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LAWN ·
. FURNIT.URE

tlltE CLOTH·

By JIOB IIOEFUCH
A driver's education prOgram and condition of sc)lool
buses appeared as major problems when the Melp
Local School District Board of Education met In
regular !leiSlon Monday night.
Board membel'll, Robert Snowden and Richard
Vaughan, objected to a recommendation for the employment of Jan'les Wright on a purchased service contract for summer driver education cles!IA!! at $50 per

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student.

Snowden and Vaughan indicated they felt driver's
education should be Oftered on a full time bula during
school hours. However, Asst. Supt. Dan E. Morris said

It iB difficult not only to get Instructors In driver's
edueation, but It iB dlffl~ult to schedule students Into
such a program during school hours.
Sam Crow, a faculty member ~ttendlng the meeting,
said driver's education had never been a school day
class since he has been at the high school. It has been
an after school and swruner time. program, Crow
stated.
Snowden and Vaughan voted along with Board
President Larry Powell-the only three members at·
tending the meeting-to hire Wright for the swnmer
program, but with the stipulation that an in depth study
be made on Improving the driver's education program.

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2 sections, 12 Pages

99

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IIMUAIT CHEST
With dame cover and twin
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NILSON'S RIG.

By KATIE CROW
Bruce Reed was named to serve
on Pomeroy VIllage Council Monday
night filling the vacancy created by
the resignation of Rod Karr. Reed
will serve two and one-half years of
the unexpired term.
Meeting with council was Henry
Stanley of Stanley Sanitation Service who told council that due to the
recent increase in landfill rates, his
cOsts have risen300 percent.
Stanley said before the landfill
rates were increased he was paying
$6 per load and is now paying $22.50
per load.
He asked council to permit him·to
Increase rates 30 percent.(For
example if a person pays $6 a month
the new rate would be $7.80 per month; disabled person now paying S4
would pay under the new increase
$5.Zl; senior citizell!l now paying $3
would pay $3.90, those paying $3.50
wouldpayS4.55.)
Council decided to pospone the matter until June I.
Stanley, before the next meeting

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of council, will meet with the com· Orville Wiles and Jack Seidenabel,
missioners to see if he can get a cemetery trustees.
· cheaper rate.
Wiles, spokesman, asked council
John Anderson, councilman, and to hire Jeff Schloss to survey three
the two men from the U. S. Corps of areas of Beech Grove Cemetery at a
Engineers, Huntington, who spoke cost of $500. Council agreed. It was
at the Pomeroy Chamber of Com- also noted that visible markers will
merce last Tuesday viewed the be placed every 40 feet.
erosion problem on the river bank on
Council passed a resolution apEast Main Street from the Kroger proving a contract for legal services
Store to the J.&amp; R. Sports Shop.
to Peck, Shaffer and Williams for
Anderson said the U.S. Corps of work in obtaining an FmHA Joan for
Engineers advised coWJCil should restoration of the fonner senior high
adopt a resolution requesting building. Council intends to borrow
engineers from the Corps of upto$100,1100.
Engineers make an Ol18ight InWinterzation bids on the senior
spection of the area to determine high building will be opened May 22,
what has caused the erosion and at nO\lfl, Mayor Clarence Andrews
what could be done.
reported.
CoWJCil agreed to write to the corHarold Brown, councilman,
ps, Congressman Clarence Miller questioned the finances of the
and the Ohio Department of Tran- village indicating receipts from
sportation.
parking meters are decreasing.
Anderson said a severe flood could
Bill Young, councihnan, reported
cause damage that could pose a that an old car is parked in the mid·
serious threat to the economy of the
community.
Also meeting with council were

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Two resolutions, one on fair
housing and another on minority
business, required for the federal
grant applicati on, were passed by
CounciL
Attending were Mayor Hoffman
and Councibnen Marvin Kelly, Carl
Horky, Dewey Horton, William
Walters, and Jack Sattefield..

tax writers In Congress, agreeing

WASHINGTON (AP)- The chief
·only that their differences are many,
are slgnallng the White House they
want to talk about finding a con·
sensus on tax cuts.
"We hope we can indicate to
anyone who might be interested"
that efforts should continue toward
flndlng a tax plan acceptable to
Congress and President Reagan,
Sen. Robert J . Dole, R·Kan., chair·
man of the Senate Finance Committee, said Monday.
Dole went Monday night to the
White House, where he conveyed
that message to Reagan's chief of
staff, James ABaker III.

"They're willing to listen," Dole
said after the meeting. "But so far
they see nothing better than their
proposaL .If, in fact, we could put
together something to present to the
president, we'd be in business."
He said the White House wants to
avoid a 'lengthy debate that could
delay final action on a tax bill until
October.
. Dole had lunch at the Captol on
Monday with Sen. Russell B. Long,
O.La., senior Democrat OR the committee; House Ways and Meal18
Committee Chairman Dan
Rostenkowski, 0.111., and Barber
· Conable, R·N.Y., senior Republican
on Ways and Means.

Talking to reporters after the
session, the four were unanimous on
one point - no agreement on a tax
plan was sought and none was
reached .
"We now agree on what the
problems are," Conable said. "We
thought this meeting was preferable
to continue reading in the papers
what each other is doing."
The Reagan administration
opened the door to compromise last
week amid mounting indications
that the president's individ~ taxcut plan is in trouble. That plan
would reduce personal tax rates by
30 percent over three years.
The four chief tax writers in

Congress agreed to the lunch in ~n
effort to expedite passage of a tax
bill. The only solid development to
come out of the meeting was
Rostenkowski's announcement that
the Ways and Means Committee
likely will begin writing its tax bill
onMay28.
House and Senate leaders hope to
complete work on the measure by
early August. The Reagan administration asked that the individual tax cuts take effect July I,
although that schedule is jeopardized because Congress has been
devoting so much time to the
president's budget cuts.

Gradison iichest representative .
WASHINGTON- Financial statements released by the U.S. House

show three Ohio COI1gP'eiiiPDel with assets poa!bly ranging over $1
mllllon and one with zero assets.
The finailcial dlaclosure statements released Monday do not in m061
casee report euct net worth, and c:ongreapmen need only show their
largest ltoldlnp as over t=O,OOO.

Palneavllle.

Pope's sips tea, fever gone
ROME - Pope Jobn Paul U lipped tea with m1lk for brelkfast
today, the lint lime be IWillowed llquidllince be -allot lui week,
and docton saki the pontiff bad airlla.t no rem- when be wok~ alter a

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received a request for a street light
on Cole Street between North Second
and North Third. The matter was
referred to committee.

Wlllls GradiBon, R-Oblo, of ancinnati reported the highest range of
assets, with a total of $742,000 tO $1.4 mllllOri, Including the holdings of
one dependent child, Beth.
AlsO ahowinil an upper range of assets poalbly over $1 mllllon were
Republicans Ralph Regula of Navarre and J. Wllllaffi Stanton of

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engineering firm's estimate. Four' size and location of additional
other bids on the project ranged storage, the industrial requirements
in the southwestern jl8rt of the
from$69,996.25 to $94,791.
village, and the re sidential
Council authorized Mayor Hoff. requirements in the northwestern
man to enter into an agreement with part of the village ala cost of $19,500.
Floyd Browne Associates, Limited, , Wor~ will begin inunediately.
to furnish engineering services
Asecond reading on the ordinance
required to analyze the village water to vacate an alley between Hamilton
system and prepare a master plan and Locust Streets was read. Clean.for its orderly growth to meet up week was announced for June 1-5
project needs.
and street repair and resurfacing
The study will place particular projects were discussed.
emphasis on an evaluation of the
Mayor Hoffman noted that he had

Predict good wheat yields

COLUMBUS, Ohio- state senators, with an axe pOised for cuts In
the House version of Gov. James A. Rhodes' state budget bill, have
been urged in an emotional appeal to spare welfare rectpients.
Representatives of hwnan services groups and some welfare
reclplents themselves made their appeal Monday night to the Senate
Finance Conunlttee. ·
Cleveland welfare mother Mrs. Dorothy WllJlama said she iB trying
to bring up two children on $253 amonth, along with $163ln food stampe. But she said she cannot afton! such things as sending them to a
dentiBt or seeing that they have flu shots.

........

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Acontract for the construction of a
water line on Powell Street from
Page to below the village cor·
poration limits, a distance of about
IZJO feet, was awarded by Middleport Village Council Monday
night to Holley Bros. Col18tructlon,
of Rodney.
Of the five bids received on the
project, the Holley Bros. bid of
$64,737 was the lowest.
Mayor Fred Hoffman noted the
bid was about $14,000 below the

Chief tax writers want White House session

Welfare recipients want help

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NEW MEMBER- Bruce Reed, right, was sworn In as a oew member
of Pomeroy Council by Mayor Clarence Andrews. Reed fills the vacancy
on Pomeroy Council created by tbe resignation of Rod Kerr.

PIKETON, Ohio- Sargents Constructlon Inc. of Waverly was apparent low bidder on a contract to build a rallroad switching spur at
the U.S. Department of Energy's Portsmouth Gaseous Diffusion
Plant.
The bid of ~1,000 was one of three received for furnishing labor,
material and equipment needed to lnstall 3,1100 feel of rail, four turnouts, one track crossing, two gravel crossings and associated hardware, earthwork and drainage .

cOLUMBUS, Ohio- The Ohio erop Reporting Service expects Ohio
fanners to produce 80.6 mll)ion bushels of wheat this year, up 11 percent from the present record of 72.4 mllllon bushels in 1977.
The agency expects an average yield of 53 bushels per acre, up four
bushels from the record of 49 bushels per acre on the 1980 crop.

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die of the Flood Road and that it
would be impossible for a fire truck
to travel the area. He also noted that
there are five to six abandonded
cars on Nye Ave.
Young also reported he is to meet
with an engineer of the Colwnbus
and Southern Ohio Electric Co. to ,
establish how many dusk to dawn
lights are needed at the mini-park ·
and where they are to be placed.
Council will make a decision before
the deadline of June 12.
Larry Wehrung, councibnan,
suggested council appropriate $1,000
for additional paving. Council approved the request.
Council also discussed a building
on Co~rt St. , that is posing a .
dangerous problem. Council agreed
to contact the state inspector to see
what can be done.
Council agreed to purchase two
front tires for the cruiser and to have
the front end lined up.

Gallia firm gets waterline contract

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·Reed chosen as Karr's replacement

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students, providing well maintained buses, textbooks
and other needed materials, while spending whatever
money necessary to do this. He suggested that the
district borrow money to do this and if people refUSe to
put out the money to operate the district, then close the
schools.'
"If it bankrupts the district, Jet's do it," Snowden
remarked.
· Supt. Gleason corrunented that the district is
operating a minimal education system on minimal funds. It was agreed to take the buses in for repair one at a
time and Supt. Gl~ason will work '!ith treasurer Jane
(Continued on page 8)

._Pomeroy-Middle ort, Ohio, Tuesda , May 19, 1981 ,

50 QUART CHEST

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BUSES HAVE FRACTORES
During the meeting, it was reported that four of the
district's. school buses have fractured bodies which
cannot be repaired at the bus garage. Cost for repair of
each bus will range from $1500 to $2000, it was reported.
Unless the repairs are made, the buses will not pass
summer lnsPl!Ction, it was reported.
Supt. David L. Gleason said money will have to come
from other funds to pay for repair of the buses. One of
the area he mentioned will be textbook purchases.
· Snowden took exception to other funds suffering for
the repair of the buses and suggested that the board
run the school district to provide a good education for

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tranqullnl&amp;ht"'11le pope hu llept hOun without the UM of aedatives,"
Alclnl told reporten. He IP8Id tbe pope'aleqietature at aa.m. (2 a.m.
EDT) wuiS.S cletP'eel FalwslbeiL 'l1le pope lll1d been ruJIPiinga femof around IOU fortbeputflwdaJL

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Mr. udlln. le.t ..... a.tel, P
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tMIIIIt.-i..teJ 3 I Ill I lr'tr.DDiredarEdllarldeulllmIIIJaflelaaraneatMIISI I 'II . I JanllreeeMdaprlq-..
eeriattltePa•eniU.... ,. 2 '10 •

JUNIORS - Melladl Slim- aDd ICellt Wolfe were PI &amp;ltd tile
Daafll'tll Awardl u tile Ga!JII•llqlld ud boy fl 1be 8ualbetaHJcb
Scllool JaDiar Clue dar1rl&amp; Friday's awardl wemltly. Mia 8a!ma Ill
tile claqbter vi Mr. aDd Mn. Deaald Sllmolllnd ICeat II tile- fl Mr.
IPid Mn. Larry Wolle.

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Commentary

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· Page-2-The Oaiiy Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
May 19, 1981

_:_·____ :::HIDl!sday.

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Tuesday, May 19,1981

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Two views of gun contro-l______;______.;__Ja_mes_J._."~·a_;;;:~
7, __· k
the criminal, getting a handgun 15 no
problem at all. There are 170,000
li,censed gun dealers; there is also a
vast underworld commerce In handguns.
But agreement also shOUld be
sought on another starting point:
However it may be circwnscribed,
there is In fact some constitutional
right -''to keep and bear arms."
There is an Inherent right of selfdefense possessed by all law-abiding
cltizens In a free society. Gun collectors, storekeepers and gun dealers
are not second-class citizens. In our
eagerness to reduce the criminal use
dguns.
of handguns, we caMot justifiably
Mr. McClure's concern is
abridge
their lawful ownership.
narrower: He wants to correct the
Are those lair starting points? U
abuses of the Bureau fo Alcohol,
Tobacco and Flreanns (BATF) in
That abuse is abundantly so, how coUld federal legislation
the bureau's enforcement of existing documented. Every hour of the day promote them? Looking first at
law.
some person is murdered by a hand- Senator McClure's concern: The
Surely it must be possible for gun. Roughly 11,000 persons die BATF, beyond question, has been
reasonably minded men to agree on every year in this fashion; another guilty of gross abuses of
these objections. It is absurd to 250,000 every year are wounded. An bureaucratic power. Legitimate gun
suggest that Senator McClure and estimated 60 million handguns are dealers have been harassed and perthe National Rifle Association want now in circulation; another 2.5 secuted. Private collectors have
to COddle gun-slinging criminals. It million are added every year. For been turned into felons lor technical
violations of existing law. The
paperwork burden of registration
and reporting may well be
needlessly complex and burdensome. To the extend that the McIll Court Streel
Clure bill would correct these
Pomeroy, Ohto
6l'-ltt·2 1~
abuses. The bill deserves symDEVOTED TO THE lNTEREST OF TilE MEIGS-MASON AREA
pathetic consideration.
Senator Kennedy's approach has
merit also. If we ever are to get a
handle on criminal abuse, we have
to start somewhere. Mr. Kennedy
ROBERTL. WINGETI
would flatly ban the manufacture,
Publlshtr
sale, assembly or importstion of
PAT WHITEHEAD
BOB HOEFLICH
WASHINGTON- On April9, Sen
Edward Kennedy, O-Masa., introduced the "Handgun Crime Con·
trol Act of 1981." On April 29, Sen.
James A. McClure, R-ldaho, introduced the "Federal Firearms .
Reform Act of 1981." The two
senators and their bills are poles
apart, but both gentlemen are on the
right track.
Mr. KeMedy's concern goes to the
heart of the matter: He wants to
begin to make it more difficult for
criminals and psychopaths to
acquire easily concealable han-

is equally absurd to suggest that
Senator Kennedy and his fellow
liberals want to abridge the civil
liberties of law-abiding citizens. Yet
such is the level of acrimony and
emotionalism . in the controversy
over gun control that each side tends
to attribute bad motives to the other.
If hot tempers can be cooled,
which often seems doubtful, a couple
of starting points might wen be
established. Certslnly we can agree
at the outset that there Is a "gun
problem." Presumably not even the
most dedicated member Of the
National Rifle Association will deny
it. The problem, briefly defined, is
the criminal abuse of handguns.

The whole ta~11!11veny over gun.
leglalaUon has been flawed by too
much name-calling. Mr. Kennedy
and his coUeaguea aie not bad guys,
· bent on conflacaUon. Mr. Mcaure
and bls.colleagues are not bad guys,
indlfferent to crime11 of violence.
The bad guys are the .murdering
punks and loonies. EliaUng laws
have not deterred them. We must
seek laws that will.

pletlng the sale of a handgun. He
wouJ,d prohibit pawnshops from
dealing in such weapons. He 1!'0Uld
impbse a mandatory addiUonal aentence of two to 10 years on first conviction of using a handgun during
comrniBsion of a felony. He has other
proposals for recordkeeplng .and
reporting that strike me as overly
complex but that merit dlacusslon
anyhow.

