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                  <text>Metzenbaum not .optimistic
WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen.
Howard M. Metzenbawn, D-Ohio, is
not optimistic about the outcome of
his light to block Senate action on an
amendment weakening the 1977
Strip Mining Act.
A filibuster led by Metzenbawn,
which delayed action for two days,
was expected to end today with a
cloture vote cutting off debate.
Metzenbaum said he and his SU!&gt;porters - Sens. John Melcher, DMont., Max Baucus, D-Mont .. and

Closed lunch period

AWARD-Troy Ohlinger was presented the 1980 Meigs County Senior
Citizens Award at the Meigs County Fair during Senior Citizens Activities
on Thursday. Presenting the award to Ohlinger and his wife is C. J.
Struble, right, representing the Meigs County Council on Aging. Ohlinger
was selected on the basis of his patience, helpfulness and unlimited
devotion to the elderly of the county. An employe of the council, Ohlinger
began his duties with the senior citizens program in 1973 as a janitor-aide
and later became a van driver. He was cited for the work he has done for
the elderly over and beyond the call of duty in his regular driver position.

During the J!J&amp;).J981 school year, a
closed lunch period will he observed
.at Meigs Junior High School.
Parents of students living within
walking distance of the Junior High
School desiring their children to
come home for lunch must visit tlie
Principal's Office · and make a!&gt;plication for a lunch pass.
Students are not permitted to
leave school grounds without this
lunch pass.
The office is open Monday through
Friday between the hours of 8 a.m.
and3p.m.

Mentally
(Continued from page ll
such a program - all the way from
funding to hot lunches. The current
board consists of members W. L.
Carr, Grace We her, Wiirna Parker,
Jeanette Thomas, Nora Rice, and
Maxine Goeglein. The board is
headed by Chairman Manning D.
Webster and administered by
Christopher Layh, superintendent.
According to . Layh, the Meigs
Association for Retarded Children
(MARC ) has been instrumental in
broadening the community's
awareness of the need for a good
educational program here for persons with mental retardation.
"It's been the enthusiasm and SU!&gt;port from these parents and concerned residents that has maintained the hope for adequate
programming for persons with mental retardation," Layh noted.
Pat Carson, president of the
MARC, encourages all parents and
interested persons to participate in
an upcoming work day and actively
support this organization. " It is this
support and participation that will
directly affect the success of our
new program. Parent involvement
is the key to success of each individual involved in this program,"
said Mrs. Carson.
Layh states "We want to provide a
total program that will enable each
person to grow and mature to their
fullest potential.
During the next year we hope to
encourage · the support and understanding of all persons in Meigs
County. We would like tooreganize a
good volunteer program to Invite the
sharing of any special skill of ability.
It is the sharing of these ideas that
will help us to determine the needs
and future direction of our program.
Our emphasis will be to develop
skills and provide training that give
our people the chance to be productive members of this community.
That's what we're trying to do. "
A work day has been set for Saturday, Aug. 23, at 9 a.m. at the fonner
Pomeroy junior high building on ·
East Main St. "We're sure hoping
for a few dedicated workers", said
volunteer Carol Lay h. "The building
needs some cheering up, to make it a
better learning environment. All the
local department stores are being
asked to help in providing fabric for
bright new curtains and now we
need to get in there and really
spruce it up."
Since the school is providing
students with skills to care f"Or themselves, as well as basic education
and job training, horne appliances or
kitchen equipment that 1can still be
used needed by the progam. A
washer and dryer, woodworking
equipment, looms and ceramic su!&gt;plies are also needed.

our efforts to rapidly bring on line :
the coal of Ohio, West Virninia, Ken- :
.
lucky and the western states."
Interior Secretary Cecil Andrus, ·
who is reviewing state programs un- ·
der the 1977 law; expects to sub- .
stantially complete that task by ·
January,
Metzenbawn said. The Metzenbawn called an "end run" a
Byrd amen!lment would disrupt that :
few weeks ago by tacking his
process, he said.
.
measure onto an unrelated bill that
of
a
review
that
will
be
"Instead
simplifies tonnage measurements of
certain vessels. That measure would subatantially complete ... we will :
have a new process, new deadlines :
bypass Udall, since it would not be
enormous delays that will mire :
and
routed to the Interior Committee.
the
coal
industry for years in cripByrd's amendment eliminates a
pling
uncertainty,"
Metzenbawn
requirement that state reclamation ·
said.
programs must he consiste.nt with
Strip mining operators have com- :
federal regulations. Metzenbawn
plained
that the federal regulations ·
said it would effectively gut the 1977
calling
for
restoration of land at :
strip mining act.
abandoned
strip
mines are too bur- :
The Ohioan said passage of the
densome.
~mendment "would hinder, not help,

fall. That measure was bottled up in
the House Interior Committee,
which is headed by Rep. Morris K.
Udall, D-Ariz.
· Metzenbawn said Udall had
assured him he would "sit on it."
Byrd tried again, making what

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

SPECIAL SALE PRICES

e
VOL. 31 NO. 92

enttne

at

POMEROY·MIDDLEPUR f, OH IO

FIFTEEN CENTS

FRIDAY, AUGUST 22, 1980

Jury indicts .7
Seven indictments were returned
by the Meigs County Grand Jury ,
May term, which met Thursday for
its final session, Meigs Prosecuting
Attorney Frederick
Crow lll,
reports.
Indictments included:
Clifford E.dward Smith 71 Fisher
St. , Pomeroy, for gross 'se;ual irnposition as a result of an incident on
Aug . 7, this year, in Pomeroy involving minor children. Gross
sexual imposition, as charged, is a
felony of the third degree. The
penality is a tenn of imprisonment
of not less than one year nor more
than 10 years and a fine up .to $10,000.
David S. Brenot, Colwnbus, on
charge of trafficking in drugs as the
result of an incident on Aug. 2,' this

w.

a

year, in Pomeroy. Trafficking in .
drugs, as charged, is a felony of the
fourth degree carrying a penalty of
not less than six months nor more
than five years in prison and a fine
up to$2SOO.
Robert Crouse and Timothy Gil&gt;bs, both currently held in the Mason
CQunty jail, for breaking and entering in conjunction with an incident on Wednesday, Aug. 20, this
year, at Betty Stewart's Carry-Out.
Breaking and entering is a felony of
the fourth degree and carroes a
penlty of a tenn of tmpnsonment not
less than stx months nor more than
five years and a fine of not more
tha~ $2SOO.
Vtckte Rose, 22, Route I, Dexter,
on a charge of aggravated arson.
charge stems froma fire at the

home of her father on Jan. 16, this
year. Aggravated arson is a felony
of the first degree for which the
possible penalty is not less than four
nor more than 25 years in prison and
a fine up to$10,000.
Doug Burns, Pomeroy, on a
charge of receiving stolen property.
The charge comes from an incident
at the Pomeroy Gun Club in July,
this year, and caries a penalty of not
less than six months nor more than
five years in prison and a fine of up
to $2SOO.
Russell Bartlett, indicted for vandalism, afelonyofthelourthdegree.
All of the seven will he appearing
for arraignments before Meigs
County. Common Pleas Court Judge
John C. Bacon in the near future.

. '

,I:!.

I

' ! J~

i

l

.

FRIDAY, AUG. 22 ·SATURDAY, AUG. 23

Mayor's Court
Twelve defendants forfeited bonds
and two others were fined in the
court of Pomeroy Mayor Clarence
Andrews Tuesday night.
Forfeiting were Gerald Dill,
Minersville, $200, posted on a
destruction of property charge, and
$100, leaving the scene of an accident; Marjorie Ferrell, Syracuse,
$26; Douglas Bartrwn, Huntington,
$27; William Asbeck, Pomeroy;
Mike Willard, Pomeroy, $33, all
posted on speeding charges; Delbert
Fridley, Pomeroy, $30, assured
clear distance; David Johnson, Middleport, 29, Sarah Drummond,
Pomeroy, Rex Roy, $28, all on
speeding charges; Charles Ellis,
Pomeroy, intoxication, $100; John
Salser, Racine, $33, speeding, and
Howard Kitchen, Pomeroy, $50,
disturbing the peace.
Fined were Robert Dugan, Middleport, $100 and costs, and Robert
Sheborn, Cheshire, $100 and costs
each on intoxication charges.

Dale Bumpers, D-Ark. - would
switch to a new tactic to delay the
amendment. The amendment's
spqnsor is Senate Majority ~ader
Robert C. Byrd, D-W.Va.
"We have a couple of hundred
amendments ready," Metzenbawn
said Wednesday night.
Each amendment would require a
time-consuming roll call vote, and
further delays could he forced by
following the amendments with
motions to reconsider, requiring additional roll calls.
In the end, "we'll get beat," Metzenbawn said. But he feels the
filibuster accomplished something
by alerting members of the House to
watch for Byrd's amendment when
it gets there.
Byrd's amendment is similar to a
strip mining bill passed by the last

•

•

10-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Aug. 21, 1980

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8
SALE

WOMEN'S
SLACKS
With Today's r.song diamond prices you should
take advantage of this
great value. A beautiful
diamond solitaire. Set in
your choice of either 14K
yellow or white gold.

Solids and patterns in
polyes ter blends. Sty led

pants or elastic wa isted .
Reg . Si zes 3/ 4 to 20
E)(fra Sizes 30 toJ8

Reg. 595
1

Reg. $13 .00 Sale 510.39
Reg. $18.00 Sale $14.39
Reg. $23.00 Sa Ie $18 .39
Reg. $29.00 Sale$23.19

SAVE 20000
1

A Small Deposit Holds Any Layaway .

Until Christmas.
Open

•VISA
•M/C
•LAYAWAY

Friday
Till 8:00

Your Diamond Jeweler

113 COURT ST.

POMEROY

992-2054

SUMMER
SLEEPWEAR
SALE

MEN'S WRANGLER 119.95

-··---

notebook filler • pens • pencils •
crayons • paste, etc.

your
aeeouut
was earning
money •••

'

ALE PRICES

BOYS QUILTED

VESTS
that's no pipe dream! Our
saYings accounts eam tl1e highest interest rates allowed bylaw'
And tl1ey're compounded daily
... so you can sleep easy know- .
tng that your interest Is building
up day and night! Find out
about the many savings plans,
clubs and certificates we offer!

Sizes 8 to 20. Fine selec·
lion of styles and colors
for winter wear.
·

BOYS 117.95 VEST$ ....................115.25
BOYS 118.95 VESTS ....................116.15
BOYS '29.95 VESTS .................... '25.45
SPECIAL SALEI

BOYS WINTER

~~g~fii~WA Home Bank

JACKETS

For

OUr entire stock on sale.

Sizes 8 to 20. You ' ll like the

MD'"-" f.:ounty"

styles, the colors and the

-

!,

.

.

Iranian Ministry denies reports

LAY-A-WAY
PLAN
Select what you need during this sale.
Make a down payment and we'll hold it
for you. Ask any of our salespeople about
our lay-away plan.

Solid colors in polyester

blends. Quality slacks a!
sale

Sizes Jto 18.

prices .

'faiwon relationship would be out

REG. '15.00 ................. .. .. SALE 111.99
SALE 116.00 .................... ,SALE 112.79
REG. '17.00 ..................... SALE 113.59
REG. '18.00 ..................... SALE 114.39

' PEKING - GOP vice presidential nominee George Bush said today
a Republican administration would have " no government relations in
the diplomatic sense" with Taiwan.
He held what both sides called a "frank" meeting with Chinese Vice
Premier Deng Xiaoping and later, when asked if he was able to convince Deng of his position, Bush answered, "Who knows' I don't know
the answer."
Speaking before the American Club of Businessmen in Peking, Bush
was asked by reporters if it would be possible to establish an official
Liaison Office in Taiwan under the 1979 Taiwan Relations Act.

SALE CHILDREN'S WINTER

COATS, SNOWSUITS
AND
SNOWMOBILE SUITS
winter outerwear f or children
is reduced for 2 days only .
Everything
is
machine
.washable.
SIZES : 6 mos . to24 mos.
2to4

BOYS '59.95 JACKETS.................. 150.95

ATLANTA - Police say the death of a 13-year-old boy whose body
was found early Thursday may he related to the slaying of five other
black children in the city this summer.
The body of Clifford Emanuel Jones, an Ohio child visiting relatives
in Atlanta, was found about I a.m. Thursday next to a trash pickup
receptacle at a shopping center. Authorities said he appeared to have
been strangled.
Police said Jones had left his aunt's home, two or three miles away,
about noon Wednesday to collect aluminwn cans to earn pocket
money. When .he failed to return by evening, ·his relatives called the
oolice.

SLACKS
SALE

Our complete tine of warm

BOYS 19.95 JACKEl;;, .................116.95
BOYS 129.95 JACKETS................. '25.45
BOYS 139.95 JACKETS ................ '33.95

Ohio teenager murder victim

JUNIOR

boys' jackets .

.

NICOSIA, Cyprus - The Iranian Foreign Ministry ·denied a
Lebanese radio report today claiming that five of the American
hostages at the U.S. Embassy in Tehran were killed while trying to
escape.
" I have contacted the students at the embassy and I am authorized
to say there is no truth in this report," Foreign Ministry spokesman A.
Hashemi told The Associated Press when contacted by telephone from
Nicosia.
The report was broadcast by the Voice of ~banon, the Beirut radio
station of the Lebanese Christian Phalange Party . Quoting unidentified "Arab diplomatic sources," it said.five of the Americans who
have been captiyes since last Nov. 4 chiseled a hole in a wall and then
were shot and killed as they tried to scale an outer wall.
In Washington, the State Department desk monitoring the hostage
crisis said it had heard nothing of any such happening.

USE ELBERFELD$

excellent quality of these
1

BANK

July consumer prices steady

Basic style in either
straight leg or boot
flare. Pre·washed 14 oz .
No Fault blue denim.
Waist sizes 27 to 42,
lengths 30 to 36.

special

Abuse, neglect charges leveled
ST. CLAIRSVILLE, Ohio - Char~es of abuse and neglect have been
leveled against the Belmont County Children's Home following an investigation by the sta te Welfare Department.
The report, made public Thursday, sa id "there is evidence that
physic11l abuse of children has occurred at the children's home since
1975" and that supervision of children at the home was inadequate.
The welfare department charged the facility with non-compliance in
2() areas of operation. Seven of the charges involve alleged violations
of the Ohio Revised Code.
The probe began,after children who ran away from the institution
complained to the Bellaire Police Department about alleged !)hysical
and sexual abuse there.

41o6x
7 to 14
IREG.516.00 ..... SALE513.59
REG. 521 .00 ..... SALE 517.19
REG. 528.00·· .... SALE 523.79
REG. 536.00...... SALE 530.59

OPEN SATURDAY 9a30 .A.Nl. TIL 5 P.M.

LBERFELDS IN POMEROY

STANDS IN WATER - Donald, grandson of Mr. and , rear of his grandparents' home. The w~ter reached
Mrs. Donald Lowery, 882 Logan St., Middleport, stands about 12 mches .at tis peak and was receding:when this
in several inches of water in the recreation room at the photo was taken.

receding when this photo was taken. Water did not get
into the home itself but did get into an equipment
storage'area.

BLUE DENIM
JEANS

20% OFF

Save now on notebooks -

HOME
NATIONAL
'.

SURROUNDED - The home ol Mr. and Mrs. Bobby
Payne, 660 Beech St .. Middleport, was just about
surrounded by water Thursday night as another extremely heavy .rain hit the county. The water was

~

SCHOOL SUPPLIES

.RACINE

Our popular Springtoot quali·
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ty . Boys sizes 1 to 11,

TWO. DAY SA LEI

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People

*1.39
TUBE
SOCKS

WOMEN'S

Save 20% on summer
gowns, robes, pa iamas,
baby dolls and dusters.
FINAL 2 DAYS

While
yo11 'vere asleep ..•

MEN'S AND BOYS'

Weather for~cast
·

Mostly sunny today, with hi~hs in the low 80s. Clear tonight, with lows
near 60. Sunny Saturday, woth hoghs from 80 to 85. The chance of rain is near
zero at midday, tonight ann Satu.rday .
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Sunday through Tuesday : F'air. Highs in the 80s. Lows in the 60s.
I'

WASHINGTON (AP) . - Overall
consumer prices did not rise at all in
July, the first time that has hal&gt;"
pened in more than 13 years, the
government said today. The sharp
improvement was due almost exclusively to a rapid decline in homefinancing costs.
'
Excluding mortgage costs and
housing prices, consumer prices last
month increased 0.6 percent, led by
a 0.9 percent boost in the food and
beverage category, the Labor
Department said.
For the first seven months of this
year, inflation at the conswner level
has accelerated a 12.6 percent compound annual rate, the department
said.
July's stable rate followed a I percent jump in June, but private
economists predicted that last month's increase in food and beverage
costs is only the beginning of a
dramatic rise in this category.
The Labor Department reported
last week that wholesale prices rose
1.7 percent in July, while food prices
at this level jumped about 9 percent.
It usually takes a month or two for
food prices at the producer stage to
work their way to the consumer
level.
The I percent difference in the

Fire loss
$100,000
Losses are expected to run a!&gt;proximately $100,000-as the result of
a fire which destroyed several
buildings at the farm home of Mr.
and Mrs. Delbert Smith, Route I,
Racine, about 10:30 p.m. Thursday.
None of the Smith family meiT)bers were at home when the fire,
which is believed to have been
caused by.lightning during a heavy
rain and wind storm.
Destro~d in the blaze was a fullyequipped milking parlor, a milk
house and a 36 by 60 foot bam. Eight
Holstein cattle in the barn were
destroyed along with 4,000 bales of
hay, a loader and other equipment.
A machine shed loaded with equi!&gt;ment and near the other structures
was seriously threatened by the fire.
However, Racine and Syracuse
Volunteer Fire Departments were
able to keep the fire from spreading
to that structure.
Smith said this . morning he has
some insurance covereaHe,
however, it is inadequate to cover·
the losses.
F"iremen were on the scene until
about 3 a.m . Friday.

Conswner Price Index between June
"!most unand July wa~
precedented," saiu 'o~~Lor Department economist Patrick Jackman.
Not since March 1967 has the CPI
remained unchanged, and the index
has not declined since August 1965,
he said.
Before July, conswner prices had
risen at least 0.9 percent lor 18
straight months.
The CPI in July stood at 247.8
before seasonal adjustment. That
means that goods and services that
cost $100 in the 1967 base period cost
$247.80 last month. The index was
13.2 percent higher last month than
in July 1979.

The Labor Department reported
that:
- Housing costs dropped 0. 7 percent, after rising 1.5 percent and 1.8
percent in May and June, respectively. The reversal was due to a
steep, 5.7-percent plunge in mor:
tgage interest rates and a O.lipercent decline in housing prices.
- Food and beverage prices, after
going up only 0.8 percent in May and
June combined, accelerated by 0.9
percent last month. Prices at
grocery stores increased 1.2 percent, after rising only l.S percent
during the first six months of this
year.
Prices for beef, pork and poultry

shot up sharply, following three
months of decline. Fruits,
vegeta bles and dairy products also
registered substantial · increases.
Restaurant meals, foods at other
than grocery outlets and beverages,
including alcohol, rose a combined
0.5 percent in July.
- For the third consecutive month, the price ol gasoline fell, but not
as much as in May and June.
Gasoline was down 0.5 percent in
July compared with a I percent drop
the month before.
- Automobile finance charges,
which had advanced sharply earlier
this year, declined 2.6 percent in
(Conti nued on page 12)

Mediator sought; ·board criticized
Meigs Local school district's OAPSE organization has requested the
services of a mediator in the latest
contract dispute with the board of
education. Meanwhile, in a prepared
statement released today, the Ohio
Association of Public School Employees (OAPSE) criticized the
Meigs Local School Board for taking
an inflexible approach to the current
contract negotiations.
Jim Wigen, chief negotiator for
OAPSE Chapter No. 17 said, "the
board has failed to negotiate in good
faith. They have been unwilling to

,.... ·-·
'

~

·-

Chapter No. 17 has requested '
Federal Mediation," Wigen continued. " We want their best offer
now," he said, "so we don't have to
strike for it.
According to Wigen, the Meigs
Local school board currently has a
policy of paying no supplemental
wage increases regardless of how
long an employee works for the
district. A senior employee is now
paid at the same rate as a new employee.

.,..

.
...~

..- :--

give us their (the board's) best offer.
It is for this reason that OAPSE

OAPSE Chapter No. 17 has
requested a 10 percent wage increase as well as a seven step lO cents per hour seniority adjustment.
The board has offered a 6lfl percent increase in wages, but will not
bend on the issue of a wage increase
for years of service.
He estimated the wage package
would cost apprmtimately $100,000.
"That's out of a $4,000,000 budget."
Talks are expected to begin again
next week.·

.. .

~ :.. ' '

.-·· ~ • •"l

WITHOUT SERVICE - Meigs Countians may not
have these garbage collection boxes at numerous
locations about the count y much longer. Meigs Commissioner Richard Jones reports that operating pickup
services from the. collection points has become too

costly for the county to absorb with lhe present income.
·The service now costs $100,000 .annually. On Aug. 26,
Jones will propose placing a one mill levy before voters
to pay for the service. These collection boxes are
IocR ted off the Route 7 by-pass.

�2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Aug. 22, 19130

Opinions &amp;
Comments

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., F'riday, Aug. 22, 19130

SCOREBOARD Wills appointment sign of hope
Major LkBCUt" Ba~t'ball
NATIONAl. LEAGUE

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GOP 'PLATFORM

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DEVOTED ro 111E
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
.
I.e~ vi op.bd• ~ welcomed. They should be len Uaan 300 words kln1 (or 1ubjecllo n:ducao. by tilt ettitor) a.cl must be si&amp;Md with the •IIDM'• addrn1. Names may be withheld upon
pablklltiGL However, oa request, Umft will be dlsr l01ed. Letters sboold be in good taJte, ad-

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Tile A11ocilted Press is elc1WIIve1y eadtled to tbe use lor pabUcatl.om of all new" dls patChl·~
eedJkd &amp;o the aewspaper iDd also the loc1l aewa pubU1hehrelD.
,
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· Gearnl M1r. 6 Clty Editor
Rubtrt Huenich
NNI Editor
~,_....,._,_
Dale Rothgeb, Jr.
Adv. Muager
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Carl Ghet&gt;n

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2), (n)
·
St. Louis (Fulgham :ki) at Atlanta (M&lt;J lula 7ll), ( n )
Los Angeles (Welch 10-6) at New Yurk t Burris

6-1), tn)
San Francisco !Whibuu 8-9) at Phi ll:l delphi ~
(Carlton 19-6 ), ( n)
Pittsburgh !Robinsoo 4-6) al Cinci nnati

t:llm:s~ ~._--.-,,_..,..=,...,

~~

{ Moskau8-4 ) , {n )

Chicago (Reuschel1 ()-9) at Houston ( K.Fonch
tn)

1~10 ).

t~e."

AMERI CAN LEAGUE
EAST

Public Defender
denies wrongdoing
The state public defender has found himself in the awk_ward position of having to defend himSelf against
allegations about the way he operates his office.
J. Tullis Rogers spent most of Wednesday fending off
allegations from unidentified sources that he uses attorneys from the state public defender's office to handle
his.private cases in Franklin County Municipal Court.
"I am not engaged in any private practice," he said in
answer to the allegations, which appeared in a newspaper
report Wednesday morning:
Ohio law does not prohibit ·the public defender from
maintaining a private law practice. But Rogers said the
only income he earns is from his $34,500-a-year state job.
"The people making these allegations said there were
five cases I used attorneys from this office ... I'd like to
know what the c;ases are," he said.
'' According to the newspaper article, .there is an in·
vestigation by the Ohio Public Defender Commission, the .
state Office of Budget and Management and the state
auditor's office.
Rogers denied ihat the nin(l-member public defender
commission was conducting any type of investigation,
however.
. "They're (commissioners) doing what they did prior to
:. hiring me, looking at the situation across the board," said
&lt;Rogers, who is being evaluated Hy the commission for
.: reappointment in October to another four-year term'.
:: . State Budget Director William D_ Keip declined to com. ment on whether his department was investigating the
:. public defender's office.
·. "For me to corrunent on anything would be premature,"
:Keipsaid.
:. ·Under state law, Keip's office is responsible for ensuring
:that all public expenditures, except for those of the
legislative and judicial branches, are spent correctly.
~
"A representative from the auditor's office ... came over
:. this (Wednesday) morning to advise me the auditor's of::fice was not conducting any sort of investigation of our of:: fice," Rogers said. "But since the article has appeared in
:; the paper, I was told the auditor will look into allegations
::made by either former or current employees with regard
::to whatever is being charged." .
. Rogers said the auditor's office assured him the probe
::"will be done very quickly."
·. An official in the state auditor's office confinned that an
::investigation was under way as a result of allegations
::made two weeks ago. But he said there was no proof of any
::impropriety.
. Rogers believes the allegations stem "from either past
;:or present upset employees or from somebody un:: beknownst to me that may want this job," he said.
·
:: According to Rogers, his office handles nearly 800 cases
::a year representing indigent defendants throughout the
: ;state..When he was hired four years ago, he was told by the ·
::commission to devote full time to the job, he said.
· "I don',t have any outside income," he said.

Berry's World

New York
Baltimore
Milwallkee

Won
73
71
66

ll&lt;&gt;;lon
Cleveland

Lost Pel. GB
41
.606 48
.597
11"1
56
.541
8

"62

66
57

.530

91'.2

.521

10 11:

62

S1

.521
.• 20

JOIIz
22 12

.645

-

Detroit

;o 69

Toronto

WFST

Kansas City

78
S3
57

O.~~.kbwd

Texas
Minnesot.:l
Chicago
Calif ornia

"I've got an uneasy feeling that there ain't no such animal."

4..1

53

~

.516

15 1'.1

62

.479

:II

00

.434
.424
.403

zjl_;z

50 68
li '·l
48 71
29
Seattle
43 ii
.358 34 1,o;t
•
Tllursday" 1 GameY
Boston 5, Oaltland 1
Minnesota ~2. Detr&lt;lit 3-4
Chicago$, Toronto 3
Cleveland 4, Kan.'las City 3
Baltimore7 , Ca!Uornia l
Seattle 6, New Ycrk 4
Only games scheduled
Friday'• Games
Milwauke ~ (Mitchell3-2 and Cleveland H I at
Texa~. (Jenkins 11·10 and Medlch 1~7 ), 2, (n)
Toronto (Clancy ll·9) yt Chicago (Borns 11}12), [n)
.
•
Cleveland (Barker 14-3) at Kansas Cit}' (Split·
lorff9-3). (n)
Detroit (Fidrych 1}-2) at Minne:iota (l&lt;.09srrum

Ohio perspective

11·10), (n)

"Ba ltimore (Palmer 13-91 at Oa kland ( McCatt y
Io;W ), (n I

Vehicles ·up, gasoline usage down
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
The
nwnber of cars in Ohio is continuing
to climb, but the vehicles aren't
using as much gasoline as they did a
year ago.
Cars, trucks and buses drank 5.7
billion gallons of gasoline and
special fuels in Ohio during the fiscal
yea£ which ended June 30, the Ohio
Public Expenditure Council says.
''This was a decrease in fuel usage
of 370.4 million gallons, or 6.1 percent, over motor vehicle fuel sales in
fiscal 1979," the private research
group said in a newsletter.
It said the sharp decline in fuel
consumption was more significant
when viewed against a backdrop of

the number of vehicles. Total motor
vehicle registrations in Ohio increased by 2.3 million from
registration years 1969 to 1979.
Less driving, of course, means
less revenue for state coffers from
Ohio's 7-cents-per-gallon gasoline
tax.
The council says it amounted to a 6
percent drop in fiscall980. A total of
$391.8 million in motor vehicle fuel
taxes was collected in Ohio during
the last fiscal year, compared to
$416.6 million a year earlier.
State govenunent receives about
three-fourth:! of the tax revenue,
·with the rest going to cities, counties

and townships. Transportation
department officials blame the drop
in tax revenue, combined with the
effects of inflation, for the chronic
financial woes which have curtailed
highway construction programs
statewide.
Ohio is not alone in facing the
problem as motorists drive less, and
more fuel-efficient cars hit the highways.
Several states have increased fuel
taxes to offset declining revenues,
although attempts to do so in Ohio
last year failed. The gaso!' •e tax has
not been increased since 1959.
But two other states have tried to
solve the problem by switching from

a per-gallon tax to a sales tax on the
price of motor fuel. As the price of
fuel increases, so do tax revenues.
"The most recent state to adopt
the 'percentage of sales' method was
Massachusetts," the council says.
"Motorists in Massachusetts now
pay a tax of 10 percent of the selling
price per gallon, instead of the for·
mer 8.5 cents per gallon tax."
California imposes both a 7-centsper·gallon fuel tax ai1d a 6 percent
sales tax. Revenues from the fixed
per-gallon tax decreased last year,
the study group said, but gasoline
sales tax revenues registered a substantial increase.

Carter recovering,
hut not completely well
.
WASHINGTON (AP) - Right on
schedule, the first symptoms of
political recovery are showing on
President Carter's chart - but he's
not well yet.
Carter and his strategists had said
all along 'that th'eir poll ratings
against Ronald Reagan would improve markedly once the
Democratic National Convention
renominated him.
Until then, it was a two-man show
among Democrats, while Reagan
had the Republican billing all to
himself. Now Carter heads ·the
Democratic ticket and Sen. Edward
M. Kennedy is supporting him,
although it isn't yet clear how active
he'll be in the campaign ahead.
The president . has indeed
. narrowed the pollsters' gap, just as
former President Gerald R. Ford
did against Carter four years ago.
Lopsided pre-convention margins
for Carter in those polls proved
illusory; once Ford had defeated
Reagan and gained the GOP

nomination, the racewas.a tight one.
An Associated Press survey
showed a surge in Carter support
immediately after the Democrats'
convention week in New York City.
The attention and television time a

percent, Carter 22 percent, Anderson 1~ percent.
In both those surveys, the margin
of error was 4 percentage points,
meaning the candidates' ,actual support could be higher or lower by that

time with a telephone in his hand,
said he was getti!lg those readings
from Democrats around the country
as he sought to orchestrate harmony
behind the Carter ticket.
The national surveys set benclunarks of popular sentiment. Except in runaway campaigns, they
tend to get closer at election day
nears.
But a presidential election is not a
single, nationwide contest. It is ~I
contests, for the electoral votes of
each state and the District of Colwnnational convention draws will
margin.
bia. The question is not only how
atmost invariably boost the ratings
Robert S. Strauss, Carter's cam- many votes, but where. A runaway
of its candidates.
. paign chairman, had said the in one state counts for·no more than
The new poll, completed on Saturpresident surely would gain ground . a narrow victory in another; winner
day, shows Reagan the preferred once his contest with Kennedy was takes all the electoral votes.
candidate of 39 percent of likely settled.
voters questioned. Carter was
"I just know that we're picking
And Democrats from states like
chosen by 32 percent, Rep. John B. up," Strauss said during the con- Ohio, Pennsylvania, Texas, even
Anderson, the independent, by 13 vention. "I'm a pretty good judge of some Deep South states, left New
Joercent. The rest were undecided or this - I'm the complaint pepart· York .nervous, or pessimistic, about
favored minor party candidates.
ment, with damn little authority to Carter's standing with their voters.
Ten days earlier, before the make refunds."
The. president can't afford to lose
Democratic show, it was Reagan 47
Strauss, who spends much of his states like those.

Today's commentary

Business mirror

Bankers looking for reasons not to lend

New York (Tiant 6-7) &lt;1 l California ( l.aRoc hc
2-31, !nl
Boston (Renko 7-5 1 at Se.i!.tlle (Bea ttie HOJ,
tnl
TODAV' S MAJOR L.EAGUE LEADERS
NATIONAL LEAGUE

BAITJNG (300 at bats ): Templet on, St.Louis,
.328 ; Hendrick, St.Louis, .325; Buckner, Chi ca~ o.
.325 ; Trillo, Philadelphia . .323; R.Smith, Los
Angeles, .322.
,
RUNS : K.He mandet, St.Louis , 81 ; leF' Iore,
Montreal, !Ml; Rose, Philadelphia , liJ; Schmidt,
Ptilladelphia, 78; Murphy, Atlanta, 76.
RBI : Ga rvey, l.o:~ Angeles, 91 ; Sctunidt,
Phlladelphi.a, 90; Hendrick, St.Louis, 86; Clark,
San Francisco, 78 : Ca rter, Montreal, 76 : Sim·
mons, St.Louis, 76; K.Hernandez, St.Louis, 76.
HITS: G11rvey , Los Ant!cles, -:;3 ; Templeton,
St.Louis, 145; Hendrick, St.Loui ~ . US ; K.Her·
nandet, SU.ouis, 140; Rose, Philadelphia, 138":
J .Cruz , H!1uJlon, lle.
OOUBLES: Rose , Philadelphia, 33 ; Knight,
CinciMali, 31 ; K . Hernandez, SU.Oula, 30 ;
Buckner, Chicago,29; Simmqns, St. Louis, 29.
TJUPl.ES : R.Scott, Montreal, 10 ; McBride,
Philadelphia , 10 ; LeFlore, Montreal. 9;
0 Moreno, Pittsburgh, 9; Templeton, St. Louis,
9.
HOME RUNS: Schmidt , PhJiadelphia, M: Horner, Atlanta, 27 ; Baker, Los An geles, 23; Carter,
Moo treal, 22: Ga rv ey. Los Angele:1. 22: Clark.
San Fr.ll.ncisco, 22.
STOLEN BASES : LeF lore. Montreal, 80;
O.Moren&lt;l , PUts burgh, 70; Collins, Cincinnati,
Ml; Richards, &amp;l n Die go, 47; R.Scott , Montreal,
43,
PITCHING (II Deds ioM): Bibby, Pittsburgh ,
1 ~ .. 833, 2.94 ; Walk , Phibtdelphia, 9-2, .818, 4.S7;
fteuss, Los Angeles, 15-4 , .789 , 2. 11 ; Carlton,
Philadelphia, lf-6, .700, 2.21 ; G.J ackson, PitL'!Iburgh , $-3 , . 7~ , 2.44 ; Sambito, Houston, 8-3 ,
:rn. 2.27; Richard, IIOU!Jton , Jo-t, .714, 1.90;
Pa..'ilore, Cincinru:~ti , J()-S, .667 , 3.19.
STRIKEOUTS: Carlton. Philadelphia , ~ II ;
Ryan , Howton, 142 ; Blyleven, Pittsburgh, 139;
P.Niekro, Atlanta , 136 ; Solo, Cincinnati, 124.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
BAITING 1300 at bal:! l: Brett, Karucu Ci ty ,
404 ; Cooper, Milwaukee, .354 ; Dilon~ .
t.1eveland, .348 ; Carew , Califomla, .333 ; B.Bell.
Texas, .333 .
RUNS: Wilson, Ka115aS City, 99; Yount ,
Milwaukee, 93; Wills, Texa,.,, 87 ; Bumbry,
Baltimore, 85; Hender.ton, Oakland, 81 ; Rivers,
Teus,&amp;l .
R.B1 : Re .Jackson, New York, 91 ; Brett, Ka nsas City, 91 ;. Cooper, Milwaukee, 90 ; Perez,
Boston, 88; Obverft'exas, 87.
HITS : Wilson. Kai\Sal City, 170: Cooper ,
Milwaukee, 163 ; ruvers, Texas, IM ; Oliver,
Texas, 111; Bwnbry, Baltlmore ; l42.
DOUBLES : Yount, Milwauke e, 39 : Morrison,
Chicago, 3$; McRae, Kansas Clty , 33; Lynn,
Boston, 31 ; D.Garcia , Toronto, 29.
TRIPLES: Griffin, Toronto, 12 : Wilson, Kansal City, 12; Brett, Kansa5 Cit1, 9; Bumbry ,
Baltimore, 7; Hebner, Detroit, 7; Yount,
Milwaukee, 7; Washington, Kansas City, 7: Llln·
dreaLlX, MiMesota, 7.
HOME RUNS : Re .Ja.cbon, New York. 34 ;
Oglivie, Milwaukee, 31 ; Thomas. Milwa ukee, 27;
Annas, Oakland, 26; Murray, Baltimore, 21;
Perez, Boston, 21; Parrish, Detroit, 21.
STOLEN BASES: Henderson, Oakl.11.nd, 62;
Wilson, Kansas Cit~. Sl; Dilone, Cle\'eland , 4S :
J .Cn11, Seattle, 36; 11b, Texll.'l, 30.
PITCIUNG (11 Decisions) : Stone, Baltimore,
~ •.833, 2.1H ; Darwin, Teus, 10.2, .8l3, 2.45;
GLU"a, Kansas City, 17-5, .773, 2.ZS : John ,. New
York, !Hi, .739, 3.49; Rainey, Boston, 8-3, .1'll.
U6 ; McGregor, Baltimore, 15-41, .714, 3.20 ;
QuisenberT)', Kansas City, lo-4 , .714, 2.82 ;
M.Norri s, Oakland, 17·7, .7~. 2.26.
Natiooal Foolballl..eague
ExhJbiUoo St.od.Joc•
AMERICAN CONFERENCE

Eaol

Miami
Bal timore
New England
Buffalo
N.Y. Jets

Pittsburgh
&lt;..'incinnati
Houston
Cleveland

W·lrT Pel. PF PA
2 D 0 1.000 41 14
1 1 0 .500 :lO 16
110.5006462
0 2 0 .000 2fi 48
0 2 0 .0002249
Central
2 0 0 1.000 30 14
1 I 0 .500 'II :1
1 'I 0 .500 27 38
(120

w...

An AP Sports Analysis
By HAL BOCK
AP Sports Writer
The ~ppointment of Maury Wills
as manager of the Seattle Mariners
is a two-edged sword.
On the one hand it offers the opportunity for a black man to call the
shots for a major league team , an
event all too infrequent in baseball.
On the other hand, it could be a no- ·
win situation unless Mariners
management has the patience
necessary to build a winner.
It is patience that Hall of Farner
Monte Irvin believes will be the key
forWills in Seattle.
"I hope they give him a chance to
build and stay with it for awhile,"
said Irvin. " If that's n~! their intention, then it's a big mistake.
You've got to have material,
something to work with. Given
talent, he'll succeed'; but it takes
The word from baseball bird dogs
is that the Mariner farm system has
some good, young players a few
years away from the majors. Irvin
hopes they reach Seattle in time for

@ 1980 b)l NEA. Inc.

"HI, there! I'm Ronald Reagan's Irrepressible
younger brother!"

'

:!r

selling it some day.
5. Lack of inventory records.
6. Poor Inventory turnover.
7. Company is highly leveraged,

thinly capitalized.
8. Viability of company rests on
one person or a small grollp.
9. Lack of management tools

Today in history
Today is Friday, August 22, the
235th day of 19130. There are 131 days
left in the year.
Today' s highlight in history:
On August 22, 1910, Korea was formally annexed by Japan.
On this date:.
In 1485, King Richard III of
England was killed in the Battle of
Bosworth, ending the War of the
Roses.
In 165'1. Jacob Barsimson became
the rirsl Jewish emigrant to
America when he · landed in New
Amsterdam.
1

In 1941, German forces reached
the outskirts of the Soviet city of
Leningrad during World War II.
They didn't get much farther.
In 1968, Pope Paul VI launched the
first papal visit to Latin America
when he arrived in Bogota, Colombi~ . '
Last year, President Carter said
he bad personally approved the sale
of $47 million in kerosene fuel to Iran
- despite the petroleum shortage in
the United States. Carter said the
amount was very tiny and the approval was on a one-time basis.

.,

needed to analyze sales by
customer, product, product line and
plant profitability.
10. Management not always open
in discussing matters with Its bank
or in making the most effective use
of its auditors or other advisers.
11. No monthly or quarterly finan- ·
cia! statements; annual reports not
· available until several months after
year-end.
"Timely flnancials of one kind or
another are among the first things
lenders look for, initially and on a
continuing basis," says Jones.
"Without statements, it is very hard
to get money."
To which you might add another
observation, one that can be verified
by small-business people: State!Qents or not, In times like these It lflif:
ten hard to get money - Wlless your
company doesn't need lt.

Eaol
2

0

0 1.000 ~2

%l

2 0 0 1.000 36 :tl
2 0 0 1.000 z;
6
1 10.5003431
110.500919
Central
1 10.5003741
MiMeS01.a
I 1 0 .500 3:1 7l
Tampa Bay
I
1 0
.500 31 34
Detroit
1 1 0 .500 24 30
Chicago
0 2 1 .167 11 34
Green Bay
Weal
San Francisco
2 0 0 Um 50 11
Ne wOrle&amp;ns
1 I 0 .500 34 33
1..os Angele:1
0 2 0 .000 47 54
Atlanta
0 2 0 .000 24 31
Friday'• Gamu
New York Giants at Baltimore

Dallas

Wuhington
St. Louis
N.Y. Gi.ants

Saturday's Games

Green Bay at Buffalo
N~w York Jeltl .at Pitl&lt;lburgh
Cincinnati at Tamp~ Bay
Cleveland at Chicago
Kansas City 11t St Louis
Oakland al Washlngton
M:innesota at Miami
New Orleans ill Detroit
AUant.a at San Dtesu
Hou.stoo at Dallas
l.A19 Angeles at Denver
St!attle at San Francisco
Suncby's Gam~ ll
Philadelphia 111 New Erll!land

I&lt;

J·' m

s un~

this

gives Frank Robinson hop~ that he'll
get ~noth e r chance.··
Wills is the third black m~n~gc r.
H.obin;-;un managed 2-t- seas(:)ns al

Cleveland and Larry Doby had a
half season with the Chi c~ go White
Sox. Being only No.3 creates extra
pressure. Irvin felt the sa me kind of
pressure when he reached the
majors in 1949, \wo years after
Jackie Robinson became big league
baseball's first black player.
" I was lucky,'!._Jrvin said. " I was

28 when Jackie broke in. I was still

young enough to get to the majors."
Jrvin,

now

an aide to Com-

missioner Bowie Kulm , has just
completed his third year as "commissioner" of the St. Regis Paper
Company's Math Baseball League.
Jt is an opportunity for him to work
with kids learning basic math in a
baseball setting and he loves it.
Irvin developed his baseball talent
in the Negro leagues where he
· played with some great players.
Many of them, like Doby, Roy Campanella, Don Newcombe , Sam

Jcthroe and Ha nk Thompson. advanced to the ma jors with him. But
others were left be hind, too old to
make it, cheated of the opportunity
by their age and~ caste system that
made them America's second class
d lizens.

Each yea r tea ms of ma jor leag ue
would go on barnstorming
tours aga inst Negro League teams.
The black players won consistently
against teams that included players
like Ch~rley Gehringer, AI Simmons, Jimmy Foxx ~nd Dizzy Deal\.
Still the majors remained off-limits.
"We were a separate society, not
accepted by most people because of
the tone of the times.'' Irvin said.
"The war changed a lot of people's
thinking."
Led by Ri ckey, ba s eb ~ ll
discovered this fountain of unspoiled
talent and began dipping into it. It
was the beginning of an economic
and human rights revolution in this
country. "It is a period of history
that changed the face of America,"
said Irvin.
Now Wills carries the ball for
another revolution , smaller in scope,
perhaps, but no less important.
~ ll-stars

Tbe Associated Press
The Houston Astros rained on the
Pittsburgh Pirates' parade with a
shower of runs Thursday night.
"They just beat our brains out,"
said Pirates shortstop Tim Foli after
a 12~ beating by the Astros in a battle of National League division
leaders.
Unaccustomed to scoring runs in
such big bunches, the West-leading
Astros collected 18 hits as they completed a three-game sweep of the
East frontrwiners. ''
The victory improved Houston's
lead in the West to It-games over
idle Cincinnati. Third-place Los
Angeles defeated Montreal ~ in 10
innings and remained two games
.' from the lead.
The Pirates' lead in the .East,
meanwhile, dropped to 1\',-games
after the Philadelphia Phillies stopped the San Diego Padres 9-8 in 17 innings.
In other NL action, the Atlanta
Braves whipped the Chicago Cubs 64 and the New York Mets trimmed
the San Francisco Giants 5-1 .
Terry Puhl, Jose Cruz and Cesar
Cedeno combined for hine hits and
seven . RBI in Houston's hitting
spree. Joe Sambito provided strong
relief pitching for the Astros,

retiring all 10 batters he faced.
Dodgers 5, Expos 4
Steve Garvey 's fourth hit of the
game, a solo homer leading off the
lOth, led Los Angeles over Montreal.
Garvey, who had stroked three
straight singles. belted the first pitch in the lOth from reliever Stan ·
Bahnsen, 7-5, for his 22nd homer.
Steve Howe, 6-5, the third Dodger
reliever, allowed one hit over three
innings to earn the victory.
Phillies 9, Padres 8
Bake McBride's second triple of
the game drove in the tie-breaking
run in the 17th inning as
Phila~elphia defeated San Diego
despite 91-3 strong innings of relief
pitching from the Padres' Dennis
Kinney .
Mike Schmidt singled with one out
in the 17th and McBride followed
with his game-winning hit, a drive to
the right-center field fence at
Veterans Stadiwn.
Kinney, who had never pitched
more \han 41'.. innings in his brief
major league tenure covering 39 appearances, lost his fifth game in nine
decisions. Kevin Saucier, 6-3, was

of the season, as Atlanta defeated
Chicago. Murphy put the Braves
ahead with a run-scoring grounder
in the second inning and sent a drive
over the left field fence at Atlanta
Stadium with two men on base in the
fourth, leading the Braves to their
fourth str~ight victory and lith in H
games.
Phil Neikro, 11-14, picked up his
second triumph in three .days,
having won in relief for the first time
this season in the series opener
'Tuesday. Niekro struck out four
before leaving the game in the sixth,
pulling )lim into a tie with Tim Keefe
for 14th place on the all-time major
league list with 2,538 strikeouts.
Mets 5, Giants 1
Jerry Morales's tw&lt;&gt;-run double
keyed a four-run rally in the fifth as
New York broke a seven-game
losing streak by beating San Francisco. Left-hander Vida Blue, 11-7,
was the victim of the Mets' rally.
Lee Mazzilli singled home the first
rll(l of the inning before Morales' key
hit. Claudell Washington drove in
the final run of the inning with a
single that chased Blue.
Pete Falcone, 6-7, was the winning
pitcher in relief of Craig Si\&gt;an, who
worked two innings before his
shoulder tightened up

Liebrandt inconsistent
CINCINNATI (APJ - The Reds '
only· left-handed starter, Charlie
Leibrandt, admits at times it must
not look like he knows what he's
doing out on the mound.
Lei brandt, IIH!, has won only one
of his last eight starts and has compiled a dismal 2-4 record and 6.39
earned run average since July 4.
He's gone from being the savior to
the question mark of the Cincinnati
Reds' pitching staff.
"One thing I've been trying to do is
get some consistency ," Lei brandt
said. "It's frustrating. There hasn't
been any sign of it. Sometimes it
looks like I don't know what I'm
doing out there."
The inconsistency lately is all the
more mysterious because before St.
Louis touched him for four runs and
two walks in less than two innings
Monday, Leibrandt thought things
were falling into place. He had only
given up five runs in his last three·
starts.
"The problem is I try to make too
good a pitch early in the game,"
Leibrandt said. "Then I can afford
to challenge him. It's a matter of
being cocky, being confident. I just
haven't been making good pitches in
the key situations."
The rookie tore off to an 8-4 start
with a 3:48 ERA and five complete
games before he fell to hard times.
Now, Reds Manager John McNamara said his pitching rotation in
the final drive for the championship

in· the National League Western
Division will be mainly right·
handers.
"Our fifth starter, as need~d. will
be either Lei brandt or (Joe) Price or
possibly (Mario) Soto, depending on
the ball club we're facing," McNamara said.
Leibrandt just wants to forget
about the bad games as the team
makes a drive for the pennant.
"Even when I was 8-4, I had a
couple of peaks and valleys," he
said. " Now I'm 2-4, and I've had
them, too.
·
"The best thing is to get in another
game, whether it's as a starter or
reliever. Just get out there."
Not even Johnny B~nch can order
one of those bronze limited edition.
statues of himself~they're all sold:
out.
"I was surprised by the qllickness
of it,'' said Roger Ruhl, the Reds'
vice president for marketing. "It's a
tribute to Johnny, his career, his
stature and the artist."
Ruhl said he thinks a combination
of art collectors and sports fans
bought the 100 12-inch statues.
Prices ranged from$950 to$1,425.
The biggest fan may have been the
fellow in San Diego who heard about
the statues on the. Reds' road trip
last week and called Ruhl in Cincinnati at 9:45 a.m. the next
day-6 :45a.m. San Diego time.

NEW

INTERNATIONAL BASEBALL
EDMONTON, Alberta (AP) The United States, Italy, Puerto
Rico, Japan, Korea and Cuba are expected to participate in the Aug. 616, 1981, Intercontinental Cup series
of amateur baseball.
Ron Hayter, chairman of the
Alberta Baseball Association's committee, said in a telephone interview
Thursday from Tokyo that Edmonton's bid to hold the tournament
the winner.
had been accepted by all36 memberBraves 6, Cubs 4
countries at a meeting of the InDale Murphy drove in four runs,
ternational Association of Amateur
including three with his 21st homer
Baseball.
The eight-team competition will
feature the winners of the last Intercontinental Cup and the last
world championship series, along
with teams from countries holding
==-------~----==~the next Cup and championship

* TIRES

* RETREADS
CALL' FOR
LOW PRICES
PH. 992-7161

GENERAL
Tl RE SALES

McEnroe has problems with game
NEW YORK (AP) - John
McEnroe, a first-round loser in his
last tournament and admittedly
worried about his game, will begin
defense of his U.S. Open tennis title
against unheralded 23-year-old
Christophe Roger-Vasselin o£ Fran·

~s~e=r~ie:s~·----------------------~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

ce.
McEnroe is seeded second for the
Open, which carries total prize
money of $684,082 and begins
Tuesday at the National Tennis Center in Flushing Meadow. The No.I
seed is five-time Wimbledon cham·
pion Bjorn Borg, who will start his
quest for his first U.S. Open title
against another unknown, Guillermo
Au bone of Argentina.
Tracy Austin, the defending champion and top-seeded woman, drew
Anne Smith as her first-round opponent, while second-seeded Martina Navratilova was paired against
Lena Sandin of S.weden.
The Open pairings were announced Thursday, a day that saw
the 21-year-old McEnroe still trying
to pick up the pieces following his
stunning first-round loss to John
Austin in the $15,000 Atlanta Open
Wednesday night.
"I've just got to get my head
together," said McEnroe, who was
beaten 7~. 8-4. "I can't see m to get
up for tournaments since Wimbledon (when McEnroe lost to Borg
in a classic five-set final) . I've
played too many matches and I
haven't practices enough, and it's
showing. Certainly, this won't help
my confidence any in the Open."

. N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

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PIPE
CPVC IN lh" and 314"
ABS IN llh", 2", 3" and 4"
AND 4" DRAIN PIPE

10% .OFF
THROUGH SATURDAY, AUGUST ;30TH

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110 W. MAIN

992-2811

POMEROY, OHIO

BLUE G.A RD
TEAT DIP
BY

li!-ENZIJDE
&gt; ...c

GET
IT
TODAY
AT
SUGAR RUN MILLS
190 Mulberry Ave.

992-2115

Pomeroy, OH.

.1)))354

Kall.'j,ll!l City
2 0 0 1.000 00 10
Oakland
1 1 0 .SOO 45 6'l
Denver
1 1 o
23 15
Seattle
1 1 0 .500 21 3t
San Oieijo
0 2 I .167 . 31 M
NATIONAL CONFERENCE

Phihodelphia

~aid.

Astros riddle Pirates, move 1 112 up

ATTENTIONI

.m

NEW YORK (AP) - Executives
of small companies, family concerns
and other not-so-large operations
·know that when times get tough and
money gets tight, bankers look for
reasons not to lend them money.
Sy Jones says it pays for small
companies to know and avoid "red
flags" which might prevent them
from winning loans. He compiled a
list for clients of his company,
Coopers I Lybrand, the big accounting firm.
I. Large growth in sales volume
with little, If any, bottomiine growth.
2. Inventory expanding at a faster
pace than sales.
3. Accounting controls not considered vey important by
management: controls that are in
place appear to have a high potential
for management override. _
4. Hanging on to an outdated inventory with the forlorn hope of

Wills. " I expect him to do well, given
a chance," he

WE ARE NOW
ACCEPTING
APPLICATIONS FOR
MOTOR ROUTE
DRIV,ERS.

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

,.

TOWN &amp;. COUNTRY VETERINARY CLINIC
WILL HOLD THE

PARVO VACCINATION CLINIC
AT THE MEIGS COUNTY HIGHWAY GARAGE PARKING LOT ADJOINING
ROCK SPRINGS FAIR GROUNDS. .

