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Thursday, Apri12. ltll .

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Sentinel Chtssified~~···:.

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Two emergency ru~s

Two calls were answered Wed·
nesday by the Middleport Emergen·
cy Unit, the Meigs County Emergen·
cY Medical Servi~ reports, Ill 5; 00
p.m., a Middleport fireman. Steve
Bunce was taken. to Veterans
Memorial Hospital for treatn\ent of
injuries received in a fall while
fighting a ~rush fire Qn Fisher St. •
He was treated and released. The
unit also treated Christina Williams
on Fisher St. at 9:35p.m.

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Veterans Memorial
Carrie
Snyder, Cheshire;
Juanita
Admitted-John
Wippel, Pomeroy;
Chapman, Clifton, W. Va.; ·Emel
Aleshire, Pomeroy; . Olan Hysell,
Minersville.
_ Discharged--Elizabeth Lane,
Clarence Prpffitt, Hobart Day.

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BANK ONE OF POMEROY. NA

614/992·2133

~p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;ii.

HIGH INFLATION GOT

•

Inflation continues upward climb
WASIUNGTON (AP) ~ Inflation at the .wholesale
leyel surged,at a 16.2 percent annual rate in Marchthe sleepest climb in eight mopths - as food prices
resumed their riSe and energy·costs accelerated from
an alteady quickened pace, the government reported
today.
.
. '
. Tht~1.3 per~ent March increase was the largest since
last JulY,'~ 1.7 percent and compared to February's 0.8
percent nse.
, ,
· But the go\'ernment also -reported that Wlemployment held steady at 1.3 percent last month despite
earlier government reports that construction and industrial production have ~n oft
.
The Labor Department said the price .of finished
energy-related goods rose 6.1 percent in March. at

.least partly due to President Reagan's Jan. 28 oildecontrol order, and made up more !.him haH of the
overall La percent rise in the Producer Price Index.
Food prices, which bad dropped 0.6 percent at the
wholesale level in February, climbed 0.8 Jltl"Cent in
March, led by a brisk 19.4 percent increas~ in prices for
. fresh and dried vegetables.
,The index, adjusted for seasonal variations, usually
gives a good indication of the 'future trend of prices at
the consumer revel.
'
It has rise,o at an annual rate of 12.5 percent for the
first three monjhs of 1981, above the 11.7 percent rate
for all of last year but well below the 11.5 percent recorded in the first quarter of 1980, a department
spokesman said.

YOU DOWN?
COMMENDED- Middleport Fire Department
membe'rs are shown battling a brush fire on the bills
behind Fisher St., in Middleport Wednesday afternoon.
Firemen of the community joined by units from
Mason, Pomeroy and New Haven are commended for

'80 MERCURY COUGAR
XR-7
'80 VW PICKUP TRUCK
'79 CUTLASS SUPREME
'78 BUICK REGAL V-6
'78 CHEV. MONTE CARLO
CHEV. BLAZER 4X4
'78 CHEVROLET CAMARO
'78 JEEP' CJ-5
'71 PLYMOUTH ARROW
'71 CAPRICE CLASSIC
'77 PLYMOUTH VOLARE
'77 DO~E RAMCHARGER
VOLARE WAGON
'76 SPORTABOUT WAGON
'76 FORD GRANADA GHIA
'76 CHEVY CONCOURS
'76 BLAZER 4 WHEELER
'75 FORD LID
'74 CHEVROLET IMPA~
'73 PONTIAC GRAN PRIX

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.doing an excellent job in keeping lhe fire away from
homes. Smoke in the community, however, was thick
Wednesday afternoon as a result of the fire which kept
firemen on the scene for many hours.

Four departments
fight
.
Middleport forest fire
Middleport Fire Department
members, aided by departments of
Mason, New Haven and Pomeroy,
successfully fought a brush fire in
the hills behind Middleport Wednesday.
The brush fire was fanned by high
wmds which threatened to take the
fire out of control.
In addition to the fire departments, a forestry division helicopter
was on the scene for hours dumping
bags of water onto the fire which
broke' out instantly from location to
location keeping firemen on the

a reasahable di~tance from the

move.

home. On Rutland St., firemen also
were able to keep the fire from
reaching homes ..
Middleport firemen rechecked th~
area are 2:30a.m. Thursday to insure that the fire was out.
Meantime, the Pomeroy Fire,
Department was battling another
brush fire on the Peach Fork Road
this morning and on Wednesday
morning fought a brush fire on Horner Hill.

The fire first started o~ a hill
beside Mill St . at 11 :22 a.m. and was
believed extinguished However,
about 2 p.m. firemen were recalled
to the a1·ea behind Fisher St. and
behind Rutland St. They were on.the
scene this time until almost midnight. Dead trees in the brush
created additional bazards.
. The homes of Mrs. M- L. French,
Mr. and Mrs. Don Stivers and their
son and daughter-in-law, Don and
Betsy Stivers were threatened by
the fire, but firemen did keep the fire

To end marriages

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Area deaths

1'

Emil R . Aleshir1·

R. Aleshire and Shirley Bell WoHe,

Enul R. Aleshire, :ill, 1523 Nye
Ave., Pomeroy, died tJU;; morning at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Mr·. Aleshire was preceded m
death by his parents, _Elmer and
Molly Forbes Aleshire, five brothers
and one sister. .
He was a veteran of World War !1.
Survivors include his wife, Linnie
Bell Aleshire ; three children, Jerry

both ofFt.Syracuse,
and four
Peggy
A.
Vining,
Wayne, Ind.;
grandchildren, Jerry R. Aleshire, Jr.,

-· Weather mild
in Buckeye state
By The Associated Press
It was an uneventful night as far
as weather was concerned. There
has been no rain m Ohio since
Wedesday morning and with high
pressure advancing toward the state
no rain is expected today or tomght.
Temperatures at dawn were
mainly in the mid 30s to mid 40s
although it was 50 degrees in the
Chesapeake area. Showers and thun-

Vivian Pierce, Rt. I, Langsville
and Carol Pierce, Rt. 1, Langsville,
filed for dissolution of marriage in
Meigs County Common Pleas Court.
Also filing for dissolution of
marriage were Fay Gum, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, and Geroge .C. Gurn, Sr. ;

e
Voi.29,No. 24S
Copyrighted 1981

TRY ASAVINGS ACCOUNT. PREPARE
FOR THE FURJRE.
6 Month Money Market Rate

12,J2%

Substantia I penalty lor early withdrawal

0

ST., RACINE,
Member
FDIC H.

APRIL SALE D.A Y$

~~d~:~:;.,!nd, and

several nieces
Funeral services will be held
Sa turday at 1 p.m. at the Pomeroy
Wesleyan Holiness Church with the
Rev. Dewey King officiatins. Burial
will be in Meigs Memory Gardens.
Friends may call at the funeral
home after 7 p:m. this evening.

Want to own

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY

There will be a postal service
examination given for the purpose of
establishing a register of eligibility
for employment as a substitute rural
route carrier at the Middleport Post
Offi~e. Applications for the testing
ma y be secured at the service win·
dow in Middleport from 8:50a.m. to
4:50p.m., April13 through April17.
No applications for the position can

OPEN FRIDAY TILB:OO P.M.
You'll find Bargains Galore On
I E · De rtnl l
Every Floor, ·n very pa en
It pllft to Take 'Advantage of the •
..1..
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and spread over all of the state
Friday ni ght.

I, John T. Williams am offering my

busi~~a,

1

Store in Pomeroy, ohio for ~ Hrtq

nOOfied Sears, Roebuck and Co. of my
intentions to sell, they are now loolling far

to purchase the business.

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-ARTIST - Mrs. Kathy Bachman, professional artist, will be working
w1tb;28 selected Meigs L&lt;lcal elementary stuclfntll at a twCH!ay workshop
to be held at tbe Rutland Elementary School Monday and Tuesday.

28 participate
i.h ·art prQgram
I

1Continued from page II

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~

the SealS Authorized Catalog Sies Merchant

an individual or husband and wife tan

1. As a SealS Aulholized Catalog.Sales
Merchant, you are the exdusive Sears
merchant in a specified area.
wrap

yourself
in
Connie
comfort

2. You sell merchandise from any Sears
catalog and from the stock
. of S.
appliances on your sales floOr.·

Packaged ·

3. You are offereCI a complete training
jqyam and consulting mice.

inside each

and every box
of fhese
handsome. low
heeled sandals
Is the present of
affordable

Please send name, ..
. ~ddress, and telephone
number to:

tomtort you
c on really get
wrapped up inl

ha,r ltage
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·· house·
·or SHoES.,
.

MIDDLEPORT,
. OHIO• ·

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Sears Catalog

· Merchant
~~

•• ~

lit

,... JOHN T.- WILLIAMS

Ul W.

011.
,.

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business?

No solution

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your own

CONTINUE

Postal exam date set

•

The White House said today that
the president had another restful
night and, when the report was
issued at 6:45 a.m. EST, was still·
sleeping after having been awake
until about 10 p.m.
Reagan awoke within an hour,
bowever, and held an early-morning
meeting in his room with top aides
Edwin Meese III , James A. Baker
Ill and Michael K. Deaver.
Reagan was reported making excellent progress at George
Washington University Hospital,
and White House aides said he
probably will be released next week .
"His progress is super," hospital
spokesman Dr. Dennis 0' Leary

. .

;)ales at ELBERfELDS.
derstohru;
are by
forecast
return to ~~be~se~c;u~re~d~a~ta~n;y~o;th~e;r~ti~m~e;;.;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
western Ohio
Fridayto afternoon

county commissioners.
As you are well aware, this board
may only make departmental a~
propriations within the certification
presented Us by the county budget
commission.
During the past few years, this
board has exerted every effort to
allocate those funds necessary to
grant all county employees an annual raise. We shall endeavor to continue this policy .
We do not, however, feel it would
he wise to enter into any type of
agreement which would restrict the
Board's ability to continue to make
our annual appropriations ill a man- ,
ne0kt is fair and f!luitable to all
county employees being paid from
ihe County General' Fund.
Therefore, considering all matters
involved , this Board has
unanimously decided as follows:
1. ) Not to negotiate in any manner
concerning the employment, appointment , com pe,nsation ,
discharge, or anyh other matters,
for emp; loyees of th Meigs County
Sherifrs department. THis being
soley within tht.authority conferred .
11pon the Sheriff by re~~on of Section
325.17,
'
2.) Not to approve or ratify any
agreemtn made by the Sheriff tbat
would in any manner curtail, limit,
.predetennine or effect the statutory
right and authority of the Commlaaionera to make annual appropriaUOill according to law arid in
a IJllllller that i.Meir and equitable
· to all County Offices.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Despite
some pain, President Reagan is
exercising, visiting with friends and
pertonning limited official duties as
he recuperates from a gunshot
· wound that the FBI says may hav e
been made by a special, explosive
bullet.
The bullet could have blown up at
, any time, even while doctors were
removing it from the president's
chest Monday night, FBI spokesman
Roger Y0ung said Thursday.
But Young said the bullet that
ricochete~ off the president's
limousine and lodged in Reagan's
left lung never exploded, although
the one that pierced press secetary
James S. Brady's brain apparently
did. Brady remained in'critical condition, but was reported making
satisfactory pro~ress.

ELBERFELDS IN POM EROY
:

MAIN ~

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enttne

limited duties

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T~R~t.~4;,P~o;m~e~r~oy~.;:;:;:;:;:;:~~~~~~~~~~~~~t~~~~~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~

Jtmmie,
Sam andAleshire,
Kevin Vining;
one;
brother,Stanley
Pomeroy
one sister, Genevieve Brogan, In·

at y

Reagan performs

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Jobless rates were 7.I percent for full-time workers,
5.9 percent for adult men, 6.6 percent for adult women,
19.1 percent for teen·agers, 6.5 percent for whites and
I3.7 percent for blacks and other minorities.
Total employment rose nearly 500,000 to 96.4 million.
The average workweek lor private nonfarn1 workers
rose from 35.3 hours to 35.4.
A nwnber of economists say other economic signs
lead them to believe the unemployment rate will begin
rising soon after slowly dropping from 7.6 percent last
sununer to 7.3 percent in February and March.
The Commerce Department reported Wednesday
that new construction completed in February fell 3.6'
percent. Earlier reports indicated housing starts and·
industrial production slipped in February.

1 Section, 10 Pages

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Friday, Aprif3, 1981

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The 6.1 percent rise in energy prices was well above
the 3.6 percent increase in February and was the fifth
straigfit large monthly advance, the new report.said.
fncl!lded were a 9 percent increase in heating oil
prices and a 7.5 percent rise in gasoline prices.
"This upward movement reflected the Impact of the
lifting of controls on the price of dOJI!estic crude oil·
earlier in the year as well as the continued passthrough of the latest round of imported oil price increases," the report said. .
Before seasonal adjustment the overall index stood
at 265.3 in March, meaning that finished wholesale
· goods costing an average of $10 in I967 would have cost
$26.53 last month.
The jobless rate stayed relatively level in ll)JISt.
major areas in March, the Labor DepartmPnt said.

Twenty-eight selected students
fro · seven Meigs Local elementary
sch 1s will take part in a special
tw
y "artist in' the schools"
ncy program featuring Kathy
Bac
n, a professional artist·
pot rofLogan.
program, sponsored by ~he
Sou heastern Ohio Voluntary
Edu~ation Cooperative and the Ohio
Artsl Council, will be hel~ Monday
and Tuesday at the Rutland Elementary School.
Tl)e workshop wiU offer students
the )lllique experience of learning
anctworking with a professional artist ln a studio setting. Slide presentations of the historical aspects of
clay work , hand-building
techniques, wheel throwing demonstrations, actual "hands on"· clay
work, pottery building and glazing•
will be included in the ~idency
program.
Mrs. Bachma~ has been working
in clay professionally since 1973. She

is a studio potter working primarily

with stoneware clay making fine
handtrafted pottery . including
decorated plattera, teapots, din·
nerware sets, lamps and other functional ware. She is presently
working as an apprentice with The
Potiers Assn. at Logan and is in the
process of establishing an artists
collective in Rushville. To be known
as The Rushcreek Craftworks, the
operation will provide studio and
gallery space for area artists and
craftsmen.
Mrs. Bachman has attended
various workshops with prominent
potters in Ohio and California and
she has exhibited in many festivals,
shows and galleries. She is a member of the American Crafts Council,
the Ohio Designer Craftsman and
hlis ser;yed as juror for the Ohio
Govern'br's Youth 'Exhibition. Her
work will be on 'display during the
tw&lt;Hiay workshop.

a

said; but he added that eagan would
not be fully recovered by April 23,
when aides said he still plans to
begin a six-day trip to California and
Mexico.
"He's had a major injury and he' s
had a major surgi cal procedure and
I don't expect him to ·be 100 percent
of normal in three weeks," O'Leary
said. "That's not a reasonable ex·
pectation for anyone."
O'Leary said the president is
capable of making any decisions,
but "there is some effort to limit"
his activity so he'll get well more
quickly.
Meanwhile, John W. Hinckley Jr. ,
charged with aUempting to
assassinate Reagan, was found competent to stand trial. He wore a white
bulletproof vest during a court appearance Thursday and was ordered
to remain in an institution for further sanity tests while a federal
grand jury investigates the charges
against him.
The FBI's tentative finding that
the .22-caliber shots fired in Monday's assassination attempt were
"devastator (exploding) bullets"
raised further questions of whether
Reagan was in graver danger than
originally reported.
Despite reports rrom .medi cal
.sources that ddctors initially thought
"they might lose" Reagan in the first moments after he arrived at the
hospital becau se he was
hemorrhaging internally, 0 ' Leary
denied Thursday that the president's
life had been in danger.

Strikers close
county landfill
Meigs Couniians will be not only the strike by highway department
be feelin g the impart ora strike by workers apparently garbage will be
county highway department backing up across Meigs County.
workers, but with temperatures on
Meantime, it was reported that
the rise they will be smelling it.
there are no negotiation sessions
Thursday, several workers of the planned to settle disputes not only
county highway department who with the coWJty highway department
have been on strike since Tuesday workers but with the deputies of the
and Fred Haynes, representative of county sheriff's department who
. the American Federation of Sl;lte, also went on strike TuelKiay.
County and Municipa1 Employes,
The deputies are striking for
went to the Meigs County landfill
reeognition
as members of the
and insisted that it be closed since
American
Fderation
of State, Councounty equipment .is being used to
operate the facility. The landfill ty and Municipal Employes. As
was, as a result closed, to all gar- spokesman for the group said the
bage and trash haulers and county has negotiated with county
remained closed today. Haulers who highway department workers, but
had done pickup at their customers refuses to negotiate with the deputy
on Thursday f\llllld they had no place sheriffs on the grounds that payment
in the area to dump trucks loaded of deputies is a matter between the
with garbage. Pickup service was sheriff and his deputies.
not being carried out by some . County ·comiilissioners Thursday
haulers on Friday. Bags of garbage issued a statement to that effect
were along the curbing in sections of pointing out that the sheriff has ap
Pomeroy Friday morning by' propriations set up for payroll each
residents who apparently were January and can negotiate with the
unaware that there would be no deputies as long as he stays within
pickup service because of the boundaries set for expenditures in
closing o( the landfijl, . Highway his budget.
Meigs Commissioner Ricbard
wor~~l'll do have a picket line at the
Jones said today:
landfill, it was reported.
"I have no corrunent on the
There was little indication today
sheriff's
situation as it a problem
· that action will be taken to get the strictly between the sheriff and h1i'
landfill reopened and since tllere are
no negotiation sessions set to settle deputies".

'

Supervisor to oversee line project
By KNriE CROW
In order 'to 'avoid unnecessary
problems when sewage lines are laid
in the village ol Syrat:use, eouncll
i:nemhers Thliraday IIJght agreed 1o
hire &amp;'SUIJ!!rvlsor.
Work on the village , lines i.s
ICheduled lo begin arowld the flnt
of May, Mayor Eber Pickens reported. 1
II wu ,reported that water and iai
linel wwe ~ when wort ooi!Je ·
- - . J1nee bepn in the village of ·
Rlcille.

Councll wl1! meet in special
Council also dls&lt;;ussed enlarging
session
Aprtl U, at 7:30p.m. to hire '
the concession stand at the pool, ditmanager,
We guards, supervisor
a
ching on Second St~t and the
to
oversee
the
·laying uf the sewer
hiring of a pool manager lnd life
lines, whether or nut 1o extend the
guards.
Council acreed t~ seek other ap- • concesaiun island at tl1e pool and
pUcatiOM for a ..JlOOl manager and what avenue to take on ditching of
life J1118rda. AppUeaU01111. must be SecuOd Street.
Councll, in other business, agreed
llUbmlUed by April13.
The pool ~ltee, Mlck Ash, to advertise for lnaurance coverage
Mike Struble, Robert WJncett, Katie on all property . and equipment
Crvw and Mayor Pldun will meet owned by t11e village; hire
C11 ApfU 7, 11 8:10 p.m. tO outline to repair and let llnet llld ltOp .
sigris; contact the villaguolldt« •
811k1eJ1ne1 for the IIIIJIIIer.

-ne

the weig)JI limit on streets and to
inquire If material cap be purchased
for patching of streets.
CouncU briefly discussed adoption
of a building code. and zoning ordinance for the village. Before adoption a lengthy study will be given the
propDA!.
.
Extenllve acts of vandallsm were ·
reported to property owned by Helen
Grace WIUlanll. The property i.s
palled 10 if anyone Ia found on it,
they will be adviled-to leav~ imd
(Continued on page 10)

lS Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

ToDAY
~.- .IN

THE

LD

Grant appi'ications available
COLUMBUS, Ohio - Applications for the Ohio Instructional Grants
Program are available to needy college students who will be attending
school during the 1981-1982 academic year.
Grants range from $100 to $720 for ~tudents at state-assisted institutions and $200 to $1,800 for students at priva te colleges. They are
available to students from families with adjusted gross incomes and
. non-taxable incomes of less than $20,000.
The deadline for submittmg applications is Aug. 21, 1981.

Two die in fireworks explosion
NEWPORT, Ky . - Enough fireworks to fill several trucks were
seized by federal and state authorities in the altennath of an explosion
in a concealed fireworks factory that killed two people and injured 25
Thursday.
Agents and state police seized fireworks stored in four locations in
nearby Covington, Kenton County and Ludlow.
·
Stokes said he wanted to question Victor Scharstein, 40 , of Ne~rt,
an adrrutted bootleg fireworks operator.
'

Ohio Bell seeks rate hike
COLUMBUS, Ohio - auo Bell Telephone Co. has some wrinkles in
the $125 million rate request it plans to present the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio in July.
The company notified the PUCO on Fridsy of the planned filing of an
8 percent rate hik e, despite rece~ving $91.2 million in higher rates since December.
The company is proposing that rates for flat-rate residential users
be increased from the current $11.25 to $12 a month for the phone line,
plus $1.50 a month for the phone. Business phones would cost $21.95 a
month lor the line, up $2.20.

Plan extensive layoffs
WASHINGTON - "Extensive" layoffs at the United Mine Workers
international headquarters in Washington, D.C., have been ordered by
UMW President Sam Church, a union spokesman says.
.
The spokesman, who dJd not want to be named, said the staff reduc- ·'
lion was brought about because of the union's nationwide contract
strike against the Bituminous Coal Operators Association. The layoffs
will take effect April15. The workers will-return to their jobs when the
strike ends, he said. ·
Some 160,000 UMW members walked off their jobs March '!1, eight
days ago. And after Tuesday's rank-and-file rejection of a proposed
contract, Wlion officials predicted a long strike.·

Recommends vest us age
WASIUNGTON - H the head of the Secret Service had his way ,
President Reagan would wear a bulletproof vest during all his pubUc
appearances.
But Secret Service Director H. Stuart Knight said he recognizes that
such a protective device "is cun1bersome, it is heavy and it is awkward."
Knight said he feels Reagan should wear such a vest at all public appearances, but that the service asks Reagan to wear a vest beneath his
clothing only when a specific threat has been made against the
president before a publicappearance or speech.

U.S. will provide food aid
WASHINGTON - Amid warnings that the Soviet Union has acted
within the past 'two days to strengthen its ability to move into Poland,
Vice Pr~sident George Bush announced Thursday that the United
States will send new food aid to the troubled coWJiry. ·
After a meeting with Deputy Prime Minister Mleczyslaw Jagielski,
Bush said the administration plans to sell to Poland dairy products, including dried milk and butter, at concessionary prices.

..

Winning Ohio lottery number
CLEVELAND - The numbers selected Thursday night in the Ohio
Lotte..Y's daily game "The Number" and weekly "Pyramid" game
drawings are:
-The Number - 733
Pyramid - 97; 518; 3426
The lottery reported earnings of $621,683 from the wagering on the
daily number game drawing. Lottery officials said sales prior to the
drawing totaled $l,ot2,449.50, and holders of winning tickets are entitled toshare$420,766.50.
(

Jr7eather
Mostly cloudy and windy with scattered showers or tlnmdentonna
tonight and Saturday. Lows tonight in the low 60!1. Highs Saturday ~
!MI. Chance of rain 50 percent tonight and 40 percent Saturday. Winds
southerly 20-30 mph and gusty tonight.
Exteaded Olllo Forecast- SUnday through 'l'uelday:A cbarice of '
showers Sunday and Monday. Fair Tuellday. Mild throuih the periOd.
Highs in the mid-50s to mi~. Lows at night IIIOIIly in the tOa.

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Commentary

S()u~~rn- e~ges_

Pa9e-2:..:_The oa ily sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohlo
Friday I AP!tl3. 1ta1
• .

~eJ~~es~ilik~~~a_ ~~~· ~~~~~~-J-~-~~J; K-~~~~
-k·
for protectionismeither.
In the end Mr. Reagan must make
a choice. If principles alone could
decide the issue, the president would
go for free trade. He would jawbone
the Japanese, urging upon them tbe
wisdom &lt;t voluntary restraint in ·
their booming export business, but
he would use every weapon at his
conunand - including his powerof
veto - to prevent the imposition of
quotas. All of Mr. Reagan's instincts
go in this direction.
But the old Deerslayer had it
right. The very best principles run
into the vei'y best facts, and
something has to give.
The case.for principle is clear. The
theory at least, ours is a free society,
dedicated to the rule of the mar~et­
place and to the rights of the consumer. If American auto manufac-

The Daily Sentinel
Ill l' 41urt Strl"t'l
P•Jmeruy, Ohio
ti 14-992·21:;6

DE\'OTEDTO THE INTEREST OF THE MEIGS.MASON AREA
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ROBERT L. WINGETI
Publ l~ hr r

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH

Ass!Ntanl PubiiJ•;her/Controller

General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB , JR. '
Nt'IHEdl tor

A MEMBER ul Tht• Auoclakd Prns. Inland Dall}
Amtrlran Nn·spaptor Publi ~ht&gt; rs Association.

.

