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-

.

r

16-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, May 29 1980

'

'

Kennedy calls for open convention
~LAND (AP) -

Sen. Ed·
ward M. Kennedy, calling for an
open Democratic National Con·
vention, said today he will release
his delegates from any obligation if
President Carter debates him, " and
I hope Mr. Carter will do the same."
Trailing the president by hundreds
of nominating delegates, Kennedy
said the convention "should be at
liberty to nominate Mr. Carter, to
nominate me - or to select a thlrd
person. I am not afraid of their (the

Two hurt in accident
Two persollll were iQjured and one
driver cited·as the result of a twovehicle accident investigated Wed·
nesday by the Gallia-Metgs Post,
Highway Patrol.
Called to the scene on SR 160 at
4:45 p.m., officers report a south '
bound auto operated by Mildred
Daft, 53, Gallipolis, had slowed In
traffic. A south bound ·vehicle driven
by Heidt Lee Jones, 17, Patriot Star
Route, failed to stop and .struck the
Daft auto in the rear.
Both drivers claimed injury, but'
were not inunediately treated. Jones
was cited on a charge of assured
clear distance.

OKLAHOMA - The familiar melodies of
"Oklahoma" will be presented by the vocal music
department of Meigs High School when the popular
musical is staged Friday and Saturday evenings in the
high school auditorium. Anna Wiles, seated, is playing
the role of Aunt Eller in the production. Other cast

Two ...

Emergency

.~quad

runs

The Meigs County Emergency
Services Headquarters reports the
following runs by local units on
Thursday :
Middleport Unit, 10:23, Hilah
Jones, South Third Ave ., to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; ll :09, 750
Sycamore St., Jenny Halley to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; 21 :49,
Jonathan Brockett, North Fourth
Ave., to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Rutland Unit, 20:23 , for
Brian Jordan, Hysell RWJ Road, to
Veterans Memorial; 22 :26 , Ericson
Road, Betty Riley to O'Bieness
Hospital, Athens; Syracuse Unit,
19:12, Rick Baker, Water St., to
Veterans Memorial Hospital ; .Tuppers Plains Unit, 19:27, Coolville for
Jack Lance, taken to Camden Clark
Hospital, Parkersburg ; 22 : 10 p.m.,
Rob Barber, Tuppers Plains, to
O'Bleness Hospital, Athens .

United Pentecostal Church with the
Rev. William Kniltel officiating.
Burial will be in Gravel Hill
Cemetery, Cheshlre. Friends flUIY
call at the Rawlings-Coats-Blower
Funeral Home from 7 to 9 this
evening, from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
on Fiday and until 12:30 p.m. on
Saturday when the body will be
taken to the church.

Crystal G. Adler
Mrs. Grace Hawley, Miss Mildred
Hawley and Mrs. Flossie Allen·
sworth , Middleport, left Thursday
for Walbridge where the~ will a!tend
funeral services for Crystal Gale
Adler, three-month old twin
daughter of Debbie and Larry Adler
who died Tuesday morning.
Besides her parents, Crystal is
survived by her twin sister, Shelly
Kay ; grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Ja me s E . Hawley, great·
grandmother, Mrs. Grace Hawley
and a hail-brother, Chuckle John·
ston.
Graveside services wtll be held
Friday at Walbridge.

Robert Hartley

John Raznoff
Mr. and Mrs. Harold WIU have
received word of the death of his
brother-in-law, John Raznoff, Tampa, Fla. He was the husband of Enda
Florence Will, formerly of Pomeroy,
and daughter of the late ·Mr. and
Mrs. Clifford Will. Burial was in
MY.rtle Hills Cemetery at Tampa
Monday.

VETERANS'MEMORIAL
Admitted-Johnny E. McCloud,
New Haven; Vicky Boso, Portland;
Gertrude Pellegrino, Middleport;
Hllah Jones, Middleport; Jeannie
Halley, Crown City: Brian Jacobs,
Rutland; Richard Baker, Pomeroy;
·
Nettle Moore, Syracuse.
Discharged-Tammie Blake, Phil
Baldwin, John Blosser, Sarah McCarty, Quinton White, Anna Grim,
Everett Caldwell.
CLOSING EARLY
Schools of the Meigs Local School
District will close three hours early
on Friday to allow students to attend
the state girls' softhaU tournament
at Ashland. There will be no af·
temoon kindergarten classes on
Friday.

VOL. 31

said. "I've seen him so much on
television, I wanted to see if that's

really what he looks like."
Six blocks away, the Reagan
crowd applauded the candidate's
promises to stop unemployment,
halt the growth of government and
ease the nation's energy woes.
Several high school bands played

SUMMER SLEEPWEAR l

WESTERN SHIRTS
Small (14· 14112) , medium (15·15112),
large (16·16112 ), extra large (17·
17 112 ) .

!

Solid colors and patterns. Ex·
cellent selection in long or short
sleeve styles.

;.s l SALE PRICES
!:~~~~::::::.~-~!:-~------------w ' HANES
l
ALBUM SALE
SPECIAL.I l
;JKJ............

BUY A PACKAGE OF MEN'S
HANES ' T-SHIRTS, BRIEFS
OR BOXERS AND RECEIVE
A FREE BOXER OR BRIEF.

I

Two Day Sale Prices on our entire stock
of ste r eo albums .
Popular, roc k, country, easy listening,
reli gi ous. movie sound tracks, in·
strum e ntals, bluegrass and children's
a lbums.

I REG. 3.79 •••••••••••• SALE 2.95
5
1
I
I REG. ~.79 •••••••••••• SALE 14.65

I REG. '8.79 •••••••••••• SALE '7.05

----~~~~~~~~~---~~~~Y1~~~~~~~~~WOMEN's

1

MEN's

UNIFORMS

II

CARPENTER'S
.

