<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="13116" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/13116?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-14T16:42:36+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="44088">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/0751c2e7e5a59b43ebe2bd27be195bba.pdf</src>
      <authentication>e2839e11aa88b92a37737050e10eec3f</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="41123">
                  <text>,
JANUARY CLEARANCE

M·EN'S SUITS

0

3 piece vested Sl•its in sizes 36 to 46 . 100%
polyester, corduroys and denims .

.
MEN'S 89.95 SUITS ........ ............... 162.00
.

1

'

.

MEN'S 192.90 SUITS ...................... 165.00 '
. MEN'S 199.95 SUITS ............. ........ .' I69.90
MEN'S 1116.85 SUITS .................... 181.70
JANUARY CLEARANCE

~

r'

0. ,'lbursday, Jan. 3, 1911&gt;

12-Tbe

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

JANUARY
CLEARANCE SALE

JANUARY CLEARANCE

PomeroyJtealth care center opens Monday

MEN'S·&amp; BOYS'

.$1.39 TUBE SOCKS

New .facility serves elderly

Springfoot quality. Boys sizes 7 to .
11, men's sizes 9 to 15.

The 1004led Pomeroy Health Care
Center will open its doors to residents Monday according to an announcement today by Rooald E.
Zidlan, facility administrator.
An open house giving the public an
opportunity to tour Meigs CoWJty 's
only such facility, was held last Nov.

·99¢

BEGINS FRIDAY, JANUARY 4 AT 9:30 AM
SPECIAL CLEARANCE SALE PRICES ON ALL THREE
FLOORS - All SALES FINAL - NO EXCHANGES
OR REFUNDS

PAIR

11.

JANUARY
CLEARANCE
'
. ' . ~

Ptmeroy Health Care Center-built
and to be operated by the Americare
Corp.-will provide the highest
quality nursing care for its patlerits In
a clean, comfortable, modem setting.
Services will be provided at the
skilled and lntennedial levels as appropriate for the needs ci the patient
In conjWJction with the medical orders of the patient's private
physician.
Each patient's needS will be
evaluated upon admission and
rwtlnely thereafter.
An individual pian ci care will be
developed for each patient to provide
the required nursing , dietary,
physical therapy and social services.
The center's goal will be to

'

CHILDREN'S
WINTER SLEEPWEAR
- Sizes infants to 7· 14.
- Robes - Gowns - Pajamas

OPEN FRIDA V TIL 8 PM
JANUARY CLEARANCE

JANUARY CLEARANCE

LlnLE BOYS'

PRE-TEEN
SPORTSWEAR

SUITS.

MEN'S SWEATERS
Sizes small (3 ·36), medium · (38·40),
lanie (42·44), extr
e (46-48).
Vests · Slipovers · ardigans

MEN'S 115.95 SWEATERS.............. 19.5]
MEN'S 117.95 SWEATERS............... '10.77
MEN'S 122.95 SWEATERS ............... ~l3.77
MEN'S 124.95 SWEATERS...............114.97

REG. 14.00 ................ ... ......... SALE 12.79
REG. 16.00... .. ............ .......... SALE 14.19
REG. 19.00 .................. ....... ... SALE 16.29
REG. 115.00 .. .. ............... ...... SALE 't0.49

Two and three piece suits in assorted
sizes for little bovs.

JANUARY CLEARANCE

JANUARY CLEARANCE

JANUARY CLEARANCE

JANUARY CLEARANCE

CHILDREN'S
WINTER COATS

MEN'S FLANNEL
WORK SHIRTS

WALL UNITS

' WINTER JACKETS
Boys sizes 8 to 20 - entire stock included
for clearance.

WHILE THEY
LAST

BOYS '24.95 JACKETS ......... .. .. .. .... ... '16.21
BOYS' 127.95 JACKETS .... ........ :....... 118.16
BOYS' 129.95 JACKETS ............. .... ... .119.46
BOYS' 139.95 JACKETS ..................... 125.96
BOYS' 154.95 JACKET~ ................ ..... '35.71
JANUARY CLEARANCE

JANUARY CLEARANCE

Sizes 36 to 48. Denims · corduroys, down
jackets · P. V.C's · colton polyester
blends. Good style and size selection .
Line vests included.

Men's $39.95 Jackets
Men's $44.95 Jackets
Men's $52.95 Jackets
Men's $79.95 Jackets

.....• $25.96
. ....• $29.21
...••. $34.41
...... $51.96

JANUARY CLEARANCE

EXTRA SIZE

WOMEN'S SPO
Nice group of jackets, skirts, slacks and
vests in extra sizes 38· 44 .·

-,

REG. 116.00................... ....... SALE 19.59
.
REG. 117.00 .. ....................... SALE 110.19
REG. 118.00 .... ...... ........ ....... SALE 110.79
REG. 127.00 ......................... SALE 116.19
JANUARY CLEARANCE

MEN'S

SPORT SHIRTS
Entire stock including westerns · velours
· knit shirts · flannels . Sizes S, M, L and
XXL.

MEN'S 19.95 SHIRTS ....................... '6.90
MEN'S 111.95 SHIRTS.... ........ .... ..... 18.40
MEN'S 115.95 SHIRTS .. .................. 111.20
.MEN'S 118.95 SHIRTS .. .. ............... '13.20

REG. 113.00 ...................•....... SALE '9.75
REG ..:'l9.00 ......................... SALE 114.25

•

REG. 126.00.......................... SALE 119.50

I

•••••••• '

DRESS GLOVES
Regular prices $2.95 to $12 .95.
Good styles and colors. While they
last.

1f2 PRICE
GUN CABINETS

All of our boys long sleeve shirts sale
priced. Flannels · knits · velours .
westerns. Sizes B to 20.

our entire stock sale. priced. Lined
coverals · bib overalls · jackets · hoods ·
good selection of sizes.

BOYS' 15.95 SHIRTS ..................... 14.20
BOYS' 17.95 SHIRTS .... , ................ 15.60

SAVE 15%

BOYS' 18.95 SHIRTS .. ..... .............. '6.30
BOYS' 110.95 SHIRTS ...... ..............17.60

For example- Reg. $52.99 Brown Duck
Insulated Coverall $44.99. Every other
item similarly reduced.

JANUARY CLEARANCE

REG. '319 MAPLE,
6 GUN, EARLY AMER. STYLE ••.••• SALE 1249
REG. 1309 PINE,
. 6 GUN, EARLY AMER. STYLE ....... SALE 1239
~EG.

Neck sizes · 14112 to 17 Sleeve
lengths 32 to 35 inches. Solid colors
and white.

Van Heusen and E I y men's flannels in
sizes S, M, land XL. Solid colros and pat·
ferns.

-Assort~d

fabrics
-28" W. X 19" h. X 16" d .

'11.95 PAJAMAS ................... SJ.76
s14.50 PAJAMAS .................. '9.42
s15.00 PAJAMAS ................. s9.75
JANUARY CLEARANCE

.BOYS' SWEATERS
Bovs sizes 8 to 20. Excellent styles and
colors. Savings are great.

.

SWEATER .................. 17.11
SWEATERS........... ..... 17.76
SWEATERS. .. ~ ...... ; .••• 18.41
SWEATERS ................'9.71

ONLY

JANUARY CLEARANCE

JANUARY CLEARANCE

MEN'S

WOMEN'S COATS
JUNIOR · MISSY · HALF SIZES
Save 33% on our entire stock off women's
winter coats.
'

REG. 180.00..... ..... .............. SALE '53.60
REG. 195.00: ..................... SALE 163.65 ·
REG. 1126.00 ..... .... ......... ~ . SALE 184.42
REG. 1158.00 ... ........ ......... SALE 1105.86

Knit hats, gloves, scarfs and sets at
clearance prices! .

REG. 13.50 ....................·..... SALE '2.60
. REG. '6.50... .... •.. .. .. . . .. . .. .. .. SALE 14.85
REG. 19.QO ............... .. ....... .. SALE 16.75
REG. 120.00 ....................... SALE '15.00

TIL

·I·N P

No wiring used
I

WINTER CAPS

OOVING1UN, Ky. (AP)- An
expert witnesS has attacked the
defense position . that. no
allmiiDm wiring W&amp;'l used in the
nCllih wall of the Zelra Rocm of
the Beverly Hills Supper Cub
wblch burned ' M• 28, 1977,
killing l~people and Injuring 50.
Jesse
Aronstein,
a
metallurgist, testified Thursday
that alumlJiwn . wiring In a
ilfl~ fixture taken fnm the
wall of the room Indicated to him
"tbat there was alwnlnum wire
in that wan, the north wan o( the
Zebra ivom, including the alcove
and til! wbbyhole. '!

s,

M, L and .X L sizes. Good selection.
Regulary $2.95 lo$8.95.

Included - all of our toboggans and face
masks .

JANUARY CLEARA
WOMEN'S

KNIT ACCESSORIES

'5_?.95

All purpose ch~st has many uses in the
living room, bedroom or family room.

MEN'S s14.00 DRESS SHIRTS ...'9.80
MEN'S $16.00 DRESS SHIRTS ..s11.20

FROM
ONLY

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) - A
courty Judge has ordered doctors
to dillcOIUlect llfe-eupport equipment from a comatose infant for
three minutes to detennlne if the
alleged . child-abuse victim is
"brain dead. •
Judge Ron Rogg of Sedgwick
Cowsty District Court on Thursday crdered a series of tests for
the Infant after a hearing on a
suit by bis stepfather, who is
seeking . to keep him m the
respirator.
Thomas Saad, 25, has been
charged with aggravated battery
and could be charged with murder If 3-month-oid Michael Saad
dies. -

UPHOLSTERED
CHEST

DRESS SHIRTS

Clearance prices on V·necks, car· .
digans, crew necks, sleeveless
vests and many other styles.

Order issued

JANUARY CLEARANCE

VAN HEUSEN

SWEATERS &amp;VESTS

REG. 110.95
REG. 111.95
REG. '12.95
REG. 114.95

REG. 1379 PINE,
7 GUN COLONIAL STYLE.. ........ SALE

JANUARY CLEARANCE

WOMEN'S

By ALEXANDER G. HIGGINS
Alloclated Prees Writer
TEHRAN, Iran (AP) - Iranian
militants oolding the U.S. Embassy
today demanded that America's top
diplomat in Iran, L. Bruce Laingen,
be turned over to them for
questiooing, the state radio reported.
Lalngen, the U.S. charge d'af·
faires In Telran, is one ci three U.S.
diplomats woo have been held at the
Foreign Mlnistsy since the Moslem
militants overran the embassy Nov.
4.
Earlier today, U.N. SecretaryGeneral Kurt Waldhelm ended a
three-day peace mission to Iran and
left for New Yll'k after Iranian
. leader Ayatollah Ruhollah

MEN'S

BOYS' SHIRTS

JANUARY CLEARANCE

J.UN·I08.·IOP·S ·:~. --

Plan&amp; undecided

wrangle, tops in luniorsizes S·M·L.
-

..

_,.....

REG. '5.00. •.•••

-·

/ f ..

1

I • • • • • I • • I I • • I • • •. • • • •

''

....

SAL.£ '3.78

aNCINNATI (AP) -Plans are
still up in t.beJiir for the first rock
cmcert in Rlverfroot Collsemn
since ·Iaiit Dec. 3, when 11 peq~le
cled 1n·a ~ede before a con·
eert by -the Brl~h group ''The

,

POM EROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

NO. 184

•

at y

enttne
PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

FRIDAY, JANUARY 4, 1980

REG. sa.oo.............. ....... .. ... SALE '5.98
REG. 'l5.\)0. .................. ;... SALE 111.28
·REG. 120.00 .............. ;....... SALE 114.98 .

..
~

In another development, reports there today and were dispersed by
from Klunelni 's headquarters city · pro-Kh&lt;melni militiamen. Several
of Qtm, 100 miles south of here, said injlB'ies were reported.
supporters of Ayatollah Mohammad
Violence in Qom last month betKazem Shariat-Madari attacked an ween Khomelni and Shariat-Madari·
unidentified grwp of worshippers factims led to a major uprising in
nlrthwest Iran's Azerbaijan region.
Shariat-Madari, an Azerbaijan
native oppased to Kh&lt;meini 's almost
total power, has bectme a symhol
for the ethnic Azerbaijmis' quest for
.~
greater autonomy.
The state radio broadcast said the
militants demanded Laingen be
brought to the occupied embassy
"for necessary explanation ci
WASHINGTON (AP) - President cane by the weekend.
A boycott ci the Olympics would espionage documents." The report
carter is getting set to announce a
be a heavy blow to Soviet !l'estige. did not elaborate, but apparently
package of get-tough measures
refl'l'red to documents the militants
toward the Soviet Union, but some of The Moscow games in August will be
the ·key ltema ate being held back the center d; w~rld attention and the claim they foundatthecmbaally.
There was no immediate response
Russiana.lntem to make them a giituntil U.S. :illies give their support.
from
the Foreign Ministry, whidl
terlng.showcase.
Specifically, sources here said, the
has
rebuffed
previous demands
admiilistration is continuing to cclnfrom
the
militants
that it surrender
slder trying to o'rganize a boycott of
~
57
-year-old
Lain gen. The
the Olympic Games this smmner in
mlnistsy
has
said
he
and the two
Moscow and to slow down shipments
other
Americans
political
officer
of grain and teclmology.
'
Victor
Tomseh
·
and
security
chief
After Carter had breakfast thi5
Michael
H.
Holland
-are
being
held
morning with foreign policy ad·
at
the
mnistry
for
their
own
protecvlsers, White House press secretary
tion. They were not at the embassy
Jody PoweU said no decision had
when it was seized.
been made on when or how to make
The militants' statement was
public the course the president
CLEVELAND
(AP)
The
broadcast
only hours after
would follow.
IJIIDlbers
picked
Tbunday
night
Secretary-General
Kurt Waldhelm
Powell also said that no decision
iD lbe Oblo Lottery's dally
left
Tehran
for
New
York after
had been made on whether to em·
rauitber
drawiDg
8lld
tile
weekly
Ayatollah
Ruhollah
Khoineini,
the
bargo U.S. grain shipments to the
gameaare:
Iranian
revolutionary
JeadE!'
woo
Soviet Union. He said Carter also
The NIUilber- 887
holds the key to freed&lt;m for the
had yet to speak with u.s. AmPyramld-13;
705;
8192
American hostages, refused to see
ba&lt;!sador Thomas Watson, who was
Booanza88;
083;
3191;
''1810;
him..
recalled from Moscow.
·
374191
Waldheim departed almost a full
But to "be effective, these
Tbe lottery reported eal'lliogs
day ahead of schedule. Acmeasures must be coordinated with
r1. $346,014.50 on sales Thursday
canpanied b,Y lranial'\ Foreign
other weliern rom tries.
iD ill dally number game.
Minister Sadegh Ghotbzadeh, he
The sources, who asked not to be
Tbe lottery's computer tabulaslipped out of his Tehran hotel at
ilentifled, said the United States
tioDB revealed sales for the day
7:25 a.m. and refused to answer
also Is urging its fri111ds to take a
came to ~,3%1. Holden of wllmquestions from a television crew
flinty view rl credits for Soviet purlug tickets are entitled to
that happened to be waiting in the
chases from the West.
$33,306.50.
lobby.
On the other ham, scme ci·the options aimed at punlsltng the Soviet
Unim f1r taking military action in '
Mghanistan have been considered
within the administratim and rejec·
ted. These, officials said, included a
break In relations with
Afghanistan 's pro..SOviet government and supplying U.S. weapons
directly to insurgents fighting to
overtlrow it.
Still not ruled out, however, is funneling American lll'lm through other
qJWJtries, such WI Pakistan. Several
key congreslimalleaders have said
'!'"- ....
..,'
they will support legislation
authorizing renewed lll'lm sales to
Pakistan if the prmldent requests it.
There were indicatims offi cial
word on actions to be taken could
Khomelni, who holds the key to
freedom for the American hostages,
refused to see him.
"The 50 American hostages at the
enmassy today began their third
month in captivity.

Carter to announce
'get-tough' rules

-~,.

BRAVE THE FffiST SNOW-JWJe and Ralph Stone, Rutland, braved
the nasty weather Friday to come to Pomeroy. Roads were hazardous
and accwnulaticn was expected up tnthree inches.

Crow reelected
council leader

Lavender who asked to purchase a
Kathryn Crow was reelected
president of village COWlcil and 15 foot alley that riDIS frtm Water
Aarm Sayre was appointed to a seat Street to the river. No actlm was
on the Board Of PubUc Mfairs when taken, huwever.
Attending were Mayor Pl.ckens,
Syracuse Village Council met in
•
Janice
Lawson, clerk, George
regular session Thursday night.
Holman,
treasurE!', Chief Varian,
Sayre was sworn in by May&lt;r
Zwilling,
Mike Struble, Jack
Eber Pickens.
Troy Zwilling, councilman, an- WilliBIIIB, Guinther and Crow, coucil
nounced that Jeff Hubbard and members, W'mebrenner, Sayre and
Ralph Lavender have beet~ ap- Doug Hemsley.
pointed by the fire department to the
FiremensDependency Board.
Gordon Winebrermer, a member
rl the Board of Public Mfalrs met
with council to discuss the annual
appropiation for the water departroLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- A Rio
ment.
Grande
couple is suing a West
Winebrenner stated money for
Virginia
man for $1 million for In,
valves, to shut cif the water at a
break so that the entire town would juries suffered in a 1978srnall plane
not be without water, was needed ss collision and crash in Gallipolis.
In a case filed In US. District
is a chlorinator. ·
Since a cost figure was not court Wednesday, Danny R. and
available Wlnebreener is to meet Kristi L. Maynard claim extenalve
with Sayre and aiTive at a figure and injiD'iffi from the mid-eir collision
report back to coWJCil at Its next with a plane being Oown by Danny
Rlffee ci Given, W.Va. The Oct. 'll,
regular meeting.
1978, crash killed one persm,
Willie Guinther, councilman,
William C. Mlller of Gallipolis.
suggested that pedestrian sgns be
Rlffee and hi5 wife filed a $500,000
placed on Third street at the insuit against Mlller 's estate In the
tersectlon of College Road and
Bridgeman Street. Guinther · same court last November. They
were severly Injured in the crash.
stressed the lmportanc~ rl safety for
children cn&amp;ing the highway In the
Rlffee was piloting a 1947 Ercoupe
airplane while Miller was piloting a .
vicinity oll.ondon Pool.
1975Cessna 172craft The two planes
The annual report of Pollee Chief
Milton Varian was read and ac- ran Into each other arxl crashed as
cepted. The chief answered 151 com- , both were preparing for a landing at ·
plaints, made 81 arrests, in- the GJIIia-Melgs County Re~onal
Airport:
' vestigated lOaccidents, received 2311
The Maynard&amp; were passengers In'
--r-'7-- phone calls, issued 143 warnings,
the Cessna at the time rl. the crash.
had 32 motorists assits, cOllected
They claim in their suit Riffee was
$5,504
In
fines
and
costs
and
drove
i
allegedly piloting his plane
6,254.4mlles.
Council commended Varian for a · recklessly.
The · Maynard! claimed Rlflee
job well done.
Meeting . with ' COWlcU was Larry
overtook the Cessna from~bo¥
behind and ran Into it. They
r
said Riff~~!! did' not radio . airport
to either alert It of bis landing or
SCIIOOL8 DISMISS EARLY
learn of any air traffic.
·
Due to weather conditions schools
In
their
suit,
the
Riffefll
claimed
BUSINE~MAN DIES - William J. (Bill) Mayer, 51, Pomeroy ar'.ci the Eastern Local Sc!xloJ District
tlBt Miller, who had rented the
tist, photographer and businessman, died unexpectedly ThiU'Sday mor·
were closed Friday as the Winter's
Cessna, was allegedly negligent in .
ning following a heart attack. Mr. Mayer worked Iii several mediwns.
first snow of 8ny significance 'feU.
pUoting the plane, am had not taken ~
1\'uneral ser-Vice for.
Mllyer will be held Sapm!ay at 3p.m. at the st.
Southern and Meigs local Schools
Jll'(ll)er care In surveying air traffic.
Paul Lutheran Churplt. J'riends may call at Ewing F'wleral Home at any
were in sesslm. However, schooia ci
.
'l'lie M~ynanla seek a tr:ia1 by Jury.
time. The body will Be In state at the church fr_om noon on Saturday WJW
the Meigs LDCal DJStrk;t were beilig
No
date bas been setfor
hearings.
·
time &lt;i services.
dismissed two hours early.
I
.
i&gt;

Rio Grande cluple

files damage suit

~.,

Two. persons
hurt in wreck

A school bus...:.wlt}l no students
aboard-was struck by a car at 8: IIi
a.m. Friday m Brick St., Ptmeroy. ·
Pomeroy Police said a car driven
by George Johnson, Racine, skiUed
Who."
'
into the left front fJ. the bus driven bY
Two acheduled ~r .cooIda Mai'tln rl Pomeroy.
cart~ were cancelled, and a Jan.
Johnson and a Pl!saenger, Ullian
211 appeaf'!lnce by the group "ZZ
Jt1mson,
were taken t.o Veterans
TOp" ltilllsn 't guaranteed.
.
Memorial
Hospl~l by the Pomeroy
'"lbe group hasn't cOiiflnned
:
Emergency
Squad for examination
tha dati! yet," prunote~ Cal Levy .
·
,
tor
possible
Injuries. The bus, ·
llid n.t~. Levy Ia the local
owned
by
till
Meigs lDCal School
agent fOr .Electric Factory ConDjatrlct
811d
one
of the newer ones of
:cer,ts of · Philadelphia, the '
the
dlatrict,
had
to be towed to the
promoter for ''The Who" coocert.
bus garage !n RuUand.

.

.•

VOL XXVIII

open Monday, January 7, to serve
the needa of the Meigs CoWlty older
citlzem.
· ~t has been a long time In
coming, but to the dlsappoinlment of
any skeptics, It Ia happening .
" We pian on taking evesyone rl.
.Meigs ·county who Juo.s applied for
admission as loog 811 we are capable
to provide the services they need.
''We appreciate your patience and
yoor accepting the waiting as we
have. Our staff will certainly Dlllke
it uptoyoo.
"They, too, have been troopers in
pr,aciicing the virtue ci patience.
"I know that Meigs CoiD!tians are
proud to have this Center, but y&lt;a~
are going to be just as proud of our
employees who will be serving you.
''I am happy to present them to yolt
for service. They are skilled and
competent.! say it, but now they will
have the opportwtity to soow it.
' 'May I take this CIPilOrtunlty to
thank the Senior Citizens AlleDCY un(Continued oit page 10)

Militants )want to .questio·n · diplomat

SALE

CARHARn BROWN DUCK

WORK CLOTHES

(USPS 145-960)

JANUARY CLEARANCE

WOMEN'S TOPS
REG. $9..oo" , ... ..... . SALE $6.211
REG. $11.00 ......... SALE $7.69
REG. $12.00 ..... .... SALE $8.39
REG. $15.00 ........ SALE $10.49

•.•..•.•.

JANUARY CLEARANCE

SPORT COATS

REG. 111.00....... ........ ........... SALE 18.25

REG. 1109.00..... ..... .. . .. •.. . .. SALE '88.00
REG. '116.00 ..................... SALE 192.00
REG. 1.158.00... .-; ................ SALE 1126.00

REG.

•

e

REG. '99.00 ............. ..... ..... SALE 79.00

JANUARY CLEARANCE

Turtle Necks· Cow Necks · Jewel Necks
Sizes S·M · L ·XL

residents on Monday, Jan. 7. There are some 70 ap, 'plicatiom on file with the center, the mly facility of Its
type in Meigs County.

1

JANUARY CLEARANCE

FLANNEL PAJAMAS

One rack of plaids, prints and flannels.

$15.95 FLANNEL SHIRTS ........ $11.10

OPENS MONDAY - The Ptmeroy Health Care
Center -a capacity ci 100 beds -will open its doors to

- various styles and shelf arrangements.
-Walnut, pecan or maple finish

JANUARY CLEARANCE

MEN'S

JUNIOR BLOUSES

514.95 FLANNEL SHIRTS .. •.. . :. $10.40

Men's $11.95 Slacks ....... $8.95
Men's$14.95Siacks •..•.•• $11.25
Men's$17.95Siacks ....... $13.45
Men's$24.95 Slacks •...••• $18.75

MEN'S

JA~UARYCLEARANCE

$12.95 FLANNEL SHIRTS ...... . . . $9.00
$13.95 FLANNEL SHIRTS ......... $9.70

Sizes 29 to 42 and extra sizes 44 fo 50 .
Solids and patterns . Most all are 100%
polyester double knits.

JANUARY CLEARANCE

lf2 PRICE

Clearance prices on remaining stock of
Alaskan flannels · country flannels . Sizes
s, M, Land XL plus super sizes 18, 19, and
20. Some tails in he selection.

MEN'S
.
DRESS SLACKS .

JANUARY CLEARANCE

Sizes 36 "to 46. Patterns and solid
colors. Hurry in for best selection.
Regularly $59.95 to $79.95.

Y2 PRICE

Y2 PRICE

Glearance prices on all winter
coats, snowsuits and snowmobile
suits.
REG. $11.00 ... ...... SALE $7.69
REG. $21.00 ........ SALE $14.69
REG. $32.00 ........ SALE $22.39
REG. $47.00 ....•... SALE $32.89
REG. $66.00 ........ SAL
19

MEN'S
WINTER JACKETS

Jackets, Slacks, Blouses, Vests
and Skirts.

rehabilitate each patient to his or her
highest level of functioning and to
help each patient maintain thi5 level
of independence.
The center is a 100 bed skilled and
lntennediate care facility with
physical therapy and rehabilitative
services, 24 hour nursing care with
private an~ semi-private rooms. It is
a member of the Ohio Health Care
Association and Is Medicaid·
Medicare approved.
Various services which will be
available at the Pomeroy Health Care
Center to provide for patients ' needs
will include medical arxi nursing
care; dietary consultation for general
and special diets; physical therapy;
pharmaceutical consultation;
medical laboratory consultation; dental consultation; speech therapy ; activities and occupational therapy and
social services.
In annoWJcing the opening, Zid ian
in his open letter to the public
stated :
·~ am happy to aMOunce that
Pmu:roy Health Ca~ Center will be

J.

~

\

Mr:

.;

1.&lt;

�I

2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport·P(Jileroy, 0 ., Friday, Jan. '. 1980

/I.-·

I og~~~\.KS
"''""Zsc~it..;c-11£

i

I:

I

Declines no big sign

II -

I

...
TI-lE '70s

A1l. E' OVE12 lllE CAt-J SAY GOOD -

I'N 10 IJ\)(0~ ~~~·
lllATE1l.GATE ... B ILLY
IV1AR1'1t-J AIJ ' LEOt.l

SP\t.li&lt;S... At.l' UIWIM'\.

WE STILL
I&lt;AVE T I-\E

Mll?PETS
At.l' TEDDY
1'\SIJt.lEDY...

WASillNGTON (AP) - Recent
declines in some key inter;st
shoold not he viewed as a sign the
Federal Reserve Board is loosening
its tight credit policy, says board
chairman PaulA. Volcker.
"Wilj.., the Fed stick with ·it?"
Volcker asked rhetorically of the
policy . "My own short and simple
answer to that question is 'yes'. And
I do not intend to qualify that answer. "
He added in a speech Wednesday
that the policy is "an absoluteprerequisite to dealing with the in·
flation that has ravaged the dollar,
undennined . our economic performance and prospects and disturbed our society itself."
But even with steadfast devotion
to a tight money policy, Volcker said
there will he some fluctuations in interest rates.
A few hours after his remarks,
Bankers Trust Co. of New York, the
nation's eight-largest bank, lowered
its prime interest rate from 15§ percent to · J~ ·percent. Citibadk, ·the
second-largest commercial bank in

notes

the country, and ninth-ranked First
National Bank of Chicago, lowered •
their rates to 15 percen.t Dec. 14.
, The prime rate - the interest
banks charge their mOISt credit·
worthy buSiness customers - rOISe
dramatically in the wake ri central
bank action on Oct. 6 to get .tighter
control ri the nation's money supply.
Rapid growth of money and credit
are believed to he inflationary.
The prime rate hit a recocd 15.75
percent in mid-November. Some
sloWing in the economy in the final
quarter of 1919 has helped push it
down somewhat since then.
Volcker also told his audience at
the National Press Club Wednesday
that the Carter administration and
Congress need to watch for ''the
right time" to reduce taxes.
"I hope we resist temptations that
could arise simply to pump fresh
purchasing power into the economy
at the first sign of a recession,"
Volckersaid.
The rare public appearance by
Volcker, who took over last August
as chainnan ri the Federal Reserve

.'

Gold becomes industrial coffimodity W a~hington today
•

•
political turmoil is frightening
: NEW YORK (APJ - Back in
,-November 1!170, when gold was people out of paper currency and into s~mething that has universal ac••:selling on the free London market
ceptance.
·~for less than $40 an ounce, a Swiss
Gold is acceptable. In primitive
:6anker in Zurich was quoted as
Societies
and in modern ones it has
j5aying its use as a hedge against turbeen
a
medium
of exchange for
imoil were over.
•
goods
and
services.
It has been so
t ''Gold is now an industrial comsince
recorded
history.
Its mystique,
!(nodlty more than anything else," he
its
acceptability
has
been
consisient.
isaid. '1t,js being bought on its llferit
Despite
this,
it
has
proven
to he
:as a c&lt;IIUDodity, not as a hedge
·against inflation or monetary up- unpredictable, too. Just 18 months
ago a trader at a major London
:sets, as in the past. "
: He was wrong, of course. Gold ' bullion house commented : "!'here's
just too much gold around. I don't
prices now exceed $600, and the
think we 'II see $200 this year. "
reasons are clear: economic and
'~

.

~ ·uAW

Two hundred dollar-an-ounce gold
was reached on Aug. I, 1978. Buyers,
said another London dealer, ineluded "everybody from top to bottom, the whole works." Still, he said,
he thought future increases would he
"a little more sedate."
Wrong again. On Thursday morning, Jan. 3, 1!1l0, a New York dealer
was quoting lj price of $630 an ounce,
about 16 times the Lornlon price ri
November 1970, and more than three
times the price oo Aug. 1, 1978.
Gold was being sought for some
old, old reasons : as security, as a
storehouse of value, as a medium ri
exchange, reasons that grow in
proportion to political and economic
turmoil.
Among the fears are a
deterioration of currencies and the
possible expropriation of private
property. With. gold selling at more
than $9,600 a pound, an individual
can tansfer assets to gold, pack up
begin Friday, Fraser said. The
-.
his property and flee, knowing that
yielding of time offwassaid to he the
he takes ' with him something of
first additional concession the UAW
value.
would offer.
Even before this level of turmoil is
Unlike their counterparts working
reached, econ~mic Instability gives
for the Canadian subsidiaries rJ
investors and savers sound reasons
General Motors Corp. and Ford
for buying gold. The valueS of many
Motor Co., Canadian Chrysler
important currencies have become
workers come under the same conbodly diluted by oversupply, by intract as their U.S. counterparls.
flation. The same caMot he done to
All a condition of approving $1.5
gold; its supply is limited.
billion in loan guarantees, Congress
A good deal of the increases over
required Chrysler's unions to give
the
past two years appear to have
up $462.5 million in contract confrom people and ·governresulted
cessions. Of that, the UAW gave up
ments
trying
to escape the dilution
$ID3 million in the October contract,
of inflation. Arabs, for example,
leaving it with $259.5 million to go.
escaping from dollar inflation.
The Canadian workers have been
But political turmoil now seems to
reluctant to go along, on grounds
have magnified the fears.
that U.S. law could not abrogate
Added to the mixare the activities
their bargaining rights.
of the speculators and the industrial
users, some of whom also speculate
for self-protection.
Is there a chance that gold pl'fes
could fall? Well, what would you say ·
the chances are for non-inflated
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - An currencies, for economic
Ashland County lawmaker says he cooperation, for political stability?
will introduce a bill limiting school For peace on earth?
district populations to 25,000 students.
D
Sen. Thomas A. Van Meter, R·
Ashland, would have the state Board
rJ Education make new districts to
acc~moda te the overflow from
existing large districts.
MoSt of the major cities in the
W.NDON (AP) - Pandemonium
state wtiuld he _affected, including struck the world's gold markets
the state's largest school district, Thufsday as buyers frightened by
Cleveland, which has more than the deepening international political
90,000 students.
"
crisis drove the price of the precious
By restricting districts, Van Meter metal above $800 an ounce for the
says, they would become more first time in history. The dollar fell
responsive to the needs and wishes sharply.
of the peq&gt;le, and result in more
The price of gold rocketed to
' levies passing as their credibility
~49. 73 in Hong Kong, then slid back
rises.
to $613.:/il. The cl~ rate was
The veteran Republican legislator $72.01 above WedneSday's closing
noted that Cleveland, as well as Cin- price of $541.25, while the high for
cinnati, hasn't approved a property the dsy represented a gain of
tax levy for schools in nearly a
$1&lt;MI.48.
decade~
When the.London market opened,
'That's a pretty good indlcstioo ri
bullion trBded at a record bid-endthe districts' lack of credibility with asked price spread of ~15 to $630. At
taxpayers," he said.
mld-efternoon, London's major
He said ''the disastrous con- bullion dealers 'fixed" the price at a
.sequences ·of a big, unmanageable
record $634 an ounce, up $74.50 from
district can be seen in Cleveland. Wednesday's af\l!:moon fixing and
When al! IS said and done, when all
up ~.50 from the Wednesday's
the !ICCUSing fingers and shoots of ciOISing rate of $567.50.
protest are stilled, the glaring fact is
In early New York trading,
that \he students rJ the public
Republic National Bank quoted gold
education system there are left on at $630 an ounce bid, ~ asked and
the bottQm of the totem pole. "
said the market was ''very busy."
Referring to the district's teacher
In Zurich, Europe 's biggest
strikes and financial problems, Van
bullion mart, trading resumed after
Meter said "the students in
a five-day holid!IY period, and gold
Cleveland have not had a decent
opened at a spread of f61~25. The
education in the last three years,
late median price of t635 was $118
and right now they are receiving
higtMlr than ~ast Zurich selling
price of $517 an ounce·on Dec. 28. .
none at all."
In Cleveland last year, Van Meter
Gold snalysts, asked to explain the
said, "the unresponsiveness of the
rush for gold, noted tbat investon~
school district was graphically · who elm afford to lnv~t or speculate
shown when the superinterxlent of
in bullion want to put more-ol their
assets iJito' the precious metal as a
schooiB received a 51 percent raise
while teachers only received an 8 S&amp;fe haven in times rJ political un·
pErcent raise. "
certainty.

refuses further
1,. contract sacrifices
~

~

'

~

WINDSOR, Ontario (AP) United Auto Workers union locals at
: C:hrysler Corp. plants in Canada
refused Thursday to go along with
- further contract sacrifices to save
· thutruggling a utomaker. .
: The refusal was delivered by
:Canadian union leaders to UAW ·
:!&gt;resident Dooglas A. F'ras~r after a
·two-flour meeting in a union hall
:near one of Chrysler's Windsor plan~