The investment ;
club .movement
During its 41-year history, members of Detroit's Mutual Investment
Club have bought $137,038 worth of stocks, withdrawn $257,643 for othe•
uses and now have a million dollar portfolio.
·
The best is to come, said &lt;feorge A. Nicholson, Jr., usually credited
with being the father of the investment club movement. Nicholson, a
member, estimates that by 1986 the club may be worth $2.3 million.
The biggest paper profit in its present portfolio of 42 stocks is Moog,
Inc., up more than nine times. Trinity Industries has risen seven times,
Core Industries five times, Air Products, Avco and Mobil Oil four times.
Two socks have tripled, six have doubled.
Critics sometimes argue the Detroit group isn't typical of clubs in the
3,900-member National Association of Investment Clubs because some of
its members are professionals. They concede this, but insist nevertheless
amateurs can be properly prepared to make big gains.
Tom O'Hara, chairman of the NAIC board of trustees, teUs the story of
one of th~ club's biggest gains. As is the custom, members allowed their
wives to pick a stock at the annual meeting. In 1974 they chose Amcord.
The purchase price, said O'Hara, a member, was $2.875.
In 1979 Amcord shares were repurchased from shareholde\S at $34~
Suddenly finding themselves with about $a4,000,'the biggest lump of cash
they ever had the opportunity to invest, they bought among other things
1,200 shares of Kennecott Copper at $24 a share. Recently offer from Standan! Oil of Ohio was approved by both boards at $62 a share.
O'Hara revealed the club's figures, which sho.wed a portfolio ·value of
$1,039,000 on the morning of March 31 (helped along by Moog reaching a
new high) in an effort to encourage people to spur the movement.
He contends there's money to be made by small investors, and he observes that, somewhat under-publicized, "individuals have been making
money in the market for the past five years."
During these years, he said in an interview, there has been a gradual
rebuilding of confidence in the market. "People view stocks as I do - that
stocks are one of the·few things that have not risen sharply, and that if
there are bargains anywhere they're to be found in stocks."
O'Hara detects a growing enthusiasm that he feels will lift the number
of clubs steadily over coming months. In fact, he says, it has begun.
Association membership last year fell to 3,600, from a high of 14,000 clubs
in 1970, but it has grown now for six straight months to3,900.
Those figures roughiy paraDe! what the New York Stock Exchange census of shareholders has shown. After reaching a high of 31 miUion a
decade or so ago, shareownership dipped to 25 million, before growing
again to29.8 million in 1~ .

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TodAy in his.tory.
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Sick as it iS, the domestic i!lduBtry .
Is not terminally ilL Spokesnian for
both labor and management contend
that if reasonable quotas could ~
lmpostld upon Japan for tile nell
three years, most of the problem .
wouldDe solved. Old principles, they
insist, would not be perm8nently .
compromised. · These arguments
may not convince Mr. Reagan, but ;
they seem mighty persuasive to me.
•

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The.facts an; equally clear. The
American auto industry is ot.ir
greatest industry. Directly or indirectly it provides OQI! of every five
jobs in the country. But the industry
is a sick indust,.Y. Last year the sale
of domestic fars slumped to 6.5
million units, le8s than the sales of 10
years ago. Undeniably, one big
reason for the slump is that
·Americans last year bOught 1.9
million Japimese.imports.

•

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How did the industry get in this
fix' It is easy enough to say, in hindsigh~ that management should
have foreseen a demand by 1981 for
small, fuel-effi cient ca rs .
Management should have foreseen
OPEC, and soaring gasoline prices, """""'-~
and swiftly changing consumer
demands. Through a rear-vision
mirror, :!G-20 eyesight is no trick at
au..
'
Today's root problems are directly traceabl~ to Hpolitical and
economic folly. While the price of
gasoline was incr~asing elsewhere

will offer the amendment when the
budget reaches the House floor, now
expected on ~ril9, he said.
House Finance Chairman Myrl H.
Shoemaker, [).BourneviUe, said the
measure is underfunded because of
downward revisions in Rhodes' own
revenue estimates. In addition, cuts
loom in federal funds, he said.
But Shoemaker and House
Speaker Vernal G,'Riffe Jr., [).New
Boston, as with a separate Ohio
Department of Transportation
budget, opted to leave the issue of
additional funding up to Rhodes and
Republicans who have a majority in
the Senate. ,
Hearings on ODOT's one-year,
$689 million budget got under way
Wednesday in the Senate, along with
those on another bill to raise the

state gasoline tax from 3 cents to 4
cents a gallon.
Neither house scheduled floor
sessions today as the chambers were
toE:befOr'a youth in government
pro
. But Shoemaker scheduled
a y-longmeeting for more work on
Rhodes' budget.
Shoemaker hoped to finish by the
end of the day and send the biD off to
lie reprinted.
Rose wanted to add the gasoline
tax to ODOT 's budget when it was in
the House, saying Ohio no longer can
afford to let its pot-holed highways
continue to deteriorate.
But Riffe and other Democratic
lead~ said Senate Republicans will
have to act first on the politically
sensitive gasoline tax hike.
The 7 percent cut mentioned by

That is worth remembering as
President Reagan recuperptes from
the wound he suffered in an
assassination attempt Monday. He
is ultimately responsible for
everything in the administrallon,
but he doesn't do everything. No one
could.
Many of his responsibilities can be

Rose would be "pretty much across
the board" and include alaahes in
education and welfare, he said.
"There are some things JI)U just
can't cut, such as the local government fund," Rose said. "But otherwise, you have to go for the blg ticket
items if you are going to save any
real money."
House Republicans also plan to
seek a fuU, two-year budget for the
fiscal biennlwn which gets under
way July I, according to Roee.
Riffe and Shoemaker have · said
tl1ey will send the Senate a ~ding
docUment covering only the fmt ,
year of the two-year bookkeeping
period. Revenues and spending .
projections further ahead than that
would be risky becalllle of uncet1aln
state and national economies, Riffe
said.

I

'84..~~.:..-_R_ob_en_J_.w._"8_ma_n·

WASHINGTON (NEA) - It is no firm of Winston and Strawn. He has closed-door' meetings, he struck a
secret that fonner Vice President told friends that he is delighted with theme that is likely to be repeated
Walter Mondale wants to be the this arrangement because the throughout his presidential camDemocratic standard bearer in 1984. teaching wiU give him visibility in paign: "Don't blame me."
Neither Is It any secret that Mondale ,.....his home sta~ while ~ law .pracHe frequently reminded the
is among the potentiBI prestdenttal lice. wtU provtde him With a s1Z8ble assembled Democrats that he had
candidates mentioned most frequen- income for what he has described as served "under difficult cir·
tly by Democratic powerbrokers.
''very little work."
cumstances." In fact, he repeated
Now it appears that he has already
This strategy rules out any that phrase so ·often that one miglt
come up with a general strategy for political campaign for Mondale in · have assumed "difficult cirgaining his party's nomination in 1982. As tlie most popular Democrat cumstances" to be the name of the
1984.
in Minnesota, he has been under president under whom he had serMondale's former aides - many some pressure to run for the Senate ved. The name of Jimmy Carter Wall
of whom contitiue to be associated next year against Republican in- never mentioned. '
with him - disclose that the plan cumbent David .. Durenberger. But
Mondale announced the DNC that
caDs for the former vice president to the Mondale people flatly rule out he had eslabllshecj a,political-action
maintain a relatively low profile for such a race.
committee to raise fund&lt;t for
the next year or so in an effort to
Democratic candidates in 1982.
stay out of any intra-party squabThey point out that Mondale could Among ~ first contributors will be
bling.
hardly promise Minnesota votes that a number of Mondale backers.
Mondale will campaign for · he would serve out a six-year Senate
Even more vlaible than Mondale
Democratic c8hdidates in 1982 to ac- term. There is even a chance tha\ l)e at the DNC meeting were his chief
cumulate political IOUs. He wiD also would lose such a race in a state th8t political . 'aides. Democratic
be working the back rooms .and has shifted toward the Republicans operative Bob Torrlcelli, a meinber
building a campaign staff that wiU in recent elections. That woUld spell of the vice presideiiUal staff who has
ready to begin operations wen in ad- disaattr for hill future pollti~al also moved to Winston and Strawn,
vance Of the earliest 1!184 primaries.
plans.
was bUBY contacting key people
In the meantime, Mondale is
Mondale waa much in evidence at from the 1976 and 1!1110 Carterkeeping busy by lecturing at three the recent Washington gathering of Mondale· campaigns. H1a meuage
Minnesota colleges and practicing- the Democratic National Com- was simple: Please keep yourself
law 8IJ a partner in the Washington mittee. In hlB public address and at a,vailable 'to work for Mondale Jn

way

earlv.

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One week. . .

1979
FORD LTD WAGON
Country Sq ui re . Loaded,

Host Wahama won its second
straight game fhursday night, 8-1
over Southwestern. On Wednesday
night, the White Falcons defeated
Kyger Creek, 10-0.
Thurs'day evening, Wahama slammed 14 hits lmroute to the non-league
victory. Pacing the a~tack were
day on the Rio Grande CoUege
Hesson with three hits including a diamond.
Unescore :
home riln, Dugan had three hits1
100 000 '0 -1 4 I
Zuap1111 and Lyons, two hits apiece. · Southwestern
101
222 X-8 14 4
Wahama
Jeff Gilbert led Southwestern with

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the Ohlo vaUey Publishing C&lt;mip&lt;ny •
Multimedia, Inc ., P()J"f)eroy, Oblo 457t.J,
991-2156. Second cla5S ~· paid at
Pomeroy, Ohlo.

JOB E. Main St . .

two hits in four trips. Dale Newberry
hid a triple.
· Dugan, the wipning pitcher, fanned nine and issued one free pass.
Randy Layton, the losing hurler,
walked slx and strokeout two. Southwestern ().2 hosts North Gallia Mon-

•

Published every llftenioon except Sunday,
M-y throllil1 Friday, I! I CourtStm~ by

scored what proved to be the winning run, w~en Pape singled, Cardone walked, and Joe_Bob Hemsley
sacrificed them to second. Jay Rees
again came lhroligh with a. single to
drive home the run. .
.
After Federal Hocking scored in
the sixth to make the score !l-8, its
leadllff batter reached in the top of
the seventh on a walk. A steal and
error led the tying run adv~nce to
third and sophomore Cunningham
went to work by striking out the side.
Kent Wolle had a perfect night at
the plate to lead Southern with three
singles, a double, and sacrifice fly.
Teaford had two singles, Allen Pape
two singles, Jay Rees a single,
Bryan Wolle a single, and Paul Car·dune a single.
Linescore :
Southern
400 311 0-9 11 3
FH
040 031 0- 8 5 3
Batteries: B. WOlfe, Collins 2nd,
(WP), Cunningham 5th and J. Rees.
S.O. 8, BB 10. Richards ILP), Smith

Waliama dumps Southwes

1!184.
Other Mondale aides - including
Richard Moe, his former chief of
staff, and Mlchae) Bennan - appeared to be already assembling a
staff for the New Hampehire
primary,
Most of Mondale's pe&lt;Jpie predict
that their candidate'• chief opponent
in 1984 wiU be Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Maas. They think that they
can effectively freeze Kennedy out
of the race by winning a few early
primaries.
Crucial to the strategy is New
Hampshire. The key person in the
Mondale effor there may be 1f:llls
·Woodward, who ran Carter's •New
Hampshire campa!sns 'and was a
WhlteHOU&amp;eadvanceman.
So, don't expect to lee too much of
the former vice pmident unW at
least early 1983.11'• not that be l.m•t
be politically active; it's jlllt tllat be
will be trying to avoid makinc
enemies.
,
Mondale's aldea kno'w that 1184 II
a Iona
off. What they fear 11101t
II that their candidate will peak too

into control problems and issued
four straight walks. Senior Mike r
Collins came on in relief and Smith
doubled home two Federal runs
followed by a wild pitch that allowed
another run to score.
Southern scored tl\ree runs on
three·walks and three singles in the
fourth and scored a single run in the
fifth on a walk to Jeff Sopher, who
later scored on a Kent Wolle
sacrifice fly. The score was now 8-4.
Meanwl.tile, Collins who had pitched earlier in the week, was ~oing a
good job on the mound until tiring in
the fifth.
Two Lancer walks and two singles
knocked Collins out of the box, the
score 11-7 and the tying run on base.
Sophomore Robbie Cunningham was

Spartans.
Jenkins had two singles e~ch , while
The Eastern quartet fanned one Nick Riggs, Will, and Martin each
ancf gave up only three walks. had one single apiece.
Alexander pit~ hers, Mallory,
Starting. pitcher Deron Jewett
Millain, Luckett and Moesner struck went three innings, gave up four called upon for a crucial relief apout two and gave up 12 costly walks. runs, four hits and struck out three, pearance.
Cunningham, who was making his
Peyton, Henthorne and Kovak . while walking five. Mark Holter
first
varsity appearance, got the
were the only Alexlmder hitters, all came on in relief gave up three runs,
clean-up
hitter to bat into a double
with singles.
three hits, fanned fo ur, and walked
play, then struck out the next batter
Eastern was scheduled to play just two for the winners.
to
put ou the fire and end the inning.
, Hannan Trace Friday evening, but
Randy Stewart was the Meigs
What
made Cunningham's efforts
the game was rescheduled for Satur- starter. He went four innings, giving
more
heroic
was the fact that this
day morning due to a conflict with up two runs, on just five hits, while
was
his
first
day back to school after
Hannan Trace's basketball banquet. fanning six and walking,four. Eddie
Game time is 9:30a.m. at Eastern.
Bishop came on in relief, allowing · a bout with the flu . The sophomore
Linescore:
only two runs, two hits, and one hurler got the save, striking out six
and walking just two in three innings
Alexander
000 000 0- 0 3 8 walk.
Eastern
'll'!l 438 x-27 15 1
Eastern's next reserve game is of work.
In the seventh inning, Southern
Batteries: Smith (WP ), Ritchie April9atFederalHocking.
5th, Well 5th, Jones and Griggs, ......:.:::.:__ _ _ _ _ _..:..__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,
Leonard 5th. Mallory, Millain 2nd,
Luckett 3rd, · Moisner 4th and Jor'dan.
Meanwhile the Eastern Eagle
reserves of coach George Collins
posted their first win of the season
1~7 over Meigs.
Meiga_ took an early 3-0 lead with a
rubs.
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single run in the first, and two in the
Twelve walks, eight Spartan second, but Eastern. came fighting
errors, al)d timely hitting on the part back in the thinl to make the score 3of the Eagles kept the Eagle offense 2. Meigs tjten came back with
roUing aU night long.
anotfler sing~ run in the fourth, the
In the fourth inning Eastern score now ~2.
scored ff.r runs all on clean hits.
The tide and the score quickly
OvelitU Easterners went to the chauged in the fourth inning wben
plate. '
Eastern's bats came alive and the
The Eastern pitChing staff had a Eagles plated 10 big runs enroute to
work ou~as Rob Smith went four in- the 14-7 win.
How-J.o Study Plan.
nings before being relieved by
Mark Holter had two siugles for
Stop In Mid pick up
Charlie RitChie in the fifth. In that the wiMers, Larry Cowdery a
your copy.
inning Sflfe"handed RitChie was hit double, ·and Todd CUndiff, Deron
on the llmd with a sharp line drive Jewett, Brian CoUins, and Brian
and was possibly lost for the season. .Well each with one single. Each club
Brian Well then came on in relief had seven hits.
before Jeff Jones finished off the . For Meigs Scott Harrison and

delegated anti are - whelher he is in yielding the powers of office at least
the Oval Office or in a hospital bed. · temporarily, delegate his authority·
Some cannot. His signature alone to order a nuclear attack.
can make a biU law. Reagan signed
Should p!e president yield power,
a bill Tuesday, the morning after either by his own decision or
surgery, blocking an increase in beca1111e a majority oi the Cabinet
dairy price supports to cut $147 detennlnes he is incapacitated, the
million from the budget this year.
authority would pass to the vice
A president cannot, without president.

Mondale looks toward

~in

BY SCOTt WOLFE
EAST MEIGS- Eastern's Eagles
bombarded Alexander's Spartans
27-0 behind a potent 15 hit offensive
attack that resulted in Eastern's'
second win of the season here Thursday evelting. Eastern is now 2-1 after the non-conference win.
Senior first baseman Gene Cole
led the hit parade with four singles,
Rogie GaUl and Cha rlie RitChie each
had two singles, Greg Wigal had two
singles and Johnny Beaver a single.
Rob Smith smacked a double, Chris
Allen a single, Gary Griggs a double,
andNickLeonardasingle.
In the firs t inning, the Eastern
bats awoke to the tune of three runs
and from that point on Eastern
opened up the lopsided winning
margin.
Johnny Beaver started things with
a · walk, Gaul sacrificed him to
serond, G(eg Wigal walked, and one
run scor~ when a Rob Smith grounder resulted in an error. Chris Allen
then res11iuled with a two run single
that accoonted for the other two

Some days, President ~oesn 't work
WASHINGTON (AP) - Some
days, ordinary days, a president
doesn't go to work, and the government keeps rolling, doing b~iness
as always.
Like anybody e!Be, presidents get
tired, or catch cold, or need or want
a day off. They're always available,
butnotalw,ays at work.

loss omlng in tbe championship game of the couuty
tournament. Shown are coaches and members ·of the
cbampioDSblp team. Front row, 1-r, Coach Weldon Bartrum, Mike Roosh, Joe Hall, John Slssoq, Jimmy
Cleland, Jerry Cleland, Sco'tt Edmunds, and Coach Jim
Snyder. Secollll row- Joey Snyder, Vaughn Mitchell,
Sam Rlle, Michael Bartrum, Matthew Peterson, Jason
Black 'and Kevin Oiler. Tbe team won a large champlooshlp tropby in the local tourney and a fine trophy
for placing ruunerup in the county tournament.
'

Easte'?J 's varsity, .reserves

House _panel tries .to balance budget
COLUMBUS, Ohio (APJ - The
House Finance Committee plans to
try to balance Gov. James A.
Rhodes' state budget rather than
send it to the Senate millions of
dollars "out of whack."
House Minority Leader Waldo
Bennett Rose, R-Lima, said Wednesday that committee Republicans
plan to offer an amendment to cut
proposed spending by 7 percent instead of letting the underfunded
budget continue to exert pressure
for a tax hike.
"We can bring this budget into
balance," he said. "It's $322 million
out of whack." •
Still, the 7 percent cut may be
rejected .by Democrats who control
the committee, Rose said. If so,
Republicans will decide later if they

1

· CHAMPS HONORED - Thursday evening's
Rulland Elementary School's fourth and fifth grade
basketball team was honored wllh a potll!Ck style
awards banquet and awards ceremony. Parents,
coaches, aDd faculty were on hallll along wltb each
team member, who received individual trophies and a
(~kate for their efforts. Awards were presented by
Coacb Weldon Bartrum. Rutland placed second in the
Meigs County Elementary Tournament~nd were tournament champions in tbe Meigs Local Tournament.
The team compiled a 14-1 overaU record with the only

I

Today is Friday, April3, the 93rd day of 1981. There are 272 days left in the
year.
Today's )llghllght in history:
On April3, 11116, during the CiVIl War, the Union Army ~upied the form~.r
Confederate capital of Richmond, Va.
·
•
On thia date:
In 1180, the Pony Ezpreu Service began between St. Joeeph, Mo. and

Sacramento, catlf.

BY sCoTT WOLFE
STEWART - The Southern Tornailoes edged the Federal Hocking
Lancers, !l-8, here Thursday evening
in boys' high school baseball action,
behind an excellent relief pitChing
" performance by Robbie Cun,
ningham. The win boosts Southern's
record to 2-1 overall, while Federal
drops to ().4 .
•
Senior hurler Bryan Wolle breezed
through the first Inning for the Tornadoes after Southern grabbed an
early ~ lead in the top of the innings.
In that round, Terry McNickle
~alked, stole second, then with one
down, scored on a Kent Wolle single.
Dale Teaford followed with a
single that scored Wolfe, then Bryan
Wolfe responded with a single that
drove home Teaford. Allen Pape
reached on a fielder's choice and
later scored on another single by
Paul Cardone.
In the second inning, B. Wolfe ran

Prt~~ Auoria tlon and tht'

LETTERS ot" OPINION lift' ~· tlr om t&gt;d . Tht&gt;y !ihnuld ht• lrss than lOO "urds lnnK . All
lt&gt; llrrs art' Nu b]t'«'l tu t&gt;dllln.: and must bt- ~ i,~~:nt&gt;d l' ilh 11.11mr. 11 ddrr ~~ .11nd tt&gt;l~phunt•
numbt-r . Nn uruiiKnt'd lt&gt;llt'r~ will tw publl ~ hrd . l.rllt&gt;rs shnu ld ht' in 11,uod Lil~lr , addrrsslnjj
b ~ ut•s . nut puJOnny\it ir,. .
·

I

turers can't make it in. the com- . in the· world, thus corrii&gt;elling the of federal rules and regulations. Inpetitive marketplace, so the prin- development of Volkswagens, flation pushed up the wages of auto
ciple avows, !et 'em go under. If Toyotas and Hondas, pur govem- workers to a point where" hourly
American auto buyers want Toyotas ment kept gasoline prices low here wages ·in teh U.S. are double those in
instead of Chevvies, that's their · at home. We loved it. No one can Japan. For a number of raasons, our
freeborn privilege. And besides, the recall complaints against 30-Cent productivity lagged. .Japanese planargwnent continues, if principle gas. But the effect was to create a . Is are highly automated, Robots do
were to be abandoned in the matter rnarket for the gas guzzlers.
milch of the work. The car-perof the beleaguered auto industry,
That econo!Oic misjudgment then worker ratio for a Toyota is 116-to-1.
what other troubled industry would was compounded by other factors, The ratio for a Ford or GM car~
be next? In this view principle is like especially by a mountainous burden to-1.
virginity ; once lost, it caiUiot be
regained.
·

(USPS I - )
AOhllklll ofMaldmellla, toe.

Federal_Hoc}Ung

J

WASHINGTON - A lpng time
ago, James Fenimore Cooper laid
down what might be defined as
Cooper's Law for Practicing
Politicians. As he grapples with the
intractable dilelll!IIB of Japanese
imports, President Reagan might
find ~orne comfort in it.
"Principles," ' said Cooper,
"become modified in practice by
facts.''
The problem of Japanese imports
meets all the qualifications of a true
dilenuna. When his sorely divided
COU118elors finaUy stop arguing, Mr.
Reagan wiU have two choices only.
He can come down on the sidepf free
trade, or he can come down on the
side of preotectionism. Under the
unhappy circumstances at hand,
there is not much to be said for free
trade; there is not much to be said

The Daily Sentinel

�- ·J'

Friday, Aprll3, ltil

• Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

AP likes
Baltimore
in·
AL
East
race
.
B~ Associated

CHARGING- Pbj,ladelphia 76ers guard Lionel HolUns (9) driv'l" into Pacers center James Edwards (40) as Indiana's Billy Knight (left)
watches during·tbe second game of the Natloual Basketball Association
opened round playolfs in lndiaoapulis Thursday night. Hollins was called
for the offensive charging fouL 1AP Laserphoto).

76ers eliminate
Indiana, 96-85
'

Press
The soap opera continues. Will
George and Reggie kiss and make
up' Will big Dave bring George success in his search for another world
championship'
The New York Yarlkees had' the
best record in baseball during the
19110 regular season but they bombed
in the playoffs against Kansas City,
and owner George SteiRbrenner
went shopping, He went a!l the-way
to San Diego for free .agent outfielder Dave Winfield. He didn't
have to go quite as far for a field
manager to replace the popular Dick
Howser (whose 103 victories. made
him the second winningest rookie
skipper in baseball history), only upstairs where Gene Michael was
biding his time as the Yankees'
general manager.
"The season 1\'aS somewhat disappointing because we failed to make
the World Series," says Michael. ·
, Winfield takes his money bags to
Yankee Stadium's spacious left field
with Reggie Jackson, who batted
.300 for the first time and tied for the
American League lead with 41
homers, in right. Fleet Jerry Mumphrey, just acquired in a trade with
San Diego, is the man in the middle.
Oscar Gamble and Lou Piniella will
DHa lot.
,
A veteran infield will have Graig
Nettles at third, Bucky Pent at
short, Willie Randolph at second and
Bob Watson and Jason Thompson
splitting time at first. Thomspon
was acquired in the capper of a
three-team trade which sent firstbaseman Jim Spencer from the
Yankees to Pittsburgh.
Clutch-hitting catcher Rick
Cerone handles a pitching staff that
includes Ron Guidry, Tonuny John
and Rudy May, all
left-banders, in the startuig rotation- the Yankees are searching
for a right-hander - and a sensational bullpen headed by
fireballing Goose Gossage.
The Baltimore Orioles; says
ManagerEarl Weaver, "had an outstanding season in 1980, but IOO·wins
wasn't enough. So this year we'll
have to win 101 gaines, or whatever.
it takes to bring the Eastern Division
title back to Baltimore.''
The Orioles seem solid
everywhere. The pitching staff includes three Cy YoWJg Award win·
n'i\! - Jim Palmer, Mike Flanagan

r-:-::========::-

· Ubrartan

OPERE'ITA TO BE PRESENTED Friday night at soldier, Jell CaldweU, Lampwick, Chris Spencer,

Tuppen Plaiua Elemealary Sclloollllliler tbe direction barlequin and Mike Weber, fruit seller. Curtain tlme Is ·
of MulDe Whitehead. Piclured are, 1-r, Kyle Sinclair, 7:3e p.m. Admission IB $1. Pre-school cblldren will be
admitted free.

ANNOUNCEMENT

Monday • Friday 5 P.M.-9 P.M.
Main Clinic Facilities
Near Gallipolis
Call 446-5287
In Advance

"'

OTHERS TAKING PART in tbe operetta Friday

night at Tuppen Plaiua Elementary are, left to right,
Brian Dunt, Dr. Crow, Allen Tripp, Dr. Ow~ Jell

.

Final rehearsals

Vail seeking more
tJ:tan pinchhitting

have
been held
'

Sayre, Medoro, the dog, Kenny Ritchie, the fo• aDd
Tndd WUsoo, the cat. The operetta is under the direction of Maline Whitehead.