"Saturday night speclals." He would
daflne these weapons as handgWlS
"not generally recognized as particularly suitable for or readily
adaplsble to sporting purposes,"
and he would leave a more precise
description to be worked otit in terms of weight, length, caliber and
lack of safety features.
Mr. Kennedy also would establish
a 21-day waiting period for com-

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New1 Editor

A MEMB ER of

Th~

Anoclated Prm, Inland Dally Prttt AuoctaUoo aod tile

Amert('an Nr\upaper Pub\lshent AnociaUon .

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Letters to editor.
Presence urged

LETTERS OF OP INION are Wt!leomt!d. Th~Y.f houtd bt 11'1 !1 titan 300 word! long. All
a rr sub jt'('t lu t'dltln~: and mu• t IM1 sl&amp;ned ..-uh name, addrrn and telrpbolk'
numlk"r. Nu urtllll(nrd le ttr n "·Ill bto publl,hed . l ~ttt:ou ~hmald bto In gncxl taste, addrrulng

Another year brings with it a very
busy month ending May.
ls~ U l'il, Ml pt'l'liiii\811Urs .
Graduation, alumni anniversaries
and Memorial Day holiday and services for the dead veterans.
It is the latter I wish to direct the
contents of this latter. In this county
as aU counties of the U.S.A. with
veterans of four wars one is inclined
to ask : Where are all these
veteranS? Veterans do not have to
belong to any given vet organization,
but as veterans they certainly do
The danger of substituting wishlul thinking lor cold blooded analysis in have an obligation to their laDen
making federal budget projections is catching UP. with the Reagan ad- comrades. Mind you only once a
ministration.
year veterans a~ asked to reflect on
High level budget officials have said that already the $5 billion spending past wars and to those less fortunate
overrun Treasury Secretary Donald Regan admitted to early in May is out of who now lay dead. Lay dead because
dale. The overrun is likely to turn out to be far higher at the end of the fiscal they once offered their lives so that
year.
we could remain free to practice our
White House Chief of Staff James Baker now says the administration may costly freedoms. Why then should
have to settle for a $60 million deficit and borrow more money to finance it. the citizens of Meigs respect
The Office of Management and Budget is having difficulty finding additional Memorial Day, if we, the veterans,
savings of $5 billion or more in government spending during the next four don't set the example? Is it too much
months to lower the deficit.
to ask for our fallen comrades? Too
Reagan partisans are trying to disclaim responsibility. "That's gOing to be much to kneel and offer a prayer for
a Carter deficit, not a Reagan deficit," Baker said loyaUy _But Reagan will the deceased? Too much to Offer a
have been In office for more than eight months when the fiscal figures are prayer for continued peace? Too
tallied. If he is unable to control federal spending to the degree necessary to much to spend a litue time reflecting
reach his first fiscal goal, he will bear the public and political consequences. on the tragedies of war? U so, why
White House officials say that the cost of servicing the national debt is a then have a hoUday? Why are we
principal villain in the higher deficit. Interest rates have run far above their such hypocrites? Take a day off
predictions. They had said that interest would average 11.1 percent on the work, receive pay for it and forget
short-tenn federal bills during 1981. On May 11, three-month treasury bills
sold for more than 16 percent. Inflation has stayed high. All the rosy assumptions they used in revising the 1981 budget were too optimistic.
The unfortunate effect of the probable failure of Reagan's economists to
provide him with realistic assumptions is that the private financial sector's
skepticism about his program will appear justified. This will spread into
other parts of the economy. As the President has said, confidence in the
"The vegetable garden is ready
economy is a necessary element for the business growth which will lilt us out
for your inspectiori, sir."
of the doldrwns onto the course of recovery.
"Thank you, Sergeant. Now hear
this. AB commander of this spring
garden, I want every plant to line up,
in rows four abreast. Let's move it,
on the double. You asparagus dewn
there. I want your shoulders back,
and your spears straight up. u you
tomato plants don't stop sagging,
I'm gOing to pull you up by your
roOts. Do you bear me? I SAID, DO
STA114PS
YOU HEAR ME? - Thai's better.
"This is the Boniest ~ for
vegetable life I've very
But let
me tell you something: By the Ume I
get llnlshed, every last one of you Ia
gOing to be fit to eat, or I'D know the
sa
reason why.
"You think all It takes is a litue
mulch and fertilizer to be a
vegetable? Well, you're wrong,
111'0118· wrong. You've had an easy
"My motto Is: BE NICE TO INDIVIDUALS, even
time of it, ll8cking out and slouching
though they only account for a crummy 11 per·
in your beds. Now you're going to
cent of our volume ... "
start producing or I'll knOW the
reason why.
"From this day on you're gOing to
shape up or shlp out. 11 that un\ rt~ n

Wishful thinking
vs. hard reality

•

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·'----------------------~-------------------

the wars, forget the dead veterans
and those presently disabled or stiU
suffering in hospitals. This
Memorial Day should be sacred and
Congress did set this day aside so
that we could aU spend some time to
reflect, to pray, to gather in memory
of those who died to preserve the
good old U.S.A. Yes, to keep Old
Glory flying. So again we ask all
veterans to join in with our local
veterans' groups wherever they are
having services as they endeavor to
preserve these precious memories.
Drew Webster Post No. 39
Pomeroy with its 330 some members
URGE' all to come to Pomeroy Monday, May 25, at the upper parking lot
to attend services. Program gets underway at 9:30a.m. Meigs band and
Eastern band will participate. All interested groups are invited and all
members of Post No. 39 urged to be
present and participate. - Paul L.
Casci.

Summer time rate
Hey, Ma Bell, and General Tel,
you are missing the boat. As this
writer understands it, you are the
only utility that cannot
"automatically" raise your rates
whenever your cost of doing

business goes up. Your cousins, gas get our hand&amp; on, neatlng like the
and electric companies have a cozy goodlitue boopers that we are.
When we received our gas bills, by
litue contract with aU their respective Utilities Commissions to recoup goUy, we did ill!! 1 We had
all their losses whether they be tem- done something for our country. We
had helped COIIBei'Ve our. natural
porary or of a longer duration.
resources.
But walt, our gas omOn is a "fuel clause adjustment,"
which could mean that If a par- pany, Instead of slapping ua on the
ticular electric supplier's pur- back for coming through for them, Ia
chasing agent had a bad day and going to try to slap It to us for dOing
bought coal at a higher price than this dutardly thlni.
According to tl'ie ·g.a company,
"nonnal" then that electric company could just "automatically" they will need $12 extra a month
pass this bad practice on to the con- during the winter months, (who
heats in the summer time anyhow)
sumer. How about that!!
added
to the nonnal biU to "recoup
Now I saw In the paper recently
that the gas company is getting a lit- Ita inVestment for providing gas sertle jealous of this "arrangement," vice to the bouse."
No matter that the "Investment"
and is trying to get Into the act. Achas
been iD for 211 yean and bas been
cording to them if we users, after
paid
for many Umee.They can't bge
being hit over the head for years to
ta1kl!Ig
about the "inveatment" of
conserve, turn thermoststs down unUI you shiver, etc., etc., don't quit baying additional gas u they are
this practice they wiD be forced to complaining that we aren't Ullng
fine u.s for our stupidity. When all of near enougb. Boy, we are going to
this conserve, conserve, conserve,,. have to get with1t.
was going on, we as gulllible . Throw out all thole energy saving
Americans decided that we really devices, tum up the old thermolltati
should do something to help this poor and act like good AmeriCBIII again,
II might even help the poor old- gas
old utility out.
So we went out and bought company If we run the furnace aD
Franklin fireplaces, heating stoves, summer wide open. At least It wiD
chain saws, wedges, etc., and spent get the klda out ci tbe house. - Paul
all of our Saturdays and evenings ' H. Roush, 481109 SR 124, Racine, Ohio
cutting aU the wood that we could 45171.

really:

Patton in the garden_____Art_Buc_h_wa_ld

Berry's World
l

seen.

Today in history. • •

By Aasoclated Presa
. Mike Schmidt said It was a litue
' like playing in the World Series, but
to Fernando Valenzuela it was
., nothing special, just a loss.'
For the first time this season - on
a Monday night before a full house of
~ 52,439 at Dodger Stadium- Valen' zuela did not go nine innings. The 20-- yeai'Oid Los Angeles pitcher left after seven innings with his team
trailing 4-0 to the Philadelphia
., Phlllies. He left without a chance to
: win, and he eventually absorbed his
first loss as a major leaguer.
Mter winning eight 'straight
games as a rookie - a feat believed
to have been accomplished only once
before - Valenzuela became im·
perfect.
The defending World Series champion Phillies wound up winning 4-0
on a first-inning home run by Sch-

.

midt, his 12th this year, and three
more runs in. the fourth inrilng· .
Right-hander Marty Bystrom, also a
rookie, scattered five hils over seven
innings for the victory.
Valenzuela, a screwbalhpeciallst,
left in the seventh for a pinch hitter,
having given up as many runs as he
had in his previous eight starts, five
of which were shutouts. His earned
run average jumped to0.9l.
"I· knew sooner or later I would
lose a gam~." Valenzuela said
through an interpreter. "I'm not .
sad. I don 'I think it will affect iny
type of game. You win games, you
lose games."
Later, after further questioning,
he said, simply: "Tonight, Ilost."
In the only two Qther National
League game11 played Monday
night, Montreal edged San Diego 3-2
in 10 innings and San Francisco

defeated the New YorkMets 3-l.
single off Gary Lucas, and Andrew
The loas erided Los Angeles' win- Dawson hit a ground-rule double to
ning streak at seven games and left left, putting men on seeond and third
Valenzuela tied with Dave "Boo" for White .
Ferris for what is believed to be the
The Padres erased a ~ Montreal
most season-opening ·winS in a row lead with a run in the eighth on an
ever for a rookie. Ferris won his first RBI single by Juan Bonilla and
eight! or the Boston Red Sox in JM:i. · another in the ninth on Luis
Valenzuellj gave up just three hits Salazar's run-scoring hit.
before leaving, but two walks in the
WOOdy ·Fryman, 3-1, was the winfourth inning hurt him. Schmidt's ner In relief of Scott Sanderson.
homer came with two out In the first,
Giaall3, Meta 1
and Valenzuela retired the next
Jack Clark hit two home runs, and
seven batters before walldng Pete Allen Ripley pitched eight strong inRose and Schmidt to start the fourth nings as San Francisco dealt New
inning.
York Its eighth straight loss.
Expos 3, Padres 2
Ripley yielded only a solo homer
Jerry White, a late-inning defen- to Joel Youngblood in the eighth and
sive replacement, drove in the win- left in favor of Greg Minton after
ning run in the loth Inning with a walking Mike Jorgenson to lead off
sacrifice fly as Montreal won only its the ninth.
third game in the past 11 .
Darrell Evans also homered for
Rodney Scott led off the loth with a the Giants.

Gossage· records another Y,ankee save

;

i

'·

Grnt!ral Mauger

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.

•

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The Daily Sentinel

Assls&amp;ant Publls her/Cor~troller

.

.Valenzuela bows to Phillies

derstood? And that goes lor the
rhubarb, too.
"Sergeant, why do these com
-stalks look so sick?"
"I don't know, sir. I've tried to get
them to !lralghten up, but they keep
flopping over."
"Maybe they could use a Uttle
discipline. Perhaps if we tie them to
a stick lor a week, they'D know how
to stand at attention."
"But that's cruel and unuaual
punishment."
· "It's nothing compared to what
. they'll face when they go up against
the corn boref. I'm trying to save
thol!e plants' lives, and we can't do
that by coddling them. Tie 'em up,
and that's an order."
"Yea, air."
"Why do these new wu beans loot
sosallow?"
.
"I don't know, air. I think they've
been high on nitrogen."
"They're all zonked out From
now on, 110 one gets any nitrosen untll you check with me. ~ me tell
you wu beans aornetldng, and hear

•
By Associated Press
_ _ You reaDy have to hand it to Goose
- - Gossage.
· That's what the New York
Yankees usually do in tight
situations - and he rarely disappoints them.
For the 11th time this season, the
Yankees' great relief pitcher came
out of the bullpen to preserve a victory, this time a 2-1 decision over the
Kansas City Royals Monday night.
That kept Gossage's relief record
spotless this season. He has made
two Other appearances in 1981,
. gaining a victory in one, while
having no decision in the other.
Gossage has aUowed just eight
hits and one run in 192-3 innings of
work and owns a glittering 0.46 earned run average.
In other American League action,
it was Baltimore 5, Oakland 1;

Chicago 7, Toronto 2; California 7, .
Cleveland I; Boston 8, Seattle 5 and
Texas !3, Detroit 5.
Dave Winfield and Reggie
Jackson, who was celebrating his
.35th l&gt;irthday, opened the silth
against Paul Splittorlf, who was
credited with the loss.
Orioles 5, Orioles 1
Scott McGregor aUowed juSt three
hils - all by Rickey Henderson - as
he pitched Baltimore over Oakland.
Mark Belanger and Ken Singleton
drove in two runs apiece for the
Orioles.
It was the silth consecutive triumph for the Orioles, who have won 15
of their last 18, and the fifth straight
defeatforthe A's.
White Sox 7, Blue Jays 2
Greg Lozinski enjoyed his finest
day since donning a White Sox

un11orm, hitting two home runs and
driving In five runs as Chicago
downed Toronto. Luzinski, raising
his season RBI total to 13, became
the first White Sox player to drive in
five runs in a game this season.
Steve Trout, 3-1, limited the Blue
Jays to five hits over seven Innings
and struck out seven to,tie a career
high. Ed Farmer and Lamarr Hoyt
finished up for Chicago.
Angels 7, Indians 2
Brian Downing's twC).run single
capped a three-run silth inning and
helped California beat Cleveland .
The Angels started the silth with
bunt singles by Rod Carew and Rick
Burleson. Dan Ford's bunt moved
them to second and third, and, after
a walk to Fred Lynn, Don Baylor's
sacrifice fly put the Angeup
Downing's clln,ehing single.

. NEW YORK (AP) - ()Ily !0 days parently, littie progress was made
remain before the threatened at that session, and Grebey and
basehaU strike, but (ederal mediator Miller both deciiMd to dtscuss the
.. Kenneth Moffett, for one, hasn't meeting.
. given up.
The players have threatened to
Moffett, acting head of the strike May 29 over the issue of free
· Federal Mediation and Conciliation agent compensation, the sole issue
Service, has caUed negotiators for left unresolved in last year's conboth sides to a meeting today at the tract settlement. In February, the
offices Of Ray Grebey, executive owners implemented a plan which
·director of the Player Relations entitles a club losing a "ranking"
Committee. Tbe session was free agent to a veteran player as
scheduled to begin at 2 p.m., EDT.
compensation, and 10 days later the
Grebey, chief negotiatior for the players set their strike deadline.
· owners, and Marvin Miller, haad of
Under last year's contract
the Major League BasehaU Players agreement, the players have until
Association, met with Moffett for · June I to exercise their option to
·more than two hours May II. Ap- strike.

Earlier this month, the players'
union asked the National Labor
Relations Board to cite the owners
for failing to bargain. The MLBPA
says that since the owners have contended that free agent signings have
created a financial hardship for
them, they want the NLRB to order
the owners to open their books to
examination by the players' union.
The complaint also asked for an
extension of the June 1 strike
deadline should the financial information be dtsclosed.
But on Monday, Grebey issued a
statement denying that the owners
had ever claimed that free agency
was causing them financial

problems and saying there should he
no need for any financial
dtsciosures.
"The sole issue In the current
negotiations is limited to the clubs'
plan for replacement player personnel for those clubs which in the
future may lose 'ranking' free agents," said Grebey. "This subject doe!!
not involve club finances and the
clubs' position in bargaining is not,
and has not been, motivated by a
lack of financial capacity.''
A decision on the unfair labor
charge is expected by the beginning
of next week. Investigators from the
NLRB's regional office here have
already interviewed both sides.

