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                  <text>Thursda 'March 19, li!!

Pomeroy-Midd_leport, Ohio

Paae-14-The DailY Sentinel

i-----------------------

1 Area Deaths -i

Buy Sentinel classifieds

I

William A. Smith
Mema..al services for William A.
(Budd) Smith, former superin-

UmdentofPomeroyVillageExem~t--------------------------~---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

. ted Schools who died on March 1 at
his home at 2381 Ecuadorian Way,

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Clearwater, Fla., were held March 7
at the St. Paul Methodist Church in
lArgo, Flli.
Born in Cleveland, Smith
graduated from Ohio University in
1929 and later received his masters
degree from that university. Besides
serving as superintendent of schools
in Pomeroy, the late Mr. Smith also
was superintendent of schools at
Washington, C.H., and at Amherest
from 1959 to 1965 when he retired.
Mr. Smith was se.cretary and
treasurer of the Ohio Association of
School administrators for 10 years
and served as vice president of the
Ohio Educational Association.
He was a member and a past
master of Pomeroy Masonic Lodge
164, F&amp;AM. He was also a past
president of the Ohio-West Virginia
Industrial Assn., a past president of
the Southeast Ohio Teachers Assn.,
and had served as a vice president ul.
the Central Ohio Teachers Assn.
He was a past president of the
Amherst Rotary Club and was a life
mem,ber of the National and Ohio
Education Associations and the
American and Ohio Associations of
School Administrators. He was
listed in Who's Who in Educational
Administration. ·
Surviving are his wife of 50 years,
Virginia; two sons, William A.
Smith, Jr., of Bloomington, Minn.,
and Richard K. Smith of Springfield
Ill.; a daughter, Mrs. Janet Lentz ci
Cincinnati and seven grandchildren.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

DAYS

SPRING
OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT
SALE!

Ohio VaUey Uvestock Co.
MARKET REPORT

Sale every &amp;! turd11y a1 I p.m. Prtces taken
rrom lhe auction of Saturday, March 14. TREN·
OS: Veal calves $4 to $7.50 lw.·er. Cow.s sle.ady to
S2 higher. Feeder cattle steady.
Tutal Head US
l', eeder cattle ; Good and Choitoe 250 tQ300 lbs.
61-74,50; 300 to .00 lbti. 61).72; 400 to500 lbs . :)8..69;
500 to600 lt»l. ~; 600 to700 lbs . 57.50-63; 700 to
800100. ~l . SO; BOOandovcr~UO .
Feeder Heifers : Good aml Chou:c250 to300 lbs.

S7-6S ; 300 to 400 it.. 5r..4.50: 400 tu 500 it.. &gt;4.5062; 500 to 600ft. . ~ ; 600tu700 tb, , S2-011.50; 700
to 800 lbs. f&amp;.Sa.SO; 800 and over 47 .5(){i7.
Feeder Dulls: Good and Choice 250 to 300 lbs.
56-71; 300 to 400 it.. 5.WI.50: 400 tu500 tt.. S7.506S: 500 to6001"' . ~1.50 : 600tu 100 1"'. s:HH : 1011
toeoo lbs. ~7 .50; 800 and over 48-S$.50.
HoLstein .steers and bulb 300-800 Ills. 46.$().
54.50.
Bulb 1,000 l~ . and up 49.50·{17.
SlAughter cows - utilities ~2 . SCJ-48 : nmners

and cutte~ 37-41.50.
Cuws/caH unit.-1 by ~head 440-640.
Springer cows by the he.Yd 400-530.
Ve~~l calves, choi ce and prime 82-96 : good

Regular sizes and sl im s izes 8 to 18 . Student
sizes 26 to 30 waist, and hu sky sizes 8 to 18.
Basic blue de nims
fashion denims
ca rpenter jeans .
Entire stock sale pri ced .

BOYS '12.95
BOYS 114.95
BOYS 116.95
BOYS 117.95

JEANS
JEANS
JEANS
JEANS

Top Hogs 38.50-39.25.
Boars 28.51).30.:::.0.
Pigs by the head 15-28.

SOws t&amp;llbs. liPd up J4.36.:;o.

AOtem Uveducli Sul1·
Albany, Ohln
MarebU, llfH
CAITLE I'HICES :
Feeder Stt.&gt;~r) : !Good ~111 d Choice 1300-500 lbs.
64.75-70.50; !i00-700 lbs. 58.50-67.
Feeder Heih.&gt;rs: IGood and Chotcel 300-500 lbs .
·~ . 7&gt;&amp; ; 500-7001b!i. ~ - ~ - ~
'

John Prout, vice president of District 6, said local
union officials have been kept In the dark about
negdotiations. "They don't tell us a damn thing," he
sat .
Prout is pessimistic about settling without a strike
sa)'ing he hopes the walkout is not too long.
'
"But from the way the negotiations went the other
day it looks like itain'tgonna be a short one," he said.
Although utilities have stockpiled coal to help them
get through a strike, they will run out if a walkout lasts
according to Bell.
'
'TI~~y ~d stockpiles before, but they go down," he
sard. Were gomg mto summer and !bey burn more
!herr. They're going to need us sooner' or tater. They're
going to hurt as much as we are."

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en tine

at

SALE

25"
......

RCA
TELEVISION SALE

:

I/

51.50 Bani on Panel Socks 99•
$1.50 Bulky Knit Orlons 99 •

('' )

1

'1. 19
'1.39

$1.75 Terry Cloths
52.25 Argyles

\/

·-~tf$==-o-=--0--IT-.~YOIJRSELF
.//

Reg . $17.00 Sale 513.59
Reg. 519.00 Sale $15.69
Reg . $21.00 Sale $16.79
Reg . $~5.00 Sale$19.99

,;·

"t
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\1

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1

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ALL WALLPAPER

CUTIING mE BUDGET - Senate Budget Com·
mlttee Chairman Pete Domcnlcl of New Mexi&lt;o. left,
'listens to committee stall member Steve Bell during a

SALE ENDS
3121/&amp;1

.(

f
~

20% OFF

WA SHABLE

,;

Hearing
features
no shows

\VALLCOVERINGS

--:;1

f,..

SAVE '5000 ON
ANY RCA COLOR
CONSOLE
IN STOCK

REG . SS .OO ........ . ... SALE 13 .99
REG . S9.00 . .. ... . . .... SALE S7 . 19
REG . SI4.00 .. ........ SALE Sl1 . 19
REG . Sli .OO ..... ..... SALE S16 .79

Good selection of styles
and co lors . One size fit 's
all. Size 10 to 13 .

A ,:~

Corduroy i ac kets ,
ski rts and slacks .
Junior sizes .
Beige, powaer blue
and pink .

XL-100

Ameeting was held today at I p.m.
at the Meigs County Highway
Garage to negotiate the renewal of a
contract with county highway employes.
.
At the meeting were Fred Haynes,
regional director of the American
Federation of State, County,and
Municipal Employes (AFSCME),
members of local AFSCME, Henry
Wells, presidenr of the board of com·
missioners, Dave Koblentz, com·
missioner, Frederick Crow, III,
prosecutor, and Phil Roberts, coun·
ty engineer.
I"l'ues to be discussed are wages
and fringe benefits. The contract
with county highway employes e&lt;·
pires at midnight on March 31. A
union has been in e&lt;istence at the
county highway garage for the past
four years.

I

JUNIOR
SPORTSWEAR ;
RCA

Negotiate
contract

7 16 14

MEN'S DRESS
SOCKS

10.99
'12.69
1
14.39
1
15.29

I\.._./

" .,

commltlee meellng on Capitol Hill Thursday. The com·
mlttee finished work on cuts to be recommended to the
1982 federal budget. ( AP Laserphoto 1.

.

GOP leaders push for vote
MEN'S SHORT SLEEVE

RED HEART
WINTUK 'J.49

SPORT SHIRTS

KNITTING YARN

S1zes S. M , Land XL . So lid colors and p.31
tern s

B1g 3 1'2 ounce skei ns, tangl e proof hand

•

Short sleeve western sh tr l s tnc luded
Fine New Selection Sale Priced For
Friday and Si!turday

knitting yarn by coa ts and ClarKs . ~01 1 0
colors. Var 1egated and spar kl e co lors .

ri

$9.95 Sport Shirts ... 58.00 ,
$12.95 Sport Shirts . S10.40
5 Sport Shirts . S11.90
Sport Shirts . S13.50

WOMEN'S

Ow,iT.Lt·suPPERS

SLACK
SPECIAL

ONE GROUP OF ANGEL TREAD SLIPPERS

ssoo
FOR MEN AND BOYS

(~"'iri9 1 ·

isv·/

CARPE
. JEANS
co tton lwtlls m

Wa fs! sizes 27 to 38. lengths 30 to
36. Wrangler and Mr. Leggs .
S14 .9S

t.t1.9S Carpenter Jeans
C;~rpcnter Jeans
S18.9S Carpenter Jeans

t8.99
$10.99
$14.99

S19.95 Carpenter Jeans

St5.99

-

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~-

(~"-'e
-"1

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.~w -_!
OF"

Save :20% thi s weekend on
men' s i!nd b()y s' Hanes Red
Label underwear - T Shirts
Briefs. - Boxer and Gripper Shirts · Athletic Shirts .
Big m en's s.i1es included.

SAVE 20%

NEEDS
. , f t•. J
. c:~~J,
. .. k

I
.J~-et..:r

Two day sale prices on our
entire stock of zippers
threads · buttons · seam
binding · bias tape - stretch
lace hem facing· knit braid·
rick rack
twill tape
blanket binding.

Thursday. He said there was a require congressional approval.
In all. the pa cka~e adopted by the
"rea listic pruspt!cl" for a final vote
Senate
Budget Committee calls for
a week from today but added that he
cutting
planned spendin~ $87 billion
would sc hedule an unusual Saturday
through
1983 - $2.8 billion this year,
sess ion if necessary to complete ac·
$.'](,.4
billion
in 1982 and $47.7 billion
tion by the end of next week.
Meanwhile, the House Agriculture the following year.
Some the additional cuts made by
Conunittee voted to back Reagan's
lhe
committee might not last.
proposal to scrap a scheduled April!
The panel's biggest departure
increase in dairy price supports. The
vote was 311-7 to approve the from the president's program called
measure. which would save an (or private financing of the Strategic
Petroleum Reserve, at a savings of
estimated$147million.
The ·full Senate is scheduled to about $3 billion.
vote on an identical bill next week.
Reagan is seeking $48.6 billion in
cuts for fiscal 1982, which begins
Oct. ) . Congressional aides said the
conunittee's fi gure is lower because
some additional money can be saved
through other legislation and still
That refund for customers or the
more ca n be saved through ad·
Ohio
Power Co .. promised recently
ministration actions that don't
by the Ohio Conswners Council
William Spratley will be con·
siderably less than Spratley claims.
In a statewide press release on
Ohio Power's latest fu el clause
hearing, Spratley snapped up his
share of credit for getting a $1.9
million cutback in the company's
revenue, Ute eompany charged
today .
Spratley, according to the com·
pany, said Ohio Power customers
could expect a $1.9 million refund
under orders of the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio.
But Spratley's office then put out a
correction saying that the refund
would be only $1.4 million, the com·
pany states. In a letter to Ohio
Power, the office admitted the
$500,000 error. but offered no
apology for having mislead the company's customers, according to the
pol"er company's statement today .
But Ohio Power says Spratley is
still wrong, since the PUCO order
will require the company to reduce
its revenues by less than $600,000 in·
stead of the amount Spratley nuw

..

clai1ns.
W. A. Leuby, Ohio Power's Por·
tsmouth Division manager, &gt;~~~id the
PUCO has ordered the company to
reduce its revenues by $476,368 plus
the amount which the company has
yet to determine . He said the un·
derterrnined amount would add up
to about $100,000.
"So what we actually will be
doing, through the fuel clause is sim·
ply making a one-time credit of
about 25 cents per customer, based
on average residential use of 750
kilowatt hours of electricity per
month" , Leuby said.
Leu by said he does not really know
the source of Spratley's confusion
"since all we have to work with are
facts and figures".
However, Leuby said, some of the
refund Spratley has prmnised seems
already to have been made last
year.
Ohio Power made a fuel clause ad·
jusiment to account for an erroneous
procedure involving oil and gas
royalties. That error was called to
the comp~ny's attention by an
auditor working for Spratley.

Court rules against landowners

SAVE 20.%

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Lack of public interest was
displayed at a meeting Thursday '
evening on the re-evaluaton of the
AORTA bus system from Pomeroy
to Athens (round t.rip) twice daily
Mol\day through Friday.
A public hearing was scheduled
for Thursday evening in the Meigs
County Courtroom for the purpose of
exarnining the continuance of Meigs
County as part of a five-county tran·
sportation service.
However, other than the Meigs
County Commissioners, no other
person attended the meeting.
According to Richard Jones, com·
missioner, persons involved in the
AORTA system will meet with the
board of directors, and in all
probability, will recommend discon·
tinuance of the line. The AORTA
system from Pomeroy to Athens has
been out of service since January .

Refund will be less
for power customers

I-

ONLY

Spec ial group of quality
sportswear bY Jo· Joba .
Blouses, slacks, skirts,
. jackets &lt;&gt;nd tops.
ss~s sizes 8 to 20 . ·

REG. SS.OO' SALE '6.39
.
REG. 112.00 SALE
~EG. '17.00 SALE 1 13.59~N'S
. '21.00 SALE '16.79 AND YOUN
MEN'S

•

A Terrific Value!

1h PRICE

SPRING
COORDINATE

WASHINGTON (API - Senate
Republicans, moving to e&lt;ploit their
new majorit~ swiftly, are pushing
for a floor vote next week on a
budget-cutting package containing
most of President Reagan's recommendations and a few of their own.
The Senate Budget Committee
capped a grueling, four-day budget
review Thursday and approved a
blueprint for $36.4 billion in spending
reductions in 1982, $2.3 billion more
than the president wants in the areas
covered. The vast majority of cuts
would come in social programs such
as unemployment, welfare.
education, nutrition and some Social
Security benefits.
Even before the conunittce ~ave
its 'approval on a 2().0 vote.
Republican Leader Howard Baker
announced the full Settate would
begin debate on the proposal next

100% polyester slacks with e la sti c
waists .
Cream, navy , b'r own· and bl ack .
Misses sizes 8 to 20.

Assorted styles a nd colors .
Sizes 5. M, L , XL .

Blue den 1ms

Ill.
Baby calves~ 12::1.

e

4 to6x

FRIDAY , SATURDAY
SALE

1

natural , ltght blue, red , royal

sa.

••

Sundresses, fancy dresses, coa t and
dress sets, dresses w/ panties and
dressy pant ou tt its .
Sizes newborn to 24 mos .
2T to 4T

$}19

Market report

talking to miners in Meigs and Vinton counties. "They
had infof1118tlon from somebody that the miners in
Pennsylvania and West Virginia were out to· support
contract talks, but we told them t,hey were out for other
reasons.
·
"We told them they had six more days left to wo;k
and Utey would haveall the \iffie in the world off if we
didn't come to an agreement at the negotiations before
long. They more or less listened to us."
Bell apparently referred to disputes in West Virginia
and Pennsylvama over the firing of six miners.
A lll-&lt;lay strike in 1977-78 led to the present threeyear pact. UMW officials said there isn't time to reach
agreement on a contract and vote on it before a nationwide strike begins.

.

GIRLS'
SPRING DRESSES

BOYS' JEANS

Albert R. Frank

vices.

prepared to return to Waslungton at any time. •
His comments came as Ohio miners returned to work
or made plans to end unauthorized walkouts. The final
group of 300 striking Ohio miners was to return to work
with the 8 a.m. shift today at the Saginaw mine near St.
Clairsville.
Several walkouts by at least I ,200 Ohio miners Wed·
nesday reportedly resulted from anger and frustration
by miners over the breakdown in talks. Other walkouts
occurret! because of misunderstandings over other
issues, Bell said.
Bell and other union officials visited several District
6 strike sites Wednesday to convince miners to go back
to work until the current contract expires March 27.
"They were just a little confused," Bell said after

SALE

StocK up now

Albert R. Frank, 75, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, died Wednesday at his
residence.
Mr. Frank attended Hysell Run
Holiness Church and was a retired
employe of Gallipolis State Institute.
He is survived by his wife, Anna
Frank; one brother Harless Frank
Long Bottom and several nieces and
nephews.
Flmeral services will be held
Friday at I p.m. at the Hysell Run
Holiness Church with the Rev .
Theron Durham and the Rev , Okey
Cart officiating. Burial will be in
Chester Cemetery. Friends may call
at Ewing Funeral Home after 7 p.m.
this evening and at the church
Friday from noon until tune of ser·

lly The A..oclaled r , 1
The United Mine Workers aren't looking forward to a
lengthy strike, but they're ready to stay out as long as
necessary to get what they're asking for, Ohio union of·
ficials say.
"I doo't think we want a long one (walkout)," said
Ed Bell, president of UMW District 6, on Thursday.
"But we'll give them (coal mine owners) one if that's
what they want. I don't how far apart they are on the
issues."
Bell returned to District 6, representing 16,000 members in southeast Ohio and the West Virginia panhan·
die, after contract talks broke down in Washington on
Tuesday. He said he'd heard nothing by late Thursday
on possible resumption of negotiations, but was

SATURDAY, MARCH 21, 1981

FRIDAY, MARCH 20th

Jewell T. Strong
Jewell T. -Bobo Strong, 00, Mill
Street Wilkesville, died Wednesday
at St. Lukes Convalescent Center.
Columbus.
Mrs. Strong was the window of the
late Joseph E. Strong who was Vin·
ton County coroner and a Wilkesville
funeral director. Mrs. Strong was
born in Meigs Count~. the daughter
of the late Vince and Dora Turner
Bobo. She was also preceded in
death by one son, Harley and one
brother.
She was a housewife, a member of
the Wilkesville United Methodist
Church and the WSCS ; Wilkesville
Chapter 207 OEs ; Pythian Sisters
Lodge 591 where she was also a
member of Past Chiefs Club ·
American Legion Auxiliary 476 and
a 50 year member of Star Grange
776.
.
She is survived by one daughter
and son-in-law, Kathryn and Paul
Kunz, Galloway; one daughter-in·
law, Althea Strong, Wilkesville; two
brothers, John Bobo, Dayton, and
Luther Bobo, Rinnela , Fla; five
grandchildren and five great grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held
Saturday at 2 p.m. at the Wilkesville
United Methodist Church with the
Rev. A. B. Maloy and the Rev . John
Lewis officiating. Burial will be in
Wilkesville Cemetery. Frientls may
call at the James N. Blower Funeral
Home, McArthur after 4 p.m. Friday
and after 10 a.m. on Saturday at the
church.

----

--·

Frustration causes early walkout

SPRING? - This may be the first day of spring but apparently the
weather Is Ignoring the matler. Mrs. Letta Spt!ncer and daughter, Mrs.
Judy King are plclllred Thursday aftcmtHm, bundled In winter rlothlng,
as a snow shower hit Meigs County.
\o .

INniANAPO!.lS IAPl ··· 'Ote U.S.
Court of Claims has ruled against 22
people who .owned land along the
Ohio River and had sought millions
of dollars in danwges alleging ~&gt;at
dams have eroded their river{runt
property.
Thl• d(lmagt• l'lttnns, filed

a~wlnsl

the Al'my Corps of Engineers, have
been turned down by the Court of
Claims at Washington.
The Corps' action has beell' under
attack by attorneys Charles S.
Gleason of Indianapolis and Norman
Hay of Cannelton, who represent the
illndnwners.

.
.

