competitions. The
corps director is Mrs. Judy Riggs.
Mrs. Cindy Wolfe of Pomeroy is her
solo baton teacher.

E

Beautiful Jewelry
is Always Treasured

..,c. fr,l.

.. ,

Your
Libraries

April Lynn Hudson, third grader
at the Salisbury Elementary School, .
won four trophies recently in baton
competition.
1
;; She placed first in basic strut and
:: third in novice solo in a contest held
: in Charleston. In competition at
• Belpre, she received a third .place in

•

,Own a small business?
You'll appreciate the
careful attention
H&amp;R Block can give
your tax returns.

618 E. MAIN ST.

of trophies in . recent
baton competitions

1

THE INCOME TAX PE;OPLE

I'WrMASTER : S.nd oddreu to The Dolly ·

Slblcrtbera nl&gt;t dulrlng to PlY the carrier
may remit In advance direct to The Dally
Slnt1nel 00 11 3, Bor 12 month basis. Credit
wW be liven carrier each month.

assessing the possibility of playing
the first round Friday.
" Hopefully, we will be aole to
complete the tournament on Mon·
day."
Pressed for continguency plans in
the case of more rain or other
delays, Mangwn said only : "We
wouldn't want to go beyond what we
have a nnounced.··
Mangum, deputy comm issioner
for the PGA Tour, announced the
one-day postponement Thursday after more them three inches of rain
and some hail fell on the three Mon·
terey l;'eninsula courses. ·
PwnJl.' were used in an attempt to
empty the flooded sa nd traps, but
they couldn't keep up with the
squalls. Fairways were also flooded .
Shallow pools funned on greens and
tees.
The forecast ca lled for showers
through today with clearing on the
weekend.
The format' for this unique event
ma kes it impractical for double

Southern frosh claim 34-29 win

StnUnel. ll l Court St .. Pomeroy, OhJo ~769 .

By Carrier or Motor Route
One week ,, . .......... . ... .... , ... 11.00
OntMonth ..... ............... ..... 14.40
OneYe•r ............... ,, ..... , , . ~2 . 10
SINGLE COPY
PRICES
Dally . . .. .. . .. .
.. ....... 1~ Ctnt&amp;

April Hudson winner

Weatherman big at Crosby
Pro-Am Golf Tournament

osu cage squad

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ohio
State basketball Coach Eldon Miller
says Art Schlichter is welcome to
come out for the team next season
even though the Buckeye football
quarterback has decided to quit for

uf

t "()()THA 1_.1 .

April Hudson

has attracted some of Ills former top asslstaniB to New
Orleans. He also has hired an offensive coordinator.

inside, and he's such a factor. John-

" I've never been to a philhar-

CHI CAGO (AP I
The new
owners of the Chicago White Sox and
the Seattle Mariners say they are
committed to developing their clubs'
farm systems.
Sale of the White Sox to a group
headed by a suburban real esta te
developer and a network television
executive and of the Mariners to a
California millionaire won the
Ulllnimous approval of American
League owners Thursday.
The new owners were approved by
a pair of unannnous J4-{) votes at a
meeting that lasted . less than an

-

' ·Anytime yuu com e in he re (Cor-

After a bit of practice, the two
went through "d few bars, Ja nis
playing the theme with Jackson ac·
companyi ng and finally Reggie hit·
ling the last chord - a two-handed
burst of thunder.
"Very quick hands and good con·
centralion," Janis said approvingly.

AL owners approve buyers

ly Prea Allociation and the Amtrlc1n
Nftlpaper Publllhers Auociatlon, Natiunal
AdvertlslnK Repruentative, Landini
Auocl1te1, 3101 Eudl'} Ave., Cleveland,
Ohlo,l eu5.

,..,..

UCLA

Janis said comfortingly.

have been among the victim~.

1

t.t-0"'

-,&lt;/"

Reggie, as honorary national.
By Associated Press
chairman of the Amyotrophic
Oregon State showed UCLA who
Lateral Sclerosis Foundation 1Al..S),
was invited to Carnegie Hall Thor· . was the boss.
" This could have been the best
sdct y m orning to join Janis in a brier
appearance promoting the pianist's game we've had all season," said
Ore,gon State basketball . Coach
benefit concert at Carnegie Hall
April 21.
Ralph Miller after an artistic 81.07
Naturally, Reggie, whose tltick, triwnph over UCLA Thursday night.
" I thought we executed well , both of·
caloused hands have poled more
fensively
and defensively. It would
than 400 horne runs and swung bats
be
very
nice
if we could remember
in five World Series, had to join
to
do
that
every
time out. ".
Janis at the keyboard. They looked
out at 2,800 em pty red seats.
·• we shall try a few bars from
The to)&gt;-rimked Beavers. one of
Chopin's 'Gra nde Waltze Brilliante,'
the country 's best shooting teams,
a rare score which I happened to
hit a season-high 69 percent from the
cjiscover in Paris." Janis said.
field on 34 of 49 atteJilpts in the big
Pac-10 game. Steve Johnson led the
"Can you play 'April Showers?'" way, hitting 12 of 17 field goal tries,
Reggie inquired.
grabbing 11 rebounds and scoring 27
The pianist's fa ce became blank .
points.
"Come on, Reggte. you ca n do it,''

YORK (AP) - Reggie
Jackson came to carnegie Hall to
~ay. a Chopin waltz on the piano and
£bund himself surrounded by
baseball infatutaion an '' I never
(jlted baseball until I saw Reggie on
TV. Now I am a fan. If that Winfie ld
fellow (Dave Winfield, the Yankees'
new $15 million outfielder) tries to
steal his thunder, he will have to an·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Beavers
whip

Today's

\-

January 30,1981

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

-The Dail Sentinel

POMEROY. OHIO

see or Ph•me : Pete Burris, Marvin Keebaugh
Mik e Anderson or Geor.ge Harris
Pomeroy, OH.
Open Evenings Until6 :00
Except Thursday &amp; Saturday Til5 :00

Ph. 992 ·6614

�Helen Help Us

Should U. S. Government sell Food for Thought
Ground beef: lean vs. regular
ad space on postage stamps?
ByHELENANDSUEBOTTEL
Special correspondents
DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
My history teacher thinks Rep.
Barry Goldwater Jr.'s idea about
selling advertising spaceon postage
stamps is "dumb". He says people
don't read stamps, so big business
wouldn't buy and even if companies
went for it, they'd raise the price of
their products to pay for extra ad ex-

New arrival
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Illle, Cave St,
Pomeroy, are announcing the birth
of their first child, a daughter, on
Jan. 20 at the O'Bieness Memorial
Hospital in Athens. The infant
weighed six pounds, six ounces and
was 20 inches long. She "" been
named Jodie Melissa, after her aunt,
Miss Melissa !hie.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Gardner Wehrung,
Pomeroy, and the paternal grand·
parents are Mr. and Mrs. Ed !hie,
Racine. Mrs. Georgia Wehrung,
Middleport, Mr. and Mrs. Marvin
Bennett, Point Pleasant, and Mr.
and Mrs. FranciS Daughterly,
Magnolia, are great-grandparents.
Mrs. Elizabeth Gardner, Beacon. N.
Y., is a great-great-grandmother.

-

penses, so nobody would win.
I say, "Give it a try." If the price
of stamps dropped to five cents,
maybe people would become letter
writers again, and that might make
us more literate. Besides, . it would
help the U.S. postal service stay out
ofthe-red.
'
What do you and others. think ?JIM
DEARJIM : •
As a "woman of letters" I'm for
anything that might lower the price
of stamps, but I'm not sure postal
advertising would do this. More
likely the extra revenue could disappear into the great maws of govern·
men\ while we writers settle for a
" No increse in pOstage rates this
year" announcement as pap.
Comments, anyone?- HELEN
JIM:
What kind of sales pitch can you
get on a postage stamp? Big
business is pretty cagey about its ad·
vertising dollar. Your history
teacher mnight be right in guessing
it wouldn't buy. - SUE

BY DIANA S. EBERTS
Cross and his colleagues comExtension Agent
pared the weight losses, protein,
Home Eeonomlcs
fat, and water content of more
Consumers may be wasting than 200 ground beef patties. in
their money by buying e&lt;tra-lean SEA's Meat Science Research
ground beef rather than regular Laboratory at the Belts
ville
ground beef, says SEA food Agricultural Research Center.
technologist H. Russell Cross.
Patties weighed 3.5 ounces and
"Consumers may pay over 40 ranged in raw fat content from 16
cents per pound Jrtore for extra- to 28 percent. Extra-lean ground
lean ground beef. But there is beef usually contains 15 to 18 per·
practically ~ no differen~e in cent lat. while regular ground
cooked hamburgers whether beef has 23 to 26 percent fat. After
made from extra-lean ~r regular cooking, the ground beef patties
ground beef, except that ham- weighed about the same regar·
burgers made from regular beef dless of raw fat content.
are juicier and a bit tastier,"
For example, cooked, quartersays Cross.
pound (114 grams) extra-lean
Cross reported earlier that patties had one gram (454 grams
weight loss during cooking is in a pound) less fat and one gram
about the same for high and low- more water than regular ground
fat hamburgers; and that in taste heel patties. "This one gram of
panel tests, patties made from fat represents about nine calories
ground beef with 12 percent fat per patty," says Cross. The ex·
did not rate as tender or as juicy tra-Jean patties were also drier
as patties rhade from ground beef and tougher than those · made
with 18 to 30 percent fat.
from regular ground beef. The
Now, he reports there is only a protein content was the same for
minute difference in the fat levels all patties regardless of raw fat
of cooked hamburgers whether content.
made from extra-lean or regular
" Consumers pay more for ex·
ground beef.
Ira-Jean beef for a variety of
Cross explains that although reasons," says Cross. "They may
there is a difference in the levels feel that leaner beef loses Jess
of fat in the raw meat, regul;tr weight during cooking, has fewer
ground beef loses more fat during calories, or contains more
cooking, while extra-lean ground protein. However, the ham- ·
beef loses more water. "The Joss . burgers made from extra-Jean
of fat is noticed because it ac· beef have only one gram less fat,
cwnulates in the pan," he says. and one gram more water after
"But water is lost as vapor and cooking. Is it worth the extra
this weight Joss is not as ob- cost?"

DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
A reader brought up the in·
teresting observation that more and
more couples who want children
seem to be having troubles with in·
fertility. He guessed this might be
caused from the chemicals in the air
and water: pollution prevents
pollenation, as it were. Also from
food additives and drugs, legal and
illegal.
.
Maybe the high cost of gasoline
contributes to the problem. With
viOl.is."
many men riding bicycles and
motorcycles to work and for
pleasure, well, certain male equipment is pretty fragile. The spenn
count could he lowered. Tight pants
The 14th World Methodist Conand underwear are aslo factors. ference in . Honolulu will be a
Testes need cool air and space to . featured opportunity for the scores
function properly.
of Methodists who will be part of the
· Perhaps someday, if we don't "Islands of Hawaii" tour, July 15-28,
clear up our damaged world, we sponsored by Educational Opwon't need birth control.
portunities, Inc. , of Lakeland, Fla.,
STUDENT
according to coordinator, the Rev.
Dear Student :
Oren D. Schaffer, Lancaster, Ohio.
We wouldn't count on it! The event will also celebrate the
HELEN AND SUE
Centennial of Methodism in Hawaii.
Those who desire only an eight day
NOTE FROM HELEN : Who says program may go July 21-28, and
our damaged world can't be at least those who desire a little later date
partially depolluted, our foods, may go July 21-August 2, with atdrugs and bike seats made fairly tendance at the World Conference an
sa[e, underwear air conditoned, opportunity on all three dates, Rev .
etc.?
Schaffer said. Those wishing to atA problem recognized is one half tend the Women's Federation Consolved, and we're certainly aware of ference may go July 15-28.
our problems these days. Just read
He added that people may still
and listen to the news'
register for the Holy Land program
departing February 17, April 27,
DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
June 22, and July 13, with options to
I've only gone with one other guy Egypt, Athens, Rome, Vienna, and
besides my present boyfriend and Jordan.
thai w•s when I was 15.
I'm afraid he loves me more than I

World Methodist Conference in Hawaii

MILHOAN
Mr. and Mrs. Mikel Milhoan of
Long Bottom are announcing the birth of their first child, a daughter,
April Louise, born on Dec. I at St.
Joseph HoSpital, Parkersburg, W.
Va. The infant weighed six pounds,
eight ounces and was 20 inches long.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Billy Dailey, Long Bottom,
alld the paternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Blaine Milhoan of
Long Bottom. Great-grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Fitch of
Long Bottom, and Mrs. Easter
Dailey, Portland.

love him. He isn t so much in the
1

looks department but he has a B-plus
personality.
The last time I tried to break up
with him, I cried my eyes out, and
ended up back with him again. But I
really do need time to think, and he's
pushing for marriage.
My feelings for him come and go. I
can't bear to hurt him, so what
should I do? - FAN
Dear Fan:
Better to hurt your guy now than
· ~fter he talks you into marriage.
Tell him the truth: you aren't sure
of your feelings, and you need a
break. Don 't weaken! - HELEN ·
-NOTE FROM SUE : And since we

suspect it may he a pennanent
break, don't give him false hopes.

SMITH

Mr. and Mrs. Greg Smith of
Pomeroy are announcing the Dec. 3
birth of their daughter, Bonne
Joyce. Born at the Holzer Medical
Center she weighed eight pounds,
three ounces and was 20 inches long.
Maternal grandparents are Larry
Pickens, Pomeroy, and the late Bonnie Pickens, and the m~tcrnai greatgrandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Wilt and Mr. and Mrs. S. G.
Pickens, both of Pomeroy.
Paternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Howard Smith, Blunt, W.
Va., and the great-grandparents are
Mrs. Thelma Garten of Blunt, and
Mr. and Mrs . John Smith,
Charleston, W.Va.

January 30, 1911

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

The regular summer program will
be the British Isles Odyssey which
will depart July 7, 14, 21. 28, August 4
and II, offering options to Ireland,
Wales, Scotland, England, and the
opportunity to attend a play at the
Royal Shakespeare Theater in Stral·
ford . Equipment used will be Boeing
747 of KLM, British, and Braniff Air·
ways.
,.
Those going to Hawaii may
arrange a stopover in Los Angeles or
San Francisco at no extra charge,
eigher going or coming. Descriptive
brochures and further information
are available free by writing Rev.
Shaffer at 951 Pratt Avenue, Lancaster. Oh 43130, or calling him at
(614) ~3789or~ll96 .
FAITH IS ...
Faith is what makes you able to
believe that tomatoes from your gar·
den next surruner will look the ones
you see in the seed catalogues.

--ASTROGRAPH-Januar)' ll , 1981
EXL' II In~ amJ rt'Yiiirdmg tlun~:, ~~a ui'ICI ~Il
111 you m ~nm p il dl\' lll t'.S t in ~ o•nu n~ )'t!l:lr.

Tht&gt;y

CANfER tJuae t i·July ltJ Tht: very
pt.•op!t• yuu are ~t irumg tu serve tuday turn
rl}! ht around and ltmd you a much-nH&lt;Jt!C,J .
lutnd in aeeumphshing one of your d'lu~!l .
AI! w1JI benefit

tu alter your
n t'wpumt ur vpm 1un nJi l L"t! rrun ~ the dt rt't·
ll\111 yuu thlllk your hie lihuuld lake.
AQUARIUS !Jan. 20-Ft'b. 1,! Pt:op le a rt·
o tl rcn:t~ t u yuu illl ll .,.·ant tu ful111W)' 'u toUay
blxou.sc: uf Uu: li Ubtlt• way you hctmll e o
h:;ul~rlihlp ru l~ . Yuu Ulltit!fll!ny )'uur un•
purlam.:t' tu bl1btt:r theirs. Rumarwe. lrnvd .
luck. rrM1urc~~. p1Js.!iiblr p1tfall.s and c;•reer
fur the t·umlnl( munth:; are nil tlbt·usSt:d 111
yuur A.slni-Graph whl t'h lxl( ill:i Wllh yuur
lll rthday . Mail $1 fur e1n:h 111 A.stn,.(i raph .
Bux w.l, Radio C1ty St.ntwn . N. Y. !0019. Bt•
sure to specify lli rlll tlatc ,
PISCES I Fl'b. zt.M11n·h 2CII C:U&lt;il.s have &lt;l
ht' Uer ch.olnt•e uf lleml( rcat'hcd lut!Hy 1f yu u
reveal yuur de ~ l rt's unl }' tu thuSt' whi1t:tl\lltl
l lll)! ht t!Ven

t·au:lt'

1/lt' tt' il ~~ 1l USIIIK thplumae) a no UtklllK !&gt;lll ·
tl }' )! 1\lt'S )IIU lrt.'lllelldH\ISt'Juut

) 'UU

UW (July !3-AUJ. n 1 Fur btosl r esults
\ida y, prt!sent yuur ideas w1th a fillir Fullw
yuur instinclS as y, showm&lt;Jn to bto colorful

without bt!tnK f11mbuyant.
VIRGO IAuM . n&amp;pl. !%1 Tlul.t siKlh ~nse
yuu·rc bl~~t!d with today can very gut:·
ccsslully be put to usc when dellling i11
money nutlters. I!Spl!{.'tally when l'le!IOhalULI(
ur bar~otalmng IS invulvt!d.
LIBRA ISer,t· Zl-Ocl. %31 Set asade serious
matlerli and e\ your ha ir down a bil today.
It'll du yoo 11 world llf gl&gt;IJd to Kel involved tn
run thin)!s of the active variety ,
SCORPIO !Ott. !4-Nov. !!I Nuthlnij Is too
good fur thwe you luve tuday. Vuu'!l find a
way tu try lo care fur lhdr needs 11nd wanl!i,
both emotional 0111d lllilterial.
SAGITI'ARIUS (Nov. 23-Dtt, !II All you
h.a'lt: lu du is shut the ildion and people will
KUilHIIaltiCIIIIy full uw you today. Even those
alrt:lidy set on one t'lltu·sc will sw1h:h uver lu

unc.lerst.:mc.l )'llUr 11\UllVt'S. With th i:! m . )'IJU

f•ml allies
ARIES iMart•h 21·AJ1ril 191 Vuul' en·
thusJaSin aurat'ls pt"t1pl c wh1 1se ab JII\ICS ur
suppon arc what yuu net&gt;c.l tn 111akc yuu a
wllllwr' t!Xtt y Tl~y·n ha nf.( In there tn a Silt:·
('t.'SSf UJ (.~11\dUS IIIIl .

TAURUS l Apri l ZO.May Z0 1 Worki ng h:m l
su m ~Ml t! else's mtere~ ls Wday and ~ IIl io(
w ill i n,~t 111 do whatever Jllb is necessary tu
make Unngs ~as 1er fur lhi.'Jil p ri ' ~' Jtlcs )' i~U

un

(GOT PROBLEM? Or a subject

for discussion, two-generation style?
Direct your questions to either Sue
or Helen Bottel - or both. if you
want a combined mother-daughter
answer
in care of this
newspaper. l

BUREAU OF lliE
MINT
The Bureau u( the Mint manufac·
lures all U. S. coins and distributes
them through the Federal Reserve
banks and branches.