:Endurance comes back to Moskau
CINCINNATI (AP) - Bit by bit,
endurance is coming back to Cin·
·cinnati Reds pitcher Paul Moskau
.following surgery last year.
: "Alter I get loose, I'm thowing
'without pain," said the righthander,
:who has been relegated to the bull
jlen while making his comeback
from shoulder surgery.
In his last six games, over four

weeks and 13 I.J innings, Moskau
has held opponents scoreless and
allowed only eight hits. He is 1.0 with
a 3.00 earned run average and has
onesave.
..
" It's a relief. Now I know I'm all
right. It just takes me a little bit
longer than Tom Hume, Doug Bair
and Joe Price to warm up. I just
can't go out there now and throw 10

or 12 (warmup) pitches and be
ready. The thing that wiU bring my
arm around now is work and warm
'!'eather," Moskau said.
His longest outing has been 3 2-3
innings, He said Dr. Frank Jobe, a
Los Angeles orthopedic surgeon,
told him endurance would be the last
thing to come back.
"I think I'm capable of pitching

six Innings, five or six Innings, right
now. The only thing tht would keep
me from doing that is if I threw a
great amount of pitches early (in a
game). But I have every expectation
of being able to throw nine, and
that's not in the distant future
either," Moskau said.
Tom Seaver, 4-1, tries for his fourth complete game today when he
faces the Cubs's Rick Reuschel, 1-4,
in the opener of a three-glplle series
at Chicago.
The Reds have won six games in a
row, sweeping the Cubs at Cincinnati and the Pirates at Pittsburgh.

'

Scramble set Thursday

with potatoes. It's a tqh UU!e
and It doMn'l mind
wallowln&amp; In the dirt. ..
"What's W1'0IIfl with thla head of

veplable

A two-man team scramble golf
tournament will be held at I p.m.
Thursday at the Jayrnar Golf Course. 1be tournament is being sponsored by the Royal Crown Botuing
Co. and proceeds will go to the Meigs
County Heart Fund. Participants
can register when they reach the

lettuce?"

· "It '11'11 1IIIWlded by an 1m1y
worm In the trenches and doesn't
want to gi'O'II' any more.''
"II's not lick. Il'sllllllncerlnc. I
far."
CID'IIItand a yellow head of leltuce.
"WeD, at least we have IOIIlething: Our vegetables are out there living
in this garden we can count on. Give· their all for ~. and this Utile
them an extra shovelful of topBollu coward jllllt 1111 iD Ita bed faking
a reward. Where are the eggplan- run.. Well, I 'won't have ).t. DO
ts?"
YOU HEAR ME? I WON'T HAVE
IT! Tlke that, you mllerable e&amp;cuae
"Dead, sir."
lora Iliad."
"Dead! How the heU did they
"Sir, you lllapped It In the face."
ljle?"
"1'1llll'l eudly .m.t It needed. If
"The early frost got them, air. It'I ""' coddle U.. rotten llirken, we
aU In my report."
haft anytiEc to est lhla IUJDo
"Oh, well, it's no greatlou. I don't mer at alL"
'

Rangers 13, Tigers 5
Pat Putnam batted in four runs
with a homer, single and double,
leading Texas over Detroit. After
Putnam hit his fourth homer of the
year in the second inning to tie the
game at I·I, he capped a three-run
raUy in the third with an RBI single
to help the Rangers take a 4-1 lead
against Dan Petry, 1-3.
The Rangers·extended their lead
to 11.;3 with a seven-run sixth iMing
keyed by Putnam's twC).run double.

·Federal mediator hasn't given up

me loud and clear. I didii't even' know too many ptiople who llke egg:
want you in my garden. I accepted plants. We can alwaya fill out the
you against my better 'judgment. rank&amp; with cucumben. How are the
But since you're here, you're going potatoes dcM«?"
to play by my rules or else wind up iD . "They're a great young crop, air.
the compost heap. I want your pods But then we never have bad ll'ouble

polished every morning, so I can see'
my face in them. I want you tough on
the outside and tender on the lnalde.
Do you read me? I SAID, DO YOU
READ ME? ... Your scraggy plants
give all wax beans a bad name.
"What do we have over here,
Sergeant?"
"Carrots, sir. Off the record, they1
haven't cau.sed us any trouble so'

Red Sox 8, Mariners 5
Dave Stapleton keyed a three-run
eighth inning with a tie-breaking
double, lifting Boston over Seatue.
With the score tied :&gt;-5, Carl Yastrzemskl started the Boston eighth
with a pinch walk off Dick Drago, I·
2, and gave way to pinch runner
Rick Miller.

VALENZUELA STYLE - Dodger pitcher Fernando Valenzuela
demonstrates his pitching style during Monday's game against the
Philadelphia PhilUes at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles. Undefeated in
eight major-league starts ging into the game, Valenzuela was handed his
first loss as tbe Phillies defeated the Dodgers, &lt;HJ. Valenz uela left the
game in the seventh inning. (AP Laserphotol .

•••
•• ••
••

•••••

•• ••
••• •••

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD
AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST
w L Pel. GB
Baltimore
20 11
.61 5 Cleveland
IS 10
.613
I ,,
New York
20 11
.183
Milwauket
17 t5
.531
Boston
17 16
. 51~
Delr&lt;&gt;it
16 18
.m 5"
Toronto
11 :!S
.306 IJI"l
WEST
Oakland
:!S 13
.6511
. ~76
Teu:s
19 )I
Chicago
18 II
.563
California
20
5
.5!5
Minnesota
11 22
.333 II~~
11 Zl
.32-1 12
SeatUe
.l2l 11
Kansas City
9 19
Momlay's Ganwti
Chicago 7. Toronto 2
Boston a, Seattle $

"

•'"

,.,

•

"

Atlant.a 1 NieKro 2·11 at Pittsburgh fBi I&gt;by 1-21. in\
iiOU!i! Oil 1Sutton :H i at St.LouL'i jShir·
il'Y '-1 I.
Muntre"'l I GUlllthon 1·3 1 at Sao Oit!f.JO
I WJ St!

'"'

1-31,

'"' Huthven

Ptuladt!l~hJa

les 1Welr

New

1

2- I J, 1n1

York I Sc_•tJl t 1·3 1

!Blue l-31

I !I I

5-1 ' at Los Ange-

" s. ..

Frant•tsco

Wl:duesdafs Goml'S
Chicago
New Vorl&lt; ot San Pratl..:tst.·Q
At\anlll ol Pitl~ burgh ,
HOU!itOn at S l.( ,(lU I ~ . 1 Il l
M11ntreal at Sun Dwgu,
Pll ilcnle\phtii ol Los An!;e\e ~ .
Clncinnati

"

'"'

'" '"

Baltimore 5, Oakhwd l
Culi fomia 7, Cleveland 2
New York 2, Kansas City I

Texas 13, Detroit 5
Olly games !lCheduled
Tuelda)''l Games
Scattlt (PaiTOlt 1·2) ot Bo:stoo 1Tannna

In)
Oitklafld (Norris 6-1 )
!Flanagan 4-31, lnl
Chicago (Barrios 1-21 at
cy 1-3), ( n)
California (Za hn ~3 )
tSplllntr (I.(J J, 1nJ
Kansas City (Gale 1·3)

~ 1.

at

Baltimort!

Toronto fCianat

531 JACKSON P1KE Rt 35 WEST

Phone 446· .524

Cleveland

at New York

(May 6-2 ), (n )

Tens ( Medich !l-2) at Detroit i Schatz e.
der 1·21. In)

at Milwaukee

Minne!Wta (ArTU)'o 2-21
(Caldwell 3·•0, (n)

Wtd.atsday'a G amt~~~
Oakland at Boston, (n)
California at Baltimore, 1nl
Chicago at Toronto, (n l
Seattl e at Cleveland. fnl
Texas at Detroit, !n)
Kansas Cit)· 111 New York, (n\
Minnesota at Milwaukee, {n)

NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST
L

W

St.LOuis
Philadelphia

19
22

Montreal
Pitt..bw-gh

IJ

19

l:i

12

16

New York

Pel GB
.679
.629
'-.!
.059
.429

3
7

8

23

;

2S

.2!!8
.167

121..:!
15

WEST
2fi

10

.722

-

&lt;llicago

l.1ll Angeles
Cincinnati
Atlanta
San Frarx:isco
Houston
San Diego

9

20 H
.56.1
~
13 16
.529
1
3J 19
.513
7~
18 lll
.500
8
14 ZJ
.378 121,-z
MODday'• Games
Montreal 3, San Die~o 2, 10 innings
Philadelphia 4, Los Ar\Rtles 0
San Franct.sco 3, New York 1
Only 11ames scheduled
Tuelday'• G1mes
Cincinnati (Sea ver f.. I) at Chi cago
(Retta&lt;hel 1~ 1

STARTS FRIDAY
I . Legend 01 th e Lone Ranger

2. Four Seasons
l. Tess

course.
MARAUDER RESERYES-Members ci tbe MeJ&amp;I reserve buebei1

~ were, lnlot row - Georae Hobloa, Fred Colbam, Dam! JeoltiDa,
Seott Harrlloa, Back row - Brlaa Will, Cbrta Burdette, Randy Stewart
Al!tlll ICIDI, and Nick Rlgp. Tbe Uttle Marauden were coached by Bru~

wo-.

HEARING TESTS SET
For Pomeroy, Ohio

ELECTRONIC

-·t.

.
HEARING TESTS

tHURSDAY,
MAY 21, 1981

9 A.M. TO
12 NOON
'.

Wllt'BE Given By

TOday is Tuesday, May 19, the !39th day of198!. There are :lAII days left
in the year.
·
Today's high!JghtiDblstory:
On May 19, the 130 ihipa Of the Spanish Annada llalled from U.bon,
Portugal to attsck England.
On this date:
In 1536, Anne Boleyn, the second queen ci England's Henry vm was
beheaded.
.
In 1849, England
declared a Commonwealth.
· In 1'192, RUBSia invaded Poland.
In liN.'!, Britain's Prime Minister Wm.ton Churcbtlladdresled the u.s.
Ccqress and pledged full British IUpporlin the war agailllt Japan.
In 11HS, more than 400 U.S. Superfortresa bomben attacked Toky~
during World War U.

H. Wfllla'm Matti"ll¥

I

-~

WANT TO SAVE ON HOMEOWNERS
INSURANc£! JOIN US.
We have dlat-e-quote service for homeowners. Call us. Ask about
·; C:~refUI homeowners rates. Often we can save the perfect
I\OmeoWnor monev for the same coverage he has now. And will
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Jiroinptly alid firmly . .
We have a lot to offer.
th9U9htful · , ..-opie

.."

~· I'(OVER
·ll"'·
TAtK
·. ,tWtTH .US.

~
Reuier-BroRtJn Insurance Service

wu

"You Don't Buy A Policy,
You Hire An Agent''
214 Main St.
992-5130
---·-- . --

--

. '

Ohio

�•

'
Ohio

Food coop reorgarzizes

Television
•

nie Melia County Food Co-op, in 19'19. NeXt t&lt;idlf oi-diir Is due at the. · 200 words, encourage more creative •

operation by tl)e County CoWJcll on ·
Mlnlstries of the Meigs CoWlty
Unlted Methodlst Churclles since
1979, has been reorganized.
Meeting Monday night at the Jop. ·
pa United MethOdist Church near :
Reedsville, the Rev. Robert Robin- '
son, social concerns chairperson, in- ·
traduced Vernon Nease, new ·

:Senlor Citizens Center on May 21
.with delivery slated for May 28.
' Reporting for the youth com,mltlee, th Rev. Mart Flynll announced the outcome of the Bible
bowl held recently at Alfred. He
said that the next bowl for the youth
'will be held June 21 at the Mor:nlngatar Unlted Methodlst Church at
executlve~oroftheFood~. 12 p.m. The quiz wlll be on the Book
Other officers elected by the Board of Genesis.
Quiz guides are
of Directors are Mrs. Mildred lhle, · 1•available though the Rev. Mr. Flynn
membership director; Mrs. Allee : jor the Parish office. All youth
Wamsley, financial director; Mrs. . :groUQS planning to participate
Pauline Roush, publicity director, ' ·should notify the commitlee.
and Herbert Shields, transportation . ' The Rev. Florence Smith,
director.
evangelism coordinator, has comThe membership has adopted a , monica ted with the evangelist, the
constitution and chose a Board of ! Rev. J8111es Bondourant, who Is
Directors which includes an ad-. iavallable for the county, Aug. 23-29.
visory conunitlee composed of the 'The suggestion wBB made to have
director of the Meigs Cooperative :services in each cluster.
One
Parish, the executive director of the ,evening would also Include a
Meigs County Senior Citizens, and ' ,fellowship dinner and the other a
the COWlty chairperson, social con- 'workshop on practical evangelism.
cerns conunitlee of the CoWJty Coun- ,The actual schedule wlll be worked
cil.
out under the BBpices of the
Policies recently adopted by the evangelism commitlee.
Board of Directors include, a monThe Rev. Mr. ThomBB distributed
thly bulk order, with staple items various printed materials pertaining
every other week, all orders to Mrs. to effective church ommunicatlons.
Wamsley at the Senior Citizens Cen- .The conunittee offered seven
ter in Pomeroy, expenses for tran- •proposals for review:
an exsportation to come from the food co- ·perimental Contact using a changed
op itself. Membership fees were set format for three months, a firm
as $3 for those over 60 arid $5 for editorial hand in weeding oqt items
. those Wlder60 up to Jan. 1, 1982 after which aren't "news", encourage
which a new year will begin. The 1non-reporting churches to report, in·
food co-op year will theresfter coin- elude special events or activities .
cide with the calendar year.
pages, devise guidelines for better,
The CoWJty Council voted ap- . communication in the local
preciation to Harold Sauer who has newspapers, limit Contact items to
served as food co-op treasurer since

7:00

CHESTER-"Sing Thankfully to
God" was the title for the program
at the recent meeting of the Chester
United Methodist Women held at the
church.
Mrs. Ethel Orr and Mrs. Clarice
Allen were leaders for an impressive
program which emphasized how the
singing of a hymn Is an exercise in
loving God.
The program opened with group
singing, ''He Keeps Me Singing" and
"In Christ There is No East or West"
accompanied by Mrs. Allen at the
piano. Mrs. Orr invited those
present to participate In the
program by telling a favorite hymn,
after which verses were SWig by the
group.
In remembrance of Mother's Day,
Mrs. Orr gave a reading, "A
Mother." Mrs. Allen played and
sang "Just a Faded Flower." A
table setting of a white flower and
candle was used at the altar In
memory of a faithful member,
Mabel Van Meter. Mrs. Orr closed

IllY DIOAII: Ml5-5 WARRICK !

AND MAY I ADD·· WHAT A

HOW GRACIOU5 OF YOU TO
MEE'T MIS AT THE AIRPORT~

EYE-CATCHIN\:1 THOUGH
THEY ARe--YOUR PR!i:55

PtL/IJHTFUL FURPflt15E-·

PHOT05 HARD~Y PRf:PARe

5ECIJ.I(; YOU FO!t Ti-110
FIR:5T TIME IN PER:50m

ON!! FOR 5-UCH BfltEIITH·
TJ/K/N6 LOVELINE55!
'

WINNERS - Wbmera of lbe decorated bite contest
beld Friday In SyraCIIIe, foDowiJJg a parade tbroagb
Iowa, were (left lo rlgbt) Chris Wolfe, Scott aud Todd

Llale aad Mart Allea. 'l'be et'ellt WBIIIJIOIIBOred by lbe
Syraflll!e-Mfllenville Baseball AsaoclaUon. All wJu.
nen received a $5 prize.

BORN LOSER

Girl Scout Diary

Evangelists to speak

draw remarkable new insight!
into their work. (Cioaed·

-

- .

-

...

SYRACUSE - k flOO donation
WBB made to the SyraCIIIIe ~
Department for help In inlllalling
playground equipment during a
recent meeting of the SyraCIIIIe PTO.
Other donations included flO (o
each of the clas&amp;es which had' not
won a room count dlll'inl the year,
and t3l to the school cook to buy kltchenltema.
Sharon Stewart ,presided at the
meeting during which time field day
activities were .planned. Field Day
wlll be held May 29 at 9:30 p.m. and
the PTO will provide refreshments ·
for the children in the afternoon. An
awards day has been planned for
June 3 at 9 a.m., that being the last-•
'

i

Captioned: U.S.A.) (60mlna.l
® PLYMPTON: DID YOU
HEAR THE ONE ABOUT ...
8:30 CD GOOD NEWS
(l)ll})OILAVERNEANDSHIALEV The comical combination
oflaverne 'etinearandwooden
voice knocks them dead when
sh e harmonizes iA song with
Shirley and the gang after aome
musical lessons from Carmine.

