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                  <text>Sentinel

Man's body
pulled from

ELBERFELDS 'IN POMEROY

Ohio River

FRIDAY-SATURDAY SPECIAL.$

The body ot a West Columbia man
was found in a car pulled from the
Ohio River Wednesday morning by
Ravenswood, W.Va. police.
The victim, identified as William
Eldon See. 42, apparently died when
his car plunged into the river Sunday evening after he failed to make
a curve in the highway.
Dragging operations began Sunday night.
The car entered the water at the
site of an old ferry landing. The car
was found approximately 200 feet
down stream from where it entered
the water.
Born July 30, 1933 al Hartford, the
victim was the son of Emma Ellen
Pringle See of Point Pleasant and
William Edwin See of GallipQiiS
Ferry, W. Va.
Other survivors include a son,
Tilhothy Allen See of Glenwood; two
sisters, Wilma Mae See of Point
Pleasant and Mrs. Thelma Cam!&gt;"
bell of Gallipolis Ferry; three
brothers, Everett, Columbus; Roy of
Hogsett and James of Chicago, Ill.
He was preceded in death by a
brother, Robert, in 1971.
Funeral services will be held at
1:30 p.m. Saturday at Wilcoxen
Funeral Home in Point Pleasant
with Rev. Odell Bush officiating.
Burial will be in Kirkland Memorial ·
Gardens. Friends may call at the
funeral home after 5 p.m. Friday.

HOSPITAL :\EWS

J

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGES MARCH 4
Mrs. Randall Adkins and son,
Robert Baker, Patricia Britton,
Elma Caldwell, Douglas Clonch Jr.,
Jamie Davies, Wanda Deweese, Jill
Evans, Douglas Fields, James
Grant, Beverly Hale, Jayme Hudson, Albert Hutchinson, ·Beulah Jarvis, Susie Kelly, Larry Lee Jr ..
Brandon Lusher, David Malone.
Billy Matthews, Marie Meal, Mrs.
Lewis Pearson and son, Mary
Rouse, Mr~_, David Roush and son,
David Rutherford , James SmJth,
Deborah St. Clair; Jayroe Tillis.
BIRTH
Mr. and Mrs. Randy Baker, Oak
Hill, son.

\

Area Death

\

Samuel A. Gibbs

CARPEl SPECIALS
-Brown/Black/White Plaid

3 95

SPECIAL S

'13

-Heavy Jute Backing
-Reg. 117.00 sq. yd.

1-ii~;;_.·--~-·_.--.S~A~L~f;--_.·~-~-r---~~---·~S;P~E~C~IA;L~~G~R~O~U~P=-·--~-·_.·~
.

FRANKLIN CONVICTED- Avowed raclstJooeph Paul Franklin
is led from the courts bulldlllg Wednesday night alter being convicted
on federal charges of violating the civil rights of two young ~lack
joggers by shooting them to death as they left a public park. Tbe men
on either side of Franklin are federal marshals. (AP Laoerpboto)

One person was injured and heavy
damages were incurred to a vehicle
as the result of an accident on West
Main St. at I :23a.m. Thursday.
Pomeroy Police said a westbound
car driven by Keith Phalin, Route 3,
Pomeroy, went out of control hitting
a utility pole. A passenger, DoUg
Phalin, was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital by the Pomeroy
Emergency Squad. He suffered a
pQsslble broken leg.
There were heavy damages to the
car and the driver was cited on a
reckless operation charge.

HuiiiPU~

REG. '15.00 .... SALE '11.99

MR. LEGGS JEANS

Allv loca tioo - whe)tJef
voo're ot' to the otflce iJI
0\,J t on lhe town -. yC&gt;J 11
a~ectote tha com1011
ord quahty lt\QI t~ove
mode Husr"l Pt.Jppo&amp;s'

REG. 117.00 .... SALE 113.59

REG. 116.95. .

REG. 123.00 .... SALE 118.39

LEE RIDER JEANS

REG ..125.00 .... SALE 119.99

REG. 122.95

on location

cosuots

IQmOIJ~

Just tne

ngnttoucn ol Cla ss com

Dined wrrn a m'Orl ~enStt
o1 stvi4:J Ana vou don l

~-

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1

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·""

··-·- f\
"'""' "' , . 0

~.. ·"'·

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REG . $2.00

~""

SALE 79'

SHOE BOX

,.

FOU..OWS CHART - Joe Thelsmann, Washington Redskin quarterback, uses something familiar, a football, to trace the money pledged
during Thursday's Tri-State Leadership dinner In Gallipolis. In all,
$1C, 790 was pledged.

I
..
••

LD.

$1899

WINONA, Ohio - Sheriff's authorities in Columbiana County say
$100,000 wbrth of drugs and lab processing equipment confiscated
earlier this week is the largest drug raid in the county's history.
Authorities said they took 13, :&gt;-foot-high suspected marijuana plants
and varying amoWJts of PCP, I..SD and cocaine from a rural horne
Wednesday night. The raid capped a six-montp investigation.
Two men and a woman were apprehended at the house .

Save 20% on quality Lane Lovechests.
Protective cedar lined - quality construction - upholstered top styles.
Pine - oak · cherry - pecan · cedar.

Reagan wants to cut legal aid

20% OFF

WASHINGTON - President Reagan, who clashed with a poor
peoples' legal aid group when he was governor of California, is calling
for elimination of all federal money for free legal help for the poor.
Reagan's budget proposals lor 1982 also would give states direct control for the first time over 4() health and social programs - such as rat
control and alcohol abuse - but provide 25 percent less money from
WashingtOh to run them .

LAY -AWAY FOR JUNE GRADUATION!

REG. $4.00

SALE 11.59
REG . $7 .00

Winning Ohio lottery number

SALE 12.79

BARGAINS

8 in. Steel Toe

'

LANE CHESTS

Special group of earrings , chains, hair
combs, necklaces, _
bracelets and rings .

THE

!

SALI'

JEWELRY
CLEARANCE

~

Black Palenl
Navy Parent

$1399

'

Confiscate drugs, equipment

· ~-- - , j~

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted-Richard Deem, Mid·
dlepQrt. .
Discharged-Carl Fulton, Ellen
Stewart, Juanita Chapman, Brenda
Pettit, Mildred Nash, Cecil Brad-

Basic straig'ht leg
style, pre-washed, 14
ounce denim. Sizes 27
to 38 waist, 30 to 36
inch length .

SPRING COLORS IN
STRETCH GABARDINE.
SIZES 3 THRU 20.

i

FREE CLINIC SET
A free blood pressure clinic will be
held ·Tuesday, March 10, from 10
a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Harrisonville
Town Hall sponsored by the Senior
Citizens Club of Harrisonville.
. Everyone is invited to attend.

MEN'S DENIM JEANS

JUNIOR
SLACKS

CLEVELAND - The winning nwnbers selected Thursday night in
the Ohio LAlttery's daily game "The Number" and the weekly

REG. $12.00

Dress Wellington

SALE 14.79

WORK BOOT

"$35

FILES SUIT
Johnna Rhodes, Bidwell, filed suit
in Meigs County Conunon Pleas
&lt;;:ourt in the amount of $52,736 against Donald W. Price, Rt. I, Cheshire.
The suit is for injuries, medical ex·
penses and loss of work as a result of
an accident on Pomeroy's East Main
Street June 22, 1980.

SQ. YD.

-3 Popular Colors
-12 FT. Width - 100% Nylon

Installed
wl'l&gt; Inch Foam Pad

Three calls were answered by
95
local units Wednesday and Thursday
morning, the Meigs Emergency
Sole. NeoPrane
Medical Services reports.
Pull 01'), American
All Leather
At 2:44 p.m. Wednesday, the MiddlepQrt Unit took Doug Morrison
from Pearl St. to Veterans Memorial
, OH.
Hospital and at 12:40 p.m., the
Rutland Unit took Rolland Stiles, ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I
Langsville, to Holzer Medical Cen- I
ter. The Pomeroy Unit at 1:31 a.m.
Thursday took Keith Phalin, from
We'•• jlllt •
the scene of an accident on West
Main St., to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.

PROBE THEFT
Pomeroy Police are investigating
the theft of a 1974 one-half ton pickup
truck from near the Twin City
Machine Shop.
Police said the vehicle was st-&lt;en
between 10 p.m. Wednesday and 7:30
a.m. Thursday. Owner is Bill Miller,
Pomeroy. A key broken off in the
ignition enabled the thief to start the
vehicle, police said.

By DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
OVP News Editor
Despite last year's gloomy
economic picture and today's uncertainty, community and business
leaders Of the tri-county area were
generous Thursday riight as $14,790
was pledged during the ann11a1 ·
Leadership Gifts Dinner for the Tri
State Area Council Of th~ Boy Scouts
of America.
The money was raised during a 15
minute session led by Dean Epling,
M-G-M district chairman. Highlight
· Of that event was the auctioning of a
football autographed by the
evening's guest speaker, Joe
Theismann, quarterback for the
Washington Redskiris of the
National Football League.

HIGH/LOW SCULPTURED CARPET

MEN'S

NAME DELEGATION
Envoy and Mrs. Ray Wining of the
Meigs Salvation Army delegated
several officers and soldiers to attend the Athens Corps Wednesday
for inspection and council.
From the local unit were Bettie
McGuire and Major Glenna Rummel (R) at the morning session and
Major Rummel, Eloise Adams,
Sally Landers, Edith Spencer, Rhonda Proffitt, and Jackie Justis at the
evening review.
Major and Mrs. George Payton Of
the Cincinnati headquarters were
the inspecting officers for the corp;
review. The Athens Home League
was in charge of a potluck dinner.

scouting
area
.
surpasses '81 goal

-Slightly Irregular

SPECIAL

"Pyramid" game are :

The Nwnber - 239
Pyramid - 115; 430; 2769
The lottery repQrted earnings of $130,738.50 from the wagering on
the daily number game drawing. Lottery officials said sales prior to
the drawing totaled $1,015,183.50, and holders of winning tickets are
entitled to share $884.445.

COATS AND CLARK

$1 49 WINTUK
YARN
3'11 ounce skeins · 4 ply hand knitting y~rn . B lg
color selection . Mothproof , non allergenic . Save
Friday and SaTurday ,

1 19

f

TUBE SOCKS

Weather

Men' s sizes 9 to 15, Boys 7 to 11 .
Whife with colored stripe tops.
Made by Sprlngfoot.

99~

Skein

Variable cloudiness through SatUrday. Lows tonight in the mid-20s.
Highs Saturday near 4()_Chance of precipiatlon 20 percent tonight and
Saturday. Northwesterly winds around 10 mph tonight.
,

Pr.

Extended Ohio Forecast - Sunday through Tuesday: Fair through
the period. Highs in the upper 30s to rnid-!Os Sunday, rising to the mid4()s to lower 50s Monday and Tuesday. LAlws in the lower 20s Sunday
morning and in the upper 20s to low 30s Monday and Tuesday.

CHILDREN'S JACKETS
.

L ined ;ackets , unlined iackefs. tl1e papular " bub le-gum"
jackets and zipper·front sweat shirt jackets. Sizws 12 mas
to24r'nos .• 2 to4, 4 to6)( , 7 to 14.
·

Theismann, in order to "sweeten

the pot," threw in two tickets to a
Washington game and dinner for two
at his Washington Restaurant.
A vigorous bidding effort followed
between Dl'. Dave Carr, Point
Pleasant physician and scout leader,
and Ronald Atkinson, a Gallipolis
CPA.
Dr. Carr was the buyer with a
$1,000 bid.
·Epling expressed thanks from all
scouting personnel for the pledges
which he said showed extreme
respect for the Boy Scouts of
America.
He also thanked Miles Epling and
Don Swisher Of Peoples' Bank, Point
Pleasant, . for their suppOrt and
llnancial assistance in sponsoring

ByKATIECROW
A proposal increasing gas rates in
the village of Syracuse was sub-

t
\

I

- ,/

I \ i

~

WESTERN SHIRTS
LOn!J ,1nd short sleeve styles . e•
t ellen t r&lt;tnge ol plltterns .t~nd

asset. You'll lind us

I U 1~ 1 1) , mlld i um CIS
l arQf' f i61&amp; 111 , x l.:~r oe
I 17 II' , !
15' 1 ) .

h1ndy 1nd friendly .

Com• in!

,.

S14.95 Western
·~
1

6 MONTH MONEY MARKET

14.383%
Substantial Penalty for Early Withdrawal

SHIRTS . ...... . $12.69
S16.9S Western
SHIRTS . . ..... . $14.39

A Point Pleasant man was barrel of a gun," according to a
arrested on a felonious assault sheriff's
spokesman.
Leach
charge following a Thursday af- allegedly held the gun on Pearspn
ternoon incident on the Silver from the passenger's side, and then
Memorial Bridge.
left the car, coming around to face
Galli a County sheriff's deputies Pearson.
cited Lome J. Leach, 29, after he
The department said Leach then
reportedly held a gun on Henderson took Pearson's gun and ordered hi!n
police chief Gene Pearson on the to stand against the cruiser.
Ohioside.of the bridge around 3 p.m.
However, Pearson had notified the
According to tile sheriff's depart- Mason County Sheriff's Department
ment, Pearson followed a car Leach and Point Pleasant police, who then
was riding in onto the bridge. Pear- arrived on the scene.
so~ wanted to question Leach in conLeach then surrendered and was
nection with a hit-skip accident in taken to the Lawrence County jail by
the village.
Gallia deputies, and faced arraignThe car and the cruiser stopped on ment in Gallipolis Municipal Court
the Ohio side of the bridge. Pearson today.
then left his cruiser and went to the
driver's £ide of the olher car, asking
for the driver's identification.
"Then he was staring down the

Riffe urges
completion
of highway

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - House
Speaker Vernal G. Riffe Jr. is urging
state transportation officials to complete lhe Appalachian Highway
across southern Ohio within two
years.
The New Boston Democrat is expected to meet with officials of the
Ohio Department of Transportation
to reinforce his request before a
possible vote Tuesday by the House
Finance Conunittee on a one-year,
$679 million budget for the
beleaguered agency.
·
" That Appalachian Highway
should have been completed a long
time ago," he said.
His insistence that the project be
finished came as the House and
Senate adjourned for the week
following noor sessions in which
they disposed of a few relatively
routine items.
Rep. Myrl H. Shoemaker, 0Bourneville, said the finance panel,
which he heads, was to vote on the
transportation budget Thursday. Action was delayed, however, until the
highway construction issue was
resolved.
Quick action by the lower chamber would send the transportation
spending document to the Senate for
pQssible inclusion of a gasoline tax
ltike. ODOT officials said the extra
revenue Is needed to adequately
met•ln the state's roads.

S19.9S Western

-

SHIRTS . ..... .. S16.89

SPRING

Made bv Wrangler - Neck
sizes 14V2 to 20 . Sleeve
lengths 33 to 36 inches. Pre·
shrunk , sna· front, 2 snap
flap pocke ts, snaps on wrist

SAVE

THIS WEEKEND

$1588

•

SAUl

)

BLAZER SALE

- ~·

..

•

Special weekend sale of blazers
by famous makers like Devon, '

Douglas MARC , Trissl, Bradley
and Cos Cob.

=1:181
Bank
3RD ST., RACINE, OH.
Member FDIC

Misses sizes 8 to 20
Extra sizes 38 to U.

REG . l3.00 ... ... . .
REG . U3.00 . , .....
REG . $40.00 . .• ....
REG . $56 .00 .......

SALE $11.39
SALE $26.39
SALE U1.99
SALE $44.79

·r

MEN'S LEATHER BllTS

I

Full grain bridle cowhide leather.
Sizes 32 to 50. Removable buckle.
$5.95 Leather Belts 1'14" wide ..• $4.88
$6.95 Leather Belts 1:1/4" wide ... 55.68

OPEN SATURDAY 9:30-5100

.
•
.
'
.
•
:

STAFF - Current staff members of the Meigs
CoUDiy Department of Hcallb Is now located In the new
multipUrpose buDding to Pomeroy. They are, front, I to
r, Debbie Lavalley, R.N., W.l.C. Director; Norma
Torre•, R.N., nursing supervisor; Nancy Ackerman,
clerk; Mary Cleek, W.I.C. clerk; back row, I tor, Carol
TIDOehill, R.N., we'll child program; Annie Moon,

,

We need to carry on our scouting
program and go over our silstalning
membership goal because of a drop
in fWlds from the United Way." Continuing, McGinnis reviewed the
cOWlcil's budget totaling $305,000.
Guest speaker Thelsmann then
combined humor with humility to
drive home several points to the
crowd.
Beginning his talk with personal
episodes in his scouting career, the
former Notre Dame star then spoke
directly to the parent, urging him to
give his young man or young lady an
oppQrtWlity."The best way to impress your children is by example
not words. Words are cheap.
Become active with your children,
play and work with them, don't
ignore them, don't let them feel left
out," he said.
Theissrruin then related his own
boyhood, college days and his
current prb career with his family
relationship.
The former All-American
described his early awakening in the
(Continued on page 7)

Point Pleasant'man
faces assault charge

·WESTERN
SHIRTS
cuff.

In his speech, he said,"We're all
here because we believe in kidS,".

.

( OI O r ~

Small

we're here".

milled to council Thursday night by
James Diddle, president of·Syracuse
· Home Utilites Company.

NEW SELECTION

CONVENIENT LOCATION: 1 grut

the dinner held at Oscar's
Restaurant.
. .
Goal for this year's event was
$11,000.
Prior tQ Theismann's address,
Robert H. McGinnis, council
e11ecutive for the Tri-state Area
Council gave a talk entitled "Why

HAPPY BUYER- Point Pleasant's Dr. Dave Carr, right, smiles after paying $1,000 for an autographed football from Washington Redsklos'
quarterback Joe Thelsmann at Thursday's M-G-M Leadership Dinner In
Gallipolis. In addition to lbe hall, Dr. Carr gets two tickets to a Redsklos'
game and a dinner at Thelsrnann's Restaurant.

Council receives gas hike - propos~

SALE$3.75 ....... . ... .. ....... SALE$3.18
REG.$5 .00 . .. . ................ SALE$4.28
REG. $9.QO ... ................. SALE S7.68
REG. $15.00 ....... . .... , ..... SALE $12.78
REG. $21.00 .................. SALE $17.88

MEN'S

15 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper .

-100% Nylon Pile

-12' Width

95

2 Sections, 12 Pages

rJPftS'~~I M-G-M
-

I G·~·..

•

enttne

Pomeroy-MiddleJ&lt;ort, Ohio, Friday, March 6, 1981

8()1

Rubber backed LMI loop Carpet

•

a-1

225

'Copyrighted 1981

WAREHOUSE

Samuel A. Gibbs, Jr. , 61 , Salem
St. , Rutland, died Wednesday
evening at the Holzer Medical Center following a lingering illness. ~b~ur~y~.----.,.---~----~===M=ID:D:L:I:PO::RT::O:H:IO::==;~
Arrangements will be annoWJced by ,..
the Walker Funeral Home in
Rutland.

Emergency
squad runs

•Voi.29,No.

•

.e

•

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT

One hurt in accident

'

1981

Ohio

nutritionist aide; Frank Petrie, R.S., deputy health
commissioner; Kim Winebrenner, sanitarian In
training; Pearl Scott, clerk/registrar. Not present: Dr.
Sellm Blazewicz, health eommls~ioner; NIU Wlsnlskl,
R.N., hyptertenslon &lt;·ontrol program, ud Betty
Christopherson, senior volunteer. (See Story on Pagcl21

•

'I

The increase calls for a commodity charge of $2 per 1,000 cubic
feet of gas, up 45 cents from the
present rate of $1.55. This figure
does not include the PGA rate, better known as fuel adjustment clause.
However, coWJcil took no action on
lhe proposal.
Willie Guinther, councilman,
. reported he had contacted Frank W.
Porter, village solicitor, regardill(l
large trucks driving on village
streets.
Porter suggested Mayor Eber
Pickens, Chief of Police Milton
Varian and Sgt. James Sheets of the
Ohio Highway Patrol bring in scales
to weigh trucks that are believed to
be overweight.
Varian has found out the stale
patrol does not weigh trucks in
Meigs County. Council discussed
other avenues that might be taken to
stop the opera ton of large trucks on
village streets.
Guinther will again contact Porter
with the suggestions made by council. Council feels heavy trucks are
posing a prob)em in maintaining
village streets.
Gene Imboden, fire chief, informed council ' that an application
for a grant under the 1981 Rural
County Fire Protection program
through Ohio Deparbnent of Natural

Resources, has been denied.
- Imboden also rep()r!ed one of the
·pagers used for emergency and fire
calls has been lost and there was no
insurance.
Imboden suggested the pagers be
insured. A pager cost $295 each plus
the cost of a charge. Council ageed
to insure the pagers and secure cost
of insurance from local insurance
firms.
Council,

in

other

business,

·designated five parking spaces next
to the city building facing the ball
park for use by members Of the
emergency squd and fire department.
Council also discussed the issue Of
dogs running lOOse in the village and
asked residents to cooperate in
keeping dogs tied to owners property.
Persons, who know the owner Of a
dog running loose, are to contact the
Mayor, Chief Varian or any council
member.
Residents are aiso being asked to
cut trees that are hanging over
village streets. It was also disclosed
that sidewalks in need of repair is
the responsibility of property
lwners.

Meeting with council was Bill Ar·
(Continued on page 7)

GUEST INSTRUCTOR- Jack Delaney, director of lbe Jackson High
School Symphonic Band, works wttb lite Meigs High School Band which
will present a concert Sunday and is getting ready lor participating in the
District Ohlu Music Education AsowelaUon in GaUipolis on !\larch 13.
.l

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

�The Dally Sentinei-Pag-3

Commentary

Kentucky ousted

Page-2-The Dally S~ntinel
Pom ..oy-Middleport, Ohio
Frida'\'. March 6, 1981

•

Upsets m~k. play~ffs

.
·
Th
t ch e. ______________
William F. Buckley
Jr.
eagan
vs.
a
_
R
During the Thatcher-Reagan visit !ton read:
'' Darling?''
we were reminded of a Punch car'' What, darling?''
toon that appeared after a meeting
" Nothing, darling. Just 'darling,'
between President Eisenhower and
Prime Minister Harold Macmillan darling."
Well, it wasn't quite that gooey,
in 1957, at the end of which the two
leaders warbled forth a com- but it is, of course, correct that the
munique that has not been matched secretary of the treasury was insince the Liebestod between Tristan structed to conceal a careful
and Isolde. The cartoon showed itemization of the difference betEisenhower in tweedy Clothes ween Reagan's program and that of
wearing a cap and sitting on a park Mrs. Thatcher. Why? Because the
bench outside tbe White House with. success Mr. Reagan will have in
Macmillan wearing the Scottish Congress heavily depends on high
equivalent of a lady's country public excitement over the prospecclothes. Ike had his anns around tive fruits of Mr . Reagan's plan.
Most Americans are acutely
Macmillan's shoulder, and the cap-

The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street

Pomtroy, Ohio
61.4-m-.!151
DEVOTED TO TilE INTEREST OF 11-IE MEIGS-MASON ~RF.A

P\JbUSher

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH

4aJ)staut Pub lis htr / Controller

Gueral Maoager

DALE ROTHGEB. JR.
News Editor
A MEMBER uf The Auoclated Prtu, tnlaod Dally Pl't'SS AssOC"Iatinn and lhe
A.merltan Newspaper Pv.bllshen Auoclltieo.

LETI'F.R.fii OF OPINION 1re welcomtd. Thty should be ltss than 311C1 "'ordl loag. AU
lttters are subject w ediUoc and must llf' siMDed •ltb name, addrH' ud tfltpboot
number. NouWiiigned idkrs wiD bf. pt~bllshrd. Letters sbould lte in good laslt. 1ddrtulng

iuuei, oot peDOnaliUea;.

Warfare in the
boardroom
Corporate executives and their boards. many of which now include
directors representing the public interest, are stepping on each other's
turf so often today that a magna carla may be needed.
" There is warfare in the bOardroom," said Prof. Eugene Jennings, who
makes the recommendation. He suggests that the Business Roundtable or
the U.S. Chamber of Commerce undertake studies leading to the pact.
The alternative, he says, is continued conflict and damage to companies. He maintains that " On one of 10 bOards at any given time the officers and directors are facing each other in coinbat readiness."
It's a developing trend, said Jennings, known as one of the foremost
analysts of corporate affairs and an author of many books on business.
Among reasons : The presence of ·•outside" directors conunitted to
public interest issues, and a tendency of boards, pressured by regulatory
authorities, to assert authority. and assume responsibility.
As a consequence, says Jennings, horror stories abound, although they
are kept from the public by one of the remaining ethics of the past, an
agreement that neither officers nor directors explain or complain.
Hiring and firing for the same reasons are to be expected, Jennings
commented, but he maintains that the rate at which boards are firing
chief executives "suggests that a new social contract be drawn up to spell
out expectations and obligations of officers and directors."
Such a social contract did exist as recently as the 1960s, when boards
were expected to legitimatize decisions of managements. Said Jennings:
" Only in cases of gross incompetency or corporate vulnerability did boards assert themselves in the manner that now represents the norm."
In the 1960s, he explained, the typical chief executive officer could tell
his lieutenants to proceed on a project, knowing l}lat at the next board
meeting he would get it mandated. " The CEO didn't have to second guess
the board and the board gave the chief wide discretionary judgment," he
said.
Now, he continued, at the very time that federal regulations narrow a
chief's authority , boards increasingly are asserting their authority and
narrowing the chirf's freedom .
" The board is trying to govern wisely," said Jennings, while " the
executive is trying to manage wisely.·•

Leuers to editor
I agree with Brenda Hickel, I think
Southern should be proud of its girls
basket bali teams too.
. They are quick, speedy and young
and as they used to say in Brooklyn
"Wait until next year."
As to the fan who blamed the
coach for the team's loss in the tournament, the coach can't put the ball
in the basket, when a team shoots
less than half of its usual per·
centage.
Here is Md. Connee Enslen's and
. team's record. She had her first
team in 1969. In those days the girls
didn't go to sectional, district or
state tournaments, They just went to
invitational tournaments. They also
played schools in A, AA and AAA
classes. Southern teams won three
championships, two against Meigs,
one against Federal Hocking.
Then the state decided to give the
girls the same rights as the boys .
They went into a league according to
the school size .
Mrs. Enslen's teams have won
three SVAC titles, been to the
district and missed one district ti tie
in an overtime game with Alexander.
At one time a Southern girls team
had a string of 32 or 33 games
without a loss, which was the best
record, boys or girls, in Meigs Coun·
ty and it would be hard pressed to
find a string that long in the whole
state. Mrs. Enslen and Southern
girls have nev~r had a losing season.
I

asks the question : Under existing
tax laws, how do individuals fare
who receive $50,000 in salary plus
$49,000 in investment income, which
last comes in as dividends ($10,000),
interest ($!i.OOO ) and capital gains
($34,000). Now, forget Year One of•
the Reagan administration, because
the effect of the man above
described will be so small as to be
virtually unnoticeable (the tax rate
on that mix of the investment income is down from 33.5 cents to 30.6
cents ). Take Year Three- at the
end of the Kemp-Roth line, after the
three successive income tax cuts.
The tax rate on the investment
dollar will be 25.4 cents. This com-

earn money. A lot of tbem work for
the purpose of giving money away.
But incentives to save have got to be
realistic. In an age when tbe former
economic adviser to George
McGovern is advocating an end to
the corporate tlusiness tax, the
elimination 'of the capital gains tax
and the elimination of taxes on
savings, the inost conservative
president in U. S. history is advocating : no reduction in the corporate tax rate, no significant reduction in the capital gains tax and no
significant reduction in taxes on
savings. Except that I and the IRS
can't afford it, It would all leave me
speechless.

pares with rates - at this very
moment, not three years from now
- of 14.4 cents in Japan, 11.8 cents in
West Germany and 7.3 cents in
France. It just isn't gOod enough to
accomplish what the supply-siders
are talking about. That doesn't
mean that their program isn't an improvement. It is. It does mean that
there is a high likelihood that three
years from now Ronald Reagan will
be visiting with Mrs. Thatcher in
Great Britain in a spirit of an undertaker, rather than a redeemer.
It is nonsense to say that Reagan
has adopted a program based on
economic· determinism.
The
American people don't work only to

,. '

LOOSE BALL - Purdue Boilermaker center,
:_ Russell Cross, lop, dives in to Ohio State guard Carter

Scott, while teammate Todd Penn covers up the ball,
during first half action to Columbus Thursday olght.
(AP Laserphotu) .

'

Williams also surpassed Jerry Lucas to be~ome Ohio
Slate's all ftm·e leading scorer with 1,!)98 points topping
Lucas by eight points. (AP Laserphoto ).

.~

..

than to consume?