IMMEDIATE OPENING
FOR NEWSPAPER CARRIER
IN THE AREA OF THE
JONES BOYS
IN MIDDLEPORT

Mason County news. · ·
have a patriotic progrl!lll at their
BY ALMA MARSHAlL
regular meeting on Tuesday, Feb. 3,'
Corres)I!IOIIenl
at 10:30 a.m. ·at the former Lewta
ROBERTOUVER
home on Brown Street. Two great
HONORED
presidents, Abraham Uncoln and
MASON - Robert Oliver was George Washington, will be honored.
honored at the Mason United Mrs. Fred Taylor and Mrs. Earl
Methodist Church Sunday, Jan. 25, Ingels are In charge of the program.
for his faithful service in ringing the
Mrs. Lois Test, president of Mason
church bell every day at nooo for one Historical Society, announced that
minute, to rennind people of the com- there will be a program at til!! soup
munity to continue to pray lor the dinner seheduled for Feb. 14 at 5:30
release of the American citizens p.m. at the historic home.
held as hostages in Iran. The few
day~ that Bob was unable to he
Marion aod area penoaala
there, friends substituted for him.
Mrs. Gladys Thomas, a senior
Plans had been made to ring the citizens fonnerly of Mason, fell
church bell on the day of liberation while at Pleasant Valley Nursing
calling the congregation to a service Home and broke her hlp. She is now
of prayer, but on the last day of cap- a patient at Pleasant Valley
tivity, the rope on the bell broke.
The Chimes in the church steeple Hospital.
Mrs. Jinuny Dunn and daughter,
could not be used. They were pur·
Lora,
of Southside, W.Va. visited on
chased by the Men's Bible class in
Saturday with her parents, Mr. and
1955 and had not been functioning for
several years, in spite of repeated Mrs. Bliss Wilson in Mason. Gary
efforts to repair them. In a last ef· Wilson of Atlanta, Ga. also recently
fort to find a way to call people to visited his parents.
Mr. and Mrs. Stan Saunders of
worship, one of the men again
Columbus
were here to attend the
checked the wiring and eqUipment,
funeral
on
MondBy of his cousin,
and suddenly the Chimes began to
Donald
Mulford
of Columbus and
play. People hastily gathered at the
fonnerly
of
Meigs
County. He died
church for an infonnal service of
on
Friday
at
Doctors
Hospital In
prayer and thanksgiving to God that
Columbus.
While
here
the
Saunders
the day offreedom had finally come.
.
visited
her
parents,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
The congregation extended its
CUrtis
McDaniel.
thanks to Bob Oliver for the part he
Mrs. Necie Moore has returned
played in this historic drama. He
home
after spending a month •
was given a yellow rose with yellow
visiting
her daughter, Mrs. Frances .'
ribbon to wear, and the altar flowers
Atkinson
at Salem, Va.'
were dedicated in his honor.

soc~~:~vE

On Dean's list

Kathryn P. Suchoza of McMurray
was among 354 students named to
the fall quarter dean's list at Ohio
Northern University, Ada, Ohio.
The dean's list is comprised of
students who attain a 3.5 grade point
average or better on a 4.0 grade •
system.
Proper wearing of the badge sash,
Kathryn is the daughter of Mr. and •
pins and insignias was discussed by Mrs. Bernard P. Suchoza, the for· •
Mrs. Janet Simpson, leader, at the mer Patricia Meier. Mrs. Suchoza is
Tuesday night meeting of the a graduate of Pomeroy High School .
Salisbury Brownie Troop 1220 held and also from St. J011eph's School of
· at the Salisbury Elementary School.
Nursing, Parkersburg.
The pledge to the flag led by Traci
Miss Suchoza is a fifth year phar·
Bartels and the girl scout promise
macy
major in the Raabe College of
by Amy Rouse opened the muting.
Phannacy and Allied Health ScienMembershiP cards were presented
ce at Ohio Northern. She is active in
to the Brownies. The first and
second grade Brownies then met Delta Zeta Sorority, Rho Chi pharwith Mrs. Jennie Warth, assistant macy honorary and is a Sigma Pi
Sweetheart.
leader, to prepare a caper chart.
She is the granddaughter of Mrs.
Mrs. Simpson discussed with the
Philip
Meier and the neice of Mrs.
third grade Brownies the various
Charles
Knopp and Mr. and Mrs.
badges on which they could work,
Robert
Meier,
all of Pomeroy.
and they selected the dabbler badge.
Refreslunents were served by
Kristin Slawter.

SUPER

Church members travel
to jackson meeting
Several members of the First
Southern Baptist Church of
Pomeroy were in Jackson recently
for a youth rally of the Scioto Valley
Baptist Association held at the Emmanuel Baptist Church.
Going from here were B'etsy
Newman, youth leader, Daisy Pal·
terson, Mike Patterson, Janie
Coleman, Brenda, Lisa and Jennifer
Nerwman, Karen and Julia Spencer,
Bill Foley, Chris and Lisa Allen, Ann
Huffman, and Joe King.
For the program the movie
"Heavenly Deception" was shown.
The impact of the movie was to
stress how to deal with members of
the Unification Church, corrunonly
called "Moonies". Enroute home
from the meeting the Pomeroy
youth stopped for refreslunents.

SAVING$

AU
KNITS
20% OFF
PAmRN

THE SEWING
CENTER
Mill

~I .

Middleport. Oh.

.,

Announces the opening of his
Point Pleasant, w. Va. office of
I a~ h onq 11 1dl tlt."' ttill lhlildtrdH ed
1n tint' ly tl')l t ured ;:, I dined q ld~s.
A C'ollec tru \ 1l t:'l ll todd y

fm yowtovf,.'d 01 ~ .

l Omor1ow ..:.. pl' rlldp ..,, .11 1 htNioom .

Located in the Professional Building at
2513 Jackson Avenue

DR. CHHIBBER's OFFICE will open

---4-

for appointments call

)

bus, Ule commission's executive

director, said nutrition is among
many services which overlap at the
state ·level. Nutrition programs are
being operated by the youth commission along with the education,
welfare, health, mental health, men·
tal retardation and economic and
corrununity development depart·
ments, he said.
Other services provided by three
or more stale agencies, the report
said, include alcoholism prevention
and lreabnent, law enforcement,
counseling,

crisis

intervention,

health screening and assessment,
tutoring and special employment
needs.

Terminate 32 cases
Twenty defendants were fined and
12 others forfeited bonds in Meigs
County Court Wednesday.
Fined by Judge Patrick O'Brien
were Dorothy Parker, Pomeroy, $10
and costs, failure to stop for stop
sign; . Oetus · Harder, Rutland,
Thelma Roberts, Middleport,
Evelyn Maynard, Racine, Sharon
Icenhower, Pomeroy, Harold
Hysell, Rutland, and Carrie Hat·
cher, Bellville, $21 and costs each,
, speed; Donald Cremeans, Coolvllle,
: $250 and costs, 10 days confinement,
• seven days suspended, one year
: probation, interfering with game
:protector; Anthony · Rerny,
: Gallipolis, $28 and costs, speed;
· Michael Triplett, Pomeroy, $5 and
: CO&lt;IIs, unsafe vehicle; Anna Taylor,
: $22 and costa, speed; Cllarles
; Adkins, Jr., Gallipolis, $20 and costs,
· speed; Joseph G. Stout, Rt. I, Long
: Bottom, ~ and costs, reckless
: operation, $150 arid costs, five days
· confinement, . confinement suspen: ded, six montm probation, hit-skip;
: Erika Garnes, Dexter, $30 and costs,

left of center; Paul E. Spencer,
Cheshire, $10 and costs, unsafe
vehicle; . Terry K. Males, Athens,
$.'100 and costs, overload; Denis R,
Shuler, Rt. I, Lan!!sville, $50 and
costs, three days coilfinement, confinement suspended, six months
probation, no operator's license;
Gary A. Johnson, The Plains, $1~
and costs, failure to yield; Laverne
Peck, Albany, $i6 and costs,
overload; Wayne Cleland, Raci~e.
$50 and costs, reckless operation.
Forfeiting bonds were Thomas A.
Zano, Rt. I, Rutland, RobertS. Burson, Shade, John Parker, Lancaster,
Johnny Jackson, Jr., Berea, Joseph
Crwn, Cambridge ,..Jeffrey F. Legg,
Colwnbus, James Matthews, Pit·
ts')urgh, Pa ., 01nd Woodrow
Browning, Mallory, W. Va., $40.50
each, speeding; Allan P. Mills,
Racine, $60.50, no operator's license.
Harland D. Whitlatch, Rt. I, Reedsville, $360.50; OWl; Hennan H.
Gaffney, Massillon, $30, speed;
Gregory F. Romano, St. Albans,
$40.50, illegal passing.

State Auditor Thomas E.
Ferguson's office announced the
February, 1981, distribution of
$47,341,958 in Aid to Dependent
Children to 555,268 recipients in the
88 Ohio counties. A total of 1,730
recipients in Meigs County will
receive $140,!109.
·

' t:OLO\' · .
,

:
;
·
:
'

I J,,.,,t,

•

KOCH GREETS EX· HOSTAGES- New York City
Mayor Ed Koch speaks tO the press Wednesday In New
York's LaGuardia Airport upon the arrival of some of
the 52 Americans who had been held hostage In Iran.

From left are: Barbara and Berry Rosen of Brooklyn,
N. Y. and Robert Engleman.it of Hurst, Texas. Rosen
and Eliglemaoo were both hostages In Iran. (AP
Laserphoto).

Kucinich finds
•
new vocatzon

•
CLEVELAND (AP) - Dennis J.
Kucinich, the fonner fiery and feisty
mayor of Cleveland, has found a new
vocation as a speech and com·
munications instructor at Cleveland
State University, where he once took
classes as an undergraduate.
The 21 students in "Com·
munlcations and the Campaign" had
little idea their instructor would he
the fonner · mayor who has made
campaigning a way of life during the
past 14 years.
Kucinich accepted the teaching
post just six days before classes for
the winter term began Jan. 5. He
said the class explores the content,
dynamaics and use of various communications campaigns, such as
political, product advertising and
issue-related campaigns.
During the course, his students
are required to construct, for
cl~jssroom use only, their own model
campaign.

BARGAIN MATINEES ON SAT &amp; SUN
ALL SEATS JUST $ t. 50
ADMISSION EVERY. TUESDAY S 1.50
531 JACKSON PIKE ·Fit . 35NORTH - Phone 446- 4524

, . - - - - - - - F R I D A Y lhru THURSDAY I - - - - - - - . ,

Kucinich, who holds Q8chelor's
and master's degrees in speech and
conununications from Case Western
Reserve University, said a ~oal of
his instruction will be to "demystify
the campaign process."
He said, ''When the students finish
this course, hopefully they'll have
enough of an understanding of the
dynamics involved to ereate their
own communications campaign.
"I'm in a unique position here,
having been involved in 18 different
campaigns in the last 14 years. In
that time I've gained some insight as
to how the political and communications process works. It's sort
of natural for me."
Kucinich, a Democrat who
decribed himself as a populist, ser·
ved one tw&lt;&gt;-year term as ll)llyor
before he was defeated in November
of 1979 by current Mayor George V.
Voinovich.

JANUARY 30 thru FEBRUARY 5 .

THE

AN EPIC

INCREDIBLE

1

COMEDY
(GIVF. O R TAI( E AN IN C H I

SHRINKING
WOI'\AN

Tell that special someone wiih

Put Your
Love On
the Line ...

. . ~- .....,

'

: /,,f,t
'
....

~t ~

~·\
1'\·_. -·
\

~CAc:::¥c:A~CA

' !,~Searching for the clever way to say "!'Love You?"

Our Happy Valentine Ads will be published
February 13, and offer you a truly unusual way to
proclaim your love and best wishes.

i I\

SAY "I LOVE YOU" WITH A
$1.00 SENTINEL VALENTINE AD.

'X '

w

Leuer to editor
'

Well, Meigs County, we finally
have gotten some good words from
the leaders of this great county as
far as road development. ·
A bypass around Rutland Is a
great welcome to some as we know
the big wheels of trucks will roil
around us making it safer for our
children and quicker for the
truckers. These two things alone are
just dandy to some. We Meigs Countians don't ask for much but when
we pay taxes for years on end we'd
like to see some of it back nnd road
development. It is just about the best

OESTOMEET
Racine Chapter 134 OES will meet
In regular session Munday, Feb. 2, at
7::JO p.m. at the Masnnic Temple.
A silent am:IMt will he h~lil1n 1h1'
dining rox1111 follnwm~ Ihe mu"tin~ .

After

w e couldn ' t have pick ed
a nice r pa ir of parents in

14

wonde rful

th e world! Have a Hap

py Va le nlin e's Da y !
Mike and Sue

r---------------------------------------------1
I
WRITE YOUR MESSAGE BEL(JN AND BRING IT
l
I

.1

·.'t)
~ l

I :j, )t{) 1 '
. . ... ) ',
. I .,. ;'1/;-•.

!

.,,.

·lJ . t~ ': ''
·~

.

1, _ ____ 2. ----~-J. _ __ _ _ 4. ----~
I

5.
6.------1· -----B.----~
9 . - - - - 1 0 . - - - - - 1 1 . _ __ _ _ 12. ----1
13. _ _ _ _ 14. _ _ __ _ 15. - - - - - 1 6 . - - - - 1
~------,-------------------------- -----------~

PHONE ·992-2156

·......
.'

·'

I
I
l I
II o/

OR MAIL liT Willi !1·00 BY FEBRUARY 12TH TO THE
DAILY SENTINEL, P.O. BOX 729, POMEROY, OHIO
16 WORDS $1.00-CASH Willi jORDER

I
I

I

lllodtrttlc d11ma,.:1 ·

To Mom and Dad• ..

years at m arriage , I' m

way to get it back.
So, Meigs County, cross your
fingers for the planning conunission.
They all need it to get this done. But
don't give up. Keep on trying. It's
our county and we have to help it
along. So Jet's hear it, David Weir,
help us build it.
Yours truly. - Floyd H. Cleland.
Box 223, Rutland, Ohio 45775.

tl~cr. rau!'.i;,,~

To My Wile, Ann . . .
st ill he ad ov e r heel s ih
love with you!
W a lte rZ .

'

MINOR TllAFFIC ACCIDENTS
No injuries were reported in two
traffic accidents investigated by the
Gallia·Meigs Post of the Ohio High·
way Patrol Thursday.
Troopers said a car driven by
Michael D. Tucker, 26, Rt. 2,
Galllpolls, was southbound on Mill
Creek Rd. at 3:10 p.m. when he
collided with a northbound vehicle
driven by carl J. Shoemaker, 74, Rt.
1. Gallipolis, causing minor damage
to both.
.Accordln~ to tile report, Cathy J .
N"well, 22, Rt. 4, Galhpoll~. was
snuthbound un SH ~ at 6:25 p.111
when her car· struck a•tcl killt~l 11

f

Friday thru Thursday

Fined were Hrau1oy Alexanaer,
Tim Herdman, 19, Rl. 4, Pomeroy,
16,
Rt. I, Rutland, $25 and costs,
appearing before Meigs Cpunty
failure
to stop within assured clear
Juvenile Judge Robert E. Buck was
distance,
accident involved; Julie
sentenced to 30 days in jail for
Maxey,
16,
New Haven, $15 and
providing alcohol a minor.
1 costs, speed; James R. Wamsley, II.
Twenty-five dBys were suspended
and he was placed on probation for 16, Pomeroy, $15 and costs, failure to
three months. Herman is presently yield, accident involved; Alan Par·
tlow, 17, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, $1~ and
lodged in Meigs County Jail.
Five juveniles were fined , when costs, no operator's license: Paul D.
Michael, 16. Rt. 4, Pomeroy, $14 and
they appeared on traffic charges.
cosl•. speed.

ISSUES CAUTION
The surgeon-general might conslder issuing a caution that sorne of
the way-out warnings fr~Xn Fogg~
Bottom ar~ apt to be hannfulto your
credibility, says our medical wat·
chblrd.

Maln..@y

---- •

better coordination of services for
children.
According to the report, there are
3,000 public and private child·
serving agencies operating in Ohio,
funded by federal, state and local
governments. The agencies are
being run by several state depart·
ments, corrunissions and boards, 616
school boards, 160 local health
departments, 53 mental health boar·
ds, 73 mental retardation boards, 88
county welfare departments and
other organizations, it said.
"In fiscal year 1978, approximately $4.7 billion of federal,
state, and local monies were spent to
operate these multiple programs,"
the report said.
An inventory and analysis showed
that thousands of Ohio children "are
being served well," the report said.
But "the persistent theme of the lack
of coordination in and among
programs and service systems is
evidenced in many places," it said.
Robert L. Lindamood of Colum-

Help us build it

675-5511
.-

roNDS RECEIVED

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Olio's
commlssion For Children, au but
out of business by a $40,000 budget
slash, says it will fight to stay alive.
The group's officers announced
Thursday the adoption of a
resolutioo deploring the cut ordered
earlier thla week as one in a series of
belt-tightening moves by the state
Controlling Board.
·
The board took all the money
which the commission had left to
operate until the end of the fiscal
year on June 30.
"We have no staff and no funds,"
said Joyce Young of Dayton, chair·
woman ol the 31-month-old agency.
It Willi created under a law containing a three-year sunset
provision, meaning it's scheduled to
go out of existence July I anyway.
Still, Mrs. Young plans•to ask the
Legislature for a six-year renewal
and $384,000.Jrom tile state's 1981·
.198.'1 budget. The money would help
the commission ' implement
programs and policies contained in a
newly drafted "Comprehensive Plan
for Ohio's Services to Children." .
The plan was distributed IJ'hursday to Gov. Jame5 A. Rhodes,
lawmakers and members of the
news media who had heard it at a
news conference.
The press session had been set up
before the controlling board action
to discuss the 135-page report.
Mrs. Young read from the
resolution, which said the corn·
mission "Is outraged over this action
by the state Controlling Board." She
said the controlling board "will Jose
more money in the long run than it
has saved," referring to recommendations in the report to
eliminate duplication and provide

'

B. A. Chhibber, M.D•.

FEBRUARY 2, 1981

DAILY SENTINEL

Agency will
fight cuts

\Juvenile
court news
.

SALE

CAPRICORN !Dec. %%-J•o . l' f You 're
humblt: and unublfWil\' ~ in Hrt:ll /1 where
it lt~n:."iS IUII Isn't Cillled fur luda y, but lcl
S4 1111l'lhln.: you want tu bt! placetlm front uf
ynu and you 'll qu!t:kly w~ke up

PEDIATRICS
'
and
INTERNAL MEDICINE

nJNDSRECEIVED

Mei!lll County was among the 34
Ohio counties sharing of a total of
$1,166,181.30 In public assistance and
special activities payments, State
. Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson's of·
fice reports .
Meigs received $24,000 in public
assistance monies.

SIMPLICITY

yu urpalh.

With UllSliU!o(hl t l' WOU'!lS
GEMINI IM11y 71 ~Junt• 'ZOI Hem~o~ Lt6ct.f ul
ilues u'l dllul l.' vuur slrl'lli.! lh toda v. In fact. 11

•

The Mason Historical Society will

Girl scouts .
discuss sashes

The Daily Sentinei-Page-7

January 30, 1911 ·

THE DAILY SENTINEL

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�The Datly Senttnei-Pag-9

This Message and Church

John F Fulfl, Mgr

Ray R1gg s
Ph 915 4100

Sl Rl

The Interested Businesses Listed On This
FRENOt'S SUNOCO
PIZZA SHACK
SERVICE CENTERS
21:Z

Ph 992 2101

CheSter

M .a 1n
eroy

I

510 N 2nd
Mtddl eport

Pomeroy

992 34Sl

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

MIOOLEPORT
BOOK StORE

Prescnpt•ons

KingsbUIJ Home Sales

NEW YORK
QODUNG HOUSE

&amp;
Service
The Fmest

KERMIT'S KORNER

m

=

Reuter-Bropn Insurance

RIDENOUR

FURNI~~~~~RDWAR:tI

Services
992 S130

214E Matn
Pomeroy

E

HEINER'S BAKERY

~
G-.·l-0-""'

Gilod Bread

GrocenesGeneral Merchand•se
Ra c m e 949 2SSO

Huntmgtoo W

IB.

¥92 Jln

WAID CROSS
SONS SlORE

Bakers of

of Co lumbu s 0

804 W Mam

ElliS &amp;SONS SOHIO
complete

1

~7\.

Automottve
~
Sennce
Locust &amp; Beech Stree1
991 9921 Mtddlepo rt

~drwklu~

, J "~
l l llN

rl•u...Wy

"
'"" ''11

I ASSU RE.' '&gt;'O U,

At&gt;J OIL MAP I

A~ TO WHY

I
WANTED YOU
ALON5 THAT 5

ANY 5ECUR tTY
~!OULATI O~;;

.ANOTH!Jt
STOFtY

IU
Oil WOW, ' oNr1 ' SKIP 5MITM
IS STILL AFTER DIIVDY WARBOC~o
AN HE'S DI%Ui5Er A&lt; P OO(TOR 1

99J 2318 P omeroy

VIRGIL B. TEAFORD SR.
J l6 s Second
Pomeroy

HEAD NG IF THAT
WON T VtOLATf"

HO 8LJT VOU RE
G! TTINS WAR~! A5
A MATTf,:t OF FACi.
WHAT 1M AFTEf{ I~

I. HAl/EN T THE
:SliGHTE~T l NrERE~T
IN OLD W1VE5 TA~E!io

Thtrd Nt tddl ep ort
9 92 1196

Nahonw1de Ins Co

...........