SATURDAY, AUGUST 23rd, 3 P.M.
ONLY HEALTHY DOGS WILL BE VACCINATED~
ONLY PARVO VACCINE WILL BE GIVEN.
DATES TO BE ANNOUNCED LATER FOR BOOSTER
CLINIC. VACCINATION GIVEN DAILY AT THE
PT. PLEASANT U.INIC DURING SMALL ANIMAL
HOURS. FOR MORE INFORMATION,
CALL 304-675-2441

�2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Aug. 22, 19130

Opinions &amp;
Comments

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., F'riday, Aug. 22, 19130

SCOREBOARD Wills appointment sign of hope
Major LkBCUt" Ba~t'ball
NATIONAl. LEAGUE

EA ST

GOP 'PLATFORM

61
64

Philadelrhia
Montrea
Ne wYork
St. Low.s
Chicago

l'ARA~E.
A$$EMiL.Y AREA

TilE DAILY SENTINE L

w~m

Pitl'l.bur"Kh

65 56
57 64

, Houston
Cinc! nnali

t USPSl~KO )

(m
jl ~

2

.537
.471

10

]IJ

.44 1
.412

IJ 1 i
17

r.1
f:li

. S~
. ~5

52
49
WFST
67
66

66

6!1

56

Los Angelel:i

DEVOTED ro 111E
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
.
I.e~ vi op.bd• ~ welcomed. They should be len Uaan 300 words kln1 (or 1ubjecllo n:ducao. by tilt ettitor) a.cl must be si&amp;Md with the •IIDM'• addrn1. Names may be withheld upon
pablklltiGL However, oa request, Umft will be dlsr l01ed. Letters sboold be in good taJte, ad-

Lust Pet.
5I
.SS&lt;
~
.!'142

11"l

. ~2

&amp;m Frandsco
60 51
.496
Atlanta
~ 62
.48.1
SanOJego
Sl 71
.418
.
. Thursdafs Games
Phila d e l~a 9, &amp;i n Dlego 8. 17 inninKS

2
71~

9
17

New York S, San Framiscu I
Los Angeles :t, Munlrealt, 10 innings

dreuiDI ii~DH, Det penoaaUUn.

hbllabed dally except Satarday by~ Oblo Valley Publilhiag CIMDpany· Multimedia, Inc.,
lll Court St., PGmeroy, Obl•l5'1tl. 8ulots1 Ofllcr Pbu~t!Z·Z~. EdiiOrial Pbollt' 9'tHI5i:
.see-d ~lau pa~:ta&amp;e paklat PltliM'roy, Ohio.
Natieul adwrtiJillg npresentadve, LaDdoo -A.u oclatet, :UOl EucUd Ave., Clt'\'l'lllnrl, OhlB
44Uli.
·
Tile A11ocilted Press is elc1WIIve1y eadtled to tbe use lor pabUcatl.om of all new" dls patChl·~
eedJkd &amp;o the aewspaper iDd also the loc1l aewa pubU1hehrelD.
,
hbUabtr
Robut Winxen
· Gearnl M1r. 6 Clty Editor
Rubtrt Huenich
NNI Editor
~,_....,._,_
Dale Rothgeb, Jr.
Adv. Muager
y~
Carl Ghet&gt;n

Atl anta 6, Chicago4
Houston 12, Pittsburgh S

Only ga mes sc hedul ed
Frlday's Gamt&gt;S
San Diego (J ones 5-12 ) at Muntrea l 1Norman J...
2), (n)
·
St. Louis (Fulgham :ki) at Atlanta (M&lt;J lula 7ll), ( n )
Los Angeles (Welch 10-6) at New Yurk t Burris

6-1), tn)
San Francisco !Whibuu 8-9) at Phi ll:l delphi ~
(Carlton 19-6 ), ( n)
Pittsburgh !Robinsoo 4-6) al Cinci nnati

t:llm:s~ ~._--.-,,_..,..=,...,

~~

{ Moskau8-4 ) , {n )

Chicago (Reuschel1 ()-9) at Houston ( K.Fonch
tn)

1~10 ).

t~e."

AMERI CAN LEAGUE
EAST

Public Defender
denies wrongdoing
The state public defender has found himself in the awk_ward position of having to defend himSelf against
allegations about the way he operates his office.
J. Tullis Rogers spent most of Wednesday fending off
allegations from unidentified sources that he uses attorneys from the state public defender's office to handle
his.private cases in Franklin County Municipal Court.
"I am not engaged in any private practice," he said in
answer to the allegations, which appeared in a newspaper
report Wednesday morning:
Ohio law does not prohibit ·the public defender from
maintaining a private law practice. But Rogers said the
only income he earns is from his $34,500-a-year state job.
"The people making these allegations said there were
five cases I used attorneys from this office ... I'd like to
know what the c;ases are," he said.
'' According to the newspaper article, .there is an in·
vestigation by the Ohio Public Defender Commission, the .
state Office of Budget and Management and the state
auditor's office.
Rogers denied ihat the nin(l-member public defender
commission was conducting any type of investigation,
however.
. "They're (commissioners) doing what they did prior to
:. hiring me, looking at the situation across the board," said
&lt;Rogers, who is being evaluated Hy the commission for
.: reappointment in October to another four-year term'.
:: . State Budget Director William D_ Keip declined to com. ment on whether his department was investigating the
:. public defender's office.
·. "For me to corrunent on anything would be premature,"
:Keipsaid.
:. ·Under state law, Keip's office is responsible for ensuring
:that all public expenditures, except for those of the
legislative and judicial branches, are spent correctly.
~
"A representative from the auditor's office ... came over
:. this (Wednesday) morning to advise me the auditor's of::fice was not conducting any sort of investigation of our of:: fice," Rogers said. "But since the article has appeared in
:; the paper, I was told the auditor will look into allegations
::made by either former or current employees with regard
::to whatever is being charged." .
. Rogers said the auditor's office assured him the probe
::"will be done very quickly."
·. An official in the state auditor's office confinned that an
::investigation was under way as a result of allegations
::made two weeks ago. But he said there was no proof of any
::impropriety.
. Rogers believes the allegations stem "from either past
;:or present upset employees or from somebody un:: beknownst to me that may want this job," he said.
·
:: According to Rogers, his office handles nearly 800 cases
::a year representing indigent defendants throughout the
: ;state..When he was hired four years ago, he was told by the ·
::commission to devote full time to the job, he said.
· "I don',t have any outside income," he said.

Berry's World

New York
Baltimore
Milwallkee

Won
73
71
66

ll&lt;&gt;;lon
Cleveland

Lost Pel. GB
41
.606 48
.597
11"1
56
.541
8

"62

66
57

.530

91'.2

.521

10 11:

62

S1

.521
.• 20

JOIIz
22 12

.645

-

Detroit

;o 69

Toronto

WFST

Kansas City

78
S3
57

O.~~.kbwd

Texas
Minnesot.:l
Chicago
Calif ornia

"I've got an uneasy feeling that there ain't no such animal."

4..1

53

~

.516

15 1'.1

62

.479

:II

00

.434
.424
.403

zjl_;z

50 68
li '·l
48 71
29
Seattle
43 ii
.358 34 1,o;t
•
Tllursday" 1 GameY
Boston 5, Oaltland 1
Minnesota ~2. Detr&lt;lit 3-4
Chicago$, Toronto 3
Cleveland 4, Kan.'las City 3
Baltimore7 , Ca!Uornia l
Seattle 6, New Ycrk 4
Only games scheduled
Friday'• Games
Milwauke ~ (Mitchell3-2 and Cleveland H I at
Texa~. (Jenkins 11·10 and Medlch 1~7 ), 2, (n)
Toronto (Clancy ll·9) yt Chicago (Borns 11}12), [n)
.
•
Cleveland (Barker 14-3) at Kansas Cit}' (Split·
lorff9-3). (n)
Detroit (Fidrych 1}-2) at Minne:iota (l&lt;.09srrum

Ohio perspective

11·10), (n)

"Ba ltimore (Palmer 13-91 at Oa kland ( McCatt y
Io;W ), (n I

Vehicles ·up, gasoline usage down
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
The
nwnber of cars in Ohio is continuing
to climb, but the vehicles aren't
using as much gasoline as they did a
year ago.
Cars, trucks and buses drank 5.7
billion gallons of gasoline and
special fuels in Ohio during the fiscal
yea£ which ended June 30, the Ohio
Public Expenditure Council says.
''This was a decrease in fuel usage
of 370.4 million gallons, or 6.1 percent, over motor vehicle fuel sales in
fiscal 1979," the private research
group said in a newsletter.
It said the sharp decline in fuel
consumption was more significant
when viewed against a backdrop of

the number of vehicles. Total motor
vehicle registrations in Ohio increased by 2.3 million from
registration years 1969 to 1979.
Less driving, of course, means
less revenue for state coffers from
Ohio's 7-cents-per-gallon gasoline
tax.
The council says it amounted to a 6
percent drop in fiscall980. A total of
$391.8 million in motor vehicle fuel
taxes was collected in Ohio during
the last fiscal year, compared to
$416.6 million a year earlier.
State govenunent receives about
three-fourth:! of the tax revenue,
·with the rest going to cities, counties

and townships. Transportation
department officials blame the drop
in tax revenue, combined with the
effects of inflation, for the chronic
financial woes which have curtailed
highway construction programs
statewide.
Ohio is not alone in facing the
problem as motorists drive less, and
more fuel-efficient cars hit the highways.
Several states have increased fuel
taxes to offset declining revenues,
although attempts to do so in Ohio
last year failed. The gaso!' •e tax has
not been increased since 1959.
But two other states have tried to
solve the problem by switching from

a per-gallon tax to a sales tax on the
price of motor fuel. As the price of
fuel increases, so do tax revenues.
"The most recent state to adopt
the 'percentage of sales' method was
Massachusetts," the council says.
"Motorists in Massachusetts now
pay a tax of 10 percent of the selling
price per gallon, instead of the for·
mer 8.5 cents per gallon tax."
California imposes both a 7-centsper·gallon fuel tax ai1d a 6 percent
sales tax. Revenues from the fixed
per-gallon tax decreased last year,
the study group said, but gasoline
sales tax revenues registered a substantial increase.

Carter recovering,
hut not completely well
.
WASHINGTON (AP) - Right on
schedule, the first symptoms of
political recovery are showing on
President Carter's chart - but he's
not well yet.
Carter and his strategists had said
all along 'that th'eir poll ratings
against Ronald Reagan would improve markedly once the
Democratic National Convention
renominated him.
Until then, it was a two-man show
among Democrats, while Reagan
had the Republican billing all to
himself. Now Carter heads ·the
Democratic ticket and Sen. Edward
M. Kennedy is supporting him,
although it isn't yet clear how active
he'll be in the campaign ahead.
The president . has indeed
. narrowed the pollsters' gap, just as
former President Gerald R. Ford
did against Carter four years ago.
Lopsided pre-convention margins
for Carter in those polls proved
illusory; once Ford had defeated
Reagan and gained the GOP

nomination, the racewas.a tight one.
An Associated Press survey
showed a surge in Carter support
immediately after the Democrats'
convention week in New York City.
The attention and television time a

percent, Carter 22 percent, Anderson 1~ percent.
In both those surveys, the margin
of error was 4 percentage points,
meaning the candidates' ,actual support could be higher or lower by that

time with a telephone in his hand,
said he was getti!lg those readings
from Democrats around the country
as he sought to orchestrate harmony
behind the Carter ticket.
The national surveys set benclunarks of popular sentiment. Except in runaway campaigns, they
tend to get closer at election day
nears.
But a presidential election is not a
single, nationwide contest. It is ~I
contests, for the electoral votes of
each state and the District of Colwnnational convention draws will
margin.
bia. The question is not only how
atmost invariably boost the ratings
Robert S. Strauss, Carter's cam- many votes, but where. A runaway
of its candidates.
. paign chairman, had said the in one state counts for·no more than
The new poll, completed on Saturpresident surely would gain ground . a narrow victory in another; winner
day, shows Reagan the preferred once his contest with Kennedy was takes all the electoral votes.
candidate of 39 percent of likely settled.
voters questioned. Carter was
"I just know that we're picking
And Democrats from states like
chosen by 32 percent, Rep. John B. up," Strauss said during the con- Ohio, Pennsylvania, Texas, even
Anderson, the independent, by 13 vention. "I'm a pretty good judge of some Deep South states, left New
Joercent. The rest were undecided or this - I'm the complaint pepart· York .nervous, or pessimistic, about
favored minor party candidates.
ment, with damn little authority to Carter's standing with their voters.
Ten days earlier, before the make refunds."
The. president can't afford to lose
Democratic show, it was Reagan 47
Strauss, who spends much of his states like those.

Today's commentary

Business mirror

Bankers looking for reasons not to lend

New York (Tiant 6-7) &lt;1 l California ( l.aRoc hc
2-31, !nl
Boston (Renko 7-5 1 at Se.i!.tlle (Bea ttie HOJ,
tnl
TODAV' S MAJOR L.EAGUE LEADERS
NATIONAL LEAGUE

BAITJNG (300 at bats ): Templet on, St.Louis,
.328 ; Hendrick, St.Louis, .325; Buckner, Chi ca~ o.
.325 ; Trillo, Philadelphia . .323; R.Smith, Los
Angeles, .322.
,
RUNS : K.He mandet, St.Louis , 81 ; leF' Iore,
Montreal, !Ml; Rose, Philadelphia , liJ; Schmidt,
Ptilladelphia, 78; Murphy, Atlanta, 76.
RBI : Ga rvey, l.o:~ Angeles, 91 ; Sctunidt,
Phlladelphi.a, 90; Hendrick, St.Louis, 86; Clark,
San Francisco, 78 : Ca rter, Montreal, 76 : Sim·
mons, St.Louis, 76; K.Hernandez, St.Louis, 76.
HITS: G11rvey , Los Ant!cles, -:;3 ; Templeton,
St.Louis, 145; Hendrick, St.Loui ~ . US ; K.Her·
nandet, SU.ouis, 140; Rose, Philadelphia, 138":
J .Cruz , H!1uJlon, lle.
OOUBLES: Rose , Philadelphia, 33 ; Knight,
CinciMali, 31 ; K . Hernandez, SU.Oula, 30 ;
Buckner, Chicago,29; Simmqns, St. Louis, 29.
TJUPl.ES : R.Scott, Montreal, 10 ; McBride,
Philadelphia , 10 ; LeFlore, Montreal. 9;
0 Moreno, Pittsburgh, 9; Templeton, St. Louis,
9.
HOME RUNS: Schmidt , PhJiadelphia, M: Horner, Atlanta, 27 ; Baker, Los An geles, 23; Carter,
Moo treal, 22: Ga rv ey. Los Angele:1. 22: Clark.
San Fr.ll.ncisco, 22.
STOLEN BASES : LeF lore. Montreal, 80;
O.Moren&lt;l , PUts burgh, 70; Collins, Cincinnati,
Ml; Richards, &amp;l n Die go, 47; R.Scott , Montreal,
43,
PITCHING (II Deds ioM): Bibby, Pittsburgh ,
1 ~ .. 833, 2.94 ; Walk , Phibtdelphia, 9-2, .818, 4.S7;
fteuss, Los Angeles, 15-4 , .789 , 2. 11 ; Carlton,
Philadelphia, lf-6, .700, 2.21 ; G.J ackson, PitL'!Iburgh , $-3 , . 7~ , 2.44 ; Sambito, Houston, 8-3 ,
:rn. 2.27; Richard, IIOU!Jton , Jo-t, .714, 1.90;
Pa..'ilore, Cincinru:~ti , J()-S, .667 , 3.19.
STRIKEOUTS: Carlton. Philadelphia , ~ II ;
Ryan , Howton, 142 ; Blyleven, Pittsburgh, 139;
P.Niekro, Atlanta , 136 ; Solo, Cincinnati, 124.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
BAITING 1300 at bal:! l: Brett, Karucu Ci ty ,
404 ; Cooper, Milwaukee, .354 ; Dilon~ .
t.1eveland, .348 ; Carew , Califomla, .333 ; B.Bell.
Texas, .333 .
RUNS: Wilson, Ka115aS City, 99; Yount ,
Milwaukee, 93; Wills, Texa,.,, 87 ; Bumbry,
Baltimore, 85; Hender.ton, Oakland, 81 ; Rivers,
Teus,&amp;l .
R.B1 : Re .Jackson, New York, 91 ; Brett, Ka nsas City, 91 ;. Cooper, Milwaukee, 90 ; Perez,
Boston, 88; Obverft'exas, 87.
HITS : Wilson. Kai\Sal City, 170: Cooper ,
Milwaukee, 163 ; ruvers, Texas, IM ; Oliver,
Texas, 111; Bwnbry, Baltlmore ; l42.
DOUBLES : Yount, Milwauke e, 39 : Morrison,
Chicago, 3$; McRae, Kansas Clty , 33; Lynn,
Boston, 31 ; D.Garcia , Toronto, 29.
TRIPLES: Griffin, Toronto, 12 : Wilson, Kansal City, 12; Brett, Kansa5 Cit1, 9; Bumbry ,
Baltimore, 7; Hebner, Detroit, 7; Yount,
Milwaukee, 7; Washington, Kansas City, 7: Llln·
dreaLlX, MiMesota, 7.
HOME RUNS : Re .Ja.cbon, New York. 34 ;
Oglivie, Milwaukee, 31 ; Thomas. Milwa ukee, 27;
Annas, Oakland, 26; Murray, Baltimore, 21;
Perez, Boston, 21; Parrish, Detroit, 21.
STOLEN BASES: Henderson, Oakl.11.nd, 62;
Wilson, Kansas Cit~. Sl; Dilone, Cle\'eland , 4S :
J .Cn11, Seattle, 36; 11b, Texll.'l, 30.
PITCIUNG (11 Decisions) : Stone, Baltimore,
~ •.833, 2.1H ; Darwin, Teus, 10.2, .8l3, 2.45;
GLU"a, Kansas City, 17-5, .773, 2.ZS : John ,. New
York, !Hi, .739, 3.49; Rainey, Boston, 8-3, .1'll.
U6 ; McGregor, Baltimore, 15-41, .714, 3.20 ;
QuisenberT)', Kansas City, lo-4 , .714, 2.82 ;
M.Norri s, Oakland, 17·7, .7~. 2.26.
Natiooal Foolballl..eague
ExhJbiUoo St.od.Joc•
AMERICAN CONFERENCE

Eaol

Miami
Bal timore
New England
Buffalo
N.Y. Jets

Pittsburgh
&lt;..'incinnati
Houston
Cleveland

W·lrT Pel. PF PA
2 D 0 1.000 41 14
1 1 0 .500 :lO 16
110.5006462
0 2 0 .000 2fi 48
0 2 0 .0002249
Central
2 0 0 1.000 30 14
1 I 0 .500 'II :1
1 'I 0 .500 27 38
(120

w...

An AP Sports Analysis
By HAL BOCK
AP Sports Writer
The ~ppointment of Maury Wills
as manager of the Seattle Mariners
is a two-edged sword.
On the one hand it offers the opportunity for a black man to call the
shots for a major league team , an
event all too infrequent in baseball.
On the other hand, it could be a no- ·
win situation unless Mariners
management has the patience
necessary to build a winner.
It is patience that Hall of Farner
Monte Irvin believes will be the key
forWills in Seattle.
"I hope they give him a chance to
build and stay with it for awhile,"
said Irvin. " If that's n~! their intention, then it's a big mistake.
You've got to have material,
something to work with. Given
talent, he'll succeed'; but it takes
The word from baseball bird dogs
is that the Mariner farm system has
some good, young players a few
years away from the majors. Irvin
hopes they reach Seattle in time for

@ 1980 b)l NEA. Inc.

"HI, there! I'm Ronald Reagan's Irrepressible
younger brother!"

'

:!r

selling it some day.
5. Lack of inventory records.
6. Poor Inventory turnover.
7. Company is highly leveraged,

thinly capitalized.
8. Viability of company rests on
one person or a small grollp.
9. Lack of management tools

Today in history
Today is Friday, August 22, the
235th day of 19130. There are 131 days
left in the year.
Today' s highlight in history:
On August 22, 1910, Korea was formally annexed by Japan.
On this date:.
In 1485, King Richard III of
England was killed in the Battle of
Bosworth, ending the War of the
Roses.
In 165'1. Jacob Barsimson became
the rirsl Jewish emigrant to
America when he · landed in New
Amsterdam.
1

In 1941, German forces reached
the outskirts of the Soviet city of
Leningrad during World War II.
They didn't get much farther.
In 1968, Pope Paul VI launched the
first papal visit to Latin America
when he arrived in Bogota, Colombi~ . '
Last year, President Carter said
he bad personally approved the sale
of $47 million in kerosene fuel to Iran
- despite the petroleum shortage in
the United States. Carter said the
amount was very tiny and the approval was on a one-time basis.

.,

needed to analyze sales by
customer, product, product line and
plant profitability.
10. Management not always open
in discussing matters with Its bank
or in making the most effective use
of its auditors or other advisers.
11. No monthly or quarterly finan- ·
cia! statements; annual reports not
· available until several months after
year-end.
"Timely flnancials of one kind or
another are among the first things
lenders look for, initially and on a
continuing basis," says Jones.
"Without statements, it is very hard
to get money."
To which you might add another
observation, one that can be verified
by small-business people: State!Qents or not, In times like these It lflif:
ten hard to get money - Wlless your
company doesn't need lt.

Eaol
2

0

0 1.000 ~2

%l

2 0 0 1.000 36 :tl
2 0 0 1.000 z;
6
1 10.5003431
110.500919
Central
1 10.5003741
MiMeS01.a
I 1 0 .500 3:1 7l
Tampa Bay
I
1 0
.500 31 34
Detroit
1 1 0 .500 24 30
Chicago
0 2 1 .167 11 34
Green Bay
Weal
San Francisco
2 0 0 Um 50 11
Ne wOrle&amp;ns
1 I 0 .500 34 33
1..os Angele:1
0 2 0 .000 47 54
Atlanta
0 2 0 .000 24 31
Friday'• Gamu
New York Giants at Baltimore

Dallas

Wuhington
St. Louis
N.Y. Gi.ants

Saturday's Games

Green Bay at Buffalo
N~w York Jeltl .at Pitl&lt;lburgh
Cincinnati at Tamp~ Bay
Cleveland at Chicago
Kansas City 11t St Louis
Oakland al Washlngton
M:innesota at Miami
New Orleans ill Detroit
AUant.a at San Dtesu
Hou.stoo at Dallas
l.A19 Angeles at Denver
St!attle at San Francisco
Suncby's Gam~ ll
Philadelphia 111 New Erll!land

I&lt;

J·' m

s un~

this

gives Frank Robinson hop~ that he'll
get ~noth e r chance.··
Wills is the third black m~n~gc r.
H.obin;-;un managed 2-t- seas(:)ns al

Cleveland and Larry Doby had a
half season with the Chi c~ go White
Sox. Being only No.3 creates extra
pressure. Irvin felt the sa me kind of
pressure when he reached the
majors in 1949, \wo years after
Jackie Robinson became big league
baseball's first black player.
" I was lucky,'!._Jrvin said. " I was

28 when Jackie broke in. I was still

young enough to get to the majors."
Jrvin,

now

an aide to Com-

missioner Bowie Kulm , has just
completed his third year as "commissioner" of the St. Regis Paper
Company's Math Baseball League.
Jt is an opportunity for him to work
with kids learning basic math in a
baseball setting and he loves it.
Irvin developed his baseball talent
in the Negro leagues where he
· played with some great players.
Many of them, like Doby, Roy Campanella, Don Newcombe , Sam

Jcthroe and Ha nk Thompson. advanced to the ma jors with him. But
others were left be hind, too old to
make it, cheated of the opportunity
by their age and~ caste system that
made them America's second class
d lizens.

Each yea r tea ms of ma jor leag ue
would go on barnstorming
tours aga inst Negro League teams.
The black players won consistently
against teams that included players
like Ch~rley Gehringer, AI Simmons, Jimmy Foxx ~nd Dizzy Deal\.
Still the majors remained off-limits.
"We were a separate society, not
accepted by most people because of
the tone of the times.'' Irvin said.
"The war changed a lot of people's
thinking."
Led by Ri ckey, ba s eb ~ ll
discovered this fountain of unspoiled
talent and began dipping into it. It
was the beginning of an economic
and human rights revolution in this
country. "It is a period of history
that changed the face of America,"
said Irvin.
Now Wills carries the ball for
another revolution , smaller in scope,
perhaps, but no less important.
~ ll-stars

Tbe Associated Press
The Houston Astros rained on the
Pittsburgh Pirates' parade with a
shower of runs Thursday night.
"They just beat our brains out,"
said Pirates shortstop Tim Foli after
a 12~ beating by the Astros in a battle of National League division
leaders.
Unaccustomed to scoring runs in
such big bunches, the West-leading
Astros collected 18 hits as they completed a three-game sweep of the
East frontrwiners. ''
The victory improved Houston's
lead in the West to It-games over
idle Cincinnati. Third-place Los
Angeles defeated Montreal ~ in 10
innings and remained two games
.' from the lead.
The Pirates' lead in the .East,
meanwhile, dropped to 1\',-games
after the Philadelphia Phillies stopped the San Diego Padres 9-8 in 17 innings.
In other NL action, the Atlanta
Braves whipped the Chicago Cubs 64 and the New York Mets trimmed
the San Francisco Giants 5-1 .
Terry Puhl, Jose Cruz and Cesar
Cedeno combined for hine hits and
seven . RBI in Houston's hitting
spree. Joe Sambito provided strong
relief pitching for the Astros,

retiring all 10 batters he faced.
Dodgers 5, Expos 4
Steve Garvey 's fourth hit of the
game, a solo homer leading off the
lOth, led Los Angeles over Montreal.
Garvey, who had stroked three
straight singles. belted the first pitch in the lOth from reliever Stan ·
Bahnsen, 7-5, for his 22nd homer.
Steve Howe, 6-5, the third Dodger
reliever, allowed one hit over three
innings to earn the victory.
Phillies 9, Padres 8
Bake McBride's second triple of
the game drove in the tie-breaking
run in the 17th inning as
Phila~elphia defeated San Diego
despite 91-3 strong innings of relief
pitching from the Padres' Dennis
Kinney .
Mike Schmidt singled with one out
in the 17th and McBride followed
with his game-winning hit, a drive to
the right-center field fence at
Veterans Stadiwn.
Kinney, who had never pitched
more \han 41'.. innings in his brief
major league tenure covering 39 appearances, lost his fifth game in nine
decisions. Kevin Saucier, 6-3, was

of the season, as Atlanta defeated
Chicago. Murphy put the Braves
ahead with a run-scoring grounder
in the second inning and sent a drive
over the left field fence at Atlanta
Stadium with two men on base in the
fourth, leading the Braves to their
fourth str~ight victory and lith in H
games.
Phil Neikro, 11-14, picked up his
second triumph in three .days,
having won in relief for the first time
this season in the series opener
'Tuesday. Niekro struck out four
before leaving the game in the sixth,
pulling )lim into a tie with Tim Keefe
for 14th place on the all-time major
league list with 2,538 strikeouts.
Mets 5, Giants 1
Jerry Morales's tw&lt;&gt;-run double
keyed a four-run rally in the fifth as
New York broke a seven-game
losing streak by beating San Francisco. Left-hander Vida Blue, 11-7,
was the victim of the Mets' rally.
Lee Mazzilli singled home the first
rll(l of the inning before Morales' key
hit. Claudell Washington drove in
the final run of the inning with a
single that chased Blue.
Pete Falcone, 6-7, was the winning
pitcher in relief of Craig Si\&gt;an, who
worked two innings before his
shoulder tightened up

Liebrandt inconsistent
CINCINNATI (APJ - The Reds '
only· left-handed starter, Charlie
Leibrandt, admits at times it must
not look like he knows what he's
doing out on the mound.
Lei brandt, IIH!, has won only one
of his last eight starts and has compiled a dismal 2-4 record and 6.39
earned run average since July 4.
He's gone from being the savior to
the question mark of the Cincinnati
Reds' pitching staff.
"One thing I've been trying to do is
get some consistency ," Lei brandt
said. "It's frustrating. There hasn't
been any sign of it. Sometimes it
looks like I don't know what I'm
doing out there."
The inconsistency lately is all the
more mysterious because before St.
Louis touched him for four runs and
two walks in less than two innings
Monday, Leibrandt thought things
were falling into place. He had only
given up five runs in his last three·
starts.
"The problem is I try to make too
good a pitch early in the game,"
Leibrandt said. "Then I can afford
to challenge him. It's a matter of
being cocky, being confident. I just
haven't been making good pitches in
the key situations."
The rookie tore off to an 8-4 start
with a 3:48 ERA and five complete
games before he fell to hard times.
Now, Reds Manager John McNamara said his pitching rotation in
the final drive for the championship

in· the National League Western
Division will be mainly right·
handers.
"Our fifth starter, as need~d. will
be either Lei brandt or (Joe) Price or
possibly (Mario) Soto, depending on
the ball club we're facing," McNamara said.
Leibrandt just wants to forget
about the bad games as the team
makes a drive for the pennant.
"Even when I was 8-4, I had a
couple of peaks and valleys," he
said. " Now I'm 2-4, and I've had
them, too.
·
"The best thing is to get in another
game, whether it's as a starter or
reliever. Just get out there."
Not even Johnny B~nch can order
one of those bronze limited edition.
statues of himself~they're all sold:
out.
"I was surprised by the qllickness
of it,'' said Roger Ruhl, the Reds'
vice president for marketing. "It's a
tribute to Johnny, his career, his
stature and the artist."
Ruhl said he thinks a combination
of art collectors and sports fans
bought the 100 12-inch statues.
Prices ranged from$950 to$1,425.
The biggest fan may have been the
fellow in San Diego who heard about
the statues on the. Reds' road trip
last week and called Ruhl in Cincinnati at 9:45 a.m. the next
day-6 :45a.m. San Diego time.

NEW

INTERNATIONAL BASEBALL
EDMONTON, Alberta (AP) The United States, Italy, Puerto
Rico, Japan, Korea and Cuba are expected to participate in the Aug. 616, 1981, Intercontinental Cup series
of amateur baseball.
Ron Hayter, chairman of the
Alberta Baseball Association's committee, said in a telephone interview
Thursday from Tokyo that Edmonton's bid to hold the tournament
the winner.
had been accepted by all36 memberBraves 6, Cubs 4
countries at a meeting of the InDale Murphy drove in four runs,
ternational Association of Amateur
including three with his 21st homer
Baseball.
The eight-team competition will
feature the winners of the last Intercontinental Cup and the last
world championship series, along
with teams from countries holding
==-------~----==~the next Cup and championship

* TIRES

* RETREADS
CALL' FOR
LOW PRICES
PH. 992-7161

GENERAL
Tl RE SALES

McEnroe has problems with game
NEW YORK (AP) - John
McEnroe, a first-round loser in his
last tournament and admittedly
worried about his game, will begin
defense of his U.S. Open tennis title
against unheralded 23-year-old
Christophe Roger-Vasselin o£ Fran·

~s~e=r~ie:s~·----------------------~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

ce.
McEnroe is seeded second for the
Open, which carries total prize
money of $684,082 and begins
Tuesday at the National Tennis Center in Flushing Meadow. The No.I
seed is five-time Wimbledon cham·
pion Bjorn Borg, who will start his
quest for his first U.S. Open title
against another unknown, Guillermo
Au bone of Argentina.
Tracy Austin, the defending champion and top-seeded woman, drew
Anne Smith as her first-round opponent, while second-seeded Martina Navratilova was paired against
Lena Sandin of S.weden.
The Open pairings were announced Thursday, a day that saw
the 21-year-old McEnroe still trying
to pick up the pieces following his
stunning first-round loss to John
Austin in the $15,000 Atlanta Open
Wednesday night.
"I've just got to get my head
together," said McEnroe, who was
beaten 7~. 8-4. "I can't see m to get
up for tournaments since Wimbledon (when McEnroe lost to Borg
in a classic five-set final) . I've
played too many matches and I
haven't practices enough, and it's
showing. Certainly, this won't help
my confidence any in the Open."

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Middleport, Ohio

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Astros riddle Pirates, move 1 112 up

ATTENTIONI

.m

NEW YORK (AP) - Executives
of small companies, family concerns
and other not-so-large operations
·know that when times get tough and
money gets tight, bankers look for
reasons not to lend them money.
Sy Jones says it pays for small
companies to know and avoid "red
flags" which might prevent them
from winning loans. He compiled a
list for clients of his company,
Coopers I Lybrand, the big accounting firm.
I. Large growth in sales volume
with little, If any, bottomiine growth.
2. Inventory expanding at a faster
pace than sales.
3. Accounting controls not considered vey important by
management: controls that are in
place appear to have a high potential
for management override. _
4. Hanging on to an outdated inventory with the forlorn hope of

Wills. " I expect him to do well, given
a chance," he

WE ARE NOW
ACCEPTING
APPLICATIONS FOR
MOTOR ROUTE
DRIV,ERS.

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

,.

TOWN &amp;. COUNTRY VETERINARY CLINIC
WILL HOLD THE

PARVO VACCINATION CLINIC
AT THE MEIGS COUNTY HIGHWAY GARAGE PARKING LOT ADJOINING
ROCK SPRINGS FAIR GROUNDS. .

SATURDAY, AUGUST 23rd, 3 P.M.
ONLY HEALTHY DOGS WILL BE VACCINATED~
ONLY PARVO VACCINE WILL BE GIVEN.
DATES TO BE ANNOUNCED LATER FOR BOOSTER
CLINIC. VACCINATION GIVEN DAILY AT THE
PT. PLEASANT U.INIC DURING SMALL ANIMAL
HOURS. FOR MORE INFORMATION,
CALL 304-675-2441

�5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomcror. 0 ., Friday . Aug. 22, 1980

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleporl-l'omeruy, 0 ., F riday, A~g . 22, 1980

-~-...;.,__David

Golfs big names live up to reputations
ByGEORGESTRODE
AP Sports Writer
AKRON, Ohio (AP) - Golf's $8
million threesome played like it.
Tom Watson, Jack Nicklaus and
Lee Trevino, going head to head for
the first time iri their careers, combined for one eagle, 12 birdies and a
best-ball score of 11-under-par 59
Thursday in the first round of the
$421,000 World Series of Golf.
HWe inspire each other," Watson
said. His six-birdie 65, five under par
over Firestone South's muddy,

soggy 7,173 yards, gave him a twtr
shot lead.
Larry Nelson, Craig Stadler and
Ben Crenshaw were second with 67s.
Nicklaus was among four players at
68. Trevino matched three others at
69.
·' My· round was a lot better than
theirs, guys," Trevino told the
media afterward. " If they had - to
play the ball from where I did, I
don 't know if they could have shot

my score.''
Nicklaus, the sport's all-time

money champion with nearly $3.6
million, said, " I enjoyed it. We had a
good day. We all got it under par,
which are good scores here.'' . . .
Trevino ranks second on the alltime money list with. $2.39 million,
and Watson is third with $2 million. ·
The select international field of 32
compla ined of the playing conditions
under which they were forced to hit
mud-covered balls from the soft fairways.
More of the same was in store
today a(ter an electrical storm, ac-

·-

·

.

.,

·,

.-

..--

-

.• .

ter the Yankees loaded the bases
in the ninth on a walk and two
singles, one a bunt.
Rawley then struck out Eric
Soderholm and Aurelio
Rodriguez . and retired Bucky
Dent on a fly ball.
Orioles 7, Angels 1
Rich Dauer collected four hits,
including a pair of doubles, and
John Lowenstein added a home
run while Scott McGregor pitched a tiidy seven-hitter for his
15th victory and the Orioles' fifth
consecutive triumph.
California scored first on a
double by Dan Ford and Don
Baylor's single in the fourth inning but Dauer erased that lead
with a two-run double in the fifth.
AI Bumbry's sacrifice fly made it
3-1, Lowenstein homered in the
sixth and the Orioles tacked on
three more runs in the seventh,
two on a double by Rick Dempsey.
The Angels, who have lost six in
a row, get a crack at the fading
Yankees this weekend while the
Orioles are in Oakland.
" Maybe the Angels can knock
off the Yankees," said Dauer.
"We won six of eight from New
York to close the gap, but now we
need some help. When we do catch them in the loss column, I
think our pitching staff will carry
us right past them. "
Indians 4, Royals 3
Ron Hassey belted a three-run
homer in the first inning a nd Rick
Waits and two relievers combined on a six-hitter as Cleveland
ended Kansas City's eight-game
winning streak. Hassey connected off Steve Busby after
Miguel Dilone's checked-swing

double and a walk to Mike
Hargrove. Brett homered in the
fourth inning for his only hit.
Twins 5-2, Tigers 3-4
Minnesota's only hit in the
nightcap was a one-out single by
Rob Wilfong in the very first inning.
" Pitching is a mind game,"
said Morris, who allowed only
three baserunners, all on walks,
the rest of the way. "I've been
struggling lately and searching
for some comfort and ease. I
think I found it tonight.
In the opener, Pete Mackanin
hit a tie-breaking twtrrun homer
for the Twins in the seventh inning and rookie Doug Corbett
recorded his 14th save.
·
Red Sox 5, A's 1
Jim Rice hit his 15th homer in
the second inning and Boston
scored four unearned runs in the
fourth to snap Rick Langford's
nine-g ame winning streak .
Despite the loss, Langford pit-.
ched his 18th consecutive complete game and 21st of the season.
Boston rookie John Tudor was the
winner, giving up six hits. The big
hit in the Red Sox' four-run fourth
was Glenn Hoffman's two-run
single. .
White Sox 5, Blue Jays 3
Jim Morrison drove in three
runs with a double and a two-run
single and Kevin Bell contributed
a key triple in Chicago's four-run
fifth inning. Winner Lamarr Hoyt
pitched five hitless innings •but
needed seventh-inning help from
Ed Farmer, who notched his 21st
save. Morrison singled home the
tyiing run in the fourth inning and
rapped a two-run single an inning
later.

.• '

...Sports briefs
GOLF
GRAND BLANC, Mich. (AP)
Rex Caldwell and Barney Thompson
fired 6-under-par 68s to share the first-round lead in the $250,000 Buick
Open.
Twenty-four golfers were unable
to finish the rain.&lt;)elayed first round
and were scheduled to complete it
this morning. David Eger was one
stroke behind the leaders at 76.
DENVER (AP) - Gail Hirata
fired a 4-under-par 68, to share the
first-round lead with Pat Bradley
and Mary Dwyer in .a $150,000 LPGA
tournament.
"TENNIS
MASON, Ohio (AP) -'- Jimmy
Connors easily defeated Robert
Van't Hof 6-1, 6-1 in the third round
of the $200,000 Association of Tennis
Professionals Championships.
In other matches, Harold Solomon
topped Victor Arnilya, &amp;-4, 6-1; Ivan
Lend! of CZechoslovakia beat Jeff
Borowiak, 4-6, 6--3, 6--3; Roscoe Tanner downed John Sadri, 6-4, 8-0; and
Pascal Portes of France edged
Australian Mark -Edmundson 6-1, 6-

-·...

3.
MAHWAH, N.J. (AP) - Andrea

,•. Jaeger set up a quarterfinal meeting
~ · with Tracy Austin with a 6--3, 6-2 vic-~; tory over Lucia Romanov of
.. • Romania in the third round of the
$100,000Women's Cuptournament.
In other matches , Dianne
J",
Fromholtz of Australia scored a 6-1,
6-1 victory over · Sue Saliba;
Czecho5lovakia's Hana Mandlikova
beat Bettina Bunge, 6-1, 6--3; Kathy
..; - Jordan ousted Candy Reynolds 6--3,
8-0; Sylvia Manika of West Germany
took a 6-3, 6-3 victory over Regina
Marsikova of Czechoslovakia; and
Trey Lewis beat Elizabeth Ekblom
of Sweden 6--3, 6-3.
ATLANTA (AP) - Unseeded
Kevin Curren of South Africa beat
John Austin 6-1, 7~ to advance to the
quarterfinals of the $75,000 Atlanta
Open tennis tournament.
Curren will play· eighth-seeded
Tony Gianunalva, who made the
quarterfinals with a 6-1, 6--3 victory
over David Carter of Australia.
In other results, second-seeded
Eddie Dibbs beat Tom Gullikson 6-2,
6-2 and sixth-seeded Terry Moor
beat Van WinitskyG-1, 5-7,6-3.
GENERAL ,
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) Victor Romero, a professional
featherweight boxer, died three
dBys after he collapsed following a
sparring session.
·

..

'

the more off line it goes with the
mud. I was hitting the ball
every where.
·
" l had better luck out of the rough
than the fairwa y."
Watson took a big step toward the
$100,000 first prize that would push
his earnings for the year past an unprecedented $510,000. His second
Series victory would all but lock up
the PGA Player of the Year Award,
the money title and the Vardon
Trophy for low stroke average for a
record fourth straight season.

" I'd rather l)e in the JAad of the
tournam e nt th an c h asing
somebody,"said the 31&gt;-year Watson ,
bidding for his seventh victory this
. year and 20th in less than four
seasons.
He reeled off three straight birdies
starting at the sixth hole, played the
front nine in 32 and came within one
shot of Andy Bean's tournament
record."
Portions of the final rounds Saturday and Sunday will be carried by
CBS television.

'

ATTENTIONI

KENT, Ohio (AP) - Paul McDonald, fresh orr an impressive performance against the Washington
Redskins, has fortified his effort to
become Brian Sipe's understudy.
McDonald, the Cleveland Browns'
fourth draft choice in the National
Football Le!igue's draft of college
players, is competing with two
young players each in their third
season - Mark Miller and Jonny
Evans.
Because Evans is the team's punter, he's virtually assured to be the
third-string quarterback behind
either McDonald or Miller.
McDonald played his college football at the University of Southern
California and starred in two Rose
Bowl games. But he also built a
reputation as a superior student.
"I've got two classes to finish up in
business," McDonald said. " It's no
big deal. I'll take them as soon as I

can.
"When I get my degree, I'll be
eligible for a real estate broker's
license. Then I'll go to law school. I
.want to go into real estate law."
McDonald and Los Angeles Rams
qua rterback Pat Haden attended the
same high school in California ,
although they were five years apart.
Haden's NFL career was delayed a
year when he studied under a
Rhodes Scholarship, and McDonald
said he had a chance at the honor,
too.
"But I decided not to pursue the
Rhodes Scholarship," he said. " It
was a difficult decision and, as !look
back at it, I think I made the wrong
one. At the time, football was the important thing to me.
"I thought if it was known I was
taking a year orr to study, I wouldn't
have been drafted as highly ."
McDonald will watch from the

sidelines Saturday when Mark
Miller and perhaps Evans get a
chance in the second half to show
what they ca n do in relief of starter
Sipe.
But he's not worried about any
possibility that he might not make
the team.
" I'm confident in my ability," he
said . "I ·believe that if you're talented enough and work hard enough,
you can do anythingyou want."

in~~rt
aruLQunRitM
Pomeroy
Flower Shop
" '-5721

CHRISTIAN
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.. Manufactur ers suggested relail price
including dest ination charges Excludes
dealer preparation , license fees . tax:es
and other op ti ons . Vehicle shown with
installed ra lly stripe which is avai lable

at ext ra cost.
"1980 EPA estimates . Remember: com pare th ese est ima tes
to estimated mpg for oth er cars. You r mileage may vary due
to speed, tri p leng th, ·or wea th er. Yo ur highway milea ge will
pro bably be lower.

The 1980 Rabbit Diesel
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gets an EPA estrmated @QJ mpg.
· 52 mpg high':"ay estimate. (Use

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A birthday party for Mrs. Flore~
ce Hannay, a shut-in , highlighted the
Tuesday night meeting of the Dorcas
Circle of the B. H. Sanborn
Missionary Society, Middleport F irst Baptist Church, held at the home
of Mrs. Beulah While.
Each member took a gift to Mrs.
Hannay and the group sang " Happy
Birthday." Pictures were taken and
cake and sherbet, coffee and
lemonade were served.
Mrs. Sarah Owen opened the
meeting with a reading and prayer ,
and Mrs. White had the devotions entitled "Pray Without Ceasing" using
scripture from I Thes. 5.
Plans were made to remember
Vivian Titus on her birthday. She
remains a patient at the Pinecrest
Nursing Home in Gallipolis. The

*~~~

These days, mos t ca r s have good ,:(as mil eage. but
Renaul t builds in a lot more. That 's why you
should test drive the 1 ~80 H.enau lt Le Car before
you buy anything else. With :JO es timate mpg/40
hig hway' , Le Ca r gives you t he economy you need
and the front wheel drive ha ndlin g and traction
you wa nt . Tes t dr:v e t he '1980 Hena ul t Lc Ca r
today.

.•

By Polly Cramer
Special correspondent
· DEAR POLLY - I have an old
refrigerator in the basement that
has a bad odor inside. f have cleaned
it with baking soda and warm water
and that helped some but an odor
still remains. I left an open box of
soda inside during the winter but
whe n I needed to use th e
refrigerator this swnmer that
lingering odor was still there. I
really need it for storing vegetables
and to freeze various things so hope
you can offer some help. - BLANCHE
DEAR BLANCHE - A couple
of bowls of vanilla
placed inside often solves this
problem
or
Jani ce's letter \
that follows may ' h,
have the answer ·
for
you.
Cramer
POLLY
DEAR POLLY - A couple of
years ago the electricity was turned
off at our summer home. The freezer
· was well-stocked with fish, of a ll
things. I ·tried everything and
nothing helped the odor so I wa~ just
about ready to get rid of the freezer
when I decided to try that dry com-

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

VMH PICNIC TIJESDA Y
Annual picnic of the Auxiliary of
Veterans Memorial Hospital will be
held Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. at the
Racine Locks a nd Dam on the West
Virginia side. The meat and salad
will be provided and members are to
lake a covered dish and their own
table service. Husbands are invited
to attend. Those going on the pi cnic
are to meet at the hospital at 5:30
p.m. for the trip to the picnic site. On
Monday at 2 p.m. there will be an
executive committee meeting of the
Auxi liary.
THOMAS WATKINS
CONFINED
Thomas E. Watkins, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Ora Watkins, Middleport,
is confined to University Hospital,
Columbus, for treatment of a foot injury.
.
Watkin s was injure~ while
working with Conrail in Columbus.
On Aug. 5, he 'lost the toes on his
right foot in the accident and Wednesday underwent a second surgery.
His room number is 885 and cards
may be sent to him at University
hospital, 410 lOth Ave., Columbus.
Watkins is the husband of the former Susan Slater, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. William Slater, Middl~port, and the ~oupl e have three
sons.
GROUND BREAKING
SUNDAY
. Gro.undbrea king ·ceremonies for
the new Racine Wesleyan United
Methodist Church will be held at 11
a.m. Sunday .

a Texas sOck!' '
"Why do you say that, Chaps~"
"Wal, first off, all us hombres
heah weah boot socks. And second,
with the kind of weather we have in
Texas, ain't nobody wore a wool
suck in yeahs!"
"Well, thank you, Chaps, Incidentally, has any member of your
delegation ever played bas.eball for
the Red Sox ~"
"Are they in the Texas League 1 "
"Back to you, Walter."
·"Good work, Dan. Now, we have
just learned here in the booth that
another sock has been found near
the West Virginia delegation, which
may, or may not be, a mate to the
first. We understand one delegate
described it as not a true red, but
what he termed , a Ramsey Clark
pink. For further information, let's
go to Harry Reasoner who's with the
West Virginia delegation. Harry .. ."
"Walter, I'm with West Virginia
delegate, Ramps Coalcreek. Mr.
Coalcreek, what can you tell me concerning the socks that have been

fuund ?"

" Very little, I'm afraid. At our last
caucus, all of our delegates pledged
themselves not to divulge any sock
information. But, I will tell you this.
Neither sock belongs to any member
of our delegation."
"How do you know that •"
'' Beca use nobody in our group was
wearing socks , 'cept Arch , and he
still has his on."
"Come, now, my dear fellow, are
you telling me that people in West
Virginia do not wear socks•''
" Very few of our party. But, according to Jay 's latest batch of commercials, everyone will soon be able
to afford socks, even elderly
Republicans."
" Well, that's good to hear Ramps.
Now, to you, Walter ."
"Thanks, Harry. Now , let's go to
Mike Wallace who's standing by
with one of t he delegates from Mon-

tana."
" Yes, Walter, I'm with delegate now , let me get this right - Chief
Crazy Firewater, is that correct?"

Fairgoers getting 'down to earth '
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -:- If the
public response to an exhibit at the
Ohio State Fair is any indication,
development of the Earth Home
may have a solid foundation .
BlUed as an alternative concept in
energy efficient housing, the structures are sheltered by earth along
three walls and the roof. A 96(}.
square foot model at the fair has
been drawing thousands of visitors
for a brief tour.
" We've been very surprised at the
number of people and the interest,"
said Jane Shera of Middletown.
"We've had people lined up clear
across the street. So there is

mercial product that so many use in
their cat boxes. It worked like a
charm a nd the freezer smells as
clea n as new.- JANICE
DEAR POLLY - My luggage
always smells just wonderful even
though I do not get to use it very often. I keep a bar of my favorite soap
in each piece and when I am going to
travel! just leave the bars of soap in
the cases - sometimes I find I would
rather use my own soap than that
provided in motels. When I return
home I replace the used bars with
fresh ones and stow the luggate
curiosity."
away in the attic.- RUBY
Ms. Shera and partner Rich
DEAR POLLY - I made the
Ingram
have formed Earihworks
cutest napkin rings from empty carfinn to help those
Inc.,
a
consulting
dboard tubes out of toilet tissue rolls.
·
wanting
to
build
earth sheltered
I cut each tube into three sections
homes.
The
two
help
find suitable
with a very sharp knife or single
building
sites,
work
with county
edge razor blade. Some of these
building officials and help obtain
tubes were covere d with pretty
financing.
adhesive-backed paper I happened
A University of Minnesota study
to have a nd others were painted with
showed there were about 3,000 of the
br ight-colo~ed marking peris and a
homes in the United States in 1977,
bit of cr ocheted lace on each end.
Ms. Shera said. Although figures for
Even the kids thought th~y were
Ohio were not ' available, she
very clever. - F .S.M.
estimated there were 15 of the strucPolly will send you one of her
tures in the Springfield and Cinsigned thank-you newspaper coupon
cinnati areas.
clipiJ"rS if she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in her
col umn. Write POLLY'S POINTERS in ca re of thi s newspaper.

A significant reduction in home
heating and cooling costs is the chief
selling point for the structures. Persons who already have built earth
homes say they spend $100 to $200 a
year for heating and cooling.
"That's been the average," Ms.
Shera said. "That's the main advantage as far as most people are

concerned.''
Temperatures of the earth
surrounding the home are cooler in
the sununer and warmer in the winter than the outside air, sheltering
the borne from exterior temperature
changes. In addition, the amount of
routine maintenance
facin g
homeowners is reduced .
"It's a lotless. You mow the roof,"
Ingram said. "Obviously a majority
of the exterior should be covered. So
you've got a maintenance situation
that should be decreased.''
Most of those who express reservations about the concept are concerned by dampness. But that's not
a problem if the home is built with
proper insulation, lighting and ventilation, Ms. Shera said.
The house's walls consist of up to
12 inches of poured concrete, with
precast, sloping concrete ceilings.
The extra-thick concrete is covered

with a waterproof membrane and insulation.
Other benefits of the construction
style include greater light per
square foot, reduced air infiltration,
adaptability to building sites and increased protection from storm
damage.
Shera said reproducing the
relatively small model at the fair +
without some of the special solarpowered equipment displayed inside
+ would cost less than $40,000. Costs
for larger homes of about 2,000
square feet are about $40 to $45 per
square foot .
Meanwhile, the fair heads into its
final three days today with afternoon and evening grandstand
performances by the Mills Brothers.
On Saturday, country singer Tennessee Ernie Ford is to entertain.
Also scheduled are finals of the
marching band festival, horse show
competition in a variety of classes,
the Buckeye Dairy Goat Sale and the
Miss Ohio State Fair Queen
Pageant.

" Ugh. "
" Chief Firewater, you have the
largest headdress I've Steen at this
convention. I hope I didn 't do too
much damage when I stepped on
your train of eagle feathers."
" Ugh."

" Chief, how do you like Detroit~"
''How."
"That 's what I'm asking . How?"
" Indian rio wear sock. Indian wear
moccasin .''
" So I see. Bear with us, Walter,
we're having a little communication
problem.'~

" Go ahead, Mike ."
" Chief, I also see you 're wearing a
"Sitting Bull for President" button.
Surely you know that Sitting Bull has
been dead for many, many years."
"Even deatl, better bull than we're
getting nowadays! "
" Back to you, Walter."
" And that's the way it is. When
you grow old , eat too much and
retire too early, you can dream it
any way you wish.!''

KEETON HOSPITALIZED
Albert (Red) Keaton of Pomeroy
is a patient at the Holzer Medical
Center. Cards J)lay be sent to room

425.

' COLO'\' · .
lh~ ufr ,

•

•

NOW THRU SEPT. 18

The &amp;ndit, Frog IIIII Justice are •t it.,.,
ir tile Ill/new llllvlntum of.. .

A UNIVEIIS,I,l f'I CIVR

_ _.. .... a,..tt._.oc ..• - • • • -

m

BURT REYNOLDS • JACKIE GJ.£ASON •
REED
DOM DelUISE and iSAU.Y FJELDj .