:is.
· Bob While, the UAW's Canadian
:(lirector, indicated the refusal was
the result of the Canadians' belief
ihat the U.S. Congress could not tell
them wha( to do.
: Joining the concessions U.S.
·workers must make, White said,
.would have ''horrendous effects in
·this country."
· Fraser said he still expected the
Wtion 's negotiating committee to approve the reopening of the October
t:ontract with Chrysler.
: If Canadian workers had joined
their U.S. counterparts, they would
have given up about $2,000 apiece
J•ver and above the concessions they
have made already. The Canadian
~efusal means that each of
htrysler's unionized U.S. employees
}viii have to sacrifice about $2,400 in
1!ddition instead of $2,000.
; Unlike their counterparts working
lor the Canadian subsidiaries of
'Ueneral Motors Corp. and Ford
. Motor Co., Canadian Chrysler
~ workers come under the same con~ tract as their U.S. counterparts.
~ As a condition of approiing $1.5
billion in loan guarantees, Congress
required Chrysler's unions to give
up $462.5 million in contract con{ cessions. Of that, the UAW gave up
·• $203 million in the October contract,
~ leaving it with $259.5 million to go.
~ UAW President Douglas A.
,. Fraser, who said Wednesday,
"There ain 'fRo santa Claus," was
meeting in Windsor, Ontario, with
leaders of the six Chrysler locals in
•• Glnada. ;:: If the question is resolved, new
barg~ning with Chrysler could

i

I

,. r

~~~----------------~
\•

11IE DA.~VSENTINEL

IUSPS 1(5..9110)

~~ ~--~"'-

Ohio
Perspective

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
political truce on President Carter's
handling of the Iranian h06tage
crisis is C(Jiling apart. Now the
question is whetlier campaign
criticism of the president and his
policies will hurt him or help him.
For two months, ·Carter's
challengers have been relatively
restrained on an issue that has
helped revive the political fortunes
ofthe president.
When Sen. Edward M. KeMedY
talked about Iran, it was with a
denunciationl1rJ the deposed Shah
Mohanunad Reza Pahlavi, not with
direct criticism of Carter and his
policies. Those comments
boomeranged, and Kennedy wound
up the object ri a wave of criticism
for a statement the administration
said was not helpful in its efforts to
gain release of the hOIStages.
Republican National Olairman
Bill Brock now has assailed Carter's
policy as one of Weakness and deception. He said Republican presidential candidates shouldn't he constrained oo anything save the
specifics of administration efforts to
get the hllStages (reed.
He also said he was not reneging
oo a Nov. 29 pledge of support .for
Carter's efforts to gain release of the
hostages. He and Democratic
Natiohal Chairman John C. While
joined in that pledge as a signal ri
national unity.
White said Wednesday that Brock
had put that unity in question. He
said that discipline had been almost
.universal until Brock broke ranks.
Actually, the truce was coming
unraveled before Brock spoke out.
California Gov. Edmund G. Brown
Jr. already had accused Carter of
playing politics with the hostage
situation. Brown, who had counted
heavily on a Jan. 7 debate in Des
Moines to bolster his campaign, said
Carter's !I withdrawal ·!tom . that
forum amounted to "exploiting the
plightofthehostagestohelphisown
campaign." ·
Republican campaigners like
John B. Connally, Ronald Reagan
and Sen. Howard H. Baker Jr. have
been criticizing administration
policies they say are signals of
weakness that encouraged the
Iranians to think they could seize
hostages ana getaway with it.
'
Sen. Bob Dole of Kansas said Carter "bears a heavy responsibility"
for the continuing captivity of the
hOIStages, and questioned whether
Carter really is doing all he can to
get them out.
That's as far as any candidate has

•
ran d. emonzum

hits market

3-

g&amp;e in criticizing Carter on the
specific question of gaining release
ri the hostages. Their conunents
have, for the most part, been more
general.
Carter has canceled his own campaign appearances, saying he has to
stay in constant touch with developments in Iran. While that crisis persists, he said, he will forgo "events
which are exclusively part of a partisan political campaign."
. That casts him as a president
doing his job, apart from and, in effect, above the political battle. That
course has paid political dividends
in his resurgent ratings in the publi('
opinion polls.

Christmas sales
didn't keep pace
with high prices

OAKLAND (AP )- After years ri
trying,CharlesO.
may at1last
be on th
... Finleyssful
...
e verge .. succe
sa e...
hisThe
riches-tiH'Bgs
sal ri the Oakland
Arne _ A's.
Lea
·
e
ncan
sue
baseball
team
for
around
$10
million
ilman Ma
to "'uwver o
rvin Davis
moved a step closer to completion
Thursday with the announcement of
a $4-mlllion offer to buy rut the A's'

Orde

rs better gas

Washington AP - A,p Energy
Department agency says it will order gasoline diverted to the District
of Columbia from hetter-fltocked
areas if supplies here fall-significantty below thenatiooal average.
The decision, issued Wednesday
by the department's Office rJ
Hearings and Appeals, applies only
to the District of Columbia but could
affect other areas if it becomes a
national precedent.
The office ruled In effect that If the
gasoline supplies here fall more than
5 percent below the national
average, within fiw dsys it will order redirection of gasoline from
other areas with ample supplies:
Although the department said the
decision was baaed on "a limited set
of facts" involving only the District
of Columbia, it does reverse earliespolicy against shifting gasoline from
one state or city to make up for a
shortage elsewhere.
District officials took the case to
the Office of Hearings and Appeals
after long gasoline lines fanned here
last summer. They said supplies in
this area were significantly below
Aome other areas despite 11 general
shortage across theooontry.
The department has avoided getling Into reshuffling of supplies In
the past, largely ·because It feared
setting rif rivalries between
localities for · scarce fuel and the
politicallmplicatioos involved.

stadium lease. The lease has pr9ved
a major obstacle to saletalk.s in the
past.
Under the arrangement, Finley,
Davis, the· National League San
FranciscO Giants and the American
League would put up $1 millloneach
to spring the A's from their Oakland
Colisewjl' lease, which still has eight
years to run.
·

Ohio Sportlight ·
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Moments after the biggest defeat of
his life, Art Schll &lt;titer made a public
vow.
"I'm disappointed for the
seniors,;' said Ohio State's sensational sophomore quarterback after a 17-16 Hale Bowl loss to
Southern- California. "Yet we 11 be
back."
_
Perhaps Schlichter was aware of
the situation for 1980 Ohio State football. All but two defensive regulars
will return and six of the 11 on rifense will be back to face visiting
Syracuse in the opener Sept. 13.
Earle Bruce ,also may have
predicted what is in store for his
second Buckeyes' coaching season
at a luncheon on the eve of the Rose
Bowl.
''Sorry," he said, '1 can1 introduce my coaches, but they're out
playing catch up. They're working
like the devil on the game and
recruiting.
,
''But I'll introduce them next year

Mexico raises
oil 'p rices

NEW YORK (AP)- The nation's
retailers enjoyed a 1919 Christmas
that was not as merry as in 1978 but
was much better than s~me had
feared, reports by lead',~ retail
chains showed Thursday.
The retailers reported December
sales gains over 1978 ranged up to
over 12 percent, slightly below the 13
percent increase in consumer prices
duringthesameperiod.
,
K mart, the nation's secondlargest retailer, said sales rose 11.8
percent to $2.20 billion during the
five weeks ending Dec. 29.
Sears Roebuck &amp;Co., the nlltion 's
largest retailer which had been
having sales problems all year, said
its sales rOISe 3.9 percent to $2.74
billion.
"Decemher sales were tate in
developing due in part to unseasonable weather and the extra
week between Thanksgiving and
Christnnas," said K mart Chairman
Robert E. Dewar. ''l'be final four
days were very strong, providing
gQO!:I cleanup of seasonable merchandise."
The picture was I)Ot as bright at
J.C. PeMey and Montgomery Ward.
Ward, a Mobil Corp. subsidiary, said
its sales rOISe 4.6 percent to $003.6
nu·ru on.
•
Penney said its sales for the period ·
r06e just 3.4 percent to $1.97 billion, ·
butChalrmanDonaldV.Selbertand
President Walter J. Neppl aald the
mqnth "ended on a strong note,
aided by an extra selling day prhr to
Christmas and by good store traffic
in the days after the holiday.''

'

'

Oakland A's sale moves.closer to reality

Board, came at a time business'conditions seem to be deteriorating.
Many econ&lt;mlsts are predicting
the nation's economy will slide Into a
recession early this year, with
unemployment rising by . s001e 2
million people by election day in
November.
The latest evidence came Wed·
nesday in a Conunerce Department
report which aald C(I!Structlon spending felll.3 percent in November to
an annual$235.3 billion rate.
The drop was the largest since a
4.9 percent decline in January and
followed an increase of 2.5 percent In
October, Commerce said.
Meanwhile, the price of gold
soared to all-time higlllln New York
and on overseas markets Wed·
nesday as the dollar sagged.
Analysts blamed telllle relations bet·
ween the United States and Iran and •
the Soviet Union for the hot market
cmditions.

MEXICO CITY (AP) - Mexico
raised the price of its crude oil to $32
a barrel Wednesday arxl reserved
the right to hike It again at any time
"because of the urlcertain situation
in the wocld petroleum market," a
spokesman for the government oil
monopoly Pemex announced.
The price had been $24.60 dollars a
barrel.
Mexico is not a member of the
Organizatioo d. Petroleum Exporting Countries but generally
follows OPEC pricing trends.
Mexico does not sell on the spot
market, where prices are higher,
and the Pemex spokesman said this
policy would continue.
.
The $32 price 1s for high quality
crude delivered at the Gulf of
Mexico port of'Veracruz.
The price a year ago was $14.10 for
the standsrd 42-gallon barrel. It
went to $17.19 in March, $22.60 in
July and $24.60in October.
The new ·price is retroactive to
Jan. I.
Eighty percent of the oil Mexico
exports goes to the United States about 44{),000 barrels of total U.S.
imports of approximately 8 l}lillion
barrels a dsy.

The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 " Fridsy, Jan. 4, 1~

here."

-

.

The biggest graduation losses
fr~m the 11~1 team, ranked fourth
nationally this season, will be the
heart of the offensive line,
linebacker Jim Laughlin and cornerback MikeGuesa.

Davis, for two years a central
figure in negotiations wlth ,Finley,
would move . the team to Denver,
contingent upon league approval.
Jack Maltester, president-elect of
the Cotiseum, said he would recommend acceptance of the buyout lifer
if legal problems did nC)I exist. But in
a meeting on t Thursday, the
O&amp;kland-Aiiuneda County Coliseum
Inc. board of directors took no vote
on whether to accept the rifer, and
Coliseum General Manager · Bill

Cunningham said . "No one should
as well as with attorneys, before the
board meets again Wednesday. .
presuppose the board is leaning one
way or another .
According to Cunningham, the U
"Th ere' are a number of
million would he more tban the
unresolved procedural arid legal
Coliseum woul&lt;! make off the A's in
ti
eight
years at the- present rate. Last
ques ons " regarding the offer, said
Cunningham. One problem coold be
yea r the Coliseum made about
a multifllillion dollar Coliseum
$150,1JX1 from the team, he said .
lawsuit against Finley alleging he
Maltester 's predecessor, Robert
has not fulfilled contractual
Nahas, hall been adamant in the
promises to promote the team .
pas\ about refusing such a buyout,
Cunningham said there will be . and that position had sabotaged
talkB with city and county officials,
several attempts by Finley to move

'

Kell~gg,

•

cool m clutch -

Gone from an· unheralded offensive line that helped the
Buckeyes average more than 400
yarda per game are All-American
By 1be Alloclaled Press
Iti the other games on the first
guard Ken Fritz, center Tom
of conference play, Michigan
night
waugh, gua rd Em'J.e Andria and · lllll(llg
What promises to be a hot race
Big Ten basketball powe- beat Minnesota 71-11'1 and Wisconsin
tackle Tim Burke.
••
Laughlin, the team's most
has begun with a touch of cool from defeated.Northwestern ~In the Ohio State-Indiana contest,
1 bl Is
G
Clark Kellogg.
With seven seconds left and Kellogg had missed his three
va ua e p yer' and uess, 811 allconference defensive back, create
second-ranked 01\io State trailing previous free-throw attempts. Was
big holes, too.
Indian b
·
·
Bruce is expected to dole out 23
a l' a pomt Thursday rught, he nervousat the line?
''You dido' see me move from the
scholarships to incoming freslunen. -.G the heralded Buckeye freshman
line
did you?" he said. "The first
0
His first priority wiD he locating big
stepped ~ the free-thrtlw line.
just
had
suspense to it. I just watfas
bil ff · and def
'
The firSt try on a one-end-«Je
. t, mo e o e!ISlve
enslve . bo
"'tuati hit the rim bo ced ched that 'baby drop through the
linemen. Some say as many as 17
nua "'
on
, un
hoop."
grants will go to Ohio State recruits.
u~ and fell through. The sec;ond shot
Kellogg, a 6-foot-8 forward , was
Ohio State can learn from the sbd through the net, glvmg Ohio
talent Southern 'California assem- State a 59~ victory oy~r visiting In- fouled by Indiana's Glen Grunwald,
who had a chance just before the
bled on its rifensive tile. The diana, rankedNo.ll.
.
Trojans' Interior ranged in size from
In another Big Ten game lnvolvmg buzzer to win the game. But~256.foot-7, ~und .-,.nthmy Munoz nationally ranked teams, Kevin . foot 'jumper from the comer un '
down to center Cbrts FoOte, a puny 6- Boyle also was. a free-throw hero, around the rim and bounced out.
Ohio State is now 6-1, Indiana 7.J.
4and 250 pounds.
sinking a pair With 30 seconds ~eft to
Indiana Coach Bobby Knight- s
Southern Cal's front three on msure No. 10 Io_wa a 72·71 vtctory
unhappy with his team's pernot
defense were all23$ to 245pounds
over No. 20 IllinOIS.
.
formance.
Bruce also will be on ·the
No. 7 Purdue survived last-minute
' 'We played a team that has as
recruiting prowl for a b~ durable heroics by Michigan State's Ron
fullback in the mold
a Bob Charles to take a 74-73 victory .
Ferguson, Bob White or Pete John- ~----~-----------:-------------------------,
son, all former standouts for the
Buckeyes. He needs such a mapon
to help balance the passing of
Schlichter.

oi

10-3.

AI East Lansing, Purdue · was
paced by Joe Barry Carroll's 25
points and had a nine-point lead with
two minutes left.
But Michigan State's Ron Charles
hit a pair of free throws ami then
stole the in-bounds pass to score a
layup to bring the score to 74-73. But
he fouled out in the effort, and
although the Spartans had the ball
with 27 seconds left, they .could not
· geta basket.
Nationa I HocRev League
Purdue is now 8-1 overall,
At A Glance
Michigan State 6-4.
By The Associated Press
Junior forward Mike McGee
Campbell Conference
·patriciiDivision
scored 23 points to lead host
W. L. T. PIS GF GA
Michigan, 8.:!, to a hard-fought vicPhila.
24 1 10 58 153 lOA tory over MiMesota, 7-3.
NY Rangers
17 15 6 AO 153 lOA
Randy Breuer pumped in. 17 points
NY ISlanders 14 16 6 34 125 126
Atlanta
U 17 4 32 117 125
for Minnesota.
Washington
9 23 5 ' 23 110 1A2
Wes Matthews and Claude
Smythe Division
Gregory scored 23 points each to
Chicago
13 13 12 3a 108 111
Vancouver
14 17 7 35 12A 126
lesd Wisconsin, 9-3, past NorSt. Louis
14 18 6 34 113 129
thwestern, 5-6.
Winnipeg
12 22 4 28 102 150
High for Northwestern was Jim
Colorado
12 22 3 27 123 143
Edmonton
9 19 8 26 123 158
Stack with 18 points.
Wales Conference

Pro standings

National

Clyde returns to
Texas Rangers

much talent as anyone in the United
States," he said. "We played extremely hard. We were patient on of.
fense and good on defense. '1t just
came down to a couple rJ plays. And
we just didn t make the the play."
Host lllinois missed three shots in
the last six seconds- in falling to
Iowa.
Eddie Johnson, who led all
scorers with 22 points, hit a 25,foot shot.after Boyle's free throws to
pull the Illini to within a point.
illinois grabbed a missed freethrow attempt, and Mark Smith,
Rob Judson and Kevin Bontemps all
had shots but missed.
Iowa is now 10-{) overall, Illinois is

the team. ·
After bringing the club West from
. Kansas City in I!Hl8, Finley built the
A's into a team which woo three consecutive World Series, with players
like Reggie Jackson , Catfish Hunter
and Rollle Fingers. But in recent
..seasons most of the players on those
teams were sold, traded or left as
free agents, and the A's plwnmeled
to last place.
Attendance fell too, and last
season they drew just :Jl6,000fansat
home. Last April, the A's drew 6S3
fans for a game against Seattle.
If the Coliseum approves the
buyout and the American League
ratifies the move, Denver would
become the fourth home of the teain
established in Philadelphia by Connie Mack in 1901. Uthe A's leave, the
Giants would again become the Bay
Area's only major league baseblill
team.
According to Robert 0. Fishel, an
aide to American League President
Lee MacPhail, the league has
delsyed the printing of its 19111
schedule, which is due to be announced officially Jan. 27. He said,
however, that the A's home dates
would he the same in either Oakland
or Denver.

Basketball Association
AtAGiance ·
By The Associated Press
Eastern Conference
Atlantic Division

Boston
Philo.
New York
WaShington
New Jersey

W. L. Pet.
30 9 .769
28 11 . 718

.

GB

2
21 21 .500 101/,
16 20 .500 12
16 24 .400 14'h

Central Division

Atlanta
25 16 .610
San Ant.
20 20.500 4'1•
league baseb&amp;ll draft that year.
Cleveland
19 21 .475 S'h
Twenty days later was the starting
Houston
17 21 .«7 6'1•
lndla~a
17 23 .425 7'h
pitcher for the Rangers against the
Oetro1t
10
JO .250 w;,
Mirmesota Twins as a packed house
Western Conference
of 35,688 fans watched the schoolboy
Midwest Division
K~n. City
23 18 .561
wonder. Clyde walked the first-two
23 18 .561
batters he faced, bUt was able to M•lwaukee
Denver
15 26 .366 8
recover and struck out the next Chicago
12 2S .324 9
Utah
12 28 .300 lO 'h
three batters swinging.
He got the win in a 4-3 Rangers vic- Seattle Pacific Division
27 12 .692 v,
tory although he pitched only five In- Los Ang.
29 13 .690
Phoenix
26 15 .634 2•12
nings, allowing one hit, a two-run
Portland
21 22 .488 9V•
homer by Mike Adams.
,
San
Diego
21
22 .488 8'h
Clyde was on the verge of earning Golden St.
13 26 .333 W I•
''the franchise"title f&lt;r the Rangers
Thursday's Games
New York 138, San Diego 101
In 1973 as he made 12 starts at heme.
New Jersey 126, Atlanta 119
For those 12 nights, the Rangers
Philadelphia 109, Cleveland 108
drew 218,240 fans, outstanding in a
Milwaukee 106, Indiana 96
Friday's Games
year when their season home atHouston
at New Jersey
tendance was only 686)50 for about
San Diego at Chicago
Ill games. He finished 1973 4-8 and
San Antonio at Kansas City
Thursday's
Washington at Golden State
fell to 3-8 in 1914.
Sports Transactions
Utah at Portland
The
former
schoolboy
whiz
fell
on
By The Associated Press
Detroit at Seattle
BASEBALL
hard times and wound up being
Saturday's Games
American League
Kansas City at Atlanta
traded to aeveland. His overall
NEW YORK YANKEES-Named' major league record Is 18-33.
Milwaukee at Cleveland
Bobby Hofman director Of scouting,
'Chicago at New York
Clyde underwent surgery in May,
Bill Livsey · director of player
Boston at San Antonio
development, Gene Michael vice
Phoenix at Houston
1976 to relieve a trapped nerve in hia
president, Cedric Tallis executive
· Washington at Utah
left shoulder.
vice president and Bill Bergesch,
indiana at Denver
Nonis, 31, is a left-handed hitter
vice president of baseball
Seattle at Golden State
operations. Named Pat Dobson and
who batted .2461ast season after hitSunday's Games
Ken Barry minor league coaches.
Denver at Kansas Cltv
ting
.2'70
for
Cleveland
in
19'77
and
FOOTBALL
Cleveland at New Jersey
.283 in 1978. He had 15 doubles, 6
National Football League
Los Angeles at Milwaukee
GREEN BAY PACKERS - Fired
triples and 3 home runs while bat·
Detroit at Portland
Chuck Lane, public relations direc - . ling In 30 runs In 1979.
Seattle at San Diego
tor. Named Lee Rummel public
Mc!AII, a right-hander, was 14-2 at :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:::::::::::::::;:;::::::::
relations director.
GAMF3POSTPONFD
HOCKEY
Tucson In the Pacific Coast League
Notional Hockey ·League
Clu11e11
In tbe GaDia County
and 1-0 withtheRangerslastseason.
NEW YHORK RANGERS
Looai
School
Dla1rlcl were caned
Gray batted .!115 at Tucaon and .238
Recalled Pat Conecher, center,
aft
teclay
becallle
Ill dick roM
from New Haven of the American
In 15 games with the Rangers.-Bucci
. Hockey League.
eoadltlou.
Tllerefore,
lrmjpt'a
baUed .256 at Tucson.
COLLEGE
SV
AC
games
betwee11
Kyger
ARIZONA STATE - Fired Fred
Creek and NorUa G.W. aDd 111111Miller, athletic director. Named
Robert L. Knox acting athletic dlrec·' · Tonight's games
DID Trace aDd Solltbweatem
tor.
..
bave bee11 poe1polled 1ecordlng to
. C.W. POST COLLEGE - An·
Dlatrlet
Sllpertatellde11t Dr. Gary
Southern
at
Eastern
nounced the resignation of Bob .,
Kyger Creek at North Gall Ia
Tootbltker.
Greene, athletic director.
SOUthwestern at Hannan Trace
r•
NORTH CAROLINA .STATE :;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::
Named Olck Kupec offensive coor· Wellston at Athens
Ironton at Meigs
~• dlnator and John Stuckey defensive
Jackson at Logan 0 ...1 •
line coach .
WEST VIRGINIA - Named Den· Gallipolis at Waverly ·
.~; nls Brown to their football coaching ' Wheelersb.urg at Lucasville
Westland at Chillicothe
&gt;':'• stall.
Portsmouth at Greenup
Parkersburg ,South at Pt. Pleasant
Charles Jewtraw won the first -court House at Madison Plains
·SATURDAY'S GAMES
Winter Olympic gold riledal for the
Ironton at Wheelersburg
United Statl:s, taking th« 5!)0-meter Athens
at Cambridge
speed-ellaling event In 1924.
Belpre at Meigs

•
ARUNGTON, Texas (AP) David Clyde, 'Who leaped from high
. _ scboo! baseball to the major leagues
as a pttcber for the Tell88 Rangers In
19'13, returned -to the R!lngers fr~m
the Cleveland Indians today as part
ri .a trade Involving /our other
players.
·
The Rangers '&amp;Moun~ early
today they obtained Clyde, 24, and
outfielder . Jim Norris from the Indians in exchange for outfielder
Gary Gray, pitcher Larry MeAl I and
third baseman Mike Bucci.
Clyde graduated fr~m Houston
Westchester High School in 1973 and
was the No. 1 pick In the major

Transactions

Adams Division
25 10 J 53
Bos-ton
20 11 5 45
Minnesota
19 9 7 45
Toronto
16 17 4 J6

.Buffalo

145
136
147
129
15 17 6 36 117

Quebec

Norris Division

Pittsburgh
Los Ang .
Montreal
Detroit
Harttord
J

16 11 11 4J
18 12 6 42
18 15 6. 42
11 18 7 29
9 16 10 289

I

t

II

EQUIPMENT

1 Pom eroy, 0 .

cord.

BITER..

Buffalo6, Central Red Army 1

. Friday's Games
Philadelphia at New York
Rangers ~--Washing on vs . Hartford at
Springfield, Mass.
Detroit at Atlanta
Boston at Winnipeg
Vancouver at Colorado

Moscow Dynamo at Edmonton
exhibition
'
Saturday's Games

Hartford

,I
Ph. 992-2176 •I

I
Hours: 8-5 Mon. -Fri.
II
I
·
8-12 Sat.
I.
Closed Sunday
'I
I International
New Ideo ft
.._. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ JJ,;A
1 Harvester
Equipment ;·_ ,

131 125
\56 137
145 132
117 128
114 129

Chicago at Montreal
St. Loulsat New York Islanders
Buffalo at Pittsburgh
Quebec at Toronto
Washington at Minnesota
Los Angeles at Edmonton
Sunday's Games
Phi !adelphia at Buffalo

co. . I

99

St . Louis6, Vancouver2

vs .

-------,.
MEIGS

105
108
137
128

Thursday's Games
Pinsburgh .C, New York Islanders

Detroit

,

Famous "you go thru ice. mud and snow" tread gets
you through winter's rough sp0ts. Polyester cord
body proVldes strength and a smooth ride.
Size
Black F.E.T.
Size
Black F.E.T.
S3~

6.00 -12
A 78-13
C78 -l3
0 78 -14

28

E78·14

3'8
39
41

F78-14
G78 -14

43
44

$1.71
1.68
2. 10
2. 10

5.60·15
6.00 -15L
6.85-15

$35
36

2.29

F78-15
G78-15

37
44
46

2.42
2.56

H78-15
L78-15

47
48

$1.82
2.03
2.36
2.49

2.02
2.'84

3.13
AU prices. plus tax. NO TRADE-IN NEEDED!
Stzes to f 1t mos t U.S. and import cars.
at

Springfield, Mass.
Atlanta at New York Rangers
central Red Army at Quebec,
exhibition
vancouver at Chicago
Los Angeles a't Winnipeg

POMEROY HOME\ &amp; AUTO
. 606 E. Main

"Front End Alignments"

992-2094

GOLF

MONTEREY, Calif. (AP) - Mike
Morley catded a 7-1111der1JIIr 65 and
J .C. Snead fired a 68 as the twQ tied
for the secmd-t"Ound lead in a
$U5,000 tournament.
,
Amateur golfer Bob Clampett had
a &amp;! arK! was one stroke back at 136.

When The
Weather
Is Stormy

.,,

•. Friends - - -

PURINA
WILD
BIRD

SEED • SUET CAKES
SUNFLOWER

INVENTORY
·CLEARANCE I

UP TO
'

25% OFF
,'

'

~ '

B·AUM TRUE VA

' THE BLACK HOLE
•

•

_
,.,ODERN .SUPPLY

.

Entire Stock ln·~tuded .'
. various stvtes
·

• l

~

.

.-.s·.E. -D_
· h~; 'e 'l'huu'l'l'l4m l:luUn Ht·(~·n•ntT
e4~tt-.t _ IJil•l~ ·

·~·ufii•ld

•llt~~•·!' St11th

MII)Ot..EPOtrr BOOK STO~E

w.

o.

_399
Main
.
. 992·2164
Pomerov,
1HE STORE WITH "ALL KINDS OF STUFF"- FOR
PETS, STABLES, LARGE &amp; 'SMALL ANIMALS,.
LAWNS /liN 0 GARDENS.
.

�I

2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport·P(Jileroy, 0 ., Friday, Jan. '. 1980

/I.-·

I og~~~\.KS
"''""Zsc~it..;c-11£

i

I:

I

Declines no big sign

II -

I

...
TI-lE '70s

A1l. E' OVE12 lllE CAt-J SAY GOOD -

I'N 10 IJ\)(0~ ~~~·
lllATE1l.GATE ... B ILLY
IV1AR1'1t-J AIJ ' LEOt.l

SP\t.li&lt;S... At.l' UIWIM'\.

WE STILL
I&lt;AVE T I-\E

Mll?PETS
At.l' TEDDY
1'\SIJt.lEDY...

WASillNGTON (AP) - Recent
declines in some key inter;st
shoold not he viewed as a sign the
Federal Reserve Board is loosening
its tight credit policy, says board
chairman PaulA. Volcker.
"Wilj.., the Fed stick with ·it?"
Volcker asked rhetorically of the
policy . "My own short and simple
answer to that question is 'yes'. And
I do not intend to qualify that answer. "
He added in a speech Wednesday
that the policy is "an absoluteprerequisite to dealing with the in·
flation that has ravaged the dollar,
undennined . our economic performance and prospects and disturbed our society itself."
But even with steadfast devotion
to a tight money policy, Volcker said
there will he some fluctuations in interest rates.
A few hours after his remarks,
Bankers Trust Co. of New York, the
nation's eight-largest bank, lowered
its prime interest rate from 15§ percent to · J~ ·percent. Citibadk, ·the
second-largest commercial bank in

notes

the country, and ninth-ranked First
National Bank of Chicago, lowered •
their rates to 15 percen.t Dec. 14.
, The prime rate - the interest
banks charge their mOISt credit·
worthy buSiness customers - rOISe
dramatically in the wake ri central
bank action on Oct. 6 to get .tighter
control ri the nation's money supply.
Rapid growth of money and credit
are believed to he inflationary.
The prime rate hit a recocd 15.75
percent in mid-November. Some
sloWing in the economy in the final
quarter of 1919 has helped push it
down somewhat since then.
Volcker also told his audience at
the National Press Club Wednesday
that the Carter administration and
Congress need to watch for ''the
right time" to reduce taxes.
"I hope we resist temptations that
could arise simply to pump fresh
purchasing power into the economy
at the first sign of a recession,"
Volckersaid.
The rare public appearance by
Volcker, who took over last August
as chainnan ri the Federal Reserve

.'

Gold becomes industrial coffimodity W a~hington today
•

•
political turmoil is frightening
: NEW YORK (APJ - Back in
,-November 1!170, when gold was people out of paper currency and into s~mething that has universal ac••:selling on the free London market
ceptance.
·~for less than $40 an ounce, a Swiss
Gold is acceptable. In primitive
:6anker in Zurich was quoted as
Societies
and in modern ones it has
j5aying its use as a hedge against turbeen
a
medium
of exchange for
imoil were over.
•
goods
and
services.
It has been so
t ''Gold is now an industrial comsince
recorded
history.
Its mystique,
!(nodlty more than anything else," he
its
acceptability
has
been
consisient.
isaid. '1t,js being bought on its llferit
Despite
this,
it
has
proven
to he
:as a c&lt;IIUDodity, not as a hedge
·against inflation or monetary up- unpredictable, too. Just 18 months
ago a trader at a major London
:sets, as in the past. "
: He was wrong, of course. Gold ' bullion house commented : "!'here's
just too much gold around. I don't
prices now exceed $600, and the
think we 'II see $200 this year. "
reasons are clear: economic and
'~

.

~ ·uAW

Two hundred dollar-an-ounce gold
was reached on Aug. I, 1978. Buyers,
said another London dealer, ineluded "everybody from top to bottom, the whole works." Still, he said,
he thought future increases would he
"a little more sedate."
Wrong again. On Thursday morning, Jan. 3, 1!1l0, a New York dealer
was quoting lj price of $630 an ounce,
about 16 times the Lornlon price ri
November 1970, and more than three
times the price oo Aug. 1, 1978.
Gold was being sought for some
old, old reasons : as security, as a
storehouse of value, as a medium ri
exchange, reasons that grow in
proportion to political and economic
turmoil.
Among the fears are a
deterioration of currencies and the
possible expropriation of private
property. With. gold selling at more
than $9,600 a pound, an individual
can tansfer assets to gold, pack up
begin Friday, Fraser said. The
-.
his property and flee, knowing that
yielding of time offwassaid to he the
he takes ' with him something of
first additional concession the UAW
value.
would offer.
Even before this level of turmoil is
Unlike their counterparts working
reached, econ~mic Instability gives
for the Canadian subsidiaries rJ
investors and savers sound reasons
General Motors Corp. and Ford
for buying gold. The valueS of many
Motor Co., Canadian Chrysler
important currencies have become
workers come under the same conbodly diluted by oversupply, by intract as their U.S. counterparls.
flation. The same caMot he done to
All a condition of approving $1.5
gold; its supply is limited.
billion in loan guarantees, Congress
A good deal of the increases over
required Chrysler's unions to give
the
past two years appear to have
up $462.5 million in contract confrom people and ·governresulted
cessions. Of that, the UAW gave up
ments
trying
to escape the dilution
$ID3 million in the October contract,
of inflation. Arabs, for example,
leaving it with $259.5 million to go.
escaping from dollar inflation.
The Canadian workers have been
But political turmoil now seems to
reluctant to go along, on grounds
have magnified the fears.
that U.S. law could not abrogate
Added to the mixare the activities
their bargaining rights.
of the speculators and the industrial
users, some of whom also speculate
for self-protection.
Is there a chance that gold pl'fes
could fall? Well, what would you say ·
the chances are for non-inflated
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - An currencies, for economic
Ashland County lawmaker says he cooperation, for political stability?
will introduce a bill limiting school For peace on earth?
district populations to 25,000 students.
D
Sen. Thomas A. Van Meter, R·
Ashland, would have the state Board
rJ Education make new districts to
acc~moda te the overflow from
existing large districts.
MoSt of the major cities in the
W.NDON (AP) - Pandemonium
state wtiuld he _affected, including struck the world's gold markets
the state's largest school district, Thufsday as buyers frightened by
Cleveland, which has more than the deepening international political
90,000 students.
"
crisis drove the price of the precious
By restricting districts, Van Meter metal above $800 an ounce for the
says, they would become more first time in history. The dollar fell
responsive to the needs and wishes sharply.
of the peq&gt;le, and result in more
The price of gold rocketed to
' levies passing as their credibility
~49. 73 in Hong Kong, then slid back
rises.
to $613.:/il. The cl~ rate was
The veteran Republican legislator $72.01 above WedneSday's closing
noted that Cleveland, as well as Cin- price of $541.25, while the high for
cinnati, hasn't approved a property the dsy represented a gain of
tax levy for schools in nearly a
$1&lt;MI.48.
decade~
When the.London market opened,
'That's a pretty good indlcstioo ri
bullion trBded at a record bid-endthe districts' lack of credibility with asked price spread of ~15 to $630. At
taxpayers," he said.
mld-efternoon, London's major
He said ''the disastrous con- bullion dealers 'fixed" the price at a
.sequences ·of a big, unmanageable
record $634 an ounce, up $74.50 from
district can be seen in Cleveland. Wednesday's af\l!:moon fixing and
When al! IS said and done, when all
up ~.50 from the Wednesday's
the !ICCUSing fingers and shoots of ciOISing rate of $567.50.
protest are stilled, the glaring fact is
In early New York trading,
that \he students rJ the public
Republic National Bank quoted gold
education system there are left on at $630 an ounce bid, ~ asked and
the bottQm of the totem pole. "
said the market was ''very busy."
Referring to the district's teacher
In Zurich, Europe 's biggest
strikes and financial problems, Van
bullion mart, trading resumed after
Meter said "the students in
a five-day holid!IY period, and gold
Cleveland have not had a decent
opened at a spread of f61~25. The
education in the last three years,
late median price of t635 was $118
and right now they are receiving
higtMlr than ~ast Zurich selling
price of $517 an ounce·on Dec. 28. .
none at all."
In Cleveland last year, Van Meter
Gold snalysts, asked to explain the
said, "the unresponsiveness of the
rush for gold, noted tbat investon~
school district was graphically · who elm afford to lnv~t or speculate
shown when the superinterxlent of
in bullion want to put more-ol their
assets iJito' the precious metal as a
schooiB received a 51 percent raise
while teachers only received an 8 S&amp;fe haven in times rJ political un·
pErcent raise. "
certainty.

refuses further
1,. contract sacrifices
~

~

'

~

WINDSOR, Ontario (AP) United Auto Workers union locals at
: C:hrysler Corp. plants in Canada
refused Thursday to go along with
- further contract sacrifices to save
· thutruggling a utomaker. .
: The refusal was delivered by
:Canadian union leaders to UAW ·
:!&gt;resident Dooglas A. F'ras~r after a
·two-flour meeting in a union hall
:near one of Chrysler's Windsor plan~

:is.
· Bob While, the UAW's Canadian
:(lirector, indicated the refusal was
the result of the Canadians' belief
ihat the U.S. Congress could not tell
them wha( to do.
: Joining the concessions U.S.
·workers must make, White said,
.would have ''horrendous effects in
·this country."
· Fraser said he still expected the
Wtion 's negotiating committee to approve the reopening of the October
t:ontract with Chrysler.
: If Canadian workers had joined
their U.S. counterparts, they would
have given up about $2,000 apiece
J•ver and above the concessions they
have made already. The Canadian
~efusal means that each of
htrysler's unionized U.S. employees
}viii have to sacrifice about $2,400 in
1!ddition instead of $2,000.
; Unlike their counterparts working
lor the Canadian subsidiaries of
'Ueneral Motors Corp. and Ford
. Motor Co., Canadian Chrysler
~ workers come under the same con~ tract as their U.S. counterparts.
~ As a condition of approiing $1.5
billion in loan guarantees, Congress
required Chrysler's unions to give
up $462.5 million in contract con{ cessions. Of that, the UAW gave up
·• $203 million in the October contract,
~ leaving it with $259.5 million to go.
~ UAW President Douglas A.
,. Fraser, who said Wednesday,
"There ain 'fRo santa Claus," was
meeting in Windsor, Ontario, with
leaders of the six Chrysler locals in
•• Glnada. ;:: If the question is resolved, new
barg~ning with Chrysler could

i

I

,. r

~~~----------------~
\•

11IE DA.~VSENTINEL

IUSPS 1(5..9110)

~~ ~--~"'-

Ohio
Perspective

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
political truce on President Carter's
handling of the Iranian h06tage
crisis is C(Jiling apart. Now the
question is whetlier campaign
criticism of the president and his
policies will hurt him or help him.
For two months, ·Carter's
challengers have been relatively
restrained on an issue that has
helped revive the political fortunes
ofthe president.
When Sen. Edward M. KeMedY
talked about Iran, it was with a
denunciationl1rJ the deposed Shah
Mohanunad Reza Pahlavi, not with
direct criticism of Carter and his
policies. Those comments
boomeranged, and Kennedy wound
up the object ri a wave of criticism
for a statement the administration
said was not helpful in its efforts to
gain release of the hOIStages.
Republican National Olairman
Bill Brock now has assailed Carter's
policy as one of Weakness and deception. He said Republican presidential candidates shouldn't he constrained oo anything save the
specifics of administration efforts to
get the hllStages (reed.
He also said he was not reneging
oo a Nov. 29 pledge of support .for
Carter's efforts to gain release of the
hostages. He and Democratic
Natiohal Chairman John C. While
joined in that pledge as a signal ri
national unity.
White said Wednesday that Brock
had put that unity in question. He
said that discipline had been almost
.universal until Brock broke ranks.
Actually, the truce was coming
unraveled before Brock spoke out.
California Gov. Edmund G. Brown
Jr. already had accused Carter of
playing politics with the hostage
situation. Brown, who had counted
heavily on a Jan. 7 debate in Des
Moines to bolster his campaign, said
Carter's !I withdrawal ·!tom . that
forum amounted to "exploiting the
plightofthehostagestohelphisown
campaign." ·
Republican campaigners like
John B. Connally, Ronald Reagan
and Sen. Howard H. Baker Jr. have
been criticizing administration
policies they say are signals of
weakness that encouraged the
Iranians to think they could seize
hostages ana getaway with it.
'
Sen. Bob Dole of Kansas said Carter "bears a heavy responsibility"
for the continuing captivity of the
hOIStages, and questioned whether
Carter really is doing all he can to
get them out.
That's as far as any candidate has

•
ran d. emonzum

hits market

3-

g&amp;e in criticizing Carter on the
specific question of gaining release
ri the hostages. Their conunents
have, for the most part, been more
general.
Carter has canceled his own campaign appearances, saying he has to
stay in constant touch with developments in Iran. While that crisis persists, he said, he will forgo "events
which are exclusively part of a partisan political campaign."
. That casts him as a president
doing his job, apart from and, in effect, above the political battle. That
course has paid political dividends
in his resurgent ratings in the publi('
opinion polls.

Christmas sales
didn't keep pace
with high prices

OAKLAND (AP )- After years ri
trying,CharlesO.
may at1last
be on th
... Finleyssful
...
e verge .. succe
sa e...
hisThe
riches-tiH'Bgs
sal ri the Oakland
Arne _ A's.
Lea
·
e
ncan
sue
baseball
team
for
around
$10
million
ilman Ma
to "'uwver o
rvin Davis
moved a step closer to completion
Thursday with the announcement of
a $4-mlllion offer to buy rut the A's'

Orde

rs better gas

Washington AP - A,p Energy
Department agency says it will order gasoline diverted to the District
of Columbia from hetter-fltocked
areas if supplies here fall-significantty below thenatiooal average.
The decision, issued Wednesday
by the department's Office rJ
Hearings and Appeals, applies only
to the District of Columbia but could
affect other areas if it becomes a
national precedent.
The office ruled In effect that If the
gasoline supplies here fall more than
5 percent below the national
average, within fiw dsys it will order redirection of gasoline from
other areas with ample supplies:
Although the department said the
decision was baaed on "a limited set
of facts" involving only the District
of Columbia, it does reverse earliespolicy against shifting gasoline from
one state or city to make up for a
shortage elsewhere.
District officials took the case to
the Office of Hearings and Appeals
after long gasoline lines fanned here
last summer. They said supplies in
this area were significantly below
Aome other areas despite 11 general
shortage across theooontry.
The department has avoided getling Into reshuffling of supplies In
the past, largely ·because It feared
setting rif rivalries between
localities for · scarce fuel and the
politicallmplicatioos involved.

stadium lease. The lease has pr9ved
a major obstacle to saletalk.s in the
past.
Under the arrangement, Finley,
Davis, the· National League San
FranciscO Giants and the American
League would put up $1 millloneach
to spring the A's from their Oakland
Colisewjl' lease, which still has eight
years to run.
·

Ohio Sportlight ·
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Moments after the biggest defeat of
his life, Art Schll &lt;titer made a public
vow.
"I'm disappointed for the
seniors,;' said Ohio State's sensational sophomore quarterback after a 17-16 Hale Bowl loss to
Southern- California. "Yet we 11 be
back."
_
Perhaps Schlichter was aware of
the situation for 1980 Ohio State football. All but two defensive regulars
will return and six of the 11 on rifense will be back to face visiting
Syracuse in the opener Sept. 13.
Earle Bruce ,also may have
predicted what is in store for his
second Buckeyes' coaching season
at a luncheon on the eve of the Rose
Bowl.
''Sorry," he said, '1 can1 introduce my coaches, but they're out
playing catch up. They're working
like the devil on the game and
recruiting.
,
''But I'll introduce them next year

Mexico raises
oil 'p rices

NEW YORK (AP)- The nation's
retailers enjoyed a 1919 Christmas
that was not as merry as in 1978 but
was much better than s~me had
feared, reports by lead',~ retail
chains showed Thursday.
The retailers reported December
sales gains over 1978 ranged up to
over 12 percent, slightly below the 13
percent increase in consumer prices
duringthesameperiod.
,
K mart, the nation's secondlargest retailer, said sales rose 11.8
percent to $2.20 billion during the
five weeks ending Dec. 29.
Sears Roebuck &amp;Co., the nlltion 's
largest retailer which had been
having sales problems all year, said
its sales rOISe 3.9 percent to $2.74
billion.
"Decemher sales were tate in
developing due in part to unseasonable weather and the extra
week between Thanksgiving and
Christnnas," said K mart Chairman
Robert E. Dewar. ''l'be final four
days were very strong, providing
gQO!:I cleanup of seasonable merchandise."
The picture was I)Ot as bright at
J.C. PeMey and Montgomery Ward.
Ward, a Mobil Corp. subsidiary, said
its sales rOISe 4.6 percent to $003.6
nu·ru on.
•
Penney said its sales for the period ·
r06e just 3.4 percent to $1.97 billion, ·
butChalrmanDonaldV.Selbertand
President Walter J. Neppl aald the
mqnth "ended on a strong note,
aided by an extra selling day prhr to
Christmas and by good store traffic
in the days after the holiday.''