~

TODAY

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~-

I •

f •

••• IN THEW
Wants to make names public
WASHINGTON - Sen. William Proxrnire wants the White House to
reveal the names of people or groups who contributed$1,000 or more to
a $375,529 fund for renovating President and Mrs. Reagan's living
~~~

White House officials have refused to release the names of any of the
167 donors who have contributed an average of $2,249 each to
redecorate and refurbish the second and third floors of the executive
mansion.

·:

:,

.
'

Administration may cut aid
WASHfNGTON -: The Reagan administration appears ready to con·
clude.rt has no chmce but to cut off economic aid to the Nicaraguan
government although such a move would risk further weakening of
moderate anlt-Marxtst elements in that country's government of.
ficials say.
'
At stake is 5 million approved but not disbursed for fiscal1981 and an
additional $20 rnillion tentatively budgeted for fiscal1982.

Letters will cost more Sunday
WASHINGTON - There are just two mail days left before the cost
of sending a letter goes up.
The first-class mail rate, now 15 cents, will go up to 18 cents at l2 :QI
a.lli. Sunday. The charge for postcards, now a dime, will be 12 cents.
Rates for other classes of mail also will go up for the first time in three
years.

•

Politician guilty of adultery
LONDON - The Conservative politician who cast the first stone at a
distinguished devotee of kiddie porn has confessed to adultery - and
made his confession voluntarily at a news conference he called.
Geqffrey Dickens, who.identified a fonner British ambassador to
Canada, Sir Peter Hayman, as the retired civil servant mentioned in a
child pornography case last week, told startied reporters Thursday he
had left his wife, by whom he has two sons, and is living with the 43year-old operator of a nursing home . .

Winning Ohio lottery number
Cl..EVELAND - The numbers selected Thursday night in the Ohio
Lottery's daily game " The Number:• and weekly "Pyramid" game
drawing are:
The Nwnber - ~21
Pyramid-17: 432; 9806
The lottery reported earnings of $210,643.50 from the wagering on
the daily nWilber game drawing . l..ottery officials said sales prior to
the drawing totaled $1,033,934, and holders of winning tickets are entitled to share $823,290.50.

Weather
Partly cloudy tonight and Saturday. Lows tonight in the rnid·20s.
Highs Saturday in the low to mid-40s. Chance of precipitation 20 per·
cent tonight and near zero percent Saturday. Winds variable 10 mph or
less tonight .
Extended Ohio ForecastSunday·through Tuesday:
RaiD likely Sunday. A chance of showers Munday. Fair Tuesday.
Highs In the mld-40s to the mld-50s. Lows In the 30s.

No village races
in June primary
Pomeroy and Middleport Villages will not have primary elections
on June 2.
This was dtsclosed Thursday afternoon by the Meigs County
Board of Elections, when, at the filing deadline for village posts, there
were no contests.
In Middleport, the terms of Councilmen Dewey M. Horn, Marvin
L. Kelly, Allen Lee King and Jack Satterfield expire this year. Horton,
Kelly and Robert N. Gi~nore, filed as Republican candidates for council; King filed as an independent and Satterfield as a Democrat. The
contests for the·four posts will come in the fall election among the five·
candidates.
There was one vacancy for the Board of Public Affairs in Mid·
dleport with the tenn of Willis Anthony expiring this year, but no one
· filed for that post.
In Pomeroy the tenns of council members, Betty BaroniCk, Joho ;
Anderson, Bill Young and Larry Wehrung expire this year. Baronick, ·
Anderson, Young and Bruce Reed filed as Republicans and Larry
Wehrung filed as a Democrat so there are no races in the spring,
Dale Smith, incumbent, filed for one seat on the Pomeroy Board of
Public Affairs with two to be filled. Harlan Wehrung, the second incwnbent, did not file for election.
Although there are no primaries in the villages as such, there will
be elections in the towns on June 2. Middleport residents will vote on a
tax renewal and residents of both towns will vote on a bond issue in the
Meigs Local School District.

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·---- - - - .----- - -

�Friday, March 20,1981

·Commentary

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Pagl.'-3

Pagl.'-2-The Dally Sentinel·
Pomeroy-Middleport, Qhlo
Friday, March 20,1981

-

The plotting thickeni.;Z____.____ _ _ _--:--_--'--_ _ _.,--Do__,n_Gra_ff

In a better of several possible
worlds, foreign crises would come
complete with programs.
In their absence, it can be difficult
for the news-following publics in
other countries to keep up with
which party is on top of what opposition and who may be doing what
to whom at any given moment.
A case in confusing point is the
recent reappearance · of an occasional role-player in El Salvador's
multi-sided civil ward, and Roberto
0 1 Aubisson 1 whose comments
caused waves as far away as .
Washington and Bonn.
Briefly, he declared the Reagan
administration favored a takeover
by right-wing military leaders, in·
formation he claimed to be privy to
through extension contacts with
Reagan insiders. As for timing. Mar·
ch, he implied, looked good.

The Salvadoran junto's civilian
president, Jose ·Napoleon Duarte,
promptly cancelled a planned trip to
West Germany, where the major
parties might be in a position to
facilitate confacts between opposing
Salvadoran political groupings. And
Washington 's statement machinery .
received a brief btit s trenuolis
workout.
It must have been heady stuff for
D' Aubisson, who during most of the
last year has aU too little of the at·
tention he believes he so richly
deserves. He has been technically in
hiding . From the law, or what
passes for it these days in El
Salvador.
D' Aubisson is one of the more
repeJiently resourceful extremists
on a Salvadoran far right that ts
plentifuJiy supplied. A former major

The Daily Sent4nel
l ll{ ' uurtStn·d

P11nlt'rt1) . Oh iu
614-992-li:M
[)f.\"!JTEO To TilE lNTt:Rt~ T. OrTUE i\lf](;S-MASO\' .-\ REt\

ROBERT L. WINGETI
Publisha

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH

AN11istant Publishrr/Cun trollt-r

f;t•rwral \latm )!t'r

OALE ROTHGEB. JR.

A MEMBER nf Tht• Assodatt·d Prt·ss. Inland llaih Pn·... ~
Amrrkan .'lr~spapa Publishrn As:hKiatiun .
·

A~~ufiatiu n

and th r

l.t: nF.RS Of fiPI\ION art:' ~~· kumt•d . Tht•.l ~huuld twIt·~~ thlln ;mo t.~••rrh 1&lt;~11,1( . All
lt&gt;lh'rs art• s ubjt•t•l tu t•dit in)! and mu s t bt• ~I,I( Ot'd ~ilh namt·. atJdrt·' :- unC klt•phunt·

numbrr. ~••un~i,.;nt·d

lt&gt;ttrr~

14 illllt' publi ) h,·d I.r ttrn ,h,•uld ht· rn )!tHKl

ta ~ lt·.

deported. Since then, by his own account, he has been dividing his time
between congenially governed
Guatemala and visits back home.
That this is possible and that he
could now appear s9 casually in the
capital and speak out so publicly is a
sickening demonstration of how lit·
tie re~l authority Duarte'sunta has
in EISalvador.
The D' Aubisson show was promj&gt;'

Uy followed by an attack on the U.S.
Embassy. It has been credited to
rightists. Uke an identical assault
last year, it was carried out by gun·
men zooming by in an unmarked
van. Similarly motivated leftists
prefer Molotov cocktails and
bazookas. Such differences in modus
operandi are what passes for a
program on the &amp;\lvadoran combantants these days.

After a bit of hesitation, Secretary
of State Alexander Haig dl8avowed
D'Aubisson's reading of U.S. policy,
reaffinned suJlPO!\ for Duarte and
the junta and warned that its overthrow would have " serious consequences," preswnably meaning a
stop order on the millions in military
and economic aid being readied for
El Salvador.
He may even mean it.

:Remember
Vietnam
What lessons should the United States have learned from Vietnam'
Cyrus Vance, the fonner secretary of state, once offered a list that went
something !Ike this:
-A government without popular support wUI fail.
-Democracy cannot be imposed from the outside.
- A country must have the support of its allies when it intervenes in the
affairs of another ~try.
- Massive imported military power may not be able to defeat a small
native force .
Vance knew what he was talking about-he helped President Johnson
wage the war and to open the negotiations for peace.
Now the United States must decide whether those lessons apply to
another small tropical country of dark-skinned people engaged in a civil
1

An apt student of Vance should quickly note the similarity between the

growing involvement of U.S. military advisers in El Salvador and the
escalatioQ of the Vietnam War tw.o decades ago.
But an inattentive studen might end up scoring an " F" on the final
exam that decides whether experience is any teacher.

r--f-(erry's World----.

'·-·
.•

•
SIXTII GRADE TEAM - Members of Portland
Elementary School's sixth grde basketball team are
( slltlllg 1-r), Robert DeLong, Charlie Weddie, and

ELEMENTARY CHEERLEADERS - Membel'!!
of the Portland Elementary School flftb lllld sixth
grade cheerleadlng squds were recently honored at a
banquet. Honored were, (sitting), Debbie Greatbou.e,
Dawu JohDBon, Dolly HtU and Becky EvaDB. Standing,

Michael Holter. Standing, Coach Denny Eva1111, Darrlo
Prater, Kenny Turley, and James Pauley.

Banquet honors
Portland teams

nia with two and Arizona, Colorado,
New Mexico, Oregon, Tennessee,
Utah, Washington and Nevada with
one each.
When the politicians finish
redrawing the lines that shift 17
House seats from the North and Mid·
west to the Sunbelt states, it won't
represent a clear loss of urban
Democrats seats to increasingly
Republican areas in the South,
Southwest and West.
The odds are that in Northern
states losing two seats each the new
lines wiJI result in a loss of one
Democratic and one Republican
seat. That's the way of political compromise .
It's in the new districts that
Republicans see the greatest opportunities.

Future worries hurt present opportunities
NEW YORK (API - Critics say
one of the problems with American
business is tha t it is so busy thinking
about a future that never eornes.
that it lets present opportunities
pass it by. .
The. accusation contains some
exaggeration . To plan is to be
prepared, say businessmen, as they
show you the faded obituanes of on· ·
ce great companies that failed to do
Whatever. many billions of dollars
are spent each year on planning and
anticipating, on attemping to mold
the future through ideas. and
seeking to assure it by subtly or

strenuously guiding legislation .
The future, in fact , is a business,
and here are some glimpses of what
it might be like.
- From a Wharton School
preliminary report on changes in the
1980s comes the forecast that the
United States and its allies will
create agriculture and fishing car·
tels to offset such groups as OPEC.
The Wharton report, ''Strategic
Planning - Focus: The Eighties,"
also expects that a wide range of
social functions perfonned by gover·
runent, such as worker training and
welfare prograrns, will shift to
·business.

- Arthur D. Utile, Inc .. which
handles .4.1100 assignments a year
from industry, goverrunent and
other institutions, recently completed a study leading to the predic·
lion that new homes in the year 2000
might use just one-third the heat of
homes built in 1975.
Little's study, made for Pacific
Gas and Electric Co. , assumes that
solar heating systems and extensive
insulation and weatherproofing will
be common at that time. But even
with conventional space heating , it
says, energy use could be reduced to
well below one-half 1975 usage.
- Less distant, says Lloyd Harr

How 'evenhanded' the cuts?

ford , Jr., a San Francisco-based real
estate consultant, is a big change in
how office building tenants will be
charged for rent. And tenants aren't
going to like it.
Hanford told the Institute of Real
Estate Management that tenants ·
will be billed separately lor their
share of a building's operating ex·
penses - heat, for example - in addition to the basic rental fee.
Tenants may not agree, but Harr
ford claims it is Impossible for
developers to predict the level of ex·
penses that will exist in the future,
making it extremely difficult . to
write long-tenn leases .

Robert Walters

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

..
" Where have you been. man? We DON'T
WANT people to look to the federal govern ment to solve all their problems any more. ·'

•

e

!(), 5/R, 1 CEJUAINLY lilJ.W
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l1fi1l&lt;p lJ fl64\if IN A FI5CI/J..

MT7l£ CF M!MIY Nll/WTOI/II.
CAI'TA/119 CF

'.

n.

In 1956, France recognized the independence of Tunisia, with
Bourguiba as its first president.
' In 1972, 19 mountain climbers on Japan's Mount Fuji were killed in an
avalancht.
Ten years ago: James Chichester-Clark resigned as Prime Minister of
Northern Ireland.

Export-Import Bank's authority to
make new direct loans in the future
be slashed by 30 percent to 33 per·
cent in comparison with earHer
projected growth rates.
A typical welfare program for the
rich, the Export-Import Bank props
up some of the nation's biggest and
wealthiest corporations by giving
their customer~. usually the governments .of other countries, multi·
million-dollar loans at interest rates
far below those available on ·t he open
market.
" In 1980, seven !inns accounted
for tw&lt;&gt;-thirds of (all) direct loans,"
Reagan noted. Most of those companies were producers of commercial aircraft and nuclear·
generating stations sold to other
nations.
But the president's program
i~nores another export boondoggle,
the Domestic International Sales

WASHINGTON
( NEAl
President Reagan's " Program for
Economic Recovery" is inherently
flawed because it fails to fulfill his
fundamental commitment to
distribute the required sacrifices.
equitably among all Americans .
' 'Our approach has been evenhan·
ded," the president told Congress in
unveiling his proposals for
dramatically restructuring government programs . ''On ly the
programs for the truly deserving
needy remain untouched."
But Reagan's program places
muchy of the burden on middle-class
citizens while virtually ignoring the
tax looj&gt;'holes, indirect subsidies an·
dother unjustifiable federal benefits
long ' enough by those wealthy
enough to be corporate managers
and owners.
The only notable exception to that
rule is Reagan's suggestion that the

Today is Friday, March 20, the 79th day of !981. There are 200 days left
in the year.
Today '~ !Jighlight in history :
On March 20, 1942, General Douglas MacArthur made his famou.
pledge: "I shalt return." He had fled from the Philippines to Australia as
the islands were invaded by Japan .
On this date ;
In 1602, the Dutch East India Company was formed .
In 194I, Yugoslavia agreed to peace terms with Gennany in World War

•

*"""'
,\

•

WASHINGTON iAPl The
few politicians expect a clear con- year election since 1938. The last
movement of Americans t o the Sunsensus on the economic program to time the party in power consolidated
its gains was in 1934, the election two
belt is forcing a redrawing of
have emerged ~y November 1982.'
political lines that could wipe out the
At this early stage, the redrawing years after Franklin D. Roosevelt
advantage Democrats might expect
of congressional and legislative entered the White House .
as the party out of power in the 1982
district lines to reflect the rgsults of
What has Democrats worried is
congressional elections.
the 1980 Census is seen as a pbten· the extraordinary political bias
tially decisive factor in the battle for,· inherent in the population shifts
The 1980 Census figures seem just
one more headache for Democrats
control of the House of Represeh· . during the 1970s.
The big losers of House seats are
reeling from last year's Republican
tatives, the last bastion of
la ndslide that put Ronald Reagan in
Democr~tic power in Washington .
the Northern industrial stales.- New
the White House and gave the GOP
If the Republicans gain 26 seats in York loses five. Pennsylvania, Ohio,
control of the Senate.
the !982 e lections , they would take Illinois two each. Losing one seat
control of the House .
Leaders of both parties see the
each are Massachusetts, Michigan,
1982 elections as the test of whether
But, historically, the paf1y out of New Jersey, Indiana. Missouri and
19&amp;1 signaled a shift in the nation 's
power corTtes out ahead in non· South Dakota . Within those states,
political direction.
presidential election years. The districts losing the most population
The biggest factor influencing the . average gain for the outs in recent
tend to be in cities and all are held by
!982 results could be the public per·
Democrats.
years has been 33 House seats.
ceptiqo of the success or failure of
More significantly, the outs have
The big gainers are Florida with
the Reagan economic pro~ram. But
pi cked up House seats in every off. four seats, Texas with three . Califor-

I

,,

Corporations established under a
I971 law designed to encourage ex·
ports by allowing the companies involved to defer federal corporate income taxes on a substantial portion
of ,their profits.
Instead of attracting new, entrants
to the export market; however, the
low allowed huge companies that
already had substantial overseas
sales to set up DISCs that were
merely subsidiary " paper corporations" that passed their inflated
profits back to the parent company.
As a result, DISCs deprive the
federal treasury of $1.8 billion an·
nually .
· Another law, dating back to 1!1111 ,
exempted ·from federal income
taxes the profits of possessions corporations" based I~. the United Staes
but doing business in the Philippines. then a U.S. possession .
The law today applies only to such

DOONESBURV

fflJ41 tmT 13~/?.fNC:E, 11/fi
Ktai! 7HifT THE aEti -Hm£0
~

"corporations" - often local subsidiaries of large U.S.·based enterprises in Puerto Rico,
American Samoa and Guam. About
$1.1 billion in government revenues
is lost each year - with almost ball
of those tax breaks going to 55
profitable phannaceulical companies.
The Congressional Budget Office,
quoting Treasury Department
documents, says "a major effect of
the exemption in the 1970s has been
to induce U.s . !inns to shift highprofit, tow-labor activities to Puerto
Rico, with relatively few benefits to
the Puerto Rican economy."
Finally, there remain two special
tax benefits for the petrolewn industry that might have been warran·
ted when the federal govemrnenl
controlled oil prices but cannot be
justified at a time when domestic oil
ts being sold at inflated "world
prices."

TIE CN.Y a.4!6 711ttrCAN

1Je a:P!'Ia[) 0'1 10 PlfT 7H&amp;~R.
TAX CJJ15 IN7{) 54VIM]S .4110
1NifSlM5N7'3.'

HONORS TEAM - The Portland Elementary
School fifth grade basketball team of Coach Denny
Eva1111 was recently honored with a hanquet. Players

Members of the Portland Elementary School Basketball program
were honored with a banquet at the
Meigs Inn Thursday evening.
PTO President ~etty Wagner served as master of ·ceremonies.
Southern athletic direct&lt;r and
basketball coach Carl Wolfe was
guest speaker.
Coach Wolfe talked about being a
'' wirmer,'' making sacrifices and
setting priorities, and being
dedicated both on and off the court.
Wolfe Ptaised the parents, PTO,
coaches, advisors, and everyone involved for contributing to a sue·
cessful program.
Coach Denny Evans and
cheerleading advisor Jane Wagner
were recognized for donating their
time and efforts throughout the
season.
A trophy was awarded to each
basketball player and cheerleader.
Coach Denny Evans presented
awards to both the filth and sixth
grade basketball teams, while Jane
Wagner presented cheerleading .
awards.

--

lrl

time, hit its first 16 sliots of the
second half to pull away from
Michigan. The Orangemen did not
miss a shot until Leo Rautins' layup
attempt rolled off the rim with 6:05
to play. By that time, Syracuse had
built a 7IH&gt;4 advantage.
" They were just hot. There's not
much you can do against a team like
that," said Mi chigan's Mike McGee,
the Big Ten's all-time leading scorer
who had 20 points for the
Wolverines, 19-11. "That Schayes, I
don'tthink he missed at all."
Senior center Dan Schayes had 22
points on 111-for-14 shooting for
Syracuse, 21-11, which will face West
Virginia in the semifinals. Erich

J

•

r 1,:5Prin!.~-~m-e.-.li''-6et"6ar-de-nln-g~-.f

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Eastern, bowing out at 21-4, had
gone ahead on a !(}.footer by Steve
Whitt with six seconds remaining as
the lead \,hanged hands four times in
the last 48 secllnds.
Buckeye Trail led by 14 points in
the first quarter, only to see Eastern
come back to take a nine-point edge
with seven minutes to play.
Buckeye Trail, 23-1 , then went on a
12·2 rampage .. in the next lour
minutes - including 10 points from
sophomore forward Mike Smith,
who poured in 35 points for the
game. Eastern was led by 26 points
from senior guard N~il Leist 26 .

turkey hunting and habitat will
be discussed plus movie and

slides of wild turkeys by Ohio

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

Dept. of Natural Resources.

MiiG"r@TP"ifr4foo1

l GoingNow
Out of Business Sale 1
In Progress
1

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1 Pomeroy, 0. Ph. 992·2176 1
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Hour : 8· 5 Mon .· Fri.
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Closed Sunday

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Softball league will
organize this .Sundny
A meeting wilt be held Sunday,
March 22, at I p.m. at the Middleport
village h\tlt to organize the men's
slow pitch league for its second
.season.

NOTICEI

CLIFTON AUJO SALES &amp;
BODY SHOP
OWNED AND OPERATED BY
DANNY KEARNS &amp; BILLY STEWART
IS NOW RELOCATED BACK AT
OLD LOCATION IN CLIFTON ON RT. 62.
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• 24 Hour Wrecking Service
Body &amp; Paint Work on Domestic &amp; Foreign Cars

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comfort with you in mind l1ke anti-scalp mo.ver decks .
controlled traction and dependable en~rnes fur years
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f

- · __ ~00 to 5~

ATHENS, Ohio (AP ) - Senior
center Mark Murray hit a 4(}.foot
desperation shot as the buzzer sounded to give seventh-ranked Old
Washington Buckeye Trail a 73-72
triwnph over Beaver Eastern in
high schoql boys Class A regional
tournament action Thursday night.

There will be a wild turkey
seminar at I zaak Walton farm, S
miles south of Chester on Shade
River Rd ., Sat., March 21 at 1
p,m. All fundamentals of wild

'

.,
f _•_HO_Es_ _ ::--•M_AN_Y_M_OR_E_f

defeats Eastern

Santifer had 21, Tony Bruin 18 and
Rautins 16.
It was Syracuse's sixth postseason
victory on its horne floor and came
before a crowd of 20,695 at the
Carrier Dome.

1

.-.,:t

Desperation• shot

Three Big Ten teams lose
By The Associated Press
Suddenly the Big Ten is no longer
the big force in the National lpvitation Tournament.
Three teams from the Big Ten
Conference got as far as the round of
eight, but two were knocked off
Thursday night as Syracuse
defeated ' Michigan 91·76 and We,1
Virginia upended Minnesota ~9.
The quarterfinals continue tonight
when Purdue, now the only sur·
viving Big Ten team, plays host to
Duke and South Alabama "visits
Tulsa . The semifinals and finals will
be played at New York's Madison
Square Garden March 23 and 25 .
Syracilse, leading 46-42 at half·

)

(1-r), Junlla Frederick, Kathy Swain, Karla Smltb,
Annette Fitch, Joyce Foreman, Donelte Talbott, and
Kim Stobart. Absent were Ann Sellers and Krista
Sellel'!i. Cheerleading advisor is Mrs . Jane Wagner.

992-2811

Tonight at Bloomington, Ind .. St.
By Associated Press
- held to two points in the first half
Joseph 's, Pa ., meets Boston College · but a team-high 12 for the game Spring is just around the eorner,
and ninth-ranked Indiana faces
but spring training a11d the Toronto
and he started up the floor surrounAlabama-Birmingham in the ded by Irish players. He dribbled
Blue Jays will have to wait a while
Mideast Regional. In the Midwest at
longer for Danny Ainge .
behind his back as he crossed mid·
New Orleans, Wichita State goes court and drove to the basket, where
The Brigham Young All-American
extended his basketball season for at against Kansas and fourth-ranked
he laid it in over a Notre Dame
Louisiana State, the highest·r~nked defender.
leasi one more game Thursday night
when he drove the length of the floor
team still left fronilthe original 48Until the closing minutes, Notre
team field. tackles No.20 Arkansas. Dame had BYU and Ainge under
and sank a layup with two seconds
remaining I&lt;' give the 16th-ranked The winners meet Sunday and the control.
four weekend winners go to the Final
Cougars a .51.00 victory over seven·
Four in Philadelphia March 28-30.
th-rated Notre Dame in the NCAA
Lamp scored six of Virginia's jirst
BYU, trailing Notre Dame by 14 eight points during a 1:Hl second-half
East Regional semifinals at Atlanta .
The victory mov~ BYU into points early in the second half, took
run that carried the Cavaliers away
Saturday's East title game against the lead for the first lime 49-48 when ' from Tennessee . Virginia destroyed
fifth-ranked Virginia, which beat reserve guard Greg Balli! hit from
the Volunteers immediately after
No.15 Tennessee 62-411 behind the the top of the key with 62 seconds
they had taken a 36-31 . lead with
brilliant second·lll!lf play of Jeff remaining .
13:20 remaining . Tennessee went
Miracle-rnindt'&lt;l Notre Dame then scoreless for the next 8:08 as Lamp,
Lamp.
In the West Regional , sixth-ranked called two timeoul• before Kelly
a third·tearn All American who had
North Carolina held off hometown 'Tripucka drilled ~n HI-footer from
a game-high 18 points, hit an eight·
favorite Utah 6!-56 and Kansas the right side with 10 seconds left to
foot shot, a jwnper from the free
State's unrank~d giant-killers give the Irish a 50-49lead.
throw line and a five-footer as the
BYU inbounded the ball to Ainge
disposed.of No.l91llinois 57-52 .
Cavaliers took the lead 39-36.

New ulfleers wilt be elected. For
additional information contact Jerry
Davenport at 614·992-7323 .
I

were ' (slllin8 1-r), Kenny Layne, Greg Weddle, Tom
Stobart, and J. J. Lawrence. Standing, Larry Sellers,
Ryan Evans, Michael B&lt;lso, and Jason Quillen.

Baseball must wait
for Cougars' Ainge

Preliminary plans are to limit the
league to 12 lefms. Each team wilt
play one doubleheader each week .
All interested learns are asked to
have at least one representative at
this meeting .

'

'

"

~"'"'~

Movement forces redrawing oflines

so.

Today in history.

.•.- }

adcln· .. :&lt;inK

i ~S Ut'S, !Ill! pt'fSt lnll l ilit•l\ ,

war.

in the intelligence service of Gen.
Carlos Hwnberto Romero, he lost
his job when reform-minded
younger officers ousted the
repressive Romero from the country's presidency in October 1979.
Thereafter, D'Aubisson became a
leader of the right-wing opposition to
the military-civilian junta and if not
the leader of " death squads" responsible for the assassination of several
prominent political figures, cer·
tainly among those most gratified by
their operations.
· P' Aubisson is a particular favorite
of well-heeled Salvadorans who have
taken prudent refuge in Miami
during the troubles back horne but
continue to do their bit to keep things
stirred up, providing funds for the
r~actionary right's catnpaign against the cente r-left opposition and the
sabotage of the junta's economic
and social reforms.
His enthusiasm for his mission ras
gotten him arrested in El Salvador
lor plotti ng the overthrow of the junta and barred from the United Slates
for his terrorist involvement.
D' Aubisson is not the one to be sloJ&gt;'
ped by mere law, however. He tur·
ned up not only in the United Staes
but in downtown Washington last
July, 'havin g entered the country, it
was reported , w1th the knowledge if
not the assistance of influential per·
sonages on Capitol Hill who have
become even more infl uential since
last Nov . ~ A widely publicized press confe rence held a stroll from that same
hill was, however. overdoing it a bit
even for D' Aubisson and got him

�Frida

Hits in all games

Umpires forfeit contest
after-Weaver pulls team
By Associaled Press
The pitchers may or may not be
ahead of the hitters but Earl
Weaver, as usual_, is right up there
with the wnpires.
·
The feisty Baltimore manager
may have outdone himself Thursday
when he pulled his team off the field
because he said the wnpires
wouldn't give him a list of Kansas
