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16-The

Pomeroy-M

· ·-~F~ T~

·.,~.:;.;,

Village funds total;

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

!;_,

'

The total of.aU Middleport VIUage

FE RROALLOVS DIVISIO~

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

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

GRAHAM PLANT
t

.Resignations still big question

Ohio

l

•

Commission given strong support

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

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

t3fQ

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

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

Commission
seeks landfill
.

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

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

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

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

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

.

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

Area deaths
George Wilbur Young

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

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

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

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

-AND THE PROFESSIONS
BANK ONE Of POMEROY, NA

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

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

Eckrich

Former hostage accepts job

JUMBO BOLOGNA ••••••••••• ~·.~1.79

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

.

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

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

Ohio Colby

LONGti)RN

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

'

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

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

Weather

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

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

FILUS •••••••••••••• ~ •• $1.97

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

Gallon Rich &amp; Ready

16 oz. Armour

.

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

a

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

UNE OF. QUALITY
~~ .

,.., ,.. o..,. •, r~. s .. ,

10, 0 b•o~ •· • ~l ... e1 10 ·~•" ~

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•on-•o~ •

""' ' ' ' t on•••" ol a lo•• '' '"'

to"""

'f""•&lt;&gt;l

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

•Ill '"'''"

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I·'• o• '"" •'' "• • ••" '"''"'

Ph "HDU
Or f,2 ·57ll

'

Flo~eu

Evtryw,..rt.

'

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

Patrol

.

ELB!RFELDS

·· IN POMEROY

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

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

'

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

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

•

'

.

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

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

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

wreck victim

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

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

12"x26' Reynolds Aluminum

'

15 Cents

A Multimedia Inc . News: a er

cite~

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

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

13:1fc oz. Swan1on

106 Butterntlf Ave .
Pomeroy , Otl .
Wt Wlrt

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

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

POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP
" TfttWIV Amtrkl Sand• Love."

WRANGLER
SPORTSWEAR

2 Sections, 14 Pages

Nation's inflation rate
falls below double digits

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

31 01. Van.Camp

1 lb. Crisco

e n t 1n e

By JAMES GERSTENZANG
Aaoclated Prea Writer

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

f'llllllo....oj

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

32 01. Nestle's

''

•

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

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

·

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

Your Clear

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

Groups
protest
•
actzons

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

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

Dismiss charges against officer

~Tb BUSINESS. INDUSTRY,

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

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

Veterans Memorial

LEASING
. .IQUIPMENT

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

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

.

Eckricb

at y

Voi.30,No.•
Co rl hied 1981

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

lib. Blue Bonnet
Quarters .

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

.

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

•

e.

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

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

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

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

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

'

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.._II

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

*

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

t

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

..

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

�.

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Thursday, April 23,1981

C0 m. m~e·.,..·t ary

Page-2- The D;;lySentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Dodger rookie blanks Astros

"

._'\..
'\. 1. ,
Pomerdoy-~i~d lepor t , Ohio
.
.
Thurs ay, .,er• 12 3,1981
,
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By ASSOCIATE;J:i PRESS
It was the kind of game Don Sutton
used to pitch. In fact, he did pitch it
- but Fernando Valenzuela pitched
it better. ·
Suttoo, once the ace of the Los
Angeles staff and now wearing the
rainbow colors ·of the· Houston
~. hooked up Tuesday night
with Valenzuela, the Dodgers' 20year-old super-rookie.
Sutton pitched about as well as you
can - giving up just one run in seven
innings, scattering si1t hil!l and
striking out three batters without
walking any. ·
It wasn't good enough. The unbeaten Valenzuel~ chalked up his
fourth victory and third shotout of
the young season, blanking Houston
on seven hits, getting 11 Astros on
strikeouts to raise his National
League-leading total to 36 - and
singling in the fifth inning to drive in
the game's only run.
Elsewhere in the NL it was St.
Louis 3, Chicago o: Atlanta 7. Cin-

--

Shopt-~1-k.--~---~----------------------~J~a~~J~.K~"~~~~~k
On Wednespay the 15th it all fell
apart. There *as no Jimmy. Miss
Cooke had CO,ltrived him. On Thursday the Postlapologized editorially.
The Pulltzer board withdrew the
prize. 1tliss ~ooke resigned. This
past Sunday tire Post c~rried a fourpage report t:ly its ombudsman, Bill
Green, explaining but not e:rcuslng
the fraud.
So much fo. the facts. I happened
to be in San Francisco when the
story of Jal.at Cooke e:rploded.
Reading of her an~h. I reacted as
many others ~ust have reacted to
be ruined car,er of a talented young
woman. The poor kid, I said. In the
next sec~nd I reacted as a
newspape
n. I could strangle
that girl, i sa· , Whatever harm she
may have do e to herself, it isn't a
patch on wha~ ohe has done to all the
rest of us. In pur business, the new.;
business, all ~e have to sell is our
own credibili11Y. This slick little liar

WASHINGTON - Those of us in
the news business will be along time
getting over little Jimmy. For my
own part, I pray to high heaven we
will never gel over little Jinuny.
This ,bogus little fellow can teach us
some painful lessons.
Ten days after the story blgan to
unfold, the hurt and the anger persist For the record: On the morning
of Tuesday the 14th, the WaSitington
Post proudly reported on page 1 that
the Pulitzer PriZe for feature writing
had been awarded to its OW'I! Janet
Cooke. The Post took a full-page
house ad to reprint her prizewinning story, an accoant of an $year-old heroin addict
Because I had missed the original
piece when it appeared Ialit September, I read it with fresh interest
It ws a superb story - beautiful
quotes, vivid narration, gripping
details of the actual shooting heroin.
Great reporting, I said.

The Dail y

Sentin~l

III Cuurt Strt:t'l
Po m ~ r o)' , Ohio
614-!!2·2151

DEVOTED TO Til E INTEREST OF Til E MEIGS-MASuN AREA

~j;h
cs:miS:I
~._-r·~=·=
'q:!v
ROBERT L. WINGETt
Publl snt!r

PAT WHITE.HEAD

BOB HOEFLICH

A!iNistanl Publisher/Controller

General Malllill!JI'f

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
Nt&gt; w~

Editor

A MEMBER 111 Tilt' Assoc il~d P r~ss. lnlud Daily Prt&gt;Ss AssO&lt;'iali on and tht
Amnlc110 Nt&gt; Vt'I IJ'Ipt'r Publishrn Auoda tion.

LF.1iERS OF OP INIO N art' wt'lrnmt'd . Tht')' shuuld bt- lrn tnt11300 '•tmrd ~ lung. All
ll'ltt'rs Mrt' subjt'r l In rdltinl( l l nd must bt- s(" nrd "'"lth nHmr, 11 drt'SS aiKI lt'kpOOrw
numhtor. Nu unsif( nrd lt'Ut'rs \i·IIJ hi' publlsht'd . Lt' Urrs shnuld Dr In ·~ Mt la ~tt', a dd rt'~~ lnl(
illli Ut•s, nul pt'l"lU tnlllilit•ll.

Forecast for hybrid

financial planners
Nobody can say when it will take place or exactly wqat it will look like,
but there's a notion circulating that somewhere down the road there'll
emerge a homogenized market for financial services.
Instead of going to the bank for cash, to your insur*nce agent for annuities, to your·broker for stocks and to the local coin d~aler for gold, you
might deal with one outfit that will service all your neeas.
They'll know a lot about you, from information yor provide and from
studying your activity file. They'll be able, as they sa) to exercise client
control or asset control - the tenns are essentially the S&amp;me.
Control, for one thing, would mean an end to the frustration of having a
customer depart because he wanted stocks and you could only sell him insurance. The financial services company could satisfy him either way.
They might have mutually synergistic influences. With inflatioo and
volatile interest rates, insurers today find their traditional fixed-return
policies less attractive to customers. But when face values are based on
the return of successful stock funds, which brokers have, the insurers
might be able to offer security - and an inflation hedge.
The possibilities are numerous, as Harry Jacobs, chairman of Bache
Group Inc., said last Wednesday, the day Prudential Insurance Co.
gained 51 percent of his company, It was day for celebrating.
"Flexibility, stability, oppOrtunity,"· Jacobs said several times. That,
he said, is what Prudential means to Bache, whose operating arm, Bache
Halsey Stuart Shields, is one of the biggest securities !inns.
It also meant one more thing to Bache executives: Safety from another
investor they frowned upon and feared, and had been trying to ward off
for two years. But, said Jacobs, the positive reasons were stronger.
"The first thing we discussed with Prudential was the entrepreneurial
nature of our business," he said. "We fluctuate between peaks and
valleys." And, he said, securities "is a gigantic user of capital.
In the early 1970s, in fact, many brokers succumbed to tight money
problems. " If we can go to Prudential with ideas that would produce a
satisfactory return of capital they might be interested," said Jacobs.
"The insurance industry has vast amoants of money to put to work.''
Bilche can offer Prudentlal85 different product.!, including money funds, stocks, mutual funds, commodities and gold, some of which might be
candidates for eventual integration into the insurance product.
That day is still far off, said Jacobs. For the inunediate future "the insurance agent and the broker will be distinct, but the cutting edges along
·the sides wiU change," he said. Gradually, he feels, the 'crisp line" may
blur, perhaps leading to a hybrid "financial planner."

has tainted our whole stock in ~ade.
In its Thursday editorial, tlil Post
said it would be an error and a
shame if "serious students and
critics of the press" should take the
Jimmy episode as eVidence that
such feature stories are largely
fabrications. That isn't the problem.
Serious students and critics will
know better. The problem is that ordinary readers will leap to such an
unwarranted conclusion.
To our discomfiture, it has to be
acknowledged that many of our
readers today share an opinion
voiced by an angry Tholllas Jefferson as far back as 1807: "Nothing
can now be believed which is seen in
a newspaper." A Gallup Poll last
November found that only 42 percent
of the people have a "great deal" or
"quite a lot" of confidence in
newspapers ..: a drop of nine points
from 1979. Long before Janet Cooke
came along, we were in deep
trouble. Jinlmy makes bad matters
worse.
,
The Post has behaved honorably
and professionally in confessing
error. Mr. Green's extended postmorten examination provides an impeccable accoant of editors who
reposed too much trust in a gifted
phony. But the purpose of such
pathology is twofold - to discover
mistakes, and to deter their
repetitjon,
Wha! must be done? For starters,
let me suggest that we kill all those
gorgeous features about Helen, the
14-yea~-old prostitute - the stories

that begin by saying, "That isn't her
Without abandoning hard inreal name, of course." Let us be vestigatlve reporting, we can insist
sparing - very sparing - about that in extraordinary cases, when
those quotes we attribute to Wliden- sources cannot be identified, the_
tified spokesmen, senior officials responsible editors demand
and reliable sources. Plenty of real· corroboration. We can make a
llke Helens can be identified from repentant vow to get back to what
court records; as for public officials we do best - straight reporting of
· with a passion for anonymity, we . the news, ancolored by pink opinions
can ask ourselv~s if they are using and purple prose.
.
us or we are using them.
.Miss Cooke's personal story Is

.•

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, li t,

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SAFE AT SECOND- E:rpos Gary Carter slldes IDI4t second under
Pblladelphla Plllllles MaDDy Trillo during eleventh iDDiDg NalloDili
League baseball aetlou iD Montreal Wednesday. Carter went ou to
third and scored the winning run when Wlllle Montanez siDgled. (AP
Laserphoto)

....•

The Plan which the two men plan
to introduce in the House calls for in- ,
creases in the personal income,
sales and Corporate franchise taxes.
It also provides tax relief for indivl'duals and businesses.
Fair, complicated tax legislation
vo:~. Waldo Bennett Rose; R- cannot be passed as a state baUot
. Lima, and Robert L. Corbin! R- issue, according to Rose. The
· ,'of a question of tax reform should be
Dayton, are seekin
· g adoption
he 581'd
uld faced by lawmakers, who should
proposal that t Y
w~
"not take an easy co~ut by asking
provide state and local goveiTIJT1fnls
"Vote ~ to decide on their own what
$1190 million in new revenue for
'"
-"ure must be done," Corbin said.
calendar year 1982. The me...
also would provide $1.7 billion ill tax
Their stand differs from that of
S ome Republicans in the Senate.
relief.
"It is a hard, cold rnathematica1 They are working on a proposal that
fact that the state cannot get Would Place a tax hike for increased
through 1982 without new revenue, " education funding before voters in
said Rose, assistant House minority November.
Most of the $1190 million in new
Iea der.

Perry teases
Reds' hitters

revenue ratsect by Rose and Corbin's
plan, $786 million, wo~ld be
available to finance education and
other state programs. The rest
would go to local goverrunents.
Individuals would bear the
heaviest share of the tax increase,
paying an additional $745 million,
compared to $145 million for
businesses.
d
. Ohio's personal income tax woul
climb to a range of 1percent to 6 perce_nt, depending on income - it now
varies from 0.5 percent
, to 3.5' percent And the state income tax personal exemption would jump from
1
""'"'to
"""" $1,000 and people with annua
incoines of $5,000 or less would be
exempt from paying any state income tax.
.
The permanent state
, sales tax also

would be raised
its current
5 from
L The
tax 4
percent I? percen
was
temporarily1 boosted
from
4
percent
If 11 J · 1 to h 1
to 5 percen , e ec·tsve an. t ,b dge tP
the state balance I curren u e ·
The temporary hike is to expire June

CINCINNATI (AP ) - Gaylord
Perry is up to his old tricks - winning baseball games while teasing
batters with his sleight-of-hand
deliveries.
The 42-year-old Perry, 1-1, pitched
his first complete game Wednesday,
limiting the slumping Cincinnati
Reds to six hits in a 7-3 victory that
left him 10 shy of 300.
True to form, tbe right-hander's
moand etiquette had Cincinnati hitters complaining to home plate umpire Paul Runge.
Runge made a visit in the first inning when Reds shortstop Dave Concepcion objected to Perry's " puff.
ball," a pitch that leaves the hand .in
a small cloud of resin.
"When he threw the ball, a big puff
al white smoke came off his hand/ '
said catcher Bruce Benedict.
Perry took Range's mound visit
with humor.
" If the umpire hadn't come out
today, it would have been only about
the fourth time in my career," said
Perry, subjected to frequent umpire
searches during his !~year major
league career.
"It (the resin ) doesn't do anything
to the bell. It's distraction (for the
hitters),"
Perry retired the last 13 ba_tters in
order after Concepeion doubled
home the Reds' final run in the fifth

.'

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~~ ~·

30.

The plan would provide prOpertY
tax relief to people who6e income~
less than
taxes m
... 3$20,000. tProperty
of djusted
excess"' percen a
gross
income would be offset by a state llltax redit
1to the oun1
come
c The
equa
.
--~•- am
credit
of the e:rcess.
.,..,...,.urn
would be$300.
Corporations also wo~ld ex'"' tax hikes and
perience a se ries
te "'hang , the
reductions.
ra tax
c f em
corf Ahise
1
porate
ranc
,
or
eump
e,
d od
estimated •216
woul pr uce an
•
million in new revenue.

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:;t&gt;&lt; -'
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Security checks cause appointment delays·
The time it has taken to fill the
dozens of assistant secretary jobs in
government departments has
become a cause celebre in
Washington. That's the way it
always is about 100 days into a new
administration.
·

arrogance~
portrayal of a supercilious corporation that arrogantly believes it
has the right to virtually monopolize
the marketing of telephone service
and equipment throughout the country.
The govef11!11ent alleges that
AT&amp;T has for decades illegally used
its market dominance and economic
power to thwart competition from
other companies seeking to provide
long-distance · service or sell
telephone equipment.

YeAH,
/IlANNA

see JT7
I

Yours truly,
Floyd H. Cleland
Box 223, Rutland, Ohio 45775~.~~1lj~L]l.i!]LJ

Tornadoettes defeat Pirates

Tommy Herr is in a i-ut. He keeps
hitting triples and dri\?ing in runs.
He did it for the third consecutive
VINTON - The rampaging White a triple and Della Johnson a
game - a two-run drive in the
Southern
Tornadoettes rolled to a lf&gt;- double and two singles.
second inning this time - to extend
9
win
over
host North Gallia here
Fuller had a double for North
st. Louis' winning streak to six
Wednesday
night.
Ga llia Tana George three singles
games and Chicago's losing streak
l.aren
Wolfe
picked
up
the
win
for
and a' double, Daniels two singles,
to nine.
coach
Connee
Enslen's
TorHigley a double and single, T. Dot"That's just guys _getting on
nadoettes.
Tana
George
suffered
the
son
two singles, and Hollingshead a
base," Herr said of his leagueloss
for
NorthGallia.
single
.
leading 11 runs batted in. " As long
Southern
hitters
were
Amber
WarLinescore
:
as I get the hits, I'm going to drive in
ner
with
a
triple,
double
and
single,
Southern
550 320 0-15 20 4
runs."
Debbie
Michael
two
singles,
Renee
N. Ga llia
440 001 0-9 12 6
Herr's hitting backed the four-hit
Smith
a
triple
and
single,
Laren
Batteries:
L.
Wolfe
and White.
pitching of an beaten l.ary Sorensen,
W
olfe
two
singles,
Elaine
Smith
George
and
Marcum.
who extended the Cubs' string &lt;i
three singles, Teresa Hill a single,
scoreless innings to 21.
Jenny Bentley three singles, Deanna .--- - - - - - - - - -

II.!&gt;&lt;•

COLUMBUS, Oh io (A P ) Backers of a comprehensive
package of tax relief and tax in·
creases say the GeneraJ AssemblY
should deal with Ohio's fiscal woes
and not pasS the decision off to

AT&amp;T

Cards 3, Cub!. ,

the fifth gave the Padres the only
run they needed, but they got their
cushion when, with the bases loaded
in the eighth, reliever Randy Moffitt
threw Luis Salaza r's comebacker
wildly past home for two runs, and
Barry Evans added a sacrifice fly.

...

Backers believe legislators should
deal with state's financial problem

WASHINGTON (AP ) - It may .. ot
have been designed this way, but the
Reagan administration's delay in
filling su!H:abinet positions means
that there are fewer officials to
dissent from the president's
proposed budget cuts.

Padres 4, Gianls 0
cinnati 3; San Diego 4, San FranJuan
Eichelberger and Gary
cisco 0 and Montreal4; Philadelphia
·
L
ucas
teamed
for a five-hitter and
3 in 11 innings. The New York Mets'
game at Pittsburgh was called due San Diego broke the game open with
to rain after 8\2 innings with the three runs in the eighth inmng to
teams tied 2-2. The game will be beat the Giants.
Mike Phillips' triple and Gene
replayed from the start at an unRichards' single off Ed Whitson in
determined·date.

..• .

It must stop! ·

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Letter to the editor
Well, fellow Americans, the sign's
coming from Washing!~ Our
nation's capital is real lif1 and the
talpayers'dreams.
•
Yes, finally we get a presidelt that
ain't afraid to say you have to work
for a Uving in this counlry. The
United States doesn't owe uyone a
living except the ones tha4 can't
work, and the ones that wocted for it
over a long period of time. ].don't
know how much cutting is going to
be done, but as long as the tapayers
~ this country are gettinl! some
good out of these cuts I am for it.
We're tlred of going lo work and
coming home to see people Wllo you
know could work but don't•lnd for
sure are drawing your tax .,.,!jars in
someway or other.
·-.'
It has to stop or we, !'41iJr1he ta:rt-Yers, will have no choi4f. but to
reftue to pay to' keep some iJy per·
son who won't work in a Jiic factory

esseJtjally a stoty of what the
Greets caUed hubriS, a story of
exaggerated anitittlon and selfconfidence tbllt result in retiibutloiL
Like Icarus, she soared too high;
and the san of truth melted the wax
with which her wings were fastened.
· · Let us remember the legend, the
brilliant rise arid the teiTible fall,
and let 'us try harder the next time
aroand.

The Da•ly Sentinel- Page-3

·
White H
off" · Is
This y~r,
ouse IC!a
are _blaming ~ delay on the extens1ve secunty an~ conflict-ofinterest checks reqwred by ~ew
laws, as well ~s the amount of time
Senate comnuttees are _spending on
their reviews of the nonunees.

But there is little indication that
they are troubled by the delays.
After all, said presidential counselor Edwin Meese m, assistant
secretaries have traditionally
become part of the alliance that
fights cuts in spending for specific
programs.

____ __R_ob_erl_ W._a_lte_rs
profits, after taxes, every hour of
every working day during the
year?"
The answer to that rhetorical
question is contained in the memo,
which said that Harlow was
"dangerous to us" not only because
he wanted to make a fair profit
selling telephone equipment, "which
he can only do at ow' expense," but
also because he was detennined to
take his case against AT&amp;T to the
public through " personal appearances in public forums and ...
statements to the press and the
(regulatory ) commissions."
Evidence that Harlow's case is n&lt;t
an isolated instance came in the
form of another docwnent produced
by the government during the
current trial. It is a massive eightvolume AT&amp;T study! of "Interbusiness Relations" completed in
late 19'13,
Authorized by AT&amp;T's E:recutive·
Polley Comrillttee, the study Involved interviews filth the company's upper- and middlemanagement aecutlvea to lllllellll
their views on tbe tactlca being Uled
. againlt COinpetltori.
"MOlt managers Interviewed by

the (study) team felt that the only
corporate strategy in this area now
· is to delay and minimize the 1068 of
our monopoly position," the report
noted.
'
Those "obstructionist tactics," the
study added, , had the effect of
"delaying ... the entry of others ~
what has been our business."
AT&amp;Targuedforyearathattheintroduction of equipment manufaclured and sold by competing earnpanies posed a potentially serious
threat to "the integrity ~ the
system" it operated- a claim that
conjured up vision of a collapse of
the nationwide telephone network.
But revealed at the ~ was
another internal AT"T memo
describing that argument as "our
weakest position now becauae .. , we
have not been able to produce
evidence of harm to the network" or
_"proof of our aUegatiiJ!IB of potential
hann."
Whether AT&amp;T winll or loles
antitrust case, documentation of
CCIIIJlllllY'a practice ol hlrUslng
ccmpetlton and mhdeedhll
cuatomers hu

I I'll

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Casey Kasem
WMP0

1

SATURDAYS

til Noon

8

inning, Slow-start' g third baseman
Bob Horner, who dn't driven in a
ran until Tuesday, d four RBI with
a home run, single
a double.
"When he's hilti g, you don't want
to make a mista on him," said
Reds Manager John McNamara ,
who saw Homer drive in eight runs
and crack two homers during Atlanta's two-game sweep.
The Reds' losing streak reached
four games. Opponents have scored
36 runs over that span whiie the
Reds generated only 13.
.
"It's the same lold thing," McNamara said. "D¥fing this whole
home stand we've had to play catch
up."

HEELS OVER HEAD - Atlanta Brave third baseman Bob Horner (lop 1 goes to the ground after colliding with teammate Ed Mlller
as the two were going after a pep foul In the third Inning of a game In
Cincinnati Wedaesday. Both players were shaken up on the play, and
neither was able to catch the baiJ. Tbe Braves went on to wln the game
7-3, taking the two game series frnm the Reds. (AP Laserphoto)

Plain or Safety Steel Toe -

Indiana almost
lost line hacker ·

Mike LaCoss, knocked out of his
previous start a fter~failing to get any
of the first six bstt rs out, found the
going rocky from the start Wednesday. Claudell ashington and
Homer delivered RBI singles in the
first inning for aU lead. .
LaCoss, 0-2, surrendered fi ve
runs, four earned, in 22-3 innings. After a strong spring training, the
right-hander has given up 19 hits in 6
2-3 innings.
" I'd say he's just not consistently
making the pitches he made in
spring training," McNamara said.
"He made a couple of mistakes that
hurt him."

