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It - The Dally stntlnei, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Thursday, Sept. 21, lrll

ELOISE HOFFMAN
Eloise Hollman, 47, Route
3, Pomeroy, died Wednesday
night at he r home. The
Pomeroy emergency squad
was called to the residence.
She was dead .upon the
squad's arrival.
Born Nov. 10, 1930, she wu
preceded In death by her
father, Floyd Sinclair.
Surviving are her mother,
Ora
Midkiff Sinclair,
Pomeroy ; a brother, Charles
Sinclair , Pomeroy; three

sisters. Mrs. Paul (Mildred )
Hauber, L&lt;&gt;ng Bottom; Mrs.
Hobert (Delores) Hawk,
Pomeroy, and Mrs. Hobert
(Mary Allee ) Bowl es,
Pomeroy ; three nephews and
ani..,.,, She was a member of ·
the _Ji radford Church of
Christ.
Funeral services wt11 be
held at I p.m. Saturday at the
Ewing Funeral Home with
bur ial in Cherry Ridge
Cemetery. Friends may call
at the funeral home after 7
this evening.

Energy discount
Bucci named to Akron deadline nears
M.T. BUCCJ

W. B. HIRSCH

post, Hirsch -successor
Goodyear official s an ·
nounced today the appointment of Michael T. Bucci,
plant manager of the Point
Pleasant plant. to the cor·
porate position of director,
production, general products
manlacturing, Akron.
Replacing Mr. Bucci at the
Point Pleasant plant will be
William B. Hirsch, formerly
manager, chemica l plants
engineering. Akron.

Driver cited
after
. mishap
~

Mei gs County Sheriff
James J . Proffitt reports
deputies investigated a
traffic accident Tu esday
afternoon at Racine.
According to the report, 18·
year-old Debbie Evans, Rt. 1,
Portland, had pulled into
E ber's Gulf Statio n at
Racine. She lost control of her
car and struck the building
damaging the door, door
casing,. frame and an outside

pop cooler.
Ms. Evans was cited to

Meigs Co unt y Co urt for
operating without a valid
operator's license.

GET LICENSES
Mar ria ge licenses we re
issued to Billy Lee Wallace,
39, Middleport, and Mary
Catherine Bostic, 21, Middleport ; Harry Clark, 45. Rt.
2, Pomeroy, and Joann Clark,
42, same address; Kenneth
Ray Neig ler, 26, Rt. 2,
Racine, and Brends Darlene
Haning, 24, Rt . 't , Middleport .
ACTIONS FILED
In Meigs County Common
Pl eas Co urt two divorce
actions were filed along with
a suit lor partition of rea l
estate.
filing for divorce were
Karen Sue Eakins, Ht. I,
'-&lt;&gt;ng Bottom, against Ronald
Ea kin s, Racine ; Hazel
Max ine Wiener Hawk,
Tuppers Plains, against Carl
Lee Hawk , Sr., Wellsville.
Filing for pa rtit ion of real
es tat e was Le na Ethel
Guthrie, Ht. 2, Coo lvill e,
against Caro l Olivie, Fairfax,
Va., and Gera ld Guthrie, Rt.
2, Coolville.

A native of Providence, R.
!. , Mr. Bucci received his BS
deg ree
in
Chemical
Eng in eering from Rhode
Island State University in
19•3. Mr. Bucc i joined
Goodyear in 1943 as a factory
office trainee in Akron. In
1946, he was promoted to
juni or chemica l engineer
serving in that capacity until
1948 when he was named a
senior chemical engineer.
In 1957, Bucc i was
promoted to department
foreman at Goodyear's Akron
Chemigum plant and was
moved to division foreman
two years later. H~ was
transf erred In 1962 as
manager of the Le Havre,
France Chemigum plant. In
1968, he returned to the
United Stat es a s plant
manager of Goodyear's Point
Pleasa nt Chemical Plant.
Mr. Bucci will report to F.
V. Prus , vice president ,
dpmestlc general products
manufacturing and will be

The deadline for Ohio
Energy Discount program
applications is Oct. I.
However, due to the weekend
date, applications wW be
accepted through Oct. 2.
Eligible Ohioans interested
in applying for aulstance in
payment of their 1978,1979
winter heating bill mUll fUe
with either the Ohio
Department of Taxation
(renters ) or the County
Auditor (homeowners ), in
order to receive the discount
benefit.
In order to be eligible for
this program a person must
meet
these
three
qualificaiions :
- The applicant must be
the head of the household or
spouse and
- must have reached the
age of 6li by December 31,
1978 or be totally and per·
manently disabled ill any
age, and
- must have a total annual
income of no more than $7,420
lor 1977 or an expected total
income of no more than $7,420

relocating in the Akron area .

A native of Uma, Mr.
Hirsc h received his BS
deg ree
in
Chemical
Engineering from Case Inst itute of Technology in 1964.
Mr. Hirsch joined Goodyear
in 19.64 as a chemical
enginee r in the chemical
plant s engineering division.
From 1968 to 1969, Mr.
Hi rsch served as staff
eng inee r at the Point
Pleasa nt pl ant
before
returning to Chemical Plants
Engineering in Akron for two
years. From 1971 to 1974, Mr.
Hirsch served as project
man age r for Goodyear 's
Isoprene Pl ant Projects
serving first in Japan and
later in Europe .
Returning to the United
States in 1974, Mr . Hirsch
se rved
as
produ ction
at the
superinte nd ent
Houston, Texa s plant until
1976. In February of 1976,
Hirsch was appointed to the
posi tion of mana ger chemical plants engineering
in Akron, a position he held
until his appointment as plant
ma nage r of the Point
Pleasant Plant. Mr. Hirsch
will report to M. T. Bucci,

Pleaoaat Valley Hoapllal
Discharges - Mrs. Melvin
Halstead, Point Pleasant ;
Mrs.
James
Jeffers,
Southside ; Charles Ut·
terback , Point Pleasant;
Sharon Walker, Gallipolis
Ferry;
Mrs.
Ronald
Wickline, Henderson ; Mrs.
Scholtz ,
Point
Frank
·P l ea s ant ;
Norman
Laudermilt, Mason.
Births - A son to Mr. arid
Mrs .
Clinton
Stover,
Gallipolis; ·&amp;son to Rev. and
Mrs. Thomas Malcolm, Point
Pleasant ; a daughter to Mr.
and Mrs. Joseph Wilson,
Point Pleasant.
BOOSTERS MEETING
Plans lor homecoming to
be held on Oct. 6 will be made
when the Southern '-&lt;&gt;cal
Athletic . Boosters meet at
7:30p.m. Monday at the high
school. Parents of all par·
ticipants in the athletic
progra ms are urged to attend .

SEEKS DIVORCE
In Meigs County Common
director .
Pleas Court Kennie C. See,
Mr. Hirsch, his wife , Middleport, flied suit for
Glor ia. an d their th ree divorce against Bernice See,
children will be reloca ting in Weston, W. Va.
the Huntington, W. Va . area.
Ilene HaD was granted a
These admi nl st r ati ve divorce from Truman D.
changes were effective Sept. Hall.
1.
.

COOKIE

JARS•••

for 1978.
The · Energy Discount
Program is a d!rect
assistance to those elderly or
disabled Ohioans who are
suffering from higher winter
heating costs," Undley says.
The discount provides a 25
percent reduction on utility,
bills for the billing months of
December through April to
those persons who purchase
their energy from a metered
utility company. For those
persons who purchase their
heating supply from a retail
dealer, the program provides
a payment of $87.50 to the
applicant.
Applicanti ons for
homeowners may be obtained
from the County Auditor.
Applications for renters or
house trailer residents are
available at local banks, post
officf!l~ , libraries , se:nior
citizen centers and District
Offices of the Ohio Depart·
ment of Taxation.

Third annual
·college day
set Oct. 25
ATHENS - Southeast Ohio
high school students will have
the opportun ity to meet
representati ves
of
60
colleges, universities and
nursing
s chools
at
the third annual Col·
lege Day hosted by Ohio
University on Oct. 25.
The program will be held in
the Convocation Center from
8:30 a.m. until noon . Each
college representative . wtJI
have a separate table where
he or she will discuas their
school and answer questions.
In addition. sessions on
career planning and financial
aid worksq ops will be
presented for students at 9, 10
and 11 a.m.
Instituti o ns send ing
representatives include most
of Ohio's state universities,
several private and technical
colleges, and the U. S. Air
Force and Naval academies.
Last year over 1,100
students
from
22
Southeastern Ohi o high
schools
attended
th e
program.
Persons wi shin g more
information should contact
their high school guidance
counselors or write the Ohio
University Admissions Of.
lice, Chubb Hall, Athen s
.:i701.

El

•

S!lfely tuck your money
In one of our regular savings
accounts and watch It
grow, earning the highest
Interest rates allowed.

A Hom e Bank _ _.
For
Me igs County

People

RACINE
HOME NATIONAL
BANK

Pope John Paull ound dead today
By-JACK R. PAY'I'ON
VATICAN CITY (UP!) Pope JOOst Paul I was found
dead of an apparent heart
aUack In hla Vatican
apartment t.oday, leaving the
throne of St. Peter vacant for
the aecond time in less than
five weeks.
The end of hl8 Jt.day reign
- the briefest In four
centuries - stunned hl8 700
million Romlln Catholic
lollo:wers, stW grieving the
death of Pope Paul VI oo
August 6.
Thousands of mourners
. poured · into St . Pete r's
Square, their faces ,numb
with shock and grief. They
feU to their knees to pray lor
the repooe of the soul of the

•
•
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 29th AND SAnJRDAY, SEPTEMBER 30th
OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8

- JUNlOifSIACK_S__

---woMi.~N's~o-P..-EN-sw-To-cK--11

BLOUSES

Stylish junior $1aci&lt;s in solid colors. Junior
sizes 3 to 1s:·
Save this weekend on our new fall collection
REG. 111,00.... ;................ ;...... SALE 18.79
of women 's regular size blouses. Sizes 30
REG. '14.00 ........................... SALE '11.19
tEhfiru :fi.846
.
.
SALE ~.39
SALE 11199
R •
... .. ..... .......... ..... ....
v
REG • 11500.
. •• ••. •• ••.•• .•••. .••••••• •.
.
RE • I
SALE '7.99
REG. '19.00 ............... .. ..... .. .. SALE '15.19
R.E • 112.00. .. ......................... SALE '9.59
REG. 120.00 ........................... SALE 115 99
REG. '14.00 · ..................... ·····SALE 111.19
,17 '59
REG. '15.00 ...........................SALE '11.99
REG • '22 •00 .. ... ... ... .... ....... .. .. SALE
.
• TREG 116 00

o.oo............................

. . . .- - - - - - -

.

.

I-I

I

I

Skirts.F~~~s.~~e~~!~~~~m
fall
colors, latest styles.

- -

j

SPECIAL PRICES ON FREE SPIRIT BODY
BRIEFER, PANT LINER, BRIEF, BRAS, CROSS
YOUR HEART STYLES AND SUPPORT CAN

END OF THE MONTH SALE

SCHOOL NAME
TOBOGGANS
regular price
two colors with

Our
s:i.95,
school name. for these area schools,
Eastern Eagles , Meigs Marauders,
Southern Tornadoes and Wahama White
Falcons.

•233

1 SPECIAL CLEARANCE SALE I

MEN'S

SPECIAl. SALE PRICE

Wr~~~:~ru~~~k~~e~~~~es l Wrangler~~~c~de~i~r~~r

in shorts, regular , tails. two way
zipper, grey hickory stripe or blue denim.

36 Ia 50

$

1799

prices
~ $13 .95 and $15.95, Western styling, straight
legs, flares and some big bells, not every
I size in every style$849d quantity.

,. ., -..-_... . ,_.....__ ,_L_...,.- - •- _...w ,_.._.._

•

MUSIC DEPARTMENT

w--~---·---1

FREE
STEREO
STAND
WITH THE PURCHASE OF A CHANNEL MASTER OR PANASONIC COMPONENT SYSTEM. WE

$2995

HAVE AN EXCELLENT SELECTION OF STYLES. MODELS WITH
CASSETIES, TURNTABLES, STEREO RADIOS.
TWO STYLES OF STANDS

----------..1--I
MEN'S LONG SLEEVE
BLUE
CHAMBRAY SHIRTS

Sizes S, M. L and XL. Two pockets.
permanent press, full shirt tails.

SPECIAL
PRICE
-- · ~--

1

' ·

8 TRACK PLAYER RECORDERS,
LIMITED TO

VALUE

DISCONTINUED PAmRNS.

MOUNTAIN MAID
THROW RUGS
All purpose rugs for kitchens, bedrooms.
hallways. bathrooms, machine washable.

VATICAN CITY (UP! )- Hours before his death, Pope
John Paull spoke of Chrlst's promise of eternal life in his last
pubilc addlresa.
"His (Oirlst's ) chief promise is eternal life," the pope told
a group of visiting bishops from the Philippines on Thursday .
"Jesus truly has words that lead us to etemalllle."

$10.49.

PRICE
__'_____________,__,__

Strict guidelines proposed

,_~,,--~

CINCINNATI (UP!) - Strict operational guidelines
'lhould be in force if the century-old Cincinnati Workhouse is
kept open beyood a court...-dered Oct. 12 closing dste, an
attorney representing ilunates at the facility said Thursday .
Leagl Ald Society atlol:ney Robert Newman also told
Q:mmon Pleas Court Judge Harry T. Klusmeier Thursday
there are good reasons why the judge should deny a city
request to extend the closing date.

END OF THE MONTH SALE

'599 BED BLANKETS
Acrylic polyester blend, sizes 72x90 Inches
for twin or full beds, nylon binding, machine
washable.

States join opposition
NEWARK, N. J. (UP! )- New York, Ohio and Michigan
have jdned New Jersey in voicing their opoislUon wa plan for
the coostruction of a $1.4 biWon coal gasification plant in
Mercer, N. D.
state Energy Commlasioner Joel Jacobson said the plan is
being proposed by a conaortium of live companies, including
two major suppliers of natural gas to New Jersey, and would
be paid f&lt;r hv Imposing higher rates on consumer.

1

-(,;--·-----..

----sivffo'7soo----·~· ~-~~i~v~~·~2o::----~~;
on a wallaway chair by Berkline.
The recliner that works just 1112
inches from the wall. Large
selection of nylon covers, solids,
tweeds, plaids and vinyls. Also large
savings
on
rock-o-loungers,
recliners, swivel rockers and
occasional chairs. Lay a chair away
for Christmas deliverv.
. . . .- - - - - - - - - - -........

I

or

the Roman Catholic cliurch
began moving to name his
successor. And in furthe r
tradition the great bronze
doors of St. Peter's were half
closed. Chains were placed
across the entrance to the
Vatican palace as a symbol of
death. The red and yellow
Vatican flags flew at half
sta ff as the bells of Rome

ON A

KROEHLER 2 PIECE·
LIVING ROOM SUITE
Regular S749, $750, S769.

DINffiE SETS,, BUFFET
&amp; HU'JiCHES

at

SALE '581.00
Only a suites in this group, grHn, brown,
rust, blue plaids. Early American style.

SAVE·20%

in Columbus.
President
Ca rt er,
Thursday, acting under the
National Railway Labor Act,
named an emergency board
to work out a prompt
settlemen t between the
railroads and their striking
workers. Officials say the
President will most likely
order strikers back to work
during negotiations.
The strike over job
diSplacement of clerks in the
fa ce of automation began
bega n two months ago at the
Virginia based Norfolk and
Western Railway after two
years of talks, then spread
this week to over 70 rail lines.

~,

.

._., .
1,' .

.

GRANDFATHER 'CLOCKS
-

LAY ONE AWAY FOR atRISTMAS
DELIVERY

'

EDISON HOBSTETI'ER, right, was greeted on the occasion of his 50th anniversary
with the Pomeroy National Bank by 1-r, Roger Morgan, director and George Harris. The
celebration will continue through Saturday.

No order will be issued, hearing
rail
strike
scheduled today on
'
..

Dy DREW VON BERGEN
WASHINGTON (UP! ) Declaring he would issue no
tempora r y . res trainin g
1rders , U.S. District Judge
Aubrey Robinson today
sc heduled an afternoon
hearing on whether to try and
halt th e nationwide rail strike
by court order .
President Carter told a
news conference Thursday he
was creating an emergency
board under the National
Railway Labor Act to solve
the dispul!' which began July
10 involving Norfolk &amp;
Western Railway.
His action , according lo the
White House and Labor
Secretary Ray Marshall ,
automatically ordered
striking members of the
Brotherhood of Railway,
Airline and Steamship Clerks
back to work.
But BRAC members, who
had brought the rail system

wa

stands\111, did not heed
The roads wan ted a
Car t e r' s
dir ect i ve restraining order against the
immediately, and lawyers for picketing which has spread
both the railroads and the from N&amp;W w 73 railroads,
union
instead
sought a nd the unions wanted
temporary "moral&lt;lriums" in 8SSW'ance of no reprisals.
district court.
Robinson heard their argu-

Applications now accepted
Ap pli ca t io ns fo r ene rgy
discounts are still being taken
at the Senior Cit izens Center
in Pomeroy.
Resident s 65 or older or
perma ne ntly and tot•IIY
disabled residents and heads
of households or spouses with
a total income of $7,420 or less
a re eligible for the 25 percent
discount on th is com in g
winter's heating bills. The
dea dline has been extended to
Oct . I and applications will be
accepted until Od . 2.
Homeowners who filed last
vear should have received an

Elberfeld• In Pomeroy

Cancr.a lor approval thil year.
t'

below $7, 42Q in 1977 and either
the husba nd or wife is
di sa bled can quality.
Residents can stop by the
center or call 992·7311 and an
outreadh worker will visit the
home and fill out the form .

CG&amp;E files
huge suit

- 25.

Single-digit - 8.

CINCINNATI (UP! ) - A
utility has filed a $52 million
"""
lawsuit again st a coa l
I
co mpany for alleg-edly
\
supplying the utility with
~ "dirty" Coal.
•
Cincinnati Gas &amp; Electric
Co., which filed the suit in
Cincinnati federal court ,
complained that Coosumer
Coal Corp ., of Dayton, Ohio,
through its subs idiary,
Kentucky Prince Coal Co. of
Hazard, Ky., sold the utility
' coal that did not meet low
sulfur content specification$.
High sulfur coal produces
the pollutant, sulfur dioxide .
The utility , which in 1976
signed a Ill-year con tract
with the coal c&lt;mpany for
50,000 Ions of low sulfur coal a
month, alleges that the coal
did not meet the cootract's
low sullur standards.
The utility is seeking SSI .6
million from the company,
the amount It says It wtJI have
1o pay for hlgher.prlced, low
sulfur coal the next 10 years.
The utility also is seeking
$285,000 in compensatloo lor
payinents already made to
the coal cotnpany.
Utility officials said the
coal In question exceeded
High School thil aeaaon. They are Penny Miller, front;
Environmental Protection
second row, I to r, Tammy Ferguaon and Unrecka
Agency standards for sulfur
Johnson , with KeUy Tyree at the top.
emlsoioos.

_.j '

1

Talks at difficult point

to

couple whose income was

up . I don't think it will take all
that much more time,'' he
said when he recessed the
court.
Carter's call for an end w
" I think we can wrap it all . the four-day strike was not
immediately heeded, and in
San Francisco, just the
opposite occurred.
Within a half-hour of
Carter 's a nnoun cement ,
strikers set up pickets on the
Southern Pacific commuter
line bet ween San Francisco
and San Jose, f~rcing 4,500
rush-hour commuters to lind
other means of getting home .
Amtr a k
c an ce l ed
Thi s week's winnin g
passenger
service
between
numbers:
Sa
n
Francisco
and
Los
Weekly 50 Ce nt Game
Angeles
.
Five-digit Wlnathon 001&amp;8.
Three-digit Blue Number
- 744.
Tw&lt;Hiigit White Number

'.'

UNITED NATIONS (UPI ) - Secretary of State Cyrui

OPEN SATURDAY 9130 A.M. TO 5 P.M.

application in the maiL This
application has to be filled uut
and returned or the disco unt
will not be given. Home-owners file with the Meigs
County Auditor .
It is stressed that residents
do not have to be senior
citizens to qua lify. Any

menta in a three-hour court
session which ended shortly
after midnight today, and set
a 2 p.m. EDT hearing rn a 00.
day injunction.

•

WASHINGTON (UP!) - President Carter believes the
time haa come fer the United Slates to participate in an
intemaUooal conference to Iring peace to a unlflad Lebanon.
"The 1ulferlng of the people of Lebanoo haa beeR
atracrdlnary," Carter aald Thlll'lday at lU 37th formal news
cooference. '"'1sere ila tracedy in Lebanon that llli rest of the ·
wcrld.haa not adequately addr..ct, including otll'IMIIves."

Vanee and Soviet Forqn Minllter Andrei Grcmyko aay their
SALT II laib an at a dllllcult alage, and compromlae In
llftl'll . . will nat come euUy.
· 1bt two dlpkmala' 10bar r·
•tta .came 'nlurada{
llfflr roar ._..ofllll«&lt;atlonl, and appeared to dim lilt llOpea
Prttldlnt Cll1« ..ld lor aendlntla new lllratelic arma treaty

MR. AND MRS. Edison Hobstet ter at the 50th
. anniversary celebration honoring Edison on his 50 years
with the Pomeroy National Ba nk . On the table is a gold
coffee service presented w them by the direcl&lt;lrs of the
bank. Cake, coff ee, and punch .were served to the many
that stopped in to offer their congratulati ons. Favors were
also given. The event will continue through Saturday.

,,

Involvement time here

ON

.

On his feet were the bright
red "shoes of the fisherman"
symbolizing the Roman
Catholic belief that pontiffs
are the heirs of St . Peter, the
fisherman !rom Galilee who
became Christ's chief
disciple.
The white silk miter
symbolizing papal authority
covered John Paul 's head,
which rested on green-andsilver pillows.
At both sides of the bier,
black-c lad priests prayed
quie tl y in eight pews ,
occasionally sprinkling holy
water toward the late pope 's
body .
The five windows of the
room faced St. Peter's
!Continued on page 12)

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1978

SAN DIEGO (UP!) - Federal crash investigators say
Clllllrollers at two air traffic centers teD different versions of
what happened in the minutes a jetliner collided with a small
plane and craahed Mooday, kUling 150 persons in America 's
wcrll aviation dlauter.
The confualon has not been clarlfled, Brad Cunbar, of the
Natlooal Tranaportalioo Slllety Board, told a news conference
Thursday night.
·

chairs.
30 Inch maple bar stools.
36 Inch maple or pine buffet and hutch.

.

W set a broken nose and two
lo remove gallstones.
The pope's 61-year-old
brother Eduardo Luciani said
in Adelaide, Australia the
pontiff had recently suffered
"some bad feelings around
the heart," but a medical
checkup had tur ned up
nothing w alarm doctors.
"What God wants has w
happen," the younger
Luciani said.
The pope 's face was pale
and shrunken and his fingers
clutched a rosary as his body
lay in state in a room covered
from floor to ceiling with
frescoes about the rei ~ of
17th century Pope Clement
VII and ot her religio us
subjects.

enttne

DiHerent versions given

5 Piece maple or pine 36" table, 4 chairs.
7 Piece maple or pine, 42" table, 6 chairs.
7 Piece metal chrome or bronze table, 6

OAK, CHRRY, MAPLE.

for II a.m . (5 a.m. EDT)
Saturday
to
make
prelim inary funera l arrangements.
Although John Paul had a
history of medical troubles,
Va ti can
officials
had
described them as not serious
and said he was in overall
good health .
John Paul, the son of a
Socialist migrant bricklayer
from the Dolomite mountain
hamlet of Forno di Canale,
had entered health spas twice
fo r trea tment of a long
condition caused by a bout of
tuberculosis as a youth.
Dur ing his lif e,. he had
undergone four operations for the removal of his tonsils
as a child, another operation

•

nl - - . - - - -

SAVE UP TO '111.00
..

-~

Etemallife in last message

FulL twin and queen sizes plus pillow cases.
Percale, not every size In every style or
color, limited quantity, regular prices up to

2.99 SIZE 24x45 ................ 12.39
REGULAR 15.99 SIZE 24x90 ................ '5.39

continuing possibility we may
have to close our assembly
plants ."
The GM complex at Lords·
town is w~rklng today but
scrapped plans to run the
passenger car production line
Saturday because the strike
has cut into the shipment of
parts to the plant , a GM
spokesman said .
A sp okesman for Ford
Motor Co. said all its plants
were operating today but the
situatioo there could also
~hange if no break is seen in
the strike.
The strike by railroad
clerks expanded Thursclay to
the Baltim~re &amp; Ohio sectioo·
of the Chessie system when
picket lines were set at B&amp;O
fa cilities Utroughout Ohio.
Picket
lines
were
established earlier
in
Cincinnati ,
Tol e do ,
Youngstown, Cleveland and
at the Chesapeake &amp; Ohio
section of the Chessle system

----

CANNON BED SHEETS

--------~· ~--·-----------w~•·--~~·---~W-1_...__..._"'

By JOHN T. KADY
Ualted Preas IDteruatloaal
At least 2,000 auto workers
have been laid off in Ohio
because of the national rail
strike, and the passenger
production line at the giant
General Motors Corp.
complex in L&lt;&gt;rtlstown will be
shutdown Saturday because
of a shortage of parts.
The layoffs of the 2.000
workers were at the Inland
Division of General Motors
Corp. In Dayton and
Vandalia . About 800 were laid
off at the division's Vandalla
plant which produ~ es
Instrument panels and foam
sea !Band the other 1,200 were
laid off In the weatherstrippinn ilne of the Inland
Division In Dayton.
" 'I'Ile cwporation Is taking
a look at the situation today,"
said Jerry Bishop , GM
spokesmari In Dayton. "We
will have to see where we
stand in shipping products
out and parts in. There is the

j~)_r_h_e_w_or_ld_To_d_a_y_

STOCK ONLY

1/2

END OF THE MONTH SALE I

centuries ol d machinery

tolled the fearful tidings.
The last rites of the church
were said by Monsignor
Canisto van Lierde. With him
was the Vatican Secretary of
State, French Cardinal Jean
Villot, and Monsignor Virgilio
Noe.
Viliol has assumed leadership of the church until a.new
pope is chosen - he had done
so whe n Pope Paul died. He
immedicately called a
conclave to elect a new pope
- directions laid down by
Paul say the conclave must
begin in 15 w 20 days,
between Oct. 13 and 18.
Betwee n 20 a nd 25
cardinals were in Rome at
the time of the pope's death
and they scheduled a meeting

Strike causes
2,000 layoffs

BE BEAUTIFUL BRAS.

'5.40
'6.00
'9.00
~!~~!.1~0!:.~:; ::;::;,;.• ':,:;:.;;.:!AlE~!!:~;...-!~·w~"-'_"_w____._,__,""--' •w---w---·--..,---~-1
ANOTHER SHIPMENT

bedroom of Pope John Paul I.
Not having found him in his
chapel as usual, he was
looking for hlm in hls room
and fo und him dead in bed
with the lights still oo, as if·he
were still reading," the
of f ici a l
V atican
announcement said.
With in
minutes
the

•

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

VOL. XXIX NO. 117

---· -·------------;=-+---·--------------·-----4

washable. Sizes 2T thru 10.
REGULAR '9.00 ......................... SALE
REGULAR '10.00 ....................... SALE
REGULAR 115.00 ....................... SALE

apparently while reading in
his bedroom .
Within six hours of his
death , the pope's body was
dressed in his red and white
papal vestments and placed
oo a bier in the Clementine
Hall on the third floor of the
Vatican Palace for public
viewing.
The first person to enter the
room was Italian President
Sandro Pertini.
TheVaticankept the pope 's
death !ifCret for eight and a
half hours. Its official announcement came at· 7:30'
a.m. (1:30 a.m. EDT).
·''This morning at about
5:30 a .m. the priv ate
secretary of the. pope, Father
(John) Magee, entered the

e

-

PLA YTEX SALE
I SAVE UP TO •3.00

REG. '6.00 .......................... ;... SALE '4.79 ~I
REG. '9.00 .............. ... ............. SALE 17.19
REG. '11.00 · ·· ·· ............. ·· ........ ·SALE '8.79
REG. 114.00 ....................... .. ... SALE 111.19
REG. '16.00 ...................... -.-.. SALE 112.79
REG. '22.00 ............................ SALE 115.99
-~
CHILDREN'S
DEPARTMENT

LITTLE BOYS AND Gl RLS
JACKETS
Lined and unlined styles. machine

pontiff whose hcrnely ways
had won. their hearts.
" It's irnpoasible. II just
can 't be true," wailed a
Vatican attendant ushering
thousands through St. Pete~
Basilica . "He had opened his
anns to all of us and now he Is
gone· so quickly."
The shockwaves of the
pope 's sudden death rolled
around the world and there
were similar outpourings of
grief from world leaders.
The 263d pooliff of the
Roman Catholic chuch was
found dead by his private
secretary at 5:30a .m. (11:30
p.m. EDT Thursday). The
Vatican said John Paul, 6li,
died about 11 p.m. (5 p.m.
EDT ) Thursday night ,

. . .......................... .

,..... ,_.._.._

PRE-TEEN

REGULAR

aranotfor
•
sav1ng
mo·nayl

sIn Pome

..
FRESHMEN CHEERLEADERS - These are
memben of the freohmen cheerleadlng squad at Meigs

"The railroads refused w
agree to a ny gua rantee
against re prisals," BRAC
President Fred Kroll said. "I
cannot send my people hack
lo work because it would be
like send ing sheep to
slaughter .
''Now the strike will COil·
!Continued on page 12 1

' '~~i~~rifri '~tif2I~f''
S unda y throu g h
Tuesda y, a chan ce of
showe rs Sunday, with fair
weather both Monday anctTuesday . Highs will range
from the upper 60s to the
middle 70s on Sunda y,
warming to the 70s both
Mond ay a nd Tues da y.
0H rni ght lows
will
generally be between 15
and 50.

Firewood
field dJJy
Saturday
A Timherstand Improvement and Firewood Field
Day will be held Saturday at
Bo b Eva ns Farm in Rio
Grande, beginning at 9 a.m.
and continuing throughout
the afternoon.
The day's act ivities center
around woodlot management
for fuel production. It is an
opportunit y to learn how
forestry can be an efftctive
part of fuel conservation.
Those in attendane&lt;! will
see demonstrations on how to
grow trees and then protect
them; how to decide which
trees should be removed from
the woodlot for lirewood ; how
to fell a tree and bow to best
prepare the wood for use as
firewood.
The Field Day is sponsored
by the Ohio Department of
Natural Resources' Forestry
Division, the forestry In·
dustry's Tree Arm Com·
mitt ee and Bob Evans
Farms,

I.

�2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Sept. 29, 1978

'

.

