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                  <text>Carpenter
Personals

Mrs. Noble Hamon is improving at
home following treatment at the
O'Bleness Memorial Hospital in
Athens.
'
Mrs. Jake Edwards spent a week
at the Pleasant Valley Hospital,
Point Pleasant, W. Va. for observation and treatment. •
Mr, and Mrs. Norman Shaner,
Jody and Kevin, Athens, were recent
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Jordan, Joshua and Jeremy .
Day Canode of the Point Rock
community has been returned to the
Holzer Medic•• I Center but is reported to be somewhat improved.

need fund of the State Grange was
planned for next 111onth when the
Columbia Grange 2435 met Friday
evening. The dress contest and en-A service of prayer and self- ; tries were discussed. The Grange
denial was held at the recent banquet was announced for April 24
meeting of the Temple United at the Salisbury Elementary &amp;hool.
Methodist Women at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Mendal Jordan atMrs. Arthur Crabtree. Mrs. Mendal tended a Grange ritualistic contest
Jordan had the program and an of- in Jackson County where a Meigs
fering was taken to send !or special County youth team participated.
outreach programs of the church.
Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Devine,
Madge Dye will host the April
Coalumbus,
were weekend guests of
meeting at her home.
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Dorsey
A bake sale to benefit a special Jqrdan, Rick and Ralph.

on Sunday Mr. Dye accompanied
them to Thurman with a dinner at
Bob Evans Restaurant.

Mrs. Clyde Walker, Thunnan,
celebrated her birthday recently at
the home of her father, Dale Dye.
Joining Mrs. Walker at the Dye
home for the observance were her
sister, Mrs. Glen Irwin, Marysville,
and Mrs. Freda Smith and Murl
Galaway, Carpenter. Mr. and Mrs.
Chester Baumgardner of Coshocton,
her brother-in-law and sister, spent
Saturday night at the Dye home, and

LEASING
..,EQUI,PMENT

. . .TO BUSINESS, INDUSTRY.
--AND THE PROFESSIONS BANK ONE OF POMEROY NA.

614/992-2133

Voi.29,No. 240
Co yrighted 1981

Pomeroy

SHADYSIDE, Ohio (AP) - "Pay
ain't everything."
The comment, between sips of
beer and turns at the pool table in
the Valley Inn here, summed up an
eastern Ohio coal miner's feelings
about the proposed United Mine
Workers' contract.
Many American workers, who
have seen their paychecks
repeatedly mugged by rampant inflation, might not agree with the
Mines of the Southern Ohio Coal
Company were Idle today due to !he
expiration of the mlnen' conlracl.
There were no plckelllnes nor mine
personnel at the sites. Supervisors of
the three mines were attending a
Dlslrlcl 6 meeting relative to the
new contract being held near
Shadeslde.

NEW FOR
PRIN
SALE

•

••

FRIDAY, MARCH 27th- SATURDAY, MARCH 28th
OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TILL 8:00

BOYS' KNIT SHIRTS

FURNITURE DEPT. 3rd FLOOR

LAST SHIFT - The last shUt of miners to work prior to the United
Mine Workers strike, walk out of the Flat Gap mine near Norton,
Virginia, Thursday. The workers of the Flat Gap mine joined 10,500 a&lt;'ll•e Virginia UMW members In a strtke against the Soft Coal Operators.
(AP Laserphoto).

SALE

Middleport, Ohio, Frida , March 27,1981

1 Section/ 10 Pages
15 Cents
A Multimedia Inc . NewS
r

District 6 leader predicts
defeat for new coal package

IN
POMEROY

•

en tine

at

e

..,81\NK .ONE.~---..

ELBERFELDS

WOMEN'S
SLACKS

•

1

rt, Ohio

Pa e-12-The Da il Sentinel

miner's appraisal. But the miner
was thinking more about the survival of the UMW and his long-term
job prospects in the coal fields.
The miner said he didn't trust
repurters, one of several with the
same opinion around (.)istrict 6
headquarters in nearby Dilles Bottom, so he wouldn't give his name.
But he was emphatic in his dislike o{
the pact that UMW President Sam
Church was to promote during a
meeting with District 6 local

representatives today . District' 6
represents about 15,000 miners in
southeast Ohio and the West
Virginia panhandle.
The miner was upset by provisions
allowing unionized coal companies
to lease mines to non-union firms
and removing the $1.90 a ton royalty
companies must pay when nol\-union
coal is loaded through UMW tipples.
" They can go in and throw out the
unions,'' said the miner, a mechanic
and six-year veteran of the mines,
District 6 President Ed .BeU
predicted Thursday most miners oppose the contract for that reason. He
already has said rejection could
mean an even longer walkout than
the 111-Qay walkout in 1978.
Miners struck at 12:01 this morning when the old pact expired,
sticking with their "n&lt;H:ontract, nl)o
. work" philosophy. The walkout was
expected while a vole was taken on
the contract proposal.
Bell criticized the proposal at a
news conference Thursday, saying
Church sold out the UMW for $100 .
He referred to a provision granting
certain coal mine widows $100 monthly pensions, for which negotiators
traded the royalty provision.
The payments would only go to
widows whose husbands retired
before about 1974 and were receiving
a pension when they died. The
provision would take affect Jan, I,
1982.

ON STRIKE- These unidentUled coal miners are shown walking oul
uf the Cannelton No.8 mine In Fayette County, West Virginia, Tbunday
night. They are among the members of the United Mine Worken wbo
began a nationwide strike atl2:01 a.m. EST Friday. AP Laserpboto).

Made by Spr,ng toor crew
neck and V neck styles Sill~

6 ro 18 Sol1d co lors and rwo
tone com bJnatJOAS Short
steeve s ryte s
Boys S2 ,9S Kn.l
Sh1rts • • • • • • • • • • • • IJ .SO
Boy S S4 .9S Knit
Sh1rts . • •. •. • • • • • • S4 .20
Boys 55 .95 Knit"
. Sh1rts ••••••• • • • • • SS .OS
Boys U .96 Knit
90

Quatny Levi's and wrangler
brands •!l m•sses s•zes 5. 6 ro 20
Lev• s &lt;'lrl' 100°o woven ft?)( f unz
ed dac ron poly es ter '" regular
and shorf lengths Wranglers

are st retch potv ca non blends '"
.vh.rc , ran -or blue

Reg. 519.00••• Sale $15. i9
Reg. 520.00 ... Sale 515.99
~teg. 521.00 .. .Sale 516.79
Reg . $25.00•• •Sale 519.99
Reg . S34.00 ... Sale527.19

•••••••••••. ss.

3 piece suits, baseball
\ outfits, 2 piece outf its,
\ bubbles and take · me·
! • home outfits.
Sizes newborn th ru
size 7.
Reg. S6.00· ·.Sale S4.79
Reg. 59.00 • • •Sale S7.19
Reg . 513.00 • Sales lli.39
Reg . $18.00•SaleS14.39

Sofas, 2 piece and 3 piece su iles .
Many new suites have arrived
iust this week . Hurry in and save
20°'0 0~ any suite in stock!

All Living Room Suites

20% OFF

BOYS'· SHORTS

FASHION JEANS

JACKET SAL£

OUTFITS

LIVING ROOM SUITES

Men's Blue Denim

CHILDREN'S

LITTLE BOYS'

Senate Republicans turn back move

Knits , denim cut oils
and cotton polyester
blen6s . Excelleflt
selection spring and
·
summer styles. Sizes .. .
8tol8 .
~ 1
Boys S3 .95
.~ !1 ~,
Shorts---······ $3.35 1~
,· \
Boys$4 .95
•

Srr a,g tn leg ana ooo r f lare
st v tes MqsT att pr e wast1ed
blue denim
New sTyles
setec tJon M en' s f ulle r c ut
fasnlon den.nls m c tu aed
Men 's 111 .95 Fashion
JEANS • • • • • • • • • • Sloi.OO
Men 's 111 .95 FasP1ion
JEANS • • • • • • • • • • S14 . 78
Men ' s 120,95 Fasnion
JEANS • • • • • • • • • • S16 .34
Men ' sS22 .95Fasflion
.
JEANS • • • • • • • • • SH .90

Sale prices on all our
children ' s jackets.
Just right for cool '
sprinq mornings!

Prices Start At
$318

r.r·
2 Day
Sale

Shorts •••••••• , S4. 20

!

1 Shorts . ••••••••• ss.os
Boys S8.95

/

B"s~.9l

·

' 1

\ . ,
-.
· 1 .~

1
'
l-A..J

1
,'

Shorts •••••••• S7.60

FOR TWO DAYS ONLY

SALE/

CANNON.

®ROYAL FAMILY

-ED SHEETS
REDUCED 20%

Full · Twin . Kmg_and tiJeen Bed sizes in fitted and
flat sheets With p~llow cases to match . Solid colors
and patterns. You Ill ike the selection .

SPRING
SALE

READY MADE DRAPERIES

•

'

D_is~ontinued

Now' s the time to stock up on Hanes quality
underwear for the whole year . save on com ·
tort able, all ·cotton Hanes underwear for men
and boys Boxers, too . Check our low spring
P.nces on Hanes , ... the underwear that
makes you feel good all under ." ·

patterns and colors.
L1m1ted quantity. Regular prices $7.99 to
$52.99 . While they last,

::.~\&amp;l.....l~

DRESS SHIRTS

The new spring selection in s izes 141f2 to
1712 neck . Solids and patterns. Full cut and
tapered sty les .
Men:s $12.00
Men , s $15,00
Men, s 516.00
Mens $18.00

van
van
Van
Van

Heusen
Heusen
Heusen
Heusen

supporters of the reductions sought
to assure their colleagues it was not
political suicide to approve the cuts.
"Veterans are not going to the
polls and throw anyone out over this
vote," said Sen . Pete Domenici, RN. M.. chairman of the Budget Com-

Republican Leader Howard Buker
promptly hailed the 56-44 vole as an
indication the Senate would wind up
suppo~ing a three-year package uf
cuts·afung the lines of the $81 billion
the Budget Conunittee is recommending.
"This is the toughest vote we've

mittee .

chairman of the Veterans Affairs
Conunittee, said the money could be
c.ut from hospital construc~ion
budgets and by reducing nonessential medical personnel. "Not
one benefit, not one pension, not one
thing for the veterans of America
was cut back in this budget."

AU Republicans except Sen.
l.owell Weicker of Connecticut voted
~~ainst restoring the funds. A handful of Democrats also sided with the
GOP majority.
The veterans lobby is one of the
most powerful in Congress, and GOP

Sen. Donald Riegle, [).Mich., said
the cuts amount to a broken promise
by Reu~un, whom he said promised
veterans during last year's cam·
paign that he would not seek to
reduce their benefits.
But Sen. Alai] Simpson, R-Wyo.,

The Senate rejected · a second attempt to restore funds for the
·veterans Administration, 5H4. The
proposal, by Sen. Alan Crbuoton, [).
Calif., would have restored $129
million to the 1982 budget.

Reagan would veto one year tax cut
WASHINGTON (API - White
House budget director David A.
Stockman warned Congress on
T~ursday that President Reagan,
holding firm on his desire {or a
multiyear tax cut, '' would veto" a
one-year tax cut bill.
It was the first time an udntinistration official said directly
that Rea~an would veto a measure
that did not inClude the administration's recommendation fur
a multiyear. across-the-board
reduction in individua I income
taxes.

Rep, Dan Rostenkowski, D-Ill.,
chairman of the tax-writing House
Ways and Means Conunittee, said
Wednesday that Reagan's call for a
three-year cut in personal income
tax •·ates averaging 10 percent a
year was all but dead and he would
seek, instead, a one-year tax cut
weigh!L'&lt;I to help lower and middle
income wage earners.
In the face of Rostenkowski's
remarks. 20 Senate Republicans appealed to Reagan to promise to veto
any tax bill that lacks his proposed
across-the-board 30 pcr~cnt income

tax m:luction over dhree years.
Earlier ,
a
Republi oan
congressman said Reagan is deter~
minc&gt;d to press !or ·his tax cut
package, despite growing opposition
in the House.
Rep. Barber Conable of New York,
the ranking Republican on .the taxwriting House Ways and Means
Conunittee, emerged !rom a White
House meeting with the president
and told reporters Reagan gave no
indication he is prepared to compromise on the tax-cut portion of his
l'tonumic plan. _

All bids exceeded estimates
Mei~s

MEN'S VAN HEUSEN
SHORT SLEEVE

Polyester knit slacks in jun.· or sizes 3 thru
20.
.
Large array of spring colors .
REG. $15.00 ..... ... ...... SALE 511.99
REG. $17.00 .............. SALE 513.59
REG. $23.00 ...... ... .... . SALE $18.39
REG. 525.00 .............. SALE $19.99

had this year, and I expect the
toughest vote we will have in the
budget battle," Baker said after
'Republicans used their majority
strength to defeat the move to
restore $295 million that Rea~an
wants to cut for 1982.

All bids received Thursday for the
County Trainin~ Center and
Workshop were at least $200,000 over
the estimated rust therefore , Frank
Lee, architect, must review the
project , then make recommendations to Meigs County commissioners on which way to proceed.
Submittin!: bids were, !:•neral
contractors, C. A. Yeager, Portsmouth, $993,000; Paul Contracting,
Zanesville, $998,000; Sherman R.
Smoot, Colwnbus, $%6,160; Fick

1h PRICE

SAVE 20%

JUNIOR SLACKS

and Karr Construction, Pomeroy ,
$1,036.364: King Contracting,
Jackson, $944,600: Karr Construction, Pomeroy, $868.400.
Submitting mechanical contracts
were Gei~er Brothers, L.o~an,
$159,300; Ber~ an Brothers, Marietta, $175,200; A. J . Stockmeisler
Corp., jackson, $174,385. Submitting
bids for heating and air conditioning
only were A. T. F. Sheet Metal,
Co lumbus, $165,900 ; Riley Nestor,

$219,125.
Electrical contractors submitting
bids were Pickerington Electric,
Marietta, $214,302 ; Southeastern
Electric, Crown City, $173,500;
Charlie Damron and Co . ,
Charleston, $210,000; Krats Inc.,
Huntington, $214,630.
·
Food service contractors submitting bids were General Hotel
Supply Co., $32,708: Wasserstron
Co .. Col u1 nbus, $30,793.

Shirts: ..... ~9.59
Shirts . .... s11.99
Shirts ..... 512.79
Shirts ..... 514 .39

Special Group

MUSIC DEPT.

MEN'S KNIT SHIRTS

REG.

'39.95

f'..
6 string junior guitar with
golden sunburst finish.
Ideal beginner's guitar .

Hanes
UNDERWEAR

SAVE 20%
ON HANES UNDERWEAR
FOR MEN AND BOYSI

SALE

HARMONY GUITAR

CLOSE-OUT SALE!

WASHINGTON lAP) - Senate
Republicans, setting · out to give
President Reagan the budget cuts he
ll'ants. turned back a Derm&gt;cratic
move Thursduy to restore nearly
S300 million for veteruns programs.

(

• Styles inS, M, L)lnd XL sizes .
Short sleeve
Sol1d colors, two· tones . Crew neck and v
nec k styles. Made by Springfoot.
Men ' s 3.95 Knit ~hirts• ·3.20
Men ' s 6.95 Knit Shirts•• 5.70
Men ' s 7.95 Knit Shirts•• 6.50
Men 's 8.95 Knit Shirts••7.30
. 'Aen' s 9.95 Knit Shirts. :8.20

ELBERFELDS
IN '

TOP HONORS - Amoag lite top hoaoreea al the Jewell, Star Farmer Award and Jeff Moore, oulaaul awardl t.nquel of the Meigs High Chapter of slandllll! oenior of thl• school year . Set&gt; anoth~r picture
the Future ~·armen of America were three memben, I .on Pag~ 10.
to r, Greg Bolen, Star Greenband Award: Terry

Appearing at a House Budget
Conunittee hearing, Stockman was
asked how enactment of a one--year

reduction would affect the administration's projections for the
economy.
Stockman replied : "The president
would veto a one-year tax cut and
we'd have to ~o back to the drawing
board, so I would strongly urge
Congress not to do that."
The president's public position ha9
been to say he would not comment if
he would veto any legislation until it
1·eached his desk.

Terminate
17CETA
employees
The Conununity Action Agency
has received written notification of
the tennination of the Title VI CETA
(Comprehensive
Education
Truining Act) program. That termination will affect 17 area CETA
employees-10 in Gallia County and
seven in Meigs County.
CAA Director Joe Barsotti said
Thursday termination of the Title VI
Program-a public service prograrn·will become effective at the end of
the work day on Aprilt7. The 17 employees affected are in the process of
receiving official notification of
their terminations.
According tb Director Bursotti,
cancellation of the title program was
mandated by a recent reduction in
Department of Labor funding
allocations. The program had
previously been operating under a
hiring free.ze.
The April 17 cutback is the first
reduction this year in federal funds
that has had an lnunmediate
negative impact on local CETA
programs, Barsotti said.
Barsotti added, however, that the
Reagan adntinistration's proposals
to un-fund the Employment Opportunity Act and to not fund the
Conununity Service Act could lead
to a total elimination of public service progranll! ln the area .
"On the surfat-e it appeurs we
could be o.ut of business," Barsotti
said, "without th~ programs we
wou;d have no le~lil basis for
existence.''

ToDAY

••• IN THEW

.
LD :
~:.

::

;

Dairy bill gets swift action
WASHINGTON - The House gave swift passage by voice vote Thursday to the administration's bill to scrap an April! boost in dairy subsidies.
It sent the bill back to the Senate so that chamber could complete

enactment on the first of President Reagan's spending cuts slated to
dear Congress. The Senate already had approved a similar bill.
The !louse approved the measu1·e without a roll call after a brief
debate in which members from dairy-producing districts protested
that farmers were being forced to bear an unfair burden in the fight
again::;t inflation.
·

Agents arrest intruder
WASHINGTON - The Secret Service has charged a 2:&gt;-year-Old
woman with unlawful entry after she climbed over a White House fence.

Spokesman James Boyle said Antoinette Alicia James, for whom
the Secret Service has no address. was arrested inunedialely after she
climbed the fence ncar East Executive Avenue , The woman was unarmed, Boyle said.

Gift causes numerous problems
WASHINGTON - The Reagan administration is corning under fire
for accepting $270,000 !rom oilmen to redecorate the White House. A
consumer critic called the money "gra tuities for services rendered,"
and a congresswoman sa id the tux-deductible donations may end up
costing the government almost three times the $50,000 federal stipend
turned down by first lady Nancy Reagan.
The White House announced last month that President and Mrs.
Reagan were declining $50,000 appropriated by Congress to refurbish
the family living quarters and would finance the project instead with
private contribution".

Avoids resignation questions
WASHINGTON - Secretary of State Alexander M. Haig Jr.,
described by one caree r diplomat as " limping pretty badly" after a
run-in with powe•iul White House staffers, is avoiding questions about
whether he will resign.
Hai~ joked about the episode Thursday and said he was "anxious to
get on with U1e conduct of foreign policy."
But under questioning by reporters. he passed up an opportunity to
declare that he has no mtention of resigning.

Winning Ohio lottery number
CLEVELAND - The winning nwnbers selected Thursday night in
the Ohio Lottery's duily game "The Nwnber" and weekly "Pyramid"
game are :
The Nwnller - 192
Pyramid - 63 ; 709; 8412
The lottery reported ea~nings of $412,310 from the wagering on the
dally nwnber game drawmg. Lottery officials said sales prior to the
draw1ng totaled $954,651.50, and holders of winning tickets are entitled
to share $542,341 .50 .

Weather
Clear tonight. Lows around 40. Increasing cloudiness and warmer
Satul'day . Highs ltf-75. Chance of pl'edpitation 10 percent tonight and
Salul'ddy . Winds variable and lighttolli!lht.
Extended Ohio Forecast- Sunday throu!ih Tuesday : Warm with
showers and thunderstorllls likely Sunday. A chance of showers and
cooler Monday and fa1r Tuesday. Highs in the 60s and low 70s Sunday
a1~d in the 50s and low 60s Monday and Tuesday. Lows in the mid-408 to
~rud-50s Sunday, m the mid-30s to mid-40s Monday and in the 30s
l'uesday
·

�..
.. '

Commentary
market for it.
He discovered an estimated 300
uses for it, many of them entirely
removed from the peanut's food
value. But it is this, of course, that is
the wonder of the peanut. The En·
cyclopedia Britannica informs us
that "pound for pound peanuts have
more protein.. minerals and
vitamins than beef liver; more fat
than heavy cream; and more food
ene~gy (calories) than sugar." And
George Washington Caree r
discovered - peanut butter.
I have never composed,poetry, but
if I did, my very first couplet would
be:
I know that I shall never see
A poem lovely as Skippy's Peanut
Butter.
·
When I was married and made
plain to my wife that I expected
peanut butter for breakfast every
day of my life, including Ash Wed·
nesday, she thought me quite mad
(for U1e wrong reasons). I told her
then that if peanut butter sold for
$100 a pound it would be served on
the queen 's birthday at Buckingham
Palacea and noblemen would drool
in apreciation of it. The principal
problem with peanut butter is that it
is too cheap. She has not come
around. really, and this.is a source of
a great sadness to me because one
wants to share one's pleasure.
I was hardened very young to the

The Daily Sl:ntincl
IIJ t'nu rt Strn·t

skeptirs. When I was 1~. t was
packed off to a British boarding
school by my father, who dispatched
every fortnight a survival package
comprising a. case of grapefruit and
a large jar of peanut butter. I offered
to share my luck with the bays who
shared my table. They grabbed instinctively for the grapefruit - but
one after another actually spit out
the peanut butter, which Uhey had
never before seen and which only
that very year ( 19381 had become
available for sale in London, at a
store that specialized in exotic foods.
No wonder tbey needed American
help to won the war.
You can find it now, in specialty
shops in Europe, but I have yet to
see it in anyone's home. And it is
outrageously difficult to get even in
the typical American hotel. My
profession requires me to spend 40
or 50 nights on the road every year
and when breakfast order time
comes over the telephone I summon
my resolution - it helsp to think
about peanut butter when you need
moral strength - and add, after the
orange juice, coffee. skim milk and
whole wheat toast, "Do you have
any peanut. butter'··
Sometimes the room service
operator will actually break out.
laughing when the request is put 'in,
at which point my voice becomes
stern and WlSJruling . Often the
operator will say, "Just a minute, ''
and then she will turn , I suppose to
Uhe chef, but I can hear her right
Uhrough the hand she has put over
Uhe receiver - " Hey Jack . We got

any peanut butter? Room 322 wants
some peanut butter!" This futive
philistinism is then regularly
followed by giggles all around. One
lady recently asked, ''How old is
your little boy and does he want a
peanut butter sandwich?" To which
I replied, " My little boy is 28 and is
never without peanut butter,
because he phones ahead before l)e
confinns hotel reservations."
I introduced Auberon Waugh to

cashew butter 10 yhears ago when he
first visited America and although I
think it inferior to peanut butter
Auberon was quite simply overwhelmed. You can 'I find it in Great
Britain so I sent him a case from the
farmer 's market. It quite changed
his writing style: For about 10 months, he was at peace with the world: I
think that .was
tune he satd
something pleasant about Harold
Wilson. On the eleventh month, it

_,.........._.. 6
rN VICTORY -

Kalida g~ard Dan Utendurf raisos his arms in vi·clory as he responds to the cheers of the crowd while head ing fur dressing
rooms after KalidB's 73-56 win over Richmond Dale Southwestern ln a
Class A state high school buys' basketball tourney game in Columbus
Thursday night. Utendorf knocked in 16 points to shan- high-pc•lnt honors
In the game. ( AP Laserpholu).

