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Pa e-12-The Daily sentinel

:Reagan may ul ill pledge zn '84

Racine council sets March as clean-up month
RACINE- Racine Village council
Monday evening made initial
preparations for an extensive
"clean-up" program for the. village
during the month of March. The
month was proclaimed, .."Paint·up,
Fix-up, and Clean-up" month in the
village. All area residents are urged
to participate.
Necessary painting and repairs

will be made to town property, and a
general clean-up along town streets
and individual properties will take
place.
In other business, it was reported
that beginning immediately, all
payments for water bills and trash
collections are to be paid in check or
money order only by mail to Mae
Cleland, Clerk, P. 0. Box 33. Racine.

Water bills are ·to be p;~yable to
Racine Village. Cash payments are
not to be accepted.
A mutual Aid Contract was
received from Syracuse, requesting
approval for fire protection assistance. The issue was discussed, but
tabled for 30 days.
The January Police Report was
given. It showed 22 calls were

l

Owners must file special forms
For oil and gas royalty owners to
claim a credit on their income tax
from the Windlall Profits Tax,
special forms must be completed
before filing the 104U or 1040F forms
with the lntemal Revenue Service
(IRS). .
When the Windlall Profits Tax was
passed by Congress, all oil and gas
royalty owners were included in the
action. However, due to the hard
work of the Farm Bureau and the
·urging of royalty owners to
Congressmen, royalty owners are
able to claim up to $1,000 credit on
their 1980 income tax return, ac·
cording to Bob Bash, director of
local activities for the Ohio Farm
Bureau Federation.
For those royalty owners and
family !ann corporations who paid
more than $1,000 of Windlall Profits

Tax, IRS form 6249 needs to be com·
pleted.
For individuals who paid $1,000 or
less, IRS form 6249A needs to be
completed.
"Royalty owners need to be aware
of this tax credit and mak~ sure that
if their taxes are prepared by
someone else, the preparer ls aware
of what forms need to be completed
to receive the credit," said Bush. He
recorrunenils that persons filing
form 6249 should wait until they
receive form 6248 from their oil company which will show the amount of
Windlall Profits Tax to deduct from
their gross oil sales. This fonn
should be received by March 31 .
Royalty owners may contact their
local IRS offices for the needed for·
ms which will be available soon to
take advantage of the credit for 1980,
said Hnqh

Thi~

i!":

;~

tP.mnorary

measure for 1980.and legislation bas
been introduced by U. S. Senators
Jotm Glenn and Robert Dole to
provide for a 10 barrel per day
exemption for royalty owners. The
Farm Bureau hopes the pennanent
exemption will move quickly in this
session of Congress, said Bash.
DEMOCRATS TO MEET
The lOth District Democratic Action Club will hold its February
Meeting, Wednesday, February 18,
at the Ohio University IM, Richland
Avenue, Athens. The meeting will be
at 8 p.m. Dinner is available from
the menu prior to that time.
Plans are being made to have a
guest speaker who will discuss the
role of the Democratic Party in the
House of the General Assembly for
the next two years.

received, nine complaints were an·
swered, one breaking and entering
was probed, one accident investigated, and six arrests made.
Arrests involved one expired licen5/', one hit·skip accident, one mufOer
violation, one no license plate
violation, and two speeding tickets.
·Three wamings were issued. The
(Xilice cruiser was driven 317.2 miles
and Police Chief Charles Shain
worked 87.5 manhours. The report
was made by Chief of Police,
Charles Shain.
Carroll Teaford WI!S in at·
Jendance, voicing his dissatisfaction
of publicity on Sewage System rates,
hook·ups, etc.
A discusison of 14 street tights was
accepted to add the new units. A
retirement party for retiring Police
Chief Alfred Lyons was discussed.
Councilman Ben Petrel spoke con·
cerning electric se..Vice for the n·ew
Emergency Medical Service
building. Council will pay the bill
and submit . to the Emergency
Medical Service.
The Fire Chief advised council of a
gas leak on the Dodge Fire Truck
Pwnper. Council advised to order a
new tank and have the firemen in· •
stall the new tank.
Last on the agenda was 'a
discussion of abandoned vehicles in
town. Council will send letters to the
others of these vehicles regarding
their removal.

•

YOU'RE the
C11T'S PJIJJIMJIJ!

e

Sometimes, during the year,
we forget to tell our customers
how much they really mean to us.
Vol.29, No. 213
Copyrighted 1981

So, at this period around
St. Valentine's Day . .. our
"Customer Appreciation Time" . ..
we're Jelling the cat out of the bag
and telling you that we sincerely
appreciate your continuing patronage.

BANK ONE OF POMEROY. NA
BANK ONE OF POMEROY, NA

Pomeroy • Rutland • Tuppers Prains
Member FDIC

614/992·2133

OPEN FRIDAY
TILL 8:00

TWO

DAY

CLEARANCE!

ALL CHILDREN'S :
WINTER CLOTHING lh PRICE
ALL WOMEN'S WINTER
CLOTHING lh PRICE

SALE!

MEN'S FASHION JEANS
and Saturday .

CHAIR SALE

$18.95 Fashion Jeans .•.. .•..
S19.95 Fashion Jeans ..•..•..
$21.95 Fashion Jeans ........
$24.95 Fashion Jeans., ....•.

GIVE YOUR VALENTINE SOMETHING
SPECIAL TO RELAX IN ••• A QUALITY
BERKLINE OR KROEHLER CHAIR.

•

FOR VALENTINE'S DAY

SEE OUR
FINE SELECTION OF
FANNY FARMER and BRACH'S
BOXED VALENTINE'S DAY
CANDY

YOUNG MEN'S

28.95

1

CORDUROY BIB OVERALLS
CLOSE OUT SALE SIZES 26-34 IN.
BROWN - TAN - NAVY BLUE
WH1LE THEY LAST.

•15

00

A

Multime~ia

Inc.

N~w~p::per

.

•

!

LAS VEGAS, Nev. - Police were searching today for a mysterious
man they knew only as "Joe" after Philip B. Cline told them he accidentally touched off the deadly Las Vegas Hilton fire with a
marijuana cigarette while engaging in a homosexual act with the
man, authorities said.
·
Cline, 23, a room-service busboy charged with arson and murder in
the blaze, made the statement to authorities Thursday, a day after his
arrest, police said.
Police said they were "satisfied" Cline set Tuesday's eighth-floor
blaze, which along with three smaller fires kiUed eight people and in' ·
jured 198.

$13.89
$14.59
$15.99
$18.19

Men's fuller cut blue
denim fashion jeans in·
eluded in this sale.

SALE
TAPES &amp; ALBUMS

SPECIALS
MEN'S &amp; BOYS' DEPARTMENT

%PRICE

MEN'S LONG SLEEVE
SPORT SHIRTS

LINCOLN, Neb. - The Nebraska Legislature gave first-round approval Thursday to a bill raising the speed limit to 60 mph on In·
terstate 80.
The measure, which carries stiffer penalties for speeders than are
currently in effect under the federally mandated 55 mph limit, is spon·
sored by Sen. Ernest Chambers of Omaha.
Senators advanced the measure, which would not affect the 55 mph
limit on stale and county roads, on a 27-6 vote.

DALLAS - Texas computer millionaire H. Ross Perot, who once
hired commandos to spring two employees from an Iranian prison,
bas won another round against Iran - a court ruling that part of
President Carter's deal to free the hostages was unconstitutional.
U.S. District Judge Robert W. Porter issued the ruling Thursday in
granting a temporary injunction blocking the transfer of $20 million to
Iran.
·
In the first major challenge to the executive order that was issued as
part of the U.S.·lran accords that led to release ofthe 52 hostages, Por·
ter said Carter's action to unfreeze Iranian assets was an " un·
warranted intrusion" into the judicial branch of goverrunent.

NEWARK, Ohio - The deaths of two Newark women may have
stemmed Thursday from extremely cold weather, officials say.
Licking County Coroner Robert Raker said Gladys Myers. 75, died
early Thursday of a heart attack while shoveling snow in front of her
home .
An autopsy was to be performed Friday on the body of another
woman, Amelia Taylor, found lying outside her home near downtown
Newark on Thursday.
According to Raker, a neighbor discovered Ms. Taylor's body In the
.snow. She apparently bad frozen to death.

LINGERIE

Labor leaders pledge no strikes

FOR YOUR VALENTINE

NEW SPRING STYLES
ARRIVING DAILY
SHORT &amp; LONG GOWNS,
'-KliiSt:S &amp; ENSEMBLES
PAJAMAS
BABY

WARBAW, Poland - Independent Ia bor leaders pledged to call no
strikes except as a last resort as Poland's new prernier promised a
"broad dialogue" with the unions, announced a !().point plan to
strengthen the economy and purged the government.
The leaders of Solidarity, the nationwide labor federation, made
their n~strike pledge in a communique issued after a meeting in the
Baltic port of Gdansk. But a spokesman said it was not in response to
Premier Wojciech Jaruzelski's speech before Parliament Thursday
calling for a 90-day moratorium ~n strikes.

DOLlS

FLOOD SCENE - Rescue workers make their way through the
flood·strlcken town of Port Jervis, N. Y. Thursday with the aid of a

By Associated Press
Floodwaters churning chunks of
ice surged into hundreds of haines in
the Northeast Thursday , and record
cold moved in following the winter's
meanest stonn, a wet and windy
killer that contributed to at least 51
deaths.
About 4,000 people were evacuated
from communities along the

REVLDN

·ON All
. COTY AND REVLON COSMETICS,
PERFUMES &amp; COLOGNES.

Dr.Norman J. Ehlinger, Pomeroy ,
has filed a five million dollar lawsuit
against Veterans Memorial Hospital
in the Meigs County Common Pleas
Court.
In his action, Dr. Ehlinger con·
tends that by letter on April17, 1980,
Veterans Memorial Hospital in·
formed him that he had been gran·
ted active staff privileges and since
May 13, 1980, he has practiced
medicine at Veterans Memorial
competently with full surgical and
medical privileges and conducted
himself in full compliance with .rules
and regulations of the , hospital,
following the accepted standards of
his medical specialty in the State of
Ohio.
Dr.Ehlinger alleges that on ~'eb. 6,
V~terans Memorial, through its
credentials committee, recom·
mended the irmnediate suspension
of his medical and surgical staff

Clear tonight and sunny Saturday. Lows tonight in the low 20s. Warmer Saturday. Highs In the mld-405. Chance of precipitation near zero
percent tonight and Saturday. Winds southerly 6-10 mph tonight.
Exieaded Ohio Forecast- Sunday through Tuesday: Fair Sunday.
Rain possible Monday and Tuesday. Temperatures well above nonnal
with higha mainly In the upper 40s and 60s through the period. Lows in
the 30s Sunday and in the 40s Monday and Tuesday.

ELD IN POMEROY
---·

privileges at the homspital and that
this recorrunendation was adopted
by the hospital's board of trustees at
a meeting held on Feb. 6.
The Pomeroy doctor alleges that
the actions were in direct violation
of the by-laws and rules and
regulations of the hospital. He
charges that according to those by·
laws, he is entitled to a reasonable
notice and written specification of
the charges made against him; that
after receipt of the written
specification of the charges, he is entilled to a hearing before the
executive corrunittee of the staff;
and if he desires, an additional
hearing involving the active
professional staff and the combined
grievance committee of the active
staff and the governing body. He
says no action should he taken
before giving him an opportunity to
be heard and that after he has been

given an opportunity to be heard, the
executive committee of the active
professional staff is required to
make a report to the active
professional staff stating proposed
reconunendations.
Dr.Ehlinger also charges that according to by-law, recorrunendations
of the active professional staff can·
not be implemented until the
following monthly meeting with the
staff.
Dr. Ehlinger charges that any action to suspend, revoke ·or terminate
his staff privileges must be done in
strict accordance with the hospital's
by·laws and rules and regulations
and that no action shall be taken
against him until he has been given
reasonable notice and written
specification of the charges against
him ; until the executive committee
of the hospital has had an opportunity to investigate the charges

and conduct a hearing during which
Dr. Ehlinger may confront his ac·
cusers; until the executive com·
rnittee prepare a report recom·
mending what, if any action, should
be taken ~gains! the plainiiff; until
the active professional staff conducts a hearing on the executive
committee's recommendations.
The action further states,if the ac·
live professional staff casts two thir·
ds of its votes in favor of suspension,
the plaintiff shall then be suspended
from staff privileges.
Dr. Ehlinger's suit says until the
controversy is resolved by the court,
the parties will be unable to proceed
in an orderly fasion to examine the
merits of the charges made against
him as the parties will' be
deadlocked in dispute as to which
procedure must be followed.
The court suit points out that the
(Continued on page 10)

Consultant to address principals

Weather

20% OFF

While some were able to retum to
Delaware River and other streams River sent floodwaters pouring into
in New York and Pennsylvania the twin cities of Port Jervis, N. Y., their homes afte the ice jam broke
where ice jams blocked the runoff and Matamoras, Pa., forcing about up Thursday rooming, most of the
from up to three inches of rain and 4,000 people to nee to emergency 2,200 residents of Matamoras were
shelters.
· forced to wail at the Matamoras
the rivers overflowed.
"To the best of our knowledge, the Elementary School where the Red
·Temperatures that had bounced to
record spring-like highs in New whole town was evacuated," said Cross had set up an emergency
England Wednesday shot ba~k ' E!izaheili Eicherly of the Pen· shelter. The swirling blocks of ice
nsylvania Emergency Management had severed a gas main and caused
down, to new lows in many regions.
a fire at a bridge linking the two
A huge ice jam on the Delaware Association in Harrisburg, Pa.
cities.

Dr. Ehlinger files $5 million suit

CLEVELAND - The winning numbers selected Thursday night in
the Ohio Lottery's daily and weekly games were :
1'he Number: 374
The Pyramid: 78;659;4132
The lottery reported earnings of $432,462 from the money wagered
on the daily number drawing. Lottery officials said sales were
$908,228. Holders of winning tickets are entltlled to share $475,766.

SAVE
20%

. rowboat. More than %,500 people were evacuated when the waters of the
Delaware River dammed up behind a huge Ice jam. (AP La!Jerphoto).

Huge ice jam causes flood

Winning Ohio lottery number

1ST FLOOR

MEN'S&gt;AND BOYS WINTER JAC~ETS ... '12 PRICE
MEN'S DRESS SLACKS ............. % PRICE
MEN'S AND BOYS' CORDUROY JEANS

Legislators raise speed limit

Extreme cold causes two deaths

.

Weekend sale prices an pre·recarded
cassettes, S·track tapes and stereo albums.
A great varentine gift!
REG. $3.79 ........ SALE $2.95
REG . 55.79 .•. ·.· .. ·SALE $4.65
REG. $8.79 ........ SALE $7.05
_..._ REG. $11.79 . • ..• . . SALE $9.45

BEDFORD, Mass. - The balloon "Jules Veme" was drifting
toward the Arabian Sea today, crippled by a small leak that could for·
ce tts two American pilots to abort their attempt at the first nonstop
balloon flight around the world, trackers said.
Jim Mitchell of the ballooists' tracking station here said today the
flight might have to be aborted in less than 43 hours, but held some
"outside hope" the leak could be contained or fixed.
The :IG-story·high balloon, named for the author of "Around the
World in 80 Days," took off Thursday from Luxor, Egypt, and at mid·
night EST, after 19 hours in the air, it had flown about 850 miles, Mit·
chell reported.

Issue order to block transfer

Waist sizes 28 to 38 . Lenoth from 30 to J,, Pre·
washed blue denim In straight leg and boot
flare stvles. Exce llent selection. Save Friday

CANDY • •

1 Section, 10 pages 15 Cents

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, February 13, 1981

Leak could force balloon landing

fcn~lJcu;

FREE
DELIVERY

ertttne

Police seek mystery partner

..
BANK ONE.

HAU.MARK
~ VALENTINE

. DON'T ·
FORGET

•

THANK YOU FOR BANKING WITH US.

~if~ ,dwe))(,'tffl,

ALL CHAIRS IN STOCK ARE
ON SALE

at y

backing off an earlier prediction of 7 percent economic
growth in 1982 in favor of a smaller estimate of 4 per·
cent.
In a paid campaign television address last Oct. 24,
Reagan reiterated his call for spending and tax cuts
and said, "The fact is, this program will give us a
balanced budget by 1983, and possibly by 1982."
But sources say the latest forecasts are for a
relatively small budget deficit for 1983.
Murray L. Weidenhai!Jil, Reagan's choice to head the
White House Council of Economic Advisers, said at the
White House it is still his "personal hope" that the ad·
ministration can produce a balanced budget by 1984.

..

FEBRUARY 14.

ELBERFELD$

Stop in on the first floor~
See the complete selection
Valentine's Day cards for
everyone on your list. Also
Hallmark Valentine's Day
party goods· decorationsgift wrap.

•

The administration program also is expected to call
for 10 percent·a·year personal income tax cuts for the
next three years and a business tax cut through in· ·
creased depreciation allowances.
Indications Thursday that the goal of a balanced 1983
budget was slipping came one day after reports that
the administration bad lowered its sights on what its
economic recovery package could achieve by the end
of next year.
Sources said Wednesday the administration is
forecasting inflation of slightly more than 8 percent in
1982, up from an earlier estimate of 6.5 percent.
At the same time, the White House was said to be

·'

WE INVITE YOU TO STOP IN
FOR REFRESHMENTS AND FAVORS ON
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 13 .and
~TURDAY,

CARDS

•

Several sources, who asked nofooto be identified, said
officials now are indicating that 1984 is probably the
earliest the budget can be balanced.
One congressional aide briefed by the administration
said of a balanced budget in 1983: " I don't think that's
· realistic at this time."
The administration's latest thinking on wiping out
the federal deficit emerged as Reagan continued a
series of meetings with Cabinet .officials to discuss
budget cuts he will propose next week.
The president is expected to propose spending cuts of
about $10 billion to $15 billion for the current year and
deeper cuts of up to $50 billion for the 198? fi&lt;eo I vee•

In fact, we think you're PURR-FECT!

Carmel News, By the Day
Mr. and Mrs. Hayward Bissell of ter, Sand Hill road, Point Pleasant,
Keno spent Saturday evening with W.Va. on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. James Circle of New
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Circle and
Haven,
W. Va. spent Sunday at the
Florence.
home
of
Mary Circle.
Garrett Circle of Racine, Brent
There
were twenty-two attended
Patterson, RD Racine and Waren
Ours of Chester recently called at Sunday School on Feb. 8 on account
of the bad weather. Everyone is
the home of Douglas Circle.
Florence Circle visited ·with hoping for nice weather soon.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Johnson and
Beulah · Circle in Columbus a few
family
of Morning Star Heights
days recently.
called
on
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur John·
Garrett Circle and Sue Hager of
son
and
family
and Betty Van Meter
·
Racine visited with Mattie Circle at
on
Monday
evening.
Pleasant Valley Nursing Care Cen·

'&gt;'

'
: WASffiNGTON (AP) - President Reagan says he
'Still hopes to fulfill a campaign pledge to balance the
·budget In 1983 even though White House economists are
:COnceding privately it is unlikely the federal deficit can
)le erased before 1984.
; "We're taking a shot at 1983, we hope," Reagan told
nporters as he left a private dinner Thursday night.
:"If we try for '83, we're sure to get it by '84."
; Earlier Thursday, in a possible preview of how the
!'dministratlon would explain backing down on
Reagan's bullish budget forecast, White House .gress
secretary James S. Brady said the " economy
jnheritance" from fonner President Carter was
~· much worse than anyone thought it would be."

DR. GEORGE REDFERN

Dr. George B. Redlern , widely
known consultant to the National
Association of Elementary School
Principals in Arlington, Va ., will be
the speaker at a full day inservlce
program at the Meigs Inn next
Friday.
Attending the inservice program
at which staff evaluation will be em·
pbasized, will be principals of the
Southern, Eastern and Meigs Local
School Districts.
The districts in cooperation with
the Meigs Cour•!y Superintendent's
Office arc staging the full day in·
service program which will get un·
derway at 8:30a.m. Russ Moore will
serve as chairman.
Dr. Redfern is currently doing

consulting in educational personnel
management specializing in per·
sonnel evaluation, comprehensive
planning, organizational analysis
and personnel policies and
procedures analysis and development.
The Virginia consultant fonnerly
was deputy executive director of the
American Association of School Ad·
ministrators; assistant superin·
tendent of the Cincinnati Public
Schools ami was a principal and
teacher in the public schools of Ohio.
He received his doctorate and
masters degrees at the University of
Cincinnati and his bachelor's degree
at Wilmington College.
He Is the author of several books

·~

including Evaluating Teachers and
Administrators, i980; Improving
Principal-Faculty Relations, 1974,
and How to Evaluate Teaching, 1972.
Dr. Redlern is a past president of
the American Association of School
Personnel ·Administrators, a
distinguished professor of the
National Academy for School
Executives and has won the
distinguished service award of the
Buckeye Association of School Ad·
rninistrators and the comparable
award of the 1\merican Association
of School Administrators.
The local inservice program is
made possible through utilization of
state monies specified for inservice
education.

'

.

�Friday, February 13, 1981

Commentary

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Oregon State posts
20th win ·this season

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-:-Middleport, Ohio
Friday, February 13, 1981

Art Buchwald

J• R • and DereguIatio~..___ _ _ _ ___:___ _ _ _ _ __
WASIDNGTON - The only people
I know in the oil business are the
Ewing family whom I watch in the
hit TV show " Dallas" every Friday
night. All soon as I heard the news
that President Reagan had
deregulated oil and was going to
deregulate natural gas, I called J .
R. , the president of Ewing Oil, to
congratulate him. ·
"I know I'm going to have to
tighten my belt," I told J. R. " But
I'm happy for you. This could mean
milliohs of dollars for Ewing Oil. " .
"Let's say we won't have to apply
for food stamps." ·
'' Are you going to use the profits to

drill for new oil? ' ' I asked him.
" No, we're just going to start
selling oil that we had capped until
the deregulations went into effect.
There was no sense selling it while
the controls were on."
" I thought the idea of deregulating
oil was to encourage new drilling so
we would become independent of
overseas imports."
"That might have been the idea,
but we don't want to glut the market
or the price of oil will come down.
We can't have that."
" I should hope not," I said. " How
much do you think it's going to cost

The Daily Sentinel
IllC•urtStrttt
P.-.meroy, Oble

IU·99Z-tl51
DEVOTED TO 'niE INTEREST OF11t:E MEIGS-MASON AREA

us a!the pwnp?"
" Maybe ·10 or 20 cents a gallon
more. I have to talk it over with the
boys at the Petroleum Club. We
don't want to get into a price war or
we'll cut each other's throats."
"Americans would hate to see you
people do that," I said. " Do you .
think the deregulations w.ill encourage more people to look for
oil?"
" It's hard to say. Daddy is going
into real estate, and my brother Bobby wants to invest in solar energy. I
need money to keep all the women
I've been chasing happy. So I don't
know how much we'll have left for
drilling. "
"You'll have plenty. We've been
paying through the nose for oil ever
since they deregulated it. You
should see our fuel bills here in the
East. "
"You'll have plenty. We've been
paying through the nose for oil ever
since they deregulated it. You
should see our fuel bills here in the

East.'

rake in the money. We have to think
of what we' re going to do about inflation."
"Have you come up with any good
ideas?"
" We're going to live within our

1 told my brother Bobby he can only
have one Mercedes Benz at a time."
" I'll bel he didn't like it."
"Well, as President Reagan said
on television, you don't tell a kid you
don't have any money- you just cut

means."

his allowance.''

"You're not going to give up your
helicopter, are you?"
·
" No, we don't have to do that. But

'' What I don'i understand, J. R., Is
that if you people en charge
anything you want fo~ oil and gas,

how is that going io cure inflation?"
"It will cause people to conserve
and that should bring the cost of fuel
down because it will make the
marketplace more competitive."
" But that would be terrible for
you. What will you do then? " I asked

I

By Associated Press
Coach Ralph Miller believes his
undefeated Oregon State Beavers
have reach~ a peak, and they appear well on their way to becoming
the most efficient scoring machine
ever in college basketball:
The Beavel's hit 72 percent from
the floor, including nine of their first
10 shots, Thursday night to beat

him.
" We'll just put caps on our wells
until the price goes up again."