City's batting Order or substitutions.
The Orioles were losing 4-2 after
six iMings when Weaver and the
Orioles flew the coop and the result
was a forfeit ... although a spring
training forfeit means about as
much as a politician's campaign
promise.
.
Kansas City Manager Jim Frey inserted five substitutes ill the top of
the seventh. Because of nwnerous
changes in spring games, the
managers reportedly had been told
that substitutions would be announced over the public address

system. Vic Vultaggio, the senior
umpire, said both managers were
made aware of that before the game.
Oh, yes, the Royals broke a 2-2 tie
on Dave Chalk's bases-loaded
double in the bottom of the sixth.
If Weaver was up to his old tricks,
so were the New York Mets. They
brought back memories of their
hilarious early days by conunitting
three errors on one play and six' alltold in an 11-3 loss to the Pittsburgh
Pirates.
In the third, third baseman Joel
Youngblood missed a grounder and
Mookie Wilson bobbled the ball in
left field. When the ball finally got to
the plate, catcher Ron Hodges
heaved it into center field trying to
nail a runner at second base.

'

singles ' by Rick Sofield and Roy
Smalley in the bottom of the ninth.
The California Angels won their
sixth consecutive game, nipping the
San Francisco Giant.s 4-3 behind the
pitching of Steve Renko and Jesse
Jefferson.
Montreal pitcher Bill Lee hit a
three-run homer to ca p a nine-n,m
third inning as the Expos ouslugged
the Houston Astros 12-9 and Graig
Nettles' tw&lt;l-'run homer helped the
New York Yankees defeat the Atlanta Braves 6-3 .
Leon Durham singled in the 12th
inning, stole second and scored Oll' a
single by · Ken Reitz to give the
Chicago Cubs a 6-5 triwnph over the
Milwaukee Brewers and John Ellis'
RBI single in the bottom of the 11th
lifted l,he Texas Rangers over the
Los Angeles Dodgers 3-2.
The Oakland A's pushed aCI'oss
four runs in the ninth inmng on a
bases-loaded walk to Rob Picciolo.

Meanwhile, the Minnesota Twins

turned in three double plays in the
first three inmngs. pulled a triple
play in the eighth and rallied to beat
the Philadelphia Phillies 4-3 on RBI

Money problems baffle NFL ·clubs
MAUl , Hawaii ( AP) - Behind progress towa rd H new players' conclosed doors, the owners of National tract. Actual negotiations will come
Football League clubs wrestle with later, but this annual meeting of the
big money adversaries.
owners is being appraised of the
First, there is the anti-trust suit overall situation.
against them by the Los Angeles
Although there have been some
Coliseum Commission coupled with minor rule changes adopted. the
the Oakland Raiders, who want to thrust of this session has been on the
move to Los Angeles.
mull i-nti !lion dollar anti-trust suit.
Secondly, the NFL Players
Right now. that action is centered
Association plays out its contract in San Francisco where the 9th
this year and wants 55 percent of the District Court of Appeals must
gross receipts distributed amoung decide if the trial owr the suit
those in uniform.
should be held in Los Angeles or
The Los Angeles Cotisewn Com- else whe re.
mission has asked $53 million in
Earlier this week. U.S. District
damages and the Raiders $160 Judge Harry Pregerson refused on
million in the suit to move the learn NFL petition to hold the trial outside
to Southern California.
Los Angeles. The league filed an arr
Meanwhile ,
the
NFL's peal to ove rrule that decision .
Management Council reports on the
" We filed 55 pages of outrage at

the Ohio Valley Pl.Jblishing Compan)' ·

Multimedia , lnl' .. Pomero)', Ohio 45769,
Second class post.ajje paid at

Pomeroy, Ohio.

W&lt;~rrt•n

Member : The Associated Press , Inland Oat-

ly Press Associalion and the American
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Representativt' , Landing

Associates, 3101 E uclid Ave ., Cleveland.
Ohi o,4~115 .

POSTMASTER · Send address to The Daily

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Th.ursd.afs Rteilllt.s

ALBUMS, CASSETTES and
8 TRACK TAPES

black youths. And many of
t.hese violent. deaths stemmed

from the use of drugs and
alcohol . There are no an ·
tibiotics for that.
If there was any need for
more evidence o f th is

SATURDAY ONLY

epidemic of drug abuse sweep -·

OT

17, have used marijuana,

U WEST • ~

u~

Sll .OO
. ..... 120.00

" " 131.110

with c h an~· · Emo tu m :-&gt; ilft '
high in adolt•sn•m·t• !t t•cau ."' t'
t.hert• arc .,,, tnan\ nt ·w ,
e lemen t s lo Cll lh ' Wllh . r h1•
leen·uger IS 1ryin g 1n find 1hil l
Uale net.• be t wt•t•n tr·.. ~..·dtllll 11 11tl

MARCH 20 thru 26

MaX'Devlin

1ElliOTTGOULD , BlllCOS8Y.

' nearly one in five is a current
user.

'Round Meigs Local
Hy liupt. Uavld L. Gleason
This week's article will touch
briefly on several items. I hope one
or more will be of interest to you .
The Pomeroy
boiler is again

llqed by Meigs Local for inclement
wc.ather this year. Any further
closings of our buildings will. result
in a make-up day being added to the
adopted ca lendar.

causing

The bond iss ue will be voted on at
the June primary.

us

problems. The
new tubes we put
in last October
are beginning to
spring leaks of all
kinds. It seems
the water eats
Gleason
throur.:h th~ metal and causes leaks.
We have repairmen scheduled to fix
it this weekend. How long it will last
this time is anyone's guess.

~.

all

CUSSAA
AI Daytan Arerw

Bcxlc) 67, Cin. MrNu:·h0la.s 64
Onu e 64J. Carhslt• ~

The letter to the Stale Department
requesting their approval for the
' bond issue has been sent. We expect
an answer in April. Pictures of
several of our building problems
which we included in the letter to the
State Department as supporting

AI Bu.,., ling Grr-cnStatt' Unheni l)
&amp;t Van B11n~n J6
Ar Ohio Unh't'Nilt)'
Bul·ke~ l' Trai l 73. Heaver E&lt;tslt'Til i2
.R1dununl Dale SE 46. Z&lt;lnt!.'i HoSt'""
era ns 3i
K&lt;~h tl&lt;t

The Stale foundation monies fur
Meigs Local have been cut. Though
ltlcal

monies have been increased,

we are not able to offset the losses.
Parent-Te3cher Conferences ore

being held in Meigs local on Saturday, March 21. If you were not able
to schedule a conference on this
date, please feel free to ca ll your
school and schedule a conference at
any time you feel you need one. Our
people will be glad to talk with you.
The next regular scheduled board
meeting will btl on April 20 at the
Meigs Junior High .

evidence.

The athletic department is
working on getting the necessary
equipment to start work on the new
truck .

ANSWER:

ttA few years ago,
new natural gas
hookups
weren't available.
Has that changed?"

t~Yes.Our growing

supplies mean theres
more gas available ...
for more people
who want it."
Columbia Gas is now adding new cw;t.omcrs where
we couldn't before. We can now do this because of
oon."'ervation and the ~:~Bvings thut have co me from
more efficient use of natural gas. And btx:ause of
our effort.J:i to increa!IC ~:~upplies .
On the con:-~ervation side, all of the !!!teps our
customers are taking to use nat.urul gas more c tli·
citmtly.have resulted in a 15(&amp; decrease in usag-e
since the peak years in the ea rly Me venues.
AI; usage hHS been going down , 1-.I)'(Jwing supplic:4

have been adding UJ the natural gas uvmlnblc to
Columbia , and Columbia cusUJmers. New we ll,,
expanding pipelines and UKrea-,ed sto rage ~•re a ll

adding to our Mupp(y capabilities
So now Columbia is m a supply s1t.uattun wh1ch
allows U.'S to udd new tlllilomcn; wh i If• mt.ael 1ng the

~

INTHIHORI
OF AFRICA

Presented by World Vision ...
"Crisis in the H orn of Afric'a"... a compelling television documentary about the
greatest human need crisis in our world
today. See dramatic eyewitness footage
from Ethiopia, Somalia and Kenya. Hear
the moving stories of mothers, children
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With ' Carol La'-:[rence, Dean Jones,
Dale Evans . Efrem Zi mbalist, Jr,

a nd Stan M ooneyham, presid ent.
of Wo rld V is ion .

[.'"'"""'"1

.ICFA!
· ~l
...,'h&gt;Q"O~

needs of curre nt customers- this w mt.cr and in
t he fu t ure.
If you'd like infonmttion nn area:oi where nt;w
hookupt; are ava ilable, call your Columbia Ga"i
office. For ideaS on way~:~ to make thtl rnoHtofyour

•

All five calamity days allowed by
1he State Department have been

The auditors iH'C con tinuing their
audit of the .Meigs Local books. This
audit will lake appn&gt;&lt;imately six
more weeks before it is complete.

If I can be of aoy assistance to you,
please feel rree [()contact me at 99'22153.

--------Honor roll announced - -- - - l~rinc ipal Je1mln ~~

fl.lllrth

&amp;oel( lt' IIHll

~tnnoun ~·l'tl the

six weeks ijradln~ Jteriotl honor rull il l the

Soot~m Junior lligh School.

M11ll:in~ H 8 or ~above m ~alltht!lr subjects 111 be
' nanlt!d to the roll were :
St:venth I{TIId~ - Th~rc:u~ !l i nt~ . ('lwrhc H•IS•t.
J11y Rustick , Htoidi CubiJ. Tunytt Cunu nm.'l, .l o~ ltt•
Harris, Lurl Atl&lt;tlllll, Tudt.J Allum."&gt;, Dixit! Du.:ur1,

Heath Hill . Mandy Uill . Mr. linda Hltl. I J:u. l'ar·
lRI'15 , Kelly Rizer, Seittl (irnelrr. MeltSSM lhll'.
Ryan Ollver, Kendal;tizcr, Andrt'W Ru:w, Huntly
Rou:~h, ftt)bln &amp;lvaMe. Tert~:ltl Shuler, Sllcrn
SililiiJII, Mtsl Spruu.~ . Kelly (irue!Wr. Hellt!t't'&lt;l
Van Metl:!r, Paula Winebren ner .
Ei~t~hth ~t~rude - C hrl~ Arm1hl. Jtlf1 Clark, ll rwn
Connolly , Riduml 0Mvid , OHvill F~ ~rslm ch.
Rtlph .FIHher, Kwnm Hen11 l~y. Ke\•ln Tear11nl.
David Puwcll. IAJrl Slmp.~on , Kim Sprn1.1sc. Altw
Crl11p, Sa.ndy HMnlen. J ulie Houdushdt. l Ali.s
Htle, 111lt! St'UI.t Schu ltt .
ltA CINE - •'lftt·eiw,ht ~ludcnt.~ nl Hlll'Htt:
Elementary School twve bftn mmk.'tllll the hmr·
ttl ail w~k.l honor roU . Student.• t 11U.'II mahthlm
11 '' 8 '' ur better to be n.11ned lu the rull Student:~ ·
narnea in capital letters rtu!lvtd ttll " A':~ , "

Ntuncd to the roll were:
r.nult! 1 - Kcllic Ervl11 . Tt~dtl H~tri ~un, Antly
Hill. Jamey 11ulter. llHvttllhle, Trt•Vt)r l't•lrc l.
Jc1my Vnrnt)~ , VtlcS.'III Uunndl, l&gt;on Stephen·
.~Uil .

an s w ~ r s .

lh;gulur p!lt u .s cr:-:~ . fnr in·
." ilil nce , nnt.e that LIH..' dru g. fo r
all i t~ p lt•usurab lt:" aspt.......:Ls.
t"han~t·s tllu..&gt;s nutll)ok on life.

Put !t•ad s to an inlcrna li zlition
uf ~t• n ,-;ut iun . An ideu or an
t'llltll loll tlu11 ont.• rn ig ht d eal
with "OliN. ral ti l's around lik e
a marhlt• in u jar. hu t du ring
m tox i l"lll Hllt t lw murhle grow s
to fill 1lw jar.
A~ n llt'

young smoker pul

il,

"" It '"'''Ills 1 ht• mort• pnt .v ou
" lttokt• . llw to ug lwr I hing s an•

to

hnudlt·

-; t ruig hl

habi l

nl

wht•fl

.vnu

art•

Tht •n you g-t'l i n l. h t•
1 hmkjng

t hat. han·

J~tn

Nlt-~EII SMITH, Atldrca Theiu, SHELLY
WINF'UHENNER, MAY1.A YOACHAM .
r. ra.dr 3 - Barvld IJ1rtl. AMY IMIUUSON .
St.'lllt Hill, KATHY IHI.E. AnKela MHnut&gt;l ,
Brt~tllc)' Maynard, Chrts Murph y, Anuny Huush ,
Ailsa Wntfunl. Aim~ W11lfe, THICIA WOLFF:,
BRENDA ZlltKt.E
Grt~dt 4
Shawr1 Dtdl.lle, J.lo::SI £E DUO·
ntNG. !Jill)' Joneli, MHrk Pu rtcr, Elid1bt!th
S111ith Mel~ lilt' VKnMt•ter.
Gra;lc 3 - AnKie Bu~!Ut•k, Patrllt.'tl Cirelt:', Mar·
I}' Ch'lnnd, T1u nmy Huller , Ounnlt' H1ff11•,
lluthl'r Shuler . ·rinil Sloler. Jon Tuttle.
Graulct! - MA'IT HARRIS, Lt•Kina lla rt, Mall
Jewell, Debbie Murphy; IJsa Pnpe, HA CI IEI.
Hto~ m•~ H . J)lama Sin~m. Tt~Huny Wulfe, Wt"n·
dy Wolfe. Tammy Thei!l.!l.

"This is the day whi ch the Lord
has made, le! us rejoice and be glad
in it," Psalm · 118:24, was the
program theme presented by Mrs.
Pearl Mura at the Tuesday night
meeting of Fr1endly Circle at Trinity
Church.
Devotions included group singing
of the hynlll, " Fairest Lord Jesus"
with Mrs. Lawrence Stewart at the
piano. There was a call to worship,
sc ripture, and meditation on the
message of spring and Lent with
prayer by Mrs. Mora .

Social Calendar

Miss Mary E. Chapman received
the offering. Mrs . Donald Hauck
presided at the business meeting
and thanked all who assisted with
'the Ash Wednesday breakfast. Members were reminded of the commumty Lenten service to be held
March t9 at the Laurel Cliff Free
Methodist Church. A lily will be
placed in the sanctuary for Easter,
and then will be taken later to a shutin member of the congregation.
The Lord's Prayer · in unison
closed the meeting. Mrs. Donald
Hauck apd Mrs. Roy Mayer served a
salad course using a St. Patrick's
Day theme.

FRIDAY
SHADE RIVER Lodge I 453 ,
F&amp;AM. special meeting, 7: 30 p.m.
Friday at lodge hall in Chester;
tn
work in entered apprentice degree.
HEMLOCK Grange 2049 7:30p.m ..
Design and
Friday evening at the hall.
Quality
WEEKEND REVIVAL Friday,
Saturday and Sunday at Faith
Pomeroy
Tabernacle Church, Bailey Run
Flower Shop
Road. Evangelist will be the Rev.
Noah Chafin of Chesapeake . Pastor
1·eceived a gi ft for maintauung
Enunetl Rawson invites the public
her KOPS. Winners in the three
to attend.
dh•isions of the contest were Mrs.
SATURDAY
Oiler, Mrs. Clay , and Mrs.
DONKEY Basketball game,
Wright. All three received gifts .
Saturday, Eastern High School, 7:30
LEGAL NOTICE
A new contest entitle'&lt;! " Let's
p.m. Advance tickets $2 from
The Publ ic Utilities ComShapt.•Up for ARD" was started,
business office education students;
miSSIOn ol Ohio has set
and will conclude on April I. The
$2.50 at door.
lor public hearing Case
winner will be presented either $5
MIDDLEPORT Youth League
No . 81 -2 -EL -EFC , to
in cash or a beautician's ce r·
rev 1ew the fue l procurerlnal signup day Saturday at Midtificate presented by Terrie
ment pract1ces and poli dleport City Hall. Registration fee is
Miller of the La Mar Beauty
cies ol The Ohio Power
$6. For additional information call
Salon , Pnmerny . Points in the
Company . the operat ion
Kitty Cassell at 992-7873.
·
contest will be awarded as
ol 1ts Electric Fuel ComBAKE SALE Saturday at Rutland
follows: I &lt;&gt;sing weight. four ;
ponent Clause. and related
Department Store beginning at 9
mat
ters . Th 1s hearing is
exercising daily, two; keeping a
a.m. Sponsored by Rutland United
schedu
led to begin at
ca lorie chart. one point; calling
Methodist Women.
1
00
p
m. on Monday.
and e ncourag i n ~ another memMEIGS COUNTY Retired
March 23. t9Bl. at the
bei', one poml: keeping a diary ou
Teachers Association, noon SaturC1 ty Counc1l Chambers .
~-:uudies passt.~ up, one poinl 1 ond
day at the Meigs 1/m. Banking and
218 Cleveland Ave .. S.Vf .
not "turtling.'· one point.
money market theme.
Canlon. Ohio 44702 .
Information on the dub 1na y be
UBERTY CHRISTIAN Church
All Interested parties w111
obtained by calli ng 742-3062.
Bake Sale at New York Clothing
be g1ven an opportulllly
House Saturday, March 2L Baked
to be heard. Further mlor ·
goods and crafts.
ma t1on may be obtained
SUNDAY
by co ntac ting lhe Com UBERTY CHRISTIAN Church, 6
mission.
• •
Libe1·ty St., Pomeroy, special serTH E PUBLI C UTILITIES
Fdmmn 1; al tlw l&lt;xtl·n.:;wnlJt lto "t· •·nw uu,...
Vl."e Sunday, March 22. Rev. Ralpll
t ttl!lllbt•t.S anti tw1r ad\'tsors prese111 Or. Duw
""
COM MI SSIO N OF OHIO
Kra\\.St'?)' n. wtt•t·m:u·,an . .:&lt;~w :tllt lk
l1culth
L. Savage, Col wnbus, spea ker. One
By Oav1d M. Polk .
atHI 11\lll1Licr1u nn: 11( s ht'cp ;wd ;ulswc rrtl
·
1 p
F k
qm· .~ I IIILIS fmmllu• l lll'lLIUcrs Tammy to:rvi n !L ild
~CIVICC on y. astor Rev. ran lin
Secretary
.luho•Thun•n Sc t'Wil rt•frcstuncnts
.Juht• Thur· r.JD!,!I!;
.c~k,!;en~s~·._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __L_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

TOPS news reported
Officers were elected and contest rules outlined at a rcceut

meeting of TOPS OH 1466.
Hutland .
Eleded wer e Nellie Haggy .
leader ; Gloria Oiler, co-leader ;
Sandy Hy sell , secretary; Ruth
Shain, treasurer ; Shorty Wright,
weight recorder , and Phyllis
Clay, assistant weight 1·eco rder.
Lynda Adkins was appointed
corresponding secretary.
Honored as weekly quee n was

Mrs . Wright with Mrs. Adkins as
runner-Up . Plans were rimdi zed

for Area Hecugnition Day and
sou ve nior r harms to be pur·
chast~l.

Tht&gt; cun tcst was rnncluded with

Mr!:i . Oiler being the overall bc!:it
ltJser. She was pre~cn tcd quar·
tcrs cullcct~d during the six week
contest plus a charm. Mt:s. Ch1y

4-H news.
t\ tlt"W HI t'lult n tl lt'ti E1.:hl t~ ~:n tm~l t hd!ltl.s
lli"J.\liiiLlalnNmltm•t•ILn 1111 Mard 1 10 HI lht• hunw
nf Mrs l'ut Wulf t\tll•iSt)rs fur tht• dull an• IJa l
Wu\f uml Mrs. r-.ftoluntc Sll'lht'ILI
Tln• lllt'tlllll"l"~ Sl' ll'l"IL'tl 1111' lliiLL it ' fur lht •Ll dn lt.

t'll'Ch'lillfftcur.~, allt l tlt.st' US!Wtl+l!l'pr~IJ t'l 'l :-.
Mrs. Sktllcru .:alit' a l h' lllllll.~lrut1 1111 •Ill hn\'o' tn
Jln'l't'lll d 1t't"St' frum t "tMlkll1~ \uu.:h and ruhlll·r;

Mrs P111 Wtt\f Sl'l"\"l'tl rcfrt&gt;.dmwn~ . Tlw rh•:&lt;t
mt't'hll)o( will bt• ,,,, Ma rt• h :!4 nllllc Wulf hunw . At
lhullil11t' till' mt•mbcr.; willmuke put tl l .~il 1tUL S
:un l tltSI 'LL'i.S lht• 1hfF1•n•LJt l )"JlC!i 11f fahrw
Ml•lt.~sll Mtll t•r . lil']lltrtt•r

Tht• Mt•Lgs ( 'ttulll) -1· 11 Shcphrnls nuh LTII'I (Il L

()/l

1

ttc, Hl'lltlt1.cr
l'l11.• M\!t,IIS Cnu nt~ Jwmw l.~!mlt.ors utt'l

11 11

Fchnl~tn·

2:1 ~+" 1 111 12 11\t'ntbcrs m attcndnnr c
Th,·r tllst'us.wtl lll"u~nun 1delts f 11r 1:.111 . mHtlt•
pl:111s ftlr an ll'l!
dc~u lt'tl

sK ~ttin..:

j)arly nn M;m•h 15 w1d

tlucs "-'Ould lw.S2.

Hdre:;hnwnl:; wtn· .s crntl h~ K1lu Yuun ~ .

Apnl Pltrkt'r anti llcllt HtldHe.

fe lt! , Ucpurtc1..

Juhe Ell&gt;t•r·

fl tllil&lt;tll••IOHN BILl. HOBACK, HUy John·

sun MeliSSK Jltllli!i, CO I.IN MAIDENS. JF. N·

Dickens is pastor of the church.
The church will have a bake sale .
at the New York Clothing Hous~
Saturday, March 21, with baked
~oods and crafts.

Psalm 118, 24, theme
of Friendly Circle meeting

know s. o r cares, wha t the
yo ung s ter is going through, ·
t.he pare nt loses what leve rage ·
he or s he has.
At the Same time. the things
the pa re nt can contribute
p u!:!it ively to this difficult
period o f adj usunent are lost
too .
Growing up is nol easy The
irnn .v is that th e teen·Hger wh o
n •sort s Lo drugs w feel less
ulone during these formative
yl.'ur~ tlllly en d s up feeling
11 1ort.• il lon e later on .
In
udolt' Sl'Cn C(!, a youngster
ronws tu grips with freedom
fo r t IH' fir t~t time. 1'he only
prohlt•m with freedom is leern·
ing ho w Lo hundle the res pon·
s ibili t.v 1ha l t'Ortll' s with it..

&lt;;rndt• 2
.JAR HUfl l 'lHCI.F:. JASON f'IH ·
('J.t-: .•Jto~N NV DA MUON, SHANNON COUNTS ,

SEED CORN
WE'VE GOT IT. • •
*PIONEER
*FUNK'S
*KENWORntY

Own asma busi.ness.?
You'll appreciate the
careful attention
H&amp;R Block can give
your tax returns.
Our tax preparers have been carefully trained to understand income taxes related to the small business situation . At H&amp;R Bloc~.
we want to ma~e sure you pay the. lowest legitimate tax.

II&amp;R BLOCit
THE INCOME TAX PEOPL6

ANNOUNCING
THE OPENING OF

THE o ·FFICES OF

STORY &amp; STORY

_energy dollar.&lt;, al'"' ask for a ropy of our free
"Everyday Energy Saver's Guide."

ctJu

hu ze thu\. cum e~ from alcohol, ·

put 1:111d other dru gs b l ots ou t
t lw questi on s a nd disLorls t he

&lt;4524

, - - - - - - FR/DAr l lltu r!1URSDA"f' _. _ - - - - - --,

M1ddlt'luwn

QUESTION:

re!ipnnsibil i1.y t. hut. he or she
will carry int.n adult life. The

in~

ble tbe ilumber in 1972. And

BARGAIN MATINEE$ ON SAT &amp; SUN
AU SEATS JUST S 1..10
AO..ISSION EVHfY TVESDAr Sl 50
~~

ability ut tlw liiJH' wht.'n
perceplio n i"l 1 tw kl·.v tm t"llP·

dou ·

What is more shocking Is
that the abuse of drugs has
now dipped into the runy of

At:atll'tll)

AI CanltiD Auditorium
Cctnltm Mt·Ktnley 49 . Chtlheutht• Jl
At Tolf"do(t'nlennial Hall
Nt'wurk 49, Fu1dlav 37
Tul. M&lt;ll·ombcr 6f Col Nurthl.i:lttd

be found in federul
surveys that show that a third
of young Americans. age 12 to
can

99 Mill STREET

CI..ASSAAA
Cl~\'t'

ing American adolesce nce. _il

MIDDLEPORT BOOK .STORE

- - - - - -- - - - - - - -..J...- - - - - - - - - - - - --j

At Kr11t Stair Ullln·nil)"
Ad.&lt;ml~ J-4. Clevl:'
St Jv~ ph

young ptmple jus ! l! nt~ r i ng
junior high Sl' hnol, fr esh nut of
grammur sdwol. und Llw
numbers are growing .
If tht! A m~r icun pun •nt
co uld afford so nH..' am ·
hivalc n cf.' about 1 ht· U!;t• of
drugs u dt&gt;t'l.lllt.~ ugo. lw Dr s ht•
cunnol now . E xp t•rts k lww
thut tho st:&gt; who lin· throug-h
th e drug ex.pt!rit•IH'l' , h11lh i l·
legal dru gs und ukuhol. s ufh~r
from sn m e im pu ir nwnt. l'o l
und alc.:uhul rob u ·' ttungstt•r ul
aware ness. lngil' , thinkin~

chief cause of death among

The Liberty Christian Church, 6
Liberty St., Pomeroy, will 'have a
speci al serv1ce Sunday, March 22,
with Rev. Ralph L. Savage, Colwnbus, as speaker. Rev. Franklin

plete that the parent no longer

LAST OF A SERIES

antl

more Ukely to die in auto ac ·
cidents. murder was by far the

~.un

Stdney

--

emotional prob ·
lems. While while youths were

Bake sale tomorrow by church

down of communication with
lh~ parent. True, a teen·ager ·
ma y need some shelter to ex·
pcrime nt with new roles. new
self images. without the
parent around to judge these
lran sient slates. But."when the
break dow n becomes so com·

police or to school authorities.
Much of the increase was
due lo deaths from automobile

abu~e

Ra tl~t-r 24..0. 9 1

Culumbus

these

accidents and murders, at·
tfil!Utable to drug and alcohol

i\t Daylt111 Arena
CtJnn~ tul

percent. In just one year. it

Gospel Music

~il

'.!. Scmiflnlol l Kt•sult,,

kind of loyalty and mutual acceptance that is worth the
pric~ in a youngster 's sense of
self-esteem. which at that age
compares · favorably to the
price of gold.
The reliance o n peer ap·
proval comes hand in hand
with the ab se nce or the break-

jumped three percent. Yet by

For The Best In

5J 1 JAC~SOtl PlltE

STARTS FRIDAY

W&lt;t tkr:s&lt;•n :!~·:1 .

Cl&lt;t}"lllollt 50 . ('111 Hn rtlc\ Jj
C.mton l'ath 60. I'Ln H~&lt;Hitn ~ H
CI.ASS ,\
ULit'kl')l! Tnul I I. Etl~cr t o n 58

Cuy ahu~~:a

vs.

t 'ul

p il L
ThurStl•~

AI CY nton flf"ldhotUI~

p.m

l.tblle~ ~I \·s

•

port from peers. The- peer
group demands and collects a

Then came the bad news.
The death rate for young
Ameficans, those ·15 to 24
years of age, was up by eleven
measures

SEMINARS- Marton Crawford, lei~ and Joyce
olflcen of
Meigs County Humane Society, conducted educational seminars on
animals to students of the Rutland Elementary School in observance of
National Wlldllfe Week, March 1&amp;-22.
the

get m ost of their social E!UP·

in the battle against cancer.

physical

apathetic , moody , tired

youngster, given to outbursts
when he or she senses that the
world is challenging again .
Many of today's teen·agers

should be the healthiest of
Ameficano. Why? What. hap·
pened? It was no secret to the

WALT DISNEY PA OOuCTIO NS

Cl.ASS A

1\ lll.'iman

. COLO\' · .

an

from heprt disease was down .
There was some improvement

,------------------r-----------------------------------

2:.!-2 . 9

AtOh.io Unin·rslt\·

&amp;bnn~ 21 · 1 \·s.

l"le\

Tt'l

Tn· Val lt') 21 ·2 ·\' S
Cullllnilu:;
Cent~tlllial JS-7. i p 111.
Ironton J.l-10 v.s. lh llsbvro !2· 1, 9 p.m

22·2

Tile victory upped the Tigers'
Grapeh·uil League record to 1r.-4
while the Reds dipped to 4-3.

ch ronic drug user, even at age

eleven or 12, avoidance can
mean smoking away an after·
noon of classes. or solving a
social problem by missing the
point entirely . The product i$

The reason for his optimism

VISIT OUR RECORD DEPT.

CLASS A

and .We1t \ 'lrainia

3 Mooth . ... -~ ~ .
6Month .
I Year .

E

~ii-0 . 7 Pil l

Dres den

"". 110.5()

3Month
Six month

,·s

Z-t.(l

p.m

may remit in advance direcct to Tht&gt; Daily

Sentinel oo a 3, 6 or 12 month basis. Credit
will be given carrier each month .

21H. :1

n.ASS ,\ AA
Sh;t~ ~~ 1.'&gt; Dot .'o

Parrish's trem~ndous

Prlce.

tt

Stall' Lnhrrsily
F: lyrm Cathoh t· tJ..i . 6

W!]JomJ 2.f..O v.s
pIll .

l ol.(l.

.. 15Ct'nls

O rn · Li l~

on

seventh off Cincinnati reliever Joe

f'lt'\"t:'iantl

Grt't'b

Buek~ye
Centra l
H ctgh~ 1&amp;-7, i p .m .

SUBSCRIPTION RATE.~

\·s

Cincinnati

is useful in coping with un·
solvable problems. But to the

was clear. The overaU death
rate fof Americans had drop·
ped 20 percent in the 18 years
from 1960 to 1978. Fewer in·
fants died at birth. Death

e rupted for three more runs in . the

At OhiiiStatt' U uhusit~

P rn.

Sentinel, 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Oh10 45769 .

One Year .

22 · ~

Kennt-d):

Tigers romp

dling things straight• is a ·
nightmare.''
A voidance is a common
human trait, and sometimes it

The Surgeon General of the
United States had good news.
"The health of the American
people has never been better,"
he said in a preview of the an·
nual report on health, the
death fate and the battle with
major diseases.
"J
am
unabash edly
upbeat."

visor is Ann Hemsley.

blast over the center field wall , and
got two m ur ein the fifth, including a
solo shot by Lynn J ones. The Tigers

three to six months to dt&gt;cid{•.

Ohio"H.S. fiirb Haskt't~ll
St.att' Tuunmnwnl

By JOHN BARBOUR'
Tbe Anoelated Pfe&amp;s

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla.
( AP)·- Dave Eichelberger. birdied
the last three holes for a 4-under-par
68 and tied Mike Morley for the firstrowld lead in the rich Tournament
Players Championship.
Jim Dent and Barry Jaeckel were
lied for second at 69. Dan Halldorson
and Mike Sullivan were two shots off
the lead at 70.

WIN AWARD- Southern's Junior Hlgh Cheerleaders recently woo
the best r heerleadlng award at the Southern lnvitalional Tournament.
Shown are lfronll. Kejly Rlzer, Tammy Adkins, and Karen Hemsley.
lla&lt;·k row, Becky Adkins, Carol O'Brien and Mindy Hill. Cheerleading ad-

fourth

Frida~·· .s St·m ili~&amp;~~.ls

CLASSAA
•
A I Ca nton Auditorium
Yuunj;sl uwn Rayt&lt;ll 2t}-.l vs
Central Cathuhl" 1....9. li p 111

AI

. .. . . . . . .

Oakland this year. Judicial delays
appear to prohibit chances for a
switch this year even though
Oakland's managing general partner AI Davis still se~s a &lt;: hance.
As the judicial proces~ goes, the
appea ls court co~ld lake 10 days
deciding whether to accept the arr
peal. Then it would need one ur tw o
rnonth.s to ru le on it, Then the re
would be a trial which will take fro m

Friday's Palring.s

Publlshed every afternoon except Sundar.
Monday through 1-~ rida)', 11 1. Court Street, by

One Wetk. .,
One Month .

One fact seems sure. The Super
Bowl c hampion Raiders will bt-' in

Ohiu H.S. Burs Baske-tball
Rt&lt;xiunal Tl)umam~lll St-mifina b

!USPS 145-1101
ADhisloaol Multl.mcdia, lac.

Advertising

try this case."

The young are dying younger

Ties first round lead

LAKELAND. Fla. I API - Lance
Parrish had three hits, including a
solo homer, and drove in three runs
Thursday night as the Detroit Tigers
romped to a !1-2 ex hibition victory
over the Cincinnati Reds.
After spotting the Reds a 2-&lt;J lead,
the Tigers came back with three
runs in the bottom of the third, keyed
by a double by Tom Brookens and a
triple by Champ Summers off Reds
.sta rter and loser Torn Seaver .
The Tigers picked up one in the

San F rancisco, less appropriate to

-------Tournrunentpallings------

The Daily Sentinel

992-21~.

t11e judge's failure to change
venue," said NFL. attorney Patrick
Lvnch Thursday. "There is no place
ui the United States. except perhaps

Marijuana and your child

TUCSON, Ariz. (AP)' - Joe &lt;llarboneau, the American League
Rookie of the Year In 1980, hu hit
safely in all nine exhlbltion games In
which he has appeared this spring,
The Cleveland Indians outfielder
has 18 hits in 37 at bats, good for a
.486 average.
.
He went 2-for-5 in the Indians' loss
to Seattle on Thursday.
Charboneau also hit well last
spring, impressing the Indians'
management enough to bring him to
the big leagues from Class AA Chattanooga, skipping the Class AAA
minor league level.

FERTILIZER
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AnORNEYS AT LAW
'

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Still your best energy value.

And we want to keep it that way.

Steven L. Story and Karan H. Story

SATURDAY, MARCH 21
8:00-9:00 PM • WOWK-TV, CH 13

236 W. 2nd. Pomeroy, Oh.
(Formerly Meigs Gen . Hospital)
Office Ph. 992-6624
·
Home Ph. 992-3523

APPOINTMENTS AVAilABLE

�Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohoo

~a~
SQUAD

This Message and Church Directory Sponsored By The Interested Businesses Listed On This Page.

ELLIS &amp; SONS SOHIO

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Automottve
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SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
~~~~! ~
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9U 29SS

