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                  <text>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.

,,

�\
Friday, Apri124,1981

Commentary

Cincinnati tops Astros, 5-4

Pag-2~The Daily Sentinel'
Potneroy~Middleport, Ohio ·

Friday, Apr1124, 1981
3 .

By Associated Press
·,O keep trying. We didn't put our
Tl!ll ~ver of the Cincinnati Reo.s Ulils between our legs."
had it ~'!xlt lost it.
.
The Astros, last year's NL West
Theil the Reds had it again, but not 'champs, lost for the lOth time in 13
wi)hout astruggle.
games this season.
''Every time we come to Houston
"Those boos will turn to cheers
it doesn't matter the score, they when we start getting hit,;," said
always ll\llke it close," said Cin- Houston Manager Bill Virdon. "I
cinnati first baseman Dan Driessen · don't think anybody likes to hear
afte~ a $-4, !().inning victory over the them, but they're part of the game."
Houston,.Utros Thursday night.
"I . watched the Astros in the.
In other NL games Thursday, Los
(National League) playoffs last year ' Ang~les beat San Diego 3-1 and
aga~ Philadelphia when they kept Atlanta stopped San Francisco 7-3 ..
conung back, and they always find a In the American League Chicago
waytodoitagainstus."
took a doublehead~r from
. The multi-directional game was Baltimo~e, 18-S and 5-3. Two games
ll_I'St ~omg Sea~er's way. Cin- were rained out - New York at Pitcmnati s star nght-hander was tsburgh in the NL and Toronto at
working on a n&lt;&gt;-hitter for 61-3 in- NewYorkintheAL.
nings and held a conunanding ~
Seaver had held the Astros hitless
lead going into the eighth.
until Craig_Reynolds singled to right
Then the roof caved m for Seaver in the seventh. Then Seaver was
at the Astrod~me, as Houston scored chased in the eighth when the Astros
lour runs to tie the game at 4-4. But scored four times, three of the runs
the Reds fmally puiJed it out in the coming on a homer by Cesar
loth on Drtessen's RBI single.
Cedeno.
'.'At least we came back and won,"
Ken Griffey then opened the Cinsat~ ~ave~; who did not figure in the cinnati loth with a single off reliever
~ton.. The way we've been Dave Smith, took second on Dickie
playmg, 11 shows excellent fortitude Than's fielding error at second and

The :.;eign of Sp....a.&amp;.linL&amp;.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _Wi_illra_'m_F.~.B_uc_k_ler_Jr._•.
SEVILLE, Spain - At a little
kiosk n~ar the _Pfrk is a child's
mecharucal rocking horse. You insert 25 pesetas, and for 10 minutes
your little boy or girl can rock
around the clock, gasping with
pleasure as they hold on hard to the
little wOOden extruberances that serve as bridles, while their feet rest on
stirrups and adjustable to the length
of their legs.
As the horse bounces about, your
eyes focus behind the child to the
window pane of the kiosk. A
magazine is held open by
clothespins. It depicts, six inches
from the chil d's head , a
photographic detail, acts of male
homosexuals.
A few minutes earlier on, the cardinal of Seville, officiating at mass

on Holy Thursday at the great
cathedral, addressed a reverential
mass of people. Seated directly in
front of the cardinal, a few yards
removed from is the mayor of
Seville. And directly behind bin) is
Calvo Sotelo, the Pcime ministe~ of
the Spanish government. They are
listening to the cardinal's words. But
the mind almost necessarily w;mders.
The kiosk outside il; the same town
whose antecedent primate, the
lamed and feared Segura, died 2!i
years ago shortly alter pronounqmg
excommunication on anyone rnan, woman, married, unmarried
- who danced. A pious people ;he
Andalusians, but a lew weeks after
the death of his eminence a toqrist
guide, answering a question from an

The Dqily Sentinel
Il l Cu urt Slrn·t
Pomc ru' . Ohiu
G14·99!"-2 15fl
IH-:\'liTEO TUTI\E INTEREST Ut'TIIE ME J(;S· MASON ,\HEr\

ROBERT L. WING ETT
Publisht•r

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH

i\ss i~ Ullll Puhlhht•r/Control lt• r

Grm•ral

Mun:~ger

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
Nt&gt;"'~

Edi to r

A MEMRER ul Tlw A !IC~ut· iat t&gt;d Press. lnhwd Ball) l'n·ss Associa tion and the
Am t'rii'a,n Nt'\\ SPUPN f'ubl ishrrs Assoda ti11n.
I.E11' EH.~ ~)F OP I:\1~) :'1 at r \\ t'i&lt;'Umt"d . Tht'y shnuld bt' b~ tht~n 300 \ln r d~ lung All
l &lt; 'tl t ·r~ &lt;~r ~· ~ UbJ. t't ' l tu t'd llln ~ . and mus t lw ~ ·~n t•d "ith IUtmt•, udd rt•s.~ and trlr phont•

nu mlwr. \ •• UDSI,I(nt•d lt· ttt'r~ v.1ll hr tm hl i ~ h r d . Lt•Uton ~ hu ui 1I IM· In ~mid Ul ~tl'. addri'~Si n g
t ~ .~u t ·~ . nut pt·r~u nu l ilu· ~ .

American about what was it like in
Seville with the cardinal dead, aliswered: "When Cardinal Segura
died, he, and we, passed on into a
better world."
The differences betwoen then and
. now flash through the mind of the
worshippers, who that night would
not, most of them, go to their beds
until after seven in the morning, since the long evening would be given
over to marching in one or more of
the many procesions , huge,
elaborate, gilded, silvered floats
bearing thousands Of candles,
weighing up to 4,000 pounds,
carrying statues - of the Virgin,
images of Christ and his tormentors
- released from their sanctuaries in
neighborhOOd churches to wander
through the crowded streets of the
city during the holy days. They
would stop every hWldred yards the men who supported the weights
could not go further without pausing,
and from time to time they would be
greeted by a lone voice, male or
female, rising up from the crowd,
singing out devotional chants in the
strangled, erotic, minor mode the
flamenco singers. Three, four, five
minutes of silence from the crowd
while the singer, deserting his
profane art, turned his talent to the
service of God.
And when they would sit down,
fmally, to eat, at two or three or four
in the morning, the conversation
would turn to politics. Turn,
specifically, to the great trauma of
Feb. 23. No historical event in
Spanish history since the civil war
has had a greater impact upon the
Spanish people. Suddenly, viewing
on television one anny officer,
machine gun in hand, holding the
parliament at bay, they recognized

tbat the changes are perhaps disordered: something on the order of
hysteresis, a lag that follows an effective cause. From zero political
freedom to freedom for communists,
and something on the orrler of
hysteresis, a lag that follows an effective cause. From zero political
!reedom 'to freedom for communists,
and somethin~ less than effective
repression o4: terrorism. From
WJquestioned national unity, to
separatism in the north. From
suspicion of nonnal heterosexual·
dancing in Seville, to open displays
of perversion, literally in the line of
sight of children.

W~ _.I 'lfii~K

Everyone has !lis theory of things.
One (highly popular) is that the king
himself, recognlzlng that the social
and political trajectory could not go
on without creating disorder,
obliquely and contingently colluded
with the generals. A second has it
that precisely because the king was
the clear and present abortifacient
M the revolution, the king (next
time) would be the first to go: either
by assassination (less likely) or
exile, or con{inement (more likely).
Others say that Calvo Sotelo has,
maximum, three months during
which to "imponetse" (hard to transmit: so to speak, to become a

dominant figure); othenrile, Incipient chaos, and back to the
generals. The positlan rl. the
generals Ia ambivalent. Say what
you like about Franco, the Speni8h
people - those of them wbo were
willing to let th!!ir political appetltee
hibernate --: did well. They
prospered economically - all'
classes of Spaniards. And the peace
was longer underFrancothanatany
time in Spanish ~ocy · Forty yean ·
of relative prosperity, peace and Independence are, for many Spaniar·
ds, a wistfully attractive subltltute
for political, social and moral81l81'
chy.

f\k ~

TtW' \(;&lt;;fLe CAW L.l\k
Afll'w~ T~ WI\HT To
I~ C~\CA~ \W~WT
K~Vt% 10 f&gt;:&gt; AMD...

and seeing the light
Ronald Reagan is turning up the heat on behalf of his economic program in
hopes of making Congress see the light.
The biggest boost in temperature is to come next Tuesday, the day after
the legisla\ors return !rom their tw&lt;&gt;-week Easter recess.
That night, in his first public appearance since he was shot March 30, the
president will go to the Capitol to appeal to a joint session of Congress for
favorable action on his budget and tax cut proposals.
It's the sort of dramatic appearance the former HollywOOd actor loves
best.
The nationally broadcast speech is certain to draw even more putilic attention than usua l as the nation looks for itself to see the extent of Re.gan's
recovery from the bullet wound in the chest inflicted by a would-be assassin.
It will enable the president to re-emphasize his commitment to passage of
his program while he and his congressional audience are aware that millions
of Americans are watching.
"He feels it is particular.ly important that he outline his views as his
program moves forward in the legislative process," said White House
spokesman Larry Speakes. "He is eagerly looking forwa rd to the opportunity to be back on Capitol Hill."
He might have sa1d it was an opportunity Reagan and his staff couldn't
resist.
The entire lobbying effort for the economic program has been a case study
on what Congress can expect from the Reagan White House when it becomes
corrunitted to an all-out press for approval of a program.
The White House has distributed to top administration officials a bluecovered booklet entitled "President Reagan's Program for Economic
Recovery."
Called an "executive briefing book," the docwnent contains a simplified
explanation of the highiight of the tax and budget programs and also includes a sample speech that begins: "It's a pleasure lor me to be here
today."
Who knows how many times this week that speech was delivered in
congressional dis~ricts across the country as the administration dispatched
Cabinet members and congressional allies to drum up support for the
pro~ram . Most of those speakers were sent into districts represented by conservative Democrats considered likely supporters of the Reagan program.
Meanwhile, administration supporters among conservative activists also
pitched in. The National Conservative Political Action Corrunittee announced a $1 million advertising program aimed at tagging key Qemocratic
members of Congress as "big spenders" opposed to the Reagan program.
An effort to recruit big business support for the program was aborted after
some complaint,; that the Reagan friends who were handling that aspect of
the lobbying program were using undue pressure on some executives. ·

CLEVELAND (AP) - C1eveland powerful Milwaukee Brewers last
Indians Manager Dave Garcia has a Thursday.
word for people. like pitcher Wayne
The right-hander returns to the
Garland: bulldog.
mound tonight against Texas.
Garland, a one-time 20-game win"The thing that really pleases me
ner whose career was jeopardized is that Wayne has been consistent all
by a rotator cuff injury to his right spring," said Duncan. "He has pitsboulder in 1978, has clawed his way ched seven times and really has not
.
back into form with support from been hit hard."
former catcher Dave Duncan.
Garland went 3-1 with a 2.25 ear"Dave caught me in Baltimore ned run average in the Cactus
when I won 20 games (in 1976)," said League.
Garland. "At times, he had more . If he can regain his 1976 success, it
confidence in me than I had in will be vindication for the Indians,
myself. He always believed I could who signed him to a !().year, $2.3
come back, and he worked and million free agent contract following
talked with me. I owe him a lot."
that season. He has since gone 26-41.
'"You know, Wayne has been
Duncan is now the Indians' pitching coach, and he's savoring the through a lot," said Duncan. "The
best week-long perfonnance by a media have not been kind to him and
Clewland staff in years. The club's it was very rough being the Indians'
five starters have allowed one ear- · big free agent and then getting hurt.
ned run in the past five games, in- Last spring was probably the lowest
cluding Garland's I~ blanking of the point because his arm hurt and he

Supports sheriff
We are writing this letter converning your article in the Daily
Sentinel on April 8, 1981 on Howard
Frank.
In our opinion, we do not approve
or appreciate how our tax dollars
are bemg spent. We would Ite your
paper to write a follo\I'Up ttl let us
know what is being done about this
matter.
We would also like to express our
support to Sheriff Proffitt and his
deputies for the fine job they are

which locate or expand operations in
urban areas.
"I urge you to accept this invitation in order that we may
demonstrate our concern to the
citizens of Ohio living in these areas
and offer them the encouragement
of a better day through bold and
creative executive and legislative ·
initiatives which can walt no
longer," the governor said in a letter
to House and Senate leaders.
Mayor George Voinovich and City
Council President George Forbes
will join the delegation for the
Cleveland tour.
The governor is minimizing the.
role he played in trying to win House
approval of a heavily lobbied bi!l

National Convention that would
deny financial and technical help to
candidates who fail to support the
F'.qual Rights Amendment.
Eleanor Smeal, president' of the
National Organization for Women,
wants the resolution ·to apply to
congr•ssional campaign com-

•

.

Nicaraguan ''advisers." ·
·Some U. S. e11perts think that less
than 20 tons of equipment has
reached the rebels - and that consists mainly of weapons of World
War U vintage and some U. S. small
arms supplied by the Vietnamese.
Eastern Europe is sending not guns
but money, which the rebels are ~ttempting to use - with little luck so
far - to buy modem weapona on tJte
black market.
It was a lack of weapons that
brought about the quick failure of
the rebels' January "final offensive" and reduced them to a hitand-run style of combat.
~r U. S. intelllgence ,reports
depict Handll's account of his 1o1t of
Conuumunlat capitals aa consideral!ly puffel\ up. A report an the
rebel leader'a visit to M-;ow laid
that be had been ,unable to arrange a
meeting with any high official or to
get,any BIBuranc.'el of dlreet help or
ev$1 the shipment of anna llhould
the leftlata be able to bay them on
the black martel,
,
Furthermore, :the White HOUle
contsltian_that tbe Sovlellllld the
Cubans are behind the Salvadorali
guen1lla movement Ia dilpllled by

-~=~~i~~

•

An important meeting of the
Meigs-Mason Girls Softball League,
both junior and senior divisions, will
be held at 2:30 p.m. Sunday at the
Royal Crown Bottling Co. garage, N.
Second Ave., Middleport.
All league teams must have a
representative at the meeting and
any new teams in the Meigs-Mason
area wanting to join must have
representatives present.
The junior division is for girls 10
through 13 and the senior division is
for girls 14 through 18, both as of
May31 , this year.

INDY 500
Grandstand C Seats
Reds vs. Dodgers
Helmet Day

DALLAS (AP) - Baseball Commissioner Bowie Kuhn , who twice
has sided with the players in their
disputes with management, finds
himself finnly on the owners' s1de in
the dispute over free-agent compensation that could lead to a player
walkout May 29.
' 'This time the owners are clearly
right, " Kuhn said during an interview broadcast Thursday night
on radio station KRLD-AM. "I have
publicly been on record for a long
time as believing that there should
be compensation of some kind. I'm
very strongly of that view. I think
it's an important need of the game."
And Kuhn said he will not lean on
the owners to comprorruse their
position in order to avoid the
walkout.
Players threaten a strik e to
protest the owners' adoption of an

agreement for compensating teams
that lose players through baseball's
free agent rules.
A recent, well-publicized case involved outfielder Dave Winfield who
played out his option at San Diego,
became a free agent and signed a
multi-million dollar contract with
the New York Yankees. San Diego
received nothing.
" When a San Dieg o loses a Winfie ld, they ought to get a guy back
that they can play, " Kuhn told
KRLD, outlinin_.gJhe idea behind the
agreement owners have adopted.
Players contend the plan will dampen the free-agent market. They say
owners will be discouraged from
aggressively pursuing free agents,
fearing the compensation to a
player's form er team would be too
high.

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BASEBALL BALLET- Reds Dave Coucepeion (13) pirouettes back
to lint 1111e oa a fourth tnning pick-off attempt. Asl:rol! flnl baseman
Mike lvle (n) awaits tbe tbrow from pltcber Vern Ru.llle, Thunday night
In tbe
Concepction was safe. (AP Laserpltoto),

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intelligence officiala from the Carter
administration - · among thein
Robert pastor, who was the Latin
America upert qn the National
Sei:wity Council. '
Theile experts say that all of the
documents that •the Reagan administratlonisUiingtoproveSovletCuban CC!fltrol of the rebela were
available to them and that their conelusion- which they 8tlll stand byWBB that the eonfllct Is an indigenoua
campaign by SalvadOI'IIIII who areu
nhappy with their rlght-wlllg •
mililary-domlnatedg0V81'1111111rt but .~
wbo are not controlled from outalde. , ,
Most of the Intelligence uperta •
questlonedagreelhatthedocumentl
show clearly tbata number of CGm- :.;
lllllll)ft countrleuupport the alma r1. ·;~
the Salvadoran leftilta and have ~
made many prom1aea to them. But' ~
there appean to be little bard ~:
evidence that tbeN ~ lll't• . ,.
being fullllled or that the Salvaclord· : ;'
confUct lathe Sovl~ CUIIU- :' '
planned insurgency that
ad- '·,
miniBtratian bellev~~lt to be. '
:,
Reqan'a E1 s.mtdor Jlllllrl :
may tum out to bave mucb ill~ , =
loon with l.,yDdan ·J olaon'l Viet- : ~
nampapenrl.18yeanaao. ,
!

ATIA5T! ~001\lHJ
THe l'6iFtcr
ll

Garland also gives credit for his
early successes this year to Indians'
radio announcer Herb Score, himself a 20-game winner for Cleveland
during the 1950s.
"Herb helped me with my slider,"
said Garland. "He showed me a new
way to grip it. Against the Brewers,
I had the best slider of my life."

Kuhn firmly
on owners' side

WEEKEND

I

side the U. S. government, say that
the Reagan administration has access to hard intelligence and other
captured docwnents that directly
contradict basic conclusions in the
white paper and the bound volume.
At the heart of what are being
called the "Salvadoran documents"
are 47 pages of handwritten notes
captured from the rebels and a written report from Shafik Handil, head
of the Salvadoran Communist Party,
on his ~ulnmer 1980 trip to Vietnam
and Eastern Europe in search of armsand otheraidfortherebelcause.
These documents, say the White
House, prove that the rebels were
promised 800 l_!lns of "the most
modem weapons and equipment"
and have actually received at least a
quarter of those llml5, primarily
through Nicaragua.
But, say the. intelligence e11perts,
other evidence suggests that little of
this has shown up in the battlefield
although the rebels may have been
promised much and although some
arms may be stockpiled for them in
Cuba. Their evidence includes
reports an what has been [l8lllured
or seen deatroyed and on infonnationfromcapturedrebels.and

was n&lt;lt pitching well.
"Buf you never want to give up on
a guy~ike Wayne until all the doubts
are e sed. He has the kind of personali y you look for in a pitcher. He
knows how to pitch and he knows
how to win. Those things are very
hard to teach."
Duncan said it is possible Garland
could Jnce again become an excellenl pitcher because the J().yearold neyer relied heavily on his fastball.
'' Al~t of people think Wayne was a
hard thrower when he won 20 games
for tbe Orioles," Duncan said.
"Weill_he was a control pitcher. His
best PitCh was his screwball.
.
"People ask me if Garland is
throwmg as hard now as he did
befol'fi the arm operation. 'I'Jley are
surpr1•ed when I tell them tl\at he is.
Wayne is a smart pitcher who relies
on his control."

CAUGHT ON TI:IEFI' ATIEMPT - San Francisco Giants shortstop
John LeMaster awaits the throw to tag out stealing Jerry Royster of the
Atlanta Braves during first inuing action Thursday afternoon In San
Francisco. Braves won, 7-3. ( AP Laserphoto).
·

TOLEDO, Ohio (AP J - Toledo
took a 9-3 lead after five innings
Thursday night, then held on for a
16-41 International League baseball
victory over the Colwnbus Clippers.
A five-run Toledo second was
highlighted by run-scoring hits by
Ron Washington, Kelly Snider and
Ed Cipot. Cipot drove in two more
runs with a single in the fourth inning.
Columbus battled back behind two
home runs by Pat Tabler, his third
and fourth of the season, and
narrowed the gap to 16-41 in the
seventh on Buck Showalter's tw&lt;&gt;run homer.
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On this date:
In 1888, Spain declared war on the United States after receiving
·America's ultimatwn to withdraw from Cuba.
.,

White Sox 1&amp;-5, Orioles iiC3
Chet Lemon drove in four runs and
Bill Almon and Greg Pryor collected
three RBI each to power Chicago
over Baltimore in the first game of
their doubleheader.
Five Baltimore pitchers, including
starter and loser Scott McGregor,
were victimized by Chicago's 26-hit
attack, the most ever against an
Oriole team. Baltimore had
previously surrendered a high of 24
hits in a June 1978loss to the Toronto
Blue Jays.
Harold Baines delivered a tw&lt;&gt;-run
single in the fifth inning to lead the
White Sox to their second-gamelvictory.

Clippers, 10-8

Today Ia Friday, April24, the II 4th day of 1981. There are 251 days left
in the year.
Today's highlight in history:
On Aprll24, 1704, the "Boston News Letter" was published for the first
tlqe, becoming the first American newspaper to be printed on a regular

~

from Rick Camp in the seventh irining.
"I wanted to beat them in front of
their fans," gloated Montefusco
following his successful
homecoming . Montefusco was
traded from San Francisco to Atlanta over the winter.
" I wanted this more than
anything. I didn't want to read in the
newspapers that the Giants beat me
again."

Toledo defeats

mit tees and state party ~uproar when the executive comorganizations 88 well as the national 'ffilttee of the party meetl May I. The
conunittee.
nail~ party organization pla)'l fill
But top party officials are deter- '?le U1 providing either technical or
mined to apply the I'I!IO!utlon on1 to fm~ncial aBSis!ance to state
the Democratic National ~m- legislaUve candidates, the people
mittee, a position certain to create moSt_ directly concerned with
rauflcatlon of the ERA.

I£JB6Y!

Today in history. .

that would add the mourning dove to:
the list of hunters' game birds in'
Ohio.
During House debate on the
Senate-passed bill, which IIIII by one
vote but could be reconsidered,
some repmenlatiVll8 complained
about phone calls Rhodes had placed
to try to get the measure puaed.
,
There were reports that be had
called as many as three dozen HOUle.
members in an attempt to win their
support. But the governor said be
made only a handful of calls and did
not have much luck.
"I called about three people. I
wasn't very successful," Rhodes
said. "They told me they were going
to vote the other way. I said fine."