'

'

Oakland A's sale moves.closer to reality

Board, came at a time business'conditions seem to be deteriorating.
Many econ&lt;mlsts are predicting
the nation's economy will slide Into a
recession early this year, with
unemployment rising by . s001e 2
million people by election day in
November.
The latest evidence came Wed·
nesday in a Conunerce Department
report which aald C(I!Structlon spending felll.3 percent in November to
an annual$235.3 billion rate.
The drop was the largest since a
4.9 percent decline in January and
followed an increase of 2.5 percent In
October, Commerce said.
Meanwhile, the price of gold
soared to all-time higlllln New York
and on overseas markets Wed·
nesday as the dollar sagged.
Analysts blamed telllle relations bet·
ween the United States and Iran and •
the Soviet Union for the hot market
cmditions.

MEXICO CITY (AP) - Mexico
raised the price of its crude oil to $32
a barrel Wednesday arxl reserved
the right to hike It again at any time
"because of the urlcertain situation
in the wocld petroleum market," a
spokesman for the government oil
monopoly Pemex announced.
The price had been $24.60 dollars a
barrel.
Mexico is not a member of the
Organizatioo d. Petroleum Exporting Countries but generally
follows OPEC pricing trends.
Mexico does not sell on the spot
market, where prices are higher,
and the Pemex spokesman said this
policy would continue.
.
The $32 price 1s for high quality
crude delivered at the Gulf of
Mexico port of'Veracruz.
The price a year ago was $14.10 for
the standsrd 42-gallon barrel. It
went to $17.19 in March, $22.60 in
July and $24.60in October.
The new ·price is retroactive to
Jan. I.
Eighty percent of the oil Mexico
exports goes to the United States about 44{),000 barrels of total U.S.
imports of approximately 8 l}lillion
barrels a dsy.

The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 " Fridsy, Jan. 4, 1~

here."

-

.

The biggest graduation losses
fr~m the 11~1 team, ranked fourth
nationally this season, will be the
heart of the offensive line,
linebacker Jim Laughlin and cornerback MikeGuesa.

Davis, for two years a central
figure in negotiations wlth ,Finley,
would move . the team to Denver,
contingent upon league approval.
Jack Maltester, president-elect of
the Cotiseum, said he would recommend acceptance of the buyout lifer
if legal problems did nC)I exist. But in
a meeting on t Thursday, the
O&amp;kland-Aiiuneda County Coliseum
Inc. board of directors took no vote
on whether to accept the rifer, and
Coliseum General Manager · Bill

Cunningham said . "No one should
as well as with attorneys, before the
board meets again Wednesday. .
presuppose the board is leaning one
way or another .
According to Cunningham, the U
"Th ere' are a number of
million would he more tban the
unresolved procedural arid legal
Coliseum woul&lt;! make off the A's in
ti
eight
years at the- present rate. Last
ques ons " regarding the offer, said
Cunningham. One problem coold be
yea r the Coliseum made about
a multifllillion dollar Coliseum
$150,1JX1 from the team, he said .
lawsuit against Finley alleging he
Maltester 's predecessor, Robert
has not fulfilled contractual
Nahas, hall been adamant in the
promises to promote the team .
pas\ about refusing such a buyout,
Cunningham said there will be . and that position had sabotaged
talkB with city and county officials,
several attempts by Finley to move

'

Kell~gg,

•

cool m clutch -

Gone from an· unheralded offensive line that helped the
Buckeyes average more than 400
yarda per game are All-American
By 1be Alloclaled Press
Iti the other games on the first
guard Ken Fritz, center Tom
of conference play, Michigan
night
waugh, gua rd Em'J.e Andria and · lllll(llg
What promises to be a hot race
Big Ten basketball powe- beat Minnesota 71-11'1 and Wisconsin
tackle Tim Burke.
••
Laughlin, the team's most
has begun with a touch of cool from defeated.Northwestern ~In the Ohio State-Indiana contest,
1 bl Is
G
Clark Kellogg.
With seven seconds left and Kellogg had missed his three
va ua e p yer' and uess, 811 allconference defensive back, create
second-ranked 01\io State trailing previous free-throw attempts. Was
big holes, too.
Indian b
·
·
Bruce is expected to dole out 23
a l' a pomt Thursday rught, he nervousat the line?
''You dido' see me move from the
scholarships to incoming freslunen. -.G the heralded Buckeye freshman
line
did you?" he said. "The first
0
His first priority wiD he locating big
stepped ~ the free-thrtlw line.
just
had
suspense to it. I just watfas
bil ff · and def
'
The firSt try on a one-end-«Je
. t, mo e o e!ISlve
enslve . bo
"'tuati hit the rim bo ced ched that 'baby drop through the
linemen. Some say as many as 17
nua "'
on
, un
hoop."
grants will go to Ohio State recruits.
u~ and fell through. The sec;ond shot
Kellogg, a 6-foot-8 forward , was
Ohio State can learn from the sbd through the net, glvmg Ohio
talent Southern 'California assem- State a 59~ victory oy~r visiting In- fouled by Indiana's Glen Grunwald,
who had a chance just before the
bled on its rifensive tile. The diana, rankedNo.ll.
.
Trojans' Interior ranged in size from
In another Big Ten game lnvolvmg buzzer to win the game. But~256.foot-7, ~und .-,.nthmy Munoz nationally ranked teams, Kevin . foot 'jumper from the comer un '
down to center Cbrts FoOte, a puny 6- Boyle also was. a free-throw hero, around the rim and bounced out.
Ohio State is now 6-1, Indiana 7.J.
4and 250 pounds.
sinking a pair With 30 seconds ~eft to
Indiana Coach Bobby Knight- s
Southern Cal's front three on msure No. 10 Io_wa a 72·71 vtctory
unhappy with his team's pernot
defense were all23$ to 245pounds
over No. 20 IllinOIS.
.
formance.
Bruce also will be on ·the
No. 7 Purdue survived last-minute
' 'We played a team that has as
recruiting prowl for a b~ durable heroics by Michigan State's Ron
fullback in the mold
a Bob Charles to take a 74-73 victory .
Ferguson, Bob White or Pete John- ~----~-----------:-------------------------,
son, all former standouts for the
Buckeyes. He needs such a mapon
to help balance the passing of
Schlichter.

oi

10-3.

AI East Lansing, Purdue · was
paced by Joe Barry Carroll's 25
points and had a nine-point lead with
two minutes left.
But Michigan State's Ron Charles
hit a pair of free throws ami then
stole the in-bounds pass to score a
layup to bring the score to 74-73. But
he fouled out in the effort, and
although the Spartans had the ball
with 27 seconds left, they .could not
· geta basket.
Nationa I HocRev League
Purdue is now 8-1 overall,
At A Glance
Michigan State 6-4.
By The Associated Press
Junior forward Mike McGee
Campbell Conference
·patriciiDivision
scored 23 points to lead host
W. L. T. PIS GF GA
Michigan, 8.:!, to a hard-fought vicPhila.
24 1 10 58 153 lOA tory over MiMesota, 7-3.
NY Rangers
17 15 6 AO 153 lOA
Randy Breuer pumped in. 17 points
NY ISlanders 14 16 6 34 125 126
Atlanta
U 17 4 32 117 125
for Minnesota.
Washington
9 23 5 ' 23 110 1A2
Wes Matthews and Claude
Smythe Division
Gregory scored 23 points each to
Chicago
13 13 12 3a 108 111
Vancouver
14 17 7 35 12A 126
lesd Wisconsin, 9-3, past NorSt. Louis
14 18 6 34 113 129
thwestern, 5-6.
Winnipeg
12 22 4 28 102 150
High for Northwestern was Jim
Colorado
12 22 3 27 123 143
Edmonton
9 19 8 26 123 158
Stack with 18 points.
Wales Conference

Pro standings

National

Clyde returns to
Texas Rangers

much talent as anyone in the United
States," he said. "We played extremely hard. We were patient on of.
fense and good on defense. '1t just
came down to a couple rJ plays. And
we just didn t make the the play."
Host lllinois missed three shots in
the last six seconds- in falling to
Iowa.
Eddie Johnson, who led all
scorers with 22 points, hit a 25,foot shot.after Boyle's free throws to
pull the Illini to within a point.
illinois grabbed a missed freethrow attempt, and Mark Smith,
Rob Judson and Kevin Bontemps all
had shots but missed.
Iowa is now 10-{) overall, Illinois is

the team. ·
After bringing the club West from
. Kansas City in I!Hl8, Finley built the
A's into a team which woo three consecutive World Series, with players
like Reggie Jackson , Catfish Hunter
and Rollle Fingers. But in recent
..seasons most of the players on those
teams were sold, traded or left as
free agents, and the A's plwnmeled
to last place.
Attendance fell too, and last
season they drew just :Jl6,000fansat
home. Last April, the A's drew 6S3
fans for a game against Seattle.
If the Coliseum approves the
buyout and the American League
ratifies the move, Denver would
become the fourth home of the teain
established in Philadelphia by Connie Mack in 1901. Uthe A's leave, the
Giants would again become the Bay
Area's only major league baseblill
team.
According to Robert 0. Fishel, an
aide to American League President
Lee MacPhail, the league has
delsyed the printing of its 19111
schedule, which is due to be announced officially Jan. 27. He said,
however, that the A's home dates
would he the same in either Oakland
or Denver.

Basketball Association
AtAGiance ·
By The Associated Press
Eastern Conference
Atlantic Division

Boston
Philo.
New York
WaShington
New Jersey

W. L. Pet.
30 9 .769
28 11 . 718

.

GB

2
21 21 .500 101/,
16 20 .500 12
16 24 .400 14'h

Central Division

Atlanta
25 16 .610
San Ant.
20 20.500 4'1•
league baseb&amp;ll draft that year.
Cleveland
19 21 .475 S'h
Twenty days later was the starting
Houston
17 21 .«7 6'1•
lndla~a
17 23 .425 7'h
pitcher for the Rangers against the
Oetro1t
10
JO .250 w;,
Mirmesota Twins as a packed house
Western Conference
of 35,688 fans watched the schoolboy
Midwest Division
K~n. City
23 18 .561
wonder. Clyde walked the first-two
23 18 .561
batters he faced, bUt was able to M•lwaukee
Denver
15 26 .366 8
recover and struck out the next Chicago
12 2S .324 9
Utah
12 28 .300 lO 'h
three batters swinging.
He got the win in a 4-3 Rangers vic- Seattle Pacific Division
27 12 .692 v,
tory although he pitched only five In- Los Ang.
29 13 .690
Phoenix
26 15 .634 2•12
nings, allowing one hit, a two-run
Portland
21 22 .488 9V•
homer by Mike Adams.
,
San
Diego
21
22 .488 8'h
Clyde was on the verge of earning Golden St.
13 26 .333 W I•
''the franchise"title f&lt;r the Rangers
Thursday's Games
New York 138, San Diego 101
In 1973 as he made 12 starts at heme.
New Jersey 126, Atlanta 119
For those 12 nights, the Rangers
Philadelphia 109, Cleveland 108
drew 218,240 fans, outstanding in a
Milwaukee 106, Indiana 96
Friday's Games
year when their season home atHouston
at New Jersey
tendance was only 686)50 for about
San Diego at Chicago
Ill games. He finished 1973 4-8 and
San Antonio at Kansas City
Thursday's
Washington at Golden State
fell to 3-8 in 1914.
Sports Transactions
Utah at Portland
The
former
schoolboy
whiz
fell
on
By The Associated Press
Detroit at Seattle
BASEBALL
hard times and wound up being
Saturday's Games
American League
Kansas City at Atlanta
traded to aeveland. His overall
NEW YORK YANKEES-Named' major league record Is 18-33.
Milwaukee at Cleveland
Bobby Hofman director Of scouting,
'Chicago at New York
Clyde underwent surgery in May,
Bill Livsey · director of player
Boston at San Antonio
development, Gene Michael vice
Phoenix at Houston
1976 to relieve a trapped nerve in hia
president, Cedric Tallis executive
· Washington at Utah
left shoulder.
vice president and Bill Bergesch,
indiana at Denver
Nonis, 31, is a left-handed hitter
vice president of baseball
Seattle at Golden State
operations. Named Pat Dobson and
who batted .2461ast season after hitSunday's Games
Ken Barry minor league coaches.
Denver at Kansas Cltv
ting
.2'70
for
Cleveland
in
19'77
and
FOOTBALL
Cleveland at New Jersey
.283 in 1978. He had 15 doubles, 6
National Football League
Los Angeles at Milwaukee
GREEN BAY PACKERS - Fired
triples and 3 home runs while bat·
Detroit at Portland
Chuck Lane, public relations direc - . ling In 30 runs In 1979.
Seattle at San Diego
tor. Named Lee Rummel public
Mc!AII, a right-hander, was 14-2 at :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:::::::::::::::;:;::::::::
relations director.
GAMF3POSTPONFD
HOCKEY
Tucson In the Pacific Coast League
Notional Hockey ·League
Clu11e11
In tbe GaDia County
and 1-0 withtheRangerslastseason.
NEW YHORK RANGERS
Looai
School
Dla1rlcl were caned
Gray batted .!115 at Tucaon and .238
Recalled Pat Conecher, center,
aft
teclay
becallle
Ill dick roM
from New Haven of the American
In 15 games with the Rangers.-Bucci
. Hockey League.
eoadltlou.
Tllerefore,
lrmjpt'a
baUed .256 at Tucson.
COLLEGE
SV
AC
games
betwee11
Kyger
ARIZONA STATE - Fired Fred
Creek and NorUa G.W. aDd 111111Miller, athletic director. Named
Robert L. Knox acting athletic dlrec·' · Tonight's games
DID Trace aDd Solltbweatem
tor.
..
bave bee11 poe1polled 1ecordlng to
. C.W. POST COLLEGE - An·
Dlatrlet
Sllpertatellde11t Dr. Gary
Southern
at
Eastern
nounced the resignation of Bob .,
Kyger Creek at North Gall Ia
Tootbltker.
Greene, athletic director.
SOUthwestern at Hannan Trace
r•
NORTH CAROLINA .STATE :;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::
Named Olck Kupec offensive coor· Wellston at Athens
Ironton at Meigs
~• dlnator and John Stuckey defensive
Jackson at Logan 0 ...1 •
line coach .
WEST VIRGINIA - Named Den· Gallipolis at Waverly ·
.~; nls Brown to their football coaching ' Wheelersb.urg at Lucasville
Westland at Chillicothe
&gt;':'• stall.
Portsmouth at Greenup
Parkersburg ,South at Pt. Pleasant
Charles Jewtraw won the first -court House at Madison Plains
·SATURDAY'S GAMES
Winter Olympic gold riledal for the
Ironton at Wheelersburg
United Statl:s, taking th« 5!)0-meter Athens
at Cambridge
speed-ellaling event In 1924.
Belpre at Meigs

•
ARUNGTON, Texas (AP) David Clyde, 'Who leaped from high
. _ scboo! baseball to the major leagues
as a pttcber for the Tell88 Rangers In
19'13, returned -to the R!lngers fr~m
the Cleveland Indians today as part
ri .a trade Involving /our other
players.
·
The Rangers '&amp;Moun~ early
today they obtained Clyde, 24, and
outfielder . Jim Norris from the Indians in exchange for outfielder
Gary Gray, pitcher Larry MeAl I and
third baseman Mike Bucci.
Clyde graduated fr~m Houston
Westchester High School in 1973 and
was the No. 1 pick In the major

Transactions

Adams Division
25 10 J 53
Bos-ton
20 11 5 45
Minnesota
19 9 7 45
Toronto
16 17 4 J6

.Buffalo

145
136
147
129
15 17 6 36 117

Quebec

Norris Division

Pittsburgh
Los Ang .
Montreal
Detroit
Harttord
J

16 11 11 4J
18 12 6 42
18 15 6. 42
11 18 7 29
9 16 10 289

I

t

II

EQUIPMENT

1 Pom eroy, 0 .

cord.

BITER..

Buffalo6, Central Red Army 1

. Friday's Games
Philadelphia at New York
Rangers ~--Washing on vs . Hartford at
Springfield, Mass.
Detroit at Atlanta
Boston at Winnipeg
Vancouver at Colorado

Moscow Dynamo at Edmonton
exhibition
'
Saturday's Games

Hartford

,I
Ph. 992-2176 •I

I
Hours: 8-5 Mon. -Fri.
II
I
·
8-12 Sat.
I.
Closed Sunday
'I
I International
New Ideo ft
.._. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ JJ,;A
1 Harvester
Equipment ;·_ ,

131 125
\56 137
145 132
117 128
114 129

Chicago at Montreal
St. Loulsat New York Islanders
Buffalo at Pittsburgh
Quebec at Toronto
Washington at Minnesota
Los Angeles at Edmonton
Sunday's Games
Phi !adelphia at Buffalo

co. . I

99

St . Louis6, Vancouver2

vs .

-------,.
MEIGS

105
108
137
128

Thursday's Games
Pinsburgh .C, New York Islanders

Detroit

,

Famous "you go thru ice. mud and snow" tread gets
you through winter's rough sp0ts. Polyester cord
body proVldes strength and a smooth ride.
Size
Black F.E.T.
Size
Black F.E.T.
S3~

6.00 -12
A 78-13
C78 -l3
0 78 -14

28

E78·14

3'8
39
41

F78-14
G78 -14

43
44

$1.71
1.68
2. 10
2. 10

5.60·15
6.00 -15L
6.85-15

$35
36

2.29

F78-15
G78-15

37
44
46

2.42
2.56

H78-15
L78-15

47
48

$1.82
2.03
2.36
2.49

2.02
2.'84

3.13
AU prices. plus tax. NO TRADE-IN NEEDED!
Stzes to f 1t mos t U.S. and import cars.
at

Springfield, Mass.
Atlanta at New York Rangers
central Red Army at Quebec,
exhibition
vancouver at Chicago
Los Angeles a't Winnipeg

POMEROY HOME\ &amp; AUTO
. 606 E. Main

"Front End Alignments"

992-2094

GOLF

MONTEREY, Calif. (AP) - Mike
Morley catded a 7-1111der1JIIr 65 and
J .C. Snead fired a 68 as the twQ tied
for the secmd-t"Ound lead in a
$U5,000 tournament.
,
Amateur golfer Bob Clampett had
a &amp;! arK! was one stroke back at 136.

When The
Weather
Is Stormy

.,,

•. Friends - - -

PURINA
WILD
BIRD

SEED • SUET CAKES
SUNFLOWER

INVENTORY
·CLEARANCE I

UP TO
'

25% OFF
,'

'

~ '

B·AUM TRUE VA

' THE BLACK HOLE
•

•

_
,.,ODERN .SUPPLY

.

Entire Stock ln·~tuded .'
. various stvtes
·

• l

~

.

.-.s·.E. -D_
· h~; 'e 'l'huu'l'l'l4m l:luUn Ht·(~·n•ntT
e4~tt-.t _ IJil•l~ ·

·~·ufii•ld

•llt~~•·!' St11th

MII)Ot..EPOtrr BOOK STO~E

w.

o.

_399
Main
.
. 992·2164
Pomerov,
1HE STORE WITH "ALL KINDS OF STUFF"- FOR
PETS, STABLES, LARGE &amp; 'SMALL ANIMALS,.
LAWNS /liN 0 GARDENS.
.

�FEBRUARY
Feb. 2ll - Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman announced that he would
seek reelection in the J Wle primary
election.
Feb. 21 - Meigs COWJty received
reimbursement of funds spent in the
voter regislra lion program.
Feb. Zl -9Ruth Moore, 2&amp;-year employee ci the Meigs County Courthouse, was honored on her
retirement by other courthouse
workers.
Feb. 25- The Pomeroy parking lot
fil!iQil with water, and flood warnings were posted for the Ohio River
Viuley area.
Feb. 26 - For the second lime in
less than three months, the Ohio
River had risen above the 46.5 foot
flood stage in Pomeroy. Milch of
East Main St. was flooded, and the
water was ellpecled to crest at the
least figure of 49 feet.
Feb. 27 - The river was expected
to crest al50.5 feel early in the day,
but it kept rising, and at 9 a.m.,
stood at 51.1 feet. The area between
Mechanic st. and Butternut Ave.
was flooded, as well as most of Main
St., Pomeroy. Middleport, however,
was practically untouched by the
flood. Few persons were forced to
move in that lime.
Feb. 211- POOleroy, hit hard by the
flooding of the Ohio River, breathed
a sigh of relief as the waters began a
painfully slow receding process. The
river had crested at 51.4 feet.

District received a $659,300 grant
from the FanJI!!rs' Horne Administration.
. March 23 - The Meigs County
C&lt;mmissioners appointed Michael
L. Swisher, Syracuse, as a new administrator of the Meigs County
Welfare Dejlartmenl
March 25 - River traffic returned
to nonnal, when two barges blocking
a gate at the Gallipolis Locks and
Dams were removed ..
March 27 - Charles L. Dowler,
resigned as superintendent of the
Meig~ Local School District, effective Aug. I.
March 28 - The apnual birthday
party d. the Drew \Wbster Post 39,
American Legion, was held ,
hon(l'ing Kennit Walton as "Outstanding Citizen", and Joe Zwilling
as "Legionnaire d. the Year".
March 29 - Eastern Local's
Board of Educatioo approved permanent appropriations for 1979,
totalling $1,492,058.
March 31 - The Meigs Local
Junior and Senior HighSchool Vocal
Department presented its first night
production d. "l'he Sound d. Music "
to a fuU crowd at the Larry Morrison
GymnasiuiTL

'Lori ~s Miracle'
featured program

""

dilion, " and the walls of the high
school were bowing, possibly due to
defective steel 111ed in construction.
April 18 -· One person was killed
and another injured in an accident
on State Route 7.
Aprill9 - Janet Horky, Lori Kloes,
Traeey Jeffers, and Charlene
Goeglein, were announced to be the
Meigs High School Buckeye Girls'
State delegates.
April 21 - Guy R. Russell, Minersvllle, received his 50-year membership pin for the Warren Council
No . 58 Royal and Select Master
Masons, his third 50-year pin, each
fl. the three for a different Masonic
organization.
•
April 22 - Sixteen Meigs High
School juniors and seniors were inducted into the National Hooor
Society.
April . Z4 - The Meigs County
Regional Planning Commission
received notice of the possibility of a
$10,000 FHA grant to be used in implementing an industrial slestudy. .
April 25 - Bruce Fisher, Michael .
McGuire, Daniel Thomas, and
Richard Williamson were announced to be the Meigs High School

7-,-I))e ~!Jy_&amp;tltinel, Mlddleport·~omeroy,O., Friday, Jan. 4, .1980_

• I

WANT AD

CHARGES

LOST: Reward for walker
'hound , Long Hollow
vic inity. :JO.i·675-lm.
LOST : • Snowville area .
Female
blue tick
coonhound. If seen,c all
Paul Phllllput742-:1209.

Misty Lyons ·

WAITRESS WANTED,
over 21 . Night shift. Frlen·
dly Tavem, 992·9'175. ·

Buckeye Boys' state delegates.
April 26 - The Racine Dental
Clinic, a component of the Meigs
County Rural Health Initiative
program, was announced to be
opening with a short lime span.
April 29 - A Meigs County man
shot and wounded three peiJPl~
before taking his own life at his Bald
Knob resident.

1977 CHEVROLET........................ s3895

1977 DODGE MONACO ................... $2695

1975 PLYMOUTH FURY •••••••••••••••••••s1495

1974 CHEV. /z l PICKUP
,. ••••••••••••••••. 1495
1969.CHEVROLET /z T. PICKUP. •••••••••••.'949

New '80 Chevies
Availab'e
fMMEDIATE DfLIVERY

..
'

READ THESE 5 CONSUMER CAR BUYING GUIDES:
DO YOU SHOP WHEN YOU GO TO.BUY AN£W OR USED CAR?
YOU SHOULD. CHECK THESE s· IMPORTANT ITEMS.

4 USED CAR SPECIALS FOR

ARY

1977 FORD PINTO_. ....................... ~.~~::~· ~-~ ::.~.!~~.~~:.~?. .~~-~~ .~~~ '2600
1977 TOYOTA CEUCA .................... ~.~~::.~ ~-~~:·. ~-~~~~~...~~.~~-~~~~.~?.~ ... '4495
1977 FORD F-100 PICKUP. ........... ... :..~?~.~~.~~~~:.~.~~~:.~~~-~~~.~~.~~~....'3195
1977.BUICK CENTURY.................~.~~:~~~!~::.~:~::.~:.~; .~?~.~~-~.~~.~.~~ ..'1895

I

~

NOTICE

' · WANT-AD

~VERTISIN~
· DEADIJNES

&amp;mday

tP.M.
Frldoyanm-

SPECIAL

1978 GMC PICKUP 4 WHEEL DRIVE

"'·'

'..•.

•
l

•

'5995

Auto., goodcond.

•

1978 Ford F-250 Club Cab ...............................13995
Good cond., auto., P.S., P.B., air, CB radio.

1973 Ford

1fz

Ton Std........................... : ......... '895

Long bed, stand., 6 cyl.

1974 Chevy C20 Aut. LWB .............................. 11295
'

1977 Ford Mustang ................................... ... 12695
Hatchback, .fsp., 4 cyl .

1977 ChevY Nova 4 dr aut., PS, PIL ..................'3495

MARTIN'S APPRAISAL.
: Stop, think, are you about
to lose money? Over 25
years e&lt;perlence In buying
and S&lt;HIIng. Will appraise
new, used or antique furniture. One piece or complete household. Gold,
sliver and other old ~olns,
china, glass, old tovs, dolls,
Iron banks, tools, antique
clothing, razors, pocket
knives and other old Items .
Call 992-6370.

1977 Ford LTD II Station Wagon ........................ 12595 .
.

OLD FURNITURE, Ice
boxes, brass beds, Iron
beds, desks, etc .. complete
households. Write M.D.
Miller. Rt. 4, Pomeroy or
caii9'12·77/IJ.
·

1&gt;162 .

Air, 6 cyl., low mileage.

.

wanted to Buy
CHIP WOOD. Poles· max.
diameter 10" on largest
end. $12 p-er ton. Bundled
slab. $10 per ton . Delivered
to Ohio Pallet Co., Rt. 2,
Pomeroy'9'12·2689.

~

1968 Chevy 1f2 Too•.•••.•.•.••.•.•..••••••••.••• •• •••••... sggs·

302, V·8, 9 pass,

EXPERIENCED
tax
preparers wanted. Hourly
rate and bonus plan. Full or
part·t·lme hours. Capital
Finance Services. Phone
992 .. 2111 today. Equal Op·
portunlty Employers. M·F.

LEGAL NOTICE
Notlceof
Appointment of ·
ANTIQUES,
FUR ·
FidUCiary
NITURE, glass, china,
Probate Court
anything. See or call Ruth
Meigs County; Olllo
Gosney, antiques, 26 N.
Estate of Woodrow R. 2nd, Middleport, OH. 992~~~~~· deceased, Case No. 3161.
On Dec. 31, 1979, In the
ANTIQUif'POCKET watelgs County Probate ches.
to pay top
ourt, Case No. 22,929, Don dollar.Willing
llson, R.D. 2, Box 149, evenings. Call 1·592·2973
bany, Ohio, was aplnted Administrator of
e estatee of Woodrow B. OLD COINS, pocket wat·
llson, deceased,' late of R. . ches, class rings, wedding
bands, diamonds. Gold or
2, Albany, Ohio.
,.
Rob..-! E. Buck silver. Call J . A. Wamsley,
..
Probate Judge 742-2331. Treasure Chest
' ~ 11, 11, ltc
Coin Shop, Athens, OH. 592-

~

1

1975 Ford LTD 2 dr:............................... ,..... 1895
1975 ChiJSier Cordoba ........ ,..........................11695
. 2 Dr., P.S., P.B., air.

1974 Ford Station Wagon ................................. 1795

· PAY TOP dollar for
gold and sliver coins,
silverware, other gold and
sliver Items, lewelry, old
glass frames and antique
furnllura. Will buy one
piece or household. Call
992-6370.

Ranch style, auto .~ air.

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

992-2126

TEACHERS, community
workers: sell World Book.
Extra Income . Send
. resume to Box 486, Racine,
OH.

'

1977 CHEV. MONTE CARLO .............. 3695

1972 FORD MAVERICK 2 DR •••••••••••••• 895

Lost and Founil ·
LOST : Female blu·e tick
coon dog end male walker
In Cherry Ridge area.
Phone 992·5556.

Help Wanted
HIGH ·sCHOOL graduate
wllh grocery store ex·
perlence. Apply at Twin
City crateway, no phone
calls.

.1978 PLYMOUTH HORIZON .............. $4395

.

· Your Best Buys Are t'ound in the Sentinel Classifieds

A play, "Lori's Christmas
MJracle ", was a feature of the
children's program present411 at the
Antiquity Baptist &lt;hurch recently.
Roles for the play which had its
setting in the Hvtng room IX a
shepherd 's home, the day before
Christmas, were Legina uart, the
mother; Donlta Manuel, Lori; Jason
Shain, 'fln:un,Y ; RobinManuei,Jody,

APRIL
April! -A Meigs County resident
was charged with the alleged arson
of a car owned by Howard Searles,
Flatwoods Rd
April2 -Pomeroy Village Council
was faced with debts totaling approximately $13,000, incilrred by the
street
department.
MARCH
April
3 - Rick Crow, acting as
March I ,.... The Pomeroy business
of the CETA Plat Map
director
district began "clean up" work after
program,
and county engineer,
4 Door, ~ark red color with matching red vinyl trim , radio, air cond.,
being flooded for several days. The
automatic trans., power steering &amp; brakes . Rally wheels.
Wesley
Buehl
met with the Meigs
town began to revive as debris left
Qmnty Comrnissiooers to discuss
5
by the river was cleared away.
progmm
and
its
progress.
the
March 2 - Activity in Pomeroy
Local 1 owner, 350 V·8 engine, auto., P .S., P.B . • air cond., good tires,
April 4 - Plat maps for sections
resumed as businesses re~ned and
landau model, solid white color .
one and two of Bedford Township
cleanup procedures continued.
March 3 Government were completed, according to
5
procedures for making application Wesley Buehl, county engineer.
Auto. trans ., good tires. Lots of serviCe in this one.
AprilS -Syracuse Council agreed
for federal disaster fWJds to repair
to
amend
the
water
rate
ordinance
damaged county and township roads
were ouUined by the Meigs County for non-residents by reducing the
amount from$6.75 to$6.25.
4 door, small V-8, automatic, power steering, power brakes , locking
Conunissioners.
differential. air conditioning, clean interior, green .
April 6 - Columbia Gas of Ohio
March 4 - Corrective actioo was
started to drain lht! hillside behind received a map of land which
Pomeroy Elementary. The hill was showed in detail the :m-ooo acres of
land of the planned annexation.
4 Dr . Brougham, V-8, auto., P.S., P . B., air, local 1 owner car &amp; real
in danger of slipping and destroying
sharp.
ApriiiOThe
Meigs
County
Comthe fo111dalion d. the school.
rnissiooers received a disappointing
March 5 - Eastern Local School
respoose
from the state for highway
District Superintendent Clark Lees
caused by recent flooding.
damages
Custom Cpe ., V·8, auto. , air, P.S., P. B., clean interior, good tires .
announced his resignation, citing
According
to Rich Jones, presld~t
personal and professional reasons as
ci the Board fl. Coounissioners, not
5
1
the basis for his leaving.
effort
was
being
made
by
enough
March 7 - Teachers In the
Southern Local School District state cificials to Iring aid into the
1
walked cif their jobs in a strike ac- county.
April II - Janis Carnahan,
tion against the district's Board of
daughter
of Mr. ·and Mrs. James
Education.
Carnahan,
Racine, was named 1979
March 8 - The mike in the
Meigs
County
Da_iry Princess by the
Southern local School District continued, although schools were of- Meigs Dairy Service Unit.
AprD 12 - One person was killed
ficially open.
and
two others injured Ill a twoMarch 9 - The Southern Local
vehicle
accident oo Stale Route 338.
Board of Education stated that there
Aprill3Jeannie C. Riley was anCHEVETTE 2 DR. &amp; 4 DR.
was not enough money in the district
nounced
to
be the featured atto grant teachers a 1.111 index salary
traction at the Big Bend Regatta.
MONZA CPE 2 X 2
increase.
"
Her
show
was
scheduled
for
Friday,
March 10 - Bill Baer, president of
CITATION 2 DR &amp; 4 DR V6
the Southern Local Teachers June 22.
April
IS·
The
Middleport-Pomeroy
Association, announced that the
board was allegedly holding back Rotary Club held its annual Easter
district fWlds from the teachers egg hunt at the Middleport Park.
Aprill6 -Middleport Mayor Fred
association.
Hoffman
announced that HUD had
March 12 - The Board d.
approved
a $330,300 grant for the
Education of the Southern . Local
village.
School District filed for an inAprill7- The Meigs Local Board
junction against the striking
of
Education was presented a report
teachers and classified employes ·
oo
the condition of the roof and
"Your l:hevy Dealer"
honoring the strike . The injuctioo,
POMERO~
structure
rJ. the nine-year old Meigs
fUed in the Meigs COWJty Conunon
Open
Even111gs
Iii
8
p.m.
High
School.
According
to
the
report
Pleas Court, would have required
teachers to cease striking and return the roof was in ''deplorable conto their jobs.
March 13 - Southern Local
District Schools were back in
regular session, foUowillj! the settlem~t of a four-day teachers strike
in the district Teachers did receive
the 1.111 index salary.
Marcil 15- Alargedrain tube was
installed behind the Pomeroy
Elementary playground, in an effort
to dry out the hill in back of the
school before more perffianent
measures would be laken.
March 17 - The Meigs High
School concert band received a "I",
(1 J Does your dealer and salesman try
which way is the best and cheapest for
the highest rating possible, in the
and help you buy the car that is right for
you? They should.
District Conce t Band Competition
you? They should.
(4) Does your salesman give you a ·
held al j\thens High School.
(2) Does your salesman explain all about
demonstration ride and explain the car's
March 18 - Work continued at the
the warranty, gas mileage? J;Joes he show
capabilities and all equipment on it? He
site d. the Meigs CoWJty Multiyou how everything on the car works? He
should,
PuJllOSC Building on. MWberry Ave.
should.
(SJ Most of all, after you buy the car, does
The proj«;t was designed to house a
(3) Does your salesman or dealer explain
the
dealer and salesman see to It that you
senior citizen center, health departall the ways you can finance the car and
have the best possible service for your
ment, mental health facilities, and
car? They should.
other.ofllces.
March ·19 - Pomeroy Village
·''
Council was faced with monetary
proble1111, eaused by many major
projects necessary for the town . A
1
5
me and one-half mill levy was
...
'
proposed.
March 2ll - The Meigs Local
Board d. Education planned an auction of all unused buildings. These
included the Rutland gymnasium,
the Pomeroy Junior and Senior High
Schools, and a ((l'mer church
building which · the dislrict owns,
Call o~ see one of ~hese Friendly Salesmen: J,D. Story, . Jimmy Deem or Bill
near the junior hig!J school.
Nelson. Don't buy any car, New or Used, till you check with us, I think we f8A
March 21 - The Meigs County
save you monfi!y.
, .
• ·
··
'
·
Spelling Bee was held, with Rhonda
!Uebel, Eastern Jllnior High, lind
Jodi Harrison, Salisbury ElementarY, being the champion and nannerup, res)le(:tlvely.
March 22 - · The prpp"sed
Syntcuse-Raclne . ~anal Sewage

.

Notices
'MEIGS
COUNTY
HUMANE SOCIETY. 992·
62/IJ. Pets available for
adoption and Information
service.
1nvestlgatlve
Agent.
GUN SHOOT EVERY
SUNDAY 1 PM. FACTORY
CHOKE DNL Y. RACINE
GUN CLUB.
GON SHOOT: Racine
Volunteer Fire Dept.
Every Saturday. 6:30 p.m.
At their b\JIIdlngln Bashan.
Factory choke guns only.
GUN SHOOT every Sunday
12:00. Factory choke only.
Com Hollow Gun Club.
Rutland. Proceeds donated
to Boy Scout Troop 249.
I PAY highest prices
possible for gold and silver
coins, rings, lewelry, etc.
Contact Ed Burken Barber
Shop, Middleport.
ATTENTION:
(IM ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
pay cash or certified check
tor antiques and collec·
tlbles or entire estates.
Nothing too large. Also,
guns, pocket watches and
coin collections. Call 614·
767·3167 or 557·3411.
BUYING U.S. SILVER
COINS DATED 1964 OR
EARLIER
(ANY
AMOUNT). DON 'T LOSE
MONEY, SIMPLY PICK
UP THE PHONE AND
DIAL
614 ·992 · 5113,
BROWN'S. .
MEIGS County Fish and
Game Club regular man·
thlymeetlng, Sat., Jan. 5th
at SM.de • Valley Club
House. Bring a friend .

Services Offered
HAVE VACANCY In
private home for elderly
only. Board, room and
laundry. 992·/IJ22 . No
drinking allowed.

COAL,

For Sale
LIMESTONE .

sand~

gravel,

excelsior Salt Works,

APPLES
CIDER ·
HONEY. Fitzpatrick Or·
chard, State . Route 68'1.
Phone Wilkesville, 669·
378.5.

harness.