992 9921 Moddleporl

Brown's Fire &amp; Safety
Equipment• serv1ce
Sales and

Rutland Oh•o 45775
8•11 Brown Owner
Phone (614) 742 2777

J Wm

992 s130 Pomeroy

•

Loan Co.

l

992 66SS

~~ ·

Syracuse

Phone 992 6304
126 E Matn

992 J785 Pomeroy

Re v W

H Perrm

pastor Roy Mayer Sunday school supt
Church School 9 15 a m worsh p Slilr
viCe 10 30om Chotr reheon;al Tues
day 7 30 p m unde r dt rectton of Altce
Neose
POMEROY
CHURCH
OF
THE
NAZARENE Corne r Un on and Mulberry
Rev Clvde V Henderson pastor Sun
day school 9 30 o m Glen McClung
svpt
morn ng worsh p I 0 30 o m
evenmg serv ce 7 30 mtd week sar
vtce Wednesdov 7 30 p m
GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH - 326 E
Mom St Pomerov The Rev Robert B
Groves rector Sunday serv •ces at 10 JO
o m Holy Commumon on the f rsl Sun
dey of each month and combtned wtth
mornmg prayer on the th rd Sunday
Mornmg prayer and sermon on all other
Sundays of the month Church School
and nursery ca re pro-vtded Cotlee hour
tn the Ponsh Holltmmedtotelv tollowtng
the serv ce
POMEROY CH URCH OF CHR IST 212 W
Mom St Netl Proudfoot pastor B ble
school 9 30 a m
morntng worshtp
10 30 am Youth meetmgs b 30 p m
e-ventng worsh p 7 30 Wednesday n ght
prayer meetmg ond Btble study 7 30

pm
THE SALVATION ARMY I 15 Butternut
Ava Pomeroy Envoy and Mrs Ray W m
tng offt cers tn charge Sunday holtne ss
meetmg 10 o m 5lJndoy School 10 30
a m Sunday school leader YPSM Elo tse
Adams 7 30 p m
salvotton meetlng
vo r1ous speakers and must c spec1ols
Thursdoy - 10 a m to 2 p m Lodt4U
Home League all women m-vtted 7 30
p m prayer meetmg and Btble study
Rev Noel Herman teacher
BURLINCION
SOU THERN
BAPTIS T
CHAPEL Route I Shade B•ble school 7
p m Thursday wor sh1p ser'o'tee 8 p m
POMEROY WESTSIDE CHURC H OF
CHRIST 200 W Mom St 992 5235 Vocal
musH~ Sunday worsh1p 10 am
B1ble
study 11 a fll worshtp b p m Wedn es
day Btble study 7 p m
OLD DEXTER
BIBLE
CHRISTIAN
CHURCH Re 11 Ralph Smt th pastor Sun
day school 9 30 a m
Mrs Worley
Froncts supertnlendent Preacl-tt ng ser
vtces f rst &amp; th1rd Sundays follow •ng Sun
doy School
GRAHAM
U NilE D
METHOOIS T
Preochtng 9 30 am f rst and second
Sundays at each month th 1rd and fourth
Sundays each month worsh•p serv ce at
7 30 p m Wednesday e-venmgs at 7 30
Prayer and Btble Study
SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST Mulbeny
He1ghts Rood Pomerov Pastor Albert
D•ttes Sabbath School Super nten dent
Rtto While Sabbath School Satu rday
afternoon at 2 00 w1th Wo rsl-t1 p Servtce
followtng at 3 15
RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
S1ster Hamett Worner Sup! 5lJndoy
School 9 30 a m
morn1ng worsh i p
1045om
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST
Do-vt d
Mann mtmster W ttl am Watson SlJnday
school supt Sunday schoo l 9 30 a m
mornmg worsh1p I 0 30 a m
FIRST SOUTHERN
BAPTIST
282
Mulberry A"'e Pomeroy ReY W1lham
R Newman pastor Hers hel McClure
Sunday school supenntendent Sunday
school 9 30 a m
mornmg worsh1p
even1ng worship
7 30 p m
10 30
M1dweek prayer serv1ce 7 30 p m
MIDWAY COMMUNITY CHURCH Dex
fer Rd
Rd
Langsvtlle Rev A A
Hughes Pastor Sundov School 10 a m
Sennces on Tuesday Thursday and Sun

doy 730pm
FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH Bo1ley
Run Rood Rev Emmett Mawson pas tor
Handley Dunn supt Sunday schoo l 10
a m Sunday even•ng serv1ce 7 30 Btbl e
teochtng 7 30 p m Thursday
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHR IST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION lawrence Manley
po5tor Mrs Russell Young Sunday
School Supt S!Jndoy School 9 30 a m
Evanmg worshtp
7 30 Wednesday
praye r meet1ng 7 30 p m
MT MORIAH CHURCH OF COD
Rocme- Re-v James Satterfield pastor
Mormng worsh p 9 45 a m
Sunday
1ehool 10 .o(5 am even1ng wonhtp 7
Tuesday
7 30 p m
lad1es prayer
meetmg Wednesday 7 30 p m YPE
MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST Comer
Stxth and Palmer the Re11 Mark Me
Clung Sunday school ~ 1S o m Randy
Hayes Sunday School 5upermtendent
Dan Rtggs osst supt Morntng Worsh1p
10 15 am Youth meettng 7 30 p m
WIKfnesdoy lndudmg wee tot s eager
beavers JUniOr astronauts and JUntor
and senior htgh BYF cho1r proctt ce 8 30
p m Wednasdoy prayer meetmg and 81
ble study Wednesday 7 30 p.m
CHURCH OF CHRIST M1ddleport 5th
and Main Bob Melton mtntster Scott
Saltsman
ouoclote mmtster
Btble
School 9 30 o m mormng worsh1p
10 30 a m evenmg serv•ce 7 00 p m
Wednesday B•ble Study and youth group
m . .hngs 7 00 p m
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF
THE
NAZARENE Rev Jtm Broome pastor
Bill Wh te Sunday ~hoot supt Sunday
school 9 30 a m
mornmg worship
10 30 am
Sunday
evangel•sf•c
mHtmg 7 00 p m Prayer meet ng