Today's

Sports World
~~

Pnmrru1 , Ohiu

Si-t-9!1i-~ IS6

Not everyone agrees with realtor president

DMUH:U TO Till: INTF. RESTOF THE ME\( i:O.· :'tl-\. ~111\ AHE ,\

ROBERT L. WINGErT .
l'uhlhh~·r

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH

AlisisUint Publish~r/Cuntrvllrr

.'
'
'

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

E:ditur

,•

A MEMBER uf Tht• A.'llliM'ialt•d Prns. lnl:md Oalh Pt l'l&gt;~ ..\~~uc· iali t tn 1111d tlw
Amt'riun Nt'Mspapcr Publishrrs Ahtl('i:.llun
•

•

I.F:ITERS
UPINJO,, ' lltl' Mdrumt·d . Tht·~ ~ lwuld hi• II'S ' than jOO \lllfd~ 11111)11. All
lrtlt't.'&gt; arr subjt'l'l In rditin.: 11nd must tk• ~i,Knt•d ~ith 11amr. ~ddr 1 ·..,~ !UK! tt' lrphun1·
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'

•

Where did they
put the· Sunbelt?
.

,

You might think that a geographical area so large - at least a third of
the entire United States land area - would be easy to find . But it i.&gt;n't.
Where in Uie world is the SunbeJt?
It is coast to coast below the 37th parallel, according to a popular
definition, but others exclude Louisiana , Mississippi and Alabama.
Soniettmes northern California is included, sometime~ it isn't.
The boundaries are important, because Sunbelt statistics are used
today in dQl:ens of ways - to show population mobility , political power
shifts, industrial growth, energy-efficient homesites .. .
But the boundaries are vague. So vague are they that the situation constitutes one of the more distressing problems of statistics, a rield already
plagued by its own inadequacies and inconsistencies.
How do you measure the population, the industrial power, the income,
the growth of an undefined area? Do you measure the Sunbelt by land
area? Or by some other measure, such as hours of sunshine?
Bradley Rice, who teaches at Clayton Junior College. in Atlanta. ran into
the problem when c&lt;&gt;-editing an anthology of articles about Sunbelt
'.
cities, to be published by the University of Texas Press.
Is St. Louis a Sunbelt city? " Anyone who has wintered in St. Louis .
would question its inclusion," he writes in American Demographics. a
monthly magazine. 18 Baltimore? Lexington, Ky.?
He found curiosities. The Census Bureau, for example. includes
Delaware with Florida in its South Atlantic Division. Does that rnake
Delaware, which adjoins New Jersey. a member of the Sunbelt group?
Tile Population Reference Bureau, a distinquished organization·, lists
Missouri as in. FortWle magazine put Virginia in but split California
along county lines near Fresno. Sales and Marketing Management
magazine published a map that included all of California but excluded
Virginia.
Rice's curiosity grew. He found that in a book on the Sunbelt, two
• economists, Robert Firestine and Bernard Weinstein, omitted northern
•• California and soutllern Nevada but included Virginia, Kentuck y, We~1
Virginia, Maryland, Delaware and the District of Columbia.
HefoWld a professor, Carl Abbott, who would include as "Sunbelt" only
tho9e areas of rapid population growth. The professor would exclude
Louisiana, Tennessee, Mississippi and Alabama, while conferring Sunbelt status on Denver, Norfolk and Seattle.
· Kirkpatrick Sale, author of " Power .Shift: The Rise of the Southern Rim
and Its Challenge to the Eastern Establishment," defined the Sunbelt as
"the boundary line which runs along the northern edges of North
Carolina, Tennessee, Arkansas, Oklahoma, New Mexico, Arizona - or
generally the 37th parallel. "
But, while the 37th parallel tends to follow state lines, it cuts through
California and Nevada. Thus, Rice points out in American
Demographics, "Las Vegas is in, but Reno is out." Sale then creates a bit
of a problem by including San Francisco.
One other thing : Hawaii is in, Alaska is out.

Today in history.

• •

Today is Friday, March Tl, the 86th day of 1981. There are T/9 days left
in the year.
Today's highlight in history:
·' On March 'll, 1945, during World War II, Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower
declared that Germl!n military forces on the Western Front had been
defeated.
On this date:
In 1703, Russian Czar Peter the Great founded the city. ot St. Petersburg.
In 1939, Adolf Hitler demanded that Polpnd agree to Gennan annexation of Danzig.

'

•

NEW YORK tAP! - A major
theme of John Wood's year as
president of the 750,000-member
National Association of Realtors is
the preservation of private property
rights, but not everyone will agree
with his approach.
Wood and the Realtors also take a
strong stand on fair housing. They
believe nobody, not even the owner
of a one-family rental house. should
be able to deny occupancy to a renter because of race, color or creed.
As things stand, an owner of three
units or fewer who doesn't use a
broker is free to make his own renter
choices. But, says Wood, "They
s hou ldn' t be exempt. It 's
discrimination. It's right or it's

fringe on property rights. The two • year, compared with a 1978 record
high of 3.9 million. And he foresees a
are distinct , he says. He's for them.
It is inevitable that some
homeowners won't see it Wood's
As you might expect. he and the new high of 4.2 million units in 1982.
In his view, the majOI" buyer
way, and will defend their position
Realtors also defend free enterprise.
on the basis of private property
which they feel has been·diminished problem isn't raising .the down
rights. Wood doesn't budge. " It jm.1
by need le ss
govern m ent payment but meeting Uhe monthly
shouldn't be," he says. "We want tol regulations. They suppor:[ President payment. If rates fall , however, that
come out and say affinnatively we
Reagan generally, but not always in situation will tend to correct itself.
are for fair housing."
specifics, one criticism being that " If we gel rates down from 15 perA moment later he asserts that the his accelerated depreciation cent to 12 or 13, we'll get them into
preservation of private property proposals are less fa vora ble for houses," he promises.
Surprisingly. to some people
rights is critical. " We see private residential rental property than for
anyway, is a collUDent that sellers
property rights dwindling," he other assets .
stales. " We think somebody rmllot
He believes mortgage interest too rnight be able to cut COllis. Real.
rates will " creep down' ' to 12 per· estate commissions, he observes,
speak out for private property."
No, said Wood, whose John R
ce nt or 13 by midswmner , and that don't have to be what the Realtor'
Wood &amp; Associates employs 25 the housing market will improve the sets. "They are negotiable," he said.
people in the Naples. Fla. area, anti- latter part of the year. His projec· "We want to get that over to the
discrimination measures do not in- lion is for 3.6 million resale units this public."
wrong."

Insurance industry suffers underwriting loss
NEW YORK (API - The property-casualty insurance industry suffered an underwriting loss of at least
fl billion last year, and investment
analySts who cover the industry say
Uhe losses may continue for years.
" In fact, " says Allen Nadler, who
studies the industry for Goldman
Sachs, the big securities investment
finn, "it is entirely possible that underwriting may neve r again be
profitable."
Big awards by sympathetic juries,
increases in Ore ca.t of automobile
repairs, rising medical bills and inflation in general are among factors
helping to spread the red ink across
the industry's books.

And yet, some analysts say shares
of property-casualty insurers are
worthwhile investments. Nadler
himself says some "appear to
provide good value," especially for
periods beyond 18 months .
The reason is suggested by
another set of nwnoors.
Despite underwriting losses, says
the Insurance Infonnatiun Institute,
the property-casualty industry last
year earned $7.51 billion, up from
$6.92 billion in 1979, a one-year gain
of $590 million.
The gain, you rrught have surmised, came in part from the same
source of the underwriting loss : It
came as a result of inflation and
other economic factors that drove up

the return on money invested .
Last year the property-casualty
peur.le showed a net investment gain
of$11.32 billion before taxes, coming
mostly from dividends earned on
stocks and interest earned on bonds,
as well as from capital gains.
Insurance companies have lots of
money to invest, and so long as they
don't get caught by turns in the
market, so long as they manage to
ride with the investment tide, they
tend to make money on investments.
An item called policyholders' su rplus - holdings after liabilities have
been deducted from assets - gives
an idea of the amounts. Last year it
reached $57.4 billion, up $10.5 billion
for the year.

What"s wrong with the
WASHINGTON r NEAl
Although he professes to have an
abiding concern about restoring
stability to Uhe nation's economy,
President Reagan is avoiding one
important opportWlity to restrain
the soaring rate of inflation.
Being ignored by the president is
the option of revising the Consumer
Price Index, which not only
measures the cost of living but also
artifically stimulates the pace of inflation because of its inherent flaws .
The CPI has become the government's best-known statistical Index
because it. is the most widely
publicized and popularly accepted
measure of the periodic changes in
the retail prices of goods and ser·
vices offered to the public.
But the CPI rs, at best, an imprecise means of measuring fluctu~ting prices. That was convincingly docunnented in a littlenoticed White House report issued

After viewing these investment
results, you might correctly conelude that the business Of insuring
was poor, but the .busineirs of investing returned rich rewards. And
Nadler expects the pattern will colitinue.
The industry is a good investment,
he says, because it is " ab!lolutely
necessary for the world's economy."
And, he says, it can be expected to
continue offering dividend in·
creases, underwriting !CISSell or not.
There are deeper reasons too, connected for example with the updowns of the underwriting cycle,
with inflation, and with what are
considered by some analysts to be
relatively low price-earnings ratios.

PAST S/JfffJ!JfC. l A+fcr-E ~ T/61.
1/AV/1/(j/!WIJO 7/XTII?Ii C/IAM-

DOONESBURY

One ca n readily sec why Mrkan
was ca lled "B rg George" in his
heyday, although high school teams

named the ~realest bask~tball
player of the ha lf-cen tury by the now have athletes who tower over
nation's sportswriters and br·oad· !rim . At 56, he is a bull-shouldered 6casters, but he ha sn't changed fee t-9 ( f~IO in the record · bouks l,
much.
·
weighing 245 pounds without nn omF
Neither. he insists, has the ga me.
ce of fat.
" Nothing is new in basketball ,"
Bespectacled, graying at the telll·
says the hulking giant frorh Min- pies, he presents a fatherly figure .
neapolis, who dominated the sport Naturally. He and his wife , Patricia ,
first as a protege of ageless .Ray bur'* four sons and two daughters .
Meyer at · DePaul and later as a Only one of the sons, Larry, now 32 ,
professional with the Minnea polis once the lemting .scorer und captain
Lakers. "Everything they do nuw , at the Univers it y of Minnesota, took
we were doing ther). The only dif· th~ game ser iou~ l y.
terence is that there are more guod
guys doing it and doing it better.
Mikan , who was placed on the
" You know. I never played until I same lofty level with Babe Ruth, Bill
got to college. Today they're putting Tilden, J im Thorpe, Jack Dempsey
balls in kids' hands when they 're :1- and Babe Didrikson Z.aharias in the
years-old. The kids are playing in • · flail-Century Pol l in 195(], was in
organized leagues at age 9. The un- New York tlu s week to be inducted
derprivileged kids live on those cOn· into the Mudison Square Garden's
crete playgroumls, shouting, pass in ~ Hall of Fame .
and guarding a ll day long.
He used the uct:asiun to partake uf
" They're fed better. Th~y're his favorite pastime. He watched the
bigger and stronge r. They gel Bustun Celtics-New York Knicks
specialized coaching ahn~t frorn game Tuesday night and Uu::
the time they can walk. It's a grcctl Natioual lnvit.aliun Tournament
game. I watch eVery time J cHn ."
L'ullegc final Wednesday .

reaching the state finals for the first
time in history.
Kalida, eighth ranked during the
regular season, simply overwhelml!{l Southeastern (23-4) with
its quickness, scoring balance and
variety of pressing defenses.
"Our defensive pressure was the
difference. We moved them farther
out on the floor. Instead of eight
footers, they were shooting 16
footers," said Kalida Coach Richard
Kortokrax, whose team was beaten
in the 1980 semifinals by Cincinnati
Summit Country Day.

Chris Durst, a 6-foot-1 junior forward, was Academy's hero in the
final moments. Averaging less than
sl/[ points a game, Durst sank six
points in the last quarter. Four of
them came on free throws in the last
38 seconds that dissolved a 45-45 tie.
John Sawyer, Badger's coach wat·
ching his team lose for the first time
in 'll games this winter, blamed the
"When the season started, I didn't
loss on the officiating.
think we had the rnat~rial to make it
"We weren't able to get our best bflck to Columbus again," he said.
five players on the floor long enough ''But our kids were determined to
to establish our normal game. We prove me wrong. The kids rnade up
lost our ability to outquick Academy their minds to do it again."
in the transition game with our key
Dan utendorf, Keith Hamburg
reboWlder (All-Ohio Dale Blaney ) and Greg Verhoff all scored 16 points
on the bench with fouls," he said.
for Kalida and Rob Kortokrax, the
Blaney eventually fouled out with c9ach's son; threw in 12 more.
4:21 left in the fourth quarter. He
Southeastern guards, Jerry Hice
played sparingly and had only four . and Gary McCorkle, provided the
points and six rebounds. His older '1 Panthers' punch. Hice had 16 and
brother, Dave Blaney, led the McCorkle 15. However, Hice and two
Braves with 15 points.
' other starters fouled out for the fourKevin Richardson, another all- time state semifinalists.
stater, poured in 18 points and grab" They were much better. much
bed II rebounds . for Academy, quicker, " said Southeastern Coach

MAKE UP YOUR MIND RIGHT NOW THAT YOU'RE
GOING TO HAVE FUN THIS YEAR! PLAY GOLF FORGET YOUR TROUBLES - GET OUT IN THE
FRESH AIR - GET SOME EXERCISE
FEEL BffiER - COME ON,
catcher Ed 011 durtng Thunday's game In Bradenton.
Fla. Bell scored lrom secood oo a single .. (AP Laserphoto)

Drop1&gt;ed from :wticm

The judge is presidir.rg at the trial
of a t979 suit filed by Rutledge, who
clallllll he was punched by Kush
during a 1978 ~amc in Seattle.

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Save our RC, RC-100, Nehi, Upper 10, Diet Rite
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THE JAYMAR GOLf CLUB

PHOENIX, Ariz. ( AP) - A
Maricopa County Superior Cour!
judge has dropped George Hanun,
Arizona State University vice
president for student affairs. from a
suit filed against former eoach
Fronk Kush by ex-punter Kevin
Rutled~e because Harnm did not
directly supervise the coach.

Bolens"
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lndians-Seaule
complete trade

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TORONTO TALLY - Toronto Blue Jays Jorge
Bell slides safely under the tag of Pittsburgh Pirates

Larry Jordan . "Their year's ex~
perience in Uhe state tournament
was the real difference. ''

=:.:_----------1----------

TUCSON, Ariz . (AP ) - The
Cleveland Indians said they have
at-quired outfielder Rodney Craig,
23, from the Seattle Mariners in exchange for Wayne Cage.
Phil Segui, general manager, announced the trade on Thursday at
the Indians' spring training camp.
'Craig, a 6-foot-1, 195-pound
righthanded hitter , was the
Mariners' starting centerfielder last
season until he was sidelined with a
shoulder injury. Craig hit .238 with
IS doubles and 20 RBI in 70 games
fur the Mariners during the 1980
season.

Judge Thomas Klcinsehmidt
Thursday also denied another
request to drop Arizona Stalt·
President John Schwada fr·om the
suit.

.,.

tangles with Cleveland John Adams
(24-2) an~ Dayton Roth ~ 24-1 ) draws
Newark (23-3) .
Tri-Valley, as Dresden Jefferson,
Dixie and Newark are all former
state tournament champions.

PHILADELPHIA (AP) - 'Only
dy Hultberg, an aide to l.'m Coach record in the last 10 games of the
the strong survive in the NCAA
Brown. " We'd be foolish to change regular season, plus postseason
Basketball Championships, and the
now. We're going to go out and do competition, is a remarkable 81-19.
teatns that made it here for the Final
what we do best, and the other teatns
This year's Hoosiers were only 7-5
Four festivities will be playing to · will try to do what they do best. "
at one stage after losing to Clemson
their strengths in Saturday's
What LSU does best is score in an and Pan American on consecutive ,
semifinals.
up-tempo game. The Tigers' 80.2· nights in the Rainbow Classic. But
"There are no more Cinderellas,"
scoring average is the best among they have come on strong, posting a
said Louisiana Stale Coach Dale
the Final Four teams. But Brown is 17-4 mark since.
Brown . " This is the best Final Four
confident that LSU can win even if
" I ·don't think Philadelphia ever
that I can remember. Indiana ,
the pace is deliberate, pointing out entered my mind when we were on
Virginia, North Carolina and us that the Tigers have won 29 of their the plane coming back from
all four are potential national chamlast 35 games that were decided by Hawaii," said Indiana forward Ted
pions."
seven points or less.
KitcheL "We've had to struggle and
But only one will wear the crown .
'We played 34 games this year," work our butts off, but it's all worth
following Monday night's title game.
he said. "I haven't seen a bWlch of ~i;.:t
The Final Four will be pared to two
Apaches that weren't disciplined in
Saturday when fourth-ranked I.BU, those 34 games."
·
31-:1, takes on ninth-rated Indiana,
But when it comes to discipline,
24-9, and fifth-ranked Virginia ,,28-3,
th1! coach that comes to mind is Inmeets Atlantic Coast Conference
diana's Bobby K!night.
rival North Carolina, 28-7 and
"The mental is to the physical as
ranked sixth
lour is to one," said Knight, when
The four clubs went through one- asked about the balance of winning
hour workouts at the Spectrum
basketball. "That holds true in tourtoday in preparation for Saturday's
nament play more than at any other
doubleheader .
lime during the season."
Although this has been a · tourKnight's teams have a history of
nament of surprises, most notably getting stronger as the season wears
the second-round massacre that saw on. reaping the benefit of his
top-ranked DePaul, No. 2 Oregon disciplined approach to the game.
State and No . 3 Arizona State fall by Knight holds a 14-4 record in NCAA
the wayside, don't expect any sur- tournament play and led the
prise strategy in the semifinals.
Hoosiers to the title in 1976. Kntght's
" We're 31-3 and we've done certain things to get us here." said Jor-

CPI?'L-_R_ob_ert_W._a_lte_rs

only five \lays before President Car· year. for example, the price of all gasoline, but has Jailed to lake acter left office.
items except housing increased by . count of the lac! that those high
Perhaps the most glaring deficien11.4 percent - but housing costs prices have led many people to subcy of the CPI is the manner in whi ch soared a phenomenal 25.3 percent. stantially modify their "market
it distorts the ~parlance of housing As a result, the composite index rose basket" by driving less and buying
costs, the most heavily weighed
less gasoline.
IU percent.
component of the index , which
Another serious problem stetns
The federal govenunent already
presumably accounts for almost from the fa ct that the CPI figures produces several price indexes that
one-fourth [24.9 percent) of all con- are derived from a "market basket" re more accurate than the CPI, and
swner expenses.
of goods and services that is bOth Uhe report issued by the Carter
Because home-purchase costs and badly outdated and relatively in· White House recommended that one
mortgage-interest rates are in- flexible.
of them be substituted for the CPl.
cluded in every monthly revision of
Although that "market basket" is
the CPI, the index is forced to rely supposed to reflect the composition
Dr. Otto Eckstein, a highly respecupon what Rep. Paul M. Simon, D- of a typical family's contemporary ted economist, has praised that
IlL , describes as "the ridiculous
purchases, it is based on a survey of report as "the most significant
a~JSumption that every American
buying patterns conducted in 1972-74 document produced In the lour years
buys a new home each month."
but never revised since that time.
of the Carter administration."
During an era of rapidly·
Moreover, that rigid "market
But Simon notes that "the difescalating, real-estate values aild basket" formula fails to reflect shif- ficulty with correcting the CPl iB
mortgage costs, the practice distorts ts in consumer preferences caused •that many powerful toes mlllt biJ
the overall pattern of price changes,
by the relentless inflation measured stepped on" because many Inthus severely impairing the CPI's bytheCPI.
dividuals and organizations view a
reliability.
Thus, the CPI has faithfully recor- steep cost-of-living lncreaae u good
During the first six months of last .ded the steep increase In the price of news.

etsaS. W ff(M /fJVt Mf RR MY

It's been 31 years - almost to the
day - since bi g George Mikan was

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
. coach of second-ranked Columbus
Academy says the Class A boys stale
basketball title shootout with Kalida
!laturday will not be anticlimatic.
Jack MacMullan stifled that
notion Thursday night moments af·
ter his 27~ Vikings had nudged toprated Kinsman Badger 49-47 in their
celebrated showdown in the small
school semifinals.
·
"A letdown? The team we're
playing Saturday is 26-1. I can't
imagine high school kids not gettihg
excited about playing in this place,"
said MacMuUan, who downplayed
the meeting of The Associated
Press' top two ranked powers.
" Polls are meaningless," he said.
"People who pay attention· to the
polls are just kidding themselves
since most people who vote don't
even see the teams play.
"The only thing that is important
is who is No. I at the end of the
yea!'."
But first, the Class AA and Class
AAA semifinalists rnust play today
in St. John Arena .
In Class AA, Dresden Tri· Valley
(24-2) took on Napoleon ( 26-0) and
Youngstown !Uryen (22-1) played
New Lebanon Dixie 124-2). In Class
AAA tonight, Wadsworth (21-5)

NCAA finalists at full strength

By WW Grfmslty
AP Correspondent

-b'"L-N?s

The Daily'Sentinei-Page--3

Middleport, Ohio

Columbus Academy, Kalida
post semi final victories

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Friday, Mart:h 27,1981

--

For many years I have felt the
burden of an Wlrequited passion.
What have I done for It, in retilrn for
all it has done for me? Nohing. But I
have wondered what I could use as
what the journalists calla "peg. "
I have found one. This may strike
some of the little-minded as attenuated, but it goes as follows: This
is the centennial year . of the
Tuskegee Institute, which was foWlded on the Fourth of July 11181 by
Booker T. Washington, who well
remembered, though he was not yet ·
a teen-ager, hearing the Union officer read to his family the Emancipation Proclamation and pronoun.ce them free. Tuskegee continues to
·be a remarkable institution, and former Secretary of Defense Donald
Runsfeld is the head of a committee
of illustrious men and women who ·
are devoting themselves to raising
$20 million to encourage it in its
noble work.
Whanoble work? We have arrived
at step two. It was, among other
things, he principal academic home
of George Washington Carver, and it
.: was G. W. Carver who for all intents
and p~ invented the peanut.
·What be did, more specifically, was
document that the cultivation of the
peanut despoiled the land far less
than the cultivation of cotton, and
then he set out to merchandise the
peanut in order that there might be a

Pomeroy

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�Pa!!e-4-The Daiiy sentinel

po,..e•-

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

Friday, March 27, 1981

- Middleport, Choo

Wahama opens baseball season ·Saturday
By Gary Clark

Right on l~e heels ol the jwit
completed baske"lball season is
Coach Gordon Spencer's Wahama
White Falcon baseball team as the
bend a,ea diamondmen prepare lor
tbeidprlng opener this Saturday
afternoon against visiting Belpre.
The White Falcons have a 36game schedule worked out lor the
111111 season which Includes some
seven double headers against such
formidable opponents as Rip)ey,
Ravenswood , Point Pleasant,
Buffalo-Putnam, Gallipolis and
BelpN!. Both Ripley and Buffal~&gt;­
Putnam advanced to the state finals
in their respective classes last year
which says something about the
caliber of opponents the White
Falcons will be lacing In '81.
This year will be Spencer's

seventh campaign as the bend area
team's skipper with six seasons and
a 102.00 record behind him, along
with lour sectional titles, one
regional championshiP" and a near
miss state championship in 1978
when the While Falcons lost 3-2 to
Tygarts Valley In the final Inning of
the state finals.
The personable head COI!Ch won
his looth career coaching victory on
the varsity level last year when the
Wahama nine defeated Wirt CoWlty
..bY a H margin. Spencer's assistant
will be Tom Cullen, in his second
term at that post.
Last year's White Falcons posted
a 13-14 season slate, which was the
first losing record during Spencer's
reign as head coach. Graduation
took live starters from that squad
and included the team's leading
hitter in Vince Weaver with a .360

batting average. Others who have
since graduated. are Jeff Arnold
(.282); Fred Smith (.236 ); Rick
McKirgan ( .236 ) and Gary .
Richards (. 222 ). Weaver and
Richards also combined for eight of
the local's 13 pitching victories,
Despite the loss of five starters,
the bend area team has a solid
foWldation with which to build on
this year. A squad of 25 prospects
consisting of seven seniors, four
juniors, seven sophomores and
seven freshman have been working
out for the past few weeks and have
been taking advantage of the
weather in getting in a number of
practices outdoors.
Figuring to be the team leader
this season is four-year starter Jay
Hesson who hit .302 last year
despite playing most of the season
with an injury. Hesson, in addition

to last year's average, hit .314 as a
sophomore and .343 as a freshman
on Wahama's state finalist team in
1978.
Also to be relied on heavily are
seniors Shawn Fields and Barry
VanMatre . Both are iwo-year
starters and appear to be the
nucleas of the Wahama mound
corp. carl Dugan, Mike Buzzard.
Peanut Harris and Larry Gibbs, the
remaining seniors, all figure to
have nailed down starting berths
for Saturday's twin bill opener,
With seven seniors apparently
getting the starting nod. Jim Powell
and George Zuspan seem to be the
leading candidates for the
remaining two positions although
Nate Davis. Estel Lavender and
Steve Lyons all have good chances
of making it into the scorebook as

Chicago White Sox, leading them to
a 6-5 victory over his old club, the
Boston Red Sox .
The St. Louis Cardinals beat the
New York Meta 3-1 as Keith Hernandez drove in two runs and scored
another. New York 's Dave Kingman
singled home Wally Backman with '
the Mets' lone run.
Ri ckey Henderson's three hits,
two of them hom e

l~uns,

sparked

Oakland's 17-hit attack as the A's
beat the Sea ttle Ma riners !Hi.
A tie-breaking Single by Odie
Davis triggered a four-run eighth inning and Rick Honeycutt pitched
seve n shutout inning.s

.:~s

the Texas

Rangers blanked the Montrea l Expos W .
Robin Younl"s three-run triple and
Don Money's twl).run homer keyed a
nine-run fourth inning in the
Milwaukee Brewers" 11·7 victory
over the Cleveland Indians.