1 Stra ight
1

1
I

~~~~t~~e

leg
pocket and
hamm e r loop . Sizes 28 to 38 waist, length
30 to 36. White · light blue and pre·washed
denim .

'11.95 CARPENTERS JEANS ........... 19.99

Mobile Home Trades Welcome
Show Models
0

KINGSBURY HOME SALES &amp; SERVICE
"For the First In Manutacuted Housing"
1100 E. Main
992·7034
Pomeroy, 0 .

..SHOP

MASON FURNITURE
!"OR THE BEST
DI!IALS
IN THE
.
.
TRISTATE AREA

MASON FURNITURE

Mon., Tues., we-d., Frldily &amp; S;~t.
· ON REGUdtsi.ARmi BU SF3
8:30 to 5: oo Thursday tllll2 Noon
.
Due to ear1y
ssa1 o1 c1asses
.. · ·
,
.
1n the Meigs Local School District , OPEN EVENIN~S BY. ~'-~~~~MEtn ONL
Frjday, children attending morning · · ·
Herman Gro~~t.,
ldndergarten classes wiU be tran·
.773·5592
Mason, w. Va.
aported to their homes on the ~I;;;;:Oii;o;·;;;
· ·;;;;;;;;;;;o;;;;;;,;;iii;;;;;;;;;;;;;o;;;;;;;;;o;;;;;o;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o;;;;;;,;;iii;;;;-..;:;;;;;;;;;;;o;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
regular school buses.
,.

'

1

12.95 CARPENTERS JEANS .......... '10.99

1

15.95. CARPENTERS JEANS .......... '12.99

WRANGLER 18.95

SAUl

STRETCH DENIM
JEANS

KODACOLOR
FILM PROCESSING

Blue denim, 78% cotton, 22%
nylon, pre·washed . Boot flare ·
true western style.
Sizes 28 to 38 waist.

12 EXPOSURES •••• ..Sl.99
.
20 EXPOSURES •••••• $2.99
24 EXPOSURES ••••••$3.27

5

enttne
FRIDAY, MAY 30, 1980

FIFTEEN CENTS :

Steep recession forecast
seen from April indicators

---~--~-~-----~-~~~~~---------~---~
CHILDREN'S
I
MEN'S

REG. '3.50 ••••••••••••• SALE '2.79
REG. 55.00.. •••••••••• SALE '3.99
REG.
SALE 9

Police blocked traffic on lflgh
Street, a main artery niJ!Il)ng north
and south through the city.
·
Officers and Secret Service agents
swarmed through the crowd and
kept spectators away from the street
as the motorcade arrived. ,-\JnOil8
thQSe waiting was ..lohn Sbrochl, a.
16-year~ld trumpet player with the
St. Francis DeSa1ea lflgh School
band.
Sbrochi said the band had practiced two particular songs for .
several days before carter's vlsltthe school fight song and "Rock
AroWld The Clock."

•

at

. POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHIO,

NO. 33

patriotic songs while Reagan supbecause he had never heard Reagan
speak.
·
porters circulated through the
crowd distributing Reagan for
"He 's a registered Democrat, but
President signs.
he's going to going to switch or we'll
Dick Keifer, a Rockwell Industries
get a divorce," Mrs. Bruner joked.
As Carter mounted the speaker's
plant 1\'.0rker, carried a sign that
said,"l{emember the B-1 bomber." . stand at the Nationwide building, a
Carter cut the B-1 from the defense
cloud of red, white and 1/lue balloons
budget.
sailed skyward. Carter removed the
jacket of his dark suit 10 minutes af"We took off work. It's costing us
ter he began speaking In the 84money to be here," Keifer said.
degree sunshine. His speech lasted
"Carter threw the thing away like it
about 18 minutes.
didn't exist, like an old rag."
Bobbie Bruner of Colwnbus said
Throngs miUed about the plaza
sipping soda, waving flags and stanshe took her husband to the rally
ding on tip-toe to see the president.

•

SPECIALS
SHOP FRIDAY TIL 8:00 AND SATURDAY TIL 5:00

1f.1 OFF

!

she rose early and rode a bus downtown, expecting traffic jams and
large crowds for Carter's . first
primary campaign trip.
"Here I am, 60 years old, and I've
never seen a president before," she

ELBERFELD$
END-OF-MONTH

Special group of pantsuit and
dress styles in white polyester per·
manent press. Slightly soiled .
Junior, Misses and Half Sizes.

MODULAR
HOMES

.

grass hear Nationwide Plaza, where
Carter spoke, or at the Ohio
Stetehouse, where Reagan forces
rallied.
Both crowds cheered as the candidates asked for support In the June
3 primary. Crowd estimates varied
wildly but the can&lt;Udates drew
roughly even nwnbers of between
5,000 to 6,000 people.
Tiny Mary Piacentini stood perspiring in the mllllng hwnanity at
Nationwide Plaza clutching a small
American flag and waiting for her
first glimpse of an American ·chief
executive. Uke thousands of others,

e

1

:·

By JACK A. SEAMONDS
Aaaoclalod Preas Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP )
President Jlmmy Carter and his
Republican opponent Ronald
Reagan competed for the attention
of more than 10,000 spectator~ Thur·
sday, deliyering overlapping outdoor midday speeches six blocks
apart.
Many came because they were
curious. Many had never seen a
president. Many ·had never seen a
former movie star who wants to be
president. And a few came just to
get off work. and eat lunch in the

GO, MARAUDERS - In support of the Meigs
Girls' Softball team which will be playing In the semifinals of the state tournament today at Ashland, a huge
drawing of a Marauder gal was placed on the front window of Pomeroy Elementary School. Just minutes

before this photo was taken of the drawing, the Meigs
team stopped at the Elementary School and a cheer
was led by principal Robert Morris. Sandi Sayre, Paige
Smith, April Smith, and Carol Spangler made the
drawing.

.

SALE ENDS JUNE 3RD

,Eiberfelds 111 Pomeroy

-

WASffiNGTON (AP)- A govern·
ment index designed to forecast
future economic actiVity plunged a
rec,ord 4.8 percent in April,
suggesting that the nation is in for a
steep recession, the Commerce
Department reported today.
The falloff in the Composite Index
of Leading Indicators came as·aU 10
components of the economic
barometer fell for only the second
time in the three-decade history d
the index.
The April decline eclipsed the
previous record one-month drop of 3
percent set In September 1974, when
the economy was falling Into what
was its worst recession since the
Great Depression.
The Carter administration has
been predicting a "mild and short"
recession this year, but private
economists have said they believe
the downturn will be closer in
magnitude to the 197H5 recession.
Adren Cooper, a Commerce
Department analyst, said the April
slide "probably does say something
about the depth" of the downturn.
"The index does have some
relationship to industrial produc-

~ Benefit

funds
'all but gone'

MUSIC DfPARTMfNT

Robert A. Hartley, Route 1, Mid·
dleport, died Wednesday evening at
the Holzer Medical Center.
Mr. Hartley was born In Pomeroy.
He studied music in Chicago, Cincinnati and Los Angeles and was an
organ and voice instructor.
He is survived by his wife,
Virginia Overturf Vitatoe Hartley,
whom he married Dec.S, 1979 at
Greensboro, N. C.; a daughter,
Suzanne Hartley, Denver, Colo.; his
parents, Allen W. and Evelyn Fen·
nimore Hartley, Pomeroy; a brother
and sister-in-law, Kenneth and Avis
Hartley, Pomeroy; a stepdaughter,
Mrs.Donald E. (Doris) Pooler,
Taylorsville, Ky.; a aephew, Ken·
neth G. Hartley, Pomeroy; a sisterin-law, Fanchon Overturf, Colwn·
bus; a brother·in-law, Gerald Over·
turf, Middleport.
Funeral services will be held at 2
p.m. Saturday at the Middleport

Court action sought
A suit for support has been filed in
Meigs CoWltY Common Pleas Court,
under the Reciprocal Agreement
Act, by Meigs County Welfare
Department and Hazel Maxine
Wiener against Daniel Ernest
Wiener.
Filing for divorce were Robert
M.Grinun, Syracuse, against Suzan·
neT. Grinun, Colwnbus; Robin Rae
Hess, Middleport, 1against Paris R.
Hess, Middleport.
Robert Jackson was granted a
divorce from Rosie Jackson on
c;harges of extreme cruelty.
The marriages of Randy Snider
and Deloris Snider and Robert S.
Burson and Patricia Elaine Burson
were dissolved.
'

Reagan, Carter woo 10,000 in Columbus

'

Area deaths

(Cont inu ed trom page\)

serving as crucial links in Ohio's
19,000 mile state highway system
are in trouble.
Under the bond issue proposal,
bridge projects are to receive $47
million In state funding to be matched with$188 million in fe3deral aid.
In addition, the state has earmark·
ed $21 million to be matched with
U89 million for safety and $20
million for preliminary engineering
and right of way easements for
future highway construction. That
amount would be increased by $60
million federal matching dollars.
New projects included in the road
construction phase of the bond issue
include SR 554 from Township Road
17 to county road 13 for relief to
flooding problems. It is a $1.9 million
project and the other also includes
SR 554 from county road 32 for eight
tenths of a mile for relief from
flooding problems at a cost of
$410,000.
There are no new highway con·
struction projects for Meigs County.
Under the proposal, $62 million
will be spent on new construction
projects in qrder to be matched with
$284 million in federal aid.

members with Miss Wiles are kneeling, Jeff Carson;
standing, I to r, Danny Riggs, Randy Osborne, Jean
Horton, Craig Darst and Mark Burson. Curtain time on
Friday will be at B p.m. while the show on Saturday
evening will start at 7:30.
·

"FoUowlng that debate, I will
release my delegates to cast their
votes in accordance with their conscience- and I hope Mr. Carter will
do the same, " he said.
Kennedy Mid whoever wins the
Democratic nomination willlO!e the
election unless the party " debateB
policies that qffer a real and present
prospect of progress."
Kennedy offered earlier this mon·
th to withdraw from the race If Car-,
ter meets hlm in a campaign debate
and then defeats him In the delegaterich June 3 primaries In CaWornla,
Ohio, New Jersey and five other
states. The president, who Is certain
to have the 1,666 delegates needed
for renomination by Tuesday night,
rejected the offer.

delegates ' J decision - or their conscience."
In a speech that aides sa id was
designed kl seize tlle political
Initiative on the day of Carter's own
campaign foray into Ohio, Kennedy
said he realize~ " better than anyone
else the odds against my
nomination." But he Insisted he Is
"not prepared to withdraw from this
race. I believe that It can be won and that it must be run for the good
of our party and our country ."
In remarks prepared for delivery
to the Cleveland ·City Club, Kennedy
said if there Is no debate before next
Tuesday's primary season windup,
" it must be held before the
ballotlns"' at the convention at New
York in August.

From the Associated PreSs

FBI probes possible conspiracy·
FORT WAYNE, Ind. - The FBI says the shooting of National Urban
League President Vernon E. Jordan Jr. may have been a conspiracy,
but local police, ruling out a "domestic type thing" as the motive, view
the attack as isolated and are checking the theory of someone working '•
alone.
Jordan, 44, under police guard in Parkview Memorial Hospital's intensive care unit, was off the critical list, but he was still in very
serious condition Thllfllday night. He had delivered a speech to the
Fort Wayne Urban League Wednesday and was shot early Thursday
outside his motel.

$75,000 raised for Glenn campaign
WASHINGTON - The chairman of Sen. John Glenn's re-election
campaign says at least $75,000 was raised at a reception for the Ohio
Democrat at the Watergate Hotel Friday night.
Patrick J . O'Connor, the Washington lawyer who heads Glenn's reelection cormnittee, said 200-to-250 tickets were sold. Tickets were $250
each bQtO'Connor said many contributors gave more than that.
Gl~nn has two opponents in Tuesday's Democratic primary- Frances A. Watermann of Bexley and Francis Hunstlger of Parma Heights.

Pontiff hegins historic visit
pARIS- Pope Jolm Paul II begins a historic visitto France today, a
pastoral journey he sees as the opening phase of a global campaign to
attract young people back Ill the Roman Catholic Church.
The visit will be the first by a pope to France since 1804 when Pius
VII went against his will for Napoleon's coronation in Notre Dame
Cathedral. It will be in the same cathedral that John Paul celebrates
Mass today.

Ohio man faces contributing charge
BATAVIA, Ohio- A 21-year~ld Felicity man was charged-Thursday with allegedly making his five younger brothers and sisters steal
food for their survival.
George Hale Jr. was charged in Clermont County J11venlle Court
with contributing to the delinquency of a minor. He was released on
.1,000 recognizance bond.
, Deputy Sheriff Barry Creighton, who flied the charge, alleged Hale
regularly forced his brothers and sisters, aged 10 to 16, to steal tbe
family's food from an IGA store In F~licity.

Weather forecast
Wann and huplid with scattered showers and thunderstorms
tonight and Saturday. Lows tonight in the mid to upper 80s. Highs
Saturday near 90. The chance of r111n is 30 percent tonight and 40 percent Saturday'.
'
EXTENDED
FORECAST
Suaday throueb Tlle.day: 8JM~wen or tllundent011111 possible
1broulb tbe J!eric!cl. llllblla jbe lOa Suuday, cooi.ID&amp; Ia to the upper 80s
aad lower 'ltl 'l'Uelday. Lctw•Ia the 101 Suuday, lowertog IDto the upper tOuDd 51111 Tuetday.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Federal
Wlemployment benefit payments to
600,000 jobless Americans, from
auto workers to ex-servicemen, will
come to an abrupt halt next week
unless Congress rushes to the aid of
a nearly depleted Labor Department
fund.
The Carter administration is
asking Congress for an additional
$1.1 biUion to keep the unemployment checks flowing, but government Officials have virtually ruled
out the possibility of congressional
action before next Wednesday, when
the fund is expected to run dry.
The money problem has developed
because the Labor Department
grossly underestimated the number
of benefit recipients from the slwnping auto industry when the depart·
ment submitted its budget request to
Congress last year. Now, action on
the request for additional money for
this fiscal year has been tied up by
C9ngress' wrangling over. the next
fiscal year's budget.
Congress is expected to approve
the money request without a fight,
mainly becauSe the increased spending Is required under laws passed
by Congress. But the nation's com-

Elect new

office~

lliicine Amerlcan Legion Post 602
elected new officers at a meeting
held Thursday night at the post
home. .
.
The new officers who will be in-

stalled on JuneS are Harry Wilford,
commander; Roger Brauer, first
vice commander; Roger Hill,
second vice commander; Pauline
Wolle, adjutant; Louie Lee, finance
officer; PaUl Sayre, chaplain;
Carroll Teaford, trustee; Bernard
Diddle, service officer and Jack
Scarbrough, sergeant-at-arms.

The composite Index In April stood

at 126.3, meaning that it was 26.3
percent ahead of its 1967 base of 100.
The figure was 12 percent below the
peak of 143.6 hit in October 1978.
A recession occurs when the
nation's output declines for two consecutive quarters, by traditional
measures. Weakness bas been
evident since February, when industrial production, factory
utilization and retail sales began
dropping.
Many economists believe continued weakness In these sectors
could produce a near-record or
record quarterly drop In the nation's
inflation-adjusted output this quar·
ter. The nation's output had grown
only a weak 0.6 percent, at an annual
rate, In the first quarter, the Commerce Department reported recently.
Further evidence of a likely steep
second-quarter decline was shown In
the companion Composite Index of
Coincident Indicators, which feU 1.9
percent in April following dropa of
1.2 percent" in March and 0.7 percent
In February. This index is desi~l¥1
to parallel economic activity. ·
On another front, the Labor
Department reported Thursday that
the average earnings of American
families rose 8 percent in the 12 months ending In March - from p;5 a
week in March 1979 to $395 a week
this March.

Dr. Niehm named
center director

plex legislative process can be slow
in handling even routine matters,
and Labor Department . officials
believe benefit payments will be interrupted for at least two to three
weeks.
''Theoretically, if Congress wants
Dr. Bernard F. Niehm, who has
to work as hard as possible, it could
been the Interim director of the
get the job done next week or very
Qallia ·Jackson ·Meigs Community
early the following week," said one
Mental Health Center for the past
department official, who asked not .. eight months, has been named perto be identified. "Chances are,
manent director.
however, that it will take somewhat
The center board made that
longer, maybe another week. And,
decision during their monthly
even after the bill is signed, It will
meeting Wednesday. The board's
take another 5 to 12 days to reswne
persoMel cormnittee reviewed apthe checks."
proximately 50 candidates, in·
Those receiving the unemcluding ones from Gennany and
ployment benefits Include 334,000
England, before recommending Dr.
workers - mostly in the auto inNiehm.
dustry + who have lost their jobs
Dr. Niehm is responsible for
because of foreign competition,
clinics In Gallia, Jackson and Meigs
190,000 fonner federal and postal
Counties (with the main ad·
employees and ex-servicemen who
ministratlve offices in Gallia). The
are Ineligible for regular state
clinics provide a large number of
unemployment insurance, 73,000 for·
services including: Outpatient, Inmer CETA public service job
patient,
ACT
( pa~tial
holders, and 3,000 loggers In Califorhospitalization), Speech . and
nia who lost their jobs wben the RedHearing, Consultation and
woods National Park was expanded
Education and the Center's newest
in 1978..
program, the Children's Residential
Treatment Program.
"The Gallia • Jackson • Meigs
Community Mental Health Center is
S0
. one of the most comprehensive
' systems for mental health care in
the state of Ohio and in the nation,"
they hava been withdrawn from the
said Dr. Nlehm. He added, "The sucsale. The two properties are Case
cess of mental health services here
78,DLT 20, property titled in the
is linked with the continued developname of Catherine Ebersbach, and
ment of good workin!l' relations with
Case 80, DLT 'lT, property titled In
other community agencies.''
the name of Hazel M. Dunlevy.
Before being appointed interim
director last September (when Tom
Gramley resigned for health
reasons), Dr. Niehm was the director of consultation and education at
the center for·111ore than two years.
Dr. Nlehm came to Gallipolis 10
yeari ago as superintendent of the
Gallipolis State InStitute (now called
Galli~lis Developmental Center), a
post be held six years.
Before moving to Southeastern
Ohio, Dr. Nlehm worked In ColamCLEVELAND (AP) - Tbe
bus~ state,department coord!Jiator
numbers draWD 'l'lnlnday IIIPt
of Mental Retardation Plalinln&amp; for
In the Ohio Lottery'• daDy game
Ohio and served on the gove~
"The Number" 811d 'Ita weekly
citizen cMuniallon for plannJDc
"Pyramid" 1•me were:
mental health and mental retiaTbeNumber-7~
dation
services for Oblo. He served
Pyramid -1'1; 1'.113; 5148
on board of ,plannJDc and grants and
'
.

Two properties won't be
Two of the properties advertised
to be sold at a tax sale at 10 a.m.
tomorrow In front of the courthouse
wiU not be sold, Meigs Prosecutor
Fred W. Crow III reported today.
Back taxes and court costs on the
properties have been paid and hence

lion, and that makes up about onethird of the total economy," lie said.
"In that sense, it suggests a
problem."
The April slide In the composite index was the seventh In the last 12
months and followed drops of 2.1
percent in March and 0.4 percent in
February. Revised data showed no
change In the index in January and
December, the report added.
Three consecutive monthly
declines in this economic barometer
traditionally have signaled that a
recession was imminent.
The Commerce Department Index
is made up of 10 measures of
economic health, ranging from the
layoff rate in industry to stock prices
and building permits.
Felicks Tanun, a Commerce
specialist on the Index, said the only
previous time all components of the
index had fallen was in November
1957, again a recesslonary period.
"Layoff rate contributed the
greatest decline," the report said,
suggesting that the sharp increase in
Wlemployment from 6.2 percent in
March to 7 percent in April may be
followed by further large rises in
joblessness.
Some private ailalysta are predicting that the unemployment rate for
May, due for release next Friday,
could rise to 7.5 million. That would
translate to nearly 8 million jobless
persons.

ld

spent two years as an administrator
for the Franklin County Mental
Retardation Program. His experience also Includes service in
residen~ centers for the developmental disabled.
Academically, Dr. Niehm holds a
Ph.D. from Ohio Stele University in
the area of exceptional children,
education psychology and guidance
and counseling. His Master's Degree
is In the fields of administration and
special education.
Dr. Niehm is active in scouting as
a member of the Tri..State Boy Scout
CouncU. He is past chairperson for
the ~allia-Melgs District
Scout Commission. Other af·
filiations include membership In
Rotary and the Great Lakes Region
of the American .Association of Mental Retardation. Dr. Nlelun acted as
past president of the Galllpolis Blue
Angels Booster Club and of the Stele
Chapter of the American
Association of Mental Retardation.
Dr. Nlehm and his ...,Ue, Eunice,
have three children: Julie, who attends Ohio State University, Patti,
who attends Otterbein College and
Bernie, Jr., who is in the aeventh
grade at Gallia Academy High
School.

�. ..

...

3-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,

2-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Poltlflroy, 0 ., Friday, May 30, 1980 •

O}linions
&amp; Comments

l.

Travel members not surprised
WASIDNGTON (AP)- Veterans first Chinook.
of presidential travel probably were not as surprised as many other
A stranger helicopter-related iJl.
Americans when mechanical cident occurred during the adproblems with helicopters forced ministration of President Richard
cancellation of the Iran hostage M. Nixon. Spending a weekend at
rescue mission.
Camp David, Md. , Nixon decided to
Often enough, helicopters involved fly by helicopter to the scene of
in ferrying reporters and major floods in Harrisburg and
photographers during presidential Wilkes-Barre, Pa.
trips fail to get off the ground or, onBecause the round trip from Camp
ce alOft, land sooner than scheduled. David required an extra-heavy load
That happened during Carter's of fuel, the pilot was unable to get off
helicopter inspection tour of the the ground on the first attempt.
spectacular Mount St. Helens
While Nixon waited patiently, a
couple of passengers were ordered
volcano.
A Chinook helicopter carrying to get off. But a second attempt at
more than two dozen reporters and takeoff also had to be aborted.
photographers followed the
Two more passengers were boonpresident's smaller chopper into the ced and the presidential helicopter
air from a small airport at Kelso, finallylaboredintothesky.
Wash. Then, to the puzzlement of the
The Carters made a quick helicoppassengers, it swung around swiftly
ter round trip last Sunday between
and returned to the Kelso field.
The press contingent was ushered Camp David and the Wolf Trap perquickly to a spare Chinook that was forming arts center in suburban
Jlllrt of Carter's helicopter armada, Virginia. They did so because
took off again and caught up with the · daughter Amy was among the per·
formers at a recital by youthful en·
Portland-bound airborne fleet.
Passengers later learned that a thusiasts of the violin and certain
warning light, which indicated an other stringed instruments.
engine malfunction, had prompted a
Asked how violinist Amy had
precautionary return to Kelso by the done, Carter grinned, "Okay - she
and about 400 others."
" ""

.

.

Letters to editor
Appreciates effort
Dear Editor:
I would like to make public my sincere appreciation to the stalf, parents/guardians, and friends of
Salisbury Elementary for their sup-

port and cooperation in making our
musical, "The S. S. Salisbury, The
Musical Showboat" a success.
But, most of all, we salute our
students who worked so hard and
performed so well.
Thank you. - John Usle, Principal, Salisbury Elementary School.

.Political interest
fades with summer
: WASIDNGTON (AP) - This
)'ear's early signs that Americans
'had regained their interest in
:Presidential pOlitics have faded with
lhe coming of summer.
: New
Hampshire
and
• Massachusetts voters opened the
primaty season by trooping to the
}lolls in large nwnbers. But that
:surge turned out to be a short-lived,
es fewer and fewer voters went ,to
lhe polls In the later primaries, coml/llred with 1976.
· Only the Republicans can take any
comfort at all in the turnout figures
lhisyear.
: Until May, turnout in GOP
primaries was uniformly higher.
And in two major states where
i.ooters could cast ballots in either
;party's prtmary, the voters opted
. more for the GOP contest than the
; bemocraticone.
;: Americans have been taking part
~ jn selecting their new president less
, and less in the last two decades. Sin~~ 1900-when 61.8 percent of the
;jtdults voted in the presidential race•Jhe trend has been down. Only about
· 54.3 percent voted in the 19'76 election, which put Jinimy Carter in the
)Vhite House.
: . The primary season started off
with a bang, which some saw as a
itin the American public was going
!Mick to the polling booth.
• Turnout was up about a third in
·both parties' New Hampshire
Primaries QVer 1976. The next week,
;a percent more voters went to the
polls In the Massachusetts

UN~ER~TAN~ 't'OUR

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WORK WITHIN THE S'I'STEM?
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in !Utory: In

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lllllbln Roulll, France.

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=-~Dtf. llncled In what!' now
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-~ terrltariee.
• ' llllJa, durlnc World WarD, IIIDfe
tiiiD 1,1. Brttllh bombers pounded
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A COP-OUT -BURN\NG 'lOUR
VOTeR ~EGISTr&lt;ATION
C.F\R~
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[

Reagan concentrating on-Carter's record
Having run out of Republican O[&gt;ponents, Ronald Reagan is con·
centraling on the issues he plans to
use against Democratic President
Jimmy Carter.
Reagan flew on Wednesday to 'Ohio, where he once expected to face
one of the climactic fights in his
campaign for the Republican
presidential nomination.
But the GOP battle was settled on
Monday when George Bush conceded that Reagan has the
nomination locked up. Bush withdrew from active competition in the
race.
Nonetheless, Reagan kept his
plans to campaign in Ohio, New Jer·
sey and California before those
states hold primaries on Tuesday.
But in appearances in Ohio,
Reagan indicated that he will concentrate more than ever on the Car·
terrecord.

While Sen. Edward M. Kennedy
continues to campaign to wrest the
Democratic n omination from Carter, Reagan has indicated he has no
doubt that his opponent wi ll be the
Democratic incumbent.

30,000 fliers in downtown Columbus
office buildings in an effort to ensure
a large crowd for the Reagan rally.
They also bought radio, television
and newspaper advertisements to
make certain people knew their can-

Today's political roundup
The former California governor
tested his drawing power against
that of Cart er tOday in Columbus
where the two candidates scheduled
rallies just a few blocks apart.
Reagan was appearing at the Obi~
State Capitol, while Carter
scheduled an ov erlapping rally at a
plaza nearby.
Frank Donatelli, a Reagan aide
working in Ohio, said the Republican
candida! e' s campaign distributed

favor lowered taies. Mrs. Waterman and Hunstiger do. Glenn said
the proposed Senate version of a
balanced budget would use any surpluses to avoid higher Social
Security taxes and to cut business
laies.
GASOLINE TAX: Hunstiger and
Mrs. Watennan do not favor a 1~
cent-a-gallon gasoline lai increase
and Glenn said he was leaning
against one.
GENERAL FISCAL MAT-TERS:
Hunstiger and Mrs. Waterman said
they · do not favor congressional
fiscal poUcies and Glenn said he did
not support some past congressional
efforts although he favors a balanced budget which Congress is trying
to adopt.
Hunstiger and Mrs. Waterman

dissolved
new elec-

"All this talking to the Issues and candor what do you suppose John Anderson 's trying to
pull? '~

'

'I

i1"

-

~AT'S

ceremonies at the high school just before they left. The
entire student body was permitted to give the team a
sendoff with the band and cheerleaders on hand for the
gesture of good wishes. The sheriff escorted the team
caravan to the county line.

CARS DECORATED - Private cars which
provided transportation for the Meigs Girls' Softball

.

Cologne, Germany.
In 18811, facing widespread riotlnc
and unrest, France's President

IDIDt.

... .. ......... -

I

didate was coming to town.
At a rally on Wednesday in CiJl.
cinnati's Fountain Square, Reagan
concentrated on economic Issues.
He told the crowd that inflation
was four times higber and interest
rates 2t times higher than when Carter took office.
"We're not going to have a turnaround until we have a turnaround
in Washing ton," he said.
With the Republican presidential

nomination decided, Interest iJl.
creased in Reagan's possible choice
for a running mate.
The Reagan campaign is polling
Republicans, Democrats and iJl.
dependents in an effort to detennine
who on a long list of vice presidential
possibilities would be the strongest·
running mate.
Reagan and aides have refused to·
say who is,on the list, but the candidate did confirm on Wednesday
that it includes two women, Sen.
Nancy Landon Kassebawn of Kansas and Anne Amlstrong of Texas, a ·
fonner U.S. ambassador to Great
Britain.
Reagan refused to go beyond
acknowledging that they were on his

said they do not support President
Carter's fiscal policies. Glenn, who
is urging re-election of Carter, said
he supports the president because
efforts are being made to balance
the budget and cut the $65 billion
deficit Carter faced when he took of.
fice.
IRAN: Glenn supports Carter's
handling of the hostage situation.
Hunstlger and Mrs. Waterman do
not.
.
FEDERAL HEALTH IN·
SURANCE: Glenn said he supports
a form of federal health insurance
that would Involve expanded
Medicaid and Medicare and provide
for catastrophic health insurance.
Hunstlger and Mrs. Waterman do
not favor a federal program.
MIUTARY DRAFT: Glenn and
Mrs. Waterman said they favor a

Summer league results [

. In late-reported Uttle League action, the Tuppers Plains Tigers beat
the host Chester Warriors, 13-1.
E. Collins got the win, fanning six
and walking one. Russell Keller and
Brent Norton pitched for Chester
striking out four and walking eight. '
For the winners, B. Bissell, Jim
Caldwell, and R. Barber each had
two singles. Collins socked a triple,
and Jeff Caldwell, B. Durst, T.
Wilson, and S. Clemson each
singled.
John Miller had a triple for the
Warriors, and Terry Newsome and
Matt Harris each singled.
The host New Haven Cubs took a 30 win over the'Poineroy Tigers, Todd
Gress and Richie Clark pitched for
the winners, striking out 12 and
walking just two. Chris Shank took
the loss, fanning 11 and walking
four.
Gress led the hitting with two
singles and a double while Shane
McKnight had a single for the only
Cuba' hit. Todd Hysell, Shank, and
Steve Musser each had a single for
the Tigers.

list.
Asked if Bush also were' on it,
Reagan reverted to his stock answer: "I haven't ruled anyone in or .
anyone out.' '

·Glenn faces unknown primary opposition

Uona.
Tea years ago, the Vietcong seized
parta of the re110rt citY .of Dalal In a
surprise atta!i. ,
Five yean qo, tw Laotian of·
flclall in VletlaDe were forced out aa
the Ccimmunllt-led Pathet Lao
IOIIdifted Ita cmtrol over the govem-

- "' -·

EN114USIA~M FOR AN~t'
OF "THE PRE~It&gt;ENnAL CAN~I~ATES Eli HER

LOS ANGELES (AP) -

Democratic prtmary and 109.5 percent more in the GOP contest than in
19'76. In Vermont the same day, _
Democratic turnout was about the
same as 1976, while 94.6 percent
more people voted in the Republican
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
primary than last time.
Ohio primary race for the
But in the 31 prtmaries since Mar·
Democratic nomination · for U.S.
ch 4 that had comparable 19'76 elecSenate
pits Incumbent John H.
tions, turnout has gone down in 21 of
Glenn
against two relatively
them.
unknown opponents.
Of the 16 Democratic primaries,
Francis Hunstiger, 54, an engineer
turnout was up in three and down in
from
Parma Heights and Frances A.
13. And two of those three with iJl.
Waterman,
49, an unemployed
creased turnout - North Carolina
teacher from the Columbus suburb
and the District of Columbia - had
of Bexley, are opposing Glenn, 58,
tight local or state contests that
who iB completing his first six-year
drew voters to the polls.
term.
But the picture was brighter for
U.S. Rep. James Betts, a
the Republicans. Of their 15
Republican from Rocky River, is
primaries since March 4, seven had
running unopposed in the
higher turnout and eight had lower.
Republican primary.
And - until !'day 1, when Ronald
The Columbus Dispatch recently
Reagan opened a wide margin over
quizzed
the three Democratic conhis challengers ~ turnout in every
tenders
on their standa on major
GOP primary was up.
Issues.
Briefly,
here are the results:
In many states, Democrats · can
INCOME TAX: Glenn does not
vote only in the Democratic primary
and Republicans only in the GOP
race. But In Illinois and Wisconsin,
voters could crossover and vote in
the other prtmary If they chose.
And crossover they did.
This year, about as many people
voted in the GOP primary In Illinois
as cast ballots in the Democratic
one. That is quite a change from
19'76, where 63 percent of the
primary vote was In the Democratic
contest and only 11 percent in the
GOP one.

Charlea · de Gaulle

...

I PON'T AAVE ANY

Ohio perspective

parliament and called for

•-

Team to the state finals at Ashlsnd were decorated to ·
give team members a boost as they left the high school Thursday.
.

Kareem Abdul-Jabbar wins MVP award

~Tothy in hist(Jry• • •

.

..

0., Friday, May 30, 1980

HONORARY SPECIAL DEPUTIES - Members
of the Meigs High School Gitla' Softball team who left
the high school just after boon on Thursday to go to
Ashland · for the· state finals were made honorary
special deputy sheriffs by Sheriff James Proffitt in

I

: Today II Friday, May 30, the 1511t
· daJofl• . 1bereare216daysleftln

~

In Girls' action, the Middleport
Midgets took a 15-9 win over Jim's
Gulf. Lisa Whittington got the win
striking outl5 and walking three. '
Teresa led the hitting with three
home runs while Christy Richmond
had one and L. Whittington had one.
Other Midget hitters were Christy
Farley, Niki Whitlatch, Wendy

draft. She said she supported such a
move only "If necessary to maintain :
our image as a strong nation." :
Glenn said a Selective Service is·
needed in case of national emergency. Hunstiger opposes the draft.
DEFENSE SPENDING: Hunstiger opposed to more money for
defense. Mrs. Waterman favors
higher spending. Glenn said he is
concerned that the nation's foreign
policy is not clear and it is im-•
possible to say what is needed.
TRANSPORTATION :
Mrs.
Waterman and Hunstiger favor ·
spending cuts. Glenn said federal
funds should not be cut and should be ·
diverted to other needs inatead of
new highways.
REVENUE SHARING: All favor
it.

Tonight ana Saturda y
Lee Marvin · Robert Stlaw

AVAI.ANatE EXPRESS
PG
Henry Fonda

CITY OF FIRE
R

IUN·THUI JUN 1....,

Unemployment claims
up radically in May
WASHINGTON (AP) -The nuriJ..
ber of jobless Americans fUing
initial claims for unemployment insurance shot up to a new seasonally
adjusted record of 675,000 during
mid-May,. the Labor Department
reported today.
The number of clatma toed for the
week ending May 17 was up 59,000
from the previous week, which had
been the highest in at least 13 years.
In a seJillrate report, the department said the productivity of private
businesses declined for the fifth consecutive quarter during the first
three months of 1980, based on
revised figures.
. The department said productivity
fell at annual l'lite of 0.7 percent
during the first quarter, a reversal
of Its preliminary report of last mon..
th in which the government
estimated that productivity actually
rose 0.6 percent.
The five consecutive quarters of
I

k1

decline · in

productivity,

Barker, Amy Radikari, Paula
Gilkey, Shannon McCarty,, and
Belinda Hadaell.
Missy Woods and Tammy Wright
pitched for Jim's Gulf. They fanned
eight and walked just four. Wri~ht
led the hitting with two home runs
and a triple while Woods had a
homer.
Beth Ewing had two doubles, and
Julie Batey, Heather Woods, and
Darci Hysell each had a single.
Jim's Gulf came out on top in a
game with Syracuse, 17-3, with Tammy Wright and Missy Woods again
doing the pitching. Wright had two
home runs, and Missy Woods had a
homer and two singles. Julie Batey
had a home run and a single, and
Beth Ewing had two singles. Alicia
VanMatre and Wendi F!'y pitched
for Syracuse.

In Meigs-Mason Pony League,
Syracuse Hubbard's Greenhouse
defeal41 Middleport 7-4; behind a 1~
strike out effort by winning pitcher
Robbie Cunningham.
Leading the hitting attack were
Tony Riffle who had two doubles and
Cunningham who had two singles.
Rick Chancey socked a triple and
Eric Cunningham blasted a double.
Brian Allen, Greg Nease, and Dennis Teaford each had a single.
J. Cremeans took the loss, fanning
11 and w~lking three. Eads led the
Middleport hitting with a triple
while Bishop and Cremeans each
had a single.
Host Eastern Reds downed
Coolville with Deron Jewett getting
the win. He fanned seven and also
walkect seven. Dave Gaul led the
winners at the plate with two triples
and a double while Jewett had two
singles.
Ben Bennett and Eric Tabler
shared the pitching chores for
Coolville as they fanned six and
walked three. The five Coolville hits
were all singles.
Roger Kovalchik tossed a no-hitter
while fanning 15 batters and walking
three as the Pomeroy Royal:!
downed host Mason, 1~2.
The Royals pounded out ten hits,
led by Nick Riggs and John Smith
who each had two singles. Mark
Boyd had a double, and Kovalchik,
Harrison, Wamsley, Milhoan, and
Gilmore each singles.
Nonn Laudennllt took the loss
with relief help from Lyons.

VOTE FOR

year after Eddie Gottlieb, the league
trophy, Abdul..Jabbar surpassed the
pioneer who died in December at the
five MVP awards won by Bill
age
of 81. Bird received 63 votes
Russell of the Boston Celtics.
from
the panel of three writers from
" That'~ nice, that's beautiful, but
each
league city to just three for
that's really hard to appreciate right
Earvin
"Magic" Johnson of the Los
now," said Abdul..Jabbar. " That's
Angeles
Lakers.
something I will, really appreciate
The
voting
for Rookie of the Yea r,
when I retire from the game and
as
for
the
other
awards, was con·
look back on my career."
ducted
at
the
end
of the regular
Abdul-Jabbar is the the 16th con·
secutive center to win the MVP season. Thus the brilliant playoff
perfonnance of the Lakers in
award.· The last non..:enter to win
was guard Oscar Robertson of Cin· general, and Johnson in particular,
cinnati in 1964. Moses Malone of did not weigh in the balloting.
Fitch, who spent nine seasons in
Houston won the award last season.
Cleveland
before coming to Boston
"Few P.,ople have the ability to
last
swruner,
is the first inan to win
dominate a game, offensively and
Coach
of
the
Year
twice, having also
defensively , as Kareem Abdultaken
it
in
1976.
He
received 37 votes
Jabbar has throughout his career "
to
18
for
runnerup
Paul
Westhead of
said NBA Commissioner Lam
·
Los
Angeles
from
a
panel
of writers.
O'Brien in presenting the award.
"My
winning
this
award
shows
"And this year he demonstrated the
that
the
media
has
a
conscience,"
leadership qualities that the Lakers
said Fitch. "If I ever deserved the
needed to win the championship.' •
award, it was for the year we were
Bird was a lopsided winner of the
liH&gt;7 that first year in Cleveland.
rookie trophy, which was named this
That might have been the best job
I've ever done, although the record
doesn't show it. But I'm happy to get
the award 10 years later."
Auerbach, architect of the Celtics'
CINCINNATI (AP ) - Frosty renaissance, got 10 votes for
Tommy took the lead at the final Executive of the Year to five for
16th pole and went on to a one-length General Manager Jerry Colangelo of
victory over Air Tool in the featured Phoenix. The voting was done by the
eighth race at River Downs on Thur-

Racine results

The winner, running the six
furlongs in I : 13 ~. returned $58.60,
$22.60 and $8.1Kl. Air tool paid $14.80
and $8.40, and Aubeenaubee Bay
paid $5.80 for show.
The daly double combination of
Market High and Eager Out, nwnbers six and eight, was worth $24.60.
A crowd of 3,408 wagered $378,210.

JUNI7

ROBERT G. PICKm

cLERK oF couRTS

DON R. HILL
R.E!;'UBLICAN CANDIDATE FOR
MEIGS COUNTY COMMISSIONER
TERM BEGJNNJ.I'!G J,ANUARY 3, 1981
*Lifelong resident of Meigs county
*Farmer in Letart Falls
*Serving lith year as Letart Township Trustee
*Married and has 3 children
•Member of Racine Masonic Lodge
*Member of American Legion
YOUR VOTE AND INFLUENCE APPRECIATED
Pd . PoL Adv .

,,

'·

•3-1/2-H.P. Briggs &amp; Stratton
engine.
•Front cha.in dri ve.
• Height adjustment, l-l /4" to 3-l/4
• Handle mounted throttle control

'10995
POMEROY HOME &amp;AUTO
•ALIGNMENTS

992-2094

"A MAN WHO CARIS ABOUT
MEIGS CO. AND ITS PEOPLE"

I

•WORKED FOR SHERIFPS DEPT. FOR 16 YEARS
'

•FAMILIAR Wlllt EVERY
COUNTY ROAD AND KNOWS
-lHE PEOPLE OF MEIGS COUNTY WEU
•OWNER OF GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES
"Your Vote .and Influence
Willie Alprer:lated"
TERM BEGINNING JANUARY 2, 1981
PD.

,

ADV.

•3-H.P. Briggs &amp; Stratton engine.
•Height adjustment. 1-1/4" tO "-"•'•
• Handle mounted throttle control.

'17495

MEIGS CO. COMMISSIONER

Vote and

FAIRLAWN•
20"
ROTARl'
MOWER

08.01·610·0

REPUBUCAN CANDIDATE FOR

*Bedford Township Trustee (4
terms)
• Bookmobile driver (9 vrs. &gt;
•Meigs Co. property owner

REPUBLICAN FOR

INDIAN SIKH

The Indian Sikh religious com·
munity, which numbers 5.5 million, ·
is centered mainly in the Punjab.

MOWER

MANNING K. ROUSH

CLERK OF COURTS

FRIIAT

The Middleport Utile League
Tournament will begin Saturday at 9:
a.m. with the New. Haven Cubs
meeting the Chester Wamors and
the Central Trust Indians meeting·
the Wellston Royals. At 10:30 the:
Pomeroy Yankees tackle the
Pomeroy Giants.
At noon, the Gallipolis Yankees
play the New Haven Reds while the
Pomeroy .Tigers go against the
Reedsville Bombers. At 3 p.m., the
Gallipolis White Sox meet
Vaughan's Braves and the Pomeroy
Pirates play the Gallipolis Tigers.

SELF-PROPELLED

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) - Brinks
Donut led all the way, holding on for
a victory by a nose over Rasmerry
in the featured race at Scioto Downs
on Thursday night.
The winner, touring the mile in
2:02 4-S, returned $14.80, $5 .80 and
$4.~. Rasmerry paid $5 and $4.80 for
second and Gilchrist County, $6.80
for show.
The 1·2-10 ninth race trifecta was
worth$916.80.
A crowd of 4,078 wagered $350,428.

ROBERT G. PICKETT

'Lifetime residenfol Meigs Co.
*Insurance Agent (12 yrs)
'Married with 3 children

LL tournament
begins Saturday

niRLAWI'II•
H"

NORTH RANDALL, Ohio (AP) Pleasure Lark, with Gary Cooper
aboard, covered six furlongs in 1:12
!.,'; on Thursday to win the featured
Pepper Pike Purse at Thistledown,
and paid $15, $5 .~ and $3.80.
Muddy Road was second and
returned $4.80 and $3.60, while R.U.
Ustening paid $5 for a third-place
finish.
Acrowd of 3,417 bel$458,434.

MEIGS CO. REPUQLICAN PRIMARY

measures how efficiently machines

league's general managers, wha.
were polled by the Sporting News. .
In accepting the award, Auerbach
said he felt he did his job no dif_ferenUy this year than in the past.
"I guess it all boils down to the bottom line + how many games you
win,'' he said.

s¢1y.

REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE FOR

which

and workers produce goods in one
hour of paid time, was the longest
since 19'73-74, when productivity
declined for seven quarters In a row.
The 675,000 claims figure Ia by far
the largeSt number of claims filed
for a single week since the government began recording seasonally
adjusted figures in 1967, and
suggested strmgly that the nation's
unemployment rate Is COOUnuing to
shoot up.
~ jobless rate jumped from 6.2
percent In ~rch to 7 percent in
April, the largest lllOJithly rise since
the last recession five years ago.
With the latest recesalm ~r..:
sillllS of deepening beyond Carter
administration forcasts, some
government economists predict the
~mployment rate for May cou)d ._
nae to 7.5 percent.

Kareem
Abdul..Jabbar feels that at the age of
33, he's not getting older, he 's getting better.
"I think I've changed as a person
and as a player the last couple of
years, and I'm proud of the change,"
said Abdul..Jabbar, who was named
the National Basketball
Association's Most Valuable Player
for II' record sixth time in his
brilliant ll-year career.
"I've matured as an adult," he
said. "My roots·may be in the 1960s,
but this is 1980 and I hope I've
matured since then.
"I know I've improved as a
basketball player. I'm more aware
of all facets of the game now than I
ever was. And as long as I can maintain the standards I've set for
myself, stay in shape and stay
healthy, I'm going to keep on
playing."
That's good news for the Los
Angeles Lakers, who rode the 7-foot2 Abdul..Jabbar's brilliant pivot play
to the championship;
"Kareem means everything to
us," said Lakers Coach Paul
Westhead "He is the Man on this
team."
But Abdui..Jabbar says the team is
more important than the man.
"As an individual award, it's won·
derful to feel that your contributions
were more important than those of
any other player,'' said AbdulJabbar. "But this .iB a team game,
and what the Lakers accomplished
as a unit overshadows this. We
proved we were the best. We got to
hang the banner in the Forum that
says, 'World Champs,' and that's the
big thing .
"We were like the Three
Musketeers - one for all and all for
one. I wouldn't be here without the
help I got from my teammates."
The NBA presented three other
awards Thursday at a special lun·
cheon during the annual summer
meetings of coaches and general
managers, and all three went to
members of the Boston Celtics.
Forward Larry Bird was named
Rookie of the Year, Bill Fitch was
· named Coach of the Year and Red
Auerbach· was named Executive of
the Year following the Celtics' turnaround from a 29-53 record in 19'79
to a 61·21 mark last season.
The 7-foot-2 Abdul-Jabbar
received 147 votes from the 221 cast
in the balloting of NBA players,
easily outdistancing forward Julius
Erving of the Philadelphia 76ers,
who was second with 3112. George
Gervin of San Antonio was third with
19 and Bird was fourth with 15.
In winning the Maurice Podoloff

�. ..

...

3-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,

2-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Poltlflroy, 0 ., Friday, May 30, 1980 •

O}linions
&amp; Comments

l.

Travel members not surprised
WASIDNGTON (AP)- Veterans first Chinook.
of presidential travel probably were not as surprised as many other
A stranger helicopter-related iJl.
Americans when mechanical cident occurred during the adproblems with helicopters forced ministration of President Richard
cancellation of the Iran hostage M. Nixon. Spending a weekend at
rescue mission.
Camp David, Md. , Nixon decided to
Often enough, helicopters involved fly by helicopter to the scene of
in ferrying reporters and major floods in Harrisburg and
photographers during presidential Wilkes-Barre, Pa.
trips fail to get off the ground or, onBecause the round trip from Camp
ce alOft, land sooner than scheduled. David required an extra-heavy load
That happened during Carter's of fuel, the pilot was unable to get off
helicopter inspection tour of the the ground on the first attempt.
spectacular Mount St. Helens
While Nixon waited patiently, a
couple of passengers were ordered
volcano.
A Chinook helicopter carrying to get off. But a second attempt at
more than two dozen reporters and takeoff also had to be aborted.
photographers followed the
Two more passengers were boonpresident's smaller chopper into the ced and the presidential helicopter
air from a small airport at Kelso, finallylaboredintothesky.
Wash. Then, to the puzzlement of the
The Carters made a quick helicoppassengers, it swung around swiftly
ter round trip last Sunday between
and returned to the Kelso field.
The press contingent was ushered Camp David and the Wolf Trap perquickly to a spare Chinook that was forming arts center in suburban
Jlllrt of Carter's helicopter armada, Virginia. They did so because
took off again and caught up with the · daughter Amy was among the per·
formers at a recital by youthful en·
Portland-bound airborne fleet.
Passengers later learned that a thusiasts of the violin and certain
warning light, which indicated an other stringed instruments.
engine malfunction, had prompted a
Asked how violinist Amy had
precautionary return to Kelso by the done, Carter grinned, "Okay - she
and about 400 others."
" ""

.

.

Letters to editor
Appreciates effort
Dear Editor:
I would like to make public my sincere appreciation to the stalf, parents/guardians, and friends of
Salisbury Elementary for their sup-

port and cooperation in making our
musical, "The S. S. Salisbury, The
Musical Showboat" a success.
But, most of all, we salute our
students who worked so hard and
performed so well.
Thank you. - John Usle, Principal, Salisbury Elementary School.

.Political interest
fades with summer
: WASIDNGTON (AP) - This
)'ear's early signs that Americans
'had regained their interest in
:Presidential pOlitics have faded with
lhe coming of summer.
: New
Hampshire
and
• Massachusetts voters opened the
primaty season by trooping to the
}lolls in large nwnbers. But that
:surge turned out to be a short-lived,
es fewer and fewer voters went ,to
lhe polls In the later primaries, coml/llred with 1976.
· Only the Republicans can take any
comfort at all in the turnout figures
lhisyear.
: Until May, turnout in GOP
primaries was uniformly higher.
And in two major states where
i.ooters could cast ballots in either
;party's prtmary, the voters opted
. more for the GOP contest than the
; bemocraticone.
;: Americans have been taking part
~ jn selecting their new president less
, and less in the last two decades. Sin~~ 1900-when 61.8 percent of the
;jtdults voted in the presidential race•Jhe trend has been down. Only about
· 54.3 percent voted in the 19'76 election, which put Jinimy Carter in the
)Vhite House.
: . The primary season started off
with a bang, which some saw as a
itin the American public was going
!Mick to the polling booth.
• Turnout was up about a third in
·both parties' New Hampshire
Primaries QVer 1976. The next week,
;a percent more voters went to the
polls In the Massachusetts

UN~ER~TAN~ 't'OUR

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lllllbln Roulll, France.

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=-~Dtf. llncled In what!' now
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-~ terrltariee.
• ' llllJa, durlnc World WarD, IIIDfe
tiiiD 1,1. Brttllh bombers pounded
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A COP-OUT -BURN\NG 'lOUR
VOTeR ~EGISTr&lt;ATION
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[

Reagan concentrating on-Carter's record
Having run out of Republican O[&gt;ponents, Ronald Reagan is con·
centraling on the issues he plans to
use against Democratic President
Jimmy Carter.
Reagan flew on Wednesday to 'Ohio, where he once expected to face
one of the climactic fights in his
campaign for the Republican
presidential nomination.
But the GOP battle was settled on
Monday when George Bush conceded that Reagan has the
nomination locked up. Bush withdrew from active competition in the
race.
Nonetheless, Reagan kept his
plans to campaign in Ohio, New Jer·
sey and California before those
states hold primaries on Tuesday.
But in appearances in Ohio,
Reagan indicated that he will concentrate more than ever on the Car·
terrecord.

While Sen. Edward M. Kennedy
continues to campaign to wrest the
Democratic n omination from Carter, Reagan has indicated he has no
doubt that his opponent wi ll be the
Democratic incumbent.

30,000 fliers in downtown Columbus
office buildings in an effort to ensure
a large crowd for the Reagan rally.
They also bought radio, television
and newspaper advertisements to
make certain people knew their can-

Today's political roundup
The former California governor
tested his drawing power against
that of Cart er tOday in Columbus
where the two candidates scheduled
rallies just a few blocks apart.
Reagan was appearing at the Obi~
State Capitol, while Carter
scheduled an ov erlapping rally at a
plaza nearby.
Frank Donatelli, a Reagan aide
working in Ohio, said the Republican
candida! e' s campaign distributed

favor lowered taies. Mrs. Waterman and Hunstiger do. Glenn said
the proposed Senate version of a
balanced budget would use any surpluses to avoid higher Social
Security taxes and to cut business
laies.
GASOLINE TAX: Hunstiger and
Mrs. Watennan do not favor a 1~
cent-a-gallon gasoline lai increase
and Glenn said he was leaning
against one.
GENERAL FISCAL MAT-TERS:
Hunstiger and Mrs. Waterman said
they · do not favor congressional
fiscal poUcies and Glenn said he did
not support some past congressional
efforts although he favors a balanced budget which Congress is trying
to adopt.
Hunstiger and Mrs. Waterman

dissolved
new elec-

"All this talking to the Issues and candor what do you suppose John Anderson 's trying to
pull? '~

'

'I

i1"

-

~AT'S

ceremonies at the high school just before they left. The
entire student body was permitted to give the team a
sendoff with the band and cheerleaders on hand for the
gesture of good wishes. The sheriff escorted the team
caravan to the county line.

CARS DECORATED - Private cars which
provided transportation for the Meigs Girls' Softball

.

Cologne, Germany.
In 18811, facing widespread riotlnc
and unrest, France's President

IDIDt.

... .. ......... -

I

didate was coming to town.
At a rally on Wednesday in CiJl.
cinnati's Fountain Square, Reagan
concentrated on economic Issues.
He told the crowd that inflation
was four times higber and interest
rates 2t times higher than when Carter took office.
"We're not going to have a turnaround until we have a turnaround
in Washing ton," he said.
With the Republican presidential

nomination decided, Interest iJl.
creased in Reagan's possible choice
for a running mate.
The Reagan campaign is polling
Republicans, Democrats and iJl.
dependents in an effort to detennine
who on a long list of vice presidential
possibilities would be the strongest·
running mate.
Reagan and aides have refused to·
say who is,on the list, but the candidate did confirm on Wednesday
that it includes two women, Sen.
Nancy Landon Kassebawn of Kansas and Anne Amlstrong of Texas, a ·
fonner U.S. ambassador to Great
Britain.
Reagan refused to go beyond
acknowledging that they were on his

said they do not support President
Carter's fiscal policies. Glenn, who
is urging re-election of Carter, said
he supports the president because
efforts are being made to balance
the budget and cut the $65 billion
deficit Carter faced when he took of.
fice.
IRAN: Glenn supports Carter's
handling of the hostage situation.
Hunstlger and Mrs. Waterman do
not.
.
FEDERAL HEALTH IN·
SURANCE: Glenn said he supports
a form of federal health insurance
that would Involve expanded
Medicaid and Medicare and provide
for catastrophic health insurance.
Hunstlger and Mrs. Waterman do
not favor a federal program.
MIUTARY DRAFT: Glenn and
Mrs. Waterman said they favor a

Summer league results [

. In late-reported Uttle League action, the Tuppers Plains Tigers beat
the host Chester Warriors, 13-1.
E. Collins got the win, fanning six
and walking one. Russell Keller and
Brent Norton pitched for Chester
striking out four and walking eight. '
For the winners, B. Bissell, Jim
Caldwell, and R. Barber each had
two singles. Collins socked a triple,
and Jeff Caldwell, B. Durst, T.
Wilson, and S. Clemson each
singled.
John Miller had a triple for the
Warriors, and Terry Newsome and
Matt Harris each singled.
The host New Haven Cubs took a 30 win over the'Poineroy Tigers, Todd
Gress and Richie Clark pitched for
the winners, striking out 12 and
walking just two. Chris Shank took
the loss, fanning 11 and walking
four.
Gress led the hitting with two
singles and a double while Shane
McKnight had a single for the only
Cuba' hit. Todd Hysell, Shank, and
Steve Musser each had a single for
the Tigers.

list.
Asked if Bush also were' on it,
Reagan reverted to his stock answer: "I haven't ruled anyone in or .
anyone out.' '

·Glenn faces unknown primary opposition

Uona.
Tea years ago, the Vietcong seized
parta of the re110rt citY .of Dalal In a
surprise atta!i. ,
Five yean qo, tw Laotian of·
flclall in VletlaDe were forced out aa
the Ccimmunllt-led Pathet Lao
IOIIdifted Ita cmtrol over the govem-

- "' -·

EN114USIA~M FOR AN~t'
OF "THE PRE~It&gt;ENnAL CAN~I~ATES Eli HER

LOS ANGELES (AP) -

Democratic prtmary and 109.5 percent more in the GOP contest than in
19'76. In Vermont the same day, _
Democratic turnout was about the
same as 1976, while 94.6 percent
more people voted in the Republican
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
primary than last time.
Ohio primary race for the
But in the 31 prtmaries since Mar·
Democratic nomination · for U.S.
ch 4 that had comparable 19'76 elecSenate
pits Incumbent John H.
tions, turnout has gone down in 21 of
Glenn
against two relatively
them.
unknown opponents.
Of the 16 Democratic primaries,
Francis Hunstiger, 54, an engineer
turnout was up in three and down in
from
Parma Heights and Frances A.
13. And two of those three with iJl.
Waterman,
49, an unemployed
creased turnout - North Carolina
teacher from the Columbus suburb
and the District of Columbia - had
of Bexley, are opposing Glenn, 58,
tight local or state contests that
who iB completing his first six-year
drew voters to the polls.
term.
But the picture was brighter for
U.S. Rep. James Betts, a
the Republicans. Of their 15
Republican from Rocky River, is
primaries since March 4, seven had
running unopposed in the
higher turnout and eight had lower.
Republican primary.
And - until !'day 1, when Ronald
The Columbus Dispatch recently
Reagan opened a wide margin over
quizzed
the three Democratic conhis challengers ~ turnout in every
tenders
on their standa on major
GOP primary was up.
Issues.
Briefly,
here are the results:
In many states, Democrats · can
INCOME TAX: Glenn does not
vote only in the Democratic primary
and Republicans only in the GOP
race. But In Illinois and Wisconsin,
voters could crossover and vote in
the other prtmary If they chose.
And crossover they did.
This year, about as many people
voted in the GOP primary In Illinois
as cast ballots in the Democratic
one. That is quite a change from
19'76, where 63 percent of the
primary vote was In the Democratic
contest and only 11 percent in the
GOP one.

Charlea · de Gaulle

...

I PON'T AAVE ANY

Ohio perspective

parliament and called for

•-

Team to the state finals at Ashlsnd were decorated to ·
give team members a boost as they left the high school Thursday.
.

Kareem Abdul-Jabbar wins MVP award

~Tothy in hist(Jry• • •

.

..

0., Friday, May 30, 1980

HONORARY SPECIAL DEPUTIES - Members
of the Meigs High School Gitla' Softball team who left
the high school just after boon on Thursday to go to
Ashland · for the· state finals were made honorary
special deputy sheriffs by Sheriff James Proffitt in

I

: Today II Friday, May 30, the 1511t
· daJofl• . 1bereare216daysleftln

~

In Girls' action, the Middleport
Midgets took a 15-9 win over Jim's
Gulf. Lisa Whittington got the win
striking outl5 and walking three. '
Teresa led the hitting with three
home runs while Christy Richmond
had one and L. Whittington had one.
Other Midget hitters were Christy
Farley, Niki Whitlatch, Wendy

draft. She said she supported such a
move only "If necessary to maintain :
our image as a strong nation." :
Glenn said a Selective Service is·
needed in case of national emergency. Hunstiger opposes the draft.
DEFENSE SPENDING: Hunstiger opposed to more money for
defense. Mrs. Waterman favors
higher spending. Glenn said he is
concerned that the nation's foreign
policy is not clear and it is im-•
possible to say what is needed.
TRANSPORTATION :
Mrs.
Waterman and Hunstiger favor ·
spending cuts. Glenn said federal
funds should not be cut and should be ·
diverted to other needs inatead of
new highways.
REVENUE SHARING: All favor
it.

Tonight ana Saturda y
Lee Marvin · Robert Stlaw

AVAI.ANatE EXPRESS
PG
Henry Fonda

CITY OF FIRE
R

IUN·THUI JUN 1....,

Unemployment claims
up radically in May
WASHINGTON (AP) -The nuriJ..
ber of jobless Americans fUing
initial claims for unemployment insurance shot up to a new seasonally
adjusted record of 675,000 during
mid-May,. the Labor Department
reported today.
The number of clatma toed for the
week ending May 17 was up 59,000
from the previous week, which had
been the highest in at least 13 years.
In a seJillrate report, the department said the productivity of private
businesses declined for the fifth consecutive quarter during the first
three months of 1980, based on
revised figures.
. The department said productivity
fell at annual l'lite of 0.7 percent
during the first quarter, a reversal
of Its preliminary report of last mon..
th in which the government
estimated that productivity actually
rose 0.6 percent.
The five consecutive quarters of
I

k1

decline · in

productivity,

Barker, Amy Radikari, Paula
Gilkey, Shannon McCarty,, and
Belinda Hadaell.
Missy Woods and Tammy Wright
pitched for Jim's Gulf. They fanned
eight and walked just four. Wri~ht
led the hitting with two home runs
and a triple while Woods had a
homer.
Beth Ewing had two doubles, and
Julie Batey, Heather Woods, and
Darci Hysell each had a single.