IN WASHINGTON

ETTA

peopletalk

~\'lORn\ ~'R-"Ttli'GRAM
l't.E. FI. &lt;9

~U~I'I'IE

Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

•

By Martha Aogle aod Robert Walters
WASHINGTON (NEA l · Sex, religion and politics may
no longer be constdered taboo as topics for polite
conversa tiOn , but that certainly doesn't make them Cit
s ubJects fo r legislative a ttention

In troduce any one of them into a de bate in Congress and
you 've got a surefire diStOrtiOn of the 1ssue under
s ha mbles

That, reg rettably. is what has happened in the 95th
Congr ess over the abortion assue, which combines m

equally explosive measure all three formerly taboo topics.
As 1f Congr ess d1dn 't have e nough to worry about 1n these
dosmg weeks of t he session wtth the energy bill, civtl
service reform and a tax reduction, it now fa ces the
pros pect of a ran corous House-senate h ght over no less
than ftve majo r bills to wh1c h anti-abortion nders have
been a ttached

Last year . the huge Labor· HEW appropriations bill was
held up for m onths by a b1tter quarrel between the House

and Senate over JUSt how tightly a restrictiOn on the use of

personnel , the foreign aid appropriations measure,
t he tar ~ et IS abortion assistan ce for Peace Corps
tee r s, a pregnancy dtsability bill; where the House
to exclude abort iOn coverage from pnvate health

where
volunwanls
insur-

ance plans. and a Honse move to prohibit the U.S. Civil
H1ghts Conumsswn from collecting and analyzmg data

about possibly diScri minatory effects of the government's
a bortwn polictes .

What has precipitated th1s flurry of a nti-abortion fervor

Meet the Marauders

"Shall we move on, now that we've laid that to rest?"

Health Review
By Dr. Lamar Miller

often physicians need to order a "glucose tolerance" test since
some diabetics may he missed with fasting glucose tests.
Urine sugar values generally are not reliable enough to make
the original diagnosis, although your doctor may use it to
regulate your insulin treabnent.
I shall discuss the glucose tolerance test in more detail
next week as well as some of the complications of diabetes.

OU College of Osteopathic Medicine

KING FACES SURGERY : Saudi Arabia's KiD8 Khaild Ia In
Cleveland Clinic Hospital where he's slated ID undergo
coronary bypass surgery Saturday. Dr. Dould Eifler says
Khalid, whose heart has been deteriorating for some years,
has coronary artery disease "but it Is a very correctable
situation." The king meanwhile is resting In a tightly guarded
3().room VIP compound on the eighth floor - lncllllllns a
private waiting room, a communications center and sleeping
quarters for personal attendants. One-hundred of the klng's
aides are occupying five floors of the adjacent Park Plaza
Hotel, which printed special menus In Arable and brought out
stuffed grape leaves for the occasion.
GIJMPSES: 1V actor Jim Nabon has put his home in the
posh Bel-Air section of Los Angeles up for sale - for $2.5
million ... Joe Cocker was sued in a Los Angeles court by hla
former landlord - for $15,000 worth of damage ID a ho111e
Cocker rented for a year ... Ba1118nl Hugbea, star ol tbe
Broadway play " Da," showed up at Sardl's to congratulate
Paxton Whlteliead · oo his opening in the Sherlock Holmes
thriller "The Crucifer of Blood" ....

•
r
MEIGS TACKLES - First row, 1-r, Larry Byer,
Randy Arnold, Bob Chappalear, Dave Davis. Second row

1-r, Paul Matson, Dan Edwards, Robert Harmon.

the Associated Press and NBC indicates a 49-13 percent percent of the population harbors at least a single recessive
plurality now favors the ex pe ndit ure of fede r al funds to gene for diabetes and may acquire the disease at some time in
pa y for abortions that poor women ca nnot finance thel.l' lives. The reason why the per~ntage is so low is that
tJ1emselves.
many people who have diabetes have never been diagnosed. In
This , however , is an elect ion year , a nd many House other words, they either have no symptoms or don't recognize
members who face close contests this fa ll fear the balance the1r symptcms as diabetes . It is very common to dlasnose a
could be t1pped by the small but active percentage of child diabetic for the first time after admission to a hospital in
\'oters who judge a candidate by his pos1t10n on abortion a coma!

•
MEIGS VICTORIOUS
In a close contest last
night, the host Meigs goU
team won a triangular
match over Warren and
Southern. Final score was
Meigs 191, Warren 193, and
Southern 198. Meigs' J. R.
Wamsley was medalist for
the evening with his 43.
Other Meigs scores
were: Scott McKinney 45,
Rob Davis 49, and Chuck
Kennedy and David
Kennedy both 52.
For Southern, Dwight
Hill got back in the groove
with· a 45 while Seth Hill
had a 48. Jim Powell bad a
49, Paul Holsinger a 56, and
Paul Roush a 60.
Mark King led Warren
"lth a 46 while Scott Wynn
had a 48. Don MacAttee
had 49 , and Mark Aebl and
Dave Lane each had 50.

Look for 2 tags when you buy a ·new appliance.

,

f~·

. ~/

tss ues alone So they vote for fundmg cut--offs as a matter

of political exped1ency, even when they have no deep

QUE:STION : What type of person IS most likely to develop
those who do genuinely abhor all abortions on moral diabetes ?
or reltg wus g rounds, fundmg c ut~ffs are a poor means of
- ANSWER : Sex does not seem to be a determining factor.
seeking to halt the practice .
Males and females are equally affected. Age is definitely a
The existing restriction on Med1catd outlays for abor- factor , smce as a person becomes older his or her chances of
tlo ns ha s now been in effect for a full year and has resulted , hecomlng diabetic continually mcrease. Diabetes is more
at't:ordtng, to HEW calculations, in a 98 percent r eduction in common in Western cultures, or more specifically, in people
the num be r of_pregna ncy tenruna ti ons flnanced by feder,flll
funds Yet according to offi cials at the Center for D1sease subjected to Western culture diets. Certain ethnic groups, such
t'ttntrol m 1\ tl anta. where abortions a re monttore d , there as Eskimos, rarely acquire the problem, while others, such as
h"s been little if any reduction 10 the number of some American Indian tribes, have an increased incidence.
Generally speaking, the younger the person is when he or she
pre~ nan 1es terminated .
1he Supre me Court has said women have a rig ht to seek' gets diabetes, the more severe the problem is likely to he .
u1 ~AbOrtion in the e arly months of a preg nancy With or Juvenile diabetics are always relatively severe diabetics and
Uhout fcdera l assastance , they conhnue to do so always require insulin, whereas people over the age of 45, also
~ "'lJrU'Y-SSrnen who vote {or fundmg cut-&lt;&gt;ffs may help their called maturity onset diabetics, rarely need to use insulin to
n pohuca l prospects, but they are not stoppmg
control their sugar levels.
hvrtJUns
personal convtct10ns on the abortiOn issue per se .
~· or

SEW.S I'AI'Eil E NTER PRISE

A..~ N

1

HEALTH
lawrence E.tamb. M.D.
lh !-""renee Lamb, M.D.
llt. AK DK . LAM B - I am
11 lu\4 .salt d1c'"t. a nd am
'km.:; K-I.AJr da1ly Can yo u
nd rut· nr tell me where I
''" ~ t.:t a h~1 of fouds low m

·dlu m

and

high

in

P.. •lii S,:O, IUJU ''

!lEAR KF:ADE R - I am
.,,~ ndmg

you The Hea lt h

Ldter number 10·12. Sa lt
You r

Vttal

Sodium and
Bala nce . It
{ 'ln ta1ns small cha rt s as
p,d aSs1urn

exam ples of the sod1um and
pvtass1um content of cum·
mun fvuds m each of the four
Uas1c ft){Jd groups
Other reade rs who want
lh l ~ 1n furma twn can send 50

r·rnts With a lung, sta mped,
«·lf·il ddressed enve lope for
Address ) our request to
mt- m care uf this newspaper,
!' 0 Box I55!, Rad1o C1ty

1l

Stauon. :-lew York, :-IY 10019.
The fr uit and fr u1t JUICes,
as a ~ro up , are all h1gh 1n
potass1um a nd low m sodiUm.
That mc lud es ba nana s,
,,rang e JUI Ce, ap pl es and
~'~lm u~t ever y fru1 t and fruit
JUite that we can consume .
:"o/r1nc of this gro up is high 111
So&lt;lium .
Vegetables tend to contain
d little more sodium . but

they a re relatively low·
sud1Um foods The problem
here IS if yu u add salt 111 the

fuud prepa rat1un Many uf the
canned and frozen vegetabl es

you get from the grocery
sto re
have
in c r e ase d
amounts

or sod1um

because

of thm preparation For that
reason, tf yo u are on a low-

sodi um dlCt. you would do
well to get ~he fresh
vegetabl es and prepare them
at home you rself
Naturall y. there 1s ,;orne
sodium 1n all the meats but,
aga m. 1f yo u bu y raw meat,
hsh or chi cken and prepme it

you rself.

rather

than

resof\. mK to canned fi sh, or

ca nned products, you wi ll
limit your intak e of sod1 um.
lly - increasi ng the frmts
and vegetables m the diet,
limiting the amount of meats
and milk and refraining from
adding salt while cooking or
I

at tht taole, yo u can have a

relatively low-salt d1e1 that
co ntains
a reasonable
amount of potassium .

who

CE

6¥z%

victory over the Ma n ne rs.

decisi ons for an .889 winning

PRICE AND

percentage, Gu1dry lowered
his major league-leading
ERA to I 72 , virtually locking
up Cy Young honors and
making a strong b1d for Most
Va luable Player laurels.

SERVICE

INTEREST
On Certificates
Of Deposit
1
1,000 Minimum
1 Yr. Term

A Great
Combma t1on
For South eastern Oh10

:;

"Those are big ifs, " wmmng for the hrst llrne in 40
conceded Zimmer last night , days, benefitting from Ri ce's
after Mike Torrez' three- homer to outduel rookie Kip
hitter and J1m Rice's 45th Young, who also Ul ssed a
homer paced the Red Sox to a three·hltter
!.{) v1ctory over the Detroit
"I just didn 't know· what
T1gers. "We need help . We're was wrong these past fe w
still one game back and 1 weeks," sa1d Torrez. ' 'I'm a
don't have much to sm1le better pitcher than I have
about ."
been. I' ve tned everything ,
The Red Sox are sllll one so tonight! just sa1d the heck
game back because the Yan- with it."
kees' Ron Guidry was busy
Elsewhere an the Amer ican
establishin g a few records League, Balhmore shaded
while pitching a four-hit , 3-1 Cleveland, 3-2, Cahforma out·
victory over the Blue Jays . slugged Ch1cago, ll -7, and
The left-hander fanned nine Texas mpped Seattle , 4-3
to set a team record witlr 243 Over m the Nahon al League ,
strikeouts for the yea r, four Houston edged Atlanta , 4·3,
and Clncmnat1 overcame L..os
Angeles, 11-7-.

Effec t1 ve

Starcraft/Ouachita Boat
Mercury Outboards &amp;
Mercruiser

NEW YORK (UP!) - The
New York State Racing and
Wagering Boa rd announced
Thursday an agreement has
heen reached between the
Western New York Harness
Horsemeii's Association and
the management of Batavia
Downs Raceway, settling a
dispute that has interrupted
racing at the track smce
Tuesday.
Agreement
on
all
clas s ificati o n s
and
preferences to racing
opportunities for all events
was reached , effective
through the end of the fa ll
meeting. Racmg is scheduled
to resume Saturday .

rate

w1th

com ·

pound ing 6.66 per ce nt .
N rnety d ay 1nterest penalty
d
wrthdrawn
befor e

DOUG'S

matunh da te

MARINE
Sales &amp; Service
(614)992 -5652
T he Atnens

NOTICE

Count~

Scn11 ng s &amp; Lo.an Co.
IIi Mam St
Pomeroy , Oh 10

Through th e lall sea son
and

wmter

month s we

FSTJC
__ __

w111 be closed on Sunday .

_....._

Doug DeClnces slammed
his 27lll homer and J im
Palmer and Don SCanhouse
combined on a four-hitter,
leading Baldmore to a threegame swee p of Cleveland .
Angels II , White SHx 7:
Ca rney Lansford drove in
four runs with his eighU1
homer and a single and the
Angels spot ted Chicago a 4.{)
lead in the first mnUJg before
rallying for a tnumph ove r
the Wh1te Sox .

BOB W

Matn

Pom~?"r oy

QH

St
57 69

.1

Rangers 4, Manners 3:

Toby Harrah drove in a
pa1r of rW1s wtth a sev enth·

1nnmg smgle, Jun Sundberg
drove m the go-ahead run
w1th
an
e ighth-innin g
forceout and Texas reliever
.11m Umbarger yie lded one

~
;Late
&lt;

it

have

it

Changes coming
in SS coverage

t hr ~e

hit over t he fi ned

inmngs w lead the Rangers to

MARAUDER GUARDS - First row 1-r, John Morris , Richard Basham, Tom Schoonover, David Wilkes. Second row 1-r, Mike Drehel, Robert Parker, Tun Wyant, Todd
Snowden.

QUE:S'nON : Are there any other conditions -which can
cause high blood sugar besides diabetes•
ANSWER: Yes, there are. High blood sugar, known as
hyperglycemia, may occilr following a stroke or heart attack.
These abnormal levels will return to normal without treabnent
after a short time. Stress from such things as infection,
surgery or pregnancy can also raise blood sugar levels. Other
causes of elevated glucose are certain glandular (metabolic)
diseases known as acromegaly and Cushing's disease, as weU
as overactive thyroid (hyperthyroidism). However, any
increased blood sugar level should be viewed as a possible
early sign of diabetes unless another cause can be identified by
your doctor .

QUESTION : How will the physician usually diagnose
seve r e med ica l problems diabetes?
ANSWER: Some symptoms which we have already
rn a) al so need to take
should make you suspicious of the problem. Your
mentioned
medi cine to eliminate sodium
doctor
w1U
make
the diagnosis on the basis of a blood test. He
from the body or may need to
may
be
able
to
diagnose
the condition from a fasting (before
go on an even more severely
breakfast)
sample
of
blood.
More often, however, he may need
sod1um-restr1 C1ed diet .
to
test
the
blood
a
couple
of
hours after eating a meal. Very
DEAR DR. LAMB - When I
wa s IB I became pregnant
and It was found that I had
sy philis I took pen1c1llin
shots for this. After the baby
was born , I had no more
trea tments Two years later I
became pregnant again and
ha d fiv e more children and
all blood tests were negative.
Now I am 56. Should I tell my
doctu r a bout the sy philis ?
Begmnm g January 1. 1979, deceased and she meets the
Please tell me all the 111· a d1v orced w1 fe can collect a bove require ment s, she
fcJrmauon you ca n un t his.
Social Sec urity bene fits on could be entitled to benefits at
her ex-husba nd's account 1f age 60 or at age 50 if she 1s
DEAR READER - Since he IS rece1ving benefits and d1sabled.
yo u wer e t reated after their marnage lasted at least
Bot h a current wife and an
penicillin became the ;tan· ten years Prior to 1979 the
ex-wife may be eligible for
dard treatment for syphilis, it marr1age had to have lasted
Social Security benefits on
is almost cenain that you for 20 years.
the same man 's work record.
were adequately treated. You
In addition, a divorced wife Apph cat ion s for divorced
should already be completely must be age 62, unmarned
cur ed. Your subsequ ent and not entJtled to a social wife's benefits under the ten
negative blood test would security benefit exceedmg year marriage rule cannot he
filed before October I, 1978.
mdicate that this is true.
what she would be entitled to The best way to file a claun or
I do believe that pallents on her ex-husband's record or
sh ould tell their doctor about entitled to any other govern· obtain additional information
all of thei r previous Illnesses. ment pension ba sed on her is to call the Athens Social
There a re rare inst ances o~ n work record whi ch would Secunty Office. In Athens
when there are complicatiOns exceed th e benefit amount County ca ll592-4448. In Meigs
or medical findin gs that are avmlable on the ex-husband 's County call 992-6622.
best ex plain ed when the record .
docto r kn ow s everythmg
•
If her ex -husband is
rather than parts of the story .
TH E I&gt;AII.Y SENTINEL
OE \ 'lTTPJJ TO TilE
Yo u shouldn't expect your
INTEREST OF
doctor to do his best job for
MElGS.MASON AREA
ROBERT HOEFLI CH
you 1f you hand1ca p hun by
City EdtlUr
not g1vmg h1m all of your
Pul.ll1shal daul y U l'e p\ Salurday
med1cal history . It is hard
lly TIM! 1 Oh10 Vwllc)' Pu llhshin~
Cuenpa ny·Multunediit , Inc.
Ill
enough to help people when
CLEVELAND (UPI ) _ Es- ~uu.rl St . Pm ner\..y . Ohio 45769.
you know all of the facts tablishment of a tw&lt;&gt;-year, bus mc~ orr..:r i'h vn~ wz, 2156
ur~ l PhurM! 99"2-11$7.
w1thout makmg ll more Class
AAA
player Ed!l
SetumJ d a!&gt;!i IJOlila ~l' 1J&lt;Iid 111
d1fhcult by obscurmg some of development contract with Pumeruy . Ohio
•
'Natlutlil l Hd v~ rt~mn..: n: pr ~~n
them .
Tacoma of the Pacific Coast IA.tli\'
C,
Landvn AS!WC.'Il:llCS JIOI
Ind ividuals who are old League wa s announced Eochd Ave , Clt!veland , Ol uu «1 115
Subscnpllun'rK~.!I Ocltvcrt•d 1..1 )
enough to have had treat· Thursday by the Cleveland
t:ll rrl ~r wher I! ·lt\l.ll.!l.!ihlt: 7 ~ t..: l'l11 (' ~~
ments before pemc1Ilin was Indians , who said the w.Jek. By Motor Route whcrt! L:C~rrrt J
dev el oped often requ1re conlract conlains an opbon ~!'\Ike -.,.t H\'allablc, Otle month.
2S By nuul in Olnu cmtl W V.11. ,
retreatmcnl . There are not so for an additional two years. $3
One v~ar . 122.00 , Six months
many people 1n that age
The Tacoma franchise re- ' 11.541 'I hrct· rnunllul, S7 00
EL'&gt; t'Whcrt $26.00 )'eo.rr; Srx montl~
group
around
nuw
because
places
the Tribe's 1978 Sl
·
'l 50 ; Three rnunth10. Si 5()
penici llin treatment ha s been association with Portland, :.;ub~riptil 1 n prrt..:c lndutk· ~ SuuO.tl'
Ttn ..·~~~r· r 1 1 1 nc l
available for syphilis for · also of tile PCL.
several decades
Indi vidual s

more than Jack Chesbro's
Yankee mark that stood for
74 years.
Along with his 24th win in 'll

Oritlles 3, Indians 2:

QUES'nON: How common is diabetes?

ha ve consistent ly shown a rna jonty of t hose questioned
ANSWER: A cooservative estimate claims tbat 2 percent
:i upport the Supreme Court's ruling that the decision on of the population has diabetes. This is probably too smaU a
whet her to terminate a pregnancy should rest s olely with a
woma n and her doctor . F urthe rmore, an August s urvey by percentage to be realistic - since it is also estimated that 22

By M,RK FRIEDMAN
UPI Sports Writer
A qu ick check of the
schedule shows Sunday ends
the regular baseball season ,
but 1f llle New York Yankees
will cooperate by losing one
of llleir next three games and
Don Zimmer's Boston Red
Sox sweep their upcommg
three-game set with Toronto

Back in Boston, Torrez was

m the House 1s not some s udden surge of broad-based

public sentiment. On the contrary . public opmion polls

BoSox need luck

BES'f DRESSERS: Women's sportswear designers Olarlea
SUppon and Bill Alkillson shared top hooors for outatandlng
creativity and Robert Stock took the prize in the menswear '
field in the 36th annual Coty Awards. "Winnies," the fubioo
equivalent of filmd&lt;m 's "Oscars," alao went to women's
fashion designer Mary McFadden - her second - and BW
Kafserman of Rafael, w.ho received a special cltatim for tbe
excellence of his recent men's SPQrtswear line. The awards,
presented at the Fashion Institute Of Technoi"!U' In New York,
were based on voting by more than 1,000 fashion editors acr011
the country.

discussion . Put them all together. and the result IS a total

In each mstance, 1t is the House that is seeking to
proh ibit tho usc of federal funds for abortions wh1le the
Se nate fi ghts to keep restrictions to a mmunum.
At stake are the defense appropriallons bill, where the
House wants to cut off paid abortions for niilitary

'

Ualted PnuiDienlall-1
FOR l'jAME'S SAKE: The lolkJ at Anlleu.--Buach are
hopping mad over the name Milwaukee rival Miller B!'ewlng
Co. has chosen for its ne.w beer. Miller Ia applyq for a •
trademark to call the beer ''Gussie," which aJ.o Mpplna to be
the nickname of Anheuser-Busch hmorary chairman .ua-t
A. Buacb Jr. The St. Louis brewery Ia "no commenlln&amp;" tbe
matter, but ooe ol its lawyers says the cmnpany could have an
unfair competition case. Sources say legal acUoo aplnat tbe
lrademark application is inevitable.

'AntPs' legislation abortion

MedtcaJd funds to fi na nce abortions for poor women should
be wntten.
To the d1smay of the calendar-conscious leaders hip in
both houses , the same bill is headed for a rematch this yea r
a nd (our other mea s ure~ are e ns narled in the abortion
controv e rs y as well

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomero)', 0 ., Friday, Sept. 29, 1978

When you're replac tng an old gas
appl tance . be sure to look for th e
ESP tag That's Energy Savtngs
Payback- what you' ll save tn
operating costs with new energysaving gas appliances
For example . the Lifet1me
Operating Cost (L .O.C ) of a
conventional gas range
13 years IS $310. The L .O.C

of an effi cient new pt lotless modelts
JUSt $216 The difference-$94-is
your Energy Savtngs Payback (all
figures national average).
New ES P gas appliances save
yo u money over the years .
They make America's most
8181
efficient energy system
even more effic1ent .

liVE

~M.IAG~

We want you to use gas

tJ nd vow money w1sely

liVE

8118

d
rally gives Re s
8-7 win over Dodgers
.

CINCINNATI (UP!) Dave Tomhn found picking
up his ninth · victory Ul 10
dec1sions eas1er than con-

that t wenty·llVe bucks he got
for appear,mg on the star of
the game show wllh me.
" And ," he added , still
flghtmg off a grin , "he'd
never gotten that second at
bat if I hadn 't given up tho se
two runs in the top of the

off the glove of Dodger
second baseman Teddy
Martinez touched off the
Reds' winning rally .
" I swung at a bad pitch
even though the count was 3l ," admitted Rose "But we
were down 7·2 at the ume and
I wasn 't gonna take any walk
when I might have a shot at ''
hlt.
" And anyway ," he added,
"you don't expect to score six
runs off the Dodger. 1n one
innmg "
Concepcion - and Ken
Griffey followed with singles
off Dodger lefty Rance
Rautzhan to load the bases. A
walk to George Foster forced
home the first run of the
inmng . Don Werner and
Danny Dnessen hit into force
plays at second to send two
more runs acr.oss the plate.
After Ken Henderson drew a
walk and was replaced by
pinch runner Dave Collins,
Kennedy singled to left to
score Driessen w1th a fourth

Dodger rookiC outfie lder
R.udy Law. But the game
ended when Kennedy crossed
the plate so Rose wound up
with a smgle.
"Three games to go. I'll get
that double I need ," sa1d a
confident Rose, who already
has tied Frank Robinson' s
club record of 51
" The hardest ball I hit all
night," he added , " was the
liner that Bill Russell p1cked
off m the seventh. " W1th the
bases loaded that would have
been a three-run double 1f the
ball had got past Russell
because 1t was hlt hard
enough to go through the
outfield gap and bounce off
the fence in left center "
Dodger lefty Doug Rau,
bidding for h1s 16th victory
against nine losses, owned a
:;..o lead going mto the bottom
of the eighth innmg.
A leadoff double by Con·
cepcion, followed by a walk to
Griffey, Jerry Grote's error
on Foster's grounder, Johnny
Bench's fielder 's ch01ce and
Driessen's smgle to right
gave the Reds two runs m the
bottom of the eighth and
routed Rau.
Butthe Dodgers got the two
runs back m the top of the
ninth off Tomlin, bunching
three walks, a single by
Pedro Guerra and Russell's
fielder's choice to go ahead 1·
2.

• cea ling a snule
~ "I'm mad," dead~pann ed
~ the Cincinnati Reds lefty.
• " Pete Rose didn't even split ninth ."
The second of Rose's twu
hits in the bottom of the ninth,
a line shot down the left fi eld
Local Bowling
line off Bob Cast illo, drove
home Junior Kennedy and
Sunday Miners
climaxed
a six-run rally that
Sept. 17, 1978
gave
the
Reds
an 8-7 victory
Standings
and a sweep of the three·
Team
W. L.
26 6 game sertes with the Los
HotShots
Angeles Dodgers Thursday
2f\ 12
Team No. 6
night.
Pin busters
16 16
" That was run," said Reds '
Country BumpkUls
14 18 third ba se coach Al ex
Alley Cats
12 20 Grammas, reflecting upon
Sunday Duds
8 24 the game- winnin g rally.
Team high game - Pin· " Nah, I didn't get tired
busters 305 ; Hot Shots 304, standing out th ere. The
'1!!7 .
longer I'm out there th e
Men's high same - R1ck better I like it.
Martin 186, 178 ; Jeff Martin "That Rose is amazmg ,''
I69.
continued Grammas. " If he
Women's high game - needed 20 hits to reach 200 run .
It was then that Rick
Sheryl Gibbs 163; Ann Morris with one game to go, he'd get
Auerbach
stepped to the plate
157; Rhonda Gibbs 150.
'em."
as
a
pinch
hitter lor Tomlin
Team high series - Hot
Rose's base hits in the ninth
Shots 896 ; Pmbusters 835; were two of four for him in and lmed a Single to right
Team No. 6 832.
the game and boosted his center to score Collins with
Men's high series - R1ck season total to 195 with three the game-tying· run.
Ordinarily, Rose's game·
Martin 526; Kenny Riggs 476 ; games remainin g on the
Winning
shot down the left
Ralph Gibbs 451.
schedule.
field
line
would have gone for
Women's high series - Ann
In the shower room a
Morris 451 ; Shery I Glbbs 399; grinning Pavey Concepcion , a double or a triple the way It
Rhonda Gibbs 384.
who accounted for three of ca romed off the fence past
the Reds' 16 hits, had given
Tomlin a playful jab in the,.-----:---:--:---,.-----------~
shoulder.
•
" I knew we were go1ng to
win that game, " Concepcion
had told the Red lefty.
" You ' re our good luck
chann."
PONTIAC, Mich. (UPI) " Davey knew that with me
Center-guard Karl Chandler, in there we were going to
ftnnerly with the New York score runs," said Tomlin.
w o AK FOR vou•
Glmlla, signed a conlract
Si~ce
the Red relief pit·
'Jtl;,rJotA·~,
,2,~,
Thtll'lday with the Delrolt
s 9·1 WO~·and·lost record
fl
I
IJmll to fW out their 45- cher
Is accompamed by an earned
'
·r •
....
.
playw roeter.
run average bodl
r er ng on
cut ,,,•.o.a,,.. ro
11
The faur.year veteran will 6.00,
he didn't have to
" ~·~ w~ de
TKA: o.., sc,..,.•or
• taU lhe l'Oiter place ol I~ elaborate upon his remark. Al so ir'. 48" Widths
WMdow o,.,.,.,,,
year man Mille Meatier, a
Rose's third h.ll of the night, .... , e.-oe. Cldc.. . lOIII Pionun In Plnt ies Since
center who walked out on the 8 ground ba)) that hit a crease 'ake lh1s ltd to your Hantware Lumber or
0
cll!b Mmday.
. t he A~
"'"~'::-G:!!!et~!!!~.:!;!~;!:!!~::.._.I_J!_-.:,.:::::2
Ul
m.ro·Turf and sk'!pped ...,:::;::~""~'!!!"~'!!!"!!!

Save Fuel This Winter!

liVE
811

Ill£
814

See your gas appliance dealer soon.

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LIMITED WARRANTIES

• fHMIUGft.fHE PAIITITiort CONN. CJOU tnPr- ''
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POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••
.....
.. . ....... .
606 E. Main, Pomeroy

llr·~·

"Front End Alignments"

.

·~

·~~ ·~

992-2094

'

�~ -The Dailv Sentine l, Middleport.Pomeroy, o., Frida~, Sept. 29, 1978

29, 1978

Tonight's games

...•••
• • • •l I
•• •• •• ••
••• • ••

! S.EOAL)
Ironton a t Ath ens

Logan a t Gal li polis
Jackson at Waverl y

-~

No women permitted
.

-----'

Wellston at !v'\elgs

ITA I-VALLEY)
Vinton Cou nty at Trim bl e

(Others)

Major League Standings
B V United Press lnfernlfi ona l
National League

Alexander at M iller
Eastern at Federa l Hocking
Nelsonville-York at Fa irland

East

Ra venswood a t Wa rren
Hannan Trace at Green
Sy mmes Valley at North

Galli a
George Wa shing ton at Poi nt
Pl easa nt (7 : 30p.m .)

( SATURDAY)
So uthern at Wahama

(7 : 30

p.m . I
Coa l Gr ove at South Po int

PIITSB URGH (UP!) ~
The Pittsburgh Penguins
made their first player cut
Thur sday by assigning
goaltender Greg Redquest to
the Jersey Aces of the newly
formed Northeastern Hockey
League.

·MEET FEDERAL HOCKING - The Eastern Eagl es
foo tball team tangles with Federal Hocking at 8 p.m. this
E'\'ening. Eastern is fresh off a 12·9 win over Alexander.
Tile Eagles will be seeking their third win in four starts. In
the photo above. the Eagle off ense is runnin g one· of its
plays .

Longbow deer ~eason
beginning October 13
Th e deer longbow season

Buck s only m ay be t ak en

will open st atewid c fur deer

dur in g this seaso n at
Sha wnee St ate Fo r est in
Scioto and Adams Count ies,
Wildcat Hollow in Ath ens,
Mo r~an. and Perry Counties,
and at Salt Fork Wildlife
Area m Guernsey County.
The deer crossbow season
is open sta tewide for deer of
either sex Dec ember 4
through January 1, 1979.
Hunting hours are one-hour
before sunrise to one-half
hour after sunset. Crossbows

of either sex on October 13
an d

con ti nue

t hr ough
Jan ua r y 20. Huntmg h ours

are one-h alf hour be f o r ~
sunri se to one-half hour after
s un s ~t .

Longbow season is
closed dur ing the gun season

in Zo nes l , 3 and 4.
The pri mitiv e wea pons
deer hunt ing season will be
Oc tober
30
through
Novem ber 4 on three
specially designat ed areas.

. . CiQ

must have a working safet y
and a one-piece stock more
than 25 inches lon g.
The daylight hunting of all
wild a nima ls except deer and
wat erfowl is prohibited in
each deer zone during the gun
season in that zone and on the
three primitive .weapon s
areas during the primitive
weapons season .
During the regular deer
gun season hunters may use
only a shotgun using a single
ball or rifled slug, or a single
shot muzzleloading rifle of .38
caliber or larger. Hunting
hours will be 7 a.m. until 5
p.m. daily ex cept Sunday .
The seasons for the deer
gun zones are :
ZONE ONE - November
'll through December 1 for
buck only with five-in ch
antler minimum. No open
season on Kelleys Island .
ZONE TWO - No deer gun

season.
ZO NE
THREE
November 27 for buck or doe .
Nove mber
28 thr ough
December 1 for buck only
with a five-in ch antl er

'

minimum.
ZO NE FOUR - November
'll through Decem ber 2 for
buck only wit h a five-in ch
antler minimum.

WORM·KU:
PAS1t 430/o
CATT\f WO!WfR PASTE

USE* NO WASJl
.*...,.UYTO
*-=-EXACT
OOS..GE

Tornado golfers

•'

lose

'

to

Trimble

Wednesday night at Forest
Hill s Golf co urse, th e
Sout hern High golf team
st art ed strong, but falt ered
on the late holes as host
Tri mble won. 18().190.
Seth Hill led Southern with
a 45 while Pau l Holsinger was
close behind with a 46. J im
Powell ca rded a 49, Dwight
Hill a 50, and Paul Roush a 66.
For the winners. Doug
Davis was medalist with a 37,
Mike Jones had 43, Carl
Echstenkamper carded 48,
Mike Border shot 52 , and Cliff
Campbell had a 53.