The Duily Sentinel
IUSPSIC6-*I

A ()t , IIJoaof MuJUme&amp;., lllc.

Published every afternoon except Swutay,
MondaY through Friday, 111 Court Street, by

back with a birdie on the 18th.
'" Except for that one hole, I played
a real nice round of golf. I'm pleased
with it. I felt my score could have
been a little bit lower, but I'm very ,
very pleased with the way I played."
Also at 69 were Jerry Pate,
veteran Don January, Buddy Allin,
Morris Hatalsky, Gibby Gilbert,
Jack Renner, Brad Bryant and
Mark O' Meara.
Defending champion Doug Tewell
had a 72 in the warm , sunny

Dave Tobik pitched four shutout
inmngs and scored the fi rst run as
the · Detroit Tigers's split squad
defeated the Hou.ton Astros 3· 1.
· Dave Parker slanuned his third
home run of the spring as the Pittsburgh Pirates beat the Toronto
Blue Jays:i-1.
Ferna ndo Va lenzuela, Bob
Castillo and Steve Howe combined
for a five-hitter as the Los Angeles
Dodget·s blanked the Atlanta Braves
7..{).

Steve Mura pitched six shutout in·
nings and Dave Edward, slanuned a
solo homer to spark the San Diego
Padres to a 4-1 voctory over the San
Francisco Giants.
Dave Henderson led off the seventh inning with a wa lk. stol e second
and scored on Hector Cruz' sacrifice
fly as the Chicago Cubs beat the
California Angels 7~ in a rain·
shortentJd game.

years , a nd missed the cut in last

week's Tournament Pla ye rs Championship. He has not yet won this
seasun and is fa r behind his norma l

pace.

SENIORS - PeanUt Harris OF:

T~s

weather.
Watson. fur the past four seasons
golf's Player of the Year, was
rebounding from his poorest per·
funnance since he became the
game's ouW;ta nd.ing periorrner. He
shot a fat 80. his highest score in five

BASEBAll. ROSTER

With ·fi ve returning lettermen,
Kyger Creek will open its 1981
baseball season at Federa l Hocking
this evening
Coach Gary Minton, in his first
ye;u as diamond me ntor, will rely on
the leadership of senior pitcher·
infi elder Terry Porter: senior
righthander Jack Mmor: ca tcher
Tim King; outfielder Mike Swishe.·,
a nd pitchcr-mfielder. Willie Noble.
Others vieing for positions are :
Se niors, Kenny Coughenour , Rol&gt;by Hebns and Bill Swisher. all out·
fielders and Mike Shoemaker. a ca l·
cher. Junior prospects include out·
fi elders, Tim Barr. Rusty Layne and
Tim Price, and infielders, Matt
Pol cyn ~nd Crai g Ri cha rds.
Sophomore players are inftci ders.
Keith \:lark. Steve Porter, and
Roger Stroud and outfielder , Ruger
Thomas. Greg Sheets is the only
freslunan playing baseball this

Watson takes early lead
lllLTON HEAD ISLAND, S.C.
(AP) - Tom Watson went to the
practice tee with some high hopes of
turning his game around.
•·Golf is a funny game," said the
man who has played that game, for
the past four seasor s. better than
anyone else in the world.
"Sometimes .a little change, a litlie adju.tment like this is all it takes .
It can make everything fall into
place again.
"Sometimes it's like a car that
isn't running right. You makean adjustment on the carburetor and all of
a sudden it's running perfect. "
Watson made a little adustment to
his hip position in his address during
the first round of the $300,000 Sea
Pines-Heritage Classic and it helped
him to a :i-under·par 66 and the first
round lead.
He made the change, he said, standing on the !Sth tee at the 6,650 hard
Harbour Town Golf Links.
And what, he was asked, was the
resull?
"Birdie, birdie. birdie," Watson
said with a grin.
He needed that burst of rthree consecutive sub-par holes to take a !shot lead over Gil Morgan, who
bogeyed the last hole for a 67.
The group at 68, 3 under par on the
tight, testing layout on this resort
island, included Hale Irwin, twice a
winner of this event, former Masters
champ Fuzzy Zoeller and the
current Masters titleholder, Seve
Ballesteros of Spain.
Ray Floyd, winner of the last two
PGA Tour titles and shooting for a
rare third in a row, shot a 69 despite
a double-bogey on the 17th hole.
Floyd, who insists he's playing " the
best golf of my life," came right

1981 WAHAMA WHITE FALCON

'

FRESHMAN - Elvis Zettle J.B..
OF ; Greg Colllns-C; Mike Pethel
OF ; Steve Simonton .OF; Ron
Bradley ZB ; Chris Bash OF; Donnie
Van Meter INF .
MGRS - Don ROUih, Raymond
Kimes and Alicia Roush.
COACHES - Gordon Spencerhead coach. Tom Cullen-Aalt,

BROWN FIRED · Atlanta
Hawks coach Hubie Brown was
fired as c"oach Thursday by the
team's directors meeting in Wt!St
Palm Beach. I AP Laserpholo) .

Notre Dame onens
·
r
spring practice

bomb Price

spring.
The Bobcats finished fourth last
season in the SVAC standings behind
Eastern . Southern and South·
western.
KCSCHEOULE
March 27 at F edera l H ocki ng

M&lt;lrch J l at Han na n Trace

Ap r 1l l a t' W~ h a m a
Ap r il 3, Southern
Apr!l6. Eas te rn
A pr il 8 at N or th Ga ll ia

Apr 11 13,. sou lhwestern
April 15, H an nan Trace
Ap ril 16, Feder a l Hocki ng

Ap ril 20 at S o ut ~ern
Ap ril22 at Eas ter n
April/4, A lexa nder

Aprtt 27. Nort h Ga ll ia
April 29 at ·southwes t ern
M av 1 at A lexa nder
M a y 4, W ah.:tm a

Play~ t•rrurlc•ss

hall

ORLANDO. Fla. (AP ) - Johnny
Bench, who was honored as the best
hitting catcher of all time Thursday
by the City of Orlando, played
errorless ball in left field against the
Minnesota Twins.
Bench, who says he'll only agree
to catch two gcunes a week, has now
played first base. third, left field and
c"tcher this spring.

BY MARION C. CRAWFORD
MelpCeaaty

a-Society
The Consolidated Humane
Organization ol Southeast Ohio under .the leadership ol President E.
·Joyce Miller of M!!igs County met at
the Holiday IM, South Point Saturday fAir a full day ol cliscudon. of
problems and accompliishments encountered in the seven counties
represented.
Guest speakers were introduced
by the p~ldent of the host society.
Bill Pfaffenberger of Lawrence
,county. They were C. "Dewey"
Kuhn, legal advisor to the Attorney
Genel1!1, West Virginia, a Huntington attorney and Tim
Greyhavens, field investigator for
the Humane Society of the United
States, Great Lakes District. There
were approlimately 25 hwnane
leaders present and they represen-,
ted, at this fourth meeting of
" CHOSO," Lawrence, Athens,
BelmOnt, Ross, Hocking, Gallia and
of COUI"8e, Meigs. Locals making the
trip, besides Joyce Miller, were Rita
Lewis and yours truly, Marion
Crawford.
Kuhn's portion of the program
dealt
with the humane
organization's legal rights ... in
dealing with those who neglect or
treat cruelly," animals in their
charge, entering private property
for confiscation purposes , etc.
Probably 'the most enlightening
portion of tbe program was the informations shared with the group by
Greyhavens. He brought the group
up to date on the status of the house .
bill in the State of Ohio that would
either outlaw or make legal the
killing of the small song bird called
the Mourning Dove - telling us
which administrators were on the
edge of coming over to our side and
encouraged all those present to con-

tact these individuals. Tuesday,
March 24, the vote 1fok place. A~ this
writing it is not known if the tiny bird
that harma no one or nothing will
become a moving target lor hunters.
These bii'WI that are among others
who nnate lor life have an 80 percent
" nonnal cause death" 110 there are
definitely not an abundance of them.
Hunting could cause their eventual
extinction. Greyhavens told of an incident where a dove was hit by a car
and its mate sat nearby lor three
days ana nights waiting lor it to
move.
1
Continuing his interesting session,
the HSUS representative told of
their organization winning 14 out of
14 court cases this year so far which
was music to au humanitarians'
ears. Further, he stated that Kaiser
Kennels out of the Dayton area that
picks up dogs from pounds in II
counties in Ohio, including Meigs, is
still a num!f!r one target. In 1968
their activities were made iUegal by
the courts and they closed down, but
have reopened and been very busy
the past recent years - iUegally buying animals from COWlty poWlds
like ours lor $100 and then killing the
long-haired large animals and
resellihg the small and medium
short-haired dogs to Bio Medical
Research Labs in PelUlSylvania and
New York for (get this) $40 each for
Slll8ller dogs and up to $95 each for
the IS to 25 pound medium sized
animals . The state's county com. missioners have been notoriously
Wlinterested in the laws that
prohibit this very . profitable•
business, preferring this "easy way
out" to the more hwnane, little bit
more expensive, h1Ull8ne method of
euthanization by a qualified
veterinarian. Eight hundred
animals a month are handled in this
manner by counties and by Kaiser.
We have officially reported this
situation on each occasion when we

ORLANDO. Fla . !AP I - Reds pttcher Fra nk Pastore gave up two
run,o; and three hits in fi ve innings
Thursday in the Cincinnati loss to
the Minnesota Twins, 3-2.
•
The Twins erupted for fi ve runs in
the seventh inning, two on a basesloaded double by Jesus Vega off
,
•
/h,utr.
relief pitcher Joe Price.
Reds centerfi elder Dave Collins
Tonight thru Thursday
walked twice and scored the ga metying run in the third innmg making
WALT DISNEY PfiODUCTIONI "
the score 2-2.
The Reds took a 3-2 lead in the inning on a do.ublc by Harry Spilman .
and he scored on a Minnesota erro r.
Pete Mackanin hit a solo home run
for Minnesota off Pastore.
--=-:'!!rn tllltOTT GOUlD, IILL CGeaY,

SOUTH BEND, Ind. (API - Notre
Dame opens spring football practice
Saturday under new Coach Gerry
Faust. who will have 16 starters
among 39 lettermen returning from
last yea r's \&lt;-2-1 squad.
'" We think there ought to be some
pretty good football players in that
group ," said Fau.t, who took over
TAMPA. Fla. (AP I - George or with someone tossing balls to hi111 . one of college football's most
Foster has borrowed a trick from
·'You can hit off a batting tee prestigious · and pressure-packed
the swruner softball leagues to help holding the bat with one hand , or you jobs from Dan Devine.
him hammer more home runs ttris could have somebody throw un·
Faust, who came to Notre Dame
season for the Cincinnati Reds .
derhanded to you while you hit into a after compiling a 174-17·2 record in
In addition to his usual practice in screen or you·could throw it up your- 18 years a t Cincinnati Moeller Hi gh
the batting cage, the power-hitting self and hit it ," he pointed out.
School, inherits eight starters on
left fielder has started swatting
The idea meshes with Ted both offense and defense.
baseballs with a one-handed swing.
·· we purposely stayed away from
K1uszewski 's theories on hitting. ·
'" I had seen some softball players Kluszewski, the Reds batting in- looking at any film the last few mondoing it but I never tried it myself ," structor . believes that the forearms, th.s. We wa nt to be able to judge
said the muscular Foster. who has wrists and hands play an importa nt everyone this spring on an equal
little trouble launching balls over role in hitting.
basis and give everyon€ an equal
the distant walls during batting
'" Hitting is from the elbows down , shot.
practice when using both arms.
" We'll be putting in some new adbasically," said Kluszewski , whose
The 32-yea r-old outfielder , the 49 home runs in 19:&gt;1 stands as the justments most of the spring, but to
heart of the Reds' attack, said a club record for most in a season by a start with we just want to see who we
friend suggested that he try the un· left-handed hitter. "The more you have to work with."
traditional hitting style to build up build up that area. the better off you
Linebacker and co-captain Bob
his wrists and hand!;. Foster has are."
Crable head!; the returning defenbeen practicing the one-handed
Foster, holder of the team record sive unit. Junior lineba ckers Mark
swing this spring.
for homers by a right-handed hitter Zavagnin and Joe Rudzinski also arc
'" It's supposed to help you with with 52 in 1977, has been hampered back, as is sophomore Rick Naylor,
your bat control and to strengthen the last two seasons by injuries. A who pushed hard for a starting spot
each of your hands," Foster said. strain in tris left side caused him to by the end of last season.
" You use each hand to hit the ball so miss two weeks in May and a thigh
you' re strengthening your hands and injury put him out of action for 10 ,-- - - -- -- - - - -- -l.you're going to get beller bat con- days in July last season.
trol. 1 started doing it over the win·
The one-handed swinging was pdrt
"ter."
of Foster's vigorous off-season
Foster said the exercise is con- tra ining program to try to prevent
venient because it can be done alone such injuries this year.

Foster borrows
softball trick
.

Shawn Fields P.SS; Barry Vanmatre P-3B; Jay H_. COF;
Larry Gibbs IB ; Car!Dupn NB;
Mike Buuard ZB.
JUNIORS - Jim Powell OF-();
Estel Lavender OF; Scott Ut.
chlield IB; Nathan Davil OF·P.
SOPHOMORES
Darren
Gillsnd P·INF ; Tom Slm(lkinl p.
INF; Norm Laudennllt P·IB; steve
Lyons OF·P; George Z1IIJIIII OF;
Jerry Spradling IB; Brad Layne

ss.

' COLO\' ·

~I
[PGI~' UDevltn

BARGAIN MATINEES ON SAT &amp; SUN
AU. SEATS JUS T S 150
ADMISSION EVERY TUESDAY S I 50
53 1 JACKSON PIKE AI

3~

WEST

~

Ptlone 446 · 4524

r-- -- - - - FRIDAY lhtu THURSDAY
MARCH 27 thru APRIL 2
j

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S ·

Area humanitariaf!s meet in Lawrence County

Bobcats open season tonight

Weaver given thumb again
By Associated Press
Earl Weaver. the volcanic
manager of the Baltimore Orioles,
has erupted again.
Weaver. making his return from a
three-game suspension, was tossed
out of the game against the Kansas
City Royals Thursday for arguing
·with umpire )'dark Johnson over access to the arbitor's lineup card.
The blowup came at the same site
- Fort Meyers, Fla. - where.
Weaver pulled his team off the field
on March 19 after argumg about the
same subject. That action led to tris
suspension by American League
President Lee MacPhail.
This time Weaver departed alone,
but the Royals won 4-0 as Clint Hur·
die and Cesar Geronimo drove in
two runs apiece . However ,
Baltimore starter Jim Palmer
allowed just one run in six innings.
At Sarasota. Fla., Carlton Fisk
doubled in his first at-bat for the

An analysis of. this year's White
Falcons would be basically young
and inexperienced in the outfield
with only two bona-fide pitchers in
Van Matreand Fields. The power in
the line up is expected to come from
Hesson and Gibbs whUe Fields
should supply the speed on the
basepatbs.
Following Saturday's 12 noon
twin bill opener with Belpre, the
locals play four times next week.
Monday finds Gallipolis invading
followed by a double header with
Meigs on Tuesday. Southwestern
visits on Thursdsy with the Falcons
closing out the week on Friday at
Kyger Creek.

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

- - - - -- - - ,

CONGRATULATIONS MARY MARTIN - Movl~ and television
penoaaUiy Darren McGavin chats with Mary MartiD at the American
Cancer Society's Ust Cured Cancer Aosembly and 1981 Crusade
Klekoff at tbe Oblo Uoloo In Coumbus oo Sunday, Marcb 22. Mary
served aa tbe Meigs County Unit's cured cancer representative at this
alatewlde ll.ickoff for tbe American Cancer SU:Ciety's April Educational and Fund-railling Crusade.

have talked to lpcal pollticians.
Nell subject: I doubt if Meigs
CoWlty is guilty of this next one,
knowing the cowoty dog .warden, but
he and you will be shocked to hear of
the swapping being done by some of
dog wardens. of selected animals for
resale purposes and of course, we
have always known of unscrupulous
people who visit both the poWld and
our Humane Society kennel giving
false identification and picking up
animals for resale to labs and pet
stores out of state. Our kennel
manager is on the lookout constantly
for them and this i.s just another
reason lor "all the questions" when
anyone comes to adopt one of our
animals.
The subject of dog licensing was
nell discussed with the dog warden·
humane agent of Ross county having
what appears to be the answer and other counties could certainly
benefit by initiating this procedure.
Starting out as one man with impossible odds seven years ago this
man started enforcing the licensing
law. The word spread, more dogs
were licensed, ~ number going
from 4,000 to 12,000 in a very short
time. Soon it rose higher and the
county was able to hire eight ad·
ditional deputies and now the system
is this: The county uses that additional money to pay lor the
deputies and the volunteer lire
department sets up a desk and sells

licenses lor the COWlty - making it •
convenient to obey tbe law In ROlls
CoWlty. With no stra)'ll to speak olin
that county the animal claims for
1980 were down to seven. Ross County Commission., are certainly to .
be commended for their ambitious
undertaking that is so benefiting
their local taxpayers.
Lastly, it has been decided that
lobbyists are needed in the hwnane
movement to try and combat the
moneyed organizations that have
and are presently being funded to
encourage the further killing and
maiming of animals. There is
probably no organization with more
educated backers than the humane
organizations, thus in the near
future you w!U be hearing about our
people contacting the politicians to
keep them well informed as to what
·the majority of civilized people feel
about unnecessary extermination of
the creatures of tbe world ivho are
forced to endure tortures at present.
In the past there have only been nonprofit organizations hopelessly competing against the welathiest of lobbyists. By combining efforts and
utilizing our present intellectual
resources, the humane movement
could become an immense force to
be reckoned with.
The next meeting of the Consolidated Humane Organizations of
Southeast Ohio will be June 13 in·
Belmont County.

PTO discusses role of scouts
Scouts and tlieir role in the
development-of youth was presented
in a program at the March meeting
of the Salisbury PTO at the
Salisbury Elementary School.
Brownies, cub scouts and girl
scouts all participated in the
program which opened with the flag
pledge given by Brownie Troop 1220
and devotions by Mrs. Wendell
Hoover.
.
Yvonne Young, leader of
Salisbury Den I of Pack 29, cub
scouts, explained the cub scout ol&gt;jectives and told of the progress
through the ranks . She noted that
George Wright of Pomeroy is the
leader of the fifth grade scouts or
webelos. Wesley Young, a bear cub
scout, displayed the race car which
he rnade for the pine wood derby, an
annual activity of the pack . After
the local derby , winners go into
district competition. Award, are
given for the best designed cars as
well as the fastest ones, it was noted.
Terry Smith, den chief and a
member .of Boy Scout Troop 24~. explained his duties as den chief.
Third, fourth and filth grade boys
onay become cub scouts prior to entering boy scouting.
The Salisbury Bronwies presented
a lively program beginning with a
roll call to introduce themselves.
They did the Brownie Ring, sang and
dance "The Hokey Pokey" , had
another song, and joined the Girl
Scouts of Troop 1100 for singing
"Part of Being a Girl. " Janet Simpson is the Brownie leader.
The Five World, of Girl Scouting
were explained by members of the
Salisbury Troop who talked of the

activities undertaken in each of the
five areas. The troop, whose leader
is Mrs. Margaret Parker, concluded
with a r1ov€l chant, 'Fried Ham,''
Mrs. Susie Pullins presided at the
bu.iness meeting and announced
that new officers will be elected at
the April meeting . The slate of officers pr~sented by the nomninating
committee are Mrs. Karen Sloan,
president ; Mrs. Martha King , vice
president; Mrs. Jeanie Robie,
secretary: a nd Mrs . Paul ette
Harrison, treasurer. Membershlp is
still being accepted and only mem·
bers are eligible to vote.
It was reported that the school
library is being readied for use. The
carpet has been installed and curtains and traverse rods purchased.
A card catalog file is on order.
Tl1ese were all purchased by the
PTO. Principal Jolu1 Lisle stated
that additional lumber and nails are
needed to complete the room and the
PfO agreed to donate $25 for the
purchase. The library room was
opened for viewing by members
following the meeting.
The kitchen committee announced
a dinner to be served to Pomona
Grange on April24 at 7:15p.m.
Donalions and workers are needed .
Sharon Duncan announced a bike-athon on May 2 at the fairgrounds
race trace . Proceed, will go to St.
Jude 's Children's Hospital. Sponsors
are to be asked for 10 cents a mile .
The PTO thanked the basketball
coa ches for their work with the
students . Tournaments are being
held now. Coaches litis year are Phil
Harrison, Don Cullums, Roge r
Young, and Don Hunnel.

TEACHER OF TilE MONTII- Mrs. Edith Ztrkle received tbe llnl
" teacber of the month" award from the Rev. Wllllam Knlttellor her work
ilr. the Sunday sebool of the Middleport Uolted Peotec081al Cbureb.

Zirkle teacher
ofthe month
A "teacher of the month" award
was recentiy presented to Mrs.
Edith Zirkle, one of six Sunday
school teachers at the Middieport
United Pentecostal Church.
Each month an award will be
given to the most outstanding
teacher of the month. Fulfillment of
responsibilities as a teacher, faithfulness to the Sunday school and
church, frequent use of the prayer
.room, classroom displays and cleanup are among the evaluation points.
Also considered in the judging is
development of new ideas, teaching
method varieties, use of visuals,
working with team members,
demonstrating holiness both in spirit
and appearance and baving a bur·
den for her class.
Each month a teacher will be
recognized. Any teacher can . win
more than once, and at the end of the
yea r a " teacher of the year" award

will be presented to the one
recctving the most points from the
judging committee of Mrs. Virginia
Hartley 'Und the Rev. William Knit·
tel.

tn

Design and
Quality
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992·2641

ANNOUNCING

lh1s is the sale yau·ve been,waiting for. Out sta nd ing
sav1ngs on the lawn a rd Qorden eq uipment buill
'"befler b y des1gn:· All of fer OJ)erotlng feature s and
cornlort w1l h y~ in mind . like a nfi ·soo lp mCMter decks.