E Miltn

s

DON T 8E 1~50 LS NT" WE ~E:- ~ WHAT 6&gt; IN HEA D L.E~5 \lALLeY
ON OUR WA'1 TO A PLACE CALLED
&amp;ESI DES THOS~ CO RP.S£:5
HEADLE7S VALLeY tF THAT
NO HEADS" THt; TRAPPER$
MEANS A"--'r'THIIIJ6
SPIN Y.ARN5 A~OUT f

MAY8E NO W

1/0t.ll.l LH ME IN
ON WHfRE W&amp; R&amp;

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

Fror m.rtv 1\tnll!n.ll Cout tv
Sill' n!l\ .. l.oiln
116 E Mam
Pomeroy
992 665S

MGdul.ar Homes

P omeroy, Oh10

461

Diamond Savings &amp;
Loan Co.

~

~

Pomeroy

~ ~~#·h'·')
Pat Hill Ford, Inc.

Phone 992 3480 ~ §.; •

Pomeroy

992 2955

Phone 992 6304
126 E Mam

MARK V StORE 3~
Middleport r:~,

ru

~~!~!

Church &amp; Olhce Supplies
GIFTS
"Mill St
Middleport

Homehle Saws

w

Ea t tn or
Cilrry Out

•

Equl'pment
J

THAT CREEPY
I
RAISES 111E
IWOF IF 50MEOHE ISH'!

~ARBUC~S

' l liE (j()f

servtee

IIH- YE$, Silt 1 I'M
$UIIE ~ ~Ill ~ ALL
RI6HTIM TIIAT CASE 1

0H INn EVERY,_""'"lt:J, SEVERAL t\IY6 1

'

!ll;lles a nd

YOU CAM RELAt,
111EN 1 l HAVEH'T
5EEH MIU5P RJR

I T' FiND

I THE ASP "

Rutland Oht o 4.577S
Btll Br ow n Owner
P ho ne (614) 74 2 2777

wm

THE DAILY
SENTINEL
M1ddleport
Pomeroy 0

I 1 li

TRINITY CHURCH Rev
pos te r

W

H Pernn

10 30 om
Sunday ... v angeltslt c
meetmg 7 00 p m Prayer meettng
Wednesday
7
p m
UNITED PRESBYTERIAN MINISTRY OF
MEIGS COU NT Y Dwtghtl Zov t: dtrec

Roy Moyer Sunday 5chool !t upt

Church School 9 15 o m

worshtp ser

v•ce 10 30 am Cho r rehearsal Tues
day 7 30 p m under d rechon of AI ce
Ne a se
POMEROY
C H URCH
Of
THE
NAZARENE Corner Unton and Mulberry

HARRISONVIllE PRESBYTERIAN Rev
EriH!'Sf St rtddtn pas tor Su nday church
sc hool 9 30 o m
Mrs Homer Lee
supt mormng worsh p 10 30
MIDDLEPORT
Sunday sc hool
q 30
a m R chord Vaughan s1.1p1 Morn ng
wonh tp 10 39
SY RA C USI:
fiRS T
UNITED
1-'RESBVTER IA.N Church Worihtp ser vtce
9 30 a m Sunday SchooiiO 30 om Mrs
Sampson Hal l sup!
RU TlAN D CHURCH OF GOO Randall
Ba ley pastor Sunday school 10 am
Sunday wo r shtp II a m
Ch ldren s
chyrch II a m
Sunday e11en ng ser
v tce 7 30 p m
Wedne sday even ng
young lodtes auK hory 6 p m Wednes
day fomt!y worshtp 7 30 p m
HAZEl COMM UNITY CHURCH Near
long Bottom Ed5el Hart pastor Sunday
schoo l 10 a m
Church 7 30 p m
ptoye1 meet n g 7 30 p m Thursday
M IDDL EPOR T PENTECOSTAl
Th rd
A 11e the Rev WI !tom Knittel pastor
Thomas Ke l ly Sunday School Sup! Sun
day school 10 o m Clas ses fo r all age s
eve 11 19 ser v ce
7 30 B ble study
Wednesday 7 30 p m youth ser v ce !i
~r day 7 30 p m
MIDDUPORT FREEWill BAPTIST Cor
ner A.sh and Plum
Rolph But cher
pastor Saturday even ng ser111Ce 7 30
p m Sunday School 10 30om
MEIGS

su pt

mo rmng worshtp 10 30 o m
even tng )e v•ce 7 30 m d week ser
v ce Wednesday 7 30 p m
GRACE EPISCOPAl CHURCH
326 E
Mom Sf Pomeroy The Rev Robe r t B
Groves rector Syndoy serv1ces at 10 30
om Holy Com numon on the I rsl Sun
day of each month and com bmed w lh
mo rn ng prayer on t he thtrd Sunday
Morn ng praye r and sermon on all o ther
Sundays of the month Chur ch Schoo l
and nursery co e pr ov ded Calfee hou r
'"the Ponsh Hal l immedtolely tollowtJlQ
the serv tce

POMEROY CHURC H Of CHRIIT 11&lt; W
Mo n St

MT

MORIAH

CH URCH

Of

GOD

Roc tne
Rev Jame s So tt erlte ld pastor
Mornmg wor sh p q 45 o m
Sunday
5chool 10 45 om 8\l'enlng worshtp 7
Tuesday
7 30 p m
lodte ~ prayer
rneetmg Wednesday 7 30 p m YPE
MIOOLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST Corner
Stxth and Palmer the Rev Mark Me
Clung Sunday !ichool 9 15 o m Ra nd y
Haves Sunday Sc hool su penntendent
Dan R1gg s. asst !iup t Mornmg Wo r ~ h p
10 15 am 'fou th meetmg 7 30 p m
Wed nesda y md udtng wee toh. eager
beavers 1un1ar a!it m outs o d 1JlltOr
and semor htgh BVF d 0 1 p1oct• ce 1:1 JO
p m Wednesday prayer nee! ng and 81
ble study Wedne)doy 7 30 p m
CHURCH OF ( Hf(I ST M ddlt po1t 5th
and Mom 8oh M~l t u
"'nuter ~colt
Saltsman
OS) OC tah
n rnr ":. h r
B b le
Sc hool 9 ]l) o
•
n o tn ng worsh tp
10 JO o m eve1 n g ~e r v t ce '7 00 p n
Wednesday Btblc ~t dt arid r rm l h y1oup
meetmgs 7 00 p o
MIDOlfPORT
t HUfo! O i
0 1
IHtNAl ARENt: Puv
' B oo '
po l d
B II Whtt tJ Su d to .: I -.o l -. upt ~ doy
~~ hn I
I I
n
'J
v v -.t 1

'

COO P ~RAT I V~

PARISH

METHODIS T CHURCH
Rtchord W ThomO!i D rector
POMEROY CLU STER
Rev Robert McGee
1-'0MEHOY Sunday School 9 15 o rn
Worsh p se r v tce 10 30 am
Cho r
r eheo ~ al
Wednesday 7 p m Rev
Robert M cGee pastor
EN TERPRISE Worshtp 9 o m Ch1.1rch
Schoo l 0 o m
ROC!&lt; SJIRINCS Sunday School 9 I S o
m Wor sh p se r viC e 10 a Jll
fLATWOODS Chu ch S&lt;:hoo l 10 o m
Worshpl l am
MIDDL~PORT

CLUSTER

HEATH Ch1.1rch Schoo l 9 JO om Wor
sh p 10 30 a m UMYF 6 p m Robert
Robtnson Pa stor
RUTlAND Church School 9 30 o n
Worshtp 10 30 a n
SALEM. CE NT ER Wor sh p 9 om
Churc h Schoo l 9 45 a m

SYRACUSE

CLUST~R

Rev Sta nley Merr !ted M nts ter
fOREST RU N Wo shp 9 am Chu rc h
~choo t 10 o m
MINER SVI LLE Chu ch School 'f a m
Wor!i h p 10 am
ASB URY Ch1.1r ch School 9 50 o m
Wo r !ih p 1I o m Btbl e Study 7 30 p m
Thyr sday UMW Its! Tuesday
SOUTHERN Cl USTER
Rev Davtd Horrts
Rev Mark Fl ynn
Re v florence Sm th
H lion Wolfe
St:THANY
(Dorcas ) Worshtp 9 30
a m Church School 10 30 a m Brble
study Thur sday 7 30 p m
CARMEL Wo1shtp secon d and fourth
Su nday s o t I 0 45 a m Sunday Schoo l
second and foyr th Sundays 9 30 o m
Worsh 1p and Sunday Schoo l at Sutton
Uflrted M e thod tst Chu rch on I rst and
thtrd Sundo,-s l:l b le study toge ther each
Wednesday at 7 30 p m Fomtly n ght
dmner together each third Thursday a t

6 30
APPU. GROVE Sunday School 9 30
om Worshtp 7 30 p m lsi and 3rd Sun
days Praye r meel ng Wednesday 7 30
p m 1- e!lowsh tp su pper ltrst Sa tu rday 6
p m UMW 2nd Tuesday 7 30 p m
EAST lETART Chruch School 9 am
Wors ht p serv &lt;e 10 a m Prayer meeltng
7 30 p ll Wednesday UMW second
Tuesday 1 30 p m
RACINE WESlEYAN
Sunday school
10 o m worshtp I I om Cho r proct ce
Thur sd ay H p m
Wor shtp se r vrce q
lETART fAll S
am Ch urc h Sc hooiiOo n
MORNING STAR Wors h p 9 30 a m
Church Sd 10ol 10 30 a m
MORSE CHAPEL Ch urch School 9 30
a m Worshtp I 1 a m
PORTLAND Sunday School 6 30 p m
Even ng W or ship
7 30 p m
You th
Mee ltn g luE.&lt;sdoy 7 :JO p m B b le Study
Thurs day I 30 p m
SUTTON Su nday School ftrst and thtrd
Sundays 9 30 a m wor~oh tp f irst and
thtrd S1.1 ttdoys 10 45 a m Worsh tp a 1d
Sunday Schoo l ot Carmel
Umted
Methods! Cl urLh on second and fou rth
Sun day s 81bl e study toge ther e ach
Wednesdo)l 7 30 p rn family n ght dm
ner toget her each lh trd Thursday a t 6 30
pm
NORT HEA ST CLUS TER
Rev Rtchord W Thomas
Duane Sy d enstrtcker ~r
John W Douglm
Ch ade:. Oom tgon
JOPPA Wo r sh tp 9 00 am Ch urch

Xhool I 0 00 o m
l HtSIER W01 stup 4 om
( hur h
~c ho Jl 10 o n ( hur Reheo ' ol 7 p 11
Thur !.doy!i ijtblc St udy H H,r ~ do s
1

mp

rn

Morm ng Wouh1p I U 30 o m
Char r
Eventng
Proct ce Sunday 6 30 p m
Wo rs h p 7 30 p m Wednesday Prayer
and Btble Study 7 30 p m
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRI ST Ch a rle$
Russell Sr
mm ster Rtck Macomber
sup! s~,~nday sc hool 9 30om wor,shtp
serv ce 10 30 o m B ble Study 1uesdoy
7 30 p m

1/

"'

" I

4 11 1l

to •

Re.., Clyde V Hender son pastor Sun
day schoo l 9 30 o m Glen McClung

Netl Proydloot pastor 8 ble
school 9 30 a m
morn ng wor~h t p
10 30 am Youth meet ngs 6 30 p m
evening worshtp 7 30 Wednesday ntght
praye r meet ng and B ble stydy 7 30
pm
THE SA LVAT ION ARM Y 115 Bulternu t
A ve Pomeroy Envoy and Mrs Roy W•n
tng off cers n charge Sunday hot n ess
meeftng 10om S~,~ndoy School 10 30
o m Sunday schoo11eode r YPSM tic U!
Adams 7 30 p m
solvo t on mee t ng
vartous speokerr. and mus•c spectol s
Thu r!idoy 10 am to 2 p m lade s
Home Leogue all women tnv.ted 7 30
p m prayer meet ng and B ble study
Rev Noel Hermon teacher
BURliNGT O N
SOUTHERN
BAI-ITIST
CHAPEL Rou te 1 Shnde 8 ble schoo l 7
p m Thur sday wors h p se ll' tCe 8 p m
POME RO Y WESTS IDE CH URCH Of
CHRI ST 200 W Mo n St 99'1 5235 Vocal
m us tc Sunday worsh p 10 am B ble
st udy 11 om wor!ih p 6 p m Wedne s
day 8 ble study 7 p m
OlD
DEXTER
B BU: CHRI STIAN
CHURCH Rev Rolph Sm th pmtor Sun
da y school 9 30 o m Mrs Worl e y
Fran cs supermtendent Preoch mg ser
v ces t r st 8 lhtrd Sunday s l ol lowmg Sun
day School
GRAHAM
UNITED METHOD IS T
Pre a chtng 9 30 am t rst and second
Sundays ol each month th rd and fourth
Sundays each month worsh tp serll'tCe at
7 30 p m Wednesday eventngs ot 7 30
Pr ay er and Btble Study
SEVE NTH DAY ADVENTIST Mulberr y
He tg h h Rood Pomeroy Pastor Albert
D tt es Sa bba th School Supe rr ntendent
R1to Wh te Sabba th School Soturdo v
afternoon of 'l 00 w tth Wor shtp Se r v ce
toll ow tng at 3 I S
RUTLAND FIRST BAPT IST CHURCH
Stster Horr ell Worner Sup! Su nday
Sch oo l 9 30 o m
morn ng worsh rp
10 45o m
THE HILAND CHAPEL Geor ge Ca sto
pasto r Sunday School 9 30 am c-11cn
mg worshtp 7 30 Thu rsday even ng
p rayer ser vtee 7 30 p m
POME ROY FIR ST BAPTIST
Dov d
Mann mmtSter W ll10m Watson Sun day
sc hool su pt Sunday schoo l 9 30 o m
morn ng wOr!ihtp 10 30 o m
FIRST
SOUTHERN
BAPTI ST
'161
Mulberry Ave Pome roy Re v Wtl l tom
R Newm an pastor Hershel M cC l ur e
Sunday sc hool su per ntendent S1.1ndoy
school 9 30 a rn
morn mg worsh p
I 0 30
evenmg worshrp
7 30 p m
M dweek prayer servtce 7 30 p m
MIDWAY COMM UNIT Y CHURCH De•
ter Rd
Rd
longsv li e He11 A A
Hughe s Pastor Sunday School 10 a m
Ser v 1ces on Tuesday Thu rsday and Sun
day 730 pm
FAITH TAB ERNACLE CHURCH Bat ley
Run Rood Rev Emmett Ra wson pas to
Handl ey Dunn supt Sunday schoo l 10
a m Sunday even ng servtce 7 30 B ble
I teochmg 7 00 p m Thursday
MIDDLEPOR T CHURCH OF CHRI ST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION l awrence Manley
pastor Mrs Russe l l Young Sun day
School Sup! Sunday Schoo l 9 30 o m
Even ng worsht p
7 30
Wednesday
prayer meet ng 7 30 p m

I

RfORGANilED

LO NG BOTTOM Su 1doy School ot q 30
o m Even mg Wo r sh p o l 7 30 p m
Thur~oday 8 b le Study 7 30 p Ill
REEDSVI ll E S1.1n d oy Sc hoo l ~ 30 a n
Mornmg Wor sh p 10 30 o rll he-n n g
7 30
p m
Btb e
Stud y
Wo rshp
Wednesday s at 7 30 p m
AlFRED S1.1nda y School ot 9 &lt;~ 5 o n
Morn1ng Wor sh p at 11 a n Youth 6 30
p m S1.1ndoy s W e dne sday N ght Pr ay er
Meeltn g 7 30 p rn
Sl PAU L (Tupper s Pi c ns \ Sundoy
School 9 00 om M or 1 '9 Wor shrp ot
10 00 am B b le ~ tudy 7 30 p m Tues
doy
SOUTH BET HEl (Sti ver R d g e ) Su nday
School 9 00 o m Morn 1 g Was h p I 0 00
o m Wednesday Btble Study 7 30 p 11
K~NO CHURCH Of CHRI ST
Olivet
Swo n Super n tendenl Sunday sc hoo
9 30 every week
HOBSON CHRI STIAN UNI O N Rev
Ke th Eblrn pa stor Sunday School q 30
o m
l eonard G r mor e
fl r!i l e ld er
eve n ng ser v tce 7 30 p m We d 1esdoy
p oyer mee t ng 7 30 p n
BEARWAL LOW RIDGE CHURCH O F
CHRIS T Duane Warde ' rntnt ster B ble
clo~ s 9 30om
morn t g w o r sh p 10 30
a m
eve 1 ng wors hrp
6 JO p m
Wednesdor B b l e ~ ludy 6 30 p n
NEW
STIVERSVI lt E COMM UN ITY
Church Sunday School se v ce 9 4S
o m
Wo r s htp
\N"V U 3
10 30
Evangel site ~e rv r c c 7 JO p 11 Wednc s
d ay Pr oye meet r g 7 JO
liON CH URCH Of CHRI ST Pom ero y
Hornson v lie Rd Robor I Purt e ll pasto r
l:lll McElro y Sunday "&gt;C heal sup! Sunday
schoo l 9 30 o n
mo rn ng w o ~h p and
commumo n 10 30 (I rn Sunday wor sh 1p
ser v •ce 7 p m
Wednesday ell'en ng
pray e r m ee t ng and B bl~ study 7 p m
ST JO HN LUTHE RAN CHURCH P ne
Grove The Rev W II om Mtdd e sworth
!lostor Church se r v ces 9 JO o n Su 1
day Schoo l 10 30 a m
BRADBURY CH URCH m: CHRIST Jerr r
P 1gley pasta
Sunday sc hool 9 30
o 11
110rnrng ....,Of!i h p
10 30 a m
Wedn es day eve n ng se l ll' cc 7 30
ANTIQUITY BAP T ST Rev Ea rl Shu lor
pa stor Sunday sc hoo l '-i 30 a m Chur ch
se rvtc e
7 p m
you th meelt ng
6
p m Tuesday 6 bl e Study 7 p n
HA(l NE CHURCH OF 1HE NALARENE
R!:! v John A Co ffman poster Martha
Wo ll e Chotrm on o f the Boor d ol Chrr s
!ton lt fE! Sunday School 9 JO a ll n o r
n ng worsh p I 0 30 ~ unday (!VCI tng
wo rs h p 7 JO p m P oyer "ee l ng
Wednesday 7 30 p ll
RACINE FIRST BAP TISr Don l Walk e r
Pa stor Robert :&gt;n th Sunday scho o l
r. upt Su nday sc h ool 9 30 o m llOrntng
worsh•p 10 40 o 11
~unday even ng
wor sh•p 7 30 Wedn esday eve t ng Bib c
~ tudy

7 :JO

DANVILLE Wl:~ltvA N
Rev R 0
Brow r
pa stel
Sunday Sc h oo l 9 30
a m morn ng woro;h rp 10 45 you th !&gt;er
v ce 6 45 p m
eve ' ng wor :;h p 7 JO
p m
proy e and p o ..,e WQdr e~ doy
7 30p m
SILV ER RUN 1-RH BAI' II :,! Rev Mot

v MorM ' pasta Steve l llle Sunday
sc hoo l )Up
Su 1d oy schoo l 10 o m
n or 1 ng worshtp 11 o m ~ UI day even
1 g wor sh p 7 JO
Pr oye mee t ng o 1d
8 bl e stud y Thur sday 7 30 p m youth
Set vce bpm Su1doy
CHRISTIAN FEll OWS HIP CHUR CH 3!:1 3
N 41nd A 11e Mtddl eport Pa stor Bob
Ha l ns .S u 1doy se r v ce s 10 00 o m and
7 p n Tuesday and fndoy ~e r Y ce!i 7 DO

v

HOU~~

O P PRAYt:R

A N D 1-'RAlSE
l bcr tv A ve Po nero y Ser\1' ce~ Sunday
:.1 00 p n fndo y 7 30 p n Tuesda y 7 30
p '
L H~ ') H:R l HUIKH 01- GOO Rc11 R ~
Roht ,..,ol'l po ~ t o 1 Su ' day sc hool 9 30
o 1 wor st p serv ce I! a 11 ell'e n ng
se r v1ce 7 00 y ou th sc1 v ce Wedne s
doy 700 pm
LAN LJ.SV llL~
CHI(l SilAN
CHURCH
Ruber I 1: Mu'&gt;.-.el p o ~ t or Sunday sc hool
I} 30 o 11
Pau l Mu sser sup! nlo r 1 ng
wo rsh p 10 :JO ~un d oy ev o 11 g scrv ce
I 00 m d week !ie ll'tce Wednesday 7