The El Salvador papers___R_ob_en_J._Jfj_as_ma_n

The Reagan administration has
defended its decision to step up
military aid to the govenunent of El
Salvador by portraying the civil
strife in that Central American
COWltry as a major test of superpower wills.'
The president and his advisers insist that the leftist Salvadoran rebels
are being heavily armed by Cuba
with the latest Soviet and Eastern
European weapons. The United
States, they say, has increased its
anning of the Salvadoran government simply to keep pace with the
Communists.
To support this position, the White
House issued in late February a
"white paper" on El Salvador and a
bound set of documents carrying the
rather ponderous title "Documents
Demonstrating Communist Support
doing for our community. Most of us of the Salvadoran Insurgency."
feel our tax dollars are well s~nt These captured documents, the
when the money goes to the sheri'lf's White House says, prove beyond a
department. We only wish we didn't doubt that the rebels are well-armed
have to pay those people who do not with the most modem equipment
earn their wages and are not on the and that the coutnry has become a
test tube for communist expansion
job.
We sincerely hope that others in&gt; in this hemisphere.
our· community will write your
But several knowledgeable inpaper and conunent on this matter. telligence experts, inside and outSincerely concerned. - Mickie
Schoonover, Rutland, and C. Sue
Payne, Harrisonville.

Letter to the editor

by the end of summer.
Meanwhile, inside the annex, work
continues on a $72,000 project in
which the old law library on the
second floor is being remodeled. The
building at one time housed the Ohio
Supreme Court.
The project will provide 22 additional offices for senators and staff
.members. Original cost estimates .
were as much as $150,000.
Gov. James A. Rhodes has invited
legislative leaders to join him April
24 for a tour of the inner-city areas of
Cleveland and the industrial areas of
Youngstown.
It is part of Rhndes' effort to enlist
support for pending legislation that
would grant tax breaks to industries

Effort may be embarrassing for Democrats
WASillNGTON (AP) - What
began as an effort to please
feminists is threatening to turn into
a political embarrassment for
Democratic Party officials getting
ready for the 1982 elections.
At issue is implementation of a
resolution from the 1980 Democratic

scored on Driessen's single,
Eartrer, Dave Concepcion had
driven Jn three runs to help the Reds
moWJt lheir four-run advantage.
Dodgen 3, Padres 1
. RickSuicliffe scattered five hits in
eight Innings and drove in the
game'~ first run as Los Angeles beat
pWlchl~ss San Diego.
Sutrllffe, 2-0, struck out four and
walkeq three, including one in the
ninth whep he was relieved by Steve
Howe, r'ho gained his second save.
The ~adres, who brought a .206
batting average Into the game, got
their ouly run on Jerry Turner's pinch homer in the eighth.
Glauts 7, Braves 3
Chri.$ Chambliss's double in the
fifth ilming broke a 3-3 tie and
triggeqed Atlanta over San Francisco. The Braves' decisive fifthinning rally began with two out
Claud~ll Washington singled and
took third on Bob Horner's ·single
before : hambliss (allowed with his
game-~reaking double.
Ex-&lt;jiant John Montefusco, who
lost t~ San Francisco April 18 in
Atlanta, posted his first victory for
the B11aves, but needPfi r~&gt;1l,:~l h,..Jn

Bulldog Garland on comeback trail

Turning on the heat Work begins on leaky roof proj-ect
C'OLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Work
is expected to be under way soon on
a renovation project designed to
plug the holes in the leaky roof of the
Statehouse Anitex.
The state Controlling Board has
agreed to let the Department of Administrative Services spend $300,000
for re-roofing and restoration of
some stone work on the structure.
General Masonry Contr,ctors,
Inc., Columbus, is to do the work.
·:we've had roof-leaking problems
over there for several years,"
Raymond R. Kohli, the department's deputy director for public
works, said.
The project calls for a new roof
and some cornice work around the
edge. It's expected to be complete&lt;!

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

.. .-

MODERN SUPPLY

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

w_ Main

992-2164
Pomeroy, Ohio
E STORE WITH "All KINDS OF STUFF''-FOR
PETS, STABLES, LARGE &amp; SMALL ANIMALS,
LAWNS AND

- -- -- - ---1,- - -- - --------

----,----

�J
Ohio

Pagl!--4- The Daily Sentinel

Kennedy-Thomas to ma"y Sunday

Longshots, youngster first
in New Orleans
en event
NEW ORLEANS (AP) - A couple
of longshots, a graying veleran attempting a comeback and a
struggling youngster trying to make
it for the first time, hold the top two
positions in the$350,000 USG&amp;F New
Orleans Open golf tournament.
"I've played better than my
record shows," insisted Skip
Dunaway after he'd fired an 8under·par 64 for the first round lead.
"It's hard to tell people just how
difficult it is to play (in the
qualifying 'rounds) ori Monday," he
said. "Lots of times I go out there
and shoot 70 and I'm not in the tournament."
He's managed to qualify only fiv e
times this season and has won only
two checks, fora total of$1 ,530.

And Dunaway very nearly didn't
make it into the tournament field his
time. He was in a playoff for the 18$1
spot in the 156-man field, didn't
make it and got in only as the !bird
alternate after Jack Newton Withdrew.
Dunaway once lost his ~our
playing rights because of lack o performance and is in the second 1year
of his second try on the PGA Tour.
DeWitt Weaver, on the other !land,
has been there before. He's won
twice as a tour .player, but tuok a
club job 10 years ago and now, at age
41, is trying a comeback.
" My contract allows me to play 20
tournaments a year and be at the
club 32 weeks," he said. ''I've
worked harder, trying to get it all

There was a .group of 13 at 68
together, .the last two ·montlis than I
which included Bruce Lietzke, a lwllhave in the last 10 years."
It paid off with a n11-bogey 66 that time winner this season, and Dave
left him alone in second, two shots Eichelberger, who beat O'Meara in
back after the first 18 holes of the a playoff for the title in the
Tallahassee Open last weekend.
chase for a $63,000 first prize.
Defending champion Tom Watson,
"It's very hard to tell anyone how
excited I am, how thrilled I am, af· the Masters titleholder, had a 69 in
ter playing so bad so long," Weaver the muggy, hazy weather and said,
"!.didn't do anything really well."
said.
·
Dunaway had an exceptional
His comeback, he said, was promround
that included four consecutive
pled by various reasons, including
financial and the fact "that the old birdies on the frontslde, which he
guys, (Ray) Floyd and (Lee) · played in 31. He missed only two
Trevino seem to be winning again. greens, chipped in for birdie on one
of those holes and didn't even come
I'm right in tl)al age group."
Rookie Mark O'Meara and Pal close to making a bogey.
"Just one of those days when I
Lindsey were at 67, +-under-par on
couldn't
do anything wrong," he
the 7,080 yard Lakewood Country
said.
Club course.

Ohio Baptist Women' s· Conference
planned at Denison University

'

Fitch's Celtics face big challenge
PHJLADELPHIA i AP) - Boston
Coach Bill Fitch knows all too well
the challenge facing his team
tonight when the Celt1cs take on the
Philadelphia 76ers in the third game
of their Na ti onal Basketball
Association Eastern Conference
final.

"We have to do unto them as they
did unto us in Boston Tuesday
ni ght," said Fitch, referring to
Philadelphia's IDa-104 victory in the
se ries opener that took . the
homecourt advantage away from
the Celtics.

W

!
1
!

Boston

Baltimore

3
~

•

•

3

9

3

Oakland

WEST
H

(.btcago

7

California

6

Tew

5
4

Seattle
Kansas City

5

5

Toronto

TeX&amp;B at Cleveland
OHkland al Seattle

P~l

L

1

Detroit
Milwallkee

to Brooklyn and his success there
was a green light for other owners. A
year later, Do by, Irvin and
Newcombe - the heart of the
Eagles' lineup -'' were on thetr way
to the majors. Irvin, who wound up
in the Hall of !'arne, remembers the
negotiations.
"Newcombe signed witn the
Dodgers and Rickey didn't pay Mrs.
Manley a dime for him. He said her
contract with Newcombe wks not
valid and she was free to sue him if
she wanted to."
Man ley, excited about the
breakthrough of blacks, did not
make an issue of it until Rickey also
signed Irvin.
"She told Rickey , 'You've already
got one of my guys for nothing. This
time, I'll fight. '''
Rickey hacked down and so Irvin's
Dodger career ended before it started. But Horace Stoneham, who
owned the New York Giants, moved
in and offered Manley $5,000 for Irvin. Sold !
Next was Doby. Bill Veeck, then
owner of the Cleveland Indians, of·
fered $5,000 for him. Manley wanted
more and so Veeck agreed to double
the price if Doby stuck. When he
helped the Indians to the 1948 world
championship, Veeck sent along a
check for anothe• $5,000.
So for three major league stars,
Manley collected a total of $15,000.
But the Eagles were a profitable
ope ration for the Manleys. The team
prospered, playing about 150 games
a season - half against other Negro
Leagueiearns and half against semipro white clubs.

Kansas City at MUwaukee

Major Lugue Bueball
AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST

New York

Sports World

'

.667
.636
.6110
.583
.556
.333

2

2 9
Tbunday'• Gamn
ctticago 18-5, Baltimore 5-J
Toronto al New York , ppd., rain
Only game.s scheduled

0)

I

II
II

3
~~~

.1fofl

.933
•700
.132
.1&gt;5
.308
.222
.112

Minnesota

GB
-

II&gt;
7
7
9
9

10

.

California

(Travers

().I ) at

Minnesota

at

aeveiand

0.0)

Toron to (Bomback Hl) 5 New York
(John 1·1), {n)
Kansas City (Gale HI ) at Mliwauk ee
rSlaton l·l), {n)
Oaklard {Norris 3-(JJ at Seattle (Abbott
fl..l), (n)
Only game.s scheduled

NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST
W L PeL

a

St.Loui.l
Philadelphia
New York
Pittsburgh
Chi~ago

-

Fridly'1 Gamet
Chicago (Troot I~) at Detroit (Petry ().

(Redfern 1·1)
TeWJ (Honeycutt
(Garland 1..0), (nJ

Montreal

,o,...t:,o'

'

2
5

~

~

~

~

I
WEST
II

Los Angeles
Atlanta
CincinnaU
San Diego
San Francisco

7
'
5
5

HOl.LStoo

2

7
7

10
2
5
!
9
9

3 10
1b1ltldly' I Game~

,~,.

' )... ·.':'!

.800
.7111

~

.500
.500
.091

.1411
.5113
.500

311
Ill
611
611

.31;7
,31;7

a

.231

New York at Pittsburgh, ppd, rain.
Atlanta 7, San FrallCix"o 3
Cincinnati ~. Houston 4, 10 innings
Los Angeles 3, San Diego 1
Glly '''"" IICbeduled
Frklay't G1mes
. New York ( J~ I}.J or Zachry U )) at
Mootreal (Burris H J
•
Philadelphia (Carlton U) at ChicaRO
IReWIChel 0-2 )
St.Louis (Shirley HI) at Pittaburgh
(Candelaria 0-1 or Bibby ~ 1. (n)
CincinnaU (Pastore 1}0) at Houat.on
(J .Niekro 1~2) , (n)
San Diei!O (Curtis 0.2) at Los Angeles
Atlanta (P.Nlekro ().G ) at San Francisco
(Blue 1·1) 1 (n)
Saturday'• GaiDel

Toronto at New York
faa_, at aeveland

CinciMaU at Houston
New York at Montreal
St.Loui.l at Plttaburgh
Philodelphlo at ClliCI!IO ·
Atlanta · at San Francisco
Son Diego ot lAo Angela, (n)

Chicago at Detroit
California at Minnesota
Oakland at Seattle, (n l
s..lafoOameo
Chicago ot O.U.It,
BO!!too at Baltimore

Toronto at New . York
California at Minnesota , 2

-

~··

·- ... .

~

FRISATSUI APIIIL 242528
531 JACKSON PIKE ·Rt.3!1 WEST
""""' &gt;141l·4524
&amp;IIIRGAIN llfATINfES ON SAT &amp; SVN
AU SEATS JUST SUO
ADirHSSION EVEffY ruESOO J r.40

---

Clint '~

...and
Cl)*.10ol

LOOKING BACK - Ella Manley, owuer of tbe black baseball team,
the Newark Eagles, looks over a scrapbook wttb one of her former
players, Don Newcombe, at ber home In Los Angeles In this 1973 fOe
photo. Manley's team was a major source for talented players once tbe
major league owuers recognized the value of black athletes and black
fans. Brooklyn Dodgers oWDer Branch Rickey signed Newcombe witbout
giving Manley any compensation. (AP Laserphoto).

bination collected three goals. Two
came from another new trio made
up of Steve Ulseth, Warren Miller
and Johnson's son Mark.
Fans would not have recognized
the Americans as the same players
who formed up for the first time in
Scandinavia two weeks ago and had
to start getting to know each other.
"We get to know a little more
about our team every day." Johnson
said: "It's a pity we are not just
beginning the championships instead of coming to an end."
Bobby Miller scored two goals for
the U.S., and Reed larson, Ron
Wilson, Warren Miller, Christian
and Steve Ulseth, had one each.

Published every artemoon , Monday through
FridHy, 1l1 Court Streel, by~ Ohio Valley
Publishing Compan)' - Multimedia. Jnc.,
Pomeroy , Ohio 4$769, 992-2156. Second class
postage paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.

.

..,

We regret cons1ruction delays prevent
Log Flume Optl~ing at this time. Watch

'

for special announcement - soon .

ByEUenBell
Your libraries recently completed a count of all the books
they own. Together, Pomeroy
Public Library and Middleport
Public Library owned 14,108
books at the end of 1980. In ad·
dition, they had on their shelves
S,410 books belonging to OVAL,
the Ohio Valley Area Libraries.
To put lhal another way, approximately one-fourth of all the
books on the shelves of your
libraries don:t- belong to your
libraries and would not be
available to you il your libraries
did not belong to OVAL.
We recently got a shipment of
more OVAL books you might
want to read.
Middleport Public Library has
"547 Easy Ways to Save Energy
in Your Home" by Roger
Albrlghl This Garden Way
publication could be just what
you need to save money, too, since energy these days (unless you
have wood or solar heat l costs
money.
Tired of paying high prices for
gasoline? Pomeroy Public
Library has "Making Your Own
Motor" Fuel by Fred Stetson.
You can learn all that you need to
know about making gasoline substitutes at home or on the farm.
(Don't forget to contact the IRS
and get pennission. You don't
want to be shot for a moonshiner! )
Do you have horses? Then you

6

R
A
R

t.to""1

tA\otJ\..

1'"~"'"
(Ill~·''\':\

';\

In and
around Meigs
Fund proceeds noted

'\,,,. , '

:\•1·

"(

may be interested in " Edge of the
Anvil" by Jack Andrew~. It's
billed as "a resource book (or the
blacksmith." This is a Jilodale
Press publication - the JBille
folks who bring you "The Mother
Earth News." You'll find this at
Pomeroy Public Library.
It's not the right season for
worrying about what to qo with
your apples. So this may be just
the right time to read Annie
Proulx's "Sweet and Hard Cider:
Making It, Using II, and EnjoyilJg
It." The color illustrations wiD
make you hunger for fall. Middleport Public Library is home
base for this book - but we can
arrange for you to pick It up at
Pomeroy Public Library.
Middleport also has ' VIllage
Homes' Solar House Designs" by
David A. Bainbridge. You gel
designs for 43 energy conscious
houses. Photos show you what the
results will look like. (If you're
like me, the artists' pictUre don't
really help.)
Want to cure your ,animals
yourself? Try the "Hert;,l Hand·
book for Fann and Stable" by
Juliette de Bairacli - l..evy. Who
knows - it might save money or
even an animal's life.
These are only a few ol the new
books OVAL has deposited at
Your libraries. Come see what's
new. There's something for
almost everyone at your
libraries.
master Masons invited.
PUBUC AUCI'ION by Racine
Wesleyan United Methodist Church,
Saturday, beginning 10 a.m. at
Racine American Legion Hall. Ar·
tides accepted on consignment, flea
market section. Lunch served by
church women. Proceeds to church
building fund .

Lots Kelly, campaign chairperson
of the Meigs Hearl Associatloo
reports proceeds of $290 to the county heart fund drive as a result of the
recent balloon sales day .
Assisting with the sale were Janet
Bolin and Alwilda Warner with Mr .
and Mrs. Bob King of King Builders
and Ralph Werry of the Meigs Inn
providing headquarters for the day
in Middleport and Pomeroy.
Selling balloons were Jobs
Daughters, members of the Order of
DeMolay and Troop ~9 Boy Scouts.
Volunteer workers were transported
to the R. C. Bottling Co. for free soft
drinks by Kenneth Wiggins.
Anyone wishing to donate to the
heart fund may send contributions to
P. 0. Box 100, Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769.

gave devotions using scripture from
Psalm 34 and an article from the
Daily Blessing. Birthday cards were
signed for shut·ins and plans made
to remember them with gifts on
their birthdays in May.
Mrs . Elizabeth Searles will
present devotions at the May Sanborn meeting. It was decided that
the balance of funds in the treasury
will be used for writing materials
and stamps for a shut· in and a gill of
cash for another shut· in.
Mrs. Hood presented the program
from the War Cry using the article,
"They Shall be Whiter Than Snow."
Mrs. Metzger thanked the members for support during the past
year. Mrs. Cathy Riggs is new chairman and yearbooks for the year
were planned. Mrs. Shirley Coleman
was welcomed as a new member.
Refreshments were served to
those named and Miss Rhoda Hall,
Mrs. Una Dotson, Mrs. Mary
Brewer, Mrs. Ethel Hughes, Mrs.
Lillian Demoskey.

Domestic violence workshop May 2
The workshop is designed to train
potential transportation volunteers,
give victims information on what
help is available and how to get it,
and provide social service agencies
with referral information.
Topics to be covered are : What is
the problem? What's the law in
Meigs County? What happens to vic-

The Meigs County chapter of
Serenity House invites all interested
persons to participate in a domestic
violence workshop on Saturday,
May 2, from 9 a.m. to 3:30p.m. at
the Meigs Inn. A $2.50 donation iB
requested; lunch is not included.
Call 992-5713 or 992-5813 for reser·
vations.

Bake, auction sole set

A prll

too bent upon doing things your wav
today . This could result in problems.
Cond it ions that inh ibit your in·
dependence should be handl ed

25, 1981

Either through necessity or
choice, greater ambition wilL be
awakened in you this com ing vear.
Once vou get revved up, vour ac·

tolerantly. ·
SCORPIO &lt;Oct. 24-Nov. 221 You're

complishments mav surprise evep

you might dwell more on gloom than
your think ing .

sunshine. Rever se

Have a bright day !
SAG ITT ARI US (Nov. 23-Dec. 21)
You' re the type who does n' t mind
picking up the tab and you may have
people around you today who w ill
allow y ou to do just that.

square holes, rather than tak ing the

the

proper

GEMINI (May 21·June 20) Tread

warily today in any involvement
si tuatio n
whi ch
smacks
of
speculation . The odds are not
stacked in your favor, th us making it
difficult for you to win.

CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jan.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 19)
There's a possib ility your cu r iosity
will be in high gear today. You m ay
trv to probe into things which
associates don' t want you to know.

family fri ct ion occurs today, chan·
ces are it will be due to a misun·
derstandlng . Before lumpi ng to con·
e lusions, get the others to cla rity
th eir positions .

A songfest will be held Sunday at 7
p.m. at the Syracuse Nazarene
Church. Special singers will be the
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) Keep in
West Virginia Training School choir mind : The only way you are going to
under the direction of Kathlene get the cooperation of others today is
f irst set a good example. Then,
Slenker. The Rev. James B. Kittle, to
you won'l be disappo inted.
pastor, invites the public.
· VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) It's ex·
tremely unlike you, yet today YO\J

FRIDAY
Immunization rescheduled
BOARD OF T!1f8tees, i&gt;eech
lnununizations ·will not be given
Grove Cemetery, will stage a public
by the Meigs County Department of
meeting, 7:30 p.m. Friday at
Hea!th all day on Tuesday, April 28.
Pomeroy VIllage Hall to discuss
.fiats will resume on May 12 and will
operations and secure public opinion
continue to be given every second
.un improvements at the cemetery.
and fourth Tuesday thereafter.
LONG BOTTOM Community
A:lsoclation will stage a bake sale
SUNDAY
Louie loved oranges
Friday beginning at 9 a.m. at the • PAST COUNCILORS and
conununity building. ·
' Deputies of District 13, Daughters of
Louis XIV, the Sun King, loved the
- FILM, "Hot Lead aDd Cold Feet" America, will hold a 12:30 p.m. din· scent of orange trees and had them
at the Pomeroy Elementary School ner followed by a meeting at the in each of his apartments in Ver·
sponsored by PI' A, 7:30p.m. Friday. Ohio University Inn, Sunday. AU sailles. His orangerie, an elaborate
' members of the dilltricl are Invited.
heated room designed specifically
' Admission, fl.
HORSE
SHOW
featuring
50
for
cultivating oranges, was widely
RUSS AND The Gospel Tones will
classes,
beginning
9
a.m.
Sunday
at
copied by other Eurupean royalty
be featured at a revival at' the Mt.
Hermon U. B. Church Friday, Satur- Bar 30 Ranch at Tuppers Plains un- and aristocrats and became the anday and Sunday evenings . der sponsorship of junior class of cestor of loday's greenhouses.
Evangelist will be . the Rev. Don . Eastern High School.
SPRING CONCERT by seventh,
So~,OayUm . Pwrtor. ~.Bob
eighth
and symphonic bands of
Sandel'!l invites the public to attend.
Meigs
Local
School District, 3 p.m.
SA'nlRDAY
SPECIAL
Sunday
at
Meigs
High auditorium.
CAR WASH Saturday at Bob's
Ashland (Sugar Run) sponsored by Guest soloist, Ernest Bastin,
Meigs Paramedics. Proceeds to be professor of music at Ohio University; guest conductor, Jack Delaney,
used to purchase heart monitor.
director fi Jackson, Ohio inANNUAL INSPECTION, Racine strumental music program. Ad·
Lodge 481, FlcAM, Saturday. Work missions f.l for family; f1 single.
'In entered apprentice degree; all

19)

Goals vou establish for yourself mav
be blocked todav i f you l ack a logica l
approa ch. Don' t let emotions or
feelings to c loud your judgment.

CANCER (June 21 -July 221 If

Songfest on Sunday

Speakers will include Laraine
Newsome (director of Crisisline),
Meigs County Attorney Barbara
Knight, and Meigs County Medical
Clinic family practitioner Dr. Wilma
Mansfield.

The Middleport Garden Club will
meet at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at the
Middleport First United
Presbyterian Church social room.
Mrs. Lennie Haptonstall and Miss
Hallie Zerkle will be the hostesses.

extremely imagin at ive tOday , but

you .
TAURUS (Aprii20-May 20) Where
your work Is concerned today you•re
apt to trv to force round pegs into
time to figure out
procedures .

survive?

Garden club to meet

ASTROGRAPH

The Wesleyan Methodist Church
will hold a benefit sale at the
American Legion hall on Route 338
in Racine with ali proceeds to go into
the building fund for the new church.
The sale will begin at !0:30a.m.
Among the many items which will
be for sale are four five-piece set·
tings of Cabbage Rose, a Mayfair
candy dish , depression and lace
edged glassware, a motorcycle, four
new wheels for a 1!118 Camaro, com·
puter games, exerciser, some an·
liques, and new merchandise contributed by local merchants.
A bake sale will also be held in
conjunction with the auction.

tims from a medical standpoint?
Can a victim leave the abuser and

' PISCES (Feb. 20-March 201 Be
very careful today when making
recommendations lo friend s. If the
results turn out poorly, they may lry
to shift the blame to you.
ARIES (March 21 ·April 19) Nor·
ma lt y ,

decisio n· making

comes

eas ily to vou. bu t todav you could
listen to a colleague who confu ses
you . He might even throw you off the
track.

cou ld be a mite too ca rel ess and lose
something vou'd have a hard time
replacing. Be careful.

LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) Don't be

Volunteers asked for
bike-hike on May 2

Movie Saturday
A movie, "Hot Lead and Cold'
Feet" will be shown at the Middleport Elementary School Saturday
at 7 p.m. Cost iB $1 for everyone except preschoolers wbo will be ad·
mitted for 50 cents.

HUBBAmS
GREENtiJUSE

Ph. 99.2·5776 Syracuse, Oh .
NOW OPEN FOR
SPRING SEASON
• Potted Plants
• Complete line of bedding
plants and hanging
baskets.
All' Dozen Packs 95C dote .
Hours: OpenOaily9tol

Sun. 1 to S

BESTSELLER
FOURTH PRINTING """' TWO MONTHS!

WBENYOUR

Carol Layh, chainnan, has issued
an appeal for volunteers to help with
the annual hike-bike on May 2 whi'ch ·I
is sponsored by tile Meigs
Association for Retarded,Citizens.
Many people will be ~ed to perfonn volunteer work dllflng tbe
hike-bike, Mrs. l..eyh pointed out.
She asks residents
to help in
these various capacities to caD 9926025.

willlnli

I

ASSORTMENT OF

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7

a•l·' ' ·

L

was announced with the Dorcas Cir·
cle to have a salad smorgasbord at
that time.
Meeting at the home of Mrs.
Alwllda Werner, the Dorcas Circle
members made plans for remembering Frances Bearhs and Maude
Betz on their birthdays. Mrs. Wer·
ner had devotions using an Easter
theme with scripture from Matthew
28, and Mrs. Sarah D. Owen presided
at the meeting. There was a prayer
circle for shut·ins and the program
by Mrs. Freda Edwards was on the1
topic, "Let Our Light Shine."
Refreshments were served to
those named and Mrs. Roma
Hawkins, Mrs. Katie Anthony, Mrs .
Elizabeth Slavin, Mrs. June Kloes,
Mrs. Helen Bodimer, Mrs. Bernice
Baker, Mrs. Clarabelle Riley, Mrs.
Eva Hartley, and Mrs. Sarah
Fowler.
Mrs. Gwinnie White hosted the
EJecta Circle meeting with Mrs.
Kathryn Metzger presiding at the
meeting. Following prayer by Mrs.
Freda Hood, Mrs. T••anna Well

The Ohio Baptist Women's Conference to be held at Denison
University, June 10, II and 12 was
announced at the B. H. Sanborn
Missionary Society circle meeting.&lt;~
Tuesday.
Miss Rhoda Hall noted that she
has registration cards for the conference. Announced at the meetings
was May Fellowship Day of Church
Women United of Meig.&lt;J County to be
held May I at the Racine First Baptist Church.
Reports were given on Easter
projects with Electa Circle members noting that crocheted Easter
baskets had been taken to shut-ins
and that Gwinnie White had
crocheted small ones for patients at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
The Dorcas Circle reported on a
visit to the Pomeroy Health Care
Center with remembrances, and
also noted that gilts had been taken
to the shut-ins for Easter.
The B. H. Sanborn Missionary
Society meeting to be held on Mav 4

handwork and scrapbook, are Iron~ left to righ~ JeJto
nHer Cross, Little Miss Poppy, Pearl Knapp, Unit 39
presid'ent; Veda Davis, junior activities chairman, and
hack, Robin Campbell, junior president; Kim Pat·
tersoo, and JennUer Couch.

Your '
Libraries ,. . ..

Social Calendar.

t-----------.1.....--,.-,.-----__.:._.J...._____+-----

.1)' Press AS.!loclation and the Ameri can

Six moolh . .. .. .

, &lt;· 0:.' ·

II
2
1
3
711

(Welch 1.0), (n)

Satllrday'• Gamet
Boston at Baltimore
K1U151U1 City at MUwaultee

'"'

GB

U.S. hockey team face showdown
GOTEBORG, Sweden (AP) - The lines into action for a convincing 7-3
United Stales ice hockey team, with victory over Holland Thursday and
revamped lines and a growing zest said his players were enjoying them·
for the open European style, faces a selves.
"There is not much physical work
showdown with Finland for the top
along
the boards compared with ·
spot in the B pool of the world charriAmerican Hockey," Johnson said.
pionships.
The Americans need to victory "The players enjoy the more open
against Finland Saturday to win the hockey that 's played over here."
"We have played some really fine
pool and finish in fifth place in the
games
now. We have only one more,
championships overall .
against
Finland, and il we keep up
Coach Bob Johnson sent new-look
our improvement we ought to end
the championships on a winning
note. "
The Daily Sentinel
Johnson's newly juggled lines
IUSPS 145-9101
were
a success. The Bobby MillerA Dlvi.IIIOO of MulUmedil, lnc.
Dave Christian-Dave Debol com-

DISTRICT WINNERS - Pomeroy Junior
American Legion Auxlllary members received several
awards at the spring District 8 conference held Satur.day In Middleport. Displaying the awards which Included the trophy for the best aU-around program, and ·
first place certUicates In history, foreign relations,

For the record. ..
Cleveland

TocJay's

HyHALBOCK
They'll bury Effa Manley in Los
Angeles Saturday and with her go
the memories of another era in spor·
ts - a time when an entire segment
of Amertcan society was excluded
from major league baseball because
its people had collUllilted the unpardouable sin of being born black
instead of white.
It seerns a lifetime ago but it has
been only 35 years smce Jackie
Robinson became the first black in
modern lime to play organized ball,
part of a noble experiment born in
the fertile brain of Brooklyn Dodger
boss Branch Rickey.
Rickey saw vast resources, not
only in player talent but in potential
fans, in the black population and was
the first major league owner withthe
courage to reap that harvest. An important part of the crop was located
in Newark, N.J., where Effa Manley
and her husband, Abe, owned the
Newark Eagles.
In 1946, the Eagles' lineup included three players who would
become familiar major leaguers.
They were shortstop Monte Irvin, .
second baseman Larry Do by - both
better known later as outfielders and pitcher Don Newcombe. They
helped the team beat the Kansas
City Monarchs and Satchel Paige for
the Negro League championship the World Series of black baseball that year. But throughout the season
and the series, they were tuned in on
Montreal and Robinson becatL'e
they knew he held the key to their
futures.
In 1947, Rickey brought Robinson

SHORT ~TROKE - Charlie Gibson of Phoenix, Arizona demODstrates his close-choke putting form as be slnkB a short shot for a par
during the first round of the New Orleans Open. Glbsoo shot a f.llllller par
68. (AP Laserpboto) .

"Once they had achieved what night thatlefl76ers Coach Billy Cun·
most learns usually try for in the ningnam shaking his head.
early part of a series, which is a split . "They just outplayed us in all
of the first two games on the road, phases of the game," he said. "!
the pressure shifted onto us. We had didn'llike the way we lost. If we play
to win the next game," added !'itch.
in Philly the same way, we're gonna
That they did, leading from wire to get beat."
wire in a 1111·99 romp Wednesdav

•

ning at 2 p.m.
The flower girl will- be Aahiey
The bride's maid of honor will be Saunders, niece of the groom,
Miss Denise Marshall, Pomeroy, Gallipolis, and the ring bearer wtll
and the bridesmaids will be Miss be Jerrod Hill, Pomeroy. The
Debbie Kennedy, sister of the bride, custom of open church will be obMiss Beverly Will, Pomeroy, and served. A reception honoring the
Miss Teresa Carr, Nelsonville.
couple will be held in the church
James Thomas, Jr., Syracuse, will social rooms immediately foUowing
serve as his brother's best man with the ceremony.
the ushers being John S. Thomas,
Sunday evening, the groom's
Rutland, Chuck Follrod, Pomeroy, . parents will host a buffet and dance
and Mark Atkeson, cousin of the in the multi·purpose building
groom, Gallipolis.
honoring the couple.

Plans have been completed for the
wedding of Cheryl Lynn Kennedy,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edward
Kennedy, Route 3, Pomeroy, and
John RandaU Thomas, son of Mr.
and Mrs. James Tbomas, Lincoln
llill, Pomeroy.
The wedding will take place Sunday at 2:30 p.m at Trinity Church,
Pomeroy, with the Rev. Wilbur H.
Perrin officiating. A half-hour of
music will be presented by Kevin
King, Middleport, organist, begin·

~~

i

11&lt; I. MAIN • I'OMIROY

I .

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'I'

'·

(

~.

. .

Now Availlble In Our Stare

MIDDLEP-ORT BOOK STORE
99 Mill Street

J

�1

Page-6-The Daily Sentinel·

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Ohoo

Friday, A!,r1124,1981

l fXrERIENCE THf JOY Of RELIGION-~
This Message and Church

· PillA SHACK
Eat tn or
Carry Out

Ray R1ggs
Ph. 915-4100

St. Rt.

SID N 2nd
Mtddleport
992 34Sl

John F Fultz. Mgr
Ph 9'12 2101

Chester

Pomeroy

MIDDLEPORT

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

BOOK SlORE