Jim's Gulf came out on top in a
game with Syracuse, 17-3, with Tammy Wright and Missy Woods again
doing the pitching. Wright had two
home runs, and Missy Woods had a
homer and two singles. Julie Batey
had a home run and a single, and
Beth Ewing had two singles. Alicia
VanMatre and Wendi F!'y pitched
for Syracuse.

In Meigs-Mason Pony League,
Syracuse Hubbard's Greenhouse
defeal41 Middleport 7-4; behind a 1~
strike out effort by winning pitcher
Robbie Cunningham.
Leading the hitting attack were
Tony Riffle who had two doubles and
Cunningham who had two singles.
Rick Chancey socked a triple and
Eric Cunningham blasted a double.
Brian Allen, Greg Nease, and Dennis Teaford each had a single.
J. Cremeans took the loss, fanning
11 and w~lking three. Eads led the
Middleport hitting with a triple
while Bishop and Cremeans each
had a single.
Host Eastern Reds downed
Coolville with Deron Jewett getting
the win. He fanned seven and also
walkect seven. Dave Gaul led the
winners at the plate with two triples
and a double while Jewett had two
singles.
Ben Bennett and Eric Tabler
shared the pitching chores for
Coolville as they fanned six and
walked three. The five Coolville hits
were all singles.
Roger Kovalchik tossed a no-hitter
while fanning 15 batters and walking
three as the Pomeroy Royal:!
downed host Mason, 1~2.
The Royals pounded out ten hits,
led by Nick Riggs and John Smith
who each had two singles. Mark
Boyd had a double, and Kovalchik,
Harrison, Wamsley, Milhoan, and
Gilmore each singles.
Nonn Laudennllt took the loss
with relief help from Lyons.

VOTE FOR

year after Eddie Gottlieb, the league
trophy, Abdul..Jabbar surpassed the
pioneer who died in December at the
five MVP awards won by Bill
age
of 81. Bird received 63 votes
Russell of the Boston Celtics.
from
the panel of three writers from
" That'~ nice, that's beautiful, but
each
league city to just three for
that's really hard to appreciate right
Earvin
"Magic" Johnson of the Los
now," said Abdul..Jabbar. " That's
Angeles
Lakers.
something I will, really appreciate
The
voting
for Rookie of the Yea r,
when I retire from the game and
as
for
the
other
awards, was con·
look back on my career."
ducted
at
the
end
of the regular
Abdul-Jabbar is the the 16th con·
secutive center to win the MVP season. Thus the brilliant playoff
perfonnance of the Lakers in
award.· The last non..:enter to win
was guard Oscar Robertson of Cin· general, and Johnson in particular,
cinnati in 1964. Moses Malone of did not weigh in the balloting.
Fitch, who spent nine seasons in
Houston won the award last season.
Cleveland
before coming to Boston
"Few P.,ople have the ability to
last
swruner,
is the first inan to win
dominate a game, offensively and
Coach
of
the
Year
twice, having also
defensively , as Kareem Abdultaken
it
in
1976.
He
received 37 votes
Jabbar has throughout his career "
to
18
for
runnerup
Paul
Westhead of
said NBA Commissioner Lam
·
Los
Angeles
from
a
panel
of writers.
O'Brien in presenting the award.
"My
winning
this
award
shows
"And this year he demonstrated the
that
the
media
has
a
conscience,"
leadership qualities that the Lakers
said Fitch. "If I ever deserved the
needed to win the championship.' •
award, it was for the year we were
Bird was a lopsided winner of the
liH&gt;7 that first year in Cleveland.
rookie trophy, which was named this
That might have been the best job
I've ever done, although the record
doesn't show it. But I'm happy to get
the award 10 years later."
Auerbach, architect of the Celtics'
CINCINNATI (AP ) - Frosty renaissance, got 10 votes for
Tommy took the lead at the final Executive of the Year to five for
16th pole and went on to a one-length General Manager Jerry Colangelo of
victory over Air Tool in the featured Phoenix. The voting was done by the
eighth race at River Downs on Thur-

Racine results

The winner, running the six
furlongs in I : 13 ~. returned $58.60,
$22.60 and $8.1Kl. Air tool paid $14.80
and $8.40, and Aubeenaubee Bay
paid $5.80 for show.
The daly double combination of
Market High and Eager Out, nwnbers six and eight, was worth $24.60.
A crowd of 3,408 wagered $378,210.

JUNI7

ROBERT G. PICKm

cLERK oF couRTS

DON R. HILL
R.E!;'UBLICAN CANDIDATE FOR
MEIGS COUNTY COMMISSIONER
TERM BEGJNNJ.I'!G J,ANUARY 3, 1981
*Lifelong resident of Meigs county
*Farmer in Letart Falls
*Serving lith year as Letart Township Trustee
*Married and has 3 children
•Member of Racine Masonic Lodge
*Member of American Legion
YOUR VOTE AND INFLUENCE APPRECIATED
Pd . PoL Adv .

,,

'·

•3-1/2-H.P. Briggs &amp; Stratton
engine.
•Front cha.in dri ve.
• Height adjustment, l-l /4" to 3-l/4
• Handle mounted throttle control

'10995
POMEROY HOME &amp;AUTO
•ALIGNMENTS

992-2094

"A MAN WHO CARIS ABOUT
MEIGS CO. AND ITS PEOPLE"

I

•WORKED FOR SHERIFPS DEPT. FOR 16 YEARS
'

•FAMILIAR Wlllt EVERY
COUNTY ROAD AND KNOWS
-lHE PEOPLE OF MEIGS COUNTY WEU
•OWNER OF GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES
"Your Vote .and Influence
Willie Alprer:lated"
TERM BEGINNING JANUARY 2, 1981
PD.

,

ADV.

•3-H.P. Briggs &amp; Stratton engine.
•Height adjustment. 1-1/4" tO "-"•'•
• Handle mounted throttle control.

'17495

MEIGS CO. COMMISSIONER

Vote and

FAIRLAWN•
20"
ROTARl'
MOWER

08.01·610·0

REPUBUCAN CANDIDATE FOR

*Bedford Township Trustee (4
terms)
• Bookmobile driver (9 vrs. &gt;
•Meigs Co. property owner

REPUBLICAN FOR

INDIAN SIKH

The Indian Sikh religious com·
munity, which numbers 5.5 million, ·
is centered mainly in the Punjab.

MOWER

MANNING K. ROUSH

CLERK OF COURTS

FRIIAT

The Middleport Utile League
Tournament will begin Saturday at 9:
a.m. with the New. Haven Cubs
meeting the Chester Wamors and
the Central Trust Indians meeting·
the Wellston Royals. At 10:30 the:
Pomeroy Yankees tackle the
Pomeroy Giants.
At noon, the Gallipolis Yankees
play the New Haven Reds while the
Pomeroy .Tigers go against the
Reedsville Bombers. At 3 p.m., the
Gallipolis White Sox meet
Vaughan's Braves and the Pomeroy
Pirates play the Gallipolis Tigers.

SELF-PROPELLED

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) - Brinks
Donut led all the way, holding on for
a victory by a nose over Rasmerry
in the featured race at Scioto Downs
on Thursday night.
The winner, touring the mile in
2:02 4-S, returned $14.80, $5 .80 and
$4.~. Rasmerry paid $5 and $4.80 for
second and Gilchrist County, $6.80
for show.
The 1·2-10 ninth race trifecta was
worth$916.80.
A crowd of 4,078 wagered $350,428.

ROBERT G. PICKETT

'Lifetime residenfol Meigs Co.
*Insurance Agent (12 yrs)
'Married with 3 children

LL tournament
begins Saturday

niRLAWI'II•
H"

NORTH RANDALL, Ohio (AP) Pleasure Lark, with Gary Cooper
aboard, covered six furlongs in 1:12
!.,'; on Thursday to win the featured
Pepper Pike Purse at Thistledown,
and paid $15, $5 .~ and $3.80.
Muddy Road was second and
returned $4.80 and $3.60, while R.U.
Ustening paid $5 for a third-place
finish.
Acrowd of 3,417 bel$458,434.

MEIGS CO. REPUQLICAN PRIMARY

measures how efficiently machines

league's general managers, wha.
were polled by the Sporting News. .
In accepting the award, Auerbach
said he felt he did his job no dif_ferenUy this year than in the past.
"I guess it all boils down to the bottom line + how many games you
win,'' he said.

s¢1y.

REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE FOR

which

and workers produce goods in one
hour of paid time, was the longest
since 19'73-74, when productivity
declined for seven quarters In a row.
The 675,000 claims figure Ia by far
the largeSt number of claims filed
for a single week since the government began recording seasonally
adjusted figures in 1967, and
suggested strmgly that the nation's
unemployment rate Is COOUnuing to
shoot up.
~ jobless rate jumped from 6.2
percent In ~rch to 7 percent in
April, the largest lllOJithly rise since
the last recession five years ago.
With the latest recesalm ~r..:
sillllS of deepening beyond Carter
administration forcasts, some
government economists predict the
~mployment rate for May cou)d ._
nae to 7.5 percent.

Kareem
Abdul..Jabbar feels that at the age of
33, he's not getting older, he 's getting better.
"I think I've changed as a person
and as a player the last couple of
years, and I'm proud of the change,"
said Abdul..Jabbar, who was named
the National Basketball
Association's Most Valuable Player
for II' record sixth time in his
brilliant ll-year career.
"I've matured as an adult," he
said. "My roots·may be in the 1960s,
but this is 1980 and I hope I've
matured since then.
"I know I've improved as a
basketball player. I'm more aware
of all facets of the game now than I
ever was. And as long as I can maintain the standards I've set for
myself, stay in shape and stay
healthy, I'm going to keep on
playing."
That's good news for the Los
Angeles Lakers, who rode the 7-foot2 Abdul..Jabbar's brilliant pivot play
to the championship;
"Kareem means everything to
us," said Lakers Coach Paul
Westhead "He is the Man on this
team."
But Abdui..Jabbar says the team is
more important than the man.
"As an individual award, it's won·
derful to feel that your contributions
were more important than those of
any other player,'' said AbdulJabbar. "But this .iB a team game,
and what the Lakers accomplished
as a unit overshadows this. We
proved we were the best. We got to
hang the banner in the Forum that
says, 'World Champs,' and that's the
big thing .
"We were like the Three
Musketeers - one for all and all for
one. I wouldn't be here without the
help I got from my teammates."
The NBA presented three other
awards Thursday at a special lun·
cheon during the annual summer
meetings of coaches and general
managers, and all three went to
members of the Boston Celtics.
Forward Larry Bird was named
Rookie of the Year, Bill Fitch was
· named Coach of the Year and Red
Auerbach· was named Executive of
the Year following the Celtics' turnaround from a 29-53 record in 19'79
to a 61·21 mark last season.
The 7-foot-2 Abdul-Jabbar
received 147 votes from the 221 cast
in the balloting of NBA players,
easily outdistancing forward Julius
Erving of the Philadelphia 76ers,
who was second with 3112. George
Gervin of San Antonio was third with
19 and Bird was fourth with 15.
In winning the Maurice Podoloff

�--- ·or
4-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, May 30, 1980

Welch hurls one-hit shutout

Olympic funding
may become availabl
DUBUN, Ireland (AP) - The
"Oiympic Solidarity Fund" may be
made available to National Olympic
Committees that lose gove.liunent
financing because of decisions · to
compete in the Swmner Games at

Killanin also confirmed there bas
been consideration given to staging
future Summer Games on an
agreed, permanent, l'olitically
neutral site.
Meanwhile, despite strong
Moscow.
pressure from the government, the
Lord Killanin, president of the In- New Zealand Olympic and Comternational Olympic Committee,
monwealth Games Association has
said Thursday the possible use d
voted to send a team to the Moscow
money from that fund would be Olympics at a six-hour meeting.
discussed at the next IOC meeting in
The committee voted 12 in favor of
June.
·
gomg, with six against and two abDuring a news conference, the stentions.
Olympic official restated his regret
In a last-minute bid to persuade .
that the United States-led boycott of the committee to boycott the Games,
thts .year's Moscow Games was
Acting Prime Minister Duncan
preventing athletes from competing. Macintyre spent one hour at the
"Governments should fight their · meeting. In a statement Friday,
battles in.J!ome other arena," said
Macintyre said:
Killanin, referring to the U.S. spon"The government is disappointed
sorship of the boycott movement in at the decision. It seems to me that a
protest of the Soviet's military in- decision which deeply concerns New
tervention in Afghanistan.
Zealand's national interests was
"I wish to reiterate a protest on
taken on the narrower concerns of
behalf of the athletes that they
individual sporting officials.
should be made to make sacrifices,"
"I do not think that they and other
hesald.
New Zealanders will look back on
Killanin added it was beyond his
thts decision with any pride. The
scope to comment on political mat- decision was theirs to take and the
ters, but said Moscow was awarded
responsibility is theirs to carry in
the Summer Games because of its
the end. ''
ability and readiness to organize
However, it seems likely that it
them. The IOC president said he will be an emaciated New Zealand
would not be a party to any breach of team that competes at Moscow.
the six-year-old contract with the
II will be without its gold medal
Soviet National Olympic Com- men's field hockey team as well as
mittee.
the women's hockey team and the
Just as binding, he continued, was swimming, yachting arltl equestrian
the agreement to stage the 1984 Sum- teams.
mer Games in Los Angeles.
Noted track athlete Rod Dixon

Hisle has shoulder checked

•
'

''

CLEVELAND (AP) - Milwaukee
Brewers .designated hitter Larry
Hisle skipped the team's road trip
for a game Thursday with the
Cleveland Indians to visit a doctor
for examination of his troublesome
right shoulder.
Hisle is expected to rejoin the
team today in Boston, according to
Brewers General Manager Harry
Dalton.
"He hasn't played in nine days
because he has pain, and we just
wanted a little more discussion of
the shoulder itself," Dalton said.
"We hope he might be able to play in
a few days."
Dalton declined to identify the
physician or physicians examining
Hisle, nor would he say where the
examinations occurred.
·Hisle missed most of last season
with a torn shoulder muscle. He
reinjured the shoulder May 19 in

Seattle against the Mariners.
Hisle has batted .283 with six home
runs and 16 • runs batted in while
playing sol.ely as a designated hitter.
CONNER HAS SURGERY
OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) - Bart
Conner of the University of
Oklahoma, who who clinched the top
spot on the Olympic team by winning the U.S. gymnastics trials in
Jacksonville, Fla . underwent
surgery Thursday for a torn bicep
muscle he suffered in the competition.
Conner is expected to be out of action for a few weeks and will miss
only one meet with the West Germans late in June.
However, Paul Ziert, his university coach, said Conner may go on a
five-city tour beginning next week,
including stops in Los Angeles and
San Diego.

also is not going at1ll other individual
withdrawals are also e~.
World champion · and former
record-holder John Walker says he
has not yet made a decision, depending on his form at the time.
The government and particularly
Prime Minister Robert D. Muldoon
had gone to great pains earlier to
persuade the committee to uphold a
boycott of the Moscow Games. It has
decided to give no leave to public
servants and said it will give no
special diplomatic assistance to the
team in Moscow.

SCOREBOARD
Oliver, Texas,l3; Lemon, Chic8f!O, 12.
TRIPLES: Griffin, Tol"OIIto, 6; Brett, Kansas City, 5; C&amp;stino, Minnesota, 4; 13 Tied

'

MajorLr:apeGame~

AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST
W. L. Prl
New York
26 16 .6111
MilwaW:ee
22 19 .$39
Toronto
22 19 .$37
Bcloton
21 Z! .m
Cleveland
Ill 22 .116
Baltimore
Zl 24 -~
DetroU
18 24 .U9

GB

3%
3~

5~

6
7
8

WEST
7!1
2l
23
22

Kansas City

Chicago

Oakland
Teus
Seattle
CalifCJml.a
Minnesota

18 .581
21 .533 2
21 .523 2~

21 .512 3

22 23 .139 l
18 24 .429 81,1,

18 v .100
ftandly'• Gamea
Minnesota S, Chicago 2
Cleveland 5, Milwaukee I}
Only games scheduled

a

Milwaukee (Sortnson 4-31 at Boston
(Raineyf..l), n

Se{ktUe (Banniater 3-4} ell
{Barker&gt;l) n

Cleveland

Toronto (CiMcy 3-2), at New York (Tiant
.J.2 ),n

California (Tanana 2-5 J at Detroit (Wllcox
2-i),n
Olicago (Ba11ffi8arterJ 1-2) at Kansas Ctty
(Gura&amp;l!), n

Baltimore (Flanagan 4-3 ), at Minnesota
IErtck!oo ().3 ), n
Oakland ( McCatty H) at Texas (Perry 32) , &amp;:l&amp;n

Saturday' I Gamet
Cali!omia at Detrolt, d
Baltimore at MlnnesotB, d
Milwaukee at Boston, d
Seattle at Cleveland, n
Chicago at Kansas City , n
Toronto at New York, n
Oakland at Texas, n
SUDday' a Gamet

Lou.Js:

I ; 13TiedWtih3.

Milwaukee at Boston, d
Toronto at New York, d
Seattle at Cleveland , d
Chicago at Kans.u City , d
Baltimore at Minnesota, d
Oakland at Teu.s, n
NADONALI...EAGtiE

EAST
W. L. Pil GB
Pittaburgll

Pbll.ode1ohla
Montreal
Chicago

21 17 .585
22 11 .561 1
20 18 .~ 1~
Jll 20 .474 t ~

New York

18 22 .450

.H~

IS 'r1 .367 91&lt;
'llmndoly'oGomOI

Pittaburglll, Philadelphia l
Cincinnati 5, San Diego 3
l...oe Angeles 3, Atlanta 0
OnJy games schfPu.led

Fridly'aGames
Ptliladelphia (t..ron 0.0 ) at Chicago
I Reuschel !1-1)
New York (Zachry 0-2) at Pittsburgh
ICandelaria ihl ), n
M oo~ l (Sanderson t-3) at St. Louis

SI&amp;Dday'a GIJDet

New York at Pittsburgh

Montreal at St. I...ouis

Phlladlephia at Chicago
Atlanta at lAs Angeles
Cincinnati at San Ole~ (I
Houston at San FranCLSCO

A Vote for Bailey is a vote for
upgrading our highway system
and other programs beneficial to

Meigs County.

REPUBLICAN, FOR COMMISSIONER
TERM BEGINNING JAN. 2,1981
Pd. Pol. 'Adv.

STOLEN BASES: Moreno, Pittsburgh, %2;
LeFlore. Montreal, 1JI; Law, los Angeles,
15; Cedeno, Howton, 13 ; North, San Fran·
cisco, 13,
PITCHING (5 Ded.!iions ): RelUs, Los
Angele.!i, 6-(1, 1.000, 2.13; Bibby, Pittaburgh,
5-1, .&amp;13, 3.11 ; Welch, Los Angeles, 5-l, .&amp;\1
2. 16 ; Ca.rltoo, Philadelphia, 8-2, .IJ«l, 1.99;
Jackson, PittJburgh,·H , .a , 1.69; Shirlt:y,
~n Diego, 4-1, .800, l.SS; Blut:, San Franctxo, 7-2, .778, 2.&amp;8 ; Pastore, Cincinnati, 6-2,
.750,2.54.

STRIKEOUTS- Carlton, Philadelphia
80; Richard~ Houston, 71; Ryan, Houston 58:
Blyleven, Pittsburgh,~; Rogers, Montiea!'
52.
•

\

Houston (B. FGrscy ~) at San Francisco
(Biue7·2),n
S.lanlo)"l a.m..
Plllladelphia at CltiC&gt;~o
Houston at San FranciSCO
New York at Pittsburgh, n
Mootreal at St. Louia, n
Atlanta at Los Angeles, n
Cncinnati at San Dies(I , n

ty.

'

HOME RUNS, Sclvnidt, Philadelphia, II ;
Luzinski, Philadelptwo, 12 ; Garvey, Loo
Angeles, !J; R. SMith, Los Angele.s, 9;
Kingman, Chicago, 8; Clark, San Frand:ieo ,
L

1Hooton4-3), n

Qualified, capable and willing

.

Philadelphia , 13; K. Hernandez, St.
12: Knight, Cincinnati, 1%; 5 Tied With 10.
TRl?l.Es : MorenG, Pittsburgh, ~ ; McBrtde, Philadelphia, 1: Knight, ctnclnnaU

Cincinnati (~i brandt s-3) at San Diego
(Mural).() ), n
Atlanla (Matula W) at LofJ Angeles

to work for a better Meigs Coun-

NATIONAL LEAGUE
BA:rrrNG 115 at bats )' Rei!%, St Louts,
.360; K. Hernandez, St. Louis, 360; R. Smith,
Los Anl!eles, .344; J. Cruz;, Hooston, .333;
Simmons, St. Louis, .325.
RUNS : Sc~dt, Philadelp~, 33; K_. Hernandez, St. Loui.s,32; !Wie, Philadelphia, 29;
Templetoo, St. I..ouU, 29; Lopes, Los
Angeles, 29.
RBI: Schmidt, Philadelphia, 37 ; Garvey,
I...os Angeles, 37; R. Smith, Los Angeles 33 ·
McBride, Philadelphia, 32; Hendrick' sl
Loui!J,30.
•
FU'I'S: K. Hernandez, St. Louis, 5-9; Templeton, Sl LoW.! 00: Rei!%, st. Louts, 5! : R.
Smith, Los Ange e..s, ~2 ; Taver8.!1, New YGrk,
OOUBLES : steams. New York, 16 ; R08e

{ Vuckovich~),n

VOTE
FOR
J. OTIS BAILEY

HOME RUNS : Oglivle, Milwaukee, 12 ·
Rl.ldi, California, 11 ; Velez, Toronto, 9· 6
Tied With a.
'
STOLEN BAS~ : Henderson, Oakland,
22; WUson, Kansas City, 16; Bwnbry,
Ba!Umore, 13; Cart:w, California, 12; Willis,
Te.lll.!l,l2.
•
PITCHING (I Decisions ): Honeycutt.
SeatUe, 7-1, .17$, 2.S9; Guidry, New York ~
1, .833, 3.12; Rainey, Boston, 4-1, ,fKJO, t.M;
John, New York, H, .718, 3.01; Gura Ka~
sa.s City, &amp;-2, .7$0, 1.87 ; Redfnnn, Minn'esota
B--1, .750, 3 .~ ; Stieb, Toronto, ~2• .714, 2.44 ;
Dot.s9n, Chicafi:o, 6+2, .714, 4.31.
STRIKEOUTS : Guidry, New V(lrk, 61 ; M.
Norri.!, Oakland, 53; Redfern, Minnesota,
49 ; Matlac~, Teus, 48; Keough, Oakland,

51.

California at Detroit, d

St. LoW.

With3.

47 ; F . BaMl.!ller, Seattl e, 4'1 .

Fridlly'• Gaml!ll

TODAY'S
MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS
AMERICAN LEAGUE
BATI1NG 115 at bata), Landruux, MinReS(IIa, .3&amp;0; Bwnbcy, Baltimore, .357;
C(loper, Milwaukee, .Ul ; Molitor,
Milwaukee, .350; Molinaro, Chicago, .344.
· RUNS: Yount, Milwaukee, 39; Wllls,
Tt:u.s, 37; Molitor, Milwaukee, 36; Wibon,
Kansas City 1 34; Trammell, Detroit, 31;
MUJ'I)hy, Ooluand, 31.
RlU : Oliver , Tens, 33 ; Oglivie,
Milwaukee, 32; Coopt:r, Milwaukee, ll ; Ar·
mas, Oakland, 30; B. Bf:U, Tna.s, 30.
HITS: Landre.au.s:, Minnesota, 82 ; Wilson ,
Kansas ctty, 56; Rivers, Texas, 58; Molitor,
Milwaukee, 57; Bwnbry, Baltimore, 56.
OOUBLES: Yoont, Milwaukee, 14; D.
Garcia, Toronto, 13; Morriaon, Chicago, l;

to present the Fight Song as a send off to the girls' softball team which left for the state finals at Ashland.

SEES TEAM OFF - The Meigs High Band
gathered in one·spot outside the high school Thursday

Indian pitching
•
Improves some

,

drills three homers
SAN DIEGO (AP) - When Cincinnati Reds' catcher Johnny Bench
breaks out of a slump, watch out.
"I hadn't gotten the ball out of the
Infield in the last four games," said
Bench, who hit three homers and
drove in four runs to lead his team
past the San Diego Padres ~ Thursday night.
It was the third time in his career
that the 32-year-old catcher had put
three in the seats in one g8IQe and it
was the first time Padres starter
Randy Jones, H, had given up three
in one game since turning
professional.
Bench's homers doubled his
season output to six, but he's still
batting just .22il with 16 runs batted
in.
"What does it mean?" said Bench.
"It means I was pretty bad until
now. I figured Jones was going to
sinker me to death, so J just tried to
be quick. The first homer came off a
bad pitch, but the other two were off
pretty good pitches."
Bench now has 338 home runs to

,1

. ~

I

co.

hesdthea~CincinnaU~tand

is just seven behiod Yogi Berra who
holds the major league record for
catchers with345.
Almost overlooked was the pitching of 22-year-old Frank Pastore,
._2, who shut out the Padres on five
singles through the first seven in-

;i

1------- ---

J'·

nings.

.Pastore, who gave up seven hits
and one walk in the eight innings he

AIII·Chllmera Sprtnt

Buy Now and Save $100
on the rider of your choice.
• Crisp contemporary styling .
• convenient controls at operator's fingert ips.
• Enclosed engine reduces no ls~ and directs exhaust
fumes behind operator.
• Step-through design for easy access.
• Recesse.d non-skid footrest tor operator comfort.

MODERN SUPPLY
m We&amp;l Main St.
Ph. 991;1154
Pomeroy, OH.
Tlte store with "All Kinds of Stull" lor Pets · Stables ·
Large &amp; Small Anlma~s- Lawn• - Gardens.
ALLIS· CHALMERS

LAWII ANO QAROEN EQUIPMENT

- ·Indlluta 5, Brewen o
John Denny and Victor Cruz combined for a four-hitter as Cleveland
blanked Milwaukee.
"Denny got his breaking ball over
all night and then Cruz came in and
threw heat," said Milwaukee acting
Manager Bob Rogers.
Denny, s-4, yielded ~ur hits,
struck out four and walked four, in. eluding the first two batters in the
eighth, before Cruz came in to shut
down the Brewers, who had a sixgame winning streak ended.
Home runs by Cliff Johnson and
Jorge Orta powered the Cleveland
victory.
TwiDB 5, WbiteSos2
Ken Landreaux extended his hitting streak to 30 games with two

- Placed Mart&lt;
Wagner, Infielder, on the 15-da.y disabled
list Purchased the contract of Stan Papt, infielder, from Oltlahoma City of the American
Asaociation.
NoU..W!.eope

1..00 A.."4GELES DODG£RS - Recalled
Mike Sclosda, catcher, from Albuque~ ueof
the Pacilic Coast League. Optioned M1ck.ey
Hatcher, Infielder, to Albuquerque .
FOOI'IIAU.

Seed and Milling
HEA

Ohio Sportlight

UARTERS

By GEORGE STRODE
AP SporiB Writer

N.UOMI Footllolll.acae

BALTIMORE COLTS - Sigrn!d Mille Oz.
dowskJ , defensive end, and Grej Landry,
quarterback, to one-year centracu.
BUFFALO BilLS - Acqu.l.red Willie
Beamon, linebacker, on wslvers from the
NewYori:Jets.
GREEN BAY PACKERS - Acquired John
Henneuy, linebacker, oo waivers from the
NewYorkJeta.
LOOANGELES RAMS - Signed Phil Murphy, defensln tackle; K.Jrk Colliru, cornerback; Tern Pettigrew, .\ackle ; and
George Farmer, wide receiver.
NEW YORK JETS - Signed Darrol Ray,
safety: Lance Mt:tll,linebacter; and George
Visger, Tom Schremp, and Joe Peters,
defensive linemen. Waived Darnell Powell,

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Pam
Higgins was so discouraged she
thought about quitting the Ladies
Professional Golf Association tour.
The agony of painful elbows was too
much.
"I was really depressed," said the
34-year--old from Groveport, Ohio. "I
was really thinking of otl)er things to
do my arms were so sore and achy,
just like arthritis .
"But I couldn't find anything
equal to the experience you feel
when you play golf well. It's hard to
explain, but I take pride in what I do
well."
Tongue in cheek, Higgins said a
career in boolt:niaklng was possible
except "that's Illegal. I couldn't face
going to jail."
Marriage? "I had nobody in mind,
but It sounded better that what J was
doing."
What she was doing was not faring
well on the LPGA Tour. She had not
won since February 1977, plagued by
thole oucby elbows.
But a Palm Springs, Calif.,
therapist has improved Higgins'
physical welfare so much that she
won the $100,000 Allanta LPG A stop ·
this month.

i-unnirut back.

ST. [OUIS CARDINAU - Signed Brent
Cook 1. tight end, and Don Gaddy,
placekicker.
COUEGE

CARROLL - Named John DriscoU head
bad.etball coach.
MANHATTAN Ann ou nced the
retiNment of lrv KinU.!ich, assistant tract
and field coach, effective at the end of tbe
current seuon.
SOl!TI!ERN ME1l!OD!Sf -

Named

Janice Metcalf womt:n'.s lt!~ coach.

Seeds · Bird Seeds · Oyster Shells and Grit · Fertilizers - Lime . Ce·
mer.t.&amp; Mortar : Stock ~att - Water Softener - Remedies . Salt . Llten.

Va~t1ne - Rooftng • Pamts- Red Brand Fencing . Baler and Binder

SU.GAR RUN MILLS

• •

Mulberry Ave.

992-2115

Pomeroy

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ij~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;~

DONALD·L MOORE
REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE FOR

- QUALIFIED

..

FOR AN EFFICIENT COUNTY GOVERNMENT

/}ullll •

DEMOCRAT CANDIDATE
FOR MEIGS COUNTY
COMMISSIONER

Greatly Appreciated

-

•

•

•

&lt;"

_,

~~Kramer

vs.
Kramer"
WINN ER O F

6ACADEMY
AWARDS
I Nt."LL OINl;

BEST
PICTURE

DUSTIN

HOFFMAN
IN

"KRAMER VS.
KRAMER''
ijigo

&lt; t ... ti)LUM"•"tluat:IJOICUIT~Ill. totr::

DONAI.D L. MOORI

•

•

ft

~

"For us to win the national championship, we would need to play perfect baseball," said Russo.
Frank Viola (9-1) was named to
start for St. John's against Craig
Lefferts or Jeff Morris, both ~2.
Florida State Coach Mike Martin
announced Rick Hatcher (!G-2 )
would start for the Seminoles. Chuck
Krim (16-9) was the mound choice
for Hawaii.

VOTE FOR

HAROLD SCHRITTER
REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE

LARRY E. SPENCER

FOR

REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE FOR
MEIGS COUNTY

CLERK OF COURTS
-SERVING 2 TERMS CLERK OF COURTS
-RESIDENT OF MEIGS CO. ALL MY LIFE
-ABLE, WILLING, AND QUALIFIED

LARRY E. SPENCER
For Meigs County Clerk of Courts
"Your Vote and Support Appreciated"

STATE REPRESENTATIVE
92nd DISTRICT
HAROLD SCHRmER-Farm Owner, Construction Business,
Has 'A Good Record in Education, Labor, Farming Business.
92nd District-Lawrence, Gallia, Meigs, 4 Townships
Athens
Representing Lawrence County in Area 7 on Aging, Rio
Grande Office.
'
Pd . Pol . Adv.

There's No Place Like Dome
For The Summer ••.•• And The Fall
Rio Grande College and Community College,
services Gallia, Jackson , Meigs and Vinton
Counties with LOW COST education within easy
commuting distance.
'

.

Why travel many miles from home when QUALI·
TY education is available at Rio Gra nde with
courses and degrees offered to fit YOUR
schedule.

•

PITTSBURG
200 Mile s

•COLUMBUS
92 Miles

Classes.

-Approved for Veterans Beneflls
VINTON

co.

Registration Dotes

VOTE OSCAR WEBER

•

py."

- Morning, Alternoon and Evening

Oscar Weber

"

TWO WEEKS
Friday, May lOth
thru Thursday, June 12

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) - Arizona
Martin said Jim Weaver, Florida
Coach Jerry Kindall described his
State's
No.2 home run hitter with 17,
team as "a scrappy bunch" and Joe
would be 95 percent recovered from
Russo, KindaU 's opponent tonight,
acknowledged his St. John's team an ankle sprain. The Seminole
homer leader is Mike Fuentes with
goes into the College World Series as 20.
an underdog .
California Coach Bob Milano told
St. John's, 29-9, and the Wildcats,
the
news conference he could not
411-20, open the NCAA double"relate
to" the Bears' H record in
elimination tournament at Omaha's
previous
national championship
Rosenblatt Stadium. Arizona has
tournaments. They won the first
been pegged as a favorite, along ,NCAA tourney in 1947.
with Miami (57·10) and California
"I can only relate to the tour(41-21).
nament
thts year and hope we can do
Florida State (49-9) meets Hawaii
well,'' said the third-yeaf coach.
(57·16) in the 8:10p.m. nightcap.
Michigan Coach Bud Middaugh
Mter an elimination game Satursaid his team played its best
day between the losers of the Friday
baseball while winning the Mideast
contests, Clemson (311-19) is mat- .regional tourney. Middaugh coached
ched against Miami and Michigan
Miami of Ohio to the Mid-American .
(~16 ) plays California to complete
Conference title last year.
the first round.
Seven of the College World Series
teams are ranked in the national top
10. Miami is No.I, Arizona No.2,
California No.3, Clemson No.4,
Hawaii No.5, Florida State No.6 and
Michigan No.7.
"It's more scrappiness than talent
that got us here," Kindall told a
n.ews conference Thursday. "Our
1974 team had exceptional talent but
didn't make it to Omaha. I would
prefer to have a team that's sera!&gt;'

(Baud on S10 per crtdlt hour tor r..idtntl ot Gallla, Jtekaon , Mtlga or
VInton Countl.. wllh leu then College junior cla n •tanding .)

Your Vote And Support

"YOUR VOTE AND INFI.UINCI APPRECIATED"

I' '

,.

- $150 per quarter tuition

TERM BEGINNING JAN. 2, 1981

VOTE DONALD L. MOORE
.,

Higgins' first outing after Gill's
treatments met with mixed success.
"I played one tournament in that
time. Terrible. Shot 8UO in Dallas,
but without soreness. I'd just been
away too long. Then I started weight
exercises because I'd lost so much
strength. I went to Jim Hardy, Carol
Mann's husband, to help me change
my swing back·," she said.
"I'm longer now - not long - but
I am averaging 220 yarda a drive,
where It used to be 205," said
Higgins after ber wire-to-wire,
1hree-shot victory at Atlanta.
"I really enjoyed playing golf
when I played well," she said.
"Ideally, I'd like to be a part-time
good player. That way I can get back
home and go mushroom hunting
with my dad (Roger) more often and
keep up with my betting.''

OSCAR ·WEBER

IN JUNE 3RD PRIMARY••.TERM BEGINNING JAN. 2, 1981

PD. POL. ADV.

my career.''

. COLO'\' ·

Check out the Rio Gran de Story.

MEIGS CO. COMMISSIONER
CAPABLE

Don Gill brought Higgins back
with ultrasound and exercises three
times a week for three months in
1979. That was after she spurned
recommended surgery by Dr. Frank
Jobe of Los Angeles.
Of the proposed surgery, Higgins
said, " No way, not at this point in

singles as Minnesota took a raindelayed victory over Chicago.

Arizona State
'scrappy bunch'

.-.~.a,..

Sports briefs.
TE~

worked, tired late in the game and
lost his bid for his second straight
shutout.
Leading :HI, he walked Gene
Tenace to lead off the eighth and pinch hitter Jerry Turner followed with
ahomerun.
'
"The shutout was in my mind,"
said Pastore, "but I was not getting
the ball where I wanted it to go. The
pitch to Turner was right down the
middle."
Pastore left after giving up a ninth-inning leadoff double to Dave
Winfield, who eventually scored on
consecutive groundouts.
Bench's first home run was a
second-inning solo shot, which gave
the Reds a H lead. Jones walked the
next batter, Dan Driessen. Rick
Auerbach, who was 4-4, then doubled
in the second Cincinnati lJlll of the
inning.
Bench powered another solo
homer in the fourth, struck out in the
sixth, and capped the evenning with
a twcrrun blast off Jones in the
eighth tQ give the Reds a S.2lead.
"Thooe pitches I threw must have
looked like softballs to him," said
Jones, who admitted he was not "in
a good groove."
"I haven't given up three homers
in a game since I was 15 years old,"
he said.
The Padres will try to snap a fourgame losing streak tonight when
Steve Mura, ~.makes his first start
of the year against Reds' left-bander
Charlie l.eibrandt, 3-3.

fection ," said LaSorda, holding his
thumb and forefinger apart.
Reggie Smith gave Welch all the ·
offense he needed with his ninth
home run of the season in the bottom
of the first. It was the first of three
hit.&lt; lor Smith.
Pirates 5, PbJilles I
Ed Ott doubled in the go-ahead
run, then scored the eventual winning run on Dale Berra's hit to lead
Pittsburgh over Philadelphia and
send the Pirates back into first place
in the NL East.
Pittsburgh took a :HJ lead in the
first inning on run-scoring singles by
Dave Parker and Mike Mike Easler,
and a bases-loaded walk to Berra.
All four Philadelphia runs were
unearned.

BASEBALL

Tw1ne - Sprays · Gates · Hay · Straw .

PARIS (AP) - Top-5eeded Bjorn
Borg defeated Andres Gomez of
Chile 6-2, ._2, 6-l and lOth-seeded
Ivan Lend! of Czechoslovakia
downed Klaus Eberhard of West
Gennany 6-1, ~. 6-1, 7-4! in the
second round of the $650,000 French
Open tennis tournilment.
In other developments, thirdseeded Jinuny Connors was fined
$1,000 for using obscene language in
his second-round victory Wednesday.
In other play, 16th-seeded Manuel
Orantes of Spain bested Czech Pavel
SlozU 6-1, 6-2, 6-1 and Yannlck Noah
of France upset Jose ' Luis Clerc of
Argentina 6-1, 6-7, 6-1, 1-6, &amp;-3.
In women· s play, second-seeded
Billie Jean King topped Anne Hobbs
of Britain 6-2, 6-2; Wendy Turnbull of
Australia defeated Nina Bohm of
Sweden 7-6, 1-4!, 9-7, and Mirna
Jau.sovec ol Yugoslavia downed
Mariana Simionescu of Romania 6-7,
6-3,6-2.

Bob Welch
one-hitter

Bench breaks slump;

CLEVELAND (AP) - Lack of pit- pearances.
ching prowess has frustrated· the
The one-game series was a
Cleveland Indians in the early part makeup of a game which was fogged
of the 1980 American League out in Cleveland earlier thts season.
baseball season, but recently there
The Brewers put runners in
has been some improvement.
scoring position in the first, sixth
The ·Milwaukee Brewers, whose and seventh, but Denny fanned Gor·
pitching staff had allowed only four man Thomas to end the first two
runs during six straight wins, were threats and Mark Brouhard grounoutmatched Thursday night as the ded out in the seventh. Thomas also
Indians pounded 24-year-old starter struck out to end the Milwaukee
Moose Haas for a f&gt;.O victory.
eighth after Denny walked the first
Home runs by Cliff Johnson and two batters and Cruz came on in
Jorge Orta powered the Indians as relief.
they snapped the Brewers' winning
Johnson opened Cleveland's third
streak.
with a single, moved to third on
Two Cleveland pitchers who have Duane Kuiper's single, then scored
been effective lately - John Denny on a single by Tom Veryzer. Rick
and Victor Cruz - combined for ~ Manning drove in Kuiper with a
four-hitter.
sacrifice fly to give the Indians a 2-ll
Denny, H, gave up four hits, lead.
struck out four and walked four
Johnson hit his third homer of the
before being relieved by Cruz in the season in the fourth off Hass, who ill
eighth inning as the Indians won now 3-4. Orta slammed his third
their third straight and filth in their homer of the year in the seventh,
last six games.
following a single by Manning. Qr..
"Denny got his breaking ball over Ia's blast ended Haas' performance
all night, and then Cruz came in and for the night.
threw heat," said Brewers acting
Manager Bob Rogers.
Cleveland catcher Ron Hassey
said Denny, a 27-year-old rightMEIGS
hander, was overthrowing his fast- l
1
ball, causing him to depend on his
~OUIPMENT
·I
curveball more. "Bul that's the sign
l
. I
of a real good pitcher, to survive rPomeroy
, 0 . Ph. 992-21~6 .
without real good stuff," Hassey
said.
. fl
Hours : B·S Mon.·Frl.
8·12 sat.
Denny now has a 1.50 earned run
Closed Sunday
average. The 22-year-old righthan- ' International
New ldH .
der also has a I. 46 ERA and 19
Harvester
Equipmen\ t
strikeouts in his last ll relief at&gt;"

'l'lmndly'1 Sportl Tru.lacttoDJ

....
DETROIT TIGERS

John Bench
3-home runs

By Associated Press
Bob Welch climaxed a classic duel
on Oct. 11, 1978, when, as a rookie, he
struck out New York Yankees
slugger Reggie Jackson to end
Game Two of the World Series and
give the Los Angeles DOdgers a 4-3
victory.
Thursday night, Welch faced the
minimum Zl batters, tossing a onehitter as the Dodgers stopped the
Atlanta Braves 3~. Between the two
high points, however, were some low
ones.
Welch strained his ann last year,
missing a good part of the season
and ending up with a 5-6 record and
4.00earned run average.
This past January, the young pitcher admitted he was an alcoholic
and spent much of the next two months ala clinic in Arizona. He said he
came away a new man and, a~
parently, a new pitcher. Or,
perhaps, the old Bob Welch.
The 23-year-old right-hander whizzed through the first 10 Braves in order before Larvell Blanks singled
cleanly to left center in the fourth.
But he got Chris Chambliss to
ground into a double play and Welch
set down the rest of the Braves in order to complete his gem.
"I really didn't mix my pitches
that well but I mixed the posiUon on
my fastball," said Welch. "This was
the best control I ever had. There
were only a few situations that I
changed speeda and the hit came on
one of those. I hung the pitch up,
high."
Allant.a's Phil Niekro, the loser,
said: "That was a no-hit game. I've
seen no-hitters pitched that weren'
half as good as that. He was in control all night."
·
Asked about Welch's almostexclusive use of the fastball, the 41year-old Niekro said: "It's still the
No.I pitch in the game. When you got
it, you got to go with it."
Welch, li-1 and a winner of his last
five decisions, walked none and •
struck out seven, including the final
two batters in the game.
"I got a few chills when it was
over," he said, referring to the stan·
ding ovation he received frcm a
small + for Dodger Stadium +
crowd of 24,630. Asked if he was
more thrilled with his one-hitter
than with his World Series strikeout
of Jackson, Welch smiled and said:
"No. You don't repeat that in
lifetime."
In Thursday's other National
League games, Cincinnati downed
San Diego li-3 and Pittsburgh edged
Philadelphia H . In the American
League, Cleveland blanked
Milwaukee 5.0 and Minnesota
defeated the Chicago White Sox S.2.
Los Angeles Manager Tom LaSorda said Welch's victory was ·one of
the better pitched games he has ever
seen. "He was just that far from per-

JUNE 9 (First Summer Term)
JULY 14 (Second ·Summer Term)
SEPT. 8 (Fall Quarter)

JACKSON

• CINCINNATI

MEIGS

co.

co.

-tr RIO QRANDl COI.i.IEQI

AND COMMUNITY COLLEGE ·

•LEX!NGTON

•cHARLESTON

t81 Ml'a s

DEMOC.RAT CANDIDATE FOR MEIGS CO •

84- MIIH

•
\

�--- ·or
4-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, May 30, 1980

Welch hurls one-hit shutout

Olympic funding
may become availabl
DUBUN, Ireland (AP) - The
"Oiympic Solidarity Fund" may be
made available to National Olympic
Committees that lose gove.liunent
financing because of decisions · to
compete in the Swmner Games at

Killanin also confirmed there bas
been consideration given to staging
future Summer Games on an
agreed, permanent, l'olitically
neutral site.
Meanwhile, despite strong
Moscow.
pressure from the government, the
Lord Killanin, president of the In- New Zealand Olympic and Comternational Olympic Committee,
monwealth Games Association has
said Thursday the possible use d
voted to send a team to the Moscow
money from that fund would be Olympics at a six-hour meeting.
discussed at the next IOC meeting in
The committee voted 12 in favor of
June.
·
gomg, with six against and two abDuring a news conference, the stentions.
Olympic official restated his regret
In a last-minute bid to persuade .
that the United States-led boycott of the committee to boycott the Games,
thts .year's Moscow Games was
Acting Prime Minister Duncan
preventing athletes from competing. Macintyre spent one hour at the
"Governments should fight their · meeting. In a statement Friday,
battles in.J!ome other arena," said
Macintyre said:
Killanin, referring to the U.S. spon"The government is disappointed
sorship of the boycott movement in at the decision. It seems to me that a
protest of the Soviet's military in- decision which deeply concerns New
tervention in Afghanistan.
Zealand's national interests was
"I wish to reiterate a protest on
taken on the narrower concerns of
behalf of the athletes that they
individual sporting officials.
should be made to make sacrifices,"
"I do not think that they and other
hesald.
New Zealanders will look back on
Killanin added it was beyond his
thts decision with any pride. The
scope to comment on political mat- decision was theirs to take and the
ters, but said Moscow was awarded
responsibility is theirs to carry in
the Summer Games because of its
the end. ''
ability and readiness to organize
However, it seems likely that it
them. The IOC president said he will be an emaciated New Zealand
would not be a party to any breach of team that competes at Moscow.
the six-year-old contract with the
II will be without its gold medal
Soviet National Olympic Com- men's field hockey team as well as
mittee.
the women's hockey team and the
Just as binding, he continued, was swimming, yachting arltl equestrian
the agreement to stage the 1984 Sum- teams.
mer Games in Los Angeles.
Noted track athlete Rod Dixon

Hisle has shoulder checked

•
'

''

CLEVELAND (AP) - Milwaukee
Brewers .designated hitter Larry
Hisle skipped the team's road trip
for a game Thursday with the
Cleveland Indians to visit a doctor
for examination of his troublesome
right shoulder.
Hisle is expected to rejoin the
team today in Boston, according to
Brewers General Manager Harry
Dalton.
"He hasn't played in nine days
because he has pain, and we just
wanted a little more discussion of
the shoulder itself," Dalton said.
"We hope he might be able to play in
a few days."
Dalton declined to identify the
physician or physicians examining
Hisle, nor would he say where the
examinations occurred.
·Hisle missed most of last season
with a torn shoulder muscle. He
reinjured the shoulder May 19 in

Seattle against the Mariners.
Hisle has batted .283 with six home
runs and 16 • runs batted in while
playing sol.ely as a designated hitter.
CONNER HAS SURGERY
OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) - Bart
Conner of the University of
Oklahoma, who who clinched the top
spot on the Olympic team by winning the U.S. gymnastics trials in
Jacksonville, Fla . underwent
surgery Thursday for a torn bicep
muscle he suffered in the competition.
Conner is expected to be out of action for a few weeks and will miss
only one meet with the West Germans late in June.
However, Paul Ziert, his university coach, said Conner may go on a
five-city tour beginning next week,
including stops in Los Angeles and
San Diego.

also is not going at1ll other individual
withdrawals are also e~.
World champion · and former
record-holder John Walker says he
has not yet made a decision, depending on his form at the time.
The government and particularly
Prime Minister Robert D. Muldoon
had gone to great pains earlier to
persuade the committee to uphold a
boycott of the Moscow Games. It has
decided to give no leave to public
servants and said it will give no
special diplomatic assistance to the
team in Moscow.

SCOREBOARD
Oliver, Texas,l3; Lemon, Chic8f!O, 12.
TRIPLES: Griffin, Tol"OIIto, 6; Brett, Kansas City, 5; C&amp;stino, Minnesota, 4; 13 Tied

'

MajorLr:apeGame~

AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST
W. L. Prl
New York
26 16 .6111
MilwaW:ee
22 19 .$39
Toronto
22 19 .$37
Bcloton
21 Z! .m
Cleveland
Ill 22 .116
Baltimore
Zl 24 -~
DetroU
18 24 .U9

GB

3%
3~

5~

6
7
8

WEST
7!1
2l
23
22

Kansas City

Chicago

Oakland
Teus
Seattle
CalifCJml.a
Minnesota

18 .581
21 .533 2
21 .523 2~

21 .512 3

22 23 .139 l
18 24 .429 81,1,

18 v .100
ftandly'• Gamea
Minnesota S, Chicago 2
Cleveland 5, Milwaukee I}
Only games scheduled

a

Milwaukee (Sortnson 4-31 at Boston
(Raineyf..l), n

Se{ktUe (Banniater 3-4} ell
{Barker&gt;l) n

Cleveland

Toronto (CiMcy 3-2), at New York (Tiant
.J.2 ),n

California (Tanana 2-5 J at Detroit (Wllcox
2-i),n
Olicago (Ba11ffi8arterJ 1-2) at Kansas Ctty
(Gura&amp;l!), n

Baltimore (Flanagan 4-3 ), at Minnesota
IErtck!oo ().3 ), n
Oakland ( McCatty H) at Texas (Perry 32) , &amp;:l&amp;n

Saturday' I Gamet
Cali!omia at Detrolt, d
Baltimore at MlnnesotB, d
Milwaukee at Boston, d
Seattle at Cleveland, n
Chicago at Kansas City , n
Toronto at New York, n
Oakland at Texas, n
SUDday' a Gamet

Lou.Js:

I ; 13TiedWtih3.

Milwaukee at Boston, d
Toronto at New York, d
Seattle at Cleveland , d
Chicago at Kans.u City , d
Baltimore at Minnesota, d
Oakland at Teu.s, n
NADONALI...EAGtiE

EAST
W. L. Pil GB
Pittaburgll

Pbll.ode1ohla
Montreal
Chicago

21 17 .585
22 11 .561 1
20 18 .~ 1~
Jll 20 .474 t ~

New York

18 22 .450

.H~

IS 'r1 .367 91&lt;
'llmndoly'oGomOI

Pittaburglll, Philadelphia l
Cincinnati 5, San Diego 3
l...oe Angeles 3, Atlanta 0
OnJy games schfPu.led

Fridly'aGames
Ptliladelphia (t..ron 0.0 ) at Chicago
I Reuschel !1-1)
New York (Zachry 0-2) at Pittsburgh
ICandelaria ihl ), n
M oo~ l (Sanderson t-3) at St. Louis

SI&amp;Dday'a GIJDet

New York at Pittsburgh

Montreal at St. I...ouis

Phlladlephia at Chicago
Atlanta at lAs Angeles
Cincinnati at San Ole~ (I
Houston at San FranCLSCO

A Vote for Bailey is a vote for
upgrading our highway system
and other programs beneficial to

Meigs County.

REPUBLICAN, FOR COMMISSIONER
TERM BEGINNING JAN. 2,1981
Pd. Pol. 'Adv.

STOLEN BASES: Moreno, Pittsburgh, %2;
LeFlore. Montreal, 1JI; Law, los Angeles,
15; Cedeno, Howton, 13 ; North, San Fran·
cisco, 13,
PITCHING (5 Ded.!iions ): RelUs, Los
Angele.!i, 6-(1, 1.000, 2.13; Bibby, Pittaburgh,
5-1, .&amp;13, 3.11 ; Welch, Los Angeles, 5-l, .&amp;\1
2. 16 ; Ca.rltoo, Philadelphia, 8-2, .IJ«l, 1.99;
Jackson, PittJburgh,·H , .a , 1.69; Shirlt:y,
~n Diego, 4-1, .800, l.SS; Blut:, San Franctxo, 7-2, .778, 2.&amp;8 ; Pastore, Cincinnati, 6-2,
.750,2.54.

STRIKEOUTS- Carlton, Philadelphia
80; Richard~ Houston, 71; Ryan, Houston 58:
Blyleven, Pittsburgh,~; Rogers, Montiea!'
52.
•

\

Houston (B. FGrscy ~) at San Francisco
(Biue7·2),n
S.lanlo)"l a.m..
Plllladelphia at CltiC&gt;~o
Houston at San FranciSCO
New York at Pittsburgh, n
Mootreal at St. Louia, n
Atlanta at Los Angeles, n
Cncinnati at San Dies(I , n

ty.

'

HOME RUNS, Sclvnidt, Philadelphia, II ;
Luzinski, Philadelptwo, 12 ; Garvey, Loo
Angeles, !J; R. SMith, Los Angele.s, 9;
Kingman, Chicago, 8; Clark, San Frand:ieo ,
L

1Hooton4-3), n

Qualified, capable and willing

.

Philadelphia , 13; K. Hernandez, St.
12: Knight, Cincinnati, 1%; 5 Tied With 10.
TRl?l.Es : MorenG, Pittsburgh, ~ ; McBrtde, Philadelphia, 1: Knight, ctnclnnaU

Cincinnati (~i brandt s-3) at San Diego
(Mural).() ), n
Atlanla (Matula W) at LofJ Angeles

to work for a better Meigs Coun-

NATIONAL LEAGUE
BA:rrrNG 115 at bats )' Rei!%, St Louts,
.360; K. Hernandez, St. Louis, 360; R. Smith,
Los Anl!eles, .344; J. Cruz;, Hooston, .333;
Simmons, St. Louis, .325.
RUNS : Sc~dt, Philadelp~, 33; K_. Hernandez, St. Loui.s,32; !Wie, Philadelphia, 29;
Templetoo, St. I..ouU, 29; Lopes, Los
Angeles, 29.
RBI: Schmidt, Philadelphia, 37 ; Garvey,
I...os Angeles, 37; R. Smith, Los Angeles 33 ·
McBride, Philadelphia, 32; Hendrick' sl
Loui!J,30.
•
FU'I'S: K. Hernandez, St. Louis, 5-9; Templeton, Sl LoW.! 00: Rei!%, st. Louts, 5! : R.
Smith, Los Ange e..s, ~2 ; Taver8.!1, New YGrk,
OOUBLES : steams. New York, 16 ; R08e

{ Vuckovich~),n

VOTE
FOR
J. OTIS BAILEY

HOME RUNS : Oglivle, Milwaukee, 12 ·
Rl.ldi, California, 11 ; Velez, Toronto, 9· 6
Tied With a.
'
STOLEN BAS~ : Henderson, Oakland,
22; WUson, Kansas City, 16; Bwnbry,
Ba!Umore, 13; Cart:w, California, 12; Willis,
Te.lll.!l,l2.
•
PITCHING (I Decisions ): Honeycutt.
SeatUe, 7-1, .17$, 2.S9; Guidry, New York ~
1, .833, 3.12; Rainey, Boston, 4-1, ,fKJO, t.M;
John, New York, H, .718, 3.01; Gura Ka~
sa.s City, &amp;-2, .7$0, 1.87 ; Redfnnn, Minn'esota
B--1, .750, 3 .~ ; Stieb, Toronto, ~2• .714, 2.44 ;
Dot.s9n, Chicafi:o, 6+2, .714, 4.31.
STRIKEOUTS : Guidry, New V(lrk, 61 ; M.
Norri.!, Oakland, 53; Redfern, Minnesota,
49 ; Matlac~, Teus, 48; Keough, Oakland,

51.

California at Detroit, d

St. LoW.

With3.

47 ; F . BaMl.!ller, Seattl e, 4'1 .

Fridlly'• Gaml!ll

TODAY'S
MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS
AMERICAN LEAGUE
BATI1NG 115 at bata), Landruux, MinReS(IIa, .3&amp;0; Bwnbcy, Baltimore, .357;
C(loper, Milwaukee, .Ul ; Molitor,
Milwaukee, .350; Molinaro, Chicago, .344.
· RUNS: Yount, Milwaukee, 39; Wllls,
Tt:u.s, 37; Molitor, Milwaukee, 36; Wibon,
Kansas City 1 34; Trammell, Detroit, 31;
MUJ'I)hy, Ooluand, 31.
RlU : Oliver , Tens, 33 ; Oglivie,
Milwaukee, 32; Coopt:r, Milwaukee, ll ; Ar·
mas, Oakland, 30; B. Bf:U, Tna.s, 30.
HITS: Landre.au.s:, Minnesota, 82 ; Wilson ,
Kansas ctty, 56; Rivers, Texas, 58; Molitor,
Milwaukee, 57; Bwnbry, Baltimore, 56.
OOUBLES: Yoont, Milwaukee, 14; D.
Garcia, Toronto, 13; Morriaon, Chicago, l;

to present the Fight Song as a send off to the girls' softball team which left for the state finals at Ashland.

SEES TEAM OFF - The Meigs High Band
gathered in one·spot outside the high school Thursday

Indian pitching
•
Improves some

,

drills three homers
SAN DIEGO (AP) - When Cincinnati Reds' catcher Johnny Bench
breaks out of a slump, watch out.
"I hadn't gotten the ball out of the
Infield in the last four games," said
Bench, who hit three homers and
drove in four runs to lead his team
past the San Diego Padres ~ Thursday night.
It was the third time in his career
that the 32-year-old catcher had put
three in the seats in one g8IQe and it
was the first time Padres starter
Randy Jones, H, had given up three
in one game since turning
professional.
Bench's homers doubled his
season output to six, but he's still
batting just .22il with 16 runs batted
in.
"What does it mean?" said Bench.
"It means I was pretty bad until
now. I figured Jones was going to
sinker me to death, so J just tried to
be quick. The first homer came off a
bad pitch, but the other two were off
pretty good pitches."
Bench now has 338 home runs to

,1

. ~

I

co.

hesdthea~CincinnaU~tand

is just seven behiod Yogi Berra who
holds the major league record for
catchers with345.
Almost overlooked was the pitching of 22-year-old Frank Pastore,
._2, who shut out the Padres on five
singles through the first seven in-

;i

1------- ---

J'·

nings.

.Pastore, who gave up seven hits
and one walk in the eight innings he

AIII·Chllmera Sprtnt

Buy Now and Save $100
on the rider of your choice.
• Crisp contemporary styling .
• convenient controls at operator's fingert ips.
• Enclosed engine reduces no ls~ and directs exhaust
fumes behind operator.
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MODERN SUPPLY
m We&amp;l Main St.
Ph. 991;1154
Pomeroy, OH.
Tlte store with "All Kinds of Stull" lor Pets · Stables ·
Large &amp; Small Anlma~s- Lawn• - Gardens.
ALLIS· CHALMERS

LAWII ANO QAROEN EQUIPMENT

- ·Indlluta 5, Brewen o
John Denny and Victor Cruz combined for a four-hitter as Cleveland
blanked Milwaukee.
"Denny got his breaking ball over
all night and then Cruz came in and
threw heat," said Milwaukee acting
Manager Bob Rogers.
Denny, s-4, yielded ~ur hits,
struck out four and walked four, in. eluding the first two batters in the
eighth, before Cruz came in to shut
down the Brewers, who had a sixgame winning streak ended.
Home runs by Cliff Johnson and
Jorge Orta powered the Cleveland
victory.
TwiDB 5, WbiteSos2
Ken Landreaux extended his hitting streak to 30 games with two

- Placed Mart&lt;
Wagner, Infielder, on the 15-da.y disabled
list Purchased the contract of Stan Papt, infielder, from Oltlahoma City of the American
Asaociation.
NoU..W!.eope

1..00 A.."4GELES DODG£RS - Recalled
Mike Sclosda, catcher, from Albuque~ ueof
the Pacilic Coast League. Optioned M1ck.ey
Hatcher, Infielder, to Albuquerque .
FOOI'IIAU.

Seed and Milling
HEA

Ohio Sportlight

UARTERS

By GEORGE STRODE
AP SporiB Writer

N.UOMI Footllolll.acae

BALTIMORE COLTS - Sigrn!d Mille Oz.
dowskJ , defensive end, and Grej Landry,
quarterback, to one-year centracu.
BUFFALO BilLS - Acqu.l.red Willie
Beamon, linebacker, on wslvers from the
NewYori:Jets.
GREEN BAY PACKERS - Acquired John
Henneuy, linebacker, oo waivers from the
NewYorkJeta.
LOOANGELES RAMS - Signed Phil Murphy, defensln tackle; K.Jrk Colliru, cornerback; Tern Pettigrew, .\ackle ; and
George Farmer, wide receiver.
NEW YORK JETS - Signed Darrol Ray,
safety: Lance Mt:tll,linebacter; and George
Visger, Tom Schremp, and Joe Peters,
defensive linemen. Waived Darnell Powell,

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Pam
Higgins was so discouraged she
thought about quitting the Ladies
Professional Golf Association tour.
The agony of painful elbows was too
much.
"I was really depressed," said the
34-year--old from Groveport, Ohio. "I
was really thinking of otl)er things to
do my arms were so sore and achy,
just like arthritis .
"But I couldn't find anything
equal to the experience you feel
when you play golf well. It's hard to
explain, but I take pride in what I do
well."
Tongue in cheek, Higgins said a
career in boolt:niaklng was possible
except "that's Illegal. I couldn't face
going to jail."
Marriage? "I had nobody in mind,
but It sounded better that what J was
doing."
What she was doing was not faring
well on the LPGA Tour. She had not
won since February 1977, plagued by
thole oucby elbows.
But a Palm Springs, Calif.,
therapist has improved Higgins'
physical welfare so much that she
won the $100,000 Allanta LPG A stop ·
this month.

i-unnirut back.

ST. [OUIS CARDINAU - Signed Brent
Cook 1. tight end, and Don Gaddy,
placekicker.
COUEGE

CARROLL - Named John DriscoU head
bad.etball coach.
MANHATTAN Ann ou nced the
retiNment of lrv KinU.!ich, assistant tract
and field coach, effective at the end of tbe
current seuon.
SOl!TI!ERN ME1l!OD!Sf -

Named

Janice Metcalf womt:n'.s lt!~ coach.

Seeds · Bird Seeds · Oyster Shells and Grit · Fertilizers - Lime . Ce·
mer.t.&amp; Mortar : Stock ~att - Water Softener - Remedies . Salt . Llten.

Va~t1ne - Rooftng • Pamts- Red Brand Fencing . Baler and Binder

SU.GAR RUN MILLS

• •

Mulberry Ave.

992-2115

Pomeroy

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ij~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;~

DONALD·L MOORE
REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE FOR

- QUALIFIED

..

FOR AN EFFICIENT COUNTY GOVERNMENT

/}ullll •

DEMOCRAT CANDIDATE
FOR MEIGS COUNTY
COMMISSIONER

Greatly Appreciated

-

•

•

•

&lt;"

_,

~~Kramer

vs.
Kramer"
WINN ER O F

6ACADEMY
AWARDS
I Nt."LL OINl;

BEST
PICTURE

DUSTIN

HOFFMAN
IN

"KRAMER VS.
KRAMER''
ijigo

&lt; t ... ti)LUM"•"tluat:IJOICUIT~Ill. totr::

DONAI.D L. MOORI

•

•

ft

~

"For us to win the national championship, we would need to play perfect baseball," said Russo.
Frank Viola (9-1) was named to
start for St. John's against Craig
Lefferts or Jeff Morris, both ~2.
Florida State Coach Mike Martin
announced Rick Hatcher (!G-2 )
would start for the Seminoles. Chuck
Krim (16-9) was the mound choice
for Hawaii.

VOTE FOR

HAROLD SCHRITTER
REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE

LARRY E. SPENCER

FOR

REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE FOR
MEIGS COUNTY

CLERK OF COURTS
-SERVING 2 TERMS CLERK OF COURTS
-RESIDENT OF MEIGS CO. ALL MY LIFE
-ABLE, WILLING, AND QUALIFIED

LARRY E. SPENCER
For Meigs County Clerk of Courts
"Your Vote and Support Appreciated"

STATE REPRESENTATIVE
92nd DISTRICT
HAROLD SCHRmER-Farm Owner, Construction Business,
Has 'A Good Record in Education, Labor, Farming Business.
92nd District-Lawrence, Gallia, Meigs, 4 Townships
Athens
Representing Lawrence County in Area 7 on Aging, Rio
Grande Office.
'
Pd . Pol . Adv.

There's No Place Like Dome
For The Summer ••.•• And The Fall
Rio Grande College and Community College,
services Gallia, Jackson , Meigs and Vinton
Counties with LOW COST education within easy
commuting distance.
'

.

Why travel many miles from home when QUALI·
TY education is available at Rio Gra nde with
courses and degrees offered to fit YOUR
schedule.

•

PITTSBURG
200 Mile s

•COLUMBUS
92 Miles

Classes.

-Approved for Veterans Beneflls
VINTON

co.

Registration Dotes

VOTE OSCAR WEBER

•

py."

- Morning, Alternoon and Evening

Oscar Weber

"

TWO WEEKS
Friday, May lOth
thru Thursday, June 12

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) - Arizona
Martin said Jim Weaver, Florida
Coach Jerry Kindall described his
State's
No.2 home run hitter with 17,
team as "a scrappy bunch" and Joe
would be 95 percent recovered from
Russo, KindaU 's opponent tonight,
acknowledged his St. John's team an ankle sprain. The Seminole
homer leader is Mike Fuentes with
goes into the College World Series as 20.
an underdog .
California Coach Bob Milano told
St. John's, 29-9, and the Wildcats,
the
news conference he could not
411-20, open the NCAA double"relate
to" the Bears' H record in
elimination tournament at Omaha's
previous
national championship
Rosenblatt Stadium. Arizona has
tournaments. They won the first
been pegged as a favorite, along ,NCAA tourney in 1947.
with Miami (57·10) and California
"I can only relate to the tour(41-21).
nament
thts year and hope we can do
Florida State (49-9) meets Hawaii
well,'' said the third-yeaf coach.
(57·16) in the 8:10p.m. nightcap.
Michigan Coach Bud Middaugh
Mter an elimination game Satursaid his team played its best
day between the losers of the Friday
baseball while winning the Mideast
contests, Clemson (311-19) is mat- .regional tourney. Middaugh coached
ched against Miami and Michigan
Miami of Ohio to the Mid-American .
(~16 ) plays California to complete
Conference title last year.
the first round.
Seven of the College World Series
teams are ranked in the national top
10. Miami is No.I, Arizona No.2,
California No.3, Clemson No.4,
Hawaii No.5, Florida State No.6 and
Michigan No.7.
"It's more scrappiness than talent
that got us here," Kindall told a
n.ews conference Thursday. "Our
1974 team had exceptional talent but
didn't make it to Omaha. I would
prefer to have a team that's sera!&gt;'

(Baud on S10 per crtdlt hour tor r..idtntl ot Gallla, Jtekaon , Mtlga or
VInton Countl.. wllh leu then College junior cla n •tanding .)

Your Vote And Support

"YOUR VOTE AND INFI.UINCI APPRECIATED"

I' '

,.

- $150 per quarter tuition

TERM BEGINNING JAN. 2, 1981

VOTE DONALD L. MOORE
.,

Higgins' first outing after Gill's
treatments met with mixed success.
"I played one tournament in that
time. Terrible. Shot 8UO in Dallas,
but without soreness. I'd just been
away too long. Then I started weight
exercises because I'd lost so much
strength. I went to Jim Hardy, Carol
Mann's husband, to help me change
my swing back·," she said.
"I'm longer now - not long - but
I am averaging 220 yarda a drive,
where It used to be 205," said
Higgins after ber wire-to-wire,
1hree-shot victory at Atlanta.
"I really enjoyed playing golf
when I played well," she said.
"Ideally, I'd like to be a part-time
good player. That way I can get back
home and go mushroom hunting
with my dad (Roger) more often and
keep up with my betting.''

OSCAR ·WEBER

IN JUNE 3RD PRIMARY••.TERM BEGINNING JAN. 2, 1981

PD. POL. ADV.

my career.''

. COLO'\' ·

Check out the Rio Gran de Story.

MEIGS CO. COMMISSIONER
CAPABLE

Don Gill brought Higgins back
with ultrasound and exercises three
times a week for three months in
1979. That was after she spurned
recommended surgery by Dr. Frank
Jobe of Los Angeles.
Of the proposed surgery, Higgins
said, " No way, not at this point in

singles as Minnesota took a raindelayed victory over Chicago.

Arizona State
'scrappy bunch'

.-.~.a,..

Sports briefs.
TE~

worked, tired late in the game and
lost his bid for his second straight
shutout.
Leading :HI, he walked Gene
Tenace to lead off the eighth and pinch hitter Jerry Turner followed with
ahomerun.
'
"The shutout was in my mind,"
said Pastore, "but I was not getting
the ball where I wanted it to go. The
pitch to Turner was right down the
middle."
Pastore left after giving up a ninth-inning leadoff double to Dave
Winfield, who eventually scored on
consecutive groundouts.
Bench's first home run was a
second-inning solo shot, which gave
the Reds a H lead. Jones walked the
next batter, Dan Driessen. Rick
Auerbach, who was 4-4, then doubled
in the second Cincinnati lJlll of the
inning.
Bench powered another solo
homer in the fourth, struck out in the
sixth, and capped the evenning with
a twcrrun blast off Jones in the
eighth tQ give the Reds a S.2lead.
"Thooe pitches I threw must have
looked like softballs to him," said
Jones, who admitted he was not "in
a good groove."
"I haven't given up three homers
in a game since I was 15 years old,"
he said.
The Padres will try to snap a fourgame losing streak tonight when
Steve Mura, ~.makes his first start
of the year against Reds' left-bander
Charlie l.eibrandt, 3-3.

fection ," said LaSorda, holding his
thumb and forefinger apart.
Reggie Smith gave Welch all the ·
offense he needed with his ninth
home run of the season in the bottom
of the first. It was the first of three
hit.&lt; lor Smith.
Pirates 5, PbJilles I
Ed Ott doubled in the go-ahead
run, then scored the eventual winning run on Dale Berra's hit to lead
Pittsburgh over Philadelphia and
send the Pirates back into first place
in the NL East.
Pittsburgh took a :HJ lead in the
first inning on run-scoring singles by
Dave Parker and Mike Mike Easler,
and a bases-loaded walk to Berra.
All four Philadelphia runs were