P

n
SY WA C U ~t

CH UR CH
Of
THI:
Rev James B Ktttle pastor
Nor ma n
P esle y
Sunday
School
Su per 1te ndent
Su 1doy sclto o l q 30
om
mornmg worshrp
10 45 om
ev o 1gel tst c .-.er v ce 7 p m Prayer and
f'rat sc Wed nes day
7 p m
r o uth
11ee t ng 7 p rp
EDtN UNITED BR~ T HREN IN CHRI ST
l:ldon H BloK e pas tor Sunday School 10
a m Robe rt Re ed sup• Mor mng ser
110
II o n
Sunday 1 ght sel \'l( e s
Chr silo Endeavor 7 30 p n Song ser
v (e
!:! p
P•eoc h1 g 1:130 pm
M dw ee k Pr ay er ll ee trng Wedn esd oy 7
p n A !v n Reed loy leade r
CHUR CH 0 ~ JESUS CHRI ST Lo loted ot
Rutland on N ew l no Ro ad ne•d to
!-or es t A CI e Po rk Rev Roy Rou~e
pasto r Robert Mus!er Sunday School
wp t ')y1dcy sc hoo 10 3U o rn w ors h p
7 30 p II
ble Study Wednesday 7 30
p m ')o tur doy n ghl prayer se rv 1ce 7 30
NALAREN~

a

pn
HEM LOCK G RO V ~ CHRI STIAN Roger
Wo!son pa stor M ldr ed l. egl er Sunday
o;c hoo l su p I Mo1n ng wo r sh ip 9 30 a m
Sund oy H hoo l 10 30 a m even ng ~ •n
ve e 7 30
MJ UN IO N BAP TISr Joe Soyu~ Sun
day
Sc hoo
Supenntenent
Sunday
S( hool Q 45 c m 9\IOn tng wors h tp 7 30
p m Prayer moe ! ng I 30 p m Wednes
doy
TUPPERS PlAIN S CH URCH Of CtiRI ST
V ncc n t Wat e r ~ po ~ tor Howa r d BIQ r
Colwell su penntend ent Sunday School
4 :JO o n morn mg ch urch 10 30om
~ u 1d oy ~ve1 lng sc1v ce 7 30 Wednes
day B1bl e Study 7 30 p m
C H ~S TER

CHU RCH

m

TH E NAZARENE

Rev Hetberl Grate pa stor honk Rrllle
sup Su day Srhool 9 30 o m Wo rsh p
.se t v cc 11 a rn an d 7 30 p 11 Prayer
mee hng Wednesday I 30 p Ill
LAUREL Cli Ff
t-REE
ME THODI ST
CHUR CH Rev Hoyd F Sh9 ok pastor
Lloyd Wr g ht
0 rector o f Chr st on
~d u cc lt o
~undoy School 9 30 o m

Weekl)' St'ntwll
In retnStttut.ng registra t iOn t or 111 ~ drall n tn l:! Untied Sta res ex
Pres1dent J•mmy Carter tS revtvtng an o ld met h od that th e Old
T es ta ment lsraeltl es used to rai se thetr arm tes 11 you had b een a
you n g man th e n you would have been numbered as be1ng e1tg1b1e
far the army upon reachmg 20 years ot a ge
The Lord spoke to Moses
tn th ew lde rness o t S na
Take a ce n sus o f a ll the co n g r ega t to n o f
I he peop l e of I srael by fam t11es by f a th ers hou ses a cc ord t ng to t he
number of names e v e ry ma l e head by nead from 20 years ol d and
upward al l tn Israel who are ab l e to go forth to war you and Aaro n
shall n umber them co mpany by compa ny
( Numnbers I 2 3)
Had you been a young man at least 20 years of age then vou would
na11e been numbered wh c.h tn e ff ec t would have meant rE!gtst e r ng for
the draft Thts dtd n ot mean t ha t vou were to automattcally go out and
ftghltn the nations batt l es however The army Then was st t up so that
you c ould have eas ily gotten o ut of f ight ng 1n 1 I you had wc:mted to
Just constder the follow1ng grounds f or exe mption
Ftrst o f all the L e vttes th e f o rerunners of today s rnin sters of rhe
gospel were not number ed They were to b e free 1o do the L,ord s work
tn the t e mp le I N umber s 1 47 50 ) BuT robe a pn e~ t o r mtntsfer as we
ca ll1 t tod ay you had to be bor n m to the f amrty ot Levl If you dtd noT
have t h a t d 1St•n c l 1an there w e r e sf l ll ways you co ul d avo d m11.tary
serv1ce The book of D eu tero nomy s t a l es that before the army could
go &lt;"Ut to ba111 e an oft cc r was there to procla tm t o 1t
W ha t man ts
the re that has bu I t d new hou se and nas not ded tc ated 1!? Let htm go
back to h1S h ouse l es t h e dte tn the battle and anot h e r man ded1 c ate tf
And what man t• tne r o that h as planted a v neyard a nd has not e n 1oycd
1t s fr u 1f? Le t hun go ba c k to h s house les t he dtc tn t he baffle and
another man cn10Y ts tru lt And wha t man rs there tha t has b e trothe d
a wtte ar d ha s not ra k en llor 7 Le t htm qo ba c k to ht s house les t h e dt e
'" the battle and anotl1c r man take hrr .O.nd tnc offtccrs s hall s p eak
turr ner t o rn e peopl r (lnd say What mrtn s there that tS fearfu l a n d
f atn th en rtt d ? L r t f nt 110 t tt Ck to h1S housl l€'$ 11tl(l heart ot hi S fellows
men as. t11S h l~ar t ./ 1D cu h ronomv 20 s 81
When 33 000 '"'' n r ( .;,pond(d 10 t he. c. all ut Gtd&lt;J on l o ttghl me
M•d1 an tcs ant: ol lh lt r&lt;;l lh hfl ':&gt; h t t lid 111r rn wil s
WtlOf"'v c r 15 fear
l u i and Tr C!nHJIJlq l e J 1 Jl' r1 tur n hom e
[.J udyPs 1 3 ) By maktng that
o ff e G •d C&gt;on lo&lt;., t
000 tt n
Bu t ht'i ar r ry w ou Itt.: IJrlt!l,
By Pas l Or A l b e rt D ttc s seventh
u nyA dv•nt ... t C"llJ r P ntntP&gt;t

n

CHU RCH OF

JES US

CHRI ST Oj-:
LATT ER DAY
SAINTS
Porllond RaCine Rood Wtlltom Rou sh
pastor 1-'hyllts Stobort Sunday Sc hool
Supt Sunday Sc hoo l 9 30 a m Morning
worsh p I 0 30 a m
S1.1ndoy evenmg
se r v ce 7 p m
Wednesday evenmg
ptoyer se r v ces 1 30 p n
BI:THlEHEM BAPTIST Rev Earl Shu ler
pastor Worsh1p se r v ce 9 30 a m Sun
day !ic hoo l 10 30 o m Btble Study ond
prayer se r v ce Thursday 7 30 p m
CARLETON CHURCH K11gsl:.ury Rood
G o ry K1ng pa stor S1.1ndo y school 9 30
o m Ro l ph Carl super mtendent e ven
mg worshtp 7 30 p m Prayer meeltng
Wednesday 7 30 p m
l O NG BOTTOM CHRI ST IAN
Tom
Rtehoson pastor Wallace Damewood
Sund a y &gt;choo l Supertntendent Worsh p
se r vrce at 9 a m Btble School 10 am
HYSEll RUN HOLJNESS CHURCH S1.1n
day Sc hoo l at 9 30 om worshtp se r
vrces at 10 30 a m Pastor Rev Theron
Durha m Th ur sday serv ces a t 7 30 p m
w th Rev Ok.ey Ca ll
HfHDOM GOSI-'I:l MISSION ol Bal d
Knob loc ated on Coun ty Rood 3 1 Rev
Lowren ce G luesencamp pasto r Rev
Roger
Wtl lf o r ~
ossts ton l
pas t o r
Preochtng 'ierv ces Sun day 7 30 p m
prayer meet ng Wednesday 7 30 p m
Gary Gnllr t h l eade r Yoyth groups
Sun day eve ng 6 30 p m wtl h Ro ger an d
Vro le t Wt lltord as leade r s Communton
Hnv1ce~ ft sl Sunday ea ch mon th
W HITE S CHAPEL Coo v li e RO Rev
Roy Deet er pastor S1.1ndoy sc hool 9 30
a m wors h p scrv ce 10 30 o m 8 ble
.s tudy and praye r se r vice Wednesday
730 pm

RUTLAND CHURCH Of CH RI ST Bob
Buck nghar11 pasto r Herb Elh ott Su n
doy S( hoo l sup! Sunday sc:hool 9 30
a m m orntng worsh1p and co mu nton
10 30 am

RUTLA ND

BI BL~

METHODIST CHURC H

Am os T II s pas to r Donny Ttlll s Sunday
School Sup! Su ndoy School 9 30 a m
! allowed by mornmg worsh tp Sunday
evo n ng serv ce
7 00 p m
.-. royer
melllt 19 Wednesday 7 00 p m
RU TLAND
CHU RCH
OF
TH E
NAL ARENE Rev lloy d 0 Cr mm Jr
pa slo r Sunday school 9 30 a m
war
sh p ser" cc 10 3U om Broodcos! l tve
ove r WMPO young peop le s servtce 1
p ll
Evange!tsll c '§ervtce 7 30 p m
Wednesday se r v tee 7 30 p n
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTI ST Co r ner ol
Second and Anderson Mason Pa sto r
Fronk Lowther Sunday schoo l q 45
o Ill wors h p se r v1ce
I a n and 7 30
p m Weekly H ble Study Wednesday
7J0p ll
MASON CH UR CH OF CHRI ST Mt l ler
St Ma son W Vo Eu gene l Co nger
mu tsfer Su nday B1ble Study 10 a m
Wors h tp 11 o m and 7 p m Wedne sday
Btble Study vo cal mus c 7 p m
LIFE SCIE NCE CHURCH
I:.! N o rth
fh td :, 1 Che sh re Independent f u n
do ne n !al servrces Sunday even 1ng 7 30
p m Pa stor Re ... Dr Rober t Persons
MASON ASSEMBLY OF GOO Duddtng
lon e Mason W Vo Rev Ronnte 8
Ro se Pasto r Sunday Sc hool 9 45 am
Mo rn ng W orshtp 11 o rn Evenmg Ser
v tt e 7 30 p m Wednesday Women s
Mr ' str e s 9 o ll (mochng and prayer
I-' royer and Btbl e Study 7 p m

HARIF ORD CHURCH OF CH RI ST IN
CHRI STIAN UNI O f\1 The Rev Wtlliom
Co 11pbell pasto r Sunday School 9 JO
Q 11
James Hughes sup! even ng ser
vrce 7 30 p m
Wednesday even ng
prayer meet ng 7 30 p m Yo uth praye r
sc rv ce eoch Tuo sdoy
fAIRVIEW BIBL E CHURCH Leta rt W
Vo Rl I Mark lrwtn pa:.tor Worshtp
se r vtces 9 30 a rn Su 1doy school I I
am eve 11ng worsh tp 7 30 p m lues
day co ttage prayer rneeflng and Btble
study
9 30 a m
Worsh1p serv1ce
Wednesday 7 30 p m
CAl VARY BIBlE CHURCH n ow loco ted
or Pomer oy P.tke Co unty Rood 15 near
Flatwoo d s Rev Blackwood pa stor Se r
vtce~o on Sunda)l at 10 30om and 7 30
p m w tl h Su nday school 9 30 am Bi bl e
sludy Wednesday 7 30 p m
IN DE PENDENT HOliNESS CHURCH
INC
Pearl St
M1ddl9po rt Rev
0 Dell Manley pastor Arthur 8orr Sun
day H hoo l !l upe rtnt enden t
Sunday
school 9 30 o m even ing worshtp 7 30
p m Pr oyer and pro se ser vice Wednes
doy 7 30 p m

HUILANO

APO~TOLIC

CHUR CH OF

J I:~US ( HRl ~ 1 Elde r Jam es Miller

Bibl e
:;tudy We d o :..doy 7 30 p m
Su nd o)l
School 10 om Sunday nigh t serviCe
I 30p u

POMEROY WlSllYAN HOliN ESS
Ha ll lson.,.. .l! o Rood Dewey Ktng pastor
Hen y Ebltn J
3un doy School Sup t
)ut do.,. S(hoo! 9 30 a m Morning Wor
sh p 1 1 o m Su nday evening servtce
I 30 m ProyEII M eeltng Thundoy 7 30

P'"

3Y NACUSI: FIRS I CH UR CH OF COO
No t Por, tu co :; tol Hf!v Ceo 1Qo O tl er

pos ter Worsh1p s~ r v ce Sunday 9 .tS
o m Sunday schoo l I 1 a m
worshtp
se r vtce
7 30 p m Thursday prayer
meeltng 7 30 p m
MT
HERMON Umted Brethren tn
Ch r ~ ~ Chu, ch Rev Robert Sanders
pa stor Don Wtll loy l eader located In
Texas Commun ty off CR 81 Sunday
s(hool q 30 a rn M orning worsh1p ser
11tee 10 45 am evemng preochtng ser
\'tCe second a nd four lh Sundays 7 30
p m Chrtslton Endeo...ot f rst and lh1rd
Sundays 7 30 p rn Wednesday p r o)ler
mt1e1tng o 1d Btble study 7 30 p m
JEHOVA H S WlTNt:SSES 37319 Stole
Route 124 (One m le e ost o f Ru tlan d)
Sunday Btbl e lecture 9 30 a m Wot
ch tower study 10 20 o m Tuesday Bt
bl e
study
7 30 p m
Thun dcy
Th eocroltc Sc hoo l 7 30 p m
Serv tce
Meettng tl 10 p "'
RUHANO FREEW ill BAPTIST C h~.~rch
Dr James A Hruhl pa stor Sun day
school 10 a m Sunday ever 1119 se r v ce
7 00 Wednesday pr ayer meel ng 7 00
pm
CHURCH Of GOD o l Prophe cy located
on the 0 J Wh te Rood a ll h1ghwoy 160
s~.~ndoy Sc hoo l 10o m Super nten de nJ
John Loveday F r st Wednesday ntght of
month CPMA serv rces second We~nes
dey WMB meet ng th rd thr ough f hh
you th servtce Geo rge Croyle pas tor
HOPi: BAPTI ST CHAPEL
570 Grant
Sl Mtddlepo rt Sunday Sc hoo l 10 a m
mornmg wor s.h1p 11 a m evemng wa r
shrp 7 p m Wedn esday even m g Btble
st udy and pr ayer meet ng 7 p m AI
ltl oted w th Sou thern Bo p tts t Co n Yen
!ton
BRADFORD CHURCH OF CH RIS T
Eugene Underwood pastor Harr)l Hen
dr ck s supe rmt enden t Sunday school
q 30om man tng wor.,h p 10 30om
eve n ng wor shtp 7 p m Wednesday B
b!e s tud~ 7 p m
JUBIL EE CH RI STI AN
CENTER
Georges Cr eek Rood Ru11 C J Lemley
pa stor John Fellure super nt en derll
Church sc hoo l 9 J0 o m mornrng wor
sh p 10 30 e11entng serv ce 7 p m Btb fe
Sludy Thurs 1 p m Classes f or oil ages
Nursery prov ded fo r worsh p 58t\ol tCelo
ST PAUl LUTHERAN CHURCH Corner
ol Sycamore and Second Sts flomuroy
The Rev Wtlltom M ddleswo,th Pastor
:,undoy School ot 9 ~ S a m and Chu r ch
Servtces II a m
SA CRED HEART Rev Father 1-'oul D
Welton pa stor Jlhone 9q'} 2!:125 Satur
day ever tng Mass 7 30 Su nday Moss 8
and 10 o m
Confess ton
Satur day
77 JOpm
V ICTORY BAPTIST
5'25 N 2nd Sl
Mtddleport James t: Keesee paslo 1
Sunday m orn ng wors htp 10 a m even
mg ser111Ce 7 Wednesday evemng wo r
sh1p 7 p m V sttall on Thursday 6 JO
pm
TR IN ITY Chrrs t on Assemb l y Coo!v li e
G !bert Spencer pa~tor
Su nday
sc hoo l 9 30 om mornmg w ors h ip 11
a m Sunday evemng servtce 7 30 p m
mtdweek p r ayer servtce Wednesda.,
7 30p m
MOUNT Ohve Commu n tfy Ch urch
l aw r ence Bush poster M ax Fo lmer Sr
Supertn lendenl Sunda y Schoo! ond mor
nrng worshtp 9 30om Sunday even ng
ser v ce 7 p m Youth meettng and Btbl e
study Wedn es day 7 p m
UNITED FAITH CHURCH
Route 7 on
Pomeroy bypass Re v Robert Sm ttl Sr
pastor Mev Jomos C~ndt ff au ston t
poslor Su ndoy Sc hool q 30 o m morn
tng worsh ip 10 30 a m even ng war
shtp 7 30 Wednesday night prayer ser
vtee 7 30 p m Women s Fellowshtp
Thur sday 9 30 a m
fAITH BAPl"I ST Church Mason meet
of Un ted Steel WorMers Unton Hall
~o l l ro o d Street Mason Pastor Rev
Rt chord Jordon Mornmg wor~hip 9 30
o m Sun day Sc hoo l 10 30 a m Prayer
meeltng Wednesday 7 30 p m
fORE ST RUN BAPTIST
Rev Nyle
Borden
pa stor
Corneltus
B~.~nch
supertn tendent
Sundoy sch oo l 9 30
a m second and tourfh Sundays war
shtp ser vice at 'l 30 p m
MT MORIAH BAPTI ST
Fourth and
Mom St Mtddleport Rev Colvtn Mm
111s pastor Mr s El v n Bumgardner
supt Sunday schoo l 9 :.10 o m worsh p
terv lce 10 ~5o m
NORTH 8ETHH Un ti ed M e thod1 st
Church Rev Charles Oom gon pastor
Sunday Schoo l 9 30 a m Worsh tp Ser
Sund ay B1bl e Studv
vtce 10 45 om
7 00 p m Wednesday prayer meeftng
730prn

BURLING HAM

S0U lHERN

BAPTI ST

CHUR CH Rou!u I Shade Pastor Don
Block Alftl ioled Wtfh Sou th ern Boptnt
Convent on Sunday school 1 30 p m
Sunday worsh 1p 2 30 p m
Thursday
evenmg Biblo stud,- 7 p m
PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBlY
Ra&lt; tne
Ro ute 12.t Wtl!tam llohocM. pastor Sun
day sc hoo l 10 a m ~unday evenin g ser
v ce 6 30 p m Wedna1doy ee n ng ser
.., ce I
C ARPENT ~R 8APTIS1 Re v Freel and
Norr s pastor Don Cheadl e Supt Sun
day Sc hoo l q 30 a l"f1 Morntng Worsh p
10 30 om flra)l•r Service alternate
Sunday•
N E A S~

SEITLEMtNT FREE Will BAP

fiST Do nald R Kerr Sr pastor Frtday
evening service 7 lO p m
Sunday
\C hoat I O o m

(,!\SOli N~

&lt;I ll r \

D1d you f tnd t h
mot or on th
cart Rufus?

Wont be no
tnc~

t

put a

One mus have
fa1th M•z' Si1.1nner'

Th motor
need t qo
under ~...,.
neath•

motor
on t h s
th1n

SlimI

U \ wRrT NC&gt; TO MY MOTHER TELLING

\.T THf 11\1 f
\1l f&gt;l
{ ..\f.":l'll

HO\\ H..\PPY I AM TO 8E WITH M Y

\\ETI \

(

r t-trt.:.

k'h.'"