EIGH'n! GRADE BASKETBALL SQUAD Maklq up the eighth grade buys basketball team at
Meigs Junior Htgh are front, l·r, Alan Terry, Jimmy

Fisk now free agent
from Boston Red Sox

1

"The Ewing family is aware of the
burden the average person is facing.
We talked about it last night at din-

ROBERTL. WINGETI

ner."

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOBHOEFUCH

Assistant P11blltber/CoDtroller

General Mau&amp;er

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
Ntws Edhor
A MEMBER of The A.uoel.a!Pd Prest, lnllad Dally Plfts Allociadoa aDd tbe
American NewtpiiPft' PubUsben Anodalioa.

LE'ITERS OF OPINION are welcomed. ~)' sbould be leu tbaa M words loq. AU

let&amp;ers are 1t1bject tG flii.U.a aDd mwll bt dped wiLt&amp;··Damt, addreM ud klepboae
number, No au ~pH letters wUI be publiahtd. Letkn thocdd lx ill cood tlittt. •dd.raiiD&amp;
iuuea, DOt pcn0011lltin.

.

Sharp -eyed. d1p1omacy
If attention can be diverted briefly from the convoluted developments
of the hostage release, let us not forget that there are still problems in the
Mideast.
Including a war, or what started out as such. Iraqi-Iranian hostilities
may have been slowed from a crawl to a near halt by the weather and
mutual exhaustion, but they are still officially on.
That is, between the combatants and on the United Nations agenda.
The United Nations is represented in the combat zone by a special envoy, Olof Palme, a former Swedish prime minister who is nothing if not
diplomatic in his assessment of the situation. On his second visit to Baghdad and Tehran, he reports both parties interested "in continuing to see
whether one could find a pea~ful process to end the war."
Personally, Palme sees "so many possibilities for a fair and equitable
solution safeguarding the interests of both countries." Which may put
him in a diplomatic class by himself as far as acuity of vision is concerned.
Mter .a quick trip to New York to report to the secretary general,
Palme plans a third visit to the area. Mter that, who knows? But the important thing clearly is to keep moving.
The United Nations, which showed nobody anything in the hostage
crisis except its inability and-or willingness to grapple with a really tough
one, has in the Iran-Iraq dustup what may be an opportunity to demonstrate that it is more than a debating forum increasingly removed from
the real world.
But don't bet on any real surprises.

Berry's World

"What conclusion did you come
to?"
" It was not of our business."
"I guess with natural gas
deregulation you people will really
make a potful of money,"
"It will help get us through the
winter," J. R. said. "Butdon'tforget
President Reagan said our 1960
dollar is only worth 36 cents now, so
Ewing Oibean't just sit back and

By The Associated Press
Two of baseball's best catchers
are on the receiving end of some
good news.
Carlton Fisk won his fight for free
agency with the Boston Red Sox and
Rick Cerone won his salary arbitration with the New York
Yankees Thursday.
The results mean more money for
both.
After the ruling by arbitrator Ray
Goetz, the Red Sox prornised "an all· '
.out effort" in trying to re-sign their
vetera-n backstop, a longtime
favorite in Boston.
" We will make an effort, that's the
bottom line, " said Red Sox General
Manager Haywood Sullivan. " I
think we've still got a pretty good
chance to sign him ... he wants to stay
here and we want him here.
Hopefully, we'll get together very
soon."
The 33-year-old Fisk would have
become a ID-year veteran with the
Red Sox during the .1961 season.
However, he sought fre.e-agency after the Red Sox mailed him his 1981
contract last Dec. :12, two days after

Reagan's promise a campaign pledge
·

WASIDNGTON (AP)- President . living increases that like!~ will add
Reagan'sprornisetokeephisbudget about 12 percent to benefit checks
cutters away from Social Security beginning July I.
retirement benefits met a campaign
Jinuny Carter and Gerald Ford
1
pledge that was as close to self. bOth proposed limits to those annual
fulfilling as a candidate could make.
increases, and got nowhere.
Congress wouldn't touch them
Reagan advisers are proposing
anyhow.
cuts in two phases of the program
No politician is going to risk the but not in the pension and survivor
rage of all those voters who get benefits that are paid to about 32
Social Security checks. And that million Americans every month.
goes double for Reagan.
One would drop student benefits, a
Politically, Reagan couldn't have step Carter proposed without suetried to change the basic benefits of cess.
a program that has been a
The other is elimination of a $122
troublesome issue for him for the monthlyminimwn benefit for people
last IS years.
who otherwise would be entitled to
So he has pledged to leave it alone less. That is supposed to save a
and intact, including the cost-of- billion dollars a year.

.

But the budget-cuttmg blueprint
carriesawarning:
" Those recipients who would lose
a portion of their income would lobby fiercely against minimum benefit
elimination. Eliminating the
minimum could be painted as a first
step toward dismantling Social
Security, resulting in heightened
resistance to other Social Security
reforms."
The latter danger gets into a
troublesome area for Reagan, who
began his political career as a critic
of Social Security and who now
champions the program. Indeed, as
a candidate, he reconunended
changes that would increase the
benefits, and the cost, of Social

Security.
Reagan said restrictions on the
amount of money recipienl,'! can
earn witHout forfeiting benefits
should be repealed.
During the campaign, Carter said
repeatedly that Reagan would undennine Social Security and wanted
tornakethesystemvoluntary.

As a fledgling politician, Reagan
did say it should be voluntary. He
also called it "the flagship of the
liberal cause." He disowned those
pooitions long ago.
"That is an old canard that has
been laid to rest every four years
since I first ran for office in 1966,"
Reagan said last fall.

Legislators should act if necessary
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ohio
House Speaker Vernal G. Riffe Jr.
says the Legislature should raise
taxes, if they have to be raised,
rather than put the issue on a
statewide ballot.
But he made it clear this week that
the House, at least, will· not bite the
bullet unless GOP Gov. James A.
Rhodes gets out front and
specifically says a hike is necessary.
The New Boston Democrat was
asked about a suggestion by State
Instruction Superintendent Franklin
B. Walter that voters might be asked
to approve a major tax increase,
with the. proceeds earmarked for
Ohio's financially-troubled school

system.
Walter has been sounding out
school groups and others to determine if a ballot proposal might be
feasible, and he is doing so with the
governor's approval, he says . One
Statehouse wag said Walter, on
behalf of Rhodes, was floating "a
trial blimp. "
·
The superintendent says primary
and secondary education needs an
incre~ in state funding in the UJ&gt;'
coming, 1981-1983 biennium of at
least $1 billion, instead of the $300
million hike, over the current biennium, provided in Rhodes' recentlyannounced budget.

Minority Democrats in the Ohio
Senate couldn't resist chiding
Republicans when the newly seated
GOP majority railroaded through a
propo~j~~l calling for a balanced
federal budget .
Under the resolution, which still
needs House approval, Ohio would
become the 31st state calling for a
constitutional convention to require
congress to balance s fiscal books.
Only three more states would be
needed, to make up the three-fourths
needed , if Ohio approved.
Sen. Oliver Ocasek, !).Akron,
Senate president in the last session,
reminded GOP members that
Ronald Reagan campaigned for

"I know what I must do. I have decided to
resign from my all-male clubs and join allFEMALE clubs."

Today in history.

• •

Today is Friday, Feb. 13, the 44th day'of 1981. There are 321 days left in
the year.
Today's highlight in history:
On Feb. 13, 1689, the English Parliament adopted a Bill of Rights.
On this date:
In 1633, Italian astronomer Galileo arrived in Rome and was detained
by the Roman Catholic Inquisition.
In 1741, Andrew Bradford of Philadelphia published the first magazine
in the United States.
In 1920, the League of Nations recognized the perpetual neutrality of
Switzerland.
And in 1945, Allied forces captured Budapest, Hungary, during World
War !I.
Ten years ago: South Vietnamese troops were driving into L!&gt;n• ·~d
seizing large stores of conununist anns and supplies.
Five years 11go: Sopr~no Lily Po:ts died of cancer at the age of 71.
One year ago: Yugoslav doctors released a medical bulletin sparking
fears that President Josip Tito was on the brink of death.
Today's birthdays: Fonner first lady Bess Trwnan is 96. Actor George
Segal is 45.
I
I

IIA!INONr
7HISISZEXe
~

\

..

budget is a particularly useful
document because it Illustrates the
difficulty of implementing one of the
most loudly proclaimed campaign
pledges made by both him and
President Reagan during their
respective successful bids for the
WhiteHouse .
In the 1976 campaign, it was Carter who declared : "Our government
in Washington now is a horrible
bureaucratic mess.
It
is
disorganized, wasteful (and) has no
purpose ... We must give top priority
to a drastic and thorough revision of
the federal bureaucracy and its
budgetlngsystem."
During the 1980 campaign, it was
Reagan who proclaimed: " Waste,
extravagance, abuse and outright
fraud in federal agencies and

programs must be stopped. Billions
of taxpayers' dollars are wasted
every year throughout hundreds of
federal ~rograms."
But after that fiery rhetoric fades,
what can be done to cut the federal
government down to size? Carter's
budget offers a partial answer to
that question because it stands as a
reminder both of his limited success
and of the political, economic and
programmatic challenges faced by
Reagan.
Consider, for example, the Coast
Guard Reserve, an organization of
barely rmrginal utility targeted for
extinction by former President
Nixon in one of his early budget
proposals about a decade ago.
A determined lobbying campaign
rescued the reserve from oblivion,

the deadline. Don Fenr, counsel for
the Major League Players
Association, said it was his un,
derstanding that Goetz ruled Fisk a
free agent because the Red Sox
missed the deadline.
The Red Sox recently offered Fisk
a multiyear contract that would
have paid him, including incentive
clauses, nearly $500,000 a season.
While Fisk was winning his
freedom, Cerone was winning ar·
bitratiOn that will result in a salary
of $440,000 for 1981. The Cerone
award was the highest this year, topping the $395,000 won by California
first baseman· Jason Thompson

earlier.
The Yankees had offered $3Sil,OOO
to Cerone, who batted .T/7 with 14
horne runs and 77 runs batted in last
season.
The Red Sox, meanwhile, signed
five players, including Glenn Hoff.
man, who is expected to replace the
traded Rick Burleson at shortsop.
The Red· Sox also signed outfielder
Gary Hancock and pitchers John
Tudor, Bruce Hurst and Keith MacWhorter.

In other baseball developments,
the ' Angels announced that seven
players had either signed or agreed
to tenns: infielders Butch Hobaon
and Dickie Thon, pitchers Steve
Renko, Don Aase, Chris Knapp and
Mike Witt and outfielder Tom
Brunansky.
lnfj/lder Junior Kennedy signed a
one-year contract with the Cincinnati Reds, thus avoiding arbitration that was scheduled for
Friday. The Chicago White Sox announced the signing of second
baseman Tony Bernazard and catcher Marc Hill.
Right fielder Ellis Valentine,
corning off an injury-plagued season
with the Montreal Expos, agreed to
terms for 1981. The Pittsburgh
Pirates announced that outfielder
Mike Easler signed a multiyear con' .tract.
Doug Rau was placed on
irrevocable waivers by the Los
Angeles Dodgers with the purpose of
givi ng him his unconditional
release. The 32-year-old Rau has pitched for the Dodgers since a
shoulder operation in June 1979.

i1EiGs-E"®IP"Mfrifoo~

NEW 1981

Munday through Fridiyl\11 Court Street, by
the Ohio VAlley Pub ishlng Cornp~ny •
Multirnedia, Inc.. Pomeroy, OhiCJ 4AM8.

Athens at Waverly

Ironton at Jackson

Wheelersburg at Lucasvil le
washington CHat Madison Plains
Pt . Pleasant at Parkersburg ·
West land at Chill lcottle

and Carter has proposed an aJ&gt;proptiation of more than $51 million
- money that could be far more
usefully spent on the active Coast
Guard.
Similarly, Carter has propooed
spending $17$ million to finance the
National Endowment for the Arts
and alm011t $169.5 million to support
'the National Endowment for the
Humanities, two organizations
whose work represents a
questionable expenditur~ of federal
funds.
The Council on Wage and Price
Stability was supposed to lead the
battle against inflation, but it did lit-·
ile more than conswne tax dollars.
Its work now is being scaled down,
but almost $3 million Is proposed to
support It in the fiscal year

Membec The Asaociated Presa , Jnland Dal-

ly PreSII ASllodation and Lhc American
Newspaper Publishers ~i•lloo, NatloiUll

Representative. La nd!nK

A:;soclah.&gt;s, 3101 ~uclld Ave., Clevt!land,
Ohio,4$115.
~TMASTER ; Send addre!is to The Dally
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SUGAR RUN MILLS
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NEWSPAPER CARRIER NEEDED :

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CONTACT
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992-2156. Second clu.s postage paid at
Pomeroy, Ohio.

Adverti sing

QUICK SALE!

Wellston at Meigs

in racing," said six-time Daytona him, but he went down there
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (AP) There has been considerable
500 winner Richard Petty. "It's a anyway," said Parsons. "He was
good thing Benny has enough sense going to crash 12 cars, and before I'd
speculation this week that Sunday's
Daytona 500 stock car race will he a
to back off and let him (Waltrip) go let that !happen I just turned right
ahead with something like that."
battle between Bobby Allison and
and let him go."
·Darrell Waltrip.
Petty, who finished fourth in the
Neither driver did anything to
second race, was in perfect position
Parsons said he would " run on the
dispel that notion Thursday as each
to see Waltrip go to the apron and
if it is necessary to win " Sunapron
won one of the Uno Twin 12:&gt;-mile
squeeze leader Parsons up the track
day.
qualifying races at Daytona Inas they raced around the Speedternational Speedway.
way's · tri-oval for the final time. 1- - - - Allison dominated the first race in
Waltrip won the 50-lap event by less
his controversial Pontiac LeMans,
than a car length .
while Waltrip was roundly criticized
"If he wants to win races that
bad," Petty said, "I'll back off and
for his tactics ih driving his Buick
Regal past Benny Parsons' Ford
let him win them ... he ain't going out
Thunderbird in the last 200 yards of
there and endangering my life like
the second race.
that."
Waltrip, who averaged 152.905
That set up a showdown between
mph to collect $12,000 in prize
the fastest qualifiers for the $780,000
money, would not respond to Petty's
race, each of whom has won two of
the first four competitive events of
remarks. · Earlier, he said air
the young NASCAR Grand National
currents from his passing car helped
push Parsons to the right after the
season.
Allison piloted a car the other
latter had moved left to block his
drivers say is too fast to catch, and
path.
Waltrip was · accuseil of nearly
Parsons, however, did not agree .
causing an accident in his quest for
" I took the inside lane away from
victory .
" Darrell done some of the r--------~-----1'----­
stupidist things today I've ever seen

Published every afternoon except Sunday,

president last year with a promise to
balance the budget. Ocasek, along
with II of the IS Democrats in the
Senate who voted against the budget
balancing proposal, said Reagan
should be given the chance to
deliver.
.
"Are we of little faith?," tbe Summit County lawmaker asked his
colleagues, wtth tongue planted fir"
mly In cheek.
Ocasek and other Democrats OJ&gt;posed the convention call primarily
on grounds .that such a conclave
would be free to propose other constitutional changes. However, GOP
sponsors of the proposal said
congress could limit the convention
to balancing the budget.

Above Ground and In Ground
Greatly Reduced for

Southern at Kyger Creek
Hannan Trace at Eastern
North Gallia at Southwestern
Gallipolis at Logan

\USPS 145-116)
A 01~ IIIOD of Multlmftlll, IDC .

',•

Swimming"Pools

Tonight's games

Will Daytona be two man race?

The Duily Sentinel

Budget: rhetoric vs. reality_____R_ob_ert_Wj_al_te_rs
WASIDNGTON (NEA)- Even in
years when there is no presidential
transition, too much emphasis is
placed upon the federal budget
proposed by the White House for the
next fiscal year.
That's because the president's
suggestions invariably are
drasticaly reshaped by the scores of
committees and subcommittees of
the House and Senate constitutionally empowered to actually
authorize and appropriate the funds .
In an inauguration year such as
this one, there usually is even less
justification for paying much attention to the outgoing president's
unveiling of an elaborately detailed
budget less than a week before his
successor is to be sworn into office.
But former President Carter's

Snyder, · Jack Welker, Mike Cline, Darrto Cremeans,
Randy Jewell; back, Trey Cassell, Bobby Staats, Steve
Crow, Bobby Foster, -Dan Thomas, Nick Bush, Scott
Gheen, Charles Knopp, and coach Ron Drexler.

Wichita State 87, Bradley 65 ; No.l7 to break open a onl!'point game and
Illinois 84 , Wisconsin 65; South lead5+45.
Florida 70, No.l6 South Alabama 52;
No.19 MarylBnd 72, Clemson 70, and
Sophomore guard Michael Holton
No.20 Indiana 116, Northwestern 52.
scored a career-high 24 points as
Byron Scott scored 19 points, and UCLA downed Arizona in another
Arizona State outsco,·e.d Southern · Pac-10 contest. Holton and forward
Cal 2:&gt;-10 over the final!O minutes of Mike Sanders led a 12-3 run that
the 'first half to break open a close gave UCLA a 81~9 lead with 4t
ballgarne. Southern Cal cut a 41-25 minutes to play. Cliff Pruitt scored
Oregon7~1.
halftime deficit to nine points, 61-52,
17 points and Sanders and Rod
It was Oregon State's seventh 60
with 4:24 to play, but Arizona State Foster had 16 each.
percent-plus game this season, and · outscored the Trojans ID-3 in the
the Beavers now are shooting nearly
final two minutes.
li8 percent as a team. The. season
Forward Sam Williams added 16 ,-----~------­
field goal percentage record is 57.2
points for Arizona State, now 1~2
by Missouri, set last year.
and second to Oregon State in the
Pac-10 with an Il-l record.
In addition, 6-foot-10\l senior
: Going Out of Business Sale 1
Steve Johnson is taking aim at a pair
Danny Vranes, a mem~r of the
Now In Progress
.1
of individual marks. Johnson, who
1960 U.S. Olympic team, scored 18 1
Pomeroy,
0.
Ph.
992-2176
1
paced the Beavers with 20 points
points and grabbed nine rebounds to 1
I
Hour:
8-5
Mon.
·
Fri.
I
against cross-state rival Oregon, is
pace Utah ove~ San Diego State in
1
8·12 Sat.
I
hitting field goals at a rate of more
the Western , Athletic Conference. 1
closed sunday
1
than 76 percent, five ·points better
Utah scored eight straight points,
I international
New Idea 1
than his NCAA record of 71 percent
beginning at 7:22 of the second half, I&amp;..,
_ _ _ _ _ _ ;... _ _Equipment
_ _ _ _ _.1
Harvester
set last season. And he currently has
a 67.2 career percentage pace that r - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - - - 7 - - ' - - - - threatens to beat Bill Walton's
reeord of65.1.
The victory gave Oregon State a
20-0 record, 1~ in the Pacific-10
Conference.
The Beavers hit nine of their
13 shots of the second half to lead 5336 with 14 minutes to play. Felton
Sealey topped Oregon with 12 points.
Beavers guard Mark
who added 13 points, was wondering
when the skeptics would be silent.
In other games involving Top 10
teams, fifth-ranked Arizona State
downed Southern Cal 77~1. sixth-.
ranked Utah beat San Diego State
62-53 and eight-rated UCLA defeated
Arizona 90-79.
Elsewhere, it was Ohio State 105,
No.l3 Michigan 87; No.14 Iowa 60,
Minnesota li8 in over.time ; 'No.l6

992-2115

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

••
••

~

PH. 992-2156 BETWEEN 8:30 &amp; 5:00

••
•••

••
•

••
•••
••
••

............................ . ••••

�Friday, Febru1ry 13, 1911

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Pagc-•-The Daily Sentinel

Friday. February 13, 1981

Pomeroy~Middleport,

Mason high school students
among ~00 to take part in
Charleston 'Government Day'
Three Mason County high school
st1Jden15 will be among the over 200
hlgb school juniors from around
West Virginia to be in Charleston on
Feb. 16 to participate in the 31st
"Know Your State Goverrunent
Day" spollllored by the West
Virginia Education Assn.
They are Bill McKinley, Craig
F,ugaroand Zirpa Tenhunera.
The sta~e's First Lady Sharon
Rockefeller will address the students lit a luncheon scheduled at the
c:harleston Civic Center and members of the state's Board of Public
Works will serve as a panel to
cllscuss the responsibilities of their
~ve offices during a morning

FEBRUARY 14th, 1981
SPECIAL MESSAGE
FROM THEONE
THAT LOVES YOU!!!
Ron,

Thank you for making
three people the happiest i n

the world .
forever .

Love

you

To Mom and Dad ..

We love you. Have a Happy
Valentine' s Day .

Love,

Connie and Terri

Linda s.

Rick,
You're the most wonderful
husband in the world. I love
you sweetheart.
Happy Valentine,
Nadine

To my

To our lovely Wife and
Mother,
We 1o11e you very much.

Char11e,
I love }'ou with all my
heart. Happy Valentine's

Love,

To my sister, Lorene,
Thanks for all you have
done thorugh the years .

Happy Valentine's Day.

Love, Rhon

I love you . Love, Joyce

Matthew,

.
Have a Happy Vi!llentine's
Day. Wealllove you.

Xou ar~ the special perSon
1n my l1fe. I love you. Hap·
py .Valentine' s Day.

To My Big Robin

Becky, Jr., Janie
Shirley, Sue

Kim

After 15 years being friends
Gene, you still are my

favorite sidekick. Happy
Valentine's Day .
Ish A.

l'

To our Grandmother,
We all love you. From all
your grandchildren. Happy
Valentine's Day.

·Love you and miss you

To my husband Joe . .
I'll love you with all

Happy Valentine's Dai

my
heart, today, tomorrow and
forever.
Ma~y

Happy Valentine's
Mom

forget the past, but tnere·s

Baby Doll,

Baby Doll,

Ora Sinclair,
We love you and thank God
that he gave us a wonderful
mother .
Mildred

Happy Valentine's Day.
Love, Melody

My Wife Marvene,
Your faith is my support,
your love is my life , love

June
You have made it all possi ·
ble. I love you and thank
you .
·
Larry

Dear Mom,
Thanks for always being
there when I need you .

J.R.

My love tor you grows
stronger everyday . I lov
eyou very much.

PeeWee

To Willard. My Love, My

To my Fiance, Ernie.
Don't every forget I love
you with all my heart.
Yours forever, Lori .

Life,
You' re so very special, and
I' 11 love you forever .
Nancy

Mark,
To the world 's bestfather . I

Penn.y,
I love you. Wish I was home
t~ tell you so. Happy
.
t•ne's Day.
Charlie

I'll love you 4-ever. You'll
always be My Valentine .

Jim

Love, Becky

Polly

Happy Valentine's Day to
wonderful fl!lmily _ To Mom&amp; Dad,
to you.
Barry, Judy, Randy &amp; Our love
Signed, John, Debbie
Crystal. I love you.
Jl!Json &amp; Tommy
Mom
my

Shortie Biggie,

The past twenty-nine years

have been great. Thanks
for good times.
Big Shortie

ReM, Margo,

Frosty and

Darling Jack.

You're like a feather in my
arms on the dance floor .
Your Dancing Partner

To Bryan,
I miss you.

Jimmer,

You are trulf the apple ot

I

Phyllis Bea~hs.
The best person In the

I
I

S.usie &amp; George,
Happy Valentine's Day . I

whole world. We love you.
Ronnie Lee Casto

love you.

To Nanny,
I love you.