CINCINNATI (AP) - Indiana
University came within inches &lt;i
losing a frestunan linebacker to a
foul basebalL
Randy Kobman, an 18-year-old
senior at Lakota High School, chilled
the afternoon crowd Wednesday at
Riverfront Stadium during the Cin-,
cinnali Reds 7-3 loss to the Atlanta
Braves.
Kublnan, a muscular 1&gt;-foot-3, 230pounder, was sitting in the second
deck behind home plate with his
brother, Bob.
Reds leftfielder George Foster hit
a pop foul in the bottom of the eighth

Mo1 aea
Coun1 e r

for the end of the game. It was
hopeless," he said.
Randy Kobman dismissed the incident.
"I didn 't have time to think about
it but it was a rush, I'll tell you that.
What happened was that I tried to
dive for the ball, and my legs hit
something and I just fl ipped over the
rail," Kobman said.
He remembered looking at the
crowd on the lower level and hang
onto the raiL
"Once I grabbed hold, I knew I
wasn't going down," he said.
" I jUlll wanted a ball. That was it. I
ahnost landed in the blue seats," he
said.

iniling.

Kohman took off after the hall and
hit the thigh-high concrete barrier
wall. Kobman fell over but managed
to grab a steel rail with one hand and
was dangling 30 feet above the field
level seats.
BySCO'ITWOLFE
Schamzembach, Cooksey , Torres,
Brother Bob and a dozen specROCK SPRINGS - The Athens Macombes and Brenneman all with tatnrs nearby pulled Kobman back
B!llldogs rolled to a f&gt;-2 win over singles.
into the stands.
Meigs' Marauders here at Meigs
Meigs plays Logan in 8 league
"He 's not afraid of anything. He
High School Wednesday behind a game Friday. ·
ahnost had it (the baU), too, missed
two-hit pitching performance by
Linescore :
by about six inches," said Bob Ko~
Athens
oos 000 0-5 8 3 man.
Paul Macombes.
The SEOAL !01111 dropped Meigs to Meigs
000 020 0-2 2 2
Was Randy shaken?
·3-7 and 1-4 in the league while Athens
Batteries: J. Wayland and T.
"Nah; he just sat down and
its record to 7-6-1 and S-3 in Wayland.
finished out the inning and went
leagueplay.
Macombes(WP )andBreoneman. home. There was no point staying
Big Paul Macombea quieted the .---- - - - - -- - - -....:__ _ _ _,;__
Meigs' bats which were red hot the
night before, holding the Marauders
to just two hlta. Macombea struck
out sl:r and walked three. Jeff
Wayland pitched for Meigs and did a
good job with the aceptlon of just
one bad inning. Wayland fanned
three and walked just one.
Mter Wayland retired the side in
both the first and second inning,
Athens got it an together in the third
and plated five big runs. Most of the
Athens ' bits were singles, but each
one was a hard slingshot into the
s•JIIl in the ouUield.
'
Athens recorded two staighl
singles, a sacrifice, a wallt, !ICOfed
on an error and plated two more
runs on a Monte Long double.
·Another single followed for two

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Athens defeats Meigs

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more runs.
Mter getting back in the groove,
Wayland fired four more innings of
lhutout bueball, but Meip could
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They came in the fifth when Jim
BoYer reached 011 an error, Miller
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IIIII boCb ldvlllCIId ooe but· on a
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Page-4-The Oaily Sentinel

I

]hH[Sday. April 23,1981

xnyrsclay. April23,1981

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

,

A's pitchers play waiting
game as·starters go route
By ASSOCIATED PRESS
In the Oakland A's bullpen, they
play a waiting game.
"We sit out there cheering and
yelling, trying to keep sharp so
. we're ready when they need us,"
Jeff Jones says of the lfttle-used A's
relief corps.
For a change, though, an Oakland
s!Jlrter didn't complete a game Wednesday - and Jones was thrown into
· the breach to save a 2-1 victory over
the Minneso!Jl Twins, the 14th in I&gt;
games for the red-hot A's.
"I guess it's been determined that
the bullpen won't be used that of. ten," said Jones. "But when we are,
we want to con~ribute."
Both Jones and Craig Minetto
came on in the ninth inning and
saved the game for starter Brian
Kingman. Jones retired the jast two
Twins batters to earn the A's first
save of the season.
" It couldn't have come too soon,"
said Manager Billy Martin of the
relief help. "We looked dog-eared
· out there today. A day and a half of
rest will do us all some good."
Last year, the A's put together a
major-league-high 94 complete
games. Before Wednesday, they had

recorded 12 route-going jobs in 14
start...
1
In other American League action,
it was Te~as 16, Boston 8;
Milwaukee 8, Toronto 1; New York
7, Detroit 2, .::Ieveland 4, Kansas
. City 0 and California 7, Seattle 3.
Rain postponed the BaltimoreChicago game.
Rangers 16, Red Sox 8
Pat Putnam drove in four runs and
Billy Sample three as Texas
walloped Boston. The Rangers
shelled three Boston pitchers for 18
hits, snapping the Red Sox' threegame winning streak.
Brewers 8, Blue Jays l
Paul Molit01 hit the first grand
slam homer oi his major league
career, the Ion• hit in the Brewers'
five-run fifth mning, and he also
singled home a,run in the seventh to
lead Milwaukee over Toronto.
Molitor's five RB!s helped make a
winner out of Mike Caldwell, who
I
recorded the Brewers' second consecutive Cllmplete-game victory
with an eight-hitter.
Toronto starter Luis Leal had
checked the Brewers on three
singles before their fifth-inning
rally.

•

•

••
VERY CLOSE CALL- Friends and other fans pull
Randy Kobman back to safely afler be fell over the
railing of the second level of Rlverfont Stadium while
trying to catch a foul ball Wednesday during a game

between lhe Cincinnati Reds and the AOaota Bravetln
Kobman did not appear to be Injured. He
also did not caleb the foul ball. (AP Laserphoto)
Clnclooa~.

By SCOTI' WOLFE
EAST MEIGS - The Easter
Eagles co~tinued to lengthen their
winning streak here Wednesday by
defeating league foe, Kyger Creek,
9-8, in an important SV AC high
school baseb•ll contest. Eastern
now owns an impressive 12-3 record
and is 5-2 in'the league.
Mark Holter got the start for
Eastern and went three and a third
innings before getting relief from
Eagle ace Greg Wi gal. Together the
duo walked five and fanned three.
The ; trike outs were all by Wigal.
Jack Minor started for Kyger Creek
and was relieved by Willie Noble.
The duo interchanged positions
several times before getting final
aid from Terry Porter. Together
they struck out five and walked nine.
Tied 2-2 in the third inning,
Eastern carne to life and loaded the
bases. Gary Griggs delivered the
blow that changed the tide of the
game when he produced a two run
single in that fra me.
Kyger Creek hitters were Jack
Minor with three singles, S. Porter
had two singles, Terry Porter
doubled, Willie Noble doubled, King
singled, arid Barr singled.
Rob Smith lined a single and

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Southern 7 North Gallia 4
The Southern Tornadoes notched a
7-4 win over North Gallia here Wednesday evening in an SV AC baseball
contest at Southern High School.
Southern was led to victory by a
decisive three run home run by Jeff
Sopher and a strvng pitching perfonnance by Kent Wolfe. Southern is
now 84 overall and 5-2 in the SVAC.
Southern scored a pair of runs in
both the first and second innings to
hold a 4-&lt;J edge over three innings of
play.
North Gallia scored single runs in
both the fourth hitting behind the
runner to the second baseman.
Jeff Sopher then launched a
towering shot ove1 .he right center
field fence for a aome run that
provided the winning margin.
Southern was led by Jay Rees,
who laced two-line singles. Jeff
Sopher hit a home run, Terry McNickle doubled, Kent Wolfe doubled,
Dale Teaford singled, Zane IBeegle
singled and Bob Bill Lee singled.
For North Gallia Don Shupe had a
double and single, Darrell Shaw a
single, Barry Marcum a double and ,
Paul Hollingshead a single.
Kent Wolfe went the distance for
Southern to record 10 strikeouts and
walk just four batters.
In the winning effort, Wolfe gave

up only five hits in an outstanding
performance. Jay Rees was the
Southern signal caller. Don Shupe,
who suffered the loss, and Paul Neal
pitched for North Gallia, fanning
four and walking five .
The second game of a scheduled
double header was called because of
darkness after four complete innings were in. The game will be
replayed at a later date. Mter four
innings, Southern led 1).3.
Cunningham and Collins were on
the mound for Southern and Neal,
Shupe and Shaw saw action for North Gallia.
Southern hitters were Terry MeNickle with two singles, Jayh Rees a
walk and a long triple, Kent Wolfe a
single, Bryan Wolfe two walks and a
double, and Jeff Sopher a walk and
single.
Darrell Shaw lined two singles for
North Gallia, Russell singled twice,
and Neal singled.
Southern plays Federal ijocking
. at horne tonight, weather permitting.
Linescore:
N. Galli a
000 110 2- 4 5 1
Southern
220 030 x-7 8 2
Batteries : K. Wolfe iWP) and
Rees. Shupe, Neal and Marcwn.
HR- Sopher.

Leading hitters for Southwester~
were Wayne Sizemore with 4-5 and a
triple ; Scott Russell2-4 and a triple;
Dale Newberry 1-4 and a single and
Jay Burleson t-3 with two runs.
Coach Mike Jenkins' Wildcat lead
hitters were Greg Webb, 1-3 and a
triple; John Waugh 1-4 and two
RB!s, and Bays t-3.
Pitcher for Southwestern was
Sizemore throughout while HT's
Kelly Petrie was on the mound for
seven and was relieved by Toby
Sheets.
Southwestern is scheduled to play
i\le&lt;ander tonight at home and will
meet North Gallia at Rio Grande
Friday .

The
Holzer Medical Center
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

ROAD RACE

••

.------------~

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
proposal' to build a new $22 million
thoroughbred trac~ near Sandusky
is drawing skepticism from the Ohio
horse racing industry.
A group of 13 Ohio businessmen
has hired retired jockey Eddie Arcaro to serve as acting presidentgeneral manager of Erie Park, a
5,000-seat plant that hopes to be in
operation by late 1982 with a limited
meeting.
"I don't think we need another
race track in Ohio," said Sylvester
"Shake" Jechura, an owner of
Toledo Raceway's harness track.
"They shouldn't build it. They
should come over to me. I'll sell
· them one.
"There's a price tag on every
track in Ohio now. I don 't think
there's a very good shot of anything
being built over there."
George Jones, general manager of
Thistledown, said the Cleveland
thoroughbred track is having
economic problems in a
·metropolitan area of 850,000. Erie
County, the site of the proposed
track, has a population of less than
80,000.

By Wlil Grtuuley
AP Correapondent

Now that the American judicial
system has exonerated Frank Kush
we can get on with the business ri
College Football .. .if that's really
what you 1\&lt;antto do.
Kush, you will remember, is the
'ex-Arizona State coach who was accused by a former punter, Kevin
Rutledge, of getting his players' attention with an occasional smack of
his hand ... or anything else that'
might be handy.
·
In his defense, Kush denied ever
striking a player "skin-to-skin" but
said helmet slapping and face mask
grabbing was not unusual. "It was
designed to get their attention.
That's all." .
Kush was a character builder, obviously.
·
It seems here, however, that the
construction of character does not
necessarily req~ire the commission
of physical violence by the con. structer on the constructee.
The frightening part is that some
college sports people think that
belting an athlete is all part of the
game. Their game, perhaps, but not
the game college teams ought to be
playing.
After the verdict, Kush, now
coaching Hamilton of the Canadian
Football League, made a pledge.
"! do not plan to change my
coaching style," he said. "I plan to
approach the CFL the same way I
coached in the collegiate ranks. I've
been coac.hing for 25 years and I feel
the style I have developed is one of a
winner. I will not change. I will not
be intimidated by any individual
that does not agree with my style."
Wonderful.
·For the pros, Kush's style may he
fine. For the colleges, however, it
must be questioned.
There is another approach 'to
college football and it is practiced
with great success by a number of
other coaches, whose programs
flourish.
And they really are the character
builders.
Woody Hayes built an enviable
record at Ohio State, littering the
landscape along the way with some

boorish behavior J When he mugged
. pI'ayer on national
an opposmg
television, it became too mucJ:! for
school officials to tolerate and Hayes
turned his whistle over to Earle
Bruce. And without so much as a
single clenched fist, Bruce managed
to assemble a nationally ranked
team, a squad the school could point
to with pride.
The pressure to win is not invalved. There is certainly as much
pressure to win in the Big Ten,
whereOhioStateplays, as there is in
the Pac-10, home of Arizona State.
College is, after all, supposed to be
an educational experience. There ts
time enough in the pros for
militaristic martinets.
Why must we take our sports especially the collegiate ones - so
seriously, with life or death seeming
to ride on every win or loss? Why
can't . we accept our sport.. as a
leisurely diversion from the daily
routine instead of attaching so much
importance to them?
If we keep it up, we won't have any
more fun and games left. And that
would he even more tragic than a
coach who feels obliged to beat on
his players, "to gettheir attention."

nine runs
in the tofifth
inning
Wednesday
evening
defeat
Hannan
Trace 12-10 in an SV AC girls' softball
game.
Pacing Coach Cindy Wilson's
Highlanders to their second straight
victory were P. Evans, P. Phillips,
S. Spencer and B. Salisbury with two
hits apiece while P. Stanley led
Coach pon Saunders' Wildkittens.
Phillips was the winning hurler
while Heather Riley took the loss.
Hannan Trace took an early f&gt;-2
lead which was increased to 7-3 after
five and one half innings.
The win gave Southwestern a 2-9
season record while Hannan Trace

proposal draws skepticism

Hush

·barely there

For the record. ..
Major League Baseball

EAST

W L

EAST
L

8
7

Montreal
St. lA:Juis

7

Philadelphia

Hansen scores upset

4
4
I

N~wYork

NOV! SAD, Yugoslavia (AP) Derunark's Johnny Hansen scored
an upset, 21-16,15-21, 15-21, 21-12, 2422 victory over world champion Seiji
·Ono in the 36th World Table Tennis
Championships.
In other action , Sweden's Erik
Lindh upset China's Xhie Saike 1821, 11&gt;-21, 17-21; Japan's Norio
Takashima beat Danny Seemiller

Pittsburgh
d1k ago

Pel.

2
2

I

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•
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WEST

Los Angeles
Atlanl.a
Cincinrutli
San D ie~o:u

5
5

San F'rancisctl

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Houston

3

.800
.778
.183
.1110
.1110
.0!11

GB

Oeveland
New York
&amp;.too

"'
2
3
3
71\

Detroit
Milwaukee
Baltimore

.833

10
6

.Ill

.4a5
9

.385

Hi
5t,.,

.385
.250

1..,
7

Wedneadar's Gamn
AtlanLa 7, Cincinnati 3

Montreal 4, Philadelphia 3, 11 innings
Sl. Loui.s 3, Chicago 0
San Diego 4, Sa n Francisco 0
Los Angeles 1, Houston 0
New York 2, Pittabur~o:h 2, 8 ~ innings,

nurtday'tGames
New

AKRON, Ohio (AP)- Mark Roth,
averaging 220 for his first 16 games,
claimed a four-pin lead over Larry
Laub after the second round in the
$150,000 Firestone Tournament of
Champions.
Roth rolled games of 189, 233, 228,
2J7, 215,223, 222 and 267 for a total of
3,52J. Laub posted a total pinfall of
3,519.

'r'ork

(Jones

(}. ! )

at

Pittsburgh

!Candelaria ~I )
Allanta rMonteCU!ICb 0..11 at San Fran·
cisco (Ripley 0- lJ
Cincinnati 1Senu 1-1 1 at Houston
(Ruhle 0-1 ), (nJ

San Diego !Wise 1).2 ) at lAli Angeles
!Sutcliffe J..(]), tn J
Only gam e~ scheduled
Frldly's Games
New York: at Montreal
Philadelphia at Chica8o
St.l..ouis at Pitl3burgh, J n )
t incinnati at Houston, (n)
San Diego at Uls Angeles, (n f
Atlanta at San Franclscu, (n)

.636
.800
.183

Oakland

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Wed11esday't Gameli
16. Boston 8
Oakland 2, M,lnnesota I
Milwaukee 8, Toronto I
New York 7, Detroit 2
Baltimore at Chicago, ppd.,
Cleveland t , Kansas City 0
California 7, Seattle J

r ~tin

CARAVAN
FUDGE
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Baltimore (McGregor IHl lllld Stone 1-01
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Toronto (C lancy 1·1) at New York
/ John 1-1), I n)

Only i':Bmes scheduled

Fridly',Gameli
Oaklund at Seattle, (n /
Chicago at Detroit.
Ca lifornia at Minnesow
Texas at Cleveland, (nI
Toronto at New Yurk, fnJ
Kansas City at Milwaukee. tnl

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Southwestern Wins
Coach Jack James' ·southwestern
baseballers broke open a tight game
in the seventh inning at Southwestern Wednesday to defeat Hannan Trace, 114.
The win puts the Highlanders in a
first place tie in the SV AC with
Southern and Eastern. Southwestern's record is now 5-2 and 6-4-1
overall .

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"I have serious concerns for unless the Ohio Racing Commission ther with commitments, including
them," he said, "the availabilit~ of grants more than a 56-day regular the financing, with just 56 days."
horse flesh, the cost of construc!i,on, meeting, according to Smith.
The architect designed Scioto
the whole economicfeasibility of it."
·;we're not ·pushing for only 56 Downs grandstand and clubhouse
John Spicer, a former Ohio days, but also the (30) winter dates and the clubhouses at the Red Mile
presidel)t of the Horsemen 's and another (56-day) meeting," in Lexington, Ky ., and Detroit Race
Benevolent and Protective Smith said. "Wewouldn'tgoanyfur- Course . .
Association, puts it even stronger.
"People talking about a new track
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horses to run our Ohio meets now."
Still, backers of the new track
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caliber of horses from the nation's
major tracks. And that's why
they've called on Arcaro.
"He will help us secure the quality
of horses we're looking for. We're
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other state tracks down," said
Dublin architect Howard Daniel
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The perfect fini shi ng to uch to a
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you JUSt won'l want to .
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Highlander girls post second victory
Host Southwestern erupted for

The Daily Sentinel

Middleport, Ohio

tr.~ck

New

Today's

''

:Eastern, Southern, Southwestern win
double for Eastern, Nick Leonard
tripled, Ray Werry doubled, and
Gary Griggs, Greg Wigal, Mike
Bissell and Rogie Gaul singled.
Linescore :
Kyger Creek
tOI tiO 0-4 9 1
Eastern
112 221 x- 9 8 3
Batteries: Holter (WP, Wigal and
Griggs.
Minor, Noble, Porter and Porter,
King.

romer.oy

Sports .World

Yankees 7, Tigers 2 ·
Reggie Jackson walloped his 412th
career home run and Jerry Mwnphrey knocked in two runs iD a fiverun seventh as New York pefeated
Detroit.
·
After newcomer Steve Balboni
tripled and scored on Bucky Dent's
grounder in the third, Jackson gave
the Yankees a 2-0 lead with his
homer in the fourth. The Tigers,tied
the game with a two-run seventh,
but then the Yankees locked i\ up
with their rally in the bottom half of
the frame.
Balboni walked with the bases
loaded to force in the go-ahead run,
Dent followed with a sacrifice fly,
Mumphrey singled in two more runs
and Dave Winfield then singled in
the fifth run of the game-breaking
inning.
·
Indians 4, Royals 0
Len Barker scattered seven hits
and Mike Hargrove blasted a tworun double as Cleveland defeated
Kansas City. The victory was the Indians' sixth in seven games on their
current road trip, and sixth of nine
overall, while the defending
American League champion Royals
dropped to 2-7.

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6- The Daily Senlinel

Sunday School cultivation workshop
planned Saturday at Syracuse church
·-

They are parents of the Rfv. Mark
Flynn, who is pastor of the llethany,
da)' School teachers and leaders. A Carmel, Portland and Sutt«tJ United
,1 J
Teat•her
Cultivation Workshop is to Methodist Churches here In Meigs
!c :
be held at the Asbury United County.
Dr. Donald Flynn grew ,up on a
Methodist Church, Syracuse, !rom
10 a.m. until 2:30p.m. The cost is $2 Methodist Episcopal ljlissions
and participants are invited to bring station in Holston Conference, and
a sack lunch. The purpose is to allow has directed three rural COOperative
Sunday School workers to share in- parishes during his ministry. A
sights and ideas concerning the graduate of West Virginia Wesleyan
work ol the local Sunday School College, Dr. flynn also lholds a
which has been an important ann ol masters in Chrilltian E~ucation
the church in United Methodism !rom Scaritt College lor hristian
from earliest times.
Workenl, a Masters of Divi 'ty from
Resource persons for the event Duke Dil.-inity School, and • Doclor
will be Dr. and Mrs. Donald Flynn ol Education degree from the
from Charleston, West Virginia. The University of Virginia. In tile 1950's,
Flynns have a long record ol service Dr. Flynn was head of the &lt;lhristian
to the church and will be leading Education Department qf West
' · workshops on various aspects of the Virginia Wesleyan. He ha~ served
ministry of the Sunday School.
one circuit of fifteen church~s in the
On Saturday. April 25, there will
bt· a unique opportunity lor all Sun-

Spring tea April 30

Pomerov Personals

Meigs 4-H news

using wood stoves to keep wa.m and
that means the nasty, dusty job of
taking out the ashes, I have gone
back to the way my mothe~ taught
me years ago and that makt "a bit
easier :
When the stove is cold, bxng in a
live-gallon pail or tub. Nev try to
use paper or plastic. Run wa er over
one side of a section of newspaper
that is folded once. Lay this paper
over the bucket and gently scoop up
the ashes and lransler them to the
bucket, also gently. Immediately
replace the paper lid. Keep the wet
side of the paper lid next to the
ashes. Try this. It works. .MARGUERITE
DEAR POLLY - I want to thank
Mrs. R.E.S. for sending in the Pointer about poking holes in the tight
elastic in shoes. I tried it and it
loosened it enough that I can w'ear
my shoes in comfort. - ANN H.
Polly will send you one of her
signed thank-you newspaper coupon
clippers if she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in her
colunnn. Write POLLY'S POIN·
TERS in care of thili newspaper.

_..

tern on Iabrie was given by Missy
Calaway at a recent meeting of the
Alfred Angels at the home of Usa
Henderson. Sewing projects and
their progress were discussed by the
members. Plans were made for
Terri Stout to give a demonstration
on relinishing furniture at the next
meeting. Brenda Calaway wil give
the safety report and Erica
Kessinger, the. health report. At the
meeting a health report was given
by Kristi Hawk. Games were played
and refreshments were served by
Usa Henderson, Brenda Calaway,
and Kristi Hawk.