Stud&lt;nt, lakin&amp; part but pot named in the

Tag day Saturday
•

MUSIC SHOWCASE
" Located at the Point Pleaunt tnn'
Rt. 6l North
. Point Pleas,nt, W. va·.
· The Perfect Evening, Cocktails, Dining and the' Stpvo

.Yates Band .

Pomeroy, Middleport, and Rutland.
Members will be in Pomeroy and
Middleport from 10 a.m. until2 p.m:
and in Rutland from 8:30a.m. WJtil
noon.

Public games party
The Racine Firemen's Auxiliary
will have a public games party
Friday, April 3, at 7 p.m. at the fire
house.

Wed. &amp; Thur. Nite
Ladles Nltes soc Bar Drinks

FERTILIZER
"YOU'll UKE OUR PRICES!"

SptCIII Elvis Tribute Set
Clll 304-675·6276

lions Are

Practice session set

\

.

Y\LE~I\E

. . - - - - - - F R I D A Y ltlru THURSDAY !

-----~

APRIL 3 thru 9
AWARD
8 ACADEMY
NOMINATIONS

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

. .----

1

jr ,

wolk·llllllndrna-•

Mil"'""*'"'

lnclu«*
llmDUI Ali-In-One-·

and p11~ vlnlana D1!111
PIUI tile popular

· EconomoWirl with aide . ·.
dlecharvo and mutctt.r modele.

• Oneida Stalnle~t~ • Baldwin &amp; Selden
Flatware
Brau
-- . ·
• Bulova and Seth • An.n lvenary a~d.,
Thomas
Wall
.
. and . Wedding ~laques
Mantel Cl~k•

• 21 ' EconoMtJichar • 2t " EconoGroomer

•.19" Econo'lnmmer

-

~

.MODERN
SUPPLY
'

Open Tun.·Tllurs.·ht.

•to•

mW.MAIN
I'K.tt2-2164
I'OMIRO'I', OH.
TIIIIIIAWtlti"Ait KIIIB II IIUW'- I'll' Plll.ltalllu,
Ulf'l* I I INti Aftlllllll, Lawns I Oll'dltll.

APPOINTMENTS AVAILAILI
J

Make It Very Special wtth AGift She'll
Treasure As Much As,She Treasur~
the Day._,K&amp;C Jewelers Bridal Gift 'Registry
Carries A.~mplete Line of Gifts for the
·Bride and Groom In Your Life.

dostorla Crystal &amp; China .Sliver Plate
and Pewter
• Fenton Glauwara
eRoyall)oudon China . Gift Items

Thll Alltt-CINIIIMI'I llnl Dl

'/

\ 1\' )liiDDY

•

LAWN GROOMERS

2ncl &amp; Brown St.
ft\11on, W. VI.
Ph. 77MJ21

.

FRIDAYTHRU
THURSDAY

'

(

H&amp;R Block provides timely tax help when you

-'•r.:

~

531 JACKSON PIKE -At .35 WEST ·Phone 446-4524

I

!CLOWNS - Tbele e1- will be a featare ol the Malle f'aotuy
Rmle, a •mbmle ftl'lety type praeotalloo, to be given at 7 p.m. S.IDI'dliy at the Metca Hllb Sclloel Auditorium Wider 1po1110nblp of the Melgl
LMal Atllletle a-ten.
·

staffed to cffici'cnt)y prepare yopr rerurn.c.
lxfor&lt; rhe April15rh deadline.

Oponfom
WMitdlys
f·J II.

'"j'"'''

I

D My taxes are filed
D It's not too late to
see H&amp;R Block

TAX LAWS woRi(
. fOR You

•

Special music will be provided
each evening at a spring revival to
be held Monday through Saturday at
7:30 each evening at the St. Paul's
United Methodist Church in Tuppers
Plains.
There will be a different speaker
each evening and singers will include the South Bethel United
Methodist Choir; the · Singing
Messengers; the Gospel Tones; the
Angelaires, and the Uhrig Brothers.
Speakers wlll be the Rev. Duana
Sydenstricker, the Rev. John
Douglas, the Rev. Gary Peck, the
Rev. John Smith, the Rev. Carl
Hicks and the host pastor, the Rev.
Richa~d Thomas. The public is invited.

......_,..., for ~prll15th?

need it mo;t, with cOn\'enicnl hours and nc:uby locations.
At1pointments are available if you prefer, or ju11 SlOp by.

l

BARGAIN MATINEES ON SAr &amp; SUN
ALL SEATS JUST S I.SO
ADMISSION EVERY TUESDAY SI.SO

Spring revivaf.set

re you

WE'LL MAKE' JHE
(Prlltl Awarded for Bell Drtlsed) .
' COME LEARN TO DANCE THE
"COTTON EYED JOE"
S&lt;~turda
N tte

Every other month, Talkini Book
"readers" receive free book
review magazines to help them
select their books and magazines.
They may also ask for two-year
catalogs so they can catch up on
back issues.
Once the Talking Book user
makes his or ber selectioos, the
r_equest fonn goes back without
postage. Then the mail carrier

Apractice session for the .Voices of
Liberty has been scheduled by Mrs.
June Van Vranken, director, for 3
Revival begins Sunday
p.m. on Sunday at Trinity Church,
· A revival will be held at the West · Pomeroy. The group will present the
Columbia United Methodist Church cantata "The Last Week" on Palm
April &amp;through Aprill2 at 7:30p.m. Sunday at Trinity.
nightly.
S~aker will be the Rev. Kenneth
Watkins. There will be special Tool sale set tonight
·.
singing each evening.
The Meigs Chapter of the Future
Fanners of America will hold a
Band boosters to meet
public tool sale Friday in the Meigs
Meigs Band Boosters will meet High School gymnasiwn. The tools
Monday, April6, at 7:30p.m. in the wiU be on display beginning at 6p.m.
band room.
and the sale will begin at 7 p.m.

If you haven't filed H&amp;R Block is prOJl&lt;tiy

.. ··.
•

Meigs High School Band members

· will hold tag day Saturday a I

SEED. CORN

*KENWORM

villa~ers chorus.

Kesslnger, Angela Damewood, Julie &amp;wk,
Rob)TI Barnett, Lila Lance. Janet Buchanan,

~~~d1::i~~:·.a;::: MIDDLEPORT BOOKSTORE

THIS WEEK'S EVENT AT THE

James Myers, Brent SWell, making up a

prt~~ram lineup urlier Include Susie Swain, Eric

BEAUTIFUL DINNERWARE AVAILABLE AT

*FUNK'S

Marie &amp;yOc. Lee Ann Robinson, Tooya Savqy,
Missy Calaway, Delanie Baker, De leah Sande111,
Carol Hendrix , making up the blue fairy court.
and Brian Fryar, Marie Scy~. Tonya Savoy,
Angela Damewood, Susie Swain, Darrin Drenner, Brian Dailey, Delanl Baker, Del..eah Saunders, Mis.oly Calaway, Janet Buchanan, Carol
Hendrix. AmY Connolly, Amy Berlthimer, Amy
Ritchie, Steve Welch, Victor Cheva lier,
Georgina Myers, Lori Burke. Renet Kaylor,

Final rehearsals have been held
·for the presentation o£ an operetta,
"The Adventures of Pinnochio" at
7:30 p.m. this evening (friday) in
the Tuppers Plains Elementary
School Auditorium.

Marauders drop 7-3 contest

.

. COLO\' · .

~~~r~:t!~,han~~m"::~~::: r-li~·b-ra_na_·_n_.- - - - - - - - ' + I R J•,PauiKelman, ~-r~ -~~~~~ ,

Holzer Clinic LTD.'s
NIGHT CLINIC

*PIONEER

brings books and ffi4gazines to be
read and returned - without
Here's the latest in a series of
postage. It's al.so possible to get
things I've been told I should "tell
ins!lvctional C888Cttes for piano,
peopleabout."
organ, guitar, and other inDid you know that anyone who
strwnents or brallle and larlebas a physical reason for being
print music scores.
· ·
"Okay," you say, '.'I know·
WlBble to read can get books and
magazines on record to tape or in
someone who could use tbat.
braille? (What's braille? It's a
Wbatdoido?"
system of raised dots to represent
Call or stop in at the Pomeroy
letters and numbers which was
or Middleport Public Library or
invented by Louis Braille.)
, the OVAL bookmobile. Ask for a
The National Ubrary Service
Talking Book application. Fill it
for the Blind and PhysicaUy Hanout and have the disability
dicapped publishes "Talking
verified by a professional
Books" and makes them
librarian (jhat's-Ellen Bell at the
available through a network' ·of
,Pomeroy and Middleport Poblic
state and local libraries. People
Libraries and Louise Hamel at
who are blind or cannot hold, hanthe OVAL bookmobile) or by a
dle or read conventional print
doctor. Mail it in. And wait (not
because of a physical handicap
too long) to receive your Talking
may borrow biographies, · Book player and Talking Books.
classics, bestsellers, mySteries,
The Pomeroy and Middleport
westerns, , poetry, history,
Public Libraries have Talking
religious books, children's books,
Book players they can lend you if
and foreign-language books.
your player doesn't work right.
They may alsO •:read" more than
They do not service the broken
70 magazines, including National
players or provide the Talking
Geographic, Good Housekeeping,
Books. Those services CQme from
Spurts Illustrated, and Readers'
another, larger library. But your
Digest.
libraries are the Uie place to
· Best of all, the whole service is
begin if someone you know bas a
free. Congress has arranged for
physical reason for being unable
' people who are blind or otherwise
to read a book.
•
physically unable to read to be
Ask for a Talking Book aploaned - without any charge _
plication today. It's one more
tape or record players, with acfree service provided by your
BY ElLEN BElL

i

WE'Ve GOT IT. • •

SATURDAY
SPRING CARNIY AL Saturday
from &amp; p.m. to 8 p.m. at Racine
Eler:nentary School. Sponsored by
Racine PTO. Refreshments, games
and prizes.
WILUNG WORKERS Missionary
Society of First Church of God,
Syracuse, will bave Easter bazaar ·
Friday and Saturday, 9 a.m. to 3
p.m. at Kroger Store, in Pomeroy.
. MEIGS COUNTY Fish and Game
Assn. regular meeting, 7 p.m. Satur·
day with election of officers tfr be
held.
BAKE'SALE Saturday, beginning
9:30 a.m. at Long Bottom Community Building under sponsorship
of new Long Bottom Eagles 4-H
Club.
BAKE SALE Saturday at Krogers
from 9 a:m. to 3 p.m. sponsored by
junior class at Southern High School.
PHOTOGRAPHY EXIllBITORS
- Please pick up photograph&amp; on
display at Riverby, at the french
Art Colony, First Avenue, Gallipolis,
April exhibit is up and fAC needs
room. Pick up between 3-!i p.m.
SUNDAY
REVIVAL at West Colwnbia
United Methodist Church now in
progress through April 12, at 7:30
p.m. ·
. Rev. Kenneth Watkins

Your
Libraries

'
and
SteVe ' Stone
and Scott last year but a team ERA ·of 4.25 Jim.Clancy are premier starting pitMcGregor may soon be the best of S!ii/O!Bged. any hopes for a high chers and first blcieman• John
all. Tim Stnddard iB .the bullpen finish. "No team will ever win with a Mayberry, shortstop Alfredo Griffin
bulwark.
4.25 ERA," says Manager Sparky ·arid outfielders Otto Velez~l~oyd
M06eby and AI WOO!Is will pruauce
There's plenty of offense with first Anderson.
some
runs, but not enQUgh.
Since Mark _Fidrych is back in the
basem,n Eddie Murray, Ken
PREDICTION:
Baltimore, ' New
Singleton, AI Bumbry and Gary mmors, -the T1gers will rely on star·
1
York,
Milwaukee
, · Boston,
Roenicke, third basema{l Doug ters Jack Morns, Dan Schatzeder,
Cleveland,
Detroit,
Toronto.
·
DeCinces and alternate catcher Dan Milt Wilcox and Dan Petry, who
Graham. Catcher Rick Dempsey, could be a big winner. A1111lio Lopez
shortstop Mark Belanger, second is an in-and-out reliever. ''
I
LEGAL NOTICE
baseman Rich Dauer and DeCinces
Left fielder Steve Kemp wields the
help make Baltimore baseball's best biggest bat. His helpmates includes \ The' Public Utilities Com·
defensive club.
catcher Lance Parrish, . first
I mission of Ohio has set for
pub Iic hearing, Case No •
.The· Milwaukee Brewers, seeking baseman Riehle Hebner, shortstop
81-03-EL-EFC, to review
a way to make up .l7 games, think Aiun Trammell, outfielders AI
the fuel procurement practhey found it in the big swap with st. · Cowens and Rick Peters and DH's
tices and policies of
Louis in which they acquired cat- Champ Summers and John Wocken·
Columbus
and Southern
cher Ted Sinunons, reliever Roliie fuss. A healthy Kirk Gibaon would
Ohio
Electric
Company,
Fingers and startlng pitcher Pete help. So would a comeback by
the
operation
of
its ElecVuckovich.
·
second baseman Lou Whitaker.
tric
Fuel
Component
"We were instantly turned into a
The Cleveland Indians are hopeful
Clause, and related matcontender," says Manager Buck of their best season in years. They
ters.
This hearing is
Rodgers.
have plenty of offense in catcher
scheduled
to begin at
Ron Hassey, first basemen Mike
9:30 a.m. on Monday,
Sinunons )OlliS a power-packed Hargrove and injury-plagued Andre
April 6, 1981, at the
lineup which includes first baseman Thornton, third baseman Toby
offices of the CommisCecil Cooper, shortstop Robin Harrah and outfielders Joe Cbar·
sion, 375 South High
Yount, third basemen Roy Howell. boneau, Miguel Dilone and Jorge OrStreet, Columbus, Ohio
and Don Money, outfielders Ben Ia.
43215:
Oglivie, Paul Molitor and · Gonnan
The Indians traded for Pit- ·
All interested parties will
Thomas and DH Larry . Hisle. If tsburgh's Bert Blyleven. If he can
be given an opportunity
Vuckovich and fellow starters Mike return to his old form, the starting
to be heard . Further inCaldwell and Moose Haas can give mound staff will be formidable with
formation may be obFingers enough leads to protect, Len Barker, Rick Waits and John
tained by contacting the
baseball's all-time save king could Denny. The bullpen, though, may
Comm ission.
be just what the doctor ordered.
kill Cleveland's chances.
The Boston Red Sox, on the other
The Toronto Blue Jays have never
THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
d
COMMISSION OF OHIO
. · hed t f th U
f
hand, don't figure as contenders
liDS
ou o e ce ar an seem
withoutCarltonFisk,FredLynnand destined to make it live last-place
By :
David M. Polk,,
D
Secretary.
f. · h ·
Rick Burleson, despite new . __llliS_·_e_s_•n_a_r_o~w_.::_a_v_e_s_ti-eb_a_nd.J_2:=======::::::__
Manager Ralph Houk's rose.rolored ·r
·'
optimism.
Dennis Eckersley, Mike Torrez
and Frank Tanana, acquired from
California, all had losing records a
•
year ago. The Red Sox do have a fine
bullpen featuring T&lt;m Iiurgmeier,
Bob Stanley and Mark Clear. And
they have punch with outfielders
Jim Rice, Dwight Evans and Joe
Rudi, first baseman Tony Perez,
third baseman Carney Lansford and
agellliS Carl Yasti"Lt!mski.
Now that second baseman Jerry
Remy is over his knee problems,
Houk must find a place for Dave
Stapleton, last year's rookie sensation. Glenn Hoffman, last year's
third baseman, is the new shortstop.
Gary Allenson ligures as the catcher.
· The Detroit Tigers scored more

INDIANAPOUS lAP ) - The from then on it was an uphill
Philadelphia 76ers' playoff ex- struggle."
perience, and Indiana's lack of it
Indiana, which trailed 52-41 at
halftime,
closed to within three poinheiped end the Pacers' first-ever a~
pea ranee in the National Basketba ll ts, 68-&lt;i5, with I: 55 remaining in the
Association playoffs with a two- third quarter. Darryl Dawkins then
game 76ers sweep.
scored the final points of the period
Philadelphia's Julius Erving had a on a layup to start a !HI Philadelphia
game-high 23 points as the 76ers ad· spurt. Dawkins also got the final
vanced to the ·Eastern Conference basket of the surge to give the 76ers
semifinals against Milwaukee with a a 77~5 advantage with 10:29
runs than any team in baseball (83tH j,j~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;;;;;;;
~ victory over Indiana Thursday
remaining.
night. The Bucks-76ers series w:Il
"The key was that we played
open Sunday in Philadelphia.
defense as well as you can play it
Philadelphia led all the way again- early in the fourth quarter," said
•
st Indiana, turning back the Pacers' Cunningham. ·'Our agressive defenattempts to rally in the second half.
se was magnificent. We helped each
" We got . up on them, they other and closed off the lanes. " .
challenged us, but we had enough to
Cunningham and Dawkins both
lice in and I'fn swining pretty good.
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (AP) reach back," said Erving . "Our sa id an improved performance by
An injury doesn't affect a guy like
Mike
Vail
is
hoping
that
his
.308
playoff experience helped us."
Indiana center James Edwards
me too much because I'm a contact
The victory ga ve Philadelphia an made victory more diffi cult than spring average will earn him more
than a pinch-hitter role with the Cin· hitter," said the 29-year old outS.O record against the Pacers this Tuesday.
fielder.
'
cinnati Reds.
season - six of the victories coming
Vail
doesn't
consider himseH a
Vail, obtained in a trade with the
in the regular season and two m the Will elect officers
Chicago Cubs for a reserve role, has home run hitter although he was hitplayoffs.
The JayMa r Men' s Golf played little, except pinch-hitting, ting the ball off the 388-foot· fence
" Playo(f experience might have
Thursday night before the exhibition
been the difference," agreed In- Association will meet at 7 p.m. because of a heel injury.
"The doctor said it 'was just a game here with the New York Mets.
diana Coach Jack McKinney, who Tuesday at the JayMar Club House.
"I never look at the fences. I try to
The agenda includes election of club bruise and five or six days ago he
gui d~d the Pacers to their fi rst win·
ning season and first playoff berth officers, fonnation of committees said it would take 10 days to heal. plllf the same kind !i game
wherever I'm playing.
since the team joined the NBA in and a discussion on a Tuesday I've been getting my batting prac1976·. "We did make a lot of costly evening golf course.
errors and we missed a lot of nice
Baseball signup set
sho!.'l."
The Pacers shot just 38 percent
A meeting of the Racine Baseba ll
RAVENSWOOD - The Meigs Jeff Murray bad two singles, Jeff
from the field , making 3!i of 91 shots. Association will be held at 5: 30 p.m.
Marauder
diamondmen dropped a 7- Marple and Mike Gragainni each
"We were right. there in the at the junior high field on Monday,
game," said Indiana guard johnny Bill Porter, president, announces. 3 decision to host Ravenswood here had one single.
Atrio o£ Marauders collected all of
Davis, who topped the Pacers with All managers and persons interested Thursday in boys' high school
baseball
acti'
O
n.
Meigs'
hits. Jeff Wayland bad a
21 points. "But we made a few in helping with the tee ball, pee wee
Roger
Kovalchik
was
the
Meigs'
single
and
a home run, TerrY
mistakes in the fourth quarter that and · little leagu e teams are
·
starter,
striking
out
seven
and
enabled them to build the lead back. r~;quested to attend.
walking four before leaving with an
injury. Roger Demosky came on in
relief in the sixth and fanned one, SEOAL league play Monday when it
99 MILL ST.
while walking three.
hosl.'i Athens at RockSprings.
ROCK SPRINGS - In girls' high in relief and did a good job on the
· Pat Balue went the distance for
Linescore:
J1~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~l~
I:IJ! 061 X- 7 8 4
sehool softball action the Warren varsity level.
Ravenswood picking up the win with Meigs
Ravenswood
100 100 1-3 6 3
Warrior gals rolled past the Meigs
Meigs hitters were Natalie Lam- 8strikeoutsand7walks.
Batteries: Kovalchik (LP) ,
Marauders, 18-ll, here Thursday bert with a double and single, Paula
Ravenswood out-hit Meigs 8 to 6
evening in a non-league contest. Horton two singles, April King a led by Gene Morris and Bruce Mc;- Demosky 6th, and Terry Wayland.
Meigs, defending reg ional cham- double, Cindy Crooks a single, Pam Coy with a single and double ea~h. S.O. 8,BB7. HR-J. Wayland.
pion, is now 1-1 on the year.
. Crooks a si ngle, and Melanie Dillard r - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1
Twenty-five walks by Meigs pit· a single.
chers came back to haunt the local
The Belpre-Meigs game origi~ally
Marauders as Warren only managed scheduled for tonight was postponed
three hits, all of which were singles. until May I. Meigs' next game wiU
Toni Anderson was on the mound be at Athens Monday night when
for the Warriors, getting relief from both schools open SEOAL league
Susan Surface in the sixth inning . play.
They combined for four strike outs
Linescore :
'
and 13 walks .
Warren
240 750 0-18 3 8
~pared
Natalie Lambert started for Coach Meigs
3J3 400 I- ll 8 5
Rita Slavin 's Marauders and went · Eateries : ,Anderson (WP), SUsan
five \nnings, fanning four and Surface 6tli · and Dolak Lambert
walking 25. Angie Hatfield came on (LP) Hatfield 6th and Horton.

Warren gals whip Marauders

Social Calendar

'·

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

~~ettelers
•. 71? f

MAl,_.

POMEROY

�•
~ --~-----------------

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
19B1

-

The Daoly Senlonei-Page-1

Pomeroy - Mrddleport , OhiO

. This Message and Church Directony Sponsore4 By The Interested Businesses Listed On This Page.

ELLIS &amp;SONS SOHIO
Complete
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!T Mu::;r V~ BEE-N' VOZ ING 1' IJ 5 &amp;UT THAi~
WHEIZ.f \1 ARY

Serv1ce

Locust &amp; Beech

992 9921

21 ~

J Wm " Btll" Brown, Own er
Phone (614 ) 74 2 2777

...