To Grandma &amp; Grandpa.
Happy Valentine's Ociy . 1
love you .
Little Angie

Little Angie

Ronnie Lee Casto

Dear Mom &amp; Dad,

From Gerri H.

Love, Tamara

Faith

Andy ,
Although we' re apart, love
keeps us together. To you, 1
give my all.
Love, Robin

Happy Valentine's Day to
Mary and Nancy. I love you

both.

Herb

Happy Valentine's
dear frl~nd .s within
Harper Valley County.

tine's Day . Love va bun·
shes,
Rodney

Grandma Jeffers,
I love you very muc:h . Hap·
py Valentine' s Day .
Ronnie Lee Casto

the world . We love vou.
Ronnie Lee and Susie

Tralrs Swartz, '
1 love you. Happy

To Grandma Grover,
We love you very much.
Happy Valentine's Day_.

Valen·
llne·s Day.
Ronnie Lee Casto

Todd&amp; Terri

Bob.
After twelve great years of

To Kat ie,
Didn't think we'd do II did
~ou?
Happy Valentine's
Day .
Guess Who?

marriage, you ' re still the
best Valentine · anyone
Love, N

•
I_

\

Dear .

1

love you

Aunt Alma Riggs

Mom,
God gave us

the best mom
in the world . We love you
today and everyday .
The Roughts

After five years on the
farm, 1 love you more each

Valentine's
Trigger

To my Mom,

We love you a lot. Happy
Valentines Day .
Love,
Sally &amp;Amy
T im ,
we rove you more than

anything In the world . Hap·
py Valentine's Day.
The Ima and Jeremy
How

tell you what

you mea·n to us, except we
love you .

Love, RIchard

Charl ie,
To the sweetest boy any
girl could ever have. Stay
with me alw~ys.
. Love, Lori

Little Eber,

Mom

Mimmle&amp; Papa.
To the best Grandparents
In the whole world . 1 love

you .

Ronnie Lee Casto

To Grandma &amp; Grandpa
Collins, we love you bOth.

Happy Valentine's Day.
ToddL Celena, Terri,
1 racy &amp;Wendy
!&gt;&lt;~t _daiJO~IJ!r.

Rodnoy,
chesl

all love you .

Us7

•

This II one In a aeries of articles
deulal health published by the
DaUy Seotlllel, In coopen~tlon
wltb die Rebwlallel Deatal
Society, Ia obaervaace of
Natlooal ·Cbl,dren's Dental
Health Mouth.
My child's teeth are very
crowded. Should I have an orthodontist check this condition.?
Teeth that are very crowded are not only UDBightly, they may
cause various problems as well.
It is hard to clean overcrowded
teeth and, therefore, difficult to
remove plaque, the stick film of
hannful bacteria that constantly
fonns on the teeth. Daily removal
of plaque by brushing and '
fl01111ing is vital to prevention of

/!1

.de"tal disease.

011

..
..
;

i:.

Brenda

1

Steve

:'
Steve
The year and a half that
we've been married have
.been the happiest
of

•

life. Love

,

Mom &amp; Oad Barton,
We want to say we love you

Dickr·

Valentine's Day,

Chlcky

Clutch,

Thank you for the love you
show me.
Love, Babe

I lOVe you .
Mary

Patsy.
1 love you. Mom says stop

•

,
To mv Wile Charlotte,
Happy Valentine's Day .
SWeefhe~rt,

much.

!;iFappy

I love you very

Nathan Hysell
Valentine's

Dad1
You re the greatest. 1 love
you .
·
Little Eber

making me so mean.
Ronnie Lee Casto

Uncle Bob &amp; Aunt Ushl,
1 love you both . Happy
Valentine's Day .
Ronnie Lee Casto

To Mom&amp; Dad,

Daddy Bill,

We love you . Happy Valen ·

tine's Day.

anyone

TOdd &amp;Ch ar

To Grandpa &amp; Grandma,
Two of the nicest Grand·

A ~hild's mouth may not function properly when there is
malocclusion, an irregular bite.
This condition can make chewing
di!ficult and may cause a person
to select foods requiring little
chewing and thus restricting a
diet. Malocclusion can cause
speech. impediments, too.
Most cases o! crowded teeth
can be corrected. Early diagnosis
by an orthodontist will detennine
the extent of your child's
proble.m. Treatment varies with
each individual, and in some
cases no treatment may be
required. For others, it is wise to
have early treatment undertaken
to prevent later problems and to
prevent more extensive and
costly orthodontic procedures.

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S

l

for persons facing emergency needs.
SATURDAY
VALENTINE BALL Saturday at Bank will be housed at offices of the
Royal Oak Park from 9 p.m. to 1 Meigs United Methodist Cooperative
a.m. Music by "Gentlemen Three," Parish ln Middleport.
MEIGS COUNTY Genealogical
Huntington. Tickets_ may be purchased at New York Clothing, K&amp;C Society, Sunday, 2 p.m. at the Meigs
· Jewelers, Marguerite Shoe Shop and Musewn. Work session on copying
Craw's Steak House. Spollliored by ' the quadrennial book. In the event of
Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter, Beta inclement weather the meeting will
be held in March.
Sigma Phi.
BAKE SALE Saturday at Gaul's . - - - - - - - - - - Market, Chester. Baked goods must
be taken to the store by 9 a.m. the
day of the sale. Sponsored by
&lt;
Lighting Fund Committee of the
Jht'tlffr
•
Chester United Methodist Church.
Sale will be from 9 a .m. until an
Fri. thru Thurs., Feb. 26
goods are sold.
·

Your

I

e

Libraries · ~
By Ellen Bell
Did you see the item about the
tari:e amount of money OVAL
(Ohio Valley Area Libraries) will
receive•· Did you think that
meant money for the Pomeroy
and Middleport Public Libraries?
It really didn't.
During 1980, the Pomeroy and
Middleport Publi c Libraries
received $6,767 from OVAL In
cash anp put $4,745 worth of
· OVAL books on the shelves for
you to borrow. In )981, OVAL will
give your libraries approximately $6,600 in cash - $167
less.
They will also put fewer books
on the shejves. Now I'm certainly
not knocking OVAL. That $6,660
is about one-eighth o! the lotal
budget for your libraries for 1981.
And OVAL will provide you with
440 hours of bookmobile service
(for $7,040 cash !rom your
libraries), with Mail-A-Books
(!or )1,423 cash from your
libraries) , with children's and
adults books, with !ilms, with

Valentine ball tomorrow
Avalentine ball will be held Saturday, Feb. 14, at Royal Oak park
from 9 p.m. to I a.m. Music will be
provided by "Gentlemen Three" o!
Huntington. Admission is $12 a
couple. Door prizes will be
available; tickets available at door.
The event is being sponsored by
Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter, Beta
Sigma Phi. Proceeds will be used for
service projects.
Tickets may be purchased at K&amp;C
Jewelers , ·Marguerite Shoe Shop,
New York Clothing and Craw's
Steak House. Tickets are limited.

Attend funeral
Several out-of-town relatives and
friends l"ere here for the funeral services of Mrs. Mary Stoler.
Among those attending were Mr.
and Mrs. Dale Sloler, Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Sloter, Mr. and Mrs. Nonnan
Henderson, Mr. and Mrs. Randy
Stoler, Marietta; Amy Slater,
Columbus; Mr. an_d Mrs. Pat
Murray, Hebron; Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Thompson and Dorothy Lee,
Elyria; Mr. and Mrs. Allen Cleland,
Toronto ; Mr. and Mrs. George
Cleland, Ashley ; Mr. and Mrs.
David Cleland, Diana and Brian,
Belpre: John Cleland, Parkersburg,
W. Va.; and Mr. and Mrs. Carroll
Cleland; Middleport.

reference and interlibrary loan
service, and with collliultants to
help your libraries serve you bet.ter ..
But I did want to be sure that
everyone understoo(j the money
situation - your libraries will
receive less money from .OVAL
In 1981 than they did in 1980 and
your libraries will be paying
more than double last year's
price for Mail-A-Book.
Y.es, your libraries, like many'
of you, are hard up financially.
Everything costs more. The
$56,096 your librar.ies expect to
have available to spend in 1981
provides you will) a main library,
a branch library, a bookmobile,
and a library in your mailbox.
Your libraries must pay for the
people who serve you, for
utilities, for books, for records,
for magazines, for insurance, and
so on. The only things they get for
free are what you donate.
So please, don't misunderstand
about OVAL. Your libraries did
not come into money - they actually got a decrease.
'

't:OIJ)'' ·
,

.
DR. BAKSHY A.
CHHIBBER

\
I

1
I

l

~

I

l1

12

noon to

6,

Mon .. Tues..

Thur ., Fri.

1 p.m. to 7 p.m. Wednesday
9 a.m. to 12 noon Saturday.

, Call 675·5511

!·

I
~

In

the

Professional

Building

1

Matinee Sunday
one Show at 2 P.M.
One Evening Show
at 8 P.M.

BARGAIN MATtNEES ON SAT &amp; SUN
ALL SEATS JUST S I. SO
ADMISSION EVERY TUESDAY S 1.50

!
!
!I

531 JACKSON PIKE · AI. 35 NORTH -Phone 446 · 452&lt;1

,--------FRIDAY'"'" THURSDAY I - - - - - - - ,

FEBRUARY 13 thru 19

For Appointments
I DR. CHHIBBER'S I
I
OFFICE
1

I
is located at
I 2513 Jackson Ave.

Cil -····-.... ro

DALE C. WARNER INS. AGENCY
V. D. EDWARDS INSURANCE
DOWNING-CHILDS AGENCY
DAVIs.QUICKEL INSURANCE
MUu.EN INSURANCE AGENCY
P. J. PAULEY INS. ~~NATIONWIDE" ·
REUTER-BROGAN INS. AGENCY

In Pediatrics \
1 And Internal Medicine 1
~ NOW ACCEPTING
i NEW PATIENTS 1
1 Office Hours·Are:
I

I

-,"11

THE FOLLOWING INSURANCE OFFICES
WILL NOT BE OPEN ON MONDAY,
FEBRUARY 16th IN OBSERVANCE OF
PRESIDENTS' DAY.

.__..,_..._~

~Specializing

~

SUNDAY
RUSS AND the Gospel Tones
singing at 7 p.m. Sunday at the Long
Bottom United Methodist Church;
public invited.
COUNTYWIDE Bible class
meeting, 2 p.m. Sunday at Coolville
Allegheny Wesleyan Methodist
Church on Route 7, north of Tuppers
Plains, with General Bissell as
leader; public invited.
BROTHERHOOD SUNDAY with
Methodists of the county to take one
or two canned items to church Sunday for food back to be established

PTATOMEET
The Middleport PTA will meet
Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the Middleport
Elementary School. The program
will be presented by Bette Althor of
the Corrununity Mental Health Center who will show a film, "Training
Before Trouble." All parents are
urged to attend.
,.._.._._._..,_.__

11

Neil Simon's

Chevy Goldie
Clla&amp;e Hawn
Charles
Grodin

I

1

SEEMSIJKE

()D 'liMEs :po:

1

~-~?.i~.t.!.~~~~~.!.a.:...J

Day

ast Fln~ers", "Tenor
.~ear",
Signmaker"
Cakebaker", ~nd "Lead:
toot". As always, ''Us "

.

1love yOu a whole bunch.
Pumpkin

~March

.

14 dance in planning stage

~ "Fifties, Sixties, St. Patrick's
;rY" dance has been planned by the
ittddleport Elementary PTA for
:~!arch 14, from 8 p.m. to midnight at
b Middleport Elementary School

~:; Kenny Hysell, popular disc jockey
~ the fifties and sixties, will hav~
~~harge of the dance program which
!'Mil include a contest. Tickets will be
:Sold at the door or can be purchased

•

!rum any o!ficer or at the Kiddie ·
Shop in Pomeroy. Admission is S3.
Refreshments will be served.
PI'OTOMEET
The Salisbury PTO will meet
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. at the schooL
Father's Night will be observed. An·
dy Lyle, game protector, will be the
guest speaker. Refreslunents will be
served.

p

Own a small business?
You'll appreciate the
careful attention
·H&amp;R Block can give
your tax returns.

..•'
•

Lou &amp;
such
Love

Dear Mom and Dad,

You ' re the greatest . We
love you .
Valerie, Jerry, Qe!la,

Michelle and Jennifer

Our tax preparers have been carefully tra ined to understand income taxes related to the small business situation. At H&amp;R Block,
we want to make sure you pay th' !~west legitimate tax .

Pam S.

To My Husband,
Our love ~rows more each
day. You re a Fantastic
Father and Husband .
Love. Wendl &amp;Tammy

Ray,
This is one way to let you
know I love you and always
will.

Dad, Mom, Susie &amp;Janie

I love you more now, than
the day we were married.

' To Tammy,
It's been a year now, let's
see how the ne)(t 70 are·: ·

To Mom and Dad,
A couple of Super Parents.
'
Love, Ed

Crowded teeth may
cause Problems

Chris and Brenda,
All our love on your second
wedding anniversary.

Mommy &amp;Daddy

Always remember
''I
could Waltz l!lcross tell:as
with you In my arms" .
Never forget me.

Love, Ed

~'Of Such Is the Kingdom" was the
some of the places where the call to
theme of the call to prayer and self- prayer and self-denial offering is
denial program presented by Mrs. sent. Prayer closed the service.
· Opal Kloes at the Tuesday evening
Devotions on the Lord's Prayer
tneeting of the Asbury United were given by Mrs. Mary Cundiff.
Methodist Church.
Blessing boxes were turned in and
Held at the home of Mrs. Irene 114 sick calls were reported for
Parker, the program leader was December and January . Missionary
usisted by Mrs. Margaret ·cards were sent to Singapore and
Eichinger, Mrs. Helen Teaford, and Argentina. A retreat"was announced
Mrs. April Hannon. The material for March 11 at Belpre. Projects
dealt with children and as a part of were discussed but nothing definite
the program, members brought was decided.
~hildhood pictures and related
memories of their youth. Mrs. Kloes
Re!reshments were served.
displayed prayers which had been Others attending the meeting were
written by the young children of the Miss Marcia Karr, Mrs. Mary Lisle,
church along with pictured of needy Mrs. Christina Grinun, and Mrs.
ghildren of the world which showed Unda Farrell. ·

love you . (bun·
·

re our
you a Million

To My Darling William.

Love, Dorothy

Asbury UMW has call to prayer

To ROd _
ney, From Brenda ,

Et&gt;er,

1 love you.

•

for being you . Jodee

I jus can 't say it enough ; I
love vou. Have a Happy

tine.

Meeting with the students will be
General Chauncey
Browning; Auditor Glen Gainer;
Secretary of State ·A. James Manchin; William H. GiUespie reprP&lt;Pn~ttorney

Gary, Darling,
With you everyday Is
Valent1ne's Day and
Christmas, too. I lave vou

Honey, just one way to say
that you are still my Velen·'

To Callie.

Jerry,
To the greatest guy on

·

Jane,
I could not have it any
greater . It sure is nice.

Wyatt

Mik ie

Dear Mom and Pap Smith,
Thanks for everything. We

Lori

I

To Althea,
My Valentine.

todaY and all year through.
Happy Valenline's Day.
. Bob, Bettie &amp;Judy

I know It's hard putting up
with me, but thanks. Love
yo ,
Della

•

'

Love,

Sally &amp; Amy

mean a lotto me. I'm glad

Stella Johnson 11

•'

I

Valentines Day.

got you. I love you.

Babe,

I

To my Daddy,
We love you a lot. Happy

tine' s Day .

1 love you mv sweethearts
Ol!ln &amp; Tamara . Sweeter is
life because we ha11e each
other .

earth. ·

••

day . Happy
Day.

' Mom Andreqni

~ssion .

Jeff, Andy
Kenny .' Billy, Butch

Day.

To a wonderful Wife,
I lov~ vou verv much . vo·u

Ozie,

•·•

We love you more than
words could ever say .
Love, &lt;;rystal &amp; Tracy

&amp;

To our special and sweet .
God bless you . I 1o11e you

parents.

Have a Happy Valentine's
Day . We love you .

Joe,

Rutland , I love you al very
much. Happy Valentine's

To Junior,
Af~er ei,ghteen years, I still

Robin B.

could hOpe tor .

To Mom &amp; Dad,

To five Walker Boys In

.

You are the best. We love
'iOU. Happy Valentine's
Day . Love, Robby, Adam,

John Deere. Happy Valen·

Dave R.

I

Mork,

Mommy &amp; Daddy,

Tne best Husband &amp; Dad In

I

No son has ever had so
perfect a father. I love you.
David Lee Durst

To Brian H.
To my wonderful hOsband

To my Husband, Randy,
Roses are red, Violets are
blue. If' s Valentine's Day,
and l still love vou .

Brenda,
1 love yov more than my

Madame X

TO Da-Da,

love you . Happy Valen-

my eye . I rea IY like you .
Secret Admirer

Mom &amp; Dad.

To Lori,
I'm sa lucky to have Some·
one as.beautiful as you.
Love, Charlie

It' s been a beautifUl year .
Hope we have many more.
All my love,
Stephannie

Day.

more today, than
-~~~~;~
~~~·
but less than
fc
Happy Valen ·

complete. It will be a year
in two days. Love ya.

H.B.

love you . Happy Valen·
tine's Day .
·
J.R.
and soon to be daddy . Love
you, Happy Valentine's

Jeff

To mkwife,

To Don,
You mean all the world to
me . I love you very much .
Traci

This is to let rou ·know I
love you with a I my heart,
forever . Love, Deana

I love you very much.- Y au
will forever be my Valen·
tine.

Than s for making my life

Howard

And thanks for being my
special loving mom.
·

Marie

Tim

Love, Gladys
Day

for everything. I
you . .Happy Valen·
Day.
Love,

Tomywife,O.L. ·

Still love you deeply,
Gorgeous, after she years
of wonderful happiness.

To Delmar. Angie, and
Baby,

To my daughter, Natali~1

To Brown Ehes,
I covldn't ave picked a
greater guy . Happy V alenfine's Day Honey . I love
you. From Pumpk in

To Mom&amp; Dad,
I couldn't have better
parents in the world and 1
thank God for you . Happy
Valentine's Day.
Rhonda

Tim,
I' ll follow your steps to

Pam,
The best wife and mother
in the world .
Love,
Scottie, Ky la and Will iam

mr

Frank

Love , Tina

You're a really neat &amp;
sweet guy . Stay the way
you are. Love ya lots, dear .
Dream a

I love you With all
heart, and always wH .
Love always,
PeeWee

pay.

To Curtis, my love, who' s
really fine lind 1 want him
for my Valentine .

Mark, ·

To Great Grandma,
To my one and only . I love
you .

I love you both very, very
much. Happy Valentine's

To George,
The one I love and always
will. Have a Happy Valen·
tine's Day.

ya .

'

To Cindy and Brad,

To Tina,
The only one I will ever
love . Have a ~appy Valen·
tine's Day .
Love, George

no future without you .
Love, Christina

From Honeysuckle Hill .

Your two daughters,
Robin and Don ita

Day.

Mike and Stephanie

Jimmy ,
To the sweetest valentine
anyone could have . 1 love
you and alwa~s will .

ToMom,

To Mom and Dad,
We love you. Happy Valent ine's Day .

ting the Agriculture Commission;
State Superintendent of Schools Roy
Trudy, and State Treasurer Larrie
Bailey.
Also addressing the students will
be Mark Zachwieja, governor, ·
Mountaineer Boys State, and Susan
Rodriguez, governor, Rhododendron
Girls State.
The afternoon wiU be spent at the
state capitol where the students will
be able to meet with delegates and
senators from their home districts.
They also will have.an opportunity to
see the legislature in action.
Know Your . State Government
Day is in its fourth decade under the
spollllorship of the West Virginia
Education Association. It is
estimated that" about 13,000 high
school students have been able to
learn about their state government
on a first hand basis through the
program.

Ohio

Steve,
Thanks for coming Into my

life and making me.., hap·
py . llovt you vary much .
Shari

'•

I

I

2ND &amp; BROWN Sl

POMEROY, OHIO

MASON, W. VA.

PH. 992-3795

PH. 773-9128

COLLECTIBLE
MINIATURES

Young

Love
Diamond

I
I The finishing touch

l•o adwmond wardrobe.
1

Appointments Available
"'

FriefUI.~Ilip is the most ('(mst&lt;mt, mO.'it
t&gt;mluring, mo.~t bu.~it· purl of love. To
.'ihow tlwtltwe, Wt' hiiVl' . ..

THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

Open: 9 a.m. to 6. p.m. Weekdays, 9 to 5 Sat.

111111111111111111

r
I

MomandDad,
Just a small Valentine to
let you know 1love you .
Love, Lori

I

H&amp;R BLOCK·
618 E. MAIN ST.

. Love, Jeff and Wendi

ight up

Jewelry

VALENTINE SPECIAl.

lDIAMOND STUD EARRINGS
I · •29•s
I
1

For Valentine's Day giving ...
Choose from seven miniature shapes including a
4'h" Jewel box, bud vase, boot, slipper, blown
vase, 5'h" basket and toothpick holder/votive .
Available in two patterns . .. Blue Roses and
Pink Blossoms . .. on Fenton satin finished
custard glass beautifully hand .decorated and
Individually signed by the artist.

Candy's Classic Collections

MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE
99 Mill

992-2641

..

�Page-6 The D,!IIY Sentmel

Pomeroy

•=

,

Fnday, February 13, 1981

Middleport, Ohto

tuJ

7 fXrERIENCE THf JOY Of RELIGION ~
This Message and Church
USED CARS, INC. "" MEIGS TIRE
\ \ CENTER, INC.
Sl Rl

Ray R1ggs
Ph 985 4100

Chester

(1\'\J

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

MIDDLEPORT
BOOK SlORE

~~~! ~

Church &amp; Ofhce Supplies

Prescnphons

GIFTS

99 Moll Sl

John F Fullz, Mgr
Ph 992 2101
Pomeroy

Moddleporl

992

Pomeroy

29SS

Kingsbury Home Sales
a.DTHING tDJSE : ':..- &amp;Service ~ :=

NEW YORK

,,. -4

KERMIT's KORNER
Pomeroy. Oh1o

f

J/
,,

RIDENOUR

FURNI~!e~L!ROWAR:tI
Homehle Saws

E

The

F1nest

Looking

IIWI

a 111e moutn Hl' ~ il t~~ppopolamvs -dno:llt)a s u~aea~ how
.ppo s svpp.:lsed Ill oak

11

Bu .,h.JtlltrOunts Q1 {)ft(JO/e IO()k r19 oown ;u tne meum

w

Its us~.~a

nev
c.roa~

'I b.&gt;ca~$Ellhey a en 1 sa sl oe(! w 1h bQI &gt;g wna
1 e ftwy I'IISI d~ c!Wid M•e 9 en M m a orna en

\

on y c

at the

IIIIH,

~

PomeroY

l2l1 E Millfi

MARK VSTORE
Middleport r~

•n &lt;deal me o slart oo1&lt;

~oub o• pe e~~,:e a d te enl .1p
ll«l:tthiOI e Tr~ecr&gt;ee lulnessu a
~an D on en IE !lou sl~:o on l.t h

3

Ju rJgu
6 II

•

2~

804 W Mdtn
992 '2318 Pomeroy

m
'

.

EWS &amp; SONS SOHIO

WAID CROSS

Complete
Automotive

SONS SlORE
Wednesday
M.ittl!ew

GrocenesGeneral Merch.1nd•se
Rae me 949 2SSO

"

2

Tllui'Sdl~

0

of Columbus

VIRGIL B. TEAFORD SR.

