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~age-:2
'

Pomeroy

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, February 19,1981

'

Middleport, Ohio

(Continuec) from page! )
serious about cutbacks" he could
save billions of dollars by cutting
pork barrel projects being pushed by
some congressmen .
.Seiberling said the president
"probably will not get as great a personal income tax cut as he sought."
The Akron Democrat would liketo
see tax cuts targeted to help indpstry in the older urbancenters of·
the Midwest and Northeast.
Rep . Delbert !,alta, R-Ohio,
ranking Republican on the Budget

· HOSPITAL :\E" S
VETERANS MEMORIAL ,
'Admitted-Joyce Riffle, Racine ;
Reannie Wells, Long Bottom ; Minnie Clark, Middleport; Leona Ba bcock, Tuppers Plains; Doris Hayes,
Pomeroy.
·
Discharged-Amanda Jewell, Sandra Bennett, Della Cleland, Charles
Beller, Jeffrey Gilland.

Corrunittee, said he will cosponsor
the Reagan program even though
some parts of it are not entirely to
his liking.
If it was his program, " there are
some things we would leave in, some
we would leave out," said Latta. But
despite that he called the Reagan
program ·'the best thing that's come
down the pike."
Latta said if Republicans can't get
the program approved in the Budget
Corrunittee, . "we'll do it on the
floor. 11
•
He said if the corrunittee, which is
controlled by Democrats, makes
drastic changes, the Republicans·
may take the version that comes
through the Senate and try to sul&gt;stitute it for the House version.
Glenn was critical of cutbacks in
research and development for
energy.

Meigs emergency runs
Several emergency calls were answered by local units Wednesday,
the Meigs Emergency Medical Services reports.
·
The Pomeroy Unit at II :06 p.m.
took Charles Paine. New St.. to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
The Middleport Unit at II :09 a.m.
took Paul Baker from the office of
Dr. James Conde to Holzer Medical
Center and at 4:29p.m. took Minnie
Clark from North Fourth Ave., to
Veterans Memorial Hospital. The
Rutland Unit al 5:411 p.m., took Danny Neal from Meigs Mine 2 to Holzer
Medical Center. The Tuppers Plains
Unit at 3 :38 p.m. took Mrs. Pam
Miller, White Hill RD&lt;jd, to Pleasant
Valley HospitaL

. HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGES FEB. 18
George Bush Jr., Gladys Casto,
Nora Craycraft, Mrs. Gerald Dean
ahd daughter, Mina Eubanks,
Thomas Fields, Shelly Fortune,
Jessica Gartin , Milton Gary ,
Virginia Gillum, Millard Harrunond ,
Doris Harder, Elmer Henson,
!jester Hulshorst, David Jenkins ,
Mrs. Jack Jenkins and da.ughter,
T.im Jones, Charles Mays Jr., Janet
Miller, Elizabeth Moses , Paul
Mullins Jr.. Katherine Northup,
Ronnie Nutter, Delores Painter,
Stacy Roach, Stephen Roberts, Tina
Saber, Brad Sang, Terry Swisher II ,
Robert Wallace, Susan Weisend.
CASSAM HINDY DIES
Mildred Williams, Doris Woodward
Gassam
(Gass ) Hindy, a residenBIRTHS
tial
and
commercial
electrldan in
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Henderson,
Meigs
County
for
many
years, died
~n. Jackson ; Mr. and Mrs. Brian
Thursday
morning
at
his
home in
Potts, daughter, Oak Hill ; Mr. and
Middleport.
Mrs. Robert Pugh, son, Wellston.

Judge
O'Brien·ends 18 court cases
,_
Fourteen defendants were fined
and four others forfeited bonds in
Meigs County Court Wednesday.
Fined by Judge Patrick O'Brien
were Dallas Weber, Middleport, $21
and costs, speed; Richard Curtis, El
cason, Calif. , $20 and costs, speed;
Robert Tom, Archbold, Ohio, $23 and
costs, speed; Terrence Conlin,
Rutland, $10 and costs, improper
backing; Mervin Smith, Pomeroy
ands John W. Davis, Jr., Pomeroy,
$22 and costs each, speed; Ramona
Compton, Pomeroy, $24 and · costs,
speed; Candace Brothers, Pomeroy,
$10 and costs, failed to yield right of
way; Brett Jones, Pomeroy, $10 and
costs, defective exhaust; Michael
Sanders, Rt. I, Reedsville, $10 and

costs, excessive speed; Michael
Smith, Pomeroy, $20 and costs, left
of center ; Junior E. Johnson,
Gallipolis, $10 and costs, stop sign;
Larry I(. France, Huntington, $200
and costs, three days confinement,
license suspended 30 days, DWI ;
Dayle Brooks, Tuppers Plains, $25
and costs, five days confinement
suspended, six months probation,
restitution, disturbing legally set
trap of another.
Forfeiting bonds were Jordan E.
Davis, Jax, Fla., $40.50, speeding ;
Richard A. Pitrulo, Morgantown,
$33.50, speed; Brian L. Kelly,
Chesapeake, $37.50, speed ; Randy
Shamblin, Rt. 2, Pomeroy, $360.50,
DWI.

•I

H

The Meigs County Tuberculosis
Office staff will be conducting a
corrununity skin testing clinic at the
Syracuse Municipal Building in
Syracuse from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m.
Monday.
All persons who receive the test on
Monday evening must return on
Wednesday evening during the same
hours to have the results read.
Joan Tewksbary, R.N., tuber-

.....

depends upon
:. 1
you. Start saving

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

· for family .
IVT

.. SECURITY NOWI

SIX MONTH MONEY MARKET

15.01%

Skin testing program slated

Substantial penalty required for early withdrawal.

culosis nurse, will be giving the skin
tests and urges all residents including food handlers, boosters,
firemen , EMS personnel and church
groups to U.ke advantage of this free
service.

Each person should have a tuber·
culin skin test as a routine
examination at least every three or

3RD ST., RACINE, OH .
Member FDIC

four years.

CHILDREN'S
JEANS

MEN'S BWE PENIM

FASHION
JEANS

For
and
need,
jeans

BY KATIE CROW
"Another federal and state
bureaucracy dictating from
Washington and Columbus what we
have to do, the same people who
have bankrupted the federal and
state government, are pushing the
li8Jlle thing on local governments,"
that's how Meigs County, Commissioner Richard Jones described
the new jail standards during a
special meeting Thursday.
Jones' statement results from a
meeting with Jill D. Kirk, state jail
inspector of the Bureau of Adult
Detention Facilities and Services.
"How is it, the rights of others,
especially taxpayers, don't count?
I'm not interestecl in creating a
"holiday atmosphere for ·
criminals,'' Jones said.
Jones' statements resulted from
the present staffing situation for tl]e
jail which has been deemed unacceptable particularly during the
second and third shifts according to
Kirk.
In a letter directed earlier to
Sheriff James J. Proffitt it was
stated that as of Jan. 1, 1980, ail jails
housing prisoners in excess of 72
hours were required to have fulltime
jail staff. It also stressed that it
takes approximately 4.8 jailers to
cover one post seven days a week, 24.
hours a day.
Kirk set Improperly supervised
prisoners place all officials charged
·with statutory responsibility in a
position of potentlalllablllty not only

as a cotinty official, but also personally for failing to take corrective
action.
Kirk emphasized courts have been
consistent in requiring adequate and
reasonable supervision of jrunates .
Measures must be taken immediately to hire and train jailers
for all three shifts to provide the
supervision required in standards
3.02 and 17.07 Kirk said.
Kirk said in the interim, road
deputies must be 'used to conduct .
hourly in-person surveillance checks
of prisoners. She suggested another
alternative to fulltirne jail staff
would be to reduce the maximum
length of detention in the Meigs
County Jail to 72 hours until such
time that a fulltirne jail staff may be
hired. She insisted that the in-person
surveillance checks must be con·
ducted no less than once every 60
minutes.
Jones poi~ted out, and Kirk concurred, that the sheriff is responsible for the operation of the jail
facility. The sheriff's department
was allocated a budget totaling
$179,071. Jones said the sheriff must
operate his department within the
allocated budget.
Howard Frank, county auditor,
said the budget appropriatecl for the
sheriff's department was approved
by the budget corrunission. No additional money is available or will be
available, Frank stressed.
Jones indicated the problem concerning additional staff at the jail

$17 .95 Fashion Je~ns
S19.9SFashionJeans
S21.U Fashion Jeans
U4.9S Fashion Jeans

..
'

\

,,

I '

./

Reg. $11.00

SALE '9.39

Stretch and pre-washed
denim jeans in boot flares
or straight leg styles.
Levi and Wrangler Quality.

S13.09
S14.S9
S1S .99
S18 . 19

SALE '12.79

BOYS' DENIM

Reg. $19.00

SALE 115.19

JEANS

Reg. $21.00

SALE '16.79

w ra ngler lA"2 ounce pre
w as hed bfue deni m . Stu
dent sizes 26 to JO

School employes face layoffs

Reg u lar , .slim and husky
si zes 9 to 18. Stock up now .

BOYS $11.95
JEANS .. ....
BOYS S12 .95
JEANS ... . ..
BOYS $13.95
JEANS . . . . ..
BOYS$14.95
JEANS .. ....

'16"
MEN'S AND
YOUNG MEN'S

CARPENTER'S
JEANS
11.95
114.95
115.95
119-95

CARPENTERS
CARPENTERS
CARPENTERS
CARPENTERS

JEANS . ... '9.55
JEANS ....111.85
JEANS.... 'l2.75
JEANS ....115.95

FUu.ERCUT

BASIC DENIM JEANS
Made by Wrangler. Sizes 32 to 50 waist.
Lengths 30 to. 36. No Fault blue denim · pre·
washed, cut a little fuller for extra comfort
and fit.
Men's $20.95 Fuller Cut Jeans . ... . . ... $16.77
· Men's $21.95 Fuller Cut Jeans .. . ...... $17'.77

$10.99
$11.89
$12.69

Youngstown teachers on strike

22.95
MEN'S DENIM

JEANS

Jf~nning Ohio

Long Time Friend,
Wrangler and Levi
brands assure quality .
Flares and straight leg
styles in stretch denim
or pre-washed denim .

REG. $20.00
REG. $24.00
REG. $28.00
REG. $30.00

•

•

•

•

•

0

SALE $15.99
SALE $19.19
SALE $22.39
SALE $23.99

L ee R i d er str ai ght legs.

100°o

c otton

pre

was hed . SiZell 27 to 36
wRiS t .

MEN'S 118.95

STRETCH
DENIM
JEANS
Sizes
to 42 waist · lengths 30 to 36. Pre·

29
washed blue denim, 78% cotton, 12% nylon.
Comfortable to wear. Sale Price

•

Judge Bacon added "It only takef
secon!ls to corrunit suicide."
Inspector Kirk suggested commissioners take some kind of step
toward checking prisoners, adding
that she did not intend to get named
in a law suit.
Frederick Crow, III, prosecuting
attorney, said suicides occur during
the first few hours of incarceration.
He also said the main interest was
supervision, and added, the sheriff
was available to docwnent 60 minute ·
checks.
Kirk kept insisting the sheriff's
department had a dispatcher on
duty and an officer on the road. It .
was pointed out that Sheriff Proffitt
has nine to 10 officers. However,
Sheriff Proffitt stated he has only
eight officers.
Kirk insisted commissioners
make plans to implement tbe
program for additional jailers im·
mediately slating she has mailed to
the sheriff and the commissioners
compliance forms and work plans.
It was suggested that a second
meeting be held after the additional
plans are received.
" No one wants to violate the law,
however, we must discuss civil
rights and human rights. We want to
help the sheriff, but I think the
situation is the sheriff's responsibility. It is unfortunate that 'we
can't give the sheriff a half million.
dollars a year," Jones said.
Kirk indicated if corrunissioners
(Continued on page 12) '

INSPECTS JAIL- JDI D. Kirk, slate jaU lospedor of tbe Bureau of
Adult Detention Facilities and Services beld jaU lospeclioos at Meigs and
GaUia Cuuolies Thlll'liday. Mrs. Kirk told Meigs Co110ty Commissioners
they must comply with the new jail rules or someone was going to end up
in court.

· Meeting in special session Thursday night, the Meigs Local School
District Board of Education passed
two resolutions preparatory to
placing a bond issue before voters at
the June 2 primary elections.
The resolutions prepared by Peck,
Shaffer and Willia1ns, a Cincinnati
bonding finn, in essence express the
board's willingness to proceed with
the bond issue and direct the

treasurer, Jane Wagner, to appl~ to
the State Department of EducatiOn
for pennission to issue one millions
dollars worth ol bonds.
The resolutions are a part of board
actions necessary to placeR two and
one-half mill bond iss••" before
voters in June. No increase in taxes
is involved.
The two and one-half mills will be
taken from four mills of taxation

now in effect. The two and one-half
mills represent a part of the four
rnills now being sent to the state, but
which can be kept locally if approved by the Ohio Department of
Education and voters .of the district.
The bond issue will be for a nine year
period and would generate one
rnillion dollars for the district
without additional taxes.
The board also employed Nancy

Radosevic, Athens, to serve as an
EMR teacher at the Rutland
Elementary School for the remainder of the year. She replaces a
teacher fatality in an auto accident
in December.
The board moved into executive
session to begin outlining
procedures to be followed in
evaluating Supt. David L. Gleason.

Additional cuts necessary if .Reagan
balances U.S. budget by 1984 goal .
WASHINGTON (AP ) - Capitol
·
Hill critics of President Reagan' s
economic proposals are questioning
whether the administration can
really balance ·the budget by 1984
without new spending reductions
that would cut the s&lt;H:alled ·•safety
net" from beneath the poor
Treasury Secretary Don~ld Regan
adrnitted Thursday that the dil.em108 of identifying some $31 billion in
cuts beyond those proposed Wednesday
the president is a "time

bomb" that will be left for Budget
·
·
Director Dav1d Stockman.
The administration acknowledges
inil;iownprojectionsthatadditional
cutS I of that magnitude will be
necessary in the ~ext three years if
its goal of balancmg the budget by
· to be met.
1984 IS
What neither Stockman nor
anyoneelsehasspelledoutis where
those cuts will be made.
And what the skeptics are saying
is that the o~ly olAces left Are some

of the programs the president has
led ed ·11 ·
t hed
P g WI. go un ouc
·
Meanwhile. Regan and Stockma~
were going back before
congressional cornrruttees today to
c.ontinue their lobbying for quick acbon on those parts of the Reagan
P1an a1r ea dy outli'ned ·
During their appearances Thursday, the two Cabmet-level
sa~esmen encou.ntered the mo~t
pomted quest10mng over Reagan s
proposal to reduce personal mcome

tax rates over thr~ years, startmg
July 1 The move IS esbroated to be
·$
to
'ddle-income
wo~ ~· 456
f
~ rru Jul
nd
farruly 0 our
ween
Y18
1984.
.
D-S C
Se~. Ernest r~o~~g:he Sen~t~
rankmg CDem~tt
t ld St km n
Budget omrn1 ee, o
oc a
1
Thursday he wo~d ~~port "':t~ ~I
the proposed!, 1 ~ w~t he
federa 1 spen ~ ~ • for rridiculed Reagan s P ' : :1 pe
sonal mcome\axreduct
.

i
f

•I

YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio- Youngstown teachers, who had urged
children to stay home today, began picketing schools before dawn in
this northeastern Ohio district of 17,000 students, police said today.
A strilte was called for today by t~e Youngstown Education
Aasociatlon, which oo Thursday rejected a last-minute proposal by
city schoolauthorl(les to go into mediation.

Misses Sizes 6 to 20
E x tra Sizes 32 to 38

1

MEN'S

$10.19

MEN'
JEANS

Carpenter and painters
styles in blue denim ,
whites and fashion colors.
Most all are pre-washed .

more money,u Jones emphasized.

Jones asked Kirk if the request to
hire additional jailers to check
prisoners every hour wsa a statute
or a regulation. Mrs. Kirk replied it
was not a statute, but a regulation
enacted by the Buro:au of Adult
Detention Facilities and Services.
He also ·asked that, out of the 26
counties Kirk worked with, how
many complied with the new
regulation, or is in total compliance?
Her answer was none.
Jones also asked if anyone had
gone over the county. budget to
detennine if there were additional
funds? She said no.
Both agreed the corrunissioners
could look forward to more deficiencies. Jones added it would only be
fair to assume that other deficiencies would require additional expenditures. Kirk concurred.
- Kirk Indicated that if com-,
missioners did not comply, Sheriff
Proffitt, the corrunissioners and she,
could be held liable if a suicide occurred at the jail. The commissioners, however, did not agree
with such a statement.
Corrunon Pleas Judge John C.
Bacon questioned the rationale of
the proposal to hire additional
jailers for prisoners who serve more
than 72 hours. Kirk said prisoners
must be checked every 60 minutes.

WESTERVIlLE, Ohio - Teachers, principals and non-teaching employees could face layoffs if a March 3levy falls, school officials say.
Layoffs would prove necessary for the central Ohio system to
qualify for an emergency state loan, if the 13-rnilllevy is not approved,
said Tom Dickson, school administrative services director. The
district also would have to eliminate a $284,610 subsidy for student suppiles.
School officials have projected a $2.3 Inillion deficit by the end of
1981.
The cuts would save about $2 million a year and reduce the staff to
minimum levels, Dickson said.

(

.·7

1

DETROIT - Ford Motor (,;o. has reported the largest full-year loss
in American corporate history - far outstripping even a record loss
reported by Chrysler Corp. - but analysts say Ford is in no danger of
falllllf! into Chrysler's deep financial rut.
The No.2 automaker on Thursday reported that its 1980 loss amounted to $12.8.'1 per share. Of that, $316 million, or $2.63 per share, came in
the fourth quarter.

PROVO, Utah - An earthquake measurillf! 3.5 on the Richter scale
sbook many Utah County residents out of their slee\ yty today, officials said.
•
,
There were no reports of damage or injuries.
The U.S. Geological Survey Earthquake Information Center in
Golden, Colo., said the quake occurred at 2:13a.m. MST and was cen·
tered 30 miles south of Salt Lake City, 6 miles west of Orem.
That would put the quake's epicenter under the northern part of
Utah Lake, said Bob Richey at the National Weather Service in Salt
Lake City.

Reg. $16.00

Sizes 29 'fo42 waist, lengths 30 to
36. Wrangler .14112 oz. No Fault
blue
denim
pre -wash ed .
Stra ight leg or boot flare style .

'

Ford Motors record big loss

Earthquake shakes Utah residents

Sizes 3 to 15/16

BASIC DENIM
JEANS
'

\
'

SALE '6.79

JR. JEANS

MEN'S '19.95

\
&lt;'

..
..
..
..

SALE 14.99
Reg , 58.00

was with the sheriff not the Meigs
county corrunissioners. "There is no
more money this year and the
auditor clearly stated there is no

Meigs board okays bond resolutions

the versatility
comfort they
our selection of
is perfect.

Reg. $6.00
Siz es 28 t o 42 wai st · lengths s
(30), M 132), L (3 4), XL 136.
Pr e · w a sh e d
d e n i ms
in
str aight leg or boot fl ar e
styl es. E xcell ent selec t ion.
Men's fu ller cut blue denim
fashion jean s ar e included ,

1 Section, 12 Pages
15 c;ents
A Multimedia Inc. NeWspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, February 20,1981

Commissioners must comply
with jail standards or go to court

The deparbnenl reports that four
chairs stolen in November from the
Laurel Grange Building were
recovered at a Columbia Township
residence Sunday afternoon .
Dale Queen has arrested on
charges of receiving stolen property. He appeared Wednesday in
Meigs County Court. The case was
continued and Queen was released
on bond.

Vol.29 No. 217
coeyrlahttcl 1911

entine

•

Deputies probe vandalism
The Meigs County Sheriff's Department is investigating an act of vandalism that occurred Tuesday night
or early Wednesday morning .
A 1980 Mercedes diesel truck
owned by the Ontario Pipeline Co.,
had the windshield , door glass and
mirrors broken while parked near
the old Hayman Hardware building.
The company is installing the sewer
pipe for the Syracuse-Racine Sewer
District.

at

e

'

Welfare program

·•

lottery number

CLEVELAND - The winning numbers selected Thursday night in
the Ohio Lottery's dally and weekly number games were:
The Nwnber: Zll
The Pyramid: M; 106: 2578
The tottery reported a loss of $425,552 from the mo~~y wag~red on
Thunday night's dally number drawing. Lottery offl~Ials said sales
were $173,251. Holders of winning tickets are entitled to share
$1,291,803.

WeJ~ther
MCllltly clear tonight. Lows near 40. Mostly sunny Saturday. Highs
near 80. Chance of rain near zero percent tonight and Saturday.
Westerly to northwesterly win!ls around 10 mph tonight.

Exteuded Oblo Forecaall- Sunday through Tuesday :A chance of ·
. rain S1111day and Monday and fair Tuesday. Highs 45-55. Lows in the
30s. - .

PRoTFsr BY MINE WORKERS - Memben of the United Mine
W~rken uoloo, led by Ill presldenl, Sam Churrh (wllb beard), march In
!root of the White House Thursday to protest President Reagan's

propor1ed culs in black lung beneflll. Mao In the foreground with Church
' is Walter Suba, a UMW official!rom Uniontown, Pa. (AP Laserpboto).

�~Commentary
.t :.
',.,

~ c~

Southern girls ellininated;
•
Symmes Valley Wins, 51-41

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
· Friday, February 20,1981

'

William F. Buckley Jr.
~-

..

and try·_agai.~__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
:i!Try
.
!'~! :
I • ':' •

:lf: WNDON

- They go on and on
, ;about Thatcherism in Great Britain
Pas though there was nothing else to
i ~ do. Yet another automobile factory
!~ has just closed, and the cater·
; ~~wauling against &gt;J:hatcher puts one
:~!i)J mind of Henry Wallace. Back
;;!l"hen he was secretary of
;; ;Mriculture for FDR in the early '30s
• ·6e ordered the massive ex:;:cerrnination of baby pigs in an at·
;i ; ~mpt to keep the price of pork up.
. ; ~The resulting hue and cry e.tracted
::!£rom Henry Wallace the only known
:;!Witticism he ever made, namely:
•' i"You'd think every one of them was
' ~ lsomebody's pet." You would think
· • ;that Mrs. Thatcher was personally
•: •tesponsible for refusing to buy every
;;:automobile made by the delinquent
! : plant.
:: ; · But in Great Britain ·there are
·';always matters of interest other
• ;than the economy, for instance,
.. crime and alleged crime. Consider
poor Peter Scott, 26, who took out a
' 'l •J;ife insurance policy on his wife for a
, • ; half million dOllars, and then un:.; :ilertook to cause her to die ac::;cidentally. You would need go give
~ -; him an A for effort. He began by put:ting mercury in her strawberry nan,
but in his enthusiasm he p~t in too
lnuch of it, and the toxic substance
' fell right through the bottom of the
plate.
Then he poisoned some mackerel,

!

'!

only to find that his wife positively
flourished on poisoned mackereL So
he took her to Yugoslavia and
suggested romantically they sit on
the edge of a cliff, but she said
something about vertigo, and stayed
out of hann's way. He repeated the
effort on a cliff in Engla.~d . but she
had not got over her aversion to
heights.
He turned to fire, but whereas
everywhere else in the world people
are dying accidentally from fire,
poor Mr. Scott could not contrive to
dispose of Mrs. Scott intentionally
by fire. in both cases Mrs. Scott
having been rescued by a peripatetic
good Samaritan.

mouse m a cage w1th a python which
had refused to eat a dead mouse.
The python just sat there and looked
at the mouse, hour after hour.
Charging cruelty, the prosecution
brought in a veterinarian, who said
that after two minutes' delay, the
mouse should have been removed,
the python having declined to
swallow it. After two minutes,
remaining in the cage was sheer tor·

and told aiL The following day
British justice sent Scott away to the
cooler, for life.
British justice is deliberate. The
Royal sOciety for the Prevention of
Cruelly to Animals, which ought to
breed a subsidiary society for the
prevention of cruelty to Mrs. Thatcher, complained, and brought to
court the owner of a pet store and
her daughter, who had put a tame

"'

;'

British tradition - forced the
prosecution to pay all costs of the
defense.
There is surely a moral or two
banging about here. Though the
government of Mrs. 'thatcher has
not yet succeeded in disposing of
Britain's economic problems, the
will is of iron; and the pythons
around here, for all that they appear
menacing, can't frighten a mouse.

Oak Hill knocked off previously
unbeaten Southem, 51H2, and Symmes Valley eliminated Southwestem, Sl-41, in opening round play
of the 1981 Class A Girls Sectional

Oaks were 14-4 overall.
Southern, to(&gt;-~eeded team in the
toumament, entered the contest
with a perfect 1~ mark. The Lady
Oaks were 14-4 overall.
Oak Hill grabbed a 16-9 first period
lead. The Jackson Countians led 2519 during the halftime intermission,
and 32-26 going into the final period.
A pair of sophomores, Christi
Howard and Melinda Burnside,
paced the Oaks. Howard had 18 points and Burnside 15. Candy McCorkle
added 10.
Spohomore Melanie Weese paced
the Tornado girls with 16 points.
.
Tammy Smidi added 12.
In the opening game, Connie Kin·
caid had 22 points and Tammie
Lester 14 to pace the Viking girls
over Southwestern.
Dena Cline led the Highlander
girls with 13 points. Barb Edwards
and Linda Edwards each had nine .
Synunes Valley led 9-2, 19-16 and
31-24 at the quartennarks.
Due to a last-minute change in the
tournament schedule, there will be
only one game Saturday. Kyger
Creek will battle Symmes Valley at 3
p.m.
Meanwhile, Oak Hill will play the

Tournament in tl)e Gallipolis gym
Thursday night.
Southern, IO(&gt;-seeded team in the
tournament, entered the contest
with a perfect 1~ mark. The l.ady

.

,

His final inspiration was to ask her
to stand in the middle of the road so
that he could test his car's suspen~
sion, presumably by swerving away
from her, but, ho, ho, ho, actually he
intended to run right over her. Mrs .
Scott, up until now, had no
suspiCIOns whatever that her
husband thought her more valuable
dead than alive, but somehow she
didn't like the idea of standing in the
middle of the road, electing instead
to stand on the side. Scott zoomed
toward her but - at the last minute
- suffered a failure of nerve. The
next day he went to a psychiatrist
and told alL The following day ,the
psychiatrist went to a magistrate

ture. But the defense came up with
another veterinarian who, reenacting the scene, observed that
the placid behavior of the mouse was
presumptive evidence that its
ignorance of the habits of pythons
caused it to be bli~fully unaware of
any dangers to it. The magistrates
found the evidence oi the · second
veterinarian compelling, dismissed
the complaint and - a glorious

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}Jpset taxpayers
.; ; : This is to inform the taxpayers of
&gt;Meigs county - Salisbury township
;; ln particular - where their tax
dollars are NOT going. We want the
trustees of this township to understand beyond the shadow of a
doubt, that the property owners on
Ball Run road are not at all satisfied
with the service we are getting on
our road. Or, rather, not getting !
The trustees have at their disposal
the necessary power equipment to
maintain the rOads under their care,
and keep them in A-1 condition . They
are being paid to do this, with OUR
tax dollars.
:: Yeteachyeartheroadsget worse.
lf gravel is put on , it is later graded
off, filling up the ditches. The roads
are graded nat, allowing water to
collect on the surface and creating
innumerable potholes.
Regular and systematic inspections are evidently not cnducted
by the trustees, for small trouble
. ;spots develop into muddy, messy
; ~ areas where our cars drag and

; · almost stall, while the road bed is
• · graded lower and lower.
.;; It would be so easy to grade so the
• center of the roadway is higher,
• allowing the rain and snow water to
•• drain, with enough material left in
': the centerlo fill in the holes.
,.
,. This procedure, with stone or
. • gravel in the worst places, would
~: eliminate most of the problems. Why
isn't this done? Of course, some
~: work has been done, and some
. :.'· money spent, but it has not been
• • enough. And we need work done
'I 1
,. now. Ball Run road is in terrible con·
••~· dillon. It really is not safe in places
~ : for the school bus tu go, and it makes
, : four round trips a day.
~·
Naturally, freezing and thawing
plays havoc with country roads.
•' Still, if they are adequately main·
:; tained in good weather, winter
••, , damage is minimal. Thirty years
~ ago, for a 15 year period, Ball Run
was in first class condition all year;
~· winter as well as swnmer, simply
, • because it.was put in good shape and
f; kept that way by constant attention.
•:
So, we are not asking for the im·
'•'• possible. It can be done. It has been
· done in the past. Is it too much to ex;: ·peel trustees to inspect the roads un:·, der their jurisdiction often and
•: regularly; to supervise work done on
' them, and to make necessary
•:
:• .repairs when needed? With bigger
~: :and better equipment, more man-

:t

:i

r.
,.

r: ~ power and more money, there is no

l;: excuse

for a county road to be in
[•: such deplorable condition.
~:: And residents should not ·have to
•; . notify trustees to get work done on
; ; :the roads. After all, we are not getting paid to do their jobs. If any of
}! :_you i;;iled _to do your work, would
}: you get pa1d? So, Jet·~ have ALL gf
; ~ the trustees present and on the job to
~' do their duty.
•I In the approximately live miles of
~; Ball Run-Bunker Hill road from
~ Route 143 to the Salisbury township
!! line, there are at least 28 vehicles
i~ whose owners pay license fees, gax
,i taxes and property taxes.
i: We deserve a decent road on
• I which to drive. Each person has a
r! moral obligation to do his be'st at his
,,
. b
•• jQ •

!•:

.