2x4 LAVIN PANElS

P O M EROY

As Advertised on TV

SEED AND MILLING
HEADQUARTERS
Oar

miD

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

. ........ $4.40

~A IN

FROM THE AUlHOR OF THE NUMBER ONE
BEST SELlER OF THE 1970's
THE LAT£ GREAT PLANET EARTH.

Steven L. Story •nd Karen H. Story

ARMSTRONG
CEILING TILE
SPECIALS
25% OFF

7 1? F

Flower Shop

Multimedia , Inc., Pomeroy, Ohi o 45781,

Member : The Assuciated Pres!!, JnllliXl Dai·
IY Press Association and the American

T he per tect way to sh ow y ou
&lt;.:a rt' . Yu ur nanlt&gt; o n on e s! de
and ht.' r ~ t ln the o ther . Both
na m ~!&gt; b ound togethe r by a
S pa r k l m~ Diam ond .
Fd ~ hi o neJ 1n Vd!dJium or lO K

Ycll qw Go ld .

Spiritual songfest set Saturday here

the Ohio Valley Publishing Company •
M-2156. Seeond class postage paid at
Pomerol', Ohio.

EMBRACE
HER WITH . ...
THE "EMBRACE
RING"

w .pi'Warers !'lave been' carefully tl'llil'lll(ltu·u~ 111

come ·taxes related to the small buai,..._ stt!HM&lt;m. AtH&amp;fl B~
· want to make sute.y,ou. pay lhe. iow.- Iegotimale.tax.

ANNOUNCEMENT

Holzer Clinic·LTD.'s
NIGHT CLINIC
Monday· Friday 5 P.M.-9 P.M.
Main Clinic Facilities
Near Gallipolis
Call 446 5,17
In Advance

seed s - Bird Seeds · qyster Shells and Grit - Fertili~ers - Lime · cement and Mortar · Stock Salt · water Softener Remedies - Salt · Lit·
ters · vaccine · Roofing · Paints · Red Brand Fencing · Baler and

8ind•r Twine · Spravs - Gates · HiY · Straw .

SUGAR RUN MILLS
Mulberry Ave.

992-2lll

Pomeroy

APPOINTMENTS AVAilABLE

�Page---6-The o ...

f Sentmel

Fr. day, March 27, 1981

.leldleport, Ohio

'"'

!pi

~

7 fXrERIENCE THE JOY Of RELIGION
This M~e and Church
USED CARS, INC. " MEIGS nRE
- ___.c.:::::j___.
~ \ CENTER, INC.
~-..
Ray R1ggs
Ph 915

••oo

St Rt

Chester

A\\i(
u

99 M•ll St

John F Fultz, Mgr
Ph 992 2101

212 W Ma1n

,,. -~

Middleport

Homelote Saws

Reuter-Brogan Insurance
Services

GoiXI Bread

Huntington, W
W

H

Pernn

pastor Roy Moyer Sunday schoo l supt

Church School ~ 15 am worsh•p ser
v1ce 10 30 om Ch01r rehearsa l lues
day 7 30 p m under d.rect•on ol Alice
Nease

POMEROY

CH UR CH

OF

THE

NAZARENE Corner Umon and Mulberry
Rev Clyde V Henderson pastor Sun

day school 9 30 a rn

Glen McClung

sup!
morn •ng worsh1p 10 30 am
evemng )erv ce 7 30 m1d week ser
v1ce Wednesday 1 30 p m

GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH
326 E
Mom St Pomeroy The Rev Robert B
Groves rector Sunday serv ces at 10 30
a m Holy Cornmunton on the f rsT Sun
day ot each monlh and combtned wtlh
rnornmg proyet on the th~rd Sunday
Mornmg prayer and sermon on all olher
Sunday~ o! the month Church School
and nursery core pro ~tded CoHee hour
tn the Par 5h Hall tmmedtotely tollowmg
the servtce
POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST ~~~ W
Mom St Ne I Proudfoot pastor Btble
$Chool 9 30 a m
morntng wors~·11p
10 30 am Youlh meet ngs 6 30 p m
evenmg worshtp 7 30 Wednesday n ght
proyet meettng and Stble s!udy 7 30
THE SAlVATION ARMY 115 Bullernut
Ave Pomeroy Envoy and Mrs Ray W n
tng otl tcers n charge Sunday hol.ness
meetmg 10 a m Sunday School 10 30
o m Sunday school leader VPSM Elotse
salvotton meetmg
' Adams 7 30 p m
vortous spea ker s and must c s pee~ols
Thursday 10 o m to 2 p m lodtes
Home league all women tnvtted 7 30
p m prayer meettng and Btble study
Rev Noe Hermon teacher

BURLINGTON

@§;)

SOUTHERN

BAPTIS T

CHAPEL Route 1 Shade Btble school 7
p m Thursday worshtp serv ce 8 p m
POMEROY WESTSIDE CHURCH OF
CHRIST 200 W Matn Sl 992 5235 Voca l
mustc Sunday worshtp 10 o m B ble
study II o m worsh tp 6 p m Wednes
day Btble study 7 p m
OLD DEXTER
SIBLE CHR IST IAN
CHURCH Rev Rolph Smtih pastor Sun
day school 9 30 a m
Mrs Worley
FranCis supertntendent Preadung ser
vtces first &amp; th1 rd Sundays lollowtng Sun
day School
GRAHAM
UNITED
METHOD I ST
Preoch tng 9 30 a m ilrst and second
Sundays of each month tht fd and fourth
Sundays eoch month worshtp ser ... tce of
7 30 p m Wednesday evenmgs at 7 30
Prayer dnd Btble Study
SEVENTH DA Y ADVENTIST Mulberry
Hetghh Rood Pomeroy Past or Albert
Dtttes Sabbath School Supenntendent
Rtfo Whtte Sabbath School Saturday
afternoon of 'l 00 wtth Worshtp Servtce
lol lowing at 3 15

RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
Stster Homen Warner Supt Sunday
morntng worsh tp
School 9 30 a m
1045om
POMEROY FIRST BAPTI ST
Do.,,d
Mann mmtslet W1lltom Watson Sunday
school sup! Sunday school q 30 o m
mormng wor!&gt;h p 10 30 a m
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST
21:12
Mulberry Ave Pomeroy Rev W II om
R Newman pasTor Hershel McC lure
Sunday school superintendent Sunday
mornmg worshtp
" hool 9 30 a m
1a JO even ng worshtp
7 30 p m
Mtdweek prayer serviCe 1 30 p m

MIDWAY COMMU NITY CHURCH De.
ter Rd
Rd
longsv Ue Rev A A
Hughes Pa stor Sunday School I Q a m
Serv1ces on Tuesdoy Thur sday and Sun
doy 730pm
FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH Baley
Run Rood Rev Emmett Rowson pastor
Handley Dunn sup! Sunday school 10
o m Sunday evemng servtce 7 30 Btble
teochmg 7 30 p m Thursday
MIDDLEPORT CH URCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UN ION lawrence Manley
pastot Mt s Russell Young Sunday
School Supl Sunday School 9 30 o m
Eventng worshtp
7 JO
Wednesday
prayer mee ttng 7 30 p m
MT MORIAH CHU RCH OF GOD
• Roctne Rev James Sotterfteld pO$IOr
Morm 19 worshtp 9 45 a m
Sunday
schoo 10 45 a m evemng wors h tp 7
lod tes proyer
Tuesday
7 30 p m
maetmg Wednesday 7 30 p m YPE
MIDDlEPORT FIRST BAPTIST Cornsr
St..:th and Palmer the Rev Mark Me
Clung Sunday school 9 15 a m Randy
Hayes Sunday School supenntendent
Don R t gg ~ asst supt Morntng Wor:shtp
10 15 am Youth meellng 7 30 p m
Wednesday tncludtng wee tots eager
beavers 1umor astronauts and 1un tor
and sentor htgh BYF chotr praCIICe
30
p m Wednesday prayer meettng and Bt
ble study Wedrwsdoy 7 30 p m
CHURCH OF CHRIST M1ddleport 5th
and Mom Bob Melton mtntster Scoll
Salhmon
ossoctote mtmsTer
Btble
School 9 30 a m morning worshtp
10 30 o m evemng se1v1ce 7 00 p m
Wednesday Btble Study and youth group
meettngs 7 00 p m
MIDDLEPORT
CHUR CH
OF lHE
NAZARENE Rev J1m Broome pastor
Bil l While Sunday school supt Sunday
morning worsh 1p
school 9 30 a m
10 30 om
Sunday evangeliStiC
meetmg 1 00 p m Praye r meehng
Wednesday 7 p m

a

UNITED PRESBYTERIAN MINISTRY OF
MEIGS COUNTY Ow1ght l ZavtU dl 9C

S•v•not &amp;

..

\t

ot Columbus, 0
804
Matn
992 2318 Pomeroy

L~n

w

llu l d \\ tllll t!tl t 11 p 1pj..n1s :-i1 tl&lt;H h uf l ~ ha:-;
he&lt; 11 c tH.I t\1t d bv lhc { fl ulur \\ 1th lru cdum uf wtl l
I IH SI\d\ mfulh ts 1\ll.tlr~spunst tu( ml s lo ve n 1 1 lllt h 11 '' ,tl rt.tt 11 n mtrull~d by d puppdt:t:r
\uti ~ l,jt 111 ~rtlt l\ l"!l lt11 rtll l ltiiJ u&gt;- tH.sston of uur
1 I rto,;l 111 1 ~II \ Hltu 1s - 11111 d \\ tudt !l uprtMhlnt:ss
llll f lt~~ u Ill\ slt llll(!.
1{, Ult ml• r th1~ "I 1 Ill"'\ I r 1 ltl put~ ::. ptnliHtl OJ-I
p rtuntl\ 11 1 1t r IJ ttl l1t..~ lh \I 1\tt L w het\ yu u
1\ ~ r .,h

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~

ALFRED Sunday
ol 9 45 o m
Morntng Worsh pat 11 a m Youth 6 30
p m Sunday s Wedne~day N ight Prayer
Meetmg 7 30 p m
ST PAUL (Tuppers Pl01ns ) Sunday
School q 00 a m Mormng Worshtp at
10 00 o m Btble Study 7 30 p m lu es

Neoc

Long Bottom Edsel Hart pastor Sunday
Church 7 30 p m
schoo l 10 a m
prayer meettng 7 30 p m Thursday
MIDDLEPORT PEN TEC OSTAL
Th~rd
Ave the Rev W II om Kmttel pastor
Thoma~ Kelly Sunday School Supt Sun
day school 10 o m Classes for all ages
7 30
Btble study
eventng 5erv1ce
Wednesday 7 30 p m youth servtces
Fr day 7 30 p m

day
SOUTH BETHEL (Stiver R1dge ) Suhdoy
School 9 00 a m Morntng Woshtp 10 00
a m Wednesday Btble Study 7 30 p m
KENO CHUR CH OF CHRIST 01 ver
Swotn Supertnlendent Sunday school
q 30 every week
HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION
R_ev
Ketth Ebl in pastor Sunday School 9 30
a m
leonard Gilmore ltr sf e der
evening ser11tce 7 30 p m Wednesday
prayer meettng 7 30 p m
BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF
CHRIST Duane Worden m n sler B1bl e
doss 9 30 a m morntng worsh tp 10 30
o m
eventng worshtp
6 30 p m
Wedne$day Btble :study 6 30 p m
NEW STIVERSV ILLE COMMUNITY
Church Sunday Schoo l serv ce 9 45
a m
Worshtp
serviCe
10 30
Evonge tSftc Serv1ce 7 30 p m Wednes
day Prayer meetmg 7 30
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST Pome roy
Hamsonvtlle Rd Robert Purtell pastor
Btl I McElroy Sunday school sup! Sunday
school 9 30 o m morntng worsh1p and
commumon 10 30 am Sunday worsh p
serv ce 7 p m Wednesday evenmg
prayer meeltng end Btble study 7 p m
ST JOHN lUTHERAN CHURCH Pme
Grove The Re ... W1lltom Mtddles warth
Pastor Church ser..,.tces 9 30 o m Sun
d ay School I 0 30 o m
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST Jerry
Pmgley past or Sunday schoo l ~ 30
om
morn tng worsh p 10 30 am
Wednesday 9\lfllllllQ serviCe 7 30
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST Rev Ea rl Shuler
pastor Sunday school 9 30 a m Church
servtce
7 p m
you th meeftng 6
p m Tuesdoy Btble Study 7 p m
RACINE CHURC H OF THE NAZARENE
Rev John A Coffman pastor Martha
Wol fe Cho rman of rhe Board ol Chm
I on lt fe Sunday School 9 30 a m mar
ntng wonh tp 10 30 Sunday ever11ng
worshtp 7 30 p m
Prayer meetmg
Wedne'!idoy 7 30 p m
RACINE FIRST BAPliST Don l Walker
Pastor Robert Smt!h Sunday school
sup! Sunday schoo 9 30 a m mornmg
worshrp 10 40 a m
Sunday eventng
worsh tp 7 30 Wednesday e'o'entn g Btble
study 7 30
DANVILLE WE SLEYAN Rev R 0
Brown pastor Sunday School 9 30
o m mornrng worsh1p 10 45 youth ser
vtce 6 45 p m eventng wo rshtp 7 30
p m
prayer and protse Wednesday
7 30p m
Sl l VER RUN FREE BAPTIST Re v Mor
"'" Mark n pastor Steve l ttle Sunde.,.
schoo l sup! Sunday school 10 a m
morntng worshtp II a m Sundoy e ... en
mg worshtp 7 30 Prayer meetmg and
Btble study Thursday 7 30 p m youth
serviCe 6 p m Sunday
rHR ISTIAN FEL LOWSHIP CHURCH JHJ

ner Ash and Plum Rolph Butcher
pa stor Saturday e11entng serv ce 7 30
p m Sunday School 10 30 a m
MEIGS

COOPERATIVE PARISH
METHODIST CHU~CH
Rtchard W Thomas Dtrector
POMEROY CLUSTER
Rev Robert McGee
POMEROY Sunday Schoo1 9 15 a m
Worsh1p servtce 10 30 om
Chotr
Wednesday 7 p m Rev
rehearsal
Robert McGee pas tor
ENTERPRISE Worshtp 9 a m Church
Schooi iO a m
ROCK SPRINGS Sunday School 9 15 a
m Worsh1p servtee 10 a 1'1'1
FLATWOODS Chu rc h School 10 a m
Worsh1p 11 o m

MIDDLEPORT CLUSTER
HEATH Church School 9 30 om War
shtp 10 30 a m UMVF 6 p m Robert
Robmson Pastor
RUTLAND Ch~Jrch School 9 30 o m
Worsh1p I 0 30 o m
SALEM CENTER
Worsh1p 9 a m
Church School 9 45 o m
SYRACUSE CLUSTER
Re'o' Stanley Merr fted M tntsle t
FOREST RUN Worshp 9 a m Church
School10 om
MINERSVILLE Chur ch Schoo l 9 o m
Worshtp I 0 o m
ASBURY Church School 9 50 o m
Worsh1p 11 om B1bl e Study 7 30 p m
Thursday UMW ltst Tuesday
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
Rev Oavtd Hams
Re " Mark Flynn
Rev Florence Smtth
Ht llon Wolfe
BETHANY
{Oor co:s ) Worshtp 9 30
om Church School 10 30 a m Btble
study Thundoy 7 30 p m
CARMEL Worsh1p second and fourth
Sundays at 10 45 o m Sunday School
second and f ourth Sundays 9 30 a m
Worshtp and Sunday School at Sutton
Un ted Methodtsl Church on f trst and
th1rd Sundays Btble study together each
Wednesday at 7 30 p m Famt ly ntght
d1nner together each th11d Thur5day at

pJO

pm

NORTHEAST CLUSTER
Rev Richard W Thomas
Duane Sydenstncker Sr
John W Douglas
Charle s Oomlgon
JOPPA Worsh1p q 00 o m Church
SchooiiO 00 a m
CHESTER Worsh1p q a m
Church
Schoo l 10 o m Chotr Rehearsal 7 p m
Thu rsday s Brble Study 'Mlursdays
730pm
LONG BOTTOM Sunday School ct 9 30
am Eventng Worshtp of 7 JO p m
Thur5doy Btble Study 7 jO p m
REEDSVILLE Sunday School 9 30 a m
Mornmg Wonhtp 10 30 o rn Ev111 nmg
Worshp
7 30 p m
ll1ble
Study

N 2nd A ve
Mtddleport Pastor
Holltns Sunday servtce:s 10 OOo m O!l,d
7 p m Tuesday and Fr tdoy servrces 7 00
pm
LIBERTY Chris tian Church
L1bert y
Ave Pomeroy Re v Fronk!m Dtck ens
pastor Ser111Ces Sunday 3 00 p m Fndoy
7 JO p rn Tuesday 7 30 p m
CHES fER CHURCH OF GOO Rev R E
Robms on pastor Sunday school 9 30
a m worsh p serv tce 11 a m even1ng
servtce 7 00 youth servtcO Wedn~n
day 7 00 p m
LANCSVILLE
Ct1RISTIAN
CHU RCH
Robert E Musser pastor Sunday school
9 30 o m Paul Musser supt morntng
worshtp I 0 30 Sunday evenmg :servtce
7 00 mtd week servtce Wednesday 7
pm

SYRACUSE

CHURCH

OF

THE

NAZARENE Rev James B Kttt!e pastor
Norman Pres l ey
Sunday
School
Superintenden t
Sunday school 9 30
am
morn1ng worship 10 45 am
evangeltSftC servtce 7 p m Prayer and
Pro1se Wednesday
7 p m
youth
meettng 7 p m

EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN CHRIST
Elden R Bloke pastor Sunday Schoo l10
o m Robert Reed supt Morntng ser
ma n II a m
Sunday mght sttrVICes
Chr shan Endeavor 7 30 p m Song ser
vtCe 8 p m
Preach ng 8 30 p m
Mtdweek Prayer meeltng Wednesday 7
p m Alvtn Reed loy leader
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST located at
Ru tland on New L1ma Rood neMt lo
Fares r Acre Pork Re., Roy Rouse
pasto r Robert Mus ser Sunday School
su pt Sunday school 10 30 o m worsh ip
7 30 p m Btble Study Wednesday 7 30
p m Saturday night prayer serv tce 7 30
pm

HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN Roger
Watson pa stor Mtldred Ztegler Sunday
school supt Mornmg worsh tp 9 30 am
Sundoyschool 10 30 a m eventng ser
vtce 7 30
MT UNION BAPTISl Merl n Teets
pastor
Joe Sayre
Sunday School
Super ntenent
Sunday school
9 A5
o m eventng worshtp 7 30 p m Prayer
meetmg 7 30 p m Wednesday

TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF CHRIST
V1ncent C Waters Il l m1mster Hermon
Block 5upertnlendent Sunday School
9 30 a m
eventng serv1ce 7 p m
Wednesday Btble Study 7 p m

CHESTER CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE
Rev Herbert Grote pastor frank Riffle
supt Sunday Sc hool 9 30 o m Worshtp
servtce II a m and 7 J0 p m Prayer
rneeltng Wednesday 7 30 p m
LAUREL CUFF FlUE METHODISl
CHURCH Rev Floyd F Shook po5to r
Lloyd Wrtghr
D~ractor of Chrtstton
Edu cot on Sunday School 9 30 a m
Mornmg Worsh p 10 30 o t'n
Chotr
Procltce Sunday b 30 p m
Evening
W ors htp 7 30 p m Wednesday Prayer
and 8 ble Study 7 30 p m
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST Charles
Rus se I Sr mml5ter R1ck Macomber
sup! Sunday school 9 30 a m worsh1p
serv1ce 10 3aa m B1bleStudy Tuesday

CHURCH OF JESUS
LATTER DAY &gt;AINTS

BOTTOM

CHRISTIAN

il&gt;m

BRADFORD

Bob

Weekly Sermon
Read thts devottonal thought wtth your Btble open If you have one
nearby F tnd the thtf'"d ch apter of the Gospel Accordtng to Sf John and
read the enftre chapter
You may not1ce a very lam t11ar verse Many people who can rectte
no other scrtpture are tamtltar Wtfh John 3 16 There ts a great deal
more tn th ts chapter thou gh than 1ust th1sone famlltar verse
Tnere ts a wealth ot evange11ca1 truth here Yet we must not read
tnto the chapter modern day t houghts whtch may mislead us
Read John 3 3 Here Jesus tells N fcodemus that unless one 1S born
agatn he ca nnot see the K tngdom of God
Somettmes folks take Wtth them to th1s passage thetr own nottons
as to what bof'"n aQatn" mean s Jesus was not us1ng a well ref ined
theological term hef'"e In fact Ntcodemus a reltg tous leader dtd not
understand what H e was talk 1ng about
J esus was talkmg about a new start obvtously He was not
speaktng about turnmg over a new leaf
however or some small
exerc tse of ones Willpower H i s dtscuss1on 1n thiS chapter of betng
born from above makes clear to us that He tS speaking of somethtng
more powerful than th 1S
'
Jesus is speaktng ot a profound sptr ttual influx tnto ones ltfe
Those of us who conture up scenes of young people giv~ng thetr lives to
Chnst at cn urch attar rails ought not to fhtnk tnat we already know all
about thrs matter of being born agam thoUgh
Btrth ts the begtnning of llfe not tts total accomplishment Anyone
who depends on one p~!t expertence to determtne that he tS pa,-t of the
Ktngdom of God nas m1ssed 1he point Splrtfual nour. 1shment is a con
stant need and sp1ntual growth should never cease 1
Have you been born agatn? Are you a new creature? Do you con
t nue to grow sptntually? All of these co{lcerns are addressed by your
churc h Be there the next ttme the congrfgatton gathers By Mark W
Flynn pastor of th e Carmel Sutton Portland and B~thany United
MethodiSf Ch rc h e~

THE

NAZARENE Rev lloyd D Grimm Jr
pbs tor Sunday Khaol 9 30 a m wor
sh tp serv•ce 10 30 a m Broodcosl hve
o"er WMPO 1 young peoples tervtce 7
p m Evongellstk ser'w'tCe 7 30 p m
Wednesday serv1ce 7 30 p m
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST Corner of
Second and Anderson Mason Postal
Fronk Lowther Sunday school 9 .45
a m worship service I 1 o m and 7 30
p m Weekly B1bla Study Wednesday
7J0pm
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST Mtlfer
St Mason W Vo Eugene L Conger
mtmster Sunday Btble Sludy I 0 o m
Worsh1p II a m and 7 p m Wednesday
Btblt. S!udy vocal mutlc 7 p m

MASON ASSEMBLY OF GOD Dudd•ng
Lone Mason W Va Rev Ronnie B
Rote Pastor Sunday School 9 ,.5 a m
Morning Worst·up 11 a m Even1ng Ser
v1ce 7 30 p m Wednesday Women 1
M1ntstr1e1 9 o m {mHhng and prayer
Prayer and 8tble Study 7 p m

HOLINESS

CHURCH

INC Pearl St
Middleport Rev
0 0.11 Manley po1tor 5undoy tchool
9 30 a m Morn ing worship 10 30 am
evening worship 7 30 p m Tuesday
12 30 p m Women s prayer meeting
Prayer and profle service W.dnesdoy
730pm

RUTLAND APOSTOliC CHURCH OF
JESUS CHRISf Elder James Miller Bible
tludy Wednesday 7 30 p m Sunday
School 10 o m Sunday night serv1ce
7l0pm

POMEROY WESLEY AN HOliNESS Harr11onvllle Rood Dewey King pottor
Henry Eblin Jr Sunday St:hool Supt
Sunday School 9 30 o m Morning Wor
thrp 11 o m Sunday evening ••rwlce
7 30 m Prayer MHtlng ThurtdOJ' 7 30

pm
'
SYRACUSE ~IRST CHURCH OF GOD -

CHURCH

OF

~

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d .5UF

•Ill ~

\

\

AIJ.EY OOP
'oNE WASlE TIME: IN SENSE
LESS DI SCUS!::ill'N H NIS14

But
I don't
i1ke 1t I

It wasn t n1ce She
to sa4 so ' 1 asked
me 1

m sorr4 40u~

Tell her

1
1
um_!:!.;

sorr4'

1s ,t polrte
to sa~ t hank !JOU
f or someth1nq
I don't want?