unearned.

BASEBALL

Tw1ne - Sprays · Gates · Hay · Straw .

PARIS (AP) - Top-5eeded Bjorn
Borg defeated Andres Gomez of
Chile 6-2, ._2, 6-l and lOth-seeded
Ivan Lend! of Czechoslovakia
downed Klaus Eberhard of West
Gennany 6-1, ~. 6-1, 7-4! in the
second round of the $650,000 French
Open tennis tournilment.
In other developments, thirdseeded Jinuny Connors was fined
$1,000 for using obscene language in
his second-round victory Wednesday.
In other play, 16th-seeded Manuel
Orantes of Spain bested Czech Pavel
SlozU 6-1, 6-2, 6-1 and Yannlck Noah
of France upset Jose ' Luis Clerc of
Argentina 6-1, 6-7, 6-1, 1-6, &amp;-3.
In women· s play, second-seeded
Billie Jean King topped Anne Hobbs
of Britain 6-2, 6-2; Wendy Turnbull of
Australia defeated Nina Bohm of
Sweden 7-6, 1-4!, 9-7, and Mirna
Jau.sovec ol Yugoslavia downed
Mariana Simionescu of Romania 6-7,
6-3,6-2.

Bob Welch
one-hitter

Bench breaks slump;

CLEVELAND (AP) - Lack of pit- pearances.
ching prowess has frustrated· the
The one-game series was a
Cleveland Indians in the early part makeup of a game which was fogged
of the 1980 American League out in Cleveland earlier thts season.
baseball season, but recently there
The Brewers put runners in
has been some improvement.
scoring position in the first, sixth
The ·Milwaukee Brewers, whose and seventh, but Denny fanned Gor·
pitching staff had allowed only four man Thomas to end the first two
runs during six straight wins, were threats and Mark Brouhard grounoutmatched Thursday night as the ded out in the seventh. Thomas also
Indians pounded 24-year-old starter struck out to end the Milwaukee
Moose Haas for a f&gt;.O victory.
eighth after Denny walked the first
Home runs by Cliff Johnson and two batters and Cruz came on in
Jorge Orta powered the Indians as relief.
they snapped the Brewers' winning
Johnson opened Cleveland's third
streak.
with a single, moved to third on
Two Cleveland pitchers who have Duane Kuiper's single, then scored
been effective lately - John Denny on a single by Tom Veryzer. Rick
and Victor Cruz - combined for ~ Manning drove in Kuiper with a
four-hitter.
sacrifice fly to give the Indians a 2-ll
Denny, H, gave up four hits, lead.
struck out four and walked four
Johnson hit his third homer of the
before being relieved by Cruz in the season in the fourth off Hass, who ill
eighth inning as the Indians won now 3-4. Orta slammed his third
their third straight and filth in their homer of the year in the seventh,
last six games.
following a single by Manning. Qr..
"Denny got his breaking ball over Ia's blast ended Haas' performance
all night, and then Cruz came in and for the night.
threw heat," said Brewers acting
Manager Bob Rogers.
Cleveland catcher Ron Hassey
said Denny, a 27-year-old rightMEIGS
hander, was overthrowing his fast- l
1
ball, causing him to depend on his
~OUIPMENT
·I
curveball more. "Bul that's the sign
l
. I
of a real good pitcher, to survive rPomeroy
, 0 . Ph. 992-21~6 .
without real good stuff," Hassey
said.
. fl
Hours : B·S Mon.·Frl.
8·12 sat.
Denny now has a 1.50 earned run
Closed Sunday
average. The 22-year-old righthan- ' International
New ldH .
der also has a I. 46 ERA and 19
Harvester
Equipmen\ t
strikeouts in his last ll relief at&gt;"

'l'lmndly'1 Sportl Tru.lacttoDJ

....
DETROIT TIGERS

John Bench
3-home runs

By Associated Press
Bob Welch climaxed a classic duel
on Oct. 11, 1978, when, as a rookie, he
struck out New York Yankees
slugger Reggie Jackson to end
Game Two of the World Series and
give the Los Angeles DOdgers a 4-3
victory.
Thursday night, Welch faced the
minimum Zl batters, tossing a onehitter as the Dodgers stopped the
Atlanta Braves 3~. Between the two
high points, however, were some low
ones.
Welch strained his ann last year,
missing a good part of the season
and ending up with a 5-6 record and
4.00earned run average.
This past January, the young pitcher admitted he was an alcoholic
and spent much of the next two months ala clinic in Arizona. He said he
came away a new man and, a~
parently, a new pitcher. Or,
perhaps, the old Bob Welch.
The 23-year-old right-hander whizzed through the first 10 Braves in order before Larvell Blanks singled
cleanly to left center in the fourth.
But he got Chris Chambliss to
ground into a double play and Welch
set down the rest of the Braves in order to complete his gem.
"I really didn't mix my pitches
that well but I mixed the posiUon on
my fastball," said Welch. "This was
the best control I ever had. There
were only a few situations that I
changed speeda and the hit came on
one of those. I hung the pitch up,
high."
Allant.a's Phil Niekro, the loser,
said: "That was a no-hit game. I've
seen no-hitters pitched that weren'
half as good as that. He was in control all night."
·
Asked about Welch's almostexclusive use of the fastball, the 41year-old Niekro said: "It's still the
No.I pitch in the game. When you got
it, you got to go with it."
Welch, li-1 and a winner of his last
five decisions, walked none and •
struck out seven, including the final
two batters in the game.
"I got a few chills when it was
over," he said, referring to the stan·
ding ovation he received frcm a
small + for Dodger Stadium +
crowd of 24,630. Asked if he was
more thrilled with his one-hitter
than with his World Series strikeout
of Jackson, Welch smiled and said:
"No. You don't repeat that in
lifetime."
In Thursday's other National
League games, Cincinnati downed
San Diego li-3 and Pittsburgh edged
Philadelphia H . In the American
League, Cleveland blanked
Milwaukee 5.0 and Minnesota
defeated the Chicago White Sox S.2.
Los Angeles Manager Tom LaSorda said Welch's victory was ·one of
the better pitched games he has ever
seen. "He was just that far from per-

JUNE 9 (First Summer Term)
JULY 14 (Second ·Summer Term)
SEPT. 8 (Fall Quarter)

JACKSON

• CINCINNATI

MEIGS

co.

co.

-tr RIO QRANDl COI.i.IEQI

AND COMMUNITY COLLEGE ·

•LEX!NGTON

•cHARLESTON

t81 Ml'a s

DEMOC.RAT CANDIDATE FOR MEIGS CO •

84- MIIH

•
\

�........

6-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, May 30, 1980

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, b.,Friday, May 30, 1980

'Fantasy Island' theme of Racine Alumni fare

Polly's Pointers

RACINE - "Fanlaliy Isiand" was
the theme of the 1980 Racin~ Alwnni
Associ!ltion's banquet attended by
nearly 400 alunmi and guests in the
' RacinegymSaturdaynight . .
Highlights included a talk by
William SU!wart. who reflected on
changes in the village and the
school, selection of ~rmen Manuel
for the S500 Paul H. Carnahan
Memorial Scholarship and the
crowning of Melissa lble, a 1980
graduate, as the alunmi queen.
New officers elected were Alice
Williams, president; Gary Willford,
first vice president; B'renda Johnson, second vice president; Jeff
Thornton, third vice president; and
Barbara Pierce, secretarytreasurer.
The welcome was extended by
Libby Fisher, president, with Gary
Willford handling the presentation d
the candidaU!s, Brenda Johnson, the

presentation of reunion classes, with
Gary Willford introducing the
speaker; Brenda Johnson, presenting the queen candidates; Alice
Williams, the reunion classes.
Gifts were presented to Paul Arnott of Portland, Oregon, who
traveled the farthest ; and Ann Coe
of the class of 1910, the oldest
graduate attending. David Shuler
won the door prize.
Reunion classes with the largest
number of graduates attending were
1930, 1940, 1960, and 1970. Other
classes having reunions were 1920,
193li, 1945, 1950, 1955, 1965, and 1975.
Pam Theiss was chairman of the
decorating committee with. Jeff
Thornton doing the art work. The
theme was earned out with plan~:~
and fruit on the tables. Maxine
Wingett of the class of 1924 gave the
invocation, and the benediction was

given by Mrs. Eileen Buck of the
class of 1935. Music for dancing was
provided by the Gary Stewart Quintet.
Out-of-county alunmi and guests
attending were Mr. and tdrs.
Delbert Van Meter, Gahanna ; Mr.
and Mrs. Danny Pro.ffitt, Bendville,
ru.; Mr. and Mrs. Charles ioster,
Pittsburgh, Pa.; Mr. and Mrs.
.James McClaskey, Industry, Pa.;
Mr. and Mrs. Bert McDougle,
Michael and Kathy Elmore, Glen
Burnie, Md.; Shirley Roberts,
Lexington, Ky. ; Mr. and Mrs. Randall Roberts, Circleville; Joyce
Rice, Roanoke, Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Sewell, West
· Liberty, Ky.; Mr. and Mrs. Herman
Reece., Cheshire; Saradelle Mack,
Grove City; Mr. and Mrs. Dwain
Sayre, McCutchenville; Marilyn
Williamson, New Cumberland, W.
Va.; Margie Wolfe, Tuppers Plains;

Mr. and Mrs. Roy Heiner, Helen
Mr. and •Mrs. AI Toney, Cross
Rhodes, Marietta; Mr. and Mrs. Lanes, W. Va.; Barbara Brutvan,
Mike Shaw, Mr. and Mrs. J . P. Cincinnati; Marcia Kerns, Atlanta,
Sauer, Point Pleasant, W. Vp.; Mary Ga.; Mr. and Mrs. Ella Holter,
Ours, Huntington ; Mr. and Mrs.
Akron; Betty Hayes, Metropoli, lll.;
Daryl Johnson, Charleston, W. Va.; Audrey Boichyn and Debora La
Mr. and Mrs. Eric Furbee, Ham- - Rose, St. Clair Shores, Mich.; Mr.
mondville; Pattie Tarr, CUyahoga and Mrs. James Thompson, Warner
Falls; Robert SylvesU!r, Del Ray Robbins, Ga.; Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Beach, Fla.; Paul Arnott, Portland, Theiss, Sugar Grove; Harold ·Black,
Oregon; Mr. and Mrs. Roy .Ervin, Vincenna, Ind.; Mr. aiJi Mrs.
East Liverpool.
Charles Cline, Moundsville, W.Va.;
Mr. and Mrs. Oren Nease, Mr. and Mrs. Norman Styer, WaterDequim, Wash.; Carl Kerns, Atlan- ford; Peggy Gregory, Etta Parry,
ta, Ga.; Richard Balba, Athens;
I~bell Wilson, Mr. and Mrs. John
David Sayre, Durham, N. C.; Mr. Fiske, Ruth Wingett, Drusilla
and Mrs. Gerald Sayre, Durham, N. House, Evelyn Ingram, Columbus;
C.; Mr. and Mrs. Homer Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Barnes, Sr.,
Akron; Mr. and Mrs. J . 0. Ellis, Cot- Columbiana; Mary Shields, Michael
tageville; W. Va.; Nina Miller, Grigleg, Lancaster; Mr. and Mrs.
Ravenswood, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Donald Bush, Betty Brickles, Wilma
Rex Cooper, Mr. and Mrs. Lewis
Darrah, Kathryn Heater, Mary
Houck, all of Parkersburg, W.Va.

Sayre, Worthington; Lawrence
Hllldore, Mrs. Lori Noller, Holland,
Mich.; Mildred and Charles Jewell,
Mason; Frankie McKelvey·, Belpre;
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Spencer, Anna
Maria, Fla.; Mr. and Mrs. Randy
Smith, Clifton, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
Chrts Hill, Shadyside.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Bradford,
Davisburg, Mich.; James Foreman,
Nellis AFB, Nev.; Mr. and Mrl!.
Cecil Hill, Winfield, W. Va.; BW
Wood, Buckeye Lake; Trudy
Masconka, Dallu, Texas; Mr. and
Mrs. Cecil McLeod, Uttle Hocking;
Edward Sellers, Elizabeth. W. Va.;
Louise Smith, Baltimore; SSG and
Mrs. Gene Lawrence, Fort Campbell, Ky.; Helen Hayes, Vienna, W.
Va.; Bonnie Jackson, Pickerington;
and Paula Laird, Lakeside, Ca.

Library

,o~t.,.o'&lt;

.

\~

,,"" "' ~··
.

I

,.,.

e

,..,.rof''
~~·! ·~ ·

l

...

Letters

R

A
R

f).._t.to"'"{

{'\\l'fl~

ll~~

.6,\,.

May29, 1!NMI
Kathleen Manicke
40769 Vineyard Road
Tuppers Plains, OH 45783

CHESTER MEMORIAL DAY PARADE -Several organizations in eluding the Chester Council 323, Daughters of America, and Chester CUb
Scout Pack 235, paraded from ChesU!r to the cemetery on Memorial Day.

Informal party precedes alumni fare

Infant Searls

Baby arrives
Mr. and Mrs. Terry Searls are announcing the birth of their second
child, a seven pound, seven ounce
daughter, born on March 29 at the
Pleasant Valley Hospital. She has
been named Shalyn Kourtney. Mr.
and Mrs. Searls have another

Members of the 1965 graduating
class of Pomeroy High School
gathered Saturday a!U!rnoon at the
Meigs Inn for an informal party
preceding the Pomeroy Alunmi
Association banquet and dance
Saturday night at the Meigs High
School.
Mrs. Donna Hauck Carr planned
the get-together with class members
wearing name tags with annual pi~
lure attached in the purple and white
colors of the school. The decorations
featured memory posters, a table of
corrunencement and baccalaureate
programs and memorabilia including newspaper clippings, the
picture of the senior class in
Washington, and an original purple
and white school flag.
Refreslunents were served from a
table centered with an arrangement
of purple and white silk flowers
made by Linda Mayer, and an
arrangement of live flowers by
Mary Mitchell.
daughter, Nikki Leigh, three. Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
Searls and the late Ralph Bass.

el'e eas

Point Pleasant, W. Va.; Susie
Kasper Smith and her husband,
South Point; John Lisle, Syracuse;
Mickey Menchini, Cross Lanes, W.
Va.; Katy Morarity Cline and a
guest, Westerville; Mike Mulford
and a guest, Solana Beach, Calif.;
' Pam O'Brien Henry, Centerville;
Brenda Potts · Hopfer, Memphis,
Tenn.; Judy Robson Sheppard,
Pickerington; Bill Sayre, Richmond, Va. ; Barbara Smith Burns
and her husband, Logan; Bryce
Smith and wife, Gallipolis; Larry
Spencer, Columbus; Phil Swindell
and wife, Penbroke Pines, Fla.; Jennie Thompson Kinney, Huntington,
W. Va.; Sue Tracy Stone, Point
Pleasant, W.Va.; Thurma Vaughan
McDaniel and her husband,
Rochester, N.Y.; Carla Will Werry,
Belpre; and Kay Wyatt Proffitt,
Racine.

FORD'S INCREDIBLE

CASH REBATE

1977 DODGE ASPEN ...................................... 11995
P.B., 318 motor.

1977 MERCURY MONARCH .............................. 11995

Offering, You Can Save Up To:

2 Dr ., 6 c yl., 4 spd ., O.D.

1976 'FORD GRAND TORIN0 ............................. '1695
1

1975 CHEVY MONTE CARLO ............................ 1295
1974 GREMLIN.~.:~~·:~.".'~: .............................. 11195
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1975 LINCOLN CONTINENTAL MARK IV .....~'?~~~?..... '2995
19ll VW FASTBACK -~-~~~:~-~~~:.~~.c.~~~~ ............. ~l695
1973 FORD MAVERICK 6 CYL ~~~:·.?~.~~?~:·.?:~--~~- - ..11395
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1980 BRONCO 8 Cyl .
1980 BRONCO 6 Cyl.
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1980 F-150 4x4
FOR ALOW PRICE OF

I• •I

'6765 00

6 cyl., gauges, sliding rear window, Limited Slip rear
aKle, 1100Kl5 all Terrian tires, white spoke wheels,
rear step bumper, plus more .

\973 FORD F-100 ... ....................................... 11195
Auto. w/topper, P.S., P .B.

lllllli....•RECREATIONAL - -

1971

CHEVY~

MERE

TON PICKUP .............;:;,;·;....... 1895
1

Auto. with DelRay Truck Camrr, sleeps 6, red and white (fully self
contained). (Will sell separate.

RETAIL AND FLEET ORDER CONSUMATED
BY JUNE 10th ARE ELIGIBLE FOR REBATE.

DEAR POLLY- I work with ink
and carbon paper. I find rubbing
alcohol is great to use for removing
the paper dYe and ink from my
hands. I also use it to clean my lightcolored suede shoes (Polly's note Do test first on your shoes.) as well
as soiled collars. - E. T.
DEAR POLLY - Some time ago a
reader asked how to "unshrink" a:
wool blanket. I once found a suggested remedy in a very old book
and tried it on a smaller article. It
worked. The hook said: "Boil garment gently in one part vinegar and
two parts water for 25 minuU!s.
Reblock to original shape and size
before drying. This works best on
tight weaves."
I do not know if this will help Myrtle's situation, but she might give it a
try. It seems to me she could experiment with the vinegar and very hot
water in her washing machine
without any great harm to the
blanket. When something is damsged drastically, we are usually ready
to_try anything with any merit. -

DEAR POLLY - I have a pr&amp;blem with a new enamel
pot
that has become
from food cooked
in it and has a
burned bottom.
I have washed it
with dishwashing ·
detergen~
and ·
with baking soda · ·
but neither has
helped. I do hope you or one of your
wonderful readers has an answer. 1
would hate to have to throw away
this pot. - IRENE.
DEAR IRENE - When I bum
food in an enamel pan, I fill it with
hot water, add a powdered
household cleaner and let it soak
overnight. The next morning the
burned particles can be removed
with a rubber spatula unless the
bum has gone through the enamel
finish. Wash as usual in soapy water
and use a steel-wool 'pad to remove
any remaining "black"~- POLLY
DEAR POLLY - If I forget to URSULA
spray a pan with non-stick coating 1
Polly will send you one of her signfind it hard to clean. So, I spray it ~
ed thank-you newspaper coupon
the hard-to-clean areas, add water
clippers if she uses your favorite
and let it soak for about 10 minutes. . Pointer, Peeve or Problem in her
When washed as usual afU!r the
column . Write POLLY'S
soaking, the spots come clean
POINTERS in care of this
newspaper.
without much rubbing. - EMILY

BY HELEN AND SUE B01TEL
Special correspondeota

1974 OLDS CUT. "S" CPE.. ........................... 1295
1

$1595

·~

1975 OLDS 98 LS ....................................... '1595
1975 OLDS CUT. SUP. SED.............................. 11595 .
1974 OLDS CUT. SUP. CPE............................. 11595
1975 OLDS ROYALE SEDAN ............................. 11595
1975 BUICK ESTATE WAGON ........................... '1595
1974 OLDS CUT. SUP. SED............................. 11595
1975 BUICK ESTATE WAGON ............................ 11695
1976 BUICK LIMITED CPE............................... 13495 .
1977 OLDS CUT. BROUGHAM CPE. ..................... 13495
1978 OLDS ROYALE CPE................................ 13995
1977 BUIC~ C£NTRY CPE. .............................. 13595
1976 OLDS VISTA CRUISER ............................. 13295

DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
My brother was killed in October,
1979. It had something to do with
drugs, I think. Ever since, we've gotten phone calls with threats about
blowing up our house.
My sister is dead, too, so. that
leaves only me.
I love my mother and father an
awful lot, but I can't talk to them any
more. We aren't even friends. We
always end up in arguments and
yelling. Mom thinks I only care for
myself, but I stay awake nights, just
worrying about what might heppen
to them. (Mom thinks I'm awake
because I take pep pills, buti don't.)
In a way, I wish whoever it is
would kill me because then I
wouldn't be lonely any more. And
scared. Mom says she's the loneliest
person in the world, but she'd have
me, if she knew I exisU!d.
Every night I go into my bedroom
and cry and cry. I hurt so inside and
it's all bottled up, more each day.
I'm only 16, and need someone to
love and want me too.
Thank you, Helen and Sue, juat for
listenln'. - HURT, CONFUSED,
AND DAZED

RAP:
I'm writing in response to the letter from "Willing To Fight For My
Guy." My time also was very
limited by my parents. I could only
see my boyfriend one weekday
evening and me afternoon or
evening on weekends. My younger
brother bad no such restrictions.
But there are advantages: It's not
so much that absence makes the
heart grow fonder, but that a
welcome can be worn out quickly if
sU!adies see so mucli of one another.
The limitations made our time
together something to look forward
to.
Once you accept the restrictions,
you'll liv~. WTFFMG. I've done it
for a year and one-half. Parents
have real trouble adjuating to a
serious boyfriend: they don't Uke
facing the fact that you're getting
older and are ready to make sour
own decisions and mistakes. Be
patient and try to understand their
worries - BEEN THERE AND
SURVIVED

'

"You'll Like Our Quality Way ·of Doing Business"

992-5342 POMEROY
Open Evenings 6:00-tils:oo P.M. Sat.

Vacation Bible School slated
RACINE - Vacation Bible school
wiU be held at the Racine First Baptist Church from Monday through
June 13 9 to 11 a.m. under the direction of Lil Hart and Barbara Gheen.
"Jesus, I Believe In You" is the
theme of the school with classes for
ages three through junior high
school. Teachers and craft teachers
were named during a recent planning meeting at the church.
The teachers are Nursery I,
Cookie Salser and Roberta Smith;
Nursery II, Pat Smith and Nancy
Circle; Beginner I, Theresa Van
Meter, and Coralee Cununings;
Beginner II , Lura Swiger and Sheila
Proffitt; Primary I, Jane Ann Hll1
and Jean Cleek; Primary II, Florence Adams and Vicki Dameron; Middler, Stella Smith and Evelyn

Foreman; and juniors, Jennifer Butcher and Jeannine Petrel.
Music wW be under the direction
of Sharon Ihle and Lillian Hayman.
The kitchen committee is composed

~

Olj

of Donna Rae Wolfe, Tracy Riffle,
Linda O'Brien, Rita Slater, Tina
Smith, and Libby Fisher 15 the
secretary.
"Doozy," the dog puppet, will be
presented each day by Patty
Struble. All children in and around
the Racine community are invited to
attend.
·

HENcandidate"Hank''
for County ~~~r.~
In June 3, Primary.

Following is a list of some ol my qualifica·

tions and achievements:
eGrallliatMI from Pomeror Hlgn SchOol and
Otllo Unlvtrsltv .
,

. , Yrs . ln U.S. Army as 1st 1-.utenant
• Prenntty employed with Ctelancl Relilty
• M,miMr and Officer of wnral .,tanl1atlons
lncludlntl South E~t'-rn Otl"' INnl of Rea !ton,
Rotuy Club , Scoutmaster, Amllt'lcan letlon,
Masons Lodta. plus ottaan too n1,1merous to· mtn·
tlon .

" lnterestH In tht&gt; P..,l• •t M•ll• C•."

Pd. Pol . Ad¥ . " ltepu~llutt-Term B..lnnlnt
2, !til."

RICH" JO
A RECORD
OF
ACCOMPLISHMENTS
FOR

MEIGS COUNTY
For the last three and one half yean, Rich ·Jones has bean working
for the people of Meigs County. DuriN this time, many .
Improvements have bean realized In county government. Following
Is a partial list of the accomplishments with which he has aulstacl.
*Return of Bureau of Employment Services Office from Gallia County to Meigs County.
*Punch Card Voting; a speedier and more efficient voting system for Meigs County
Citizens.
*Establishment of County-Wide Emergency Medical System.
•Completion of Housing Rehabilitation Program through $80,000 Federal Grant.
At No Cost to Taxpayer.
\

*Updating County Plat Maps with 1180,000 Federal Grant Money. At No Cost to
Taxpayer. A program that hasn't been undertaken since 1928.
*One Million f$1,000,0001 State Grant for Mental Retardation Training Center and
VVorkshop.
·
. *Arranging for Comprehensive Soil Survey for Meigs County Land Owners.

GOSPEL
MEETING
•
at Westside Church of Christ
May 26 thru June 1, 1980
200 West Main Street - Pomeroy, Ohio
With Evangelist HARRY RICE
of Columbia, Tenn.
Nightly at 7:30P.M.
Sunday at 10 am &amp; 6 pm

*Federal Grants of $380,000 for new access road from Union Ave. to Mulberry
Heights Complex. At No Cost To Taxpayer.
*Completion of Multi-Purpose Health Care Center. At No Cost to Taxpayer.
*Completion of Senior Citizens Center. At No Cost To Taxpayer.
*Completion of $2 Million f$2,000,0001 One Hundred Bed Nursing Home to provide
for our elderly. At No Cost to ·Taxpayer.
* Assisted in acquiring in excess of fi~e million f$5,000,000 l in Federal, State and
Private Capital Funds in last 3'12 Years.
*Maintaining County Government in sound fiscal position through Good Management'
and Fiscal Responsibility.

"A COUNTY OFFICIAL

MOTOR TRAVEL MAGAZINE
Our colorful, bi-mol'lthly club publication is full of interesting articles, club
. news, special vacation opportunities
and motoring news and information.
And we keep you informed of the many
events throughout Southern Ohio.

See One of These courteous Salesmen
Pete Burris, Marvin Keebaugh, George Harris

SIMMONS OLDS-CADILI.AC INC.

11

newspaper's mailing room. It
arrived to us only this month!
We hope things are much better
for you now, but if they aren't, and
you need our support - as well as
close-in help - please send us a
stamped, self-addressed envelope
and we'll prove that many people
care. We'D be worrying until we
haar from you. - HELEN AND SUE

You are cordiJJlly invited to attend a

$1295

Mr. and Mrs. Leland Sisson have
returned to their Pomeroy home after a visit in Florida with Mrs.
Sisson's sister, Mrs. Olga Gaudin,
Fort Lauderdale, and at West Palm
Beach with !heir nephew, Robert
Johnson and daughter, Amy. They
were there for Amy's first communion.
·Enroute home they visited in
GaUon with their son and daughterin-law, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Sisson
and daughters, Andrea and Angela.
Andrea accompanied them home for
a few•days visit and was joined here
for Memorial Day weekend by her
parents and sister.

Helen Help Us
Lonely daughter needs love

1979 OLDS TORONADO .................................. '8995
1979 CAD. DEVILLE CPE................................. 18995

1974 OLDS 98 SEDAN ................................. 11295

Combined with the Discount Pat Hill Ford Is

By Polly Cramer
Special COrreopoodeol

DEAR HURT:
Here's an example of why columnists beat their heads against the
wall:
Your letter, written late last year,
was evidently lost in your

Our Summer Used Car Sale

On Trucks and Cars Is For AUmited nme On~.

TO BUY USED CARS FROM
SPOrtcpe., auro., P.S.,

Attending were John and Joan Anderson, Linda Bailey Wyatt, Coty
Beaver Curtis, Linda Darnell
Mayer, Sharon Dill Folmer, Peggy
Folmer Crane, Joe Hall and wife,
Donna Hauck Carr, Barbara Hor&lt;~k
Smith, Linda Starcher Van Meter,
David Reed, Ronnie Riffle, Jackie
Spencer Brickles, Sandy Thomas
Korn, Mary Thompson Mitchell, and
Carolyn Zwilling Lewis, all of
Pomeroy.
Susanna Arnold Fitzgerald and
husband of Olathe, Kansas; Arthur
Barry Boyer, Malta; Pat Buffington
'Thompson, The Plains; Mike
Capehart, Middleport; Sheila Crisp
Might and guest, Bucyrus; Ed Durst
and wife, Middleport; David Eskew,
Newark; George Harris and his
wife, Middleport; Bessie Watson
Sylvester and her husband, Delray
Beach, Fla.; Harley Hendricks,

Dear Kathy,
Pomeroy Public Library's Preschool Story Hour will be starting
on Thursday, June 5 at 10:45 a.m. I hope you haven't forgotten that you
promised to be the "story hour lady" for all the children ages 2
through 6 whose parents would like to bring them to this free progr~.
Do you think people need an explanation about what story~ IS
and why it's important for their children? We could, perhaps do a litUe
item in the Sentinel explaining that "story hour" is really about a halfhour program - but welcoming the children, helping them select
hooks, teaching them about signing out hooks (and hot buying them),
and finally, saying goodbye, adds about another half hour.
'we could also tell parents that story hour is very important in
preparing children for nursery school or kind~rgarten beca~ they
learn to listen, to follow a leader's directions, to cooperate With other
children, and much more.
We have had.preschool story hours at the libraries before, but this
is the first time we have ever welcomed children as young as two.
Some of the larger cities have experimented with story hours for the
very young set, but I believe you are the first "story hour lady" to try
it in a small town.
I'm reaUy looking forward to seeing some of the "terrible two's"
and other preschoolers I know and meeting many youngsters I've
never seen before. I hope that Rachel, Missy, Heather, Emily, Billy
and many other preschoolers are looking forward to this first tasU! of
formal, structured learning and fun as much as we are anticipating it.
Perhaps you'd like to join me on the Your Libraries program on
WMPO this monday at 9:45a.m. so we can talk a little bit about what
story hour is, what hcildren can expect by way of fun, and what is so
special a bout story hour that parents should be willing to give up a bit
of their time each week in order to allow their children to participate.
I'll certainly plan to see you on Thursday, if not before. (And
THANKS for helping your libraries.)
Sincerely yours,
Ellen Bell, Librarian
Serving all of Meigs County

Problem with enamel pot

Sissons return
from Florida

...

· GALLIPOLIS

Trawl Agency

WORKING FOR MEIGS COUNTIANS"

RE-ELECT

RICHARD E. JONES
MEIGS CO. COMMISSIONER
TERM COMMENCING JAN. 3, 1911

13 COURT ST.
'4460699

MC 111272t1

'

PD. POL AOV.
\

••

�........

6-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, May 30, 1980

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, b.,Friday, May 30, 1980

'Fantasy Island' theme of Racine Alumni fare

Polly's Pointers

RACINE - "Fanlaliy Isiand" was
the theme of the 1980 Racin~ Alwnni
Associ!ltion's banquet attended by
nearly 400 alunmi and guests in the
' RacinegymSaturdaynight . .
Highlights included a talk by
William SU!wart. who reflected on
changes in the village and the
school, selection of ~rmen Manuel
for the S500 Paul H. Carnahan
Memorial Scholarship and the
crowning of Melissa lble, a 1980
graduate, as the alunmi queen.
New officers elected were Alice
Williams, president; Gary Willford,
first vice president; B'renda Johnson, second vice president; Jeff
Thornton, third vice president; and
Barbara Pierce, secretarytreasurer.
The welcome was extended by
Libby Fisher, president, with Gary
Willford handling the presentation d
the candidaU!s, Brenda Johnson, the

presentation of reunion classes, with
Gary Willford introducing the
speaker; Brenda Johnson, presenting the queen candidates; Alice
Williams, the reunion classes.
Gifts were presented to Paul Arnott of Portland, Oregon, who
traveled the farthest ; and Ann Coe
of the class of 1910, the oldest
graduate attending. David Shuler
won the door prize.
Reunion classes with the largest
number of graduates attending were
1930, 1940, 1960, and 1970. Other
classes having reunions were 1920,
193li, 1945, 1950, 1955, 1965, and 1975.
Pam Theiss was chairman of the
decorating committee with. Jeff
Thornton doing the art work. The
theme was earned out with plan~:~
and fruit on the tables. Maxine
Wingett of the class of 1924 gave the
invocation, and the benediction was

given by Mrs. Eileen Buck of the
class of 1935. Music for dancing was
provided by the Gary Stewart Quintet.
Out-of-county alunmi and guests
attending were Mr. and tdrs.
Delbert Van Meter, Gahanna ; Mr.
and Mrs. Danny Pro.ffitt, Bendville,
ru.; Mr. and Mrs. Charles ioster,
Pittsburgh, Pa.; Mr. and Mrs.
.James McClaskey, Industry, Pa.;
Mr. and Mrs. Bert McDougle,
Michael and Kathy Elmore, Glen
Burnie, Md.; Shirley Roberts,
Lexington, Ky. ; Mr. and Mrs. Randall Roberts, Circleville; Joyce
Rice, Roanoke, Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Sewell, West
· Liberty, Ky.; Mr. and Mrs. Herman
Reece., Cheshire; Saradelle Mack,
Grove City; Mr. and Mrs. Dwain
Sayre, McCutchenville; Marilyn
Williamson, New Cumberland, W.
Va.; Margie Wolfe, Tuppers Plains;

Mr. and Mrs. Roy Heiner, Helen
Mr. and •Mrs. AI Toney, Cross
Rhodes, Marietta; Mr. and Mrs. Lanes, W. Va.; Barbara Brutvan,
Mike Shaw, Mr. and Mrs. J . P. Cincinnati; Marcia Kerns, Atlanta,
Sauer, Point Pleasant, W. Vp.; Mary Ga.; Mr. and Mrs. Ella Holter,
Ours, Huntington ; Mr. and Mrs.
Akron; Betty Hayes, Metropoli, lll.;
Daryl Johnson, Charleston, W. Va.; Audrey Boichyn and Debora La
Mr. and Mrs. Eric Furbee, Ham- - Rose, St. Clair Shores, Mich.; Mr.
mondville; Pattie Tarr, CUyahoga and Mrs. James Thompson, Warner
Falls; Robert SylvesU!r, Del Ray Robbins, Ga.; Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Beach, Fla.; Paul Arnott, Portland, Theiss, Sugar Grove; Harold ·Black,
Oregon; Mr. and Mrs. Roy .Ervin, Vincenna, Ind.; Mr. aiJi Mrs.
East Liverpool.
Charles Cline, Moundsville, W.Va.;
Mr. and Mrs. Oren Nease, Mr. and Mrs. Norman Styer, WaterDequim, Wash.; Carl Kerns, Atlan- ford; Peggy Gregory, Etta Parry,
ta, Ga.; Richard Balba, Athens;
I~bell Wilson, Mr. and Mrs. John
David Sayre, Durham, N. C.; Mr. Fiske, Ruth Wingett, Drusilla
and Mrs. Gerald Sayre, Durham, N. House, Evelyn Ingram, Columbus;
C.; Mr. and Mrs. Homer Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Barnes, Sr.,
Akron; Mr. and Mrs. J . 0. Ellis, Cot- Columbiana; Mary Shields, Michael
tageville; W. Va.; Nina Miller, Grigleg, Lancaster; Mr. and Mrs.
Ravenswood, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Donald Bush, Betty Brickles, Wilma
Rex Cooper, Mr. and Mrs. Lewis
Darrah, Kathryn Heater, Mary
Houck, all of Parkersburg, W.Va.

Sayre, Worthington; Lawrence
Hllldore, Mrs. Lori Noller, Holland,
Mich.; Mildred and Charles Jewell,
Mason; Frankie McKelvey·, Belpre;
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Spencer, Anna
Maria, Fla.; Mr. and Mrs. Randy
Smith, Clifton, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
Chrts Hill, Shadyside.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Bradford,
Davisburg, Mich.; James Foreman,
Nellis AFB, Nev.; Mr. and Mrl!.
Cecil Hill, Winfield, W. Va.; BW
Wood, Buckeye Lake; Trudy
Masconka, Dallu, Texas; Mr. and
Mrs. Cecil McLeod, Uttle Hocking;
Edward Sellers, Elizabeth. W. Va.;
Louise Smith, Baltimore; SSG and
Mrs. Gene Lawrence, Fort Campbell, Ky.; Helen Hayes, Vienna, W.
Va.; Bonnie Jackson, Pickerington;
and Paula Laird, Lakeside, Ca.

Library

,o~t.,.o'&lt;

.

\~

,,"" "' ~··
.

I

,.,.

e

,..,.rof''
~~·! ·~ ·

l

...

Letters

R

A
R

f).._t.to"'"{

{'\\l'fl~

ll~~

.6,\,.

May29, 1!NMI
Kathleen Manicke
40769 Vineyard Road
Tuppers Plains, OH 45783

CHESTER MEMORIAL DAY PARADE -Several organizations in eluding the Chester Council 323, Daughters of America, and Chester CUb
Scout Pack 235, paraded from ChesU!r to the cemetery on Memorial Day.

Informal party precedes alumni fare

Infant Searls

Baby arrives
Mr. and Mrs. Terry Searls are announcing the birth of their second
child, a seven pound, seven ounce
daughter, born on March 29 at the
Pleasant Valley Hospital. She has
been named Shalyn Kourtney. Mr.
and Mrs. Searls have another

Members of the 1965 graduating
class of Pomeroy High School
gathered Saturday a!U!rnoon at the
Meigs Inn for an informal party
preceding the Pomeroy Alunmi
Association banquet and dance
Saturday night at the Meigs High
School.
Mrs. Donna Hauck Carr planned
the get-together with class members
wearing name tags with annual pi~
lure attached in the purple and white
colors of the school. The decorations
featured memory posters, a table of
corrunencement and baccalaureate
programs and memorabilia including newspaper clippings, the
picture of the senior class in
Washington, and an original purple
and white school flag.
Refreslunents were served from a
table centered with an arrangement
of purple and white silk flowers
made by Linda Mayer, and an
arrangement of live flowers by
Mary Mitchell.
daughter, Nikki Leigh, three. Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
Searls and the late Ralph Bass.

el'e eas

Point Pleasant, W. Va.; Susie
Kasper Smith and her husband,
South Point; John Lisle, Syracuse;
Mickey Menchini, Cross Lanes, W.
Va.; Katy Morarity Cline and a
guest, Westerville; Mike Mulford
and a guest, Solana Beach, Calif.;
' Pam O'Brien Henry, Centerville;
Brenda Potts · Hopfer, Memphis,
Tenn.; Judy Robson Sheppard,
Pickerington; Bill Sayre, Richmond, Va. ; Barbara Smith Burns
and her husband, Logan; Bryce
Smith and wife, Gallipolis; Larry
Spencer, Columbus; Phil Swindell
and wife, Penbroke Pines, Fla.; Jennie Thompson Kinney, Huntington,
W. Va.; Sue Tracy Stone, Point
Pleasant, W.Va.; Thurma Vaughan
McDaniel and her husband,
Rochester, N.Y.; Carla Will Werry,
Belpre; and Kay Wyatt Proffitt,
Racine.

FORD'S INCREDIBLE

CASH REBATE

1977 DODGE ASPEN ...................................... 11995
P.B., 318 motor.

1977 MERCURY MONARCH .............................. 11995

Offering, You Can Save Up To:

2 Dr ., 6 c yl., 4 spd ., O.D.

1976 'FORD GRAND TORIN0 ............................. '1695
1

1975 CHEVY MONTE CARLO ............................ 1295
1974 GREMLIN.~.:~~·:~.".'~: .............................. 11195
1975 FORD GRANADA .. ~.c.v.1 ;·.~~!~:·.~;~~·-~:~: ...... . .. '1695
1975 LINCOLN CONTINENTAL MARK IV .....~'?~~~?..... '2995
19ll VW FASTBACK -~-~~~:~-~~~:.~~.c.~~~~ ............. ~l695
1973 FORD MAVERICK 6 CYL ~~~:·.?~.~~?~:·.?:~--~~- - ..11395
1973 EL CAMIN0 ....................~~-'?:·.~;~:·.~:~: ...... '1195
1971 CHEVY NOVA ............~?~:~.u.t?::::~::~.c.v.1: ........ 1495

1979&amp; 10804K4 PICKUPS
1980 BRONCO 8 Cyl .
1980 BRONCO 6 Cyl.
1980 CLUB WAGON
1980 SUPER CAB
190 PICKUPS V-8
1980 PICKUPS 6 Cyl.

$2,400.00 to $3,000.00
$2,300.00
$2,000.00
$1,800.00
$1,800.00
$1,400.00 to $1,600.00
$1,000.00 to 51,600.00

CHECK OUT lHIS INCREDIBLE DEAL!

1980 F-150 4x4
FOR ALOW PRICE OF

I• •I

'6765 00

6 cyl., gauges, sliding rear window, Limited Slip rear
aKle, 1100Kl5 all Terrian tires, white spoke wheels,
rear step bumper, plus more .

\973 FORD F-100 ... ....................................... 11195
Auto. w/topper, P.S., P .B.

lllllli....•RECREATIONAL - -

1971

CHEVY~

MERE

TON PICKUP .............;:;,;·;....... 1895
1

Auto. with DelRay Truck Camrr, sleeps 6, red and white (fully self
contained). (Will sell separate.

RETAIL AND FLEET ORDER CONSUMATED
BY JUNE 10th ARE ELIGIBLE FOR REBATE.

DEAR POLLY- I work with ink
and carbon paper. I find rubbing
alcohol is great to use for removing
the paper dYe and ink from my
hands. I also use it to clean my lightcolored suede shoes (Polly's note Do test first on your shoes.) as well
as soiled collars. - E. T.
DEAR POLLY - Some time ago a
reader asked how to "unshrink" a:
wool blanket. I once found a suggested remedy in a very old book
and tried it on a smaller article. It
worked. The hook said: "Boil garment gently in one part vinegar and
two parts water for 25 minuU!s.
Reblock to original shape and size
before drying. This works best on
tight weaves."
I do not know if this will help Myrtle's situation, but she might give it a
try. It seems to me she could experiment with the vinegar and very hot
water in her washing machine
without any great harm to the
blanket. When something is damsged drastically, we are usually ready
to_try anything with any merit. -

DEAR POLLY - I have a pr&amp;blem with a new enamel
pot
that has become
from food cooked
in it and has a
burned bottom.
I have washed it
with dishwashing ·
detergen~
and ·
with baking soda · ·
but neither has
helped. I do hope you or one of your
wonderful readers has an answer. 1
would hate to have to throw away
this pot. - IRENE.
DEAR IRENE - When I bum
food in an enamel pan, I fill it with
hot water, add a powdered
household cleaner and let it soak
overnight. The next morning the
burned particles can be removed
with a rubber spatula unless the
bum has gone through the enamel
finish. Wash as usual in soapy water
and use a steel-wool 'pad to remove
any remaining "black"~- POLLY
DEAR POLLY - If I forget to URSULA
spray a pan with non-stick coating 1
Polly will send you one of her signfind it hard to clean. So, I spray it ~
ed thank-you newspaper coupon
the hard-to-clean areas, add water
clippers if she uses your favorite
and let it soak for about 10 minutes. . Pointer, Peeve or Problem in her
When washed as usual afU!r the
column . Write POLLY'S
soaking, the spots come clean
POINTERS in care of this
newspaper.
without much rubbing. - EMILY

BY HELEN AND SUE B01TEL
Special correspondeota

1974 OLDS CUT. "S" CPE.. ........................... 1295
1

$1595

·~

1975 OLDS 98 LS ....................................... '1595
1975 OLDS CUT. SUP. SED.............................. 11595 .
1974 OLDS CUT. SUP. CPE............................. 11595
1975 OLDS ROYALE SEDAN ............................. 11595
1975 BUICK ESTATE WAGON ........................... '1595
1974 OLDS CUT. SUP. SED............................. 11595
1975 BUICK ESTATE WAGON ............................ 11695
1976 BUICK LIMITED CPE............................... 13495 .
1977 OLDS CUT. BROUGHAM CPE. ..................... 13495
1978 OLDS ROYALE CPE................................ 13995
1977 BUIC~ C£NTRY CPE. .............................. 13595
1976 OLDS VISTA CRUISER ............................. 13295

DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
My brother was killed in October,
1979. It had something to do with
drugs, I think. Ever since, we've gotten phone calls with threats about
blowing up our house.
My sister is dead, too, so. that
leaves only me.
I love my mother and father an
awful lot, but I can't talk to them any
more. We aren't even friends. We
always end up in arguments and
yelling. Mom thinks I only care for
myself, but I stay awake nights, just
worrying about what might heppen
to them. (Mom thinks I'm awake
because I take pep pills, buti don't.)
In a way, I wish whoever it is
would kill me because then I
wouldn't be lonely any more. And
scared. Mom says she's the loneliest
person in the world, but she'd have
me, if she knew I exisU!d.
Every night I go into my bedroom
and cry and cry. I hurt so inside and
it's all bottled up, more each day.
I'm only 16, and need someone to
love and want me too.
Thank you, Helen and Sue, juat for
listenln'. - HURT, CONFUSED,
AND DAZED

RAP:
I'm writing in response to the letter from "Willing To Fight For My
Guy." My time also was very
limited by my parents. I could only
see my boyfriend one weekday
evening and me afternoon or
evening on weekends. My younger
brother bad no such restrictions.
But there are advantages: It's not
so much that absence makes the
heart grow fonder, but that a
welcome can be worn out quickly if
sU!adies see so mucli of one another.
The limitations made our time
together something to look forward
to.
Once you accept the restrictions,
you'll liv~. WTFFMG. I've done it
for a year and one-half. Parents
have real trouble adjuating to a
serious boyfriend: they don't Uke
facing the fact that you're getting
older and are ready to make sour
own decisions and mistakes. Be
patient and try to understand their
worries - BEEN THERE AND
SURVIVED

'

"You'll Like Our Quality Way ·of Doing Business"

992-5342 POMEROY
Open Evenings 6:00-tils:oo P.M. Sat.

Vacation Bible School slated
RACINE - Vacation Bible school
wiU be held at the Racine First Baptist Church from Monday through
June 13 9 to 11 a.m. under the direction of Lil Hart and Barbara Gheen.
"Jesus, I Believe In You" is the
theme of the school with classes for
ages three through junior high
school. Teachers and craft teachers
were named during a recent planning meeting at the church.
The teachers are Nursery I,
Cookie Salser and Roberta Smith;
Nursery II, Pat Smith and Nancy
Circle; Beginner I, Theresa Van
Meter, and Coralee Cununings;
Beginner II , Lura Swiger and Sheila
Proffitt; Primary I, Jane Ann Hll1
and Jean Cleek; Primary II, Florence Adams and Vicki Dameron; Middler, Stella Smith and Evelyn

Foreman; and juniors, Jennifer Butcher and Jeannine Petrel.
Music wW be under the direction
of Sharon Ihle and Lillian Hayman.
The kitchen committee is composed

~

Olj

of Donna Rae Wolfe, Tracy Riffle,
Linda O'Brien, Rita Slater, Tina
Smith, and Libby Fisher 15 the
secretary.
"Doozy," the dog puppet, will be
presented each day by Patty
Struble. All children in and around
the Racine community are invited to
attend.
·

HENcandidate"Hank''
for County ~~~r.~
In June 3, Primary.

Following is a list of some ol my qualifica·

tions and achievements:
eGrallliatMI from Pomeror Hlgn SchOol and
Otllo Unlvtrsltv .
,

. , Yrs . ln U.S. Army as 1st 1-.utenant
• Prenntty employed with Ctelancl Relilty
• M,miMr and Officer of wnral .,tanl1atlons
lncludlntl South E~t'-rn Otl"' INnl of Rea !ton,
Rotuy Club , Scoutmaster, Amllt'lcan letlon,
Masons Lodta. plus ottaan too n1,1merous to· mtn·
tlon .

" lnterestH In tht&gt; P..,l• •t M•ll• C•."

Pd. Pol . Ad¥ . " ltepu~llutt-Term B..lnnlnt
2, !til."

RICH" JO
A RECORD
OF
ACCOMPLISHMENTS
FOR

MEIGS COUNTY
For the last three and one half yean, Rich ·Jones has bean working
for the people of Meigs County. DuriN this time, many .
Improvements have bean realized In county government. Following
Is a partial list of the accomplishments with which he has aulstacl.
*Return of Bureau of Employment Services Office from Gallia County to Meigs County.
*Punch Card Voting; a speedier and more efficient voting system for Meigs County
Citizens.
*Establishment of County-Wide Emergency Medical System.
•Completion of Housing Rehabilitation Program through $80,000 Federal Grant.
At No Cost to Taxpayer.
\

*Updating County Plat Maps with 1180,000 Federal Grant Money. At No Cost to
Taxpayer. A program that hasn't been undertaken since 1928.
*One Million f$1,000,0001 State Grant for Mental Retardation Training Center and
VVorkshop.
·
. *Arranging for Comprehensive Soil Survey for Meigs County Land Owners.

GOSPEL
MEETING
•
at Westside Church of Christ
May 26 thru June 1, 1980
200 West Main Street - Pomeroy, Ohio
With Evangelist HARRY RICE
of Columbia, Tenn.
Nightly at 7:30P.M.
Sunday at 10 am &amp; 6 pm

*Federal Grants of $380,000 for new access road from Union Ave. to Mulberry
Heights Complex. At No Cost To Taxpayer.
*Completion of Multi-Purpose Health Care Center. At No Cost to Taxpayer.
*Completion of Senior Citizens Center. At No Cost To Taxpayer.
*Completion of $2 Million f$2,000,0001 One Hundred Bed Nursing Home to provide
for our elderly. At No Cost to ·Taxpayer.
* Assisted in acquiring in excess of fi~e million f$5,000,000 l in Federal, State and
Private Capital Funds in last 3'12 Years.
*Maintaining County Government in sound fiscal position through Good Management'
and Fiscal Responsibility.

"A COUNTY OFFICIAL

MOTOR TRAVEL MAGAZINE
Our colorful, bi-mol'lthly club publication is full of interesting articles, club
. news, special vacation opportunities
and motoring news and information.
And we keep you informed of the many
events throughout Southern Ohio.

See One of These courteous Salesmen
Pete Burris, Marvin Keebaugh, George Harris

SIMMONS OLDS-CADILI.AC INC.

11

newspaper's mailing room. It
arrived to us only this month!
We hope things are much better
for you now, but if they aren't, and
you need our support - as well as
close-in help - please send us a
stamped, self-addressed envelope
and we'll prove that many people
care. We'D be worrying until we
haar from you. - HELEN AND SUE

You are cordiJJlly invited to attend a

$1295

Mr. and Mrs. Leland Sisson have
returned to their Pomeroy home after a visit in Florida with Mrs.
Sisson's sister, Mrs. Olga Gaudin,
Fort Lauderdale, and at West Palm
Beach with !heir nephew, Robert
Johnson and daughter, Amy. They
were there for Amy's first communion.
·Enroute home they visited in
GaUon with their son and daughterin-law, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Sisson
and daughters, Andrea and Angela.
Andrea accompanied them home for
a few•days visit and was joined here
for Memorial Day weekend by her
parents and sister.

Helen Help Us
Lonely daughter needs love

1979 OLDS TORONADO .................................. '8995
1979 CAD. DEVILLE CPE................................. 18995

1974 OLDS 98 SEDAN ................................. 11295

Combined with the Discount Pat Hill Ford Is

By Polly Cramer
Special COrreopoodeol

DEAR HURT:
Here's an example of why columnists beat their heads against the
wall:
Your letter, written late last year,
was evidently lost in your

Our Summer Used Car Sale

On Trucks and Cars Is For AUmited nme On~.

TO BUY USED CARS FROM
SPOrtcpe., auro., P.S.,

Attending were John and Joan Anderson, Linda Bailey Wyatt, Coty
Beaver Curtis, Linda Darnell
Mayer, Sharon Dill Folmer, Peggy
Folmer Crane, Joe Hall and wife,
Donna Hauck Carr, Barbara Hor&lt;~k
Smith, Linda Starcher Van Meter,
David Reed, Ronnie Riffle, Jackie
Spencer Brickles, Sandy Thomas
Korn, Mary Thompson Mitchell, and
Carolyn Zwilling Lewis, all of
Pomeroy.
Susanna Arnold Fitzgerald and
husband of Olathe, Kansas; Arthur
Barry Boyer, Malta; Pat Buffington
'Thompson, The Plains; Mike
Capehart, Middleport; Sheila Crisp
Might and guest, Bucyrus; Ed Durst
and wife, Middleport; David Eskew,
Newark; George Harris and his
wife, Middleport; Bessie Watson
Sylvester and her husband, Delray
Beach, Fla.; Harley Hendricks,

Dear Kathy,
Pomeroy Public Library's Preschool Story Hour will be starting
on Thursday, June 5 at 10:45 a.m. I hope you haven't forgotten that you
promised to be the "story hour lady" for all the children ages 2
through 6 whose parents would like to bring them to this free progr~.
Do you think people need an explanation about what story~ IS
and why it's important for their children? We could, perhaps do a litUe
item in the Sentinel explaining that "story hour" is really about a halfhour program - but welcoming the children, helping them select
hooks, teaching them about signing out hooks (and hot buying them),
and finally, saying goodbye, adds about another half hour.
'we could also tell parents that story hour is very important in
preparing children for nursery school or kind~rgarten beca~ they
learn to listen, to follow a leader's directions, to cooperate With other
children, and much more.
We have had.preschool story hours at the libraries before, but this
is the first time we have ever welcomed children as young as two.
Some of the larger cities have experimented with story hours for the
very young set, but I believe you are the first "story hour lady" to try
it in a small town.
I'm reaUy looking forward to seeing some of the "terrible two's"
and other preschoolers I know and meeting many youngsters I've
never seen before. I hope that Rachel, Missy, Heather, Emily, Billy
and many other preschoolers are looking forward to this first tasU! of
formal, structured learning and fun as much as we are anticipating it.
Perhaps you'd like to join me on the Your Libraries program on
WMPO this monday at 9:45a.m. so we can talk a little bit about what
story hour is, what hcildren can expect by way of fun, and what is so
special a bout story hour that parents should be willing to give up a bit
of their time each week in order to allow their children to participate.
I'll certainly plan to see you on Thursday, if not before. (And
THANKS for helping your libraries.)
Sincerely yours,
Ellen Bell, Librarian
Serving all of Meigs County

Problem with enamel pot

Sissons return
from Florida

...

· GALLIPOLIS

Trawl Agency

WORKING FOR MEIGS COUNTIANS"

RE-ELECT

RICHARD E. JONES
MEIGS CO. COMMISSIONER
TERM COMMENCING JAN. 3, 1911

13 COURT ST.
'4460699

MC 111272t1

'

PD. POL AOV.
\

••

�.
8-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy;o ., Friday, May 30,1980

b

r-~E~~~~S-~&amp;~~~~H~~---r--~--M•E•IG•S•T•IR•E---r--A•tte•n~d~---,--M•~··s----------~--.--K•&amp;•C•J~--a£•R•S--~

CHURCH
NEWS

c
,
IN .
John F. Fultz, Mtr.

. LOcu st &amp; BHch treet
992-9921 Middleport

TRINITY CHURCH, Rev. W. H. Perrin,
pastbt; Roy Mayer, Sunday school supt .
Churc"- Sc~l . 9: 1S. o .m.; worship service, 10:30o.m. Choir r,eheorsol , Tuesday ,
1i30 p .m , under dirft(tion of Allee N1t0se .

Church o1
Your Choice
"'hiS'
.1.

CENTER

Complete r
Au~~r~!
.. ,JO a
. .

Ph. ,.2-2101
Pomeiov

&amp; .E N
.
f.RANKUr.f

-

K~

---

MOUNT

Brown's Fire &amp;
Equipment

POMEROY CHURCH Of THE NAZARENE :
Cor.,.,. Union and Mulberry. Rov . Clydo V.

of YoW. Choice
This Sunday.

-

·'

J . wm . " Bill" Brown, owner
Photte (61U U 'l-'1111

326 E.

P. J. PAULfY,
AGENT

Grov•. rector. Sunday services, at 10:30
a .m. with Holy Communion on the llrst
Sunday ol each month, and combined
with Morning Prayer on teh third Sunday ;
Mornin9 Prayer and Sermon on all other
Sundays of the month. Churc~ School and
nursery care provided. Coffee hour in the
Parish Hall immediately following tile ser·
vice.

~

~'* ¥.;:·:~:;r

Main St. Neil Proudfoot, pastor. Bible
school, 9:30a .m.; morning worsllip, 10:30
a .m.; Youtll meetings ! 6:30p.m.; evening
wonhlp , 7:30. Wednesday night prayer
mMting and Bible study, 7:30p.m .
THE SALVATION ARMY, 115 Butternut
Av•., Pomeroy. Envoy and Mrs . Ray Win ing, officers in charge. Sundoy-holinan
me.ting, 10 a .m. ; Sunday School , 10:30
a .m. Sunday school leader. YPSM, Eloise
Adams . 7:30 p.m ., solvation IT!eeting,
various speakers and music specials.
Thursday- 10 a .m . to 2 p.m. Ladies Home
League, all women invited: 7:30 p.m.
prayer m"ting and Bible study . Rav . Noel
Hermon, teacher.
BURLINGTON

SOUTHERN

R~cine

For The Best In T\1 \Jiewlnu

Clll99l-2505

RACINE

Rev.Rolph Smith , pastor. S~tJnday school,
9:30
a.m. , Mrs. · Worley Fronds ,
superintendent. Preaching services first &amp;
third Sundays following Sun,day School ,

Ml~

Mill Work .
Cabinet Making
·Svracuse 992 .3978

METHODIST .

Preaching 9:30a.m . , lirst and second Sun·
days of each month; third and fourth Sundoya each month, worship service at 7:30
p.m. Wednesday evenings at 7:30. Preyer

HEINER'S
BAKERY
t(.lhrlght I !ItO ~fl"fl ~~1'1 1SU'JQ Ser;l[t
P I) Boo 802~ Clll•l~ll•srl'E V" 11'"" ?l'l:illb

Bakers of

ADVENTIST , Mulberry

Good Bread

H•ights Road , Pomeroy . Pastor, Albert
Olttes: Sabbath School Superintendent ,
Rite White. Sobbotll Schoo l, Saturday
afternoon at 2:00, with Warsh ip Service
following at 3:15 .

~unting~n,

:k11p1uru Mlectea o~ TMI ..,merocan llil&gt;HI SOOety

W.

Sister Harriett Worner, Supt . Sunday
School, 9:30a.m.; morning worship . 10:45
a .m .

PENTECOSTAL

1.1· 12

1:1· 14

1:.5·19

tl:6- 12

6: 13- 16

6:5· 13

tARPENTER

THE HILAND CHAPEL , George Casto.

MARK V STORE

Middleport
Middleport

THE DAILY
SENnNEL
Middleport·

.Pomeroy, 0.

WAID CROSS
~NS STORE

992.2955

POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST, Dovid Monn .

Reuter-Brogan
Insurance
Services

FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST . 282 Mulberry

Ave., Pomeroy . Hershel McClure, Sunday
school superintendent. Sunday school ,
9:30a.m. ; morning worship, 10:30; even ·
lng worship, 7:00 p.m. Midweek prayer
service, 7:00p.m .

Attend The
Church of

Attend The Church
of Your Choice

214 E. Main
9'2 ·5130 Pomeroy

RACINE
FOOD MARKET

The

The Store
With A Hurt

Your Choice
This

This"Sunday

R~clne

Ph. 949·2626

MIDWAY COMMUNITY CENTER, Dexter

Ad .. langsville. Ohio. Rev. Clyde Ferrell .
Pastor. Sunday School 11 a .m. Saturday
preaching services 7:30p.m. Wednesday
.venlng Bible study at 7:30p.m
fAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH , Bailey

Run Rood , Rev. Emmett Rawson, pastor.
Handley Dunn , supt. Sunday school , 10
a.m. Sunday evening service 7:30; Bible
teaching, 7 :30p.m . Thursday.
•

DYESVILLE

COMMUNITY

CHURCH .

. Roger C. Turner , pastor. Sunday sctlool ,
· 9;30 a.m .: Sunday morning worship,
10:30; Sunday evening service, 7:30.
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST IN

CHRISTIAN UNION, Lawrence Manley ,
pastor; Mrs. Russell Young. Sunday
School Supt. Sunday School 9:30 a .m .

Evening worship, 7:30, Wednesday prayer
meeting , 7:30p.m .
MT.

MORIAH

CHURCH

OF

GOD.

Racine- Rev. James Satterfield . pastor.
Morning worship, 'i''; -45 o.m.; Sunday
school , 10:-115 a .m .; evening worship, 7.
Tuesday , 7:30 p .m.·, ladies prayer
meeting: Wednesday , 7:30p.m. VPE .
MIDDLEPORT fiRST

BAPTIST, Corner

Sixth and Palmer , the Rev. Mark McClung ,
Sunday school , 9:15a.m. : Randy Hayes ,
Sunday School, superintendent. Dan
Riggs , out. supt. Morning Worship , 10:15
a.m. Youth meeting, 7:30 p.m. Wednes·
day , Including wee tots , ooger beavers ,
Junior astronauts, and junior and senior
high BYF; choir practice , 8:30 p.m.
Wednesday prayer meeting and Bible
study, Wednesday. 7:30p.m .
CHURCH OF CHRIST , Middleport . 5th

and Main , Bob Melton , minister, Mike
Gerlach, superintendent. Terry Yankey .
youth minister. Bible school , 9:30 a .m.;
morning worship, 10:30 a .m.; youth group
Sunday 6 :30 p.m. evening worship , 6 :30;
prayer service, 6:30p .m. Wednesday.
MIDDLEPORT

CHURCH

Of

THE

· NAZARENE, Rev. Jim Broome, pastor: Bill
White, Sunday school supt. Sunday
achool , 9:30a.m. ; morning worship , 10:30
a.m. ; Sunday e'!"Jngelis.tlc meeting, 7:00
p.m. Prayer meeting , Wednesday , 7 p.m.
UNITED PRESBYTERIAN MINISTRY Of

MEIGS COUNTY, Dwight L. Zavltz, direc·
tor.
HARRISONVILLE

PRESBYIERIAN ,

10:30.
SYRACUSE FIRST UNITED PRESBYTERIAN

Church. Worship service 9:30a .m . Sunday
School 10:30 a .m . Mrs. Sampson Hall ,
supt.
RUTLAND CHURCH Of GOD. Rev . Bob·

by Porter. poster. Sunday school , 10 a .m.;
SUnday worship, 11 a .m.: Sunday evening
HrVice, 1 p.m .i Wednesday Family Troi·
lng Hour, 7 p.m.Wednesdoy worship ser·
.tee, 7:30p.m .
HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH , Near
Long Bottom, Ed181 Hart. paotor. Sunday

tchool, 10o.m .; Church, 7:30p.m. ; prayer
Third

Ave .. the Rev. William Kri~ttal, pastor.

Thomao

Kelly , Sunday School Supt . Sun -

clay school, 10 a.m. ClaJSes lor'oll ages;
evening servi.c e , 7:30: Bible study,
Wednescloy, 7:30 p.m. : youth services ,
friday, 7:30p.m.
MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST , Carner

Alh and Plum; Nqel Herrmon. pastor.
Soturcloy evening s•rvlce, 7:30p.m .; Sun·

dcry School, 10:30 0·"1·
MEIGS
COOPERATIVE PARISH
MeTHODIST CHURCH
·Richard W. Thomas, Director ·
POMEROY CLUSTER
Rev. Robert McGeo

R.v. James Corbitt
POMIROY, Sunday School 9:15 a.m .
W~ service 10:30 a.m. Choir rehoar·
~1.
•dneoday, 7 p.m. Rev. Robert

~tar.

ISE,

Robinson , Pastor .
RUTlAND . Church School 9:30 a .m.
Worship 10:30 a .m. Wilbur Hilt, Pastor .
SALEM CENTER, Worship 9 a .m . Church
Sc hoo l 9 : ~5 o.m .
SYRACUSE CLUSTER

Rev . Carl Hicks , Interim Pastor
FOREST RUN: Wonhp 9 a .m. Church
Schooi 10·o .m.
MINERSVILLE , Church School 9 o .m .

Worship 10 a .m.
ASBURY: Cllurch School 9:50a .m . War·
ship II a .m. Bible Study 7:30p.m . Thursday . UMW list Tuesday .
SOUTHERN CLUSTER

Rev . David Harris
Re~t . Mark Flynn
Re't' . Florence Smitll
Hilton Wolfe
BETHANY , {Dorcas), Worship 9:00a .m .
Church School10:00 a .m .
CARMEL, Chruch School 9:30a .m. Wor ·
ship 10:30 a .m . 2nd and 4th Sundays .
APPLE GROVE, Sunday Schoo19:30 a .m .
Worship 7:30 p.m. 1st and 3rd Sundays;
Preyer meeting Wednesday 7:30 p.m.
Fellowship supper first Saturday 6 p.m .
UMW 2nd Tuesday 7:30p.m.
.

EAST LETART, Chruch School 9 o.m .
Worship service 10 a .m . Prayer meet ing

7:30p .m. Wednesday . UMW second Tues·
day 7:30p.m .
RACINE WESLEYAN - Sundoy school I 0
a .m .; worship , 11 a .m . Choir practice ,

Tllursday . 8 p.m .
LETART FAllS- Worship service 9 a .m .
Chu rch School10o .m.
MORNING STAR . Worship 9:30 a .m.;
Churcll School 10:30 a .m .
MORSE CHAPEL . Chu"h School 9:30

a .m . Worship 11 o.m.
PORTLAND, Church School 6:30 p.m .,

Even ing Worsh ip, 7:30 p.m. Youth
Meeting . Tuesday evening.
SUnON , Church 5chool9:30 a .m . Worship 1st and 3rd Sundays 10:30 a.m .

Rev.

Ernett Stricklin, pastor. Sunday church
wchool, 9:30a .m., Mrs . Homer Lee, supt.;
morning worship, I 0 :30.
·
MIDDLEPORT. Sunday sch OI'.l l, 9:30a.m.,
Rkhard Vaughan, supt. Morr. ing worship.

meeting, 7:30p.m. Thursday.
MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL,

FLATWOODS, Church School 10 a .m .
Worship 11 a .m .
MIDDLEPORT CLUSTER
• HEATH. Church School 9:30a .m. War·
ship 10:30 a .m. UMYF 6 p.m. Robert

Worol!lp 9 a.m. Church

lchooiiOa.m.
IIOCIC IPIIINGS, Church School tO a.m .
'l\1lnlhlp 10 a.m. UMYF 6:30p.m.

NORTHEAST CLUSTER

Rev . Richard W. Thomas
Duane Sydenstricker, Sr.
John W. Douglas
Charles Domlgon
JOPPA,

Worship

9:00 o.m .

ST . JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH . Pine

Grove . The Rev. William Middlesworth,
Pastor . Church services 9:30a.m . Sunday
Scllool10:30o.m .

Church

7:30p .m .
LONG BOnOM. Sunday School at 9:30

a .m . Evening Worship of 7:30p.m . Thurs·
day Bible Study , 7:30p.m.

REEDSVILLE : Sunday School 9 :30 o .m .
Morning Worship I 0:30 o .m. Evening Wor·
shp 7:30p.m . Bible Study Wednesdays at
7:30p.m .
ALFRED, Sunday School at 9:45 o.m.

Morning Worship of 11 a .m. Youth, 6:30
p.m. Sundays . Wednesday Night Prayer
Meeting, 7:00p.m .
•
PAUL , (Tuppers Plaino) : Sunday

School 9:00 a .m. Morn l.ng Worship at
!O:OOa.m . Bible Study, 7:30p.m. Tuesday.
SOUTH BETHEL (Silver Ridge) : Sunday

LAUREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST
CHURCH , Rev . floyd f . Shook, pastor;

7:30p .m .
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH , now locatod

Lloyd Wright, Sunday School Supt .; Morn ing Worship 9 :30 a .m.; Sunday School
10:20 o .m.; Wednesday Prayer and Bible
Study 7:30p.m.; Sunday evening worslllp
7:30p.m.; Choir Practice Thursday , 7 p .m.
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST. Charles

Russell , Sr. , minister: Rick Macomber,
supt . Sunday school, 9:30a.m . ; worship
service , 10:30 a .m. Bible Study, Tuesday ,

RACINE CHURCH Of THE NAZARENE,

Rev . John A. Coffman . pastor. Franklin
Imboden , chairman ol the Boord of Chris·
tian life. Sunday School. 9:30a .m .; morn·
ing worship , 10:30: Sunday even ing war·
ship, 7:30p.m. Prayer meeting . Wednes·
day . 7:30p .m.
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST, Don L. Walker .
Poster. Robert Smith , Sunday school
supt .; Sunday school , 9:30a .m.; morning
worship , 10:40 a .m .; Sunday evening wor·
ship, 7:30; Wednesday evening Bible
study . 7:30.
DANVILLE

WESLEYAN ,

Rev.

R.

D.

Brown , pastor. Sunday School , 9:30a .m.;
morning worship 10:4S; youth service.
6 : ~5 p .m .; evening worship, 7:30 p.m.:
prayer and praiae , Wednesday , 7:30p .m.
SILVER RUN FREE BAPTIST. Rev . Morvin

Markin , pastor; Steve little Sunday school
supt. Sunday school. 10 a .m. : morning
worship, 11 a .m. Sunday eve ni ng wor·
ship, 7:30. Prayer meeting a nd Bible
study , Thursday , 7:30p.m.; you th serv ice,
6 p.m. Sunday .
CHESTER CHURCH Of GOD, Rev . R. E.

Robinson , pastor . Sunday school. 9:30
a.m.; wo'rshlp service , 11 a .m.; evening
service, 7:00; youth service , Wednesday ,
7:00p.m.
LANGSVILLE

CHRISTIAN

CHURCH .

Robert Musser , pastor. Sunday school ,
9:30 a .m .; Ray Sigman , supt. ; morning
worship, 10:30; Sunday ev'lloing service,
7:30; mid· week service, Wednesday, 7
p.m.
Re v. Dale Boss. pastor ; Sunday school ,
9:30a.m .; morning worship , 10:-45 a .m.;
evangelistic service, 7 p.m. Wednesday
services - proyor and praise , 7 p.m•.;
youth meeting , 7 p.m . Men 's praye r
meeting . Saturday, 7 p.m.
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN CHRIST.

Elden R. Blake. pastor . Sunday School 10
a.m.; Robert Reed , supt.; Morning ser·
mon , 11 a .m .; Sunday night services
Christian Endeavor, 7:30p .m. ; Song sa r·
vice, 8 p.m.; Preaching 8:30 p.m.
Midweek Prayer meet ing , Wednesday , 7
p.m.: Alvin Re,e d , loy leader.
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST , Located ot

Rutland on New limo Rood , next to Forest
Acre Pork ; Rev. Ray Rouse , pastor ; Robert
Musser , Sunday School supt. Sunday
school . 10:30 a .m .: worship 7:30 p .m.Bi·