,!:
~:

~:

;;
~:

f,.
",

Elected officials certainly are not
excempt from this expectations. We
who live on country roads have the
right to expect more than we are getting, and lf it is not forthcoming, we
intend to find out why.
And, if you readers wonder why

Supports SEOIS

(FIRST GAME)
SOUTHWESTERN (41) - B. Ed·
w ard s 4·1·9; L. Edwards 4· 1·9; Jar ·
dan 2 0·4; Mi l ler 1·2·4; Cl ine 5·3 13;
Hammond 1 0·2. TOTALS17· 7-&lt;1.
SYMMES VALLEY (SI) - Lester
7 0 14; Kin cai d 5 l2 ·22 ; Ba lm er l ·J ·
5; K e lly 1 0 2; Wh il ehea d 2 0 4;
Wil son 0 ·2·2; Roc he 0 2·2. TOTALS
16· 19-52.
Score by quarters:
Southwes tern
2 14 8 17- 41
Symmes Valley ~
9 10 12 2o-51

I SECOND GAME)
SOUTHERN (42) - T . Smith 5·2·
12 ; Johnson 2·2·6; E . SM ith 0·0·0 ,·
Wee se 5·6· 16; Sal ser 2·1·5; Evans 0·
2·2; Wolf e O· l · l. TOTALS 14·14·42 .
OAK HILL (50) - M cCorkl e 5' 0·
10; Evans 1·1-J; Circ le 2· 0·4;
Howard 6·6·18 ; Burnside 6-3· 15 ;
Gra y 0·0·0; Su r f ac e 0 0·0. TOTALS
20· 10.50.
Score by quarters:
Southern
9 10 7 16- 42
Oak Hill
16 9 7 18- 50

So1•th,ero's Melanie Weese (20) drives against
Oak Hill's Christi Howard (25). Weese led Southern in scoring with l6
points in a 51l-42loss Thursday. Howard had 18 for the Lady Oaks.

Gophers drop Buckeyes

Letters to editor
we are so " steamed up," just take a
drive up Ba\1 Run road.
And remember while you are sli(&gt;ping and sliding and bwnping along,
that it really does not have to be that
way. That is the sad thing about all
this.
Signed : Mr. and Mrs. Hartwell,
James P. Lambert, Richard M.
Reuter, Lindsey Ward, Gary L.
Scholderer , Connie Scholderer,
Delores Long , Roger Long, Wallace
L. Reuter, Eva Schreider, Mildred
Wells, Edward Wells.

·winner of the Kyger Creek.,&lt;iymmes
Valley game on Thursday, •' eb. 26,
at 6 p.m. Winner of that lower
bracket game will advance to the
Chillicothe district.
Tonight, Eastern, second seeded
team in the tournament, will battle
North Gallia . That game is set for 6
p.m. Hannan Trace will lock horns
with Federal-Hocking at 8 p.m.
Box scores:

COLUMBUS. Ohio ( AP ) - The
comm11nts of Minnesota
Coach Jim Dutcher and Ohio Slate's
Eldon Miller gave no clues as to the
outcome of their Big Ten basketball
contest Thursday night.
" I don't realistically think we can
win the Big Ten, " Dutch er said.
" But it is realisti c for us to get an
NCAA Tournament bid.' '
Miller said, " I think a 12-S record ·
-' could gel a share of it (the league
championship J."
By those opinions, you would think
the Gophers had lost, 1nstead of winning 82-76 and avenging an earlic1·
13-poinl home Joss to the Buckeyes.
post-~ame

' HAW ~ ThAI 1lCKL£s I

I

BURNSIDE SHOOTS- Oak Hill's Melinda Burnside (42) fire jump
·•hoi against Southern In Thursday's Class A Tournament opene~ at
Ga!Upolls. Sopthern defender Is Della Johnson (15). Oak Hill won. ~2.
I Brenda Wilson photos).

President's economic plan big boom
NEW YORK lAP) - President
Reagan's economic plan is a big
broom and a prod. ll is designed to
sweep away the governmental col&gt;webs that thwart productivity and
goad the private sector into greater
activity.
There is no question at all about
how the econo'my is viewed:
The vast federal government,
growing out of control, is killing off
the nation's ability to sustain itself
economically. If the economy is to
be saved, power must be restored to
the people, from whence it carne.
It represents a huge effort, one the
Reagan people say will pay for itself
in the improved perfonnance of
households and industry and, as a
consequence, the improved performance of the U.S. government it-

Dear Editor,
1 would like to voice my opinion
about free legal service for our very
poor low income families in Meigs
County, as well as other counties, in
the Stale of Ohio,
According to "The Hard Times
Publication Mailer" I have receives
as of late: the conservative
Washington-based group called
"The Heritage Foundation" has
presented a 100 page report to.
President Ronald W. Reagan, commenting that the Legal Services Corporation ( LSC) be abandoned.
The report reconunends gradually
phasing out the program by cutting
its budget. By doing this - that
would limit legal aid attorneys to
"representing individuals in in- living.
Why should we sit still and allow
dividuallawsuits. "
"The Heritage Foundation" is ourselves to be put out of existence ?
supported by private individuals, We have our rights as American
foundations and corporations, such Citizens; we pay taxes the same as
as General Motors and General the other citizens. Please allow us
Electric. The rep&lt;Jrt is considered to the right to voice our opinions. Don't
be significant because the "Heritage try to put us in jail, when we try to
Foundation" is thought to be the speak up for our rights.
Allow me to say once again - let
private organization with the most
influence over policies of incomeing us the poor people of Meigs County
have our (SEOLS) attorneys to turn
administration.
The report by J och Nesh, a to in time of need. I would ·like to say
Washington Attorney for President - more power to each and every atRonald W. Reagan, (Transition torney. within each of our IS county
Te-am) told The Hard Times the regions in Southeastern Ohio.
"Heritage Foundation is 'well·
Hail - to each and everyone of
respected' among many Washington them. t Sylvia Smith Carman.
politicians."
Group leader, Bill Olson, would
not conunent about the group's
diScussion on the report, or how
much support President Ronald
Reagan, administration will give the
WASHINGTON President
reconunendalions. Olson said, "! Reagan's economic package is
specifically cannot' tell whether it divided into three parts. Most of the
(!SC) report was only reviewed and press have concentrated on his
considered.
proposals to reduce federal spen·
Loren Souers, p1·esident of the ding. Much controversy has cen·
Ohio State Bar Association, an tered upon his ideas for cutting
organization which represents tbe federal taxes. Not nearly enough atinterest of Ohio attorneys said his tention has been paid to the
organization has "always supported president's third promise - to
legal services for the poor. It is a reverse the tides of federal
good and necessary program·, even regulation.
though some members have been
Today's papers will tell you more
doubtful about its needs and tbe than you may really want to know
government in legal services," about the proposed budget reduc·
Souers said.
lions. They go across the board. Mr.
I feel we have the right to voice an Reagan's tax bill will be kept on hold
opinion, about free legal services for . while the budget cuts are fo~ght out
our poor people. I would ike for tbe
"Southeastern Ohio Legal Services"
be given more consideration by
Congress, and allowed to continue,
with free legal help for the poor
people.
Without our free legal help from
(SEOLS) we poor people would have
to live under dictators. They would
take everything we have. including
our family inheritances, eve"ything
where money is involved. Without
our free legal services to help us, we
poor people must go alollg and do u.
they say, or else. Some of us "poor
people" don't like to have to take all
of this "else" dictator's way uf

self.
If the plan is on target, for exam·

pie, the country will turn a $54.5
billion deficit this year into a $500
million surplus in fiscal 1984. And
that, we are told, would be just the
beginning of the better times.
By 1985 the surplus would rise to
$8.9 billion, and it would leap to $29.9
billion in 1986. No claims are made
beyond that time, but the suggestion
is clear: By then, the economy will
be prosperous.
The prospertiy will be real too,
unlike the ersatz type the president
said we had become used to, that is,
bigger pay checks but even bigger
bills. And one of the main agents of
that prosperity will be ta.x cuts.
Individual taxes will be cut 10 per·
cent on July 1, and 10 percent more
on the same date in each of two succeeding years. Industry will be able
to lower taxes through accelerated
depreciation, retroactive to Jan. 1.
With financial power in hanU, and
freed from regulatory harassment,
individuals and industry will have
the cash and inclination to invest,
the inducement being the prospect &lt;i
a real return for the risk taken.
As government spending corltinues to be reduced as a percentage
of gross national product - from a
record 23 percent now to 19.3 in
fiscal1984 - ami as money is put to
more efficient use in the private sector, production will grow, reaching 5
percent or so late this year.
All these factors will tend to
reduce high unemployment, in·

nation and interest rates, which
have been wasting money or restricting the productive use of it. Inflation may even come 9own to 6
percent by late 1982. Interest rates,
now near records high, and unemployment, now nwnberir~ nearly 8
million people. will iall sui&gt;-

stantially.
And if it comes to be - a matter
over which Congress, special interest groups, beneficiaries and
others · will have a say - it will
represent, depending on viewpoint,
either a new beginning or a big step
backward.

Ohio
Sportlight
COLUMBUS, Ohio ( AP) - Chuck
Machock is a traveling salesman of
a different sort. He's trying to ped·
dle Ohio State's basketball program
to three more high school basketball
recruits this winter. •
Machock will deliver his
promotion speech at the slightest
urging.
" If a player wants exposure. !here
isn 'I a better place in the country
than Ohio State," said the Buckeyes'
assistant cilach. "You can talk about
the Atlantic Coast Conference all
you want, but the Big Ten has led the
nation in attendance the pas! five
years.
"I don 't talk down about any other
program. We think our program has
enough to offer a player that if he
visits here, iLwill sell itself.··
Machock, in charge of the
Buckeyes' recruiting, has a good
start on the 1981 hunt when five
scholarships become available. The
Buckeyes will Jose seniors Herb

Ill Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohla
tl ..ltt-%151

DEVOTED TO TilE INTEREST OF 111E MEIC.S.MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
f'\lbllther

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOBHOEFUCH

A.sslstaut Publillber/Coatrolkt

Geotral MIIDIIt~:r

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
Ntwa F..dl&amp;or
A MEMBER of Tht~: A11oclalcd Pftaa, lll.la!MI Dally Prn1 Altoda.tloa aad &amp;he
Amtrh:aa Ncwsp1ptr P\lblbh~rt Auodatloa.
LETTERS OF OPINION arr Mlroqttd. They should bt 1m thu M wordt I~ . All
!etten arc sub)«t I.e rd.IUq a.nd mut M 1ipcd wllll Mmr, addrut •Dd klepboae
u11mbrr. No IIUIJDed lctkra •Ill be publl1bed. l~tteraak..ld bt Ia &amp;Md &amp;IJ&amp;e,addrestlDI
illlleJ,IIOt ~noulitin ,

Thought for today: Everybody thinks of changing hwnanity, and
nobody thinks of changing himself - Leo Tolstoy, Russian writer (182S!910).

SEOAL wrestling
tournament set

Moving to deregulation___Ja_m_es_J._K_ilpa_m_·c_k
one by one. All these ad)ustments order restores the functions of a
are for the future . The encouraging relatively free marketplace, which
thing is that right now, the president is one of the things the Reagan landis doing what needs to be done slide was all about.
To be sure, decontrol of these
toward deregulation.
petroleum
products will have other
Mr. Reagan's executive order of
Within
a week after the
effects.
January 28, putting an end to oil
28
order,
oil companies
January
price controls, provides an example
on
gasoline and
raised
their
prices
in point. The order permitted
home
heating
oil
by
five
or six cents
producers, refiners and retailers of
Most
of
these
increases
a
gallon.
crude oil, gasoline and propane imwould
have
been
authorized
anyhow,
mediately to set their prices without •
but
the
new
prices
produced
some
federal restriction. The order freed
noisy
cries
that
Mr.
Reagan
was
the industry from much of the sufof
the
poor.
Nongrinding
the
faces
focating paperwork demanded by
the Department of Energy. The ef- sense. He was recurring to economic
fect will be to stimulate both produc- fundamentals -- to laws of supply
tion and conservation. In sum, the and demand to which all classes of

men are subject. And high-time.
For another example: Mr. Reagan
instructed his secretary of labor to
suspend the imposition of some
fairly incredible regulations that the
Carter administration had cooked
up for building contractors. The
regulations had to do with the en-·
forcement of civil rights on federally
assisted construction jobs.
You would not believe these
proposed regul{ltiOns unless you
read them, and I cannot encourage
anyone to read them. Tile rules
cover &amp;I pages of the Federal
Register - 192 colwnns of fine type.

DOONESBURY
/EY..IKJ li41R
7i1KIN6 MY

1

IWATH
Aii/4Y..

\ I

. ROCK SPRINGS - Saturday the
Southeastern Ohio Athletic League
wrestling tournament will be held at
Meigs High School in I.arry R.
Morrison gymnasiwn.
Wrestling will begin alii a.m. and
continue throu~h 7 p.m. Finals arc
scheduled at approximately 4 p.m.
Five teams will ·particpatc in the
tournament

•

including

Gallipolis,

Ironton, Meigs, Logan and Athens.
The public is invited to attend.
Meigs starters include: !llllbs., Scott
Harrison; !05 lbs., Brill King; 112
· Jbs., Scott Hartjnger; 119 Ibs., Troy
Bauer; 126 Jbs., Mike Willford; 132
lbs .. Briall King ; 138 lbs., Brian
Bauer: 145 llJ• • Steve Cars9n; 155
Ibs., Doug Neece; 167 lbs., Mike
Jackson; 175 lbs., Bill Powell; 185
lbs., Danny Davis and hwt., Steve
Herald.

LOS ANGELES 1API - If you
look close enough, history can
repeat itself.
And · who can look closer than
Dr.Gil Morgan, an optometrist who
is more concerned with golf balls
than eyeballs? He doesn't practice
his Jnetlical art .
Morgan went into today's second
round of the $300,000 Glen Canipbell·
IAls Angeles Open golf tnurnamcnt.,
which he won in !978, with a nn estroke lead after firing a S-under pa r
65 Thursday.
· Morgan opened in 1978 with a 66

ATTN .

BUSINESS

and / or Realtors
Listings.

I

I
I

the Nation.
Please Wrile For Free Del ails
2400 Mt . Vernon Ave.

Pt. Pleasant, wV .
2SSSO

I

.,

DR. BAKSHY A.
CHHIBBER

Fri. thru Thurs., Feb. 26.

,

I.

!1
~

Office Hours Are :
12 noon

to

Thur. , Fri .

6. Mon .. Tues ..

lp.m . lo7p.m . Wednesdoy

9 a .m . to 12 noon Saturday .

Call 675-5511

f 01

Ap Poi'ntments

DR. CHHIBBER'S

OFFICE

I ., is localed at
I 2513 Jackson Ave.
Buildinq

l'rolc"londl

mans, . a Unive•·sity of Southern
CH lifornia collegian, who shot a 3235- 67.

at8P.M.

tie for second pla ce af-

ter shooting a 32-34- 66. He was bel·
ter than Jack Nicklaus, 71 , Tom
Watson, 72 , and Lee Trevino , 72.
Tied with the Japanese.
bridegroom were John ,Cook, Johnny
Miller, Bruce Lietzke, Keith Fergus
and Miller BarlJer.
Then came amateur Ron Cun..l-

WEDNESDAY
MARCH 4
7:30PM
$6 .00. 55 .00

mtormation &amp; CHARGE BY PHONE:
f 614) 594· 5207 (Vi .... &amp; MC accepted)

l

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II

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w~~~

BARGAIN MAriNEES ON SAT &amp; SUN
AlL SEATS JUST S 1.50
ADMISSION EVERY TUESDAY $ 1 . ~0
531 JACKSON PIKE Rt . JS NORTH - Phone 446 -4! 24

, - - - - - - . , . . - - FRIDAY lhru THURSDAY I - - - - - - - - ,

FEBRUARY 20 thru 26

COVER-ALL 4 MIL ROLLED PLASTIC
20x25 ........~.~~: .~~~:~~ ...........~.&lt;?~. '1 0.79
15x25 ....... -~-~?: -~~~:~~- ........ --~~~--- •a. 10
1Ox25 ........ ~-~?: -~~ :~~- ........... ~~~- ...•5.40

EASY-ON WINDOW &amp; DOOR KITS
36"x72" WINDOW KIL -~-~?: -~~~- ....... ~~~- 49c
36"x8411 DOOR KIT.. .....~?~·.~~-~ .......~~~..63c
POLY-PANE

2 PACK

WIN DOW KITS........ -~~-~:~-~~ ..... -~~~- 63~
EBERSBACH

~' HARDWARE

.
110 w. Main st.
992· 2811

HARDWA!I StOIIIS

1

'"
L~.~!!~~~~!-~.:..~~.:...J
lhll

Matinee Sunday
One Show at 2 P.M.
One Evening Show

,u1mi ~ ston :

1

NEW PATIENTS

six~way

__

$1.00 dl&lt;; count children 12 &amp; ut1der
llt'kl'h on ~ale : Center Ticket Office

I

1

in a

t

Ohio Unh·ersity Athens ·

I

I

think I am better tee to green ."
But look ouHor the bridegroom.
Namio Takuso, on his second
marriage , decided to take his bride
to Honolulu where 'he found there
was a golf tournament going on . He
joined the Monday morning rabbits
and attempted to qualify .
He did, and finished 73rd in the
tournament. But since one golfer in
front of him was an amateur, hC
qualified to play at Los Angeles .
And he came out of the first round

I h ~ '"''

•

Convocation Center

Specializing In Pediatrics
A
1 M d' ·
nd lnterna e ICtne
1
NOW ACCEPTING

\

You w1sH To sELL
YouR
susiNEss....
can put your
information

. COLO\' · '

. PG

.--------..:....----------- - -- -----j

r_..._._._....._.-...-..-._._..._..p

Bus .

IF

Nicklaus played a duffer 's shot on
the final hole.
'' My game hc.~s matured olot since
I won here," Morgan t:onunented. "I
think I'm a little · bit smarter,
CSJ&gt;ecially around the greens. And I

.----------------1

OWNERS

with

and went on to win when Jack

SPECIAL OLYMPIC HELP
ROCHESTER, N.Y. (AP) - The
mentally handicapped athletes who
will compete in a special world
Olympics, March 8-13 in· Vermont,
will be given some $50,000 worth &lt;i
support by Eastman Kodak.

i;;;,;:;;;;;;;~~;;~~;~~~~I
We
In
thehandsofpolenlialbuy crs ... in
your own locality ... or al l over

r

Williams, Carter Scott, Jim Smith.
T1xld Penn and Marquis Miller f1·om
the current team.
Already signed to Big Ten letters
of intent are 6-foot playmaking
guard Troy Taylor of Canton
McKinley and 6-3 forward Joe Concheck of Canal Fulton Northwest.
Taylor has averaged .23.1 points in
leading McKinley to 19 straight vic·
tories and the No. 1 Class AAA state
ranking. Concheck is hitting :ll.S
points this winter after avera ging 28
points as a junior.
Macl1ock is seeking the services of
three more Ohioans, 6-11 Brad
Sellers of Warrensville Heights , 6-9
Greg Stokes of Hamilton and 6-2
Dave Jones of Jcwett.,'icio.
Jones, averaglng more than :n
points this winter , might provide the
outside scoring punch the Buckeyes
have missed since the departure of
Kelvin R&lt;.nsey to the professional
ranks this season.
From the out-of-state ranks, Ohio
State is after 6-5 Ron Rowan of
Beaver Falls, Pa., 6-7 Leath R&lt;indall
of Gainesville, Fla.,, and 6·4 Milt
Wagner from Camden, N.J .

~

S()AAY.

State's 6-10 heralded senior Herb
Williams 26-13 and the Gophers'
slatting guards had30 points to their
counterparts' 16.
" It' s not a special challenge going
aga inst Herb, " Breuer said . " But it
docs give a better measuring stick
for others and for me to measure
myself. The others do all the work. I
shoot tl1C balL"
Breuer called it the biggest
Gophers' victory to date, even
Ia1·~er than routs of North Carolina
and Pu1·due.
"We played to our tempo," he
said . "When we do that, we're tough
to beat. "

Dr. Morgan has one-stroke lead

By George Strode

The Daily Sentinel

Both arc H in the conference . Minnesota is 15-7 overall and Ohio Stale
12-10.
It was a bitter loss for the
Buckeyes, one of the Big Ten preseason title favorites and an earl y
Top Ten ranked team. Ohio State
has lost at home to Indiana, Illinois
and Minnesota.
Th e home crowd took its
frustrations out 011 Miller , booing
him three different times in the
second half. " It was the kind of
game you could boo,"· said the Ohio
State coach.
R&lt;.ndy B1·euer, Minnesota's 7-foot2 sophomore center, outscored Ohio

1

.;,

Pomeroy, OH.

M·S. 8:00 to 5:00

•

�Friday, February 20,1981

Friday, February 20,1981

TENNIS
.
(AP )
victories .
SYDNEY, Australia
Connors whipped Terry Moor &amp;.o
Sweden 's Bjorn Borg defeated John 6- . 1 dl struggled to a 6-1 ~ ~
2 , ..en
McEnroe &amp;.o 6-4 in the f1rst match of
• •
the Benson' &amp; Hedges Challenge triwnph over Bob Lutz and Solomo.n
.
crus hed Trey Waltke &amp;-3, 6-2.
~~ .
·
R
T
.
LA QUINTA, Calif. (AP ) _ Jim·
In other a c tto~, oscoe anner
downed Hank Pf1ster 6-7, 6-4, 6-4 ;
my Connors Ivan Le ndl and Haro ld
h
I' · t d "'ddi
'
· th
Eliot Teltsc er e uruna e ., e
Solomon earned berths '" e quar- D'bb s-2 6-1 · Brian Gottfried
' s
•
·
.
terfinals of the $175,000 Grand Marnier-ATP Games with third-round ousted Mel Purcell &amp;-3, 6-4

•

Marauders seek sixth wzn
to.n ight against Chieftains
BY SCOTT WOLFE
ROCK SPRINGS- Coach Gordon
Fisher's Meigs Marauders are
coming off their biggest weekend of
,the year, after capturing successive
wins over Wellston and Wahama. A
well-balanced team effort was the
key to . the successful weekend.
Tonight the Marauders hope to use
...the same winning combination
, against Logan.
, . Last Friday evening Meigs scored
a come-from-behind 60-55 win over
' the Wellston Golden Rockets led by
Steve Ohlinger's 14 points, Jeff
·wllyland with 12, and Chris J udge
with 10.
Last Saturday night, Meigs won
the battle of the Big Bend 51-50 over
.Wa hama on a pair of Mike Miller
.toul s hots with two seconds
remaining. Bob Ashley led that attack with 18 points followed by Mike
Miller with 13.
,
.· M&amp;igs should carry its momentum

into tonight's game against the 7-12
Chieftains. Meigs owns a 5-13
record . Last time against Logan, the
Marauders were defeated , 70-54.
Logan has scored 1,043 points and
given up 1,234 as of February 7 in 18
games.
Meigs as a team has scored 941
·points and given up I ,031 points in 18
games. It has been averaging 52.2
points offensively and allowing 57.2.
The Marauders have compiled a
season long total of hitting 385 of 982
shots from the field for 39 percent.
Despite an off-night on Saturday,
Steve Ohlinger continues to lead
Meigs with a 13.1 overall scoring
average and a 13 .3 league average.
Tlie sharp-shooting Marauder a lso
owns the rebounding department as
well as being an offensive sparkplug.
The unpredictable Kevin Smith
still owns a respectable 7.9 point
average. After a healthy beginning

Smith hit a mid-season drought, but
has been playing well of late to play ·
an important part in the past two
wins.
Bob Ashley put in all together last
Saturday against Wahama. Ashley
has a 7.8 average. Another Saturday
night hero, Mike Miller again hit
double figures and owns a 6.8
averaga, while Jeff Wayland has a
6.7 scoring average. Chris Judge has
played very well recently and owns
a 4.4 mark. Britt Dodson has come
off the bench to play a big role in the
recent Marauder success. Other
'llarauders coming through when
called upon are Brian Swann, Dave
Kennedy, Roger Kovalchik. Tony
Scott, and Randy Mur ray .

Harrison
Bethany
inductee

The Meigs reserve squad of Coach
Ch ilds has showed conti nua l
iJn provement throughout the season
and will precede the varsity game at
6:30p.m .
Mi c ~

through appropriately named townships of Athens County such as Troy.
Cartha ge, Rome and Canaan before
fini shing in Athens , Ohio. The 1968
winner was Albert Sewell of Cincinne~ti then a freshman at Fisk
University in Nashville. His winning
time was 2:24 :00.
1n !980. 270 out of a fie ld of 304 runners eumpleted the 26 mile 385 yard
mce. Overall winner was 35 year old
Kerr)· Ragg who completed the
course in 2:26:U . The course again

While at Pomeroy High, Harrison
was a member of the 1960 eham-

this year will be certified.
In true O!yhpic fashion, and what
has become a tradition for this race,
the " champion" of the Athens
Marathon is crowned with an
a ut hentic royal wreath. The wreath
will be specially sent for race from
Athens, Greece.
Further information and en try
blanks may be obtained from
Ellsworth J . Holden, Jr., Race
Director, 26 Northwood Drive,
Athens, Ohio 45701.

The Daily Sentinel
!USPS 115-9101
A Dl"lalon of Multimcdta. Inc.
. .#'

Published every afternoon except Sunday ,

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Monday through Friday, Il l Court Street, by
the Oh.io Valley Publishing Company -

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Inc., Pomeroy. Ohio 45769,

992·2156. second class pOst.a'ge paid Cit

Pomeroy, Ohio.

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Sentinel on a 3, 6 or 12 month bas is. Credit
will be given carrier each month.

However. in each of this year's
cases, the players all won sa lary increases although not as much as
they wanted.
Centerfielder Dave Collins wanted
$360,000. The arbitrator awarded
him the $267,500 the Reds offered. It
was a raise of $100.000.
Collins sa id he 'd remember what
the Reds said about him in the
Chicago,lll. hearing .