PU Riil
NA~::.:::.:::~:::C_J
WORM KILL PASTE
C0n· ro 1s Stom ach &amp; Intes t ina l Worm s in
Beef &amp; Da rr y Cattle .

r .

Pilsie Wo•m er St ic ks in the Mou tht:e Sp 1 Out- NO WAST E.

D· o•·•' ,.,q Guo
:.....- r~1'e u r.. r1

Allows

For

Eas y

a.

I '·
IV,rm Koll" Catt le Wor mi ng
Pr g·am l1h " Offer s 3 Prod ucts in 3
F rms ior ' Varo able Usages.

MODERN SUPPLY
399 W. Main Street 992 -2164 Pomeroy , 0.
The Store With " All Kinds of Stull"
F or Pets - Stables - Largeand JSmall
Animals . Lawn s - Gardens.

PARK RESERVED
SATURDAY - SEPTEMBER 30TH
UNTIL 6 PM

FAMILY OUTING
OF

IRONTON COKE CORPORATION
OCTOBER 1ST

APPRECIATION DAY
LAST OPEN DAY OF 1978 SEASON

HAND STAMP

w.

L. Pet.

GB

89 69 .563
85 n .54 1
17 81 .487
74 85 .465
68 91 •, .4 28
6.4 94 .405
We it

12
15 12
2 1' 'il
25

3 '12

W. L. Pet .

GB

Los Ang
94 65 .591 Ci ric inat i
89 69 .563 4' ~
San Fran ·
88 71 .553 6
San D iego
82 77 .51 6 12
Houst on
72 87 .45J n
Atlanta
69 90 .434 25
x -clinched di\'i si on tit le
Thursday 's Re sults
H ou ston 4, A tlan ta 3
Cin ci nna t i B, Los A ng 7
Toda y• s Probillble Pitch er s
( All Ti mes EDT)
N ew Y or k { Bruherl 4 10 a nd
0 11
at
Ch ic ago
Ja c kson
( Reu schel 14 14 a nd Holtz m an
0-J) . 1 p .m .
Ph i ladel p h ia ( R uth ven 15 11
and Car lton 16-121 a t P i tt sbu r gh
( 81y leve n 14 10 and Kison 6·6 l.
2, 6 :05p.m .
A t lan t a (Mahler
4- ll l
at
Cin c in na ti {M os kau 6 ·41 , 8 : 05
p .m
Mon tr eal ( San der son 4 21 a t
St . L ou is ( Denny 13 -111 , 8 : 35
p .m
San Fran cisc o ( Haclic k i 10 )
at Hous ton ( Ban n i ster 3-9 }. a : J5
11

a

P.m .
L os Angeles ( Hoo ton 19 .9 ) at
San Oi t&gt;go {J ones 13 14 ). 10
p .m .
Saturday ' s Game s ·
New York at Chicago
Ph ilad elph ia at Pi ttsburgh
Montreal a t St . Lou is
A tlan ta a t Ci n c inn ati
San Fran cisco a t Houston
L os A nge les a t Sa n Diego

Am erican Leagu e
Ea st
w. L. Pet GB
N ew Yor k
9 7 61 .610
Boston
96 63 .604
1
M ilwauk e
90 69 .566 7
Ball im r e
89 69 .563 7' .
D eTro i t
84 75 .528 13
Clevetnd
66 68 .436 271 ~
Tor onto
59 99 .373 37 1 ~
West
W. L Pet. GB
'~~ · KM Ci t y
90 69 .56.6
Ca l i!
86 73 .541
4
Texa s
84 75 .528 6
M ineso ta
72 87 .453 18
Chicago
69 89 .4 37 20 12
Oa kl and
69 90 .&lt;134 ? 1
Sea111e
56 101 .357 33
X·Ciinch ed d i\' i sion title
Thursda y's Result s
Ba ll 1ni ore J, Cleve la nd 2
Bos ton 1. Det ro i t 0
New Yo rk 3, "T or on to 1
Ca l ifor n1a I I. Ch ica Qo 7
T e.11 as 4, SeaTT le 3
Tod ay ' s Probabl e P itch er s
CAll Tim es E OT)
Tor on to ( ( lane y 10 11 ) at
Bost on ! E c k er sley 19 8 L 7 · 30
pm
Cl ev eland I Clyde
11 J at
New York ( Beatt ie 6-9 1. B p .m .
Ba l t imor e (M cG r eg or 15 13 )
a t Detroit ( Bi ll ingha m 15 6 ), 8
p .m .
M inn esot a I Go l! z 15 10 1 a t
Ka nsas Ci t y (L eona r d ~0 17) ,
a · 30p .m
Ch icago I Tr ou l 2.0 ) at Cali ·
f orn ia ITana n a I B-11! , 10 : 30
pm
M il waukee ~ T r avers I t 111 at
Oakland ( Keou'g h 8 14 ), 10 : 30
pm
Tex as
l Cote m an
0·0 ) at
Seattl e 1Parr o11 1 4 ), 10 : 35 p .m .
Saturday ' s Games
Tor on to a t Bo st on
Clev elan d at New Yor k
Baltim or e at Oe tr o il
M inne sot a ar Kan Ci ty
Ch icago at Cal if or n ia
M il wau kee a t Oa k land
T e ~~; as at Sea tt le

a

ATLANTA !UPI J - Phil
Niekro, the Atlanta Braves'
knuckleball ace, has received
a surprise gift from his boss
- a $100,000 bonus. Braves'
owner Ted Turner handed
Niekr o
an
envelope
Wednesday night with details
of the bonus which will be
paid to him over a pe riod of 10
years when his playing days
are over.
"~n he gave me the
letter, I couldn 't believe it,"
Niekro said . "I didn 't know
what to do. I wa s
speechless." Neither Niekro
nor Turner would confirm the
amount, bu t according to
published reports, it will be
$10,000 a year for 10 years.

NORTH WILKESBORO,
(UPI J
Cale
N.C.
Yarborough and Lennie
Pond, who have won the pole
position five times each this
year on the NASCAR Grand
National circuit , head the
field Friday when tilne trials
open for Sonday 's Wilkes 400
stock car race .
Other top cootenders are
CLEVELAND ( UP! I
Neil Bonnett, track record
Running
back Greg Pruitt
holder Benny Parsons,
.
rej
oin
ed
the Cleveland
Darrell Waltrip, Richard
Browns
Thursday
alter a
Petty and Dave Marcis .
one-week
stay
1
n the
Bobby Allison and Richard
Oeveland
Clinic
but
;s·1not
Brooks also are entered.
expected to see action ,.gainst
the Houston Oilers Sunday .
Oeveland Coach Sam Rutigliano said Pruitt, who was
off to his best start with 22li
yards and a 5.1 average in his
first two games, will begin a
'reconditioning program af"'r
suffering a seve re left calf
cont usion.

c

SUNDAY -

Phi Ia
P iHSbrgh
Ch icago
Mon t rea l
St. L ou is
New Y ork

•400

RIDE 11 AM • 9 PM

M aj or l ~ag!J e Re• ults
By Un i t ed P r e ss I nfernational
Na fional L eague
Hous
00 2 000 ?CIO- d 9 2
A t Ia
000 001 020- 3 4 2
' ~ ic hard ,
A nd u jar ( 6 1. W il
Iiam s (7 ) , Fors ch (8 ) and
Bo.c h y ; M c W ill iam s. Garber {9 l
an d Bened ic t . W- Richard, 18
11 . . L - M c W ill ia ms, 9 -3. HR HoUs ton , Ric hard ( 1) .
LA

0 11 10 1 01 2-

1 10 1

Ci n ci

ooo· ooo 026- a 16 1
Rau , Ra u t zh an 1a1 , Cast illo

(9 )
a nd
Yeager :
LaCos s,
Dumou l in 18 1, To m lin ( 9 ) a nd
Benc h , Werner . W - Tom l in , 9 .1.
L - Ra u tz ha n ,
2 1.
H R- L os
Arigeles, Monday 11 9 1.

{On l y gam es scht'du led )
Am e r ic iln Lugu e
000 000 oil2- 2 a 0
Cle11e
Ba tt
100 100 0 111- 3 6 0
Hood
and
O iaz ,
Pr ui tt ;
Pa lme r , Stanh ouse { 9 ) and
Dem psey . W - Pa lm er , 2 1-12. L
- H ood . 5-6 . HR - Bal t imore.
DeCin ces (2 7) .

CINCINNATI CUPI J "It 's my clubhouse and I can
ban anyone I want t.Q," says
Cinci nnati Reds Manager
~rky Anderson about the
controversy over female
rep&lt;rters in locker rooms.
"I doo't think it's right that
women should be in here,"
declared Anderson. "I know
I'd feel funny,"
The Reds' brass and some
players' wives agree with
Anderson, but not aU the
players.
"There is no reason to keep
therri out ," llgured Tom
Seaver . "All I ask is that they
let me keep my clothes on
while a woman is in there.
"I'm not the kind who
would go around naked in
front of a reporter. I don 't do
it with the men reporters."

De l
000 OW 000- 0 3 0
Bos
000 100 00:. - 1 3 0
You ng and May ; Tor re z and
F is k . w - Torr ez. 16 12 . L Yo ung , 6 ·7 . HR - Bosron . R ice

Added Johnny l!ench, "'!'he
Constitution says a woman
can come in and I don 't see
why not . It doesn 't bother me .
The woman is supr&gt;&lt;$ed to be
a pro and, as long as they
handle it like a pro, it's aU
right with me."
But said Terry Knight , wife
of Reds ' utility infielder Ray
Knight, "I don't want some
other woman looking at my
husband. "
And as for the Reds ' official
policy, publicity director Jim
Ferguson said, "Our policy
now is same as it has been.
Women will not be admitted
into the clubhouse."
Ferguson said at issue is
" th e player 's ri ght to

The l ong -simmering
controver sy hit a boiling
point this week when a
female federal judge in New
Yll'k ruled that the New York
Yankees
were
acting
unconstitutionaUy In banning
women reporters from locker
rooms.

r;x,;etko,nce tn
Design and ~·
Quality I
Pllmii'IIJ

eoShop

privacy."

"A player has a right to
dress without a woman pre·
sent," he added.

History will be recorded in
SEO if Logan fails to show
. ~st forfeit ever of an athletic coo test as the result of a opener In toDigbt," but to uo aVIIU.

strike 15 •~ted to take place in the 53 year-&lt;&gt;ld Southeastern
Ohlo Athletic League tonlght.
When Logon falls to appear on Memorial Field 1n
GalllpoU. at 8 p.m. Ga!UpoU., under the current SEOAL
Constltulloo and By-Laws, wW elalm a ~forfeit victory.
Coach B1U Trent's Blue Devils were scheduled to play
Coach Bob Boyntoo's defending league champion Chieftains in
the 1978 conference opener.·
Logan teachers and nm..academic employees, however,
have been oo strike Since Aug. 29. Last week, the Logan City
Sch"?l Board canceUed all extra curricnlar activities at lJiS,
despl~ the fact classes are being held onder the direction of
superVISOry personnel.
The Ohio High School Ahtletic Association reportedly wiD ·
not aUow forfelt.s of athletic contests because of school strikes
However, according to · the Southeas"'rn Ohio Athleti~
League's C)lrr~nt con~tutlon and by-laws, Article 5, Section 6,
Paragraph 3 states : "II a ~arne ·is not played foc any reason
other than an 'Act of God and cannot be rescheduled the
coolest shaU be classified as a 'forfeited game.' "
'
GAHS Athletic Director Dan Brisker bas been working
diUgeotly since early Monday mol'lliJJ&amp; to "gel the

Sports Transactions
United Pre ss International
Tor
000 0 10 000~ 1 4 2
Tt'tundav
N Y
010 00:1 oox - 3 4 2
Hockey
M oo r e ,
Bu skey
(6 ) . a nd
P i tt sbu r gh - Assi gn ed goali e
Cer one ; Gui dry and M unson. w Gr eQ R ed a uest Ia J~ rsey Ace s
- G u idr y , 24 3. L - M oor e, 6 9.
Of N o rt h e a ste r n Hockey League .
( 45 ) .

Ch i
400 002 010- 7 11 o
Pro Football
Cal if
50040200x- ll l 30
De t ro i t Sig ned cen1 er .
H inton . Schueler (1 ). W il guard K a r t Cha nd ler .
lough by ( J l, Torrea lba ( 6 ] a nd
Nah orodny , F oley . Rya n , Br ett - - - - -- - - - - - . ,
( 1J. D . M iller ( 7) and Down in g . JW ~ B r e tt , 3 5. L - H inton , 2 6.
HRs Ch ica g o,
Soder holm
2
!20 1 ;· Ca ld orn ia , Lansfor d (8 ).
100 000 210- 4 B 4
Se a
000 100 200- 3 3 0
Al e xande r , U mbarger 0 ) a nd
J . Ell is, Sundberg , Rawley ,
Ro m o ( 8 ) ana St inson . W Umbar ger , 5·8 . L - Rrt w ley, 4 -9.
(Onl y ga mes sc hedul ed )

Texas

Ma lor League Leaders
By Un i ted Pr ess International
Batting
I Based on 425 al bats)
Nal io nalleaque
G A.B . H . Pel .
Pa rk er P i t
14&lt;1 567 188 .332
Buc kn er Ch i
114 434 138 .3 18
Ga r v ey L A
159 6J3 200 .3 16
M adl OC k SF
120, 4Ja 137 .313
Cr uz H ou
151 55a 174 .3 12
Rich a r d s SO
15 1 541 169 .312
Clark SF
153 5BO 179 309
W inf ield SO
155 575 177 .308
Rose Ci n
156 64~ 195 .302
Bu r r og hs A l l
15 1 483 146 _302
Ameri can Le.ag!J e.
GAB . H. Pet .
Ca r ew M in
150 556 186 . 335
Oliv er Tex
13 1 5 17 169 .327
RiceBos
159 66 ?208 .314 1
Pin iella N Y
127 460 14 4 .313
Robert s Se a
132 465 142 . 305
Og ti vlc M i l
127 46 7 142 .304
Ot is KC
139 4 79 143 .?99
LeF lor e D et
154 664 197 .197
Bostock Cat
14 7 568 168 .?96
You nt Mil
125 494 146 . 296
Hom e Run s
National League : Fost er , Ci n
) 7 ; L UZIMSk i . Ph i l 33 ; P a r k er ,
P11t
30 ;
Smi th ,
LA
29 ;
Kingm a n, Ch i 28.
Am er ic an L eague : R ice . Bos
45: Bay lor , Cat and Hi sle, M il
JJ : Thor n ton , Clev 32 . Thoma s,
M i ~ 3 1.
Runs Batt ed In
National League : F ost er . Cin
and Pa r k.er , Pill 11 5 ; Ga r vey ,
L A I ll ; Clark, SF 98 ; Luz insk i ,
P t1il and Winf ield , so 97 .
.
Am erican League : Rice , Bos
136 . St aub , D el 120 ; H i sle, Mit
113 ; Thor n ton , Cle v 10 4 : Cart y ,
Oak 97 .
Stolen Ba st_s
National L ea gue : M o r en o,
P itt 68 . L op es . L A 45 ; T a ve r a s.
P i tt 44 , DeJesus, Ch i and
sm ,t h , so 40.
A merican League : L eFl or e,
Del 69 : Cruz , Sea 57 ; Wi lls , Tex
51: D i lone. Oa ll. J9 , W ilson , K C
44 .
Pitch in g

Glamour .. .
by the handful I

.
, Jr., M.D., President of the
Medical Staff at the Holzer Medical Center, registers foc
the Fun Run with Beverly Jackson, treasurer of the
Employees ' Recreation Committee sponsoring the Run at
10 o'clock tomorrow morning at the Gallia County
Fairgrounds.

Fun Run hegins
at 10 Saturday

REGISTER. NOW
New Quarter Begins

The Fun Run sponsored by
the Employees' Recreation
Committee of the Holz er
Medica l Center will start
promptl y at 10 o'clock
tomorrow morning at the
Gallia wunty Fairgrounds.
Those who have pr eregistered by sending in their
registration fee and com·
pleting the offi cia l entry
form , should report to the
Main Stage starting at 9
o!clock.
Anyone wh o wi shes to
pilrticipate but did not send
the fee and entry form in
advance, may also reg ister
and take pa rt in any one of
t~e three races by reporting
t~ the Registration Desk ai
the Main Stage located on th e
&lt;lallia Co unty Fairgrounds on
~o ut e 35, ju st west of
Qallipolls, and paying the
$Z.50 entry fee for the race of
their choice. The three races
will be 1.5 miles, 3.0 miles and
6:Jj miles. Those under age 18
~o participate must have
the signature of one parent or
legal guardian on the offi cial
entry blank , in order to he
eligible to run in any of the
.three races.
Trophies will be awarded to
the winner and runner-up in

Sept. 18, 1978
Choose a Career in. . .
A ny one ol these cho,ce
colo re d Je we ls could be
JU S1 thr one s1e s wan ted
l o r so tong' See ou r w onaerl ul
sele c t,on - comp ter.n l or hohday g1v 1ng

A

Ha nauu~ ea

eBUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
eJR. ACCOUNTING
eEXECUTIVE SECRETARIAL
eGENERAL OFFICE
•SECRETARIAL

Shell

Cameo
B Lu st, o us Jaae
C G 1.1morous G a , net

ST. NO. 75-02-04728

0 Cul 1u rea P e&lt;HI
SPIIl€1~

Victor~ es

National Leillgue : Perry·, SO
21 6 ; H oot on, L A 19 9 ; Gr l m
sley , Mtl 19-11: N ick r o. Aft 19
17 ; Bl ue , SF 18 9 , Richar d , H ou
18 11.
c
American L e agu e :~ G u ia r .,. .
1\ ? f
MAIN . POMEROY
NY 74 3 ; Ca ldwell , M il 2 1 9 .
Pa l mer , Ball 21 11 , LE-On a r d, L - - - - - - - - - - '
KC 20. 17 ; E c kers le.,. , Bos 19-8,
F i guer oa, N Y 19 -9 ; Spl i ltorft ,
K C 19-13 ; F lana ga n , Ba it 19 -14
Eillrned Run A \' erige
I Bas ed on TS3 innings pi tched }
Nati .. nal League : Swa n , N Y
'J 43 ; R o ge r ~ . Mil 2.47 . Vuck:
ovic h , St .L 2 .58 ; Knepper , S F
1.63 : Hooton , L A 2.68 .
American League :-. Gu id r y,
N Y 1.72 . Ca ldw ell , M il 2.23 ,
Matla c k , Tex 2.31; Pa lmer.
Bait 2.46 ; Gol tz . M 1nn 7 54
Strikeouts
N•t ional L eagu e : ;.,R ic hard,
Hou JOJ ; N iekro , · At! 147 ,
Se av er . Ci n 71.5 ,' Bt y teven , P 1tt
and M ontef usco, SF 177 .•
American Lugue : R van , Ca l
247 ; Gu ion· . N Y 243 . L eon ara,
K C 179 ; F lana gan . Ba lf l b4 ,
Ma t la c k . l ex 154

'

CALL TODAY FOR
FREE INFORMATION
446-4367

APPEJ.lllNG THIS WEEKEND .

INNPLAGE

, \ l l l l l 'l l ;

::FLYING~

Pomerot· 6owlin9 Lines
Tuesda y Triphc•t~
Lei QUe
S..pt' 26 , 1978

Team
No. J

Pis .

Reuter -Br og en Ins .

No . 2

16

21
19
8

Fr iend l y Ta vern
Robert Ro b ie Con st.
H igh i n d iv idua l game
Mel 8 a rne f1
184 ; M.a )Ci ne
Duga n 180 ; Nora Ri c e 119.
H i g h series - Met Barnett
49 2; Ma xi ne D ug a n 47 4; Bert y

Smith 467 .
Team high ga m e -

49 3.
Te a m
h ig h
R eu t er . Br o gan

I\\\ .\ \ \\ \ \ \ \"

14
11

Roya l Crown Col a

1379.

-;MACHINE-

Standings

No. 2

se r i es
In s uran ce

'

'

4-PIECE GROUP ,
PLUS VOCAL
FROM PORTSMOUTII, 0.
TONI~HT

&amp; SATURDAY

10-2
THE MEIGS INN
POMEROY,O.

992-3629

ea ch of the three races, ac·
co rding to Ron Saunders, who
is chairing this first running
event sponsored by th e
Recreation Committee. Walt
Saunders, president of the
employee group, encourages
e.veryone to be sure to fini sh
the race in which he or she is
register ed, even II it look.&lt;; as
if they would come in last ,
because everyone who
completes their race will
receive a tee shirt with the
Fun Run and Holzer Medical
Center in signia imprint on
the front. These shirts are
dark blu e trimmed in light
blue and gold .
The Fun Run will start
promptly at 10 o' clock
tomorrow morning. When the
winner and ruMer-up from
the 6.0 mile race cross the
fini sh llne, the presentation of
the trophies to the winners
and rurmers-up in all three
ra ces will take place. These
awards will be made on the
Main Stage at the Fairgrounds.
Wea ther predictions look
good for this weekend. The
race will take pla ce, regard·
less of rain or inclement
weather.

Will Anderson
start Sunday?

AT THE

;

· " H a ~~~:hool knowalt canuot malte 1 playiDI dale, oflldlls
uf that ~~~:hool abould l~t the oppooblg acbool know In plenty uf
lime," llrillter aald Tbunday. '"11111 wW Jive the other school
ample time to sele&lt;:t aootber opponent," llrilker coallaued.
Brisker said most area schools canoot afford to lose an
entire gate beca111e of a cancellation, nol to mention the
hardship of aU youngsters involved.

CINCINNATI IU'PIJ Question marks still hover
over Ken Anderson's name as
the Clncinna ti Bengals
prepare for the battle of the
onvictorious SUnday in San
Francisco.
Anderson, who has missed
the Bengals' first four games
with a broken bone in his
right iltdex finger, is listed as
questionable for Sunday's
game with the . 49ers. The
seven-year veteran has
gingerly worked out with the
Bengals' offense this week,
testing the injured throwing
hand for the first time since
Aug. 26.
But lhe attitude is still
"wait and see " among
Anderson and the Bengals'
coaches.
"I thought I was throwing
the baD weD the first part of
practice," Anderson said
after ruming the offense for·
the first time in four weeks.
"But I faded a little bit at the
end. I thought for the first day
I dld pretty well ."
"I've never had problems
with hllvlng a sore arm, so
I'm not worried about that.
I'm in 'not bad' shape. I've
been l'lllllllnll and wilting m
the bicycle machine~~ , " he
said.

"The m ly thing that could
be a problem is if it (his
hand) swells up or gets sore.
I'll have to see what
happens."
Coach Bill Johnson was not
surprised by Anderson's
apparent lack of stamina in
his first full-&lt;~Cale practice.
"I thought he threw the baU
very well. I think be got run
down a little bit, but you don't
realize what those drops take
out of a quarterback," said
Johnson . ''After you 've been
out a while, it takes a while to
bulld your stamina back
up ."
U Anderson is unable to

start again Sunday, back-up
Jolm Reaves will be ready,
comtng off his best
performance yet !ll!ain.t New
Orleans last Sunday in
Riverfront Stadium.
Reaves completed 9-&lt;&gt;f-17
passes against the Saints for
111 yards and me touchdown .
Bengals 'quarterback coach
H&lt;lller Rlce gave Reaves a
high ~ percent rating for his
performance.
"I want to play.' ' said
Reaves . " Kenny's . comlng
back is going to give the team
a lift, but thatdoean't lllrt my
desire to play. I'D be ready oo
matter what."

Mmday, Logan's Athletic Director, KeUey StUweU,
informed Brisker he was "optimistic" that the game would be
played . Tuesday, however, StllweU was very "pessimistic"
when he cooferred with Brisker.
The. GAHS athletic director asked for a confirmation by
noon Wednesday. On Wednesday, LAJgan asked for an
extension until 12 noon Thursday. Then, yesterday , this was
extended until 9 a.m. Friday.
Gallipolis has refused to reschedule the game Nov. 17,
which is one week foUowing the completion of regular season
play, fll' two '""sons : 1- Weather factor and: 2 ~ Wrestling,
weightllfting, basketball and other athletic programs which
will be underway at that time.
'lbe official league scbedule caU. for tonight's game to be
played at8 o'clock. If Logan falls to show bee1111se of the strike,
then GaWpolls, In accordance wttb the league's earrent
constitution, wW claim a ~forfeit victory. 'lbe slrllle u nolan
"Act of God.''
Here's the entire text of Article.a, Section 6 of the SEOAL's
coostitution .
Section I
"Postpmed, delayed and unplayed athletic contests:
" H schools are closed or if an 'Act of God ' causes a game to
be unplayed, the following procedure shaD be foUowed:
"1- League members are to expend every effort to make
up the unplayed game.
"2-U the game was not played due to an 'Act of God,' and
could not be rescheduled, and contest shall be classified as an
'unplayed' game.
"3~U the £1!111e was not played for oay reuon other than
an 'Act ot God' and could not be reaebeduled, the contest abaU
be classified as a 'forfeited' game.
"4- Any dispute as to whether or not every effort was
made to make up a contest shall be settled by a vote of the
league's board of coolrol.
"5- If the visiting team is forfeiting nonplaying team, the
home team wiD be paid by the visiting team as follows : $50Clfor
football and ·$200 f&lt;r basketbaU."
Brisker pointed out that during a strike by Meigs teachers
in 1977, supervisory personnel took over coaching dutiies of the
Marauders. Players were transported to games by private
vehicles. MHS games were played as scheduled. LoR!ln. as a
result of action by that district's school board, ·has refused to

~

•if•'·

"

'

Redskin-Cowboys key game
BY JOE CARNICELU
shapes up this weekend:
UP! Executive Spons Editor ·
Suuday
NEW YORK (UP!) - The
Pittsburgh 24, New York
National Football League Jets 13 - Unbeaten Steelers
saves its best for last this are in best physical shape so
weekend .
far this season . Jets will have
The key game of the NFL's problems without injured QB
fifth week is on Monday night Richard Todd.
when
the
Washington
Los Angeles 17, New
Redskins play host to the Orleans 10 - Rams still
Dallas Cowboys in a battle lor rolling along unbeaten but
first place in the NFC East . Sainl.s will keep it close at
The surprising Redskins home.
are unbeaten in four games
Oeveland 20, Houston 14 and Dallas is 3-1, with the Surging Browns are back
looe blemish being a loss to home still smarting ·over
Los Angeles two weeks ago . overtime loss to Pittsburgh.
The game features the two Houston has problems on
highest scoring offenses in road.
the league, with Dallas·
Oakland 31, Chicago 20 scoring 107 points and Raiders have to get serious if
Washington a close second at they intend to stay close to
102.
Denver is AF'C West. Bear
Washington's Joe defense exposed against Min·
Theismann is the NFC's nesota .
leading passer after a 21-lorDenver 20, Seattle 14 30, 209-yard, two touchdown Broncos tough at home but
performance aginst the New yoong, offense-minded Sea·
York Jets last week. And hawks should keep it close.
Theismann 's erght touchNew York Giants 16,
down passes rank second ooly Atlanta 10 - Giants cootinue
to Dallas quarterback Roger cleaning up with light
Staubach, who has nine.
schedule. Falcons just can't
Tony Dorsett of the seem to come up with points.
Cowboys Is. the league 's
Minnesota 24, Tampa Bay
leading rusher with 450 yards 10- Vikings need to make up
after a 1!'14-yard performance for upset loss In Bucs two
against St. Louis last Sunday. weeks ago . Tampa Bay
Washington is one of the top defense needs another big
Monday night teams in the game to stop Fran Tarkenton
league. The Redskins are 6-0 and Co.
at home in Monday night
New England 34, San Diego
games and !().3 overall.
'J:i - Patriots rolling again
A Dallas victory combined now alter upset of Oakland
with a New York Giants but need to watch offensive
triumph over Atlanta could fireworks of new Charger
leave the clubs in a three-way Coach Don Coryell .
·
tie for first in the NFC East
Green Bay 17, Detroit 13 with 4-1 records .
Surprising Packers keep m
Here's the way the NFL winning. Lious offense almost

Mason OJUrch of Ouist

do thisaccocdlng to Brisker . In the opinion of Jolm c. Wickline,
fo~mer teacher, coach, administrator , ex-member of the Ohio
High School Athletic Association (Southeastern District ) and
current member of the Gallipolis City School Board, the
OHSAAwill, inaUprobability,upholdtheleague'sconstitution
100 percent.
Wickline did feel, bowever, that It u pooalble tbe OHSAA
wW Dol act either way on the current matter because Uke tbe
SEOAL, there's really no specific·· provision In the state
cuostltutloo to act oo •. strike Issue .
Wtckllnt: has been tnVlted to serve on a special 0~
comnuttee m the near future to help update the state 's
constitution.
Tom Metiers, official SEOAL statistician and veteran
sports reporter for the Athens Messenge~, said Thursday he
urged SEOAL offiCiaLs more than once tn the · pas! year to
amend the loop's coostitution to cover strike situations.
Mette,rs has also cootacted SEOAL officials on more than
one occas1on o~ ~e strtke ISSue , and they informed him, "It 's
up to league offiCiaLs to settle their own matters."
Although officials have amended the SEOAL constitutioo
several times in recent years, the strike issue is not covered
onder currept regnla!ions .
·
Meanwhile, GaUia Academy High School's athletic
director will submit several proposals to league officials for
study when they hold their next regular meeting in November.

PAGE TRANSFERS
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)Ken Page, suspended from
the Ohio State basketball
team, has transferred to New
Mexico ·
· Page, of Staten Island. N.
Y., had been suspended by
OSU Coach Eldon Miller for
disciplinary reasons .
John Wisenant, a ss istant
coach at New Mexico, said
Page received help in his
transfer from OSU assistant
Chuck Machock.

non-.,xistent, tied for league
low with only 38 points.
Philadelphia 24, Baltimore
10 - Eagles finally get an
easy one after string of
contenders. Colts wiU have
trouble scoring on improved
Philadelphia defense.
Buffalo 24, Kansas City 20
- Bills !ina lly woo one last
week against Baltimore and
get another relatively soft
touch in Chiefs.·
Mlami 37, St. Louis 10 Winless , punchless Cards
have misfortune of facing
Dolphins in Orange Bowl
after upset loss. Another sad
week for Card Coach Bud
Wilkinson .
Cincinnati
20.
San
Francisco 17- Battle of the
winless . Bengals finally
break into win column while
49ers remain perfect at 1}.5,
Monday night
·Dallas 24, Washington 17 Cowboys have
sluggish
against inferior competition
and should be ready for
archrival Red s kins'
chaUenge.

been

- --=::::::=:==:::;) 0

.

6 Miller Street
Box 487
Mason, W. Va.
Sunday Morning
Bible Study 10 : 00 a .m .
Sunday Morning
Worship 11:00 a.m .
Evening Servic es
at 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Evening
Bible Study 7:00p .m .