O WN F"-THE'I':
HIS NEW

;(~r

~ &lt;\Mil Y

[I \

l.t-'--...:::J

j~-21(';__-(£,~~r!"
Evening television listings
JAN 10 t981

lfntf i to t21GI NEWS
13 1 STUFF
I5
CAROL BURNETT ANO
FRIENDS
(' ABCNEWS
t 3 2 I CONTACT
f11
OYER EASY t-1 /H t &lt;; ll uiJh
Do wns a nrt Frllnk B 1
6 30 2 0 7 NB C NEWS
3 GOOO"NEWS
{!\ BOBNEWHAIH SHOW
I FACE THE MUSIC
Ill 8 I tO CBS NEWS
I
WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
11 LILIAS YOGA AND YO U
12 CD ABC NE"WS
6 ~8 3 J C_BN UPDATE NEWS
7 00 :1 II PM MAGAZINE
3 THE STORY
5 1 AlliN THE FAMI LY
e tlCIFAMILYFEU O
1 POP GOES THE COU NTRY
Ill I TIC TA C DOUGH
I
11
MACN El l lEHRER
REPORT
10 NEWS
130 2 JCI BUlLSEYE
3 THELESSON
S SANFORD AND SON
8 Q (l JOI&lt;ERSWllO
7 101 MOLL YWOOD SOU ARES
i 111 DICK CAVETT SHOW
t:IJID FACE THf: MUSIC
758 l CBNUPDATENEW S
8 00 2 8 1 HARPER VAllEY PTA
Stetto dOil fi ~J IIR am cos t tn tl ttnd
m1Ht.Q 1 nde!'l as an o 1 r.h 11 !Iff f!
I:HU ! Orp p tt COSS I A (J!BI tt a t y
eu:: hom l'! HQII nM F o A S•mpson
Rt tty who !I no 101 JQ 1 11 na 1
3 IN TOUCH
4 MOVIE (COMEDY)_." How
To S.at Th • High COli Otllvlng
t 980
5 MOYIE )HORROR )" Tombol
!he Ll•ln~ D.. d 1969
I l l MUPPET SHOW
0 a 10 ITS YOUR FIRST KISS
CHARLIE BROWN Chnrl e Br own
t As bflcn c holl
Atl lh e k ck(l t lot
tift toe a! tr '"
a
ho a nflo MI
!lo t• ecom 'g tatJ tb A lgamo an a
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ng Ill' Ho m llt::O nt l!J Oueen 10 th(J
rel &amp;b rltl o 11ru ce rnct !I &gt;' lfiU hil l
ti c ! a1 anl l ktSS
I II WASHINGTON WEEK IN
REVIEW
tn ! CII BENSON A W 'JOil !U!l B~
80 lllldK ~~~ ~ l n dtt o m sc i Y11S I I O
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n n und c llfl l! k to' lla e ~ r1 mg a s 1
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830 2 - ~ 7 SANFOROI t~d5Rn l ltl
11110 !I 0 IQ1 I fl I I ldy Q 11th
j {lh! r tlyl tll !f k £'J; I t;!W I I!OWII'f
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2 0 1 NERO WOlFE Nl! o

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9 MOVIE (M'I' STER"'') • Death
Is A Woman t967
2 0
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SPECIAL
6 SOLID GOLD ( o hos ls Gte
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ff! ro r1 w Ill's pe to m tne 111
Sl.l ll.1_
•
12 W MOVIE IHORROR I ••
Mumm y sCUise 1944
3 CBN SPORTSREPORT
3 JIMMY SWA(JGART
.t MOVIE (ROMANCE) .. When
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12 CJ)NEWS
15 MOVIE (0RAMA) 0 •
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3 30 MINUTE S WITH FATHER
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UO) t BELIEVE
'13 1 CBN 'S POATSREPORT
3 ROSSBAGlf:VSHOW
5 MO~tE (COMEDY DRAMA)
• 1 LtllleCigara 1973
~ CBN SPORTS REPORT
lh l V

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12 OC
12 3C

lnthtu s e 1e 1 ~s anrt I
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12 4(
I III CU wl le he ll(!S tH• I 11hll ::;
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3 700C LUB
II 12 Gt THE AMERICAN MUSIC
AWARDS
liJ 8 10 THE OUI&lt;ES OF HA Z 12 Sl
lARD Alt tlr Bur ul\1 h ts h s
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I (!gO J s.Otc~seotto 1 p(lr a y~ l lltj
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11 5
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II II HARD CHOICES D111 hAd
2 OC
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11 f
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world hrtYt' on: Hod 160 ' ns )
3
10 00 2 0 1 NBC REPORTS WHO
4 OC ( J 700 CLUB
Will FIGHT FOR AMERICA? T 1e
4 5C I !I MAVERICK
1111 m 1y ' ){lt..S ot s t.. led a1d
5 3C 3 PHllARMSPRESENTS
~p(l et ~c d l l"ll co n t ss ro' (' tl
5 se 13 SPORTS REPORT
o r ~,. ers tro n Amo c 1 ~ 1 mod
t rce!l KOg Qll l tth iHlli:!I S n tn JAN Jt 1981
d 11 ne lil t~ nt~ t on ,. chJhl sa 6 00 2 \1i !10 NEWS
lll.lllb lllf w 1 bo th(ls I tflC toltl s
.4 1MO\IIE ~WESTERN ) ••• Blg

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10 2~
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1111

J•k•

1971

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�January 30,1981

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-1o-The Daily Sentinel

Dairy program may come under cuts
WASHINGTON ( AP l - Although
Reagan admtmstration offtctals
have not spelled out how and where
they hope to cut Agriculture Depart·
mcnt spending, substantial knife
work may develop in the datry
program
Unless Cong ress changes the Jaw,

: however,

da1ry

lann e rs

automattcally will get another boO&gt;i
of about 6.9 percent in milk prtce
suppoHs Aprtl 1, addmg further to
federal costs of 'tlperatmg the
program
· Agriculture Secretary John R
. Block, at hts ftrst news conference
: smce jmmng the Cabmet, satd Wednesday the datry program "ts
becoming more costly than it
should" and mdicated, wtthout being
spectftc, that he would work wtth
producer groups to ftnd soluttons
Block was asked if he supported
leg tslation recommended by the
Carter admtnistratton just before it
left offtce that would allow the April
1 support increase to be skipped.
" We are looking at that," Block
replied
" That mtght be a
posstbthty. I am not prepared to say
prectsely what we want to do. "
Later in the news conference,
Block talked about cuts m spendmg
generally, mdtcatmg that " all
departments, all parts of depart-

ments, all agenc1esn Wlll share m
the cost reductions, some more than
others.
" About farm programs, I can't tell
you precisely, " he satd. "I don 't
fo resee that farm programs wtll be
wiped off the face of the earth or be
completely gutted, but the costly
farm programs wtll be receivmg the
great amount of scrutmy and those
are the programs that· are really

costmg dollars.' '
Pressed further to ctte some
examples, Block said, " The costly
ones. I thmk probably the dairy
program is going to have to be given
ct

lot of consideration.''

Block also mcluded operahons &lt;:i
the Farmers Home Administration,
the Rural Electnftcatton Administration and the various food
programs such as food stamps and
school lunch opera lions.
Accordmg to Agricultur~ Department ftgures, the current price suP'
port of $12.80 per 100 pounds of milk
will go up to about $13.68 on Apnl I
because of an expected nse m the
"parity index" whtch reflects
changes in production expenses.
The current support of $12.80 went
into effect last Oct. I and represented then a 6 percent boost from the
previous rate of $12.07 per 100 pounds.
Those are s upports based on
manufacturmg-gt·ade mtlk of 3.5
percent fat content. Such rrulk is
used to make butter, cheese and ~on­
fat dry milk.
Dairy fanners do not get direct
subsidies, but the government is
required by law to buy surplus butter, cheese and nonfat dry mtlk at
pnces aimed at keepmg pnces paid
to producers from falling much
below the support pnce.
Although the program directly affects manufacturing milk , its rates
also are reflected eventually m
minimwn prices under various
federal and state mariletmg orders
for Class I or the "flwd grade" mtlk
that goes on store shelves.
Deparltnent offictals estunate
that the program as tl now stands

Carmel News, By the Day
Mr and Mrs. Arthur Johnson, Pat
and Sheryl, called at the home of Mr
and Mrs. Douglas J ohnson of Racme
a recent even mg.
Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Muttt and
family of Mansfteld and Dtxte Ciccle
of Cleveland vtstted at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Ctrcle and Verna'recently.
Rev. and Mrs. Rtchard Young and
family of Stdney, Ohto, Mr and Mrs.
Robert Watsun _and fanu ly of Kent ,
Ohw were guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Edson Roush a few days last week .
Those at the home of Mary Ctrcle
un Chnstmi:ls day were Mr and Mrs.
Melvin Circle, Mananne and Mark
of WIChtta. Kansas , James Ctrcle.
Mr. and Mrs. Rtck Ctrcle of New
Haven, Mr . and Mrs Ge~rge Circle
and Cheryl of New Haven, W Va ,
and Mr. a tid Mrs. Donald Pterce of
Athens.
Mr and Mrs Arthur Orr of

Chester were dinner guests on
Chnstmas day of Mr. a nd Mrs.
Robert Lee and fam ily .
Mrs Douglas Circle. Mrs. Harold
Hager and Florence Ctrcle vtsited
Eva Archer at the home of Mr and
Mrs. Russell Archer of Guysville,
Oh. recently.
Mr and Mrs. Wilham Carelton
· and daughter, Angela Dawn, of
Racine spent an evening with
Margaret Ann ,Johnson Patrick,
Sheryl and Betty VanMeter.
Mrs Ernest Johnson of Belpre and
sons, Robert Johnson and son, Chad,
of Columbus visited Mr. and Mrs.
Douglas Ctrcle on Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs Arthur Orr of
Chester called at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Lee and farmly .
Carla Etker of Racine spent an
evemng with Sheryl Johnson.
Mr. and Mrs. James Circle of New
Haven spent Sunday at the home of
Mary Circle.
Mr and Mrs . Glenn Ables of Bald
Knobs spent Saturday evemng wtth
Mr. and Mrs. Dou~las Ctrcle and
F lorence.
,
Mr and Mrs. James Ctrd e of New
Haven, W Va , spent Sunday wtth
Mary Ctrcle.
Douglas Johnson of Racmc called
at the home uf Arthur Johnson and
family on Saturday afternoon.
There wre 26 present fur Sunday
school on Sunday .
Patnck and Sheryl Johnson, Betty
VanMeter and Eume Brinker spent
a recent evening wtth Mr. and Mrs.
Wtlliam Carelton , daughter Angela
Dawn, of Rae me.
Mr. and Mrs. Glen Rehymer
(Eliza Young) of Austm. Texas
VISited with her grandparents, Mr
and Mrs. Edson Roush on a Friday
during the holidays.
Dixie Circle returned to Cleveland
after spendmg h~r vacation wtth her
parents, Mr and Mrs. Homer Circle
Mr. and Mrs. James Circle of New
Haven spent Sunday at the home of
Mary Circle.
Angela Dawn Carelton of Racine
spent Thursday with Sheryl John-

son.
Thwerc were 14 present for Sunday school on January 4.
Family night will be at the Sutton
church on Jan. 15 at6 :30 p.m .
Betty Van Meter and Sheryl Johnsun spent Frid .. y 11t the home of Mr
and Mt s Wtlltam Careltun •nd
daughtet 1\llf&lt;•''" Dawn of Racute
Mr and Mrs. Tom O'Neil and sons
and Mrs Evely" Jn~rarn ~f O&gt;ltun
bus spent Sat ut day lllg ht h&lt;•t c at the .

•

Lee home and with the Robert Lee
family.
Mrs. Martha Lee, daughter Becky
and Patrick Johnson called at the
horne of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Orr of
Chester Saturday afternoon.
Angela Dawn· Carelton of Racine
spent Satur&lt;jay evening with Sheryl
Johnson.
· Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Multi and
family of Mansfield, Ohio spent the
weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Homer
Circle and Vema Circle.
Rev. and Mrs. Richard Young and
sons from Stdney, Ohio spent the
weekend WJth Mr. and Mrs. Edwon
· Roush.
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Pierce of
Athens spent Saturday evening with
Mary Circle.
Mr and Mrs. Hayward Bissell and
son of Keno visited Mr. and Mrs .
Douglas Circle on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Ctrcle ;nent
Friday evenmg with the Pitzer
family of Bas han attended a bir- .
thday party.

Apple Grove
News Notes
Mr. and Mrs. Don Bell were
Thanksgiving Day dinner guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Hensler at
Racme. Other guests of the Henslers
were Harold and Violet Grinun,
David and Becky Hensler and
chtldren, Rachel and Nathan, Dame!
Hensler and chtldren, Jamie and
Kelly. Mrs. Dame! Hensler was
unable to attend due to gtving birth
to a daughter, Julia Damelle, at
Holzer Medical Center on Wednesday evening. Mrs Bell visited
Mr. and Mrs. Hensler and new
daughter Monday.
Mr and Mrs. Gerald Hayman and
son, Keith, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Hart and daughter, Beth Ann, Brice
Hart of Colwnbus, Mrs. Phyllis
Young of Middleport, Mr. and Mrs .
Allen Cunningham and children
Olevia and Zac of Cottageville, Mr.
and Mrs. Ted Hayman and family,
Mr. and Mrs. Terry Huber of Columbus all had Thanksgtvmg dinner on
Saturday with Mr. and Mrs. Gene
Jewell at Letart, W. Va. On
ThanksgiYlng Day Mr. and Mrs.
Herald Hayman and son, Keith,
Bruce and Lorna Hart and Brice
Hart of Colwnbus were dinner
guests of Mr. ando Mrs. Robert Hart
of Racine
Ladies of the U.M.W. Society of
the local Methodist Church visited
Dons Jean Kiser and Mrs. Enna
Wilson at the Pomeroy Health Care
Center Tuesday., Attending were
Mrs. Eile~n Buck, Mrs. Pearl
Norris, Mrs. Herbert Roush, Mrs.
Dolly Wolfe, Mrs. Edith Manuel,
Mrs Bessie Parsons and Vicki
Ables.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Smith received
telephone calls from the following t
Christmas Ddy: Donna Smith of
Gtessen~

Germany; Jtk Derouin,

Mart Deroum, Carol Freeman, Bob
and William Smith, all of Pen·
nsylvania. chrtstmas Day guests of
the Smiths were Mr and Mrs. Jerry
.Johnson, Sr ., Jerry Johns~n. Jr.,
Valcl'le Adams of P&lt;•:nero): Della
Juhm;on, Mirhdle .John,on, H•&gt;&lt;lne)
N\.!Jglcr , .h:u i ' J J.:lur:"'c•l' ..wJ JiJII
O'Brt\'11 .
~h .

cand Mrs F:vcrctte l'ursuns ui

Will have a net cost to the government this year of more than $1 23
billion, compared to $1.01 btllton in
the I~ year that end~d last Sept.

30.
Last year the department's Commodity Credit Corp. bought the
equivalent of about8.2 billion pounds
of Intlk in the fonn of manufactured
products to help prop up prices at
the fann . Currently, the program ts
expected to mvolve 8.5 btllton pounds of trulk equivalent mi!JID.IIl.
Most of the surpluses eventually
are donated to schools and other Ill·
slttutions , go mto foreign atd
progratns or are sold back to the industry.
'
Nearly 200,000 datry farmers
produce trulk 111 the Umted Umted'
States, and they turned out a record
128.1 billion pouflds last year. Wtth
favorable prtces - backed up by
higher supports - many people fear
a contmued buildup 111 surpluses.
"Stnce the surplus ts a small fraction of the total milk supply , a small
change in productwn or conswnpllon has a magnified impact on
the actual surplus," says a recent
background paper.

'' Smce a 1 percent change

111

producl!on equals about 1.3 btllion
pounds, CCC' s annual removals
(government purchases ) can vary
substantially from year to year''
The law that provides milk price
supports recogmzes "the potenttal
mstabllity of supply and demand" 111
the dairy mdustry, it said .
'If prtces were not supported, or
not supported at high enough levels,
there would be wtde swings tn milk
prices. Durmg tunes of sharply

reduced

prices.

manv

fanners

Laurel Cliff
News Notes
Attendance at the Free Methodist
Church Jan. 4 was 71. Chotr members present were 12 There was a
duet by Pastor Shook and Sharon

Wright.

1
Fifteen members of the young

adults of the Free Methodist Church
held their Christmas party at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Mike Wright.

Mr. and Mrs. John Anderson,
Cambridge , VISited recently with
Mrs. Anderson's parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Uoyd Wrtght.
Mr. and Mrs. Wtlliam Jacobs,
Columbus. VISited recently with
Mrs. J aco b s ' mother, M rs. T ma

Jacobs
All the stck people of this com-

mumty are much better

Mrs. Bertha Parker rece1ved
seven calls Christmas from fEr
children, two '" Texas, three in
Columbus, and one m Dayton.
J ohn Story, who ts attendmg
school at the Bell and Howell school
111 Columbus spent his vacation with
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Vern
Story.
Mr. and Mrs Otto Lohn were ill
and unable to attend church servtees
Sunday
Mrs. Tma Ja(·ubs rs unpruvmg
from her recent tllness

would be forced out of busmess."
The paper said that while reduc,
bons in dairy herds and the nwnber
of tmlk cows can occur rapidly , it
takes about two years before a
heifer calf caft be added to the
nulking herd

" Milk shortages in some areas of

the country, as well as sharply
higher nulk and dairy product prices
for all conswners throughout the
natton, could be'the consequence," it
said.
The Agrtculture Department has

evening
Christmas throug h Sa turday
vtsttors of Mr. and Mrs. Vernon
Donohue were Mr. a nd Mrs. Lowell
Burton and daughter of Col umbus ;
Mr and Mrs. Charles Winebrenner
and children of Newbury; Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Harden and family of

Marion
Christmas evening dmner guests
of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Roush were
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Roush and
daughters, Mr and Mrs. Dana
Lewis of Clifton and Cindy Roush.
Christmas Day guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Arnold Anderson, l,ori and
Brenda, were Mr. and Mrs. Ted
Wtlford and daughters, Wallie and
Conme. Morris Bart Rhodes called
in the evemng.
Mr and Mrs Charles Mugrage
and sons, Tyson and TraVIS, of Oak
Grove were Sunday dinner guests &lt;:i
Mr. and Mr• . Dorsa Parsons
Christmas Day g uests of Mr. and
Mrs. Dallas Hill we·e Mr. and Mrs.
Marshall Roush and children, Joey
and Cortncy , Mr and Mrs . Darrell
Norris and children, Tracy and
Ryan, Mr and Mrs Art Hill, Mr.
and Mrs. Dc•n Hill and son. Mrs .
Dolly W~l!c , Mr. and Mrs . Carl
Wolfe. .lr anu three rhtld r en,
OuruUry and {'(•ell Ito!' elk·~ r) und

r;, I'~ noullllt'Y&gt; nf ( 'Dllllllbus t'&lt;JI!Nlrn
LL(· ' IIU' I'/llJll' l

asked for public conunent by Feb.l7
on the "midyear adjustment" in
milk supports scheduled for Aprill.
Those can be sent to: Director,
Procurement and Sales Division,
ASCS-USDA, P.O. Box 2415,
Washington, D.C. 20013.

They'll Do It Every Time

PubliC NOflce

NOTICE

hereb y gnren
Public U ttltt1es

1S

r-----

fT'S 'IHE LAW oF APf'LIAI&lt;CeS.

EVERVTHII'/8
IIO'?KS' OKAY

Comm•ssion of Ohio shall
hold a hear~ng 1n Case No

3

l!f£~ 0!11-V (iO

Bf,O.:JEY OH

W!'EI&lt;&amp;I&lt;DS

AU WEEK ..

801245 AU COl , In the Mat·

ter of the Commt ss•onrs l n-

vest,gat•on

of

Increased

Exose Taxes Payabl e 1n
1981 Appli cable to Publ1c
Ut111 t y Compan •es
The

c•se tax payments, and •t
the

iipproprtate

mechan•sm for provtd1ng

recovery The heanng will
commence on February 19,
1981. at 9 . JO a m., at the of
l1ces of the CommiSSIOn .
375' South H1gh Street,
Columbus, Oh•o 43215 All
mterested persons shall be
g1ven an opportun1ty to be
heard . lnqutr 1es con
ce rn1ng
further
1n
format1on about thiS case
sho uld be dArected to the
Secretary , Publi c Utll1t1eS
Comm1SS10n of Oh10, 375
South High Stree t. Colum
bus , Ohio 43215
THE PUBLIC UT ILITIES
COMMISSION OF OH 10
by Dav•d Polk
Secretary
( IJ JOl. ltc

Put a cold nose 1n your lite
Call the Me1gs County
Humane Soctefy at 992 ·
6260

----APPLES

Bow~r s

-·-- -

Golden
dellc•ous, $3 .75 per buschel
Other vanet1es at $4.00 per
buschel &amp; up F1tzpatnck
Orchard, State Route 689
Phone 609·3785
Announcements

3

In Memonam

2

In 1ov1ng memory at my
dear Husband , Cec11 F
Evans who passed away 10
years ago January 30 , 1971
SBdiY m•ssed by w1te,
Dorothy &amp; son, J•m , &amp;.
family .