SENIORS - Senior m embers of the Eastern Eagle girls' eage
squad are, Laura Eichinger, Patty Edwards, Bonnie Jacks, and Beth

SUGAR RUN MILLS

~~~M~u~l~be~r~r~y~A~v~e~.;;;;;;~;;~~~~~~~~~:

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Each of the players agents thought
they had the facts and comparative
figures on their side, but each time
the Reds were able to drive in a winning point.
With Collins, it was his defense.
With Vail, it was his roll as a reserve

1 LOT

was on the All Conferenee Team,
chosen Most Valuable Player, selected as the Outstanding Senior
Athlete, named to Honorable Mention. All American, and was the captain of the only undefeat ed season in
the history of the college.
Phil is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Ole~ Harrison of Pomeroy and is
employed by the Ben-Tom Co rporation. He i.s mar ried to. the rur-

ACME BOOTS
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HEMLOCK - Eastern's freshman
team dropped a 33-21 decision to
triple " AAA" Athens in the Miller
F rcsh1n&lt;:tn Tournament . Athens
claimed the champions hip CI'Own
while Eastern reigned as the second
place finisher .
Athens shut out the you ng Eag les
in the first stanza !Hl, but Eastern
carne soari ng back in the second
qua rter to score 13 points, only to fall
short 23-13at the half.
The 1]1UCh bigger Athens club used
its slze and quickness to contain
Eastern the entire game to lead 30-15
by the end of the third period.

YOUR WORD LIVES
IN MEl

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Farmers...
Let H&amp;R Block

618

Athens wins frosh tourney

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992 · 2164
POMEROY,OH .
The Store with " All Kinds of Stuff" for Pets - Stables
Large &amp; Small Animals - Lawns &amp; Gardens

1
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NEXT TO CITY LOAN AS OF
FEB. 23, 1981.

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&lt;f/J; IS MOVING TO
360 SECOND AVE.

j

l..eslie Allen remembers how she Championships - the World Series
sal and brooded in a hotel room a of women's tennis - at Madison
year ago.
Sq ua re Garden March 25-29.
" I had just finished last in an Avon
" I never think of being black,"
11
d d
·h d
.
Futures tennis tou rna ment,'' she
MISS
A en respon e w1t a ·
· bl epa t 1·ence and grace. " II ook
recalled. " I received a check for $25 . nura
· p1ayer
l said to myself,'Here I a 1n getting a
upon myse If on ly as a tenms
· to wm.
· 1t never occurs to me
$25 check and there a re women ou t trymg
· · hona
· 1sym boI ror
there I know I ca n beat who are get- lla
I t I am anmspira
.
ting $25,000." '
my race, a J ac k1e Robinson or an
.,,..
It was a depressing period in the At
l hea G lu.&lt;on
.
·k·
23
life of tl1e statuesque, sophisticated
AIIe n, a stn mg woman of .
black girl with a magna cwn laude
willowy ta II at 5-10 and 145 po unds,
degree from the University of · copper-skinned with 'high cheekSout hern California, faci ng the
bones 11nd raven ha ir fall ing to her
crossroads of her career.
shoulders, rocketed into the tennis
Should she ~ive up PI'ofessional
gala xy last week by heating the
.
h
tennis and concentrate on designing,
Czechoslovak tan p enom , Harm
a skill for which she was trained '
Ma ndlikova , in Ihc finals of a ma jor
Or s hould she grit her teeth and
Avon tournament in Detroit.
.
·
h
tough it out.
·
Her fIrst pme was $25,000.
e
~~ I called room service," she
had spanne d lhe bridge. lmrela ted. " ! had a ni ce di nn er in m y
mediately she was being compared
room . Then I sai d, 'Where can you
with Althea, who reigned as U.S. and
beat a life like this' None of that 9Wimbledon champion in 1957-58.
t&lt;&gt;-5 routi ne. Travel the world, go to
" How could I ever dream of being
interesti ng plaees , make your own
another Althea," she replied to a
decisions, do what you en joy doing
trying
hit
and sti11makc enough money to sur- query
mysel .f "when,
in the back
of to
theserve,
head Iwith
vive.'.
the racket' I just have to be me and
" It wasn 't even close. 'Why give
lake it s tep at a time."
up?' I said to myself . 'Go home and
Perfectly poised, articulate and
reorganize. Develop a positive atdevoid nf pretense, she radia tes the
titude. Give it your best s hot'"
effects of her schooling at CarnegieThat's what Leslie ultimately did.
Mellon, Te&lt;as Southern, USC and
On Thursday, she was the cente r
finally the Institute of Fashion
· of attention at a news eonfcrencc
Technology and upbringi ng by an
called to promote the $300,000 Avon
l\t'tress mother.

CLOSEOUT SALE

During his senior year. Harris on

f prepare your income tax 6
f returns ..•we could '

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

MODERN SUPPLY IS HAVING A

among small colleges.

Outfielder Mike Vail, who came in
trade from the Chicago Cubs, also
lost to an arbitrator in Chicago. He
ltn te rndtional
New Idea :
wanted$225,000 but got $175 ,000.
~:_:-_:'~•.:_ ___ --~:P_:',::'~
Pitcher Paul Moskau lost in New _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _....__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ____,
Vorl! on Thursday. He sought
$120,000 but got about $90,000.

MAIL SUBSCRIPI'IONS

By Will Grlrmley
AP Correspondent

ON THE FOLLOWING SELECTED ITEMS

player. With Moskau, it was his
raise .
"A large part of their case dwelled
on the percentage Paul would he
receiving Qased on his performance
of 1980. " when he had a !1-7 record
with a 4:00 earned run average,"
Hendricks said.
. He said Moskau's salary was near
the bottom last season compared to
mcr Paulette Hudson and they have
other pitchers in the league wi th his
experience. He also had a shoulder two sons. Rodd and Trevo r.
injury and underwent surgery .
.---------------1
Moskau, however, was not unhapPY with the res ult: He is anxious to iiEIGs-f(lliiP"M"fN-"f
get to spring training at Tampa, Fla .
Going Ou1 of Business Sal e 1
" I'll run, get in shape, see friends
Now In Progress
1
and do a little fishing, " he sa id.
Pomeroy, 0 . Ph . 992~ 2176 1
" I'm sure the fact that I did have
Hour : 8· S Mon .· Fri.
I
arm surgry was another factor in I
8· 12 Sat·
I
the opera tion . Still, it's a heck of a
Closed Sunday
I
living," Moskau said .

The Reds indicated they saved the
admission prices of 26,667 blue seat
admissions in Riverfront Stadiwn .
" I'll say this," said Moskau's
agent Alan Hendri cks. "The Reds
did their homework quite we ll. Their
case was , pr esen ted very
professionally. "

Sports World

Pomeroy

992 · 2119

a. One wed!. . ... .. . ........ . ... , ...... SLOO

,.
)
;?

Today's

Binder Tw ine - Spr ays - Gi!tes - Hay - Straw .

avcraaged over 20 points per game
during his four year career. II is be~t
pcrsonul effort came a.s a sphomorc
when he averaged 24 .6 points and
tB.I rebounds per game. His rebOunding pla ced him third in th~ nation

I
I

,,..Riebe-l.------~

seeds . Bird s eeds . Oyster Shells and Grit · ~e~~~z:~~e~ ~~~~~ ~ ~i~~
ment an d Mortar . Stock Salt ·. Water Softener d F
.
. Baler a nd
ter s . ' vaccin e Rooting . Pamts · Red Bran . e nctng

voted
the basket
Most ba
Valua
ble Player
of
pionship
ll team.
He was
the Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League as well as bei ng chosen tL&gt;
theAIIstateTeam
At Bethany College, Harrison

Management saves _Reds $160,000

."'~

miD

PHIL HARRISON

Expect 400 runners zn 14th
Athens Marathon April 5

der and Sal Artiaga.
" We were serious about our approach to arbitration this year,"
said Wagner, wh o lost last season to
collins and third baseman Ray
Knight.

NEW YORK (AP) - Marvin
Miller, executive director of the
major league players associatio)l,
has a suggestion for New York
Yankee owner George Steinbrenner.
" If George is so concerned about
compensation for free agents, let
him sell one Of his players to San
Diego for $1," Miller said. "He
signed Dave Winfield. I..et him
volunteer. If his heart bleeds for the
Padres, let him do something
unilaterally. We won't object."
But if Steinbrenner or the rest of
the major league owners think
Miller will sit back and pennit
wholesale compensation to be put into place as part of the free agent reentry process, they are sadly
mistaken.
The owners set in motion the
machinery for what seems certain to
develop into another baseball labor
crisis Thursday when the PIAv•r

SEED AND MILLING
HEADQUARTERS

Phil Harrison, a 1960 graduate of
Pomeroy High School and a 1964
eollege graduate, was recently inducted into the Bethany College
Athletic Hall of Fame. The event occurred February 14 during halftime
ceremonies of the college's basketball game in Bethany, W. Va.

CINCINNATI lAP) ~ The Cin. cinnati Reds ma nagement swept the
~" arbitration series 3-0 over Dave
'' Collins, Mike Vail and Paul Moskau,
··and saved $160,000 in salaries.
· " It was a team effort by the fro nt
: office," said Reds President Dick
'Wagner, praising attorney George
Yund and executives Sheldon Ben-

Machinery put into motion
fOr possible diamond strike
'

•

·. Continuing a 14 year tradition, the
;mnual Athens Marathon will be held
in Athens on Sunday, April 5. The
race will begin from in front of the
Athens County Courthouse on Court
Street at 12 noon . A field of ~00 runners is eKpected.
This southeastern Ohio event has
s teadily grown in popularity and at'tendance since it was first held in
March, 1968. That year 23 of the
original fi eld of 36 finished the race.
"The run a t that time wound its way

T he Daily Sentinel-Page-s .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

l&gt;age-4-The Daily Sentinel

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Eastern continued to hustle, but they
were just overpowered by a 33-21
score .
Matheney led the winners with 18
poi nts, scori n~ 10 from the foul line.
Whaley had nine, Nuzum four ,
Hogan three, Conz two and Lovett
two, For Eastern Jim Newell scored
· eight points, Troy Guthrie five, Bob
Maison four, and Tim Probert four.
Eastern hit five of seven from the
line, while Athens hit 16 of 20.
E~stern ha d 21 fouls a nd Athens
nine. Eastern ended its season with
a 9--7 record.

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The compensation issue, which
threatened to precipitate a strike
last spring, was set aside, turned
over to a committee to try to solve.
" We would bave dropped it if the
owners didn't care about it," said
Grebey. "They knew we cared
because we wouldn't drop it."
Wh e n
th e four-member
management-player committee
failed to reach agreement and sulr
sequent negotiations between Miller
and Grebey also produced no

also have to be in the top 50 percent
of all players in their league in tenns
of game appearances for pitchers
and plate appearances for other
players.
·
Management bas repeatedly said
that only three players in ·the 1980
draft ~ Winfield, Don Sutton and
Darrell Porter - would qualify as
"ranking" players and thus produre
compensation for their fonner
teams.

progress,

Miller laughed at that.
"Do you mean to tell me they're
ready to s hut down an industry just
because they want compensation for
three players," he said. "C'mon·.
How can anybody believe that?
"What they want to do is stymie
free agency for the overwhelming
majority of players."
Miller's constituency seems to
agree.

management

J(pn Grov1~r

im-

plemented its plan. Under its terms,
" ranking" players signing with new
teams would bring r oster player
compensation for their former
clubs.
Ranking players would be determined by two criteria. First, they
would have to be selected by more
than eight clubs within a specified
nwnber of draft rounds. They would

Indiana whips 12th ranked Hawkeyes
said. " It sure was a play you don 't scoring Kenny Page to just seven Utes.
want to see, but I'm anxious to look points in the second half to break
J erorne Akins came into U&gt;e game
open a close game. The victory kept shooting only 37 percent from the
at the fllm."
Krafcisin wound up with 18 points, Utah two games ahead Of BYU and foul line, but he hit a pair of free
and Vince Brookins topped Iowa Wyoming in the Western Athletic throws with 22 seconds left !bat
with 19. Landon Turner led Indiana Conference with an 11-1 league boosted New Mexico State over
with 18 and Ray Tolbert had 17. mark, 22-2 overall.
Wichita State .in the Missouri Valley
Thomas had 16 points.
Page led the Lobos with 21 points, Conference.
Iowa, 18-4 and atop the Big Ten and Karl Bankowski added 16 for the
with a 10-3 conference mark, hit 15 of
16 free throws in the final two
minutes after going into a fourcorner stall toensurethevictory.
WASHINGTON (AP) - Sugar lice television.
In games involving other ranked
Ray
I..eonard will defend hili World
Leonard has come under criticism
teams, sixth-ranked UCLA downed
Boxing
Council welterweight title on from the WBC for not defending his
California 72-86, No.9 Utah .whipped
New Mexico 90-73, New Mexico State March 28 a ga inst one of three op- title.
On Wednesday, the WBC warned
upset 14th-ranked Wichita State 82- ponents, Leonard's attorney said
Thursday.
Leonard it would strip him of his
110, 15th-ra nked Illinois defeated No.
According to Mike Trainer, the title if he failed to defend it three
18 Michigan 67~ and No . 17
possible opponents are Larry Bonds times in 1981.
Brigham Young beat Texas-EI Paso
of Denver, ranked fourth by the
Trainer refused to label the March
84-75 .
WBC; Jorgen Hansen of Denmark;
bout a tuneup for Leonard's June 19
Mike Sanders scored 20 of his 24
h
ranked sevent , and eighth-ranked date with Ayub Kalule. The June 19
points in the second half, rallying
h
Hwan C ung Jae of South Korea.
fight, to be held in Las Vegas or the
UCLA over California in the Pacific
Three sites are under con- Meadowlands in New Jersey, will be
10 Conference. UCLA trailed 33-30
sideration for the fight, Trainer said. for
Kalule's
World Boxing
early in the sec011d half, but the
They are Syracuse, N.Y.; Hartford, Association junior middieweiglt
Bruins took the lead 4~ on a layin . Conn. and Houston.
title.
by 7-foot-2 reserve center Mark
The lawyer said selection of an opLeonard regained his WBC title on
Eaton and later stretched their adponent a nd a site a re e&lt;pected in the Nov. 25 in New Orleans when he
vantage to as many as 10 points.
next few days. The March 28 fight is
UCLA improved its record to 17-4, to be broadcast over Home Bo• Of- defeated champion Roberto Duran.
10-3 in the Pac 10, with its sixth ,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..:__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
straight victory.
Torn Chambers scored 27 points,
and Utah held New Mexico's high-

By Associated Press
Steve Krafcisin, Iowa 's &amp;-foot-10
center, brushed off the incident.
"It's no big deal," he said. "It happens ail the time."
Krafcisin was referring to a punch
in the face he got from &amp;-foot-1 Indiana guard Jsiah Thomas Thursday
night as the 12th-ranked Hawkeyes
were administering a 7~5 beating
to !6th-ranked Indiana.
" It was just a reflex more than
anything," Krafcisin said. "He
came up and apologized later. He
said he was sorry and that it was an
accident."
Thomas was e1·ected from the
ballgame with 39 seconds left after
he tried to fight his, way between
Iowa players and took a s wing in a
crowd at Krafcisin.
" I can't blame the ·officials,"
Thomas said, adding he never had
been thrown out of a game before.
"It was 1·ust a s tupid play."
After Thomas was tossed out,
Krafcisin hit a pair of free throws
that gave the Hawkeyes a 71-li3lead.
Indiana Coach Bobby Knight was
assessed a technical shortly a!terward, and he said he would reserve judgement on Thomas until he
had seen the films. He said it appea red Krafcisin had grabbed
Thomas' jersey.
" It was not a good play ," Knight

Leonard to defend title soon

r-.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~

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1977 Pontiac GP Cpe.
1973 Cadillac Deville Sed. $1295
1978 OLDS 98 Regency Cpe. $4995
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agency while Ray Grebey, director
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"Compensation was one Of many
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May," Grebey said. "T hose
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1976 FORD PINTO

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Relations Corrunittee unilaterally
adopted 'the compensation proposal
which the players had rejected last
spring.
Tile players have until March I to
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PAT HILL FORD, INC.
See: Garland Parsons or Pal Hill, Gen. Mgr .
PH. 992·2196
Middleport, OH .

s. Jrd Ave .

..

�'
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Friday, Februar 20,1981

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentlnei-=--P• e-7

SUPPO_RT THE HEART FUND• • •

HEART SUNDAY IS FEBRUARY 22, 1981
Reuter·Brogan Insurance

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992-SlJO Pomeroy

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YOUR HEART FUND VOLUNTEER WHEN
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992 -2196

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Ph. 992-2101

Tilua
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PIZZA SHACK
Eat In or
Cury Out

Phone 992-6304
Pomeroy

126 E. Main

MARK VSTORE
Middleport

Diamond Savings &amp;
loan Co.
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HALL'S
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Pomeroy

· 214 E. Main

992-66SS

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RACINE PLANING MILl

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Mill Work·
cabinet Making

Syracuse
992·3978

t

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p.m .
THE SALVA liON ARMY , 115 Butternut
A11e ., Pomeroy . Envoy and Mrs . Ray Win ing , officers in charge . Sunday -holiness
meeting. 10 a .m .: Sunday School , 10:30
a.m . Sunday school leader , YPSM , Eloise
J Adams . 7:30 p .m ., sol\lotion meeting,
• \/Orious speakers and music specials .
I Thursdo';'- 10 a .m. to 2 p.m . Ladies
I Home LEKlgue , all women invited ; 7 :30
p .m . prayer meeting and Bible study .
Rev. Noel Hermon, teacher .
·

I

BURLINGTON SOUTHERN
BAPTIST
CHAPEL. Route I . Shod~. Bible school , 7
p.m . Thursday : worship service, 8 p .m .
POMEROY WESTSIDE CHURCH OF
CHRIST. 200 W. Mo;n St .. 9'12 -5235. Vocal
music. Sunde~ worsh.ip , 10 a.m .; Bibl e
study , 11 a .m .. worshtp . 6 p .m . Wednes day Bible study, 7 p .m .
OLD DEXTER BIBLE CHRISTIAN
t CHURCH , Re ... . Ralph Smith , pastor . Sun ~ day school. 9:30
a .m ., Mrs. Worley
Francis, superintendent . Preod-1ing ser vices first &amp; third Sundays following Sun day School.
GRAHAM
UNITED
METHODIST ,
~ Preaching 9 :30 a .m ., first and second
t Sundays of each month: third and fourth
Sundays each month . worship ser11 lce at
7:30p.m . Wednesday even ings a t 7:30 .
Prayer and Bible Study .
SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST , Mulbeny
Heights Rood . Pomeroy . Pastor, Albert
Dittes; Sobboth School Superintendent ,
Rita White . Sabbath School , Saturday
afternoon at 2:00, with Worship Service
followingat3 : 15.
I
RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Sister Harriett Worner , Supt. Sunday
• SchooL 9:30 a .m.: morning worship ,
10:45 a .m.
THE HILAND CHAPEL , George Casto,
~ pastor. Sunday School , 9:30a.m .; even ' ing worship , 7:30. Thursday evening
prayer service, 7:30p.m .
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST . Do, ;d
Mann , minister: William Watson , Sunday
. school supt . Sunday 5Chool . 9:30 a .m .:
morning worship 10:30o.m .
I FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIS T. 282
t Mulberry Ave. , Pomeroy , Rev . WiUiam
•' R. Newman , pastor: Hershel McClure,
i Sunday school superintendent, Sunday
~ school, 9:30 a .m.; morning worship ,
10:30: evening worship . 7:30 p .m .
Midwe~ prayer service , 7:30p .m .
t
MIDWAY COMMUNITY CHURCH , Oex ter Rd ., Rd ., Langsvi lle, Rev , A. A .
t Hughes, Pastor. Sunday School 10 a .m .
Ser-iices on Tuesday Thursday and Sun • dov . 7:30p .m .
FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH, BoUey
Run Rood , Rev . Emmett Rowson , pastor·.
Handley Dunn, supt. Sunday school, 10
a.m. Sunday evening service 7:30; Bible
leaching. 7:30p .m . Thursday .
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION , Lawrence Manley ,
pastor: Mrs. Russell Young , Sunday
School Supt . Sunday School 9 :30 a .m .
Evening worsh ip, 7:30. Wednesday
proy tr meeting , 7:30p .m .
MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD ,
Raci ne-- Re11 . James Sotlerfleld , pastor .
Morning worship , 9': -45 a .m .; Sunday
school. 10: 45 a .m .; e"ening worship , 7.
1
1 Tuesday . 7:30 p.m ., ladies prayer
~ • meeting: Wednesday , 7:30p .m . YPE .
•
M IDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST . Corner
:, Sixth and Pa lmer , the Rev . Mark Me !
Clung~ Sunday school. 9: 15a.m .; Randy
Hayes, Sunday School , superin tendent .
: Dan Riggs . asst. supt. Morning Worship ,
1 10: 15 a .m . Youth meeting, '7 ~ 30 p .m .
Wednesday , including wee tots , eager
4 beavers, junior ostronauh , and junior
and senior high BYF; choir practice , 8 :30
p.m . We~e~oy prayer meeting and Bi·
blestudy , Wednesday , 7:30/c.m .
~
CHURCH OF CHRIST , M; dlepo&lt;t. 51h
1 and Main , Bob Melton , miC'Iisfer , Scott
Saltsman, a,_sociate minister. Bible
School. 9:30 IP ~ m .; mor~ing wor:,h ip,
10:30 n . m . : elfenlng servtce, 7 :00p.m .
Wednesday Bible Study and youth group

t

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meeliruJS~}: OOp . m .

MIDDLEPORT CHURCH
OF
THE
NAZARENE . Rev . Jim Broome. pastor;
Bill White , Sondoy sc.Qool supt. Sunday

•

Ron&gt;•n•

Pom ~ roy ,

K&amp;C:;LERS
212 E . M.atn Street
992 -3785, Pomeroy

WAID CROSS
SONS STORE

THE DAILY
SENTINEL

S.••·"W&gt;_..,.,,.,......,_,.... _ _
Wheh Longl~low merJIIOfled "lhe screa(lw.g cnt slnutlfee &lt;~veryone
pCrur~ n LJkew1se it wasn't nard to env1s1on the tra 11 oi tne lonesome
1)11'18 ·· But hnl• nas Deel1 wnnen About a siOQif' wnne 6trcn 11 ~ alw ay~ a
Jfln(l' ot 01r cne~

Perti&amp;P! becau!e birtnas a•e ~ k e people Tl'lil!'\f re 1ne same in many
ways, yet eatn Is dlfter w&lt;lt And lherr Irue magn&lt;locence cannot De &lt;l!lll•liKI
He-~ng t)fle alone It's wl1an the~ stalid toge the• that thefl ~·~t!fSII'/ blend!!
11110 a Of'leness which can be speelecular

In the worsh1p and ac~ ~•lies ot tlle churcn "'egam tt1e 11ue per specll~ e

o4 Ol.l r lnd•~ldual tty ~ al'\d our communoty The ch1HCh C3fes aboo I y01.1 u a
persor~

Yet ot helps yQIJ learn 10 ca1e about the soc.ety ot ..nocn you are "
pan ~ inspores eecl1 to wrve all To acho e~e oneness ol la•l h anO """"' c;;,-,
lle$0118 our di~e• s • tv
~

.. ... ,_.....___
,

•o~oolll•

c... ~-

"-1~

Thursdays . Bible Study , Thursdays )
7:30p .m .
LONG BOTTOM, Sunday Sc: hoo l at 9:30
a.m. Evening Worship at 7:30 p .m .
Thursday Bible Study , 7:30p.m .
REEDSVILLE : Sunday School 9:30 a .m .
Morning Worship JO:JO a .m . Evening
Worshp
7 :30 p . m . Bib l e Study
Wednesdays at 7:30p.m .
ALFRED . Sunday School at 9:-45 a .m .
Mqrning Worship of II a .m . Youth , 6 :30
p.m. Sundays . Wednesday Night Prayer
Meeting, 7:30p .m .
ST . PAUL , {Tuppers Plains): Sunday
Scllool 9:00 a .m . Morning Worship at
10:00 o .m . Bible Study , 7 :30p.m. Tues day .
SOUTH BETHEL (Si lver Ridge) : Sunday
School 9:00a .m . Morning Wosh ip 10:00
a.m. Wednesday Bible Study , 7:30p. m .
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST, 0/i"er
Swain, Superintendent. Sunday school
9:30 every week .
HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION . Re ,_
Keith Eblin , pastor. Sunday School, 9 :30
a.m.: leonard Gilmore, lirst elder;
eveninQ service, 7 :30 p .m. Wednesday
prayer meeting . 7:30p .m .
BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF
CHRIST . Duane Worden . minister . Bible
class . 9:30a .m .·; morning worship . 10 :30
a.m.; e\lening worship, 6 :30 p .m .
Wednes-day Bible study , 6:30p .m .
NEW STIVERSVILLE COMMUNITY
Church, Sunday School ser\li ce . 9 :45
a .m.:
Worship
service,
10 :30:
Evangelis-tic Service, 7:30p .m . Wednes day , Prayer meeting , 7:30 .
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST. Porheroy Horrisonvi lle Rd .: Robert Purtell. poslor .
Bill McElroy , Sunday school supt . Sunday
school. 9:30a .m .: morning worship and
communion , 10:30 a .m ., Sunday worship
utrvice. 7 p.m . Wednesday evening
prayer meeting and Bible study, 7 p .m .
ST. JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH , Pine
Grove. The Re v. William Middlesworth ,
Pastor. Church sar\l ices 9:30a .m . Sun day SchoollO:JO a .m .
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST, Jerry
Pingley, pallor. Sunday .school. 9:30
a.m.; morning worsh ip , 10:30 a .m ..
Wednesday evening service , 7:30 .
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST . Re 11. Earl Shuler .
pastor . Sunday school 9:30a.m .: Chur ch
service, 7 p.m.: youth meeting. 6
p.m .Tuesdoy Bibl e Study, 7 p .m.
RACINE CHURCH OF THE NA ZARENE .
Rev . John A. Coffman , pastor . Martha
Wolfe , Chairman of the Boord of Chr i stian life . Sunday School. 9.30 a.m .. mor ning worship , 10:30; Sunday e11en ing
worship , 7:30 p .m. Prayer meeting.
Wednesday , 7:30p.m .
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST . Don L. Walker
Pastor, Rober! Smith , Sunday school
supt .: Sunday sc hool , q:JO a.m ., morn 1ng
worship . 10:40 a .m .: Sunday even ing
worship , 7 :30; Wednesday evening Bibl e

study. 7:30.
DANVILLE WESlEYAN , Rev. R. D.
Brown, pas1or Sunday School , 9:30
a.m .; morning worship 10:-45 : youth ser ·
Vice , 0:45 p.m .: evening worsh ip , 7:30
p.m .: prayer Ond praise. WedneSday .
7:30p .m .
SILVER RUN FREE BAPTIST . Re... . Mor "ir'l Markin , pastor ; Steve Li ttle Sunday
school supt. Sundoy sckool, 10 a .m .;
morning worship , II a .m. Sunday even ·
ing worship , 7:30. Preyer meeting and
Bibl e study ,. Thursday , 7:30p .m .; youth
service, 6 p .m. Sunday .
CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP CHURCH , 383
N . 2nd A&gt;Je ., Middleport . Pastor, B~b
Hollin s. Sunday services. 10:00 a . m and
7 p .m . Tuesday and Friday ser"ices 7:00
p .m .
HOUSE OF PRAYER AND PRAISE .
Uberty A11e .. PoiT)eroy . Services Sunday
3:00p .m . Friday 7 :30p .m. Tuesday 7.30
p .m .
CHESTER CH URCH OF GOD. Re, _ R. E.
Robinson , poster . Sunday school , 9:30
a .m .: war5hip ser\llce. 11 a .m .: evening
ser vice. 7:00: youth serv ice , Wednesday , 7:00p .m.
LANG SVILLE
CHRISTIAN
CHURCH .
Robert E. Musser, pastor . Sunday school,
9:30a.m .; Paul Musser, supt .. morning
worship , 10 :30; Sunday even ing service,
7:00: mid- wee~ service, Wednesday, 7
p .m .
SYRACUSE
CHURCH
OF
THE
NAZARENE , Rev, James B. Kittle , pastor:
Norman Presley , Sunday
School
Superintendent. Sunday school 9:30
a.m .: morning wor&amp;hip, 10:45 a .m .:
e11ange listic service, 7 p.m . Prayer and
Praise Wednesday , 7 p.m .; you th
mee ting . 7 p.m.
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN CHRIST.
Elden R. Blo~e . pastor. Sunday School 10
a.m.: Robert Reed . sup! ,; Morning ser·
mon , 11 a.m.; Sunday night sen~ices
Chris lion Endeo\lor , 7:30p.m .: Song ser vice , 8 p.m.; Preaching 8:30 p.m .
Midweek Prayer meeting, Wednesday , 7
p.m .; Alvin Reed , loy leader .
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST, Located at
Rutland on New limo Road . next to
Forest Acre Pork ; Rev, Roy Rouse ,
pastor: Robert Musser. Sunday Schaal
supt . Sunday sc hool , 10:30 a .m .; worship
7 :30 p.m .Bible Study , Wednesday , 7:30
p.m .: Saturday ni ght prayer ser11fce . 7:30
p.m .
HeMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN , Roger
Watson . pastor; Mildred Ziegler. Sunday
schoalsup t. Morning worship , 9 :30 o .m .:
Sundoyschool . 10 :30 a .m.: evening ser vice . 7·30 .
·
MT . UNION BAP TIST. Merl in Teeet:s .
pos1or : Joe Sayre, Sunday School
Su perin tenent. Sunday school , 9:45
a .m .: evening worship , 7:30p .m . Prayer
meeting. 7 :30p .m . Wedn&amp;!ldoy .
TUPPERS PLAI'lS CHURCH OF CHRIST .

Weekly Sermon
Sometimes we must, of nec essi ty , d i sappoint our c h i ldren eve n as
we help them . The v i rtually un i versal dislike of spinac h or cas t or oil
proves that .
Jesus' liste ners must have fe l t th a t kind of d i sappoin tm en t too . T hey
looked to Him for help . They gro aned un de r the bur d en of a tre m e n
dous self · imposed diSCipline ..,..... THE LAW . The M essia h, they t e ll,
would deliver them from their lega l misery .
But instead of doing away with the o ld str ictures, jesus rei nforces