'214 E Mam

~E-CREr

Piii:ACTtCAI.LY

A GIANT

Thtrd N •ddleporf

Natoonwtde Ins Co

f t-rmf!flll A Ihens Cou nty
Sav1n9\ &amp; looln
Pomeroy
216 E Mcun
992 665S

Su'ldl¥

LOUD
AND L..ET ME !f&gt;J ON THE

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

~

216 S Second
Pomeroy
992 3325

UNP~EDI CTA6LE

our

992 2196

Diamond Savings &amp;
Loan Co.

lately?

s

GL1E651NG

CAVED IN BUT
Hf WA5 8/G--

Pat Hill Ford, Inc.
461

~TART

A QUICK GI.IMPt::f:
IN THE- DARK 6E
FORE' THE ~OOF

A LOOK AT WHOEVEFt
HIT ..,.OLJ 2

WELl. AT LEAST A fRIFL.So
If AL$0
'AEAN$ $He NOW KNOW5
WE I&lt;E' COM ING I

IF HIS SIZE CL.UES YO\..! N

NOT MUCH. J UST

BACK I~ CAMP HAD
TO O~A&amp; YOU MO~TOF
TME WAY DJO YOU 6-!T

~

- "

,_
Phone 992 3480 -..__§

ng liP rom tile nea 1 A chu &lt;:h

STAND ON A
AND PLAY
A CHARACTER •

STAGE

-

( APTAIN F:ASY

Phone 992 6304

SHl N 2nd
Middleport

.JUST STAND IN
FRONT OF A CAMERA
IN A 6AT"HING SU IT"!

ACT, 0 SHOW MYS!OL..F,
IF NO ONE ELSE,
THAT I COULD

PLAV?

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Eat In or
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992 l4Sl

f u ~ o 1!11 5011 &lt;'1 el lor ~n91 ppo ke Man hu
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conqua e.a y con~p acy ot c

Services~
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Hunhngton. W

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NOT

VvANTED TO

REAL.L.Y

YOU

CONSIDERED
WITHDRAWIN&lt;3
FROM THE

1

Reuter-Brogan Insurance

G aod Bre.ad

I

~-lAVE

Hie e ! a very SO!Jntl reiiSQI'J lor Ills teiiOw l&lt;lloolo. oo .. n

Modular Homes
1100 E Mam

Bakers ol

' DICK T:.:R.::.A:.:C:;V_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _--,

.....•

The Interested Businesses Listed On This Page.
FRENOI'S SUNOCO
PIZZA SHACK
SERVICE CENTERS

sect•onal

992 SllO Pomeroy

Pomeroy-Moddleport Ohoo

, Froday, February 13, 1981

J

Equipment

''

I DOti'T ~IHO
AHYTHIN6 AS

LOH6 AS YOO'RE
HERE, "DAOOY' I

~:~c:.:;d

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R uti and Ohto 45775

UM·IIJ\'/ I FEEL 6UILTYI'~ AFRAID I~ GOIH6 TO
HAI/C TO LEAVE '1tJU IH
LIMIII'$ CARE FOit
AWIIILE

wm

Bill Brown Owner
Phone (614) 741 2777

THE DAILY
SENTINEL

Ser111ce
Locust &amp; Beech
99'21 Meddteport

Mtddleport

Pomeroy 0

"2

Mllltww

105- 5

TRINITY CHURCH Rev W H Perrm
p[]sfor Roy Mayer Sunday schoo sup1

Church School 9 15om worshtp ser
vtce 10 30 Q m Chotr rehearsa l Tues
day 7 30 p m under dtrecflon of Ahce
Nease
POMEROY
CHURCH
OF
THE
NAZARENE Corner Un on and Mulberry
Rev Clyde V Henderson poster Sun

doy sch.ool 9 30 o m

Glen McClung

supt

mornmg worsh p 10 30 o m
evcnmg servtce 7 30 mtd week ser

vtce Wednesday 7 30 p m
GRACE EPISCOPAl CHURCH - 320 E
M01n St Pomeroy The Rev Robert B
Groves rector Su nday serviCes at 10 30
a m Holy Commumon on tile f trst Sun
day ol each month and combined w•th
morntng prayer on the th1rd Sunday
Mormng prayer and sermon on ott other
Sun days of the montl1 Church School
and nursery core provided Cotlee hour
tn the Pansh Hall tmmed1otely fo lowmg
the serv ce
POMEROY CHURCH OF CHR IST 212 W
Mom St Ne1l Proudfoot pastor 81ble
schoo l 9 30 a m
morn ng worsh1p
10 30 am Youth meetmgs b 30 p m
eventng worsh•p 7 30 Wednesday night
prayer meetmg and B ble study 7 30

pm
THE SALVATION ARMY 115 Butternut
A " e Pomeroy Envoy and Mrs Ray Wm
mg ofltcers 1n cha rge Sunday holmess
mcehng 10 o m Sunday School 10 30
o m Sunday school l eader YPSM Elo1se
Adams 7 30 p m
sol vat on meetmg
venous speakers and musK spec ols
Thursday- tO om to 2 p m Lodtes
Home League all women •n vtted 7 30
p m prayer meetmg and 8•ble study
Rev Noel Hermon teacher
BURLINGTON
SOUTHERN BAPTIST
CHAPEL Route 1 Shade B1ble school 7
p m Thursday worsh p serviCe S p m
POMEROY WESTSIDE CHURC H OF
CHRIST 200 W Mom St qq2 5235 Vocal
musiC Sunday worsh1p 10 a m Btble
study 11 o m worship b p m Wednes
doy Btble study 7 p m
OlD DEXTER
BIBLE
CHRI STIAN
CHURCH Rev Ralph Smith pastor Sun
day school 9 30
a m
Mrs Worley
Francis su per nfendent Preoch1ng ser
v1ces first &amp; thtrd Sundays followmg Sun
day School
GRAHAM
UNITED
METHODIST
Preochmg 9 30 a m
f1rst and second
Sundays of each month th rd and fourth
Sundays each month worsh1p servtce ot
7 30 p m Wednesday even ngs at 7 30
Prayer and Btble Study
SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST Mulbe"y
Hetg hts Rood Pomeroy Pastor Albert
01ttes Sabbath School Supermtendont
R1to Wh1te Sabbath School Saturday
afternoon at 2 00 wtth Worsh1p ServiCe
fo11owmgot3 15
RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Sts-ter Harnett Worner Supt Sunday
School 9 30 o m
mornmg worsh p
10 45 om
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST
Dovod
Mann mm1ster W II tom Watson Sunday
school supt Sunday sct'lool 9 30 o m
mornmg worshtp 10 30 am
FIRST SOUTHERN
BAPTIST
2B2
Mulberry Ave Pomeroy Rev W lltom
R Newman pastor Hershel McClure
Sunday school supenntendenl Sunday
sct'lool 9 30 a m
mornmg worsh p
10 30
e\lenmg worship
7 30 p m
Mtdweek pray er servtce 7 30 p m
MIDWAY COMMUNITY CHURCH Dex
ter Rd
Rd
Langsv ill e Rev A A
Hughes Pastor Sunday School 10 a m
Sor\ltCeS on Tuesday Thursday and Sun
day 730pm
FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH Bo ley
Run Rood Rev Emmett Raw son pasto r
Handley Dunn supt Sunday school 10
o m Sunday eventng serviCe 7 30 Btble
tcochmg 7 30 p m Thursday
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRI ST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION Lawrence Manley
pastor Mrs Russell Young Sunday
School Supt Sunday School 9 30 o m
Even1ng worshtp
7 30
Wednesday
prayer rtleellng 7 30 p m
MT MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD
Ra cine- Rev James Sot1crf1eld pastor
Mornmg worshtp 9 45 o m
Sunday
school 10 45 a m evemng worshtp 7
7 30 p m
lad te l prayer
T ucsdoy
meeting Wednesday 7 30 p m YPE
MIDDlEPORT FIRST BAPTIST Corner
Sodh and Palmer the Rev Mark Me
Clung Sunday schoo l 9 15om Randy
Hayes Sunday School supennlendenl
Dan R199s osst supt Mornmg Worshtp
10 1 ~ om Youth mcet1ng 7 30 p m
W~dnesdoy tndudmg wee tots ooger
beavers tuntor astronauts and tumor
ond semor tugh BVF cho r practtce 8 30
p m Wedne!5doy prayer mcehng and Bt
ble study Wednesday 7 30 p m
CHURCH OF CHRIST Moddloport 5th
and Main Bob Melton mlmster Scott
Soltsmon
ouoctatc m ln•st er
Btble
School 9 30 a m
mormng worst·11p
10 30 o m even.ng servtce 7 00 p m
Wednesday Btbl o Study ond youth group
meetings 7 00 p m
MIDDLEPORT
CHURCH
OF
THE
NAZARENE Rev Jtm Broome
pastor
Btll Whtte Sunday school supt Sunday
schoo• 9 30 o m
mormng worshtp
10 30 om
Sundov evangelistic
meeting 7 00 p m Prayer meotlng
Wednesday 7 p m

UNITED PRESBYTERIAN MINISTRY OF
MEIGS COUNTY Owtght l Zovtfl dtrec
lor
HARRISONVIllE PRESBYTERIAN Re'
Ernest Stmk 1n pastor Sunday church
Mrs Homer lee
school 9 30 a m
supt morn ng worsh1p 10 30
MIDDLEPORT
Sunday school 9 30
am
R chard Vaughan supt Mormng
worsh p 10 30
'
SYRACUSE
FIRST
UNITED
PRESBYTERIAN Church Worsh1p serv ce
Y 30 o m Sunday School 10 30 o m Mrs
Sampson Hall supt
RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD Randoll
Baley po~tor Sunday school 10 am
Sunday worsh1p 11 o m
Chtldren s
church 11 o m
Sunday even ng ser
v ce
7 30 p m
Wednesday even ng
young lades OUMIIiory 6 p m Wednes •
day fom l y woah p 7 30 p m
HAZEL COMMUNITY CH URCH Near
Long Bottom Edse l Hart pastor Sunday
school 10 o m
Church 7 30 p m
pr'oyer meetmg 7 30 p m Thursday
MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL
Thtrd
Ave the Hev W1 l hom Kntfle l poster
Thomas Kelly Sunday School Supt Su f'l
doy school 10 a m (losses for oil ageS
eventng serviCe
7 30
B1ble study
Wednesday 7 30 p m youth serv1ces
Fndoy 7 30 p m
MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST Cor
ner Ash and Plum
Ro lph Butcher
pastor Saturday evenmg servtce 7 30
p m Sundoy School 10 30 a m
MEIGS
COOPERATIVE PARISH
METHODIST CHURCH
R chord W Thomas 0 rector
POMEROY CLUSTER
Rev Robert McGee
POMEROY Sunday School 9 15 a m
Worshtp serviCe 10 30 am
Chotr
rehearsal Wednesday 7 p m Rev
Robert McGee pastor
ENTERPRISE Worshtp 9 om Church
School tOo m
ROCK SPRINGS Sunday School9 15 a
m Worsh•p serv•ce 10 a m
FLATWOODS Church School 10om
Worshtp 11 am
MIDDLEPORT CLUSTER
HEATH Church School 9 30 o m War
sh p 10 30 a m UMVF 6 p m Robert
Robmson Pastor
RUTLAND Church School q 30 a m
Worshtp 10 30 a m
Wo,htp 9 a m
SALEM CENTER
Church School 9 45 a m
SYRACUSE CLUSTER
Rev Stanley Mernhed Mtn ster
FOREST RUN Worshp 9 a m Church
School10o m
MINERSVILLE Church School 9 a m
Worshtp 10 a m
ASBURY Church School 9 50 o m
Worsh1p ll am Btble Study 7 30 p m
Thursday UMW ftsf Tuesday
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
Rev Dov td Horns
Rev Mark Flynn
Rev florence Smtth
HIt on Wolle
BETHANY
(Dorcas )
Worshtp 9 30
a m Church School 10 30 a m B•blc
study Thursday 7 30 p m
CARMEL Worshtp second and fourth
Sundays at 10 45 o m Sunday School
second and four9h Sundays q 30 o m
Wol'sh1p and Sunday School at Sutton
Untted Methodtsl Church on fi rs t and
th rd Sundays Bible study together each
Wednesday ol 7 30 p m Fom ly ntght
d1nner together each th.rd Thursday at

REEDS VI LLE Sunday School 9 30 a m
Morntng Worshtp 10 30 o m E\lcn ng
Worshp
7 30 p rn
B1ble
Study
Wednesday$ at 7 30 p m
ALFRED Sunday School ol 9 45 o m
Mornmg Worsh•p at 11 o m Youth 6 30
p m Sundays Wednesday N ght Prayer
MeeltnQ 7 30 p m
"ST PAUL (Tuppers Ploms ) Sunday
School 9 00 o m Morntng Worsh p at
10 00 om 8 b le Study 7 30 p m l ues
day
SO UTH BETHEL (S lve r Rtdgc ) Su• day
School 9 00 am Morn ng Woshtp 10 00
a m Wednesday B blc Study 7 30 p m
KENO CHURCH OF CH RIST 01 'or
Sw01n Super ntendenl Sunday school
9 30 every week
HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION
Rev
Ke th Eblin pastor Sunday School 9 30
a m
Leonard G lmore f rs9 e lder
even ng serv•cc 7 30 p m Wednesday
prayer meetmg 7 30 p m
BEARWAllOW RIDGE CHURCH OF
CHRIST Duan e Worden mtn si N Btble
class 9 30 a m morn ng worsh1p I 0 30
a m
evenmg worsh•p
b 30 p m
Wednesday Btblo study 6 30 p m
NEW
STIVERSVILLE
COMMUNITY
Church Sunday School sc r v•cc 9 45
am
Worst;up
scrvt co
10 30
Evangel st c Servtce 7 30 p m Wedne s
day Prayer moefl1g 7 30
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST Pomeroy
Horrlson v Ita Rd Rob ert Purtell pastor
Btll McE lroy Sunday sc hoo l supt Su{'ldoy
school q 30 a m nornmg worsh p and
co mmun•on 10 30 am Sunday worshtp
se rv•ce 7 p m Wednesday eventng
prayer meetmg and Btblc study 7 p m
Sf JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH Ptr,e
Gro ve The Rev W1lham Mtddlesworth
Pastor Church ser vices 9 30 o m Sun
day School 10 30 a m
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST :Jerry
P ngley pastor Suflday sc hool 9 30
o m
morning worshtp
10 30 a m
Wednesday evontng scrv ce 7 30
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST Rev Earl Shuler
poUor Sunday s.chool 9 30 a m Church
scHvtce
7 p m
youth mecttng
b
p m Tuesday B ble Study 7 p m
RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE
Rev John A Colfmon pastor Martha
Wolfe Chotrmon of tko Boord of Chr s
I tali L fe Sl.llldoy School 9 30 o m mor
n ng worsh•p \0 30 Sunday P.venmg
Praye r meeting
worshtp 7 30 p m
Wednesday 7 30 p m
RACINE FIRST BAPTI ST Don L Walker
Pastor Robert Sm1th Sunday schoo l
sup! Sunday school q 30 o m mornmg
worshtp 10 40 o m
Sun day cvcntng
worshtp 7 30 Wednesday c " en ng B1bl e
study 7 30
DANVIllE WESLEfAN
Ro "
R D
Brown pastor Sunday School q 30
a m mornmg worshtp 10 45 youth ~cr
"cc 6 45 p m eventng wor 5htp 7 30
p m p1oyer ond protso Wodnesdoy
7 30p m
Sll VER RUN FREE BAPTI ST Re v Mar
v n Markin pmtor Steve ltttlu S un~oy
school supt Sunday sch ool 10 am

morntng worsh1p 11 a m Sunday even
1ng worshtp 7 30 Prayer mocllng and
8 bl ~ study Thu rsday 7 30 p m youth
ser v co b p m Sunday
CHRISTIAN FEllOWSHIP 'HURCH 3B3
N 2nd A ve
Mtddleport Pastor Bob
Hollin s Sunday servtces. 10 00 a m and
7 p m Tuesday ond Fr day serv cos 7 00

pno
HOUSE OF PRAYER AND PRAISE
L bcrty Ave Pomeroy Se r vtces Sunday
300pm Frdoy730pm Tuesdoy730

pm
CHESTER CHURCH OF GOD Rev R E
Robtnson pastor Sunday schoo l q 30
a n worsh p scrvtce 11 o m evemng
serv ce 7 00 youth servtce Wednes
doy 7 00 p m
lANGSVIllE
CHRISTIAN
CHURCH
Rober! E Musser pas tor Sunday school
9 30om Paul Musser sup! morntng
worsh p 10 30 Sunday evemng serv ce
7 DO mtd week serv ce Wednesday 7

pm
SYRACUSE
CHURCH
OF
THE
NAZARENE Rev James B K1tt le pastor
Norm an
Presley
Svnday
School
Supenntcndcnt
Sunday school q 30
o m
morn1ng worship 10 45 o m
Cll angeltsttc s~rvtce 7 p m Prayer anti
Prot sc Wednesday
7 p m
youth
mectng 7pm
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN CHRIST
Elden R Blok e pastor Sunday School 10
a m Robert Reed supt Morntng ser
man 11 o m
Sunday ntght services
Ch••st on Endea vor 7 30 p m Song sor
v tcc
8 p m
Prooch tng 8 30 p m
Mtdweek Prayer meehng Wednesday 7
p m Al 111n Reed loy leader
CHURCH Of JESUS CHRIST located ot
Rutland on New l imo Rood nc•f to
Fore5t Acre Pork Re v Ray Rouse
pastor Robort Mussar Sunday School
sup! Sunday school 10 30 o m wor5h1p
7 30 p m B ble Study Wednesday 7 30
p m Saturday mght prayer servtce 7 30
pm
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN Ro9er
Wots;on pastor Mildred Ztegle r Sunday
school sup I Mormng wors h p 9 30 o m
Su,ndayschool 10 30 o m even ng ser
VICO 7 30
MT UNION BAPTIST Merltn Teefs
Joe Sayre
Sunday School
pastor
Su per ntenent
Sunday school
~ 45
o m (NOM ng worshtp 7 30 p m Prayer
meeltng 7 30 p m Wednesday
TUPPERS PlAINS CH URCH OF CHRIST
v ncent Waters pastor Howard 81otr
Colwell supermtcndcn t Sunday School
9 30 om mornm g church 10 30 am
Sunday evem ng \erv ce 7 30 Wednes
day B blc Study 7 30 p m
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE
Rev Herbert Grote pastor Fronk Rtlfle
sup! Sunday School 9 30 o m Worsh p
sc rv tcc 11 a m and 7 30 p m Prayer
m£lclmg Wednesday 7 30 p m
LAUREL CLIFF FREE
METHODIST
CHliiKH Rev Floyd F Shook pastor
Lloyd Wr.ght
Otrector of Chnst1on
Educat on Sunday School 9 30 a m
Morntng Worsh1p 10 30 a m
Cho.r

630
APPLE GROVE Sunday School 9 30
om Worshtp 7 30 p m lsi and 3rd Sun
days Prayer meet ng Wednosday 7 30
p m Fellowsh p supper ftrsl So9urdoy 6
p m UMW2ndTuosdoy7 30p m
EAST LETART Chruch School 9 a m
Worst·11p servtce 10 o m Prayer meottng
7 30 p m Wednesday UMW second
Tuesday 7 30 p m
RACINE WESLEYAN
Sunday school
10 a m worshtp 11 a m Chotr procttco
Thursday 8 p m
LET ART FALLSWorshtp sorvtce 9
a m Church SchoollO a m
MORNING STAR Worshtp 9 30 o m
Church School 10 30 a m
MORSE CHAPEL Church School 9 30
a m Worship 11 o m
PORTLAND Sunday School 6 30 p m
Evontng Worst·up
7 30 p m
You1h
Meeting Tuesday 7 30 p m Btblo Study
Thursday 7 30 p m
SUTION Sunday School ftnt and third
Sundays 9 30 a m worsh p f rst and
th rd S:undoys 10 45 a m WorstHp and
Sunday Schoo l at Carmel Un tied
Mcthod1sl Church on second and fourth
Sundays Btbl e study together each
Wednesday 7 30 p m Famtly mght dm
ner together eqch thtrd Thursday a! 6 30

pm
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
Rov Ri chard W Thomas
Duane Sydenstricker Sr
John W Douglas
Charles Dom•gon
JOPPA Worship 9 00 c m Church
School 10 00 a m
CHESTER Worsh1p 9 o m
Church
School 10 om Cho1r Rehearsal 7 p m
Thursdays Btble Study Thursdays
7 30p m
LONG BOTTOM Sunday School ot q 30
a m
Even ng Worshtp at 7 30 p m
Thurc;doy Hlbln Study 1 30 p n

Weekly Sermon
The Gospel makes 11 clea r that we ca nnot genu•nely love God 1f we
do not lov e our ne 1ghbor To 1llustrate what he means by ne1ghbor
Jesus tel ls a story - the story of the Good Sam an tan - the story of a
heathen foreigner Jesus also po1nts out that 1t 1s no great achtevement
for us to love only those who love us
Do we 1n th ts Chnst1an country love our netghbor' I fear not I fear
that the Chnsttan1ty of th•s country IS more on the surface than m the
hearts of her people
Look how hateful even church peopl~ have been to persons of other
races 1 The Gospel offers no excuse for fht s sort of th1ng
Look how Amer1can wor1&lt;1ng men who have htgh paytng lObS resent
MeX 1cans who would l1ke to be able to make lust enough to feed their
famtltes 1
ounng the has, age cns•s we d1d appear to love our Amen can neigh
bars who had met W1th m1sfortune, and thts we ough t to have done Yet
we allowed the mtsdeeds of a few score peop le breed hatred '" our
hearts for all the people tn the la nd from whtch the wtse men came
While our concern was d1rected toward the hostages during all of
one year and a few weeks of each of two other years we probably
m1ssed some other tragedies For Instance tf the trend of the late
seventoes held through WBO and the begonnong of 1981 during lhe 14
months of the hostage cnsis more than 26 000 Amencans were ktlled
by drunk or dnnktng dnvers More than a thousand of these were
ktlled tn Ohto and near ly 250 dted in West Vtrg1nia Is tf not strange
that we love our Amencan ne1ghbors enough to hate someone else 1n
the~r behalf but not enough to change our own lifestyles to protect
them?
Too many of us have allowed the blessed doctrtne of grace to be an
excuse for betng sat tsf•ed w1th ourselves when we are far from
measur1ng up to the Gospel We have no r1ght lobe sc sa t1 Sftedl
John Wesley whose doctnrw of sancflflccJfiOn 1S dear to many chur
ches m Amen ca today wro te tn h1S d•ary on hts 71nd b1rthday God
be merc1ful to me a stnner
Let us re101 ce I hat sa lvation Is offered to us as 1mperfcct as we are
Let us re to•ce th at the power of th e Holy Splrt 1 can br1ng about change
tn us Yet let us never be sat1sf 1ed w1th ourselfes Let us always en
deaver to Increase our love - By Mark Flynn of the Carmel Sutton
Bethany and Portland Untted Methodist Churches

Procttce Sunday b 30 p m
hen tng
Worsh p 7 30 p m Wednesday Prayer
and Btble Study 7 30 p m
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST Charles
Russell Sr mtmster R1ck Macomber
supt Sunday school 9 30 o m worshtp
serv ce I 0 30 a m Btbl e Study Tuesday
730pm
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS
CHRIST OF
LATTER DAY
SAINTS
Portion~ Raone Rood Wtlltom Roush
pastor Phyll1s Stobort Sunday School
Sup I Sunday School 9 30 a m Morntng
wors hip 10 30 a m
Sunday evenmg
scrvtce 7 p m
Wednesday evqnmg
prayer services 7 30 p m
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST Rev Earl Shuler
poster Worsh1p s.erviCe 9 30 o m Sun
day school 10 30 om Btble Study and
prayer serv &lt;e Thursday 7 30 p m
CARLETON CHURCH Kingsbury Rood
G o ry Kmg pastor Sundov school 9 30
o m Rolph Carl supen ntendent even
lng worshtp 7 30 p m Prayer meehng
Wednesday 7 30 p m
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN
Tom
R1choson pastor Wallace Damewood
Sunday School Supenntendent Worship
ser\I'ICC at 9 0 m B blc s,hool 100m
HYSEll RUN HOLINESS CHURCH Sun
day School ot 9 30 o m wonh tp sor
vtcos at 10 30 a m Pa stor Rev Theron
Durham Thursday services ot 7 30 p m
wtfh Rev Okey Carl
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION ot Bold
Knob located on County Rood 31 Re v
Lawrence Gluesencomp pastor Rev
Rogor Wdlford
ass stonr
pastor
Preach ng servtces Sunday 7 30 p m
prayer meeting Wednesday 7 30 p m
Gory Gnlftth l eader Youth groups
Sunday evcmg 6 30 p m wtth Roger and
V ole! W lllord as leaders Commun1on
sorvtces ft r\ 1 Sunday each month
WH!TE S CHAPEl Coolvtlle RO Rev
Roy Deeter poster Sunday lChaol 9 30
a m worshtp servtce 10 30 a m Btble
study qnd prayer service Wednesday