ROBERTL. WINGETT

Proud mother

aware that Mrs . Thatcher's
program is in very deep difficulty. ·
They don't, as a rule, inquire deeply
into the causes of those difficulties ;
and as a matter of fact not anyone
can absolutely say what are the
causes of her difficulties. They talk,
even,aboutfundamentalchangesin
the British character, and such
phenomena cannot be flippantly
discounted.
It is a fact that in Great Britain.
almost two years after Mrs. Thatcher was elected, things were in a
bad way, with very high unemployment, inflation and general
discontent. There are factors at
work in Great Britain extrinsic to
the U.S. situation (for instance, the
paradoxical effect of an oil glut
maintaining the pound at a value so
high as to discourage British exports) . But Mr. Reagan's program is
different in a concrete way. The
question to ask is : Is it different
enough? The answer to that question
is quite simple: Will it substantially
alter - upwards - the American
disposition to save and invest, rather

romp over Georgia Tech. Ralph
decision over Drake, and Daryl
By Associated Press
Some of the poor relatives in the Sampson scored 20 points for the Stovall hit two free throws with one
Southeastern Conference are finally Cavaliers, despite drawing two second remaining to provide
getting rich, thanks to inspired play technical fouls. The contest was a .Creighton with a 66-64 triumph over
in the post-season basketball playof!' virtual shoving match that has Tulsa in the semifinals of the
become a hallmark of Virginia- Missouri Valley Conference playoffs .
Such teams as Vanderbilt, Georgia Tech games.
fs.
In other .ACC games.• Frank JohnMississippi and Georgia, who spent
In first,round action of the Pacific
the ·season idling at the middle or son scored 32 points to lead lith- Coast Athletic Association, Craig
Dykema scored 16 points and grabbottom of the standings, won quarr ranked Wake Forest over Clernson
terfinal games Thursday night In 8().71; Sam Perkins ignited a ninebed nine rebounds irt Long Beach
State's 83-77 victory over the Univerone of the most upset-studded SEC poinl run midway through the
second half to lead No.12 North sity of Pacific, and Doug Murrey
playoffs in history.
Vanderbill pulled off the biggest Carolina i&gt;ast North Carolina State
had IS to lead San Jose State over
surprise, beating seventh-ranked 6!).54, and Greg Manning's free
Fullerton State 63-54.
throw broke a tie with four seconds
Kentucky 61).55 in the tournament at
In the opening round of the ECAC
left as 20th-ranked Maryland
Birmingham, Ala., as freslnnan AI
Metro Division tournament, Earl
defeated Duke 56-53.
McKinney hit seven straight free
Fuller scored 14 of Long Island
In first-round play of the Metro University's final 24 points to lead
throws in the final 2\'z minutes .
Mississippi knocked off No.IO Ten- Conference tourney, Dale Solomon, the Blackbirds to an 85-78 triumph
nessee 81-71 as Cecil Dowell scored scored 25 point as Virginia Tech beat over Fordham, and Iona stopped St.
Memphis State 72~ ; Kevin'Gaffney
Peter's of New Jersey 41-38 with the
22 points, and Georgia, ·which had
lost twice by big margins to hit a jwnper with 13 seconds left to help of Gary Springer's tie-breaking
lift Cincinnati over Tulane 67.j]6, and jumper with three seconds left. In
Alabama during the regular season,
Mickey Dillard's 23 points triggered the ECAC North, Eric Jefferson and
upset the Crimson Tide ft6.IIO behind
Florida State past St. Louis 84-77.
Pete Harris each scored 18 points as
Dominique Wilkins' 31 points.
Antoine Carr scored 25 points to Northeastern beat Vermont 7f&gt;.69 in
Only third-ranked Louisiana State
Wichita State to an IIS-74 overtime,
among the .favorites got away unscathed, beating Florida 85-73 as
leonard Mitchell came up with 27
points in the other quarterfinal.
Upsets also marked play in the Big
East and Southwest conferences as a
variety of college basketball playoffs continued from coast to coast
Thursday night.
. Regular-season champion Boston
College was beaten 67~ by lastplace Providence in the first round
of the Big East playoffs as Ricky
,Turner delivered a final-second shot
for the Friars.
In other matches Thursday night,
Eric Floyd scored 19 points to lead
Georgetown to a ~2 decision over
Seton Hall; Aaron Howard scored all ,
of his 15 points in the second half to
lead Villanova past Connecticut 8564, and Erich Santifer and Leo
.Rautins each scored 18 points to lead
Syracuse past St. John's 71~.
In the SWC quarter-finals, Texas
Christian stunned Bay)or 56-47 as
Jeff Baker came off the bench to
score 18 points. LaSalle Thompson
score.d 21 points and collected 13
rebounds to pace Texas over Texas
Tech 66-58.
In the SWC quarter-finals, Texas
Christian stunned Baylor 56-47 as
Jeff Baker came off the bench to ·
score 18 points. LaSalle Thompson
scored 21 points and collected 13
rebounds to pace Texas over Texas
Tech 66-1i8.
All oi the favorites ·won in the
opening round of the Atlantic Coast
Conference· playoffs, and No.4
Virginia led the way with a 76-47

She won't toot her own horn but I
will. I am her mother and proud of'
her. - Iris Williams, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy.

Tum by example
If the United States of American is
to turn away from the crimeincrease wave, that turning can only
be done by example and not by
legislation. The key to the tendency
to criminal action is frustration with
level, normal, labor-oriented means
of productivity.
Government mismanagement ,
special interest legislation and their
accompanying pay-offs, income tax
cheating, petty theft, and special
privileges to authorities are not
· symptoms of our sickness, but
rather our problerps. Mutual
distrust among neighbors, fear and
distrust of police and politicians are
our symptoms.
.With so much contempt and
distrust for those in authority,
frustration has become our national
excuse to give-up and cheat as
everyone else does. Have we no
longer the .moral sense of pride to
realize that each individual sets his
or her own example'
President Reagan may lead, but
as he said we cannot legislate
morality or social change. Positive,
free, honest choices are our goal and
our only chant-e to prodictivity as an
alternative to cheating and continuation of our criminal tendencies .
- Richard P. Nease, ,Columbus,
Ohio 43229.

We have before us one more study,
pointing to the inadequacy of Mr.
Reagan's reforms, if the objective is
to increase production. It is called
" The United States Economic Perfonnance in a Global Perspective,"
and it is the work of Dr. William C.
Freund, chief economist for the New
York Stock Exchange. It reveals
that our tax structure predisposes
Americans to spend rather than to
save. The index (devised by dividing
real growth rate by rates of unemployment and innation) puts us sixth, behind Japan (37 ), West Germany (29), France (18) , Canada ( 16)
and Sweden (15.3). We then weigh in
with 15.2, ahead only of Italy ( 13.4 )
and Britain (2.2). The study thee

~:S::::~i::::

&lt;

~.,.,.,

\:~~~~~~
~

State casts eyes on Wayne National Forest
COLUMBUS .. Ohio (API - The
state is casting eyes toward the
172,IJOO.acre Wayne National Forest
in Ohio.
Gov. James A. Rhodes has sent
two letters to the U.S. Department of
Agriculture proposing Ohio take
control of the forest.
Department of Natural Resources
Director Robert W. Teater calls the
plan the eastern g,hase of the
Sagebrush Rebellion,\ reference to
attempts in western states to have
the federal goverrunent turn over
U.S.Iand to the states.
Teater said he expects a reply
from federal officials any day on the
idea . When it comes, Wayne
National Forest Supervisor Harold
Godlevske says he expects
Agriculture Secretary John Block's
decision to be negative.
Godlevske said he was surprised

to hear of the Rhodes proposal. He
said federal management complements state management by
providing money for more forest
acquisition, multiple use activities
such as wildlife management, strip
mine reclamation and the like.
" We think we're doing a good job
of managing the national forest ian·
ds. They would do a good job, but I
wouldn't say they would do a better
job,'' Godlevske said.
But Teater disagrees . He said the
department's Division of Forestry
could manage the woodlands much
be tter than federal foresters
because of its closer relationship
with local goverrunents.
The forest, which encompasses
172,766 acres in several southern and
southeastern Ohio tracts, was
named for Maj. Gen. Anthony

Wayne, a Revolutionary War hero
who also subdued Indians in the Northwest Territory after the war.
Combined with 166,000 acres of
state forest land in the area, the
division would be responsible for
managing more than 338,00o acres of
forest and other land.
Although the national forest maintains stations in Athens and Ironton
and a substation in Reno, headquarters for the sprawling forest is at
Bedford, Ind. Officials there also
manage the 185,IJOO.acre Hoosier
National Forest. Teater said the
Jack of closeness rriakes it more difficult to manage the forests in Ohio.
Teater said that by combining the
forests, . fewer employees would be
needed than are now used to mainlain separate systems.
Main blocks of federal land are

north of Ironton, north of Athens and
northeast of Marietta. Ohio has 17
state forests in the region and one of
them would be used as headquarters .
for the operation, said division Chief
Ernest Gebhart
About $2 million lo $2.25 Inillion
would be needed to pay for the
management, an amount that
doesn't worry Teater, despite big
cutbacks in the state budget
" We're looking farther down the
road," he said. About $1 Inillion of
the extra revenue would come from
timber sales, according to Gebhart,
although Godlevske said currently
$280,000 in timber sales come from
just the national forest.
Teater said other operating money
would come from funds he said the
Reagan administration intends to
begin returning to the states.

Reagan dismantles Carter's hallmark
WASHI)'IGTON (AP ) - It took
President Reagan just six weeks to
dismantle one of the hallmarks of
Jimmy Carter's four-yea r foreign
policy.
Without making any major
speeches on the subject, without any
white papers. the new administration sent clear signals to
authoritarian regimes that it will not
take a harsh view of transgressions
of human rights - so long as tbe
regimes are friendly to U.S. in-

terests.
Item: The Reagan administration
lifted the ban on Export-Import
Bank financing of trade with Chile.
Ca rter imposed the prohibition to
protest Chile's lack of cooperation
with the investigation of a terrorist
attack on one of that country's former diplomats - an opponent of the
Chilean junta - in the streets of
Washington.
Item: The second foreign lea der
received by Reagan was Chun Doo-

The deregulation
WASHINGTON (NEAl - Candidate Ronald Reagan frequently
promised to "get goverrunent off the
back of private industry. " And
President Reagan has reiterated
that the elimination of burdensome
federal regulations will be a top
priority of his administration.
Reagan chose a Cabinet that
shares this view. Malcolm Baldrige,
the secretary of commerce,
declared during his confirmation
hearing that " deregulation from top
to bottom" would be high on his personal agenda.
But in trying to deliver on this
promise, the Reaganites will run up
against a problem that they may n~
have expected: How do you
deregulate an industry that wants to
remain regulated "

hwan , a South Korean military
strongman then awaiting election as
president of hi s nati on after
squelching the opposttion.
Item : Secretary of State Alexander M. Haig Jr. has 1nade clear that
human rights will not be given high
priority when policy is written . He
says " international terrorism" is
the ultimate violation of human
rights and that is his target.
Item : The most-outspoken critic
of'the Carter hwnan rights policy -

Ernest Lefever - is Reagan's
choice to head the State Department's bureau of human rights and
hwnanitarian affairs. Two years
ago, Lefever told a House suhconunittec that the United States
should have no laws establishing
huma n rights standards for other
nations to meet. Last Tuesday ,
Reagan was asked whether he
agreed with this ; he said he had
never discussed the matter with his

nominee.

dilemm~a_R_ob_ert_J._w._ag_m_an

The busineSs community does not
really want to see all government
regulation eliminated. Instead,
business .is seeking the ·repeal of
rules that it considers restricting
and the retention of rules that
protect it- usually from open competition.
. Examples abound. For instance,
owners of television stations continually complain about the Federal
Communications Commission's
restrictions on what they can broadcast
,
But let someone suggest that the
FCC cease all of its regulatory activities - that restrictions be lifted
on the establishment of new
television stations, networks and
cable systems - and cries of foul
are heard from broadcasters all

across the land., Their message is . the big bankers. They, too, want
clear. We like any regulation that both freedom from competition and
protects us from competition.
freedom to do what they want to inThen there is the banking in- ternally.
dustry. For years, sinal! bankers
The classic case is the trucking in·
have complained about regulations dustry. The Carter administration
imposed by the Comptroller of the started the deregulation of tran·
Currency and the Federal Reserve sportation with the airlines and conon the interest rates they can set for tinued with trucking. So, it would be
loans and deposits, the types of ac- natural to assume that trucking
counts they can offer and so on. For would also be one of the first
that reason, many have opted for deregulation targets of the Reagan
state regulation rather than federal administration. Don't count on it.
regulation.
Now there is talk of significantly
Some of the highest officials in the
" deregulating" the banking in- new administration were paid great
dustry - for example, allowing swns of money in their previous jobs
banks to establish branches in other to oppose any deregulation of the
states. The small bankers are trucking industry. They can be exscreaming that such a move would pected to counsel Reagan against
cause them to be swallowed up by trucking deregulation.·

oo

OH.. w
iAJANT M&amp; TV
MIMi AmiSS

7H&amp;.

"'

'

ALL RIGHT, HERBIE- Ohio State center Herb
Williams, (32) is congratulated by his sister, Viola
Crocken, of Columbus. Williams scored 24 points as
Ohio State upset Purdue 93-92 Thursday night.

.S eason began ·little late for
Western ·Michigan club

ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP ) - The also was the day transfer guard
· basketball ~eason startl'&lt;l a little late Walker D. Russell became eligible
for Les Wothke, but the Western to play.
Since then, the Broncos have imMichigan coach has reason to hope it
will continue beyond tonight's big proved dramatically and Russell Mid-American Conferenee tour- a sophomore whiz out of Pontiac
Central whose older brother is
nament game.
The Broncos take on Northern National Basketball Association
Illinois at 7 p.m . on the neutral floor star. Campy - has played a key
·
in Michigan's Crisler Arena while role.
Russell has scored 16.9 points a
Toledo and Ball State square off in
llte other semifinal ganie at 9 p.m. It game and dished out nearly six
is the second straight year the MAC assists a game, many of them to
has staged its post-season tou1·· Jasper McElroy who leads the Broncos in scoring with a 17. laverage.
, . nament here .
" Walker D. creates a situation
The winner
represent the
league in the National Collegiate where he can get the ball to our center and forwards more often ,''
Athletic Association tournament.
The four semifinalists all shared Wothke said. " He opens up our ofthe regular-season title with fense a lot more."
The Broncos had a crack at win. Bowling Green - each finishing IQ-6
in league play . On the season, ning the league title outright, but
Western Michigan is If&gt;. II ; Northern they were beaten at the buzzer
lllinois 16-11 ; Toledo 19-8; and Ball Saturday by Northern Illinois in the
final regular season contest.
State 111-9.
Wothke said the trawna of that
Western Michigan was doing a
defea
t has been erased by virtue of
slow shuffle and had o11ly a f&gt;.5
winning
a first-round bye in a coinrecord on Jan. 7, the day the contoss.
ference race began. However, that

wtll

FARMERS' HEADQUARTERS
FOR

Sign-up date set

Northern Illinois' trip to the
Signup date for those youth
semifinals was thanks in part to a 24to participate in - the
wishing
point perfonnance. against Bowling
·
Pomeroy
Youth
League's summer
Green by 6-foot guard Leonard
baseball
program
has been set for
Hayes, a freshman from Atlantic
City, N.J ., who found his way to the Saturday, March 14. The signup
hours will be from 10 a.m. until 2
Midwest almost by accident
p.m.
at the Pomeroy City Hall
" I'd never heard of Northern
building.
A registration fee of $6 per
lllinois," said Hayes. '' A guy I know
person
will
be required at the time of
who works for a tennis shoe comsignup.
pany told me about Northern and
The Pomeroy Youth League sponsaid they needed guards. As you ca n
sors
program for Tee-Ball (ages :&gt;see, everything worked out."
61.
Minor
League (ages HI ). This is
Ball State made it to Ann Arbor on
in which the coaches
a
new
league
the strength of a solid 115-70 victory
do
the
pitching.
PeeWee (ages~
will
over Ohio as Ray McCallum scored
10),
Little
League
(ages
11-121, Pony
20 points, including 14 during a firstLeague
(ages
13-151,
and
Girls Softhalf burst on the Cardinals home
ball
(ages!).ll).
court at Muncie, Ind .
'Those having any questions conIt's hard to call any team a
cerning signup may contact Phil
favorite when they all finished with
Harrison at 992-&lt;i248.
identical M.AC records.

WHAT'S UP? - Evaosvllle's Jerry Davis and Xavier Uolvenity
David Anderson reach up for a rebound during flnt half action at Ct.
cinna!l Riverfront Colliseum Thursday night. Xavier University won the
game7H9.1AP Laserphotot.
LEBANON RESULTS
LEBANON, Ohio (AP) - Intruding Butler scored a three-length
victory Thursday night in the $1,000
featured pace mile at Lebanon and
paid$4.40, $4.80 and $5.
Cappie T placed, $9 and $5.40, and
Edgewood Span way, third, $3.60.
The 3-4 double of Dixie Doll N and
Take The Rap paid $190. Attendance
was 1,086 and the mutuel pool totaled
$118,310.

i1"Eitir£Q1JTP"Mfrfffo~
: Going Out of Business Sale
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�Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

Friday, March 6, 1981

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

I

Friday, March 6, 1981

•

Koinonia
Class hosts
chili fare

Pastore must he. patient
TAMPA , Fla. (AP) - Frank
Pastore has one great fear for his
baseball career.
" I lear myself," said the righthander, who led the Cincinnati Reds
pitching staff in victories last year
despite sitting out six weeks with a
finger injury.
"One of the flaws I have is that I'm
over-exuberant. I get into things in
such depth that I'll lose' petspective.
Capriciousness might he another
word.''
Simply stated, the 23-year-old
Pastore thinks he must team a little
patience if he's to improve on his 137 record and 3.26 earned run average
of 1980, his first full season in the
rnajor leagues.
Pastore is one of the hardest
workers on the staff, to the point that
he has hurt himself. Last year he
plunged into a running program so
quickly that he aggravated his knee.
It healed slowly because he didn't
give it enough rest.
" I was supposed to rest it for two

STEAL TIIROW - Cincinnati Reds catcher Joe
Nolan working on his !brows to second durin.: a

Today's

COLUMBUS, Ohio (API - Ohio
State's Ed Majors, with only one
point under his belt during the
basketball season, was noncommittal over his shot in the final
seconds of the third overtime that
enabled the Buckeyes to beat Purdue.
" I really had no thought at all
when I let it go. It was just like warmups," said the suhstitute guard,
whose !().foot jump shot sparked
Ohio State to a 93-92 Big Ten Conference victory Thursday night.
The victory pushed the Buckeyes
to&amp;-9 in the league and 13-13 overall.
Major, who had played a total of 17
minutes all year, came off the bench
to score eight points, including the
winning basket.
Purdue had a last shot at winning
the game, but Kevin Stalling's 'EIfoot desperatiOn shot at the buzzer
rimmed the basket.
Buckeye Coach Eldon Miller was
ecstatic over the victory, calling it

worth more than the $180,000 a year
he has been ~etting.

Tournament results
OhloH.S. Girls Blsltt&gt;lball

Tllundly's Rcsulta
Clasa AAA Toui'DimenU
Akron Buchtt!l ~. Kent Rooxvdt 46
Barberton 49, GrettU!bur~ Green 3i
Cot Wattt!rsDn 70, Grove City 45
Cuyahoga Falls 70. Akron Kt!nmort! 45
Lakewood 56. Elyria 44
Mans. Ma l11bar 59, De!i:.lnct&gt; ~ 2
Shelby 61 , Findlay 57
Upper Arlington 57, Gah.ann.a ::.6
Wooster 43, Louisville .«)
Class AA Tourullieols
Badger 52, Chagrin Falls -46
Coldwater 4&lt;1, Napo\eQn 33
IJma Calh. 54, Paulding 53
Olmsted F.111ls T2., Cleve. Lutheran W. 47
Upper Sandusky 43 .' Bellevue 17
Class A Tournaments

""N.

B.llltimore 4ll, New Rie!jel 36
Vanlue 49, Fostoria St. WendeUn 43
lanes. Rosecrans 60, J ewett..SCio :i9

36

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (AP)
- When muscle men get together,
the s ubject is muscle.
So it wasn't so unusual on another
day of spring baseball training that
two of the New York Yankees' most
powerful sluggers - Mickey Mantle
and Reggie Jackson - should drift
into a colloquay on home runs.
''You know this guy holds the
record for most home runs in the
World Series -'- 18," Reggie said as
an aside to a friend as Mantle pulled
an undershirt over brawny
shoulders:
"You're not doing so bad yourself," Mickey reminded Reggie.
" I got nine - I feel like a piker,"
Reggie confessed.
"But you got the big three," said
Mantle referring to those consecutive climactic blasts in the final
game that gave the Yankees their
. 1977 World Series victory over the
Dodgers in the Stadium.
" What do you think is the longest
ball you ever hit' " an outsider asked
Mantle in the preworkout locker
room bull session.
·'They say the one in Washington
in 1953 which was supposed to have
been measured at 565 feet," Mickey
replied. " Red Patterson, who was
the Yankees' publicity man, insisted
he went out and personally
measured it. I think I've hit harder

ones."
Mantle, who is in camp as a temporary coach, finished his career
with 536 homers, third highest in
history at the time, and some of
them were monstrous.
"There wasthe one I hit on top of
the right field facade at Yankee
Stadium, the closest any ball has.
come to going out the park," Mickey

said.
Reggie said,".tl think the hardest
. balll've ever hit was at Minnesota.
It was hit dead center and it wen Linto the top tier. The ball traveled 550
if an inch."
Mickey and Reggie have similar
builds, massive shoulders, thick
thighs and powerful legs. Their
power seems to generate in the legs
and flow up through powerful arms
and wrists.
·
Babe Ruth's power appeared to
come from a rotun\1 torso and a
naturally smooth swing that lofted
lazy parabolas out of the park. He
had pipestem legs but used a
railroad tie lor a bat.
Roger Maris ami Hank Aaron, the
Babe's successors, also possesed
fluid, natural home run swings that
got the job done without the vicious
whacks appliert by Mantle and
Jackson.
" The hardest hu.er I' ve ever seen
was the Horse, Frank Howard, " said
Mickey, referring to the IHoot-7, 25().
pound goliath who played for the
Dodgers and later the Washington
Senators and Texas Rangers.
'·I agree," said Reggie. " When I
was at Baltimore he hit a cannonball
down to third that knocked Brooks
Robinson backward and tore his cap
off."
14
That's nothing," said Mickey. "I
saw him hit a high fly to left in the
Stadium that, I'll swear, sailed over
the flag pole and went out of sight. It
may have gone out of the park.
"In the 1963 Series, Howard put
one in the upper deck at LA's Chavez
Ravine and he almost decapitated
me and Whitey Ford both in the
Stadium,'' Mantel added.

-ANNOUNCING
THE OPENING OF

42

Findlay 61. lJ.ma Shawne-e ~
Galion :it. Fremont Ros.s 51
GroVI'port 74. Watkins Memorial 50
Lakewood 78, Cleve Hayes 43
Mans. Malabar 56. Mans. Mad1son 53
Mans. Senior 68 , Tiffin CG!urnbian til
Massillon Perry 69, N. Canton 60
Tol. Ro..:ers 77, Tol. l...ibbey 62
To\. Scott 71. Tol. St. J ohn 63
Valley For~e 5-4 , Cle\·e. St. l)!rllltlu:; 50
Warrell Howland 51. Vowii!:S. Ursuline
Yoongs. Sbuth n, Al.l!'ltintown-Jo"itch 65
Cla n AA Toumamenll
Ashtabula HarbOr 67 , GarretUlville 45
8roddield ~. Lakeview 4ti
Bryan 51, P11uldinl!: 40
Ca r!Lsle 61, Trenton Edgewood ~
Cin. GrHnhill:; 70, Mariemont 38
Dixie 70, Day. Jeffenon 62
F~toriH ~7 , Genoa JS
Fnmtler 63. Wellsville 47

Glenn 71, M~adowbrook 57
Goshen 57, N. Co\le~e Hill 53
Hamilton Badin 61, Dliy. c~r ro ll 53
Kenton Ridge 49, Bellt;fon\..aint! 46
Uma Citholic 57, Kenton 51
Minford 68, Jackson 61
Napoleon $5, Delta 42
Ottawa Glandorf 71. Li.ma Bath 36
S.. Cl.alnville 65, Cadiz 57
Swanton 53, Otsego 5:!
Urbana !t7, Miami E. 50
Clan A Tourumuts
Ada 67, Upper Scioto Val. Sl
Arlington S5, Cory-Rawson 46
Archbold 73, Edgerton 67, OT
Ayem-ille 65, Pettisville 52
Cin. Swrunit 69, Cin. Perfonning ArU
:r7

Cleve. H.awk~n 63, Grand Val. 45
Elmwood :.3, Bettsvill.- 50
HoJ~te 47, TO I. Northwood 15
Kalida 80, Patrick Henry 73
Mapleton ~. E. canton Sl
Marion Local S8, Oh1o City 31
McComb 57, Riverdale 37
McDonald 62, Minera l Ridge t2
New Riegel 56, Tiffin Ca lvert $-4 , OT
Ottoville 64, Convoy Cre.11tvlew 62, OT
Pandora-Gilboa :iii, CulwnbU!I Grove 52
Parkway 62r Antwerp 43
Richmond HU. 57, tairport Harding 4:i
St. Htmry 74, Mmster 43
St. Wendelelin ~ . Fremont St. Joseph
43
&amp;neca E. 55, Monroeville 43
Spencerville 7~. W•yne:sfield-&lt;lo:ihm 54
WilliBnuburg 78. Cin . &amp;ven Hllls 59

I

'

A nORNEYS AT LAW
Steven L. Story and Karan H. Story
236 w. 2nd, Pomeroy, Oh.
(Formerly Meigs Gen. Hospital)
Office Ph. 992-6624
Home Ph. 992-3523

Important for everyone. But he was
hard put to describe his feelings.
''We haven't won in so tong, I don't
know how to describe how I feel, " he
said.
Miller praised his Buckeyes, who
had lost their previous live games.
·'Everytime you walk out on the
floor, you're putting something on
the line," he said. " If we had lost, I
would have told our team they tried
everything to win."
Throughout the game, each team
had the chance to grab the lead. Ohio
State didn't take that opportunity
until the very end. Purdue never did.
"We played dwnb," said Purdue
Coach Gene Keady. "Ohio State was
not ready to play. They were
lackadaisical.
"We had a Jot of chances to win it,
but you'll have to look at the film on
the goal tending caU against
(Buckeye Jim I Smith."
Keady referred to Cross' block of
Todd Penn's shot with five seconds

.-·

left in the first overtime. Cross
threw a lead pass to Drake Morris,
and as Morris went in for the winning layup, Smith blocked the attempt at the bliZZer.
" We won the game," said Keady,
"but they didn't show it on the
scoreboard." ·
Ohio State, with six players
fouling out of the game, was paced
by Penn with 25 points. That included a game-tying shot with eight
seconds left in the second overtime.
Senior center Herb Williams added 24 points for the Buckeyes,
becoming Ohio State's all-time
scoring leader with 1,9!18 points. He
surpassed Jerry Lucas with 1,990
points.
The Boilermakers, 9-8 and 16-10,
were led by freshman center Russell ·
Cross with 26 points. Morris added 24
before fouling out in the second overtime.
·

r------------The Daily Sentinel
IUSPS JU.MI
A Dl-lllolo1Muldme6, ..e.

Published every afternoon ucept Sunday,
Moodoy thnJUt!h rrlday, Ill C"""'Stno~ by
the Ohio Valley P\Jblishinfl CllrTlJMrt)' •
Multimedla, Inc., Pmneroy, Ohio

~111.

99'2-21:i6. Second · class ))Oitan, paid 11
Pomeroy, Ohio.

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MIDDLEPOR'T,OH.

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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
I

I

ffastor Dittes in Pennsylvania
'

~!bert G. Dittes, pastor of the
Pdmeroy Seventlrday Adventist
C~urch. will be in Gettysburg, Pent~lvania, March 11-11 for a business
s$5ion of the Columbia Union Conference .
!fe will join more than 500
delegates and visitors representing
cilurches in Ohio, Pennsylvania,
West Virginia, Virginia, Maryland,
D4laware and New Jersey for the
bU:;iness session and a ministerial
selninar. The delegates will hear
ret&gt;Orts of achievement in various
phases of church work, and will also
elect officers for the next live-year
pefiod.
~long with the election of the
pr~sident, secretary and treasurer.
th~ delegates will also name a staff
of departmental heads, as well as
th~ exe~utivc corrunit\ee. Composed
of the officers, departmental heads,
pastors and lay members, the
executive corruniltee is governing
body of the Adventist Church in the

mid-Atlantic area.
High-ranking o!!icials of the church from the world headquarters in
Washington, D. C., will also attend
the parley. Heading the list of
visitors to the session is Charles E.
Bradford, president of the North
American Division of the church.
Others who will attend include W. L.
Murrill, assistant treasurer, and J.
W. Bothe, associate secretary for
North America.
Wallace 0. Coe, president of the
Colwnbia Union Conference, will
give his report at the opening
meeting Sunday night, March 8.
Bradford is slated to address the
delegates on Monday morning. ·The
business session is expected to conclude Monday night. This will be
followed by a tw&lt;Miay "Couples in
Ministry" seminar for pastors and
their spouses .
Pastor Dittes will report to the
local congregation on the conclave
upon his return.

MILLIGAN COLLEGE, Tenn.
Eric Sciles, a freshman from
Pomeroy, is a member of the.
Milligan College Concert Choir, ac~
cording to Dr. John L. Morrison,
conductor.
,The 36-rnemher choir is touring
d~ring the college sprin~ break
tlirough Virginia, Pennsylvania,
0/rio and Kentucky. Nationally accfaimed, the Concert Choir has

•1

: 10
1

International Thinking Day was
served by Kathy Pickens.
observed with a ''tasting" party by
At another recent meeting of the
Salisbury Girl Scout Troop 1100 at
troop a trip to the Center of Science
Meigs High School recently. Foods
and Industry in Columbus was
from countries served were Russian
discussed. Scouts worl!;ed on dimentea cakes, Johnny cake of America, sional crafts and refreshments were
pineapple for Hawaii, tea for served by Audra Houdashelt and
England, tacos for Mexico, cheese Susan Jones.
fQr Switzerland, tappico wafers lor
India, Italian sausage, and Spanish
SALISBURY BROWNIE
olives.
·
TROOP1220
The scouts paid one cents for each
A program to be presented at the
different food they tasted. The
March 17 meeting of the Salisbury
PTO was planned during a meeting .·
money will he given to the Juliette
Low World Friendship Fund.
of the Salisbury Brownies Tuesday
Madhu Malholtr:a and daughter,
night at the school.
Mi"helle, spoke on Indian customs.
Girl Scout Week was announced
They brought lappico wafers, a
for March &amp;-14 and the girls were
nalive dish of India.
asked to wear their uniforms to
The meeting was conducted by
church on Sunday. Marsha King led
TI(Jnra Vance with Brenda Sinclair
in the pledge to the flag, and Tracy
ta~ing attendance and Lisa Pullins
Bartels the promise. Amy Rouse led
cojlecting ·the dues:· Cookies were · inagame.