Sew-Rite club plans sale

Mrs. Hannay honored

THE DAILY SENTINEL

If you're looking

·Has refrigerator odor

,.. .

TERRELL WINS AWARD
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (AP) J erry Terrell, Kan8as City utility infielder, has been·voted the 1980 Da nny Thompson Award " for exemplary Christian spirit in baseball."
Terrell, 34, a veteran of eight
major league seasons, was selected
by the Baseball Chapel staff from a
dozen major league nominees.
Terrell, who spent most of August
with the Omaha faim club, served
Kansas Ciity both as Chapel leader
and player representative. Last
spring when the player association
took a strike vote, Terrell cast the
only negative ballot.

has rocked this great arena to its
ticipa tion of seeing J ohnny Bench
slam anothc1· one out, when, lo and very foundation, and, could , rip
behold, who d1d I see seated behind
as under · the harmony "that has
the m icrophone in the press box• No
existed between the conservative
Bill Brown or Ray Lane but, Walter ·and the more moderate wings of the
Cronkite, himself!
Republican Party. As we unThough attired in his usual crisp,
derstand it, a sock has been found, a
business pinstripe and dry-cle~ned
red sock, on the convention floor
mustache, I immediately detected a
which has led many of the delegates
marked change in Walter. A new
to believe that an outsider has intwinkle danced in his eye and as I
filtrated their ranks, since recent
settled back in my recliner, I noticed
polls show that an overwhelming
a distinct halo of gray light floating
majority of Republicans wear conlazily over hi s head. I was soon beset
servative brown or black socks. For
by pan gs of disappointment,
more details, let's go to Dan Rather
however, as the halo began to
who's with the chairman of the
dissipate and I suddenly realized it
delegation in wh' Je area the sock
was only a cloud of smoke, no doubt . was allegedly found. Are you there,
launched by Walter himself while off
Dan?"
camera . Walter's an incessant pipe
"Yes, I am, Walter. I'm talking to
smoker, I'm told, but the mere sight
the chairman of the Texas
of an anchorman taking a puff on
delegation, Mr. J;:haps Gertrudis.
television can get him a job counting
Mr. Gertrudis, can you shed any
icebergs on the Eskimo Express.
light on the sock that was found in
As I fired my own pipe, Walter
your area?''
began to speak:
"Wal, podnah, all we-all heah
" Ladies and gentlemen, an event
heah is rumors, but, if it's a regular
has occurred at this convention that
wool sock like they say, it shore ain't

Polly's Pointers

Sports shorts

WE ARE NOW
ACCEPTING
APPLICA liONS FOR
MOTOR ROUTE
DRIVERS.

Upper River Road

There are many kinds of dreams.
. . Daydreams, pipe dreams, sleepy
hme dreams and even nightmares.
Luckily, most of our dreams are
happy affairs that allow us to enjoy
many delightful pursuits beyond the
veil of slumber that evade us in the
real world.
Unfortunately, the farther we
ascend the rickety ladder of old age,
the more often our dreams are constructed of crazy , scary stuff that, at
any given moment, can set us bolt
upright in bed pinching our clammy
skin to ascertain if we are, indeed,
slill :jmong the living.
Recently, during one of my more
tranquil ventures into dreamland 1
snapped on the T.V. with avid ;n-

USC star pushing for Na. 2

Yankees hear footsteps
The Associated Press
If the New York Yankees aren't
hearing footsteps behind them,
they certainly must be a ware of
the flapping of Oriole wings in the
inunediate vicinity of first place.
Playing more like the Bad
News Bears, the Yankees handed
Seattle four unearned runs in the
first inning, then failed to score
after loading the bases with none
out in the ninth and dropped a 6-1
decision to the lowly Mariners.
Meanwhile, the high-flying
Baltimore Orioles trounced
California 7-1, giving them 11 consecutive regular-season victories
over the Angels- 8-() this yearplus a 3-1 edge in the 1979 AL
playoffs.
New York's lead- on July 19 it
was 9¥.. over Milwaukee, 10 over
Baltimore - is down to a scant
11&gt;-games for the first time since
May 21 and George Steinbrenner's blood pressure must be
boiling over.
In other ,action, the Cleveland
Indians nipped the Kansas City
Royals 4-J - George Brett
homered in four at-bats and is hitting .404 - the Detroit Tigers
beat the Minnesota Twins 4-2 on
Jack Morris' one-hitter after the
Twins took the doubleheader
opener 5-3, the Boston Red Sox
downed the Oakland A's 5-1. and
the Chicago White Sox defeated
the Toronto Blue Jays 5-3.
Milwaukee and Texas were not
scheduled.
Seattle's Bruce Boehle, who
singled home the tie-breaking run
in the fifth inning - Julio Cruz
homered in the seventh for an insurance run - helped settle
reliever Shane Rawley dowti af-

companied by heavy rain and 50
mph winds, raked the course
moments after the . " Big Three"
•
finished .
Defending champion Lon Hinkle,
one of the sport's long hitters, said
he was at a disadvantage in the conditions.
"Every time I was in the fairway,
I had a quarter-to a half-inch of mud
on my ball," said Hinkle, tied at 68
with Mike Reid, Hale Irwin and
Nicklaus. "The harder you hit your
irons, the more spin the ball has and

David H. Cummings, retired
Pomeroy Post Office employe,
, , over -the past few years has penned humoruuss columns for The
Daily Sentinel on a variety of sul&gt;jects. In the following latest
column, Dave ''socks '' Jt to 'em.

Cummings--Dream a little dream-_,.;._--

group also will participate in the
" care a nd share" program.
Each member submitted the
name of someone in need of special
prayer, with Mrs . White giving the
prayer. The program entitled
"Sistership of a Local Church" was
given by Mrs. White.
Refreshments by Mrs. White,
assisted by Mrs. Pearl Hoffman,
were served to those named and
Mrs. Dreama Hudson, Mrs. Sarah
Fowler, Mrs. Helen Bodimer, Mrs.
Janice Gibbs, Mrs. Eva Hartley ,
Miss Rhoda Hall, and Mrs. Hannay.

Mrs. Betty Wehrung hosted a
recent meeting of the Sew-Rite
Sewing Club recently. Presiding at
the session was Mrs. Nettie Boyer
with a rummage sale being planned
for September. Mrs. Wehrung had
the treasurer's report, and Mrs.
Evelyn Gilmore, the secretary's
report.
Games were played with the prize
going to Mrs. Shirley Baity who also
won the door prize. Mrs . Mildred
Wells will have the next meeting.

TO REPORT MONDAY
Eastern High School girls interested in playing volleyball this
fall should report for practice Mo~
day, at I :30 p.m . at the high school.

Refreshments were served by the
hostess to those named and Mrs.
Lucy White, Mrs. Lenora· McKnight,
Mrs. Barbara Mullen, and Mrs. Flo
Strickland. Guests were Mrs.
Boyer's daughter, Brenda, and her
son, Jeremy.

~'The phone

systems

big

WINNER ANNOUNCEDI

Wilda Durst of Cottageville,
W.Va., won the Squeez:o given
away at

Now lor a hm11ed lirnt~ only wht·n you bL;y a Stihl 028W8 you 'll also
I;Jl' l d strong. d o ul llt· Wdilt·. l •.ll rymg r.ctse, B 02 can of otl, file and

~===::;;;...,_...-.-~
~

handle:. I'IU!=; d llw woocl Uooklet a nd plasllc wedge.
heforf'

the Ci:'!Se IS clu!ied

\ .

-~

ST/HL

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Our Commun icat ions Cons ul ta nts
have only one job: t o mak e your t e lecommunications bette r and better.
W e h ave what you n eed.

HOME &amp; AUTO

606 E. Maill
- Alignments
Most cars Sl I. SO

for us .. :•

When is a coal company n ot a coal
company?
When it's a lso into truc king , fa rming and mine supply.
They're a ll p a rts of the Bowman family businesses, e ach with
its own phone system. But they
outgrew these systems, a nd
asked the Genera l T e leph one
Communications Consultant for
help . W e s uggested a GTD120C compute r -contro ll ed sys tem.
" Without Communi catio n s C o n s ulta nt Esther Klineb rie l. w e wo uldn 't have
known what was availabl e t o save us time a nd
money," said Mr. B owman. "Our n ew phon e system h andles ca ll s for
all four compani es. Yet each gets its own phon e b ills for accounting
purposes . Th e ni ght-answe r feature is very
imp ortant. N ow w e get a ft e r-h o urs c a lls a t
h ome - these a r e a lmos t a lways v e r y imp ort a nt calls."

ASTRONG CASE FOR
BlJYING THE STIBL 028WB
RIGHT NOW.

1\ $37 Vd lut · FnEE Gt· l 11 no w

•

-Pbil Bowman. Vice President, Waterloo Coal Co •• Oak Hill

BAUM TRUE VALUE

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�5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomcror. 0 ., Friday . Aug. 22, 1980

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleporl-l'omeruy, 0 ., F riday, A~g . 22, 1980

-~-...;.,__David

Golfs big names live up to reputations
ByGEORGESTRODE
AP Sports Writer
AKRON, Ohio (AP) - Golf's $8
million threesome played like it.
Tom Watson, Jack Nicklaus and
Lee Trevino, going head to head for
the first time iri their careers, combined for one eagle, 12 birdies and a
best-ball score of 11-under-par 59
Thursday in the first round of the
$421,000 World Series of Golf.
HWe inspire each other," Watson
said. His six-birdie 65, five under par
over Firestone South's muddy,

soggy 7,173 yards, gave him a twtr
shot lead.
Larry Nelson, Craig Stadler and
Ben Crenshaw were second with 67s.
Nicklaus was among four players at
68. Trevino matched three others at
69.
·' My· round was a lot better than
theirs, guys," Trevino told the
media afterward. " If they had - to
play the ball from where I did, I
don 't know if they could have shot

my score.''
Nicklaus, the sport's all-time

money champion with nearly $3.6
million, said, " I enjoyed it. We had a
good day. We all got it under par,
which are good scores here.'' . . .
Trevino ranks second on the alltime money list with. $2.39 million,
and Watson is third with $2 million. ·
The select international field of 32
compla ined of the playing conditions
under which they were forced to hit
mud-covered balls from the soft fairways.
More of the same was in store
today a(ter an electrical storm, ac-

·-

·

.

.,

·,

.-

..--

-

.• .

ter the Yankees loaded the bases
in the ninth on a walk and two
singles, one a bunt.
Rawley then struck out Eric
Soderholm and Aurelio
Rodriguez . and retired Bucky
Dent on a fly ball.
Orioles 7, Angels 1
Rich Dauer collected four hits,
including a pair of doubles, and
John Lowenstein added a home
run while Scott McGregor pitched a tiidy seven-hitter for his
15th victory and the Orioles' fifth
consecutive triumph.
California scored first on a
double by Dan Ford and Don
Baylor's single in the fourth inning but Dauer erased that lead
with a two-run double in the fifth.
AI Bumbry's sacrifice fly made it
3-1, Lowenstein homered in the
sixth and the Orioles tacked on
three more runs in the seventh,
two on a double by Rick Dempsey.
The Angels, who have lost six in
a row, get a crack at the fading
Yankees this weekend while the
Orioles are in Oakland.
" Maybe the Angels can knock
off the Yankees," said Dauer.
"We won six of eight from New
York to close the gap, but now we
need some help. When we do catch them in the loss column, I
think our pitching staff will carry
us right past them. "
Indians 4, Royals 3
Ron Hassey belted a three-run
homer in the first inning a nd Rick
Waits and two relievers combined on a six-hitter as Cleveland
ended Kansas City's eight-game
winning streak. Hassey connected off Steve Busby after
Miguel Dilone's checked-swing

double and a walk to Mike
Hargrove. Brett homered in the
fourth inning for his only hit.
Twins 5-2, Tigers 3-4
Minnesota's only hit in the
nightcap was a one-out single by
Rob Wilfong in the very first inning.
" Pitching is a mind game,"
said Morris, who allowed only
three baserunners, all on walks,
the rest of the way. "I've been
struggling lately and searching
for some comfort and ease. I
think I found it tonight.
In the opener, Pete Mackanin
hit a tie-breaking twtrrun homer
for the Twins in the seventh inning and rookie Doug Corbett
recorded his 14th save.
·
Red Sox 5, A's 1
Jim Rice hit his 15th homer in
the second inning and Boston
scored four unearned runs in the
fourth to snap Rick Langford's
nine-g ame winning streak .
Despite the loss, Langford pit-.
ched his 18th consecutive complete game and 21st of the season.
Boston rookie John Tudor was the
winner, giving up six hits. The big
hit in the Red Sox' four-run fourth
was Glenn Hoffman's two-run
single. .
White Sox 5, Blue Jays 3
Jim Morrison drove in three
runs with a double and a two-run
single and Kevin Bell contributed
a key triple in Chicago's four-run
fifth inning. Winner Lamarr Hoyt
pitched five hitless innings •but
needed seventh-inning help from
Ed Farmer, who notched his 21st
save. Morrison singled home the
tyiing run in the fourth inning and
rapped a two-run single an inning
later.

.• '

...Sports briefs
GOLF
GRAND BLANC, Mich. (AP)
Rex Caldwell and Barney Thompson
fired 6-under-par 68s to share the first-round lead in the $250,000 Buick
Open.
Twenty-four golfers were unable
to finish the rain.&lt;)elayed first round
and were scheduled to complete it
this morning. David Eger was one
stroke behind the leaders at 76.
DENVER (AP) - Gail Hirata
fired a 4-under-par 68, to share the
first-round lead with Pat Bradley
and Mary Dwyer in .a $150,000 LPGA
tournament.
"TENNIS
MASON, Ohio (AP) -'- Jimmy
Connors easily defeated Robert
Van't Hof 6-1, 6-1 in the third round
of the $200,000 Association of Tennis
Professionals Championships.
In other matches, Harold Solomon
topped Victor Arnilya, &amp;-4, 6-1; Ivan
Lend! of CZechoslovakia beat Jeff
Borowiak, 4-6, 6--3, 6--3; Roscoe Tanner downed John Sadri, 6-4, 8-0; and
Pascal Portes of France edged
Australian Mark -Edmundson 6-1, 6-

-·...

3.
MAHWAH, N.J. (AP) - Andrea

,•. Jaeger set up a quarterfinal meeting
~ · with Tracy Austin with a 6--3, 6-2 vic-~; tory over Lucia Romanov of
.. • Romania in the third round of the
$100,000Women's Cuptournament.
In other matches , Dianne
J",
Fromholtz of Australia scored a 6-1,
6-1 victory over · Sue Saliba;
Czecho5lovakia's Hana Mandlikova
beat Bettina Bunge, 6-1, 6--3; Kathy
..; - Jordan ousted Candy Reynolds 6--3,
8-0; Sylvia Manika of West Germany
took a 6-3, 6-3 victory over Regina
Marsikova of Czechoslovakia; and
Trey Lewis beat Elizabeth Ekblom
of Sweden 6--3, 6-3.
ATLANTA (AP) - Unseeded
Kevin Curren of South Africa beat
John Austin 6-1, 7~ to advance to the
quarterfinals of the $75,000 Atlanta
Open tennis tournament.
Curren will play· eighth-seeded
Tony Gianunalva, who made the
quarterfinals with a 6-1, 6--3 victory
over David Carter of Australia.
In other results, second-seeded
Eddie Dibbs beat Tom Gullikson 6-2,
6-2 and sixth-seeded Terry Moor
beat Van WinitskyG-1, 5-7,6-3.
GENERAL ,
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) Victor Romero, a professional
featherweight boxer, died three
dBys after he collapsed following a
sparring session.
·

..

'

the more off line it goes with the
mud. I was hitting the ball
every where.
·
" l had better luck out of the rough
than the fairwa y."
Watson took a big step toward the
$100,000 first prize that would push
his earnings for the year past an unprecedented $510,000. His second
Series victory would all but lock up
the PGA Player of the Year Award,
the money title and the Vardon
Trophy for low stroke average for a
record fourth straight season.

" I'd rather l)e in the JAad of the
tournam e nt th an c h asing
somebody,"said the 31&gt;-year Watson ,
bidding for his seventh victory this
. year and 20th in less than four
seasons.
He reeled off three straight birdies
starting at the sixth hole, played the
front nine in 32 and came within one
shot of Andy Bean's tournament
record."
Portions of the final rounds Saturday and Sunday will be carried by
CBS television.

'

ATTENTIONI

KENT, Ohio (AP) - Paul McDonald, fresh orr an impressive performance against the Washington
Redskins, has fortified his effort to
become Brian Sipe's understudy.
McDonald, the Cleveland Browns'
fourth draft choice in the National
Football Le!igue's draft of college
players, is competing with two
young players each in their third
season - Mark Miller and Jonny
Evans.
Because Evans is the team's punter, he's virtually assured to be the
third-string quarterback behind
either McDonald or Miller.
McDonald played his college football at the University of Southern
California and starred in two Rose
Bowl games. But he also built a
reputation as a superior student.
"I've got two classes to finish up in
business," McDonald said. " It's no
big deal. I'll take them as soon as I

can.
"When I get my degree, I'll be
eligible for a real estate broker's
license. Then I'll go to law school. I
.want to go into real estate law."
McDonald and Los Angeles Rams
qua rterback Pat Haden attended the
same high school in California ,
although they were five years apart.
Haden's NFL career was delayed a
year when he studied under a
Rhodes Scholarship, and McDonald
said he had a chance at the honor,
too.
"But I decided not to pursue the
Rhodes Scholarship," he said. " It
was a difficult decision and, as !look
back at it, I think I made the wrong
one. At the time, football was the important thing to me.
"I thought if it was known I was
taking a year orr to study, I wouldn't
have been drafted as highly ."
McDonald will watch from the

sidelines Saturday when Mark
Miller and perhaps Evans get a
chance in the second half to show
what they ca n do in relief of starter
Sipe.
But he's not worried about any
possibility that he might not make
the team.
" I'm confident in my ability," he
said . "I ·believe that if you're talented enough and work hard enough,
you can do anythingyou want."

in~~rt
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Flower Shop
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at ext ra cost.
"1980 EPA estimates . Remember: com pare th ese est ima tes
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to speed, tri p leng th, ·or wea th er. Yo ur highway milea ge will
pro bably be lower.

The 1980 Rabbit Diesel
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gets an EPA estrmated @QJ mpg.
· 52 mpg high':"ay estimate. (Use

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A birthday party for Mrs. Flore~
ce Hannay, a shut-in , highlighted the
Tuesday night meeting of the Dorcas
Circle of the B. H. Sanborn
Missionary Society, Middleport F irst Baptist Church, held at the home
of Mrs. Beulah While.
Each member took a gift to Mrs.
Hannay and the group sang " Happy
Birthday." Pictures were taken and
cake and sherbet, coffee and
lemonade were served.
Mrs. Sarah Owen opened the
meeting with a reading and prayer ,
and Mrs. White had the devotions entitled "Pray Without Ceasing" using
scripture from I Thes. 5.
Plans were made to remember
Vivian Titus on her birthday. She
remains a patient at the Pinecrest
Nursing Home in Gallipolis. The

*~~~

These days, mos t ca r s have good ,:(as mil eage. but
Renaul t builds in a lot more. That 's why you
should test drive the 1 ~80 H.enau lt Le Car before
you buy anything else. With :JO es timate mpg/40
hig hway' , Le Ca r gives you t he economy you need
and the front wheel drive ha ndlin g and traction
you wa nt . Tes t dr:v e t he '1980 Hena ul t Lc Ca r
today.

.•

By Polly Cramer
Special correspondent
· DEAR POLLY - I have an old
refrigerator in the basement that
has a bad odor inside. f have cleaned
it with baking soda and warm water
and that helped some but an odor
still remains. I left an open box of
soda inside during the winter but
whe n I needed to use th e
refrigerator this swnmer that
lingering odor was still there. I
really need it for storing vegetables
and to freeze various things so hope
you can offer some help. - BLANCHE
DEAR BLANCHE - A couple
of bowls of vanilla
placed inside often solves this
problem
or
Jani ce's letter \
that follows may ' h,
have the answer ·
for
you.
Cramer
POLLY
DEAR POLLY - A couple of
years ago the electricity was turned
off at our summer home. The freezer
· was well-stocked with fish, of a ll
things. I ·tried everything and
nothing helped the odor so I wa~ just
about ready to get rid of the freezer
when I decided to try that dry com-

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

VMH PICNIC TIJESDA Y
Annual picnic of the Auxiliary of
Veterans Memorial Hospital will be
held Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. at the
Racine Locks a nd Dam on the West
Virginia side. The meat and salad
will be provided and members are to
lake a covered dish and their own
table service. Husbands are invited
to attend. Those going on the pi cnic
are to meet at the hospital at 5:30
p.m. for the trip to the picnic site. On
Monday at 2 p.m. there will be an
executive committee meeting of the
Auxi liary.
THOMAS WATKINS
CONFINED
Thomas E. Watkins, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Ora Watkins, Middleport,
is confined to University Hospital,
Columbus, for treatment of a foot injury.
.
Watkin s was injure~ while
working with Conrail in Columbus.
On Aug. 5, he 'lost the toes on his
right foot in the accident and Wednesday underwent a second surgery.
His room number is 885 and cards
may be sent to him at University
hospital, 410 lOth Ave., Columbus.
Watkins is the husband of the former Susan Slater, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. William Slater, Middl~port, and the ~oupl e have three
sons.
GROUND BREAKING
SUNDAY
. Gro.undbrea king ·ceremonies for
the new Racine Wesleyan United
Methodist Church will be held at 11
a.m. Sunday .

a Texas sOck!' '
"Why do you say that, Chaps~"
"Wal, first off, all us hombres
heah weah boot socks. And second,
with the kind of weather we have in
Texas, ain't nobody wore a wool
suck in yeahs!"
"Well, thank you, Chaps, Incidentally, has any member of your
delegation ever played bas.eball for
the Red Sox ~"
"Are they in the Texas League 1 "
"Back to you, Walter."
·"Good work, Dan. Now, we have
just learned here in the booth that
another sock has been found near
the West Virginia delegation, which
may, or may not be, a mate to the
first. We understand one delegate
described it as not a true red, but
what he termed , a Ramsey Clark
pink. For further information, let's
go to Harry Reasoner who's with the
West Virginia delegation. Harry .. ."
"Walter, I'm with West Virginia
delegate, Ramps Coalcreek. Mr.
Coalcreek, what can you tell me concerning the socks that have been

fuund ?"

" Very little, I'm afraid. At our last
caucus, all of our delegates pledged
themselves not to divulge any sock
information. But, I will tell you this.
Neither sock belongs to any member
of our delegation."
"How do you know that •"
'' Beca use nobody in our group was
wearing socks , 'cept Arch , and he
still has his on."
"Come, now, my dear fellow, are
you telling me that people in West
Virginia do not wear socks•''
" Very few of our party. But, according to Jay 's latest batch of commercials, everyone will soon be able
to afford socks, even elderly
Republicans."
" Well, that's good to hear Ramps.
Now, to you, Walter ."
"Thanks, Harry. Now , let's go to
Mike Wallace who's standing by
with one of t he delegates from Mon-

tana."
" Yes, Walter, I'm with delegate now , let me get this right - Chief
Crazy Firewater, is that correct?"

Fairgoers getting 'down to earth '
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -:- If the
public response to an exhibit at the
Ohio State Fair is any indication,
development of the Earth Home
may have a solid foundation .
BlUed as an alternative concept in
energy efficient housing, the structures are sheltered by earth along
three walls and the roof. A 96(}.
square foot model at the fair has
been drawing thousands of visitors
for a brief tour.
" We've been very surprised at the
number of people and the interest,"
said Jane Shera of Middletown.
"We've had people lined up clear
across the street. So there is

mercial product that so many use in
their cat boxes. It worked like a
charm a nd the freezer smells as
clea n as new.- JANICE
DEAR POLLY - My luggage
always smells just wonderful even
though I do not get to use it very often. I keep a bar of my favorite soap
in each piece and when I am going to
travel! just leave the bars of soap in
the cases - sometimes I find I would
rather use my own soap than that
provided in motels. When I return
home I replace the used bars with
fresh ones and stow the luggate
curiosity."
away in the attic.- RUBY
Ms. Shera and partner Rich
DEAR POLLY - I made the
Ingram
have formed Earihworks
cutest napkin rings from empty carfinn to help those
Inc.,
a
consulting
dboard tubes out of toilet tissue rolls.
·
wanting
to
build
earth sheltered
I cut each tube into three sections
homes.
The
two
help
find suitable
with a very sharp knife or single
building
sites,
work
with county
edge razor blade. Some of these
building officials and help obtain
tubes were covere d with pretty
financing.
adhesive-backed paper I happened
A University of Minnesota study
to have a nd others were painted with
showed there were about 3,000 of the
br ight-colo~ed marking peris and a
homes in the United States in 1977,
bit of cr ocheted lace on each end.
Ms. Shera said. Although figures for
Even the kids thought th~y were
Ohio were not ' available, she
very clever. - F .S.M.
estimated there were 15 of the strucPolly will send you one of her
tures in the Springfield and Cinsigned thank-you newspaper coupon
cinnati areas.
clipiJ"rS if she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in her
col umn. Write POLLY'S POINTERS in ca re of thi s newspaper.

A significant reduction in home
heating and cooling costs is the chief
selling point for the structures. Persons who already have built earth
homes say they spend $100 to $200 a
year for heating and cooling.
"That's been the average," Ms.
Shera said. "That's the main advantage as far as most people are

concerned.''
Temperatures of the earth
surrounding the home are cooler in
the sununer and warmer in the winter than the outside air, sheltering
the borne from exterior temperature
changes. In addition, the amount of
routine maintenance
facin g
homeowners is reduced .
"It's a lotless. You mow the roof,"
Ingram said. "Obviously a majority
of the exterior should be covered. So
you've got a maintenance situation
that should be decreased.''
Most of those who express reservations about the concept are concerned by dampness. But that's not
a problem if the home is built with
proper insulation, lighting and ventilation, Ms. Shera said.
The house's walls consist of up to
12 inches of poured concrete, with
precast, sloping concrete ceilings.
The extra-thick concrete is covered

with a waterproof membrane and insulation.
Other benefits of the construction
style include greater light per
square foot, reduced air infiltration,
adaptability to building sites and increased protection from storm
damage.
Shera said reproducing the
relatively small model at the fair +
without some of the special solarpowered equipment displayed inside
+ would cost less than $40,000. Costs
for larger homes of about 2,000
square feet are about $40 to $45 per
square foot .
Meanwhile, the fair heads into its
final three days today with afternoon and evening grandstand
performances by the Mills Brothers.
On Saturday, country singer Tennessee Ernie Ford is to entertain.
Also scheduled are finals of the
marching band festival, horse show
competition in a variety of classes,
the Buckeye Dairy Goat Sale and the
Miss Ohio State Fair Queen
Pageant.

" Ugh. "
" Chief Firewater, you have the
largest headdress I've Steen at this
convention. I hope I didn 't do too
much damage when I stepped on
your train of eagle feathers."
" Ugh."

" Chief, how do you like Detroit~"
''How."
"That 's what I'm asking . How?"
" Indian rio wear sock. Indian wear
moccasin .''
" So I see. Bear with us, Walter,
we're having a little communication
problem.'~

" Go ahead, Mike ."
" Chief, I also see you 're wearing a
"Sitting Bull for President" button.
Surely you know that Sitting Bull has
been dead for many, many years."
"Even deatl, better bull than we're
getting nowadays! "
" Back to you, Walter."
" And that's the way it is. When
you grow old , eat too much and
retire too early, you can dream it
any way you wish.!''

KEETON HOSPITALIZED
Albert (Red) Keaton of Pomeroy
is a patient at the Holzer Medical
Center. Cards J)lay be sent to room

425.

' COLO'\' · .
lh~ ufr ,

•

•

NOW THRU SEPT. 18

The &amp;ndit, Frog IIIII Justice are •t it.,.,
ir tile Ill/new llllvlntum of.. .

A UNIVEIIS,I,l f'I CIVR

_ _.. .... a,..tt._.oc ..• - • • • -

m

BURT REYNOLDS • JACKIE GJ.£ASON •
REED
DOM DelUISE and iSAU.Y FJELDj .

Sew-Rite club plans sale

Mrs. Hannay honored

THE DAILY SENTINEL

If you're looking

·Has refrigerator odor

,.. .

TERRELL WINS AWARD
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (AP) J erry Terrell, Kan8as City utility infielder, has been·voted the 1980 Da nny Thompson Award " for exemplary Christian spirit in baseball."
Terrell, 34, a veteran of eight
major league seasons, was selected
by the Baseball Chapel staff from a
dozen major league nominees.
Terrell, who spent most of August
with the Omaha faim club, served
Kansas Ciity both as Chapel leader
and player representative. Last
spring when the player association
took a strike vote, Terrell cast the
only negative ballot.

has rocked this great arena to its
ticipa tion of seeing J ohnny Bench
slam anothc1· one out, when, lo and very foundation, and, could , rip
behold, who d1d I see seated behind
as under · the harmony "that has
the m icrophone in the press box• No
existed between the conservative
Bill Brown or Ray Lane but, Walter ·and the more moderate wings of the
Cronkite, himself!
Republican Party. As we unThough attired in his usual crisp,
derstand it, a sock has been found, a
business pinstripe and dry-cle~ned
red sock, on the convention floor
mustache, I immediately detected a
which has led many of the delegates
marked change in Walter. A new
to believe that an outsider has intwinkle danced in his eye and as I
filtrated their ranks, since recent
settled back in my recliner, I noticed
polls show that an overwhelming
a distinct halo of gray light floating
majority of Republicans wear conlazily over hi s head. I was soon beset
servative brown or black socks. For
by pan gs of disappointment,
more details, let's go to Dan Rather
however, as the halo began to
who's with the chairman of the
dissipate and I suddenly realized it
delegation in wh' Je area the sock
was only a cloud of smoke, no doubt . was allegedly found. Are you there,
launched by Walter himself while off
Dan?"
camera . Walter's an incessant pipe
"Yes, I am, Walter. I'm talking to
smoker, I'm told, but the mere sight
the chairman of the Texas
of an anchorman taking a puff on
delegation, Mr. J;:haps Gertrudis.
television can get him a job counting
Mr. Gertrudis, can you shed any
icebergs on the Eskimo Express.
light on the sock that was found in
As I fired my own pipe, Walter
your area?''
began to speak:
"Wal, podnah, all we-all heah
" Ladies and gentlemen, an event
heah is rumors, but, if it's a regular
has occurred at this convention that
wool sock like they say, it shore ain't

Polly's Pointers

Sports shorts

WE ARE NOW
ACCEPTING
APPLICA liONS FOR
MOTOR ROUTE
DRIVERS.

Upper River Road

There are many kinds of dreams.
. . Daydreams, pipe dreams, sleepy
hme dreams and even nightmares.
Luckily, most of our dreams are
happy affairs that allow us to enjoy
many delightful pursuits beyond the
veil of slumber that evade us in the
real world.
Unfortunately, the farther we
ascend the rickety ladder of old age,
the more often our dreams are constructed of crazy , scary stuff that, at
any given moment, can set us bolt
upright in bed pinching our clammy
skin to ascertain if we are, indeed,
slill :jmong the living.
Recently, during one of my more
tranquil ventures into dreamland 1
snapped on the T.V. with avid ;n-

USC star pushing for Na. 2

Yankees hear footsteps
The Associated Press
If the New York Yankees aren't
hearing footsteps behind them,
they certainly must be a ware of
the flapping of Oriole wings in the
inunediate vicinity of first place.
Playing more like the Bad
News Bears, the Yankees handed
Seattle four unearned runs in the
first inning, then failed to score
after loading the bases with none
out in the ninth and dropped a 6-1
decision to the lowly Mariners.
Meanwhile, the high-flying
Baltimore Orioles trounced
California 7-1, giving them 11 consecutive regular-season victories
over the Angels- 8-() this yearplus a 3-1 edge in the 1979 AL
playoffs.
New York's lead- on July 19 it
was 9¥.. over Milwaukee, 10 over
Baltimore - is down to a scant
11&gt;-games for the first time since
May 21 and George Steinbrenner's blood pressure must be
boiling over.
In other ,action, the Cleveland
Indians nipped the Kansas City
Royals 4-J - George Brett
homered in four at-bats and is hitting .404 - the Detroit Tigers
beat the Minnesota Twins 4-2 on
Jack Morris' one-hitter after the
Twins took the doubleheader
opener 5-3, the Boston Red Sox
downed the Oakland A's 5-1. and
the Chicago White Sox defeated
the Toronto Blue Jays 5-3.
Milwaukee and Texas were not
scheduled.
Seattle's Bruce Boehle, who
singled home the tie-breaking run
in the fifth inning - Julio Cruz
homered in the seventh for an insurance run - helped settle
reliever Shane Rawley dowti af-

companied by heavy rain and 50
mph winds, raked the course
moments after the . " Big Three"
•
finished .
Defending champion Lon Hinkle,
one of the sport's long hitters, said
he was at a disadvantage in the conditions.
"Every time I was in the fairway,
I had a quarter-to a half-inch of mud
on my ball," said Hinkle, tied at 68
with Mike Reid, Hale Irwin and
Nicklaus. "The harder you hit your
irons, the more spin the ball has and

David H. Cummings, retired
Pomeroy Post Office employe,
, , over -the past few years has penned humoruuss columns for The
Daily Sentinel on a variety of sul&gt;jects. In the following latest
column, Dave ''socks '' Jt to 'em.

Cummings--Dream a little dream-_,.;._--

group also will participate in the
" care a nd share" program.
Each member submitted the
name of someone in need of special
prayer, with Mrs . White giving the
prayer. The program entitled
"Sistership of a Local Church" was
given by Mrs. White.
Refreshments by Mrs. White,
assisted by Mrs. Pearl Hoffman,
were served to those named and
Mrs. Dreama Hudson, Mrs. Sarah
Fowler, Mrs. Helen Bodimer, Mrs.
Janice Gibbs, Mrs. Eva Hartley ,
Miss Rhoda Hall, and Mrs. Hannay.

Mrs. Betty Wehrung hosted a
recent meeting of the Sew-Rite
Sewing Club recently. Presiding at
the session was Mrs. Nettie Boyer
with a rummage sale being planned
for September. Mrs. Wehrung had
the treasurer's report, and Mrs.
Evelyn Gilmore, the secretary's
report.
Games were played with the prize
going to Mrs. Shirley Baity who also
won the door prize. Mrs . Mildred
Wells will have the next meeting.

TO REPORT MONDAY
Eastern High School girls interested in playing volleyball this
fall should report for practice Mo~
day, at I :30 p.m . at the high school.

Refreshments were served by the
hostess to those named and Mrs.
Lucy White, Mrs. Lenora· McKnight,
Mrs. Barbara Mullen, and Mrs. Flo
Strickland. Guests were Mrs.
Boyer's daughter, Brenda, and her
son, Jeremy.

~'The phone

systems

big

WINNER ANNOUNCEDI

Wilda Durst of Cottageville,
W.Va., won the Squeez:o given
away at

Now lor a hm11ed lirnt~ only wht·n you bL;y a Stihl 028W8 you 'll also
I;Jl' l d strong. d o ul llt· Wdilt·. l •.ll rymg r.ctse, B 02 can of otl, file and

~===::;;;...,_...-.-~
~

handle:. I'IU!=; d llw woocl Uooklet a nd plasllc wedge.
heforf'

the Ci:'!Se IS clu!ied

\ .

-~

ST/HL

........... ......."POMEROY

Our Commun icat ions Cons ul ta nts
have only one job: t o mak e your t e lecommunications bette r and better.
W e h ave what you n eed.

HOME &amp; AUTO

606 E. Maill
- Alignments
Most cars Sl I. SO

for us .. :•

When is a coal company n ot a coal
company?
When it's a lso into truc king , fa rming and mine supply.
They're a ll p a rts of the Bowman family businesses, e ach with
its own phone system. But they
outgrew these systems, a nd
asked the Genera l T e leph one
Communications Consultant for
help . W e s uggested a GTD120C compute r -contro ll ed sys tem.
" Without Communi catio n s C o n s ulta nt Esther Klineb rie l. w e wo uldn 't have
known what was availabl e t o save us time a nd
money," said Mr. B owman. "Our n ew phon e system h andles ca ll s for
all four compani es. Yet each gets its own phon e b ills for accounting
purposes . Th e ni ght-answe r feature is very
imp ortant. N ow w e get a ft e r-h o urs c a lls a t
h ome - these a r e a lmos t a lways v e r y imp ort a nt calls."

ASTRONG CASE FOR
BlJYING THE STIBL 028WB
RIGHT NOW.

1\ $37 Vd lut · FnEE Gt· l 11 no w

•

-Pbil Bowman. Vice President, Waterloo Coal Co •• Oak Hill

BAUM TRUE VALUE

1Jl t~ 31Jc

our
one. It

.
phone

992-2094
- Brakes
S.ervice

·,

�7-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomero~ , 0., Friday, Aug. 22, 1980

6-The Daily Sentinel. Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday. Aug. 22, 1980

Shade Valley Art
Council to have
local flower show

j

"The IDtimate in Fantasies" will

,.~·'

.......
t·
(

•,,
·'•I

I '

"··.I

.,

...
~~

:i'

·'• .
:r
. .

be theme of the Sept. 13 and 14
flower show of the Shade Valley
Council of Floral Arts to be held in
the · Coon Hunters' building on the
Rock Springs Fairgrounds.
The public is invited to enter the
show which has classes for hor·
ticulture specimens, potted plants,
artistic designs, and education
exhibit for both adult and junior
exhibitors. Boys and girls through
age 18 may enter the junior classes
which are in the horticulture
division, zinnias, large flowering
type, and sunflower, any variety;
and artistic design, "A Grizzly
Adams," featuring weathered wood,
and " An Olympic Medalist," avertical design featuring gold, silver or
bronze colors.
The classes open to the public for
exhibit in the horticulture division
are any flowering shrub, 12 to 18 in·
ches long, hybrid tea rose in either
red or pink, hybrid tea rose "in either
yellow or white, large flowering type
dahlia, large flowering type
marigold, and houseplants, suc·
culent, flowering houseplant, and
foliage houseplant as well as Mrical
violets, not a miniature, with at least
one bloom and a single crown.
Artistic arrangement classes open
to the public. are "Bringing Worldwide and Lasting. Peace," any
design creating a religious in9Qd;
and "Dining in Gay Paree,'' suitable
for a table, using one or more candles.
In the educational division, the

Library
,.,, ,1\~

Letters

public may also enter hanging wall
plaques which must include plant
material.
The show also has two noncompetitive classes, "The Deco
Plants" by Gwenda Ferguson, and
"SeasonaJ Fantasies" which are

special arrangements with exhibits
by invitation only.
In the show arc 10 classes for ar·
listie designs by members of the
Shade Valley Council Club only.
They are "Rich amj Famous," a
hogarth; "A Miss America Con·
testant," a vertical design;
"Touring North to Alaska," a
traditional design featuring
weathered wood; "One of the Top
Ten U. S. Horticulturists," a
triangular design using aU green
material; "Oh! the Deep South, Tan,
and Shrimp Creole!," a mass
arrangement using dried and/or
fresh rna !erial.
"Hawaiiim Honeymoon No. II," a

crescent; " A Star in the movies," a
modern, showing motion ;
"Disneyland, Five Pints, Ohio," a

fun construction; "Enjoying the Far
East," in the maribanna manner;
and "Dream on Dreamer, Gas $1.40
per Gallon," a miniature, not over
eight inches.
.
According to the show rules, a best
of show, reserve best of show,
creativity award, junior best of
show, junior reserve, horticulture
sweepstakes, and a junior hor·
ticulture sweepstakes award will be
given.

.. Helen Help ·Us
-··
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.When a mother parties.

2

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BYHELENANDSUEBOTTEL
Special correspondents
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
My 21-year-old sister leaves her
baby with my father all the time
while she parties around on her
welfare money. I don't like this and
say so.
To get even, she's been spreading
rumors that I sell dope and have
been questioned by the police. My
girlfriend broke up with me because
of her talk. (I'm an 13-year-old guy.)
Don't say to ask my father's help.
His answer is, " I'm busy. Don't
bother me."- PLEASE HELP
DEARP.H.:
Evidently your father doesn't
mind caring for his grandchild.
Since you got into \his jam by
fighting for a man who wants no
help, perhaps you could get out of it
by calling a cease-fire with your
sister. Try it! - HELEN
P.H.:
As for your girlfriend, · is she
believes rumors over truth that you
can probably prove, is she really
such a catch? -SUE
RAP:
I'm 22 and still a virgin. Worse yet,
I'm male! A combination of shyness,
intensive work toward a scholar·
ship, and lack of opportunity
brought about this miserable cir·
cwnstance.

• •

Now I have met the girl of my
dreams and I want to inarry her. She
seems willing, but a little perplexed
about my reticence. She doesn't
know rm scared to death that I may
fail, or not know how to please her,
or look like a complete fool in bed.
She thinks I've got old-fashioned
respect.
Every date I say, "This is the
night," and then I freeze up. What
can I do? - ROB
DEAR ROB:
For Pete's sake, virginity isn't
shameful, for either male or female.
Tell your girl the truth. We're sure
she'll he gentle with you. ;-- HELEN
AND SUE
P.S. What if roles were reversed?
Wouldn't you happily play her
teacher? Read on :
(GOT A PROBLEM? Or a subject
for discussion, two-generation style?
Direct your questions to either Sue
or Helen Hottel - or both, if you
want a combination motherdaughter answer - in care of this
newspaper.)
MEETING POSTPONED
The annual board meeting of the
Meigs County Cancer Unit
scheduled for tonight has been post·
poned until Sept. 18.

Famiel ·Hall reunion held
The Faniel ·Hall school reunion
was held recently at the Mason
County Fairgrounds.
Attending from the class of 1919
was Emmett Kelly of Warren.
Oth.ers recognized were Mary Thompson Fulton, Cheshire, class of 1920;
Esther Baker Gordon, Cheshire,
class of 1922; Mary Roush Miller,
Gallipolis, class of 1924 ; Joe E .
Thompson, Cheshire, class of 1924;
Thelma Roush Shaver, Galliolls, and
Iris Butcher Baker, Syracuse, class
of 1926.
Julia Baker Lee, Addison, class of
FIRE SHOWER SLATED
A shower, open to the public, has
been planned _for Tuesday at 7:30
p.m. at the Rutland United
Methodist Church, honoring Mrs.
Denise Hendrix Michael, formerly
of Syracuse. The home of Mrs.
Michael and her husband, Mark ,
was couple
recentlyis destroyed
fire and
the
in need ofbyhousehold
items, linens, small appliances an
utensils. For those unable to atend,
gifts may be left at the home of Mrs.
Marjorie Davis in Rutland or at the
Racine Home National Bank. The
shower is being hosted by several
friends and relatives of the couple.

~:: ;
;:

1925; Robert Thompson, Pomeroy,
class of 1927 ; Frederick Thompson,
Cheshire, class of 1931 ; Emmett
Thompson, Cheshire, class of 1920;
Tom Melralf, Utica, New York,
Daniel Swisher, Cheshire, and
Delbert S. Smith, Langsville, class
ofi933;BobBaker,Addison, Oliver
Kail, Cheshire, Arlene M. Taylor,
class of 1933 ; Gordon Swisher,
Cheshire, 1934; Sarah Roush
Fowler, Middleport, 1932. Clair
Ohara of Colwnbus, was the only
teacher present. Guests were Alice
Thompson, Pauline Thompson, H.
Fulton, Mary Lou Swisher, Marjorie
Polly Thompson, Sophia Swisher,
Mrs. Delhert Mitchell, Roberta Kail,
Bobby Gordon, Tony Fowler.
The reunion was planned by
Esther Gordon, Iris Baker, and Bob
Thompson. A covered dish dinner
was held. It was decided to have
another reunion on July ti, 1981 at the
same place ·

"Families Facing Change" will be
the topic of study by the Middleport·
Pomeroy Area Branch of the
American Association of University
Women in the 1980-ll1 year.
Meeting Tuesday at the Meigs Inn
for the purpose of making program
plans, were tl1e officers and com·
· rnittee cbainnen, including Mrs.
Dorothy Woodard, president ; Mrs.
Fay Sauer, first vice preident, and
program chairman; Miss Rosalie
Story, second vice president and
membership chairman; Mrs. Lee
Lee, sec retary ; Mrs. Barbara
Knight, women's area; Rachael

Friday ·'s Sermonette

Downie, community; Mauritta
Mlller, cultural arts; Maxine
Wingett, legislation; and Jeanne
Bowen, bulletin.
A meeting will he held on Sept. 23
at 7 p.m. at the multi-i:ommunity .
room in the Senior Citizens Center .
with the officers to serve as
hostesses. Members are asked to ·
take guests. Any graduate of an Bl'- ·
credited college or university is
eligible for membership.
Discussed by the study group for
programs during the year was the
use of local talent, demonstrations,
and talks by people in nontraditional roles.

A WORTHY GOAL
'
Text: "Apd Jabez called oo the God of Israel, saying, Oh that thou
wouldest bless Jlle Indeed, and enlarge my coast, and that thine hand
llligbt be with me, and that thou wouldest keep me from evil, tbat It
may oot pieve me! Aod God granted him that which be requested. I
Chronicles C: 10.
·
In the midst of a long series of genealogies we find a precious gem the prayer of Jabez. God was so pleased with this man's goal in life
that he had this prayer recorded in the inspired Word of God. The
Bible says very little about this man, but that which is recorded proves
the true worth of this great man.
. The prayer is deeply spiritual, for it honors God. Jesus Christ says,
"How can ye believe, which receive honor one of another and seek not
the honor that comes from God only?" Jabez sought the kind of honor
that counts. The prayer is completely unselfish.
Notice the content of the prayer:
1. Jab4lz asked for God's blessing. He prayed, "Oh, .that thou
wouldest bless me indeed. " We can be sure this good man wanted
more than a material blessing. In James 4:3 we read, " Ye ask, and
receive not, because ye ask amiss, that ye may conswne it upon your
lusts." Indeed be did pray that God would enlarge his coast, but his
motive was pure in the sight of God, for God granted his request. Our
Saviour · says, "But seek ye first .the kingdom of God, and his
righteousness; and all these things shall be added unto you." Matthew

UMW enjoys recent picnic
A picnic supper was enjoyed
recently at the home of Mrs. Anri
Watson by the United Methodist
Women of the Forest Run Church.
Mary K. Roush had devotions and
Ullian Napper had prayer. A
program was given with each member having a reading. Sixty-five
shut-in visits were reported. ,
Attending were the Rev. and Mrs.
Stanley Merrifield and family. Mrs.

New arrival

Hilda Yeauger, Mrs. Betty Black..
wood, Mrs .. Naomi Wyatt, Mrs.
Kathleen Scott, Mrs. Ann Watson,
Mrs. Lillian Napper, Mrs. Elma
Holter, Mrs. Edith Sisson, Mrs.
Evelyn Hollon, Mrs. Mae Holter,
Mrs. Mary Nease, Mrs. Leah Nease
'.
Mrs. Fay Hamilton, Mrs. Erma •
Roush, Mrs. Mary K. Roush, and a
guest, Mary Jane Wise.

6:3.

2. He asked that God would be with him. We all need God! The
Master tells us, that " Man shall not live by bread alone but by every
word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God." Matthew 4: 4b. Many
feel self-sufficient until time of crisis, then awaken to their real need of
God. There is a real security we feel so long as we walk close to God.
3. Jabez prayed that he might be kept from evil. He realized that sin
is the cause of man's misery, so Jabez prayed for victory over "evil
that it may not grieve me." Zhe Bible says, " The way ol transgressbrs
is hard." Proverbs 13: 15b, God wants to save us from sin and make us
happy in Him. In I John 1:9 we read, " If we confess our sins, he is
faithful and just to forgive us our sins, and to cleanse us from all
unrighteousness."
4. God granted his request. God always answers such a prayer.
Listen to the words of our Lord Jesus Christ, "And I say unto you, Ask,
and it shall be given you; seek, and ye shall find ; knock, and it shall be
opened unto you." Luke 11:9, The Lord of Jabez is waiting to hea r your
prayer. Come to Him now!
By Uoyd D. Grlnun, Jr., Pastor, Rutland Church of the Nazarene.

TO MEET TUESDAY

Mr. and Mrs. Bryan Yonker, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy, are announcing the birth
of thei r second son, Corey Lee .
Corey was born July 27 at Holzer
Medical Center. He weighed 7 pounds , 7 ounces, and was 22 inches long.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Stanley H. Johnson,
Racine. Paternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Charles F. Yonker,
Letart, W. Va. Maternal greatgrandmothers are Mrs. Mabel
· Roush , Columbus, and Mrs.
Margaret Johnson, Racine.

The Salem Center PTO will have a
meeting Tuesday at 7:30p.m. at the
fire house in Salem Center.

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MEIGS
EQUIPMENT CO.
.

·r Pomeroy, 0.
:•I
•

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.

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I
Ph. 992-2176 ' I
.
. I

Hours: 8-5 Mon.·Fri.
I
8-12Sat.
11·.
Closed Sunday
'f
I International
New Idea ' f

LH!r.:e~~-----~~-=~

You Are In·VJ"ted To
A Free
11

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•,

TRAVEL SHOW

•'

ThuiSdav. August 28, 1980 at AAA Office
33 Court Street, 7:30 p.m.
/REGISTER FOR A FREE M.OTORCOACH TOUR!

F

·

eaturmg

Col Sl d 0
Of

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e Williamsburg
e Gatllnsburg
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Public Invited!
MC130273 Sub-1 MIF

GALLIPOLIS_

'friR'el Agency
446 0699

r--------·------------------~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~-::~~~~~~

MRS. COBB
COMPLETES WORKSHOP
Mrs. Sandra Cobb, who graduated
this spring with a B. S. in business
education from Rio Grande College,
just completed a two week I.O.E.
workshop at Kent State University.
She resides in Syracuse with her
husband, Charles, and daughter,
Heidi. She is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Boone Adams of Racine.

'Music in Worship' theme of Circle
Mrs. W. H. Perin presented the
program, "Music In Worship ,"
when Friendly Circle l)let at Trinity
Church Tuesday evening.
Psalms 149 and 150 and a reading,
"A World Without Music" noted that
songs meant "songti of praise: and
the song that has filled the world since the beginning of time is an art
given only to man. "
The circumstances of writing
seve ral hymns were given and then
the hymns sung with Mrs. Lawrence
Stewart at the piano. "Blessed
Ass urance" and many other hymns
were written by Fannie Crosby,
blind from birth. "Uttle Brown
Church" was written by William S.
Pitts, a music teacher, about a church of his dreams when he visited a
peaceful vale in Bradford, Iowa .
Later a'church was built on that spot
by a small dedicated congregation.
John Newton, a captain on a slave
ship in the 1700s, gave his life to
Christ following a severe storm at
sea, then gave up the sea and the
slave trade, to study 15 years for the.
ministry. As a result of his ex·

'

written.
.
Among the other songs discussed
during the program was " Blest Be
the Tie" written by John Fawcett,
an English minister in the 1700s on

The 45th annual Parker reunion George, Thomas, Francis and Mary,
was held Aug. 10 at the Tuppers the largest family present ; Rachel
Plaina Elementary School.. A basket Ashley, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
dinner ws enjoyed following grace Keith Ashley, the youngest; and
by Hal Parker. .
Jinuny Parker, son of Mr. and Mrs .
T. Franklin Parker prelided at the Ralph Parker, the'youngest. Mr. and
meeting with the officers being elec- Mrs. Jack Parker received the gifts
ted as follows: T. Franklin Parker, for the newlyweds.
president; Roy · Parker, vice
Others attending were Mrs. Hal
presid Pnt ; Glady-s Parker, Parker, Mark Edward Parker,
l!eCreta•·rt.reasurer. Keith Ashley Parkersburg; Angie Kerby, Walker,
was appointed historian and asked W.Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Bob Hecox, Jr.
that infonnation regarding the and Becky, Rockford, Ill. ; Lottie
family be sent to Parker Family, Parker and Mrs. Frances Roderick,
Meigs County Historical Society, Smithville, W. Va.; Maxine Yost,
Pomeroy, 4S769. He emphasized that Sugar Grove ; Mr. and Mrs. Harley
names, dales and places be given. .Davis, III, Charleston, W. Va.;
The group signed a card for Carol Lillian Gettrost Lee and Katherine
Lee Colburn, Colwnbus ; Gail M.
Jones who Is ill.
The family trees prepared by Mills, Elizabeth, W. Va. ; Martha
Clara Bell Burns and Eleanor Poole and Will, Wright-Patterson
Bowman were displayed. The group Air Force Base ; Mr. and Mrs.
voted that these be on exhibit in the William White, Diana, Cindy and
KeiU; Mrs. Keith Ashley, Mae Dor·
Meigs Musewn.
Gifts were presented to Ethel st, Pauline Baker, Freda Bean, Lola
StOut, the oldest woman, now92; Hal Griffin, Roberta Chatham, Mr. and·
Parker, the oldest man, 68; Ruth Mrs. Wilber Parker, Genevieve
Witt of Tucson, Arizona and Mr. and Guthrie, and Mrs. Ralph Parker, all
Mrs. Roy Parker, Dade City, Fla., local.
wllo traveled the farthest.
The 1981 reunion will be held the
Gilts also went to Mr. and Mrs. second Sunday In August at the
Albert Parker, Lisa, Teresa, •arne location.