BY HELEN AND SUE BOTIEL
DEAR AUCE:
1
Lack of character? No Bid fo •
Special COrrespondents
'
-· ·
r~..
DEAR HELEN AND SUE : ·
tention? Yes. A misplaced
• y"
I called our medical clinic today to sometimes seems Olltentatious, ut
make an appointment. (It's a big not always. Would Gucci have made
. place and you usually don't have a It as "Guccy"? _ HELEN
personal doctor.)
AUCE:
The nurse (or clerk, maybe) who
As a sometime Suzl,. Susy, ' d
wwered llllked, "Do you have any suzanne who finally returned to
objections to seeing a female plain old Sue, I can say that ~'physician?"
.
periments in name-spellings go 'th
• Of aU the blatant se!dsm! I an- growing up. A "prissy snob" · It
swered, "Why didn't you ask, 'Do figure "y" helps the Image, btlt .
you have any objections to seeing a doesn't mean aU Alyces, Ullya ,
ffiale doctor?"' She didn't even cat· Cyndees, whatever, are snobs. ch my sa(CBSIJI.
SUE
I sat right down and wrote a letter
P.S. FROM HELEN: Wonder Wlto
to the clinic's general manager. It will be the first Joyce to becorhe
read in part, "Alllwantinadoctor . "Joice?" ... andhowcome"Phyll¥"
ill competence, knowledge, un- looks so right, but "Pbyllip" might
derstanding and honesty. I don't only happen in San Francisco?
care whether he or ahe is male,
female, black, white, green, tan or
polkadotted, and I feel that no one ar DEAR HElEN AND SUE:
your clinic should imply there might ·
I'm 17 and in love with my lialf
be objections to women physicians." second cousin who's 21. We want to
Do you think I was overreacting? marry but our parents are shocked.
- FOREQUAUTY
Is thili incest? Would our children be
DEARF.E.: .
retarded or deformed? - FORYou certainly weren't!
BIDDENLOVE
-Your letter will probably DEAR FORBIDDEN:
eliminate a question which is as offNo, this distant · relationship
base as asking, "Do you have any doesn't make for an incestuous
objections to seeing an Asian (or marriage. However, it the family
black, or East Indian) physician?" has a history of hereditary disease
- HELEN AND SUE
. we'd suggest genetic counseling
before you plan children. - HElEN
DEAR RAP:
AND SUE
A friend whose name is Janice, is
now spelling it "Janyce."lt figures.
(GOT A PROBlEM? Or a subj t
She's kind of a prissy snob.
for discussion, two-generation sty! ?
Am I wrong in thinking it tells Direct your questions to either S e
something about lack of character or Helen Bottel - or both, if y u
when a person changed " i" to "y" in want a combination moth her name? - AIJCE - NOT daughter answer - in care of
ALYCE
newspaper.)

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uwe Care"

FRIDAY
RUSS AND The Gospel Tones will
be featured at a revival at the Mt.
H
U
Ch
da y and Sunday evenings.
ermon . B.will urch
Friday,
Evangelist
be the
Rev. Don
Scwders, Dayton. Pastor, Rev. Bob
Sanders invites the public to attend.

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BE:\l'TIFl ' L F ·\~11LY B IHTH H1'0NE !li NG S
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SATURDAY
CAR WASH Saturday at Bob's
Ashland (Sugar Run) sponsored by
Meigs Paramedics. Proceeds to be
used to purchase heart monitor.
ANNUAL INSPECTION, Racine
Lodge 461, F&amp;AM, Saturday. Work
in entered apprentice degree; all
master Masons invited.
PUBIJC AUCTION by Racine
Wesleyan United Methodist Church;:
Saturday, beginning 10 a.m. at
Racine American Legion Hall. Articles accepted on consigrunent, flea
market section. Lunch served by
church women. Proceeds to church
building fund.

-

UIURSDAY
MIODLEP\oRT LODGE 363
F&amp;AM Thursday at 7 p.m. Work in
master mason degree. All master
masons are invited to attend.
REVIVAL now in progress at
Church ol Christ in Christian Union,
Middleport. The Rev. Rosco Thome
guest speaker. Services 7:30 p.m.
nightly.
RIVERVIEW GARDEN CLUB,
,..., home of Janet Connally, Thursday, 8
p.m. Barbara Knight to speak on
"Woman and the Law."
TWIN-CITY SHRINETTES, Thursday, 7:30p.m. at the home of Mrs.
Mary Stewart, Chester Road.
WI LUNG WORKERS CLASS oi .
Enterprise United Methodist Church
Thursday at 7:30p.m. at the church.
BRADBURY PTA, 7:30 this
evening at school.

You can't take your home stereo with you in
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FRIDAY
B9ARD OF Trustees, Beech
Grove Cemetery, will stage a public
~ing. · 7:30 p.m. Friday at
Pomeroy Village Hall to discuss
operations and secure public opinion
on improvements at the cemetery.
LONG BOTTOM Community
Alsociation will stage a hake sale
Friday beginning at 9 a.m. at the
cvmmunity building.

't
i

FILM, "Hot j..ead and Cold Feel"
11 lbe Pomeroy Elementary &amp;hwl
l!p011801'ed~y PTA, 7:30p.m. Friday.
Admiuioo, Sl.

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rTlOITIOd ~ 11&lt;&gt;d00rs 10 bring"""' gteslel
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lawn swing, 7' side entry slide trapeze " U" bar .

Metbodist Church. Speaker will~
the Rev. Jun Kittle, pastor of
Tom Grueser was elected Syracuse Church of the Nazare .
president fo the Meigs County Coon President Jim Broome extends a
HWIIers Association when they met welcome to the public.

Homebuilders class
meets at local church ·

Devotions were given by Coleen
Van Meer, Dorothy Roach, Osby
Martin and Clarice Erwin at the
Tuesday night meeting of the
Homebuilders Class of the Middleport Church of Christ.
Mary Martin presided at the
meeting. Prayer was by Ed Evans
and Denver Rice. Refreshments
were served by Mrs. Van Meter,
Mrs. Roach, and Miss Thelma
Boyer. Others attending Itere 1
Clarice Erwin, Herman Kincaid, . '\\
Nora Rice, Nettie and Willard
Ernest Bastin, professor of music Boyer, Farle and Raymond Cole,
at Ohio University, will be guest Dorothy and Raymond Baker,
soloist on the trwnpet when Meigs Bessie Forth and Edna Evans. . . · ·
Local School Platrict bands are
presented In a spring' Ctlllcert at 3 ·M C
p.m. Sunday 1n the high school gymr. · artoon to be here
naalum.
Mr. Cartoon and ~r of WSAZAwl~ variety of aelectiOIIS will be ·1V will visit Meigs County on Saturpresented dlll'lns the concer1 by lbe , day, Apri125.
I,
seventh, eighth and high schoolsymThe duo will be at the Meigs High
phonic bands directed by Doug Hill. School Auditoriwn at 2 p.m. for a
Guest conductor will be Jack wesentatlon of cirtoons and games.
Delaney, Jackson High School in- AdmilalonwillbeS2atlbedoor.
stnunentallllltn1ctor.
Tlcketa are on ssle at all elemen·
The symphonic band will preaent a tary schools in lbe Southern Local
. contemporary IIIJIIber, "ApoUo" School DiBtrict and are on sale at
and will conclude the concert with a various area busines!l houses.
medley of well-known Henry ManI: •
22 atte-'""J jree cuntc
cinJ nwnbers.
· Admilllon is S2 for families and
Twenty-two persons attended the
per lingle.
free blood pr8IIUI'e clinic sponsored
by the HarriBonvWe Senior Citizens
D of A to meet here · Club. Eleven persons also attended
forlunch. :
Put Councilors d Deputies of
Ice cream and cake were served in
Dlltriet 13, DaucJiten of America,
hooor
of the birthdays of Mrs. ~
. williJII!tlat the Ohio Univesity Hill
and Mrs. Hue! Stanley.
at 11:31! p.m. ~~ for -dinner
Mn.
Ferndora
Story, RN, as in
foUowecliby I meeting. Any member
chartle of the cUnlc.
d the diltriet. Invited
Edna Shalhr . . the fiUell of the
to meet day. The Illlt clinic will be beld May
12,
10 a.m. to 1p.m. 11 lbe town
The. Bradbur)' PTA
meet at house In HarrlllinYIIIe.
The regular , 11Mt1tiJtc of the
7:JO thlnvtn~n~at~.
1111T1!tonvU1e
s,niGr W[aena Club
To meet Tu y night wtU • held April
a ~ 1 p.m. at the
'""'
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boule.
Rtfntlhmeall
of .
The Mtlll A
Htlle
Alii,
~
IIIII
Ia
wiD
be
....
.'-!lllnn wW 111111 at 7:• p.m.
ru.dlly at the DlnYille United ...._ AD member1 are qed to at-

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Coon Hunters meet

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Fri.-Sat.-Sun
Sale Days

In and around Meigs
~~-

Bose f'llrOduces the Model1401•
0Jrect!Aellecllog• car sterao.
WhiCh means mat now you can ~sten
to the same Qual~y sound when you 're
sitting 1n a traflic jam or crui!lilg dawn
the highway, !hat you hear v.11en you're
rome with your Slef80 system.
Two Direc1/Reflec1ing· ~s wllh
adjUStable \lanes let ,-ou reflect !he
soond otf the rear window Of IXhef
. solid Maces of lhe car. And reftecl
sound lhe way It IS renecred in a con-

Sundays 1-6

Kevin Brooks, Eastern High ce person to the alunmi .
School student, has been selected
Theis holds a bachelor of music ,
to llay in the Dogwood Festival education degree from Capital
Honors Band which will perform University, and a master ol
in concert at the Pike County music degree from Vander Cook
Dogwood Festival Saturday at 8 College of Music. He is well·
p.m. in the Piketon High School known throughout the midwest as
auditorium.
a music educator, clinician, and
Guest conductor will be adjudicator.
William Theis, director of Alunnni
Students to participate in the
Services at Vander Cook College ·. band .are selected on the basis of
of Music in Chicago. He was a their musical ability, leadership
high school band director for and overall bandmanship
several years before going to the qualities as rated by their high
College where he provided alum- school directors. Only 125 studenni services as adjudicator, guest ts were selected to participate in
.conductor, clinician, and resour· the band.

officers elected were
Malcom ,Guinther, vice president,
and Berjlard Diddle, secretary and
treasurer. Trustees elected lor a
three year term was Jim Teaford ;
two year term, Boone Levacy, and
one year term Jerry Grueser.
The association meets the first
and lllird Friday of each mllllth. The
club boule will be open every Fridlly
evening.

: Social Calendar
•

......

Open Dally 10-9

Brooks honored

·.-

u Yul lab le.

handicapped indlvid~. It Is an opportunity to share their works and
lntheblrdundthel!ees
accomplishments.
I behold Him ·
,wlllled&lt;tononn\Ykneea
The festival Is open to all handicapped pe rso ns in the
:J~':."'"'
Scutheastern Ohio area.
Anyone interested in participating
. ~:~talnurut the brook
or receivii\g further details should
I blbold Him
:wbenireadllllboiybook
contact Mike KeUogg, coordinator,
IbdloldHlm
at
the Ohio University School of
lnevOI')'fhlnl! Id&lt;&gt;
aw~reness .
The festival ill a celebration ol the
.:.\:,.'4;',';'.. ureanew
A great many activities are plan- arts, which will include demon- Music, Athens, Ohio (614-594-65117).
. Becauae He is
ned for the over 500 handicapped in- strations, and performances in
,andiam.
dividuals who are expected to par· music, dance, drama, poetry, and
The Very Special Arts Festival is a
IblboldGod
ticpatein the festival.
villualarts.
project of the National Committee of
. r~~J%:r •bove
Workshops will he offered to
The Very Special Arts Festival is Arts lor the Handicapped an~ is supwhenHeelllllpredo"' love
anyoneinterestedinartsfor ~he,han- designed to include and ac- ported locally by the Hocking Valley ·
:~~=
dicapped, May 6, from 6:3~9 :30 commodate all varieties of hanArts Council, Southeastem Ohio
andtn:rt;llf•
p.m. Workshops will include .card- dicaps and disabilities.
Voluntary Education Cooperative,
=~m'~roubleand mptri!e
board carpentry' creative
The purpose of the festival is to Ohio University College of Fine ArBecause HeIs
dramatics, special arts education, demonstrate the inunense impact of
ts, Ohio University College d
and I am.
Barbara James s~cial music education, and pup- the arts in developing responsive Education and the Knights of Columpetry.
I . They will be held in the School and learning achievement among bus.
:--------------'-------------;-------------------:· ofMusic.
Programs thoughout the day on
May 7 will include small group
singing, kardboard karpentry fo r
kids, puppetry, creative dramatics,
'the •O.U. jazz ensemble, children 's
opera theatre, and many other arts
eXperiences.

- t

~

6 cyl inder eng ine, 3 speed, hard·
top.

Athens specidl arts festival
ATHENS - The secOnd annual
Southeastern Ohio Very Special Arta
Festival will be held on May 7from 9
·
a.m. -4 p.m. on the Obi'o Uruversity
campus, A joint effort Of the Schools
of Music and Art, this festival is
designed to provide opportunities for
handicapped people, 'in displaying
their works and crea ting t&gt;Ublic

and the u-

20% REDUCTION

·1978 JEEP CJ-7

The Daily Senlinei-Pa

HEllAND !AM

IbdloldGod

A MCJIHERS DAY
she'll remember
ORDER BEFORE MAY 1st
AND RECEIVE

WE HAVE 2
1977CAMARO
1978CAMARO LT

A demonstration on pinning a pat-

Poet 's Corner

Her blatent sexism causes
;r~rd~
woman to lodge complaint
·

~~of;God~~w=he~re~P~a~ul~is~past~
· :o~r.iiiiii;;;;;;d~~~~~s~u~n.~l~to~s~;;;;~

Herbert M. Mcintyre, brother of
C. D. Mcintyre of Minersville has
been promoted in the U. S. Air Force
to the rank of staff sergeant.
Mcintyre is an instrumentation
mechanic at Wright-Patterson Air
Force Base, Ohio.

rt, Ohio

Helen Help Us

Monday

GREENUNI$E

RIVERSIDE

--·Baking stains problem

meet

tiJBBMD'S

Navy Seaman Recruit Billy J.
Parsons, son of William D. and
Velma I. Parsons of Rt. 1, Racine,
has completed recrui~ training at the
Naval Training Center, San Diego. rfii-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;;;;;.,-~
During the eight-week training
cycle, trainees studied general
military subjects designed to
prepare them lor lurther academic
V. W.-AMC-Jeep-Renault
and on-the-job training in one of the
Navy's 85 basic occupational fields .
1979 BUICK REGAL
Included in their studies were
seamanship, close order drill, Navy
Landau V -6, brown with tan lop
and interior. Loaded .
history and first aid.

Polly's Pointers

To

Jack Smith of Lancaster and Ar'!'he Rutland Garden Club will
The Farm Bureau Women's tbur Smith, CbalqlCe)', have bee11 meet Monday night at the home of
spring tea will be held April 30 from
here to vlllt their aunt, Genevieve Mrs. M!trvin Wilson, Rutland.
1:30 to 3:30 p.m. in the Riverboat
Meinhart, retlll'l!ed · to her home r-;;;;;;;;~~~;;;
Room of the Athens County Savings ·· fm)l
.the Holzer Medical Center
and Loan Co. Judy Runyan, ·cool'- Saturday, and Mrs. Erma smtth. ·
dinator of Kids in Safe Seats (KISS),
Mrs. Dorothy Woocts,rct was In
Ohio Department of Highway Athena
recenlly for a bridal show
I1'N
Safety, will be the guest speaker.
andluncheonheldattheSportsman.
Ph.
992·
5776
svracuse,
Oh.
Wheeling District of the West
Refreshments will be served.
.
Mr.
ind
Mrs.
Dick
Nease
of
NOW
OPEN
FOR
Virginia Conference, and is currenColumbuswereEaatergueatsofMr.
SPRING SEASON
tly pastor of the Cental United
.
,e Potted Plants
1 ment and Mrs. Paul Nease.
Methodist Church, located in R
eturnS from dep oy
Mr. and Mrs. Edward voss were
.ecompl'e te line of bedding
Charleston, W. Va. He will bring
Marine Sgt. Daniel R. Midkiff, son' the weekend guests of their son and
plants and hanging
several fresh ideas to share with
of
Ray
and
Bernice
Midkiff
of
daughter-in-law,
Peebles.
They
at.
baskets.
•
thsoe attending Saturday.
Langsville
recently
returned
from
a
tended
SWirlse
service
and
an
·All
Dozen
Packs
9jc dOl.~ .
Mrs. Shirley E. Van Varick Flynn
deployment
to
the
Mediterranean
Easter
cantata
at
the
First
Church
Hours:
Open
Daitv91ol
was, during her youth, a conference
president of the Newark Conference
Ocean.
..
Heand
is aIndian
member
of Battalion !,.aDMethodist Youth Fellowship. She Sea
graduated from West Virginia ding Team · (BLT) 1/8, based at
•
jWesleyan College and has served as Camp Lejeune, N. C.
A 1972 graduate of Meigs Hig!!
district officer . of the United
Methodis Women and District Coor- School, Pomeroy, Midkiff joined the·
Marine Corps in January 1973. His
dinator of Children's Ministries.
Both Dr. and Mrs. Flynn are ex- wife, Cynthia, is the daughter of
perienced teachers in one-room Marie Domigan of Route 2,
church buildings. The two together Coolville.
have written two articles lor the
publication "Church School Mcintyre promoted
Magazine."

Parsons graduates

Dr. and Mrs. Don Flynn

ril'23, 1981

. Thursday, April23,1981

Pomeroy-,.,iddleport, Ohio

I

Ettend.

mm

(80}

3.88'

Our
4.77
D1corallve Bird Bath
Durable heavv -weight
plastic.

'·

2.77

Our Reg.
3.B7 Ea.

Hote-lnd Sprayers
6-gal. capoclty Insect or
1~1. all-purpose unlts.

3.97

18 97

Our Reg.
5.27
lrooclleaf WMCI KHier

' 33--lb.'
Bag ·
. lcotll'l Turf IUilder
For thick. healthy gross;
covers 10.000 sq. ft . lawn.
1

Quart Super K Gro ' wood

killer: gets

dandelion~

"Nelwt,

'

tsr; l tnf1rR RIVER ROAD, GAlliPOLIS

laid.

l;

(82)

(81)

.

0

'
~·

··-··-~ ~ ·- -- ---·----~~~

•

�ri'l23,1981

Thursday. April2lr 1981

Pa e-8-The Dail Sentinel

.

..

UMW makes $500 donatipn .·
A $liOO donation to the church Karr.
.
building fWld was l!Ylde on Easter
During the meeting 40 shutUJ calls
SWJday by the Umted Methodist ·were reported and a discusston was
WomenoftheChesterChurch.
held on an ice cream social t9 be
The UMW presented the Easter held later. Next meeting was ansunrise service which was followed nounced for May 7at I: 30 p.m. at the
by a breakfast served in the church.
fellowship rQOm. Mrs. Kathryn WinThe Rev. Richard Thomas, Debbie
don .and Mrs. Mildred Gaul had Frost,andArtdyWolfwereguestsat
charge of the breakfast. Two Easter the meeting which featured a threelilies were placed in the sanctuary part program. entitled "A 20th Cenand then later taken to shutins.
tury Emmaus Walk" bY Mr~.
Plans for the Easter activities were Kathryn Mora and Mrs. Jackte
made during a recent meeting of the Frost. Apamtmg at the front of the
UMW presided over by Mrs. Ruth

.
d pot1i hted
churgh, draped an s
g
~rovi~ed a focal area ~or U:ho~s
tliD~ as the Rev.
r. · · .

·ei

pres~ntedaprel~d.~~fo~anm~~

M •F~ost rea
ou ever ..
Wh. . It s Gomg ~ B~ E:!"~th
Scnpture was rea r m
s
Chapter of Luke, !5,34, and Mr ·

1

RuthKarrandM~;HelenWolf;:g

r.

'Were You There? accom:;~ ~
0
theiv · Mr. T~omas
~
~~d
by
oup s~~mg 0
.
Rug ed Cross.
n ave the ins. Mora tha g

Bridal shower honors Miss Painter
A bridal shower honoring Becky surrounding the larger cake ..Candle
Painter, bride-elect of Bill Am- arrangements were used on the
berger, was held at the Bradford refreshment table.
Attending were Marjorie Wilt,
Church of Christ recently . Hostesses
Tressie Hendricks, Vicki Smith and
were Diana Bing and Vicki Smith.
Games were played with prizes Bonne, Rayanna Cole, Marie Legar,
going to Kathy Johnson. The door Ruth Durst, Jackie Reed, Sonja
prize was won by Norma Russell. A Allen, Kathy Johnson , Sharon
wishing well theme was carried out Russell, Becky Vance, Carolyn
with decorations in a blue and white Biggs and Penny, Norma Russell,
color scheme. The cake carried out Nora Cambron, Jane Wise, Sherrie
the · wishing well theme with Barnhart, Ruth Barnhart, Mildred
miniature cakes in coin replica Hysell, Frances Hysell, Edna Mae

Swic~,

Dreama Pickens, Rita
Bail y, Delores Bailey, Jerri, Susie
and herie Lightfoot, Margaret Ambergfr, Madeline Painter, Bonnie
Wood, Tillie Rowley, Diana Bing,
Catherine Russell, Jane Hysell and
Jane!!.
Selilding gifts were Janice Haggy,
Peg~y Caldwell, Lawrence and Jean
Vance, the Helping Hands
Miss[onary Circle, Helen Miller,
Phyl is Joachim, Larry and Scott
Pickl!ns and Brenda Vance.

vitation to take a walk out-of-doors
by twm~ and to share and rejoice in
the quiet companionship as well as
to obserVe the signs of spring. nte
group ' then returned to ' the
fellowship room for further
meditation. The minister read the
song "Evening ilt Emmaus" and
ra ~r Mrs Mora read Scripture
fr~ Luke 24 arid the ~up participated in breaking bread and
eating .fish from a candle lighted
table. In conclusion the group sang
the doxology.

·Language
fair set at OU

'ASTROGRAPH
in .involvements that others
originate rather th,an in those you
launch ·yourself. Act In areas
wnere you get the best odds. ni
SCORPIO lOci. 24-Nov ••
either academically or in pracDon't base ImpOrtant declsoons
tical areas. What you learn will
on hunches or hearsaY today ·
help you rise to the top faster In
Judgments should .be ~a de solelY
.. your chosen field .
on the facts If you hope to ~VOid
TAURUS !April 2Q-May 201
Today you may be te(Tlpted to do - problems later.
SAGITTARiUS (Nov. 2)-Dec.
just enough to get by. Un'·
2l) Financial conditions maY be a
fortunately, that which you fail to
mixed bag today. You could be ·
do may demand attention at .an
botn prudent and extravagant.
inConvenient tiiTie late~. .
Emphasize .tne former and
GEMINI !May 21 -June 20)
eliminate
the latter.
Changes to which YOu have given
CAPRICORN 1Dec . .22-Jan. 191
sufficie~t stvdY w; II work out to
Business and pleasure may not
your .advantage today .
blend too ~moothly today. Your
Alterations made impulsively
prospects could feel you're trying
cOuld cause COITIP.Iicatians. _
to butter them up, eve.n .though
CAI'ICER !June 21 ·July 22)
this might not be your intention.
Don't let . friends or outsiders
AQUARIUS (Jan. 2Q-Feb. 19)
become inVolved in fan111y mat·
Think.
your moves 'through
ters. They maY ~e forced to take
carefully today, but don't ~well
sides and offend either you or
on them so intensely that you fall
your mate .
to act. Good Ideas are only that
LEO
(July
23-Aug. 2.21
unless they are implemented .
Coworkers m&amp;y ~ave better.ideas
· PISCES (Feb. 2D-March 20)
than yours for doing things today .
Though your int~ntion iS to be
Don' t let your ego get In the way
helpful, you' d ~wi~ today n~tlo
of proper execution of a job.
. try to ma.naoe lor. others th.ngs
VIRGO (Aug. 25·Sept. 22) Be
very careful today if invQived in · that may be beyond your scope .
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
anything which requires a finan Your goals are attainable today,
cial risk. Study the situation from
but it may require some shrewd
every angle to be sure it't not a
maneuvering to get what you
foolish gamble.
.
want . Even then you could fall
LIBRA (Sept . 23 ·0ct. 23)
short of your target.
You're likelY to be lucKier today
April24, 1981 ·
Take adva~tage of anv . op·
portunlties you get this coming· .·
yea• to ·enhance your knowled9e,

A'!'HENS - School officials from
throughout . Southeastern Ohio
should register now for the Seventh
Annual Ohio University Language
Fair for high school students.
Scheduled for Saturday, May 9,
the fair begins up to 2,000 high school
students to the Athens Campus of
Ohio Univesity for a wide variety of
language and cultural activities
ranging from folk dancing and
singing to cultural quiz bowls.
School officials should contact C.
P. Richardson, Department of
Modem Languages, Ellis Hllll,
"Tbe Makeup of the Christian
Athens 45701, (614) 594-li795, for furWoman"
will be the theme for the
ther information and registration
May
12
mother-daughter
banquet to
materials.
be held at the Middleport First
United Presbyterian Church.
Plarui for the annual banquet were
discussed when Group II of the
church met Tuesday night at the
home of Mrs. Robert Woodard. The
executive committee will meet at
the home of Mrs. leWis Sauer at 7
p.m. tonight (Thursday) to complete
"My Valley"
plans for the observance.
I walked alone ina valley,
No light ahead could I see,
I w11~ alone and :to lonely.
For no one "'a!ked with lllt! .