8:58 CD CBN UPDATE NEWS
9:00 I])I IC!J HILLSTIIEETBLUES
The firat warm spell of the year
keeps the copsonthehill busier
than ever, as Captain Furillo
sees a racist narcotics officer
investigated lor a auspicious
shJoting , Hill and Renko baby sit lor a neglectful mother, bd
LaRue's drinking jeopardlzea
Belker' s lile. (2 hrs .)

ALLEYOOP
IT'S -mE MESSENGER MORE OF 'EM? Gl&gt;l&gt;F~! THOSE
AGAIN,PET... WITH
Tl-IINGS ARE GETIIN' T'BE ,_,
MORE MEMOS I=OR 'IOU!
DANG NUISMICE!

CD 700CLUB

YE'AH! NOW WHY
DIDN'T I THINKA
THAT?

(l) 1!21 Ill
THREE'S
COMPANY
CIJ ®) CBS TUESDAY
NIGHT MOVIE 'TheViolalionOf

a

Thanks fer

Am.J time,
sittin' Rover. Mrs.Bump!

dear!

Ienjo4

If som'thin' I .. .I11 bemovin'Rover
is work in' on
t' a rnore infleckual

havinq
hirn!

work out ...

envir'mint!

FAMILy CLINIC

ALLERGY AND DI-MATOLOGY .

What Is Psoriasis?
A chronic lkln,dlseall8 that alfectasome B million

.. . ' ""

~le

country.

or

day iCiiOOC ·-It wu noted that the teet.eMotters
·' have '-t inl&amp;alled llld the merry.
go-round wlll be inltllled later this
year.
~
·
Meetings of the PTO were
changed from the second Tuesday to
the second Thursday 11 eilch month.
Cindy Wolfe Ia to be ll)lOIIIOI'ed bY the
PTO for baton lellonlat the school,
. II Will reported that several balll
were received through the Clmpbell
Soup 'label redempUGn. The project
wlll be _continued by tbe ways and
meaJlll commltlee.
Room count wu .won by the third
grade. Refreshments were served
by the teacherl.
.

.r

,.

In this
•

What CauMS l'lorfllllt
.
No on~ knowa. Skin Injury, emo1101111 lfrMa ant1101111 'torma Of
Infection• are said to trigger Its*''""""'"'·
Wllo Geta Plorlnllt .
•
.
Men and women In equel nvmbera at eny • · IIIII 11101t'iftwt
bet wNn the 8111 II IS n u, Pu liP II hlllilln dlegn I lid fer 1M
first time In l*llllte(ICI¥..-.• . ltll•.trlk-. clllldlilll. Abilut
150,000 !!IW ca•of .1111!'11111-d~Hch yettr.
· II l'lorlllil Cantlllt 11J.
No.
.
What Dots Plorllela Look Llbt
It eppHrs •• •11-y lkln petcha, oftln an lenNI .and llbow11, but
can be found on any prt of 1M body. The pllcl\ft, or pllquea, are
~mpoud of dHcf lkln ~111 whiCh ICCumul.t.ln 1~1.
.
Ia Thtrt a Cure ftr I'Mrllllaf
No, but for many victims of lilt dl-. cantrol 11 PCiillbft. ScN:M
paorlatlcs may have remlil~ o1 the di,MNI for long llfll'lodt of
time. In rare caM110!11etlm11 the d l - may dluppe~~r llllllrely.

DAVID L. ·CARR, D.O. - OFFICE, 675-697
Office
2914 Jac*san

Houn by Appolnlftllfll

Ava.

"
--=---- - - ---------------

'·

·-

ttel"' Pt..llnl,

.
WV

USJO

--~

MARIN KA

A9 AMOPEL
· ~ET HER UP IN
A LUXURIOUE1
APARTMENT 1

I

KN&lt;JW.'

TIPP Y'e ElEEN
GOING 10
HER PI.ACE 1

1ilg Red One" 1880

11

(I) NIGHT GAllERY
C1J DAVEALLENATLARGI
11:28 (1l _!;~UPDATE NEWS
11:30 C2Jti&lt;DTNETOIIIGIITSHOW

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

.'\

BRUSH.

,,

·cum·tf

- ,.

'The Beat of Caraon' Gueata :

.•

Alan Aida, David Brenner.
(!!epeal: 60mlne.l
(I) ROBS BAGLEY SHOW
&lt;Il MOVIE -(ADVENTUII!I
•• "1- "Beneath TtM 12 Mile
Aeef''.1163
C1J (ft) G ABC NEWS NIGIIT·
UNE Anchored by Ted
Koppel.
·
• Cll CBS LATE MDVII!
'COLUMBO: Negativ'e Reac·

BARNEY ,'

l'fSHORE IS RAININ'
-OUTVONDER

PAW!!
·SORKIN'

MONKEY SEE ••
MO~I&lt;EY DO

•

·echo's 2000 Is a MWen
· I !*fOrmer fOr bi:lhJ or

,.

•
I

,

..

, '

~ ~:2:£!!:~=-....:..ll....:::=~~=::....:J.

._

I

IT'S A LOT., 6ETIER .
·THAN BEIN6 OWNEO
Bl{ A PEN 6UIN !

11

CBNI"'OITIIIIPOIIT

I h,.-)iLr-

.

.1 , 2:00 Ill ~VIIW .

C!llll• •WI
lllli•unt

'---rrl; .2:21 ill CIIIIPORTIIIII'ORT

' 2::10 ClliiOSS IAGLIY IIIOW
3:118 Cll C8N II'ORTtiii!I'ORT
' 4:00 (I) 700 CLUB

4:05
, 1:05

Pom.iroy, Ofllo

!VIII -AIIIIG

FAITH
1:31 C1J ATLANTA -VI!I lA·
NIALL· MPLAY Atlanta
8f•v•• ve Ptttlburgh Plrat"

'-'

• 1 5::10

C1J MUlliON IIIPOSIIBLE
C1J RAT PATROL

(I)

ILACICWOOO

,l 1:~ !JlIROTHEIII
L9VI! AM!IIJCAH STYLI_

Front End Allgnment-512.50 Most Pe......,. Cen

.

"

\.

. AQJ72
• J 10 9 2
+A 9 5

EAST
• 953
• K 10 9 5

• 7'

+8 7 6 3

SOUTH
+A Q 107 2
•a 3
tK Q5
+KJI

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South
West

N&lt;1rth

Easl

Obi.

2 NT

Pass
Pass

3t

Pass
Pass
Pass

Pass

Opening lead:+J

ga me. There is nothing to the
play. South has to lose two
hearts and the ace of clu bs.
but makes his 10 tricks.

5 Wiseacre
• Southern
novel
7 The DA is one
(abbr.)
8 Window
section
9 Primped
1% Faux pas
li Am. Rev.
general
%1 Distorted
%Z Command
Z3 Mosque
feature

Yesterday's Alllwer
%4 Lace about
31 Perk up
Z5 Intimate
3% Set
%6 Anklestraight
length robe
35 Pitcher
Z7 Deportment
37 One of a · Z9 Artist
D.C.
hundred
(abbr.)

OOWI'j

1 Bread-biting
giveaway
%Opponent

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Hen's how to work It: :
It

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter olmply 1tands for another. In thie oample A Ia.·
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. SlnRle !etten..
ap01trophes, the length and formation of the words are all·
hin!l. Each day the code letten are different.
:·
CRYPTOQUOTES

THBTYH

VHYXBW

JWTSBDH

RPHU

WBXHY

GF M

(l)

.12:18
. .CllLollt .....,., 1110
1:00 Cll

::~~:::.

606 E. Main - --:-Pii.992-2094

n

TOIIOIIIIOW .
·COAIT·TOOCOAIT GueaiO:
Saari Con nary, f~HEW M · · ·
crelary Joaaph Calllano. (10
mlna.)
· :J2:fl6 (!) IIOYII -lWISTIRII) ••

. PEANUTs
I

portrayer
uEggaped
;14 Rudolph's
' headpiece
! 15 Duck
i 17 Celtic deity
. 18 Wholly
· . 19 Hovel
!0 Daughter
«Cadmus
n For what
reasm?
%!South
African
Z3 Mother (Fr.)
Z5 Deer
MDiminutive
· n ID the center
Z8 Hlll«&lt;llter
. Z8 lAte Duryea
. 30 Highest DOle
. ' 33 Statute
34 Meantime
: :M Qooe aloft
:II Sewed
:II Withdraw
41Elyalum
' 41 Purport
· UWrest

' "~: 011 ~(ft)ttTUI!IDAYMO'IIEOI'
TilE Wl!EK 'Tho Dellaa Cow· · ·
boya Clloerlaadet'l' 1878
1
Stars: Ja•• Seyn~our \ 1111 ' .

. ' '::12::10

WH'I' DO D065 LET
THEMSELVES BE OWNED
81{ PEOPLE?

·u Film SarnBon

CIJ AIC CAPTIONED NIWS
~ MOYII! ·(HORROR) •~!.
"Let'a Scare Jeealc• to
De1Ut" 1171
'

&gt;I

professional use. tts ,
· ClePend•ble 21CC KIORITZ .
, ( engJne·lllas ptentyof' . .
. , pawer fOr cuttlninwfttt
.nylon line, bruShbllcle or
· ' saw toettHIIIde. Felbni.f
· comfortable grtp nana1e 1
ana ShoUlder support
• , ~11-bearlng sw~ I
soncs CIIM Shift

-to Ceremony

g~~ ~::~~~ra: Peter Folk, 1

WET!!

'

-....---~ ·-

(

YE~.

SIGNEt&gt; HER ON

WEST

t6

ACROSS
3 In the least
I Steed
4 Ameche
5 Disney pooch
film role

C1J ll1J a

TOO CLOSE FOR
COMFORT Henry suddenly
finds himself in double jeopardy
when Muriel' a old flame comes
to town, and the dapper mu·
sician not only finds Muriel atilt
attractive , but also seta his
!!,phta on ~ackle . (Repeat)
10:00 llJ TBSEYEHING NEWS
(l) 1!21 •
HART TO HART
Jennifer ' a death acane In a
community play mirrors reality
when her inv olvement with a
promiaing playwright, who succumbs to a apikad cigar, marks
her 101' deolh. (60 mine.)
CIJ SHERLOCKHOLIIIESAND
DR. WATSON
liD NEWS
10:28 (I) CBN UPDATE NEWS
, 10:30 ClliOUND OF TRUMPETS
.
(!) CONSUMER REPORTS
PRESENTS: THE CAR SHOW
Through documentar)l , anima·
tlon and parody, this special
helpaconeumeramekethebeat
chotcae when buying.a car.
C1J INSIDESTORY
I
(l]) TWILIGHT ZONE
10:58 CD CIIN UPDATE NEWS
, 11:oo m•Cil m DCil~ll1l•
NI!WS
(I)
UNANIIOUNCED
(!) MOYII! -(ADVI!NTUREI ••

. 64
t A8 6 3
+Q 10 2

~~-'
by THOMAS JOSEPH

MYSTERY! 'A Caae of

Spirit a' Sergean t Cribb· alnvee·
tigstfon o f a stolen artwork
leads him into the realm of clair·
't'Oyance and seances when he
suspects that a medium is responsible forlhetheh . (Cioaed·
Captioned; U.S.A.) (80 mina.)

9:30

5-19-81

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

Sarah McDavid' 1981 Stars:
Pattt_Ouke Astin, Ned Beatty.

CIJ ill)

NORTH

+ KJ 8 I

' Bobby Jordan, one of the
·very ~players in the late
'50s and early '60s, has a con·
vention named after him. It is
! · a two-notrump call after sec. : ond hand has doubled his
partner's major-suit opening
' to indicate a normal limit
· jump raise with defense
against the opponents.
When you play Jordan your
no rmal jump raise of
. partner's major is used with
what can be described as a
good normal single raise and
' the single raise has a range
. from five to eight points.
Today's hand shows Jordan
: in operation. North has just
about the minimum for the
•Jordan bid. If South merely
! rebid three spades. North
would pass, bul South decides
to make a slight game try. He
bids three clubs. North thinks
his queen-10 of clubs have
increased in value and bids
three diamonds as an acceptance of his partner's game
try.
This extra encouragement
is all South needs. He jumps to

the 1800's, tracing the story at
how the ability to freeze time on
film has enabled scientiatato

r·;w~ehrung::·iiiiiiiiiiiiii--;.~J~~~~~~~~~~

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

By Onrald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

of atill and cine photography in

I

·.

Playing Jordan

mina.)
(}) NOVA 'MovingStiii'Thiafllm
shows the extraordinary work .

I •

I I I I I I XXI )

BRIDGE

a

CfF TH' LIGHT!

Now' arr:~nge the circled lettara lo
the aurprlso ..._, 11 IUQ·
gelled by lhe abo.. cartoon
form

Jumbte Book No. 11, c:cnt8lnlng 110 puz;dn., II 1WIIIIb61for $1.75 poq.ld
trom Jumble, C/o ... MWI~, Box 34, Norwood. N.J. 07141. lnctudt your
,.,.., zip coda •
moko - · poyoblo lo N_...._..

roadside diner beara a remark ·
able resemblance to hlalong
to at mother.
CIJ ®) PALIIIERSTOWN
W.O. riskshiaJife'• savings in a
land speculati on deal after
geologists convince him that
Pa lmerstown is about to
become an oil boom town. (60

WHAT ARE Y' HAH61N' BACIL
FOR?! I'M TUR.HIH'

NIGHT.

· Yeaiefday 'ol Jumbleo: SOOTY CLUCK JACKET ENOUGH
Anower: Whallho lady boxer was, absolutely!.
A KNOCKOUT

is knocked for a loop when he
discovers that a waitreaaln a

· 0' YA HEAit ME, SANDY?

Vl€&gt;1011.1 A1"

(Anowero tomorrow)

"DHttl On The Hlte't 1978

Grover going home

Need help decoriJting .

. .wwer~~ere: A (

C1Jil1Je HAPPY DAYSFonzio

1

HEL.I/ TO . INIP~OVE'

[I J I [J

CD ORAL ROBERTS
C!l MOVIE ·(MYSTERY) ••,~!.

sentinel
Social Calendar-.

JI

lLAHROY~

tlmate hoapttal. (Repeat; 60
mine.)

Pictures available

Syracuse firemen
receive donation

·' _ ....., ...

I r)

begins an investigation that
leads him to a group of attracu...enuraesataaupPoaedtyleui·

~S. i&gt;lcl~_;j~~~"Zelt

.

.:;.:r.o:.:,.-

ill II PM MAGAZINE

theaaheaofOeputyPerkintand

Contribution made

'unet.