Orientation meeting Sunday
The Meigs and Vinton County
Junior Miss Prugnna is beginning
this year's pageant plans, starting
with an orientationi meeting to be

the occasion of his planned depa r·
ture from a poor parish to a larger
church. The congregation was so
saddened at his leaving tha\ he
made the decision to stay and wrote
the song, it was noted.
During tht business meeting, Miss .

periences 1 " Amazing Grac~" was

Parker family has . reunion

.

BARGAIN MATINEES ON SAT &amp; SUN
ALL SEATS JUST $1.50
ADMISSION EVERY TUESDAY $1.50

·- · •

...

~':\~ ~~~

- By Michael Schmidt, treasurer of the F'riends of the Meigs County
Ubraries
I would like to address anyone who is self-employed, owns a firm, or
is in charge of some company that sells a product or service.
I'm wondering if you realize that there is an inexpensive, tax dedul'tible advertising method at the public library.
I stwnbled on the idea one evening a few months back when I opened
a book I had borrowed from the library that day . A bookplate in the
front announced that the book had been donated in memory of some individual.
·
I wondered what would prevent some enterprising business person
who, as an example, owned a craft supply shop, from donating a book
on macrame or leathercraft and having a bookplate placed in the
book. It might look like this : The John Q. Public Craft Shop, 200 E.
Second Street, Pomeroy, OH 46769, Phone992-5813, Hours: 10:30 a.m.·
5:30p.m., John Q. Public, Proprietor, " The Place for Information on
All Your Hobbies."
Shortly after this I talked with our librarian.. She was very enthusiastic about this way of using books as advertising as well as
reading.
"All people need to do, " she said, '' is tell us how much they want to
spend and what infonnation they want on the bookplate. We'll order
the book or record and they can pay for it when it comes."
Books cost roughly $10 to$15 for adults, $5 to$10 for children's books.
Records go for almost$8 per record in an albwn.
Books and records in the public library would generate sales month
after month, but the expense would be a one-time thing - unless this
idea proves so successful for you that you decide to do it again.
.
If you want more information on this new way of advetising and
helping our community at·the same time, tell Ellen Bell at 992-5813 or
992-5713 and find out how you can participate.

-. -------~~~~~~~~~~~Ci~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Ei~!i~------~

'¥
•.v •.

AAUW to meet Sept. 23

values, and clarity of expression.
This will be the 17th year for the
Junior Miss Program in Meigs Coonty, and the national finals will be

3 PIECE DINNER

NEW BUILDING - The new Rutland Furniture
Store will be opening for b~siness in the near future .
The attractive bUilding in Rutland has been completed

tained by the Trinity Congregation.
A silent auction will be held
following the September meeting.
Summer flowers decorat. :1 the table
for a dessert course serVed by Mrs.
Arthur Slusher . and Mrs. Pearl
Mora. Favors were rainhats.

furniture store was destroyed by fire last Jan.-23. Since
that time the company has been operating from
several smaller buildjn11s ne!lr the main store.

and stock is being moved into the rneiw~st~ru~ciit~ur~eii.~Tjihei~!ii!!i!!!ii!!!!lj;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~·

Holstein dairy show
held Thursday
Ohio District 6 held its first
Holstein Dairy Show Thursday
evening at the )11eigs County Fair.
Seven breeders of Registered
Holstein cattle from Meigs and
Gallia Counties participated with 44
head of cattle in the show.
Judge was Floyd . Livingston,
Union City, Indiana. Rosettes and
ribbons were furnished by the Ohio
Holstein-Friesian Cattle · Club and
Trophies for each class were purchased by the District 6 club and
several donors.
District 6 Queen Patty Parker
gave out the awards assisted by
Mary Colwell, Meigs Dairy Prin·
cess, and Kelly" Stowers, Gallia
Junior Dairy Princess.
Jim Carnahan, chainnan, acted
as announcer. Attending frorri State
office at Wooster WIIS Janice Keene,
Ohio Holstein News Editor.
Results are:
Bulls under two years - first ,
Shade River Farm, Dean and
Chevalier ; second and third,
Holter's Holsteins, Roy Holter and
Family.
Junior Calf - Shade River Farn'l,
French Hill Farm, Carmichael
Family; French Hill Fann, Holter's
Holsteins, Shade River Farm, Han·
nan Hill Holsteins, Mills Family .
lntennediate Calf- Shade River ,
French Hlll, Holter's Holsteins,
William . Howard and Family ,
Holter 's Holsteins, Shade River,
French Hill, and Hannan Hill
Holsteins.
Senior calf - Robert Lee, L .
Double E Holsteins; Holter's
Holsteins, William Howard and
Family.

held SWiday at the Meigs Inn, ~h~el~d~in~M~ob~il~e=.-~\l~r~,e~xt~~~::::=========::;;;::;;;::;;;::;;;;j
Pomeroy, at 2 p.m. The program is .,
sponsored by Southeast Ohio Junior
Miss, Inc., P. 0. Boxl04, Pomeroy.
Contestants are judged in several
areas· which count as different per·
centage figures in their total scores
in the Junior Miss Pageant. Among
the classes and percentages are
scholastic achievement, 15 percent,
based on Acr scores, National Merit
testing, class rank, and awards;
·creative and performing arts, 20
cu"s tom deluxe pickup, 350
percent, judged on originality,
V-8, std . shift.
technical accuracy, appropriateness
of selecUon and costwne; youth fit·
ness, 15 percent scored ln coor·
350 V·B, automatic, power &amp; air.
dination, dexterity, stamina,
posture, and appearance; poise and
appearance, 15 percent, rated on
Automatic, power &amp; air.
grace, grooming, carriage, and personal appearance; and a judges' in~1795
terview, 35 percent, scored on men·
2 Dr ., white w / wh i te vinyl top . N ice!
tal alertness, personality, sense of
5

KENTUCKY
FRIED CHICKEN

Elizabeth F'ick read notes of thanks
from Mrs. W. H. Perrin and Phil
Giobokar. Contribution was made
toward relocating the cross on Un·
coin Hill. The cross was erected
during the ministry of the Rev.
• Ralph Reuther, 1937-46, and is main-

progr~m .

Junior Yearling - Holter's
Holsteins, Shade River , and Holter's
Holsteins.
Senior Yearling - William
Howard and Family, S~de River,
Carmichael, Holter's Holsteins,
Robert Lee, fifth and sixth, and
Leland Parker and Family.
The judge places as Junior Champion Female the Intermediate Calf
shown by French Hill Farm.
Two Year Old Class - Hannan
Hill Holsteins, Holter's Holsteins,
Hannan Hill Holsteins, L. Double E,
Shade River, William Howard and
Family, L Double E, and Leland
Parker and Family .
Three Year Old - Holter's
Holsteins, Shade River , Holter 's
Holsteins.
Four Years and Over - French
Hill, Howard and Family, Shade
River, Holter Holsteins, Hannan
Hill, Holter's Holsteins, L Double E.
Champion Female was won by
French Hill, Carmichael Family ;
Reserve Champion Female, William
Howard and Family; Get of Sire
Class Winner, Shade River Fann,
Dean and Chevalier ; Dam and
Daughter Class Winner, Holter's
Holsteins, Roy Holter Family ;
Three females bred and owned by
exhibitor, winner was French Hill,
Carmichael's; Produce of Dam
Class winner, Shade River Fann,
Dean and Chevalier.
All breeders participated these
last four classes and completely
filled the show ring with cattle.
GARDEN CLUB TO MEET
.Mrs. Marvin Wilson, Mrs. J ack
Robson, Mrs. Harry Williamson,
Mrs. Charles Lewis, Mrs. Everett
Caldwell, and Miss Edna Mae Swick
will be the hostesses for the Rutland
Garden Club open meeting to be held
Monday at 7:30 p.rn. at the Rutland
Methodist Church. The arranger will
be Mrs. Earl Dean of the Chester
Garden Club, and all county garden
club members or Interested persons
are invited to

5

1979 CAD. DEVILLE CPE.
1980 AMC SPIRIT CPE.

8795
$4995

1977 CHEV. CAPRICE SED.

$3495

1976 OLDS VISTA CRUISER

5

1974 OLDS 98 SEDAN

5

1976 BUICK SKYLARK CPE.

$2495

1495

1975 OLDS ROYALE SEDAN
1975 OLDS CUTlASS SEDAN
1975 BUICK ESTATE WAGON
1974 OLDS 98 SEDAN
1972 OLDS 98 SEDAN

495

5

3495

5

1977 CHEV. C10 lfz TON
1976

FORD~

TON CWB CAB

See One of These Courteous Salesmen
Pete Burris, Marvin Keebaugh, George Harris

SIMMONS OLDS-CADILLAC INC.
" You ' ll Like Our Quality Wav of Doing Business"

992-6614 POMEROY
Open Evenings 6:00-til S: OD P.M . Sat.

'225

'2495

1977 CHEV. MALIBU 4 DR ..... ....... ........ ..S2495
1975 CHEV•.IMPALA 4 DR....... ;.............. $1495

AT

PAT HILL
FORD

1975 MERCURY MARQUIS ......................

Bachte/s visit, take
part in ch~rch service

1976
FORD GRANADA ............................ 2895
4 Dr., 302 V·8, Ghia Series, auto., power &amp; air , Shar p!
1975 DODGE DART 4 DR................. ...... 51395
6 cyl. , auto., power &amp; air.

Mr. and Mrs. Forest Bachtel and
children, Jeremy and Katie, have
been here for the past three weeks
visiting their parents, Mrs. Juanita
Bachtel and Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Scott, and other relatives.

Three "finger lickin' good" pieces of the Colonel's Fried
Chicken-Original Recipe or Extra-Crispy, plus all the
fix in's - mashed potatoes, gravy, a dinner roll and cole
slaw.

Sunday six~month-old katie was
christened at the Heath United
Methodist Church by the Rev. Bob
Robinson. Family members at·
tending Included Mr. and Mrs. Scott,
Mr!!. Leo Childs, Mrs. llarbara
Scites, Mrs. Kitty Dallas and Missy,
"St. Paris, and Mrs. Bachtel and
Carol TannehiU.

A 'VALUE ADDED SPECIAL AVAILABLE ONLY
W.U.T Dll\Ntl'

PROIJLCT~'

Hl:RBifOOf~
MN~N~5

SUNDAY, AUGUST 17THROUGH
SUNDAY, AUGUST 24, 1980

CUJRIIi UACHMll.~ CHUUii MARliN liMITH
,,. Hli.R\'ff IUIRMli.N ,.• - lllmARD ,&amp;UCI!U

..•

-

He wanted
to be Moses ...
but he didn't have the
right connections.

~

3095

5

1977 CHEVROLET C-10

531 JACf5SON PIKE · Rt. 35 NORTH - Phone 446-4524

.,

2795

I.

Bachtel was soloist for the service
singing "tf With All Your Heart"
from Elijah, and the offertory, "His
Eye Is on the Sparrow." He also
sang with the Voices of Freedom
Chorus at the Bob Evans Farm bean
dinner recently.
Tile family will return to their
home in PhoeniX, Ariz. Sunday.

1973
atEV. CHEVEu.E
........................... '1095
Automatic , P .S .. P .B,
v inyl top .
'!2

19SO F-100, 6 CYL

LIST t

'6896.60

Auto trans., P S, step bum per , wsw, rrld io, cig. l ighter.

1980 F·100, 302

7623.00

5

1977.FORD F-100 PICKUP.:...................... 2995

9952.10

1

6 cyl ., automatic &amp; power steering .

4 Wheel drive, 4 speed trans., AM-FM, tool box in bed . Cos I new $8900.

$568500

1

Auto tran s., gauges, P S, mirrors. PB , TuT~ne, ti lt wheel and more .

1974 MERCURY COM£1 ..........................51395
1973 FORD LTD ..................... .................. ,95
1973 VOLKSWAGEN ••BUG'~......................$1295
1971 OLDS CUTlASS ................................~95
1980 FORD CUSTOM F-250 ......................'6495

PAT HILL'S
PRICE

jiiiirf~~~ u
speci
-._,o6V
Ca\;e tle/ radi o, ti ll w heel. au x. fuel tank ,
l imited Slip axlves . F&amp;R ,f dual ba1ter ies. H .O. G .V . W.• Slid ing 1
· rear windows. cab lights, skid pl ates, d igital clocK and more .

....

11,413.64

1980
F-250, 6 CYL
4 sp. _trans., power steering , r adio, au x . rear spr ings , step bumper,

76]8.41 -

1

193rt.1so ctua wlGoN

SS28000

V·8, PS, auto trans ., 8 passenger , AM/ FM, tutone paint, Carom
bumeers and more

1980
BRONCO v1
Auto trans, gauges, tutone paint, L imit ed slip axle, pr ivacy g la ss,
more.

FORD
TRUCKS

'10,678.20

$925000

PAT HILL FORD, INC.
Ml
3rd AVE.

992·2196

�7-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomero~ , 0., Friday, Aug. 22, 1980

6-The Daily Sentinel. Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday. Aug. 22, 1980

Shade Valley Art
Council to have
local flower show

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"The IDtimate in Fantasies" will

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be theme of the Sept. 13 and 14
flower show of the Shade Valley
Council of Floral Arts to be held in
the · Coon Hunters' building on the
Rock Springs Fairgrounds.
The public is invited to enter the
show which has classes for hor·
ticulture specimens, potted plants,
artistic designs, and education
exhibit for both adult and junior
exhibitors. Boys and girls through
age 18 may enter the junior classes
which are in the horticulture
division, zinnias, large flowering
type, and sunflower, any variety;
and artistic design, "A Grizzly
Adams," featuring weathered wood,
and " An Olympic Medalist," avertical design featuring gold, silver or
bronze colors.
The classes open to the public for
exhibit in the horticulture division
are any flowering shrub, 12 to 18 in·
ches long, hybrid tea rose in either
red or pink, hybrid tea rose "in either
yellow or white, large flowering type
dahlia, large flowering type
marigold, and houseplants, suc·
culent, flowering houseplant, and
foliage houseplant as well as Mrical
violets, not a miniature, with at least
one bloom and a single crown.
Artistic arrangement classes open
to the public. are "Bringing Worldwide and Lasting. Peace," any
design creating a religious in9Qd;
and "Dining in Gay Paree,'' suitable
for a table, using one or more candles.
In the educational division, the

Library
,.,, ,1\~

Letters

public may also enter hanging wall
plaques which must include plant
material.
The show also has two noncompetitive classes, "The Deco
Plants" by Gwenda Ferguson, and
"SeasonaJ Fantasies" which are

special arrangements with exhibits
by invitation only.
In the show arc 10 classes for ar·
listie designs by members of the
Shade Valley Council Club only.
They are "Rich amj Famous," a
hogarth; "A Miss America Con·
testant," a vertical design;
"Touring North to Alaska," a
traditional design featuring
weathered wood; "One of the Top
Ten U. S. Horticulturists," a
triangular design using aU green
material; "Oh! the Deep South, Tan,
and Shrimp Creole!," a mass
arrangement using dried and/or
fresh rna !erial.
"Hawaiiim Honeymoon No. II," a

crescent; " A Star in the movies," a
modern, showing motion ;
"Disneyland, Five Pints, Ohio," a

fun construction; "Enjoying the Far
East," in the maribanna manner;
and "Dream on Dreamer, Gas $1.40
per Gallon," a miniature, not over
eight inches.
.
According to the show rules, a best
of show, reserve best of show,
creativity award, junior best of
show, junior reserve, horticulture
sweepstakes, and a junior hor·
ticulture sweepstakes award will be
given.

.. Helen Help ·Us
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.When a mother parties.

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BYHELENANDSUEBOTTEL
Special correspondents
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
My 21-year-old sister leaves her
baby with my father all the time
while she parties around on her
welfare money. I don't like this and
say so.
To get even, she's been spreading
rumors that I sell dope and have
been questioned by the police. My
girlfriend broke up with me because
of her talk. (I'm an 13-year-old guy.)
Don't say to ask my father's help.
His answer is, " I'm busy. Don't
bother me."- PLEASE HELP
DEARP.H.:
Evidently your father doesn't
mind caring for his grandchild.
Since you got into \his jam by
fighting for a man who wants no
help, perhaps you could get out of it
by calling a cease-fire with your
sister. Try it! - HELEN
P.H.:
As for your girlfriend, · is she
believes rumors over truth that you
can probably prove, is she really
such a catch? -SUE
RAP:
I'm 22 and still a virgin. Worse yet,
I'm male! A combination of shyness,
intensive work toward a scholar·
ship, and lack of opportunity
brought about this miserable cir·
cwnstance.

• •

Now I have met the girl of my
dreams and I want to inarry her. She
seems willing, but a little perplexed
about my reticence. She doesn't
know rm scared to death that I may
fail, or not know how to please her,
or look like a complete fool in bed.
She thinks I've got old-fashioned
respect.
Every date I say, "This is the
night," and then I freeze up. What
can I do? - ROB
DEAR ROB:
For Pete's sake, virginity isn't
shameful, for either male or female.
Tell your girl the truth. We're sure
she'll he gentle with you. ;-- HELEN
AND SUE
P.S. What if roles were reversed?
Wouldn't you happily play her
teacher? Read on :
(GOT A PROBLEM? Or a subject
for discussion, two-generation style?
Direct your questions to either Sue
or Helen Hottel - or both, if you
want a combination motherdaughter answer - in care of this
newspaper.)
MEETING POSTPONED
The annual board meeting of the
Meigs County Cancer Unit
scheduled for tonight has been post·
poned until Sept. 18.

Famiel ·Hall reunion held
The Faniel ·Hall school reunion
was held recently at the Mason
County Fairgrounds.
Attending from the class of 1919
was Emmett Kelly of Warren.
Oth.ers recognized were Mary Thompson Fulton, Cheshire, class of 1920;
Esther Baker Gordon, Cheshire,
class of 1922; Mary Roush Miller,
Gallipolis, class of 1924 ; Joe E .
Thompson, Cheshire, class of 1924;
Thelma Roush Shaver, Galliolls, and
Iris Butcher Baker, Syracuse, class
of 1926.
Julia Baker Lee, Addison, class of
FIRE SHOWER SLATED
A shower, open to the public, has
been planned _for Tuesday at 7:30
p.m. at the Rutland United
Methodist Church, honoring Mrs.
Denise Hendrix Michael, formerly
of Syracuse. The home of Mrs.
Michael and her husband, Mark ,
was couple
recentlyis destroyed
fire and
the
in need ofbyhousehold
items, linens, small appliances an
utensils. For those unable to atend,
gifts may be left at the home of Mrs.
Marjorie Davis in Rutland or at the
Racine Home National Bank. The
shower is being hosted by several
friends and relatives of the couple.

~:: ;
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1925; Robert Thompson, Pomeroy,
class of 1927 ; Frederick Thompson,
Cheshire, class of 1931 ; Emmett
Thompson, Cheshire, class of 1920;
Tom Melralf, Utica, New York,
Daniel Swisher, Cheshire, and
Delbert S. Smith, Langsville, class
ofi933;BobBaker,Addison, Oliver
Kail, Cheshire, Arlene M. Taylor,
class of 1933 ; Gordon Swisher,
Cheshire, 1934; Sarah Roush
Fowler, Middleport, 1932. Clair
Ohara of Colwnbus, was the only
teacher present. Guests were Alice
Thompson, Pauline Thompson, H.
Fulton, Mary Lou Swisher, Marjorie
Polly Thompson, Sophia Swisher,
Mrs. Delhert Mitchell, Roberta Kail,
Bobby Gordon, Tony Fowler.
The reunion was planned by
Esther Gordon, Iris Baker, and Bob
Thompson. A covered dish dinner
was held. It was decided to have
another reunion on July ti, 1981 at the
same place ·

"Families Facing Change" will be
the topic of study by the Middleport·
Pomeroy Area Branch of the
American Association of University
Women in the 1980-ll1 year.
Meeting Tuesday at the Meigs Inn
for the purpose of making program
plans, were tl1e officers and com·
· rnittee cbainnen, including Mrs.
Dorothy Woodard, president ; Mrs.
Fay Sauer, first vice preident, and
program chairman; Miss Rosalie
Story, second vice president and
membership chairman; Mrs. Lee
Lee, sec retary ; Mrs. Barbara
Knight, women's area; Rachael

Friday ·'s Sermonette

Downie, community; Mauritta
Mlller, cultural arts; Maxine
Wingett, legislation; and Jeanne
Bowen, bulletin.
A meeting will he held on Sept. 23
at 7 p.m. at the multi-i:ommunity .
room in the Senior Citizens Center .
with the officers to serve as
hostesses. Members are asked to ·
take guests. Any graduate of an Bl'- ·
credited college or university is
eligible for membership.
Discussed by the study group for
programs during the year was the
use of local talent, demonstrations,
and talks by people in nontraditional roles.

A WORTHY GOAL
'
Text: "Apd Jabez called oo the God of Israel, saying, Oh that thou
wouldest bless Jlle Indeed, and enlarge my coast, and that thine hand
llligbt be with me, and that thou wouldest keep me from evil, tbat It
may oot pieve me! Aod God granted him that which be requested. I
Chronicles C: 10.
·
In the midst of a long series of genealogies we find a precious gem the prayer of Jabez. God was so pleased with this man's goal in life
that he had this prayer recorded in the inspired Word of God. The
Bible says very little about this man, but that which is recorded proves
the true worth of this great man.
. The prayer is deeply spiritual, for it honors God. Jesus Christ says,
"How can ye believe, which receive honor one of another and seek not
the honor that comes from God only?" Jabez sought the kind of honor
that counts. The prayer is completely unselfish.
Notice the content of the prayer:
1. Jab4lz asked for God's blessing. He prayed, "Oh, .that thou
wouldest bless me indeed. " We can be sure this good man wanted
more than a material blessing. In James 4:3 we read, " Ye ask, and
receive not, because ye ask amiss, that ye may conswne it upon your
lusts." Indeed be did pray that God would enlarge his coast, but his
motive was pure in the sight of God, for God granted his request. Our
Saviour · says, "But seek ye first .the kingdom of God, and his
righteousness; and all these things shall be added unto you." Matthew

UMW enjoys recent picnic
A picnic supper was enjoyed
recently at the home of Mrs. Anri
Watson by the United Methodist
Women of the Forest Run Church.
Mary K. Roush had devotions and
Ullian Napper had prayer. A
program was given with each member having a reading. Sixty-five
shut-in visits were reported. ,
Attending were the Rev. and Mrs.
Stanley Merrifield and family. Mrs.

New arrival

Hilda Yeauger, Mrs. Betty Black..
wood, Mrs .. Naomi Wyatt, Mrs.
Kathleen Scott, Mrs. Ann Watson,
Mrs. Lillian Napper, Mrs. Elma
Holter, Mrs. Edith Sisson, Mrs.
Evelyn Hollon, Mrs. Mae Holter,
Mrs. Mary Nease, Mrs. Leah Nease
'.
Mrs. Fay Hamilton, Mrs. Erma •
Roush, Mrs. Mary K. Roush, and a
guest, Mary Jane Wise.

6:3.

2. He asked that God would be with him. We all need God! The
Master tells us, that " Man shall not live by bread alone but by every
word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God." Matthew 4: 4b. Many
feel self-sufficient until time of crisis, then awaken to their real need of
God. There is a real security we feel so long as we walk close to God.
3. Jabez prayed that he might be kept from evil. He realized that sin
is the cause of man's misery, so Jabez prayed for victory over "evil
that it may not grieve me." Zhe Bible says, " The way ol transgressbrs
is hard." Proverbs 13: 15b, God wants to save us from sin and make us
happy in Him. In I John 1:9 we read, " If we confess our sins, he is
faithful and just to forgive us our sins, and to cleanse us from all
unrighteousness."
4. God granted his request. God always answers such a prayer.
Listen to the words of our Lord Jesus Christ, "And I say unto you, Ask,
and it shall be given you; seek, and ye shall find ; knock, and it shall be
opened unto you." Luke 11:9, The Lord of Jabez is waiting to hea r your
prayer. Come to Him now!
By Uoyd D. Grlnun, Jr., Pastor, Rutland Church of the Nazarene.

TO MEET TUESDAY

Mr. and Mrs. Bryan Yonker, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy, are announcing the birth
of thei r second son, Corey Lee .
Corey was born July 27 at Holzer
Medical Center. He weighed 7 pounds , 7 ounces, and was 22 inches long.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Stanley H. Johnson,
Racine. Paternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Charles F. Yonker,
Letart, W. Va. Maternal greatgrandmothers are Mrs. Mabel
· Roush , Columbus, and Mrs.
Margaret Johnson, Racine.

The Salem Center PTO will have a
meeting Tuesday at 7:30p.m. at the
fire house in Salem Center.

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MEIGS
EQUIPMENT CO.
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Ph. 992-2176 ' I
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Hours: 8-5 Mon.·Fri.
I
8-12Sat.
11·.
Closed Sunday
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I International
New Idea ' f

LH!r.:e~~-----~~-=~

You Are In·VJ"ted To
A Free
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TRAVEL SHOW

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ThuiSdav. August 28, 1980 at AAA Office
33 Court Street, 7:30 p.m.
/REGISTER FOR A FREE M.OTORCOACH TOUR!

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MRS. COBB
COMPLETES WORKSHOP
Mrs. Sandra Cobb, who graduated
this spring with a B. S. in business
education from Rio Grande College,
just completed a two week I.O.E.
workshop at Kent State University.
She resides in Syracuse with her
husband, Charles, and daughter,
Heidi. She is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Boone Adams of Racine.

'Music in Worship' theme of Circle
Mrs. W. H. Perin presented the
program, "Music In Worship ,"
when Friendly Circle l)let at Trinity
Church Tuesday evening.
Psalms 149 and 150 and a reading,
"A World Without Music" noted that
songs meant "songti of praise: and
the song that has filled the world since the beginning of time is an art
given only to man. "
The circumstances of writing
seve ral hymns were given and then
the hymns sung with Mrs. Lawrence
Stewart at the piano. "Blessed
Ass urance" and many other hymns
were written by Fannie Crosby,
blind from birth. "Uttle Brown
Church" was written by William S.
Pitts, a music teacher, about a church of his dreams when he visited a
peaceful vale in Bradford, Iowa .
Later a'church was built on that spot
by a small dedicated congregation.
John Newton, a captain on a slave
ship in the 1700s, gave his life to
Christ following a severe storm at
sea, then gave up the sea and the
slave trade, to study 15 years for the.
ministry. As a result of his ex·

'

written.
.
Among the other songs discussed
during the program was " Blest Be
the Tie" written by John Fawcett,
an English minister in the 1700s on

The 45th annual Parker reunion George, Thomas, Francis and Mary,
was held Aug. 10 at the Tuppers the largest family present ; Rachel
Plaina Elementary School.. A basket Ashley, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
dinner ws enjoyed following grace Keith Ashley, the youngest; and
by Hal Parker. .
Jinuny Parker, son of Mr. and Mrs .
T. Franklin Parker prelided at the Ralph Parker, the'youngest. Mr. and
meeting with the officers being elec- Mrs. Jack Parker received the gifts
ted as follows: T. Franklin Parker, for the newlyweds.
president; Roy · Parker, vice
Others attending were Mrs. Hal
presid Pnt ; Glady-s Parker, Parker, Mark Edward Parker,
l!eCreta•·rt.reasurer. Keith Ashley Parkersburg; Angie Kerby, Walker,
was appointed historian and asked W.Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Bob Hecox, Jr.
that infonnation regarding the and Becky, Rockford, Ill. ; Lottie
family be sent to Parker Family, Parker and Mrs. Frances Roderick,
Meigs County Historical Society, Smithville, W. Va.; Maxine Yost,
Pomeroy, 4S769. He emphasized that Sugar Grove ; Mr. and Mrs. Harley
names, dales and places be given. .Davis, III, Charleston, W. Va.;
The group signed a card for Carol Lillian Gettrost Lee and Katherine
Lee Colburn, Colwnbus ; Gail M.
Jones who Is ill.
The family trees prepared by Mills, Elizabeth, W. Va. ; Martha
Clara Bell Burns and Eleanor Poole and Will, Wright-Patterson
Bowman were displayed. The group Air Force Base ; Mr. and Mrs.
voted that these be on exhibit in the William White, Diana, Cindy and
KeiU; Mrs. Keith Ashley, Mae Dor·
Meigs Musewn.
Gifts were presented to Ethel st, Pauline Baker, Freda Bean, Lola
StOut, the oldest woman, now92; Hal Griffin, Roberta Chatham, Mr. and·
Parker, the oldest man, 68; Ruth Mrs. Wilber Parker, Genevieve
Witt of Tucson, Arizona and Mr. and Guthrie, and Mrs. Ralph Parker, all
Mrs. Roy Parker, Dade City, Fla., local.
wllo traveled the farthest.
The 1981 reunion will be held the
Gilts also went to Mr. and Mrs. second Sunday In August at the
Albert Parker, Lisa, Teresa, •arne location.

Orientation meeting Sunday
The Meigs and Vinton County
Junior Miss Prugnna is beginning
this year's pageant plans, starting
with an orientationi meeting to be

the occasion of his planned depa r·
ture from a poor parish to a larger
church. The congregation was so
saddened at his leaving tha\ he
made the decision to stay and wrote
the song, it was noted.
During tht business meeting, Miss .

periences 1 " Amazing Grac~" was

Parker family has . reunion

.

BARGAIN MATINEES ON SAT &amp; SUN
ALL SEATS JUST $1.50
ADMISSION EVERY TUESDAY $1.50

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- By Michael Schmidt, treasurer of the F'riends of the Meigs County
Ubraries
I would like to address anyone who is self-employed, owns a firm, or
is in charge of some company that sells a product or service.
I'm wondering if you realize that there is an inexpensive, tax dedul'tible advertising method at the public library.
I stwnbled on the idea one evening a few months back when I opened
a book I had borrowed from the library that day . A bookplate in the
front announced that the book had been donated in memory of some individual.
·
I wondered what would prevent some enterprising business person
who, as an example, owned a craft supply shop, from donating a book
on macrame or leathercraft and having a bookplate placed in the
book. It might look like this : The John Q. Public Craft Shop, 200 E.
Second Street, Pomeroy, OH 46769, Phone992-5813, Hours: 10:30 a.m.·
5:30p.m., John Q. Public, Proprietor, " The Place for Information on
All Your Hobbies."
Shortly after this I talked with our librarian.. She was very enthusiastic about this way of using books as advertising as well as
reading.
"All people need to do, " she said, '' is tell us how much they want to
spend and what infonnation they want on the bookplate. We'll order
the book or record and they can pay for it when it comes."
Books cost roughly $10 to$15 for adults, $5 to$10 for children's books.
Records go for almost$8 per record in an albwn.
Books and records in the public library would generate sales month
after month, but the expense would be a one-time thing - unless this
idea proves so successful for you that you decide to do it again.
.
If you want more information on this new way of advetising and
helping our community at·the same time, tell Ellen Bell at 992-5813 or
992-5713 and find out how you can participate.

-. -------~~~~~~~~~~~Ci~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Ei~!i~------~

'¥
•.v •.

AAUW to meet Sept. 23

values, and clarity of expression.
This will be the 17th year for the
Junior Miss Program in Meigs Coonty, and the national finals will be

3 PIECE DINNER

NEW BUILDING - The new Rutland Furniture
Store will be opening for b~siness in the near future .
The attractive bUilding in Rutland has been completed

tained by the Trinity Congregation.
A silent auction will be held
following the September meeting.
Summer flowers decorat. :1 the table
for a dessert course serVed by Mrs.
Arthur Slusher . and Mrs. Pearl
Mora. Favors were rainhats.

furniture store was destroyed by fire last Jan.-23. Since
that time the company has been operating from
several smaller buildjn11s ne!lr the main store.

and stock is being moved into the rneiw~st~ru~ciit~ur~eii.~Tjihei~!ii!!i!!!ii!!!!lj;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~·

Holstein dairy show
held Thursday
Ohio District 6 held its first
Holstein Dairy Show Thursday
evening at the )11eigs County Fair.
Seven breeders of Registered
Holstein cattle from Meigs and
Gallia Counties participated with 44
head of cattle in the show.
Judge was Floyd . Livingston,
Union City, Indiana. Rosettes and
ribbons were furnished by the Ohio
Holstein-Friesian Cattle · Club and
Trophies for each class were purchased by the District 6 club and
several donors.
District 6 Queen Patty Parker
gave out the awards assisted by
Mary Colwell, Meigs Dairy Prin·
cess, and Kelly" Stowers, Gallia
Junior Dairy Princess.
Jim Carnahan, chainnan, acted
as announcer. Attending frorri State
office at Wooster WIIS Janice Keene,
Ohio Holstein News Editor.
Results are:
Bulls under two years - first ,
Shade River Farm, Dean and
Chevalier ; second and third,
Holter's Holsteins, Roy Holter and
Family.
Junior Calf - Shade River Farn'l,
French Hill Farm, Carmichael
Family; French Hill Fann, Holter's
Holsteins, Shade River Farm, Han·
nan Hill Holsteins, Mills Family .
lntennediate Calf- Shade River ,
French Hlll, Holter's Holsteins,
William . Howard and Family ,
Holter 's Holsteins, Shade River,
French Hill, and Hannan Hill
Holsteins.
Senior calf - Robert Lee, L .
Double E Holsteins; Holter's
Holsteins, William Howard and
Family.

held SWiday at the Meigs Inn, ~h~el~d~in~M~ob~il~e=.-~\l~r~,e~xt~~~::::=========::;;;::;;;::;;;::;;;;j
Pomeroy, at 2 p.m. The program is .,
sponsored by Southeast Ohio Junior
Miss, Inc., P. 0. Boxl04, Pomeroy.
Contestants are judged in several
areas· which count as different per·
centage figures in their total scores
in the Junior Miss Pageant. Among
the classes and percentages are
scholastic achievement, 15 percent,
based on Acr scores, National Merit
testing, class rank, and awards;
·creative and performing arts, 20
cu"s tom deluxe pickup, 350
percent, judged on originality,
V-8, std . shift.
technical accuracy, appropriateness
of selecUon and costwne; youth fit·
ness, 15 percent scored ln coor·
350 V·B, automatic, power &amp; air.
dination, dexterity, stamina,
posture, and appearance; poise and
appearance, 15 percent, rated on
Automatic, power &amp; air.
grace, grooming, carriage, and personal appearance; and a judges' in~1795
terview, 35 percent, scored on men·
2 Dr ., white w / wh i te vinyl top . N ice!
tal alertness, personality, sense of
5

KENTUCKY
FRIED CHICKEN

Elizabeth F'ick read notes of thanks
from Mrs. W. H. Perrin and Phil
Giobokar. Contribution was made
toward relocating the cross on Un·
coin Hill. The cross was erected
during the ministry of the Rev.
• Ralph Reuther, 1937-46, and is main-

progr~m .

Junior Yearling - Holter's
Holsteins, Shade River , and Holter's
Holsteins.
Senior Yearling - William
Howard and Family, S~de River,
Carmichael, Holter's Holsteins,
Robert Lee, fifth and sixth, and
Leland Parker and Family.
The judge places as Junior Champion Female the Intermediate Calf
shown by French Hill Farm.
Two Year Old Class - Hannan
Hill Holsteins, Holter's Holsteins,
Hannan Hill Holsteins, L. Double E,
Shade River, William Howard and
Family, L Double E, and Leland
Parker and Family .
Three Year Old - Holter's
Holsteins, Shade River , Holter 's
Holsteins.
Four Years and Over - French
Hill, Howard and Family, Shade
River, Holter Holsteins, Hannan
Hill, Holter's Holsteins, L Double E.
Champion Female was won by
French Hill, Carmichael Family ;
Reserve Champion Female, William
Howard and Family; Get of Sire
Class Winner, Shade River Fann,
Dean and Chevalier ; Dam and
Daughter Class Winner, Holter's
Holsteins, Roy Holter Family ;
Three females bred and owned by
exhibitor, winner was French Hill,
Carmichael's; Produce of Dam
Class winner, Shade River Fann,
Dean and Chevalier.
All breeders participated these
last four classes and completely
filled the show ring with cattle.
GARDEN CLUB TO MEET
.Mrs. Marvin Wilson, Mrs. J ack
Robson, Mrs. Harry Williamson,
Mrs. Charles Lewis, Mrs. Everett
Caldwell, and Miss Edna Mae Swick
will be the hostesses for the Rutland
Garden Club open meeting to be held
Monday at 7:30 p.rn. at the Rutland
Methodist Church. The arranger will
be Mrs. Earl Dean of the Chester
Garden Club, and all county garden
club members or Interested persons
are invited to

5

1979 CAD. DEVILLE CPE.
1980 AMC SPIRIT CPE.

8795
$4995

1977 CHEV. CAPRICE SED.

$3495

1976 OLDS VISTA CRUISER

5

1974 OLDS 98 SEDAN

5

1976 BUICK SKYLARK CPE.

$2495

1495

1975 OLDS ROYALE SEDAN
1975 OLDS CUTlASS SEDAN
1975 BUICK ESTATE WAGON
1974 OLDS 98 SEDAN
1972 OLDS 98 SEDAN

495

5

3495

5

1977 CHEV. C10 lfz TON
1976

FORD~

TON CWB CAB

See One of These Courteous Salesmen
Pete Burris, Marvin Keebaugh, George Harris

SIMMONS OLDS-CADILLAC INC.
" You ' ll Like Our Quality Wav of Doing Business"

992-6614 POMEROY
Open Evenings 6:00-til S: OD P.M . Sat.

'225

'2495

1977 CHEV. MALIBU 4 DR ..... ....... ........ ..S2495
1975 CHEV•.IMPALA 4 DR....... ;.............. $1495

AT

PAT HILL
FORD

1975 MERCURY MARQUIS ......................

Bachte/s visit, take
part in ch~rch service

1976
FORD GRANADA ............................ 2895
4 Dr., 302 V·8, Ghia Series, auto., power &amp; air , Shar p!
1975 DODGE DART 4 DR................. ...... 51395
6 cyl. , auto., power &amp; air.

Mr. and Mrs. Forest Bachtel and
children, Jeremy and Katie, have
been here for the past three weeks
visiting their parents, Mrs. Juanita
Bachtel and Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Scott, and other relatives.

Three "finger lickin' good" pieces of the Colonel's Fried
Chicken-Original Recipe or Extra-Crispy, plus all the
fix in's - mashed potatoes, gravy, a dinner roll and cole
slaw.

Sunday six~month-old katie was
christened at the Heath United
Methodist Church by the Rev. Bob
Robinson. Family members at·
tending Included Mr. and Mrs. Scott,
Mr!!. Leo Childs, Mrs. llarbara
Scites, Mrs. Kitty Dallas and Missy,
"St. Paris, and Mrs. Bachtel and
Carol TannehiU.

A 'VALUE ADDED SPECIAL AVAILABLE ONLY
W.U.T Dll\Ntl'

PROIJLCT~'

Hl:RBifOOf~
MN~N~5

SUNDAY, AUGUST 17THROUGH
SUNDAY, AUGUST 24, 1980

CUJRIIi UACHMll.~ CHUUii MARliN liMITH
,,. Hli.R\'ff IUIRMli.N ,.• - lllmARD ,&amp;UCI!U

..•

-

He wanted
to be Moses ...
but he didn't have the
right connections.

~

3095

5

1977 CHEVROLET C-10

531 JACf5SON PIKE · Rt. 35 NORTH - Phone 446-4524

.,

2795

I.

Bachtel was soloist for the service
singing "tf With All Your Heart"
from Elijah, and the offertory, "His
Eye Is on the Sparrow." He also
sang with the Voices of Freedom
Chorus at the Bob Evans Farm bean
dinner recently.
Tile family will return to their
home in PhoeniX, Ariz. Sunday.

1973
atEV. CHEVEu.E
........................... '1095
Automatic , P .S .. P .B,
v inyl top .
'!2

19SO F-100, 6 CYL

LIST t

'6896.60

Auto trans., P S, step bum per , wsw, rrld io, cig. l ighter.

1980 F·100, 302

7623.00

5

1977.FORD F-100 PICKUP.:...................... 2995

9952.10

1

6 cyl ., automatic &amp; power steering .

4 Wheel drive, 4 speed trans., AM-FM, tool box in bed . Cos I new $8900.

$568500

1

Auto tran s., gauges, P S, mirrors. PB , TuT~ne, ti lt wheel and more .

1974 MERCURY COM£1 ..........................51395
1973 FORD LTD ..................... .................. ,95
1973 VOLKSWAGEN ••BUG'~......................$1295
1971 OLDS CUTlASS ................................~95
1980 FORD CUSTOM F-250 ......................'6495

PAT HILL'S
PRICE

jiiiirf~~~ u
speci
-._,o6V
Ca\;e tle/ radi o, ti ll w heel. au x. fuel tank ,
l imited Slip axlves . F&amp;R ,f dual ba1ter ies. H .O. G .V . W.• Slid ing 1
· rear windows. cab lights, skid pl ates, d igital clocK and more .

....

11,413.64

1980
F-250, 6 CYL
4 sp. _trans., power steering , r adio, au x . rear spr ings , step bumper,

76]8.41 -

1

193rt.1so ctua wlGoN

SS28000

V·8, PS, auto trans ., 8 passenger , AM/ FM, tutone paint, Carom
bumeers and more

1980
BRONCO v1
Auto trans, gauges, tutone paint, L imit ed slip axle, pr ivacy g la ss,
more.

FORD
TRUCKS

'10,678.20

$925000

PAT HILL FORD, INC.
Ml
3rd AVE.

992·2196

�s-The Datly Senltnel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy,

~~--------~--------~--------~----------~--------~
4tt(•lld Th e
RALl'S
MEIGS TIRE
ELLIS &amp; SONS SOHIO
K&amp;C JEWELERS

CHURCH
NEWS

Complete

Au tomoh~ e

vtce 10 30o rn Chotrreheorsol Tuesday
7 30 p m under d trectl on of Allee Nease
POMEROY CH UR CH OF THE NAZARENE
Co rner Unmn and Mulbe rry Rev Clyde V
Henderson p o51or Sunday school 9 30
a m Glen M cC lung supt mornrng war

sh1p 10 30 o m evemng service 7 30
mtd week ser vtce Wednesday 7 30 p m
Mom St

Pomeroy Th e Rev

32&amp; E

Rober t B

Groves rector Summe r sc hedul e -

~

_

Locust &amp; BHctt treel
' " 9921 Mlddluort

Sun

day servtces ot 10 30 o m Ho ly Comm u
nton to be ce lebrated July 30 Aug 3

Aug 17 and Se pt 7 Mornmg Prayer and
sermon on all other Sundays No Church
Sc hool or nursery core prov1de d dunng
summer months CoHee hour 10 th e Portsh
Holltmmed mt e ly tollowmg the serv •ce
POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST 212 W
Mom St Ne 1l Pro udfoot pastor 81ble
schoo l 9 30 o m mornmg worsh1p 10 30
a m Youth meehngs b 30 p m evenmg
worsh1p 7 30 Wednesday mght pray e r
meetmg and 81ble study 7 30 p m
THE SALVATION ARMY 115 Butternut
Ave Pomeroy En voy and Mrs Roy Wtn
mg off1cers •n charge Sunday holmen
meetmg 10 a m Sunday School 10 30
a m Sunday school leader YPSM Elotse
Adams 7 30 p m
solvat1on meetmg
venous speakers and mus1c spec1a ls
Thursdoy - 10 a m to 2 p m Lad1es Home
Leagu e all women mv1ted 7 30 p m
pray er meeting and B•ble study Rev Noel
Hermon teacher

CENTER, INC.

Church of

Jotln F Fu lh Mgr
Ph 992 2101
Pomerov

}'our Clw11'e
Thi~

BEN

~FRANKLIN•

l

Middleport OhiO

Brown's Fire &amp;
Equipment

wors"'tp ser

GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH -

~
0
~-

Ser~tce

TRINITY CH URCH Rev W H Pernn
poster Roy Moyer Sunday school supt

Chu rch Sc hool 9 15 am

Fnday, Aug 22, 1980

J

wm

81!1

._...~-·212 E Mam Street

992 37ti.S Pomeroy

of Your Choice
This Sunday.

Otl• o4 '71~

Br-.wn Owner

pnone ( '14) 141 2771

P. J. PAULEY,
AGENT
Nationwide Ins Co
of Columbus, 0
104 W Maun

m

Keepsake'

ttend The

SAlES ot nd SERVICE

Rut land

(j

2311 Pomeroy

ttend The Church

Symbol
of
Safety
.,

of Your Choice
This Sunday.