Horses

and

ponies. Ruth Reeves. 614·
698·3290. lording and
Riding Lessons and Horse
·care products. Western
boots. Children's $15.50.
Adults $29.00.
RISING STAR Kennel.
Boarding. Caii36Hl292.
POODLE GROOMING.
Judy Taylor. 614·367·7220.
HILLCREST KENNELS .
Boarding, all breeds. Clean
lndoor·outdoor facilities .
AlSo AKC . registered
Dobermans. 614·416·n95.

Real Estate for Sale ·
VERY NICE 3 · bedroom
trailer. 2 complete baths, 5
acres of land. 742·2542 or
742 -2324 for complete
details.
FIVE ROOMS and bath, all
electric home, 1 acre of
land . 992 ·2711.

$370 per thousand for en·
velopes you mall. Postage
paid. Free. MAP, Box .47,
Buchtel, OH 45716.

FARM ON SR 1.(1 above
Wolfe "Pen Store. Phone
992·7559.

Mobile Homes • Sale
1972 LYNN HAVEN 14x65 3
bedroom
1970 Vlndale 12x63 with ex·
pando, 2bedr.
1970 New Moon 12&lt;/IJ 3 bdr.
1973 Skyline 12x55 2

THREE BEDROOM home,
appro&lt; . 1 acre. Good
location. SR 689. Call 9'12·
3389.

}

-HOBSTffiER
REALTY

1972 Bonanza 12x52, 2 bedr.
B &amp; S MOBILE HOME
SALES, PT. PLEASANT,
wv. 304-675·-1424.

:PHONE 742·2003

For Sale
APPLES - ROME beauty
apples at Sol per bu. Best for
apple butter. Call 669-3785,
Fitzpatrick Orchard, SR

NEW LISTING - E&lt;·
ceptlonal buy. 2 homes
on Beech Grove Road .
Bot~ In excellent shape.
Live In one and rent the
other. Situated on 10
good acres. call forall
details . Good Income
producing property.
MIDDLEPORT - E&lt;·
ecutlve style 5 bedroom
home. 2 full baths,
modern kitchen, family
room, living room and
full basement. Many

-

WOOD BURNING _stoves
- fireplace Inserts at the
Riverside Plreplace, 514 E.
Main, Pomeroy . Open
Tues.·Frl., Sat. 9·1, hi.

nice features
acres

17 cubic foot refrigerator,
StOO. 2 Firestone snow
tires. Call 9'12-2759.
firewood ,
priced. 742·

ONE redlick coon hound, 2 ZENITH television for par·
trained beagles, 3 white ts. 992·7015.
English bulldog puppies, 3
rabbits, ~oes, I buck. 742· ·UTILITY TOOL chest for
2521.
plclr.up, $75. 1nqulre at 400
Lasley St., Pomeroy, OH.
GIVE A CUTE liveable pup _
a future. Adopt an orphan ,-~
·~
from your Humane ;
HOTPOINT
SOCiety. Shots, wormi!d
Donations appreciated.
992-62/IJ.
GENERAL

-::::;;;:_;:::;:::;:;:::;::==.;

Simmons Olds-Cadillac;

..,

Inc~·

~

'1

Means A Great Deal For You

' '-''I

1978 CADILlAC ELDORADO CPE., 14,000 Miles ....... !8695 ·;
1975 OLDS LUX. SED..... ;.............................. 1 1995 '~
•
.
11 95
1975 OLDS
CUT.
SUP.
SED
.......................
,
.....
5 '""
""
1976 OLDS 88 ROYALE CPE ............................12495 ,;
1975 OLDS 88 ROYALE S£0 ............................11695 ~
"'
1977 CAD. CPE. DEVILLE .............................. .'6495 .
1974 OLDS CUT. SUP. CP£.; ...........................11695 "
• •I I

I

1974 OLDS CUT. SUP. CPE .............................11695 .;.
1976 OLDS ROYAL CPE .............................. 11895 ·:.:.
1977 OLDS CUT. SUP. CPE. BROUGHAM .............. 3995 ~
1

1977 DODGE 100 'h TON . W!TOPPER ................

'5295 .""':~

1977 MERCURY cOUGAR XR7 CP.E................ ~ .. 13495 ~~;
..

1976 OLDS CUT. "S" SED.....................~ ....... 13495 .;
i975 BUICK ESTATE WAGON........~ ..........., ...... 1iB95 .~.
1976 BUICK REGAL CPE...................·............. 11895 ·2
'

"'·

See One of These Courteous sal.. men
PeteBui'rls, Marvin keebaugh, George Harris
,

,

r

SIMMONS
OLDS-CADILLACJNC.
.
,
.
. .
"Ye.u'll Like Our Qualify Way of ~In• Business"
' . I .,

.

I• '

992·5342 POMEROY .

. ·,

I

•

'.

'

•

j

I

~

Open Evenlnll 6t00+-tll 5:80P.M. sat;

"

'". .
•'

.."'
'
II

""
It
I

...."'.

from

chen

has

garage

disposal
and
dishwasher. Situated on
a little over an acre.
Must see to apprec late
workmanship. Sells for
$.45 ,/IJO .00.
Our homes are selling.
We can help our
qualified buyers find
financing. Coli us and
discuss your Real
Est1t1 problems, we 1tl
be gllld to help.
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.
Phone 742·2003
Velma Nlclnsloy, Assoc.
Phone 742·3092
George 5. Hobstener Jr.
1 raker 992-5739

ELECTRIC

Headquorters
Auto Sales
ApPIIIRC~I..
·
"lifo
~ Sorvlc.
STOCK CAR. Howe
chassis, 350 4 bolt main
POMEROY
Chevy, Franklin quick
change rear end, motor
I
LANDMARlt51 LVER DOLLARS, $13" buill to maximum, all new
AND UP, SILVER parts. New and extra tires. · - · - JIC~W.Carsoy .
CHANGE, $12 PER E&lt;tra parts and rims. llliQ
M1r.
.
DOLLAR, GOLD COINS $5,()00. Can be seen on a
Plloneft1·2111
AND . ITEMS AT ·DAILY Saturday, Twp. Rd. · 27, •
MARKET PRICES. CON· Dexter, at Slater's reslden·
· TACT ED BURKETT ce.
Real Estate for Sale
BARBER SHOP, MID·
DLEPORT, OH. OR CALL
1975 Manto Carlo, excellent
992-3476.
.
condition, $3250. 992·23n or
"2-6114.
PAYING $14.50 AND UP
FOR SILVER DOLLARS,
:5sf'O"FE 0CONVENTIONAL .FINANCING POR
$13.20 FOR SILVER 1974 JEEP CherOkee, P&lt;&gt;$1·
DOWN.
.. ~R HOMES FOR AS LOW AS 5'!6
CHANGE, GOLD COINS track, all new radial winter
tires.
completelY
AND MISC . ITEMS AT overhauled
and checked
HONEST UP·TO·DATE out for winter.
, JUST LISTED -Good 3 bedrm. hoUSe with kitchen,
PRICES. CONTACT ED dillon . 614-985-4209.A·1 con·
dining &amp; bath, City water and septic. Nice vinyl
BURKETT
BARGER
siding. Located In Pomeroy Corp. Prlce&lt;l atSU,900.
SHOP, MIDDLEPOR~
PRICI! DRASTICALLY REDUCED- On this nice
OH. OR CALL 9'12 ..3476 AF· 1974 · Plymouth Scamr,,
3 bod room house with large living room &amp; kitchen,
custom Interior~ 6 cv ,,
TER 5:00P.M.
bath, plenty of closets, b\JIIt·lncablnets, etc. Steve&amp;
auto .. $1800 or' trade. 7G·
refrlg.
Large storage building with concrete floor.
2451.
.
Large lot wtlh plenty of shrubbery . Located In Mid·
dleport. Reduced for quick saleto $28,000.
Giveaway
1961 Camara 396 4-spetd,
BEAUTY SALON - F\JIIY equipped, read-,. to go. In·
Hurst rear spoiler, black on
eludes two working stations and live rooms, bath.
HEAL THY DOGS, pup· black.
Cragars, 'other ex·
Cold drink machine, etc. A mon~y·maker In good
pies, shots, wormed. Husky tras. excellent
location, In Racine. Priced at $25,000.
shape.
Call
elkhound,
shepherd,
$11,000 - Trailer &amp; Lot In Racine. 3 BR, all
Pomeranian, English Set· 9-49·~181 .
carpeted, front Porch with awning, WOOd underplnn·
ter, mixed breed. Humane
lng, also lncludM pool tor the children. Anxious to
1976 ·'12 ton pickup truck In
SOCiety, 992-62/IJ.
sell.
good condition. 992 .. 5786
SYRACUII -Nice 3 BR home, extra large LR,
PUPS TO GO to good from 9·5 p.m. .
equipped kit,, washer, dryer, full basement, central
home. Make nice .pets for
air, breezeway leading to garage. Well cared for
1975 4·dor Ford Landau,
children. 9'12-55.57.
ttouse has manv eKtras, several fruit trees of dlf·
P.S., P.B., all power. Ex·
fereot varieties and nice garden. see to Appreciate.
cellent condition. $2495.
Very nice location In lower syracuse on st. Rt. 124.
THREE MALE puppies, 8 call
992·SI04or9192·2238.
Prtsed t\U63,9GD.
_ ..
weeks bid. 992·7853.
TIII.AILIR -2 Bill on peaceful side ilreel, all equip·
Pod kitchen Including dinette set. Must sell. $10~.
NIW.- WON'T LAST -4 yts. old, 3 .BR, bath &amp;
uHII!In, kitchen w·dlshwaaher, D.R. w-slldlng glau
Forltent
doors to patio, on nearly. '4 acre. Carpeted In
The. Union l!latloll4'
MOBILE Home
.b eaullfultnte. l-44,900.
•
·Shltlttlcal Yearbboil: repor. COUNTRY
Park, Route 33, ft9rlh of
MINI PARM - Beautiful brick bl-llllol With 3
tl tllil In 19'11 the United Pomeroy. Large tots.C.II
. tbodrm., large living room with fireplace. Totet olec·
1rlc lnd tully Insulated. All hardWood f'-S. Base·
Slates led the wcrld ln.the . 992·7479.
-mentcould ba tlnlsll«&lt; for extra living quarters. At·
IIIIIIlber rillelevlllon letlln
!ached garago. 3 large hot hOUses and rn,ny.extras
3 AND 4 RM fumlshed ap·
uae - 1~ mlllloo. 'lbe · IS.
on s ecrts. Loc. close 10 Racine. Asking $63~.
Phone 9'12·5-134, '
Sovl~t U!llon reported
CHESTI!R - 4 BR home, hardwood floor~. large
mare than oa m1D190 aeta, TWO BEDROOM trailer ..
LR, family rm., garage, outbuilding, fruit trees and
garden space. A5klng~.ta.ooo.
.
·
Japan bad 31.M6 miWcn .Adults only 992·3324.
l'AMtLY
HO~I"-··L!Its
01
poulbllltles
with
this
•1111 tbe Federal ftepullllc
nice 2 story. Many l.eatures, central air, bullt·ln ap·
.o( Germany 19.2t! mlllloo. . TWO BEDROOM fumlshtd
pllancn, all c•rpeled, good Investment with several
I~ country aenlng
trailer
_,...._ -·
ntco .blldlng ,loll. On approx. acres In the center
off Rt. •7, 6- mlln from
l!f.lll~!_ne. Asklr!U54.000.
.
Pomeroy FrHzor ·end oxLOTI 01' LOT• ,_;_ From 1 to 75 acres, bordering
Ire 1tor'loi.o, · $135 plus
~~lltln end lewn care.
fPOn:ler'~. .
". ~ ·- --·
Dop~slt
. required .. ·
I YEA Ill OLD HOMI, J Bill, dining and utility room, ·
Avel~• eltw J1111. 1. 915·
kit. O&lt;jul~ W·SIOW lnd' retrlg. MOIIIY carpelld, '
:19-19.
toreoct efr' gufurnaco, 1 yr. oJd ,Ger-, a cOtTipte" ·
, trailer - ·UP With nat. gas tap and Nptlc can' add
' '
Income. bver 2 acrn. $29,900. Call for tp"polntment.
FOUR' ROOMS .a..d llllffl,,
· Juat off At. 7111110W Middleport.
Gas forced air futn~. • ·
2734..
•

··-·=··

.

across

Eastern Hlgh. very
good building site. Ask·
lng S7,ooo.oo.
RUTLAND Total
electric, J bedroom,
brick home on Main
Street . l'h baths,
modern kitchen, dining
room and full basement.
Asking $43,500.00.
NEW LISTING -Cozy
3 bedroom home In
Syracuse on Cherry
Street. Living room, kit·
chen, bath and base·
1-I!Wllt... sma 11 lot with
building . A real b\Jy at"
only S10,ooo.oo. Beitel
check thIS one out! 1
NEW LISTING -Quail·
ty. built new home. 3
bedrooms, bath, utility
and living room. Kit·

UPRIGHT plano. Priced to
sell. GOod condition. 742·
2303.

~-14.

to th is

home. Call for an appt.
NEW LISTING - 2.&lt;41

WHITE WHIRLPOOL
dryer, good running con·
dillon. $125. Call 98.5-4276.

CURED
reasonably

. ,CENTRAL REALTY CO.

-

-·

~-

,'

•

•

•

'

,

·-

'

I

,

'

"-

I

WANT 10 SlLL?., Gin .,l'i·A.t;AU.' ·
ciliL~ iiMMY"~iii!'MLA•s0¢1A't'lfV;9-Uii

•

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION
Vinyl &amp;

H. L WHITESEL

Olt NAN~ -!,.~'•IllS, AlfO~IATI • ..
',
· f4f•
trMf.21t1
· . . •. •:

-

OHIO VAllEY
ROOFING

ROOFING

Aluminum Siding
el nsU)ollon

All types roof work, new

• Stortn Doors

NICE PIGS for sale. Wor·
med, castrated. 949-2857.
Pets for Sa I e
HOOF HOLLOW, English
'and Western. Saddles and

Inc . ~

E. Main st., Pomeroy, 992·
31191.

Business Opp'ty
CASH IN ON every con·
servallon, full or part lime.
Timely revolutionary new
healing product now being
Introduced. Ground floor
opportunity to develop
sales for $300 retail unit.
Pomeroy and surrounding
area available. Investment
of $1,000 setured by In·
ventory. Send name, ad·
dress and home no.to Myco
Thermal Art Sales, c·o BO&lt;
729·M, The Oally sentinel,
Pomeroy, OH 457111.

689.

Business Services

calcium

chloride, fertilizer , dog
food, and all types of salt.

WILL DO odds and ends,
paneling, floor tile, ceiling
Hie. Fred Miller, 992-6338.

bedroom

•

• Storm WIndows
• Repl.cement Win dows

Free Estimate

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

or repair gutters and
downspouts,
gutter
cleaning and painting.
All work guaranteed.
Free Estimates
.Reasonable Prices
Call Howard
949-2162

Roofing, gutters, and

downspouts.
Estimates. All

guar11nteecl. 20 ve•rs.x ·

-lente. ·c.ll Athens,
collect, Gerald Cluk
79i-4157 or Tom Hoskins
797-2745.

12·7·1 mo.

11 · l4 :mo.

10·19·1 mo.

N. L CONSTRUCTION

Roger Hysell
Garage

ADD DNS &amp;
REMODEUNG

Quality con11ruction at
reasonilble rates.

14 mite off Rt: 7 bv·pass .

on St. Rt. 124 toward

Rutland. ·

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
,
Phone 992-5682
OO·ttc ;J

C. R. MASH
VINYL &amp; ALUM.
SIDING
*New Kitchens
•Bathrooms ·
•New Home
*Add ons
•Remoldings
•Free E~timates
1·4-!Pd.)
Real Estate for Sale
F INANCING ·VA·FHA LO·
ANS. LOW OR NO OOWN
PAYMENT. PURCHASE
OR
REFINANCE .
IRELAND · MORTGAGE,
n E. STATE, ATHENS.
614·592·3051.
SIX ROOM hou'e and bath
In Rutland, OH, on corner
of Bryant Rd. and Main St.,
out of water. No reasonable
offer refused . Phone 742·

Free
work

Gutter work, down
spouts, some concrete
work, walks and

Remodeling
Additions
Siding
Brick Work

driveways.

Block work
concrete Finishing

!FREE ESTIMATES)
Reduced Winter Rates

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Guaranteed Work
Free Estimates
After S P.M. 992·5547

RACINE , O.
949·2741 or
992·7314
12·28-pd.

12·1nmo. pd.

JIM &amp;WAYNE'S
PLUMBING REPAIR
Let us

-

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING
Federal Housing &amp;
veterans Admin. Loans.

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

Wrap Your
Pipes for
Cold Weather
cheap Rates
Quality Service
Call 992-2852
or 992-7235
12·13·pd .
WILL HAUL limestone and

gravel . Also,, lime hauling

and spreading. Leo Morris
Trucking. Phone 742·2455.
PAINTING ANO

sand ·

blasting. Free estimates.

Hours 9-1 M., W., F.
Other times by appoint·
ment.
107 Sycamore (Rear
Pomeroy, 0 . .

CALL 992-7544
SEWING
Repa i rs,

makes.

MACHINE
ser\lice,

all

992 ·2284 .

The

Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Sales
and Service. We sharpen

Scissors.

call949·26116.

DOZER , END Loader,
brush hog . Will do
base"'ents, ponds, brush,

timber,

land

clearing.

Charles Butcher. 742·2940

2063.

EXCAVATING, dozer .
loader and backhoe work :
dump trucks and lo·b&lt;&gt;ys
for hire, will haul fill dirt,
limestone and
gravel. Call Bob or Roger

top soil,

Jeffers, day phone 992·7089,
night phone 992 ·3525 or 992·
5232 ..
HOWERY AND MARTIN
Excavating,

systems, dozer,

Rt. 1.(1. Phone 1
7331 or 742·2593.

septic

backhoe.
(6$4) 698·

AUTOMOBILE
SURANCE . been
216 E. !iol'!'"d SlrHI .

$1,000.00 DOWN - large
11 room home, lde8rtor
a family. 1'h baths, nice

carpeting, paneled kit.,
baemenl and 2 car
garage. $17,500.
LOT 77x264 2
bedroom home with
bath, T.P. water, all
electric, on R1. 7 In Tup·
pers Plalos. St,OOO.OO
DOWN.
NEW LISTING - 2.90
acres near Rutland on
hard road. water tap,
septic tank. electric and
good garden land.
SALEM CENTER One acre on Rt. 124.
Three

bedrooms, 1'h

baths, F.A. heat, rural
water tap and Ohio
Power. $2,000.00 DOWN,
G. I. NOTHING.
$750.00 OOWN - 8

rooms ~·~~I

storm

window ,
·•t. gas
F.A heat, ba.
ntand
1 acre.
S10,5oo .
BARGAIN.
H'l ACRES
woods and native stone,

..a room home, beth, city
water, and oas furnace.

$1,000.00 down . Excellent b\Jy.
$1,750.00 DOWN - A
real 9 room home. 2
baths, equipped kitchen,
formal dining room,
baement,

furnace,

5

bedrooms and 2 car
garage.
.
WANTED:
LITTLE
FA,MS ON THE EDGE
OF TOWN, CALL
992-3:W QR 992-3!176.

Housing
Head uartets

9'12-2259
NEW LISTING - In·
come producing, 2
apartments, walk to

town,

always

r~nted,

call for details.
RUT_LAND - 2 story
frame &amp; brick, up lo' 4
Bdrms . , 2 baths,
fireplace,

1 1!~

acres.

IN ·
can ·
vour

eel ted?
Lost
operator's license? Phone

99.2·21.(1.

IN STOCK for Immediate

delivery : various sizes of

pool kits. Do·it·Yourself or
let us Install for you. D.
Bumgardner

Inc.

Sates,

9'12·5724.

$26,881 .00.
SYRACUSE - 3 year
old ranch, 3 Bdrms ..
equipped kit., base··
ment, garage, other
features. $.4.1,000.00.
CHESTER' Small

BRADFORD, Auctioneer,
Complete Service. Phone
949·2487 or 949·2000. racine.
- Ohio, Crill Bradford.

barn, remodeled home,
rrew kit., . new bath, all
carpeted, etc. $38,950.00.
MIDDLEPORT - 1
floor plan home, 2
Bdrms., large lot, some
carpeting and remodel·
lng. $16,200.00.
POMEROY - Beautiful
home all features. ex·
cellent condition, must
be seen to be ap·
preclated. $40,000.00.
BUILDING SITES - In
new subdiVISion, start at
$2,500.00.
.
WE HAVE FINANCING
AVAILABLE
FOR
MOST 01' OUR HOMES
AT 11 •h'J6 Interest, 30
yrs. to pay, 3'!6 down on
lsi $25,000.00, 5% on
balllnce. VA. No Down
Pay.
'
REALTOR
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
9921191
ASSOCIATES
Rover &amp; Dottle Tu n11r
742-2474
Jean Truuell949·2660
OFFICE PHONE

appliances. Lawn mower.

farm, 25 acres, fencing

992-2259

··HOMES FOR SALE
WE ~RRANG_E_ ANANCING FOR AS ·LOW , ·
AS 5% DOWN AND 30 YRS. TO' PAY

BOWERS
ELWOOD
REPAIR - sweepers,
tOllsters, irons, all small
Next to State Hlghway
Garage on Route 7, 98.5·
3825.

"

S &amp; G Carpet Cleaning.
Steam

cleaned.

Free

estimate.
Reasonable
rates. Stolchguard. 992·
6309 or 742·2348.
WALL PAPERING and
painting. 742·2328.
PIANO TUNING. Lane
Daniels. New phone num·
ber, 742·2951. Service to
schools and home since

1965.

DR IV~ . All mE
SAVE-A' Wl
RUBBER BACK
CARPET

'4!!up.

.

Caih ~Carry
.

SAlE ON ALL ·

I,

Ll KE NEW - Quiet country living In this tree
bedroom, 2.balh ranch. Over an acre of ground with
a .SPlit rail fence, garage and workshop. Fireplace,
central heat and air cond. $44,900.00. ·
POMEROY - A beautiful 11n1e starter home ,, or
retirement couple. Two bedroom and beth. Large
IIVI!lll room · nice kitchen. Full basement..
$17,5j)O.OO. ·
MIDDLEPORT - 2 b~room brick only 1 block
1r0111 town, lOW ~ll.lltles . A bargain etS12,500. •

ltLSTCK.I'. .
. ·. '9'1,dup
.lno1.U41d_wlll!•d fiit ·

"GOOD REMNAN.l
SElif.TJON.
6'1t12'to
12'xY·
-..
\

IIIUTLANO :... ., homos on Salem Street. Ta,.e your .
chQI~e or,liUV' both and rent !hom. 11.2,000 each. ~
'" '

.

CALL 992~2342

__ _

1111 Cftlllls, ar1nch Mana,.,, Homo ·"2-244f
:.".R. .'t 00Wf!lll'l, ~!~110r 1 Hlilllo 992-3731 .

MIDDLEPORt; OHIO

' $.3SU'anil.~_p
Cali742·2211

�FEBRUARY
Feb. 2ll - Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman announced that he would
seek reelection in the J Wle primary
election.
Feb. 21 - Meigs COWJty received
reimbursement of funds spent in the
voter regislra lion program.
Feb. Zl -9Ruth Moore, 2&amp;-year employee ci the Meigs County Courthouse, was honored on her
retirement by other courthouse
workers.
Feb. 25- The Pomeroy parking lot
fil!iQil with water, and flood warnings were posted for the Ohio River
Viuley area.
Feb. 26 - For the second lime in
less than three months, the Ohio
River had risen above the 46.5 foot
flood stage in Pomeroy. Milch of
East Main St. was flooded, and the
water was ellpecled to crest at the
least figure of 49 feet.
Feb. 27 - The river was expected
to crest al50.5 feel early in the day,
but it kept rising, and at 9 a.m.,
stood at 51.1 feet. The area between
Mechanic st. and Butternut Ave.
was flooded, as well as most of Main
St., Pomeroy. Middleport, however,
was practically untouched by the
flood. Few persons were forced to
move in that lime.
Feb. 211- POOleroy, hit hard by the
flooding of the Ohio River, breathed
a sigh of relief as the waters began a
painfully slow receding process. The
river had crested at 51.4 feet.

District received a $659,300 grant
from the FanJI!!rs' Horne Administration.
. March 23 - The Meigs County
C&lt;mmissioners appointed Michael
L. Swisher, Syracuse, as a new administrator of the Meigs County
Welfare Dejlartmenl
March 25 - River traffic returned
to nonnal, when two barges blocking
a gate at the Gallipolis Locks and
Dams were removed ..
March 27 - Charles L. Dowler,
resigned as superintendent of the
Meig~ Local School District, effective Aug. I.
March 28 - The apnual birthday
party d. the Drew \Wbster Post 39,
American Legion, was held ,
hon(l'ing Kennit Walton as "Outstanding Citizen", and Joe Zwilling
as "Legionnaire d. the Year".
March 29 - Eastern Local's
Board of Educatioo approved permanent appropriations for 1979,
totalling $1,492,058.
March 31 - The Meigs Local
Junior and Senior HighSchool Vocal
Department presented its first night
production d. "l'he Sound d. Music "
to a fuU crowd at the Larry Morrison
GymnasiuiTL

'Lori ~s Miracle'
featured program

""

dilion, " and the walls of the high
school were bowing, possibly due to
defective steel 111ed in construction.
April 18 -· One person was killed
and another injured in an accident
on State Route 7.
Aprill9 - Janet Horky, Lori Kloes,
Traeey Jeffers, and Charlene
Goeglein, were announced to be the
Meigs High School Buckeye Girls'
State delegates.
April 21 - Guy R. Russell, Minersvllle, received his 50-year membership pin for the Warren Council
No . 58 Royal and Select Master
Masons, his third 50-year pin, each
fl. the three for a different Masonic
organization.
•
April 22 - Sixteen Meigs High
School juniors and seniors were inducted into the National Hooor
Society.
April . Z4 - The Meigs County
Regional Planning Commission
received notice of the possibility of a
$10,000 FHA grant to be used in implementing an industrial slestudy. .
April 25 - Bruce Fisher, Michael .
McGuire, Daniel Thomas, and
Richard Williamson were announced to be the Meigs High School

7-,-I))e ~!Jy_&amp;tltinel, Mlddleport·~omeroy,O., Friday, Jan. 4, .1980_

• I

WANT AD

CHARGES

LOST: Reward for walker
'hound , Long Hollow
vic inity. :JO.i·675-lm.
LOST : • Snowville area .
Female
blue tick
coonhound. If seen,c all
Paul Phllllput742-:1209.

Misty Lyons ·

WAITRESS WANTED,
over 21 . Night shift. Frlen·
dly Tavem, 992·9'175. ·

Buckeye Boys' state delegates.
April 26 - The Racine Dental
Clinic, a component of the Meigs
County Rural Health Initiative
program, was announced to be
opening with a short lime span.
April 29 - A Meigs County man
shot and wounded three peiJPl~
before taking his own life at his Bald
Knob resident.

1977 CHEVROLET........................ s3895

1977 DODGE MONACO ................... $2695

1975 PLYMOUTH FURY •••••••••••••••••••s1495

1974 CHEV. /z l PICKUP
,. ••••••••••••••••. 1495
1969.CHEVROLET /z T. PICKUP. •••••••••••.'949

New '80 Chevies
Availab'e
fMMEDIATE DfLIVERY

..
'

READ THESE 5 CONSUMER CAR BUYING GUIDES:
DO YOU SHOP WHEN YOU GO TO.BUY AN£W OR USED CAR?
YOU SHOULD. CHECK THESE s· IMPORTANT ITEMS.

4 USED CAR SPECIALS FOR

ARY

1977 FORD PINTO_. ....................... ~.~~::~· ~-~ ::.~.!~~.~~:.~?. .~~-~~ .~~~ '2600
1977 TOYOTA CEUCA .................... ~.~~::.~ ~-~~:·. ~-~~~~~...~~.~~-~~~~.~?.~ ... '4495
1977 FORD F-100 PICKUP. ........... ... :..~?~.~~.~~~~:.~.~~~:.~~~-~~~.~~.~~~....'3195
1977.BUICK CENTURY.................~.~~:~~~!~::.~:~::.~:.~; .~?~.~~-~.~~.~.~~ ..'1895

I

~

NOTICE

' · WANT-AD

~VERTISIN~
· DEADIJNES

&amp;mday

tP.M.
Frldoyanm-

SPECIAL

1978 GMC PICKUP 4 WHEEL DRIVE

"'·'

'..•.

•
l

•

'5995

Auto., goodcond.

•

1978 Ford F-250 Club Cab ...............................13995
Good cond., auto., P.S., P.B., air, CB radio.

1973 Ford

1fz

Ton Std........................... : ......... '895

Long bed, stand., 6 cyl.

1974 Chevy C20 Aut. LWB .............................. 11295
'

1977 Ford Mustang ................................... ... 12695
Hatchback, .fsp., 4 cyl .

1977 ChevY Nova 4 dr aut., PS, PIL ..................'3495

MARTIN'S APPRAISAL.
: Stop, think, are you about
to lose money? Over 25
years e&lt;perlence In buying
and S&lt;HIIng. Will appraise
new, used or antique furniture. One piece or complete household. Gold,
sliver and other old ~olns,
china, glass, old tovs, dolls,
Iron banks, tools, antique
clothing, razors, pocket
knives and other old Items .
Call 992-6370.

1977 Ford LTD II Station Wagon ........................ 12595 .
.

OLD FURNITURE, Ice
boxes, brass beds, Iron
beds, desks, etc .. complete
households. Write M.D.
Miller. Rt. 4, Pomeroy or
caii9'12·77/IJ.
·

1&gt;162 .

Air, 6 cyl., low mileage.

.

wanted to Buy
CHIP WOOD. Poles· max.
diameter 10" on largest
end. $12 p-er ton. Bundled
slab. $10 per ton . Delivered
to Ohio Pallet Co., Rt. 2,
Pomeroy'9'12·2689.

~

1968 Chevy 1f2 Too•.•••.•.•.••.•.•..••••••••.••• •• •••••... sggs·

302, V·8, 9 pass,

EXPERIENCED
tax
preparers wanted. Hourly
rate and bonus plan. Full or
part·t·lme hours. Capital
Finance Services. Phone
992 .. 2111 today. Equal Op·
portunlty Employers. M·F.

LEGAL NOTICE
Notlceof
Appointment of ·
ANTIQUES,
FUR ·
FidUCiary
NITURE, glass, china,
Probate Court
anything. See or call Ruth
Meigs County; Olllo
Gosney, antiques, 26 N.
Estate of Woodrow R. 2nd, Middleport, OH. 992~~~~~· deceased, Case No. 3161.
On Dec. 31, 1979, In the
ANTIQUif'POCKET watelgs County Probate ches.
to pay top
ourt, Case No. 22,929, Don dollar.Willing
llson, R.D. 2, Box 149, evenings. Call 1·592·2973
bany, Ohio, was aplnted Administrator of
e estatee of Woodrow B. OLD COINS, pocket wat·
llson, deceased,' late of R. . ches, class rings, wedding
bands, diamonds. Gold or
2, Albany, Ohio.
,.
Rob..-! E. Buck silver. Call J . A. Wamsley,
..
Probate Judge 742-2331. Treasure Chest
' ~ 11, 11, ltc
Coin Shop, Athens, OH. 592-

~

1

1975 Ford LTD 2 dr:............................... ,..... 1895
1975 ChiJSier Cordoba ........ ,..........................11695
. 2 Dr., P.S., P.B., air.

1974 Ford Station Wagon ................................. 1795

· PAY TOP dollar for
gold and sliver coins,
silverware, other gold and
sliver Items, lewelry, old
glass frames and antique
furnllura. Will buy one
piece or household. Call
992-6370.

Ranch style, auto .~ air.

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

992-2126

TEACHERS, community
workers: sell World Book.
Extra Income . Send
. resume to Box 486, Racine,
OH.

'

1977 CHEV. MONTE CARLO .............. 3695

1972 FORD MAVERICK 2 DR •••••••••••••• 895

Lost and Founil ·
LOST : Female blu·e tick
coon dog end male walker
In Cherry Ridge area.
Phone 992·5556.

Help Wanted
HIGH ·sCHOOL graduate
wllh grocery store ex·
perlence. Apply at Twin
City crateway, no phone
calls.

.1978 PLYMOUTH HORIZON .............. $4395

.

· Your Best Buys Are t'ound in the Sentinel Classifieds

A play, "Lori's Christmas
MJracle ", was a feature of the
children's program present411 at the
Antiquity Baptist &lt;hurch recently.
Roles for the play which had its
setting in the Hvtng room IX a
shepherd 's home, the day before
Christmas, were Legina uart, the
mother; Donlta Manuel, Lori; Jason
Shain, 'fln:un,Y ; RobinManuei,Jody,

APRIL
April! -A Meigs County resident
was charged with the alleged arson
of a car owned by Howard Searles,
Flatwoods Rd
April2 -Pomeroy Village Council
was faced with debts totaling approximately $13,000, incilrred by the
street
department.
MARCH
April
3 - Rick Crow, acting as
March I ,.... The Pomeroy business
of the CETA Plat Map
director
district began "clean up" work after
program,
and county engineer,
4 Door, ~ark red color with matching red vinyl trim , radio, air cond.,
being flooded for several days. The
automatic trans., power steering &amp; brakes . Rally wheels.
Wesley
Buehl
met with the Meigs
town began to revive as debris left
Qmnty Comrnissiooers to discuss
5
by the river was cleared away.
progmm
and
its
progress.
the
March 2 - Activity in Pomeroy
Local 1 owner, 350 V·8 engine, auto., P .S., P.B . • air cond., good tires,
April 4 - Plat maps for sections
resumed as businesses re~ned and
landau model, solid white color .
one and two of Bedford Township
cleanup procedures continued.
March 3 Government were completed, according to
5
procedures for making application Wesley Buehl, county engineer.
Auto. trans ., good tires. Lots of serviCe in this one.
AprilS -Syracuse Council agreed
for federal disaster fWJds to repair
to
amend
the
water
rate
ordinance
damaged county and township roads
were ouUined by the Meigs County for non-residents by reducing the
amount from$6.75 to$6.25.
4 door, small V-8, automatic, power steering, power brakes , locking
Conunissioners.
differential. air conditioning, clean interior, green .
April 6 - Columbia Gas of Ohio
March 4 - Corrective actioo was
started to drain lht! hillside behind received a map of land which
Pomeroy Elementary. The hill was showed in detail the :m-ooo acres of
land of the planned annexation.
4 Dr . Brougham, V-8, auto., P.S., P . B., air, local 1 owner car &amp; real
in danger of slipping and destroying
sharp.
ApriiiOThe
Meigs
County
Comthe fo111dalion d. the school.
rnissiooers received a disappointing
March 5 - Eastern Local School
respoose
from the state for highway
District Superintendent Clark Lees
caused by recent flooding.
damages
Custom Cpe ., V·8, auto. , air, P.S., P. B., clean interior, good tires .
announced his resignation, citing
According
to Rich Jones, presld~t
personal and professional reasons as
ci the Board fl. Coounissioners, not
5
1
the basis for his leaving.
effort
was
being
made
by
enough
March 7 - Teachers In the
Southern Local School District state cificials to Iring aid into the
1
walked cif their jobs in a strike ac- county.
April II - Janis Carnahan,
tion against the district's Board of
daughter
of Mr. ·and Mrs. James
Education.
Carnahan,
Racine, was named 1979
March 8 - The mike in the
Meigs
County
Da_iry Princess by the
Southern local School District continued, although schools were of- Meigs Dairy Service Unit.
AprD 12 - One person was killed
ficially open.
and
two others injured Ill a twoMarch 9 - The Southern Local
vehicle
accident oo Stale Route 338.
Board of Education stated that there
Aprill3Jeannie C. Riley was anCHEVETTE 2 DR. &amp; 4 DR.
was not enough money in the district
nounced
to
be the featured atto grant teachers a 1.111 index salary
traction at the Big Bend Regatta.
MONZA CPE 2 X 2
increase.
"
Her
show
was
scheduled
for
Friday,
March 10 - Bill Baer, president of
CITATION 2 DR &amp; 4 DR V6
the Southern Local Teachers June 22.
April
IS·
The
Middleport-Pomeroy
Association, announced that the
board was allegedly holding back Rotary Club held its annual Easter
district fWlds from the teachers egg hunt at the Middleport Park.
Aprill6 -Middleport Mayor Fred
association.
Hoffman
announced that HUD had
March 12 - The Board d.
approved
a $330,300 grant for the
Education of the Southern . Local
village.
School District filed for an inAprill7- The Meigs Local Board
junction against the striking
of
Education was presented a report
teachers and classified employes ·
oo
the condition of the roof and
"Your l:hevy Dealer"
honoring the strike . The injuctioo,
POMERO~
structure
rJ. the nine-year old Meigs
fUed in the Meigs COWJty Conunon
Open
Even111gs
Iii
8
p.m.
High
School.
According
to
the
report
Pleas Court, would have required
teachers to cease striking and return the roof was in ''deplorable conto their jobs.
March 13 - Southern Local
District Schools were back in
regular session, foUowillj! the settlem~t of a four-day teachers strike
in the district Teachers did receive
the 1.111 index salary.
Marcil 15- Alargedrain tube was
installed behind the Pomeroy
Elementary playground, in an effort
to dry out the hill in back of the
school before more perffianent
measures would be laken.
March 17 - The Meigs High
School concert band received a "I",
(1 J Does your dealer and salesman try
which way is the best and cheapest for
the highest rating possible, in the
and help you buy the car that is right for
you? They should.
District Conce t Band Competition
you? They should.
(4) Does your salesman give you a ·
held al j\thens High School.
(2) Does your salesman explain all about
demonstration ride and explain the car's
March 18 - Work continued at the
the warranty, gas mileage? J;Joes he show
capabilities and all equipment on it? He
site d. the Meigs CoWJty Multiyou how everything on the car works? He
should,
PuJllOSC Building on. MWberry Ave.
should.
(SJ Most of all, after you buy the car, does
The proj«;t was designed to house a
(3) Does your salesman or dealer explain
the
dealer and salesman see to It that you
senior citizen center, health departall the ways you can finance the car and
have the best possible service for your
ment, mental health facilities, and
car? They should.
other.ofllces.
March ·19 - Pomeroy Village
·''
Council was faced with monetary
proble1111, eaused by many major
projects necessary for the town . A
1
5
me and one-half mill levy was
...
'
proposed.
March 2ll - The Meigs Local
Board d. Education planned an auction of all unused buildings. These
included the Rutland gymnasium,
the Pomeroy Junior and Senior High
Schools, and a ((l'mer church
building which · the dislrict owns,
Call o~ see one of ~hese Friendly Salesmen: J,D. Story, . Jimmy Deem or Bill
near the junior hig!J school.
Nelson. Don't buy any car, New or Used, till you check with us, I think we f8A
March 21 - The Meigs County
save you monfi!y.
, .
• ·
··
'
·
Spelling Bee was held, with Rhonda
!Uebel, Eastern Jllnior High, lind
Jodi Harrison, Salisbury ElementarY, being the champion and nannerup, res)le(:tlvely.
March 22 - · The prpp"sed
Syntcuse-Raclne . ~anal Sewage

.