:
I
I

no longer used and sample books sent to the school by
various publishing companies. Preparing tbe books for
the sale are students, Jesse Howard and Scott
Oberholzer.

Girl Scout Diary

Eric
Scites
joins
choir
•

1

I
I

BOOK SALE - Under tbe direction of the new
" student council, a book ~ale Is being held at the
Harrisonville Elementary School to raise funds for
field trips of classes. Included in the sale are textbooks

t
I

THE LATE GREAT
PLANET .EARTH

I

1

STORY &amp; STORY
.

...

• •••

:

lr(Jm W llld ii,Cj rmd r1 rO(lgE' u f

THE OFFICES OF

••
-:;
• ~~
·;l

Member : The Wocu1ted Press, Inland OU.
further action was taken on the
WASHINGTON (API - In the
ly Pre$:! AMociallon and the American
measure.
Boston-Minnesota hockey game last
Newspaper Publishers ,4.saoclation, National •
Advert!sinf! Representat ive . Landini
Mottl said ordinary assault and
Friday night, there were seven
As.sO&amp;.'ialell, :not Euclid Ave., Clevel.tnd,
battery laws are difficult to apply to
fights in the first half of the first
Ohio,451U.
the unique setting of sports. The
period. Before the Bruins outlasted
POSTMASTER : Send ~address to The O.Uy ·
federal statute wpuld add uniformity
the North Stars :;.1 in the National
Sentinel, Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio 4$70.
and certainty while deterring exHockey League game, there were
SUBSCRIPTION RAT&amp;'I
cessively violent conduct and
406 minutes of penalty time
ByCaniuorMo&amp;orR•W
on.....k .. ' ....................... 11.110
reducing injuries, he said.
assessed, with most of it corning
Ont:! Month .
tHO
Mottl, who was a high school and
during that hectic first 10 minutes of
One Year .
. IM:.IO
SINGLE COPY
college athl,te before spending a
play.
PRICES
Rep. Ronald M. Mottl, D{)hio., .season as a pitcher for a Cleveland
Deily ' '' '' .................... 15Centl
farm club, said : "I want to make it
who has campaigned against violenSubecrlben not dcslrlrtt~. to ~Y the carrier
clear that you can play rough and
ce in sports, wants to deter and
may mnit In advance dlrtet to The Dilly
SenUnel on • 3. 6 or 12 rnooth bub. Credit
hard, but you ean't . play to
punish such actions with criminal
wUl be given carrier each month.
deliberately or recklessly hurt
penalties.
No 1Ub!Jcripti005 by rn1U permitted In tOIIrNI
Mottl, a former minor league someone. This bill is a useful tool for
where home carrier servt~ II available.
baseball player, has reintroduced keeping the heat on the pro sports
leagues to clean up their acts. ''
MAIL SIIII8CIIIPTJONS
legislation would assess a penalty of
OW. ud Wet! Vlrtlalo
up to a $5,000 fine or a year in jali, or
I Month .......................... IIO.IG
Six month .... ,, ................. 1!7.!0
both, on any player who " knowingly
1 Year . . .
. ... . ...... 1 ••••• • •• t33.00
WITHIN FEDERALLY
uses excessive physical force and
Rai!IO.ll6de&lt;:til
... WetiVlr&amp;iaia
thereby causes a risk of significant
OWNED FORESTS
SMooth . . ........................ tll.OD
bodily injury to another person ... "
Thirty-four percent of the nation's
s Month .......................... 1').110
I Year ........................... ISIIO
The legislation defines excessive timber lies within federally owned
physical force as that which "has no national forests.
reasonable relationship to the com- , - - - - - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - petitive goals of the sport, is
~~-~~---~~~~~~~-~~,
unreasonably violent and could n&lt;X
be reasonably forseen or consented
to by the person affected."
The criminal sanctions would apply to players in any professional
sport.
In introducing the legislation
Thursday, Mottl told the House that
·SOFT COVER
if his bill is enacted into law, " it
would deter hockey players and
other athletes from throwing
dangerous, bare-fisted punches at
each other. They'd have to concentrate instead at improving their
-LINDSAY
skilLs at the game."
Chairman John Conyers, D-Mich.,
of the House crime subcommittee
held two da~s of hearings on the
HARD COVER
legislation last November, but no
t t

Ohio H.S. Boys Basketball
Thunday'11 Resulb
Clau AAA Tournameol.!l
Akron Cen·Hnwer 59, Akron Buchtel 40
Ct!linll $8, Uma 57
Cleve. Ha)· 63, E. Cleveland Shc!w 61
Col. Northland 56, Hilliard 41
Fairborn Parll Hill s ~ . Vandalia-Butler

By Wnt Grlnuley
AP Correspoadent

-:=.
' ..

And when asked about his quick
success in the majors, he can
become a phitosbpher.
" If you catch yourself thinking
about how far ·you've come, you . •'
won't he thinking about how far you ·"
• •
have to go," he said.

Legislator want~ to
curb sports violence

Ada 48, New Bremen 44..
Buckeye Trail 63 , Wellsvll!e 44
Delphos St. John S6, Miller City 50
Edgerton SO, Holgate -46
•
Georgetown 4J, Cin. Countr)' Day 33
Kalida 43. Antwerp 42
Ne.w Knoxville 67, Waynesfield-Goshen

Sports :World

,:

•

workout at tbe Reds training camp at Tampa, Florida.
! AP Laserpboto).

nine years.
Jim Essian, a catcher who already
has signed with the White Sox as a
free agent, was one Chicago player
not enthused about the prospect of
Fisk joining the team.
'· I hope he signs somewhere else
so he doesn't come here and catch
all the games," Essian said Thursday. "It's not going to break my
heart if he comes here, but if he
does, l' d expect to he traded."
Fisk reportedly was in San Diego,
Calif., with his agent, Jerry Rapstein, today and was expected to
make a decision on which team to
sign with by this weekend.
Another Kapstein client, pitcher
Dennis U!onard of the Kansas City
Royals, said his 75 victories in the
past four years should make him

,
••

'

•

Boston still in Fisk sweepstakes
By The Associated Press
Don't count out Boston in the
Carlton Fisk sweepstakes.
The Red Sox have been vigorously
pursuing Fisk in an effort to re-sign
the veteran catcher, who was
deClared a free agent in an arbitration decision last month.
General Manager Haywood
Sullivan said Thursday night that
the Red Sox would offer Fisk a four·
year, guaranteed contract. He said
the proposed contract includes
several incentive clauses, such as
playing in 140 games and making the
All-Star team, thqt could inake it
worth up to $3 million.
The Toronto Blue Jays and the
Chica ~o White Sox also have expressed strong interest in signing
Fisk, who has been with Boston for

••

Bucks win on last second basket ........

I

I

weeks," he said. " I only waited
about eight days."
A more serious problqm was the
·injured middle finger on his pitching
hand, the one that grips his zooming
fast ball and gives breaking pitches
their snap. It was improperly
diagnosed as tendinitis initially,
Pastore said, and d.ktots Mer
discovered bone chips.
Pastore said Thursd~y that the
finger had healed, &lt;llthough he
hasn't forgotten the mental anquish
of sitting on the bench lor six weeks.
"That was the toughest thing I've
had to deal with in sports," he said.
" It feels like you're being cheated,
that there's a great injustice, that
someone is robbing you · of an opportunity to vent your competitiveness.''
Pastore has learned another
lesson: a blazing fast ball and crisp
breaking
pitches
don't
automatically transfer into victories
in the major leagues.
"The difference between winning

and losing on the mound Is your
ability to correct your mechanlcal
mistakes (in pitching fOJm) on the
mound within one pitch," he said.
Barring injury, Pastore figures te
maintain his spot in the Reds starling rotation. He thinks he knowa
how his talent fits in.
"My role is to remain healthy, to
get in 230 innings, and to do my best
at every outing,'' he said.
In the clubhouse, Pastore II
usually in motion,.either working out
on a stationary bicycle or j~
with a teainmate. He can become fn.
trospective during interview•
ranging on topics from his competitive temperment to his love ot
the opera .

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

toure-d throughout the United States
and Mexico singi ng in churches,
clubs, and at conventions. Past
Milligan choirs have sung In
England, in Mexico City, at the Mormon Tabernacle, at the North
American Christian Convention, at
the World Christian Convention, and
at the National Prayer Breakfast.
Eric is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Scites, 36719 Rock Springs.

OES honors departed member
•
: The charter was draped for
!lite Thomas Edwards at

the
the
Tuesday night meeting of Pomeroy
C::hapter 186, Order of the Eastern
~tar, held at the Masonic Temple.
l Mn. Doris Snowden · read a
memorial poem and James Soulsby
iang "Beyond the Sunset" which
:fas followed by silent prayer. It
loas noted that the worthy matrons
tnd worthy p~~trons of 1981 o(
Disfrict 25 had sent money to Grand
t:h.l!pter for ca ncer research in
~efnory of the late Mr. Edwards.
lelle Ankrum of Belpre, the
puty grand matron, was a guest at
~,. meeting and
read "Life's
Clock."
=Pauline Hysell, worthy matron,
tnd Dale Smith, worthy patron pro
~111, presided at the meellng with
~rs. Elizabeth Well taking the sunsl~n~,.collectlon .
Guests lrl!sidcs

E

Mrs. Ankrum included Chester
King, aide to the deputy grand
matron. Nine past matrons and two
past patrons were present along
with Ruby Vaughan, district
secretary.
Read at the meeting was
l'Orrespondence and invitations to
ins(lllctions from other chapters.
The Roberta Circle meeting was announced for April23 at Lowell Chapter with a potluck at 6:30 p.m.
1'hank you note to the chapter and Its
officers from the Thomas Edwards
family was read.
The by-law and standing rules
were read.
Debra Chevalier,
associate conductress, gave her lecture in chapter. ' AI the April
meeting there will be initiatory work
and a practice was set for April 6 at
7:30 p.m. Marie Curd and Dorothy
Woodard served ret1;e~lunents.

The Koi'nonia Class of the
Pomeroy Church of Christ hosted a
fellowship chili supper Monday
night at the church with members of
the Golden Rule Class and the Adult
Class attending .
Dano King presided at the meeting
which opened with prayer by Neil
Proudfoot. Anna Davidson gave the
secretary's report.
Report for the Golden Rule class
was given by Carolyn McDaniel who
noted that their projects ·include
visiting the Pomeroy Health Care
Center on the fifth Sundays of months each year, supporting the storm
window fund, and sending flowers
and cardS to the sick.
Mrs. Frances Eskew gave the
report for the adult class mentioning
the missionary and flower funds and
sending cards to the sick and shutins. Next meeting of the a(lult class
will be in June .
Bill McDaniel gave devotions .
speaking on the theme "Anything
worth having is worth working for"
and scripture from James 2, Matthew 5 and I Corinthians. McDaniel
closed with prayer.

D of A plans
rally practice

ASTRO
GRAPH

Mrs. Dorothy Ritchie, deputy of
District 13, announced a practice for
the March 21 district rally to he held
at the Syracuse Elementary School
when
Chester Council 323,
of America, met Tuesday
Daughters
M11rrh 7, 1981
Pcn;ons with whom \ 'UU become invulvl'd thi:;
evening at the hall.
t:tllninl&lt;( year will help you make . impurt.unt
The practice will he held on March
dwntJ,Cti in yoU\" life whkh you eouldn 't m,:·
t;Ulllplish unaided. \'uur new l1cadln~s will tdm
15 at I: 30 p.m. at the school and
yuu toward brighter tomorrows.
members of all Councils in the
PISCES (Frh. :!:I).M11rrh ZO) Avoid t"OIItJliilliuus
today who tent! to think tha t what they ha ve is
district are urged to attend. Mrs .
theirs 111\d what you have Is also theirs WI well.
Ritchie also asked that members get
Their jWI!US Vo'\11 bt! OUI..Slrott.•hed . ROII\CIIlj.:l',
travel, rinuncc!J, luck and possible piHalls.a rl' all
their gifts ready for the different
d1scus:;ed In your Astru-(lruph which hegins with
tables at the raJly.
your IJirthdt~)" . Mllil $1 for cad1 to Astro-Gruph,
P 0. Uux 439, futdio Ci ty SLaliun, New V\.lrk, N.
Charlotte Grant, councilor ,
V. l0019. Be sure"losped fy birthdutc.
at the meeting with Ada
presided
Aft. I F...~ i Much Zh\prll 1!1 In impurt&lt;int om....
urt-tllll' situatium; IUthl y the tltkls n1&lt;1y be sli l\htly
Neutzling being reported ill. The
lilted llMainst yuu . Avnic\ di!urppuintmenL"'. Don't
charter was draped in memory of
undcrest\UlUttJ ~· our opposition.
TAURUS jAprtl ~May Zfl) Be ht!lpful to
Mabel Van Meter. A meeting of the
uthcrs ttkUJy, but al!!ll lake cu re lhlll everyone
Past Councilors Club was announced
duesn'l to· to S&lt;~ddlc you w1th their respunSibililics. The)' IIIIi)' bt• more than you l'IU1
lor March 11 at 7:30p.m. at the hme
fl\iH\U~l' .
of Enna Cleland with Ada Bissell as
GEMINitl\.Jily !l·Jurn· ZOI You'll be in H ratl1cr
Krc).!Hri\lus mood today anll caj;ler to cin·ulatc · c&lt;~hostess.
&lt;1\llllllg yuur peer~ . but avuitl knnw-it-atl lypt!S
At the March 17 meeting of the
who like tn pick apart your gn.mtl ideas.
CANn:H !Junl' 21-July 221 If you rely upon
Council, quarterl y birthdays will be
hard work yuu·rc capable of tllll&lt;otandin ~
observed. Clarice Allen was, piani~1
;lt'hit.'Vement totlay, but if )'UU becurnc too def&gt;'!ll·
denton l..ady l .uek nut much~· ill happen .·
for the meeting. Attending besides
I.EO !July 23-AprU 22) St!riolL'I tnpit.os imthose named were Di•ie Beair, Nina
pt~i-tun t tu you ma)· not huve the :IHIIIC mtcrcst1i
fur J)CI"Sti!\S with whom you'll ~ as:wclutinjl(
Windle, Thelma McMannis, Opal
ltlllyH . G11uge your ltudicncc c~tr efull y .
Hollon, Letha Wood, Ada Morris,
\ 11RGO 1 Aug. !1-&amp;pt 221 Nlln nally you lrcat
)'LIUI' rcsourc..'t!S mu\ funds with pntdt•ncc mul
Thelma White, Daisy Canter, Erma
resJM.'t'l , but today mi~ht bt! IU1 exceptinn. \'ou
Cleland. Margaret Tuttle, Mary K.
cuuld be both c:arelt:s.s allll cxtruvag.11nt.
I.IRRA iSept. z:H~I. 2:11 Persons whu w&gt;u:•J!Y
Holter, Linda Beasley, Betty Roush,
~o &lt;J iun)l, with. }'IIUr wuy of doing thinKS may nut
Zelda Weber, Elizabeth Hayes,
be n~upcnt l iw Hllics today. 11\'llell.d of dcJ&gt;ell·
d i n~: nn others, rdy solely un yourself.
Esther Smith, Doris Grueser,
S(."'QRPIO tOt•l. Z4-Nuv. nl When it's lllllt' f11r
Virginia Newlun, Ethel Orr, Sandy
snmcthint: to~ done y1lu 'rc the type whtl likl'll to
ctu it and get 1t uut uf the way , but today you nmy White, Virginia Lee, Goldie
ylcltl ILl the ·· tomorruw " syndrtlrnc ml&lt;l put
Frederick , Lora Damewood,
lhill).lllllff .
SAGITTARIUS iNov. 'll-Utf'. Ul F'rhmtls
Carolyn Holley, Fern Morris, Mary
think hi~-thly of }'L)U 111111 enjoy your t.'(lmp.my, but
tuday twu uf your JlCll.s may not want you in - Showalter, Charlotte Smith, Opal
wln..'tl in whitt tl~y Mrc doin..:.. Butt-out .
Eichinger, and Laura Mae Nice.
CAPR it."'ORN tDet'. Z!·Jan. 19) In siluations
" 'here you Hrc lryinto: to be helpful you'll be SUI.'·
t:l'S..&lt;tful tuduy . lnm&lt;Jtlcrs wlll'rc yuu an1 Lou :-;cU·
s&lt;~n• lnM VIIU could fall nat.
AQUA.RIUS iJan. 20-FPb. 191 Ont.'-up~lllllllshi)l
isn"l yuur furtc today, su bt! L:arefulubout usm~
ph1ys. Vou"ll look bt!tter if you Jet utht!r.&lt;o Ina~
nbuut )' OUr uccumplishrncnls.

Group makes
two donations
Donations to the heart lund and to
the International Beta Sigma Phi
Endowment Fund were made at the
meeting of Preceptor Beta Beta
Chapter Thursday night at the
Riverboat Room of the Diamond
Savings and Loan Co.
The chapter will again this year
sponsor a student to Buckeye Girls'
swte which will be held at Ashland
College in June.
Funding of many projects is handled through the Endowment Fund,
it was reported. The Fund annually
~lves $10,000 each to cancer research, the Swn!ord Kidney Research
Center, cystic fibrosis, Reyes Syndrome, the Toronto Sick Children's
Hospital, the Magnolia School for
the Deaf, the National Multiple
Sclerosis Society, the RenalMetabolic Dialysis Center. and the
Midwest Heart Institute .
Named to the nominating committee were Donna Jones, Janet
Hill, and Betty Ohlinger. Next
meeting will be a combined social at
the Riverboat Room. It l"as noted
that the dance was a success. Fifteen couples attending the dinner
party at the home of Lillian Moore
on Saturday. A thank you note was
read from Rose Sisson who has been
hospitalized.

DUCKS UNLIMITED
TO ORGANIZE
A meeting to organize a Ducks
Unlimited Chapter will be held at 7
p.m. Tuesday at the Point Pleasant
Junior High School. '!'he group will
be area-wide and is aimed at actions
to prevent lurther dwindling of
wuter fowl.

Children--share a secret code
Part of a series of articles
preseoled by the Trl-couoty Optometric Society to celebrate
Save Your Vlslon Week concerns
children's vision.
Children have a secret code for
sending out messages about how
well they are seeing but teachers
and parents can crack it.
" Most children with vision
problems think everyone sees the
way they do," said Dr. Bailes,
spokesman for the Tri-county Optometric Society in a Save Your
Vision Week (March 1-7 )
message. " But their behavior often gives clues parents and
teachers can spot."
Always sitting close to the
television set can be a sign of
nearsightedness ; so can a
preference for reading or other
dose work over outdoor or sports
activities requiring good distance

vision.
The reverse - preferring active play to close work - may be
a sign of a near vision problem .
So is frowning, scowling or

Social Calendar
FRIDAY
MEIGS COUNTY Pomona Grange
Friday 8 p.m. at Rock Springs
Grange hall. Racine Grange to
provide refreshments. All members
are urged 19 attend.
SUNDAY
FAMILY NIGHT Sunday at 6 p~ m.
a t Middleport Heath United
Methodist Church with a carry-in
supper. Theme by Rev. Robert
Robinson is "The Meaning of Lent."
Each family requested to bring si•
pictures of thei r family .
BOOSTERS TO MEET
The Southern Junior High Athletic
Boosters will meet Monday, March
9, at 7:30p.m. at the junior high to
make plans for the up-coming
budget.
· BOOKAWARDS ·
NEW YORK (AP)- The National
Book Critics Circle recently awarded its sixth annual awards to books
in four categories by American
authors published in 1980.
·
The fiction award went to " The
Transit of Venus, " by Shirley Hazzard. " Walter Lippmann and the
American Century," by Ronald
Steel took general non-fiction. The
poetry award was given to .
"Sunrise," by Frederick Seidel,
while criticism honors went to" Part
of Nature, Part of Us: Modern
American Poets," by Helen Vendler.

•

;

{

placing the head close to the book
or desk while reading or writing.
Closing or covering one eye or
turning the head to use one eye
only could mean vision is much
better in one eye than the other.
Losing the place while reading;
using a finger or marker as a
guide ; or omitting, repeating and
miscalling words may be signs of
an eye tracking or eye coordination problem.

•'

••·•·
j,

After the seconi,l grade,
children who persistently reverse
words; have difficulty identifying
and reproducing basic geometric
forms; or confuse similar words
may have vision perception
problems.
.
A thorough optometric
examination annually is a good
way to be sure children have the
good vision they need for learning.
" Don't rely on school vision
screenings/' Dr. Bailes said.
" They won't detect many
children's vision problems.''

Area honor rolls
The honor rull !or the second nine weeks
grading period at the Eastern Junior High School
and the Eastern High School has been announced . Studenl~ making a 1'8 '' or above in all
their subjects and named ~o the roll were:
Seventh ~rade - Melissa Barker, Dawna
Grue.ser , Lisa Henderson, Ronald Jacobs,
Angela Pooler, Veronica Provo, John Rice,
Patricia Sarru, Torn Srnilh. Terri Sloul, Valerie
Woods and Angela ~ncer.
Ei~hth grade - Tun Ball, Brenda Bentz, Beth
8erkl1imer, Tammy Cl:l lawa y, JHy Carpenter,
Angela Collins, Debbie Craft , Max Eichinger,
Kevin Fick, Melinda Mankin, D. J. Randolph,
Anita Reed, Brian Reed, Jim Schaekel, Traci
&amp;hul and Angela Spencer.
Ninth grade - Randy Bahr, La rry Cowdery,
Ann Diddle, Bobby Johnson, Aarcn Parker, Lori
Robirt:!on, and Melissa Scarborough.
I
Tenth grade - Nathan Doatritht, Brian
Cullin:;, Elizabeth Collins, Dave Gaul. Scott
.Justis, P11m Mw·phy, Mark Rice, Jerf Shriver.~,
Til18 Spencer, Barry Staats, Linda Thoma, Ed
Werry, Melissa Thomas and Diana Smith .
Eleventh grade - John &amp;aver, Tina Beaver,
ca rolyn Bowen, Sheryl Bush, Brenda Calaway,
Tanuni Cozi!rt, Scott Dillion, Roger Gaul, Sarah
Goebel, Mike Hauber, Crystal J acobs, Cathy
Morris, Mar!(ery Myers, John Riebel, Renee
Riebel. Charlie Ritchie, Tami Samos, Cassie
Sheets, Ed Slek, Jan Smith, Terry Snowden, .
Tammy Spencer, Rodney Wood , Kila Young and
Alison Starcher.
Twelfth grade - Gene Cole, l ~ura Eichinger,
Rick J,..O ng, Brett Matthews, April Parker, Kathy
Pooler, Fonda Rapp, Brenda Rucker, Tammie
Starcher and Greg•Wigal .

. &lt;:OLO'l · .
t:

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J'j,,•fllf

r

•

LEE MARVIN MARK HA/IIIIlL

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

, - - - - - - - - F R I D A Y lhtu THURSDAY!

MARCH 6 thru 12
I!' ' ""

" ,olio " ' •~•

~ ::~ ...~~ :.~:·

BOOSTERS MEET TIJESDA Y
Parents of all band members and
future band members are asked to
attend a meeting of the Eastern
Local Band Boosters to be held at
7:30p.m . Tuesday at the band room
of Eastern High School.

::..': '

ANNOUNCEMENT
A Refunders meeting will be held
Monday at the Riverboat Room of
the Diamond Savings and \,.oa n Co.,
6:30p.m .

PTOTOMEET
Syracuse PTO will meet at 7:30
p.m. Wednesday at the Syracuse
Elementary School. The program
will be presented by a representative of the Conununity Mental
Helth Center.

This Is lhe sole you've been wailing lor. Oulslondlng
SO'£ings on the lawn and garden equipment built
"beHer by design ." All oiler opera ling teo lures and
comfort with you in mind. Like anti -scalp mONer dec ks .

conlrolled troc lion and dependable enlllnes for years
ol quality performance. Plus. our outhomed Parts and
Servi ce departments stolid ready tp serve you.

A.
by~ .
1:..\ LAWN
ALLIS-CHALMERS
AND GARDEN EQUIPMENT

MODERN SUPPLY

399 w. MAin
9'12-2164
Pomeory, Oh .
THE STORE WITH "ALL KINDS OF STUFF"- FOR
PETS, STABLES, LARGE &amp; SMALL ANIMAL~,
LAWNS AND GARDENS .

�\

Page-6 The Daily Sentinel

Friday, March 6, 1981

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'

East Letart UMW
studies energy
Energy and ways to save it was from Mrs. Clara Adams, Early
the topic of the program presented Roush, Mrs. Nina Wagner, Gerald
by Kathryn Philson at the recent Hayman, Josephine Mowery, Edna
meeting of the East Letart United Foster for fruit baskels at Christmas
Methodist Women held at the chur- time. Mrs. Lucy Oonahew thanked
the group for a donation to her
ch.
Ms. Philson talked on the in- family.
A May II workshop at the
creased usage of energy through the
years and then listed 18 ways to save Rockland Methodist Ch~rch was anenergy. There was a general nounced. Registration will begin at
discussion on the topic with Ha~el 9:30 a.m. and those attending are to
Fox and Doris Adams presenting a take a sack lunch.
Named to the telephone comskit. The program leader gave a
parody on " America, the mittee for the UMW were Mrs. Julia
Norris and Ms. Philson. Mrs. Belva
Beautiful."
" Call to Stewardship" was the Fi•her, Mrs. Eileen Roush, and Mrs.
program theme with members par- Focie Hayman wiU have charge &lt;t
ticipating in a responsive reading nowers and cards. The mission
and the song, " This Is My Father's report by Mrs. Hayman was on the
mounti.in people of Luzon.
World."
Mrs. Fisher provided a birthday
Mrs. Doris Adams presided at the
cake
inscribed " Happy Birthday
meeting with Mrs. Hazel Fox giving·
Focie
Hayman and Eileen Buck."
prayer, and Mrs. June Wickershsm
Refreshments
were served by Mrs.
reading the. minutes of the previous
Hayman
and
Mrs.
Norris.
meeting. Thank you notes were read

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Libraries

By Ellen Ball ·
Librarian
Did you see Johnny Cash in
"The Pride of Jesse Hallam" on
TV this Wednesday? From the
point of view of the Adult Basic
Education learning centers In
your libraries, it hsd its good
points and its bad points.
"Literacy lessons" in Meigs
County's ABE learning centers
are never whole classes saying
things together. They are never
"A is for apple." They are
sometimes "This is a picture of a
bird," the way Miss Galucci
taught Jesse. In our ABE learning centers, each person gets a
specially tailored lesson thst
starts with where thst person is
NOW and, we hope , takes him or
her to whatever goal he or she
sets.
'' Literacy lessons'' in our coun~

Helen Help Us

This guy offers help to
aid his own purposes
BY HELEN ANDSUEBOTIEL
Special correspondents
DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
This fellow . goes with my
girlfriend, but says he might break
up with her.
He called me yesterday and said if
I wanted to " get experienced'' he'd
be glad to help out. (He knows I'm a
virgin.)
I admit that at 15 I'm kind of
curious, but I put him off because
I'm not sure. He said his offer would
be open "for a limited time only"
and I must make up my mind in a
hurry.
What should I tell him' - DOUBTFUL
DOUilTFUL:
... To stuff his offer in his ear!
Stay curious- and safe. - SUE

L

Since your friend lives near Stanford University, we recommend he
visit the Alcohol Clinic there. It has a
special program for older children
of alcoholics, who have been af•
fected more than they sometimes
realize by family upheava ls.
Says the clinic's associate direct9r, Dr. Stephanie · Brown, "The
ger.e,al history of these grown-up offspring we are now seeing is very
sirnilar. There is a real syndrome of.
overachievement. Often they were
the perlect children, yet as adults
they are driven and their accomplishments too often seem
hollow. "
And so, some turn to booze.
Let's hope your friend reads this
and relates. Facing down a possible
problem is much better than trying
to eradicate it later on. - HELEN
AND SUE

ty now are held in the basements
of the Pomeroy and Middleport
Public Libraries ..The people you
meet there may not be able to
read at all - or they may be a
week away from taking the GED
exam to get their high school
diploma equivalent.
When someone comes to the
center, an instructor will talk
with the new person about what
schooling he or she has had
before and why he or she wants to
learn to read, to pass the GED, or
to do whstever else he or she has
set as a goal.
The next step is a bit of testing
to see whst that person's skills in
math and reading are RIGHT
NOW, so that the newcomer
won't waste precious time or try

.

For no one bows not when.

Tomurrow, we can say it
When we're standing on lhat rock
Jesus Christ is Lord and King
And Him ""e canm&gt;t mock.
For each day that's given to us
Ill a day unto the Lord
When we'reprayerful and thankful
•And feeding on HLs Word.
All the tomorruw.s of the world
Cannot brinK Dack a day
When everyone had a chance
To bow on theirknee.s andpl"lly.

I SHY tumurmw is for me to live and be with

C11rist

To telllhe world about Him, Hi s Love HJ.s mercy
and truth
tllen we will have many days
Which never will be dim.