,,

Nallonw1de Ins Co.
ol Columbu s, 0

804 W M tltn

P h 992

S.lv o og~

l

992 6655

RACINE PLANING MILL
Mtll Work
Co1 bm el Ma ktng

~~~~'I

i]Nj'ij

Sy r ac u se

992 1978

TRINI TY CHURCH Rev W H Perrrn
pas tor Roy May e r Su nday school sup t
Chur ch Sc hool 9 15 a m wo rshrp ser
vtce 10 30 am Cho1 r rehear sal Tue s
day 7 30 p m under dtreclron ol AI ce
Nease

POME ROY

CHU RCH

OF

THE

NA ZAR ENE Corne ' Umon a nd M ulberry
Rev Clyde V H e,nde r ~on pa"&gt;lO! Sun
day school 9 30 a m Glen McC lung
sup!
mornrng wors h p 10 JO a m
evenmg serv1 ce 7 30 mrd w e e f.; ser
¥tee Wednesday 7 30 p m
GRACE EPISCOPAl CHURCH
326 E
Ma tn Sl Pome roy The Re v Robert 8
G ra ve~ ree l or Sunday serv-Kes at I 0 30
am Holy Communron on t he fr n; t Sun
da y of each month and co mb ned w tlh
morn rng proye • on !h e lhr rd Sunday
Mo rn1ng pra ye • and "ier m on on o il other
Sunday s ol the mon lh Chur( h School
and nurse ry care prov tded Calf ee hour
111 the Pa nsh HoH 1mmed •otely loll ef\Jli n.gl
th e serv•ce

POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST 212 W
Mom Sl Ned Proudfoot pastor B ble
sc hoo l q 30 o m
mornrng w arship
10 30 o m You l h meetrng s b 30 p m
even mg wof!io h tp 7 30 Wednesday n1ght
prayer mee tmg and Brble ~ludy 7 30
pm
THE SAl VAliON ARMY 11 5 Butt e, nu t
Ave Pome roy Envoy ond Mr 'S Roy W1n
rng otf tcers m charge Sunday holr ne"&gt;s
meeTrng 10 a m Sunday School 10 30
am Sunday school leader YPSM Elotse
Adams 7 30 p m
sa lvorron mee rrng
va r1 0us speak ers and mustc spe crob
Thur sday I 0 o m l o 2 p m ladr es
Home l eague a ll women mn l ed 7 30
p m prayer mee t tng and B1ble study
Rev Noel Herm on teache r

BURliNGTON

SOUTHERN

BAPTI ST

CHAPEL Rou te 1 Shade 8 r b l~ $Chool 7
p m Th ursday wo rsht p sen.11t e 8 p m

POMEROY WE STSIDE CHURCH OF
CHR IST 200 W Mo1n St 992 5235 Voca l
muSIC Sund ay worshrp 'flO am Btble
study 11 a m wonh tp 6 p m We d n e~
day Btble ~ lu dy 7 p m
OL D DE XTE R BIBL E CHR I Sl iAN
CHURQ-t Rev Ro lph Smd h pas tor Sun
da y school q 30
a m Mr'l&gt; Worl ey
Fran Cis supe n ntendent Preoch mg ser
v1ces f trst &amp; 1h1rd Sundays l o llowrng Su n
day Schoo l

GRAHAM

UNITE D

ME THODI Sl

Preoc hmg 9 30 o m hr st and secon d
Sunday s of each monlh th1 rd o n d founh
Su ndays each month worsh tp ser,tcc at
7 30 p m Wed nesda y evenmgs at 7 30
Pra yer and Bt ble Stud y
SEVENTH DAY ADVE NTIST Mulberry
He •ghts Rood fomeroy Pa stor Al ber t
DtHes Sabba th Sc hool Superintenden t
Rtto Wh tl e Sabbol h School So l u•doy
afternoon at 2 00 w 1th Wors hrp Ser vto:o
to ll owmg at 3 15

RUTlAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURC H
Stsl er Hame tt , Worner Sup! Sunday
Sc hool 9 30 a m
mornmg wars h p
10 45 a m
Dc &lt;~ d
Mann mrmst er W rlh om Wahon ~ Su n dny

POMEROY

FIRS T BAP115T

sc hool sup! Sunday school
m o rnmgworshrp 10 30om

SOUT HE RN

9 30 o m

BAP TIST

282

Mulberr y A ve Pome ro y Rev Wrll10m
R Newma n pastor Hershel McClu re
Sunday .chao! superrnlendent Sunday
sc hool 9 30 a m
mormng r wars hrp
10 30
event ng worsh tp
7 30 p m
M1dweek pray er serv tce 7 30 p m
MIDWA Y COMMUNil Y CH UR CH De x
,er Rd
Rd
l ongsv •lle Re11 A A
Hughes Pas tor Sunday School 10 a rn
Ser v1ces on Tues day Thursday and Sun
day 7 30 p m

FAITH TABERNACl E CHU RCH Booley
Ru n Rood Rev Emme tt Rowson pa stor
Handley Du nn supl Sunday school 10
a m Sunday eve n tng serv tce 7 30 Btbf e
teochmg 7 30 p m Thursday

MI DDlEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRI STIAN UNION law rence M an ley
, pastor M rs Ru ssel l You ng Sunday
• Schoo l Supt Sunday Sc hoo l 9 30 a m
; Even ing wors h tp
1 30 Wednes day
))roye r mee ttng 7 30 p m

MT

MORIAH

CHURCA

OF GOD

Roctne- Re v Jam es Sott e'rf,e ld po sl or
; M o rm ng worsh1p 9 45 a m
Sunday
school 10 45 a m eve nrng won h1p 7
• Tuesday 1 30 p m
lod1es prayer
; meetmg Wednesday 7 30 p m VPE

,

MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST Comer
Six th and Palme r th e Rev Mark Me
Clung Sunday sc hool 9 15 am , Randy
Hoyes Sunday Schoof superi ntendent
Don Riggs osst supt MormnO Wors htp
10 15 am Youth meeti ng 7 30 p m
Wednesday lnclud1ng wee tot s eage r
l)eavers, tumor astronauts and juntor
and senior htgtl BYF ch01r p rac tice 8 30
p m . W.dn11day prayer meettng and B1

ble atudy. Wednoadoy 7 30 p m
• CHURCH OF ~HRIST Moddlopo&lt;l 5th
and Main Bob Mehan mtnt sfer Sc ott
, Sofhman
assoctote mintster
Bt ble
morntng w orsh tp
School, 9 30 o m
10 30 o m , ~en t ng servtce 7 00 p m
Wedne1day Bible Study and youth group
mHtlngs 7 00 p m

MIDDLEPORT

CHURCH

OF

T11E

NAZARENE Rev Jtm Broome, poster ,
Bill Whllt Sunday schoo l supt Sundav
school 9 30 o m
morn tng'- w ors htp
10 30
m , , Sunday e vo n9 el ls tl c
meeting, 7 00 p m Prayer meeting
We-dnesday , 7 p m

0

126E

t

.

Pomeroy,

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HAR~I SO N V IL LE

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Chu&lt;eh School 9 30

NORTHEAST CLUSTER

Rev Rt chord W Thomas
Duane Syden sl rtcker Sr •
John W Dougloi
Charles Dom lgon
JOP PA Worshi p 9 00 a m Church
School lO 00 a m
Church
CHESTER. Worlhtp 9 a m
School 10 a m Choir Rehearsal 7 p m
Thursday s 8tble Study Thursd,py s

7 30p m
LONG BOTTOM Sunday Sc hoolot9;30
o rn Evemng Wors hi p 01 7 30 p m
~

ffiRBIJ CKS LINES
1115 POCKETS
~I TH

- ANY KEOICARE SO ~H AT ARE BOYS~ I
CLAIMG I'IOULO YI)J TELLING &amp;EllcVE
BE BI LLED BY US, MCCLf~ ? LIXIR IS
THE HOSPITAL
lei: "GRAY
'' '
AVEH6ER"!

&lt;;UE SO AGITATED, SA rlO~ 7 l
FIGU~E D SHE 'D BE PLEASED
THAT
lir iR PL AYED SANTA
CLAUS FOR
TH' 0(1175

rR

GOLD, HE

~~~~:j oown HAVE
fO FINA6LE".
DOES

Rae one 949-lSSO

Hormonvtlle Rood, Dewey King restor ,
Henry Ebhn Jr Sundoy Schoo Supt
Sunday School9 30o . m Morntng Wor - 1
shtp 11 o m , Sunday evemng serviCe ,
7 30 m Prayer Meehng Thursday 7 30

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LAUREl

CliFf FREE METHODIST
CHURCH Rev Fl oyd F Shook pastor
lloyd Wnghl Dt rector of Chmttan
Education Sunday School 9 30 a m ,
Mornrng Wonhtp 10 30 a m , Chotr
Pracltce Sunday 6 30 p m
Evening
Worshrp 7 30 p m Wednesday Prayer
and B1ble Siudy 7 30 p m

DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST Chode•
Jhur !.doy Brble Study 7 30 p m
REEDSVI l lE Sunday Sc hool q 30 a m
M ornrng Wo r sh rp 10 30 am Eve nrng
Wor ~ hp
7 30
p m
8 b l e Sl ud y
Wednesd ay s at 7 30 p m
ALFRED Sunday Schoo l at q 45 a m
M orn mg Wo rshtp al 11 a m Youfh 6 30
p m Sundays We d ne~doy Ntgh t Pray er
M eelt ng 7 30 p m
Sf PAU L (luppers Pl orns ) Sunday
Schoo l 9 00 a rn Mornr ng Worsh1p at
10 00 a rn Brbie Sludy 7 30 p m Tue s
doy
SOU l H BET HEL (SrlvFn R•dge ) Sunday
School q 00 0 m Mormng Wosh •p 10 00
am Wedn es day Brb le Study 7 30 p m
KENO C HUR ~ H Of CH RI Sl
Oli ve r
Swa m Supe rm tender11 Sun day sc h ool
9 30 every w ee k
HOBSON CHR !Sli AN UNION
Rev
Ke th Eb hn po~tor Sunday School 9 JO
o m
l eonard Gt lm ore flrst'Gfcter
evenrng se r vrce 7 30 p m wecf'(;;sdoy
prayer rneet 111 g 7 30 p m

BEARWAll OW RI OGE CHU RCH OF

630

MORSE CHAPEl

,'

I
Ill

COOPERAT IVE PARISH
CHRI Sf Duan e Worden rnrru"&gt; tt:!r Brble
METH O DIS T CHURC H
class Cl 30 a m morn1ng worshrp 10 30
a rn
eve ntng worsh•p
6 30 p m
Rtchord W th omas Otre c tor
POMEROY CL USTER
Wedne sday Btb le st udy 6 30 p m •
Rev Rober tMcGee
NEW STIVE RSV IU E CO MMUNITY
POME ROY Sunday Sc hoo l 9 15 a m
Chur ch Sunday Schoo l 5EH vrce q 45
W orshrp ser vrce 10 30 om
Chotr
W ors h 1p
se r vrce
t (J 30
0 rn
r ehears e( , Wedne~day
1 P 111 RP.v
Evang el si re Se rvrce 7 30 p m We dn es
Robert M cGee pastor
day Prayer meehng 7 30
ZION CHURCH Of CHRIST Pomer oy
ENTE RPR ISE Warshtp 9 o m Church
~choo ll O 0 m
Harmo nvrlte Rd Robert Pur tell pa sto r
HOCK SPRINGS Sunday Sc hool9 15 o
8t H McE lroy Su nday s(hool ~u pl Sunday
m Wo r~h r p "&gt;e rvrce 10 a m
o6choal 9 30 a m mormng worshrp and
flA TWOOOS Chu rch Sc h oo l I 0 o rn
fa mm un on t 0 30 a rn Sunday wor shr p
Wor~h r p 1I o m
~ervrce 7 p rn Wednesday even 1ng
MIDDLEPORI CLU STE R
prayer meet rn g and Brhl" ~ t u dy 7 p m
HEATH Ch urc h Sch ool 9 30om War
5T JOHN LUTI.. ~•
... HUR CH Prne
~ h•p 10 30 o n1 UM'I'F 6 P rn Rober!
Gro'&lt;'e 1h e Re v W !hom Mtddleswor th
Robrnson Pastor
Pastor Chur ch se rvrces 9 30 am Sun
RU TLANO Chur( h Schoo l 9 30 o rn
day Sc hool 10 30 0 m
Worsh rp 10 30om
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST Je11y
SAlEM CE Nl ER Wor shrp q om
Pmgley post ~
Sunday \ Chool 9 30
ChUrch Sc hoo19 45 o rn
mornr n g wor shrp 10 30 0 m
0 rn
SY RA CUSE C L US~,-~~~-v-edn esdoy eve nrng serv tee 7 30
AN l iQUilY BAP TIST R~.tv Earl Shuler
Rev Sl on ley Mer nl ted . Mmt ster
FORE ST RUN Wor shp 9 am Chur ch
~t or Sur1doy sc hool9 30om Chur ch
Sc hool 10 o m
~ervtce
7 p m
you lh meel rng
6
MI NER SVIllE Church S(hoo l 9 a rn
p m J ue~do.,. B ble Study 7 p m
Worshrp 10om
RACINE CHURC H OF lHE NAZARENE.
ASBURY Church Schoo l 9 50 o 111
Rev John A Collman poster Mor l ho
Woll e Chan man ol th e Boord o f Ch m
Worsh•p 11 a m Btble Study 7 30 p m
Th un day UMW I rs ! Tuesday
tron Lde Sunday Sc hool 9 30 0 rn mar
SOUlHERN CLUSTER
nmg wa, .. hrp 10 30 Sun da y eve nrng
7 30 p m p royer meefr ng
Rev Dov td Horn s
war~ h •p
Rev Mark Flyn n
Wedr1esdoy 7 30 p m
Rev Florence Srn1th
RA CI NE FIR ST BAP TI ST Don L Walke r
Ht lton Wol l e
Posl or Ro ber t Smt i h Sunday sc hool
BET HAN Y !Dorcas)
Wor sh P q 30
sup! Svnd oy sc hoo l 9 30om mor ntng
a m Church Sc hoo l 10 30 o m Brb le
war shtp l 0 40 a m Sunday even tng
study lhursdoy 7 30 P m
wa rsht p 7 30 Wednesday evemng Brbl e
CARMEl Worshtp s Ed and lourlh
sl udy 7 30
Sun days a t 10 45 o m
unday Sc hool
DANVILLE WESL EY AN Rev R 0
seco nd and f ou r! ~ Sun ys 9 30 a m
B•ow n pas tor Sundoy School 9 30
Wors ht p an d Su nday School a t Sulton
0 m mornrng wo rsh1p 10 45 youth ser
Un ti ed Me,lhodts l Church o n firs t and
vrce 6 45 p m evenmg worshtp 7 30
th1rd Su ndays Btbl e study tog elh er each
Wednesday a t 7 30 p m Fo m• ly ntg ht
d mner l oget her each thtrd lhursd oy ol

a m Warship 11 o IJl
PORTLAND Svndoy School 6 30 p m
Even1ng Wonhtp 7 JO p m
You th
Meehng Tu es day 7 30 p m Bt bfe Study
Thur sday, 7 30 p m •
SUTTON Sunday Sc hoo l f1 n t and th~td
Sunday s 9 30 a m wo r!l h•p ltr sl and
th trd Sunday s 10 .t5 o m W orsh1 p and
Sunday School at Cormel Unl!ad
Methodist Church on second and fou rth
Sunday s B1bfe studv together each
W ednesday 7 30 p m Fomtly n1ght dtn·
ner togeth er edc h third Thursday at 6 3~

. ~HAT 010 I SI1Y r 6cT ~R

ANDGIHCE

GrocenesGeneral Merchandtse

servtce II a m and 7 30 p m Prayer
meet1ng Wednesday, 7 30 p m

I •I

I h,

APPLE GROVE Sunday School 9 30
a m Wo rshtp 7 30 p m Is! a n d 3rd Su n
days Prayer meelr ng Wednesday 7 30
p m Fe ll owsht p su pp.er f ~rsl So turdoy 6
p m UMW 1nd Tuesday 7 30 p m
EA ST LETAR T Chruch Sc hool q om
Wocsh tp se rv1ce I 0 a m Pray er meett n g
7 30 p m Wedne sday UMW second
Tuesday 7 30 p m
R~CI NE WE SLE YAN
Sunday sc hoo l
10 am wor sht p ll o m Cho tr prac ltce
Thur sday 8 p m
LE TART FA LLS
Wo r sh tp serv1ce q
o m Ch urc h Sc hoof lOa m
MORNING STAR Wor sh1 p q 30 am
Church School I 0 30 o m

HE MAINLY

pm
SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF GOD -

IO&lt;

MEIGS

TO A MEETIN6 ~ERE AT
THE MEDICLINIC,
M" CLEI'i? \'&lt;HY?

WAID CROSS
SONS STORE

212 E M cli n Str eet
992 3785 , Po m e r oy

PRESBYTERIAN Rev
Ernest 51nck l m pa stor Sunday chu rch
sc hool 9 30 o m
Mrs Ho mer l ee
supt morn ng wors hip 10 30
MIDDLE PORT
Sunday sch ool 9 30
a rn Rrchor d Va ughan su p! Morn ong
w orsh rp 10 30
SYRACUSE
FI RST
UN i lED
PRESBYTERIAN Church W01sh •p ~ er v1 ( e
9 30 o ni Sunday School 10 30 a m Mrs
Sa mpson Hall ~u pt
RUH A"ND CHU RC H OF GOD Randall
Barley pa ~ t o r Sunday sc hool 10 am
Ch ldren s
Sunday w01~htp 11 o m
chur( h 11 o m Sunda y even ng se r
"' rce 7 30 fl m
Wednes day evenmg
young ladres ou•rl or y 6 P Jn Wedne s
day Iom ly wor~h• p 7 30 p m
HAZEl COM MU NilY CHURCH Nea •
Long Bot tom Edse l. Hart pas to r Sunday
sc hoo l 10 am
Chur ch 7 30 P m
p rayer mce l mg 7 30 p m lhursPoy
MIDD l EPORl PENTECOSTAL
Thrr d
Ave ! he Rev Wtllrom Kn rllel pastor
Thomo5 Kelly Sunday School Supt Sun
day ~(hoo f 10 am Cla~ses lor all age s
evenrng '&gt;ervKe
7 30 Brble 5l udy
Wedhe .. doy 7 30 p m you th servrces
fr1day 7 30 p m
MIDDLE PORT FREEWILL BAPTISl Cor
ne t A sh and Plum Ralp h ilu lche 1
pa ~ tor So rurdoy evenrng se nll(£&gt; 7 30
p m Su nday Sch ool 10 30 o m

~ EL L, NO~UT ~E

~Oil

US TO GET UXIR

McCGjsAuction

K&amp;C JEWELERS
I

Phone 992-3480

Pomerov

Moddleport

M 1dd lep ort , Oh 1o

UNI TE D PRES BYT ERIAN MINISTR Y OF
MEIGS COU Nt Y Dw tght l Zo v tlz d1rec

P "'

Mr11n

THE DAILY
SENTINEL

~FRANKLIN'

Po m er oy

MiddlepOrt

Phone 992 · 6J04

2101

BEN

&amp; Lo.Jn

216

Eattnor

nn1u.'S

F('•mHIVAlh (&gt; ll~ Coun tv

THf OIL Y.AP !

MARK VSTORE

Carry Oul

Pomeroy

Loan Co.

~
E Mam

PIZZA SHACK

John F Fultz , Mgr

Diamond Savings &amp;

8'AT ~E5E ~ID

46T S. Third, Moddleporl
992·2T96

MEIGS TIRE
CENTER, INC.

'

992 2318 Pomeroy

THAT \· MA!ii: K ON
HER DIAGFt.l.M HAS NOfHINe'l
TCO "Y!TH '!'OU R MI,51NG OIL
MAP! "1T 5TA ND5 FOiitTMf:
REAL THING!

~h~rvice ~:~:;~,..1 Pat Hill Ford, In~ ·

E Matn

992 51 JO Pomeroy

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

WROH6!

Kingsbury Home

Reuter-Brogan Insurance
Services

Rutland, Oh10 45775

FIR ST

Pomeroy

992 295S

Brown's Fire &amp; Safety
Equipment s•les
•nd
Serv1ce

DO I'\'N FROM THAT CAY&amp;
OJ'SNIN G 8EFJ RE- THf
INI~TER 5 NQW5 1

p m pray er and ' Pro t\e Wed nesd ay
7 JO p m
Sl l VE R RUN FREE BAPTIST Rev Mar
vrn Mork tn pas to r Si eve ltt!le Sunday
school sup! Sunday sch ool 10 a m
111orn rng w ors hr p I I a m Su nday even
111 9 wo r'ih p 7 30 Prayer m eellng ond
B ble study Thu rs.doy 7 30 p m ~oulh
ser11rce 6 p m Sunda y
CHRI STI AN FEllOWSHIP CHURCH 383
N 2nd Ave
M tdd lepo rl Pas tor Bob
Ho llin s Sunday serv 1ces 10 00 a m and
7 p.m Tuesday an d Fn doy ~erv • Cei 7 00

pm
UBERTY Chn sh on Church
l rberty
A ve Pome •oy Rev Frankl n D•ck en s
pa stor Ser v1 ces Su nday 3 00 p m Frr doy
7 30p m Tues day7 30p m

CHESTER CHURCH OF GOD Re' R E
Robt nsan pastor Sunday sch ool 9 30
a rn wor sh tp serv tce 11 a m eve mng
se rvtce 7 00 you th servtce Wednes
day 7 00 p m

lANGSVIl l E

CHR IST I!':N

CHURCH

Robert E Mu sse r pa stor Su nday sch ool
q 30 a m Pau l M u:;se r su pt morn tng
worsh rp 10 30 Sunday even tng ,se rv tce
7 00 rnrd wee ~ se rvrce Wedn es day 7
pm

SYR ACUSE

CHUR CH OF
THE
NAZA RE N E Rev JofYies 8 K1ttle po ster
Nor man
Presley
Sun day
Sc hoo l
5uper rnl enden t
Su nda y sch oo l q 30
am
mo rn•ng wars htp 10 45 a m
evongeltsi tl servtce 7 p m Prayer and
Pr o1se Wednes day
7 p m
you th
meel tng 7 p m

EDEN UNITED BRETHR EN IN CHRIST
Elden R Sto k e p o ~to r Sun day Sc hool 10
a m Raber l Reed su p! M orn mg ser
man 11 a m
Sund ay n tgh t servtces
Chrt st ton Endea vo r 7 30 p m So n ~ ser
v1ce 8 p m
Preoch tng 8 30 p m
Mt dweek Prayer meet tng W ed nesd ay 7
p m Af .., tn Reed l oy leader
CHUR CH ONIIESUS CHR'I ST located at
Ru l lon d on New ltma Rood nex t to
.Fores t A cre Por k Rev Ra y Rouse
pasto r Ro ber t M usse r Sunday Sch ool
sup! Sunday school 10 30 a m warshrp
7 30 p m Brbl e Stu dy Wednesd ay 7 30
p m Solurd oy ntgh t praye r se r v 1 ~ e 7 3D

pm
HEMl OCK GROVE CHRISTIAN Roge&lt;
Wo l son pastor M tldred Zteg ler Sunday
sc hopl sup! M ormng worsh 1p 9 Jbo m
Sundoytchool 10 30 a m evemng ser
... rce 7 30
M l UNIO N BAPTIST M erhn l eels
Joe Sayre
Su nd ay Sc hool
posl or
Supettntenen t
Sun day school
9 45
a m evenmg wor shtp 7 30 p m Prayer
meet tng 7 30 p m We dnes day

TUPPER S Pl AI NS CHURCH OF CHRIST
Vmcenl C W afer s Ill mu"'ls ter Hermon
Block supenn ten dent Sunday School
9 30 a m
evenmg se rvtce 7 p m
Wed nesd ay Bib le Sl udy 7 p m

CHEStER CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE
Rev Herbe rt Grol e pas l or Ftonk Riffle
sup! Su nday Sc hool 9 30 a m Worsh 1p

God Provides The Rain
'

'

That Fails Into Each Life
Sweet
shower

IS

the breath of vernal
- Thomas Gray

In Apnl or any o\her month,
ram 1s something of which there
al~ys seems to be either too little or too much Some people
thmk· ram IS depressmg, while
others !md 11 exc1Ung If 11 doesn't
come too oft en, w1th a perversity
that can. wash out a p1cmc or a
baseball game. On the . other
hand, the Ooods 11 causes can
usually be prevented by mteljlgent plannmg and adequate
drainage systems. Rain washes
the dust and other impunties out
of the air; and there is nothing
like the clean, fresh smell of rainwashed earth. Rain provide&amp; life- •
gmng moisture for the ammalll
and 1ndeed, for all of us , fllr we
could not grow food without 11
Whatever our faith, you learn
" The l4d shan open r,to thee
that the ram is a pnti!iess blesshis
good tftasure ... to give the
Ing of God's creat1on; becuse of
rain
unto they lllnd."
fonns of li!e.depend on 11
- Deuteronomy28:12

Russell Sr m1ntster, Rick Macomber ,
sup! Sunday schobl 9 30 a m warshtp
~ ser.,. 1ce I 0 30 o m ·81ble Study Tuesday
7 30 p m

Not Pentecostal , Rev George Oiler
pastor Worship serv1ce Sunday 9 "5
a m Sunday school 11 a m . worship
service 7 30 p m Thursdoy prayer
meettng 7 30 p m
MT HERMON Un1ted Brethren m
Christ Church Rev Rober! Sanden
pastor Don W1fl loy leader located m
TeJoCas Community off CR 82 Sunday
school 9 30 a m , Morning worship ser
~ v1ce 10 "5 a .m , evemng preaching ser
v1ce second and fourth Sundays, 7 30
p m Chmt1an Endeo.Jat first and thtrd
Sundays 7 30 p m Wtdne~day prayer
meeftng and 81ble study 7 3Q p m

REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS
CHRIST OF lA ITER DAV SAINTS
Portland Rac me Rood Wilham Roush
pa stor Phyllis Slobort Sunday School
Sup! Su nday Schoo l 9 30 o m Mormng
worship 10 30 a m Sunday evenmg
serv1Ce 7 p m Wednesday even1ng
pra yer servtces 7 30 p m
BETHLEHEM BAP TIST Rev Earl Shuler
pa stor W onhtp ser vt ce 9 30 a m Sun
day' schoo l 10 30 am 81ble Study and
pra yer serv1ce Thursday 7 30 p m
CARLETON CHUR CH Kmgsbury Road
Gory Ktng , pa stor Sunday school 9 30
a m Rolph Carl , supennlendent even
.ng worsh1p , 7 30 p m Prayer meeting
Wedne sday 7 30 p m

LONG

BOTTOM

CHRISTIAN

Tom

R1chas on pastor, Wallace Damewood
Sunday School Supen ntendent Wt.trsh1p
se r vice at '1 o m 81ble School l 0 a m

HYSEll RUN HOlii)IESS CHURCH Sun
dov School at 9 30 a m worsh1p ser
vtee s al 10 30 a m Pastor Rev Theron
• Durham Thu rsday serv1ces at 1 30 p m
w 11h Rev O~ey Cart

FREEDOM GOSPEl MISSION cl Bold
Knob locot8d on County Road 31 Rev
l awrence Gluesencamp pastor ReY
Roger
W1llford , assistant pastor
Preochtng serv1 ces Sundov 7 30 p m
prayer meettng Wednesday 7 30 p m .
Gory Gnflith !Bader Youth groups,
Sunday evelng 6 30 p m wtfh Rogel'ond
VIolet Willford as leaders Communion
se rvtces f irs t Sunday each month

WHITES CHAPEL. Cool,.lle R6 Rev
Roy Deeler, pastor Sunday school 9 30
am worshtp servtce , 10 30 o . m Bible
study and prayer serv ice , Wednesdav,
7 30p m

OF

THE

NAZARENE Rev lloyd 0 Gnmm Jr
pas tor Sunday school 9 30 a m war
sh1 p serv1ce 10 lO a m Broadcast l 1ve
over WMPO young people .s s,arvlce 7
p m Evangelistic service , 7 30 p m
Wednesday service, 1 30 p m

FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST. Comer of
Second and Anderson, Mason Pastor
Frank Lowther Sunday school 9 .t5
o m worship service II a m . and 7 JO

p m Weekly Bible Study. Wodnttdcy
730pm

MASON CHURCH OF CJ-VliST Miller
Sl Mason W Vo Eugene l Conger
m tnlster Sunday Bible Study IQ, a m
Wonhtp 11 om. and 1 p m Wednesday
Bible Study, vocal music, 1 p.m
.
LIFE SCIENCE CHURCH - T2 North
Thtrd St Chesh i re. lnd..,andent , fun
domental servtces Sunday evening 1 30
p m Pastor Rev Or Robert Persons

MASON ASSEMBLY Of GOD. Dudding
lone Mason W Va . Rev Ronnie 8
Rose Pastor Sunday School 9 "5 a m
M ornmg Wanh1p 11 a m Evening S.r·
vt ce 7 30 p m Wednesday Women s
Mlnlstnes 9 a m (meet ing and prayer
Prayer and Bible Study 7 p m

HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION Tho Rev Willlcm
Campbell. polloi Sundoy •Schcol , 9 30
a ."" James Hughes, supt .. evening atr
vice 7 JO p m Wtdne1doy evening
f,rayer meetl'lg 1.30 p.m Youth prayer
service each Tuesdby .
•

FAIRVIEW BIBLE

C~URCH

Lolcrl, W

Vo , Rt 1 Mark Irwin pastor Worship
servtces 9 30 a m , Sunday school 11
am , eventng worship , ~ 30 p m Tues ·
day co ttage prayer • m"ting and Bible
Worship sel'\llce,
study . 9 30 a .m

Wodnoadoy, 7·30 p.m.
CAL VARY BIBlE CHURCH. now located
on Pomeroy Pike, County RoOd 25 n.ar
Flatwoods Rev llockwood pa1tor S.r·
vices on Sunday ot 10 :kJ o m and 7 30
p m with Sundoy 1chool, 9 30 o m Bible

study , Wodnotdoy . 7 30 p m
INDEPENDENT HOliNESS CHURCH,
INC - Pearl St , Mlddfoporo Rev.
O'ilofl Monloy pastor Sunday tchool, •
9·30 am. , Morning worahlp 10:30 om. :
evening wort~lp , 7o30 p.m. Tuotdoy.
12 X) p m . Women's prayer mHtlng:
Prayer and praitt service. Wednttdoy,

7 30p m
RUTLAND APOSTOliC
JESUS CHRIST Eldo&lt; atudy Wod,..dar , 7 30
School. 10 c.m. Iunday
7:30p .m
P.OMEROY WESCEYAN

f

CHURCH OF
MHior llblo
p m • Sunday
night aorvlce,
HOliHES$

--.·

)I

\.

f&gt;- II'::J TAJ....F.