Visitors Welcome
The Churches
of Christ salute
Romans 16: 16

~~~~~~~ \)

FUTU RA STONE

COMES TO MEIGS-GALLIA-MASON AREA
It's the newest dim ension in outdoor surfa ce coverin g with nati ona l
and intern ational acceptance .

BEAUTIFY ANY RESIDENTIAL &amp; COMMERCIAL AREA

Ideal For:
•LOBBIES
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•WALKWAYS
•DRIVEWAYS
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It Eliminates:

UTUR
STONE

•SLIPPAGE LIABILITY
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SURFACES

REG. TRADE MARK

WHAT IS FUTURA STONE
It is a beautiful wa sh smooth river gravel bonded in a c lear durabl e
hard exposy . YOU MUST SEE IT TO APPRECIATE IT'

~ uper

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION AND FREE ESTIMATES

CALL 992-3886
BILL HACKETT • GEORGE HACKETT · DENNIS HACKETT
-------------·OR MAIL COUPON·-------------,
I
FUTURA STONE OF MIDDLEPORT
I
I
93 7TH AVE.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 45760

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11
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in the fami ly to use !What' s more,it will makeyour base ment
more sec ure against intrusion . An d it wi ll pay fo r i t s el l
many times o ver by savi ng repai r and replacem ent co sts
If your home was built with out the co nven 1e nce of
a direct basemen t entrance, ask us for S ileo 's new ha nd·
book "How Ia Add Valuable Living Space to Your Home."
Stop in and see our display. We'll
give you tree literaru rtt on how ta

do ff. Or, we can suggest s man
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THIS
OFFER
GOOD
AT ANY
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The Daily Sentinel, Court St., Pomeroy, 0. 45769
NAME •••.••.•..••• .•••••..•• .••• •.•...•..•••... •• ..•.•••••••
ADDRESS .••.......••••.....•...............................
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Mllldllpart I o.
....... ff2·3741 ., 992-1020

Collv11111nt FrH .._rldng

OFFER
EXPIRES
SEPTEMBER

30,
1978
SORRY,
NO
REFUNDS

�clubf "'"'i i;};;"U;}""'"'"! Middleport G~rden Club giv~n
'

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, Sept. 29, 1978

Bend '0 the River garden
i:i
met Monday, installed officers ·r Us

e

Alpha Delta Kappa week to·be
·
p
:' flower arrangzng demonstratzon.
. . By Helen Botteh:
observed by Alpha Epsilon
·:;:

Mrs. Suzy Carpenter
conducted a workshop in
flower arranging at a recent
meeting of the Middleport
Garden Club held at the
Middleport firehouse.
Mrs. Carpenter discussed
basic principals of flower
arranging and described the
varieties of dried plant
materials which can be used .

Installation of offi cers presented each officer with a months .
Mrs. Ruth Barnitt had the
highlighted the Monday night gift from the d ub .
TI1e
meeting
was
preceded
dub
poem and the prayer
meeting of the Ben~ C' Ihe
by
a
lour
of
the
terraced
was
given
by Mrs. West. f or
River Garden Clu~h- I at the
.
gardens
uf
Mrs.
West.
Mrs
.
roll
cal
l
members gave
home of Mrs. Esth• West.
Cross
opened
the
Andrew
timely
aut
urnn
reminders.
Racine.
meeting
wit
h
thoughts
of
Program
·
booklets
were
Installed by Mrs . Bernice
Carpenter were Mrs. James September and Mrs. Grella distributed and each member
r ea d
·' Mv was asked to create her own
Diehl. president : Mrs. Eileen Sim pson
Has
Garden design on the cover.
Buck, vice president : Mrs. Moth er
Andrew Cross, secretary ; fair ." Mr s. Cross spoke of cover.
For
arrangeme nts .
and Mrs . Esther West. September as thai time when
treasurer. Mrs. Carpenter plant s get rea dy for the next "Summer's Gone" , Mrs. Bert
likened the club members to year. They die, their seeds Grimm and Mrs. Carpenter
a flower arrangement with drop, and they propa gate in received ribbons.
Refreshments were served
each member being a part the spring. She also spoke
with a special purpose when ab&lt;JUI bulbs which are dug. by the hostess. Mrs. Grimm
placed together · form a placed in a wam1 spot. and lie will host the next meeting.
successful
club.
She dormant durin g the winter

ALL FA'f WOMEN ARE NOT SL&lt;iBS!
BY HELEN BO'ffEL
Dear Helen :
A belated answer to " J . W." I agree with "Fatty Sexy
Patty," he's a conceited egotist and certainly shouldn't be a
social service counselor.
He wrote that aU overweight women are slobs inside and
out, self-indulgent, lacking in character and willpower, lazy,
etc.
If he can overcome his bigotry and climb down off his
pious perch for a few minutes he may find some interesting
facts below :
Richard Nisbett of the Unive~sity of Michigan ( 1972) and
Stanley Schachter at Columbia University (1971) have done
research which revealed that some obese people are
biologically programmed to be overweight due to cells which
store body fat in the form of fatty acids. Overweight
individuals have a greater number of these "adipocytes" than
thin persons. '[bere are crucial ages when the cells develop;
before birth, about 9 months, between 6 and 10 years, and
· finally during late adolescence. At these stages, if the
individual takes in excessive quantities of food, the adlpocytes
develop in greater numbers and do not decrease in later life .
And sometimes it is bere where parents push food the most
("clean up your plate" syndrome; offering junk food treats as
rewards for good behavior) .
.
Next consider the condition known as hyperphagia, where
tiny lesions in the brain cause a compulsion to overeat.
The Public Edu cat1on
Finally I point out that when obese persons were tested in
committee has a variety of laboratories, they were found to experience physiological and
programs available to any
psychological symptoms of starvation when placed on even
organization free of charge. mild diets.
There will be a Public
While many of us can blame extra pounds on late night
Ed ucati o n Committee
treats and too many helpings, not aU weighty people can
meeting Thursday, Oct. 5, at
control their condition. They need patient, understanding
10 a.m. at Athens County counsel, not judgmental put-downs.
Savings and Loan Company
I wonder how J.W. feels about heavy men? Would he show
meet ing room . Any one who
as much sympathy for wives who turn to lovers because their
would like to serve on this husllands became "fat slobs?"
committee is welcome to
Before he writes me off as the stereotyped fat, lazy
come to the meet ing.
woman, may I add I have slimmed from a size 14 to a size 8, but
I'm still the same inside . My values, ambitions, morals,
initiative,
have remained constant regardless of my weight.
Bake sale planned
The change in body size does not change the power of mind or
fund raising projects m- wit.
cluding a bake sale, bazaar
Let's hope J . W. opens up his ugly, thin, narrow mind.and house wares party were NANCY
discussed at a recent meeting
uf the Long Bottom Com- DEAR HELEN :
Over half the timewben my husband and I have sex, it's by
mumty Club held at the
force on his part. That's worse than ~ing raped by a stranger
community building.
Progress on the building as you expeet affection and understanding in maiTiage. I have
renovation was viewed by the lost all desire for this monster .
members who later enjoyed
He had convinced me I was fri8id unW I had a brief affair
instrwnental music provided with a warm, tender man. Now! know I'm normal : I just don't
by Mr. and Mrs. Bill Thurst(!ll like sleeping with Genghis Khan . Women !lhould have the right
and Francis Andrew. Next to say "No" without feigning a hftclllche- and to bring rape
meeting will be held on Oct. charges against their husbands U warranled . .Maybe that
26. 7:30 p.m . with people of would show mine he needs COUI\Iellng , I don't rully want. a
the community being given a divorce as he's a good father, proVIder and ~nd otherwise.
special invitation to joi n with Help ' - N.S.D,
the group which ha s community betterment as its Dear N.:
You say you don't really want a divorce yet you call your
objective .
husband a monster. I think you both need counselin8 ! . Try an ultimatum: either therapy or a break-up. You risk
his second choice here , but honest -isn't it a chance you have
1&lt;&gt; take ? - H_

Public Education Committee
of the Meigs County Cancer
Society to educate adults and
youth through literature and
films .
They are at the present

tim e

wurking

on

Anti-

Snloking programs to be
presented in , elementa ry
sch ools, and are also placmg
literature on Ant i-Smoking in
van ous public establi shment s.

Harrisonville Order of Eastern
Stars met recently, made plans
The Harrisonville Order of
Eastern Star met recently
with Stella Atkins , worthy
matron and Larry Wel l.
worthy patron presiding.

RUMMAGE SALE
The Ladi·es Auxiliary of the
Bashan Volunteer fire
Department will hold a
rummage sale on Thursday
andFriday , Oct.5and6at the
fire house in Bashan from
9:3() a.m. io 4 p.m.
Any one having items to
donate to the group such as
clothing, toys , dishes . furniture, etc., is asked to call
949-2409, 949-2898. or 949-2660.
Any· contributions will be
appreciated. offi cers of the
group, repon .

Plans were made to hold
"friends' night " on Oct. 6 at
7: 30 p.m. m Harrisonville.
The progr am will be
present ed by Pomeroy .
Midd leport , Ra0ine and
Harrisonville Chapters. All
OES members are cordially
invited to attend.
Harrisonville members are

asked to bring salad. sandwiches or a cove red dish . The
meeti ng was held at the
Harri so n vi ll e

Masonic

Temple.

RUIIIIIIAGE SALE
A rummage sale will be
held. Oct . 4 and 5 at the
fellowship hall of St. Paul's
Lutheran Ch urch. 9 a.m. to 3
p.m. both days.

-a-

at-

Southeast Ohio Junior
Miss , Inc. publicity chairman, Mrs. Joyce Quillen
announced today members of
Ohio Eta Phi Chapter of Beta
Sigma Phi will be contacting
business establishments in
Middleport and Pomeroy the
week of September 25 thru 30
for advertising for the 1978-79
Southeast Ohio Junior Miss
Program.
Contacting Middleport
merchants will be: Carol
Ault, Brenda Haggy, Patsy
Ogdin and Kaye Walker. In
Pomeroy, Kathy Cumings
and Sonya Ohlinger will
contact the businesses.
The Junior Miss Program
is open to all high school
senior girls of southern Ohio.
The two reigning Junior
Misses are: Miss Kim Batey,
South Meigs County Junior
Miss. 1978, a 1978 graduate of
Eastern High School and
Miss Kim Taylor , North
Meigs County Junior Miss,
1978, a 1978 Southern High
School graduate.
The 1978-79 Junior Miss
finals will be held November
19 at the Meigs Junior High
School auditorium, Middleport. Any high school
senior girl wishing in·
formation on the Junior Miss
Program
can
contact
Southeast Ohio Junior Miss,
Inc .. P. 0 . Box 104. Pomeroy

..-..------··-·- ·
t ·

I

VISIT OPRYLAND
Mr . and !'&gt;Irs. Ha rvey
Erlewine spent the weekend
in Nashville wh ere the y
McConnelsville, · were
VISIToRS
atende attended the Grand
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Mc- weekend guests of Mr. and
Ole Opry with Ernie Ford as llowell, Columbus, and Mrs. Mrs . Karl Grueser and
a guest star. They also vbited Patrick Quinn and grandson, Larry, Minersville.
Opryland and toured the Paul Edward Ha ck worth.
homes of several stars, and
VISited th e Upper Room
publishing place. They also ~ ---r.-----------~--------,
vi sit ed Mr . and Mrs. James
Goodwin. Kathy and Jamie at
I
OPTOMORIST
I
Hendersville. Tenn.
OFFICE HOURS: 9:30 to 12,2 to S (CI..OSE
I
1 AT NOON ON THURS.! - EAST COURT I•

..I

I

Calendar 1

FRIDAY
BEFORE • THE · GAME
supper at the Semor Citizens
Center, serving 4 to 7 p.m.
jW.ith soup, sandwiches, and
h&lt;i'memade desserts.
MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT GARDEN
CLUB, 7:30 Monday night at
the home of Mrs. Carl Horky.
Programs for the year to be
planned.

WAS

MODELS

n. W. COMPTON, O.D.

MF-230 Gas
MF 230 Diesel
MF 245 Diesel
MF 255 Diesel
MF 275 Diesel
MF 285 Diesel

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'14,300
'16,000

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'6250
'6875
'9000
1
11,750
'13,200 .

AoPltca tton o f Pi oneer • 1008 rnast•c

45769.
Southeast Ohio Junior
Miss, Inc., is a non-profit
organization · organized
under the laws of the State of
Ohio.

TV i. Ap'liance
Gas Servtce
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;:&gt;URI~G O~R SALE"
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sheet ; seli-od ·
seolto the
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window sill .

• Clea r, rigid plastic storm wi~ows fit easily into strips of
od"esive bocked vinyl trim applied to window frames
• Fit a irtight- eliminate drofrs

DOUILE PLUS PIORCTION
AGAINST HUT LOSS

CooYenfional sform wind&lt;MS only do pan of the fotl. By insfblliAQ
ln·Sider 100. heo1 loss minos double. Together, 'storm willkJws ond
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BAND..()..RAMA
SUNDAY, OC101ER 1, 1971
FROM 2100 P.M. TIL ????

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PHONE 992-2444

500 E. Main St.

MIDDlEPORT, OHIO
'

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\. .

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Refreshments Wdl Be Seroed
Favors For All

I

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Gregorys
return

The

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Your
choice

Carl Horkys
entertain

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r··- ·-· - -------------,
'
Social Calendar I

G1 an d PriX LJ

FOR MORE INFORMATION - MAIL THIS COUPON
I
U ROOF U SIDEWALl U PATIO U DRIVEWAY U POOL DECK
LJSIDEWALKS
NAME
I ADDRESS
I
I
I
II CITY
STATE.
I
I

LEON

Mrs. William
Swatzel returns

are

1878

EUREKA

Carl F Kernan
receives ·training

Kim Cogar had the promise, Terri Roush, the prayer, and
Sherri SISIIOII, the pledge to open the meeting.
Several mmey making projects were discussed and the girls
talked about places to visit and things to do during the coming
year. Mrs. Shirley Cogar Is troop leader and Mrs. Joyce Sisson
and Mrs. Carol Adams are co-leaders. Other members of the
troop
Becky Hudson, Jayne Good, Traci Hubbard, Paula
Wlnebrermer, Kim Adams and Regina Nance.
Girls from . the fourth, fifth, and sixth grades
interested in scouting are invited to attend the Tuesday night
meeting at the school.
SYRACUSE BROWNIE TROOP 1120
Plays'to be presented at the October meeting of the Syracuse
PI'O were practiced durin~( a meetin~ of the Syracuse .
Brownies at the school Tuesday night.
Taking part in the plays will be Mary Baldwin, Lois
Davidson, Sarah Philson, Wendy Fry, and Becky
Wlnebrermer. Lois Davidson collected dues and led in the
pledge to open the meeting and Wendy Fry led in the Brownie
promise. Refreslunents were served by Becky and Lois.
At last week 's meeting a flyup ceremony was held for the
fourth graders going into the junior troop. They were Kim
Adams, Heidi Cobb, Jane Jett and Terri Roush .
Games were played and Sarah Philson served refreslunents
to the scouts and guests, Joyce, Sherri and Samantha Sisson,
Kim Mll'row, Jane Ann Williams, Diane Davidson, and Carol
Adams.

Ptoneer If 1
IS a monolithic co ating th"tf pr otec ts roo fs agatnsl tndustnal
at mosp hem:: cou o~on sunlight Cf'ld extreme weather 'llanances Thts spec •al
cold proc ess sys tem can oe use e w•tn or w tlh out the vartous colored ceram•c
granules wh•ch are spray aoplle&lt;:J 10 the mastiC praor to drymg

' J 7TH AVE.

\

mon!M.

r---------------~-------~-----------1

458~1630

Dian Bise was honored
recently with a layette
shower hosted by Dolores
Foster and Jackie Bigley at

12 oz.

•COMMERCIAL
•INDUSTRIAL
•RESIDENTIAL

I

SHINN'S
Tractor Sales

Layette shower planned

On special
Nehi®cans.

PRODUCT :

now '19,900

Has birthday

llOUl'HERN CADE'ITE TROOP 1208
Officers were elected at tbe first meeting of the Southern
Cadelte8 held at the home of Mrs. Edith Cogar Tuesday
evening.
·
Elected were Sherry Cogar, president; Susan Jelt,
treasurer; and Brenda Cunningbam, reporter. Plans were
dbcusaed during the meeting about places to visit this fall and
craftl to make durin~ meetings. Dues were set at. 25 cents.
Next meeting will be held at the home of Shirley Cogar. Girls in
the ~~eventh, eighth and ninth grades are invited to join the
troop.
SALISBURY JUNIOR TROOP 1100
Sandy Hoyt and Teresa Pratt played a flute and trumpet solo
In coojunctlon with their badge work at tbe Tuesday
niRht meeting of the Salisbury Juniors. ·
!Mmey making projects were discussed along with craft
projects and activities for the year . A bake sale was set for
Oct. 21 at Krogers. AlliS members of the troop were present.
The group worked on a styrofoam craft following the meeting.
SYRACUSE JUNIOR TROOP 1204
First meeting of the Syracuse juniors was lield Tuesday
night at the school with Jill Nease being elected to take
attendance and Tammy Theiss to handle dues for the next two

PRODUCT DATA

MF - 308 Loader, Backhoe

POLLY'S PROBLEM
nicely ahd will wear in- at the homecom ing of the · and Mrs. Margaret Neuman, Roush. and Allee Wamsley .
working force and are conDEAR POLLY - A large definitely .
Minersville United Methodist the acco mpanist. Transstantly striving to serve their
Artificial flowers that are Church. Do,in ~ a "''" fur •h e
communities and nations in quantity of hot wax from a
MEETING CHANG E
educational, civic, cultural burning candle spilled onto faded from the sun can be
Racine
Gran g'e
ha s
and charitable programs my thick pile acrylic carpet. touched up to look like new. A
changed
its
regular
meeting
leading to harmony, hap- It has hardeced into what small can of spray paint the
to the second and fourth
piness, and peace among all seems to be a permanent one- same color as the flowers or
Amber , Mrs . t"lo ren ce Wednesda ys of ea ch month
The
birthday
of
Gwinnie
inch strip. What can I do to one shade brighter works
people.
celebrated Hannay. and Terry Snowden . effective Oct. I.
dislodge t!lis and restore that well for this job. Cut a slit in a White was
area of the carpet' I hope piece of newspaper, slip the recently with' a cookout at the
the readers have some hints. - flower through the slit and .home of Mrs. Beulah White .
Tables were set up on the
ELLEN
pinch it shut to protect the
DEAR ELLEN - Perhaps foliage and your arm while porch and following the
dinner a birthday cake baked
the home of Mrs. Mary Alice the following letter from a spraying the paint. It is best by Mrs. White's daughter,
reader
will
be
of
assistance.
to
do
this
job
out
of
doors
but
Bise. Gifts were placed on a
out oft he wind for a nice even Texanna Well , was served.
decorated table. Cake, mints, POLLy
.
DEAR
POLLY
I
had
.
finish. The paint dries in just Others attending were
crackers and punch were
a
larg
e
puddle
·
of
dark
a few minutes and the flowers Charles White. Mr. and Mrs.
served to the guests.
wax
on
my
beige
living
can be put back in the Tom Darst and Craig, Mr.
green
Attending were Anna
and Mrs. Jeff Darst and
Washburn and Marsha of room carpet and thought it original container or bouquet Keith. Pearl Hoff1nan , Mr.
Coolville, Lucy Roberts and must surely be ruined. for the cemetery or and Mrs. Emerson Well, Mr.
Tina, and Ava Miller of Luckily I saved it. I held my wherever. - E.J.f ..
DEAR POLLY - We have and Mrs. Howard Well and
Hockingport, Maxine hand-held hair blower over
Whitehead, Frances Reed the wax until the heat melted six fruit trees in our yard and
and Brian, Grace Weber, it and then bloted up the wax they bear fruit at different
Ruth Anne Balderson, Mamie with paper towels until it was times during the summer
·
k d months. The birds just love to
Buckley, Dolly Reed , Opal all gone. Th IS wor e
feed on the fruits and nuts so
Randolph, Virginia Walton, beautifully and there was no
Phyllis Hetzer, Pat Martin, stain left on the carpet. . to discourage them from
landing in the trees I have
Erika Boring, Geralding WYLMA
DEAR POLLY - My new hung most ine.pensive wind
Marine Staff Sergeant Carl
Holsinger, Paula Cowdery,
curtains
were
clinging
chimesineachtree.
They
are
F
.
Kernan , whose wife,
Mabel Hetzer, Seott, Sybil
together,
to
the
windows
and
made
of
lightweigh
t
Dewie,
is the daughter of
and Sara Foster.
Games were played with to me so I took a fabric sol- aluminum and glitter in the Phyllis Creech of New Haven,
sun as well as clang in a W. Va :, recently participated
prizes going to Ava Miller tener sheet and rubbed ii up
each
curtain.
Now
windy breeze. I Polly's Note- in two weeks of active duty
and
down
and the door prize to Pat
ihere
is
no
more
clinging.
Small
pie plates can be training at Coronado Naval
Martin.
MARY LEE
strung up to make such Amphibious Base in San
DEAR POLLY- An emery chimes.) - BEA
Diego.
board works fine for getting
Polly will send you one of
He is assigned to "I"
mitered joints to fit perfectly. her
signed
thank-you Company, 3rd Battalion, 25th
It makes a good addition to a newspaper coupon clippers Marines at Wheeling , Va.
hobby kit.
if she uses your favorite
The two-we ek trainin g
If you have part of a tube of Pointer. Peeve or Problem in period featured sea and air
column. Write POLLY'S assaults, live-fire dese rt
Mrs . William Swatzel cau lk .mg cemen t Ieft but d0 her
POINTERS in care of this ·
returned Sunday from not have a cap for the spout
warfare and basic am phibious
and
combat
Guthrie, Okla. where she was try a cap from an old newspaper.
called by the illness and ballpoint pen. I find they fit
training. Reservi sts also
participated in tactical livedeath of her granddaughter,
fire combat maneuvers in the
Ashley Ann Hopfer, sevendesert warfare exercise
month-old daughter of Mr.
" Palm Tree 8-78" at Twenand Mrs. Kenneth Hopfer
tynine Palms, Calif.
(Brenda Potts ).
Kernan joined the Marine
Ashley Ann died on Sept. 14
Corps
in May, 1964.
at Mercy Hospital in
FRIDAY
MONDAY
Oklahoma City following a
MARYSHRINE370RDER
POMEROY Garden Club
long illness . Beside her of White Shrine of Jerusalem Monday 7:30p.m. at home of
parents she is survived by a inspection Friday 7:30 p.m. Marga ret Blaettnar.
brother, Jason Lee, six, and a at Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
EACH
SOUTHE RN ATHLETIC
sister, Rebecca Lynn, two, Inspecting officer will be
her grandparents, Mr. and Valma Joy Burnie, Supreme Boosters. 7:30 p.m. Monday
Mrs .. William Swatzel. Worthy High Priestess. at high school to plan for
EUREKA CANISTER
'homecoming on Oct. 6.
Pomeroy, and Mr. and Mrs. Potluck refreshments.
• Self- storing to ols in
REPRESENTATIVES of
John Hopfer of Guthrie, Okla.
Mr. and Mr s. Carl Horky
1111 -oll tray
SATURDAY
Among those attending the
• Steel construc ti on w1th
CARNIVAL AND jitney Tuppers Plains Water entertained recently with a
funeral services were Mrs. J . supper at Chester Elemen- System will be at Mt. Moriah dinner party honoring the
lu ll clean ing power .
•,9 pc . tool set l or tull
D. Tate (Sandy Potts) of tary Saturday. Jitney supper Church. Rt . 2, Racine, retirin g employes of the
flo or to ce i ling cle aning .
Oxon Hill, Md., and Jim from 5 to 7 p.m. and carnival Monday at 7 p.m. to discuss Middleport office, Columbus
extending
the
water
system.
Swatzel, Wierton, W. Va .
and Southern Ohio Electric
from 7 to 9. Sponsored by
All residents are urged to Co.
Mr. and Mrs. Hopfer' s Chester PTO.
EUREKA
address is Route I, Guthrie, POTLUCK supper and attend especially those on
Honored were Miss Rhoda
UPRIGHT
county road 28 {Jenny Watt),
Okla . 73044.
songfest at Cheshire United Mile Hill, Blind Hollow, and Hall , Jack Williams, Wilbur
• Brilli ant headlight
Boyer, and Max Davis. A
Methodist Church, Sept. 30, Antiquity.
• E xc lusiv e 6- way
buffet dinner was served
supper at 5:30, singing at
Dial-A- N ap rug
7:30. The Lemley Family
heig ht adju stment
TUBERCULIN
SKIN along with a decorated cake
singers.