1

TO SEE GOD
ANDFEELGOD
YoucanseeGod

In the blueness of the sky
You can feel God

When you're all alone and cry
YuucanseeGod
Jn the mount.ains and the trees
Yvu can feel Him
In a soft and ~entlc breeze.
Yvu can sec God
In the brook.\! and in the stream.'!
You can feel Him
When His wann sunshine beams.
YoucansecGod
In • rnother'll eyes whv ce~re.s
,You can feel Him
When your head is buwed in prayer.

You can .see God
In the beauty uf .a fiower
Yoo can feel Him
When )'tiU hearll sweet church choir.

Vvu can see God
fn the ~reenMo of the earth
You can feel Him
Jn the newnw of a birth.
Jnspirt.'d to glorify Jesu!l Chrit~ l , the Saviour.
Mrs. B.arbara James.

,''''"".
..~ a; ''
' !'o'f

''\"1••"

~ ~~ ":! ·

Un-shrinking wool

By Polly Cramer
DEAR DOUBTFUL:
DEAR POLLY - When I washed a
This fellow is aboui as " helpful"
wool cardigan, it shrank. I would
as a cat is to a bird. Tell his girl of DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
like to know how to un-shrink it. the offer, and let's hope you both find · I hate my first name.'If I'm 18, do I
MRS. H. S.
DEAR MRS. H.
better boyfriends soon. - HELEN
have to hsve my parents' perS. - Put the clean
mission to change it? Must I go to
sweater in a conDEAR RAP:
the courthouse?- M.G.
tainer of one
Guy's father is an alcoholic. He's DERM.:
gallon
of
18, a good student, but intense and
You may call yourself any name
lukewarm water,
sort of an overachiever. There's lotS you wish, though don't expect your
of conflict at home, so to calm down, parents to change their tune over- to which you have
added a couple
·'
he's started drinking. He says he'll night.
tablespoons of
Cramer
never be like his old man, and it's
A legal name-change requires synthetic hair. shampoo that contru.e, he just gets mellow, not drunk, minor (and inexpensive) paper work
tains no soap. Squeeze this through
but he's putting away quite a lot of at the courthouse. This is best, to
the sweater and then put it in a
booze. I'm worried. Will awareness avoid mix-ups in Social Security and
colander to remove the excess
of his Dad's problem keep him from other official signatures later on. - · solution. Push down with the hands
"catching" it? - CONCERNED
HELEN AND SUE
until water drains off. Do not rinse.
DEAR CON :
(GOT A PROBLEM? Or a subject Stretch out nat and ease to the
Insisting "I'll never be like my for discussion, twC&gt;-generation style?
proper size. When dry, the a!)Dad" is no assurance that a drinking Direct your questions to either Sue
pearance will be smoother and
teenager won't become a lush. An or Helen Bottel - or both, if you
"newer" if a pressing cloth is put
estimated 50 or 00 percent of want a combination mother- over it and the sweater lightly
alcholics have at least one alcoholic daughter answer - in care of this
ironed. - POLLY
parent.
DEAR POLLY - A plastic plate
newspaper.)
got wedged in the bottom of an expensive stainless steel pan. We tried
to pry it out, but nothing would
budge it. In desperation I put water
in the pan, put it in the freezer. After
the water was frozen, only a few
sharp taps on a table brought the
plate out. - MRS. P. L.
TOMORROW
TO MELISSA EILEEN JOHNSON
By Bart.n J•mea
DEAR POLLY - I do hope M. G.
Yes. annUler precious daughter
We always say tomorrow
Has been born, her place tori\\
will discontinue her use of lint from
What we will do or say
In thto home of her dear pareniS
her dryer in stuffed toys she makes.
Don't we know there's evil sufficient fur each
In ~cc&lt;1rdance to God's wilL
day
She's the second in this family.
This
is unsanitary and can you
For tomorrow is not promised to me. to you or
Andlprayth.atshewill be
imagine
an ·infant having a toy filled
them
s..oeet alld pretty like her sister'
.So live each da)' the best you can
And a joy for all to s~ .
with dusty, hairy lint thst may even

Poet 's Corner

Samuel A. Gibbs, Jr.

""'oc\.

Polly's Pointers

hsve hairs from a dog or cat in it?
Old, but clean, nylons or the legs
from pantyhose would be much
more satisfactory and the stuffed
toy would be machine washable and
dryable.
As for making the centers of
sheets, blankets, etc., I do mine with
a ·'lazy daisy." A touch of ern-

. GIRL SCOUT WEEK - A proclamation designating March 8-1,4 as
Girl Scout Week was signed Thursday by Mayor Clarence Andrews,
Pomeroy. In signing the proclamation, the Pomeroy mayor called on
citizens to give their continued Interest, cooperation and support to the·
Girl Scout program. On March 12, the Girl Scouts of the U.S.A. will observe their 69th anniversary. Nearly three mllUon girls and adults are Involved In the scouting program. Pictured with Mayor Andrews u be
signed the proclamation are from the left, Shari Cogar, Meigs County
Senior Troop 1208; Jeooiler Swartz, Pomeroy Junlor Troop 127&amp;; Tammy
Capehart, Cadette Troop 1180, Chester; and standing front, Nikki Meier,
Bradbury Brow ole Troop 1052.

Legion plans party March 21
The American Legion birthday
party to be held at the hall on March
21 was announced at the Tuesday
night meeting of the AUxiliary of
fulcine Post 602.
The party will be held at 7:30p.m.
and each member was asked to take
a gi ft to be awarded as a game prize.
Present at the meeting were the
nominees for Buckeye Girls' State to
be held June 13 to 20 at Ashland
College. After the four Southern
High School juniors had spoken
briefly, the Auxiliary selected a
delegate and alternate. Names will
be announced once confinnation of
acceptance has been rece ived from
Girls' State officials.
The Buckeye Girls' State tea. was
announced for April26 at the Mount
Mol'iah Baptist Church in MidcUeport. It will be hosted by members of the Lewis Manley Post
Auxiliary 263. Also announced was
the Ei!ghth District Junior Auxiliary
spring conference to be held on April
!8 at the post home of FeeneyBennett Post 128, Middieport.

broidery is ever so much more at·

tractive than a marking pen.- A. T.
DEAR POLLY - To remove that
glue left on a car after stickers have
been removed, try using brake fluid .
It does not hurt the finish . Saturate
the glue and leave for jqst a few
minutes . If the glue is very hard, this
may have to be repeated, but it does
take the glue off.- JENNY
DEAR POLLY - A quick, clean
and easy way to chop up nuts is to
put them in a plastic bag with a ZiP"
per fastener, seal tightly and then
crush with a rolling pin. - BERNADINE
Polly will send you one of her
signed thsnk-you newspaper coupon
clippers if she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or problem in her
colwnn. Write POLLY'S POINTERS in care of this newspaper.
FREE CLlNIC TIJESDA Y
A blood pressure clinic will be held
Tuesday. 10 a.m. to I p.m., at the
Harrisonville Senior Citizens Center. Mrs. Ferndora Story, R. N. will
have charge of the clinic. There will
be a noon dinner. The public is invited to come by to hsve a free blood
pressure check.

Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Nelson enjoyed a vucat1on of several days in
Hawa ii recently.
Rexie Cheadle 1s convalescing at
his horne following eye surgery m
Columbus.
Ida Denison spent several days
with her nep hew and wife. Mr. and
Mrs. Mendal Jordan, local. and then
was a guest of Edith Talbert of near
Salem Center for a few days .
Mrs. Dana Bailey is a ga in at home
following leg surgery at Holzer
Medi cal Center. Her son-in-law and
daughter, Mr . and Mrs. Richard Jeffers, New Boston, Illinois, spent a
few days here with their p;lrents,
Mr. and M" . Dana Bailey and Mr.
and Mrs . Reed Jeffers because of
her surgery .
Mrs. Clay Jordan new to Florida
and spent some time with her son
and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Dale Jordan, Katie and Karry, her

••

RIO GRANDE - The first
recognition ceremony for the freshman class of the Rio Grande College
and Community College-Holzer
School of Nursing wlll be held at 7:30
p.m. on Friday, March 13, In the
theater of the Fine and Perlorming
Arts Building on the college campus.
This functiOn marks the successful
completion of the first two quarters
of academic study and related
hospital clinical experiences by the
Class of 1982.
The ~member class has students
from nine counties:
GALLIA - Tanuny Davies, David
Tabor, Larry Lee, David Snyder,
Rhonda Daley, Tammy Taylor,
Tamara Welch, Ann Nelson, Teri
Weiher and Maria Ruff.
JACKSON - Luanne Kiefer,
Jackie Shepherd, Kida Newell and
Kelli McClurg.
MEIGS - Sonia Ash, Amy Souder
and Tonia Ash.
LAWRENCE . - Christi Kri and
Kathy Blevins.
.
SCIOTO - Donna Gastelle and
Lois Egbert.
ROSS - Kristy Taylor.

I~r;;;;;;;;;;~!;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

lHE INCOME TAX PEOPLt:

E. MAIN ST.
POMEROY, Ott.
PH. 992-3795

618

OPEN: 9 AM-8 PM
WEEKDAYS
9-5 SATURDAY

2ND &amp;BRfMN ST.
MASON, W. VA.
PH.

773-9128

OPEN:
TUES., THUR. &amp;SAT.
9 to 6

APPOINTMENTS AVAilABLE
•

DINNER PARTICIPANTS- A total of $14,790, well over the goal,
was pledged Tbunday eveolng during the annual leadership cUnner for
the Tri-State Area Council of the Boy Scouts of Allllll'lca. Taking part In
the eveat were lefl to right, Dean Epling, M-G-M district chslrman; Joe
Thelsmann, Washington Redskto quarterback, the guest speaker; Robert
H. McGinllls, CouocB Executive, Tri-State Area Council and Dr. Dave
Carr, Point Pleasant, seoutleader and contributor.
CRACKDOWN SET
Beginning Monday there will be a
crackdowrt on motorists parking on
sidewalks in Pomeroy, Pollee Chief
Harry Lyons warned today .
Violation tlckets will be issued to oflenders, the chief said.

SUIT FILED
A suit In the amount of $1,900 was
filed In Meigs County Conunon Pleas
Court by Bank One of Pomeroy, NA,
against Howard Beasley, West
Columbia.

JEFFERSON- Rhonda Rutter.
MASON- Tam! Duncan.
WASHINGTON- Lucinda Board.
Following the processional, with
Mrs. Edith Ross at the console, invocation will be given by the Rev.
Mlchsel Berne, Pastor, Simpson
Chapel, United Methodist Church,
Rio Grande.
Welcome and introductions will be
given by Dr. Paul D. Hayes,

Lu Ann Beavers, RN, BSN; and
Margaret Leedy, RN, BSN, will
presented the nursing caps or
chevrons to the 25 freshmen students, followed by an impressive candlelight ceremony.
After the benediction by the Rev.
Michael Berne and the recessional,
a reception will be held in the foyer
of the Fine and Perlonning Arts
Building.
The public is invited.

President of the college, with Dr.
Edward L. Donovan, Dean of the
Colleges, then introducing the guest
speaker.
Presenting . the address for the
ceremony · will be Dr. Edward
Berkich, Gallipolis.
Following the address, the Class of
1982 will be presented by Janet M.
Byers, RN, MS, Dean, School of Nursing. The freshman class nursing instructors, Linda Ballard, RN, BSN;

M-G-M scouting area .passes goal
(Continued from page I)
NFL following a brief career in the
Canadian Football League.
"When I arrived in Washington
they nicknamed me 'The Savior'. I
was supposed to be the Messiah, the
one to save the football franchise in
Washington. Both Sonny Jorgeson
ahd Billy Kilmer were getting old, so
I was tabbed as the big successor.
Apparently those clipping went to
my head, I began believing
everything that was written, I began
yelling at my receivers for dropping
passes and my running backs for
missing handoffs, never did I feel it
was my fault.
. "Suddenly, my life changed for
the better, after my little girl was
hospitalized with a serious heart
ailment. We were told she had a hole
in her heart, but it took almost a
year before we believed it.
" My first thought was how this
could hsppen to me, I thought, gee,
!'am Joe Theismann, the savior &lt;t
football in Washington how can God
let this hsppen to a three year old,
she hasn't done anything wrong.
"Following my daughter's successful operation, I visited her in the
recovery room where she had tubes
running out various parts of her
body. I was there just a few minutes
but It seemed like hours. She looked
up at me and responed with the word
'daddy' just then I came to the
realization thst there are more important things in life thsn football,
publicity and everything connected
with it. God turned me around, he
gave me the strong vision I saw in

the love from my daughter" .
In closing, Theismann said, "Success is wanting to love, wanting to
care,".
During a question,answer session
following the program, Theismann
touched upon his Washington teammates, the firing of coaches George
Allen and Jack Pardee, his 1new
coach and the drug situation in the
NFL.
Thelsman said he thought Allen
and Pardee were great defensive
coaches but he was looking foward
to playing for his new .coach, Pete
Gibbs, an offensive minded coach
who has served as offensive coor-

dinator for the highly explosive San
Diego offense.
When asked about the apparent
drug abuse problem in the NFL, his
response was that it exists, but it's
blown out of proportion by the news
media particularly when such stars
Thomas (Hollywood) Henderson are
involved.
"In the complex world of the
National Football League, we have
drugs', homosexuality aqd all the
other thinks that exist but the media
brings our problems out in the
opening more because we're in the
public's eyes." ·

Methodist leader will preach Sunday
The Rev. Benjamin Edwards,
superintendent of the Athens
District of the United Methodist
Church, will preach in lour Meigs
County Churches on Sunday.
The Rev. Mr. Edwards will speak
at the Forest Run Church at 9 a.m.;
the Minersville Church at 10 a.m.;
the Asbury Church of Syracuse at II
and at the Portland Church at 7:30.

The Rev. Mr. Edwards presides
over the 180 churches of the Athens
District composed of Gallia, Meigs,
Athens and all or part of five other
Southeastern Ohio counties. He was
appointed to the post in June,l980.
The Rev. Stanley Merrified
pastors the Forest Run, Minersville
and Asbury Methodist Churches.
The Rev. Mark Flynn pastors the
Portland Church.

MARCH SPECIALS
AT

OLDS.CADILLAC
1979 CAD. DEVILLE CPE.
de' Elegance, dark green .

SHARP

1979 OLDS.CUTlASS CALlAS CPE.
r-----SPECIAL-----,
1978

FORD PINTO RUNABOUT

•3595
1974

Med. blue, blue Landau.

1979 OLDS.CUTlASS SUP. CPE.

V·6 motor, new radial tires, AM·FM
radio, air conditoned, one local owner,
like new, 29,000 miles.

HOSPITAL :\EWS
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted--Douglas Phalin,
Pomeroy; Louise Eshelman,
Pomeroy; Judy Stiltner, Ewlngton;
Rosalinda Roque, Lakin, W.Va .
Discharged-- Brenda
Elliott,
Weltha Burson, Russell Tucker,
Richard Dean, Ruby Nickless,
David Cunningham, Douglas Phslin.

alao appear at Sunday's concert Directing thst gronp will be Fred Rutb,
a former Meigs I...oeal School Distrlcllnstrumentallnstractor. There will
be an admission cbarge.

Date set for Rio nursing class ceremonies

Design and
Quality
Pomeroy
Flower Shop

H&amp;R BLOCK

Save our RC, RC-100, Nehi, Upper 10, Diet Rite
and Dad's Root Beer bottle caps for charity.

Council.

FlNAL REHEARSALS- Part of the Meigs High Scbool Symphonic
Band Is ptetured ID one of the final rebearsal sessions precediDg a winter
contest concert to be held at 3 p.m. Sunday ID the high school auditorium
with Douglas Hill directing. The Warren High School Wind Ensemble will

Bertha Crippen, Arthur Crabtree
and Mr. and Mrs. Mendal Jordan
from Colwnbia Grange attended the
annual Grande Officers Conference
at Rock Springs on Monday evening.
Metta Fisher was taken by am·
bulance to O'Bieness Memorial
Hospital on Tuesday. She was suffering from heart pains but is cported to be improved.

Our ca refully tra1ned tax pr eparers are up-to-date on all the tax
cred itS and deduct1ons \hat apply to thf' farmer At H&amp;R Block .
we' ll lak e a ll' the !1me necessary to do th e JOb fight because we
want you to pay the lowest leq,t, mate ta• .

Com~ Feb. 18 and 19, 1931 , by Mrs. Riley
Pigott, Lon" Bottom. Ohio •~743 . Mtdl~ Eileen
i:; rny 4h;t )tlreat·granddlild. She wa s born Feb.
16.

Funeral services for Samuel A.
Gibbs, Jr., 61, Salem Sl, Rutland,
who died Wednesday at Holzer
Medical Center follOWing a lengthy
illness, have been set for 2 p.m. Sun- Alma McDougal
day at the Walker Funeral Home in
Alma Ruth McDougal, 57, died
Rutland.
Mr. Gibbs was bOrn Dec. 30, 1919, before midnight yesterday at
in Middleport, a son of Blanche Veteran Memorial Hospital,
SOul.sby Gibbs imd the late Samuel Pomeroy.
She was one of three children born
A. Gibbs, Sr. He was married on
March 5, 1946 to the fonner Verna to the late Lorie Patterson and Ora
Hendricks who survives along. with Gay Greathouse. She is survived by
his mother; two sons, Samuel A. · a brother, Henry Patterson, Hun·
Gibbs, Ill, Tucson, Ariz., and Kevin tlngton, and Carl Patterson, Paben
City, W. Va.
L. Gibbs, at home; a daughter, Mrs.
She attented school in Shinnston,
Ralph (Connie Sue) Baleil, Rutland;
W. Va. She married James Wilson
three grandchildren, Richard Gibbs,
Middleport; Samuel A. Gibbs IV, McDougal in 1953, when they came
Tucson, and Rachel Bales, Rutland; to Gallipolis. He preceded her in
two brothers, Charles Gibbs, Sewell, death in 1967.
They hsd two children: James
N.J., and Paul Gibbs, Ledson, S.C.;
a sister, Mrs. George (Virginia) McDougal, Pomeroy, and Carol McOiler, Racine, and several nieces, Douglal, Cheshire.
She is also survived by one grandnephews and cousins.
Mr. Gibbs had been a coal miner daughter.
She lived in Gallipolis for several
during his life and he had been employed as a sample man for 24 years · years, but resided in Chel!hire for 20
with Foote Mineral He was a the past years.
1
Funeral will be Sunday at 2 p.m. at
veteran of World War II having ser·
ved in the U. S. Army and belonged Miller's Home for Funerals with
to Eli Denison Post 467, American Rev. Alfred Holley. lntennent will
Legion, Rutland.
He was an be in Gravel Hill Cemetery.
Calling hours will be 2-4, 7-9 p.m.
honorary trustee and a member of
Saturday.
the Rutland United Methodist Church.
Officiating at the Sunday services
will be the Rev. Richsrd Thomas
and burial will be in Miles
(Continued from page I)
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral home at anytime after 2 p.m. nott, president of the SyraCUSf1Saturday. Tbe family will receive Minersville Baseball Association
friends from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. who asked council to asswne the
Saturday. Graveside military rites cost of hsving the ballfield prepared
will be conducted by the Eli Denison for all little league and pony league
games. Council ageed to hire•Doug
Post.
Hemsley to drag the fields before
Chrisie E. Powell
each game.
Mlck Ash, councilman, reported
Chrisie Eugene Powell, 71, Route
the
new eight foot fence at the
2, Racine, died Thursday afternoon
ballfield
has been installed and the
· at his residence.
old
fence
hss been put in place near
He was preceded in death by his
the
playground
area.
parents, George W. and Clara
Council
decided
to notify residents
Maude Ours Powell, and two
that
have
junk
cars
on their property
brothers, Dr. Dale Powell and .Rush
to
hsve
them
moved
or properly
Powell.
housed.
Surviving are his wife, Clara
Council members were asked to
AdaiTII! Powell, three daughters,
attend
a meeting of the installation
Dorothy Spencer, Racine; Mildred
of
the
sewage
system on March II,
Orr, Gahsnna, and Eleanor Davis,
at
7
p.m.
at
the
sewage office in
Louisville, Miss., nine grandRacine.
children, nine great-grandchildren,
a sister, Faye Smith, Long Beach,
HYMNSlNG
Calif., and several nieces and
A hymn sing wiU be held at 2 p.m.
nephews.
Sunday at the United Faith Church
Mr. •Powell was a retired worker
on the Route 7 bypass near
with the Meigs County Highway
Pomeroy . .Featured singers will be
Department and he attended the
the Country Hymntimers, the HarRacine Baptist Church.
vey Sisters, the New Life Choir
Funeral services will be held at 2 and others. The Rev. Robert E.
p.m. Sunday at the Ewing Funeral
Smith, Sr., pastor, invites the public.

area.

prepare your tncome tax
returns ... we could
·save you money.

Yes, rny dear, you wiU needJe:ms
On your journey thru this life,
1&gt;.3 there will be disappointmenl'l,
And some sorrow, pain and strife .
Life contains bvth joy and sorrow.
And we need to trwt uur Lord
Who will comfort and protect WI,
And He 'll give a blest reward.

Home with the Rev. Don Walker officiating. Burial will be in the Letart
Falls Cemetery. Friends may call at
the funeral home anytime . after 7
this evening.

parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Dwelly
and other relatives in the Orlando

•

Then I see you and your luver,
Ne~~:t , you are a happy bride,
Slolnding cl~ by your dear hlL'!band,
As glad tcllrs you try lo hide.
Moretllun gold , you will need Jesi.L.'l,
As your Saviour, Lord and Friend;
Muy yuu seck and find Him early ,
And stay near Him tillli£e'send.

•

EARTH HEAT
Geothermal energy literally
means " earth-heat" energy. It is
gound where the heat is great and .
close to the surface. The source .
must be near permeable rocks thst
contain enough water to transfer the
heat to the surface, either along
fractures or through drill holes .

Farmers•.•
Let H&amp;R Block

To a little baby like you,
Bull 'm writin~ for your futu re,
With rny wishes good and lrul!
Seetns I see you in the school room,
As yoo ll!arn to read and write,
Then l ~;ee you t:raduating,
In your garments pure and while.

ORIGlNAL ART
NEW YOHK (AP) - The original
art of over 100 artists is being
presented in an exhibition of awardwinning illustrations from the
Society of Illustrators Annual
Exhibitors.
The work i• being shown at the
New York Historical Society
through May 15.

Mrs. Louise Stewart presided at
the meeting with Frances Roberts,
chaplain, giving the prayer. Marths
Lou Beegle, Americanism chairman, introduced the Girls' State
nominees. The unit donated $25 in
the name of Mrs. Stewart, a past
district president, to the fund for the
renovation of the Department of
Ohio headquarters in ZaneviUe.
Poppies were ordered for the observance of Poppy Day in · May.
Community service month will be
observed at the next meeting with ,
Mrs. Roberts to have the program
Eunie Brinker donated the traveling
prize. Refreshments were served by
Mrs. Brinker and Betty Van Meter.

Carpenter Personals

I have prayed for inspiration,
And f hope thclt I com write
Wurd.!l ol. faith and love an~ beauty,
That will fill with pure delight.
Melissa Eileen, you 're this baby,
Anti for you I hwnbly pray,
May yuu grow to bt a lady,
Ami keep pure along life 1s Wll)'.

Sonlt! rnay wonder why I'm wrtting

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Area deaths

j.,o..1

things that are too difficult for
him or her right now.
Helping adults learn is not the
SIV!le as helping children, and the
people at yilur ABE learning centers know that. For most adults,
learning is partly remembering
what we learned before and par. tly learning new things - but
much faster than we did when we
were children. Some of us stoP'
ped learning because we were
bored, some because we had to go
to work, some because something
in the school situation turned us
off just as surely as we turn off
the TV when we go to bed. I think
that adults who come to the learning centers learn quickly
because they WANT to iearn,
because they learn at their own
speed, and because they find thst
the folks at the training center
really CARE about them.
Johnny Cash - Jesse Hallam
was right about one thing. Being
ignorant isn't smart. Admitting
that we are ignorant about
something is. And doing
something ahotit it is smartest of
all.
If you know someone who can't
read - or doesn't read well - be
a real friend. Urge him or her to
talk with Pat or Lucy (992-5713 on
Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday from to a.m. to 2 p.m. or9925813 on Tuesday and Wednesday
from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m.). Be willing
to come along and brush up on
your own skills or just to give encouragement on the trip, if that 's
whst it takes.
No one HAS to be illiterate.
Please help Johnny Cash spread
the word.

"

Friday, March 6, 1981

Med. Blue, White Landau.

SS595
SS395

1980 VW RABBIT•••••••••••••••••••• '6395

00

1977 CHEVROLET M.C••••••••• ••• •• •• '3995

F250 XLT••••••••••••••••••••••••••

Long bed. auto .. p.s .. good cond. '1895

FORD PINTO •••••••••••••••~~~· ~a.u:~o'1095
· 1974 PONTIAC TEMPEST•••••• ~·:~·:~s~·:~:o~.'1295
2 Dr .. outo., goodcond. '1695
1976 FORD PINTO•••••••••••••••••••••••
1974 AMC MATADOR •••••••••••• ;.o;~:~~~~. '695
1975 PINTO STATIONWAGON•••••••••••• !1695
Auto., air cond . $1195
1974 COUGAR•••••••••••••••••••••••••••
1974 MAVERICK 4 DR.•••••• :.u;:~p.:~ .C:!. '1195
Flat bed, runs good .
1978 GMC PICKUP.
···················~··· ·~
1974

6

1977 PONTIAC G. P. •••••••••••••••• '3695
1973 CAD. DEVILLE SED••••••••••••• .'1295
1974 OLDS. CUTLASS SED.•••••••••• .'1295
1976 CHEVROLET WAGON••••••••• '1995
1975 PLYMOUTH DUSTER CPE •••••••• '595

SIMMONS OLD5-CADILLAC INC.
You'll Like Our Quality Way Of

~95

.

. Doing Business
See or Phone: Pete Burris, Marvin Keebaugh
Mike Anderson or George Harris

Ph. 992·6614

Pomeroy, Oh.

Open Evenings Until6:00
Except Thursday &amp; Saturday Til 5:00

�...

Pomeroy-Moddleport, Ohoo

••

:•

••

'

This Message and Church Directory Sponsored By The Interested Businesses Listed On This Page.
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P. J. PAULEY, AGENT
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4192 2318 Pomeroy

Diamond Savings &amp;
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992 6655

Mttl Work

Cabtnet Maktnt

~~ I

Syracuse
992 )97B
TRINITY CHURCH Rev W H Pernn

vtce 10 30 om Chotr rehearsal lues
day 7 30 p m under d rect on of AI ce
Nease
POMEROY
CHURCH
OF
THE
NAZARENE Corner Unton and Mulbarry
Rev Clyde V Henderson pastor Sun
day schpol 9 30 a m Glen McClung
supt
mornmg wonh1p 10 30 a m
even •ng serv ice 7 30 m1d week ser
'v'tCe Wednesday 7 30 p m
GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH - 326 E
Mom St Pomeroy The Re'v' Robert B
Graves rector Sunday Utr'v'IC&amp;S at 10 30
o m Holy Commun1on on the first Sun
doy of em:h month and combtned w1th
~orn1ng prayer on the th rd Sunday
~rn1ng prayer end sermon on all other
~undoys of the month Church School
~nd nursery core pro'v'ided Coffee hour
'" the Ponsh Hall 1mmed1ately fo llowmg

212 W

Matn St Ne I Proudfoot pastor B ble
school 9 30 o m
mornmg worsh p
10 30 a m Youth meetmgs 6 30 p m
evenmg worsh1p 7 30 Wednesday night
•prayer meeting and Btble study 7 30

..pm
THE SALVATION ARMY 115 Butternut
Ave Pomeroy En..,oy ond Mrs Ray Wan
tng offtcers 1n charge Sunday hohness
meetmg 10 am Sunday School 10 30
a m Sunday school leader YPSM Elo1se
Adams 7 30 p m
sal'v'atton meeting
venous speakers and mustc spectols
Thundoy- 1Q a m to 2 p m Lod18s
Home Leogue all women nv1ted 7 30
p m prayer meeting and Btble study
Rev Noel Hermon teacher
BURLINGTON
SOUTHERN
BAPTIST
CHAPEL Route 1 Shade 81ble schoo l 7
p m Tl-lursday wonhtp semce 8 p m
POMEROY WESTSiiJ£ CHURCH OF
CHRIST 200 W Mom St 9'92 5235 Vocal
mus1c Sundoy worship 10 o m B ble
study II o m worsh1p 6 p m Wedne!i
day B1ble study 7 p m
OLD DEXTER
BIBLE CHRISTIAN
CHURCH Rev Rolph Sm1th po!ilor Sun
doy school 9 30 a m Mrs Worley
FranCis supenntendent Preochlfl9 ser
vices ftrst &amp; th~rd Sundays followtng Sun
day Sct!ool
GRAHAM
UNITED METHOD IST
Preochtng 9 30 o m f~rst and second
Sundays of each month thtrd and fourth
Sundays each month worsh1p serviCe at
7 30 p m Wednesday even ngs a t 7 3Q
Prayer and B•ble Study
SEVENTH DAV ADVENTIST Mulberry
~e•ghts Rood Pomeroy Pastor Albert 1
01ttes Sabbath School Supenntendenl
R1ta Wh 1te Sabbath School Saturday
'afternoon at 2 00 with Worshtp Serv1ce
)ollow•ng at 3 15
RUTLAND FIRST BA~TIST CHURCH Sister Harnett Worner Supt Sunday
morn1ng worship
School 9 30 o m
10 45a m
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST
Dovtd
Mann mm1ster W Ill om Watson Sunday
5Chool sup! Sunday school 9 30 a m
mornmg worsh 1p 10 3D am
FIRST SOUTHERN BA~TIST
2B2
Mulberry Ave Pomeroy Rev Wdltom
R Newman jastor Hershel McClure
Sunday schoo supenntendent Sunday
school 9 30 o m
mormng worshtp
10 30
l!'lenmg worshtp
7 30 p m
M 1dweek prayer servtce 7 JO p m
MIDWAY COMM UNITY CHURCH Oex
r 1er Rd
Rd
Langsville Rev A A
Hughes Pastor Sunday School 10 a m
Ser111ces on Tuesday Thursday and Sun

C:

L: day 730pm

F'
FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH Ba1ley
1 ..Run Rood Rev Emmett Rowson pastor
•
~

Handley Dunn supt Sunday school 10
o m Sunday evenmg serv•ce 1 30 Btble
teochmg 7 30 p m Thursday
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION Lawrence Manley
f pastor Mrs Russell Young
Sunday
School Sup! Sunday School 9 30 a fTl
"'Evenmg worship
7 30
Wednesda)l
pra.,er meeting 7 30 p m
MT
MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD
Rocme - Rev James Satterfie ld pc!!1t9r
~ ~rn•ng worsh1p 9 45 am
Sunday
•chool 10 45 a m even ng wor!!lhtp 7
Tuesday
7 30 p m
ladles prayer
1 meeting Wednesday 7 30 p m YPE
MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST Corrior
Sh&lt;th and Palmer the Rev Mark Me
Cllmg Sunday school 9 1S o m Randy
Hayes Sunday School supennteQdent
Don Rrggs asst supt Mornmg Worship
10 1~ o m Youth meeting 7 30 p m
Wednesday mdudmg wee tots eog&amp;r
beavers 1umor astronauts and 1un1or
and senior high BYF ch01r practice 8 30
p m Wednesday prayer meeting and 81
ble study Wednesday 7 30 p m
t
CHURCH OF CHRIST Middleport 5th
.ond Main Bob Melton mm1ster Scott
I Saltsman
assoetate mtmster
8 ble
morning worship
School 9 30 a m
10 30 a m evening serv1ce 7 00 p m
Wednesday 81ble Study and youth group
meet1ngs 7 00 p m
I
MIDDLEPORT
CHURCH
OF
THE
NAZARENE Rev Jtm Broome
pastor
8111 White Sunday school supt Sunday
school 9 30 a m
mornrng worsh•p
o m
Sunday evangelistic
1 10 30
..f ~t • ng
7 00 p m Prayer meetmg
Wednesday 7 p m

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MEIGS nRE
CENTER, INC.