Would ~ou loke more
oatmeal Gretchen?

oo k~

40u re

v

you

d1dnt
l1ke
her
hat'

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WINNIE
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\ LOO...,ING

CHRIST -

TRINITY Chr ts han Assembly Coolvtlle
Gtlbert Spencer pastor Sunday
sci1ool q 30 a m morning worsl\lp II
om Sunday e.,entng ter\I ICe ? 30 p m
mtdweak prayer ser vtce Wednesday
730pm
MOUNT Oltve Commumty Church
Lawrence Bush pastor MoM Folmer Sr
Supertnlendent Sunday School and mor
ntng worship 9 XI a m Sunday evening
serv1ce 7 p m Youth meet ng and Bible
study Wednesday 7 p m
UNITED FAilH CHURCH - Route 7 on
Pomeroy b't'pou Ae" Robert Sm1th Sr
pa5lor Rev James Cund1ff assistant
pasTor Sunday School 9 lOa m morn
1ng worship 10 30 a m evening wor
sh tp
7 30
Women s Fellowship
Tuesdays 10 o m Wednesday ntght
prayer serv1ce 7 30 p m
FAITH BAPTIST Church Mason meel
at Umted Steel Workers Union Hall
Aotlroad Street Mason Pa1tor Rev
AIChord Jordon Morning worship 9 30
om Sunday School 10 30 o m Prayer
meetmg Wednesday 7 30 p m

Thtrd St
Cheshlre Independent lun
damental ••rvteel Sunday eventng 7 30
p m Pot tor Rev Dr Robert Penons

INDEPEND£NT

I

CHOOR5 15 OOE OF

TO MEOICIIIf
A5 WELL

-~ ~~ ~')

..._ _

You hurt Grandmas
feelmqs
sa41ng

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lOVEll
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H~T 0\ 11.... .:0 \\E IN

'..)UR SH..:"I\ .... .. .._"1 \\

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'

FOREST RUN BAPTIST -

6

CAROl BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
l f l ,t,BC NEWS
I. 3 :Z I CONTACT
!1tl0VEREASY C1e111 v ty !Juotst
JeuamynWtttil pHl tll o Ame · c ~·
wnlltr Host Hui;ihOowns (Closed
Captt on ed U S A I
6 30 I ~ ) · 7 NBC NfWS
GOOD NEWS
\ )
THE
RANGER
OF
BROWNSTONE
BOB NEWHART SHOW

&lt;j)

~

{

{

PENTECOSTAl

ASSEMBLY

.

I!I
I

CARPENTER BAPTIST

Rov Frooland

Norris poafor Don Cheadle Supt Sun
day School q 30 o m Morning Worship
10 lO a m Prayer Service alternate
Sunday•

NEASE SETTLEMENT FREl Will lAP
fiST Donald R Karr St pastor Friday
8\lenlng "ervlce
1Choal lOa ttl

7

30

p m

Sunday

Il l HOLLYWOOO SOUARES

'1 58 1J C_BN UPDATE NEWS
800 t ~ l 8 ? ) HARPER VALLEY PTA
StetUI scats up lhu eo~,; alt9dd!.H
.,..t1en ,, appialt !lhi t1M8 mht!llltH.l
m1 1on• !rom a man w11 01e hi ~&lt; sn11
v ed years aye
IN TOUCH
~( MOVIE

(THRILLERI..,.'~

..

The

Fag 1880
(} I 11 BRAVES
f l MUPPET SHOW Gue11t Wa ljy
8olil g
IIJI t llO THE INCREDIBLE HULl(
Petalvt•d I rom I he ..... ats t d() w
AltfH an acc tdttnt Othtd Oa rmfl • s
onty nope In wall\ au:1un he a n IIHt
ragenetat1ve pow eta oi iiH! Hulk
(60 m1na )
tt (11) WASHINGTON WEEK IN

1\1;\'lEW
(11JID8ENS0Nqenao ldre,!jSIIb ~
u A aoldte end lind a htmattlt Hl
hiiArtOUSIIOubltl!atll OIIIUI QI)UIIy
althe e~ec ut ve mana on anatt11•
co mpt c11htd by I he pre11ence u! a
pr c;e eu gold ata tu tl and a plOt ov
IOitt gn r11voluttoneruta to ,.teAl 1
(AO!!!_OII
8 30 (21.
'r THE I!IAADY 8RIOES
Vttf11he t\fiiP Q! 1111119HI I\H1 Wf:llt)
ttte ' 10 h&amp; lp PtHI pi~HHIH I s
students by 11 v ll'ol '" n s•J "' "
potnlers on b••nQ htp
f&amp; NBA IASK!TIALL Al tdn t
BttYitl vii Chtcau v Bullll
fl 112 CD I M A BIG GIRL NOW

12 30

s 11e~e~bt4t C t U I II t,l C&lt;J tllhll'ij O I

U1e ttVtll 1 wh61 0 111111 I Is n h e
d llliUille and N 681 o 1 lhtl I tiCI c

dDhVIlfy
8 111 WALLSTREETWEEK ilusl
L0 1!IRukeyse
a sa 3 CBNUPDATE NEWS
000 2 D 1 NERO WOLFE Aconri)DI
1011r 1;15 to sellle 01 d old ac mtt w th
Ne10 by pi a t tn~ h n c ~pt vtt lilt s
O ~Aol OOOby II RPIHtd hO!Tlt! w lh Af
c l'\ t1 at d 11 O~At l tl rt rttpor l t:t [60
' na )
3 700CLUB
f 1a ID FRIDAY NIGHT MOVIE
M1 MHI\lStyll 19! I SI815 ChArles
Bt anson lllld tl C t8l81
llJ 8 1 10} THE DUKES OF HAZ
lARD Allii!ICAped COilYICI t! I UI IS
to Hauard ro ,u ttt lo a sco 9 w tn
Boss Hogu and L• ke &amp;nd Bo ha vo
10 s awt~ th t~• nflll&amp;S salter ht1 a
lo. (J ntri)P~:tdbrlheven~c t ltuu t wfl
(60rnnfi)
t SESSION B I
11 COSMOS
Q 30 _. MOIJfE (MYSTERY] ••• ,
L1dy Vanl•hes 197{1
I WITH OSSIE AND RUBY My
OtHidy Wat111 R11 It olid Man f\uu
I CA !I JOIT181lt..t! Wllh the rAtlfOitdS 5
ff!CIIII&amp;('l liS Os!ltt! and Ruby
1e 11811' bt~• 1ha r rat n~tn bath I itt!
road rnen thr p ~(,lh pOfllly lOIII
ta u sto es ~ 111 song (CIO!li! d
C III)II On~d u s A )
10 00 2 II 7 NBC MAGAZINE WITH
OAIJID BRINKLEY
Cl) !I tO'l OALLASDts cu nH Hun t :~
1he ht~Ad ot tr\f! E.,.,mg clan 11 s Jock
tlu elt lll lSI OSI:IIIIIle CO nplt lybus
1 t~U I M 11::1 Ell 9 d vorce11 fltm (6 0

12 40

12 58
1 00

1 15

t 35
2 00

2
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2
2

10
28
30
45

3 58
4 00

tO 28
10 30

tO 4~
10 58

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8 CORTEZ AND MONTEZUMA
A~p o 1 tmt1t1! W ll Oe&amp;l n~ Th $
dnunat za l 01 111 CltJHI9a lht! lfl
tt:ttii Jlltl&amp;l ng oltw o men l hRI letl lu
the cte&amp;t!u Ch&lt;J l at A Clvtlll\1101
11 NEWS
~ CBN UPDA fE NEWS
~ RICHARD HOGUE
11
MASTERPIECE THEATRE
Oanu9r UXB EP•IIOdll XII 811ttn :s
Ita hangs 1n th e ba lance lollh ftn a
nune e10.plodes on (I booby 1rapp~d
p e1 (Closed Capho 1ed U S A )
$ TBSEVENINGNEWS
~ CjtNUPOAU NEWS

2

u •

t 111

e

10 12 ID

NEWS
S OAh GRIFFIN
MORECAM8E AND WISE
1 1 28
C_BN UPDA T! NEWS
11 30
D ~ THt TONIGHT SHOW
Guell l 9 ~ Hnltn~a w ctH Cti1U t;t:i
Ne11on Ril1lty (t;O m ns )
~ FlOSS BAGLEY SHOW
~ MOVIE (WESTERN!""" wan
de Ne,J!ia 19n
t )J.! W FRIDA 'IS
11 NBA aASKE raALLI 11 ,.,,
•!\
::, tHillh
'ol81tl8
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Suptubu otto
10 MOVIE F Ht HOlt! nt l11tlo~ I

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II &lt;45 5 MO\'tE tSCtENCE FICTION!
• , Ang1y Red Pl•n•t 1960

8

THE MIDNIGHT
SPECIAL HOll iS Sk pSiephllns on
By on All on Guests Rober t Ur ch
Cr 9edttnc e Clea r wat er Rtt v1val
ClUny MOIIIIII'f (90m OS}
e SOLIDGOLDHmtol 0 01 t l' Wtr
w ck GoldflitCOrd w nne spm tmm
lh etr htl SCI g&amp;
1ll 8 MOVfE (HORROR I •" •
Son ol Fr~nk•n•t•tn IVJV
3 CBN SPORTS REPORT
) JIMMY SWAGGART
~ MOVIE (HORROR)"
Cas ue
Ot Fu Man ctlu 11172
'
STANDING ROOM ONLY
Yilt 1! tnl Follow Tei\1:19 Cht:ler
hHiclt:HS rt11 ough hm~:~ s ot p am poms
Ql d pep rtt I tiS 11 llml StHl!l I HI
Broadway sn1a sh abo 11 oruw 1111
~~P (S tars ~ne ll ey Hack Mert!a 111
Ba~tter Btrney
5 MOVIE (HORROR)••• Sphtls
01 The Dead t~6Q
NEWS
~ l 30 MINUTES WITH FATHER
MANNING
l it I BELIEVE
1t'1 GJ NEWS REVIEW
~ CBN SPORTS REPORT
~ ROSS BAGLEY' SHOW
4 MOVIE (ADVENTUR E) ••
Killer Fish UHQ
3 CBN SPOfHS REPORT
2

2.
~

tO) FRONT P.t.GE
11) WITH OSSIE AND RUBY
LaughtngMauers 11 sm1magatnst
mach ne as guest sta Ctaavon L I
tl ll tOtnsOu e and Ruby tor a sat r
.cal look at c anned aud ence
llu~;~ ht or the ret nga game and
so me othtt yr Slworr aspe cts ot
(Closed Capt toned
tetev t!l on
uS A I

1

700 CLUB

BOO

~ G 1 8ARBAR.t, WANDRELL
AND THE MANDRELl SISTERS

Gue st slatS Ronn1e M•lsap Chat
to11e Rae (60 mtns l
~ ) 700CL.UB
&amp;l MOYIIE {WESTERN DRAMA)
••• Tw...2._ Rod• Ta11ether 1811
' ) 1itl 18 EIGHT IS £HOUGH
Tommy tiS aboulia leave ontneolo
gestUlUgnmentolhltrocltgroup a
catee r a t our with Boz Scaggs
whan Ius"" g rttnerld Ellen t ells
n•m sne s p11rgnent arld that he 11
me lather (Peri l at a two pa rt ep1
8001
60
mtnR )
(ClaSIIId
Caphoned U S A )
Q [f )(!Q) WKRPINCINCINNATI
ODYSSEY The Sekuddet The
Sall.uddelltf est yle Cerllets a round&amp;
sp r 1u111 harmony 'flllh the souls ot
ttHt ll ancestors end lhllltr tungle
env tonment but progo11ms betng
deve loped by the tndonesu1n
gove mment m a~ soon d srupt
thue
!tad hens
(Closed

1m

C Ht::JI O!Utd

8 30 D i l l llJI INSIDE HOLLYWOOD
THE PICTURE BUSINESS CBS
News e•amm•a how Amertcsn
movtiS are ltnanced made and
marketed Us1ngtoo1agetrommore
thsn t Smov ea and ln terv twlwtlh
some o l the 1nduatry a declaton
mskera the broedcut un11r1hs
the Q111ty buatnlla behin d the
•mageotHoll~wood (IK)mma)
lfl SUPE.RST&amp;RPROFllf
e 00 l J)e (!) HILL ITR!I!TI!ILUES An
eKploat ...eetlultlonlacrelftdwhen
two tuventle gan!il members are n
terrupted during e at ore robb 11ry
and take holtages {RBQetl 60
mtns)
I() PROf'ES.SIOHALBOXING FU
TURE CHAMPIONS TOC!IY I hot
teat young pro tighlersslug tlout m
I/:til t:fDQ.JPCrfl tJt.CiUIIYI
&lt;11 (I2J •
THE LOVE BOAT
Weddtng bellama~rlng lor Juhe 1nd
Gopher when they I all mtovewhtle
try ing to thaw that Gopher lalu!lt as
btg aladlet man athtaotdcottegt
buddy
(80 mint ) (Closed
CIPttontd U S A)

&lt;t l MOYIE
•••
til 30

u s A)

~COMEDY

DRAMAI

MJ Luckwo 1843

MARCH 28 IV81

6 00

EVENING
5
CHAMPIONSHIP
WRESTLING

CJ

!

00

THE Lt:IION
( SNt:AKPIWVIEWSHoatiGene
S tket and Roger Eberl review 11'18
tatut tllmt Inclu ding All NtgM
Long 1 comedy etarrmg Gena
Ha c;l\ man end Strbra Stretund
tnd Back Roads arurallovestory
stamng Sally Field and Tommy L11e
Jones

NEWS
I CONCERN
tQ CBSNEWS
11 THISOLDHOUSOlllt; tB ubV Ia
:sulJPhtU he ltn sw.,rs hJ llll non
4Ul'!llt01!11:1 11 OU tlo;rl tJ I I tt&lt;Je lOf
" ' t(Cioltlli C: ttiJI Ont!O US A I
li
,t.CTION NI!WSMAKER
PRESCRIPTION FOR LIFE
100 1
l BLACMWOOD BROTHERS
• MOYIE (ADVENTURE) ••
Ralte The Titanic IQBO
0 CJ &amp; HEEHAW U t1lll!i l'o tJ t
~~ iJEI•S tlflt:t M ., I • M II
I
td Banrl lheHQ\Iot s GralCJt.J dolld
llc~nl Oill!
11 es
k, pOt HI iiO
Ill lh)
7 lAW Rii,NCE WEl fot SHO'N
I MUPPE'T SHOW
10 BUGS BUNNY
11 ONCE UPON A -. l ASSt C I
I ' ., I '
n ~)l

t2

CIJ

1.,
I

I

'l A

SOLill GOLD

I

....

.,,

ACROSS

J! Kabbolloke

- Time
Next Year
... &amp; Novelist
Gwner -

39 Wongl1ke
40 f ashennan

t

rodenl

tl Defrost

DOWN

10 Mild oath
ll Thtck slice
13 Radial

1 Beg1n to occur
2 Sure footed
3 Norma Jean
Baker

or snuw

II The 15

~tan

Lown.shap

nver

5 Lome

11 Plethora
11lnlet !Sp 1
II Brotish
naval he ro
20 Mollusk
21 Frank
Mernwell

Yesterday's Aaawer
12 D1d a
25 Take a
ptpe·
break

4 Dutch

Strikes Back

or Graham

bowl Job
16 Uruque

27 Roust&gt;

to

act1v1ty

19 Bonjour 30 Of the nose
Tn~tesse
31 Bnng lo bear
7 Snake
author
33 Rozelle
8 Mrs l'harles 20 Vulgar
of fooll&gt;all

6 Avatar
of Vtshnu

s

A Black

23 Bully tree 36 Pers1an ruse
24 Histone
37 Old Dutch

9 Arranged

school

m a sertcs

22 Network

measure

23 Spree
25 Trealed with
ultraviolet

light

21 Outdo
Z8 Doctorow s

- l.ake
29 Jew1sh

Unscramb e these lour Jumbles
onEtlt7f1er to each :5Quate to totm
lout otdtnary word:s

ascetic
Dancer
Mtller
33 Quiet•
34 Peppard on
The Blue
32

n

35 B&lt;lmbardoer s
concern
31 cathedral

LNr
'-AR
n
-"-v"'-E __,_!
YEMINT

WHA"T THE

IIAJLY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXI

CON5T~UC."TION

!0 I

F'OP:EMAN G&gt;OT
F'P:ONI 'THe MA50N

lo

"(

I I XI )"
[ A n3 ~ers

'l -. It

OANOY
lt1~ ~
1

Answll !

LEAFY

AGENDA

toma

BEGONE

rot~

lONGFElLOW

Unt lttter a1mply stands f or -.nother In thla sample A II
usetl for the three I s X for the lwo 0 s I'll' Smale lett•n
apostrophes the lenath and formation of the words are a11
hmts Each dl)' I he &lt;"Ode letters are dillertnt

Now artar1ge th e cttcteo tenets to
1o1m lhe surpr se answar as sug
gesled by the abOve csrtoon

Pr1nranswer~ere

h+-1- +--+-t-

part

-@

team

!
IIJ

t'

by THOMAS JOSEPH

26 The .ttt!neJd s
first word

IQ NEWS

' PRISONER Its Yo11 Fu • e al
11
CROCKETT S VICTORY
GARDEN
6 30 ~ G 7 NBC NEWS
f
DYNASTY UCLA BASKET
BALl Th I HB O~~r. C ill !l vtl l&lt; !luttS
ll e uor allle lim c t ps rt nd •e~;e ~~
ntervttt"' S w lh somt 11 the u ea
It! 51 SlflrS ol tht! UCLA baslo. elball

~6,.,.. ~ t

LAWMAKIItS

5 MOVIE (MVSTERVI" .. Bud
With Ttle Cryelal Ptummage
1Q70
~ 30 J PHIL ARMS PRESENTS
5 58 l CBN SPORTS REPORT

11 115 )

!f \1111 DICK CAVETT SHOW

BAPTIST

Roclno

QIABC NEWS
6 Sf! { C_BN UPDATE NEWS
7 00 { • PM MAGAZINE
l THE STORY
) ALL IN THE FAMILY
(1alCD FAMILY FEUO
POP GOES THE COUNTRY
8 tf TICTACDOUGH
1T
11
MACNEIL LEHRER
REPORT
l(Q: Nf:WS
7 30 !fJ G BULLSEYE
(' THE LESSON
(41HB0SNEA.-;PREY1EW APRIL
Jeflv St tier and Anne Mea1a h1gh
lght the upco m ng mav ea sport s
and spaotals 011 HBO 111 Apt I
~NFORD AND SON
G
l t l JOKERSWILD

~

"5

Route 124 William Habock pastor Sun
day •chool 10 a m Sundo't' evening Mr
vice b 30 p m Wednndoy eenlng Mr
vice 7

FACE THE MUSIC

I . !tO CBSNEWS
!t l
WI LD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
{~ LILIAS YOGA AND YOU

Fovrlh ond

CHURCH Route 1 Shade Potter Don
Block Afftllated with Southern Bopllst
Convenlton Sunday tchool I 30 p m
Sunday worship 2 30 p fT1 Thundoy
e~o~emng Bible sludy 7 p m

oo •&lt;}IJ•eSTUFF
-n or '""u m••ws
($)

Rev Nylo

SOUTHERN

arll

EVENING

Moln St M iddleport Rev Colvin Min
nlt pastor Mrt Elvtn Bumgardner
supt Sunday school 9 30 o m worshtp
I&amp;Nice 10 45 om
NORTH BETHH United Methodi st
Church Rev Charlet Oomtgan polfor
Sundo't' School 9 30 a m Worship S.r
v1ce 10
am Sunday Bible Sludy
7 00 p m Wednesday prayer meetlnv
730pm

BURLINGHAM

Bu• ky s b 11 nil Cl lnelltl est0u1

MARCH27 1Q81

Borde n
pottor
Cornelius Bunch
tupenntendent Sunday school 9 30
a m •econd and fourth Sundays wor
ship service at 2 JO p m

MT MORIAH BAPTIST -

Warw ck Gold recordw nne•s par
totm the11 hI songs
1 30 #J THE LUNDSTROM$
fl CLASSIC COUNTRY

Evening television listings

pm

North

FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH lolorl W

ABOUT ?

9'

I'VE BEEN
HELP W OR

Nt AILEY

Pomeroy
The R&amp;'ol Wtlllam Mtddletwarth Pastor
Sunday Sc hoo l at q "5 o m end Church
Servtces II a m
SACRED HEART Rev Father Pau l 0
Welton pastor Phone W'1 28'1S Sotur
day eventng Moss 1 30 Sundoy Mou 8
and I 0 a m
Confession Solurday
7730pm
VICTORY BAPTIST - 525 N 2nd St
Middleport James E Keesee pastor
Sunday morning wonhtp 10 a m even
tng ser'&lt;'tCe 7 Wednesday eventng war
Ship 7 p m IJUtiOIIOn Tl\uudoy 6 J0

Amos Tltlls pastor Danny T1ll1s Sunday
School Sup! Sunday School 9 30 a m
followed by morning worship Sunday
aventng servrca
7 00 p m
Prayer
meeting Wednesday 7 00 p m

Vo Rt 1 Mark lrwtn pastor Wors~·up
tentlces 9 30 o m Sunday school 11
am evening worship 7 30 p m lues
day coltag• prayer mHting and Bible
study
9 30 o m
Wonhip serv1ce
Wednesday 7 30 p m
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH now located
on Pomeroy Plke County Rood 25 near
Flotwoodt Rev Blackwood po1tor Ser
'o'ICes on Sunday ot 10 30 a m and 7 30
p m wtth Sunday tchoal 9 30 o m Bible
study Wednesday, 7 30 p m

) Oll WI SII W 5£ E ME

ST PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH Cocnec

RUTLAND BIBLE METHODIST CHURCH

CHRISTIAN UNION The Rev William
Campbell pa1tor Sunday School 9 30
a m James Hughes 1upl evenmg ser
vtce 7 30 p m Wednetday evenmg
prayer meehng 7 30 p m Youth prayerserviCe epch Tuesday

ANtiM16 F~OM
l ~RANGERS

o f Sycamore and Seco~d Sts

HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
4

-

Eugene Underwood pastor Harry Hen
drtcks supermtendent Sunday school
9 :K&gt; a m mormng worsh1p 10 30 am
evenmg worshtp 7 p m Wednetdoy 81
ble stud.,. 7 p m
JUBILEE CHRI STIAN
CENTER
Georges Creek Road Rtr¥ C J Lemley
pastor: John Fai lure superintendent
Church school 9 30 a m morning wor
sh1p 10 30 evening serv1ce 7 p m Btble
Sludy Thurs 7 p m Classes lor all ages
Nursery prov1ded lor worsh1p servt cet

Budunghom pastor Herb Elliott Sun
day school 5upl Sunday school 9 30
a m morntng wor1h1p and comumon
lOJOom

I~

-

.,.

CHURCH OF GOD of Prophecy located
on the 0 J Whtle Rood c.ff tughwoy 160
Sunday School 10 a m S~:~penntendent
John Loveday F1r5t Wednesday night of
month CPMA servtees second Wednes
day WM8 meet tng thi rd fhrou.gh ftfth
youth serv !ce George Croyle pastor
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL - 570 Grant
St M1ddleport Sunday School 10 a m
morntng worshtp 11 o m evening wor
sh1p 7 p m Wednesday evening Btbl e
study and praye r meettng 7 p m AI
f1f1oted w1th Southern Baphsl Conven
tton

FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION ot Bold

OF

J ':'\ l

DOCTO!l 15 TO EASE THE &amp;UFFER!IIQ
THEIR FELLO" BEIH6G • ~-'---...,

HM

pm

Knob loca ted on County Rood J\ Rev
lawrence Gluesencomp pastor Rev
Roger
Williard
Oll!lfant pastor
Preoch1ng 5erv1ces Sunday 7 30 p m
prayer meeting Wednesday 7 30 p m
Gory Griffith leoder Youth groups
Sunday avetng 6 JO p m w1th Roger and
V1olet W1llford os leaders Commun ion
servtces f irs t Sunday each month
WHITE S CHAPEL Coolville RD Rev
Roy O.eter pastor Sunday school 9 30
a m wonhtp ser\IICB 10 30 o m Btble
study and prayer sarv1ce Wedntnoday
730pm

LIFE SCIENCE CHURCH -

'.