Notices
'MEIGS
COUNTY
HUMANE SOCIETY. 992·
62/IJ. Pets available for
adoption and Information
service.
1nvestlgatlve
Agent.
GUN SHOOT EVERY
SUNDAY 1 PM. FACTORY
CHOKE DNL Y. RACINE
GUN CLUB.
GON SHOOT: Racine
Volunteer Fire Dept.
Every Saturday. 6:30 p.m.
At their b\JIIdlngln Bashan.
Factory choke guns only.
GUN SHOOT every Sunday
12:00. Factory choke only.
Com Hollow Gun Club.
Rutland. Proceeds donated
to Boy Scout Troop 249.
I PAY highest prices
possible for gold and silver
coins, rings, lewelry, etc.
Contact Ed Burken Barber
Shop, Middleport.
ATTENTION:
(IM ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
pay cash or certified check
tor antiques and collec·
tlbles or entire estates.
Nothing too large. Also,
guns, pocket watches and
coin collections. Call 614·
767·3167 or 557·3411.
BUYING U.S. SILVER
COINS DATED 1964 OR
EARLIER
(ANY
AMOUNT). DON 'T LOSE
MONEY, SIMPLY PICK
UP THE PHONE AND
DIAL
614 ·992 · 5113,
BROWN'S. .
MEIGS County Fish and
Game Club regular man·
thlymeetlng, Sat., Jan. 5th
at SM.de • Valley Club
House. Bring a friend .

Services Offered
HAVE VACANCY In
private home for elderly
only. Board, room and
laundry. 992·/IJ22 . No
drinking allowed.

COAL,

For Sale
LIMESTONE .

sand~

gravel,

excelsior Salt Works,

APPLES
CIDER ·
HONEY. Fitzpatrick Or·
chard, State . Route 68'1.
Phone Wilkesville, 669·
378.5.

harness.

Horses

and

ponies. Ruth Reeves. 614·
698·3290. lording and
Riding Lessons and Horse
·care products. Western
boots. Children's $15.50.
Adults $29.00.
RISING STAR Kennel.
Boarding. Caii36Hl292.
POODLE GROOMING.
Judy Taylor. 614·367·7220.
HILLCREST KENNELS .
Boarding, all breeds. Clean
lndoor·outdoor facilities .
AlSo AKC . registered
Dobermans. 614·416·n95.

Real Estate for Sale ·
VERY NICE 3 · bedroom
trailer. 2 complete baths, 5
acres of land. 742·2542 or
742 -2324 for complete
details.
FIVE ROOMS and bath, all
electric home, 1 acre of
land . 992 ·2711.

$370 per thousand for en·
velopes you mall. Postage
paid. Free. MAP, Box .47,
Buchtel, OH 45716.

FARM ON SR 1.(1 above
Wolfe "Pen Store. Phone
992·7559.

Mobile Homes • Sale
1972 LYNN HAVEN 14x65 3
bedroom
1970 Vlndale 12x63 with ex·
pando, 2bedr.
1970 New Moon 12&lt;/IJ 3 bdr.
1973 Skyline 12x55 2

THREE BEDROOM home,
appro&lt; . 1 acre. Good
location. SR 689. Call 9'12·
3389.

}

-HOBSTffiER
REALTY

1972 Bonanza 12x52, 2 bedr.
B &amp; S MOBILE HOME
SALES, PT. PLEASANT,
wv. 304-675·-1424.

:PHONE 742·2003

For Sale
APPLES - ROME beauty
apples at Sol per bu. Best for
apple butter. Call 669-3785,
Fitzpatrick Orchard, SR

NEW LISTING - E&lt;·
ceptlonal buy. 2 homes
on Beech Grove Road .
Bot~ In excellent shape.
Live In one and rent the
other. Situated on 10
good acres. call forall
details . Good Income
producing property.
MIDDLEPORT - E&lt;·
ecutlve style 5 bedroom
home. 2 full baths,
modern kitchen, family
room, living room and
full basement. Many

-

WOOD BURNING _stoves
- fireplace Inserts at the
Riverside Plreplace, 514 E.
Main, Pomeroy . Open
Tues.·Frl., Sat. 9·1, hi.

nice features
acres

17 cubic foot refrigerator,
StOO. 2 Firestone snow
tires. Call 9'12-2759.
firewood ,
priced. 742·

ONE redlick coon hound, 2 ZENITH television for par·
trained beagles, 3 white ts. 992·7015.
English bulldog puppies, 3
rabbits, ~oes, I buck. 742· ·UTILITY TOOL chest for
2521.
plclr.up, $75. 1nqulre at 400
Lasley St., Pomeroy, OH.
GIVE A CUTE liveable pup _
a future. Adopt an orphan ,-~
·~
from your Humane ;
HOTPOINT
SOCiety. Shots, wormi!d
Donations appreciated.
992-62/IJ.
GENERAL

-::::;;;:_;:::;:::;:;:::;::==.;

Simmons Olds-Cadillac;

..,

Inc~·

~

'1

Means A Great Deal For You

' '-''I

1978 CADILlAC ELDORADO CPE., 14,000 Miles ....... !8695 ·;
1975 OLDS LUX. SED..... ;.............................. 1 1995 '~
•
.
11 95
1975 OLDS
CUT.
SUP.
SED
.......................
,
.....
5 '""
""
1976 OLDS 88 ROYALE CPE ............................12495 ,;
1975 OLDS 88 ROYALE S£0 ............................11695 ~
"'
1977 CAD. CPE. DEVILLE .............................. .'6495 .
1974 OLDS CUT. SUP. CP£.; ...........................11695 "
• •I I

I

1974 OLDS CUT. SUP. CPE .............................11695 .;.
1976 OLDS ROYAL CPE .............................. 11895 ·:.:.
1977 OLDS CUT. SUP. CPE. BROUGHAM .............. 3995 ~
1

1977 DODGE 100 'h TON . W!TOPPER ................

'5295 .""':~

1977 MERCURY cOUGAR XR7 CP.E................ ~ .. 13495 ~~;
..

1976 OLDS CUT. "S" SED.....................~ ....... 13495 .;
i975 BUICK ESTATE WAGON........~ ..........., ...... 1iB95 .~.
1976 BUICK REGAL CPE...................·............. 11895 ·2
'

"'·

See One of These Courteous sal.. men
PeteBui'rls, Marvin keebaugh, George Harris
,

,

r

SIMMONS
OLDS-CADILLACJNC.
.
,
.
. .
"Ye.u'll Like Our Qualify Way of ~In• Business"
' . I .,

.

I• '

992·5342 POMEROY .

. ·,

I

•

'.

'

•

j

I

~

Open Evenlnll 6t00+-tll 5:80P.M. sat;

"

'". .
•'

.."'
'
II

""
It
I

...."'.

from

chen

has

garage

disposal
and
dishwasher. Situated on
a little over an acre.
Must see to apprec late
workmanship. Sells for
$.45 ,/IJO .00.
Our homes are selling.
We can help our
qualified buyers find
financing. Coli us and
discuss your Real
Est1t1 problems, we 1tl
be gllld to help.
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.
Phone 742·2003
Velma Nlclnsloy, Assoc.
Phone 742·3092
George 5. Hobstener Jr.
1 raker 992-5739

ELECTRIC

Headquorters
Auto Sales
ApPIIIRC~I..
·
"lifo
~ Sorvlc.
STOCK CAR. Howe
chassis, 350 4 bolt main
POMEROY
Chevy, Franklin quick
change rear end, motor
I
LANDMARlt51 LVER DOLLARS, $13" buill to maximum, all new
AND UP, SILVER parts. New and extra tires. · - · - JIC~W.Carsoy .
CHANGE, $12 PER E&lt;tra parts and rims. llliQ
M1r.
.
DOLLAR, GOLD COINS $5,()00. Can be seen on a
Plloneft1·2111
AND . ITEMS AT ·DAILY Saturday, Twp. Rd. · 27, •
MARKET PRICES. CON· Dexter, at Slater's reslden·
· TACT ED BURKETT ce.
Real Estate for Sale
BARBER SHOP, MID·
DLEPORT, OH. OR CALL
1975 Manto Carlo, excellent
992-3476.
.
condition, $3250. 992·23n or
"2-6114.
PAYING $14.50 AND UP
FOR SILVER DOLLARS,
:5sf'O"FE 0CONVENTIONAL .FINANCING POR
$13.20 FOR SILVER 1974 JEEP CherOkee, P&lt;&gt;$1·
DOWN.
.. ~R HOMES FOR AS LOW AS 5'!6
CHANGE, GOLD COINS track, all new radial winter
tires.
completelY
AND MISC . ITEMS AT overhauled
and checked
HONEST UP·TO·DATE out for winter.
, JUST LISTED -Good 3 bedrm. hoUSe with kitchen,
PRICES. CONTACT ED dillon . 614-985-4209.A·1 con·
dining &amp; bath, City water and septic. Nice vinyl
BURKETT
BARGER
siding. Located In Pomeroy Corp. Prlce&lt;l atSU,900.
SHOP, MIDDLEPOR~
PRICI! DRASTICALLY REDUCED- On this nice
OH. OR CALL 9'12 ..3476 AF· 1974 · Plymouth Scamr,,
3 bod room house with large living room &amp; kitchen,
custom Interior~ 6 cv ,,
TER 5:00P.M.
bath, plenty of closets, b\JIIt·lncablnets, etc. Steve&amp;
auto .. $1800 or' trade. 7G·
refrlg.
Large storage building with concrete floor.
2451.
.
Large lot wtlh plenty of shrubbery . Located In Mid·
dleport. Reduced for quick saleto $28,000.
Giveaway
1961 Camara 396 4-spetd,
BEAUTY SALON - F\JIIY equipped, read-,. to go. In·
Hurst rear spoiler, black on
eludes two working stations and live rooms, bath.
HEAL THY DOGS, pup· black.
Cragars, 'other ex·
Cold drink machine, etc. A mon~y·maker In good
pies, shots, wormed. Husky tras. excellent
location, In Racine. Priced at $25,000.
shape.
Call
elkhound,
shepherd,
$11,000 - Trailer &amp; Lot In Racine. 3 BR, all
Pomeranian, English Set· 9-49·~181 .
carpeted, front Porch with awning, WOOd underplnn·
ter, mixed breed. Humane
lng, also lncludM pool tor the children. Anxious to
1976 ·'12 ton pickup truck In
SOCiety, 992-62/IJ.
sell.
good condition. 992 .. 5786
SYRACUII -Nice 3 BR home, extra large LR,
PUPS TO GO to good from 9·5 p.m. .
equipped kit,, washer, dryer, full basement, central
home. Make nice .pets for
air, breezeway leading to garage. Well cared for
1975 4·dor Ford Landau,
children. 9'12-55.57.
ttouse has manv eKtras, several fruit trees of dlf·
P.S., P.B., all power. Ex·
fereot varieties and nice garden. see to Appreciate.
cellent condition. $2495.
Very nice location In lower syracuse on st. Rt. 124.
THREE MALE puppies, 8 call
992·SI04or9192·2238.
Prtsed t\U63,9GD.
_ ..
weeks bid. 992·7853.
TIII.AILIR -2 Bill on peaceful side ilreel, all equip·
Pod kitchen Including dinette set. Must sell. $10~.
NIW.- WON'T LAST -4 yts. old, 3 .BR, bath &amp;
uHII!In, kitchen w·dlshwaaher, D.R. w-slldlng glau
Forltent
doors to patio, on nearly. '4 acre. Carpeted In
The. Union l!latloll4'
MOBILE Home
.b eaullfultnte. l-44,900.
•
·Shltlttlcal Yearbboil: repor. COUNTRY
Park, Route 33, ft9rlh of
MINI PARM - Beautiful brick bl-llllol With 3
tl tllil In 19'11 the United Pomeroy. Large tots.C.II
. tbodrm., large living room with fireplace. Totet olec·
1rlc lnd tully Insulated. All hardWood f'-S. Base·
Slates led the wcrld ln.the . 992·7479.
-mentcould ba tlnlsll«&lt; for extra living quarters. At·
IIIIIIlber rillelevlllon letlln
!ached garago. 3 large hot hOUses and rn,ny.extras
3 AND 4 RM fumlshed ap·
uae - 1~ mlllloo. 'lbe · IS.
on s ecrts. Loc. close 10 Racine. Asking $63~.
Phone 9'12·5-134, '
Sovl~t U!llon reported
CHESTI!R - 4 BR home, hardwood floor~. large
mare than oa m1D190 aeta, TWO BEDROOM trailer ..
LR, family rm., garage, outbuilding, fruit trees and
garden space. A5klng~.ta.ooo.
.
·
Japan bad 31.M6 miWcn .Adults only 992·3324.
l'AMtLY
HO~I"-··L!Its
01
poulbllltles
with
this
•1111 tbe Federal ftepullllc
nice 2 story. Many l.eatures, central air, bullt·ln ap·
.o( Germany 19.2t! mlllloo. . TWO BEDROOM fumlshtd
pllancn, all c•rpeled, good Investment with several
I~ country aenlng
trailer
_,...._ -·
ntco .blldlng ,loll. On approx. acres In the center
off Rt. •7, 6- mlln from
l!f.lll~!_ne. Asklr!U54.000.
.
Pomeroy FrHzor ·end oxLOTI 01' LOT• ,_;_ From 1 to 75 acres, bordering
Ire 1tor'loi.o, · $135 plus
~~lltln end lewn care.
fPOn:ler'~. .
". ~ ·- --·
Dop~slt
. required .. ·
I YEA Ill OLD HOMI, J Bill, dining and utility room, ·
Avel~• eltw J1111. 1. 915·
kit. O&lt;jul~ W·SIOW lnd' retrlg. MOIIIY carpelld, '
:19-19.
toreoct efr' gufurnaco, 1 yr. oJd ,Ger-, a cOtTipte" ·
, trailer - ·UP With nat. gas tap and Nptlc can' add
' '
Income. bver 2 acrn. $29,900. Call for tp"polntment.
FOUR' ROOMS .a..d llllffl,,
· Juat off At. 7111110W Middleport.
Gas forced air futn~. • ·
2734..
•

··-·=··

.

across

Eastern Hlgh. very
good building site. Ask·
lng S7,ooo.oo.
RUTLAND Total
electric, J bedroom,
brick home on Main
Street . l'h baths,
modern kitchen, dining
room and full basement.
Asking $43,500.00.
NEW LISTING -Cozy
3 bedroom home In
Syracuse on Cherry
Street. Living room, kit·
chen, bath and base·
1-I!Wllt... sma 11 lot with
building . A real b\Jy at"
only S10,ooo.oo. Beitel
check thIS one out! 1
NEW LISTING -Quail·
ty. built new home. 3
bedrooms, bath, utility
and living room. Kit·

UPRIGHT plano. Priced to
sell. GOod condition. 742·
2303.

~-14.

to th is

home. Call for an appt.
NEW LISTING - 2.&lt;41

WHITE WHIRLPOOL
dryer, good running con·
dillon. $125. Call 98.5-4276.

CURED
reasonably

. ,CENTRAL REALTY CO.

-

-·

~-

,'

•

•

•

'

,

·-

'

I

,

'

"-

I

WANT 10 SlLL?., Gin .,l'i·A.t;AU.' ·
ciliL~ iiMMY"~iii!'MLA•s0¢1A't'lfV;9-Uii

•

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION
Vinyl &amp;

H. L WHITESEL

Olt NAN~ -!,.~'•IllS, AlfO~IATI • ..
',
· f4f•
trMf.21t1
· . . •. •:

-

OHIO VAllEY
ROOFING

ROOFING

Aluminum Siding
el nsU)ollon

All types roof work, new

• Stortn Doors

NICE PIGS for sale. Wor·
med, castrated. 949-2857.
Pets for Sa I e
HOOF HOLLOW, English
'and Western. Saddles and

Inc . ~

E. Main st., Pomeroy, 992·
31191.

Business Opp'ty
CASH IN ON every con·
servallon, full or part lime.
Timely revolutionary new
healing product now being
Introduced. Ground floor
opportunity to develop
sales for $300 retail unit.
Pomeroy and surrounding
area available. Investment
of $1,000 setured by In·
ventory. Send name, ad·
dress and home no.to Myco
Thermal Art Sales, c·o BO&lt;
729·M, The Oally sentinel,
Pomeroy, OH 457111.

689.

Business Services

calcium

chloride, fertilizer , dog
food, and all types of salt.

WILL DO odds and ends,
paneling, floor tile, ceiling
Hie. Fred Miller, 992-6338.

bedroom

•

• Storm WIndows
• Repl.cement Win dows

Free Estimate

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

or repair gutters and
downspouts,
gutter
cleaning and painting.
All work guaranteed.
Free Estimates
.Reasonable Prices
Call Howard
949-2162

Roofing, gutters, and

downspouts.
Estimates. All

guar11nteecl. 20 ve•rs.x ·

-lente. ·c.ll Athens,
collect, Gerald Cluk
79i-4157 or Tom Hoskins
797-2745.

12·7·1 mo.

11 · l4 :mo.

10·19·1 mo.

N. L CONSTRUCTION

Roger Hysell
Garage

ADD DNS &amp;
REMODEUNG

Quality con11ruction at
reasonilble rates.

14 mite off Rt: 7 bv·pass .

on St. Rt. 124 toward

Rutland. ·

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
,
Phone 992-5682
OO·ttc ;J

C. R. MASH
VINYL &amp; ALUM.
SIDING
*New Kitchens
•Bathrooms ·
•New Home
*Add ons
•Remoldings
•Free E~timates
1·4-!Pd.)
Real Estate for Sale
F INANCING ·VA·FHA LO·
ANS. LOW OR NO OOWN
PAYMENT. PURCHASE
OR
REFINANCE .
IRELAND · MORTGAGE,
n E. STATE, ATHENS.
614·592·3051.
SIX ROOM hou'e and bath
In Rutland, OH, on corner
of Bryant Rd. and Main St.,
out of water. No reasonable
offer refused . Phone 742·

Free
work

Gutter work, down
spouts, some concrete
work, walks and

Remodeling
Additions
Siding
Brick Work

driveways.

Block work
concrete Finishing

!FREE ESTIMATES)
Reduced Winter Rates

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Guaranteed Work
Free Estimates
After S P.M. 992·5547

RACINE , O.
949·2741 or
992·7314
12·28-pd.

12·1nmo. pd.

JIM &amp;WAYNE'S
PLUMBING REPAIR
Let us

-

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING
Federal Housing &amp;
veterans Admin. Loans.

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

Wrap Your
Pipes for
Cold Weather
cheap Rates
Quality Service
Call 992-2852
or 992-7235
12·13·pd .
WILL HAUL limestone and

gravel . Also,, lime hauling

and spreading. Leo Morris
Trucking. Phone 742·2455.
PAINTING ANO

sand ·

blasting. Free estimates.

Hours 9-1 M., W., F.
Other times by appoint·
ment.
107 Sycamore (Rear
Pomeroy, 0 . .

CALL 992-7544
SEWING
Repa i rs,

makes.

MACHINE
ser\lice,

all

992 ·2284 .

The

Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Sales
and Service. We sharpen

Scissors.

call949·26116.

DOZER , END Loader,
brush hog . Will do
base"'ents, ponds, brush,

timber,

land

clearing.

Charles Butcher. 742·2940

2063.

EXCAVATING, dozer .
loader and backhoe work :
dump trucks and lo·b&lt;&gt;ys
for hire, will haul fill dirt,
limestone and
gravel. Call Bob or Roger

top soil,

Jeffers, day phone 992·7089,
night phone 992 ·3525 or 992·
5232 ..
HOWERY AND MARTIN
Excavating,

systems, dozer,

Rt. 1.(1. Phone 1
7331 or 742·2593.

septic

backhoe.
(6$4) 698·

AUTOMOBILE
SURANCE . been
216 E. !iol'!'"d SlrHI .

$1,000.00 DOWN - large
11 room home, lde8rtor
a family. 1'h baths, nice

carpeting, paneled kit.,
baemenl and 2 car
garage. $17,500.
LOT 77x264 2
bedroom home with
bath, T.P. water, all
electric, on R1. 7 In Tup·
pers Plalos. St,OOO.OO
DOWN.
NEW LISTING - 2.90
acres near Rutland on
hard road. water tap,
septic tank. electric and
good garden land.
SALEM CENTER One acre on Rt. 124.
Three

bedrooms, 1'h

baths, F.A. heat, rural
water tap and Ohio
Power. $2,000.00 DOWN,
G. I. NOTHING.
$750.00 OOWN - 8

rooms ~·~~I

storm

window ,
·•t. gas
F.A heat, ba.
ntand
1 acre.
S10,5oo .
BARGAIN.
H'l ACRES
woods and native stone,

..a room home, beth, city
water, and oas furnace.

$1,000.00 down . Excellent b\Jy.
$1,750.00 DOWN - A
real 9 room home. 2
baths, equipped kitchen,
formal dining room,
baement,

furnace,

5

bedrooms and 2 car
garage.
.
WANTED:
LITTLE
FA,MS ON THE EDGE
OF TOWN, CALL
992-3:W QR 992-3!176.

Housing
Head uartets

9'12-2259
NEW LISTING - In·
come producing, 2
apartments, walk to

town,

always

r~nted,

call for details.
RUT_LAND - 2 story
frame &amp; brick, up lo' 4
Bdrms . , 2 baths,
fireplace,

1 1!~

acres.

IN ·
can ·
vour

eel ted?
Lost
operator's license? Phone

99.2·21.(1.

IN STOCK for Immediate

delivery : various sizes of

pool kits. Do·it·Yourself or
let us Install for you. D.
Bumgardner

Inc.

Sates,

9'12·5724.

$26,881 .00.
SYRACUSE - 3 year
old ranch, 3 Bdrms ..
equipped kit., base··
ment, garage, other
features. $.4.1,000.00.
CHESTER' Small

BRADFORD, Auctioneer,
Complete Service. Phone
949·2487 or 949·2000. racine.
- Ohio, Crill Bradford.

barn, remodeled home,
rrew kit., . new bath, all
carpeted, etc. $38,950.00.
MIDDLEPORT - 1
floor plan home, 2
Bdrms., large lot, some
carpeting and remodel·
lng. $16,200.00.
POMEROY - Beautiful
home all features. ex·
cellent condition, must
be seen to be ap·
preclated. $40,000.00.
BUILDING SITES - In
new subdiVISion, start at
$2,500.00.
.
WE HAVE FINANCING
AVAILABLE
FOR
MOST 01' OUR HOMES
AT 11 •h'J6 Interest, 30
yrs. to pay, 3'!6 down on
lsi $25,000.00, 5% on
balllnce. VA. No Down
Pay.
'
REALTOR
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
9921191
ASSOCIATES
Rover &amp; Dottle Tu n11r
742-2474
Jean Truuell949·2660
OFFICE PHONE

appliances. Lawn mower.

farm, 25 acres, fencing

992-2259

··HOMES FOR SALE
WE ~RRANG_E_ ANANCING FOR AS ·LOW , ·
AS 5% DOWN AND 30 YRS. TO' PAY

BOWERS
ELWOOD
REPAIR - sweepers,
tOllsters, irons, all small
Next to State Hlghway
Garage on Route 7, 98.5·
3825.

"

S &amp; G Carpet Cleaning.
Steam

cleaned.

Free

estimate.
Reasonable
rates. Stolchguard. 992·
6309 or 742·2348.
WALL PAPERING and
painting. 742·2328.
PIANO TUNING. Lane
Daniels. New phone num·
ber, 742·2951. Service to
schools and home since

1965.

DR IV~ . All mE
SAVE-A' Wl
RUBBER BACK
CARPET

'4!!up.

.

Caih ~Carry
.

SAlE ON ALL ·

I,

Ll KE NEW - Quiet country living In this tree
bedroom, 2.balh ranch. Over an acre of ground with
a .SPlit rail fence, garage and workshop. Fireplace,
central heat and air cond. $44,900.00. ·
POMEROY - A beautiful 11n1e starter home ,, or
retirement couple. Two bedroom and beth. Large
IIVI!lll room · nice kitchen. Full basement..
$17,5j)O.OO. ·
MIDDLEPORT - 2 b~room brick only 1 block
1r0111 town, lOW ~ll.lltles . A bargain etS12,500. •

ltLSTCK.I'. .
. ·. '9'1,dup
.lno1.U41d_wlll!•d fiit ·

"GOOD REMNAN.l
SElif.TJON.
6'1t12'to
12'xY·
-..
\

IIIUTLANO :... ., homos on Salem Street. Ta,.e your .
chQI~e or,liUV' both and rent !hom. 11.2,000 each. ~
'" '

.

CALL 992~2342

__ _

1111 Cftlllls, ar1nch Mana,.,, Homo ·"2-244f
:.".R. .'t 00Wf!lll'l, ~!~110r 1 Hlilllo 992-3731 .

MIDDLEPORt; OHIO

' $.3SU'anil.~_p
Cali742·2211

�Fnday, Jane. 4, SHTJ8EOR
8- The DauJu Sentinel ' Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .,MIOL&gt;LEPORT
LU