Pi'! DF-Sli{L)Y lNG MY
RECORDS IN OUR

'

DOCUMENl S COU Ll)N T
111\VE EXISTE D IN
\

11r--1E FRAI'V\E

TH E F'UTURE

r-

., .' '

..

.\

."
GASOII N ~.

(:_ ~

Alii· Y

_-.----f You

He came to see 40u
when
weresd 1

remember Doc 1

If ljOu t al l&lt;. out I

She's been tall&lt;.1nq
fo r a wee~

Dr James A Bruhl pastor Sunday
scnool 10 a m Su nda\ eventng servtce
7 00 Wednesday prayer maettng 7 00
pm '
CHURCH Of GOD of Prophecy located
an the 0 J Whtte Rood off htghwoy 160
Sunday School 10 o m Superintendent
John Loveday Ftrst W~nesday ntght of
month CPMA serv1 ces second Wednes
day WMB meetmg. th1 rd through fifth
youth servtce George Croyle'!"Pastor

about my tali&lt;,mq,
wdl1t qo

now, Cor ~~~

dWdlJ ?

HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEl - 570 Grant
St M1ddleport Sunday School 10 o m
morn rng Wonhtp 11 a m evenmg war ·
shrp 7 p m Wednesday evemng Btble
study and prayer meetrng 7 p m Af .
ftfloted w 11h Southern Bopltsl Con~o~en ·
i1on

~C

SHE \\o fNT

WINNIES PAo&amp;HTER
BElTER 1\ATCH OUT

.CHRISTIAN

Evening television listings
APR . J, 1U.J1

•

6 00

a.m. , Sunday Sc:hool 10:30 o.m Prayer

FRIENDS
! t l 3 2· t CONTACT
ftt )OVEREASY Guee t SmgerMtu
rne Sulll'o!&amp;rl Hbai Hugh Downs
(Ctoaed Capttoned U s A )
6 30 (2 1. {'7 1NBC NEWS
IS J GOOD NEWS

I I ) BOB NEWHAll! SHOW
( t I FACE THE MUSIC
CJII Hi~ CBS NEWS
II J WILD WILD WORLD OF
,t.NIMALS
til l LILIAS , YOGA AND YOU
112JGJ ABC NEWS

668 Il l !;_BNUPOATfNEWS
7 00 ( 21U PM MAGAZINE
( S1 THE 8TOAY

( 4 I WE LISSA MANCHESTER IN
CONCERT Hao pte tent s a daz
limo t ho w !eaturtng tha p op rock
!nngarwho a captrvattng Amer 1c:: 1n
aud1 ences w1th her aongs
(5 1 ALLINTHE,AMILY
(1 1f121e FAMILY FEUD.
I t l POP GOES THE COUNTRY
0 111~C TACOOUGH
ft l 1111
MAC~Ell ·LEHAER

Rov

7 30 [I) .

• MT MORIAH BAPTIST -

l ~l

\f ).

CARPENTER IAI'TIST. Row. FrMiond
Norrft. paotor Don ~lo. Supt. Sunday Schoof, 9:30 o.m Morning Wonhlp,
10:30 om. ,royer Sorvko, alternate
Sundoyt. '
'
NEASE SEnLEioiiNT NH Will IAI'·
TIST, Donald R. KorT, Sr., pootor, Friday

-lflt - · ·
Khoof. IOo.m.

SANFOIIO AND SON
(I J JOKER &amp;WILD

,

11){1tl OICKCAYI!niHOW
7 68 I I taN UPDATE NEWS
800

111. [1) HARPIRYALLRYPTA
WhentheHirper VtdleyPT At r1e1t0
shul downM&amp;.,.orHarpar s favorrte
bar SleUaworketokeetJit opltl1b';'
campatgntng tor the mi';'Or agam1t
Flora Ae•llr's c andtd,te

Fourth and

vlt:t, 6 :1) p.m. Wednnclaf eenlng 1er·
vice, 7

BULLSEYE

I l l (\~ HOLLYWOQD SOUAitES

Main St . Mkldleport Rev Colvin Min·
nls pastor Mrs Elvin Bumgardner,
supt Sunday school , 9 30om , worship
sel'\lice, I0 :•5o.m.

NOitTH BETHEL Unllod Mothodill
Church, Rov. Char lot Domlgon. pallor.
Sunday Sc:hool. 9·30 o.m : Worahlp Sorvlcl. 10 45 a.m : Sunday Blblo Sludy.
7.00 p.m.: Wednotdoy prayer "mooting.
730pm
BURLINGHAM SOUTHERN BAPTIST
CHURCH Reule 1. Shade Potlor Don
Block. AHlllot~llh Southern loptltl
Convention Suiidoy tchool , 1:30 p.m.:
Sunday wonhlp, 2 30 p m. Tl!uradoy
ovonlng lfblo atudy, 7 p.m
l'ENTKOSTAL /\$$EMILY -Racine.
Routo124. Wllflomflobock. pallor. Sundoyachool,10o.m.: Sundayovonlngtor-

....,..

,.

il l IN TOUCH

( 4 I MOVIE ·(ROMANCE! ••
I Sl ~ MOVI~ ·CDRUIA) •••,
'Wk:klr Mtn " t075
(f ) MUPPETIHOW Gueat Shtrlt't'

B••••r
.
e l t JIIQJ T111!1NCRED!eU HUL.

David Bannur tac e• e~poaurltr om
1 &lt;tatptratareportet who 0t1tman
euvera t.tc:G1e to ~~ 1n tntervtew
w1th ttwt Hulk (80 mm1 J

H!WI
10.28 131CINUPOATENEWS
10.30 I t t RICHARD HOQUE
111 1 MAITEAPIECE THEATRE
Oanyer UXB Ep11 ode XII Brran s
lt l e hlnga rn the blllln ce when a
mtn e tAPIOdll on a boob)' tr, pped
p•e• (Cloud Capuoned u s A )
(BOm•n• ,
I ll )

1UII 111CL._INUPOATEHEWS

1100 l l i . i f lit l e il l &gt;161&gt;1V e
N!WI
DANG-Ill
t I NIOttT GALLERY
MORICA. .E AJriO WISE
1121 I l Q._INUPOAR . . WI
11 30 ! 11. ! 1 ) THe TOfiiOHT IHOW
TheB ..tO! Cirll,)n Oue111 SHi ve
L•••ence Eyd• e Gorme Lrnde
ou•.., Otuy Gtllllpll (Repeat 60 ·

'I·
. 'I

1, ) l!li jifAIIINQTOIO WUK IN
R!VIIW

t1.40

litoA
WALL
•flO
•_
_~
... _ _wu•
Cioooll 11:00
11:10
Geof'ttH Mlcftlftl •• I Glllfol

Flflf Pntttc AdviiOft ....,.. LOlli

-. a,u

AohtM!

Il l CllfUI'OATUI!WS

1 15
2 00

MANNING
tQ1 I BELIEVE
2 10 t4l MOVIE ·(ROMANCE)
Moment By Momenl 1G7B
2 28 31 CIN SPORTS REPORT
2 30 3 t ROSS BIIQLEY SHOW
315 5\ MO\IIE·IDRAMAI"' • Crlm
sait•Kimono " t8Si
3 58 31 CBH,~OATSAEPORT
4 00 l 700 CLUB
S 00 f 5I MISSION IMPOSSIBLE
5 30 13) PHIL ARMS PRE.SENTS
S 58 31 CBN SPORTS REPORT
APR 4 1G81

EVENING
600 t 1 UD 1 t l 01~ NEWS
51
CHAMPIONSHIP
WRESTLING
7 t GOO HAS THE ANSWEA
t I PRISONER Checlo.mate
111
CROCKETT S VICTORY
GARDEN
6 30 ~ 2 1 . 1 1 ) NIC NEWS
• l CIRCUS WORLD CHAMPION·
SHtPSThew or!d sp•ttiiHerbrg top
ptul ormers compete 111 tout ca
l ttQOtt iiS trick rteltllg IUgghng
lrampoltne anatl'fii'I\J 1111JOI:I l e

stramedrel at onshrpwt lhhtsla tller
;w d th e d• fhcu l!l e&amp; ot 9r o w• n ~ up
blac k 111 An c•• ca and oil ers hrs
spe c ra l rfiS tQt\1 rnt o I he tutuut ol
race relatr ous rnt he Unti ed States
(Closed Cep t1onod U S A)
800 12IIJ ! 7 BARBARAMANORELL
AND THE MANDREll SISTERS
Guests Oolhe West Jrm Stafford
(60mtn s I
3 700CL.UB
51MOVIE (ADVENTURE)••• ,
Pttnu Vat11nt' 1954
111 ~ laltl EIGHTISENOUGH CupiCI
wreaks h a~oc tn 1h6 81 11dt01 d llou
seho ld when Tommy da tes the
dauuhltH ot a raa 10 station e 11ecu
trvel o gel arlpla.,. torhtsrecord and
Da• •d 1s sluck w1lh datmgtheo1rl s
o.hvol (;ed motile• {60 mms}
Q 18 l! tO WKftPINCINCINNATt
ll r VIC BRADEN 'S TENNIS FOR
THE FtJTUAE Tf1e Forehand
B;~:~ ed or18ro dEn ~bes t setltny
book, til ts i:IPISOde 9&amp;811.S IOdtSp1111
me cOmmon fTI'r'IM s about the l or
t~ lll'l nd stroke (Closed Caphoned
U SA )
8 30 IJ(I li10JFL0 Earlbrea kUt teoand
b acomese~ tr emfl ly u psellllmraa
mg a re umon w•th hiS old bran
~; ob u s t rn g bUOd)' B J Fl o hnds all
ti llS hard 1o ijnd erstAnd tJnlll she
d scovers tha t B J 191 ~e 1 y au 1ac
hwe lady rtdCI
11 SUPERSTAR PROFILE
t1JLtlliANHEllMAN APAOFILE
Ltll 1an Hellman lhe oll encontrove•
51 al wrrte1 tells othe1earl ydays as
d li!lugghng)'ounu playwr•gh1 her
lust IIISte a! success and rl s toll
d ":;e~ penences wnlong 101 111 8
,
~~v:
900 ! 21. ! 7 1 Hill STREET BLUE
CaptamF llrrllocon trnu eS htl pea ce
r~eg ot 1 atr ons wtlh th e rr va l gangs

C~

.:ISk.EC YIE .:1R:-T

C.JuRSE BV1 l

wrl l ,tll 0w lor a Prt~s r tlent al
w;olkmg louI at ht s pr ec tn cl and
Juhnnv l aRue al th a vtce sQuad s
1ncked rnt o ac(; ep11ng a cas h
~ ayo ll hom o c•uo ked nar col tCII
cop {Aepeill 60 mms )
I l l 11t) Ci)
THE LOVE BOAT
Romance and rntngue rerg11 on !Me
tuytl!i~&amp; s as l r ll ~ efllli!~ e d couples
bua rd the Pactl•c Pnncess to com
pe te m a Mar rtagf' a fh on Crutse
G u~;~ sls t ars DebbteRevn otds Ann
Jrlltan Oonny MOS1 Tea Kmghr.11nd
Cncul ene T&lt;li On (Repea l 2 hrs I
Ill 11 11101 THAT S MY LINE A
poli ceman who per susctes hot
t 3ge t alo. ers roreleasetheu vrct 1ms
d husp1tal psy cho tor;ust who help s
' h ldr~n o .,.er co melllmr leltr OI sur
Y\: ''1' arHIIfi &amp;I OSinges t coac tl•n
oa slo. el ba ll a1e tusl l hree ol the
ll h il

I&lt;~ Sc ma l r ngpe ople lll t1htJO u 5ua loc

t, upahons (6ll mrnG l
I I MOYIE ·tWESTI!RNI••• Tall
In The S.ddll ' 1~4
I ll LAWMAKERS
930 3 1THELESSON
41 STANDING ROOM ONLY
\larlltt es Follow f e• as ChetH
leaders thl oughltmesat pom pom!l
and pep rail res rn 1h1s sen!ul rve
Bljildwa y smash abou t gro wing
up (S i a•s Shelley Ha ck Mered tt h
B IU I EI B11ney
l t1)SNEAKPREVIEWSHostsGflnfl
Srakel and Aooer Ebert re~ • e w the
la tes t hlms tn town ncl ud rng
Threl !l tarr mg J.11 mes Caan and
Tuesday Weld and Fmal Count
down the last rn5tallmenl ot Ttl e
Omen IIIIOQ'I'
00 12\IJ l'f l Hill STREETBLU~S A
lat~e nuntber ot guns are st olen
/rom a loc al store and short I)' ther
tHt tt e• a bla cli out h•t• the aree

('0

'ifr f\)1.\Jl rnl't ~ TH~T SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

r::J '9 ~~._

byHennArnold andBoblee

Un 5Cramble !hell lour Jumbles
one tener 10 tacn squall to lorm
lour ordtnary worCIS

1\ NEWS

101 CIS NEW$
1111 THIS OLD HOUSf II s hme to
tackle some tougl1 ahmyhni;IJ Ob a on
the tLifret 'and rooft op (C losed
Capt toned U S ")
1111 ACTION NEWIMAKER

1 DO 2
DANCE FIVER
3 ' .J.LAC,ffOOD8ROTH!RS

l t.

t i i H!EHIIW Ou•llls Mer!e

H~:~uwerd leonaW•IIram s l t nn• •
s tteMoonshlfl t~C I Ofl\1';11 •

()OWN

ACROSS

1Take paons

I - wtth

2 Old Grt!t!k t:.:Otn
3 Newsm aker s

tl'onfront 1

5 ~'loor

4 Ele \l e s
holoday

CO\ICrtnl(

II Border on
12 Ag"ln.'\t
the tdea
13 Garment

sell SOn
S Frohc
6 Ward o((
1 on the

14 \JIIIe
15 House

Yes terday 's Anlwer

onacuve lost

IS One o!

lll \.eglsla \e

1
the Cole~
34 James
8 Concem'i not 21 Adhestve
- Carter
the public
substance
35 Elotanost Asa
s Take a gues:; Z3 Cocktail
!1 Cockney s
:ro · 1 - camera 10 Y outhful
241 etN·ttle
castle
zs Thumb over 1' Cam er et
2S Malarkey' ' Jti Japanese
!2 Gam!:! for tyk es part
t9 Made a pmch m eas ure
.,addttion
li Ce ltic dett)'
11 Coq au 18 Sluggosh

t abbr

!3 Screens
24 HellenJr

osland
26 Asaan n ver

21 ·Whero
' the he1u11s"

211 App.-.coale •
29 l.otssu
31Medoeval

sh,.ld

,1! Ending
lor exull

13 Voong •he&lt; p
36 Cogar , hape
18 Tophner
19 Soclu y

(Repeat

qu een

•
llAILY CRYI'T01( li OTE - litre's how l o work it.
AXYP L 8 A AXR

TAIRE

rJ

Is L 0 110 G F E I. I 0 W

1

'

LAWRENCE W!UIMOW

11 WITMOIIII ANDMIIY The
... ,,, F .... u _,., t•t ut&lt;tr~ Blldlllllln
(h, al " dlld Avb, 'fHt lld t1111e W1ltl
IIIWd OfiV~Ull J•lltill hid
"''"' fto~ ld•.n , •ndJtiiYh1t1 1 1)f ' " '

•'·'F ..

by THOM~S JOSEPH

II Be fnsulled
4! Subw-lr of

1nmw ) '

I Co.AIIIC COUNTRY
tOr fRONt 'AOI

~~J'(

10 Olympoan

0 &gt;11CONCERN

I I MUPPIT '"OW
101 BUGIIU_,Y
11 QflfCE UPON A CLAUIC The
f MI!IfllloUI
PBtl V
(Cto•eel
L;api! WI"l.l U S A )
G) .
BOLIO QOt.O Ho• t Oranne
wa• wlt.:k Gotar •~.; "' d w1nne•• P••
lorm lheu 1'11! SI/A\11
r 3D I THI LUNDITROMS
4 110¥11 tCOII~O'f' I • 'Hot
LeMAMColdFHt ' I l l

I I~I'MAitGOIIUIOWT11td

..............-(.._..,

1 00
1 10

7

• 30 [I)
If ) IRADY - ·
Thtnkrngthat lhe•flv"l 1wet0f at th1
door rt eller t11m tor traHfc viola
ttonl WattypoHIIItuatNothlfln
11w Ptlllll' but 11\elnquirer 11 an
' F 8t gent ChKIIIftQOft Phillip
of •ptndtng lftOIIIIt we.-eflel
lll&gt;fte OlaM vafttvt'el 0111 to • em
gt•• Nr wtt.lelhe ,...Ia en 11
t or1mtflt ot IMrlllltftl everY Plctl

12 58

Nawt on JOI\11 Heart (Repeat 90
nuns)
! 3J CBNSPORTSREPORT
31 JIMMY SWIIGGART
.! • 1 MELISSA MANCHESTEA IN
CONCERT HB O p1esent s H daz
l hng sho w tea tu1mg !he pop rock
smgur who s c aP.I•~at.nv Amer•can
aud1en.ces Wtl h her songs
I I SOLIDGOLOHost D onne Wa•
w•ck Gold recotd wrnners perform
men tl r! &amp;onvs
t1t) • NEWSAEVIEW
t51 MOVIE (ADVENTURE) ••
CocklelfltiiHtfOII 1'1156
t2). NEWS
3, 30 MtNuTes wtTH FATHER

~:; 0

111111!--

7:30 p m.: Sunday
1

Horn " 1.aG,
l 1TBSEVENINGNEW&amp;
O t 11110) DALLAS Donna and Ray
Kr ebbs fr)' to re concile JOCk and
Mt ai Elite and hnd the•eu• m01e to
I hell dtaconlenllhan lhtt 1'aktpe
pr oJect (60rntns )
r11 APP.OINTMI!NT WITH DEsTINY The Lui Day 11 ol John
OtiiU1ger

I I J THfLESSON

Nylo

Borden.
pastor
Cornelius lunch,
suptrlnlendent. Sunday school 9 30
a.m second and fourth Sundays war·
ship Nrvlce at 2:;1) p m

g 00 218 17 1NERO WOLFE Abrtll•anl
crrmmal boOb'fll &amp;pa Nero s home
malung capt lvel ot th e Ia moue de
lli C!Ive hiS an•stant and a beau.
lttut repo11e1 (60 mms )
13l 700CLU8
1 1112} .
FAIOAY'NIGHTMOVIE
Y11mp11a 1979Star!l JuanMrUer
Arche rd L)'nch
tl (I I (U}) Ttf£ DUKES OF HAZ·
ZIIRD Whtl tt du vrng eta ~•. Lu k a an d
Ba 11re eccuse d ol steahog a valu
able gol d cer ltlrcate alter 1! 15 htd
den rn I he ll Cal (60 m~n a)
! 1 1 SESSION '81 Til tS progra m
oilers a weekly updale on happeo
1Rgs rn the West VirQtnt a
Legtllature
Itt ) COSMOS Backbontt o l N•ght
Q 30 t I I WITH OSSIE AND RUBY
10 00 1218 1~ I NBC' MAGAZINE WITH
OA VIO 8AINKL~Y Tilts weeki y se•
tea olle1s a blend oi current news
Shtr•ea toptca l re porl a and
protrlea Holt Oavrd Bnn ktey 11
!O•ned by conlnbultng rep orte rs
Gemck Utl e)' J,ackPerk,rna Doug
las Kttl e1 and Bets.,. Aaron (60
m1ns )
I 4 I MOVIE -{WElTE ANI'' Tom

REPORT
. 1121 NEWS

mHtlna Wednt~cfay , 7.30 p. m

FOREST RUN BAPTIST -

BURNETT AND

l f l ABC NEWS

7 30p.m
MOUNT Olivo Community Church
lawrence Bush , pastor, Max Folmer Sr

Pomeroy bypou. Rev . Robert Smith, Sr.,
pottor: Rev. Jam•• Cundiff, onlstont
pastor. Sunday School. 9 :.&gt;a .m . morn
tng worship ' 10 30 a . m .. evening worship
7:30
Women 's Fellowship
Tuesday• . 10 a m : w.an ..doy night
prayer service 7 30 p m
FAITH BAPTIST Church , Moton, meet
at U;-tlted St"l Worken Union Hell,
Railroad Strttt, Mason Poster, Re~o~.
Richard Jordon. Morning worship 9.30

EVENING
&gt; 21 G I 11 011 1 M~ IIll GI NEWS
i l l STUFF
CAROL
f51

Sunday mormng worship 10 o m . even·
mg service 7 Wednesday evening, war·
shtp 7 p m Vllrlotton, Thursday , 6 30

UNITED FAITH CHURCH - Routo 7 en

~,pp,

.l,NC.: ; .. ~~ 'lf...~ r

SACRED HEART · Rev Fctho&lt; Paul 0

Superintendent Sunday School and mar·
nlng worship, ~ 30 a m Sunday evening
service, 7 p m Youth m"tlng and Bible
study , Wednesday , 7 p m

:-u::-.;.l.St"l ~r-.jE:::­

-\SCI f 3!- "'I .;
TI'IE ,.,.l,~ (; Th .lT
I="EE Df lofER

ST PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH. Corner

TRINITY Chrlttion Assembly CoolvUip
Gtfbert Spencer, pastor. Sunday
school 9 30 a m , mormng won,hlp, 11
o m Sundov evening 11rvict , 7·l0 p m.
mtdw"k prayer strvlct Wedn"day

\IJ \ 1 (;C"4 T SE

~c

T;.,~i-8

CENTER

pm

:'~

WH" 1 Tt11Ni'&lt;o;
.:-ONSUEl.:' 1\ ..)lJLL
1\.\1\ E 4 f.:'P ~ ur E L
SHE 114=- l.
NICE ~!1 -\ LtT '

Georges Cr"k Rood Rev C J Lemley
poslor , John Fellure suptnntendenl
Church school, 9 30 a m . marmng war ·
sh1p 10 30, evening !leNtcl, 7 p m Bible
Studv Thurs , 7 p m Closats tor all ag11 .
Nursery provided for worsnfp services

7-7 30p.m.
VICTORY BAPTIST - 525 N. 2nd St
Middleport . Jomts E Keesee , po1tor

T"'~T f:

1'1eE?
~

Eugene Underwood, pastor Harry Hen·
dncks 1uperlntendent Sunday school ,
9 JO a m . morning worship 10 30 a m ,
eventn~ worship 7 p m Wednesdav 81
ble study , 7 p m

JUBILEE

"CU

THiN!'\

BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST-

Welton , pastor Phone 992 -2825 Satur·
dav evening Mass 7 30 Sunday Mo11 , 8
and 10 a .m ; Confession, So!Urdoy

CHURCH

TO 1HEM '
~ -~~--.._ -

lliEIAS!

RUTlAND FREEWILL BAPTIST Church -

Buck1ngham pastor Herb Elltofl Sun·
day school supt Sunday school 9 30
a m mornln9 worship and camunton ,
10 30om

RUTLAND

~ H E ~ tk: IFD r&lt;)
0 H ! 5 EE' B't BLJ KNINb
CHA.NCiE TH E t'r.I..SI ) YOUR PAI1 Kb HOW, THE

Y MEAN THEf
YES N fHfi,;: EFFORlS rCl t-lAKtWHA l
6 LE\\ 1HEr-.t \.SURE THE'I' LEFt NO TRA.lkS t&gt; A\ 1 .l 1 ~AS
=-ELVES A.WAY · ~ AND r. II ~&lt;..EL MAflE: &gt;.lNE:: 1 l &gt;s rLT
THAI

WHA.I H A.PPE NEP

I

tN STE.O.D OF

of Rutland)
a m WatTue!idoy Bt·
Thursday ,
m
Serv1ce

RUTlAND CHURCH OF CHRIST Bob

RUTLAND BIBlE METHODIST CHURCH .