EARLY BIRD Specoal, 10
percent ott al l team untfor
ms Ha ts, shirts, and pants
It ordered bet ore Feb 18
Custom Prm t. 240 E. Ma1n,
Pome roy 992 2462

Announcements

3

1
Card of Thank s
Words are 1nadequate to
e &lt;press our hearttelf ap
prec 1at1on for the e x
press•ons ol sympafhy e•
1ended 1o us •n the unt imely
deafh of Danny E . Bowers
The ex press1ons by chur
ches &amp; c ommunit•e s a s we n
a s fr ie nds &amp; ne,g hbor s
were overwhelrn 1ng
We
s•ncerc ly thank those whO
r e memb e r ed
us w1th
prayers, load, fl owe rs. &amp;
cards So many ol yo4
helped 1n so man y wa ys
w£J thank each &amp; e v ery one
ot you &amp; spectal thank s 10
Ne d Proudfoot , o ur
m, n,ster . &amp; to the staff of
the Ew,ng Fune ral Home
for the•r ktndnesses The
family of Dann y E

Tax serv.ce, federal, state,
&amp; quarter ly taxes done by
appointment See wanda
Ebltn, 41000 Laurel Cliff
Road , Pomeroy, Ohio
45769 992 2272

MEIGS MUSEUM open by
appomtment January-Mar
ch 992 2264, 992 2802, 992·
2360 or 992·2639 Histones
tor sale
Pomeroy
Middleport Librar•es

tected publ1c
util!t1es
should be allowed to
r ec over th e 1ncreased ex·

Expenenced tree trim
m1ng
&amp;
removal
Reasonable 1nsured rates
Ca ll anyttme for free
est1mate 1·614 667 ·3031 or
1614607 3248
SHOOTING
MATCH ·
Rutland Amertcan Legion
every sunday at 1 00 8 1g
prizes &amp; games Factory
choke guns only .

va 1ent1ne
permanent
spec.als until Febru~ry 14
WRESTLING : Jan var y 31
Regular S20 00 perms tor at 8· IS at the Mason Fire
$18 00 . regular $18 00 per
Station Sponsored by the
ms for $16 00. Curly perms, Mas.on Res cue Squad
$12 .00 &amp; up Specti! l wave . Many top wrestlers Will be
length perms. regular on hand Box office opens
S25 00 now, S20 00 All at a l 6 00 T•ckets on sale at
Altne Weaver 's Beauty Mason C1ty Butlding &amp;
Shop , F1tth &amp; V1ne Streets, trom Mason Rescue squad
Ra c.ne, Oh 10 949 1666
members

PAY highest pr1 ces
poss1bl e for gold and stlver
C01ns, nngs , teWe lry, etc
Contact Ed Burlc.~tt Ba rber
Shop , M•ddleport
RACINE GUN SHOO T,
Rac me Gun Club , every
Fnday n1ght star11ng a r
7 30 p m Factory choke
g uns on ly.

---

1-----------f---------=-==-

0 UR
PI AN 0
Too
Vclluabl c to neglect. ex per t
tun 1ng &amp; and repair Lane
Oa n,els, IJ,'J. 2951 or 992
2082
y

I

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

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX
•ANNOUNCEMENTS

Pnnt one word tn eath
CIRCLE
space below Each in
1t•al or group ot ltgures
counts as a word Count
name and address or
10
6
phone number if used .
1
3
You' ll geT better results W ords
daY days days days
1f you describe fully ,
g1ve prtce The Sent.nel to 10
$1.00 12.00 14 00 17.00:
reserves the right to
ctass1fy, edtt or re1ect
I
any ad Your ad will be to 2S suo 11 7S S.lO S9.oo I
put 1n the proper
c1as1f1C.:tt•on 11 you ' ll to 3S suo 14.SO 7 so 110 .0~
chec k I he proper box
below
Th ese ca sh rate s
, nc 1ude dtscoun r

AD WANTED

41 - HOUI.. fc.r Atnt
12- MObiie Hom••

4- QIIo'eoiWI~

u - .apartment tor R tnt

6 _ _ _ _ _ __

7. _ _ _ _ __
8 _ _ _ _ __
9 _ _ _ _ _ __

10 _ _ _ _ __
II _ _ _ _ _ __

11 - - - - - - - - - - -

1- Happ~

~- Lost

•s-FROOml

..- Span tor A tnt
47- Winted to Rent
41-Eoulpmentlor fttnt

~ouncl

1- Yatd S.lt
1- Pubhc Silt

'""'''~" to Buy
9-Wanted
•EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

wanted to Buy c lass rtngs,
wedding bands, a ny thing
stamped, 10K, 14K , or 18K
gold Sdver cotns, pocket
watches . Call Joe Clark at
'1'12 205~ at ClarK' s Jewelry
Slore, Pomeroy , Ohio 45769
USED FURNITURE Gold
&amp; silver, c la ss rings, pockef
. watches, cha•ns, d1amonds
&amp; so on. Copper brass and
batteries, antique .tems,
also do appra1sa1s, com
plete auct1oneer service
Over JO years e)(penence 1n
bus1ness Will buy com
plete estates Osby Marttn
General Store, Middl eport,
Oh 992 6370

•

Help wa_nte!L

11

GET VALUABLE tra1ntng
as a young business person
and earn good money plus
some g reat g1fts as a Sen
t1ne 1 route earner Phone
us right awaY and get on
the eltgib1 111y l1st at 992
2156or992'2157

n - ca, TV. Rlcllol:quipment
JJ- Ant!qult

wantecl
11- S•tuatH Wlnlflt
,, _ Help

5-4- MI&amp;c Morcflandlll

n - lulldint Su..,llu
St-Pet1 tor S.lt

ll- ln&amp;~o~rance

14- BuJinen Tr1ln1n1

lt- SciiOClhlnltruction
11-

e FARM SUPPLIES
I LIVESTOCK

R.cllo, TV

1

ca.,,.,,

e FINANCIAL

H - Trucks tor hie
U - L.h'nto&lt;lt
64- Hay &amp; &lt;lnin

IUIInHI

19 _ _ _ _ _ __
20. _ _ _ _ _ __
11
22 _ _ _ _ __

lt - Hom" tar Sill
ll- Moblll Homn
lor Silt

23 _ _ _ _ __

l4- lullneu lu l ldlng1

u - ~armt

71 - Awto.

tor Sill

lt- Lota. ACfllll'

want· Ad Advertising
DeAdlines

2_
7_
-_
--_ 28
__

1 lO Jl,M Oa•I V
It Noon htvrd.tv
tor MondiY

29.30
_______
31. _ _ _ _ __

•SERVICES
11 - Homtlmtre'f'lmtntl
12- lllwmtltne &amp; lxu~t•tlnt

il- E,nltallnt
lt- EIIctriUI
&amp; Aotrlttratltn
U - Otnorll Haultnt

33 ._ _ _ _ _ __

Rates and Other Information
15 Word I or Undor

...

Cuh
Idly
1 d•YI
Jdayt
4dl~l

~

1
I'
I

________ .J

Clt•rtt

100
110

'"

1.U

•

'"
us

us

Eich word Olo'er thl min• mum 1$ worctt It~ cents,., word,., dar
Acll ru~nlnv other lllln conMCuflvt elfin will bl thlrted •t the I t11y

,.,,

ln memar~ . Clrcl ot ThUll.\ lnd Oblt\laty : • ctnfl per woni, U .H
minimum Cnh In •dv•nu

Mobllt HOMII.III lnd V'Md •atesartiCUtiH Gnt¥ with Cllh llirllh
ordt'r ~' unr ct1•r•• for 1c11 carrylnt lot Numoer In cue of Tile
~ent•nel

NEW LISTING
Ex
cellenl trailer lot In Har
nsonvllle Approx J "
acre with wafer tap
ONLY $2,800 00!!
NEW LISTING
Brand new home, be 1f' s
ftrst owner The total
electn c, 3 bedroom
home •s Situated on n1ce
s•ze lot tn Rutland
Village FHA approved .
Sells for $41.000 00
NEW LISTING
Large
trame
home
on
Sycamore St tn M id
d lepor t 3 bedrooms,
a1vm 1num s•dtng, gas
forced air furnac e Lot
1S approx so·x 100' ON
L Y $20 .500 00
APARTMENT
BUILDING
R1ver
front property w1 th
many possibilities . Has
rental 1ncome Owner
will take land contract
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.
Phone742 · Jl71
Velma N1cinsky , Assoc

~.::==P:h:o:n:e:74:2:3:o:•:2==~

AII·Oay Good Looks
l'l'inlt·&lt;ll'allt'I'Il
I

Bus mess Bu•ldmgs
Ho te l lounge wtlh three
commerc tal renta ls, two
apar tmen ts LaSalle Motor
In n 1n M1ddleporf 992 9917

34

Reetals
Houses for Rent

~1

FO UR bedroom house ; one
bedroom apt 992 2094 afler
5·00992·5742

ousing
Headquarters

.l

EAFORDm
VIRGILB .SR ·1 '&gt;~ 1 0 11
216 E . Second Street
Phone
1-(614)-992-3325

NEW - 2 bedroom log
type home on the Ot,•o
R1ver with al l c1ty
utdt ttes ava tl ab le and
level lot
NEW LAND - Clear !I
yoursell or le i th e wild
11te roam Natura l gas ,
water, and elec tn ctty
avat lable
NEW LOCATfON
For
your tra1 le r or home
Sept ic tank , electr iCITY
and drilled well on 1' 1
a cres near Tile c oal
mmes on 124
SMALL - 2 car garage
\\nth 2 bedroom apart
menf ove r on level 101
Bath, carpeting , natural •
gas furna ce and c tfY
water Only $16,000
10 ACRES
Nice bot
torn land on Rf 124 lor
your new home on
trader Water and e lec
trtc ava il ab le
A LOCAL REALTOR
CAN BEST SHOW AND
5ELL YOUR PROPER ·
TY
CALL 992 ·332S,
992·1876.

Housing
Headquarters

-

SPECIAL DISCOUNT
pr1,ces on furntture .
Reupholstenng
Jan . &amp;
Feb ,
1981
Mowrey's
upholstery, Pt Pleasant,
W Va 1·304 675 · ~154

THE

Apartment
for Rent

"

62

46

Space for Rent

CO UNT RY MOB I L~ Home
Park , Rout e 33, North of
Pomeroy Large lot s Call
992 7479
T RAILER spaces for rent
Southern Valle y Mobile
Home Park . Chesh1re , Oh
992 3954

to Buy

JONES "'~,,,.,~
CONSTRUCTION

~~·
v

Anltques

S3

ATTENTION
I IM
PORTANT TO YOU ) W&lt;il
pay cash or certll1ed c he ck
for antiques and col lec
tlbles or ent1re es tates
Nothtng too large Also.
guns, pocke t watche s an d
cotn col le cti ons Call 614
767 3167 o r 557 34 11
S4

Mise Merchantse

F irewood , $35 00 a truck
load , S60 00 a cord All hur
dwoocl , sp t1t , &amp; deliv ere d
843 48J 1 or 343 4734

Racine, OH .

949-2049 .,~11
:0:
~'
,._#'!.o':o~.-.
((.. fv rv~..~..
.ioc
0 0

'rRV

do pane 11ng, ce1hng ,
tloor tile , plumbmg Free
cstuT)ates. Fred M iller a1
992 6338
Wdl

estate:

Homes for Sale
s un~ res~ the
nOll! lhe cla!.~ IL

Swt one nunute
ne)fl And do

ea$e ot thr racket 11 lops every
th1ng 111 yow wardrobe Stm plesl
of sew1ng be-sf of the new looks

P11nled Pal!etn 4994 M 1 ~se s
I ~ 16 18 &gt; &lt;~c
11 1b11&gt;l 34) d" ss 1'• ~" dl
4\ HlCh. ldCke1 1 J &lt; ~ YJ&lt; IIS
$2.00 for uch ~Hern. Add ~OC
for nch p.~ltern tor fil1t·clm
aum1il and hand1tn1. Send to:

S&lt;tes 8 10 12

Anne Adams

''""n Dept.

·I '+ 1

The Datly Sentinel
243 West 17 St, New r ..;, Nr
10011. Print NAME, ADDRESS,
ZIP, SIZE, and STYLt NUMBER.

We streaml1ned lhe sew1pg to
save you 11me so you can sawt
mone~l Send now fot NEW 19R I
SPRING SUMM ER PAnt RN CAl
ALOG I00 slyles lree pallem
coupon ($1 Val"") Calalog . $1
134-14 Qui&lt;l Quills . .
$1 .7~
133-Fasllloo Homo Quiltin1 $1.7~

130-Swulti&gt;·SIItS 31·56

$1.1~

t29·QIIItkl (lll Ttii!Sit~ . $1 7~ '

73

be~UI 1ful

a cre s wlfh Slr e arn
tnnbe r land , budd ing
s•fc and some tillable
Ulillfi es
avf"d et bl e
$18 ,000
WORK IN RAVENS ·
WOOD? L 1ve nc ar th e
new bridq e in th 1s nea l 5
bedroom hom e w11h
enclosed rear por ch,
basement , torccd air
tleal on a n• cc lot. Own er
wil l1ng to help tm ance
$32,000
ALSO NEAR
THE
1Jr1dge 1 5 country &lt;'teres
wllh 4 bedroom house,
bath ,
he a l ol a t o r
hr cp ld ce House recent
ly remodeled S4S,OOO
MIDDLEPORT
3
bedroom house on IMg e
lot
(1lummum s1d lno,
lul l basement, ntce kt-1
chen $26,900
BUILOING SITE
Ap
prox . 13 acres 111at
would be an e xcellent
place lor your new
llomc $1 I 100
IN TOWN
1971 Holly
Park mob ile home on
r~ppro x
1 l't CrC' lot 2
bcoroorns
l l rL•pla c P .
l'qu1ppcd
ki! Ctl c n
$16.500
REAL fOR
Hl'nry E . Cleland, Jr.
991 ·6191
ASSOCI A rES
Jean Trusseii94Y 266V
'Roqcr &amp; Dottte Turner
9Y2·S6.2
OFFICE 992 22S9

0

sd

:.y

.,;y

V'..

,,,

~'" c,'lJ "-r,

~ &lt;;
.;j'
1181mo

?.)

0

CID E R, Frcst1 Sweet CtdC 1
av."ll abl c M F1t zpa lr1 c k Or
chard , St al e Rl 689 66 9
3785.
F IR E WO O D lor sa le
Sea so ned , hardwood, s pl1 t
&amp; d c livf'rf'd $ 30 lo.ld 99 2
S240
•
Mclle rntty Cloftl es now o n{'
p r. cc
Wcll erm clon
Pat ch New H twrn, WCS I
v,rg•n• a aa2 J.Jlo

ha lt

Farm Buildings
S1zes
" From JOxJO"
SMALL

Utility Buildings

CHEVY
Tur
b ohydrama350
tt c tran
sm&lt;SSion
Parts
for 74
Caprice Blu e TICK coon
hound want to buy Pm1o
car lor parts 992 2735

S1res from 4x6 to 121:40

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt. 3, Box l4
Racine, Oh .
Ph 61~ 8~3 2591
6· 15 lfc

I

Guod I r o~ l l t! r Appnlv \•d Wood
t\u &lt;ot C I

~ 10 1/l'

wolh

I!IOWl r

1 G ood '"' ~ w.111111
I Oot)(J HOIIJOI II I W~ ~ h t: r
I
\

7) 1 G LI V
6 ( U II HOipOIIll

ll o l r oqf' .o10 1
A!l Ol tho .1bovt otc m\ on t'&gt;
ce llo •!ll conll •hon All •1 ~ &lt;' pto to• d
tn ~ o · ll tllllll ~ llo,llf'I Y Sc ~· II \ lo

'"

V~- POMEROY

--

~LANDMARK
992 218 1

E Mi'lH\ St

fhU

REESE
TRENCHING
SERVICE

Mortgage Bankers
992-7544
VA loans no money.down
,
Federal Housing ~
3% on S2S,O(IO
5% on balance .
conventtonnlloans5%
down
Call lor Information
992·7S44
121tf c

Water·Sewer·Eiectric
Gas Line· Ditches
Water Lme Hook ·ups
Seplic Tanks
county Certtfted
Roush Lane
Chesh~re,

ROGER HYSEll'S
GARAGE
•

camaro
307
v8
r~utomat 1 c Good cond 992
2967

-Auto &lt;1nd Truck
Repair
- TranSilJission
Repair
Hrs.. Mon .-Fn
9 A.M .·S:30 P.M

Trucks for S.1le

1977 Ford pi ckup tru ck J 4
ton 1978 Mercury Cougar
Both tn excellen t cond 1t1on
Phone 992 71&gt;44
truck, he.=tvy duty w1th flaT
1968 Ford
fourths
bed.
goodthr ee
s hape
S35oton
.oo
l1rm 9854351

992·5682

17tfc

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

Body Repa~r · In surance
Work · Colltston Repcm.
EKpert pa1ntmg , body
work, ptnstnptng &amp;
vmyl tops.
Free Esttmates
Call992 ·3421
I&lt; mgsbury Rd , 2 mt
west Co . Rd 18.
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769
Dome sttc, J.apanese &amp;
European Cars &amp;
Trucks.
1 14 1 mo

• New Homes - extensive remodeling
• E Iectnca I work
• Roofing work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583
I 22 1 mo

_fiARVEST
f"flf'rE
\NIT E HOUSE

Carousel
Confectionery
317 N 2nd Ave.
Mtddleport
Order your decorated
cakes for all occaston s:
B1r1hda ys , Anntver·
sanes ,
Weddtngs,
Showers, etc
"Beg&lt; nncr
Cake
Oecor~t1ng
Classes"
stMtmg soon . Ple.1 se
note, we wll be closed on
Mondays dunng the
month of J~nur1ry .
1 11\mo

.

Pomeroy, Oh.
Op en

Saturday Only
4 P.M. to 11 P.M .
FreeCoflee&amp;Tea
d

Free Foo

L1ve Music

J&amp; D

12 l1 ·l mo

ON MOST

Spec. Pnce $225.00
Plu s T .lll &amp; Flu1d
109 Sprmg Ave
P 1 mcr ,1 y,
Oh
Ph . 992·5541
I 22 I mo

Boats and
Motors for Sate

1979 Starer aU a lum•n um v
t1UII open bow. 80 hp Mer
cury outboard, canopy &amp;
tra il er m e xce lle nt all
around condttton Boat l1ke
ne w $3.700 00. 992 2849

-Addonsand
remodeling
- Rooting and gutter
work
-Concrete work
~ Plumbing and
electrical work
C Free Est1mates}

• Dozers
• Backhoes
Hourly Contract
Large or
small jobs.
Ph . 992-2478
11 20 3 m o pd .

CAR~

l&gt;lcg.Pt1Ce!t32500

1978 KAWASAKI KZ 650
motorcyc le, co lor blu e
Ci'111949 2649

"YOUNGS
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

PUUINS
EXCAVATING

AUTOMATIC
TRANSMISSIONS
REPAIR &amp; SERVICE

Motorcycles

V.C. YOUNG II
992 6215 or •92-7314
Pomeroy, Oh.

Rutland Furniture rpet op
Januarj lnventol} Sale

J&amp;L BLOWN

INSULATION

Vtnyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding
eln sula lton
• 5 torm Doors
• Storm Wmdows
• Replacement
W1ndows
Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph. 992-2772
1 28· l mo

Cash ' n' Carry

Home
Improvemen ts

Gene s Carpe t Clean1ng,
dee p s tream extrac tt on
Free
es ltm a t c d ,
r c ~1 so nabl e
rat es, sc ot
cllqu ard 992 6309 or 74 2

KITCHEN
CARPET

I CARPET

2 Rolls
Rubber Back

Reg. '8"

$995 ~~·.