CHURCH
NEWS

HEATH Churc h School 9 JO o m Wo1
ship 10 30 o m UMYF b p m Robert
Rob•nson Past or
RU TLANO Church Schoo l 9 30 o m
Cllurch &amp; Oftl(t' Supph•s
Wo rs t·up 10 30om Wilbur Hdt Pastor
GIFTS
SALEM Cf:NTER Worsh1p 9 o m Church
KERMIT'S KORNER
Scl-lool9
o m
Pomeroy . Oh1o
Middleport
SYRACUSE CLUSTER
Rev Harvey Koch Jr
&amp; LUnot
TRINITY CHURCH Rev W H Pem n
FOREST RUN Worshp 9 am Church
pastor Bob Buck Sunday sc hool supt
Schooi iO am
•
Church School 9 15 am worsh1p ser
MINERSVIll E Church School 9 om
Wt Fill Doctors'
v1ce, 10 30 a m Choir rehearsal Tuesday
Worsh 1p 10 o m
Prescnphons
7 30 p m under dmtcl •on of Allee Nease
AS&amp;URY Church School 9 50 o m War
" Jn 1tu
POMEROY CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE
sh 1p 11 0 m 8 1ble Study 7 30 p m Thurs·
,Pomeroy
Corner Umon and Mulberry Rev Clyde V
day UMW f1st Tuesday
Henderson pastor Sunday school 9 30
SOUTHERN ClUSTER
a m Glen McClung supl rnorn1ng wor
Rev Dov 1d Harm
__./~_J sh1 p, 10 30 a m e'w'en1ng serviCe 7 30
Rev Mark Flynn
FURNI T URE lo HARDWARE
m•d-weekser~o~1 ce, Wednesdov 7 30p m
FlorenceSm1th
Home lite Sews
~
GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH - 326 E
Holton Wollo
Main St Pomeroy l'he Rev Robert 8
BETHANY, (Dorcas) Worsh1p 9~ 00 a m
Sf Rt 7
Cra~o~es rector Sunday serv1ces at 10 30 Church School 10 00 a 1m
0 m with Holy Communion on the ftrst
CARMEL Chruch School 9 30 o m War·
Sundov of each month and comb•ned sh•p1 030a m 1ndand.-th Sundays
w1th Mommg Prayer on teh th.rd Sunday
APPLE GROVE Sunday School9 30 o m
Morn~ng Prayer and Sermon on oil othe r Worst·u p 7 30 p m 1st and 3rd Sundays,
Sundays of the month Church Schoo l and Preyer meeting Wedn.ndoy 7 30 p m
nursery core provided Coffee hour m the Fellowsh 1p supper ftrsf Saturdav 6 p m
Paush Hall 1mmed1otely follow1ng the ser
UMW 2nd Tu esday 7 30 p m
Ph
v•ce
EAST LETART Chruch School 9 o m
POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST 212 W
Worsh 1p serv 1ce 10 am Prayer meettng
Mom St Ned Proudfoot . pastor B1ble 7 30 p m Wednesday UMW second Tues
school 9 30 am morn1ng worsh ip 10 30 day 7 30 p m
om Youth meetmgs 6 30 p m even.ng
RACINE WESLEYAN - Sunday school10
'Tht Store
worsh ip 7 30 Wednesdol,. mght prayer 0 m worShip , 11 a m Cho1r pract•ce
With A H••rt
meetmg and B•ble study, 7 :~ P m
Thursday 8 p m
R1c1ne
212 W. Mltn
THE SALVATION ARMY 11 5 Butt ernut
LETART FALLS- Worsh1p serv•ce9 am
Ph 949 2626
tf2-m2
Ave Pomeroy Envoy and Mrs Roy Wu,. Church School tOo m
.ng offtcers 1n charge Sunday holmen
MORNING STAR Worsh1p 9 30 a m ..
meet •ng 10 am Sunday School 10 30 Church , School 10 30 om . You th
0 m Sunday school le&lt;Jder YPSM Eloise
Tuesdays 7 p m
NlflonwHie Ins Co
MORSE CHAPEL Church School 9 30
Adams 7 30 p m solvot 1on me&amp;trng
of Columbus. 0 .
am Worsh1p 11 a m
vonous speakers and mus•c spec1als
104 W Mliin
Thursdoy-10 am to 2 p m lad 1es Home
PORTLAND Church School 9 30 om
tt2-2l11 Pcuneroy
League all women 1nv1ted 7 30 P m
Worsh 1p 11 a m
prayer meetmg and Btble study Bob
SUTTON Church School9 30 a m Wor
Estep
leader
Re~o~
Noel Hermon
st'up 1st and3rd Sundays 10 30 o m
teacher
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
BURLINGTON SOUTHERN BAPTIST
Rev R1chardW Thomas
CHAPEL Route 1 Shade- Poster Bobby
Duane Sydenstnck cir Sr
Elkm s Sunday school 5 p m Sunday
John W Douglas
worsh1p 5 45 p m Wednesday pr ayer
Cha rles Dom1gon
serv1ce 7 30 p m
JOPPA Worship 9 00 a m Church
POMEROY WESTSIDE
CH URCH OF Sch ooiiO 00 om
CHRIST, 200 W Mom St , Conservative
CHESTER Wonh1p 9 a m
Chu rc h
COPYRIGHT 1980
Here 's a P.hotograph taken tram~ kayak Y
I\ ElSTER AOVERTISitJG SE RVICE
norHnst ru mental Sunday worsh1p 10 School 10 am Cho1r Rehearsal 7 p.m
P 0 BOX 802~
don't
bring a slup th 1s close to an ICeberg.1
am B1ble study 11 _ a m wo rsh1p 6 Wednesday B1ble Study Wednesdays
CHAALOTIESVILLE. VIRGINIA n906
p m Wednesday Bible study , 7 p m
7 30 p m
underwater th e tentacles of thi s cruel, co ld
OLD DEX TER BIBLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH
LONG BOTTOM Sunday School ot 9 30
monster may reach out a mile or more.
Rev Rolph Sm1th pastor Sunday school
0 m E&gt;.oemng Worsh1p at 7 30 p m Thur•
9 30
am
Mrs
Worley Fronc1s, day B1bl eStudy. 7 30 p m
Ltfe fo r so me folks 1s a successiO n of narrow
supenntendent Preochmg ser v1ces f 1rst &amp;
REEDSVILLE Sunday School 9 JO am
tk•rcfSundoys follow1ng Sunday School
Mornmg Worsh•p 10 30 am Evening War·
escapes.
But th ese are adven tures we can do
lnsuranc:e
GRAHAM
UNITED
METHODIST , shp 7 30 p m Bible Study Wednesdays of
wtthout
They
don't prove us bold sa tlors
214 Second
'
Preochmg 9 30 o m f1rst and second Sun- 7 30 p m
Pomeroy
simpl y prove us poor navigators.
ALFRED Sunday School at 9 .tS o m
days of &amp;ach month th1rd and fourth Sunm .ms
days each month worsh•p sen~~ee at 1 30 Mornmg Worsh1p at 11 c m WednMday
Fnghtened men so met1 mes turn to rehgton as
p m Wednesdav evenmgs ot7 30 Prayer N1ght Prayer Meeting. 7 30 p m
and B1bie Study
ST PAUl, (Tuppers Plo1ns) Sunday
a 1 efuge when dang ers - moral, sp iritual and
SEVENTH DAY ADVE NTIST Mulberry School 9 00 0 m Mormng Worship at
physical - loom too close for com fort God does
He1ghts Rood Pomeroy Pastor, Albert 10 00 a m Monday N1ght Bible Study 1 30
D1ttes Sabbath School Supenntenden t
pm
not fail US Ill Cri SIS.
R1to Whtte Sabbath School Saturday
:;OUTH BETHEL (S •I ver R•dge) Sunday
461 S. ]ltlrcl, Mld&lt;lloport
afternoon at 2 00 wtth Worship Ser-v1ce School 9 00 0 m Mornmg Wosh1p 10 00
But the every- day fun cti on of faith IS to pi I
WJ-21"
tollowmg at 3 15
0 m Wednesday B1ble Study, 7. 30 p m .
men
on
a
tru
e
coutse
th
rough
the
sea
of
life.
RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCHKENO CHURCH OF CHRIST services
Churcll cannot sweep away Icebergs. It warns
S1ster Harnett Worn er Supt Sunday each Sunday 9 ·30 a .m George P1ckens
School. 9 30 a m morn1ng wo rsh •p 10 AS pastor w1th preochmg on lint and third
of thetr whereabouts and 'helps us give them
om
Sunday of month Ohver Swa1n. Supt.
wtde berth.
THE HILAND CHAPEL George Cas to,
HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION Rev. Ketth
pastor Sunday School , 9 30 o m evening Ebhn pastor Sunday School 9 30 a m .
worsh•p 7 30 Thu rsday evenmg proyer leonard Gilmore, ftrst elder, even1ng serserv•ce, 7 3Q p m
viCe, 7 30 p m
Wednesday prayer
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST Oa \l ld Mann, meeting, 7 30 p .m
mm1ster, Wilham Watson, Sunday school
BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH 01
lu psrluv
We dn v~ fill\'
f. Will\
St~ lu rdny
1/w rs du\'
supt Sunday school 9 30 om. morn~ng CHRIST, Duane Worden, min1ster B1blt.
fHIHih
• Jil'VHIO!IU/1 • llf u s • /l ebren s
• /f'r!'UIIUh •
doss, 9 30 am morn1ng worshtp, 10 30
worsh1p 10 30om
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST, 282 Mulberry 0 m
ev.en 1ng worsh1p
6 30 p. m
g2 7
liJ 1lJ
12 1 7
J J 20
1 1 lb
Ave Pomeroy Her shel McClure Sunday Wednesday B1bla study, 6 30 p m
school supenntend"nt Sunday school,
NEW STIYERSYILLE COMMUNITY
9 30 o m mormng worsh1p 10 30 even- Church -su nday School serviCe, 9
o m.,
mg worshtp 7 00 p m M1dweek prayer Worsh iP ser\IICe. 10 30. Evangelistic Ser·
serv1ce 7 00 p m
'&lt;~ICe, 7 30 p m Wednesday, Prayer
Eet In or
MIDWAY COMMUNITY CENTER Dexter
meefing 7 30
C•rry Out
Rd Langsville Ohto Rev Clyde Ferrell
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST, Pomeroy126 E Mlln
Pastor. Sunday School 11 a m Saturday Hamsonv 111e Rd, Robert Purtell. pastor.
9f2-6l04
preoch•ng aerv•ces 7 30 p m Wednesday Bill McElroy, Sunday school supt. Sunday
pomeroy
even1ng B1ble study at7 30 p. m
school 9 30 o m morning YIIOfSh1p and
FAITH TABERNACLE SHURCH Bailey commumon, 10 30 am , Sunday worsl·up
Run Rood, Rev Emmett • awson pastor
aerv•ce 7 p m Wednesday evemng
Handley Dunn su pt Sundov school, 10 prayer meeting and B1ble study, 7 p m
0 m Sunday evening serv1ce 7 30 B1ble
ST JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH P1ne
om (meeting and prayer. Prayer and
ages Nursery prov1ded for worshtp serWednesday, 1 JO p m
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE
bleStudy7p m
teod ung 7 30 p m Thursday
Grove The Rev. Wilham Middlesworth.
vice
FOREST RUN BAPTIST Rov. Nylo
Rev Herbert Grate pastor Worstl1p ser
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
DYES VIllE COMMUNI TV CHURCH
Pastor Churctl serv~ees 9 30om Sunday
ST PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH, Corner
Borden
pastor
Corneltus Bunch,
Roger C Turner po st or Sunday school
SchoollO 30 0 m
.-ICe 11 o .m and 7 30 P m Sunday CHRISTIAN UNION, The Re\1 Wi lliam
of Sycamore and Second Sfs , Pomeroy
supenntendent Sunday school 9 30 a m ,
School, 9 30 a m Charles B1ssell supt
Campbell pastor Sunday School, 9 30
9 30 o m
Sunday morn1ng worsh1p
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST Sunday
The Rev Wi lliam Middlesworth, Pastor
second and fou rth Sundays worsh1p ser
Prayer meetmg Wednesday 7 30 P m
a m James Hughes supt evenmg ser
10 30 Sunday evenmg serv1ce, 7 30
school 9 30 a m , worsh1p serv1ce 10 30
Svnday School at 9 ~5 a m and Church
~o~lce at 2·30 p.m .
LAUREL
CliFF
FREE
METHODIST
v•ce
7
30
p
m
Wednesday
evenmg
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
m
Other
meet1ngs
as
announced
Serv1ces II a m
0
MT. MORIAH BAPTIST - Fourth and
CHURCH Rev Floyd F Shook, pastor, prayer meehng, 7 30 p m Youth prayer
CHRISTIAN UNION lawrence Manley
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST Rev Earl Shul er,
SACRED HEART. Rov Fothor Pau l D
Main St, Middleport Rev Calv1n M1nnts,
Lloyd Wnght, Sunday School Supt .• Morn- service each Tuesday
pa stor
Mrs Russell Young Sunday posfor Sunday school 9 30 om Church
Welton, pastor Phone992-2B25 Soturcfoy pastor Mrs Elvin Bumgardner, supt Sunong Wor&gt;hop 9 30 o m . Sunday School
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH. Lotort. W
School Supt Sunday School 9 30 a m. / service 7 p m ' youth meeting
6
even1ng Moss 1 30. Sunday Moss 8 and day school, 9·30 a.m .. worsh1p service,
10 20 o m , Wednesday Prayer and Bible Yo , Rt. 1, Rev Charles Hargraves
Evenmg worshtp 7 30 Wednesday proy.y p m Tuesdoy B1ble Study. 7 p m
10 a.m., Confession , Saturday 7-7 30
10415am
Study 7 30 p m Sunday eventng worsh1p pastor Worship serv 1ces. 9 30 a m . Sunmeetong, 7 30 p m
RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE .
pm
NORTH BETHEL United Mothodi51
,
J
30
p
m
,
CholrPract1ce
Thursday
1
P
m
day
school,
11
am.
,
evening
WOflhip
MT
MORIAH CHURCH OF GOO , Re'Y' John A Coffman, pastor Franklirl
VICTORY BAPTIST - On the Rculo 7
Church Rev Charles Dom1gon. pastor.
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST Charlet 7 30 p.m Tuesday cottage prayer meeting
Roc1ne- Rev James Sotterf1eld pastor
Imboden cha1tmon of the Boord of Chnsbypass Jam•• E Keesee, pastor. Sunday Sunda~ School, 9.30 o m Wonhlp SerMorn~ng worsh1p 9',-45 om · Sunday ttan Life Sunday School, 9·30 o.m morn- Russell. Sr , minister Ride Macomber, and B•ble study, 9:30 a. m. Worship ser
achool, 10 a.m., morning worship 11
vice, 10•45 c.m.: S..nday Bible Siudy. 7 00
supt
Sunday
school,
9.30
o.m
,
Yllorshlp
v•ce
Wednesday
,
7
30p
m
"hool. 10 ~5 am even1ng worsh1p 7
mg worsh 1p 10 30 Sunday e~o~enl ng wor·
o m evening aervice, 7.
p. m .; Wednesday prayer meetmg, 7 30
service. 10 30om Bible Study Tuesday,
cALVARY BIBLE CHURCH, nOw located
Tuesday , 7 30 p m , lod•es prayer ship, 7 30 p m. Prayer meet•ng. WednesTRINITY Chrlollan Auembl~. Coolvlllo p. m .
meetmg Wednesday 7 30 p m YPE
day 7 30 p m
7 30 P m.
·
on Pomeroy Pike, County Rood 25 near
Gilbert Spencer, pastor. Sunday
BURLINGHAM SOUTHERN BAPTIST
REORGANIZED
CHURCH
OF
JESUS
Flatwoods
Rev
Blackwood,
postor
Ser·
MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST Corner
iV;ciNE FIRST BAPTIST Don L Wolkor
school, 9 .30 om. mornmg worship, II
CHURCH, Route 1, Shade Pastor Don
S1xt h and Palmer the Rev Mark McC lung
Pastor Ronn1e Sal ser, Sundav schoo l CHRIST OF LA ITER DAY SAINTS. Portland vocos 00 Sunday at 1~30 a. m. and 7 30
a m Sunday evening service, 7:30 p.m
Block AHII1ated with Sourh,rn Bapttst
p m w ith Sunday school. 9.30 om Bible
Sundav school 9 15 o m Don W1 lson
supt , Sunday schoo l 9 30 a m morn1ng RaCine Rood Wtlliom Roush, pastor.
m1dweeh prayer service Wednesday 7•30 Convention. Sunday school 1 30 p. m ,
Sunday
School
Supt
Sunstudy,
Wednesday,
7
30
p.
m
PhylliS
Sjobart,
~upeuntenden t lacy Borton asst supt
worsh 1p 10 ~0 om Sunday evenmg wor
pm
Sunday worship, 2·30 p m. Thursday
INDEPENDENT HOLINESS CHURCH , INC
Morn.ng Worsh1p 10 15 am B1ble stu dy
ship 7 30 Wednesday evemng 8tble day School. 9 30 om . Mornong war&gt;hlp ,
MOUNT Olive Community Church
even•ng Bible study 7 p m
10 30 0 m of church Vouth meet mg. 7 30
study 7 30
10 30 am Sunday even•ng servlce7 P m
_ Pearl St, Middleport Re\1. O'Dell
lawrence Bush pastor, Max Folmer, Sr
PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY
Ra cone.
Wednesdav evenmg prayer serviCes, 7 30 Manley, pa stor; Sonny Hudson, Sunday
p m Wednesday Wednesday mght B1ble
DANVI LLE WESLEVAN Rev
R 0
Superintendent Sunday School and mornRoute 12.t WUI!am Hoback pastor Sunstudy and prayer serviCe 7 30 P m
Brown , pastor Sunday School , 9 30 a m ,
Pm
school supt Sunday school, 9.30 am,
mg worsh1p 9 30 o m Sunday evening day school, 10 a .m ., Sunday even1ng serBETHLEHEM BAPTIST , Re\1 Earl Shuler, evenmg worship 7 30 p m Prayer and
CHURCH OF CH RI ST M1ddleport Sth
morn•ng worst·u p 10 45 , youth ser\IIC8,
serv1ce, 7 p m , Youth meetmg and 81ble v tre, 6 30 p.m Wadnesdoy een1ng ser
and Motn Bob Melton m1n1ster, M1ke 6 &lt;t5 p m twemng worship, 7 30 p m
pastor Worsh1p serv1ce 9 30 am Sunday proiSe ~er\IICe, Wednesday, 7·30 p m
st udy Wedneadoy 7 p.m
vice, 7
school, 10 30 o m Boble Study and prayer
RUTLAND APOSTOLIC CHURCH OF
Gerlocn supenntendent Terry 'Yankey
prayer and pro1se. Wednesday 7 30 p m
FAITH BAPTIST Church, Mason, mHI at
CARPENTER BAPTIST, Rov Freeland
youth m1n1ster B1ble school , 9 30 a m ,
Sll YER RUN FREE BAPTIST Rev Mar~o~i n
servtee Thu rsday 1 30 P m
JESUS CHRIST, Elder James Miller. Bible
United Steel Workers Un1on Hall, Railroad Norr11, pastor. Don Cheadle, Supt SunCARLETON CHURCH, Kongsbury Rood.
otudy , Wodnooday 7 30 p. m.: Sunday
mormng worsh1p 10 30 a m youth group Morkm pastor Ste\le little Sunday school
Street, Mason. Pastor, Rev Joy Mitche ll. day School, 9 ·30 a.m. Morning Worohlp,
supt Sunday school. 10 a.m. morn1ng Gary King, pa stor Sunday school, 9 30 School. 10 0 m. Sunday night servke, 7 30
Sunday 6 30 p m even 1ng wonh1p 7 30,
Morning worship 9 45 o m , Sunday 10·30 a.m. Prayer Service alternate Sunam , Rolph Carl, superintendent event ~g p.m.
prayer serv1ce 7 30 p m Wednesday
worshtp, 11 o. m Sunday even•ng worSchool 10·30 o, m
Prayer mHtl~
POMEROY WESlEYAN HOLINESS MIODLEPORT CHURCH
OF
THE
sh 1p 7 30. Prayer meet1ng and Bible worship 7 30 p m Prayer m""llng ,
NAZARENE, Rev J•m Broome, pallor, B•ll
study, Thursday , 7 30 p m , vouth service,
Wednesday, 1 30 P m.
Harmonvtlle Rood, Dewey King, pastor,
Sunday school supt Sunday 6 p m Sunday
Wh 1te
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN, George F
Edison Weaver assis tant Henry Eblin,
school , 9 30om morn1ng worsh1p 10·30
CHESTER CHURCH OF GOO, Rev. R E
P1ckens, pastor, Wallace Damewood
Jr , Sunday school supt. Sunday school
Robmson pastor Sunday school , 9 30 Supt Bible School 9 ~5 a .m Preaching 9 30 am morning worship, 11 a. m Suno m , Sunday evangel•shc meeting 1 00
service 10.-45 o.m first ond third Sundov even•ng serv1ce, 7·30; prayer
p m Pra ye r meetmg Wednesday 7 P m
0 m , worsh 1p serviCe 11 am , evening
TUPPERS PLAINS - St. Paul
meetmg Thursday 7 30 p m
message was, ''How I !Ill Can Be the
UNITED PRESBVTERIAN MINISTRY OF
serv•ce 7 00 youth serviCe, Wednesday , days. 7 p m second and fourth Sundays
United Methodist Church d. Tupers Happiest Year d. Your Life." Tbere.
MEIGS COUNTY Dw1ght l Zov1tz direc
7 00 p m
B1ble dudy, 8 P m Tu .,.doys
SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF GOD HYSELL RUN FREE METHODIST CHURCH, Not Pentecostal, Rev George 01ler,
Plains had 52 present for Sunday
tor
LANG SVILLE CHRISTIAN CHURCt&lt;,
was a time of sharing on ''What God--._
Rev Ok ey Cart pasto r Sunday School pastor Worship service Sunday, 9.4S
HARR ISONVILLE PRESBYTERIAN Re'Y'
Robert Mus ser. pastor Sunday school
school
and 51 present for worship Has Done for Me. " Special nwnben~
Ernest St o ck hn pastor Sunday church 930 0 m Roy Stgman, supt. morn1ng 9 30 Morn1ng serv1ce, 10.30 o m Sunday 0 m., Sunday school, 11 o m, worahlp
Dec. ~. There were 14 choir mem- were done by Rev. Thomas, Bonnie
ser\ltCe, 7 30 p.m
Thursday prayer
school 9 30 a m Mrs Homer Lee supt
worsh 1p 10 30. Sunday evening ser.11ce. evenmg and Thursday evenmg serv1ces at
bers
mormng worsh•p I 0 30
7 30, m1d- week serviCe, Wednesday, 7 7 OOp.m
meeting, 7:30pm
Thomas, Mrs. Sarah
Mn.
MIDDLEPORT Sunday school, 9 30 a m
pm
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION ct Bold
M T HERMON Unoted Brothren Church
The
sermon
was
~ven by Rev.
Gertrude
Russell,
and
David
Rice,
1
Knob
Rev
lawrence
Gluesencamp
Sr.
Sunday
Scllool
9.30
a.
m
Worsh1p
III'\IICe
R chord Vaughan supt Mornmg worshtp,
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE .
Richard Tbomas; tbe topic was, "A son of Mr. and Mn. Jolm Rice. Num10 30
1
Rev Dole Boss pastor Sunday school, pastor; Roger Willford , Sr , Sunday school 10 -45 a m Preaching services every Su,..
SYRACUSE FIRST UNITED PRESBYTERIAN 9 30 am , mornmg worsh1p 10 &lt;t5 o m . supt Sunday school 9 30 o evening wor·
day alternating with C. E. Wednesday
Olangeleai Christ
Changing bers were sung by the w&lt;men and
Church Worshlr serviCe 9 30 o m Sundol
eva~ahshc servtce 7 p m Wednesday sh1p, 7 30 p m Prayer meeting, Wedne• prayer meeting 7 30 p.m. Rev. Jamft
Age." The IICripture read!~
day 7 30 p m Youth maeHng, Sunday,
Leoch, pastor. David Holter, lay l.ader.
School 10 30 a m Mrs. Sampson Hal •
serv 1ces - prayer and praise. 7 p m
from Plalm 48. Next Sunday, Jan. 8,
JEHOVAifS WITNESSES, 1 milo - t al
supt
youth maetlng, 7 p m Men's proyer 5·30 p m woth Don and Martho Moodowo
be
R\ITLAND CHURCH OF GOD, Rev . Bol&gt;
moeling Saturday 7 p.m
In charge
Rutland JUnction of Route 124 and Noble
WHITE' S CHAPEL, Coolville RD. Rov , Roy -&amp;Jmmll' Rood (T· 174). Sunday llblo Lee·
by Porter pastor Sunday school 10 am
EDEN 'UNITED BRETHREN IN CHRIST,
St.
obaenled Watclmlght,
ture. 9:30 0 , ., Wotchtowet stucfor, 10 30
Sunday worship, 11 o m , Sunday even1ng
Elden R Bloke poator Sunday School 10 Deeter , pastor Sunday tchool9 30 a.m .;
Monday
evenln
for
c&lt;lllilni cllhe
service. 7 p m Wednesday Family Tral
am. Robert RMd, supt, Morning ser- wonhop oervlco 10:30 a.m. Bible tludy 0 m: Tuooday, Bible lludy, 7 and 8: 15
There ~ candleliglt
lng Hour. 7 p.m .WednMdoy worsh1p ser
mon 11 am . Sunday night servicet and prayer service, W~nesday, 7:30p. m. p m Thundoy theocratic school 7·30
" RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST, Brad p:m:: oorvlce m~tong, 8 30 p. m.
.
v1ce, 1 30 p m
Chr11110n Endea vor 7 30 p m , Song ter·
cenm001, apeclal muaJe and a
Hend•rson 1, pastor, Herb Ell•ott, Sunday
RUnANO FREEWILL BAPTIST Church HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH. NO&lt;J r
voco. o p m . Proachong 8·30 p.m
me818ge by Rev. Richard
long Bottom Edsel Hart, pastor Sunday
Midweek Prayer meet•ng Wedn&amp;~day. 1 school supt Sunday school, 9 30 o m · Leland Hale';' , pastor. Sunday school, 10
from 7:30 tll8 p.m.; from 9-10 p.m.,
morn1ng worsh1p oncf comunion, 10:30 0 m., evening service, 7·30 p.m. Prayer
s(hool. 10 o.m Church 7 30 P m prayer
p m Alv1n Reed lay Ieeder
moehng, 7 30 p m Thursday
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST located ot a m
there was a felloWBblp hlillr ln the
meeting, Wedn&amp;lday, 7:30p.m.
Six' defenclanlll were fined and
RUTLAND BIBLE METHODIST CHURCH,
CHURCH OF GOD of Prot&gt;llocy, located
MIDDLEPORT PENTE.COSTAL
Th•rd
Rutland on New Limo Road, next to Forest
RefreB!unents
serA'&lt;~e the Rev Wdllom Kmttel pastor
Acre Pork . Rev Roy Rouse pastor Rober t Amos Ttlh s, po s,or Danny Tillis, Sunday on the 0. J. White Road off ·highway 160.
three others forfeited bonds ln the
Tho~as Kelly Sundoy "School Supt Sun Musser, Sunday School supt. Sundov School Supt Sunday School 9.30 om Sunday School 10 a.m. Superintendent ved. FrtllllG-12, there was a hyumn
court !1. Middleport Mayor Fred Hof·
day school , 10 o m Classes for all ages
school 10 30 0 m , wors h 1p 7 :10 p m 8•· followed by morning worshtp. ~ndoy John Loveday. First Wednesday night Of
si!!i in the sanctuary. :There were
fman
Wednesday
e¥enlng
service,
7.00
p.
m
Prayer
month
CPMA
services,
second
Wedne
...
8\lenlng serv1ce, 7 30
B1ble study
ble Study, Wednesday , 7 30 p m, Saturscripture readiQga by JWv, Thomas
-.ling Wednesday, 7:00 P m
day WMB meeting lhord through fifth
Wednetday. 7 30 P·!" ; youth servtces
day mght prayer ••rv•ce 7 30 p m
Fined
1Mter E. Marcban,
fr&lt;m Ephe8lana 2 and
81
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE,
~outh service. Goa.;o Croyle, pollor. Friday, 7 30 p.m.
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN, Roger
Nortb
llmljbfleld,
Rhode llland, ~
and3f.
HOPEBAPJISTCHAPEL - 570GrontSt ,
MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST. Corner
Watson, pootor. Mildred Ziegler, Sunday Rev. Lloyd D. Grimm, Jr., pootor. S..nday
COlli,
tine
days
Con Blake, pastor. .SunA1h and Plum; Noel Herrman, pastor
school aupf. Mofrllng worship, 9 30 a . m.; school, 9 30 a.m. worship service, 10.30 Middleport;
Rev. Thomu' New Year't •
Satur y evenln service, 7:30Pm · Sun·
Sundayschool, 10·30 o. m , e~o~enlng ter· a.m. Brood cast II¥~ over WMPO: yount day sthool, 9 30 9· m , morning worwhlp,
See,
$10 and
people's
service
7
p
m
Evangelistic
ser·
10:30
a.m.;
evening
wOrship,
7
p.m
:
day Sc ool, 10: a.m.
vice 7.30.
I:Oitl,
to
malrUin
control;
MEIGS
MT. UNION BAPTIST, Cecil Co•, vlco, 7:30 p. m . Wodnooday urvlco, 7:30 Wednoodoy ovonln~ Bible otudy a•d
Geary,
Middleport,
$.100
and
RA liVE PARISH
minister Joe Sayre, Sunday School p m
proyor mHII"g, 7 p.m . AHIIIai*d witt\
'
FIRST
SOUTHERN
BAPTIST,
Corner
of
S•
Southern
Bopllot
Convention.
'
COlli,
t11tee
·day.
CU~flnement,
HODISTCHURCH
Suporlntenent Sunday" school, 9:45a. m .:
GERALDINE P AJI80NIII
IRAilfORD CHURCH OF CHRISTRichard W Thomos, Otrector
evenmg worshipt.... 7 30 p m
Prayer • cond and Anderoon, Mooon Pastor Fronk
deltnldloa p&amp;GjHI ty; Roy
Lowthor Sund~ tchool , 9·4$ a.m., wOf'
Underwood, pcntor: Harry Hon• MoVIIBATIDIC
POMEROY CLUSTER
meotong. 7 30 p.m . WO&lt;In..day
'
MJ.Mltpart,
. .and COlli, cborderly
drlcks, •uporlntondonl. S..ndoy school .
Rev. Robert Mc:Geo
TUPPERS PLAINS 'CHURCH OF CHRIST, ohlp ,..,Ice. 11om and7 30 p.m. Wo.ttMn. Virgil (Gerlldlne) Parsons, a ~r; BlU Wll1ilma, Middleport,
ly
Bible
Study.
Wednoaday
,
7
30
P
m
·
9·30
m
,
morning
worohlp,
10:30
om
:
0
Rev. James Corbitt
Randy Koehler , po ster. Dennis Newland
patlept at the ,Holzer Medical Center $100 and
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST, Mill or St. .
evonlng worahlp, 7 p. m. Wodnosdoy Biblo
POMEROY, Sunclay School 9 15
m
Sunday schoo l superlntonden,t S\lnday
petty theft; Paul
study 7,.)&gt; m
WotSh(p tervlce 10.30 a.m. Choir rehear
School. 9, 30 a-m , morning church aer· Mcison W Vo Aur ice Mlck 1 pastor Sun·
smce sufferl!IB a heart aUack earlY
Middleport,
•100 and
JUBILeE CHRISTIAN CENTER - George'•
aal, Wednespoy, 1 p. m. Rev Robert
\lice 10 Jt a. m .. Sunday evenmg Bible doy Bible Studr. 10 o.m , Worship 11, o.O'I)
last week, has been moved from the
petty
theft.
I
and
1
p
m
Bib
e
Study
Wednesday
1
P
m.
Creek
Rood
Rev
C.
J.
Lemley,
pastor;
McGH. pottlor.
c
h' ' study . 7 p.m ..
•
John Fellure. superintend1t11t ChurCt'l Cardiac Care Unit into Roorii«N B.
ENTERPRISE, Wonhlp 9 o .m Cnurc
LET~T FALLS UNITED BRETHREN, Rev. Vocal mutlc.
bcllda
Timothy
MASON' ASSEMBLY OF GOD, Dudding
ochool, 9 00 a.m.: morning W00'1hlp1 Her cond!Uonlll'tii!CJI1ed
Sck-.&lt;..110 am
'
Freeland
Norns,
postor
Floyd
Norrlt,
Au.
llflewart,
.,._,
• :.:Z... J~·R,:'~s_ CD··rch SchooiiO o m
Rannlo l . Ro..
10:30: ""•nlng '"""'~•. 7 p.m . Voulh tory.
""""""' v- nu • nu
supt. $undav Kfiool, 9:30 o.m.: morning Lane, McMOn, W . Va.
but
Mid·
WOtship 10 a .m . UMYF6·30 ~. m .
sermon 1():30 a.m : Prayer Mrvlc•, Pastoto Sunday School9:•5 a.m .: MOrning mooting Sundl!y, 6 p m . Bltile tludy In
ftUJd til• dllpcrt, ...
Worohip 1 I 6.m. Evonl"'l 5oNico 7 : ~ deplh, W.,OOesdoy 7 p .m . Closoos for all the family
FLATWOODS, CJ.urch Sc ool 1'l 0 "'
Wednesday. 7:30 p m.
JoNpb
J.
p.m. , Wednesday Warne• 1 Mlr lotrlos '
•joy CIU'ds.
• '
•
I,

MEIGS TIRE
CENTER, INC.

MIPDLEPORT BOOK STORE

EWS &amp; SONS SOHIO

NEW YORK
CLOTHING HOUSE

•s

PHARMACY

of Your Choice
This

RIGGS USED CARS, INC.

1

RIDENOUR SUPPLY

o:·

'Y CC \,E l'-1
~~I D

RACINE
FOOD MARKET

{I f WI Ll ~f- ~ ~
'" 15 - .)
1 •o
1 11- w~ '"' 4 r- , A
'
lJF Cl 4.L'DJA

\.1!4;:_H

~I=:S

t.,E"..

·-:.l ...: T

OF- "' f-EI ' ING HCt.l4Ero ~

FO~

~

..,

J.J FIG HE&gt;Cl tl..-.

I"QI ~ l

"'CU , CHRI"- '

BLAZE S.

ME~"' F~ u~

~HE

, ' 17 (

DA DO"' Ti LL

A PUZZ. LE

KtD5
5TILL

~ i1AT

[

DO"-l'T SAVVY HOW
HE CONTROL 5o A
MONS'TER L1 KE
CL AUDIA .

J C I I f' \I',

o\P ir, -_. ;

...----

SUNDCO
SERVICE
CENTERS

P. J. PAULEY,

(A' EM;

{'j J

riO! I LL ~ 0
TE LL YOU

·f. IE P ~ ":r ~

E\'-"' rr-E ~Cn ~ r..'l. B!JE
~M&lt; o1 5 ...o DF~0r " &lt;IOUL?

TYAT BIT f) F ( I)TH
rLfr l '::MEO IN SA r~JYS
JAWS .:.c-=p i&gt;-~E

MIENT

f&lt;

1
F 1~tG E RED HER' ~='OR
A C.UY NA~EO JACK,

~ ·1Ei? '1'TH •NG 1

PHENCE B UT I DOT~ T
l' rlQ J/ NH/IT hE 010 WITH
T &gt;-~E 6 1
1?L 0 " WHE~E HE

PPEFEf? Tr1f.;'?

I

HOW'

I SWEAR!

the Church
of \'our Choice
This Sunday,.

This Sundav

Services

Lc, 6 • F r 1t A:=" , \o.. I
F NO ":O lJJ\111.. ;;.;JI"'T BE!:!":

TH 15 TIGER ( RI515
~LOW$ OYE R .

The Churcm
of Your Choice
This Sunday

9~-f.t:JO ,/

r

VIRGIL B.
TEAFoRD SR.

-

WAID CROSS
SOliS. STORE

TSmoke!

The Church

The smol4e? Doc
1s bumnq trash
next door. Walt'

Of Your Choice
This S""u nday

•s

The Church

MARK V' STORE
Middleport

of your, Choice
This Sunday

of Your Choice
This Sunday

oNA':&gt; THEIR
117EA I A SORT

OF HOUSE ·
WARMING I

/IOLIJNTEERED I

a..

Sermon heard on making 1980 happy

present.

l.un.!llord,

for a

wu

''Ctmmilnlon Sunday."
Paw
tbe
New Year.
a

men.

wtn

Thomas

basement.

Mayor's
court
.

were

were

PsaJms.,oo,

~oofinement,

'aodi
~; ~

A:..,.

.

Dun

nliht.

filll!l'e

.SidweJI,

Jr.,

°

i:osts,

Milbourn;

il'*flllacVllltor:ure not111t011 fLU
I'IJICil1l tbat.

ilo.v.

1'1""'11?'11 a. rri.

1

(

'·

..

I

com.
-ForteWac

were

aarawu.
.....; a....

Kina.

m,

111111'1.. ;
BlOW II, MiDernllle, tiD, lpeedlng,

. "'

'

Television

PEANUTS

by

NO 'IOU WERE PROBABL4'
INVITED TO NINE PARm=s
BUT ALL THE INVITATIONS
WERE LOST IN T~ E ,\\AIL

ACROSS
39 Vogues
1French pnest to Debark
5Wme
DOWN
It " _ That
I An Arab
12 Employee's
bio
13 TeMyson lady
11 Canadian
perunaula
15 - Turner
16 Result
of an AdamUttin
17 ~ta 'S g

Iollower
18 Contemry

01

~:;:.,ur

2 Platttudlnous
3 John Bull's
erstwhile
glory

Yesterday's ADitwer
10 Inhabit
Z5 Swear to

4 FlJUS
5 Had to have

II State

6 Prymg device
7 Fit _
ftddle
8 Arne composition
9 Happmess or

Fr

Z6 Swamp

19 Mets'
28 lllustrtous
stadium
29 Make
22 1954 SCI-fi fUm believe
23 Bobby33 Coli
, d·
Martini
soxer s 1 o1 35

••
Spanish
~

mgredient

painter

:16 Everybody

sorrow, e.g

2t Storage
place
II Food fish
%! Run along
13- Atkins

question

14 Climb
NORTH
• 10 l2
.1 (17 6 3
+8 6 5

15 F1eld

11 Run into
%7The

"

.

+to 9 6

Jones boy
!8 CeremoniiiWI

WEST

EAST

+K 8 7

lGSwnmit

+K 7 2

UQJ96"

.A Q

+Q

+AQ t
Vulnerable East West
Dealer West

38Zoo
creature

We1t

DAILY CRYPTOQ UOTE- .Here's how to work it ·
AXYDLBA A XII
1o LONGFELLOW
One l etter !limpl y st a11d!i fo r another In this sample A is
used for the three l..'s, X (or 1he twn 0 s etc Smglc letters,
apostrophes, the len,a:th and formatiOn o ( the words are all
hints Each da) the code letters are different •

CRYPTDQUOTES

I N

LQIJQHJ

1•

Nurtb
Pass

Pass

Pass

doesn' t cover

2. ••
East

FKJ

VBLDGWCQKHL .

Sout t.

Pass

XWHFC

Y BKJ L

WB I.H

FIGTH

BC - MFL E11KXCG K BWTBKX
\ Yesterday'• Cryptoquole: I'VE REACHED THE KliNT
WHERE I REGARD MY EXISTENCE AS AN ARTICHOKE',
AND I'M STRIPPING AWAY THE OUTER LAYERS.··S.J.PERELMAN
'

10 1979 Kino F.. turu Sl'ndltefe, Inc,

'

0

. Then you take and wm the
heart £tnesse and make your
co ntract Should East cover
the 10 of clubs the mnc
becomes a re-entry
Mathematically

Opemng lead • K

your

chances y;eren' t good It was
necessarv that East hold both
the JaCk "of clubs and king of
hearts

and Alan Sonta g

But the wmmng li ne was
slightly better than th e s1mple
ltne of fmess1ng hearts and

Here IS an mterestmg prob
\em from En~land You are m

one cl ub loser after playmg
cl ubs from your own hand

rour spades West leads the

I QC

IS a dec1ded Yes
The answer to the second a
quahfted Yes The wmmng
play 1s reasona ble but would
probabl y be overlooked by
even the most expert declarer Here 1t 1s
You s ta 1t pr oceed mgs bv
leadmg the queen of clubs
West wms w tt h lhe k1n g and
leads another diamond wh1ch
yo~ rurf Now you lead a low
spade
West's best play I!; to take
tu s king and lead hiS last
trump You are now •n

dummy You lead dummy s 10
of clubs and let It nde tf Et~st

By O.wald Jacoby

CFYHJ

FWH

+J 8 53

SOUTH

event

ABCCAH : YBKJL

-

. K 542
• J 10 9 4 3

• J 98
t AK7 2

31 Skill
3% NO\'el
34"Vanationa"
3i Not for
17 Od. baseball lr.-+--+-1--t--+-

Vi~wing

FRIDAY ,JANUARY 4,1 980
8 30- Wa ll Street Week 20,33
9 OO - Se nsat10nal Wond erful
Wa cky 70s 3, 15 Duke s of
Hazzard 8 10 Lord Mounlba tlen
20 33
9 JO - Mov 1e Stunts Unlimit ed
6, tJ
10 00- Dallas B 10 Perspecl 1ve on
Grea tness 17 N ews 20. David
fi usslond 33
11 00- News 3,6,8. 10, lJ 15 Last of
the Wild 17 Monty Python s
Fly 1ng C1rcus 33
11 )0- Ton 1ght 3 15
Charlie s
Ange ls 6 Mov1e 'The Deat h
Pol 1cy 8 ABC N ews 33 Mov1e
' Daughter of Dr Jekyll " 10,
Movie' Ftr st to F 1ght' 13 Mov1e
' Dracula Has R1sen from the
Grave ' 17
12 40- FBl 6
1 OO- M1dn1ght
Spe cial J 15 Movie ' Tw1s ted
Bram" 10 . News 13
1 30 - News
17
1 3S - M6vle
"Muscle Beach Party" 17
2 30--News 3 3 35-Movle "Con
fess•ons of a Nazi Spy" 17

COWitry

Bow,

ol

Euvon•

~tue-"t!t'
THOMAS JOSEPH

Dream"

I 01{) BuT IM
GDING IO M/.SS
HER NEVER. THE: LES5

1~

THE GANG
AT THE OFFICE

then h.op1ng to get a~Aay w1th

kulg and ace of dtamonds . lNI'- WSPAPWA )'~ NT !:: HPil\ Sf. o\!-1SN
You trump m an d lay down
(Fa; a copy Of JACOB Y
yo ur ace of , spadE's ~ast
• MODERN send $ 1 to Will at
Sh OWfl out
Can you make the lland? Bridge, · bRre of thiS newspa
Can you fmd a log1 cal ba s1s pe~ p 0 Box 489 RR'I)ip City
SrstiOr.J
New Yo rk~
f or the wmnm&amp;-rl3J'
Thr iH'I~WPr to the ft rst • 1001g)

2

2

3
3
4

the Know 10 Wesl V1rg1n1a
Outdoor s JJ
30---30 M.nu tes 8 10 Mov1e Th e
Innocent s 17 Old Hou seworks
JJ
OD-Thts Is the NFL 6' V•ewpo1nl
a Gomer Pyle 10 Marlo &amp; I he
Mag1c Mo111 e Mach1ne 13
Mas terp1ece Th eatre 33
3D-Pro Bowi 1ng 6 13 Eil~~' West
Shn ne Game 8 10
00- PTL Cl ub 1S
Up &lt;o l rm s
Downstairs Jl
30---Cha ngmg T1mes 3
3 45-Movle ' H1gh S1crra J
DO-Hula Bowl6 13 All Cred lur es

Grea t &amp; Sma ll 33
5 DO--Full Gospel Temple IS": Lap

Qu •ll •ng 20, Poldark II 33
The Maestro
Remembered 3, Rat Patrol 17.
Crockett s V1ctory Garden 10
6 00- New s 3 10 Conc{!rn 6. God
Has the Answer 15 Wrestling 17
Upstairs Downsta~rs 20 Calch
33 33
...
6 30-- NBC News 3 15. Muppel Show
a CBS News 10 Know Your
Schoo ls 33 •
7 00--0ance Fever 3
Lawren ce
Wel k 15 Hee Haw 6 8. Once
Upon a Classi c 33 Bugs Bunny
10 $1 98 Beauty Show 13 Pearl s
5 30- Toscann1

SATUROA '(,JANUARY S, 1980
s so-World at Large 17. b 00Health F1eld
10
Human
10
D1menslon 17
7 3D-An lns1de Look 3 $100 000
6 30 - Saturday Report 3 _TV
Name That Tune 13 , Best ot
• Classroom B U S Farm Report
Groucho 20 World War II G I
10 Ke ntucky Afle ld 13 II s Yoaur
D1ary 33
Bus1ness 17
B oo-Pnme T1me Saturday 3 15
7 00-- Big Blue Marble 3 Porky P•g
Ropers 6, 13, College Basketball
8 It ' s Your Business 10,
10 1 hai Nashville MusiC 17
An1mais, Anima l s An1mals 13,
Masterpiece
Th eatre
20 ,
Three Stooges L1ttle Rascals 17
Strmger Port ra 1t of a Newsree l
7 30-- Ll tlle Rascals J Bay C1 ty
Cameraman 33
Rol lers 15, Matters of l1fe b Not
B J0- Poi1hcal Debate 3,6,8 13 15 33
For Women Only 10 Sp 1der
9 oo- Co liege Baske t bal l 17 ,
Woman 13
Ellx.1r of Love 20
R oo- Godz• lla, Globe trotters J, 15
10 oo-Mel Tllh s at Knollsberry
Su perfrlends
6. 1J
Mighty
Farm 10
Mouse Heckle &amp; Jeckte 8,10 .
tO 10- NBC News 3, 15. ABC News
Ultra Man 17, !les"imw St JJ
Spec tat 6, 13
8 Jtl-Partrldge Fam1ly 17 9 00Fred &amp; Barney 3,15, PlastJc Mar. 11 00 - N ews 3,6,8 10, 13 , 15 . D 1ck
Maunce &amp; Co
17
Movie
6, 13 Bugs Bunny Road Runner
·
Splendor
"
33
8 10
Mavenck 17 , Harold
11 30--j alurday Night Llve 3, 15.
Lloyd's Wor ld of Comedy 33
MtfVie ' Sleepwal ker" 6 CBS
10 00- Movie "T.llil VIctor s:' 17
News Special 8 Movle " The
10 JQ-Daff y Duck 3 IS, Scooby
Silencers" 10 , Mov1e ' Dracula' s
&amp; Scrappy Doo 6 13, Pcpeye B
Daughter · 13
Mov1e " The Lf!gend of Custer"
11 40 - Mo vie
" The
Young
10. Wodehause Pl.whovse JJ
St range r
a. 12 Oo-Don K lr
11 OQ-Casper &amp; t ill' Angels J, 1S
shner 's Rock Concert 17
Predators 33
11 30- Jet son s 3. 15, G•gg iesnort,. 1 00-Niov•e ' ' The Hell wllh Heroe s"
J. Mov1e " House uf Dracula" 1J
Hotel 6 Fat Albert B. Action
1 30- Movie ' A Bullet lor Joey' 17 ,
News ~ lor K1ds 13
1 lO ABC NeW, 13 , 2 45-- News
1~ oo- Hot Hero
S.:mdwlch :3. 1.5
'J
Weekend Spee~al ' 6" IJ, Shazam•
3 15- Mov1 e ·We Were Slrangers"
8 Snr,ak Prevtcws 33
3 320 - Mov•e " Th e Killer Is
l
30 Anwncan Bcwdstand 1J ,
Loose · 17
m
I V•t:w 6 Tarzan Super 7
s oo- Love , Amencan Style 17 ,
8 Hog '
s 10
5 15- M ovle " You Can 't Run
1 oo
Col lf"Ol'! T:\ it sketbail 3. l'i ,
Aw;,y From It " 3
1 •rlumhu~ p .. w 1 !'(,; ":. lassie 6 ~ 1 n

I

SUNDAY ,JANUARY 6,1980
5 30 - AGUSA
17,
600Ame rlcan
Problems
&amp;
Challenges 10 Be tw ee n t he
L me~ 17
6 Jo-Chr•slopher Closeup 3 Better
Wily a Treehouse Club 10
Act 1on Newsmaker 13
7 00--- Th1 s Is The Ltfe J
Jerry
Fa lwe ll B. Urban League 10 ,
J1mmy Swaggart 17
Gospel
Outreach 13
7 JO- TV Chape l 3 Eddle Saunders
6 Jerry Fa lwell 10, The B1ble
Answers 13 Jimmy Swaggart
15. It I s Wnllen 17
a DO - Mormon Choir 3 Grace
Ca thedral 6 Day of D•scovery a.
Chr is t for the World 13 Three
Stooges 17 , Sesame St 20 33
a JO-Ora l Roberts J Contact 6.
James Rob1son 10
Lower
Lighthouse t3 Open 81ble 15
9 oo-Gospe l Smgmg Jub1iee 3 Oral
Roberts 10 Re)( Humbard 6.
Chnsilan Cent er 8 Rev J1m
Franklm 13. Ernest Ang ley 15,
Los i m Space 17 M1ster Roge r s
20.33
9 3D-Robert Schuller B. E lec Co
33, lt Is Written 10. Rev R A
West 13 Sesa me St 20
10 00-Thls Is The N-FL 3. K1ds Are
Peop l e Too 6 Movie · The
P1geon That Took Rome' 10.
J1mmy Swaggart t3. Gospel
S1ng1ng Jub1lee 15 , Hazel 17
Stud1o See 33
10 30- Re)( Humbard 3 Ernest
Angley 8 Zoom 20 , Mov1e
'Caged" 17 Big Blue Marble 33
11 00- Rex Humbard 15
Rev
Henry Mahan 13 E lee Co 70 ,
Footst eps 33
11 30- Btl! Dance Outdoors 3.
Ani mal s, Anlmats, Anima l s 6,
Face the .NaHon a. Big Blue
Marble 20. Evangel 1sttc Outlook
13, Unicorn Tales 33
12 DO-Meet the Press 3, 15 Issues &amp;
Answers 6, 13, V1ewpoint 8, The
Issue 10 , Ohio Journal 20. Movie
" Down Laredo Wa y" 33
12 30- Directlons 6. Kids Are
People Too 13 Movie "Fort
Yuma · 17, Otto Zoo Gonl la 20
I GO-Aware 6 Mov ie 'Splendor'
JJ
1 3tl-Amerlca's Black Forum 6,
High Q 13; Soundstage 20
2 QO-Road to /Mscow 6, Mar la &amp;
the Magic Movie Mach1ne 13,
Mov•e "How to M arry a
Millionaire" 17
2 3tl-Batt le of the Planets 13.
Hocktng Valley Bluegrass 20
3 00- Movie
" Marjorie
Mor
nmgstar" 6, Tn State Today &amp;
Tamorrow 13 , Polde~rk II 20:
Movie " The Homecoming" 33
3 Jtl- Mo~f"' Born Yesterday " 13
4 · 00- Mo..rle
' Tammy &amp; the
Mllllofialre" 17 Lap Quilting 20
• JG-Wali Slreel Wee~ 20. S ooE lee Co 20, Nova 33.
5 30-Best of Groucho 20. In Search
Of 6, 1979 The Year That Was

13

�Fnday, Jane. 4, SHTJ8EOR
8- The DauJu Sentinel ' Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .,MIOL&gt;LEPORT
LU