PIZZA SHACK

John F Fultz, Mgr
Ph 992 2101
Pomeroy

Phone 992 6304

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lh t~ 111nter of
ll Lhalkl {t up n11 w
rt cord s fo r su tJ Zl ru lt!U'J.Wratures and u 1
hc:lltll alle ~nu 1 stor ms lust as l anyone
who hvud ttmmMh 11 all tn.l h l tijO

SUI 111 \

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APPLE GROVE Sunday School 9 30
o m Worshtp 7 30 p m hi and 3rd Sun
days Prayer meetmg Wednesday 7 30
p m Fellowsh1p supper f~rst Saturday b
p m UMW 2nd Tuesday 7 30 p m
EAST LET ART Chruch School 9 a m
Worship serviCe 10 o m Prayer meet ng
7 30 p m Wednesday UMW second
Tuesday 7 30 p m
RACINE WESLEYAN - Sunday school
10 a m worsh1p II a m Choir practiCe
Thursday 8 p m
LETART FALLSWorsl·up serv1ce 9
o m Church School 10 a m
MORNING STAR Worship 9 30 am
Church School 10 30 a m
MORSE CHAPH Church School 9 30
om Worsh1p 11 om
PORTLAND Sunday School b 30 p m
7 30 p m
Youth
Evenrng Warsh•p
Maetthg Tuesday 7 30 p m B1ble Study
Thursday 7 30 p m
SUTTON Sunday School f rst and thlfd
Sundays 9 30 a m wo sh1p ftrst and
thtrd Sundoys 10 45 a m Worsh1p and
Sunday School at Carmel
Unated
MethodiSt Church on second and fourth
Sundays B ble study together each
Wednesday 7 30 p m Fomdy naght dm
ner together each thtrd Thursday at 6 30
pm
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
Rev RIChard W Thomas
Duane Sydenstncker Sr
John W Douglas
Charles Domrgan
JOPPA Worship 9 00 a m Church
School 10 00 a m
CHESTER Worsh1p 9 a m
Church
School 10 o m Chaar Rehearsal 7 p m
Thursdays B1ble Study Thursdays
7 30p m
LONG BOTTOM SUnday School at q 30
am Evonmg Wotsh1p at 7 30 p m

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Thundoy 81ble Study 7 XI p m
REEDSVILLE Sunday School 9 30 a m
Mornmg Worshtp 10 30 a m Evenmg
Worshp 7 30 p m
B1b l e
Study
Wednesdays at 7 30 p m
ALFRED Sunday School ol 9 45 o m
Mornrng Worship at 11 o m Youth 6 30
p m Sundays Wednesday N•ght Prayer
Meehng 7 30 p m
\
ST PAUL (Tupper5 Plo ns ) Sunday
School 9 00 o m Morn ng Worsh1p or
10 00 am 81ble Study 7 30 p m lue s
day
SOUTH BETHEL (Stl..,er R dge) Sunday
School 9 00 a m Mornmg Woshrp 10 00
o m Wednesday B1ble Study 7 30 p m
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST Oliver
Swatn Supenntenden t Sunday school
9 30 every week
HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION Rev
Ke th Ebl n pastor Sunday School 9 30
a m
leonard G lmor e hrst elder
evemng servtce 7 JO p m Wednesday
praye r meetmg 7 30 p m
BEARWALLOW RIDGE C~URCH OF
CHRIST Duane Warden m ntster Btble
class 9 30om morning worsh1p 10 30
om
evenmg worshrp
b 30 p m
Wednesday B1ble stu dy 6 30 p m
NEW STIVERSIJILlE COMMUNITY
Church Sunday School servtce q -45
a m
Worship
ser vrcc
10 30
Evangel she Serv ce 7 30 p m Wednes
day Prayer meet ng 7 30
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST Pomeroy
Hornsonv1lle Rd Robert Purtell pastor
Btll M&lt;Eiroy Sunday school supt Sunday
school 9 30 a m morning worsh1p and
commun1on 10 30 a m Sunday worshtp
ser vtce 7 p m Wednesday evenmg
prayer meetmg and 8 ble s tudy 7 p m
ST JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH P•ne
Grove The Rev Wdl om M1ddleswor1h
Pastor Church i erv1ces 9 30 a m Sun
doySchool 10 30om
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST Jerry
P ngley pastor Sunday school 9 30
om
mornmg worsh1p 10 30 a m
Wednesday eventng servtee 7 30
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST Rev Earl Shuler
pastor Sunday school 9 30 am Church
ser'v'!Ce 7 p m
youth meet ng 6
p m Tuesday 81ble Study 7 p m
RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE
Rev John A Coffman pastor Martha
Wolfe Ch01rmon of the Boord of Chm
t1on ltfe Sunday School 9 30 a m m or
n•ng worsh p 10 30 Sunday even1 ng
worsh1p 7 30 p m Prayer meettng
Wednesday 7 30 p m
RACINE FIRST BA~TIST Don l Walk er
Pastor Robert Sm th Sunday sch ool
sup! Sunday school 9 30 a m morning
worsh1p 10 &lt;40 a m
Sunday even ng
worsh1p 7 30 Wednesday evenmg Btb le
study 7 30
DANVILLE WESLEYAN Rev R D
Brown pastor Sunday School 9 30
a m morning worsh p 10 45 youth ~ er
vtce b 45 p m evening worship 7 30
p m praye r and protse Wednesday
7 30 p m

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SILVER RUN FREE BAPTIST Re v Mar
Morktn pastor Steve Little Sunday
school supt Sunday school
10 am
mornmg worshtp 11 o m Sunday even
mg worshtp 7 30 Prayer meeting and
B1ble study Thursday 7 30 p m youth
serviCe 6 p m Su!ldoy
CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHI~ CHURCH 3B3
N 2nd Ave M1ddleport Poslo r Bob
Ho llms Sundcy serviCes 10 00 o m and
1 p Ill Tuesdoy and Fndoy serv ces 1 00
pm
HOUSE OF PRAYER AND PRAISE
l berty A ve Pomeroy Servtces Sunday
3 00 p m Fndoy 7 30 p m Tue sday 7 JO
pm
CHESTFR CHURCH OF GOo Rev R E
Robm son pastor Sunday school 9 30
om worshtp serviCe 11 a m evenmg
ser v1ce 7 00 youth ser\IICB Wednes
day 7 00 p m
LANGSVIllE CHRISTIAN
CHURCH
Robert E Mu~ s er pastor Sunday schoo l
9 30 o m Paul Musser sup! morn•ng
wor shtp 10 '30 Sunday e'v'en.ng serviCe
7 00 m d week serv1ce Wednesday 7
pm
SYRACUSE
CHURCH
OF
lHE
NAZARENE Rev James B K ttle pa,lor
Norman Presley
Sunday
School
Supenntendent
Sunday school q 30
o m
mornmg worsh1p
10 45 om
evangelis tic serviCe 7 p m Prayer and
Pro se Wednesday
7 p m
youth
meet1ng 7 p m
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN CHRIST
Elden R Bloke pastor Sunday School 10
a m Robert Reed supl Mormng ser
rnon 11 o m
Sunday ntght servtces
Chr sttan Endeavor 7 30 p m Song ser
viCe 8 p m
Preach1ng 8 30 p m
M•dweek Prayer meeting Wednesday 7
p m Al 'v' tn Reed loy Ieeder
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST located ot
Rutland on New L1ma Road next to
Fares t A cre Pork Re'v' Roy Rouse
pa stor Robert Musser Sunday School
svpt Sunday schoo I 0 30 a m worsh1p
7 30 p rn Bib le Study Wednesday 7 30
p m Saturday mghr prayer servt ce 7 30
pm
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN Roger
Wat son pastor M il dred Z1egle-r Sunday
sc hool sup! Mornmg worsh1p 9 30 am
Sundoy 5chool 10 30 o m evemng ser
VICe 7 30
MT UNION BAPTIST Merltn Teets
pastor
Joe Say re
Sunday School
Supenn1enenr
Sunday school
9 45
a m even 1ng worsh•p 7 30 p m Prayer
meehng 7 :fop m Wednesday
TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF CHRIST
V ncent Waters poster Howard Blotr
Colwell supermtendent Sunday School
9 30 o m mormng church I 0 30 o m
Sunday evemng serv1ce 7 30 Wednes
doy Btble Stud'( 7 30 p m
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE
Rev Herbert Grote pastor Frank Riffle
supl Sunday School 9 30 a m Worship
ser vtce 11 o m and 7 30 p m Proyor

._.,n

r---------~._-SERMONETTE--------------~
Sc r•pture - Rev 2 -4 Neverthe less I hilve somewhilf ilga.nst
thee because thou hast lefT thy ftrst love
In the seven letters to the seven churches of Revc lat1on we t 1nd a
warnmg from the Lord H1mself as w e are exhorted to hear what the
Sp1r1t sayeth to the churc hes
1 The letler to the church at Ephesus represents the danger of
losing our f~rst love - that fr esh ardor and devot1on wh1ch charac
terrzed the early church Tt11s ftrst c hurth menttoned 1n Revelation
had been extremely well taught havrng had Paul Apollos Timothy
and John as pastor s They were a church of whtch any commun1ty
would be proud They were sound m doctrine and duty but there was
one thrng the Lord had aga nst them they had lost thetr ftrst love Hts
mstructton to them was to remember and repent and return to a fresh
and exc1ttng new relaftonsh•p wtth the Lord Jesus Chrrst
2 The sec ond church at Smyrna represents the danger of the fear
of suffenng tor ones personal testimony of fa tth m Chr1st How many
turn ch•c:ken when they thmk someone m1ght hurl an tnsult at them
If they profess fatth and salvat1on tn Chrtst
3 The th1rd church the church ot Pergamos represents the con
stant danger ot comprom1srng the doctrtne of the Word of God Every
church needs to heed that warntng and proclaim the truth and the
fa•th that was once deltvered to the satnts
4 The church at Thyat1ra 1S a monumental illustrat ion of the
danger of moral comprom•se We must not tolerate 1mmoral•ty 1n our
own ltves or tn the lite of the church we (Ire exhorted a gam and again
to live accordmg to nghteous moral standards as He who has called
you Is holy so must you be holy 1n all Godly llvmg
5 The church at SardiS IS an exampl &lt;i of orthOdO&gt;cy w•thout life A
form w•thout Godlmess an outward appearance wtfhout inner punty
6 The sncth church the church at Phfladelph•a represents the
church endurrng pat1ent1y whtle they watch and work and walt for
thetr Lord s return
7 The fmal message was the one to the church al Laod•ce a That
message was a warn1ng agatnst lukewarmness If there Is anytt11ng
that Chrost1ans need loday It Is to be slorrcu by the Holy Spor l t until
w th burnmg hearts we will serve the Lord W1th fervent labors of love
i\nd lnsptrtng ;.eat
Subm1lled by Floyd F Shook, Paslor, laurel Cloff Free MethodiSt
Church

meettng Wednesdov 1 30 p m
LAUREL
CLIFF
FREE METHODIST
CHURCH Rev Floyd F Shook pastor
Lloyd Wr~ght Director of Chnst1on
Education Sunday School 9 30 a m
Morn1ng Worsh1p 10 30 a m
Chelf
Practice Sunday b 30 p m
Evemng
Worsh1p 7 30 p m Wednesdav Prayer
and 81ble Study 7 30 p m
OEXlER CHURCH OF CHRIST Charles
Russell Sr
m1ntster R1ck Macomber
sup! Sunday school 9 30om worsh1p
serv1ce 10 30 am B1ble Study Tuesday
7 30p m
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS
CHRIST OF
LATTER DAY
SAINTS
Portland Roone Rood Wtlham Roush
paslor Phyllis Stobort Sunday School
Supl Sunday School 9 30 a m Mornang
worsh1p 10 30 a m
Sunday e'v'enmg
service 7 p m Wednesday eventng
proyer servtces 7 30 p m
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST Rev Earl Shuler
pastor Worship servrce q 30 a m Sun
day school 10 30 a m Bible Study and
prayer service Thursday 7 30 p m
CARLETON CHURCH Kmgsbury Road
Gory Ktng pastor Sunday schoo l 9 30
o m Rolph Carl supermtendent even
1ng worshtp 7 30 p m Proyer meeting
Wednesday 7 30 p m
Tom
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN
R cho~on pastor Wallace Damewood
Sunday School 5upenntendent Worship
$erv•ce at q a m 81ble School 10 a m
HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH Sun
day School ol q 30 o m worship ser
v ces at I 0 30 o m Pastor Rev Theron
Durham Thursday servtces at 7 30 p m
w1th ~ev Okey Cart
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION 01 Bold
Knob located on Coun ty Rood 31 Rev
lawrence Gluesencamp pastor Rev
Willford
oss•stont pastor
Roger
Preachmg servtces Sunday 7 30 p m
prayer meet ng Wednesday 7 30 p m
Gory Gofflth leader Youth groups
Sundo.,. eve1ng b 30 p m with Roger and
V1olet Wtllford as leaders Commumon
services f~rst Sunday each month
WHITES CHAPEL Coolvi lle RD Rev
Roy Deeter pastor Sunday school 9 30
a m worship serv1ce 10 30 o m B1ble
study and prayer serv1ca Wednesday
7 30p m
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST Bob
Buckrnghom pastor Herb Elliott Sun
day school supt Sunday school 9 30
o m mormng worshtp and comunton
10 JOo m
RUTLAND BIBLE METHODIST CHURCH
Amos Ttl its pO$Ior Donny T1lhs Sunday
School Supt Sunday School 9 30 a m
l~llowed by morni ng worshtp Sunday
7 00 p m Prayer
eitenlng serviCe
meellng Wednesday 7 00 p m
RUTLAND
CHURCH
OF
THE
NAZARENE Rev Lloyd 0 Grimm Jr
pastor Sunday school q 30 a m war
sh p serv1ce 10 30 o m Broadcast lave
...,ver WMPO young peoples servtce ?
p m EvangelistiC ser'v'ICB 7 30 p m
Wednesday UHv!Ca 7 JO p m
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST Corner ol
Second and Anderson Mason Poslof
Fronk Lowther Sunday school 9 -45
a m worship serv1 ce 11 a m and 7 30
p m Weekly B ble Study Wednesday
7 30p m
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST Miller
Mason W Va Eugene l Conger
1nlster Sunday 81bla Study 10 am
orship 11 o m and 7 p m Wednesday
Bible Study vocal mustc 7 p m
12 North
liFE SCIENCE CHURCH Thtrd St
Cheshtre Independent fun
damental services Sunda.,. eventng 7 30
p m Pastor Rev Dr Robert Persons
MASON ASSEMBLY OF GOO Ouddtng
Lone Mason W Vo Rev Ronn1e 8
Rose Pastor Sunday School 9 •S o m
Mornmg Worshtp 11 o m Evening Ser
vic e 7 30 p m Wednesday Women s
MmtStnes 9 om (meehng and prayer
Prayer and Btble Study 7 p m
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION The }lev Wlll lom
Campbell posror Sunday School 9 30
a m James Hughes supt evening ser
vtce 7 30 p m Wednesday even•ng
prayer meet ng 7 30 p m Youth prayer
service each Tuesday
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH letart W
Vo Rt 1 Mark Irwin pastor Worahip
se rviCe s 9 30 o m Sunday school 11
am evemng worship 7 30 p m Tue1
day cottage prayer meeting an,d Bible
study
9 30 o m
Worship lervlce
Wednesday 7 :Kl p m
CAL VARY BIBLE CHURCH now located
on Pomeroy P•ke County ltood 25 neor
Flatwoods Rev Blackwood pattor Ser
vrces on Sunday at 10 30 am qnd 1 30
p m with Sunday school 9 30 o m Bible
study Wednesday 7 30 p m
INDEPENDENT HOLINESS CHURCH
Pearl St
Middleport Rev
INC 0 Dell Manley pastor Sunday achool
9 30 a m Morning wonhlp 10 30 o m
evemng worship 7 30 p m Tvesdav
12 30 p rn Women 1 prayer meeting
Prarer and prolse service Wednetday
730pm
RUTLAND A~OSTOLIC CHURCH OF
JESUS CHRIST Elder Jom01 Miller &amp;lblo
study Wednesday 7 30 p m
Sunday
School 10 o m Sunday night service
7 lOp m
POMEROY WfSLEYAN HOLINESS -

£

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GrocenesGeneral MerchandiSe
Rt1c 1ne U9 25.50

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\\ i n!tlTs t;hlll ~ onh H. rr t~mu ry now
t ho u)lh 11 a n ) uf us &lt;~ n: 11 btl t o u~thc r fo rth ~

ANNIE

Phone 992·3480

Middleport
Pomeroy 0

Ul {l ma n 11 uner .t lsu It ft man\ a frayt:1l
tcmper tn li s pa1hwa1 :S nu v h mn ~ ruoh
C l\ tod u hu S I!~ and t r~n s 1ere hours lat 11
IIHI p1uplc s mm tlS 1cre s l rt~ IL: he11 !!Mht

K&amp;C=-LERS

UNITED PRESBYTERIAN MINISTRY OF
MEIGS COUNTY Dwtght L Zovtlz d rec
lor
HARRISONVILLE PRESBYTERIAN Rev
Ernest Strtclc.lm pastor Sunday church
Mr~
Homer Lee
school q 30 a m
supt morntng worshtp 10 30
MIDDLEPORT Sunday school 9 30
o m RiChard Vaughan supt Mornmg
worshtp 10 30
SYRACUSE
FIRST
UNITED
PRESBYTERIAN Church Worsh1p serv1ce
9 30 c m Sunday School10 30 a m Mrs
Sampson Hall supt
RUTlAND CHURCH OF GOD Randall
Batley pastor Sunday school 10 o m
Sunday worship 11 a m
Qh ldren s
church 11 a m Sunday IE!'v'Em ng ser
v ce 7 30 p m Wednesday even ng
young lodtes ou:.ctltary 6 p m Wednes
day lomdy worshtp 7 30 p m
HAZEl COMMUNITY CHURCH Near
Long Bottom Edsel Hart pastor Sunday
Church 7 30 p m
school 10 a m
prayer meetmg 7 30 p m Thursday
MIDDLEPORT PENTECOStAL
Thord
Ave the Re._. Wt lltom Kntltel pastor
Thames Kelly Sunday School Supf Sun
day school 10om Classes for all ages
eventng serv1ce
7 30 81b le study
Wednesday 7 30 p m youth ser'v'!Ces
Fndoy 7 30 p m
MIDDLEPORT FREEWill BAPTIST Cor
ner Ash and Plum Rolph Butcher
pastor Saturday e'v'enmg serviCe 7 30
p m Sunday Sc~ool 10 30om
MEIGS
COOPERATIVE PARISH
METHODIST CHUR&lt;;H
Rtchord W Thomas Director
POMEROY CLUSHR
Rev Robert McGee
POMEROY Sunday School q 15 a m
'A{orshtp servtce I 0 30 a m
Chotr
Wednesday 7 p m Rev
rehearsal
Robert McGee pastor
ENTERPRISE Worsh1p q am Church
SchoollO a m
ROCK SPRINGS Sunday School 9 15 a
m Worship serv1ce 10 a m
FlATWOODS Church School 10 am
Worship 11 a m
MIDDLEPORT CLUSTER
HEATH Church School 9 30 a m Wor
sh tp 10 30 a m UMYF 6 p m Robert
Robmson Pastor
RUTLAND Church S&lt;:hool 9 30 am
Worshtp 10 30 o m
SALEM CENTER
Worship 9 a m
Church School9 45 a m
SYRACUSE CLUSTER
Rev Stanley Mernftf!d Mtnlster
FOREST RUN Worshp 9i a m Church
School10 o m
MINERSVILLE Church S(hool 9 o m
Worsh1p 10 o m
ASBURY Church School 9 50 a m
Worship 11 a m B1ble Study 7 30 p m
Thursday UMW ftst Tuesday
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
Re'v' Oov1d Herr s
Rev Mark Flynn
Rev Florence Sm1fh
H1lton Wolfe
BETHANY
(Dorcas ) Worshtp 9 30
o m Church School 10 30 a m B•ble
study Thursday 7 30 p m
CARMEL Worsh1p second and fourth
Sundays at 10 -45 o m Sunday School
second and fourth Sundays 9 30 a m
Worsh1p and Sunday School ot Sutton
Umted Method•st Church on first and
third Sundays. Btble study together each
Wednesday at 1 30 p m Family mght
dinner together eoch third Thursday or

Pomeroy

MARK VSTORE
Middleport

TifE DAILY
SENTINEL

Middleport OhiO

212E MatnStreet
992 3785 Pomeroy

tAl

Eatlnor

Carry out

I ~

postor ROy Mayer Sunday school supt
Church School 9 15 o rn worshtp ser

='~b~~~~~y CHURCH OF CHRIST

992 2196

BEN
!-FRANKLIN•

Savngs&amp;Loan

RACINE PLANING MILL

461 S Thn·d, Mtddleport

HALL'S

~ Fnr~he~uniY
216 E Mam

OTHER u.!DIA~!H

Pat 'Hill Ford, Inc.

214 E Matn
992 5130 Pomeroy

Phone (614) 742 2777

Natronwode Ins. Co.

'
- .IOIIN
1!1(1 TWO
~
..OtmN&amp;
WITH

Reuter-Brogan Insurance

Rutland, Ohto 45775
J Wm

m

I.D
~•· n~

Harrtsonv•lle Rood Dewey Kmg restor
Henry Ebhn Jr Sunday Schoo Supl
Sunday School 9 30 a m Mormng Wor
shtp 11 a m Sunday evanmg serv1ce
7 30 m Prayer Meettng Thursday 7 30
pm
SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF GOD Not Pentecostal Rev George Oiler
pallor Worshtp servtee Sunday 9 45
a m Sunday school 11 a m worsh1p
ser'v'lce 7 30 p m Thursday prayer
meehng 7 30 p m
MT HERMON Un1ted Brethren m
Chmt Church Jil.e'v' Robert Sanders
pastor Don W ill to.,. leader Located tn
Te~~:as Commun1ty elf CR 82 Sunday
school 9 30 a m Morn ng worship ser
viCe 10 -45 o m evenmg preaching ser
VICe second and lourth Sundays 7 30
p m Chnst1on Endeavor farst and thard
Sundays 7 30 p m Wednesday prayer
1
meetmg and B1ble study 7 30 p m
JEHOVAH S WITNESSES 37319 State
Route 12-4 (One m1 le east of Rutland )
Sunday B1ble lecture 9 30 o m Wet
chtower study 10 20 a m Tuesdoy 1 B1
ble study
7 30 p m
Thursday
Theocrat c School 7 30 p m ~ Servtce
Meeting 8 20 p m
RUTLAND FREEWill BAPTIST Ct&lt;lurch Dr James A Bruhl pastor Sunday
school I 0 a m Sunday evenmg serv•u
7 00 Wednesday prayer meetmg V 00
pm
CHURCH OF GOO of Prop~e&lt;:y located
on the 0 J Wl-11te Rood off highway 160
Sunday School 10 a m Super~ntendent
John LoYedoy F~rsl Wednesday nigftt of
month CPMA serv1ces second Wednes
day WMB meet1ng rhard through fifth
youth ser'v'ICe George Croyle pastor
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL - 570 Grant
St Middleport Sunday School I 0 o m
mormng worship 11 o m evening war
sh p 7 p m Wednesday even1ng Bible
study ond prayer meet1ng 7 p m AI
hliated w1th Southern Bapt is t Conven
lion
BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST Eugene Underwood pastor Harry Hen
dricks superintendent Sunday school
9 30 am mmmng worsh1p 10 30 c m
evemng worsh1p 1 p m Wednesday 81
ble study 1 p m
JUBILEE
CHRISTIAN
CENTER
Georges Creek Road Rev C J Lemley
pastor John Fellure supeuntendent
Church school 9 30 a rn mornmg war
sh tp 10 30 evemng serviCe 7 p m Bible
Stud'( Thurs 7 p m Classes for all ages
Nursery prO'v'lded for worsh•p services
ST PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH Corner
of Sycamore and Second Sh Pomero'(
The Rev Wtlllom M•ddlesworth Pastor
Sunday School or 9 45 a m and Church
Servrces 11 a m
SACRED HEAAT Rev Father Poul D
Welton pas lor Phone 9q2 2825 Sotur
day evening Mou 7 30 Sunday Moss 8
and 10 a m
Confesston Saturday
7730pm
VIC10RY BAPTIST - 525 N 2nd 51
Middleport James E Keesee pastor
Sunday morntng worsh1p 10 a m evan
lng serviCe 7 Wednesday evening war
shtp 7 p m Vts1tatton Thursday 6 30
pm
TRINITY Chmllan Assembly Coolvtlle
Gtlbert Spencer pastor Sundoy
school 9 30 a m mornang wor ship 11
o m Sunday evemng serv1ce 7 30 p m
m1dwt1ek pro-fer service Wednesday
730pm
MOUNT Ohve Community Church
lawrence Bush pastor MoK Folmer Sr
Superintendent Sunday School and mar
nmg worsh i p q 30 am Sunday even1ng
service 7 p m Youth meeting and B1ble
study Wednesday 1 p m
UNITED FAITH CHURCH - Route 7 on
Pomeroy byposs Rev Robert Smtth Sr
pastor Rev James Cundiff osslstont
poster Sunday School q 30 a m morn
ing worsh i p 10 30 o m evening wor
shlp
7 30
Women. s Fellowsh1p
Tuesdays 10 a m Wednesdcy naght
prayer service 7 30 p m
FAITH BAPTIST Church Mason meat
ot United Steel Workers Umon Hall
Ra1lrood Street Mason Pastor Rev
Richard Jordan Mornmg worsh p 9 30
a m Sunday School 10 30 a m Prayer
meeting Wednesdoy 7 30 p m
FORESl RUN BAPTIST - Rev Nylo
Borden
pastor
Cornel1us Bunch
superlnt•ndent Sunday sct&lt;lool 9 JO
o m second and lourth Sundays war
sh1p service at 2 30 p m
MT MORIAH BAPTIST ._ Fourth and
Main St Middleport Rev Colvin Mln
nls pastor Mrs Elvin Bumgardner
supt Sunday school 9 30 a m wonhip
service 10 ,.5o m
NORTH BETHEL United Melhod111
Church Rev Charla! Domigan pastor
Sunday School 9 30 a m Worship Ser
'v'lce 10 .45 a m Sunday B•ble Study
1 00 p m Wedrtesdoy prayer meeting

GASOI I NE ALLEY

. . .&lt;ishh.;ei;"'s

wasn't meant Should we

Quick! Call

sleep1nq so
so soundl4'

uld talk 1

the doctor!

trLJ to

wake her'

5EE!NG TH&gt;l.T PICTiJ f(f
&gt;r EGTER~')o

PIP 450\\'=

HlN6 TO \\E \ \ .)..0 10
\"1::_ i HI NK \\ .l.1 B E 1
HAP ?!E f :-l 'T'C
COl.) \\13 .l, 5 ".l.R TE~
~N C THER • '"E
1 H E~E 1

~ "'~

Evening television listings
Ill()) (10) THE DUKES OF HAZ

MARCH e 11181

, oo ti Je rtl d ct l(ooo lrnGI ••ws
(J ) STUFF
(f )
CAROL BURNETT
FRIENDS
l t ) A8CNEWS