~~~~ ·~

Church &amp; Olhce Supphes
GIFTS
9'1 Mtll St.
Moddleport

Pomeroy

9'12-2955

NEW YORK

DiamOnd

Bus.ness as usual 1n Jet'usalem Unless we understand the
whole s•gn1hcance ol what 1s happemng we pay little ansnt100

I.

Pomeroy, Oh1o

.. '

Do you understand what happened that Frldav? Do you
realize WHO hung on that central Cross? Do you know WHY He
d1ed? And FOR WHOM?

a..DTHING tDJSE ]'·...
KERMIT'S KORNER
• ~· 7

~
216 E. MaiM

There IS nothing more necessary In our lives than the deep
personal knowledge of whal happened thet Frkjay
and the
Sunc;!ay following

\]/

114E Maon
99 .. Tsuo Pomeroy

HEINER'S BAKERY
Bilk enol
GoiMi Bread

w.

Hunt1ngt1Ht,

TRINITY CHURCH Rev W H Pernn

pastor Roy Mover Sunday school sup!

Church School 9 15 a m worshtp ser
VIC&amp; 10 30 a m Cho1r rehearsal lues
dey 7 30 p m under direct ton ot Altce
Nease

POMEROY

CHURCH

OF

THE

NAZARENE Corner Union and Mulberry
Rev Clyde V Henderson pastor Sun

dey school 9 30 a m Glen McC lung
sup I
mornmg worship 10 30 a m
&amp;Yemng service 7 30 mtd week ser
vtce Wednesday 7 30 p m

GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH -

326 E

Mom St Pomeroy The Rev Ro bert B
Gra ...es rector Sunday ser ... •ces at 10 30
a m Holy Communion on the t1rst Sun
doy of each month ond comb•ned wtth
mornmg prayer on tfle thtrd Sunday
Morm 1g prayer and sermon on al l other
Sundays at the month Church School
and nursery core prov1ded Coffee hour
1n the Pansh Holl •mmedtotely follow •ng
the serv1ce

POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST 212 W
Mom St Ned Proudfoot pas tor B1ble
school 9 30 am
morntng worship
10 30 om Youth meetmgs 6 30 p m
even1ng worsh1p 7 30 Wednesday n1ght
prayer meetmg and 81ble st udy 7 30

pm
THE SALVA liON ARMY 11 5 Butternut
Ave Pomeroy Envoy and Mn Ray Wm
tng off1cers 1n charge Sunday holiness
meetmg 10 am S~J ndoy School , 10 30
o m Sunday schoo l leoder YPSM Elo1se
Adams 7 30 p m salvation meet1ng
variou s speakers and musk spec1ols
Thursdoy - 10 o m 10 2 p m Lodtes
Home League oil women 1n1o11ted 7 30
p m prayer meet1ng and 8 1ble study
Rev Noel Hermon teacher

BURLINGTON

SOUTHERN

BAPTIST
CHAPEL Route 1 Shade Btble school 7
p m Tflursday worship ser'111ce B p m
POMEROY WESTSIDE CHURCH Of
CHRIST 200 W Mo1n St 992-5235 Vocol
mus•c Sunday worshtp
study 11 a m wonh1p
day Bible study , 7 p m

OLD

DEXTER

10 a m B1ble
6 p m Wednes

BIBLE

CHRISTIAN

CHURCH Rev Rolph Sm1th pastor Sun
doy school 9 30 a m
Mrs Worley
Franc•s supen ntendent Preachmg ser
loiiCes f1rst &amp; thtrd Sundays followmg Sun
day Schoo l

GRAHAM UNITED METHODIST
Preochtng 9 30 o m ftnt and ~econd
Sundays of each month thtrd and fourth
Sundays each month worshtp servtce at
7 30 p m Wednesday e'llen•ngs at 7 30
Prayer and Bible Study

SEVENTH .DAY ADVENTIST Mulbe"y
Hetghh Rood Pomeroy Pastor Albert
Dllles , Sobbath Scflool Supermtendent
Rita Wl"l1t8 Sabbath School Sa turday
aher noon at 2 00, wtth Worsh•p Serv1ce
followtng at 3 1S

RUTLAND FIRST B"PTIST CHURCHSister Harriett Worner Sup! Sunday
morn1ng worsh1p
Scl"lool 9 30 o m
10 45 am

POMEROY

FIRST

BAPTIST

Monn m1n1!1ter William Watson Sunday
school supt Sunday Khool 9 30 a m
morntng worship 10 30 a m

FIRST

SOUTHERN

BAPTIST ,

2B2

Mul~rry Ave , Pomeroy Re~o~ W1 lhom
R Newman, pastor Hershel McClure,
Sunday school superintendent Sunday
morn1ng wonh1p
school 9 30 a m
10 :l), avemng worshtp
7 30 p m
Midweek prayer ser'lltce, 7 30 p m

MIDWAY COMMUNITY CHURCH, De•
fer Rd
Rd langsvtlle Re\1 A A
Hughes Pastor Sunday School 10 0 m
Ser'llices an Tuesday Thursday and Sun·

day, 7 30p m
FAITH TABERNAqLE CHURCH Batley
Run Rood , Re~o~ Emmett Rawson , pastor
Handley Dunn supt Sunday school 10
a m Sunday evening serv1ca 7 30 Btble
• teoc:h tng , 7 30 p m. Thursday

MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION , Lawrence Manley,
pa•tor, Mrs Russell Young Sunday

School Supt Sunday School 9 30 o m
Eventng worship
7 30 Wednesday
prayer meettng 7.30 p m
MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD,
Racine- Rev . James Sattarf.eld, pastor
Morning worship , 9' 45 o.m , Sunday
tchool 10 45 a m , evemng worship , 7
Tuesday
7 30 p m
ladles prayer

mHtlng, Wednesday, 7 30 p.m . YPE.
MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST Carner
Sixth and Palmer, the Rev Mark Me ·
Clunv. Sunday school 9 15 a m , Randy
Hayes , Sunday School superintendent
Dan Rlggt, a11t. supt Morning Worshtp
10·15 a.m . Youth mHttng, 7 30 p.m
Wttdnetday , Including wee tots, eager
betwen, tunlor astronauts, and tunlor
and tenlor high IVF chotr practice, B 30
p .m Wednesday prayer meeting ond Bi·

blutudy, Wednesday 7 30 p.m
CHUIICH Of CHRIST, Middleport 5th

and Moln, Bob Melton, m1nlster , Scott
Saltsman,

School,
t0.30 a.

a••lote minister
Bible
9 30 a . m , morning worship ,
m. evening llrvtce 7 00 p.m

Woclnotday llblo Study and youth group
-llnp, 7 00 p.m.
MIDDLE,ORT CHURCH OF THE
NAtAIENE , Rev Jim Broome,

pastor

1111 While, Sunday school supl Sunday
Khool
10·30

9 30
a.m ,

a

m : morning warship ,
Sunday evongelilflc
p m Prayer ..,...ting,

r'Mitlng, 7:00
Wednesday 7 p m

UNITED i'HSIYTERIIIN MINISTRY OF
MEIGS COUNTY , Owoghtl Zavltz dire&lt;·

~

Gr-ocenesGeneral Mer-chandtse
Ractne949 2550

Servtce
Locust &amp; Beec~ Street
992· 9921 Moddlepart

SYRACUSE

fiRST

COfi'Y&lt;'i"' lMI

RUTLAND CHURCH Of GOD Randall
Bodey po5tor Sunday school 10 a m
Sunday worshtp II a m
Cht ldren s
chu rch 11 am
Sunday evening ser
v1ce 7 00 p m
Wednesday evemng
young ladles aux1hory 6 p m Wednes
day family worshtp 7 00 p m

HAZEl COMMUNITY CHURCH

Neor

Long Bottom Edsel Hart , pastor Sunday
Church, 7 30 p m
school , 10 am
prayer meetmg 7 30 p m Thursday

.!

MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL
Th~rd
Ave th e Re" Wtll!om Kntttel pastor
Thoma ~ Kellv . Sunday School Supt Sun
day sc~ol 10o m Classes for oil ages

7 30 B1ble study
evemng serv1ce
WedneSday 7 30 p m youth servtces
f nday ~ 30 p m
MIDDLEPORT fREEWILL BAPTIST Cor
ner Ash and Plum, Ralph Butcher
pastor , aturdov evemng servtce, 7 30
p m ~undoy School 10 30 a m

MEIGS
COOPERATIVE PARISH
METHODIST CHURCH
RIChard W Thomas D1rector
POMEROY CLUSTER
Rev Robert McGee
POMEROY Sunday School 9 15 a m
Chotr
Worshtp servtce 10 30 am
rehearsal Wednesday 7 p m Rev
Robert M cGee pasto r
ENTERPRISE Wonhtp 9 a m Church
R1chord Rothemtch
Scflool 10 am
pasto r

ROCK SPRINGS Sunday School9 15 o
m Worshl~ rservlce
Rothem•ch pastor

10 a m

R•chord

flATWOODS Church School 10 o m
Warshtp 11 a m , Rtehord Rothem1ch
pastor

MIDDLEPORT CLUSTER
HEATH Church School 9 30 a m Wor
sh1p 10 30 am UMYF 6 p m Robert
Robtnson Pastor
RUTLAND , Cflurch School 9 30 o m
Worsh1p 10 30om
SALEM CENTER. Wonh•p 9 a m
Church School9 45 a m

SYRACUSE CLUSTER
Rev Stanley Merrlfled Mm!Sfer
FOREST RUN Warshp 9 a m Church
School lOam
MINERSVILLE Church School 9 a m
Worshtp I 0 o m
ASBURY Church School 9 SO a m
Worshtp 11 o m B1ble Study 7 30 p m
Thursday UMWt1stTuesday

SOUTHERN CLUSTER
Rev Dav 1d Horn~
Rev Mark Flynn
Rev Florence Smtth
H•lton Wolfe

BETHANY
a m
study

(Dorcas),

Worship 9 00
Chu rch School 10 00 o m 81ble
1st 2nd 3rd and Sth Tuesdays

7 15 p m youth follow shop 2nd ond 4th
Tuesdays 6 00 p m .
CARMEL ond SUTTON (Worship, Sun
day School and mast other events held
jOintly ) Sunday Schoo l 9 45 and Wonhtp
11 00 at Sutton first and th~rd Sundays
and at Carmel second and fourth Sun·
days . Bible Study second , fourth and
ftfth Thursdays , 7 15 p .m Famtly N1ght
Fellowship Dinner th ird Thursday , 6 30

pm
APPLE GROVE

730pm
REORGANIZED CHURCH Of JESUS
CHRIST Of LATTER DAY SAINTS ,

~Mitt ~-..ng Sennco

PO Boo 110,. CPIIr- - '119"&lt;1 22901

Sunday Schoo l 9 30

am Wonhlp 7 30 p.m . lit and 3rd Sun·
days , Praytr meeting Wednesday 7 30
p m Fellowthtp supper f.rst Saturday 6
p m UMW 2nd Tuesday 7 30 p m

EAST LET"RT Chwch School 9 o m
Wonh•p service 10 am Prayer mHtmg
7 30 p .m Wednesday UMW second
Tu11day 7 30 p m

RACINE WESLEYAN -

Sunday school

lOam worsh1p 11 am Chotrpractict,
Thursday 8 p m
LETART FALLS- Worship service 9

om Church SchoaiiOa.m
MORNING STAR Worship 9 30 a.m ,
Church School I 0 30 a m
MORSE CHAPEL , Church School 9 30
om Worship 11 am

PORTLAND. Sunday Sc'-16 30 p m ,
Evening Worship , 7.30 p .m . Youth
Fellowship, Wedn..day , 7 ·JOp.m.
NOI1THEAST CLUSTER
Rev R1chard W Thomas
Duane Syden1tricker, Sr

Sunday Monday ruesday Wednesday fl'lursday
John

t

3:31 ·36

Jatm
• 1· 14

John

John

Jolin

625...0

661).70

737·39

ST PAUL (Tuppers Platns) Sunday
School 9 00 a m Morn tog Warsh1p at
10 00 a m Btble Study 7 30 p m Tues

Sunday school

BETHLEHEM BAPTIST Rev Earl Shu lo'
pastor Wonh•p servtce

CHURCH Of

CHRIST Duane Worden , mm11ter Btble
doss 9 30 o m mornmg worsh 1p, 10 30
om
8\'ltfHng worshtp
6 30 p m
Wednesday Bible study . 6 30 p m.

CHESTER CHURCH Of GOD Rev R E
Robmson pastor Sunday school 9 30

Gory King , pastor Sunday school 9 30
a m Rolph Carl , superintendent even ·
1ng worsh1p , 7 30 p m Prayer meettng ,

worsfltp servtce 11 o m evenmg
7 00 youth servtce Wednes

Wodnosday 7 30 p m
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN,

CHRISTIAN

COMMUNITY
Churcn , Sunday School service 9 45
a m
Wonhtp
serv1ce
10 30
EvangelistiC Service 7 30 p m Wednes ·
day Prayer meettng 7 30.

ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST Pomeroy
Robert Purtell , pastor,

Bill McElroy Sunday school supt Sunday
school 9 30 a m morning worsh1p and
commumon 10 30 am Sunday worsh1p
servtce 7 p m Wednesday eventng
prayer meettng and Bible study , 7 p m

ST JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH Pmo
Grove The Rev W1lham M•ddlesworth ,
Pastor Church serv1ces 9 30 a m Sun·

day School tO 30 a m
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST Je,ry
Pmgley . pastor Sunday school 9 30
a m , mormng worshtp, 10 30 a m
Wednesday evening ser~o~tee , 7 30

ANTIQUITY BAPTIST Rov Earl Shuler
pastor Sunday school 9 30 a m Church
youth meeting 6
sarvtce 7 p m
p m Tuesday Blblo Study. 7 p m
RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE
Rev John A Coffman pastor Martno
Wo lfe Ch01rman of the Board of Chns han Life Sunday School 9 30 o m , mar
ntng worshtp , 10 30 Sunday eventng
worshtp 7 30 p m . Prayer meehng
Wednesday 7 30 p m

CHURCH

RACINE FIRST BAPTIST, Don L Walker
Pastor Robert Sm1th Sunday school
supt Sunday school. 9 30 a ~j mormng
worshtp, 10 40 a m
SundaY evening
worshtp, 7 30 Wednesday even1ng B1ble
study 7 30

DANVILLE WESLEYAN, Rev

R D
Sunday School 9 30

Brown, pastor
am momlng worship 10 45 youth ser
VICe , 6 45 p m., 8\lentng worship 7 30
p m , prayer and pra lst, Wednesday

730pm
SILVER RUN fREE BAPTIST, Rev . Mor·
vln Markin, pastor , Steve Uttla Sunday
school supt Sunday school 10 a m
mormng worsh•p 11 am . Sunday even·
1ng worship , 7 30 Prayer meettng and
Btble study . Thursday , 1 30 p .m , youth
serv ice, 6p,m . Sunday

CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP CHURCH 383
N 2nd Ave , M•ddleport Sunday School 1
10 00 o m Sun &amp; Tuas Evening Ser·
viCes 7 30 p m Frtday Prayer Meeftng

730pm

HYSEll RUN HOLINESS CHURCH Sun
day School at 9 30 a m , worshtp ser
vtces at 10 30 a m Pastor Re" Tfleron
Durham Thursday serv1ces at 7 30 p m
w1th Rev Okey Cart

pm
SYRACUSE

CHURCH
Of
THE
NAZARENE Rev James 9 K1tt le pastor

fREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION at Bold

Norman Presley
Sunday
School
Supertntendent
Sundav school 9 30
a m
mornlng worshtp , 10 45 o m
evangeliStiC serviCe 7 p m Prayer and
PraiSe Wednesday
7 pm
youth
meettng 7 p m

Knob located on County Rood 31. Rev
Lawrence Gluesencamp pastor , Rev
Roger Willford
an11tont pastor
Preachtng services Sunday 7 30 p m
prayer meeting Wednesday , 7 30 p m

Gary Griffith

loader Youth groups
Sunday evefng 6 30 p.m . wtth Roger and

EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN CHRIST
Elden R Bloke , pastor Sunday Schooii O
a m Robert Reed , supt'. Morning ser
Sunday n1ght serv1ces
mon 11 o m
Chmt1on Endeavor 7 30 p m Song ser Preachtng 8 30 p m
VICe B p m
Mtdweek Prayer meettng , Wednesday , 7
p m Alvln Reed , loy leader

V1olet Wtllford as leaders Communion
services f irs t Sunday each month

WHITES CHAPEL Coolville RD Rev
Roy Deeter, pastor. Sunday school9 30
a m worshtp servtce , 10 30 o m Bible
studv and prayer servtce Wednesday ,
730pm

RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST locoted ot

FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST, Comer al

TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF CHRIST
Vtncent C. Waters , Ill, mtniSter, Herman

9 30

Second and Andenan. Mason Pastor
Fronk Lowther. Sunday school 9 45
a .m ., worship service, 11 a.m . and 730

superintendant. Sunday School
a m , e~o~enlng service , ' p m \

Wednesday Bible Study 7 p m
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE
Rev Herbert Grote pastor. Fronk Riffle

supt. Sunday School , 9 30 a.m. Worshop
service 11 a.m . and 7 30 p. m Prayer
meeting, Wednesday , 7 30 p m
LAUREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST
CHURCH Rov Floyd f Shook , posto'
Lloyd Wr~ght
Director of Christtan
Education Sunday Scflool, 9·30 a m ..
Morning Worship , 10·30 a m, Cho1r
PractiCe, Sunday 6 30 p .m .. Evenln,g
Worship , 1 30 p m Wednesday Prayer

Russell Sr . mintster Rick Macomber,
supt Sunday school , 9 30 am.; wor1h1p
servtce, 10.30a.m. Bible Study, Tuesday ,

Meigs County 4-H news
The MelD
Riden 00
Marth
lhf lheCowoly
home of- Mr ond Mn.
Jm. with
nine memben and throe aclvloon In alltndance
The menilon eleded olll"''! ti&gt;d docldod
when and wbort lhe nul .-n, W1lllld be.
Project boob..,. fll•en 0111 ti&gt;d memben were
lllllflned 10 """ lhe !tnt ...Uon done lor lhe

JEHOVAH S WITNESSES, 37319 State
Route 124 {One mile .ast of Rutland)
Sunday Bible lecture 9 30 a m , Waf·
chtower 1tudy, tO 20 a m , Tuesday Bl·

ble

study

7 30

p.m :

Theocratic School, 7 30 p
MHttng , 8.20 p .m.

m.,

10 a m .. Sunday evening 1ervlce

7 00. Wednesday prayer mHting, 7.00
pm
CHURCH OF GOD of Prophecy, located
on lhe 0 ·J Whlla Rood oH highway 160
Sunday School 10 a m . Superintendent
John Loveday First WodnNday night of
day WMB mHtlng, third through filth
youth •ervlce George Croyle, pastor

HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL - 570 Grant
St , Middleport: Sunday School, 10 a m.
morning worshiPr 11 a m eYenlng war·
ship , 7 p. m. Wednesday evening Bible

aervlces, 9 30 a .m ., Sunday 1chool, 11
am.; evenlng worship, 7:30 p.m. Tues·
day cottage prayer meeting and Bible
Warsh(p tervlce,
atudy , 9 XI om

1

~1(.'1''-:...,:S~I:M~P ~L~Y WHAT
crA0C&gt;liS
II
BECAME

BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHRISTEugene Underwood, pastor, Harry Hen·
drickl , superintendent. Sunday Khool,
9 30om morning worship, 10 30 o.m ,
evening wor1hlp 1 p m Wednesday Bl·
blestudy , 7p.m .

Property Transfers

eon

30

War-

ner, I acre, Sctplo.

.

w-··

7130p.m.
RunANO AI'OSTOLIC CHUIICH OF
JESUS CHIIIST, Elder- Miller. llble

Nursery provided for worship lltvlcH.

ST PIIUL LUTHERAN CHURCH , Carner

re~ • ew s

m.

SACRED HEART, Rev. Father Paul D.
Welton , pastor Phone ,992·2925 , Sotur·
day evening Man, 7 30; Sunday Mass, 8
and 10 a m , Confe11lon , Saturday ,

~

OVEAEASYGue11 Eleanor
Ste•ber Hoat Hugh Down s

illd·Cipllaned, U S A I

1:68
7:00

CII

7j!O CLUB

l

ALL.!H TliEFAMILY
till. FA..LY FEUD
liLLY
GRAHAM

i.,IIJ't'~~ TAC DOUGH

(l'j(fi}

MACNEIL·LEHRfR

PORT

7.30

r:LLIEYE
THELIIION

I

NI'ORD AND SON
Cll JOltER'S WILD
OICI&lt; CAVETT SHOW
HOI.LYWOOO SQUARES
• FACE THE MUSIC
7.118
CM!IPDATE NEWS •
100
HARPIR VALLEY
PTA ThetowngotilpalaUI'ICh a

•rn

M

Qr.........
{)J MUPPET IHOW Gue11

ZARD Luke and Bo heect Uncle
Jea11'1 advice to be good
neighbor aand rijn ijp agtlnat
some I'IIW Huurd,denlzens
wholl need tor hell) 18ema
beyond thtrn ijfllil Luke hilt
onto 1 deeper ate pltn at aclloo

I'~I'"~HIIIICMDIILE

CJJ

oalllhoro

(~epe1! , 80minl)

{10 min a )

lr.-....... ~~a••
lrtQMet~lnt tim

wtten lhe pUot

ottlwplallolnwhlehhaandtha
f0¥eraot'lteftylflgditl lndthe
QO'ferrtor. wbo h., htd only •
taw hOYfl training, ttkeathe
OOIIti'IIIIIIIH'"-Y.....,)fltO
Ur~e reMrYMI fat nucleer

-·

~. .rr~

IIIWIY

u-•o•s

Gueat

10:11
10:10

~

, CIIIIUI'IIAft NEWI
IIDOUG
UIIIAU Atlanta8rl•ll
v1 Sen Fflncltea O&amp;lrlt'
[fl, IIAITI-CI THIATill '
Therlle Raq¥tn lp•aodell
""" Clflltllt
TNtiH

I'"""·
aiHt Lturtnl pattMIIJ cak:utatt

"" mo"'1n1 •nen lht., "'•~
marry

Bob Newhart
Chartea Grodtn (60

ill ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
(I) BENNY HILL SHOW
0 [)) NBA BASKETBALL
PLAYOFF GAME Teama and
S ll 8 10 be announced

Cf1

MOVIE

·(SCtENCE~FICTION)

11

'r'l

".Unearthly Slrang•r" 1064

1m MOVIE

Wtt chea Mounta1n
1970 Patty Shaph ad John
Ca llari 2) ' Death Smlles On A
Murderer 1973EvaAu lln Klaua
Kmsk1._i_2 hrs 30 mm a)

!Hi 01
tj,IGHTLINE

ABC

NEWS

11.50 (~ ) MOYIE ·(HORROR) •• Yt
" Dracula'' 1879

U ·OO (}J!HI ID FRIDAYS
12.30 (I) • rrJ THE MIDNIGHT
SPIECIALHosta TheBeeGees
Guests Jeuy Lee lew1 s
Gladys Kn tght and the Pips
Johnny Nuh, J1m Weatherly
epeet 90 mini )

12:58
1.00

~

C8N SI'ORTS REPORT
JIIIMV SWAGGART

MOVI! -(DRAMA) •• ' 'The
lntrudlft ' 1M7
1 10 (() SOLID GOLD Hosl 01onne
WarwiCk Gold record wmners
rtorm their hil aonos

1:'0

2.00

!

.NEWS

MOVIE -~DRAMA) u Yl
"LU.!lfll" HJ78

OO •

(I)

I

7.00

US
8•00

A}

CII D &lt;II BARBARA MAN·

US AI

DRELL AND THE MANDRELL

(f.l8
lll

[}) CBN THEATRE An1mat ed

ti1iQJ ACTION NEWSMAKER
DANCE FEVER

BLACKWOOD

SiSTERS

BROTHERS
lt ) HEE HAW Gueals Ray
St evens Sytv•a Susan Gut!
mann LuluRoman (R epeal, SO
m1ns)

short Zach Jr andthela cmat
lng Beh ind th e Sce nes w th
Come Ten Boom desc 11bmg
the makmg of The H 1d1n~
Place
ffi MOVIE ·(WESTERN~ ••••

liJ I])

I]) U1l QJ WIDE WORLD OF

1tJ MUPPET SHOW

SPECIAlThi!Jsh owlook!lallhe
memorable moments and ex
traord1n&amp;1y parsonaht1es as
soc1e led w1th the ahows two
decadeAaa lelev• s•on s moat
popular sports sefl es Anostal
g1c look ba ck at manyolthe out
st anctmg athletes wh ose car
aera have been chron1cled by
Wide World Will play 8 S l~
n1f1 C1nt parltn the anmversary
salu te Hoat J1m M cKay (90
mmo.._)
IJ CI) HEEHAWGu&amp;!Jts Ray
St e~,~e na S'r'lvla, Susan Gull
mann lulu Roman (Repeat 6 0

l1J LAWRENCE WELK SHOW

WORDS OF THE
CHAMPIOfiS

@ BUGS BUNNY
(II) ONCE UPON A CLASSIC
Th e TaliSman
Salad.n
prom1seato marry Kenneth an d
Ect11h and offers to lei Kenneth
carry the l allaman but he
refuses (Ciosect Captioned
U SAl

~~

Gil SOLID GOLD Hoal

Dionne WarWI Ck Gold record
wmner1 perform their h1!
SOr'l_ll!!

7 30 liJ U INSIDELOOK

llJ HI DOUG
C&lt;l MUMBO JUMBO . ITS

MAGIC! Tom Bosley host a thf:t
world's ma sters of 1llus1on m
thiSspallbindmg e\lemng of en
terta•nment Featur1ng Mark
W1ls on Sh1mada D1anatheEn
chantreu Dick Z1mm erman
anti spec•a l .guest alar Oavrd
CoiJp8rl19ld

lJ) CLASSIC COUNTRY

[® FRONT PAGE

llll WITii OSSIE AND RUBY
Hollywood Heroes F11m CriTI C
Donald Boeg6lto•ns Oa11e a net
Ruby and apec1alguut8utterl
ly McQueen l or aQrovacatlve

II!LIEYE
CIIIIIPORTS REPORT
ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
MOVIE

•(COMEDY·ORAMA) •• loi:
" ~lit tn P8r8dtte" 1MI

SPORTS 20th ANNIVERSARY

2 Herooc
9 Semiprecaous 3 Econonuze

mir.a)

{fa)

WKRP IN CINCINNATI
Jenmter IS e.r;cheo at the pro
spec! of movmg 1nto her newly
pure he sed V•ctonan hOuse on a
Qu•el street and enl11ta th e
WKRP gan~ to help her move
(ftel)eat)
{ft) VIC BRADEN ' S TENNIS
FOR THE FUTURE The Volley
Coach Braden help a overcome
your tear ol oomoto !he net dur
111g Ill rally and ahowa you •hal
to do once you ~et there
fCioled·Caollanad US A.)

~ TliATICRAIIILIOWOADOAMl
~~/,NUl.!)~·
byHonliAmoldWBoi&gt;L"

3 18 ;
4 00

CIIIIIII'OATS REPORT
TOO CLUB

4.41

.. sttONIMPOSIIIILE

5 30
""L ARMS PRE lENTS
1118 (}.) CBII PORTS Ill! PORT

The wedd1n0 n1Qhl

B 30

13 Subsl!ll

length umt

11 Lome
or Graham
li Refreshing

6 Multotude
7 Diamonds
l si I
s cat in
Wooderland

drink
17 R R slop

ctly

24 3 :oJi

Z5 Empore :;tatej..~-1-+govemor
H Stat&lt; on&lt; 's
posiUon
2'1 Abonunale&lt;l

21 Bluing
Z!l Paronoma•la
3t - Lanka

31 Franclosa
"Having
diMer

1--+-+-

(have
laoth in)

41 - on

.... ;;:;~&gt; •._. , -· - -

4Z Mirth\

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE t- Here'o

(J

II

how La

.,.

work

IL:

AXYDLBAAXI
LONGFELLOW

One letter 11mpl,y 1tandl for another In this sample A Is
uled for the three L's, X for the two O's, ~tc Sln1le lette",
tpoltraphes, the lencth and fonnatton of lhe words 1~ all
hint1 E1th day the code letten are dltrerent

CIYPTOQUOTIIl
LYEU
NCDVUPI

~~;~I NBCNI!WI
{) , W!IKINDOAR!IENER
It ,
CHAMPIONSHIP
- I T LING
U 11ftSOLD ttOUII Bob Vila

13 Russoan

herolne

EVENING
f10i NIWS
['I') GOD, HAl Tli! ANSWER
lfi PIIIIONER C'an~1 ol
folond
l l~ CROCKETT'S VtCTOt!Y

•lo ·ICHIIE'wS
CONC:IRN

22 Ventalate
23 Roscoe

31 Alncan
light·years
nver.
labbr 1
II EnroUed
35 Flash
18Some
12 You don't say' Z5 Jargon
t7 Ravenous
Gordon's
19 Child of Loki I&amp; Lofty
29 Forwn
school
ZO Surmount
00 Dovers
32 Be pendenL 31 - had It 1
!3 "Georgy - " !1
24 Risk
,.::..:;;:::.:::;:;...::;,:;:;:;

tiJeD

t . NIWI

Yesterday 's Answer

rendition

APR 2&amp;, 1881

1·00

4 Swass luge
5 Russ1an

stone
10 Bowman

31 Four-leaf .. Old-time

0

·--

restlval

ketch

31 PavaraUI

Unscramble theM four Jumctel
one teller to each sqUIIre, to lorm
four ordinary Words

I LEREB
I I 'I

by THOMAS JOSEPH
DOWN
ACROSS
1 Dame Myra - I Hmdu
5 Levanhne

\llf!Jrulli}'il

II (

t!iM'·~·t'

"Hill!! N_20n " 1g52

NEWS
30 MINUTES WITH

FATHER MANNING

2.28
2:30
3:00

look at stereotyp1ng 1n Amer
1can ltlma (Ciosett Ca ptioned

UHCOLN

'Prairie Ltwyer Abraham Lin·
coin (Hill Holbrook) a lawyer
dettndlng 1 murder auap•ct.
tacetStephlnOouolaa(Welter
Mc(ijnn) thtprOieCuiH'Igalior·
ne1. !lfholnttftd• to w1e tllttrilt
":f=k:altdwenltQe

(I)&lt;JDW-TONWI!IKIN

I:JO

An

~ell® THEDUK~SOfHAZ·

IN TOUCH
MOYII-(ADVINTURf.) •••

HULK David Banner leDPtr
cfilel ~~own anonymity when
h8 8fttltlpll to IIOP I tniper
tram ••eolllitg 1 tormer Viet-

..

Game

D ['I'}THETONIGHTSHOW

mms)

AICN~WSCLOSEUP The

A.pocalypae

"Drecullttlllhln From The

Thunday

ffi

Guest hoAI

•

ttle Bl Bartg
10 00 lJl iiOVI~ ·I DRAMA I ''" ~
• Etc•pe From Alcalru"
7V
TIS EV!NINQ NEWS

(JJ IIOYII. .o(HOIUtOR, ••~t.

lllodo. "lflllatod with Southern lapttot

11.30

JOHN DENVER·

ZAAD Bo1sHogg 'a good tw in
ltlaws up to claim h1a ahara of
their aunt'• lnl\ernance but
mean Bolllongagotlaah•d hiA
brother declared 1agllly
c decea ..d (Repeat 60 m1111 )
(}) ECH~I OF CHILDREN A
tr1bute to the one and ahaltm•l
lion child 'IIC!Iml at the
HoiOCiijll
CiD COSMOS Edgeot Forever
Rev1ewtng the vatlneu ot our
unl\lerae Or CariS•~an t urnato
tl\e prevailing theory on how 11
may have orlgmaled A cloae
com partaonls ahown tlttwaen
H1ndu ballet• and co ncepta ol

·~kl-" t87D

c:on-Jton. Iunday acMol, 1.30 p.m.; '

UNANNOUNCED
MOR~CAMBE AND WISE
11.28
CBNUPDATENEWS

MUSIC AND THE MOUNTAINS
John Denver celebrates h•alor
ln living amidst the magmhcent
Rocky Mountalna ln beautiful
Aapen , Colorado In a mu aic
!llledoutdoorahow Vlobntstltz
hall: Perlman and llu!lat James
Galway are hla;ueatlttrsowllh
opera star Beverly Slll1 as hill
~cll~uest alar {60 mini )
U (})IIQI TH~DUKESOfHAZ·

frlntlc campaign to lmd 1 au1l
tbll hulblnellor SteUI attar
ahela ovlflleard Ia !tung about
I 116ng Ulbblllllf' (Repeal)

~

becorres a ma c abre avent as
theIr l).&amp;rvaa1ve gu 1lt conrur e 1up
th e h~untmg sp 1rlt ol Camille
(Closed CaptiOned US A )
l§_O mms)
10.58 (I) CBNUPOATENEWS
t t 00 IIJ U ilJ l1l 0 (I) ®I !Hi CD
NEWS
PROGRAM
Ill

• til THE GANGSTER
CHRONICLES

({) ti2J •

• AKNEWS
(;IN UPDATE NEWS
• PIIIIAOAZINE
GOODNEWS
INSIDE DONALD DUCK

i

auporlntendent. Sunday school, 9·30
a.m., second and fourth Sundayo war·
ahlp ""'Ice at 2 30 p.m.
,
MT. MOIII"H eA'TlST - Fourth and
/Min St , Middleport, Rev. Collin Min·

,lpo.m.

~NJIPDATENIEWS

~tt:.. YOGA AND YOU

Donald Duck takea to !he
1n11yat 1 couch and delves1nto
hla p11t eflcountera with
member~ olthe farrar sex m·
udtna DillY 0YCkt

Bunch,

lr .• """· ~

~

PROGRAM

i

,

::.:.;• IINice, 1 30 p.m.; luttdlj

8 58

V 00

NANIIj)UNCED
(JJ {!; CBIHEWS
WJLD WILD WORlD OF

FAITH MPnST Church, Moton, ,...,
at United S'"l Warken Union Hall
Railroad Street, Malon. Pastor, lev'
Richard Jordan . Mamlng worship 9.30
a.m ., Sunday Schoo) 10:30 a.m. Prayer
moetlnmWodnesday, 7:30p.m.
FOREST RUN BAPTIST - Rev. Nyle

liST, Dottoltll. .....

Annual Rel)or tl Reed1ng
Between the Li nes Guesl
Steven J Golub p~rtner Bl
Oellolle Hu lun s and Sella
II loula Rukeyser
·

108 NEWHART SHOW

;

ohlp. 7:30
Women 's Fellowship
Tuotdayo: 10 a m.; WednNday nlgllt

'
llotclne,

llJ till WALL STREET WEEK

• CIJ HBCN~WS

8.30

pastor, Rev .

fi"'·
ALMII.V,

Cll iiOi illl lil

{CONTINUED
FROM
DAYTIME)
ill CAROL BURNETT ANO
FRIENDS
ABC NEWS
FREEST'YLE

nlng worship, 9 30 a m . Sunday evtnlng
service 7 p m., Vouth m . .tlng and Bible

SundooJ Mrlhlp, ~!30 p.m.
-lng llillutudy, 1

(!) •

t!t:WB

om . Sunday evening service, 7·30 p .m ;
midweek prayer service Wedn11day,

Cornelius

CIJ •

ill ROSS BADLEY SHOW

p.m.
TRINITY Chrllllan "•tombly, Coalville
Gilbert Spencer, pallor. Sunday
school, 9·30 a m ; morning wonhlp, tJ

patter.