.aJN~ '

JEHOVAH S WITNESSES :I73T9 Stcjo
Roule 124 {One m i le .est
Sunday, B~ble lecture 9 30
chtower study , 10 20 a m
ble study , 7 30 p m ,
TheocratiC School 7 30 p
Meettng 8 20 p m

of Sycamore and Second Sts Pomeroy
The Rev Wilham Middlesworth Pcfstor
Sunday School at 9 ~5 a m and Chur ch
Services 11 a m

Amos Tillis pastor . Donny Tillis , Sunday
Schoo l Sup! Sunday S&lt;:hool , 9 30 a m ,
f ollowed by morning worship. Sundov
Prayer
eventng serv1ee , 7 00 p.m
meettng , Wednesdav , 7lQO p m

't t: S
I HI 'r lo: t-

WHAI IHe
" D"AMA1'151" MI$HI
HAVe 15eEN.

r

Now arrange the c ~rc!e&lt;l tefters to
tarm the t&amp;Jrpnll aniwe• as sug
gesttcl oy lht above canoon

JI
Msw. A"'r t :t 1r111 x1 r
I

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DETAIN

-.,..., What the nervous con•lrtiCIIOn worker wn
m011 ol11ll time - ON EDGE

One letl cr s1mp ly ~otand s f or anoth er In th l1 sample A Is
used f or th e t hree I. s. =\ (o r th e t wo 0 s et c SlnCie letten.
1postrophes the l eng1h and form.a.tron of th e wo rds ere Ill
hlnt s Each d &amp;} lh&lt;' rode l t'tt r r s at ~ dlrfl'rtRl

( 'RYP'TOIIUOTES

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MFKFC .

V~•l&lt;rday s Cowtoquot&lt; : YOU "VE NO IDEA WHAT II POOR
OPINION I HAVE OF MYSELF, AND HOW IJTnE I

IIESEHVF: 11 - W S l:ILBERT

�The
r
IN THE COMMON
PLEASE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY OHIO
THE FEDERAL LAND
BANK OF LOUISVILLE
Pia nl If

ex st ng center ine pany s Purchase and boun
Sm h
n the Common
of State Route Numb&lt;&gt;r 681
ded as follows Beg nn ng
P eas Court of Me gs Coun
thence north 78 degrees 00 at the southeast corne of tv Pomeroy Oh o Case
m nutes 1 seconds east
and fo me ly so d by No 17797 The ob eel of the
a ong the grantor s north Da' d Da ey to Ph p Comp a nt sto g ani p a n
ne and l~e Da ey on Ezek el Wo
p ope ty
I If a divorce from
Vf
ex st ng center ne of State then s I ne n the center of
"J
defendant
HOMER A COLE ET Al
Roule Numbe 68
321 4 lhe creek hence up sa d Sm h and Haro&gt;lcd:~,u,rci~
the d&lt;
of
to
and
former
v
nt
hence
south
feet
to
a
po
Defendants
the Co~ pia nt s a d vorce :~~~~~:n;l, ~~,",:'~!1'!~
No 17 58' 86 deg ees 47 m nutes 41 owned by Ph lo Da ns
upon I e grounds of gross Estate ·.c:orcted
LEGAL NOTICE
seconds east con nu ng thence soulh 86 &lt;tegrees neg ec of duty and ex
'•
~PTION
Being a
Pursuan to an o de of a ong sa d ne 500 78 feet wesl to he corner of the trem e crue y for tem
240 Page 803
Fraction 33 Town
Sa e ssued by the Common to a po n thence north 90 fence near a ledge of rocks
porary and permanent ty Deed Records
Ohio Com
cuslody of the m nor
A so
except ng
the ISh&lt;iDci.
P eas Court of M e gs Coun
deg ees oo m nutes oo supposed to be 82 rods
i&gt;.~-~ ••;.;. begin
thence
southeaster
y
a
eng
en l~ren for temP\)rary fol ow ng real
estate
v Oh o w I ofle or sale seconds eas cant nu ng
1 h d
s tuated n Fract on 33
at pub c auc on at the a ong sa d ne 500 00 feet sa d ledge of rocks to and pe a
P9 nt
5c
corner
of
rm nen c
sup
Town 6 Range 14 Rutland
steps o he Cou t House n to a po nt n the eas ne of E zek e Worthen s and
port al mony for set
the
northeast
quarter
of
hence east along sa d ne 1 ement of proper y ghts
Townsh P Me gs County
Pome ov Oh o a 10 00 sad Sec on Numbe 17 and
he p ace of beg nn ng
and thai he defendant w 1 Stale of on o and be ng Sect on 33 Townsh p 6
A M on t he 17 h day of the wes ne of sa d Sec on
Range 14 thence south
Apr
1981 lh e to ow ng Numbe
hence nqrth 85 supposed o conta n 25 further take not ce thalth 5 mo e ful Y descr bed as
40'
!.! rods more or less
descr bed ea esta e to degrees 59 m nutes 45 ac es mo e or less And cause can be heard at any to lows Commenc ng at a thence
east 17 rods to the
be
ng
the
same
proper
y
w
me fol ow ng twenty e ght po nl n he southwest co•
se onds east cent nu ng
true
of beg nn ng for
a ong sa d ne 50 1 22 ee conveyed by Samuel Cole days from the dale of lhe ner of sad Fraction 33
TRACT I
rce
herein
and
Harr
el
E
Co
e
h
s
las
publ
calion
of
lh
s
thence
no
lh
along
the
wesl
to
a
po
t
then
ce
north
79
S lu a e n F act ona Sec
thence
south
to
w
fe
to
A
be
1
Cole
by
deed
not ce and lha the de~en
I ne of said Fraction 33 and
t on 5 Sec on
Sect on deg ees 0 m nu es 10
of Lead ng
da
ed
August
22
1900
and
danl
s
equ
ed
answer
the
east
I
ne
of
Section
33
seconds
east
cant
nu
ng
0
16 Sec on 1
Town 4
!hence down the
ecorded n Book 86 Page th s Comp a nt w h n lwen
1320 feel more or less to a
Range 2 Orange Town a ong sa d ne 341 25 feel
creek
to
lhe wesl bank Of
sh p Me gs Counly S ate o a pont n the granto s 499 of the Deed Records of ty e gh days from the tlate pO nt thence eas a ong a Fat Run thence up Flat
Me
gs
Coun
y
Oh
o
of
he
as!
pub
I
cal
on
ne
280
SO
feel
to
a
po
nt
n
no
theas
t
p
oper
y
corner
01
of Oh o and be ng mor e
Deed Refe ence Vo ume th s not ce and that the ast
he grantors southwest Run n a northwesterly
hence soulh o degr ees oo
fu y descr bed as to ows
59
Page
415
Me
gs
Coun
publ
cat
on
w
1
be
made
on
property
corner and the direct on to the place of
m
nute6
oo
seconds
east
Commenc ng at a po n n
beliinr1in!j, conla n ng 2 50
ly
Deed
Records
the
ls
day
of
May
1981
center
ot
Lead ng Creek
he no hwes co ner of a ong he g anto s east
or ess
Sub eel to a ega h gh
Larry E Spencer
hence north along the
sa d F ac ana Se t on 5 proper y I ne 205 00 feet
Be ng a part
ways
and
easements
of
Clerk
of
Courls
grantors
west
property
o
a
po
n
n
the
g
antor
s
and t he no th es t co ne of
of Sect on 27
eco
d
Me
gs
coun
y
Oh
I
ne
049
73
feet
lo
a
po
nt
0
sa d Sect on 6 and he p ope v ne and the north
Range 14 Ohio
G antor c a ms t t e by
By Mar ene Harr son
n lhe grantors property
ne o he no thwest qua
southeast co ne o sa d
Purchose and
deeds
of
eco
d
as
r
ecorded
DepuY
carne
e of th e southeast qua ter
Se ton 17 and he sou h.
at a po nl which
n Deed Book 159 Page 414
(4 3 10 17 24 5) 1
Thence east a ong the
w E!s co ne o sa d Sec on of sad Sec t on Nu m be 1
rods 16 I nks north
grantors
prope ty I ne
~ence no th 90 deg ees hence no th 90 deg ees 00 Deed Book 235 Page '19
from the southwest corner
and
Deed
Book
238
Page
268
62
feel
to
a
po
nt
In
the
00 m nutes 00 seconds east m nutes 00 seconds eas t
Publ c Not ce
341 n the Reco ds of the
grantors property corner of the east half of said
-aong he no th ne o sad a ong he g anto s p ope
Me
gs
counly
Recorde
s
hence norlh a ong the Frac on 33 thence east
NOTICE OF SALE
F ac t ana Sec t on 5 and t y ne an d he no th ne o
64- ' ods thence south 68
Of ce A so Vp 237 Page
he no hwes qua te o
By v tue of an 0 de of grantors west property rods
th e south ne o sa d Se
thence west 64- 2
35
Me
gs
County
Deed
ne
95
fee
more
or
ess
sou
hwes
qua
ter
o
the
Sa e ssued out of the Com
ton
128 fee to a po nt
rods thence nor h to the
lo
the
rea
I
po
nt
of
beg
n
Records
mon P eas Court of Me gs
n
he g an o s east sad Sect on Nu mbe I
Desc p on o the above County Oh o n the c~se of n ng fo the land here n p ace of beg nn ng con
485 DO ee t o a po nt n he
P ope y ne and fhe ea
act of and The Rae ne Home Nat ana
descr bed
hence north ta n ng 27 00 acres more or
po n o beg nn ng o he g anto s p ope y corner descr bed
EXCEPT NG
be ng the esu ts of com Bank Rae ne Oh o and a ong the g anto s west less
and he no heas corner o
and he e n desc bed
THEREFROM those three
p
ng
he
deed
ecords
and
operty
ne
and
the
p
he
no
hwes
qua
te
of
The Cen ra Trust Com
thence sou h 0 deg ees 00
e)C sf ng cen er ne of port ons of sa d parce
s not by actua f e d su
pany N A
M ddlepor
m nu es 00 seconds eas the sou hwes qua te of
vey R cha d C Glasgow Oh o P a nt ffs aga nsf Townsh p Road No 46 de5cr bed as to ows to
lfl ong he gran ors east sa d Sec on Number
WI
R S 5161
hence sou h o deg ees oo
Ronald G Shepard dba 1 5 00 feiit.to a po nl hen
Pope y ne 223558 ee
EXEPT ON
ONE
TRACT 2
Southeastern Oh o Trus s ce nort1i 87 deg 5 easl Beg nn ng at the northeast
oapo n n heg ano s m nu es 00 seconds eas
An
add
ona
55
ac
e
s
~
ong
a
ne
3SO
00
feel
to
a
along
he
gran
or
s
east
Raile Company and L nda
sou he y p ope y ne and
corner of sa d 27 00 acre
desc bed as o ows
p ope y ne and he eas
Shepard Defendants upon po nt hence no 1)1 0 deg parce men ~e south 36 ,
he sou h ne o sa d F ac
00 east a ong a ne 200 00
The o ow ng ea es ate a tudgment there n ren
ne of he nQ hwes qua
ana Sec on Numbe 5
feel to a po nl n lhe gran rods thence west20 rods 15
s tuated n he County of der ed be ng Case No
e of he sou hwes qua
hence no th 90 deg ees 00
thence norlh 19 2
tor s norlh property ne
e and he eas ne of he Me gs n the Sta e o Oh o 17 617 nsa dCout
w
m nu e~ 00 se onds west
4 rods 22 links
and
n
the
Townsh
p
o
87
deg
15
thence
north
offer o sa e at he front
a on g th e g an o s sou hwes qua e of he
north 55 ' deg west
east
along
the
grantors
southe y p ope v and he sou hwes qua e of sa d D ange Sec on No ~ doo of he Courthouse n
north properly 1 ne 409 76 6 rods thence north 28
Se on E e en
2 640 00 Townsh p No 4 and Range Pome oy Me gs Coun y
south ne of sa d F a
rods hence easl 28 rods
fee
o a po n thence south and
ee o a po n n the g an No 12 and bounded and Oh o on I he 9 h day of May
t ana Sec on Num be 5
19 I nks to lhe pate of
19 aeg
wesl
ong a
o s p ope t y co ne and desc r bed as to ows 1981 at 10 00 o c ock A M
1 28 00 ee t o a po
n he
beg nn ng conta n ng 6 00
ne
443
28
feel
o
a
po
nt
Beg
nn
ng
n
he
m
dd
e
of
hesou h neo sadSe
the a ow ng ands and
sou hwes carne o sa d
hence south 15 deg 45 acres 54 rods
Slale Route No 7 7 92 tenements tow
on Nu mbe
and the no
Fr ac ana -sec on Numbe
EXCEPTION TWO
east
a ong a I ne 73 00 feet
cha
ns
wes
om
the
no
h ne o sa d F a ona
TRACT NO
The
S and he eas ne of sa d
Beg nn ng allhe no lhwesl
sou
h
20
o
a
po
n
thence
heas co ne o ands now fo ow ng
es ta e
ea
Sec t on Num be 6 hen e Se ton Numbe 5 hen e
co ner of the aforemen
sou h 0 deg ees 00 m nutes na,r h 90 deg ees 00 m nu es or to mer y owned by c F s tua ed n he Townsh p of deg 00 wesl along a ne I oned 27 00 acre parcel
67
SO
fee
o
a
po
nl
thence
Ru and County of Me gs
00 seconds eas a eng th e 00 seconds wes a ong the Ke er and Lue a Ke e
south 8 ~ deg 30 we s along thence south 18 rods more
eas ne of sa d Sec on 6 g an o s p ope t y ne and sa d po nt o beg nn ng a so and Sta e of Oh o Beg n
or less
thence In a
a
ne 91 83 feet o a po nt
be
ng
7
50
cha
ns
sou
h
of
he sou th ne o sa d Sec
n ng easl 64- ods norlh 80
and he g anto s eas e y
southeaster y d reef on
lhence
no
l
h
73
deg
00
hen er sec t on o
R No
and he no h ne of
ods
om lhe sou/hwesl
p ope t y ne 596 42 ee o
40 2 rods weslto a point on
Sec t on 7 and S R No 681 hence co ner at th e east one half west along a ne 75 00 fee
a po nt n he g ante s sa d F ac ona
lhe west ne of Exception
lo
a
po
n
thence
soul/1
82
prope y co ne
hence Numl)e 5 33 00 ee o the wes 4 ch a ns to an on of F ac t on JJ Town 6
deg 30 wesl along a ne One above descr bed
no h90deg eesoom nu es po n o beg nn ng and o n hen ce south 5 decr ees Range 4 ol he Oh o Com
wh ch s 26 rods south Of the
0 m nutes wes 38 cha ns pany s Purc hase thence 200 00 feel to a po n n lhe no th ne of sa d 27 oo acre
00 seconds wes a eng the cona n ng 5 6 65 acres ex
ex st ng cen t er ne of
o an ron p rl hence east 4 east 32 rods hence nor
gran o s sou h p ope y cept ng 00 acre as con
parce
thence north 26
Townsh p Road No 46
to Gr over Wh e and cha ns o hem dd e o sa d h 49 rod s and 6 nks
ne 1 36500 ee oa po nt
ods thence wesl tn the
thence
nor
h
49
deg
00
S a e Rou e No 7 thence hence west n a nor
n he en e o he Eas des bed as fo ows
place of beg nn ng con
west a ong the ex st ng cen
S ua e n Sec on 7 a ong th e m dd e of sa d hwes e y d rec on 5
B anch of the ShadeR ve
Ia n ng 5 oo acres more or
ter
ne
of
Townsh
p
Road
oad no h 5 deg r ees 0 rods lhence w es 9 r ods
thence no h 0 deg ees 9 Town 4 Range 2 0 ange
m nutes 52 seconds wes Townsh p M e gs Coun y m nutes eas 1 3B cha ns to hence sou h 4 rod s thence No 46 33 57 t eet to the
n a sou heas er v d ec on po nt of beg nn ng anc;l con
along
the
g an a s S a e o Oh o and be ng the p ace of beg nn ng co n
mo
e
u
y
desc
bed
as
Ia
n
ng
55
00
of
an
ac
e
o ods and 22 nks lhence Ia n ng 6 096 ac es Sub jecl
weste y p ope y ne and
to a
ega h ghways and
M ag ne c Var at on 6 east 20 ods and 15 nks
fo ows
thecen e o he East B an
ecord
Commenc ng at a po n n deg ees wes An d be ng hence soul h 42 2 ods to ease m ents of
ch of he Shade R ve
Oeser
PI
on
for
the
above
sou
theast
co
ne
o
sa
d
1'
1
e
sa
me
p
oper
y
con
he
he
p
ace
o
beg
nn
ng
con
95 6 ee o a po nl n he
Sec on 7 hence no h 90 'eyed by Be I e Bahr and a n ng 12 acres and 34 desc r be d l rac l was
g an o s sou he v p ope
prepared by R cha d c
deg ees 00 m nutes 00 Bess e Bah husba nd and rod s more or ess
y ne and the south ne o
south I ne
seconds wes a ong he w fe to Home A Co le ana
Deed Reference Vo ume G asgow R S No 5161 Two above
he no theas qua e o
om deed records and
sou h ne o sad Sec t on One ta Co e t1Usband and 237 Page 053 M e gs coun
sa d Sec t on 6 thence no
thence west or
rods
ae a s and s not an actual wester
7 8d0 00 I eel o a po n
w l e by deed da ed Sep
y Deed Reco ds
h 90 degr ees 00 m nu es 00
v
with lhe south line
boundary
survey
then e no h 0 deg ees 00 tember 4 1943 and recor
TRAC T NO
2
The
seconds wes t a ong the
of
sad
Excep
on Two 17
Sa d Tract No 2 s fur
m nu tes 00 seconds east ded n Book 150 at Page 378
ol ow ng
ea
estate
g an o s sou he y p ope
rods to the pace of ~J&lt;&gt;gln
he
and
more
part
cu
arly
ong
a
ne
6A1
00
fee
t
to
a
of
he
Deed
Records
of
a
s tuated n he Townsh p of
ty ne and the sou th ne o
n ng conta n ng 95 square
po n n he ex s ng cen Me gs County Dh o
Ru land Cou nl y o Me gs desc r bed as fo lows
sa d Sec on Numbe
6
rods more or less
Parce
One
Be
ng
a
part
ne
o
Townsh
p
Road
Conla
n
ng
n
a
39
70
fer
and Sta e of Oh o Be ng n
6300 ee oapo n n he
All of the above ands at
of F act on 33 n Sec I on 27
Nu mber 279 and he r ea ac es more o ess
Sect on 33 F ac on 33
gran o s wes e y p ope
ter
deduct ng said ex
po n of beg nn ng fo he
sa d rea es ate s ap
Town 6 Range 14 of lhe Townsh p 6 Range 4 Oh o cept ons conta n a total of
y
ne
hence nor h
Co
mpany
s
Purch~se
and he e n descr bed
pra sed as to ows Tract 1 Oh o Com pany s Pu chase
deg ees 28 m nules 48
hence north 30 deg r ees 16 $7 600 00 and Tra c 2 beg nn ng at a po n n th e beg n n ng for a reference ..st:OO acres more or less
seconds eas
a eng he
EXCEPTING
FUR
m nu es 32 seconds wes
$42 500 00 and cannot be m dd eof Lead ng C eek 17 po nt at lhe southeast cor
g antor s wes te y p ope
THER
the
following
real
a ong fhe ex st ng cen so d to ess han two th rds ods eas o the wes ne of ne of the northeast Quar eslale s luale n Fraction
y
ne5607 fee oa
er
ne
e
of
ol
Townsh
p
Road
Sec
on
33
Townsh
p
of
heapprasedva
ue
Ter
sa d sec on thence down
po nt
lhence no lh 5
Numbe 279 214 22 feetto a ms of sa e are cash n hand sa d creek to a po n west of 6 Range 14 l hence south 33 Town 6 Range 14
deg ees 29 m nu es 26
Rutland Township Meigs
hence no lh 3&lt;
da y of sa e and w
be a rack thence eas t o the a ong lhe wesl lne of sa d
seconds wes a Qng he po n
County State of Ohio and
F
act
on
33
40'
1
.1
rods
deg
ees
47
m
nu
tes
46
so d sub ec o lhe 1 en to
north end of a Ia ge rock
g an o s wes e y p ope
be
more fu y desc:rlbed
seconds wes cant nu ng ~ea estate I axes tor 1981
lhence no h 33 deg easl 2 mor e or ess to the south asfo lows
y ne 810 42 ee o a po nt
sad
ne
143
69
fee
ne
of
lands
formerly
a
ong
JAMES
J
PROFFIT
cha ns 91 nks to a notch n
n he g an o s sou he y
Commenc ng ala polnlln
o a po n thence no th 65
o'fned by Ez a Knapp and
SHE RIFF OF a ock
be ng lhe nor
p ope y ne hence sou h
the souhlhwesl corner of
now
owned
by
Roy
Lee
eg
ees
3
m
nutes
15
MEIGS
COU
NT
Y
OH
0
thwest co ner of Ha es
86 deg ees 00 m nutes 00
sa d Fract on 33 thence
3 13 20 27 4 3 o 5t c
and hence east 7 cha ns S gman and a the nor
seconds wes atong the s ends eas a ong a
norlh along the westline of
06
fee
to
a
po
n
hen
thwest
corner
of
lands
now
and
nks
l
o
a
posl
n
lhe
g an to s sou the y p ope
sad Fract on 33 ond the
Publ c Not ce
o
fo
me
ce
o~h
38
deg
ees
28
y
owned
by
m dd e o sa d sec t an
ty ne 66 00 fee t to a po n
east I ne ot section 33 1320
m nu es 36 seconds eas
thence no th on sa d m dd e R chrd B H ck man then
n the g ante s weste y
NOTICE OF
teet more or ess to a
ong
a
ne
365
34
teet
a
a
a
ce
eas
17
ods
loa
point
on
HEARING ON
p oper y ne and the west
ne 32 cha ns and 50 nks
po nt thl!nce east along a
po nt
hence south 65
PETITION FOR
to a posl hence wesl 3 lhe north ne of sa d H ck
ne of th e no theast qua
ne 280 50 feet toe po nl In
ADOPTION
man
land
wh
ch
s
lhe
true
deg
ees
31
m
nules
15
se
te o sa d Sec on Numbe
cha ns and 30 nks o a
the
grantors southwest
The
State
ol
Ohio
Me
gs
cond west a ong a
ne
hence soulh
8 p ace of beg nn ng fo lhe property corner ond the
16 henc e no th 0 deg ees
County
Common Pleas pos t
parce
here
n
descr
bed
4700
ee
to
lhe
pon
o
cha
ns
and
47
1
nks
lo
a
00 m nutes 00 seconds east
Court ProbateD v s on
center of Lead ng Creek
beg nn ng and conta n ng
a ong
ne g an t e s
Case No 23370 pos thence west 4 cha ns lhence nor h 24 rods along
thence north along the
00 a e
souther y proper y ne and
NOTICE OF
and 7 nks o a pos lhenc• lhe ne of ands of the said grantors west property
E
xcep
ng
he
fa
ow
ng
Roy
Lee
S
gman
to
a
cor
HEAR
NGAND
sou h 5 cha ns and 90 and
the wes
ne of he nor
ne 10&lt;1'173 feet to a point
n
EXAMINATION
r ea esta e s tua ed
theas qua ter ol sa d Sec
I nks lo the p ace of ner thence eas l w lh lhe
n the grantors propertf
0
ange
T
ownsh
p
M
e
gs
the
Ma"er
of
lhe
adopands
of
sa
d
Roy
Lee
beg nn ng con ta n ng so
1 on Number 6 248 00 l eet
S gm an about 17' ods to corner thence east along
to a po n n g anto s Coun ty Oh o bounded and t!l-ci&lt;Jioi~',eyC~har es w 11 am ac es mo eor ess
the grantors property line
desc bed as o ows
another carne of sa d Roy
Except 8 acres more o
souther y p ope y
ne
268 62 feet to a po nt In the
Parcel
No
I
T
he
Lee
S
gman
and
lhence
lhence no th 90 degrees oo
ess deeded to A exande
grantors property corner
to ow ng
rea
estat e
m nu es 00 seconds wes
B aley and 2 acres more nor herly n a pub c road thence north along the
lua
e
n
lhe
Coun
t
y
o
s
20
rods
o
a
corne
of
about
o ess deeded to A L
he
g antor s
a ong
grantors west properly
Me gs n he Stale of Oh o
ands now or to merly
Sm lh
southe y p ope ty
ne
ne 95 feel more or less
973 SO feet o a po nl n lhe and n he Townsh p of
A so anolher p ece of owned by F w w lcox
to the real point of begin
0
ange
and
bounded
and
granlo s
so u hwes
eal es ale si tua ted n the thence eas w lh the lends n ng for the land herein
desc r bed as fo ow s
of sa d F w w lcox 53 1/ S
p ope y co ne
thence
Townsh p of Ru and
ctescr bed
thence north
Beg nn ng a lhe northwes
north 1 deg ees 40 m nu es
County o Me gs and ale rods more or ess o to the
along
the
grantors
west
6 seconds east a ong he co ne o the nor heas
o Oh o bounded and east ne of ne west half of
property II ne and the
qua
te
ol
Sec
on
6
sa
d
Fracl
on
33
lhence.
granto s weste y p oper
descr bed as follows
exist ng centerline of
Townsh p4and Range12of
y I ne and pass ng a po n
Beg n n ng at norlhwest soulh w ith sa d east ne 19
Townlll p Road No 46
he Oh o Company s Pu
n the north ne of sa d Sec
cor ner of sa d Oav d rods or to the north ne of
115 00 feet to a point then
chase
n
Orange
Town
ands
now
or
former
on Nu mbe 16 and he
Wolfe s and n Secl on 33
ce north 87 dog 15 east
sh p M e gs Counly Oh o
south ne o sa d Sec on
Town 6 Range 14 of the owned by Rober t G Bobo
along aline 350 00 feet to a
thence
sou
th
96
r
ods
then
thence
w
lh
the
north
line
Number 7 1 364 20 fee a
OCP
lhence east 64 2
nl thence north 0 deg
po
ce
no
th
86
deg
ees
east
86
of lhe sa d Robert G Bobo
ot a d stance ol 2 068 17
rods thence south 68 rods
00' east along a line :100 00
ods to he cente of he
west
7
06
cha
ns
o
e
notch
eet o a po n thence no th
then ce west 64- &gt;'&gt;
ods
feet to a point In the gran
cr eek (East Shade R ve )
28 d egrees 04 m nu es 21
I hence nor h to the p ace of n a rock thence south 33
tors
north prperty line
hence sou h 3 r ods thence
seconds eas
cant nu ng
beg nn ng conla n ng 27 deg west 2 91 chains to a
thence north 87 c1tg 15
east
83
rods
to
the
eest
ne
rock
near
Lead
ng
Creek
a ong sa d ne 170 00 ee
acres mo e or ess
east along the grantors
of sa d Sect an thence nor
o a po nl
Except 5 acres and 95 thence weslto a po nt n the
north property lint «19 76
2
rOds
thence
west
22
th
cenler
of
Leading
Creek
T hence no th 24 deg ees
rods deeded to Jo hn
feet to a po nt thence soultl
ods
lhence norlh SO
58 m nutes 26 seconds eas t
Craw ford
and
Sa rah thence up the center of so d
19 deg 00' wnt olong a
degrees west 96 ods to the
l-ead ng Creek and w lh the
con t nu ng a ong sa d ne
Crawford and
413 21 feet to a po nt
ne
of
sa
d
Sect
on
north
402 65 feet to a po n
hen
6
lhence
10
1he
place
of
ce sou h 69 degrees 26
PEANUTS
m nul es 38 seconds east beg nn ng con a n ng 69
WITNESS my Slgnatu e
acres Be ng the sa me
cant nu ng a eng sa d ne
and lhe sea of sa d Court
427 20 feet to a po nl hen p ope l y descr bed n deed
h s Olh day of March
from
F
orence
Worthen
et
A D 1981
ce norlh 69 degrees 16
A bert cole bear ng
Robet E Buck
m nutes 28 seconds east a
Judge
con nu no a eng sa d ne date M~rch 9 1922 and
197 80 fee o a pont n ne reco del! n Book 123 page
By Janel E Morris
center of lhe Easl j! ranch 1 of he Deed Records of
Chief
M e gsCoun y Oh o
of Shade R ve I hence no
Depuly Clerk
lh 65 deg ees 3 m nules 15
Parce
No
2
T he
3) 13 20 21 4) 3 10 17
seconds eas
cant nu ng t o ow ng
ea
estale 6tc
along sad I ne 675 74 lee s ualed n lhe County of
to a point thence no lh 32 M e gs n lhe Slate of Oh o
Publ c Not ce
degrees 20 m nutes 06 ser and n lhe Townsh p of
conds eas!Conl nu ng a ong Orange and bounded and
IN THE COMMON
sa d line 645 02 feet o a desc be~ as follows
PLEAS COURT
point
thence norlh 69 Beg nn ng al lhe soulheasl
MEIGS COUNTY OHIO
BARNEY
degrees 26 m nu es 38 corne of the northeasl HARRIET J SMITH
seconds easl coni nu ng quarler ol Section 16
Pl•lnlfff
- VI along sa d line 85 44 feet to Tow nsh p 4 and Rar19e 12
1 po nt n the g antor s of the Oh o Company s Pur
HAROlD
EUGENE
SMITH
west property I ne and the chase n Orange Town
II
west line of the no lheast sh p Me gs County Ohio
Defendant
'f'ONDER
quarter of the soulheast thence north 68 rods then
No 11797
c~ wesl 80 ods to lhft ~:en
quarter of so d sect on 17
PUBLIC NOtiCE
thence north 0 dtilrees oo fer of lhe creek thence
Harold Eugene Sm lh
minutes 00 seconds east southe y following lhe defendant whose rnlden
along the grantor s wes meander ngs of the creek
ce s unknown but whOM
to the sou h lin~ of sa d lasl known addrns was
proprty ne and the wes
line of the norlheost quar qua ter thenco easl to lhe Rut and Slreel Route 1
Box 8 B M ddloport Oh o
ter of the southeast quarter place of beg nn n9 COil
and IIW wnt line of the Ia n ng 30 V. ocrn Also the t5760 w II lake nollte thai
dtscr bed lot of on the 25th dly of March
southNat querter Ill the follow
north Hit quarter 01 u d land situate In ln. County 1911 that Harr ell J
and State ator-ld In
sm lh plaint If flied a
SectiOII Number 17 1725
feel 10 1 point In the gran 1 on 16 Townllllp 4 and Comp alnt against the
defendant Ha old Eugene
lor 1 nOrth property I ne Range 12 of the Ohio Com