IIJ 3·2

AND

I COHT ACT

tH) OYEREASY Oueats Popa•nger
Melissa Man cho&amp;t er and her
lat11er claaalc al basaoo n at Oavtd
Man chester Hoal Hu gtl Downs
(Closed Captioned U S A I

0 30

Cll G m

NBC HEWS

( JJ GOOD NEWS
(5) BOll NEWHART SHOW
l t ) FACE THE MUSIC

em r101 cas••ws

WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
(11) Llli"S YOGA AND YOU
(1a ) . ABC NEWS
I 68 ( t) CBN UPDATE NI!!:WS
1 00 {218 PM MAGAZINE
t 3J THE STORY
{ 4) MOVIE (DRAMA)•' My Brll
tJ•nt C•reer 11180
(S) COLLEGE BASKETBALL
DOUBLEHEADER
ACC
Semt F nats
(t)

[tl(t~lll FAMILY FEUD

{ 7} POP GOES THE COUNTRY

lli/IJ TICTACOOUGH
t t ) (11)
REPORT
lJQJ NEWS

7 30

rll 8

MACNEIL LEHRER

WHO

LOVES

AIIIY

TONIGHT?
13) THE LESSON

ll l lll ff l

JOHO SWILD

17)({{)) HOllYWOOD SQUARES
l i HIJl DICK CAVETT SHOW
11a1Cl FACE THE MUSIC
7 68 ( )1 CBN UPDATE NEWS
800 ( 1) . (7) HARPER VALLEY PTA
l J) IN TOUCH
rt JMUPPETSHOW Gufl81 018bOr
ah HarrY.
D !l ) (t~ THE INCRIW IBLE HULK
Oav1dBanne1tearcf\ealor ac untto
his own malady by invullgatlng 11
legend ot another Hulk llka me
t amorpho1uaota aclen till bRill'l'o'ed
oead tor 30 yeera and llndllhR
othercrealuleallttexlata (PI lot•
two (!Art ep•aode eomm• I
( ~] (ll] WASHINGTON w•EK IN

7 30p m
BURLINGHAM SOUTHERN BAPTIST
CHURCH Route I Shade Pastor Don
Block Affiliated with Southern Baptist
Con.....,tlan iunday school I 30 p m
Sunday worship 2 30 p m Thursday
evening Blbl• studv 7 p m
PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY
Racine
Route 124 William Habock pastor Sun
day school lOam Sunday even1ng t•r
vlce 6 30 p m Wednetdoy eenlng ser
'v'ICe T.
CARPENTER BAPTIST Rev Freeland
Norrlt pastor Don Ct)eodle Supt Sun
day School 9 30 a m Mgrnlng Worship
10 30 a m Prayer S.rvlce alternate
Sundays
NEASE SETTLEMENT FREE WILL BAP
liST Donald R Kerr Sr pastor Friday
evening service 7 30 p m
Sunday
school lOam

~EI(tEW

("W8JBENSONBanaondreaaeaup
a aa soldier end hndahunse 111nlrou
bitt at • wild co atume party at the
execuliwe mana 0 11 an alia If com
plica ted by the preaence of a pr~c•
1e11111 gold statue and a plot bV fOP
elgn revo1uhonarlea to steel It

8 30

~~l•;lvl 1/HE B"ADYBRIDES

rl l lttlli!t M A BIG GIRL HOW

( t J(t1) WALL STREET WEEK Hoi! I

•••

I

FtukftyUr
OJ (:8NUPDAUNI!WS
I.,OUII

tOO f~ J - ( 7) NEROWOLF~
( J } 700CLUB
I ~ ) THECANDIOCANDIOCAMEA
A Man Funl trsva11 All over ltlf
co1.111try to catch !he unauapectmQ
In VI!!.Y (!!_ltCirloua a1tultlons
{ t l (1l!. FRIDAY NIGHT MOI/I'
long Jou1ney Back tU78 Still
Mike Connors SteJ.ohanle Zlm
t*•tt

ZARD Sass Hog'Ol bnn~Js hiS mean
neph ew Hugh•e b1.1ck to help nell
the Duk a co us ns and ltvea tore
gretll (60 m1ns)
(l l SESSION 81 •
(11.) c;:OSMOS Hea118n and Hell
Whil e Earl h 19 now a hAtaven 111at
to!l l!tr l and sustain!! hie Dr Sagan
u piOFt.l S tt'l e ootl on thai humans
co uld turn the1rown parBd aa ln! 08
helh sh
was teland
(Closed
Captton ed)
D 30 ( 41 MOVIE (SUSPENSE) ..
~lent Scre•m 11180
! Ol WITHOSSIEANORUBY ADa y
Wtth Sl e rhn g Br own The !lie and
works ol poet and toa cher Shut ng
B(Own ar e p•ohled u Onle and
Ruby travel to Wuh•ngt on 0 C lo
'o' ISII Brown n his home and on t1'1e
campus ol Howa d Unlveraity
(Cio sud Capt oned U S A)
tO 00 I 2" G ( 7) NBC MAGAZINE WITH
DAVID BRINKLEY
I!) 1111101 THE CUKES OF HAZ
ZARDluke svu~tiJ e cJ•ntoaboxlng
11
1t CI Wllh 1\ pr Oie!tSIOfl81 fighter
so lei~ 101 th o a g o;,~r~t• d1toment at
Bos s Hogg s wot et (Repeal 60
mina )
( 11 SURRENDER AT APPOMAT
TOX Th•a drama -cnron.cleslhehn
nt de spernl edAyso lthe CtviiWar
And the co n!I ch ol Genftralslee
Arid Grant
1111 NEWS
tO :tB ( 31 CBN UPOAU NEWS
10 30 ( 31 RICHARD HOGUE
l1tl MASTERPtECE THEATRE
Onnge1 UXB Ep•a ode IX The
at ght es t JOlt ol IS magnt~tlc field
co1ld det onnro th&amp;m ne thai 11 otda
o l ondon no ghborhoo d In Ill grip
Br an enlstalheNawy S8!detodeal
wtth lho t ck.ng th• eat (Closed
CaptiOned U S A ) (60 m1na)
10 58 (3) CON UPDATE NEWS
11 00 12 1 8 Il l ( 7) llJ ll l ~Ql ~~ Gl
NEWS
{ 3) DAN GRIFFIN
(4) MOVIE (DRAMA) •• V1 Th•
I·~··
&amp; TBSllit7i
EVENING NEWS
(8 WORECAMBE AND WISE
11 28 ( ~ ) CBNUPDATENEWS
1130 ( 2l G 17l THE TONIGHT SHOW
Host Johnny Carson Gunls
Mehua ManchBare• Sle'o'fl lan
deaborQ (60mtnl)
( i ) ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
l i Htl)GI FRIOAYS
•
l it
CBS LATE MOYIE
CITIZEN SBAND 1977 Siara Paul
Lit Mal Cnn dy Clu •~
I II THE SHOCKERS

{tOlMOVIE !HORRORJ' Twl1ted
Breln UH4
1Z 00 I l l MOVIE (SCIENCE FICTION)
•• B•••t 01 Hollow Mounlaln
1856

12 30 I l l

8

(f )

THE

IIIIDNIQHT

SPECIAL
12 40 {l l SOLIOGOLDHolll 01onneWflf
wick Gold l tiCOtd W1nneraperlo1m
ltHt r h•t Ro ngs
(11} CD MOV te (TITLE UNAfrrt.
NOUNCED)
12 51 U ) CBN SPORTS REPORT
1 00 I S1 JtMMT SW-.alGART

1 15 (4) MOVIE (DRAMA)•• MyBrt..
llant C•r•er 1Q80
t tlO ("!) MOVIE (MYSTERY ORAMA)'
Slclll•n• le&amp;4
l 00 {2) .
NEWS
13 1 30 MINUTES WITH FATHER
MANNING
l10 I BELIEVE
2 10 {1Zl CD NEWS
2 :Z8 f:il CBN SPOflTS REPORT
2 30 l 3~ ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
3 00 141 DAYS OF THRILLS AND
LAUGHTER
15 MOVIE (ROMANCE COMEDY)
• ltl•nd Alfalr 1Q64
3 58 (3) CBN SPORTS REPORT
400 131 700CLUB
4 50 15) MOVIE (MYSTERY) "
Murd•t Over New 'fork 1e.0
5 30 f3l PHIL ARMS PRESENTS
5 58 ( 31 SPORTS REPORT

MARCH 7 1981

• oo r 2 l DO ll l/t~

NEWS

l 5)
CHAMPIONSHIP
WRESTLING
t 71 GODHASTHEANSWER
\ i ) GIZMO ThiS program pre sen! !I
a doc umentar y satule l o !he more
crated bl.r:arre1nvent ons ol Am er
1can h1at ory

0 30 I 2] 8 (7 ) NBC NEWS
l f l U:IJGJ HEWS
1!) ( ~1 CONCERN
110) CBS NEWS

{111 MAKINO M A$ H Norratedby
Mar)' Tyler Moore U11s spe CIAl
looks AI what many con:uder to be
cQmmerc•ai telev s on s beat and
moat su cc essful e nl e rtalnmB~t
StH es M " S H and seek a to
IUl&amp;vrel the Quea!lon mo at vt ewer!
askweekal!ar wtulk Howdo they
dOlt ?
7 00 [t) D DANCEFEYER
1 3~ BLACKWOOD BROTHERS
141 BAD GUYS:" AND WICKI!:D
WOMEN Using rere 111m footage
thl a spaciallnvestiQAI98 thell!llfl
known truth beh nd legendary out
taws hke Jesae James John 0 I
linger Belle Slat and other•
f t ) D (l l HEE HAW Guetfl Ray
Pri ce B o~~.c ar W the Kentucky
Ch•mea Dance• Roy Clark Family
Outn!lla Hutton (60 mll\8 )
( 7) LAWRENCE WELK SHOW
( t } MUPPETSHOW

I

(10) BUGS BUNNY

(\2).
SOLIDGOLOHoal Oonfle
Warwi ck Go ldrecordwlnners per
lor itt then htltongs
1 30 (118 INSIDE LOOK
(3 / THE LUHOSTOOMS
II ) THE PICNIC Tht1 comedy ltnun
ot Ron!ll tl B1uker and Ron 1 e Co•
• lloll known os the Two Ronn 61
11nr In lh fl humoroiJSillle olen our
11g on thf! IdylliCEngh"h aummor
d11y w1th a Cr t!lly gene1at &amp;nd h1a

'""

(10] FRONT PAGE
8 00 (2l 8 17l BARBARA MANDRfll
ANO THE MANDREll SISTERS
(31 700CLUB
("' I MOVIE COAAMA) •• Border
.... 1810
I t I "'OOftAM UNAHNOUHCID
Il l C:OU.IGUAIKITIIAIJ.Iewo

..

I 4)MOVIE (DRAMA) .. Prelty
M•ldeAIIInARow 1971
(ll (til
FANTASY ISLAND A
beautdul young woman andhernew
husbandwF;~nllo sol'fe the my11! ery
of her lath er 11 d sappearance and
a co uple who have been marrre~ for
su years try to re(;reat e the eerly
days of their marr age (60 m 1\8)

Untver slly
v1
Oh o
State
Un veuuty
IJ [I )l10) WKRPINCINCINNATIIn
en elf or! t o be more compell,1ve
w•thanvalrad oalat on LeeNes !f.'
man take &amp;lluponh mselfloparkhla
mobile news scooter &amp;fld co'o'er the
news n a World War b•plsne llown
by a craz y war veteran {Repeal}
ro\ (1t)
SOMETHING SPEC
TACULAR WITH STEVE ALLEN
Stove A.tlen and lhe old Tomght
Show garrg present an al l new
spec 1al wh•ch spo olspubhctetevl
s•un wh1te enterlelmng wtlh a
uela~y otQuestalars •ncludlngCarl
Re iner Peggy lee t~nd M lion
Berte (3 hrs)
(t2JID CHARLIE S ANGELS The
angel! don lhlllr biktms ala tpsh
Hewalum resort to lnhltrate a vllCa
r onlng aw•nomo smgles group that
•s the cov er lor a dudlyterronst
sec t ser on carry ng our lhe as
sus lnatt on ot an lnrernatlonal
pu ce leader (Repeat 60 min a)
8 30 rs l COllEGE BASKETBAll~CC
Tournament Cf1amplon8tllp Game
ClJ (81 (10) THE TIM CONWAY
SHOW
g 00 t2) 8 [ 1)
THE GANGS~ER
CHRONICLES

m

J 0 11ld W ll help out a truck dnver

40.

8

(f)

SATURDAY HIGHT

L.IVE

1!) ( 1 /llQl FLO

.tCROSS
1 Caprtcorn

&lt;Ill.

1 t 30 (I)

112).
THE LOVE BOAT A doftttn
ee 1g mo lhcrtt e9 to break Up a
rO(Tl ance between her son and a
gotg eous g1rl and a woman hnds
th e sh p somewhat crowded when
all thr ee oth er hllnces joln her
Gu ssl shu s Sylvta Sidney Jul et
M Ua
(60
mms )
{Cl osed
C ~tpl onttd U S A )
g 30 ( 11 THE LESSON
llJ ( l lltOJ LADIES MAN
10 00 (2 \IJ ( 1 ) HILL STREET BLUES
131 ROCKC~RCti

ftlfiji~(t

by THOMAS JOSEPH

2 Russtan c1ty
3 Vase handle
symbol
4 Trial run
budrlybyd tVmgh sr gonadel 'v'ery
lr om St LOUIIIO Spmtgl eld not
S Dtatla or Betsy 5 Lasso
rDL'IIIzmu that a trme bomb n l~tur
traller coulcfblowthamskyhlgh (60 9 French river , factory e g
m ns.}
10 New York Cll)' 6 Chan
oo lll 8 (o)l1) IIHJl @
li! Not so much
portrayer
NEWS
13
Paleness
7
Salt
IFr )
LJ ) ZOLA LEVITT
\51 TBS WEE"'- END NEWS
IS Knock down
8 Paod on a
ti l MYSTERY! Rumpole and th8
Yesterdays A01wer
fixed basis
ShowFolk Rumpole•scalledaway 17 St s1gn abbr
!4
Vedic
cloud 34 Art of
l1 Uterary
lroml ondon to serve as tun•or coun 18 Shrewmouse
set n delendmg an acttess ec
dragon
Love
19 Twilled
work
cused ott he bacK. stage mu1der ol
2&amp;
Mamtoba
poet
fabnc
14
Abrogate
her husband (Closed Capt Of!ed
Indian
35 Chmese
U SA )(SO m na )
20 White wme
16 Gull s
f11) GIZMO Thl s do cumentary
Z8 Leo Gorcey s
dynasty
relallve
salutes tho b1larre nventlons ot 24 Wtngs (her )
Boys
341
Small
20 Scattered
Amer ca lrom the 20 s through the 25 F.vlta or
Iiii i l/11\) CONCRETE COWB~YS

t1

~8NM"tJ 1

~J ROSS BAGLEV SHOW

f 4l MOVIE (DRAMAJ• Meteor
11179
151 COllEGE BASKETBALL SEC
Tournament Cha l1p10nshlp Game
f i 1MOVI£ (WESTERN) •• Eye
ForAnEy• lite&amp;
I I (I ) MOVIE (ORAMA)••t., All
Min• To Glv• 1955
(1(J.IMOYI£ (DRAMA) • Yall•y ol
the Dalla 1967
12l Cl'l ABC NEWS

Juan
!&amp; Pincerlike
claw
!lF 1eld

21 Dostaff role 30 Oregon coty
33 Invol ving
22 Buil dmg
no fisk
23 Brown kiwi

whirlpool
38 Subway stop
( aPbr )

28 Nupt1al
Z!l Mythical
flyer

30 Wooden
pall

31 Pose £or
32

lnsptrm~

dread

fii}'ft

,-~THAT SCRAMBLED WOAOQAME
~ ~ ~ ~L!l
by Hanrt ArnOICI RnCI Boo Lee
Unscrl'mble th ESI! four lumhlas
onB ener to eac h squar e to for,..; 1
fow o•dmi\ry words

37 Isolate
39 Athirst
40 Put in
a dtary
41 Dtscovery
42 Disposed
to light

43 Nervous
DOWN

depre·
elates

I It

LFIRAD
TJ+---r.:o""'
I D tJ

above par

..
YORM MElr-,--,
I_I D . 0

It

lAKES A
CONSUM ING INIEREST
IN CLOIHES

IYEENAH ~I

D IJ .

...,...-

D ( XXI J
(Answers tomorrow}

I

Jumbles FOYER AORTA CRAFTY KILLER
A.nswer What I he burlesque queen I ked mos t abOut
llylng - THE lAKE OFF

'

how

to work

ot

AX\'DLBAAXR
LONGFElLOW

One letter stmply stands for another 1n thts sample \ rs

used for the three L s X for the two 0 s et.c Stngle letters
apostrophes the length and formation of the words are all
htnts E~ c h day the cud~ leiters ure d1!lerent

CR\'PTOQUOTES
Now a range the c rci ed le"e•s 10
lorm the swpr se mnswer as s •9
~ es ted by the above cartoon

Prtn1answe1 here
Vetlefdty I

o

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's

1\11

CITPC

E K D1

O~YHU

HIT

U1

EDOEQC

OEQ

P YF I
Y F

FTECYH

U T

P Y

Y

F

r

YOU KNOW WHAT A FAN LETII!;!l
IS - IT SJUSTAN INKY RASPBERRY -BOB HOPE

Yesterday 1 Cryptoquote

()1111 ll:tnt FUtllrn '\;YftdiCihl Inc

�Page-10

The Datly Sentmel

Pomeroy

Fnday, March 6, 1981

Mtddleport, Ohto

9

Small investment, large returns, Sentinel Want Ads
--

Pubhc No.2t!-'oc,e_~

Nottce of Foreclosure

t

IN THE COMMON
PLEAS COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
NOTICE
OF
FORECLOSURE
OF
LIENS
FOR
DELINQUENT
LAND
TAXES BY ACTION IN
REM,
BY
COUNTY
TREASURER OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
Publtc noftce 1S hereby
gtven that on the 9th day of
February , 1981 the County
freasurer of Metgs County
Ohto filed a campla.nt '"
the court ot Common Pleas
of Metgs County Ohto at

Pomeroy

Ohto, tor

foreclosure

of

the

ltens

for

deltnquent

taxes

assessm~nts

penal ftes

.and charges agatnst cer
tatn real property sttuated
'"such county as descnbed
m satd complatnt
The ob,ect of the

actton ts

to obtatn from the court a
tudgment foreclosmg the

tax ttens agatnst such real
estate and

--~

Public Not1ce

ordenng the

sale of such real estate for
the sattsfacfton of the tax
I tens thereon
Such action IS brought
aga1nst the real property
only and no personal
.jUdgment shall be entered
therein
The permanent parcel
number of each parcel 1n
el uded '" such act1on the
fu l l street address of the
parcel, 1f available
a
descnphon of the parcel, a
statement of the amount of
taxes,
assessments
pena1t1es and charges due
and unpa1d on such parce l
and t he name and address
of the last known owner
thereat as such appear on
the general tax list all as
more tully set torth •n the
comola1nt are as follows
CASE NO 81 DLT 34 Ca l
(b) I (c)
Parce l Nos
022 023 &amp; 024 Seroa l No 81
DLT 34 (a) lbl &amp; (C)
't• tied m the name of
ROBERT E CREMEANS,
1f l•v•ng whose last known
address 1s Rt 1, Rutland,
Oh10 the unknown hetrs,
dev•sees, legatees
ad
m•n•strators
exec ulors
and/ or ass,gns of Robert E
Cremeans
1f decesed
DOTTIE J CREMEANS ol
11v1 ng whose last known
address 1S Rt 1 Rutland
Oh10 the unknown he1rs,
legatees
ad
.devtsees
mmrstrators, exee\Jtors
and/ or ass1gns of DOTT IE
J
CREMEANS,
of
deceased
DREXAL A
LAMB ERT
of
l1v ong
whose last known address
IS Rt 1 Rutland Ohro the
unknown he•rs dev•sees.
lega tee s
admrnr!&gt;frators
execu tors andt or ass•gns at
Dr exa l
Lambert ,
1f
deceased
EDITH LAM
BERT 1f lrvrnq whos e last
known address •s Rt 1.
Rutland
Oh10
the
unknown he1 r s dev•sees
legatees, adm•n•strators
executors and / or ass1gns of
Edtth
Lambert ,
If
deceased

Sttuated '" the Twp of
Rutland, County of Me•gs
and State of OhiO
Parcel No 1 Srtuated 1n
Sec 16 Town 6 Range 14
conta1nmg 1 89 acres
Parcel No 2 Be1ng tn
Sec 16, Town 6 RAnge 14
of 0 C P and be1ng known
as Oil We l l Lot or Old Holt
Lot and bemg 25 acres
Parcel No 3 Betng W
half of Sec 16 Town 6
Range 14 of of 0 c P and
be1ng 22 62 acres ex 1 89
acres descnbed as Parce l
No 1 above
Deed Reference
Vol
225 pg 823 Me1gs County
Deed Record
JUDGMENT $252 56 plus
accrued taxes assessmen
ts penalttes and costs of
ac t ton
81 DL T 3S ,
CASE NO
Parcel No 004 Senal No
81 DL T 35
tolled on the
name of CLEM P WEST tf
liv10g whose address 1S
unknown
the unknown
he1rs, dev 1sees legatees
adm•n•strators executors
and/ or a~1gns of Clem P
West , 1f deceased MAE
WEST aka May West If
llvtng , whose address tS
unknown
the
unknown hetrs devtsees
legatees
adm•n•strators
executors and/ or asstgns of
Mae West aka May West
1f deceased
Sttuated •n Twp
of
Lebanon County of Me 1gs
and State of Oh•o Betng •n
Sec 33 Town 2 Range 11
cons 1st ng of 25 acres on S
end of 50 acre tract
Deed Reference
Vol
112 pg 227 , Metgs County
Deed Records
JUDGMENT S242 29 plus
accrued ta xes assessmen
ts, penalftes and costs of
act ron
CASE NO 81 DL T 35 ,
Parcel Nos 013 017 018 &amp;
019 , Seroal No 81 DL T 36 ,
tttled m the name of THE
ONEGO CORPORATION
606 Fayette Nattonal Bank
Bldg
Un1ontown
Pa
20S30 THE ONEGO COR
PORATION,
co CO
FISHER , Statutory Agent
119 5 2nd Ave, Mtddleport
Ohoo , UNITED STATES
OF AMERICA co Un•ted
States Attorney Dept of
Taxat•on
85 Marcon•
Blvd
Columbus
Ohto
43215 UNITED STATES
ATTORNEY GENERAL
washington,
DC
ASSISTANT ATTORNEY
GENERAL, C 0 Eugene P
Everhart Ohto Bureau of
Employment Serv.ces 145
A Front St
Columbus
JOE
D
Ohoo 43216
MILLER , 129 Locust St r
Pomeroy, Ohoo 45769
WEST VIRGINIA TRAC
TOR &amp; EQUIPMENT CO
address unknown
Ml D
WEST STREEL CORP , E
Ma•n S t
Pomeroy , Oh1o
45769 MACHINERY INC
address unknown,
JOY
MANUFACTUR ING CO
Henry W Ol1ver Bldg, P1t
tsburgh
22
Pa
GENERAL TELEPHONE