James A Bruhl pastor Sunday
school I a a m Sunday evemng servt ce
7 00 Wednesday prayer meet ng 7 00

HYSEll RUN HOLINESS CHURCH Svn

CHURCH

•r

Or

day School ot 9 30 a m worship ser
vtces al I 0 30 a m Pastor Rev Theron
Durham Thursday sarv1ct'~ at 7 30 p m
wtth Rev Okey tort

RUTLAND

SAN D~ ~EVER TA~E5

AFRAID I TEND
lO~E I AL0N6 &amp;TTER "ITH
" Ell
ANIMALG TIIAH " ITH
~
YOU
PEOPLE r - BUT "IIAT DID KHO" HOW

]I(ERE ME TIIOSC !lltOSC
PURPOSE Ill BECOMIH~ A

()!(,MY - AHHIE, SOME PEOPLE ENTER THE
VARIOUS PROFE&amp;510H5 OIILY &amp;ECAIJIE
1HEY TEND TO PRO~IDE A60W LIVIHG,
HOT BECAUSE THEY HAVE ANY 5PEC111L
APlllUOE OR CAUIHG- THIS APPU1:5

"ELL SOIIEOHE NA&gt;
SIIV IH' THAT OR ~UE
I&amp;H" A VERI GOOD
IXJC TO!l

~ E lt,l'~

••

RUTLAND FREEWILL BAPTIST Chucch -

liftcflason pastor Wallace Damewood
Sunday School Supertnfendent Worsh1p
ser~o~lceot9o m 81bleSchool10o m

RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST

~ROH6l061V"

M~

-

Not Penteco stal Rev George 01ler
pas lor Wonh1p service Sunday 9 45
a m Sundar' school I I o m worshtp
servrce 7 30 p m Thursday prayer
meeftng 7 30 p m
MT HERMON Umted Brethren 10
Chrtsl Church Re v Robert Sanders
postor Dan Will lay leoder l&lt;Xoted tn
Texas Commun1ly off CR 82 Sunday
school 9 30 o m Morn1ng worsh1p 5er
vtce 10 45 a m evemng preochtng ser
vtce second and fourth Sundays 7 30
p m Chr stton Endeavor f~rst and thi rd
Sundays 7 30 p m Wednesday prayer
meelrng and Bible study 7 30 p m
JEHOVAH S WITNESSES 37319 Slate
Route 124 (One mtle east of Rutland )
Sunde.,. Btble lecture 9 JO a m Wot
chtower 5tudy 10 20 o m Tuesday Bi
ble
study
7 30 p m
Thursday
Servt ce
TheocratiC School 1 30 p m
Meetmg B 20 p m

Portland AoCin&amp; Rood Wtlltam Roush
pastor Phyllt :s Stoborl Sunday. School
Supt Sunday School 9 30 a m Morntng
worshtp I 0 30 o m
Sunday eventng
servtce 7 p m Wedne5day e..,.en1ng
prayer servtces 7 30 p m
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST Re" Earl Shuler
pastor Worsh tp serv1ce 9 30 a m Sun
do.,. school 10 30 o m B1ble Sludy and
prayer servtce Thursday 7 30 p m
CARLETON CHURCH K1ngsbury Rood
Gory Ktng pastor Sunday school 9 30
o m Ralph Carl supenn tendent even
tng worsh1p 7 30 p m Preyer meattng
Wednesda'(. 7 30 p m

LONG

OH IT'S HOT THAT, rR
LIX IR 1 IT'G JUGT THAI

\_

Middleport
Pomeroy 0

'for A Real Auctton

OF

'' -I'M SORRY,
ANNIE ~AG 1

(

THE DAILY
SENTINEL

Cilll the Relil McCoy
t 0 ' 1 Mac McCoy
Rt 1, Reedsville Oh
tiS 3944

p

ANNIE

Phone (6141742 2777

McCOrS AUCTION SERVICE

CHRIST

Sampson Hall supt
RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD Randall
Bat ley pastor Svndoy school 10 am
Sunday worshtp 11 o m
Children s
church 11 a m
Sunday eventng ser
Wednesday evenmg
vtc e 7 30 p m
young lodtes ou;~ultary 6 p m Wednes
day fom1ly worsh1p 7 30 p m

am Worship 11 am
PORTLAND Sunday School 6 30 p m
Eventng Worshtp
7 30 p m
Youth
Meetmg Tuesday 7 30 p m Btble Study
Thursday 7 30 p m
SUTTON Sunday School ltrst and ttwd
Sundays 9 30 o m worshtp ftrst and
thtrd Sundays 10 45 o m Worshtp and
Sunday S(hool at Carmel Untied
Method1sf Church on second and fourth
Su r days
B1ble $tudy together each
Wednesday 7 30 p m Family night drn
ner together each third Thursday ol 6 30

',,
I...

Rutland, Ohto 45775
81!1 ' Brown Owner

Serv1ce
Locust &amp; Beech Street
"2 H21 Mtddleport

Pf!ESBYTERIAN Church Worsh p serv1ce

MORSE CHAPEL Chvcch School 9 30

'

•

J Wm

0~

Complete
Automot1~o~e

9 30 o m Sunday SGhool I 0 3a a m Mrs

APPLE GROVE Sun day School 9 30
om Wor5h1p 7 30 p m I sta nd 3rd Sun
days Prayer meetmg Wednesday 7 30
p m Fellowshtp SI:Jpper ltr st Saturday 6
p m UMW 2nd Tuesday 7 30 p m
EAST lETART Chruch Schoo l q om
Worshtp s•nvtce 10om Ptoyer meettng
7 30 p m Wednesday UMW second
Tuesday 7 30 p m
RA.CINE WESLEYAN
Sunday ~c hool
10 am worshtp II a m Chon practiCe
Thursday 8 p m
lETART FAllS
Worshtp se rvt ce 9
am Church School lOa m
MORNING STAR Worshtp 9 30 am
Church School 10 30 o m

,,

...

ServiCe

UNITED

HAZEl COMMUNITY CHURCH

•\

SANDY THE
611Ll :_] '!:_

EWS &amp; SONS SOHIO

lilt ~

It Is II II th II l,ud di,l!lll I l. lfU abuul hUilliJII bt:
I huh l\ lOr In lhe l11blu ond nth c llft of H1 s
s m Jcsl s l od h&lt;id nn1du vlvtd l } dear lits l OVt::
11d Ill ~ \\Ill

Ernest Slrtckltn pastor Sunday church
Mr s Homer lee
school 9 30 a m
supt morntng worshtp 10 30
MIDDLEPORT Sunday sch_,ol
-, 30
o m RICha rd Vaughan 5upl Morn ng
worshtp 10 30

FIRST

Thtrd Middleport
992 2196

Nattonwtde Ins Co.

m

992 3125

lid~ d ll

toe
HARRISONVIllE PRESBYTERIAN R"'

SYRACUSE

s

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

Pomeroy

Pomeroy

11 ' ' 1 .tlltd In f'dmt uf t\ 1l! And 11 IS unt! of !he
nu~l '\tilt I t( 1de.t~ In rthtrl s rdti!ti UUS know le d~e
\l dtt ttl. f r oun:etvtJs \\hat ~' e II beltc\e and ho\'.

MIDDLEPORT FREEWill BAPTIST Coc

pm

461

F!'r ... erh AUten' counrv

216 S Second

G rocenesGener.nl Me,-chandtse
Racme 949 2S50
Rev

3

VIRGIL B. TEAFORD SR.

WAID CROSS
SONS STORE

Bakers at

~·

Pat Hill Ford, Inc.

992 6655

HEINER'S BAKERY

TRINITY CHURCH

r.~

216 E Matn

E

ATHUe

A QUICK ~LIMP.sE
IN THI!' l&gt;ARt&lt;··
LOdKID Ill! I

Savings &amp;
Loan Co.

~

214E Maon
992 SilO Pomeroy

tONLV CAueHr

THAT GIANT f.JUT INH O COLD COCKED
Mf ON OUR WAV NTO THE VALLEY'