them by taking them lo th eir l ogical e nds - logical because we
humans are both body and sp i rit , physical and e mo ti onal cre atures
made In Goers image .
We chafe, do we not, under a ny type of obed ience, and Jesus' law
seems to b ind us c lose ly . Jesu s may h ave sought to he lp us, we teel j
but we are quic k l y disappointed in what He offers. W e want a "q ui c k ·
fix ," but Jesus offers a " permanent solution" to all our ills. what·
soever they be .
Legal ism is poisonous . That' s what Jesus was saying in Matthew
5: 17 ·37 when He Insisted on involvement ot the hear t . Hypoc rites are
perfectionistic, n arrowmi nded, 1 iterai i s tic . Jesus c am e to save the si n ·
ner , and th e most difficult t o deal with, Is - you guessed It - the
hypocri te. But Jesus loves the hypocrite, the Pharisee, the religiou s
extremist, j ust as He loves the har dened si nner. the adulterous woman
(or man) and the irreligious pagan .
Jesus a'lso exposes the deception of self -su ff iciency . We are not suf·
f!cient of our own efforts. "Our competency, our suffi cie ncy," Paul in·
sists, ''is from God.' ' So long as we are too timid to co mmit murder or ·
adulTery, we can PRETEND to keep God ' s law. But Jesus says we
cannot depend on our. own efforts. We must. be to tally dependent upon
th e Lord of a ll,
Jesus came to bring the law of love into full blossom . W e think of the
law as a series of rules a11d regulat ions. But Jesus' idea of law is law
informed by love - nam e ly God ' s Jove, th e love which rul es th e world .
All the com mandm ents are summed up in taw of lov e : " Love God ...
love your neighbor ... love your ene my ."
Jesus' law is not a ceiling bey o nP which w e must not go. lt is a floor
bene a th Wh ich we must not venture. It is a spiritual support upon
wh ich we build, with God's help. Jesus wants u~ to be more than
lawkeepe rs . He insists fhal we become law · doers . By loving us to the
Cross, Jesus shares GOd's law with us In a remarkable and
revolutionary way .
Lik e spinach - like castor oil - It rea llY will be good tor us. - By T .
w. Ri c hards, Divine Life Missions . .
4

o.

Vincen t Wotars , pastor; Howard Blair
Colwell. superintendent. Sunday School. .
9 :30 a .m .: morning church , 10:30 a .m .;
Su nday evening service 7:30: Wednesday Bible Study, 7:30p.m .
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE .
Rev . Herbert Grote , pastor. Fronk Riffle ,
sup!. Sunday School. 9:30a .m . Wonhip
service. 11 a .m . and 7:30p .m . Prayer
meeting , Wednesday , 7 :30p .m .
LAUREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST
CHURCH , Rev , Floyd F. Shook , pastor;
lloyd Wright, Director of Christian
Education . Sunday School , 9:30 a . m .;
Morning Worship , 10:30 a . m .; Choir
Practice . Sunday , 6 :30 p.m .; Evening
Worship , 7:30 p .m. Wednesday Prayer
and Bible Study . 7.30 p.m .
DE XTER CHURCH OF CHRIST , Charles
Rus sel l. Sr .. minister : Rick Macomber ,
supt . Sunday sc hool , ljt ;JO a .m .: worsh ip
ser\lice . 10:30 a .m . Bible Sludy , Tuesday.
7:30p.m .
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS
CHRIST OF LATTER bAY SAINTS,
Portland Racine Rood . William Roush ,
pa stor . Phyllis Stobort. Sunday School
Supt . Sunday School , 9:30a .m .; Morning
worship , 10:30 a .m .. Sundoy evening
ser lfice 7 p .m . Wednesday evening
prayer s-erv ices . 7:30p.m
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST , Rev. Earl Shuler,
pastor . Worship ser&gt;Jice, &lt;1 :30 a .m . Sun day sc hool. 10:30 o ,m , Bible Study ond
prayer serv ice Thursday , 7:30p.m .
CARLETON CHURCH . Kingsbury Rood .
Gory King , pastor . Sunday school , 9 :30
a .m., Rolph Cdrl . superintendent: even ing worshi p , 7 :30p.m : Proyetr meeting,
Wednesday , 7:30p.m .
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN . Tom
Richeson. pastor: Wa llace Damewood ,
Sunday School Superintendent . Worship
serllice ol9o .m . BibleSchool10o .m .
HYSELL RUN HOliNESS CHURCH , Sun day School at 9:30a.m .; worship ser v ices at 10:30 a . m . Pastor Rev . Theron
Durham. Thursday services at 7:30 p . m . '
with Re v. Okey Cart.
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION at Bold
Knob , located on County Rood Jl . Rev .
Law rence Gluesencomp, pastor ; Rev
Roger Wil lia rd . assistant pastor .
Preac hing services , Sunday 7:30 p.m ..
prayer meeting , Wednesday . 7:30p.m . ,
Gory Griffith, leOder . Youth groups,
Sunday e11ei ng, 6:30p.m . with Roger and
Violet Willford as leader s. Communion
se r11ices firs-t Sunday each month .
WHITE'S CHAPEL , Coolville RD . Re v.
Roy Deete r , pastor . Sunday school 9 :30
o .m.: worship service, 10:30 a .m . Bible
study and praye r serv ice , Wednesday ,
7:30p.m .
"'\"
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST, Bob
Buckingham , pa!ltor: Herb Elliott, Sun day school sup!. Sunday school . 9 :30
a .m .: morning worship and comunion ,
10:30 a .m .
RUTLAND BIBLE METHODIST CHUR!:H ,
Amos Tillis . pa stor : Donny Tillis . Sunday
School Supt. Sunday School , 9 : 30a . m .~
followed by morning worship . Sunday
evenin g service , 7:00 p .m . Prayer
meeting, Wednesdo-,r . 7:00p.m .
RUTLAND
CHURCH
OF
THE
NAZARENE . R&amp;\1 , lloyd D. Grimm , Jr .,
pastor. Sunday school , 9:30 a .m .: wor ship ser\lice , 10:30 o .m . Broadcast li ve
over WMPO; young people's service , 7
p .m . Evangelistic service. 7:30 p.m .
Wednesday service, 7:30p.m .
FIRST SOUTHERN BA.PTIST . Corner of
Second and Anderson, Ma son. Pastor ,
Fran~ Lowther . Sunday school, 9:45
a .m .: worship service , 11 a .m . and 7:30
p .m. We&amp;kly Bibl&amp; Study, Wednesday ,
7:30p.m .
MASON CHURCt-i OF CHRIST , Miller
St. . Mason . W . Va . Eugene l. Conger ,
n1inister. Sunday Bible Study 10 a.m .:
Worship II a .m . and 7 p .m . Wednes-day
Bible Study, \lOCOI music, 7 p .m .
LIFE SCIENCE CHURCH 12 Nonh
Third St . . Chesh ire . Independent. fun damental .services. Sunday eve n ing 7 :30
p.m . Pastor Rev . Or . Ra~ert Persons.
MASON ASSEMBLY OF GOD, Dudding
Lone , Mason , W . Vo . Rev . Ronnie B.
Rose . Pastor, Sunday School 9 :45 O. m. :
Morning Worship 11 a .m . Evening Ser vice 7:30 p .m . Wednesday Women 's
Ministries q a .m . (meeting and prayer .
Prayer and Bible Study 7 p .m .
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION , The Re \1 . Wil liam
Campbell, pastor . Sunday School, 9 :30
a .m .; Jc.mes Hughes . supt., evening ser vice, 7 :30 p .m . Wednesday e...-ening
prayer mee,lng, 7:30p.m . Youth prayer
serv ice each Tuesday .
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH, Letart, W.
Va ., Rt . 1, Mark Irwin, pastor. Worship
setrv ices, 9:30 a.m.: Sunday school, 11
a .m .: R\lening worship , 7 :30 p.m . Tues day cottage prayer meeting ond Bible
study, 9 :30 a.m . Worship ser"lce,
Wednesday , 7 :30p.m .
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH , now located
on Pomeroy Pike, County Rood 25, near
Flatwoods . Rev . Blackwood , pastor. Ser \lices on Sunday at 10:30 a .m . and 7 :30
p.m . with Sunday school. 9:30 a .m. Bible
study, Wedneaday, 7 :30p.m .
INDEPENDENT HOLINESS CHURCH .
tNC . - Pearl St., M iddleport. Rev .
O 'Dell Man ley , pos ter; Ar thur Barr , Sun·
day school superintendent. Sunday
school, 9 :30a.m .; evening worship , ? :30
p .m . Prayer ond prolae ter..,lce, Wedn•s ·
day, 7:30p .m .
RUTLAND APOSTOLIC CHURCH OF
JESUS CHRIST~ Elde' James Miller . Bible
stud-,r, W.dnesdoy . 7 :30 p .m . ; Sunday
School, 10 o .m . Sunday night aervlce.
7:30p .m .
POMEROY WeSLEYAN HOLINESS Harrisonville Rood ; Dewey King , pastor:

1'

.

HELP YOUR HEART.

GroceriesGeneral Merchandise
Racine 949· 2550

Middleport·

Middleport , Oh•o

school . Q:30 om .: morning worship ,
10:30 a .m .:
Sunday evangelistic
meeting . 7:00 p.m. Prayer meeting ,
Wedne$dOy ,
7
p.m.
UNITED PRESBYTERIAN MINISTRY OF
MEIGS COUNTY . Dwight L. Zovitz , direc tor .
HARRISONVILLE PRESBYTERIAN . Re,
Ernest Stri ck lin , pastor. Sunday church
uhool. 9:30 a .m .. Mrs. Home r lee .
supt.; mcirning worship, 10:30 .
MIDDLEPORT , Sunday school , 9:30
a.m ., Richard Vaughan , supt. Morning
worsh ip, 10:30.
SYRACUSE
FIRST
U NITED
PRESBYTERIAN Church . Worship service
9:30a.m. Sunday School10:30 a .m . Mrs .
Sampson Hall. sup! .
RUTlAND CHURCH OF GOO , Randall
Bailey , pastor . Sunday school. 10 a .m .;
Sunday worship , 11 a .m .; Children 's
church . 11 a .m .: Sunday even ing ser·
vice , 7 :30 p .m .; Wednesday evening
young ladies auxiliary , 6 p .m . Wednes day family worship , 7:30p.m .
HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH, Neo'
long Bottom , Edsel Hart, pastor . Sunday
school , 10 a .m ., Church . 7·30 p .m .;
prayer meeting , 7 :30p .m. Thursday .
MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL , Th ird
Ave .. the Re \1 . Will iam Knittel. pastor .
Thomas Kelly , Sunday School Supt . Sun day sc hool. 10 a.m . Classes lor all ages :
evening sar\lice, 7:30; Bib le study ,
Wednesday , 7 :30p.m ., youth services ,
Friday , 7:30p .m .
MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST , Cor ner Ash and Plum; Ralph Butcher ,
pas)or. Saturday e~o~ening ser \I ICe , 7:30
p.m .; Sunday School , 10:30 a ~m ,
MEIGS
COOPERATIVEPARISH
METHODIST CHURCH
Richard W . Thomos . Dir ector
POMEROY CLUSTER
Re\1 . Robert McGee
POMEROY , Sunday School 9 : 15 a .m .
Wo!A~p service
10 :30 a .m . Choir
rehearsal. Wednesday . 7 p .m . Relf .
Robert McGee, pastor .
ENTERPRISE , Worsh ip 9 a .m . Church
School10 a .m .
ROCK SPRINGS . Sunday Schooi9 :1S a .
m. Wt:!'nh ip service , l Oa. m .
FLATWOODS , Church School 10 a .m .
Wo?hip 11 o .m .
MIDDLEPORT CLUSTER
HEATH , Church School 9 :30a.m . Wor ship 10:30 ·a .m . UMVF 6 p .m . Robert
Robinson , Pastor.
RUTLAND , Church School 9:30 a.m .
Worship 1.0:30 a .m .
SALEM CENTER , Worship 9 a.m.
Ch urch School 9 :45a.m .
SYRACUSE CLUSTER
Rev. Stanley Merrif ied , Minister
FOREST RUN : Worshp 9 a .m . Church
SchoollO a .m .
MINERSVILLE , Church School 9 a .m .
Worship 10 a .m .
ASBURY : Church School 9 :50 a .m .
Worship 11 a .m . Bibl e Study 7:30p.m .
Thursday . UMW fi st Tuesday .
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
Rev . Da vid Harris
RRv . Mark Flynn
Rev, Florence Smith
Hilton Wolfe
BETHANY , (Dorcas ). Worship 9:30
a.m . Church School 10 :30 a .m . Biblestudy . Thursday . 7:30p .m .
CARMEL , Worship second and fourl h
Sundays at 10:-45 a. m . Sunday School ,
s~c o nd and fourth Sundays , 9 :30 a . m .
Worship and Sunday School ol Su tton
United Methodist Church on first and
third Sundays . Bible study together each
Wednesday at 7 :30 p.m . Family night
dinner together each third Th1.1rsday at
6 :30.
APPLE GROVE , Sunday School Q:30
o..m . Worship 7:30p .m . 1st and Jrd Sun days; Preyer meeetlng Wednesday 7 :30
p.m .. Fallowshlp supper first Saturday 6
p.m . UMW 2nd Tuesday 7:30p.m .
EAST LETART . Chruch School 9 a .m .
· Worship ser\liCe 10 a .m . Prayer meeting
7:30 p.m . Wednesday . UMW sec:ond
Tuesday 7:30p .m .
, RACINE WESLEYAN - Sunday school
10 a .m .; worship , 11 a.m . Ckoir practice :
Thursday , 8 p.m .
LETART FALLSWorsh ip ser11ice 9
a .m . Church SchoollOo.m .
MORNING STAR, Warship 9 :30a.m.:
Church School10:30 a .m .
MORSE CHAPEl , Church School 9 :30
a ;m . Worship 1l 'a .m .
PORTlAND , Sunday Sc hool 6:30p .m .,
Evening Worship, 7:30 p.m . Youth
Meeting, Tuesday 7:30p.m . Bible Study ,
Thursday . 7:30p .m .
SUTTON, Sunday School f irst and third
Sundays. 9 :30 a . m .: worship , first and
third Sundays. 10:45 o . m. Worship ond
Sunday School at Carmel United
Methodist Church on second and fourth
Sundays. Bible study together eoch
Wednesday, 7 :30p .m . Fam ily night din ner togetther each third Thu rsday ol6:30
p.m .
NORTHeAST CLUSTER
Rev . Richard W. Thomas
Duane Sydenstricker, Sr .
John W. Douglas
Charles Domlgon
JOPP". Worship 9:00 a ,._ Church
SchoollO:OOo .m .
CHESUR, Worship &lt;'I a .m ., Church
School 10 a .m . Cl-toir; eheorsal 7 p .m ..

t
TR INITY CHURCH, Rev . W . H. Petrin ,
t pastor : Roy Mayer , Sunday school supt .
Church School , 9 :15a.m .; worship serf vice , 10:30 o.m . Choi r rehea rsol , Tuest day, 7:30p.m. under direction of Al ice
' Nease.
POMEROY
CHURCH
OF
THE
6 NAZARENE : Corner Union and Mulberry , '
: frelf. Clyde. V. Henderson, pastor . Sun day school , _9:30 a .m .. _Glen McClung .
supt.; mornmg worshtp , 10.30 a .m .;
t e_vening serv ice , 7:30: mid -week ser t vtce , Wednesday , 7:30p.m .
GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH - J:lb E.
•
~Main St. , Pomer oy. The Re~ . Robert B.
• Groves, rector . Sunday serYtces at 10 :30
: a .m. Holy Communion on the fi rst Sun ~ day of each nibnth , and combined with
t morning prayer on the third Sunday ,
r Morning prayer and sermon on all other
: Sundays of the month . Church School
' and nursery core provided . Coffee hour
• in the Parish Hall immediately fol low ing
the seryice.
·
POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST, 212 W .
Main St . Neil Proudfoot, _p astor . Bi~l e
t school. 9:30 a.m .; m~rntng worshtp ,
t 10:30 a .m .: Youth meettngs . 6:30p.m .;
~ evening worship . 7:30. Wednesday night
prayer meeting and Bible study , 7 :30

f

Sarurd~)

HEART YOU LOVI.

Phone 992-3480

Fmla )
I Coun1 h1~n ~
1-4 '!" l l

SHI IS HELPING YOU SA VI A

Henry Eblii1 , Jr ., Sunday School Supt.
Sunday Sci-1ool 9:30 o . m .: Morning Worship 11 a . m.: Sunday evening ser\lice,
7:30 .m.; Prayer Meeting , Thur~doy , 7:30
p.m .
SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF GOD Nol Pentecosta l , Re11 . George O iler ,
pastor. Worskip serv ice Sunday, 9:45
a.m .; Sunday school , 11 a .m .; _worship
ser11ice. 7:30 p.m . Thursday prayer
meeting , 7:30p.m .
MT . HERMON United Brethren In
Christ Church. Rev . Robert Sanders ,
pastor : Don Will , lay leader. LO&lt;ated In
Te:was CommUn i ty olf CR 82. Sunday
sc hool. 9:30a .m .; Morning worship ser.
vice . 10:&lt;45 a .m .; evening preaching ser vi ce second and fourth Sundays , 7:30
p.m .: Chr,lstion Endeavor. first and third
Sundays, ., :30 p .m . Wednesday prayer
meeting ond Bible !lfudy , 7:30p.m .
JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES, 37319 Slate
Rou te 12-4 (One mile east of Rutland ),
Sunday . Sible lecture ~ : 30 a . m .: Wot r
chtower s! udy , 10:20 a. m .: Tuesday , BIble study . 7:30 p .m .;
Thursday _.
Theocratic School . 7:30 p .m .; Service
Meeting, 8:20p .m .
RUTLAND FREEWILL BAPTIST Chu&lt;eh Dr. James A . Bruhl. pastor. Sunday
sc hoo l. 10 a.m .; Sunday evening llr\llce,
7:00: Wednesday prayer meeting, 7:0Q
p .m .
CHURCH OF GOO of Prophecy. located
an the 0 . J. Wh ite Rood off highway 16d,
Sunday Sc hool 10 a .m . Superlntetndenl
John Loved ay . First Wednesday night of
month CPMA services . second Wednea ·
day WM8 meeting , third through fift~
youth ser\lic,e . Geofge Croyle, pastor
HOPE 8APTl5l CHAPEL - 570 Gran't
St ., M iddleport: Sunday School , 10 a . m ..;
morning worship , 11 a . m . evening wor-ship, 7 p. m, Wednesday evening Bible
study and prayer meeting. 7 p. m. A.l f ilio ted w ith Southern Baptist Conven tion .
BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHRISTEugene Underwood , pastor : Harry Hen dricks . superintendent . Sunday school.
9 :30a .m .; mornin g worship , 10:30 a .m .:
eYening worship . 7 p.m . Wednesday Bi ble study, 7 p.m .
JUBILEE CHRISTIAN CENTER
Georget 's Creek Rood . Rev . C. J. Lemley .
pastor: John Fellura . superintendent .
C hu~ch school. 9;30 a .m .; morning wor sh ip. 10:30: evening ser\l ice, 7 p .m . Bible
Study Thurs ., 7 p .m . Cl osses for all agel .
Nursery prov ided for worship services .
ST. PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH , Corner
of Sycamore and Second Sts .. Pomeroy .
The Re v. William Middlesworth , Pastor .
Sunday S&lt;lhool at 9 :45 a .m . and Church
Ser\lices 11 a .m .
SACRED HEART . Re\1 . Father Paul D.
Welton . pastor . Phone 992-2625. Sotur ·
day evening Moss , 7:30; Sunday Moss , B
and 10 a .m .; Confession. Saturday .
7-7:30 p.m.
VICTORY BAPTIST - 525 N. 2nd Sl .,
Middleport. James E. Keesee, pastor .
Sundc:ly morn ing worsh ip , 10 o.m ,; e\len .
ing service , 7: Wednesday evening worship , 7 p.m .; Visitation , Thursday , 6:30
p .m .
TRINITY Christian Auembly , Coolville
Gilbert spencer, pastor . Sunday
school , 9:30 ci .m .: morning worship . 11
a .m . Sunday e"ening ser\llce, 7:30p.m .;
midweek prayer ser\lice Wednesday ,
7:30p .m .
MOUNT Olive Community Church,
Lowrencet Bush, pastor: Mo .. Folmer . Sr .
Superintendent. Sunday School and morning worship , 9 :30a .m . Sunday evening
ser\lice , 1 p.m .: Y~uth me•ting and Bible
study, Wednesday , 7 p .m .
UNITED FAITH CHURCH - Route 7 on
Pomftroy bypass . Rev . Robert Smith , Sr . ,
postor; Rev . James Cundiff. onislant
pastor. Sunday School , 9:30a .m .; mornIng worship , 10:30 a . m .; evening war·
ship , 7:30. Wednesday nl~ht prayer service , 7:30 p.m : Women s Fellowship,
Ti-1ursday . 9:30a. m .
FAITH BAPTIST Church . Mason , meet
at United Steel Workers Union Hall,
Rail road Street, Mason. Pastor, Rev.
Ri chard Jordon . Morning worship 9:30
a.m., Sunday School 10 :30 a.m . Prayer
metetlnQ Wednesday . 7 ::M&gt; p .m .
FOREST RUN BAPTIST - Ro. . Nyle
Borden , poalor . Corneliu1 Bunch,
superintendent. Sunday school. 9 :!l0
o,m .; second and fourth Sundays w"o rship ser..-ice of 2;30 p .m .
·
MT . MORIAH BAPTIST _.. Fourth and
Main St .. M iddleport . Rev . Colvin Min·
nls, pastor, Mra . IEI\IIn Bumoardner,
supt. SundO)' tchool , 9 :30a.m .; wonhlp
service, i0:45 a .m .
NORTH BETHEL United Methodllt
Church, Rev . Chorlft DomiQon , pastor,
Sunday Schoof, '11 :30 a.m .; Wor~hip Service . 10 :_.5 a .m .; Sunday Bible Study,
7:00 p.m .; Wednesday prayer meeting,

7:30p.m.

BURLINGHAM SOUTHERN BAPTIST
CHURCH, Route I , Shade. Pastor Don
Block . Affiliated with Southern Baptlat
Convention. Sunday school, 1:30 p .m. ;
Sunday worship , 2:30 p .m . Thuraday
evening Bible study, 7 p .m .
PENTECOSTAL
ASSEMBLY , Rocloe,
Rout• 124, William Hoback, paator . Sun·
day school. 10 a .m .: Sunday ev.nlng ser·
vice, 6:30 p .m . Wedneaday Hnlng ser·
vice , 7.
CARPeNTER BAPTIST,
FrMiand
Norris, pattor. Oon Cheadle, Supt. Sun·
· dO)' School. 9:30 a .m . Morning Worthlp,
10:30 a.m . Prayer Service. alternate
Sundoya.
NEASE SETTLEMENT FREE WILL lAP·
fiST, Donald R. Ka, , Sr., pastor. Friday
evening aervlc:e, 7 :30 p.m.: Sunday
school. 10a.m .

A••-

T

•••

-HELP YOUR HEART FUND

cj)
cj)
cj)
cj)

Heart clis ase causes premature death and disablity. Your Heart campaip dollars
support researdl which wiH help stop unneciSSaiJ death and ·suffering. Be
pnerous when a Hart Volunteer knocks' at your door.

H

No one is safe from hart dis• se Hhits old and young and an)One in
bftween. The Heart Association has free information cin heart disease that
may change your thinking and your hdth habits. ·Support JOUf Heart

Association and give to the Heart campaign.

A
R

CAMPAIGN CHAIRMAN •••••••••••••••••••• .-•••••• MRS. LOIS KELlY
PUBLICITY CHAIRMAN.
MARION t. CRAWFORD
PRESIDENT. o•• o. oo ••••• oo ..... oo oo .. oo •• JAMES WITHERELL. M. D.

T

VICE PRESIDENT oo•··•····••oo ...... oo••· WILMA MANSFIELD, M.D.
TREASURER ••••• oo .. oo .... •oooo. oo .. oo• oo•• MRS. MILliE MIDKIFF

5

u
N

D
A

oo o• •••• o oo••o• o o ••o•

y

THIS PAGE IS BEING SPONSORED BY THE FOLLOWING AREA BUSINESSES:

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY
Ph. 992·2556

•

•

•

•

SIMMONS OLD5-CADILLAC

G&amp;J AUTO PARTS
Pomeroy , OH.

Ph. 992-2139

NO ONE IS SAFE FROM
HEART DISEASE. . . .

FRANCIS FLORIST

BAUM TRUE VALUE
Chester, OH .

Ph. 985-3301

Middleport, OH.

RC BOmiNG CO.

SMITH NELSON MOTORS
Pomeroy, OH.

Ph. 992-2174

NEW YORK CLOTHING HOUSE
FARMERS BANK

INGEL'S FURNITURE
Middleport, OH.

Ph. 992·2635

THE DAILY SENTINEL
Pomeroy, OH .

Ph. 992·2156

Pomeroy, OH.

POMEROY_FLOWER SHOP
Pomeroy, OH .

Ph. 992-2039

Pomeroy, OH .

·Ohio Valley Plumbing &amp; Heating
Ph. 992 ·2036

Pomeroy, OH.

Chesler, OH.

Ph. 985-3308

MEIGS AUTO PARTS
Ph . 992-7711

Ph . 992-6661

MAR(;U~RITE

SUGAR .RUN MILLS
Ph. 992·2115

Pomeroy, OH.

Pomeroy, OH .

CENTRAL TRUST CO.

K&amp;C JEWELERS
Ph. 992-3785

Ph. 992· 2136

Pomeroy, OH .

Ph. 992 ·3639

DALE C. WARNER INS.
Ph. 992·2143

Pomeroy, OH.

Ph. 992·2133

Pomeroy-Rutland-Tuppers Plains

Ph. 992-2121

Pomeory, OH.

Gravely Tractor Sales &amp;Service
Ph. 992·2975

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REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE

-RIDENOUR SUPPLY

MEIGS INN
Ph. 9'l2-3629

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Ph. 992-2049

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.EWING FUNERAL HOME

Middleport, OH .

Ph. 992-3542

Ph. 992-2178

BANK ONE OF POMEROY
Pomeory, OH.

Ph. 992-2644

Rawlings-Coats-Blower Funeral Home
Ph. 992-5141

Pomeroy,'OH.

ph. 992-6614

SEARS CATALOG STORE

Middleport, OH.

SHOES
Pomeroy, OH.

Ph. 992·5130

Pomeroy, OH.

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
Ph. 992-2104

P..omeroy, OH.

RACINE HOME NATIONAL BANK
Ph . 949-2210

Racine, OH.

DOWNING-CHILDS AGENCY
Ph. 992·2342

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heritage house of Shoes
Ph. 992·5627

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DIAMOND SAVINGS &amp; LOAN
Ph. 992·6655

Pomeroy, OH.

�Pa~-a

The Daily Senlinei- Page-9

Pomeroy Middleport , Ohio

Friday. February 20,1981
DICK TRACY

The Daily sentinel

Heart Association and VMH fund
schooling for special care unit
By Marion C. Crawford
Meigs Heart Chapter
Meigs Countians certainly have
every reason to be proud of Veterans
Memorial Hospital and feel confident that in time of critical
illnesses there is a place to go where
qualified personnel stand ready to
prolong lives.
There is a room - it is 116 - that
is .different from the others. This is
the special care unit. This unit
opened on September 22 of this past
year. Dr. Johnny A. Brawner, a
surgeon, is chairman of the special
care unit committee. Sharon Dailey
is the head nurse.
After talking to the Hospital Administrator Scott Lucas, I went into
this room on Tuesday - saw what it
involved and talked at great length
with Rhonda Da'iley, inservice director, who explained its operation and
what type patients it handled. I
came away very impressed!
This two-bed unit is special in
many ways, first with the
seriousness of any illness of any
patient that ends up in this room.
Only nursing personnel who have
had advanced cardiac life support
training in Columbus are qualified to
be assigned to this unit. These highly
qualified personnel provide expert
medical and nursing care, as well as
infection control in this specially
designed and equipped environment
to those patients who require continuous, comprehensive observation
and treatment due to the seriousness
of their illness. These medical personnel are, with their skill, able to
direct their ability toward meeting
life saving care and treatment in ad-

dition to spiritual, physical and
emotional needs of the patient.
Four medical people were trained
this past year to function in this
capacity with expenses paid by the
Central Chapter, American Heart
Association. They were Dr. James
Witherell and three registered nurses, Pam Henderson, Bonnie Smith
and Raye Gwi~dowsky. Other RN's
have been sponsored by the hospital
itsejf, two of who are full time nurses, Cathy Baldwin and Vickie
Clelland. At least two more of
Veterans Memoria 1 Staff will he
trained within the next year, after
which these eight or more highly
specialized staff members will
supervise training of others.
Room 116's patients are monitored
24 hours a day with at.least one of the
above mentioned people in attendance at all times. When there is
no one in the unit there is one person
on call and can respond within
minutes. With proper care In this
room filled with life support equij&gt;ment, lives are saved, the critical
period reduced and its patients are
prepared for convalescence.
Now then, the uteam" consists of
more than those f've spoken or so
far. As in all successful team efforts
there are the "support" personnel
with the expertise to properly maintain the patients. They are: A COo
chainnan, three active members of
the medical starr, hospital administration, director of nursing, inservice nursing director, head nurse
(SC U), s.upervisor medical
laboratory, the pharmacist and the
respiratory therapist. Operation of
the entire unit is under the direction

'Heroes of Faith'
program topic of local

Helen Help Us

Do divorced women represent
~easy game ' to modern men?

HELEN AND SUE :
You said report complaints about
undelivered mail orders to the office
of consumer affairs, a newspaper or
TV hotline, the post office, and
authorities or agencies in the city
where you sent the check.
1 did all this, plus I wrote to the
magazine that ran the ~d­
vertisement. The editor said they'd
received over 100 complaints and
were trying to locate the culprit, unsuccessfully.

'

The people of Meigs County are ,
benefiting daily by the presence of
this good hospital with its dedicated,
skilled personnel, as well as by the
additional advanced training being
sponsored by the American Heart
Association and VMH. I would say
that our county does not take a back
seat to any other county in the state
when it comes to being prepared for
any medical setback that any of you
should experience in the future. We
are, indeed, lucky to have Veterans
Memorial Hospital so close and so
well staffed with professionals standing by to provide life saving efforts
to you - the citizen and potential
patient.

ASTRO
GRAPH

The specials were "Footprints"
"Heroes of the Faith" was the
program topic at the Tuesday night and " Break Through" by Naomi
meeting of the Forest Run United Wyatt. There was a meditation by
Methodist Church held at the home Mrs. Napper and the closing song,
"Fairest Lord Jesus. "
of Ann Watson.
During the business meeting ofEdith Sisson was program leader
reading Psalm 95 and a meditation ficers' reports were given and the
entitl~ "The Unbalanced World . love offering was collected. Mary
Freedom." Unison reading of " The Nease, president, read a letter from
Holy Scriptures" and Hebrews 11 Beatrice McMahon. A donation was
preceded readings on the heros, sent to the Heart and Hand House at
Polycarp by Lilian Napper , Philippi, W. Va. The Lenten breakAugustine ci Hippo by Nancy fast at Trinity Church was anMerrifield, Francis of Assissi by nounced for March 4. A rurrunage
Ann Watson, Martin Luther by sale will be held March 5 and 6 in the
Kathleen Scott, John Calvin by Mary church basement. There were 68
Nease, John Wesley by Hilda sick and shutin calls reported.
Refreshments were served to the
Yeauger, and William Boothe by
Betty Blackwood. Short prayers by 14 members and the Merrifield
Leah Nease interspersed the children by the hostesses, Mrs. Watreadings. There was group singing son, Carolyn Salser, and Naomi
Wyatt.
of "Breathe on Me Breath of God."

BY HELEN AND SUE HOTTEL
Special correspondents
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
You championed the woman who
said she wanted to keep her virginity
until marriage, but added, "And at
least two or three men will agree
with you."
Not even two or three guys agree
with a divorcee's resolve not to be a
one-night stander! Or forever
available!
I'm 21 and far from Victorian. But
I don't like "wham, bam, thank you,
ma'am." I've often been called a
prude because I won't jwnp into bed
at the drop of a suggestion.
Finally I found a man I thought
was my friend. But since we started
an affair, I feel terribly pressured.. He thinks I should be there every
time he snaps a finger, and says I
don't know what love is all about.
You see," occasionally I prefer just
cuddling, though I do enjoy sex.
Aren't there any men left who understand that a woman isn't just for
sex only•- SORRY TO FINALLY
REAUZEIT
DEARSTFRI :
Your question will bring dozens of
answers from men who insist they
aren't the WBTYM type and wish
they cnulrl prove it to you.
Since we can't forward this sort of
mail, I can only say, "Keep looking :
more and more men these day.s are
sensitive to women's needs. Yours
will be along shortly."- HELEN
(I hope! - SUE)

of the special care unit committee
with the chairman acting as the
director.
The nursing staff, under the supervision of the head nurse, is responsible for the patient care and you can
bet your life it·is done magnificently
by these highly skilled women.
To bring more information to you,
the public, because this special unit
could some day save your life or that
of someone you love, I would like to
close by telling you exactly what