Pomeroy

MARK VSTORE
Middleport
Phone 992 3480

Wednesday 7 p m
UNITED PRESBYTERIAN MINISTRY OF
MEIGS COUNTY Dw•ght l Za '¥ 1t1 d1rec
lor
HARRISON VILLE PRESBYTERIAN Re v
Ernest St r ckhn pasto r Sunday church
school 9 30 a m
Mrs Homer lee
supt mor mng worsh tp 10 30
MIDDLEPORT Sunday school 9 30
am R1 chard Vaughan supt Mor ntng
worsh•p 10 30
SYRACUSE
F I RST
UNI TED
PRESBY TERIAN Church Wors htp serv •ce
9 JO a m Sunday School 10 30 o m Mu
Sampson Hall supl
RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD Randall
Batley pastor Sunday sc hool 10 am
Sunday worsh 1p 11 am
Chtldren s
church 11 a m Sunday even ng ser
Y ce 7 30 p m
Wednesday e-ven.ng
you ng lad1es ou xtl•ary 6 p m Wednes
day famt ly worsl-ttp 7 30 p m
HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH Nea r
Lang 8ottom Edsel Hart pastor Sunday
school 10 a m
Church 7 30 p m
prayer meet ng 1 30 p m Thursday
MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAl
Thord
A ve the Re11 W1lltom Kntttel pastor
Thomas Kelly Sunday School Supt Sun
day school I 0 a m Classes fo r all ages
even ng servtce 7 30
Btble study
Wednesday 7 JO p m youth serv1ces
Frday 7 30p m
MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST Cor
ner Ash and PllJm Rolph Butche r
pastor Saturdav even•ng serv1ce 7 30
p m Sunday School 10 30 o m
MEIGS
COOPERATIVE PARISH
METHODIST CHURCH
Rt chard W Thomas 01rector
POMEROY CLUSTER
Re v Robert McGee
POMEROY Sunday School 9 15 o tm
Cho r
Worshtp servtce 10 30 om
rehearsa l Wednesday
7 p m Rev
Robe rt McGee pastor
ENTERPRISE Worshtp 9 a m Chur ch
School 10 o m
ROCK SPRINGS Sundov Sc hool 9 15 o
m Worsh p utrv1ce l Oa m
FLATWOODS Church School 10 a m
Worshtp II a m
MIDDLEPORT CLUSTER
HEA TH Church School 9 30 a m Wo r
sh p 10 30 a m UMYF 6 p m Rober t
Robmson Pastor
RUTLAND Church School 9 30 a m
Worsh1p 10 30 a m
SALEM CENTER
Wors htp 9 a m
Churc h School9 45 a m
SYRACUSE CLUSTER
Re-v Stanley Mernfu:rd Mmtster
FOREST RUN Worshp 9 a m Church
School 10 a m
MINERSVIllE Church School 9 a m
Worshtp 10 am
ASBURY Church Schoo! 9 50 a m
Worsh1p II a m B ble Study 7 30 p m
Thursday UMW tlst Tuesday
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
Re"' Oav td Horns
Rev Mark Flynn
Rev Florence Sm th
HIt on Wolfe
BETHANY
(Dorcas)
Worshtp 9 30
o m Ckurch School 10 30 a m Btble
study Thursday 7 30 p m
CARMEL Worshtp second and f ourth
Sundays at 10 4S o m Sunday School
second and fourth Sundays 9 JO o m
Worsh1p and Sunday Schoo l at Sutton
Untted Methodtsl Church on f trst and
thtrd Sundays Btble study together each
Wednesdoy at 7 30 p m Fom•ly n1ght
dmner together each thtrd Thursday at

630
APPLE GROVE Sunday School 9 30
am Worsh•p 7 30 p m ht and 3rd Sun
days Prayer meettng Wednesday 7 30
p m Fellowsl·up supper f1rst Saturday 6
p m UMW2ndTuesday7 30p m
EAST LET ART Chruch School 9 a m
Worship serv iCB 10 am Prayer meehng
7 30 p m Wednesday UMW second
Tuesday 7 30 p m
RACINE WESlEYAN - Sunday school
10 a m worsh tp I I a m Cho1r proct tce
Thursday B p m
LETART FALLS
Worsh1p servtce 9
a m ChlJrch School 10 a m
MORNING STAR Worsh1p 9 30 am
Church School10 30a m
MORSE CHAPEL Church School 9 30
am Wonh1p 11 am
PORTLAND Sunday School 6 30 p m
hemng Worshtp 7 30 p m
Youth
Meetmg Tuesdov 7 30 p m 81ble Study
Thursday 7 30 p m
SUTTON Sunday School f rst and third
Sundays 9 30 a m warsh p ftrs t and
th1rd Sundays 10 -45 a m Worshtp and
Sunday School at Carmel Un1ted
Methodtst Church on sec.ond ond fourth
Sundovs Btble 1tudy rogerh., each
Wednesday 7 30 p m Fom1 ly mghl dm
ner together each th"d Thursday at 6 30
p m
•
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
Re\1 R1chord W Thomas
Duane Sydenstr1cker Sr
John W Douglas
Charles Domtgon
JOPPA Worship 9 00 o m Church
School10 00 o m
CHESTER Worsh ip 9 a m
Church
School 10 o m Chotr Rehearsal 7 p m
Thursday• B1ble Study Thursdays
7:10pm

Y' SAY THIS DR SUE
GHOORS WON 'T 60 A lO H~
~IlK INVbTI6ATIH6 THE

NO AND ~ E
DOH' T THi tl~
S ~ E'? BftN

GRAY AVENGER " OOC"

PPDOI N ~ ~EK
ARE BILL&gt;

WAID CROSS

lHE DAILY
SENnNEL

WOMA~

ANYONE- E5PeCJALLY NOT
~UI&gt;T

FOil. THE ~I&lt;! OF
GETT IUt; RICH1

DOH' r BE roo SORE '
SHf ' Bft tl ~EAL
COZ1 " ' TH OLI VE~
WAR BUCK G WARD
-~------1 A( ~1!1 ° IIAMH
ANNIE 1

WARBUCKS?t W
ELL, WELL 111M
oAL ~'" ~E 5MA RTE~ H ANY
Of YOU PASGIHG UP THE
EA•1 PICKINq' FOK A STRIKE
AI f ilE MOTHER LODE 11

t1 1
1110'1 l IJON TI{H~
HOWOOCrQ f\ ..., fVH.: ll I ~~ ~ I
DOCTORIN I)(INF ' THE RE&gt; 11\Jr(f

• WARBlltKS WILL
BELIEVE HER '
HE'S DEVOTED

INTRIGUE IN fillS

TO THE CHILD 1

SONS SJORE
GrocenesGenera l Merchandt se

Mtddleport OhiO

QK~~~;,:s

992 3978

&amp;PALJTIF l)L

461 S Thtrd Mtdd,l eporf

Eattnor
Ca rry Out

BEN
l,.FRANKLIN'

Pomeroy

0~

WI o

6UT l M HOT A&amp;OUT TO MAAP.Y

LOOk MAj:ly • 'fOIJ R:E A MIGHTY

Pat Hill Ford, Inc.

PIZZA SHACK

RAl!'S

Fc-,.me r lv A ttl ens Count y
Sil v.ng s &amp; Loan

nU- MUST 81 THE AN6WER:.
THEY MUH liE EV~N MORE SIMPLE
MJNPEI&gt; THAN I THOU&amp;H T

992 2196

Pomeroy

RACINE PLANING MILL

992 JJ2S

-

Ph 992 2101

216 E Mam

510 N 2nd

The

John F Fultz Mgr

Oiamood Savings &amp;

TRINITY CHURCH

@&amp;

MEIGS nRE
CENTER, INC.

of Columbus 0 ~
804 W Mcun
992 2319 Pomeroy

m
l.D

mps.mse., '••y"d

PiJmeroy

214E Maon

Natoonwode Ins Co

Mtll Work
C&lt;11bmet Makmg

282 W Mo110

VIRGIL B. TEAFORD SR.

Reuter-Brogan Insurance
Setvices

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

~

FRENCH'S SUNOCO
SERVICE CENTERS

R~c•ne

IJUI

't

McCoy's Auction
u I fl

~uppt

hJhh I

l

\\{A1 1 ~fl

1fu,Jmt~

I

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c.: hurh

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)J \

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Fr hJirJ 1 t l!llll..l
Ul"&gt;lh,,thut,hunh,...J'

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hdt'\~

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~~&gt;h&lt; Jr~

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I I lc.: lhl
lil t 111

tll l ho,;lp 'u •'f'll:~~&gt; lh lh~ pr hkn lm'&lt;J,m lk ''"hll1~lhl
J c.: h an~tnt: ~ rll 1ll
.. kh 1p 11. th lhc.: t "'
, hurl h

,.,r. .._, "''" r ~.......
~~.., ~
,

... ._ ....

~

Sunday Monday Tuesday
Jeremtah
Psalms
Job
11 5 3
5 8 16 33 18 22

Wednesday
Psalms

"

98S 3944

lltHJIJ ud

• han~c.: ~~&gt;llh
LLt' ii iiL 1J

"' • 'V"' ,...

I 0 Mac' McCoy
Rt t, ReedSVIlle Oh

J!!l

L hun. ht td ~ ll'..tnldtrtll\t ll lltlll l lLhll&gt;l l tht ,...

•o.l il&lt;l~

For A Real Auct1on

f'l•~-- Call the Real McCoy

Ul

nclh,lll~

J!l JILUlil til

hi.LII&gt;thu.hat ,nn'

m:tn)

I hJ' ~ .1 .a I h th
II !.1\ n :t ld

l \ U hJJ II Jn

6

LONG BO TTOM Sunday School at 9 30
o m Even ng Wo rsn p at 7 30 p n
Th1.1rsdoy Btble St udy 7 30 p m
REEDS VILLE Sund ay School 9 30 a m
Mormn g Worshtp 10 30 o m Evem ng
Worshp
7 30 p m
8 ble Study
Wednesdays at 7 30 p m
ALFRE D Sunday Schoo l at 9 45 o m
Mornmg Worsh tp at I a m Youth 6 JO
p m Sundoy5 Wednesday N igh t Prayer
Meet1ng 7 JO p m
ST PAUL (Tup pen Plmns ) Sunday
Sc hool 9 00 am Mormng Wors h p at
10 00 a m Btble St udy 7 30 p m Tues
doy
SOUTH BETHEL ( St i ve r Rtdge ) Sunday
School 9 00 o m Morn ng Wash p 10 00
a m Wednesday B b e Study 7 30 p m
KENO CHUR CH O f CHRIST 0 tver
Swo n Supeontendent Sunday school
9 30 e-very week
ReY
HOBSON CHRIS TIAN UNIO N
Ke1lh Eblm pasto r Sunday Sc hool 9 30
am
Leonard G tlm are f trst elder
evemng serv ce 7 30 p m Wednesday
prayer meet ng 7 J0 p m
BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF
CHRI~T Dua ne Worden mt 1 ster Bt ble
doss 9 30 o m mormng worsh p I 0 30
om
e....en•ng worsh tp
6 30 p m
Wedn esday B ble st udy b 30 p m
STIVERSVt l lE COMMU N I TY
NEW
Chu rch Sunday School serv 1ce 9 45
o m
Worsh p
se rYt Ce
I 0 30
Evangeltstte Ser-v ce 7 30 p m Wednes
day Prayer meet ng 7 30
ZION CHURCH OF CH RIST Pome1 oy
Herr so n vtl le Rd Rober t PlJrlell po ster
Btll McE lroy Sunday school supt Sunday
sc hoo l 9 30 a m morn1ng worsh p an d
commun on 10 JO am Sun day worsh p
serv ce 7 p m Wednesday even ng
prayer meeltng and 8 ble stlJdy 7 p m
ST JOHN lUTHERAN CHUR CH P ne
Grove The Rev Wdl om M tddl eswor th
Pa sto r Chu1ch serviCes 9 30 a m Sun
day Sch oo l 10 30 o m
BRADBURY CH URCH OF CHRI ST Jer ry
Pmgley pas tor Sunday sc i-t ool 9 30
o m
morn ng worsh p I 0 30 a m
Wednesday eve n ng serv tce 7 30
ANTIQUITY BAPTI ST Re"' Earl Shuler
pastor Sunday sc hool 9 30 a m Church
7 pm
youth meettng 6
servtce
p m Tuesday B bl e StlJdy 7 p m
RACINE CHUR CH O F THE NA ZARENE
Rev John A Co tt man pa stor Mart ha
Wo lfe Cho rmon o f th e Boo rd of Chris
han l 1l e Sunday School 9 30 am mor
n ng worship 10 30 Sunday even ng
worsht p 7 30 p m Proye t meet • 19
Wed nesday 7 30 p m
RA CINE FIR ST BAPTIST Don l Walker
Pasto r Rober t Smtih Sunday sc hoo l
supt Sunday sc hool 9 30 a m morn ng
worship 10 40 a m
SlJnday even ng
worshtp 7 30 Wednesday evemng B1ble
study 7 30
DAN VI LL E WES LEYAN Rev R D
Brown
pastor Sunday School 9 30
om morn ng worshrp 10 45 youth ser
v•ce 6 45 p m even ng wors htp 7 JO
p m
prayer and protse Wednesday

Thursday
Psam~

I 19 &lt;11 &lt;18

Fnday
Sa urday
)\lerbs P overbs
10 19 28 13 1 12

P~

7 30 p m
S l VE R RUN FREE BAPTI ST Rev Mor
\l tf1 Mark, 1 pas tor Steve l tt! l e SlJn doy
sc hoo l supt Sunday sc hool I 0 a m
morn ng wors h p I I o m Sunday even
.ng worshtp 7 30 Prayer meet ng and
8 ble study Thursday 7 30 p m you th
se r.,•ce b p m Sunday
CHRISTIAN FELLOWS HIP CHURCH 383
N 2nd Ave M ddleporl Pasto r Bo b
Hoi In s Sunday serv 1ces r p 00 a m o~d
7 p m flJesdoy and Fr day serv1ces 7 00

pm
HOUSE OF PRAYER AND PRAISE
ltberty Ave Pome roy Ser-v tces Sunday
3 00 p m Fodoy 1 30 p m T1.1esdo y 7 J O

pm
CHE STE R CHURCH OF GOD Rev R £
Rob.nson past or Sundo., schoo l 9 30
o m ~o rs h p serv ce II a m e .... enm g
service 7 00 yo uth serv ce Wednes
doy700 pm
l ANGSVIl LE CHRI STI AN
CHUR CH
Robert E MlJsser pasto r Sun d ay sci-t ool
9 30 o m Paul Musser supt mormng
worshtp 10 : 10 Sunday e-venmg servtee
7 00 mtd week se rvtee Wed nesday 7

pm
SYRACUS E
CHUR CH
OF
THE
NAZA REN E Rev James B Ki ttl e pastor
Norman
Pr es l ey
Sunday
Sc hool
Super ntendenl
Su nday sc hool 9 30
a m
mornmg w o rsh p I 0 45 o m
ev onge sl c se r v ce 7 p m Prayer and
Pro se Wudnesdoy
7 p m
you th
meellng 7 p m
EDE N UNITED BRETHREN IN CHRI ST
Elden R Bloke pastor Sun day Sc hool 10
a 111 Ro ber! Reed supt M o rn ng ser
110n II a m
Sunday mght serv tees
Chr st an Endeavo r 7 J O p m Son g se r
Y ce
8 pm
Preach ng 8 30 p m
M dweek Praye r mee tmg Wed nesdo)l 7
p m A lv n Reed lo y leade r
CHU RCH OF JESUS CHRIST local ed at
Ru tl and on N ew l mo Rood ne•t to
Forest Acre Park Rev Roy Rouse
pos tor Ro ber t Musser Sunday Sc hool
supl SlJndoy schoo l 10 30om worsh tp
7 30 p m 8 b e StlJdy Wednesday 7 30
p n Saturday n ght prayer serv1ce 7 30
pm
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRI ST IAN Roger
Wohon pa stor M ldred Z.egler Sun day
sc nool su p! M orn mg wors h p 9 30 a m
Sund oy schoo I 0 30 o m even ng se r
"ce 7 30
MT UNION BAPTIST M e rl n Tee ts
pas to r
Joe Sayre
Sunday Sc hool
Super n tenen l
Sunday sc hool
Q 45
o m even mg worsh p 7 30 p m Praye r
meehng 1 30 p m Wednesday
TUPPERS Pt AINS CH URCH OF CHRI ST
V ncen t C WotefS Ill m nlster Hermon
Bla ck SlJ permtendent Sunday Sc hool
q 30 a m e-vemng servtce 7 p m
Wednes day St b le Study 7 p m
CHESTER CHUR CH OF lHE NA ZARENE
Re"' Herbert Grole pa stor Fro nk Rtftle
supt Su nday School 9 30 o m Worsh1p
$Srv ice II o m ond 1 30 p m Prayer
mee hn g Wednesday 7 30 p m

A Better Ltfe!
In the matena l pn ys 1ca 1 r ea lm of l •f e we look forward t o be f1cr
th1n gs and b e tte r days Such thoug h t s ca n encourage us all t o l ook f or
ward with greater hop e a nd ex p ect a ft on for to m o rro w Even though
such th ngs mt g ht not happen tn Tht s world yet 1n th e spiritual realm
we have assurance from Gods Word th a t th ey wtll occ ur The apostl e
Paultn me Hebrew leTTer sp eaks of better th1ng s
In Hebrew s 8 6 P a ul says Cnns t h as b rough t t o p ass a belfer
c ovenant thus l nd tca t ,ng th a t t he O ld Law was not th e best A cc or d mg
to the 8th v e rse God f o und f ault wtth tl t hus H e sat d Behold th e
days come satth the Lord whe n I will m ake a new coven ant V'lth th e
house of Israel and wtfh the house of Juda h
The Old la w w as not able
to sav• the soul of m a n
A be tter covenan t g u a r an t ees better prom tscs Under the New
C ovenant t here •s the promtse of re m ss•on of st n s Thts wa s not gran
t e d under the old J es us c ha rg ed H1s apos t les to go nto all the world
and they w e nt lel ltng peo p le to be lieve 1n J esus Chrtst r epen t of the tr
stns confess thetr fatth In the Son of G od an d be ba pttz ed 1nto J esus
for me remtss ton or f orgt ve ness of s1ns N o one unde r th e Ol d covenant
ever prea c hed th• s k1nd oi message Th•s was new and ali11e with hope
tor the present and futur e as well T he prom1se ot a be tt e r land was tn
eluded tn the glad ltd ngs of sa lvatton
Evervthtng about the New Testament potnted .n the d-trectton of
be tter th•ngs
Truly a better 11tP begms w1th J esu s Without H1m
J •f e tS empty and wtthout purpose • Without Chns t and w•thout G od
what hope Is there? A b so ute l y none • In Chn S:f there tS hope In E ph
1 3 the apostl e Pau l sla tes a ll s p tnrua l b less•ngs are tn Chnst We
must be In Chrtst tn order to recetve suc h bless•ngs Have you been
bapftzed 1nto ChrisP Bapr ls m 1S the f•na l act thai puts one tnto Chnst
(G al 3 27 ) There 1S m ore to sa lvat• on than 1ust be lt evlh gl
Th e name we we ar 1S new The name Is bc tl e r
ano mor e
valuable !han an y ma n otters
C hns rnm
1sn t 11 wond e rfu l ?
Doesn t 1t ha11e a beauti fu l sound ? In re i1 Q1on I don t want to be c alled
anythmg else I wou ldn r f o r one m tnvl e tntnk of c allin g myse lf by
some human na me What about you my fn en d ' Let us be content to
wear th e name th e d sctplcs w~ re ca lleo
In A ntioc h
(Acts 11 26)
Submttted by E 11ang~ 1t s t Eugene L Con ger Mason Church of
Chr•st Mason w va