Have some more carrots!
\

forllrJ
$

PROGRAMIIIIHG
UNANNOUIICI!D
&lt;Il ALL IN THE FA..LY
(l) ll})ll) FAMILY FEUD
.
crJ
PROGRAM UNAMNOUNCED
'Buffalo
of
Botewana'
GCIJ TICTACDOUGH
C1J &lt;Ill MACNEII,-LEHIIER
REPORT
®)NEWS
7:30 (l). BULLSEYE
&lt;Il BASEBAll Atlanta Bra•••
va Pittsburgh Pirates
&lt;Illl C1J JOKER'S WILD
(!) HOLLYWOOO SQUARES
CIJ(j]) DICKCAVEnSHOW
®)
RICHARD SIMMONS
SHOW
1!21 G FACE THE MUSIC
7:118 CD CBN UPDATE NEWS
8:00 &lt;DIIC!l LOBOLoborocelvoa

CAPTAIN EASY

Sallsbury Troop 1100
be entered in the Meigs County Fair
Plaques for historical places in hUB been set for &amp;lturday, JWJe Z1 in
Meigs CoWJty have been made by the 4-H building on the Meigs CoWJty
the members of Salisbury Troop FairgroundS.
THURSDAY
1100.
ROCK
SPRINGS BETTER
Points of judging to be considered
The places to be marked are by the . panel of six judges are HEALTH CLUB, 1:15 p.m. at the
MOW!! ctmetery, the }'omeroy originality, creativity, work· home of Mrs. Susie Pullins. Mrs.
Historical District, the Pomeroy manship, attractive appearance, Lottie Leonard will have the
Public Library, Olester Court honesty of materia~ and cOn- program and Mrs. Wilmetta
House, Reed's Indian Mound, struction durable enough for the · Leifheit, the contest.
William H. Grant's house, Chester d~gneduse.
MIDpl.l;PORT CHILD CON·
Academy and Buffington Island
SERVATION
LEAGUE, 7:30p.m.,
Judging for Brownies will begin at
MOWit.
at
the
home
of Peggy Harris.
9 a.m. for juniors at 10 a.m. and for
· Sally Radford presided at the cadet and senior scouts, 11 a.m.
Devotions by Tonda Seidenable.
meeting with attendance being
Travelling prize by Susie Abbott,
The categories for exhibit by in·
taken by Angie Sloan. Dues were dividuals are the world of wei! being,
with Chris Layh, Meigs Community
collected by Lisa Pullins.
School,
BB speaker. Susie Sou!sby,
the world of people, the world «
Middleport
Helen
Blackston
and Eloise White .
today and tomorrow, the world of
Junior Troop 1039
will
be
hostesses.
the arts, and the world of the out.of·
Pl8118 for an overnight at Camp doors.
WILLING WORKERS CLASS, En- ·
Rotan near Athens were made when
terprise United Methodist Church, :
smooth, to the patieil(.oe - ilnd un- -Elizabeth Thompson, sang a song. . the Middleport Junior Troop met
7:30p.m., at the home of Mrs. Agnes:
derstanding of the Christian life, lip- Recognized were Mrs. f:lelen with Mrs. Joy Clark, leader, last
Dixon.
stick, with its color, to the kindness Reynolds, the oldest mother; Mrs. week.
and cheerfulness of a happy David Carsey, the yOWigest mother,
The girls discussed exhibits for the
Acontribution was made to the
r;~;;;;;;~~iii•..Christian, and the blending of blush and Mrs. Jack Coleman, the Meigs County Fair with Mrs. Clark . firemen on their new truck when the II
to the fellowship of Christians, one youngest grandmother.
explaining the various categories Ladles Auxiliary of the Orange
Volunteer Fire Department met
with another.
Approximately 70 members and and the time schedule for judging.
recently
at the firehouse.
To conclude the program, it was guests attended the banquet served
It WBB also decided that two or
During
the meeting it was also
pointed out that unlike facial make- at tables featuring floral three meetings will be held this sumNOW OPEN FOR
decided
to
send a representative
up, the Christian make-up cannot be arrangements. The programs· and mer. Day camp wBB discussed and It
SF'
RING SEASON
washed off at the end of each day, favors were in the shape of mirrors.
was noted that Harold and Rhea fnrn the Auxiliary to the ned
o
PoHecl
Plants
but Is a continuous way of life. "The Special guests were Etta Mae Ellis, Norris will be the directors, with firemen's meeting to talk about
.
o
Complete
line of bedding
·mirror of evaluation and reflection Leona Martin, Betty Will, Maxine camp to be held July 13-17 at Camp finishing the inside of the firehouse.
plints and hanging
must be used often to remind us that Black, and Josephine Mowery, Mrs. Kiashuta. Day camp fee is $3 for The Auxiliary will furnish the
material,
it
was
decided,
if
the
our Christian life must be clean, Guy Harper thanked all those who scouts, and $9 for non-scouts.
AU DOien.rc
natural and pleUBing in the sight « helped her with the annual affair inJudging of Girl Scout projects to firemen will install it.
HOul'$:
I·
Several fWld raising projects were
God," Mrs. Horky concluded.
eluding the men who assisted in 8erRecitations were given by Mary ving. Group singing of "Bless Be'the
discussed. A cookboOk sale was I~~~!!~~~~~~~
Veterans Memorial
discussed aod members were asked ·~
Beth Stein an Erin Harper. The Tie That Binds" concluded the
Admitted--Pamela Brown, o begin collecting recipies so that a
primary children, Kelly Satterfield, evening.
Langsville; Edith Burton, Pomeroy; decision on whether to compile a
Ma_!LJ!!!th Stein, Erin Harper_and
. Lizzie Andrews, West Columbia; An· cookhonk can be made at the ned
nette Boyd, PomeroY; Ruth Bailey, meeting. Plans were also made for
Pomeroy; Frederick Crow,_ a bUBket of groceries to be awarded
Syracuse; Shirley Tyree, Mid- at a Father's Day dinner planned for
beque at Tuppers Plain recently.
Ridenour Supply donated oil, dl,eport; Clarence Swauger, Mid- June 20 at the firehouse. A cake
walk will be held at that time also.
Trophies were awarded to the first
Hawk's PennzOil, the gaB, and Dan dleport.
Discharged--Bertha
Diehl,
Pledge to the flag and officers'
place winners in each cla!IS,
Smith and Jim Carnahan were anPauline
Derenberger,
Wayne
reports
were given at the meeting
nouncers for the contest.
Gilliand, Georgia Swauger, Iva attended by 11 members and four
The winners were : 1).2 cubic inguests.
ches, Lowell Ridenour, first; T. R. Stewart.
Mrs. Mina Walker and Mrs. Allee
Cullwns, second, and Richard KerCurtis served refreshments. Next
ns, third; 2.!-3.5 cubic inches, Jim
meeting
will be held June 8 at the ·
'Kenny Grover of near Pomeroy is
Hawthorne, first, ~Y Chevalier,
firehouse.
seccnd, and Lowell Ridenour, third; expected to be returned to his Route
witli prayer and scripture from 3.&amp;-4.5 cubic Inches, .Cecil Midkiff, 7 home Saturday following major
Proverb!! 31.
fu-st, Elmer Newell, and Harold open heart surgery at University Sewing club meets
Mrs. Ruth Karr presided at the Young; 4.6-5.5 cubic Inches, Don Hospital in Columbus. His horne ad·
Mrs. Barbara Mullen, Middleport,
.meeting with the 15 members , Cullwns, first, Sam van· Matre, dress is 38124, State Route 7, Long
entertained
members of the Sewpresent reporting 46 shutin calls second, and Rlcharil Leeth, third; Bottom.
Rite-Sewing
Club
it her home Wedduring the month of April. A com- 5.6 and up, John Swartz, first, Jim
nesday
night.
Officers'
reporta wPn• :1
munication WBB read from the Hawthorne, second, and Russ Wells,
given
by
Mrs.
Pandora
Collins and
·women's Division Board of Global third.
Mrs. Ma..Y6'iirlen of uie Meig;' Mrs. Evelyn Gilmore. A game was
Ministries noting that giving in ali
In the 0-4.5 open stock, winners
Unit
of the American Cancer Society ,played with Mrs. Mildred Wella winareUB of missions lncreUBed in 1980.
were J. B. Ridenour, first, Cecil
prize.
The "Spiritual Awakening alld Midkiff, second, and Richard Leeth, , reports that anyone having ning the..
_ She also won the door
robl
·
..
the'
Mr
prize.
un.
wlll host
Prayer" meetings, one held Satur- third, and In the 4.6 and up open P ems m recmvmg tr . Car- June meeting.Gibnore
Mrs. Mullen served
day at Syrscuse and the other to be · stock, the winners were Ralph loon pictures should contact her at dessert course to those named
'held May 21 at the McArthur Stewart, Don Lambert, and J . B. =~e pictures have been put Mrs. Carolyn McDaniel, Mrs. Nettie
' MethOdist Church, were announced. Ridenour. In the modified contest, ... . _____ ,
.
Boyer, Mrs, Flo Strickland, Mrs..
It was noted that an order for vanllla ' the winners were Ralph Stewart, fir·
Lucy White and Mrs. Betty
had been placed and wlll be sold by st, Richard Leeth, second, and Sam
the members.
Van Matre, third.
A call forathelp
to , decorate
the
Mrs. Elizabeth Hayes thanked the
gymnasium
Southern
High SChool
for the annual Racln!l Alumni
Society for the Wy she received at ·
'Easter. Note paper with a picture of
Banquet, to be held Saturday night,
the church may be purchued from · The Cornwell twins, evangelista, hUB been iMued. Anyone wliJing to .
1
the membership committee. A· are now at the Pomeroy Church II help Is Bilked to be at the gym Thi!D' '
•discuM!on was held concerning the Christ through Wednesday.
day and Friday evenlnga at 6 p.m.

ice cream
IIOCial
aad future.
bake sale to
be
held
In the
near
Ned
meeting w111 be held at the church on . .

by Hetlr1 Arnold and lloblae

CD

pastors. .
The schedule for future meetings
,is
1 July !~, Salem Center; Aug. 10,
:.Rock Spnngs; Sepl!4, Sutton; Oct.
12, Forest RWI; Nov. 9, RacineWesleyan, and Dec.!4, Chester. The Rev. Mrs. Smith noted a 10
percent lncreUBe In radio expenses.
The Rev. Mr. ThomUB, parish coor·
dlnator, annoWJced his reslgnation
as parish coordinator but reported
he wlll continue as pasto( of the four
churches he currently serves.
Devotions to open the meeting were
led by Seldon Johnson, newly·
, appointed pastor of the Joppa Chur·
ch. Other churches represented at
the meeting were Apple Grove,
Bethany, Forest Run, Morning Star,
Rutland, Heath, St. Paul, Enterprlse, East Letart, Salem Center
and Long Bottom.

Chester UMW meets,
hymns main topic

EVENING

.

.

ftrl~Nl 11»11 ~THAT SCRAIIILED WORD GAllE

~ ~ ~~$
Unacramble theH lour Jumtllea.
one~ ~each tqUare, to fOrm
lour ordinary WOfda.

1

IIAY 18, 11181

Stages chain saw event
The_Shaae Valley Jaycees staged
a cham saw cutting contest in conjwJCtion with the firemen's bar-

•

VIewmg

use of church publicity by ap,pointing a conununlcatlolis coor1dlnatorfor each congregation.
1 The Rev. Mrs. Smith reported on
the gardenlng project, noting that 40
·fsmllies are participating, up from25 last year. A report on the Unlted
Methodlst Men wss given with ac, tlvitles to Include a corn roast in
i August at Royal Oak Park. and a '
: '11lanksgi\1ng feast In November at
·the new Raclne-Wesh)yan Church.
It WBB noted that there will be no
County Council on Ministries
meeting in June but that there will
be a cOWity·wlde mini-aJnference on
June 28 at the Portland Park, 4 to 7
' p.m. featuring an old-fBBhiOned pic. nlc, a report from the annual· con·
ference and a welcome for new

Mothers, daughters meet
at Presbyterian church
"Make-up of a Christian Woman"
was the theme of the loth annual
mother-daughter banquet held at the
Middleport First United
Presbyterian Church.
Mrs. Carl Horky and Mrs. ThomBB
Rue presented the· program which
compared facial make-up to the
make-up of the Christian life. Mrs.
.Horky compared the foWJdation of
prayer in the Christian life to the
base foundation on the face, noting
that the foundation is the most im·
portant element.
Just as one uses a comb and brush
daily to keep the hair straight, she
said one should read God's word
daily to keep life on the straight and
narrow. She compared eye makeup, used to highlight, soften and

.

MPHE

PZDH

UB

MPHWVHYDHV

MB

OBTE

ZKMHS .

• - QBYXVWJMP
, Ylllscdiy'a Ca)ptuq;Ntt: A SINGLE BREAKER MAY
:.... RI!XEDE; BUI' THE 1'IDE IS EVIDENTLY OOMIN(l

' IN.-MACAULEY

Scents off
WASHINGWN (AP)- When applylng fragrances, IIICt.
u &amp;ei'IIIIOl perfumes, start by spraying your wrtats. Continue behind your ears, inside the elbow, behind the kneea
and on your throat.
The Idea is to spray the wannest parta of your body to
. rei- lhl' 11ce11t faster and make It more noticeable, ado
r; · vises the Aei'OIIOI Pacbglng Council.

·:'.

'•

&gt;-

�Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

May 19,1981

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
I

Meigs re~eives ESEA grant
The Meigs Local School District
Inservlce traming and conhas been notified by the Dtvision of sultation is provided to assist school
PlaMing and EvaluatiOn of the Ohio faculties develop techniques for inState Department of Education that teracting effectively wtth teenage
the distnct has been awarded a Tttle students. "Staff DevelOpment for a
IV..C E.S.E.A. Adoption Grant for Humantsltc School" and
the 1981-82 school year.
" Humamstic Acltvities in the
The Adoption Grant title IS Regular Classroom" help teachers
"Positive Alternatives to Student and students get to know and apSuspensions." The main purpose of preciate each other.
"A Student's School SUl"Vlval
the grant is to provide mtervention
strategies designed to prevent or Course" and "Home SUl"Vlval Courminimize non-prOductive soctal se" help students with problems tn·
behavior of secondary students. In- teract more effectively within thetr
service training and consultation school and environments.
will be provtded to assist the high
These activtt1es effectively reduce
school faculty develop techniques the amount of disruptive behavior;
for mteracting effectively wit)! yet when such behavior does occur,
the students are sent to a tune-out
teenage students.
The Meigs Local School Dtslrtct room tnstead of bemg suspended. In
has been qwte successful m bemg this room the students talk out thetr
awarded Title IV-C Grants and the problems and complete academic
benefits denved for the system's assignments.
Lastly, mdividual and group counstudents through participation mapproved programs has been judged to seling is avatlable for students exbe highly rewarding and productive. periencing serto_us mter-personal
Assistant Supenntendent Dan E. confrontations.
Morris provtdes the followmg
The Project
outline on how the program wtll be
Described
set up and operate to help wtth the
There ts a three-{!ay workshop
problem of school suspensions:
priOr to the start of the school year
Overview of Program
Two of the days involve a core team
" Positive alternatives to student which includes personnel in charge
suspensions" has proven effecl!ve of discipline, guidance counselors,
as a means of unprovmg student the time-out-room workers, two
behavtor m school and of unprovmg teachers and the building prmcipal.
student attitudes toward self, (Also tn attendance, tf possible,
teachers and education. The target should be a psychologist, social
populatton IS students m secondary worker, school board members and
schools.
a couple of interested parents.) The
consultant conducts this traming
Development of the
which emphastzes the philosophy of
ProJ~rBm
"Posttive alternatives to student the program and the mechantcs of
suspensiOns" ts one of three com- unplementatton, m particular the
ponents of the "Puptl Personnel Ser· creatton of the tune-out room.
vtces Demonstration ProJect,"
The third day mvolves the enttre
which was an ESEA Title III faculty The emphasis of this
developmentalprograrnfrorn1971 to training sesston is att!itwareness of a
1974. Dunng 1974, all three com- humamsttc approach to relating to
ponents were vahdated and ap- students. This training IS conducted
proved by the Untied States Ofhce of by either the consultant or the core
Educatton's Jomt Dtsserrunatton team which recetved the tw!&gt;&lt;lay
Revtew Panel
trammg
Intended Outcomes
ImplementatiOn of the prOJect tn·
Mam purpose of " Postttve alter- volves a more humamstic allttude
nattves to student suspensions" ts to by the entire faculty. During the
provide interventton strategtes course of the school year, student
destgned to prevent or rrunimtze behavior should improve as a result
non-productive soctal behaviOr of of the hwnanistic approach by the
secondary students This ts ac- faculty
comphshed through acttvtttes on
Recognizing that not all problems
several levels.
wtll disappear, a tune-out room is

Conservation
awards given

7~-~Y~a~rd~S~a~le~--

,.

2 family yard sa le on Wed
resday May 20 from 10·4.
AI the Cart Weaver
• residence, Rustic Hili~.
Syracuse.
~7-----------------. Garage sale· May 21·22
'DIShes,

........................
.............. .
Announcements

Ground Hog Contest. Firsi
prize: $500.00 cash. Tri·
County Sport Shop, Pl.
Pleasant. Stop In lor
details. 1-304-675·2988.

t.low buying gold and
sliver, old pocket watches,
chains, diamonds, silver
money and coms. Marttn's
~eneral

No trespassing on mY.
property. Trespa!sers will
be prosecuted to full extend
of law Dale Riffle

.san;
a0

The 10,000 meters event wu won
by Chris Parsons of Barboursville,
W. Va. Hill time was 31:53. Here are
the results:
31 1:1, Gary Pari, 32 23, S,.m
Miller, ·u:"!Si" Ron Rowsey, 34·11: Scott
Chris Poraons,

Kibler, !$ 42; Edw1rd Sayre, 31 :41 :
Canon Munny, 36 53 ; Ja~k Bn.non,
36 01 , Ku rt Nu trant, 36 · 2~t Mark
F0&lt;, II 32, Marl! Carter, 11 II, Keluo Collee,

!