ble Study, Wednesday , 7:30p .m.; Safur·
day night prayer service, 7:30p .m .
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN , Roger

Watson, pastor; Mildred Ziegler , Sunday
school supt . Morning worship. 9:30a .m .;
Sundoyschool , 10:30 a .m .; evening ser·
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST, service•
each Sunday 9:30 a .m . George Pickens, ... vice, 7:30.
pattor with preoching on first and third . MT. UNION BAPTIST, Ce~ll Cox .
minister ; Joe Sayre , Sunday School
Sunday of month. Oliver Swain . Supt.
Superlntenent. Sun.d oy school, 9:•5 a .m .;
HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION, Rev. Kolth
evening worship, 7:30 p.m . Prayer
Eblin, pastor. Sunday School. 9:30 a.m .;
Leonard p.ilmore , first eld•r; evening ser· meeting , 7:30p.m . Wednesday .
TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH Of CHRIST.
vice. 7:30 p.m . Wednesday prayer
Randy Koehler , pc~stor ; Dennis Newland,
meeting, 7:30 P,.m.
Sundar sc~aol superlnt~ndan t. Sunday
BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH Of
CHRIST , Duane Warden. minister. Bible Schoo, 9:30 a .m .; morntng c.hurch ser·
clan, 9:30 a.m.; morriing worship, 10:30 vice, 10:30 ~.m .; Sunday evening Bible
o.m.: evening w~nhip, 6:30 p.m . atudy, 7 p .m ..
Church, Sunday School service, ' :.o115 a.m .;
Worthip service. 10:30; Evangelistic S.r·
vice, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday. Prayer
meetinq, 7:30.

services , 9:30 a.m .; Sunday school, 11
a.m.; evening worship, 7:30'/.m. Tuesday
cottage prayer meeting an Bible study ,
9:30 a.m. Worship service, Wednesday,

BRADBURY CHURCH Of CHRIST . Sunday

School 9 :00 a.m . Morning Woshlp 10:00
a.m . Wednesday Bible Study, 7:30p.m.

Wodnooday Blblootudy, 6:30p.m.
NEW
STIVERSVILLE ·cOMMUNITY

Rev . Herbert Grote, pastor. Fronk Riffle,
supt . Sunday School. 9:30 a .m. Worship
servic.a , 11 a.m . and 7:30 p.m . Prayer
meeting, Wednesday. 7:30p.m.

school , 9:30a.m. ; worship service, 10:30
a .m .. Other meetings as a'nnaunc&amp;d.
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST, Rev . Earl Shuler,
pastor. Sunday school 9:30a.m .: Church
service, 7 p.m.; youth meeting , 6
p.m.Tuesdoy Bible Study , 7 p.m.

SYRACUSE CHURCH Of THE NAZARENE,

School 10:00 o .m .
CHESTER , Worsllip 9 a .m.. Church
Sc hool 10 o .m. Choir Rehearsal 7 p.m .,
Tllursdays . Bible Study , Thursdays .

ST.

ZION CHURCH Of' CHRIST , Pomeroy·
Harrisonville Ad .; Robert Purtell, pastor:
Bill McElroy . Sunday school sup t. Sunday
school , 9:30 a .m.; morning wo rship and
communion . 10:30 a.m .; Sunday worship
service, 7 p.m. Wednesday evening
prayer meeting and Bible study . 7 p.m.

LETART FALLS UNITED BRETHREN , Rev ,

FrMiah9 Norris, paator; Floyd Norris,
tupt. Sunday school, 9:30 a.m .; morning
serm~n . 10:30 a .m .: Prayer service,
Wednesday , 7:30p .m .
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE .

7:30p.m .
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS
CHRIST Of LAnER DAY SAINTS , Portland

Racine Rood. William Roush , pastor.
Phyll is Stobort, Sunday School Supt . Sunday School, 9:30 a .m.; Morning worship ,
10:30 a .m.; Sunday evening service 7 p.m .
Wednesday evening prayer services . 7:30
p.m.
.
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST, Rev . Earl Shuler,

pastor . Worship service, 9:30a .m. Sunday
scllool, 10:30 a .m . Bible Study and prayer
service Thursday , 7:30p.m.
CARLETON CHURCH. Kingsbury Road .

Gory King, pastor. Sunday school . 9:30
a.m., Rolph Carl , superintendent; evening
worship , 7:30 p.m. Prayer meeting,
Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
LONG

BOnOM

CHRISTIAN .

Tom

Richeson, pastor; Wallace Damewood,
Sunday School Superintendent . Worship
service at 9 a .m . Bible School10o .m.
HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH . Thu.ro·

day evening services 7 :30, Rev. Cart ; Sunday morning services 9:30 and evening
services 7:30p.m. , Rev. Durham.
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION ot Bold

Knob . Rev .· Lowrance Gluesencomp,
pastor ; Rev . James Cundiff, assistant
pastor : Roger Willford .. Sunday school
supt. Sunday school9:30 a.m. Bible study.
6 p.m . youth meeting. 6 p.m. worship service , 7:30 p.m . Prayer meeting Wednesday , 7:30 p.m . Women 's fellowship and
Bible study, Tuesday , IOo .m.
WHITfS CHAPEL , Coolville RD . Rev . Roy

Deeter, pastor . Sunday school ?:30 a .m.;
worship service, 10:30 a .m . Bible study
and prayer service, Wednesday, 7:30p .m.
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST, Brad
Henderson , pastor; l:lerb Elliott, Sunday
school supt. Sunday achool, 9 :30 a .m.;
morning worship and camunion , 10:30
a .m.
RUTLAND BIBLE METHODIST CHURCH,

Amos Tillis, pastor; Donny Tillis . Sunday
Sthool Supt . Sunday School , 9 :30 a .m.;
followed by morning worship. Sunday
evening service , 7:00 p.m. Prayer
meeting, Wednesday, 7:00p.m.
RUTLAND CHURCH Of THE NAZARENE,

Rev . Lloyd D. Grimm, Jr., pastor. Sunday
school. 9:30a.m .; worship service, 10:30
a .m . Broadcast live over WMPO ; young
~Ia' s service, 7 p.m . Evangelistic ·ser·
vice, 7:30 p.m . Wedneadoy service, 7:30
p.m .
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST, Corner of Socond and Anderson. Mason. Pastor frank
Lowther . Sunday school, 9:-45a.m. ; worsh ip service, 11 a.m . and 7:30p.m. WMkly Bible Study , Wednesday, 7:30p.m .
MASON CHURCH Of CHRIST, Millor St ..

Mason , W . Vo . Auric• Mick , pastor. Sunday Bible Studv 10 o.m.j Worship 11 a.m.
and 7 p.m. Bibfe Study Wednesday 7 p .m .,
Vocal "'uslc.
·
MASON ASSEMBLY OF GOD. Dudding

on Pomeroy Pike, County Rood 25, naor
Flatwoods. Rev. Blackwood, pastor. Services on S\tndoy at 10:30 a .m. and 7:30
p.m. with Sunday school, 9:30a.m. Bible
study, Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
.
-

INDEPENDENT HOLINESS CHURCH , INC.
Pearl St.. Middleport. Rev. O'Dell

Manley , pastor; Arthur Barr, Sunday
school superintendent. Sunday school.
9:30 a .m. : eVening worship, 7:30 p.m.
Prayer and praise service, Wednesday.
7:30p .m .
RUTLAND APOSTOLIC CHURCH Of
JESUS CHRIST, Elder James Millar. Bible

study. Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. ; Sunday
School , 10 a.m. Sunday night service, 7:30
p.m.
POMEROY WESLEYAN

HOLINESS -

Harrisonville Rood: Dewey Klng , pastor;
Edison W&amp;Gver. auistont; Henry Eblin,
Jr ., Sunday school supt . Sunday school ,
9:30a.m . ; morning worship, 11 a .m. Sun·
day evening service. 7:30; prayer
meeting, Thursday , 7:30p.m.
SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF GOD -

Not Pentecostal , Rev. George Oiler.
pastor. Wonhip service Sunday, 9:~5
a.m.: Sunday school, 11 a.m .; worship
service, 7 :30 p.m . Thu,.sday prayer
meeting, 7 :30p .m.
MT. HERMON United Brethren in C~rist
Church . Rev. James Leach, pastor ; 'Dan
Will . lay leader. located In Texas Com·
munlty oH CR 82 . Sunday Khool , 9:30

a .m.; Morning worship service, 10:-115
a.m.; evening preaching service second
and fourth Sundays, 7:30p.m. ; Christian
Endeavor, first and third Sundays, 7:30
p.m. Wednesday prayer meeting and Bi·
ble study , 7:30p.m.
JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES , I mile oaot

Rutland, jundion of Roure

12~

of

tur~ , 9:30 a .. : Watchtower study, 10:30
a.m.: Tuetdoy, Bible study. 7 and 8:15
p.m.: Thursday, theocratic school , 7:30
p.m. ; service meeting, 8 :30p.m.

RUTLAND FREEWILL BAPTIST Church -

Sunday school, 10 a .m.; evening tervice,
7:00 p.m. Preyer mHtlng, Wednesday ,
7:00 p.m . Darrel McPherson, Pastor . Guy
Priddy, Supl.
CHURCH Of GOD of Prophecy , locatod
on the 0 . J. White Rood oH highway 160.

Sunday School 10 a .m . Superintendent
John Lovodoy. First Wodneoday night of

mont.h CPMA services, second W.dnH·
day WMB meeting , third through fifth

youth •ervlce. George Croyle, pastor.
HOPE BAPTIST CHAP.EL - 570 Grant St ..

Middleport: Rev. Don Bloke, pastor. Sunday school , 9:30a.m .; morning worship,
10:30 a .m.: eVening worship, 7 p.m.;
WednMday •venlng , Bible study and
prayer m. .tlng , 7 p. m. A.Hiliahtd with
Sciuthern Baptist Convention.
CHURCH

OF

CHRIST-

Eugene Underwood, pastor; Harry Hendricks. superintendent. Sunday school ,
9:30a .m.; morning worship, 10:30 o.n,. :'
evening worship, 7 p.m. Wednesday Blble
otudy , 7 p .m .
JUBILEE CHRISTIAN CENTER -

"'

-Middleport Church has
mother-daughter fare

'Round
Meigs
Local
By Supt. David L. Gleason
By Supt. David L. Gleason
The "S. S. Salisbury" with its
large paddle wheel chugging made a
brief visit to our school district last
Wednesday and Thursday evenings
to the delight of everyone in the
?Verflow crowds. Music, laughter,
JOkes, and stirring recitations could
be heard from the ship as it passed
along.
The selections sung by the first
through sixth graders of Salisbury
Elementary (who made up the crew
and passengers) brought back the
"good ole days" of river travel and
raucous showroom entertairunent.
A most fitting conclusion to the
show sent chills up and down your
spine as you listened to a special
recitation and the chorus singing
"The Battle Hymn of the Republic."
Congratulations, Salisbury
Elementary, for a job well done . You
should be proud!

The regional champion Meigs
High School Girls' softball team
goes after a first ever state title for
Meigs High School (in any sport)

this evening. A win tonight against
Warren Champion in Ashland, 0.,
w1ll put our gals into the title game
tomorrow at 4 p.m.
Let's get behind our team and root
them on to the state title.·
Th.e Rutland Elementary spring
mus'.c program last Thursday
everung was also well done as
students in the first through the sixth
grades performed to a large crowd.
The students were dressed in their
"SWlday go to meeting" clothes as
they sang song after song.
Congratulations to the MLTA for
their excellent mini programs on
WMPO, ''Classroom Comments.' '
The annoWJcements feature local
teachers and parents talking about
various topics such as discipline,
study habits, and attendance.
The "a Ia carte" day at the high
school last Friday seemed to go
quite well. We scheduled Thursday
and Friday of this week as "a Ia carte" days and hopefully next Monday
we will be in full swing.

By Mrs. Herben Rousb
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Rbodes of
Columbus spent the weekend with
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Rbodes.
Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Russell Roush were Mr. and Mrs.
Ronald Russell, Mandy and
Michael, Mr. and Mrs. Dana Lewis
of Clifton. Visiting Tuesday evening
were Cindy Roush and Becky Fry of ·
IPomeroy.
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Lawson,
Mrs. Dorothy Parsons attended
funeral services for Mr. Lawson's
sister, Mrs. Cindy Ford of South
Side, W.Va. at the Hambrick chw-ch
Sunday. Intennent was in Mt. Carmel Cemetery at Gallipolis Ferry.
Clarence and Inez Roy of Racine
visited Mrs. Etha Warner Sunday.
Arthur Warner of Racine visited
Mrs. Warner Saturday.

Wolf Pen
News Notes

New officers were elected at a
recent meeting of the Harrisonville
PTO ·held at the school. They are
Helena Riggs, president; Flora

Donohue, vice president; Rhea
Norris, secretary; Pat Arnold,
treasurer; and Eva Howard, reporter. Harold Norris wsa named en·
tertairunent chairman, and Shirley
Kauff, refreslunent chairmari.
The officers will be installed at the
JWJe 5 meeting to be held at the
school at 7 p.m. The date of the
meeting was changed due to the
election.
A report was given on the spring
carnival and a vote of thanks extended to the businesses of
Pomeroy, Middleport and Rutland
for donations.

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Russell are
visiting with Mr. and Mrs. Tom ,
Swnmerfield, Candy, Wendy and
·erystalofMedina.
Mrs. Iva ,Johnson was Saturday
visitor of Mr. and Mrs. Charley 1
&amp;ruth.
!
Bertha Russell spent a couple of
days with Mr. and Mrs. William
Russell of Minersvllle.
Dorothy Reeves was SWiday
visitor of Mr. and Mn. Fred Tucker-'

man.

Mr.~.amt

Pitzer of :

Dubin IU1d
• Rocky. Mr. IU1d :
Mrl. Gl . Ablel of Bald K1101Je •
were
at tbe home It 1
Mr. aDd Mn. Dougla.s Circle.
Mr. aod Mn. Arthur Jollnson IU1d I
daughter, Sheryl Leann villted with:
Mr. aDd Mn. Dong!•• Jolnon of ,
Racine on Sunday.

TOENTERtAIN8&amp;40
Mrs. Veda Davis will entertain the
8 and 40 at her home on Spring Ave.,
Pomeroy, at 7:30p.m. Monday.

REVIV ALSLATED
A revival will be held at the Midway Commwlity Church, coWJty
road 10, beginning June 8, at 7:30
p.m. nightly.

Kevin Bradley Deemer, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Robert L. Deemer,
Syracuse, celebrated his second birthday recently with a party hosted
by his parents.
A Cookie Monster cake was served
with ice cream and Kool-Aid. Attending were Mrs. Darla Thomas
and Amber, Mrs . Eleanor
McKelvey, Michael and Jay, Miss
Tracie Hubbard and Kevin's
brother, Christopher. Each child
was given a balloon, party favors,
and a book. Sending gifts and cards
were Michael Robinson, Syracuse,
Erin, Shannon and Kelly Brogan,
Athens.

Kevin Deemer f

CZAR ALEXANDER U
Czar Alexander !I of Russia was
assassinated in 1881 when bombs exploded under his carriage.

PIERCED

FREE

EARS

With
Purchase of
EAR RINGS
4 STYLES

24 Carat
Gold
Over
Surgical
Steel

TREATED
LUMBER
CCA Treated Lumber
GREAT
-LANDSCAPING
-oECKS
-FENCING
NOW IN STOCK

FOR
-PORCHES
-POOLS
-OTHER NEEDS
CALL FOR QUOTE

BAUM TRUE VALUE
CHESTER, 0.

Company representative will be in our store.

NEXT SATURDAY, JUNE 7, 1980
10 TIL 3:00

Middleport Book Store
Middleport, Ohio

985-3301

Ph. 992·2641

Those under 18 years of age must be accomp;ulied by
parent or guardian.

SATURDAY ON-L YI
Rev. Carte
Evangelistic services
scheduled in Racine

E30%ro50%

Evangelistic services will be held
at the Church of the Nazarene in
Racine beginning June 3 and continuing each evening at 7:30 p.m.
throughJWJe8.
Rev. and Mrs. William E. Carte of
Marmet, W. Va., will be the
evangelist, singers, and musicians.
Both Rev . and Mrs. Carte were
graduated from Mount Vernon
Nazarene CoUege, Mount Vernon,
where Rev. Carte was a religion
major, and Mrs. Carte a music
major. Rev , Carte is pastor of the
Marmet Church of the Nazarene,
and Mrs. Carte serues as pianist in
the church:
Everyone is invited to attend these
seruices.

MICROWAVE OVENS

'299

95

LOTS OF ITEMS WE HAVE
FOUND IN OUR WAREHOUSE
THAT WE DID NOT KNOW
.WE HAD. WE MUST
SEU AT A LOSS!

BmLE SCHOOLS ANNOUNCED
Daily Vacation Bible Schools will
be conducted June U at the
following locations: Portland United
Methodist Church, (further information, call 949-2895 ). Letart
Fa~ Elementary School, (sponsonng churches: Apple .Grove
United Methodist, East Letart
United Methodist, Letart . Falls
United Methodist) (further information, call 247-2664, 247-3444).
Racine-Wesleyan United Methodist
Cl.urcb, (sponsoring churches :
Bethany United Methodist and
Racine-Wesleyan United Methodist )
(further inforniation, please call9492895, 949-2741 ),

ADDISON TO SPEAK
I!lere will be a ' revival at the
Rutland Bible Methodist Church,
Main Street, with the Rev. Richard
Addison, Michigan, evangelist, as
guest speaker.
Providing music will be the M. H.
Dunn family of Colwnbus. Services
are now through June 8 at 7:30p.m.
nightly. Amos Tillis is tile pastor.

ON

ALL MERCHANDISE IN STOCK!

SALE WILL BE INSIDE STORE IN CASE OF RAIN!

Carmel News,
Bythe~ay

program, members and guests sang
" Blest Be the Tie That Binda."
Attending were Mrs. Nora Rice,
Pat Carson, Mrs, Cathy Erwin and
Amy, Mrs. Dorothy Roach, Mrs.
Trudy Williams, Mrs. Farie Cole
Rayanna Cole, Frances Roush'
Mary Buck, Mrs. Allensworth, Mrs:
Debbie Gerlach, Mrs. Maryln
Wilcox, Mrs. Melton, Mrs. Edna
Evans, Mrs. Sharon Stewart, Mrs.
Donna Glaze, Mrs. Gertrude Miller,
Mrs. Kathryn Evans, Mrs. Regina
Swift, Mrs. Judy Crow, Mrs. Geneva
Tuttle, Mrs. Clara Williams, Mrs.
Dorothy Bryan, Mrs. Flo Grueser
Mrs. Mary Lou Boggs, Miss Mildred
Hawley, Mrs. Clara Conroy, Mrs.
Lois Cunningham, Mrs. Rose
Reynolds, Angie Neff, Cathryn Erwin, Mrs. Lena McKinley, Mrs. Ella
Mae Daugherty, Mrs. Martha
Haggerty, Mrs. Louise McElhinny,
Mrs. Grace Hawley, Mrs. Phyllis
Gilkey, Mrs. Clarice Erwin Sandra
Gibbs, Mrs. Ida Gibbs, Mrs. 'Dorothy
Baker, Delcie Forth, Mrs. Helen
Reynolds, and Mrs. Beulah Roush.

Birthday bay is two

G LOT

Mrs. William Boyce of Colwnbus

Is spending some time with Mrs.
Bertha Ru.saell.

The annual mother-daughter
banquet of the Middleport Church of
Christ was held recently with Mrs.
Nora Rice, president of Philathea
welcoming the members and guests:
Miss Frances Roush presented
silk rose corsages to Mrs. Beulah
Roush, the oldest mother; Mrs. Gertrude Miller, the mother with the
most children; Sharon Stewart the
youngest mother, and Cathy E~
and Dorothy Roach, the mothers
with perfect attendance in 1979, Mrs.
Debbie Melton, wife of the pastor,
was also presented a corsage.
The dinner arrangements and
decorations were handled by Mrs.
Rice, Mrs. Erwin, Miss Roush, Mrs .
Roach, and Mrs. Farie Cole.
Mrs. Melton, Mrs. 'Qyda Allensworth, and Mrs. Beulah Roush had
charge of the program with readings
by Mrs. Roush, Mrs. Melson and
Mrs. Helen Reynolds, and a piano
solo by Amy Erwtn. Mrs. Betty
McKinley had a chalk drawing as
Mrs. Clarice Erwin played piano
music, and the scripture was given
by Mrs. Melton. To close the

PTO elects new officers

Fairview
News Notes

Goargo'o

Cr. . k Rood. Rev . C. J. Llltllley, pastor;
John Fellure, superintendent. Church
school. 9:30 a.m.: morning worship,
10:30; evening service, 7 p.m . Youth

lone, Mason, W. Vo. Rev. Ronnie B. Rose. ' mooting Sunday , 6 p .m . Blblo study In
Pastor. Sunday School9:45 a .m.; Morning depth , Wednesday, 1 p.m. Clones lor all
Wonhip 11 a .m . Evenln9 S.rvice 7:30 ages. Nursery provided for worship ser·
p.m. Wednesday Wom1n 1 Ministries 9 vice.
ST . PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH, Corner
a .m . (meeting and prayer. Prayer and BIof Sycamore and Second Sts ., Pomeroy.
ble Study 7 p.m .
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN TM Rev. William M 1 ddleswart~, Pastor.
CHRISTIAN UNION, Tho Rev. William Sunda~ School ai 9:45 a.m. and Church
,
Campbell , paator. Sunday School. 9:30 services 11 a.m.
SACRED HEART. Rov . father Paul D.
a .m .; James Hughes, supt., evening service, 7:30 p.m . Wednesday evening Welton, pastor . Pt'lone 992.2825. Soturdoy
prayer mHtlng. 7:30 p.m . Youth prayer evening Man , 7:30: SundGy Moll, 8 and.
s•rvice each TuMdoy.
. • 10 a.m. : Confession, Saturday, 7-7:30
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH . Le.t ort , w. p .m.
VICTORV BAPTIST - On lhe Route 7
Vo ., Rt. I, Mark Irwin. ~star. Wonhlp

·~

Attendance at the Free Methodist
Church April 13 was 75. Choir members present were 15.
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Higginbotham and Erin, Colwnbus, spent
the weekend with Pastor and Mrs.
Floyd Shook.
•
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Jacobs,
Florida, spent the weekend with Mr.
and Mrs. Cliff Jacobs.
Mrs. Tina Jacobs is spending a
week with her daughter, Mrs.
Wllliam Davis, in Colwnbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Dick Karr atten .ed
the funeral of Mr. Ca:l Grif th;
Columbus. Mr. Griffith w;.s uom :
and reared in this conummity. He
was 70 years of age.
Mrs. Mildred Jacobs was hostess
Thursday 'evening to 12 members of
the Laurel Cliff Health Club. Games
were ph!yed and Polly Eichinger,
Jean Wright and Iva Pearl Powell
won the prizes. Refreshments were
served.
Recently somebody has knocked
the flagpole down at the Rock
Springs Cemetery and took thiJ flag.

and Noble

Summit Road (T· 174). Sunday Bible Loc·

BRADFORD

Rev . FrHiand

Laurel Cliff
News Notes

441 Locust
992·3093

Pomeroy

minister: William Watson , Sunday school
aupt. Sunday school , 9:30a.m. : morning
worship 10:30o.m.

BAPTIST,

Donald R. Kerr , Sr., pastor. Friday even·
lng service, 7:30p.m. : Sunday school , 10
a .m.

Prescriptions

postar . Sunday Scllool , 9:30a.m.; evening
worship, 7:30. Thursday even ing prayer
service, 7:30p.m .

Racine,

NEASE SEnLEMENT FREE WILL BAI'TIST,

pomeroy

-

We fill Doctors'

ASSEMBLY ,

Norris, pastor. Doh Cheadle, Supt. Sun·
day School, 9:30 a .m . Morning Worship,
10:30 a .m. Prayer Service, alternate Sun·
days .

Eat In or
C•rr.v Out
126 E. Main

11 :1- JJ

BljPTIST

Route 12~. William Hoback, pottor. Sun·
day Khool, 10 a .m.: Sunday evening ser·
vice, 6:30 p.m. Wednesday . .nlng ,.,.
vice, 7.

PIZZA SHACK

Mondny TtJrsdlly \Vrdn f'srluy Thursday hiduy Saturday
liTh r .fsrifo nimls lll'rtrr I Tlmollt!J I Ti mothy I Timothy Maflh eu.;
LuJw

SOUTHERN

CHURCH , Route I, Shade. Pastor Den
Block . Affiliated with Southern Baptist
Convention . Sunday school, 1:30 p.m.;
Sunday worship, 2:30 p.m. Thuraday
evening Bible stucfv, 7 p.m.

Sunda y

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY

RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH-

Mothadlst

p.m.; Wednesday prayer mHting, 7:30
p.m.

Ford, Inc.
As a freshman I was too 5cared of
flun king to think a.houl what my par.ents
had don e to mnke college possible . As a .
.!&gt;Ophomore tryin g to decide my major, I ·
was too busy f&lt;;Jr g ratitud~ . As tt jun ior
cmmming fo r mid -years - there wasn't
tinu• for st&gt;nti mc nt al tho ughts .
But with my se nior year coming to its
thrilling climax- there's nothing I wan t
to say mo re t ha n THANK S DAD ,
THA NKS MOM .
1 hl'n during our baccalaurea te service an aweso me though t grippt'd ntc.
Not on ly h ave my pare nts given me my
cdut·aliml . . . they huvt- give n me my
faith as well .
My q uest lOr a co llege degree began
in nurse!)' schoo l and kindergarten . It
was just ahnul that lim e when these
same wonde rful parents brought me to
what wo uld soo n b e c o me OUR
CHURCH .
.
My ques t for a strong, sure fa ith
began whe re it does so oft en ~ in the
BEGINNER'S De partme nt.

Unllod

Sunday Schaal , 9:30 a.m.; Wonhlp Sor·
vice, 10:45 a .m.: Sunday Bible Study, 7:00

46 I S. Third, Middleport
992 -2196

BAP TIST

day Bible study, 7 p.m.
OLD DEXTER BIBLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH .

BETHEL

BURLINGHAM

216 E . Main

music. Sunday worship, 10 a .m.; Bible
atudy, 11 o.m.; worship , 6 p.m. Wednes·

and Bible Study,
SEVENTH-DAY

NORTH

tt2·112&gt;

Athens County
Sawings &amp; Loan
Co. -~

Fourth and

Church. Rev~ Charles Domlgon, pastor.

Meigs County Br•nch

POMEROY WESTSIDE CHURCH QF
CHRIST, 200 W . Main St .. 9'12·5235 . Vocol

UNITED

MT . MORIAH BAPTIST -

Pomeroy

949-2020

Re¥. Nylo

MOin St., Middleport. Rev .. Colvin Mlnnlt,
pastor. Mn. Elvin Bumgardner, supt. S•ndoy School , 9:30 a .m.; wonhlp service,
· 10:4So.m .

216 s .. second

Chester 98S·3307

CHAPEL,' Route: I, Shade~ Pastor Bobby
Elkins. Sunday school . 5 p.m.; Sunday
worship, 5:~5 p.m. ; Wednesday prayer
Mrv·l ce, 7:30p.m.

GRAHAM

510 N. 2nd

VIRGIL B.
TEAFORD SR.

p'

Church ,

pastor. Corn•llut ·lunch,
su~rlntendent . Sunday schoo1 . .9:30o .m.;
aecond and fourth Sundays worship service at 2:30p.m.

~·t\t--

q._

Community

. . ..

9-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0., Friday, May 30, 1980

Borden ,

;:~•t' .~

POMEROY CHURCH .OF CHRIST , 212 W.

Olivo

Wodnooday , 7:30p.m.
FOREST RUN BAPTIST -

282 W. Main

Ridenour

Sunday

StrHt, Mason. Pastor, Rev. Joy Mitchell.
Morning worship 9:-115 a.m . , su,qoy
School 10:30 a.m . Prayer meeting

FRENCH'S
SUNOC:O
SERVICE
CENTERS

N1tlonwlde Ins. Co.
of ColUmbus, 0 .
104 W. Mil in .
"2·2311 Pomerov

paotar,

Unltod Steol Workoro Union Hall . Railroad

lmld-w..k ••~Ice, Wednftday, 7:30p.m.

Main St., Pomeroy. The R•"· Robert &amp;.

Spencor,

lawrence Bush, posto·r : Max Folmer, Sr.
SUperintendent. Sunday School and morn·
ing worship, 9:30 a .m. Sunday evening
service, 7 p .m.; Youth meeflng and Bible
ttudy, Wedne1doy, 7 p .m.
FAITH BAPTIST Church, Mason , mHt at

The

SALES ilnd SERVICE
Rutl•nd, Ohlo4S77S

Henderson,. pastor. Sunday Khool , 9:30
,a .m., Glen 'McCiung, •upt.; morning wor·
ship, 10:30 a .m .; 8\l'enlng service , 7:30;
GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH -

Gilbert

achool , 9:30a.m .;. morl')ing worship, 11
a .m. Sunday •venlng tervlce, 7:30 p.m .;
midweek prayer servlc:• Wednesday, 7:30
p.m.

~12 E. Mlin StrMt
ff2. J7tS, Pom_eroy

Middltport, Ohio

1

bypass. James E. K... M . pastor. Sunday
tchool , 10 a .m.; morning worship, 11
a .m.: .venlng aervlce, 7.
TRINITY Chrjstlan A1sembly, Coolville

--

"DON'T MISS THIS SALE"

I
·.'

LARRY'S! WAYSIDE FURNITURE
THIRD &amp; OLIVE

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
,.'
&lt;

�.
8-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy;o ., Friday, May 30,1980

b

r-~E~~~~S-~&amp;~~~~H~~---r--~--M•E•IG•S•T•IR•E---r--A•tte•n~d~---,--M•~··s----------~--.--K•&amp;•C•J~--a£•R•S--~

CHURCH
NEWS

c
,
IN .
John F. Fultz, Mtr.

. LOcu st &amp; BHch treet
992-9921 Middleport

TRINITY CHURCH, Rev. W. H. Perrin,
pastbt; Roy Mayer, Sunday school supt .
Churc"- Sc~l . 9: 1S. o .m.; worship service, 10:30o.m. Choir r,eheorsol , Tuesday ,
1i30 p .m , under dirft(tion of Allee N1t0se .

Church o1
Your Choice
"'hiS'
.1.

CENTER

Complete r
Au~~r~!
.. ,JO a
. .

Ph. ,.2-2101
Pomeiov

&amp; .E N
.
f.RANKUr.f

-

K~

---

MOUNT

Brown's Fire &amp;
Equipment

POMEROY CHURCH Of THE NAZARENE :
Cor.,.,. Union and Mulberry. Rov . Clydo V.

of YoW. Choice
This Sunday.

-

·'

J . wm . " Bill" Brown, owner
Photte (61U U 'l-'1111

326 E.

P. J. PAULfY,
AGENT

Grov•. rector. Sunday services, at 10:30
a .m. with Holy Communion on the llrst
Sunday ol each month, and combined
with Morning Prayer on teh third Sunday ;
Mornin9 Prayer and Sermon on all other
Sundays of the month. Churc~ School and
nursery care provided. Coffee hour in the
Parish Hall immediately following tile ser·
vice.

~

~'* ¥.;:·:~:;r

Main St. Neil Proudfoot, pastor. Bible
school, 9:30a .m.; morning worsllip, 10:30
a .m.; Youtll meetings ! 6:30p.m.; evening
wonhlp , 7:30. Wednesday night prayer
mMting and Bible study, 7:30p.m .
THE SALVATION ARMY, 115 Butternut
Av•., Pomeroy. Envoy and Mrs . Ray Win ing, officers in charge. Sundoy-holinan
me.ting, 10 a .m. ; Sunday School , 10:30
a .m. Sunday school leader. YPSM, Eloise
Adams . 7:30 p.m ., solvation IT!eeting,
various speakers and music specials.
Thursday- 10 a .m . to 2 p.m. Ladies Home
League, all women invited: 7:30 p.m.
prayer m"ting and Bible study . Rav . Noel
Hermon, teacher.
BURLINGTON

SOUTHERN

R~cine

For The Best In T\1 \Jiewlnu

Clll99l-2505

RACINE

Rev.Rolph Smith , pastor. S~tJnday school,
9:30
a.m. , Mrs. · Worley Fronds ,
superintendent. Preaching services first &amp;
third Sundays following Sun,day School ,

Ml~

Mill Work .
Cabinet Making
·Svracuse 992 .3978

METHODIST .

Preaching 9:30a.m . , lirst and second Sun·
days of each month; third and fourth Sundoya each month, worship service at 7:30
p.m. Wednesday evenings at 7:30. Preyer

HEINER'S
BAKERY
t(.lhrlght I !ItO ~fl"fl ~~1'1 1SU'JQ Ser;l[t
P I) Boo 802~ Clll•l~ll•srl'E V" 11'"" ?l'l:illb

Bakers of

ADVENTIST , Mulberry

Good Bread

H•ights Road , Pomeroy . Pastor, Albert
Olttes: Sabbath School Superintendent ,
Rite White. Sobbotll Schoo l, Saturday
afternoon at 2:00, with Warsh ip Service
following at 3:15 .

~unting~n,

:k11p1uru Mlectea o~ TMI ..,merocan llil&gt;HI SOOety

W.

Sister Harriett Worner, Supt . Sunday
School, 9:30a.m.; morning worship . 10:45
a .m .

PENTECOSTAL

1.1· 12

1:1· 14

1:.5·19

tl:6- 12

6: 13- 16

6:5· 13

tARPENTER

THE HILAND CHAPEL , George Casto.

MARK V STORE

Middleport
Middleport

THE DAILY
SENnNEL
Middleport·

.Pomeroy, 0.

WAID CROSS
~NS STORE

992.2955

POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST, Dovid Monn .

Reuter-Brogan
Insurance
Services

FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST . 282 Mulberry

Ave., Pomeroy . Hershel McClure, Sunday
school superintendent. Sunday school ,
9:30a.m. ; morning worship, 10:30; even ·
lng worship, 7:00 p.m. Midweek prayer
service, 7:00p.m .

Attend The
Church of

Attend The Church
of Your Choice

214 E. Main
9'2 ·5130 Pomeroy

RACINE
FOOD MARKET

The

The Store
With A Hurt

Your Choice
This

This"Sunday

R~clne

Ph. 949·2626

MIDWAY COMMUNITY CENTER, Dexter

Ad .. langsville. Ohio. Rev. Clyde Ferrell .
Pastor. Sunday School 11 a .m. Saturday
preaching services 7:30p.m. Wednesday
.venlng Bible study at 7:30p.m
fAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH , Bailey

Run Rood , Rev. Emmett Rawson, pastor.
Handley Dunn , supt. Sunday school , 10
a.m. Sunday evening service 7:30; Bible
teaching, 7 :30p.m . Thursday.
•

DYESVILLE

COMMUNITY

CHURCH .

. Roger C. Turner , pastor. Sunday sctlool ,
· 9;30 a.m .: Sunday morning worship,
10:30; Sunday evening service, 7:30.
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST IN

CHRISTIAN UNION, Lawrence Manley ,
pastor; Mrs. Russell Young. Sunday
School Supt. Sunday School 9:30 a .m .

Evening worship, 7:30, Wednesday prayer
meeting , 7:30p.m .
MT.

MORIAH

CHURCH

OF

GOD.

Racine- Rev. James Satterfield . pastor.
Morning worship, 'i''; -45 o.m.; Sunday
school , 10:-115 a .m .; evening worship, 7.
Tuesday , 7:30 p .m.·, ladies prayer
meeting: Wednesday , 7:30p.m. VPE .
MIDDLEPORT fiRST

BAPTIST, Corner

Sixth and Palmer , the Rev. Mark McClung ,
Sunday school , 9:15a.m. : Randy Hayes ,
Sunday School, superintendent. Dan
Riggs , out. supt. Morning Worship , 10:15
a.m. Youth meeting, 7:30 p.m. Wednes·
day , Including wee tots , ooger beavers ,
Junior astronauts, and junior and senior
high BYF; choir practice , 8:30 p.m.
Wednesday prayer meeting and Bible
study, Wednesday. 7:30p.m .
CHURCH OF CHRIST , Middleport . 5th

and Main , Bob Melton , minister, Mike
Gerlach, superintendent. Terry Yankey .
youth minister. Bible school , 9:30 a .m.;
morning worship, 10:30 a .m.; youth group
Sunday 6 :30 p.m. evening worship , 6 :30;
prayer service, 6:30p .m. Wednesday.
MIDDLEPORT

CHURCH

Of

THE

· NAZARENE, Rev. Jim Broome, pastor: Bill
White, Sunday school supt. Sunday
achool , 9:30a.m. ; morning worship , 10:30
a.m. ; Sunday e'!"Jngelis.tlc meeting, 7:00
p.m. Prayer meeting , Wednesday , 7 p.m.
UNITED PRESBYTERIAN MINISTRY Of

MEIGS COUNTY, Dwight L. Zavltz, direc·
tor.
HARRISONVILLE

PRESBYIERIAN ,

10:30.
SYRACUSE FIRST UNITED PRESBYTERIAN

Church. Worship service 9:30a .m . Sunday
School 10:30 a .m . Mrs. Sampson Hall ,
supt.
RUTLAND CHURCH Of GOD. Rev . Bob·

by Porter. poster. Sunday school , 10 a .m.;
SUnday worship, 11 a .m.: Sunday evening
HrVice, 1 p.m .i Wednesday Family Troi·
lng Hour, 7 p.m.Wednesdoy worship ser·
.tee, 7:30p.m .
HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH , Near
Long Bottom, Ed181 Hart. paotor. Sunday

tchool, 10o.m .; Church, 7:30p.m. ; prayer
Third

Ave .. the Rev. William Kri~ttal, pastor.

Thomao

Kelly , Sunday School Supt . Sun -

clay school, 10 a.m. ClaJSes lor'oll ages;
evening servi.c e , 7:30: Bible study,
Wednescloy, 7:30 p.m. : youth services ,
friday, 7:30p.m.
MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST , Carner

Alh and Plum; Nqel Herrmon. pastor.
Soturcloy evening s•rvlce, 7:30p.m .; Sun·

dcry School, 10:30 0·"1·
MEIGS
COOPERATIVE PARISH
MeTHODIST CHURCH
·Richard W. Thomas, Director ·
POMEROY CLUSTER
Rev. Robert McGeo

R.v. James Corbitt
POMIROY, Sunday School 9:15 a.m .
W~ service 10:30 a.m. Choir rehoar·
~1.
•dneoday, 7 p.m. Rev. Robert

~tar.

ISE,

Robinson , Pastor .
RUTlAND . Church School 9:30 a .m.
Worship 10:30 a .m. Wilbur Hilt, Pastor .
SALEM CENTER, Worship 9 a .m . Church
Sc hoo l 9 : ~5 o.m .
SYRACUSE CLUSTER

Rev . Carl Hicks , Interim Pastor
FOREST RUN: Wonhp 9 a .m. Church
Schooi 10·o .m.
MINERSVILLE , Church School 9 o .m .

Worship 10 a .m.
ASBURY: Cllurch School 9:50a .m . War·
ship II a .m. Bible Study 7:30p.m . Thursday . UMW list Tuesday .
SOUTHERN CLUSTER

Rev . David Harris
Re~t . Mark Flynn
Re't' . Florence Smitll
Hilton Wolfe
BETHANY , {Dorcas), Worship 9:00a .m .
Church School10:00 a .m .
CARMEL, Chruch School 9:30a .m. Wor ·
ship 10:30 a .m . 2nd and 4th Sundays .
APPLE GROVE, Sunday Schoo19:30 a .m .
Worship 7:30 p.m. 1st and 3rd Sundays;
Preyer meeting Wednesday 7:30 p.m.
Fellowship supper first Saturday 6 p.m .
UMW 2nd Tuesday 7:30p.m.
.

EAST LETART, Chruch School 9 o.m .
Worship service 10 a .m . Prayer meet ing

7:30p .m. Wednesday . UMW second Tues·
day 7:30p.m .
RACINE WESLEYAN - Sundoy school I 0
a .m .; worship , 11 a .m . Choir practice ,

Tllursday . 8 p.m .
LETART FAllS- Worship service 9 a .m .
Chu rch School10o .m.
MORNING STAR . Worship 9:30 a .m.;
Churcll School 10:30 a .m .
MORSE CHAPEL . Chu"h School 9:30

a .m . Worship 11 o.m.
PORTLAND, Church School 6:30 p.m .,

Even ing Worsh ip, 7:30 p.m. Youth
Meeting . Tuesday evening.
SUnON , Church 5chool9:30 a .m . Worship 1st and 3rd Sundays 10:30 a.m .

Rev.

Ernett Stricklin, pastor. Sunday church
wchool, 9:30a .m., Mrs . Homer Lee, supt.;
morning worship, I 0 :30.
·
MIDDLEPORT. Sunday sch OI'.l l, 9:30a.m.,
Rkhard Vaughan, supt. Morr. ing worship.

meeting, 7:30p.m. Thursday.
MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL,

FLATWOODS, Church School 10 a .m .
Worship 11 a .m .
MIDDLEPORT CLUSTER
• HEATH. Church School 9:30a .m. War·
ship 10:30 a .m. UMYF 6 p.m. Robert

Worol!lp 9 a.m. Church

lchooiiOa.m.
IIOCIC IPIIINGS, Church School tO a.m .
'l\1lnlhlp 10 a.m. UMYF 6:30p.m.

NORTHEAST CLUSTER

Rev . Richard W. Thomas
Duane Sydenstricker, Sr.
John W. Douglas
Charles Domlgon
JOPPA,

Worship

9:00 o.m .

ST . JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH . Pine

Grove . The Rev. William Middlesworth,
Pastor . Church services 9:30a.m . Sunday
Scllool10:30o.m .

Church

7:30p .m .
LONG BOnOM. Sunday School at 9:30

a .m . Evening Worship of 7:30p.m . Thurs·
day Bible Study , 7:30p.m.

REEDSVILLE : Sunday School 9 :30 o .m .
Morning Worship I 0:30 o .m. Evening Wor·
shp 7:30p.m . Bible Study Wednesdays at
7:30p.m .
ALFRED, Sunday School at 9:45 o.m.

Morning Worship of 11 a .m. Youth, 6:30
p.m. Sundays . Wednesday Night Prayer
Meeting, 7:00p.m .
•
PAUL , (Tuppers Plaino) : Sunday

School 9:00 a .m. Morn l.ng Worship at
!O:OOa.m . Bible Study, 7:30p.m. Tuesday.
SOUTH BETHEL (Silver Ridge) : Sunday

LAUREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST
CHURCH , Rev . floyd f . Shook, pastor;

7:30p .m .
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH , now locatod

Lloyd Wright, Sunday School Supt .; Morn ing Worship 9 :30 a .m.; Sunday School
10:20 o .m.; Wednesday Prayer and Bible
Study 7:30p.m.; Sunday evening worslllp
7:30p.m.; Choir Practice Thursday , 7 p .m.
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST. Charles

Russell , Sr. , minister: Rick Macomber,
supt . Sunday school, 9:30a.m . ; worship
service , 10:30 a .m. Bible Study, Tuesday ,

RACINE CHURCH Of THE NAZARENE,

Rev . John A. Coffman . pastor. Franklin
Imboden , chairman ol the Boord of Chris·
tian life. Sunday School. 9:30a .m .; morn·
ing worship , 10:30: Sunday even ing war·
ship, 7:30p.m. Prayer meeting . Wednes·
day . 7:30p .m.
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST, Don L. Walker .
Poster. Robert Smith , Sunday school
supt .; Sunday school , 9:30a .m.; morning
worship , 10:40 a .m .; Sunday evening wor·
ship, 7:30; Wednesday evening Bible
study . 7:30.
DANVILLE

WESLEYAN ,

Rev.

R.

D.

Brown , pastor. Sunday School , 9:30a .m.;
morning worship 10:4S; youth service.
6 : ~5 p .m .; evening worship, 7:30 p.m.:
prayer and praiae , Wednesday , 7:30p .m.
SILVER RUN FREE BAPTIST. Rev . Morvin

Markin , pastor; Steve little Sunday school
supt. Sunday school. 10 a .m. : morning
worship, 11 a .m. Sunday eve ni ng wor·
ship, 7:30. Prayer meeting a nd Bible
study , Thursday , 7:30p.m.; you th serv ice,
6 p.m. Sunday .
CHESTER CHURCH Of GOD, Rev . R. E.

Robinson , pastor . Sunday school. 9:30
a.m.; wo'rshlp service , 11 a .m.; evening
service, 7:00; youth service , Wednesday ,
7:00p.m.
LANGSVILLE

CHRISTIAN

CHURCH .

Robert Musser , pastor. Sunday school ,
9:30 a .m .; Ray Sigman , supt. ; morning
worship, 10:30; Sunday ev'lloing service,
7:30; mid· week service, Wednesday, 7
p.m.
Re v. Dale Boss. pastor ; Sunday school ,
9:30a.m .; morning worship , 10:-45 a .m.;
evangelistic service, 7 p.m. Wednesday
services - proyor and praise , 7 p.m•.;
youth meeting , 7 p.m . Men 's praye r
meeting . Saturday, 7 p.m.
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN CHRIST.

Elden R. Blake. pastor . Sunday School 10
a.m.; Robert Reed , supt.; Morning ser·
mon , 11 a .m .; Sunday night services
Christian Endeavor, 7:30p .m. ; Song sa r·
vice, 8 p.m.; Preaching 8:30 p.m.
Midweek Prayer meet ing , Wednesday , 7
p.m.: Alvin Re,e d , loy leader.
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST , Located ot

Rutland on New limo Rood , next to Forest
Acre Pork ; Rev. Ray Rouse , pastor ; Robert
Musser , Sunday School supt. Sunday
school . 10:30 a .m .: worship 7:30 p .m.Bi·
ble Study, Wednesday , 7:30p .m.; Safur·
day night prayer service, 7:30p .m .
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN , Roger

Watson, pastor; Mildred Ziegler , Sunday
school supt . Morning worship. 9:30a .m .;
Sundoyschool , 10:30 a .m .; evening ser·
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST, service•
each Sunday 9:30 a .m . George Pickens, ... vice, 7:30.
pattor with preoching on first and third . MT. UNION BAPTIST, Ce~ll Cox .
minister ; Joe Sayre , Sunday School
Sunday of month. Oliver Swain . Supt.
Superlntenent. Sun.d oy school, 9:•5 a .m .;
HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION, Rev. Kolth
evening worship, 7:30 p.m . Prayer
Eblin, pastor. Sunday School. 9:30 a.m .;
Leonard p.ilmore , first eld•r; evening ser· meeting , 7:30p.m . Wednesday .
TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH Of CHRIST.
vice. 7:30 p.m . Wednesday prayer
Randy Koehler , pc~stor ; Dennis Newland,
meeting, 7:30 P,.m.
Sundar sc~aol superlnt~ndan t. Sunday
BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH Of
CHRIST , Duane Warden. minister. Bible Schoo, 9:30 a .m .; morntng c.hurch ser·
clan, 9:30 a.m.; morriing worship, 10:30 vice, 10:30 ~.m .; Sunday evening Bible
o.m.: evening w~nhip, 6:30 p.m . atudy, 7 p .m ..
Church, Sunday School service, ' :.o115 a.m .;
Worthip service. 10:30; Evangelistic S.r·
vice, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday. Prayer
meetinq, 7:30.

services , 9:30 a.m .; Sunday school, 11
a.m.; evening worship, 7:30'/.m. Tuesday
cottage prayer meeting an Bible study ,
9:30 a.m. Worship service, Wednesday,

BRADBURY CHURCH Of CHRIST . Sunday

School 9 :00 a.m . Morning Woshlp 10:00
a.m . Wednesday Bible Study, 7:30p.m.

Wodnooday Blblootudy, 6:30p.m.
NEW
STIVERSVILLE ·cOMMUNITY

Rev . Herbert Grote, pastor. Fronk Riffle,
supt . Sunday School. 9:30 a .m. Worship
servic.a , 11 a.m . and 7:30 p.m . Prayer
meeting, Wednesday. 7:30p.m.

school , 9:30a.m. ; worship service, 10:30
a .m .. Other meetings as a'nnaunc&amp;d.
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST, Rev . Earl Shuler,
pastor. Sunday school 9:30a.m .: Church
service, 7 p.m.; youth meeting , 6
p.m.Tuesdoy Bible Study , 7 p.m.

SYRACUSE CHURCH Of THE NAZARENE,

School 10:00 o .m .
CHESTER , Worsllip 9 a .m.. Church
Sc hool 10 o .m. Choir Rehearsal 7 p.m .,
Tllursdays . Bible Study , Thursdays .

ST.

ZION CHURCH Of' CHRIST , Pomeroy·
Harrisonville Ad .; Robert Purtell, pastor:
Bill McElroy . Sunday school sup t. Sunday
school , 9:30 a .m.; morning wo rship and
communion . 10:30 a.m .; Sunday worship
service, 7 p.m. Wednesday evening
prayer meeting and Bible study . 7 p.m.

LETART FALLS UNITED BRETHREN , Rev ,

FrMiah9 Norris, paator; Floyd Norris,
tupt. Sunday school, 9:30 a.m .; morning
serm~n . 10:30 a .m .: Prayer service,
Wednesday , 7:30p .m .
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE .

7:30p.m .
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS
CHRIST Of LAnER DAY SAINTS , Portland

Racine Rood. William Roush , pastor.
Phyll is Stobort, Sunday School Supt . Sunday School, 9:30 a .m.; Morning worship ,
10:30 a .m.; Sunday evening service 7 p.m .
Wednesday evening prayer services . 7:30
p.m.
.
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST, Rev . Earl Shuler,

pastor . Worship service, 9:30a .m. Sunday
scllool, 10:30 a .m . Bible Study and prayer
service Thursday , 7:30p.m.
CARLETON CHURCH. Kingsbury Road .

Gory King, pastor. Sunday school . 9:30
a.m., Rolph Carl , superintendent; evening
worship , 7:30 p.m. Prayer meeting,
Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
LONG

BOnOM

CHRISTIAN .

Tom

Richeson, pastor; Wallace Damewood,
Sunday School Superintendent . Worship
service at 9 a .m . Bible School10o .m.
HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH . Thu.ro·

day evening services 7 :30, Rev. Cart ; Sunday morning services 9:30 and evening
services 7:30p.m. , Rev. Durham.
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION ot Bold

Knob . Rev .· Lowrance Gluesencomp,
pastor ; Rev . James Cundiff, assistant
pastor : Roger Willford .. Sunday school
supt. Sunday school9:30 a.m. Bible study.
6 p.m . youth meeting. 6 p.m. worship service , 7:30 p.m . Prayer meeting Wednesday , 7:30 p.m . Women 's fellowship and
Bible study, Tuesday , IOo .m.
WHITfS CHAPEL , Coolville RD . Rev . Roy

Deeter, pastor . Sunday school ?:30 a .m.;
worship service, 10:30 a .m . Bible study
and prayer service, Wednesday, 7:30p .m.
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST, Brad
Henderson , pastor; l:lerb Elliott, Sunday
school supt. Sunday achool, 9 :30 a .m.;
morning worship and camunion , 10:30
a .m.
RUTLAND BIBLE METHODIST CHURCH,

Amos Tillis, pastor; Donny Tillis . Sunday
Sthool Supt . Sunday School , 9 :30 a .m.;
followed by morning worship. Sunday
evening service , 7:00 p.m. Prayer
meeting, Wednesday, 7:00p.m.
RUTLAND CHURCH Of THE NAZARENE,

Rev . Lloyd D. Grimm, Jr., pastor. Sunday
school. 9:30a.m .; worship service, 10:30
a .m . Broadcast live over WMPO ; young
~Ia' s service, 7 p.m . Evangelistic ·ser·
vice, 7:30 p.m . Wedneadoy service, 7:30
p.m .
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST, Corner of Socond and Anderson. Mason. Pastor frank
Lowther . Sunday school, 9:-45a.m. ; worsh ip service, 11 a.m . and 7:30p.m. WMkly Bible Study , Wednesday, 7:30p.m .
MASON CHURCH Of CHRIST, Millor St ..

Mason , W . Vo . Auric• Mick , pastor. Sunday Bible Studv 10 o.m.j Worship 11 a.m.
and 7 p.m. Bibfe Study Wednesday 7 p .m .,
Vocal "'uslc.
·
MASON ASSEMBLY OF GOD. Dudding

on Pomeroy Pike, County Rood 25, naor
Flatwoods. Rev. Blackwood, pastor. Services on S\tndoy at 10:30 a .m. and 7:30
p.m. with Sunday school, 9:30a.m. Bible
study, Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
.
-

INDEPENDENT HOLINESS CHURCH , INC.
Pearl St.. Middleport. Rev. O'Dell

Manley , pastor; Arthur Barr, Sunday
school superintendent. Sunday school.
9:30 a .m. : eVening worship, 7:30 p.m.
Prayer and praise service, Wednesday.
7:30p .m .
RUTLAND APOSTOLIC CHURCH Of
JESUS CHRIST, Elder James Millar. Bible

study. Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. ; Sunday
School , 10 a.m. Sunday night service, 7:30
p.m.
POMEROY WESLEYAN

HOLINESS -

Harrisonville Rood: Dewey Klng , pastor;
Edison W&amp;Gver. auistont; Henry Eblin,
Jr ., Sunday school supt . Sunday school ,
9:30a.m . ; morning worship, 11 a .m. Sun·
day evening service. 7:30; prayer
meeting, Thursday , 7:30p.m.
SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF GOD -

Not Pentecostal , Rev. George Oiler.
pastor. Wonhip service Sunday, 9:~5
a.m.: Sunday school, 11 a.m .; worship
service, 7 :30 p.m . Thu,.sday prayer
meeting, 7 :30p .m.
MT. HERMON United Brethren in C~rist
Church . Rev. James Leach, pastor ; 'Dan
Will . lay leader. located In Texas Com·
munlty oH CR 82 . Sunday Khool , 9:30

a .m.; Morning worship service, 10:-115
a.m.; evening preaching service second
and fourth Sundays, 7:30p.m. ; Christian
Endeavor, first and third Sundays, 7:30
p.m. Wednesday prayer meeting and Bi·
ble study , 7:30p.m.
JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES , I mile oaot

Rutland, jundion of Roure

12~

of

tur~ , 9:30 a .. : Watchtower study, 10:30
a.m.: Tuetdoy, Bible study. 7 and 8:15
p.m.: Thursday, theocratic school , 7:30
p.m. ; service meeting, 8 :30p.m.

RUTLAND FREEWILL BAPTIST Church -

Sunday school, 10 a .m.; evening tervice,
7:00 p.m. Preyer mHtlng, Wednesday ,
7:00 p.m . Darrel McPherson, Pastor . Guy
Priddy, Supl.
CHURCH Of GOD of Prophecy , locatod
on the 0 . J. White Rood oH highway 160.

Sunday School 10 a .m . Superintendent
John Lovodoy. First Wodneoday night of

mont.h CPMA services, second W.dnH·
day WMB meeting , third through fifth

youth •ervlce. George Croyle, pastor.
HOPE BAPTIST CHAP.EL - 570 Grant St ..

Middleport: Rev. Don Bloke, pastor. Sunday school , 9:30a.m .; morning worship,
10:30 a .m.: eVening worship, 7 p.m.;
WednMday •venlng , Bible study and
prayer m. .tlng , 7 p. m. A.Hiliahtd with
Sciuthern Baptist Convention.
CHURCH

OF

CHRIST-

Eugene Underwood, pastor; Harry Hendricks. superintendent. Sunday school ,
9:30a .m.; morning worship, 10:30 o.n,. :'
evening worship, 7 p.m. Wednesday Blble
otudy , 7 p .m .
JUBILEE CHRISTIAN CENTER -

"'

-Middleport Church has
mother-daughter fare

'Round
Meigs
Local
By Supt. David L. Gleason
By Supt. David L. Gleason
The "S. S. Salisbury" with its
large paddle wheel chugging made a
brief visit to our school district last
Wednesday and Thursday evenings
to the delight of everyone in the
?Verflow crowds. Music, laughter,
JOkes, and stirring recitations could
be heard from the ship as it passed
along.
The selections sung by the first
through sixth graders of Salisbury
Elementary (who made up the crew
and passengers) brought back the
"good ole days" of river travel and
raucous showroom entertairunent.
A most fitting conclusion to the
show sent chills up and down your
spine as you listened to a special
recitation and the chorus singing
"The Battle Hymn of the Republic."
Congratulations, Salisbury
Elementary, for a job well done . You
should be proud!

The regional champion Meigs
High School Girls' softball team
goes after a first ever state title for
Meigs High School (in any sport)

this evening. A win tonight against
Warren Champion in Ashland, 0.,
w1ll put our gals into the title game
tomorrow at 4 p.m.
Let's get behind our team and root
them on to the state title.·
Th.e Rutland Elementary spring
mus'.c program last Thursday
everung was also well done as
students in the first through the sixth
grades performed to a large crowd.
The students were dressed in their
"SWlday go to meeting" clothes as
they sang song after song.
Congratulations to the MLTA for
their excellent mini programs on
WMPO, ''Classroom Comments.' '
The annoWJcements feature local
teachers and parents talking about
various topics such as discipline,
study habits, and attendance.
The "a Ia carte" day at the high
school last Friday seemed to go
quite well. We scheduled Thursday
and Friday of this week as "a Ia carte" days and hopefully next Monday
we will be in full swing.

By Mrs. Herben Rousb
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Rbodes of
Columbus spent the weekend with
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Rbodes.
Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Russell Roush were Mr. and Mrs.
Ronald Russell, Mandy and
Michael, Mr. and Mrs. Dana Lewis
of Clifton. Visiting Tuesday evening
were Cindy Roush and Becky Fry of ·
IPomeroy.
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Lawson,
Mrs. Dorothy Parsons attended
funeral services for Mr. Lawson's
sister, Mrs. Cindy Ford of South
Side, W.Va. at the Hambrick chw-ch
Sunday. Intennent was in Mt. Carmel Cemetery at Gallipolis Ferry.
Clarence and Inez Roy of Racine
visited Mrs. Etha Warner Sunday.
Arthur Warner of Racine visited
Mrs. Warner Saturday.

Wolf Pen
News Notes

New officers were elected at a
recent meeting of the Harrisonville
PTO ·held at the school. They are
Helena Riggs, president; Flora

Donohue, vice president; Rhea
Norris, secretary; Pat Arnold,
treasurer; and Eva Howard, reporter. Harold Norris wsa named en·
tertairunent chairman, and Shirley
Kauff, refreslunent chairmari.
The officers will be installed at the
JWJe 5 meeting to be held at the
school at 7 p.m. The date of the
meeting was changed due to the
election.
A report was given on the spring
carnival and a vote of thanks extended to the businesses of
Pomeroy, Middleport and Rutland
for donations.

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Russell are
visiting with Mr. and Mrs. Tom ,
Swnmerfield, Candy, Wendy and
·erystalofMedina.
Mrs. Iva ,Johnson was Saturday
visitor of Mr. and Mrs. Charley 1
&amp;ruth.
!
Bertha Russell spent a couple of
days with Mr. and Mrs. William
Russell of Minersvllle.
Dorothy Reeves was SWiday
visitor of Mr. and Mn. Fred Tucker-'

man.

Mr.~.amt

Pitzer of :

Dubin IU1d
• Rocky. Mr. IU1d :
Mrl. Gl . Ablel of Bald K1101Je •
were
at tbe home It 1
Mr. aDd Mn. Dougla.s Circle.
Mr. aod Mn. Arthur Jollnson IU1d I
daughter, Sheryl Leann villted with:
Mr. aDd Mn. Dong!•• Jolnon of ,
Racine on Sunday.

TOENTERtAIN8&amp;40
Mrs. Veda Davis will entertain the
8 and 40 at her home on Spring Ave.,
Pomeroy, at 7:30p.m. Monday.

REVIV ALSLATED
A revival will be held at the Midway Commwlity Church, coWJty
road 10, beginning June 8, at 7:30
p.m. nightly.

Kevin Bradley Deemer, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Robert L. Deemer,
Syracuse, celebrated his second birthday recently with a party hosted
by his parents.
A Cookie Monster cake was served
with ice cream and Kool-Aid. Attending were Mrs. Darla Thomas
and Amber, Mrs . Eleanor
McKelvey, Michael and Jay, Miss
Tracie Hubbard and Kevin's
brother, Christopher. Each child
was given a balloon, party favors,
and a book. Sending gifts and cards
were Michael Robinson, Syracuse,
Erin, Shannon and Kelly Brogan,
Athens.

Kevin Deemer f

CZAR ALEXANDER U
Czar Alexander !I of Russia was
assassinated in 1881 when bombs exploded under his carriage.

PIERCED

FREE

EARS

With
Purchase of
EAR RINGS
4 STYLES

24 Carat
Gold
Over
Surgical
Steel

TREATED
LUMBER
CCA Treated Lumber
GREAT
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FOR
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CALL FOR QUOTE

BAUM TRUE VALUE
CHESTER, 0.

Company representative will be in our store.

NEXT SATURDAY, JUNE 7, 1980
10 TIL 3:00

Middleport Book Store
Middleport, Ohio

985-3301

Ph. 992·2641

Those under 18 years of age must be accomp;ulied by
parent or guardian.

SATURDAY ON-L YI
Rev. Carte
Evangelistic services
scheduled in Racine

E30%ro50%

Evangelistic services will be held
at the Church of the Nazarene in
Racine beginning June 3 and continuing each evening at 7:30 p.m.
throughJWJe8.
Rev. and Mrs. William E. Carte of
Marmet, W. Va., will be the
evangelist, singers, and musicians.
Both Rev . and Mrs. Carte were
graduated from Mount Vernon
Nazarene CoUege, Mount Vernon,
where Rev. Carte was a religion
major, and Mrs. Carte a music
major. Rev , Carte is pastor of the
Marmet Church of the Nazarene,
and Mrs. Carte serues as pianist in
the church:
Everyone is invited to attend these
seruices.

MICROWAVE OVENS

'299

95

LOTS OF ITEMS WE HAVE
FOUND IN OUR WAREHOUSE
THAT WE DID NOT KNOW
.WE HAD. WE MUST
SEU AT A LOSS!

BmLE SCHOOLS ANNOUNCED
Daily Vacation Bible Schools will
be conducted June U at the
following locations: Portland United
Methodist Church, (further information, call 949-2895 ). Letart
Fa~ Elementary School, (sponsonng churches: Apple .Grove
United Methodist, East Letart
United Methodist, Letart . Falls
United Methodist) (further information, call 247-2664, 247-3444).
Racine-Wesleyan United Methodist
Cl.urcb, (sponsoring churches :
Bethany United Methodist and
Racine-Wesleyan United Methodist )
(further inforniation, please call9492895, 949-2741 ),

ADDISON TO SPEAK
I!lere will be a ' revival at the
Rutland Bible Methodist Church,
Main Street, with the Rev. Richard
Addison, Michigan, evangelist, as
guest speaker.
Providing music will be the M. H.
Dunn family of Colwnbus. Services
are now through June 8 at 7:30p.m.
nightly. Amos Tillis is tile pastor.

ON

ALL MERCHANDISE IN STOCK!

SALE WILL BE INSIDE STORE IN CASE OF RAIN!

Carmel News,
Bythe~ay

program, members and guests sang
" Blest Be the Tie That Binda."
Attending were Mrs. Nora Rice,
Pat Carson, Mrs, Cathy Erwin and
Amy, Mrs. Dorothy Roach, Mrs.
Trudy Williams, Mrs. Farie Cole
Rayanna Cole, Frances Roush'
Mary Buck, Mrs. Allensworth, Mrs:
Debbie Gerlach, Mrs. Maryln
Wilcox, Mrs. Melton, Mrs. Edna
Evans, Mrs. Sharon Stewart, Mrs.
Donna Glaze, Mrs. Gertrude Miller,
Mrs. Kathryn Evans, Mrs. Regina
Swift, Mrs. Judy Crow, Mrs. Geneva
Tuttle, Mrs. Clara Williams, Mrs.
Dorothy Bryan, Mrs. Flo Grueser
Mrs. Mary Lou Boggs, Miss Mildred
Hawley, Mrs. Clara Conroy, Mrs.
Lois Cunningham, Mrs. Rose
Reynolds, Angie Neff, Cathryn Erwin, Mrs. Lena McKinley, Mrs. Ella
Mae Daugherty, Mrs. Martha
Haggerty, Mrs. Louise McElhinny,
Mrs. Grace Hawley, Mrs. Phyllis
Gilkey, Mrs. Clarice Erwin Sandra
Gibbs, Mrs. Ida Gibbs, Mrs. 'Dorothy
Baker, Delcie Forth, Mrs. Helen
Reynolds, and Mrs. Beulah Roush.

Birthday bay is two

G LOT

Mrs. William Boyce of Colwnbus

Is spending some time with Mrs.
Bertha Ru.saell.

The annual mother-daughter
banquet of the Middleport Church of
Christ was held recently with Mrs.
Nora Rice, president of Philathea
welcoming the members and guests:
Miss Frances Roush presented
silk rose corsages to Mrs. Beulah
Roush, the oldest mother; Mrs. Gertrude Miller, the mother with the
most children; Sharon Stewart the
youngest mother, and Cathy E~
and Dorothy Roach, the mothers
with perfect attendance in 1979, Mrs.
Debbie Melton, wife of the pastor,
was also presented a corsage.
The dinner arrangements and
decorations were handled by Mrs.
Rice, Mrs. Erwin, Miss Roush, Mrs .
Roach, and Mrs. Farie Cole.
Mrs. Melton, Mrs. 'Qyda Allensworth, and Mrs. Beulah Roush had
charge of the program with readings
by Mrs. Roush, Mrs. Melson and
Mrs. Helen Reynolds, and a piano
solo by Amy Erwtn. Mrs. Betty
McKinley had a chalk drawing as
Mrs. Clarice Erwin played piano
music, and the scripture was given
by Mrs. Melton. To close the

PTO elects new officers

Fairview
News Notes

Goargo'o

Cr. . k Rood. Rev . C. J. Llltllley, pastor;
John Fellure, superintendent. Church
school. 9:30 a.m.: morning worship,
10:30; evening service, 7 p.m . Youth

lone, Mason, W. Vo. Rev. Ronnie B. Rose. ' mooting Sunday , 6 p .m . Blblo study In
Pastor. Sunday School9:45 a .m.; Morning depth , Wednesday, 1 p.m. Clones lor all
Wonhip 11 a .m . Evenln9 S.rvice 7:30 ages. Nursery provided for worship ser·
p.m. Wednesday Wom1n 1 Ministries 9 vice.
ST . PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH, Corner
a .m . (meeting and prayer. Prayer and BIof Sycamore and Second Sts ., Pomeroy.
ble Study 7 p.m .
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN TM Rev. William M 1 ddleswart~, Pastor.
CHRISTIAN UNION, Tho Rev. William Sunda~ School ai 9:45 a.m. and Church
,
Campbell , paator. Sunday School. 9:30 services 11 a.m.
SACRED HEART. Rov . father Paul D.
a .m .; James Hughes, supt., evening service, 7:30 p.m . Wednesday evening Welton, pastor . Pt'lone 992.2825. Soturdoy
prayer mHtlng. 7:30 p.m . Youth prayer evening Man , 7:30: SundGy Moll, 8 and.
s•rvice each TuMdoy.
. • 10 a.m. : Confession, Saturday, 7-7:30
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH . Le.t ort , w. p .m.
VICTORV BAPTIST - On lhe Route 7
Vo ., Rt. I, Mark Irwin. ~star. Wonhlp

·~

Attendance at the Free Methodist
Church April 13 was 75. Choir members present were 15.
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Higginbotham and Erin, Colwnbus, spent
the weekend with Pastor and Mrs.
Floyd Shook.
•
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Jacobs,
Florida, spent the weekend with Mr.
and Mrs. Cliff Jacobs.
Mrs. Tina Jacobs is spending a
week with her daughter, Mrs.
Wllliam Davis, in Colwnbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Dick Karr atten .ed
the funeral of Mr. Ca:l Grif th;
Columbus. Mr. Griffith w;.s uom :
and reared in this conummity. He
was 70 years of age.
Mrs. Mildred Jacobs was hostess
Thursday 'evening to 12 members of
the Laurel Cliff Health Club. Games
were ph!yed and Polly Eichinger,
Jean Wright and Iva Pearl Powell
won the prizes. Refreshments were
served.
Recently somebody has knocked
the flagpole down at the Rock
Springs Cemetery and took thiJ flag.

and Noble

Summit Road (T· 174). Sunday Bible Loc·

BRADFORD

Rev . FrHiand

Laurel Cliff
News Notes

441 Locust
992·3093

Pomeroy

minister: William Watson , Sunday school
aupt. Sunday school , 9:30a.m. : morning
worship 10:30o.m.

BAPTIST,

Donald R. Kerr , Sr., pastor. Friday even·
lng service, 7:30p.m. : Sunday school , 10
a .m.

Prescriptions

postar . Sunday Scllool , 9:30a.m.; evening
worship, 7:30. Thursday even ing prayer
service, 7:30p.m .

Racine,

NEASE SEnLEMENT FREE WILL BAI'TIST,

pomeroy

-

We fill Doctors'

ASSEMBLY ,

Norris, pastor. Doh Cheadle, Supt. Sun·
day School, 9:30 a .m . Morning Worship,
10:30 a .m. Prayer Service, alternate Sun·
days .

Eat In or
C•rr.v Out
126 E. Main

11 :1- JJ

BljPTIST

Route 12~. William Hoback, pottor. Sun·
day Khool, 10 a .m.: Sunday evening ser·
vice, 6:30 p.m. Wednesday . .nlng ,.,.
vice, 7.

PIZZA SHACK

Mondny TtJrsdlly \Vrdn f'srluy Thursday hiduy Saturday
liTh r .fsrifo nimls lll'rtrr I Tlmollt!J I Ti mothy I Timothy Maflh eu.;
LuJw

SOUTHERN

CHURCH , Route I, Shade. Pastor Den
Block . Affiliated with Southern Baptist
Convention . Sunday school, 1:30 p.m.;
Sunday worship, 2:30 p.m. Thuraday
evening Bible stucfv, 7 p.m.

Sunda y

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY

RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH-

Mothadlst

p.m.; Wednesday prayer mHting, 7:30
p.m.

Ford, Inc.
As a freshman I was too 5cared of
flun king to think a.houl what my par.ents
had don e to mnke college possible . As a .
.!&gt;Ophomore tryin g to decide my major, I ·
was too busy f&lt;;Jr g ratitud~ . As tt jun ior
cmmming fo r mid -years - there wasn't
tinu• for st&gt;nti mc nt al tho ughts .
But with my se nior year coming to its
thrilling climax- there's nothing I wan t
to say mo re t ha n THANK S DAD ,
THA NKS MOM .
1 hl'n during our baccalaurea te service an aweso me though t grippt'd ntc.
Not on ly h ave my pare nts given me my
cdut·aliml . . . they huvt- give n me my
faith as well .
My q uest lOr a co llege degree began
in nurse!)' schoo l and kindergarten . It
was just ahnul that lim e when these
same wonde rful parents brought me to
what wo uld soo n b e c o me OUR
CHURCH .
.
My ques t for a strong, sure fa ith
began whe re it does so oft en ~ in the
BEGINNER'S De partme nt.

Unllod

Sunday Schaal , 9:30 a.m.; Wonhlp Sor·
vice, 10:45 a .m.: Sunday Bible Study, 7:00

46 I S. Third, Middleport
992 -2196

BAP TIST

day Bible study, 7 p.m.
OLD DEXTER BIBLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH .

BETHEL

BURLINGHAM

216 E . Main

music. Sunday worship, 10 a .m.; Bible
atudy, 11 o.m.; worship , 6 p.m. Wednes·

and Bible Study,
SEVENTH-DAY

NORTH

tt2·112&gt;

Athens County
Sawings &amp; Loan
Co. -~

Fourth and

Church. Rev~ Charles Domlgon, pastor.

Meigs County Br•nch

POMEROY WESTSIDE CHURCH QF
CHRIST, 200 W . Main St .. 9'12·5235 . Vocol

UNITED

MT . MORIAH BAPTIST -

Pomeroy

949-2020

Re¥. Nylo

MOin St., Middleport. Rev .. Colvin Mlnnlt,
pastor. Mn. Elvin Bumgardner, supt. S•ndoy School , 9:30 a .m.; wonhlp service,
· 10:4So.m .

216 s .. second

Chester 98S·3307

CHAPEL,' Route: I, Shade~ Pastor Bobby
Elkins. Sunday school . 5 p.m.; Sunday
worship, 5:~5 p.m. ; Wednesday prayer
Mrv·l ce, 7:30p.m.

GRAHAM

510 N. 2nd

VIRGIL B.
TEAFORD SR.

p'

Church ,

pastor. Corn•llut ·lunch,
su~rlntendent . Sunday schoo1 . .9:30o .m.;
aecond and fourth Sundays worship service at 2:30p.m.

~·t\t--

q._

Community

. . ..

9-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0., Friday, May 30, 1980

Borden ,

;:~•t' .~

POMEROY CHURCH .OF CHRIST , 212 W.

Olivo

Wodnooday , 7:30p.m.
FOREST RUN BAPTIST -

282 W. Main

Ridenour

Sunday

StrHt, Mason. Pastor, Rev. Joy Mitchell.
Morning worship 9:-115 a.m . , su,qoy
School 10:30 a.m . Prayer meeting

FRENCH'S
SUNOC:O
SERVICE
CENTERS

N1tlonwlde Ins. Co.
of ColUmbus, 0 .
104 W. Mil in .
"2·2311 Pomerov

paotar,

Unltod Steol Workoro Union Hall . Railroad

lmld-w..k ••~Ice, Wednftday, 7:30p.m.

Main St., Pomeroy. The R•"· Robert &amp;.

Spencor,

lawrence Bush, posto·r : Max Folmer, Sr.
SUperintendent. Sunday School and morn·
ing worship, 9:30 a .m. Sunday evening
service, 7 p .m.; Youth meeflng and Bible
ttudy, Wedne1doy, 7 p .m.
FAITH BAPTIST Church, Mason , mHt at

The

SALES ilnd SERVICE
Rutl•nd, Ohlo4S77S

Henderson,. pastor. Sunday Khool , 9:30
,a .m., Glen 'McCiung, •upt.; morning wor·
ship, 10:30 a .m .; 8\l'enlng service , 7:30;
GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH -

Gilbert

achool , 9:30a.m .;. morl')ing worship, 11
a .m. Sunday •venlng tervlce, 7:30 p.m .;
midweek prayer servlc:• Wednesday, 7:30
p.m.

~12 E. Mlin StrMt
ff2. J7tS, Pom_eroy

Middltport, Ohio

1

bypass. James E. K... M . pastor. Sunday
tchool , 10 a .m.; morning worship, 11
a .m.: .venlng aervlce, 7.
TRINITY Chrjstlan A1sembly, Coolville

--

"DON'T MISS THIS SALE"

I
·.'

LARRY'S! WAYSIDE FURNITURE
THIRD &amp; OLIVE

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
,.'
&lt;

�I()-

The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, May 30, 1980
'

Ohio nurse helps Nicaraguan residents
DAYTON (AP) - Until nurse
J udy Matthews -went to Nicaragua ,
she said she never thought anyone
on welfare in America could be rich.
Mrs. Matthews, an emergency
medicine nurse, went to Nicaragua
in April to arrange for maimed and
mutilated residents of the war-torn
country to receive medical care
unavailable in their homeland.
"! know it had to be difficult for
the children 's parents to let them go
6,000 miles away," Mrs. Matthews
said. "It had to have been terrifying.
That's a position I would never want
to be put in .
"But, I hope I wiU be able to send