7 30p m
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST Bob
Buckmghom pmtor Herb Ellloll Sun
day school supt Sunday lChool 9 30
a m mornmg wors h p and com un ton
10 30 a m
RUTLAND BIBLE METHODIST CHURCH
Amos T !hs pastor Donny Ttl! s Sunday
Sthool Sup! Sunday School 9 30 o m
followed by mor nmg worshtp Sunday
evenmg serv tce
7 00 p m
Prayer
meeting Wednesday 7 00 p m
RUTLAND
CHURCH
OF
THE
NAZARENE Rev Lloyd D Grimm Jr
pastor Sunday school 9 30 o m war
shtp serv1cc 10 30 o m Broadcast live
ovel' WMPO young peoples scrvtce 7
p m Evangeltst c servtce 7 30 p m
Wodnosdoy servtce 7 30 p m
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST Corner of
Second and Anderson Mason Pastor
frank Lowther Sunday school 9 45
a m worshtp serviCe II o m and 7 30
p m Weekly B1ble Study Wedne,doy
7 30p m
MASON CHUfKH OF CHRIST Miller
St Mason W Vo Eugene L Conger
m1n1ster Sunday Btble Study 10 a m
Worshtp 11 o m ond 7 p m Wednesdav
Bible Study vocal musiC 7 p m
liFE SCIENCE CHURCH 12 North
Thtrd St Cheshtre Independent fun
damentol serv1cos Sunday evomng 7 30
p m Pastor Rev Or Robert Persons
MASON ASSEMSl Y OF GOD Ouddmg
Lano Mason W Va Re" Ronnte B
Rose Pastor Sunday School 9 45 a m
Mormng Worshtp II o m Even.ng Ser
v ce 7 30 p m Wednesday Women s
Mintstrles 9 o m (meeting and prayer
Prayer and Btble Study 7 p m
HARTFORD CHURCH Of CHRIST IN
CH RISTIAN UNION Tho Rev Wi lliam
Campbell postor Sunday School 9 30
a m James Hughe ~ supt evening ser
v1co 7 30 p m Wednesday evemng
prayer mcetmg 7 JO p m Youth prayor
sorvtce each Tuesday
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH letart W
Vo Rt 1 Mark Irwin p&lt;htor Worship
services 9 30 a m Sunday school 11
a m oven1ng worshlp 7 30 p m lues
day cottage prayer meehng and Bible
study
4i 30 a m Worship service
Wednesday 7 30 p m
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH now lo~o tod
on Pomeroy Ptke County Rood 25 near
Flatwoods Rev Blackwood pastor Sor
viCes on Sundov at 10 30 a m and 7 30
p m wtth Sunday school 9 30 a m Bible
study Wednesday 7 30 p m
INDEPENDENT HOLINESS CHURCtl
INC ~ Pearl Sf
M1ddloport Rov
0 Doll Manley pastor Sunday school
q JO am Morning worship 10 30 am
evening worship 1 30 p m Tuesday
12 JO p m Women s proyor meeting
Prayer and praise seNica Wednesdav
7 30p m
RUTLAND APOSTOLIC CHURCH OF
JESUS CHRIST Elder James Miller 8ible
study .. Wednes-day 7 30 p m
Sunday
School 10 om Sunday night service
7 30p m
POMEROY WESLEYAN HOLINESS Horrlsonvt lle Rood Dewey Ktng restor
Hon ry Eblin Jr
Sunday Schoo Supt
Sunday School 9 30 o m Morning War
ship II a m Sunday evening 1ervlce
7 30 m Prayer Meeting Thursday 7 30
pm
SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF GOD Not Pentocostol Rev George Oiler

pastor Worship serv ce Sunday 9 45
am Sunday s-chool II om worsh1p
servtce 7 30 p m Thundoy prayer
meet ng 7 30 p m
MT
HERMON Umted Brethren in
Chmt Churct't Rev Robert Sanders
pastor Don W1ll loy leader Located tn
Texas Commun ty off CR 82 Sunday
school 9 30 a m Mornmg worshtp ser
\!'ICe 10 45 o m evenmg preachtng ser
vtco second and fourth Sundovs 7 30
p m Chmtron Endeavor ftrst and th rd
Sundays 7 30 p m Wednesday prayer
meet ng and B ble study 7 30 p m
JEHOVAH S WITNESSES 37319 State
Route 124 (One mile east of Rutland)
Sunday Btblc lecture q 30 a m Wat
chtower study 10 20 o m Tuesday 81
ble
study
7 30 p m
Thursday
Theocratic Schoo l 7 30 p m
Sorv cc
Meeting S 20 p m
RUTLAND FREEWillBAPTIS I Church
Or James A Bruhl pastor Sunday
school 10 a rn Sunday evonlng snrvtce
7 00 Wednesday prayer moot ng 7 00
pm
CHURCH OF GOD of Prophecy loco ted
an the 0 J Whtlo Rood off h1ghwoy 160
Sunday School 10 o m Supermtendent
John Loveday Ftrsl Wednesday mght of
month CPMA ser\1\Ces second Wednas
day WMB meeting thtrd through ltfth
youth serv1cc George- Croyle pastor
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL - 570 Gront
St Middleport Sunday School 10 a m
mormng worshtp 11 o m even ng war
shtp 7 p m Wednesday eventng Btble
study and prayer meeting 7 p m AI
fthoted wllh Southern Baptist Con ven
tton
BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST
Eugene Underwood pastor Harry Hen
dncks suponntenden l Sunday schoo l
q 30 o m morntng worship 10 30 a m
oventng worsh i p 7 p m Wodnosdoy B•
bltl study 7 p m
JUBILEE CHRISTIAN
CENTER
Georges Creek Rood Rov C J Leml oy
pastor John Fellure super nlcndent
Church school 9 30om mormng war
sh1p 10 30 evon ng seNice 7 p m Btblo
Study Thurs 7 p m Clones f or all ogos
Nursery provtdod fo r worsh1p :serviCes
Sf PAUL lUTHERAN CHURCH Corner
of Sycamore and Second Sis Pomeroy
Tho Rev W litem Mtddlesworth Pasto r
Sunday School or 9 A5 a m ortd Church
ServiCe!. II a m
SACRED HEART Re" Father Paul 0
Welton po.stor Phono 992 1825 Sotur
day e vening Mass 7 30 Sunday Mo~s S
and I 0 o m
Confess ton Satu rday

7730pm
VICTORY BAPTIST - S2S N 2nd 51
M1ddleport James E Keesee pastor
Sunday morning wor!.htp 10 o m avon
1ng service 7 Wednesday &amp;\len1ng wor
sh p 7 p m Vl:sttot lon Thursday 6 30

pm
TRINITY Chrtsf tan Assembly Coolville
Gtlbert Spencer pastor Sunday
school 9 30 a m morntng worsh1p 11
om Sunday evening service 7 30 p m
midweek prayer .s cr vlca Wodne1dov
730pm
MOUNT Olivo Cammuntty Church
Lawrence Bush pastor Max Folmer Sr
Supenntendent Sunday School and mor
nlng worship q 30om Sunday evening
service 7 p m Youth mooting and Bible
study Wednesday ? p m
UNITED FAITH CHURCH - Route 7 on
Pomeroy bypass Rev Robert Smith Sr
pastor Rev James Cundtff assistant
pastor Sunday School 9 30 o m morn
lng worship 10 30 o m O\lentng wor
ship 1 30 Wednesday n l ~ht prayer sor
viCe 7 30 p m Women s Fellowsh1p
Thurtdoy 9 30 a m
FAITH BAPTIST Church Mason meet
at Umtod Steel Workers Umon Holt
Ro1lrood Street Mason Pastor Re v
Rtthord Jordon M ormng worsh1p 9 30
am Sunday School 10 30 a m Prayer
meeting Wednesday 7 30 p m
FOREST RUN BAPTIST - Re v Nylc
BCirdon
pastor
Cornelius Bunch
superintendant Sundoy sc hool 9 30
a m second end fou' th Sundays war
shtp servtce at 2 30 p m
MT MORIAH BAPTIST - Fourth and
Main St Middleport Ro1,1 Colvin Min
nls pastor Mrs Elvin BuiTlgardn or
tupt Sunday sc hool 9 30 o m worsh ip
aorv •co 10 45 a m
NORTH BETHEL United Methodist
Church Rov Charles Dom lgon pastor
Sunday School 9 30 a m Worshtp Ser
vico 10 45 om
Sunday Bib le Study
7 00 p m Wednesday prayer moot ng
7 30p m
BURLINGHAM SOUTHERN BAPTIST
CHURCH Route 1 Shade Poslor Don
81ack Afftlloted wtlh Sduthorn ~op!lst
Convention Sunday school I JO p m
Sunday worsh1p 1 30 p m Thursday
evening 8 tble !o tudy 7 p m
PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBl V
Rocono
Route 114 Wtlhom Hoback pastor Sun
day school I 0 a m Sunday evemng sor
vice 6 30 p m Wcdnosdoy oonlng ser
vko 7
CARPENTER BAPTIST Rev Froeland
Nom s pastor Don Chood lo Supt Sun
day Schoo' q 30 o m Morning Wonhlp
10 30 a m Prayer Servtce altcrnoto
Sundav•
NEASE SETTLEMENT FREE WILL BAP
liST Donald R Korr Sr pastor Fndoy
evenln1 1erv1ca 7 30 p m
Sunday
school lOam

GASOliNE \II FY

About
N1na, I've dec1ded t1me' It's
what
tomorrow 1
!want
for

b~r~h
daLjf

HE MA'i BE AFRAID O F HURT Nb

&gt;F._, fl\H HE 5

:&gt;TI LL
NOl CONV IN CED WE
..,HC\JLD OE LVE N TO
Hl"7 PA!'7 T

1.15 I SQMETIMb

I WONI7ER IF
HE REMEM!!1fR S MORE THAN HE_,
I ET1 1NG O N

{3 }

Evening television listings
butln•umanl'llrea Wolletotlnd l'llt
tong lost son anl:t l~a detecthte
d ecove11 thet I !'Ia m1111ng heir end
a young manaccu..d otatayln(Jthe
bt ulel f\uabend of tha woman he
tovea •re
and lila ume ~80
mi .. )

FEB 13 UJ81

o DO illiJ (. :_,7)~8
=11"1"'lt~"'t"'fll"'I;;-:N
D :;;F.:;;W;;:&amp;
3 1 STUFF
•
f e1
CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
I e l ABC NEWS
f t ) 3 1 1 CONTACT
111 OVER EASY Ho111 Hugh
Downs anl1 Fr.11n.. Blem
6 30 \} ) 8r1) NIICNEWS
Il l GOODNEWS
1• 1 MO"IE Nlll:ltl Wttd Ooo 01 Tha
North Partll1961
{S ) BOB NEWHART SHOW
f l l FACE THE MUSIC
0 \ 11(10) CBS NEWS
fl l
WILD WILD WORLD Of
ANIMALS
(11) LILIAS YOGA AND YOU
lt2l lll AICNEWS
6 58 C:l l CBNl.IPOATENEWS
7 00 ( 2) 1J PMM.I.OAZINE
( 3) THE STORY
f S) ALLIN THE FAMILY
( I I «~ ID FAMILY FEUD

(1) POP GOES THE COUNTRY

on•

l)l

Z~RO

Baaa Hoog • Annual Ston
ftwa lf Jeckeon Dey turn• •our wUh
!heGeneralahtatoncaword which
luke endBoare h~tedtoguerd the
large! at a paw of crooks hired by
Boaa (eDmtfla)
( t l S!SSIOH'I111'11aproorampre
86ntt lhe Rapubltcan reaponae to
theGubernalorteiSteteoflheStete
eddreaa
[if) COSMOS ShOrea at 1M Cos
mlcOcean
g 30 rll MOVII: (HORROR) .. .,.
Hunchback Of Notre 0..-. '
183"'

10 DO IJJ .

MACNEIL LEHRER

liQJ NEWS

BULLSEYE
(3) THE LESSOH

I 4) CONSUMER REPORTS PRE
SENTS TheAll Ataund the Houee
Shew Produced by Co aumert
un on this specut l ca mbilnea tacl
packed mlarmaltan w th entertain
mt~nt t o help consumerechooae th•
sa tes ! hAAllhteal and moat •con
om•cfll hou.11t1ho ld pro ducts \n
today 11 mt~~rk.lllpl.llce
I S1 SANFORD AND SOH
(l l tJ [ f ) JOKER SWILD
( 1 ) t10) HOllYWOOD SOU AA!&amp;
\ I J( 1~) Dtllfll CAVfTT stiOW
11:ZI CD FAtE THE MUSIC
1 58 { ' ) CBN UPDATE N!WS
Q:OO r 2) IJ (1) HARPER VALLEY PI A
l ) l IN TOUCH
( 4) MOVIE -(HORROR) •• "'- The
L•gacy 1V7B
( 5) NIGHT GALLERY
{ I ) MUPPET SHOW
CJ ( f ) liO) THE tHCAEDtBl!
HUUC

l I ) {1tl WASHINGTON W!fK IN
REVIEW
(t2JCI BENSON Tnt~ gov•rnor •
111 tuv1a\on adoreu t o tha st•t•
wrns n to chA O~ whenMarcy •• ght
w th her boyfriend turns her Into an
ttmo t anal wreck
s 30 C2) . ( 7) SANFORD Even Frad a
tl&amp;ll! beh111v orlan l goodonoogh to
onlluttl tho! Cat s m&lt;Jther a ltret vi
9 1 lhflu lu st reunlon\nhveyeara II
A IJrlllll 01" no thl!lO aeema to
p 11119.1! ho and ~tho abaa lut•ty
rf)IU80!I. to spo 1d even one night
u \dO th9 98ffi6 1001 'Nilt1 Cal and
F~+:t d

!5

'

NBA 8AI!IK!T8ALL Atlanta
Ht;twka ~o~s ~Mau Cf•h Klnoa
f l l !t tl m t MABIGG~LNOW
I Ht1 l WALL tTA!.ET WI!!K Hot
Rocks tot V81MI nfl .11 Day Hotl
Lou s Rukeyur
8 58 ( ;I l CBN UPDAT~ N!WS
tOO l 2l G I 71 NEAOWOLflAnc:h

m HaC MAGAZINE WITH

DAVID IRINK.Lt:T
( 4) STANDING ROOM ONLY Krle
Kr•atollerson and Anne M\lrrliY
Two of Arnftt'ICI II hOtllltltart J"f
torm e medley at their biuoeat

30 tl l D

1

12 Sl (ll CBN &amp;PORTS REPOIIT
t 00 (I ) JIMMY&amp;WAGGART
1 40 (&amp;l MOVII (HORROR) •••
S&lt;:re•m •nd Scre•m Aptn
1870

2 00 l l l . N!WS
(SJ 30 MINUTES WITH FATHER
MANNING

D Il l ~OJ Tl4l DUKEI CW HAZ

(!)(!) TIC TAC DOUGH
I I ) UU
REPORT

700CLUI

It )(l2J. FRtOA V NIGHT 110¥11!
tnmetea

Th• . .ntlnel 11111
12 4&amp; r4 l MOYII -(COM~DYI ••'t'l
cen tltopThellluetc 1UO

l!ill NUI!YE

2 10 1111• NEWS

2 21 fll CBN SPORTS REPORT
230

zu

\'1

WILL 8 ABLE 8 BAGGY
PAHfl ANO COMPANY From one
at the original burle1que houa..
cam•• a seMY nostalgiC took ala
b}.Qone era
340 CI)MOYit:-(DRAMA)••~,; Wtldln
( .t)

........., ,.72

3 sa Ct ) CIIN SPORT&amp; REPORT
400 (,1 700CLU8

S 30 rJl Ptlt.ARMS PRESENTS
(I) R.U PATROL
I sa fll SPORTS R!POIIT

OOO m••CIJ®J NEWS
r•J BOXtNGSBlST JOELOUI8

Thta uclutl'la rare h1m tootaga
take a a too• at tl'le personAl lite anl1
plotaaa 1onal career ol oneorthe
gtulllll world haevywelghl
c hamp• ot all time

hill

D(()Cfll DALLASJ R

aconniving
attectathahveaotBobbV P•m end
CUll butSuaEII•nls\gnoredelhe
retuua to •cll.nowledoe tl'le fact
that she Ia l).. ng toUawed (80
mtna)

t021

llJ) NEWS
(t] CINUPDATEMWI
llfl

1048
1058
11 00

Ill

MASTE-CE THII!ATIII!

OangetUXB EplaodaVI Br .. nand
Suaan allp any lor a q!Het •••
kend together When 1he returne
home aha Ia stunned to ltl'd an
Jne•pected vltllor
(Ctoaed
Ceptlaoed US A )(IOmlne t
I ll TIIUY!NINGNI!WI
' l l C&lt;JNUI'DATINEWI
•
ill • (J1 (7] • l tl ®lllJl
N!WI
Ll l DAN

GRIFFIN

( . ) IIOVI! -(COM!DY) ••

ltert

tngO..•r 1•11

11 2B rtl (;BN UI'DAft NEWI
1130 I l l . II) THf TONIGHTaHOW
Ouaata Bob and Ray (80 mkla )
! 3) IIIIOISIAOll!TIHOW
l l l(ttl • • RIOAYI

Ill lt'l • cas

LATE

MOYII!

VIGILANTE FORCE t97e St•r•
Kr1aKriS!atteraon JanMicheel\ltn
~; •nt

f l l MOYIE

CIUIPI!NI!.) •• •
Joumey.,.toFear 1. . 2
lt6lMOVtl 8rldeaoiOracu1a 1HO
Peter Cuahln~t~ Freda Jackson 2)
Hat chet Far a Honeymoon 1970
Slt~pl'len Fouylhe Dagmar 1. . .
a.-,ncHtr (2 hra 30 mlna )
1 t •e&amp; (11 MOVI! (HOfUtO ... •• '•
ComedJ OfT•nore' tM:S
1230 Il l •
(I)
TIC M SPI.CtAL
t1 t&amp;O I tiiOli)QOLOHaat Dionne We'
w1ck Gold record 'lfltlnnara perlotm
th.ll r l'lnaanga
ti1 • MOVIE C~HRILLIRJ ••

CHAMPIOIIIHII'

T ubb and Slrtngbe an
UO) FRONT PAGE
{1() WITH OSSIE AND RUBY Ute
1a Ho1te Ossle Dav11 and Ruby
Doe are 1oined by glle&amp;.t star Delta
Reese In a aer ea ~~dramatic vlg
ne!les portray ng tolka of all ages
anda11walkl oft feoflermgverloua
nlerpriHa!lons to the age 9ld
question Wt1al 11 lite?
112J. MUPPET SHOW
6 Q(l I ~) U (7) BARBARA MANDRlLL
AND THE MANDRELL SIST!RS
JolnlngBertlaraondher staters ate
gueat1 Robert Gu\llaume and Larry
Gatlin (60m1ns}
{ 3 ) 700CLUB
l ol ) MOVIE !WESTERN)••• Rio
Lobo 1870
I &amp;)MOYIE (DRAMA )•• Bedford
Incident 1i6!5
Il l

COLLEGE

Abraham L ncoln mth1t Stiff ng and
la,tua\ documentary
(11\ LAWMAI&lt;.ERS
(12) CD THE lOVE BOAT
9 30 ( S) THf:LESBON
liJ ( I] ~O) LADIES MAN
(11) SNEAK PREVIEWS Crlltques

Roger Ebert and Gene Slake!
rovtow some at the newest 11\me
nclud ng Altered States and The
Mirror Crack d
10 00 r21 U C1J
THE OANGSt"ER
CHRONICLES
l I ) ROCK CHURCH
( 4 ) MOVIE~HORROR)•• D.. th
Shill 1880
l 5) TBS EVENING NEWS
[J)~lJ IDFANTASYISLANO-' ~;;au

ptewhohevebeenmamed25)ears
meet on Fantasy Island as total
sttam;era w thlhe chan cetobe&lt;Jtn
a new romance Guest atara Peter
Mat1hall Jane Powell (60 m1ns)

BASKETBALL

tJ [ I )(tiJCONCA£TECOWBOYS

Stale
0 [ 6)(l0) WKRP tH CINCINNATI
(t1l OOYSSI!Y O n ~;~ka aBtoMQka
Thill program tocuaea on Ongka a
New Outneen endhtsoroanlzallon
ol a hllQO maka o ceremanll\1 pre
aentatton of g !19 llsed to p10mote
one uoclalandpol\t tea latandlng
(BOrnfns)
&lt;111 8) CHARLIE SANGELS
B 30 lit tt l (fO) THE TIM CONWAY
SHOW
ltJ SUPI!RSTARPROFILE
g 00 (:f}. t 7) WALKING TALL
CJ (I ){ffj) FlO
{ f l THEY VE KILLEDPAESIDfNT
LINCOLN Joaeph Leach por1r.11ya

J 0 and W\11 putt an elaborate con
game the Et Dorado on the mur
dereraollhetr!r end01dHarold (60
m na l
11) MOVIE (WESTERN) •••~
Tha Weaternar 1840
(111
MOVIE
(M'iSTEA'f SUSPENSE) ••
Murder 1i130
1! DO ti1 D (I ) (71 Ill (81 (t~ lfil iD
NEWS
,
~3) ZOLA LEVITT
{5)
DICK MAURICE AND
COMPANY
t 1 30 (f) IJ COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Unlvers1tyol "labamA~tiiUntverelly
of Kentucky

ttt \no1s~tll Oh10

1}fl'~~ ffi~ ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
byHennAinotdandBobLee

m•
cn NBC NEWS
(t](ftl • NEW&amp;
Ill (Jl

CONCERN

ItO) CBS N!WS
(1i\ THI80lDio40USE Host Bob VIla
diiCU*'OI plana lor a n11w hint of
lcally complllblef ~o~e cergerage
(Ciol~ Captioned US A )

1 DO

il .