TOPS •wekomes mem

He healed the sick and raised the dead,
But. oh, unlucky me,
I didn't even see the nails,
That were driven in the tree.

" Russ and The Gospels Tones"
will be featured at a revival at the
Mt. Hennon U.B. Church Friday,
Saturday and SWlday evening.
Evangelist is the Rev. Don Sowders

And, oh! I wished I could hElve seen,
The Saviour in the sides.

And then I felt a genUe touch,

Go through rram head tot~.
Hem~ id, ''My body went abOve,
But my spirit's ht!re below."

Carmel News,
By the Day
Calling at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Douglas Circle were Mrs. Ernest Johnson and son and Mrs.
Phyliss Blazer of Belpre, 0 ., Mrs.
Ray Johnson and son Billy of Eagle
Ridge, Mrs. Glenn Pitzer and son of
Bashan.
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Circle
visited with Mrs. Mattie Circle and
Garret Circle at Pleasant Valley
Hospital on Sunday.
Sheryl Leann Johnson spent Saturday night and Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. William Carelton and
daughters, Angela Dawn and Jen,
niter Lynn of Racine.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Orr of
Chester called at the Robert Lee
home on SWJday.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Earl Johnson
visited with Douglas Johnson, a
patient at Holzer Medical Center, at
Gallipolis Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Circle called
on Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Circle and son,
Nickie, of Bashan on Wednesday
evening.
Arthur Johnson and daughter
• Sheryl called at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Douglas Johnson of Racine

F)orence Circle and Sue Hager
visited with Garrell Circle, a patient
at Pleasant Valley Hospital on Sunday.
Alan Pape, RD, Racine, called on
Patrick Johnson on SWJday.
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Circle
called on Mr. and Mrs. Clint Pitzer
and family recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Edson Roush visited
with his sister, Katie Curtis and
husband of Columbus one day recently . .
Angela Dawn Carelton of Racine
spent Sunday with Sheryl Johnson
and attended Sunday School with
Sheryl.
Mr. and Mrs. William Erf of
Bellevue, Ohio visited Mr. and Mrs.
Edson Roush over the weekend.

KIDDIE SHQPP

~:~~n. Pastor iB the iRieviiii.iiiBiiioiiib~~1~1~1~W~.2~n~d~:.~p~o~m~.e~ro~y~,~Oi;h~•.

So reach out, my child, and take,
All the powers yoa will,
While my spirit's hm on e{trth,
Vourh~ry soul to fill .

SWJday afternoon.
Angela Dawn Carel! on of Racine
spent Saturday with Sheryl Johnson.
Kim Follrod called on Becky Lee
on Sunday evening.
•
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Harris of
Springfield spent the weekend with
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Circle and Verna. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Circle spent
Saturday evening at the Circle home
visiting.
Douglas Elsie Circle visited at the
Hein home on Eagle Ridge on Saturday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Ables of Bald
Knobs called at the Douglas Circle
home recently.
Florence Circle visited Garrett
Circle and Mattie Circle at Pleasant
Valley Hospital on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Orr of
Chester were dinner guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Lee and family on
SWJday.
Kim Follrod and a girl friend
called on Becky Lee on Sunday afternoon.
Angela Dawn Carelton of Racine'
spent Sunday with Sheryl Johnson
and other relatives.
Becky Lee was guest of
FollrodSBturday night.
Douglas and Elsie Circle
Mr. and Mrs. Hayward "ISsei'
Keno a recent evening.

Selediorl-

Gospel Tones to appear

I sat down in my valley,
Md tears flowed from my ~yes,

lHE EXQUISITE
FORM BRA

My valley is no lqer lonely,
1 have u wonderful friend, 1
The spirit ol Jesusenteredj
And will stay until the end.
''Getft.ftldy"
By Mn. Bart.111 Jame!
Many day.s have come and g~J·

SIZES36 B
To48DD
For Support and
Comfort

Since Christ wu here on earth,
Yes manydayshavecmwand one
Fro;n the time ofHia preci0\19 birth.

Man keeps going on hia way
Wlthout a thOught or heed,
Thinking not u( Christ at all
Doing many un-Christ·lik ~ deeds.

TWO'S CO.

They take each day as thelf just due
And continue on their w11y I
Tht!)· don't have time for~
Or to bow on their knees &amp;ndpray.
They think they have time on band
And go merrilY on \heir way.

Ohio

One day that old man called death,
He meets them face to race,
TelLs tllem their time ill up
It's the end of the race.
Yes, many, many days bayetome and gone
Sinl'1!' Chrbt was hereon death,
Many days have come an~ gone
Sincolhe time of lib pre&lt; !OWl birth. ·

That

man that didn't a;zlm,

Time finally caught up to,,. ,
He's beneatbtbe miry claJ.

PRETTY AS
A. PICTURE

.

..,.,.

__.

Th~ ptrfect . 'n(~e/ of msual eltgana .. .yf
· u've

mastered the 'fme art of fash1on, combm1 g
sophislic,ated good looks with easy com ort. ·
. . . a full gul/ery .of (tJ/ors. vividly rendmd on c~nVIls -

ChOose From A

.

I

.

:.,

' 13.171%
Substantial penalty ior urly withdrawal .

{

( .

Spring Home
Fashion
.

.

"

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

HEAVY DUTY WROUGHT IRON

PATIO and POOL
FURNITURE
REDUCED
3 P¢. CAFE S,ET

•136

20%

'

Gather

for

6NROUPS

FAMOUS SAMSONITE

•WOOO AND B'RASS 3" 3·WAV
TABLE LAMPS . Reg. S39.00f2
.
ONLY
•BRASS 3-WAV TABLE LAMPS
Reg. SS9.00
•
ONLY
•FLOOR lAMP WITH
DECORATIVE GlASS TRAY
Reg . $129.00
NlY

3RD ST., RACINE, OH. ·
Mem• fi.Q.I.C.
I

FOLDING TABL£ and
4 CHAIRS

4

REDUCED20%

33

Excellent Graduation Gift .
Complete Sets Reg. $122.50
NOW
00 s pc. set.

'9

•66

SOFAS

DR~EL

All Styles Reduced

- HERITAGE QUALITY

STARTINGAT

'599·

STARTINGAT

DECORATOR PIECES
ON

$399

Sectionals and
Pit Groups

by DREXEL

SALE

COCKTA il TABLE
IN BlAC ~ LACQUER

GORGEOUS SOFAS AND LOVESEATS, AT BOTH STORES IN
OUTSTANDING 1981 FABRICS. THE
LATEST tOLOR COMBINATION~
AND NOW ON SALE!

Reg. 5114

SALE f599

REDUCED 10% to 40%
STARTING AT

$988

MATTRESS SALE

SlOREWIDE

SHOP THIS AREA'S LARGEST MATTRESS DEPARTME NT FEATURING SIMMONS and STEARNS &amp; FOSTER

Chair
Sale

$189.95

QUEEN (Set) $299.95

•74
'94
'222

KING (Sell

•299

$499.95

TWIN (Each)
FULL

•Contemporary
•Lounge
•Swivel Rockers
•Traditional
I
CANE - OCCASIONAl CHAIRS
OUR BEST VELVET .COVERS
REG. $159

*ADJUSTABLE-MOTOR IZED BEDS
*"BEAUTY REST"
"REGAL SPLENDOR''
" BISMARK"
EXTRA FIRM
FIRM
SALE
SALE
REG .
REG.
$89.95
$139.95

•INNERSPRING
•WATER BEDS

night

VELVET
WING CHAIRS
REG . $419 to $49S

'122

'333

.

~Each)

$119 .95

5399.95

$399.95

•114
'144
•322
'399

FAMOUS BEAUTY REST MATTRESS
Starting at a Low
'137 EA. Twin Size

ALSO ON SALE

Gigantic

TOPE'S FINE QUALITY

Dining.Room Suites
.

'

REDUaD20%

L.a-Z·Bol and Action

•CHERRY
•MAHOGANY
•PINE
•MAPlE
•PECAN·

Recliner Sale

•OAK

speak

' REDUCED
20%T060%~

-..:

FREE INSTALLATION

Easter

Easter guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Spencer, Apple Grove, were
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Byers, Mr. and
Mrs. David Byers, Katie Mae and
Becky, Mr. and Mrs. Bub Barnett,
Jeremy, Angie and Heather,
Doug1aa Barnett, Connie Bennett,
Tracl Meama, Terry auk, Debbie,
vern and J.- Limbert, an ct
·Parteral!wl. lbe RJ'OIIP enjoyed an
ea huntln the afternoon.

SUPER SAVINGS!

LAMPS

•LOUNGES
•CHAI RS
•UMBRELLAS

• DINING SETS
•SEATING GROUPS

STOREWIDE SALE -

BIG SELECTION

,

Selection of Styles and
in these Rugged

MARGUERITE SHOES .

rated show, finished fourth in the
week ending Aprill9.
In addition, CBS listed " Private
Benjamin," introduced two weeks
ago, in filth place, and a companion
sitcom, "TbeTwoofUs," in lith.
CBS's rating for the week was 17.3,
to 15.8 for ABC, which won the
weekly competition the two previous
weeks, and 13.9 for NBC. The networks say that means in an average
prime-time minute during the week,
17.3 percent of the nation's homes

. Howard Frank, Meigs County
auditor, will speak on "County
Govenunent and Finances" at a
meeting of the Middleport-Pomeroy
Area Branch of the American
Association of University Women to
be held at 6:30 p.m. on Tuesday at
the Meigs Inn. Members may bring
guests to the meeting. Reservations
are to be made by Friday night with
Mrs. Fay Sauer.

We invite you Ia use this popular
bankinl plan. Opin your account and start ban~lnl by mail.
6 M911th Money ~arket .

to

"60 Minutes," last season's tot&gt;"

The Daily Sentinet-,Page-9
with television Were tWJed to CBS.
NBC's average rating :was the
lowest for any network since the
week ending Sept: 16, 1980, when the
same network registered 12.i.
The rating for "Dallas" was 31.3.
Nielsen says that means of all the
. COWltry's TV~uipped homes, 31.3
percent saw at least part of the
program.
ABC got a boost from "The Ten
Commandments," a PassoverEaster perennial, which finished
ninth.

l&amp;pUcoR~o~o~•?eAIJERIFB lopuc!:.!f~~.~~~ f=;~:

The Community Mental Heath
Center's second annual poster contest for children is featuring prizes
donated by area businesses.
Children from pre-school through
the sixth grade may enter a prister
on .the theme "Helping MyselfHelping Others." Pencils, crayons,
paints or collage may be used to
create the poster which should be no
larger than 23 inches by 28 inches
and no smaller than 20 inches by 23
inches. Entries are to be submitted
\o the Meigs Community Mental
Health Center by April 30. The Center ·is located in the Multipurpose
Health Facility on Mulberry
Heights. For more information on
the post contest; children are asked
to telephone 992-2192.
Gilt certilficates of $10 have been
donated by Sport About. and Elberfelds. Toys, games, gift certificates
. and other gifts have been contributed by The Ben Franklin Store,
Burger Chef, RC Bottling Co., the
Kiddie Shop, Jeans and Things,
Custom Print, The Wizard, Pomeroy
Pastry Shop, Dutton Pharmacy,
VU!age Pharmacy, Midleport Book
store, Meigs Inn Pizza Shack,
Swisher and Lohse, and Adolph's
Dairy Valley.

Auditor

.

STARTS TOMORROW AT 9:30- BOTH TOPE'S LOC~TIONS

Poster contest
features prizes
·from merchan

school

.

.

A "high school night" will be held
Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. in the Meigs
Junior High School cafeteria, Middleport, for eighth grade students
and their parents.
Meigs High School Principal
James Diehl and Counselor Tim
Flesher will describe the high school
program and the choice of courses
available to the incoming ninth
grade students. Students and their
parents will be able to ask questions
about the high school and the classes
they are interested in. Refreshments will be served by members of
the Parent-Teacher Forum.

Whowentmenilyonhis ay,

Sunpipers_ _--+_

WRANGLERS

The ministers of the Meigs
Cooperative Parish recently hosted
a farewell luncheon for Mrs. Hazel
Hilt, widow of the late Rev. Wilbur .
Hilt of Rutland. Mrs. Hilt has moved
to Willoughby, Ohio, following an opportunity to relocate nearer her
family. The event was held· at the
Rutland United Methodist Church on
April15.
Following prayer offered by
parish coordinator Rev. Richard
Thomas, the group enjoyed the noon
meal. Afterw~rd, Rev. Florence
Smith presented Mrs. Hilt with a
card and a gift as the group's appreciation for Mrs. Hilt's "work of
love" ..
Attending the luncheon were the
following: Mrs. Benjamin EdwardS
of Athens, Rev. and Mrs. Robert
McGee, Pomeroy; Rev. and Mrs.
Robert Robinson, Middleport ; Rev.
David Harris, Racine; Rev. Stanley
Merrifield, Syracuse; Rev. Mark
Flynn, Racine ; Rev. Richard
Thomas, Tuppers Plains; Rev.
Florence Smith and the ltbnored
guest, Mrs. Hilt.

High

Many of au.r ~ustamers make deposits to their accounts by mall!

HEADQUARTERS FOR
MEN'S, WOMEN'S AND
CHILDREN'S

l&amp;p~

farewell fare

.

'

overwhelnled the competaio~ in the .
three-way ratings race during the
1900-81 TV 1year, 8eason-long figure5
from the nl)tworks show. ·
The A.C 'lielsen Co. says a point
in the ratings ·for a prime-time
program represents 778,000 homes,
and CBS' l~ad at the end of the 1911081 season NBS 1.6 - an average
rating of 1~18 to 18.2 for ABC and 16.6
for NBC.
CBS said Tuesday the margin was
its largest since the 1973-74 season,
when the network defeated then-

Hazel Hilt
honoree of

Summer Merchandise
Arriving Dai~!
See Our ILarge

Mildred Jeffers was welcomed as
a new member when the TOPS OH
!456, Rutland Club, met recently.
There was a total loss of 18 pol,lJids.
Freda Davis lost the most weight,
and Janet Bolin was rUfUler-up.

Iliad never met the Saviour,
No one introduced Him to me,
They said He had come and died,
Crucified upon a tree.

from the classroom anllinto tbe park's flower gardens
for a quick lesson in tl)e "buddy" system. lAP Lruierphotol

NEW YORK (AP) ~ Wipner by a
whisker over ABC a year ago, CBS

Mrs. Paul Haptonstall presided at
the meeting with Mrs. V.:oodward
giving devotions. Sbe u8ed .the topic
of "Prayer" and read several poems
on prayer. The devotions cOncluded
with Wlison repeating of The Lord's
Prayer.
·
Mrs. DWight Wallace reviewed
"Hager" by Lois Henderson. Mrs.
Harry Moore had the closing prayer,
and a dessert course was served by
Mrs. Woodward and Mrs. Wallace,
co-hostess.

o, Dorothy Proffitt

80s the spring weathe~ forced tbe two USC studenlll

competition

Mother-daughter fare
planned for May 12

Poet's
Corner

BUDDING. ROMANCE - Eric Roper and his
financee Shtia Orfl engage in a blt of extracurricular
activity 'during a visit to Exposition Park in Los
Angeles Tuesday. As temperatures reached into the

CBS
ove·rwhelms

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio
.
.
nmner-up NBC by 2. 4 points.
programming for more than a monThe networks say CBS' rating for th, Filing the IO.week actors' strike
the 25-week season means in an as the delaying factor. CBS was the
average prime-time minute during No. 1 network in the longer NBC
· the periOd, 19.8 percent of ·the season, too.
.
nation's homes with television were
CBS completed the season that
tWJed to CBS.
began Oct. Tl by ending ABC's twoCBS won the three-way race for week run in first place with some
thel979-IIO season by one-tenth of a muscle from a couple of the season's
point over three-time champion most-watched series and two
ABC.
promising newcomers.
NBC . argued that the recently
CBS's "Dallas" was the week's
completed season began Sept. 15, No.· 1 program, as it had been 17
but ABC and CBS held off new times in the last six montbs, while

I

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PROFESSIONAL l N, STAL~ERS
WE DD ALL OF THE WORK - YOU '
BA,CK AND ENJOY FOR

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CORNER THIRD AND OLIVE
GALLI POLIS, OHIO

•

446-3045

�Page

10 The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-:-Middleporl, Ohio

40 attend no til~'-\ge demonstration
Appruxunalely 40 interested far~
·mers attended the n&lt;rtill forage
:demonstration day held Tuesday afJernoon at the Charles " Red" Carr
farm .
Hesourt't' Personnel from the
Cooperative Exte nsion Office,
Agri cultural Stabilization Conservation Service tASCSl, and Soil
Conservation Service (SCSJ I were
present to explain the use of the

5N'fe

TAKE;N-

15th.
Any donation from Meigs County

businesses or individuals would be
deeply appreciated and the donors
recognized fo': their contri~uti ons .
For further information contact
Sam Shain at 94!).2720 or any member of the &amp;cine Volunteer Fire

A Southern High School student held Tuesday in the Buckey~ Hills
has been elected as the new sentine l cafeteria .
)lf the District 17 Future Fanners of
As District Sentinel, Todd wil help
Ameria .
with all District 17 activities and
• To dd Mu grage, a junior FFA officers' training sessions.
agriculture student, was installed at District 17 Is comprised of FF A
the District 17 FF A Awards Banquet chapters from high schools and

Department. All donations are badly
needed and will be deeply appr eciated . Other activities
scheduled for the Fourth are the an·
nual parade, chicken barbecue,
games, fireworks and tentatively
scheduled at this time is a talent
show. All sponsored by the Racine
Fire Department.

vocational sc hool s in Gallia,
Jackson, Vinton, Lawrence and
Meigs Counties.
Todd Is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Mugr;lge of Letart. His FFA
advisor is Aaron Sayre.

Meigs Property Transfers
Norman 0. Weber, Vera A. Weber
Mamie M. Staphenson, Affidavit,
to Susan .1. Tuttle, 8.985 acres, Oli ve . Salisbury.
floward Gibson, Valera Gibson to
Margaret L Amberger to Jack L.
James W. Hetzel, Sandra M. Hetzel, Ritchie, 2 A., Sutton.
i3.30 acres. Sci pio.
James W. Suttle, Greta M. Suttle,
Aff.
Notice, Bedford.
Dorothy B. Stone, Roy Stone to
Racine
Home National Bank to ·
James E. Lucas, EUzabeth A.
Vernon
R.
Little, Sheryl L. Little,
Lucas, 1A., Rutland.
Maxine Doris Chapman aka Parcels, Chester.
Jessie Y . Jarrell , Affidavit,
Max ine D. Chapman by William H.
Chapman to Bonnie Sue fulmsey,
Parcels, Orange.
Bonnie Ramsey to William H.
Chapman, Parcels, Orange.
Peggy Hofhtan , dec. , to Lloyd
Hoffman , Cert. of Trans., Chester .

Letart.
Dorothy Mae Cashdollar, Af.
fidavit, Olive.
Joyce K. Circle, George W. Circle,
Carol Noreen Carson, Clarence E.
Carson, Cheryl Doreen Circle,
Janice E. Gibbs, Fred W. Gibbs,
Venida Kay Wilson, Larry Keith
Wilson, Trina Lynn Gibbs to Joyce
K. Circle and Janice E. Gibbs, Lots,
Middleport.

m

Giants

111ABC NEWS

/CAPTAIN EASY
;ORIJ~TTIN6 YOUR

8055

McK!'! S!NT YOU IJP
HEt:i:!' TO WOt:I:K
FOII:N!

THAr-!7 Rli'iHT-HE DID .. BUT
~OT

MAYI!e YOU'VE
FORGOTTEN HOW
· WE HAPPENE'iD
T'5TUM&amp;LE ON

T'8E YOU~

ACCOMPLICS!

OIL

'Y I RECKON . .
YOU l THE MOUNTie;; "!

WE FOUND IT
BECAU5E

5TOLE THI~ MAP
FROM THeir&gt;.
CA~ I N!

I

WOULD CON~Dfl'l
THAT A CRIME-DON' T YOU! LET
ALONE WHAT THe
NEW5PAPERS
WOULD 5AY
A&amp;OUT If!

t
J I I J

lfiJ

OVEB EASY Guest : J o hn
Host: Hugh Down s
{Closed-Ca ptioned; U.S A .)
6 :30 (2) 0 11' ) NBC NEWS
(4] CIRCUS WORLD CHAM·
C ull~m .

Print answer here:

'
Yest
erday 's [ Jumbles PAPER FA INT HAZARD BREACH
Answer Wh en you can find something at a
dowMo·earth pri ce it should be th is" 01 AT" CHEAP

m

Jumble Boo« No. 16, containing 110 puutes, is available for S1.75 postpaid
!rom Jumble, cJo this newspaper, Box 34, NorwOOd, N.J. 07648. lncluelt your
name, address, zip coOe and mako cheeks payable to Newspaperbooit&amp;.

IJJ

l cnl'T Bal81/6

'?

IT!

A~­

ClJ

0

ffi

SANFORD AND SON
Ci)0 (j) JOKER'S WILD
(j)(jj)· DICK CAVETT SHOW
®J MATCH GAME
@ G) BLUE GRASS STAKES
7:58 CIJ CBN UPDATE NEWS
8 :00 I]) 0 11J NBC MAGAZINE
WITH DAVID BRINKLEY This

HO~ -ER...

AGP? I'LL BE PACKED
(lUICK.ER'H YOO ...--~

ARE YOU
EiETTIM' ON

WELL -HEHA5
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GETTING IG OORTH
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IF THERE'S OHE THIN6\IIE 61RL5
KNOW, IT'G THAT AMAll WOIITH

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88

HER 'TRUE MOTHER
COMF: FORWARD.

WAY HELP HER
DAUISHTER .

Our staff of registered phar·
macists work hard to merit a
repuca_rion for dependable and
accurate service. Rely on them!

VILLAGE PHARMACY
PH. 992-6669
N. 2ND AVE.

WAS !IE/NG
REA551GNED STATE·
SIDE, CONSUflO
WAS ALLOWED TO
ACCOMPANY HER!

·clalrol's 1980
Dealer Price
Was $18.69 Battery Included
The PANIC BUTTON sounds a
Pt.erc1ng alarm when activated. Carry it
Wtth you while walking, shopping.
Even hang tf on the door for pro
taction while traveling . #49-465 BARNEY

Big Price Cuts on Hand-Held
oo
Electronic Games
We're Proud
Of Our Record •

QUITE 6Y ACCIDENT
ANP HOPED THEY
WOULD IN SOME

97

A. Electronic Shooting Gallery. 3 exciting
adventures. 1160-2155. Reg. 12.95 .. . . . .. . .. . 7.88
1£J .B. lWo-Pitv-r Footblll. Plays four complete
quarters.IHI0-2156. Reg. 39.95 ............ . 19.97
, C. CIMJmplanlhlp Footbllll. 4 quarters, 2 skill
levels. ltlf0·2151. Reg. 29.95 ...... . ......... US
D. CIMJmplonlhlp a.Mblll. Nine Innings of
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excitement. 1160-2154. Reg. 27.95 .......... 13.97
E. Two-PIItv-r a.ublll. You select pitches.
time hllllng. IHI0-2157. Reg . 39.95 ... . .. . .. . 1i.l7

PAW .. WOULD VOU
GO OUT ro·TH'
WOODSHED AN'
FETCH METH'
CHOPP ltV' AX.?