them hack whole children who can
be whatever their mothers have
dreamed of them becoming. That's

what it's aU about."
began exanumng cases tbat ap- bright, alert, has never been to
Mrs. Matthews, 38, became inpeared to need specialized help school, has no father. He's the
volved in the Nicaraguan effort
unavailable in Nicara gua.
youngest of six children and his
through her brother, Carl Matthews,
" I was prepared to see children
mother is younger than I am.
an official in the U.S. Embassy
"My daughter is vaccinated for
walking down highways with no ar·
there. She was a volunteer clinical ms," she said. " But, I am never everything. She has never been
instructor in the Wright 'State · prepared for aU that war and ear- malnourished. I n}ver thougtt
University School of Medicine,
thquakes can do.
anyone on welfare was·rich, but now
where her husband, Dr. Carl
"After seeing them, I realized I l do."
Jalenko, is chairman of the Depart· was very lucky."
Mrs. Matthews said she found
ment of Emergency Medicine.
One of the casualties was an 11· . physician care in Nicaragua equal to
Her brother told U.S. Ambassador year-{))d boy burned extensively on · any major medical center in the
Lawrence PezzuUo that his sister the legs and unable to walk since United States, "but they are not as
and brother-in-law were in medicine January 1979. He was flown to the far advanced in some proced!'fes as
and recommended that Mrs. Mat· Shriners' Burn Institute in Cin- we are here, and ther~ are not
thews be asked to help coordinate cinnati, where doctors expect him to enough physicians.''
care lor some victims of the war and walk again in two months.
She expects to return to Nicaragua
· "I have a daughter II and I in two months to choose other
earlier earthquake.
The Nicaraguan government flew couldn't help c~mparing her to the
casualties for treatment in the
Mrs. Matthews to the country and boy in Cincinnati," she said. " He is
United States.

CAPI'AIN EASY
WHY

.

~OH,.YOU

A
YliRY IIRIEF CHIIHCE TO GET

TWD-IIIT

RANC.H PeACEABL '/:

WE'RE THE
PROOF! YIE

was filed in state district court in
crowd tonight I think we ca·n get 6 percent limit imposed by the
WHICH WAY IS UJ'? Tbat may have been one of tbe quesamendment
would
fly
in
the
lace
of
Austin. The city says the taxpayers,
more than 10,000 signatures,"
tions tbat arose during installation•of tbe unprecedented
who weren't listed individuaUy,
Pablo Picasso exhibition at New York's Museum of Mod·
association president Lewis state Ia w, since property values
ern
Art. Works displayed in tbe show are on temporary
traditionally
appreciate
by
more
were
named
as
defendants
because
Lovelace said. .
loan
to tbe museum from public and private collectioos in
than
that.
they
voted
lor
the
allegedly
un" II they keep up with the
tbe
United
States and abroad.
The
suit
seeking
to
have
the
constitutional
proposition.
deiJl8goguery they can be sucreferendum declared unconstitional
cessful," Diaz said before leaving.
"They will have to recaU me, I'm not
' 'We want to throw the bums out,' '
said Joe O'Brien, secretary of the going to resign."
"Those people have a deaf ear to
Corpus Christi Taxpay ers
Association. "That in a nutsheU anything from the other side," said
Diaz. " It was a kangaroo court."
covers the situation."
Zarsky dismissed the gathering as
About 200 members of the group
shouted down moderating viewpoin· "a mob. 11
The city filed suit last week again·
ts during the tumultous meeting and
"A Plymouth Gran Fury delivered
ffiLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
Commenting on recent legislation health center was dedicated Sunday,
st
aU taxpayers, residents, property
voted to seek the recall of all seven
to
our
Warren
office
had
bolts
which
Ohio
Highway
Patrol
said
125
of
its
owners
and
persons
claiming
a
separating
the Ohio Department of May25.
council members, rather than just
were completely loose. The banger Mental Health and Mental Retar·
The " 648" Board has available
new
Plymouth
Gran
Fury
patrol
financial
interest
in
Corpus
Christi.
the five who voted to file the suit.
holds
the
spring
in place was
that
$1.4
million capital improvement
had
loose
bolts
that
could
calise
cars
The
suit
challenges
the
validity
oi
dation
into
two
cabinet
level
agen·
Two councilmen, David Diaz and
just
hanging
there;"
the
captain
the
car
to
drop
on
its
rear
wheelS.
dollars
for the construcon of a new
Maxine
Plummer,
Executive
cies,
Cliff Zarsky, attended the meeting, a city charter amendment - known
said.
No
injuries
or
serious
accidents
community
mental health center in
Director
and
the
"648"
Board
of
but both left before the vote without as Proposition 14 and overWendell
Larsen,
Chrysler
vice
have
been
reported
in
Ohio,
but
the
Jackson
County.
Gallia,
Jackson
and
Meigs
Counties
whelmingly approved by voters last
addressing the crowd.
president for public relations, said . today said, "We will continue to serproblem could cause patroimen to
Construction of both residential
O'Brien said a state law governing month - that cuts the property tax
he
was
unaware
of
any
problems
lose
control
of
one
of
the
vehicles
in
a
and
transitional facilities within the
ve as the community authority of the
when a city can hold an election ap- rate from 74 to 68 cents per $100
with
the
vehicles.
"We
bave
had
no
Gallia.
Jackson • Meigs three counhlgh-speed
chase,
a
spokesman
said
new 'split' department of Mental
pears to give association members valuation and limits annual in·
reports
of
a
problem,"
he
said.
And,
ty
area
are included in the board's
Thursday.
Health under Dr. Timothy Moritz's
only about two weeks to gather the creases in property appraisals to 6
he
said
he
knows
of
"no
mechanical
two-year
community plan.
The
patrol
was
alerted
to
the
leadership."
9, 400 signatures needed to Ioree a percent.
of
this
type
on
R-body
cars."
failure
week
ago
when
the
rear
Construction
of these facilities is
danger
a
Mrs. Plununer also announced
Diaz said Pro~ition 14 is un- .
recall election.
The
R
body
is
the
base
for
the
to
be
funded
by
capital
improvement
end
of
a
new
cruiser
dropped
while
completion of the third construction
"That seems to me to be almost an constitutional. He said state law
Chrysler
New
Yorker
and
the
twins,
traveling at a low rate of speed.
of a mental health facility in the ·dollars on a 90110 percent basis. No
requires that property taxes be
impossible task," O'Brien said.
Dodge
St.
Regis
and
Plymouth
Gran
levy funding is involved. The plan·
This
is
the
second
recent
mishap
area,
a multi-purpose health center,
based
on
true
market
value,
and
the
"From the enthusiasm . of the
Fury.
involving a 1980 Plymouth Gran
ned facilities are designed around
located in Pomeroy. Construction c1
Fury. Two weeks ago a North · He said there have been no recaUs the center brings to fruition another
the community mental health
Haven, Conn. policeman driving a for suspension problems on those aspect of long-'range community
philosophy that service should be
· new Fury, slid off a stretch c1 cars.
available within the communities
planning by the board.
The R-body has been in production
straight highway while involved in a
where they are accessible to patienThe $1.2 million multi-purpose
for
2t years and the cars are assemhigh speed chase. He is in critical
ts and their families.
condition and has not regained con- bled at Chrysler's Lynch Road plant
in Detroit, which is slated for closing
sciousness.
. MAY NOT LEAVE CINCY
at the end of the model year.
The wreckage of the car is being
CINCINNATI
(AP) - Cal Levy,
George Byers x Sons is the
examined by a mechanical engineer
120 WORKERS LAID OFF
local
promoter
for Philadelphia·
hired by the State of Connecticut, ac- Columbus dealer which delivered
FAIRFIELD,
Ohio (AP) -- About
based
Electric
Factory
"-oncerts,
the police cruisers. "This ifl normal
cording to Deputy Chief Thomas
120
laid-{)ff
workers
wiU be recalled
said
Thursday
that
he
may
root
leave
for us. We always have some little
Villano of the North Haven Police
beginning
Monday
at General
Cincinnati
as
originally
planned.
problem with a new car. But we
Department.
Motors'
Fisher
Body
plant
in FairLevy, who helped promote the
don't usually check those bolts. Af·
"The body of the cruiser dropped
field.
Dec. 3 Riverfront Coliseum concert
ter all, it's a new car," Vice
down to the rear tire," while the car
Plant spokesman Dick Polan said
by The Who at which 11 people sufPresident
George
Byers
Jr.
said.
was being driven at slow speed,
Thursday
that the recall will bring
Bob Bretz, a mecbanic at the state focated in a pre-concert crowd
Capt. Jolm W. Rohal, of the patrol's
the
work
force
at the Fairfield site to
garage, said each patrol car has 20 crush, said he wiU continue to work
procurement and auditing office,
bolts on it, 14 hanger bolts and six for Electric Factory in Cincinnati 1,900 and reduce the number of laidsaid.
until the end·of June, when he will off employees to about 450.
shackle
bolts.
''The Clermont County sheriffs of·
Reduced car sales nationwide
have
knee surgery. He all"ounced
"I've
checked
about
35
or
40
new
fice had nine new Furys and all nine
caused the first layoffs in early
last
week
that
he
was
leaving
to·take
Plymouth
(Gran)
Furys
so
far.
On
had loose bolts," Rohal said.
January, plant officials Sl!id.
the average at least one spring a similar job in Orlando, Fla.
The Warren district office reported a Dodge St. Regis with loose shackle bolt and three or four
hanger bolts aren't tight. I found one
bolts. The car was manufactured at
where none of the bolts were
the same Detroit Chrysler plant as
fastened."
the Plymouth Gran Fury, Rohal
said.
MUSICAL TALENT MUST run in country sioger Mickey
Gilley's family; one of bis cousins is Jerry Lee Lewis. In
addition to bis performing career, Gilley is co-owner oftbe
Houston club tbat is said to be tbe world's largest bookyGlenn's re-election committee, said
EVENT SUCCESS
tonk.
that 200-250 tickets were sold for a
'
I
reception at the Watergate Hotel
WASHINGTON (AP) - A $251).
Thursday.
per-ticket fund-raising event for
Glerm bas two opponents in
Sen. Jolm Glenn, D-Ohio, brought at
Tuesday's
Democratic primary least $75,000 into the campaign col·
Watermann of Bexley
Frances
A.
fers, according to Glenn's campaign
and Francis Hunstiger of Parma
chairman.
sville, $150 and costs, three days con·
Thirty-two defendants were fined
Heights.
Patrick J. O'Connor, head of
finement, DWI, $50 and costs, no
and 18 &lt;(hers forfeited bonds in
operator's license; Henry Carsey,
lyleigs County Court Tuesday. . .
MiddlePQrt, $2:i and costs, perFined by Judge Patrick O'Brien
mitting unlicensed operator to
were June 0. Johnson, Pomeroy, $25
SUPPORT
and costs, stop sign; Thelma Rober· perate vehicle; Larry Richmond,
Rt. I, Rutland, costs only, nonts, Middleport, $10 and costs, failure
to yield right of way; Gilda Baxter, support; Van Willford, Middleport
and Lawrence Stewart, Rutland, $50
Pomeroy, $24 and costs, speed;
7dlamond
Gary Green, Washington Court· and costs each, six months
REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE FOR
probation, improper handling of
house, $50 and costs, failed to tag
turkey ; Kent Varney, Long Bottom, firearms in a motor vehicle; Sam
Terzopplous, Racine, costS, 30 days
$25 and costs, no motorcycle endorsement; Douglas Fox, Parkers- confinement, costs and jail sentence
burg, $23 and costs, speed; Melvin suspended ·providing restitution is
Pullins, Lorain, $28 and costs, made, theft; Tony Hutton,
Langsville, $15 and costs, left of cen·
MEIGS COUNTY - JAN. 2ND TERM
speed; Leon Pierce, Rt. I, Langster;
Harold
Hudnall,
Pomeroy,
$50
ville, $51 and costs, overload; Ron E.
Eastman, RD, Coolville, $79 and and costs, one year's probation,
costs, overload; Cathy D. SPencer, assault.
DAVIDS. KOBLENTZ
Forfeiting bonds were Jane VinRt. I, Long Bototm, $24 and costs,
-Dairy farmer for 28 years
• WIL.L.ORD
The Radiant Round
son, Gallipolis, $32.50, speed; David
-Chester Township Trustee for 12 years
sPeect; David A. Fife, Middleport,
Kasler, Athens, $35.50, speed;
(Past Pres. of County Assoc.)
$42 and costs, speed; Eugene Smith,
-Republican Committee for 12 years
.
Racine, $25 and costs, no operator's Hilary A. Turley, Pomeroy, $35.50,
Your choice
-Past member of the Regional Planning Commission
crossing divided medium; James C.
license; Meredith Brammer, Coal
only
-Worked
with
farm
youth
13
years
as
a
4·H
leader
Grove, $21 and costs, speed; MarkS. Miller, Gallipolis, Franklin Jeffers,
-Served
24
years
on
Meigs
County
Fairboard
.
Bethesda, James T. Steele, Rt. 2,
Clay, Rutland, $23 and costs, speed;
-Active member in a number of Farm and Da1ry
Brent Bolin, Rutland, on two Albany, Mildred Swain, Gallipolis,
organizations
John W. Riffle, New Marshfield,
charges of assured clear distance,
The Magnificent Square
-Married
with 2 children
.
$10 and costs each cbarge; Anthony Ray C. Flinchum, Grayson, Ky.,
-1 make my living in Meigs County, I'm interested 1n
Matthew C. Caton, McConnelsville,
Eblin, Rutland, $25 and costs, left rl
Meigs county and as..a Commissioner I would be close _to
Magnificenl and masculine. 7 big , ·
and
George S. Ragen II, Albany,
center; Clara Bear, Freeport, $13
the county needs, working with the board of comm1s·
,brilliant
diamonds set to look like a single
and costs, speed; Iris Johnson, Mid· $40.50 each, speed; Robert H. Smith,
sioners for the good of the county.
blazing
gem. And best of all , at
dleport, $20 and costs, speed; Dale Sardis, Ohio, $360.50, DWI; Steve
a
price
you
can
afford. Nowhere else will
Millhone, Tuppers Plains, $50, hunR. Hennan, Middleport, $50 and
you find so much brilliance at
Cll!lts, no operator's license; Edward ting turkey without pemiit, $40.50,
·
such a small co&amp;t. ·
l'
Holter, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, $29 and speeding; David Darst, Rt. 2,
costs, speeding; Paul H. Schuler, Rt. Racine, $62.55, reckless operation;
1 RuUand, $15 and costs, left vehicle Mabel Johnson, Rt. 1, Reedsville, ·
permitting minor to opel'llte
·puked on right of way; Roger ,$112.55,
I
velilcle;
Harry E. Stewart, Rt. I,
REPUBLICAN FOR COMMISSIONER
Escue, Albany, $15 and costs, failure
Cheshire,
Sherry
Perry,
Waverly,
to yield; Willard Reed, Rt. 1, ReeP- .
svilJe, $22 and costs, speed; James $62.55 each, reckless operation; Har·
YOUR SUPPORT IS APP.RECIATED
Middleport, Ohio
106 N. 2nd Ave.
Couch, Pomeory, $22 and cos~. vey S. Clagg, Rt. 1, Cheshire, $37.55,_
failure
to
yield.
speeding; Harrison Rood, Jr., Reed-

AND LET M~ TELL YOU .. HIS
HAR[)~OCI&lt; CALABOOSEA M/6HTY UNPLfAIIIIIIT PLACE I'Oil

MAKES THE

O UT OF HERE AND OFF M'/

F"A~HL I GHTf

0/ERHEI\RD .

CORPUS CHRISTI, Texas (AP)Outraged taxpayers voted over·
whelmingly Thursday night to seek
the recall of the entire Corpus
Christi City Council, which earlier
had filed a suit against everybody in
town. ·

Loose bolts found on new
Ohio State Patrol cruisers

.

NO--l'M GOIN5 TO GIVE 'IOU

GONNA SHOOT
.V.&amp; WITH THAT

Outraged taxpayers seek council recall

-

THE WHOLE
THING! ·

ctrY 5LICICEitlll

.

- ARE YOJ TELLIH6 OH, 50METHIN6 WILL
PROBABLY HAPPEH,
ME NOTHIN'S
60NNA HAPPEN'&gt;' ALL R6KT. SEf"';TOI!

SO WHO ARE THEY
601NG TO BELIEVE?
A COJPLE a' IUDS!.,
OR A U.S. SENATCII?

· HUH? I DON'T SEE HOW
ANNIE!
SENATOR STAN COUW 6ET
A PURE
BOuHCED FROM THE SENATE HEART IS NO
WHILE A CROO!( LIKE LAWFTY MATCH FOR
GETS MORE 'N'
CLOOT!
POWERFUL!

STAN WILL PROBABLY
LOSE HIS SENATE
SEAT ..

'648' Board will continue to
seroe as community authority

I THINK YOO
KNOWW
HY
l'MHERE,
SENATOR LAWFT'f ...

··THE EVENTS OF
FOR A MAN
THIS EVENING HAVE
SITTING IN THE
BEEN 6ROOGHT TO HOT SEAT, 'l!YJ'RE
MY ATTENTION,
M16HTY COOL-·
YES

YE'S ... AND I FILLED HIM IN ON THE
VINEGAR BE.ND SUNCH, CURLY BIL.L.,
AND THE BURIED LOOT!

GASOLINE ALLEY

But it realh-1
don' seem ric#!

-~

'

)

'
~ORRY, &lt;&gt;UY~1 L'M AFR'IID

WE UNDERL CAN'T MAKE IT TO DIN· ~TAND, BUT
WINNIE WI~L
NE IZ mN IBHT. SOME E&gt;E 50 DISTH INB Ve~IMPOR­
APPOINTED!
TANT HA5 COME UP .

.

Court ends 50 cases

big
brilliant look
for men

DAVID J. KOBLENTZ

clusters

COMMISSIONER

$185

DAVID J. KOBLENTZ

INGELS

FURNITURE &amp; JEWELRY
.

J

.A~~--'Md'
Jd).

Television Viewing

PEANUTS

~

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
1 Raimondi

HAVE TO LiVE

DOWN

orHlnes
5 Son of Jacob
10 Quondam
11 Stripped

ol honorB
13 Andrews !ibn
14 Actress

"Scllttlsh

7 Jambon

trench

8 Coming

di!hea

home

(])

• Dependence
Arthur Lake

of Juat ica 'Thiaprogram focuaeaon
ae~eratcouncauainanat!emptt o
uamine the plea ba'rgeinina

ROSS BAGLEY SHOW

renee, Tim Conway .
ABC NEWS

m

&lt;ID Z...OOM

Ye~terday'a

II Ceramic
product
zo Primitives
Zl SumptuZZ AnceStral

1% Role for

'Plea Bargaining : An AmericanWay

8 aJ. ClJ @l (jJ) m·NEWS

(I)
CAROL BURNETT AND
FmEND&amp; Gueate: Sieve Law-

ousneas

into view

the Truckee

&amp;:00 (1J

8:30

8 Humble

divisions
13 City on

"!V!NING

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memento
4 Musical
5 Cold buffet

CIJELECTION '80 .
CllJ NON-FICTION TELEVISION

MAY 30, 1e00

I Nonaense
2 Prefix
for chamber
3 Battle

15 Apostate
17 Fumi!h
with gear
11 Actor Nolte

zo calyx

WIT~

REGRETS ...

compooitloo

Tiffin

"i

APERSON SHOULDN'T

41 African
antelopes

Z3 Skiddoo!
Z5 Actress,
Lynn -Z7 Retrogre!s

•

tx_etem In Florida. (60 mina.)
10:00 ~· BASEBAL.l.CincinnatiReds
va San Diego Padres
ffi MOYIE ·ISCIENCE·FICTION)
••• ' 'Moonraker" 1878

W NBC NEWS

([) NIGHT GALLERY

II TEN SPEED AND
BROWN SHOE E.l. and Lionel lind
themael.,ea wanted for murder and
•g rand theft ambulance ' In a mad
scramble to aave E.L. from the
clutches of hia parole officer. (60

(I) BOB NEWHART SHOW
(I)
CAROL BURNETT AND

Anlwer

(I) il})

FRIENDS

Z9 Glacial
ice lll8!lll
32 Owing

a CIJ ({OJ

nothing
33 Manchurian
_. river
34 Bullcllng

CBS NEWS
()}
WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
VILLA ALEGRE
ABC NEWS
7:00
CROSS WITS
;
STUFF
BILLY SMART'S CIRCUS For
circua iovera of all agee. Bfita ln' a
largest tredltlonal fami ly cir cua
presnett Europe 'a beat Big ·Top
1tera In a delightful three·rlng
ectecular
~NfoAD AND SON
fACE niE IIUSIC
jJ)VE AMERICAN STYLE
CIJ TIC TAC DOUGH
MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT

I

I KNOW ONE REGRET
THAT HAS HAUNTED
ME FOR 'IEAR5 ..

wings

31 O'Neill

l

(II).

play

ztWinged
:15 PoUce squad
:II Author
C&amp;spary

Z7 Declaimed

7,30

Z1 Vllal
lllllistiC
Zt Medical

l

NEWSCAVETT SHOW
l!!CK
W PIOOEISRIGHT
THELEIION
AU.INTNEFAIIILY

IHANANAGuest : Oann~And

TheJunlort .
Cl) illl •
POP GOES THE
Ol,!!jTRY
(I) JOKER'S WILD
DICK CAVETT SHOW
FAMILY fEUD
MACNEIL-L!HR!A REPORT
8:00
HERE'S BOOMER
IN TOUCH
MOVIE ·(SUSPENSE) •••
"Silent Partntr" 1870
Cll iiOYIE ~SCIENCE-FICTION)
••
''Frtnllenateln Created
Wornain" 1M7
([ )(Jf). FfUI,)A't'NIGHTMOVIE
(!) HERE'S BOOMER Boomer
htlptayounghandattheracetrack
to realize flla dream of becoming a
12!;!!J1c!OO mlno.)
WW{Ia) THEINCRfDI8L!HULK
Otvld Banner Ia arreated lor wa·
grency and lint to a work camp
wtltra.hla r.ttow ptisonert tc:c:uaa
him of being an Informer. (Rap81t;

fluldll
.lnltlated
(poel.)

IIHI!lt
IIi Indivisible

m lno~

D C1J

(f§) DALLAS Ellie don
reqy lre a mastectomy and LY CY
retcta by avoid ln; 1'1er grandmother . (Concloaion: 60 mina.)
(H) NEWS
10:30 CD RICHARD HOGUE
([) BASEBALL Atlanta 8rav111 va
Loa A.ngelaa Dodgers
(]) PORTRAIT OF JAMIE Thit il a
portrait of a prominent young
Qalnter. Jamie Wyeth .
()D OVER 'EASY Gueat: Ja ck
YLene. HI!J.I: HtJQ!!_Downa.
11:00 CIJW (I)
W I!JlillliD

(LJ.

~WS
DAN GRIFFIN

DAYEAI.LENATLARG£
C!JCKCAYETTSHOW
IUD
W(I) THHONIGHTSHOW
Hoat : Johnny Careon. Guests :
Sarah Vaughn. Cart Sagan. (90

wJ21e
mlno .)

e

:n Racetrack
Jthape

38 Deacrlbable
quantity
a Proverbial

heroine

tO Put In
office

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-- Here's how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW .

II

12: 111
12:40
12:•a
1:00

~CIAL

~mint . )

liJ CllJ WAIHINGTOH WEEK IN

IV"NECCIS
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J

j ·~

r:,t,......t._~.&lt;l&lt;L_l. _ _L~~"-"'

LCP
LXX

QCFMOR

XV

CFA M L

F I P

onongo

tonTI the aurprise answer. as sUQ·
gested by the abOVe cartoon.
,

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fte'dEW
8:30 (l)(fi) W~ITR!ETwfi!K 'lone

the dn:led lene" 10

l I X)''( I XI I I I J
-

"

(Answert tomorrow)

EPFW

LX

AP

VPYL

HOLMY
.

LCPB

FIP

LXX

RLIXOZ

LX

AP

AIXWPO . -- RFKHPY
TXCORXO
· Y......J'o CryploqVele: 1N THOSE DAYS HE WAS WISER
111AN HE 1S NOW. HE USED FREQUENTLY TO TAKE MY
ADVICE.-WINSTON CHURCHILL

..

(l 1fl0 ICI"f FtahH'" 'y!MIIcate, Inc.

. ._...
·'

.,

,,

v.este•day s

J

Jumble' ' BROIL GIANT LICHEN BEADLE
Answer : Forever doing tn ls when he went
tobsterlng - CRABBING

.lumbllloot No. 1S, oonl•l"'nt t 10puDits, ls"alll~ !Of11.7Spostpakl
tromJu'mb.., c/o thtentwtpaper, lo• 34. NONood, N.J. 07&amp;41..1nckldl your
nlmt; addi'ISI, tip eodl and meka c:hMb payl!bte to Ntwspal'frboOh .

§t•tllt!fiiiOY'
'
UlO CIJWI.IJUPTOWNATTHI!APOL·
'
LO Natal61 Cola, Lou Rawla, Ban
IJerttn and Flip Wilton tlost ttlia
mualcal ·eomady- t ribute to the
fi:med J~erforminQ · thowcaae In
New York's Harlem: Gueat atara:
Jack Albartson, Csb Calloway,
Billy- Ecklllnt, TheTemp11tlon1,
Serll'\ Vaughn and The ""IOhty
uds of Joy. {2 hrs.)
700~LUI •
·
(I) 1111 THE DUKES Of H.U·
!AIIID l!lo and Luke gil lltTttttd for
· rultllng twlc•ln one dlly when they
try to http a nelgt'lbor wln 1 horae
r1ce. (Aape_at; $0 Mini .)

i

ROll BAGLEY SHOW
FRIDAYS
(I) CBS UTE MOYIE 'THE
AVENGERS:Epic'Emma lsabduct·
ed and little does ahe know that a
manitcsllllmmaker plans to alar
her In hit new film epic. (Repeat)
'THE RETURN OF THE SAINT: The
Imprudent Prole nor' Stars: tan
~1/vy, Anltoony S!. .l.
ABCCAPTIONEDNEWS
MOVIE 'Destroy All MOnatert '1888 Aklm t&lt;ubo . Jun Ttuki. 2)
'FactofFira'1V5g
~ SHEAK PREVIEW-JUNE
EMERGENCY
W MAAY TYLER MOOAE
I!.IOW
.
())MOVIE -(DRAMA) ••• "City On
~•" 1871_
(I) •
(l)
THE MIDNIGHT

1,10
1:20
.. . 1'30
2:00
2:30

INSIGHT
!IIWS
NEWS
MOVIE o(IIYBT!:RY)•• "Sctr·

e

ICI••"

1-

JIMMYBWAGGAI\T
I BELIEVE
NE'fVS
ROSS Bil.QLEV SHOW
2:50
MOYIE ·(DRAMA) •
'- ~M.M.M.83'' 1185
•:00 ~ 70oCLU8
5:30
JU.TPA&amp;SINQTHRU
LOVE; AMERICAN STYLE

e

IIAY31, 1880

(j) .0_0o HA.S THE ANSWER
Q (l) CONCERN

I

"OOKATME
LOQ_K AT ME 'Oiacipline '
uo
U ffi HBCNEWS
NI!!WS
(j) MUPPETS SHOW
KNOW YOUR SCHOOLS
CBS NEWS
CllJ VICTORY GAADEN
ll}) Cil ACTION NEWSMAKER

~

7:00

I

II DANCE FEVER

II~

BU KWOOD BROTHERS
HEE HAW Guests: Don
Wllliamt , Billy Parker, Gerald
Smitn. Rldd le and Pha lpa. (Repea t;
60m ins.)
(I) LAWRENCE WELK SHOW
()) (fi) ONC! UPON ilo CLASSIC
'The Old Curiosity Shop' Ouilp vi ·
au a Grandfather, berate• him ror
gambling and dem ends to be repaid
Immed iately.
ilJl BUGS BUNNY
SUO BEAUTY SHOW
7,30
INSIDE.LOOK
THE LUNOSTROIIS
CONSUMER REPORTS PRE·
SENTS 'Medicine Show' For con·
aumera confused about which
over-the-counter drugs are the
bet! buya. thle excultlva offera a
cure. The aec:ond segment ol
HBO' 1 entertaining end Informative
aerial helpa ahOppert make wise ·
cholcea
In
the
medicine
marttept1ct .
WORLD OF THESEA
QIIOUCHO
•
11110,000 NAME THAT

;I

I

8:00

~~(I)

BJ AND THE BEAR BJ
help• an Indian aave wild tloreea
from certain death at the handt of a
ruth leu profiteer who Intends to
slaughtertheenlmala. (Repeat; eO
mlns.)
.
&lt;Il700CLUB
(]) MOVIE •(SUSPENSE) •••
"Kilter Elite" 11175
(I)
MOYIE
-(ADVENTURE-ROMANCE) •••
lver or No At~ tum: • 1854
Cfl!BRITY CONCERTS
(I) ilJl GOLDIE ANO LilA
TOGETHER Goldie Hawn and Ltza
Mlnnalll join their wlde-renglng
talente tor an hour of eong, dance
and drama. (Repeat; 60 mlna.)
0DALLCREATURESGREATAND

i

l':.'tsT!RPIECE THEA TRI! ;My
Son, My Son' OIIYtr,now anottlcer
In the 'Black and Ttnt', flndt tllm·
ttlf In combat agalnat Rory . (80
mlne.J.
illl
2.0 ~OBERT Tho 2&gt;10FIOBERTteam has to aave the 'lie·
tlmtof tn ocean plane erath and a
baautlrul womsn trapped on a
mountain 1fter 1 ditaatroua ac.
Q!Jitn,t. (Repelt; ~mlna . )
8:00 llJW THEOREAIIIIERCHANTS
Start: Morgan Ftlrchlld, MllrkHarmon, Brlanne Lear)'. Anambllloul .
. young drifter named Johnny Ed"•
begins a movie etudlo dynaaty In
HollYwood' a golden era. (Pt . I; 2 ·
.
hra.)
(I) Tljl! DREAM Ml!tK;IIANTS ,
Sttrt: Mor!Jin Falrchllcl, Mllrk Har·
mon: &amp;rienne Leary. An •mbltloue
young driHer named Johnny Ectoe
btglnl a movie atudlo dJI\attJ In
Holtywood'a golden e,.. (Pt U; 2
/trl .)

e

. CJl !IAN'ORD

'

,

•

�I()-

The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, May 30, 1980
'

Ohio nurse helps Nicaraguan residents
DAYTON (AP) - Until nurse
J udy Matthews -went to Nicaragua ,
she said she never thought anyone
on welfare in America could be rich.
Mrs. Matthews, an emergency
medicine nurse, went to Nicaragua
in April to arrange for maimed and
mutilated residents of the war-torn
country to receive medical care
unavailable in their homeland.
"! know it had to be difficult for
the children 's parents to let them go
6,000 miles away," Mrs. Matthews
said. "It had to have been terrifying.
That's a position I would never want
to be put in .
"But, I hope I wiU be able to send
them hack whole children who can
be whatever their mothers have
dreamed of them becoming. That's

what it's aU about."
began exanumng cases tbat ap- bright, alert, has never been to
Mrs. Matthews, 38, became inpeared to need specialized help school, has no father. He's the
volved in the Nicaraguan effort
unavailable in Nicara gua.
youngest of six children and his
through her brother, Carl Matthews,
" I was prepared to see children
mother is younger than I am.
an official in the U.S. Embassy
"My daughter is vaccinated for
walking down highways with no ar·
there. She was a volunteer clinical ms," she said. " But, I am never everything. She has never been
instructor in the Wright 'State · prepared for aU that war and ear- malnourished. I n}ver thougtt
University School of Medicine,
thquakes can do.
anyone on welfare was·rich, but now
where her husband, Dr. Carl
"After seeing them, I realized I l do."
Jalenko, is chairman of the Depart· was very lucky."
Mrs. Matthews said she found
ment of Emergency Medicine.
One of the casualties was an 11· . physician care in Nicaragua equal to
Her brother told U.S. Ambassador year-{))d boy burned extensively on · any major medical center in the
Lawrence PezzuUo that his sister the legs and unable to walk since United States, "but they are not as
and brother-in-law were in medicine January 1979. He was flown to the far advanced in some proced!'fes as
and recommended that Mrs. Mat· Shriners' Burn Institute in Cin- we are here, and ther~ are not
thews be asked to help coordinate cinnati, where doctors expect him to enough physicians.''
care lor some victims of the war and walk again in two months.
She expects to return to Nicaragua
· "I have a daughter II and I in two months to choose other
earlier earthquake.
The Nicaraguan government flew couldn't help c~mparing her to the
casualties for treatment in the
Mrs. Matthews to the country and boy in Cincinnati," she said. " He is
United States.

CAPI'AIN EASY
WHY

.

~OH,.YOU

A
YliRY IIRIEF CHIIHCE TO GET

TWD-IIIT

RANC.H PeACEABL '/:

WE'RE THE
PROOF! YIE

was filed in state district court in
crowd tonight I think we ca·n get 6 percent limit imposed by the
WHICH WAY IS UJ'? Tbat may have been one of tbe quesamendment
would
fly
in
the
lace
of
Austin. The city says the taxpayers,
more than 10,000 signatures,"
tions tbat arose during installation•of tbe unprecedented
who weren't listed individuaUy,
Pablo Picasso exhibition at New York's Museum of Mod·
association president Lewis state Ia w, since property values
ern
Art. Works displayed in tbe show are on temporary
traditionally
appreciate
by
more
were
named
as
defendants
because
Lovelace said. .
loan
to tbe museum from public and private collectioos in
than
that.
they
voted
lor
the
allegedly
un" II they keep up with the
tbe
United
States and abroad.
The
suit
seeking
to
have
the
constitutional
proposition.
deiJl8goguery they can be sucreferendum declared unconstitional
cessful," Diaz said before leaving.
"They will have to recaU me, I'm not
' 'We want to throw the bums out,' '
said Joe O'Brien, secretary of the going to resign."
"Those people have a deaf ear to
Corpus Christi Taxpay ers
Association. "That in a nutsheU anything from the other side," said
Diaz. " It was a kangaroo court."
covers the situation."
Zarsky dismissed the gathering as
About 200 members of the group
shouted down moderating viewpoin· "a mob. 11
The city filed suit last week again·
ts during the tumultous meeting and
"A Plymouth Gran Fury delivered
ffiLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
Commenting on recent legislation health center was dedicated Sunday,
st
aU taxpayers, residents, property
voted to seek the recall of all seven
to
our
Warren
office
had
bolts
which
Ohio
Highway
Patrol
said
125
of
its
owners
and
persons
claiming
a
separating
the Ohio Department of May25.
council members, rather than just
were completely loose. The banger Mental Health and Mental Retar·
The " 648" Board has available
new
Plymouth
Gran
Fury
patrol
financial
interest
in
Corpus
Christi.
the five who voted to file the suit.
holds
the
spring
in place was
that
$1.4
million capital improvement
had
loose
bolts
that
could
calise
cars
The
suit
challenges
the
validity
oi
dation
into
two
cabinet
level
agen·
Two councilmen, David Diaz and
just
hanging
there;"
the
captain
the
car
to
drop
on
its
rear
wheelS.
dollars
for the construcon of a new
Maxine
Plummer,
Executive
cies,
Cliff Zarsky, attended the meeting, a city charter amendment - known
said.
No
injuries
or
serious
accidents
community
mental health center in
Director
and
the
"648"
Board
of
but both left before the vote without as Proposition 14 and overWendell
Larsen,
Chrysler
vice
have
been
reported
in
Ohio,
but
the
Jackson
County.
Gallia,
Jackson
and
Meigs
Counties
whelmingly approved by voters last
addressing the crowd.
president for public relations, said . today said, "We will continue to serproblem could cause patroimen to
Construction of both residential
O'Brien said a state law governing month - that cuts the property tax
he
was
unaware
of
any
problems
lose
control
of
one
of
the
vehicles
in
a
and
transitional facilities within the
ve as the community authority of the
when a city can hold an election ap- rate from 74 to 68 cents per $100
with
the
vehicles.
"We
bave
had
no
Gallia.
Jackson • Meigs three counhlgh-speed
chase,
a
spokesman
said
new 'split' department of Mental
pears to give association members valuation and limits annual in·
reports
of
a
problem,"
he
said.
And,
ty
area
are included in the board's
Thursday.
Health under Dr. Timothy Moritz's
only about two weeks to gather the creases in property appraisals to 6
he
said
he
knows
of
"no
mechanical
two-year
community plan.
The
patrol
was
alerted
to
the
leadership."
9, 400 signatures needed to Ioree a percent.
of
this
type
on
R-body
cars."
failure
week
ago
when
the
rear
Construction
of these facilities is
danger
a
Mrs. Plununer also announced
Diaz said Pro~ition 14 is un- .
recall election.
The
R
body
is
the
base
for
the
to
be
funded
by
capital
improvement
end
of
a
new
cruiser
dropped
while
completion of the third construction
"That seems to me to be almost an constitutional. He said state law
Chrysler
New
Yorker
and
the
twins,
traveling at a low rate of speed.
of a mental health facility in the ·dollars on a 90110 percent basis. No
requires that property taxes be
impossible task," O'Brien said.
Dodge
St.
Regis
and
Plymouth
Gran
levy funding is involved. The plan·
This
is
the
second
recent
mishap
area,
a multi-purpose health center,
based
on
true
market
value,
and
the
"From the enthusiasm . of the
Fury.
involving a 1980 Plymouth Gran
ned facilities are designed around
located in Pomeroy. Construction c1
Fury. Two weeks ago a North · He said there have been no recaUs the center brings to fruition another
the community mental health
Haven, Conn. policeman driving a for suspension problems on those aspect of long-'range community
philosophy that service should be
· new Fury, slid off a stretch c1 cars.
available within the communities
planning by the board.
The R-body has been in production
straight highway while involved in a
where they are accessible to patienThe $1.2 million multi-purpose
for
2t years and the cars are assemhigh speed chase. He is in critical
ts and their families.
condition and has not regained con- bled at Chrysler's Lynch Road plant
in Detroit, which is slated for closing
sciousness.
. MAY NOT LEAVE CINCY
at the end of the model year.
The wreckage of the car is being
CINCINNATI
(AP) - Cal Levy,
George Byers x Sons is the
examined by a mechanical engineer
120 WORKERS LAID OFF
local
promoter
for Philadelphia·
hired by the State of Connecticut, ac- Columbus dealer which delivered
FAIRFIELD,
Ohio (AP) -- About
based
Electric
Factory
"-oncerts,
the police cruisers. "This ifl normal
cording to Deputy Chief Thomas
120
laid-{)ff
workers
wiU be recalled
said
Thursday
that
he
may
root
leave
for us. We always have some little
Villano of the North Haven Police
beginning
Monday
at General
Cincinnati
as
originally
planned.
problem with a new car. But we
Department.
Motors'
Fisher
Body
plant
in FairLevy, who helped promote the
don't usually check those bolts. Af·
"The body of the cruiser dropped
field.
Dec. 3 Riverfront Coliseum concert
ter all, it's a new car," Vice
down to the rear tire," while the car
Plant spokesman Dick Polan said
by The Who at which 11 people sufPresident
George
Byers
Jr.
said.
was being driven at slow speed,
Thursday
that the recall will bring
Bob Bretz, a mecbanic at the state focated in a pre-concert crowd
Capt. Jolm W. Rohal, of the patrol's
the
work
force
at the Fairfield site to
garage, said each patrol car has 20 crush, said he wiU continue to work
procurement and auditing office,
bolts on it, 14 hanger bolts and six for Electric Factory in Cincinnati 1,900 and reduce the number of laidsaid.
until the end·of June, when he will off employees to about 450.
shackle
bolts.
''The Clermont County sheriffs of·
Reduced car sales nationwide
have
knee surgery. He all"ounced
"I've
checked
about
35
or
40
new
fice had nine new Furys and all nine
caused the first layoffs in early
last
week
that
he
was
leaving
to·take
Plymouth
(Gran)
Furys
so
far.
On
had loose bolts," Rohal said.
January, plant officials Sl!id.
the average at least one spring a similar job in Orlando, Fla.
The Warren district office reported a Dodge St. Regis with loose shackle bolt and three or four
hanger bolts aren't tight. I found one
bolts. The car was manufactured at
where none of the bolts were
the same Detroit Chrysler plant as
fastened."
the Plymouth Gran Fury, Rohal
said.
MUSICAL TALENT MUST run in country sioger Mickey
Gilley's family; one of bis cousins is Jerry Lee Lewis. In
addition to bis performing career, Gilley is co-owner oftbe
Houston club tbat is said to be tbe world's largest bookyGlenn's re-election committee, said
EVENT SUCCESS
tonk.
that 200-250 tickets were sold for a
'
I
reception at the Watergate Hotel
WASHINGTON (AP) - A $251).
Thursday.
per-ticket fund-raising event for
Glerm bas two opponents in
Sen. Jolm Glenn, D-Ohio, brought at
Tuesday's
Democratic primary least $75,000 into the campaign col·
Watermann of Bexley
Frances
A.
fers, according to Glenn's campaign
and Francis Hunstiger of Parma
chairman.
sville, $150 and costs, three days con·
Thirty-two defendants were fined
Heights.
Patrick J. O'Connor, head of
finement, DWI, $50 and costs, no
and 18 &lt;(hers forfeited bonds in
operator's license; Henry Carsey,
lyleigs County Court Tuesday. . .
MiddlePQrt, $2:i and costs, perFined by Judge Patrick O'Brien
mitting unlicensed operator to
were June 0. Johnson, Pomeroy, $25
SUPPORT
and costs, stop sign; Thelma Rober· perate vehicle; Larry Richmond,
Rt. I, Rutland, costs only, nonts, Middleport, $10 and costs, failure
to yield right of way; Gilda Baxter, support; Van Willford, Middleport
and Lawrence Stewart, Rutland, $50
Pomeroy, $24 and costs, speed;
7dlamond
Gary Green, Washington Court· and costs each, six months
REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE FOR
probation, improper handling of
house, $50 and costs, failed to tag
turkey ; Kent Varney, Long Bottom, firearms in a motor vehicle; Sam
Terzopplous, Racine, costS, 30 days
$25 and costs, no motorcycle endorsement; Douglas Fox, Parkers- confinement, costs and jail sentence
burg, $23 and costs, speed; Melvin suspended ·providing restitution is
Pullins, Lorain, $28 and costs, made, theft; Tony Hutton,
Langsville, $15 and costs, left of cen·
MEIGS COUNTY - JAN. 2ND TERM
speed; Leon Pierce, Rt. I, Langster;
Harold
Hudnall,
Pomeroy,
$50
ville, $51 and costs, overload; Ron E.
Eastman, RD, Coolville, $79 and and costs, one year's probation,
costs, overload; Cathy D. SPencer, assault.
DAVIDS. KOBLENTZ
Forfeiting bonds were Jane VinRt. I, Long Bototm, $24 and costs,
-Dairy farmer for 28 years
• WIL.L.ORD
The Radiant Round
son, Gallipolis, $32.50, speed; David
-Chester Township Trustee for 12 years
sPeect; David A. Fife, Middleport,
Kasler, Athens, $35.50, speed;
(Past Pres. of County Assoc.)
$42 and costs, speed; Eugene Smith,
-Republican Committee for 12 years
.
Racine, $25 and costs, no operator's Hilary A. Turley, Pomeroy, $35.50,
Your choice
-Past member of the Regional Planning Commission
crossing divided medium; James C.
license; Meredith Brammer, Coal
only
-Worked
with
farm
youth
13
years
as
a
4·H
leader
Grove, $21 and costs, speed; MarkS. Miller, Gallipolis, Franklin Jeffers,
-Served
24
years
on
Meigs
County
Fairboard
.
Bethesda, James T. Steele, Rt. 2,
Clay, Rutland, $23 and costs, speed;
-Active member in a number of Farm and Da1ry
Brent Bolin, Rutland, on two Albany, Mildred Swain, Gallipolis,
organizations
John W. Riffle, New Marshfield,
charges of assured clear distance,
The Magnificent Square
-Married
with 2 children
.
$10 and costs each cbarge; Anthony Ray C. Flinchum, Grayson, Ky.,
-1 make my living in Meigs County, I'm interested 1n
Matthew C. Caton, McConnelsville,
Eblin, Rutland, $25 and costs, left rl
Meigs county and as..a Commissioner I would be close _to
Magnificenl and masculine. 7 big , ·
and
George S. Ragen II, Albany,
center; Clara Bear, Freeport, $13
the county needs, working with the board of comm1s·
,brilliant
diamonds set to look like a single
and costs, speed; Iris Johnson, Mid· $40.50 each, speed; Robert H. Smith,
sioners for the good of the county.
blazing
gem. And best of all , at
dleport, $20 and costs, speed; Dale Sardis, Ohio, $360.50, DWI; Steve
a
price
you
can
afford. Nowhere else will
Millhone, Tuppers Plains, $50, hunR. Hennan, Middleport, $50 and
you find so much brilliance at
Cll!lts, no operator's license; Edward ting turkey without pemiit, $40.50,
·
such a small co&amp;t. ·
l'
Holter, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, $29 and speeding; David Darst, Rt. 2,
costs, speeding; Paul H. Schuler, Rt. Racine, $62.55, reckless operation;
1 RuUand, $15 and costs, left vehicle Mabel Johnson, Rt. 1, Reedsville, ·
permitting minor to opel'llte
·puked on right of way; Roger ,$112.55,
I
velilcle;
Harry E. Stewart, Rt. I,
REPUBLICAN FOR COMMISSIONER
Escue, Albany, $15 and costs, failure
Cheshire,
Sherry
Perry,
Waverly,
to yield; Willard Reed, Rt. 1, ReeP- .
svilJe, $22 and costs, speed; James $62.55 each, reckless operation; Har·
YOUR SUPPORT IS APP.RECIATED
Middleport, Ohio
106 N. 2nd Ave.
Couch, Pomeory, $22 and cos~. vey S. Clagg, Rt. 1, Cheshire, $37.55,_
failure
to
yield.
speeding; Harrison Rood, Jr., Reed-

AND LET M~ TELL YOU .. HIS
HAR[)~OCI&lt; CALABOOSEA M/6HTY UNPLfAIIIIIIT PLACE I'Oil

MAKES THE

O UT OF HERE AND OFF M'/

F"A~HL I GHTf

0/ERHEI\RD .

CORPUS CHRISTI, Texas (AP)Outraged taxpayers voted over·
whelmingly Thursday night to seek
the recall of the entire Corpus
Christi City Council, which earlier
had filed a suit against everybody in
town. ·

Loose bolts found on new
Ohio State Patrol cruisers

.

NO--l'M GOIN5 TO GIVE 'IOU

GONNA SHOOT
.V.&amp; WITH THAT

Outraged taxpayers seek council recall

-

THE WHOLE
THING! ·

ctrY 5LICICEitlll

.

- ARE YOJ TELLIH6 OH, 50METHIN6 WILL
PROBABLY HAPPEH,
ME NOTHIN'S
60NNA HAPPEN'&gt;' ALL R6KT. SEf"';TOI!

SO WHO ARE THEY
601NG TO BELIEVE?
A COJPLE a' IUDS!.,
OR A U.S. SENATCII?

· HUH? I DON'T SEE HOW
ANNIE!
SENATOR STAN COUW 6ET
A PURE
BOuHCED FROM THE SENATE HEART IS NO
WHILE A CROO!( LIKE LAWFTY MATCH FOR
GETS MORE 'N'
CLOOT!
POWERFUL!

STAN WILL PROBABLY
LOSE HIS SENATE
SEAT ..

'648' Board will continue to
seroe as community authority

I THINK YOO
KNOWW
HY
l'MHERE,
SENATOR LAWFT'f ...

··THE EVENTS OF
FOR A MAN
THIS EVENING HAVE
SITTING IN THE
BEEN 6ROOGHT TO HOT SEAT, 'l!YJ'RE
MY ATTENTION,
M16HTY COOL-·
YES

YE'S ... AND I FILLED HIM IN ON THE
VINEGAR BE.ND SUNCH, CURLY BIL.L.,
AND THE BURIED LOOT!

GASOLINE ALLEY

But it realh-1
don' seem ric#!

-~

'

)

'
~ORRY, &lt;&gt;UY~1 L'M AFR'IID

WE UNDERL CAN'T MAKE IT TO DIN· ~TAND, BUT
WINNIE WI~L
NE IZ mN IBHT. SOME E&gt;E 50 DISTH INB Ve~IMPOR­
APPOINTED!
TANT HA5 COME UP .

.

Court ends 50 cases

big
brilliant look
for men

DAVID J. KOBLENTZ

clusters

COMMISSIONER

$185

DAVID J. KOBLENTZ

INGELS

FURNITURE &amp; JEWELRY
.

J

.A~~--'Md'
Jd).

Television Viewing

PEANUTS

~

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
1 Raimondi

HAVE TO LiVE

DOWN

orHlnes
5 Son of Jacob
10 Quondam
11 Stripped

ol honorB
13 Andrews !ibn
14 Actress

"Scllttlsh

7 Jambon

trench

8 Coming

di!hea

home

(])

• Dependence
Arthur Lake

of Juat ica 'Thiaprogram focuaeaon
ae~eratcouncauainanat!emptt o
uamine the plea ba'rgeinina

ROSS BAGLEY SHOW

renee, Tim Conway .
ABC NEWS

m

&lt;ID Z...OOM

Ye~terday'a

II Ceramic
product
zo Primitives
Zl SumptuZZ AnceStral

1% Role for

'Plea Bargaining : An AmericanWay

8 aJ. ClJ @l (jJ) m·NEWS

(I)
CAROL BURNETT AND
FmEND&amp; Gueate: Sieve Law-

ousneas

into view

the Truckee

&amp;:00 (1J

8:30

8 Humble

divisions
13 City on

"!V!NING

Y.._OINED IN PROGRESS)

memento
4 Musical
5 Cold buffet

CIJELECTION '80 .
CllJ NON-FICTION TELEVISION

MAY 30, 1e00

I Nonaense
2 Prefix
for chamber
3 Battle

15 Apostate
17 Fumi!h
with gear
11 Actor Nolte

zo calyx

WIT~

REGRETS ...

compooitloo

Tiffin

"i

APERSON SHOULDN'T

41 African
antelopes

Z3 Skiddoo!
Z5 Actress,
Lynn -Z7 Retrogre!s

•

tx_etem In Florida. (60 mina.)
10:00 ~· BASEBAL.l.CincinnatiReds
va San Diego Padres
ffi MOYIE ·ISCIENCE·FICTION)
••• ' 'Moonraker" 1878

W NBC NEWS

([) NIGHT GALLERY

II TEN SPEED AND
BROWN SHOE E.l. and Lionel lind
themael.,ea wanted for murder and
•g rand theft ambulance ' In a mad
scramble to aave E.L. from the
clutches of hia parole officer. (60

(I) BOB NEWHART SHOW
(I)
CAROL BURNETT AND

Anlwer

(I) il})

FRIENDS

Z9 Glacial
ice lll8!lll
32 Owing

a CIJ ({OJ

nothing
33 Manchurian
_. river
34 Bullcllng

CBS NEWS
()}
WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
VILLA ALEGRE
ABC NEWS
7:00
CROSS WITS
;
STUFF
BILLY SMART'S CIRCUS For
circua iovera of all agee. Bfita ln' a
largest tredltlonal fami ly cir cua
presnett Europe 'a beat Big ·Top
1tera In a delightful three·rlng
ectecular
~NfoAD AND SON
fACE niE IIUSIC
jJ)VE AMERICAN STYLE
CIJ TIC TAC DOUGH
MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT

I

I KNOW ONE REGRET
THAT HAS HAUNTED
ME FOR 'IEAR5 ..

wings

31 O'Neill

l

(II).

play

ztWinged
:15 PoUce squad
:II Author
C&amp;spary

Z7 Declaimed

7,30

Z1 Vllal
lllllistiC
Zt Medical

l

NEWSCAVETT SHOW
l!!CK
W PIOOEISRIGHT
THELEIION
AU.INTNEFAIIILY

IHANANAGuest : Oann~And

TheJunlort .
Cl) illl •
POP GOES THE
Ol,!!jTRY
(I) JOKER'S WILD
DICK CAVETT SHOW
FAMILY fEUD
MACNEIL-L!HR!A REPORT
8:00
HERE'S BOOMER
IN TOUCH
MOVIE ·(SUSPENSE) •••
"Silent Partntr" 1870
Cll iiOYIE ~SCIENCE-FICTION)
••
''Frtnllenateln Created
Wornain" 1M7
([ )(Jf). FfUI,)A't'NIGHTMOVIE
(!) HERE'S BOOMER Boomer
htlptayounghandattheracetrack
to realize flla dream of becoming a
12!;!!J1c!OO mlno.)
WW{Ia) THEINCRfDI8L!HULK
Otvld Banner Ia arreated lor wa·
grency and lint to a work camp
wtltra.hla r.ttow ptisonert tc:c:uaa
him of being an Informer. (Rap81t;

fluldll
.lnltlated
(poel.)

IIHI!lt
IIi Indivisible

m lno~

D C1J

(f§) DALLAS Ellie don
reqy lre a mastectomy and LY CY
retcta by avoid ln; 1'1er grandmother . (Concloaion: 60 mina.)
(H) NEWS
10:30 CD RICHARD HOGUE
([) BASEBALL Atlanta 8rav111 va
Loa A.ngelaa Dodgers
(]) PORTRAIT OF JAMIE Thit il a
portrait of a prominent young
Qalnter. Jamie Wyeth .
()D OVER 'EASY Gueat: Ja ck
YLene. HI!J.I: HtJQ!!_Downa.
11:00 CIJW (I)
W I!JlillliD

(LJ.

~WS
DAN GRIFFIN

DAYEAI.LENATLARG£
C!JCKCAYETTSHOW
IUD
W(I) THHONIGHTSHOW
Hoat : Johnny Careon. Guests :
Sarah Vaughn. Cart Sagan. (90

wJ21e
mlno .)

e

:n Racetrack
Jthape

38 Deacrlbable
quantity
a Proverbial

heroine

tO Put In
office

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-- Here's how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW .

II

12: 111
12:40
12:•a
1:00

~CIAL

~mint . )

liJ CllJ WAIHINGTOH WEEK IN

IV"NECCIS
r 'i
J

j ·~

r:,t,......t._~.&lt;l&lt;L_l. _ _L~~"-"'

LCP
LXX

QCFMOR

XV

CFA M L

F I P

onongo

tonTI the aurprise answer. as sUQ·
gested by the abOVe cartoon.
,

~'n7--&lt;T7"'&lt;T7""'0

· Hm~:[

fte'dEW
8:30 (l)(fi) W~ITR!ETwfi!K 'lone

the dn:led lene" 10

l I X)''( I XI I I I J
-

"

(Answert tomorrow)

EPFW

LX

AP

VPYL

HOLMY
.

LCPB

FIP

LXX

RLIXOZ

LX

AP

AIXWPO . -- RFKHPY
TXCORXO
· Y......J'o CryploqVele: 1N THOSE DAYS HE WAS WISER
111AN HE 1S NOW. HE USED FREQUENTLY TO TAKE MY
ADVICE.-WINSTON CHURCHILL

..

(l 1fl0 ICI"f FtahH'" 'y!MIIcate, Inc.

. ._...
·'

.,

,,

v.este•day s

J

Jumble' ' BROIL GIANT LICHEN BEADLE
Answer : Forever doing tn ls when he went
tobsterlng - CRABBING

.lumbllloot No. 1S, oonl•l"'nt t 10puDits, ls"alll~ !Of11.7Spostpakl
tromJu'mb.., c/o thtentwtpaper, lo• 34. NONood, N.J. 07&amp;41..1nckldl your
nlmt; addi'ISI, tip eodl and meka c:hMb payl!bte to Ntwspal'frboOh .

§t•tllt!fiiiOY'
'
UlO CIJWI.IJUPTOWNATTHI!APOL·
'
LO Natal61 Cola, Lou Rawla, Ban
IJerttn and Flip Wilton tlost ttlia
mualcal ·eomady- t ribute to the
fi:med J~erforminQ · thowcaae In
New York's Harlem: Gueat atara:
Jack Albartson, Csb Calloway,
Billy- Ecklllnt, TheTemp11tlon1,
Serll'\ Vaughn and The ""IOhty
uds of Joy. {2 hrs.)
700~LUI •
·
(I) 1111 THE DUKES Of H.U·
!AIIID l!lo and Luke gil lltTttttd for
· rultllng twlc•ln one dlly when they
try to http a nelgt'lbor wln 1 horae
r1ce. (Aape_at; $0 Mini .)

i

ROll BAGLEY SHOW
FRIDAYS
(I) CBS UTE MOYIE 'THE
AVENGERS:Epic'Emma lsabduct·
ed and little does ahe know that a
manitcsllllmmaker plans to alar
her In hit new film epic. (Repeat)
'THE RETURN OF THE SAINT: The
Imprudent Prole nor' Stars: tan
~1/vy, Anltoony S!. .l.
ABCCAPTIONEDNEWS
MOVIE 'Destroy All MOnatert '1888 Aklm t&lt;ubo . Jun Ttuki. 2)
'FactofFira'1V5g
~ SHEAK PREVIEW-JUNE
EMERGENCY
W MAAY TYLER MOOAE
I!.IOW
.
())MOVIE -(DRAMA) ••• "City On
~•" 1871_
(I) •
(l)
THE MIDNIGHT

1,10
1:20
.. . 1'30
2:00
2:30

INSIGHT
!IIWS
NEWS
MOVIE o(IIYBT!:RY)•• "Sctr·

e

ICI••"

1-

JIMMYBWAGGAI\T
I BELIEVE
NE'fVS
ROSS Bil.QLEV SHOW
2:50
MOYIE ·(DRAMA) •
'- ~M.M.M.83'' 1185
•:00 ~ 70oCLU8
5:30
JU.TPA&amp;SINQTHRU
LOVE; AMERICAN STYLE

e

IIAY31, 1880

(j) .0_0o HA.S THE ANSWER
Q (l) CONCERN

I

"OOKATME
LOQ_K AT ME 'Oiacipline '
uo
U ffi HBCNEWS
NI!!WS
(j) MUPPETS SHOW
KNOW YOUR SCHOOLS
CBS NEWS
CllJ VICTORY GAADEN
ll}) Cil ACTION NEWSMAKER

~

7:00

I

II DANCE FEVER

II~

BU KWOOD BROTHERS
HEE HAW Guests: Don
Wllliamt , Billy Parker, Gerald
Smitn. Rldd le and Pha lpa. (Repea t;
60m ins.)
(I) LAWRENCE WELK SHOW
()) (fi) ONC! UPON ilo CLASSIC
'The Old Curiosity Shop' Ouilp vi ·
au a Grandfather, berate• him ror
gambling and dem ends to be repaid
Immed iately.
ilJl BUGS BUNNY
SUO BEAUTY SHOW
7,30
INSIDE.LOOK
THE LUNOSTROIIS
CONSUMER REPORTS PRE·
SENTS 'Medicine Show' For con·
aumera confused about which
over-the-counter drugs are the
bet! buya. thle excultlva offera a
cure. The aec:ond segment ol
HBO' 1 entertaining end Informative
aerial helpa ahOppert make wise ·
cholcea
In
the
medicine
marttept1ct .
WORLD OF THESEA
QIIOUCHO
•
11110,000 NAME THAT

;I

I

8:00

~~(I)

BJ AND THE BEAR BJ
help• an Indian aave wild tloreea
from certain death at the handt of a
ruth leu profiteer who Intends to
slaughtertheenlmala. (Repeat; eO
mlns.)
.
&lt;Il700CLUB
(]) MOVIE •(SUSPENSE) •••
"Kilter Elite" 11175
(I)
MOYIE
-(ADVENTURE-ROMANCE) •••
lver or No At~ tum: • 1854
Cfl!BRITY CONCERTS
(I) ilJl GOLDIE ANO LilA
TOGETHER Goldie Hawn and Ltza
Mlnnalll join their wlde-renglng
talente tor an hour of eong, dance
and drama. (Repeat; 60 mlna.)
0DALLCREATURESGREATAND

i

l':.'tsT!RPIECE THEA TRI! ;My
Son, My Son' OIIYtr,now anottlcer
In the 'Black and Ttnt', flndt tllm·
ttlf In combat agalnat Rory . (80
mlne.J.
illl
2.0 ~OBERT Tho 2&gt;10FIOBERTteam has to aave the 'lie·
tlmtof tn ocean plane erath and a
baautlrul womsn trapped on a
mountain 1fter 1 ditaatroua ac.
Q!Jitn,t. (Repelt; ~mlna . )
8:00 llJW THEOREAIIIIERCHANTS
Start: Morgan Ftlrchlld, MllrkHarmon, Brlanne Lear)'. Anambllloul .
. young drifter named Johnny Ed"•
begins a movie etudlo dynaaty In
HollYwood' a golden era. (Pt . I; 2 ·
.
hra.)
(I) Tljl! DREAM Ml!tK;IIANTS ,
Sttrt: Mor!Jin Falrchllcl, Mllrk Har·
mon: &amp;rienne Leary. An •mbltloue
young driHer named Johnny Ectoe
btglnl a movie atudlo dJI\attJ In
Holtywood'a golden e,.. (Pt U; 2
/trl .)

e

. CJl !IAN'ORD

'

,

•

�:i2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday , May 30, 1980

' ~niV' V

""'!r;ICifVL?

NEW OWNERS - Racme Food market, Racine,
owned and operated by Phebe )'toberts for the past 12
years has been purchased by David and Linda Spencer
and Judy and Ike Spencer. Ike will serve as general
manager and meat cutter and David will continue as
office manager at the Meigs County Highway Department. The new owners will take over the operation on

CONDUCTS SERVICES
, The Rev. James Kittle of
·Gallipolis IS conducting regular ser;vices at the Syracuse Church of the
;Nazarene. Dale T. BasS 1s the former pastor.

BffiLESCHOOLSET
East Letart, Apple Grove and
Letart Falls, United Methodist Bible
.SChool will be held at Lelart Fails
. Elementary Jurie 2, through June 6,
:from 9a.m. to 11 a.m daily
: Children age 3 to elementary
:school age are welcome to attend.
•Children from other churches are
:also welcome. Refreshments will be
:Served each day Mrs. Eileen Buck
;Is the director.

! Mrs. Ruth Sauer Slace, 76, former
; resident who has been living in
:Haines City, Fla., died Wednesday
·night at the Heart of Flonda
:uospilalm Haines City.
; Mrs. Stace was a daughter of the
;late Edward and Effie McKim
:Sauer. She was also preceded in
:death by her husband, George, and a

:sister.
; Surviving are four daughters :
·Mrs. Charlotte Roseberry, Dyer:sburg, Tenn.; Mrs. Mary Powell of

WASHINGTON (AP) - Government checks, possibly Including
some Social Security benefits due
'next week, could be held hostage to a
congressional effort to repeal
President Carter's controversial
dime-a-gallon gasoline fee.
foes of the gas fee succeeded late
Thursday in linking the energy ISSue
to debt~eiling legislation needed to
extend the government's borrowing
authority.
An effort to put the borrowing bill
back on the track was expected to be
made by House leaders today + first
before the Rules Committee and
then on the floor.
And Senate Majonty Leader
Robert C. Byrd, D-W.Va., was
keeping the Senate in session despite an earlier plan not to meet
today - to vote on the debt~eiling
bill should it be approved by the
House.
Without the crucial measure, the
government's power to pay some of
its bills will expire at midnight
Saturday.
However, such deadlines have
been missed before and there are a
number of slop-gap measures officials can take to keep the money
flowing - at least for a week or so.
Congressional leaders were

June I. It will be caUed Spencer's Grocery, Inc. They
will offer the same excellent quality and service that
has been given in the past by Mrs. Robers . Remodeling
will be done and some changes will be made. A grand
operung will be held on June 20 and 21 . Pictured, 1-r,
Linda and David Spencer, Phebe, Ike and Judy Spencer. The Spencers had the large key made just for the
occasion.

ELECTION DINNERS
Electwn day dinner and supper
will be served m the annex of the
Syracuse Presbyterian Church
begmmng at 11 a .m.
The menu consists of chicken and
all the trimmmgs. At 10 a.m. in the
church yard a yard, hake sale,
bazaar, and parcel post sale will be
held.

}
II

PHONE 992-2156
CLASSIFIED AD INDEX
eRENTALS

1- Carcl of Tflulu
2-ln MemDrlam

41 - Houstslor Rtnl
0 - Mobilt Homes

3- .0.nntunc@menh

44-Ap•Mrn~tnllor

S-Ha ppy Ads
t-Lost ilnd Found
7-Y.Jrd Sal@
I- Public Sale
&amp; Auction
~Wanted to

:

Public Not1ce
ntng, conra1ning thirt y six
acres, more or less
Also the right of wav for
a pnvate road With gates
through the Ur1ah Stevens
lot down the stream where
the trussel now is. There Is
reserved on the above
described prem1ses the
right of a road for an outlet
for the east end of the Bart ·
lett Stevens lot com ·
menclng at a stake on the
east line of the above
described premises from
which a mulberry tree four
inches in diameter bears
south « degrees west two

Buy

51 - Household Gooch

n- cB, TV , Atdlo Equipment
53-Antiques
54-MISC . Mtrc:handise
55-Building supplltl
~Pels lor S.lt

14- 8USifttU Tro~unlnt
Js-Scttoolslnstruct•on
ItRadi o. Til
&amp; CB Repa1r
11-WantedToDo

Members of the Chester Alunmi
Association are asked to meet at 7
p.m. this evening at the Chester
building to decorate for Saturday

e FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

22-Monev lo Lo.tn

tl-Farm Equlpmtnl
n - wantect lo auv
72-Trucks for Slit
u - 1..1 vtstock
64- Hay &amp; Or tin

23- Proteniona l

65-- Seed &amp; Ferlllinr

eFINANCIAL
21 -

evening's annuaJ reunion.

BUsiness
Opportunity

Serv•ces

NO QUORUM
A postponed session of Middleport
V1Uage CoWJcil scheduled for Thursday night was not held due to the
lack of a quorum.

e'TRANSPORTATIDN

e REAL ESTATE

71-Autos tor Slit
11-Vans &amp; 4 W D.
74-Motorcyc:ln
75Auto Part5

JJ - Homes fo,- S.ltJ

32 - Mobllt&lt;Homes

tor Sill'

Accessoriu
77-Auto AtPiir
&amp;

JJ-F•rms for Salt

34- Business lulldlnvs

35-Lots I Acre•ve

U - Real Estilla Wanttd
J7- Reallon

eSERVICES
11-HometmproYtmtnts
12-Piumbing &amp; E~c:ntting

Want-Ad Advertising
Deadlines

PASSAGE URGED
CINCINNATI (AP) - Hamilton
County Democratic and Republican
leaders on Thursday urged passage
of a June 3 tax levy for the Cincinnati public schools.
The school system, which closed
for ti\ree weeks last year when funds
ran out, is trymg to pass a 7.43-rrull
levy. Cincinnatians have not approved a school levy m more than a
decade.

lt-Eitctrical
&amp; Refrigeration

Is-General HIUII"t
16-M, H. lhplir

I.

tor Monday

IS Words or Under
CMh
1 ..

Ctlarge
1.25

I. SO

"'
'"

"'
"'

• Clays

"'
15 words 114 cenh per word per dey,

Each word over the minimum
Ads runnr"9 other lhu cons.cutlvt days will be c:l'lar~ et the 1 day

IN THE

•
COMMON PLEAS
•
COURT OF MEIGS
'I"
COUNTY, OHIO
ji/IRGINIA R. BLAKE , ET
:;1,\L

...
Plaintiffs,
"' ' \tS,

:!NApE F. KING, ET AL
~NNA ROBINSON Kl NG,
!~Address

It'
~

Unknown
Defendants.
No. 17,443

- NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION -

I'

'

To the unknown heirs,

ftev/sees,

lepatees,

executors, admin istrators,
ouse or ass1gns ot Anna
ng Robinson , address
nknown, and A . J . Reuter,

~

rods; rnence south 500 west

srx rods, thence south 530
west e1ght rods , thence
south JlO west Si)( rods ;
thence south 4112° wes t
eight rod s; thence south 2eo
west four rods to a stake on
the south line of the above
conveyed prem rses from
which the south east corner

amie Reuter, T. J . J ohn·

eon, Virgmia Johnson, 01to

~

hnson,

Harley Johnson,
ebecca Kay Meadows,
aul King, and Dan King,
deceased, all whose ad

dresses are unknown :
.. You are hereby notified

of

tliat a Complaint has been
f~led In the Common Pleas
Court of Meigs County,
Ohiol ca~ No . 17,«1,
riam ng the bove as Defen

ty Deed Records .

tlllon of the following
described real estate, to·

You are notif1eq that you
are required to answer the

.Complaint within 28 days
after the last publication .
The last publication Will be
made on the 6th day of
June, 1980. 1f no answer "
flled 1 the Court will grant

.

, Situated in the County of
Meigs, State of Ohio, Town·
$1llp of Salisbury and fur·
t.~er
bounded
and
described as follo,ws:
· Commencing at the
&amp;j)uthwest corner of the
Bartlett Stevens lqt known
t,., lot No. 4 of the northeast ·
'!rler of Section No. 35,
nge 19, Town No. 2;
1 nee south 87° east one
hUndred and fourteen ( 1141
reds aloiKI the north line of
Urlah"Steveos lot, then·
c norlll ~· east forty·
ght (.all rods and eight
( 1 links to the section line; .
nee nor!~ 870 west along
1 section tine lo Wolf Pen
(!reek; thence down the
creek to the, place of begin·

the aemand for partition of
real estate . ..

Larry E. Spencer.

il:

I

described

mil a proposal for a demon·

I

County have agreed to sub

fund1n_g, and

( 5)

the

citizens of the Village of
Pomeroy and Meigs county to formaly submit said

proposal , now therefore

BE IT RESOLVED BY
THE MAYOR AND THE
COUNCIL OF THE
VILLAGE OF POMEROY,
OHIO :
That the Meigs Local

Community

C:::orrections

Planning Board Is hereby
designated as the Agency

collect. 614 .. 592·5122
Tun in g

·

oanlels 742 2951

Lane

Tuning

and Repair Service smce
1965 If no answer phone

Have

galt

items.

Bags,

covers. W ill trade

Teaford . 614·9B5 3961

John

&amp; TREES

Larry Wehrung .

Pllbllc Notice

Discount Prices
POMEROY
LANDMARK
Main St.

&lt;;Ia renee Andrews
Mayor

Dale 5·19·80
( 5)

week ol June 1, 1980
through June 8, 1980.
Regular office hours will

4

; . ,~,.. ,;.

..........

~

""' ~

.." . ...... . ... . .,. .
~

~

,, • •

~·

..

~

ATTEST :
Jane Walton
Clerk

Pomeroy
992-2181

23, :11), 21C

# ' . . . . . . . . . . ...

, .. _ . . . . .. .

...

~

~

Monday,

8 Yellow Kittens and 1
black and white kitten, also
2 pups part sheep dog and
See

Ray

on right past Little Kyger
Congregational

Church .

..

,.., , ,

..

wrth Franklin County licen ·
se tag. Is wearing rabies

lag and small bell around
neck. The dog IS a family
pet and Is a reward is of·

fered . The dog is ten years
Old . If found call 985·4273 or
985·3851.
1

Giveaway

Christian

Three lon9 haired kittens .
Need home desperately ,
Call992 7222.
One male all black part
Himalayan cat, 1 yr. old to
Assorted number of cats
and kittens. Long ha ired

and short haIred, of all
shapes and sizes. Call 985·
4163 .

Yard Sale

month old baby k1ttens.Call
949 ·2271.

You 'II
tract it down

from Foglesong's Funeral
Home. Starts 10:00 Thur·
sday, Friday and Saturday .
Depression glass. fur ·
niture, drapes, and etc.

3 Family Yard Sale Friday
afternoon and Sat. John
Dudding
Racme .
Y11rd

residence,

Sale,

Carolyn

Althouse, Pagevllle, Ohio,
Friday and Saturday from
9·4, Sunday 12-4. Rain or
shine.

Large Yard Sale Friday
the 30th only from 9·3,
About 1'12 mile north of
Pomeroy on Rt. 7. Jeans,

flower pots, and misc.
items. Call 992·5770 or 742·
3082.
'
Yard Sale June2, 3, from 9
? Follow signs at Fi ve
Po1nts.

much faster
11 i th a

YARD SALE, Monday 6
p.m. til?, and Tuesday 9:30
a.m. to?, top of Rose Hill,
girls clothes, all sizes from
infant on up, toyt, baby car

WANT AD

----- -

..

I

I

Phone

I

seat.

Pomeroy, OH 1 or call 992·

7760.
10 karat, 14 karat, 18 karat,
gold. Denial gold and gold
ear pins. 675·3010.

selling/ Also do appraising .
osby OssieJ Marlin . 992
6370.

etc Ca/1245 9188.

GET VALUABLE training
as a young business person
and earn good mane'; plus
some great gifts as a Sen·
ti ne! route carrier Phone
us right away and get on

: the elig ibility list at 992·
. 2156or9922157 .
extra

~ home .

-

. Robert Ne1ghbarger, 273
Edgewater Beach, Thorn·
vile, Oh . 43076 .

I
I

20.

1I .
1

21.
22.

1

1

27.
28.

I

8.
9.

29.
30.

10.

I

1

I
III

1

),

35.

16.
Mail This Coupon with Remittance
The Daily Sentinel
Box 729
Pomeroy, Oh. 4S769

I
I
.I
I

1
1
I

I

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

and lamps, also TV games.

Saturday, May 31 and Monday, June 2 from 10 to? at

the Kelly residence In
Syracuse; Watch for the

signs.

'

FIVE Family yard sale
Monday, June 2 from 9 to 4
held Inside at Rich Valley
corner of Park and Page
Streets In Middleport. Lots
of Items. Call9~9- 2479 .
Y!loRD Sale June 2 through
7, 8 to 5 p.m . at the Gene
Riggs residence, located
Route 7 at the top of the hill
from Eastern High School.
Lots of clothing, new and
used from Infant to adulls.
Furniture and household
items. Toys, king and
queen motorcycle seat.

Yard Sale

CARPORT sale, June 3. 2
p.m. · 7 p.m.; June~' 10 4.
918 S. Third, Middleport.

5 FAMILY yard sale, June
2·3, 9 to 5. Rlggscrest
Manor above Eastern High
School.
Mini - bike,
snowmobile

suit,

square

dance
outfit ,
bike,
children's clothe~. Infant's
and up, baby sterilizers
and

other

baby

maternity clothes.

Monday, June 2 through
Thursday, June 5 or until

things last. From 9-S.
Clothes, whatnots, jewelry,
houseware and a IItie bll of
everylhlng. On the Laurel
Clift Road at lhe home of
Mrs. Clifford Jacobs. Rain
cancels.

YARD SALE Monday ,
June 2, 6 p.m. Ill ? ,
Tuesday, June 3, 9:30 a .m.
Ill 1 Davis residence, Rose
Hill .

BUSINESS BUILDING

downtown

Rutland, 0 .. approx. 10
years old
Use as
business or convert to
living quarters . See to
appreciate.

NEW LISTING - 3 BR
cottage with 2 acre5 of
quiet countrystde . 5
minutes from Mid

dleport, 0.
l BEDROOM HOMECarpeted and paneled,
on Vine Street '"
Racine, very clern,
ready to move Into. N1ce

1 ACRE IN MIDDLE·
PORT - 4 room col·
' tage, trailer hookup,
reduced to sa,ooo.

2 BR HOME - 4 acres.
walking distance to Mid ·
die port
TAKING LISTINGS!
Hobart Dillon, Broker
Fay Manley
Branch Mgr.
Phone 991·1598
Real Estate

Ashland . All size clothes,
furniture, flower .t

vases, etc . A lot of good
buys. Rain or shine. From 9,
till dark.

.LARGE
~~~------------garage sale Moo :'
and Tues., June 2 and 3 . 3.40~