D•ana hndl heraelt acting JUII
like her mtertenng tathe1 when
she ralaes objecllonst o hiS
romance wtth abeautllul you no
woman with whom Olanawenlto
.h!gh ac hool (Repeat)

EVENING
1:00

Sunday morning worship , 10 a m ; even
•ng ••rvlce 7 Wedneldoy evening war ·
ship , 7 p m Vlaltatlon Th~Jrsdoy , 6 30

Borden ,

(JJ!Hi GII MUIGGIALNOW

APR. 24, 1881

7-7 30p m.
VICTORY BIIPTIST - 525 N, 2nd St ,
Middleport. Jamat E. Koe-. pastor .

prayer strvlce, 7:30p.m.

plana lor the 1nter1or ot
barn un 11 In the mam house
he dec1des whiC h ll oors must
go
(Closed Capl1oned
I he

Evening television listings

=..::m. ,.,.. ,......

Frederldt to lMry T. Ballq, Anna
ltlarpreUIIlley, 7.I ICI'II, a.eer.

KNEW AT LEA5T ON£
PARENTS tDE"NTITY1

Study Thurs .. 7 p.m. ClattH for all egos .

I'INTICOITAl
11Dutoi2A, WIIIJ.tt HaMck, paator. SunCynthia L. Lowther to Olley
lily tehctol. 10a.m.: Iunday _ ... - ·
Theodore Pullins, Leoma J. Pulllna, stydy w.lneadav. 7:30 p.m. : Sunday · ll!ce, 6·30 p.m. Wedtt'ldlt -lng - ·
vice, 7.
~. 10 a.m . $unclly nitlhf ..,..leo,
11 acres, Cheater.
7:30p.m.
CAJI'IN111 IAI'TIIT, lev. '" tl'tid
Cynthia L. Lowther to Clinton R.
-,11, poator. Don Choodlo, ..,., .....
I'OMIIlOY WEsuY AN HOI.iNISS Piller, Esler L. Pitzer, 9 acres llolillllll&lt;illo Road; De..., Kint. poator: dly School, 9:30a.m. Mof•llnt ~
Otester.
' Honty ~... Jr., ......, lcllactl Supt.
~·Jean T. Frederick, Oritt T. ' 5uftdav......,. 9:30 o. m.; Mo»Mh• w.,. 1
NWI tmUMINT 1'1111 W1U lAP·
ship II '•· m.: . . . . -1ne IINice,
7:30 ,Ill.;,.,... Meollttl. 'fhuritllr,7:30
p.m.
'
S'(RACUSI 'ltiST CHUtiCltOI GOD -

TO 8EUEVE S'HE

CURIOU5 ABOUT
WAAT !IECAME OF
lliBR FLE511 AND
BLOOD.

pastor John Fellure, 1uperlntenct.nt
Church school . 9 30 am , morning war ·
ship , 10 30, evening service 7 p m Bible

I

9 30 a.m. ; Morning w«ahlp 10 30 om .;
....,,ng -.hlp. 7:30 p.m . Tueaday,
12:30 p.m.
prayer ~;
Prayer and ptaiM M&lt;VIce, WodneacioY,

YWINT THEM

MUCH LAT£1( •

JUBILEE CHRISTIAN CENTER
George's CrHk Rood . Rev . C. J Lemley ,

SUihenl j

John W. Douglas
ChariH Damlgan
JOPP". Worship 9.00 a m Church
School I 0 00 o m.
CHESTER Warship 9 a m Church
School 10 am Choir Rehearsal 7 p m
Thursdays. Bible Study, Thursdays,
7 30 p.m.
Albert Gdegleln, Ida Sue Goegleln,
LONG
oM. Sunday School at 9·30
•very Goegl in, H 1ene Goe 1 1n
om Evening Worsl)lp at 7 30 p m
'l
e
e
ge o
Thursday Bible soudy. 7 30 p.m
Charles Goegleln, 'Maxine Goegleln
REEDSVILLE · Sunday School 9 30 a m
I? Charles E. Riffle, Ruth Ann Rif·
~ornthng ~o rs htp 10 30 a.bml Evening
fie, Parcela,S.liBbury.
on p
p m
Bl o Study
H I F Ba •· C ""--··
Wednesdays at 7 30 p m
1 neten
•
er w . """'"'"
"LFRED Sunday School at 9.~5 am . .. Hanun, Linda V. Hanun, 13.28
Morning Worship at 11 a m Youth, 6 30 't acres, SUtton
p m Sundays Wednesday Nleht Prayer &lt; Gary L. Warner to Tery R
1
~ling 7 :lOp m

51MPL Y DON'T

CONSUELO WANTED
50 DESPEI?ATEL Y
)'5".£A.-.r::..t,j, \:

BUT MI'&gt;'Y COME BACK

HEIC:~HlfRI

The Eight Ia EIIOIIIh 4-H Clllb mol oo March :14
• nls, pastor. Mra. Elvin Bumgardner,
atlhe home of Patl'foU with elihl memben and
Refreollmenll were oerved by Mr. 111d Mn
twoadvllon In attendance.
Wednesday. 7 30 p.m .
aupl. Sunday Khool, 9:30a.m.. worship
JThe mom ben planlod fiower- and loeb~
CALVARY BilLE CHURCH now located
..,-.leo, 10.&lt;15 a.m.
Tbe nul ....U0W wW be April II. Memben
al dlllerenl pattema. Advlaor Melanie
on Pomeroy Pike, County Rood 25, naar
NOIITH BETHEL United Mothad)at
aretDilnllltl' roUctU with a partdthe hofte pve a &lt;lettloMmiGII oo how 10 provent cruat
Flatwoods Rev Blackwood, pastor. Sor· ' Church, Rev Chari.. Domlgan, pattor.
Deity Jo HUll, Roporler
1mn I~ on-.. puddinfj. JIUIIorLooclor,
Sunday Sc'-1 . 9 30 a.m., Worships.,.
Pam !Uebel, pve 1 dernmltrltioa on how to • vleet on Sunday at 10 30 a.m. and 7 30
p m. with Sunday Khaai, 9.30a.m.llblo
vke, 10:&lt;15 a .m.: Sundoy llblo . Study,
The A1lnd AJ~ttll mel oo March 2Z at lhe
roadllqllid-.
I
study, Wednotdoy, 7 :JOp.m.
7:00 p.m., Woclnoaday ptayer meeting,
home of Terri 8tout with nine f""""*" and two
• The
Re!J
.........
- on Aprtillatlhe
by lin - home·
next
~""'
will be
IND£PENDfNT HOLINESS CHURCH,
odvllon •ttencllnl
7:30 P·l'l ·
'
Project boob...., ctven Old ancllhe memben I ofPatWoll - MoU.Omllllc,Roporter.
INC. - Pearl St.. Middleport. Rev.
-1NGHAM IOUTHIIIN WTIST
dll&lt;.._t ....... I Stanley tale. A hoolllo ' - '
O'Dell Manley, paotor, Sunday oct-1.
CHUIICM, ..... I, Shade. l'tsator Dell

nutiiii!OIIn&amp;

~OPLE LEAVE
CHILDREN HERE
!lECAUSE n&lt;EYCAH'T
AFFORP TIIEM 0&lt;

DID CONS'UELO'S NO SHE'S WHAT
MOTHER FINALLY IOU MI6&gt;!T CHARI·
T.ASLY CALL A "L..OOSf"
wANT HfF'
!\OMAN 5HE WA5
8ACI&lt;?

study and prayer mHtlng 7 p m Af·
filiated with Southern Baptist Convention.

Jam.. Cundiff, Olllstant
pastor Sunday School, 9 30 o m.; morn·
lng worship , 10 30 a . m • evening wor·

fAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH Lotarl W
Va .. Rt. l, Mark Irwin, paslar. Warship

Rover's
mother?

month CPMA 1ervlces, second Wedne1

MASON ASSEMBLY OF GOD Dudding

vice, 7·30 p.m . Wednotday evening

I watch'

Ktn

40U

RUTLAND FREEWILL BAPTIST Church Dr James A Bru~ l . pastor Sunday
school.

It appears that's

what 1t wtll ta~e'

after breail.fa~t'

Service

study, Wednotday, 7 p.m.
UNITED FAITH CHURCH - Route 7 an
Pomeroy bypaat. Rev. Robert Smith, Sr ,

prayer mHtlng, 7 :30p.m. Youth prayer
1erviceeoch Tuesdoy.

GASOUNE AILEY

Thursday.

Third St. , Cfl•shlre . Independent fun·
damental strvlce•. Sunday evening 7·30
p m . Pastor-Rev . Or, Robert Persons.

am .: Jamts Hughe1, supt .. evening 11r

Wllllliven by Taf'nm1 Call way.
For recreaUon lhe 11""'11 playec!IO Yard Dub
Relreslvnenb w"" 10Md by TerTI Bloul, LIN
Hende1'101t, and Robin Bamett. - Terri Sloul,
RepotUr

postor Dan Will lay loader . Located In
Texas Community off CR 82. Sunday
school, 9·30 a m ; Morning worship 1er·
vice 10 45 a m , evening preaching ser·
~o~tee second and fourth Sundays 7 30
p m Chnstlan Endeavor first and third
Sunday• . 7 30 p m Wednesday prayer
meetmg and Bible atudy, 7 30 p.m.

7·30p.m.
MOUNT OUvo Community Church ,
Lawrence Buah, paator; IM• Folmer, Sr.
Superintendent. Sunday School and mar·

Prayer and Bible Study 7 p.m.
{
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CH,IST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION, Tho Rev ~llllom
Campbell pastor. Sunday Scho\11. 9.30

HEY!!!

Not Pentecostal Rev ~rge Oiler.
pastor Wor1h1p service Sunday, 9.-45
am Sunday school , 11 a.m. worship
servtce, 7 30 p.m . Thursday prayer
meeting , '7 30 p.m
MT HE~MON United Brethren In
Christ Church Rev. Robert Sanders

p m Weekly Bible Study, Wednotday ,
730pm
MASON CHURCH Of CHRIST Miller
St Mason W. Vo. Eugene l . Conger.
miniSter. Sunday Sible Study 10 a.m ,
Worshtp 11 o .m . and 7 p m, Wldn•sday
Bible Study , vocal muslc, 7 p m
LIFE SCIENCE CHURCH - 12 North

Lone , Ma1on, W Vo Rev . Ronnie 8
Rose Pastor Sunday School 9 45 a fY\ ,
Morning Warship 11 a.m. Evening S.r·
v1ce 7 30 p.m. Wedn..OOy Women 1
MtnlstriH 9 a m . (mHtlng and prayer.

ond Bible Study 7 30 p m
DEX1&lt;R CHURCH OF CHRIST Charles

0

Serv•ces 11 a

poster Sunday school, 9 30 a.m . war·
ship serv1ce 10 30 a.m. Broadcast live
over WMPO, young people's service, 7
p m. Evangelistic service, 7 30 p.m
Wtdnesday service, 7 30 p m

pastor
Joe Sayre, Sunday School
SuP*rtntenent
Sunday achoo l , 9 45
a m avenmg worship, 7 30 p m Prayer
meeting, 7 30 p m Wednesday

SENTINEL

School Supt. Sunday School , 9 30 a.m..

RUTLAND CHURCH
OF THE
NAZARENE , Rev lloyd D Grimm , Jr ,

UNION BAPTIST Merlin Teets

Serv1ce

Amos Tllhs pasto r , Danny Tillis , Sunday
tollowed by morning worship Sunday
evening service , 7 00 p.m. Prayer
meettng Wednesday , 7 00 p.m
•

Watson , pastor , Mtldred Z•egler 1Sunday
school tupt Morning worshlp , 9 30a m ,
Sundayschoal 10 30 am evemng ser
vice 7 30

HOL."(
SMOKE!
I'MS'POSED
T' BE ~lliH' I

1\:ETIHG

BE EMPTY ...

Sales and

of Sycamore and Second St1 , Pomeroy
The Re\1 William Middlesworth , Pastor
Sunday School at 9 45 a.m . and Church

RUTLAND BIBLE METHODIST CHURCH,

pm
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN, Ro9er

Block

Bob

Buck•nghom pastor Herb Elliott, Sun·
day school supt Sunday school 9 30
a m , morning wonfllp and comunlon ,
10 30a .m

Rutland on New Ltmo Road ne)(f to
Fore st Acre Pork, Rev Roy Rouse ,
pastor, Robert Muss er Sunday School
supt Sunday school , 10 30 a m. worsl"ltp
7 30 p m B1ble Study , We-dnesday 7 30
p m Saturday n ight prayer servtce 7 30

MT

Tam

Rtchason pastor, Wallbce Damewood
Sunday School Superintendent Worship
servlceot9a m BlbleSchool10o m

Robert E Musser , pastor Sunday schoo l
9 30 o m , Paul Musser supt morn1ng
worsfltp 10 30 Sunday eventng serwce
~... 7 00 mtd week servtce Wednesday 7

STIVERSVILLE

9 30 a m Sun ·

pm

doy, 7 OOp m
LANGSVILLE

o m , leonard G1lmore, f1rst e lder
even1ng serviCe 7 30 p m Wednesday
prayer meeting 7 30 p m

Hamson~o~tlle Rd

11:17·27 1:29·34

ser~o~tce ,

Rev
Keith Ebhn , pastor Sunday School , 9 30

NEW

Portland Racine Rood W•ll•am Roush .
pa~tor Phyl liS Stobort, Sunday Schaa l
Sup! Sunday School , 9 30 am , Morning
worsh1p 10 30 am , Sunday eventng
serv1ce 7 p m Wednesday evemng
prayer ser~o~1ces 7 30 p m

John

day school 10 30 a m Bible Study and
prayer service Thursday , 7 30 p m
CARLETON CHURCH, Kingsbury Road

a m

HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION

8EARWALLOW RIDGE

JOI'In

LIBERTY Chnsttan Church
L1berty
A~o~e Pomeroy Rev Frankhn D1ckens
pastor Sunday School 10 am Worsh 1p
11 am Frtdoy 730 p m Tuesday 1 30

doy
SOUTH BETHEL (S1Iver Rodge) Sunday
School 9 00 am Morning Wosh lp 10 00
o m Wednesday B1ble Study, 7 30 p m
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST OHver
Swo1n Superintendent
9 30 every week

Fnday Saturday

Al 1'11YS HEEDEr TlME
FOR 001\ GIRL TALK,
IT HAGtrT STOPPEfl
THE ~ORLD FROM
TURNIH6 YET ••

Moddleporl·

UNITED

Sampson Hall sup!

M TIME HE IS
EL161BLE, THE 61\AAEL ~ILL

WELL, WE ~O MEN HAI'E

HERE

"B1II" Brown, Owner

Pomeroy,

1. 0. "Mac" McCoy
Rt. 1, Reedsvtlle, Oh.
985-3944

PRESBY fER IAN Church Worsh1p ser~o~tCe

COIITINUfS, BY

YOUR " ~DilY"
~III(B!t~S, AHHI E"'

YOU'LL BE

~H'

NO, BUT..

THE DAILY

'

"for A Real Aucfton
Call the Real McCoy"

9 30 om Sunday Schooi iO 30om Mrs

r-·,r-

DO YOU ~NOW ~ HERE

Phone {6141 742· 2777

~

McCOY'S AUCTION SERVICE

Ernest Stnckltn pasto r Sunday church
school 9 30 o m
Mrs Homer Lee
supt mornmg worsh1p , 10 30
MIDDLEPORT Sunday schoo l 9 30
o m ~· chor d Vaughan supt Mornmg
wonh1p 10 30

..J

YES.. HE CAN GEE
THAT IF TilE FRALV

Rutland, Ohto 4S77S

wm

~
- •
-

EVEN I'IWGE, ASnOKE.
IT'6 MOE MR MCCLEW VERY
THOU611TFOL . HE'$ HOT
ELI618LE F()t
,---'/ - MEPICME YET·-

... Cl(

,, ,' '

B04W. Maon
992·2318 Pomeroy

'

EWS &amp; SONS SOHIO
Complete

POLICi IN CAI.GAI'.Y!

~

ol Columbus, 0 .

m
d ~

••

Naltonwtde Ins. Co.

J

WAID CROSS
SONS SlURE

Automottve

TAAN;Mi r TO THe Pt:fOVI!fiOI\IAl.

ili!:Y VE MAPE: IN

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

5ctVIn95 &amp; Loan
Pomeroy

992 3325

•-

~)TJttiCE

992· 2196

Frormerlv

Pomeroy

T LONG JOHN AND MAA Y &amp;AffE;&amp;!

NOT YET•• I'L L DO THAT RI6HT
NOW~ MeAJJWHIL.t: , l'HiR~S A~
1111/IINT IIIE~SAGE I D LIKE 'I()V TO

s. Third, Mtddleport

VIRGIL B. TEAFORD SR. Equipment

lor
HARRISONVILLE PRESBYTERIAN Rev

DaVId

461

Savin~ &amp;
~nCo.
Athens Co11nty

216 S Second

10 I..IK! VOIJ TO WJTNf,_; A~

A&amp;REEMENT IIETWEEN WARRICK
&amp;-'PL.Oit.ATIQN; AND 1ME,e TWO
1,\JDJANS •• CCNCERNit..IG AN OIL.

OF WINDlNG JJP IN THE'
Jl$T BECAU* Y' HATE
nt&amp; THOUGHT OF PA'iiN ROYAl. fi E;

Pat Hill Ford, Inc.

992· 6655

Reuter-Brogan Insurance
Setvices

.J N~T&amp;AD

~LAMMER -·

TH I~ fe~RITOR¥ ~

Phone 992·3480 ""-~ ..,

Three men died on Calvary Hill One at them was ttleGallleanl

Ji

Pomeroy

126 E Matn

MARK VSlURE
Middleport n.~

When we beCOme m1red tn 11'18 rouune of life, one day ls ltke
any other ThiS was JUSt another world~·day for most of the
people tn Jerusalem

Prescnphons

Phone 992-6304

'

••

-

Yesterday'

(-IOmo&lt;TOW)

CYNIC

TABOO

KINDLY ENTICE

II *orne 'longh8nd " qutcker th•n
1 Ab~~- Whtrt
soma "lhOrthand"?- ON A CLOCK
1

BM

I YCYCPAX

LBGG

ZA

BV

E

NDGUBOEUAX

UYAPA .
SGEUC
Yalenlay'o ~te: WE CAN ONLY PAY OUR DEBT TO

THE PAST BY PUTnNG THE FUTURE IN DEBT TO
OURSELV&amp;S - JOHN BUCHAN
C) till Kftt ftMYrt~ 5~ Ire:

•

�Page-8-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Midclieport, Ohio

I

Friday, AprU 24, lfal .
I

•'

Helen Help Us

,-.

Baker,
Evaf:ZS
champions
of
1981
4th
She was a runaway wife
grade'.conse.rvatfon
poster
contest
before they were 'in '
.
.

'

-

.

.

.

'

.

By HELEN BOTI'EL
Speelal correspondent
DEAR HELEN:
Kramer vs. Kramer publicized
runaway moms, but I became one 22
years ago. I don't regret it, though I
am often lonely for my children.
• There was good reason to leave: ·
My husband refused to work or help
me in the home, even though I held
down two outside jobs and was sole
support for our family of four. Our
daughters wouldn't help. Talk about
Supennom, I was she, running from
six a.m. until midnight and past!
I gave my husband two years to
straighten up. He didn't, so I packed
my things in a taxi and left before I ·
died of overwork .
He turned all the blame on me, the
deserter, and wouldn't let me see the
children. Also, he took the house,
furniture, everything I'd slaved for.
But he did get a job and he brought
up the girls quite well, albeit with
considerable bitterness. I'm a
stranger to them and this hurts.
However, I've made a new life:
I'm a nurse and get my happiness
caring for people need and love me
for the good person I am.
Had I stayed, I'd he a physical
wreck by now. Had I left with the
children, they might have turned out
badiy. It took, my walk-out to
straighten up their father - and
them.
Please print this for wives who
have come to the end of their rope :

Sometimes runninl! Is best! - S.G.
DEARS.:
... And perhaps someday, your
daughters will unlierstand that.too.
~H.

grade CQIJSftvation poater contest
sponsored by the Meigs Soil and
Water Conservation District.
Winners, selected at last night's
· meeting of the supervisors, were first, second, and third, respectively,
in each school: Judy Taylor,
Michelle Taylor, and Sherry
Teaford, Salisbury; Gary Rood,
Miki Sclunidt, and Mlckael Young, ,
Riverview; Becky Evans.. Mike

Winebnmner, and KriSten Pape,
Syracuse; ChrisUne Bass, Teddy
Parsorui and Weslen Howard,
Harrisonville; Matt l!arket, ·Kim
Chadwell, 'and Amy '-'uckeydoo,'
Middleport; Mike Shuler, Bobby
Shamblin and Tracy Barrett, SBJem
Center; Savrinil Wilson, Jlnuny
Cleland and Shawn Fetty, Rutland;
Carolyn Elam, POJI!eroy; Michelle

Mother;_daughter fare
announced for May 4
DEGREE - BW Dyer, son

The mothel'(iaughter banquet
to be held at the Pomeroy Church
of Christ was announced for May
4 at 6:30 p.m. when the
Evangeline Missionary Society
met recently at the home of Anna
Belle Davidson.
Plans were also discussed for
the father·son banquet to be held
in June. Several members of the
group volunteered to clean the
church.
Eileen Bowers presided at the
meeting with Ladonna Clark
reading scripture from Matlhew
and giving a meditation. Judi

~

Mrs. Maxine Dyer, wlll he among
the Meigs High School Future
Farmers of America, attending
the Slate FF-4 conveotiou in
Columbus this ~eekend and wW
receive the Slate Farmer Degree
on Saturday evening. His sister,
Patty, previouSly received this
degree. BW Is a senior at Meigs
High and served as FFA
presld~nt this school year.

Grogan had the prayer and mem:
bers responded to roll call with
comments on Easter.. ,
Officers' reports were given by
Mrs. Alkire, Betty Spencer, and
Janet Venoy who also read "I
Can Be Used." She was presented
a gift from Mrs. Alklre for perfect attendance during the past
year.
Next meeting will be at tbe
church on May 28 with a potluck
dinner at 6:30 p.m. Refreshments
were served to those named and
Helen Miller and Naomi
Ohlinger.

.. ~@~~e f~r R~~! _ ~COUNTRY
MOBILE Home
For rent or sale. Furnished
Park
,
Route
33. North of .
Business
hou se·, 3 bedrooms, Brad·
21
Pomeroy . Large lots. Call
Opportunity
bury area . No childr.en or 992·
7479. .
1
pets. After 4 p.m. call 992·
LOG HOMES, factory 7791.
direct,
dealership ' - - - -----. ~- ---available,
investment 42- -MObileHOmeS required, unlimited Income
tor Rent
potential. Call Mr . Stacey, ------ - -·------Household
Goods --·
1-800-438-9528 .
2 bedroom Mobile Home . 51 -- ---·--·Adults only. Br own's Full size bed . $75.00. Phone
Trailer Cour1, Minersvilie. I 304-882·2755.
992 3324.

'

.