FRENCH'S
SUNOCO
SERVICE
CENTERS
2B2W Matn

.,,,merov 992 9962

[B

VIRGIL B.
TEAFORD SR.
216 5 second
Pomerov
992 ll2.S

~I

#II ! Oil

Pat Hill Ford Inc.
4&amp; 1 S Third, M1dc jeport

216 E Mlln

992 2196

ttend The
of Your Choice

PillA SHACK

BURLINGTON
SOUTHERN
BAP TIST
CHAPEL Route 1 Shade- Pastor Bobby
Eat In or
Carry Out
Elkm s Su nday school 5 p m
Sunday
wors h1p 5 45 p m Wednesday prayer
126 E Mam
se rv 1ce 7 30 p m
POMEROY
WESTSIDE CHURCH
OF
pomeroy
CHR IST 200 W Ma1n St 992 5235 Voca l
mus1c Sunday w orsh1p 10 o m
B1ble
study 11 a m worsh1p 6 p m Wednes
day B1ble study 7 p m
OLD DEXTER BIBLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH
Rev Rolph Sm 1th pastor Sunday school
9 30
am
Mrs
Worley FranCis ,
448 Locust
supe nntendent Preochmg serv1ces f1rst &amp;
992 ]09]
th1 rd Sundays fol lowmg Sunday School
Middleport
Thursdnv
You nevu mistah the meaning of e C hurch spire
GRAHAM
UNITED
METHODIST
Co/ou rons
Euen tothosewho are cold 10 the tdeel5 fo r which the Chun:h slands tha t flnguollallh
Preachmg 9 30 o m l1 rst and second Sun
11-8
a l wav~&gt; pclnt' lo w me! hlng that 15 comforting rn~~u rl ng silfe
days of each month th1rd and fou rtA Sun
Friday
days eac h month worsh1p serv 1ce at 7 30
The very presence of a Church whet her In a c rowded city st reet or o n a quiet countl'}l
Colourons
p m Wednesday even1ng s at 7 30 Prayer
road Is a benediction to ll ll incluOir.g th ose wh o are not com;dous of worship
12027
and Bible Study
Such an Influe nce with wh at t me1ms to th os.- wl1 o OIJt' U their heart&amp; 10 lr uth Is worthy
Saturday
Bakers of
SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST
Mulberry
of a 5ec ond thoug ht It me rit s acceplano as 1'1 rPfngl' II comma nd s co !lftde nce as a pun In
I
The$SO/onwn5
Middleport
He1ghts Rood Pomeroy Pastor Albert
time of storm
1 7 19
Pomeroy. 0
D1ttes Sabbath School Supenntendenf
The Church deservn your ~ up p o rt - your membership - bE cause It a ffords real
R1ta Wh1te Sabbath Sc hool Saturday
proti!Ctlon fo r the fa mtly w h o~l' ~~;ell He tis your du ly lu defe11d and"" ho~ snol)l'r upb r lr~glng
afte rnoon of 2 00 w1th Wo rshtp Servtce
Is your solemn obllg a llo n
fo llow•ngot3 15
RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Siste r Harnett Worner
Supt Sunday
Co~rr ·~~~ r%0 ke"'lll': I.&lt;Jo&lt;A!O"Q 5!-n-o:•
P O Bo 802~ C ~• •o n~oollt ~ Q" l ?'\1()1;
~ I
~,.,.., ~ltli'I""'M'"',. •" IWIIrS.OC• ..
School 9 30 a m morn 1ng won h1p 10 45
We F1ll Doc:tors
am
Prescriptions
THE HILAND CHAPEL Georg e Ca sto
Gtner1l
1
" 992 2955
R1clne 949 l.S.SO
pastor Sunday Sch ool 9 30 a m evenmg
~ Pomeroy
wor sh1p 7 30 Thursday even mg prayer
serv 1ce 7 30 p m
POMEROV FIRST BAPTIST Oov1d Mann
mini Ster Wil liam Watson Sunday school
supt Sunday school CJ 30 a m morning
worsh1p 10 30 a m
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST 2B2 Mulberry
Ave Pomeroy Hersh&amp;l McClure Sunday
214 E Main
sc hool supen ntendenl Sunday sc hoo l
m-5130 Pomeroy
c;J 30 a m
morntng worship 10 30, even
1ng worsh1p 7 00 p m M1dweel'l prayer
serv1ce 7 00 p m
MIDWAY COMMUNITY CHURCH Dex ·
serv1ce
7 pm
Wednesday e ve n1n g
DE XTER CHURCH OF CHRI ST Char l es
Worsh1p 11 a m
ter Rd
Rd
Langsv1lle Rev A A
prayer meehng and B1bl e study 7 p m
Ru sse ll Sr
m.n tste r R1 ck Macombe r, Manl ey past o r A rthur Barr Sunday
MIDDLEPORT CLUSTER
Hughes Pastor Sunday School 10 a m
ST JOHN LUTH ERAN CH URC H Pm e
sup I Sunday ~c h ool c;J 30 a m
worshtp school supe rmte nde nl Sunday schoo l
HEATH Church School 9 30 o m Wor
Se rv1ces on Tuesday Thu rsda y and Sun
9 30 o m evenmg worsh1p 7 30 p m
sc rv1ce 10 30o m 81ble Study Tuesday
sh1p 10 30 am UMYF 6 p m Robert Grave Th e Rev Wlll1om Middlesw ort h
day 730pm
Pastor Church serviCes 9 30 a m Sun d ay
7 30 p m
Praye r and p rorse servtce Wednesday
Rob1nson Pastor
FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH Bodey
School tO 30 a m
REORG AN IZED CHURCH OF JES US 7 30p m
RUTLAND Church Schoo l 9 30 a m
Run Road Rev Emmett Rowson pastor
BRADBURY CHURCH Of CHRIST Jerr y
CHRI ST O F LATTER DAY SA IN TS Por tl a nd
RUTLAND APOSTOLIC CHURCH OF
Worsl·up 10 30 am W1lbur H1lt Pa stor
Handley Dunn supt Sunday school 10
Roc1ne Rood William Ro ush pa st or
JESUS CHRIST Elder Jam es Miller B1bl e
SALEM CENTER Worsh1p 9 o m Church Pmg ley pastor Sunday sc hool 9 30 a m
a m Sunday even ing serv1ce 7 30 B1ble
morn1ng worsh1p 10 30 am Wedne sda y
Ph yllts Sto bart Su nday School Sup! Sun
st udy Wednesday 7 30 p m
Su nday
School9 45 o m
teoch •ng 7 30 p m Thursday
evenm g serv1ce 7 30
doy School 9 30 a m Mor n1ng worsh1p
School I 0 o m Sunday ntght ser vtce 7 30
SYRACUSE CLUSTER
DYESVILLE
COMMUNITY
CHURCH
ANTIQUITY BAPTI ST Rev Ead Shul e r
10 30 o m Sunday eventng serv1ce 7 p m
pm
Rev Stanley Mernf1ed Mm1ster
Roger C Turner pastor Sunday school
Wed nesday evenmg praye r se r vi Ces 7 30
POMEROY WESLEYAN HOLI N ESS
FOREST RUN Worshp 9 a m Church pa stor Sunday sc hool 9 30 a m Ch ur ch
q 30 a m
Sunday mornmg worsh tp
se rv1ce
7 p m
yo ut h meet 1ng
6
p m
Horn sonvd le Rood Dewey Kmg pastor
School lOam
10 30 Sunday evening serv1ce 1 30
p m Tuesd ay B•ble Study 7 p m
BETHLEH EM BAP TI ST Rev Earl Shul er
Ed1son Weave r oss1stant Henry Ebl.n
MINERSVILLE Church Schaal 9 a m
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZAR EN E
pa sto Wo rs htp serv 1ce 9 30 o m Sund ay Jr Sunday sc hoo l supt Sun day sc hool
Worship 10 a m
CHRISTIAN UNION lawrence Manley
Rev John A Coffman pa sto r Martha
schoo l 10 30 o m Btble Study and prayer 9 30 a m morn1ng wor sh1 p 11 o m Sun
ASBURY Church School 9 50 o m Wor
pastor
Mrs
Russe l! Yaung
Sunday
Wo lfe C ha~rman of tHe Boo rd at Chns t •on
serv1cc Thursday 7 30 p m
day
eve ntng
serv1ce
7 30
praye r
sh1p 11 a rn 81ble Study 7 30 p m Thurs
Sc hoo l Sup! Sunday School ~ 30 a m
L1f e Sunday School 9 30 a m morn•ng
meettng Thur sday 7 30 p m
CARLETO N CH UR CH K ngsbury Ro od
dov UMW ftst Tuesday
Eventng worst·up 7 30 Wednesday praye r
worsh1p 10 30 Sunday evenrng w ors h1 p
SYRA CUSE FIR ST CH URCH OF COD
Gorv Ktng pa sto r Sunday schoo l 9 30
SOUTHERN CL USTER
meet 1ng 7 30 p m
7 30 p m Praye r meetmg Wedn esd ay
a m Ralph Carl sup e nn te nd ent e v enmiJ No l Pen tecos tal Rev Georg e Oile r
Rev Dav1d Horns
MT
MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD
7 30p m
pa stor Warsh1p se r v1ce Sunday 9 45
7 30 p m
Prayer meetmg
worsh1p
Rev Mark Flvnn
Rocme- Rev James Sotterf1eld pastor
RACINE FIRST BAPTI ST Don l Walk e r
a m
Su nda y school 11 a m
wor sh1p
Wedne sday 7 30 p m
Rev Florence Sm1th
Mornmg wors h1p 9 45 a m
Sunday
Pasto r Rober t Sm1 t h Sunda y sc h oo l
7 30 p m Thu r sday praye r
l O NG
BOTTOM
CH RI STIAN
Tam seP11ce
H1lton Wolfe
school 10 45 a m evenmg w o rsh1p 7
sup! Sunda y schoo l 9 30 o m m o rnrng
meeting 7 30 p m
R•c ha son pa sl or Wallace Damewood
BETHANY (Dorcas} Worst-l•p 9 00 o m
Tu esday
7 30 p m
lod1 es prayer
wo rsh ip 10 40 o m Sunday eve ru ng w or
MT HERMON Umted Bre thr en 1n Chr 1st
Sunday Sc hool Supe nntendent Worsh1p
Church Sc hoollO 00 am
meeting Wednesday 7 30 p m YPE
ship 7 30 Wednesday eve mng Btble
Church Rev Robert Sanders postor Dan
serv1ce a t 9 a m Btble Schooii O a m
CARMEL Chruch School 9 30 o m Wa r
MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST Corner
study 7 30
Wdl loy l ead er located 10 Texes Com
HY SEl l RUN HOLI NE SS CH UR CH Thurs
sh1p 10 30 am 2nd and 4th Sundays
S•x:th and Palmer the Rev Mark McClung
DAN VIll E WESLEYAN
Rev
R
D
mun1ty ofl CR 62 Su nday sch ool 9 30
day eve n ng sen.nces 7 30 Rev Cart Sun
APPLE GROVE Sunday School 9 30 a m
Sun day schoo l Cjl 15 a m Randy Hayes
Brown pas to r Sunday School 9 30 o m
Mor n1ng wa rsh1p ser vtCe 10 45
day mo rn 1ng servtees 9 30 and ev e nmg am
Worship 7 30 p m lsi and 3rd Sundays
Sunday School
supermtendent
Don
mornmg wo rsh1p 10 .45 yo uth s ~r v 1 c e
o m eve n ng prea ch1ng se rv1ce secon d
serv1ces 7 30 p m Rev Durham
Prayer meet1ng Wednesday 7 30 p m
R1gg s asst supt Mormng Worsh1p 10 15
6 45 p m evenmg worsh1p 7 30 p m
fREEDOM GOSPEL M I SSION a t Bal d and fourth Sundays 7 30 p m Chnstron
Fellowship supper f1rst Saturday 6 p m
om Youth meet1ng 7 30 p m Wednes
praye r a nd protse Wednesday 7 30 p m
Endeavor f 1rst and th1rd Sunday s 7 30
Knob loca ted on County Road 31 Rev
UMW 2nd Tuesday 7 30 p m
day tncl ud1ng wee tots eager bea vers
SIL VE R RUN FREE BAP TI ST Rev Morvm
p m Wednesday pr ay er meeltng and 6
la w rence G lu ese ncomp
pa stor
Rev
EAST LET ART Chruch Schaal 9 a m
1untor astronauts and IUnlor ond sentor
Roge r
Williar d
o ss tst ant
pastor
bl e st udv 7 30 p m
Worshtp serv 1ce 10 om Prayer meehng Morkm pastor Steve L1 ttl e Sund ay sc hoo l
htgh BYF cho!f practtce
8 30 p m
10 a m m o rn ng
JEHOVAH S WITNESSES 1 mde eo st of
Preachtn g se r v1ces Sun day 7 30 p m
17 30 p m Wednesday UMW secon d Tues J supt Sunda y sc hoo l
Wednesday prayer meetmg and Btbl e
worsh1p 11 a m Sun day ev enrng w o 1
Rut land jUnction of Rout e 124 and N ob le
pra yer mee tmg Wednesday 7 30 p m
day730pm
I
study Wednesday 7 30 p m
Su mm1l Rood (T 174) Sunday B1 bl e Le e
Ga ry Gr1ff1 th leader Youth g r oups Sun
RACINE WESLEYAN - Sunday schoo l I 0 sh1p 7 30 Pray er me et•n g and B• b le
st udy Thur sday 7 30 p m youth ser v 1ce
CH URCH OF CHRIST Middleport 51h
dny eve •ng 6 30 p m w1 th Roger and lure 9 30om Watchtower study 10 30
a m worship 11 a m Cho1r prac t1 ce
and Ma 1n Bob Melton mm1ster Mtke
6 p m Sunday
V o le! Wd lford a s leaders Commun •on om Tu esday B1bl c study 7 and 8 15
Thursday 8 p m
Gerlach su penntendent 81ble schoo l
CHE STER CHUR CH OF GOD Rev R E
se rv1ces f1 rs l Sunday each mo nth
pm
Thu r sday theocrot 1&lt; school 7 30
LET ART FALLS- Worst-l1p se r v1ce 9 a m
9 30 am mornmg worsh1p 10 30 am
Robtnson pas tor Sunday sc hool 9 30
WHITE S CHAPEL Coo lv lie RD Rev Roy p m se rv ice m eeft ng 8 30 p m
Church School I 0 o m
youth group Sunday 6 30 p m even1ng
a m worsh1p se rvtce 11 o m eve n 1ng
Dee te r pasto r Sunday sc hool 9 30 a m
RUTLAND FREEWILL BAPTI ST Ch urch MORNING STAR Worsh1p 9 30 om
worsh1p 7 00 prayer serv1 ce 7 00 p m
se rv1ce 7 00 yo ut h serv 1ce Wed ne sda y
wor sh p se rvtce 10 30 am B1ble stud v Churck M cP herson pastor Guy Pn ddy
Church School1 0 30 a m
Wednesday
and p ra ye r ser vice Wednesday 7 30 p m
supen ntenden t Su nday schoo l 10 a m
MORSE CHAPEL Church Schoo l 9 30 7 OOp m
MIDDLEPORT
CHURCH
OF
THE
LAN GSV IHE
CHRISTIAN
CHU RCH
RU TL AND CHURCH OF CHRIST Brad Sunday evenmg an d We dnes day ser ... lces
a m Worsh1p 11 a m
NAZARENE Rev J1m Broome pastor Btll
Robert Mu sser pastor Sund ay sc hool
Hend erso n pa stor Herb Ell ro tf Su nday 7 JOp m
PORTLAND Church School 6 30 p m
Wh1te
Sundov school supt
Sunday
Roy S1gmon supt morn1ng
schoo l sup t Sunday school 9 30 o m
CHURCH OF GOD of Prophecy locat ed
Evemng Worsh1p
7 30 p m
Yo u th 9 30 a m
sc hool 9 30 o m morn1ng worship 10 30
worsh tp 10 30 Sunday eventng se rvtee
morn 1ng w or sh 1p and comun 1on 10 30 on th e 0 J Wh1te Rood oH h1ghway 160
Meeting Tuesday ttvenmg
o m Sunday evangelistic meetmg 7 00
7 30 m1d week serv1ce Wednesday 7 am
Su nday School 10 o m Supenntendeni
SUTION Church School 9 30 o m Wa r
p m Preyer meet1ng Wednesday 7 p m
pm
RU TL AND BIBLE METHODIST CHURCH
John Loveday F1rst Wednesday mght of
sh1p 1st and 3rd Sundays 10 30 a m
UNITED PRESBYTERIAN MINISTRY OF
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF TH E NAZARENE
Am os Ttllt s pa stor Donny l1 lll s Sunday mon th CPMA serv1ces secon d Wednes
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
MEIGS COUNTY Ow1ght L Zav1tz d1rec
Rev Jam es B K1ttle pas to r N o rma n
Sc hoo l Sup! Su ndov Schoo l 9 30 c m
day WMB meet 1ng thtrd t hrough f 1fth
Rev R1chard W Thomas
lor
Presley Sunday School Supe nn tende nt
foll owe d by mornmg wo r sh1p Sunday youth se r v1&lt;e George Croyle pastor
Duane Svdenstncker Sr
HARRISONVILLE PRESBYTERIAN Rev
Su nday sc hoo l 9 30 a m mo r n ng w ar
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL - 570 Gran I St
se rv tce
7 00 p m
Prayer
eve nr ng
John W Douglas
Ernest Stnckhn pastor Sunday church
sh tp 10 .45 am
evangelis ti c serv tee 7
M iddl eport Rev Don Bloke pastor Sun
meet ng W edne sday 7 00 p m
Charles Dom tgan
school 9 30 o m Mrs Homer Lee supt
day school 9 30 a m mornmg wors hip
RU TLA ND CHURCH Of TH E NA ZARE NE
JOPPA Worsh1p 9 00 a m Chur ch p m Pray er and Pra •se Wedn esda y 7
mormng warsh1p 10 30
p m youth mee ting 7 p m Men s pro)l e r Rev Ll oyd 0 Grimm Jr pa sto r Sunday 10 30 o m
eventng worshtp 7 p m
SchoollO 00 a m
MIDDLEPORT Sunday sc hool 9 30 a m
schoo l 9 30om wo rs htp se rv 1ce 10 30 Wednesday eve mng B1ble study and
CHESTER
Wonhtp 9 a m
Church meehng Saturday 7 p m
EDEN UNITED BRETHR EN IN CHRI ST
Rt chord Vaughan sup! Mornmg worsh •p
a m Broad cast li ve o ver WMPO young prayer m eetmg 7 p m Aff thoted w 11h
School 10 a m Cho~r Rehearsal 7 p m
Elden R Blok e pa stor Sunday Sc hoo l 10 peo ples se r v1ce 7 p m Evongeltsh c ser
10 30
So ut he rn Bopt1s t Co nvenlt on
Thu rsdays Bible Study T~ur sdoys
a m
Robe rt Reed sup ! Mornmg ser
SYRACUSE FIRST UNITED PRESBYTERIAN
v•ce 7 30 p m Wedn esday se r v 1ce 7 30
BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHRI ST 730pm
man 11 a m
Su nday n1ght ser vtee s p m
Ch urch Worsh 1p serv1ce 9 30 a ,m Sunday
Eu gene Underwood pastor Harry Hen
LONG BOnOM Sunday Schaal al 9 30
Chn shan Endeavor 7 30 p m Song se r
School 10 30 om Mrs Sampson Hall .
FIRST SOU THERN BAPTIST Carne r o f Se
drlcks supen ntenden t Sunday school
o m Evanmg Worsh1p at 7 3 0 p m Thu rs
v 1ce
8 p m
Preoch1ng f:l 30 p m
supt
cond a nd And e rso n Mason Pastor Cronk 9 30 a m morn1ng worsh1p 10 30 o m
day B1blo Study 7 30 p m
RUTLAN D CHURCH OF GOD Rev Bob
M1dweek Prayer meet1ng Wednesday 7 Low th er Sunday schoo l 9 45 o m war
eveni ng worsh1p 7 p m Wedn esday B1ble
REEDSVILLE Sunday School 9 30 a m
by Po rter pastor Sunday school 10 am
p m Alv•n Reed loy leader
study 7 p m
sh1p se rv ce 11 a m and 7 30 p m Week
Morntng Worsh1p I 0 30 a m Eve mng Wor
Sun day wa rsh1p 11 a m Sunday evenmg
CHURCH OF JESUS CH RIST lac o ted a t ly B1bl e St udy Wed nesday 7 30 p m
JUBI L ~E CHRISTIAN CENTER - George s
shp 7 30 p m 81ble Study Wednesday s at
serv1ce 7 p m Wednesday Fam1ly Tra1
Rullond on New L1ma Road ne)( f to Fo r es t
Creek Rood Rev C J Leml ey pa stor
MA SON CHUR CH OF CHRIST Moil er 51
730pm
mg Hour 7 p m Wedn&amp;sday worshtp ser
Acre Park Rev Ray Rou se pa st o r Robe r t Mo so, W Vo Aun ce M•ck pas l or Sun
Jo hn Fe llure
supenntendent
Church
ALFRED Sunday School a t 9 45 a m
VICe 7 30p m
Mu sse r Sunday Sc hoo l sup!
Sunda y day Btbl c Study 10om Worsh1p 11 om
Morning Wonh1p at 11 om Youth 6 30
school
9 30 a m
mornmg wors htp
HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH Neor
sc hool 10 30 am wo rsh tp 7 30 p m B1
and 7 p m Btble Studv Wednesday 7 p m
10 30 e ven1ng se rv1 ce 7 p m You th
p m Sundays Wednesday N tghl Prayer
Long Botto m Edsel Hart pastor Sunday
ble Study Wednesday 7 30 p m Satu r
Vocal m us •c
Meehng 7 30 p m
moehng Sunday 6 p m B1bl e study 1n
school I 0 a m Church 7 30 p m prayer
doy mghl prayer se rv 1ce 7 30 p m
MA SON A SSEMBLY OF GO D Dudd i ng depth Wednesday 7 p m Classes f o r all
ST PAUL (Tuppers Plam s) Sunday
meetmg 7 30 p m Thursday
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRI STIAN Roge r lon e Mason W Vo Rev Ronn1e B Ros e
ages Nursery prov1ded for worsh tp ser
School 9 00 a m Morn1ng Worsh1p at
Wa tson pastor M1 ld red Z1egle r Sunda y Po:, to r Sunday Sc hoo l 9 45 a m Morn1ng Vl(9
MIDDLEPORT
PENTECOSTAL
Th"d
10 00 a m Btble Study 7 30 p m Tuesday
school sup t Morn mg war sh1p Cjl 30 a n
Ave
the Rev W1ll1om Kmttel pastor
Wor sh1p 11 a m Evenmg Service 7 30
SOUTH BETHEL (Solver R1dge) Sunday
51 PAUL LUTH ERAN CHURCH Carne r
Thoma s Kelly Sunday School Sup t Sun
Sundoyschool 10 30 a m eve n 1ng se r
p m Wedn esd ay Women s M101 stn es 9 of Sycamore and Second Sts Pome roy
School 9 00 am Mornmg Wm h 1p 10 00
day sc hool 10 a m Clones for oil ages
VICe 7 30
a m (mee ttng and pray er Prover and Bt
Th e Rev Wilham M1ddlesw o rt h Pas tor
a m Wednesday 81ble Study 7 30 p m
eve ntng serv1ce
7 30
B1ble study
Ml UNION BAPTI ST Joe Soyre Sunda y ble Studv 7 p rn
Sunday School at 9 45 a m and Church
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST
Ohver
Wednesday 7 30 p m youth se rvices
Sc hoo l Supenntenent Sunday !ichool 9 45
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRI ST IN Se rviCes 11 o m
Swam Supenntendent Sunday school
om even •ng worshtp 7 30 p m Pray er CH RISTIAN UNION Th e Rev Wilham
Fr1day 7 30 p m
9 30 every week
SACR ED HEART Rev Fath er Paul D
MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST Corner
meellng 7 30 p m Wednesday
Campbell pastor Su nday School 9 30 We lton pastor Phone 992 2825 Sa tu rday
HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION Re v Ke ith
Ash and Plum Rolph Butcher pester
TUPPER S PLAINS CHURCH OF CHRI ST
Eblm pas tor Sunday School 9 30 a m
o ll1 Ja m es Hughes sup! evenmg se r
evemng Moss 7 30 Sunday Mass 8 and
Saturday evenmg serv1ce 7 30 p m Sun
V• ocen t Wa te rs pas to r Howard Bl atr Co l
Co nfess i on Saturday 7 7 30
Leonard Gtlmore ftrst e lder evonmg ~er
v1ce
7 30 p m
Wed nesday ove nmg 10 a m
day School 10 30 o m
we ll supenntenden t Sunday Schoo l 9 30 praye r mee tmg 7 30 p rn Yout h praye r p m
~o~ice
7 30 p m
Wednesday pray e r
MEIGS
am morn1ng chu rch 10 30 a m Sunda y serv ic e each Tue sday
meetmg, 7 30 p m
VICTORY BAPTIST - S25 N 2nd St
COOPERATIVE PARISH
evemn g serv1ce 7 30 Wedn esd ov B1bl e
I A IRV IEW BIBLE CHURCH l et a r t W
M idd leport James E Keesee pastor
BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF
METHODIST CHURCH
Study 7 30p m
Vo Rl 1 Mark lrwm pastor Worshtp Sunday morntng worsh•p I 0 a m eve n
CHRIST Duane Worden m1n1ster B1ble
R1chard W Thoma s D1rec to r
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE NA ZAR . N E
lng se r ~o~ 1 ce 7 Wednesday even tng war
serv1ces 9J30 o m
Sundov schoo l II
clan 9 30 a m mormng wars htp I 0 30
POMEROY CLUSTER
Rev He rbert Grote pastor Fronk R1 ft l e
o m eve n1ng worsh 1p 7 30 p m Tu esday sh1p 7 p m
V1s1totlon Thursday 6 30
a m
evanmg worsh1p
6 30 p m
Rev Robert McGee
su p! Sunday Sc hoo l 9 30 o m Wor sh1p co ttage pro)'er meet1 ng and Ehb le study
pm
WednMday B•blesludy 6 JOp m
Rev James Corb1tt
serv 1ce 11 o m and 7 30 p m Praye r 1 q 30 a m Wors h•p servrce Wednesday
TRINITY Chosttan Assemb ly , Coo lville
NEW
STIVERSVILLE
COMMUNI TY
POMEROY Sunday School 9 15 o m
m eeting Wednesd ay 7 30 p m
,
7 3Qp If'
G1lbert Spencer
pastor
Sunday
Church Sunday School serv1ce 9 45 a m
Worsh1p se rvtce I 0 30 a m Cho1r re he ar
LAUREL
CLI FF
FRE E METHOD I ST
CA LVARY BIBLE CHURCH now l ocated school 9 30 a m
mornmg worsh1p 11
Worship serv1ce 10 JO, Evangelistic Ser
so l Wednesday 7 p m Rev Robert
CHURCH Rev Flovd F Shook p ast o r
on Pomer o y P ke Coun ty Rood 25 near a m Sunday evenmg service 7 30 p m
VICe
7 30 p m
Wednesday
Pray e r
McGee pa stor
1 meettng 7 30
Ll ovd Wng ht D1rec tor ol Chf 1S I1 a n Edu co
Flatwo ods Rev Blackwood pas tor Se r
m1dwee k praye r serv1ce Wednesday 1 30
ENTERPRI SE Worship 9 a m Church
t 1on Sunday School 9 30 o m M or n1ng v1ccs on Sunday oi 10 JO om on~ 7 :tO pm
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST Pom eroy
School tO a m
Worship 10 30 a m Cho1r Pracfr r'3 Su n
p m vv th Sunday schoo l 9 30 o m B1bl e
MOUNT Oli ve Community Church
Harr ison vi ll e ~d Robert Purtell pa stor
ROCK SPRINGS C ~u rc h Schoo l I 0 a m
day 6 30 p m
Evenmg Worsh p 7 30 study Wednesciov 7 30 p m
lawrence Bush pastor Max: Folme r Sr
Btll McElroy Sunday schoo l su pl Sunday
Worshtp10om UMYFbJOpm
p m Wednesday Pray e r and Bib le Stud v
INDEP oNDENT HOLI NE SS CH URCH INC
Supen nte nd ent Sunday School and morn
sc hool 9 30 o m mornmg wor sh1p and
FLATWOODS Church School tO a m
Pearl Sl
M1ddl c por t Re "' 0 Dell '"9 worsh1p 9 30 a m Sunday evemng
7 30p m
commun1on 10 30om Sunday worsh1p

'
This Sunday.

4

RACINE

MARK V STORE
Middleport

HEINER'S
BAKERY

THE DAILY
SENTINEL

WAID CROSS
SONS STORE

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY

Reuter-Brogan

Insurance
Semces

Attend The Church
of Your Choice
This Sunday

(

Attend The
Church of

Your Choice
This

Alit tul
,"
) our l:lmice

This Sunday

se rv1co 7 p m Youth m eet1ng and B1ble
study Wed nesda v 7 p m
FAITH BAPTI ST Chur ch Ma son mee t at
Unt i ed Stee l Work er s Un1on Hall Radrood
St ree t Ma so n Pa st or Rev Joy M1tchel l
Mornr ng wor sh1p 9 45 om
Sunday
Schoo l
10 30 a m
Praye r meehng
Wedn esday 7 30 p m
FORE ST RUN BAPTIST - Rev Nyle
Bo rd e n
pastor
Co r ne liu s Bunch
supertnlendenl Sunday schoc...t 9 30 a m
second and f o urth Sundays worsh1p ser
v1ce at 2 30 p m
MT MORIAH BAPTIS T Fourth and
Mom St Middleport Rev Ca lvm M1nn 1s
pa stor Mr s El v1n Bumgardner sup l Sun
day school 9 30 o m worsh1p ser v1ce
10 45 a m
NORTH
BETHEL
Unrted
Method1 st
Church Rev Charles Dom1gon pos fa r
Su nday School 9 30 a m Worshtp Se r
vtee 10 45 a m Sund ay B1bl e Study 7 00
p m Wednes day praye r meetmg 7 30
pm
BUR LI NGHAM
SOUT HERN
BAPTIST
CHURCH Route 1 Shade Pastor Don
Blo ck Afld toted w 1th Southern Bop ttsl
Convent ion Sundov schoo l 1 30 p m
Sundav worshtp 2 30 p m
Thursday
c venmg B1b le study 7 p m
PENTE COSTAL
ASSE MBLY
Roc me
Route 12-4 Will1om Ho bac k pastor Sun
day sc hool 10om Sunday e venmg ser
v 1ce 6 30 p m Wednesday eenmg ser
VICe 7
CARPENTER BAPTI ST Rev
Freeland
Noms pa stor Don Cheadle Supt Sun
dov Schoo l 9 30 a m Morn 1ng Wo rs h1p
10 30 o m Prayer Sc rv 1ce a l ternate Sun
days
NEASE SETTLEM ENT fREE Wi ll BAPTI ST
C'onold R Ko rr Sr pas tor Fuday even
mg serv1ce 7 30 p m Sunday schoo l 10
am

9- T he Daii; Se nt mcl , M id dl cpm t Pum cruv 0

HEY. W WHAT
WA5 THAT B IG ~UMP
.JU$T THE'-!!'

WHAT HAPPE'-lED?
DID '&gt;'OU Ml~$ THE
A!RPOFl.r -z

0 '-J L¥ NOT
O N A PAVE D
RUN WA¥ IM

RATHER OVER$ HOT"
THE MARK.

~ELL, GE T THAT

IT WILL HAVE TO WAIT,
MR 6ARR 1 MUST
PRE PARE FOR ABOARD
OF DIRWOR5 ~ Ef TIHG -

-EAP 0 TTA THERE 1 1
60TTA GET T' ABOARD
0' DI RECTORS McnN' 1

YOU AND YOUR FRI END W I LL
LEA.RN WHAT FATE AWAITS 'fOU

A S SOON AS THE S TARS RULE
THE N IG H T S KY '

C. A~UI IN L ,\ I l l

AC TU Al.t.Y DAHL. It.J G l
BEL IEVE WE VE LAN D I'D
IN THE 5PAN I&amp;H SAHARA!

THA T $ 0'-J E WA"
OF PUTT IN G I T ~
IT WOUL D 5 EEM WE

AF R.AI D ,

Property
Transfers
Wtlham Buchanan, Dons A
Buchanan to Monongahela Power
Co, Rtght of Way, Oltve
Ella Mae Enghsh to Howard T
Enghsh, Sr , Phyllts F Enghsh, Lot
256, Pomeroy
Betty Van Meter, John Wayne Van
Meter to Rodenck Elmer Grurun,
MarJOrie Vtrgtnta Grmun, II acre,
Sutton
Rodertck Elmer Grmun, MarJOri e
Vtrgtma Grurun to Betty Van Meter,
100 acre Lot 2-A II acre, Sutton
Rodertck Elmer Grmun, MarJOri e
Vtrgmta Grunm to J effrey T
Kmghtmg, Rexanna M Kmghtmg,
18 acre, Sutton
Harry Lee Spencer, Avtce E
Spencer to Jose Mascaro, Vtrgte
Mascaro, 2 037 acres, Chester
John C Boston, Cheryl A Boston
to Harry Lee Spencer, Avtce E
Spencer, 49 acres, 1 acre, Chest er
J ohn C Boston. Cheryl A Boston
to Wa td Lee Spencer, Gladys Spencer , 20 acres, Chester
Watha Farley, Mary Farley to
Dor1s Farley, 26 70 acres, Salem
Delores A Mtller , Afftdavtt,
Salisbury
Robert Ray Stgma n, Vtckte Sue
Stgman, Phtlip Dean Mtller, Demse
A Mtller " hrtstopher A Mtller to
Delores A Mt ll er , Pa r cels,
Sahsbury
Douglas D Wtckhne , Inez
Wtckhne, James D Wtckltne, Shelba
J Wtckltne to James D Wtckline,
Shelba J Wtckhne, 6 acres, Sutton
James D Wtckhne, Shelba J
Wtcklme to James D Wicklme,
Shelba J Wtcklme, Int tn Par cels,
Sutton
Kenneth Hager, Arlte 0 Hager to
Ltberty Otl and Gas Co , Rtght of
Way, dec, Orange
J ack Sattetiteld to Ca rolyn Jean
Sa tlerfteld, 1r. tnt m parcels,
Salts bury
John Dyue, dec , by Robert
Lyman Dye, Trus , Eva Della Dye
Butts, Trus , aka Eva Delle Dye ButIs to Rober\ Lyman Dye, Dons Opal
Dye Angle, Eva Della Dye Butts,
Parcels, Columbta
Thomas A Hawley, Tern L
Hawley to Joseph P Ekhch, Glenna
J Ekhch, Lot, Pomeroy
Gera ld W Drenner, Rebecca J
Drenner to James R Grueser, Donna J Grucser, Lots, Mtddlepor\
Lavern W J ordan, Mary J ordan
to Floyd Sayre, Paula Sayre, 6 2
acres , Columbia
Wtlltam Dodderer aka Wtlliam D
Dodderer , Rebecca Dodderer to
Davtd Dodderer, Lots Dodderer
23 65 acres and 5 acres, Oltve
'
Burn ell Stephenson, Sophta
Stephenson to Sammy Louts Darst ,
Sherry Darst, 4 90 acres, Salem
Robert L Cunnmgham, Sharon L
Cwmmgham to Lula Mae Grueser
I 02 acres, Sutton
'
Jay Hall, Jr , Llltian Marlene Hall
to Rtchard Va ug han, Rub y
Vaughan, Easement, Mtddleport
Boyd A Ruth, Judith M Ruth to
Wtllard L Moore, Karen S. Moore,
Lot3, Bawn's Sub , Chesler
Dona ld R Sayre, Betty J Sayre to
Besste Pullins, Lot 421, Life Estate,
Mtddlepor\
Mary McAngus Freeman, Jack
Freeman to Barry W Hart, Pamela
L Hart, Lots, P omeroy
Vtctor E Gaul, Leah D Gaul to
Gerald W. Drenner, Rebecca J
Drenner, Lot 7 Rtggscrest Manor,
Orange
Lotlte M Bradford to Anthony G
Bradford, 41'% acres, Lebanon
Wtltiam Fred Snuth, Sr , Beatnce
E. Snuth to H Roy Searls, Rosie B.
Searls, Lot, Middleport
Clyde J Ingels, Hallie L Ingels to
Athco Inc., Lot 5, Chesler, Baum's
Sub
Edna N. Wood, Admrx , Ida M
Christie, dec. to Phillip Roger
Harnson, Paulette Lowse Harrison
'
Parcels, Salisbury.
Cha rles K :Suneral to Enuna Lee
Suneral, 12 25 acres, Lebanon
' Eugene H. French to Catherme p
French, Cert of trans , Middleport

F' ru.l&lt;oti Aug 22, 1980

DICK TRACY

LOOK I lHERE'S
THE 6ALWHO
CAL L S HERSELF
EEHANEE

1

Y

we took our
vacat1on tnp 1n
the camper

LONTAGT
LENSES 4RE
l'; f.,. DY TO t:&gt;E

I MUST G ET
USED TO M Y
NEW NA M E/

PICI-.ED UPI

(I) THAT GOOD OLE NASHVILLE

Evening television listings

IIIU!i!C

(IJ (.)21 II 2~ROBERT Trap and
Thlb recetveao me unuaual support
hom aunworahtppera at e nude
be ach u they attempt to reacue
the nudists trapp11d 10 an awkward
atlon (Repeat 60 mlna )

t:!iS"IC.. VJtrf

tO 00 (I) ROCK CHURCH
(]) CANDID CANDID CAMERA
by THOMAS JOSE,H
Whenyoulea at expect it AllenFunl
appee.rawlth 1·ua hidden c amera tor
ACROSS
%H1gll note
apontaneous uncenaoredcomedy
1
Offspnng
3 Piece of corn
a1tuatlona
(I)GIJ OJ FANTASY ISLAND 5 "Wtth malice 4 A dime
Cl eopatra and the pageantry of an
a dozen
- none ''
el an! Rom e com e alh1a when a
5CaMed
item
woman travels backward in ttme to 11 Kirghiz
beco me the Egyptian queen and
Take
mountains
la ces death because ol hertornd
the stump
lovetorMarkAnthony (R epeat 60 12 Muse
of astronomy 7 Thailand
mlns)
(ll) JAZZ AT THE MAINTI!NANCE
temple
SHOP Phil Woods Quartet Pan Ill U Temperance
8 Cuckoo bird
leader
(60mlna l
10 30 Cil MOVtE-(MUSICAL)••• 'Heir'' 15 Exactly
9 Bracero's

Cnm•nale aeekmg a charrce toea
8 58 (3) NEWS UPDATE
cape for good are taken to the
e 00 lll &amp; &lt;IJ SPEAK UP Alii ERICA
(l)!laJ THAT SillY LINE
home ola marr c taimmiOJt O ha~o~eper
(])
700CLUB
ALLCREATURESGREATAND
8 00 (J) a (!) d CIJi!OliiJi m NEWS
te
ct
ed
a
t
ime
ma
chine
(Repeat)
()) (ft)
FRIDAY NIGHT MOVIE
!i_IIIALL
CIJ STUFF
THE
STRANGE
POSSESSION
OF
Da lla s Co wb ova Che er leaders
llll IIIASTERPIECE THEATRE
(]) SUIIIIIIER SPORTS SPECIAL
MAS OLIVER 197 7 Stars Karen
1978 Sta re Jane Seymour Bert
Lillie GolngonStaga EpusodeVIII
PART II
Black George Hamilton
Con.u
The Pnnce of Wale a comes to Lll
CIJ ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW
ABC
t:;APT
IONED
NEWS
liJ ®l THE DUKES OF HAZ
lie uldbyarranglngforhertomave
()) ABC NEWS
MCGUFFEY LANE
ZARD After Daisy hnlallan tor a
t o Parle tor the bnth other child
12
00
DAVID
SUSSKIND
SHOW
lllJ ZOOIII
croaked scheme to have a song
(.gl aaad CaptiOned) (60 m1na )
8 30
e &lt;IJ NBC NEWS
®) MOVIE D1a cu la eCastla 1969
she wrote publlehed Uncle Jesse
8 30 (I) P~P l:\OES THE COUNTRY
John
Carradme
2)
From
He
lilt
IIIUSIC
aendelhe boys to At lanta to get her
0 00 (}) 1J (!) NFL PRE·SEASON
Cll t LOVE LUCY
t,;a me 1957
money re turned from the une
11 00 ~
187:0LA LEVIn
FOOTBALL GAME Dallas Cow
(f)
CAROL BURNEn AND
12 40 (j) EMERGENCY
crupu toua mue1c p ublisher
D (l)ilalilll iD NEWS
boya va Houston 01lera
(l%l
II
$1
98
BEAUTY
SHOW
FRIENDS
(8_epeat 60 mms)
(I) PRE·SEASON FOOTBALL
REFLECTIONSDFTHETHIRD
(f) ilaJ CBS NEWS
1
00
(I)
•
ffi
THE
MIDNIGHT
(J) MOVIE -{COMEDY) ••• Folly
AfiCH The German Lenon Part I
Atlanta Falcons va San Otego
Cf) WILD WILD WORLD OF
SPECIAL
tobaWite' 1U51
Based on the beat aell1ng novel by
Q'la..rgera
ANIMALS
Cil tNSIGHT
lllJ OLDFRIENDS,NEWFRtENDS
- CIJUV. THE LOVE BOAT A bnl
Sie gfried Lenz th1a I1Im revea l a
{]) MOVIE (COMEOY) •• \-1,
lllJ ScLIIII CUISINE
Ruth Ellen Patt on Totten and
llant plain 1ene bacomeaagtamollr
how the Nazl regime wu strength
m ABC NEWS
'Amerlcattlon" 11178
Helerr Roas (Close d Captioned)
ened by people whO obeyed blindly
g ~rlwllhthehelp o fJuhe andtalla1n
8 88
NEWS UPDATE
1 10 GIJ ID NEWS
0 30 (fiJ PAVAAOTTI AT JUILLIARO
rather I han QuestiOn authority
lov e w1th a man who hasaome m111
1 00
• CROSS WITS
1 30 (I) JIM lilY SWAGGART
Tenor L uc1an a P avarottl works w•th
takenldeaaabout her {Repeat 60
lllJ
HOCKING
VALLEY
THE STORY
CIJ MOVIE-(ORAMA)"'~ 1 '8onnla
three performers A.11eoulse de
BLUEGRASS
mlna_l_
HO(lAN S HEROES
Parker
Story
"
1958
Vaughn s1ng1ng 0 M10 Fernarrdo
ClJ ilaJ SATURDAY NIGHT
11 30 (I) RICHARD HOGUE
Gila FACE THE IIIUSIC
2 30 Ill I I N!WS
Roberta Bngga amg1rrg lnlellce
MOVIE Perfe ct Gentlemen 1979
MOVIE -ITHRtLLERl " "
ytCYSHOW
(])
ROSS
BAGLEY
SHOW
and Chrlatlna Radman alnglng
Star a Lauren Bacatl, Robert Aida
' AnJ!omy Of Terror'
(]) TIC TAC DOUGH
(!)
ON
LOCATION
George
Conde Lleta
II liJ MOYIE tHORRORI •"
MACNEIL·LEHRER REPORT
Segals Beat Beta
tO 00 llJit&lt;IJ FRIDAYNIGHTFIGHTS
(J) "A Song Ia Born 'Danny Kaye
• G~rgoylea" 1872
3
20
())MOVIE
(COMEDY)•
Ya
'Amaz
NEWS
WBA Super SentamwetQhl cham
BennyGoodman Agroupotprofetl
1JID IIIOVIE ·( DRAIIIA-WESTERN)
lllJ OICK CAllEn SHOW
m..g
Dr
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'
1965
p1on Will redo Gomez defends hi a
aora compiling a history of mu111c
"OneEyld Jacka' HMI1
1 30 Ill. PRICE IS RIGHT
• 00 LV 700 CLUB
title agamat cha ll eng er Oerrlk
whobecomea1nvolvedw1th a n1ght
GIJ ID ABC NEWS
CIJ THE LESSON
IBELtEVE
Holmes fr om Caeaar a Petaca 1n
club aInger who 11 hld1ng from the
11 45 G)) Cl MOVIE T1ttes Unan
(])
SPORTS AROUND THE
5 10
RAT PATROL
laa Vegas (60 mine )
OA aolllce
noun cej[_ (3 hrl )
WORLD Australlan Surf Llfesev
5
30
JUST
PASSING
THRU
([) TBSEVENING NEWS
lllJ LORD IIIOUNTBAnEN IIIAN
12 00 Cil i iCV NEWS
lng' F1ve thouaa rrd athletes tast
(l)IJID THE OUKES OF HAl·
FOR TME CENTURY MountbaUen
~ HI OOUG
the lr atrength endurence andtra ln
ZARD Jesse a second couem and
be comes t he viceroy of India
1ng during threa day s ol rowing
hert woc hlldrenaell the lrlandlor I 6
12
30
&lt;C_Ioaed Ca piiOned) (60 mms )
AUG 23, 1080
sprinting, awlmm lrriJ kayaklng and
mlll10n dollars When they lose the
Host BIIIRu sse ll Gueeta Ch1cago
Q 30 (3) THE LESSON
surfing conteetat o prove hOw they
money the Dukes hBV&amp; to get1t
600 Ci) MOYIE-4COMEDY)•• 'Who 'a
(Repeat 90mtns)
could if neceuary eave • llle
bac:kbeforeBoaeHogg cantracelt
Killing the Great Ctlata of Eur
(I) ALLIN THE FAIIIILY
a~ eat 60 mine)
9.2•?' 1878
()) SHANANAGuesta Danny And
llJ
CHAMPIONSHIP
NEWS
The Juniors
10 15
SNEAK PREVIEW ~SEP
WRESTLING
(!) Gil ID POP GOES THE
TEUBER Jerry Stlller and Anrre
(Il CONCERN
OUfjTRY
Meara he ve put l og at her a pot pour
CATCH33
liJ JOKERS WILD
Unscramble these lour Jumbles
rl alakit a clip a comedy and com
NEWS
DICK CAVEn SHOW
one letter to each square to form
menta1n a look at what aln a1ore
E_XTENSIONS
ALL THAT JAZZ
tour ordtnary word s
6 30
(H) ID NEWS
10 28 CIJ NEWS UPDATE
IIIACNEIL·L!HR!R REPORT
(I) MUPPETS SHOW
10 30 Cl) RICHARD HOGUE
7 58
NEWS UPDATE
{)) OLDFRIENOS NEW FRIENDS
(I) OOC OLDEST MAN IN THE
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SEA On Seplember 14 1979
Ruth Ellen Patton Tolten and
IN TOUCH
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~~--------~--------~--------~----------~--------~
4tt(•lld Th e
RALl'S
MEIGS TIRE
ELLIS &amp; SONS SOHIO
K&amp;C JEWELERS

CHURCH
NEWS

Complete

Au tomoh~ e

vtce 10 30o rn Chotrreheorsol Tuesday
7 30 p m under d trectl on of Allee Nease
POMEROY CH UR CH OF THE NAZARENE
Co rner Unmn and Mulbe rry Rev Clyde V
Henderson p o51or Sunday school 9 30
a m Glen M cC lung supt mornrng war

sh1p 10 30 o m evemng service 7 30
mtd week ser vtce Wednesday 7 30 p m
Mom St

Pomeroy Th e Rev

32&amp; E

Rober t B

Groves rector Summe r sc hedul e -

~

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Locust &amp; BHctt treel
' " 9921 Mlddluort

Sun

day servtces ot 10 30 o m Ho ly Comm u
nton to be ce lebrated July 30 Aug 3

Aug 17 and Se pt 7 Mornmg Prayer and
sermon on all other Sundays No Church
Sc hool or nursery core prov1de d dunng
summer months CoHee hour 10 th e Portsh
Holltmmed mt e ly tollowmg the serv •ce
POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST 212 W
Mom St Ne 1l Pro udfoot pastor 81ble
schoo l 9 30 o m mornmg worsh1p 10 30
a m Youth meehngs b 30 p m evenmg
worsh1p 7 30 Wednesday mght pray e r
meetmg and 81ble study 7 30 p m
THE SALVATION ARMY 115 Butternut
Ave Pomeroy En voy and Mrs Roy Wtn
mg off1cers •n charge Sunday holmen
meetmg 10 a m Sunday School 10 30
a m Sunday school leader YPSM Elotse
Adams 7 30 p m
solvat1on meetmg
venous speakers and mus1c spec1a ls
Thursdoy - 10 a m to 2 p m Lad1es Home
Leagu e all women mv1ted 7 30 p m
pray er meeting and B•ble study Rev Noel
Hermon teacher

CENTER, INC.

Church of

Jotln F Fu lh Mgr
Ph 992 2101
Pomerov

}'our Clw11'e
Thi~

BEN

~FRANKLIN•

l

Middleport OhiO

Brown's Fire &amp;
Equipment

wors"'tp ser

GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH -

~
0
~-

Ser~tce

TRINITY CH URCH Rev W H Pernn
poster Roy Moyer Sunday school supt

Chu rch Sc hool 9 15 am

Fnday, Aug 22, 1980

J

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81!1

._...~-·212 E Mam Street

992 37ti.S Pomeroy

of Your Choice
This Sunday.

Otl• o4 '71~

Br-.wn Owner

pnone ( '14) 141 2771

P. J. PAULEY,
AGENT
Nationwide Ins Co
of Columbus, 0
104 W Maun

m

Keepsake'

ttend The

SAlES ot nd SERVICE

Rut land

(j

2311 Pomeroy

ttend The Church

Symbol
of
Safety
.,

of Your Choice
This Sunday.