- r-------------------~---

Curb Inflation.
Pay Cash for
Classlfieds and
Savell I

CO OF OHIO P 0 Box
No 9007, Marton, Oh•o
43393
S•tuated tn the Twp of
Rutland County of Metgs
and State of Oh•o Beg1n
n1ng at the N W corner of
lands formerly owned by
Davtd Wo lfe rn Frac No
33 Town 6 Range 14 of
0 C P contam•ng 5 acres,
more or less
Another tract of land In
Frac 33 Town 6 Range 1.4
of 0 C P , beo•nn~ng 18 rods
S of the N W corner of I an
ds formerly owned by
Dav•d wolfe, contalntng 95
rods more or less
The following descnbed
real estate m Frac 33,
Town 6 Range 14 of 0 c P
Beglnnmg af N E corner of
Dav•d Wolfe land con
ta1n1ng ten and one e•ghfh
( 10 1/ 8) acres more or
less
Deed Refererence Vol
Deedpg
Records
213,
415, Meog• County
JUDGMENT $248 88 plus
accrued taxes assessmen
ts penaUtes and costs of
acf1011
CASE NO 81DLT37,
Parcel No POMV 8 Senal
No 81 DL T 37 lolled on the
name of VIRGINIA CREW,
1f lt v.ng whose last known
address •s Pomeroy Oh10,
the unknown spouse, 1f any ,
whose name and address
are unkoflwn the unk nown
he1rs devises legatees, ad
mm1sfrators
exec utors
and/ or ass1gns of V1rQ101a
Crew 1f deceased RUTH
0
STEELE, 1f ltvtng
whose last known address
1S 160 Caldwell Chtllicothel
Ohto the unknown spouse,
1f any whose name and ad
dress are unknown thP
unknown he1rs dev1sees,
legatees, admtn1strators,
executors and/ or ass1gns of
Ruth
D
Steele
1f
deceased ALICE ROSEN
THAL tf liv•ng whose last
known address 1S 2155
Luray Ave , Cmc 1nnat•
Ohto t he unknown spouse ,
1f any whose name and ad
dress are unknown, the
unknown heirs dev•sees,
legatees, admm 1strators ,
executors and/ or ass1gns of
Al1ce
Rosenthal,
•f
deceased . ANN MOOTZ ol
llvmg whose la st known
address 1S 525 Laramte
Trail , Cmcmnat• Oh10 the
unknown spouse, If any
whose name and address
are unknown the unknown
hetrs, dev•sees, legatees
adm10rstrators executors
and/ or ass•gns of Ann
Mootz 1f deceased FAYE
SMITH '' 11v1ng, whose
last known address IS 310
R.ver onve Cov,ngton ~
" 1
1fit! unKnown spouse
t any whose name and ad
dress are unknown the
unknown he1rs dev1sees
admtntstrators
legatees
executors and/ or ass1gns of
Faye Smrth, 1f deceased
LOTTIE B COHEN
of
l1v1ng whose last known
address ts Pomeroy, Oh1o
the unknown spouse. tf any
whose name and address
are unknown the unknown
he.rs devtsees, legatees,
adm •ntstrators, executors
and/ or ass,gns at Lottte B
Cohen , 1f deceased
S1tuated 1n Vtllage of
Pomeroy, County of Metgs
and State of Ohto Berng the

~~~~2~~~~~~!~~~~~~~g~~
PubliC Nottce
back part of Lot No 21 1h
c.onta1ntng 1 13 acres, more
or less
Vol
Deed Reference
241 pg 385 Metgs County
Deed Records
JUDGMENT $38 36 plus
accrued ta xes, assessmen
ts penalf •es and costs of
act1on
CASE NO 81 OL T 38,
Parcel No 005 Ser ra! N il
81 DL T 38
t1fled tn th e
name of WALTER BAR
TRUM 1f 1tv1ng, whose ad
the
dress tS unknown
unknown spouse, If any
whose name and addres s
are
unknown
thP
unknown hetrs dev•seea
legatees
adm 1n rstrators
executors and/ or asstgns of
Walt er Bartrum tf deceas
ed
Srtuafed 1n Twp
of
Sal1sbury County of M e1gs
and State of 01J10 Betng 1n
Sec 32 Town 2 Range 13
0 C P
contam1ng 25 54
acres more or less
Deed
Ref erence
Vol
172 pg 625 Me rgs County
Deed Records
JUDGMENT S203 76 plu s
accrued
taxes
assessments penalttes and
cos ts ot actton
Any person ownmg or
c larm ng any nght f1tle or
tnterest tn or lien upon
any parcel of real estate
above l•sted may file an
answer n such act•on set
t ng forth the nafure and
amount of rnterest owned
or c latmed and any defense
or obte c tron
to
the
foreclosure Stflch answer
must be filed tn the ottrce of
t he unders,gned Clerk of
Court and a ciJpy th ereof
served on the County Pro
secular on or before the 6th
dayofMay 1981
It no answer tS fil ed on or
before the date spectfled as
the last day for ftling an
answer
a tudgment of
foreclosure will be taken by
default as to any parcel
listed rn th e compla nt as to
wh• ch no answer has been
hied Anv parcel as to
$htctl a foreclosure tS
taken by defaul t shall be
sold for the sa ftsfa ctton of
assessments
th e tax es

WANT AD INFORMATION

PHONE 992-2156

Wr.te your own ad and order by ma•l w1th th ts
coupon cancel your ad bv phone w 11 en you get
results Money not refundable

or Wnte Datly Senhnel Classtfted Dept.
111 Court st, Pomerov,
45769

o,

It Name _ _ _ _ _ _ _.....__......._
(

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

Address _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

I ANNOUNCEMENTS
1 - Co~rdo l Tllo~nkl

t1 - HO\IUIIOr Rtnl
U - MOblle Homfs

'l - tnMemon•m

I

I
I

I
I
I
I
I

I

I
I
I

I
I
- I
I
-I
,I
-I
I
•&lt;

I
I

Wanted
For Sa le
Announc ement
For Rent

3 _ _ _ _ __

4 _ _ _ _ _ __

5 _ _ _ _ __
6 _ _ _ _ __

7.~-------8. _ _ _ _ _ __
9. _ _ _ _ _ __

12
13 _ _ _ _ _ __

I

1- HoiPPV AilS

4S- t=R.ooml

' - Lost 1nd Found
1- Y•rd hit

••- Spece lor f;tent

1- PIIbhc
&amp; AuCitOn

lA _ _ _ _ _ __

S•l~r

41- Equ•pment lor lilent

oMERCHANOISE
st USls•SS-

SER\IICES
, _ Http w1 nied
W•nfrd
11- lnsuunu
U - Bus neu Tn•n 119
1~- Sc hools lnJtrud on

Aid iQ TV
R1p11r
11- Winftcl To Do
6-

&amp;

These cash rates
tnclude diScount

•FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LI\IESTOCK

ce

61 - Folrm Equ•pm e nl
n - Winltclto lvv
11- Trucks tor Silf

o FINANCIAL
eus.ntu

U - LIYUIOCk

Opporrun fy

17
18
19
20

H - Mone~

_ _ _ __ _
_ _ _ _ _ __
_ _ _ _ _ __
_ _ _ _ __

" - H•~ &amp;

to L.o1n

U - Seed &amp; Ferhl 1er

oREAL ESTATE
JI - Hom~~ lor 511'1

71 - AufOlfOr §.I II!
1l- VIM &amp;• W D

e TRANSPORTATION
7•- Mollrcyclu
~~-

lor So~lr
lgr Silt
l4- l!!lu1men lutldtngs
n - L.ots &amp; Acrugr

27
28 _ _ _ _ _ __
29 . _ _ _ _ _ __
30 _ _ _ _ _ __

17- Ayto AOp&lt;ltr

J' ~ Rul Ellilt Winfed
J7 - Rulton

eSERYICES

Want Ad Advertlstng
Deadlmes
~

llil PM Oa•lv
12 Ngon 51hHci'V

11- Homtlmprovemtnls
U - Piumbmg&amp; EICIVIflnlil
U - E-\CIYOIIftl

14- Eitcfrlul
&amp; R.t!r1ttrlt on
U - Gtntrtl Hl~o~hnt
16- M H AIP&lt;IIr
17 - Uphollftrv

l or Monda~

31 _;___..:..__ __
32 __________
33._ _ _ _ _ _ __
34 . _ _ _ _ _ _ __

.111110 P•rh

A JlC(IUOriU

JJ - Fo~rms

24
--'---25 _________
__
26 _ _ _ _ _ __

Gr111 n

Jl- Proleu•on• l
SfrYICU

Jl- MObiii-HOmtS

22 _ _ _ _ _ __
23 _ _ _ _ _ __

Hounhold Gooch
CI!I T'.' R1d10 Eqv pment

Ant !JUI!i
M11c Morcnend•n
I!Iu1 !cl n9 Suppl u
~• - Pets lor 5ilc

l 'l - 511Uif~

Rates and Other Information
15 Words or Uncltr

35

cun
1cliV

...,

11 - W•nlfcliO Ren t

9- Wanted to Buv
I EMPLOYMENT

21 _ _ _ _ _ __

2 _ _ _ _ _ __

lor R~rnt
U - Apolrtmtnl lor lilrnt

4 -G•v~r•w•'l'

11 -

10 _ _~---11 _ _ _ _ _ __

.,-...
-.

J - Announcem~rnh

Pnnt one word •n each
space below Each '"
tf1al or group of ftgur es
counts as a word Count
name and address or
phone number tf used
You II get better results
'' vou descnbe f ully
gtve pr1 ce The Sentme l
reserves th e r •oht to
classtfy edtt or re,ect
any ad Your ad will be
put rn the proper
clas•f •catron 1f you II
check the proper box
below

•RENTALS

] dl\'1
J dl\'1

15------16 _ _ _ _ _ __

•a•vs

Cflortt

100

"'
"'
"' "'
"'
"'
word owtr !hem n•mum IS words Is 4 etnh ptr word Jtr ell\'
110

E1cfl
Ads rynn1111 otfltr then conucut•wt dus w1!1 bt cn•re-G 11 It'll 1 d•y

rllt

I
I
I

1

Mall Thts Coupon With Remittance
The Datly Senttnel
Bo~ 729

Pomeroy, Oh10 45769

In momorv C.,cl ol
11nk,
mint mum Clltlln '''&lt;'Inn

1ncl Ob1i11tr, • ""'',.,wont U DD

oncl 'f Ucl u lu " ' ICCtpleCI o y with Clift with
un1 ct'l~rt• tor &lt;~ell utr'l'l"9 &amp;g. ~u "1 11
•n Ctr• If Tnt

MOIIIIt HOIU 51111

orcltr u
Stnhntl

"---------..-------------- . ------------J

---

Publ•c Not•ce

pena lt 1es
charges
and
cos ts rncurred 1n the
foreclosure that are due
and unpa•d
At any t1me pr1or to me
f l1ng of an entry ol con
t 1rmat ton of sale
any
owner or lrenholder of a
parcel li sted 1n t he com
pla tnt may redeem such
parcel by tendenng to the
County
Treasurer the
amount
of
taxes
assessments 1 penalf•es
and charges due nnd un
pa1d on such Parcel
together w.th a ll costs
whtch have been tncurred
n any proceed ng 10
strtut ed
agatnst
suc h
parcel
under
Seclton
572 1 18 of the Rev1sed Code
Upon tfle flltng of any entry
of conf•rmatton of sale
There shall be no further
equ ty of redemptron Any
person ther eafter cla rmtng
any nght trtle and mlerest
n or !1en upon any such
shall be forever
parcel
barred and for ec losed of
any such r ght flfle 1n
Terest tn li en upon and any
equtty of redempt1on rn
such parcel
Larry E Spencer
CL erk of Court
at Common Pleas
131613 20 31c
Public Nottce
f.INANCtAL
REPORT OF
TOWNSHIPS
For F1scal Year
End1ng December
31 1980
Bec1ford Townshop
Mesgs County
Rt 2 Box15l
Cool\lllle, Oh10
Feb 17, 1981
I cerhfy the followmg
report to be correct
Helen Swartz
TownshiP Clerk
Tel No 614
696 1116
SUMMARY OF
CASH BALANCES,
RECEIPTS AND
EXPENDITURES
Balance
Jan 1 1980
General Fund
S 1 862 78
Motor Vehtcle
L 1cense Tax
22 18
Fund
Gasoltne Tax
1 S13 88
Fund
Road and Bndge
Fund
85 08
Federal Revenue
Shanng Fund
165 98
3 649 90
Total
Total Rece.pts
General Fund
10 67 1 27
Motor Ve ll1 cle
L1cense Tax
10,364 62
Fund
Gasolrne Tax
15 616 00
Fund
Road and Bndge
2 362 54
Fund
Federal Revenue
Shanng Fund
3984 00
Total
42 998 43
Totat Rece•pts
and Balances
General Fund
12 534 05
Motor VehiC le
L1cense Tax
Fund
10 386 80
Gasol rne Tax
17 129 88
Fund
Road a nd Bndge
2 447 62
Fund
Federal Revenue
Shar.ng Fund
4 1-49 98
Tota l
46 648 33
Expenditures
Genera l Fund
9 686 43
Motor Vehrc le
Lt cense Tax
Fund
8 056 35
Gasol rne Tax
Fund
1634051
Road and Bndge
Fund
2 154 85
Federal Rev enue
Sharmg Fund
3 263 92
Total
3950206
Balance
Dec 31. 1980
General Fund
2 847 62
Motor Veh•cle
License Tax
Fund
2,330 45
Gasol •ne Tax
Fund
789 37
Road and Bndge
Fund
292 77
Federal Rev enue
Shanng Fund
886 06
Total
7 146 27
CASH BALANCE ,
RECEIPTS AND
EXPENDITUilES
BY FUNO
General Fund
Balance Jan 1,
1980
1 862 78
Recetpts
General Property
Tax- Rea r Esta te
and Tra ler
&lt;Gross i
3 355 65
Tang•ble Personal
Properly Tax
(GrOSSI
17 97
Estate Tax
303 04
&lt;Grossl
Local Government
and Sta te Income
Tax
3 307 48
C1gc1• ette lu;ense
Fees and Ftnes
!G ros si
18 75
Other
3 668 38
10 671 27
Total Recei pts
To ta Begtnntng
Balance Plus
Receipts
12 534 05
EKpendllures
Total ExpendtturesAdm
8 083 13
Town Halls,
~n1orial Bu i ldings
.net Grounds
103 30

Pubhc Nottce
F1re
Pfotect 1on
1,500 00
Grand Total Exp ~
Genera l Fund
9,686 43
Balance, Dec 31 ,
1980
2,847 62
Total Exp Plus
Bal Dec 31.
1980
12,534 OS
Motor Veh1cle
L1cense Tax
Fund
Balance. Jan 1.
1980
22 18
Rece1pts
Motor Vehicle
L1cense Tax
10,314 95
Other
49 67
Total Rece1pts
10,364 62
Total Beginning
Balance Plus
Receopts
10.3111&gt; 80
Expend•tures
Total Exp MtSC
6,264 38
Maont
1,791 97
Grand Total Exp Motor Veh1cle
L•cense T a.x
Fund
8,056 35
Balance Dec 31
1980
2, 330 45
Total EKp Plus
Bal , Dec 31.
1980
1M86 80
Gasoline Tax
Fund
Balance Jan 1,
1980
l,Sl3 88
Rece1pts
Gasol.ne Tax
15,600 00
Other
16 00
Total Recetpts
15,6 1600
Total Beginn1ng
Ba lance Plus
Rece1pts
17,128 88
E)(pend1tures
Total Exp Mosc
6,192 00
Ma•nt
10,148 51
Grand Tota l Exp Gasoltne Tax
Fund
16 340 51
Balance D ec 31,
1980
789 37
Total Exp Plus
Bal , Dec 31.
1980
1712988
Road and Bndge
Fund
Balance, Jan I ,
1980
85 08
Rece•pts
General Property
Tax- Rear Estate
and Trailer
(Gross)
2 348 95
Tang1ble Personal
Property Tax
(Grossi
12 59
Other
100
Total Rece1pls
2 362 54
total Begln nrng
Balance Plus
Receopts
2 447 62
Expend•tures
Total Exp MtSC
1 682 02
Ma1nt
472 83
Grand Total Exp Road and B ndge
Fund
2,154 85
Balance, Dec 31.
1980
292 77
Total Exp Plus
Sal Dec 31
1980
2.447 62
Federal Revenue
Shanng Fund
Ba lance, Jan I,
1980
165 98
Rece1ph
Other Recerpts
3,984 00
Total Rece1pts
3 , ~84 00
Total Beg1nnmg
Balance Plus
Receipts
4,14998
Expendttores
Ma1nt and
Operatton
Other Expenses
3 26392
Total Exp
3,263 92
Balance, Dec 31 ,
1980
886 06
Total Exp Plus
Bal Dec 31
1980
4, 149 98

&lt;11 6 lie

Publtc Not1ce
publid•on of th1S nottce,
wh1ch w111 be publtshed on
ce each week for St)( con
secutt&gt;ve weeks The last
publlcat1on wrll be made on
March 20. 1981 , and the 28
days for answer will com
mence on that date
Larry E Spencer
Clerk of Court
of common Pleas
Me1gs County Oh10
121 13 20, 27. (31 6, 13,20

·•···· "' ..............

~ ... I I . . . . . . ...
- · Otl 0 "'" 100"'\

Card of Thanks
1 want to thank all of my
frtends, neighbors, Rutland
Nazarene Sunday School
Class, my Pastor Rev
Lloyd D Gr•mm, Rev and
Mrs Cecil W1se All others
who VIStted se nt cards
flowers and prayed for me
Also Dr Telle, Staff and
Nurses
at
Veterans
M emonal Hosp1tal
May God Bless You All
Mrs Anna Wolfe
'
We w•sh to thank everyone
for the k•ndness shown us
dunng the passrng of our
loved one
May God ever bless each of
you
The Harnngton Fam1ly
and Reuben Ware
lnMemonam

2

IN MEMORY of Hetloe
Wh1te who left us 11 years
ago on March 13th
Sadly mtssed by fam1IY
frtends and all that knew
her
IN MEMORY of my dear
husband Purley T K.arr
who passed away March 7
1975
The dearest of ttes we must
sever,
Tear's of sorrow are seen
every day,
But no s1ckness no s•gh•ng
forever
In that beaut•ful land far
away
Greatly m1ssed by Wife
Altona
sons Paul and
Horace Karr and daughter
Mrs
Katheryn Mora
Grandchtldrcn and Great
grandchildren
3

Announc;:ements
--

1 PAY highest pr1ces
posstble for gold and stlver
cotns nngs, 1ewe1ry etc
Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, Moddleport
Rac.ne Volunteer F 1re
Department sponsors a
shot gun &amp; nfle m atch
everv Sat n1ght 6 30 p m
at their build 1ng •n Bashan
Factory choke 12 guage
shot guns only Open s•ghts
22 r1fle

Starting Point!
Prinh·d Pattern
•

Pubt•c Notice
NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION
To Roger Epple whose
last known address was
Route 1 Reedsv ile Ohto
45772 and June Epple
whose last known address
was Route l. Reedsvtlle
Oh•o 45772, you are hereby
not•f•ed that you have been
named Defendants 1n a
legal ac t 1on ent1tled Ban
cOhro Nat1ona l Bank
P latnttff versus Roger EP
pie and June Epple ef al
Defendants
Thts act1on
has been asstQned case
number 17 703 and •s pen
dtng in the Court of Com
man Pleas of Mergs Coun
ty Pomeroy. Oh•o 45769
The object of the act •on •s
to marshal liens aga.nst
th e fOllOWing deSCribed
real es tate to wit
S• tu ated
tn
Chester
Townshrp Me1gs County,
Oh tO
Begl nnmg at t he south
west corner of Secti on 35 '"
Town 3 Range 12, Ohto
Company s
Purchase 1
thence n.lnntng north on the
west line of said Section
No 35 a dtstance of 641J2
rods thence runnmg east
parallel wtth the southllne
of satd sect• on to the ce nter
thence
of sa•d sect.an
sout h to the center ot a Run
ca lled Walkers Run a
d1sta nce of B'h rods thence
south 49 degrees west 32
rods to the mouth of a
dram thence sou th to the
sectron I me thence west on
th e south line of satd sec
tlon to the place of beg•n
n•ng conta1n1ng 60 acres,
more or less
Save and except the coa l
underlytng sa1d premises
wh1ct1•s not conveyed or tn
tended to be conveyed by
th•s conveya nce
Excep l~ng and Reservtng
a life estate only tor Elma
Epp le In a one storv frame
house ~nd two acres
loca ted on the above
dcscr.bed property
The demand ot the Com
plaint •s that all ot the
ltenholders c latming an In
terest tn m e real estate set
up therr clatms and that the
real es tate be sold and the
proceeds of the sale applied
aga1nst the two Judgments
of the Pla1nt1ff one In the
a moun I of $516 817 17 and
the seoond 10 the amount of
S236 416 04
whoch
liens
were recorded 1n Volume 1,
Page 389, Meigs County
Records of Judgments In
the Offoce of lhe Clerk of
Courts of M e•gs County,
OhtO
You are requtred to an
swer lhc Complaint within
18 days alter the lasJ

~

Announcements

RACINE GUN SHOOT,
Racme Gun Club, e\lery
Friday ntght starttng at
7 30 p m Factory choke
guns only

MEIGS MUSEUM open by
appomtment Janua,-y Mar
ch 992 2264 992 2802, 992
2360 or 992 2639 Hlsloroes
for
sale
Pomeroy
M•ddleport L1brar1es

BRITT ANY
Spanoel
18
months old male mother
&amp; father reg•stered Puppy
not reg1stered but full
blooded To goOd home on
countrv 992 3694
Free to good horne 5 year
old Blue T1ck Hound dog
and a blac k and whtte part
Lab Retnever and Blue
t1ck 3 months old 378 6319

__
6

--

_.___

Lost and Found

Lost
small blllck dog
male
long ha i r
taken
somet•me Wedn esday bet
ween the hours of_. and 5 30
p m
Name IS Rusty
Anyone
knowtng
whereabouts call 992 7086
Sallie Byers L1ke a son not
a hunt!Og dog

Los t brown wallet •n the
v•ctnlfY of Crows Steak
House
•n
Pomeroy
Valuable pa pers needed
Leave at the Sentinel otftce
or tn the n1ght depoSitory at
the offtce on 111 Court
Street Can phone742 2072

Humane

Yard Sale
PORCH SALE Saturday
March 7th from 9 5 Turn
ftrst road lett past the WM
PO rad1o statton from Mid
dleport t"llll
watch for
!tgns ram or shine Baby
clothes, rock1ng horse,
rec ltntng super sw•ng l ots
of other mtsc •terns
9

-~--

Want~_!&lt;&gt;_ Buy

Wanted to Buy c lass rings
weddmg bands, anythmg
stamped !OK UK or 18K
gold Stiver co• ns , pocket
watches Call Joe Clark at
992 205-t at Clarks Jewelry
St ore Pomeroy Ohto 4.5769
CHIP WOOD Poles max
dtameter 1&lt;4 ' on largest
end S12 50 per ton Bundled
slab
S l 0 50 per ton
Delivered to Ohio Pallet
Co , Rock Spnngs Rd
Pomeroy 992 2689

Heres the 1ackel thal 1 the
STARTING POIN I tor dozen s ol
great looks w11h pants skorts
dres1es Very very ea sy- sew II
and a beu~t '" linen gahardme
Pronted Pallern 4869 Mosses
Sozes 8 10 11 14 16 18 10
11 (bust 34) J3CMel 1 118
,ds 45 on be"l 5/ 8

s,.

sz oo far uch poltetn

Add

soe

for ucfl 111nem far thst-ci.s
ltmtlll ond hlndhna S.nd to:

Anne Acloms

Pllltrn llopl

t 'I 1

The Datly Senttnel
243 West 17 SL, flew Yark, NY
10011 Priot NAM£, AIJHESS,
ZIP, Silt, 11d STllE NUMBER
We streamltned the sewing 10
save you ltme so you can sne
money' Send now for NEW 1981

SPRING SUMMER PAnERN CAT
AlOG 100 slyles free pallern
coupon ($1 Value) Catalot Sl

1~14QiolclQuilb
.$175
133-f. . . lfllloCitoittinl $1.75

IJO.SIItllen-SI•-JI-51 $1.75
IH-QIIdJ£., Trllllflts $1.75

malltng work
No ex
per•ence requtred
AP
PLY Ctr cle Sales P 0
Box 224 D. Rochmond Hill
NY 11418

Attract1ve part time work
for
well
groomed
homemakers who love
pretty tash•ons and want to
keep up on current styles
Average $10 00 ~r hour
plu s tree wardrobe for
those who
qualify
Management opportun.ty
open For free mfomatton
please phone 992 394 1 or
669 4535
VETERANS' IF YOU CAN
SPARE 39 DAYS A YEAR
I T COULD BE WORTH
OVER Sl 500 TO YOU
PLUS FREE
TUITION
ASSISTANCE
TO ANY
WEST
VIRGINIA
COLLEGE
OR
AC
CREDITED BUSINESS
OR
TRADE SCHOOL
CONTINUE
YOUR
RETIREMENT BENEFI
TS HELP YOUR COM
MUNITY IN TIME S OF
EMERGENCY
' THE
NATIONAL
GUARD
N EEDS
YOUR
EX
PERIENCE GOOD PAY ,
GOOD BENEFITS FOR
DETAILS CALL SSG
0 NEAL AT 1304 675 3950 )

I RON AND BRAS S BEDS
Old turn1ture, desks, gold
r.ng s
te welry , Stiver
dOllars, sterling, etc WOOd
rce boxes jars antiques
et c complete households
Write M 0 Miller Rl 4
Pomeroy OH
45769 Or
ca ll992 7760

ATTRACTIVE

home

Pets for Sale

56

Reg1stered trained walker
18 months old $75 992 7001

on

Private sett 1ng on St Rt 7
by Memory Gardens Ter
ms 992 7741

61

7 rooms &amp; bath, full s11e at
tic, 3 room basement In
Pomeroy 992 7001

1976 Gravely converttble,
dual wheels electnc start,
eight speed, 30 mower,
sull&lt;y 992 7605

Farm Equtpment

Housing-

Sec retary nee ded for con
st ruc tr on lteld office Apply
'" person to Bob Campbell
Ontarto
P1p 1ng,Second
Str ee t Racrne , Oh10 45771
WANTED 3 people to sell
Avon Ca lt 742 2354 or 742
2755
12

S1tuat1ons Wanted

TREE TRIMMING and
r emoval 9.t9 1129 or 992
6040
Work 1n dayttme help,ng
el derly people
Rutl and
Pomeroy Middl eport area
7 42 2288
HAVE va cancy
Room,
laundry for the
board
el derly 992 6022
Will care for the elder ly 1n
our home Women men or
co uples Tra1ned and ex
per•enced 992 7314
W111 do wallpapering 992
3760
13

Insurance

AUTOMOB IL E
IN
SURANCE
been can
your
c elled'
Lost
operators l•cense' Phone
9922143

18

wanted to Do

Furnace repatrs electrt c al
work
plumbmg
mobilf:'
home or res.dence ~92
58S8

-

T rn ~
EAFORD

VIRGIL B SR ., .,o,
,_ ., E Second Street

Phone
1 (614)·972-3325
NEAR TOWN and
schools 3 bedrooms
stucco, City water, bath
natural gas furnace and
about one acre wtth
~O:~b~~~N 2 l evel
lots and old 7 room
house on land contract
C1ty water, electnc and
natura l gas
FAMILY HOME 5
bedrooms new bath 2
furnaces, carpet1ng,
paneltng and many
other nt ce new things
Large yard, basement
andsunporch
NEW LISTING 45
acres
1n
Rut land
Townsh•P bnars brush
Leadrng Creek water
elec tn c and mtnerals
RESTFUL &amp; NICE Modern 3 bedroom
home has d•n•ng With
slldr ng glass door to
patto Garage, stainless
S1nk 2 full baths and
large yard 1n a ntce set
ling
NOW IS THE TIME TO
CALL A REALTOR TO
SELL YOUR PROPER
TV tRY 992 332S or
H2 3176

_

Housing .
Headquarter.&lt;.

~ .• ~ ...

/

~~~~~~~~~~===r~==~~;~;===19
31

K

Homes for Sate

Beauttful three bedroom
ranch brtck home In Baum
Addition, Pomeroy, OhiO
Gas heat central a•r Call
992 2571 or l 687 6429
Mobile Homes
for Sale
1973 Crown Haven, 14 x 65 ,
three bed,ooms , new car
pet 1971 Cameron 14 x 64
two bedrooms new carpet
1972 Champoon 12 x 60 two
bedrooms new carpet 1976
Cameron 12 K 60, two
bedrooms all electrt c 1971
Sky line , 12sx 6), two
bedrooms bath &amp; 'IJ new
carpet
1970
PMC,
12 x 60 , two bedrooms new
car pet B X S Sales, Inc
2nd x V•and Street Pomt
Pleasant, WV Phone 675
4424

32

1969 PMC 3 bedroom
lraoler 12x60 992 39S4

1975 VIKING MObile Home
12x65 m excellent con
d1t1on, under p1nn1ng 10
eluded $5500 DO 247 3942
1974 Skyl1ne Mob•le Home
$5 500 1h acre lot all set up
13 000 992 20S5

s

JS

lots &amp; Acreage

TRAI LER LOT for sale,
$4,000 00 992 2571
Acreage One acre and one
half of ground located bet
ween old Rt 33 a.nd new Rt
33 factng
the Me•gs
Fatrgrounds S4000 00 992
2571

POMEROY,
992-2259

0.

NEW LISTING - Han
dyman s special, thts
older home needs same
help but w•ll be a good
bet for the future,
!ocafed on a large ap
prox
240x140 lot
3
bedrooms, d tntng room
large front porch and
workshop
ONLY'
Sl3 000
NEW LISTING - Close
in and conven1 ent Th•s
home features a mce I!V
1ng room and dung
room basement w1th
garage and 2 bedroomsS20 000
NEW LISTING - N~
Constructton - 5 roo
home w1th over an acr
land 3 bedrooms utilt
tv
attached garage
electrtc
B B
h ea t
dishwasher 537,500
NEW LISTING A
home to be proud ot • 5
room home on over 1
acre Fully tnsulated
electriC 8 B heat 3
bedroms uttl lty Also 2
garages Really n•ce
S37 500
SMALL PRICE - BIG
VALUE - 2 bedroom
home wtth elec tn c heat
11v1ng room
drn10g
room bath and utlltty
rooms Over 1 acre land
10 mmutes to town
$16 200
REALTOR
Heney E Cleland, Jr
992 6191
ASSOCIATES
ootfle &amp; Roger Turner
992 l692
Jean Truuell949 2660
OFFICE 992 2259

Will do panelmg, ceiling
floor file plumb•ng Free
es t.mates Fred Mtller at
992 6338

~4

Apartment
for Rent

Four room apartment for
rent 992 5908
Three room effiCiency
apartment $65 00 per week
or $25000 per month With
all util1t1es paid 992 3092 or
after 5 phone 9~2 3762
Four room apartment, fur
ntshed or unfurn•shed
Phone 992 3092 or after 5
phone 992 3762
Furmshed Rooms

45

Sleeptng rooms
by the
week
Kdchen,
and
televtston lounge Carryout
store and restaura nt w•th•n
500 feet '1192 6370
46

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33 North of
Pomeroy Large lots Call
992 7479
TRAIlER spaces for rent
Southern Valley Mobile
Home Park, Cheshtre, Oh
992 3954

Anttques

Sl

ATTENTION
(IM
PORTANT TO YOU! Woll
pay cash or certtfled check
for anttques and col1ec
trbles or enttre e,tates
Noth•ng too large Also,
guns pocket watches and
co1n collecttons Call 614
767 3167 or 557 3411

42

Mob1le Homes
for Rent

12x60, 2 bedroom Mobile
Home Ractne area 992
S858
Two bedroom
mobtle
home
co mplete ly fur
n•shed Depostt requtred
Adu lts preferred 992 2749

2 bedroom Mob•le Home
Adults
only
Browns
Traoler Court Monersvolle
992 3324

1- Good Hillpoint wunf!r
GE TV
t- 15cu It Holpo1n l
R~:lnqer•tor

St ill" lew new Kero~ene
l Onlv New 011 Stove Closeout
S.tve
$1SOOO
All ot the ibove H~rm1 m 111
ulltnt cond t.o11 All o~rt pt~etd
to sell tr"mfd•.aiely Set vl to

• .,

1976 Chevy p1ckup W rll sell
or trade for van of equal
value 992 7453
1979 Ford F150 4 x 4 power
steenng
power brakes,
four speed 351 eng one,

150 v 8 power steenng,
power brakes, good trres
$90000 or best offer 992
2876 after 6 p m or 992 5218
days

74

and downspouts, gutter
cleansng and pamt.ng
Allwork guaranteed

Free Esflma 1es
Reasonable Pnces
Call Howard
949 2862
949 2l 'O
u
2 4 tfc

New , used, and antique fur
nlture No Item to lnrge or
lo small Will buy 011e piece
or complete households
Martin's Generttl Store at
992 6370

Home
Improvements

tenstve remodelmg
• Electncal work
eRoOflngwork
years
12
Expereence
G
R
h

reg

ous

Ph 992 • 7583
2 23 l mO

....
h k
Let George f"' 111 er c ec
your present electncal
systemResldenhal
&amp; Commercral
Call742-3195
or 992-7680

2 8 lfc

THE DABBLE SHOP
NOW OPEN
Mon Wed 10 oo 9 od
Tues Fn Sat
10 00 5 00
Closed Thursdays
Stop '" and see our lm e
of plastercraft You can
en1ov maktnq vour q1fts
and help hght mftat1on
located ne xt to Dale
Hill Ford Tractor '"
Pomeroy

Two Jack Kramer tenn 1s
racquets Four and three
etg hths 11ght four and one
halt light Excellent co n
do loon S2S 00 each 992 5523

REMODELING , doors
panelt ng
ce 11 1ng til e
floors s,1dtng &amp; patntmg 25
years expenence ~92 2759

1- - - - - -----_:_______;,__--,

Rutland Fum~ure carpet Shop
SPRING CARPET SALE
KITCHEN
CARPET

CARPET
ITH PADDIN

2 Rolls
Rubber Back

From

From

Reg SIS 9S

12.95 &amp; up

1

Installed

Greens NcWO jlen

•GnnLeuons F orAttA~•
w~ atti!r 1o \ate top oualtv Doon ~nn
oncu ardmlnann•~~
BROWNING

nt

h~nl

ng 01

Prti~MU !tOll caou •l
torma •niiiO!IGin, l hon
Wf •too , ury • ,om plole I ne G BrDWn

..

ong Sporing Good!