Pomeroy

~

Phone 992 3480 '--- ~ .,

KERMIT S KORNER

FURNI~!e~~~RDWAR:tI

126E Matn

I&amp;UT HR SU~

Pomeroy

992 29SS

Phone 992 6304

510 N 2nd
Mtddlepof'"t

9'/2 3451

NE.W YORK
Cl.OlHING HOUSE ~ ':-..
l• 7
Pomeroy Oh1o
J/

RIDENOUR

I

Eatfnor
C•lrf'"Y Out

Pomeroy

Prescr.pflons

M•ddleport

-

~~~! · m

Church &amp; Ofhce Supphes
GIFTS

&gt;

•

•••

MARK VSTORE

MIOOL£PORT
BOOK STORE

........

'

1

Clt\'nOQVOTE8
~NWWtAOVV

N

HGGJ

VADNRV

CGL

FA

HFHA M

M~JGLXS

RAGJ

CG L

I:! \11UI way I s a jOke - A GA.G

BOTM

GWDA

ZGSA

QNJJ C KGJD

YOIIenlafs CryJIGquole ONE DOES NOT EXPECf IN THIS
WORLD ONE HOPES AND PAYS CARFARES
- J05EPIUNE P PEABODY

�Fr.day March 27 1911

Pomeroy-M•ddleport Oh o

Page-8-The Da11y sent nel

Fnda

Small
investment,
large
returns,
Sentinel
Want
Ads
I
address unknown
JOY
MANUFACTUR NG CO
fjen v W 0 ve Bldg P 1
tsburgh
22
Pa
GENERAL TELEPfjONE
CO OF 0fj 0 P 0 Box
No \1007 Mar on Oh o
43393
s ua ed n the Twp of
Ru and County of Me gs
and Sta e of Oh o Beg n
n ng a the N W co ne of
ands formerly owned by
Dav d Wolfe n Frac No
33 Town 6 Range 4 of
OC P contanng 5 aces
mo e or ess
Another tract of land n
F ac 33 Town 6 Range 4
of 0 C P beg nn ng 18 rods
S of he N W carne of an
ds formerly owned by
Dav d Wolfe con a n ng 95
rods more or less
The to low ng descr bed
eal estate In Frac 33
Town 6 Range U of 0 C P
Beg nn ng at N E corner of
Dav d Wolfe and con
ta n ng ten and one e ghth
1 8
acres more or
ess
Deed Refererence Yo
213 PO 415 Me gs Counly
Deed Records
JUDGMENT S2.&amp;8 88 pus
ace ued ta)(es assessmen
ts penalt es and costs of
ac on
CASE NO 81 DL T 37
Parce No POMV 8 Sera
No 81 DL T 37 I I ed n the
nameofV RG N A CREW
f I v ng whose ast known
address s Pomeroy Oh o
he unknown spouse t any
whose name and add ess
are unkonwn the unknown
he rs de'V ses egatees ad
m n s a tors
executo s
and or ass gns of v rg n a
Crew f deceased RUTH
0
STEELE
f
v ng
whose last known add ess
s 160 Ca dwell Ch 1 cotne
Oh o the unknown spouse
f any whose name ancl ad
dress are unknown the
unknown he s dev sees
egatees
adm n strators
ex:ecufo sand o ass gns of
Ruth
D
Stee e
t
deceased AL CE ROSEN
THAL f v ng whose ast
known add ess
s 2155
Lu ay Ave
C nc nnat
Oh o the unknown spouse
f any whose name and ad
d ess are unknown the
unknown he s dev sees
legatees
adm n strarors
executors and o ass gns of
A ce
Rosentha
f
deceased ANN MOOTZ f
v ng whose ast known
add ess s 525 Laram e
T a C n nnat Oh o the
unknown spouse
f any
whose name and add ess
a e unknown the untcnown
he s dev sees ega tees
adm n s rata s e&gt;&lt;ecutors
and or ass gns of Ann
Mootz
deceased FAYE
SM Tfj
f
v ng whose
ast known add ess s 320
R ver 9Rwe
ov rgtor.
Ky
he unknown spouse
f any whose name and ad
d ess are unknown the
unknown he rs dev sees
egatees
adm n strators
executors and or ass gns of
Faye Sm lh f deceased
LOTT E B COHEN
f
v ng whose last known
add ess s Pome oy Oh o
the unknown spouse t any
whose name and add ess
are unt&lt;.nown the unknown
he s dev sees legatees
adm n s raters e&gt;&lt;ecuto s
and or ass gns of Lott e B
Cohen f deceased
5 tuated n V age of
Pomeroy Coun y of Me gs
and State of on o Be ng the
back pa
of Lot No 2 1
con a n ng
3 acres mo e
o ess
Deed Reference
Vo
241 pg 385 Me gs County
Deed Records
JUDGMENT S38 36 pus
accrued ta xes assessmen
ts pena t es and cos s of
act on
CASE NO 81 DL T 38
Pa ce No 005 Ser a No
81 DL T 38
ed n he
name of WALTER BAR
TRUM f v ng whose ad
d ess
s unknown
he
unknown spouse
any
whose name and add ess
a e
unknown
he
unknown he s dev sees
ega ee~
adm n s ato s
executa sand o ass gns o
Wa rer Ba urn f deceas
Pub c Not ce
ed
S tuated
n Twp
o
IN THE COMMON
Sa sbu y County of Me gs
PLEASE
COURT OF
and S a e o Oh o Be ng n
MEIGS COUNTY OHIO
Sec 32 Town 2 Range 3 TfjE
FEDERAL LAND
0 CP
conta n ng 15 54
BANK
OF
LOUISV LLE
aces mo eor ess
Pant f
Deed Re e ence
Vo
2 pg 625 Me gs Counly
Deed Reco ds
JUDGMENT 1203 76 pus
ac
ued
ta xes
assessmen s pena es and
cos ts of ac o
Any pe son
ca m ng any
e es
n o
any parce ot ea es ate
above s ed may
e an
answe n such act on se
t ng fo h he na u e and
amount of n e es owned
o
a med and any de ense
o
ob ec on
o
he
fa eclosure Such ans.we
must be f ed n he of ceo t
the unders gned C e k of
Cou
and a copy hereof
se ved on he Coun y P o
sec;utor on or be o e he 6 h
day of May 198
t no answe sf ed on o
be ore the date spec t ed as
he as day o f ng an
answer
a udgment o
o ec osu e w be taken by
defau t as o any pa ce
sed n he-comp a nf as o
wh ch no answe t'las been
ed Any pa ce as o
wh en a
orec osu e
aken by defau t sha be
sod o he sa sfac on o
he taxes
assessmen s
charges
ncu eel
n
o ec osu e na a e
and unpa d
A any t me p o o he
ng of an en y ot
ma on o
sa e
owne o
enh o d

no

v ng
whose as known address
sR
Ru and Oh o the
unknown he rs de\/ sees
ega ees
adm n s a o s
exe o sa nd o ass gns of
D exa
Lambert
f
de eased
ED TH LAM
BERT
v nq whose ast
known add ess s Rt
Rli and
Oh o
he
unknown he s dev sees
ega ees
adm n s a o s
exe u ors and o ass gns of
Ed h
Lambe
f
de eased
S uated n the Twp of
RlJ and Coun y o Me gs
a d S a e of Oh o
Pa ce No 1 S ua ed n
Se
6 Town 6 Range 4
conan ng 89ac es
Pa ce No 2 Be ng n
Se
6 Town 6 RAnge 14
o o c P and be ng known
as 0 Well Lo o Old Ho
o and be ng 25 ac es
Pa eel No 3 Be ng W
ha t of Sec 6 Town 6
Range 14 of o 0 C P and
be ng 22 62 ac es ex
89
ac es desc bed as Pa ce
No 1 above
Deed Rete ence
Yo
225 pg 823 Me gs Coun y
Deed Record
UDGMENT $252 56 pus
ace ued ta xes assessmen
s pena es and costs o
ac t on
CIISE NO 8 DL T 3l
Pa ce No 004 Sera No
81 DL T 35
I ed n the
name of CLEM P WEST f
v ng whose address s
unknown
he unknown
he rs dev sees ega tees
adm n st a o s e)(ecu o s
and or ass gns of C em P
West
f de eased
MAE
WEST aka May West f
v ng whose add ess s
unknown
he
unknown he s dev sees
egatees
adm n strata s
execu1o sand o ass gns of
Mae Wes aka May Wes
f deceased
S tuated
n Twp
Of
Lebanon County of Me gs
and Sta eo Oh o Be ng n
Sec 33 Town 2 Range 11
cons s ng o 25 acres on S
endot50ac et act
Deed Re e ence
Vo
12 pg 227 Me gs Coun y
Deed Reco ds
JUDGMENT $242 29 pus
accrued axes assessmen
s pena f es and costs o
act on
CIISE NO 81 DL T 35
Pa ce Nos 013 017 018 &amp;
019 Se a No 81 DL T 36
ted n the name of THE
ONEGO CORPORAT ON
606 Fayette Na ona Bank
B dg
Un on own
Pa
20530 THE ONEGO COR
PORATON
co
CO
FISHER Sto utory Agent
119 S 2nd Ave M ddleport
Oho UNITED STATES
OF AMER CA co Un ted
States Attorney Dept of
Taxaf on
85 Marcon
Blvd
Co umbus
Oh o
.()215 UN TED STATES
ATTORNEY GENERAL
Wash ngton
D C
ASS STANT ATTORNEY
GENERAL co Eugene p
Everhart Oh o Bu eau of
Emp ovmen Serv ces 145
A Front St Co umbus
Oh o 432 6
JOE
D
MILL.ER 129 Locust St
Pomeroy
Oh o 45769
WEST VIRG N A TRAC
TOR &amp; EQUIPMENT CO
address unknown
M D
WEST STREEL CORP E
Main St
Pomeroy Oh o
45169 MACfj NERY NC

Pub c Not ce
172 of the Deed Records of
Me gs county Oh o
Parcel No
2
The

a ow ng

rea

estate

s ua ed n he County of
Me gs n the Sta e of Oh o
and n the T ownsh p ot
0 ange and bounded and

descr bed

as

Publ

AM
W TNESS my s'3nat~re
and the seal of sa Court
th s 10 h day of March
AD 198

By Jane1 E Morr s

Chef
Deputy Clerk
20 27 ~· 3 10 17

to ows

Beg nn ng at the southeas

corner of the northeas
quarter

ol Sect on 16
Townsh p A and Range 2
of the on o company s Pu

chase
n 0 anoe Town
sh p Me gs County Oh o
thence north 68 rods then
ce wes 80 rods to the cen
ter of the creek thence
souther y fa low ng the
meander ngs of the creek
o

he south

quarter

ne of sa d

hence east to the

Publ c Notice
IN THE COMMON
PLEAS COURT
MEIGS COUNTY OHIO
HARRIET J SMITH
Pia nhll
-vsHAROLD
EUGENE
SMITH
Defendant

and s tuate n he County
and Stale aforesa d n Sec
on 16 Townsh p 4 and
Range 12 of he Oh o Com
pany s Pu chase and boun
ded as fa tows Beg nn ng

at the southeast corner o
and forme ly sod by
Dav d Da ev to Ph p
Da ey on Ezek e Wo
hen s ne n the cen ter o
he creek. hen e up sa d
creek to and former y
owned by Ph a Da ns
hence sou h 86 deg ees
west o the co ne o the
ence nea a edge of rocks
supposed to be 82 rods
hence southeas er y a ong
sa d edge of rocks to
Ezek e Wo hens and
hence east a ong sa d ne
o the p ace of beg nn ng
supposed to conta n 25
ac es mo e or ess And
be ng the same property
conveyed by Samue Co e
and Harr elt E Co e h s
w fe to A bert Co e by deed
da ed Augus 22 1900 and
eco ded n Book 86 Page
499 of the Deed Reco ds of
Me gs County Oh o
Deed Refe ence Vo ume
59 Page 415 Me gs Coun
y Deed Records
Sub ect o a ega h gn
ways and easements o
eco d
G an o c a ms t t t&gt; by
dt&gt;eds o ecord as eco ded
n Oeed Book 159 Page 4 4
Deed Book 235 Page '19
and Deed Book 238 Page
34 n the Records of fhe
Me gs Coun y Reco de s
Off ce A so Vo 137 Page
35 Me gs County Deed
Records
Desc pt on fa the abo~o~e
desc bed
act of and
be ng he esu s of com
P ng the deed eco ds and
s not by act ua f e d su
vey R cha d C G asgow
RS 5 6
TRACT 2
An add f ana 55 ac e s
desc bed as o ows
The fa ow ng ea es t a e
s uated n the Coun y o
Me gs n the Sta e of Oh o
and n the T ownsh p o
0 ange Sec on No 5
Townsh p No 4 and Range
No 12 and bounded and
des
bed as to ows
Beg nn ng n he m dd e o
State Roue No 7 7 92
cna ns wes f om the nor
1heas co ne o ands now
o o me v owned by C F
Ke e and Lue a Ke e
sa d po nt o beg nn ng a so
be ng 7 50 cha ns sou h of
he nfe sect on o S R No
7 and S R No 68
hence
wes .4 cha ns o an on
on thence south 5 deo ees
0 m nu es west 38 cha ns
to an on p n hence eas 4
cha ns o hem dd e of sad
S a e Rou e No 7 hence
a ong the m dd e of sa d
oad nor h 5 degrees 10
m nut ~ eas
38 cha ns to
the p ace o beg nn ng con
fan ng 55/100 ot an ac e
Magne c Var at on 6
degrees wes
And be ng
he same p oper y con
veved by Ber e Bah and
Bess e Bahr husband and
w e o Homer A Co e ana
One fa Co e husband and
w fe by deed dated Sep
tember 4 1943 and eco
ded n Book 50 at Page 378
ot the Deed R eco ds o
Me gs Coun t y Oh o
Con a n ng n a 39
ac es more or ess
Sa d ea esta e s ap
pra sed as fo ows Trac t
S7 600 00 and Tra ct 2
SA2 500 00 and canno t be
sod to le ss than two th rds
of he app a sed va ue Te
ms of sa e a e cash n hand
on dav of sa e and w be
so d sub ect to the en for
ea es ate a)(es o 981
JAMES J PROFF T
SfjER FF OF
ME GS COUNTY Ofj 0
3 13 20 27 4 3 10 5 c
Pub c Not ce
NOTICE OF
fjEARING ON
PETITION FOR
ADOPTION
The State of Oh o Me gs
County
Common P eas
Court ProbateD v son
Case No 23370
NOT CE OF
HEARING AND
EXAMINATION
In the Matter of the adop
ton of Charles W II am
McK nnev
To Robert Edw n M ller
address unknown
You are he eby not f ed
that on the 10 h day of Mar
ch
198
Jeffrey Ray
McK nney
res d ng at
Beech Street Apt
M d
d eport Oh o w lh the con
sent of Jenn fer Lynn
McK nney
es d no at
Beech 51 eel Apt
M d
d eport Oh o f ed n th s
Court a Pe t on for eave to
adopt Charles w am
M ller l!l ch ld dOe th ee
yea s and to a chanoe of
the name of sa d ch ld to
Charles w 1 am McK n
ney and tha near ng of
sa d Pe t on and
he
exam na on under oath
of a I the partes n nte est
who may be p esent and to
whom rawfu not ce has
be had
been g ven w
before sa d Court at Me os
Counfy Probate Court
Courthouse
Pome oy
Oh o on the 27th day of
May 198
a 19 o c ock

RAC NE GUN SHOOT
Ri!lc ne Gun C ub every
Fr day n ght start ng at
7 30 p.m Factory chOI&lt;e
guns on v
YOUR
P A NO
Too
va uable to neglect expe t
tun ng &amp; and repa r Lane
Oan els 742 2951 or 992

2082

R N posit on n 10 bed acute care psych atr c umt
using nterd sc pi nary appruch Past ve work ng
env ronment with eMcellent fr nge benet ts n
l"'d nu conhnu ng education ilnd tuition re mburse
menl Flex ble schedul ng w th every other
weekend off (m n mum) For more nformat on
contact the Personnel Off ce Gal a Jackson Me gs
Comtnun ty Mental Health Cente 4 2 v nton P ke
Golf pol s OH 4l631 Phone No 16 4) 446 5500

GET VALUABLE ran ng
as a young bus ness person
and earn good money p us
some g ea g fts as a Sen
t ne oute carr er Phone
us r ght away and get on
the e g b ty st at '192
21560 9922157

Business Services

SWIMMING POOL.S
N
STALLED $9'19 00 Com
panv has poo s eft over
from ast year 6 x 31 o d
5 x: 24 sw m area Pr ce n
c udes pool f Iter deck
bench
ladde
and n
stallat on
on
normal
g ound cond t ons Also n
ground poo k ts start ng at
$ 695 00
Bank t nanc ng
aYa ab e Cal co ect a
304 776 6333 or n Oh o ca
800 624 85 1

I'AI'~

I fX!UT£t.
filE Olfstt£
UJ®b

loB€

etC:i-JeR

The Mental Health C.enter s a Prhlilte Non Prof t
(;orporataDn aad an Equa Opportun ty Aff rmat ve
Action l!lnployer

IAA~TtUS

APPLIANCE SERVICE

TERMITE and

Call Ken Young

PEST CONTROL

WANTED

G veaway

PACQUALE

have o go to Veterans
Hasp ta
n C nc nnat
fjave n ce cats to gel good
homes to 1 3 yeas od
ght gray s r ped female
w h 7 g ey k t ens ~weeks
Old I n ne monftl o d ve ow
str ped ma e very f sky
2 8 month o d wh te cats
ma e and fema e a are
sho t ha red Mrs Ma y
Rusk James
Gal pol s
Oh 446 0728

p ace of beg nn ng con
ta n ng 30 , acres A so the
o ow ng descr bed ot of

by Larry Wright

COMMU~lJlrf!lAl HEAl.lH

c Not ce

The Dail Sentinei-Pa ..._,

Pomeroy-M•ddleport Oh10
KIT N CARLYLE •

•
'

Publ c"Not ce

March 27 1981

ELE9RICAL CO.

WANT EO Peop e
Avon
Wo k you
hou s Pa
me o
m f nterested ca
2354 or 742 2755

42

Mob le Homes
fo Rent

• Heat Pumps
• E ect c Heat ng
&amp;W ng
ndus a Com me
and Res dent a

CUNNtNGHAM
&amp;ASSOC
Mortgage Bankers
992 7544
VA ia.i!nS

ca

no money down
Federal Hous ng
3% 011 S2S 000

se I ng

3 bed oom mob e home

General

h'ousing

babys n my home fa
nfan s o
sc hoo
ch d en Have e e ences
and ex pe ence Phone 992
394

Th ee bed ooms a ge k t
hen am y oom daub e
ga age deck M d s x es
992 5420

Headquarters

OS T Safe depos key or
Centra T us co Bank
Los somel me yes erday
Jus
etu n key o 690
Lau e S M dd eport No
quest ons asked

Los
a ge ma e ge man
sneptla d answe ng to the
name of Shadow Wea ng
a g een co a Ch d s pe
Los n the Pomeroy area
992 6756 May have s ght
ght back h p
-~

1

2
n memo y
Leson Me
hday
You a e gone bu ce
a n y no to go ten
m ss you mo e each day
as wa ch he a nsgoby
Then d eam o you
we a e com o ed by
know ng you a e w hou
pa n and you are e o c ng
Sad y m s5ed by w fe
daugh e s
sons
g and
en dren and g ea g and
ch d en
Announcements
HAVE vaca ncy
Ca e
oom boa d &amp; aund v to
nva d o e de y pe sons
Reasonab e 992 60:22
Ra e ne vo untee
F e
Depa men
sponsors a
shot gun &amp;
e ma ch
eve y Sal n ght 6 30 p m
a ne bu d ng n Bashan
Facto y choke 12 guage
sho guns on v Opens ghts
22 t e
M E GS MUSEUM open by
appo ntment January Ma
c h '192 2264 992 2802 '192
2360 o 992 2639 fj s o es
fo
sa e
Pome oy
M dd epor t L b ares
Matern y c othes at a
to dab e p ces Nu s ng
b as and gowns Water
me on Patch 5 hand Ma n
New Haven Wes v g n a
Phone 1 304 882 3410
NOW T LL EASTER 2()Q0
off pa nt 30°o off g een
wa e 0 ehe s Ceram cs
59 N 2nd Ave M dd epo 1
Oh 992 275

Yard Sale

Ya d Sa e Sa urday Mar
en 28 a 0 00 at he Roger
B ack es den e on Ma n
S ee
n Rut and Oh o
Ran cance s
8
AUCT ON eve y F day
n gh 7 p m Ha to d Com
mun y Cen er Ha o d
w va
9

Wan

edto~

WANTED
TO
BUY
GOLD
S LVE R
PLAT NUM STERL NG
CONS R NGS JEWELR
Y M SC
TEMS
AB
SOLUTE
MARKET
PR CE GUARA NTED ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SfjOP
M DDLEPORT
0fj 0 '192 W6
OLD CO N S pocke wa
ches c ass ngs wedd ng
bands d amends Go d or
s ve Ca
A Warns ey
T easu e Cnest Co n Shop
A I hens OH 594 4221

CH P WOOD Po es max
d ame er 14
on arges t
end S12 50 pe on Bundled
s ab
$ 0 50 per ton
De ve ed o Oh o Pa let
Co
Rock Sp ngs Rd
Pomeroy 992 2689

LOCKSM Tfj
Se vee
Mas e
Key ng
b nat ons Bonded Ca
New Haven W va J04 882
2079

Bnng Them To

lANDMMK'S
lAWN &amp; GARDEN
aJNIC
Free Soli Test
wh1le vou wait
March 27 19 81
9am 4pm

POMEROY
lANDMARK
POMEROY
LANDMAAI&lt;

m
E Mlln 51

2111
Pomeroy

VIRGIL B SR
o
u E Second Street

Phone
1 r6t4&gt; 992 3J2s

RACINE - Large home
w h 5 bedrooms Looks
n ce and has cha ac e
appea Has a arge o
and s nea schoo s and
sto es
NEW L STING
Mode n 3 bed oom
horne w h 2 65 ac es
Bu
n tc cnen ce n a
hea
and a ge v ng
m w h s d ng gas
doo s o the pa o Good
d
ed we
and a ge
ba n
NEW L STING
976
H c es mob e hom e
w h 3 bed ooms and 2
ba hs Looks kc new
y oom
A so has a u
bu on
SYRACUSE
To a
e ec c nome nea the
poo and p ayg ound
Has J bed ooms
2
ba hs
Ga age
and
arge ya d A n ce home
0 us $43 500
OUT OF TOWN
Reasonab e home w h
ac eage 2 bed ooms
a ge v ng and 2 po
ches On 5 R 7 On v

125 ac es of exce en
pas u e
o
en
Two
do a s pe cow per man h
965 3809

w LL ake ca e ot e de y
woman n my home 667
6675

buy ng god and
s ve o d poc ket watches
cha ns d amends s lver
money and co ns Ma t n s
Genera S ore M dd eport
'192 6370
Bed oom tu n lure I v set
and d n ng room suite
Must be n oood cond t on
and reasonab e 992 3941

11

H_!!fWonled-

Look ng o mature woman
who needs nome &amp; sma e
wages to help care for
sma ch dren in country
992 7584 &amp; leave number
Ar C all concept s now
seek ng conse lo s end
managers
Except ona
earn ng program
Wei
establ shed company with
e&gt;ec us ve products No n
vestment
de very
or
collect ng
Croft
ex
per ence not requ red For
nterv ew call 2.16 9363
even ngs and weekends

OPE N fjOUSE Sa u day
Ma ch 28th
om 9 5 and
Sunday March 29tn t om
5 p m On S R 7 be ween
Memo y Ga dens and S a e
Ga age 992 774 1
One f oor s x oom tu e et
f c en house w h ga age
Nea M dd epa
bus ness
d st c 992 7329 a e noons
and even ngs

REPA R o
wo k
00 s
pane g
e ng o
e s ct ng 992 2759

AU OMOB
SURANCE
c e e ct'
ope a o s
992 2 43

LE
been
ca n
yo u
os
ense? Phone

Waned to Oo

8

e epa s e e

a
wok
p umb ng
mob e
han e 0
es den e 992
Fu

a

5858
You g ady s w
sew o peop e t1 he home
Nea
as and easonab e
Phone 949 2202

Future Heirloom

ACREAGE
0 ac es
of good bottom and on
s a e ou e Wou d make
an
dea
m n a m
Wanl$ 0 000
YOU MAY NEVER
SEE THESE AND OUR
OTHER PROPER T E 5
FOR SALE AGAIN

Lots &amp; Acreage
AND o sa e Loca ed o
0 qc; e5 S ve R dge 60
ab e 985 4 6

Housing
Head uartPrS

All Mode s

ya d
men
5949 0

Ava lab e
LEO MORRIS
R I S de fj I Rd
Ru and Ot)
2 9 tc

43

Apar ment
for Ren

44

DENNEY
CHAIN LINK
FENCE

L vestock

BULLS fo sa e Po ed
He efo ds
2 24 mon hs
o d Phone 614 247 2704 or
6 4 247 2702

KEN SOLES

Hay to sa e 90 c en 5 pe
ba e Can de ve No Sun
day sa es 84J 2 95 o B43
278

Transpartaflae

Space to Rent

COUNTRY MOB LE Home
Pa k Rou e 33 No h a
Pome ov La ge o s Ca
9'n 479
RA LER
sou he n
Han e Pa
992 3954

Autos fo Sale
Couga
XR 7 w h
wh e op w h ed andau
oo
Am m
casse e
m whee s
es n ve y good
on 992 2370 a e 5

H. L WHITESEL
ROOFING
A types o oo wo k
new o
epa
gu e s
nd down spouts gutter
c Ciln ng c1 nd pol nt ng
A Wo k guarc1nteed
F

~ucs

Fo d o no two doo
n good cond t on w th
ad a s Good gas m eage
S495 00 667 3085 Tuppe s
Pa ns Oh o

Houses fo Rent
3 bed oom u n shed nouse
on 3d S
Mddcpot
Dcpos
&amp;
eo u ed 992 2606

ee

E'5 rna e

t?en on.1b e P ce s
C How d
949 2862
949 l 6(]

Mave k 4 dOOr] 6
975 Fo d Landau 4
powe b ak.es powe
Househo d Goods
s ee ng a cond am m
ad o
u se
ant
Wagon whee bunk beds
w h rna r ess good con powe e1 ve s sea
d on o $ 75 00 A so 2 150
bedsp eads 2 pa r
969 Cam a o
V8
a ns snoopy des gn S
speed
ebu
$1800 00 o
Phone J04 77J 5492
bes o l e 949 2455
Ani

PWMBING
AND
HEATING

2 19 lfc

32

Water sewer Electr c
Gas L ne D tcheS
water L ne Hook ups
Sept c Tanks
County Cerhf eel
Roush Lane
Chesh re Oh
Ph 367 7l60
7tfc

mo

J&amp;L BUMN

ROOFING

INSUlATION

V1nv1 &amp;
Alum•num S1d1ng
elnsulat on
• Storm Doors
• Storm W ndows
• Replacement
W ndows

SpecJahzmg In
Re Roofmg
eSma !Carpenter Jobs
oarre Brewer
PH 992 2882

Free Esttmate
James Keesee
Ph 992 2772

2 4

992 2606
992 786
3
1 mo pd

3 23 I mo

Mlu.ER ELECTRIC
SERVICE

J&amp;F
ENTERPRISES
•
•
•
•

Trash P1ckup In
The Vtllage of
Middleport Oh
Ph 992 5016
or 992 7505
3 11 1 mo

REESE
TRENCHING
SERVICE

12 Park St
Middleport Oh
Ph 992 6263
Anvt me

245 9113

SANITATION
SERVICE

dtiJI

KAUFPS

Free Esltmates

Hay&amp; Gran

46

J&amp;C

ARD
AVA TORS

•••••

w h

l]

RentaJs

Rea Estate- General

'

1

992 5682
10 7 fc

Mob

c

9 2 Regency 1 K 60 wo
bed oom mob e nome new
soea de geao new
ca pe
na u a gas hea
w~she and d ye
992 671

s 2 000

....

&amp; b I ugstBEk

41

own Haven 4 x 65
h ee bed ooms new ca
pe
97 Came on 4 x 64
wo bed ooms new ca pe
9 2Cnanpon 2x60
bed ooms new ca pet
Came on
2 K 60
bed ooms a e ec c
Sk y ne
2sx 6
bed ooms ba h &amp;
a pe
970
l x 60 wo bed ooms new
t: a pe B
S Sa es
2nd
v and S ee Po n
P easan
WV Phone 675
4424
Q3

_

R VERS DE APTS
&amp; 2
bed oom
apa
ava abe
Equa
op COWS for sa e B ed and
open po ed herefords 6 4
po un y hous ng 992 7 2
247 2704 or 6 4 247 2702

Mob e Homes
tor Sate

31

-·-'

MOB LE fjQME to rent
Camp e e y
fu n shed
Adv ts pre e ed Oepos
992 27 49

3 A ND 4 RM tu n shed ap
s Phone 992 543.4

1nsurance

tl

Wan ed o Buy c ass ngs
wedd ng bands anyth no
s amped OK
4K o 18K
god S ver cons pocket
wat ches Ca Joe Cia k at
'192 2054 a C ark s Jewe rv
St o e Pome oy Oil o 45769

T S BEEL NE S Show and
Te
T me
Ou
sp ng and summe
now ava abe and s un
be evab e
G ve us a
ca for more nfo ma on
abou th s nterest ng wo k.
Phone 992 3941 f om 9 6

Problems or Questions,
about Lawns or
Gardens7 For Answers

t

EAFORDrn

o

B c k house on wooded

_.......... ... . .

App ox ma e y 5 m es
om Pome oy or M d
d epo I 992 5858

nea Memo y Ga dens 2
ac es Terms 992 774

Hrs Mon Fn
9AMl30PM

991 7 544

3 11 1 mo
PR VATE

-Auto and Truck
Repa1r
-Transmossoon
Repa1r

S% on b,a a nee
Conventon.i! Loans
S%
down
Cal for ntormat on

Ph Pomeroy
614 992 7038

bed oom nome on S R

ROGER HYSEll'S
GARAGE

For all of your w1r
ng needs

Backhoe
E&gt;&lt;cavat ng
Sept c Sys ems
wa er Sewer &amp; Gas
L nes
L censed &amp; Bonded

Let George M ller check
you present electr cal
sys em
Res dent a
&amp; Com me cat

P ymou h Ho zon
over payments 992

M sc Me chan s

NEW LIST NG
Jus
what vou re ook ng to
n ce 2 or 3 bed oom
bath home on a good
see
n Mddepo t
La ge eve
o
base
men w b p carpe
ng many new tea u es
JUST $24 900
NEW LISTING
R 7
bypass app ox ma e v
4 acres o n ce y ro ng
and plus o d house w h
exce en
to
we
mob e homes o home
s es sa 500
NEW LIST NG
C osc
n
8 ac es eve and
w th a beaut tu newer 3
bed oom 2Ax60 daub e
w dew th 2 ba tlS equ p
ped k tchen and ut ty
and an added on tam y
com w th a wood
burner Large deck a ea
NEW
L ST NG
Panoram c v ew of he
R ver
P us app Oll
mately 3 ac es
ver
f ontage on th s 75 ac e
I arm w th a 3 bed oom
home barn and sma
pond w h t ab e and
De
wooded acreage
ve opment po ent a as
pr m t ve camp s tes
and bu d ng s les Near
New Br dge SS1 000
NEW L STING - L I e
upkeep on th s hOuse
Cute tti e 2 bedroom ho
mean e arge country o
w h tu basement tha
nc udes wood bu ne
nsu a ted ca pe d a so
s orage
bu d ng
519900
REALTOR
Honry E Cleland Jr
99261fl
ASSOC ATES
Dollie &amp; Roger Turnc
992 l692
Jean Trussell 949 2660
OFFICE 992 2259

1B

t:!S d ye
99 5287

3 b ue sp uce ees I a sa
3
W t ade to 3 swee
gu m ees 992 56

Mob eHome'i
fo Rent

42

2 bed oom Mob e Hon e
Adv 5 on y
B own s
T a e Cou
M ne 5V e
'192 3324

0

osseeboe
m e wo h s 25 w
$65 992 196

ROGER HORNSBY
SWIMMING POOL CO.
EARLY BIRD SALf

Bo• 163 Old Chll"a Sl.l Now
Tll!l NY 10113 ~ 1n1 Nome
Add1ess Zp hn110 Numbe•
Ca chon o lhe • boom Send
o ou NEW 98

em OG o•

NEEOUCRAf1

i"'

111 de
ee pa e ns ns de S 00

J

100 LB CHLORINE $109
SLB CONDITIONER $19 95
VJsot our large show room m Coolv1lle
Oh or Ph 667 3146 Day or N1ght
Master Charge &amp; V1sa accepted
(21st Year I

Rutland Furniture Carpet Shop

AU. CRAFT BOOKS. $1 75 uch
m 14 Quick lloch •• Qu lis
Ul FISIIlon Homo Qu II •1
ll2.Quilt Onaonab
llUdd I Block Qu Is

UO SwU11tlfllll10111 Sz•31 56
1Z9 Ou1tk n E.., I '"''""
Ill (nlllllpl Polthwll!l Qlulls
127 Aljlt1ns n Doii..
1!6 lh II) C111) flow on
IZS Pllll Qulb
124 E•r Gflll n Or01m1Ais
1Zl Slltth n Pllth Qu lis
122 Sluff n Puff Quills
IZO Crochol Tou W•d obe
ll9 E•1 Art of Flowe Cochel
)16 "'"'
''"'oll1pplo
Quills "t ochot
115
E., Art

IIJ.Complelo Gift W
109-Siw + Knil (lllic 1ittu1 nc I
lOS lnstlat C10thol
102 II uNUm QuIts
IOI.Quilt 1oM c.lloti1D11 1

one on uck
a ks $ 200 00
949 2455
976 Fo d 4 x 4 F250 w h
powe
s ec ng
powe
b akes
automa c
$2400 00 985 4133

CARPET
ITH PADDIN

F om

F om

Reg S15 91

7 99 &amp; up

1

1295 &amp; up

1

fn sta ed

SHAG

$799

SQ
Yd

74

Vmyl &amp; Alummum
SIDING

Motorcycles

979 Yamaha XS750Spec a
w h ow m eage exce en
cond t on w th many ex
as Ca after 4 p m a
'192 5348
Boats and
Motors for Sa e
on boat 17 too
c ru ser berg ass op u
canvas runn ng gh s 00
horse powe
Me cu y
eng ne a
fe acke s and
sk
equ pment
$ 495 00
ca 367 78

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
BeautlltJt Custom
Bu It Garages
Ca
to
ree s d ng
es mates 949 2101 or
949 1860
No sunday Ca Is
3 11 tf c

82

RUTLAND FURNITURE

742 2211

VC YOUNG II

992 621.5 or 992 7l 4
Pomeroy Oh

&amp;er"IEes
81

ROUSH

GAU.IA
REFRIGERA"'1'lN
INC.

CONSTRUCTION
New Homes
ex
tens1ve remodel ng
• Electrtcal work
• Roof1ng work
12Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph 992 7583
314

Rheem Amana
I Carr er
AIR CONDITIONERS
&amp; HEAT PUMPS
Ph 614 992 7038

mo

31

mo

83

Plumbing

&amp; Heat n
WATER
WELLS
Domest c and comme c a
pump sa cs and serv ce
Tom
Lew s
Dr
ng
Seasona d scount on pum
ps 1 304 89 5 3802 o
304
895 364

Casn nCar y

Buy Now &amp; Save $2 $6 Per Yard
25 rolls carpet 1n stock 10 p1ck trom