lAUREl CUff
FREE METHODIS T
CHURCH Re v Floyd F Sho ok pastor
lloyd Wrtght
D•rect or of Chnsttan
Educat ion Sundav School 9 30 a m
Mornmg Wo rsh1p 10 30 a m
Chotr
Proc t1 ce Sunday 6 30 p rn
Eve ntng
Worshtp 7 JO p m Wednesday Prayer
end B ble Study 7 30 p m
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST Charles
Ru!!. sell Sr m n star RICk Macomber
sup t Su nday school 9 30 a m wo rshtp
ser11 tce 10 30 o m B1bl e Stud y Tuesday
730pm
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS
OF
LATTER
DAY
SAINTS
CHRIST
Portland Rac tne Road Wil ltom Rou sh
pasto r Phy l l. s Stob ort Sunday Sc hoo l
Su pt Sund ay School 9 J O a m M orntng
worshtp 10 30 o m
Su nday eYe ntng
ser-v •ce 7 p m Wed n esday eventng
prayer servtces 7 30 p m
BETHLEHEM BAPTI ST Re v Earl Shul er
pastor Worshtp serviCe 9 30 a m Sun
day school I 0 30 a m B ble Study and
prayer servtce Thu rsd ay 7 30 p m
CAR LE TON CHURCH K ngsbury Rood
Gory K ng pastor Sunday school 9 30
o m Ralph Carl super nt en denl even
ng worsh p 7 30 p m Prayer meeting
Wednesday 1 30 p m
l ONG BOTTOM CHRIS TI AN
Tom
R choson past or Wallace Damewood
SlJndoy School Supennlendent Wo rsh1p
ser111ce ol 9 am B ble Sc hool 10 a m
HYSElL RUN HOliNESS CHURCH Sun
day Sc hoo l at 9 30 o m worsh p ser
vtCes at 10 30 a rn Po uor Rev The ron
0 lJ r hom Thursday se r-v tces at 7 J0 p m
w tlh Rev Okey Ca r t
FREEDOM GOSPEL MI SSION ol Bald
Knob loc ated on County Rood 31 Rev
Lawrence Glues&amp;n camp pastor Rev
Wtllf o rd
oss tstant pos1or
Roger
Preoch1ng services Sunday 7 30 p m
prayer meellng Wednesday 7 30 p m
Gary Grlfft th l eader Youth group s
Su nday eve mg 6 30 p m w th Roger ond
Vo le ! Wtlltord as leodera Commun ton
se r'o' tce s ftrst Sundoy each month
WHITES CHAPEl Coo lv tl le RD Re\1
Roy Deeter pastor Sunday school 9 30
o m worshtp se rv tce 10 :10 am Btbl e
study and prayer se r 'o' !Ce W edne5 doy
730pm
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIS T Bo b
Bucktnghom pas to r Herb Ell 011 Sun
day sc hool supl Sunday sc hool 9 30
am morntng wonhtp a nd co mumon
1030om
RUILAND BIBLE METHODIST CH UR CH
Amos f1 l hs pasto r Donny Till! I Sunday
School Supt Sunday School 9 JO o m
!allowed by morntng wors1'11p Sunday
evemng serv ce
7 00 p m
Prayer
meeltng Wednesday 7 00 p m
RUTLAND
CHURCH
OF
THE
NAZARENE Rev lloy d 0 Gr mm Jr
pastor Su nda y sc hool 9 30 a m wor
shtp &amp;er YICB 10 30 a m Brogdcast lt ve
over WMPO yo ung p eoples serv1ce 7
E\l ohgehS fi C S91Y!Ce 7 30 p m
p m
Wednesday ser'¥1ce 7 JO p m
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST Corner o f
Secon d and Anderson Mason Pastor
Fr onk Lowther Sunday school 9 45
am worshtp serv tce 11 am and 7 30
p m Weekly B1bl e Study Wednesday
730p m
MASON CHURCH OF CHRI ST M ll e r
St Mason W Vo Eugene l Conger
minuter Sundov B ble Study 10 am
Wo rsh•p 11 a m ond 7 p m W edn es day
B1ble SllJdy vocal mustc 7 p m
liFE SCIENCE CHURCH
12 North
Thtrd St Chesh re Independent lun
domenlol serv ices Sunday even ing 7 30
p m Pa stor Rev Or Robert Perso ns
MASON ASSEMBLY OF GOD Dudd ng
Lone Ma so n W Vo Rev Ronn ie B
Rose Pastor Sunday Schoo l 9 45 a m
Morn ng Wo rs h•p II a m E'¥ en lng Set
viCe 7 30 p m Wednesday Wom11n s
MtntStr es 9 o m (meeting and praye r
Prayer and Btble S1udy 7 p m
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTI AN UNION The Re"' Wilham
Campbel l pastor Sunday School 9 30
a m James Hughes supt eventng ser
v1ce 7 30 p m Wednesday evening
prayer meeting 7 30 p (" Youth praye r
servtce each Tuesday
FAIR VIEW BIBLE CHURCH lelorl W
Va Rt I Mark lrwm pastor Warsh1p
!!oer-vlces 9 30 a m Sunday !!.chaol 1 I
a m evening worshtp 7 30 p m Tues
day cottage prayer meetlng on'\t 81ble
9 :)() a m
Worshtp serv1ce
study
Wednesday 7 30 p m
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH now loc:;a ted
on Pomeroy Pike County Rood 25 near
Fl a twoods Rev Blackwood pastor Ser
v•ces on Sunday at 10 30 a m and 7 30
p m wtth Sundav school 9 JO a m B1ble
study Wednesday 7 30 p m
INDEPENDENT HOLINESS CHURCH
IN(
, Pearl St
Middleport Rev
0 Dell Manley pastor Sunday sc hool
9 30 o m Mormng worship 10 JO a m
even•ng worship 7 30 p m Tuesday
12 30 p m Women s prover rneetmg
Prayer and pro• se service Wednesday
730pm
RUTLAND APOSTOliC CHURCH OF
JESUS CHRIST Elder James Miller B•ble
study W•dnesday 7 30 p m
Sunday
Sc hool I 0 o m Sunday night service
7 :30pm
POMEROY WESlEYAN HOLINESS
Harrisonvi ll e Rood Dewey Ki ng pastor

949 2SSO

Henry Ebhn Jr Sunday School Supt
Sunday School 9 30 a m Marn tng Wor
d11p 11 a m Sunday evening ser'¥ 1Ce
7 30 m Pray er Meeting Thu rsd ay 7 30

pm
SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF COD Not Pen tecoslol 1 Re-v George 01ler
pastor Wo rs htp ser-viCe Sunday 9 45
a m Sunday school II a m wor ship
ser'o'tee 7 30 p m Thursday prayer
meeltng 7 30 p m
MT HERMON Un ted Brelhren n
Chrts t Church Re v Robert Sanders
pa stor Don W .J I loy leader located n
Texas Commun ty off CR 82 Sundoy
school 9 30 o m Morntng wonh 1p se r
-v 1ce I 0 &lt;15 a m ev emng preachmg ser
v tce s9Co nd and lo urt h Sundays 7 JO
p m Chrtstton Endeavor f~rst and th i rd
Sundays 7 30 p m Wednesday prayer
meellng and B ble study 7 JQ p m
JEHOVAH S WI TNESSES 37319 State
Roule 124 (One mt le east of Rutland )
SlJndoy B1bl e lectur&amp; 9 30 a m Wet
chtower st ud y 10 20 a m Tuesday Bt
ble st udy
7 30 p m
Thursday
TheocratiC Sc hool 7 30 p m
Serv ce
M eetm g 8 20 p m '
RUTl AND FREEWill BAPTIST Church
Or James A Bruhl pastor 'Sunday
sc hoo l 10 a m Sunday e'¥emn g serv•ce
7 00 Wednesday prayer mee ting 7 00

BUT KAYLA AND I IN fE N D
10 C ._.t\~ E ALl THA1 WtlH
YOUR TIM E MA.CHINE

HOPE fO C HANCi E

,.l -;-- -:-y;j

THE FUTU RE'

GASOIJNE AILEY

a p1ece of

r

I~

CHURCH O F GOD of Prophecy located
the 0 J Wh1te Rood olf h ghwoy I bO
Sunday School 10om Super ntend&amp;nt
John Loveday Fust Wednesday mght of
month CPMA seNices second Wedne s
day WMB meettng th rd tl-trough ltlth
youlh se r,.. •ce George Croyle pastor
1"40PE BAP flST CHAPEL
570 Grant
St M iddleport SlJndoy Schoo l 10 a m
morn ng worsh p 11 a m evanmg war
sh p 7 p ~ m Wednesday even •ng Btbl e
study and prover meetmg 7 p m AI
h lm!ed w1th Southern Baptist Conven
lion
BRADFORD CH UR CH OF CHRIST
Eugen e Underwoo d pastor Harry Hen
drtcks !!ou p&amp;n n tendent Su11day school
9 J0 a m morn ng worship 10.30 a m
eYen tng worshtp 7 p m Wednesday Bt
ble study 7 p m
JUBILEE
CHRISTIAN CENrER
George 5 Creek Rood Re"' C J Lemley
pastor Jo hn Follure supenntendenl
Church schoo l 9 30 a rn mornmg war
sh p 10 30 eve mng serv• ce 7 p m Btble
Study Thur ~ 7 p m Classes for all ages
Nur sery provtded for worshtp ser-vtces
ST PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH Corner
ol Sycom o r&amp; and StJcond Sts Pomeroy
The Re-v W il ham Middleswor th Past or
Sun dov Sc hool at 9 45 a m and Church
SerYt ces 11 a m
SA CRED HEART Re"' Father Paul 0
Welton pos1or Phone 99'2 281S Satu r
day even 1ng Moss 7 30 Sunday Mass 8
Con fess ion Soturdoy
ond I 0 a m
7730pm
VICTOR Y BAPTI ST
525 N 2n d St
Middl eport James E Keesee pastor
Sunday morn ng worship 10om even
tng ser11tce 1 Wednesday ev11nmg wor
shtp 7 p m V sltott on Thu rsday 6 30

0 '"

s.:E

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Evening television listings
MARCH 20 1gat
EVENING
T I O LI IJQJ l:V GJ HEWS
' } STUFF
8) CAROl BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
t ABCNEWS
t\ 3 2 1 CONTACTP OIOJIKm 1 ll,l
may be nte IUIJI&amp;d due to
pledgmg
flU OVER EASY Guest B ll'f' Oan
els mu te• song sty! sl Hou
Hugh Downs (Closed Cs phoned

e 00 l iG

858

~00

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!71

6 30 (21.
NBC NEWS
1) GOODNfWS
BOB NEWHART SMOW
FACE TME MUSIC
I I III QI CIS NEWS
Il l
WlLO WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
111) LILIAS YOGA AND YOU
11u Ill ABC NEWS
( C_I!IN UPDATE NEWS
( ) D PM MAGAZINE
I )I THE STOAV
f $) AL.L IN THE FAMILY
(f ) 12l. FAMilY FEUD
l f ) POP GOES THE COUNTRY
D I J TIC TAC DOUGH
Il l fHI
MACNEIL. LEHRER
REPORT
{t.oJ NEWS
il l D BULLSEYE
THE LESSON
( ) l_ANFOAO AND SON
{f i D I I l JOKER SWIL.D
17 /t Jc)) HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
11!1 DICK CAVETT SHOW
( Gl FACE THE MUSIC
kBN UPDATE NEWS
(2) Q C1 ) HARPER\IAL.LEYPTA
Wh en the Retllyr1.1mo mtllhA&amp; tth 11
St ell A 11 pu cl c.ng the o deaf
pr o!tnst on ahe ret• l ates w th R
scheme that tea~1ts1n th e arreal 01
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Mote l
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!1 MOVtE ICRIMEI .. M•gnum
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( 5 NB.t. BAStt:ETBAll AIIH II ft
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(f ) MUPPETSHOW Guea t G lnd~ s
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II f l l 110 YOU RE THE GREA
TEST CHARLIEBROWNln sp !llo
h11 untmJJI411U!IYe lrft Ckrecord nlhtl
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8 30 { ~ J - f i THEBRAOYBRIDES
I I J(f21GJ I M AltO GIRL NOW
. I i 10J BUGS BUNNV S BUS
TIN OUT AL.I OVER ::;tJr nutne
brmga ct tld t
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buQa itnd Wol l ~ O yole !,18!8 a
C hlll C IIIJ HI I tpw!lllh slll1\J
llf11e n&amp;tnfl8 s ltl a RuaCI Rur t e
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Gues t Artn1.1r So tar v c&amp; p ~Stden l
and sen or se cur ty Bllalys ot Mo
ga1 Stanley and Co mpa 1y Hos!
l ou a Rukeyse•
3 CBNUPDATENEWS
2 1J 1t NEROWOL.FE Ato ne,
lHS Vegas1.1nderwa tar str JJ ea1u t
ar l sUstoundlloat • g nNt1wY01k s
Easl Rtvel Rfld one o l N e OWOIIIl !1
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3 700CLUB
te \l t)GJ FRIDAY NIGHT MOVIE
The Ch ld Steal a t979 Sta1 s
Deau 8 tdges Bla r Brown
lll \i 11t0) THE DUKES OF HAl
lARD Carn \I BI0 1TI'1r Us Lukl'lancl
So ha~e Ihe r ttrst roe II ght aller8 o
ag teea 1o Jump th e Generallllle
D\1111 32 ca s tor ht!l ove o l 1t preny
carntYa l own er ( ~ hrs )
I t SESSION 81BethNogoyh oa l s
th s week y rev e w ol he We al
V g 11 PI Leg Sleture
1~ COSMOS
~ l LIVE FROM THE GRAND OLE
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2). (7 1 NBCMAGAZINEWITH
DAVID BRINKLEY
&lt;l l MOVIf (THRILlER)•• He
Alone 1980
Know• You
111 NEWS
3 ) CBNUPDATENEWS
! 3 RICHARD HOGUE
111 MASTERPIECE THEATRE
Oiln wer U)(B EptSOdtl )( I Bran ofl
aen! t o CambmhHt l o B9 1H!tt and
te11t ln tht~b ootly lltt pped Y tuse
Because Suun s tat her Dr 0 lit!
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(Gia!ttld Caplu ell U SA )
5 TBSEVENINGNEWS
3 i CBN UPDATE NEWS
\ ~ l D 111 1 0 I 10 12 CD
NEWS
) ) DAN GRIFFIN
1J l NtGHTGAL.LEAY
\ ~ 1 CBNUP DA TENEWS
218 17 THETONIGHTSHOW
3 1ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
4 MOYIE (ADVENTURE!•••
Superman ftle Mo\lle 1978
I_ ) t2.1 CIJ FRIOA Y.S
D I
CBS LA fE MOYIE
PIIAN TA::;M tQl Y !ila s Michael
Oa dw Kn t h~ l llsl uo
10 MOVIE I ll ~ !H O Jofl C flvow
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~ JIMMY SWAGG~RT
I MOYIE !SCIENCE FI CTION)
•• W~rlo c: k Moon 1975
1 45 5 MOVIE (DRAMA I • • P1ych

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:ZIONEWS
3 30 MINUTES WITH FATHER
MANNINO
4 MOVIE !HORROR/ •• 1 The
Dark 1978
1011BELIEVE
12JQt NEWS
13 CBNSPOATSREPORt
3 1 ROSS BAGlEV SHOW
5 MOVIE (SPECTACULAR) ••
Slory Of 01~id 1960
13 CBN SPORTS REPORT
3 700 CL.UB
3) PHIL ARMS PRESENTS
3 SPORTS REPORT

MARCH 2 1 198 t
EVENING
8 00 2l iiCI 18 l tO) NEWS
!5 1
CHAMPIONSHIP
WRESTltNG
7 GOO HAS THE ANSWER
0 1 PRISONER Oo Not Fo uakt:J

B30
g 00

t ~ -1.

'~Cu

0 Sl

730pm

•

number
two'

"''L

a,

BURliNGHAM SOUTHERN BAPTIST
CHURCH Route 1 Shodt Poator Don
Slack Afllhored with Southern Boprlsl
(an'¥entlon Sunday school 1 30 p m
Sunday worship 2 30 p m Thuradov
e¥entng Bible study 7 p m
PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLV
Racine
Rout• 124 William Hoback postor Sun
day school 10 a m Sunday e-vening aer
vice 1&gt; 30 p m Wedneadoy Mnlng ser
VIC&amp; 1
CARPENTER BAPTIST Rev Freeland
Narrla pastor Don Cheadle Supt Sun
day School 9 30 o m Morning Worship
10 30 a m Prayer Ser 'o' lce alternate
Sundov•
NEASE SETTLEMENT FREE Will lAP
TIST Donald R Karr Sr pastor Friday
evening service 7 30 p m
Sunday
schoo l 10om

I II

not be

qrandma, qrandmas,dear I
Grandma number
too'
one

speait, let's tr(J to
speah correctiLJ'

[sa1d,1 IS

!Sdidl

1m your

lf were qo 1nq to

That s not what

pm

p '"
TR INITY Chns t on A uembly Coolvtlle
G tlbert Spencer posl or SlJndoy
sc hoo Q 30 a m morn mg worsh 1p 11
a m Sunde., eventng ser'ltCe 7 30 p m
fT!tdweek prayer servlce Wedne sd ay
730 pm
MOUN T Oltve Communtty Church
Law rence Bu sh pa5 tor Mo ~ Folmer Sr
Supe rt nl e ndent Sunday Schoo l and mar
mng w"rshtp q 30 a m Sunday e-vemng
serv1ce 7 p m Youth meellng and Bib le
st udy Wednesday 7 p m
UNITED FAITH CHURCH
Route 7 on
Pomeroy bypo u Rev Rober t Smith Sr
pastor Re-v James Cund1fl osslston t
pastor Sunday Schoo l 9 30 am mor n
ng wo rsh tp 10 30 o m evemr~g wor
sh tp
7 30
Women $ Fe ll owshtp
Tuesday s 10 o m Wedn esday nigl-tt
pra yer s&amp;r v tce 7 30 p m
fAITH BAPTIST Church Mason meet
a1 Un1ted Steel Workers Unlon Hal l
Ro I road Street Mo son Pastor Rev
R• chord Jor don Morntng wonhtp 9 30
am SlJndoy Schoo l 10 30 am Prayer
meettng Wednesday 7 30 p m
FOREST RUN BAPTIST
Re v Nyle
Borden
pastor
Cornelius
Bunch
( uperintendent Sunday schooJ
~ 30
a m leCO['ld and f o urth Sundays war
shtp se rvtee a! 2 J0 p m
Ml MORtAH BAPTIST
Fourth and
Mom Sl Mtddlepor1 Re"' Colvm Min
ms pastor Mr. Elvm Bumgardner
SlJpl Sunday school 9 30 o m worship
servlce 10 do m
NORTH BETHEL Unlled Molhodlol
Church Re "' Charles Domlgan pastor
SlJndoy Schoo l 9 30 a m Worsh ip Ser
-v 1ce 10 45 am Sunday 8 ble Study
7 00 p m Wednesday prayer meeting

' BY RE: AWAKENING
HO.V" ) PEOPLES INTEREST
lN THE PAST WE

...

..:.Nr

E~. .: M ~ ~ E
\\E

p zednewa!l&amp;ck!ank aalolen (60
mms )

i 11 THE FIFTIES MOMENTS
TO REMEMBER Th s mus ca l
sahLte to the non rock mus cot thA
I QSO a was taped l ve n the Grand
Ball roo mo llheWa ldo tAaloroatwd
s111 s nany olthetOPJJOpula IHI ats
o! h e pe o d nclud ngArlhur God
lt ey Rosemary Cl ooney M tch
M ller and F ankte lalne
_. I MOYIE (ADVENTURE ) ••••
North By Northw•sl 1959
llJ 1 1 1 ~ FLO
2 IJ 1
THE GANGSTER
CHRON ICLES Lucky l uc an o
fUll 1 nu ot 11 double c ross has
Ma anzanoel mtnt:ll&amp;dand calstor
an underworld summ t mee t no n
Ch1ceg o !o !o m a neltonal cr me
synd cataundtuh slttadersh p (60
mms)
I t:i!JQ) THE LOVEB0ATI81Hl C
causes come d c cha os wh en he
e m \1 nces It a c e w to bols ter hts
s!ages1 1uck aunt s ego wh ch
turns her n! o an outra geous p11ma
dona Guast sta rs lsabu! Santord
T•o)' Donall uu (Rep eat 60 mm s l
O t I lttll CONCRETE COWBOYS
JO and W lshonastywh lework
ng alth e Kansas C1I Ystock ya 1ds
cosf!IJ the n e, d Wrnnre Hooper
her 10b andtl'ley tuersllys tampede
to ~e l th ngs r ght (60 mns )
3 THE LESSON
2 IJ 1 HILL STREET BL.UES
CapiH 11 Fu 1t!o damages h 8
Chan ces tor a pro nouan when he
presses on 1 h s n .. estoga lton ot a
call g l s slih• tng wh le Htmtar s

t ll1iJ Gl FANTASYISLANOMr

by lHOMA5 J05ErH
l&gt;OWN
ACROSS
I Dams male
II Jon
S Echtor s mark
tn Afnca
10 Mu ~.: h l ow~ d one 2 Perfect
11 S..: re11.mer
I H.oc k g roup
O"~~~ JQJ RIKER
1% IJquefy
4 Porkt~r
11 00 ~l iJ [! I 11 llJ II I II~ 11 ~ liJ
13 Sa!o!;e advice
5 Actor
NEWS
1_3 ) ZOLALEVITT
~ource
Wendell
tl l MOVIE
(DRAMA) •••
14 French diinr e 6 loss
Apocalwop•e Now te7g
5
DICK MA\JRICE AND IS Three
1 Movm~
COMPANY
1111 anwtn
furntLurc
I MYSTERY! Rump ole an d the
Roa rke allows even ts th at are unu
sual even b y Fantasy Island stan
darrts to hRppan when ha pe m ts
an e• c nange ot tantas as by a br I
It ant Wall Stree t analyst who wants
to be wea lthy end a wea lthy chent
who wants l o tve modtHi lly (60

\9

Br ta n s Rac e Aelallo na Act
(Closed Capt oned U S A )

19

Choler

11 Noted

20

f

opera SinK er !6 I&lt; rench
IS F om1e r TV lop pcunt er
18 He~wauan
tS Plodded

It

PAULSIMONina concarl t llpad

1Y8 a t the Tower Thea ter tn Uppet
Darb}' Pa poe t sangwr 1e1 and
pertotmer Paul S1man demonstar
a tea h s ab ht }' !o con! nue 10 ar
ll cutatethelmage sand dea laot
the tans he hu accumulated n h s
re markable 15year ce reer
t1 30 121 U (11 SATURDAY NtOHT
LIVE
I ~ ROSSSAGL.EY SHOW
I MOYIE (SCIENCE FICTION )

.