type serious illness is treated in this
special care unit. Now this is not an
exclusive list, but merely an example of the most eligible cases. They
are respiratory embarrassment.
any etiology and then too, shock,
cardiovascular problems, acute or
life threatening, hemorrhage, acute
trawna, post-surgical presenting
anesthesia or procedural complications, also stroke and diabetic
acidosis and pulmonary embolism.

My story: a year ago .t :)t:ll~ 1v1 a
$2i gadget you stick in the soil of
your potted plant. It was supposed to
cough if the plant wanted water,
hum if it was content and make
several other noises for various
needs. The company cashed my
check and vanished.
What do I do now? - SHIRLEY
DEAR SHIRLEY:
You hum with anger, and, I'm
afraid, kiss your check goodbye.
Sorry ... HELEN

SHIRLEY:
And consider this a $21 lesson on
the smarts of buying locally.- SUE
DEAR RAP :
I've been going steady with Tom
for 10 months, but" now we hardly
ever see each other except at school
where he walks me to and from
classes.
He tells people we're still together,
but tells I,11C he's not sure. He never
asks me on dates any more. Or calls,

or comes over.
Other guys have asked me out, but
I say "No" because I don't want to

lose Tom. Should I keep on waiting•
- MIXED UP
DEARM.U. :
Seems to me you've already lost
Torn. Find out for sure by telling him
you plan to start dating again, and if
he doesn't ask, others will. HELEN

M.:
Waiting for a "steady" who never
even calls is like eating thin soup
with chopsticks: frustrating, foolish,
and a total waste of time. Accept a
"justrriends" relationship with Tom
and find a guy who is really interested. - SUE
(GOT A PROBLEM? Or a subject
for discussion, two-genera"tion style?
Direct your questions l9 either Sue
or Helen Hottel - or both, if you
want a combination motherdaughter answer - in care of this
newspaper.)

i

Febnary !I, 1!11

Good c.l~ you have clone for others are
likely t o be repaid with a sub!tantial bemus
th~ cuming year. Thi.li should be espedally
true in three particular instances .
PISCES jFeb. %0-March %'0) Although your
mtentions wiU be aimed at helping another
today, your kind actioru; could end up
benefitinl!l you more than the one you unselfi!;hl y sought to atd. Find out more of wh.Ht
Ues ahead for you in the year followin~ your
bu"thday by sendin~ for your copy uf AstroGraph. Mail Sl for each to Astro-Graph, Box
489, Radw City Statiun, N. Y. 10019. Be sure
to specify birth date.
ARIES lMart'h U-AprU ltl Partnership
arrangernents should tum out to be very fortunate for you today, becawe allies who
share interests with you ma_y be able tu acc.vmphsh what you ccm't.

,I'\..,_

-~

\F He FE:L.l Off

LObi&lt;, EASY! THOSE'

TOO fAR MCK

&amp;LOWS 0'-J THE HEAD
WEREN'T LOVE TliPS.~
VOU RIDE -- I'LL
HANOLE· T HE

;t: .r·•

DO GS~

HE COULO

6Y NOW!

,

ARE PAID
LA~ FIKM
THAT'S ALL I
KNOW,

REMINAHOH'iMOUG
!SEND THE BILLS
TOA ~O. Il()~ ..

OH, SURE. HE'S
AKIHD OF
JOKE IN THE
MEDICAL

COMMUNITY.

'""

POSTER WINNER - Honorable mentloos In the
Dental Health Month postal contest went to Mayla
Yoachim, second grader at Racine and daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Mark Yoacham, standing left, and Melanie
Van Meter, fourth grade Racine student, and daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Van Meter, right back. The win-

FRIDAY
MIDDLEPORT Lodge 363, F&amp;AM,
will hOld its annual inspecting 7:30
p.m. Friday: work in Master Mason
Degree: all Master Masons invited.

·· AHD l SU~SE
YOU'iE HEiER
EiEH HEARD
Of 111E "6RAY
IWENGER"I

THE BILLS

l DOH' T~NON THE
DO~OR PREFERG TO

Social Calendar

e.e

I'II.OrEN 50LIP

neni are with Dr. Margie Lawson. Children who participated may slop by the clinic and receiwe free foothbrush aud noss by Identifying their posterS. Some
posten will be displayed at the Clinic and at Racine
businesses.

Dental Health Month
poster winners told
( ;i\SI &gt;1.1 NE t\ \ .LEY

Prizes were presented Thursday
ADULT FELLOWSHIP Class wi'll
to
the winners in the Dental Health
bowl at Pomeroy Lanes Friday at 8
Month
poster contest sponsored by
p.m.
the Racine Dental Clinic.
Approximately 70 posters were enSATURDAY .
tered
in the contest by elementary
DAVE LUCAS and the WatchrnE
students
of Letart Falls, Racine.
Quartet Saturday, 7 p.m. at the Zion
Syracuse,
and Portland schools.
Church of Christ, public invited.

In the first through third grade
category, ihe winner was Chris
Wolfe, pictured left front with Dina
Shuler, fifth grade student at Letart
Falls, the first place winner in the
fourth through sixth grade category,
right front. Each received $5 in cash,
a blue ribbon, and a dental kit.

And put one
in 40ur room,

Li I!

.

Jes' a tad

Two pianos' Are
LJOU trLjinq to spoil
t he child'

hiqher, Rufus.
an' she's on

t,h' car't!

ml!
r

TAURUS IAprU ZO.May 201 [)(ln't be

hesitant abuut taking on la rger responsibilitit.'S today workwise. You'll do a competent job and win the respe&lt;:t of the right
people.
GEMINI !May 21-Juae ZOI You'll be
populilr with pusons fNm all Willks of life
today, but even rnore so with your lll'quain·
lances who have the !!!realest inOucn~..oe . One
could do you· il big filwr.
CANCER tJuoe 21-July H) Pre:;s for a
close today on matters which could be
beneficial financiall y. Your chant't!l:l for a
profitable score look very prornising.
LEO (Jaly 23-Aug. Z%1 You're very adept
today at workinj.l things out so that all who
~tre involved benefit in some 11'\llnncr. Your
fairne~ won't be forgotten.
VIRGO lAue. ts-Sept. ZZI You're now in a
brief cycle where you can receive larger
returns than usual for service or expertise
yuu have tc offer. Do al.(oodjoband hear the
cuh register rin~ .
LIBRA IMpt. %3-0ct. C ) Mo!wne direct
cootrol over situations today which .you
deen\ tu be pe[1JI)nally important. You cna
make them turnout well where others can't.
SCORPIO IOd. Zt-Nov. n~ Your material
pr()Sped.5 look Vel')' encouragin~S toda)', but
more so from the effort.s of other1'! than from
your own actions. Be prepared for the uneli·
pe&lt;te&lt;l.
SAGmARIUS !NOv. %3-Dcc:. 211 Current:!
tire now stirring which could give you
jlL'Itificalion for ~omething you've ~en
hoping for. A lucky break may be
precipit.ated through act LUlU of a friend.
CAPRICORN (Dtt. ZZ..Jaa. 1'1 lXm 't be
afraid to alm for lofty target:! today. You 1
should LVIIle out well ahead even if you fall
shurt u! your marlt. Nuthin~ ventured.
nothin~ gaintd .
AQllARRJS fJao. ZO.Feb. 1'1 Yuu hHve a
we.allh af uperient-e to drilw upoo , and
today severallessum you've l~rned HUIYbe
put tu beneficial uses. Knuwl edj~~e is JIU'ol'e r.

::c '&lt;:lri!'J k..

•
•

FEB.

Grrl scouts meet
Patty Parker gave a report on
Whirlwind '110, scout trip to New
York, New Jersey, and
Philadelphia, Pa . at the Tuesday
night meeting of Salisbury Girl
Scout Troop 1100. Sally Radford
presided at the meeting with Brenda
Sinclair taking attendance and Lisa
Pullens collecting the dues. The
cookie sale was disCW!Sed and
refreshments were served by Lisa
Fryrnyer, April Clark, and Sue Fry.

\/. .

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•

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.'

J

'

ao. 1eot
NEWS

{!1

•
•

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IRIVES PIIIO I ORIII CO.
260 E. Main Sl, Chillitotht, Ohio

.•

."'

Savings. Select from Baldwin, Wurlitzer, Lowrey, Conn, Hammond and

.....
~

...

TERMS: DIRECT FACTORY FINANCING ·UP TO 60 MONTHS TO PAY

~~!;A"

CO., 260 E. MAIN, CHILLICOTHE. OHIO
i

CAROL BURNET'f AND
FRIENDS
Il l ABC NEWS
(t ) 3·2· 1 CONTACT
(1\) OYER EASY Oue11U En ter
!Atnen Si e ve All an and Jayne
Meado ws Ho&amp;t s HughOownsand
Fr ank Blu1r (Clo sed C apllonttd,
USA)
6:30 t 2) . ( 1 ) NBC HEWS
l l l GOODNEWS
( $ l 808NEWHARTSHOW
I I FACE THE MUSIC
IJ ( I )tiOI CBS NEWS
(I )
WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
l11l LILIAS , YOGA AND YOU
C1't} CD .. BC NEWS
8:58 f 3) CBN UPDATE NEWS
7:00 ( 218 PM MAGAZINE
l 3) THE STORY
{5 ) ALL IN THE FAMILY
( I H11lat FAMIL,YFEUO
( 7) POP GOES THE COUNTRY
Cl ( t ) TICTACDOUGH
( 0 ) (I t)
MACNEIL•LEtiRER
REPORT
ll ~

NEWS

(2)8 BULLSEYE
U l THE LESSON
(0 ) SANFORD AND SON
lll ClJ lll JOOEA 'S WILO
( 1 ) (1 4) HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
I t Hit) DICK CAVETT SHOW
t1fl dl FACE THE MUSIC
7 :&amp;8 ( 3) CBN UPDATE NEWS
8 :00 f n G t 1 ) HARPER VALLEY PT~
Sr ella oets t o be ' The R ttllly Gi rl
model tn an nd c ampe1Qn for Reilly
pupe r tOwtllll und 111 so p opular thAI
avon Floro Simpson Re1lly horull
car' I tlr&amp;hor
, 3 ) IN TOUCH
l 4JMOVIE · tCOMEDYI•• ''Foolln'
Around' 1 1i80
I Sl MOYIE •lSCIENCE -FICTION!
' 'Dey TheEarlh Stood Sllll'
1Q51
( f }MUP;!" rStrOWGuoal Mo lll!lll
Manc twe t &amp;r
llJ[ I )I, O'l THE INCREDIBLE HULK
011 vi d Banner 19 th e unwtlling
rec rp tu nl o l a mntl mdor bfille , lhtt
torer unn ur ol A plot whic h plungoa
him tn ta the mld(tle ot a Chinat own
mtrtgue (60mlllS l
( I ) (11) WASHINGTON WEEK tN
REVIEW
l t2liDBENSONMarcy ' sdomlneer ·
lll\1 mol hOI 0fiiV98 fUI I IY 10 AolllnUII
her daughter 'S woddtnO , and Adds
10 the contustoi'l g rrppmg Ihe Ax oc u
IIVO mansiOn by tiHI.IA I On ii11J I I) hOy
Go lllhtH;e 101nony tl M!Hc ytHI 1!1 Ben·
sonJllvll' twr awnv
8 :30 (2JU {7) THE BRAO't' GIPLS GET
MAAfUEO llle ln tho Bn1dy I'\OU·
!!.Ahotd storl $ 10 y411 ba ck to 'no rmnl' alter th6 ulrls and lhoi1 hu•·
bonds rnove tnto lhou new home
(Conc luatOt1)
r t l U2l C8 I'M A DIG GIRL NOW
Ot!lllH·s c ttuuhtm thO rnu!&lt;lla wt'lttn
11n wt1 o rrt n n iii O Spl\m wtlh her
n1 o.lhHf r~ t i!H II:I und nak 'i Om11fr' s

7 !30

•• t"

others.

WARRANTY: All WARRANTIES BACKED AND SERVICED BY GRAVES .PIANO AND

r·

...,•
.••
..
~

•I

•.

·,

Lb:ylhl"~~"'~ '~'~-..1. ~-~61~~£'~~~iJ~!IIII~":t:J~~=~~~i~~:;~~

-.-.-,.---"',.-,-,,-.-,,d
"

Warw•L
, ,- o, ,-. -" -, -,,-. -w-,o-o-. .-.

l ~ l STUFF

DEliVERY: FREE DELIVERY ANYWHERE IN OHIO

....=~~

~ ~~ _/"~ \

I

6'00 II"J0 [7)ClJ (OJ!ibiu tl OI

SAlE HOURS: ~ FRI. &amp; SAT. 12~ SUN.
lOCATION: ACE HARDWARE, 407 PEARl ST., MIDDlEPORT

:=-::'\:-T\::

-- l(~· - -&lt;~~~

L, /~- . u
··'~

EVENING

unclaimed lay-aways and demonstrators that will be sold at Fabulous

J..

'

Evening television listings

Ohio on Fri. 20, Sat. 21, Sun. 22, 1981. These are new, used, trade-ins,

'""=-·\~""".:;~•::

- .... ,,;:.M..:. J,"T' _.,'\1

\

-

Atruckload of Pianos &amp;. Organs will be at Ace Hardware, Middleport,

:.:-~ -~::

-.\.\ : _

\1 . J I

t

Bloodmobile here
The Red .Cross Bloodmobile will be
at the Senior Citizens Center. Wednesday and residents are urged to
give blood to replace the more than
166 units which have been used since
the bloodmobile's last visit here.
Red Cross officials report that
Veterans Memorial Hospital has
transfused &lt;W units in the past two
months, while two Pomeroy residents have required multiple units of
blood. Mrs. Janet Kom has received
72 units and Steve Smith, still a
patient at the Holzer Medical Center, has received 48 units to date.
The Bloodmobile will be at the
Center in the new multipurpose
building on Mulberry Heights from 1
to 6 p.m. Residents giving blood as
replacement should designate for
whom their Wlit is to be credited.

).

''

-\'\:-'.:\.\
' ............. ="''
··~ ...... __ ,_. '

.. .. .: '.\_:.- I .; . . : . .:. _\

=t-.l=

~= -\ -~' IS
OUR=- ST~~?

t1otp u1 r•t-tlstabiiShtno his triAnd·
shtp ond p1H inersh1p whh Ben
I l l (11] WALL STREET WEEK
'lnllal1 011 Yo u Atn' l Seen Noth in '
Yt~l' Hoa t, LOYiS flykeyser .
8 : 58 (31 CBN UPDATE NEWS
V:OO ( 2) 8 \ 7) NERO WOLFE
( 3) 700CLU8
{1Jt12liD FRIDAY NIGHT MOVIE
'lotrud or Wtthm ' 19 61 Sta r a. Ch.1 d
Evere tt , Jonntler Warren.
Ill I I ) (10) THE DUKES OF HAZ·
ZARO A handsome h i tc hh ike r
l1gt1ts a lire tn Oorsy 's oyea,bul t~•
hre he ltght s lor B oss Hogg Is att~e
t~ nd otetuse (60 mtna.)
(01 SESSION '81 Hosted by Beth
Noga.,. , lhls prOQIBm fHOaenta a
re v1 o .,., oft ~ewe ek a prodaadmga ln
tho Wes t V1rgima Leglatature.
l h 1C OSM OS 'One Voic e inth eCoa ·
m i~;; FuQue' ln :uuuc h o llileon other
plantltB . Or C art S agan eKplores
the ongm . ~:~vo lul t on, diversity end
llltde rlytniJ I:IHTlila fi ty olall plants
and animahJ On tiArlh.
U:30 tt l WITH OSSIL!. AND RUBY ' llle
Is · HOll i S Onil:l Davia end Rub)'
Oeo 111~ tolned b y Uut!!ll star Della
Re&amp;Sil m a sertaa of drama !I(. vig ·
non os ponraylng !olks of aU agea
And eu wRiks olltle o lhtr tng various
lnt er pretalions to the aga ·old
q_uutt on. 'What r11 lih1?'
10:00 (2)8 (7 \ NBC MAGAZINE WtTH
DAVID BRINKLEY
l • )MOYIE ·(COMEOV) ••• " Up In
Smok•" IU78
l IS ) TBS EVENING NEWS
Q ( 8 )ll0) DALLAS Luc k Sl:utmii iO
be l o ll owtngJ R .&amp;S hrs tore 1gncoup
bnngs the c AIIel bac lt to Ewing Oil
lo plea ae ht s lather . but Jock t11111
hill own eurpru1e tor the lemtly (60
m1n11)
( 8 1 THE PLOT TO MURDER Ml·
TLEA Jemo11 M ason narratee thia
pro gram.
IH ) NEWS
10: 28 ( ~ ) CBN UPDATE NEWS
10:30 13) RICHARD HOGUE
Itt)
MASTERPIECE THEATflE
' OttnQm UXB ' Epur oda IV The
squad 1&amp; c ulled out t o del a no toe
bomb in fH1 ev a cuat ed fact ory, en
ttsstgnmcntthat I liKes thelno enui·
I Y o f avorv me mber olthe unlt :
ICiosttd Ca ptioned ; u . s . ~) (60
nuns l
10: 58 ( S) CBNUPDATENEWS
1 "oo 11 10 IO l! l l liJ l Bl 11® U~ II)
NEWS
l l DAN GFIIFFIN
I 0 I NIGHT GALLERY
[ I I MOAECAMBEANOWISE
11: 28 I l l CBNUPOATENEWS
11! 30 I 218 f T\ THE TONIGtiTSHOW
Ouo!il 1011y llontl ~ll (60 m t n~;~ )
I 3 ) ROSS BAGlEY SHOW
l ,. l MOVIE ·1COMEDY)" .. 1-. " A
Mal'l , A Wornatl And A 8al'k "

HHQ
l &amp;l MOVIE -(HORRORJ'••, 'C ry
01 The Banshee " UHO
11 11 121CI) Ff';IOAYS
1J I I '
CBS LATE MOVIE
'C HINATO WN ' 197 4 &lt;;t ru '\ ,tack
Nt c hol~ ou , Fuyt-~ D1lhfl'otJil y
8 MOYIE ·(SUSPENSF)
" Oom o11s 0 1 rtul Mt•lt:l 197 I .,

12:30
12 :o40

12 :o41

12:58
1:00
1:15

2:00

2: 11
2:28
2:30
3: 15
3:58
o4 :00
5: 15
5:30
5 :58

UO) MOVIE ·tong Kong Escapu'
1968Linda Miller . RhodasAetison .
2) ·oevtl 'sHand ' 196.1
(~) 8
11 )
THE MIDNIGHT
SPECIAL
(I! ) SOLIOGOLDH os f ·Olonn&amp;WAr ·
wi c k . Gold re co 1d wtnnlH!I p&amp;rtorm
lheir htl ao no s
~f)
G)
MOVIE
·( SCIENCE -FICTION}•• '" '' Allen
Factor " 1Q78
13) CBNSPOATSAEPORT
( 3 1 JIMMY SWAGGART
( ,.) THEHOllYWOOOCLOWNSA
paradO o t clowns, pul and pre·
senl. 11r0 pr o llted tn thie HBO
spec1al Htghlights ~n c ludemem or ­
ablttlilrn cltps oiW C FHtlds. L&amp;ural
HndHald)l . th e Ma' " Brolhers, Red
Skelton. end Lu c tllt! Boll
(&amp;l MOVIIE ·(DRAMA) •• "lut
Grenade" 1i70
t2lll NEWS
(3 ] 30 MINUTES WITH FATHER
MANNING
, .. ~ MOVIE ·(ADVENTUAIE) •••
" Eacape To Athena " 197i
(10) I BELIEVF
11tl 0t NEWS
( 3) CBN SPORTS REPORT
( 3) ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
( 5) MOVIE ·(SUSPENSE) •• \o'J
'' When Elgh1 Bells Toll" 1!H 1
( 3) CBN SPORTS REPORT
( 3) 700CLUB
( S) RAT PATROL
{3 l PHIL ARMS PRESENTS
( 3) SPORTS REPORT

FEB . ll1 , 1$81
EVENING
6:00 .( 2) iJIJi (l )ltO) NEWS
( 7) GOO HAS THE ANSWER
{iii)
PRISONER 'Mony H Appy
.
Returns '
lt1' VICTORY GARDEN
6 :30 1210 11) NBC NEWS
, 41 WORLD PRO SKIING Top
rti GOIS l rom 13 nations oo head·
l o hood Ill slalom !lnd ulnnt sla lom
con1pet ri10n rn Stowe , Ver mont
Il l 1121CD NEWS
Cll l l l CONCERN
.
(101 CBS NEWS
I 11\ THISOLOHOUSE Has t Bob Vtla
and cllml l: Brp urrt er Norm Abram
U1'18 USIIIJ IO Q! tiSS repor t o n th e
nouse
(Closed C aptroned:

tom1 the•r hit aonga
INSIDE LOOK
l3) THE LUNDSTROMS
(,.) COUNTRY MUSIC : A FAMILY
AFFAIR Tamrn)' Wvn ett e ~tnd
AogerMtllerhosllt1isllvel)ljambor ·
08 feettur ino co untry mu sic' s moat
ta moua kin 1olk.
1 5 ~· NBA BASKETBAll Atla11t1:1
Haw~s vs Cleveland Caval1ers
ll l SUPERSTAR PROFtLIE
1101 FRONT PAGE
\11 1 WITH OSSIE AND RUBY ' Two
From Lllr'IQston ' The beauty of the
wo rk o l LAngst on Hug hell tS
reveal ed as Ro ber! and Kev in
Hoo k s 1oi n Ossle and Ruby in a
drama ttza hon ollw o !thort s1or lu
by the Ia mod wnt e r ' Thank You
M a ' am' snd ·s arlor Ashore ·.
(Cioae d·Caplt oned : U.S.A)
8:00 (2) 1J ('7l BARBARA MANDREll
AND THE M~NORELL SISTERS
Il l 700CLUB
f tl (121 CD CHARLIE'S ANGELS

7 :30

( ~) 8

K ell yd o na~tt r dan ci ngahoestopul

her sktlls ns well as hor lifo on the
cho rusltnolll adonoerousschame
t o unravel tho mystery o l dlsap12,!tltlllr,JBhowoirts (60 mins.}
U ( l )(10l WKRPINCINCINNATI
! 11 COLLEGE BASKETBAll
Furman vaMar11t1al
l 11) 0DYSSEY 'OtherPeople 'sG Gr·
bege ' All~ o uoh wrilt en doc ument a
1o co unt mMe tt1 11n J 50 .,ears of
avtHl tsm Amrmca. the., revsellillle
ofwhaldo yto d!l )l ll le washke . This
~rOtjjiAill e11plores the oft en diller·
unt story of tha rec ent pa111 be fng

cha eol og tsr s ar o und the nat io n.
(Ciosed ·Captioned : U.S .A) (80
m1ns .)
8:30 0 {}) (10) THE TIM CONWAY
SHOW
9 :00 (fl iJ ( T) WALKING TALL
( 41 MOYIE ·(SCIENCE-FICTION)
.. h " Black Hole" 1979
(6)(ft) m THE LOYE BOAT Ar~em bitte1ed woman l hwerts the ad ·
va nGe:s Ol lllellow pa sse nger : end

1 Woman's title

2 Attica's

5 American
clergyman
10 Expectant

shoppin"
"

area
3 Parole

CHndidate

pmu~ in stiJr e when he meets e' 1Z C)umsy bird

4 Way back
ba8ut tlul woman who is not what 13 Bryan was one ~Dessert wine
she seems t o btl . Guest star s: Los·
lie uooams, Dtck Mart in, (60rnins.) 14 " All the Things 6 Old note
(Ciosed ·Capllonod : U.S.A l
You - "
7 Somehow
0 \ll ffOJ FLO An t~leuant lady
wn rer is d omg a 11toryon Ihe VaUow lS lllwnined
II Like simba

Rose. so Flo minds her manners
unl tl her heiH Atstng tJrother . Lon ·
RIO. arr1ves And ruins her gsme
plan
llt.\ LAWMAKERS
Q:30 LS) THE lESSON
-- (8''"0'
LAOIES ' MAN
· ~"
l1fl SNEAK PREVIEWS Co-hOsts
Ge ne Slsk.ttl and Roger Ebert
19VI &amp;w tho latestliJms . tnolllding
Paul N ewman'!l l at eat lltm 'Fort
·Apa che, TheBronll.', andUiylom·
lin's ' The ln cradiblo Shinkino
Wornon '
9:45 ( 51 TBSEYENINGNIEWS
10:00 ' 21U l 7l HILL STREET BlUES In
an 11proar ove r the la c k o f police
pro t oc t ion nnd an alnrm tng c rime
wa ve. t ho loco lmer c hnnta take
thmg s tnl o lh01r own hand a

9 Tasks
11 On the

IS Spanish
reina

17 Actor Karl
19 Smile
20 "Turan d ot'•
role
21 ~ bark

Vt'sterday's Answe.r

19 Dazzling

29 Tiny

finch

light

30 Sports
22 Mountain
building
passes
32 Boxer Tony
23 Granunat· 35 European

way OUt
ical case
country
IS Russian river
C"- . " 24 Soft drink
!abbr. I
18 " 'I
a. r. ,ulpS
26 Frilly it e m :16 Pub potable
portrayer

22 Ubyall city
24 Holding
place .~

25

..

"Essays of

26 Dickens

chcuacter
21 Speedy
28 Texas dty
31 Japanese

statesman

:n: Italian

aunt
33 Pronoun

Unscramole tiiOse tour Jumbles
one 1ette 1 10 each SQuaHJ 10 rorm
row ord1nary words

34 Ancestral
l6 En~li s h
river ,

:11 With faimess ~4-+--+-+38 Cut of bt.&gt;ef
:J.q Su1l fabric

40 S1cilicm
d ty

llAILY CRYPTtHiliOTE - Here'• how to work it:
A X V 0 I. 8 A A X R
Is

I. 0 N G F E I. t , 0 W

On" ll'tt t'r silllJlly stands for another. ln this sample A is
u sed ft1r th e three I.'s, X for tlw twu O 's, elr . SinJ::l e IC'tle rs.
apostrophes. t h e length :~ nd formati on o r the w1ml!1 aTe a11
hin \5 . }'~a f h da)' t\H' ('Ode l etter~ ::Ire tliffertnt.
Now dllil fiQtl lllC CII Cifld IC!ICf $ 10
lorm tho surpr1se answe1 a s sug
qc stod by Ihe 11b0vc r ariOOP

Answer[ l l l l i J AcrrrTTI

C'RYPTO«tl!OTES
~~

\

t· ~ h· Htl l\ 'I

I /ll l' oWO!

MAGPIE

f-li O'IfHlll,l ily Ollf' ~ I I O Uill o' ,t l l It Till ~

" A SPADE "
1111Jif Book No, I 5: contelrung 110 puules, I~ llvflilRillo !01 SI 75 VQIIPiid
om JuR'bll. clo thll now1pap&amp;1 , fiOl 34. Norwood. N J 07646 Include you1
mil, Rcldi8U, lip code l'llld 011~11 ched ,, p1tV~b1 &amp; 10 NI Wipllpeiboakl.

~

---

-

-

-

s

S I.W

(AI ISWtHS IO'li01 10W)

l· NDUHl

C fl Ptilo'IHI/tl1 d t\ :\II VIlli ' Ull uri I 1 1\ l ltl~

t'1ttlll Ori 11 t\tiJlj.) t)lt l j ly IIIIIArlkbile(l
((' !, ,,.,11 .oL&gt;t 11)11Ud
1SinrtJ
USAl
12 CD SOl iD G• )LO Ho ~t 1 • '"u"'

DOWN

QSS

ACR
I Family
member

an overly:sus~ic1ous manha a~tsur· II Bogey man

U S A)

7 :00 ( 2: 111 DANCE FEVER
t l l BLACKWOOD BROTHERS
111 10 18 l HEEHAW Gua51s Oenms
W eowe r . l Oitl 1 HHII fiJfllnlY
tlullh'!r, Stac y I ynn Rms (60
1111118 )
17 1 lAWRENCE WELK StiOW
.\ 9 1 MUPPET SHOW
110 1 I)UGS HUNNY
lt l ONCEUPONACLASSIC tlln1·11.
l :~ lunol' P lt rtl M n; l taUI.In t l . l o.~H . !lllO
:it 1\ (nl l Hnh•11jl &lt;l llw \:0 11111 • ) ', I rt• t! il
ltdu 111 {Ill ()t,l !Ju,t!II H• Vl111d t~ln\j Ill II.
!IO C I\Idi '( l i t ~ • l ' '-'" ,t.ll 't Tho bOA I

·

by tHOMAS JOSEPH

J(

'I'

li I.

II SZI. B U
. HWMS U l.

VSXLW

W M S

XV N XJI.

N BUWM

u '1' .
N M II
liT

i.S H S U ·

W M S

M X I.

ll SU l;W
W M S

HN Z .

SVGX I.
V.IDXZ
DXKKBZ
Ycslt•rda(s Cryploquote' WOHHY, THE INTEHEST PAID BY
TI-IUSI·: WHO BOHHOW THOUBI.E.-GEORGE W. I.YON

�Friday,
Pomeroy

Page-10-The Daily Sentmel

Moddleport, Ohoo

1981
31

NRECA takes
dim view
of proposal

cooperatives and to telephone coops He also urged an end to lowmterest dorect loans for customers
of the Rural Electriftcatlon Adnurustrallon, an agency of the
Agnculture Department
The REA has helped fmance
power projects m rural AmeriCa smce the mtd-1930s The Reagan budget
report says the agency has largely
accomplL,hed 1ts orogmal purpose of
extending power to the natiOn 's far-

WASHINGTON (AP)- One of the
natiOn's most mfluenllal rural lol&gt;bymg groups os takmg a dom voe\v of
Presodent Reagan's budget
proposals to make 11 harder for
power cooperatoves to get government fonancmg
A semor offocoal of the Natoonal
Rural Electroc Cooperat ove
Assocoatoon saod Thursday the
budget proposals added up to "go&lt;Jd
news for bog bankers and bad ne"~
for rural Amerocans "
Robert D Partrodge, executive
v1ce presodent of the assoc•allon,
sa1d Reagan's proposals "mean that
rural electric cooperatives Will have
to pay higher mterest on theor loans
and wtll have more difficulty m ol&gt;tammg" necessary capttal m the
future
Reagan recommended an end to
direct federal lending to electroc
generatton and transmoss10n

It also reconunended an end to 2
percent direct loans and other credit
measures a1med at mcreasmg the
cost of federal lending to rural ele&lt;:troc and telephone compames and
cooperatives
Partrodge saod Reagan's plan
"holds a certamty of higher electroc
bills" for 25 milhonpeople served by
rural electroc systems and there are
'! orrunous new dimenstons" which
had not previously been mentiOned
by adlmmstrat10n officials
It 1s clear, he sa1d, that "the admtmstratwn 's plan represents a
radical change m ph1losophy toward
rural electriC cooperatives" and
that "they are detenruned to force
sllll hogher costs" on those co-ops
WASHINGTON (AP) - President
Reagan has not reconunended an
end to certam gasohol loans handled
by the Farmers Home Adnumstratwn, an Agnculture Department spokesman says
The spokesman, Stanley Weston,
sa1d Reagan's budget proposal sent
to Congress seeks a ban on new synthetic fuel development loans
prevoously authonzed for FmHA at
about $525nulhon

ms
"What os clear now ts that on addihon to unposmg drastic cutbacks,
the admimstrat!On also mtends to
squeeze down more and more on
rural electnc borrowers, eventually
forcmg them out of the government
program and totally mto the pnvate
money market to seek the1r fmancmg," Partndge saod " This plan
represents the begmnmg of the end
for the programs "
Reagan's budget proposal for
REA sa•d that by d1scontmumg
direct lendmg by the Federal Fmancmg Bank to electric generatiOn and

transmJsston

coo peratives

borrowmg from the U S Treasury
would be reduced almost $5 15
billion

It had been

understood the
proposal also covered gasohol loans
announced prevtously by the agency
as part of a general "restructurmg
of synthetic fuels" programs m the
federal government
But Weston sa1d Thursday that as
far as 11 could be detenruned, the
proposal only applied to a general
cutback m FmHA's "alcohol fuels
and biomass loan program" which
has not been put onto operatiOn.
He sa1d 1t did not apply to loan
guarantees announced previOusly
whichwould help fmance 29 alcoholproduction
operatiOns
under
FmHA's ''busmess and mdustnal"
loan program
Agnculture Secretary J ohn R
Block on Jan 27 ordered those held
up pendmg a revtew Fourteen of the
29 were released and authorized to
proceed on schedule Feb 13, and
another seven were released Feb
18
The remamder are still under
rev1ew, according to deparlment officials
Reagan's budget proposal sa1d the
adnmmstration "will support contmuat!On of tax mcenlives for
alcohol fuels ," w1th provate mdustry

- OLD COl NS, pocket wat
ches, class rings, wedding
band"' diamond• Gold or
solver Call J A Wamsley,
Treasure Chest Coin Shop,
Alhens, OH 594-4221

taking up the gap
The budget report satd, "Excessive production of alcohol fuels
from gram crops that could result
from the Joan subsidy program may
have adverse effects on food pnces
and agrocultural export revenues.
"In addihon, the federal mvolvement might enable rnargmal
projects to attract provate financing
that would otherwise go to more
productive mvestJnents "

Wanted to Buy class rtngs,
weddtng bands. anyth•ng
slamped, 10K, I4K, or IBK
gold Stiver coins, pocket
watches Call Joe Clark at
992 2054 at Clark's Jewelry
Store, Pomeroy, O~tO.f5769

~

ORDINANCE
NO 518
ANNUAL
APPROPRIATION
ORDINANCE
(VILLAGE)
A RESOLUTION to
make appropnat1ons for
Current E Kpenses and
other Exfenditures of the
V11tage o Pomeroy, State
of Oh10, dunng the ftscal
ear endmg December 31
981
Secfton 1
BE IT
RESOLVED by the Council
fo r the Vollage of Pomeroy .
State of Ohto , That to
prov 1de for the currenl e.:
penses and other ex
pendt tures of the sa 1d
VIllage of Pomeroy durtng
the ftscal year endtng
1981 the
December 31
followtng sums be and rhey
are hereby set as•de and
appropnated as foll ows

- PubltCNotlce - -

- - -

!)erv1ces
15,000 00
Capttal Outlay
10,000 00
Olher
19 000 00
Total For Gen
Adm
3 400 00
Total For General
Governmental
Ser vtces
54,740 00
SECURITY OF
PERSONS AND
PROPERTY
POLICE
DEPARTMENT
Personal
Servtces
8400000
Suppl1es and
Matertals
1235000
Other
21,700 00
Total For Police
Department
118 050 00
PARKING METER
DEPARTMENT
Orner
7,000 00
Total For Park1ng
1 000 00
Meier Dept
SAFETY
DEPARTMENT
VOl
Other
2,000 00
Sect1on 2 There there be Total For Secunty
appropnated from the
of Persons and
GENERAL FUND
Property
127 050 00.
GENERAL
LEISURE TIME
GOVERNMENTAL
ACTIVITIES
SERVICES
PARKS AND
MAYOR
PLAYGROUNDS
Personal
Supplies and
Serv•ces
$
2 400 00
Matenals
960 00
Total For
Total For Parks and
Mayor
2 400 00
Playgrounds
960 00
CLERK
TRANSPORTATION
TREASURER
FACILITIES
Personal
STREET DEPT
Servrces
J 600 00 Personal
Total for Clerk
Serv1ces
33,000 00
Treasurer
3 bOO 00 Supplies and
SOLICITOR /
Matenals
1400000
LEGAL ADVISOR
Capttat Outlay
1,000 00
Personal
Other
3 000 00 Total For Stree t 12,000 00
Servtces
Total fo r
So lt c t tor /
Pav ng
60 000 00
Legal Adv1sor
3 000 00
UTILITY
GENERAL
LIGHTING
ADMINISTRATION
Suppltes and
Personal
Mater•.i! l}_ - ~~- OQ

r

r-----------------------·

I

Curb Inflation. II
Pay Cash for
II
Classifieds and II
Savel I I
II

I

II
II
II

1
I
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I
I Name
I
1 Address
I
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1 Phone
I
I Pnnt one word tn each
I space below Each m

1
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I
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1

1
I

tttal or group ot ftgures
counts as a word Count
name and address or
phone number tf used
You II get better results
of you descrobe tully
gtve prtce The Senttnel
reserves the r 1ght to
class•fy, edtt or re1ect
any ad Your ad wtll be
put on the proper
clasifiCaf1on tf you II
check the proper box
below

I
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1

Wanted
For Sa le
Announcement
For Rent

1

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1

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3

4

s

6
7

B
9
10
11

12
13
14

IO

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j

vs ;

!I

19 00

J

1

7 50 10 00 I
These cash rates
•nclude d1scoun t

17
IB
19
20
21
22
23
24
25

26
21

28
29
JO
Jl
32
33
34
35

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1

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Ma•l Thos Coupon Wlfh RemJttance
The Daoly SeniJnel

I
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1
1

I

Bo.IC 729

1

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Pomeroy , Ohoo 45769

I
1

or Wnte Daily Sentinel Class1f1ed Dept.
111 Court St_, Pomeroy, 0 , 45769

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX
I ANNOUNCEMENTS

1 RENTALS

1- C•rdoiThantn
2- ln Mtmaroun

tl - HOUIII lor R tnl
U - Mob•lt Homts