"~:~~=~~i·~~~

d"''''''";,.i,

~

oo

a

s

no

s

v

lhence south 15
east along a I ne
to a f!Oinl; thence
deg. .00 west along
67.50 teet to a point
south 82 deQ 30 west along
a lne 91 83 feet to • po nt
lhence north 73 d911
west along a line 75 00 feet
to a po nl thence south 82
dog 30 west along a line
200 00 feel to a point n !he
existing centerline of
Township Road No 46
thence north 49 dell 00'
west along the ex sling cen
ter fne of Township Road
No 46 331 57 feel to IM
pont of beg nning and con
lain ng 6 096 acres Subject
lo all legal h ghways and
easements of record
Descrlpl on for the above
desCirlbed tracl was
prepared by Richard C
Glasgow R S No 5161
from cleed records and
aer ats and s not an actual
boundary survey
Appro sed
val
$19 400 00
Terms of Sale Cash.
James J Prof! It
Sher If of Me gs County
Apr 3 lO 17 3tc

oo

COMES MY

OL: PAPPY

no

oo

(

s.c

•

2082
Racine vo unteer Fire
Department sponsors a
shot guri &amp; r I e match
every Sat n ght 6 30 p m
at the r bu ld ng n Bashan
Factory choke 12 guage
shot guns only Opens ghts
22 rifle

'

WANTED
TO
BUY
GOLD
SILVER
PLATINUM STERL1NG
CO NS RIN GS JEWELR
Y M SC
TEMS
AB
SOLUTE
MARKET
PRICE GUARANTED ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP
M DDLEPORT
OHI0992 3476
RON AND BRASS BEDS
0 d turn lu e desks go d
ngs
ewe ry
s lver
della s s er ng e c Wood
Cf boxes a s ant ques
e c cdmplete households
WleMDio(&lt;eR4
Pome oy OH
45769 0
call 992 7760
New used and ant que fu
n ure No rem to a ge o
to small W buy one p ece
o comp e e househa ds
Mar n s Gene a S a e a
992 6370

no

9926310

I PAY highest prices
possible for gold and sliver PARTS for fr ick sawm 11
coins rings jewelry etc Also wanl older model
Conlact Ed Burkett Barber Meytog
copper
tub
ShOP Mldd eporl
washing mach ne 667 3760
or667 ~15

::t ALREADY

DID

KIT

N CARLYLE

"

by Larr y

Wr ght SJ

Fu nace r epa rs e ec
a
wo k p umb ng mob le
home o
es den e 992
5858
AL TERA ONS &amp; genera
sew ng e)(pe en ed wo k
gua an eed M Me e 992
5983

54

==--??R eal estate

Help Wan led

GET VALUABLE a n ng
as a young bus ness pe son
and earn good money p us
some gr:eat g fts as a Sen
t nel route carr e Phone
us r ght away and ge on
lhe e g b ly sl a 992
2 56or992215

S 85 00 o $SOO week y do ng
rna I ng wo k
No ex
per ence r equ red
AP
PLY C c e Sa es P 0
Box 224 D R chmond H 1
NY 1 418
WANTED Peop e IO se
Av on
Work your
hours Parr me o
m f nter es ed ca
2354 or 742 2755

ll

PR VAlE
se ng
3
bed room hom e on R 7
nea r Memory Ga dens 2
ac es Te ms 992 741

s

3

Asoana
ean
of
g
aund oca
eddoneha
nea
he
Ia g ounds S&lt;IOOO 00 992
257
n
angsv e a ea
wo
bed oom home on and one
e gh s a es Ne w v
em ode ed w th e a w h
o c head bu d ng and
ga age
Fa
mo e n
fo mat on ca
42 54
M d 120 s
31

AUTOMOB LE
SURA NCE been
Ce

,e d ?

LOS

operators t cense
992 2143
8

N
can
y ou
PhOne

Wanted to Do

w
do a
ypes o car
penler work Expe enced
and r espons b e No ob o
b g o r to sma Phone 992
3941 any! me
Real Est•te

General

HOBSTETTER REALTY
Office 742 2003
George's HobslelletJr
Broker
NEW LISTING
Beaut fu ran ch home
s tualed on 2 acres 3
bedrooms
2 balhs
arge I 'lng oom d n
ng room k lchen l ull
basement
ca po 1
storage bldg Ask ng
$45 000 00
NEW LISTING
1979
W ndsor Mob e Home
14 x70 3 bed ooms 2
baths equ pped kllchen
with m1~ro wave bu It
n s ereb
v ng room
centra a r 5 ts on 1 93
leve acres 127 600 00
NEW LISTING
Love
ly two slorv home
v
ng room w tn I rep ace
d ning room modern
3 Qr
4
k tc hen
bedrooms 1 ' baths
tu
basement garage
with overhead workshop
or could be apl Ask ng
$53 000 QO
PRICE REDUCED GRAVEL HILL Large
two story 7 room nome
2 beths on large evel
lot S37 500 00
ltUTLAND - PRICE
REDUCED - New 3
bedroom
vlng room
d nlng &amp; kitchen comb
bath corporl e I elec
trlc on n c• corner ot

138 700 00
Vtlml Nlclnlky Assoc
742:1092
Cheryl Lemley Assoc
742 1171

SANITATION
SERVICE

- Auto and Truck
Repa r
- Transmossoon
Repa r

U F 0 k es l 6 E
Pome o

r---------~--------~-------------------J
Space

46

TRA LE R spaces o ent
Sou he n Va ey Mob e
Home Pa k Chesh e qh
992 395d

44

Apartmenl
for Rent

3 AND 4 RM I urn Shed ap
s Phone 992 5434

$269 00

47

Wan ed to Rent

Land o co n n Ches e
a'ea B Cou n s 985 383
M sc Merchan se

S4

KEN SOLES

2459113

ARD

POMEROY
~LANDMARK
........
992 2 8
E Ma n St
Pom eroy

KITCHEN
CARPET

CARPET
ITH PADDING

Rubbe Back

From

f om

Reg I 5 95

ooms

by

12 95 &amp;up

1

$799

J&amp;L BLOWN

Sq
Yd
Cash n Ca y

V nyl &amp;
Alum mum 5tdmg
• nsu at on
• Storm Ooo s
• Storm W ndows
• Rep ace ment
Wjndows
Ft'ee Esl1mate

Headquarters

T

EAFORDrn

V RGIL B SR
2 6 E Second Streel
Phone
9923325

I (614)

OUT OF TOWN
3
bed oom b ock home
w th ha dwood oar s
A c v ur t es and on
shady acre Jus S30 000
YOUR SUBDIVISION
31 ' acres on o d R1
33
dea
lo
sub
d v d ng You name ne
aCid on and the stree s
we
do the r es t Less
lhan 12 000 a houses l e
FOR RENT OR LEASE
5 000 sq f of space
a I on ground f oo Only
S2SO pe monlh
45 ACRES - W d and
n
R u and
woo y
Townsh p E lect c and
wa er t~~Vll lab e 0
dr ng all around p o
perly
Wanl on y
SIS 000
YOUR MINI FARM
Choose as rrwch as you
w Sh 3 5 or 10 acres
Tall trees water elec
lr c and natura gas
ava lable
Good
SYRACUSE o der l]ome w th 6 rooms
and exira large ot Has
a
u ll'ltles
near
playground an~ POOl
Pr ced at $24 Silo
LISTINGS N~EDED
NOW FOR SPRING
SALES WANl YOURS
SOLO CALL 992.76

Yuu

, , )1/'.111&lt;/

Ht•o~rlr

v.utr •r-.

much

t down
faster

3 23

abe

J&amp;F
ENTERPRISES
• Backhoe
e EKca a ng
• Sept c Sy em
e Wa e
L ne

L

Sewe

&amp; Ga s

en ed &amp; Bonded

992 2606

992 780
3

DUMP TRUCK
Ph 992 72 0
5 mo

mo pd

rna

MILlER ELECTRIC
SERVICE

0

• !I a

WANT AD

used R 40 o ch w
6 4 694 7842
T enche

304422278

Farm Bu1ld1ngs
S zes
F om 30...30
SMALL

For all of your wor
ng needs
let Geo ge M le check
you p ese nt e ect ca
sys em
Res den I a
&amp; Com me c al

h

YOUNGS
CARPENTER
SERVICES

ALL STEEL

Addons and
emodel ng
Roofn;andgu e
wo k
Cone e e wo k
P umb ng and
electr ca wo k
Free Es ma es

Utility Bu1ldmgs
S

zes from 4x6 to 1211:40

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Call 742 3195
or 992 76 8°
28

VC YOUNG II

Rl 3 Bo x 54
Ra e ne Oh
Ph 6 • 843 259

r92 62 so 991 73 •
Pome oy Oh

6 5

~~================~~::::::::::::::::=-~================~
GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE

tor sa e

Vonyl &amp; Alumonum
51 Dl NG

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

BISSELl

1978 Z28 Cama o 3SO 4
speed p s p b am m 8
ack ess t1an 7 000 m es
992 3150

POMEROY 0
992 2259
NEW LISTING
3
ac e fa m n Bed o d
Townsh p c ose o S
R 33 App ox 25 ac es
of pas u eat p esen
5
111c es
ab e 2 houses
and seve a ba ns and
farm s uctu es Ca
ta r
mo e de a s

New Homes
ex
ten s ve remodeling

SIDING CO

955 CHEVY exc cond &lt;00
Chevy eng ne 350 u bo
hyd am I ans 667 3333

• E leclr cal work
• Roof ng work
12 Years
Experoence
Greg Rou sh
Ph 992 7583
3 24 mo

Bea ut fu Custom
Bu t Ga ages
ca
to
f ee s d ng
est mares 949 280
or
949 2800
No Sunday Ca s

Cap e
powe
conct on ng

s ee ng

3

=================+===;============-~-===========

$68 000 00

AlB

a

&amp; LIVestBEI«

Autos

"26191

Mode

A

Ph 992 2772

Fou
5 000 ga on an&lt;s
oca ed above g ound a
A hens Oh o
$3 000 00

ASSOCIATES
Jean Trusstll ' ' ' 26611
Rottn&amp; Dolllt 'furner
"2 5692
OFF"E 992 2219

A

Spec aloz ng In
R e Roolong
• Sma Ca pen e Jo b
Oar e B ewe
PH 992 2882

James Keesee

Farm supplies

each Phone

-

H L WRITESEL
ROOFING

ROOFING

INSULATION

7A2 2211

MOB LE HOME o en
Camp e e y
u n shed
Adu ts p e er ed Depos
992 27 49

Housing

Che h e Oh
Ph 36 S60

LEO MORR S
R
S de H R d
Ru a nd Ot:J
7q

RUliANo'fuiiNfTtJ'RE
act

NEW L STING
R ve r v ew n Pomer oy
Conven en
oca on 3
base
bedr ooms fu
ment a ge or arge
d n ng oom and v ng
oom w on r as ong
535 000 00
NEED 4 BEDROOMS
I SO h S 2 SIO y
f a rn e ho m e w h
a urn num s d ng pa
b asemen
s o age
bu d ng and
ce k
chen cab ne s s us for
you $26 900 00
EASTERN DISTRICT
Th s beau lu 23
acres has a bu d ng
s t e bottom ian d for
est and a sma c eek
unn ng th ough
t
$18 000 00
APPLE GROVE
N ce
ay no 3 6 acre~ w ~
an ode home Has
some u f tr ees Wou d
cons de and cont act
Sl 200 00
BEAUT FUL HOME
PLUS
Th is houses
beauly s nd ~cr bab e
1 s s lua ed on a b g
eve
or w th a ge
shade
ees
prel y
sh ubbe y and has 3
tut
base
bed ooms
men
ga age apa t
men and a garage w h
a wo kshop
A sk ng
SSl 000 00
WE HAVE OVER 10
PROPERTIES
TO
CHOOSE FROM Fl
NANCING
AVAIL
ABLE OPEN r 5 MON
SAT
REALTOR
Henry E Cleland Jr

Ga L neD he
wa l:f L ne Hook up
Sep
Tn nk
Coun v Ce
ed
Rou h Lan e

20 30 H P
- 25 60 H P
45 80 H P

Buy Now &amp; Save S2 $6 Per Yard
25 rolls carpet n stock to pock from
R egular backed carpet nstalled free
w th pad

he

P
aeseepg
w h oak ng a
es a
co nd on ng and ab e v
773 565

wa e Sewe E

SHAG

Mam 51

K

REESE ffl~
TRENCHING
SERVICE

mo

Q ,. _

ns ailed

Fu n shed Room s

mo

2

Cash n Carry

u n shed apa
M dd epa
n ud ed
$ 25

o r"17'92 7505

12 Park 51
M ddleport Oh
Ph 992 6263
Any tome

SPRING CARPET SALE

n

s

KAUFPS
PLUMBING
AND
HEATING

Rutland Furniture Carpet Shop

Mob e Homes
fo Ren

Real Eslale- General

Sat 9
C osed T

Ph . ,2~ 2 5016

97

F f y foot o o en 949
'l 94a er 5 Camps te

3 bed oo m
house
n
Pome oy $ 75 man h $ 00
depos
You pa y u
es
992 6384

es
pa d
Two
bed oom mob e home and
one bed oom apa men
One ch d accep ed John
Shee s 3 and one ha m es
sou ho Mdd epo onR
7

Weds F

Free Esltmates

Camps te s o
en
on
seen c ve bank U
es
pa d Sm a
a e s on v
Phone 773 565

l'r1nl4 411'ull4 r11

Two a e s o
n shed a
cond
cab e v 7 3 5651

Hours
Man Tues 9 6

DENNEY
CHAIN LINK
FENCE

SHP
TILLER

o Rent

Trash P ckup In
The v llage of
Middleport Oh

nd S

Most Shmmmg Wrap

42

Mon F

0

9 3 C own Haven 4 x 65
h ee bed ooms new ca
pe 19 Came on 4 x 64
two bed ooms new ca pe
19 2 Champ on 2 x 60 wo
bed ooms new ca pe 976
Ca me on
2 x 60
bed ooms a e e
Sky ne
2sx 6
bed ooms ba h &amp;
a pe
197 0 PMC
l 'l x 60 wo bed oo ns new
ca pet B
S Sa es n
2nd
V and S ee Po n
P easa n WV P one 675
44 4

Aeetals====

s

AlHENS SPORT
, CYCLES
St m son Ave Athen s

992 5682

Mob e Homes
tor Sa e

u

nsunnce

GARAGE

9AMS30PM

WOMAN Seek ng em
p oymenl Hosp a D ol
ce of C n c as ecep
on st o Med ca eco as
Any sh t o days K now
e m no og y
med c a
Ret e eru:es,,,.7 42 2030

W babys n my home n
Sy acuse o you s E x
pe enced and w
s any
age Phone 992 31 0 992
27 9 0 949 27 91

J&amp;C

B ck house on wooded o1
Th ee bed ooms a ge k 1
hen am y oom doub e
9~ age deck M d s )C es
992 5420

s tuat ons wanted

va cancy
Ca e
oom boa d &amp; aund y o
nval d o e de v pe sons
Reasonab e 992 6022

ROGER HYSELl'S

H

POS T O N open
o
Reg s er ed Nu se P ete
he app can o have t om
h ee o
ve yea s n
dus a expe ence as a
Exce en
sa a y
nu se
and a f nge benef s pa d
o by he Company We
a e an eq ua oppo tun ty
emp aye
P ease ma IM&lt;Jbille
esume
o Pe sonne
P0
Box 2 8
Manage
New Haven Wes t V g n a
Fou year o d daub c w de
25265
x 24 n exce en con
on Mus be moved om
EA D Voca st oak ng fo p ese n oca on on Co ege
p og ess ve ock band o Road Sy acuse
ow 20 s
ead gu a s wa nted can 991 2638
ac t Gary F l e 992 362 o
L
992 S026 any me

HAVE

"

sc Merchan se

yea o d wh te Adm a
ef ge a o N ew 3 6
a mond
Hot
Po nt
el gera o 992 7501

7 99 &amp; up

REPA R o
emode ng
wor.: f oo s doo s wa
pa
ng ce ng o
oo
s d ng 992 2759

'

Homes for Sale

1

2

M

Business Services

F REWDOD
S30
oad
Sp t &amp; de ve ed 991 5240

ba h an d doub e garage on
one ac e and one ha of
g ound Loca ed on R
at
F ve Po nls
$4 ~00 00
11

Ant ques

ATrENT O N
U M
POR TANT TO YOU f'W
pay cash or cett t ed check
o ant Ques and co ec
t b es o en e esta es
No h n&lt;) too arge A so
gun s pocke watches and
con co ec t ons Ca 6 4
767 3167 0 557 341

S x oom a m house w h
NOW TILL EASTER 20%
off paint 30% off green
ware Drehe 5 ceram cs
59 N 2nd Ave M dd eport
Oh 992 2151

s

n

"'EP·· I ALREADV
SEEN HIM COMIN'

YOUR
PIANO
Too
valuable to neg eel expert
tuning &amp; and r•P.• r Lane
Daniels 742 '1!151 or 992

ITS BEEL NE S Show and
Tell Time
our new
sp ng and !IUmmer 1 ne s
PUBLIC NOTICE
now ava lable and s 1 un
Not ce Is hereby g ven be evable I Give us a
hat on saturday Apr 14th ca for more informat an
!981 al10 00 A M a pub c tboullhls nterest ng work
sale w II be held on 105 ~hone992 39~1 from 9 6
Un on Avenue Pomeroy
Serv ce
Oh o to sell for cash the LOCKSMITH
Master Keying
Com
to low ng collateral to-w t
1976 Ford Truck Mlr b nat ons Bonded ca
New Haven w va 304 882
Serial No F15YEB28954
980 Oldsmob le Cutlass 2079
Supreme
Ser el
No sa es Opportun tv
Har
3R47AA0482498
'
The Farme s Bank and vest Compan ed s look ng
for
aggress ve
sa es
Sav ngs
Company
Pomeroy Ohio reserves peop 1e
Our present
the r ght to b d atth s sale salesmen ear between
$15 000 o $40 000 per year
an d 1o withdraw any of the Fo a pe sonal nterv ew
above men! oned veh c es send resume to M 5
pr or to the sale Furlher T ay or Route I Box 247
the Farmers Bank and Lilli H k
savings Company ese"es
e oc ng Oh o 45742
lher gllttoreleclanyorall SHOOTING Match
20
b ds subm fled
No ex l.gu,age shotguns only 1 30
Pressed or lmpl ed warran
Apr 1 at the
ties
C ub beh nd
Mar '1!1 Apr I 3
!Oun Shop on
Run Rd Fo low
Public Notice
Any questions? Con
NOTICE OF
742 2421
DRAWING JURORS
Offrice of
Comm s
Losland Found
s oners tlf Jurors Meigs 6
County Oh o Aprll3 1911
LOST
Motorcycle s de
Te All Whom It May Con cover b ack w th GS 450 L
cern
on I $5 00 reward Cal 992
On Fr day the lOth day 2570 afler 4 p m
of Apr I 1981 a 10 oo
o clock A M at the office Lost
16 foot green
of the Comm ss oners of alum num 10hn boat
s
Jurors of Me gs County m ss ng back seat 949 2281
Oh 0 Jurors w II be pub c 0( 949 2 '1!1
Y drawn for the May (981
Term of the Common Peas LOST Near Port and 2
lema e fox hounds 1 wh le
Court of sa d County
Free and S Norr s 1 brown &amp; wh le 843 2354
Lauren Hoffman
Comm ss oners 7
Yard Sale
of Jurors ':-c-,-,-=.!.!C~~!--~
GIGANTIC Mov ng Sa e
Furn ture
app ances
lamps d shes, clothes p c
Publlt Noloce
tures some ant ques oys
NOTitE OF FILING
cameras bed c othfng cur
OF INVENTORY AND
Ia ns books Many m sc
APPRAISEMENT
tems fo Easter Apr 3 4
The State of Ohio Me gs S &amp; 6 287 Coal 51 M d
County Court of Common d eporl
Ple•s Probate Div slon
To the Executor or Ad
YARD SALE Apr 3 &amp; 4
m n slrator of the estate to I me 9 4 235 Mulberry Ave
such ot 1he to ow ng as are Spons by,.X Gamma MU
res dents of the State of Sorority
Ohovz
lhesurvvng
spouse the next of kin the YARD SALE Boso s Great
benefic ar es under the Bend Apr 3 4 &amp; 5 Spr ng
w I and to the attorney or &amp; summer clothing of all
at orneys represent ng anv s zes TV books records
of lhe aforementioned per tapes baby bed drapes
odds &amp; ends to numerous to
sons
I sf
Name of Decedent
Res dence
Large yard sa e Apr 1 3
Rona d Harbour (233-43!
and 4 on Sl Rt 55-4 between
R R 4 Pomeroy Oh o
Porter
You are hereby noll ea Chesh re and
Everylh ng prlced to go
that the 1nventory and Ap
prolsemenl of lhe estate of Yard Sa e Apr I 4 11 from
the
aforementioned
9 30 to 6 00 at the corner of
deceased ale of sa d Coun 4th and Br dgeman Street$
ty were flied n this Court
nSy acuse
Sad Inventory and Ap
prolsement w I be for OLD COINS pocket wet
hear ng before tn s Court ches class r ngs wedd
on lhe 22nd day of Apr I bands diamonds Gold or
1981 all 30 o clock P "1,
s ver Call J A Wams ey
Any person des r ng lo Treasure Chest Con Shop
file exceptions the eto Athens OH 594 4221
must file them at least I ve
days pr ior to the date set Wanted to Buy class rings
wedd ng bands anylh r19
for hearl"ff
Given under my hand stamped lOK 14K or 18K
and seal of sa d Courl lhls god S lver coins pocket
watches Call Joe Cla•k at
1st day Of April 1981
Robert E Bock 992 205-4 al Clark s J.We ry
Judge Store Pomeroy Ohio 45769
By Carolyn G Thomes CHIP WOOD Po es max
Deputy Clerk d ameter 14 on largest
(4 3 10 2tc
end S12 SOperton Bund ed
Slab
$10 50 per ton
Z
, __..;l:n,:..:M
= em=o::.
r ,a:.:m
:.:._--,- De lvered lo Ohio Pallet
Rock Spr ngs Rd
IN Memory of Susan co
Manley who left us 2 years Pomeroy 992 2689
ogo April 3 1979
M ned loved
and not Now buy ng go d and
s ver old pocket watches
forgotten Carol &amp; Phy s
chains diamonds sliver
money end coins Mart n s
3
Announcements
General Store Mldd epart

o

LOOI&lt;Y,
MAW

RAC NE GUN SHOOT
Rae ne Gun Club eve~.Y
Friday night starting lfl
7 30 p m Factory choke
guns only ..,

Wanted to Buy

ce 000
en cond
ent
t56
ac uat onm Exce
es E
11 1
1 es U95 00 7 42 30 0
1976 Fa dE e n good con
d I on S 400 00 Phone 992
39

GAlli A
REFRIGERATION

1980 P ymouth Hor zon
take ave pay mens 992
3625

Rhe em Amana
&amp; car er
AIR COND T ONE AS
&amp; HEAT PUMPS
Ph 6149927038

SALE
2o,-•• 3D%

s.