.o
''f
11 M'l

Farfleld, Brian Bailey and Frank Calby.Finlt.
•· •
Parker,Chesler.
·
In other board action last nl@ht,
Awards to be pre8ellted in each Cooperator agreementa
ac- ~
schOol will
sllvet dollars and a · cepled for Arlin Radekln and "lden ·:
bl~ ribbon fodlrst place, two sliver · Blake.
··
· ·
Plans were Jha!ie to host tbe Sum- ..
dollars and a red ribbon for seeond
· pllice and one silver dollar and a rner 6 South Supen1aors meeting at ' '
while iibbon for lhitd place. Tbe Royal Oak Park on June 24.
'~ ~
cbampionawlllreceiveatrophy.
Those attending the board ''"
Judging the poaters thia year was meeting . were Tom ~ Roy ,.,.
the Ladles AUXWacy of the bOard of Mlller, Thereon Johnson, DaviF.-'·
supervisors, Catherine Shenefield, Gloeckner, Robert First, Reid
Pam TbeiBB, Maurita Mll!er, Mary YoimgandOpa!Dyer.
:;;,
Lew Johnaon, Sally Gloeckner and ,

IN THE COMMON
PLEAS COURT
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
HARRIET J. SMITH,

Public Notice

Father's Day observances .'at the : ~
Money-making projects for the
church.
.
·11 ,~
new church building fund . were
Plans are · being made ror the,i~
discussed at the recent meeting of
the Administrative Board of the celebration of \he 150th anniversary · •·
of the church. Plates will be ordered ' ·
Racine Wesleyan Church.
and pictures taken for a dlrectoey.
Saturday an auction will be held at
Mrs. Betty Roush presided at the ,.
the Racine Legion hall beginning at
·
business meeUng with Mrs. Marlene '
10:30 a.m. and church members are
Fisher
and Mrs. Martha Dudding .
urged o donate items. Lunch will be
giving
reports.
An all-church . :, ~
served and a bake sale will also be
meeting will be held on May 20 at . ··&lt;
held durlog tbe day.
Tbe Rev. David Harris reported 7:30p.m. to finalize ·plans for tbe :·.:;
new church. Announcement sheets .: ; ,
that the Meigs County United
will be used instead of bulletins on a ' .
Methodist Churches may have a
trial
basis at the church. A Charge '~:;
money making event and give the
Bible
study and revival was ..~,
proceeds to the building fund. It was
suggested for the faiL A spring " '
reported that cleaning day at the
retreat will be held tor the senior : ~
church was .a success. Tbe winning
high members on May 7, 8 and 9. A ·~ .'
basketball team wll be honored at
pastorlal relations conunittee report ,. ~
some Sunday in the future.
was
given by Alleyne Rees. Prayer ' " ·Ruth Smith was appointed to plan
by
Fred
Smith closed the meeUng.
gifts for the Mother's Day and

tiff a divorce from the
defendant, Harold Eugene
Sm ith , and the demand of
the Complaint is a divorce
upon the grounds of gross

Clerk of Courts
Me igs County, Ohio
By Marlene Harrison
Deputy
(31 27, (4) 3, 10, 17, 24, (51 I,
6tc

They'll Do It Every Time

Announcements
PAY highest prices
possible for gold and silver
coins, rings, jewelry, etc.
Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, Middleport.

11

Help Wanted

7

YardSale

- - -==7'-'-'' - - --

Three or four bedroom
house, carpet, fireplace
sundeck, two car garage:, 2
and one half acres . Lovely
setting on SR 7 North. 992 ·
7741 .

.

( 1f!.- ~

.,.....
•. ll l.

. ... ~
l !lJ'II

...·.

:.:. . ---=======-

l1

WANT AD INFORMATION

- -- -

PHONE 992-2156

!.

lO'x48' trailer with 2 added
rooms 12'x42' on lol 1n Sleeping rooms; by the
Syracuse. SII.OOO. 992·5065 we ek . Kitchen, and
televis ion lounge. Carryout
or 992-5886.
store and restaurant within
soo feel. 992-6370.
4 acres with 2 bedroom
trailer 70xl4. 2 car garage,
--- -3 miles from Racine on Co. ~ ___S_e_~c~ for ~~nt __
Rd . 28. Before 12 noon or af · TRAILER spaces lor rent .
ter 5 p.m. 949·2618
Southern Valley Mobile
Home Park , CheShire, Otl .
8x45 2 bedroom mobil e 992 3954.
home. Real good . 51,950.
Brown 's Trailer Park . 992·
Real E•tate General
3324.
Granville mobile
hOme, 3 bedrooms, lur ,
'" nished, washer and dryer ,
air conditioning, porch and
awning, metal building. ·set
up on rented lot . $7000.00.
Ca II 992 ·3679 or 992·3027.
1975

Farms
- --- - -for
- Sate
-·100 acre farm . . Chester
township on Route 248 .
small house &amp; barn . 667 ·
6129 or 985·4146.
33

~

Lots &amp; Acreage
8 acres more or less fo r
sale. $11,000. 992·2292 .
35

Five acr es of land on
Hysell Run Road . $3000.00.
992-7237 .

Rentals
41
Houses for Rent
2· bedroom house, slove,
refr igerator, ca rpeted ,
remodeled kitchen &amp; bath
in Pomeroy . Sl95. mo. plus
ut i!. Call alter 6 p.m. 9922288.

-------

3 bedroom house. S200 .
month, S100. deposit .
References. Close to mine
1. 742·2126.

9

t

f

.
.

1

·------

'-----"'!'-.;...., .

,

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

II

I

,.,..

....

"

,,
:

I

--~"~..::;.~.,.-::~~nd:.·~
· ~

·-----------------------J

'

'/

j

"' \

:

I '

.-

''

'

"YOUNGS
CARPENTER
SERVICES".

.. ·5) _____An_!.i_!lues_ -- ~ -

i.

~

HOBSTETTER REALTY
Office 742-2003
GeorgeS . Hobstetter Jr.
Broker
NEW LISTING
Extra-Extra good bu y!
Approximately 71 '2
acres with 3 or 4
bedroom home. Full
basement with garage.
Home is only 2 vrs. old
and has equ ippt:d kit·
chen . Nice redwood
sundetk overlooking
your awn pond . Extra
tra iler hook ·up for addi·
tiona\ income . Only
545,000.00!!
NEW Ll STING - Ap·
prox. 20 acres with 5
bedroom farm home. 2
full baths. Barn with
electric and water .
$44,000.00 .
MAINTENANCE
FREE - Lovely ranch
home on nice size lot. 3
bedrooms, total elec·
tric. Just right for the
family on the go. Sells
lor $36,500.00.
ONE ACRE - Neal
tota l electric, 3 bedroom
home with L·shaped
dining-living area . 1112
baths. Won't last long at
only $32,000.00.
We now have manv gOOd
buys. Give us a call.
Vetma Nicinsky, Assoc .
742-3092
Cheryl Lemley , Assoc .
742-3171

54

---·
- - ---- - Misc. Merchanise

IMM ING
POOLS:
P
E SEASON
S LE:$999 .00
IN
ST LLED!! Above ground
Po I completely installed
sta ting at $999.00. Price in
Clu es pool, deck, fen ce,
filt r, liner and installat1on
un er normal ground con·
dit ons. Free shop at home
se vice . Call 1-8006246511 .
S

~~Q:~·~n~~rOw~;a_e~i
help finance. 526,900.00.
SOUTHERN DISTRICT
- Nice 2 bedroom home
on large lot. Fully In·
su:ated, wood burner to
supplement forced air
he&amp;t. Full bosement.
$29,900.00.
NEW CONSTRUCTION
- 3 Bedroom ranch
home on 1acre lot. Elec .
baseboard heat. 2
garages. 539.900.00.
RACINE - Furnished 5
room house with 3 car
buement garage, 2
bedrooms, gas heat.
$33,000.00.
MULBERRY AVE. An elegant H bedroom
nome, lull basement,
50x100 lot. Many extras .
~.000.00.

MIDDLE PORT - Handyman's Special, 2
bedroom houle on large
lot. Could be trailer site.
$9,000.00.
WE HAVE OVER 10
PROPERTIES
TO
CHOOSE FORM. STOP
BY AND LET US HOW
THEM TO YOU.
REALTOR
Hlftry.E. Cleland, Jr.
ASSOCIATES
J11n Trussell "'•2..0
Rottr • DoHio Turnw
992·sm
OFFICI992·USf

FOR LANDSCAPING
YOUR LAWN
POMEROY

~LANDMARK
.
Pomeroy

Rutland Furniture

2 Rolls
Rubber Back

KITCHEN
CARPET

7.99 &amp; up

Fronp

'

Install

SHAG
$'799 sa.
Reg. Sl5.95

12.95 &amp;~p

ltlsta lied

1 · Yd.

Buy Now &amp; Save S2-S6 Per Yard.
25 rolls carpet in sto:ck to pick from .
Regular backed carp~t installed free,
with pad.
Drive A Little- iave A Lot

.RUTLAND FURNITURE

Main St.

742·2211

'
-- -i'el51oir5ale-- -·
Two month spr .mg spec1a1
lor upholstering furniture.
Ger man
R1chard Mowery , Sr . P~ fe bred
S ephard puppies . 6 weeks
Owner . 675-4154.
ol . 669 ·5061.

1----------1
Mileage-Maker!
l'rinted l'allern

Hou\111(/

Hl•.lcli u." tl!r ~

3-'ld · l

SeFflees
8t

Home
~m_p~vem~_l!!!__ ':.

_
Gene's Carpet Clean ing,
deep strea m extraction.
es timat ed ,
F ree
rea sonab le ' rates , sc ot
chquard . 992·6309 or 742·
2211 .

French City Paintin g
Residential. commercial ,
int erior,
exter ior
SpecialiZi ng in Interior
painti ng, paper ha nging &amp;
tex tured cei lings. Free
estimates.
367 ·7784 or 367
7160 .
WILL do plumbing,
roofing ,
paintin.g ,
remOde ling and electr ic al
work . Free estimates. Call
985-4121.

l~~alker tema:e, 4 years
ol ; 1 walker pup . All VKC
r gistered. Call 949·2657 Does your house need a
face lift? Or just a little
a yday alter 4:3op.m.
makeup? Call me &amp; I' ll
have it look ing young agai n
in no time . Will do all types
at interior work ; paneling,
ceilings, floorin g, elc. ' plus
exterior work, painting ,
61 _ Farm Equipmen!_ _
Shi nglinf
any work
size oing,
and
ngling roofs.
:;t ed R·40 Ditch Witch sha pe. 30 years experience
Tfencher . 1·614-694-7842.
in carpetry . References
provided upon request. 992 ·
'
Four 15,000 gallon tanks 6293.
located above ground at 82 ----Pl umbing - Alhens, Ohio. $3,000 .00
- ~ -~ ~!i_'!_L __ _
eac h. Phone 1·304-422-2781 .
WATER
WELL S.
4 14,000 gallon lanks Domesti c and com mercial.
:oca led above ground al pump sales and servi ce.
Athens. Oh. S3,ooo. each . I· Tom Lewis Drilling .
Seasonal discoun t on pum·
30N22·2781.
ps. 1·304-895·3802 or 1·304·
895·3641.
'
'
'
"

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

Auto• for Sale
-------1979 Corvette; mint con·

COMPLETE
sever ser
in
slallation
&amp; backnoe
vice for Rac ine-Syracuse
dition ; low mi leage with all sewer distri ct. Dozer work
options .
Reasonably if needed . 949·2293 .
pr~eg. Aller 5 call 378·6117
or 378·6293
Oitcher work . Gas· W~te r ·
Eleclric installed. 742·2819
before
9:00p.m.
For Sale : 1979 Trans Am
with western wheel s,
raised white leller radio is. DOZER work . Small jobs a
:oaded tor $6300.00 or best spec ially . 742·2753 .
offer . 992-5620 .
197~ Nova Hatchback 350,
power steering, power
brakes, body's in real good
shape. Best offer. 992·6786
or 992·3941.
·•

1973 Chevy Impala . Small

V·B, new paint &amp; tires.

Asking $95o. 992 -5388.

Hou se

Ow r~ ers

J&amp;C

SANITATION

Middleport, Ohio

SERVICE

NEW STORE HRS

Trash Pickup In
The Village of
Middleport, Oh.
Ph. 992-5016

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

or 992· 7505
4-17-tfc

4·9·1 mo. pd .

ARD
AVA TORS

-Auto and Truck
Repair
--Transmission
Repair
Hr s.: Mon .- Fri .

All Model s
Available
LEO MORRIS
Rt. 1 Stde Hill Rd .
Rutland , 01} .

9 A.M .-UO P .M.

992 -5682
10 7 tt c

r

2 9 tfc

.yt &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

ALL STEEL

Farm Buildings

BISSELL

C&amp;A AUTO REPAIR
J10 3tl1 st.. Racine, Oh .

Sizes
"F rom JOxJO"
SMALL

SIDING CO.

PH . 949-2777
*Complete Auto and
truck Repair
*Rebuilt Automatic
on
Transmissions
most American Model
Cars .
H225.00 Parts &amp; Labor
Plus Fluid.
• 24 Hour Wrecker
Service
• Triple A Affiliated .
4·6· 1 mo

Utility Buildings

" Beautiful. Custom
Built Garages"
Call lor tree siding
estimates, 949·2801 or
949-2860 .
No Sunday Calls

-sizes from 4xil to l h40

3 11 tf c

6 IS li e

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rl . 3, BOK 54
Racine, Oh.
Ph. 6t4-843·2l91

1;:========:;1-;::::========~-;:::========;

REESE~
TRENOUNG
SERVICE

J&amp;F
ENTERPRISES

MILLER ELECTRIC
SERVICE
For all of your wiring needs .

1 Backho.e
1 Excavating

Let George Miller check
your present electrical
system.
Resident1at
&amp; Commercial

1 Septic System s
1 Water, Sewer &amp; Ga s

water-Sewer-Electric
Ga s Une· Ditches
water Line Hook-ups
Septic Tank s
county certified
Rou sh Lane
Cheshire, Oh .
Ph . 367·7560

Lines

1 Dump Truck
Licensed &amp; Bonded

Call 742 ·3 195

PH. 992·7201

or 992-7680

~~~~~~~~; ~7~11~c~t=====~4~·1~5-~l~m~o=.~~====~=2=8=t=fc~

H• L WRITESEL·

Quality Built
Economically Priced

ROOfiNG

REESE BUILDINGS

types ol root work ,
new or re pa ir gutters
and downspout s, gutter
clen ning and painting .
All work guart~nte ed .

Garages - Buildings Barns Equipment
Sheds
POLE BUILDINGS
• '
'
'
PORTABLE STEEL
STORAGE BUILOINGS
(4 'x6', 8'x 8' , 8'x 10',
1C'x 10', 10'x 12' &amp; up)
A!lv Size built to your
specifications. Model s
1n Meigs . Gallia and
Mason Counties.
FREE ESTIMATES
All Buildings
Guaranteed

AII

Free Estimiltes
h'casonolb lc Pric es
Ca ll Howud
949 -2862

949-2160
2 4 He

1;~========1
TERMITE and
PEST CONTROL •

I DON'T KNOW ..

"*"'·...

Itt ... ,...... ... , . .
IIIMi . . . . SIIIMi lD:

eac1l lw fiOIIIIIIOd lllndloiC

.0.~1 .

PH. 367-7671
or 367"7560
I ':=C:H:E=SH=IR:E:' =4=·1 =2·:1f:c~

1RE
KOIIHI'lY

KLIIIi.

Scout Camp Rd .
Chester, Oh .
• Short game practice
• Puttrng &amp; Chipping
Green Opeh
• Hole· I n-One
• Pro·Golf lessons
for all ages
• Repair : Cleaning,
refinishing, new grips
length change,
weight change
• Fa st service
Ph . 16141985·396 1
4·23·1
Electrical
_ &amp;_ llelrigeral.~io"n'__
SEWI NG MACH INE
Repa ir S, service, all
mak es 1 992 228 4. The
Fabr ic Shop, Pomeroy .
Aurnorizeo Singer Sales
and Servi ce . We sharpen
Scissors.
84

Roac hes ,
Bi rds.
Rodents, Spiders, Fleas, tAnts and other sma ll in·
sect control.
Electrical
84
FREE ESTIMATES
&amp; Refrigeration
1 or s year termite
Eledrical
14
guarantee
Avai lab le to handle all your
&amp; Refrigeration
Located in Gallipolis
electri ca l needs. Repa irs,
ELWOOD
BOWEf&lt;S;
Ph. 614· 446 ·280t
wor &gt;ng , re -wiring , in·
J - ·- General Hauling
REPAIR - Sweepers,
3· 27 • 1 mo.
stal lation , modifications, B
toasters, iro ns, all sma ll 1':=::::===::::::::=::j rev isions,
reside nt ia l, Well 's T ra~ h Hauli ng . SS .OO
appliances. Lawn mower . tfarm, business. No job to per month . Ol1 ve and
NeKt to State Hi ghway
large or to sma ll. Ava ilabl e Orange Townsh ips and
Garage on Route 7, 985·
immediate ly . Bill Cad le at surrounding areas 985·
3825.
992·7182.
35 18.
·--- - --..-

Nothin&amp; &amp;ives you better mil ..
111e than a suildress lhat you can .
separate 101 added wea1abllil).
lhe top has a wide. soft cOllar,
niiped waist. skirt swin&amp;s easiiJ.
P1in1ec1 Patteon 4611: Hall
Sizes 10~ . 1211. 1411 1611,
1811 Size 1411 (bust Ji) takes
2li 1ards 60.~nth fabroc.
$2.00 .....
514

cou~2 ialue). tata:ac. Sl.
MI.
10011 .. $2.. . . .
IJ4.14 Qlilt Qllltl
IIU.... IIIill .....
r=::;;nu(
..!l(
I
,_,. .
11oGb IfNI ca~~~oe - add z~c

.....

·" Mob1 1e Hom e P.1 rks

ROGER HYSEU'S
GARAGE

PEANUTS

AloM AMI
·1 ·•• I
l'llln o.t. .
·'
The Daily Sentinel
zu .... 11 5.!-J.!I- ......,
10011. Prill -[, MiliUS,
DP, SIZl, lfMI Sill.£ .....
We streamlu1ed the stwlnl to
ilwt 1011 time so JOU can ""
mon11! Stnd now lw NEW 1981
SPRING-SUMMER PATTERN CAIAI.OG. 100 styles, free pattt!n

,, Co1n L aund r.es
,, Ren1a 1 Properlles

322 N. 2nd Ave.

mo .

195J

~~~======~t.=========t=========~

8~ -· ---~xcavating

71

Rt po'uring Stnce

BAILEY'S SHOES

New Homes - extensive remodeling
• Electrica 1work
• Roofing work
12Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992 -7583

Scottie camper for sale.
992 3791.

SPRING

Phone
1-1 61_4)·9~2-3325

w.soo,

'

~-

_11&amp; E. Second Street

NEW LISTING - 112
acre cattle farm . GOOd
mostly new barb wire
tence. ~ bedroom ranch
home, lull basement,
woodbur'ning furnace,
free gas, large barn,
gralnery and some stan·
dlng·tlmber. S7D.OOO.
RT. 33 NORTH - 3
bedroom ranch. bath,
city water, nat. gas fur·
nace, wood cabinets In
teh kitchen, hardwood
floors and about one
. acre. $30,000.
POSSIBLE - A nice
subdivision on small
farm. over 30 acres of
nice laying farm :and.
Ideal for d ividing. Good
.tor investment minded
person. $53,000.
SHI P,SHAPE - 7 room
Insulated older orne
with 3 bedrooms, buill·
' in stove, dishwasher,
furnace, basement and
' lots of carpeting. 2.65
acres of :eve: garden
land. Neat for k:I,OOO.
1971 HILLCREST - 2'12
baths, 3 bedrooms. nice
carpeting, extra room
and nice equipped kit·
chen . Will
lake
512,000.00 lor quick sale.
MODERN HOME Nicely carpeted 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, lovelY kitchen with dining,
and glass door to 12K2&amp;
patio. Garage and '·•
acre of land. Only

-

_ Mo~orcy~les__ _
1978 Yamaha 650 Special in
good condition . 7,900 mi les.

74

3027.
$1300.00.- 742
or 992
-·- 3025
·-· - --B*utiful red 1978 1979 Kawaski 100, 522 ac
Ka asaki Kz 650 Sr, low
m1 eage, loaded with ex tual moles. $600.00 . 949 "2463
tr s for sale or trade, after 7 p.m
$2, .00. AlSo good used
c. .'s, 8 track tape players
Camping
an speaker$. Good por 78
ta le black and white t.v .'s.
--~quip~-~~ __ ~
Se at Uncle Buddys Trade Camper for ·sale : 1977
n Post ., 92 Olive Street, Pa la mino folddown ca m·
G lli polis.
per . Folds out to 22 foot
with all equipment. 742·
2336.

t~~ILB.SR.',!'~
NEW LISTING - 12K70
mobile home with buillon addition on 5 acres,
2-3 'bedrooms, 2 baths,

-Trucks
- - - -tor
- -Sale
---1977 Ford pi ckup with
32,000 miles . 6 tires, good '
topper, 6 cylinder. 949·2048
72

PARTS AND SERVICE
ALL MP.KES
ew e ~ n en
• Disposa ls
• Dry ers
• DIS hwashe r s
eR il ng e~
eHotWaterTanks

Hours:
Mon. ·Tues. 9-6
Weds. ·Fri . 9·7
Sat. 9-5
Closed Thurs.
3·29·3 mo.

CONSTRUCTION

OF SHRUBS

1

AlHENS SPORT
CYCLES
Stimson Ave . Athens.

ROUSH

A WIDE SELECTION

1

985-3561

V.C. YOUNG II·

--

From

Call Ken Young

992-6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Oh.

t

Main St.

APPLIANCE SERVICE

remodeling
- Roofing and gutter
work
- Concrete work
-Plumbing and
electrical work
I Free Estimates)

AT
POMEROY
LANDMARK

G ... _

l&lt;ee p Thi~ Ad lor Future Releren u

- "'Cldons and

_
A'TTENTIO~ :
(IM PORTANT TO YOU) Will
pay cash or certif ied check
for antiQues and collec tjbles or entire estates.
Nothing too large. Also,
guns, Pocket watches and
coin collections. Call 614·
767 3167 or 557·3411

Ho11o;in!-;
Headqu,, ters

'7""

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

-o.. - Business Services

Real Estote. General

_________

Phone ___________

-·

----4_! _ --~-u-~ n.i_s~ed Rooms

......

Curb Inflation.
Pay Cash for
Classlfieds and
Savell I

Very nice 1974 Grandvi lle.
3 bedroom, air, washer,
dryer, awning, storage
building, under pinning, set
upon rented lot. 992-7479.