(!

n·« : Eir1 Jacuon, 1118, Pat Story, sa 41;

Oovld Flllll&lt;, 39:02; Randy Spahn, 311:011: GOOI'Ie
Marklna, 39 U, Gn:g E,..ln, 39 32, Waller
Perry, 39 11, RObert Kuchaio, 31i II and Jacl
Adklns 10·011
.
Dennls Cottrlli,IO .ti, Jom DoolllU., IO II, J
D
10 II; Bob Hates, «1:311; JOhn
Raneager , IO.tll , MuMcGhet!, IO 17, Herbllartmon, ~I II , Rlchllnl Cyr, 41 :38; Jadle Moore,
tti!O, Tyler Caha_t, 12 22; Jolw! r,..!t 12:%1;
Morris Adltlna1 ~: "': John Oldllom, IJ.D, ICeilh
McGuire, 12:.,; Cleon Fowler:J tl:lll; Marl!
Rouott.t:tt7, RobDo.ts, t:t rn, ......,Bat..hy,

J-.

43:11; llovollluher, t:t:t7,

Raymoad

1 For Sale
I Announcement
I For Rent

18.-=======

19 .•_ _ _ _ __
20.

21 . _ _ _ _ __

22.=======
23

1

2. _ _ _ ___;_ ' 24. _ _ _ _ __

25. _ _ _ _ __
26. _ _ _ _..__

3.
4·

27.· ~~

Uevlnl.

43 Z!ondC.D Mc!nlyn,t:l3'1
Ronokl Browninl, t:l:ll; Tom Hanlo, U II;
Campbell Neol, 43_:~; Rod Pfonc:uff, 44:11; Ken
Anderom, « tl; ltlcllllrd Balmer, t1 1!, tcollh
Bartlmul,,l$ It, E4Swllher, t1 II, Slo1lenGrU·
filh. til 00, Pow Dorvyak, 18 II, BW TIUlo,
tll.34; Palrict Boyher1 tll:ll; Glll!lblo Grant,
tll·ll; VOila Balmor, 47 rtl; Doag Wlllll.-,
17.10, Gordon Splete, t7 17, Jery Call, 4117,
Jerry Sigmon, ti:GII; T11omoa Smith. 41:11 and
Fred Rlh!y tl U
Rooe Babiilr. t1 •: Jolw! Baylll, Jr., t1 st,
Rob Allen, 41· •~ Sit lllrder, ft :l&amp;; JIJJ"'ee
Wq,gmor, II. I!; Amy Carter, 10 a ; Nonq
Kohletlel', 60:44; Jeff W1rd, ll :OG; Dlvtcl
Evona, II II , Bob Polcyn, ll:IS; flobbr Jolwo1011, 11 :47; Amokl SIUier, 11.10; Ron Evan~,
62 tl; Ronold Hannor1, Ill: II; Tom Donner,
!! 11,_Gincor Olltr, lt.H7, Stan Evono, It 01,
Tilm ,.,...,., 14:11 and Gtom Marlllns, M:11.
Art Lund, 04.41, Chort.. ilolror, 111·01; Marl!
Allen, 111:11: Eileen GGnlon, ll.lll, Jolon Hood,
111,38; Pete Toothoktr,l7:!0; a.. Splete, 17:47:
'Sheila Whiteley, 1'1-61; J""'1 ........ 11:411;
l"'!tborti Adorns, 1110; Gllrrille Solllor, 10:11;
Gory Fa"'"IQi:h, a • : Alt. llordorL'N:a;

17. _ _ _ _ _..._

7.
8

~ANNOUNCEMENTS '
l-4rdetTtt•••

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

.......

7- Yanlhlt

t-Wontod toBIIY

........

!1-HtiiiJWI..._.
11- llfMMIIW"'flll
11-I"IYr•IKI

lt-I•&amp;MII Trlllllftl
11-ldltett lftltntCflM

· - .......

...,.........,
Opp

.......,...... ........
11-ll'ttsfw ....

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......... .

;

letvkn .

,,_................
rt-Y... &amp;4w,o .
rl?11cfdll
,...
....
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1-lf......... ;,,.,
t-MelillleMIIMI

......
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1
........
,.....,.,
,._
.,.
,,_L.m. Ac,..,.

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

~""p

M-IMt ••tate WHIM

..•
...........
..............
1 illiiYICII'

:11-IMtwt

·
-- ··-·--"··1

DHdllnet l . ,

"""*"'

D'Usfffr

..

,,

'

:

R•t" •nd Othtr lnform•tfon
t

11Wd•UMer

I

I

...,.

.....
...,.

1

,.

.. ,..

c-r.

•
1

-~,

•.•

t.ll

1M
.... .

Lll

....... _......_,._~·--·--··
i

.... ,...... .......... URI

· · · .c.........

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I'

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. . . . ,,.. . ..... - . . . . .,:
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-·-. . -,...------·-··-·--·--·-·""·-·-··'!1 L-~--~~--~~~~~~~
.
_____
'
- ----- -·-------

Sonoh11&gt;omooa. 7t :lhndllorlonohlln, n :ll.

_....__,_

INI(.II

-·--~·

garage and cement car·

111,500.00.

ENTERPRISE RD. &lt; 11ft A lot wllh neat 3
• bedroom nome. good
condlllon. $25,000.00.
tlfALTOR
~ Htnry 1. Cleland, Jr.
'
911-1191
:
AIIOCIATES
'
JNn TNIHI Mt·:IHI
r. ' Do1t1t&amp;R...,T.,_

SERVICE STATION
THIS WIEK'S
SPECIAl.
Insurance
13
31
Homes tor Sate
1N ·
AUTOMOBILE
SURANCE been can· Modified A·lrame with 3
celled? Lost your bedrooms, 2 baths, caroperalor•s license? Phone peted , stone circular
fireplace, spiral stairs,
992·21&lt;13.
uti lily room. Provate. 8
acres.
992-7741.
t8
wanted to Do

Experienced

produce

clerk. lull tome. 2 years ex
penence. Please send
resume to Oa1IY Sentinel.
Box 729·D, Pomeroy, Oh
45769.

Experienced
auto
mechanic wanted lnquore

NIce 2 story home lor sale,
In Basl!an. 4 bedrooms, 2
baths, natural gas furnace.

three fourths ac:re, chatn

Oil Change
Lube Job&amp;
'Oil Fitter
All For Only

11.95

5

owner

building,

will finance down payment

or accept trailer or land as

down payment
Phone 985·&lt;1395.

$28,000

'ijl"-

LANDMARK

-·
~

Business Services
Kttp Thll Ad tor Future Atttrenc•

KAUFPS '
PLUMBING·
AND
HEATING

APPLIANCE SERVICE
Call Ken Young

f_RODUCTS

Siding
R111&gt;ling &amp;Gutter
Remodeling

SERVICE
STATION

56
Pets lor Sate
Beautiful Peek a· Poo pup
pies, 2 males, 2 females.
Been wormed. $50. 247·

3863

20 Years

12 Park St.
Middleport, Oh.
Ph. 992·6263
Anytime
561 mo

EUG.ENI LONG ,

Lovely 1!. lonely Gordon
size, one
year old. Also shephard
collie mixed breed puppy.
Humane Socoely , 992·6505.
AKC registered cocker
spaniel puppies, show type,
black and part1es 843 2684
57

HOWARD
ROTAVATORS

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

HJ50"-20·JO H.P.
HA 60"-25-60 H P
HE 60"-45-10 H.P

Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding

monlhly payments. Can be

seen at

vour

home.

For in

formation call collect 614
773·5125. Ask lor cred1t

manager.

--· _..........
•.........
...... . .. .

house, full

basement, 2 car garage

t~~~~~:Ui

Rutland, Ohto

PH. 742-2455

5 11 ft c

t.,-/1.._ -/1.1-,

..........

•

'

0

'

•

I

0

"

'

... Apt House Owners
.... Mob•le Home Pflrks

Quality Built
Economtcally Pnced

REESE BUILDINGS
Garages - But/dings
- Barns-E qutpment .

Sheds
POLE BUILDINGS
15'x20' up to 40' x100'

PORTABLE STEEL
STORAGE
BUILDINGS
(4'x16', 8'x8', 8'xl0',

IO'x lO' , IO'x12' &amp; up)

Any stze butl1 to your
Models

spec•f•cat•ons
m Meigs,

Gallia and

Mason Counttes.

THE
KOUNTRY
KLUB
'·.J.

J&amp;C
SANITATION
SERVICE

Scout Camp Rd
Chesler, Oh.

Shor1 game pract1ce
** Green
Pullong &amp;
Open

FREE ESTIMATES
All Butldtngs

Guaranteed

PH. 367-7671
or 367-7560
CHESHIRE

Trash Pickup 1n
The Village ol
Middleport, Oh.
Ph. 992·5016
or 992·7505
4 17 tfc

*Hole-In-One

*Pro Golf less ons

tor all ages

• Repatr : Cleanmg,
reflntshmg, new gnps
• Fast serv1ce

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
New Homes · ex·

Ph. (6141985 3961
4 23 1 mo

REESE~
TRENCHING
SERVICE
Water·Sewer· Electr1c

Weds. Fn.

Sat 9·5

Closed

~· 7

Thurs.

3 29 3 mo

TERMITE and
PEST CONTROL
Roa c h es,
Btrds ,
Rodents, Spt ders, Fleas,
An ts and other smal l m
sec t control

FREE ESTIMATES
1 or S year termtte

guarantee
Located tn Galhpohs

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Ph. 614 446 2801
3 27 I mo

''YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICES"
- Addons and

remodeling
- R:ooftng and gu1ter
work
- Concrete work

- Piumb1ng and
elecfriCa I work
( Free Est1mates)

V. C. YOUNG II

992-6215 or992·7314
Pomerov, Oh

BUYING

NEW STORE HR

SILVER llOLD
COINS
Sl~ to S}f'
For Silver Dollars

.

GLENN BISSELL
949·2801
No Sunday Calls
58·1 mo. pd
COMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERVICE
From the Smallest

Heater Core to
Largest Radiator

the

Radiator Speclaiost
NATHAN BIGGS
3l Yrs. Exper&lt;ence

SMITH NEI.SIDt
MOTORS INC.

Ph.

Pomeroy , OH.

BOOGS

11

12 lfc

Shmson Ave Athens,
Hours
Mon. Tues 'il 6

tenstve remodel ·
mg .
• E lectncal work
• Roofing work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583
4 26 1 mo

ROGER HYSEll'S
GARAGE

4

ATHENS SPORT
CYCLES

length change.
Weight Change

~

-_· : :;·:;::::=.===

Rates For"

992·2174

5 7·11C

Excavating

13

COMPLETE sever In·
st•llallon &amp; backhoe ser
\lice for Rac1ne Syracuse
sewer d1str 1c1. Dozer work

of needed 949·2m.

DOZER work. Smail lobs a
specialty 742·2753

~-

14
;;;----;:E"I'e"'c~t::;
rl::
ca::;l;--

.,.. .,..CIII_

&amp; Refrigeration
SEWING MACHINE
Repairs, service, all
makes! 992· 22U. The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales
and Service. We snarpen
Scissors.

..

I

Special

BAILEY'S SHOES

0

• D•sposals

... com Laundnu
... Rental Properl•es

MILLER ELECTRI
SERVICE

. . ..

I I

• HOI Waf4r Tan!ls

Windows

Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph. 992·2712
5-6 I mo

Rl. 1 Side Hill Rd .

J&amp;R
SERVICE

I' I

• Ranv•s

•Storm Wtndows
•Replacement

H. L WHITESEL
ROOANG

Get aJump On!