ALLSTEEL

Farm Buil~ings
S11es
"From 30x30"
SMALL

Utility Buildings

JOYCE ELECTRICAL
SUPPLIES
College Rd
Syracuse.
Oh
Ph 992 3804
2 23 1 mo

Rt 3, Box 54
Rac1ne, Oh
Ph 614 843 2591
6 15 tfc

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

CONSTRUCTION

-Auto and Truck
Repatr
- Transm1sston
Repatr
Hrs Mon Fn
9A M 5 30 PM

•S1d1ng •lnsulatton •Roofmg •Storm Wmdows • Concrete Work • Sepftc Systems
•Backhoe •Dump Truck~ •Remodelmg
•New
construct1on
•Guttertng
&amp;
Downspouts

PH. 992-7119

992-5682
10 7 lfc

40625 St Rt 681

2 13

1 mo pd

~~~~2§~~§~~~~~~
I~;;
ARD
GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE·

GllAVEL.Y - Wtltlt
r d.ng lncton Push

ben 1111
&amp;

~

sen pr.o

mowtr$
SNAPPER - PU$h &amp; sell pr'o
mowen nd1ng tr.1ct[ln
ATL.AS- Tdlen
WE EO EATER - Brush cutter &amp;

$799

Sq.
Ydcash n Carry

lnmmcrs

t

STIHL- Brush culten &amp; ,,..,

All Models
Available
LEO MORRIS
Rt 1 S1de H1ft Rd
Rutland OIJ
2 9 tfc

81

742 2211

!-IE PR06A6LI( WROTE

J

Stz-:..s from 4x6 to 12x40

SHAG

RUTLAND FURNITURE
HOME A LOT

WGJ ~ ~ ..

t shng boots Aho

DAVID BRICKLE$

Buy Now &amp; Save $2-$6 Per Yard.
25 rolls carpet m stock to ptck from
Regular backed carpet mstalled free,
wtth pad
Dnve A ltttle- Save A lot

"•

...::

• ~ .. I ng I.Ch PP ng

Cash 'n' Carry

IT'S A VERI(
FAMOUS COMMA

THE

~~

Res1dent1al &amp; L1ght
Cammerc1al Electrtcal
S"ophes
Qua hty Products
Reasonable Prtces

ROGER HYSEU.'S
GARAGE

Home
...... _ Improvements_ _

French C1ty Pa•ntmg
Restdent•al
commerc ta l
Interior
ex ter 1or
Spec •al•z•ng
tn
lntenor
pamtmg paper hangtng &amp;
textured ce ilmgs
Free
esttma te s 367 7784 or 367
7160

--

~--

--~

83

_

_§_~ava hn!.._ -~

COMPLETE sever 1n
stal lat ron &amp; ba ckhoe ser
v•ce for Racine Syracuse
sewer d •stnct Dozer work
tf nee ded 949 2293

85

~-

--

G£n~al H_!ulin~

J&amp;C San ttat1on SerV•ce
Trash pickup avatlable •n
V llage of Mi dd l epor t
Phone 992 50 16 or 992 7597
an'{ttme

'

.ng needs

VA loans no money down
Federal Housmg 3% on 525,000
S% on balance
Conventional Loans5%
down
Call tor Information
992 7S44

992-62150r992 7314
Oh

Dozer work Small JObs a
742 2753

Cut oft saw 992 6035

For all of your wtr-

992-7544

V.C. YOUNG II

spec1r~lty

Now buying gold and
silver old pocket watches,
chains diamonds silver
money and cams Martin s
General Store, Middleport
992 6370

CUNNtNGHAM
&amp;.ASSOC.
Mortgage, Bankers

-Addons and
remodeltng
-Roofing an,t gutter
work
-concrete work
-Plumbing and
electrical work
(Free Est• mates)

BARNEY

GOES
MV DADBURN
SHOCK ABSORBER!!

Body
Repiillr
- lnsurance
Expert
paontong,
body
work, ptnstriptng &amp;
vmyl tops
Free Estimates
Call99l-3421
t&lt;mgsbury Rd, 2 m1
west co Rd 18
Pomeroy,Oh 45769
Domestic, Japanese &amp;
European
Cars
&amp;
Trucks
2 15 1 mo

ELECTRICAL
SUPPLIES

Plumbrng
&amp; H ea '~'"·-cg._~­
WATER
WELLS
DomestiC and co mmerc •a l
pump sales and servtce
Tom
Lew•s
Dnlltn g
Seasonal d•scount on pum
ps 1 304 895 3802 or I 304
895 3641

SHUX··THAR

H&amp;R BODY SHOP MIU.ER ELECTRIC
SERVICE •
work Colllston Repatr

CARPENTER
SERVICES"

82

Old or h•sfoncal 1tems
from Me1gs Co
Par
t lcularly Pomeroy Stgned
stoneware
bottles, ad
IJerttsing
photographs,
tokens ,
document s
souvenir pieces postcards,
etc I'm a co llector, not a
dealer Call Bob Roberts
after 5 p m 992 2592

213)mO

Motorcycles

W•ll do carpenter work and
.ntenor or extenor pa.n
t10g Free esttmates CALL
992 6190 or 949 2614

1nsta lted

Bags Lrmrt Per Weeki
PHONE 992 7802
or992 7443

f }'"~

"

PEANUTS

2 F 70 u on Remington
t1res '"good cond 882 3592

c4

c~~============~~~~t;::::::::=:~2~2;3~l~m~o~
~~::::P:h::36:7:7:S:60~l~l~t~f
H l WRITESEL
ROUSH

19 78 Ford F250 4 wheel
drr'.'e super cab all extras
good cond 742 2068

Matn St.

HALLEY'S COMMA?

Bedford Townshtp
and
Flatwoods Area
$5.00 Per Month
Weekly PICkUp

:~~~;=~.~:;:~,: ~:-~~:.:;; ~~~-~ ~~(;t ~: .:.~,f.: r.T·f

&amp;JLANDMARK
.._.....
n22181
E Ma.n Sf
Pomeroy

7.99 &amp; up

Unfurn•shed one bedroom
apartment f or rent Ren
ters asstsfance available
for sen1or c•ftzens Contact
Vtllage Manor Apartments
at 992 7787

Water Sewer Electrtc
Gas Ltne DitChes
Water Lme Hook ups
Sept•c Tanks
County Cert•hed
Roush Lane
Cheshtre Oh

1976 Chevy ptckup truck,
Wtll sell or trade tor van or
equa l value 992 7453

WILL DO ALL k1nds of car
pentry work, •ncludmg
paneltng cet ltn9s repatrs
etc
Expertenced
wtth
references Phone 992 3941

POMEROY

1

Is Phone 992 5434

Trucks for Sale

' " '~

HUffn

Three bedroom mob1le
home
near Cheshtre
SlSO 00 per month SSO 00
deposo I 367 7811

---3 AND 4 RM furn•shed ap

72

DUMP TRUCK
Ph. 992- 7201
35 lmo

iN/

REESE
TRENCHING
SERVICE

Genes Carpet Cleanmg
deep stream extractiOn
Free
est1mated
reasonable rates
scot
chquard 992 6309 or 742
2211

1- H

no ce yard, ulolotoes paod
992 5949 or 992 9975

Apartment
for Rent

2 19 ttc

81

r;:,~~c:.;;, o~o;r:;e~ tr'o~~

44

245·9113

1980 Datsun front wheel
dr1ve 4Speed 12,000m11es
992 7001

&amp;eF"JIEes

Mow~rr

S•x room house and bath
w1th ut•ltty room
Ctty
water and gas SlSO 00 per
month woth SSO 00 depoSit

KEN SOLES

197 4 X R 75 Honda motor
cyc le •n good cond•t •on
S250 DO Phone 992 5523

1-11 Hors• Powtr R1d.ng

Houses for Rent

Free Estimates

S ace for Rent

SEVERAL chOICe butldmg
lots Eastern D1strict.Tup
pers Pla1ns Chester water
Owner w111 help ftnance
992 5869

41

DENNEY
CHAIN LINI(
FENCE

1974 Chevrolet Malibu
classtc, PQ'(t'er steer.ng,
power brakes, atr con
d rt1onmg au .tomat1c No
r ust A 1 condtt•on $975 00
985 4124

1975 Mercury Marquts, two
low m rleage
ex
door
cellen t cond1tton S1600 00
form 742 2734

Backhoe
EKcavahng
Septic Systems
Water, Sewer &amp; Gas
Ltnes
L1censed &amp; Bonded

HART'S
TRASH HAULING

Ir~=====~~~~=~~=========~t~=====~~~~~

--~-~-

1977 Ford Granada 6 cyl1n
der, 3 speed, overdnve
742 2451

•
•
•
•

Middleport, Oh
Ph. 992·6263
Anyt 1me
32lmo

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . &amp;-0. . . . .

71
Autos for Sale
1976 Plymouth
Val ore
wagon a•r cond•t•onong.
etc
very ntce $1500 00
Glen Bosse! I at 949 2801 or
49 286o

J&amp;F
ENTERPRISES

12 Park St.

••.. 1. .1"•··-········

Headquarters

Real Estate- General

Fun ttme and part ttme
bartender Apply tn person
No phone calls No eM
penence necessary Me1gs
Jnn
~

KAUFPS
PWMBING
AND
HEAnNG

two and one half acres

Cdr salesman
Send
resume to Bo~ 179H co
The Oarly Sentmel
111
Cour t Street
Pomerov
Ohio 45769

--------

Found average SiZe collie
with co llar and tags
Terr•bly shy , p oss i bly
blind Found '" the M1ner
sville Hill area If know
whose dog thts may be
please co ntact 992 2724

brown •n color
Socrefy, 992 6260

SIZES 8-20

s185 00 to SSOO weel&lt;ly doong

Ace Hardware at Mill
Street m Middl eport 1s now
selling hunt1ng and f1shlng
l rsce nse

G1ve away adorable pup
p1es to good home Will be
large dogs Call992 5914

Business Services

Homes for Sale

3 BEDROOM
2 bath,
modern kitchen, llvmg
room, d•ntng room , ofttce,
full basement new heat
system wtfh central a1r,
unattached garage,
2
blocks from school 992
3443

__

LADY or girl to ltve •n 992
2686

T1red of penny p~nch•ngP
Housewives and mothers
change spare t1me •nto $$$$
FleXIble hours excellent
earnrngs, free wardrobe
Two eventngs a week For
more tnformahon cal l 992
3941 or 669 4S35.

------FOUND 1 female boxer

4869

11 ·--==~.!!!.

GET VALUABLE tra1nong
as a young business person
and earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Sen
t1ne1 route earner Phone
us nght away and get on
the eligtbll•ty list at ~92
2156 or 992 2157

APPLES golden del•c•ous,
$3 IS per bushel Olher
vanettes at $4 00 per bushel
and up F1tzpatnck Or
chard Sf R:t 689 Phone
669 3785

G1veaway

31

Real Estate- Gl'neral

LOCKSMITH
Service
Master Key1ng
Com
b10atrons, Bonded Call
New Haven W Va (304)
882 2079

4

KIT 'N CARLYLE '"

OLD COl NS pocket wat
ches, class rings, wedding
bands, d•amonds Gold or
StiiJer Call J A Wamsley,
Treasure Chest Cotn Shop,
Athens. OH su 4221

YOUR
PIANO
Too
IJaluable to neglect, expert
tuntnQ &amp; and repa1r Lane
oan 1els 742 2951 or 992
2082

81 G shoot1ng match at th e
Corn Hollow gun club Sun
day March 8th Starts at 12
noon

Wanted to Buy

WANTED
TO
BUY
GOLD ,
SILVER
PLATINUM, STERLING'
COINS, RINGS,JEWELR
Y , MISC
ITEMS
AB
SOLUTE
MARKET
PRICE GUARANTED ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP, MIDDLEPORT,
OHI0992 3476

84

e lectncal
&amp; Refngerat ~
oo"'n'---

SE WING
MACHINE
Repa•rs
serv•ce
a ll
makesl
992 2284
The
Fabnc Shop
Pom eroy
Authonzed S1nger Sales
and Servrce We sharpen
SC ISSOrS

mers
Y AlOO- H• wheel mowers
We !ierv1ce whal we sell

'
,

Smo111 Eng nu- Our Spect&lt;~ll,lf
Pomeroy 01'1
PH 9'11 HH

204 Condor 51

J.S lmo

84

~---

Etectncal
&amp; ~fngerahon

ELWOOD
BOWE'RS
RE PAl R
Swee p~rs,
toasters 1rons a ll small
appliances Lawn mower
Next to State Hrghl(lay
Garage on Route 7 985
3825

�Pomero

Frida , March 6, 1981

ort, Ohio

Engineers accept Plan.
V."'-\c:.,S COUI(J'f

Plan B--an estimated $258.2
ml!Uon proposals--has been
selected by the Huntington District
of the U.S. Corps of Engineers as
the best plan for correcting the
hazardous conditions at the
Gallipolis Locks and Dam.
This decision was revealed
Wednesday night at the weekly
dinner meeting of the Point
Pleasant Rotary Club by Col.
James Higman, commander of the
Huntington District of the U.S.
Corps of Engineers.
"Today Is a red letter day for the
Huntington District," Col. Higman
told Rotarians, "because this is the
date I submitted the report to the
Cincinnati division engineer,"
Higman, however, emphasized
that several other steps must be
taken before the proposed project is
at the construction stage. He
estimated It wUI be 18 to 24 months
before Congress will authorize
funds for construction.

P~UBLIC

HEA-lTH

DE.PARTH:ENT
'AMICUS HUMAN I GENERIS ' ·

AMICUS HUMAN! GENERIS- "We are lrie.nds to all Humanity."
Thus sayeth the new sign at the Meigs County Health Department, this is
a slogan that the Staff, Health Commissioners and Board of Health are
working hard to build upon.

Heart disease major death
cause during '80 in Meigs

"Once construction is authorized
and funds are available," Col.
Higman conunented, "I estimate
that final design, preparation of
plans and specifications, real estate
acquisition, and award of a major
construction contract will reqllire
about three years.
"Actual construction will require
about four years ," continued
Higman, "And the " new" Gallipolis
facility will be In service about 199()
if all goes well."
Higman said Plan B, whjch Includes building of a canal and
provides for 1200 ft. and 600 lt. lock
chambers, was selected over four
other long siudled plan proposals.
He said the breakdown of costs
for the planned replacement In··
eludes $174.8 million for new locks,
$41.5 mllllon fo~ dam rehabilitation,
$9.5 million for other construction,
$25.2 mllllon for engineering and
design, supervision and admln41tration and $7.2 mlllion ·for
mitai!ation of wildlife, habitat loss
and archeological salvage.
The present Gallipolis Locks and
Dam was built 43 years ago, ac·
cording to Col. Higman, and at the
present time passes more traffic,
tonnage and barges than any
project upstream of Louisville and
performs mo~e lockage eyeles than
any other locks on the Ohio River.

OPEN FRIDAY TIL 8
SPECIAL SALE PRICES lHIS

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
··Girls or Boys
• Men's Jeans
• JeweiiJ

Jackets
• Tube Socks
• Junior Slacks
• Wintuk Yam

•CARPET AT THE WAREHOUSE

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

I
No. 4
Copyrighted 1981

diseases.

Other major death causes ere cancer, 16: emphysema or respiratory
arrest. seven: broncho pnewnonia ,
five : accidents, five; suicides, six ;
gastro intestinal bleeding, three:
crib deaths, two; toxemia, one, and
stroke, one.
The Meigs County Health Department, now loeated in the new "Multi
Purpose Building" recorded 178 births and issued 1.446 certificates and
permil"i .

Other infonnation released in the
report included :
ENVIRONMENTAL
HEALTH STAT ISTICS
Public Water Samples, 60 Ta k en,
60 saf e. 0 unsaf e, P riva te, 96 t aken,
40 sale, 56 unsafe ; Sewage P er mi t s,
issued 69; Food Service ope r a f 1ons.
99 1icensed , 220 i nspect ions; Ve n di ng
Locnt ions, 4l icensed . 10 inspec t ions ;
Traile r Park s. 7 licensed, 15 inspe ct ions ; Camps, seven l i censed,
n ine in~pect i o n s ;
Schools , 20
1ocat 1ons, dO inspe ct ions; Publ ic
Swim Pools, two licensed , 50 in spect ions; Ot her bat hing places, tw o
li censed , f ive i nspec t ionsi Nu i sance
com pl a i nt s Rece ived, 128 , co n·
sultatio ns 2 12, inspec t ions \57 .
Rabies Control
a tot QI of 125
dogs and 10 cat s we r e va cci nated at
a pub lic c lin ic sponsored b y The
hea l th department las t June . A total
ot 58. an imr~l b ites wer e reported.
For ty six dogs, si x cars, S i )( w ild
anima ls, fo ur w ild anim a l s, t hree
dogs. and one ca t head w er e fran ·
sport ed to the Ohio Depa rtm ent of ·
Health lab for exami nat ion . Al l ot
these we r e fou nd to-be negative .
NURSING STATISTICS
Hi gh Risk Mothers and Ch i ld ren
Prog r am ---.- Tota l m aterni t y c lients
- 723 an d th ei r subsequent c hi ld ren
we r e screened and given ap·
propr ia te ca r e. Plus 53 c h il dren
we r e. under th e age of one ye ar wh o
req ui r ed specia l assistan ce .
In dus trial
H y p e r te n s i o n
Screen ings 257. H y pert ension
Control Pr ogram scr eene d 578 in·
div idual s betwee n 15·65 a nd over .
H ypertens ion Clin ics co ndu cted
thr ou g hout th e coUnty - 61.
B.C .C .S. 22 1 childre n w ere
prov i d ed
services und er
the
ausp iceS of the Burea v 1 of Cr ippl ed
Ch ildr en .
Well Ch i ld - 361 ch il dre n w er e
exam ined ; 42 we r e given f ollow·up
clini cs ; 508 children were r efe rred to
oth er cli nics.
Speci al Cl ini cs - 13 wer e hel d (i n·
el ud i ng Or t ho pedic a , Card i ac
I Hea r f) , Pla st ics, Vi sion a nd
Hea r i ng Conser va t ion) during wh ich
53 8 1i r st t i m e cl ients wer e sc r eened ;
fOll ow -up ser v ices w e r e fll en
provi ded to 144 of th e or igin a l538 .
B lood Spec imens --- 22 7 wer e
drawn an d submitted to Oh io Oepar·
tm ent of Health labs. These in cluded
spec i m ens t hat w er e sc r ee ned for
the followi ng d isea ses. 74 Venereal
D1se ase ; 150 A nemi a Scr ee nings ; 1
Le ad Poiso ning ; 1 Phenylke tonuria ;
1 Sickl e Ce ll Prep.
Nu rsi ng V i sits· - Nine w er e m ade
to co unty schoo ls for Publi c H ealth
Educa tion . E)(am inat ion s 80
prov ided for Head Start ch il d r en as
a pr er eq uisi te tor enrollment .
Influenza - 672 we r e g iv en .
I m mun iza tion s - 1, 430 w er e given
to ages SIX weeks to 19 yea r s of age.
F am il y Plann ing Educati on - 17 2.
Drug Abuse Educa tion - 194
A lcoho li sm E du cat ion - 16 7. ·
Specia l Individuali zed Assessm en·

9 sections, 70 Pageo 2S Cents

Sunday, March a, 1981

1

Vol. 15

Middleport-Pome foy-Gallip()iis-Point Pleasant

A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

OVRDC Director denouncJ.s proposal

Impact of SQuthem Ohio cuts 'enormous'
.

i

By LARRY EWING
all of the fiscal year 1981 funds that
GALLIPOLIS The ad- have been appropriated to the A~
mlnistation's proposed budget cuts palachian Regional Commission. In
will have an " enourrnous impact on addition, the administration ill
southern Ohio communities in terms proposing a fiscal year 1982 budget
of potential improvements, money that requests no funds for the ARC. 1
and jobs lost," G. Robert Schwable,
The OVRDC dlstrlct, which serves
Executive Director of the Ohio 11 southern Ohio counties including
Valley Regional Development Com- Gallia, Jackson, Lawrence and Vin·
mtssionsaldSaturday.
ton, receives substantial funding
David Stockman, Director of the through the ARC .
Office of Management and Budget,
The last session of Congress
has presented Congress with a passed legislation that continued the
rescission order to recover almost legal authorizatlo!l for ARC

'

programs through fiscal year 1982.
However, without any ap·
proprlations the commission would
be unable to continue its programs
and assistance.
"A total of $37 mlllion ih ARC funds has been invested in the 11 county
area," OVRDC Director Schwabie
said.
"These investments made
possible new services, more
housing, better health and
education, and other quality life im·

provements for which a dollar value
cannot be assign.ed," Schwable continued.
According to the OVRDC director,
the administration's request to
recover appropriated 1981 funds endangers several projects in the area
that have not received final ·approval.
"Many projects involve other
federal , state and local matching
funds which wiU probably be lost if
Congress approves the rescission."

~anson

prosecutor
will speak at Rio·

RW GRANDE
Vincent
Bugliosi, who gained national attention over 10 years ago when he
prosecuted cult leader Charles Manson, will be guest lecturer at Rio
Grande College at 8 p.m. March 16.
Bugliosi's appearance is part of
the college continuing artist and lectu're series, Stardates.
The author of "Heller Skelter,"
the book which grew out of his experiences with the Manson trial, and
"Till Death Do Us Part," a true
murder mystery, Bugliosi is considered one of the nation's top
prosecuting attorneys, and is a
much-sought after speaker.
In his speech, he will discuss the
Manson case and reveal facts about
the "family," their philosophies,
and how various kinds of people
came to view Manson as Jesus
Christ.
The speech will also center on the
spread of cultism into our soelety
and what can be done about it. His
current efforts involve an attempt to
re-investigate the assassination of
Robert F. Kennedy.
Tickets for the speech, which will

Meigs County deputy
health commissioner
Hea rt-related diseases were again
the leading cause of death for 1980 in
Meigs County..According to the annual report released today, 105
people died because of hea rt-related

/

Schwable said. "Much planning
time and effort have gone into these
projects, and some have been
providing continuing servies to the
community."
Specific area projects that would
be endangered by Stoekman's
"Black Book" include:
-OVRDC's health technical
assistance, affecting the entire 11
county area .
-OVRDC' s child development
planning and administration grant

which serves the 11 county district.
--Gallia-Meigs child development,
affecting over 100 children.
-Southern State Educational
Television, which provides
education T.V. to the multi-county
a~.

- A new Human Service Student
Center building at Jackson·
Vlnton-Ga!Ua Vocational School.
-Rio Grande College Student Center.
(Continue~. on page A3)

•

••

VINCENT BUGUOSI
be held at the perfonning arts center, are~ for the general public, $4
for college staff, $2 for public school
students and $4 for senior citizens.
For ticket information, contact
Jean Curtis, center director, at 24553a3, ext. 220.

Inside
today.
.
.
Area deaths .......................................

PREPARATION FOR
DEMOLITION CON·
TINUES - Workers used
a small front-loader to
remove the last of the
loose rubble from the Inside of the west wing of the
Gallla County courthouse
Friday. The building,
which was heavily
damaged during a Jan. 8
fire, Is scheduled to be
demolished starting early
next week. Earlier plans
to begin the ~ork were
delayed pendlug a final inspection, set fo~ Monday,
by architects. (TimesSentinel photo by Larry
Ewb:ag.) ·

~-4.

Business . . • . • . • . . . • . . . . . . • . • . • . • . • • • • . . . . • . . • . . . • . I&gt;-2
Classified . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • ..• . . . . . . • . • . D-2-7
Editorial ......•..•.....•....................... . .. A-2

Farm . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . • . . . . . . • . . . . . . C-8
[A)cal ...•.•.•••..•.•.•.•.......... • .... .• .•.•... A-3-8
lJfestyle ............ . ......•.•......•.... • •..... B-1·8

Sta.~National ................... . ......... . ....... D-1
Sports .• . ....

0

.......

0

0

0

•••••

I

•

0

•••••••••

0

•••

0

•

0

••

C·l-7

TV guide •....................... . .... . ....••... Insert

Center submits proposals

You should expect a lot from your financial institution. For example, you should
expect interest on your checking account.
BANK ONE's CHECKING TWO plan gives you just that ... and
along with interest on checking, BANK ONE gives you a staff of
professionals experienced in handling your checking needs and
solving any problems you might have. But checking with interest is
only a part of the full services and conveniences you can expect
from BANK ONE. We also give you things like our unique Total
Account Bank Statement... one of the most complete monthly
reporting systems available. It lists all your checks in numerical
order·and in the order your transactions are cleared by the bank.
And that makes balancing your checking account much easier.
If you get checking with interest, you should also get full service
banking with it. You should get CHECKING TWO at BANK ONE.

Is - 51.

CHECK ACCIDENT
The Meigs County Sheriff's Department received a report of a minor
accident involving a school bus from
Southern Local.
Dan Smith, Racine, driver of the
school bus was backing from county
road 30 onto township road 123 and
struck tile left rea1· fender of a
vehicle d1·iven by James R. Anderson, Rt. I, Minersville.
There was slight damage to the
vehicle and none to the bus. 'There
were no injuries.

tmts·

'

ELBERFELDS

BY FRANK PETRIE

lndi v i ~ u a n y
Pla nned
H €alth
Promot ion I nf orm ation was im ·
pa rted to 1, 50 8.
•
Den ver .Deve lopm enta l sc r een ing
tes ts (f or detec ti on of gross lea rn ing
di sabilitie s) - 61 2.
·
Denta l Sc r eenings - 361.
W . I .C. - 513 cl ients have been
p rovi ded goods and servi ces as of
December 31. 1980.

~B'

Higman predicted If nothing were
Higman who wu accom~nled
done to alleviate the problem at
by Huntington District Public
Affairs Officer Blll Brown, was
the Gallipolis Locks and Dam, the
typical tow may be delayed 33 hours introduced by Program Chairman
by the end of the century. He said 1n Jim Mussnve. President Tim
1979 the delays averaged eight Stover p~esided over a brief
hour_,.,_ _ _ _
---- ---"bus:::!!!:!lne::•::•:....:•:::et::•:::lo:::n;...- - - - -

• Western ~irts

•

'

...
...
BANK ONE,.. ...
BANK ONE OF POMEROY
Pomeroy • Rutland • Tuppers Plains
Membe r FDI C

GALLJPOI.JS - Serenity House, domestic violence to a shelter.
- Purchase of residential services
the domestic crisis center for Gallia.,
Meigs and Jackson counties, has from shelters or commercial
submitted proposals to the board of housing.
- Purchase of emergency medical
cOITUnissioners of each county for
the release of marriage license fun- services for domestic ciolence victims.
.
ds.
- Reccuitment and training of
All three counties have notified
Serenity House the proposals have volunteers.
- Ongoing conununity planning
been funded.
In addition to these funds, Serenity directed toward coordination of
House has been informed il has existing services and the developreceived an $800 grant from the ment of a local domestic violence
Episcopal Dioeese of Southern Ohio. shelter.
Further Information can be obThese monies will operate the
tained from Crisisline at 446-5554 or
followin~ proposed services :
- Transportation for victims of 992-5504.

American Cite Middleport man following wild chase
executed

BOGOTA, Colombia (AP)
Colombian guerrillas executed kidnapped American Bible translator
Chester Allen Bitterman on Saturday, hours after announcing that
time for negotiating his release had
run· out. His body, found here in a
hijacked minibus, was wrapped in
the guerrillas' red and black fia g,
the U.S. Embassy said.
Police said they found the body of
the 2&amp;-year-old Lancaster, Pa.,
"
native at 4:30 a.m. in a industrialresidential ncighb01·hood of Bogota
six hours after the M-19 guerrilla
group offered its "last chance" to
bargain for Bitterman's life.
M-19 had accused Bitterman of
being a CIA spy and demanded as
the price for his life thai the institute
he worked for leave Colombia. The
Swnmer Institute of Linguistics,
which translates Bibles into Indian
dialects, refused to do so.
In Washington, the State Department accused Bitterman's killers of
" cold-blooded murder."
"He had come to Colombia as a
man of peace and faith and was innocent of any wrongdoin~ , " the
department said, adding that Bitterman worked as a linguist under
contract to the govcrmncnt of
Colombia.
BriTERMAN KILLED BY GUERRilLAS - American Bible lrao"The U.S. · government, and
tlalor Cbetler Allen Bitterman appeen to be playtoa: ebeu with a
civilized
people everywhere, conperrllla member of the M·19 ll'OUP wblcb lddllllpped blm In January In
demn
totally
this savage and.cowarthlll photo provided by lbe perrtlla Jll'OUP. Tbe 21-yeaM~ld from Laodly
act,"
the
State
Department said.
cuter, Pa., was fouad dead Saturday In a biJac:ked mlolbua In southern
It said the U.S. EmbaSilY in Bogota
Bogota. (AP Laserphoto),
was making arrangements for
disposition of the body.
Bitterman, married and the father
of
two young girls, had been shot on• Partly cloudy today . High around 40. Low tonight in the low to mid 20s.
ce In the heart, according to a
Chance of precipitation, 20 percent.
Colombian photographer who
viewed the body at the Bogota
Ohio Extended Forecast- Monday .through Wedneaday-Fair weather
morgue and to Radio CarHcol, who
with near normal temperatures through the period; DaDy blcba In the 40s
quoted
an institute source.
aod olpttpe ~owl In the :188.
,,

....

cording to Pomeroy police. The state
highway patrol and units from the
Gallia County Sheriff's Department
joined in the chase when Neff
crossed the county line.
The incident came to an end at
12:17 a.m. when Neff's ear reportedly crashed near Bidwell. Neff
was taken by police to the Meigs
County jail.

-

Extended forel'.ast, state .weather

I

tained from area law enforcement
POMEROY - A Middleport man
agencies, the incident began at 11
was arrested on a variety of charges
p.m. when Pomeroy officers atin the wake of an hour-long, hightempted to stop Neff's car on East
speed car chase through Meigs and
Main Street.
Gallia counties late Friday night.
Neff reportedly took off toward
Pomeroy police said they have
U.S. 33 and officers pursued,
cited Jack R. Neff, 20, for DWI,
assisted by Middleport police.·
reckless operation and fleeing a
Neff drove out Long Hollow and
police officer.
Peach
Fork Roads and onto SR 7,
Based on sketchy information obgoing · south toward Gallipolis, ac-

'

r

NEW DESKS - FUIII aad sixth graders at tbe 1s have sanded the oak desks and Pl'O memben llllve
Harrisonville Elementary School will soon have new refloltlhed many of tbe deskll with the preject to be
d&lt;sks. Well, not new but like new. Some 50 desks were completed Ibis mootb. Sixth graden pictured wllb a
transported from the former Pomeroy Junior High couple of lhedeslls- before and after-are I tor, BobSehoul and have been rejuvenated. Sixth grade studen- . by Hall, JasoD Morman, Joe Maddox aad Cllllrllll
Barrett.

•'

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