FRENCH'S
SUNOCO
SERVICE
CENTERS
2B2W Matn

.,,,merov 992 9962

[B

VIRGIL B.
TEAFORD SR.
216 5 second
Pomerov
992 ll2.S

~I

#II ! Oil

Pat Hill Ford Inc.
4&amp; 1 S Third, M1dc jeport

216 E Mlln

992 2196

ttend The
of Your Choice

PillA SHACK

BURLINGTON
SOUTHERN
BAP TIST
CHAPEL Route 1 Shade- Pastor Bobby
Eat In or
Carry Out
Elkm s Su nday school 5 p m
Sunday
wors h1p 5 45 p m Wednesday prayer
126 E Mam
se rv 1ce 7 30 p m
POMEROY
WESTSIDE CHURCH
OF
pomeroy
CHR IST 200 W Ma1n St 992 5235 Voca l
mus1c Sunday w orsh1p 10 o m
B1ble
study 11 a m worsh1p 6 p m Wednes
day B1ble study 7 p m
OLD DEXTER BIBLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH
Rev Rolph Sm 1th pastor Sunday school
9 30
am
Mrs
Worley FranCis ,
448 Locust
supe nntendent Preochmg serv1ces f1rst &amp;
992 ]09]
th1 rd Sundays fol lowmg Sunday School
Middleport
Thursdnv
You nevu mistah the meaning of e C hurch spire
GRAHAM
UNITED
METHODIST
Co/ou rons
Euen tothosewho are cold 10 the tdeel5 fo r which the Chun:h slands tha t flnguollallh
Preachmg 9 30 o m l1 rst and second Sun
11-8
a l wav~&gt; pclnt' lo w me! hlng that 15 comforting rn~~u rl ng silfe
days of each month th1rd and fou rtA Sun
Friday
days eac h month worsh1p serv 1ce at 7 30
The very presence of a Church whet her In a c rowded city st reet or o n a quiet countl'}l
Colourons
p m Wednesday even1ng s at 7 30 Prayer
road Is a benediction to ll ll incluOir.g th ose wh o are not com;dous of worship
12027
and Bible Study
Such an Influe nce with wh at t me1ms to th os.- wl1 o OIJt' U their heart&amp; 10 lr uth Is worthy
Saturday
Bakers of
SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST
Mulberry
of a 5ec ond thoug ht It me rit s acceplano as 1'1 rPfngl' II comma nd s co !lftde nce as a pun In
I
The$SO/onwn5
Middleport
He1ghts Rood Pomeroy Pastor Albert
time of storm
1 7 19
Pomeroy. 0
D1ttes Sabbath School Supenntendenf
The Church deservn your ~ up p o rt - your membership - bE cause It a ffords real
R1ta Wh1te Sabbath Sc hool Saturday
proti!Ctlon fo r the fa mtly w h o~l' ~~;ell He tis your du ly lu defe11d and"" ho~ snol)l'r upb r lr~glng
afte rnoon of 2 00 w1th Wo rshtp Servtce
Is your solemn obllg a llo n
fo llow•ngot3 15
RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Siste r Harnett Worner
Supt Sunday
Co~rr ·~~~ r%0 ke"'lll': I.&lt;Jo&lt;A!O"Q 5!-n-o:•
P O Bo 802~ C ~• •o n~oollt ~ Q" l ?'\1()1;
~ I
~,.,.., ~ltli'I""'M'"',. •" IWIIrS.OC• ..
School 9 30 a m morn 1ng won h1p 10 45
We F1ll Doc:tors
am
Prescriptions
THE HILAND CHAPEL Georg e Ca sto
Gtner1l
1
" 992 2955
R1clne 949 l.S.SO
pastor Sunday Sch ool 9 30 a m evenmg
~ Pomeroy
wor sh1p 7 30 Thursday even mg prayer
serv 1ce 7 30 p m
POMEROV FIRST BAPTIST Oov1d Mann
mini Ster Wil liam Watson Sunday school
supt Sunday school CJ 30 a m morning
worsh1p 10 30 a m
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST 2B2 Mulberry
Ave Pomeroy Hersh&amp;l McClure Sunday
214 E Main
sc hool supen ntendenl Sunday sc hoo l
m-5130 Pomeroy
c;J 30 a m
morntng worship 10 30, even
1ng worsh1p 7 00 p m M1dweel'l prayer
serv1ce 7 00 p m
MIDWAY COMMUNITY CHURCH Dex ·
serv1ce
7 pm
Wednesday e ve n1n g
DE XTER CHURCH OF CHRI ST Char l es
Worsh1p 11 a m
ter Rd
Rd
Langsv1lle Rev A A
prayer meehng and B1bl e study 7 p m
Ru sse ll Sr
m.n tste r R1 ck Macombe r, Manl ey past o r A rthur Barr Sunday
MIDDLEPORT CLUSTER
Hughes Pastor Sunday School 10 a m
ST JOHN LUTH ERAN CH URC H Pm e
sup I Sunday ~c h ool c;J 30 a m
worshtp school supe rmte nde nl Sunday schoo l
HEATH Church School 9 30 o m Wor
Se rv1ces on Tuesday Thu rsda y and Sun
9 30 o m evenmg worsh1p 7 30 p m
sc rv1ce 10 30o m 81ble Study Tuesday
sh1p 10 30 am UMYF 6 p m Robert Grave Th e Rev Wlll1om Middlesw ort h
day 730pm
Pastor Church serviCes 9 30 a m Sun d ay
7 30 p m
Praye r and p rorse servtce Wednesday
Rob1nson Pastor
FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH Bodey
School tO 30 a m
REORG AN IZED CHURCH OF JES US 7 30p m
RUTLAND Church Schoo l 9 30 a m
Run Road Rev Emmett Rowson pastor
BRADBURY CHURCH Of CHRIST Jerr y
CHRI ST O F LATTER DAY SA IN TS Por tl a nd
RUTLAND APOSTOLIC CHURCH OF
Worsl·up 10 30 am W1lbur H1lt Pa stor
Handley Dunn supt Sunday school 10
Roc1ne Rood William Ro ush pa st or
JESUS CHRIST Elder Jam es Miller B1bl e
SALEM CENTER Worsh1p 9 o m Church Pmg ley pastor Sunday sc hool 9 30 a m
a m Sunday even ing serv1ce 7 30 B1ble
morn1ng worsh1p 10 30 am Wedne sda y
Ph yllts Sto bart Su nday School Sup! Sun
st udy Wednesday 7 30 p m
Su nday
School9 45 o m
teoch •ng 7 30 p m Thursday
evenm g serv1ce 7 30
doy School 9 30 a m Mor n1ng worsh1p
School I 0 o m Sunday ntght ser vtce 7 30
SYRACUSE CLUSTER
DYESVILLE
COMMUNITY
CHURCH
ANTIQUITY BAPTI ST Rev Ead Shul e r
10 30 o m Sunday eventng serv1ce 7 p m
pm
Rev Stanley Mernf1ed Mm1ster
Roger C Turner pastor Sunday school
Wed nesday evenmg praye r se r vi Ces 7 30
POMEROY WESLEYAN HOLI N ESS
FOREST RUN Worshp 9 a m Church pa stor Sunday sc hool 9 30 a m Ch ur ch
q 30 a m
Sunday mornmg worsh tp
se rv1ce
7 p m
yo ut h meet 1ng
6
p m
Horn sonvd le Rood Dewey Kmg pastor
School lOam
10 30 Sunday evening serv1ce 1 30
p m Tuesd ay B•ble Study 7 p m
BETHLEH EM BAP TI ST Rev Earl Shul er
Ed1son Weave r oss1stant Henry Ebl.n
MINERSVILLE Church Schaal 9 a m
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZAR EN E
pa sto Wo rs htp serv 1ce 9 30 o m Sund ay Jr Sunday sc hoo l supt Sun day sc hool
Worship 10 a m
CHRISTIAN UNION lawrence Manley
Rev John A Coffman pa sto r Martha
schoo l 10 30 o m Btble Study and prayer 9 30 a m morn1ng wor sh1 p 11 o m Sun
ASBURY Church School 9 50 o m Wor
pastor
Mrs
Russe l! Yaung
Sunday
Wo lfe C ha~rman of tHe Boo rd at Chns t •on
serv1cc Thursday 7 30 p m
day
eve ntng
serv1ce
7 30
praye r
sh1p 11 a rn 81ble Study 7 30 p m Thurs
Sc hoo l Sup! Sunday School ~ 30 a m
L1f e Sunday School 9 30 a m morn•ng
meettng Thur sday 7 30 p m
CARLETO N CH UR CH K ngsbury Ro od
dov UMW ftst Tuesday
Eventng worst·up 7 30 Wednesday praye r
worsh1p 10 30 Sunday evenrng w ors h1 p
SYRA CUSE FIR ST CH URCH OF COD
Gorv Ktng pa sto r Sunday schoo l 9 30
SOUTHERN CL USTER
meet 1ng 7 30 p m
7 30 p m Praye r meetmg Wedn esd ay
a m Ralph Carl sup e nn te nd ent e v enmiJ No l Pen tecos tal Rev Georg e Oile r
Rev Dav1d Horns
MT
MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD
7 30p m
pa stor Warsh1p se r v1ce Sunday 9 45
7 30 p m
Prayer meetmg
worsh1p
Rev Mark Flvnn
Rocme- Rev James Sotterf1eld pastor
RACINE FIRST BAPTI ST Don l Walk e r
a m
Su nda y school 11 a m
wor sh1p
Wedne sday 7 30 p m
Rev Florence Sm1th
Mornmg wors h1p 9 45 a m
Sunday
Pasto r Rober t Sm1 t h Sunda y sc h oo l
7 30 p m Thu r sday praye r
l O NG
BOTTOM
CH RI STIAN
Tam seP11ce
H1lton Wolfe
school 10 45 a m evenmg w o rsh1p 7
sup! Sunda y schoo l 9 30 o m m o rnrng
meeting 7 30 p m
R•c ha son pa sl or Wallace Damewood
BETHANY (Dorcas} Worst-l•p 9 00 o m
Tu esday
7 30 p m
lod1 es prayer
wo rsh ip 10 40 o m Sunday eve ru ng w or
MT HERMON Umted Bre thr en 1n Chr 1st
Sunday Sc hool Supe nntendent Worsh1p
Church Sc hoollO 00 am
meeting Wednesday 7 30 p m YPE
ship 7 30 Wednesday eve mng Btble
Church Rev Robert Sanders postor Dan
serv1ce a t 9 a m Btble Schooii O a m
CARMEL Chruch School 9 30 o m Wa r
MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST Corner
study 7 30
Wdl loy l ead er located 10 Texes Com
HY SEl l RUN HOLI NE SS CH UR CH Thurs
sh1p 10 30 am 2nd and 4th Sundays
S•x:th and Palmer the Rev Mark McClung
DAN VIll E WESLEYAN
Rev
R
D
mun1ty ofl CR 62 Su nday sch ool 9 30
day eve n ng sen.nces 7 30 Rev Cart Sun
APPLE GROVE Sunday School 9 30 a m
Sun day schoo l Cjl 15 a m Randy Hayes
Brown pas to r Sunday School 9 30 o m
Mor n1ng wa rsh1p ser vtCe 10 45
day mo rn 1ng servtees 9 30 and ev e nmg am
Worship 7 30 p m lsi and 3rd Sundays
Sunday School
supermtendent
Don
mornmg wo rsh1p 10 .45 yo uth s ~r v 1 c e
o m eve n ng prea ch1ng se rv1ce secon d
serv1ces 7 30 p m Rev Durham
Prayer meet1ng Wednesday 7 30 p m
R1gg s asst supt Mormng Worsh1p 10 15
6 45 p m evenmg worsh1p 7 30 p m
fREEDOM GOSPEL M I SSION a t Bal d and fourth Sundays 7 30 p m Chnstron
Fellowship supper f1rst Saturday 6 p m
om Youth meet1ng 7 30 p m Wednes
praye r a nd protse Wednesday 7 30 p m
Endeavor f 1rst and th1rd Sunday s 7 30
Knob loca ted on County Road 31 Rev
UMW 2nd Tuesday 7 30 p m
day tncl ud1ng wee tots eager bea vers
SIL VE R RUN FREE BAP TI ST Rev Morvm
p m Wednesday pr ay er meeltng and 6
la w rence G lu ese ncomp
pa stor
Rev
EAST LET ART Chruch Schaal 9 a m
1untor astronauts and IUnlor ond sentor
Roge r
Williar d
o ss tst ant
pastor
bl e st udv 7 30 p m
Worshtp serv 1ce 10 om Prayer meehng Morkm pastor Steve L1 ttl e Sund ay sc hoo l
htgh BYF cho!f practtce
8 30 p m
10 a m m o rn ng
JEHOVAH S WITNESSES 1 mde eo st of
Preachtn g se r v1ces Sun day 7 30 p m
17 30 p m Wednesday UMW secon d Tues J supt Sunda y sc hoo l
Wednesday prayer meetmg and Btbl e
worsh1p 11 a m Sun day ev enrng w o 1
Rut land jUnction of Rout e 124 and N ob le
pra yer mee tmg Wednesday 7 30 p m
day730pm
I
study Wednesday 7 30 p m
Su mm1l Rood (T 174) Sunday B1 bl e Le e
Ga ry Gr1ff1 th leader Youth g r oups Sun
RACINE WESLEYAN - Sunday schoo l I 0 sh1p 7 30 Pray er me et•n g and B• b le
st udy Thur sday 7 30 p m youth ser v 1ce
CH URCH OF CHRIST Middleport 51h
dny eve •ng 6 30 p m w1 th Roger and lure 9 30om Watchtower study 10 30
a m worship 11 a m Cho1r prac t1 ce
and Ma 1n Bob Melton mm1ster Mtke
6 p m Sunday
V o le! Wd lford a s leaders Commun •on om Tu esday B1bl c study 7 and 8 15
Thursday 8 p m
Gerlach su penntendent 81ble schoo l
CHE STER CHUR CH OF GOD Rev R E
se rv1ces f1 rs l Sunday each mo nth
pm
Thu r sday theocrot 1&lt; school 7 30
LET ART FALLS- Worst-l1p se r v1ce 9 a m
9 30 am mornmg worsh1p 10 30 am
Robtnson pas tor Sunday sc hool 9 30
WHITE S CHAPEL Coo lv lie RD Rev Roy p m se rv ice m eeft ng 8 30 p m
Church School I 0 o m
youth group Sunday 6 30 p m even1ng
a m worsh1p se rvtce 11 o m eve n 1ng
Dee te r pasto r Sunday sc hool 9 30 a m
RUTLAND FREEWILL BAPTI ST Ch urch MORNING STAR Worsh1p 9 30 om
worsh1p 7 00 prayer serv1 ce 7 00 p m
se rv1ce 7 00 yo ut h serv 1ce Wed ne sda y
wor sh p se rvtce 10 30 am B1ble stud v Churck M cP herson pastor Guy Pn ddy
Church School1 0 30 a m
Wednesday
and p ra ye r ser vice Wednesday 7 30 p m
supen ntenden t Su nday schoo l 10 a m
MORSE CHAPEL Church Schoo l 9 30 7 OOp m
MIDDLEPORT
CHURCH
OF
THE
LAN GSV IHE
CHRISTIAN
CHU RCH
RU TL AND CHURCH OF CHRIST Brad Sunday evenmg an d We dnes day ser ... lces
a m Worsh1p 11 a m
NAZARENE Rev J1m Broome pastor Btll
Robert Mu sser pastor Sund ay sc hool
Hend erso n pa stor Herb Ell ro tf Su nday 7 JOp m
PORTLAND Church School 6 30 p m
Wh1te
Sundov school supt
Sunday
Roy S1gmon supt morn1ng
schoo l sup t Sunday school 9 30 o m
CHURCH OF GOD of Prophecy locat ed
Evemng Worsh1p
7 30 p m
Yo u th 9 30 a m
sc hool 9 30 o m morn1ng worship 10 30
worsh tp 10 30 Sunday eventng se rvtee
morn 1ng w or sh 1p and comun 1on 10 30 on th e 0 J Wh1te Rood oH h1ghway 160
Meeting Tuesday ttvenmg
o m Sunday evangelistic meetmg 7 00
7 30 m1d week serv1ce Wednesday 7 am
Su nday School 10 o m Supenntendeni
SUTION Church School 9 30 o m Wa r
p m Preyer meet1ng Wednesday 7 p m
pm
RU TL AND BIBLE METHODIST CHURCH
John Loveday F1rst Wednesday mght of
sh1p 1st and 3rd Sundays 10 30 a m
UNITED PRESBYTERIAN MINISTRY OF
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF TH E NAZARENE
Am os Ttllt s pa stor Donny l1 lll s Sunday mon th CPMA serv1ces secon d Wednes
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
MEIGS COUNTY Ow1ght L Zav1tz d1rec
Rev Jam es B K1ttle pas to r N o rma n
Sc hoo l Sup! Su ndov Schoo l 9 30 c m
day WMB meet 1ng thtrd t hrough f 1fth
Rev R1chard W Thomas
lor
Presley Sunday School Supe nn tende nt
foll owe d by mornmg wo r sh1p Sunday youth se r v1&lt;e George Croyle pastor
Duane Svdenstncker Sr
HARRISONVILLE PRESBYTERIAN Rev
Su nday sc hoo l 9 30 a m mo r n ng w ar
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL - 570 Gran I St
se rv tce
7 00 p m
Prayer
eve nr ng
John W Douglas
Ernest Stnckhn pastor Sunday church
sh tp 10 .45 am
evangelis ti c serv tee 7
M iddl eport Rev Don Bloke pastor Sun
meet ng W edne sday 7 00 p m
Charles Dom tgan
school 9 30 o m Mrs Homer Lee supt
day school 9 30 a m mornmg wors hip
RU TLA ND CHURCH Of TH E NA ZARE NE
JOPPA Worsh1p 9 00 a m Chur ch p m Pray er and Pra •se Wedn esda y 7
mormng warsh1p 10 30
p m youth mee ting 7 p m Men s pro)l e r Rev Ll oyd 0 Grimm Jr pa sto r Sunday 10 30 o m
eventng worshtp 7 p m
SchoollO 00 a m
MIDDLEPORT Sunday sc hool 9 30 a m
schoo l 9 30om wo rs htp se rv 1ce 10 30 Wednesday eve mng B1ble study and
CHESTER
Wonhtp 9 a m
Church meehng Saturday 7 p m
EDEN UNITED BRETHR EN IN CHRI ST
Rt chord Vaughan sup! Mornmg worsh •p
a m Broad cast li ve o ver WMPO young prayer m eetmg 7 p m Aff thoted w 11h
School 10 a m Cho~r Rehearsal 7 p m
Elden R Blok e pa stor Sunday Sc hoo l 10 peo ples se r v1ce 7 p m Evongeltsh c ser
10 30
So ut he rn Bopt1s t Co nvenlt on
Thu rsdays Bible Study T~ur sdoys
a m
Robe rt Reed sup ! Mornmg ser
SYRACUSE FIRST UNITED PRESBYTERIAN
v•ce 7 30 p m Wedn esday se r v 1ce 7 30
BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHRI ST 730pm
man 11 a m
Su nday n1ght ser vtee s p m
Ch urch Worsh 1p serv1ce 9 30 a ,m Sunday
Eu gene Underwood pastor Harry Hen
LONG BOnOM Sunday Schaal al 9 30
Chn shan Endeavor 7 30 p m Song se r
School 10 30 om Mrs Sampson Hall .
FIRST SOU THERN BAPTIST Carne r o f Se
drlcks supen ntenden t Sunday school
o m Evanmg Worsh1p at 7 3 0 p m Thu rs
v 1ce
8 p m
Preoch1ng f:l 30 p m
supt
cond a nd And e rso n Mason Pastor Cronk 9 30 a m morn1ng worsh1p 10 30 o m
day B1blo Study 7 30 p m
RUTLAN D CHURCH OF GOD Rev Bob
M1dweek Prayer meet1ng Wednesday 7 Low th er Sunday schoo l 9 45 o m war
eveni ng worsh1p 7 p m Wedn esday B1ble
REEDSVILLE Sunday School 9 30 a m
by Po rter pastor Sunday school 10 am
p m Alv•n Reed loy leader
study 7 p m
sh1p se rv ce 11 a m and 7 30 p m Week
Morntng Worsh1p I 0 30 a m Eve mng Wor
Sun day wa rsh1p 11 a m Sunday evenmg
CHURCH OF JESUS CH RIST lac o ted a t ly B1bl e St udy Wed nesday 7 30 p m
JUBI L ~E CHRISTIAN CENTER - George s
shp 7 30 p m 81ble Study Wednesday s at
serv1ce 7 p m Wednesday Fam1ly Tra1
Rullond on New L1ma Road ne)( f to Fo r es t
Creek Rood Rev C J Leml ey pa stor
MA SON CHUR CH OF CHRIST Moil er 51
730pm
mg Hour 7 p m Wedn&amp;sday worshtp ser
Acre Park Rev Ray Rou se pa st o r Robe r t Mo so, W Vo Aun ce M•ck pas l or Sun
Jo hn Fe llure
supenntendent
Church
ALFRED Sunday School a t 9 45 a m
VICe 7 30p m
Mu sse r Sunday Sc hoo l sup!
Sunda y day Btbl c Study 10om Worsh1p 11 om
Morning Wonh1p at 11 om Youth 6 30
school
9 30 a m
mornmg wors htp
HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH Neor
sc hool 10 30 am wo rsh tp 7 30 p m B1
and 7 p m Btble Studv Wednesday 7 p m
10 30 e ven1ng se rv1 ce 7 p m You th
p m Sundays Wednesday N tghl Prayer
Long Botto m Edsel Hart pastor Sunday
ble Study Wednesday 7 30 p m Satu r
Vocal m us •c
Meehng 7 30 p m
moehng Sunday 6 p m B1bl e study 1n
school I 0 a m Church 7 30 p m prayer
doy mghl prayer se rv 1ce 7 30 p m
MA SON A SSEMBLY OF GO D Dudd i ng depth Wednesday 7 p m Classes f o r all
ST PAUL (Tuppers Plam s) Sunday
meetmg 7 30 p m Thursday
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRI STIAN Roge r lon e Mason W Vo Rev Ronn1e B Ros e
ages Nursery prov1ded for worsh tp ser
School 9 00 a m Morn1ng Worsh1p at
Wa tson pastor M1 ld red Z1egle r Sunda y Po:, to r Sunday Sc hoo l 9 45 a m Morn1ng Vl(9
MIDDLEPORT
PENTECOSTAL
Th"d
10 00 a m Btble Study 7 30 p m Tuesday
school sup t Morn mg war sh1p Cjl 30 a n
Ave
the Rev W1ll1om Kmttel pastor
Wor sh1p 11 a m Evenmg Service 7 30
SOUTH BETHEL (Solver R1dge) Sunday
51 PAUL LUTH ERAN CHURCH Carne r
Thoma s Kelly Sunday School Sup t Sun
Sundoyschool 10 30 a m eve n 1ng se r
p m Wedn esd ay Women s M101 stn es 9 of Sycamore and Second Sts Pome roy
School 9 00 am Mornmg Wm h 1p 10 00
day sc hool 10 a m Clones for oil ages
VICe 7 30
a m (mee ttng and pray er Prover and Bt
Th e Rev Wilham M1ddlesw o rt h Pas tor
a m Wednesday 81ble Study 7 30 p m
eve ntng serv1ce
7 30
B1ble study
Ml UNION BAPTI ST Joe Soyre Sunda y ble Studv 7 p rn
Sunday School at 9 45 a m and Church
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST
Ohver
Wednesday 7 30 p m youth se rvices
Sc hoo l Supenntenent Sunday !ichool 9 45
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRI ST IN Se rviCes 11 o m
Swam Supenntendent Sunday school
om even •ng worshtp 7 30 p m Pray er CH RISTIAN UNION Th e Rev Wilham
Fr1day 7 30 p m
9 30 every week
SACR ED HEART Rev Fath er Paul D
MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST Corner
meellng 7 30 p m Wednesday
Campbell pastor Su nday School 9 30 We lton pastor Phone 992 2825 Sa tu rday
HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION Re v Ke ith
Ash and Plum Rolph Butcher pester
TUPPER S PLAINS CHURCH OF CHRI ST
Eblm pas tor Sunday School 9 30 a m
o ll1 Ja m es Hughes sup! evenmg se r
evemng Moss 7 30 Sunday Mass 8 and
Saturday evenmg serv1ce 7 30 p m Sun
V• ocen t Wa te rs pas to r Howard Bl atr Co l
Co nfess i on Saturday 7 7 30
Leonard Gtlmore ftrst e lder evonmg ~er
v1ce
7 30 p m
Wed nesday ove nmg 10 a m
day School 10 30 o m
we ll supenntenden t Sunday Schoo l 9 30 praye r mee tmg 7 30 p rn Yout h praye r p m
~o~ice
7 30 p m
Wednesday pray e r
MEIGS
am morn1ng chu rch 10 30 a m Sunda y serv ic e each Tue sday
meetmg, 7 30 p m
VICTORY BAPTIST - S25 N 2nd St
COOPERATIVE PARISH
evemn g serv1ce 7 30 Wedn esd ov B1bl e
I A IRV IEW BIBLE CHURCH l et a r t W
M idd leport James E Keesee pastor
BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF
METHODIST CHURCH
Study 7 30p m
Vo Rl 1 Mark lrwm pastor Worshtp Sunday morntng worsh•p I 0 a m eve n
CHRIST Duane Worden m1n1ster B1ble
R1chard W Thoma s D1rec to r
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE NA ZAR . N E
lng se r ~o~ 1 ce 7 Wednesday even tng war
serv1ces 9J30 o m
Sundov schoo l II
clan 9 30 a m mormng wars htp I 0 30
POMEROY CLUSTER
Rev He rbert Grote pastor Fronk R1 ft l e
o m eve n1ng worsh 1p 7 30 p m Tu esday sh1p 7 p m
V1s1totlon Thursday 6 30
a m
evanmg worsh1p
6 30 p m
Rev Robert McGee
su p! Sunday Sc hoo l 9 30 o m Wor sh1p co ttage pro)'er meet1 ng and Ehb le study
pm
WednMday B•blesludy 6 JOp m
Rev James Corb1tt
serv 1ce 11 o m and 7 30 p m Praye r 1 q 30 a m Wors h•p servrce Wednesday
TRINITY Chosttan Assemb ly , Coo lville
NEW
STIVERSVILLE
COMMUNI TY
POMEROY Sunday School 9 15 o m
m eeting Wednesd ay 7 30 p m
,
7 3Qp If'
G1lbert Spencer
pastor
Sunday
Church Sunday School serv1ce 9 45 a m
Worsh1p se rvtce I 0 30 a m Cho1r re he ar
LAUREL
CLI FF
FRE E METHOD I ST
CA LVARY BIBLE CHURCH now l ocated school 9 30 a m
mornmg worsh1p 11
Worship serv1ce 10 JO, Evangelistic Ser
so l Wednesday 7 p m Rev Robert
CHURCH Rev Flovd F Shook p ast o r
on Pomer o y P ke Coun ty Rood 25 near a m Sunday evenmg service 7 30 p m
VICe
7 30 p m
Wednesday
Pray e r
McGee pa stor
1 meettng 7 30
Ll ovd Wng ht D1rec tor ol Chf 1S I1 a n Edu co
Flatwo ods Rev Blackwood pas tor Se r
m1dwee k praye r serv1ce Wednesday 1 30
ENTERPRI SE Worship 9 a m Church
t 1on Sunday School 9 30 o m M or n1ng v1ccs on Sunday oi 10 JO om on~ 7 :tO pm
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST Pom eroy
School tO a m
Worship 10 30 a m Cho1r Pracfr r'3 Su n
p m vv th Sunday schoo l 9 30 o m B1bl e
MOUNT Oli ve Community Church
Harr ison vi ll e ~d Robert Purtell pa stor
ROCK SPRINGS C ~u rc h Schoo l I 0 a m
day 6 30 p m
Evenmg Worsh p 7 30 study Wednesciov 7 30 p m
lawrence Bush pastor Max: Folme r Sr
Btll McElroy Sunday schoo l su pl Sunday
Worshtp10om UMYFbJOpm
p m Wednesday Pray e r and Bib le Stud v
INDEP oNDENT HOLI NE SS CH URCH INC
Supen nte nd ent Sunday School and morn
sc hool 9 30 o m mornmg wor sh1p and
FLATWOODS Church School tO a m
Pearl Sl
M1ddl c por t Re "' 0 Dell '"9 worsh1p 9 30 a m Sunday evemng
7 30p m
commun1on 10 30om Sunday worsh1p

'
This Sunday.

4

RACINE

MARK V STORE
Middleport

HEINER'S
BAKERY

THE DAILY
SENTINEL

WAID CROSS
SONS STORE

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY

Reuter-Brogan

Insurance
Semces

Attend The Church
of Your Choice
This Sunday

(

Attend The
Church of

Your Choice
This

Alit tul
,"
) our l:lmice

This Sunday

se rv1co 7 p m Youth m eet1ng and B1ble
study Wed nesda v 7 p m
FAITH BAPTI ST Chur ch Ma son mee t at
Unt i ed Stee l Work er s Un1on Hall Radrood
St ree t Ma so n Pa st or Rev Joy M1tchel l
Mornr ng wor sh1p 9 45 om
Sunday
Schoo l
10 30 a m
Praye r meehng
Wedn esday 7 30 p m
FORE ST RUN BAPTIST - Rev Nyle
Bo rd e n
pastor
Co r ne liu s Bunch
supertnlendenl Sunday schoc...t 9 30 a m
second and f o urth Sundays worsh1p ser
v1ce at 2 30 p m
MT MORIAH BAPTIS T Fourth and
Mom St Middleport Rev Ca lvm M1nn 1s
pa stor Mr s El v1n Bumgardner sup l Sun
day school 9 30 o m worsh1p ser v1ce
10 45 a m
NORTH
BETHEL
Unrted
Method1 st
Church Rev Charles Dom1gon pos fa r
Su nday School 9 30 a m Worshtp Se r
vtee 10 45 a m Sund ay B1bl e Study 7 00
p m Wednes day praye r meetmg 7 30
pm
BUR LI NGHAM
SOUT HERN
BAPTIST
CHURCH Route 1 Shade Pastor Don
Blo ck Afld toted w 1th Southern Bop ttsl
Convent ion Sundov schoo l 1 30 p m
Sundav worshtp 2 30 p m
Thursday
c venmg B1b le study 7 p m
PENTE COSTAL
ASSE MBLY
Roc me
Route 12-4 Will1om Ho bac k pastor Sun
day sc hool 10om Sunday e venmg ser
v 1ce 6 30 p m Wednesday eenmg ser
VICe 7
CARPENTER BAPTI ST Rev
Freeland
Noms pa stor Don Cheadle Supt Sun
dov Schoo l 9 30 a m Morn 1ng Wo rs h1p
10 30 o m Prayer Sc rv 1ce a l ternate Sun
days
NEASE SETTLEM ENT fREE Wi ll BAPTI ST
C'onold R Ko rr Sr pas tor Fuday even
mg serv1ce 7 30 p m Sunday schoo l 10
am

9- T he Daii; Se nt mcl , M id dl cpm t Pum cruv 0

HEY. W WHAT
WA5 THAT B IG ~UMP
.JU$T THE'-!!'

WHAT HAPPE'-lED?
DID '&gt;'OU Ml~$ THE
A!RPOFl.r -z

0 '-J L¥ NOT
O N A PAVE D
RUN WA¥ IM

RATHER OVER$ HOT"
THE MARK.

~ELL, GE T THAT

IT WILL HAVE TO WAIT,
MR 6ARR 1 MUST
PRE PARE FOR ABOARD
OF DIRWOR5 ~ Ef TIHG -

-EAP 0 TTA THERE 1 1
60TTA GET T' ABOARD
0' DI RECTORS McnN' 1

YOU AND YOUR FRI END W I LL
LEA.RN WHAT FATE AWAITS 'fOU

A S SOON AS THE S TARS RULE
THE N IG H T S KY '

C. A~UI IN L ,\ I l l

AC TU Al.t.Y DAHL. It.J G l
BEL IEVE WE VE LAN D I'D
IN THE 5PAN I&amp;H SAHARA!

THA T $ 0'-J E WA"
OF PUTT IN G I T ~
IT WOUL D 5 EEM WE

AF R.AI D ,

Property
Transfers
Wtlham Buchanan, Dons A
Buchanan to Monongahela Power
Co, Rtght of Way, Oltve
Ella Mae Enghsh to Howard T
Enghsh, Sr , Phyllts F Enghsh, Lot
256, Pomeroy
Betty Van Meter, John Wayne Van
Meter to Rodenck Elmer Grurun,
MarJOrie Vtrgtnta Grmun, II acre,
Sutton
Rodertck Elmer Grmun, MarJOri e
Vtrgtma Grurun to Betty Van Meter,
100 acre Lot 2-A II acre, Sutton
Rodertck Elmer Grmun, MarJOri e
Vtrgmta Grunm to J effrey T
Kmghtmg, Rexanna M Kmghtmg,
18 acre, Sutton
Harry Lee Spencer, Avtce E
Spencer to Jose Mascaro, Vtrgte
Mascaro, 2 037 acres, Chester
John C Boston, Cheryl A Boston
to Harry Lee Spencer, Avtce E
Spencer, 49 acres, 1 acre, Chest er
J ohn C Boston. Cheryl A Boston
to Wa td Lee Spencer, Gladys Spencer , 20 acres, Chester
Watha Farley, Mary Farley to
Dor1s Farley, 26 70 acres, Salem
Delores A Mtller , Afftdavtt,
Salisbury
Robert Ray Stgma n, Vtckte Sue
Stgman, Phtlip Dean Mtller, Demse
A Mtller " hrtstopher A Mtller to
Delores A Mt ll er , Pa r cels,
Sahsbury
Douglas D Wtckhne , Inez
Wtckhne, James D Wtckltne, Shelba
J Wtckltne to James D Wtckline,
Shelba J Wtckhne, 6 acres, Sutton
James D Wtckhne, Shelba J
Wtcklme to James D Wicklme,
Shelba J Wtcklme, Int tn Par cels,
Sutton
Kenneth Hager, Arlte 0 Hager to
Ltberty Otl and Gas Co , Rtght of
Way, dec, Orange
J ack Sattetiteld to Ca rolyn Jean
Sa tlerfteld, 1r. tnt m parcels,
Salts bury
John Dyue, dec , by Robert
Lyman Dye, Trus , Eva Della Dye
Butts, Trus , aka Eva Delle Dye ButIs to Rober\ Lyman Dye, Dons Opal
Dye Angle, Eva Della Dye Butts,
Parcels, Columbta
Thomas A Hawley, Tern L
Hawley to Joseph P Ekhch, Glenna
J Ekhch, Lot, Pomeroy
Gera ld W Drenner, Rebecca J
Drenner to James R Grueser, Donna J Grucser, Lots, Mtddlepor\
Lavern W J ordan, Mary J ordan
to Floyd Sayre, Paula Sayre, 6 2
acres , Columbia
Wtlltam Dodderer aka Wtlliam D
Dodderer , Rebecca Dodderer to
Davtd Dodderer, Lots Dodderer
23 65 acres and 5 acres, Oltve
'
Burn ell Stephenson, Sophta
Stephenson to Sammy Louts Darst ,
Sherry Darst, 4 90 acres, Salem
Robert L Cunnmgham, Sharon L
Cwmmgham to Lula Mae Grueser
I 02 acres, Sutton
'
Jay Hall, Jr , Llltian Marlene Hall
to Rtchard Va ug han, Rub y
Vaughan, Easement, Mtddleport
Boyd A Ruth, Judith M Ruth to
Wtllard L Moore, Karen S. Moore,
Lot3, Bawn's Sub , Chesler
Dona ld R Sayre, Betty J Sayre to
Besste Pullins, Lot 421, Life Estate,
Mtddlepor\
Mary McAngus Freeman, Jack
Freeman to Barry W Hart, Pamela
L Hart, Lots, P omeroy
Vtctor E Gaul, Leah D Gaul to
Gerald W. Drenner, Rebecca J
Drenner, Lot 7 Rtggscrest Manor,
Orange
Lotlte M Bradford to Anthony G
Bradford, 41'% acres, Lebanon
Wtltiam Fred Snuth, Sr , Beatnce
E. Snuth to H Roy Searls, Rosie B.
Searls, Lot, Middleport
Clyde J Ingels, Hallie L Ingels to
Athco Inc., Lot 5, Chesler, Baum's
Sub
Edna N. Wood, Admrx , Ida M
Christie, dec. to Phillip Roger
Harnson, Paulette Lowse Harrison
'
Parcels, Salisbury.
Cha rles K :Suneral to Enuna Lee
Suneral, 12 25 acres, Lebanon
' Eugene H. French to Catherme p
French, Cert of trans , Middleport

F' ru.l&lt;oti Aug 22, 1980

DICK TRACY

LOOK I lHERE'S
THE 6ALWHO
CAL L S HERSELF
EEHANEE

1

Y

we took our
vacat1on tnp 1n
the camper

LONTAGT
LENSES 4RE
l'; f.,. DY TO t:&gt;E

I MUST G ET
USED TO M Y
NEW NA M E/

PICI-.ED UPI

(I) THAT GOOD OLE NASHVILLE

Evening television listings

IIIU!i!C

(IJ (.)21 II 2~ROBERT Trap and
Thlb recetveao me unuaual support
hom aunworahtppera at e nude
be ach u they attempt to reacue
the nudists trapp11d 10 an awkward
atlon (Repeat 60 mlna )

t:!iS"IC.. VJtrf

tO 00 (I) ROCK CHURCH
(]) CANDID CANDID CAMERA
by THOMAS JOSE,H
Whenyoulea at expect it AllenFunl
appee.rawlth 1·ua hidden c amera tor
ACROSS
%H1gll note
apontaneous uncenaoredcomedy
1
Offspnng
3 Piece of corn
a1tuatlona
(I)GIJ OJ FANTASY ISLAND 5 "Wtth malice 4 A dime
Cl eopatra and the pageantry of an
a dozen
- none ''
el an! Rom e com e alh1a when a
5CaMed
item
woman travels backward in ttme to 11 Kirghiz
beco me the Egyptian queen and
Take
mountains
la ces death because ol hertornd
the stump
lovetorMarkAnthony (R epeat 60 12 Muse
of astronomy 7 Thailand
mlns)
(ll) JAZZ AT THE MAINTI!NANCE
temple
SHOP Phil Woods Quartet Pan Ill U Temperance
8 Cuckoo bird
leader
(60mlna l
10 30 Cil MOVtE-(MUSICAL)••• 'Heir'' 15 Exactly
9 Bracero's

Cnm•nale aeekmg a charrce toea
8 58 (3) NEWS UPDATE
cape for good are taken to the
e 00 lll &amp; &lt;IJ SPEAK UP Alii ERICA
(l)!laJ THAT SillY LINE
home ola marr c taimmiOJt O ha~o~eper
(])
700CLUB
ALLCREATURESGREATAND
8 00 (J) a (!) d CIJi!OliiJi m NEWS
te
ct
ed
a
t
ime
ma
chine
(Repeat)
()) (ft)
FRIDAY NIGHT MOVIE
!i_IIIALL
CIJ STUFF
THE
STRANGE
POSSESSION
OF
Da lla s Co wb ova Che er leaders
llll IIIASTERPIECE THEATRE
(]) SUIIIIIIER SPORTS SPECIAL
MAS OLIVER 197 7 Stars Karen
1978 Sta re Jane Seymour Bert
Lillie GolngonStaga EpusodeVIII
PART II
Black George Hamilton
Con.u
The Pnnce of Wale a comes to Lll
CIJ ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW
ABC
t:;APT
IONED
NEWS
liJ ®l THE DUKES OF HAZ
lie uldbyarranglngforhertomave
()) ABC NEWS
MCGUFFEY LANE
ZARD After Daisy hnlallan tor a
t o Parle tor the bnth other child
12
00
DAVID
SUSSKIND
SHOW
lllJ ZOOIII
croaked scheme to have a song
(.gl aaad CaptiOned) (60 m1na )
8 30
e &lt;IJ NBC NEWS
®) MOVIE D1a cu la eCastla 1969
she wrote publlehed Uncle Jesse
8 30 (I) P~P l:\OES THE COUNTRY
John
Carradme
2)
From
He
lilt
IIIUSIC
aendelhe boys to At lanta to get her
0 00 (}) 1J (!) NFL PRE·SEASON
Cll t LOVE LUCY
t,;a me 1957
money re turned from the une
11 00 ~
187:0LA LEVIn
FOOTBALL GAME Dallas Cow
(f)
CAROL BURNEn AND
12 40 (j) EMERGENCY
crupu toua mue1c p ublisher
D (l)ilalilll iD NEWS
boya va Houston 01lera
(l%l
II
$1
98
BEAUTY
SHOW
FRIENDS
(8_epeat 60 mms)
(I) PRE·SEASON FOOTBALL
REFLECTIONSDFTHETHIRD
(f) ilaJ CBS NEWS
1
00
(I)
•
ffi
THE
MIDNIGHT
(J) MOVIE -{COMEDY) ••• Folly
AfiCH The German Lenon Part I
Atlanta Falcons va San Otego
Cf) WILD WILD WORLD OF
SPECIAL
tobaWite' 1U51
Based on the beat aell1ng novel by
Q'la..rgera
ANIMALS
Cil tNSIGHT
lllJ OLDFRIENDS,NEWFRtENDS
- CIJUV. THE LOVE BOAT A bnl
Sie gfried Lenz th1a I1Im revea l a
{]) MOVIE (COMEOY) •• \-1,
lllJ ScLIIII CUISINE
Ruth Ellen Patt on Totten and
llant plain 1ene bacomeaagtamollr
how the Nazl regime wu strength
m ABC NEWS
'Amerlcattlon" 11178
Helerr Roas (Close d Captioned)
ened by people whO obeyed blindly
g ~rlwllhthehelp o fJuhe andtalla1n
8 88
NEWS UPDATE
1 10 GIJ ID NEWS
0 30 (fiJ PAVAAOTTI AT JUILLIARO
rather I han QuestiOn authority
lov e w1th a man who hasaome m111
1 00
• CROSS WITS
1 30 (I) JIM lilY SWAGGART
Tenor L uc1an a P avarottl works w•th
takenldeaaabout her {Repeat 60
lllJ
HOCKING
VALLEY
THE STORY
CIJ MOVIE-(ORAMA)"'~ 1 '8onnla
three performers A.11eoulse de
BLUEGRASS
mlna_l_
HO(lAN S HEROES
Parker
Story
"
1958
Vaughn s1ng1ng 0 M10 Fernarrdo
ClJ ilaJ SATURDAY NIGHT
11 30 (I) RICHARD HOGUE
Gila FACE THE IIIUSIC
2 30 Ill I I N!WS
Roberta Bngga amg1rrg lnlellce
MOVIE Perfe ct Gentlemen 1979
MOVIE -ITHRtLLERl " "
ytCYSHOW
(])
ROSS
BAGLEY
SHOW
and Chrlatlna Radman alnglng
Star a Lauren Bacatl, Robert Aida
' AnJ!omy Of Terror'
(]) TIC TAC DOUGH
(!)
ON
LOCATION
George
Conde Lleta
II liJ MOYIE tHORRORI •"
MACNEIL·LEHRER REPORT
Segals Beat Beta
tO 00 llJit&lt;IJ FRIDAYNIGHTFIGHTS
(J) "A Song Ia Born 'Danny Kaye
• G~rgoylea" 1872
3
20
())MOVIE
(COMEDY)•
Ya
'Amaz
NEWS
WBA Super SentamwetQhl cham
BennyGoodman Agroupotprofetl
1JID IIIOVIE ·( DRAIIIA-WESTERN)
lllJ OICK CAllEn SHOW
m..g
Dr
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'
1965
p1on Will redo Gomez defends hi a
aora compiling a history of mu111c
"OneEyld Jacka' HMI1
1 30 Ill. PRICE IS RIGHT
• 00 LV 700 CLUB
title agamat cha ll eng er Oerrlk
whobecomea1nvolvedw1th a n1ght
GIJ ID ABC NEWS
CIJ THE LESSON
IBELtEVE
Holmes fr om Caeaar a Petaca 1n
club aInger who 11 hld1ng from the
11 45 G)) Cl MOVIE T1ttes Unan
(])
SPORTS AROUND THE
5 10
RAT PATROL
laa Vegas (60 mine )
OA aolllce
noun cej[_ (3 hrl )
WORLD Australlan Surf Llfesev
5
30
JUST
PASSING
THRU
([) TBSEVENING NEWS
lllJ LORD IIIOUNTBAnEN IIIAN
12 00 Cil i iCV NEWS
lng' F1ve thouaa rrd athletes tast
(l)IJID THE OUKES OF HAl·
FOR TME CENTURY MountbaUen
~ HI OOUG
the lr atrength endurence andtra ln
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mlll10n dollars When they lose the
Host BIIIRu sse ll Gueeta Ch1cago
Q 30 (3) THE LESSON
surfing conteetat o prove hOw they
money the Dukes hBV&amp; to get1t
600 Ci) MOYIE-4COMEDY)•• 'Who 'a
(Repeat 90mtns)
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()) SHANANAGuesta Danny And
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CHAMPIONSHIP
NEWS
The Juniors
10 15
SNEAK PREVIEW ~SEP
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(!) Gil ID POP GOES THE
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DICK CAVEn SHOW
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6 30
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10 30 Cl) RICHARD HOGUE
7 58
NEWS UPDATE
{)) OLDFRIENOS NEW FRIENDS
(I) OOC OLDEST MAN IN THE
B 00
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Ruth Ellen Patton Tolten and
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one letter sim ply atands ror anot her I n th11 sample A l1
used for the th ree I. s X (or t he two 0 s etc Smgle letters,
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CRYPTOQUOTES
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�10-The Datly Sentmd, Middleport Pum e t uy 0 F nda y Au ~ 22 19&amp;1

Latin America subject of
•

Tuesday Electa Circle meet
A program on Latm Amenca was
gtven by Mrs Freda Hood at the
Tuesday meeltng of the EJec ta Ctr
cle of the B H Sanborn Mtsstonary
Soctety, Mtddleport Ftrst Bapltst
Church, held at the home of Mrs
Elizabeth Searles
Mrs Texanna Well had prayer
and Mrs
Katheryn Metzger
presided at the meeltng DevotiOns
were gtven by Mtss Rhoda Hall who
used scnpture from I Peter and the
toptc, A word m Season
InternatiOnal prtce codes were
turned m and vtsttalton reports
made Plans were made to remem

r---------------: Mawn County
I

-~

News Notes

H) llmlf Marl'lhllll

I
I
•

:;pectal correspondent
Mason and area personals
Mrs Ron Pterson of PoughkeepSie, New York, VISited her mother,
Mrs Sarah Spencer lor a week Mr
Pierson VISited here brtefly before
leavmg lor St Petersburg, Flonda
to vtsll his 92-year old grandfather
~ Mr and Mrs J W Noble and
grandsons, Gary Schwabe, returned
• to New Orleans, alter vtsttmg thetr
daughter and son·m·law, Mr and
: Mrs Roy Elmer and lanuly, and his
:mother, Mrs Matilda Noble, stster
:and farruly Mr and Mrs Stanley
:,Harbour and farruly
• Mrs Lewts Hamm Addie Pttt
man, Alice Scheutter, all of Toledo,
VISited recently wtth Mr and Mrs
·Chester Ohver
FAMILY PICNIC HELD
MASON
Mason Umted
Methodist Women held a farruly pterue on Monday m the church soctal
room With Mrs
Ray Profitt!
prestding durmg a bnel busmess
meetmg Mrs Margaret Ptckens
read a poem entitled, 'Wmdows of
Gold'
Attending were Mrs June Van
Maire, Mrs Catherme Srruth, Mrs
Joyce Carson, Mrs Ray Proffitt,
Mrs Margaret Ptckens, Mrs John
(MaDora) Wtldman Mrs Sarah
Spencer, Mrs Lots Test and Dr
John Wildman

VBS CONCLUD&amp;'&gt;
MASON - Vacation Btble School
was concluded on Sunday mormng
at Mason Umted Methodist Church
With a program m which the young
people parttctpated There was an
average attendance each day of 38
Mrs LoiS Test was director of the
school Mrs Cecilia Harns was m
charge of the mustc, aSSisted by
Melarue SISSOn
Teachers mcluded Lon Chapman
nursery
Glorta Chapman and
Kathy Wood, kindergarten Susan
Kincatd, ltrst and second grades,
Jackte SISSon, third and fourth, Dee
Bond, fifth and sixth grades
Mrs Dtana Johnson was m charge
of crafts Pat Mossman Roxanne
Russell and Judith were m charge of
refreshments Darla Jerrell and
Kathy Test helped wtth the
devotionals

FAMILY SEEKS DOG
A Coolville family ts asking help of
restdents m locating lis pet-a small
black long hatred dog which IS
believed to be somewhere between
Tuppers Plams and Coolville
The dog lS weanng a red harness
and answers to the name of "Fift"
Anyone knowmg of the whereabouts
of the family pet IS asked to call 667
30110 Inctdentally, a reward 1s of·
fered
AUXILIARY PICNIC

PLANNED
The Amertcan Leg10n AUXIliary of
Racme Post 602 Will have a ptcmc at
the home of Mrs Davtd Yost, Great
Bend, Tuesday at 6 p m Members
are to take a covered dish and thetr
own table servtce Dues are still
payable A group Will leave from the
Amertcan Leg1on hall m Racme for
theYostlarmat5 30p m

OPENSSEPT 3
The new school year m Southern
Local School Dtstnct wtll open for
classes on Sept 3, Supt Bob Ord
reports The startmg ttrne of classes
~nd the bus schedules wtll be the
same as last year, Supt Ord states
Anyone m the district wtth questtons
may contact Supt Ord at 949-2600

CHAIRMANSHIP NAMED
Mrs Charlotte Kunes has agreed
to the cha1nnanship of the St Jude
Children's Research Hospttal Door·
!&lt;&gt;-Door Campalgll m Hartford, to
ratse funds to support the hospttal
according to Mr W1l11am J Ktrwen
Director of Develoment at the mternatlonally recogniZed hosptlal

PROSPECTIVE VALI,EYBALL
PLAYERS TO MEET
All Eastern ljtgh School gtrls m·
terested m playmg volleyball this
school year should meet for practice
Monday at 1 30 p m at the htgh
school

her a shut m s birthday wtth a gtft
and also to send a gtft to Mttc hell
Lmdqutst the Ohio Bapbst scholar
sh1p student
Refreshments were served by the
hostess to Mrs Metzger Mrs Well
and daughter Amber Mrs Gwtnme
Whtte, Mrs Una Dotson Mrs Fran
ces Smart, Mrs Mary Brewer, Mary
Beth Brewer, rruss Hall Mrs Lillian
Demoske), Mrs Ethel Hughes Mrs
Cathy Rtggs and Davtd Mrs Hood
and guest, Kathleen Lwnpkm of
Mobile, Ala , longtune frtend of Mrs
Searles
NEHACLIMA CLUB MEETS
NEW HAVEN- The Nehacltrna
Garden Club held 1ts annual
progressive dinner on Monday, Aug
11, with the AppetiZer Course held at
the home of Mrs John Campbell
Mrs Campbell and Mrs Chester
Weaver acted as co-hostesses lor
this course Mrs Wtlliam C Gtbbs
gave the mvocabon
The Mam Course was a Garden
Party" held on the ptcmc area of the
Umoo Campground Mrs Davtd
Ftelds, Jr and Mrs
Donald
Bwngardner served as co-hostesses
for this course The Dessert Course
was held on the patio of Mrs Danrue
Harbour wtth the theme Down by
the Seashore ' Mrs Harbour and
Mrs Sam Longanacre served as cohostesses for this course Favors
were giVen to each one present wtth
complunents from the Cttazens
Nat10nal Bank of Pomt Pleasant
The evemng was enJoyed by all at·
tending
The next meetmg wtll be held on
Monday, Sept 8, wtth Mrs Carroll
Adams, Jr Mrs Danme Harbour,
Mrs Douglas Miller and Mrs Blllte
Howard servmg as hostesses Members !tending the dinner were Mrs
Roy Jones Mrs Tom Hollman Mrs
Phil Batey, Mrs John Campbell,
Mrs Chester Weaver, Mrs Dav1d
F1elds, Jr , Mrs Donald Bumgard·
ner, Mrs Wllham C Gtbbs Mrs
James N Roush, Mrs John Thorne,
Mrs Harry Miller, Mrs James
Lockhart, Mrs Hobte Lowe Mrs
Mel Clark, Mrs Mtchael Memlt,
Mrs Larry Wiley, Mrs Dann1e Har
bour, Mrs Sam Longanacre, Mrs
Douglas Miller, Mrs
Harold
Bumgarner, Mrs DaVId Stmonton
and Mrs Gerald Cunnmgham
MISSIONS DAY OBSERVED
NEW HAVEN - Miss10ns Day
was observed at the Church of God
State Campground at Rtphng
Waters near SISSonvtlle, W Va on
Thursday, Aug 7 Mrs E E
Wolfram of Anderson, Ind was the
guest speaker for the mornmg and
afternoon services The New Haven
local recetved a Standard of
Achtevement Award for thetr past
year s work They also recetved ftrst
place honors for thetr History Book
In the afternoon servtce, the State
Umfted ProJect Oflermg was
presented wtth the theme bemg
' Let's Celebrate Everlastmg Joy
Through Mtsstons " The Reverend
Doctor E E Wolfram was guest
speaker for the evemng servtce The
service ended w1t11 a very msptr~ng
candlelight servtce conducted by the
Women of the Church of God Those
attending from New Haven were
Mrs Davtd Ftelds, Jr Mrs Lewts
Dodson Mrs Rena Johnson, Mrs
Pansy Fry and Harry Ray Fry
BRIDAL SHOWER HELD
NEW HAVEN- Mrs Carl Vance,
the lonner Angle Flelds was
honored wlth a brtdal shower m the
Fellowship Hall at the New Haven
Ftrst Church of God It was hosted
by the Women of the Church of God
Games were under the directton of
Mrs Lee Jeffers Game priZes were
awarded to Mrs Bnan Rtffle, Mrs
Wilham C Gtbbs and MISs Betty
Kelly
The servmg table featured two
bndal cakes baked and decorated by
Mrs George Reed and Mrs Davtd
Ftelds, Jr , and the gtft table
displayed an umbrella wtlh
streamers, nbbons and white wed
ding bells
Refreshments were served to Mrs
Lewts Dodson , Mrs
Roberta
Maynard, Mrs Iva Capehart, Mrs
Rena Johnson, Mrs Pansy Fry,
Mrs Revena Kmg Mrs Dextet Er·
Will, Btrdie Roush, Mrs Fred
Taylor, Mrs George Reed, Ms
Stacey Reed, Mrs Russell Maynard,
Ms Samantha Maynard Mrs Cectl
Cunmngham, Mrs Lester Dodson,
Mrs Larry Moore, Mrs Joe Cundiff,
Mrs Brian Riffle, Mrs Wilham C
Gtbbs, Mrs Wtlliam Kelly, Mtss Betty Kelly, Mrs Glen Weaver, Mrs
Lee Jeffers, Mrs Wyllis Davis, Jr ,
MISS Usa Davis, MISS Wendy DaviS,
Mrs Lufema Weaver, Mrs David
Ftelds, Jr , and the honoree, Angte

CHEERLEADING CLINIC
PLANNED
A cheerleadmg chmc wtll be held
at Meigs Jun10r High School Monday
through Wednesday lor all m
terested girls ages r.-12 Sessions wtll
begtn at 9 a m and last unt1112 noon
each day, and there will be a
nonunal fee of $2 50 for the chmc
I

UFE SAVING OFFERED
A semor hfe savmg course wtll be
offe red from Aug 25 through Aug 29
a t the Middleport Pool Those
wts hmg to register may call 992
9968 Kellee Burdette IS the m
structor

Social
calendar
SUNDAY
HAZEL COMMUNITY CHUR&lt; H
Homecommg IS scheduled for Sun
day wtth a b~ s ket dtnner at noon
and servtces begmmng at I p m
F eatUI ed smgers are Dan Hayman
and the Hymntuners, and the guest
speaker will be Floyd Bogard
Hillsboro
Pastor Edsel Hart
welcomes everyone
CARR SCHOOL AND SWARTZ
reunton wtll be held combmed at the
Carr grove at Alfred Sunday A
basket dmner wtll be at 12 30 p m
and everyone IS welcome
EBLIN FAMILY wtll meet for a
reuniOn Sunday at the Rock Sprmgs
Grange Hall on the Metgs County
Fatrgrounds Dmner Will be at I
pm

tn

P~bhc~h~e­

WANT AD INFORMATION

or Write Da11y Sentmel c Iasstfled Dept
111 Court St., Pomeroy, 0 , 45769

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX
eANNOUNCEMENTS
I- Card of Thanks
2- tn Memoriam

9-Wanted lo Buy

TO MEET TOMORROW
The Roberta Ctrcle of Dtslnct No
25 Will meet Thursday at 12 noon at
the Middleport Masomc Temple
Members are asked to brmg a
covered dtsh
BOOSTERS TO MEET
The Southern Athletic Boosters
wtll meet Monday at 8 p m at the
htgh schoolm !Ulcme

!ii- Hou1ehold GoOds
n - ca TV Rtdlo Equipment
SJ- Antiqun
54- Mise Mtrchandlte
U-llullding Supplies
St--Pets lor Salt

11_Hwlpw.ntect
12- SifUJff(l Wanted
13- lnlur•nct
14- &amp;uslntu Tra~ntnt
U-Sc;hDOIS ln1fn.td on
16RJdio TV
&amp; C8 Repair
11-WanttdToDo

e FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK
.. -Farm Equipment
U-W•ntecl to Buy
71-Truckl for Sale
u-Llvtltotk
'-4- Hey &amp; Grain
U- Setdl Fert llztr

eFINANCIAL
21 -

Business
Opportunity
22-Monev to L.o.n
ll-Professlonat
5ervtnl

e TRANSPORTATION

eREALESTATE

71 - Auto, fOr Slit
n - Vtns &amp; • w D
74- Mot&amp;rcycle•
1$-Auto Ptru
&amp; Acctuories
77- Auto AepJ1r

31 - Homes tor S.lel
32-Mobl le.Jiomel
lor Salt
ll - F'arms tor S•le
34-llulinwu Build1n11
n-Lots &amp; Acrnte
J6-AUI E1tatw Wanted

l7- Re•ttors

Ohto

eSERVICES

Want Ad Adverhsmg
Deadlines
4PM D•lv

11 Noon sarurdr,
for Mond•v

A certtfted check payable
to the Treasurer of the
above board of educt ton or
a sat1sfactory b1d bond
e)(ecuted by the b dder and
the surety company •n an
aFfnount equal to ttve per
cent (5%) ot the b•d shall
be submitted w th each b1d
Satd board of educat on
reserves the r1ght to wave
ntormaltt es to accept or
retect any and all or parts
of any and a ll b•ds
No btds can be wtth
drawn for at least th rty
130 ) days after the
scheduled clostng ttme for
recetpt of b ds
Metgs Local
Board of Educat1on
Jane Wagner Treasurer
South Th1rd Avenue
Middleport Oh10 45760
IS) 22 29 (9) 5 12 4tc

al-Homalmprovtmenh
12- ftlumblnt &amp; E•uvtt~nv
ll- EJlCIVJting
14-Eiectrlul
I RetrlgtrJIIon
U-GMerat Hauling
U-M fol Repai r
11- Uphollttry

Rates and Other Information
1!i Worcts or

IJndtr
Chtrte
111

Ctsh

I day
2 d•vs
l days
6days

,,.
'"
"'
"'
'"
'" '"
Each word over lht m n1mum 15 words is 4 cents per word per dl'f

ACis runnint other thJn
rate

conse~tuhve

days will be c;tlarged Jllhe 1 dJy

In memory C•rd of Thant11 •nd Ob1Wary ' cents ,.r word U GO
mmlmum CJih 11'1 advJnn
Mobllt Homt ultsand Y;,rct Slits art acuplecl only with c;ash w th
order 25 cenl charte for ads urry111111 IIOK Humber In Carw ol Thw
Senflntl

ARABUREemenJs

Announcements

3

r----------------------1
I
Curb Inflation. 1

4-H News !