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

40 To

be CLal

l

1 - Nazlmova
DOWN
s Afncan snake l Take as
10 1'wofold
one s own
11 Ia go s w1fe
! Of a mght
13

Wav y

1her l

soght

14 F orsake
15 Compensate
16 ordma1re
17 lnd1an

3 Queen s
attendant
4 Pub polable
Yesterday's Answer
5 Illustnuus
I!
Jnchned
26 Lease holder
ltahan
16
Extremely
Z8 Swmdle
family

Ulle

Z9 Wall Dtsney s

19 Type
7 Bad Ipref l 22 Cloer s ex

18 CuLlhree ways 6 Colktn

20 Potcher
Mag he

debverles
9 S1ren of

seaweed
11

So -

WWII

23 Dlsorderly

21 Thelma Moke

mtddle name

23 Iron Curtam 30 Cham of hills
35 Deface
colUltry
36
Suffox
~4 Carr)
w1th Bengal
15 Of the pope

I Stork

21 Purple

1---l--+--+-

or Rtchard

map
26 One and only
21 Mother

2S CoLy

of Hezekte:~h
211 Rl'COVt'f

31 Butter
servm~

3! Sugary

Unsctamble lhese 10u1 JumD1es
one le"er to each square to lorm
lour ord nary words

:n Mans name

sufftx

34 Ill woll
36 Oklahoma

I ENUOE_.~-1~
1

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17 Prlnl
qua~tly

:18 Hmd s mate
39 Holll

DANCE fEV!A

{3) BLACKWOOD BROTHERS
( 41LEGENDS JOHNW.lYNE THE
OUKE LIYESONA111n the 11\mrolea
hfl piJ~ad JaM Wayn.11 the man
w11s elwaya t\ghtmg turh11 beheta
ma•lng him e revered -'mertcan
ttuoughout I he -Nortd HIS l ife II
I&gt; I ohled tram childhood through his
long career as our most beloved
him hero
II lCi l t ) HI!EHAW Gueats Helen
Cornehut 6ttlv Grammar John D
Loudermilk Jack Worley ~60
m1n11)
l 1 i LAWRlNCl W!ltt SHOW
(l l MUPPETSHOW
10 BUGS BUNNY
In ONC! UPON A. CLASSIC t.1111
on the FIOSR 8oth Stephtt l Slid
PI11Upar• nto .. ewlthMAUO o Wh JA
Maggie and Stllp h~n go Hlllflng
Stephen tQames thll oan over
board and thu tw o 81A to1ned t o
apendthumghl ithlfl fit A!lllruttlt
I oil'! hi{ If M" ~H~ u 11'NI1'1 tr tJm th"
nil! (Cloud Capt 11 • tl U S " l
tlll iiJ SOLID GOLD llo11 Dlonn.t
Wa wck (,o\dlt!CI dw ll••'lpl!
to n'llhelr hit r10nu~
1 30 'I G tNStDF LOOt\

~tw16td'

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WRESTLING
! t l PRISONER TheGener•l
(tf1 VICTORY GARDEN
130

tO 30 ( $ } RICHA"D MOGUl

R0818AOLEY Sti()W

THE LUNDSTROM$

( l l CLASSIC COUNTRY Ernut

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DAILY CRYI'TO!lUOTE - Here s ho"
IN \HI&amp; KIND OF
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LL

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One le tter simpl y stands for another In th1s sample A
hmt~ Each da y the code ll'ttcrs at e different

tRYI'TOQUOTES
Now arrange the c rcled tellers tO
torm tho surpr se answer as sug
gested by the abovfl c ar1c.on

f

J1 mblos FEVER AWARD GAD FLY ACCE N1
A we\ghl 11119 In tt1 e teat herod wor dA CRA"'E

SAHWWO

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Smgle l etters
Used for the three L s X (or the \w o 0 s etc
apostrophes the leng th an d I orma L10n or the word~ are all

ZH R

F M

MFMWA

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work ot

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!NO IN YOURSEIJ" AND THAT THING NOBODY CAN
H~ACH VOU I !lAVE NEVEH HEARD UF' A UNIVERSITY
m BIIAVERY - EI.COROOBES
Yeslerday s

Cryptoqolole

([) 1981

II: I'IQ hi;ilu

eJ S¥r&gt;d1CIIt1

ln1.

�Pag'!-~- The

Daily Sentinel

Friday, February 13, 1981

Getting ·in shape--do we
really mean it this time I' I'

..,

Social Calendar

FRIDAY
RETURN JONATHAN Meil(~
") ") Chapter, Daughters of America,
Friday at the home of Mrs. ArthUF
' ' SkiMer. Mrs. Thoren C!ltteriU, Mrs,
Georga Skinner, and Mrs. Mark
By Charleoe HoeDlcb
The next step is to "lead yourself
Grueser, Jr., co-hoste.sses. Mrs,
Ufestyle writer
from temptation. " Avoiding the exPatrick Lochary to rrview, "The
"Before SPRING I'm going to get ternal hunger cues that affect your
Minute Wo!llen at Bunker Hill ."
.,
myself in shape."
appetite means changing your
We've said it before, but do we behavior.
'·'
mean it this time~
For instance if you " nibble" while
TOPS QUEEN NAMED
"'
Or are we fooling . ourselves by watching television, make it a rule
Clara Phillips was honored as
C&lt;JnstanUy inserting a new season that you never eat except when
queen of the month when the
for getting in shape as the year rolls seated at the kitchen table.
Rutland TOPS OH 1456 Club met this
along, and the pounds hang on.
If you eat when you're bored, turn
week. Donna Frye was queen of the
Winter is when a lot of us sit In that Iinne into a period of exercise ...
week and both were presented cash.
front of the tube more .. run in place, do some push-ups, prizes and other members sang in
With goodjes ... c;llories, calories, . jump a rope.
their honor.
calories ...
Take your anger or frustration out
And a guilt complex.
· by chewing sugarless gum rather
BLOODMOBILE HERE
,
For shaping up in Spring '\1, it's than eating a pound of chocolates.
The American Red Cross BIOO&lt;!r,
now or never, and there's plenty of
Don't buy foods that you're admobile will be at the Senior Citizens
help around,
dicted to.
Center, Pomeroy, on Feb. 25, from
Underway at the Meigs County
And exercise - not only your
1:30 p.m. to 6 p.m. Vernon Neas~ 1 .
Extension Office is a diet and exerbody, but a lot of will power 1 Think
blood program chainnan , ancise class. Diana Eberts, extensidn
slim and trim for Spring '81 !
nounced today.
agent, is leader of the :16 sha!M""
conscious women who already are
reporting lower weights and smaller
waists.
Good nutrition is emphasized to
maintain a steady slow weight loss
through diet and exercise. Goal in
weight loss is one pound a week.
While the class only meets once a
week, and it's all free except for a
small materials charge, members
4 Wheel Drive. "We
MONTE CARLO
New diesel truck
are encouraged to do the exercises
sold it new". Low,
White exterior wi th
trade-in , air, 5 speed,
low m il es, 6 cylinder
daily but not less than three times a
red
inter ior and
tachometer, guages
engine, white sport
p i nstripi _ng , Rally
and console, bed top·
week.
wheels,
electric
per
spoke wh ee ls. air, tilt
There is a psychology to dieting,
winch .
wheeL
according to Mrs. Eberts, who poin.
'4695
'6795
'4695
ts out that psychologists have found
that eating is a type of addictive
1978 FORD
1978 CHRYSLER
1979 JEEP CJ-5
behavior which provides an im4
wheel'" drive, Levi
· PINTO
CORDOBA
mediate positive reinforcement.
denim top rlrld i n
Charcoal
gray,
&lt;t cy linder engine,
This, she says, means that eating
rer i or ,
alum 1n um
automatic,
air ,
metal' :c: pa int. gray
c us tom
whee ls ,
gives an immediate sense of
interior,
loaded
with
power steering, vinyl
power steering.
top .
.
pleasure so you tend to repeat the
all the optiOns.
act of eating and the result is that
'5795
'4295
'3695
overeating becomes a habit
. Breaking the habit is the problem. _
1976 CHEVROlfT
1977 DODGE
1976 CHEVY
• So the first step in your weight
MONTE CARLO
C&lt;Jntrol program is to identify cues in
LUV TRUCK
D-150 TRUCK
" Super Clean ". The
your environment that encourages
''
Extra
Sharp".
318
4 cylinder, 4 speed
seats have been
you to overeat: For instance, do you
V ·B,
automati c .
trans·., bed topper ,
covered in plastic
power steering , bed
less
than
40,000
eat when you're bored or depressed?
since the day it was
topper, low f!1iles .
miles.
new .'
Or do you eat oui of habit when you
12995
'3195
watch television, or when things
'31
aren't going well at home, or when
you're preparing a meal.
BIG PRICE REDUCTION
To identify the cues which en1977 PLYMOUTH ARROW GT
courage overeating, perhaps the
best way is to keep a record of when
Was 3995
and where you eat, what .you are
doing at the time, and how you felt.
Doing that for two or three days and
then studying the chart will help
detennine what auses you to
overeat.

~~197~8=~J

.

,-

'
Firm up those thighs. . ,

Small investment,-large returns, Sentinel Want Ads
I

,r--------- ------------_.

!l

'

Curb Inflation.
Pay Cash for
Classifieds and
Savell I

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:t

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1

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-_!' ubi ~ ~oti"'ce
,___

---·--~

Public Notic e

NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION
To Roger Epple, whose
last known address was

Route 1. Reedsvile, Ohi o

45772.

and June Epple,

whose last known address
was Route 1, Reedsville,

mon Pleas of Meigs Coun·

ty, Pomeroy, Ohio &lt;15769.

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

Address _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

I

!I•1 Phone ___________

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'Print one word in each
space below . Each in itia l or. group ot figures
c ounts as a word. Count
name ' and address or
phone number· if used.
You'l l get better results
if you descr ibe ful ly,
give price . Th e Sen tin E:I
r eserv es t he rig ht to
cl assify, edil or r eject
any ad. Your ad will be
put in th e proper
clasitication if you ' ll
check th e proper bo)(
below

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eRENTALS

1- C• r dof Thilnks
l - In Mtmonilm

41 - Houses lor lhnr

) Wanted
) For Sa le
l Announ ce m ent
J For Rent

I.--------

4

· ------------

4 - GIYt.IIWoil\f

I AucliOI'l

W&lt;:~nted

9

1 r_ Help w.n~~
11 - Siru•red Wan teo

:.I

-;;1

·I

SS- Ih.i!ldlng SU!lPIIti
ll- Pen tor Sltt

eFA .RMSUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

&amp; C8 Rtpltr
11- Wented To Oo

•1 - F•r'" Equipment

• FINANCIAL

H - Wuted to luy
1l- Tnn;ks for Si lt

8UIHitU

U - LiVtiiOCII;

Opporluntty
U - Mone, to LOiln

17. ------- - - - :
18.
1
19.- - - - - - - - - - 1
20.
I
21. _ _ _ _ _ _ 1

1
23 .- - - - - - - - I
24. - - - - - - - - I
25.
I
26. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ I

5. - - -- - - - - -- - - 27. _ _ _ _ _ __
_________
6
·---- - - - 2829.._
_ _ _ _ __
7. - - - - - - - - - 8 _ _ _ _ __
30._ _ _ _ __
31 . _ _ _ _ __
9 · ---~-10.
_ _ _ _ __
32. _ _ _ _ _ __

l4. - - - - - -

16. - - - - - - - - -

s1- Ho\lsthokl Gooe11
, Sl- C&amp;. fll , Rtdio Equlpmtnl
S4- Misc . Merlt,•ndlse

14 - 511W1US Tr1• n•n9
IS- SchoOIJo lnstr'"c11on
1•i!:.ld10. T\1

Th ese cash ra1es
inc lude disco unt

eMERCHANOISE
SJ- Antiqlltl

ll - ln sur~ nce

64- HJiy I Gr1ln

ll- Pt01tii 10MII
SfrYICU

U - Sud I FutiliJer

e REAL EHATE

71 - AIIIOifOr hit

eTRANSPORTATION
1l - V•n1&amp;~

JI - HOmltllor Sill'! I

W.O.

r 4- MottrC'tCIII
151AIIIOPirtS
&amp; Acunl)r lu
H - Auto Rtoillr

lJ - Mobllt ·Hom es
l orhlt
JJ- Fol r ms for Stlt
l4- 8Uii1U!B 8U ! ICiirlgS

H - LDII &amp; Acrutt
'/Urtltd
J1 - Nultors

l J0 P . M . Oall y
11 Nocn Saturdrt-

lor MondiY

eSERVICES
et - Homt lmprovtmtnlt
U - Pho~mb i ng I E•uvatlnt
U - fl!.UVIIinl

Mail Til is toupon with Remittance
The Daily Sentinel
Box 729
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

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

SHOOT,

Racine Gun Club, every
Friday night starting at
7: 30 p.m. Factory choke
guns only

YOUR

PIANO .

Too

valuable to neg lect, expert
tuning &amp; and repair. Lane
Daniels, 742· 2951 or 992·

2082.

Racine Volunteer Fire
Department sponsors a
shot gun &amp; rifle matc h
every Sat. night 6: 30 p.m.
at their building: in Bashan.
Factory choke 12 guage
shot guns onl y . Open sights
21 rifle .
Ta)( service, federal , state,
&amp;. quarterly fa)(es done by
appointment . See Wanda
Eblin, 41000 Laurel Cliff
Road, Pomeroy, Ohio

45769 . 992·2272.

MEI'GS MUSEUM open by
appointment January·Mar·

ch. 992-2264, 992-2802, 992·
2360 or 992·2639 . Histor ies
for
sale
Pomeroy Middleport Libraries.

MYRT IS Parker of Myrt;s
of the Pla intiff, one ;n the Kay's Beauty Salon an ·

amount of $516,817,17 and nounces the c losing of her
the second in the amount of own Salon
ahd has
$236,416.0-l, which liens relocated at the Fashion
were recorded in Volume 1, Beauty Shop, 113'12 E .
Page 389, Me;gs County Second St ,, Pomeory,
Records 01 Judgments In owned by Mrs . El izabeth

Cllh

CPIIrfl

1.00

t.2S

l.H

UCI

2.00

1.21

uo

us

Mobile Ham • tl!tl and Y., rd Ultl lrt 'CCtpltd , " 'v witll Cllll wltPI
ordl!r 25 un t Cl'1lllrge lor act • urryi,, &amp; o~ "1111T1b•" tn Clrt ol Tht
Sl!ntrntl.

PAY higl1est prices
possible for ~ld and Si lver
coins, rings , jewelry , etc.
Contac t Ed Burk ett Barber
Shop. Middleport .
I

GUN

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

SUNDAY, FEB. 15 AT 11:00 O'CLOCK A.M.

Announcements

RACINE

8

PUBLIC AUCTION

against the two judgments

U - G.,tr•l Heul lne
U - M .H . Itepllr
11- Upi\CIIIItry

IS Wordt or Under

J da ys
•dan

....... ... ...... "

- 1 0101 ' J ' 010 ...... I I . . . . . . .

proceeds ott he sale applied

14- Eiectrint
&amp; flefrrttrllicn

Rates and Other Information
1 dly
1 dlyl

12) 13, 20, 27 ; 1316,13, 20

plaint is that all of the
lienholders claiming an in· ~uta cold nose in your life .
terest in the real estate ~t Lall the Me igs County
up their claims and that the Humane Society at 992·
real estate be sold and the 6260.

H - lll!o~l Eilllt

Want· Ad Advertising
Deadlines

The object of the action is
to marshal liens against
the following described
real estate, to·wit :
Situated in Chester
Township, Meigs County,
Ohio .
Beginning at the south·
west corner of Section 35, in
Town 3, Range 12, Ohio
Company's
Purchase :
thence running north on the
west line of said Section
No. 35 a distance of 641h
rods ; thence running east
parallel with the southline
of said section to .the center
of said section; thence
south to tt1e center of a Run
called wauc;ers Run a
distance of 81f2 rods ; thence
soutr-: 49 degrees west 32
rods to the mouth of a
drain ; thence south to the
section li ne ; thence west on
the south line of said sec·
lion to the place of begin·
ni ng, conta ining 60 acres.
more or less.
Save. and except the coal
underlying said premises
wh ich is not conveyed or In·
tended to be conveyed by
this conveyance.
Excepting and Reserving
a life estate only for Elma
Epple in a one· story frame
t1ouse and two acres
locat~d
on the above·
described propert~ .

The demand of the .Com·

EacPI ward ove r 1111 mmlrrno~m 1! word1 ;, • unts otr warCI ptr day .
.41.11 &lt; •unnmq 01/Htr llll n (O nU(\J it \11 dl¥1 w i ll ttC h l rt'cf ' ' fill 1 dl¥'
rate.

•I

,.1

to Buy

•EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

1

~I

u ....: ip•u lor Rent
~1 - WilnltO to Rent
41- Eilutpmenr tor ~ern

1 - Y&lt;~rdSille

"1
~I 15.

,.
tl,

44- Apilrlmrnl for Rent
I i - F Rooms

I - Public S•le

,jlI
,,,L I n : - - - - - - - 33 . _ _ _ _ _ __
12. - - - - - - - - - - - - 34._ _ _ _ _ _ __
11 13.
_ _ _ _ __
35. _ _ _ _ _ __

"I

lor Rent

S- HiiPPY Acts
• - Lou•n(IFounCI

22 _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

2
- _
- -_
- -_
- -_
- -3.· _
__-

41- Mob•'• Hornu

l - Anflouncemenr s

71 -

Lt
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eANNOUNCEMENTS

of Common Pleas,
Meigs County, Ohio

ding In the Cour! of Com- l

or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept.
I 1I Court St., Pomeroy, 0 ., 4S769 •

I

Oh io 45772 ; you are htereby
notified that you have been
named Defendants in a
legal action entitled Ban·
cOhio Naflonal . Bank,
Plaintiff, versus Roger Ep·

_ __,P_,u,_,bc::tlc_l;l_o_!! ~ .

Defendants . This action
has been assigned case
number 17,703 and is pen·

PHONE 992-2156

'I
il N a m e - - - - - - - - - -

Public Notice

pie and June Epple et at.,

WANT AD INFORMATION

Write your own ad and order by ma il w1th th is
coupon . Can cel your ad by phone w 1en you get
results. Money not ref undable.

:I

~,

l_ _ _
Announcements

ATTENTION : I need ten

homemakers to tra in as
fashion stylists. No ex·
perlence necessary. For
personal interview : 992·

the Ott;ce of the Clerk of Vaughan. For appt. call
Courts of Meigs County, ~2 - 2702 .
Ohio.
You are required to an·
NOW DOING hauling ,
swer the Complaint within moving jobs, pa inting
28 days after the last houses inside or out.
publiction of this notice,

Basement, attic cleaning,
which will be published on· also carpet c leaning, yard
ce each week f=· six con · work, etc . Phone ~2-3849 .
secutive weeks. The last
Ask for Velma and leave
PUblication will .be mc1de on name and number and we
March 20, 1981, and the 28 will return the call. Free
days for answer will com·
estimates In Meigs County
mence on that date.
area .
Larry E. Spencer,
Clerk of Court

t02 HILLCREST DRIVE , MAR IETTA, OHIO
Take St. Rt. 60 South to north edge of Marietta; turn
east at S·wav street light on Colgate; turn south oft •
Colgate Dr . at the blinker light onto Glendale to
Cisler Or. (1st street) ; turn right onto Cisler Dr. to ,
Hillcrest Dr. , 2nd house on right, No . 102.

'

EXTRA GOOD ANTIOUE FURNITURE AND OLD
ITEMS, GLASS, CHINA , LAMPS, CLOCKS , GUNS
and SOME MODERN FURNITURE
H~ving sold property and moving out of stat e will
sell the following :
ANTIQUE FURNITURE &amp; OLD ITEMS
Extra nice large black oak (from Germany ) di ning
room suite : extra large hutch very ornate w ith rope
twist columns. small ornate hutch ; fllbl e with 6
chairs and step stool for reaching top of ldrge
hutch : rosewood secretary with roll front ; Vic
tori an · ornate loveseat, finger carved walnut.
original horsehair and bl ack silk up~o l s t cry ; large
Empire fainting couch with high bac k in bl ue
velvet; 2 extra nice Queen Anne arm chairs w i th
beige velvet · walnut rose back trim ; w alnut china '
cupboard; round oak pedestal tabl e; mt~rblf' top
chest with drawers, hand carved ; full !ltJ· cj bril$5
bed; walnut Empi r e chest with bra ss pulls and
glove bOx ; 2 oak washstands with towel racks ; oak
sectional bookcase ; walnut china cupboard wnh '
double glass doors (beaded trim) ; several Victorian
tables with white marble ·top s (Seve.ral si1es and
shapes) ; Victorian straight chairs in sing les, pa1 rs
and sets; Victorian black oak st . chair , ornate wr lh
lea ther , upholstery and brass stud~ ; 1 matchi ng
wooden beds ; marble top chest of drawers w ith
wood pulls ; sq. filigree metal stand with marble toP
insert ; Boston rocker ; pressed back rocker : presS-·
ed back st . cha irs,· player plano ,· piano r ol ls; pine'
commode table ,· heating stove (wood outsific wit h 2,
compartments for hot ·soapstone) ; lg , ant brea d
box;- brass hall tree ; lg. elder press ; I g . co li~o mi ll :
umbrella stands ( l brass); brass and irons. 3 spl nn
ing wheels (2 lg. and 1 small) ; post card &lt;t lbums;
Wheeling pitcher and bowl set ; doll frun k~ . broa d
a)(e; advertising boxes / ha t pins; ex tra goort 1 horse
open sleigh ; old books; games ant.! Joys; .
mllgllz lnes ; lot bric·a·brac, and many oth er misc.

Items.
CLOCJ&lt;S Include Ban[o: 8 day Sessions, and manll e
clocks.
t
lAMPS Include Rayo, Aladdin, Juno and others.

GUNS : (5 ant. rifles) ; 18th Century Flihl Lock ; 191J
Stevens 12 ga . shotOtrn; 1913 Rolling Block Rem·
lngton and others.
GLASS &amp; CHINA: Includes Heisey , Ruby, Fenlon,
cut glass, depression, Cambridge. signed Carn ival ,
German steins, 1903 calendar plate, silver and gold
overlay, Jack·ln· Pulpit and many other pieces not

listed.
MOOERN FURNITURE:

II

Nice house on 2 &amp;. one ha If
acres on SR 7 between
Memorv Garde ns &amp; state
Qi:trage . Priced on
in ·

Lost and Found

6

FOUNO: Cocker spaniel.

Five

Po i nts

area · on

Frecker Farm. 985·3949.
STRAY

OR

Lost

dog .

Needs good home, large.
"shaggy, tan airedale type)
Friendlv. but would make a
good watch dog . 667·6143 .
Wanted to Buy

9

old furniture , desks, gold
rings,
!ewelry, silver
dollars, sterling, etc ., wood
ice boxes,jars ant iques,
etc. Complete households.
Write M. ·D. Miller, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy , OH I or call 992·

7760.
WANTED TO BUY :
GOLO ,
· SILVER,
PLAT1NUM , STERLING·
COINS, RINGS,JEWELR
Y, MISC . ITEMS . AB ·
SOLUTE
MARKET
PRICE GUARAN TED . EO
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP, MIDDLEPORT ,
OHI0992 ·3476 .
0LD COINS, pocket wat·
ches, class r-ings, .~edding
bands. diamonds. Gold or
si lver. Call J . A. Wamsley~
Treasure Chest Coin Shop,

Athens, OH . 594·42lt.
Wanted to Buy : cl ass r i ngs,
wedding bands, anvthing
stamped, lOK , 141&lt;, or lBK
gold . Silver coins, pocket
watches. Call Joe Clark at
99'1·2054 at Clark' s Jewelry
Store. Pomerov . Ohio 45769

5

miles from
Ravenswood
bridge,
Portland,
Oh . 843·
2561.

TRAIL ER spaces for rent.
Southern valley Mobile
Home Park. , Cheshire, Oh .

992·3954.

l·~~~~~~~~~~:r;::~;:~~~~~~

,REALTY

large 2 story home
located on Gravel Hill,
features living room
with fireplace, family
room, 4 bedrooms, kit ·
chen, 2 baths , full base·
ment, large lot .

1972 Champ;on, 12 x 60,

bedrooms, bath &amp; lf3, new

PMC,

$2,800.00.
BARGAIN

12 )( 60, two bedrooms. new
carpet , B x S Sales. Inc .,
2nd x VIand Street , Point
Pleasant, wv Phone 675·
4424.

trailer . 12x60 . 992 ·3954 .

Cheryl

USED FURNITURE . Gold
FOR SALE : MobHe Home.

watches. chains, diamonds
&amp; so on . Copper- brass and
batteries, antique Items.
also do appraisals, com ·
plete auctioneer servi ce.
Over JO years experie nce in
business . Wi l l buy corn ·
pl ete es tates. Osby Martin
General Store, Middleport ,
Oh. 992 6J70.

Setup in Country Mobile
Home Park , Darwin .
Priced on inspection . Burl
D . Walker, Rt. 1, Shade,

Lemley~

Assoc .