• Po we r- dr iven
testing clinic Monday 7:30 inscribed with the names of
the
honored
guests.
Others
1 2-mch beater
SPECIAL MEETING, p.m., in the E.M.S. building, attending were Mr . and Mrs.
bar bru s h ro l l
Shade River Lodge 453, Rutland . Clinic is free and John Welsh, Mr. and Mrs.
MODEL 1424
F&amp;AM. 7 p.m. Saturday at Jane Brown, R.N., tuber- Wendell Hoover. Mr. and
culosis nurse for Meigs
hall
in
Chester.
Work
in
the
MASON - Mr. and Mrs.
90
County will do the testing. Mrs. Lloyd Blackwood, Mr.
MM
degree;
all
Master
FO:OTH I
Gary ·Gregory, Leigha and .
ThOse who recelve tests on and Mrs. John Redovian, Mr.
Ma
sons
invited
.
Also
and Mrs_ John Hood, Mrs.
John and Mrs. George Carson
Monday will return on
SAVE '45.90
spent
the
weekend members are asked to help Wednesday to have the Betty Spencer, and Janet and
with
the
repair
of
the
lodge
Sheila Horky.
vacationing at Watega State
hall roof at 10 a.m. Saturday, results read.
Park, near Marlington, W.
TUESDAY
weather permitting.
Va.
HARRISONVILLE
PTO
LEONARD BASS
SUNDAY
They left on Friday morTuesday 7:30 p.m. Plans for
Leonard Bass, Syracuse,
REV. GEORGE OILER,
ning and stopped at SummerHalloween party will be made
ville Dam to visit briefly with pastor of the first Church of and a discussion will be held has returned home following
the Reverend and Mrs. God, Syracuse, will begm on sending kindergarten a stay in St. Mary's.Hospital,
MIDDLEPOR f 0.
106 N. 2ND AVE.
broa dcastin g hve from children to Rutland . All in- Huntington.
Robert Maring at Belle, W.
Va . While there, they visited WMPO beginning Sunday at terested parents urged to
the parsonage and church of 9:30a.m.
attend.
the United Methodist Belle,
W. Ya. where the Rev .
Maring is pastor.
They visited Cranberry
Glades, Cass Railroad, and
Pearl Buck's home . While at
Lewisburg, W. Va . they
visited with Dr. and Mrs. E.
A. Schackel. Dr. Schaekel is
reportedly back to work at
"Scripture Text"
the Osteopathic College at
Lewisburg.
Calendar Towels for 1979
The docto1 's son and wife,
Selected scriptures and colorful scenes are silk
Mr. and Mrs . Edward
screened on 100% pure linen, l'rinted with the
Schaekel and family of
12 months ol the year lor 1979. Each comes
Pomeroy. also visited with
with two-piece wooden dowel and cord fOr
his parents and celebraled
hang1ng. Packed in ils own mailing envelope.
Size : 16x28".
the doctor's birthday on
Friday. ·
Enroute
home.
the
Gregorys and Mrs. Carson.
stopped at Hawk's Nest,
which climaxed a nice
vacation of camping out and
visiting friends.

In announcing the observance, the local chapter
officers note that women in
education constitute a ~reat

By Charlene Hoeflich

u for

~

tavities enriching the lives of
individuals into a happy,
constructive and fu lfilling
life.

. . . ----,
Girl Scout Diary I

1

POLLY·s POINTERS

Meigs Senior Citizens Ch'orus
entertained at homecoming

Polly Crame.r
~ ·--·----···""'- ..
.
.
h
.
i
'
The Meigs County Senior group was Bill Watson. Mrs . . portmg t e sen11,r c uzens
portion of the nation's -::::...~----------------- Citizens Chorus sang Sunday Irene Christy is the director. were B1ll . Wat so n. Ea rl y

r- , - ··-·--~------:-

PIONEER 1008

EXTRA SPECIAL
was '22,900

RIDENOUR'S

International Alpha Delta
Kappa week will be observed
Oct. 8-14 by the Alpha Epsilon
Chapter here.
Alpha Delta Kappa is an
international honorary
sorority for women educators
with the goala of giving
recognition to outstanding
educators, to build a
fraternal fellowship among
educators adding to their
effectiveness
In
the
promoting of excellence in
education, to establish high
standards of education, and
to promote educational and
charitable projects a'nd ac-

'

No muss - no fuss - no
need to tear off your
roof to renew &amp; insulate
slate, metal, shingle or
built-up roofs. Make it
Leak-Proof.

NOW

DOXOL
SERVICE

Smith
Nelson
Motors
1

- FIX THAT ROOF

on these specials

For All your home
Enlortelnmtnlend
Appllence NMds

'

!_!T.::.!2~!~2.~---------------::

save!

M. L: French and Mrs. Fred
Kessmger were hostesses. A
polled plant was presented to
Mrs. Carpenter.

You're Invited. . •

l

Look, and you'll see big savings
on the new MF farm tractor
you need!

Slie displayed the labeled
dried materials prepared by .
the Pomeroy Flower Shop.
Members of the club created
arrangements with the
assistance of Mrs. Carpenter,
an accredited judge of the
Ohio Association of Garden
Clubs.
. . .
A covered d1sh dinner
preceded the meeting. Mrs.

Merchants to be contacte

Public Education Committee placing
Anti-Smoking literature in schools
It is the purpose of the

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pcrneroy, 0 ., Friday, Sept. 29,1978

FEATURING:
DAVE DUNN - RED STEWARD - CHARLIE LILlY
MD MORE - YOUR HOST - ED EWS

Pomeroy, Ohio

,.
•

MIDDLEPORT
BOOK
STORE
99 Mill St.

NOW AVAILABLE AT

SUGAR RUN MILLS
MULBERRY AVE.

'

992·2115
•

POMEROY

�.

MEIGS TIRE
CENTER, INC.
John F . Fultz, Mgr.
Ph. 992-2111
Pomeroy

Owtght l Zov rrz , duector
lfUNII Y C HUIK H Re11 W H
1-'€-r rr n pastor l:lob Suck ~un day
sc h ool s.u pl Ch ur ch !&gt;choql 9 I~
am wors,·up $erv rrP 10 30 a m
Ch orr rehe ar sal 1 ue!&gt;day l 30
p rll
under d•rec h on o l A lrce
Nease

HAf.INI

~ONV

1-' ft~ ~ ~ YHNIA N

I

GRACE
CHURCH
( EPISCOPAL) - 326 E Main
St ., Pomeroy . The Rev .
Robert B. Graves . rector .
Hol y
com munion
and
ser mon , 1l am . Jun ior choir
and nursery service.

POMtfo'O Y CHUR CH 0~ CHRI ST
21 ") W Morn ~~ John M cArthur
po ~ro r l:l rble sc hool &lt;! :JO am
mo rnrng wo r $hrp
1() 30 o m
You th meetrn g s 6 30 p m e\len
rng wor$h rp
l 30 Wedne$dOy
n rg hr prayer meelrng and ~rbl e
~ rudy f
p m

SY RA(U ~\:.

M ornu1g wOIShtp 9
)vn doy ~c h oo l 10 o m Mr !i
~ m p son Hall ~upt
WU1l AN O CHURCH 0 ~ GOO
k! ev Bobby Parter pastor ~u n
day sc hool 10om ~u ndoy wor
sh 1p 11 o rn
Sund o.,. evenrng
s e r vrc~ I p rn
Wedne sday 1--omr
ly 1r o1 rr1 g How 7 p m Wedr1esdoy
wor shrp ~ervrre l 30 p rn
HAL H COMMUNII Y CHUftCH
Near l ong Bo tt om ~ d$e ! Hor I
pas tor ') un d oy school IU am
Ch ur ch
7 JO
p 111
pra .,.er
meet mg 7
p m lhu1sday
o m

~U f.illN G TON SOU THH~N

I:IAP
Rou l e 1, Sh ade
~a bby
l:l~tn '!i
Sunday
~ p m
Sunday w or shrp
m Wedne&lt;;day prayer ser
30 p rn

11~1" CHAPH

1-'a s! or
sc hool
~ &lt;1 ~ p
vrc e l

PO M~HO Y

W ES1SID~

CHURL H
0 1-- l HRI!) T 200 W Mor n 5 t Jerry
f'oul m1 n r&lt;; ter p hone qq7 lb06
(ons er vo trve
non•ms trumentol
~und ay w o rshrp , 10 om
l:l rble
srudy 11 o m
wor~hrp (&gt; p m
Wednesda y Brble study l p m
O lD OU&lt;HR l:llt!l ~ C HR I~lJ AN
CHU RC H
Rev Rolph
Smr th
pa stor Sun d ay sc hool Q 30 a rn
Mr !l. Wo rley 1--' ronc rs sup e r 1nren
den t Preo chr n g ~ erv1 ces lrrsl I/.
th rr d ~ un d oy s followrng Sunday
~c ho o l

G RAHAM U NI H O M~ l HOOIS 1
Pr eo chrng 9 30 o m f rrst an d ~e
co n d Su nday s of ea ch mon rh
rhrrd and fo u r th Sund ay s each
nlOnth worshrp servrce ot I 30
p m
Wednesd ay evenrn g'&gt; at
7 JO Prayer and Brble Study
~ ~ V ~N TH DAY
AD V ~N ll~l
Mulberry Hergh t s Ro od Pomeroy
1-'o sta r A Ib ert Q,ne s Sabbat h
Sc hool
Su p e rrntendent
Rrto
Whrte ~ obboth Sc hool Satu rda y
after noon o t ')_ 00 w1 th Wor shrp
~erv rce follo w rn g ot3 I !I
IW TLAND
~IR ST
BAP f t S1
CHU RC H
Srster
Ho r rr elt
Warne r
Sup t
!:Iunday ~chool
'I 30 om
m01 n rng wOr $hr p
10 4!1 o m
1H~ HIL AN D CHAPI::l George
Co5 to , past or
!:.undo y Sc hoo f
Q
a m e"enrng w o r ~hr p l 30
l hu rsday evenrng pra ye r serv rce
I 3U p m
1-'0M~ R OY
FIRS l
BAPTI ~l
i.)ovrd Mon 'l mrn1s 1e r Wrllrom
Wor~on Sunda y s.chool su pr Su n
day ~c hoo l 9 30 o fll
mo rnrng
w o r ~ hrp l 0 30 o m
f-I R!I1 ~OU1 H I:f.iN BAPTIS1 21:fl
Mulberry A v o,_~ Pome1oy Pau l J
Wh rte Po ~ lor Gory B o~hom Sun
day ~c ho o l sup t Sun day schoo l
o j(J o m
rnor nr ng w ors h rp
10 JO evenrng worsh rp tJ 30 p m
M r dwe P~ pray e r , p," rr e
I ]0
pm
MI0 1',t1
O MM Ur-J !l'T ONH f.'
L)c ~t er
ang'&gt;~rlle Ohro f.!e,
llyde f L r II
Po :. to r
~und oy
~ c h oo t
II
n m
'::lo t urdo y
weochrng servr(~~
l 30
p rn
Wednesday e venrnq H1ble s tu dy
or 7 JO p m
~A II H TA b l: fiNA Cll: CHURCH
l:lo rl ey Ru n Rood Rev l:. mmet!
How~on
po:.lor Handley Dunn
.,u pt Sunday &lt;,c h ao! 10 a m Sun
doy e venr ng HHvrce I JO b rble
reoc hrn g 7 30 p m Th u r &lt;..doy
lJYI:)VIlH
CO MMUNI I Y
CHURC H Roger C lur ne r pa'&gt; ta r
'.u11doy ~choo l 9 30 o m Sunday
rnornrng w o r ~hrp 10
~und oy
ev en rn g !l.er vr ce I ) ()
MIO DLI:POf.' l
l HU R( H
01
M llJOllPOfll
CHHI Sl IN C H RI~liAN UN ION
l owrPIIr(' Ma nl ey po~tor Mr&lt;,
Ru ~!&gt;etl
Young
)u11 doy School
)u pr 5-undoy Sc h ool Q JC! o m
~venrn g w 01shrp
I JO We d nes
doy p1ayer meet rng J ]() p m
Ml MORI AH CHUflc' H OF GOD
Rocr n e f.l oute 2 the ~ev Jorne s
M M unc 'l pa stor Sun day school
&lt;J 11) om
mo r nrn g wor :. hrp 11
om
evenmg wa r ~ h 1 p
I 30
!-'foyer mee l rng
1ut&gt; sd oy 7 30
p m
Young peo ple ., rneet rng
! JO p rn f hu r sday
MI(.)Olt:POIH
Fti&lt; ~T
BA PTIS T
Cor ne t ~rJC f h end Palmer t-he Hev
Orler
po :. Jo r
Rober !
K11 by
Parker ~ upe r r 11 ten dent Sund ay
WMPO Wo dro pr og ram ·1 d 5 o rn
~unday ~chaof Q l) o m
Morn
rng Wor sh rp 10 1) am Vou th oc
trv1 1re!&gt; and f eflow~hrp lor 1unror
and ~en r or hrgh stude n h t. p m
l,undoy evenrng war ~ hrp
l JO
p m M rd w Pe~ prayer ser viC e$
Wedne~d oy 'J 30 p m
CHURCH
01-CHRI ST
Mrd
d{eport 5th end Morn Geor ge
Glote mrnrs te r M rkf" G erlach
~ o perrn te n d ent
Terry Von l.. ey
youth rmnr~ t er Brb le !&gt;choo l 9 JO
om
mo r ntng worshr p
10 30
o rn
eve n rn g wo r shrp
f JO
prayer se r vrce I p m W e d ne$

:w

:w

.J ::J~'

MIDDLEPORT
CHURCH
OF THE NAZARENE - Rev
J im Broome , pa sto,. B i ll
Wh ite ,
S unda y
school
super i ntenden t
Sunday
sc hoo l, 9 30 a .m : morn ing
worship, 10· 30 a.m Sunday
evange list ic mee ting 7 p m
Pra-;er meet ing Wednesday , 7
pm
U N illD
PfH ~ H VlH!IA IJ
MIN1 ~1 HY O t- M I::IG~ COU N IY

212 E . M.in StrHI
992-3785, Pomeray

Pomeroy

.....

~···

A

MIKE SWIGER
STATE FARM
INSURANCE

Of Our Religious HeritJJge

~t's

lf1'h~• S. Thtrd

ROSEBERRY'S
PENNZOIL

Ever run mto a fnend tn TOk yo, or meet one of

~rid

P~Nll: CO~ lAL

Ph. 949-9130

The Store
With A Heart
Ractne
Ph . 949-2626

It makes you slop and thtnk- l he way thiS world
ts sh nnkrng It makes you wtsh that the men and

women who hv e on oppos1te sides of the globe
h ad more things 1n common
There can be no m o re unrfytng force tn the
world than a common belief tn God A nd toward
that Ideal we are rap rdly progressing Ch nst1ans
the world over are fee lmg and expressrng the1r
u nrty of fallh and purpose

Sunday ts World-Wide Communron Sunday
On that day. w1th1n the space of a few short hours.
C hrrs!lans m every land w111 reverentty part1c1pate
1n the lords Supper wh1ch has been a mark of
Ch r~s!tan fatth for almost two thousand years

RACINE
FOOD MARKET

Wors hip With the World rn the Churc h of your

Sunda y
Psalms

P. J. PAULEY,
AGENT

~ YRA CU~ l: CLU~ HR

Rev

H e r ve ~

Koch Jr
W o r sh rp 11
o m
Chu rch ~rhoo l q .'&gt;0 a m UMW
'" " ' l uesd o y ~ r bl e ~ r ud.,. lhur ~
1 ::wpm
l--O R~ ~ T RUN
Wors.hrp 9 o m
· lhu rc h ~c ho ol 10 am
MI NI:fl ~VIll ~ Wors hrp 10 am
Chu rc h Sc hool 9 o m
~Y ~A CUS ~ Ch u r&lt;h ~c h ool 9 UO
o m Wor shrp ser vrce f 30 p m
A ~ B U RY

SOUT H ~ RN ClU~ll H

We" Do¥rd Horr r~
(lus te r L-t&gt;ode r
~lev ~ Ieven \1\/ •lso n
~ Io ren ce Smrrh
Hrlton Wo lf e
A s soc ra t e~
1:11: I HAN Y
(lJorc o s ) Wor&lt;,h rp
9 00 o m Chu rc h ~chool 10 00
om
CARM l:l (hruch ~ &lt; hool ~ JO
om Wors hr p 10 30om '2nd on d
4th ~un dav s
AI-'Pll: GROVt: ~undoy ~chool
9 JO o rn Wo r sh1p 7 30 p m 1st
an d J r d ~u n dop Prayer rneetr ng
Wedne!&gt;doy 7 JO p rn rel low sh rp
su pper f rrsr Sor u rd oy b p m UMW
:?nd 1ues d oy I 30 p rn
t: A S1 U:T AR l t.hruch Sc h ool 9
om Wo r shrp ser v oce 10 om
1-'royer
rnee trn g
I 30
p m
Wednesday UMW hr st I ues do'r'
"/JO prn
I&lt;A CI N~ Wl:!&gt; U: Y AN
~und ay
school 10 o m
w orsh rp 11 o m
Chorr pro ct. ce lhursdov !:l p rn
te1 Ah' 1 J.A Lt ~
Chu rc h !&gt;c hoo l
10om W o r ~hrp ~e r v r ce 9 om
M O RNIN G ~T AR W or~ h r p 9 30
o r'r'l Chu r ch Sc h ool I 0 30 o rn
M rd Week ~e1vr ce WednP sdoy f:l
pm
MOR~l:
( HA PH
W o r !lo h p 11
o m Ch ur ch Sc ho ol 1.! 30 o rn
PO RlLA N O W or:. h rp l 30 p rn
Ch ur ch Schoo l 9 30 o m
~UllO N
Ch urch ~choa l 9 30
o rn Wo r ~ hr p I :. t and Jr d ~und oy s.
10 JO e rn
NO WIH I:. A )l CLU~ H:J.I
Rev f.lr ch o rd fh omo!lo
1-' o'!it o •
Ou one s .,. den~ tr ot k ••r
Joh n Oouglo .,
A s~oc r o te !.

JOPPA
Wor~hrp
10 om
Ch ur ch Sc hool 9 om
Prayer
M ee t rng Wedn e$doy Cl p m
C HI: ST~ R
W or$h 1p 9 om
Churc h ~c hool 10 a rn
LO NG HOTTOM War!.hrp I 3U
p m Chu r c h~ chool9 JO o
Al l--1&lt;1:0 W orshrp I 30 p rn
Church School 1.! 30om
~~
PAUl Wo rs hr p II a rn
Churc h Sc hool Q :10om
~~W ~VI llt Sund o.,. ~chao! 9 30
o m Wor sh1 p 7 :JO p m
Pra yer
M ee trng 'J JU p m
1uesda .,.
Vrs do l ron7 JO p rn ls r 1hur~d oy
51l Vf:.f.i R I OG ~ Wo r shr p 10 a rn
Ch urc h !&gt;c hoo l 9 o m
TU I-'PEf.I S PlAIN ~ Wor~h r p 9
om Church ~c hooi1Uo m
Kl:NO l HUR CH O F C HRI ~f ser
vr( e'!i eod1 Sunday 9 JO o m
George flfCio.ens
pa stor with
preoch rng o n f rr st an d thr r d Sun
da y o l mo nth O lr ver Sworn Su pl
HOH~ON CHRI STI AN UN IO N
Rev Ket th t: bl rn past or ~u n do ~
Sc h ool
9 JO
o m
leon a rd
Grl n10re , lrr s t e lder e "' enrng ser
vrce 7 30 p m Wednesday pray er
m ee trn g f ::JO p m
Ml M O RIA H CHUfK H O f C O D
Roc rne Hou l e 2 Th e Rev C h ad f! ~
Hand pas tor Su nday .. ch oo l 1.! 4 ~
om
m o 1nrng worsht p 11 om
~ ve nrng 1oer vrces
fues doy and
~ rrd oy f J(J p m
BI:Af.IWAl lOW f.IIOG~ ( HUfl l H
0~
C HR I ~T
Duane Worde n
rnr nr~fe r
l:l rb le cfos!&gt; 9 30 0 m
m o•n r.ng wo r shrp
10 30 o m
evenrng
w o r sh •P
6 30
p m
Wednesday Brble stu d.,. b JO p m
N I:W ~ rt V I:W ~V Ill ~ COMMU NI
1Y Church ~und o y Schoo l ser
vr(e 4 45 o rn Wo r!l. h rp !&gt;E&gt;~v r te
10 3U l:vongel rs t 1c Ser vrce I 30
p m
Wednesd ay
P"f oyer
mee trn a 'l J()

ZIO N
CHURCH
OF
C HRI ST
Pomer o y
Har'r lsonville Road Robert
Purtel l, pastor . Bil l McE lroy,
Sunday school s upl . Sunday
school , 9: 30 a .m .: morning
wors"'lp and commun ion ,
10 30 a .m . Sunday worship
service, 7 p.m . Wednesday
evening prayer meeting an d
Bi ble study . 7 p.m .
Sf

JOHN I U I HUl AN ( HU W( H

KE~P.f

,::o R: - II=' WF; ,1./\~,.._I AGE TO
SNEAK 1"-1.::.1 DE Kl-5 LAY~
OUT WITHOLJ 1 E-E IN 6
(.__ SP OTT E Dl

1-4 15 TA NK OF
SHCIRK 5~

506 65 AN D HIS

UH·O Hl HOLD IT. WA S H: •..
DO YOU SEE WHAT I SCH!

SHARKS:

..J/

Athens County
Savings &amp; Loan

i
I

Chester 985-3307
Racine 949-2020

Wednesda y
Psalms

~

119 12 1· 128
Wor s. hrp II om
Chu r ch ~c h ool10o rn
fi Ol K S P I-!ING ~
Wo r ~h r P, 10
o m
Chur ch ~choal 9 I ~am
UMVf 6JOp rn
~ L AI WOO D ~ Wo1shrp 11om
Church ~c h ool 10 om
MI DDU: PORl ClU) 1l: ~
tfev Rob er tl:lu rngorne r
Hl:A lH
f.! ob ert
~ urn ga rner
l-'o st01
Wors hr p
IU 30
o rn
Chu r ch School CJ 30 o 111 UMVf tJ
pm
Ru rlond ~olern Cen ter Charge
f&lt; Ull ANU W rlbur Hrll 1-' o ~ !or
Wor shr p 10 JU o rn Churc h ~cha ol
'1 30 am
~ Ali:M Cl:NH: h' Chu r ch ~ch oo l
9 4 ~ o m worshrp 9 om

?&gt; 066€0

N•tionwide Ins. Co.
of Columbus, 0 .
804W. Main
992-2318 Pomerci'l

Ridenour
1V &amp; Appliance
Gas Service

119"113· 120

I:N l HIP R! ~I:

C F THE WAY

GUARDS- WE 'L L PAY
A LITTLE CALL OIV

ME 0'-1 A DE LIVfRv

fHA T 'LL @.E ONE O r: 'THE
F 1R .; 1 n-tl"-165 rNE L.00 1C

WHERE MA)OR

992-6655

Tuesday
Psalms

He" Jam es (or brtt
POM~ROY
warshrp ser vrce
9 1.) o m
~undoy $C heal
10 30
o rn
~ ev
R.ob e rl
M&lt;G ee

992-9962

r woNh eR

I'ETl ER PARK HERE
~ND WALK THE R E&lt;; J

IF THE JOI,_,T 15N'T
SR ISTLIIJ' WITH BODY·

POIN TED IT OUT 0 '-ICE
WHEN HE ~OD t: WITH

Co.

1191 05· 112

PO M ~ R OY C LU ~ li::R

YEAH . , MlKE \.\ORAN

212 W. Main

216 E . M.in

Monday
Psalms

COO Pl:f.lA l iVl: PA~I~ H
M~ 1H OO I ~ l CHURC H
Robert 1 l:lurngo rn er
lJ 1r ec tor

FRENCH'S
SUNOCO
SERVICE
CENTERS

chorce '

119 97 - 104

MI:I G~

SERVICE

Mill WDI'k .
Cabinet M.king
992·3978

you r nerghbors tn Amsterdam ? Maybe nol-but
such thmgs are happentng every day!

&amp;\~tnall

Middleport
Ph. 9'2-1155

'

RACINE
PLANING
MILl

Are Sponsored Each Week By The Following:

99l-2955

,·

Auction C.. II
Thlt Real McCoy)
1. o.
McCoy

Locust &amp; BHch
992-9911

Middleport, Ohio

These Messages

Prescrlpttons

9 _ The•l)aily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Sept . 29, 1978
OICK TRAt ' Y
(ForA RNI

We Fi t! Doctors'

Th rrd A ve the Re v W•llro rn Kn rt
tel pa sto r f.t o nold Dugan Sun
day ~chool !&gt;up t ( los5 e~ l or all
og es even rn g ser vrce 7 3(.) Brb le
stu dy
Wedne sday
1 :10 p m
you th serv iCes I-- n d ay l JO p m
Mll)OLH 'OR 1 ~ W HWI L l I!AP
liS 1 (o rn e ' A sh and Plum Noe l
He rrrnon p o s tal ~a rurdoy even
•ng ser ... .ce 7 JO p n 1
~u nday
SC hool 10 JO o m

:w

I H ~ 5A LVA 1 10N A t&lt;M Y 11 ~
l:l u trem ur Avo:
Po meroy l:nvoy
an d Mr s kay Wrn• ng oll rcers Jn
ch ar g e
!:tundoy holrness
mee trng 10 o m Sunday ~chool
10 JO a m ~ u nday school leade r
YI-'SM l: lorse Adams 7 JO p m
"olvarro n
mee t rng
vorrous
speolo.er~ and rnusrc $pe&lt; ral s
lhursda y 10 a m
ro 1 p m .
lad res Home league a ll women
1r1vrfed 7 30 p m p ra yer mee tr n g
and Br b le Stud y
l:lob b lep
IPa de1
~e v
Noe l
Herm on
te ache r

0 ---

:m

MIOOL~P O R 1

~

Compltto
Automotive
Service

Keepoakcr

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY

.

ELLIS &amp; SONS SOHIO

ll~

l rnest
~lr rc k lrn po~tor
~urrdo y churrh
'c hool lf ~0 o rn
M1 !. Hamel
l t~ e
&lt;,up t
•ll O I IHilf:j
WOfS ~Hp
10 Ju
MIOOli:YORl
~und ay ,&lt;hool
~ :w a m
Wrc hord Vaughan !ioup t
M ornrng worshrp 10
K-"v

:w

POMI:f.iOY CHU!o(CH O t- ! HI:
NAlAIU:NI:
Corne r Un •on on d
Mu lbe11y Re11 Clyde V Hender
t.an pa stor ~und o y school 9 30
a m Glen M cCl un g s. upr morn
'"9 w ar~hr p 10 30 o m evenrng
ser \lrCe I J O m rd week servrce
Wed ne sd o.,. l 30 p m

K&amp;C JEWELERS

. .

\VhiriD4flfl

Thursday
Psalms

APPLIANCE II

119129·136

Fnday
Ps alms
119 137- 144

DOUG'S
MARINE
SALES &amp;

PIZZA SHACK

Saturday
Psalms
119 145-152

Stare raft Pleasu,.e &amp; Fishing
Boat s,
MercurY
Outboard ,
Mer cru1

Reuter-Brogan
Insurance
Services
214

r;-~~

Eat In or
Carry Out
1l6 E. Main
991-6304
pomeroy

HE'Ll COST A lOT ... AND
Hf 't l MESS LIP TH E
MACH INERY " BUT YO U
lAl&lt; E WHAT YOU CAN
I.:.ET 1H£ SE DAYS ·

'I

(FACT IS, PHIL FUMBL f WOI't ' T

Gl AD YOtJ' RE
N0 1 MA D AT
ME Ut.! ClE
JfB ·

MESS THINGS UP AN'f
WOR SE'N JEB WOULD ··· )

I ' Y( 1'-\ ll UO UF EN A B \ 1
9 HORT 0 CAPITA l · COl
10 ~ I AVF CAPHAL 1' 0 P [ ~AH
· 'fl: S, St.,' E E MQNf Y

f R, l HIRED
PHtl FUM BLE TO
RUN rn· l~ ACioR

HO ' M'f K.NEE FEE l S
F"l t.l{ THI S KI ND 0'
Wf Al HER ... I'l l RUN
THAT l RACTO R ..
I'M A WHIZ AT
MACHIIIJ fRY .. ,

, YOUR k' NEF ••· NO
U 'SE YOU WORK IN '

MAKES MOOI Y, I I"H LU ~ '-.('!'(

SO HAR D

VIRGIL B.
TEAFORD SR.
216 S . second
Pomeroy
991 -3325

E. M.in

992·51 JO Pomeroy

FuHon-Thompson
Tractor Sales, Inc.

GASOLI NE ALLEY

::::::J

Don ThomDSOn Ford, Inc.

Deult Tractors. New Holland
Farm Mach1ner-;
Spring Ave. 9925101
Pomeroy

992-2196

has
been

If she doesn·

Slim does not
a1wa4s qet th;nqs

Let's qo!
This is a
rouqh
part of
town!

The man
drove Slim's
mother here
this
morn;nq!

This
place

461 S. ¥o rd. Middleport

Attend The Church
or your Choice

And where
is she? Its
past
ten•

worli. t here
what does
she do?

mixed up!

I'm worried! Wait ten more
What should
utes... and
we do?
tnen
decide?

closed
for
months!

This Sunday

@

BROWN'S
FI~E &amp; SAFID

Of Your Choice

Attend The Church

SONS STORE

_

..,. ........ .._._

Equipment

Groceries -

Sales.Service

This Sunday

General Merchandtse
Racme 949-2550

HEINER'S
BAKERY
Professional Serv1ce
Aenai -SchoolsWoddings
Chesler 985-4155

1-'rne Grove lhe Wev Wrllrorn
M•ddleswor l h
Pmr o ,
(hu r &lt;h
':&gt; e r ... rce~ 9 30 om ~ undoy ~c h ool
lU JOo m
t! f.IA OI:WRY
CH UR CH
0~
CHRI ~ 1 Mr Donald ~ol ey p o ~ lor
~u n doy H hool 9 JO o rn
wor
'.hr p '&gt;Civi(E' 10 300m ~ur1 day
!.Cf'o'r &lt;e'&gt; I p m
yo uth gr ou p
Wednesda y 'I p rn
AN 11QUITY t!AP TIS l Rev l:o r l
Jhuler
pa stor
Sun day school
4 3U o m Ch urch ~ervrce l p m
youth meet•ng 6 p m \uesdoy !:l r
bl e ~ tu d y 7 p m
CHURCH
Of
l H~
RA (I N f:.
NAZA H ~ N~
k ev John A (o ft
m an pas 1or ~r ank lr n Imbo den
chorrmon of th e tJo ord o f Chrrs
to on l rle ~ u n doy Sc hoo l 4 30
om
morn rng wor shtp
10 JU
~un doy even1n g w o r shrp
l :.tO
p m
Prayer m ee t tng W edncs
do y / 30 pm
RA CINt:. Hfoi ~ l ~Af'TI~ T . Do n l
Wolke,
Pa stor Ron nr€' ~ ol s er
~u n doy
'&gt;c ho ol su pt
~updoy
~c h ool 1.! JO o m
m o rni n g war
!.hr p 10 40 om Sun day evcnr ng
worsh1p I 30 Wedne5doy e ven
rn g l:l rb le s tud y 7 30
UAN V I l l ~ WI:: SLE YAN Re v R
0 l:lr own pa l! to, Sunday Sch ool
1.! 30 a m
rnornmg wor~ hr p
10 d ~ you th ~e r ll r ( e , b 4 ~ p m
evenmg
worsht p
7 30 p m
pray er and pro r$e Wednesday
'1 30prn
~ll V I:H RUN FRH BAPfi Sr Rev
Morvm Mwkm pastor ~ t eve lrt
1le Sunday sc hool sup t !&gt;undoy
s.c hoo l 10 o IT! , rnorn rng wa r
~h r p 11 a m ~ unday evenong
w or sh tp
I JO
!-'roye r mee rrng
and Brble ~ tu dy Th u r sday "I 30
p rn youth ser v rc e !I p m Sun

HM · M ·· fHAT'S RIG HT ANNIE ·

Bikers of
Good Breod "."''lll..tl~

. w.

nfE DAILY
SENTINEL

:w

Weekly

~ rble

'J :JO p 111
CHURCH 0~ CHR IST , P
0 H o~~: 4f:l"/ M rller !&gt; t Ma son W
Vo Sur1 doy l:l1bf e ~ t udy 10 o 01
Wo r sh rp 11 o rn and I p m Brbl e
Voca l
Jiudy Wednc~doy 7 p rn
MA~ON

mu~r(

A)!&gt;~M I:Il ¥

3U5ST!

f., JW 'l JU K.I\JOW ~\HA- V\Y W =E YA[;
PUT U" \V ITH. SA'\~LING AL\VAY:C
CAM ~ = {:jT W IW \'\::.~ \I::VER

H"- D A SC'U

-c 1,\Y 'JAM:: .. 'C

•Yi A-":E&lt;. HOW •\\C:C'-'
: CA?'\:::::'

5HE MUST ~!WE BEEN .-'\ SAINT.'
A LL THE \\OZE REA5-0 \I YCU VE

_:_::; ,

"' 1-5 '\JC.,.. =-4'S'-

GOT TO I'AA&gt;&lt;-:: iT

BE1\J&amp;

r---~

1\ \\,

-l-;;:=

=

\:::.L

"=- .
--- 1
-=t"
:L~

'-:: JU e-.1 :3""20K..
-::'&lt;: "..\ND A '\ D

:cv ,:; . . :;---=

-c
''"

r\1\At&lt;,:;:: ::::

A G &gt;~ IIBL::'&lt; e~W I= = 51l'CK. IT C'U-.-

JP TC HER!

\ J• &gt;\

A\ ::' _:.l(Y

I

~O rv ~::k' -r;o-~A \1

M05T \o\0.1\E 'J

Extraction

WOUL7.

992-2206 or 992-7630
Rt. 3, Pomeroy

~ tudy

Wcd n e~ do~

M A ~ON

'&lt;:IGHT G ~RY

YOU '&lt;E MY

Fe• turing Deep Ste1 m

448 Locust
992-3)93
Middleport

p m

THA-&amp; Ac L

YOUNG'S
CARPETING

MARK V STORE
Middleport

MiddleportPomeroy. 0 .

Sun day ~chool 1U am
Ho ward
~ AIN l~
Po rt land No {l rll' ~ood
McCoy '&gt; upt
M 01 1\m g ~ mn, o n
Wrlho rrr Rous h
po !. to r l&lt; u!&gt;s.ell
11 a m
~un doy nrght !&gt;to r v r ce~
Rnt cl ttf ch ur ch $Ch ool lJrrect o •
lh ii SIIOil l: ndeo vor ·1 30 p m
)undoy ~c h oot '1 JU a rt1 M a r 11
~on g ser .... 1ce ~ p rn
Pre o ch rng rng wors hrp I () 3U o m ~un do.,.
8 :w p m
M rdwoek
Pr ay e r ov er1rng s.crvr&lt;e f p m VJednes
rn e e t rng Wedne '!idoy f p rn kay day eve11rn g pr a yer se r v o(€'&gt; I JU
Ado rm loy l eader
P'"
( HUfll H 01-- Jt~ U~ l HH ISl
I:H: lHL~HtM ~AI-' 11~1
J.lev l:orl
l oc ated ot Hutl and on New Lrmo Shul p r po s. ro r W o r ~ h rp ~ervrce
Ho od ne .-1 to ~ore s t A n e 1-'or~
1.! JO Cl m Sund ay ~chool
I U 30
l&lt; ev flay Ro use po:. l or Wobe1 t om ~ r bl e ~ rudy and p r oye r ~er
Mu!. !l.e r Sunday !&gt; choo l sup! Su n
vrce 1hu r !l. doy l JO p m
day !.C hool I 0 30 a rn
w or'&gt; h rp
( ARHl O N CHUR CH K r ng~bury
f :JO p m 8 rble Stu riy Wed ne.,
Wo od Go r y Krn g pa s tor ~ undo y
d a y 7 ]() p rn
Sot ur day n•g ht '&gt;Ch oo l 9 JO o rn
Ra lp h Carl
p1oyer o;.er v•&lt;e 'J :10 p m
wper rntcndc n t eve nr ng war ~hr p