44
Apartment
J-2 -~
M:-:o""
bi"'
le~H
"'o-m-es
for
Rent
- . .
lor Sale
Two bedroom furnished
1973 c'fown Haven, 14 x 65 , apartment.
992-5434 or 1·
three bedjooms, new car · 304-882-2566.
-pet. 1971 Cameron, 14 x 64 ,
two bedrooms, new carpet.
1972 Champion, cl2 K60, two Furnished 2 bedroom up·
bedrooms. new carpet. 1976 sta irs apartment . Adults
Cameron, 12 • 60, ·two only, no pets. MiddleporT.
bedrooms, all electric. 19)1 992 3874
Sky line, 12sx 61. two
bedrooms, bath &amp; 1f3, new 2 bedroom furni shed up·
carpel . 1970 PMC, sta irs apartment $150.
12 x 60, two bedrooms, new month plus util ities. $50.
carpet. B x S Sales, Inc. , deposit. No pets. Avai lable
'2nd x Viand Street, Point May I. Call 949 2875 alter
Pleasant, WV Phone 675 · 4:30p.m.
4424.
- .

Need Money? Need Gigantic yard sale on , .u;
Clothes? Why not get your Depot Street in . Rullend, .• :
PAPPY
wa rdrbbe at no cost to you Friday and Saturday from
STAI?TS
Plaintiff
and earn extra dollars too? 9 to ? . Curtains, nic·nacs, \loll "
Ci&amp;WI!IG
neglect of duty and ex "
- vs.For information or in· tank tops, lot of nice clean •...
71/E
HAROLO
EUGENE treme cruelty , tor tem ·
terview aPpointment call clothing.
Racine
Volunteer
Fire
;;·,;;
~
porary and permanent
SMITH,
992-3941 between 9-9.
Public
Notice
Department
sponsors
a
OF
lHE
cus tody of the minor
Defendant.
shot gun &amp; rifle match
Ptcr~
No . 17797 chi ldren, for tem porary
PUBLIC NOTICE
IVIN&amp;'\?W
...
every
Sal. night 6:30 p.m. Fashion Consultant needed ;:---;;-;-;:----;;-:--- ··•b.
and permanent child sup·
PUBLIC NOTICE
The Vi ::age of Pomeroy
Public Sale
"' ~
at
their
building in Bashan. NOW! Ladies fashion firm . 8
Harold Eugene Smith, port, alimony, for set·. will hold the second com--ri-tt
Average $8.00 per hour.
&amp; Auction
"'"
12
guage
Factory
choke
munity
wide
hearing
of
a
tlement
of
property
rights,
defendant, whose residen·
_h_i_o _R-iv-'e"r"A"'u"'ct"'io"'n- a_t_H_a-rt· .
"""'
shot guns only. Open sights For appointment interview O
serie~ of two hearings con599
&amp;·GRow,
81RICI-I
ce is unknown, but whose and that the defendant will ce
22
rifle
.
rning
a
Co
mmunity
call992-3941
between
9-9.
lord
Community Building . ',,
last known address was further take notice that this development block grant
Fri~ay,
Apri I 24. 7 p.m. 11r.r.
Rutland Slreet, Route 1, cause can be heard at any final application on WedIT'S BEELI~E'S Show and Wanted. Share ride to New &amp; used merchandise . . voo
80&gt;1 8· 8 , Middleport, Ohio time fo llowing twenty ·eight nesday, April 2'/, at 7:30
··.~
Tell Time!!.!! OUr new Athens, hrs. 8-5. Mon.· Fri . Snack bar .
45760, will take not ice that days from the date of the p.m. at Village hall,
spring and sUmmer line is Call 992·3390 after 6:30p.m . - - - -- - - - : - - ".'
on the 25th day of March, last pub I!cation of thi s Pomeroy, Oh1o . At th is
now .available and is it un· Kerrs Run area .
1981, that Harriett J . notice and that the defen· meeting citizen input
Farm Equipment AUction,
regarding the use of funds
believable!!!!. Give us a
Smith, plaintiff, filed a dant is requ ired to answer will
Sal., May 2, 10 a.m. Siders
be
solicited.
·
ca ll for more information Now taking applications Equipment Co. I mil~ S. of
Complaint against the this Complaint with in
For further information
about this interesting work. tor lifeguards . Apply Pl. Ple&amp;sanl on U.S. 35. 675- :s
defendanl, Harold Eugene ty·&lt;!ight days Irom the
contact the Mayor's Off ice.
Phone 992·3941 from 9·6.
Clarence Andrews,
Smith, in the Common of the last put&gt;liii ca&gt;tion
weekends at Royal Oak 3440 .
Consignment
that the I
Mayor
Pleas Court of M eigs Coun· this notice
Park.
welcome.
'~ 6
;l g_ :&gt;
Village of
ty , Pomeroy, Ohio, Case publication will be made an
LOCKSMITH
Service,
- - - - -- Pomeroy, Ohio
No . 17797. The obiect of the the lstday ol May, 1981 .
Master Keying , Com · 12 Situations wanted
4) 24, ltc
Larry
E.
Spencer,
Complaint is to grant plai n·
I•C::=~~~~~== ., ...
binations, Bonded. Call:
New Haven, W.Va. 304-882- Repair or remode ling L'
--------.,.~:
2079.
work, flooring , doors, wall WANTEO TO BUY : "'
I
1
paneling, cei ling, or floor GoLD,
S 1LV E R.
tile,
Siding.
992
·2759.
PLATINUM,
STERLING·
I
I Calico cal , female ;
STOBARTS Greenhouse is
COINS, RINGS•.JEWELRI• beautifulto good home. 742·
now opened. It Is located on
I
1. 3166
Racine Rt. 2, C.R. 100. Have vacancy to cere for Y, MISC. ITEMS. AB· ..
I
MARKET
or invalid . SOLUTE
~
1:
1...---------,---------~ Hanging baskets &amp; bedding elderly
PRICE
GUARANTED.
ED , ~
Reasonable.
992·6022.
1! 1__________---"r'---~~--.:.._plants. Vegetables &amp; plants
I
BURKETT
BARBER
j: II
Of all kindS.
SHOP, MIDDLEPORT, c
I
13
Insurance
OH10992-3476.
I
AUTOMOBILE
IN - - - - - - - - - - ,. ,
SURANCE been can · OLD ' COINS, pocket wat- ' .
1
card ot Thanks
ce lled?
Lost your ches, class rings, wedding ·l u• ~
operator's license? Phone bands, diamonds. Gold or
Racine Volunteer Fire
•
992-2143.
Department wishes to ex·
silver. Call J. A. Wamsley,
Write your own ad and order by mail with this
tend their thanks to the II
Help Wonted
Treasure Chest Coin Shap, ;
coupon . Cancel your ad by phone w11en you get 1.
or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept.
people who helped out the
Athens,
OH. 594-4221.
. ·~
results. Money not refundable .
,.,
,_,a:::n:.::led=:l"o-"Do""-Fire Department in their GET VALUABLE training I,_,I: .__ _,W
1'1
111 Court St., Pomero-,, 0 ., 45769
as
a
young
bUsiness
person
gun
shoot
and
hope
to
see
I,
and earn ~ood money pius . Furnace repairs, electrical Wanted to Buy: class rings, · '
you all again this fall.
some
great gills as a Sen- work, plumbing, mobile wedding bands, anything
I•
Name--------- I
tinel
route
carrier. Phone home or residence. 992- stamped, 10K, 14K , or 1iK 0
CLASSIFIED AD INDEX
1
wish
to
thank
ail
our
friengold. Silver coins, pocket
us
right
away
and get on 5858.
Addreu _ _ _ _ _ _ __ I
ds to many to thank in- the eligibility list at 992·
watches. Call Joe Clark at ...,
I
dividually . Our
son, 2156 or 992·2157 .
:
Will do all types of car- 992-205&lt;1at Clark's Jewelry
daughters,· grandchildren,
I
eAN~OUNCEMENTS
e RENTALS
penter work. EKperlenced store, Pomeroy, Ohiool5769 ......,;,
and my sisters for the
1- CudofThlnlls
~ 1- HOUitl tor Rtnt
and responsible. No job to
I
many acts of kindness and $185.00 to $500 weekly doing big or to smalL Phone 992 - CHIP WOOD . Poles· max.
2- ln Mtmortlm
42- Mol:liltl-lomtl
1
No
ex·
mailing
work.
l - Announnmtn1S
love, for the beautiful
tor Rtnf
394lanytlme.
diameter 14" on largest ~ , !!
4- GivtiWIY
·I Print one word in each
I
44- Ap•rtmtnltor Rtnl
flowers, cards, letters, perlence required . AP·
end.
$12.50 per ton. Bundled
Jl-llppyAOI
PLY
:
Circle
Sales,
P.O.
HFRooms
I space below. Each in
phone calls, and prayers.
I
,
l-Lost tnd Found
4l-Splct for Rent
BoK 22•-D, Richmond, Hill, ALTERATIONS &amp; general •lab. $10.50 per ton .
1 itia l or group of figures
And
especially
the
visits
of
, _ 'flrtl5tlt
to
Ohio
Pallet
I
Delivered
47- Wanttdta A tnt
NY
11•18.
sewing,
experienced,
work
1 counts as a word. Count
gOOd friends while I was
I - Public Satr
41-Equlpment for Rent
Co.,
Rock
Springs
Rd.,
:
guaranteed.
M.
Meier.
992
name and address or
.
hospitalized in Huntington
I Auction
Pomeroy992·2689 .
,
I phone number if used . Words
and since my return to the WANTED. People to sell 5983.
9- Wanted to Buy
I
e MERCHANDISE.
e EMP~OYMENT
I
I You' ll get better results -+~~!!}:~~~~-!
orthop~dlc
surgeons in Avon. Work your own
s1 - Hou~tholtl Goods
• if you describe fully ,
SERVICES
Huntington and Dr. Daniels hours. Parl· tlme or full Will do housecleaning. Ex- IRON AND BRASS BEDS- ::1 I
n - ca. TV, bdlo l~~tuiPment
· ~ give price. The Sentinel
tt - Htlp w1 nttd
Old furniture, desk·s, gold t11 1 ~
who recommended them. lim. II Interested call 742· perienced. Cai1985-3861.
U- Antiqutl
12- Si.h lllledWtnltd
I reserves the right to
rl~gs ,
jewelry, sliver ·c t
S4- MIIC . Merch•rtdlst 1
Mrs. Dwight (Kay) Logan.· 2354 or 742-2755.
ll- lnsuranct
classily, ed it or re ject
U- lullcllftiSUp.Utl
dollars, sterling, etc. Wood .&lt; i'
Rug
weaving.
992-5971.
14-lluslntn Tr1inl119
n-PttiiC~ Site
I any ad. Your ad will be
Ice bo)(es, jars, antiques, .u ""~ t
2
In Memoriam
Part lime employee needed
IS- Schools Instruction
I pul in the proper
etc. ,complete households .. ,,~
16hdlo, T\1'
by
Humane
Society
lor
• FARM SUPPLIES
1 claslfication if you ' ll
Write: M.D. Miller, Rt. 4, . ,1 , r
In memory of Robert N. emergency animal rescue ''--=L.::05:.:1.::a!!nd:.:,.F,_ou,n,d:___
I Cl Rt,.lr
&amp; LIVESTOCK
1 check the proper box
!']ark.
Pomeroy, OH 45769. Or "' ~ :
11- Winr.t:l To 0a
These cash rates
61-Firm I!Qul~tmtnf
I below
We were not there, Grand- agent. Must be over 21, LOST : Small black ~nd cai1992·7760.
' . . ..
include discount
u-wanttd
to
luv
4iFINANCIAL
have vehicle &amp; current while dog, 3 miles pa•l Fort - - , - - - - - - - ' - - - "' "' l1
pa deer, to see you die,
n
Tl'\ldlijror
5tlt
drivers license. Must be
21 IIUIII'IIU
I
To hold your hand or kiss able
U - LIVIIICKk
to read &amp; write &amp; con- Meigs on Side Hill Rd. 742· New; used, and antique fur· ...
Oppartunll-,.
I
gOOd-bye
2949 or 7•2-2608 or contact nii\Jre. No Item to large or "t 1
I Wanted
J4- H•v &amp;Or1ln
11- Monty IOLOift
verse
Intelligently with .Gloria Malone or John and to
u- Sted If ~.rtllll•r
1 For Sa le
But we'll remember our
1J- Proltnlonll
I
small. Will buy one piece ..1 1
public.
Neat
appearance
a
.
Pat Moore.
17. ~----) Announ cement
StrVi(tl
whole life through,
or complete household$. ' ~ i
I
18. _ _ _ _ __
must. Mileage paid &amp;
•TRAN!fPORTATION
) For Rent
The lost lew words we had salary negotiable. Write InMarlin's General Store 81 1'1 :
19. _ _ _ _ _ __
I
,1- AUIOt,.,. ltlt
eREAL ESTATE
with you.
FOUND:
wnite
guinea
terests
&amp;
qualiflcetlons
to
20.
_
_
_
_
_
_
TJ- V1ns &amp; 4 W.D.
I
)1 - Homts lorSeltf
Sadly missed by grand- Box 682, P.omeroy, Oh chicken. 742-2949 ' or U2- 992·6370.'
·" ~ •'
14- Motercyclts
JJ-Mobllt-Momu
21 . _ _ _ _ __
daughters
Tamra,
Penny,
I
a~uto fl•rfl
JS/69. !"refer Middleport, 2608.
for hit
Now buying gold and '' '
and Wendy.
I Accttur"•
Pomeroy,
Rutland
U- Fo~rmstor ltlt
22. _ _ _ _ __
sliver, old pocket watches. 'E ~
"
Auta
.,...,lr
)4- lusintll ll.iil41int•
resident. Phone necessary. LOST: Reward offered for c:h•lna, diamonds, silver .: 11 ~
I.
23. _ _ _ _ _ __
bye
J~lou&amp;Acrtatt
a grey and while long money and coins. Marlin's
I
U- Rtll Elttlt W1ntltd
2. - - - ' - - - - . 24. _ _ _ _ __
haired
female
cat
lost
In
General
Store,
Middleport
..
:~
37- •tllfMI
eSERVICES
3.
25. _ _ _ _ __
In loving memory of '1ra~~late
high school the Bashan· Bald Knob 992-6370.
", 1
11 - Htmt fmlh"ovtmnti
Robert N. Clark who ''
over 21 with area
• I
. 985·4295. 4·- - - - - - - 26. _ _ _ _ __
11- lttumbklt IIIICUIIIItl
passed
away
April
,
.
pleasant
phone
voice
for
.
.
,J '
Want-Ad
Actvtrllslng
24 1980
5 . _ _ _ _ _ _ 27 . _ _ _ _ _ _ 1
Ul,clvtH~tl
TV
that
doelfl'l
work.
,,
r
A happy home we OflCe on· answerlnv service In own
Deadlln11 ·
M-lttctrtcat
joyed,
home
for
Meigs
·
Co.
Lost:
Siamese
Maltese
cat,
992-2034.
•
·
:
6
'
I
I RtfriMrttlon
· - - - - - - - 28
1:10 P.M. DtiiV
How sweet the memory Humane Society. You 12 yurs old, answers to the
'' • 1
u-o...,,., Htuflnt
7.
~.
~
12 Notn IIIUI'CI'¥'
,
would serve only as coor- name of CindY. LOst IS the
., • I
.......M.H•• .,.,,
51111
forMon41ty
8.
30.
lo
But death has lett a dlnator advlslnv public of aru Of Front and Garfield .
U-U,IMISttry
,~ l
loneliness,
· corr..,t method to handle 992·7095.
r
~ \· }
9.
31 .
I
The world can never fill .
animal releted problema.
· ...J I
I 1o.
32.
I.
Applicant must be someone i..oat: Gold wedding band .
'
Sadly missed by wife, Lola, who sincerely carH for
I 11.
33.
11
Rates and Other I nforni.ltfon
992-7315.
Reward.
son and daughter In law, Weilfart Of animals • hlvt
I 12.
34 .
I,
Larry &amp;nd Joy and grand· most of lime aVIIIIblt to
IS
W'Orfl
tr
Ullftr
I 13.
35
I
daughters.
..
phone. If lnlwHI8d writ. 7_ ___;Y:..:a,_rd=St:.;l::.•_ _
C1ttl
c
.....
.
I'
1 cley
II 14.
l.tl• .
I:
Box 612, Pomeroy, Ohio
2itVi
&lt;t$769. Salery negotleb1t.
l Clays
1.11
Yard Sale: a,t 137 Pearl
In loving memoyr Of
I 15.
'iiVI
Ul ·
Slrftt In Middleport. ThurElizabeth
Duckworth.
I 16. - - - , . - - - I
to mow blnks sday and Friday, April 24,
We loved you dearly, we Somlletl ••rll ntr fl'lt ml~tlmum IJ WIH"Iflll 4ct1Ut HI Wftfl ,., 11'/.
lllroug!lout tilt summtr. 251rom9to?.
All rul'lftlftt otMr ftltn COftltCVtl¥1 fiVI will . . CMI'IM II 1M t ..,
mill YOU Yet.
•Appralclmat.tv every 3
I;
No ,maner now long, we w.kl. Afllr 6 call 992-:N67 .
' )) .,.
•I
-1
shall
never
forget.
'
Auxiliary at. the
Mail This Coupon with Remittance
·11
In m-.nary, Clnt tf , 111n1n liN Ollhllr'l' : t Ct"h "" wtrl, liM
You
ire
no
longer
1n
our
Church
Of
God
Is
I
1
mlnlmwm. Ct1h In HV1nct. ·
Hftd 10m101oe to move, In'I
The Daily Sentinel
1~
to share.
e yard lilt at
I lives
But dMp In our hears, tiC!, 2 small bulldlnga. 1,
Duncan's f1rm In
'I
Box 72'1
I•
MMIIt Homt 11111 lnf Y"rll111t1 lrlacct]llt.. only w!tll nlll -- ~·
10lc10 "" other 10X30. 992· .
you• :.lelwavs bt lhtrt.
on P'r1day, Aprlt
orclor.
25 cent cltlrll tor ••• ctrrvl"' lo~ Hum•tr In Clrtlf 'BI
:1
· Pomeroy; Ohio 45769 · ·
lj
7..0.
.
Stntlntt.
·
••
t
. SICily miiNd by children
and oranctchHdrtn. .

..,,------------

by Larry Wright

Beautiful thr,ee bedroom 2 bedroom Mobile Home.
ranch brick home in Baum Racine area. 992 5858.
54
Misc
Addition, Pomeroy, Ohio.
- -. Merchatlise
-- - - - - - Gas heat, central air . Call 2 bedroom Mobile Home, Grave ly mower with su lky .
992-2571. 985·4145 or 1·687 funished, adults preferred. Dua l wheels &amp; electri c
Deposil. 992·2749.
6429.
S1arter .'992 ·5872 after 5.

---------~---------~---------r------------------~~----------r---------..,.--------- ·; ,~;.
Public Notice

'N' CARLYLE '"

46

-·---· ~·---

For sale or rent; J bedroom
mobile home with exQando
Homes tor Sale
31
on large rented :ot, s~ 143,
Brick house on wooded lot. furnished, with washer and
Three bedroom$, large kit· dryer, new carpet and
chen, family room, double aluminum build i ng .
742·3025 or 992·
garage, deck. Mid·S ixtles. $5400.00.
3027.
992·5420.

Money making projects considered

_________________. .;. .;_________________________
Small investment, large returns, Sentinel Want Ads

~

--

were

--------------------------~------""'7

Public Notice

Hous!ls for-Rent
- -----. . ---

41

.

.

tJU.ee

Ohio

FlaaRtill

-

Matt Baker, Middleport, and · Baao, and Larry Sellers, Portl!lnd;
Beclty Evans, Portland, 'Were
Melanie Van . Meter, and Steven
chosen champions of tbe 1911 folll'\h Grady, Rae~; Todd u.le, Bec!ty

Friday,

.~

' lr

BARNEY

AIN'T THAT ROMANTICAL,

PAW? ELVINEV AN'LUI&lt;EY
HAVE BEEN MARRIED
TWENtv "'~RS - - -

.. AN' THEY'RE ' .
STILL HOLDIN'

HANDS

�' . ...... ~·--

•

4.,.

-

• • ••

·~

. ..

•..

~

,. • •

· ~ "1. ~ .. ... ~ . .. .... "lo. .. .. . .. . ., '" ...... ' • .... . , ' ' • .

.. '•

· ~·'

w

10 •• •

•

~

"

~

..r-4

..

• ' ...

Friday, Apri124,-1981

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Shutdown attempt draws heavy 'fire'
By ;ne Auoclaled Pres• .
England said guards at the PhilpQtt
Sheriff s!leputlesescortedagroup Coal Corp. in Beckley, W.Va., fired
of coal ~mpany .guards out of West u to 30 shots Thursday night at
V1rgmw .s Rale.tgh
·
try'mgosop
t t
1P k 15 who were
· · County after
ed pee
striking coal mmers
were spray
tl
th min
·
'th b kshot nd
1 hi 1
opera ons a 1 e
e.
WI
uc
a se~era ve c es
The shooting was the second in·
shot up, authorities satd.
cident between Phil tt
rds and
Raletgh CoWJty Sheriff Claude ·
po gua

'

coal miners during the 28-day-old

strike by the Unite&lt;\ Mine Workers
160,000 members.
UMW President Sam . Church ,
meanwhile was scheduled to make
•
an annoWJcement today on the
stalled contract negotiations with
the BltuminOWI Coal OnerMnr&lt;

Asaoclatlon, accordlnglto aides.
More ,than 40 state troopers,
sheriff's deputies and city pollee,
some of them with riot lll!llS and
helmets were rushed to Philpott to
,
separate the two sides after the
shooting.

•

Dream of woodworking comes true, B·l

Three Meigs teacherS_ given ·c ontinuing status
(Continued from page I )
coach.
Professional leaves were given
Arthur Arnold, Ida Marin, Sam
Crow and football coaching staff
members and Gary Walker.
The board hired Robert Williams,
substitute bWI driver, and Joe Jacks,
substitute custodian and set the pay
of Susan Carpenter for · drivers
education at $50. Given leaves of air
sence were Bonnie Edwards, Jane
Bourne and Jan Burner, teacher.
Not given contracls were teacher,
Harry Yarbrough, and Keith
Molden, substitute.
Aletter of accreditation from Nor·
th Central was acknowledged.
The release of students, Matt
Grueser, Kay Dodson and Charles
Wheeler was denied and Supt. David
L. Gleason will work on policy
dealing with releases. Fields trips
for Harrisonville sixth grade; Mid·
dleport Elementary; Rutland fifth
grade and the high school business
and office education class were approved.
The financial reports of Treasurer
Jane Wagner were approved and the

BROKEN GLASS - Glass rained over a iectlon of the Courl Street
sidewalk in Pomeroy Tblll'!lday afternoon as the wind and raiD hit into the
windows of tbe unoccupied building owned by Mrs. Amy Kingsland Jones
and gutted by ftre several years ago. VWage workers cleaned up the glass
and blocked off a section of the sidewalk pendlDg some decision as to wbat
to do about the remainder ol the broken window panes In tbe bnllding and
the danger they Impose to others.