742-3171
Velma Nicinsky, Assoc.

742·3092

SPEOCIAL

Mobile homes for rent, fur ·
nished, very nice. Ca ll 992 ·

prices on furniture .
Reupholstering . Jan . &amp;
Feb .,
1981. Mowrey 's
Upholstery , Pt . Pleasa nt,

367-7811.

on Rl. 7.
44

Apartment
for Rent

J AND 4 RM furnished ap·
ts . Phone 992· 5434.

1975·VIKING MobHe Home,
in excel lent con·
underpinn ing in·

__ __

. 11

..

!!~Wanted

GET VALUABLE trainfng
as a young business person
and ear n good money plus
some great gifts as a Sen ·
tine I route carrier . Phone
us right away and get on
the elig1bi l ity list at 992 ·

POMEROY, 0.
992-2259
NEW LISTING
EASTERN DISTRICT

TRAILER LOT for sale,

$4,000 .00 . 992 ·2571.
8.6S

ACRES

Pomeroy

City

$2,500. 949·2652 ..

borders

Lim rt s.

- A really nice 9 room
house, all on one floor ,
with a full basement,
family room , TV room ,
di ning room, and 4
bedrooms. All on one
acre with a garage and

Re.al Est.ate- Gener•l

2156 or 992·2157.
WANTED : People to sell

WANTED for television :
assistant to mag ician .
Write Dr . Bloch , the
Magicia n. 920 East 6th

Street.
10009.

New

York, NY

IMPORTAN T :

Ladies

fashion
c ompany ex
pandlng . 10 people needed
to work 10 hours per week ;
SIO .OO per hour. For per ·
sonal interview phone: 992 ·

3941 or 669·4535, 9·6.
NEW

HAVEN

United

M e thod i st
Church
is
seeking part tim e Director
of Music. Con ta ct Dr .

James Lockhart 13041 882-

3136

or

Reverend

John

Campbell at !304t 882 2624 .
UN IQUE opportun;ty for
sales oriented person . No
trAvel. Must be resident of
Meigs County . Prefer per ·
son wirh f i nancia l in·
stitution background. No
hard selli ng. Must be per·
so nabte, outgoing and
image conscious. Sa lary
open . Send resume and
salarv hlsrory to Box 129M ,
c o th e Daily Sentinel,
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769.

--- -- ----Wanied-· ----

12 -Si t-;.atiOn~s

-- ----·

WILL . DO babysitting or
h o~se

cleaning. 992·3647.

HAVE

VACANCY

for

elderly .p ersons who need
board, room and laundry .
Eat·in d i ning room, men
and women have separate
baths, private rooms and
seml ·prlvate , available .
Prices to fit Income . 992·

6022 .
Insurance

13

AUTOMOBILE
SURANCE been

IN ·
ca n·

celled?
Lost
your
operi!tor's license? Phone

ousing
Headquarters

$26,900 .
NICE

Furnace repairs , electrical
work , plumbing, mobile
homP or r es idence . 992·

5858 .
Will do paneling , ceiling,
floor tile, plumbing . Free
estimates . Fred Miller at

9'12-6338.

good

Holpolnt auto. refrigerator lcoppertone l; Kenmore

31

Homesf or Sa~­

Traller lot for sale, 55,000.
MOdul~r home lot on Route
7, three bedroom farm ·
house loca ted on Route 7.

992 2571.

VILLAGE ABOOE - 5

~ ell

m
IU~HOII ,

YOUR MONEY WILL
RETURN TO YOU BY
DEALING LOCAL .
CALL US FOR BEST
RESULTS.

41

Houses for Rent

6 room house on Nye Ave

$200. month plus depoSit .
367-7811.

February Inventory Sale
Cash 'n' Carry

CARPET Ru~b~~~~ack
With Padding
SHAG .
Sq.

y~p

&amp;

Reg. 515.95

$7'1J ~~-

' - - " - " \)~II-L~I!.!!n~st!!!a!.!!ll'.:!:ed~~c~a.l!.sn!!·~n!.::·C~a~rl!r.l...J
Buy Now &amp; Save S2·S6 Per Yard.
25 rolls carpet in stock to pick from.
Regular backed carpet !r.!talled free,
with pad.
Drive A Little- Save A Lot

RUTLAND FURNITURE

742·2211

\

1·7·tfc

MILLER ELECTRIC
SERVICE
For all of your wiring needs.
Let George Miller check
your present electrical
system.
Residential
&amp; Commercial

Call 742-3195
or 992-7680
z.B ·Ifc

TRI.COUNTY

I!'Qml!dldll!IY . Sl'l! u '

BOOKKEEPING SERVICE
•BUSINESSES
•FARMS
•PARTNERSHIPS
•CORPORATIONS

to ·

_.

62

Wanted to

B
::::ueJVL.~

WIN

CHIP WOOD . Poles max~
diameter 10" on largest
end . $12 p -er ton. Bundled
sl ab. $10 per ton . Delivered

H&amp;R BLOCK OFFICE LOCATION

10 lb. Chocolate

618 E . Main

ANN'S CAKE
DECORATING
SUPPLIES

to Ohio Pallet Co .. Rl . 2,
Pomeroy 992-2689 .

. . ........ . . . . .....
...................
~ · ··

Pomeorv, Oh .

992-3795
2·1·2mo.

Reedsville, OH.

Ph. 667-6485
Autos for Sirle

71

1975

NOVA

Hatc'hba ck.

Good cond. 742 ·2421.

10% to 20% Discount
· On Entire Stock
1 25 I m o.

-- ~~~

1979 CHEVROLET Cnevet·
te, 2 dr . hdtp. Standard
tr an S. 1 rad iO, pU!Se WiperS,

good t;res. Please ca ll 614during daytime
hOurs, or 614992-740 5 after

992 3381

I(

Up Thi,Ad lor

All Models

Fuluu R e t •rt~U ,

APPLIANCE SERVICE

Available

LEO·MORRIS
Rt. 1 Side Hill Rd .

Call Ken Young

Rutland , Oh.
2-9·1fc

F OO" F ntSer••&lt;et

6.

915-3561

1975

BUICK

Limited,

PARTS AND SlltVICE

loaded, new tires, no rust in

ALl MAKIS

A-I condiHon . 992·3288 .

•nr,pou h

• Or¥er~

• Oitiii•Msners

• RangH

• H•IW~t~•

'" lpiC:o~IIUI ~•

,, IUrt!~ l

,• A. ol

Runner . 318, air con ·
d i tioning, power steering ,
in e)(cellent condition. Also
1964 Dodge Polara. JIB ,

4651
SIZES 8-20

Trucks for Sale

72

- ---1971 FORD dump truck ;n

lhe most figure

tlattermg o! new sprmg wrap·
dresses w1th 1ls wrd e-curved yoke

good condition. Will con·

Sider trade. $3500.00. 985·
4395.

balarJcmg a n1pped '(t'a tsl. shm .
to ht
P11nled Palle&gt;n 4651. MISses

sk11t.

Just

snap

---- ---

M.!Jt~~ ~s

74

Anne A•ams
P1tt11n Dopt.

·I ' I \

The Daily Sentinel

i6- ·

Auto Parts
- -----

&amp; Accessories

--

(4

money! Send now I" NEW 1981
SPRING·SUM MER PATTERN CAT.
ALOG . I 00 s\1~ flee paU!in
coopon. ($2 Value). Calalo&amp;. II.
134-14 Quick Qlilb , .. , .$1.7S
13J.F•h"'llomo Quiltin1 .$1.7S
uo.s-ten·Si•ts 31·56 .$1.75
129-Quick/ E., Tronsltn .S1.75

''

IIDIHI~I &amp; )Did

-Electrical
-· ---

-

992-7S44

1-!Hfc.

•S iding •In s ulation •Roofing •Storm Window s • Concrete Work • Septic Systems
•Ba ckhoe •Dump Truck •Remodeling
•New construction
•Guttering
&amp;
Downspouts

PH. 992-7119
40625 St. Rt. 681

_ --~ RefrLgeration

makes!

MACHINE

service,

992 ·2284.

all

The

Fabric Shop; Pom eroy .
Authorized Singer Sa l es
anc:t Service. We shM pcn

n il .

no monev down
Federal Housing J% on sls,ooo
S% on balance.
Conventional Loans 5%
down
Call for lntormation

-~-

Repairs,

Gene's Carpet Cleaning,
deep str eam e&gt;:tra c tion.
Fr ~ e
estimated ,
reasonable rates , scot·
chquard. 992 6309 or 742

VA loan s-

CONSTRUCTION

Dozer work . Small ioPs a
specialty . 742· 2753 .

-

~ .... O! U~ ~&lt;l

992 -7544

. DAVID BRICKLES

83 - ---Exc~vating · - -

SEW IN G

Home
lm provcm en t s

FAST SERVICE

CUNNtNGHAM
&amp;ASSOC.
Mortgage Bankers

PHONE 614-915-3961

PHONE 992-7801
or 992 -7443
2·13·1 mo.

Mopar. $95 . 992-7354 after 6.

81

Gl'ipl. Ltnllh ClllnJt, Wti&amp;fll (hlntt

HICKORY SHAFIED CUJBS

Bags Limit Per Week)

84

We streamlined the sew&gt;ni 10

sa-ve you ttme so you can save

P~rk•

Bedford Township
and
Flatwoods Area
$5.00 Per Month
weekly Pickup

A TOP tor Chevy Blazer,
S150 i a small Mopar
rearend with springs, $100 .
Auto. tran s. for small block

243 W•t 17 Sl, Ntw York, Nl
10011. Print NAME, ADDRESS,
ZIP, SIZE, 1nd STYlE NUMBEi.

GOLF CLUBS:
New &amp; Used "LESSONS
RIPAIRI Clunina, Rel inisttin&amp;,

PrOPI!rhe'

HART'S
TRASH HAULING

Sizes 8. 10 . 12. 14, 16 , 18. 20. 1978 KAWASAKI KZ 650
Size il (bull 34) lake~ 2'• '"ds motorcv cle, color blue.
Call949·2649.
60·mch lab11c .
$2.00 lot uch "'"''"· Add 50C
lot uch pollem lor lint·clm
airmoil llfld handlin&amp;. Stnd to:

KLUB

~;:::::::::::::'~"~"~'==~ "ftl

Phone949·217 1.

t1-11..- 1/J.._,
SIM PLY

Road

KOUNTRY

For"

H uuu: O.,n~r t

,. MGb&lt;IC Hom I!

PLYMOUTH

T•nh

·,. c~~n L~"" ~"u

Phone 247·2192.

1977

THE

•w u~erl

1974 PLYMOUTH Valianf,
6 cy li nder , automatic ,
power steering, new bat ·
tery . Runs good. $450.00 .

992 ·5692
OFFICE 992 ·2259

room frame home . Cen·
tral heat, basement ,
bath, 2 porches, and e)( ·
tra tot for a large
garden . Has store near·
by, playground, swim ing pool and everyting
desirable for children.

Pomeroy, Oh. 45769
Domestic, Japanese &amp;
European
Cars &amp;
Trucks.
1· 14·1 mo.

Payrolls, profit and loss statements, all
federal and state forms.

Jean Trusselt 949-2 660
Dottie &amp; Roger Turner

St.

Ph . 367-7S60

Riding

• New Homes - extensive remodeling
• E lectrica 1work
• Roofing work
12 Years
Experience
Greg .Roush
Ph. 992-7583
1 22 1mo.

l'rinlt•cl l'allt•rn

992 -6191
ASSOCIATES

carpeting, storm win·
dows and doors, out of
flood , and walk to
stores.

Ma

water-sew er·E lectric
Gas Line-Ditches
Water Line Hook·ups
septic Tanks
County Certified
Roush Lane
Cheshire, Oh.

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

1- l•cu. ll . Hotpoint
lle lrlger.uor
All ol the .11Jo11e ofl•ms ' " e• ·
cellen t condition. All M e p n (ed

...

Henry E . Cleland, Jr.

$499 .

REESE~
TRENCHING
SERVICE

POMEROY
~LANDMARK
992-2181

mineral rignts . $44,500.
REALTOR

furna ce

call992·l421

Kingsbury Rd.1 2 mi.
west Co. Rd . 18.

I.

Q,.._

On a Spring Breeze

some pasture, some
ti mber and a 7 room
house set up for a woOd
burner, and a large
stm:·age building and

NEW LISTING - Nice
older home of 3 bed ·

Body Repair-Insurance
Work - Collision Repair.
Ex pert pa intingl body
work , pinstriping &amp;
vinyl tops.
Free Estimates

l-;::=========;i-::::========:::t==========.

Burner Stove With blower

to

features . ONLY $35,000.
APPROXIMATELY 23
ACRES - Some tillable,

$995

Power

Ph. 992-7201

dav .

111, story frame home
attractive . and, the A
bedrooms makes it just
right for 8 fam ily . Built·
i n oven
and
nice
cabinets in kitchen , pav·
ed parking for 4 cars,
and
many
other

yard. A good buy at

Reg. '8"

Horn

Ph. 614-843-2591
6·15·1fc

1- GooQ Ga s Range
1- GOO(I Hotpoint W&lt;lsher
1- 25" GE T\1

A WRAP -AROUND
PORCH - Makes IM

$31 ,000 .

KITCHEN
CARPET

Now At
Pomeroy
Landmark
Repossessed
Items

s14,000.

COUNTRY - Real n i ce
r enovated home of six
rooms. Just right for a
large family , Furnace
heat, modern kitchen
with. stove and
re·
frigerator . 2 ful l baths
and . large enclose·d

Do -

304-882·2566.

STARTER

992-2143.
11 - -wanted'"

Middleport . No childre n. I ·

HOME - A ·cute and
cozy one bedroom home
with an enclosed sun
porch, part basement
and a good big storage
building, Reduced to

Housinq
Hendqunrters

Rt. J1 Box 5,.
Racine, Oh.

bath. Part of the 1 1!8

tv utilities. Only $12,000.

of

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

H&amp;R BODY SHOP

1- Good Trailer Approved Wcod

acre is fenced for an
animal and the k itchen
is equipped . ONLY

n ice bedrooms, large
equ ipped eat· in kitchen,
full basement, some
storm doors and win ·
do.~s . with large lot for
the children and a
garden.
REASONABLE
5
room one floor plan .
Chimney for wood ·
burner, bath, and all ci ·

tot s

Phone 992 ·2363.

I - ll

Pom"eroy 1 Oh.

MOWI!f

2 BEOROOM apartment n

nice Is the way to
describe th is 2 bed room
home with new carpet ,
new siding , and new

Phone
1-(614)·992-3325
COUNTRY HOME - 3

hea t,

BROWN viny l couch in
good condition . $135.00 .

double. 2

Four room apartment for
rent. 992·5908 .

$49,900.
SET UP FOR A WOOD
BURNER - Neal and

16 E. Second Street

bath,

a

month. 992·2749 .

wor~shop .

.TV~R~~~.~:.w

rooms,

of

bedroom completely fur·
nlshed. Ava i lable 1st of

35 · --Lots !_Acreage _

Utility BuildiAgs

World Book Encyclopedias
Limited number, 1980
ediiton sets. Save $100 .00 .

two horses
; one t paint
ONE
HORSE
rail er mare
and
and one registered Ap·
paloosa . 992·5449.

J&amp;F
ENTERPRISES
Backhoe, snow plowing,
e&gt;:cavation, water -gas·
· sewer lines, certified
septic systems, dump
truck, stone-coal, etc.
General ·home repair &amp;
carpenter work. Springs
developed &amp; ponds
cleared.
·
Rt. 2 Pomeroy

SMALL
Sizes from 4x6 to 12X40

·----·---

HALF

992-6215 or 992-7314

10·7·1fc

Sizes
"From lOxlO"

load, $60.00 a cord. All har·
dwood, split, &amp; delivered.

ar992·7787 .

eluded . S5500.00 . 247 ·3942.

V.C. YOUNG II

992 -5682

Farm Buildings

W.Va . 1·304-675·4154 .

Unfurnished one bedroom
apartment for rent. Ren·
ters assistance available
for senior citizens. Contact
Village Manor Apartments

Ohio 45776.

Hrs .: Mon.·Fri.

9 A.M .-5:30P.M.

ALLSTEELJ

S15.00 per month . Et;zabelh
TWO BEDROOM mobile Cottman, 949·2592.

home for rent, utilities
paid. John Sheets, Jllz
miles south of Middleport

- Addonsand
remodeling
-R oofing and gutter
work
-Concrete work
-Plumbing and
electrical work
(Free Elitimates)

-Auto and Truck
Repair
-Transmission
Repair

DISCOUNT

843·4831 or 843·4734.

2 BEDROOM mobile home
furnished . Available im ·
mediately. No pets or
children. Deposit. 992· 2749 .

BUY

$26,500.00 .

pick-up load. Delivered,
will sta ck tor Senior
Citizens. 843 ·4951 or 843·

2 bedroom trailer. Adults
only , Brown ' s Trailer

Run Rd. $200. plus deposi t .

Beautiful 2 story brick
home, htts 3 bedrooms,
llh bath, l iv ing room ac cen ted
by
antique
chandelier, large kit
chen and fam ily room
com b. with fireplace .

. ---------·
1969 PMC 3 bedroom

F irewood for sale, Mixed

types of wood . $35 .00 per

3 BEDROOM Home, Slorys Firewood, $35 .00 a tru ck

nice trailer lot. approx .
lJ.4 acre with water tap .

GARAGE

• Dozers
• Backhoes
Hourly contract
Large or
small jobs.
Ph. 992-2478
11 ·20·3 mo . pd

Misc. Merchanise

~

2815.

7479 .

BUILDING SITE - Or

two

Mobile Homes
for Rent

Park . 992 ·3324.

garage. $36,500.00.
MIDDLEPORT

Pedrooms, new carpet. 1976
Cameron, 12 x 60. two
bedrooms, all electric . 1971

dition.

41

NEW LISTING - Extra
nice 3 bedroom ranch
home, living room,
l"arge eat·in kitchen,
utility room , single c ar

1973 Crown Haven, 14 x 65,
three bedjooms, new car·
pet. 1971 Cameron, 14 x
two bedrooms, new r~•·n•t

Nothing
too watcheS
large, Also,
guns,
pocket
and
coin co llections. Call 614·

"YOUNGS
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

ROGER HYSELL'S

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

767 -3167 or 557·3411.

home in Middleport. No
pets . References
and
deposit required . 992·3457 .

Office 742-2003

tor Sale

Houses for Rent

pay cash or ce,rtified check
tor antiques and collec ·
t ibles or ent ire estates.

FOUR BEDROOM br;ck 54

GeorgeS. Hobstetter- Jr.
Broker

- - -Mobile Homes

&amp; si lver , class rings. pocket

2·1·1 m·o-.

1·28-1 mo .

ATTENTION :
(IM ·
PORTANT TO YOUI Will

32

6),

12 Park St.
Middleport, Oh.
Ph. 992-6263
Anytime

Free Estimate
J~mes Kees.ee
Ph. 992-2772

2·4· tf c

Antiques

53

FOR SALE : Seve n room
double insulated ranch
style home, total electric,
wood burner in family
room , gas available . 3
bedrooms,
l lh
baths,
r easonably priced on th ee
level acres one mile fr-om
Rac ine . Phone 949·2706 .

12&gt;&lt;65

Free Esttmates
Reasonable Prices
Call Howard

KAUFPS
PWMBING
AND
HEATING

Aluminum Siding
elnsula1ion
• Storm Doors
• Storm Windows
• Replacement
Windows

949-2861
949-2160

41

1970

All types of roof work,
new or repair gulters
and down _spou1s, gutter
cleoJning and pa~nting .
All work guaranteed .

2 bath,

house .

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSUlATION
. Vinyl &amp;

H. L WRITESEL
. ROOfiNG

992 ·7479.

3443.

carpet.

Space for Rent

Park, Route JJ, North of
Pomercy Large lots . Call

modern kitchen, living
room, d ining room, otfice,
full basement, new heat
system with centra l air,
unattached garage , 2
blocks from school. 992·

Skyli ne , 12sx

Business Services

COUNTRY MOBILE lrlome

-------

BEDROOM

Furnished Rooms

46

FOR SALE : seven room
double Insulated ranch
sty le home, total electric,
reasonably priced on three
leve l acres one m ile from
Rac ine . Phone 949·2706.

4

IRON AND BRASS BEDS,

----

-~·' -···-

304-773·5651.

spection. 992-7741 .

3 BEDROOM,

,.....

45

Sle~ping rooms for rent on
Main Street ·in Mason .
Cook i ng faci li ties, table .
S40'. oo per week. Phone 1·

Beautiful three bedroom
ranch brick home in Baum
Addition, Pomeroy, Oflio .
Gas heat, central air. Call

SALE : Boys' hooded sweat
shirts, $4 .88 ea.c h; men's
engineer boots, $26.95 pair;
men 's us~d work pants,
$1 .99 each pair ; men's used
work jackeh, $6 .88 each.
Bailey' s Bargain Store,
Middleport, Oh io.

auto. wa5her and dryer (gold) ; redw oort lawn fur·
niture, and many boxes of misc . it em~ 1r: t 1 r1

OWNERS - O.vld and Yvonne Thompson
AUCTIONEER - Bill Janes, Phone 614·5S7·3&lt;11

"'---'-==~~!!!.__

The Daily Sentinel-Page-9

Ohio

3;;1; - -H=om
= os" 't"o-' rc::-sa" t':_
e __ ltrK-IT-'N_'_C;_A_R_L_Y_L_E_'_"_ _~;---b:y::La=rr:y~W=r~lg~hlt

992-2571 or 1-687-6429.

Sears 25" colored console TV with sensor touch;

Nothing shown before day of sale. Lrunc h, 1 -'1 ms:
Cash or check with positive ID day of sale . Not
responsible for accld1nts.

, pom

3941 or 669·4535 .

Avon. 742 2354 or 742·2755 .

.

I

:I

,,

Friday, February 13, 1981

Sri ~c;o ,

Gene~ Hauling

J&amp;C S anit~tion ServiCe.
Tra sh pic kup available in
Villag e of M i dd l epor t .
Phon&lt;' Q9? lO l A or 991-7597

,,n.,. T 1lll•

o;

E LW OOD

85

UOW ERS

R E PAl R
. Sw eepers ,
roasters, irons, al l small
apptlances. L awn niower .
Next to State Highway
Garage on Route 7, 985·
33'15 .

2·13·1 mo. pd .

S'AfiSFY YOI/R NEEDS

as
NOW

General Hauling

DOIN G hauling,

rno vihg · iobs, painting
' ;U~'"'s 1ns ide or out,
b.t'5CI11t·n l attic
cleaning,
also cal'pet cleani ng, yard
work., etc . 992·3849. Ask for
Velma and leave name and
no . Will ret urn call. Free
estimat es in Meigs Co .
area.

.,

�Pag~:--IG-The

I

. Mrs. Hattie H. Paynter, 86,
Racine, died Thursday at her
residence.
Mrs. Paynter was preceded in
death by her parents, Henry and
Amelia Blaettnar Theiss; her
. husbaJJd, Albert, in February, 1968,
three brothers and four sisters.
Surviving are several nieces and
nephews.
. · Mrs. Paynter was a member of
Syracuse Guiding Star Council 124,
Daughters of America; the Meigs
~ty
Pioneer and Historical
~iety; the Senior Citizens .Council
on Aging, and was a member of the
·Bethany United Methodist Church at
!)Orcas.
· Funeral services will be held at
i::30 p.m. Sunday at the Ewing
Funeral Home with the Rev. Mark
flynn officiating. Burial will be in
Browning Cemetery, Portland.
lrriends will be received at the
funeral home after 7 p.m. this
~vening and from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
p.m. Saturday.

George Simon
• Geroge Simon, 85, Columbus,
tather of Paul Simon, Pomeroy, died
this morning.
Services for Mr. Simon will be
held Monday at 10 a.m. Friends may
call at the John Qunit and Son
Funeral Home, Columbus, Sunday
from 2to4 and 7 to9.