H~ML OC J&lt; G~O Vi: CHI&lt;15llAN
I JO
p rn
Proy e 1 me etr ng 1
Ho g er Warson po s ter K.e nnf! th Wpdne .. d o y 'I 30 p 111
By er Sun day ~&lt; h ool !&gt;u pt M o1 n
LON G
I:IOrlOM (H HI ~li AN
rn g w o r shrp
9 JO o 'l'
Su n
l:lru co !:l mrth
po s.ro r
Wallace
doyschoo l 10 30 o rn
evenmg l)orn ewood Su pt ~rbl e ~c h o ol
se r vrce 7 30 We dn e!&gt;doy "rbl e 4 J0 0 l1l
J-'1 C0Ch1n g SO I VIrP
~ t udy 'J JOpm
10 4 ~ a rn N o evPn rng ~e • v • c e
M1
UNION ~APli S 1
Oan
H Y5~ ll RUN fRH MI: I H O OI ~l
Wr l so n
Ju n doy
~&lt; h ool
CHU RCH
Re v Herb er r A rlrn g
supe r rn tende111 Sunday !&gt;c hoo l
pa stor ~undo y !&gt;c h oo l q JU o m
9 4 ~ a m ev •mrng wor sh rp 'l 3() Morn rng serv rce
10 30 om
p m Pr eyer m ee trn g 1 3U p rn
~ !o'onge lr s fr &lt;
!l.e r vrce I 30 p rn
W e dn e sday
l'r oy e t rn ee t rng f h ur~doy I 30
1UPP~R ~
PLA IN ~
CH RI 511AN
p '"
CHURCH
~u gene
Un der wood
I J.o:~~lJOM C O ~ PH M I )~IO N ot
pa~t or
Howard Col d w e ll
Jr
Ho ld
Knob
Wcv
lawren ce
~u ndoy
~chool
Su p !
~und oy
G luesenco mp Sr pa stor Roge r
~tho o l 9
o m
M ar nrn g ~e 1
Wr l l l o rd ~r ~un d oy school !loup t
ma n 10 30 a m ~und oy C¥enrng Sunday Hhool '1 JO o
t&gt;VE'Illl\ g
ser v1c e 7 p m
7 JO p m
Pr aye r
w a r !&gt; h rp
UTA R I
FA L L ~
U N II ~lJ m ee t rng W edn es day I 30 p m
I:IIU l HIUN Re v heelo nd No rrrs
't'o u thmeetrn g !,~nday !l 3Up m
pa sto r flo yd N orrr s sup! Sun do-, wr!h Dor, an d Mar tha M e odow~ rn
s.&lt; h ool Q JO a m
mo r nrng 5e r
charge
man , lO 30 o m Prayer ~er vr re .
WHITE!, CHAPH Coolv rll e RO
Wodne~d ay 7 30 p m
~e ... f.lo y Deete r p o!i tor Su nday
CHI:::SHR CHUJ.! CH 0 ~
THI: :tcho o 19 JO o m w or sh rp S.()tv !CC
NAZARI:::NI: Re v Herber t Gr or e
10 30 o rn f:lrbl c study and pray er
pa sto r Wo r shrp !.er vrce 1 1 o m
'ie r v rce W e dn esday l JU p m
do~
orrd f 30 p m ~un doy
Sun do.,.
IW lLAND
C Hf:. ~ll: R CHURCH 0 1-- GOO
~choo l 9 30om Rrch ard Bo r ton
RU TL AN O CHUHCH OF CHHIST
Hev Do nny H Coo k po~tor Sun
r.upt Praye r mee fl ng Wednes· Lo 11y (o lernon po ~ t o r Co ~un
dey s&lt;hoo l 9 :lO o m
w o r sh rp day l 30 p m
dov $Ch ool ~u pts . ')o m M cKrn nc y
$e r v•ce I I a m evenrn g s.er vrce
BRADF O RD
CHUR CH
0~
and Herb ~ H tll ~u ndo y sc hoo l a nd
7 00 yo u th se1v tee WednfHdo y
CHHI ST G obrre l Mu s past o r 1::1 1 co nunu r11 0 n 9 JO o rll Wor!&gt;h rp
"/ UOpm
ond com u n•on 10 3Uo .m
b le Sund oySchooi930o .m mor
l AN G~V Ill t:
CH RI Sli AN " '"9 ch urch 10 30 o m
5u ndo.,.
N U ll AN 0
( 0 M M UN 11 't'
CHURCH Robe r t M us se1. p o$ IOr
evenrn g
ser ... rce
7 00 p m
CHUH CH
~ vnd oy !&gt;c hool. 9 JO
~undoy 5Chool 9 30 a rn
lol oy Wedne1odo-, 5e r ... rcl!o 'J 30 p 1n
om
worshrp se r vrce . II o rn
Srgmon '&gt;u p t mo rn rn g worshrp
lA U REl CliFf FHH MfTHO OISl
Wedne sdor pray er mee trng 'I 30
10 30 Sun day ev1m 1n g serv1ce , CHURCH Rev f loyd F Shook , p 1n yout h ~ cr¥ rccs . !&gt;u ndoy I
'l J O m 1d · we ek servrcc , Wednes· pos te r
lloyd Wright
~ und oy
p m ~ und o.,. nrgh t worshrp 7 :JO
day lp m
lchaol Supt
Marmng Wor:s ht p
RU TLAN U CHURCH 0~ lHt~Y HA C US~ L HUHCH QF f H ~
9 JO 0 m
~u nday Sc hool I 0 10 NAl AJ.!I:NI: Rev lloyd 0 C.r unrn
NA l AR ~ NI: ,
Re v
Do le l!a ~s
a m Wednesday Pray er ond f:l r Jr pas l o r Sunday sc hool 9 JO
po s!o'
Bob M oote , Sun da y b le Study 'l 30 p rn . Sund ay eve n · am wor s hrp ser vrce 10 JU o rn
X h oo l !&gt; u p t . Sunda y sc hool 9 JO "'9 wors hrp 7 :J0 p m , Ch ar• Proc
Br oa dcas t lt'o'C over WMPO -, ou ng
am
morn1n g worshtp
I U 4 ~ 11ce fh urs d oy '/ p m
peo pl e:~
~ e t vrCO
I
prr'l
om e"'ongc lr s!tc ~er vrc e I p 1n
DI:XH H CHUf.ICH 0~ C HHI ~T
h on ge lr s tr c 1oervtt'e
I IU p rn
Wed nes day !&gt;erv rce s
proyt.•r
Chorl e • ~u~5e ll
~r
rnrn1 s tpr
Wf'd nf&gt; $doy !i.Pr vrcr•
I 3U p rn
and p1ar .,e 'J p m
Nr'llorenC' Rr ch Moco rnber
sup!
~u ndo~
M A ~O N (I)U N 1 Y
you lh
I
pIll
Dor ly
prnyer
wo r r.hr p ~ ,,, '
l l f.l!,l O,t)UIH l k/ J !:!A/-'11)1 Co r
scl •ool . '1 30 o rn
lflf''('fr nq ~ 30 a rn Ml"' ll ~ pr Oyc&gt;r
., ,~,._. 10 30om l:l 1ble ~ r udv lu(' ~
rrt} r o l ~c· &lt;Or\fl 011d A ••d('lr son
"'"c tmq ~oturdo y I p rn
day l JO p n1
M o-.orr
fl o.s to r ~ ron~ luwtht..•r
lUHJ UN I ll 0 8R fl HHI:N IN
RH WC.ANlli:D
CHUW ( H 0 1 )undoy \choo l 1.1 A) n rn
war
C HR I~l Urlen '-1 Bloke poster
J~ ';!U) ( HkiSl 0 1-- LA l HR UA Y ~hrp •. orv r(e l l u m . an d 'J JU

WINNIE

Fire EEKt•lngiJiS~IOrs
F1re

O f- GO O
Oudd " ' 9 lon e Ma son W Vo
Che~ t cr 1ennon t !-'as tor !&gt; un doy
S.C hoo l 1.! &lt;4 ~
a m
Ch ,l d r en §
Chur ch 6 4 ~ p m Young People s
&gt;ur v rce b d ~ p m
l:vongelr str c
~c1 vrcc 7 JO p m Women s M• s
~ronor y Co unnl 10om Ill lo t an d
thud l uesdoy s Pro.,.er ond 8 tbl e
~t ud y We d nesdo-, , 'J 30 p m
HAH 1 ~ O RO CHURCH OF CHHI ST
IN t. HN IST! AN UNI O N . The Hev
Wrl liorn Camp bell pO $tor· Sun day
J.c hoo l q 3U o m Jam es Hu g hes
~u p !
even rng ~e r vic e , "! 30 p m
Wcdne!&gt;d oy
e\le nrng
p ray er
rnee trng 7 JO p m You !h proy e r
.,cr "'ce e a ch Tuesday
,_. AIR V II:W
BIBt ~
( HUN C H
le tar t W Vo Rt I Re v Ch arles
Hargro ve$ p o!. to r Worshr p se r
voce!&gt; , 9 :10 a rn . Su n doy sc hool
II o m
e veni ng wo r sh rp , 7 30
p m
Tuesday co llage pray er
meetr ng o nd Brb le st~ dy 9 JO
a m ~ o r s h 1 p ser ... rc e Wednes
day 7 30pm
CAl VAR Y BIBLI:- CHUR CH , now
loca ted on flomerov Pike, County
Woo d 7~ near Flatwood s Rev
Block wood po ster . Se r vices on
~un doy at 10 30 a m o nd 7 30
p m -w rth Sunday sc hool , 9 30
a m
Brbl e stu dy
Wedn e'!idoy ,
130 prn
INO~Pf:NDI:NT
H OliNESS
C H U ~ ( H INC
Pe arl 51 . M1d
d lep o r t
Rev
0 De l l Manley
po$lor
Son n y Hud son Sunday
..&lt;hool Sl •p t Sunday "hool , 9 30
o rn , evenrng wor s hrp, 7 JO p m .
P1oyer
a nd
pro 1!e
$er v rce ,
Wed ne sd ay . 7 30 p m.
1HI: PI: O PLI: 'S CHUR CH OF
POMI:ROY
Co rner Morn and
Co urt
~h
th rrd fl oor over
lrghthous.e Rc! tou ro nt
Henry
Cook po s tor )undoy ~c h ool . 10
n rn . morn tng wor shrp 11 om
c11 en mg ser11 1Ce 7 JO Wed nas
doy evenrng se r v rcu 7 :W In
l t"rdf!n o rnru o tional fu l l g o~p el.
RUTLAND CHUR CH or C.O O
Po ~ro r
Oer1 111~
l:lol es
Sundoy
~c h oo l 10 o m - worsh ip ser111 ce
II 30 o. m and 7
p m Pray er
mr&gt;e t1119 W ed ne!.doy 7 30 p .m

Oewey
Krng
pas tor
td1so n
We ave r on rstonl Hen r y f::bl 1n ,
Jr Su nday sc hool 5up t Sun do .,.
sc hool 9 30o m
m orni ng wor ·
$ht p 11 a m ~un doy even rng ser
vrc e 'J 30 p r ayer rnee l rn g, Thurs ·
do y 'JJO pm
SYRACUSI: FIH )T CHUJ.o: ( H OF
GOD
No t Pe nt ecos tal Re v
George O rl er po~to r Wor $hrp
~ er .... rce Sund ay , 9 45 o m
Sun·
day sc hool, 11 o .m .. wo t !l.h !p ser ·
vtce . 7 30 p m . Thur sday p r aye r
mee trng 7 30 p . m
M T Ht:RMON United Hre thren
Ch urc h Sunday School 9 30 o m
Worship
serv rce
I 0 AS o m
Prea ch i ng services every s~ndov
ol terno t 1ng w1th C E. Wednesday
prayer meetmg 7 30 p m Me v
Jomes
Leac h
pas tor
Dav id
Holter lo y l eader

JfHOVAH 'S WITNESSES , 1 mde

Geor ge s Creek Rood
Ch u r ch
r.c hool 9°30 a rn . mo1 n rng wor
sh1 p 10 30 cvenrng ~ C r \l' t Ce I 30
l-' roy e1 meelrr'g W edn e s-day 7 30

pm
Sl

PAUl lU T H ~ RAN CHURCH,
lorn er o f Sy ca more a nd Sec ond
Sts Pomeroy Th e He . . Wrl l rorn
Mrddle swo r th
1-'aMor . Sun day
X hoo l ot 9 4 ~ om o nd Chu rch
Ser vice'&gt; I I o m
SA CRED -tt ~Af.I T , Rev Father
Pau l D W"h on p o$ tor Phon e
9911 825 Saturday eve nrng Mo ss
730 Sun d oy Mon fjond 10 o m
Con fes ston , Sa tu rday 7.7 30p m
VICTO HV BAPTISl - O n th e
Rou te 7 bypou Jame s E Kee see
JXI S. tor Su nday schoo l 10 o m
mornrng war s hrp 11 a rn : eve n ·
tn g ser v rce 7
TRIN ITY Ch r 1stia n Assembl y,
Coolvr !le
G1lber t Spen cer
pastor Sunday sc hool' 9 30 o m
m ornrng worsh 1p 11 o m Sunday
e\len 1ng
ser vtce
7 30
p 111 ,
mrdweek p ray er se r v1ce W ed nes ·

eo5t of Rut lan d junc t1on al k o ute
124 ond N oble Summ rt Rood (T·
174} Sundoy Bible l ect ure 9 30
o , Watchtower stud y, 10 30
am Tuesday Ot ble 5ludy , 7 and doy 7 30 pm
8 15 p m
Thu ,.d a~ , theocrotrc
MOUNT
O live
Co mm ~n rty
iCh oo l ,
7 30 p m . , servrc e . Church , long SaHom Russe ll
meeti ng, a 30 p m .
Clrn e , supen ntenden t
Sunday
HOPE BAPTIST - 570 Gra n1 St
Sch ool I 0 o m Youth gr oup and
Middleport Bobby Elk in s , p as to r
pra yer meehng$ Wed nesday 'J 30
Sunday Schoo l 10 a m , wonhrp p m Ch u r ch ser.... ices Su nday 'J 30
s.e r vke I 1 am . evenrng ser v rce , p m lowrern:e Bvsh, p ast o r
l JO p m
Thursday
pra yer
FA ITH BAPTI ST Ch ur ch . Mason ,
meeting a n d S1ble study 7 30 meet at Un•t ed Sl eet Wo rk er s
pm
Un ron
Hall
Rorlro od
Sh eet ,
RUHAND FNE &lt;Will BAPTIST M0$00 Po~ tor Rev Joy M11 chefl
Chu rch
l eland Holey p asto r
Mmmng worship 9·45 om Sun
Su n day school , 10 o m evenrng day Sch oo l 10 30 o rn
Pra yer
se r vice ,
'1 .30 p m
Pro-, e r meet1ng Wedne sday 7 30 p m
mee 11ng, Wednesdov . 7. JOp m
CHURCH 0~ GOD o f Prophecy ,
located o n the 0 J White Hood
off highway 160 Sunda)l School
10 om
Superln tenderv John
Loveday First Wednesda y nig~t
of mon th CPMA ~erv l ces, uteond
Wednesday WMB mee t i ng th,rd
!~roug h
fifth
y ou th
servtce
Georg e Cr o yle , pastor .

FRANK &amp;

EH&gt;"~ :7~~~~~;-r.:;~~;;;;!~~~:--=-~==:-:::~:=-:::-::::;-1

,,- llll

I

~p~:: ::;;~~~

BRIDGE

Po$f'E:'I"T. iu'l" PLeASE

570

'fHf SouND

INHEN liP DOE.$.

NORTH
• AJ 2

• 62
t A 10 8 7 2
• A43

BORN LOSER

T.IUJ~ 10 '()U ~~IKe

TO i\ ~TICK.!

~~

Ht\S IT &amp;ZIJ
Si tJCE' we HAD AWCXXJ

BRAD FORD

CHURCH

Vulnerable : Both
Dealer : North
West North East
Pass
Pass

Pass

JUBILEE CHRISTIAN CENTER -

It

Pass

2t

Pass
Pass

••

Pass

Th r cvcn1 ng stars arc Mars
and Venus
·nl i!Sf' b'Jrn un thi s date a r e
unde r Lhl' s1gn of Libra.

South

t•

"•li

rJ

4 NT
You i1old :

• 5

r)

t A 9i5 4

+ AJ 32

By Oswald Jaroby

\..
;

}

-:.:=::

South decides that sm ce
the game is rub ber bridge
and the hour is la te he will
settle for siK spades .
When h e

sees

the d ummy

&amp;:-he is glad that he did just
that. He a lso is slig htly wo rried about six.
He takes his ace of hea rts
\\
and plays h" king of ~rumps.
both opponents fo ll ow
has no trump loser .

I

FITHES

t K 32

and Alan Sontag

0
-

VINGE

6.

Pass

mandate.

ln 1936, '" the pres1dent1al
V1ct or Mollo as ks, "Can
campaign bet ween Fra nklm
South mak e sure of ha s conD Huuseve ll and All Landon ,
tract at t h" stage 111 t he
Act or s Gen e A utr~ and both part•es went on radw for
proce edings''''
The answer 1s that he can. 'l rcvo r H (r \Hlrd were born on th e hrst li me
provided clubs d on 't brea k 9- Sept 29 - t he form er m 190i
0 or B-1
The correct sa fe ty pla y as ftftlf'i"Mf ~'if ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
to lea d a club to dummy 's
~ ~ ~Ul~ ~
by Henrr Arnold and Bob lee
ace ruft a cl ub . ente r
dun'uny " ' th a trump , lead Unscramble trtese lour JumbleS .
a nd ruff duinm y ·s las t club one leHer to each square to lorm
lou r ordtnary words
a nd pla y hr s last heart
It doe sn't matter wh1 c h
opponent wms t hat hea rt
tn ck A heart or cl ub lead
w&lt;il allow him to ruff m
dumm) and discard one of
~ ,.,. .. "'" r""'9" '''l u ""
."".
h&lt;S d•amonds wh1le a dia mond lead
take h1 s d• a ·
mond frnesse for h un

I CASK!i9

Opemn'g lead • Q

(

"'

SOUTH

+ J

:m

·----.. ----

• Q6 4
• Q9 6 5

• A4
t K J 9

OF

"I hit the jackpot! I found
1101110 ol my dad 'a old report
cardll"

EAST
• Q 10
• K975

• K! i6543

S BC

CHRI ST G ob rlel Mro . pastor
Sunday sc h ool , 9 30 a m , morn·
mg ch u r ch , 10.30 o .m Jun1or
HUI'lANU APO~TOLI C CHURCH chvrch program under d i rection
(,)f JHU!, C HR I ~ T Elder James
of Koren Mror: for children 2· 10.
"A1IJE'r Hrbl c study Wed nesd ay d ur ing regular chu rch h our i n
I 30 p. 1n ~undoy Sr hool 10 om church basement Sunday even·
) IJndoy nrgh t ser v •ce 'I 30 p m
ing aervrce 7 p .m .. Wednesday
PO MHOY
WEHHA N ser vice 7 : :t0 p .m .
HO UNt:!&gt;S
Han rson vrlle Hood

WEST
• 9
•QJl08 3
• • 3
+Kl08 72

POT R&lt;»GT :?

WHO BROKE MV
WINDER WIF THIS
DADBURN HOSS SIIOE ?

Grant St , M•ddleport Mev Bobbt~
flk rns. Sunday school 10 om . ,
II , even ing
mo tni ng worsh i p
wo r,hip
7 30 p m .. Thu"doy
even ing Brbl&amp; study-'ond prO)Ier
m&amp;etin g , 7·30 p m. Affiliated w 1th

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

On making a safety play

LAFF-A-DAY

HOP&lt; SAPTIS1 CHA PEl

friday , Sept. 29

irLANJC. ONe::.! IN A WHILl',
,.~ OfF

a nd the latter m 1916.
On thiS day tn history:
Unitt•d l'rt'sS lntf' rnational
In 1769 . the U S. War
Toda 1s Fnciay. Sept 29. the
Depa
rtment set up a reg ular
272nd da y uf 1918 v.lth 93 to
Arm) of 700 men to serve for
ft)llow
lb e moon 1s ap proachmg three vear s
In ·t923. Great Bn ta m
It s ne\\ pha se
rh £' mor nm g sta rs a re bega n to govern Palest me
under a League of Nations'
i\•1 crcur~ ..Jup1L cr and Saturn
Til E ,\LA MAC

1

0

Your partner opens one

spade. Second hand jumps t o
four hearts . Both stdes are
vulnerable. Wha t do you do ')
We bid four s pades . There
IS no g uarantee here, but
tha t four-heart bid has emba rrassed us a nd left us a
tou g h decis iOn
, ]'; f&lt;'WS P AJll&lt;" l&lt;

I• N1'Fill '!l1 SE AS.&lt;;N

tEXNOST I

I) I

Print answer hare ·

DENII~'T
&lt;&amp;FII: I N~

IEEIH,

Now arrange Jhe crrcled letters to
form the surpnse answer. as sug·
gested by the aoove cartoon

rn (XI I I I I ];
(Answers tomorrow } '

r

Yesterdays

(For a copy of JACOBY MOO ERN. send Sf to " Wm at
Bndge · care of th is ne wspa ~
per P 0 Box 489. Ra d10 C1ty
Sta/JO n. New Yo1k. N Y 10019 )

[J

. HOW AN AN61't'Y

I

Jumbles NIPPY MOUND GLANCE EMPIRE
'.
,
Answer What you'd expec t t o pay for an acupuncture ,
treatmen t - PIN MONEY
"'

Jumbte Book NO 10, wtrh tnt 111881 110 puzztel.. II ~ lor 11 35 pc*·
paid from ... ~. cJo this rww1pnper, Box 34, Notwood, N.J. 01848 lnraiUdt

your rwne. address, tip ooc:te and makl cMdCIPIV81*10 tjeuul$4($l

•·

�'\
\0 - The DaUy Sentinel, Midclleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, Sept. 29,1978

.
..\ulu Sail"!!

Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash
WANT AD
CHARGES
1 ~ Word!; ur UuUt&gt;r
Ce~s h

100

ltbt r
41 \Ill :,.IIi
J tlll ys
6 dlt,vs

C'IU!rKt'

[.:,0

'"
'"'"

100

:.!~

J.OO

:!75

RELO C AT I NG
TO area .
N eed 3 or " bedroom tlouse
to rent or tease
W il t
f urn i sh
r e f eren
ces . deoos 1t .
Be r nard
K i ngs l ey , Box 631 , Qrr .
v ille , Oh io.

Eiu.:h wunl ovtr Uw nununwn IS
i t.'t'lli.S pt-r word · ~r day .
AWi r unnUl!( uth~r U101n L'IJt ~· utt v ll!
day ... \10'111 bt· d\a l t;t"'.! al th.. I d;n•

words

IS

r~&amp;tto .

In mt'tnory, Cart! vf Thanks dtlll
6 tcllls pt'f wunl . t:l 00
11W1unwn. Cilll.'ih 111 at.lvant't'
Olu t uar~

Mubtlt' HUI IW ~Sal~ arK.I Y&lt;trd ~ l ~s
an• l:tt'l't' ptt'd only wtth c&lt;~sh w1t h
urdt'r 25 t't'rll l'hilrge fur atl!'i l"ilrry·
U l~

PAINTS

'
For ~ k

BoK Nwnbcr In Cart• uf Tht.• &amp;n-

Uilt' l.

T H REE BEDROOM house
107 L oc ust St . • Pomeroy
S150 per month plus S. l OO
depostt
Re f erences
992·
JJ60 a ft er 5 p .m

-------------COU N T R Y MOBI L E Home
Park . Ro ute 33 , nort h o f
Pomer oy . La r ge lots Call
992 .7479

HUTCH SOLID ha rci r oc k
maple . 9C1 ? 9975 .

1968 F OR 0 1 ~ ton p ic kup ,
short bed 6 cy t w i th topper
Call 9915 11 7 after 5 p m

Red ,
SWEE T POTA T OES
wh i te . and yellow Phone
8113 2432
Ro b ert w. Lew is,
Rt 2, Ra c tne , SR 114 .

l'et.1 UISI:'I'lWII

T WO
BE D ROOM
nome
Rea l n ice
on ly . 992·3314.

GRIME S GOLDE N , Red
Det t c.ous .
.
G o l den
Del ic •ous apples
Fi tz
patr i ck
O r cha rd ,
SR
68 9
614 669 37 85 .

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
Mvnda\
Noon un Satiml ll ~

Tul'stilA)
thru F nd&lt;t~
~ p M
Utt' U..y t.lt'forl' pubhntltutl
SumJ;:n
~ p M
Fndit ~ dftt'nhMIII

N oti ~t·&amp;
F"O~

YOU R:

comp l ete
t'lous ing r~mod~l i ng , con
s trvct ton and ma tnten an ce .
g i ve J R . a t r y . R ef er ence
a~,~aitabt e .
R eason a ble
pr ic es PI'IOn e 99 2 51 91

GUN
SMOOT .
Rac i ne
Votuntetr F i re Dept E'olerv
Seturday 6 30 p .m . at t he ir
build1n; in B ashan Fa c
lOr \I ct'lolo.e guns on tv
NO HUNTING or r resgass 1nQ
on my property w it hout
germ tU ion
Juc:tv
McGraw

GU N SHOOT
Ra c ine Gun
C lub
E'olery Sunday 1 pm
Factory cnoke g uns ont.,.
NOTICE
OL I VE Tow n
!t.h tp Trusr~es Wt ll l ake
app licat ions for a . graoer .
operator , al Reed 's Store
1n Reec:IS'ol t lle . O H ur'lf •l
Satu rday e'We ni n'Q , Se p
t
30th

W anlt•d lu BuJ
WANT TO buy : elect r i c or
gas coppertone r ange . Al s-o ,
draw dr ap ery roos After 6,
call 304.882.2560
WANTED . B lACK w e ln u ts
Br ing your bl ack wa ln uts to
Excelsior Sa lt Works . Inc ,
Box ?67 . Pomeroy , Onto
-45769
Plly ing top pn c e
afte r they are hauled
Startmg Oct 1

------------CHI P
WOOD
Poles
m ax
d i a meter
10 "
on
largest end , S8 SO per to n .
Bund teo stab , S6 SO per to n
De ltv ered to OhtO P~llet
Co , Rt 1. PomNoy
992

2689

ONE
BED R OOM
home
992 2598.

mob 1l e
AdulTs

mob 1l e

SHARE A P T
l tvi ng t or
eld erly on l y tn Pomero..,.
av a il a b le
tn Nove mber ,
every t h i ng
fu r nish
ed
exce pt medicahon
S l75
p er mon th
covers
a ll .
Write An n a Ha tnes , 9 57
Lockbour n e
Rd.
Col u mou s, OH 43206 Call
col - teet J.253 -511SI

SMA L L
new
house .
2
b edroom , wa ter furnishe d ,
adulls only
No dogs . S. SO
se cur i t..,.
deposit
61 4 37 8
61 76

TRUMPET
A ND
Si n ge r
treadle sew i ng
mac h ine
Both 1n ex c e ll ent con
Otf to n Ftrewood . 949·2351! .

T IMBER POMEROY Forest
Pr o
ducts Top p r l c e for
sta nding saw t 1mber Call
99'1 5965 or Kent Hane y , 1
446 8570

YARD SA L E We d, Fr t and
Sat at Letart. 1nd house
pa st gas s ta
t1on . watch
tor signs Clothes , w oo d
burner . too ts, d ishes . rugs
and oth er i tems 9 t i t d ark

OLD
FU RN ITU RE ,
tc e
boxes . brass beds . 1r on
bed s . desto.s . etc , co mpl ete
nou sehot a s
Wr t te M 0
M tll er , Rl
4,
P ome r oy
o r c al l 99'1 7760

YARD SA LE Sept , 19
30
776 G ra nt St , M iddleport .
TO'JIS . good c l otht ng . ha1r
drye r . m any mise art rcl es
R a1n
1n g ood co nd !lion
date Oc r ~
7

OLD COI N S, pocket wat
c hes , c l ass nngs . w edd 1n g
b and s. dtam ond s Gold or
silver
Call Roger Wa m
sle y 74 '1 ?JJl

YARD SALE
T h urs. and
s::r , , Sept
28
29 at the
Pa ul Baer r es tden ce hrs t
t arm on the r tght past the
h igh wa y g ar a ge on Rt . 7 .
Boys '
ta ll
a nd
wi nter
clo thes . Stie J T and some
1T Jp w el ry
Kn tc k kna cl&lt;s
an d m tSC

WE PICK up tun k auto b0d1es
cuy tng ju nk cMs scr ap
~ron , c a t
t er1 es and metals
R tder 's Sal'ol age , SR 12 11 ,
P omeroy
992 5468
OLD MOTORCYCLES and
p a rts
Dol" sn' t ha ve to run
992 6]45
WANTED
T O buy
100
H e tf er ste ers and bull c. alf
Also some co ws and l ar gl"
bul ls 6 14 593 5132 anyt,me
WANT TO b uy 1967 Dod ge
Cor one I 440 949 ?470

Uel\"' W ant&lt;&gt;d
B O DY A ND Cl eanu p men .
Harol d Hy sell' s Garage ,
Ap p ly in
R utl and . Oh io
person or ca ll 74? 31 54
NEED TRUCK Or t'v'e r 1m
med t ately
Prefer
ex
per 1en ce but not necess ar y
M us t be 21 years o f age ,
app ly 1n p er son Po meroy
L andmark .
ETA TITLE VI Must ce
unemployed 15 of last 20
weeks , re~ i dent of Me lQs
Co . . meet federa l incom e
gu ide li nes Cont!Ct OhiO JOb
Ser'olices . Eq u al Opportun i ty
Employer ( 8) Pos it ions on
P lat Map Upd ate P roject
BA B YSITTER NEE D E D for
2 Smllll ch i ldren in the ir
nome . 992 6062
N EEUt:U
BA B Y Sit I £:.1&lt;
for 1 c h i ld , 11 days a week .

992 ·2033.

l AKING ~ppl ic at io n~
for ser'ol ice stat i on at
ten da nts Apply i n person at
office M onday . Must be 18
ye ar s or older
Pon-eroy
Landmark .

NOW

WA N TED : EXPERIENCED
body man A pp ly i n person
a t B l ll 's Q ual ity Body Shop.
Ml dd leoor t

l:aritping EquipDI&lt;'Ut
TRA VEL T RA I LER t or sale .
1972 Mark Twa in 19 ft 741 -

2566

.

........ .. ............... .
'
'

GF T V

YARD
SAL E
T hurs an d
Fr 1
F r ances
Allo.tre
res 1d ence . Harr •sonvtll e .
Y A RD SA LE F r t , Sitl , Su n
29, 30 , Oc t 1 10 am .
Sept
O tshes . rad~o .
cl othes ,
ant t oues and m t sc P hil
Bal dw tn re stdence . 1 mile
N Beacon Stat to n on Rr 7
YARD SALE
C li ll on , WV
Fr tday only Sep t 19 9 t o
4
Dana Le w 1S re si de nce
Follow s1gns
GARAGE SA L E 27 , 78 . 29 5
miles on Eagle R tdge Rd
Tur n of! Rt 7 a t Mem orv
G ard ens Ce me t er y
TW O F AMILY Y ar d Sat e .
F r i and Sat , Sept 19 and
30 Fr om 9 t.t 4 AI 20 4
Lastev St acro ss !r om ol d
Sug ar R un School . We have
di"'a pes . bedsprP aels , t u r
; nr l u r e . d ishes , tamps and
real
n ic e
dres ses
Sometn tn g tor e'oleryone
Watson Sm i th
YARD SALE Sept 29 and 30
9 4 AI Hys ell Run F ref'
Metho~ts t
Parsonage
O tshes , c loth i ng , m ts c
items Hy se l l Run Rd
YARD
SALE
I I 1t ra i n ,
ga r age . Fr !. and Sa t 9 ·5 6
cyt Chevrolet eng tne . Baby
bed , and tables and co ff ee
table , v 1se , t i res , baby
1t ems , ~ few an t i qu es 6th
.on r;..\,ght on N ew Hope Road .
Henry Hartmen . c nes rer ,
Ohio 985 1839

t" ur ~ k
BLACK AND Wl'11l e porfabte
Zen i th TV 19" wttn srana

992 5183.
16 FT S EA Sl fH ba ss boat .
115 E'Wmru d e . Full..,. r igged .
992 3193
PLA Y PEN . ca r sea t 5n d
wa l ker Goo d c ond tt ion .
98.5 .t 259 , an y time .

--------------

1977 GM C P I CKUP . 22 ,000
miles . Air con d i tion i ng
Good con d it ion Call 61-4 698 ·
3809 after I! p .m .

~

--~---- ,--------

MAIN
POME.B.QY. 0.
~· -·
SHOULD BE SOLD - 3

·-.

bedroom ranch , 2 baths,
c entral air , good full

basement, large lot, only 8
old , good condition .

-f=:~~;S21.000. 00.

•, ll.

Hotpo1111 Appl
S.tll' PrrCI"',

Jack W. C.lr',('Y
Mqr.
Phon•· 997 /18 1
F IVE P I E CE d in e t te se t . 99 2
7040
1962
DO D GE - 3• t on 4
whee l d r i v e, r u ns good .
1966 Plymouth
Valiant.
50 ,000 m rles , 6 c yt ,auto ,
r ea lly n1ce Phone 949 27 63
19 75
DAT SUN
PICKUP
Lo w m i iPa ge , go od c on
d ttton , step bumper , good
tt res , tru c k m tr ron, . 52B 50
985 3979 .
4

HP OUTBOARD motor
F ou r 8 15 M 16 5 l tr f' S 57
g ) llon
wat e r heater
Pts ton ty pe wat er pump
Axle spr i ngs adn l t r es
t o m ake t r a 1l er
St ant
si x Plymout h w i th std
t ran smtS Ston
D ouble
b ar re l shotgun
500 wall
Demon l i nea r
100 watt
H E C ltnear Phone 949
2763

·I

OFFER -

This 2·

home is located on a
street in Middleport .
livable conditlon -

Starflrid at S13,500.
RANC IN EXCELLENT
CONDITION - 2'1' acres, 2
car garage. wood burning
fireplace , n ice k i tchen ,
patio
and
barbecue ,

BELOW FAIR MARKET
VALUE at 525,000.00.
10 LOTS - in the country ,
ni ce 1 floor plan home w ith
basement , bar n, other
buildings . Fruit trees and

berlles . A stea l at
51 1.700 .00.
MINI FARM - Over 5
a c res , remode led and nice
1 floor plan hom e , barn ,
storage build i ng , goOd

fenced pasture . ONLY
516.500 .
IN THE COUNTRY - Near
Pageville--Very nice home
in e)(c:ellent condition , the
house must be moved-

56,000.00 .

ALS0--15 nice acres of
gro und to put house on . Ca ll
for details.

EXPERIENCE,
KNOWLEDGE &amp; HARD
WORK SELLS HOUSES.
WE NEED LISTINGS,
CALL TODAY.
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
Hank. Kathy &amp; Leona
Clelond
99l-2259- 99l-2568
992-6111

197 3 TERRY TRA IL ER 27 fl
A C , r ol l ou t
awn•ng .
power c on
'v'e rt cr
Ex
ce llent
co ndtl ton . S4SO O
l 1rm
4 Gooa year L 78
15 t 1res and wheels . ap
prox 700 m lie~ . SJO O 742
166 7

KENNEBE C
P OTATOES ,
available t h tS week . Paul
Sayre , Portland , Greal
Bend Rd
64 3 1159 1

NEED A WATER
SOFTEN ER?
L et Pomerov Landmark
soften &amp; condition vour
wat er w tfh co -op wat er
soft enN . Model UC · SVt!

•289.95
vour wa te r

9 ... Jack W. Carsey , M9r .
Phone91'2-l181

THREE GER MAN Shepard
p u pp teS
6 weeks ol d . V Pry