1 rn l-lr---1

STAARY ~-,­

U {IO i ltiS Wihhlt !I JIQ !I

OAVEAlLENATL.ARGE
10 FRONT PAGE
0 00 2 0 1 BARBARA MANDRELL
AND THE MANDREll SIS TEAS
G l.lt;~:. l s Bub H pu u1 1 M a I) H 1L
L IHI (fittj.}tlil bl.l 1 1 Ill )
3 700 CLUB
5 MOVIE (COMEOYj••• Wac.,_
lui Sh!.Q_ In The Arm)' 1960
0 12 QJ 240 ROBERT A1 o I r
yt
It UV5 1 Uitl JtH it tl ~ !Jy
t 1 • l ~ llHJ ~ (Ju v n ~:l!l d1 0 H11Htt
,.., tJo ~ 1 &lt;o~ tt l 1 k 1U l1b t~ r se • telthto
ll t. !oln! l!lu l 1 J v lt)tl
..;
I
it s h H it 1\.lt Ill It t. l~t! I I I)
!i H "' II
I!lUI lo )
CJ a 10 WKRPIN CtN CINNATI
i

LNJGDI H

_I

n

1--l...,.,.....,

CLil l

of

! l l allf c1ty

monkeys

lllJ!:er

21 }' Tf R( h a n~cl
2:2 Molten
subshmce

~ 4 swu1~r

sorce ress
15 1\teJucan

tree
16 Ca rtoomst

L,ardner

bard

24 (uu rt

attendants
'ZS IJkewase

26 Pla ywrtJ.(ht

nnellgrollee
y
!7 Co
Make
2~

1own 1n
MaSll

lllluv ~ II .at
l 2 l'onnu.:

'3

at: ld

1

nwhr
the

When~
Ho) ~

1961

t

~o n g

1

14 U nt:over
16 Outer coat

:n Poem
38 Pa ~.:tty
39 L&gt;emollshed
40 on a ship
U \II Y t H Y I'TOl!l i O I~~ - llroe'• how lo work 11

AXV0 I 8 \ A XR
u

I 0 N (, F E I I 0 W

Unc IC!It r !HIIIJII) Jla ll h f r
u ~t

Now a range: the cocled tene s 10
form 11'1e Sulpr Sl! answer as sug
Yi!SIM by the &lt;tOOYe ca naan

~.:ost

leavmg

s A.oswer

! I Sw1~s nver t9 Palmer
22 Moment of
of ~olf
l1uth man 30 (,reek

16 Kra z}
17 The htgh

TELITl

l [ 11

I! ~ ttpand
9 Squ1rrt! l

Vc~tPrday

Faec stBeeat A staun ch advoca te
ol he a spe ech Aumpole accept s
the &lt;Ia tense o f Capt n ReJt Parkm
charged w th nc ling a r ot under

Me
11I MOREOFTHATGREAT AMER
!CAN GOSPEL SOUND Tennessee
'OJ 30
E111e F ord a d De ll a Rattse tH e
JOtt ert by Grandpa Jone!l a H1 tO 00
Roman a And a&amp; Crouc h !h e
Hftppy GoodmAn Farn ly The Nosll
v Ia Sou1 ds 8 t d th e 81IWalk e1Or
t has! au1a celab11U onot 11:11111on
AI
and CO l amp01t11 y \lOSptH _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __:_:_.c.::_.c.::__:_:_:.___:__.:..__:_:_.:._
mus c
6 JO 2 U 7 NBC NEWS
,f)~ 1M}
~THAT SCRAMBLED WOAD GAME
41BOXING SBEST Rock,MAR
~
~~
by Henr Amold and Boo Lee
CIANO HBO Spotts takes e re ~ea
1ng too k a! I he o 11'r' undllltla led
Unscramb e these tow Jui'Tibtes
cllamp m b o~ ng h $IOIY
one 1ener to eacl'1 square to torm
0 1 NEWS
tou r ord nary words
Q t l l CONCERN
101 CBS NEWS
12).
ACTIONNEWSMAKER
1 00 l D DANCE FEVER
) I BLACKWOOD BROTHERS
0 Q 11 HEEHAW Guests Slt l
Ptckens Dot G1bson Jaclt.y W111d
M ! 101'1 Dolt.!ll BHI d (6 0 m 5 )
1 L.AWAENCE WELK SHOW
e MUPPET SHOW
10 BUGS BUNNY
12)8 SOLID GOLD !i HI I 0 ut t1
WAr wu.;k Gotr1 ur. urdwlln&amp; spe
to m th eu 11aonws
7 30 Z II ) INSIDE LO OK
WHAi A CSI.JY WH05
3 THE LUNDSTROMS
4 MELISSA MANCHESTER IN
iOO l" IPSY iO
CONCERT HBO present s n d iU
Sl"AND UP HAD
tiUl'J 91 OW II II lUI HIJ the pvp IOo,; lt.
~E5T DO •
:i lh.,lt!r w!lv S l. p ii Yit l 1 \lA 11 t. I I

ID"

~,.,(

tl l ROCK CHURCH
! ' ) TBS EVENING NEWS

I ftr

th ~

tiHtt I .,:'\ I

111lh1r l11 tl us snnple A 11

h 111

~~ ~

t it

apos\Jop i ucs tl t It ••~lh 111 I f 111 111 1 1f t he
h 1nls Ea r h l :l) th l'ltlc htt c •-.ared tiT cu nt

S tn ~-: l e
w1

lett ers

rd11 an~ all

Print answer here
N
J11T1bles CAT CH lYIN G PlriEO EYELID
Answe
Lot s you• tol owers know you re thereA TAI LLIOHT
Jumblt Boo~ No 15 conlJ!rt og 1IU pur.tlll s lvtlll:ltt tor s 1 75 po•lpald
lrom Jumble ci o lht s naw1p1pe1 8l)~ ~ Norwooc N J ll764&amp; tnctu&lt;M your
n1me •ddoM$ np t odll 11nd mo.a c hK~J Jlli~.Ote 10 NewspspeftlookJ

NA

W0 I B

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VOIJPXV

Yesterdays

QBRI\

&lt;:rypluquole

MEI\Z

NU

V O IJPXV

ADFSBWV

&lt;) XIlV

V

1 HE SEcRET

X

NV

FB

XDJRBZ

OF SU CCESS

UES

N01 IN DOING YOUR OWN WORK BU1 IN RECOONIZING
1HE RIGH r MAN ru DO I I - ANIJI\EW CAHNEGIE

�The DallY Sentmel

Pase-8

Pomeroy

Friday, Marsh 20,Jrsr.

Middleport, Oh10

4

Givuway

11

ONE large femele puppy 6
months old OOI&lt;s ke a
c ass between te rler &amp;
col e Very gentle gOOd
watch dog 843 3171
lost •nd Found

6

LOST near Port and
2
male walker fo)( hounds

both black wh te tan n
co lor If seen ca ll8r13 2354
LOST Female wa ke 1
years Name Kafhy w th
coll.!r Cherry R dge a ea

even

Sat
1

ng 997 3666
YardSate

~

WE MOVED Yard sa e
Fr &amp; Sat Ma c h 20 21 9
a m to 6 p m at Gau s
Shake Haven Chester Oh
d a peres rugs
d shes bedsp eads a k n
ds m sc terns

Clothes

KIT N CARLYLE "

Help Wanted

A ract ve part t me work
fo
well
g oomed
homemakers who
ave
pre y fash ens and want o
keep up on cur ent sty es
Average $ 0 00 per hou
plus free wardrobe fa
hose
who
qua 1 ty
Management oppor un ty
open Fo free nfom at on
please phone 992 3941 o

ARE 'lbiJ \HE ~AD'( \1-\11.\
11 MED\UM !&gt;l:nA ~AL-F
WtfH p~pptRONI MD MVSH~MS

At-U&gt; J.IA!-F Will-\ KITT'(

\

- Auto and Truck
Repaor
- TranSmiSSIOn
Repatr

Ha

ford

9 AM S 30 PM

...............
'

n ov ng memoro; of out
son Ry an Rage Roush
who d ed at b rth tour years
ago oday Ma c h 20 1977
The even ng sta sh nes on
he g ave
Of one we oved bu could
not save
God took h m home
was

Publ c Nohce
NOTICE OF
HEAR NG ON
PETITION FOR
ADOPTION

The State of Oh o Me gs

County

Common

Pleas

Court ProbateD vis on

Case No 23370
NOTICE OF
HEAR NG AND
EXAMINATION
In the Matter of the adop

s ee l s cas ng alum nu m
n e d or shop Loca ed a
Lake or cal

Goa ts fa sa e 742 20 5

•

Insurance
N

Homes for Sale

ton of Char es
Met&lt; nney

WI am

To Robert Edw n M ller
address unknown

You are he eby not ed
that on the Oth day o Ma

ch
198
Jeffrey Ray
Me K nnev
res d ng at
Beech Street Apl
Md

d epor Oh o w th he con
sent of Jenn fer Lynn

McK nnev
res d ng at
Beech Street Apt
Md
d epor Oh o f ed n h s
Cour a Pe ton for eave to
adopt Char es W am
M ller a ch ld age three

rChar es

PAY
h ghest
p ces
poss be tor god and s lver
co ns
ngs ewe y e c
Contact Ed Burke Ba be
Shop M dd epor

RAC NE

W TNESS my s1gnature
and the sea of sa d Court
h s 10 h ctay of March

AD 198

Rober E Buck
Judge

Bv Jane E Mar s
Chef
Deputy Clerk

20 21 ( 4) 3

0 17

Publ c Notice

ORDINANCE 519
AN
ORDINANCE
TO
AME NO
ORDINANCE
NO 379 ORDINANCE NO
40 ORDINANCE NO 401
ORDINANCE NO 4JI OR
DINANCE NO 440 OR
DINANCE NO 451 011
DINANCE NO 454 OR
DINANCE NO 456 OR
DINANCE NO 485 OR
DINANCE NO ~TO FIX
SALARIES AND WAGES
OF THE VILLAGE OF
POMEROY OHIO
BE IT ORDAINED as

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX
e RENTALS

fa lows by he Counc; of
the V age of Pomeroy

Oh o

'"

1 1974 Ord nance No 454.

dated November 18 1974
Ord nance No 4.56 dated

TuklDS.t

February 3
1975
Or
d nance No 473 dated June
6 1976 Ordnance ..as

ock

t

a I

dated Augus 20 973 Or
d nance No 4SI da ed July

Fa m Equ pmtn
Wo1n td 0 I!IU

L

of

d nance No 431 dated Mav
IS
972 Ord nance 440

e FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; L \/ESTOCK

eFINANC AL

two th ds

members elected thereto
concurr ng that 0 d nance
No 379 da ed February 6
1969 Ord nance No 40
dated June 1 1970 Or
d nance No
A01 dated
Novem~er
1
1969
Or

eMERCHANDISE

&amp; CB Rep•
1 Win tdToDo

Hay&amp;GIII
Seed &amp; Ft

e TRANSPORTATION
eREAL ESTATE

dated January 1 1978 Or
d nance No
SOl
da ed

February 19 1979 and Or
d nance No 51 de~ ted June
1 1980 s hereby amended
to fhe ex ent that Sect on 1
Paragraph A

and Sect on

1 Paragraph B Paragraph
c Parag apt&gt; D and

Paragraph E are changed

as to lows
Sect on

e SERVICES

1

Tha
the
to low ng sea e of sa aries

and wages for emp oyees of
the v r1 age of Pome oy

Oh o • hereby adoRted
A STREET DEPART
MENT

0 PM 01

lNoonh d~
o Mo da

Street

Superv sor

mon hs serv ce S3 75

after 6 months SA 53
Ass stant
Stree

cemetery Super
Ass,,

Rates and Other lnformat1on

..

W11

. ..

ct o unCle

'"".. "" "
"
"'

u • .,

'"

ldiVI

..

E•cnwo do • htm m m Swod1
on t
t 111
w
vnn nv o ht h•

•d•

n mtmo

Ct Cl o
• k t d Ob VI
m n mum C•th n tdv1n t

t

ll't

I
I

'"

I
I

wii'CIH Cit

bt lit fiCI t

n•

Too

a neg eel expe t
and repa
Lane
742 29S
or "92

IIIV

6

SEVERA L c:ho ce bu d ng
o s Easte n D st c l Tup
pe s P a n s Ches e wa e
Owne w
he p f nan e

vo untee

tp td
N mb

IMI wod UIO

w hUIIIW h

nC•eofht

RON AND BRASS BEDS
0 d urn ure desks god
ewe v
s ve
ng e c Wood
ce bo)(es
a s ant ques
etc cam p ete househo ds
w e M o M er Rt 4
Pomeroy OH
45769 0
n gs

do a s ste

7760

sho

g un

f

&amp;

&amp;

ths $3 25

after 6 months S4 00
Leborers - Street
Cemetero;

Houses to Rent

Fou
and u

house w h ba
y corn 992 398

L STING

ut t es
HUNTING

10 ACRES
M NERALS -

ALL
Loased

w th good we s d ed
w th n one m e Good
fen es

and

a

seve

d ng s

Betl ord

992

2360 o 992 263Y H stor es
fa
sa e
Pome oy
M ddl eport L brar es

Deco ated cake5 fa a oc
cass ens Cha acter cakes
shee cakes and wedd ng

ca

cakes
2583

992 6342 o 992

THERE w
be a w ld
tu key sem nar a
leJak
wa ton farm 5 m es south
of Ct es te on Shade R ver
Rd sat March 3t a 1
p m AI fundament a s ol
w ld tu key hunt ng and
nab tat w
be d scussed
p us mov e and s des of

w ld

keys by Oh 0 Dep

IU

of Na ura Resources
NO

Tresspass ng on

~e

Dravo Corp propertv (Old
Tr S ate

Ma er a

p a pe ty) AI

Corp

v olators wll

you

past

present

or sa e

992 663

257

l ves tock

Apa tn e t
fo Rcn

J AND 4 RM u n Shed
s Pflone 1W2 5434

P

oad
sa es 843

Fu

s eep ng

'J ac r es at

cams

46

Autos for Sale

Space to Ren

o

COU NTRY MOB
Pa k Rou e J3
Po
9f.J

e Oy
4 v

L

srt e

Ph o e

g

T ucks lor Sa

Fa d
91

Headquart"'r~

e

H L WHITESEL

REESE l~t:J/
TRENCHING
SERVICE

ROOFING

w

tc sewe E ec c
G
n e D he
wnte L nc Hook ups
Scp

cT

k.s

coun t y ce
eo
R ou h L
e
Ches h c Oh
Ph 36

no

ELECTRICAL
SUPPLIES

S60

2

PACQUALE

APPLIANCE SERVICE

ELECTRICAL CO
• H e a Pumps

• E e

H ea ng
ng
ndus a Con ne c a
and R es den a

'*

oD

oR

S

Co e ge Rd
acusc
Ph 99'1 3804

Oh

J

a

by

week
K c hen
e ev s. o ou ge Ca you
s o e a d es au iln w h n
soo tee t 'VII 63 o

GALli A
REFRIGERATION
INC
Rhecm Am
&amp;

rna

CUNNINGHAM
&amp; ASSOC
Bil kcrs

THE DABBLE SHOP
NOW OPEN

Morlg~ge

Mo

W d 0 00 9 00
Tu cs F
s
0 00 s 00
C osed Thu days
S op n nnd ee ou
ne
o paste cra ft You can
en o mak nq yo u q Its
d he p
gh n at on
Loc a ed nex
o Da e
H
F a d T acto
n
Pon e oy

992 7544

~

Ca r c

Ph 6

General

OJB

yen

3

Sl

Hou sehold Goods
daub
~

c

q

20~•. 30~.

992 5Y).J

Ant ques

S3

OFF

All CAKF
DECORATING
SUPPLIES
ANN S CAKE
DECORATING
SUPPLIES

418
I ov

0

SALE

o
Avit

Pa es now n our 6 h
yea
s exp;tn d ng rtnd hrts
open ngs to nanilgc s &amp;
dea 1:.' s
Pet v P
x
pe ence t elp fu
Gua an
cd oys md g tt s N o Cf!S
nveslment no co c nq
oe ver ng Ca
&amp; pho c
ne t&gt;~S.a v
Ca
co
Care Day S 8 •UIY ltJ9~

dr

Osborn Rd
Reedsv e Oh
3 6

S4

M sc Me

F R E WO OO
Sp &amp; r1 v

4894

Chol

5

SJO
r1 '19

•

DENNEY
CHAIN LINK
FENCE

J&amp;C
SANITATION
SERVICE

Free Est males

Trash Ptckup In
Th e V llage ol
M ddleporl Oh
Ph 992 5016
or 992 7505

KEN SOLES

245 9113
0

110

KAUFFS
PLUMBING
AND
HEATING

Home

AVA TORS

SIZES 8-18

(.'/-/h • ... •(/,.;,

20 30 H P
- 25 60 H P

M)

- 45 80 H P

12 Park 51
M ddl eport Oh
Ph 992 6263
Any! me

tutu e g ves adv se on ove

all a

s

~

bus ness

rna r age

f you are
&amp; don t know
wh ch way lo urn come n
fa t~dv ce one v s t wiU
co nv n ee you ttlere s a bet
e way Rt 2 .0.40 Oh. o
R ver Rd
Hunt ngtoo

unhappy

J

1 304 523 1121
Read ng $10 Save SJ 00

w h ad By phone on
quest on answered free

$? 00 f01 uch 1'111• n Add 51)(
101 each potle n 101 f Bl &lt;loss
mol and hondtn1 Send to

5HP
T LLEW

Annt Ad1m1

$269 00

1

fOrdable prices Nursing
bras and gowns Water

P1H11n Dtpl

o

SALE

I)(){)(

Saturday

21

New

York

so ed by L berty Chr stan

Chu ch
4

PARAKEET cage &amp; /art

247 2678

Hem y E Clttl.l"d
9916191
ASSOCIATES
Oott e &amp; H oge T
Y¥7

Cash n Carry

10011 Pnnl NAMI ADDRESS
liP Sill ond SlYL£ NUMBER

J

F o

F om

1 Ro s
Rubbe Back

'12 95 &amp; up

~692

r s~t!tt 9•9 1660
OFF rF 0 92 121,

POMEROY

~LANDMARK
LMMMft

~~1

1 H

Buy N ow &amp; S lvc $2 $6 Per Ya d
1 stock lo p ck lrom
c r pet onstalled free

o t u put
Rcgu 1 ll cko d
w1th pa 1

25

.~

"'

CARPET
llli PAODIN
d

r

IB.