Meigs County happeni.Dgs ....

Dr. Ehlinger. • •

Area deaths

.Hattie H. Paynter

.' '

(Contin.ued from page 1)
hospital maintains it is not bound by
any of the procedures of its by-laws
Richard Frazier
Richard Frazier, Bellefontaine, and rules and regulations in that the
formerly of Meigs County, died plaintiff was only granted temThursday at a Bellefontaine porary staff privileges which could
be revoked at any time by summary
hospital.
action.
Mr.Frazier was a son of the late AI
Dr. Ehlinger charges that there
and Nan Frazier. He·was born and
has
been a breach of contract: and
reared in Meigs County.
that
he
has been deprived of his right
Surviving are his wife, Dorothy; a
to
practice
his livelihood, has lost in·
daughter, Wanda Roush,
come,
has
suffered damage to this
Charleston, Ill.; a sister, Mrs.
professional
reputation and seeks
Eileen Little, Bellefontaine, and
damages
in
the
amount of $5,000,000.
several nieces and nephews.
SEEKS
INJUNCf!ON
TOO
· Funeral services will be held at 4 ·
Dr.
Ehlinger
has
also
filed
for the
p.m. Sunday at the Van Horn
issuance
of
a
temporary
restraining
Lakeview Funeral Home in
Bellefontaine with burial to be in order, preliminary injunction and
permanent injunction enjoining the
Charleston, Ill.
hospital, its agents and its employes
from suspending, terminating or in
any other way affecting the planGrace G. Wolfe
tiff's medical and surgical staff
Mrs. Grace Gilkey Wolfe, 83, Rt. 4, previleges at the hospital until such
Pomeroy, died this morning at time that action is done in strick by·
law compliance.
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
.Earlier this week, Dr. Ehlinger
Mrs. Wolfe was born Nov. 17, 1897
filed
a 15 million dollar action in the
the daughter of the late Frank and
U.
S.
District Court stating this his
Lillie Rife Gilkey. She was also
due
process
rights were violated
preceded in death by one sister,
when
he
was
dismissed from
Sa&lt;jie Wolfe.
Veterans
Memorial
Hospital without
She is survived by her husband,
a
chance
to
defend
himself.
He also
Shirley Wolfe, and one brother,
requested
a
temporary
restraining
Howard Gilkey, Pomeroy.
Funeral services will be held Man· order against the hospital, Lewis D.
Tells, the hospital's chief of staff and
day at 2 p.m. at the Rawlings, Coats,
Walter Scott Lucas, the hospital's
Blower Funeral Home with burial in
administrator.
Chester Gravel Hill Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home Sunday from 2to 4 and 7 to 9.
GRANT EXTENSION
Upon the application of Meigs
County Auditor Howard Frank, the
and costs, overload; George Staats, Department of Tax Equalization has
Minersville, $150 and ·costs, three granted an extension on the
payment of housetrailer taxes in the
days confinement, DWl.
county.
Forfeiting bonds were Charles
Originally Jan. 31 was the
Snider, Columbus, $35.50, disorderly
deadline
for these taxes. The exconduct; Howard Searles, Pomeroy,
tension
gives
housetrailer owners
$36().50, DWl; Edgar Ashe, Old
until
March
10
to
pay the taxes.
Washington, Ohio, $00.50, failure to
display highway use tax sticker;
Gary Clark, Columbus, $35.50, ex·
. pired operator's license; Robert E.
Gibbs, Reedsville, $360.50, DWl;
Robert Glass, Middleport, John
Lehew, Gallipolis, Jerry Fairchild,
Richmondale, Lionel Hupp, Parker·
sburg and Jean Whitney, Ironton,
$40.50 cash, speed; Harold Epps,
Reno, Ohio, $30.50, speed.

Stolen car found
in Topeka, Kansas

...

DIAMOND EARRINGS:

U.S. 35 in Gallia County at 5:25p.m.
when his car backfired and caught
fire~ ·causing minor damage.
Richard A. Erwin, 16, Vinton, was
eastbound in Kanauga at 4:20p.m.
when he lost control of his car went
off the left side of the road and
collided with a mailbox, causing
moderate damage to his car.
The patrol said Jane Ann Wv•t•
18, Pomeroy, was eastbound on SR
124 in Meigs County at 12:45 p.m.
when she lost control of her vehicle
on a curve, ran off right side of the
road and collided with a guard rail.
Moderate damage was reported to
her car, the report said.
Jeffrey Peckham, 18, Middleport,
was southbound on Leading Creek

.vestigated
Series of byone-car
the patrol
accidents
Thursday.in·
. Troopers said Robert A. Nidy, 24.

Road
his car
in Meigs
went over
County
anatembankment
3 p.m. when
and overturrred, causing moderate

Syracuse Police Chief Milton
REG. 1119.75 SAVE 130.00
Varian is 'investigating a hit-skip
that occurred in the village of
FREE RING SIZING
Syracuse Thursday at 6 :~p.m.
According to Varian, a vehicle turFREE Gin WRAP
ned off Water Street onto Cherry and
struck a parked vehile owned by
113 court
Pomeroy
Donald F. Hendricks, backed up and
992-2054
struck a stop sign then left the scene.
The vehicle is believe to be a ~p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;==========;
Granada, silver in color and has I
damage to the rightfrontfender.
Anyone seeing this vehicle is
asked to obtain the license number
VALINTINI GIFT SUGGESTION
on the car and call Varian at 992-5183
or the sheriff's department. at 992·
3371.·

t~

ELBERFELD$

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted--June Freed, Mid·
die port; Sally Lambert, Middleport;
Jeremy Ross, Middleport; Connie
Herdman, Mason, W. Va.
Discharged-&amp;ott Carsey, Ken·
nethBraun.

Ymdl have cver}•thm ~ at ~·our lu1 g~·, t1p~ ~&gt;"llh Rolf~ ~let&gt;k , new 5¥~· a~nl~ '
Clu tl:h fur wumcn . Tnple rn:;rde pod ct ~. il lrMwd cni n purse. removable
du•ckhook co\!n ami a 71ppt' r'-'d brll pndc.t&gt;l Ht' l }'Oll mMllllll.ed. And, Roll s
fuwly crafted, d.us rc lenlhtrs w1lltake ~·o u t'\'er)•wht&gt;rc Ill style . Desilolned for
your way nlliv1n~. Ro lf s alw ~tys pt•rfmrm lx•ilu lrfully. I''SPL'C IUII y m the dutch.

WEDNESDAY
MARCH 4

7:30PM
Convocation Center

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urtorru.ttion &amp; CHARGE BY PHONE :
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'

6

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
SIMMONS OLOS-CADIUAC INC.
MEANS A GREAT DEAL
FOR YOU
1976 Chev. Caprice Wagon
1973 Cadillac Deville Sed.

unba
Vol. IS No.3

Copyrighted 1981

By LARRY EWING
GALLlPOUS - If current spen·
ding trends continue, officials fear,
budget pr,oblems may lead to the
temporary closure of the Gallia
County Jail and discontinuation of
the services of the sheriff's depart·
ment by the third quarter of this
year.
Early in January, in the wake of
an .extremely tight 1981 qudget appropriation, the board of county
commissioners issued A directive to
all office-holders and department
heads advising them to "live within
their budgets." County officials
were told there wou.ld be no supplemental appropriatlons-e~cept
for extreme emergencies-this rear.
"I may not be able to stay within
my budget," Gallia County Sheriff
James M. Montgomery said Friday.
"If we can't we'll just have to shut it
down.''
The department's total ap·
propriation for the current year was
set at $.'188,375 (the sheriff had
requested $449,000 ). Last year's ex·
penditures, including supplemental

appropriations, totaled $429,000.
In January, the department's ex·
penditures came to $44,000. If that
rate ol spending should continue, the
sheriff's budget would be depleted
by the end of September.
"We knew it was going to be
tough," Sheriff Montgomery said
Friday. "I . had planned to recoordinate manpower and equipment with the budget this year; and,
we were getting in pretty good
shape,' but then the fire knocked us
off ourfeel."
On January 8, a fire swept through
the 101·year old west wing of the
Gallia County Courthouse, causing
e~tensive ~amage to the sheriff's
department olfices and jail facility.
Since the fire, Gallia irunates have
been housed in jails in adjoining
counties.
"At the moment, with the cost of
transporting prisoners into and out
of the county ... and with the $14 a day
cost of housing them In other jails,.. !
don't know exactly how much we are
spending," Montgomery said . .
"Our cruisers logged 40,000 miles

1975

1978 DODGE D150 PICKUP

'3185

1975 Olds. Royale Cpe.

V·8, auto trans., radio .

1976 CHEV. LUV PICKUP

$2595
3695

5

4 cyl., 4 spd ., PS, AM/ 8· tra ck ; one owner . L ow mileage .

1978 RDRD GRANADA 4 DR.

1980 AMC

S~irit

Cpe.

3595

5

302 V·8, auto. trans., air cond .. AM/ FM, PS, PB.

5

1295

~95

1980 VW Rabbit

Fuel
Injected

1295

5

4395
$1295

5

~895

SIMMONS OLDS-CADILLAC INC. You'll Like Our Quality Way Of

Doing Business

PAT HILL FORD, INC.

see or Phone: Pete Burris, Marv in Keebaugh
MiKe Anderson or Georqe Harris
Pomeroy, OH.
Open Evenings Until6:00
Except thursday &amp; Saturday Til 5:00

Ph. 992-6614

11 Sections, 94 Pages 35·Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Sunday, February IS, 1981

last month-&lt;i,OOO of those miles were
in transports-we're paying $1.21 per
gallon for gas," the sheriff continued. "It's expensive, and the
longer we're out of the building (the
courthouse) the more It will be."
"With things the way they are, it
will be two-to-three months before I
even know how I stand with my
budget,'' the sheriff added.
Sheriff Montgomery went on to
say that, even.without the problems
created by the fire, staying within
his 1981 budget would not have been
easy.
"If you want an example of the
shape this department is in," the
sheriff said, "just compare us to the
G.allipolis Police Department.''
"We have 12 road deputies
traveling 1,200 miles of highway,
protecting 30,000 people living in an
area encompassing ~7 square
rniles ... the city has more men, bel·
ter paid men, protecting a
population ofl""" than 6,000 people."
Since the first of this year, the
sheriff said, he has lost an in·
(Continued on page A3)

more bones
in Atlanta

1995

Duster Cpe.

1975 Olds. Royale Sed.

4 cv l. . auto trans .. low mi leage . Local owner .

1979 RDRD PINTO 3 DR.

P~mouth

•

entme
•

tmts

Discover

495

1595

+

Gallia sheriff may .not be
able to stay within budget

5

5

CELEBRATES ANNIVERSARY.- Today, Feb. plloDS of water per minute iD a Hreftgbllng situation.
15, the RaciDe Volunteer Fire Depl!rimeol celebrates Pictured above are fire department members, left to
Its 30th alUiiveraary. One of RaciDe's newest addiUoos rtglit, Mlleb Nease, Harry Lyoos, Jr., Dave Nelgler,
Is Ibis 1973, Ford pumper truck, rated to pump 750 and Jllllior Johnson.

'W'dl shut it down '--Montgomery

5

1977 Chev. M.C. Cpe.
1973 Olds. 98 Sedan

dleport departments were called for
assistance, 'but due to lengthy travel
time, both were often too late. That
great need for modern fire protection resulted In the organization
known as the Racine Volunteer"Flre
Department in 1951.
With the help of local citizens, the
first piece of equipment. was put·
chased. It was a 1937 GMC fire
truck, bought from the Second Ward
Fire Co. of Pomeroy. Later new
hose, fire coats, and other necessary '
appanitus were obtained.
In 1956, a new 500 gallon Dodge
pumper truck was purchased. For
s~veral years it was . the most
modern piece of fireflghting equipment in Meigs County. The pwnper
is still in use today.
A Ford pumper truck was added in
1973 which was capable of pumping
750 gallons of water per minute onto
a blazing fire. In 1980, a 1978 Ford
tanker was acquired. It is currently
(continued on page AJ)

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant

1978 OLD.S· 98 Regency Cpe. 54995

1974 VOLKSWAGEN BUG

see: Garland Parsons or Pat Hiii·Gen. Mgr.
Ph. 992-2 196
Middleport, OH .
S. Jrd Ave.
t

.

1977 Pontiac GP Cpe.

1979 FAIRMONT FUlURA 2 DR.

1975 PINTO STATIONWAGON •••••••••••• '1495
Perlectcond.,4speed, p.s . '2895
1977 FORD MUMANG
~II
•••••••••••••••••••
Auto., a;, cond
S1195
1974 COUGAR •••••••••••••••••••••••••••
Auto., good cond '1795
~
1976 FORD PINTO ~ •..•......•...••••
4 Dr .. auto .. p .b.lp.s. $}395
1974 PONTIAC ••••••••••••••••••••••••••
1974 PONTIAC LeMANS 4 DR•••••••••••• sngs
1974 MAVERICK 4 DR••••••••:";:~p~~~ .C:!. '1195
Standar.d w/ topper . SOft5
1973 CHEVY PICKUP.••••••••••••••••••••···a~
1975 FORD F150 PICKUP. •• !':~~·:~:::o~~:~.s1395
1964 PONTIAC lEMPESI •••••••••••• :.c:~. '195
1962 DODGE PICKUP ••••••••••••••••••••• s295

the mothers and wives of the
BY SCOTT WOI.$E
RACINE - Today the Racine firemen.
Previously, fire protection for tile
Volunteer Fire Department . will
Racine
area consisted of the •' bucket
celebrate its 30th anniversary. It has
brigade"
which functioned fairly
been providing years of service and
well
after
sufficient personnel
fire protection to Racine Village,
arrived
at
the
scene. Back in those
Lebanon Twp., Letart 'J'wp., andSut·
days,
every
man
and woman over 18
ton 'i'wp.
were
volunteer
firemen.
On Thursday, Feb. 15, 1951 after
Atwo wheeled, hand held cart was
much discussion, Henry Cleland and
Racine's
first piece of fire equipPutt Lyons, after blowing the siren,
mept.
The
cart, purchased, In 1898,
called the first meeting of the
provided
40
years of service to the
Racine Volunteer Fire Department
community.
At ·the tune it was pur·
to form an organization \hal would
chased,
it
was
quite a novel outfit.
provide Racine Village and the.
Mounted
with
·two
large tanks, it
surrounding area with the best
used
chemical
action
to generate a
possible fire protection.
foam,
which
was
directed
at the
Mayor Bud Wingett appointed
flames.
Later,
another
two-wheeled
Carroll Teaford as fire chief and
Lyons as assistant chief, while Otis hose cart was purchased with a por·
table pump.
McClintock was elected president.
For many years, this was the only
A constitution and by-laws were
fire
protection the Racine area had,
drawn up for the department by
which
resulted in tremendous losses
Henry Cleland, which still exist
due
to
fire
.
today. A lew months later, in May, a
Often
the
Pomeroy and Mid·
firemen's auxiliary was formed for '

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10. It's guaranteed!

BE SURE TO SEE ALL THE OTHER STYLES
LADIES AND MEN'S ROLFS WAUETS
AND ACCESSORIES

. Ohio Universih Athens ·
admrssion: $6.00, $5.00
$1 .00 discount children 12 &amp; under

Racine volunteers started
service 30 years ago today

WHY PAY MORE?

ROLFS ... it ohows you care.

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$8995

ONLY

Seek hit·skip driver

:One hurt in four accidents Harlem .
-. One person was injured in a twocar crash on U.S. 35 in Gallia County
,. Thursday morning, according to the
• Gallia·Meigs Post of the Ohio High• way Patrol.
:. The patrol said Donald B. Hay, 39,
~. Ray, was eastbound near Rio Gran·
·deat9:40a.m. when he attempted to
pass another eastbound vehicle
driven by Connie J. Hill, 24, Rt. 2,
Bidwell.
According to the report, Hill's car
• then turned left and the two autos
; ~ollided, demolishing the Hill auto
: and causing minor damage to Ray's
-vehicle.
~ Ray was injured but not treated,
the patrol said.
No injuries were reported in a

ASKTOWED
,
A marriage license was issued to
Andy Oliver Doczie IV, 20, Rt. 1,
Middleport,. and Barbara An 'I ,
Haley, 17, Middleport.

CLOSED MONDAY
The Meigs County Courthouse will
be closed Monday in observance of
President's Day as will the Meigs
County Landfill.
·

The 1980 Ford Thunderbird taken
in the breaking and entering of the , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -.
Pat Hill Ford Agency, Middleport,
•
Tuesday has been recovered in KanJUST
fOR
HER
sas.
The Meigs County sheriff's depart·
fOR VALENTINE'S DAY
ment was notified by Topeka, Kan·
"1
sas police that the vehicle had been
'!
fROM CLARKS
recovered. The vehicle was owned
by Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Sayre, New
Haven.
In other activity, officers are in·
vestigating a breaking and entering
of the Rickman Store located at the
Set in either 14K white or ~"
Cr0fi1Sroads that occurred Wed·
yellow gold. This is a great
nesday night.
buy. In time for Valentine's ~
Entry was made through a back
Day.
window. Information on what was
taken was not available.

Terminate 21 cases·
Ten defendants were fined and 11
others forfeited bonds in Meigs
County Court Wednesday.
Fined by Judge Patrick O'Brien
were Raymond Chandler, Colum·
bus, $22 and costs, speed; Domingo
Delacruz, Reedsville, costs only,
three days confinement, littering ;
Robert Caruthers, Middleport, $24
and costs, speed; Linda Beliveau,
Racine, $23 and costs, speed;
Richard Boring, Reedsville, $27 and
: costs, speed; Angela Ginther,
Pomeroy, $26 and costs, speed;
James Janetski, Wheeling, W. Va.,
$22 and costs, speed; Jeffrey
Crueser, Pomeroy, $23 and costs,
speed; Ronnie Eblin, Rutland, $~

Friday, February IJ, 1981

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Daily Sentinel

MORE BONES FOUND- AD Atlanta Pellce Crime Lab olftcer looks
at two boaea fouod Ill a wooded ll'tl 1outhwest ol AUaala SaiUrday
during a search for clues lo the deathl of 17 AUanla chUdren. The boaes
were ltllllld less than a mile from lbe area where 1kelelal remaiDB were
found Frldaf. Atupper rlgbt II AUanla city councllman Arthur Laagford,
Otben are uBidentlfled. (AP Laaerpboto).

Extended weather, state forecast
Sunny today,. High around 50. The chance of precipitation is near zero per·
cent.
Ohio Extended Weather - For Monday through Wednesday - fAir Man·
day. Rain possible Tuesday and Wedne.tdlly. Temperatures'well above nor,
mal with highs mainly in the 50s. Lows in the upper 30s and lower 40s through
theperlnd.

I

I

.''

ATLANTA (AP) - Volunteers
searching for evidence in the series
of child killings found what appeared to be some small leg bones
Saturday, and the police task force
llliSigned to the case was called in to
determine whether. it was the body
of an 18th victim.
.The discovery came one day after
two more children's bodies were
found, raising to 17 the nwnber of
black children believed murdered in
the area in less than two years.
Police inunediately surroimded
the area where the bones were found
Saturday, and lnvesllgators . were
called to the scene. The area was ad·
jacent to where a skeleton was found
Friday, authorities said.
About 200 people gathered for a
police-sponsored seminar on how to
deal with children's emotional
problems caused by the killings.
Parents, social workers, teachers,
youth leaders and psychologists met
at Atlanta University for the aU-day
conference designed to he~p children .
and parents cope with deep,
widespread fear.
'
"The living and learning en·
vlronment of children at home;
school and the playground may not
be psychologically safe," Public
Safety Conunissioner Lee Brown
said. "Parents and teachers are
reportedly having difficulty handling the increased levels' of stress
and anxiety exhibited by children."
Sandra Sims, director of child
development at Spebnan College,
said fears have been 14!1!11ln children
refusing to go to school or trying to
arm themselves with knives and
guns before leaving home.
Some youngsters are reporting
recurring nightmares bed wetting
and other sympto~ of acute
anxiety Ma. Slllll said.
The ..:orkahop was set up to help a
group of mt!nUil health professionals
(Contin ued on page A3)

BOILER INSTAIJ..ED- Heat was restored to tbe
UDell: of the Gallla COUDty courtb0118e early Friday
morning when a boUer IDIIU!Hed by A. J. Stockmelster,
lac., Jackaoo, was made operational. Tbe boller
replaces the ol~er unit damaged iD tbe Jan. 8 court·

b0118e fire, and Is housed In a cinder-block structure iD . •
what was formerly tbe sheriff's department property
lot. Tbe boiler was to have been worklog two weeks
ago, but work was held up by electrical problema. ·
~Kevin Kelly photo).

County reaches agreement
on units, cost will be $45,696
Building on First Ave.-because of
GALLlPOLlS- An agreement for specialize in disaster-retief housing,
the lease of eight modular units to the units are being designed to house the price and the fact the stationing
house county officilS destroyed a large courtroom, witness and jury of the buildings at the courthouse
during the January 8 courthouse fire roorns, as well as offices for the would keep county operations cen·
tralized.
was entered into Friday by the Probate and Juvenile courts, the
A clause in the contract will allow
Galtia County Board rl. Com· . c~unty commissioners, and the park
the
county to purchase the buildings,
missioners.
district.
if
the
commission should so desire,
The lease arrangement calls for
The motion to enter into the
with
the
rental expense being apsix mobile units to be stationed as a agreement for the lease of the units
plied
to
the
purchase price.
complex in the side parking lot of the passed the commission by a two-toThe
units
are expected to be
courthouse. Two other units will be one vote. Commissioner Jim Saun·
delivered
to
the Gallia County
placed in t~ front lawn.
ders voted in the negative.
Junior
Fairgrounds-where
they will
The eight units contain a total of
Commissioner Paul D. Niday said
be
partitioned
and
fitted
to
county
7,616 square feet-cost of rental will Friday he had opted for the rental of
.
specifications-next
week.
be $2 per square foot per year, or a the buildings, as opposed to other opThe modular units are scheduled
total of $45,696 over the three-year tions being explored-including the
to
be ready for occupancy at their
contract period.
rental of the Old Library Building
courthouse
locations by April!.
Supplied by Sohn and Sons, and the purchase of the Barr
,Washington Courthouse, who

lnvesti·gators study statements
.

LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) - Arson Tuesday night's fire, which killed
Investigators are trying to pin
Investigators are taking a close look eight, injured 198, and caused $10 down how three fires erupted in the
at statements by two friends of the million damage to the 2,783-room hotel after the first andlar~otest blaze
busboy held _In co~nectlon with the hotel, the nation's lar~otest.
(CQntinued on page A3)
Las Vegas Halton fare, and also have
found new evidence that will "throw
big holes" in his story, authorities
said Saturday.
"I'm going to bring Irrefutable
evidence that the fire was t~e result Area deaths ......•................•......•.•.•.••• A-7
of premeditated arson," said Capt. Business • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . • . • . • • • D-1
Mike Patterson of bie Clark County Classified .....•.•.•.•..•••.•.•·.•.•..•.•••.....••. D-a-1
Fire Department, chief arson In- Editorial ..... .... ... . . . ............ yf"'.. • • • • • • • •
A·l
vestigator on the case. "Our thrust Farm ....• .•...•.
C..7
now is to show this guy (busboy Lifestyle .......... .... ...... . ................... B-1-8
Phlip Bruce Cline) .~dn't set the ~cal ......•....•.•.....•..•.•...•.•.•••
A-3-8
hotel hre by aCCinent.
State-National
................................•..
,
•
, D-1
He declined to disclose the new
C.l....
evident-e, but said "What we found Sports .•.........•..•...•..•.....•...
TV guide .... .•.•........•..........•.•.••.•.• , • I.ert
will throw big holes in his story.~·
Cline, 23, was booked for investlgatlon of murder and arson in

===':======================

. Inside today.

• •

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�</text>
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