$2 00 Ill -~ flllllrlt Adcl 50C
Ill -~ pdllro leo Hill-class
- 1 IN IIIHiill&amp;- Sto4 let:

.... .....,

Plllllll' O.,l
The Da11v Sentmet
24J w.t 17 Sl New YIR. NT
10011 Pritlt fWI( MIIMtlSS

z" sll£ •• snu ••••
We sl eam nlil he ww nJ o
save you I me so you can save
money Send now for NEW 198

SPRING SUMMER PAIT£RN CAl
ALOG 00 styles f eo pane n
coupon S2 Yl uel C,iaq. $

U4-14 QIJicl Qitilll

$17$

lw.l.lllttttQIIIII( $1"
ll..SWI I r!IM. 31-!iC $1 15
I~(Jor

,_.. Sl 75

8

Call Ken Young

I 9~5 I

Need Roof Prolecl on
S W E PC 0
guaranleed
roo coa ngs for all oof
lypes Fu s x (6 yea
warranty
I appl ed lo
companv spe c f ce t ons
A I ~ oducts for protec
I c!9'V aspha I
pav ng
masonry bu ld ngs and
resurlac ng concrete Call
1 414 992 7603 afler 5 p m

A

AND SER
MAI&lt;ES

1 Hea Pumps

CE

• E ectr c Hea ng
&amp; W ng
ndus a Co mm er c a
and Res den a

Ph Pomeroy
614 992 7038
3
I mo

Osborn Rd
Aeeodsville. Oh
16 mo

2211

7160

PAR

ELECTRICAL CO.

ANN'S CAKE
DECORATING
SUPPLIES

Gene s Carpe C ean no
deep slreem ex I acl on
F ee
es ma ed
reasonab e ra tes
sea
chquard 992 6309 o 7&lt;2
French C y Pa nl ng
Res den at
com111erc a
ner o
e)C ter or
Spec a zng
n
ne or
pa nllng paper hang ng &amp;
te~tured
ce ngs
Free
esl mates 367 778• or 367

3561

DECORATING
SUPPUES

Hom e
Improvements

PACQUALE

APPLIANCE SERVICE

AU CAKE

N! om cu ved

band necUo hem a1o a n m
mn1s1ory Andveij£AS! Io cul 1
sew few rna nparta ap and but
on sash or wea I ee
P n ed Pane n 487 Ha f S es
10 ~ 2' 14 16"
20'
S e 14 " busl J) akes 3 8
ya ds45 nch

PEST CONTROL

INC

90 P UMOUTH Duser
340 H gh perfo manch
eng ne e u t B M ha
dsh f1 au toma t c be st at
eve y h ng 992 5286

ONE LEAN

TERMITE and

82

P uinb ng
&amp;H.. I~

WA TE R
W E LL S
Domes! c and com me c a
pump sa es and serv ce
Tom
Lew s
Dr ng
Seasona d scoun on pum
ps 1 304 895 3802 or I 304
895 3641

83

Excaval'!i_

COMP.LET E sever •n
stall a on &amp; backhoe se
v ce fo Rae ne Syracuse
sewe d s c Dozer work
f needed 949 2293

84

Electrical
gerat.!!!.-L....

~Refr

n

_!!&lt;caval n!!

D cher work Gas Walef
E eclr c lnsla led 742 2819
before 9 00 p m

SEW N G
M AC H NE
Rep• rs
se 'It'!!
a
makesl 992 2284
Th e
Fabr c Shop
Pomeroy
Author Zed S nger Sales
and Serv ce We sharpen
Sc ssors

84

Electr cal
e a lon
EL W OOD
B OW ERS
RE PA R
Sweepers
toaster s rons a I sma •
app ances Lawn mowe
Nex
o S ale H ghway
Ga age on Roule 7 985
3825
&amp; Refr

�...,
j

~age--10- The Dal ly Sentinel.

,

Area deaths
Edna M. Blumenauer

Homer Winebrenner

-.1

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

N: :~= ~::~:!utted

in

·Middleport until further notice.
The community has been plaqued
with brush fires and residents are to
wait until they get an okay frorn the
firedepartmenttodoanybuming.
Thursday afternoon the , Middleport Fire Departrnent was in the
Silver Run area fighting another
brush fire and the department was
assisted by Pomeroy firemen.

firiday, Apri13, J98t

s~;a~;:c:~~~e!~:nent

Classifietis sell more.

EMS,. ·Volunteers may split

was unlntentional,ly omitted as r.~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiii;;;jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
hsving asSisted Middleport Fire
Department in fighting a brush fire .
in Middleport W$eSday afternoon.
Boosters WI'll eet

,
FWjeral services for Mrs. Edna M.
Horner WinebreMer, r7, South
Blumenauer, 55, Route 3, Athens, Third Ave., Middleport, died .Thor·
who died m Athens Wednesday as a sday at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
The Southern Junior High Athletic
result of injuries received in an
Mr. WinebreMer was born May
Boosters will meet at 7:30p.m. Monautomobile accident, will be held at 17, 1893 at Leon, W. Va., a son of the
day at the junior high in Racine to
·10 a. m. Saturday at the Jagers late · Charles apd Sarah See
make plans r r the sports banquet.
9
Funeral Home in Athens.
WinebreMer. He was also preceded r~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;.;;;;;;;;;;iii;;~
Mrs. Blumenauer was a daughter in death by a daughter, Bernice
of the late Jud and Effie Davis and Snow, lout brothers and four sisters.
was reared in the Darwin area: She
LE!twith $3.00 off new Missesjeansf
also was a forrner resident of the
Mr. WinebreMer was a retired
Harrisonville community of Meigs machinist having worked for the
County.
New York Central Railroad. He was
Wrangler will send you S3.00 by mail when you
Surviving are two daughters. a rnember of the International
buy a pair of new Misses Jeans at our ~tore.
Gloria and Nancy Blwnenauer, Association of Machinists Lodge '!17
Columbus; three sons, · Roger and A.M., New York Central Locomotive
Clip the certificate- from one of these
Ritchie Blumenauer, Columbus, and Dept. He was an .active rnember of
Ray Blumenauer, Athens; two the Enterprize United Methodist
magazines - Glamour, Good Housekeeping,
sis(ers, Mrs. Clifford I Mary I Church and the Heath United
Cosmopolitan, Family Circle, 4/28 McCalls,
Sellers, Industrial. Pa., and Mrs. Methodist Church.
Working Mother, Madameuselle, or SevenCliffo rd (Beulah I Hall, Racine; ' a
Surviving are his wife, Lelah
teen.
brother, Kenneth Davis, Chester, Mohler Weatherby Winebrenner, a
and a half-b rother, George Starcher, brother, Dale Winebrenner,
Send the certificate, your sales receipt and wasteband
Pomeroy. Mrs. Blwnenauer was . Crestline, and several nieces,
size tag to Wrangler ·and they will send you $3.00.
nephews and cousins.
preceded in death by a son, Richard.
Limited lime offer. Stop in today.
Services will be held at 1 p-.m. SunOfficiating at Saturday services
will be t~e Rev. Russell Nitz. Burial day at the Rawlings-Coats-Blower
will be in Beech Grove Cemetery in Funeral Home in Middleport with
Pomeroy. Friends may ca ll at t)le the Rev . Robert Robinson offuneral home· 'from 7 to 9 this ficiating. Burial will be in Gravel
evoning.
Hill Cemetery at Cheshire. Friends
may call at the funeral home from 2
to 4aqd 7 to9 p.m. Saturday.

ELBERFELDS

n
'
t

Wmmn:s·

··

By LARRY EWING
. GAWPOUS - An ultimate break between the
Gallii County Emergency Medical Service !lnd the
Gallla County Volunteer Emergency Squad Inc. seems
to be developing as the June 12 contract expiration date
between the county and \hal organization approaches.
The county currently leases the Jackson Pike
squadroom and-three ambulances frorn the Volunteer
·Emergency Squad. During the past week- in the midst of threats of eviction and non-renewal of th8t lease ad- ·
a continuing ~wer struggl~ has emerged over,
,.___

MEN'S '18.95
BLUE DENIM

.

~

100% Cotton. Sanforized
Shrunk ..
Neck sizes 14ih - 20.
Sleeve lengths
32 -36 inches .. Style
as pictured. Spec·
ial Sale Price.
·

.. . .......

Vo). 15 No. 10
Copyrighl0!11981

..ELBEREELDS I" POMEROY

Friends may ca ll at Ewing
Funeral Home to pay their respects
to the family of Emil H. Aleshire, 58,
Pomeroy, who died Thursday mor·
ning. The name of U1e funeral home
was uninteni onally omitted.

'•

Uarify nanw
The Tammy K. Mash listed in
Thursday's paper who was sen·
tenccd to a State Penal Institution is
not Tammy K. Mash who is employed at Bahr Clothiers and resides
at RL 2, Pomeroy.

/

Supervisors
(Continued from page I I
upon failure to do so, they will be
arrested following the signing of
warrants,
Council agreed to replace the front
steps on the house owned by the
village located near the park.
Attending were Mayor Pickens,
Jan ice Lawson, clerk , George
Holman, treasurer. Millon Varian
police chief, Willie Guinther. Mik~
Struble, Mick Ash, Jack Williams,
Troy Zwilling and Katie Crow, council members, Kenneth Cundiff Bill
Cundiff, Jim Teaford and Doug
Hemsley.

APRIL

.

group of county highway employes
at a picket tine set up near the county landfill charged that th~ highway
deparlmf!lt "has too many chiefs
and not enough indians". ·They
charged that there are too many
high paid supervisors absorbing
payroll money, therefore, there is
not enough left for workers.
They cited figures stating that the
county engineer receives $23,000 a
year;, the ·assistant engineer, $II an
hour; the superintendent, $7.49; the
office manager, $6.76, and the
assistant superintendent, $6.68 per
hour. There are also an office clerk
and a tool room clerk thus increasing the lllministrative number
of employes, the men. claimed. They
said that.there are only 24 workers
and the administrative force is too
large for that many.
The also charged that workers are
not being replliced as they retire or
resign. They also complained about
three supervisors driving county
cars to and from their homes.
The men indicated the workers
have been ready to negotiate at 11ny
time to seWe the strike and get back
on their jobs.
They reported that when
negotiations started · they w~re
seeking a three year contract which
provided for a 50 cents an hour increase (or the first two years plus
one-hliU of major 111edical insurance
the first year, full payment of major
medical the secon&lt;1 year and 40 cents
on the third year plus health and
welfare benefits. The term of the
contract being negotiated was then
reduced to two years, they saiq, and
they wanted 60 cents an hour inContinued on A-4

QHIO CavAJcrL 8
Lo&lt;:. .. l /~fo

LANDFILL - These Meigs
Co110ty Highway Department
employees on a picket Une at the
county landfill Friday afternoon
prohibited use of the facWty by
haulel'l or individuals. The
workers Indicated they have been
ready to negotiate their contract
but that no effort bas been made
to reopen the negotiations whlcb
broke down Mooday, A source
from the co110ty lrulicatid that H
requ~ts of tbe workers were met
the budget of the department
would be In the red. Workers
charge that there are too many
high paid supervisors with the
department A strike by
employes of the Meigs County
Highway Department could
become a smelly iltuation.
Workers bave establ!Bbed a
picket llne at the county-owned
landfill, prohibiting liB use by
garbage and trash haulers.
Meaollme, residents unaware
Friday that the landfill was ciOII·
ed due to the strike put out sacks
of garbage and trash for haulers.
Wbeo no pickup was made, most
residents moved the' sacks to less
conspicuous locallons at thetr
home until some ao1utloo Is work·
ed oul. With the current warm
temperatures the sltuat!oo could
become smelly as garbage stacks
up and residents wait lor service
to be resumed.
•

·No.funds available
to settle walkout
J

" POMEROY-sheriff · James J. lives.
Proffitt at noon Saturday isaued a
''I was budgeted $119,000 for paying
statement to the effect that he has no 10 people and this has to run for the
funds with which to seWe a strike'by year of 1981. Due to the high costs of
his deputi\!8tnrultion that we all rnust face, there
The,sheriff said:
l~,s_no money that can be transferred
"For the benefit of those in- ~my other budget categories to
terested citizens who wonder why I give my men a raise.
don't make a seWement with my
"I want the citizens of this county
- cleputiea who are on strike, I· want to understand that I cannot obligate
· you to know that if I had the money myself beyond what the corn· In my budg!:J I assure you I would missioners have appropriated to me.
malle some kJrid of settlement. I Not only myseU, but it looks like the
know that all of my personnel are commisaioners have a problem
very Ulller paid for the kind of chan· also/'
ces thl! they take daily with their

4th

Meigs H igh Sc hool
Spon s or : Mei gs Athletic

.

&amp; Bg,oste rs

'Predict lengthy-coal ·strike·

Show Tlme : 7:00

By'ntOMAsRIZZO
Auoclated Pren Writer

· • The president of a United Mine
: :Workel'l Jos:alln Ohio said Saturday
· :lie lhinkll the strike against the soft
~~industry will bti u long 8ll three

: ptha.

.

-: Although' the indllltQ' claimed it

:,has 1ufficlent s~ckpiles to
:1rfth.tand a lengthy 'strike, H:R.
:llall; preaident of UMW Local1340 in

-MAGIC

· 'New Lesingten, " people use 11
• mucll coal in the lllllllnel' II they do
- in the winter. People IWl need elec-

'.

ANTAS

Contact your dealer or
call BANK ONE at 992··2'133.

·'

REVUE

L

.

Minutes of
100 Thrills &amp; Laughs 100

''

Stars Direc t From

STAGE &amp; SCREEN
Member FDIC

'"

tricity."
llelplte a propcll8l to l'llle wa1ea
_-111• percent, the Wlion'1 rant and
• fAe turned thwnt. clown on a
;_., propc11~ contract with the IO(koai

,
_
BANK ONE ..
'-

.

~ded

,

Industry Tuesday by a 2-1 margin.
HaU said in a telephone interview
that his 600-member local and others
acrou the Eastern region of the
United States voted doWn the contract beCause of the removal of a
requiremer\t" that unionized coal
companies pay 8 $1.90 royalty on
each ton of coal they ~ss from

non-WIIon m1ne1.

"Givinll up that $1.90 a ton would

affect union aecurity becall8e coal
opealonl would mine and buy more
llOIHIIIIon coal," HaU Ald. "They
could 10 out arMI and buy ... ltrlp

C9ll cheaper than they could mine It
for. Tile IDYl working in Wlion
mlnel could end up worklnl only two
Continued on A-4 '

. '

forecast, state w~er

Ollltl1l ltlrw eat- "'**lytllruulbW.....,y - FilrManday. •
e1t11c1 otlllonn or tllutldentGmla 'l'leltll7 lllld-WIIIIIilda)'. a--ally
a&amp; HIP Monday Ill
&amp;o low.- IIIII W1n11i1W 10 the • r-lay llld

..

till*

· Mlildly.IAiwlll niCMia theJIIIIIII'III eomltllll early MondlyWinlllnc

BANK ,ONE OF POMEROY, NA
Pomeroy • Rutland • Tuppe111 Plaine

. .....

• tnllt411tll'ly1'ulllllyllld "........,

'

:. ·~...,.
,......., ldltf - ·...,:elllnce Gl ..... lll the liiOniiJII,.Hllh 11610
'•

.•
11 Sections, 94 Pages 35 Cents
A Multim edia Inc . News a er

Sunday, AprilS, 1981

.

'

POMEROY

SAT.,

Middh!port· Pomeroy-Gallipolis- Poinl Pleasant

ByBOBHOEFUCH
POMJ:;ROY-Two groups of county
employes continued their strike action Saturday morning apparently
after no action was taken to get the
workers back on their jobs. ,
· Deputies of Sheriff Jarnes J. Prof·
fi(t and the county highway department employes went on strike
TUesday.
•
·- Sherifrs deputies, joinect by
j\'lyes, and mothers were picking in
the area.of the courthouse and county jail Saturday rnorning.;the coun·
ty highway department workers
establjshed a picket line near the
cOunty garage· and on Thursday
established a second picket line at
11\e county landfill closing that
facility to all haulers and in·
dividuals.
Residents unaware that the landfill had been closed by the strike
place garbage and trash along curbs
for pickup Friday. There was no
pickup.
Rlicine Village officials an·
nounced there would be no pickup·
service 'until the landfill is reopened
and Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews isaued a warning to anyone
who tries to throw garbage and trash
along Pomeroy streets that they will
be prosecuted to the full extent of the
law.
While trash haulers are not on
strike, the situation was compared
to cities where garbage has piled up
due to strikes. Apparently highway
workers feel public pressure may
help !bern to a strike settlement as
garbage continues to pile up and is
"enhanced" by the current warm
weather.
· Meantime, Friday afte_moon, a

Six t'lllt'rg-t'nf'y runs
Six calls were answered Thursdav
and Frida y morning by locUJ
emergency units, the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services reports .
The Hutland Unit at 10 :02 p.m.
Thursday took Ja mes Congo from
Mine 2 to Holzer Medical Center: at
8:34a .m., Robert Davis from Meigs
Mme 2 to Pleasant Valley Hospita l,
and William Tillis. New Li ma Hoad,
to Veterans Memorial Hospital at
10 2ti p.m. The Pomeroy Unit at 7:23
p.m. took Mrs. Grace Swa n,
Pomeroy Hea lth Care Center, to
Veterans Memorial and the Middleport U,nit at I I::lll took Mildred
Laudermilt from Middleport to
Pleasant Valley Hospital. Fnday at
9:04 a. m., the Racine Unit took
Hazel Carnahan from Fifth St. to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

.
.entmt
,

:Wives·join
.picket line

SALE ENDS SATURDAY 5 P.M .

f t Ewing- Chape l

squadroom and certain EMS equipment. (Note: the
S9Liadroom was coostructed by the Volunteers ·on
property owned by the county - the Volunteers main• lain · control of the facility through a ~year lease
· agreement with the county - to station the county
EMS at that location, the .col1lJIIissioners lease the
property from the Volunteer Squad ).
Seveo Full-Time Employees
The county EMS staff roster consists - along with
seven full-time employees - of approximately 30 partContinued on A-4

ministrative authority within the qounty EMS ·
program.
In June 1979, following seven years of controversy
centering on the delivery of emergency medical services in Gallia County, the board of commissioners opted to create a county operated emergency medical
service " ... not coMected with either SEOEMS
(Southeast Ohio Emergency Medical Service) or the
Volunteers."
Shortly thereafter, the county entered into an
agreement with the Volunteers for the lease of the

•
tmts

WESTERN
· SHIRTS

. '·

Three townships. seek fire protection.

'
Gallipolis Fire Department, who advised them federal and state money
is available to help townshi~
establish fire departments, but the
brunt of financial support is on their
shoulders.
'' It would be up to the residents to
support it and do their part," Bush
said. " It would be economically impossible for 'them to have anything
other than a volunteer setup.' '
While one trustee noted the cost of
paying for repeated runs from area
fire departments "would break DB,"
Bush said Gallipolis has a "very
reasonable" contract with its
customers.
The contract calls for paymenl
based on $1 per l!Dpulatlon in each
tow'nship for three years' worth of
runs. The contract is similar tO th011e
Continued on A-4
'

.

By KEVIN KELLY
John Lewis, a Greenfield trustee
GALUPoUS - A house in rural whose own home on Gallia·
Gallia County catches fire and its Centel')loint Road burned to the
owners stand by, helpless to do ground in 1976, said trustees have
anything because no fire depart- been trying to get fire 11rotection
mentis on Its way.
from the Oak Hill Fire ~partment,
This scenario has been a fact of only six miles away, but have bee~
life for people living in Harrison, 1ll1Sllccessful.
Walnut and Greenfield Twps. for
"We're really trying to get in with
years, because none of the three them this time," Lewis said.
l)ave a contract with area fire dell!!r· "They're closer than anybody else."
tlnents.
"
..
Lewis noted interest in fonning a
Residents and trustees blame this volunteer lire departmen't for his
situation . on three problems township is lacking, even among
money, the distance which must be homeowners who have ~ontacted
travelled and lack of interest in for- himandothertrusteesforhelp.
·ming a volunteer fire department in
"They don't usually complain ontheir own township.
til it happens to them," he said .
In the put year, one house in
Lewis ~~aid. the only way to raise
. HarriJon w~ destroyed by flames . money for a fire department, even a
and a person died because of it, ac- '- Slllfll one, is through an operating
cording to till Gallia County ~, a view llhaml by ~r
Shariff's Department. Six homes · trustees, Uke Kenneth Swain of
bumed in Greenfield and four in !IaMison, who said interest in an
Walnut, !be department added.
area fire department Ia growing._
And more recently, two Northup · He said he and other trustees
residents died M11rch 25 when their would be meeting in the near future
Uncoln Pike trailer calllht fire. with residents to • d!acuss the
Ellrller on the 11111t dly, 1 boUle polliblllty of puttin8 up 8 levy, a
near Ollila burned to the pwnd.
mori now being undertaken by
1Wt II qnllllll1l the tolnUipl, Gtiy1D n.p.
ftrwldally ltnined .IIIey ... canAllhouP GtiyiD Ia CVYifed by the
nolllord lira C.UtaiduldiiiiJ af ' Crown City Fire Department,
IIW CGIIIty llrt dlputnwntl. Added 11'1111111 .,. ..... piUIIe of I
,eo the cell Ia CCIIIIidlnltlon at the II1Hlllll !Ivy eo l'llle fundi for the
diiiMet volum-1 llld replar lltabli"-1 at 1 YOiw1teer fire
~...a trlvel to stt&gt;to IGIIll
clepiJ1IMil Ia MemPvllle. It 11
...._,~lnGnullllil.
hllpld dU dltl&amp;f*"l could be the

I

nucleus of fire protection for Guy an,
Harrison and Walnut.
Originally scheduled to go on the
ballot April 28, the levy has been
temporarily withdrawn, according
to Trustee I.;ewis Sheets.
Trustees sought to exclude Crown
City voters -from voting in the )Jwy
since it would only affect rural
residents, a move which has nm into
some legal problems the trustees
hope to resolve soon.
"We're trying to get protection
any way we can," Swain said. "If we
don 't seU our story before we go on
the ballot, if won't go through.''
Swain noted Harrison residents
have always been nervous ~!&gt;out
lack of fire protection, "but 'theY
don't want more taxes. "
. Trustees met last month with Ray
Bush, battalion commander with the

Inside today. ..
Area dea.ths ...•• •• •• •• , , ••..•..•••......••..•...•• D-3
C18ssllted •• . ......••• ~ ..•_... ·..•.•..•..•.•.••••... D-4-8
'Editorial .• ••.. ~ ••.•••. ••
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