Reg, $15.95

With Padding

$499

&amp; Up

&amp; Up
Installed

SHAG

$799 Sq.
Yd .
Casn · n·'Carr

Buy Now &amp; Save $2·$6 Per Yard .
25 rolls carpet tn stock to pick from.
Regular backed carpel installed free,
with pad.
Drive A Little - Save A Lot

Excavattng

Kt ~ p

Th• l Ad lor

Call Ken Young

RUTLAND FURNITURE

985-3561

~=M=a:i:n:S::t·======~======7:4:2:·2:2:1=t=~

PARTS AND SEIIVICE
ALL MAICES

1

Dozer worl&lt; Sma ll 1obs a
s pec tal ty 74 2 2753
Electncal
&amp; Refngeralmn

Elec tn ca l se rv• ce lor a ll
winnq needs , serv1c e cal ls ,
es t1m a tes Ca ll Mill er E loc
tr.c ol742 3195or992 7680

•w ~ ,h c n

84

Elec trical
&amp; Rcfrtgeratton

F L WOOD
BO W E R S
RE PAIR
SwE'e pe rs,
IOil Stcr s, 1rons. all sma ll
npp11 a ncos Lawn m ower
Nex t to Stale H•ghwa y
Gar age on Re ul e 7, 985
3815

84

Electrtc.,l
&amp; Refngeralmn

M A CHIN E
serv 1ce , a ll
rn a kcs l 992 22 8.:1
Th e
Fabr •c Sllo p, Pomero y
Author ,l ed Stn ger Sal es
rtnd Ser vt ce We s harpe n
SCISSo rs

Ful~reQder f nce

APPliANCE SERVICE

cava!mg
r k &amp; trans •II~
l r~yout 992 wo
7201

•O•w~ ,~ ~ '

.n , ~ ~ · ~

•

• ~ .HHW \

•H oi W • !N 1 .1nO ~

O t&gt; hw,o ~ h t "

SE W I N G
R c p a ~r s ,

· Coon L.tY nan e\
~ ~ "'
~ /o~l

11 l't opo• r h ~ ~
11 0n1e I' Mk \
, ,. ,.,

H ll u i~ Own u r \

• MO UII f

I ~=====-====::!.

r

PEANUTS

DO '{OU REALI ~E I
HAVEN'T '{ELLED AT
I OU ALL DA'r' ?

THAT'S RIGHT AND
I APPRECIATE IT...
THANK '{OUVERV MUCH

GOODNIGHT!

BAHNEY

FETCH ANOTHER
LOG FOR TH' FIRE,
JUGHAID

1

~~=====;==~t=========~t=========~

73
Vans&amp;4W D.
1971 Chevy van, 6 cyl1nder,
sta ndard, tw o new !•res, a ll
carpeted 1nS1de, runs good
S1095 00 742 2211 , al1er 5
ph one 7 42 2201