IT 'S GOT A SHARP STEEL

TH'CHOPPIN' AX?.

BLADE WITH A HICKORY
HANDLE ABOUT THIS
LONG STUCK
THRU IT

OH.
THAT
THING!!

MV 6RAND~ATHER THINKS
HE'S OVER THE HILL

('If(

GRANDFATHER THINI&lt;5

l-IE'S OVER THE HILL.AND

AROUND THE BEND

6RANDFATHEK THINKS
l-IE'S OVER THE HILL,
AROONI' ·THE SEN~ OUT
THE SWIMANDOH~E :M~L.r:t

!If{

SHE ALWMS
l-iAS TO WIN

10:58
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by THOMAS JOSEPH
4 Hebrew
ACROSS
I Vacillate
for Lord
6 Boat
5 Unfetter
II Weak .
6 Rancor
7 Fall behind
12 Glue
13 Constitutional 8 Kirghiz,
U.S.S.R. city
guarantees
15 Palm leaf
9 Fonner
16 Emulate
Giants mgr.
Homer
IO Foot (Lat. I
Yesterday's Aruwer
17 Cosmetic job 14 Accelerate 23 Place of
34 Feminine
22 Overthrow 17 Strong
bliss
suffix
zs Thought
point
24 Hollow
35 Broadway
(comb. forrn)l8 Woody
ringing
light
26 Venerate
vine
sound
:16 Buttram
Z7 De Ia Roche 19 On tbe
27 Oedipus' 37 Be obliged
novel
bum
mother
38 Remiss
Z8 Bivouac
20 Marshes
29 Take on
39 Writer
item
21 Perfectly
31 Cords
WoUert ·
29 So help me ! 22 Info
33 Orchestra 411 HiD
38 Thackeray ...;.;..:;:..:....,.,.......,,......,heroine
3% Macaw ,
33 Gazzara
36Country
lacking
13 Across
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43 Where the
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DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it :
A.XYDLBo\AXR

l1 LONGFELLOW
One letter simply ~lands tor another. In this sample A lo
used lor the three F•· X for the two O's, etc. Sln1le letters,
apostrophes, the lencth and formation of the wordo are all·
hints. Each day the code l•tters are dltreront.
CRYP'I'OQUai'BS

NEWS

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0 (]) ®J

CBN UPDATE NEWS
THE LESSON
' OUTI!RLIMITS
•
C,BN UPD~E NEWS
•
®J 1l21111
NEWS
~)
PROGRAM
UNANNOUNCED
L$) NIGHT GALLERY
MORICAMII AND WillE
.CIN UPDA11! NEWS .
. 11 JTHi!TONIGHTSHOW
Gueat haal; D1v1d Leiterman
Gueata. Jo1t'1 Embery. Fred Wil·
lard (80 mm1 )
,3 RQIUAGI.EY SHOW

.

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;,nd dn·11 lrtHn p' w1llt lhr•·t ·
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10:.2 8
10:30

PEANUTS

t

• 1\1-:

l "llfl lt nu t •d I tt ' IX o~ nd I I
~\ J .' u p tn .lr nmn L1 1 piJ\ th •·

Americ ans.
·
HBO SNEAK PREVIEW :
MAY Jerry Slilter and Anne
Meara highlight the up coming
mo..,ies, sports and specials on
HBO in May
TAXI Strange roman tic sparks fly when spaced out
Reverend Jim falls for Tony 's
divorced sister. (Repeat)
(j) GOOD NEIGHBORS
@ THIS OLD HOUSE Bob Vila
reviews planslorthB interior of
the barn unit. In the main house
he decides which floors must
go.
(Closed-Capt ioned ;
U.S.A.)
tO:OO (!) MOVIE ·(COMEDY) "
"Odd Angry Shot" 1979
(I) TBS EVENING NEWS
I]) il2l CD 2(}-20 Hugh Downs
anchors this week ly magazine
profiling noteworthy events in
news , science. and entertain·
ment. (60 mlns .)
NURSE Mary 's de·
pression ' at turning 40 complicates her reaction to th8
romantic attentions of ' a
younger man , a doctor et the
noepital. (60 min a.)
I]) COUSTEAU ODYSSEY
'Mediterranean : Cradle or Cot·
lin"Filmed atlocationsthrough·
out the Mediterranean, this tum
documents exploration into the
legendarv sea bv J8cques
Cousteau. Careful ekamination
is given to different I )I pes of pol lution affectiAg the sea. (60
min a.)

9 :30

,:- ·,

• u Ill K .i

•

·\ l o~n

life and Death of the Black
Mo11 le ' Hosts Gene Siskeland
Roger Ebert discuss why we 've
come to the end of an era otlilms
by , for and abOut black

ANtJ fflt'I'PIP/
WHEN ONE OF
OUR SENIOR AIDfS

+:

EA"'T

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IIJ® SNEAK PREVIEWS 'The
SHE HAD FOCJND

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ONLY AFTER CON6UEL0'5
DePARTURE FOR THE
UNITED STATES D /17

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anew c ampaigntoavoidwomen
than the squa d room i s fi lled
with gorgeous call girl s, and he
has to stael himseH against
temptation.
(Repeat)

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th.JI ~r w hJd, · d Al;Jn Crt ·t·ntll'r ~
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11\lll'r Bt ·;tr St" ;•r n.., .,.... o, ·r. th ·~

weakly' series oilers a blend of
cu rrent news stories, tqpical
reportsand profiles .Host David
Brinkley is joined by contribu l ·
i ng reporters Garri c k Utley,
Jack Perkins, Dougla s Kiker
and Betsy Aaron . (60 min s.)
11)
PRIORITY
ONE
INTERNATIONAL
@ MOVIE ·!ADVENTURE)"
' 'The Rover'' 1971
t.[) iW
BOSOM BUDDIES
Kip and Henr y' s friendshtp
t eeters on the brink when Kip
insist s that the beaut iful. sexy
So nny live with them after her
roo mmate . Amy. throws her out
of the apartment they share
(BeJ1l1aJ)
O I!J®l CHECKING IN
li l SEARCH FOR SOLUTIONS
'Trial and Erro r , Conte xt and
Adaptati on' In this episo de , the
viewer looks at three vita lpr ob ·
lem solving teChniques used in
scientific discovery . (Cl osed ·
Captioned ; U.S.A.t(60 mms .)
(llJ WORLD ' No More Moun·
tams : The Story ot the Hmong '
Thts fi lm tells the story o f the
Hm ong, or"lree people ', a tribe
ol LAOTIAN MOUNTAIN PEO·
PLE. FROM THEIR EARLY
TIME S TO THEIR PRE SENT
STATEOFHOMELE SSNE SS IN
REFUGEE CAMPS AND FOR ~
EIGN COUNTRIES. (60 m.ins .)
8 :30 13) SOUND OF TRUMPETS
Cii: il2l G) MORK AND MINDY
Mark braves a shootout when
helacesa formidable opponent
tn a ghost town saloon, a sma ll
boy armed with water balloon s
tryi ng to emulate o utl ~w hero
Billtlhe K id. (Rep eat)
0 l!J@ PARK PLACE A bliz·
zord traps David Ross and h ts
lega l aid s tafl overnight with a
roomful or unusual clien ts in·
eluding an ira te owner o f a de·
pressed turtle , a disturbed
drunk , and a young man wtth a
strange appetite.
8:58 C1J CBN UPDATE NEWS
9:00 @ 700 CLUB
tlJil21 GJ BARNEY MILLER No

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(Answers tomorrow)

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Now arral")ge the c1rcled lenefs to
form the surprise answer, as :sug ·
gested by !he above cartoon :

PIONSHIPS The world 's
premier big·top pe rformer s
compe:te in four ca tegori es
trick riding, juggling, trampoline
and !lying trapeze .
[.[) BOB NEWHART SHOW
PROGRAM
UNANNOUNCED
CBS NEWS
ri) WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
(jj) LILIAS, YOGA AND YOU
il2l ABC NEWS
6:58 CIJ I;BN UPDATE NEWS
7:00 ~) 0 PM MAGAZINE
Y(EEKEND GARDENER
LSJ ALL IN THE FAMILY
III il2l G) FAMILY FEUO
ClJ
BILLY
GRAHAM
CRUSADE
0 IIJ TIC TAC DOUGH
00 (jj) MACNEIL-LEHRER
REPORT
®J NEWS
7:30 (l)
BULLSEYE
PROGRAM
UNANNOUNCED
(4) MOVIE -(COMEDY)' "Hot

WHERE IS SOME
"I..ON GHAND' QU!Gt&lt;Efi!:
THAN $0ME

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(9) RAINBOW'S END

'
MAYIIe YOU'II:E AL90

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.

VIewmg
NEWS
l ~ l' ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
(CONTINUED
FROM
DAYTIME)
I 5 : BASEBALL (CONTINUED
FROM DAYTIME[ Allanla
Brave s vs San Francisco .

~XPLAINS USAGE :..._ E1terulon A&amp;enl, Jobn R[ce explalru lbe
proper use of needed cbemlcals Ill make a successful no-till seedlllg.
Modreanl-drllllslD backgrouud.- (SCSphoto)

third in the area of Agriculture Sales
and Services. David, a sophomore,
Is employed by Spencer's Fas·Chek.
The Racine FFA won chapter
awards in five diffe rent areas. The
chapter received an· area award for
BOAC (Building Our American
Communities ) and received a
superior chapter award. The chap- ..
ter received a first place trophy for
the District 17 Urban Soil Judging
Contest. The chapter place third in
the areas of cooperati.ve&amp; and
marketing.

..,

by HennAmold and Bob Lee

EVENING

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•

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~THAT SCRAMBLED WORO GAME

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one lener to each square, to. form
lour Gfdinary words.
·

Lead And Cold Feet" 1978

students hould learn in judging test is designed to encourage pargeneral livestock makes them better ticipants to enhance their ability to
livestock producers and COotsumers identify waterfowl and game bird
by giving them practical experience management principle of proper
in identifying and understanding game harvesting by being able to
characteristics that affect q~ality identify and harvest species selected
meat production.
by the Ohio Division and the U. S.
The meat judging team consisted Fish and Wildlife Service.
of Randy Arms, James Bush and
Members of the mammal idenTodd Mugrage. This contest is a tification contest include A. J .
practical method to teach students Willbayer and Troy Ward. The purto identify cuts of meat and to pose is to familiarize students with
recogn ize quality meat products.
various kinds of Ohio mammals and
Mike Henry and Mike Vance par· to instill in the particpants a sense of
ticipated in the Waterfowl and game appreciation and understanding for
bird identification contest. This con- Ohio marrunals.

S?uthern student chosen as district officer

COMPLETES TERM David Lawson has just completed
his term as District 17 FFA
secretary. His duties Include the
wrlllllg of aU correspondence In
relation to DIJtrict 17 activities.
David was also instrumental lD
1ett1Dg up the Dlstrfcll7 officers
training ses•loa and the District
17 banquet. District 17 Is com·
pri1ed of FFA cbapters from high
, schools lllld vocaiiODDI schools In
Gallla, Jacboo, Vlulon, Lawrence, aad Melp COUlltfes. David Is
- I l l Mn. Jaolce Lawson of
:.. Syrae~~~e. Hh FFA advisor Is
. AaruaS.yre.

Television
6:oo 7l ~=
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.;=.;,&lt;r;;.) tiJ.Bj11on w

BORN LOSER

Fire department needs assistance
The Ra cme Volunteer Fire Depar·
unent 1s planning a full day of ac·
tivilies for this year's Fourth of July
Celebrati on, including the annual
firework s display in Raci ne. Th e
Volunteers are in great need of
money for the fireworks display,
which must be ordered by March

...JQNE-5 WA5

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~ ~ ~~ .,

APR . 23 , 1981

FFA students participate
in annual judging contest
Several students of the Racine
FFA participated in the annual State
FFA judging contests.
Bob Lee, A. J. Willbarger and
Albert Holman received a gold,
. si lver and bronze rating respec·
· lively in tl1e area of showmanship.
Lee will 1·eceive a trophy for hi s efforts at the state convention later
this year.
Participating in the ge neral
livestock judging '"ntest were
James Jush, Laren Lewis and Troy
Ward. This contest is designed as a
practi cal method of teaching students to recognize quality mea t producti on antmals. The skills v&lt;&gt;-ag

SMITH.

MIDDLE OF -.tHE NIGHT.

:Recognize R~ci~~:e FFA at District 17 fete
David Lawson, son of Mrs. Janice
Lawson of Syracuse, was honored
with a plaque for obtaining the
highest score in the District 17 Urban Soil Judging contest.
He was also recognized for
receiving second place in the area of
outdoor recreation. Hls project consists of a garden and work at London
Pool. David also serves as Sentinel
for the Racine Chapter and was past
secretary of District 17.
Davili Salmons, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Don Salmons of Racine, placed

OF

A MAN
LING
COLOGNE
cARING
DESIGNEcR' EANS, HAD
SUFFERED ,..\ ''HUNTING
ACCIDENT' . -IN .THE

,.
Moore Uni-Drill, a Jl()o~Jl forage · procedure.
failure.
seeder, owned by the Met s Soil and
The ten-step renovation procedure
The Moore drill can be us'1&lt;! in
Water Conservation Dis ict. The as explained by Extension Agent, direct n&lt;&gt;-till seedings or on fields
drill is available for rent to Meigs John Rice. He pointed out that in or- that have been tilled. A pasture or
County landll!lers.
der to get a successful seeding, the meadow seeding should be made in
Those attending saw '! " alfaUa renovation procedure must be April or August for best results.
followed completely through.
seeding being made into a11 existing
For further information about renstand of orchard grass. Tlje seeding
Leaving out a step or Wling lower tal of the seeder, cost-share monies
was a part of the ten step ln&lt;&gt;-tillage rates of chemicals and fertilizer can for seedings or other conservation
pasture and hayland r~novation make the difference in success and assistance, contact the SCS and
ASCS office in Pomeroy.

The Racine Chaplet Future FarBob is president of his FFA Chap·
mers of America was recently ter and ili very instrwnenlal in his
honored at the annual District 17 family dairy operation.
FFA anquet held at Buckeye Hills
Steve Riffle, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Career Center at Rio Grande.
James Riffle of Syracuse, received
Bob Lee, son of Mr. and Mrs. second place in the ,area of
Robert Lee of Racin e, was Placement in Agriculture Steve's
recognized for his accomplishments work e•perience project involved
in attaining the State Farmer working for Arnold Hupp in swine
Degree. He also received second and vegetables. Steve also worked at
place trophies for his work in Dairy a supermarket in Middleport where
Production and Accounting. Bob he learned how to use a cash
placed third in the areas of Soil and register, how to order stock and to
Water Management and Fish and stock she! ves.
Wilflife Management.

The Daily

Ohto

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. Y•terday's Cryploquote: l'r J8 alMPLETELY tiNJMPOR·
TANT. THAT JS .WHY IT IS SO INTERESTING.-AGATHA

CHRISTIE

'

'

.

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1981
11
Help Wanted
Lost and Found
6
KIT 'N' CARLYLE '"
FOUND wh1le gumea Someone to mow banks
Chicken 742 2949 or 742 throughout the summer
Approx.matelv every 3
2608
~
weeks Aller 6 call992 2667
(.ARJ&gt;ILeJ I 'toKT
Yard Sale
7
UN~TAND
Yard Sale at 137 Pearl Need someone to mo\le, .n
tact,
2
small
boi
ldongs
'loo W~'f !::AT
street on Moddleport Thur
sdaY and Froday, Aprol 24, lOxiO the other 10x30
'(0\J~ l&gt;ti(N.~ .
7680
25 from 9 to?

12- The

Two donors join three gallon cl __ , Small investment,_large
at Wednesday bloodmobile visit
returns, Sentinel W8nt Ads
I

Nmety-seven units of blood were
collected Wednesday durmg a VISit
of the Huntmgton Regwnal Blood·
mobile held at the Semor C1t1zens
Center, Pomeroy In all, 105 JM;rSOns
a tt end ed . There wer e 53
replacements and 14 f1rst ttme
donors
Three gallon donors were Joyce
Bartrum and V~rgll Taylor
Doctors ass1stmg were Dr W1Jma
Mansflled, Dr James Wtlherell, Dr.
Johme Brawner and Dr L. D Telle.
Nurses assisting were Ferndora
Story, Jack1e Frost, Karolyn Black,
June McDougal, Margaret Johnson,
Sally Gloeckner and Beulah Ward
In charge of the canteen was the
Rock Sprmgs Better Health Club
Clerical workers were Mary
Nease, J ean Nease, Juamta Sayre,
Etta Mae Hill, Grace Drake, Enuna
K Clatworthy, VIrgtma Buchanan,
Opal D1ddle, Joyce Hoback, Mace!
Barton, Vernon Nease, Becky An·
derson, Patty Sham, and Gladys
Walker
Ass1stmg from the Rellred Semor
Volunteer Program were Thelma
D1ll , Florence Rtchards , Eva
Dessauer, Alice Struble, Clarence
Struble and Bernadme Meter
DonatiOns were made by Quahty
Prmt Shop, The Da1ly Sentmel, The

Athens Messenger, W.M P.O. Radio,
Semor Ctltzens progr&lt;i'll R.S.V.P.
and Veterans MemonaiiHospJtaL
Donors from Pom•roy were
Carolyn Jeffers, Walter R Couch,
Donna Roush, Rilla Lo'fo'Cry, LoUISe
Myers, Sharon K. Pratt, Donna J
Hatfteld, Joann Ward, Mary Starcher, Deborah L Gru$fr, Russell
Moore, Wilham C Qt¢kel, Donna
Evans, Pamela J Mc~gal, Geoffrey A Wtlson, Jeanr E Braun,
V~rgtl E Taylor, Albe E Parker,
Shelly Clark, Robert
Vaughan ,
Sheila J. Taylor, Alice Wamsley,
Vtrgll K. Wmdon, Chari M. Werry,
Mary K Spencer, Btlly J . Spencer,
Edgar Abbott, Wtlliam . Radford,
Leo L. Vaughan, Rowena H.
Vaughan, Rhonda Bell, ~ane V. Abbott, Angela S Sellers. Ed. E .
Sellers, Carolyn G Thymas, Louts
B Vaughan, Becky '!' Thomas,
Dorothy J Oliver, Glona Rtggs and
MarkS Rtggs
Donors from MmersVflle were C
Thomas Hanun , Debp1e Brown,
Clarence D Mcintyre Becky Anderson and Mary L toss; Middleport, Patnc1a J Vaughan,
PatncJa K. Logan, 1George L
Harrts, Jr., Lmda L. HalFY· Joyce V
Barton, Tunothy J Ku1l, Leafy M.
Chasteen, James R Da)\I!Y. Sarah J

&amp;b Evans will host seminar

Wild turkey season
to commence Monday
RIO GRANDE - Oh1o's "lld
turkey huntmg season opens Mon·
day, Apnl 27, and th e Gallla County
Conse1vat1on Assoc1aton m conJUnctwn wtth Bo b Evans, president
of Bob Evans Fanus Inc 1s sponsormg a W1ld Turk ey Semmar at
I 30 p 111 Saturday, April 25, at the
Bob Evans Farm shelter house
The farm IS located on U S 35 onehalf rrule east of R10 Grande
Bob Evans, an av1d sportsman
and conservatwmst , Will host the
w1ld turkey semmar Evans has
spent the last 10 or more yea1s
deve lopi ng Improved wildli fe
hab itat a r eas thr ou g ho ut
SoUtheastern Oh10 111 an effort to morease the state's w1ld turkey
populatiOn
Semmar speakers mclude B1ll
May of the Ohio Department of
~a tu ra l
Resourc es
IOD NRJ
l;)IVIsJOn of Wildlife, who Will provide

mformatwn on the history of the
w1ld turkey m Ohio Olla Arbogast of
Pomt Pleasant, W Va , who has won
several West VJrglflla state turkey
calhng champwnshipc, will also
spe0k, along with Lew McClure of
CaQJOn, wmne r of several regiOnal
and natwnal w1ld turkey callmg
titles Members of the ODNR
DIVISIOII Of W1ldhfe Will be hn hand
to show a film of Wild turkey growth
111 Ohio and to provide mforrnatJOn
about turkey huntmg laws m the
state
,)&lt;.enneth Tomllson, area game
1l'rotector, conunented ~ •• the W1Id
Turkey Semmar say1 1.g, 'W1Id
turkey copul$hons m Isolated areas
of Oh10 have been mcreasmg
significantly m recent ears, and
equal mterest 111 harv~stmg the
game bird by sportsmen hs also mcreased, consequently, semmars
hke this one Will help etlucate the

In pursuance Of an order
of the Probate Court of
Meigs County, Ohio,
H0 mer Baxter, Ad
mlnlstrator of the Estate of
Dillon Harold Taylor,
Deceased, woll offer for
sale on the 24th day of
Aprol, 1981; ollO 00 a.m on
the Meigs County Cour
!house steps; •, Pomeroy,
Ohoo, 1 24 acres )ocated In
Lebanon Township, Meigs
County, Ohio, except
monerals, as shown on deed
recorded on Vol 223, Page
529 of the Meigs County
Deed Records, belonging to
the late D1ilon Harold
Taylor Terms of the sale
are cash
The Ad ·
mlnlstrator reserves the
rrghtlo refuse any and all
b1ds
Homer Boxter,
Adm rnostrotorsof the
Estaleof
Do lion Harold Taylor, Oec
1419,16, 23, 3tc
Public Notice
PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTYLOHIO
NOTIC" OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
The follow1ng persons
were, on the dales shown,
appomled loadmon&lt;Sterthe
follOWing decedents '
estates pending '" the
Me1gs County Probate
Court
Flducoary's Name, Ad
dress and Tolle, Date of Ap
po1ntment, Decedent s
Name and Address, and
Case Number are listed·
Hollon Wolfe Sr , Box
114, Rac1ne, Ohio 45771 ,
Mar ch 27 , 1981. Ad
H
monostrator , Guy
Ne1gler , Rac •ne, Oh•o
45771 , 23374
Manning D Webster, 114
Butter n ut
Avenue ,
Pomeroy, Ohoo 45769, Mar
ch 16, 1981, Executor, Elsa
B K1mes, Middleport, Oh•o
45760, 23375
Gladr.s Herney, 42340
Cootv ll e Road, Reedsville,
Oh 10 45772, March 27, 1981.
Adm1 n1stratn x, Emmet
Ray Heoney, 42340 Coolv rlle
Road, Reedsville, Ohoo
45772, 23392
Mary Darst, Route 1.
Cheshtre, Oh1o, 45620, Mar
ch 31. 1981, Admonostralrox,
Leonard Go imore, Route 1.
Middleport, Ohoo 45760,
23386
Jerry F Powell, 28229
Tanners Ru n Road ,
Rac1ne, Ohoo 45771&lt; Apnl9,
1981, Execulor, 1..iara J
Powell , R 0 2, Rac1ne,
Ohoo 45771.23354
t4l 16, 23, 30,3tc

BOB EVANS
hunter w1th the proper knowledge m
harvestmg techmques."
The Wild Turkey Semmar ts free
and open to the pubhc

Public Notoce
IN THE
COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF
MEIGSCOUNTY,
OHIO
WILLIAM H LOY, ETAL,
Plam11ffs,
vs
D M SHIELDS, ETAL,

The average retired worker gets
$337 a month and stands to receive
an mcrease of about $37 to $374 a
month
The average elderly couple now
kets $576 from Soc1al Securtty They
would get about $64 more, $640 a
month

Here are those and some earlier
mcrease voted by Congress: 1968, I3
percent; 1970, 15 percent ; 1971, 10
percent, 1972, 20 percent; 1974, 11
percent; 1975, 8 percent ; 1976, 6 4
percent, 1977, 59 percent; 1978, 6 5
percent, 1979, 9.9 percent; 1980, 14 3
percent
In the same 13-year pertod, the
payroll tax or the amount of wages
that may be taxed for Social
Security has nsen a total of 18 times.
Soctal Security taxes are now levted
on mcome up to $29,700, nearly four
times the 19681evel