Page St., Middleport.

•

:=====~~~~====~1
8
Public Sole
&amp; Auction

11

BIG AUCTION
SALE
AT FOREST ACRES
PARK

General

Fairpoint,

14x65

Cameron,

good

neighborhood.

Should

2 bedroom furnished apt in

Middleport 1·304-882·2566

rentals

now,

Let

2

income property for the
low price of a moderate

2

home .
$35,000.

l 4x65,

14x65 3

Need

only

REAL ESTATE IS EX·
PECTED TO DOUBLE
IN VALUE IN 10 YRS.
WHERE WILL YOU
BE? CALL 992·ll25 or
992-3876.
·-

Housmg
' H adquarters

Farm Equipment

B model Mack tra ctor, exc

shape. 992-7354 after 7 p m .

d i ameter 10"

on largest

ATTENTION
(IM ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will

com collections Call 614
767·3167 or 557 3411
ATTENTION:
(IM ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
for antiques and collec
tibles

or entire

guns, pocket watches and

coin collections. Call 614·
767·3167 or 557·3411

COAL,

LIMESTONE,

sand, gravel, calcium
chlonde, ferttlizer, dog

992-2259
NEW LISTING
SOUTHERN DISTRICT
- 7 room house w1th 3

room home, 2 baths,
carport and workshopt
situated on 20 acres w ith

bedrooms, l lf::~ baths,
n1ce family room, total
electric, 2 car garage,
storage building on 5
acres of cleared land

a good barn . On Co . Rd .
13, Asking $49,500 00
ACREAGE - 185 acres,

$51,000.00.
NEW LISTING- MID·
DLEPORT ApproK. 10
acres with 1 1!:~ story 5

on VanZandt Rd , some
minerliiS. Call for 1nfo .

3

bedroom, total electnc
hOme Off New L1ma

room
house.
3
bedrooms, bath, .garden
space. fruit trees, 2 car

Rd , ca ll today .
MEIGS HI - Lovely 3

garage $20,900 .00.
NEW LISTING
SOUTHERN DISTRICT
...:. 4 bedroom home, 2

bedroom home on near
ty an acre . Sell 1ng pnce

$39,900 .00
BRICK - Beautiful bl·

story, on.approx lh acre
lot , 2 car carport, par·
tial
basement .

level, 3 bedrooms, ~ 112
baths, livmg room, d1n·
ing room, very nice ki_t
chen with
bullt · 1n
microwave,
family
room with fireplace, 21f2
car garage, situated on
corner with approx . -4

$18,000 00
TRAILER AND LOT-

992·5724
MAY 23 to June 10, 30% off
greenware sale. Bring a
container 9 a m to 9 p m

Drehel's Ceramics 59 N.
Second Ave., Middleport,

ches, class rings, wedding
bands, diamonds. Gold or
silver Call J . A Wamsley,

12x60 on sox112 lot. Fur
niShed . $14,000.00
REDUCED MID·
DLEPORT - 7 room
houS. with 3 bedrooms,

remodeled
home , 3
bedroom, I iving room,
dining room, large kitchen, utility and garage.

bright sunny kitchen,
large rooms, whole
house air cond. on large

Situated on 01ce lot . Sell·
ing pnce $28,000.
GillE US A CALL
DAY OR EVENING.
Velma Nic1nsky, Assoc.

GOLD ANO SILVER
COINS OF THE WORLD.
RINGS,
JEWELRY,
STERLING
SILVER
AND
MISC ITEMS . PAYING
RECORD
HIGH,
HIGHEST UP · TO OATE
PRICES. CONTACT EO
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP , MIDDLEPORT ,
OH 10, OR CALL 992·3476.

Ton';
boots

Lama and Acme
Mountain Leather

and General Store. 104·105
West Union, Athens, Oh .
592· 5478, 10·5. 30 Man Sat .
Decorated cakes for all oc·
casions . Character cakes
and sheet cakes . Call 992·

6342 or 992 ·2583.

Real good cond . 992·5348.

large

kit·

$34,900.00.
FARM -

General

A. ,

44

carpeting, equipped kit·
chen, extra trailer
hookup , and
other

buildings. 542,000 oo.

ment &amp; family room . On 3 beautifu l acres . Ask1ng

Office hours Monday
thru Saturday, 9 to 5.
ALSO Mon. and Fri.
EVENINGS unlll8 p.m.
REALTOR
Henry Cleland, Jr.
991·6191
ASSOCIATES

b ' ld '

2 BR, on n ice lot, sma ll out u1 mgs
for storage, on quiet street. $10.500 .

LOT IN RACINE - Includes septic, water &amp; gas
Iines. As1&lt;ing $3,700.
REDUCEO FOR QUICK SALE - 3 BR house, lam I·

ly room, partially closed in carport. 10x10 storage

bldg . Reduced to $37,000.
SPLIT ENTRY - Only 5 yr . old. 3 BR 1n good
development. 547,500.

Roger &amp; Dottie Turner

741·1474
Jean Trussell, 949·2660

.

Greenhouse . Geraldine
Cleland, Racine, Ohio.

16

tillable, pasture and
woods, with 7 room
modular .
Has
A
bedrooms, 2 baths,

NEW LISTING - Overlooking Ohio River &amp; Kaiser
Alum . Plant, 31g. BR 's, plenty of closets, full ba.se·

hanging baskets, pots of

POMEROY - 3 BR home, city water. vmyl Siding
on Rl. 33 $14,900.
f' · h d
LARGE HOUSE IN RACINE - 2 story, 1n1s e

POOD LE GROOMING
Judy Taylor 614 367 7220.
HILLCREST KENNELS.
Boarding, all breeds Clean
lndoor·outdoor. fac ilities .

Also

AKC

reg1stered

or Individuals.

Shirts$4.00 Each
"We print ALMOST

$10.700.00 . SAVE. Call Mar
vm Keebaugh al 992·6614
till6 oo and 985·3913 after 6
p m.

Work.

anything on ALMOST
anything!"
Ph. 614·949-1358
Evenlnvs &amp; Weekends
5·8·1 mo.

Donations

required .

ONE

TON

crew·cab,

dual

dual fuel

tanks,

Two bedroom

house for

rent. Unfurnished, deposit

ed, on property water lines ctose. All m1neral nghts

required No pets. Call 992·

"Old Fort Meigs" on ,

go with property . Also Timber ready to be cut. Call

3090.

New Lima Rd., Rulland,
Oh. sat., May n, 11
A.M. Howa1'11 aa. .tey,
owner auctl-. Bring
your lawn cllairs.

for morP Information.

'

1

FOR RENT, two bedroom
with garage. Salem Street,

Rutland. $175 month plus
utilities 742·2378 .

*Electrical works
*Masonry work
12 Years

Chevy

and

THE POOL PEOPLE '
31711 Noble Summ11 Rd .
Middleport, Ohio
992-5724
Sales, service and sup-

1979 Ford 150 4x4, auto.,

etc .

English

and

Reeves

AKC

Terrier

Yorkshire

puppy . One male,
weeks old . 992·3829.

$IX

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt. 3, Box 54
Racine, Oh.
· Ph. 614·143·2591
5· 14 1 mo

Vjnyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding
e1nsul1tion

estorm Doors
storm Windows
• Replacement
Windows
Free Estimate

•

Construction
742-2328
~25 ·tlc

James Keesee
Ph. 992·2772

plies . In ground and
above ground pools.
5· Hfc

ROOFING
REPLACEMENT. WINIXMS
Serving your area for 2S vears.
Call Now for Large Savings
For Free Estimate Call

Eugene Long (614) 843-3322
5·29·1 mo.

p.s .. p.b .• topper. Positive!r~=======::::====~r==~=========~:=:f;=::=::=;;;,~~~=~
43
traction front and rear. 985·

Zuzuki, wi!!ter

85
General Hauling
WILL HAUL 11mestone and

87
Upholstery
A&amp;H Upholstering . "Now

Roofmg, siding, room ad·
ditions , all types of general

gravel. Also, l1me hauling
and spread1ng . Leo Morns
Trucking Phone 742 2455

seats". Pn . 992·3752 or 992·
3743.

repa 1rs, 25 years exp 992· 1
3406.
~
W1ll paint houses, barns
and roofs No job is too big
or small. Free est1mates.

First quality work
992·3941 or 992 5126.

Auto Parts

76

Home
Improvements

81

74
Motorcycles
1973 Kawasaki 350 dirt
bike Good cond . Must sell.
$250 992·6115

&amp; Accessories

14" and 15" used tires. plus
14" and 15" hubcaps. $1.50
up. 992 5118 .
2 G78 15" tires. Less than
1,000 miles $65 949·2065.

KINGS
Roofing

Call

CONTRACTING.
and chimneys,

house pninting and tree

service . Call992·3737.
PAINTING done; interior

and exterior. Ca/1992·3827.
AutoRe~ir

FRONJ: _ENO

FLOORING,
I

992·2759

UJNMENlS '

LANummn

SERVICE
STAroN ·
Call (614) 9P1·9932
Pomeroy,O.

83

Str•:IEes

Bill Pullins 992·2478.

Home
S &amp; G Carpet Cleaning
Steam
cleaned .
Free
estimate .
Reasonable

rates . scotchguard . 992·

6309 or 742· 2211

Will

pour

block and
3406

concrete,

lay

br~a ll

992·

'-/

........

MACHINE
service,

all

Scissors.

ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR
Sweepers,
toasters, Irons, all small
appliances. Lawn mower.

to Slato Highway

Garage on Route 7, 985·

3825.

DO

FOR ALL YOUR INSURANCE, NEEDS
CALL US.

992-2342 '

OOWNINGCHILDS t.GENCY, INC.

CARPET
SHOP
A
"Drive

-Little"'S'ave A Lot"

~HOP
IS
FULLY
STQ~KE.D
•
-w•
- w•• •

Electrical

makes. 992 ·2284. The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales
and Service . We sharpen

Next

AR~ YOU PAYING TOO MUCH?
YOU HAVE THE COVERAGE?

&amp; Refrigeration

SEWING

1mprovements

SERVING SOUTHEASTERN OHIO SINCE.18681I

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Dozer, backhoe and tren·

Car

OOWNINGQULDS
r· INSURANCE

Excavating

cher. Septic svstems, com·
plete services. HourlY or
contract
Engineering,
layout and construction.

"'

Re - Upholstering

_:==========-+-==========-

ceiling,

paneling, doors and win·
dews, also paintmg . Call

b y Randy
Car·
penter,
factory
trained
frontend
alignment
specialist. Nlllllll

rfding

Western . Ruth
(614) 698 .. 3290

Sizes from ~x6 to 12X40

INSULAnON

Tromm

SALES

power

Vans&amp; 4W.D.

992·

lessons .
Everything
Imaginable In horse equip·
ment . Blankets, belts.
boots,

Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992·7583
5·15·1 mo.

Repairs ,
ponies

AI

111

wheels,

on weekends 247·2302.
73

Utility Buildinp

r~=========~f=========~f=====~5~·1~8~·1=m=o·~
D. BUMGARDNER
VINYL SIDING

steering, power brakes,
and a1r conditioning . Call

HOOF HOLLOW . Horses

$57.500.
100
INVESTMENT PROPERTY - Over
acres,
could be housing developmenl - gas a.lready drill ·

REMODELING
HOME
I
MAINTEN"NCE

667·3652 .

6260. noon-7 p.m .. except

and

CONSTRUCTION

Stewart,

1975 CHEVY '12 ton PICkup.

Tuesday , emergency calls

41

ROOFING

SA95 or will take guns on

only .

basement, heavily insulated, thermo wtndow~ lift
out for cleaning . carpeted on all31evels. Extenor 1S
Real Perma Stone, 2 car garage. Much more for

ROUSH

*New homes - extensive remodeling

71
Trucks for Sale
GMC 1974 pickup one-half
ton $1,495. 69 Olds Cutlass

Stx cylinder, 3 speep
Rad10, 54,000 miles, $2,000.
can Mrs Brvan Harris at

SMALL

~~~========~-====~~~~~::fr=~~=~~~===
J&amp;L BlOWN

good gas mileage, S1100.00.
see Glenn B1sse11 M 949·
2801.

eng
f.rm .Pickup.
949·2328.360
1974 $1,200
Ford Floo

shirts for politicians,
ball teams, businesses

949·2686

985·4394..

Dobermans . 614·446 7795 .
HUMANE
SOCIETY .
Adopt a homeless pet.
Healthy, shots, wormed.

novelty

-Free Est1ma1es
-Interior &amp; Exterior

Pets for Sale

RISING STAR Kennel .
Boarding . Ca/1367-0292.

and

-Fully Insured

77

56

Sizes
"From lOxlO"

T·shlrts

VEGE TABLE plants, cab·

flowers and vines. Clelend

Farm Buildinp

with same equipment with
sticker at appro.:imately

o.

ALL STEEL

&amp;

trol. $7,995.00 19BO model

cooled In good conditiOn.
$750.00. Cal/992·36&lt;10.

banana. egg plant. Large

992-3795
4·2 tic

Roller, Brush and Sprav
Work.

sedan. Like new, auto.
1978 Oatsun B210, 4 dr.
transmiSSton, low mileage.

POMEROY,O.
992·6215 or
992·HI4
1·28·1 mo.

Sandblasting Co.

Rear

fog lights . 992·77611.

selection bedd ing annuals,

on .

defogger, leather seating,
tilt wheel, and cruise con

1972 k750

5 room house on 1
acre lot
with
3

V. C. YQUNG Ill

OCusiPShopntD.nt.fn

Painting

power locks, six·way seat,
trunk release, AM· FM

112 H.P. 100 lb . air com·
pressor . White roll bar w ith

lot with 2 car garage.
$44,900.00.
EASTERN DISTRICT

chen ,
carpeting ,
garage,
insulated .

Ph . 741·2003

Gh~en's

1979 9,000
Olds miles,
Royalelike88-lwo
door
new
Full power equipment in·
eluding power windows,

3'1 .

Large wOOden off1ce desk
and swivel office chair .

Pomeroy,

and

' (FREE ESTIMATES)

618 E. Main

trade. see T.
742·2421

107 Sycamore St.
Pomero , OH.

worlt,
walks
driveways.

Business-Farms-Partnerships
and Corporations
Payrolls, profit and loss statements, all
federal and state forms .

sale. All

c .b.

By Appointment
Oil ice 991-7544
Home 992-6191

1---------------------t----------ADD ONS &amp;
·Tri~Counfy
REMODELING
Bookkeeping:
Gutter work, down
Service
spouts, some concrete

SIZe. Ca/1742·2455

and

S•lem Twp. Rd. 110
Dexter, Ohio 45726
Bill Eskew, Ph. 742·2456
Your Place or Mine

Rutland, 0.
Ph . 742·2455
5 21 1 mo .

H&amp;R BLOCK OFFICE LOCATION

stereo

Tri.f.ounlJ
General Welding

Other Times

sizes, from fryer size to pet

1974
New styles of Resistol
Straw and Felt hats and

bage, broccoli, cauliflower,
lettuce, celery, beets,
green peppers, chili pep·
pers,
pimentoes,
H unga ri an wa)(, sweet

bedrooms,

Ph. 742·3092
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.

LEO
MORRIS

742·2331. Treasure Chest
. Coin Shop, Athens, OH . 592·
6462

for

ENGINE .
STEAM
CLEANED
'12.00

111f2'!(,1ntereSI·3DYrs.
PARK FINANCIAL
VA &amp; VA Automatic
Loans, No Down Payment. Federal Housing
Loans, 3% down on
125,000; S'lb down on
balance. FHA 265 Subsidy Program. FHA 145
Gradual Payment Mort.
Open M·W·F 9:00 to 1:00

ROTOVATOR
eV · CHISEL
PLOW

992 2751

2 bedroom mobile home,

acres . Only $69,000
SYRACUSE Nice

eHOWARD

food, and all types of salt.

IN STOCK tor immediate

1·12-tlc

HAVE YOUR

~~;::~~~:::=====l:::::::::::::::~~~~~~~~:;:==~::~~~~=~
~Real s ale Loans

1974 Gremlin,
power
steering, atr condit,oning,

Misc. Merchanise

949· 2862
949·2160

5·1·1 mo

estates.

Nothing too large . Also.

deliver.,. various s1zes of
pool k1ts. Do·i t·you.rself or
let us install for you. D
Bumgardner Sates~ Inc .

Broker

·
Coil Jimmy Deem. Associate 949-1388
or Nancy Jaspers, Associate 949·2654 or 949·1591

Antiques

Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices
Call Howard

tor

71

3891.

NEW LISTING- N1ce 7

GIVE US A CALL

5551.

All work guaranteed .

OLD COINS, pocket wat·

RABBITS

2 METAL tw1n beds, com·

clean;ng and palntinv.

calls.

slab $10 per ton. Delivered

Pomeroy 992 -2689

and downspouts, guHer

Free Siding I
Estimate, 949,1101 or
949·2860 . No sunday

Call

end $12 p·ec ton Bundled

ANT I QUE S,
FUR ·
NITURE, glass, ch1na,
anything See or ca ll Ruth
Gosney, antiques, 26 N.
2nd, Moddleport, OH 992·
3161.

new or repair gutters

SIDING 00.

wanleel to Buy
62
CHIP WOOD . Poles max

H. L WRITESEL
ROOFING
A (I types of roof work,

BISSEll

Gocx:l

cond S20 992·5118 .

Excels1or Salt Works, Inc., ·
E . Main St, Pomeroy, 992·

Georges . Hobstetter Jr.

-

Household Goods

Gas Tappan range

54

General

NICE

51

pay cash or certif1ed check

PHONE 742-2003

LOTS - Bordering Pomeroy 1 to 75 acre~ .

61

63
Livestock
Eight week old p1gs for
sale $16.00 each . Straw
$1 25 a bale . Ca/1985·4104 .

pay cash or certif1ed check
for ant1ques and collec tibles or entire estates.
Nothing too large. Also,
guns, pocket watches and

2

REALTY

$65,000
TRAILER -

Pomeroy Large lots. Call

992 ·7479 .

Has

HOBSTETTER

Real Estate

Space for Rent

53

Real Estate

EXTRA

Vinyl and Aluminum ·
Siding

II&amp;..-

to Oh10 Pallet Co., Rt. 2,
Furn1shed apartment tor
rent, three rooms and bath
Newly remodeled With
garage
Stove
and
refrigerator. $160.00 man ·
th Deposit required Call
992·2362 after 4 and before
7

$18,500.
FINANCIAL SECURI·
TY - Live here free.

of town . $28,000.
INVEST- In this 6 unit

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

WANT TO SELL?

RENTER 'S assistance for
Sen 1or Citizens in Village
Manor apts Ca\1992·7787. ,

sheets free w1th beds. 992·

and

your renters buy this for
you Has 3 structures
and t lfA acres Outskirts

Items,

3 FAMILY yard sale, June
2 and 3 at Ina Masser
residence
In Tuppers'
Pli!:ins, 3 houses abo\te
dishes,

home, nice built·in kit·
chen with range and
oven on Rt . 7 tn
Pomeroy , Oh

3' AND 4 RM furn1shed ap·
ts. Phone 992 ·5.434.

street lot. Full base-

anothe rpossible.

196S Yanor 12x52, 2 bedr
1968 Fleetwood 12x63, 2
Bdr
B 8. S MOBILE HOME
SALES, PT PLEASANT ,
wv 304 675 4424.

NEW LISTING-1 floor
plan, 3 or 4 bedroom

Apilrtment
for Rent

Economical 3 bedroom
home with street to

FHA or VA easily. Just

1971 Shakespear, 14x65 2

trailer hookup for add• ·
t1onal income.

I

&amp; Ll"estaek

plete . with mattress and
springs $175, 2 ma"ress
covers, 2 bedspreads and

ment

bdr., bath 'h

Sider rent.ng.

~

FIVE Family yard sale

upkeep yard $24,500.
STARTER HOME -

Mobile Homes
for Sale

bedr
1971 Fleetwood,

level lot Will also con·

records, flower pats and

Items

!

: MONEY - MONEY

land . 3 miles below M1d·
dleport off Rl 7. Also

.... ......

44

Services

5122
-.
-~
• • t•IO· o •"o

Only

rooms, equipped kit chen on corner lot A
comfortable home on
the sidewalk with little

:~$$$$:

REAL ESTATE

In

Power .

**~***********

DILLON

Bu~iness

P1cking up a p1ano In vour
area . Lookmg for a respon·
sible party to take over
payments
Call c red i t
manager collect . 61.4··592

baths. natural gas. and

General

I

t
I
I

34.

Real Eslate

NEW LISTING- 3 BR

·- - - - I'

7

IN ·

home on 2'1z acres of

32.
33

household

Family yard, 2 car
garage, dining, family
room, 4 bedrooms, 2

bedroom
Insurance

Bedroom Mobile
Home. Adults only . 992·

Two

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park , Route 33, North of

$35,000.
OVERHAULED 3
bedrooms. bath, 2 utility

1971

One bedroom mobile home
Furnished , all utilittes
paid Caii992·7A79

46

Pnone
1·( 614 )·992·3325
FAMILY HOUSE

!

·:

31 .

11 .
12.
13.
14
15

plants,

"il_'rr. Se~ond

Ohio

1973

Musical
Instruments

57

\'IRGIL B. SR . .~~~

Located m e&gt;c:c res1dential
comm un1ty, spacious, at
tra ctive, ma1ntenance free
home located on lovely
acre lot. Modern kitchen ,
family room,
several
bedrooms, ywo baths,
basement, garage
Low

l2

Mobile Homes
tor Rent

Two bedroom new l y
remodeled house for rent.
Fully carpeted w ith stove,
refrigerator and washer
and dr';er provided Also
has garage. Part1ally fur ·
nished S225 00 per month
dePOSit required Call 992·
2362 after A and before 7

Beautiful large home Low
utilities, brick ranch style,
3 bedrooms, 2'12 baths,
fireplace , full basement,
family room,. a1r con
di tioner, 3 car garage
Baum Addit 1on, Meigs Co.

Real Estate

~·

THREE
Family flea
market Including antique
dishes, clothing, books,

3454 or 992·5455

992 2143

19

24 .

Yard Sale

for hookup 698·6306 after 6

ref!nance*
Monday through Friday ,.and
ll-cases.
Call Com-:
7 45 to 4:45. Call 992 6026
after S.
:plete
Mortgage,.
,.services
in*
Babysitter
wanted .
JtGallipolis,
Ohio
at~
Cheshire area for 3 small
children 2 school age . :446·1517 for more*
Needed some afternoons, *information
andll367·0525.
ll-your appointment • .
*************111'
12
Situations Wanted

can celled?
Lost
your
operator's license? Phone

17
18

3.

7

APPROX 4 acres near
Albany , Cistern, septic ,
electric, telephone, ready

NEW 3 or 4 Bedroom home,
2112 baths, rec room,
fireplace ,
basement.
garage At Morning Star
Hts • lee ConstructiOn, 992·

BabYSitter 1n my home in *First mortgages,lt'
Middleport ;
for two :second mortgages,:
children ages one and tour .

AUTOMOBILE
SURANCE been

• include discount

1

I

Homes for Sale

at

992·5403

These cash rates

~

If interested wnte Box 45,
Syracuse, Oh

utillt1es. 992 7727

-

money

Good pay, easy
·work . No exp. necessary .
Send for free appllcat1on to

13

Lots &amp; Acreage

College St, Syracuse, Oh.

bedroom

23.

1
I
I

35

Former E .U.B . Church
property SO'x100' lot on

M1ller 992-6338.

2.

I

Call992 3640.

P 0. Box 766, Gallipolis,
Oh .

Will do odds •and ends.

I

I
I
I
I

1973 62xl2 two bedroom
mob 11e home 1n good con ·
acre lot •n Harrisonvrlle

985·4169

Help Wanted

•EARN

cel lent shape, all for $5.000.
Call992·5632 .

Iran·

•smissions,
batteries,
engines, or scrap metals,

, - - - --

1970 Cardinal 12x60 mobile
home w1th lots of extras,
underpin ning , porch. Ex-

Bus1ness
Opportunity

31

42

3324

CASH Loan never repay,
free details, A L . Lutton,

No item too large or too
small . Check pnces before

I
I You ' ll get better results
I lf you describe fully,
1 give price The Sentinel
I reserves the nght to
fy , ed1t or reject
I ctass1
any ad Your ad W1tl be
I put 1n the proper
I classification 1f you'll
1 check the proper box
I below.
I
I
) Wanted
I
J For Sale
1
) Announcement
) For Rent
I
I
I
I 1.

I
I

21

dollar, or complete estates.

11

2881 or 992-7633.

fiRjJAEia I

Gold, Stiver or fore1gn
coins or any gold or silver
items Antique furniture ,
glass or ch ina, will pay top

Will give p1ano lessons to
beg inners and advanced
students 1n my home Also
teach chordmg ,and tran·
sposmg if interested, ca ll

Yard Sale in Mason across

Mother cat and five two

;

..

on

June9, 19BO.

good home . 992·7102.

· K. . u . ljrown, Jr.

Betty A. Baronlck

r he Law Off1ce of Douglas
w. L1ttle, Pomeroy, Oh,
will be closed during the

commence

Lost and Found
Small black and tan dog

6

balls, clubs, carts, head

Resolution Is hereby 1f!!l'~~'!l
waived, and further
II
That II shall become ef· uvv
SUP PLY
fectlve immedlatetr, Uf'On
the affirmative vo e of a
ma iorltv vote of Council.
SHRUBS
voting aye thereon:

2, 9, 16, 23, 30 (6) 6, 61C

Announcements

Rd . in Cheshire. One house

now exist and additional
consideration
of
this

William A. Young
Rodney C. Karr

Sentinel .

Garlinger on Little Kyger
P tano

u .oo

~---------,,-----,---~

a~redale.

992·2082

munity Corrections Act of
1979, and further
That an emergency does

Meigs County
Clerk of Court

RESOlUTION
WHEREAS, in July of
1979, ofhe Ohio General
Assembly passed the community Corrections Act,
Am . Sub. H.B. 204, with the

Pi ck ing up an Easy play
organ in
your area
Looking for a responsible
party to take over pay men
ts Call cred1t manager

WHEREAS, il Is In the
of

pr. ces ,

Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, Middleport

Stale to plan the proposal
and seek further subsidy
interests

hl~hest

PAY

poSSible for gold and silver
coins, rings, 1ewe1ry, etc .

stration project in com·
munlty corrections which
will insur~ a grant from the

premises bears south 870 · to eoordinate planning and
east eleven (11) rods and
to develop a proposal for
nine links.
submission to the State of
Reference Deed : Vol.
Ohio in accordanee with
113, Page 21S, Meigs Counprovisions of the Com-

dants and demanding par·

wltr

the above

---.===~·
3:..__
::A:::n:::n"'o-"u"n"ce,m=en:::-le!s= ==
-

Obiluary 4 cents Pfr word,

Mob1te Home sate• and Y;'lrd stlt1 1reaccep1ec1 only wiln usn w•tl'l
order. 25 un1 cnarte for Ids carrylnliJ lin• Number In Can of Tht

J

State Institutions, and
the Village
of WHEREAS,
Pomeroy and
Meigs

best

In m emory, Card of Thank'\ ancl
m1n1mum . Cash in adYence

I

I
·I
I

Rates and Other Information

2den
Jdays

1 Address

I

17- Upholstery

1 dav

results Money not refundable.

I ;·
I
I ~·

IJ-EilUYating

4 P.M Daily

n Noon Saturday

I
1
I.•
I .'
I

1

name and address or
phone number if used.

eMERCHANDISE

,, _ Help wanted

MEET TONIGHT

Public Notice
purpose to develop alter
nat1ves to the comm1tment
of non-violent Offenders to

The Pomeroy Emergency Squad
was called to the coWJty sheriff's
quarters at 8:13 p.m. Thursday ftr
Steve McGrath who was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

washer . Have to see to ap·
prect ate $9,000 Call 992·

2379.

complete
households
Write M. D. Miller, Rl. 4,

old

1969 2 B R 12x60 Hollvpark
Trail er Furnished , a c.

Interior and exterior pain
ting done . Also barn roofs

1ron and brass beds, old
furniture, desks, gold
rings,
j ewelry , silver
dollars. sterling, etc , wood
ice boxes, ant iques, etc .

BUY

for Sale

No lob too small Call 949

Paneling, floor! ti le, and
ceiling t tle
Call Fred

H - Wanltd 10 Rtnt
• 41-Equipmenllor R..-rt

rate

Public Notice

an eye laceration. She was taken to
Holzer Medical Center.

Wanted to Do
W1ll do babysil1 ing , Ca ll
Traci Tucker at 992·5451.

Wanted to Buy

9

~2~--~M
~
~
ob
~l7
1e~H
~
om
__e_s ___

18

949·2487 or 949·2000. racine,
onto, Crill Bradford .

I Print one word m each
I space below Each in ·
1 it1a/ or group of figures
1 counts as a word Count

u-FRooms

eEMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

complete Service, Phone

,WILL

I

Ritnl

•'-Space klr Rent

ll- rnsuranct

Shop The Sentinel Classifieds

«

Write your own ad and order by mail with this
coupon. cancel your ad by phone when you get

1

for Rent

•- Grveawav

12-Siruattd WaniM

Pomeroy; Mrs . Margaret Greene,
Vu-gmia, and Mrs. EUa Dey Peterson, Hames City ; two sons, George
Phillip Stace, Findlay, and Lanny
Ross Stace, St. Cloud, Fla.; two
Slsters-m-Jaw, Mrs . Rose Reynolds,
Middleport, and Mrs. Clara Conroy,
Chester, 20 grandchildren, 39 greatgrandchildren and three greatgreat-grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held at 2
p.m. Saturday at the Gnssom
Funeral Home at Kississilrunee,
Fla ., with bunal m Rose Hill
Cemetery there .

I
I
1
I
II
I

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

eANNOUNCEMENTS

SOUP DINNER
An electwn day soup dinner and
supper will be held from 11 :30 a .m .
to 7 p.m. at the Racme Wesleyan
Church. Bean and vegetable soup,
corn bread, sandwiches, p1e and
salad will be available. Those
1
wishing to carry out should take
their cohlainers.

bill could jeopardize the payment &lt;I
June Social Security benefits, due
next week.
"You know the president of the
United States will veto it with this on
it," O'Neill said.
But opponents argued that the 31~
74 vote suggested such a veto could
be overldden.
The IG-cent-a-gallon fee, which
Carter proposed to curb Imports and
promote conservation, was to take
effect May 15 but was blocked by a
federal judge wbo ruled that · the
president bad overstepped his
authority in imposing It on aU
gasoline instead
just on 011 imports.
•
The administration, which Is appealing that decision, wants
Congress to delay action on the
repeal bill until a ruling is handed
down on the appeal.

Curb Inflation. 1
Pay Cash for
I'
Classlfleds and I
Savell I
1I

1
f

WANT AD INFORMATION

JOINS STAFF
Patricia Lew1s, 70 North Second,
Apt. 7, Middleport, has joined the
staff of the National Executive
Housekeepers Association in
Gallipolis as accountant-bookkeeper. Among her other positions,
she was an employee of Dr. James
P. Conde, Middleport.

MEETS TUESDAY
Sutton Township Trustees .will
meet at 8 p.m. Tuesday in the
Syracuse Municipal Building.

&amp; Auction
BRADFORO, Auctioneer,

Emergency squad .runs
The Middleport Emergency Squad
was caUed to Second Ave. at 5:18
p.m. Thursday for Geneva Spraudlin
who y;as taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospilal. At 6:20 p.m.
Thursday, the squad went to
Vaughan's Cardinal for Laura
Leifheit, Route 3, Pomeroy, who had

Public Sale

8

~----------------------,~

MEETS MONDAY
The Me1gs County Fair Board will
meet at 8 p.m. Monday at the
secretary 's office on the Rock
Sprmgs Fairgrounds .

Women of the Forest Run Umted
Methodist Church will stage an election day dinner at the church beginning at 9 a .m. Tuesday, Soup, sandwiches, desserts and beverages
will be available.

redoubling their efforts to win approval of the bill increasmg the debt
ceiling - minus the gasoline-feerepeal measure - but major dif·
ficulties loomed.
Even if the House separates the
two issues, Sen. Robert Dole, R·
Kan., has Indicated he will try to
rejoiti them in the Senate.
And both chambers have now indicated in test votes their over·
whelming opposition to the gasoline
fee - already blocked from taking
effect by a federal judge.
Ignoring Holllle Speaker .hornas
P. O'NeiU, the House voted 312-74
Thursday to block floor debate on
the debt~iling bill unless the
measure to kill the gasoline fee was
attached toil
O'Neill, who supports the adnunistration's efforts to impose the
politically unpopular fee, complained that delay of the_~ebt~eiling

••

MONEY RECEIVED
State Auditor Thomas E .
Ferguson's office reported a total of
$153,059.44 has been sent to 60 Ohio
counties as reunbursement for costs
incurred under Ohio's public defender program . Meigs County
received $635.73.

Area deaths
Ruth S. Stace

13- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, May 30, 1980

Dispute could hold up SS checks

:Meigs County happenings.
SUNDAY SERVICES
League of Mercy Sunday is being
: held at the Salvation Army, But: ternutAve., Pomeroy, Sunday .
Mrs. Ray Wming w1U be in charge
: of services Sunday at 10 a.m . and
Mrs. Caryl Cook at the 7. 30 p.m . ser. vices.
• At 2 p m. the group WIU hold a service and give out treats at the new
Pomeroy Health Care Center. The
,Rev. Broome of Middleport
:Nazarene Church will be m charge
·ofthe2p.m . services.

'

.

Rubber~g95· •

!l•.c.J!.1!!1.

.

Padding &amp; caroeflastalled Free
Purcnase

�:i2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday , May 30, 1980

' ~niV' V

""'!r;ICifVL?

NEW OWNERS - Racme Food market, Racine,
owned and operated by Phebe )'toberts for the past 12
years has been purchased by David and Linda Spencer
and Judy and Ike Spencer. Ike will serve as general
manager and meat cutter and David will continue as
office manager at the Meigs County Highway Department. The new owners will take over the operation on

CONDUCTS SERVICES
, The Rev. James Kittle of
·Gallipolis IS conducting regular ser;vices at the Syracuse Church of the
;Nazarene. Dale T. BasS 1s the former pastor.

BffiLESCHOOLSET
East Letart, Apple Grove and
Letart Falls, United Methodist Bible
.SChool will be held at Lelart Fails
. Elementary Jurie 2, through June 6,
:from 9a.m. to 11 a.m daily
: Children age 3 to elementary
:school age are welcome to attend.
•Children from other churches are
:also welcome. Refreshments will be
:Served each day Mrs. Eileen Buck
;Is the director.

! Mrs. Ruth Sauer Slace, 76, former
; resident who has been living in
:Haines City, Fla., died Wednesday
·night at the Heart of Flonda
:uospilalm Haines City.
; Mrs. Stace was a daughter of the
;late Edward and Effie McKim
:Sauer. She was also preceded in
:death by her husband, George, and a

:sister.
; Surviving are four daughters :
·Mrs. Charlotte Roseberry, Dyer:sburg, Tenn.; Mrs. Mary Powell of

WASHINGTON (AP) - Government checks, possibly Including
some Social Security benefits due
'next week, could be held hostage to a
congressional effort to repeal
President Carter's controversial
dime-a-gallon gasoline fee.
foes of the gas fee succeeded late
Thursday in linking the energy ISSue
to debt~eiling legislation needed to
extend the government's borrowing
authority.
An effort to put the borrowing bill
back on the track was expected to be
made by House leaders today + first
before the Rules Committee and
then on the floor.
And Senate Majonty Leader
Robert C. Byrd, D-W.Va., was
keeping the Senate in session despite an earlier plan not to meet
today - to vote on the debt~eiling
bill should it be approved by the
House.
Without the crucial measure, the
government's power to pay some of
its bills will expire at midnight
Saturday.
However, such deadlines have
been missed before and there are a
number of slop-gap measures officials can take to keep the money
flowing - at least for a week or so.
Congressional leaders were

June I. It will be caUed Spencer's Grocery, Inc. They
will offer the same excellent quality and service that
has been given in the past by Mrs. Robers . Remodeling
will be done and some changes will be made. A grand
operung will be held on June 20 and 21 . Pictured, 1-r,
Linda and David Spencer, Phebe, Ike and Judy Spencer. The Spencers had the large key made just for the
occasion.

ELECTION DINNERS
Electwn day dinner and supper
will be served m the annex of the
Syracuse Presbyterian Church
begmmng at 11 a .m.
The menu consists of chicken and
all the trimmmgs. At 10 a.m. in the
church yard a yard, hake sale,
bazaar, and parcel post sale will be
held.

}
II

PHONE 992-2156
CLASSIFIED AD INDEX
eRENTALS

1- Carcl of Tflulu
2-ln MemDrlam

41 - Houstslor Rtnl
0 - Mobilt Homes

3- .0.nntunc@menh

44-Ap•Mrn~tnllor

S-Ha ppy Ads
t-Lost ilnd Found
7-Y.Jrd Sal@
I- Public Sale
&amp; Auction
~Wanted to

:

Public Not1ce
ntng, conra1ning thirt y six
acres, more or less
Also the right of wav for
a pnvate road With gates
through the Ur1ah Stevens
lot down the stream where
the trussel now is. There Is
reserved on the above
described prem1ses the
right of a road for an outlet
for the east end of the Bart ·
lett Stevens lot com ·
menclng at a stake on the
east line of the above
described premises from
which a mulberry tree four
inches in diameter bears
south « degrees west two

Buy

51 - Household Gooch

n- cB, TV , Atdlo Equipment
53-Antiques
54-MISC . Mtrc:handise
55-Building supplltl
~Pels lor S.lt

14- 8USifttU Tro~unlnt
Js-Scttoolslnstruct•on
ItRadi o. Til
&amp; CB Repa1r
11-WantedToDo

Members of the Chester Alunmi
Association are asked to meet at 7
p.m. this evening at the Chester
building to decorate for Saturday

e FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

22-Monev lo Lo.tn

tl-Farm Equlpmtnl
n - wantect lo auv
72-Trucks for Slit
u - 1..1 vtstock
64- Hay &amp; Or tin

23- Proteniona l

65-- Seed &amp; Ferlllinr

eFINANCIAL
21 -

evening's annuaJ reunion.

BUsiness
Opportunity

Serv•ces

NO QUORUM
A postponed session of Middleport
V1Uage CoWJcil scheduled for Thursday night was not held due to the
lack of a quorum.

e'TRANSPORTATIDN

e REAL ESTATE

71-Autos tor Slit
11-Vans &amp; 4 W D.
74-Motorcyc:ln
75Auto Part5

JJ - Homes fo,- S.ltJ

32 - Mobllt&lt;Homes

tor Sill'

Accessoriu
77-Auto AtPiir
&amp;

JJ-F•rms for Salt

34- Business lulldlnvs

35-Lots I Acre•ve

U - Real Estilla Wanttd
J7- Reallon

eSERVICES
11-HometmproYtmtnts
12-Piumbing &amp; E~c:ntting

Want-Ad Advertising
Deadlines

PASSAGE URGED
CINCINNATI (AP) - Hamilton
County Democratic and Republican
leaders on Thursday urged passage
of a June 3 tax levy for the Cincinnati public schools.
The school system, which closed
for ti\ree weeks last year when funds
ran out, is trymg to pass a 7.43-rrull
levy. Cincinnatians have not approved a school levy m more than a
decade.

lt-Eitctrical
&amp; Refrigeration

Is-General HIUII"t
16-M, H. lhplir

I.

tor Monday

IS Words or Under
CMh
1 ..

Ctlarge
1.25

I. SO

"'
'"

"'
"'

• Clays

"'
15 words 114 cenh per word per dey,

Each word over the minimum
Ads runnr"9 other lhu cons.cutlvt days will be c:l'lar~ et the 1 day

IN THE

•
COMMON PLEAS
•
COURT OF MEIGS
'I"
COUNTY, OHIO
ji/IRGINIA R. BLAKE , ET
:;1,\L

...
Plaintiffs,
"' ' \tS,

:!NApE F. KING, ET AL
~NNA ROBINSON Kl NG,
!~Address

It'
~

Unknown
Defendants.
No. 17,443

- NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION -

I'

'

To the unknown heirs,

ftev/sees,

lepatees,

executors, admin istrators,
ouse or ass1gns ot Anna
ng Robinson , address
nknown, and A . J . Reuter,

~

rods; rnence south 500 west

srx rods, thence south 530
west e1ght rods , thence
south JlO west Si)( rods ;
thence south 4112° wes t
eight rod s; thence south 2eo
west four rods to a stake on
the south line of the above
conveyed prem rses from
which the south east corner

amie Reuter, T. J . J ohn·

eon, Virgmia Johnson, 01to

~

hnson,

Harley Johnson,
ebecca Kay Meadows,
aul King, and Dan King,
deceased, all whose ad

dresses are unknown :
.. You are hereby notified

of

tliat a Complaint has been
f~led In the Common Pleas
Court of Meigs County,
Ohiol ca~ No . 17,«1,
riam ng the bove as Defen

ty Deed Records .

tlllon of the following
described real estate, to·

You are notif1eq that you
are required to answer the

.Complaint within 28 days
after the last publication .
The last publication Will be
made on the 6th day of
June, 1980. 1f no answer "
flled 1 the Court will grant

.

, Situated in the County of
Meigs, State of Ohio, Town·
$1llp of Salisbury and fur·
t.~er
bounded
and
described as follo,ws:
· Commencing at the
&amp;j)uthwest corner of the
Bartlett Stevens lqt known
t,., lot No. 4 of the northeast ·
'!rler of Section No. 35,
nge 19, Town No. 2;
1 nee south 87° east one
hUndred and fourteen ( 1141
reds aloiKI the north line of
Urlah"Steveos lot, then·
c norlll ~· east forty·
ght (.all rods and eight
( 1 links to the section line; .
nee nor!~ 870 west along
1 section tine lo Wolf Pen
(!reek; thence down the
creek to the, place of begin·

the aemand for partition of
real estate . ..

Larry E. Spencer.

il:

I

described

mil a proposal for a demon·

I

County have agreed to sub

fund1n_g, and

( 5)

the

citizens of the Village of
Pomeroy and Meigs county to formaly submit said

proposal , now therefore

BE IT RESOLVED BY
THE MAYOR AND THE
COUNCIL OF THE
VILLAGE OF POMEROY,
OHIO :
That the Meigs Local

Community

C:::orrections

Planning Board Is hereby
designated as the Agency

collect. 614 .. 592·5122
Tun in g

·

oanlels 742 2951

Lane

Tuning

and Repair Service smce
1965 If no answer phone

Have

galt

items.

Bags,

covers. W ill trade

Teaford . 614·9B5 3961

John

&amp; TREES

Larry Wehrung .

Pllbllc Notice

Discount Prices
POMEROY
LANDMARK
Main St.

&lt;;Ia renee Andrews
Mayor

Dale 5·19·80
( 5)

week ol June 1, 1980
through June 8, 1980.
Regular office hours will

4

; . ,~,.. ,;.

..........

~

""' ~

.." . ...... . ... . .,. .
~

~

,, • •

~·

..

~

ATTEST :
Jane Walton
Clerk

Pomeroy
992-2181

23, :11), 21C

# ' . . . . . . . . . . ...

, .. _ . . . . .. .

...

~

~

Monday,

8 Yellow Kittens and 1
black and white kitten, also
2 pups part sheep dog and
See

Ray

on right past Little Kyger
Congregational

Church .

..

,.., , ,

..

wrth Franklin County licen ·
se tag. Is wearing rabies

lag and small bell around
neck. The dog IS a family
pet and Is a reward is of·

fered . The dog is ten years
Old . If found call 985·4273 or
985·3851.
1

Giveaway

Christian

Three lon9 haired kittens .
Need home desperately ,
Call992 7222.
One male all black part
Himalayan cat, 1 yr. old to
Assorted number of cats
and kittens. Long ha ired

and short haIred, of all
shapes and sizes. Call 985·
4163 .

Yard Sale

month old baby k1ttens.Call
949 ·2271.

You 'II
tract it down

from Foglesong's Funeral
Home. Starts 10:00 Thur·
sday, Friday and Saturday .
Depression glass. fur ·
niture, drapes, and etc.

3 Family Yard Sale Friday
afternoon and Sat. John
Dudding
Racme .
Y11rd

residence,

Sale,

Carolyn

Althouse, Pagevllle, Ohio,
Friday and Saturday from
9·4, Sunday 12-4. Rain or
shine.

Large Yard Sale Friday
the 30th only from 9·3,
About 1'12 mile north of
Pomeroy on Rt. 7. Jeans,

flower pots, and misc.
items. Call 992·5770 or 742·
3082.
'
Yard Sale June2, 3, from 9
? Follow signs at Fi ve
Po1nts.

much faster
11 i th a

YARD SALE, Monday 6
p.m. til?, and Tuesday 9:30
a.m. to?, top of Rose Hill,
girls clothes, all sizes from
infant on up, toyt, baby car

WANT AD

----- -

..

I

I

Phone

I

seat.

Pomeroy, OH 1 or call 992·

7760.
10 karat, 14 karat, 18 karat,
gold. Denial gold and gold
ear pins. 675·3010.

selling/ Also do appraising .
osby OssieJ Marlin . 992
6370.

etc Ca/1245 9188.

GET VALUABLE training
as a young business person
and earn good mane'; plus
some great gifts as a Sen·
ti ne! route carrier Phone
us right away and get on

: the elig ibility list at 992·
. 2156or9922157 .
extra

~ home .

-

. Robert Ne1ghbarger, 273
Edgewater Beach, Thorn·
vile, Oh . 43076 .

I
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20.

1I .
1

21.
22.

1

1

27.
28.

I

8.
9.

29.
30.

10.

I

1

I
III

1

),

35.

16.
Mail This Coupon with Remittance
The Daily Sentinel
Box 729
Pomeroy, Oh. 4S769

I
I
.I
I

1
1
I

I

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

and lamps, also TV games.

Saturday, May 31 and Monday, June 2 from 10 to? at

the Kelly residence In
Syracuse; Watch for the

signs.

'

FIVE Family yard sale
Monday, June 2 from 9 to 4
held Inside at Rich Valley
corner of Park and Page
Streets In Middleport. Lots
of Items. Call9~9- 2479 .
Y!loRD Sale June 2 through
7, 8 to 5 p.m . at the Gene
Riggs residence, located
Route 7 at the top of the hill
from Eastern High School.
Lots of clothing, new and
used from Infant to adulls.
Furniture and household
items. Toys, king and
queen motorcycle seat.

Yard Sale

CARPORT sale, June 3. 2
p.m. · 7 p.m.; June~' 10 4.
918 S. Third, Middleport.

5 FAMILY yard sale, June
2·3, 9 to 5. Rlggscrest
Manor above Eastern High
School.
Mini - bike,
snowmobile

suit,

square

dance
outfit ,
bike,
children's clothe~. Infant's
and up, baby sterilizers
and

other

baby

maternity clothes.

Monday, June 2 through
Thursday, June 5 or until

things last. From 9-S.
Clothes, whatnots, jewelry,
houseware and a IItie bll of
everylhlng. On the Laurel
Clift Road at lhe home of
Mrs. Clifford Jacobs. Rain
cancels.

YARD SALE Monday ,
June 2, 6 p.m. Ill ? ,
Tuesday, June 3, 9:30 a .m.
Ill 1 Davis residence, Rose
Hill .

BUSINESS BUILDING

downtown

Rutland, 0 .. approx. 10
years old
Use as
business or convert to
living quarters . See to
appreciate.

NEW LISTING - 3 BR
cottage with 2 acre5 of
quiet countrystde . 5
minutes from Mid

dleport, 0.
l BEDROOM HOMECarpeted and paneled,
on Vine Street '"
Racine, very clern,
ready to move Into. N1ce

1 ACRE IN MIDDLE·
PORT - 4 room col·
' tage, trailer hookup,
reduced to sa,ooo.

2 BR HOME - 4 acres.
walking distance to Mid ·
die port
TAKING LISTINGS!
Hobart Dillon, Broker
Fay Manley
Branch Mgr.
Phone 991·1598
Real Estate

Ashland . All size clothes,
furniture, flower .t

vases, etc . A lot of good
buys. Rain or shine. From 9,
till dark.

.LARGE
~~~------------garage sale Moo :'
and Tues., June 2 and 3 . 3.40~

Page St., Middleport.