CHURCH
NEWS

HEATH Churc h School 9 JO o m Wo1
ship 10 30 o m UMYF b p m Robert
Rob•nson Past or
RU TLANO Church Schoo l 9 30 o m
Cllurch &amp; Oftl(t' Supph•s
Wo rs t·up 10 30om Wilbur Hdt Pastor
GIFTS
SALEM Cf:NTER Worsh1p 9 o m Church
KERMIT'S KORNER
Scl-lool9
o m
Pomeroy . Oh1o
Middleport
SYRACUSE CLUSTER
Rev Harvey Koch Jr
&amp; LUnot
TRINITY CHURCH Rev W H Pem n
FOREST RUN Worshp 9 am Church
pastor Bob Buck Sunday sc hool supt
Schooi iO am
•
Church School 9 15 am worsh1p ser
MINERSVIll E Church School 9 om
Wt Fill Doctors'
v1ce, 10 30 a m Choir rehearsal Tuesday
Worsh 1p 10 o m
Prescnphons
7 30 p m under dmtcl •on of Allee Nease
AS&amp;URY Church School 9 50 o m War
" Jn 1tu
POMEROY CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE
sh 1p 11 0 m 8 1ble Study 7 30 p m Thurs·
,Pomeroy
Corner Umon and Mulberry Rev Clyde V
day UMW f1st Tuesday
Henderson pastor Sunday school 9 30
SOUTHERN ClUSTER
a m Glen McClung supl rnorn1ng wor
Rev Dov 1d Harm
__./~_J sh1 p, 10 30 a m e'w'en1ng serviCe 7 30
Rev Mark Flynn
FURNI T URE lo HARDWARE
m•d-weekser~o~1 ce, Wednesdov 7 30p m
FlorenceSm1th
Home lite Sews
~
GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH - 326 E
Holton Wollo
Main St Pomeroy l'he Rev Robert 8
BETHANY, (Dorcas) Worsh1p 9~ 00 a m
Sf Rt 7
Cra~o~es rector Sunday serv1ces at 10 30 Church School 10 00 a 1m
0 m with Holy Communion on the ftrst
CARMEL Chruch School 9 30 o m War·
Sundov of each month and comb•ned sh•p1 030a m 1ndand.-th Sundays
w1th Mommg Prayer on teh th.rd Sunday
APPLE GROVE Sunday School9 30 o m
Morn~ng Prayer and Sermon on oil othe r Worst·u p 7 30 p m 1st and 3rd Sundays,
Sundays of the month Church Schoo l and Preyer meeting Wedn.ndoy 7 30 p m
nursery core provided Coffee hour m the Fellowsh 1p supper ftrsf Saturdav 6 p m
Paush Hall 1mmed1otely follow1ng the ser
UMW 2nd Tu esday 7 30 p m
Ph
v•ce
EAST LETART Chruch School 9 o m
POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST 212 W
Worsh 1p serv 1ce 10 am Prayer meettng
Mom St Ned Proudfoot . pastor B1ble 7 30 p m Wednesday UMW second Tues
school 9 30 am morn1ng worsh ip 10 30 day 7 30 p m
om Youth meetmgs 6 30 p m even.ng
RACINE WESLEYAN - Sunday school10
'Tht Store
worsh ip 7 30 Wednesdol,. mght prayer 0 m worShip , 11 a m Cho1r pract•ce
With A H••rt
meetmg and B•ble study, 7 :~ P m
Thursday 8 p m
R1c1ne
212 W. Mltn
THE SALVATION ARMY 11 5 Butt ernut
LETART FALLS- Worsh1p serv•ce9 am
Ph 949 2626
tf2-m2
Ave Pomeroy Envoy and Mrs Roy Wu,. Church School tOo m
.ng offtcers 1n charge Sunday holmen
MORNING STAR Worsh1p 9 30 a m ..
meet •ng 10 am Sunday School 10 30 Church , School 10 30 om . You th
0 m Sunday school le&lt;Jder YPSM Eloise
Tuesdays 7 p m
NlflonwHie Ins Co
MORSE CHAPEL Church School 9 30
Adams 7 30 p m solvot 1on me&amp;trng
of Columbus. 0 .
am Worsh1p 11 a m
vonous speakers and mus•c spec1als
104 W Mliin
Thursdoy-10 am to 2 p m lad 1es Home
PORTLAND Church School 9 30 om
tt2-2l11 Pcuneroy
League all women 1nv1ted 7 30 P m
Worsh 1p 11 a m
prayer meetmg and Btble study Bob
SUTTON Church School9 30 a m Wor
Estep
leader
Re~o~
Noel Hermon
st'up 1st and3rd Sundays 10 30 o m
teacher
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
BURLINGTON SOUTHERN BAPTIST
Rev R1chardW Thomas
CHAPEL Route 1 Shade- Poster Bobby
Duane Sydenstnck cir Sr
Elkm s Sunday school 5 p m Sunday
John W Douglas
worsh1p 5 45 p m Wednesday pr ayer
Cha rles Dom1gon
serv1ce 7 30 p m
JOPPA Worship 9 00 a m Church
POMEROY WESTSIDE
CH URCH OF Sch ooiiO 00 om
CHRIST, 200 W Mom St , Conservative
CHESTER Wonh1p 9 a m
Chu rc h
COPYRIGHT 1980
Here 's a P.hotograph taken tram~ kayak Y
I\ ElSTER AOVERTISitJG SE RVICE
norHnst ru mental Sunday worsh1p 10 School 10 am Cho1r Rehearsal 7 p.m
P 0 BOX 802~
don't
bring a slup th 1s close to an ICeberg.1
am B1ble study 11 _ a m wo rsh1p 6 Wednesday B1ble Study Wednesdays
CHAALOTIESVILLE. VIRGINIA n906
p m Wednesday Bible study , 7 p m
7 30 p m
underwater th e tentacles of thi s cruel, co ld
OLD DEX TER BIBLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH
LONG BOTTOM Sunday School ot 9 30
monster may reach out a mile or more.
Rev Rolph Sm1th pastor Sunday school
0 m E&gt;.oemng Worsh1p at 7 30 p m Thur•
9 30
am
Mrs
Worley Fronc1s, day B1bl eStudy. 7 30 p m
Ltfe fo r so me folks 1s a successiO n of narrow
supenntendent Preochmg ser v1ces f 1rst &amp;
REEDSVILLE Sunday School 9 JO am
tk•rcfSundoys follow1ng Sunday School
Mornmg Worsh•p 10 30 am Evening War·
escapes.
But th ese are adven tures we can do
lnsuranc:e
GRAHAM
UNITED
METHODIST , shp 7 30 p m Bible Study Wednesdays of
wtthout
They
don't prove us bold sa tlors
214 Second
'
Preochmg 9 30 o m f1rst and second Sun- 7 30 p m
Pomeroy
simpl y prove us poor navigators.
ALFRED Sunday School at 9 .tS o m
days of &amp;ach month th1rd and fourth Sunm .ms
days each month worsh•p sen~~ee at 1 30 Mornmg Worsh1p at 11 c m WednMday
Fnghtened men so met1 mes turn to rehgton as
p m Wednesdav evenmgs ot7 30 Prayer N1ght Prayer Meeting. 7 30 p m
and B1bie Study
ST PAUl, (Tuppers Plo1ns) Sunday
a 1 efuge when dang ers - moral, sp iritual and
SEVENTH DAY ADVE NTIST Mulberry School 9 00 0 m Mormng Worship at
physical - loom too close for com fort God does
He1ghts Rood Pomeroy Pastor, Albert 10 00 a m Monday N1ght Bible Study 1 30
D1ttes Sabbath School Supenntenden t
pm
not fail US Ill Cri SIS.
R1to Whtte Sabbath School Saturday
:;OUTH BETHEL (S •I ver R•dge) Sunday
461 S. ]ltlrcl, Mld&lt;lloport
afternoon at 2 00 wtth Worship Ser-v1ce School 9 00 0 m Mornmg Wosh1p 10 00
But the every- day fun cti on of faith IS to pi I
WJ-21"
tollowmg at 3 15
0 m Wednesday B1ble Study, 7. 30 p m .
men
on
a
tru
e
coutse
th
rough
the
sea
of
life.
RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCHKENO CHURCH OF CHRIST services
Churcll cannot sweep away Icebergs. It warns
S1ster Harnett Worn er Supt Sunday each Sunday 9 ·30 a .m George P1ckens
School. 9 30 a m morn1ng wo rsh •p 10 AS pastor w1th preochmg on lint and third
of thetr whereabouts and 'helps us give them
om
Sunday of month Ohver Swa1n. Supt.
wtde berth.
THE HILAND CHAPEL George Cas to,
HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION Rev. Ketth
pastor Sunday School , 9 30 o m evening Ebhn pastor Sunday School 9 30 a m .
worsh•p 7 30 Thu rsday evenmg proyer leonard Gilmore, ftrst elder, even1ng serserv•ce, 7 3Q p m
viCe, 7 30 p m
Wednesday prayer
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST Oa \l ld Mann, meeting, 7 30 p .m
mm1ster, Wilham Watson, Sunday school
BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH 01
lu psrluv
We dn v~ fill\'
f. Will\
St~ lu rdny
1/w rs du\'
supt Sunday school 9 30 om. morn~ng CHRIST, Duane Worden, min1ster B1blt.
fHIHih
• Jil'VHIO!IU/1 • llf u s • /l ebren s
• /f'r!'UIIUh •
doss, 9 30 am morn1ng worshtp, 10 30
worsh1p 10 30om
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST, 282 Mulberry 0 m
ev.en 1ng worsh1p
6 30 p. m
g2 7
liJ 1lJ
12 1 7
J J 20
1 1 lb
Ave Pomeroy Her shel McClure Sunday Wednesday B1bla study, 6 30 p m
school supenntend"nt Sunday school,
NEW STIYERSYILLE COMMUNITY
9 30 o m mormng worsh1p 10 30 even- Church -su nday School serviCe, 9
o m.,
mg worshtp 7 00 p m M1dweek prayer Worsh iP ser\IICe. 10 30. Evangelistic Ser·
serv1ce 7 00 p m
'&lt;~ICe, 7 30 p m Wednesday, Prayer
Eet In or
MIDWAY COMMUNITY CENTER Dexter
meefing 7 30
C•rry Out
Rd Langsville Ohto Rev Clyde Ferrell
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST, Pomeroy126 E Mlln
Pastor. Sunday School 11 a m Saturday Hamsonv 111e Rd, Robert Purtell. pastor.
9f2-6l04
preoch•ng aerv•ces 7 30 p m Wednesday Bill McElroy, Sunday school supt. Sunday
pomeroy
even1ng B1ble study at7 30 p. m
school 9 30 o m morning YIIOfSh1p and
FAITH TABERNACLE SHURCH Bailey commumon, 10 30 am , Sunday worsl·up
Run Rood, Rev Emmett • awson pastor
aerv•ce 7 p m Wednesday evemng
Handley Dunn su pt Sundov school, 10 prayer meeting and B1ble study, 7 p m
0 m Sunday evening serv1ce 7 30 B1ble
ST JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH P1ne
om (meeting and prayer. Prayer and
ages Nursery prov1ded for worshtp serWednesday, 1 JO p m
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE
bleStudy7p m
teod ung 7 30 p m Thursday
Grove The Rev. Wilham Middlesworth.
vice
FOREST RUN BAPTIST Rov. Nylo
Rev Herbert Grate pastor Worstl1p ser
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
DYES VIllE COMMUNI TV CHURCH
Pastor Churctl serv~ees 9 30om Sunday
ST PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH, Corner
Borden
pastor
Corneltus Bunch,
Roger C Turner po st or Sunday school
SchoollO 30 0 m
.-ICe 11 o .m and 7 30 P m Sunday CHRISTIAN UNION, The Re\1 Wi lliam
of Sycamore and Second Sfs , Pomeroy
supenntendent Sunday school 9 30 a m ,
School, 9 30 a m Charles B1ssell supt
Campbell pastor Sunday School, 9 30
9 30 o m
Sunday morn1ng worsh1p
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST Sunday
The Rev Wi lliam Middlesworth, Pastor
second and fou rth Sundays worsh1p ser
Prayer meetmg Wednesday 7 30 P m
a m James Hughes supt evenmg ser
10 30 Sunday evenmg serv1ce, 7 30
school 9 30 a m , worsh1p serv1ce 10 30
Svnday School at 9 ~5 a m and Church
~o~lce at 2·30 p.m .
LAUREL
CliFF
FREE
METHODIST
v•ce
7
30
p
m
Wednesday
evenmg
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
m
Other
meet1ngs
as
announced
Serv1ces II a m
0
MT. MORIAH BAPTIST - Fourth and
CHURCH Rev Floyd F Shook, pastor, prayer meehng, 7 30 p m Youth prayer
CHRISTIAN UNION lawrence Manley
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST Rev Earl Shul er,
SACRED HEART. Rov Fothor Pau l D
Main St, Middleport Rev Calv1n M1nnts,
Lloyd Wnght, Sunday School Supt .• Morn- service each Tuesday
pa stor
Mrs Russell Young Sunday posfor Sunday school 9 30 om Church
Welton, pastor Phone992-2B25 Soturcfoy pastor Mrs Elvin Bumgardner, supt Sunong Wor&gt;hop 9 30 o m . Sunday School
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH. Lotort. W
School Supt Sunday School 9 30 a m. / service 7 p m ' youth meeting
6
even1ng Moss 1 30. Sunday Moss 8 and day school, 9·30 a.m .. worsh1p service,
10 20 o m , Wednesday Prayer and Bible Yo , Rt. 1, Rev Charles Hargraves
Evenmg worshtp 7 30 Wednesday proy.y p m Tuesdoy B1ble Study. 7 p m
10 a.m., Confession , Saturday 7-7 30
10415am
Study 7 30 p m Sunday eventng worsh1p pastor Worship serv 1ces. 9 30 a m . Sunmeetong, 7 30 p m
RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE .
pm
NORTH BETHEL United Mothodi51
,
J
30
p
m
,
CholrPract1ce
Thursday
1
P
m
day
school,
11
am.
,
evening
WOflhip
MT
MORIAH CHURCH OF GOO , Re'Y' John A Coffman, pastor Franklirl
VICTORY BAPTIST - On the Rculo 7
Church Rev Charles Dom1gon. pastor.
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST Charlet 7 30 p.m Tuesday cottage prayer meeting
Roc1ne- Rev James Sotterf1eld pastor
Imboden cha1tmon of the Boord of Chnsbypass Jam•• E Keesee, pastor. Sunday Sunda~ School, 9.30 o m Wonhlp SerMorn~ng worsh1p 9',-45 om · Sunday ttan Life Sunday School, 9·30 o.m morn- Russell. Sr , minister Ride Macomber, and B•ble study, 9:30 a. m. Worship ser
achool, 10 a.m., morning worship 11
vice, 10•45 c.m.: S..nday Bible Siudy. 7 00
supt
Sunday
school,
9.30
o.m
,
Yllorshlp
v•ce
Wednesday
,
7
30p
m
"hool. 10 ~5 am even1ng worsh1p 7
mg worsh 1p 10 30 Sunday e~o~enl ng wor·
o m evening aervice, 7.
p. m .; Wednesday prayer meetmg, 7 30
service. 10 30om Bible Study Tuesday,
cALVARY BIBLE CHURCH, nOw located
Tuesday , 7 30 p m , lod•es prayer ship, 7 30 p m. Prayer meet•ng. WednesTRINITY Chrlollan Auembl~. Coolvlllo p. m .
meetmg Wednesday 7 30 p m YPE
day 7 30 p m
7 30 P m.
·
on Pomeroy Pike, County Rood 25 near
Gilbert Spencer, pastor. Sunday
BURLINGHAM SOUTHERN BAPTIST
REORGANIZED
CHURCH
OF
JESUS
Flatwoods
Rev
Blackwood,
postor
Ser·
MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST Corner
iV;ciNE FIRST BAPTIST Don L Wolkor
school, 9 .30 om. mornmg worship, II
CHURCH, Route 1, Shade Pastor Don
S1xt h and Palmer the Rev Mark McC lung
Pastor Ronn1e Sal ser, Sundav schoo l CHRIST OF LA ITER DAY SAINTS. Portland vocos 00 Sunday at 1~30 a. m. and 7 30
a m Sunday evening service, 7:30 p.m
Block AHII1ated with Sourh,rn Bapttst
p m w ith Sunday school. 9.30 om Bible
Sundav school 9 15 o m Don W1 lson
supt , Sunday schoo l 9 30 a m morn1ng RaCine Rood Wtlliom Roush, pastor.
m1dweeh prayer service Wednesday 7•30 Convention. Sunday school 1 30 p. m ,
Sunday
School
Supt
Sunstudy,
Wednesday,
7
30
p.
m
PhylliS
Sjobart,
~upeuntenden t lacy Borton asst supt
worsh 1p 10 ~0 om Sunday evenmg wor
pm
Sunday worship, 2·30 p m. Thursday
INDEPENDENT HOLINESS CHURCH , INC
Morn.ng Worsh1p 10 15 am B1ble stu dy
ship 7 30 Wednesday evemng 8tble day School. 9 30 om . Mornong war&gt;hlp ,
MOUNT Olive Community Church
even•ng Bible study 7 p m
10 30 0 m of church Vouth meet mg. 7 30
study 7 30
10 30 am Sunday even•ng servlce7 P m
_ Pearl St, Middleport Re\1. O'Dell
lawrence Bush pastor, Max Folmer, Sr
PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY
Ra cone.
Wednesdav evenmg prayer serviCes, 7 30 Manley, pa stor; Sonny Hudson, Sunday
p m Wednesday Wednesday mght B1ble
DANVI LLE WESLEVAN Rev
R 0
Superintendent Sunday School and mornRoute 12.t WUI!am Hoback pastor Sunstudy and prayer serviCe 7 30 P m
Brown , pastor Sunday School , 9 30 a m ,
Pm
school supt Sunday school, 9.30 am,
mg worsh1p 9 30 o m Sunday evening day school, 10 a .m ., Sunday even1ng serBETHLEHEM BAPTIST , Re\1 Earl Shuler, evenmg worship 7 30 p m Prayer and
CHURCH OF CH RI ST M1ddleport Sth
morn•ng worst·u p 10 45 , youth ser\IIC8,
serv1ce, 7 p m , Youth meetmg and 81ble v tre, 6 30 p.m Wadnesdoy een1ng ser
and Motn Bob Melton m1n1ster, M1ke 6 &lt;t5 p m twemng worship, 7 30 p m
pastor Worsh1p serv1ce 9 30 am Sunday proiSe ~er\IICe, Wednesday, 7·30 p m
st udy Wedneadoy 7 p.m
vice, 7
school, 10 30 o m Boble Study and prayer
RUTLAND APOSTOLIC CHURCH OF
Gerlocn supenntendent Terry 'Yankey
prayer and pro1se. Wednesday 7 30 p m
FAITH BAPTIST Church, Mason, mHI at
CARPENTER BAPTIST, Rov Freeland
youth m1n1ster B1ble school , 9 30 a m ,
Sll YER RUN FREE BAPTIST Rev Mar~o~i n
servtee Thu rsday 1 30 P m
JESUS CHRIST, Elder James Miller. Bible
United Steel Workers Un1on Hall, Railroad Norr11, pastor. Don Cheadle, Supt SunCARLETON CHURCH, Kongsbury Rood.
otudy , Wodnooday 7 30 p. m.: Sunday
mormng worsh1p 10 30 a m youth group Morkm pastor Ste\le little Sunday school
Street, Mason. Pastor, Rev Joy Mitche ll. day School, 9 ·30 a.m. Morning Worohlp,
supt Sunday school. 10 a.m. morn1ng Gary King, pa stor Sunday school, 9 30 School. 10 0 m. Sunday night servke, 7 30
Sunday 6 30 p m even 1ng wonh1p 7 30,
Morning worship 9 45 o m , Sunday 10·30 a.m. Prayer Service alternate Sunam , Rolph Carl, superintendent event ~g p.m.
prayer serv1ce 7 30 p m Wednesday
worshtp, 11 o. m Sunday even•ng worSchool 10·30 o, m
Prayer mHtl~
POMEROY WESlEYAN HOLINESS MIODLEPORT CHURCH
OF
THE
sh 1p 7 30. Prayer meet1ng and Bible worship 7 30 p m Prayer m""llng ,
NAZARENE, Rev J•m Broome, pallor, B•ll
study, Thursday , 7 30 p m , vouth service,
Wednesday, 1 30 P m.
Harmonvtlle Rood, Dewey King, pastor,
Sunday school supt Sunday 6 p m Sunday
Wh 1te
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN, George F
Edison Weaver assis tant Henry Eblin,
school , 9 30om morn1ng worsh1p 10·30
CHESTER CHURCH OF GOO, Rev. R E
P1ckens, pastor, Wallace Damewood
Jr , Sunday school supt. Sunday school
Robmson pastor Sunday school , 9 30 Supt Bible School 9 ~5 a .m Preaching 9 30 am morning worship, 11 a. m Suno m , Sunday evangel•shc meeting 1 00
service 10.-45 o.m first ond third Sundov even•ng serv1ce, 7·30; prayer
p m Pra ye r meetmg Wednesday 7 P m
0 m , worsh 1p serviCe 11 am , evening
TUPPERS PLAINS - St. Paul
meetmg Thursday 7 30 p m
message was, ''How I !Ill Can Be the
UNITED PRESBVTERIAN MINISTRY OF
serv•ce 7 00 youth serviCe, Wednesday , days. 7 p m second and fourth Sundays
United Methodist Church d. Tupers Happiest Year d. Your Life." Tbere.
MEIGS COUNTY Dw1ght l Zov1tz direc
7 00 p m
B1ble dudy, 8 P m Tu .,.doys
SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF GOD HYSELL RUN FREE METHODIST CHURCH, Not Pentecostal, Rev George 01ler,
Plains had 52 present for Sunday
tor
LANG SVILLE CHRISTIAN CHURCt&lt;,
was a time of sharing on ''What God--._
Rev Ok ey Cart pasto r Sunday School pastor Worship service Sunday, 9.4S
HARR ISONVILLE PRESBYTERIAN Re'Y'
Robert Mus ser. pastor Sunday school
school
and 51 present for worship Has Done for Me. " Special nwnben~
Ernest St o ck hn pastor Sunday church 930 0 m Roy Stgman, supt. morn1ng 9 30 Morn1ng serv1ce, 10.30 o m Sunday 0 m., Sunday school, 11 o m, worahlp
Dec. ~. There were 14 choir mem- were done by Rev. Thomas, Bonnie
ser\ltCe, 7 30 p.m
Thursday prayer
school 9 30 a m Mrs Homer Lee supt
worsh 1p 10 30. Sunday evening ser.11ce. evenmg and Thursday evenmg serv1ces at
bers
mormng worsh•p I 0 30
7 30, m1d- week serviCe, Wednesday, 7 7 OOp.m
meeting, 7:30pm
Thomas, Mrs. Sarah
Mn.
MIDDLEPORT Sunday school, 9 30 a m
pm
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION ct Bold
M T HERMON Unoted Brothren Church
The
sermon
was
~ven by Rev.
Gertrude
Russell,
and
David
Rice,
1
Knob
Rev
lawrence
Gluesencamp
Sr.
Sunday
Scllool
9.30
a.
m
Worsh1p
III'\IICe
R chord Vaughan supt Mornmg worshtp,
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE .
Richard Tbomas; tbe topic was, "A son of Mr. and Mn. Jolm Rice. Num10 30
1
Rev Dole Boss pastor Sunday school, pastor; Roger Willford , Sr , Sunday school 10 -45 a m Preaching services every Su,..
SYRACUSE FIRST UNITED PRESBYTERIAN 9 30 am , mornmg worsh1p 10 &lt;t5 o m . supt Sunday school 9 30 o evening wor·
day alternating with C. E. Wednesday
Olangeleai Christ
Changing bers were sung by the w&lt;men and
Church Worshlr serviCe 9 30 o m Sundol
eva~ahshc servtce 7 p m Wednesday sh1p, 7 30 p m Prayer meeting, Wedne• prayer meeting 7 30 p.m. Rev. Jamft
Age." The IICripture read!~
day 7 30 p m Youth maeHng, Sunday,
Leoch, pastor. David Holter, lay l.ader.
School 10 30 a m Mrs. Sampson Hal •
serv 1ces - prayer and praise. 7 p m
from Plalm 48. Next Sunday, Jan. 8,
JEHOVAifS WITNESSES, 1 milo - t al
supt
youth maetlng, 7 p m Men's proyer 5·30 p m woth Don and Martho Moodowo
be
R\ITLAND CHURCH OF GOD, Rev . Bol&gt;
moeling Saturday 7 p.m
In charge
Rutland JUnction of Route 124 and Noble
WHITE' S CHAPEL, Coolville RD. Rov , Roy -&amp;Jmmll' Rood (T· 174). Sunday llblo Lee·
by Porter pastor Sunday school 10 am
EDEN 'UNITED BRETHREN IN CHRIST,
St.
obaenled Watclmlght,
ture. 9:30 0 , ., Wotchtowet stucfor, 10 30
Sunday worship, 11 o m , Sunday even1ng
Elden R Bloke poator Sunday School 10 Deeter , pastor Sunday tchool9 30 a.m .;
Monday
evenln
for
c&lt;lllilni cllhe
service. 7 p m Wednesday Family Tral
am. Robert RMd, supt, Morning ser- wonhop oervlco 10:30 a.m. Bible tludy 0 m: Tuooday, Bible lludy, 7 and 8: 15
There ~ candleliglt
lng Hour. 7 p.m .WednMdoy worsh1p ser
mon 11 am . Sunday night servicet and prayer service, W~nesday, 7:30p. m. p m Thundoy theocratic school 7·30
" RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST, Brad p:m:: oorvlce m~tong, 8 30 p. m.
.
v1ce, 1 30 p m
Chr11110n Endea vor 7 30 p m , Song ter·
cenm001, apeclal muaJe and a
Hend•rson 1, pastor, Herb Ell•ott, Sunday
RUnANO FREEWILL BAPTIST Church HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH. NO&lt;J r
voco. o p m . Proachong 8·30 p.m
me818ge by Rev. Richard
long Bottom Edsel Hart, pastor Sunday
Midweek Prayer meet•ng Wedn&amp;~day. 1 school supt Sunday school, 9 30 o m · Leland Hale';' , pastor. Sunday school, 10
from 7:30 tll8 p.m.; from 9-10 p.m.,
morn1ng worsh1p oncf comunion, 10:30 0 m., evening service, 7·30 p.m. Prayer
s(hool. 10 o.m Church 7 30 P m prayer
p m Alv1n Reed lay Ieeder
moehng, 7 30 p m Thursday
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST located ot a m
there was a felloWBblp hlillr ln the
meeting, Wedn&amp;lday, 7:30p.m.
Six' defenclanlll were fined and
RUTLAND BIBLE METHODIST CHURCH,
CHURCH OF GOD of Prot&gt;llocy, located
MIDDLEPORT PENTE.COSTAL
Th•rd
Rutland on New Limo Road, next to Forest
RefreB!unents
serA'&lt;~e the Rev Wdllom Kmttel pastor
Acre Pork . Rev Roy Rouse pastor Rober t Amos Ttlh s, po s,or Danny Tillis, Sunday on the 0. J. White Road off ·highway 160.
three others forfeited bonds ln the
Tho~as Kelly Sundoy "School Supt Sun Musser, Sunday School supt. Sundov School Supt Sunday School 9.30 om Sunday School 10 a.m. Superintendent ved. FrtllllG-12, there was a hyumn
court !1. Middleport Mayor Fred Hof·
day school , 10 o m Classes for all ages
school 10 30 0 m , wors h 1p 7 :10 p m 8•· followed by morning worshtp. ~ndoy John Loveday. First Wednesday night Of
si!!i in the sanctuary. :There were
fman
Wednesday
e¥enlng
service,
7.00
p.
m
Prayer
month
CPMA
services,
second
Wedne
...
8\lenlng serv1ce, 7 30
B1ble study
ble Study, Wednesday , 7 30 p m, Saturscripture readiQga by JWv, Thomas
-.ling Wednesday, 7:00 P m
day WMB meeting lhord through fifth
Wednetday. 7 30 P·!" ; youth servtces
day mght prayer ••rv•ce 7 30 p m
Fined
1Mter E. Marcban,
fr&lt;m Ephe8lana 2 and
81
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE,
~outh service. Goa.;o Croyle, pollor. Friday, 7 30 p.m.
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN, Roger
Nortb
llmljbfleld,
Rhode llland, ~
and3f.
HOPEBAPJISTCHAPEL - 570GrontSt ,
MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST. Corner
Watson, pootor. Mildred Ziegler, Sunday Rev. Lloyd D. Grimm, Jr., pootor. S..nday
COlli,
tine
days
Con Blake, pastor. .SunA1h and Plum; Noel Herrman, pastor
school aupf. Mofrllng worship, 9 30 a . m.; school, 9 30 a.m. worship service, 10.30 Middleport;
Rev. Thomu' New Year't •
Satur y evenln service, 7:30Pm · Sun·
Sundayschool, 10·30 o. m , e~o~enlng ter· a.m. Brood cast II¥~ over WMPO: yount day sthool, 9 30 9· m , morning worwhlp,
See,
$10 and
people's
service
7
p
m
Evangelistic
ser·
10:30
a.m.;
evening
wOrship,
7
p.m
:
day Sc ool, 10: a.m.
vice 7.30.
I:Oitl,
to
malrUin
control;
MEIGS
MT. UNION BAPTIST, Cecil Co•, vlco, 7:30 p. m . Wodnooday urvlco, 7:30 Wednoodoy ovonln~ Bible otudy a•d
Geary,
Middleport,
$.100
and
RA liVE PARISH
minister Joe Sayre, Sunday School p m
proyor mHII"g, 7 p.m . AHIIIai*d witt\
'
FIRST
SOUTHERN
BAPTIST,
Corner
of
S•
Southern
Bopllot
Convention.
'
COlli,
t11tee
·day.
CU~flnement,
HODISTCHURCH
Suporlntenent Sunday" school, 9:45a. m .:
GERALDINE P AJI80NIII
IRAilfORD CHURCH OF CHRISTRichard W Thomos, Otrector
evenmg worshipt.... 7 30 p m
Prayer • cond and Anderoon, Mooon Pastor Fronk
deltnldloa p&amp;GjHI ty; Roy
Lowthor Sund~ tchool , 9·4$ a.m., wOf'
Underwood, pcntor: Harry Hon• MoVIIBATIDIC
POMEROY CLUSTER
meotong. 7 30 p.m . WO&lt;In..day
'
MJ.Mltpart,
. .and COlli, cborderly
drlcks, •uporlntondonl. S..ndoy school .
Rev. Robert Mc:Geo
TUPPERS PLAINS 'CHURCH OF CHRIST, ohlp ,..,Ice. 11om and7 30 p.m. Wo.ttMn. Virgil (Gerlldlne) Parsons, a ~r; BlU Wll1ilma, Middleport,
ly
Bible
Study.
Wednoaday
,
7
30
P
m
·
9·30
m
,
morning
worohlp,
10:30
om
:
0
Rev. James Corbitt
Randy Koehler , po ster. Dennis Newland
patlept at the ,Holzer Medical Center $100 and
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST, Mill or St. .
evonlng worahlp, 7 p. m. Wodnosdoy Biblo
POMEROY, Sunclay School 9 15
m
Sunday schoo l superlntonden,t S\lnday
petty theft; Paul
study 7,.)&gt; m
WotSh(p tervlce 10.30 a.m. Choir rehear
School. 9, 30 a-m , morning church aer· Mcison W Vo Aur ice Mlck 1 pastor Sun·
smce sufferl!IB a heart aUack earlY
Middleport,
•100 and
JUBILeE CHRISTIAN CENTER - George'•
aal, Wednespoy, 1 p. m. Rev Robert
\lice 10 Jt a. m .. Sunday evenmg Bible doy Bible Studr. 10 o.m , Worship 11, o.O'I)
last week, has been moved from the
petty
theft.
I
and
1
p
m
Bib
e
Study
Wednesday
1
P
m.
Creek
Rood
Rev
C.
J.
Lemley,
pastor;
McGH. pottlor.
c
h' ' study . 7 p.m ..
•
John Fellure. superintend1t11t ChurCt'l Cardiac Care Unit into Roorii«N B.
ENTERPRISE, Wonhlp 9 o .m Cnurc
LET~T FALLS UNITED BRETHREN, Rev. Vocal mutlc.
bcllda
Timothy
MASON' ASSEMBLY OF GOD, Dudding
ochool, 9 00 a.m.: morning W00'1hlp1 Her cond!Uonlll'tii!CJI1ed
Sck-.&lt;..110 am
'
Freeland
Norns,
postor
Floyd
Norrlt,
Au.
llflewart,
.,._,
• :.:Z... J~·R,:'~s_ CD··rch SchooiiO o m
Rannlo l . Ro..
10:30: ""•nlng '"""'~•. 7 p.m . Voulh tory.
""""""' v- nu • nu
supt. $undav Kfiool, 9:30 o.m.: morning Lane, McMOn, W . Va.
but
Mid·
WOtship 10 a .m . UMYF6·30 ~. m .
sermon 1():30 a.m : Prayer Mrvlc•, Pastoto Sunday School9:•5 a.m .: MOrning mooting Sundl!y, 6 p m . Bltile tludy In
ftUJd til• dllpcrt, ...
Worohip 1 I 6.m. Evonl"'l 5oNico 7 : ~ deplh, W.,OOesdoy 7 p .m . Closoos for all the family
FLATWOODS, CJ.urch Sc ool 1'l 0 "'
Wednesday. 7:30 p m.
JoNpb
J.
p.m. , Wednesday Warne• 1 Mlr lotrlos '
•joy CIU'ds.
• '
•
I,

MEIGS TIRE
CENTER, INC.

MIPDLEPORT BOOK STORE

EWS &amp; SONS SOHIO

NEW YORK
CLOTHING HOUSE

•s

PHARMACY

of Your Choice
This

RIGGS USED CARS, INC.

1

RIDENOUR SUPPLY

o:·

'Y CC \,E l'-1
~~I D

RACINE
FOOD MARKET

{I f WI Ll ~f- ~ ~
'" 15 - .)
1 •o
1 11- w~ '"' 4 r- , A
'
lJF Cl 4.L'DJA

\.1!4;:_H

~I=:S

t.,E"..

·-:.l ...: T

OF- "' f-EI ' ING HCt.l4Ero ~

FO~

~

..,

J.J FIG HE&gt;Cl tl..-.

I"QI ~ l

"'CU , CHRI"- '

BLAZE S.

ME~"' F~ u~

~HE

, ' 17 (

DA DO"' Ti LL

A PUZZ. LE

KtD5
5TILL

~ i1AT

[

DO"-l'T SAVVY HOW
HE CONTROL 5o A
MONS'TER L1 KE
CL AUDIA .

J C I I f' \I',

o\P ir, -_. ;

...----

SUNDCO
SERVICE
CENTERS

P. J. PAULEY,

(A' EM;

{'j J

riO! I LL ~ 0
TE LL YOU

·f. IE P ~ ":r ~

E\'-"' rr-E ~Cn ~ r..'l. B!JE
~M&lt; o1 5 ...o DF~0r " &lt;IOUL?

TYAT BIT f) F ( I)TH
rLfr l '::MEO IN SA r~JYS
JAWS .:.c-=p i&gt;-~E

MIENT

f&lt;

1
F 1~tG E RED HER' ~='OR
A C.UY NA~EO JACK,

~ ·1Ei? '1'TH •NG 1

PHENCE B UT I DOT~ T
l' rlQ J/ NH/IT hE 010 WITH
T &gt;-~E 6 1
1?L 0 " WHE~E HE

PPEFEf? Tr1f.;'?

I

HOW'

I SWEAR!

the Church
of \'our Choice
This Sunday,.

This Sundav

Services

Lc, 6 • F r 1t A:=" , \o.. I
F NO ":O lJJ\111.. ;;.;JI"'T BE!:!":

TH 15 TIGER ( RI515
~LOW$ OYE R .

The Churcm
of Your Choice
This Sunday

9~-f.t:JO ,/

r

VIRGIL B.
TEAFoRD SR.

-

WAID CROSS
SOliS. STORE

TSmoke!

The Church

The smol4e? Doc
1s bumnq trash
next door. Walt'

Of Your Choice
This S""u nday

•s

The Church

MARK V' STORE
Middleport

of your, Choice
This Sunday

of Your Choice
This Sunday

oNA':&gt; THEIR
117EA I A SORT

OF HOUSE ·
WARMING I

/IOLIJNTEERED I

a..

Sermon heard on making 1980 happy

present.

l.un.!llord,

for a

wu

''Ctmmilnlon Sunday."
Paw
tbe
New Year.
a

men.

wtn

Thomas

basement.

Mayor's
court
.

were

were

PsaJms.,oo,

~oofinement,

'aodi
~; ~

A:..,.

.

Dun

nliht.

filll!l'e

.SidweJI,

Jr.,

°

i:osts,

Milbourn;

il'*flllacVllltor:ure not111t011 fLU
I'IJICil1l tbat.

ilo.v.

1'1""'11?'11 a. rri.

1

(

'·

..

I

com.
-ForteWac

were

aarawu.
.....; a....

Kina.

m,

111111'1.. ;
BlOW II, MiDernllle, tiD, lpeedlng,

. "'

'

Television

PEANUTS

by

NO 'IOU WERE PROBABL4'
INVITED TO NINE PARm=s
BUT ALL THE INVITATIONS
WERE LOST IN T~ E ,\\AIL

ACROSS
39 Vogues
1French pnest to Debark
5Wme
DOWN
It " _ That
I An Arab
12 Employee's
bio
13 TeMyson lady
11 Canadian
perunaula
15 - Turner
16 Result
of an AdamUttin
17 ~ta 'S g

Iollower
18 Contemry

01

~:;:.,ur

2 Platttudlnous
3 John Bull's
erstwhile
glory

Yesterday's ADitwer
10 Inhabit
Z5 Swear to

4 FlJUS
5 Had to have

II State

6 Prymg device
7 Fit _
ftddle
8 Arne composition
9 Happmess or

Fr

Z6 Swamp

19 Mets'
28 lllustrtous
stadium
29 Make
22 1954 SCI-fi fUm believe
23 Bobby33 Coli
, d·
Martini
soxer s 1 o1 35

••
Spanish
~

mgredient

painter

:16 Everybody

sorrow, e.g

2t Storage
place
II Food fish
%! Run along
13- Atkins

question

14 Climb
NORTH
• 10 l2
.1 (17 6 3
+8 6 5

15 F1eld

11 Run into
%7The

"

.

+to 9 6

Jones boy
!8 CeremoniiiWI

WEST

EAST

+K 8 7

lGSwnmit

+K 7 2

UQJ96"

.A Q

+Q

+AQ t
Vulnerable East West
Dealer West

38Zoo
creature

We1t

DAILY CRYPTOQ UOTE- .Here's how to work it ·
AXYDLBA A XII
1o LONGFELLOW
One l etter !limpl y st a11d!i fo r another In this sample A is
used for the three l..'s, X (or 1he twn 0 s etc Smglc letters,
apostrophes, the len,a:th and formatiOn o ( the words are all
hints Each da) the code letters are different •

CRYPTDQUOTES

I N

LQIJQHJ

1•

Nurtb
Pass

Pass

Pass

doesn' t cover

2. ••
East

FKJ

VBLDGWCQKHL .