The rntmmum benefit of $153.10 a
month ts likely to go up about $17 to
$170
The maxtmum SSI payment ts
now $238 for an mdivtdual and $357
for couples. Thetr payments are
likely to rtse by nearly $27 and $40
respectively .
Some SSI reCipients may gam
nothing When thetr checks go up,
other beneftts may fall correspolldingly.
Smce 1975, Soctal Secunty checks

Livestock reports. • •
Olt't Valley Uvettoc.k Co

~" ' "

Receive state funds
The April State School Foundation
'ilubstdy payment of $'13,697,222 '!/ to
,612 Ohio ctty, exempted village and
local school distncts and 87 county
board of educatton was reported by
State Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson.
Me1gs County's three local distric.f3, followmg retirement deductions
for teachmg and non-teachmg
retirement received a total of
$21111,968 68. Metgs Local recetved
'$141 ,584 63 ; Eastern Local,
$75,385.17 and Southern Local,
$72,998 88. The Meigs County Board
'of Education recetved a dtrect allot)nent of•l8,756.82. 1

- ,I
Publk Notoce

Feeder Steen Good and Chotce 250 to 300 1~
71.-J, 3110 to&lt;GO lbo 6&amp;.76, 4011 to500 lbo 114-74 50
500 to 800 II» 82-71 50 600 to700 11:18 $8.64 , 700 to
1001bi5W4, IOO.Ildover46-56
F'etdtr Heifers Good and Choice 25(1 to300 lbiJ
110 :..1-72 :10, 300 to 100 ll&gt;O 110-71 50 4011 to 500 11&gt;11
174tl, 110 01 tiOO lbo ~ 50, 1100 to 700 lba 5Z.
57 50, 700toiXJ Jbl t&amp;-$5 , 8•hnd&lt;JYer 4Wl50

F-.. Bulls Good and Choice ~ to !00 lbs
111-72 50. 3110 to 400 lbs 6MI.:JO, 400 to 500 lbs
17 5Ne, 500 to 1100 lbs ~. t100 to 700 lbs ;,.
Bulls l ,OOlltw and up~ 50-64 75
Sll.l~ht.er cows utili he~~ U 50-47, Cllnners and
cutten 37:42
CoM~-Cal vl'!l by the ~~~d~

Veal calves - cho1ceand pnnll! 118-99 good M71
&amp;bycalvuM-140
Top ho,;• 38 5(1.;18 ~
Bo.Hrs »37 50

SprlnJcer Cow• (By the Head) 28M50
Cow inot Ca~ Po ira (Bylloe Unl114»61tl
Veals (Choace andPrime )&amp;UeJO
Baby Calves (By the HeadJ 52..50-110

HOG PRICES

INo I Ba rrows arid Gilts) m-230 II•
Butcher Sows 27-.33 50
Buteher Boars 2? '15-32 to
F-r l'llto tBytloe Headll:h'll

~

SHEEP PIUCES

Feeder IAmbs 82-70

- - -- --

/

Canner~ and CuttersJI -42 ~

-·

~- -----

---

- -'Pu::c:b::.;li'Cc ~o,!l ce __ _

Putiloc Notoce
------

2-1n Mtmor•tm
l - Annovrtetmtnll

41- Mobllt Homta
tor II tnt

4- GivtiWIY
J- HI,VAds

u-A~ rfmtnll or

t - Puellc Slit

IRON AND BRASS BEDS
Old furn1ture, desks, gold
rmgs, Jewelry , SliVe r
dollars, sterling, etc WOOd
1ce bo)(es, 1ars, ant1ques,
etc complete households
Wrrte , M o Mrller, Rt 4
Pomeroy, OH 45769 Or
call992 7760
New, used , and a nt1que fur
ntture No ttem to large or
to small Will bu y one poece
or complete households
Martm's Ge nera l Store at
992 6370
Now buy1ng gold and
Sliver, old pocket watches
chams. dtamonds, S•lver
money and cotns Mart1n's
Genera l Store, M1ddleport
992 6370
Color TV that doesn't work
992 2034

9-WantedloBuy

1

17 _ _ __

R'"t

n - hllttirtt Suttlln
M-llt111or Stlt

&amp;LIVESTOCK

tl- llorm ICI'II.,.,tnt

n - Wiflftd to lily
U- Trutkt torlale
u-Liwntocll
64-Hiy &amp; Grilli

n - MOMy It Loan
, _ ,,. . . . . 1

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6~ 1oM &amp;

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•

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.

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e REAL ESTATE

7l-VIItl &amp;4 W D

)\ - HMIIIIOf' hi• I

74- Mottrcycltt

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U- MoiiUt ... OmOI

1J.AUto Parts
&amp;AcctueriH
n - Aufrt lt.,.lr

, ,_,.., .. ,fer Salt
,.- IWSiMtt IWINiqs
Jl-lotll ACI'Nft

u-lt~llttiiiWintecl

11 - MMNI lfft..,....tMffttl

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want-Ad Advtrtlllnt
.
Dtedllntl

742

Need Monev? Need
Clothes? Why not get your
wardrobe ol no cost lo you
and earn e.:tre dollars too?
For mformatlon or In
terv1ew appo1ntment call
992·3941 between 9 9

.,_ ,. .......... lllttwiMnt
J)-IIICtYiflftl
1'-lltctrlcat

• llftltft'ltlen

87 . _~-----1
_ _ __ _ ....J 30·.
29·-_
-, ._
. _- _-_
_-_

lt-Otfllfll MIYII~
u-MH 1-lr

9_

17- U.... twy

_

31 ·-- - :_
32
_-_
_-,..--_
33•._ _ _ _ __

sell
own
full

eSI!IlVICII

n - WNittr1

1t Wtrft tr U_,

35 - -.,....--,..,- -

Colll

••

a.,.,,
0. . .

..

1 5 . - - - - -- 1 ~ - - - - - - - -{

111

....

__,,c.,. 11 , ,..., ... 001o•.,, , , ..h , . , . _ u .11
00
,...,....
_ _ _ ,..,..,.-.,. ..........,,...,,.,._
- ·· - _,-"' .. W'YIOI h• .,.,..,, oo c... II""

Ill

rtte

Cf'"'"""-

,,

Merebandlse

- ---- - - -

42

Mob1te Homes
13
tnsurance
lor Rent
AUTOMOBILE
IN 2 b~droom Moh1le Home
SURANC E been can Ad~~ ts on ly Brown' s
cell ed?
Los t your Tra il er Court. M.nersv111e
operator s l1cense? Phone 992 3324
992 2143
Two trailers tor rent, tur
n1shed, a•r cond1ttOn1ng ,
cab I~ tv 773 5651
1"'8_ _ wanted lo Do
Furnace repa1rs electnc:al For ale or rent. 3bedroom
work, plumbmg, mobile mob le home w•th expando
home or res1dence 992 on 1 rge rented lot, SR 143,
5858
turn shed w1th washer and
dry r, new carpet and
W1ll do all types of car a lu •num bulldtng
penter work Expenenced $54 00 742 3025 or 992
and responsible No tob to 3027
b1g or to small Phone 992
3941 anyt1me
2 b~1.1roorn Mobile Home
Radne area 992 5858
ALTER ATION S &amp; general
sew1ng, exper•enced, work 2 bldroom Mobile Home
guaranteed M Me1er 992 fun• hed, adult s pr eferred
5983
Dep sot 992 271.9

45
Furnoshed Rooms
Sleepong rooms, by the
K•tchen , and
week
telev1S10n lounge Carryout
store and restaurant w1th1n
500 feet 992 6370

W1!1 do housecleanmg Ex
peroenced Call985 3861
Rug weavr ng 992 5971

I

ATHENS SPORT
CYa.ES
Stamson Ave Athens,
Hours
Mon Tues 9 6
- Weds Fn 9 1
Sat 9 5
Closed Thurs
3 29 3 mo

-

Apartment
for -Rent - - 21
Bus.ness
Furr.1shed 2 bedroom up
Opportun1ty
sta•r$ apartment Adu lts
LOG HOMES , factory only no pels Middleport
dtre ct,
d ealershtp 992 3874
availab le,
1n\les tm ent
requ1red, unhm 1ted •ncome 2 bt:-proom tu rn1shed up
potent1al Call Mr Stacey , sta .r~ apartment $150
I BOO 438 9528
month plus uTII 1t1eS $50
depo 1t No pets Ava il able
May 1 Call 949 2875 after
Real &amp;stall:
4 30 m

Sizes 38-56!

4 acres with 2 bedroom
tra1ter 70x14. 2 car garage,
3 miles from Rac1ne on Co
Rd 28 Before 12 noon or af·
ler 5 p m 949 2618
Bx45 2 bedroom mobole
hOme Real good $1,950
Brown's Trailer Park. 992·
3324
33
Farms tor Sale
100 acre farm Chesler
township on R0&lt;1te 248.
Small house &amp; barn 667
6129 or 985 4146
Lots I Acreoge
35
,
8 acres more or less fer
sale $11 ,000 '1'12 2292

'

Farm Buildings

Farm Equ1pment
U$ed R 40 Dolch Wo1ch
Tr'rncher 1 614 694 7842

Hou-;in!J

P&amp;S BUilDINGS
Rl 3, Box l4
Rac.ne, Oh
Ph 614 843·2S9t
6 15 ti c

J&amp;F
ENTERPRISES

I

For all of your wirong needs
Let George M1ller check
you r present electncal
sys tem
Res•denttat
&amp; Commerctal

PH. 992-7201

Call742·3195
or 992·7680

F¥r 15,000 gallon tanks
lo ated above ground a t
At ens, Oh1o S3 ,000 oo
e• h Phone 1 304 422 2781

)'OU

TIRES GOI NG BALD'
h ~ F1rutont 721 sand ~&gt;~t

.c

We

h~1p

i H. L WHITESEL
--------------2 23 1 mo

!;:=========;!

tv pes of roof work
new or repatr gutten.
and down spouts, gutter

14,000 ga ll on tanks
above ground at
At ens, Oh $3,000 each 1
30 ·:2 2781

lnt A6a ·e.~ ,(l.

.. --

'
Co to town or for a wall on the
woods m lh1s CtiiY pullover
Lean lona easy Oiet sh1rt or
turtleneck beneath Cmchet pull
oveo rn gmple shell sl1lches ol
synlhetiC worsted Panern 717 1
dlfect1on s lor s11es 38 to 56
mcluded
$2.00 foo each pattern Add
501 each pattern foo postJae
and han~lona Stod It

....

Nlllltcrllt 111pt,
;a t '
The Daily Sentinel
. . 1i3, Old Clltlltl Sta., lw
Yllk.
1om. Print .....
~ Zip, Pllltrl • • •
Ca1ch on., the craft boom' Send
!01 ouo NEW 1981 NEEDLECRm
CATALOG Ovtr 172 desocns. 3
lreel:;f"' oAgde $1 00

•v

au

ms. .$2.10 _.

........ Co':) Mtl 2S4
. . . . . . . . . hiMIIJII,
I34-14 IlliG IIICIIilt Qlllls
13J.fllltlM ..... QIIItitlt

m2:.czr...

I k

UNmLU Y•

IINII M II fiMt CMiltl
II..,_-=
IIHI!t .. "
CMiltl

...... .............
I.,....
me ~11

1111

t.iillll

112. . . . . .
1014Jtll lttUI' Ill I

I

@

clea nm g .1 nd p a mfl ng
All wo rk g u &lt;~ra nt eed

f ree Estim ates
Pnces
Ca ll How ard
949 2862

~ e.tson a b le

aspaFfiJtllb

949 1160

Autos lor Sale

7

-

PEST CONTROL•

All

l~afed

Phone
1-(614) -992-3325
'
NEW LISTING - 112
acre cattle farm GOOd
mostly new barb w.re
fence 4 bedroom ranch
nome, full basement,
woodburnlng furnace,
tree gas, Iorge barn,
gra.r1ery and some stan
dong limber 570,1100.
RT 33 NORTH - 3
bedroom ranch, bath,
c•tv wate.r. nat gas tur
nace, w~ cabinets In
teh kitchen, hardwood
floors and about one
aore SJO,OOO
POSSIBLE - A nice
subdivision on small
farm Over JO acres of
noce laying farm land
Ideal tor dividing Good
for Investment minded
person $53,000
SHIP·SHAPE - 7 room
1nsu1attd older ome
wolh 3 bedrooms, buill
' m stove, dishwasher,
furnace, basement and
Jots of carpeting 2 65
acres Of leve garden

TERMITE and

ROOFING

Quality Buoll
Economocallv Proced

~

7271

2 8 ti c

15 1 mo

POMEROY HOME &amp; ~UTO

Ph 992 2094

Headqu&lt;~•ters

MillER ELECTRIC
SERVICE

Backhoe
Excavahng
s ephc Svst ems
ewater, Sewer &amp; Gas
Ltnes
1 Dump Truck
L1censed &amp; Bonded

1
1
1

can

PH 949 2777
• Complete Auto and
Truck Repa.r
• Rebuilt Automatic
Transm 1ss1ons on
most Am en can Model
Cars
• S22S 00 Ports &amp; Labor
Piu s Flu1d
• 24 Hour Wrecker
Serv1ce
• Tnpl e A Affl l•ated
4 6 1 mo

S•zes from 4x6 to 1211.40

after 4 30 p m

-

nt ~t h St , R;w ne, on

Utility Buildings

1~ al k er female, 4 years II
ol , 1 walker pup All VK C I
re 1slered Call 949 2657 I

6)

C&amp;AAUTO REPAIR

S1tes
" From lOxlO"
SMALL

P~rphard
e b r epupp1eS
d
G e r m a n I ~====:::::::=====~~
S
6 wee ks }-- - ------------01 6695061
I

Real Estate - General

111-hltll .....
112·11111 'I' hll

---------

ALL STEEL

water Sewer E lectnc
Gas Lme·O•tches
water Ltne Hook ups
Septic Tank s
c ounty Certrtred
Roush Lane
Cheshrre, Oh
Ph 367 7560
I 7 lie

Cant help

·=·. .E.
2 bedroom house,
refrigerator , ca1roe,tetl,
remodeled kitchen
,n Pomerov $195 mo
ulll Call after 6 ; m.

1 • li e

REESE~
TRENCHING
SERVICE

Pomeroy

Pets tor Sale
Put a cold nose .n you r l1fe
Cdntact the Me1gs Coun ty
Ht mane Soc1etv at 992
62.;.) One engli sh se tter,
shepard coll•e type pu p
p• es , 4 we e ks old
M ~ n•atu r e shephard dober
m ~ n ty pe, black and tan
copn dog Lab type Two
a&lt;I&lt;JIIScats 992 6260

yday

tf c

Models
Av.a dab le
LEO MORRI S
R1 I S•d e Hill Rd
Rutl.a nd Ot)

3 11 tic

S6

a

10 7

All

"Beautiful, Custom
ButtrGarages'
Call for free s1dmg
esttmates, 949 2801 or
949 2860
No Sunday Calls

LAWN

-, ·---------------

992·5682

BISSEll
SIDING CO.

POMEROY

Maon Sl

- Auto and Truck
Repair
- TransmiSSion
Repaor
Hr s Mon Fn
9 AM S 30 PM

ARD

GOING BALD?

32

10' x48' lraoler wolh 2 added
rooms 12' )(42' on lot •n
Syracuse $11,000 992 5065
or 992 5886.

-

~.

ROGER HYSELl'S
GARAGE

Vmyl &amp; Alummum
SIDING

~LANDMARK

.

Trash Pickup In
The VIllage of
MJddleporl, Oh
Ph. 992·5016
or 992-7505
4 17 tfc

Effective 4-6-81
MON. thru SAT.
9to 5
Closed Thursday
491mopd

FOR LANDSCAPING

iftl.-. _

J&amp;C
SANITATION
SERVICE

NEW STORE HR

OF SHRUBS

•

Ph. 992· 2772

r~========~~======J=23=1:m:O:;

322 N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

AWIDE SELECTION

YOU~

Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum SJdmg
elnsulatoon
• storm Doors
e Storm Wrndow s
• Replacement
WondowE I ate
Free s1m
James Keesee

""'

BAILEY'S SOOES

AT
POMEROY
LANDMARK

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

New Homes · ex·
tens1ve remodelmg
I Electric a I work
I ROOfing work
12 Years
Expenenc e
GregR
h
ous
Ph . 992 · 7583
32 41 mo

r~=~-~M~oo~··~·~"'~m~•=•=··=•=•=~~~~~

Two month spnng spec1al
for upholstenng furn•ture
R1 chard Mowery
Sr
Owner 675 4154

NEW LISTING - 12x70
mob1le home wllh buoll
on addition on 5 acres,
2 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
central a1r , garage,
small pond Owner will
help fonance $26,900 00
SOUTHERN DISTRICT
- N1ce 2 bedroom home
on large lot Fully 1n
sulated, wood burner to
supplement forced air
heat Full basement
$29,900.00
NEW CONSTRUCTION
- 3 Bedroom ranch
home on I acre lpt Elec
baseboard hea t, 2
garages $39,900 00
RACINE - Fur noshed S
room house wolh 3 car
basement garage, 2
bedrooms, gas heat
$33,000 00
MULBERRY AVE An elegant 3 4 bedroom
home, full basement,
50xl00 lot Many extras
$33,000 00 •
MIDDLEPORT - Han
dymon 's Specoal, 2
bedroom house on large
lot Could be trailer sole
$9,000 00
WE HAVE OVER 80
PROPERTIES
TO
CHOOSE FORM STOP
BY AND LET US HOW
THEM TO YOU .
REALTOR
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
ASSOCIATES
Jean Trusseli949·2UO
Roger &amp; Dottle Turner
992-5692
OFFICE 992·2259

44

Mobile Homes
lor Sale
1973 Crown Haven, 14 x 65,
three bed 1ooms, new car
pel 1971 Cameron, 14 x 64,
two bedrooms, new carpet
1972 Champoon, 12 x 60, two
bedrooms, new carpet 1976
Ca meron, 12 x 60, two
bedrooms, all electr• c 1971
Skyline , 12sx 6). two
bedrooms, bath &amp; 1/ J, new
carpet
1970 PMC .
12 x 60, two bed rooms, new
carpet B x S Sales. Inc ,
2nd x Voand Street, Poont
Pleasant, WV Phone 675
4424

Rep;u
rmg lSmct
53
spem
Rates19For
, c om Laundnes
,., R!r.tal Propert•es
..- Apt Hnuse ownen

Betty Says " You may be
pay.ng more for the same
quality Check our pnces"
Racme Dept Store

Ver'l( niCe 1974 Grandville
b~tdroom, a.r washer,
dryer, awn•ng, storage
bulldmg underp•nn.ng, set
up on rented lot 992 7479

Homes for Sale
Brock house on wood~d Jot
Three bedrooms, large kot
famoly room double
oaraoo:, dec k M1d S1Xf1es

pOOl COmpletely
start.ng
at $999 00 InStalled
Pn ce 1n
eludes pool , deck fence,
f11ter. liner and mstallat1on
under normal ground con

985-3561
•••n••o se ovrce
AL L M'" "
eW.a slu!n
•D•s posalt
eOrren
eO os nw a shers
eli!anges
eHotwaterTanh

Gravely mower w•th sulky
Dual wheels &amp; el ectrt c
starter 992 5872 alter 5

3

31

54
Mosc MerchaniSe
SWIMMING
POOLS
P R E s E A s o N
SALE $999
00
IN
STALLED 11 Aboveground

servoce Free
Calli shop
BOO 624
8511
d1t10ns
at h9me

Pnvate sleep1ng rooms,
w1th c:ookmg facilitieS, a.r
cond•t•omng and cable tv
773 5651

----- - · - -

lz4-111r ::.. OJ I

a.u

-··--··"I.L________..__. . ,. __._ --- ·---'

-Addonsand
remOdeling
-Roofmg a net gutter
work
- Concrete work
-Piumb1ngand
electr1cal work
(Free Esftmates )

Fo r Fas l Ser v.ce

1.11

Now. taking applicellons
tor lifeguards Apply
weekends at Roval Oak
Park

a.•

ANt&gt;s OOT
I ATE"
Hru.

Have vacancy to care for
eld e rly or 1nval1d
Reasonable 992 6022

c.....

wanted Share rode to
Athens. hrs 8 5. Mon Frr
Caii992·J390 after 6 lOp m
Kerrs Run area

1

KOUifl'IY
KWB

camps1tes for rent on
scen1c nverbank U1111t1es
paod Small trailers only
Phone 773 5651

~~

IJI.StHk F.alntii.e,._H,
I~ Pt.btL Qttllll

, ,.
••
••~..,....,,..,..1"1""'"'"..,.. ....... ..,..,.,.,..,,
.,...,.......,,.._..c.....,.,...,.•,u .. ...._ ..... f...,
ltlayt

\

"YOUNGS
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

Call Ken Young

'\ Retts end Other lnforll\ltfon

34-----,..-

~~WILL

APPUANCE SERVICE

Three or four bedroom
house, carpet, f1replace
sundeck, two car garage 2
and one half acres Lovely
setlong on SR 7 North 992
7741

WANTED hogh school
graduate over 21 woth
pleasant phone voice for
answermg serv1ce 1n own
home for Melgs Co
Humane Socoety You
would serve only as coor
dlnator advosong publ ic of
correct method to handle
animal related problems.
Applicant must be someone
who sincerely cares for
welllare of anomals &amp; have
most of time ava ilable lo
phone If mteresled write
Box 682, Pomerov, Ohio
4576'! Salary negotiable

e FARM SUPPLIES

11-WtnltG To Do
eFINANCIAL
11- i'lllfiHS

18. _ _ _ _ _ __
\20
19 _ __

lllnl

U- Aflliii!U.S
14- Misc Mtf"thandltt \o

Clltp.~lr

TRr -

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

S185 00 loSSOOweekly domg
marhng work No e x
penence requ1red AP
PLY Corcle Sales, P 0
Box 224 0 , Roc hmond Hoi I.
NY 11418

Part t1me employee needed
Humane Soc rely for
emergency an1mal rescue
agent Must be over 21 ,
have veh•cle &amp; current
dnvers license Must be
able to read &amp; wnte &amp; con
verse Intelligently w1th
publ1c Neat appearance a
musl Mileage paod &amp;
salary negotiable Wr ite on
leresis &amp; quallf lcatoons lo
Box 682, Pomeroy, Oh
45769 Prefer Moddleport,
Pomeroy ,
Ru t land
res1dent Phone nece$sary

n - CI TV, Rtcllol••limtnt

1)-lniW..Ict
14- IUtlnnt Trolnlnt
11-ki!MIIInstructlon
16IIHIO TV

TRAILER spaces for rent
Southern Valley Mobtle
Home Park, Cheshore. Oh

V.C. YOUNG II

acres w•th Oh1a Rt\l'er
frontag e, turn•shed .t1 room
house, fuel 011 furna ce &amp;
dnlled well across from
Kao ser 949 2296

by

eMERCHANDISE
Ji - Houstttold Goo.~s

eEMI'LOYMENT
SERVICES
11- Htlp w1 nt.a
11- SitvaledWant.d

Business Services

992 621lor992 7314
Pomeroy, Oh

11
Help wanted
GET VALUABLE tra lnmg
as a young bus.ness person
and earn good money plus
some great g1fts as a Sen
tmel route carr ier Phone
us nght awav and get on
lhe eloQibolitV list at 992
2156or992 2157

WANTED People to
A\l'on Work vour
hours Part ttme or
t1m If mterest ed call
2354 or 742 2755