KITCHEN
CARPET

7 99 &amp;up

?43 lltsl II Sl New Y'"k NY

~EALIOR

J

I 11

SPRING CARPET SALE

The Da11y Senttnel

w

Phone 1 304 882 3410
BAKE

0

Rutland Furniture Carpet Shop

wv

me on Patch Sth and Ml

&amp;W

Ph Pomeroy
614 992 7038

AIR COND TONERS
&amp; HEAT PUMPS

rna ng wo k
N o ex
pe ence
equ ed
AP
PLY
rete Sit es P 0
BO)( 124 0 R h ond H

HOM E

tenStV e remodel ng
• Electrocal work
• R ool ng work
12 years
Expenence
Greg Roush
Ph 992 7583

Hay &amp; G an
45

S185 00 Jo$500week y dong

FR E NOL Y

3 5 mo

~~=====~6~~~~~=====~~~~-t;:::;~~~~~~~;

Sou h Easte n Oil o Po ed
He eto d Assoc
h an
nua sa e F day n gh Ma
ch 2
98 a 7 p m Ro c k
Sp gs. Fa
g ounds
Pone oy
Oh o Con ac
ud h M e
6 4 596
5564

Spnng Surt News

LOT

Real Estate

DUMP TRUCK
Ph 992 720 I

? 23

Housing

some g ea t g tts a s a Sen
e
Phon
and get on
s
I 992

NY

I

FLOORS

US CALL 991 3816
GET VALUABLE t an ng
as a young bus ness pe son
and ear n good money P us

G a e y
a a
and
owe New y ave hau ed
q92 3996

Two
bed oom
nob e
hom e u
es pa d One
ch d accep ed No pe s
John Shee s 3 and one ha
m es sou h ot M dd epo

44

L nes
L e n ed &amp; Bonded

Rl 3 Box 54
Rae ne Oh
Ph 6 4 843 259

on R

WANT TO SELL 7 ASK

Help Wanted

Utility Buildings

ah~

c oth ng Hause
Baked
gOOds and crafts Spofl

6 months s~ 89
alter 6 monthS S2 97
c
Weier &amp;
Sewer
Distribution Svstem
Super ntendent $5 00
Ass stant u 00
Leborers

LO

Acreage One ac e and one
ha t a g ound oca ed bet
wee n ad R 33 and new Rt
33
ac ng
he
Me gs
Fa g ounds S4000 00 992

M ss

Mete man
2~

TRA LER

$4 000 00 992 25

• 8 ck hoe
• Ex en n ng
• Sep c Sy s e m
• Wa e
Sewe &amp; Gas

SMALL

Hope Pa m R ead ng Tel s

March

DEPAR T

Lots &amp; Acreage

35

be prosecuted There w
be no except ons to th s A
watchman w I be on duty
s gned he 0 avo Corp
AppiP. G eve Plant Box
418 Rae ne Oh

LOOK tor hand s gn

992 5858

e

WANT TO KNOW THE
VALUE
OF YOUR
PROPERTY? ASK NG
FOR AN APPRA SAL
1

S zes
From JOX30

P&amp;S BUIWINGS

3bedoo
obe
Ap p ox ma c y 5
Pome oy o

LAND

Good ocat on o hun
ng cab n w h 14 acres
Lots of game and as
c ose o Fo ked Run
Lake as pass be

Farm Buildings

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes ex
97
H c rest
Hom e
s
a
Ha sonv e Rd

J&amp;F
ENTERPRISES

KOUNTRY
KlUB

S zes f om 4X6 o 2"x40

6

oom house on eve o
Bath nat gas F A u
nace wood cab nets n
k t hen
and ga age
On y SIS 500
N CE v E w
9 acres
n Pome roy w th v ew of
he
ve
Has a c y

THE

ALL STEEL

Mob l e Hom es
to Ren

42

and d
ed we
Oh a
Power u
ty bu d ng
&amp; pad on Rt 24 Wes
Ask ng ust $6 500

appo ntment January Mar

after 6 months SJ 15

6 months S3 00
alter 6 months $3

36 78

Fa m Equ pment

I

NEW

TRAILER
A mas eve

Now

ME GS MUSEUM open by

T ed of penny p nch ng??
Housew ves and motners
c han ge spare me nto SSSS
F C)( b e hours
exce ent
ea n ngs t ee wa drobe
Two even ngs a week For
mo e nformat on ca 992

mo Pd

3

KuKe 400 ga spray
11t
540 dx 16 p ows M F 3 5
o sc c t auge
set
snap on 5 5x38 dua
es
N H 367 Manu e Sp ede
Dunham
4
Ha ogato
rae o 986 304 615

Phone
1 (614) 992 3325

HARDWOOD

e match

ch 992 2264 997 2802

6

hp
d ng
r actor w h
MA
mowe
SS EY
e eFERGUSON
c s a $4758

New Haven Wes V rg n.a

&amp;

I 6 months $3 00

B POL CE
MENT

3

.,.._ A ave y home w th a
am y room 1 bed
ooms 2 t rep aces tu
basemen
J o s and
unattached garage Th s
you w
ke

eve y Sa t n ght 6 30 p m
at he bu d ng n Bashan
F ac o y choke 12 guage
sho guns on y Open s ghts
22
e

Brewe

992 2606

Farm Spaplies
&amp; lh·esleEM

oom house and ba h
w h u ty
oom
C y
wa e and gas $ 50 oo pe
mon h w h S50 00 depos
Loca ted on N ye Ave Ca

Housing
Headquarters

bu

a

D spa chers

.,,

CH P WOOD Po es ma)(
d a me er
4
on a ges
end $12 50 pe ton Bund ed
sab
SIOSO pe
ton
De ve ed to Oh o Pa let
Co
Rock Spr ngs Rd

F re

sponsors

re

PH 992 1882

992 186

ap
ed to Buy
ass ngs
wedd ng bands anyth ng
s amped OK l4K o 8K
god S lv e cons pocke t
wa ches Ca J Joe C a k a
992 2054 at C a k s Jewe y
s o e Pom erjv Oh o 45769

~2

oa

5864

Wr~n

ca

e Small Carpen e Jobs

AKC beag e c hamp onsh p
b ood ne pupp es Phone
a e S p n n Athens 592

992 5869

Sx

General

Matern ty Ctotheo at Iii

I 6 mon

Super

R!!!_Es.!!!!._-

Townsh p

394 0 669 4535

or Wnte Dally Senltnel Class1fled Dept
111 Court St Pomero'f 0 4576?

n my I ome

M onaay hrough Fr day
Ve v c heap nte es ed n
dong someth ng mo e so
han to
he money
Rc ercnces 992 2B30

OLD CO NS pocke wa
ches class r ngs wedd ng
bands d amends God or
s ve Cal J A Warns ey
T easu e Chest Co n Shop
Athens OH 594 427

w

exam nat on unde oath
of a 1 the part es n nterest
who may be present and a
whom lawful not ce has
been g \len w
be had
befo e sad Court at Me gs
County Proba e Cou t
Cou thouse
Pome oy
Oh a on he 27th day of
~1J 198
a
0 o c ock

e ANNOUNCEMENTS

SHOOT

P ANO

am McK n
ney and that hear ng of
sa d Pe t on and the

PHONE 992-2156

WANTED
TO
B UY
GOLD
S LVER
PLAT NUM STERL NG
COINS R NGS JEWEL R
Y M SC
ITEM S AB
SOLUTE
MARKET
PR CE GUARANTEO ED
BURKETT
BARB ER
S&gt;iOP
M DDLEPORT
OH 0997 3416

Pomeroy 992 2689

Rae ne Gun Cub ever y
Fr day n gh star ng at
1 30 p m
Factory c hoke
guns on v

ea s and fo a c hange of
he name o sa d ch ld to

WANT AD INFORMATION

GUN

Spec al zong In
Re Rool ng

Lots &amp; Acreage

35

c an

fu
th ee bed oom
br ck home n Baum
18
Wanted to Do
ton Pom e oy Oh o
hea t cen a
a r Ca
6d29
Fu nace epa rs e ectr ca 1.,.,.,.,
687
wo k
p umb ng
mob e
home o res dence 992

W I babys f

Announcef!!!!!tS

J

Beau lui Custom
au t Garages
ca 1 for tree s d ng
est mates 9•9 2801 or
949 l,860
No Sunday Ca Is
3 1 tt c

WELD NG done 10 years

H sw I
Bu n au hearts we ave
h m st
Sad y m ssed by Daddy and
Mommy
(Roger and
Ch sty and s sters K m
ber y and Jenn f e

BISSELl
SIDING CO.

For all of your w1r
ms needs

992 5682

41

_,;,;, ., .• ,. .. ~'''"''"r

Vonvl &amp; Alum mum
SIDING

5858
Wanted to Buy

9

MILlER ELECTRIC
SERVICE
Le Geo ge M ti e check
your pre se nt e ec tr cal
sys em
Res dent a
&amp; Com me
al

Mon Fr

Hr

Equ pment Co on u s
ce ed'
Lo s
your
Hwy
35
Hende son
operata s I cense? Phone
W VA ca I for deta s 675 992 2143
3440 Sa Mar c h 21s
q
am

mun ty Cen e

ROGER HYSELL'S
GARAGE

e)( per ence equ pped o do

AUTOMOB LE
SURANCE
been

W Va

B&lt;1I1E~ ~

REPA R or remodel ng
work f oars doo s wa
pane ng ce ng o flea
e s d ng 992 2759

AUCT ON
Large fa m
equ pmen1 auct on Sa t
March 21st
a
S ders

Fr day

3242

Have vacancy for e der v
Room and boa d aundry
Reasonab e 9Y2 6022

M ap ewood

eve y

Business Services

ac and gas S75 00 A so 25
nch co or TV o SHXl 00

O~RED

S•tUitons Wanted

12

949 2285

AUCT ON

Lag
sp l tie
S350 00
Retr gera o
or camper

669 453S

8

n9h 7 p m Hartto d Com

M sc Merchan se

by Larry W

Dt ve A Lttlle -

Save A Lot

RUTLAND FURNITURE

Ma111 St

742 2211

�..•••
•

Pomeroy
.

Friday, March 20,1911 :

Middleport, Ohio

'

·• •

Accidents leave 2 hurt

I"

••
••
..•.
...
•••
:c

Two people were cited in a series
Louise E. Richards, 56, Thunnan,
of traffic accidents investigated and Marty L. Conley, 22, Jackson,
Thursday by the Gallia-Meigs Post were both eastbOund on U.S. 30 at
•
of the Ohio Highway Patrol.
8: S5 a.m. when Richards attempted
'*
Troopers said Jerry L. Rowe, 27, to pass Conley, lost control on ice
•
Racine, pulled from a private and collided.
driveway onto SR 124 in Meigs CounBoth vehicles were moderately
ty at 8:25 a.m. and collided with an damaged, the report said.
eastbOund vehicle driven .by Teresa
The patrol went to U.S. 33 in Meigs
~
L. Holstein, \7, Syracuse.
· County at 10 :00 a.m. when a truck
....
Moderate damage was reported to driven by William E. Lewis, 38,
·~
both autos and Rowe was cited for Altavista, Va. , slid orr the road irito a
failure to yield.
ditch to avoid a vehicle driven by
In Gallia County. the patrol noted Calvin R. DOwell, 34, Pomeroy.
.I ~
Sherry A. White, 28, Gallipolis, also
DOwell's vehicle reportedly pulled
~
'( ,
pulled from a private driveway on from a private drive into the path of
/J ~
SR 7 at S:34 p.m. into the path of an the truck, which suffered moderate
•
•'•
auto driven by Sherman R. Kemper, damage.
••
34, Gallipolis.
Aceording to the report, a car
Kemper's vehicle was moderately driven by Shawn P. Hayes, 25,
••••
damaged and White wa• cited for Lowell, was northbound on Raccoon
•
~·
failure to yield.
1'wp. Rd. 37 in Gallia County at 4:19
a
••
The patrol said Sonja J . Owen. 27, p.m. and collided on a hillcrest with
Bidwell, was southbOund on SR 160 a vehicle driven by Russell L.
••lo•
at 6:50a.m. when she applied her Ferguson, 30, Gallipolis.
brakes for the intersection with U.S.
••
Both vehicles were moderatef.y
JEANS 'N THINGS - Mn. Celia BaUey Ia pictured In a aeetton ol ber '~
30, and slid on an ice-covered patch damaged.
new business, JeaDS ' n Things, wblch has opened Ia a part of the buAineu :
of road, colliding with a parked
The patrol said Randall W. Bright.
room occupied by the Custom Print Store al234 E. Main St.lier new shop :
vehicle owned by Gleim R. Johnson, 29. Gallipolis Ferry, was merging
Is featuring Western attire lncludlnc cowboy bats plus summer shorts : ~
4!i, Gallipolis.
onto U.S. 30 at8 : 15 p.m. when he lost
and tops. It is open fromlO a.m. lo 4:30p.m. eacb day e1cepl Wednelday ••
Owen S car was severely damaged control of his vehicle and collided
when It closes at noon.
~
and the Johnson vehicle suffered three times with li concrete divider,
slight damage.
causing moderate damage to his . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -:,
Troopers said autos driven by ca r.

•

..
.

...

...
'

I

'"
•

\
\

'I

1

NEW BUSINESS - The Wizard Game Room has been opened at 236
E. Main St., Pomeroy, by James Bailey. The room is open from·IO a.m. to
11 p.m. Monday through Thursday; 10 a.m. to 12 midnight, Friday and
Saturday and from 12 noon to 10 p.m. Sunday evening. Featured are pool,
electronic games, pinhuU machines and a snack hur. Bailey is pictured in
the new business room.

Area deaths
April Parsons

Valley and was released on,Monday .
Miss Parsons' immediate sur-

April Pai'sons, 20, New Haven ,
who was involved in an accident

vivors include her mother. Dorothy

early Sunday morning on Rt . 62.
several miles north of Point
Pleasant, died Thursday morning in
St. Mary's Hospital.
She was a driver in the two-vehicle
accident, which is still being in·
vestigated by the Mason County
Sheriff's Department.
Miss Parsons was taken to
Pleasant Valley Hospital followtng
the accident, was treated for head
·injuries, and transferred to St.
Mary's.
The driver of the other vehicle,
Stephen 0. Jenkins, 26, Racine, was
also injured. and was released
Thursday morning from Pleasant
Valley Hospital. A passenger in the
Parsons car. Jenny J ames, 20 , New
Haven, was hospitalized at Pleasant

Parsons. sister, Anna Parsons, one
brother. Joseph Parsons, all of New
Haven.

Funeral ser\'ices will be held at 2
p.m. Sunday fr om Foglesong
Funeral Home with Rev. Cass Hut·
chinson officiating. Burial will be in
Kirkland Memorial Gardens. Frien·
ds may call at the funera l home
from 24 and 7·9 p.m. Saturday.

Kt•nnt•th

E.

Mankin

Kenneth E. Mankin , 5.1. Pomeroy,
died Thursday at the Veterans Ad·

A song f~st featuring Russ Spen·
cer and The Gospel Tones will be
held Sunday at 7 p.m. at the
Syracuse Church of the Nazarene.
Pastor is James Kittle.

Veterans Memorial
Admitted .. Sandra Darling,
Ostrander; Albert Smith, Pomeroy :
Charlene Patterson, Rutland ; Jenny
Williamson. Rutland ; Mary Gilkey.
Middleport : Roy Rutter. Pomeroy :
GladysShwnway, Long Bottom.
Dischurged-Terry Derenbergcr,
Kenneth Welsh , Brien Taylor. Alva
Reed, Lowell Coll ins , J osep h
Vadish.

Out un arrival
The Pomeroy Fire Department
was called to the Richard Elliott
home in Colwnbia Township at 7:09
a.m. Friday. Soot in the chimney
had caught fire . The blaze was out
when the department arrived, Fire
Chief Charles Legar •eports.

Snow greet~ first day
The first day of spring arrived in
Meigs County with another snowfa ll

Terminate 24 cases

' ELBERFELD$

Fourteen defendants were fined
Blevins, Pomeroy , $liO and costs,
and 10 others. forfeited bonds in
five days confinement, two days ol
Meigs County Court Wednesday. ,
confi nement suspended, no
Fined by Judge Patrick O'Brien
operator's license, SIOO and costs.
were Jack Sparks, South Point,
reckless operation.
Ruby Vaughan, Middleport, and
Candace Brothers, Shade, $21 and
Forfeiting bonds were U.Donna
costs each, speed; Claudia Daniels, Bellomy, Branchland, W. Va .. Jef·
Crown City. Sherie Shaffer, frey Brugger. Norcross, Ga., Debbie
Pomeroy, and Sarah J . Tuttle, · Perchikoff, VanWert, Lewis J . G.
Gallipolis, $23 and costs each, Berkhimer, Paintsville, Ky., and
speed; Lawrence Smith, Jr. , Clifton, Dennis Ritchie, Columbus, $40.50
$10 and costs, stop sign violation;
each, Sf'Ced; Russell Fitchpatrick ,
Arden Kerns, Belpre, $21 and costs, Rutland, $60.50, no operator's licenspeed; Helen Savage, Pomeroy , $10 se; Pamela Pennington, Rutland
and costs, failure to yield right of and Ronald Cremeans. Pomeroy.
way; Robert Erruners, Dayton, $25 $30.50 each, failed to display valid
and costs, speed; Jason Davis, re gistration ;
David .Stroud,
Pomeroy, $10 and costs, failed to Gallipolis, $500 and costs, reckless
display valid registration tag ; Jef- operatiOn; Theodore Coppick. Por·
· frey Friend, Long Bottom, $30 and tland, $150 and costs, 10 days con·
costs, improper registration ; Ressie finement , suspended, six months
Shafer, Racine, $10 and costs, probatiOn and restitution, criminal

OPEN FRIDAY TILL 8

BOYS LOVE SHIRTS
SHORTS·
Perfect for their athletic ac·
V · neck top with
tivities!
pull
·on shorts. Sizes 6
number ;
to 20.

STOP ,in . See our new line of boys '
knit shirts, shorls, tank tops . Big
Selection of mix and match styles.
Take advantage of

earlv selection.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY ·

rninistra tion Hospital in Huntington. r;ope
::r:at:in:;g:a~n:u~ns;a;f~e;;~;;·;L;;ut;h;er;;;r;ru;
·s;ch;i;er;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
W. Va .. following a lingering illness.
1~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Arrangements are

bein~

fur the third day in a row. The inch of
snow that fell overnight. however.
was apparently to be short lived and
roads were relatively dear this mur·
ning.

~alt·

~

made at

the Ewing Funeral Home where
friends ma)' c~ll after 7 p.m. Satur·
day.

Meigs County happenings ..
Songfest set Sunday

..

ARMSTRONG
CEILING TILE
SPECIALS
25% OFF

MOVING SOON
TO NEW LOCATION.
NEED MORE ROOM
HURRY INI SAVEl

2x4 LAYW PANELS
Numbers 280, 283, 198, 922,

starts S.1turdav•

901, 908, 936

The Meigs Salvation Army an-

12x12 CEILING TILE

noun ce~

the sale of the Easter

edition of War Cry will go on sale
tomorrow in Middleport. The sa le in
Pomeroy will be on Apri l 4. Anyone
missed may call 992-5472 or 992·7480
to rccei ve a copy.

1979
FORD LID WAGON
Countr y SQutre Loaded .

SATURDAY
SIGNUP FOR participants of
Syracuse-Minersville swruner hull
program will be I to 4 p.m. Saturday
at Syracuse Municipal Hall ;
registration fee of $6.50 must be paid
befure season opens .

SUNDAY
MEETING FOR officers of
various leagues of Big Bend Area
swnmer ball program schedul ed for
6 p.m. Sunday at Drew Webster Post
39 Home in Pomeroy, to discuss the
program fo r tiaseball and softhull

486, 12, 13, 17, 258

. . . . . . . . .-.. . . . . . . . . . . _,.w.
are•.....,
1980' MUSTANG

J IB mol or. oulo
lll9
1975 DODGE STATION WAGON • • • • • ••• • • • ••• • ••• ~ 5
1976 HORNET STATION WAGON •••••• ••••••• ••• '1895

6cy l .. air cond .. good cond .

1 clr sl ondorCI

,

1974 VW DASHER ••••••••••••••••••••••••,. 1695
'
''Dr . o cy r
1974 FORD MAVERICK •••••••••••••••••
••• '1295
6 c yl , dulo , p s , l1ffle r ough
sc95
1973 FORD MAVERICK •••••••••••••••••••• -u
Run s qood . but r ough
u 95
1975 FORD PINTO •••••••••••••••••••••••••••
Flar bod . sl anda rd
169
1968. GMC PICKUP••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 5
· UP••••• ~ •••••••••••••••
St andard
'1095
1973 CHEVY .LUV PICK
4 Dr . high mileage ,
1976 MERCURY .~ ......................•... 1095
~

I

1979 FAIRMONT

FUlURA

$4695

1979 FIESTA

1978 FORD F250
Club Cab. Long Bed ,
2895
Auto ., PB / PS

·

I

cloth inter ior. 2.800 miles. Traded in on
new Cad illac diesel.

1981 OlDS 88 ROYALE SEDAN
jadesrone 1nle nor . Demo." 4,500

Wh1te,

$4895
SPRING SPECIALS

CHESTER, OHIO
985-3301

t

•

mil es

2 DR .

season .

wn11e vrnyl root , blue c loth

mtertor . 8,500 m iles

BAUM TRUE VALUE
Social Calenrhlr

~295

$14 995
198 ~~ ~k 9!ao~[~~~~! ~~~.~ $11 495
va 6 ' · .wh1t e,

---

Middleport· Pomeroy, Ohio

1981 CADIUAC DEVILLE SEDAN

Numbers 260, 117, 149,

--

The Daily Sentinel

1979 PINTO

3 DR .

3 DR .

s3995.

$3695

1979 CHEV. CAMARO

1978 MERCURY

z 28

COUGAR XR7

ss795

$4095

1978 CHEV. MAL

CLASSIC WAGON

$4095

1978 CHEV. BLAZER. loaded...................... '5995
1979 PONTIAC TRANS AM .......... ... :.......... 16995
1979 OLDS CUl BROUGHAM CPE .............. , 16395
1979 OLDS ROYALE SEDAN ...................... '5695
1980 OLDS CUTLASS LS SEDAN .................. 16795 ·
1980 CHEV. CAPRICE ClASSIC SEDAN· .......... ·16795
1979 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME CPE. .. ......... 16295
1977 CHEV. MONTE CARLO CPE... , .............. 13795
1973 CADILLAC DEVILLE SEDAN.,,_,, .. ........ '1095
1972 DODGE STATION WAGON ....... -............ 1695

3 DR .

1976 CHEV. CAPRICE WAGON ..................... 1 16~

140 H.P. MERCURY OUTBOARD
Great for Fishing, Skiing or Pleasure

PAT HILL FORD, INC.
.

1979 CHEV. CHEVEnE SEDAN ...... .. ...... ..... '4695

1975 PLYMOUTH DUSTER CPE... · · .. •.... ·.. ·· ·•• '595

$2695

Parson~

Lt

1977 PINTO

19' STARCRAn BOAT

See: Garland
Ph . 992 · 2146

1981 OLDS CUTIASS BROUGHAM CPE.
Dk sdnosrone .
landtlu root 5,000 m i les .
~:~~· $8749

or Pal Hill, Gen . Mgr .
Middleport, OH.

1976 PONTIAC CATALINA SEDAN· ...... ·.... •••••· 1695
1972 VW SUPER. BEEnE ...................... -.. '1295

SIMMONS OLDS-CADILLAC INC.
See or phone one of these courteous salesmen:
Pete Burns, Marvin Keebaugh,
Mike Anderson or George Harfis
"You'll Like Our Qualitv wav of Doing Business"
Ph. 992·6614
• &lt;

Pomerov, OIIIJI
'

•

•

A Multirr(edr~ Inc .

Friday, Ma rc h 20, 1981

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