Sout t.

Pass

XWHFC

Y BKJ L

WB I.H

FIGTH

BC - MFL E11KXCG K BWTBKX
\ Yesterday'• Cryptoquole: I'VE REACHED THE KliNT
WHERE I REGARD MY EXISTENCE AS AN ARTICHOKE',
AND I'M STRIPPING AWAY THE OUTER LAYERS.··S.J.PERELMAN
'

10 1979 Kino F.. turu Sl'ndltefe, Inc,

'

0

. Then you take and wm the
heart £tnesse and make your
co ntract Should East cover
the 10 of clubs the mnc
becomes a re-entry
Mathematically

Opemng lead • K

your

chances y;eren' t good It was
necessarv that East hold both
the JaCk "of clubs and king of
hearts

and Alan Sonta g

But the wmmng li ne was
slightly better than th e s1mple
ltne of fmess1ng hearts and

Here IS an mterestmg prob
\em from En~land You are m

one cl ub loser after playmg
cl ubs from your own hand

rour spades West leads the

I QC

IS a dec1ded Yes
The answer to the second a
quahfted Yes The wmmng
play 1s reasona ble but would
probabl y be overlooked by
even the most expert declarer Here 1t 1s
You s ta 1t pr oceed mgs bv
leadmg the queen of clubs
West wms w tt h lhe k1n g and
leads another diamond wh1ch
yo~ rurf Now you lead a low
spade
West's best play I!; to take
tu s king and lead hiS last
trump You are now •n

dummy You lead dummy s 10
of clubs and let It nde tf Et~st

By O.wald Jacoby

CFYHJ

FWH

+J 8 53

SOUTH

event

ABCCAH : YBKJL

-

. K 542
• J 10 9 4 3

• J 98
t AK7 2

31 Skill
3% NO\'el
34"Vanationa"
3i Not for
17 Od. baseball lr.-+--+-1--t--+-

Vi~wing

FRIDAY ,JANUARY 4,1 980
8 30- Wa ll Street Week 20,33
9 OO - Se nsat10nal Wond erful
Wa cky 70s 3, 15 Duke s of
Hazzard 8 10 Lord Mounlba tlen
20 33
9 JO - Mov 1e Stunts Unlimit ed
6, tJ
10 00- Dallas B 10 Perspecl 1ve on
Grea tness 17 N ews 20. David
fi usslond 33
11 00- News 3,6,8. 10, lJ 15 Last of
the Wild 17 Monty Python s
Fly 1ng C1rcus 33
11 )0- Ton 1ght 3 15
Charlie s
Ange ls 6 Mov1e 'The Deat h
Pol 1cy 8 ABC N ews 33 Mov1e
' Daughter of Dr Jekyll " 10,
Movie' Ftr st to F 1ght' 13 Mov1e
' Dracula Has R1sen from the
Grave ' 17
12 40- FBl 6
1 OO- M1dn1ght
Spe cial J 15 Movie ' Tw1s ted
Bram" 10 . News 13
1 30 - News
17
1 3S - M6vle
"Muscle Beach Party" 17
2 30--News 3 3 35-Movle "Con
fess•ons of a Nazi Spy" 17

COWitry

Bow,

ol

Euvon•

~tue-"t!t'
THOMAS JOSEPH

Dream"

I 01{) BuT IM
GDING IO M/.SS
HER NEVER. THE: LES5

1~

THE GANG
AT THE OFFICE

then h.op1ng to get a~Aay w1th

kulg and ace of dtamonds . lNI'- WSPAPWA )'~ NT !:: HPil\ Sf. o\!-1SN
You trump m an d lay down
(Fa; a copy Of JACOB Y
yo ur ace of , spadE's ~ast
• MODERN send $ 1 to Will at
Sh OWfl out
Can you make the lland? Bridge, · bRre of thiS newspa
Can you fmd a log1 cal ba s1s pe~ p 0 Box 489 RR'I)ip City
SrstiOr.J
New Yo rk~
f or the wmnm&amp;-rl3J'
Thr iH'I~WPr to the ft rst • 1001g)

2

2

3
3
4

the Know 10 Wesl V1rg1n1a
Outdoor s JJ
30---30 M.nu tes 8 10 Mov1e Th e
Innocent s 17 Old Hou seworks
JJ
OD-Thts Is the NFL 6' V•ewpo1nl
a Gomer Pyle 10 Marlo &amp; I he
Mag1c Mo111 e Mach1ne 13
Mas terp1ece Th eatre 33
3D-Pro Bowi 1ng 6 13 Eil~~' West
Shn ne Game 8 10
00- PTL Cl ub 1S
Up &lt;o l rm s
Downstairs Jl
30---Cha ngmg T1mes 3
3 45-Movle ' H1gh S1crra J
DO-Hula Bowl6 13 All Cred lur es

Grea t &amp; Sma ll 33
5 DO--Full Gospel Temple IS": Lap

Qu •ll •ng 20, Poldark II 33
The Maestro
Remembered 3, Rat Patrol 17.
Crockett s V1ctory Garden 10
6 00- New s 3 10 Conc{!rn 6. God
Has the Answer 15 Wrestling 17
Upstairs Downsta~rs 20 Calch
33 33
...
6 30-- NBC News 3 15. Muppel Show
a CBS News 10 Know Your
Schoo ls 33 •
7 00--0ance Fever 3
Lawren ce
Wel k 15 Hee Haw 6 8. Once
Upon a Classi c 33 Bugs Bunny
10 $1 98 Beauty Show 13 Pearl s
5 30- Toscann1

SATUROA '(,JANUARY S, 1980
s so-World at Large 17. b 00Health F1eld
10
Human
10
D1menslon 17
7 3D-An lns1de Look 3 $100 000
6 30 - Saturday Report 3 _TV
Name That Tune 13 , Best ot
• Classroom B U S Farm Report
Groucho 20 World War II G I
10 Ke ntucky Afle ld 13 II s Yoaur
D1ary 33
Bus1ness 17
B oo-Pnme T1me Saturday 3 15
7 00-- Big Blue Marble 3 Porky P•g
Ropers 6, 13, College Basketball
8 It ' s Your Business 10,
10 1 hai Nashville MusiC 17
An1mais, Anima l s An1mals 13,
Masterpiece
Th eatre
20 ,
Three Stooges L1ttle Rascals 17
Strmger Port ra 1t of a Newsree l
7 30-- Ll tlle Rascals J Bay C1 ty
Cameraman 33
Rol lers 15, Matters of l1fe b Not
B J0- Poi1hcal Debate 3,6,8 13 15 33
For Women Only 10 Sp 1der
9 oo- Co liege Baske t bal l 17 ,
Woman 13
Ellx.1r of Love 20
R oo- Godz• lla, Globe trotters J, 15
10 oo-Mel Tllh s at Knollsberry
Su perfrlends
6. 1J
Mighty
Farm 10
Mouse Heckle &amp; Jeckte 8,10 .
tO 10- NBC News 3, 15. ABC News
Ultra Man 17, !les"imw St JJ
Spec tat 6, 13
8 Jtl-Partrldge Fam1ly 17 9 00Fred &amp; Barney 3,15, PlastJc Mar. 11 00 - N ews 3,6,8 10, 13 , 15 . D 1ck
Maunce &amp; Co
17
Movie
6, 13 Bugs Bunny Road Runner
·
Splendor
"
33
8 10
Mavenck 17 , Harold
11 30--j alurday Night Llve 3, 15.
Lloyd's Wor ld of Comedy 33
MtfVie ' Sleepwal ker" 6 CBS
10 00- Movie "T.llil VIctor s:' 17
News Special 8 Movle " The
10 JQ-Daff y Duck 3 IS, Scooby
Silencers" 10 , Mov1e ' Dracula' s
&amp; Scrappy Doo 6 13, Pcpeye B
Daughter · 13
Mov1e " The Lf!gend of Custer"
11 40 - Mo vie
" The
Young
10. Wodehause Pl.whovse JJ
St range r
a. 12 Oo-Don K lr
11 OQ-Casper &amp; t ill' Angels J, 1S
shner 's Rock Concert 17
Predators 33
11 30- Jet son s 3. 15, G•gg iesnort,. 1 00-Niov•e ' ' The Hell wllh Heroe s"
J. Mov1e " House uf Dracula" 1J
Hotel 6 Fat Albert B. Action
1 30- Movie ' A Bullet lor Joey' 17 ,
News ~ lor K1ds 13
1 lO ABC NeW, 13 , 2 45-- News
1~ oo- Hot Hero
S.:mdwlch :3. 1.5
'J
Weekend Spee~al ' 6" IJ, Shazam•
3 15- Mov1 e ·We Were Slrangers"
8 Snr,ak Prevtcws 33
3 320 - Mov•e " Th e Killer Is
l
30 Anwncan Bcwdstand 1J ,
Loose · 17
m
I V•t:w 6 Tarzan Super 7
s oo- Love , Amencan Style 17 ,
8 Hog '
s 10
5 15- M ovle " You Can 't Run
1 oo
Col lf"Ol'! T:\ it sketbail 3. l'i ,
Aw;,y From It " 3
1 •rlumhu~ p .. w 1 !'(,; ":. lassie 6 ~ 1 n

I

SUNDAY ,JANUARY 6,1980
5 30 - AGUSA
17,
600Ame rlcan
Problems
&amp;
Challenges 10 Be tw ee n t he
L me~ 17
6 Jo-Chr•slopher Closeup 3 Better
Wily a Treehouse Club 10
Act 1on Newsmaker 13
7 00--- Th1 s Is The Ltfe J
Jerry
Fa lwe ll B. Urban League 10 ,
J1mmy Swaggart 17
Gospel
Outreach 13
7 JO- TV Chape l 3 Eddle Saunders
6 Jerry Fa lwell 10, The B1ble
Answers 13 Jimmy Swaggart
15. It I s Wnllen 17
a DO - Mormon Choir 3 Grace
Ca thedral 6 Day of D•scovery a.
Chr is t for the World 13 Three
Stooges 17 , Sesame St 20 33
a JO-Ora l Roberts J Contact 6.
James Rob1son 10
Lower
Lighthouse t3 Open 81ble 15
9 oo-Gospe l Smgmg Jub1iee 3 Oral
Roberts 10 Re)( Humbard 6.
Chnsilan Cent er 8 Rev J1m
Franklm 13. Ernest Ang ley 15,
Los i m Space 17 M1ster Roge r s
20.33
9 3D-Robert Schuller B. E lec Co
33, lt Is Written 10. Rev R A
West 13 Sesa me St 20
10 00-Thls Is The N-FL 3. K1ds Are
Peop l e Too 6 Movie · The
P1geon That Took Rome' 10.
J1mmy Swaggart t3. Gospel
S1ng1ng Jub1lee 15 , Hazel 17
Stud1o See 33
10 30- Re)( Humbard 3 Ernest
Angley 8 Zoom 20 , Mov1e
'Caged" 17 Big Blue Marble 33
11 00- Rex Humbard 15
Rev
Henry Mahan 13 E lee Co 70 ,
Footst eps 33
11 30- Btl! Dance Outdoors 3.
Ani mal s, Anlmats, Anima l s 6,
Face the .NaHon a. Big Blue
Marble 20. Evangel 1sttc Outlook
13, Unicorn Tales 33
12 DO-Meet the Press 3, 15 Issues &amp;
Answers 6, 13, V1ewpoint 8, The
Issue 10 , Ohio Journal 20. Movie
" Down Laredo Wa y" 33
12 30- Directlons 6. Kids Are
People Too 13 Movie "Fort
Yuma · 17, Otto Zoo Gonl la 20
I GO-Aware 6 Mov ie 'Splendor'
JJ
1 3tl-Amerlca's Black Forum 6,
High Q 13; Soundstage 20
2 QO-Road to /Mscow 6, Mar la &amp;
the Magic Movie Mach1ne 13,
Mov•e "How to M arry a
Millionaire" 17
2 3tl-Batt le of the Planets 13.
Hocktng Valley Bluegrass 20
3 00- Movie
" Marjorie
Mor
nmgstar" 6, Tn State Today &amp;
Tamorrow 13 , Polde~rk II 20:
Movie " The Homecoming" 33
3 Jtl- Mo~f"' Born Yesterday " 13
4 · 00- Mo..rle
' Tammy &amp; the
Mllllofialre" 17 Lap Quilting 20
• JG-Wali Slreel Wee~ 20. S ooE lee Co 20, Nova 33.
5 30-Best of Groucho 20. In Search
Of 6, 1979 The Year That Was

13

�"

•

•
\0- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, Q., Friday, Jan . 4, 1900

Carter hacks revenue sharing.plan
WASHINGTON (AP) - The Car·
ter adrninistra~on announced on
Thursday that it will back'~~! five·

No major danuJge
The Middleport Fire Department
was called to the Jessie Beaver
mobile h&lt;JDe in Cheshire at 4 :34
pm. Thursday where a furnace
motor caught fir•. However, the fi re
was contained and there was little
damage.
'
At 7:38 p.m. Thursday the
ewergency unit went to 50 River·
view Drive where Mary McCarty,
who was iU , was treated on the
·"'scene.
At 6:44a.m. Friday, the emergency unit started on a call.to Cheshire
when it slid on ice and struck the
rear of a vehicle. The accident oc·
curred on Powell St., aild the Middleport unit was unable to complete
the call. A Gallia County unit was
summoned to answer the call.

year extension of the $6.9-billion·a·
year general revenue sharing
program, including continuation of
funding for state governments.
The decision, a reversal of
President Carter's earlier op·

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted-Ada Keesee, Pomeroy;
ROOert Manley, Middleport; Rudy
Stewart, Middleport; Mary Deren·
berger, Pomeroy; Douglas Burton ,
Middleport; Benjamin Neut:zling,
Pomeroy; Roy Phillips, Can·
nonsburg, Pa .; David Jenkins, Mid·
die port.
Discharged .. Annette Boyd,
Ericka Hubbanl, William Morris,
Eugene Reeves, Rebecca Acker·

man .

..

ETHEL HYSELL HOSPITALIZED

Mrs. Harold (·Ethel) Hysell,
formerly of Meigs County, is con fin·
ed to University Hospital , Room 645,
Columbus.

Area deaths
Evans of Middleport and Charles
CARMON E. EVANS
Evans of Pomeroy, eight grand·
Qlnnon E. Evans, 83, 1086 Vine
St., Middleport, died Friday mor· · children, 21 great-grandchildren,
two step great-grandchildren and
nlng at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Mrs. Evans was born Nov. 29, two great-great-grandchildren, and
1896, a daughter of the late John and several nieces and nephews.
Mrs. Evans was a member of the
Laura Preston Cassell. 9le was also
preceded in death by a grarxl· Laurel Cliff Free Methodist Church
mother, Julia Williamson Preston, and the Laurel Cliff Better Health
who reared her; her husbarrl, Club.
FWJeral services will be held at I
Joseph Evans, and a daughter,
Monday at the Ewing Funeral
p.m.
Sarah Frances Cole.
Home
with the Rev. Floyd 9look of.
Surviving are two sons, Edward
ficiating. Burial will be in Beech
Grove Cemetery. Friends may call
at the funeral home anytime after 7
pm. Saturday.

General customers
will get decrease

MARION - General Telephone
Co. of Ohio customers will ave some
$2.2 million on their telephone bills
this year due to a scheduled
decrease in .taxes , the company an·
noWlced today.
Responsible for the dr~ is the
reduction from 3 to 2 percent on the
federal excise tax charged on all
local and long distance phone calls.
The company's 550,000 customers
will get the decrease on their
January phone bills.
'
The 12-percent tax first was levied
during Wortd War I. Although
repealed in 1924, it reappeared as a
temporary measure during the
depression in 1932., then was
broadened in 1942 to meet war
needs. During the I!IS(fi the tax was
reduced to 10 percent md repealed
for all utilities except telephones.
In 1970 a federal law was passed
that required annual one-percent
reductions in the tax until phased out
c&lt;JDpletely. The ''temporary" tax
will become history in January,
1962.

New ••• "

(Continued from page I)
der the direction of Mrs. Eleanor
Thomas for their dynamic role in
helping Pomeroy Health Care Center gets its start.
"Mrs. Leafy Chasteen of Senior
Citizens took applications for
. residents and employees dating
back to early 1979. We are grateful
for her help and concern for the
people of Meigs County.
"Mrs. Helene Zidian, my Director
d. Social ServiCes, is looking forward to working with Mrs. Thomas
am her staff at Senior Citizens Center to keep our people together and

Drew Webster Post
commends Baker
Edison . Baker, Middleport
businessman, was highly com·
mended for his efforts in placement
of American flags in Middleport
business houses when Drew Webster
Post 39, American Legion, met Wednesday night.
Duling the meeting the group
discussed Baker's project of
securif1l the plastic flags and seeing
that they got into Middleport
business houses to remind residents
and motorists that they are
Americans and of the hostages being
held in Iran.
The post conunended Baker and
agreed to contact him for assistance
in locating additional flags for
Pomeroy like th(lle being used in
Middleport. Meantime, the post
went on record as requesting all
Pomeroy residences and businesses
to display the American flag daily to
show their sentiments of patriotism
and partirularly toward the Iranian
situation.
In the absence of Commander Joe
Zwilling, who was ill, Ouil'les Swat·
zel presided over the meeting. Elza
Gilmoce served refreslunents.

Gwli

.~etting

session

plan11ed for January 9

The Meigs County Soil and Water
Conservation District is sponsortng
a special public meeting, Jan. 9 to
help determine district resources,
set goals, develop an annual work
plan and to inventory the assistance
available. The session will be held
active.
from 10 a.m. tO noon at the Meigs
"As of this letter, all inquiries for
Inn. AU residents interested in ac·
residency and employment should
celerating the conservation and en·
be made at the Pomeroy Health Cenvironmental improvement of Meigs
ter. For Residency Information call ·
County should attend.
Mrs. Zidlanat 992~ ."

ATTENTION:

-PAPER CARRIER
NEEDED IN THE
POMEROY AREA
FOR THE
OAitY SENTI'NEL

position to continued revenue
shartng for the states, was con·
sidered a victory for state, county
and city lobbying groops that have
fought hard for extension of the
program beyond its Sept. ll expiration date.
The major change being sought in
the. 8-year~ld program. will be a
requirement that states set up
special commissions to stilly loelll
financing , top White House aides
told a news conference.
Stuart E. Eizenstat , the
president's chief domestic affairs
adviser, said the administration also
would recommend some changes In
the formulas by which local·
government shares are determined.
"We do not anticipate any radical
changes in the allocation formulas,"
he said.
But he admitted that changes in
eligibility requirements could
eliminate s&lt;Jne of the 39,60lllocal
governments now eligible for the
federal fWJds. Specific targets, he
said, would be singl"'flurpose units,
like h ~hway districts, and wealthy
conununities. .
The proposal is expected to be submitted to Congress by early
February, Ei2enstat said.
There it is likely to l')lll into opposition from budgeto(!onscious
congressmen who have been trying
in recent years to scale down the .
program

.'-i11ou· w11rn ill?[.~ posted
By Tbe Associated Press
Snow warnings were posted for
much of Virginia, West Virginia and
Maryland today where new ac·
cum ulations of up to six inches were
expected from a winter storm
moving ·into the Appalachians.
Travel adviSories also were posted
for paris of Kenttrlly, Ohio, Indiana
and the mouniains of North Qlralina
where up to three inches of new soow
•were expected· and for the Colorado
mountains where blowing and drtf·
ting snow made ~ving hazardOus.
TernperatW"es were WJseasonaply
cold over much of the nation early
today, ranging from 7 below zero at
Marquette, Mich., to 67 at Fort
Lauderdale, Fla.

CONTINUES PICKUP
Lawrence Manley is continuing
trash pickup in the Minersville area.
A delay in the pickup was caused
earlier this week when Manley's
truck was extensively damaged by
fire.

IIAIUUSFJI ENTERTAIN
CHRISTMAS GUFSI'S
Mr. and Mrs. Lewta Hatrla enterChristmas day gllests rl. Mr .. and .· talned on New Year 'a Night 11'1~ a ·
MrlL Walter Wears, Rock Springs, family party. Their IIUIIbl were Mr.
were Mr. and Mrs. Paul Wears and
and Mrs. Geotle Hlrril, Sr., Mr.
Danny, Mr. and Mrs. Tom Fields, and Mrs. Geqrge Hlrril, Jr. and 1011,
Tommy and Johnnie, Mr. and Mrs.
P. J., Mr. and Mn. 'lbcmu Harris, •
Cecil Lyons, West Columbia, W.Va.;
Res&amp; and Clrrle, New Haven, vr. ·
Kay lyons, New Haven, W. Va., Mr. Va; Mr. and Mrs. Denver Rice and
and Mrs. James Evans, Pam !ind
Bill, Middleport; Mr. and Mrs. KenJay; Mr. and Mrs. Bruce BJ,cltston, neth Harris and sms, Kenneth and
Mr. and Mrs. Benton Eblin, Doug,
Davld,Pvmeroy.
Mandy and Dale; Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Eblin, Dixie, Kim, Tammi
WEEUNDGUE8TS
and Tracy, all of Pomeroy ; Mrs.
Mr.
and
Mill. JceepbFoster, Patty
Carrie Wears, Rutlanll; Dennis
aiXI
Anthony,
Livonia, Mich. were
Wolfe, Middleport. Evening callers
llllfSis
Cl
Mrs.
Edward Foster and
were Mr. and Mrs. Harold Abbott,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Ral~
Webb on the
Coolville.
ChristmBI holldayweell:end. "'

SQUAD RUNS
The Rutland ER Squad was called
· Wednesday at 11:21 p.m. for Olarles
Neut:zling, Jr., ~sville, a medical
patient, who was taken to Holzer
Medical Center.
At 5:57a.m. today the squad was
called for Ada M. Keesee, Hysell
Run Road, a medical patient, who
was taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.

~-. ,
_.,...'

'

'lbe Meigs CoWlty Sheriff's Department investigated an accident in
the Harrisooville area Monday
evening.
.
AccQrding to the report David
Arix, Harrlsmville, was traveling
east on a township road near the Blil
Kennedy !ann. Arix lost control of
the vehicle · he was driving, which
ran off the road and struck and tore
out a section offence.
Around midnight the department
received a call that an individual in
a pickup truck was causing a ·
distrubance in Harrisonville.
Deputies were unable to locate the
truck.

Clearance Sale

•

tnttS -

unba
•

VOL. 13

GALLIPOLIS-POINT PLEASANr

NO. 49

Inside today.
••

0

0

••

0

•

•••

0

0

•

•••

0

••

••

••

0

••

0

•

••••••

o •••••• o ••• • •••••••••••••••••••••

0

••

0

••••

0

••• ••••••••••

I

0

••••

•••

0

•••

•••••••

•••••••••••••••••

Stjlte and national .........•........•............• D-1

Sports •••.
TV guide . . .. .. ........
I

NOW AVAILABLE

••••

I

I

•••••••••• I

I

••••••

MIDDLEPORT - The Meigs
Local School District Boanl &lt;i
Education has implemented an in·
clement weather program c&lt;JDposed rl. three parts.
The program includes Plan A,
Plan Band Plan C and the particular
plan to be followed will be announced on the radio on mornings
when weather is bad.
Under Plan A all buses will run
one hour later than nonnal. Bus
drivers will contact WMPO on any
route changes or any areas they will
be unable to pick up. All students
will be dellvered home at the normal
time. Any student not riding the bus
to school must ride home some way
other than the bus.
Plan B provides that all buses will
be running two hours later than
usual. All other instructions Wlder
Plan Aare to be followed.
Under Plan C, all buses will be

R
.

CERTIFICATE OF DEPOSIT
BIG MONEY RATES FOR AS LlnLE AS '100
Government regulations have just changed -for the better.
Now you can earn high money market interest rates with no risk for
as little as $100.

.

·!.',=. •

:~1·

Deposit provides a guaranteed money market
interest rate for savers large and small.

1980 t.hrough

l

Fair committfes to
"

*Rate is .75% below the average 2112-year yield on U.S. Treasury Securities and
is announced the first of each ~onth.
There is a substantial interest penalty for early withdrawal.

·

po.meroy

rutla~
tupp~rs pla.ins

pomeroy

natlona

bC.nk . · ·
Member .FDIC

Meigs commzsszon
approves funding
BY KATIE CROW
POMEROY - Meigs County ap·
propriations resolution providing an
all time high in the general fund for
I !8J in the amount of $1,075,225, was
approved Friday by the Meigs County Commissioners .
Last year the general fund budget
was $982,000, an inerease of $93,225
for 1~ . Richard Jones, president of
the · boanl of commissioners, arxl
Henry Wells pointed out that only
$483,225 of the $1,075,225 comes from
personal property and real estate
taxes.
Jones said, "We appreciate the
fiscal restraint that has bene used by
county officials in operation of their
&lt;ifices in 1979 and in submittil)g
their budget request for !911l. This
type of coopera tion makes it
possible to continue to operate in the
black."
''This board's policy is to continue
to provide every service possible
with the amount of money available
however, we will take no action that
will cause this' county to go in the""'
red," Jones further commented.
A total of $7,000 was certified for

the dog and .kennel fund. Jones and
Henry Wells felt that it will take an
additional $10,000 to operate this
fund. Last year 's certification was
$:i,600.

Appropriated to the public
assistance fund (welfare) was
$669,445.00. Jones and Wells said the
county's share was $12,960. Ap·
propriated to the Meigs-Gallia·
Jackson 648 Board was $1,640,77 4.
Appropriated to the county high·
way department was $1,084,681.51 of
which approximately $150,000 will
come from new auto tag incr-ease.
However, $100,000 of the $Hi0,000
will be held WJtil a later date as the
commissioners will eannark the
$100,000 to change gravel roads to
hard surface roads. This means that
the amount appropriated to the
county highway department at this
time will be $984,681.51.
The corrunissioners have advised
Wesley Buehl , coWJty engineer, they
expect a road upgrading plans by
early spring.
The budget for emergency
medical services will be -$106,100,
(Continued on page A-2)

tntint
MIDDLEPORT -POMEROY

PRICE 35 CENTS

••

I

•

C-1-6-D-2
D-3 11

••••••••••••••••••

rWlning three hours later than usuaL
All other instructions under A and B
will be in effect.
In the event that bad weather
arrives after school is in session, it
may be necessary to dismiss school
early. If a child is to go to a place ·
other thim the normal delivery
point, the school is to be notified by
letter or phone. If time pennits,
every effort will be made to allow
students to call home. In case of
early dismissal, the radio station
will be notified to make an an·
nouncement giving the number of
hours early the district will be
dismissing classes,
Nornuil dismissal ·times at the
schools d. the district include Brad·
bury, 2:~; Harrisonville, 3:ll; Mid·
dleport Elementary, 3:30; Pomeroy,
2:45; Rutland, 3:30; Salem Center,
3:30; Salisbury, 3:25; Meigs JWJior
High, 3:10; Meigs HighSchool, 3:15.

.. .
,
•j

GALUPOLIS - It was reported
Saturday the Gallia.Jackson-Meigs
Conununity Mental Health Center
Board Chairperson had previously
approached the 648 Board for
merging the boards ..
This announcement follows Acting
Center Directcr Bernard Niehm's
testimony on Wednesday, Jan. 2,
that the 648 Board's decision io
operate the Children's Residential
Facility was the 'first step toward
an attempt at an eventual merger of
the boards."
Both boards are currently in court
over charges brought by Joe Cain,
Gallia County Prosecuting Attorney,
on behalf of the Board of Com·
missioners, tllllt the 6411 Board may
~::::::;:::::: :::::: : :::::::::::: ::::::::::::::::::::: : :::::::: ::::::: :: ::.: :::::::::::::::::::

EXTENDED FORECAST
Turning colder wltb a cbance of
snow or rain Monday and flurries
possible Tuesday and Wed·
nesday. Hlgbs In tbe mid ao. to
mid 40s Monday, falling to the
mid %Os to low 30s by Wednesday.
Lows 15 to 25 Monday, dropping
to 5 to 15 by Wednesday morning.
::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

Weather
Mostly cloudy. IDgh today in the
low lls . The chance of precipitation
10 percent.

have received an improper license
and may not have adequate persormel to rWJ the facility.
According to a statement released .
Satunlay by the 648 Board, in a let·
ter dated October 26,1979, to Maxine
Plummer, Executive Director rl. the
648 Board, from Leah J. Ord, Center
Chairperson, Ord extended an in;_
vitation to, 648 Board to meet with
the Center Board on Nov. 7, to
discuss and share information

regarding the merging of the two
boards.
Apparently without knowledge of
Onl's letter, Niehm told Municipal
Court Judge James Bennett that his
belief is that the Dec . 17, 648 Board
decision to operate the Children's
Residential Facility was the ' 'first"
step toward a total takeover by the
648 Board, the statement continues.
When contacted, 648 Administrator
Mark Johnson stated that ''at the

December 648 Board meeting a
motion was made proposing that the·
648 Board contract with an agency
other than the center for the
operation of the Children's Residential Facility. Since another agency is
not inunediately available to
operate the program the 648 Boanl
chose to run the facility temporarily
as required by Statelaw."
Johnson swrunarized concerns of
(Continued on page A·2J

Iran's economy is .·r eeling
By MIKE FEINSILBER
Associated Press Writer
WASHING TON ( AP ) - Iran 's
ecol)omy already is reeling, top U.S.
officials say, so it will be some time
before the man~n-the-tJtreet in that
Persian Gulf nation would notice an
impact from any U.N..imposed
trade sanctions.
Officials concede that a United
Nations vote to cut off worldwide
trade with Iran - as ,Y,.erica will
propose in the Security CoWJcil Mon·
day - would be more of a political
gesture than an act of economic
reprisal for the seizure of hostages
in the U.S. Embasily in Tehran.
Food and medicine would be
exempt fnm sanctions, and Iran
would be free to continue selling oil

to an oil-hungry world.
"Its inunediate effect will be
psychological," says one offical,
asking not to be quoted by name .
'1t will increase their s~e of
isolation, " he says. "In time 1t will
tell the Iranians that things are bad
and getting worse. The revolution
was expected to usher in better
days, not hard times."
U.S. analysts priv a t e ly
acknowledge that there will he some
'1eakage" in an embargo aimed at
Iran , especially since Iran 's oil
customers are not eager to antagonize her.
Cuba, Rhodesia and Israel have
been the targets of economic boycotts by some coWJtries in reeent years,
and all survived.

Officials anticipate that Iran's
three chief trading partners - the
United States, West Gennany and
Japan - will cut off non-l!gricultural
exports to that coontry.
President Carter wants sanctions
imposed against Iran, following the
failure of the negotiating mission of
U.N. Secretary General Kurt
Waldheim, as one more tum of the
scr6ws in the step-by-tltep strategy
he adopted to win the hostages'
freedom without bloodshed.
A worldwide food embaJ1io would
squeeze Iran even more, but Carter
has ruled out trying to starve the
Iranians into releasing the hostages.
However, a de facto U.S. embargo
on foodstuffs already exists because
(Cootinued on page A·2)

, ,~ Tax sale

conducted
tumultuous times in Iran \ \

(E&lt;IJtor's note- 'Ibis Is one of 8
·serleli of three articles by Steve
CoWer, 27, 8 native of Gallla
Coun.ly, who tells of tbe
~tuous limes be experte~~ted
In nottbern !rail jus.l prior to last
January's revoluttoo and af.
tei'WIInl. Steve visited bls stepgranlt!8tber, Clarence R.
Stephen., Symmes Creek Rd. In
GreeDrleld Twp., until 'Friday,
whe!j be joined bla father In Portamoutb. His fa~r Is the Rev.
· Leroy Collier, realtot and In·

that's short term and long on interest.
Rate effective J~1:1uarv . 3,
;tanuary..o9,1980is 11.880%

•

•

J

meet on Jan. lOth

I

I

I

·,~.: ,,~,G:u:,:;;;;~:t;:,·~;,

you buy this 2112-vear Certificate of Deposit,
the rate is guaranteed until maturity. Now, at
last, POMEROY NATIONAL BANK can offer
you high interest for saving small amounts.

THE 6-MONlH s10,000
. MONEY MARKET CERTIACATE

Rate effective for Jan~ary, 1980, is 10.15% -

BETWEEN 8:30 AM &amp;5 PM

•••••••••

=~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: : : : :; :: ::::::::: : :::::::::: :::::::::: :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: :::::::::::::::: ::::::: :::::::::: ::::::: :: : :::::::::::::::::: ::::::::::

•

CAlL 992-2156 .

I

Board implements
weather program

that gives you high money market interest for
as lit11e as $100.

high

Statement says center hoard
approached·648 for a merger

• •

Ar~. deaths .
A-4
ClassHied ads .• •........••• •. .... •••..•.. •..... D-3-7
Farm news
C·7-8
~Mal .....
A·2..S
IJfestyle •...•...........••••..
B-1-8

SATURDAY HOURS 9:30 TO 5 PM

OUR BRAND NEW
·
CERTIFICATE OF DEPOSIT

SUN DAY, JANUARY 6, 1980

all~time

:;:;:::::::~;::::: ::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:; :;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:; : ;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;: ;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;: ;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:; :;:;:;:;:; :;:;::,=:::::: ::::::::::::: :::::: ::::::::::::·

0

21/z-YEA.R

/

other "good things.,'' Two employees of G and J Auto in Pomeroy took to
their shovels Friday afternoon to clean off the company's parking lot as
the snow kept coming.

OLD MAN WINTER STRII\ES! - Winter is upon us once again
bringing the usual fender benders, window scraping, snow shoveling, and

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8

Now there's a ·high -yield plan for every saver.
The addition of this new 2112-vear Certificate of

-./ -~ ,;/

FREE CLINIC
Afree bloodpr~ure clinic trill be
held at the Harrlaonvllle Town Hall
from 10 a .m. to 2 p.m. Tuesday sponsored by the Harrisoov!Ue Senior
Otizens Club. The public lli1nvited.

This annual sales event brings great savings on many Items of wearing apparel
for you and your family . Sale prices limited to stock on hand. It'll pay you to visit
every department- Look for the green colored sales signs.

The interest rate on our new Certificate of
Deposit is based on equivalent u. S. Treasury
Securities.*' That's what the new law allows.
This rate will change each month, but when

'

GRANTED DIVORCE
Granted divorce In Gallla County
Common Pleas Olurt 'lbunday was
James R. Hasldnl from Doma Jean
Haskins.

BRINGS SAVINGS OF
20%, 25% UP TO 50'%

Minor mishap checked

'

--~~:--·,.,...

ELBERFELD$

Jan~ary

.
/

General fund

· 'GALUPoLIS - There will be a
meeting of Gallia Coonty Junior
Falr's ·coptest, premium and,award
committees on Thursday, Jan. 20 at
7:~ p.fli. in !,he PCA building
'basement located on Upper Rt. 7.
M!Un dlllpussion will deal with selection of li'vestock judges for the 1960
Gallia Qounty Jllllior Fair. Any in:· dlvlduafi or gl'liu!IS \vho wish to
· silgge$t) pdssible judl,let or .lu~ging
proced!fe8 are · welcome. to attend
the m~ting or to contact committee
,melpr exte!l!!ioo agents before
the
.eeting . and give t~em
su~g

ltms.

... . l ·l .
-~

\

Pomeroy-Despite the bad
weather coniltions 11 relative good
surance agent. Tbe remaining
size crowd was on hand at the Meigs
two articles will appear In tbe
CoWlty Court House Saturday for the
next two Issues of tbe Timessale of delinquent real estate tax
Sentinel).
Jroperty
The sale was conducted by
BY STEVE COLLIER
Prosecuting Attorney Rick Crow
GALUPOLIS - After eight mad- and deputy sheriff Robert Beegle .
dening months in an Iranian prison I
The followning property was sold:
had learned enough Persian
the T. G. and Bertha Clay property,
Dyesville, was purchased by Edwin
basically to understand what ihe two
men were saying. Their words
S. Calart, Racine for a minimum bid
petrified me. One was an Iranian of- of U45.84; the dara Charleton ·
property, R!ltland )Vas purchased by
fiCial and tjl~ . other was the man
upon whom \he fate of myself and
Glen R. and Naomi Bissell, Long ·
my seven companiops 1¥JW depended
Bottom, for $775; tbe Sarah A.
-Michael Metrtnko, a consul for the
Powell property, Olive Township,
was sold to Roger Deem, Belpre for ·
United States government in Tabriz,
Iran.
$9,000;' the Milia A. Watson properWhen I had firs! been brought to
ty, LebanQII Township, 5old to ·
Tabriz eight months previously in Harley and Bonny Mohler, Pinellas
JWJe, 1978, I hadn \ even been sure
Park, Fla., for $!,700; the Jacob
what an American consul dld. Tom · Walters property, I..e~anon, sold to
an eighteen-year-old
Arvil Holter, Long Bottom, lor
Smith,
American wh011e acquaintance I'd $4,600; Clarence Cole property,
recently made, likewise had little Orange Township was sold to Ronald
k119w!edge of the subject' ·.
V. and Mary M. Jones, S)'racuse, for
But,, after we were both taken $5,100; 'the Rebecca Walters properLOOK . O\$R RENOVATION STUDY - Dan
from our train as. we' tried, to cross ty, Lebanon w,as sold to Edward w.
Davies,. left, ,Mrs. T,helma Elliott ancj James Mullim,
the!ranian porderlntoTurkey, were
Fisc!Jer, Riverside Drive, Columbus
light, ,loolt over l'l!novation ' study of downtown
acctlsed of autQ 'smuggling, inr. for $8,100;· til!! · ~, W. Bragg proper·
Galllpolis durl,ng an executive co111111ittee session of the
carcerllted three days, and were ty', Orange Township, was .sold to
GalllpoliB Aft!a Cham~r of Commerce. The chamber
able to c~icate with prac· ,Marvin and Mirna Walker, Tuppers
received ~ ~.900 ~ant recently .on 'behalf of the
.
tlcally·no one, we decided It was hi~h PlaiJ1S for $2,500..
Gallipolis Retail 1\fercliants Association by tne ArProceeds go direc)ly to the coWJty
time to learn more of !he functions of
1
chitectura1Divisi•.
m of the Ohio~ Co~mdl. The grant
r,
D'f
reported
(Continued on iJage A.!J. )

-··
.
will aid In the , development and pro~tion of the
proposed plan for the renovation :am ~estoratlon of
downtowrr GallipoliS. · Davi~s and· Mlillil\s are co;;
chalnnen of the downtown improvement· committee.
1
Mrs. Elliott is the chamber's veteran execUtive . !
secretary. See story and additional pictures on Page B· .
!todljy.
I
J

.·'

.l

'j •

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="105">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2668">
                <text>01. January</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="41125">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="41124">
              <text>January 4, 1980</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