&amp; Awctton

f ole exceptions thereto
must file them at least five
days prior to the date set
forhear1ng
Given under my hand
f!it~ ~~·; ~'lt,;?, f9~~rt, this
Mail This Coupon ..lth Remittance
Robert E Buck
Tl\e DillY Senllnel
Judge
8~ 729
By Carolyn T Thomn
Pomeroy 0-h-I0-4-S7_69__
Anv oerson destr lnR to (41 16, 23, 4lc Deputy Clerk ••·-..,·-·-,-··-·--i

- - -- - - - -

~6-Sp.~ct lw •tnt
41- Wanttd to Rtnt
41-E-UIJifttnl fer Atfll

J- Yarcl Slit

23 _ _ _ _ _ __
_ _ _ _ __
2
3 _
-_
-_
--_ _
-__,
-11· 25
24

_ __:__

·-- - - - -

CHIP WOOD Poles ma x
d•ameter 1&lt;1 " on largest
end S12 50 per ton Bundled
slab $10 50 per lon
Delivered to Oh• o Pallet
Co , Rock Spnngs Rd ,
Pomeroy 992 2689

U - Fitttml

6- LotllndF~nd

--~

benet •c iar•es Under rhe
wilL and to the attornev or
attorneys represent, no llny
of the aforementtoned per
sons
Name of Decedent, case
Number and Res•dence are
1osted
Clara J Powell 1Case
No 23354) , R 0 2, Racone,
Ohoo and Guy H Nelqlor
!Case No 23374) Racont,
Ohoo

eRENTALS
~1 - Hovnllor

Ot,.,.tunity

_ _ _ _ _ __
_ _ _ _ __
_ _ _ _ _ __
_ __ _ _,..._ _ _ _ _-:--

Wanted to Buy class nngs,
wedd•ng bands, anyth• ng
stamped, IOK , 14K, or 18K
gold Solver co ons, poc kel j
watches Ca ll J oe Cl ark af
992 2054 at Clark's Jewelry
Store, Pomeroy, Ohoo 45769

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

22 _ __ _ _ __

10
11
12
13
14

OLD CO l NS, pocket wal
ches. class nngs, weddmg
bands, d1amonds Gold or
sliver Call J A Wamsley ,
Treasure Chest Com Shop ,
Athens, OH 594 4221

or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 court St., Pomero.,, 0., 45769

,21 . _ _ _ _ _ __

4

9
wanted to Buy
WANTED TO BUY
GOLD,
SILVER
PLATINUM, STERLING
COINS, RINGS ,JEWELR
Y. MISC ITEMS AB
SOLUTE
MARK E T
PRICE GUARANTED ED
BURKETT
BARB E R
SHOP, MIDDLEPORT ,
OHIO 992 3476

PHONE 992·2156

e ANNOUNCEMENTS

Space for Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Pork, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy Large lots Call
992 7479

WtW

---- 1_2_ _!!!uatrons Wanted
WOMAN Seek rng
ployment, Hospolal. Dr of
f1 ce of Cl1mc as recep
t•on1st or Med1ca1 records
Any sh~rt or days K
med• cal
termano logy
References 742 2030

•

by Larry Wrtght 4!_

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

LOST : Reward altered for
a grey and whole long
haired female cal lost In
the Bashan· Bal d Knob
area 985 4295

I - Card of Thanks

-

The

Farm EQuipment Auct1 on
Sal, May 2, 10 a m S1ders
Equopment Co 1 mole S of
PI Pleasant on U S 35 675
3440
Cons1gnmen t
wel come

WANT AD INFORMAnON

Pn nt one word •n each
space below Each m
•1•al or group of figures
counts as a word Count
n~me and address or
pHone number •f used
You 'll get better results
of l you descrobe fully ,
91 e pnce The Sentinel
r ~erves lhe roght to
10
classify, ed1t or re1ect ':~~~~~+~+~
a ~y ad Your ad will be ~
pyt 1n the proper
clas1f1cat•on If you' ll
c h~c k the proper box
These cash rates
below
Include discount

UvetttekSaltt

Public Sale
&amp; Auct1on
Oh•o R1ver Auct1on at Hart
ford Commun.ty Bulldmg
Froday, Aprol 24 7 p m
New &amp; used merchandiSe
snack bar

., ,.., . ~,., _, ,.r

LOCK SMITH
Service,
Master Key1ng , Com
bmat1ons, Bonded Call
New Haven, W V~ 304 882·
2079

• _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Address

Alboi•y, Otdo

Aortlll, 1111
CAITLE PRICES :
FO&lt;d.rS...ra (Good and Ch&lt;&gt;ic&lt; )3tlt).,I(J(J ibs
10 7H2, 500-70tllbs $3 ~50
F..,.rHeUera iGoodandCholce) JOtl.4iOO ibl
H-73 50 500-70tllbo 46 ~ 71
F..,.r Bulls (Good and Choice) lbl
" Z.79ltl 10().700 lbs $2 21MIIltl
Slaooglot&lt;r But~ fOYer 1,0011 lba I 46 7!H3 25,

5150, 100101» lbtl 47 ~ . IOOand over .WI
Holstein steers and bulls300to800 Jbl 50 50-63

_.f~bh_!: ~Jic!._ ~--

NOTICE ON
FILING OF
INVENTORY AND
APPRAISEMENT
The Statt ot Ohio, Meogs
County; Court ot Common
Pleas robato Dlvosoon
... To 1he Executor! or Ad
,~ mlntttrators of the estates.
,to .Uch 01 the lollow•ng as
are rntdenlo of the Stale of
Onlo, viz
the survlv•ng
spouse, the next ot k.n the

ALbeDI

'

Name-------------------

Wanted
For Sa le
Announcement
For Rent

8

431

# ro le your own ad and order by moll wolh lhos
GOupon Cancel your ad by phone when you get
results Money not refundable

Pags by the head 13-34
Sows 450lbs and up 34-36 50

MARKET REPORT
Prices taken from the auctiOn o( Sa turda y,
Apral 11 Trertds Veal calveB steady COws
!:lteady Feeder c11tUe !Uady Total head 473

the
Rutland Church of God IS
havtng a yard sal e at
Stanley Duncan' s farm m
Bradbury on Froday, Aprol
24a19am

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

Pay Cash for
Classifieds and
Savell I

have rtsen automaltcally each July
under a formula that provtdes for
the mcreases when mflahon exceeds
3 percent from the first quarter of
one year to the first quarter of the
next

LadleS Auxll •ary at

No. 17124 Volume 213, Page 3431)1 the possoble for gol~ and silver
NOTICE BY
Deed Records, Meogs coun coons, rings, jewelry, etc
PUBLICATION
ty, Oh10
Contact Ed Burkett Barber
TO· D M Shields, llliv1ng,
Reference Deed · Volume Shop, Moddleporl
and hiS Wilt, If any, and fo 260, Poge 905 Of the Meigs
the Wodow 1 . Heirs, CountyOeedRecords
Demee'I and Next of Km
Subtecllo an exlslong 011 Rac1ne Volunteer F1 re
of Deceoent and to Mary and gas tease to Carl F Deportment
a
Dewey, of lovong, and her Smith, Inc , and an existing shot gun &amp; sponsors
rotle match
Husband, 1f any, and to the mortgoge at The Se~urlty
Wodower, Helrsi' Devisees, Bpnk on Athens, Ohoo II os every Sal noghl 6 30 p m
and Next o Km of agreed by lhe grantor and atlherr buoldong In Bashan
Decedent, all whose names grantees that ,the current Factory choke 12 guage
and addresses are
alanceowlngonsa rdmor shot guns only Open sights
unknown to Plaonllfls:
tgage is $14,606 76
You are hereby notofled
The grantor expressly 22 rille
that you have been named conveys herein all hiS
ljefendants In a legal actoon roght, lllle and onlerest on
entrtled Wolloam H Loy, and to the monerals un STOBARTS Greenhouse "
eta I, Plaont1ffS, vs D M derlyong so ld real estate, now opened It os located on
Shoelds, etat, Defendants. lncludong, bul not llmoted Racone Rl 2, C R 100
This act1on has been to, the oil and gas and all Hangong baskets &amp; beddong
assoQned Case No 17824 hiS Interest on the lease to plants Vegetables &amp; plants
and os pendong on the Court Carl E. Smith, Inc, above ofall konds
of common Pleas of Meo~s mentioned
county, Pomeroy, Oh1o,
The grantees hereon
A&lt;769
1 ~~·~U!!!! and agree to pay The Mason County Lottie
TThe ob 1ect of the com
menlooned mor Men's League of Poo nl
pla1nl os to qu,ellolle by ad·
to hold the gran Pleasant, W Va os holdong
therefrom
verse possess.on on the
real estate descrtbed as
conveyance rs sub 1ts Second Annual Men's
follows
easements and high Slow Polch Softball Tour
The followong real estate
rights of woy of namenl on May 1, 2 &amp; 3
sotuated on the Townshop of
ThiS Is an A SA Sane
0 11ve, County of Mergs, and
tloned Tourn a ment
State of Oh10, and rn -r~ange
Trophoes
that will be awar
11 , Town 4, and Sectoon 35
ded are lsi, 2nd &amp; 3rd
of the Ohoo Company Pur
place team &amp; Individual
chase and more par
trophoes Also 4th &amp; 5th
trcula rly descrobed as
place leom lrophoes &amp;
follows Begonnong 20 rods
there wdl also be a most
east from lhe northwest
corner of s ect ron 35, thence
hots trophy This will be a
east 60 rods, thence south
Double Ellm1nat10n Tour
80 rods , thence west 80 rods
sue
nament
Entry Fee rs $75
to the west lone of 011ve
last and lhe soffboll's will be
Township, thence north 60
made on prov1ded To1enter the tour
rods, thence east 20 rods ,
and the 28 nament
or for more m
thence north 20 rods to the
answer wd 1 com·
tormat1on call Buck K.ng
place of begmn1 ng, con
on Ihat dale
ta.n1ng 37 acres. and BO
case of fa1lure to an- al675 1353
rods, bulsubJeclloal l legal swer or otherw1se reSP-Ond
hoghways
as required by the Ohio
Also the tollowmg real Rules of Covil Procedure,
Geveawav
estate Situate 10 the Town JUdgment by default will be 4
shop County and Stale rendered aga.nst you for
aforesaod and 10 Range 11. the reloef demanded on the Caloco c at , female ,
Town 4, and Seclron 35 of complaonl dated Apnl 20, beautofullo good home 742
the Oh1o Company Pur 1981
3166
chase and bounded and
Larry Spencerf
descnbed as fol lows
Clerk of Cour
Lost and F0&lt;1nd
Be91nnonQ at the center
of Mergs County, 6
of said sect1on, thence nor
Ohoo LOST Male loght brown
th 60 rods, thence east 80 14) 23,30 15) 7, 14, 21 , 28, 61c
and whrte cat weanng a
rods, thence south 60 rods.
wh1te flea collar Lost 1n
thence west 80 rods to lhe
place of begmn.ng, con
the M1ddleport area on
!among 30 acres. more or
Salurdaynoght Ph 992
less
6376
1 Reference Deed Volume
140, Page 217, Deed Recor
ds. Me1gs Countv. Oh1o
LOST Gold weddong band
EXCEPTIONS
W1th an lnscnptlon mslde
(1) Except 30 acres sold
beanng a 1800's dale
by oeed recorded rn
REWARD Phone992 7315
Card of Thanks
Volu me 159, Page 441 of the
Deed Records, Me•gs Coun
Rac•ne Volunteer F1re LOST Grey Schnauzer
ly, Oh10
12) Except Lots 17, 18, 19, Department WIShes to ex· thai answers to the name of
20, 21 , 22, 23, 24, and 25 of tend the1r thanks to the Schultz. Lost on lhe Rock
McCune s Second Addoloon people who helped out the Sp r ings
vo c onoty
to Tuppers Plains sold by F•re Department m the1r
deed recorded 10 Volume gun shoot and hope lo see REWARD Phone Dick
Owen at 992 2651 or 992
188. Page 127. and Volume
191, Page 191 of the Deed you all aga•n th1S fall
5627
Records, Me•gs County ,
Oh10
3
Announcements
FOUND Whote male dog
{ 3) Except one acre sold
by deed recorded rn Betty Says " We specoalile W1lh red patches Some
Volume 240, Page 695 of the 1n Amertcan made type sporting dog . Has lei
Deed Records, Me1gs Coun c:lothtng We thtnk 1t tm ters K.J tattlOCd lnsode
ty , Ohoo
roght ear F0&lt;1nd on Sliver
(4) Except! acre sold IQ portanl Shouldn't you' " svll
le Bald Knob Road, '
J ames A Fultz and Janet Ractne Dept Stor~
Long Bottom, Oh Ph 843
Fu ltz as descnbed .n deeds
recorded 1n Volume 239, IT'S BEELINE'S Show and 3~74
Page 13, and Volume 238, Tell Time!"!! our new
Page
of lhe Oeed
LOST Small black and
Records1 Meigs County, sprmg and summer ltne Is whole
dog, 3 moles past Fort
now available and 1S 11 un
OhiO ~
(5) Ex pi 11 625 acres believable•••• G1\l'e us a Meigs on Sode Hill Rd . 742
as sold and conveved •n call for more Information 2949 or 742·2608 or contact
abOut thiS 1nterest1ng work Gloroa Malone or John and
Pal Moore
Phone 992 3941 from 9 6

Social Security recipients will
1,.,...,- .._·------·-·--·-------Curb Inflation.
receive 11.2 percent pay increase
WASHINGTON (AP) - For the
12th tune ml3 years, Social Security
rec1p1ents w1ll be gettmg an mcrease
m benefits - probably around 11.2
percent
The exact s1ze of the mcrease for
the natiOn 's 36 rntlhon beneftctartes
depends on the March Consumer
Pr1ce Index figures bemg released
today
. Soctal Security benefits rtse
automatically each year wtth that
mflatton mdex, as do Supplemental
Secunty Income benefits for 4 1
nulhon poor, aged, bhnd or disabled
people
Each I percent mcrease m the
Consumer Prtce Index boosts the
cost of Soctal Secur1ty by $1.4 billiOn
a year The new mcrease m benefits,
which wtll take effect m July, ts ex·
peeled to add upward of $15.4 b1llton
to the annual cost of the program,
now $136 b1lbon a year
The maxunum benefit for S&gt;year·
olds retmng this year ts $677 a mon·
th They are likely to get a boost of
about $76, ra1sing them to about $753
a month

·- - -·-

K. ~==~P~u~b~lo~c~N~ot~•c~e~~lr==~P~u~bl~oc5N~o~t~tc~eESl==~P~ub~IEic]N~o~ti~c~e==1C=~~~~~~~
NOTICE OF SALE
Defendants
I PAY highest prices

Fowler, Edward W Durst, Judith
Hunter, Debra J . Carder, C. Robert
Fisher, Belpre, Jon J. Guinther;
Athens, Juantta Terrel, Mason,
Steven D. Mace and Phyliss N
Knopp ; Long Bottom, Debbte E
FinlawandHaztleeRtebel
Donors from Racme were Mary
Annn Fowler, PhylliS Harrts,
Gregory L. Johnson, Loretta K Htll,
Charlotte Wamsley, Rhonda L.
Dailey, Patty Shatn, Dorothy M.
Sayre, Larry J . Ball, Amy M.
Ftsher, Paul E Harns, Michael J.
Brown, Rortald L Salser, and Martha M Dudding · Syracuse Donna J
'
'
Aleshire, Kathy Fry, Betty L. Curtman and RoUte D Stewart; Reedsvtlle, Richard Barton, Stacte L Arnold, Jonn C. Rice, Debbte L Sanders, Ntesel E Duvall and Mace!
Barton, Langsville , William R
Myers, R1chard L. Lambert,and
Elll E Myers
s
·
Cheshire donors were Rodney E.
Sptres and Joseph W White, Portland, Martha Meadows and Beth A
Ellis , Rutland, Avanell George,
PatriCia A Imboden, Karolyn K
Black, Fred H George, Jiunes Btrchf1eld, and Pa ul A R1ce; Chester,
Clarence C Wolfe, Jr , Pt Pleasant,
Beverly Black, Letart, W Va ,
JamesP Bumgarner.

Oh10

2 4 ti c

Roa c hes
B•r d s .
Rodents, Sp•ders Fleas.
Ants and other small 1n
sect control
FR EE ESTIMAT ES
1 or s year term1te
guarantee
Located rn Gallipoli s
Ph 614 446·2801
3 27 1 mo

1~9 Corvette. m1nt con

d1 10n , low mil eage w•th al l
o t1ons
Reas o nably
pr cod Aller 5 call 378 6117
or 37~ 6293
1

F~r

Sale 1979 Trans Am
western wheels.
ra1sed Wh1te letter rad1al s,
loaded lor $6300 00 or best
offer 992 5620
wv h

speclf1cahons Models
Metgs, Galha and
Mason Coun11es
FREE E$TIMATES
All Buoldongs
Gu•ranleed

1n

PH. 367-7671
or 367-7560
CHESHIRE, 4 12 1fc

1974 Novasteering,
Hatchback
350 1~~=========~
power
power
brpkes, body's on real good
sh~pe Besl offer 992 6786
or992 39~1
ser aces

81

Home

Does your house n~eCI a
face ll ff? Or lUSt a little
makeup? Call me &amp; I II
have 1t lookmg young aga1n
m no t1me Wil l do all types
of 1nten or work , panel mg,
ceil .ngs, floonn g, etc , plus
extenor .work , pamtmg,
shangling roofs, work omg,
shmgl1nf any s1ze and
shape 30 vear s experience
1n carpetry Refe rences
prov1ded upon req uest 992
6293