SMITH PROMOTED
Mark S Srruth, son of Mr and
Mrs Vernon L Srruth of New Haven,
W Va , has been promoted m the
U S Air Force to the rank of atrtnan
ltrstclass
Airman Srruth IS a sul'Vlval eqUipment spectalist at Seymour Johnson
Air Force Base, N C

eMERCHANDISE

e EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Young reunion

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISHCHARG&amp;'&gt;, AUG 21
Gerald Bechtel, Mrs Roger
Bloomer and daughter, Deborah
Bush, Tanuny Carter, Enunett Con·
way, Michael DaviS, Gladys Dtcken
son, James Doss, Nancy Getlker,
Amy Gtllespte, William Howell,
Karen Johnson, Rutholene Judy,
Myrtle Kelly, Mrs LewiS McCombs
and son, Nellie Moms, Ervm
Napter, Clarence Oiler, Esther Raf·
lerty, Peter Setdel, Margaret
Sheline W1lliam Sktdmore, Mrs
Davtd Srruth and daughter, Carl
Tredway John Tucker, Mrs Albert
Turner and daughter, Mrs James
Walker and daughter, Mrs Denrus
Wallace and son, Russell Wells,
Helen Woodruff, Lisa Yates
BIRTIIS
Mr and Mrs Dame! Horvath,
daughter, Crown Ctty, Mr and Mrs
Ronald Ohver, son Wellston

eRENTALS
41 - Houses for Rent
41- Mobilt Homes
tor Rent
44- Apartment for Rent
U - FRooms
4t--Sp•ct for Rent
47-Wanled to Rent
41- Equipmwnt for Rent

]- Announcements
4-Gtve•w•y
S-Happy Ads
6-LOSIJnd Found
7- YardS.Ie
I ~ Public Sate
&amp; Auct on

Pebbles Blake, daughter of Mr
and Mrs Eldon Blake, Jr of Reed·
svtlle and Kathy Pooler, daughter of
Mr and Mrs Emerson Pooler at
Chester, represented Eastern Htgh
School at the 24th Annual Leader·
ship Trammg Workshop (17th Ad
vanced VVorkshop) at Kenyon
College m Gambter, July 13-18
The workshop program was sponsored by the Ohio Assoctabon of
Student Counctls under the auspices
of the Ohio Assoctabon of Secondary
School Admimstrators
The summer workshops brought
together student council represen·
tallves from throughout Ohto
Durmg the ltve days on Kenyon
Campus, the students dtscussed
problems conunon to thetr schools
and developed soluttons usmg Improved leadership and group
process techmques
Through
assoctallon wtth other students,
mock counctl meetmgs lectures,
laboratory sesstons and mlonnal
discussions, the delegates explored
the apphcallon of democratic prm·
ctples at the high school level
Pebbles and Kathy w1ll be semors
at Eastern Htgh School this fall and
will be president and vtce prestdent,
respectively, on the student counctl

The Meigs County Shepherds Cub met July 24
at 8 p m at the home of Nickey and Dame!
Leonard With 10 members and two advuors
present The club discussed cleamng the sheep
barn and setUng up pel\3 for the r.ur made pa:t:l
buy en signs and made arrangements for the fair
booth exhibit Ntck and Nickey Leonard showed
the group how t&lt;1 block market lambs and how to
prepare beedmg sheep for the show Refreshments were served by Shelly Avts J&lt;Jhnny and
Davld Rice - Daniel Leonard New!! Reporter

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
PURCHASE OF THREE
SCHOOL BUSES FOR
MEIGS LOCAL BOARD
OF EDUCATION
Seated proposals w11t be
rece1ved by the Board of
Educat on of the Me gs
Local School D1str. ct of
Middleport Oh1o at the
Treasurer s Off tce unt I
12 00 Noon on September
IS 19SO and at that t•me
opened by the Treasurer of
sa1d Board tabulated and
a report thereof made to
sa•d Board at ts neKt
regular
meet1ng as
provtded by law for three
13) 65 passenger school
buses
accord ng to
spec If cat10ns ot satd board
of educat1on
Separate and
1n
dependent btds w•ll be
rece1ved w1th respect to the
chass1s and body type and
w•ll state that the bus when
assembled and prtor to
delivery comply wt t h all
s c hool
dtstrtct
spectftcattons all safety
regulat1ons and current
Ohto Mtntmum Standards
tor School Bus Con
structton of the Depart
ment ot Educat on adopted
by and wtth the consent of
the D rector of Highway
Safety pursuant to Sec tton
4511 76 ot the Oh•o Rev•sed
Code and a II other per
tment prov stan of law
Speed caftans and 1n
structtons to btders may be
obtatned at the off ce of the
Treasurer
M ddleport

PHONE 992-2156

Gambter

The Young farruly reunwn was
held Sunday, Aug 17, at Forest
Acres Park Attending were Mr and
Mrs Wil Young and Mmdy, Mr and
Mrs Frank Young Mr and Mrs
Ralph Clark, Bob, and Rtchte Mrs
Lurene Kennedy, Robert H Yowtg,
BtU Buck, Jr Mr and Mrs Btll
Buck, Sr , Mr and Mrs Bill Buck
III, Mehssa and Jason Mr and
Mrs Pat Hager, Kelly and Cory,
Mr and Mrs Larry Cleland, Greg
and Mary Mr and Mrs Rtck Buck
and Jeremy

BAKE SALE-CAR WASH SET
The southern Band wtll hold a
bake sale begmmng at 9 a m at the
Racme Home Nattonal Bank, and a
car wash at Eber s Gulf Station m
Racme startmg at IG a m Saturday

Small investment, large
returns, Sentinel Want Ads

Mmes Blake, Pooler
represent Eastern at
workshop

ROGER DIXON TRANSFERRED
Roger Dtxon, son of M~ and Mrs
Herbert Dtxon, has been transferred
to Mtdland, Texas m his e m
ployment wtth the Conoca Otl Co
Both he and hts wtle are Conoca em
ployees

II

Pay Cash for

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:II
Savell!
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Write your own ad and order by mall w1th lhls
coupon Cancel your ad by phone when you get
results Money not refundable

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below

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YOST WRECKER Serv1 ce
cars Call742 315ll

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SHOOTING
MATCH
Forked Run Sportsman
Club Startong Aug 31 each
Sun there after Factory
choked guns only
MASON HOME REPAIR
heatmg and atr con
dtt1onmg furnace c leantng
plumbmg repatr restden
ttal e lectnc w rtng sales
servtce and mstallat1on
992 2364

SEPTIC TANKS Cyallia
County
Cert•hed)
Leach beds water and
gas line electric ltnes
pole bu1ld.ngs Reese
Trench1ng and Backhoe
Serv1ce 367 7560

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These cash rates
mcludedtscount

n

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WILL
YOUR
House
wtthstand another hard
wmter' How about that
root and barn that snow
gets pretty heavy I Let us
do any general
matn
tanence work for you pam
ttng gutter repatr Patch
work odds and ends so you
canst back tn trent ot that
warm f1re thts wtnter and
not have to worry Call 992
3941 992 3519 or 992 5126
and we II come and g ve
you a free est1mate
References are provtded
upon request

24 hours a day wanted 1unk

21

5

Lane
P1ano Tuntng
Dantels 742 2951 Tunmg
and Repa r Servt ce stnce
1965 If no answe r phone
992 20S2

CANDY SUPPLIES on
sale
Ann s
Cake
Decoratong Supplies 50716
Osborn Rd
Reedsv lie
Oh 667 6485

the proper box

) Wanted
) For Sale
I Announcement
) For Rent

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Address

I Prmt one word m each
I space below Each 1n
1 tt1al or group of f1gures
1 counts as a word Count
name and address or
I phone number 1f used
I You II get better results
I •f you descnbe fully
1 g1ve pr.ce The Senlonel
1 reserves the r ght to
claSSifY ed1t or retect
I any
ad Your ad w II be
I put 10 the proper
I classtflcahon 1f you 11
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I PAY h1ghes1 pnces
pass ble for gold ~nd Sliver
coms nngs 1ewelry etc
Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop M•ddleporl

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STILL OFFERING
ICE CREAM
W1th Any Untco
FREEZER OR
REFRIGERATOR
PLUS
$25 DISCOUNT

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sto,e tnMtofrROoetyatls

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Ma11 Thts Coupon wtth Rem1ttance
The Da1Iy Sentmel
Box 729
Pomeroy, Oh . 45769

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LAN

,--;l.W~:;;;
--

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

ARK-

amSt _
erwr
9.92 • 2 1e1

JANET S HAl R GO ROU

~t:_-The ~ally Sent~el, Mtddle port Pom eroy
PO
SIT ION
t !___
_H_etp_AVAILAB
w_a_nt_et!._ LE
Admtnt sfrat•ve Spec ta ltst
through knowledg e of
rehabtlttat 1on methods
w1th mental ly retarded a nd
developmenta lly dtsabled
.nd!VIduals MINIMUM of
f 1ve years eKpenence m
related f1e1 s wtth a t least
two years n an ad
m1n1strat1v e capa c tty
Should have know ledge of
grant wrttmg
Public
Relations Adult servtees
10 b placement and
curnculum development
Qual!toeo persons should
send resume to the Met gs
County Board of Menta l
RetardatiOn County Cour t
House
P omero y
Ohto
45769 Applt cattons wtll be
accepted unftl August 2.4
19SO

0

Aug 22 l!J8() OUR BOARDING HOUSE

NEW 3Homes
bed &lt;ootor
m sate
home lor
31
sa le
Bu11t tn k1tc he n
d tntn g
r o om
la rg e
recrea tton room ftre pl ac e
lots of stora ge 2 12 baths
gara ge 1 acre lot 992 3454

w •th MaJor Hoople

44

~~~~~~~~~n~~~~~~~~~~~~

Apar1m e nt
for Rent

Business Services

3 AND 4 RM turn ts hed a p

Is Phone 992 5434
RE NTE R S ~S s 1stan ce fo r
Sen or Clttze ns tn Vfllage
Manor apt s Call991 7/S7

----------

ED
BA RT E LS Lo a n
Repr csenlatlve 1100 Easl
Ma tn St
Pome roy Oh
Mortgag e
mon e y
ava la ble All typ~s hom e
t 1na nc1 ng
ne w
old
reftna nc.ng a nd 2nd ma r
!gages Phone 992 7000 or
'192 5732
F l_V_E ROOM S bath utll•ly
room Browne ll Avenue

FURN IS HED
APART
MENT four room s and balh
adults only nn pets m M1 d
dleport 992 3S74
DOUBLE 2 bedroom
lurn!Shed
Adu lts only
Nosch1ldren or
pe ts
DepoSit 992 2749
'12

~ d_d_
l e_
po_r_t_9.!_2_2~~ --­

N D m Mason Spec ta Is th s

month Regular $35 00 per
m s Now $32 00 530 00 per
ms Now 527 50 $25 00 per
ms Now $23 50 1 51 00 oft
on any blow dryer or
styltng tron frosttngs
Reg $22 50 now 520 00 Call
773 5404 Conme Mar lee
or Janet
YELLOW FREESTONE
Canntng Peaches
Now
available at Bobs Market
Just 59 9S per busche l
Bnng your own conta1ner
Also red npe 1utc y water
melons
F rst of the
season rambO cookmg and
eat ng apples home grown
cantalopes and tomatoes
Open 7 days a week ttll
oark
Bobs Markel
Mason W Va Phone 773
5721

POSITION AVAILABLE
Classroom a de postt on
enta11s work.ng Wtth men
tally retarded and develop
mentally d sabled tn
dlvtduals Ass•sts teache r
w1th routme classroom
management
Mtn mum
one
year eKpenen ce
worktng tn s mdar posttmn
Salary mmtmum wage
Resumes Wtll be acc peted
unttl August 24 1980
Quallfted persons should
send resumes to
Metgs
Counly Board of Menia l
Retardatton Me gs County
court House Pomeroy
Oh!o45769

CARPENTER
SERVICES"
-Addons~nd

POMEROY 0
Chlllrt~s

Real Estate - General

M Hayes

A~allor

N eac IE Carsey Br Mgr
Ph 992 2~0 3 or 9n ~780

L.islmq- NR 67

F&lt;" mecl y

~21.

WANTED BABYSITTER
m Racme area tor 2 school
age ch ldren Call afler 5
949 2S92

6

Lost and Found

FEMALE COLLIE losl s1n
ce last week n VtCJntty of
Co Rd 25 F latwoods a rea
F amdy pet Answers to
Sally Reward 992 7165
LOST MALE German short
hatr po1nter
Has tn
dent ftcatton
numbers
ratooed tn ear 6350 Lost 1n
the Rutland area 992 7425
n even1ngs 742 3146
LOST small bla c k dog
wear ng red harness bet
ween Coolville and Tuppers
Pla•ns
Answers to F It
Rewa rd Call667 3080
LOST fox hound wh te
w th lemon spots AboiJt SIK
months old weanng col lar
w th no name plate Harry
R chard 843 34.43
Yard Sale ____..,___
YARD SALE and car wash

at the Syracuse F re
Statton on Saturday August
23 from 9 4 Sponsored by
the Southern Cheerleaders
LARGE YARD sale Thur
sday AugiJst 21 from 1 6
and Saturday August 23
from 10 S Bedspreads CIJr
tatns some almost new
chtldrens clothes and lots
ot olher terns 131 South
4th Avenue Mtddleport
Rtght across from
Amertcan Leg ton
CARPORT SALE
Ed na
Hantngs on old 33 one mlle
norlh of County Road IS
Ant que trunk over 100
years old hand tools wren
ches and household tems
Fr•day and Saturday
August 22 and 23rO 9 5
8 --.----Publtc Sale

BRADFORD Auct1oneer
Complete Sen11ce Phone
949 2487 or 9~9 2000 rae ne
Ohto Cntt Bradford
OSSIE S AUCTION House
20 N 2nd Stree t M•d
dleport Oh10 We sell one
ptece or enttre households
New used or ant ques tn
ci1Jd1ng homes farms or
ltqutdat on sa les Get top
dollar Ltst wtth the man
who has over 25 years n
the new used and anr1que
furntture bus ness
We
take cons1gnments For n
format 1on and ptckup se r
v1 ce call 992 6370 or m
Wesl V rgm1a 773 5471 Sale
every Fnday n1ght at 7
p m Aucttbneer Howard
Beasley apprenttce auc
t1oneer Osby A Marf•n
I no tunk)
Wantetl to Buy

I ron and brass beds old
furniture
desks
gold
r ngs
tewelry
Stiver
dollars sterling etc woad
tee boxes anttques etc
Complete
households
Wnte M D Mdler Rt 4
Pomeroy OH1 or call 992
7760

10 karat 14 karat 18 karat
gold Dental gold and gold
ear ptns 675 3010

Gold Stiver or foretgn
coms or anv gold or silver
ttems Antique fiJrnt ture
glass or chma Will pay top
dollar or complete estates
No 1tem too large or too
small Check pnces before
selling Also do appra1smg
Osby IOSS!e) Martm 992
6370
WANTED TO BUY 1 to 5
acres of land '" the
Southern Local School
District Phone 742 2974 af
ter6 p m
11

BABYSITTER NEEDED
in Rae ne area For one
school age child and one 1n
fant Needed before school
starts 949 2624
12

I WILL dO babySitting m
my home days or ntghts
Phone 992 7714
13

HelpWanted

GET VALUABLE tra1nlng
as a young busmess person
and earn good money plus
some great Q1fts as a Sen
tinel route earner Phone
us nght away and gel on
!he el•ll•b•l•ly list a! 992
2156 or 992 2157
ADDRESSERS WANTED
tmmed•ately' Work at
home no
expertence
ncwsary excellent pay
Wdt~ ~u:an Serv1ce
8350 ~&lt;"A!'k l,.aQ.e Su1te 121
Dallas.TJ!:~

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Older remodeled home
on 35 acres located tn
Bradford Township 8
rooms
w1th
.4 5
bedrooms 1 bath uttl
ty ga s heat public
water central atr
Call K1tty tor more 1n

forma1ton

Insurance

AUTOMOB I LE
IN
SU RANCE been can
your
celled'
Lost
operator s I cense' Phone
992 2143

Real Eslate - General

Housing
Headquarters

l

EAFORDm
IRGILBSR
216 E

t ~&gt;

O~

Second Street
Phone

Mtscellaneous
17
WARFIELD MI LWAUKE
E upnght P•ano Excellenl
Iones Also 3 h p go carl
!hat cost 5359 00 Will sell for
$300 00 247 267S
---·~---

ZEN ITH TV v edo tape
mach•ne records up to 3 1/J
hours like new st1ghtly
used for $500 00 See Kenny
Hysell
corner Depot
Street Rutland or phone
742 2184

21

Bustness
Opportunity

5-UPERMARKET
FOR
lease 8 300 square feet tn
M•rlclleport OhiO $2 90 per
square feet equipment
lease $1 000 per month
Box 729A Daily Sent•nel

Real Estate

General

HOBSTETTER
REALTY
PHONE 742-2003
Georges Hobsteller Jr
Broker
NEW LISTING 3
bedroom home on Con
dor St at a prtce to ftt
your
pock et book
$13 500 00
POMIOROY - Love ly 2
story sol d brtck home
E xtra nt ce k tchen wtth
ftreplace large dtntng
room and hvtng room
112 baths We ll worth
$26 500 00
BUSINESS - Grocery
on St Route 124 tn
Rutland
Get th•s
busmess gomg agatn
Great opportun•tY tor a
person who I kes be ng
h1s own boss Has apan
ment rental tncome
Equ•pment ncluded at
a selltng pr ce of only
521 200 00
POMEROY - Large 2
story home on un on
Avenue
Solid bu il t
home w1lh lots ot
pass bcllt1es
Ask ng
$26 500 00
FARMS - 1S6 Acres
wtth mtnerals Located
on VanZandt Rd
20 ACRES - W1th farm
house Good barn Sells
for $~9 500 00
FAMILY HOME - Well
kept matntenance free
Gtves Mom and Dad
t1me wtth the ktds 3
bedrooms I vmg room
bath 1&lt;..1tchen and ut It
ty Asking 536 SOO 00
COUNTRY ESTATE 24 acres of luxury Well
kept grounds
all
mtnerals
1ncluded
Lovely 3 bedroom home
and 1n\11tlng pool We ve
reduced the prtce on th•s
one' Ca II tor appt
BUILDING SITES
we have some n1ce ones
tor your new home'
POMEROY - Beaut1ful
2 story home on
Mu l berry Ave
3
bedrooms large living
room
dtntng room ,
modern
kitchen
garage Call for appl
Velma Ntc.nsky Assoc
Phone 742 309~
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc
Phone74Z 3171

1 (614) 992 3325
CHEAP - 2 bed room
home wtlh ba th new
fo rc ed a.r furna ce
large porc h pa ne ling
uttl ty room and large
lot Ask ng $12 000
ACREAGE - 30 a cres
destrable tor deve lop
ment Can sell lots or
bu•ld and sell Good
chance for a promoter
MODERN - 4yearold3
bedroom home N1 ce
bath and step save r ktt
chen la rge basement
garage and large lot m
Syracuse
COUNTRY HOME - 10
room
home
4
bedrooms bath large
fam ly room storm
doorS and w ndows
slate roof natural gas
heat wood cabtnets 3
car garage and 3 acres
$39 500
NEW LISTING
Bulld1ng lot 1n Ra cme
69K180 near the sc hools
out of flood Wa nt only
$4 000
NEW LISTING
Re mote hunt1ng ca b n
w th bea utiful v1ew Has
good ha y t1e ld s and n•ce
woods Lots of frutt
trees Has c reek w th
wate rfalls too Come
Take a look
BE SAFE BUY REAL
ESTATE FOR A SOLID
INVESTMENT

Housing
Headquarters

V.C. YOUNG II

or 992 7314
Oh

THREE
BEDROOM
modern home w1th e1ght
acres of land For more
detads cal\949 2405
POMEROY 0

992 2259

S1tuattons Wanted

neal estate

&amp; Auction

9

~•oo

ONE YEAR old spilt entry
home w1th three bedrooms
1 1/ 4 baths basement w1th
wood burner two car
garage
fully carpeted
Over two acres of land 992
7378
HOUSE &amp; STORE bulld•ng
m Bashan 3 or 4 bedrooms
2 baths 1tv1ng room dlntng
room k tchen fully car
peted natural gas dnlled
well cha1n ltnk fence 949
2042

PLOTZ
REALTY INC.

PART TIME RN wanted to
do 1nsurance phystcals for
Metgs County Call 61.4 891

remodeling
-Roof1ng and gutter
work
-concrete work
-Plumbing ~nd
electr•cal wor~
(Free Estlm~tesl

NEW LISTING - A 2
s tory o lder home w th 6
room s new w r.ng and
furna c e
s torag e
buddtngs
a nd 2
ftreplaces $16 000 00
NEW LlSING - A 1980
Liberty Mobile Home
that has 2 bedroom s
metal storage bu1 ldmg
&amp; underpmmng 14x52
lot c an be r e nted
$9 000 00
CLOSE IN - Two slory
fra me wtfh 3 bedrooms
1 h baths util1ty and
s torage room Could be
2 family iS 000 00
44 ACRES - Wtth a 2 yr
old Modular 124•60)
stoc Ked pond 2 story
barn a nd other out
butldtngs Also ha s Dut
chess frutt trees Owner
wtll
help
finance
$42 000 00
IMMEDIATE POSSES
SION - The ceram c
tile fl oor 1n the bath s
h ghl lghted by the
beautif ul Dress1ng Vant
ty Has 3 bedroom s rec
room wtth bar tn base
ment and a large e a t tn
k•tche n 530 500 DO
GOODBYE
MR
LANDLORD - You can
own th s mob I ehome
and 2 4 acres tor less
than you can rent Als o
nas 2 rooms butlt on
ba c k a nd central a r
cond•t•on•ng $17 000 00
MIDDLEPORT
Clean as a whts tle 1S the
way to descrtbe thts 2
story 3 bedroom home
Ha s l'h baths central
atr condtfton ng well m
sul a ted and has low
ullt.ty bills $44 900 00
LET US SHOW YOU
ONE OF THESE TO
DAY DELAY COULD
MEAN DISAPPOINT
MENT
REALTOR
Henry E Cleland Jr
992 6191
ASSOCIATES
Jean Trussell949 2660
Dot1te &amp; Roger Turner
OFFICE 992 2259

Real Eslate - General

__

..._____

--

CENTRAL REALTY CO.
NEW LISTING - A I condttton 3 BR full base
ment 1n town locatton many e xtras Prtc ed to sell
$39 000
OVER 100 ACRES - All m1ne ral nghls gow1th pro
perty Water ltnes clos e t1mber ready to cut drilled
gas well Ca ll for more tnfo
BEAUTIFUL - Well kept home has 3 BR s could
be more tam y room &amp; den 1 h bath 2 car garage
we ll nsulated All lh1s and much more S57 500
NEW LISTING - Small2 BR home needs work on
ly $S 000

ANT TO SELL? GIVE US ACALL! !

THREE
BEDROOM
modern home wtth etght
acres of land For more
deta Is call 9~9 2405
32

Anhques
53
ATTENTION
I IM
PORTANT TO YOU) W1ll
pay cash or cert tfted check
for anttqiJeS and collec
tcbles or enttre estates
Nothmg too large Also
guns pocket watches and
com collecttons Call 614
767 3167 or 557 3411

INSULATION
Vmyl &amp;
Alum mum Stdmg
elnsulatoon
• Storm Doors
• Storm Windows
• Replacement
Wondows
Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph 992·2772

summer Pnces E)(cels 1or
Co 614 992 2205

Mob1le Homes
for Sale

CANN ING
pappers
Cleland

1975 Western Manston 14 K
three bedroom
1971
Cameron l4 x 64 two
bedroom 1971 L1berty 14 x
65 two bedroom
1968
Atlanl •c
12 x 60 two
bedroom
1968 New
Moon 12 x 60 w lh expando
two bedroom 1967 Buddy
12 x 50 2 bedroom
B&amp;S
Mobde Home Sales
Pt Pleasant W VA
675 4424

From 30x30
SMALL

Utility Buildings

• Masonry work
Years

12

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Expenence
Greg Roush
Ph 992 7583

Rt J Box 54
Racone Oh
Ph 614 843 2591

~~=====~6~1~5~1~fc~!..J,=======8=7=1:m:o=~

HILLCREST KENNELS
Boardtng all breeds Clean
tndoor outdoor faC1I 1t1es
Also AKC reg•stered
Dobermans 614 446 7795

ROOFING
REMODELING
servmg your area
for 25 years. Call
now for large sav
~ngs
For
Free
Esttmate Call
Eugene Long
(614) 843 3322
s 1S 1 mo pd

FINANCIAL

REAL ESTATE LOANS
Federal Housmg
Veterans
Admtnostraflon
107 Sycamore
Pomeroy
Office 992 7544
Home 992 6191

RUTLAND FURNITURE'S

CARPET SHOP
"Dnve A Ltttle Save A Lot"
SHOPISFULLYSTOCKED
GRASS CAR PET
Blue&amp; Gold
SHAG
TURF
RUBBER
CARPET
BACK
Installed
Yd
Reg Sq
ss 99

'3"

1971 REBEL RAIDER 12 x
one bath
mobtle home tn good con
d•l•on $5 500 Call 9S5 3S62

60 two bedroom

( Pr ce oo~ s Not
nclod e
n
sta llo.t on)

•9"

·4~
Sq Yd

Cash~

Sq Yd
and UP

Carry

w/ paddmg

JULY CARPET SALE
ALL CARPET AT DISCOUNT
Any regular

1979 three bedroom tra ler
take over pavments 992
7816
Bus• ness Bu1ld1ngs

1 89 ACRES FOR sale
footers for trader sept c
tank water electrtc tn
Rutland Oh o
Call 773
5373 1n Mason Wv

RUTLAND FURNITURE
Mam St

S6

Mobile Homes

for Rent

4561

Th•s surpl1ce l~ne " the one
can count on to sleek your
l1guoe to make you look INCHES
SLIMMER few parts put 1t
together 10 an eventng and save
Pnnted Patlem 4561 Msses
Stzes 8 10 12 14 16 18 S11e
12 (bust 34) takes 1 518 yards
60 Inch labnc
$1 75 ff!f uch JliHern Add 50$
fflf 11th JliHint ff!f f1m elliS
ltrmltl 1nd lland~n~ Send lo:

Mustcal
I nstrume._,n:.:
ts,___

ARTLEY FLU rE 1n e x
cellent condtt1on only used
one year 949 2514

THREE
BEDROOM
mobile
home
ap
pro)omately ttve miles
from Pomeroy or M1d
dleport 992 5S5S
TWO BEDROOM mob1le
home rea I ntce Brown s
Tratler Park 992 3324
TWO BEDROOM tra ler
completely turn shed w1 11
constder one c h1ld Two
mtles out on 143 Depos1t
and references requ tred
992 3647
TWO BEDROOM mobile
home near Ractne Ca ll
992 ssss
TWO BEDROOM mobile
home tor renl Y92 2598
I -

Anno Adlm

''""" Dtpl &lt;l
Tne Dally

~1

Senl!n~l

243 Wal 17 Sl Now Yod!, NY
10011 Prtlt NAME, AllDRESS,
liP SIZE 1nd STYLE NUMBER
Wny put up w•ln n1gh pncessave dollars get better quality'
Send l01 ou1 NEW FALL WINTER
PATIERN CATALOG 94 patterns
Free Pattern Coupon (worth
Sl 75J Calalog $1 DO
133-fllhlotl Homt Qu1lltn1S1 75
130-Swultts-S!m 31-56 $1 75
129-QIItck/Eisy 111t1Sftrs $1 75
127-MaittM I Oaillts $1 75

61

Farm Equ1pment

71
Autos tor Sale
1974 FORD PINTO

62

Wanled to Buy

CHIP WOOD Poles max
dtameter 10 on largest
end 512 per ton Bundled
slab $10 per ton Delivered
to Oh10 Pallet Co Rt 2,
Pomeroy 992 26S9
OLD COINS pocket wat
ches, class nngs wedding
bands dtamonds Gold or
s•lver Call J A Wamsley,
742 2331 Treasure Chest
Co1n Shop Athens, OH 592

72

74

1976 JOHN DEERE 3SOO
Chopper w1th 2 row corn
head and 2 row snapper
head exc cond $5 595
Shtnns Tractor Sales Leon
W Va 458 1630

GOLD AND
SILVER
COINS OF THE WORLD
RINGS
JEWELRY
STERLING SILVER AND
MISC ITEMS PAYING
RECORD
HIGH
HIGHEST UP TO DATE
PRICES CONTACT ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP
MIDDLEPORT
OH I0 OR CALL 992 3476

1974 NEW HOLLAND
Super 717 chopper w th one
row head good cond
52 495
Sh nn s Tractor
Sales Henderson WV 458
1630
---- ~

ONE NoN MASSEY
Forguson 200 chopper 2
row head weathered l1st
price $S,OOO 53995 SHINN
TRACTOR
S ALES
Gal lipOliS Oh!0446 1044

L1vestock

JONES Meat Pack1ng
slaughtertng
custom
process.ng retatl meat
Wash ngton Co Rd 248
L1ttle Hocking OH 667
6133

. _L. . .... ...... . . . ......
•

71

•

• I . .. I

• o • o•

I • I I 0"00

Autos for Sale

1966 DODGE POLARA for
sate tor parts
ask1ng
5200 00 1f mterested call
992 7775
~--~~----

1967 OLDS tour foor hard
top with power steenng
power brakes air con
d1t1ontng
runs .good
S100 00 Burlingham CoRd
40 oil Route 33 S•gns •n

yard

Motorcycles

19SO KAWASAK I KZ 440
LTD 1200 m1les •n ex
cellent cond1tton Phone
742 2143
1977 SUZUKI GOFFER 100
less !han 1400 m1les w1th
wtndscreen 1ncluded
$550 00 Call992 7775
75

Boats and
Motors for Sale

1977 STARCRAFT BOAT
17ft tn haul 120 h p Mer
cury motor Power tnm
and lilt load tra1ler many
exlras 992 3792

76

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessones

2 16 1nch nms S lug to f1t
Chevy truck $10 00 each
400 Lasley St Pomeroy

ser
81

lees

Home
Improvements

S &amp; G Carpet Clean.ng
Steam
cleaned
Free
eshmate
Reason~ble
rates Scotchguard 992
6309 or 7~2 2211
Excavat1ng

BULLDOZER work small
tobs a spec1alty Call 742
2753
J X F BACKHOE SER
VICE llscensed and bon
ded
sept1c tank 1n
stallat1on water and gas
lines Excavat ng work and
transit layout 992 7201
84

USED R 40 d1lch W1lch
w lh trencher 1 614 694
7S42

Trucks for Sale

1976 DATSUN long bed
w•th camper top and 1972
lnternat1onal wtth low
m• teage '192 5400

8l

63

two

~~~;J:oo 00 or best offer

742 2211

6462

57

~ou

2 BEDROOM
Mobile
Home k1tchen furnished
Elderly couple preferred
Depostt rr 1u red no pets
992 2749

- - - -- -

HOOF HOLLOW Horses
and pontes and nd.ng
lessons
Everyth ng
tmag nabl e tn horse equ1p
ment
Blankets belts
boots etc Engl sh and
Western
Ruth Reeves
(614 ) 69S 3290

t,-IA,_ ..(/./.._,

Rentals

Pets for Sale

POODLE GROOMING
Judy Taylor 614367 7220

SIZES 8-18

Servrce &amp; Qua

1978 17 foot Lund mboard
oulboard boa! 120 Mer
cruiser, complete canva•
brown 1nter1or With brown
and wh1te edenor used
one season easy on gas
$7 000 992 607S

ICe

Lots &amp; Acreage
JS
65 ACRES IN Me1gs County
near Harrtsonvllle Oh10 30
acres of t11lable ground
rest tn pasture Wood two
ponds a1r strtp plane
shed $56 500 742 2577

Moddleport, Oh10
PH 992 6342
TRY US•
Complete Dry Cleantng
and Laundry
ecarpet
eorapenes
• Furntture
c 'We reNo 1 •n

~~:;:;~~~~~~~~

VINYL SIDING

PRIME COMMER ICAL
PROPERTY
Pomeroy
Oh10 Mam street ap
prox1mately 1.40 feet fron
tage bus1ness bu1ld1ng and
home on property Phone
after 5 30 p m 992 3779

8 13 1 mo

• Electncal work

S11es from 4x6 to 12x40

50 x 12 MOBILE HOME
Rt chardson located tn New
Haven at the R 1chardson
Tra1ler Park
Good con
dtfton eKcellent locafJOn
space for rent for $45 00 per
month S82 2216

34

1. Portland, Oh

• New Homes • ex
tenstve remodeling

Pets for Sale

Printed Pallern

Rt

CONSTRUCTION

Sizes

'-----------"'1

FOUR YEAR old double
wtde 2.4 x 64 tn excellent
condltton must be moved
from present locat on m
Syracuse Phone 992 263S

843-2803

ROtJ~i 1
O)r1

PARK

Inches Slimmer

Call After 5 P.M.

s 14 1 mo pd

OH 992 5724

1977 ACADEMY
two r
bedroom
mob1 le home With
expando Large awn1ng
underpmnmg outbutldtng
Call992 6234 or 992 7502

INSIDE &amp; OUT

992 2478

Bumgardner
Noble
Sum(Tl•t
Rd Sales
M ddleport

S6

House Painting

Expenenced Operators
ava1labl~ tor local work
e2 rubber hre backhoes
el eKCavator hoe 11/4
yd
e2 Dozers
• Dump Trucks
All related equ1pment

Fann~uidings

TOMATOES
Gerald1ne

by 20
sect•on
D
3/8
nchttrebar17conly
per foot

BELL

Excavating

ALL STEEL

Buoldong Supplies

55

Pullins

~;=====~7~3~1~1~m~o~~~===~~~~~~~t~~~~~~~~=~

EARLY AMERICAN sofa
90 tong be1ge gold green
flora l nylon cover Good
cond•t on Pnone 949 2367
$100 00

70

42

CALL BILL CHILDS 992 2342
Rodney Donwtng, Broker
Middleport, 0

J&amp;L BUMN

54
Mtsc OIL
Merchan1se
HEATING
Buy now at

MOBILE home tor sale
$6500 land contract w1lh
$500 down or w II negot ate
cash sa le
Also on e
be droom butlt n bunks
48x10 mobde home $2SOO
land contract $300 down
Wnte J Bowland 15066
Emptre Rd
Thornv lie
OH 43076

NANCY JASPERS ASSOCIATE
949 2l9t Leave Message
or 949 2654

MIDDLE PORT - Large
corner tot only a block from shopping
bedrooms and bath upsta1rs F1ve rooms and bath
downstairs New furnace w1th central a~r condttton
.ng One car garage w1th storage room up FIJII
basement Call for an appomlment - $59 000 00

li _ _,_,
H.::
O.::
U"'
Seo:h.::O-.:Id
~-=
G:.:o.::
O.::
do_
S_
WARM MORNING wood or
coal burnmg stove $125 00
992 3737

Electr~cal
&amp; Refngeration

SEWING
MACHINE
Repa1rs
serv1ce
all
makes
992 22S4
The
Fabr.c Shop
Pomeroy
Authorized Smger Sales
and Servtce We sharpen
Sc1ssors
ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR
Sweepers
toasters 1rons all small
appl ances Lawn mower
Nexl to State H1ghway
Garage on Roule 7, 985
3825
APPLIANCE service, all
makes washers dryers,
ranges.
dish
washers disposals
water
tanks Call Ken Young 985
3561 before 9a m or after 6
pm

�10-The Datly Sentmd, Middleport Pum e t uy 0 F nda y Au ~ 22 19&amp;1

Latin America subject of
•

Tuesday Electa Circle meet
A program on Latm Amenca was
gtven by Mrs Freda Hood at the
Tuesday meeltng of the EJec ta Ctr
cle of the B H Sanborn Mtsstonary
Soctety, Mtddleport Ftrst Bapltst
Church, held at the home of Mrs
Elizabeth Searles
Mrs Texanna Well had prayer
and Mrs
Katheryn Metzger
presided at the meeltng DevotiOns
were gtven by Mtss Rhoda Hall who
used scnpture from I Peter and the
toptc, A word m Season
InternatiOnal prtce codes were
turned m and vtsttalton reports
made Plans were made to remem

r---------------: Mawn County
I

-~

News Notes

H) llmlf Marl'lhllll

I
I
•

:;pectal correspondent
Mason and area personals
Mrs Ron Pterson of PoughkeepSie, New York, VISited her mother,
Mrs Sarah Spencer lor a week Mr
Pierson VISited here brtefly before
leavmg lor St Petersburg, Flonda
to vtsll his 92-year old grandfather
~ Mr and Mrs J W Noble and
grandsons, Gary Schwabe, returned
• to New Orleans, alter vtsttmg thetr
daughter and son·m·law, Mr and
: Mrs Roy Elmer and lanuly, and his
:mother, Mrs Matilda Noble, stster
:and farruly Mr and Mrs Stanley
:,Harbour and farruly
• Mrs Lewts Hamm Addie Pttt
man, Alice Scheutter, all of Toledo,
VISited recently wtth Mr and Mrs
·Chester Ohver
FAMILY PICNIC HELD
MASON
Mason Umted
Methodist Women held a farruly pterue on Monday m the church soctal
room With Mrs
Ray Profitt!
prestding durmg a bnel busmess
meetmg Mrs Margaret Ptckens
read a poem entitled, 'Wmdows of
Gold'
Attending were Mrs June Van
Maire, Mrs Catherme Srruth, Mrs
Joyce Carson, Mrs Ray Proffitt,
Mrs Margaret Ptckens, Mrs John
(MaDora) Wtldman Mrs Sarah
Spencer, Mrs Lots Test and Dr
John Wildman

VBS CONCLUD&amp;'&gt;
MASON - Vacation Btble School
was concluded on Sunday mormng
at Mason Umted Methodist Church
With a program m which the young
people parttctpated There was an
average attendance each day of 38
Mrs LoiS Test was director of the
school Mrs Cecilia Harns was m
charge of the mustc, aSSisted by
Melarue SISSOn
Teachers mcluded Lon Chapman
nursery
Glorta Chapman and
Kathy Wood, kindergarten Susan
Kincatd, ltrst and second grades,
Jackte SISSon, third and fourth, Dee
Bond, fifth and sixth grades
Mrs Dtana Johnson was m charge
of crafts Pat Mossman Roxanne
Russell and Judith were m charge of
refreshments Darla Jerrell and
Kathy Test helped wtth the
devotionals

FAMILY SEEKS DOG
A Coolville family ts asking help of
restdents m locating lis pet-a small
black long hatred dog which IS
believed to be somewhere between
Tuppers Plams and Coolville
The dog lS weanng a red harness
and answers to the name of "Fift"
Anyone knowmg of the whereabouts
of the family pet IS asked to call 667
30110 Inctdentally, a reward 1s of·
fered
AUXILIARY PICNIC

PLANNED
The Amertcan Leg10n AUXIliary of
Racme Post 602 Will have a ptcmc at
the home of Mrs Davtd Yost, Great
Bend, Tuesday at 6 p m Members
are to take a covered dish and thetr
own table servtce Dues are still
payable A group Will leave from the
Amertcan Leg1on hall m Racme for
theYostlarmat5 30p m

OPENSSEPT 3
The new school year m Southern
Local School Dtstnct wtll open for
classes on Sept 3, Supt Bob Ord
reports The startmg ttrne of classes
~nd the bus schedules wtll be the
same as last year, Supt Ord states
Anyone m the district wtth questtons
may contact Supt Ord at 949-2600

CHAIRMANSHIP NAMED
Mrs Charlotte Kunes has agreed
to the cha1nnanship of the St Jude
Children's Research Hospttal Door·
!&lt;&gt;-Door Campalgll m Hartford, to
ratse funds to support the hospttal
according to Mr W1l11am J Ktrwen
Director of Develoment at the mternatlonally recogniZed hosptlal

PROSPECTIVE VALI,EYBALL
PLAYERS TO MEET
All Eastern ljtgh School gtrls m·
terested m playmg volleyball this
school year should meet for practice
Monday at 1 30 p m at the htgh
school

her a shut m s birthday wtth a gtft
and also to send a gtft to Mttc hell
Lmdqutst the Ohio Bapbst scholar
sh1p student
Refreshments were served by the
hostess to Mrs Metzger Mrs Well
and daughter Amber Mrs Gwtnme
Whtte, Mrs Una Dotson Mrs Fran
ces Smart, Mrs Mary Brewer, Mary
Beth Brewer, rruss Hall Mrs Lillian
Demoske), Mrs Ethel Hughes Mrs
Cathy Rtggs and Davtd Mrs Hood
and guest, Kathleen Lwnpkm of
Mobile, Ala , longtune frtend of Mrs
Searles
NEHACLIMA CLUB MEETS
NEW HAVEN- The Nehacltrna
Garden Club held 1ts annual
progressive dinner on Monday, Aug
11, with the AppetiZer Course held at
the home of Mrs John Campbell
Mrs Campbell and Mrs Chester
Weaver acted as co-hostesses lor
this course Mrs Wtlliam C Gtbbs
gave the mvocabon
The Mam Course was a Garden
Party" held on the ptcmc area of the
Umoo Campground Mrs Davtd
Ftelds, Jr and Mrs
Donald
Bwngardner served as co-hostesses
for this course The Dessert Course
was held on the patio of Mrs Danrue
Harbour wtth the theme Down by
the Seashore ' Mrs Harbour and
Mrs Sam Longanacre served as cohostesses for this course Favors
were giVen to each one present wtth
complunents from the Cttazens
Nat10nal Bank of Pomt Pleasant
The evemng was enJoyed by all at·
tending
The next meetmg wtll be held on
Monday, Sept 8, wtth Mrs Carroll
Adams, Jr Mrs Danme Harbour,
Mrs Douglas Miller and Mrs Blllte
Howard servmg as hostesses Members !tending the dinner were Mrs
Roy Jones Mrs Tom Hollman Mrs
Phil Batey, Mrs John Campbell,
Mrs Chester Weaver, Mrs Dav1d
F1elds, Jr , Mrs Donald Bumgard·
ner, Mrs Wllham C Gtbbs Mrs
James N Roush, Mrs John Thorne,
Mrs Harry Miller, Mrs James
Lockhart, Mrs Hobte Lowe Mrs
Mel Clark, Mrs Mtchael Memlt,
Mrs Larry Wiley, Mrs Dann1e Har
bour, Mrs Sam Longanacre, Mrs
Douglas Miller, Mrs
Harold
Bumgarner, Mrs DaVId Stmonton
and Mrs Gerald Cunnmgham
MISSIONS DAY OBSERVED
NEW HAVEN - Miss10ns Day
was observed at the Church of God
State Campground at Rtphng
Waters near SISSonvtlle, W Va on
Thursday, Aug 7 Mrs E E
Wolfram of Anderson, Ind was the
guest speaker for the mornmg and
afternoon services The New Haven
local recetved a Standard of
Achtevement Award for thetr past
year s work They also recetved ftrst
place honors for thetr History Book
In the afternoon servtce, the State
Umfted ProJect Oflermg was
presented wtth the theme bemg
' Let's Celebrate Everlastmg Joy
Through Mtsstons " The Reverend
Doctor E E Wolfram was guest
speaker for the evemng servtce The
service ended w1t11 a very msptr~ng
candlelight servtce conducted by the
Women of the Church of God Those
attending from New Haven were
Mrs Davtd Ftelds, Jr Mrs Lewts
Dodson Mrs Rena Johnson, Mrs
Pansy Fry and Harry Ray Fry
BRIDAL SHOWER HELD
NEW HAVEN- Mrs Carl Vance,
the lonner Angle Flelds was
honored wlth a brtdal shower m the
Fellowship Hall at the New Haven
Ftrst Church of God It was hosted
by the Women of the Church of God
Games were under the directton of
Mrs Lee Jeffers Game priZes were
awarded to Mrs Bnan Rtffle, Mrs
Wilham C Gtbbs and MISs Betty
Kelly
The servmg table featured two
bndal cakes baked and decorated by
Mrs George Reed and Mrs Davtd
Ftelds, Jr , and the gtft table
displayed an umbrella wtlh
streamers, nbbons and white wed
ding bells
Refreshments were served to Mrs
Lewts Dodson , Mrs
Roberta
Maynard, Mrs Iva Capehart, Mrs
Rena Johnson, Mrs Pansy Fry,
Mrs Revena Kmg Mrs Dextet Er·
Will, Btrdie Roush, Mrs Fred
Taylor, Mrs George Reed, Ms
Stacey Reed, Mrs Russell Maynard,
Ms Samantha Maynard Mrs Cectl
Cunmngham, Mrs Lester Dodson,
Mrs Larry Moore, Mrs Joe Cundiff,
Mrs Brian Riffle, Mrs Wilham C
Gtbbs, Mrs Wtlliam Kelly, Mtss Betty Kelly, Mrs Glen Weaver, Mrs
Lee Jeffers, Mrs Wyllis Davis, Jr ,
MISS Usa Davis, MISS Wendy DaviS,
Mrs Lufema Weaver, Mrs David
Ftelds, Jr , and the honoree, Angte

CHEERLEADING CLINIC
PLANNED
A cheerleadmg chmc wtll be held
at Meigs Jun10r High School Monday
through Wednesday lor all m
terested girls ages r.-12 Sessions wtll
begtn at 9 a m and last unt1112 noon
each day, and there will be a
nonunal fee of $2 50 for the chmc
I

UFE SAVING OFFERED
A semor hfe savmg course wtll be
offe red from Aug 25 through Aug 29
a t the Middleport Pool Those
wts hmg to register may call 992
9968 Kellee Burdette IS the m
structor

Social
calendar
SUNDAY
HAZEL COMMUNITY CHUR&lt; H
Homecommg IS scheduled for Sun
day wtth a b~ s ket dtnner at noon
and servtces begmmng at I p m
F eatUI ed smgers are Dan Hayman
and the Hymntuners, and the guest
speaker will be Floyd Bogard
Hillsboro
Pastor Edsel Hart
welcomes everyone
CARR SCHOOL AND SWARTZ
reunton wtll be held combmed at the
Carr grove at Alfred Sunday A
basket dmner wtll be at 12 30 p m
and everyone IS welcome
EBLIN FAMILY wtll meet for a
reuniOn Sunday at the Rock Sprmgs
Grange Hall on the Metgs County
Fatrgrounds Dmner Will be at I
pm

tn

P~bhc~h~e­

WANT AD INFORMATION

or Write Da11y Sentmel c Iasstfled Dept
111 Court St., Pomeroy, 0 , 45769

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX
eANNOUNCEMENTS
I- Card of Thanks
2- tn Memoriam

9-Wanted lo Buy

TO MEET TOMORROW
The Roberta Ctrcle of Dtslnct No
25 Will meet Thursday at 12 noon at
the Middleport Masomc Temple
Members are asked to brmg a
covered dtsh
BOOSTERS TO MEET
The Southern Athletic Boosters
wtll meet Monday at 8 p m at the
htgh schoolm !Ulcme

!ii- Hou1ehold GoOds
n - ca TV Rtdlo Equipment
SJ- Antiqun
54- Mise Mtrchandlte
U-llullding Supplies
St--Pets lor Salt

11_Hwlpw.ntect
12- SifUJff(l Wanted
13- lnlur•nct
14- &amp;uslntu Tra~ntnt
U-Sc;hDOIS ln1fn.td on
16RJdio TV
&amp; C8 Repair
11-WanttdToDo

e FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK
.. -Farm Equipment
U-W•ntecl to Buy
71-Truckl for Sale
u-Llvtltotk
'-4- Hey &amp; Grain
U- Setdl Fert llztr

eFINANCIAL
21 -

Business
Opportunity
22-Monev to L.o.n
ll-Professlonat
5ervtnl

e TRANSPORTATION

eREALESTATE

71 - Auto, fOr Slit
n - Vtns &amp; • w D
74- Mot&amp;rcycle•
1$-Auto Ptru
&amp; Acctuories
77- Auto AepJ1r

31 - Homes tor S.lel
32-Mobl le.Jiomel
lor Salt
ll - F'arms tor S•le
34-llulinwu Build1n11
n-Lots &amp; Acrnte
J6-AUI E1tatw Wanted

l7- Re•ttors

Ohto

eSERVICES

Want Ad Adverhsmg
Deadlines
4PM D•lv

11 Noon sarurdr,
for Mond•v

A certtfted check payable
to the Treasurer of the
above board of educt ton or
a sat1sfactory b1d bond
e)(ecuted by the b dder and
the surety company •n an
aFfnount equal to ttve per
cent (5%) ot the b•d shall
be submitted w th each b1d
Satd board of educat on
reserves the r1ght to wave
ntormaltt es to accept or
retect any and all or parts
of any and a ll b•ds
No btds can be wtth
drawn for at least th rty
130 ) days after the
scheduled clostng ttme for
recetpt of b ds
Metgs Local
Board of Educat1on
Jane Wagner Treasurer
South Th1rd Avenue
Middleport Oh10 45760
IS) 22 29 (9) 5 12 4tc

al-Homalmprovtmenh
12- ftlumblnt &amp; E•uvtt~nv
ll- EJlCIVJting
14-Eiectrlul
I RetrlgtrJIIon
U-GMerat Hauling
U-M fol Repai r
11- Uphollttry

Rates and Other Information
1!i Worcts or

IJndtr
Chtrte
111

Ctsh

I day
2 d•vs
l days
6days

,,.
'"
"'
"'
'"
'" '"
Each word over lht m n1mum 15 words is 4 cents per word per dl'f

ACis runnint other thJn
rate

conse~tuhve

days will be c;tlarged Jllhe 1 dJy

In memory C•rd of Thant11 •nd Ob1Wary ' cents ,.r word U GO
mmlmum CJih 11'1 advJnn
Mobllt Homt ultsand Y;,rct Slits art acuplecl only with c;ash w th
order 25 cenl charte for ads urry111111 IIOK Humber In Carw ol Thw
Senflntl

ARABUREemenJs

Announcements

3

r----------------------1
I
Curb Inflation. 1

4-H News !