HighwaY-----'.:(C=o:.::nti:::'n:::Ue::d..::fr..::om=pa::l!g~e~I)
ween the parties as evidenced by the
consent agreement not to picket the
Meigs County Landfill.
"In the alternative, you have
escalated the tension by cancelling
tlle employees' hospitalization in·
surance leaving the employes and
tlleir families without medical
protection and yw have continually
refused to return to the bargaining
table in a good faith effort to end the
work stoppage. Perhaps you do ntt
wish to see this work stoppage ended
and the service restored to the
citizens ol Meigs County.
"I am hopeful that this is not the
case and that you will agree to either
returning to the bargaining table
with tlle union, agree to request the
assistance of the FMCS or agreeto
return to the bargaining table with a
mutually agreeable third party
citizen of Meigs County as an impartial mediator.

_ __

"Your response to this letter lor
the purpose of expediting resolution
of the wprk stoppage is anticipated."
Haynes further stated "The union
has continually requested tlle
engineer to utilize the alternatives
available in the union letter. The
engineer has continually refused to
act in any responsible manner and
bas refel:ted any means of resolving
the stri~e proposed by the union.
"The members of Local lOBn
apologiZe to the citizens of Meigs
CoWJty for any inconvenience the
strike has caused, but the resolution
of the strike and the equitable
justice for the highway department
employes and for the people of
Meigs Gounty lies solely with the
engineer's concerned responsibility
to agree to return to the bargaining
table with or without third party
mediation."

Charles S. Beller
Charles Samuel Beller, 69, Route
I, Rutland, died WJexpectedly at his

home Wednesday morning.
He was born October 15, 1911 in
Mason County, W.Va., a son of the
late Samuel E. and Louella Rice
Beller. He was married Aug. 13, l!lf&gt;5
to Alma Etta Ellis who preceded
him in death on Dec. 26, 1976.
Mr. Beller was a retired operating
engineer in the construction in·
dustry. He had served in the U. S.
Annyduring World War II.
Surviving are a daughter, Mrs.
Harold (Beverly) Ridenour, Point
Pleasant; a son, Richard L. Beller,
Point Pleasant ; three stepsons,
Oran P. Love, Jr., Grove City; Roy
Ellis, Rutland, and Dale Ellis, Middleport; a stepdaughter, Mrs.
Harold (Betty) Kirby, Vienna, W.
Va., four grandchildren, l9 step
grandchildren, several step great·
grandchildren, three sisters,
Winifred Kidwell, Point Pleasant;
Mrs. Levetta Greenlee, Hazard, Ky.,
and Mrs. Genevieve Burgess,
Chillicothe.
Several nieces,
nephews and cousins also survive.
In addition to his wife and parents,
Mr. Beller was preceded in death by
a stepson, James E. Love, in 1979.
Mr. Beller was a member of
Feeney-Bennett Post 128, American
Legion, Middleport; Harrisonville
Lodge 411, F&amp;AM; the Ohio National
Rifle and Pistol AssOCiations; the
Meigs County Humane Society and
the Meigs County Senior Citizens.
Services will be held at 11 a.m.
Saturday at the Walker Funeral
Home in Rutland with tlle Rev.
Amos Tillis and the Rev. Ralph
Sager, Jr., officiating. Burial will be
in Miles Cemetery. Friends may call

Winning Ohio lottery number .
CLEVELAND - The nwnbers selected Thursday night in tbe Ohio
Lottery's daily game "The Number" and the weekly "Pyramid" and
"Pick 4" games are :
The Nwnher - 776
Pyramid - 85; 479; 6310
Pick4- 2460

Weather
Mostly cloudy tonight. Lows 35-40. Mostly sunny Saturday. Highs in
the low to mid.OOs. Chance of rain 20 percent tonight and near zero per·
cent Saturday. Winds northwesterly 1~15 mph tonight.

I

Area deaths

recommended special education
plan was adopted.
A report from Ellen Bell, Meigs
CoWJty Librarian, was received and
permission was given for a second
ball diamond at the Harrisonville
Elementary School. The drafting
program was discussed along with
the possibility of discontinuing that
class due to the small enrollment.
Preceding the executive session, a
parent addressed the board stating
that his child bad been placed in a
special class at the Pomeroy
Elementary School last fall because
of a reading problem. The parents
said the class for the entire year has
been chaotic and that eight children
who were in the class have lost the
entire year's work.
The parents charged that texts for
the class provided through the
program had not arrived and that
his wHe has made 13 tripa to the
school to check on them. He said
his child has a folder full of
materials which he colored this
year, but little has been accomplished with the reading
problem.

Extended Ohio Forecast- SWJday through Tuesday: Fair SWJday
and Tuesday. Achance of showers Monday. Highs in the upper 50s and
low 60s Sunday and Tuesday and in the 60s Monday. Overnight lows in
the upper 30s to the low 40s.

at the fWJeral orne anytime after 2
p.m. today WJtil the time of services.
The family will receive friends from r;;;::;;::;;::;;::;;::;;::;;::;;::;;::;;::~~~~~~~~~~~;;~
2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. toda-y. Masonic I
rites will be conducted at the funeral
home at 8 this evening by Harrisonville Lnd(!e, Graveside military rites
will be conducted by FeeneyBennett Post.

~~

-~

Carl Fruth
Carl ~- (Buck) Fruth, 68, a
resident Qf 2302 Mt. Vernon Ave., Pi.
Pleasant, died Thursday at 8:45p.m.
at his home.
Mr. Fruth was a Pt. Pleasant barber for 50 years.
He was a World War II veteran,
having served in the U. S. Army.
Mr. Fruth was born in Mason
CoWJty on April I, 1913, son of tlle
late Christopher and Elizabeth
Whitehead Fruth.
He married Freda Wippel. She
survives, along with one daughter,
Mrs. David (Karen) Roush, Bidwell; two sister~ Miss Christine
Fruth, Pt. Pleasant, and Mrs. Vera
Kreimer, Parkersburg ; two
brothers: Ralph , Mason, and
Robert, Pi. Pleasant; three grand :
and three great-grandchildren.
FWJeral services will be held 2
p.m. Sunday at the Crow-Hussell
Funeral Home with Rev. John
Stinespring.
will James
be in
Icenhower, Burial
and Rev.
Kirkland Memorial Gardens.
In lieu of flowers, the family
requests donations be made to the
Pt. Pleasant Rescue Squad or fire
department.
,
Friends may caU at the fWJeral
home on Saturday from 2-4 and 7-9

POSTER CONTEST
Prizes have been contributed by Meigs County
Businesses:
Game · Nelson's Prescription Drug Store; Jig Saw Puz·
zle · Ben Franklin Store; Burger Chef Coupons - Pomeroy Burger Chef; Coupons and Hats · RC Bottling
Company ; Wallet · The Kiddie Shop; Gift Certificates ·
Elberfelds, Jeans and Things, Custom Print, The
Wizard, Pomeroy Pastry Shop, Village Pharmacy,
Sport About, Meigs Inn Pizza Shack, Adolph's Dairy
Valley; Soap · Dutton Pharmacy; China Doll - Mid·
dleport Book Store; Nell B·all and Frisbee· Swisher and
Lohse.
ENTER BY APRIL30
Submit entries to your community Mental t:te-alth
center.

ff;;~§§§§§~§§§§§§§§§~§~;;~

I 0. 0 . 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 • • • • • • • 0

'6895

255 V·8, Air, stereo, vinyl roof, silver, black exterior
local owner. 4,000 miles.
'

1976
FORD lfz TON PICKUP. •••••••• ~ •• ~.$1295
Auto .• high mileage.
1976 OlDS CUnAS SUPREME SW •••••••$1895
•Dr., aufo., P.B., P s s1795
1976 BUICK LeSABRE•••••••••••••••••••
1973 .AMC JAVLIN
2 Dr . aufo . P.S. s•95
.
···~················'
1970 FORD PICKUP................•.......
Aufo.,4dr.,P.S. Runs good.sr::.95

...

.

-~

1973 CHEVY CAPRICE ••••••••••••••••••• sggs
6cyt. , P.S., P.B., standard.
dr.hardfop,
6 cv l., 2
1975 FORD GRANADA •••••••• •• :~to•. :.~. '1395
19'16 fORD LID 4dr.,aufo., P.B., P.S., air, good cond.S1795
2dr.,hardfop, aufo.,air, vlnvf fop. '1895
19'II16 fORD LID•••••••••••••••••••••••••
1976 PONTIAC •••••••••••••••~u~~~~~~:~·..$1695
1977 l'nUEf
~
••.•........••• 4dr., tfandard. '1895
1

,I

llllllllllllllllllt•ttll

.........

1978 PONTIAC TRANS AM •••••••••• , •••• l5295
Air, AM/FM, Sharp,.

1979 MUSTANG 2 DR ................... '4495
4 cyl. Auto . Trans.,

~.S .

1975 PONT. CATALINA 4 DR•.•••••••••••• '1095
1979 PIN10 3 DR•••
S3595
0 •••••• 0 ••••••••••• '

4 Sp. Tran. 4 cyl.

1978 FORD AESTA. •••••••••••• ~ •••••••• S3595
I

some problems with the class but he
said some materials for the class
were picked up lit a Huntington store
and !here supplemental materials
have been used. He said there was a
late approval on the Title VI·B
program and .tbat the publishing
comi&gt;any W.S out of materials due to
a heavY demand. The parent said he
bad been told by the principal, the
teacher, and his son ti}at materials
were not in the classroom.
He said before moving children he
would have made sure that he had
the necessary materials to carry the
job through Thj! eight children were
moved out of their regular classes,
he said, and as a result have lost out
this year. He suggested the board
secure a tutor in an attempt to help
them reCilver the learning losses of
the year.
Concluding the parent said he does

One hurt in mishap
One person was injured in a twt&gt;car accident in Meigs County Thursday night, according tO the Gallla·
Meigs P011t of the Ohio Highway
Patrol. ·I•
The patrol said a vehicle driven by
David L. Wolf, 17, Chester, pulled
fromSR681 ontoSR 7 at 8:30p.m. into the path of a vehicle driven by
Kirk D. Chevalier, 28, Chester, and
collided.
Injured was a passenger in the
Chevalier auto, Jessica D.
Chevalier, 2, who was treated at the
scene. Moderate damage was repor·
ted to both vehicles and Wolf was
cited for failu,e to yield.

not want a teacher to be a baby sitter
for his child; that he wants the cblld
to be taught. He stated that is.time
for authority to see that the teaching
is done ifthe teacher Is not teaching.

'

Gas Savel', local owner, AM/FM/8 Track '

1976 1MAVERICK 4 DR ............~ ••••• $2095

•••••••••••••••••••••• '4595

Hand crafted
wood, B-1

Buehwald on parent education, B-2

Rhodes on tour, D-1

•

..

''Things should just not run
loose", he commented.
Morris made arrangements to
meet with tbe parent today to
discuss the problem fw1her.
Board members attending last
night's meeting were Powell, Robert
Snowden, Dick Vaughan and Carol
Pierce. Dr. Keith Riggs was not
present.
Also attending were
Morris, Supt. Gleason and
Treasurer Jane Wagner.

tm:es Vof.15gNo.
Copyri
hted131981

Middleport · Pomerov~Gallipolls-Point

The Middleport Emergency Squad .
at 10:10 p.m. Thursday took Mamie
Hendricks from herS. Second Ave.,
home to Veterans Memorial
Hospital. The Racine Unit at 1:23
a.m. took Dave Clark to Veterans
Memorial. The Pomeroy Unit at 8:29
p.m. Thursday treated Kirk
Chevalier and Carrie and Jessica
Chevalier, reportedly for auto accident injuries in Tuppers Plains.

ByXEVINKEUY
GALUPO!JS - Voters in the
Gallla·County School District will go
to the polll Tuesday to' decide the
fate of a proposed 3.!;.mill school
bondiaaue.
Voting places will be open from
6:30a.m. until 7:30p.m., accorcilhg
to the county election board.
The Issue, If paased, will generate
funds for the renovation or
replacement of several elementary
· achools in the district.
Specifically, passage of the levy,
the district contends, will allow for a
11&gt;-18 !'0001 achool to replace the

Veterans Memorial
Admitted··Kenneth
Matson,
Rutland; Wesley Oark, Racine;
Kathy Fife, Pomeroy; Luella King,
Pomeroy; Mamie Hendricks, Middleport; Marie Roy, Racine.
Discharged-John Jacobs, Hilda
Weaver.

',

OPEN FRIDAY TIL 8 P.M.
SPECIAL WEEKEND SALE
PRICES FOR THIS WEEKEND

.,.

Men's Sport Shirts ,- Men's Jeans- Cannon TowelsMisses and Women's Tops Children's Wear Painters Jeans- And many more.

ELBERFELD$

present facilities at Cadmus and
Centerville; a new 16-18 room
building for Vinton Elementary; and
a new 16-18 room building to replace
the present structure at Bidwell·
Porter.
In' addition, funds will be raised
for an addition and remodeling of
Hannan Trace Elementary to
replace poriable classrooms, and
additions and remodeling to Addaville and Cheshire Kyger elemen·
tary schools.
Those in the Clay, Green and Rio
Grande elementary school areas
will not vote in the election since

they are jlart of the Gallipolis city
oolsystem.
e election will be held In 17
p ecincts, and will overlap fpr
v rs In Madison Twp. In Jack!ibn
C WJty, according to the election
rd.
'The voting areas ll'n:'ll
_.Addi~on _Twp., Addison precinct,
~;neshire Twp.,. Cheshire precinct,
Greenfield Twp., Guyan Twp.,
Guyan precinct, Harrison Twp.,
Huntington Twp., Huntington
precinct, Morgan Twp., Ohio Twp.,
Perry Twp., Centerville precinct,
Springfield Twp., Bidwell precinct
and Walnut Twp.

WASHINGTON ( AP )
· dications that the package faced Its
&lt;Joncnlllorial Republicans, buoyed most difficult test in the
by President Reagan's surge In De. nocratic-controlled House.
populsrlty and heav:y defections
Preliminary head counts made
among Democrats, appesr within last week by botll parties showed a
11rik1n11 distance of passing the somewhat modified version of the
rtcupetatlng chief executive's . big legislation, a variation suppqrted by
ecoborlllc package.
the administration, to be Kaining
When Reagan goes before a joint considerable Democratic supportHouse.Senate seS&amp;ion Tuesday to perhapa more than enQugh to pass it.
Tuesday's congressional addreu
. plug hla program, the votes to pass it
may· already be In the chamber in was io be Reagan's first public apfi'ont of blm.
pearance since he was shot in the
Thlt's in spite of earlier in- chest nearly a month ago in an

a1!11811matlon attempt,
. And the drama potential of
Reagan's appearance, coming two
days before the House waa to begin
-elderatlon of the budget-cutting
rtlod of his plan, waa not wasted
n Democratic leaders.
One high-ranking House
mocrat, who asked nol to be ldened, said the party Wal being hurt
be delectlo118. He said so many
bemoc~:~ts were defecting that
blocking Reagan's budget-cutting
plan In the House now seems
unlikely.

~

SIMMONS Ol.DSf.ADIUA&amp;QtEV., INC.

It's DST!

NOW AT NEW LOCATION

WASHINGTON (API- DayUghl..vlo&amp; time wentiDto effect at! a.m.

Pomeroy, OH.

tedly.

WE NEED MORE ROOM FOR OUR GRAND OPENING.

At !bet time, clocu In mOil 11.1tea
were moved abead one hour to 3

HURRY IN - GET YOUR BEST USED CAR!

a.m.
· Tbe oDiy exceptio01 were Arllona,
KawaU IJICIIIIQit of lndlau, where
1l.lte elflclall bave decided to keep
1taadard time lllrou&amp;boallbe year.
DayUpl-lllvlng lime wlll laat uolllllle lut Sunday Ia October.

1981 CAD. DEVILLE SEDAN .••••••••••••••••••••••••• !l4,995
1981 OLDS. 98 REGENCY SED., Diesel .... ;••••••• ..'ll,495
1981 OLDS. 88 ROYALE SED. Demo ............... '9395
1979 FORD LTD WAGON ............................... '6295
1978 CHEV. MONTE CARLO.Sharp.....................14995
1978 CADILLAC DEVILLE CPE. ............. :........... 17495
1978 TOYOTA' CORONA SEDAN ........................ '5295
1977 FORD GRANADA SEDAN. .........................13595
1980 CHEV. CHEVETTE SEDAN.........................14295
1979 CADILLAC ELDORADO............................ '9395
1976 PLYMOUTH VOLARE WAGON.................... 12195
1979 DODGE OMNI COUPE........................... '5395
. 1977 PONTIAC GP, All Blacll...........,. ..............'3595
.1979 CHEV. CHEVETTE SEDAN: ..................... :.14295
1979 PONTIAC TRANS AM.'............................. '6995
1978 CADILLAC DEVILLE CPE •••••••• ~ .................'7495
1980 OLDS CUTlASS LS SEDAN ...................:•• '6795
1980 CHEV. CAPRICE CLASSIC SEDAN............. ,.. '6795
1977 CHEV. MONTE CARLO CPE. ..................... 13795
1977 ·PONTIAC GP .AI Brown ......................... -13595
1972 DODGE STAnON WAGON .. .'...................... IS95
1975 PLYMOUTH DUSTtR CPE. ........................

Simmons

POINT PlEASANT - The Muon
County Sherlff'a Department llallll
looking for a Gallla County man

whole car wu found abandoned cin
the $liver Memorial Bridge Aprils.
On the mlllinl pmona lilt II

Samuel Palll Copley, ae; Bidwell.
Muon deJjiiUN ripol1 they have
obtained lnfonnitlexi Copley wu'
seen hltcllblldna toward Wayne,
W.Va. the morning of hla dilappearance. It wu at flnt beUeved
Copley had jumped from the bridge,
sparkln8 a week·long rivel'lide 1811'
ch by the Point Plf:U~Dt F:lre Depar-

GALUPOLIS - A possible link
between an alleged break-in, carbOWie accident and motorcycle theft
was stlll being sought Saturday by
Gl!llipolis City Police.
All the incidents are reported to
have happened early Saturday morning.
Officers were first notified at 1:21
a.m. by the Gallla County Sheriff's
Department there had been a
possible break-in at Smith and
Halley's Ashland service station on

describes Copley as a white male,
five feet, nine Inches tall, weighing
172 pounda and having a slender
build. He has blonde hair and a fair
complexion.
Anyone wltll information on
Copley's whereabouts Ia urged to
contact the Muon County Sheriff's
Department at 8'1W810.

AI of lait 1Jetk, neither flrtlnen or
deputlta hld ,Ill)' new leadl on
Copley'a wbereaboull, bUt the wtth
the IIIW lnformalion, he hal been
.lilteclu alllillq JIII'IGII.
The llll'dl bepn When CGpley'1
white, 1171 Buldl - found 1111 the
Welt VlrJinla Iitie of the bridle it

Vine Street.
Upon arrival, the department said
·they met Ted Comer, Rt. I, Vinton,
who explained he had pulled into the
station earlier to check gasoline
prices when he spotted a broken window in one of the garage doors.
Comer said he saw a inan leave
the garage through the broken window with a bucket in his hand. Of·
fleers investigated and found
nothing missing from the station,
although the door of a car parked in
the garage was found open .
, At 1:23 a.m., the department was
notified by the Gallia·Meigs Post of
the Ohio Highway Patrol a car had
collided with a house owned by Cor·
bett Roberts at the corner of Texas
and Chillicothe Roada.
The driver had reportedly left the
5Cllne, pollee said. The patrol said

aherlff' 1

Saturday their report on the incident
was incomplete, but the car was
towed from the scene and
discovered to he registered to
Douglas Orin Wheeler, Patriot, who
had reportedly bought the car in
Wheelersburg two weeks ago.
However, the same vehicle was
earlier reported rr.issing from the
Green Gables on SR 7. Linda
Wheeler, Patriot Star Route, in·
formed the department she had left
the car at the scene because it would
not start, and when a member of her
family later went to the bar and
grill, he foWJd it missing.
Officers were then notified a
1
\motorcycle was taken from I the
,' Patrick A Cochran residence, 31
Portsmouth Rd ., .between 2 and 2:30
a.m. Saturday. However, the motor.
Continued on A-4

'Cleanup _project begins Monday
April27 .
Ward Two : Court Street to Pine
Street, Third Avenue to the Ohio
River, First Avenu~. Tuesday, April
28. '
Ward Three : C~urt Street to Nell
Avenue, Third Avehue to the city
limits, Wednesday, April29.
Ward Four: Pine and Olive
Streets, Neil Avenue to the Silver
Bridge mall ; First Avenue, Eutern
Avenue, and the Ohio River to the
city limits, Thursday, April :tl.

GALLIPOLIS - City crews will be
moving throughout all four of the
city wards starting Monday as part
of the Old French City's cleanup
week program.
.All material mW!t be set at the
curb line and prepared for easy han·
dling. Yard material needs to be
containerized.
Crews will be following this pickup
schedule:
Ward One: city limits on Garfield
Avenue to Court Street, Monday,

Inside today. ..

6:46i.m.lbe day he diaappeattd.
The

swing behlnd Washington Elementary School.
Everyone enjoyed cool but sunny weather Saturday.
Rain Is expected to return to the area Sunday.

Early Saturday incidents
related, police believe

tment. . .

deputment

'

Extended forecast, state weather

Inc.·

~eigs deputies ~back on job
The comnilulune~, Sheriff Prof·

P~ cloudy today. Hilh in the lower 70s. Chance of rain 20 percent.

!Itt and officials of the Union were In
lllfGiiatibna all day Friday. They

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"You'll Like ourQuellty Wey of Doing Buslntss"

'•

BOY ON A SWING- David Goody, son of Mr. and
Mn. Vernon Goody ol Gallipolis, took advantage of the
cleating weather receody to take a few turns on the

Continue search for man

see or Phone One of Then court19111 Selesmen:
Pete Burris, Marvin KHblugll, .
Mike Anderson, Steve Kiser or Rosco Burdette
992-6614

9 Sections , 66 Pages 35 Cents
A Multimedia Inc . Newsgaoer

. Sunday, April26, 1981

President Reagan to plug
.economic package Tuesday

.ELBERFELD$

308 E. Main St.

Pleasant

'Gallia residents to
vote on bond iss'ue

Emergency runs

ITPAYSTOTAKEADVANTAGEOFTHESALES
AT ELBERFELD$

Sponsored By The •
Ga Ilia-Jackson-Meigs
Community Mental Health Center
PRilES! In 4 Categories: Pre-School, 1st &amp; 2nd Grade,
Jrd &amp; 4th Grade, Sth &amp; 6th Grade.

1980 lHUNDERBIRD

Dan Morris said there bave been

A-7

balloon falls in Gallia,

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