1973 Chevy Impa la. Sm.a il
Home
V 8, new paint &amp; lores 81
lm rovement5
Asking $950 992 5388
Plumbing
Gene's Carpet Clean1ng, 82
72
Trucks lor Sale
&amp; Heattn
deep srream e xtra ct1on
r ee
es ttmat ed. WA.T E R
1977 Ford pockup wllh F
WE LL S
reasonable
scot Domestt c and commerc•a
32,000 miles 6 tires, good chquard 992 rates.
t.
6309 or 742
\;~ "~tr~c:.~opo 2'12 IOf)per, 6 cylinder 9&gt;19 2048 2211
pump sales and serv1ce
baths, 3 Didrooms, nloe
Tom LeWI S Dnlllng
carpetiJIII, extre room
Seasonal d1scount on pu m
and nice equipped kol·
French Coty Pa1nllng ps 1·304 895 3802 or I 304
chen. Will take
Resldentoal , commerc ial, 895 3641
S12,ooo 00 for quick salt
•ntertor ,
e• tertor
MODERN HOMI! Speclalozlng 1n Interlor 1.~1;==::::;;E;:x:.=ca;::v:;:a::;t;:ln;:g;==
Nicely cerptled 3
painting, paper Mngmg 8.
bedrooms, 2 balhs. love •
textured ce ilings Free COMPLETE sever on
Jy ~ltchtn with dining,
estomates 367 7784 or 367 stallatlon 8. backhoe ser
one! glass door to 12t&lt;26
11
camping
7160
v1ce for Racine Syrl!cuse
patoo Garage and 112
Eguopmtnt
sewer doslroct Dorer work
acre of land Only
Camper for sale 1977 WILL do plumbing, of needed 9•9 2293
SAl 500
pa1nt 1ng ,
Palomino folddown cam roof 1ng ,
~~~ Fold• out to 22 foot remodel ing and electrocal Dltcher work Gas W~te r
work Free estimates Call Elecln c ln•talled 142 2819
Nou' ''"I
~~ all equipment 742
985 4121
belore9·00pm
lfeac/ 11.11 ,,., ·.

_,._ . - - ·
~

,,

--

--·

---------

Excavat1ng
DOZER work Sma ll Jobs a
spec ra lly 742 2753
83

1mpro vem e nt ~ __

+

84

Electncal
Refngerat1on
SEWI NG MAC HIN E
Repa1rs , se r\1 1Ce , all
makes l 992 22 8~
The
Fabroc Shop, Pomeroy
Authon zed S• nger Sales
and Serv•ce We sharpen
Sc1ssors
&amp;

BOW E RS
EL WOOD
RE PAIR
Sweepers,
toasters. 1rons, all small
applia nces Lawn mower
Next to State H1 ghway
Garage on Route 7, 985
3825
Avao la ble to handle all your
electncal needs Repa1rs,
w•r •n g, rewir ing, In
stall atlon, modofocallons,
rev •s •ons ,
res 1dent lal ,
far m, business No lob to
large or to small Avaolable
ommed lately Boll Cadle at
992 7182
B..:.S_ _:::Gc::t,no, r"•"' 1-"H"'a-"u!!lln,gL ._
Well's Trash Hauling, $5,00
per month Olive and
Orange Townships and
surrounOrng areas. fa·
3518

�Page-14-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday. Aprill3,1981

.New planes could be used against Israel
WASHINGTON (AP) - The Gulf olHlel&amp; against air strikes. ad- start of the administrttion's fight to
Reagan administration is ministration officials said, adding gahtapprovalforthesale, which the
acknowledging that the five ad- that the aircraft are not designed to oil-rich Saudis have used as a test of
vanced radar planes it wants to sell strike at ground instaUatiOIIB in U.S. frien&amp;hip.
to Saudi Arabia conceivably coUld J~rael.
Fonnal Sl.lbmission of the sale
be used againstlsrael.
. "It is primarily a defeliBive proposal will come later - after
I
"Prudent Israeli planners clearly system which should not create a President Reagan ami his aides try
will have to take this-possibility Into threatening · situation for neigh- to quell congressional opposition.
accbunt in preparing their boringcountries,"thereportsaid.
Once the plan is sent to Congress,
cal~ulations for a possible future
Distribution of the briefhtg paper the House and Senate have 30 days to
Arab-Israeli war," the ad- to congressional leaders marked the block it.
miniStration said in a briefing paper
distributed among congressional
Flags will recognize Vietnam era veterans
leaders.
But the nine-page document,. obAmerican flags will be placed · drews will sign a proclamation this
tained by The Associated Press, in- throughout the Pomeroy business week 'in recognition of Sunday's obsisted that the controversial sale, section by the Pomeroy-Middleport servance and several ministers are
which Congress has the power to Uons Club Sunday' ht observance of planning recognition of the day and
block, really poses no major threat National Recognition Day for Viet- the two miUion Americans who
to Israel's security.
nam era veteraliB.
fought and died ht Vietnam.
Pomeroy_ Mayor ·Clarence An"As the Saudis clearly recognize ,"
the briefing paper said, "plans to
employ the U.S.-supplied AWACS
aircraft against Israel would be
viewed with the utmost gravity by
the U.S. and would create a major
'
problem in our arms supply relationship."
Charles S. Beller
residence Wednesday. Arrangementruckers and striking union coal mines. Jack Coleman
The Saudis want the planes - AirCha r1es Samue1 Be11 er, 69, died ts are hem'g made at the Walker
of Caoanda, Ky., foreground-right, said: "The huUels
borne Warning and Control Systems
ctedl t his R
funeral Home ht Rutland.
1
came through the front and rear wiodshlld, and they
or AWACS- to defend their Persian rfun;;;e;;;x;;;pe~~y;;;a;;;;;;;;;o;;;ute;;;;;R;;;ut;;;la;;n;;d;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
didn't miss my hand an inch." (AP Laserpbolo)

Area deaths

•

TRUCKERS WAIT FOR POLICE - These independent coal truckers in Belfry, Ky.; wait in a ditch
Wednesday for police to move a truck that wrecked,
blocking the road, during a shooloul between the

Horse show slated

Meigs County happenings.
·
F 1'l ffi Sh OWlUg
Set
The Walt Disney movie, "Bed
Knobs and Broom Sticks" will be
shown at 7 p.m. friday at the
Rutland Elementary School under
sponsorship of the Rutland PTA.
food will be served beginning at 6
p.m. PTO officers advise that a

1

Emergencv runs
I

Six emergency calls were an-

swered b} local units on Wednesday,
the Meigs Emergency Medical Services reports.
The Midllleport Unit at 2:48a.m.,
took Dorothy Roush from Railroad
St. to Holzer Medical Center and at

107 Park St. to Veterans Memorial
Hospital. The Pomeroy Unit at 11:15
• a.m. took
Bertha Diehl from
Pomeroy Cliff Apartments to Holzer
Medical Center. At 5:03 p.m., the
Tuppers Plains Unit took Alma
Pullins from her home to CamdenClark Hospital in Parkersburg;
Rutland at 10:53 a.m. took Kenneth
Matson from Route 124 to Veterans
Memorial Hospital ; the Racine Unit
at 4:34a.m. took Gerald Hayman, E.

Fifty classes will be featured at an
open horse show to be held at Bar 30
Ranch in Tuppers Plains beginning
at 9 a.m. Sunday under the sponsorship of the junior class of Eastern
High School.

EASY

GOING
Sf-fOES

.._......... Casual and comfortable

'f\egular meeting Set

to go everywhere... in smart

The Meigs County Regional Planning Commission will hold a regular
meeting at 3:10p.m. Monday at the
agricultural conference center of

style!

footwear.
See our family

SIMON'S PICK·A-PAIR
'
speak~r used in showing movies at ~11;:2;0;a;.m~.~~~oo~k~M;ic~h~el~le~S~m~it;h~f~ro;m;;;;Le;;ta;rt;R~o~a~d,;to~V~e~te~r~an~s~M~e~m~o~ri~al~-~Th~e~F~a~nn~·e~r~s~Ba~n~k~B~w~'ldin~-~g~-~iiiii~~~==~====~~·~·l:n:t:h:e:H:e:a~rt~o=f~P~o~m~er~o~y~";;~
the school has now been repaired. [

;:;:;:~,;~~door

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

A marriage license was issued to
Carter Michae1,34, Jackson, and
Sheila Kay Anderson, zti , Dexter.

WEEKEND SALE!

Commission
(Continued from page 1.1
payment of hospitalization in·
surance. Deputies had asked for 50
cents and hour, health and welfare
benefits and one-half of
hospitalization costs on the first year
of a two year contract. They had
asked recognition as mem~rs of the
American federation of State, County and Municipal Employes.
The conunissioners have contended it is the duly of the sheriff to
operate his office but have contended that. he must stay within appropriations established at the first
of each year by the board of commissioners.
At this morning's meeting, Commissioner Jones again stated he is
not against Sheriff Proffitt, his
deputies or unions, but stressed that
the problem is not the responsiblity
of the board, but is the problem of
the sheriff. He said 1976 budget
before the present sheriff went into
office was $86,000 and in 1981, this
year, was $155,000 plus a new
sheriff's vehicle.

"

.· .

t

SPECIAl. VALUES FOR THRIFTY BUYERS
FRIDAY, APRil. 24 and SATURDAY, APRil. 25

.'

_;)

OPEN FRIDAY TIL 8:00 PM

NEW SPRING SELECTION
MEN'S

Sizes S, M, L and XL in solid
co lors and pia id patterns .
Made by Wrangler , Campus
and Van Heusen . All short
sleeve styles.
Regular prices begin at$9.95

REDUCED 20%
SPECIAL SAVINGS

PLAYTEX
',\ PANTYHOSE SALE

Famous Cannon quality .
Choice of solid color in blue,
rose and maize or floral pattern
in pink, blue or gold . Save now .

)

Sale $2.90
Sale $3.39
Sale $4.75
Sale $5.50

DENIM JEANS
Sizes 32 to 50 waist in fashion
denims and basic boot flare
style. Most all are prewashed . Slightly fuller cut
for extra comfort.
Men's $19.95 Fuller Cut
JEANS .... . ..... ·... $15.76
Men 's $20.95 Fuller Cut
JEANS ••.. . ........
Men's $21.95 Fuller Cut
JEANS . .......••... $17.36
Men's $22.95 Fuller Cut
JEANS ........•... . $18.16
Men's $23.95 Fuller Cut
.) JEANS .. ... ........ $18 .96

PAINTER
JEANS
From your favorite
color negative. ·
SNr~ ~our manorin wtlh qutiHy
reprlnls from i OUIIivorftl'! color

Lose water bloat
with ODRINIL
-Nature's way

Reg. 19.95 Painters

dtmng ltle pre·mensrruat cvcte

Jeans ......... ••

tSenecllve ano last acllng
To lose werghl all month ton g try tne

new e..:tn..strength SUP£1 OORM:X 'Re·

___

cJuclng Plan. Both $Old w1th money back
Pomeroy, OH .

SERTA QUALITY••• FOR MORE
HEALTHFUL SUPPORT.

CAMERA DEPT.· 1st FLOOR

ELBERFELDS
IN POMEROY

P~;~meroy-Middleport,

I Section, 10 Pages

Ohio, Friday. April24, 1981

IS C~nts

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

. Strike issue remains 'up in air'
Commissioners
won't resign .

•

"The Meigs County Co~­
missioners met Thursday mom· g
to decide whether or not they wo d
ratify the contract recen ly
negotiated by Sheriff Proffitt and biB
officers.
"The board, after serious consideration, concluded that they Will
appropriate the additional money offered on AprU. 21, 1981, for Blue
CrOIIS and Blue Shield insurance ~nd
salaries.
"If the sheriff negotiates a rontract within the appropriation ~de
to his department, the county cornmissioners have decided they would
review and COIIBider the contract
contents and If the tenns of same
are satisfactory with the board and
its legal counsel, they will ratify ,the
contract and thus recognize the

By BOB HOEFUCH
Two Meigs County Commissioners-Henry Wells and
Richard Jone&amp;-have reconsidered
resigning and the resolution of a
deputies strike and problem of a cootract has gone back to the drawing
board.
These things resulted from a commissioners' meeting Thursday in
·which strong support for commissioners was.shown by nwnerous
residents. The majority of commenta from lhose speaking supported the commiasioners.
In addition, cOOIJlliBsioners the
group did not want · the commissioners to resign and felt they
had conducted good government for
the county.
Commissioners Wells and Jones
had stated earlier they would resign
If they could not agreed to support
membership in a union by deputies
by noon on Thursday.
Deputies had returned to the
picket line Monday after \roting
down an offer for 25 cents an hour increase and one-hall the costs of
hospitalization Insurance offered by
the commissioners.
The deputies remained on their
picket line today following yesterday's meeting.
However, Gary Wolfe, spokesman
for the group, said decisions by the
COIIlJDissioners Tbllf!!day "OpeliB up
a way to a solution. "We are willing
to sit down and work out a settlement."
Following the meeting Thursday
morning, commissioners iBsued the
following statement :

union."

Commissioner Jones also issued a
statement following the meeting. He
said, "After the outpowing of support from the citizens of Meigs County and as a result of the public
llljleting held in the Meigs Co!.lnty
Courthouse in our support Thursday
morning we have concluded we wiU
continue as members of the bo&amp;rp of
county commiBsioners.
"The overwhelming support given
to both Henry WeUs and myself is
greatly appreciated and we shaU
continue to bring about the type of
government 1\'leigs Countians deser-

LARGE CROWD - More than loti reslde!!ls of Meigs County were
present Thursday morning at the Meigs County Courthouse to ofler
strong support to the board of comrnlssloners. When the commissioners

entered the courtroom they were given an enthusiastic roimd of applause
by the large crowd. Several persollli spoke oo behalf of the commissioners.

Highway employe strike in 24th day
The strike in the Meigs County
Engineer Department enters the
24th day with the prospect that it will
continue for a long, indefinite period
unle55 the Meigs County Engineer
agrees to return to the bargaining
table in an effort to settle the matter,
according to a union statement
issued today.
The statement by Fred Haynes,
regional director of AfSCME Ohio
Countil8 conthtues: "The union has
made every effort since the strike

began to return to the bargaining
table, but engineer, Philip Roberts
continually refuses.
"On Friday, April 24, the Union
hand delivered a letter to the
engineer's office indicating three
alternatives offered to the engineer
for the purpose of resolving this
strike and restoring service to the
citizens of Meigs County.
The letter rea&amp; "The current
work stoppage in your ~epa,rtment
now enters the 23rd '
with the

prospect that it will continue for a
long and indefinite period unless you
can agree to return to the bargaining
table in an effort to settle the matter.
"The Union has made every effort
to return to the bargaining table since the work stoppage began aliB offered the following solutions to you
on a nunnber of occasions: (I) To
submit the dispute to Federal
Mediation and Consiliation Service
(FMCS) which is a free service
available to the parties for

resoultuion of work stoppages. The
submission to FMCS requires joint
request.
As of this date you have refused to
request such a55istance jointly with
the union.(2) . If bargaining begins,
the union has offered to submit different proposals to you for your consideration. You have refused to meet
with the Union.
"The union has made every good
faith effort to ease the tensions bet(Continued on page 10)

Eastern school board hires employes

Nunnerous contracts, teaching and Whitlatch, Carolyn Ritchie, two J.V. girls coach, Sue Thompson; as a tuition student. Page and Mrs.
non-teaching, were awarded when years; Debra Rose, Mary Bowers, junior high girls basketball, Pam Nancy Larkins introduced changes
the Eastern Local School District Florence Wyers, continuing. Not DouthiU; head teachers, Chester in the cheerleader constitution
ve."
Board
of Education met Wednesday issued contracts until notification of Elementary, Leonard Swiaz- which were approved by the board.
Wolfe said his team would get with
night.
Sheriff· Proffitt today to come, up
federal funding is received were dowsky; Grace Weber, Riverview, The board approved job descriptions
Given
one
year
contracts
pending
Margaret Cauthorn, Martha Durst, and David Weber, Tuppers Plains; for teachers, teacher aides and
with a new contract for presentation
yearbook advisor, Carol King secretaries.
to the commissioners in accordance proper certification and federal fun- Judy Wolfe, Sandra Scott.
ding were Mike Douglas, Mary
Alunmi reunions for Eastern,
with their action on Thursday. ·
Supplement contracts issued in- Brewer; cheerleader advisor, NanPrice, Tim Simpson, Wendy Halar clude athletic director and head cy LarkiliB; student council advisor, Chester and Toppers Plains were
and Carolyn Tripp.
baseball coach, Ralph Wigal; girls Arch Rose; audio visual director, approved with the stipulation that .
Other teaching contracts went to voUeyball, Debbie Weber; head Tom Kelly; transportation coor- floors be protected. April 7 was apWayne Caudill, one year; Kathy track, boys, Dennis Eichinger; head dinator, Arch Rose; band, James proved as a calamity day due to a
Simpson, Betsy Stivers, two years; track girls, Sue Thompson ; Wliheim; lunch room supervisor, broken water line at the high school.
Norman Bahr, Suzy Carpenter, Jim assistant football coach, Arch Rose; Mary Rose ; bus supervisor, Arch Nettie Young was approved as a subHuff, Maida Long, Gary Reed, Anna assistant football coach, Dennis Rose.
stitute cook and Miss Thompson and
Rice, Unda Faulk, Martie Baunn, Eichinger; jullior high football
Named class advisors. were Tom Mrs . Kestner were given
Maxine Whitehead, David Weber, coach, Mike Abrahain; junior high KeUy and Jim Huff, seniors; Donna professional leave to attend events
Jim Wilhelm, three years; Janice football coach, Mike Douglas; head Chadwell, junior; Arch Rose , at Rio Grande. The requirements of
Kestner, Carolyn Smith, five years;
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews has announced he is prepared tq
boys bosketbaU coach, Dennis sophomore; Carol Brewer, fresh- the state in regard to special
Joe
Fie!&amp;, continuing. Contracts Eichinger; assiatant J.V. basket- man. James Huff was named direc- education were approved.
submit,a complete Commurilty Development mock Grant applicatiorl
were not iBsued to Valerie Adams,
to the Department of Housing and Urban Development.
The board set a special meeting
ball, Tim Simpsom; junior high boys tor of federal programs
Roger Fetterly and Buddy Moore.
for
7:30p.m. on April 29 to revise the
Pomeroy was selected as one of only 15 non-metropolitan comt
Principal
James
Page
outlined
basketball, Dave Weber; junior high
Non-certified contracts issued
munlties in the state invited by HUD to prepare a fuU application. The
policy
manual and set the next
boys basketbaU, Mike Abraham; plans for the senior class trip \md
were Ila Osborne, one year; Keitha
Small Cities Block Grant program ill. highly selective, a over 9t
regular
meeting for May 20.
head girls basketbaU and assistant Victoria Ann Morrison was accepted
requeslll for funding in this fiscal year were received by HUD.
While HUD tenns the program "small cities," actual applicanl&lt;
may range in size to a population of 50,000. Pomeroy had the distinotion of ranking sixth ht the overall competition for non-metropolitan
areas statewide.
The $440,000 allocated to Pomeroy will substantially improve and
By BOB HOEFUCH
nan, Kenneth Eblin, Marjorie Fetty, grade football ; football trainer, Fen- Kaldnor, substitute cook ; John
upgrade the village's water and sanitary sewer systems.
Teaching and non-teaching con- Jack Slavin, Benoy Slawter, Nancy ton Taylor; seventh and eighth Blaettnar, yearbook; John KrawscOver the past :U months Pomeroy has been the recipient of nearly
tracts as well as supplemental con- White, live year contracts; Judy grade footbaU, John Arnott; boys zyn and Jim Crow, seventh and
$1.15 mi11lon ht Federal grants for conununity development projects.
tracts were awarded and a nunnber Crow, Verna Evans, Sandy Korn, varsity basketball, Gordon Fisher; eighth grade football; Elizabeth
of resignations accepted when the Mindy Young, three years; boys reserve basketbaU, Mick LaRue, high school social studies;
Meigs IAcal School District Board of Stephanie Ash, Bonnie Edwar&amp;, Chll&amp;; boys eighth grade basket- Diane Miller, elementary L.D.; Dale
Education met in special session at Gordon Fisher, Ed Harkless, Ben- baD, Bruce Wilson ; elementary Harrison, baseball ; Charles
the junior high building Thursday nita King, Melanie Wert, two years; basketball intrwnurals, John Ar- Holliday, assistant band; Ron
night.
Gloria Alexander, Doug Belmke, nott; junior high track, Jesse Vail ; Drexler, eighth basketbaU ; Steve
The board moved into executive Bonnie Chapman, Mick Chll&amp;, assistant baseball, Bruce Wilson; Lones, junior high teacher and
• Repair work on the Gallipolis had cracked and the metal was bent session for an hour or so ~fore Rebecca Cotterill, Carol Crow, Ron head wrestling, Larry Grimes; golf,
(Continued on page 10)
returning to the meeting room to Drexler, Debra HUI, Doug HUI, Robert Oliver; girls volleyball,
IAcka and Dam by the U.S. Anny in the accidents, he added.
Corps. of Engil)eers ended earlier
The corps had BMOunced earlier move quickly through the contract Charles Holliday, Nancy Radosevic, Karen Walker; girls reserve basket- , . . . . . - - - - - - - - - - . ,
this week and the darn bas been lhiB year the work would beght in awarding.
Robbin Reyhl, Kim Ohlinger, Joyce baU, Bonny Chapman ; girls head
reopened for
Before
the
board
acted
on
the
Seelig,
James Carpenter, one year.
track, Gordon Fisher; g!rls softball,
mld-June, but due to the coal strike
Conrad Ripley, pll&amp;ilic infonnatlon · and the resulting dropoff ht river measures, however, President
Non-certified contracts issued in- • Rita Slavin; girls reserve softball,
officer with the corps' Huntington traffic, repairs began in mld-April. Larry Powell said some employes clude: Lois Wyant, Pat McCarty, Kim Grueser; girls junior high
district, said this mqming the work The completion date was set for May might have to been laid off if state Margaret Johnson, continuing; basketball, Gloria Alexander;
fun&amp; are not adequate.
This Leland Parker, Gary King, David atl)letic facilities care, Charles
wa.s primarily for the miter gate, 3.
which had been damaged in several
would
be
done
on
the
basis
of . Chase, Leta HaU, Charles William- Chancey; high school cheerleaders,
Ripley said work went "very
navigation accidents over the past smoothly" on the repairs, ac- seniority and placement back on son, Brian Windon, Shirley Priddy, Jeannie Taylor ; junior high
few years.
their jobB would be handled on the Hazel Kauff, Robert Moore, Mary cheerleaders, Robbin Reyhl; junior
cowrtlng for early completion.
A mlter gate conslsta of a large
Lou Hawkins, Eva Howard, Unda class sponsors, Dorothy Oliver and
"Our calculation worked out same basis.
Teacher contracts issued include: Stobart, two years; Uoyd Haggy, Celia McCoy; athletic director,
framework of timbers with a coo- correctly," he said. "There was no
liderable amount of metal plating, problem at all. So if the coal strike Celia McCoy, Karen Walker, Jean- Joe Wyne, Pauletta Harrison, one Same Crow; band' director, Doug
Ripley explained. Some ol the wood ends, we'll be
nie Taylor,
·
Carl Bran- year.
HUl ; gUtdance, Granville Flesher,
for them."
Administrators given contracts in- John Redovian and Martha Vanclude Doug Belmke, Rutland, one nari; librarian, Janice Burner;
year; Charels Holliday, Harrison- assistant high school principal, part
ville, one year; John Amott, head time, Earl Young; Pomeroy safety
teacher, one year, and John Usle, patrol, Sandy Kom; clerko(:ustodian
Saturday alibi, be sure and
two years.
vocational program and extra prin'
move
the banda of all clocb
Supplement contracts issued in- ting for schools, Bernice Hoffman;
ahead
one
boor. At %a.m., Sonclude assistant varsity football, Fen- food service supervisor, Avice
day, DayUght Sovlngs Time
ton Taylor, Don Dixon, Mike Barr; Balley.
begins.
reserve f~ball, Fenton Taylor,
Resignations accepted include
Mike Barr; Sam Crow, head ninth ConnleNia~. seoretary; ~Ida~------------------·'

·..;
'•'.f

. ~ ' ":"'·~r·,
'

·~

'

Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.

$6.00 •....•• Sale $4.79
$8.50 ••••••• Sale S6.79
$12.00 .•..•. Sale $9.59
$16.00 .•.• .• Sale$12.79

Move ahead
hands of time

use.

REG. 1299.90 lWIN SAT........ SALE '149.95 SET
R~G. '359.90 FULL SET ....... ~. SALE '179.95 SET

Denim jeans, twills, painter pants
and knits in sizes 2 to 4, 4 to 6x and
7 to 14.
·

I

.
I

150 attend awards banquet

MEN'S '19.95

WRANGLER
•

~~1~5-~5~5.;~~-~.; ....

OORNIIL - the 'NatUi al" Water Ptll
contam5 mnurat herbs 1n a taOie t tha t

._

F~OUS

JEANS AND
PANTS SALE

Reg. 14.9S Painters
Jeans ......... .11.51
Reg. 18.95 Painters

Jeans •••••••••• 14.SS

Voi.30,No.7
Copyriphted 1981

enttne

Engineers end dam repair

UTILE GIRLS'

Waist sizes 27 to
38. Lengths 30 to
36 . Pre-washed
blue denim and
white cotton
drill . Popular
style with ham·
mer loop and
rule pocket .

OIWMIL ctan help you lose ex c e s~
wetghl due to excess water retention

ary

Three Meigs teachers given continuing status

'449.90 QUEEN SET •.•••.SALE '224.95 SET

neWJ1iwt. Oflrr ~•Pitt•
JuM27 . 1981.

guarant'i,ELSON'5 DRUG

Sale Prices Start
At Only

MEN'S WRANGLER
FULlER CUT

MEN'S &amp;, YOUNG

e

•

Pomeroy chosen
for HUD·· grant

Plain, printed and striped tops
of polyester, poly -cotton blends
and terry .
Sizes S-M-L and extra sizes.

'3.99
BATH TOWELS .. SALE *3.00
'2.49
HAND TOWELS SALE ..•2.00
'1.69
ASH CLOTHS SALE '1.25

For a smooth and figur eflat tering look under a ll
yo ur clothes, Playte x Control Top Pantyhose is your
sec ret weapon .

Reg . $3.50
Reg. $3.95
Reg . $5.95
Reg. $6.95

WOMEN'S
TOPS

CANNON TOWELS

SHAPE UP AND SAVE

I'

SALEI

SPECIAL SALEI

SPORT SHIRTS

Patrol•..
(Continued from page I I
·she lost control, went off the left side
of the road and collided with an embankment. The car then overturned,
according to the report.
She was taken by private vehicl e
to Holzer Medical Center, where she
was treated and released for
multiple bruises. Her vehicle was
severely damaged in the accident,
the report said.
Troopers investigated a two-car
accident in Gallia County early Wednesday morning.
The report noted a vehicle driven
by Nicky C. Smith, 23, Rt. 4,
Gallipolis, was northoound on SR 7
at 6 a.m. when another northbound
vehicle driven by Russell Young Jr.,
57, Gallipolis, went lef~of center and
attempted to pass Smith.
Smith then turned left, colliding
with Young's vehicle. Both autos
were severely damaged and Young
was cited for left of center.
The patrol reported it was kept
busy investigating other minor accidents in the area Wednesday.
Troopers said a vehicle driven by
Lester L. Parker, 24. Rt. 3,
Pomeroy, was backing into a private
driveway on SR 124 at 10:30 a.m.
when he collided with a marker post,
causing moderate damage.
James E. Roof, 46, Galljpolis, was
eastbound on Gallia CR 10 at 5:50
p.m. when he stopped his vehicle,
backed up and went into a fence and
.ditch. His vehicle was moderately
.damaged, the report said.

size selection ... here!

•

BASIC DENIM JEANS
Size~

28 to 42 waist. All
lengths. Boot flare or straight
leg style. 14112 oz. pr~- washed
No Faulf blue denim .

.

RIICBIVEAWARDII-F .. l&amp;llle-'
Pn " ,.,. hr II C
1 ee . . . . '
1 &amp;
II =
I
4 ...... ••
Ptrter, c. 1. P:lrn!eo ... 'llllrM 1 • 1a. ~-

ftw., "

.,

•

'

7

-pa IMI.,f' (W•mlallllem-udiBft
II 111e ,.r. Pldw!MI an, J.r, Joe 8lnble, .-ter af
. ..
p' I . , 1 I •••••• ....... w......... c. E.
N
' 1, ~ Jr•••• a.-1 Jim Fretiter,
"

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

\

I

By KATIE CROW
Struble, ht, his opening rernarkB,
More than 150 persons attended said If it were not for the chamber
the annual Pomeroy Chamber of tributes such u thole Thursday
Commerce Awards Banquet Tbur- night ,-ouud not be poaible.
aday evenlnc bonorinll Eleanor RobFrecker1 who atended thanks to
son, county~. Frank W. Por- those attending, Introduced county
tel', POmeroy Attorney, Tbll-eon officials and othen in attendance.
Johnlon,-executive vice prealdtont of
Each honoree httroduced memtheFarmen Bank andSovlngs, and benofhilfamlly.
C. E. Blakellee, retired Meigs Cou&amp; • A ling-«long, llong with slides to
ty Agricultural Agent Thursday the words of sonp such u "School
night.
Days"," Bicycle Built For
Joe Struble aerved u muter of • . '1'11o","YIIIkee Doodle Dudy" and
ceremonlet llld Jim Freeker, many others wu preeented by Arpnaldent ol the Ptawo7 Ownber lllllld Turley. Turley entertained
· of ~ree, preeented Nch IIMIIli with cqao music during the
~"with..
a plaque.

entire evening. Turley's music and
sing-along were well received.
Words of appreciation, hwnor
and fellowship highlightec! the event.
A highJi&amp;bt of the evening wuat the
introd~ ol Porter. Just as Porter's name was mentioned a cuckoo
clock decided ·It was time to announce the hour. The laughter of !he
crowd stopped r jX'OCeedings for
several minutes.
Flowers for the tables ~
donated by Hubbard's Greenhoril'e: ·
The Invocation and benediction were
given by John Ander1101~ vice
president of the chamber.

,,

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