84

Oh

Ph. 367·7SG0

~~~~~~~~===~~~=========~~~~;;;;;=~
h

19/ 'J.

81

1 25·1 mo

H&amp;R BODY SHOP

ALL STEEL

Autos for Sale

74

10% to 20% Discount
On Entire Stock

max. l~==~~~~===~~======~~~t~~~~~~;~~~

1980 Pontiac Pheon1x:, 2
door, frontwheel dnve, a tr
condttlontng, am tm rad10 ,
33 mpg, 2,000 miles ,
$6.400.00, new c ar warran
ly 992 2849

75

Mower

1

..,

Free Estimates

Transpertalloo

72

Reedsvtlle, OH
Ph . 667-6485

CUNNINGHAM
&amp; ASSOC.

ly_('~.r~

-f'~~.-oh..,,,.,~,,
o,.._
...-..

107tfc

W$tnted to Do

one halt
befw(\cn
&amp; state
on in

". ,,

22 11

POMEROY,O .
992 ·2 259
PEACE IN THE COUN ·

&lt;f

"~•

18

Ntce house on 'J &amp;
acres on SR 7
Memory Gardens
garage
Pnced
spectlon 992 7741

.,,o~,., ,,~o,

c_.-oJ_}.0if:'
bq.
il\Q

d1ameter
10 ". Poles
on largest
CHIP
WOOD
end $12 per ton Bundled
slab $10 per ton Oel1vered
to Oh10 Pallet Co , Rt 2,
Pom eroy 992 2689

71

ANN'S CAKE
DECORATING
SUPPLIES

I~=;=~===~~~~~~~~=~~·~m~o~t=====~~~~~

i"estot!«

~ant_ed

10 lb. Chocolate

cle•s~ cLt'FFoRo

".r

ts Phone 992 5434

I bedroom turn1St1ed apart
ment, wall to wall car
petlng, rede corated , low
utlltt1eS $174 month 992
2362atter4

L

LESSONS

Farm supplies
&amp; L

WIN

Backho~. snow plawmg,
excavation, water-gas
sewer lines, certifted
sept•c systems, dump
tru,ck, stone-coal, etc.
General home repair &amp;
carpenter work. Spr.ngs
developed &amp; ponds

-6

J &amp; F BACKHOE SER
VtCE 11scensed &amp; bonded ,
sep t1 c tank Insta llat iOn ,
wr~ter &amp; gas lines
Ex

Four year old house on 3
acres, 7 rooms, 1 &amp; one half
bath, nice !or a tion, Route
2, Rac1ne 949 2706

GOlf ClUBS:
New &amp; Used

--~-----~-

Pets for Sale
-------

83

Beautiful three bedroom
ranch bnck home in Betum
Addittbn, Pomeroy , Ohio
Gas heat, centrol a•r con
d1t1ontng Call 985 38 14 or
Y92 257 1.

KOUNTRY
KLUB

Ge l a puppy from your
Humane Soctety 992·6260
A I I pupptes,
shephard
fypes, husky types, bull dog
types, coll1e type, adult,
doberman type, Benp type,
a beaut1ful intelligent'
american domesttc type,
shhots, wormed. Also coon
ound type

3 AN 0 4 RM furn1 shed ap

Unturn1 sh ed one bedroom
apartment tor rent Ren
ters asslstanct.• availab le
tor sent or c 1t•zens Contact
V•ll ag e Manor Apartmen ts
at 992 7781

J&amp;F
ENTERPRISES

Rt. 2 Pomeroy
Ph. 992-7?01
1 25 1

3236.
2hound
year 304
old 882
Blut
T1ck coon

HOBSTETTER REALTY
OFFICE 742· 2003
GeorgeS. Hobs tetter Jr .
Broker

Business Services

S6

Insurance

Tra11er lot tor sale, $5,000
Modular home lot on Route
7 three bedroom tarm
house located on Route 7
992 2571 .

" - M. H. Rttllr
17- Utholltlry

31. _ _ __c..__:'--34 ·- - - - - : : : - 35· - - - - - - ' ' - -

Real Estate- General

Ftrewood for sale, Mixed
types of wood $35 00 per
PI Ck up load
Delivered,
will sta ck for Sen 1or
C•t•zens . 843· 4951 or 843·
2815

NEED ttems for your
Mobile Home? V1s1t our·
parts store 8. ptck up a free
cata log
At
K1ngsbury
Home Sates Park &amp; Ac
cessones Rt 124 M1ner
SV&lt;I Ie , Oh 992·5587 .

Real Estate - General

10 ROOM brick , 3 baths . 1''
ac re : 6 rooms, 2 bat hs, 11:1
acres, 6 room s basemen! ,
ba th , 2 mobile ~ a me s .
Mason, 3 bedroom never
l•ved in, 2 bedroom, rented
2 a cres . John Sheets , 3' :1
miles south of Middleport ,
R1 I

lii- Re•l Eslalt Wan ltd

26-----~-

191&gt;9 PMC 3 be droom
trailer 12:.60 992 39S 4

The Daily Sentinel-Fa e--11

.·

5~ ~...:M
=
is~&lt;c.·,_,
M_,e,_r-'ch"'a"'n"'i"'
se,__

992 7143

Jl

14- Metorcyctu
aAuto Parll
&amp; Acctnorl"
77 - Awta ••1111lr

l1- RealtOU
r-_
_ _ _ __:•

cvra=vw.

1972
Champnew
ton, carpet
12 x 60, 1976
two~==========:;:========::~
bedrooms,
Cameron r 12 x 60, two
bedrooms, .all electnc . 1971 32
42
Mobile Homes
Mobtle Hom es
Skyltne , 12sx 6) , two
for Rent
· for Sale
bedrooms, bath &amp; ' J, new
c arpel
19 70
PMC , 1975 VIKING Trailer Three bedroom furn1shed
12 x 60, two bedrooms, new 12x65 Exc cond under tr a 11er, avai lab le im
Musl have
carpet. B x S Sa les, Inc , p1nn1ng tnc tuded $6,000 medtately
depostt &amp; re ferences
2nd x Vtand Street , Po1nl 247 3941
$200 00 a month plus
Pleasant, lf}JV Phone 675
ut1l1ttes
Phone 992,S5 11
4424
1972
Gle nwood
l 2x.60 anytime after 3
1970 PARI&lt;WOOD custom trailer , 2 bedroom, new
Mobile Home 12x60 un stov e &amp; retr 1gerator, gas
furn1sh ed 2 bedroom, 1 furnace On rented lot tn 2 bedroom tra1le r Adults
Middl eport. $6,000
992
only
Browns Trailer
baTh, fuel o tt heat 992 ·3823
1987
Park 992 3324

Situahons Wanted

Real

1)- 'Janl &amp; 4 W ,D

lor hie

B€1M6 OJf£"
Al,Y IHE TiME
IAK£S A LDI

1973 Crown Haven, 14 x 65,
three bedJooms, ne~ car
pet , 1971 Cameron, 14 x 64,
two bedrooms, new carpet

• TRANSPORTATION

eREAL ESTATE

NAP MAIN, CA~yt..E. 7
W'HY Do K1TIENS
'&gt;1.£W SO
&lt;
\.

Mab1le Homes
tor Sale

WIL L b~lbvslt 1n my home
weekdays Day sh1ff, Mid
dl eport area 992 6309

u - SHCI &amp; Fertllher

S.rlo'lcn

32

Wtl l do bab)ls ltt ing '" my
home In Portland Have
reterences. Call843 ~801

.. -~•r"' lqUII""Ir\1
4l- WutH to lu"

11- Winted To Dll

12

)B58

~1 - HovllhOid Gooch

IQ LOin
11- ProtentQntt

18 _ _ _ _ _ __

M.1il This Cou'pon with Remittance
The Datly Senltnel
Bo• 719
Pomeroy , Ohto 45769

OLD COINS, pocket wot
c hes, class rings, wedd•ng
bands, dtamondS Gold or
silver Call J A. Wamsley ,
742 2331. Treasure Chest
Cotn Shop, Athens , OH 592
6462

YoUTIWII&lt;I6 A

FOR Sale or rent Ap
prox1mately 34 acres w 1th 3
bedroom modu lar home 10
Portland, Oh 10 area. 9
miles from Ravenswood
bndge . Call after 5 p m
673 5272

Furnace repatrs , e lectn cal
work , pfumb•ng, mob•lc
hOme or res •den ce qq2

eMERCHANOISE

H -M~n•y

17 _ _ _ _ _ __

16. _ _ _ _ __

'-------------

Ad\

and

13 - - - - - -

"------1&gt; - - - - - - -

WANTED TO
BUY
. GOLO,
S ILV ER,
PLATINUM. STERLING
COINS, RINGS,JEWELR
Y, MISC. ITEMS
AB
SOLUTE
MARKET
PRICE GUARANTED. ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP, MIDDLEPORT ,
OHI0992 3476

by Larry Wright

A UTOMOBILE
IN
SU RANCE been
c 'n
c el l ed?
Lo s t
your
operator ' s l 1 c~nse' Phone

t~r R~t

o,portunity

25-------

IRON AND BRASS BEOS,
old furniture, desks; gold
nngs, 1ewe lry, Sl iVer
dollars, sterling. etc, wood
1Ce boxes,jars anftques,
etc Complete 1'1ouseholds
Wrtte M D Miller, Rt 4,
Pomeroy, OHl or call 992

13

•RENTALS

1 - Co~r&lt;l ~~ Th1n1ts
1- l n Memorllm
J- Announctmtnll

11 -

5 _ _ _ _ __

Wanted to Buy

A~

Four&amp; one half acres in the
Southern Local School
Dtstr. ct, two bedroom
bath, liv ing room, kitchen :
hot &amp; cold water, drilled
well Located on Manue l
Road. 949 2301.

Pan T•me bartender. Apply
1n person at the Meigs Inn .

· PHONE 992-2156

•
Phone ____________
_

14 _ _ _ _ _ __

9

For sale : older home on
large lot behtnd Burger
Chef in Pomeroy Call bet·
ween the hours of 7· 10 p m
992 7547 .

Girl 18 or 19 years old to
11v e 10 992 2686

WANT AD INFORMAnON

Address _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

4 _ _ _ _ __

MALTESE cat Found on
992·5059

w Main St

URGENTLY
NEED
Depef"ldable person who
can work without super
v1s•on lor Texas oil co •n
Pomeroy area We train
Wnte O.B D1ck , Pre s ,
SouthwesTern Petroleum ,
Box 789, Ft Worth , Tx
76101

Name _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

31 . _ _ _ _ __

___ ___

.

1

'-------

LIST in Chester, R1denour
Rd 6 month old female
Blue Tic . Reward Call
collect367, 0478. Jack Lee

' 6606 .

I

7 _ _ _ _ __

Lost and Found

6

high
In
e ld erlya people
morals
must.and
Pret
er
· • someone W1fh p1ano and or
~ ~ mus ica l ablltty . Ca ll Terry
0: Stoots, M F . 8 4 30 at 992

I

'

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ' "

PART TIME assistant ac
t1v1t tes d•rector 1ntcrestcd

-----------------------·
! Curb Inflation. I

Wanted
For Sale
Announ cement
For Rent

Gtveaway

WANT ED People fo sell
Avon 742 2354 or 7~2 27S5

Rac1 ne Volunt ee r F•re
De partment s pon sors a
s hol g un &amp; nile match
every Sat n1 gl1t 6 JO p m
.:11 the1r budd 1ng 1n Sa o;han
Fac tory choke 11 guage
shot guns onl y Ope n S•g hts
22 r d le

Pay Cash for
! Classifieds and
1
Savell I

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

7760

Income tax serv1ce, federal
&amp; state Wallace Russell
Bradbury , ca ll 992 7228

exc.se ta)(es, payable pur
suant to Senate Bi ll 448,
upon regula ted publ1c
utiltttes, whether the af

sa ,

Announcements

--~

heanng shall cons•der the
•mpact at the mcrease '"

1981

PUPPIES to good home.
Father pure bred Irish Set·
ter 9~9 · 2023 .

Small investment, large
returns, Sentinel Want Ads

Wnte your own ad and order by mail w•th fh•S
coupon Cancel your ad by phone when you get
results . Money not refundable
Proctorvtlle were recent v t ~Itors of
Mr and Mrs. Owen Anderson .
Mr. and Mrs Wtlmer Fmdley of
Lancaster vistted Saturday wttl) Mr
and Mrs Russell ~'mdley. Mr and
Mrs. Charles Fmdley visited the
Fmdleys Sunday .
Mrs. Marie Mtchael of Racine
spent Chrtstmas evemng with Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Michael, Becky
and Chuck Mr . and Mrs . Roger
Roush, daughters Kimberly and
Jennifer, along with tl!ose named
above all vtsited Mr. and Mrs. Lewis
Ptckett. daughter Tracy 111 the

4

r---------------------------------------

Not•ce
that the

30,

Januar

'IES,
UNCLE
SNUFFY

NOT
THAT

ONE!!

�I •

Pag~12-The

Pomeroy

Daily Sentinel

January 30, 1981

Middleport, Ohio

22 former hostages given parade
NEW YORK (AP) - A night of
champagne, !ancy dining and
theater-going gave 22 former
hO.stages a taste of New York's high
life, and today ' they were !leing

..

HEADING FOR A WELCOME - Former hostage.
Anny Staff Sgl. Joseph J. Subic Jr .. and fianre. Allison

from motorcade limousine to V.F.W. Post345 in Rad·

Bum~ter

100 family numbers and reporters jammed lbe small
building. 1AP Laserphotol .

of Southhampton, England work

tht~ir

way

ford Township, Detroit, Mich., for a reception. Nearly

CAA gets hand-delivered checks
COLUMBUS - Fifty checks
totaling nearly $2.6 million were
hand-delivered Thursday to community action agencies participating in the Home Energy
Assistance Program I HEAP ).
The checks channeled through the
federally-funded program. whi ch
helps low-income .people cope with

because they cannot pay their
heat ing bills." ' Ouerk said.
Duerk said the program has three
major objectives:
- Funneling money to eligible
recipients to help offset the ~COSt of
rising healing bills of low-income
families.
- Assu re as much possible that

rising winter heating bills, cover ad-·

payments e:tre made to offs€1 the

ministrative costs and provides funds for users of bulk fuels , according
to James A. Duerk, state development director.
"The checks Will also enable the
agencies to provide some relief fur
Ohioans who face a cutoff of service

heating bills are spent on th ose tiills
alone .

·

- Guaru against fraud and abuse
which have marked other federal
assistance programs.
"Ohi n's HI;:AP plan differs [rom

Area deaths
Vada Caldwell
Vada Caldwell, 96, former Racine
resident died Thu1·sday at the
Pomeroy Health Care Center.
Mrs. Caldwell was preceded in
death by her parent.&lt;;. Horrace Spencer and Amelia Lewis Hall : thi·ee
brothers, Jasper Hall. Horra~e Hall
and John Crew; three sisters
Virginia Helvort, Marga ret Romme
and Mabel Hall Latham ; her two
husbands, Robert Crew and Charles
Caldwell.
She was well known for her
flowers and gardens. She is survived
by four nephews, six nieces and
several great nieces and nephews .
Funeral services will be held
Saturday at 2 p.m. at lh e Ewing
Funeral Home with the Rev. Allen
Blackwood officiating. Burial will be
in the Greenwood Cemetery. F'riends may call at the funeral home after 7 p.m. thi s evening.

the plans in some other states
because the bulk of the money will
be distributed to utilities directly.
with the utilities issuing credits on
customer bills." Duerk noted.
In some states, money is ·chan. neled directly to the applicant. with
no assurance it will be spent on
energy costs, he added .
Duerk said another program.
Energy Crisis Intervention Program
(ECIP), will provide help for those
facing immediate service disconnection or those who have had their
services cut off. ECIP is administered by the U.S. Department
of Health and Human Services
through local community action

I

Stephanie Ann C41de
Stephanie Ann Cade died Thursday a, the Holzer Medical Center
shortly after birth.

agencies.

Under HEAP, those who qualify
will have between 20 to 6() percent of
their monthly heating bills paid by
federal funds . HEAP will help pay
bills dating back to Dec. I. The filing
application deadline is March 1.
Applications are available at
neal'ly 650 locations througbout
Ohio. '· There are 543 ~a tions maintamed by the Oh10 Commission on
Aging where senior citizens can ob--

She is survived by her parents,
Henry and Annette Might Cade, 10
N. Seconq Ave .. Middleport ; mater·
nal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Stephan Might , Rutland; paternal
grandparenw. Mr. and Mrs. Henry
Cade. Route 4. Pomeroy, and
.several aunts, un cles and cousins.

Graveside rites will be held at 2
p.rn. Sunday at the Miles Cemetery
in Rutland with the Rev. Eugene
Roush officiatin g. Jo'riends may call
at the Walker Funeral Home in
Rutland anytime after 2 p.m. ow
Saturday. The family will receive
friends from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
Saturday.

tain applications and receive information about the program."
Duerk said.

Meigs County happenings •.

1

rt:t·uperation. Dan Morris was

(Continued from page 1)
goverrunent, or absen&lt;:e of a government, in Iran.''
At another point, however, he
said: " Now, I think that any country
would want to help anpther if they
really ·showed an intent to have a
governmenr that would abide by international law and do what they
could to help them in that regard.
But until such a· thing appears apparent there, I don't know that
there's anything we can do."
He said the United States "will
honor the obligations" of the
agreement leading to freedom of tbe
American hostages after 444 days'
captivity. He added, however, that
tbe most important obligations
already have been carried out.
Asked why he ruled out a policy of
revenge, in view ci his pledge
Tuesday for swift retribution in
future terrorist attacks on U.S.
diplomats. Reagan replied: '' What
good would just revenge do and what
form would that take ? I don't think
· revenge is worthy of us. On the other
hand , I don't think we should act as
1f this never happened. "
Reagan urged Americans to
"think long and hard before they
travel to Iran because we don't think
their safety can be gu~ranteed
there."
Any busineSsmen eager to deal
with Iran should consult "by long
distance," the president quipped,
because "we wouldn't want to go
back to having just a different cast
of characters but the same show
going on.''
Reagan seemed at ease and mixed
jokes with his answers during the
half-hour question-and-answer
session. Under a new set of groundrules set by the White House staff,
· reporters sought the president's attention by raising their hands in
silence, instead of jwnping from
their seats and shouting, "Mr.
· President."

Former•••
(Con tinued from page 1 )
the board.
On the Monday following the
Saturday meeting, Thompson
resigned as the Superintendent of
the Gal!ia-JacksonNinton Joint
Vocational School Dist~ict.
On Wednesday of this week. the
Gallia County Grand Jury returned
itll three-count criminal indictment
against Thompson. Service of swnmons was delivered by sheriff's
department deputies yesterday .

think we have to be bigger than
that."
Mayor Edward Koch was sure
Thursday that everYthing was going
fine, despite suggestions from
Secretary of State Alexander Halg
and The New York Times that the
parade represented one welcome too
many.
"This is one of our great days,"
Koch said as he joined the ~ostages
and their families at Windows on the
World. "I haven't heard a single
New Yorker that doesn't support
what we're doing."
Earlier, nearly a dozen former
captives joined more than 2,000
people at a prayer service at :he
National Cathedral in \Washington
ribbons and yelling. ~~we love you" D.C.
In New York, the former hostages,
and "Welcome back."
Before the 11:45 a.m. kickofl of the most of whom arrived in the city late
parade from the Battery up Broad- Thursday, got a sample of the city's
way to City Hail, the hostages' fondness for showering paper on
schedule today included breakfa•t at heroes when their limousines from
the Tavern on the Green in Central LaGuardia AirpOrt pulled up outside
'
Park - for those who did not care to the Waldorf.
As hundreds of New Yorkers
linger over breakfast in bed.
Although ticker tape is no longer crowded the streets and sidewalks
used on Wail Street, the city made aroUnd the hotel, tbe windows of the
sure the parade would be authentic Colgate!Palmolive Building opposite
by obtaining 550 miles of tape from .new open and a cloud of shredded
Western Union and a company in paper noated down as the cheers of
the crowd below were mingled with
Connecticut.
Kennedy said he hoped that ail the those of the office workers.
"In my mind, the ultimate tha(
celebrating, which has included
festivities in West Point, N.Y., America can do for anybody is a,
Washington and hometowns across ticker-tape parade in New York,"
the nation, would relieve the said Howland, 34, who lived in New
frustration Americans have built up York for years before going to
Tehran. He now lives in the
about the 444-day hostage crisis.
· " I hope somehow this displaces Washington area.
the Hreat anger." Kennedy saip. "!
treated to one of Manhattan's giddiest pleasures :- a ticker-tape
parade down Broadway.
"It's great. It's wonderful. Only
New York could do this," said former hostage Michael Howland.
''This is very glamorous," said
former hostage Moorhead Kennedy
as he surveyed New York's skyline
from Windows on the World, a posh
restaurant on the 107th noor of the
World Trade Center.
Everywhere they went, from their
lodgings at the luxurious WaldorfAstoria Hotel to the Mark Hellinger
Theater near Broadway, wbere they
saw the hit show "Sugar Babies,"
the former hostages were greeted by
New Yorkers decked out in yellow

Merrill L. Evans, president of Carter &amp; Evans Transportation, Inc.,
was recently elected a member of
the board nf trustees during the annual meeting of the Holzer Hospital
Foundation.
Other highlights of that meeting
included in the reelection of seven
members of the board . of trustees
and lhe election of the foundation's
officers and memllers of the
executive conunittee.
Reelected chairman of the board
was !.. R Ford, Jr.. of Gallipolis;
John F. Stifner, Sr., Jackson, was
named fits! five chainnan and Max
W. Morrow of Wellston was reelected second vice chainnan.
Theodore T. Reed Jr., of Pomeroy
is the newly elected secretary. and
Thomas E. Tope of Gallipolis was
reelected as treasurer.

Board members elected to serve

GAME AT EASTERN
The Eastern Eagles of Coach Dennis Eichinger will play the North
Gallia Pirates at Eastern this
evening not at North Gallia as was
reported Thursday.

as the younger gals glided to a 43-22 ·
lead at the buzzer. In the last round
Southern wrote the final chapter
with a potent offensive spurt that
boosted them to the61-35 win.
Renee-Smith paced Southern with
12 points, Della Jolmson had a gret
night underneath with II points.
Tonja Salder added 10, and Mel
Weese nine for the winners. Kathy
Still and fl. Putney led Hannan
Trace with 15 and 10 points respectively.

Learn to drive-in the sky

~.Mal

'I

••..•~.......... .. ........................ A-3-8
Lifestyle ........ ! ............................ B-1·10

. . .B -1

State-Na.1tooal •.••. : .·..•.•.. ." .................. ()..1

•

mD~rt

~t4tatiLl
Pomny

Flower Shop
m.nl•_

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

_u

I ••••••

•

unba
Vol . lS No. 1

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gall~ll_~lis-f&gt;oint

Copyrighled 1981

BLOWING IN THE WIND- An unidentified VIetnam veteran holds a large American nag aloft atop the
World War Memorial in Indianapolis Saturday alleroooo. Over 300 VIetnam veterans marched through

SANDUSKY, Ohio (AP) - The
commandant of the besieged Ohio
Veterans Horne said Saturday he is
resigni11g that post for "personal
reasons" unrelated to a highly
critical investigation of the facility.
Robert Borders, who .first began
working at the horne in 1955, will
leave Feb. 13, he said in a letter to
the horne's board of trustees.
In an interview, Borders was
tight-lipped about his decision to
quit.

downtown Indianapolis .to hooor the. elghtsetvlee men
killed In the Iran rescue auempl; 1o welcome home the
hdtilages, and to bring aUention to their own plight.
(AP t.aserpholo)
·

Pennits bring
in $742,609

1nanaging ·the personal funds of
veterans it deemed to. be incompetent; serving improperly handled food, and for operating a
"grossly filthy"· detention facility
where drunken veterans were jailed.

However , he insis ted it wasn't cona

nectcd to a report issuc&gt;d earlier this
month by five state government
agencies which sharply criticized
the home's operations.
"I gave the board my resignation
for personal reasons. I think it is in
the best interests of the home and
the veterans," Borders said.
The state task force's I ,()()().page
report found nwne1·ous problems
with the 94-year-old home. The
facility provides free care for about
280 patients in a nursing home and
another 550 in residential cottages
and a dormiiory on the IQO..acre
grounds.
The . task force criticized the
home's management for maintaining shabby living conditions for
some veterans; improperly

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

VETERANS HOME COMMANDANT RESIGNS - Robert
Borders, commandant of the
much criticized Oblo yelerans ·
Home In Sandusky, has resigned.
IAP Laoerphoto}

GALUPOIJS - James T. Boster,
Gallipolis city code enforc~ment officer, .reported a total of $742,600
worth of construction pennits were
issued through his department in
1980. .
Boster released the infonnation in
his annual report Friday.
Included in the 1980 figures were
two permits for new ooe-family
residences, $55,000; 12 pennits fo
residen'tial additions and
alterations, $83,600 ; three pennits
lor office, bank and professional
buildings, $247,000; three pennits
for stores and other mercantile
buildings, $340,000; eight pennits for
miscellaneous additions and
·
alterations, $7,009.
During the year, Boster reported
240 consultations )\'ith the general
public concerning zoning
requirements were conducted.
Zoning certificates issued last
year were signs, nine; fence, three;
gas well operation, one; private
swirruning, one.; relocation of a
home on same lot, one.
Boster said he conducted 115 inspections, 24 consultations, seven
time limits in health programs and
departmental inspections.
His office also conducted five inspections and two consultations on
five licensed vending machines; t6
inspections and five consultations on
II food establishments; five inspections of dwellings and four of
buildings; and 13 inspections and .
four consultations of six licensed
trailer parks.
Boster also investigated 28 garhage inspections, 67 for refuse;
three for sewage, 32 for insectrodent complaints and 14 for
animals.

By LARRY EWING
GALUPOUS - The housing of
prisoners has become a major
problem for the Gallia ·County
Sheriff's Department since the
January 8 fire that destroyed the
101-year old west wing of the courthouse.
Flames did not reach the jail
during the Jan. 8 fire; however, the
inmate housing and the administrative office area-located under the new annex of the courthouse-as well as the kitchen, located under
the old wing, incurred heavy water,
heat and,.Jjmoke dap1age.
On the n!ght of the fire and immediate!~ thereafter, irunates were
traru;p,~rtf\'1 tQ jails in surrounding
counties fvr JJ1Carceration.
Since that time, stricter enforcement of state standards for
such facilities and increased housing
needs have created a substantial
problem for the Gallla department.
"At present we have four
pri,oners housed in out-of-county
jails," Sheriff James M. Mon-

tgornery said Friday, "we are about
to lose the services of those
facilities, however.''
According to Sheriff Montgomery,
the state has ordered that the
Jackson County Jail be temporarily
closed, beginning Tuesday, until certain health and safety problems are
corrected.
Additionally, the sheriff said, his
office has been advised by the state
that Gallia prisoners should no
longer be housed in Meigs County
due to the lack of around-the-clock
jailers at that facility . And, the.
sheriff added, the Lawrence County
Jail is filled to capacity.
"At present," the sheriff said,
''we're relying on the cooperation of
the prosecutor and the judges to help
us with the problem."
To reduce the need 'tor housing of
prisoners, Prosecuting Attorney
Joseph L. Cain said Friday, summonses for appearance in court
rather than warrants for arrests are
being issued in most cases.
The Gallia jail has been cleaned
and painted and awaits state ap-

proval before it can be used for the
housing of prisoners. Heat has been
re-established in the prisoner area.
Although offices have been reopened on a part-time basis in the
administrative area, that section of
the facility still requires extensive
repair. Additionally, there is no heat
in the office area.
Crews were working Friday to rebuild and replace security doors
designed to separate the jail from
areas of public traffic in the court
house. That project was expected to
be completed Saturday.
"Other than for a lack of bedding
and sheets, and a means of feeding
prisoners, we are close to being in a
position where we could re-open the
jail," Montgomery said.
The county is currently
negotiating with the Gallipolis
Developmental Center for contracted catering services for the jail.
"We won't be able to open,
however, until we get tbe okay frorh
the state," the sheriff added, "and
its jail standards aren't easy to meet
even in the best of times. "
·

Hiring freeze causes panic
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
callers can be count~d by the
thousands, from Anchorage, Alaska,
to San Juan, Puerto Rico. Some are
crying, others cursing, many
begging.
They are the people who were
promised federal jobs only to be left
out in the cold by President
Reagan's hiring freeze.
" The panic, the uncertainty can
rip your guts out," says a governe
ment official on the answering end of
many calls. He requests anonymity,
sayin~, " We've literally had threats

on our lives.''
Reagan's hiring·freeze, backdated
to Nov. 5, is designed to symbolize
the administration's intent to cut
federal spending. It also is the
opening move in a promised campaign to reduce the government's
size.
But for thousands of potential employees, the freeze is proving an
agonizing shock. And for
bureaucrats who must administer
the program, it is creating turmoil.
" Officials are still trying to figure
out how this all will operate,'' says

an Office of Personnel Management
spokeswoman.
"We have to sit here and tell these
people, "Gee, I don't know,' when
we're asked about jobs.'' says
another official.
Even the nwnber of people affected by the freeze appears uncertain, with officials offering only
an estimate of about 20,000.
Abnost immediaiely after the
luring freeze was signed last
weekend, court challenges were
filed, congressional offices began to
protest and personal horror stories
materialized.
- A young woman in Tulsa, Okla.,
came here with the promise of a job
as a key-punch operator at St.
Elizabeth's Hospilal, a federal institution. She put most of her money
toward a security deposit on a new
apartment and had enough left for
two weeks of groceries. Suddenly,
she didn't have a job.
- A middle-level bureaucrat
working for the federal Bureau of
Land Management in Utah quit for a
higher-paid post in another agency .
He sold his horne, loaded his family

into a motor horne and took off for
the Lake Tahoe region on California's border. Half-way there, he
received word that his job was gone.
" When he called (us), he was
h~sterical, alternately screaming
and crying,'' recalls a government
official. "We were sympathetic, but
he said, 'Gixt damn it, I don't need
sympathy, I need help. "'
- Thirty-year-old Bruce Merchant
of Fort Wayne, Ind., is a recreation
specialist who.plans to get married
next month. On Jan . 21, he received
a letter instructing him to report for
work Feb. 2 at a federal prison in Oxford, Wis. He and his fiancee, who
had quit her job, drove the 200 miles
to Oxford last Sunday. They rented a
house, installed a telephone,
enrolled her !().year-old child in
school and even changed their
mailing address.
On Wednesday, the couple returned to Fort Wayne only to be informed that the position was.frozen. ·
" I have no job, neither does my
fiancee," Merchant said. " We're at
the government's mercy."
(Continued on page A3)

Gas line fire
·burns employe

Stoto (HIO•Y

O&lt;tl..,ded

--- ===

High School Seniors

Pomeroy

11 Sections, 110 Pages JS Cents

Sunday, February 1, 1981

,...,..,..

Veterans ·home
official quits

ATTENTION

109 High Street

Pleasant

Problems mount ·for
Gallia jail officials

namt-&gt;d acting superintendent
durinlj Gl~ason's absenee.

THR PHOTQ,PLACE
,.
Chulene and Bnh Hoejlicl.1

entittt

tmts

The winners hit 27 of 63 for 43 percent from the field and hit seven of
14 from the line for 50 percent.
Southern had 16 steals nine assists
13 fouls, and 13 turnove~s.
'
Southern won the rebounding batIle with ·38 to Hannan's 27. Della
Johnson grabbed 10 rebounds, Tonja
Salser seven, and Cindy Evans six.
Hannan TGrace hit 16 of 42 from
the field for 38 percent and hit three
of !3 for 23 percent.

YES! We are still doing senior portraits and you
have lime to meet the yearbook deadline .
Your tull color portraits are done before tradi
tiona I oil ba ~ kdrops as well as scenic settings to give
you a wide variety of preview selection.
W i! give you individualized attention .
Give us a call for your aop'lintment.

•••D-1

Sports •.• .••• • ••.•..•... ' ....••••••••.
(}..1. .8
T\' guide • • . . . • . . • • • • . • . . . . . . . . . • . • . • . . . . • • . IIISert

.

on the executive corrunittee for a one
year tenn include Ford, Stifner;
Morrow, Reed, Tope, Imogene
Davis, J . Tim Evans and Atty.
Warren F. Sheetll.
Seven. members of the board
whose tenns would have exp1red,
were reelected to serve an additional three years as trustees.
They include Edward J . Berkich·,
M.D., William P. Cherrington,
Davis, Ford. Harland Martin,
Morrow andStifner .
Evans was elected to fill the unexpired term of his father. Emerson E .
Evans, for one year. In addition to
his ownershiP in Carter and Evans
Transportation, Inc .. has other corporate interests include Evans Enterprises, Inc., Gallia Development,
Inc .. Planned Properties, Inc., Concerted lnvestmentll, Inc., Quail
Creek, Inc., Gallia Minerals, Inc.,
Ideal Energy, Inc., M &amp; T Investments, Inc., and MECA, Inc.
From 19S5 until 1972 he was an officer and director of Evans Packing
Company. He presently is a member
of the Board of Directors of the Ohio
Valley Bank, and until his election to
the hospital's board, was a trustee
and vice chainnan of the Holzef
Foundation for Tri.State Health
Care. He has been an active member
antl officer in a nwnber of com·
munity organizations throughout his
business career.

The last hurrah

Farm ••.•..•.•...•..... -. ..........•••••.•••..•. D-3

Name Merrill Evans
to hospital board

Tornadoettes move
another step ·closer

RACINE - The Southern Tornadoettes of Coach Connee Enslen
whirled up a convincing 61-35 win
over the Hannan Trace Wildcats
here Thursday evening for their
seventh straight SV AC triumph . The
wm moved the Southerners one step
closer to the SV AC title and raised
its record to a perfect 13-0.
Initially the lady Wildcats held
their o~n with the hosts in a very
F/.IRBOARD MEETING
SEEKS DIVORCE
close f1rst period exhibition. Both
The Meigs County Fair Board will
David Reeves. Pomeroy, filed suit
meet at 8 p.m. Monday at the countv for divorce in Meigs County Com- clubs hit the scoring exchange
extension service office in PomeroY. mon Pleas Court against Luetta Ann several tunes before Southern took a
slight advantage in the latter stages
Nick Dorr of Variety Attra ctions will Reeves. Athens.
·
of the period to lead I&lt;HI.
be present to discuss grandstand at:
Southern's strategy paid off in the ·
tractions at the 1981 fair .
second round as it applied a very efSPECIAL MEETING
fective half court trap that deflated
A special meeting of the Meigs ·the visitors and turned the tide in the
Local
Board of Education will be
Tornadoettes favur .
VETERANS MEMORIAL
held
at1:30
p.m. Saturday at til&lt;
Adrnitt~d-Daniel Shane, Racine;
The hosts exploded for 17
Susanne Hubbard, Syracuse: Ma1·y · Meigs Junior High School. Purmarkers. while holding H. T. to just
pose is to reinstate Supt. David L.
Adkins,Syracuse; Shelby Combs ,
five, to lead 31·13 at the inGLeason who has been off the job termission .
Cheshire.
due tu major surKery and
Discharged- Belva Miller. Mark
The second half was all Southern's
Burson .

Reagan

-Inside today. ..

Area deatb.s ••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ •••• : •••• A-6
BuslDess • • • .. • • • • • • • • • • • • . • • • • • • . . • • • • . • • • • • • • • 1)-5
Classified •. ~ .................. : . . . . • . . . . . . . . ll-5-9
FAiltortal ••.••.••..••••••••••••••.•••••.•.•••.• A-2

lWO

ONE

5x7

8x10

'

WEATiiER FORECAST - A wide band of snow Is forecast for
Sunday from northern Plains across the central Plains down to northern Texao up to Great Lakes and lhe Appalachians. Rain Is expected
over the northern Pacific eoaat and mosi ol thr Soulb. Showers arc
predicted over southern Texas. El'"'where skies will be sunny. lAP
Laserpholo)

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enlargement at a terrilic price! Hurry, offer expire•

M~rrh

Extended j'oreCRst
Lows nea·r 30. Rain devt'lopmg Sunday, ptl!lsibly beginning as snnw or
freezinl! rain. Hi!!h!; in the low 40s. The chance of precipitation is 90 prreent.

?8 19R1

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
'•

Extended Ohio Foreelllit- Monday throu~il Wednesday: Ad1ancc of snow
flurries Monday . Fuir Tuesday ancl Wt:dnesday . Hi~hs i11 tile oppcr 20s and
30s Monday and in the 20s Tucsdu y and Wedne!tduy . l.vw' "'the tee'" Muuday and from 5 tu t51'uesdiiY """ Wcclm•sday .
lj

.
•

. POMEROY -Natural ~as suppy
for residents of Minersville ,
Syracuse and Racine area was
nearly cut off Friday evening as a
result of a fire that occurred at a gas
line at Forest Run .
According to the report Columbia
Gas employes were repairing a leak
In the line wheq it caught fire .
Eugene Fink, Rutland, employed
by the gas company. sustained burns lo he face and hands and was
taken by private whicle to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where he was
treated and released.
l.al~.::r iu the evening, the rire was
extinguishc'&lt;l by ~as rumpany cmpluyes. The Syracuse Fll·c Department was call~d to the scene tu cool
down the area to enable t•mplolyes uf
the KBS

cnmp~ny

to lllMkt· the
i·epair.'l'hl' Pomcr'uy Fire
rh ·p;trlment waf.t JISt' ··ailed ln tlw

nece~sar)'
'il 't Il l '

*'

' I' \

DONATIONS- Three Meigs County organizations
· recelvrd • tulal of $,1,800 h1 donations from Aerie 2171,
Fraternal Order of Eagles, Friday In the office rl
Pnmeruy Atton1ey Frcderltl.. W. Crow 111. The money
is frum charity prm·•·cds raised tfirough various evt•n·
t• . Th•· Punwroy Fir•• Dt'p!lrlnll'nl rrcehed $2.100;

Melg• County American Legion baseball program,
$1,000 and the Syracuse Fire Department, $500. Left to
rtght, !runt, are Charles Legar, Don Thomas, Pomeroy
Fire Department representatives, and Abe Grueter,
making the presentations for the aerie, Rear- Geae
Imboden, Syracuse Fire Departmeot; Allen Stobart,
Legiun baseball program, and Crow.
I

.I

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