l - Annaunclrntnts

I

lor Rtnt

4 -G•~tuway

U - AJJarlmtnllor Rent

S- HipftyAch
• - last tnd Fauna
1- TiriiSatt
1- Potlht hit
&amp; Aot11on

U - FRooms r
,._~pact fa ~

IMERCHANDISE
si - Houltho1d GocMh
H - C 11 lV ll!aaoo Equopmtnl
U - Anliqutl
S4- Mht Mtrcfland ou
U- lu lldlrtt Supplou
it- Pill tor SaLt

11_ Htlp w1 niHI
11 - Si!Ualf(l Wan ltd
tl - tnsurtnct

14 - llu''"'" Tratnong
1S - Scflooh lnstrwtloon
It1t11110 TV

I FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

1 ce IUpaor
11- Wanttd To Oa

" - F•rm Eaurpmant
U - W•ntad to luy
11- l rutiU tor Salt
6l- llu..tocll.
•~ - Hiy &amp; Grain
u - Sttcl &amp; Ftrtll1 ttr

I FINANCIAL
BUslntu
Opportunol~

22- Monty to loan

1l- PrOtt5tronat
S.r~totes

I TRANSPORTATION

oREAL ESTATE

71 - Aulos tor Salt
7l - Vanl&amp; 'W 0
U-Molt rcytttS
H,Auto P1rh

JJ - Homtslor Saltf
l1- Moltolt Homtt
lor Salt
•

U - Firm' l(lr hit

&amp; AtttUon"

17 - Aulo

u - aus1ntu lultdlnts

Rtpa~r

U - Lots &amp; Atrlllf
J6- Rtal Estatt Wlntt4
J1- Rttllan

I SERVICES

W1nt Ad Advert1s1ng
D&amp;~dltnes
l 30 P M Oaoty
II Noon hlurdft
lorM(Intln'

11- Homtlm,roo;tmtnll
U- Ptumbll'l &amp; l!•nvttrng

ll- i,caooatlnt
U - Eitctrttal

I ••,,..,.,lOR
h - Gtntral Haulint
.,_ M H lhpatr
1, - IJ,holsttry

Rates and Other Information
IS Wonh or Urultr

1 day
2 dt';'l
l diYI
• dlyl

c...

rill!!

Cfltrtt

,,.
"' "'
"'
111
'"
'"
'"wora

Each wordCYfr lht m1nlmum !J word I !14 c.nt1 ur
Ad5 runn~ntt Olfltr lhln conltcut iYI day1 W1I11M cnlrttct

jNra•y
1 d:ty

It'"'

MoblltHomualts.lnGTtrdS.IIturt.uuplfd
ordtr H ctnt cflartt lor 1d1 ctrrylrtt lu Nvr'P!o

''""""·

Publtc Nottce
d1nance or resolutton of
counctl to make the ex
pendt tur es provtded that
no warrants shall be drawn
or patd for salanes or
wages except to persons
employed by authonty of
and tn accordance wtth law
or ordtnance Prov•ded tur
ther that
the ap
propr tat•ons
for con
tingenetes can only be e•
pended upon appeal of two
th•rds vote of Counctl for
•tems of expense con
stttuttng a legal obl tgation
agamst the village and for
purposes other than those
covered by the other
spectf•c appropnattons
here• n made
Sec tton 18
Th1s or
dmance shal l take effect at
the earltest penod allowed
by law
Passed Feb 2 1981
Larry Wehrung
Prestdent of Council
AtTest
Ja ne Wa!fon
Clerk of Council
CERTIFICATE
Sectton 5705 39 R C
No
appropr1at•on
measure shall become ef
fecttve until there 1S flied
wtth the appropnatmg
authonty by the county
audttor a cert1f1cate tha~
the total appropnattons
from each fund, taken
together w1th all other out
stand tng appropnartons 1
do not exceed such offlctal
est1mate or amended of
ftctal es t1mate When the
appropr 1at!on does not e)(
ceed such offlc1al est1mate,
the county auditor sha 11
9•Ve su'h certtf1cate for
thwtth upon recetvtng from
the appropnat1ng authonty
a cert1fted copy of the ap
propnatton measure
The State of Oh•o Metgs
County , ss
I, Jane Walton Clerk of
the V t II age of Pomeroy m
sa 1d County, and 1n whose
custody the Fdes, Journals
and Records are required
by the Laws of the State of
Oh1o to be kept, do hereby
certtfy that the forego1no
Annual Appropnat1on Or
d1nance ts taken and cop•es
from lhe ortQtnal Or
dmance now on f• le wtth
sa•d Vtllage, that the
for egomg Ord1nance has
been compared by me wtth
the satd ong.nal and that
the same tS a true and
correct copy thereof
Wttness my stgnature,
th1 s 4th day of February
19BI
Jane Wa lton
Clerk of the
VIllage of Pomeroy
Metgs County, Oh10

SUMMARY OF
APPROPRIATIONS
BY FUND AND
PROGRAM
Secunty ot
Persons and
Property
General
11A oso 00
Electrtc
L1gnr
26,360 00
F1re
15.500 00
Communtfy
Envtronment
Water
Revenue
13B ,500 00
Sewer
Revenue
73,250 00
Federal
Revenue
6,500 00
General
Government
General
54,740 00
Safety
2.000 00
Street Canst
60,000 00
Ce metery
3,000 00
Hospotal
17.000 00
Parktng
Meter
7,000 00
Park
960 00
Water
Revenue
B5,700 00
Federal
Revenue
3,400 00
Fund Total
General
172 790 00
Safety
2 000 00
Street
Canst
601000 00
Cemetery
3,000 00
HO!&gt;pltal
17 000 00
Park.ng
M eter
7 000 00
Park
960 00
Elec tr ic
Log hi
26,360 00
Water
Revenue
22&lt;,200 00
Sewer
Revenue
73,250 00
Federal
Revenue
16.900 00
Frre
15,500 00
General Bond
Rettremenr
Fund
9, loo 00
I1J 20, 27 21c
Publtc Nottce

PUBLIC Nu riCE
Nottce Is hereby given
that on Sarurdav 1 february
21, 19BI at 10 w
AM a
publrc sale Wtll be held aJ
• ~wlthcuflwlth
lOS
Unron Avenue,
!n (art of T"t
Romeroy Ohto to sell tor
----'1 cash lhe follow i ng

In mtmory Card ol
oant" 1nd Ob!llllry • unu Hr wortt U 00
m1n1m\jm Cufl '" td\lanu

lo.-----------------------J --------------I

lhnl

41- Eqwo,mtnl lor Rtnl

I EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

11 -

Rtnl

41 - Wanted to

9- WantedloBuy

I

I
15
16

PHONE 992-2_156

I

I

And the
Sectton 17
Vtllage Clerk tS hereby
author tzed to draw hts
warrants on the Village
Treasurer for payments
from any ot the toregotng
appropr1at1ons
upon
recetvtng proper cer
ttfiCafes and vouchers
therefor approved by the
board
or
oftH;ers
authortzed by la w to ap·
prove the same or an or

WANT AD INFORMATION

I
1
1

Wrtfe your own ad and order by mail wtth thts
coupon Cancel your ad by phone w en you get
results Money not refundable

Pubhc:; No_!t ~e
Personal
ServiCeS
15,000 00
Suppl•es a nd
Matenals
25 ,000 00
Total For Sewer
Ma 1nt
40,000 00
ADMINISTRATION
-SE WAGE
Debt SerVICe
32 750 00
Other
500 00
Total For Adm Sewage
73,250 00
Sectton 13 That mere be
approprtated from the
GENERAL
BOND
RETIREMENT FUND
Payment of
Prmctpal
7 000 00
Payment of
Interest
7 100 00
Total For General
Bond Rettremenr
Fund
9, 10000
ADDITIONAL
FUNDS
Sectton 15 That there be
approprtated from the
FEDERAL
REVENUE
SHARING FUND
FEDERAL REVENUE
SHARING
Capo tal
Outlay
13,500 00
Other
3,400 00
Tota l For Federal
Revenue
Shartng
16 900 00
FIRE
DEPARTMENT
Persona l
Servtces
4 000 00
Suppltesand
Matenals
7 000 00
Other
4,500 00
Total For Ftre
Depl
15.500 oo
TOTAL ALL APPRO
PRIATIONS
62B.06000

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ' "

WASHINGTON (AP)- World cotton production now IS estimated at
about 65.2 million bales this season,
an mcrease of 1.1 nullion from
eslimates a month ago, the
Agriculture Department says
Offlctals sa1d Thursday the 10crease, wh1ch puts the estimated
cotton crop at about 500,000 bales
less than m 1979-30, IS "entirely attnbutable to an upward reviSIOn" m
China's crop esttmate, now put at a
record of 12 I mllhon bales.
The report satd the reduced U.S.
crop of II I nulhon bales accounted
for only 17 percent of the world total,
compared w1th 22 percent 10 1979-80,
when ytelds were much better.

CHIP WOOD Poles max
dtameter 14" on largest
end $12 50 per ton Bundled
$10 50 per ton
s lab
Delivered lo Ohoo Pallel
Co, Rock Springs Rd,
Pomeroy m 2689

11

Hel wanted

GET VALUABLE tra lnong
as a young business person
a nd earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Sen
ttnel route carrier. Phone
us nght away and get on
the elogoblloty lost at 992
2156 or 992 2157
WANTED People to sell
•. vo,n. 742 2354 o• 742 2755

MEIGS MUSEUM open by
appotntment January Mar
ch 992 2264 992 2802, 992
2360 or 992 2639 Histon e•
for
sale
Pomeroy
Middleport Ltbrartes
Put a co ld nose tn your ltfe
Call the Me1gs County
Humane Soctety at 992
6260

12J 16 2B 20, Jtc
Pubhc Nohce

-

--

lienholders clalmtng an 1n
terest tn the real estate set
up thetr cla•ms and that the
real estate be sold and the
proceeds of the sate app lted
aga•nst the two JUdgments
of tne Platntrft, one rn the
amount of $516,817 17 and
the second •n the amount of
$236,416 04
wh•ch hens
were recorded tn Volume I,
Page 389, Me1gs County
Records of Judgments '"
the Off1 ce of the Clerk of
Courts of Me1gs County
Oh10
You are requ~red to an
swer the Compla int wlthtn
28 days afler the last
publictlon of thts notice
which wtll be publtshed on
ce each week for stx con
secuttve weeks The lllst
publtcatton w111 be made on
March 20 1981. and the 2B
days for answer wrll com
mence on that date
Larry E Spencer,
Clerk of Court

NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION
To Roger Epple , whose
last known address was
Route 1 Reedsv,le, Ohto
45772 and June Epple,
whose last known address
was Route 1, Reedsville,
Ohto 45772 , you are hereby
nottfted that you have been
named Defenda nts tn a
legal actton entttled Ban
cOhto Nattonal Bank,
Plamt1ff versus Roger Ep
of Common Pleas
pie and June Epple et al,
Me1gsCounty, OhtO
Defendants Th1s actton 12) 13 20 27 , (3) 6, 13,20
has been asstgned case
number 17,703 and tS pen
d1 ng 10 the Court of Com
man Pleas of Metgs Coun
"
_,,,,,
ty, Pomeroy, Ohto 45769
The ObJect of lhe ac1oon ts
to marshal hens agamst
the follow.ng descnbed
C,ud ot Thanks
real estate, to wit
wtsh to express my stn
Sttuated tn Chester
Townshtp, Meigs County, cere thanks and ap
prectafton to all my fnends
Oh10
a nd neighbors for the many
Begtnntng at the south
west corner of Sect ton 35, 1n prayers and cards while
Town 3. Range 12. Ohto my wrfe was a pat1ent at
Veterans
Memorial
Company's
Purchase
thence runnrng north on the Hosp•tal I extend special
west ltne of sa1d Sectton thanks to the staff and doc
tors for the1r concern lind
No 35 a distance of 64•h
rods thence runntng east care Sh1rley Wojfe
parallel wrth the southltne
of sa td sect•on to the center 2~---•~n~M
~
e~
m~o~rl~•~m~--of satd sect1on, thence
In
memory
of
our daughter
south to the ten ter of a Run
called Walkers Run a and stster, Na ncy Ann
d1stance of 8 1h rods. thence Chaffee Walker, who lett us
so u ttl 49 degrees west 32 to be wt th her Lord on
rods to the mouth of a February 20, 1979
There's an open gate at
dra1n, thence south to the
sec lton ltne, thence west on the end of the road,
Through whtch each must
the south line of sa1d sec
go alone,
tton to the place of begtn
And there, tn a ltght we
n1ng containing 60 acres,
cannot see,
more or less
Our Father cla1ms H1s
Sal/e and e)(cept the coa l
underly ing satd rremlses own
Beyond the gate our loved
wh1ch is not conveyed or •n
tended to be conveyed by one f•nds happtness and
rest,
fhts conveyt~n ce
AndlhereoSCOfllfOrllnthe
Excepttng and Reservtng
lhoughl
a ltfe estate only for Etma
That a loving God knows
Epple •n a one story frame
house and two acres best
So sadlY flltSsed by Mom
located on the a~ove
and Dad, Lourse and Keith
descnbed property
Chaffee and brolhers. Ken,
The demand of the Com
Dan and Tim
pl~lnt •s that all of the

........
. . ...
...................
~

LAFF-A - DAY

l
Announcemen1s
Racme Volunteer Fire
Department sponsors a
shot gun &amp; rifle match
every Sal noght 6 30 p m
at the ir butld•ng 1n Bashan
Factory choke 12 oultge
shot guns only Open stghts
22 rifle
Tax service, federal, state,
A. quarterly taxes done by

appointment See Wanda
Eblon, 41000 Laurel Cliff
Road, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769 992 2272

NOW DOING haulong ,
mov.ng 10bs
palnt.ng
houses tns1de or out
Basement. t~tftc c leanmg ,
also carpet cleantng, yard
work. etc Phone 992 3849
Ask for Velma and leave
name and number and we
Wtll return the call Free
esttmates rn Meigs County
area
LOCKSMITH
SerYoce.
Master Keyrng, Com
brnat•ons, Bonded Call
New Haven W Va (304)
BB2 2079
INCOME TAX serv1ce
Federal and state Waflace
Russell Bradbury Phone
992 7228
VEGETABLE PLANTS
Tomaroes sweet potatoes
strawberry peppers, cab
bage, cau liflower, broccoh
celery, ~ad lettuce, egg
plant, cucumbers, melons
squash
For varlet1es
prrces, and ordenno. call
Harrt s
Farms
and
Greenhouses, Portland
Ohoo at 8&lt;3 2698 or 843 2693
THE ELITE 5,000
Swtngtng soc•al c\ub
singles
and
coup es,
dtscreet
ltm tfed mem
bershtp, daftng servtce,
cock tail parttes and on
premised sw•ng club For
more tnformatton wnte
P 0 Box ~789, Fa!rv•ew
Park Ohlo4.4126

1

LADY or girl to hve tn 992
26B6

37 ACRES wtth small house

and garage and barn St
Rt 338 near alumtnum
plano 247 3072

10 lb. Chocolate
Fat' fi l l Servl tt

Mob1le Homes
for Sale

1973 Crown Haven I~ x 65,
three tied1ooms, new car
pet 1971 Cameron 14 x 64,
two bedrooms, new carpet
1972 Champton, 12 x 60, two
bedrooms, new carpet 1976
Cameron, 12 x 60 two
bedrooms, all electnc 1971
Skyline, 12sx 6)
two
bedrooms, bath &amp; 1/J , new
carpet
1970
PMC ,
12 x 60, two bedrooms new
carpe t B x S Sales 1nc ,
2nd x V1and Street Potnt
Pleasant, wv Phone 675
442&lt;

APPLICATIONS for fulure
CETA framing postttons
•u iJre betng accepted at the
Ga ll ta Meigs Communtty
~ · Ac tton Agency
Restdents
~ ' ot Gal Ita and Meigs coun
ttes may obtatn further 10
formatton at the 'Me tgs of
flee tn Pomeroy, 117 W 2nd
St, (Warner buoldongJ 992
,, 2313 the Gallipolis off1ce,
, • Cbld Thaler Ford butldmg)
446 4612, extens1ons 63 or
67 , or the Cheshire off•ce,
~ 367 7342 or 992 6629 When
ca lltng ask for the CETA
, 1, 1n take
Offtce Equal Op
,r portuntty Employer
· Part ttme offtce c lerk, two
ro three days per week
Vanety of general off 1ce
dut1es could develop 1nto
•4 full ttme pos1tton Send
resume·, tnc1ud1ng referen
ces to
P0
Box 123
Syrac use, Ohto, 45779

J•

Sl BS 00 to $500 week Iy doing
t! •i malltng work
No eK
per•ence requ1red
AP
PLY Circle Sales, P 0
Box 224 D Rochmond Hill.
NY 11418

,-o=~
;- ST.It:'u:'a:Ch:C
on:;s=;w
~
anled

''
"
.:-·
1 1

"'
n

"
6

HAVE VACANCY for
elder ly persons who need
board, room and laundry
Eat tn dtnlng room. men
and women have separate
baths pnvate rooms and
'em 1 pnvate, available
Phces to fit mcome 992
60V2

' " ' ~-----

, t~EE TRIMMING and
removal 9~9 2129 or 992
6040

..

~.~ 1

Insurance

AUTOMOBILE
IN
'' " SURANCE been can
'; celled?
Lost
your
~ operator's license? Phone
' 99? 2143

'•

Wanted to Do

Furnace repatrS electncal
1 y.;brk
plumbing, mob•le
' hom~ or residence 992
' 5B58

,,

WIU do paneltng cetltng,
floor tile, plumb•ng Free
u• estimates Fred Miller at
·- 992 6338

APPLES goldendellcrous,
S3 75 per bushel Olher
varrettes at $4 00 per bushel
and up F•tzpatnck Or
chard, St Rt 689 Phone
669 J7B5

'"
,,

Ma1ern•t'r' Clothes Nursing
bras child ren 's clothes 1 2
proce NEW g ir l's 7 to 14
tops and pants, 25 percent
off Mavenck shorts and
pants sets SIZes 2 7 25 per
cent off Watermelon Pat
c h, New Haven 882 3410

r" 31- --...onies for Sale
I, - Trailer lot for sale, ss,ooo
Modular home lot on Route
1
~ ~'~ 7
three bedroom farm
hOtJse located on Route 7
'" ~2 2571

Real estate

FEMALE yellow and willie
k•tten, lhree months old
Also mother yellow cat.~ see
Ray Garlinger one hOuse
on right past the church on
Little Kyge r Road Co Rd
20 In Cheshl re

.

Reg. '8"

lv
-~

$49!'&amp; Up

Real Estate - General

41

Mob1le Homes
for Rent

2 bedroom trailer Adu lts
Brown' s Tra11er
on ly
Park 992 3324
THREE
BEDROOM
mobtlehome on Story Run
Road 367 7BII
1975 Two Bedroom mobtle
hOme Part1a li y furn•shed
located tn the Country
Mob1le Home Park $15000
per month 247 3942
FOR SALE or rent Ap
34 acres wtth
three bedroom modu lar
home tn Portland Oh10
area Ntne mtles from the
Ravenswood brtdge Ca ll
after 5 p m at I 304 113
5272
proxtmat ~ l y

TWO BEDROOM mobole
home , co m p letely fur
n1shed Adu lts preferred
992 2749
44

HALF of a double 2
bedroom complete ly fur
ntsh ed Ava•lable 1s t of
month 992 2749
Four room apartment tor
ren t 992 5908
2 BEDROOM apartment n
Moddleport No cho ldren I
304 882 2566
THREE ROOM and balh
upstatrs apar tme nt In
Pomeroy 992 5621
THREE BEDROOM apart
ment by week, stove and
refrtgerator
tv
room
requ•red
r e ferences
$100 00 deposit no pets
1,000 foot from restaurant
grocery, carry out and
Pomeroy brtdge Utll tt1es
pa1d $60 00 a week 993
7022 or 992 6370
Apartment for rent, ft ve
room and bath
Two
bedroom close to town
992 3592 aller 7 p m

With Padding1

2 Rolls
Rubber Back

SHAG i

Sq_

Reg.$15 ,95

Installed

Casn-n-Carr

&amp;y~p

$7'19 ~~

Regular backed carpet mstalled free,
w1th pad.
Drive A Little- Suve A Lot

•
~

~;- ~
,

RUTlAND FURNITURE

, Main St.

742-2211

-~-

51

Household GoOds

Good used Hotpotnt e lec
tn c stove 992 7020 or 122
Un ton Avenue, Pomeroy
l3

Anttques

ATTENTION
(IM
PORTANT TO YOU ) Woll
pay cash or ce rttfted check
for anf1ques and col lec
ttbles or e nttre estates
Noth1ng too large Also
guns pocket watches and
co1n collect ons Call 614
767 3167 or 557 3411

Horse Power R•d•n9
Mower
1- Good Tr;uter Approved Wood
8,urner !&gt;love wtth b lower
1- Good Gas Rangt&gt;
1- Good Holpoonl Washer
1- ?S GE TV
I - J6cu 11 Hotpoml
1 ~ 11

I;!Cinger&lt;~lor

All

ot tfle

•bove 11ems '"

e•

ce!lenl cond•hon All .He proced
ro 5CII tmmedt .. teh See us Ia

c;(l...,_

I..UI......

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

• • ' 0' . . . '" ' ' . I ' 0 0 1 ' 01

71
Colt Trouper MK Ill , 357
Magnum S250 00 9B5 3301
days or 985 4319 after 5
pm

Cozy Crochet!

S0"-20-JD'H . P.
60"-25-60 H -P60" ----45-80 H. P.
All Models
Ava•lable
LEO MORRIS
Rt I Stde Hill Rd
Rutland, Ob.
2 9 tfc

DAVID BRICKLE$

KAUFPS
PWMBING
AND
HEATING

CONSTRUCTION
•S•dmg •InsulatiOn •Roofing •Storm Wmdows • concrete Work • Septoc Systems
•Backhde •Dump Truck- •Remodeling
•New
construct1on
•Gutterong
&amp;
Downspouts

12 Park St.
Moddleport, Oh.
Ph- 992-6263
Anytome
2 I I mo"'

PH. 992·7119
40625 St. Rt, 681

Autos for Sale

1975 BUICK
L1mrted,
loaded, new ttres, no rust 1n
A 1 cond1tton 992 3288
19 77 Cutlass Supreme
Brougham, b lack wtth red
pmstnp1ng red velour tn
ter1or,
brand
new
Goodyear ra•sed whrte let
ter GT radtats Loaded
w1th equtpment Bemg sold
by Crenson Pratt Call 992
3093 after 5 30 p m
1977 Monte Carlo crutse
control, t11t wheel, am fm
tape $3150
deck, 00
atr condtf
lor
Phonelontng
992 ,
7054
197.4 Pont1ac two door Ven
tu ra s tx cyltnder In ex
ce llent cond ttton, stereo,
am fm e1ght track, good
gas mileage, wtll accept
older and larger car or
truck as trade m or Will sell
lor $1295 00 Call 6&lt;.7 JOBS
Tuppers Platns Ohio
72

Truc:ks for Sale

$N

TRI.COUNTY

REESE
TRENCHING
SERVICE

BOOKKEEPING SERVICE
•BUSINESSES
•FARMS
•PARTNERSHIPS
•CORPORATIONS

Water Sewer Electric
Gas Lrne-Dttches
water Ltne Mook ups
Septic Tanks
county cert1fted
Roush Lane
Chesh.re, Oh
Ph 347 7560
I 7 tiC

~~======~~~~

Payrolls, profit and loss state{l"lents, all
federal and state forms_

ROGER HYSELl'S
GARAGE

H&amp;R BLOCK OFFICE LOCATION
618 E. Maon

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes - extenSIVe remodeling
• E lectncal work
• R oofong work
12Y ears
Expenence
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583
I 22 I mo

992-5682
10 7 tic

two~~======:=~~~~

1974 Scout,
wheel
drove,6 cylmder
$1275 00 992
6323

Headquarters

1975 CHEVROLET pockup
truck wtth topper In ex
cel lent condttton S1800 00
Call 949 2537

l~~~L~~~rB

1971 DODGE two ton tru ck
w1 th no bed Long wheel
base S700 00 949 2012

16 e Second' Street

Phone
1- (614)-992-3325

ALLSTEEL

J

Farm Buildings
~•res

" From 30x30"
SMALL

J&amp;F
ENTERPRISES

Utility Buildings

-

Sizes from 4d to 12x40
She II love lhtS COIY Ctocheted
oulltl woth loopy It m

ror bnsk breezy days thiS out
Itt os easy CROCHH Work loom
neck down all tn one p1ece Use
synthellc worsted Popcorns lr1m
yoke loops add hvely contoasl
PaNetn 7316 S11es 4 10 tncl
$2 00 foo each patteon Add 501
each paltern lor ftrst class a r
maol and handlong Stnd to:
Ahte Brooits
1 I
Ntedle&lt;oaH Dept
•
!Insert name of your _.1
The Daily Sentinel
Bo1 163, Old Chelsea Sto, New
TOll, NY 10113 Pnnl Name.
Addteu, Z1p, Pattem Numbtl
Catch on lo the craft boom' Send
tot out NEW 1981 NEE DLECHA FI
CA IALOG Oveo 171 desogns 3
tree pall eons onsode SI 00
ALL CRAFT BOOKS Sl 75 uth
134 14 Qouck Mtthlnt Qlnlts
fnhton Home Qutllinl
ll2 Qu11t Onjlnals
Ill Add a Blid QuHts
IJO.Sweaterfnh..,.Sim31 56
12!1-Quttk 'n' Eny ToansfetS
121 (nvelope PatthwOik Qt11lts
lt1 Af&amp;hlll$ n' Ooihn
126 Thnfty Crafty Flowe"
12Hetal ~tits
124 Eny G11ts 'n' Omamenu
123 Sblth 'n' Patth l)tllb
122 Stuff 'n Puff Quilts
120-Ctothet Yout Wardtobe
119 EaSJ Att ot Floweo Crothel
116 Nifty F1lty QUilts
115 Easy A•t of ll•otlle Crothet
113 Complete G1ft llooit
111!1-S.W + KIIH lllaoit tiatle 1ncQ
105-tnsllltt Coochtt
102 MuHUm Quilts
101 Quill Bed, Collotllon I

m

1976 CHEVY pockup truck
wi ll sell or trade for a van
of equa l value Also we
have a gas
heattng
stove 992 7453

Pomeory, Oh.

•

-Auto and Truck
Repair
-TranSmiSSIOn
Repair
Hrs. · Mon Frt
9AMS30PM

1977 DDDG E four wheel
drive, 8 foot bed tn good
condo toon $2600 00 Also

ousing

Housinq
_HeacJquarters

GOOO FA RMAL L lractor
wtth SIX foot snow blade,
plow, 4 foot bush hog Two
wheel tratler Gary Welch,
Pageyolle, $1650 00 69B
6716

Vmyl &amp;
Alumonum Siding
• InsulatiOn
• Storm Doors
• Storm Wrndows
• Replacement
Wrndows
Free Esttmate
James Keesee
Ph- 992-2772
1281mo

992-2181

Real Estate- E!eneral_

NEW - 2 bedrooms
bath iolt. knolly pone
ktt chen elec baseboa rd
heat and level lot on th e
river
LARGE - 1620 sq It of
floor space 8 rooms 4
bedrooms 2 lull baths,
gas furnace wtth wood
burner, b1rch kttchen.
full
basement,
carpet1ng 2 porches. and
dbl garage
FIREPLACE
AND
DEN - very ntee 2
bedroom home wtth
perma s tone sld1ng
Furnace, bath new k1t
chen. detached garage
and 3 lots
TRAILER LOT - On
Rt 124 near coa l m tne
Dnl led well
sept1 c
tank e tectn c and I 66
acres of nearly leve l
land Only $6,500
GARAGE APT - Noce
Jy carpeted 2 bedrooms,
ba th gas furance, db l
garage, all In good
shape Close to stores,
school and pool Only
$16,000
I 62 ACRES Near
town on R I 7 Four
room frame home wtth
cistern water
2
bedrooms. half balh and
front porch for 1ust
$12.000
NEW LISTING
14
acres nc.:- r F-orke d Run
Lake
Mtnerals and
wll~lole $1 •. 000

'1
Farm Equtpment
PICKING up a plano tn
your area
Take over
payments
Call credtt
manager collect as 1 592
5122

POMEROY

"~AITOii

-

PUT a cold nose m your
future Call the Metg s
County Humane Soc1ety at
992 6260 Three Alasktan
Sp1fl, Doberman type St
Bernard type, Labrador
type Amertcan Fo)(hound,
Chesapeake
Bay
Retrtever, Colhe type, Ben
11 type and terner type

~LANDMARK

m

Apartment
tor Rent

3 AND 4 RM furn tshed ap
ts Phone 992 5&lt;134

CARPET

$995

POMEROY, 0992 -2259
NEW LISTING
CLOSE IN - off bypass
Newly constructed one
bedroom house Needs
patnt tnstde and
carpetmg 1112 acre lot
w 1t h large garage
1
$19,000 00
NEW LISTING - Ap
prox 50 x100 lot 1n Mtd
dleport ,
wtfh
all
utrltt1es
Has small
older home to ft x up or
remov e from
sr t e
$9 000 00
FRENCH DOORS , bay
wtndows large foyer,
and
butlt tn
c h•na
cabtnet are some of the
outstandmg features of
thts 3 4 bedroom home
tn town Want to see'
$33 000 00
YOUR OWN FRUIT
ORCHARD m the back
yard Seve r a l trees "
bedrooms tn th tS 7 room
house on Rt 124 2 car
garage $20,500 00
REDUCED• SOUTH
ERN DISTRICT
Almost •1 acre lot w1th A
bedroom house Bath,
ut1l1ty Large carportt
$16,000 00
APPROX S ACRES OF
VACANT LAND• Utt l
iftes
avatlable
SIO,OOO 00
REALTOR
Henry E Cleland, Jr
992 6191
ASSOCIATES
Dottle &amp; Roger Turner
992 l692
Jean Trusse/1949 2660
OFFICE 992 22S9

House for rent , 4 room and
bath, ntce and clean
Depostt requ•red 992 3090

Buy Now &amp; Save $2-$6 Per Yard _
25 rolls carpet on stock to PICk from .

Wanted to Bu

WANT E D TO
BUY
GOLD
SiLVaR
PLATINUM, STERLI6tG :
COINS, RINGS JEWELR
Y, MISC
ITEMS liB
SOLUTE
MARKI:T
PRICE GUARANTED 'ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP, MIDDLEPORT,
QHI0992 3476
"

Kl EN
CARPET

Space for Rent

TRAILER spaces tor rent
Southern Valley Mobrle
Home Park , Chesh1re, Oh
992 3954

SIX ROOM house on Nye
Avenue 367 7811

"'

..

Ftrewood for sale 742 2409

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park Route JJ. Norlh of
Pomeroy Large lots Call
992 7479

7H
-:-o-u-se-s tor-R-e n- ,-

~==:;;:;:::=::::=;:::===

l

46

---------

,.'-----:-"'G"-oY,.,e:;:a:..:w:..:a,_,___ i GIVE TO good home
Small black and wh ite pup
PY 3 to 4 months Old 'tt/or
med and paper tralrted
992 571B

-

1969 PMC 3 bedroom
trailer 12x60 992 3954

41

Body Repair-Insurance
work ColliSIOn Repa1r.
Expert paentmg, body
work, p1nstrtp1ng &amp;
vtn'r'l tops.
Free Estimates
Call992-3421
Ktngsburv Rd. , 2 m•.
west Co Rd 18
Pomeroy,Oh 4S769
Domesttc, Japanese &amp;
European Cars &amp;
Trucks.

Unfurnt shed one bedroom
apartment for rent Ren
te rs asststance available
for semor citizens Contact
Vtllage Manor Apartments
at 992 7787

00 YOU have bankong o.ftnanctal
tnStltUtton
background but would lt ke 1975 VIKING Mob ole Home,
12x65 tn excellent con
' 1 to be outstde? We need out
s1de contact per~on Mu st dtt•on, underptnntng In
1" be res•dent of area With eluded SS500 00 2&lt;7 3942
outgo 1ng
personaltty
Rettrement medical, den
till all p&amp;id, salary open
send resume to Box 129M, TRAILER LOT lor sale
co The Ozuly Senttnel $4,000 00 992 2571
I ~'" court
Street, Pomeory
Ohio 45769

11
THE IZZACK Walton an
nual covered plate dtnner
and fun auctton w•ll be held
Monday, Feb 23 al 7 p m
A II members are urged to
attend

9_

WIN

3A43

)2

YOUR
PIANO
Too
valua ble to neglecT. expert
tuntng &amp; and repair Lane
Oante!s 74'1. 2951 or 992
2082

---

SPECIAL DISCOUNT
prices on furniture
Reupholstenno
Jan &amp;
Feb , 19BI
Mowrey 's
Upholstery, PI Plea•ant,
W Va 1 304 675 4154

batteries, antique •terns,
also do appratsals. com
p)ete auctioneer service
over 30 years experience In
busmess Will b\.IY com
plete estates Osby Marton
General Store, Middleport,
Oh 992 6370.

by larry Wright 3,__- 'A
=.n
::.:n_,_,o,u::.:
n;,cce,_,m
:.:.e,_,n::.:t,_
s __

Public Nottce

3 BEDROOM, 2 bath,
modern kitchen, lt\' ing
room, dtntng room, office,
full basement, new heat
system wtth central atr,
unattached garage, 2
blocks from school 992

Business Services

watches, chams, diamonds

RACINE GUN SHOOT,
Ractne Gun Club, every
Fnday ntght start1ng at
7 30 p m Factory c hoke
guns only

-

Firewood for sale, Mtxed
types of wood S35 00 per
p1ck up load Delivered,
wtll stack for Sen•or
Cllozens B43 4951 or 84~
2BI5

&amp; so on Copper brass and

1 PAY htghest prtces
poss1ble for gold and Stiver
coi ns, rtngs, 1ewelry etc
Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop Middleport

Pubhc Nohce
collateral to w1t
1976 Ponttac Grand Pnx
SJ 2K5726P19&lt;674
The Farmers Bank and
Savtngs
Company
Pomeror· Oh•o. reserves
the ngh to b1d at th•s sale
and to wtthdraw any of the
above ment1oned vehtcles
pnor to the sale Further
the Farmers Bank and
Savtngs Compan{ reserves
the rtght to re1ec any or all
btds submt tted

Beauttful three bedroom
ranch bnck home 1n Baum
Addition, Pomeroy, Ohoo
Gas heat~ central air Call
992 2571 or I 687 6429

USED FURNITURE Gold

o-~

Publtc Not1ce
Total For Uftllfy
26 360 00
Loghtong
Sectton 5 That there be
approprtated from the
STATE HIGHWAY IM
PROVEMENT FUND ll'h
PCT OF AUTO LICENSE
AND GASOLINE TAX )
STATE HIGHWAY
DEPARTMENT
Personal
Servtces
500 00
Other
2,500 00
Total For State
H1ghway
Depl
3,000 00
Sectton 6 That there be
approprtated tram the
CEMETERY FUND
PUBLIC HEALTH
SERVICES
CEMETERY
OPERATION AND
MAINTENANCE
Persona l
serv1ces
15,000 00
SupplieS a nd
Matenals
2.000 00
Tota l For Cemetery
OperatiOn and
Matntenance
17 000 00
Total For Cemetery
Fund
17 000 00
Sect1on 9 That there be
appropnated from ttw
WATER
IREVENUEJ
FUND
WATER
DISTRIBUTION
Personal
Servtces
42 ,000 00
Suppites and
Matertals
35.000 00
Capttal Outlay
31 ,000 00
Other
30,500 00
Total For water
Dost
13B,500 00
ADMINISTRATION
-WATER
Debt Servtce
85,000 00
Other
700 00
Total For Adm Water
B5,700 00
Total For Water
(Revenue)
Fund
224 ,200 00
sect1on 10 That there be
approprtated from th e
SEWER
!REVENUE!
FU ND
SEWER
MAINTENANCE

s4M,sc-:-M~an-.-se­

Homes for Sale

&amp; s11ver, class rings, pocket

Small investment, large returns, Sentinel Want Ads
PubliC ND_!IC!___

Ohio

Froday, February 20;1911

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Backhoe, snow p1owmg,
excavation, w~~~:;"j;~~~.~
sewer lines,
sept1c systems, du
truck, stone coat, etc
General home repatr &amp;
197B Ford FISC 4 x 4351 VB, 1_....::========~~ carpenter
work Spr1ngs
power steenng, power tdeveloped &amp; ponds
brakes, automattc, ttlt
wheel sltdmo rear wtndow,
cleared
c hrome step bumper , 81
Rt 2 Pomeroy
Home
cr utse control , new ttres,
Ph 992-7201
mo
Improvements_~
whtte spokes , asking
1
$4,500 M 949 2571
Gene's carpet Cleanrng,
deep stream extracloon
Free
esttmated,
74
Motorc cles
reasonable rates
scot
Rt 3, Box 54
Ractne, Oh.
Ph 614-84l-2S91
6 15 tfc

992-3795
2 1 2 mo

PULLINS
EXCAVATING
• Dozers
• Backhoes
Hourly Contract
Large or
small lobs .
Ph 992-2478
1120Jmopd

H. L WRITESEL

ROOFING
All types of roof work,
new or repatr gutters
and downspouts , gutter
clcanmg 01nd patnttng
All work guaranteed
Free E sttmates
Reasonable Pnces
Call Howard
949 2862
949 2160
2 41fc

rl~;::=:=:=:=~§~§~rr==:;¥,~~~§i=~
"YOUNGS
MillER ELECTRIC

197B BLAZER, 22,000 miles,
no rusl 992 2178