SMITH PROMOTED
Mark S Srruth, son of Mr and
Mrs Vernon L Srruth of New Haven,
W Va , has been promoted m the
U S Air Force to the rank of atrtnan
ltrstclass
Airman Srruth IS a sul'Vlval eqUipment spectalist at Seymour Johnson
Air Force Base, N C

eMERCHANDISE

e EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Young reunion

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISHCHARG&amp;'&gt;, AUG 21
Gerald Bechtel, Mrs Roger
Bloomer and daughter, Deborah
Bush, Tanuny Carter, Enunett Con·
way, Michael DaviS, Gladys Dtcken
son, James Doss, Nancy Getlker,
Amy Gtllespte, William Howell,
Karen Johnson, Rutholene Judy,
Myrtle Kelly, Mrs LewiS McCombs
and son, Nellie Moms, Ervm
Napter, Clarence Oiler, Esther Raf·
lerty, Peter Setdel, Margaret
Sheline W1lliam Sktdmore, Mrs
Davtd Srruth and daughter, Carl
Tredway John Tucker, Mrs Albert
Turner and daughter, Mrs James
Walker and daughter, Mrs Denrus
Wallace and son, Russell Wells,
Helen Woodruff, Lisa Yates
BIRTIIS
Mr and Mrs Dame! Horvath,
daughter, Crown Ctty, Mr and Mrs
Ronald Ohver, son Wellston

eRENTALS
41 - Houses for Rent
41- Mobilt Homes
tor Rent
44- Apartment for Rent
U - FRooms
4t--Sp•ct for Rent
47-Wanled to Rent
41- Equipmwnt for Rent

]- Announcements
4-Gtve•w•y
S-Happy Ads
6-LOSIJnd Found
7- YardS.Ie
I ~ Public Sate
&amp; Auct on

Pebbles Blake, daughter of Mr
and Mrs Eldon Blake, Jr of Reed·
svtlle and Kathy Pooler, daughter of
Mr and Mrs Emerson Pooler at
Chester, represented Eastern Htgh
School at the 24th Annual Leader·
ship Trammg Workshop (17th Ad
vanced VVorkshop) at Kenyon
College m Gambter, July 13-18
The workshop program was sponsored by the Ohio Assoctabon of
Student Counctls under the auspices
of the Ohio Assoctabon of Secondary
School Admimstrators
The summer workshops brought
together student council represen·
tallves from throughout Ohto
Durmg the ltve days on Kenyon
Campus, the students dtscussed
problems conunon to thetr schools
and developed soluttons usmg Improved leadership and group
process techmques
Through
assoctallon wtth other students,
mock counctl meetmgs lectures,
laboratory sesstons and mlonnal
discussions, the delegates explored
the apphcallon of democratic prm·
ctples at the high school level
Pebbles and Kathy w1ll be semors
at Eastern Htgh School this fall and
will be president and vtce prestdent,
respectively, on the student counctl

The Meigs County Shepherds Cub met July 24
at 8 p m at the home of Nickey and Dame!
Leonard With 10 members and two advuors
present The club discussed cleamng the sheep
barn and setUng up pel\3 for the r.ur made pa:t:l
buy en signs and made arrangements for the fair
booth exhibit Ntck and Nickey Leonard showed
the group how t&lt;1 block market lambs and how to
prepare beedmg sheep for the show Refreshments were served by Shelly Avts J&lt;Jhnny and
Davld Rice - Daniel Leonard New!! Reporter

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
PURCHASE OF THREE
SCHOOL BUSES FOR
MEIGS LOCAL BOARD
OF EDUCATION
Seated proposals w11t be
rece1ved by the Board of
Educat on of the Me gs
Local School D1str. ct of
Middleport Oh1o at the
Treasurer s Off tce unt I
12 00 Noon on September
IS 19SO and at that t•me
opened by the Treasurer of
sa1d Board tabulated and
a report thereof made to
sa•d Board at ts neKt
regular
meet1ng as
provtded by law for three
13) 65 passenger school
buses
accord ng to
spec If cat10ns ot satd board
of educat1on
Separate and
1n
dependent btds w•ll be
rece1ved w1th respect to the
chass1s and body type and
w•ll state that the bus when
assembled and prtor to
delivery comply wt t h all
s c hool
dtstrtct
spectftcattons all safety
regulat1ons and current
Ohto Mtntmum Standards
tor School Bus Con
structton of the Depart
ment ot Educat on adopted
by and wtth the consent of
the D rector of Highway
Safety pursuant to Sec tton
4511 76 ot the Oh•o Rev•sed
Code and a II other per
tment prov stan of law
Speed caftans and 1n
structtons to btders may be
obtatned at the off ce of the
Treasurer
M ddleport

PHONE 992-2156

Gambter

The Young farruly reunwn was
held Sunday, Aug 17, at Forest
Acres Park Attending were Mr and
Mrs Wil Young and Mmdy, Mr and
Mrs Frank Young Mr and Mrs
Ralph Clark, Bob, and Rtchte Mrs
Lurene Kennedy, Robert H Yowtg,
BtU Buck, Jr Mr and Mrs Btll
Buck, Sr , Mr and Mrs Bill Buck
III, Mehssa and Jason Mr and
Mrs Pat Hager, Kelly and Cory,
Mr and Mrs Larry Cleland, Greg
and Mary Mr and Mrs Rtck Buck
and Jeremy

BAKE SALE-CAR WASH SET
The southern Band wtll hold a
bake sale begmmng at 9 a m at the
Racme Home Nattonal Bank, and a
car wash at Eber s Gulf Station m
Racme startmg at IG a m Saturday

Small investment, large
returns, Sentinel Want Ads

Mmes Blake, Pooler
represent Eastern at
workshop

ROGER DIXON TRANSFERRED
Roger Dtxon, son of M~ and Mrs
Herbert Dtxon, has been transferred
to Mtdland, Texas m his e m
ployment wtth the Conoca Otl Co
Both he and hts wtle are Conoca em
ployees

II

Pay Cash for

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:II
Savell!
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Write your own ad and order by mall w1th lhls
coupon Cancel your ad by phone when you get
results Money not refundable

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below

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YOST WRECKER Serv1 ce
cars Call742 315ll

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SHOOTING
MATCH
Forked Run Sportsman
Club Startong Aug 31 each
Sun there after Factory
choked guns only
MASON HOME REPAIR
heatmg and atr con
dtt1onmg furnace c leantng
plumbmg repatr restden
ttal e lectnc w rtng sales
servtce and mstallat1on
992 2364

SEPTIC TANKS Cyallia
County
Cert•hed)
Leach beds water and
gas line electric ltnes
pole bu1ld.ngs Reese
Trench1ng and Backhoe
Serv1ce 367 7560

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These cash rates
mcludedtscount

n

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WILL
YOUR
House
wtthstand another hard
wmter' How about that
root and barn that snow
gets pretty heavy I Let us
do any general
matn
tanence work for you pam
ttng gutter repatr Patch
work odds and ends so you
canst back tn trent ot that
warm f1re thts wtnter and
not have to worry Call 992
3941 992 3519 or 992 5126
and we II come and g ve
you a free est1mate
References are provtded
upon request

24 hours a day wanted 1unk

21

5

Lane
P1ano Tuntng
Dantels 742 2951 Tunmg
and Repa r Servt ce stnce
1965 If no answe r phone
992 20S2

CANDY SUPPLIES on
sale
Ann s
Cake
Decoratong Supplies 50716
Osborn Rd
Reedsv lie
Oh 667 6485

the proper box

) Wanted
) For Sale
I Announcement
) For Rent

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Address

I Prmt one word m each
I space below Each 1n
1 tt1al or group of f1gures
1 counts as a word Count
name and address or
I phone number 1f used
I You II get better results
I •f you descnbe fully
1 g1ve pr.ce The Senlonel
1 reserves the r ght to
claSSifY ed1t or retect
I any
ad Your ad w II be
I put 10 the proper
I classtflcahon 1f you 11
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I PAY h1ghes1 pnces
pass ble for gold ~nd Sliver
coms nngs 1ewelry etc
Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop M•ddleporl

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STILL OFFERING
ICE CREAM
W1th Any Untco
FREEZER OR
REFRIGERATOR
PLUS
$25 DISCOUNT

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sto,e tnMtofrROoetyatls

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Ma11 Thts Coupon wtth Rem1ttance
The Da1Iy Sentmel
Box 729
Pomeroy, Oh . 45769

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LAN

,--;l.W~:;;;
--

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

ARK-

amSt _
erwr
9.92 • 2 1e1

JANET S HAl R GO ROU

~t:_-The ~ally Sent~el, Mtddle port Pom eroy
PO
SIT ION
t !___
_H_etp_AVAILAB
w_a_nt_et!._ LE
Admtnt sfrat•ve Spec ta ltst
through knowledg e of
rehabtlttat 1on methods
w1th mental ly retarded a nd
developmenta lly dtsabled
.nd!VIduals MINIMUM of
f 1ve years eKpenence m
related f1e1 s wtth a t least
two years n an ad
m1n1strat1v e capa c tty
Should have know ledge of
grant wrttmg
Public
Relations Adult servtees
10 b placement and
curnculum development
Qual!toeo persons should
send resume to the Met gs
County Board of Menta l
RetardatiOn County Cour t
House
P omero y
Ohto
45769 Applt cattons wtll be
accepted unftl August 2.4
19SO

0

Aug 22 l!J8() OUR BOARDING HOUSE

NEW 3Homes
bed &lt;ootor
m sate
home lor
31
sa le
Bu11t tn k1tc he n
d tntn g
r o om
la rg e
recrea tton room ftre pl ac e
lots of stora ge 2 12 baths
gara ge 1 acre lot 992 3454

w •th MaJor Hoople

44

~~~~~~~~~n~~~~~~~~~~~~

Apar1m e nt
for Rent

Business Services

3 AND 4 RM turn ts hed a p

Is Phone 992 5434
RE NTE R S ~S s 1stan ce fo r
Sen or Clttze ns tn Vfllage
Manor apt s Call991 7/S7

----------

ED
BA RT E LS Lo a n
Repr csenlatlve 1100 Easl
Ma tn St
Pome roy Oh
Mortgag e
mon e y
ava la ble All typ~s hom e
t 1na nc1 ng
ne w
old
reftna nc.ng a nd 2nd ma r
!gages Phone 992 7000 or
'192 5732
F l_V_E ROOM S bath utll•ly
room Browne ll Avenue

FURN IS HED
APART
MENT four room s and balh
adults only nn pets m M1 d
dleport 992 3S74
DOUBLE 2 bedroom
lurn!Shed
Adu lts only
Nosch1ldren or
pe ts
DepoSit 992 2749
'12

~ d_d_
l e_
po_r_t_9.!_2_2~~ --­

N D m Mason Spec ta Is th s

month Regular $35 00 per
m s Now $32 00 530 00 per
ms Now 527 50 $25 00 per
ms Now $23 50 1 51 00 oft
on any blow dryer or
styltng tron frosttngs
Reg $22 50 now 520 00 Call
773 5404 Conme Mar lee
or Janet
YELLOW FREESTONE
Canntng Peaches
Now
available at Bobs Market
Just 59 9S per busche l
Bnng your own conta1ner
Also red npe 1utc y water
melons
F rst of the
season rambO cookmg and
eat ng apples home grown
cantalopes and tomatoes
Open 7 days a week ttll
oark
Bobs Markel
Mason W Va Phone 773
5721

POSITION AVAILABLE
Classroom a de postt on
enta11s work.ng Wtth men
tally retarded and develop
mentally d sabled tn
dlvtduals Ass•sts teache r
w1th routme classroom
management
Mtn mum
one
year eKpenen ce
worktng tn s mdar posttmn
Salary mmtmum wage
Resumes Wtll be acc peted
unttl August 24 1980
Quallfted persons should
send resumes to
Metgs
Counly Board of Menia l
Retardatton Me gs County
court House Pomeroy
Oh!o45769

CARPENTER
SERVICES"
-Addons~nd

POMEROY 0
Chlllrt~s

Real Estate - General

M Hayes

A~allor

N eac IE Carsey Br Mgr
Ph 992 2~0 3 or 9n ~780

L.islmq- NR 67

F&lt;" mecl y

~21.

WANTED BABYSITTER
m Racme area tor 2 school
age ch ldren Call afler 5
949 2S92

6

Lost and Found

FEMALE COLLIE losl s1n
ce last week n VtCJntty of
Co Rd 25 F latwoods a rea
F amdy pet Answers to
Sally Reward 992 7165
LOST MALE German short
hatr po1nter
Has tn
dent ftcatton
numbers
ratooed tn ear 6350 Lost 1n
the Rutland area 992 7425
n even1ngs 742 3146
LOST small bla c k dog
wear ng red harness bet
ween Coolville and Tuppers
Pla•ns
Answers to F It
Rewa rd Call667 3080
LOST fox hound wh te
w th lemon spots AboiJt SIK
months old weanng col lar
w th no name plate Harry
R chard 843 34.43
Yard Sale ____..,___
YARD SALE and car wash

at the Syracuse F re
Statton on Saturday August
23 from 9 4 Sponsored by
the Southern Cheerleaders
LARGE YARD sale Thur
sday AugiJst 21 from 1 6
and Saturday August 23
from 10 S Bedspreads CIJr
tatns some almost new
chtldrens clothes and lots
ot olher terns 131 South
4th Avenue Mtddleport
Rtght across from
Amertcan Leg ton
CARPORT SALE
Ed na
Hantngs on old 33 one mlle
norlh of County Road IS
Ant que trunk over 100
years old hand tools wren
ches and household tems
Fr•day and Saturday
August 22 and 23rO 9 5
8 --.----Publtc Sale

BRADFORD Auct1oneer
Complete Sen11ce Phone
949 2487 or 9~9 2000 rae ne
Ohto Cntt Bradford
OSSIE S AUCTION House
20 N 2nd Stree t M•d
dleport Oh10 We sell one
ptece or enttre households
New used or ant ques tn
ci1Jd1ng homes farms or
ltqutdat on sa les Get top
dollar Ltst wtth the man
who has over 25 years n
the new used and anr1que
furntture bus ness
We
take cons1gnments For n
format 1on and ptckup se r
v1 ce call 992 6370 or m
Wesl V rgm1a 773 5471 Sale
every Fnday n1ght at 7
p m Aucttbneer Howard
Beasley apprenttce auc
t1oneer Osby A Marf•n
I no tunk)
Wantetl to Buy

I ron and brass beds old
furniture
desks
gold
r ngs
tewelry
Stiver
dollars sterling etc woad
tee boxes anttques etc
Complete
households
Wnte M D Mdler Rt 4
Pomeroy OH1 or call 992
7760

10 karat 14 karat 18 karat
gold Dental gold and gold
ear ptns 675 3010

Gold Stiver or foretgn
coms or anv gold or silver
ttems Antique fiJrnt ture
glass or chma Will pay top
dollar or complete estates
No 1tem too large or too
small Check pnces before
selling Also do appra1smg
Osby IOSS!e) Martm 992
6370
WANTED TO BUY 1 to 5
acres of land '" the
Southern Local School
District Phone 742 2974 af
ter6 p m
11

BABYSITTER NEEDED
in Rae ne area For one
school age child and one 1n
fant Needed before school
starts 949 2624
12

I WILL dO babySitting m
my home days or ntghts
Phone 992 7714
13

HelpWanted

GET VALUABLE tra1nlng
as a young busmess person
and earn good money plus
some great Q1fts as a Sen
tinel route earner Phone
us nght away and gel on
!he el•ll•b•l•ly list a! 992
2156 or 992 2157
ADDRESSERS WANTED
tmmed•ately' Work at
home no
expertence
ncwsary excellent pay
Wdt~ ~u:an Serv1ce
8350 ~&lt;"A!'k l,.aQ.e Su1te 121
Dallas.TJ!:~

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Older remodeled home
on 35 acres located tn
Bradford Township 8
rooms
w1th
.4 5
bedrooms 1 bath uttl
ty ga s heat public
water central atr
Call K1tty tor more 1n

forma1ton

Insurance

AUTOMOB I LE
IN
SU RANCE been can
your
celled'
Lost
operator s I cense' Phone
992 2143

Real Eslate - General

Housing
Headquarters

l

EAFORDm
IRGILBSR
216 E

t ~&gt;

O~

Second Street
Phone

Mtscellaneous
17
WARFIELD MI LWAUKE
E upnght P•ano Excellenl
Iones Also 3 h p go carl
!hat cost 5359 00 Will sell for
$300 00 247 267S
---·~---

ZEN ITH TV v edo tape
mach•ne records up to 3 1/J
hours like new st1ghtly
used for $500 00 See Kenny
Hysell
corner Depot
Street Rutland or phone
742 2184

21

Bustness
Opportunity

5-UPERMARKET
FOR
lease 8 300 square feet tn
M•rlclleport OhiO $2 90 per
square feet equipment
lease $1 000 per month
Box 729A Daily Sent•nel

Real Estate

General

HOBSTETTER
REALTY
PHONE 742-2003
Georges Hobsteller Jr
Broker
NEW LISTING 3
bedroom home on Con
dor St at a prtce to ftt
your
pock et book
$13 500 00
POMIOROY - Love ly 2
story sol d brtck home
E xtra nt ce k tchen wtth
ftreplace large dtntng
room and hvtng room
112 baths We ll worth
$26 500 00
BUSINESS - Grocery
on St Route 124 tn
Rutland
Get th•s
busmess gomg agatn
Great opportun•tY tor a
person who I kes be ng
h1s own boss Has apan
ment rental tncome
Equ•pment ncluded at
a selltng pr ce of only
521 200 00
POMEROY - Large 2
story home on un on
Avenue
Solid bu il t
home w1lh lots ot
pass bcllt1es
Ask ng
$26 500 00
FARMS - 1S6 Acres
wtth mtnerals Located
on VanZandt Rd
20 ACRES - W1th farm
house Good barn Sells
for $~9 500 00
FAMILY HOME - Well
kept matntenance free
Gtves Mom and Dad
t1me wtth the ktds 3
bedrooms I vmg room
bath 1&lt;..1tchen and ut It
ty Asking 536 SOO 00
COUNTRY ESTATE 24 acres of luxury Well
kept grounds
all
mtnerals
1ncluded
Lovely 3 bedroom home
and 1n\11tlng pool We ve
reduced the prtce on th•s
one' Ca II tor appt
BUILDING SITES
we have some n1ce ones
tor your new home'
POMEROY - Beaut1ful
2 story home on
Mu l berry Ave
3
bedrooms large living
room
dtntng room ,
modern
kitchen
garage Call for appl
Velma Ntc.nsky Assoc
Phone 742 309~
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc
Phone74Z 3171

1 (614) 992 3325
CHEAP - 2 bed room
home wtlh ba th new
fo rc ed a.r furna ce
large porc h pa ne ling
uttl ty room and large
lot Ask ng $12 000
ACREAGE - 30 a cres
destrable tor deve lop
ment Can sell lots or
bu•ld and sell Good
chance for a promoter
MODERN - 4yearold3
bedroom home N1 ce
bath and step save r ktt
chen la rge basement
garage and large lot m
Syracuse
COUNTRY HOME - 10
room
home
4
bedrooms bath large
fam ly room storm
doorS and w ndows
slate roof natural gas
heat wood cabtnets 3
car garage and 3 acres
$39 500
NEW LISTING
Bulld1ng lot 1n Ra cme
69K180 near the sc hools
out of flood Wa nt only
$4 000
NEW LISTING
Re mote hunt1ng ca b n
w th bea utiful v1ew Has
good ha y t1e ld s and n•ce
woods Lots of frutt
trees Has c reek w th
wate rfalls too Come
Take a look
BE SAFE BUY REAL
ESTATE FOR A SOLID
INVESTMENT

Housing
Headquarters

V.C. YOUNG II

or 992 7314
Oh

THREE
BEDROOM
modern home w1th e1ght
acres of land For more
detads cal\949 2405
POMEROY 0

992 2259

S1tuattons Wanted

neal estate

&amp; Auction

9

~•oo

ONE YEAR old spilt entry
home w1th three bedrooms
1 1/ 4 baths basement w1th
wood burner two car
garage
fully carpeted
Over two acres of land 992
7378
HOUSE &amp; STORE bulld•ng
m Bashan 3 or 4 bedrooms
2 baths 1tv1ng room dlntng
room k tchen fully car
peted natural gas dnlled
well cha1n ltnk fence 949
2042

PLOTZ
REALTY INC.

PART TIME RN wanted to
do 1nsurance phystcals for
Metgs County Call 61.4 891

remodeling
-Roof1ng and gutter
work
-concrete work
-Plumbing ~nd
electr•cal wor~
(Free Estlm~tesl

NEW LISTING - A 2
s tory o lder home w th 6
room s new w r.ng and
furna c e
s torag e
buddtngs
a nd 2
ftreplaces $16 000 00
NEW LlSING - A 1980
Liberty Mobile Home
that has 2 bedroom s
metal storage bu1 ldmg
&amp; underpmmng 14x52
lot c an be r e nted
$9 000 00
CLOSE IN - Two slory
fra me wtfh 3 bedrooms
1 h baths util1ty and
s torage room Could be
2 family iS 000 00
44 ACRES - Wtth a 2 yr
old Modular 124•60)
stoc Ked pond 2 story
barn a nd other out
butldtngs Also ha s Dut
chess frutt trees Owner
wtll
help
finance
$42 000 00
IMMEDIATE POSSES
SION - The ceram c
tile fl oor 1n the bath s
h ghl lghted by the
beautif ul Dress1ng Vant
ty Has 3 bedroom s rec
room wtth bar tn base
ment and a large e a t tn
k•tche n 530 500 DO
GOODBYE
MR
LANDLORD - You can
own th s mob I ehome
and 2 4 acres tor less
than you can rent Als o
nas 2 rooms butlt on
ba c k a nd central a r
cond•t•on•ng $17 000 00
MIDDLEPORT
Clean as a whts tle 1S the
way to descrtbe thts 2
story 3 bedroom home
Ha s l'h baths central
atr condtfton ng well m
sul a ted and has low
ullt.ty bills $44 900 00
LET US SHOW YOU
ONE OF THESE TO
DAY DELAY COULD
MEAN DISAPPOINT
MENT
REALTOR
Henry E Cleland Jr
992 6191
ASSOCIATES
Jean Trussell949 2660
Dot1te &amp; Roger Turner
OFFICE 992 2259

Real Eslate - General

__

..._____

--

CENTRAL REALTY CO.
NEW LISTING - A I condttton 3 BR full base
ment 1n town locatton many e xtras Prtc ed to sell
$39 000
OVER 100 ACRES - All m1ne ral nghls gow1th pro
perty Water ltnes clos e t1mber ready to cut drilled
gas well Ca ll for more tnfo
BEAUTIFUL - Well kept home has 3 BR s could
be more tam y room &amp; den 1 h bath 2 car garage
we ll nsulated All lh1s and much more S57 500
NEW LISTING - Small2 BR home needs work on
ly $S 000

ANT TO SELL? GIVE US ACALL! !

THREE
BEDROOM
modern home wtth etght
acres of land For more
deta Is call 9~9 2405
32

Anhques
53
ATTENTION
I IM
PORTANT TO YOU) W1ll
pay cash or cert tfted check
for anttqiJeS and collec
tcbles or enttre estates
Nothmg too large Also
guns pocket watches and
com collecttons Call 614
767 3167 or 557 3411

INSULATION
Vmyl &amp;
Alum mum Stdmg
elnsulatoon
• Storm Doors
• Storm Windows
• Replacement
Wondows
Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph 992·2772

summer Pnces E)(cels 1or
Co 614 992 2205

Mob1le Homes
for Sale

CANN ING
pappers
Cleland

1975 Western Manston 14 K
three bedroom
1971
Cameron l4 x 64 two
bedroom 1971 L1berty 14 x
65 two bedroom
1968
Atlanl •c
12 x 60 two
bedroom
1968 New
Moon 12 x 60 w lh expando
two bedroom 1967 Buddy
12 x 50 2 bedroom
B&amp;S
Mobde Home Sales
Pt Pleasant W VA
675 4424

From 30x30
SMALL

Utility Buildings

• Masonry work
Years

12

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Expenence
Greg Roush
Ph 992 7583

Rt J Box 54
Racone Oh
Ph 614 843 2591

~~=====~6~1~5~1~fc~!..J,=======8=7=1:m:o=~

HILLCREST KENNELS
Boardtng all breeds Clean
tndoor outdoor faC1I 1t1es
Also AKC reg•stered
Dobermans 614 446 7795

ROOFING
REMODELING
servmg your area
for 25 years. Call
now for large sav
~ngs
For
Free
Esttmate Call
Eugene Long
(614) 843 3322
s 1S 1 mo pd

FINANCIAL

REAL ESTATE LOANS
Federal Housmg
Veterans
Admtnostraflon
107 Sycamore
Pomeroy
Office 992 7544
Home 992 6191

RUTLAND FURNITURE'S

CARPET SHOP
"Dnve A Ltttle Save A Lot"
SHOPISFULLYSTOCKED
GRASS CAR PET
Blue&amp; Gold
SHAG
TURF
RUBBER
CARPET
BACK
Installed
Yd
Reg Sq
ss 99

'3"

1971 REBEL RAIDER 12 x
one bath
mobtle home tn good con
d•l•on $5 500 Call 9S5 3S62

60 two bedroom

( Pr ce oo~ s Not
nclod e
n
sta llo.t on)

•9"

·4~
Sq Yd

Cash~

Sq Yd
and UP

Carry

w/ paddmg

JULY CARPET SALE
ALL CARPET AT DISCOUNT
Any regular

1979 three bedroom tra ler
take over pavments 992
7816
Bus• ness Bu1ld1ngs

1 89 ACRES FOR sale
footers for trader sept c
tank water electrtc tn
Rutland Oh o
Call 773
5373 1n Mason Wv

RUTLAND FURNITURE
Mam St

S6

Mobile Homes

for Rent

4561

Th•s surpl1ce l~ne " the one
can count on to sleek your
l1guoe to make you look INCHES
SLIMMER few parts put 1t
together 10 an eventng and save
Pnnted Patlem 4561 Msses
Stzes 8 10 12 14 16 18 S11e
12 (bust 34) takes 1 518 yards
60 Inch labnc
$1 75 ff!f uch JliHern Add 50$
fflf 11th JliHint ff!f f1m elliS
ltrmltl 1nd lland~n~ Send lo:

Mustcal
I nstrume._,n:.:
ts,___

ARTLEY FLU rE 1n e x
cellent condtt1on only used
one year 949 2514

THREE
BEDROOM
mobile
home
ap
pro)omately ttve miles
from Pomeroy or M1d
dleport 992 5S5S
TWO BEDROOM mob1le
home rea I ntce Brown s
Tratler Park 992 3324
TWO BEDROOM tra ler
completely turn shed w1 11
constder one c h1ld Two
mtles out on 143 Depos1t
and references requ tred
992 3647
TWO BEDROOM mobile
home near Ractne Ca ll
992 ssss
TWO BEDROOM mobile
home tor renl Y92 2598
I -

Anno Adlm

''""" Dtpl &lt;l
Tne Dally

~1

Senl!n~l

243 Wal 17 Sl Now Yod!, NY
10011 Prtlt NAME, AllDRESS,
liP SIZE 1nd STYLE NUMBER
Wny put up w•ln n1gh pncessave dollars get better quality'
Send l01 ou1 NEW FALL WINTER
PATIERN CATALOG 94 patterns
Free Pattern Coupon (worth
Sl 75J Calalog $1 DO
133-fllhlotl Homt Qu1lltn1S1 75
130-Swultts-S!m 31-56 $1 75
129-QIItck/Eisy 111t1Sftrs $1 75
127-MaittM I Oaillts $1 75

61

Farm Equ1pment

71
Autos tor Sale
1974 FORD PINTO

62

Wanled to Buy

CHIP WOOD Poles max
dtameter 10 on largest
end 512 per ton Bundled
slab $10 per ton Delivered
to Oh10 Pallet Co Rt 2,
Pomeroy 992 26S9
OLD COINS pocket wat
ches, class nngs wedding
bands dtamonds Gold or
s•lver Call J A Wamsley,
742 2331 Treasure Chest
Co1n Shop Athens, OH 592

72

74

1976 JOHN DEERE 3SOO
Chopper w1th 2 row corn
head and 2 row snapper
head exc cond $5 595
Shtnns Tractor Sales Leon
W Va 458 1630

GOLD AND
SILVER
COINS OF THE WORLD
RINGS
JEWELRY
STERLING SILVER AND
MISC ITEMS PAYING
RECORD
HIGH
HIGHEST UP TO DATE
PRICES CONTACT ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP
MIDDLEPORT
OH I0 OR CALL 992 3476

1974 NEW HOLLAND
Super 717 chopper w th one
row head good cond
52 495
Sh nn s Tractor
Sales Henderson WV 458
1630
---- ~

ONE NoN MASSEY
Forguson 200 chopper 2
row head weathered l1st
price $S,OOO 53995 SHINN
TRACTOR
S ALES
Gal lipOliS Oh!0446 1044

L1vestock

JONES Meat Pack1ng
slaughtertng
custom
process.ng retatl meat
Wash ngton Co Rd 248
L1ttle Hocking OH 667
6133

. _L. . .... ...... . . . ......
•

71

•

• I . .. I

• o • o•

I • I I 0"00

Autos for Sale

1966 DODGE POLARA for
sate tor parts
ask1ng
5200 00 1f mterested call
992 7775
~--~~----

1967 OLDS tour foor hard
top with power steenng
power brakes air con
d1t1ontng
runs .good
S100 00 Burlingham CoRd
40 oil Route 33 S•gns •n

yard

Motorcycles

19SO KAWASAK I KZ 440
LTD 1200 m1les •n ex
cellent cond1tton Phone
742 2143
1977 SUZUKI GOFFER 100
less !han 1400 m1les w1th
wtndscreen 1ncluded
$550 00 Call992 7775
75

Boats and
Motors for Sale

1977 STARCRAFT BOAT
17ft tn haul 120 h p Mer
cury motor Power tnm
and lilt load tra1ler many
exlras 992 3792

76

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessones

2 16 1nch nms S lug to f1t
Chevy truck $10 00 each
400 Lasley St Pomeroy

ser
81

lees

Home
Improvements

S &amp; G Carpet Clean.ng
Steam
cleaned
Free
eshmate
Reason~ble
rates Scotchguard 992
6309 or 7~2 2211
Excavat1ng

BULLDOZER work small
tobs a spec1alty Call 742
2753
J X F BACKHOE SER
VICE llscensed and bon
ded
sept1c tank 1n
stallat1on water and gas
lines Excavat ng work and
transit layout 992 7201
84

USED R 40 d1lch W1lch
w lh trencher 1 614 694
7S42

Trucks for Sale

1976 DATSUN long bed
w•th camper top and 1972
lnternat1onal wtth low
m• teage '192 5400

8l

63

two

~~~;J:oo 00 or best offer

742 2211

6462

57

~ou

2 BEDROOM
Mobile
Home k1tchen furnished
Elderly couple preferred
Depostt rr 1u red no pets
992 2749

- - - -- -

HOOF HOLLOW Horses
and pontes and nd.ng
lessons
Everyth ng
tmag nabl e tn horse equ1p
ment
Blankets belts
boots etc Engl sh and
Western
Ruth Reeves
(614 ) 69S 3290

t,-IA,_ ..(/./.._,

Rentals

Pets for Sale

POODLE GROOMING
Judy Taylor 614367 7220

SIZES 8-18

Servrce &amp; Qua

1978 17 foot Lund mboard
oulboard boa! 120 Mer
cruiser, complete canva•
brown 1nter1or With brown
and wh1te edenor used
one season easy on gas
$7 000 992 607S

ICe

Lots &amp; Acreage
JS
65 ACRES IN Me1gs County
near Harrtsonvllle Oh10 30
acres of t11lable ground
rest tn pasture Wood two
ponds a1r strtp plane
shed $56 500 742 2577

Moddleport, Oh10
PH 992 6342
TRY US•
Complete Dry Cleantng
and Laundry
ecarpet
eorapenes
• Furntture
c 'We reNo 1 •n

~~:;:;~~~~~~~~

VINYL SIDING

PRIME COMMER ICAL
PROPERTY
Pomeroy
Oh10 Mam street ap
prox1mately 1.40 feet fron
tage bus1ness bu1ld1ng and
home on property Phone
after 5 30 p m 992 3779

8 13 1 mo

• Electncal work

S11es from 4x6 to 12x40

50 x 12 MOBILE HOME
Rt chardson located tn New
Haven at the R 1chardson
Tra1ler Park
Good con
dtfton eKcellent locafJOn
space for rent for $45 00 per
month S82 2216

34

1. Portland, Oh

• New Homes • ex
tenstve remodeling

Pets for Sale

Printed Pallern

Rt

CONSTRUCTION

Sizes

'-----------"'1

FOUR YEAR old double
wtde 2.4 x 64 tn excellent
condltton must be moved
from present locat on m
Syracuse Phone 992 263S

843-2803

ROtJ~i 1
O)r1

PARK

Inches Slimmer

Call After 5 P.M.

s 14 1 mo pd

OH 992 5724

1977 ACADEMY
two r
bedroom
mob1 le home With
expando Large awn1ng
underpmnmg outbutldtng
Call992 6234 or 992 7502

INSIDE &amp; OUT

992 2478

Bumgardner
Noble
Sum(Tl•t
Rd Sales
M ddleport

S6

House Painting

Expenenced Operators
ava1labl~ tor local work
e2 rubber hre backhoes
el eKCavator hoe 11/4
yd
e2 Dozers
• Dump Trucks
All related equ1pment

Fann~uidings

TOMATOES
Gerald1ne

by 20
sect•on
D
3/8
nchttrebar17conly
per foot

BELL

Excavating

ALL STEEL

Buoldong Supplies

55

Pullins

~;=====~7~3~1~1~m~o~~~===~~~~~~~t~~~~~~~~=~

EARLY AMERICAN sofa
90 tong be1ge gold green
flora l nylon cover Good
cond•t on Pnone 949 2367
$100 00

70

42

CALL BILL CHILDS 992 2342
Rodney Donwtng, Broker
Middleport, 0

J&amp;L BUMN

54
Mtsc OIL
Merchan1se
HEATING
Buy now at

MOBILE home tor sale
$6500 land contract w1lh
$500 down or w II negot ate
cash sa le
Also on e
be droom butlt n bunks
48x10 mobde home $2SOO
land contract $300 down
Wnte J Bowland 15066
Emptre Rd
Thornv lie
OH 43076

NANCY JASPERS ASSOCIATE
949 2l9t Leave Message
or 949 2654

MIDDLE PORT - Large
corner tot only a block from shopping
bedrooms and bath upsta1rs F1ve rooms and bath
downstairs New furnace w1th central a~r condttton
.ng One car garage w1th storage room up FIJII
basement Call for an appomlment - $59 000 00

li _ _,_,
H.::
O.::
U"'
Seo:h.::O-.:Id
~-=
G:.:o.::
O.::
do_
S_
WARM MORNING wood or
coal burnmg stove $125 00
992 3737

Electr~cal
&amp; Refngeration

SEWING
MACHINE
Repa1rs
serv1ce
all
makes
992 22S4
The
Fabr.c Shop
Pomeroy
Authorized Smger Sales
and Servtce We sharpen
Sc1ssors
ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR
Sweepers
toasters 1rons all small
appl ances Lawn mower
Nexl to State H1ghway
Garage on Roule 7, 985
3825
APPLIANCE service, all
makes washers dryers,
ranges.
dish
washers disposals
water
tanks Call Ken Young 985
3561 before 9a m or after 6
pm

�VETERANS MEMORIAL
Thursday admissions-Ernest Imboden, Syracuse; Steven LaValley,
l{acine; Dorothy Reynolds, Middleport; Dorothy Hysell, Pomeroy;
Angela Fisher, Middleport.; Robert
Manley, Middleport; . , Howard
Frank, Racine; Kathleen rails, Middleport; 'Sharon Hemsley, Dexter;
Velma Winebrenner, Pomeroy;
Maude Grueser, Pomeroy.
Thursday di scharges--Charles
Wolfe Christine Kilpatrick, Hattie
Roush Ruby Congo, Maudie Wood,
Joyce 'Porter, William Blythe, Fritz
Buck, Helen Harris, John Follrod.

July consumer
fimmce costs in July's report: ac-

( Confmued fr o m pnge I J

July.
- Medical care was up 0.7 percent
following increases. of 0.5 percent in

FIREMEN - Middleport firemen were on duty
during Thursday night's heavy storm pumping out
basements which were flooded. Firemen are pictured
in deep water near the home of Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Lowery, 882 Logan St., Middleport, an area which was

heavily flooded Thursday night. Low~ry said that the
storm sewer did not carry away the ram water causmg
the flooding around his property. The floodmg has occurred three times in the 19 years he has resided m the
property.

Eastern District ·b us routes given
The first day of. school for all
students in the Eastern Local School
District will be on Tuesday, August
26. All schools will take up at the
same time as the 1979-l!Oschool year.
Increase of lunch prices for the
students will be 65 cents and adult
lunches will be $1.10. All students
will be given information as to workbook fees at the first day of school.
The Eastern Local School District
bus routes for the 1980-81 school year
are as follo)\'s:
CHARLES ESTEP - he will begin
his route at 7:10a.m. at Roger Hoffman 's trailer on County Road 82. He
will travel the East Shade Twp.
Road, Co. Road 26, Crew Farm
Road, back to County Road 82 where
he will not pick up any children ex:cept the Pickens child, back Pickens
Lane until the bus reaches Emerson
Pooler's residence. He will take a
right there on Twp. Road past Sammy Michael's residence to County
Road 25 in to Chester Elcm.
ALFRED WOLFE - he will begin
his route at 7:20 a.m. and will travel
New Hope, Victor Bahr's Lane,
Henry Bahr's Lane, and up Sumner
Road as far as Betty Dean's residence; Pooler Road off County Road 82,
Route 7, Oak Hill Road and into

Chester Elem.
MARY ROSE - she will begin her
bus route at .7:15 a.m. at George
Roberts' residence in Bashan, then
proceed to John Bentz's for the
second stop on Eagle Ridge Road.
She will travel Route 7 into Five
Points, a portion of County Road 25,
26, and continue to County Road 82
where she will transport the children
on that road into Chester Elem.
THEODORE PULIJNS - he will
begin his route at 7:25a.m. at John
Foster's residence on Eagle Ridge
and work his way back into Bashan.
All high schodl studen~ in Bashan
will ride his bus. He will travel Horsecave Road, County Road 28 to
Route 248 and then into Chester
Elem.
BILL HANNUM - he will begin
his route approximately 7:05 (time
will change possibly in future), at
the Earl Ritchie residence. Then he
will proceed down County Road 28
and transport all Riverview children
on that road, plus Rainbow, Long
Run, and Long Bottom children.
PAUL BAER- he will begin his
route about 7:'20 a.m. on the Boy
Scout Camp Road, then proceed on
Sand Ridg_e Road, Pine Grove Road,
Vinegar Street, Roval Oak Road,

Area deaths Uoger L. .IIornshv
Roger L. Hornsby, 43, Coolville,
died Thursday at St. Joseph Hospital
in Parkersburg following a brief
illness.
·
Mr. Hornsby was born in
Springfield, a son of Nellie Bender
Hornsby of Coolville, and the late
Herschel R. Hornsby. A well-known
swinuning pool builder, he owned
and operated the Hornsby Swimming Pool Co. in Coolville for 20
years building residential and
municipal pools in both Ohio and
West Virginia. He was a member of
the Coolville United MeUmdist Church and belonged to Coolville Lodge
337,F&amp;AM.
Mr. Hornsby was a former member of council and mayor of Coolville
and he was a former employe of the
Kaiser Aluminum Co. at Belpre.
He was a 1954 graduate of Carthage High School and was a member of the first AU Southeast Oh1o
basketball team. He was a veteran
of the U, S. Navy having serving on a
destroyer and the submarine fleet
during the Korean Conflict.
Besides his mother, he is survived
by his wife, Beverly Chapman Hornsby; two daughter, Trac1 and
Trina, at home; a son and daughterin-law, Randy and Charlene HorHIGHWAY MEETING
State Transportation Director
David L. Weier wlll meet with local
and state officials In Racine Wednesday to discuss the requested
Meigs County highway Improvements at 3 p.m. at Southern
High School in Racine, The agenda
Includes a discussion on requested
highway lmprovemeuts contingent
with the new Ravenswood Bridge
over the Ohio River. The bridge is
slated for CO!IIpletion about next
spring by the State of West Virginia,
according to reporl on the plaiUied
meetln(:.
Weir has asked that concerned
local and stale officials attend the
meelng.

Winning numbers
CLEVELAND (API ~ The winning numbers drawn Thursday night
In the Ohio 'Lottery's dally game
"The Number" and its weekly
"Pyramid" and " Lucky Buck"
games were:
TheNumber -7~9
Pyramld~60; 253;

9141
Lucky Buck-63; 792; 2707; 11823;
60871%

.f

nsby of Coolville; . a great uncle,
Myrl Nist, Belpre; a great a&lt;Jilt,
Grace White of Sutton, W.Va., and a
' niece Tonda Cottrill, Parkersburg.
He 'was preceded in death by his
father, a brother, Vasil, and an uncle, Ward Hornsby.
Funeral services will be held at I
p.m. Monday at the White Funeral
Home in Coolville with the Rev.
Gary Peck officiating. Burial will be
in Coolville Cemetery. Friends may
call at the funeral home after 7 p.m.
Saturday.

William M. Price
William Matheson . Price ,
Licemore, W. Va., died Fnday,
August 15, in Montgomery HospitaL
A former local resident, he is survived by his wife, Thelma Milton
Price, Licemore; two sons, Gene of
South Carolina, and Harry of
Washington; a d;IUghter, Doris
Byrd, of Licemore; two brothers,
Arley and Tom, both of Cahforma;
five sisters : Bessie Graham,
Pomeroy ; Lena Pauley, Wheelersburg; Mabel Jarvis, Greenville,
S.C.; Nellie Lowe, Columbus; and
Helen Young, Elkview; several
grandchildren,nieces and nephews.
Matheson also has a half·brother
and half·sister living in Virginia.
He was preceded jn death by his
parents, two sons, three brothers,
and one sister.
Funeral services were held in
Licemore.

Route 7 and into Chester Elemen:
·tary.
SANDY COWDERY - she will
begin her route about 7:10 a.m. at
the back of Riverview Elementary
aQdthenontoMountOiive,Websters Emergency squad runs
Hill and back into Long Bottom,
The Meigs County Emergency
down Route 124 to Dewitt's Run and
back to Long Bottom Post office to Medical Service Headquarters
meet Bill Hannum to exchange reports that two runs and two transtudents and then return back to sfers were made Thursday by area
emergency units.
Riverview Elementary.
At 12 :26 p.m., the Middleport
HELEN BLAKE - she will begin
her route at 7:20a.m. and she will Emergency Squad was sununoned
begin · the route from her home on to 270 W. Main St., Pomeroy, [rom
State Route 124, proceed north to where Ernestine Winebrenner was
County Road 50, While Chapel Road, taken to Veterans Memor'ial
Rice Run Road, Fire Tower Road, Hospital.
and Craft Road into Tuppers Plains
The Rutland squad made the
Elementary.
second run at 3:06 p.m., when it
CHESTER FREDERICK - he transported Sheila Birchfield,
will begin. his route at 7:15a.m. star· College Ave., to Holzer Medical Cen·
ling on Lick Skillet. He will travel ter.
Osborn Road, Success Road, Owl
AI' 9:20 a.m., the Middleport unit
Hollow Road, Calaway Ridge Road, transferred Patty Roush from
and back to Route 7 north of Tuppers Veterans Memorial Hospital to the
Plains.
'
Pomeroy Health Care Center, and at
SHEILA FIELDS - she will start ~ :26 transferred Maude Grueser
her route 7:25a.m. and travel south from the Pomeroy Health Ca re Cenon Route 124 into Reedsville, west on ter to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Route 681 to Tuppers Plains trans·
porting high school and junior high
PAPERS FILED
students. She will make a run into
Secretary of State Anthony J,
Sam's L3ne and Riggscrest Manor Celebrezze, Jr., reported today ar·
before concluding her route at ticles of incorporation have been
Eastern High School.
filed with his office in Columbus by
· CAROLYN RITCHIE - she will Meigs Surgeons, Pomeroy. Norman
begin her route about 7:20a.m. at J . Ehlinger filed the papers. Other
the Avis Farm residence about 7:20 articles were filed on behalf of Spena.m. on Route 681 west of Alfred. She . cer's Grocery Inc., Racine, with
will make a loop through the coun· David H. Spencer as the intry, past the While Farm on the Carr corporator.
Road, Woody Road, to County Road
41, Tucker Road, Mudsock, Kaylor
Road and into Tuppers Plains
Elementary,
KEITHA WHITLATCH - she will
begin at 7:1~ a.m. at Keith Weber's
residence on the east Shade Road
west of Alfred. She will continue the
route on Cherry Ridge Road, Sumner Road down as far as the Yonker
FRISAT
Farm. She will travel Silver Ridge
AUG 22 23
Road into Eastern. From Eastern
the bus ·will go into the Riggscrest
James Collum
and Route 7 into Tuppers Plains
In
Elementary.
VIOLET SATTERFIELD - she
BALTIMORE
will begin about 7:20 a.m. from her
BULLETT PG
residence on Route . 124 through
Reedsville, Twp. Road 273, Twp. Rd.
274, Twp. Rd. 265, Twp. Rd. 276,
Richard Crenna
State Route 681, County Road 43,
County Road 46. She will also pick up
In
Tom Spencer's child on Route 246
DEATH SHIP
and meet Bill Hannum at the Old
Catholic Church at the junction of
R
248 and Success Road to exchange
students, then continue oh into
Riverview Elementary.
DARLENE REED - she will
begin her route about 7:40a.m. and
will transport elementary students
living along Route 681, County Road
50, Route 124 north of Reedsville and
including Reedsville.

PERMANENT
SPECIAL.
BACK TO SCHOOL FALL SPECIAL

'2500
s2s.00 PERM WAVES ARE ............'2000
..
S3()00

May and June.
.
- The price of apparel and its
upkeep rose 0.4 percent last month,
compared with nu change in June.
- Entertainment costs increased
0.8 percent.
All these changes are seasonally
adjusted.
The Labor Department also reported virtually no change in July in ·
real spendable earnings,, which is
take-home pay after deductions for
federa l 1ncome and Social Security
taxes.
Private economists cautioned that
July's improvement on the inflation
front was part illusion.
"Obviously, the increase in food
prices is more significant than the
decrease in housing costs," said
Michael Evans, head of Evans
Economics of Washington, D.C.
HThere's really no comparison.
" People go to the supermarket
every week; they may buy a house
once every seven or'eight years,'' he
said. "Less than a million people a
year might be affected by mortgage
costs; everyone feels the bite of
higher food bills."
Allen Sinai, v1ce president of Data
Resources Inc., of Lexington, Mass.,
said the Consumer Price Index for
July "may show better results, but
this is not indicative of inflation's
true direction at this time."
The , expected decline in home

PERM WAVES ARE ............... .

NOW THRU SATURDAY, SEPT. 6TH
CALL FOR APPOINTMENT 773-5352

CAROL'S
COIFFURES
MASON, W. VA.

tually reflects conditions as far back
as May, these economists say.
However, in recent weeks, both
house prices and mortgage rates
have begun to climb higher again.
This won't be measured by the Con·
sumer Price Index until the fall, ·
they added .
Even July's rise in consumer food
prices does not tell the full story,
said Sinai. Wholesale food prices
rose about 9 percent in July, but the
full impact won't hit consumers for
another month or two.
Rocketing food prices partly
reflect the searing drought that has
afflicted the Midwest and South this
summer, killing off poultry and
other animals while drying out corn
and grain fields.

Americans
pump, pump.

VOL. 15 NO. 30

GALLIPOLIS-POINT PLEASANT

SUNDAY, AUGUST 24, 1980

THE PHOTO PLACE
BOB AND CHARLENE HOEFLICH
109 High St.

Pomeroy, Ohio

. ·'
,

~~

'

,I

RUTLAND ..., An Jl.year old
Rutland boy was killed near his
home Friday afternoon when he was
struck by a car that ran off SR 124,
two and a-half miles west of that
Meigs County village.
Dead is Terry Lee Rathburn, Box
181, Rutland, the son of Bobby Joe
and Mary Moran Rathburn.
The driver of the vehicle allegedly
involved-Edward D. Neece, 31, Rle.
I, Middleport-has been charged
with driving while under the influence (DWII in connection with the
accident.
Called to the scene at 3:56 p.m.,
the Gallia-Meigs Post, ·Highway
Patrol, reports the Rathburn youth
was standing at the edge of his yard
near the east birm of SR 12~ when
the Neece vehicle passed off the
right side of the roadway and struck
the victim.
Upon impact, the boy was knocked
onto the east bound lane of the high·way. The Neece vehicle came back
onto the roadway, crossed 124 and

passed off the west side striking a
pole.
Rathburn was pronounced dead at
the scene by Meigs County Coroner
Ray Pickens. The body was
removed by the Rutland Emergency
Squad to Walker Funeral Home,
In further action, two persons
were Injured during a two-vehicle
accident investigated Friday in
Gallia County by the highway patrol.
Called to the scene on SR 325 at
1:45 p.m., officers report a north
bound auto operated by Mary Baker,
22, Jackson, turned Into the path of a
south bound vehicle driven by Sandra Petrie, 17, Gallipolis.
A passenger-Debbie Dillon, 17,
Gallipolis-in the Petrie auto; and, a
passenger·-Patty Baker, 15,
Jackson-in the Baker vehicle
claimed injury and were transported to Holzer Medical Center for
treatment.
Baker was cited on a charge of
failure to yield,

Teacher resignation accepted
I

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY NIG_HT

9 1
TIL

.

,•'

'

MIDDLEPORT-The resignation
of one teacher was accepted and a
new junior high school secretary
was employed when the Meigs Local
Sc hool District Board of Education
met in special session Friday night.
Before moving into a two and onehalf hour executive session to
di~cu ss negotiations with
noncertified employes of the district,
the board accepted the resignation
of Carol Mesnard, hired recently for
a learning disability class at the high
school. Ms. Mesnard has accepted a
position in Logan, it is reported .
Marla Grimes was hired as junior
high secretary. She will replace BoJ&gt;.
bie Archer who will be moving into a
secretarial post in the central office
of the district.Grimes was hired at a
4-1 vote with Robert Snowden
casting the !jissenting vote.

The board also heard a complaint
from David Jenkins, a teacher, who
felt that the board should not have
hired Steve Lones as a teacher at the
recent regular meeting. Lones was
hired as a science teacher and a
coach pending certification but still
has university work to complete for
the sciene field. Jenkins stated that
he is already certified in the field.
Following the executive ,session,
the board at a three to two vote
passed a resolution instructing Supt.
David L. Gleason to secure a letter
of recommendation from Meigs
County Supt. Robert Bowen to hire
James Carpenter as a teacher.
Snowden, Dr. Keith Riggs and
Richard Vaughan voted in favor of
the resolution with members, Carol
Pierce and Larry Powell voting
against it.

35 CENTS

Decision expected in teenager's murder case
MASSILLON, Ohio (AP) - A
Stark County judge may decide next
week whether a teen-ager charged
with aggravated murder and arson
will be tried as an adult in the death
of an elderly Massillon couple.
Killed in a July 30 fire were Julius
Broglie, 82, a retired steel worker,
and his 7JI.year old wife, Sylvia.
In the first of a two-part hearing
Friday, Judge W. Don Reeder of
Stark County Family Court found
"there was probable cause that .15-

year·old Keith Leonard committed
certain acts which would be con·
sidered a felony if he were an adult, ''
said Paul Mastriacovo of the county's public defender office.
During the second phase of the
hearing Tuesday, the judge is to
decide whether Leonard, from
Massillon, can be rehabilitated by
the juvenile system, Mastriacovo
said. If, after reviewing evidence,
the court finds that Leonard would

not respond to such rehabilitation,
the case would be presented to the
grand jury.
Leonard was charged with
delinquency on one count of arson
and two counts of aggravated murder. He bas been confined to a detention home since his arrest July 30.
Police said the couple, who died of
smoke inhalation two days before
their 60th wedding aiUiiversary, had
complained several times of being

terrorized by neighborhood youths.
The city's fire prevention bureau
cited arson as the cause of the blaze.
A plastic container reeking of
gasoline was discovered under a
tree near the fire scene, officials
said,
Reeder has prohibited cameras
and electronic recording equipment
during the hearings, which he ordered closed at the request of the
public defender's office.

Catholic leaders urge strikers to avoid any bloodshed
GDANSK, Poland (API - In its .
first public statement on the
spreading labor crisis in this communisl nation, the Polish Roman
Catholic Church expressed understanding for the demands of
striking workers but urged them to
a
void bloodshed.
Panic buying of food and gasoline
spread to Warsaw, but a threatened
general strike in th,e capitallailed to

materialize.
"Prolonged laying down of work,
eventual riots or the shedding of
brotherly blood are against the good
of the community," the church said
in a statement issued Friday by the
bishop of Gdansk, the Baltic industrial seaport of 450,000 where the
strike began 10 days ago at the giant
Lenin shipyard.
The church statement, expressing

" understanding for the strikers who
make efforts toward improving
living conditions," was issued after
a meeting here between the bishop,
the Most Rev. Lech Kaczmarek, and
Polish primate Stefan Cardinal
Wyszynski.
Earlier this week, Polish-born
Pope John Paul II said, "We here in
Rome are united with our fellow
Poles."

The strikes reportedly have
spread to 420 factories and plants
and involve 130,000 workers in this
country of 35 million, 90 percent of
whom are Catholic,
In Warsaw, the Polish capital 175
miles to the southeast, many of the
1.4 million residents cleaned store
shelves of caiUied goods, sugar and
bread and wailed in mile-long lines
for gasoline following reports of a
general strike. Tensions seemed
high and there were reports of stepped-up police patrols through city
streets in recent days.
Meanwhile, five of 24 dissident ac·
tivists arrested in Warsaw and other
cities in mid·week were released
Friday, Still being held without

charges were Jacek Kuron and 18
other leaders of ihe dissidents' Committee for Social Self-Defense, or
KOR.
The group supports the labor
unrest, the worst since bloody
strikes in I 970 broug ht down I he
government of comrnunisl Party
chief Wladyslaw Gomulk a.
Edward Gierek, who replaced
Gomulka, has dispatched a commission to this Baltic coast strike
area in attempts to negotiate but has
thus far refused to deal with an inter-factory committee' pressing
strikers' demands - including
higher pay as well as freedom to set
up trade unions free of government
control, press freedom, release of

political prisoners and other refor-

ms.

Labor unions in Poland - as in
other Soviet bloc countries - are
controlled by the Communist Party
and strikes are illegal.
G'1erek, p rerruer
' EdwardBa b1'uch
and · v·1ce ,._
nerruer
· Mieczys1aw
J ag1e
· Jsk'1 have a ddressed the nat'1on
on television and radio, appealing to
workers to return to their·jobs and
warning the country's security is at
stake.
Gierek, Premier Edward Babiuch
and Vice Premier Mieczyslaw
Jagielski have addressed the nation
on television and radio, appealing to
workers to return to their jobs and
warning the country's security is at
stake.

Committee formed to help
•
revive
dying blood program

FINAL CLEARANCE

MEN'S DRESS SLACKS
REGULAR PRICES 114.95 TO 124.9 5 - SOLID COLORS AND PAlTERNS - MOST
SIZES 29 TO 42 WAIST.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY

GALUPOUS - Billed as "the first athletic competi·
tion for babies in Gallia County," a diaper derby was staged Saturday morning as one of the events held in connec~
tion with the offical dedication of the Raccoon Creek County Park. Above, the entrans start the race; right, contest
winner Jeremy Bailey, son of Mr. and Mrs. Pat Bailey, approaches the finish line. Bradley Wright, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Kevin Wright, placed second in a field of two.
Weekend activities, including hot air balloon rides, carnival games, hayrides and square dancing, will continue
through Sunday night.

OPEN FRIDAY TIL 8 P.M.

, 5 oo

•

Child di·es
in accident

ELBERFELD$

ALL ARE 100% POLYESTERS

entine

Driver charged

MAKE YOUR APPOINTMENT NOW!

POMEROY, OHIO

C-1

State-national ........... . ....... .. , ............ D-1
Sports ..................• .. ........ ..... . .....· C-1-5

lUttS -

REASONABLE PRICIS

PH. 992-3629

contest Saturdoy....

Farm . . . . . • • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • • . . . C-6--7
Ufestyle ...................... .. ............. B.-1-8
lAeal . . . . . . . . . • • • • • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . A-3-8

+

OUR PREVIEW SETS include traditional
poses before oil backdrops AND poses in
beautiful outdoor settings, with double exposures as requested.

MEIGS INN

• •

TV" guide •. ·. . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . tnsert

IT'S TIME TO THINK ABQUT
YOUR SENIOR PORTRAITS!

THE

Brick~throwing

Classified ................................. ... D-2-7
Editorial ... ." .................. . .... .. .......... A·2

B-1

ASKTOWED
Daniel E. Norman, 19, Rt. 4.,
Pomeroy, and Anna Lavaun Frank,
21, Rt. 3, Racine, were issued a
marriage license in the Meigs County Probate Court.

,THIS WEEKEND
AT THE
INN PLACE

here it hr imdde

Area.deaths ••.••...•.....•....••••••••••.•...•.. A-4

HIGH SCHOOL SENIORS

~~'""'.........

7
\\

RED CROSS BLOODMOBILE CITIZENS COM·
MJTTEE - Faced with a decreasing number of blood
donors in Meigs County, a citizens corrunittee has been
organized with the specific goal of working to put new
life into the blood program. The next visit of the Red
Cross Bloodmobile w1ll be Wednesday from I :30 to 6
p.m. and the place has been changed from the
Pomeroy Elementary School to the Senior Citizens

Center conununity room , Among- those serving on the
citizens conunittee are, left to right, seated, Ferndora
Story, R.N., Scott Lucas, Veterans Memorial Hospital
administrator Rhonda Dailey, R.N., Beverly Black,
Veterans Me~orial Hospital laboratory supervisor,
and standing, Eleanor Thomas of the Senior Citizens
Genter and Vernon Nease, Meigs County Red Cross
'
blood program
chairman.

BY BOB HOEFLICH
POMEROY - Meigs Countians
are using more blood than they are
donating, In an effort to breathe new
life into the county's Red Cross blood
program, a citizens colTllll)ttee has
been organized.
Serving on that conunittee are
Vernon Nease, blood chairman;
Rhonda Dailey, R.N., disaster chair·
man; Scott Lucas, Veterans
Memorial Hospital · administrator;
Beverly Black, Veterans Memorial
Hospital laboratory supervisor;
F'erndora Story, R.N., a bloodmobile
volunteer, Eleanor Thomas and
Jeanne Braun of the Senior Citizens
Center and its Retired Senior Volunteer Program; Teresa Collins, R.N .,

Veterans Memorial director of nursing, and Debbie Stalnaker,
representative of the American Red
Cross.
During a corrunittee meeting
Friday afternoon it was noted that
total collection of blood in Meigs
County is decreasing with 55 units
being collected at the J,une visit,
while only 46 units at the April visit.
Based on the population and
calculated donor potential of the
area, the Red Cross has estimated
that Meigs County should have approximately 80 donors per bloodmobile visit.
The next visit to Meigs County will
be Wednesday. The location is being
chan,ged from the Pomeroy Elemen-

tary School to the conununity room
of the Senior Citizens Genter. Hours
will remain the same - 1:30 to 6
p.m.
Ms. Black presented figures on
units transfused durng the past year
just at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Her report showed a total of 317 units
·
wereused.
During that same period, 357 units
were donated h~re for use by Meigs
Countians not only at the local
hospital but at other area hospitals,
thus a severe shortage has resulted. Emphasizing that shortages are
real, Ms. Black noted that twice this
·summer elective surgery on two
patients had to be postponed two
days until blood became available.
(Continued on page A -3)

'

'

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