• D•shwashtrs

•Storm Doors

33
Farms lor sale
..
By Owner 55 acre farm
Gas Line- D1tches
,
Will cons1der land con· with 9 room house. barn.
Water
L1ne Hook-ups
ILl
lracl. 992·5694. 152 But· and minerals. Morning
Sephc Tanks
ternut Ave., Pomeroy .
Star Area. $65,000. 949·2630
County Cert1fled
evenings
Roush Lane
,,
Farm Equipment
Cheshire, Oh.
Will care for the elderly in 3 bedroom 2 acres, 2
Vinyl &amp; Alumtnum
Four 15,000 gallon tanks
Ph. 367·7560
our home. Have \/acancy bedroom rental. 2 car
51 Dt NG
Men &amp; women II In garage. I have several
located
above
ground
at
~~~=====1~7~1
~ttc~
Athens,
Ohio
$3,000.00
pieces of property tor sate
terested cai1992 7314.
II you want a good buy. 4~1--'-H'-'o-"u"'sa"'s-'lo"'r-'R""a"n~t- each. PhOne 1 304 422 2781.
John Sheets, 3'h miles Small unfurnished two 4 14.000 galion tanks
Repair or remodeling south Middleport, Rt 7.
work , flooring, doors, wall 1---------~ bedroom house 6 miles located above ground at
paneling, ceiling, or floor
east of Chesler on SR 248
Athens, Oh. SJ,ooo. each. 1
tile.sldlng 992·2759.
985·42-u.
304 422·2781.
" Beaut1ful, Cus1om
All types of root work,
Built Garages"
House lor rent 2 bedroom,
new or repa 1r gut1ers
Call
for free s1d1ng
deposit required. 9'12·309Q.
63
Livestock
and downspouts, gutter
Real Esta .. ~General
eshmates, 94~ · 2801 or
clean.ng and pillnteng.
Printed Pattern
949·2860
4 Hampshire Yorkshore
All work guaranteed.
42
Mobile Homes
No Sunday Calls
hogs
lor
sale
843·2451
H'ouc;lng
lor Rent
J 11 tic
Free Est1mates
2
bedroom
Mobile
Home,
Reasonable
Pnc
es
Headquarters
luniShed, adults preferred.
Call Howard
Deposit. 992·2749
949 2862
949·2160
Autos lor Sale
2 4 ttc
Mobile home. 4 bedroom, 71
utilities paid, no pets, 1
1969 Dodge
Dartanyt1me
GTS I~~======:=::::;l
child accepted. John Sheets Asking
S2,000 Call
1
J
h
miles
south
Middleport,
- 216 E. Second Street
at949 2123
For all of your wir·
Rl. 7.
ing
needs .
Phone
1974 Monte Carlo 350
322 N. 2nd Ave.
Let George M1ller check
Headers, gOOd tires $1400.
.Ht14)· 992· 3325 '
Apartment
your
present electncal
Phone 949 26()2.
lor Rent
Middleport, Ohio
system
RETIREMENT - :
Two ' bedroom furnished
Res1denflal
bedroom troller, 1'1•
Trucks for Sale
apartment. 992·5&lt;134 or 1 72
&amp;Commerc•al
baths,
slove · re ·
304 882 2566.
frig@rotor, gas forced
1948 Chevy pickup 283
Cal1742·3 195
air furnace, carpeting,
standard, good shape. 949·
or 992-7680
added •oom and sun·
Effective 4·6·81
Efficiency apartment lor
deck overlooking the
2 8 ttc
rent. 992·5434 or 1·304 882
MON . thru SAT.
Ohio River Drilled well
2566.
1971
Ford
F·600
dump
9to5
an6 3.7 acres. Good lor
truck. Good condition. With
summer home Can you
Closed
Thursday
hauling contract. $3,700.00.
45
Furnished Rooms
beat the price of only
491 mo. pd
Phone 985·4395.
$13,500?
Sleeping rooms; by the
FORKED RUN - 14
week . Kitchen, and
acres, more or less, of
television lounge. Carryout 1971 Chevy tru ck with no IT----- - - - - - ,
woods lor camping,
store and restaurant within engine. Automatic. S350.
Also new ports for 283
close to the lake on good
- Auto and Truck
500 feet. 992·6370 .
engine. See at 245 Mulberry
gravel road. All kinds o1
Repair
Avenue, Pomeroy
wildlife such as deer &amp;
44
Spoca
for
Rtnl
- Transmission
wild turkey.
~TRASH
MOBILE HOME 14x70
COUNTRY MOBILE Home 7,~3-~V,_,a,n!..
s&amp;
= 4-"
Wcc.O
:o.,____
Repair
Hillcrest, 3 bedrooms,
Pork, Route 33, North of
Hrs.:
Mon.-Fri .
Box
65,
Portland,
OH
.
One
good
used
1973
Chevy
21ft baths, furnace, nice
Pomeroy. Large lots. Call
Ph.
843·4912
Van,
1st
Sl
,OOO
takes
II
carpeting and extra
9
a.m.-5:30p.m.
992·1479.
55.00 Monthly
1964 tnternaltonat truck,
room . Can rent lot or
steel dump bed, $1 ,500. or Serv1ng the fOllOWing
move. Low heat bills.
TRAILER spaces lor rent best offer. Pomeroy Land
townships Lebanon ,
992· 5682
You must see lor lust
Southern
Valley Mobile mark. 992·2181.
Sutton, Letart, Olive,
$12,000 .
10 7 ttc
Home Park, Cheshire, Oh
Orange, Salisbury, Bed·
ARCHAIC
3
992 39~.
lord, Chester, Salem,
bedrooms, bath, dining,
76
Auto Parts
Scopio, Rutland and
basement, natural gas
ALL STEEL
&amp; Accessories
Harrison
........ ... " .....
F.A. furnace, 51 drs. &amp;
windows, nice carpel·
Topper lor sole. In very
Farm Buildin~
lng, city water and con·
good condition. $100.00. See
SIZES 8-18
HoustiiOid Ooodl
51
venlent to town. Asking
Sizes
at 400 Lasley St. Pomeroy.
127,500
"From 30x30"
5 piece chrome dinette set
SMALL
NEW LISTING - 1h
with formica table top. In
o:omplng
acre of land, old 2 BR
excellent condition Call 71
SALES &amp; SERVICE
home with bath, copper
- -· •t;;9Yipm•!!:.:.f_ _
Utility Buildin~
Get 1 jump on for 111mmet! 992·5250.
plumbing, gas fireplace
1¥77
f'H
I~
mlno
fold·down
Sozes
irom 4x6tol2x40
U.S. Rt. 50 East
Elntic bodice and wa1!1 make
and basement. Will sell
co1r.pe•
f.,'
,j9
vut
to
22
11.
Phone
614-662-3821
on lime Asking $11,500. _ fllttnl and everylhinf else
with ell equipment. 742· Authorized John Deere,
P&amp;S BUILDINGS
EXTRA-EASY! Sew 1h~ jumpllltl
ATTENTION :
(IM · 2336.
NEW LISTING - Ex·
New Holland, Bush Hog
Rl. ! , Boxl4
in
-..clter,
tinen
WIMS.
PORTANT TO YOU} Will
cellenl corner location
farm equtpmentdealer.
Rac1ne, Oh.
Pnntad Pattern 4695 M1ssa
pay cash or certified check
on 2 state routH. 1'h
Ph.
614·843 2591
Sizes
8,
10,
12,
14,
16.
18
S1ze
for
antiques
and
collec·
acres of land 3
6 IS tic
2 used No. 150 New
tlblft or entire estates.
bedrooms, carport and 2 12 (bust 34) 1umpstut 2 )lids
Holland round hay
Nothing too large. Also,
outbuildings. Large 60-inch flbrie.
b;toters, both In ex·
guns, pocktl WitChes and
square ciStern, Leading SUI .. Itilt ...... Mila
cellent condition.
Home
coin collections. Call 614·
Creek waltr available .
Improvements
767-316711r 557-3411.
ONLY $2.,000.
. . .... , ... 11
5·14·1 mo
VERY PRIVATE 19t
French C1ty Painting .
one larllt bedroom .......
stone home with balh.
Residential, commercial,
·Tilt Dally Sentinel
woodburnlng fireplAce,
lnterlor.
exterior .
Specializing In Interior
Home
modern kllchtn, elder
141 ... 17
lmprovematita
lintel cloth closet,
painting, paper hanging &amp;
..... Nil
Wllhtr·drytr hOollUPI,
textured ceilings. Free
IIP,IIII,
Does your house need a estimates 367·nU or 367·
and 2.5 acrft. LOll of
.... ill
face 1111? Or lust a lillie 716().
lrttl. Only 121.500.
. Wt
makeup? c,ll me I I'll
WIIIN YOU liNT,
have II looking young 1goln
iWirl Slid . . . fi£W 1111
YOU PAY "01 THI
In 1'0 lime. Will do all types 12
IPIIlfi8.SUIIIIER i'AilUIII'.AT·
HOUII YOU OCCUPY,
Plumbing
of Interior work , paneling,
IUT NIYII OWN. ALOliOO- ......
I Healint
collings, flooring, ale.; plus
UVI YOUR MDIIIY . -.IJ2~c.tii.Sl.
WELLS .
exterior work, painting, WATER
AND UIM A HOMI. ~~shii!OIIng roofs, work olng, Domestic and COI'flmerclat,
IUY,IUY,IUY.CALL
sninglinf any size and pump sales and service.
~
shape. 30 years experience Tom Lewis Drilling.
In carpetry. References Seasonal discount on pum
i 1' ,
provided upon request. 992· ps. 1-30H95·3102 or 1·304·
6293.
195-3141.
I l. ' .
3 bedroom

All MAkES

•Wu hers
1 Dr.,. ers

•Insulation

All Models Avatlable

MUSICII

your area Take bver low

PARTS AND SERVICE

Call Collect
Ph.j4_11322

Instruments

Picking up p~ano &amp; organ on

I

Free Estima1es

Chopp~ng

Setter, medium

'

Serving Your Area for 1

LEO MORRIS

Also register this week
for $50.00 worth of Free
Gas. Drawing to be Fro·
day Noon. Come in. You
mav be the lucky won·
nert

link fence, extra large

storage

32
Mobile Homes
- - - - 'lo,r_,S"'a"'le' - - - 1973 Crown Haven, 14 x 65,
three bedlooms. new car·
pet. 1971 Cameron, u x 64,
two bedrooms, new carpet.
1972 Champion, 12 X 6(), two
bedrooms, new carpet. 1976
Cameron, 12 x 6(), two
bedrooms, all electroc. 1971
Skyline, 12sx 61, two
bedrooms, bath &amp; •;,, new
carpet
. 1970 PMC,
2story home, 3 bedrooms, 1 12 x 60. two
new
bath, lull basement, good carpet B xbedrooms,
S
Sales,
Inc.,
location, Pomeroy. Call al 2nd x Viand Street, Point
ter 6, 9'12 7284.
Pleasant, WV Phone 615·
4424.
8 room house w1th bath &amp;
shower. lull basement, 1975 Viking trailer, 12 x 65
alumonum Siding, storm
bedroom, bog living
WindOWS &amp; doors, big bUilt two
room.
on country
in porth, b1g lot partly fen· Mobile Located
Home
Park 247·
ced in. Metal bulldmg. 9'12· 3942.
7453.

..
........
...
~..
"""lB'
........ __
,.1692

ll¥1.,_ . . . .....,.. . . . . . '

-lit,...,..,. Clrtlfl_.. •

'

NEW LISTING - Close
to Middleport, . nice
home with good block

l
l

a·~~~···
M l' : • • - at111

Wlnt·AIIMV111111111

$25,900.00

• pofl, taroe level lot, .75
A. with gordon space, 2
1\ bedrooms, cellar, many
: features
ONLY
' $23,000.00.
' REDUCED TO SELL!
- A 2 year old, one
bedroom home, Ideal for
retired couple or newly
marrieds. Approx. 1'1•
A.. close to bypass.
Large garage. REOUC·
EO TO $15,500.00.
A
SYRACUSE
• beautiful ranch home on
J level lot, 3 bedrooms,
' basement, attached
garage, buill· In kitchen.
$43,000.00.
MIDDLEPORT - 2
story tnme, 6 rooms. 3
bedrooms, woodburnlng
, fireplace ,
recently
, remodeled, really cute.

eTRANSPORTAhON

eRIAL ESTATE

many

1

,.,..,,.,.

.._

31.~~~~~~~~

Mail This Coupon with Remtnance
.The D•tly Sentinel
Box729
Pomeroy, Ol;lto 45769

'

~

-..M-Hoy&amp;lroiJI

IWRity

U- MMtYitLNit

2:.P.M. Deltr

15.- - - - - 16. ----'----"-'-

_

M-Milc. Mli c.....,..

e I' ARM SUPPLIES
ILIVIITOCK

11-W...-.T•IM

new features plus a

house lull of furniture,
whi ch Is new and
modern, level lot,
• storage building THIS
: YOU MUST SEE!

. _,..............,
,._,_,,.,_

I.,.._TV
&amp;Cia...li'

:

1

eMERCHANDISE
,,_.,..Ill
........ .
st-CI,TV,I .... I"*"""

eEMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

enclosed front porch, all

'

47-WMIMtel ... t
.._............. ltftt

1-ll'utiUChlt

:~

• carpeted with

4h:PIIMN

hLOitiiMIIMnd

,.,_

NEW LISTING - Reao·
ly nice 1 floor plan
home, remodeled with
' beautiful bulll·in kit·
~~ chen, large modern
" bath, dining orea,

41-*tfttsttrlttflt
42-M.-. .. KMta

,_._.lltlol.. Clffttntl

It N -

----

LANDMARK

2545.

eRENTALS

+-Giw...•y
J-HI..WOMI

30
32.
33.
3•.
35. _

'

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

29.

10.
119.
12.
13.
14.--------::---

General

or Write D•IIY Sentinel Cl..sifted Dept.
111 Court St., Pomeroy, 0., 45769

~8.

'5.·

Reai Estate

PHONE ·992·2156

eFINANCIAL

( I Wanted

~126afler6p. m .

WANT AD INFORMAnON

Address. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Complete results of 6.2
mile run released today

Store, Middleport

WANTED TO BUY :
HARLEY DAVIDSON ,
preferably older model
Must be in good running
~ondil ion $1500·$2000 price
range Call 992·5006 or 9'12

,

-

'

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

POSTER WINNERS- Riverview Elementary 1cbool poster contest
winners, front row, left to rlgbl, Mitl &amp;hmldt, Mlltel YOUDg, and Gary
Rood. Back row - Grace Weber, Prlnelpa1, and Robert First, Dlstricl
Conservationist.

9,92-6370.

The lzzack Wallon Regular
meeting has been postponed from Monday May
25th to l'uesday, May 26th
at 7 p.m. There will be a
fishing movie presented af·
ter supper end meeting.

Curb Inflation.
Pay Cash for
Classlfleds and
Savel'! I

Complete results of Saturday's 6.2
mlle run were released today by '81 :
Road Race CO.Chatrrnen Ron Saunders, Holzer Medlcal Center, and
Darrell Brotherton, Ohio Valley
Publishing Co.
Broken down mto age groups
10,000 meter winners were:
'
MALE - 11-14 years, Tyler Cabal·
1S:I9, Scott Kibler; ~25.
MtUer; ~. Jack Branon· 40-45
Keith Coffee; 50-M, Walter P;rry;
and up, Campbell Neal.
FEMALE - jO and under, Sarah
Thomas; 11-14, Shelia Whitly; IS:I9,
none; ~25, Amy Carter; ~. Nancy Kohleeser; 43-49, ROBe Balmer ·
50-M, Allx Harder.
'

dllplafl (IOI..nce award presented by Carl'1 Sboe Stolre,
Gelllpollll.

New, used, lind antique fur·

n1ture. No 1tem to large or
to small W111 buy one piece
or complete households
Martin's General Store at
9'12-6370.

18·24.

pomeroy Pollee are mvestigating

Got some free time? Start
your own business. Start

IRON AND BRASS BEDS - at Mool\e's Store, Pomeroy
Old furniture, desks, gold. Equal Opportunity Em·
rings, jewelry, sliver plover.
, dollars, sterling, etc. Wood
lee boxes, jars, antiques,
etc complete households. 12 Soluallons Wanted
Write · M D. Miller, Rl 4, Will do roofs 3 years ex·
Pomeroy, OH 4Sl69 Or perience. Free estamites.
call992 776()
Call 742 2109 and ask lor
Don

Jack

the breakmg of a large plate glass

-CHRIS PanoDJ, winDer of
Saturday'• '81 Road Race,

. '

_,

Lee aka Guy W. Lee,.

Probe vandalism

Need Money? Need
Clothes? Why not get your
wardrobe at no cost to you
and earn extra dollars too?
For information or In·
appointment call
199'2·3941 between 9-9.

anhques,

-'.HIP WOOD. Poles ma•.
Wameter 14" on largest
end. $12.50 per ton. Bundled
slab S10.50 per ton .
Delivered lo Ohio Pallet
Co., Rock Spnngs Rd.,
Pomeroy 992·2689.

• James J. Proffitt
Sheriff Of
Meigs County, Ohio
19, 26, (6J _2, 3tc

under normal

ground condition. Free
shop at home service Call
1·800·62H511 .

boss. Set your own hours
·9
Wanted to Buy
The harder you work, the
,WANTED TO BUY more you' II earn FQ{
call 742·2354 or 742·
GOLD,
SILVER, details,
2155.
"'---"==="--PLATINUM, STERLING·
Would like odd lobs Lawn·
·COINS, RINGS,JEWELR ·
mowing &amp; misc. lobs
Y, MISC ITEMS. AB· Wanted: someone to board working around homes.
SOLUTE
MARKET cats tor the Melas county 9'12-6595.
:PRICE GUARANTED. ED Humane Socle~ while
BURKETT
BARBER homes are sought for them.
SHOP, MIDDLEPORT , Cages, litter boxes .
medication, food, and litter
' OHI09'12 3476
are supplied. You need
good draft free clean 3~t_ _,H"'o~m!!e.,s!.!f~or._,s~a'-"le,___
·OLD COINS, pocket wat· building or room, where Beautiful three bedroom
.ches, class rmgs, wedding
can show animals to ranch brick \home In Baum
-bands. diamonds Gold or vou
sliver Call J A Wamsley, prospective owners. Must Addition, Pomeroy, Ohio.
'treasure Chest Com Shop, be in the Middleport· Gas heal, central air. Call
Pomeroy area, sa lary 992·2571, 985-4145 or 1·687·
Athens, OH 594·4221.
negotionable Phone 9'12· 6429 .
5427 alter 5:30 p m
Wanted to Buy : class ring~.
wedding bands, anythlrib Female roomate to live in Brick home on wooded
Three bedrooms,
~tamped, 10K, 14K, or 18K trader near Harrisonville acre
gold. Silver coins, pocket Can be seen on Co. Rd. 19 fireplace, unique family
watches. Call Joe Clark at Harrosonvllte Kingsbury room, ftntshed double
garage, deck Upper ·
9'12 2054 at Clark's Jewelry Rd. 1st tra1ler .
Sixties. 992 5420.
Store, Pomeroy, Ohio45769

Platntlfls,

Print one word In each
SPace below. Each in
otoal or group of ligures
counts as a word. count
name and address or Words
phone get
number
used . • -+~~!!1¢~*!!:!..!!
You'll
betterIfresults
If I'OU describe fully ,
give price. The Sentonel
reserves the right to
classify, edit or re1ect
any ad. Your ad will be
put In the proper
claslflcalion If you ' ll
check the proper box
These cash rates
below
include discount

SWIMMING
POOLS.
PRE -SEASON SALE:
$99'1.00 INSTALLED!!!
~..... H Above ground pool COM
PLETELY INSTALLED
starting al$999.00. Price in·
eludes pool, deck, fence,
/Iller, liner, and In·
s1alla1ion

selling Avon. Be your own

Roger W. Dav1s , et. al.,

Phone ____________

some

: material, clothing and
misc. 1tems 9·5 Flashing
·light at Tuppe" Plaons
'folow arrows on 681 .
.~Chester Carson restdence

01'110

Write your own ad and order by mall with this
coupon Cancel your ad by phone when you get
results. Money not refundable.

Horses, ponies, 1 hay
bailer, hoy wagon's, pony
cart with harness, 1·3 pt
pickup disk, like new, pony
Mddles. 985·3891.

..---------

2-l~tMttn.n.m

wmdow at Crow's Steak House
sometime between 10 p.m. Monday
and early Tuesday morning
A large boulder was thrown
through the large front window
located tn the dining room of the
establishment.
The boulder also heavily damaged
a customer table. Pollee were called
to the steak house about 7 a.m.
Tuesday.

4

1

Conservation poster contest prtzes
were awarded m the Eastern Local
School Dtstrict last week.
First place wmners m each school
received a blue nbbon and three
silver dollars. other prizes awarded
were a red nbbon and two silver
dollars, for second place and one
stlver dollar and a white rtbbon for
third place
Recetving prizes tn Eastern Local
School District were ftrst, second
and third respectively, Mtchele Gar·