playful
741305 7
POINT
C H OCO L A TE
Si amese cats
I ..,.ea r o td
992 5016
TWO PUPPIE S Moth er tS
spr inge r span ie l . fath e r tS
poodl e 992 7416

1976 N ASHUA 14 11. 65 1
b e droom
Jl 1 b ath . un .
derp tnn1 ng , S.1500 and
assume
lo a n .
9-49 26 83
or 843 331\
1910
19 70
1965
1968
1~ 55

Amt'lerst 50x 12 '1 BR
Champion 60 x1? 2 BR
Gener a I 60x 11 1 B R
PMC 52x 12 2 BR
P r a ir ie Sc ho oner 18 x 8

BR
1973 Roya l Embassy 68 M14 J

BR
1~.59 Sta r SOx lO 2 BR
1973 SI1Jr 60x 14 2 BR
1968 Star 60x 12 2 BR
1970 Syl'ola 60x12 2 BR
1968 Villages 60xl2 2 BR
1964 Wind so r 5h 10 2 BR
1970 K ir k wo od 12M60 3 BR
8 S MOB I LE HOME SALES
PT . PLE ASA NT , W .VA

HOBSTffiER
REALTY
GeorgeS. Hobstetter Jr .
Broker

Your Full Time
Rea l Estate Broker

Office 99l-6JJ3
NEW LISTING- 7 room ,
full basement, n ., baths,
gas heat, located on E.

older

home

located

South

Jrd

Avenue .

information

on

Hilton Wolfe, Assoc .

Home Phone 949-l589
Georg! S. Hobstetter ~ Jr.,
Broker
Home Phone 992-5739

V .500 .
MIDDLEPORT

hig h water w ith n ice vi ew
and shade trees . 4 to 5
bedroom hom e. all ci ty
utilities, c entrl't l air and
heat , basement, 4 porches,
and storm w indows .

BUILDING-

also small res i dence with
bath , and all city utilit ies .
A c heap way to make a
sta r t f or only Sl 3,000 .
w ith 3 bedrooms , bath ,
natu r al gas fu rna ce, ci ty
w ater , large lot for garden

and parkmg. A good buy at
$9,500.
NEW COUNTRY HOME dr i lled we l l , nice c arpeting
and o ld log ho use for
com pany . 28 a cres of land

with sale . Lots of road
f rontage

near

the

ne w

bridge
OLDER HOME - In tho
country on good country

road . 3 bedrooms, bath ,
and se veral outbuild ings on
one &amp; one-th ird ac res . Just

516,000
JO ACRES

- . Near

Old

Cellulosic [wood"fiber)
Thermal insulation
Slivo30 pet. to SOrt.
on hNitng cos
Experience end
'
fully Insured
Free Est.
Call99l-l712
8-10-1mo. (Pd.)

2 door , 4 speed .

OHIO VAU.EY ROOFING
AND
HOME MAINTENANCE
SERVICE

CHEAP!

All types of roofing, guHers
&amp; downspouts,
experience .

guaranteed.

vurs

20

All work
Call Tom

Hoskins, U9-2160 .
Estimates.

Free

In Middleport between
Third &amp; Fourth StrNt-ofl
Mill Street just behind
Tony's Carry OUt.
Open Saturday 10·4 p.m.
Sunday 12 noon to 3 p.m.

9-7·1 mo.

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING
Residential o~nd commercial. Cilll for estimate. 24
Hour service. Any day,
anytime.

....
.....,. ......
Service
,,_.._....,...

Phone 915·3806
Jack Ginther 915-3106

SMITH NELSON.
MOTORS, INC.
I'll. 992-2174

ES TATE . W i ll

sell to 120 acr es . wht'ltever
· y ou wa nt with 8 y ea r old ,
ra n ch s tyle
2400 sq . A
h o u se .
3
bedroom ,
:2
full batns , ce ntral a ir and
h eat h ea t pump , well in .
su ta 1ed on g ood road , ci ty
w a t e r .
Tr ul y
bea ut i ful home . 2 barns , 2
pond s , J ca stur es, all n ew
fe n c~:&gt; ,
t 1m be r. 105 ' n ew
m ach i ner v she d a nd work
sh op , 25 acre s In meado w .
For appo inf men t to see ,
c all o wn er . 61-4 . 949 ~2763

see

to

apprec iate .

room ,

fireplace .

several

out buildings . Owner being
transferred

Price

535,000.00.
CALLUSFORALLYOUR
REAL ESTATE NEEDS.
8114 w. Main
Pomeroy
992-2291
Allor Hours
call992-7133
CONTACT :

Ph. 992·ll48

10·30 c

1E X CAVA TING , dozer , loader
and b a c kh oe w ork ; dump
tru c k s an d to -bo y s for
h ire ; w i ll haul fill d irt. to
so i l , li mes tone and c;~ra v el.
Call Bob or R oger Jef f ers ,
p t'l on e
99 2. 7089 .
d ay
nigh I p h one 99 2·3525 or 992 ,

EXCAV ATIN G
Se r ~,~ice .
Ph one

renovated

home with dr illed well , and
on
water
and • State
H ighways . Nice vftw and

washer. Beautiful dining room with sliding glass doors
leading out to large desk. Large living room and family
room , and to finish 11\ls well-laid out home we have five
bedrooms, utility room and garage . Very low healing
bill . That' s not ai L we have strawberries. raspberries
and garden space. Red barn-like storage building .
Located about ten minutes north of Pomeroy just off
Rt . 7. call for more details and appointment. Asking
$55.000
MIDDLEPORT
This well c&amp;red for newer home has l BRs, living room.
bath , mostly carpeted, kitchen Is equipped with
refrigerator and stove, utility room , natural gas forced
air heat, outside storage building . Price $27,000.
6 ACRES - N1cel'l&gt;story home mostly carpeted wlfh 3
or A bedrms., living rm .. family rm .. with fireplace,
basement , fuel oil furnace, garage and ouibulldlngs.
Some fencing , plenty of road frontage and garden
space . City water and dr illed well . Loc . close to
hospital and school at Laurel Cliff . Asking S.ol2,500.
TWO ACRES- A beaullful4 year old, 3 bedroom home
with large eat-In kitchen, J bedrooms, all nicely
carpeted, 2 baths, full basement with TV room . Many
more extras , low he·a t bill with naf. gos forced air

Pomeroy,O.
3-1S-Ifc

stores

from

this

alum inum siding . 21ofs and

2 car garage All thi s for
only S15.000.
your

investment grow

while you live in it. Think,

buy your home now.

G. Bruco Te•ford
Helen L. T Nford
Suo P. Murphy
Anoc:l ..••

Housing
Headquarters

Sl895

'695

1973
BUICK

1973
DODGE

1975 CHEV.
CAPRICE

'1795

'1895

1973 CAD.
CPE. DeVILLE

1975 OLDS
LS SED.

Full power , air,
am .fm .

I

REP A IR
and Sweep er s.
t o a stl!r!o, ir on s. a ll small
app lt an c e s .
Lawn
mow er . n ext to Stal e H igh
wa y Ga rag e on Ro ute 7.
P hone ( 614 1 985 · 3825.

SE W I NG

'4395

'495

Marvin Keeb11u9h or George Harris .

R epa trs .
ma kes ,
99 2 · 2284 .
Tt'le
Feb r l c
Shop ,
Pomerov . A uthori zed
Si nger Sale s and Ser'v'i Ce
W e sharpen Sc issors

been ca n cf' ll ed
Los t you r
P hon e
op er a tor s 1lcen se .
992 2143

SAVE ON
CARPETING

CHIMNE Y FI RE S ~r e n o
fun ! Ha ve yours c le an ed
th e dust less wa y
The
Cn i mn ey
Sw ee g , 614 373 ·

DRIVE A LITTlf

6051 .

&amp;.
SAVE ALOT
All cupet Instilled with
p•ddlng •' no charge .
Export lnst•llellon.

Rubber Back Carpet
AlLow As

"You'll Ltke Our Quality Way of Doing Business"
GMC Financing.
99l-Sl 42
Pomeroy

9' a(ld 12' Vinyl

Floor eo.ing In Stocll

Open Evenings untii6 : 0o--Til s p.m . Sat.

pll!fl••••••••••••lli•••iii..

---~;;'/ D&lt;IJRitiG OUR IDT·WID£ USED CAR SALE

1977
AMC HORNET................... ~3695
X Station Wagon , 6 cyl. , PS, Auto
1975 HONDA CUCC ....................'2295
Civic Station Wagon ,

---

c.ill74a-am
TALK TO
Wendell or Herb Grete
or Gone Smith

RUnAND
FURNITURE

I

742·a211

locotlon . Will go quick fOr $35,000.
40 Acres of land In SuHon Twp. Nice building sites,
small barn . Pr iced at only Sl1 ,500 .
WANT Eo : We have a qualllled buyer for a few acres
of land with a good home with at least 3 bedrooms
located on good road .

4

dr .

1974 FORD TORINO.................. '1495
4-dr . Wgn , ps, pb, ac.

1974
OlDS CU11ASS .:--·--·-·······-$2495
Dr .. automollc , P .S., P. B., o lr .

4

1973 CHEVY NOVA -~-c.~':·--~~:~:.~.~: .'1495
1973 PONTIAC VENTURA ............ sggs
1973 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX.......!1495
Auto ., p.s., p.b .• viny l roof , a ir

1975 AREBIRD ·---····--·····:··---- '3695
V-1, auio., P.S., P. B.• tape deck. spoiler.

Prices Includes

Buy whore you c•n come ln
end HI wflot you're getting
- Gaod soloetlons- Fully
stocked.

Rutt.nd

CHEV. CHEVEU.L ............. SJJ95

4

Dr. Wagon.

MERCURY MONTEGO ......... ~l295
4 dr . auto. air , p.s., p.b.

1911 CHEVY MONTE CARLO ..~~: .. 11295
1973
PLYMOUTH DUSTER---·········
6 cyl., auto.
1972 CHRYSLE~-····-~-d.':.~·~·........... '595
1969 PLYMOUTH VALIANT.. .......... '395
CHEVY ~" : ......................
1971 MERCURY 4 DR•.................

RIEBEL'S USED CARS

MAKES A

St . Rt . 7

ROQer Riebel
2 Convenient Numbers
985-3345 or 667-3463
1 mile north
Tuppers Plains, Ohio

owner's age

141 ACRES -

prevents her from continuing

to

operate

CAll lltE WISEMAN
REAL ESTATE MiENCY 446-3643

Ml DOLE PORT, 0 .

99l-l196

OPEN TILL7 P.M. E•cepiThursday &amp; Saturdoy ti15 :00. Closed Sunday .

~-~

14 Tell aU

45 New
York
"Forty
- "City

l5 Candlenut
lree
16 Highwayman's order
17 Large wasps
It Wallis or
Holbrook
20 Gennan river
Zl Extremely
22 Applaud
24 Shy of
25 Piece of
wood

5 Bakery
fixtures
7 Card game
term
8 More
impudent
9 Ann of
the sea
10 With great
emotion

Yesterday's Alllwer

16 Rope fiber
18 Sans chaser
21 Weathercock
22 Almosphere
Z3 Subsequently
24 Feral
!5 01 a state
Zl Tarry
from

29 Snare
30 Large
container
31 Box-score
entry
33 Skin of
bacon
3&amp; Knock

br+-+-+-

Zl Ane&lt;lstral :
abbr.
%7 Tiny bird t.r-t--tHamlet's
last word

·za

~Buck;

brave
34 Hockey

star
SS Weighing
for
shipment
31 Zoo SOWid
37 Right
away
38 Concerning

Jrr-+-t-

39'-'&gt;an
shark
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how lo work It:
AXYDLBAAXR
lo LONGFELLOW
One lett e r stmply stands ror another. In th1s sample A Ia
u sed for the three L's, X ( or t he two O's, e tc. Single letters ,
apostrophes, the le ngth and (ormation of the warda are all
hiots. Each day the code letters are difl'er ent.
C RYPTOQUOTES

AV

EWVBWN

YMLFSTFYE
DOY

YV
"VG

TFYTH ·

VKT

GHLTFRE,

YKN

ZOLIPWN

y v

YKTLH

SLEGVHYOFTE .
IKLWV
Yeolerday'a Cryploquole ; '"A TJTI"JE KNOWlEDGE IS A
DANGEROUS TIUNG." THAT IS WHY SO MANY PERSONS
DON'T FOOL WITH lT.- DAN KIDNEY
.
I{) Ur78 l(jnl Features S,ndkat.e, Inc.

"Finally, rve found
a MAN-SIZE tractor"

b.

••u ..,, ... t .,....,
... tl ,...

. *"''

15 IN STOCK
Largnt SelectiOn

In The Valley

LOS ANGELES (UP!) Loa Antelea Laker Ron
Boone aullered multiple
fracture• of hla nose
Wedneldly nilht In a prepme ...lnlt the
Seattle SUperSonics In

bowed liy Dick Snyder iri the
second period of the game,
and will be out of action about
taio weeki. Considered lhe
iron man of lhe NBA, Boone
has never before milled a
game in his profeas!onal

Oakland, Calli.

career.

Doane -

accidentally el-

1975 FORD GRANADA ..... ...... ..... ...... ,'2795
4 Or .. auto .• P . S , P B , a ir .

975 FORD GRAND TORIN0 .... ...... ... ....'2895
Low mileage, 2 Or ., aut o., P .S., P B.

1975 FORD MAVERICK ..... .'.~;; ·.•~~:~ .... .. '2195
1974 FORD TORINO .?..~~:. :.~;'.!:.~;.~~r.....11795
1973 FORD GRAND TORINO. ~~:::': ::::'~.'~..'1695
1972 PLYMOUTH FURY II 318 •.. ..•.. .•. ... . '495
1971 GREMLIN ..... .• .•.. .. .. .•. ..~ .d·~-~!?: ... '695

1966 COR VETT E . 327 4 sp ee d
con ve rtabt e top 949 .1314.
1972 C H EV Y BLA ZE R
4·
whe el dr ive w i th lOC k out
hu bs 30 7 v , 8 w ith P . S.,
P B .• -4 ne w 6 pl y t ir es 98 5·
42 20
1976 P O N T I AC
5J 700 98 5·3981

C a t al in a .

WAGONS

1975 CHEVY WAGON ..• .. :: ~ :. ~~ .. ........ '2495
1975 PINTO WAGON .. ..~~!~:. ~:~·.:~.'-k·-·· ··'2595
1974 FORD PINTO WAGON ... ..:'.':: .'.~ ~ : ....'1495
1973 CHRYSLER WAGON .............. ...... '1595

1971 P LYMOUT H F URY
P s. P B ., A c A 1 co n
d i ft on S1500
742 27 90
1974
OLD S
CUTL A SS
Supr em e
Good shape 992 7084 P S, P . B , AM t ape,

a •r

W 81 and t "uund

.•..

WO R K

"":,.

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

~

~

Rack , P .S, P . B. , atr

OV ER S E AS ,

A ustralia , A frtca ,
South
A mert c a ,
E u r o pe , e t c
Cons tr uc t ion ,
Sa tes. Engm ee r s, Cle r ic al ,
etc $8000 to $50. 000 plu s.
E x pen ses pa id
F or em
p loy ment
t n
for mat1 on wr i te . Q~,~ e r seas
Empto vme nt , Box
101 1,
Bo ston , Ma . 02 102.

TRUCKS &amp; VANS
FORD LONG BED......... -.. -..... ... - '2995
1976 FORD RANCHERO ... ..... ..... .... .....'3295
Aut o.,

c-.1 . • ., .... ,

SEE THEM TODAY

REED'S COUNTRY STORE
Reedsville. 0.

Shorf stake bed,

FRfniiY. SEPTEMBE8 ,..1971
5:oo-Voyage to the BoHom of the Sea 3; Six Million
Dollar Man 4; Beverly Hillbillies 8; Mister Rogers'
Neighborhood 20,33 ; Gomer Pyle, USMC 10;
Emergehcy One 13; Petticoat Junction 15.
5 · JG-News 6; Sanford &amp;. Son 8; E lee. Co . 20.33. Mary
Tyler Moore 10; Hogan' s Heroes 15.
6·QO-News 3,4,8, 10,13, 15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6:3G-NBC News 3.4,i5; ABC News 13; Carol Bunett a.
Friends 6; CBS News 8. 10; Over Easy 20.
7: QO-Cross-WIIs 3; PM Magazine 4 ; Newlywed Go me
6,13. Muppel Show 8; News 10; Gilligan's Is. 15;
Ohio Journal 20; Cranberry Country 33.
7 :3G-Hee Haw Honeys 3; Dating Game 4; $1 .98 Beautv
Show 6: Bonkers 8; $100,000 N~me That Tune 13;
Pop Goes The Country 15.
8:QO-Waverly Wonders 3.4,15; Donny &amp; Marie 6.13;
Wonder Woman

4

sp .. P.S.

9 ·oo-Movi e " The Missour i Br eaks " 3,4,15 . L ove Boat
6, 13 , Am eri c an Gi r ls 8, 10 : LN e Fro m The M et 20 ;

Long Se arch 33

. "

l O: QO- Fanta sy Island 6, l3 , Dalla s 8 , 10;, Mov te

T he

Iron Ma sk " 33.
11 QO- Ne ws 6.8, 10.13 ; 11 : 15-ABC News 6
11 3Q- News 3. 4, 15; Mov ie "I s land of lhe B urn ing
Doome d " 6 ; Mo vie " The P r o d ucer s" 8 ; Wood .,

Hayes · Football 10: College Foot ba ll 13.
12 ·oo--Saturday Night Li ve 3, 4, 15, M ovie " T he
A ss assination Bur eau " 10.
1· 30--MOv ie " Criminal L awy er " 3. Mo vie " D id Y ou
Hea r The One Abou the T r a veling Salesla dy" 4.
2 ·oo--- AB C N ew s 13: J : OQ- News 3, 3 31&gt;--M ov ie
" T obru k" 3, 5 3D- Bonan za J

i,·10; Washington Week In Review

20 ,33.
8:3()-Who' s Watching the Kids? 3,4, 15; Wall Street
Week 20,33.
9:QO-Rockford Files 3,4,15; General Elec. All -Star
Ann iversary 6, 13; Incredible Hulk 8, 10; Great
Performances 20; Evening at Pops 33.
10·oo-Eddle Capra Mysteries 3,4, 15; Flying High 8, 10,
News 20; Great Performances 33 .
10 3G-Monty Python' s Flying Circus 20 .
11 :oo-News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, 15; Dick Cavett 20.
11.3()-Johnnv Carson 3,4,15; Borella 13; Movie " In
Broad Daylight" 6 ; Gun•moke 8; ABC News 33,
Movie "The Vengeance of Fu Manchu " 10.
12:4G-Ironslde 13; I :QO-Movle "Terrified" 10.
1:3G-Midnlghl Special 3,4, 15; I : ~News 13.
J .QO-News 3; 3: JG-Movle "Tight Spof' 3; 5 :QO-Movle
" Father Is a Bochelor" 3.
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER JO, 1971
6:oo-Sunrlse Semester 8, 10; 6:3G-Salurday Report 3;
Vegetable Soup 4; TV Classroom 8; U S Form
Report 10; Kentucky Afield 13.
7:QO-Go 3; Mario &amp; the Magic Movie Mach ine 4;
Matters of Life 6; Mr . Magoo 8; Public Polle y
Forums 10; Anima ls, Anlmo ls, Animals 13.
7:»-Land o the Lost 3; World of Survival 4; Dusty 's
Treehouse 6 ; Porky Pig&amp;. Friends 8; Pink Panther
13, Vegetable Soup 15.
8:QO-Yogl ' s Space Roce 3,4, 15, Popeye 8, 10.
8:3()-Fongfae ~t3 ; 9·QO-Supefrlends 6,13 : Bugs
tsunny ."J&lt;oad t&lt;unner 8, 10.
9:»-Godzllla 3,j4,15; 10 :QO-Scooby's All-Stars 6,13.
10 :»-Fonfastlc Four 3, 15; Movie " Oig That
Uranium " 4; Tarzan -Super 8, 10
11 :00- Kroffl Superstar Hour 3. 15; 11 · 30- LIItle
Rascals 4; Bewitched 6 ; Action News for Kids 13 .
12 :QO-Fabulous Funnies 3; Weekend Special 6,13;
Movie " The Stalking Moon" 4; Space Academy
8, 10; PTL Club 15.
12 :»-Baggy Pants 3; American Bandstand 13; Point
of VIew 6 ; Fot Albert 8, 10.
1:QO-Big Blue Marble 3; NFL Game of the Week 6;
WVU E•ten•lon Serv ice 8; In the Know 10; Where
lire Twisted Laurel Grows 33 33.
1:30-Thls Is The NFL 3; College Football Pregome
Show 6, 13 ; Bob Jones 8; Movie " Beach Blanket
Bingo" 10 : Consumer Survival Kit 33.
1 : ~ollege Football 13,6.
2:QO-Baseball Warm -Up M, 15; Racers 8; French
Chef 33.
2: 15-Basebali 34,15; 2:3G-VIewpolnt I ; Photography
33.
3:QO-Do-11 -Yourself with Homer Formby 8; Book
Beat 33.
3:3G-Golt 8, 10; Indian Summer 33
4:oo-Turnabout 33.
4 : 3~atch . JJ 33.
5·oo-Star Trek 3; Wide World of Sports 6,13; Gong
Show 4; Sports Spectacular 8, 10; James Michener' s
World 33; Wrestling 15; Long Search 20.
5:»-Cheap Show 4 ; .
6:QO-News 3,4, 10; Gong Show 8; GOd Has The Answer
15; Zoom 20; Over Easy 33.
6:30-NBC News 3. 15; World War II 4 ; News 6; Porter
Wagoner 8; You Bet Your Life 20; Outdoor West
Virginia 33.
7:QO-Abboll &amp; Costello 3; Lawrence Welk 4, 13, 15; Hee
Haw6,8; Bugs Bunny 10; Elec . t':o . 20; Once Upon A
Classic 33 .
7:»-We Tlllnk Y~u Should Know 3; Lowell Thomas
Remembers 33; Please Stand By 10; Once Upon A
Classic 20 .
8:01)-(hlps 3,4.15; Carter Country 6,13; Rhoda 8,10;
Onedln Lne 20; Great Performances 33.
8:30-Apple Pie 6; Good Times 8, 10; Mary Tyler
Moore 13;

301, P .S., P .B., V iny l bet! cover .

1975 CHEVY LUV 4 SP ... .•... .. .. .... .....•.'1895
1973 FORD 1 TON ... ..... ... .. ..... ... .. .... '2195

TELEVISION
VIEWING

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
40 Equal
I European
DOWN
basin
1 Mother of
5 Searched
Isaac
carefully
2 Word in a
Confederate
battle cry
Disinclined
3 An "I du" site

IC:OitOII'
lllell• ....... ,._,.1111
itit .... ..... til, !hllilat. :ZD tiUidt

The

ttre farm and she dnlres an Immediate sale. 50 to 60
acres tillable will\ some very good creek boHom hilltop land . The bal•nce Is In pasture &amp; woods. The 6
room home Is good (does need some modernization],
large all purpose barn &amp; several ouibulldfngs. The
minerals go with II end It's located In an aree where
gas, oil &amp;. c011l hove been found to be plentiful. Near
Rutland . 60's.
.

Manager~ for a

Good Deal on a New or Used Vehicle .

See

Woneed t.rge &amp; sm•ll F•rms
•nd Mlny typos of P"'-'Y
CALL IMMY DEEM Allocl•lo,f4f-2SII

EXCELLENT FARM BUY -

See Rocky Hupp, Darrell Dodrill or Pat Hill, General

•----------------~-. . :::Proportion

Hatcht»ck , 6 c vl. , a td'l')

•4.a8 sv~

White-Wall Co-Op

Karr &amp; Van Zandt

MERCURY BROUGHAN ... •. ........... '3295
4 Dr , full y e qu ipped. Wh ite &amp; Red Int .

197 4 N OVA CUS T OM . P .S.,
P B . A C, g ood c ondtlton .
992 2903 .

GENERAL MOTORS PAJti'S

See one of these courteous salesmen : Pete Burris,

22,000 m i les, air cond ., P .S., P . B., AM· FM ster eo, 2 dr .,
bl11 ~ wifh w h ite vi n y l r oof .

Wa g o n
S t a t ion
9 p a ssenge r . A l l pow e r
E :.te ll en t mec han t c at
cond i t ion No r ust. $1700.
992 572 1 di!ly s or 99 2.52-46
after 5.

DAN THOMPSON FORD

Drive Home A Winner

1977 CHRYSLER CORDOBA ..... ........... - ~4895

19!2 F O R D CO U NT R Y Se da n

Visil our dealership with your parent or guardian and sign up.
Everyone who registers will be given a free PP&amp; K Tips Book . It has
pointers from the pros and is designed to prepare you for Punt, Pass
&amp; Kick.

'

-4 door . po~er steer i ng,
power brakes , automat ic .

19 75
PO NT I A C
AS TRE ·
n a tchback , buc k et
sea t s,
au tom a t 1c .
N ew · r ad1at s
and ba tt er v . 30 m pg , 949
2283 aft er 7p m .

Registration: Sept. 25 through Oct. 7

NOVA 2 DR.

1974 CHM BEL-AIR

19 77
MO NZ A
SP YOER ,
305 engine Lik ebr and ne w
wtt h eve r y th i n g . 742 2826.

You'll compete with others in your own age gr-oup . If you're a winner
you'll compete in higher levels of competition. You could even
compete in the PP&amp; K National Championship finals to be held
January 7, 1979, at the NFC Championship game.

1972 CHEVY

Speclol

1977 POR O L T O 4· d Oor
se d an Li k e new w ith a ir.
P S, P B , t il t w hee l AM ·
F M 8 tr a ck M or e ex t r a s
742 2826

IrS FREE AND OPEN TO BOYS AND GIRLS AGES 8 TO 13.

'3495

---- ...- ·- -- --

1975
CA DIL LAC
E L DO R A D O . Fu ll power ,
a ir, A M F M r a d io . · Cl ean .
Phone 99 2·7462

DATE: OCTOBER 7, 1978

power, air, am fm. new tires.

MA C H I NE
se r 'v'l c e,
all

AU TOM O B IL E IN SUR A NCE

Fed . Tu
(does not include
s•lostuor
blll•nclngl
FULLY
GUARANTEED
Other sius
comporebly
priced.

2

~--

1974 DA T SUN
P ICK UP .
Phone 99 2 6192 5f te r .5p m .

PLACE: MEIGS JR. HIGH FOOTBALL FIELD

3 seal wagon, full

Fu ll power , air ,
am -fm , vin yl r oo f,
good t ires.

S1995

3

bedroom home with all city
utilities . Has large rooms
with lots of ca rpet ing and

Let

'895

'"ICEEP THAT GREAT GM FEELING
wiTH GENUINE_ GM PARTS,

good buy
NEW LISTING - Walk lo
the

I

cp e .,

New or R_
epair
Gultels and
Downspouts

two ncle acres of land In ll good

$15,000 - Good 5 bedroom house with 2 full baths .
Natural gas forced air heot, located In Chester .
S10,900 - 3 Bedroom mobile home on 1 acre land . Nat.
gas heal.

-

ELw o·&lt;;·ii··· .. 6..owe R s

Custom Poly
A78xl3

Sky lar k
p.s.

-~

----- ----~·-----

TIME: 10:00 A.M.

auto ,

dr .. air

BRA.DFORD . Au Cit oneer ,
Com · plet c Ser v tee . Phone
949 24 8 7 o r
949 20 0 0 .
O.h io ,
C r i ll
R ac in e,
Bradf o rd .

4 NEW

air,

ROOFING

Lois P•uley

Bra•ch MaNrger

power,

Lesabre sed ., air . Charger S E.

8-20·1 mo. {Pd. l

REEVES TR A OIN G Pos t ,
Pag e 'ol i lle
G rocp r ies, d ry
g oo ds , hard war e, fe e d ,
ta ck snop Sp eci al 25 lb . or
dog f ood , $3 88 .

Fu ll

am -fm tape.

SEIMCE/PARTS

d o r oo f i ng , c on .
W IL L
stru clio n , plu mb ing
and
heat mg . No iob too la rg e or
to o small. Pnon e 742·2348 .

P U LLIN S
Com pl e t e
992 2478.

.

1971
BUICK

1972 OLDS
LS. CPE

dr . sed ., air.

.-

Enioy the action!

'2295

- ~-~---- --·---

12 X 65 CASTLE MOB IL E
home witt'! 12 x 30 b uil t.on I
a cr e lot Also, 8 room house ,
·~ acre 742·20 68

2 dr., am-tm , air ,
" ·r.

':2295

1973 CHEV.
IMPALA

Free Estilnates
Pttone 949-2862
or 949-2160

3685 .

Auto .• p .s., radio .

GMQUAUTY

E XC .-. V AT I N G ,
d oz er .
b a c kh Ot' and
dilc h e r .
Charle!. R , Hat f iel d , Ba c k
H oe
Sr r vlce. R utla n d .
Oh io . P h on e 742 2008.

B A TH ROO M S AND
Ki t ch en s r em odel ed , ceram ic
tHe , plum b i ng , ca rp ent r y .
and gen eral m a intena nce .
13 vear s ex ce r te n ce . 99 2-

a ir ,
tires .

1974 OLDS
ROYALE

H. L WRITESEL

5232

1331

Price 512,500.
11 ACRES - More or less. 4
bedrooms, modern bath ,
large kitchen &amp; d ining

.

Chesler , Ohio

HOW E R Y AND M A RTIN
Ex c a v al i n o.
se pti c
sys tems. d ozer . ba c khOe .
d ump t ru ck, I i meston e,
g ra vel,
bla c kto p p av ing ,
R t 143 Ph on e 1 ( 614 ) 698 .

3 BEDROOMS - Older
some remodeling ,
beautiful view of the river.

Muffler . Brakes
Shocks . Tires
Battery.
Installation Service

Jack's Septic
Tank Service
BoX l

Ht•al E slalt• fur Sale
COUNTRY

MOORE'S

power,

3595

1

1976
PACER

S6900

For The Best
Price In Town
See
Denver Kapple
At

442, bu cket seats,
con sole,
a m fm

$AYE

1595

am -fm. new

4

8-31 · 1 mo.

4 dr sedan

1976 CAD.
SED. DeVILLE

220 E. Mlln Street,
Pomeroy, 0 .
ca11m-1o13
For Froo Estimates
9-21·1mo.

SPACIOUS BI -LEVEL
This may be your dream nome. II has a large kitchen

and

.,

EWOTT
APPUANCE II

WOOD HEAT

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

furna ce . All this

'

Armstrong Carpeting

QUALITY

1975 OLDS
CUT. SUP.
Iape .

1

Your Headquarters For

'lllaAJIPAWIGHIAN
MOVE GOJIPANY

with lots of cabinets, stove, refrigerator lind dish-

A
b edr oomer , 111:2 b a t hs ,
furn ished k itchen , n atural
gas, 2 car garage w i t h
large worksh op o ver L evel
lot near stores .

BUSINESS

1975 DATSUN
8210

Full

must

more

4-30-Hc

8 2 I mo

Sells for 525,000.00.
Ml DOLE PORT- Owner

526,000.00 .

.

Autp &amp; Truck
Repalf
Also Transmission
Repair
Pho.tle 992-5682

Pomeroy

ho me.

Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.
Home Phone 74l·lOOJ

can ow n a 5 a c r e plot In
Sut1on Town ship for only

1Bob Hoeflich t
109 Htgh St .

bedroom s, P/ 2 baths. new
gas furnace and new roof .

buying and .selling your

Now you

The Photo Place

on

3

o.

1978 98
REGENCY

Blown Insulation
JIM KEESEE

GAIIMiE
m ile
Rt.

11ft
7 ~Y-PIIII on
Sf. Rt. T24 lo~W~rd Rutt.nd,

\II

Coli Us Todoy

available. Selling fast at
$11 ,000.00.
Middleport
Charmrng

home.

MINI -FARM -

We are curr.Pntly 'J'IIk int
appoi ntmtnts for senior
poJ'tro~its . We us.- trtd f·
t i ono~l
settings •nd 11tsD
f eature
outdoor
por ·
rr a iture .

Main St .• corner of Pl u m
across from Smith -Nelson
garage . Parking space

for

Pom eroy

Mobil&lt;: Homes for Sal&lt;:

SYRA CUSE , 7 r oom hou se
and ba th w i th ex tr a lot ,