~~~uard

SERVICE

992 6309 or 742

75

Boats and
82
Plumbon~
Motors tor S,_,a"le',___ _ _ ~Heatmg _ _
Ten toot two passenger WAT ER
WELLS
speed boat, 35 h p Merc ury Oomesttc and commerctal,
motor,tra ller and cover , pump sales and serv1 ce
$800 00 9B5 3301 days or Tom
Lew1s
Drtlltng
985 4319 after 5 p m
Seasonal dtscount on pum
ps 1 304 895 3802 or 1 304
895 3641
76
Auto Parts
&amp; Accessones
1979 NORRIS Craft bass 84
Electrtcal
boat and trailer 161oot, 115
&amp; Refngeratron
..
h p !=vonrude, fully equop
MACHINE
ped Like n~w Phone 992 SEWING
Repatrs ,
servtce, a ll
3401
makesl 992 22B4
T he
Fabrtc Shop, Pomeroy
Authortzed Stnger Sales
and Serv•ce we sharpen
SCISSOrS
81
Home
ELWOOD
BOWERS
!!"Pr~ments
REpAIR
Sweepers,
WILL DO ALL kinds of car toasters, 1rons all sma ll
appliances Lawn mower
penlry work, lncludl
paneling, cetl tngs repairs, Next to State H1ghway
etc
Exper1enced with Garage on Roule 7, 9B5
relerences Phone992 3941
J82S
---~--

_

For all of your WJrmg needsLet George Mtller check
your present e1ectncal
svs1em
Res1denttal
&amp; commercial
Call 742-3195
or 992-7680
2 B tic
85

General Haulmg

J&amp;C San•tafton Servtce
Trash p1ckup avatlable ln
V1llage of M1ddleport
Phone 992 5016 or 992 7597
a nyt1m e
NOW 001 NG haulong ,
mov•ng tabs, patnt1ng
houses tns tde or out
basement at iiC c lean•ng,
also carpet cleantng, yard
work, etc 992 3849 Ask for
Velma and leave name and
no W•ll re1urn ca ll Free
est1mates 1n Me •gs Co
area

CARPENTER
SERVICES"

- Addonsand
remodeling
- Roofing and gutter
-~:~~rete work
- P 1umbrng itnd
electncat work
(Free Esllmates)

V.C. YOUNG II

992-6215 or 992 7l14
Pomeroy, Oh

DENNEY
CHAIN LINK
FENCE
Free Est1mates

KEN SOLES

245-9113

�..
Pag~\2-The

Daily Sentinel

•

Cline's preliminary hearing set
LAS VEGAS, Nev . (AP)- Guests did not enter a plea.
With the acrid smell of smoke still
brought their own smoke detectors,
but gamblers said the oddS were lingering in places, the hotel's
against another fire as the Las casino and shows and about a third
Vegas Hilton Hotel reopened a week . of its guest rooms reopened for
and a haU after a blaze that killed business.
" It doesn't strike twice, does it?"
eight people and injured 192.
Meanwhile, busboy Philip Cline asked Dick Oberski of Detroit,
was Jed into a courtroom in whose blase feeling about the chanmanacles Thursday and was ces of another fire was echoed
arraigned on eight counts of murder throughout the casino.
" I could walk out in the street and
and one count of arson in the Feb. 10
fire at the nation's largest hotel. get hit by a car," Oberski
Cline, who is being held without bail. said." Besides, the. (slot) machines

ARSON SUSPECf ARRAIGNED - Phllip Bmce Cline, right, a 23year-old busboy, is escorted by unidentified bailiff into Las Vegas court
. )Vbere he was arraigned Thursday. He was charged with eight counts of
murder and one of Bl'!lon, all in connection with the $10 million Las Vegas
Hilton fire in which eight persons died. (AP Laserpboto).