field, Bnan Bailey and Frank
Parker from Chester Elementary
School who received thetr awards
from Roy Mtller, SWCD Supervisor.
Rtvervtew awards were presented
by Robert First, Dtstrtcl Conservationist, Soil Conservation Ser·
vice, to Gary Rood, Mikt Schmid~
and Mikel Young.
The 1981 contest theme "Food and
the Land" was mtended by the sponsors, Meigs Soil and Water Conservatton Dtstrtcl, to make
youngsters more aware of how food
IS grown and prOduced.

They'll Do It Every Time

Giveaway
Mixed breed puppies,
Humane Society. 992-6505.
Also many kittens, a1111
:.:.__...:H.:.:e,_,lp._W=I.:.:nt:.:ed"'-colors and sizes and ·
shapes. Humane Society, GET VALUABI:E training
9'12-6505.
as a young business person
and earn good money plus
some
great gills as a Sen·
2 adorable black kittens. 6 t1ne1 route carrier . Phone
weeks old. 949·2&lt;130.
us right oway and get on
the eligibility list at 992·
2156or 992 2157.

Small investmen~t, l~ge
I
~returns, Sentinel WaDt Ads.

created as a place where stu1lents
displaying disruptive behavtor are
sent. in this room the students
receive counseling and guidance as
the time-out room workers try to unPublic Notice
derstand and deal with their
PUBLIC
NOTICI!
problems.
The annual report Form
Dunog the course of the school 990 PF for lhe Klbbte Foun·
daiiQ"n, Bernard Fultz,
year the project consultant wtU trustee, is avaolable for
make two on-site visits. He will ob- public inspe,ctlon at Ber·
nard Fultz, Law Office, 2nd'
serve the project in operation, an- St., Pomero~ . Ohio 45169 l i ~!r~,j,y"
swer questions and make recom- dur1ng regular business '
hours for a period of 180 1:!':~'.""1
mendations pertment to a successful days
subsequent to
publiCation of thos notice.
implement of the program.
Recommendations and
(51 18, 19, 20, 21 , 22, 24, 6tc
Requirements
In tune-out room worker(s) need
at least a B.A. in one of the applied
behavioral sciences and related experience or recent training in
establishing helping relationships
wtth students. If qualifted, a para·
professtonal may be used in the
lime-out room. However, the hinng 1,~~~~~~~~ v
of additional stall, if necessary, will I
be at district expense. This program
can be implemented using existing
staff.
It is recommended that one person
be destgnated as the tune-out room
worker. This results in a more consistent operation of the ttme-out
room. However, the room may be
staffed, if necessary, wtth several
workers throughout the school day. ·
(School distnct budgetary constramts will decide which approach
IS used)
In etther case, the tune-out room
worker(s) will work closely wtth a
supervismg counselor, preferably a
guidance counselor, psychologist or
social worker. The supervising counselor needs an appropnate master's
degree and must be profictent m
plannmg and Implementing staff
development programs as well as in
providing direct servtces for students. He/she must be a sktlled group
leader able to learn how to conduct
hwnanisttc activities, survival courses and encounter groups. The
supervistng counselor provides
trammg and consultation for the
'tune-out room worker(s)
The number of teachers who can
recetve inservice trammg at any one
May 7, 1981
tune is 50. Schools with more than 50
teachers wtll need to determine (5) 12, 19
which 50 will receive training and
PubliC NOIICe
how to provide training for the
IN THE
rernaming staff members.
COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS,
MEIGS COUNTY,

The Dal

.,.

~~Ht
•

ELWOOD
BOWERS
Sweepers,
REPAIR toasters, Irons, all small
appliances. Lawn mower .
Next to Slalt HlghWIY
Garage on Route 1, 915·
3825.

..

�. 1981' .
,I

Meigs board
:continuedfrornpage1) 1
Wagner In studying finances to see teindlii varsity staff could handle
where the money for the bus repairs the group. He Indicated that the enlcan come from,
ployment of Grimes would not
Gleason warned that It the district any additlonel coaches since he hail ,
borrows from the state, the state' ~ resigned from the . freshmap
dictate to the district In what · position. However, no second came
facllltl~ and ~rv!ees to be cut from for the motion to hire Grimes.
;
the district's operations.
The board discussed contlnuatioil , .
On the subject of buses, board· lllthesEOVECprogram!ortheneit
member Vaughan said he has had school year. Board members said
~
reports of ~oklng taking place on they want more Information on ser.
'1
\
school buses as well as vandalism vices provided the district by the
even to the point of students tearing program and it was agreed to hold p
~~
seats out of the vehicles.
special session to hear details of ser, Supl Gleason said he had Jl\!r- vices from a representative of the ·
sonally ridden one such b!lll recently program.
•.
The 1981 graduation Ust wBB all:'
:and warned students that they would
not be permitted to continue riding proved and a policy on the releBBe of.
the biL!I if there are any further in- students tO other districts was aP,
fraction of the rules. Students ap- proved. Cheerleader constltuilona
pear to be breaking the rules when were approved and Darlene Wheeler
substitute drivers are on the buses, and Mathew Grueser, student.iJ
Gleason reported.
were released to other districts.
Vaughan also questioned the use
The board discussed a school
of the Riverview Golf Club by the calendar for next year but took no
school's golf team over a Pomeroy action. It was decided to diJcU!IB the
facility. He was told by Coach calendar further at the special
Robert Oliver that the students pay session which will he held In the near
their own fees.
future. In-service and parentVaughan also brought up the sale teacher conferences came Into the ·
AWARDS - Winning awards as the most outstanding vocal music
FIRST AWARD~ Mrs. Florence Barrett, Rutland, has been presenof an unused building on Pearl St., diJcusslon and will be discussed at
students of their respective classes at Meigs High School are, I tor, Tam·
ted with an. award from Ed Harkless, Meigs High School vocal music
and was told that the building is ex- the special session.
my Black, freshman; ~elf Carson, s,ophomore; Fred Young, junior, and
supervisor, as the Meigs Countian who most advanced vocal music
peeled to be advertised for sale
The board agreed to authorize apCamille Swindell, senior. The four stndeots were presented awards at the
duriDg the past year. Mrs. Barrett has served as first president of the
withln the next month. Vaughan plications for several federal and
Meigs Voeal Music Boosters, organized juslthis year.
,
spring concert of the vocal music deportment held Sunday at the
said perhaps, the proceeds could be state projects for the 1982 ·fiscal
Pomeroy United Methodist Church.
·
used for the neeiled bus repair.
year. A diJcussion was held cin
The board accepted the changing
head
teacher
resignations of Charles Corder, high qualifications, but no action WBB
school drafting; Anna Turner, takenlnthatarea.
elementary; Robbin Reyhl, junior ' Supt. Gleason advised that .a
WASHINGTON (AP)- American advance that the revision could show ling chief economist, William Cox, Reagan administration _ have been high cheerleadlng; Sam Crow, system to chemically treat water
freshman football; Bruce Wilson, IL!Ied In the furnace of the Pomeroy
consumers are finally cutting back even more strength than the robust said that "the housing sector is talkingaboutforsometime. ,
Personal
consumption
spending,
,
reserve baseball, and Sandy Kom, Elementary School could he pur·
their spending, and the national 6.5 percent growth reported last without a doubt going to be a
.
chased for '180 a year. The furnace
negative influence on the next one of the most important fuels the , elementary.
economy is slowing down with them, month.
economy
runs
on
"seems
to
have
A
reconunendat10n
to
employ
has been out of order twice during
couple
of
quarters"
of
overall
But they also said that the growth
a new goverrunent report Indicates.
cometoahalt,"C~said.
~rry
Grimes
as
an
assistant
var-,
thecurrentschoolyear.
Personal consumption spending was concentrated in January and economic growth,
He noted that after taking inflation sity football c~ch failed when no
Snowden said that he does not feel
A separate Federal Reserve
increased 0.2 percent in April, the that the economy has slowed coninto
account,
spending
,
showed
no
second
to
a
motion
by
P?Well
~arne.
the
system would properly treat the
Board report showed U.S. manufacCorrunerce Department reported siderably since then.
gain
in
February
and
actually
Sam
Crow,
athletic
director,
water
for the furnace and he recs'"
Monday. But that plus undoubtedly
Two Corruneree reports released turers operating at 80.3 percent of
would have been a minus had not in- Monday seemed to back that up, in- capacity in ApriL That 0.3 per- declined about 0.1 percent in March. recommen~ed ~t Grimes be em- mended the use 'of a "still" systeJi!.
centage point increase - to the And April wiil probably be even ployed stating Grunes would rna_ke No action was taken.
flation driven up the prices of goods.
dicating that:
The financial statement and bills ·
- Personal income rose only 0,6 highest level in a year - was con-, lower when inflation figures are an· five members of the varsity
Such spending, which makes up
nounced,
he
said.
coaching
staff.
He
said
other
schools
were
approved.
more than 60 percent of the gross percent in April, the smallest in- sidered an indication that producers
Administration
officials
have
been
in
the
area
have
that
many
or
more
Board
members not present for
national product, had risen U per· crease since last June, while spen- are not about to shut down entirely
cent as recently as January, But ding climbed 0.2 percent, the in the face of reduced consumer worried about the nation's savings an~ he highly recommended the mee~g are Dr. Keith Riggs and
rate, and the new income-and- Grunes. He said that a freshman Carol Pierce. Only,10 persons were
spending.
then it leveled off at about the rate of smallest rise since last May.
spending
report showed savings coach IS not need~ause of the on hand for the meeting. Generally,
Taken
together,
the
reports
apInflation before dropping in April.
- Housing starts rose 4.2 percent
risi~g
from
F percent to 5 percent small tum?ut of eshmen 'every the~ are from 50 ~o 100 residents at·
The Corrunerce Department was last month, making up only a little of peared to show the sluggish,
of
disposa
ble
income.
year and if there w a large tending the Meigs Local Board
releasing revised first-quarter GNP the 27 percent decline recorded in basically flat economy that most
enoough
turnout for a freshmen sessions.
figures today, and analysts sa id in February. And the department's ac- economists - including those in the

mean

~

Tuesday, May
. 19, 1981'

•

We Honor

Open Daily 10·9; sundays 1.6
t;AA I~ intention Is lo haW! every ldver·
=-~ ~ •IDI?k on ovr shelves. II an
Mid rlem IS not IVIJiable !of ~ /·
dlaa due to anv Uiiloreseen reason

=

t&lt; mill will isM a R8W1 Chad~ oo requesi
Jot IN ~ !0011 ilem Olltuon·
I~ Qlllnlity) lobe pufChasa:dat tile
1)"1» whentYtr available or will sell
==~~~~ematacompa·

n,....

Wed. Thru

Sat. Sale

Spending cutback slows U.S. economy

Valley Hospital at Keyser, W.Va.
They said they were among 200 West
Virginia miners who traveled to
Barton by caravan.
"No one seems to know who did
the shooting," said police Lt. Bernie
Chabot.
In a second incident Monday at the
Beener mine, John McKenzie, an independent hauler, said he was
dragged from his rig by knife-and·
cluix:arrying union pickets who
then dwnped a 20-ton load on the
roadside and smashed the truck win-

The bargaining council has been
actively involved in the contract
issue only once since January, when
it approved by a 21-14 margin on
March 24 the tentative three-year
accord that miners rejected eight
days later.
"We are going io update the
bargaining council, explain to them
what we have been offered and get
some guidance," Church said. "We
weren't sure what they (BOCA)
would come back with today and
their proposal was the same. We're
going to explain to them what we've
been offered and get some input and
see what they think we should do at
this time."

cjows.

" It was an army," McKenzie said.

1

On the front lines of the strike,
which has halted almost half the
nation's coal production, three UMW ,
pickets at the non-union Beener Coal
Co. in Barton, Md., were wounded by
shotgun pellets during a con·
frontalion with employees Monday.
Maryland State Police refused to
identify the victims, who were
treated and released at Potomac

of Keoke, Va., was treated for head

inJ'uries at a Harlan hospital after
being struck by a rock which pollee
said was thrown from a group of 10
to 15 pickets at theJericol mine.
About 150 UMW pickets linked arms Monday and kept hundreds of
white-collar workers from thet'r jobs
at the Pittsburgh headquarters of
Consolidation Coal Co,, the home
base of Bobby R.' Brown, thiehi; f
BOCA negotiatOr.
Asked in Washington whether industry had any new offers to make,
Brown replied, "No, I do not." He
said he and the other two industry
bargainers were leaving town but
would remain on call.

by
local emergency units on Monday,
Meeting recently, the Pomeroy- the Meigs County Emergency
Middleport Uons Club unanimously Medi 1Servi
rts
ce the
repoMiddl.....,..
•
endorsed the 2.5 mill no cost, Meigs
At ca
5 36
: p.m.,
.,.,.. Unit
Local School District bond issue to took Shl 1 M
r ey cKinney, S. Fourth
bevoteduponJune2.
Ave., t o veterans Memorial
Supt. David L. Gleason explained H ···I the p
u·
OSpiwo ;
omeroy rut at 10:56
aspects of the issue which will give
tOOk Edith Burt
'
on from
the district one million dollars to be a.m.
p
H lth
omeroy ea
Care Center to .
used In building repair and main- v te
M rial H tal
ospi and the 1
tenance at no additional tax. The en- D.e Inransu emo
·
""c e rut at 6:33 a.m. took
dorsement followed a question and D-ymond G d w tt R
""
ra y, ya
oad, to
answer session.
H 1ze Medical Ce
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ELBERFELD$

NeM 18HOUR"
Area deaths J LOVELY LOOKbras

"I was scared to death."
In Kentucky, Lonnie Klepper, 'l/,

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Lions endorse levy , Emergency
Three calls were answered

Violence erupts as coal talks end
WASHINGTON (AP) - With contract talks broken off and renewed
violence and disruption along picket
lines, the United Mine Workers
bargaining council is assembling to
diJcuss the 54-{lay-old soft-coal
strike.
UMW President Sam Church
called the 3~member council to
Washington for meetings Wednesday or Thursday after he broke
off negotiations Monday, unable to
win further management concessions on the emotional issue of
union security.
Church and his fellow negotiators
went into Monday's negotiations
hoping the BituminQils Coal
Operators Association would expand
and improve upon a proposal it
made to meet UMW concerns about
the hiring of outside, non-union subcontractors at union mines,
But the BCOA, chief bargaining
agent for some 1,100 Appalachian
and Ea$eril coal operators, refused
to do so, and after an hour of talks at
a downtown Washington hotel, Church signaled for a time out.

i

; /
,

·.

I ~~~~

'

i

I

,__ ;
~

'·
_. ...:
I -,.. ~
'

\~\

B

(300)

ave
•

1:47 2:'7'7

Toddlers' Shorts
In polyester I cotton
poplin. Sizes 2-4,

Girls' Gym Shorts
Polyester /cotton .
Solids or
4-14.

by Playtex ,;

Olive B. Ashcraft

Pretty enough for a bride and ,you!

Money Back Guarante·
from Playtex•
(Offer ends July 15, 1981 , See clerk for details).

67'

Our Reg. 990
oiMO
llaptdn

"CCok.o.ioo

57•

Our Reg, U7
lo•Jo' Wat.,.... Hand Cleaner
14-oz.' cream removes grease

and grime without using water.
'Nttwt.
•

GOODYEAR TIRES
HIGH S4 t;1140
' .
s
Continues

THIS WEEKEND AT .:
MEIGS INN .
9 tlll1
'

. .AU
. UGAL. IEVERAGBf

,SERVED

Through Friday

THE MEIGS INN

C:LOSED SATURDAY AND ·
Plan free clinic

- ,

The Rutland Emergency Medical
Service will hold a free blood
pr mm•e clinic Thursday night from
8:30 to 8 p.m. at the Rutland EMS
station. Free refreshments will be
aerved. The public ill Invited.

·MONDAY FOR MEMORIAL DAY

MEIGS TIRE CENTER
01

John Pultz,

Ma1r&lt;

.---;

'

You Milt Be 21 11 Ar:anJIIIIild,
11J Pllllit II Leairl Gulrdl.i

PamiiiJ, iih.

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