targe ca r port , nt&gt;w roo f
and stor m wi n dow s 99 237 17

We have other listings to
choose from . call us today

2 full baths, forced air heat,

viw Awar

PRI C E R E DU C ED on 1
year old , a ll electr ,c. 3
b edr oo m ho m £~ w it h !.Ome
appl ia n ces tnclu d ed 949
2424.

an acre. Only

7 ROOMs--carpeted home

Pomeroy Landmark

H O U SE IN Po m er oy . Larg e
l ot
Same
r ec ent
r emo d eli ng ,
nf'w carp e t •
cen t r al
he at t ng ,
ut i l tty
room ,
f ul l
ba se m ent , 2 por c h es .
or
un ·
F u rnishe d
fvr n ish ed
99 2.7074

ha s a detached garage and

992-3325
l16 E. Second Street

SENIORS

-

196!1 F=Oto!O F · 100 ~~ ton
picku p . 6 cy l • std 992 766 3
or see at C1t 1zens Nat ional
Ba n k , Middl eport .

PUNT
PASS &amp;
KICK

J&amp;L

ROGER HYSElL

ACR E S PL US. b uild in g lot !.
i n Cheste r ar ea 98 5·3981.

nice 3 bedroom home. II

RACINE - Large lot out of

e .

N E W 2 b edro om h o u se ,
c arp et, g ar a ge . beauti f u l
ki t c h en 1 acre lo t L oc at e d
at T uPp er s Pla 1ns. Oh io .
614 ·667 33 49
...
. ..
LO T A ND acre ag e in T up .
p ers Pl ai n s. Oh io . 614 667
) 349

Is situated on one-third of

STA N ' S
B.A'i GA IN LA ND .
Where ev •_, yone gels a lair
deal
Op ~ n
9 to 5 daily
eHe pt Sunday , 11 t o 6
Matn St , Rutland , Oh tO

L et u s l est

NEW
T H REE
bedr oom
home, r ec ro om , f tr ep la c e .
large
dec k , g a r a g e,
ba se m ent. on e and a half
b a th s . Phone Lee Con .
s tr uc lion
99 2 · 3 4 5 4 .
w ee k en d s 1.614 ·446 9568.

~ as reduced price o f th i s

( Realtor AssociattsJ

p. a cres loc ated
m ti e
f rom Me1gs M tne N o I
Dr i lled well a nd ~epllc
sy s tem
I 30 4 88 2 '.B3 4

Now Only

F I VE ROOM house and
bath , remo d e l e d ,
ful ly
ca r peted . May be seen
Ph
991 3933
a ft er 3 p m
one
s'a'ie Hou se . 2
b arn s , tra iler . Large pond
10 acres or 82 acres 742
' 2566

H O U SE
IN
Min er sville
Alum in u m sidin g
Newl y
car p ete d .
P a r
t ly f u r n tShed -4 bedroo m.
t t vtn g r oo m .
k 1 t c h ~n ,
ut i lity r oom . b ~lh 1 n1 ce
ba sem ent
Onl y a sk · tng
$11 ,500 992·5823 .

For All YOL!r

SACRED H EART Ch u rch
RummagP Sa l e, Mulbe r r y
A'We Pomeroy . O c t J.4, 9·3
Church auc:l ttor tum

LARGE YARD SA LE
909
Brownell Av e ,
Pull• n s
res1den c e
Everytt'li ng
che ap
Tues
26th until
Fr i , Oct 6.

HOMESIT E S to r sale . 1 ac re
and up . M id dl ep ort , n ea r
Rutla nd . Ca ll 99 2 74 81.

POMEROY
LANDMARK

F OU R F AM I LY Yar d Sale
0( t 1. 3. • at Paul H ill
res• den ce tn Letar t Falls ,
Oh io abov e Ra ci ne Locks 10
ftl ')

YARD SALE until sold out .
All St ZCS
Of
ClOth i ng ,
a fghans , wmte r
clot t'li n g ,
m a crame , tl ower starters ,
mite off
k n i c k kn a c"-s . 1
CR 4, w es t o f Dex ter

T WO EX T RA n ice IO f S 111
Ractne w 1t h 12 x 60
Hollypar k t ra iler . Part i all y
f urn tshed 18 x 40 cemen t
b lock b u i ld ing w i t h she d ,
la r ge g ard en spa ce w ttn
fru it trees . 949 2428.

U SED OLDS t r ump et , c a se ,
mus tc s ta n d a nd sev eral
books . Good co nd i t ion S.5 0.
-c~ll 992 253 1.

GIA NT YARD SALE . Se p t.
20 )0 9" Mose!i Norman ' s
res ld eon ce at Hysell Run fo r
Rutland Church of God .

G ARAGE SALE Thurs . and
Fr !
9 to 4 ~ 1g g screst
Man or o ff CR 18 at top o f
Ea stern H tgh Sc h ool h i ll

17 AC R E . 12x 60 mobl teh0 m e
near D ex t er 99 2 5858 .

case , ex tr a se t o f strin gs
and
p i cks i n cl u ded
May l ag Copp er t on e Por ta
pa ir w ahser an d dr ye r .
Ve r y good co n d tfio n , se ll
as se t
Call t'l ff er 5 . 00
pm , 992 2995 .

YARD SAL E on Ol d R t 33
north of fa irg r ou nds thr u
Sat urday noon . E'olery th ing
c neap

tF YOU nave a servtce to
ott er , wan t to buy or se ll
somefhtng , a re loo k in g f or
wo r k
or wh at eve r
.
you ' ll get results t as t e r .
w tfh
a
Senftne l
want
Ad
Call 992 .215 6

Real ~!:.tate for Sale

TRAM
D2 10A
C B ba se
sta t ion , \450 , stac k three
beams a nd 50 tt . o f tower
pl u s ot h er C B eq u ip ment
949 2322 .
LI KE N E W H ond o guitar a n d

3051.

_________. F'ARM 'FoR'
ii

SC H OOL
BUS
camcer .
60 passenge r with new
l1res
Good
c ond i t ion
Cont a c t Tom Ma n ki n at
9 9~1 220 I .

F OR RE N T ; 3 mob tlehomes
tor season , 1 shadY acre ,
water furn i shed . Or f or
.sa le S30,000
50 m i tes from
Sar a sota and Ft
Myers
ana 9 m i tes trom A r · ca di a .
Wa lt er Messter , 1 813 494
2857 No collect c alls .

'ord S alt·

Phone 991-2111

High School

VA -FHA , JO yr . fina ncing ,
a l so ,-et inanc tng
Irel and
M or t gage , 77 E . Sta t e ,
Ath en s, phOne {6141 592

Register for

buys

ZAN DrS

T H REE BE D ROOM f r ame
home tn M iddl epor t. Ca ll
992 345 7

UAr
W. ,....
.... rsey , ..,. ·

BURROUG H S
SENSI ·
MAT t e
a c coun t i n g
machine . Phon e 992 -2156.
T he Dai l y Sen ti n e l , I l l
Court
Street .
Pomeroy , Oh 10 .

3 AN D 4 R M . t urn1shed and
un
fu rn tshed
a pts
Phone 991 .5434

Season•l

OUtside While
Red root point

COAL . LIMESTONE , sand ,
gravel , c alc i um
chloride ,
fertil i zer , dog f ood , and a ll
types of sa lt Ex
celsior
Salt
Works .
t nc . .
E
Ma in St , Pomerov
99 2
]89 1

Th~· Pl.Jbl l.~~t"lt!r r~:wr.·es lht• rl!:ht
k! t'l.ltl or l't'Jt'l'ltm ~· ad:i dl't'm cd ulr
)t't'Uonal. Tt~ PubiLSher wall nut IJt.&gt;
n.'SJ)OI~ l bl t' fur 11101'1' t h an Ullt' UI CO I •

Phunt' !19'.!-0!lf»

During
Our
Closrout.

KARR &amp; VAN

fi.,aJ ~!:sial&lt;&gt; fw Sale

DISCOUNT
PRICES!!! "

BLACK AND whi te portable
TV , 19" w i th st&amp;nd 99 2-.5783

Business Services

1913 OLOS , .C ·dOOr , $1 ,050 . 985
3839 6 cvt rebu ilt Chevy
eng ine .

t "ur Salt· . H.-nl or Trndt•

S&lt;-ni&lt;To Offe r e d

197 3 N A SH U A mobile hom(' ,
3 bedroom .
par t.ally
f urn i sh ed
Ask •nQ pr~ c('
\ 500 0. 949 27l 4

W I LL CA RE for the elder l y tn
ou r home Ph one 99 2 73 14
WATER
W ELL
drill i ng .
Granf 74? :?87 9
W tlltam T

FOR SA LE or r ent M F 711
S!o.td Ste er toader M F :i'OO
t wo
row
c hopper
AC
Glea n er c ombtne 4 row New
Idea I row p1 c ker Shtn n 's
Tra c tor Sa les . L eon. NV
JO&lt;~ 458 16JO

W ILL BABY SIT 1n m y hom e
for c hildr en under 2 yea r s
old An na Mae Leam on d
by Wag ner H ar d ware 1n
Ra ct ne
WILL BA BYS IT tn my home

99 7 76JO

HOOF HOLL OW Hor ses
Buy , se l l trade or tr a in
New a nd used saddl es
Ruth
R eeves .
( 614 ) 698 3290
·A l bany

Sv r acus ('

,JfijJ@lt,••
SPECIAL '12.95

R I SI N G
STAR
Kennels
Boa rd ing and
g r oomi ng ,
all br eeds
CheS t'l tr e , J67
02 92 or J 6 7 o106
LOVA B LE W H ITE sno w drill
great P YRENEES
Pup
p ies Phone 1 614 667 3838.
AKC
REGI S TERED
Beagles 8 week s old , shots
and
wormed
6\4 3610292
or 61 4 367 03-47

Spin Balance

f Reg . ) U .50

MALE
ONE
year
old
Dachshund , house brok en ,
bla c k and b r o wn . long
h a ir ed 992 5098 a ft er 5 pm ,

With Alignment SJ.50
Bubble Balance

I Reg .) S2 .50
with alignment $2 .50
If you want an

ON E 'I' E A R ol d da chs h und .
male . H ousebroken , gen tle
w i t h child ren \50 992.5098
alter 5

experten c ed front
end man ask for
Trent.

T H REE COON hou nds and
a 11 the dog bolles \600 992
5705

In 1977. Muhammad Ali
re ta ined
hi s
world
heavywweight boxing t itle by
defeatin g Ernie Shavers at
Madison Square Ga rden in
New York City.

1

1
1

on

MEfGS I

Equipment Co. I,

Til1 1 ,oo p.m.
ForYour
Shopping
r' t''"VII!ftitftCI

Special
Price

. 7, 1971
htludes front -wheel
drive cars .

I
II

________ .J

-~

alignment

Any U.S. made c•rparts extr• if ntflled.

POMEIIOY, 0.
I'll. 992-2175
•
lllltfuliaul Optn Friday

'II
lllltwtll
·1 lllwl..
~

Absolutely tree with
alignment
and
· bill lance .
Bring In
Coupon and Ractive

'2.00 OFF

-----------,

I

SPECIAL FREE
GREASE JOB

·c.u now "" •PiflllnlmMII.

Pom..., ......
Jacts w. ca...,, Mar.

1

'

I'IIIM fft-2111

·

�12-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Sept. 29, 1978

HOSPITAL NEWS

Dr. Amsbary opening
PVH practice office
Harry L. Amsbary, M.D.,
an opthalmologist (eye
doctor) will open his Point
Pleasant office in t he
physician 's suite of Pleasant
Valley Hospita l Thursday,
October 5.
His office hours will be
from 8:30a.m . to 12 :30 p.m.
each
Thursday .
Ap·
pointments may be made by
calling 446-7036. In addition to
his Pleasant Valley Hospital
office, Dr. Amsbary a lso has
one at the Amsbary Eye
Oinic, 548 Jackson Pike in
Ga llipolis.
Medical ex aminations,
refractions, treatment of eye

disease and minor surgery
will be done at both locations.
Eyeglasses and contact lens ·
fitting will be done at Ams·
bary Eye Clinic only. Major
eye s urgerl'~s.now being done
at Pleasan't Valley Hospital.
Dr. Amsbary uses the latest
techniques in eye surgery.
A native of Gallipolis, he is
the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Wayne Amsbary . His father
is the former Laurel Biscuit
Company representative in ·
this area. Dr. Amsbary is a
1967 graduat e of Gallia
Academy High School. He
attended
undergraduate
school at
Ohio State

A checkbook ... tells who. how much. when.
Open a Checking Account soon.
At th e bank ... w here you're th e boss. "
1

Be our guest Friday, September
29th and Saturday, September
30th for cake and coffee. Come
help celebrate Edison Hobstetter:'s
50th Anniversary.

University in Columbus, June
1967-June 1970 during which
time be was chosen by Phi
Beta Kappa and graduated
cum laude with a Bachelor of
Scienze in oology ~ He earned
his M.D. at Ohio State
University Medical School in
June, 1973.
Dr. Amsbary served his
internship at St. Francis
General Hospital, Pittsburgh,
Pa. from July 1973-June 1974.
He then completed a three
year
residency
in
Ophthalmology at Mt. Sinai
Hospital, Cleveland, serving
as chief resident July 1976June 1977.
During those three years he
learned the latest developments in intraocular surgery,
contact lens fitting, and all
._aspects of eye examination
and treatment. He attended
the Basic Ophthalmology
Course at Case Western
Reserve University
in
aeveland 1974-75, the Armed
Forces
Institute
of
Pathology 's
Ophthalmic
Pathology
Course
in
Washington, D. C. November
1975 and the Ameri~an
Academy of Ophthalmology
and Otolaryngology Courses,
Las Vegas October 1976.
While in Cleveland, he was a
member of the Cleveland
Ophthalmological Society
and is a candidate to the
American
College
of
Surgeons.
He returned to Gallipolis
and is remodeling a 65 yearold farmhouse near town. His
wife, Myla, is the daughter of
Harold Hilligas, former
manager of the Pomeroy and
Gallipolis Farm Bureau, now
residing in Wooster, Ohio .
Mrs. Amsbary is a licensed
Physical Therapist and has
completed a course for
ophthalmology
assistants.
The Amsbarys have two
children, Wayne 4, and Kristi,
17 months .

- Register to win a $50.00 Bond-

pomeroy
rutland
tuppers plains

pomeroy
national · .
bank

SQUAD CALLED
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad was called to the
Laurel Qiff area at 6:44p.m.
Thursday for
Hanford
Stanley who was taken to
Holzer Medical Center.

the bank of
the century
established 1872

FRIDAY SERVICES
The Rev. and Mrs. AI Welsh
will conduct services at 7:30
this evening at the Laurel
Qiff Free Methodist Church
and again at 9:30 a .m. Sunday . The Rev . and Mrs.
Welsh presen·special musical
numbers with the service .
The public is invited .

VetenDS Memorial Hoapllal
Admitted
Charles
Beegle, Racine ; Lois Reitmire, Letart, W. Va.; John
Cundiff, Mason ; Dorothy
Norris, Racine ; Vicki Boso,
Portland.
Discharged Donald
Covert, Sandra Patterson,
Mary Allbritton , Dorothy
Johnson.

Pope •••
(Continued from page I)
Square and were left open to
the cool fall breezes blowing
in from the Alban hills south
of Rome .
Two Swiss Guards, dressed
in their ceremooial blue,
yellow and red unlferms and
holding
Rennalsance
halberts, stood at attentloo oo
each side of the bier.
The smile and attentive
eyes that made the pope an
immediate favorite of the
people were gooe now. The
pontiff appeared almost a
different man in death.
Besides the muffled Latin
prayers of the priests, the
ooly sounds in the room were
the shuffling footsteps of
mourners fU.Ir-3 by the bier
walking over the marble
inlaid tile floors of the
Clementine Hall. Far away
sounds of Rome traffic
filtered through the open
windows.
To commemorate the
pope's death, the Italian
government ordered all
schools closed Saturday and a
session of parliament that
was just about to begin in the
morning was ~celled.
Trade unloos called off
planned strikes throughout
the country.
The flnt of nine requiem
Masses fer the late pootiff
was ICheduled for 6 p.m.
Inside a chapel of St. Peter
Basilica and was to be
celebrated by Archbishop
Aurelio Sabatani, vicar of the
archpriest of the church.
The cardinals who will
elect John Paul 's successor
were expected to , begin
arriving in Rome Saturday
and
throughout
the
remaining eight days of the
nine-day official mourning
period planned to meet daily
to discuss their choic~ for
the next pontiff.
Although John Paul's 34day reign as pope was the
shortest this century, It was .
surpassed in brevity by the
l:klay reign of Urban VDI
who .sat on the throoe of St.
Peter from Sept .15 to Sept. 'll,
1590.
Editors: Above Includes
major developmeall. Editors
desiring addiUooal details
can pickup at l5tb graf: John
Paul

No order
(Continued from page 1)

tinue.••

NOW IN STOCK

FOAM BOARD
5 SIZES

1/2" %" 1"
' ' '
1%" or 2"
CALL IN FOR A QUOTE.

BAUM TRUE VALUE
CHESTER, OHIO

985-3301

FINAl. DA YSI
SEPTEMBER 29, 30

..

HURRY I

NAME BRANDS
ANNIVERSARY PRICES

FLEXSTEEL -.! ADMIRAL • HOOVER
CALORIC - SPEED QUEEN - FRIGIDAIRE

BAI&lt;ER FURNil URE
.

MIDDLEPORT, 0

•

N&amp;W lawyers were not
present fer the late-night
court session, but Robinson
erdered the road into the
case. "Nerfolk &amp; Western is
in this case by my order .
They're in it," he declared .
The strike over job security
for senior werkers at N&amp;W in
the face of automation began
two mootha ago following two
years of talb.
BRAC set up picket lines to
widen the strike to the entire
nation on Tuesday and
expanded It even further
Wednesday to encompass 73
railroads that provided N&amp;W
with $800,000 a day in mutual
strike assistance.
Carter's action came after
negotiators fer BRAC and
N&amp;W failed to settle the
dispute in 28 hours of roundthe·dock bargaining before a
special mediator .
Carter said the strike
brought "almost a c001plete
shutdown of rail service" in
the United States.
The administration said
that under the Railroad
Labor Act, picketing was to
cease immediately; the
emergency board was to
investigate the dispute and
repcrt back to the P'eaident
within 30 days, and workers
could not resume striking
unW 30 days after such a
repcrt.
That interpretatioo Ia open
to court challe~e. however,
since the law was written to
prevent
strikes
from
beginning, rather than for
ending walkouts.
Named to the threemember emerpncy board
were Paul Hanlon of
Portland, Ore ., chairma!l,
who haa aerved 11 head of
four
other emergency
boardl; Jerre Wllllama of
Austin , Texaa, a vice
P'ellident of the National
Academy of Arbitrators, and
Jacob Seidenberg of Falla
Ou-ch, Va., 111 attorney and
lllllllber of the arbltratora
academy .

Holzer Medical Center
( Dlscbarae•. Sept. 28)
Andrea Barnett, Cynthia
Cole, Mrs. John Coleman and
son , Marga ret Denney.
Wanda Dewese, Mrs. John
Evans and daughter, Louella
Hearon, Goldie Herman ,
Melinda Howell , Frank
Ireland, Darrell Jones, Ruth
MacFarland, Christy Marshall, Robert Mullins, Judy
Musser, Edna Niday, Mrs.
James Pratt and daughter,
Vivian Robinson , Johnny
Safflef, Mason Sleb, Mary
Sbrop, Mary Shropshire,
Henry Taylor, Ruby Taylor,
William Wallace, Pearl
Warman, Paul Waugh, Joyce
Wedmeyer, Marsha Winters,
Oullia Wise.
Births, Sept. 28
Mr. and Mrs . Robert
Patterson,
son,
Point
Pleasant.
Mr . and Mrs . Wesley
Canter, daughter, Jackson .
Mr . and Mrs . Kenneth
Turley , son, Gallipolis.

McMaster
promoted
RAVENSWOOD,W. Va. Wally D. McMaster has been
named production services
manager for the reduction
plant of the Ravenswood
Works of Kaiser Aluminum
and Chemical Corporation.
He had been Kaiser 's
resident technical director at
the Anglesey Aluminum ,
LTD plant in North Wales
since May 1977.
McMaster joined Kaiser in
19~1 working in various
positions in maintenance and
reduction management at the
firm's Mead, Washington
plant. In 1972, he became
production manager at the
Anglesey plant. In 1973, he
returned to the Mead Works
as
superintendent
of
potrooms and reduction
services. He transferred to
Ravenswood in 1975 as an
assistant to the reduction
operations manager.
A native of Havre, Mon·
lana , McMaster holds a
Bachelor of Science degree in
Metallurgical
Engineering
from tlie Montana School of
Mines.

Bostock
•

g~ven

farewell

Meigs
Property
Transfers
Evelyn Cook Clark to
William T. Ratliff, Juanita E .
Ratliff, Lot, Pomeroy.
Allen J . Eichinger, Hazel
P. Eichinger to Gerald Kelly,
Bonnie J . Kelly, .23 acre,
Salisbury.
James R. Eiselstein,
Alberta R. Eiselstein to Jose
Mascarro,
Virgie
M.
Mascarro, 125 acres, Chester.
Ralph R . Radcliffe to
Raymond Radcliffe, .72 acre,
Sutton.
David Triplett to Patricia
Triplett, 1.22 acres, Lebanon.
Paul K. Strauss, Marcia H.
Strauss to Larry H. Hoffman,
B. Danette Hoffman, 12.690
acre~. Rutland.
Garth Smith, Audrey Smith
to Stanley G. Wells, Juanita
V. · Wells, 6.87 acres, Olive.
Joseph Young, Jr., Rowena
E. Young to Joseph A. Young,
Rowena E . Young, Parcels,
Scipio • Salem.
Kenneth J . Wolfe, Anna L.
Wolfe to Adams Drilling ·co.,
Meter site agree ., Rutland.
James E . Haley, Joyceline
C. Haley to William Trent
Knittel , Debra Marie Knittel,
.28 acre, Rutland.
· George H. Warner, Grace
M. Warner to David D. Price,
Mary V. Price, 90 acres, 35.56
acres, Salisbury.
Bobby W. Vance, Yvonne
Vance, Drexel C. Vance,
Parthenia Vance to Forest W.
Lee, Leda M. Lee, Parcels,
Bedford.
Russell W. Moore, Hope J.
Moore to Lois G. Kelly, onethird acre, Syracuse Village.
Orville G. Bashan, Derrah
G. Bash an to Buckeye Rural
Elec. Co., Easement, Bedford .
Lawrence H. Cowdery,
Nina G. Cowdery to Earl K.
Co wdery, Gladys Geyer,
Harold Cowdery, Mabel
Arnett, Grace Kelly, Int . in
Parcels, Olive.

Weather
Increa si n g cloudiness
tonight, with lows between 50
and 55. Variable cloudiness
Saturday, with s howers
possible by evening and highs
between 75 and 80.

MARATHON SESSION
Advising negotiators to
"bring your toothbrushes, " a
aeveland judge has called.
teachers' union and school
board officials into a
marathon bargaining session
aimed at ending the threeweek-old strike that bas idled
101 ,000
public
school
students.
Judge Harry A. Hanna,
hoping to end the strike in two
days, resisted the school
board's request for a back-towork order for the 10,000
teachers and support personnel.

INGLEWOOD, Calif. (UP!)
- Under a scorching midday
sun, the California Angels
baseball team said their final
farewells to teammate
Lyman Bostock.
Doo Baylor ran his hand
along the yellow casket and
psused briefly. ·
Then, with tears in his eyes,
he said, ''Goodbye Lyman."
Bostock, 27, the popular
SUCCESSOR SIMILAR
slugging outfielder, was
CINCINNATI (UP! ) killed by a shotgun blast Cincinnati
Archbishop
Saturday night in Gary, Ind. Joseph
L.
Bernardin
He was buried Thursday at predicted today that the next
Inglewood Park Cemetery. pope selected will be a person
During · services
at very similar to the late Pope
Vermont Square United John Paul I.
Methodist Church in Los
"I think the warm response
Angeles - Bostock's church that was given to Pope John
- Angel pitcher Ken Brett Paul is very indicative of the
spoke of the emptiness felt by type of pope, the type of
the entire team.
pastor, the church is looking
"It Ia always difficult to say for at this particular period,"
goodbye to a friend," Brett said Bernardin.
said, his voice breaking. "I
don't believe I have the
ability to portray the picture
of the Lyman Bostock we
knew so briefly.
GAME ON RADIO
"There re~nalns for us ooly
The Wabama - Southern
ooe con10latlon, that we are
football will be aired over
all better persoiiS for having radio station WYPC.FM at
known him . He was a great 7:10 o.m . Saturday.
friend.
More than 500 friends,
teammates,
relatives,
reporters and fans crowded
into the church, with another
500 standing outside under
the broiling sun.
Rev . John C. Baln, former
minister of the church and
loogtlme friend of Bostock,
said his death created a void
that would take a long time to

.

/

,,...,........ .
' \"'}

CONGRATULATED ~ Edison Hobstetter, president

of the Pomeroy National Bank, was coogratulated by
Marcia Karr, Syracuse, who was his eighth grade
teacher, Thursday on the occasion of his 50th anniversary
with the Pomeroy National Bank.

Winding Trail Garden
Club conducts tour
Members of the Winding . From there the club mem·
Trail Garden Club of bers went to the Roadside
Pomeroy toured the dahlia Park on Route 33 for a picnic.
gardens of Francis Shaeffer Attending were Mrs. Alice
and
grandTuesday night. He has ap- Thompson
proximately 500 plants in 50 daughter, Katie Mitchell ;
varieties, every size and Mrs. Ruth Moore and her
color . Each. of the garden daughter-in-law , Peggy
club members was presented Moore, Mrs. Pat Thoma and
Mrs .
with several dahlias to take daughter, Suzan,
Mrs .
home .
Addalou
Lewis,
Plans we re made for Margaret Parker and Patty,
Shaeffer to be guest speaker and Mrs. Cora Beegle and
at the club's open meeting to Miss Shirley Beegle.
be held in September 1979.
CLOSED OCT. 9
COLUMBUS - Director
Qlfford E. Reich of the Ohio
Department of
Liquor
Control announced today that
all state liquor stores,
agencies and departmental
offices will be closed Monday,
October 9, in honor of
Columbus Day .
GRADUATE
area
students
These
graduated from Ohio State
University in the s ummer
quart e r , 1978
commencement :
Steven Michael Anderson,
Rt. 3 Wipple .Rd., Pomeroy
and Philip Richard Gaul,
Route 3, Pomeroy .

Announce birth
MASON - Mr. and Mrs.
Marty Yeager (the former
Vicki Burton) of Mason 11re
announcing the birth of twins
born to them on July 25 at
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Born were a son, Craig
Martin, weighing 7 lbs., I ¥.!
oz., and a daughter, Erin
Nicolle, who weighed 6 lbs., 9
oz.
The maternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs .
Lewis Burton of Mason , and
the paternal grandparents
. are Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Yeager of Mason.
Great - grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. L. E . Piersall of
Point Pleasant, W. Va . and
Mrs . Rhoda Yeager of
Mason .
These are the first children
for the Yeagers.

END MARRIAGES
In Meigs County Common
Pleas Court Charles Pennington, Racine, and Virginia
Pennington , Middleport, filed
NEW DEPUTY
for dissolution of marriage.
Keith Little bas been apPaul Jennings Jacks was pointed a special deputy by
granted a divorce from Sheriff James J. Proffitt.
Peggy Sue Jacks.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

fill.
"A star has faUen," the

Rev. Bain said. "A promlaing
career baa been shattered."
Los
Angelea
City
Counclhnen Robert Farrell
and Undaay Wagner made a
brief pr-ntatioo on behalf
of the city.

NOW YOU KNOW
The legs of dancer Fred
Aatalre once were Insured for
tuO.OOO; the legs of World
War II pin-up queen Betty
Ora ble were Insured for

taO.OOO.

END-OF-THE-MONTH SALE
CONTINUES ALL DAY SATUR
FROM 9:30 ·A.M. TO 5 P.M •
You'll like the special sale prices on Men's Blue Jeans, Coveralls,
School Toboggans and Chambray Shirts, Throw Rugs, C.nnon
Sheets, Bed Blankets, Furniture on the 3rd Floor-Junior Slacks,
Children's Jackets, Pre- Teen Sportswear and many other Items for
you and your family.

SHOP FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8

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