Emmett R. Heiney, 76, Reedsville,
died Thursday morning at Veterans
Memorial Hospital following a brief
illness.
·
Mr. Heiney was born Jan. 3, 1905
ip Meigs County to the late Dallas
and Lottie Cowdry Heiney. He was
also preceded in death by one
~rather. He was a carpenter in the
area for the past several years.
He is survived by his wife, Gladys
Riggs Heiney; one son, Gale of
Reedsville; one daughter, Eileen
Friess, Sylvania, Ohio; six brothers,
Elza, New Lexington; Everett, Ar-

Commissioners. • •
(Continued from page I)
did not comply someone was going
to end up in court. She also indicated
that perhaps the county could send
prisoners to other facilities.
All commissioners agreed they
would not be forced into such a
program and bankrupt the county.

HOSPITAl :\E"S
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted--Charles
Payne,
Pomeroy; Otho Karr, ·Middleport;
Hazel Ferrell, Middieport; Carol
Baker, Middleport; Janetta West,
Middleport; Theresa Canterbury,
Mason; Agnes Coleman, Minersville.
Discharged-O'Dell Blake.

thur and Albert all of Toledo; Froc·
die; Ottawa Lake, Mich., and Robert
of Roseville, Ohio; three Sisters,
Daisey Carter, Toledo; Alice Shar·
mann, Coleton, Calif., and Mary
Ellen Garrison, Livettburg, Ohio;
four grandchildren, one great gran·
dson

and

several

The formal criminal complaint
filed against him Thursday charged
him with starting the fire "willfully,
unlawfully, maliciously and
feloniously.''
Cline's story was discounted by
fire officials, who said the fire on the
eighth floor was too big to have been
started as Cline said.
Three other,' smaller fires were
deliberately set on other floors, and
police said last week they were
looking for other suspects.

nieces and

nephews.
Funeral services will be held
Saturday at I p.m. at the White
Funeral -Home with the Rev. Roy
Deeter officiating. Buri a! will be in
the Heiney Cemetery. Friends may
call at the funeral home at anytime.
The family will receive friends this
evening from 7 to 9 p.m.
REAGAN'S SACRED COWS
WASIDNGTON (AP) - Federal
programs spared from President
Reagan's budget ax, from veterans
benefits to tobacco subsidies to Nan·
cy Reagan's pet social program, tell
much about personal and political
power in Washington.
That sacred cows still exist is
clear from a look at which programs
which were not included in Reagan's
$41.4 billion "hit list."
The leading sacred cow is the
Defense Department, which is
slated to come out ahead despite
minor reductions in some military
programs.

FIRE DAMAGES TRAILER
Fire damages to a mobile home
occupied by Pat Snyder, Racine,
were estimated at $1,750 Glen Rizer,
, assistant chief reported.
The fulcine Fire Department was
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
called Thursday at 6:45 p.m. The
DISCHARGES FEB. 19
fire caused by an electrical outlet
Linbergh Arnold, Harold Baker
was cOntained to the Jiving room.
Sr., Frank Benjamin, Ralph Boster,
Twenty members and three trucks
Teresa Cardwell, Sarah Cavins,
were at the scene.
Angela Cummins, Sharon Cundiff,
Celphia Flora, Barbara Grueser,
BOWLING PROMOTED
Woodrow Hall, James Hwnphrey,
Marine
Pfc. Brian K. Bowling, son
Deborah Jeffries, Eileane Johnson,
of
Pearl
Shatto, formerly of
Charles Mahle, Katherine Me·
and
a brother to Belinda
Gallipolis,
Callister, Gilbert Miliron, Opie
has been promoted
Johnson,
Racine,
Moore, Rosetta Moore, Ronald
to
his
present
rank
while serving
Paden II, Wanda Patterson, Susan
Peoples, Kermit Price, Rena Rober·
the FirstCaUl. Battalion,
Pendleton,
He joinedCamp
the
ts, Dorothy Rodgers, Daisy Sayre, with
Milfred Sheets, Vera Souders, Mrs.
Phillip Thomas and daughter, MarineCorpsinApril, 1980.
James Waulk, Ruthanna Weaver, ·
FAMILYMOVES
Herman Whobrey Sr., Melvin Wolfe.
Robert Hayes, son of Mr. and Mrs.
BIRTHS
A. W. Hayes, Middleport, and his
Mr. and Mrs. David Baker, son, family have moved from Pontiac
Patriot; Ml'. and Mrs. Bill Edwards, Ill. to South Houston, Texas, wher~
he has accepted employment.
son, Galli'polis.

T~nk

Parents' night
held at Meigs

Vol. 1S No.4

Copyrighted 1981

'
r•

--

HEARTLINE PROJECf - The aDDual Valentine's project of the Heath United Methodist Church
women wa• carried out Tbul'!lday u trays of
homemade cookies and candle• were dlotrlbuted to
shut-Ins of the community. Among those working on

Bob&amp; Charlene Hoeflich
109 High St., Pomeroy

E

programs. However, there is no

question there will be fewer
passenger trains running and fewer
benefits for unemployed workers.
Here is a summary of how Ohio
will be affected by cuts in specific
prog ~ams, as indicated in the Nor·
theast-Midwest
Congressional
Coalition's analysis: CETA : The
Reagan budget proposes to

•

eliminate all public sector employment ( PSE) under the Comprehensive Employment and
Training Act by the end of fiscal
1981. Last year, Ohio communities
had 14,768 persons on their payrolls
under this program for a total of $139
million.
Revenue sharing : No cuts are
specified in revenue sharing, so Ohio
(Continued on page A3 )
•

•

9 Sections, 70 Pages 35 Cents

Sunday, February 22, 1981

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant

.

ByJOHNW.CHALFANT
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP )
Universities and colleges in Ohio
could face more fiscal troubles if
enrollment during the next two
fiscal years falls short of projected
figures.
Duane R. Rogers, the Ohio Board
of Regents' executive director for
budget and resource planning, said
systemwide enrollment is forecast

,

·-

~

~
"

.~

"

• •l

the project were from tbe Jell, Nan Moore, JU8Dlla
Bachlle, EtoWa Cusell, Grace French, Elllabetb
Mourn!Dg, Mai'y RelDbart, Clara CrlaweU, Eln&gt;etla
Beeblle, Lellle YOWII, and Dorothy RoUer. The pnject
Is sponsored by tbe Afternoon Circle of the cburtb.

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

25
F. Bearhs, Racine. Mark R. Roger Allen Ketchum
Higman, Reedsville, and Hannah · Hockingport and Rhonda Je~ Ash:
Five emergency calls were an- · Higman, Belpre filed for dissolution 23, Minersville.
swered by local units Thursday, the of marria'ge.
Meigs Emergency Medical Services
NAME OMITI'ED
reports.
HEART SUNDAY
The name of Tom Schoonover, a
At 10:34 a.m., the Pomeroy Unit
Heart Sunday will be observed in senior, was omitted from the third
took Richard Winebrenner from Meigs County this Sunday. In six weeks honor roll submitted for
Pomeroy Health Care Center to charge of the annual door-to-door publication by Meigs High School.
Veterans Memorial Hospital; at 4:32 )und drive in Middleport is the Mid- Tom is a son of Mr. and Ml'll.
p.m., the Racine Unit took Otis dleport Business and Professional Thomas Schoonover, Rutland.
Bailey from Elm St., to Holzer Women's Club while in Pomeroy
Medical Center and at 10:41 p.m., the Ohio Eta Phi Chapter of Beta Sigma
TB TESTS SET MONDAY
Racine Unit took Judy Holter, Phi Sorority will be in charge.
A
tuberculosis
skin testing cllnlc
Bashan Road, to Veterans
will
be
held
from
~: 30 to 7:30 p.m.
PROBE 111EFI'
Memorial. The Syracuse Unit at 1:08
Monday
at
the
Syracuse
Municipal
Meigs County sheriff's deputies
p.m. took Jason Kline, Welshtolvn
Building
by
the
Meigs
County
Tuberare
investigating
the
theft
of
an
un·
·
Hill, to Veterans Memorial Hospital
culosis
Office
personnel.
All
persona
and at 2:40a.m., the Middleport Unit determined amount of money from
took Hazel Ferrell, Second Ave. , to the W. S. Michael residence, Rt. I, receiving the test must return to the
building during the same hours on
Minersville.
Veterans Memorial.
Wednesda.
Yto have the results read.
The theft occurred sometime Wednesday. A back door was reportedly
SEEKS $152,698
MEETS TIJESDAY
unlocked.
A breach of contract suit has been
The
Pomeroy
Chapter of Past
filed in Meigs County Common Pleas
Matrons
will
meet
Tuesday at 7:30
ASK TOWED
Court by Hugh Mitchell, Pomeroy,
p.m.
at
the
home
of
Marjorie
Crow.
A marriage license was issued to
agatnst Robert Thompson, Fulton
Thompson Tractor Sales, Inc.,
Pomeroy and Fred and George
'·
Thompson.
The plaintiff, Mitchell, according
to an entry charges that the defel]dants failed to live up to the contract
by which he was hired as general
manager.
•
The plaintiff prays for judgment
•
against the defendants the swn of
$152,698.34 plus one-half of the profit
of business in 1980 plus interest.

~

garden trac
· to~
i&amp;

·

~

ELBERFEL_
DS IN POMEROY

SALE

MOWING
SEASON IS
JUST AROUND

THE CORNER.
STOP IN
AND
CHECK OUT OUR
PRE-SEASON DEALS.
NEW 1981 WHffl HORSE LAWN
".I"JD GARDEN TRACTORS

BAUM TRUE vALUE CHESTER,
-

OHIO

Niday, Jim Saunders, and Lonnie Burger. Standing
are, (1-rl, Jeff Parsley, Buckeye Hllls Career Center
(Forestry); Dana Green, North Gallla FFA; Bill Bainter, Hannan Trace FFA; Dale Newberry, South·
western FFA and Bob Foster, Gallla Academy FFA.

.

Area residen.ts finally
get help on energy bills
By KEVIN KELLY
GALLIPOIJS - After a long,
sometimes worry-filled wait, lowIncome residents in Gallia and
Meigs counties are getting assistan·
ce from the state on their energy
bills this winter.
Under the auspices of the state's
!lome Energy Assistance Program
(HEAP), checks have been made
out to bulk energy suppliers in the
area on behalf of eligible applicants.
The program provides 20 lo 6() pet'
cent heating cost subsidies for
December, January and February,
depending on household income. The

maximum per applicant is $750.
Letha Pt·offitt, HEAP coordinator
for Gallia-Meigs Community Aclion
Agency, said Friday 556 applications
to date have been approved and
checks totalling $124,429 are going
out to applicants, out of a $127,000
appropriation from the state
program.
More funding will be on its way
nexl week to help cover the more
than 1,000 applications now on file
withCAA .
"There is adequate money for
area residents," Proffitt sal d. " I

have been assured all applications

Extended forecast, state weather
Low near 40. Partly cloudy with a.chance of shower or thunderstonns
Sunday. High in the low 60s.
Ohio Extended Forecast- For Monday through Wednesday - showers
Wednesday. Highs in the mid-40s to
the mid-50s Monday and Tuesday, and in the 50s Wednesday. Lows in the
30s throughout the period.
~nding Monday, and fafrTuesday and

'34900

REG. '24J.85

•

3 PIECE DINEnE .SET
DROP LEAF TABLE, 30"K23" LEAVES DOWN,
30"x41" LEAVES UP. HIGH PRESSURE LAMINATED
TOP.
2 MATE'S CHAIRS

'1-99

which are approved will be funded. "
The program, started this year,
suffered delays in getting underway
and has been the victim of misinfonnation and rwnor, resulting in
sometimes frantic, mostly. concerned phone calls from applicants
lo the CAA office.
Proffitt said straightening out
misconceptions about the program
were almost as· time-conswning as
processing the checks, which she
and CAA Outreach staff have been
working on for the past few weeks.
'' It was total chaos in the beginning because it didn't get off the
ground when lt was supposed to,"
Proffitt noted, explaining htiw some
applicants would receive letters .
from the state HEAP program
stating they would receive funding
before the local program had been
notified.
Checks are sent to the local CAA
office with the names of the applicant and his or her main energy
supplier, which is then paid directly
to the supplier.
James A. Duerk, director of the
Ohio Department of Economic
Development, said last month
similar energy assistance programs
in other states failed because the
state had no guarantee applicants

WASHINGTON
(AP)
Something needs to be done to
rescue the Social Security system
and it needs to be done fast: that was
the one point of agreement after
th1·ee days of hearings on the
system's financial woes before a
House sub&lt;.'Ommittee.
"The safety time clock for the
elderly is ticking and we mll!lt act
within !981," Rep. J .J. Pickle, chair·
man of the House Ways and Means
subcommittee on Social Security
which held the hearings, sw~11ned up
in an interview Friday.
During last week's hearings,
projections were released of the

fiscal soundness of the system,
which provides benefits to 36.million
Americans.
Even the most optimistic forecast
was that the retirement fund would
run into trouble next year, and the
Congressional Budget Office reported flatly that the fund will be
depleted in 1983.
After that, it's a matter of how
many billions in the red the fund will
rw1.
New administration projections,
based on implementation of
President Reagan ' s econoll'lic
recovery plan, place the deficit at
$40.3 billion by the end of 19~. But

the budget office, an arm of
Congress, puts it at $63.5 billion by
the end of fisca\1986.
Pickle criticized the ad·
ministration's rosier figures, saying
they give the impression there is
considerable time to deal with the
financing issues. "The time to act is
right now," he said.
Some subcommittee members in·
dicated the system's financial
arrangements should be keyed to
pessimistic assumptions of what the
economy will do in the future. Ttlat
way, goes the thinking, Americans
can be assured the system will be
(Continued on page A3)

'•

CEREMONY IN RAIN - Ceremonies were held
despite drizzling rain Friday to mark the beginning of
the construction of a 41)-unit senior citizens apartment
romplex in Middleport. Manning shovels during the
ceremony were Marvin Kelly. president of Middleport
Council; Mayor Fred Hoffman; Art Win.,r, general
partner in the project; Mrs. Eleanor Thomas,
executive director of the Meigs County Council on

Aging; A. Jones of the FHA and Meigs Commissioner
Henry Wells. Others looking on lnduded Richard Jones
and David Koblentz, Meigs Commissioners; William
Walters and Jack Satterfield, Middleport Councilmen;
Harold Chase, Middleport Planning Commission; Attorney Steve Story; Bob Wacha and John Northrup of
the company having the complex construction. ·

h

d

F n•day 1.0r new.apartment ·COffipleX

42" ROUND TABLE, 12" LEAF, 1%'' THICK TOP,
HIGH PRESSURE LAMINATED TOP.
4 ARROW BACK CHAIRS

SPECIAL

Although Rhodes' instructional
subsidy level of $624.7 million for
fiscal1982 is based on the enrollment
projections, some schools contend
the figures are too conservative,
Rogers said. lf they are, that could ,
spell future underfunding problems
for colleges similar to those ex·
perienced this year.
For example, the current budget
had included state subsidies for an
(Continued on page A3)

~~~~~s:en~:~i~i:o~:y;rn:;:gt~~ Ground reaking ceremonies.bel · -

5 PIECE DINEnE SET

checks through local officials.
Proffitt said natural gas suppliers,
£
likeColwnbiaGasofOhio,workthe ·
HEAP program somewhat dif·
fcrently. Applicants pay only a persingle-story design, with eight-inch
MIDDLEPORT - A brief ground· April.
centage of their gaS' bills with their
"
The
units
will
leave
Columbus
double walls and two layers of inbreaking ceremony was held Friday
HEAP funding, where utilities get a
100
percent
complete,
including
all
sulation
between, the spokesman
to mark the construction of 40
direct payment from HEAP.
wiring,
plwnbing
and
insulation,"
noted.
prefabricated senior citizens apart·
Although the payments were slow
The development will be managed
Nmthru!J said.
mcnts at Powell and Page Streets.
in coming, suppliers like Colwnbia
The
units
will
arrive
with
all
by
Cardinal, and rental rates will be
According to John Northt·up, a
Gas assured consumers , involved
finishing
details'
including
covered
subsidized
by the Fanners Home
spokesman lot· Cardinal Industries,
with HEAP they wouldn't be cut off
walls,
kitchens,
appliances,
carAdministration.
Columbus, production on the
if the payment wasn't on time.
Several village and county of·
modular units , which will be called peting, buill-in &gt;bookcase and other
Because of the late start, the
items,
Northrup
said.
ficials
were oo hand for the
Stone Woods, is slated to begin at
original March I deadline for apThe
apartments
will
feature
a
ceremony.
plications was extended last week to Cat·dinal's Colwnbus facility in
March 31 by the state controlling
Hu!'lh nanws on-~itt·
board.
Officials said the delay was task forrt• in Atlnntn
0
0
caused by federal bureaucracy
WASHINGTON I AP) - Vice
surrounding the $90 million sul&gt;A-5
.
Area deaths
sidizing the program, approved by President George Bush announced
Saturday the establish111ent of an onEditorJal ........•.•.....•........•................ B-2
Congress in December.
Classified .... . ..................................
"It got off to a slow start-the ex· site task force to coot·dinate federal
efforts to assist Atlanta authorities
tension was needed," Proffitt said.
Lifestyle
o' • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
B-1·7
Applications are available at in the investigation of the slayings of Local ..................•..•...•..•.•..........•. A-3-8
CAA's offices In Gallipolis, Cheshire 18 children and thl disappearance of State-National •. , ... , ....•.•..... , , . , , ........ , .... ().1
and Pomeroy. Applicants are urged two othm-s.
Mayor Maynard ,Jackson of Allan· SJX)rts ............ . ......•......•......•.....•... C·l-8
to fill out all questions about their
fuel providers so HEAP will know ta and other local officials had TV guide ...•............................ . ...... Insert
where the two-party checks are agreed to the task-fnrce effort, Bush
said.
·
going .

Inside today.

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

00

SHOP TONIGHT TIL 8&amp;00

985-530l

NATIONA!L FFA WEEK - Representatives of'
local FFA chllpten In Gallla County met with Gallla
County Commlsslonel'!l recently to proclaim the week
ol Feb. 21·!8 as Natloaal FFA Week. Pictured above
are Gallla C011Diy Commissioners (seated l·rl. Paul D.

REG. '422.75

SPECIAL .

at 282,737 in fiscal191!2 and 279,218 in
fisca\1983 .
Regents reviewed the enrollment
estimates Friday as they examined
the higher education spending leyels
included by Gov. James A. Rhodes
in his proposed budget submitted to
the Genet·a! Assembly. Board staff
members and university presidents
are to testify at House Finance Com·
mittee hearings on the budget star·
ling March 10.

System needs help--fast!

mergency squad runs

WHE£iL HURSE

-

UDAG, EDA and many . other

tlttntt

tmts

Meigs County happenings

r~C~oa~ch~B~o~n~n~ie~C~ha~pma~~n.:i:i!i:;::;~~~=;~~~~,,~.S~7~21~i~

GIVE US A CALL

•

~·~~. \~ /

Pomnr

eSPECIAL OCCASIONS
ePASSPORTS

THE PHOTO PLACE

'

- -··

"Photos Are Forever"
eWEDDINGS
• ePORTRAITS

the Economic Development Ad·
ministration , which created 9,667
Ohio jobs.
The organization would like to
save urban mass transit and low·
income energy assistance programs
also.
Because of lack of specific details
from the administration it is not yet
possible to determine exactly the
impact of proposed cutbacks in ·

Colleges could face
more fisCal troubles

in~~rt
aruL QunfitM

Save Today ',r Precious Moments For
Tomorrow With Beautiful Full
Color Photographs.

Leaders of the coalition, a nonpartisan organization with more
than 200 members in the House, say
th~y will fight to keep CETA and
some other programs that are of
particular benefit to the area.
The coalition says it will oppose
cutbacks in the Urban Development
Action Grant program, which is
credited with creating 16,565 jobs in
Ohio over the pa.st th~ee years, and

unba

-

ROCK SPRING - Parents' night
for the Meigs High School girls'
basketball team was held recently
before the Meigs-Wellston game,
which the lady Marauders later won.
Each girl presented a red carnation
to her parents between the reserve
and varsity matches with Wellston.
The following are players,
managers, and parents who were
honored at the·event. Reserve members recognized were Robin Buf·
fington and her mother Sharon Buffington, Cathy Dean represented by
Carmel and Richard Dean, Paula
Horton escorted . by Pauline and
Mack Horton, Valerie Jeffers by
Nancy Jeffers, Susan Lightfoot by
Gerry Lightfoot, Mae Nakamoto by
Janet Nakamoto, Kris Snowden by
Flo and Gene Snowden, Paula
Swisher by Nola and Velvet Swisher,
and Cindy Crooks and her sister
Pam Crooks of the varsity squad
represented by Judy and Eddie
Crooks.
Continuin~ with the varsity squad
are KristeQ ~derson represented
by Jennifer Anderson, Vicki DeBord
TO END MARRIAGES
- Janice and Dallas DeBord,
Barbara C. Bearhs. Syracuse,
Melanie Dillard - Charlotte and filed suit for divorce against Philip
Roger Dillard, Shari Drehel Phyllis and James Drehel, April r;~;=========::-1
King - Kay King, Lynne Oliver Dorothy and Robert Oliver, Andrea
Riggs - Barbara and Keith Riggs,
Laura Smith - Madge and Oscar
Smith, and Sherry Holtz, Mgr. Lura Swiger. The parents of Lorri
Snowden were unable to attend.
Flower Shop
The Marauder girls ar• coached ·
by Coach Ron Logan and reserve

lCIITAI.,..,..,.
&amp;
UIYY .1..1.

of how Ohio will be affected - froin
the loss· of jobs nwnbering in the
thousands to lost train service.
Reagan's proposed elimination of
public sector employment under the
Comprehensive Employment and
Training Act (CETAJ would affect
scores of Ohio cormnunities that hire
city workers under the program.
CETA provided jobs for 14,768 persons in Ohio last year.

By ROBERT L. SHAFFEil
Auoclatetl Press Writer
WASIDNGTON (AP) - It apparently will be some time before
the full impact of President
Reagan's budget-slashing proposals
on specific programs affecting Ohio
will be known.
However, a study produced by the
Northeast-Midwest Congressional
Coalition provides some indication

as "Joe."

f- Area deaths· I
Emmett R. Heiney

Ohioans await ·impact of cutbacks

are paying real good. I've been all
over town and this is the first place I
hit anything."
"There's nothing to be nervous
about," said Agnes Glowinski of ·
Milwaukee, who was trying her luck
at the Hilton's keno parlor.
"A fire like this may not happen
again for a thousand years," she
said.
The Hilton fire came three months
after a blaze at the MGM Grand
Hotel about two miles away killed 84
people.
Some guests at the reopened
Hilton did express some apprehension.
·
"I've got goose bumps. I'm scared
to death, but I've got a smoke detector right here in my purse," said An·
drea Cole of Los Angeles. "The
smoke detector is going right by the
door to my room."
Cline, 23, shuffled into a packed
courtroom and sat on the edge of his
chair biting his lip during the
arraignment. He did not say a word
during the proceeding, at which he
was formally charged.
His attorney, Kevin Kelly, waived
reading of the charges, and Justice
of the Peace Daniel Ahlstrom set a
preliminary hearing for March 6.
The judge turned down a defense
motion to ban television, cameras
and sound equipment from the courtroom, saying the public had the
right to know the details of the case.
Although Cline did not · enter a
~)lea , Kelly told reporters outside
court he believes the young man is
innocent, despite $tements police
said he made to homicide detectives.
Cline, who worked as a room service busboy at the Hilton, allegedly
told homicide detectives he accidentally started the fire with a
marijuana cigarette while engaged
in a sex act with a man he knew only

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

~~
- ----------~~~~
•••

GU'ITED IN BLAZE- An early Saturday morning fire which gutted
tbll \hreeoa..rtm~nt JUldence at 825 Second Ave. Is still under lnvetltlptloally the city fire department. Firemen went to the scene at 5:03
a.m. when the lire broke out in the first noor stairwell. The cause Is still
unlmowa, althOUflh the blaze did an eitlmated $20,000 damage to the
structure, owaed by Howard Baker S.unden, Gallipolis. The hoUIIC wM
!UIOCCUpled at the time of the fire. Lt. Nell McMahon of the city fire depa,.
tment wu Injured when he felltbrongh the floor while fighting the fire.
McMahon WIB taken to Holzer Medical Center, where he was treated and
released.
'

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