•

:=====~~~~====~1
8
Public Sole
&amp; Auction

11

BIG AUCTION
SALE
AT FOREST ACRES
PARK

General

Fairpoint,

14x65

Cameron,

good

neighborhood.

Should

2 bedroom furnished apt in

Middleport 1·304-882·2566

rentals

now,

Let

2

income property for the
low price of a moderate

2

home .
$35,000.

l 4x65,

14x65 3

Need

only

REAL ESTATE IS EX·
PECTED TO DOUBLE
IN VALUE IN 10 YRS.
WHERE WILL YOU
BE? CALL 992·ll25 or
992-3876.
·-

Housmg
' H adquarters

Farm Equipment

B model Mack tra ctor, exc

shape. 992-7354 after 7 p m .

d i ameter 10"

on largest

ATTENTION
(IM ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will

com collections Call 614
767·3167 or 557 3411
ATTENTION:
(IM ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
for antiques and collec
tibles

or entire

guns, pocket watches and

coin collections. Call 614·
767·3167 or 557·3411

COAL,

LIMESTONE,

sand, gravel, calcium
chlonde, ferttlizer, dog

992-2259
NEW LISTING
SOUTHERN DISTRICT
- 7 room house w1th 3

room home, 2 baths,
carport and workshopt
situated on 20 acres w ith

bedrooms, l lf::~ baths,
n1ce family room, total
electric, 2 car garage,
storage building on 5
acres of cleared land

a good barn . On Co . Rd .
13, Asking $49,500 00
ACREAGE - 185 acres,

$51,000.00.
NEW LISTING- MID·
DLEPORT ApproK. 10
acres with 1 1!:~ story 5

on VanZandt Rd , some
minerliiS. Call for 1nfo .

3

bedroom, total electnc
hOme Off New L1ma

room
house.
3
bedrooms, bath, .garden
space. fruit trees, 2 car

Rd , ca ll today .
MEIGS HI - Lovely 3

garage $20,900 .00.
NEW LISTING
SOUTHERN DISTRICT
...:. 4 bedroom home, 2

bedroom home on near
ty an acre . Sell 1ng pnce

$39,900 .00
BRICK - Beautiful bl·

story, on.approx lh acre
lot , 2 car carport, par·
tial
basement .

level, 3 bedrooms, ~ 112
baths, livmg room, d1n·
ing room, very nice ki_t
chen with
bullt · 1n
microwave,
family
room with fireplace, 21f2
car garage, situated on
corner with approx . -4

$18,000 00
TRAILER AND LOT-

992·5724
MAY 23 to June 10, 30% off
greenware sale. Bring a
container 9 a m to 9 p m

Drehel's Ceramics 59 N.
Second Ave., Middleport,

ches, class rings, wedding
bands, diamonds. Gold or
silver Call J . A Wamsley,

12x60 on sox112 lot. Fur
niShed . $14,000.00
REDUCED MID·
DLEPORT - 7 room
houS. with 3 bedrooms,

remodeled
home , 3
bedroom, I iving room,
dining room, large kitchen, utility and garage.

bright sunny kitchen,
large rooms, whole
house air cond. on large

Situated on 01ce lot . Sell·
ing pnce $28,000.
GillE US A CALL
DAY OR EVENING.
Velma Nic1nsky, Assoc.

GOLD ANO SILVER
COINS OF THE WORLD.
RINGS,
JEWELRY,
STERLING
SILVER
AND
MISC ITEMS . PAYING
RECORD
HIGH,
HIGHEST UP · TO OATE
PRICES. CONTACT EO
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP , MIDDLEPORT ,
OH 10, OR CALL 992·3476.

Ton';
boots

Lama and Acme
Mountain Leather

and General Store. 104·105
West Union, Athens, Oh .
592· 5478, 10·5. 30 Man Sat .
Decorated cakes for all oc·
casions . Character cakes
and sheet cakes . Call 992·

6342 or 992 ·2583.

Real good cond . 992·5348.

large

kit·

$34,900.00.
FARM -

General

A. ,

44

carpeting, equipped kit·
chen, extra trailer
hookup , and
other

buildings. 542,000 oo.

ment &amp; family room . On 3 beautifu l acres . Ask1ng

Office hours Monday
thru Saturday, 9 to 5.
ALSO Mon. and Fri.
EVENINGS unlll8 p.m.
REALTOR
Henry Cleland, Jr.
991·6191
ASSOCIATES

b ' ld '

2 BR, on n ice lot, sma ll out u1 mgs
for storage, on quiet street. $10.500 .

LOT IN RACINE - Includes septic, water &amp; gas
Iines. As1&lt;ing $3,700.
REDUCEO FOR QUICK SALE - 3 BR house, lam I·

ly room, partially closed in carport. 10x10 storage

bldg . Reduced to $37,000.
SPLIT ENTRY - Only 5 yr . old. 3 BR 1n good
development. 547,500.

Roger &amp; Dottie Turner

741·1474
Jean Trussell, 949·2660

.

Greenhouse . Geraldine
Cleland, Racine, Ohio.

16

tillable, pasture and
woods, with 7 room
modular .
Has
A
bedrooms, 2 baths,

NEW LISTING - Overlooking Ohio River &amp; Kaiser
Alum . Plant, 31g. BR 's, plenty of closets, full ba.se·

hanging baskets, pots of

POMEROY - 3 BR home, city water. vmyl Siding
on Rl. 33 $14,900.
f' · h d
LARGE HOUSE IN RACINE - 2 story, 1n1s e

POOD LE GROOMING
Judy Taylor 614 367 7220.
HILLCREST KENNELS.
Boarding, all breeds Clean
lndoor·outdoor. fac ilities .

Also

AKC

reg1stered

or Individuals.

Shirts$4.00 Each
"We print ALMOST

$10.700.00 . SAVE. Call Mar
vm Keebaugh al 992·6614
till6 oo and 985·3913 after 6
p m.

Work.

anything on ALMOST
anything!"
Ph. 614·949-1358
Evenlnvs &amp; Weekends
5·8·1 mo.

Donations

required .

ONE

TON

crew·cab,

dual

dual fuel

tanks,

Two bedroom

house for

rent. Unfurnished, deposit

ed, on property water lines ctose. All m1neral nghts

required No pets. Call 992·

"Old Fort Meigs" on ,

go with property . Also Timber ready to be cut. Call

3090.

New Lima Rd., Rulland,
Oh. sat., May n, 11
A.M. Howa1'11 aa. .tey,
owner auctl-. Bring
your lawn cllairs.

for morP Information.

'

1

FOR RENT, two bedroom
with garage. Salem Street,

Rutland. $175 month plus
utilities 742·2378 .

*Electrical works
*Masonry work
12 Years

Chevy

and

THE POOL PEOPLE '
31711 Noble Summ11 Rd .
Middleport, Ohio
992-5724
Sales, service and sup-

1979 Ford 150 4x4, auto.,

etc .

English

and

Reeves

AKC

Terrier

Yorkshire

puppy . One male,
weeks old . 992·3829.

$IX

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt. 3, Box 54
Racine, Oh.
· Ph. 614·143·2591
5· 14 1 mo

Vjnyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding
e1nsul1tion

estorm Doors
storm Windows
• Replacement
Windows
Free Estimate

•

Construction
742-2328
~25 ·tlc

James Keesee
Ph. 992·2772

plies . In ground and
above ground pools.
5· Hfc

ROOFING
REPLACEMENT. WINIXMS
Serving your area for 2S vears.
Call Now for Large Savings
For Free Estimate Call

Eugene Long (614) 843-3322
5·29·1 mo.

p.s .. p.b .• topper. Positive!r~=======::::====~r==~=========~:=:f;=::=::=;;;,~~~=~
43
traction front and rear. 985·

Zuzuki, wi!!ter

85
General Hauling
WILL HAUL 11mestone and

87
Upholstery
A&amp;H Upholstering . "Now

Roofmg, siding, room ad·
ditions , all types of general

gravel. Also, l1me hauling
and spread1ng . Leo Morns
Trucking Phone 742 2455

seats". Pn . 992·3752 or 992·
3743.

repa 1rs, 25 years exp 992· 1
3406.
~
W1ll paint houses, barns
and roofs No job is too big
or small. Free est1mates.

First quality work
992·3941 or 992 5126.

Auto Parts

76

Home
Improvements

81

74
Motorcycles
1973 Kawasaki 350 dirt
bike Good cond . Must sell.
$250 992·6115

&amp; Accessories

14" and 15" used tires. plus
14" and 15" hubcaps. $1.50
up. 992 5118 .
2 G78 15" tires. Less than
1,000 miles $65 949·2065.

KINGS
Roofing

Call

CONTRACTING.
and chimneys,

house pninting and tree

service . Call992·3737.
PAINTING done; interior

and exterior. Ca/1992·3827.
AutoRe~ir

FRONJ: _ENO

FLOORING,
I

992·2759

UJNMENlS '

LANummn

SERVICE
STAroN ·
Call (614) 9P1·9932
Pomeroy,O.

83

Str•:IEes

Bill Pullins 992·2478.

Home
S &amp; G Carpet Cleaning
Steam
cleaned .
Free
estimate .
Reasonable

rates . scotchguard . 992·

6309 or 742· 2211

Will

pour

block and
3406

concrete,

lay

br~a ll

992·

'-/

........

MACHINE
service,

all

Scissors.

ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR
Sweepers,
toasters, Irons, all small
appliances. Lawn mower.

to Slato Highway

Garage on Route 7, 985·

3825.

DO

FOR ALL YOUR INSURANCE, NEEDS
CALL US.

992-2342 '

OOWNINGCHILDS t.GENCY, INC.

CARPET
SHOP
A
"Drive

-Little"'S'ave A Lot"

~HOP
IS
FULLY
STQ~KE.D
•
-w•
- w•• •

Electrical

makes. 992 ·2284. The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales
and Service . We sharpen

Next

AR~ YOU PAYING TOO MUCH?
YOU HAVE THE COVERAGE?

&amp; Refrigeration

SEWING

1mprovements

SERVING SOUTHEASTERN OHIO SINCE.18681I

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Dozer, backhoe and tren·

Car

OOWNINGQULDS
r· INSURANCE

Excavating

cher. Septic svstems, com·
plete services. HourlY or
contract
Engineering,
layout and construction.

"'

Re - Upholstering

_:==========-+-==========-

ceiling,

paneling, doors and win·
dews, also paintmg . Call

b y Randy
Car·
penter,
factory
trained
frontend
alignment
specialist. Nlllllll

rfding

Western . Ruth
(614) 698 .. 3290

Sizes from ~x6 to 12X40

INSULAnON

Tromm

SALES

power

Vans&amp; 4W.D.

992·

lessons .
Everything
Imaginable In horse equip·
ment . Blankets, belts.
boots,

Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992·7583
5·15·1 mo.

Repairs ,
ponies

AI

111

wheels,

on weekends 247·2302.
73

Utility Buildinp

r~=========~f=========~f=====~5~·1~8~·1=m=o·~
D. BUMGARDNER
VINYL SIDING

steering, power brakes,
and a1r conditioning . Call

HOOF HOLLOW . Horses

$57.500.
100
INVESTMENT PROPERTY - Over
acres,
could be housing developmenl - gas a.lready drill ·

REMODELING
HOME
I
MAINTEN"NCE

667·3652 .

6260. noon-7 p.m .. except

and

CONSTRUCTION

Stewart,

1975 CHEVY '12 ton PICkup.

Tuesday , emergency calls

41

ROOFING

SA95 or will take guns on

only .

basement, heavily insulated, thermo wtndow~ lift
out for cleaning . carpeted on all31evels. Extenor 1S
Real Perma Stone, 2 car garage. Much more for

ROUSH

*New homes - extensive remodeling

71
Trucks for Sale
GMC 1974 pickup one-half
ton $1,495. 69 Olds Cutlass

Stx cylinder, 3 speep
Rad10, 54,000 miles, $2,000.
can Mrs Brvan Harris at

SMALL

~~~========~-====~~~~~::fr=~~=~~~===
J&amp;L BlOWN

good gas mileage, S1100.00.
see Glenn B1sse11 M 949·
2801.

eng
f.rm .Pickup.
949·2328.360
1974 $1,200
Ford Floo

shirts for politicians,
ball teams, businesses

949·2686

985·4394..

Dobermans . 614·446 7795 .
HUMANE
SOCIETY .
Adopt a homeless pet.
Healthy, shots, wormed.

novelty

-Free Est1ma1es
-Interior &amp; Exterior

Pets for Sale

RISING STAR Kennel .
Boarding . Ca/1367-0292.

and

-Fully Insured

77

56

Sizes
"From lOxlO"

T·shlrts

VEGE TABLE plants, cab·

flowers and vines. Clelend

Farm Buildinp

with same equipment with
sticker at appro.:imately

o.

ALL STEEL

&amp;

trol. $7,995.00 19BO model

cooled In good conditiOn.
$750.00. Cal/992·36&lt;10.

banana. egg plant. Large

992-3795
4·2 tic

Roller, Brush and Sprav
Work.

sedan. Like new, auto.
1978 Oatsun B210, 4 dr.
transmiSSton, low mileage.

POMEROY,O.
992·6215 or
992·HI4
1·28·1 mo.

Sandblasting Co.

Rear

fog lights . 992·77611.

selection bedd ing annuals,

on .

defogger, leather seating,
tilt wheel, and cruise con

1972 k750

5 room house on 1
acre lot
with
3

V. C. YQUNG Ill

OCusiPShopntD.nt.fn

Painting

power locks, six·way seat,
trunk release, AM· FM

112 H.P. 100 lb . air com·
pressor . White roll bar w ith

lot with 2 car garage.
$44,900.00.
EASTERN DISTRICT

chen ,
carpeting ,
garage,
insulated .

Ph . 741·2003

Gh~en's

1979 9,000
Olds miles,
Royalelike88-lwo
door
new
Full power equipment in·
eluding power windows,

3'1 .

Large wOOden off1ce desk
and swivel office chair .

Pomeroy,

and

' (FREE ESTIMATES)

618 E. Main

trade. see T.
742·2421

107 Sycamore St.
Pomero , OH.

worlt,
walks
driveways.

Business-Farms-Partnerships
and Corporations
Payrolls, profit and loss statements, all
federal and state forms .

sale. All

c .b.

By Appointment
Oil ice 991-7544
Home 992-6191

1---------------------t----------ADD ONS &amp;
·Tri~Counfy
REMODELING
Bookkeeping:
Gutter work, down
Service
spouts, some concrete

SIZe. Ca/1742·2455

and

S•lem Twp. Rd. 110
Dexter, Ohio 45726
Bill Eskew, Ph. 742·2456
Your Place or Mine

Rutland, 0.
Ph . 742·2455
5 21 1 mo .

H&amp;R BLOCK OFFICE LOCATION

stereo

Tri.f.ounlJ
General Welding

Other Times

sizes, from fryer size to pet

1974
New styles of Resistol
Straw and Felt hats and

bage, broccoli, cauliflower,
lettuce, celery, beets,
green peppers, chili pep·
pers,
pimentoes,
H unga ri an wa)(, sweet

bedrooms,

Ph. 742·3092
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.

LEO
MORRIS

742·2331. Treasure Chest
. Coin Shop, Athens, OH . 592·
6462

for

ENGINE .
STEAM
CLEANED
'12.00

111f2'!(,1ntereSI·3DYrs.
PARK FINANCIAL
VA &amp; VA Automatic
Loans, No Down Payment. Federal Housing
Loans, 3% down on
125,000; S'lb down on
balance. FHA 265 Subsidy Program. FHA 145
Gradual Payment Mort.
Open M·W·F 9:00 to 1:00

ROTOVATOR
eV · CHISEL
PLOW

992 2751

2 bedroom mobile home,

acres . Only $69,000
SYRACUSE Nice

eHOWARD

food, and all types of salt.

IN STOCK tor immediate

1·12-tlc

HAVE YOUR

~~;::~~~:::=====l:::::::::::::::~~~~~~~~:;:==~::~~~~=~
~Real s ale Loans

1974 Gremlin,
power
steering, atr condit,oning,

Misc. Merchanise

949· 2862
949·2160

5·1·1 mo

estates.

Nothing too large . Also.

deliver.,. various s1zes of
pool k1ts. Do·i t·you.rself or
let us install for you. D
Bumgardner Sates~ Inc .

Broker

·
Coil Jimmy Deem. Associate 949-1388
or Nancy Jaspers, Associate 949·2654 or 949·1591

Antiques

Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices
Call Howard

tor

71

3891.

NEW LISTING- N1ce 7

GIVE US A CALL

5551.

All work guaranteed .

OLD COINS, pocket wat·

RABBITS

2 METAL tw1n beds, com·

clean;ng and palntinv.

calls.

slab $10 per ton. Delivered

Pomeroy 992 -2689

and downspouts, guHer

Free Siding I
Estimate, 949,1101 or
949·2860 . No sunday

Call

end $12 p·ec ton Bundled

ANT I QUE S,
FUR ·
NITURE, glass, ch1na,
anything See or ca ll Ruth
Gosney, antiques, 26 N.
2nd, Moddleport, OH 992·
3161.

new or repair gutters

SIDING 00.

wanleel to Buy
62
CHIP WOOD . Poles max

H. L WRITESEL
ROOFING
A (I types of roof work,

BISSEll

Gocx:l

cond S20 992·5118 .

Excels1or Salt Works, Inc., ·
E . Main St, Pomeroy, 992·

Georges . Hobstetter Jr.

-

Household Goods

Gas Tappan range

54

General

NICE

51

pay cash or certif1ed check

PHONE 742-2003

LOTS - Bordering Pomeroy 1 to 75 acre~ .

61

63
Livestock
Eight week old p1gs for
sale $16.00 each . Straw
$1 25 a bale . Ca/1985·4104 .

pay cash or certif1ed check
for ant1ques and collec tibles or entire estates.
Nothing too large. Also,
guns, pocket watches and

2

REALTY

$65,000
TRAILER -

Pomeroy Large lots. Call

992 ·7479 .

Has

HOBSTETTER

Real Estate

Space for Rent

53

Real Estate

EXTRA

Vinyl and Aluminum ·
Siding

II&amp;..-

to Oh10 Pallet Co., Rt. 2,
Furn1shed apartment tor
rent, three rooms and bath
Newly remodeled With
garage
Stove
and
refrigerator. $160.00 man ·
th Deposit required Call
992·2362 after 4 and before
7

$18,500.
FINANCIAL SECURI·
TY - Live here free.

of town . $28,000.
INVEST- In this 6 unit

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

WANT TO SELL?

RENTER 'S assistance for
Sen 1or Citizens in Village
Manor apts Ca\1992·7787. ,

sheets free w1th beds. 992·

and

your renters buy this for
you Has 3 structures
and t lfA acres Outskirts

Items,

3 FAMILY yard sale, June
2 and 3 at Ina Masser
residence
In Tuppers'
Pli!:ins, 3 houses abo\te
dishes,

home, nice built·in kit·
chen with range and
oven on Rt . 7 tn
Pomeroy , Oh

3' AND 4 RM furn1shed ap·
ts. Phone 992 ·5.434.

street lot. Full base-

anothe rpossible.

196S Yanor 12x52, 2 bedr
1968 Fleetwood 12x63, 2
Bdr
B 8. S MOBILE HOME
SALES, PT PLEASANT ,
wv 304 675 4424.

NEW LISTING-1 floor
plan, 3 or 4 bedroom

Apilrtment
for Rent

Economical 3 bedroom
home with street to

FHA or VA easily. Just

1971 Shakespear, 14x65 2

trailer hookup for add• ·
t1onal income.

I

&amp; Ll"estaek

plete . with mattress and
springs $175, 2 ma"ress
covers, 2 bedspreads and

ment

bdr., bath 'h

Sider rent.ng.

~

FIVE Family yard sale

upkeep yard $24,500.
STARTER HOME -

Mobile Homes
for Sale

bedr
1971 Fleetwood,

level lot Will also con·

records, flower pats and

Items

!

: MONEY - MONEY

land . 3 miles below M1d·
dleport off Rl 7. Also

.... ......

44

Services

5122
-.
-~
• • t•IO· o •"o

Only

rooms, equipped kit chen on corner lot A
comfortable home on
the sidewalk with little

:~$$$$:

REAL ESTATE

In

Power .

**~***********

DILLON

Bu~iness

P1cking up a p1ano In vour
area . Lookmg for a respon·
sible party to take over
payments
Call c red i t
manager collect . 61.4··592

baths. natural gas. and

General

I

t
I
I

34.

Real Eslate

NEW LISTING- 3 BR

·- - - - I'

7

IN ·

home on 2'1z acres of

32.
33

household

Family yard, 2 car
garage, dining, family
room, 4 bedrooms, 2

bedroom
Insurance

Bedroom Mobile
Home. Adults only . 992·

Two

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park , Route 33, North of

$35,000.
OVERHAULED 3
bedrooms. bath, 2 utility

1971

One bedroom mobile home
Furnished , all utilittes
paid Caii992·7A79

46

Pnone
1·( 614 )·992·3325
FAMILY HOUSE

!

·:

31 .

11 .
12.
13.
14
15

plants,

"il_'rr. Se~ond

Ohio

1973

Musical
Instruments

57

\'IRGIL B. SR . .~~~

Located m e&gt;c:c res1dential
comm un1ty, spacious, at
tra ctive, ma1ntenance free
home located on lovely
acre lot. Modern kitchen ,
family room,
several
bedrooms, ywo baths,
basement, garage
Low

l2

Mobile Homes
tor Rent

Two bedroom new l y
remodeled house for rent.
Fully carpeted w ith stove,
refrigerator and washer
and dr';er provided Also
has garage. Part1ally fur ·
nished S225 00 per month
dePOSit required Call 992·
2362 after A and before 7

Beautiful large home Low
utilities, brick ranch style,
3 bedrooms, 2'12 baths,
fireplace , full basement,
family room,. a1r con
di tioner, 3 car garage
Baum Addit 1on, Meigs Co.

Real Estate

~·

THREE
Family flea
market Including antique
dishes, clothing, books,

3454 or 992·5455

992 2143

19

24 .

Yard Sale

for hookup 698·6306 after 6

ref!nance*
Monday through Friday ,.and
ll-cases.
Call Com-:
7 45 to 4:45. Call 992 6026
after S.
:plete
Mortgage,.
,.services
in*
Babysitter
wanted .
JtGallipolis,
Ohio
at~
Cheshire area for 3 small
children 2 school age . :446·1517 for more*
Needed some afternoons, *information
andll367·0525.
ll-your appointment • .
*************111'
12
Situations Wanted

can celled?
Lost
your
operator's license? Phone

17
18

3.

7

APPROX 4 acres near
Albany , Cistern, septic ,
electric, telephone, ready

NEW 3 or 4 Bedroom home,
2112 baths, rec room,
fireplace ,
basement.
garage At Morning Star
Hts • lee ConstructiOn, 992·

BabYSitter 1n my home in *First mortgages,lt'
Middleport ;
for two :second mortgages,:
children ages one and tour .

AUTOMOBILE
SURANCE been

• include discount

1

I

Homes for Sale

at

992·5403

These cash rates

~

If interested wnte Box 45,
Syracuse, Oh

utillt1es. 992 7727

-

money

Good pay, easy
·work . No exp. necessary .
Send for free appllcat1on to

13

Lots &amp; Acreage

College St, Syracuse, Oh.

bedroom

23.

1
I
I

35

Former E .U.B . Church
property SO'x100' lot on

M1ller 992-6338.

2.

I

Call992 3640.

P 0. Box 766, Gallipolis,
Oh .

Will do odds •and ends.

I

I
I
I
I

1973 62xl2 two bedroom
mob 11e home 1n good con ·
acre lot •n Harrisonvrlle

985·4169

Help Wanted

•EARN

cel lent shape, all for $5.000.
Call992·5632 .

Iran·

•smissions,
batteries,
engines, or scrap metals,

, - - - --

1970 Cardinal 12x60 mobile
home w1th lots of extras,
underpin ning , porch. Ex-

Bus1ness
Opportunity

31

42

3324

CASH Loan never repay,
free details, A L . Lutton,

No item too large or too
small . Check pnces before

I
I You ' ll get better results
I lf you describe fully,
1 give price The Sentinel
I reserves the nght to
fy , ed1t or reject
I ctass1
any ad Your ad W1tl be
I put 1n the proper
I classification 1f you'll
1 check the proper box
I below.
I
I
) Wanted
I
J For Sale
1
) Announcement
) For Rent
I
I
I
I 1.

I
I

21

dollar, or complete estates.

11

2881 or 992-7633.

fiRjJAEia I

Gold, Stiver or fore1gn
coins or any gold or silver
items Antique furniture ,
glass or ch ina, will pay top

Will give p1ano lessons to
beg inners and advanced
students 1n my home Also
teach chordmg ,and tran·
sposmg if interested, ca ll

Yard Sale in Mason across

Mother cat and five two

;

..

on

June9, 19BO.

good home . 992·7102.

· K. . u . ljrown, Jr.

Betty A. Baronlck

r he Law Off1ce of Douglas
w. L1ttle, Pomeroy, Oh,
will be closed during the

commence

Lost and Found
Small black and tan dog

6

balls, clubs, carts, head

Resolution Is hereby 1f!!l'~~'!l
waived, and further
II
That II shall become ef· uvv
SUP PLY
fectlve immedlatetr, Uf'On
the affirmative vo e of a
ma iorltv vote of Council.
SHRUBS
voting aye thereon:

2, 9, 16, 23, 30 (6) 6, 61C

Announcements

Rd . in Cheshire. One house

now exist and additional
consideration
of
this

William A. Young
Rodney C. Karr

Sentinel .

Garlinger on Little Kyger
P tano

u .oo

~---------,,-----,---~

a~redale.

992·2082

munity Corrections Act of
1979, and further
That an emergency does

Meigs County
Clerk of Court

RESOlUTION
WHEREAS, in July of
1979, ofhe Ohio General
Assembly passed the community Corrections Act,
Am . Sub. H.B. 204, with the

Pi ck ing up an Easy play
organ in
your area
Looking for a responsible
party to take over pay men
ts Call cred1t manager

WHEREAS, il Is In the
of

pr. ces ,

Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, Middleport

Stale to plan the proposal
and seek further subsidy
interests

hl~hest

PAY

poSSible for gold and silver
coins, rings, 1ewe1ry, etc .

stration project in com·
munlty corrections which
will insur~ a grant from the

premises bears south 870 · to eoordinate planning and
east eleven (11) rods and
to develop a proposal for
nine links.
submission to the State of
Reference Deed : Vol.
Ohio in accordanee with
113, Page 21S, Meigs Counprovisions of the Com-

dants and demanding par·

wltr

the above

---.===~·
3:..__
::A:::n:::n"'o-"u"n"ce,m=en:::-le!s= ==
-

Obiluary 4 cents Pfr word,

Mob1te Home sate• and Y;'lrd stlt1 1reaccep1ec1 only wiln usn w•tl'l
order. 25 un1 cnarte for Ids carrylnliJ lin• Number In Can of Tht

J

State Institutions, and
the Village
of WHEREAS,
Pomeroy and
Meigs

best

In m emory, Card of Thank'\ ancl
m1n1mum . Cash in adYence

I

I
·I
I

Rates and Other Information

2den
Jdays

1 Address

I

17- Upholstery

1 dav

results Money not refundable.

I ;·
I
I ~·

IJ-EilUYating

4 P.M Daily

n Noon Saturday

I
1
I.•
I .'
I

1

name and address or
phone number if used.

eMERCHANDISE

,, _ Help wanted

MEET TONIGHT

Public Notice
purpose to develop alter
nat1ves to the comm1tment
of non-violent Offenders to

The Pomeroy Emergency Squad
was called to the coWJty sheriff's
quarters at 8:13 p.m. Thursday ftr
Steve McGrath who was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

washer . Have to see to ap·
prect ate $9,000 Call 992·

2379.

complete
households
Write M. D. Miller, Rl. 4,

old

1969 2 B R 12x60 Hollvpark
Trail er Furnished , a c.

Interior and exterior pain
ting done . Also barn roofs

1ron and brass beds, old
furniture, desks, gold
rings,
j ewelry , silver
dollars. sterling, etc , wood
ice boxes, ant iques, etc .

BUY

for Sale

No lob too small Call 949

Paneling, floor! ti le, and
ceiling t tle
Call Fred

H - Wanltd 10 Rtnt
• 41-Equipmenllor R..-rt

rate

Public Notice

an eye laceration. She was taken to
Holzer Medical Center.

Wanted to Do
W1ll do babysil1 ing , Ca ll
Traci Tucker at 992·5451.

Wanted to Buy

9

~2~--~M
~
~
ob
~l7
1e~H
~
om
__e_s ___

18

949·2487 or 949·2000. racine,
onto, Crill Bradford .

I Print one word m each
I space below Each in ·
1 it1a/ or group of figures
1 counts as a word Count

u-FRooms

eEMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

complete Service, Phone

,WILL

I

Ritnl

•'-Space klr Rent

ll- rnsuranct

Shop The Sentinel Classifieds

«

Write your own ad and order by mail with this
coupon. cancel your ad by phone when you get

1

for Rent

•- Grveawav

12-Siruattd WaniM

Pomeroy; Mrs . Margaret Greene,
Vu-gmia, and Mrs. EUa Dey Peterson, Hames City ; two sons, George
Phillip Stace, Findlay, and Lanny
Ross Stace, St. Cloud, Fla.; two
Slsters-m-Jaw, Mrs . Rose Reynolds,
Middleport, and Mrs. Clara Conroy,
Chester, 20 grandchildren, 39 greatgrandchildren and three greatgreat-grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held at 2
p.m. Saturday at the Gnssom
Funeral Home at Kississilrunee,
Fla ., with bunal m Rose Hill
Cemetery there .

I
I
1
I
II
I

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

eANNOUNCEMENTS

SOUP DINNER
An electwn day soup dinner and
supper will be held from 11 :30 a .m .
to 7 p.m. at the Racme Wesleyan
Church. Bean and vegetable soup,
corn bread, sandwiches, p1e and
salad will be available. Those
1
wishing to carry out should take
their cohlainers.

bill could jeopardize the payment &lt;I
June Social Security benefits, due
next week.
"You know the president of the
United States will veto it with this on
it," O'Neill said.
But opponents argued that the 31~
74 vote suggested such a veto could
be overldden.
The IG-cent-a-gallon fee, which
Carter proposed to curb Imports and
promote conservation, was to take
effect May 15 but was blocked by a
federal judge wbo ruled that · the
president bad overstepped his
authority in imposing It on aU
gasoline instead
just on 011 imports.
•
The administration, which Is appealing that decision, wants
Congress to delay action on the
repeal bill until a ruling is handed
down on the appeal.

Curb Inflation. 1
Pay Cash for
I'
Classlfleds and I
Savell I
1I

1
f

WANT AD INFORMATION

JOINS STAFF
Patricia Lew1s, 70 North Second,
Apt. 7, Middleport, has joined the
staff of the National Executive
Housekeepers Association in
Gallipolis as accountant-bookkeeper. Among her other positions,
she was an employee of Dr. James
P. Conde, Middleport.

MEETS TUESDAY
Sutton Township Trustees .will
meet at 8 p.m. Tuesday in the
Syracuse Municipal Building.

&amp; Auction
BRADFORO, Auctioneer,

Emergency squad .runs
The Middleport Emergency Squad
was caUed to Second Ave. at 5:18
p.m. Thursday for Geneva Spraudlin
who y;as taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospilal. At 6:20 p.m.
Thursday, the squad went to
Vaughan's Cardinal for Laura
Leifheit, Route 3, Pomeroy, who had

Public Sale

8

~----------------------,~

MEETS MONDAY
The Me1gs County Fair Board will
meet at 8 p.m. Monday at the
secretary 's office on the Rock
Sprmgs Fairgrounds .

Women of the Forest Run Umted
Methodist Church will stage an election day dinner at the church beginning at 9 a .m. Tuesday, Soup, sandwiches, desserts and beverages
will be available.

redoubling their efforts to win approval of the bill increasmg the debt
ceiling - minus the gasoline-feerepeal measure - but major dif·
ficulties loomed.
Even if the House separates the
two issues, Sen. Robert Dole, R·
Kan., has Indicated he will try to
rejoiti them in the Senate.
And both chambers have now indicated in test votes their over·
whelming opposition to the gasoline
fee - already blocked from taking
effect by a federal judge.
Ignoring Holllle Speaker .hornas
P. O'NeiU, the House voted 312-74
Thursday to block floor debate on
the debt~iling bill unless the
measure to kill the gasoline fee was
attached toil
O'Neill, who supports the adnunistration's efforts to impose the
politically unpopular fee, complained that delay of the_~ebt~eiling

••

MONEY RECEIVED
State Auditor Thomas E .
Ferguson's office reported a total of
$153,059.44 has been sent to 60 Ohio
counties as reunbursement for costs
incurred under Ohio's public defender program . Meigs County
received $635.73.

Area deaths
Ruth S. Stace

13- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, May 30, 1980

Dispute could hold up SS checks

:Meigs County happenings.
SUNDAY SERVICES
League of Mercy Sunday is being
: held at the Salvation Army, But: ternutAve., Pomeroy, Sunday .
Mrs. Ray Wming w1U be in charge
: of services Sunday at 10 a.m . and
Mrs. Caryl Cook at the 7. 30 p.m . ser. vices.
• At 2 p m. the group WIU hold a service and give out treats at the new
Pomeroy Health Care Center. The
,Rev. Broome of Middleport
:Nazarene Church will be m charge
·ofthe2p.m . services.

'

.

Rubber~g95· •

!l•.c.J!.1!!1.

.

Padding &amp; caroeflastalled Free
Purcnase

�...

~.

~~

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

H- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday. May 30, 1980
~....;:.;;.;.;;_:,:-=-.;..;.;.;;:
"'
~ .
.- - - "'- - - ,. ·
\..

Comlnission races highlight Meigs election
POMEROY - Seven Republicans
and twa Democrats are seeking the
nomination of their respective parties to run for Meigs County Cornmissioner, term ending Jl!ll. 2, 1985.
Meigs Countians wW 'cast their
votes on this race and otlll'ra when

,..

. _......

••

they go to the polls Tuesday.
The seven Republican candidates
for the post, now held by Democrat
Cl1ester E. Wells, include J . Otis
Bailey, Racine; Henry E. Cleland,
Jr., Pomeory; David J. Koblentz,
near Pomeroy; Donald L. Moore,

Route 2, Pomeroy; Kenneth Guy
Rose, Route 1,- Long Bottom; Manning K. Roush, Minersville, and
Elden C. Walburn, Middleport. The
two Democrat candidates for the
post are Wells, the incumbent, and
Oscar Weber, Long Bottom.

There are only two candidates for
the second county corrunissioner
pest to be filled this year, term expiring Jan. 3, 1985. They are Richard
E. Jones, Pomeroy, the incumbent,
and Don R. Hill, Racine, both
RepublicallS .

.

Where It Is Inside

It's summertime
.

!

·.. ·.

Meigs County also has two candidates, both Republicans, running
for the nomination of clerk of
courts. They are Larry E. Spencer,
Racine, incumbent, and Robert G.
Pickett, Pomeroy. There are no
&lt;Continued on page A·Jl

•

t

:~,.,

The county has two Republican
candidates for nomination to run for
county sheriff and they are J . J.
CremeallS, Middl~port, and John C.
Welsh; Dexter. Tbe winner will oppose Democrat incumbent, James J.
Proffitt, Pomeroy, in the fall.

\'

again ...

'--"'""'

SCHOLARSHIP RECIPIENTS - Pictured above are the winners of various scholarships present during
Senior Awards Nig_ht at Wahama Wednesday. They are, from the left, Karen Brown, the National Honor Society
scholarship ; Alice Roush, the Mason Mother's Club scholarship; Terry Angel, the Waham~ Alumm Assocwt10n
scholarship; and Stephanie Estes, the New Haven Woman's Club scholarship. The scholarship wumers are among
84 students who will graduate from WHS during commencement exercises Wednesday , June 4, at 7:30 p.m.

Area deaths • •• • • • . . • • . • . . • • . . . . • • • • • • • • • . • • • • A-41
Classified ads • . . • . . . . . . . . • . • . . • . . • • . • . . . . . . . D-2-7
Editorial ....................... .. ........... , • A-2

B-1

Farm oe-ws . o • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
E-2-5
Lifestyle .............••.•.••....•.......•.. B-1-8
Local .......• o • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • A-3-8
State-National ..•............................. J&gt;.l
~rts ............ ....•.
C.l-8
guide . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • • . . . Insert
0

AWARD w;NNERS - Paul Maynard, left, past commander of the American Legion Smith·Capehart Post 1&lt;W,
New Haven, presented several awards during Wednesday's Senior Award~ Night at Wahama High SchooL Ptctured
above from the left are Maynard' Terry Angel and Terri Johnson , wmners of the Amencan Legton God and
Count~y Awards: K~ren Brown, wktner of the DAR Good Citizenship Award ;. Jill Taylor and Jeff Bumgardner,
Danforth Award winners: and Annette Campbell, winners of the Chnsttan L1vmg Award.

0 ••••• · •

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

.state tourney . . . C-1

0 ••••••••••••

•

ttntS

House rejects budget
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Mter rejection of the budget, Sen. terence would likely end up cutting
House, sending contradictory Ernest F. Hollings, D-S.C., Senate defense.
signals on higher military spending, Budget Committee chairman,
However, Rep. Jack Kemp, Rhas rejected a $613.3 billiol), defense- blamed Carter for its defeat and said N.Y., opposed the budget, saying it
oriented 1981 budget while ~ ndorsing a revised compromise could "short- was "going back to Herbert Hoover"
a record peacetime increase for the change our critical defense needs. "
by trying to balance the federal
Pentagon .
The House vote on the budget budget by relying on increased lax
The House action Thursday night sharply divided the Democratic
revenue in the face of an econorruc
downturn. Kemp said lax cuts were
instructs House-Senate negotiators leadership, with O'Neill and Carter
to prepare a second budget com· at odds with nearly every other top
needed.
promise, but tells them to keep the House Democrat, including
The compromise budget was
Majority Leader Jim Wright, [).
controversial defense figure that
reached last week by a HousePresident Carter and House Speaker Texas, and Giaimo.
Senate conference that Jargely acThomas P. O'Neill Jr. opposed.
A total of 146 Democrats and 96
cepted the Senate's demand for
"I've got two mandates and one Republicans joined with O'Neill and
sharply higher military spending
headache," complained Rep. Robert Carter in opposing the budget, while
and cuts in domestic programs.
N. Giaimo, [).Conn. , House Budget 'i17 Democrats and 44 Republicans
" We cut (domestic) programs
favored it.
Committee chairman, as he
without sense " said Rep. Richard
prepared to take the proposed balanThe issue of higher defense spen- ' A. Gephardt.' 0-Mo., one of five
ced budget back to conference with ding also sparked a rare public
liberal-t&lt;&gt;-moderate Democrats who
opposed the compromise in · conthe Senate next week .
disagreement between Carter and
Earlier Thursday, Carter and the Joint Chiefs of Staff, who told
ference.
O'Neill
appeared
to
have
prevailed
Congress
they
needed
more
defense
BAlFOUR WINNERS _ Valed'ictorian Lisa Hill and Honor Student Rick Barnitz were named the 1980 B a lfo~r
in their opposition to the budget's
money, not less, than was included
Award winners during Senior Awards Night held Wednesday at Wahama High School. Pictured above, from the le t,
$153.7
billion
defense
figure
as
the
HOSPITAL :\EWS
in the compromise.
are WHS Principal William McWhorter, Miss Htll, Barmtz and Ass1stant Prmctpal Ron Vance.
compromise spending plan was
The Democratic split left the fate
voted down, 242·141.
VETERANS~ORL\L
of the first proposed balanced
But as the night wore on and many
Admitted-William
Reitmire, Jr.,
budget in 12 years largely in the han•
Democrats headed for home,
Pomeroy;
Robert
Fetty,
Langsville;
ds of Republicans. But GOP memRepublicans succeeded in forcing
Dessie
Kuhn,
Cheshire;
Graham ·
bers remained deeply divided over
approval of instructions to the
Goff,
Pomeroy;
Glena
Soulsby,
whether to support the spending
negotiators to stick by the $153.7 plan.
Syracuse; Geneva Spraudlin, MidGideon's Auxiliary presented white
The presentation of the prestigious
am very proud to honor such an
biilion
defense
amount
for
fiscal
dleport.
House Minority Leader John J.
Testaments to nurses aid students
Balfour Award to Lisa Hill and Rick
outstandin g individual who has
1981,
which
starts
Oct.
1.
Discharged--Carolyn Gilmore,
Rhodes,
R-Arlz.,
said
he
was
voting
Forbes.
Leah
Edie
Shephard,
Kim
excelled in academics as well as
Barnitz highlighted the an'nual
The
non-binding
instructions
were
Boyles, Betty Ross, George
Sarah
"reluctantly"
for
the
budget
Hoffman
,
Melinda
J.ieving.
Regina
athletics."
Senior Awards Night at Wahama
on
~oice
vote
after
the
approved
Sr., Gerald McDaniel Ill.
Folmer,
because
a
new
House-Senate
conRe
lma
Gibbs.
Todd
Keebler.
High School Wednesday.
WHS
Other top students recognized
Democratic
leadership
failed
,
16!&gt;Goodnite
and
Judy
Hall.
principal William McWhorter, in
· were Salutatorian Karen Brown and
123, to table - or kill - the GOP
Also receiving recognition were
honorarians Teresa Ayers and Terri
presenting the Balfour keys to Miss
motion
and then lost, 14frl41, on an
band members Karen Brown and
·Hill. the 1980 valedictorian. and
Johns~?
1 effort to adjourn the House before a
Terri Johnson. prior recipients of
Barnitz, a senior honor student, said
Jtll I aylor and Jeff Bumgardner
final vote.
the Ar ia n Award; and sen io r were nam ed Danforth Award
the two were chosen for their
The Republican instructions
members of the National Honor winners and, in recognition of this
scholastic ability, participation in
denied
Carter and O'Neill a clearSociety. Ce rtificates of appreciation awarded promoting leadership,
school activities. citizenship and for
cut
victory
in the defeat of the
from Lakin Hospital and Rhonda
their relationship with the students
were presented with the "I Dare
budget
package
they opposed
Nicewonder. Mason County Special
and fa culty members at Wahama
You'' book. Scholarship winners
of
its
proposed
cuts in
because
Educati on Coo rdinator, we re included Stephanie Estes, the New
throughou t their high sc hool
domestic
spending
to
pay
for
higher
FASHION WEAR
presented to Rick Ba mitz. president Haven Woman's Club scholarship;
careers.
defense.
of the National Honor Society , in Karen Brown, the National Honor
McWhorter also honored the
The instructions, proposed by
recog niti on of th e society' s Society scholarship; Alice Roush,
entire Class of 1980 by saying, "We
Rep
. Delbert Latta, R.Qhio, also
assistance with various programs at Mason Mother's Qub scholarship;
appreciate each and every member
should
strengthen the hand of Senate
!.akin and with the recent Mason and Barbara Gordon and Terry
of this year's graduating class for
negotiators who have vowed to fight
Co unty Spec ial O l~m pics.
what they've given to Wahafj;\a High
Angel, the Wahama Alumni
to
keep the $153.7 billion defense
Eighty-four
seniors
will
receive
Association scholarships.
School while they've been here and
figure, which is $3.2 billion mo're
we wish them the brightest future their diplomas in commencement
than Carter requested.
exercises at Wahama on Wedpossible."
Columbus,
and
Mrs.
Kay
Gilkenson,
Giaimo said rejection of the
nesday. June 4. at 7:30 p.m.
He further commended the seniors
Mrs. Emily Wood and Dreama Kay,
budget raised doubt about the future
by ,;ail when you buy any 2 Comfort Colors ••
by commenting on their sterling
East Uverpool, were Memorial Day
of the t&gt;-year-old congressional
·
. He'll like Hanes new fashion shades.
behavior on the recent senior trip to
weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs. Bob budget process and its attempt to
and
so
will you
Cincinnati. Interjecting a "com·
Hoeflich and Jayne, Pomeroy.
bring
federal
spending
under
conHurry' Oll er lasts only un tt l Ju ne 14, 1980
mercial" of sorts, McWhorter said,
BEND AREA PERSONALS
Ltm it: One tree garment per household
Mr. and Mrs. David Eskey, Kandi
trol.
"I'd like to sell a product of great
Mr. and Mrs. Rollin Wolfe, Colum·
and Amy, Newark , visited over
" If the liberals are upset with the
quality. If you'd like to buy such a
bus, have spent the past several
Memorial Day weekend with their
budget for one reason and the conproduct, buy the senior class of
days here visiting thei r son-in-law
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harvey servatives for another, then God
Wahama High School."
and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. DonEr·
Erlewine, Rutland, and Mr. and
help the American people," he
Miss Hill also received the Robert
win and fami ly, Middleport, and
Mrs. Charles Eskew, Pomeroy.
declared .
C. Byrd Award , a medal, savings
other relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Boles, Cinbond and certificate presented
Guests of Mrs. Clarice Erwin,
cinnati, left Thursday after visiting
annually to high school valedic·
Middleport, over the holiday
Mrs. Amanda Murray, Middleport.
torians throughout West Virginia.
weekend were Mr. and Mrs. Dwight
They came especially to visit his
and was recognized for her high
Brown, St. Albans, W.Va.
sister, Mrs. Cynthia Gohring, a
school achievements by the
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Hammer, Mrs.
pa tient at Veterans Memorial
Daughters of the American · Kimberly Martin and son, Stevie,
i'lpspital.
BARGAIN MATINEES ON SAT &amp; SUN
Revolution and the Am erican r------'----------- - - - - - - -- - - 1
ALL SEATS JUST $1.50
Association of University Women.
Barnitz, in addition to being
531 JACKSON PIKE ·Rt .35 NORTH - PI1one 446· 4524
named a Balfour winner, was the
recipient of the Chemistry I Award
and was awarded a certificate in
recognition of being nominated to
the McDonald's All-American
Basketball Team . Gary F en·
derbosch, manager of the Gallipolis
McDonald's, said, " This award is
presented to Rick, not only for his
accomplishments this year but in
recognition of his entire basketball
career at Wahama High School. r
Karen Brown and Brett Grinstead
received · medals and pins as the
OAR Good Citizenship award
winners ; Terri Johnson and Terry
Angel received the American Legion
God and Country medals; Karen
Brown, the American Association of •
ROf SCI-fUR
University Women's award; and
7:00 &amp; 9:30P.M.
Annette Campbell, the Christian
&amp; 3:
Uvlng Award, a $25 prize.
Scholastic award winners were
jeff Bumgardner , .the drafting
award and the chemistry II award ;
J
•RABBITS •SCIRROCCOS •DASHERS
Mellnda Lieving, the home
. •PICKUPS •VANAGONS
economics
award ;
Debbie
McKnight, typing I, and Nellie
ONE DIESEL AVAilABLE NOW!
Esque, typing II; Terri Johnson, the
business award: and Teresa Ayers,
the accounting a ward.
Upper River Road
_
Gallipolis, Ohio
Mrs. Orville Strow, on behalf of
446 9800
the Point Pleasant Camp of the

Barnitz, Hill WHS Balfour

•

.Meigs girls ousted from

VOL 15

NO. 18

GALLIPOLIS- POINT PLEASANT

SUNDAY, JUNE 1, 1980

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY

35 CENTS

Gallians to vote on
2 ·tax levies Tuesday
GALUPOUS- Gallians will vote ·
on two tax levies and narrow the
current field ri 32 candidates
seeking county offices during
Tuesday's primary election.
Six candidates are seeking the
January 2 term of the Gallia County
Board of Commissioners.
Republicans seeking nomination are
incumbent James C. Saunders,
James w. Saunders, Melvin R.
Halley, and Glenn L. Thompson.
Tonuny Lee Stewart will run unopposed for the Democratic
nomination to that term. Evelyn G.
Morrow seeks election as an independent candidate.
Eight candidates are seeking the
January 3 tenn of the county commission. Republican hopefuls are incumbent Paul D. Niday, Ralph G.

WIDD ers

Brown, John L. Belville, and J .
Robert Evans. Donald R. Wright,
Stuart Hy\len (Coronel), and C.
Robert Shaw are running for the
Democratic nomination to that
term. Warren D. Woodyard seeks
election as an independent.
Incll!llbent Democratic Sheriff
James M. Montgomery will face opposition from within his own party
from Jimmy Lee HaUield and
Wayne Russell. Republicans seeking
nomination to that post are D. Ray
Roberts, Daniel Lee (Tuck) Carter,
John Heiskel, ·and Derry D. Hemphill. James E. Baldwin seeks election as an independent.
Vying to unseat incumbent
Democratic Gallia County
Prosecutor Joseph L. Cain are
Republicans David D. Evans and

Hamlin King, who wlll face-off at
Tuesday's primary election.
Democratic candidate for the ·
judgeship of Common Pleas Court
Richard C. Roderick will face no intra-party opposition on Tuesday.
The Republican Party fielded no
candidate for the post. Incumbent
Judge Ronald R. Calhoun is seeking
his third term to the Gallia County
bench as an independent.
Five incumbent Republican office
holders will face no opposition from
either within their own party or from
the . Democratic Party. Running
unopposed are Clerk of Courts
Louise Burger, Recorder Evalee
Myers, Treasurer Frank H. Mills ·
Jr. , Engineer James P. Baird and
Coroner Dr. Donald R. Warehime.
(Co nti nued on cage A ·J)

ELBERFELD$

I

'

~

I

~
,.

~·

Wi

'- ' TWENTY.ONE members of the Holzer Medical
Center School of Nurstng wW graduate on Friday, JWJe
6. They are, first row, left to right - &amp;icky Sallaz,
Point Pleasant; Becky James, Sciotovllle; Jan Elick,
LancaSter; Krista! Hash, Bidwell; Krista Smith, Point
Pleasant; Beth Taylor, Circleville, and Mary Batt,
Vinton. Second row - Carla Graves, Chillicothe;

COLORS.

\

Kathy Dukas, Belpre; Thomasina Gates, Kyeser; Betty Spray, ScJotoville; Sally Ehret, Richwood; Penny
Daugherty, Belpre, and Cheryl Huber, Mason. Third
row - Grace Bumhelmer, Minford; Paula Hughes,
Ironton; Trlsh Terzy, Jackson; Charissa ParsollS,
Westerville; Cheryl Carey, Ironton; Beth Mooney,
Gallipolis, and Connie Lyon, Portsmouth.

Holze._. School of Nursing
to graduate 21 on June 6
GALLIPOLIS - Twenty-one
young women will graduate from the
Holzer Medical Center School of
Nursing on Friday, June 6.
Ceremonies for the 57th
graduating clats will begin 8 p.m. in
Faith Baptist Church, Rodney.
Graduation activities commence
Tuesday, June 3, when 11 members
of the senior class will participate in
the annual spring concert, presented
by the school's glee club, beginning
at 8 p.m. in the Main Lounge of
Davis Hall, 514 First Ave. in downtown Gallipolis.
The concert will feature contemporary music, including a number of popular and show tunes. Jay
Batt and Sally Ehret will present a
duet and Connie Lyon a solo.
Another highlight of the one hour
program will be a sing-along. Anne

orT·SHIRT

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

MAY 30.31. JUNE 1.2.3.4.5

VACATION BEGINS - With the dl.smissa1 of
Southern Local Schoola Friday many youngsters

headed for London Pool in Syracuse in Meigs county to
get their vacation time off to a good start.

Social Security gets temporary reprieve
WASHINGTON . (AP) _ While
banks are ready to honor benefit .
checks for 35 million Social Security
recipients,. Presldent earte·r •s .10..
cent gas fee appears headed f or can-

gaUonfeenextWednesday.
That was price paid by lfouse and
Senate leaders to obtain !13ssage of
an emerge·ncy five-day e:ite
. nsion of
the federal debt ceiling. Failure to
pass the extellSion · by midnight
cellation.
popula 1
tont'ght could have hung up Social
Opponenls of the un
r evy
wrung a comm Itmen t from . Security and Othe r government
con-•O!IIIIleaders FridaY f or a benefit Checks.
"' ~
the ~·-~·
Those on both sides of the issue
showdown floor vote on
..... ~-

WE GOT 'EM
FINALLY!

Weather forecast

1980 VOLK'SWAGENS

Partly cl011dy wann and hwnld Sunday with a chance of shOwers or thunderstonns by late afternoon. Highs mid to upper Ms. Warm and hwnid with
IIC8ttered shoWers or thunderwtorms Sunday nig~t ahd Monday. Lows Sun·
day night
70 and highs Monday In the low 90s.
EsteDdecl Oblo Forecait
M-.y tllroql! w•Mity: Scattered altowen and thunderstorms
tiJnlu&amp;bout tile alate MOiiday and mUdyln tile east and louOI Tueoday and
Wednr'ay. ~ ft- tile • Moaday to the mid 70s to mid 80s Tuesday
IIIII Wed-day. !Awl Ina
Manday and Tuer'lly to
SO. to low 80s

near

RIVERSIDE VOLKSWAGEN

I

W,..,nec,y.

' ·,

lile,..

qte

I

"

now agree that once put to a vote,
the gasoline levy - already blocked
by a federal judge - will be permanently shot ham
down by wide
marginsHin bothsc k bers.
Tho .
P·
And ouse pea er
mas .
O'Neill, who supports the fee and
bl k fl
te
·t
had tried to oc tha
a oor vo on ls1 ,
conceded Friday
t opponents
ha
h
te a to
seem to
ve enoug vo s o
override the veto Carter has
threatened.
Treasury Department officials
said. the stopgap legislation was
needed to h• vr enough cash to pay
all of the ,9.5 billion in Social
Security benefits that come due
June3.
Failure of Congress to. raise the
debt ceiling, ·officials said, could
have meant that some of thooe
checks .~ already in the mail would not have bceil honored by
banks. Other federal benefitll and
(Continued on page A 3)

Fischer is the director of the glee
club. Joe Gulley is the accompanist.
Following the concert, a reception
will be held for family members,
friends, and the general public.
Seniors participating in their final
concert wlll be Katherine Dukas,
Sally Jo Ehret, Jan Ellen Elick,
Carla Jane Graves, Krista! Dawn
Hash, Cheryl Annette Huber, Paula
Sue Hughes, Becky Jane James,
Constance Elaine Lyon, Charissa
Lynn Parsons and Patricia Dawn
Terry.
Thursday, at 8:30a.m. will be the
aruiual senior graduation breakfast,
tobebeld in the hospital's cafeteria .
The climax comes on Friday
evening with graduation exercises
at Faith Baptist Church. Mter the
invocation by Rev. Arthur Lund,
Director of Chaplaincy Services at

the hospital, Hugh P. Kirkel,
President of the Holzer Medical Center, will welcome the families and
friends of the graduates. He will also
introduce the featured speaker,
Thomas W. Morgan, M.D., chairman of the department of surgery of
the hospital. His topic will be "A
Changing Profession in Changing
TUnes.''
Dr. Morgan joined the staff of the
Holzer Medical Center as an attending surgeon in 1952, and became
the Chainnan of the Department of
Surgery at the hospital in 1968, the
post he continues to hold. Agraduate
of Washington and Jefferson
College, he holds his medical degree
from Harvard Medical School and
completed his surgery specialty
training at Ohio State University. He
(Continued on page A·JI

James R. Williams
named to bank post
GALLIPOUS - Russell L. Reid,
Chairm8n and President of The Central Trust Company, Marietta, announced Saturday James R.
Williams, Vice President and Comptroller, has accepted the position as
president of The Central Trust Company, Sou\hern Ohio Division, at
Gallipolis and Middleport.
The promotion is with an affiliate
bank of The Central Bancorporation,
Inc. and a move within the holding
company.
Williams joined The Central Trust
Company 26 years ago ~nd started
his employment in the bookkeeping
department. He has worked in
various departments throughout the
bank and held a number of positions.
In January; 1~, he was appointed
manager of Personal Loan ,Department, January, 1966, Manager, Installment Loan Dept., February,
1968, he was elected Caahier,
January, 1973, Vice President and
Cashier, and December, 1978, Vice
President and Comp\foller.
Williams is a graduate 'f

Cleveland West High School,
American IIIStitute of Banking, Ohio
School of Banking, Ohio School of Installment Credit and attended
Marietta College.
He is a member of the Marietta
Noon Uons Club of which he Is a past
president, a director of the Ohio
Valley Chapter of American Institute of Banking, member of
Mariela Riverfront Improvement
Corp., Washington County 648 Board
·- Mental Health Service,
Washington County Chairman,
United States Savings Bond
Program, Marietta Chamber ol
Commerce of which he is a past
director lind treasurer, past director
ri Grea~ Mal&lt;ieUa United Appeal,
put president ol Washington County

ArthriUs FoUndation, \faahlngton
County Heart AMoclatlon and
Marietta Convnunity FOWidati01,.
He and hill wife, the former Jennie
A. Theis, reside at 211 Wooster
Street, Marietta. They have one son,
Michael D. Wiiliama, who' is married
to th~ former M~ry Sl~n.

II

~

..

MEIGIJOB~CWDEU

POMEROY- Walter Smith, ~
the Ohio Department ~ ,..._
portatlQn, Marietta, 8llllOIIIICed
Friday that Iuue 'lbrae, relll'llfnc
highway repair and ~
incltldel repair to SR JJt betwliWI
Racine lllld ~'at I COlt : ~

.-,ooo.

..

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