Regular backed carpet mstalled free
w th pad
Drove A L1tt1e - Save A Lot

Man St

RI3BOKl4
Rae ne Oh
Ph 614 843 2191
6 15 lfc

22 0

Cash n Carrv

KITCHEN
CARPET

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

977 Fo d 5 passengc c ub
wagon Good cond on 949

SPRING CARPET SALE
2 Rolfs
Rubber Back

Utility Buildings
S zes from 4d to lbt40

- Addons and
emodel ng
- Roof ng and gutter
work
-C oncrete wo k
- P umb ngand
electr ca work
(Free Est mates)

acuse
work

84

I

Electrical
&amp; Retr gerat on

I
I

I
I
I

SEW NG
MACfj
Repa s
se v ce
a
makes
992 2284
The
Fabr c Shop
Pomeroy
Au ho zed S nger Sales
and Serv ce We sha pen
Sc sso s

GOING BALD1

:

C&amp;n hcpro

1

TIRES GOING BALD'

Wr. have r

one 72 and wt

tanhtp

BOWERS I

POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO

ELWOOD
REPA R
Sweepers I Ph Hl 20t4
oaste s
ons a sma
app ances Lawn mower
Nex:t o S ate H ghway
Garage on Route 7 985
3825

3 23 1 mo

I

!r

I
j

'---------------

�'f&amp;~~~~==========~==t:
-~g~~O-The Daily en one
' :=I::::::::::::::::::::::::~------~==---P-o_m__o__
·~·-_ _- ~~idd~ll~e!~o~rt~,~O~h~i~o~----------------------------------------~--~F~_~ri;da~y~,~~~a~r•c•h•2~7~·~19~8~1

MeigS County happenings.. .

Area deaths
Nannie M. Radcliffe

Mary F. Sheron

Mrs. Nannie M. Radcliffe, 86,
Mrs. Mary F. Sheron, 95, 809 N.
Bryant St., Rutland, died Thursday Second Ave.. Middleport, died
afternoon at Veterans Memorial Friday morning at Veterans
Hospital.
Memorial Hospital.
Mrs. Radcliffe was born Aug . 9, •
Mrs. Sheron was born Feb. 8, 1896
1894 at DyesviUe, a daughter of the
late John and Estaline Jordan in Mason County. a daughter of the
Caster. She was married on Oct. 18, late Nelson and Mary Washington
1911 in Point Pleasant to Isaac F. Stevens. Besides her parents, Mrs.
Radcliffe who preceded her in death Sheron was preceded in death by her
in November, 1968. Besides her husband , Felix, and several
parents and husband, she was also brothers and sisters.
preceded in death by a grandson and
a great-grandson.
Mrs. Sheron was a member of the
Surviving are two daughters, Mr.s.
Rutland
First Baptist Church and
Wayne (Melva ) Turner, Rutland,
had been a homemaker most of her
and Mrs. Lauren (Meriwn) Hoff.
man, Route 1, Dexter, four grand- life.
Surviving Mrs. Sheron are a
c hildr en and nine greatdaughter, Mrs. Harriett Warner of
grandchildren.
Rutland; seven grandchildren; 26
Mrs. Radcliffe had served as postgreat-grandchildren ; 20 great-greatmaster in Carpenter for 32 ·years
granchildren; a sister, Mrs. Myrtle
during her career and she was a
Warren, Canton, and several nieces,
member of the Retired Postmasters
nephews and cousins.
Association.
Funeral services will be held at
Funeral services will be held at 2
1:30 p.m. Sunday at the Walker
Funeral Home in Rutland with the p.m. Monday at the Rutland First
Rev. Cecil Cox officiating. Burial Baptist Church with the R.ev. John
will be in the School Lot Cemetery. King officiating. Burial will bti in
Friends may call at the funeral Miles Cemetery. Friends may call at
horne anytime after 2 p.m. Saturday the Walker Funeral Home anytinne
until the hour of ti•e services. The after 3 p.m. Sunday until12 noon-on
family will receive friends at the Monday when the body will be taken
funeral horne from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 . to the church where it will lie in
p.m. Saturday.
state.

Terminate 26 cases
Seventeen defendants were fined
and nine others forfeited bonds in
Me1gs County Court Wednesday.
Fined by Judge Patnck O'Brien
were Andrew L. .Evans, Gallipolis,
Mary Durst, Pomeroy and Vernon
Facemyer, Apple Grove, W.Va., $W
and costs each, speed; Jerry Rowe ,
Racine, $10 and costs. failu re to
yield right of way; Karen Phali n,

hnement, contempt ; Dennis Boothe,
Pomeroy, $5 and costs, unsafe
vehicle ; Kenneth Wright, McArthur,
$5 and costs, extended load and no
red flag; Sheila Dent, Rutland, $10
and costs. failure to display two
lighted headlights; Danny Barrett.
Rutland, $15 and costs, failure to
display valid registration; Carl
Alley , Racine. $75 and costs. 10 days

srATE FARMER

-Seven members of the Meigo High &amp;hool Future
Farmers of America Chapter have achieved lhe State Farmer Degree
this school year, a re&lt;ord number. Pictured atlhe aonual awanhi dinner
of the chapter Wednesday are five of the seven who include: seated, I tor,
Bill Dyer, Kathy Parker; back, I to r, Blair Windon, Jell Moore, Dean
Colwell. The other two members receiving lhe degree were Kevin JeweU
aud Nancy Smith.

.Marching band clinic
There will be marching band
clinics in the band room at Meigs
High School for incoming freshmen
and present members next week.
On Monday , March30, a clinic will
be held for incoming freshmen from
7 p.m. until 8:30 p.m. and from 7:45
p.m. to 8:30 ror present members.

Tuesday and Wednesday, March
31, and April I, from 7 p.m. to 8:30
p.rn a clinic will be held for ~II
students. Tryouts will be held Thursday, Apri12, at Tp.m.
The clinics are for field comn.ander, flag corps, majorette corps
and rifle corps.

Due to a death in the family of the
featured speaker. the burn-out
seminar scheduled from 1 to 4 p.m.
Monday has been postponed. Ap-

proXImately 80 persons had
registered for the burn-out seminar
which was to have been held under
the sponsorship of the Meigs County
Department of Health.

Employ secretary

Retail sales tax receipts, aided by
the additional one cent tax, were up
46.50 percent in February, this year,
compared to · February, 1980, according to the report of State
Treasurer Gertrude Donahey.
The report shows receipts qf
$124,440.93 for February this year
while receipts for Feb., 1980, amounted to$84 ,940.96.
Motor vehicles sales tax receipts
were up 10.92 percent for February
of this year compared to February,
1980 with receipts this year amounting to $25,213.32 compared to
$22,729.86 in February ,1900.

Veterans Memorial
Admitted-William Barber, Jr.,
Reedsville, and Wilbur Hanning,
Middleport.
Discha rged--Me lanie Holman ,
Kenneth Reed, Mamie Hendricks,
and Roy Rutter.

Social Calendar
FRIDAY
MARY SHRINE 37, Order of
the White Shrine of Jersualem,
will have a practice fo r installation Friday at 7:30p.m. at
the Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
SATURDAY
POMEROY Seventh-Day Adventist Church will ohsen-c foot
washing and corrununion during the
worship service at 9:30a.m. Saturday.
SPIRITUAL Sounds will be at the
Ash St. Freewill Baptist Church in
Middleport at 7: 30 p.m. Saturday.
The public is invited.

1976 LTD
•2195

1976 OLDS CUTlAS SUPREME STATIONWAGON-- -- '1895
'
6cyl .,pb ., p .s
•
'2195
1977 VOLARE ·••-•••t•:"r.t!•••-•••w•"'"""'
1974 CHEVY NOVA •••• ;~~ ••~···••••••••••••• '695
1966 FORD FALCON •...cl~ ~~·~~ ~"".•JI~
.......,. • '295
~i'tJ·moTor , au o.
1975 DODGE STATION WAGON ·... •••••• • • • •••• '995
1976 HORNET STATION WAGON·••;.-~;~~::~"••• '~89~
F la t bed , standard
1974 VW DASHER •••••••••••••••• .......... .
6 cyl. , a1r cond., good cond .

Standard .

'1095

1973 CHEVY LUV PICKUP•••••••••••••••••••••
4 Dr n.gn mooeage . '1095
1976 MERCURY •••••••••••••••••
~ •• •.... •• •
.
Aura ., p.s ., looKs._ runs gooo . '1l
1974 F250 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 95

RIGGS USED CARS, INC.
Rely Riggs

985-4100

Ken Grover

CHESTER, OHIO

BIG SALE ON
ALL NEW &amp; USED CARS IN STOCK

'

58606 .49
506 . 99

•810000
1981 PONnAC CATALINA 4
LIST PRICE
DISCOUNT
YOUR PRICE

$8568.59
1040. 59

'752SOO +Til~
1981 GMC 1f2 TON DIESEL
LIST PRICE
DISCOUNT .
YOUR PRICE

LEISURE FOOTWEAR

~~®
OUTDOOR SOLE
COMFORT FOAM CUSHION
WASHABLE FOR EASY CARE

$9680.00
1030 .00

•865000

+Ta~

LIST PRICE
DISCOUNT
YOUR PRICE

S881 S.49
S6S .49

$9388.31
963.31

Tax

tmts

•

Ohio mzners upset,.
burn new contract
By JAMES HANNAH
Assoelated Press Writer
DILLES BOTIOM, Ohio fAPI United Mine Workers in Ohio, upset
over the proposed coal contract, torched copies of the pact and picketed
a radio appearance by UMW
President Sam Church in nearby
West Virginia.
·
A brief protest by UMW mine,-,;
and construction wurkers in front of
District 6 headquarters in Dillcs Bottom late Friday afternoon erupted
after Church ca nceled an appearance there. UMW miners and
construction workers ignikd copies
or the pact and carried s1gns attacking Church.
"Church lied when he sa id he's
corning tu the coal fields:· said Tom .
Schier of UMW Local 1810. " This is
the heart of the coal fields .' '
The miners protested in Wheeling,
W.Va., across the Ohio River, later

Friday night after learning Church
decided to appear in a radio talk
show there. As he arrived at the
station. pickets carried signs saying
" UMW Will Die in Sam's Hands"
and "Sam Prefers Non-Union Coal."
Church is un a five-day swing
through eastern coal producing
states trying to sell a tentative contract to rank-and-file members.
" If he \Church) felt it was such a
good contract, he should have been
here 1in Ohio I, " said UMW District 6
President Ed Bell.
Bell spent 7•,, · houn; Friday
discussing provisions uf the contract
at District 6 headquar-ters. District 6
represents about 15,000 miners in
sou theast Ohi o and the northe rn
West Virginia panhandle, who
walked off the job as e.pected at
12:01 a.m . on Friday when their former pact expired.
· "I don 't think it !tentative pad)

will pass," Bell said. "If they ... read
it, I don't think they will approve."
A major stwnbling block appears
to be a provision letting coal
operators lease out construction to
non-union firms, Bell said. Union
construction workers would be
eliminated under the measure, he
said.
John Prout, vice president of
District 6, said the provision, if enacted, probably would cost 20,000 union
jobs.
Many district' officials, including
Bell, are upset with a provision
freein~

some 130 coal companies

from paying $1.90 a ton royalty into
the UMW's pension fund for nonunion coal that they buy and
process. The royalties, which · have
been in the national coal agreement
since 1964, have generated $52
million for the pension fund .

UP IN FLAMES - The tentative United Mine
Worken contract goes up In flames in the hands of Clil·
lord. Wright, chairman of the local 2035 min~ committee !lert), during a break In a union meeting In

VB 6 • . while, while viny l roof. blue c loOh
1ntenor, 8,500 miles .

By J . Sherman Porter
GALLIPOLIS - Ohio's entrenctunent tax has chopped off
some of .the Old French City's

The every-other--week color magazine to " 3 To Get Ready," a part
of lhe Sunday Times-sentinel &amp;ioce January 4, has been suspended by
its New York publishers and the Issue in your Sunday package today
will be It• last. The alternate week pages that have supported It also
,
are being dlsconlinuL'ti.
The editors'and many of our readers ha ve been impresseif with the
content and overall quality of the publlcaUon. which was designed to
appeal to chlldren of all ages. Regretfully, the magazine did not
achieve sufficient succerl1 to financially justtly Its continued .
preparation and distribution on a national basis. The Sunday TimesSentinel will continue to look lor other such opportunities as it seeks to
offer lhe best possible Sunday product to lis readers nl all ages.

t

White , i adestone Interior . Demo. 4,500
miles .

$9395

1981 Ol.DS CUTI.ASS BROUGHAM CPE.
DAeVmEo.
S

$8749

1978 CHEV. BLAZER. loaded .......... ............ '5995

1979 PONTIAC TRANS AM ........................ '6995
1980 OLDS CUTlASS LS SEDAN ... ............... '6795
1980 CHEV. CAPRICE ClASSIC SEDAN---- --:... .. "6795
1979 OLDS CUTlASS SUPREME CPE... .. ...... .. '6295
1977 CHEV. MONTE CARLO CPE. ..... :........... '3795

1973 CADILLAC DEVILLE SEDAN ................. '1095

Ta~

Check with us before you buy any new or used car. We need good used cars . So
come on in and let us show you how we can save you money . See or call one of
these friendly salesmen: J . D. Story , Jommy Deen or Boll Nelson.

1976 PONTIAC CATALINA SEDAN..... ............. '695

SIMMONS OLDS-CADILLAC INC.
See or phone one of these courteous salesmen:
Pete Burns, ~arvin Keebaugh,
Mike Anderson or George Harris
" You' 11 Like Our Quality Way of Doing Business"
Ph. 992-6614

Pomeroy, Ohio

history. it became known this
weekend, with the revelation from
the Ohio Historical Society that Our
House Musewn will open more than

Notice to our readers

t

Traded in on

Castlewood, Va., Friday. James Amoburgey (rig)lt')
president of the Local 2030, puts a lighter
pocket after lighting the&lt;ootrad. IAP Laserphoto).

Our House Museum
will open late this spring

Sfi295
1981 CADILlAC DEVIU£ SEDAN
$14 9'95
198
~•~k 9!.p~~~~~~! ~~~ $11 495
m i le~ .

. Cents

Point Pleasant

Po me

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

1975 PLYMOUTH DUSTER CPE. ................... '595

59652.44
863 .44

'878fJGO '

Vol. lS No.9

people still underneath, still unacThe accident site was somber, as
counted for."
hundreds of curious onlookers
But Brevard County Civil Defense gathered on a bright, sunny day and
Director Jim Atkins said contacts quietly watched the grim search.
with relatives made him believe that
Giant cranes, including a 140-ton.
"as many as 20 people" were unac- · unit from the Kennedy Spece Cl!n-&gt;
counted fer ..And Cocoa Beach Police ter, lifted sheets of concrete from.
Chief Bob Wicker said as many as 25 the accident site. Jacks were placed
worke(s might be missing.
beneath each sheet as it WHB slowly
Several dozen people were in- raised, a!.!owing workers to peek forjured, 14 seriously enough to be victims who might be trapped unhospitalized.
derneath.
·

•

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

• 1972 DODGE STATION WAGON .................... '695

1981 PONTIAC GRAND
LIST PRICE
DISCOUNT
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He said it would take at least until
Sunday for crews to remove the
h~ge slabs of steel-reinforced concrete that stacked up like pancakes.
Some survivors blamed the collapse - which occurred as concrete
· was being poured for the roof - on

the ruins of what was to be the plush
Harbour Cay condominiwn, according to Brevard County homicide
detective Charlie Slaughter. Searchers said the body of an lith victim
had been spotted in the ruins but
could not immediately be extracted.
Univel spokesman Mike Mervis
said representatives of the contractor and rescue officials had
agreed at a midmorning meeting
that "there are only two to four

'lao

NEW FROM ANGEL TREADS

1979 CHEV. CHEVEITE SEDAN ................... 14295

$12,630.31
1,180.31

'825()00 + Ta~
1981 PONTIAC CATALINA 4 DR.
LIST PRICE
DISCOUNT
YOUR PRICE

CHOICE OF FOUR STYLES IN
SIZES SMALL (Shoe Size 5-6), MEDIUM (Shoe Size
6'h-7 'h), LARGE (Shoe Size 8-9) and EXTRA LARGE
(Shoe Size 9\7-10 1h).

Dk sandstone. Lt . landau roof . 5.000 mites.

•11,45000 + Ta~
1981 BUICK SKYLARK 4 DR.
LIST PRICE
DISCOUNT
YOUR PRICE

AFTER SPORTS

POOL SIDE

1981 Ol.DS 88 ROYALE SEDAN

1981 BUICK LIMITED 4 DR

'875000 + Ta~
1981 BUICK SKYlARK 4 DR.
LIST PRICE ,
DISCOUNT
YOUR PRICE

COMFORT FIT

tragedy, answered: 11 No, noway.''

failure to let the concrete harden
sufficiently as the five--story, 4&amp;-unit
project was being built:
But a spoke8111Jln· fo~ the construction company, Unive!lnc., said
such talk was only speculation, and
Assistant Labor Secretary Thome
G. Auchter, who sent eight investigators to the scene, said ther~
were no indications of faulty construction work "at this time."
Ten bodies were r\)Cilvered from

unba

The Meigs County Grand Jury wiil
meel Wednesday, April!, at 9 a.m.
I

Walker, asked if there was a· chance
anyone could still be alive beneath
the tons of debris left by Friday's

Cocoa Beach Fire Chief Robert

Grand jury session

FLEX-TOP

cloth interior. 2.800

LOOK AT THESE BIG DISCOUNTS:
$9640 .44
89Q_,.44

COCOA BEACH, Fla. 1AP) Volunteers searching for up to 25
trapped consttuction woo·ken poked
through lhe dusty rubble of a col!ap, sed nverfront condominiwn Saturday, ~s _federal_investigators began
e•amumng the scene of the accident
that killed at least 11 people. (See
earlier story and pictures on [).J
todlly.l

new Cadi llac diesel.

SMITH NELSON MOTORS, INC.
1981 BUICK REGAL

Abandon hope for more survivors

1979
FORD LTD WAGON
Country Squire . Loaded .

r•;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;••;;;;;;;;;;;;~~

LIST PRICE
DISCOUNT
YOUR PRICE

A foreclosure suit was filed in
Meigs County Common Pleas Court
by Farmers Bank and Savinga, Co.,
Pomeroy, against James Mash, Rt.
· 1, Middleport and Norena C. Mash,
Rt. 1, Middleport, et al.
Harriet J. Smith, Rt. 1, Mi~
dleport, filed suit for divorce against
Harold Eugene Smith, addresa
unknown. , ·
Cheryl Ann Ush, Middleport, and
Joseph Edward Ush, Mason, filed
for dissolution of marriage.

Postpone nweting- - - . . , - - - - - - - - - - -

Bhw Grass

Retail sales tax up

Court actions filed

ELBERFELD$

no operator's license.
Forfeiting bonds were Stephen
Jenkins, ·Middleport, $75, assault ; .------------------------:----1
Jessie Lambert. Ivanhoe, Va., '
Robert Neal, Niles, and Myrta Ar·
ms. Pomeroy, $40.50 each, speed;
Bernard Bay, Reedsville, $60.50,
speed: Andrew Evans. Gallipolis,
$35.50, no motorcycle endorsemen t;
4 . Dr., P. B ., P .S.
James Woodyard, Pomeroy, $35.50,
Loke new.
expired temporary registration ;
Kenneth Welsh, Pomeroy, $60.50,
Club cab. long bed, auto., P.b .L P .S.
'2895
..eUtA,tA• ... ••At.
1978 FORD F25nU' •••••eeAtAt
reckless operation: Doug Burns.
P.B., P.S., 6cyl,goodcond .
'1895
Pomeroy, $37.55, disorderly con1975
FORD
GRANADA····•-•••
...
_.~··•••••
9 pass., tully equ1p .
duct.

and
Opal
next 22
meeting
was set
forDyer.
8 p.m.The
on April
at the
agriculture conference room or The
Farmers Bank Building.

A marriage Ucense wu Luued to
James Alan Duvall, 25, Reedsville,
and Debbie Kay Young, 25, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy.

Finals of the Meigs Elementary
,Basketball TOllftll!lllent will be held
this evening at the Meigs Junior
High School with the fourth and rifth
grade championship game at 7,
Bradbury Hood versus Rutland,-and
the sixth grade championship game,
Bradbury CasseU against Salisbury,
at 8:30 p.m. Admission is $1 for
adults and 50 cents for students.

confinement, seven days suspended,

Meigs County Bluegrass music enthusiasl&lt; are invited to a special
meeting of the Southeastern Ohio
Bluegrass Association to be held at 2
p.m. sunday at the Eagle Hall in
McA rthur.
The hall is located one block west
or the jwlction of Routes 50 and 93.
Membership is open to any person
who enjoys playing or listening to
Bluegrass music. A jam session will
be held following the meeting.
The association's primary interest
is to promote Bluegrass and bring
this part of our heritage back to
Southeastern Ohio. Cooning events
are planned including festivals. picniCs and square dances. Me.mbership dues of .$15 annually entitle
members to free admission at all of
the events.

Two calls were aliswered on Thursday by local eJllergency units, the

Tourney finals tonight

Pomeroy, restit ution and costs, in·

Opal Dyer was employed as a per·
manent, full time secretary when
the Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District Board of Supervisors met recently.
Cooperator agreements for Henry
Bahr and Mildred Gaul were approved as well as three requests for
inventory and evaluations. It was
reported that R~bert First, district
conservationist or the service, and
John Rice, cooperative extension
service, are planning a no-till
demonstration to be staged on April
21 at the Charles Carr Farm . Nov . 12
was set as the tentative date for the
annual meeting.
Attending were Rex Shenefield,
Torn Tbeiss, Roy Miller, Thereon
Johnson, Robert First, Reid Young

Couple gets license

Meigs County Emergency Medical
Services reports. At 6:51 a.m., the
Pomeroy Unit took Mrs. George
Skinner, Route 33, to Holzer Medical
Center and the same unit at 9:57
p.m, took Doris Haynes, Mul~rry
Ave., to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.

sufficient funds; Robert Sheley,
Kenova , $27 and costs. speed; Ruby
Mossman. Pomeroy. $23 and costs.
speed; Edwin Sweeney III, Siewarl,
$21 and costs, speed; Wayne Little,
Jr., Pomeroy, $24 and costs, speed;
Eldon Blake, Reedsville, $25 and
costs, did kindle a fi re in an unsafe
area and allowed fire to escape;
Tanuny Daniels, Pomeroy, $10 and
costs. assured clear distance; Billy
Nelson, Coolville, $10 and costs,
assured clear distance ; Billy
Nelson, Coolville, $10 and costs, expired license plates, five da,vs con- ·

me~ting

Emergency runs

{Conti nued on Page A-4)

rather than its usual opeolng date In April. The Ohio
Historical Society Is exploring alternatives to dosing
the museum with the city chamber of tummerec.

WILL OPEN ONE MONTII I .A Tl:K - Rclttightenlng by the sllltc will fon•t• Our -Huusc, Gallipolis'
historical museum , tu upen on Mt•nHtrlaiUay wt•ckcnd

a month late- if it opens at all.
Dallas (Bill ) Harder, the state
society's chief of properties, told the
Tinnes-Sentinel that the Buckeye
state's financial difficulties have
brought severe cutbacks in a number of historic sites, including the
Gallipolis musewn, and they're curtailing activities at all of them.
There will be no sites open until
May 23 - the Memorial Day
weekend - except Ohio Village. Of
course, the Ohio Historical Center,
the "square mushroom" off 17th
Street, will be open the year round ,
according to Harder.
A conference was · held with the
executive committee of the
Gallipolis Area Chamber or Commerce, and the two entities- chamber and state society - will look into

Wright sees progress after year on job
By KEVIN KELLY
GALI.JPOLIS - It will ha ve been
a year April 7 since Keven Wright
asswncd his duties as Galli polio first recreation director.
An~ in the past year the city has
seen an encour~g ing response to

progra1t1s a nd improVement of smne
•·ecreation facilities initiated by
whut Wright termed the city's "l'tllll·
onitment to a recreation progo·am.'"
The year lms been satisfying fur
Wright because recreation
programs were installed on a qua r-

Inside today.

• •

Area deaths . .. ...... .. . , . . .... , , .. , ...... : . ... . .... A-6
Editorial ...•.•. •. .... . ...•........ •. .........•.. A-2-3
Classified ..... ... ...........•.. ...•..•..•. ...••.. D-3-7
Farm ................ , ... ............. ~ --~········ C-8
Ufestyle .. .......... . .................... .... . .. B-1-8
Weal • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . A+8
Sp&lt;»rts •.........................•..•.... ...•..... C·l·7
State-National ........................... . ...... ... D-1
1V guide . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Insert

Extended forecast, local weather
Windy with showers ·and thunderstorm--s likely Sunday. High around 70.
Chance of rain near 70 percenl
Ohio Extended Forecaot Molllday throu~h Tuesday - A chance of
showers or thundor~torrn~ each day and mild through the period. Highs In
the rnid 50s tu !Around 60 Monday and in the 6011 Tuesday and Wednesday.
Lows In the 40s. '
1

H

'J

•

terly basis, where in the past such
programs were only offered during
the surmner by the schools.
"One reason I took this job is
because nut many people can say
they saw a progr·am grow from the
ground floor up, " Wright observed.
With a $!)6,000 budget in 1900,
Wright launched inlo a swnmer
program involving baseball and softball leagues a nd later expanded into diverse areas such as gymnastics,
bridge and backganunon .
"Our basic interest Is recreatnm
ror the masses," he said. " We don't
want to be terribly specialized .. .for
example, we'd like to go into pottery
because It crosses all age barriers."
As the only fulltime recreation
employee, Wright said all of his
programs are dependent on volun·
teer work. Most programs and courses are rree. he added, if the person
teaching them volunteers.
The department does charge for
courses tau~ht by those who want
reionbuo·sement, Wright said.
" We only charge enough to cover
our expenses," h~ noted, "We try to
keep It as cheap as we can. I'm the
one who always viewed the
r·ecrt!ettlon depHrtmcul as u
(Continued 011 PagL• A 4 )

l't:'~ u lar

- -·r- -___;_---.. . . . . _:.__..,. . . ._____ . :. ::._
.....

:~&gt;......

.........t.

SOLD- Pomeroy Molor Company, owned and
operated by A. R. Ko!ght located on Pomeroy's East
Maio Str~et, has heen purrhased by Larry Simmons,
owner and operator of SlnlRlOIL'i-OiolsmobiiL~Cadillac
locat&lt;'li on Pomeroy's West Main Street Simmons was
in the process Saturday of mo~in&amp; cars and equipment
from his preoenteslabUahmeot to the building on East
Main Street. The new busiDells will be lwown as Shnmona-Oidsmoblle--Cadlllae-Chevrolel, Ine. They will be
open lor business on Tuesday. John and Marilyn Fultz,

Middleport, owners and operators of Meigs Tire Ceoter, East Main Street, Pomeroy, are in the proeesa of
purchasi ng the Simmons-Oldsmobile-Cadillac
building. Fultz said no dellnJtc date has been &amp;et aa l4i
when he will he will move his operation from Ua
preoent location to lbe Slmmollli building. Slmmolll
purchased lhe Oldamoblle-Cadlllac agency from 1rv1n1
Karr which operated Wider the name of Karr aud Vu
Zalldt. Slmmou will retain ita preaent phone DIUIIber,
ttw614 which will be In operation Tue&amp;day allbe location.

.

"'

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