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10- The DHily Sentinel Middleport-Pumeruy , 0 .. Thursday, Nov . 2. 1978
'
Earthquake hits
Pamir Mountains

MOSCow· UPI-Radlo
Moscow today reported a
st rong and potentially
devasting earthquake struck

a remote region of the Pamir
Mountains in Soviet Central
Asia late Wednesday.
Radio Moscow reported
that the quake occurred at
10 :49 p.m. EST and
registered a massive 9 on the
Soviet 12 point seismic scale.
Western seismic
ob·
servatories In Sweden and th e
United States reported their
instruments logged the
earthquake at between 6.7
and 7.2 on the openended
Richter scale.
Radio Moscow said the
epicenter of the quake was
located in a sparsely
populated area of the Pamirs
and there were no reports of
casualties or damage.

-------------------------I,
Ar'ea Dea'ths I,

I
MABELV.CLELAND
Mabel v. Cleland, 87,
Racine; died this morning at
Pleasant Valley Nursing
Center.
Mrs. Cleland was born Jan.
7, 1891the daughter of the late
Phillip and Martha Shain
Wolfe. She was also preceded
in death by her husband, Rev.
Thomas A. Cleland and one
son, Meredlty.
She is survived by the
following children, James, St.
Joseph, . Mich., Kenneth of
Kingston, Ill .• Isabel PiekPns.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED-Clara Hall,
Middleport; Norma Wilson,
Pomeroy; Kenneth Reed,
Portland;
Lee
Wood,
Rutland ; George Hackett ,
Sr., Middleport.
DISCHARGES - William
Reitmlre, Edna Evans.

Holzer Medical Center
Discharges, Nov.!
Jeffrey Adkins; James
heaver ; Beaver; Juanita
Brown ; Leah Brown; Junior
Cullins; Beverly Crank;
James French ; Chad
Gilliland ; Geraldine Harrison ; Alma Elmer Henson ;
Celelia Jenkins ; Marshall
King ; Sharon Landers; Mrs.
Donald Lyons and daughter ;
MarthH McComas; Charles
Mt-Goon ; Ted Moore; Flora
Mullins; Duris Nolan; Judy
O'Neil; Mrs. Jeffrey Paller·

WOMEN'S WARM-LINED
by

Hush

lliPP.!~J!

THE
..REGENf'

son and son ; Patrica Pelfrey;

Pamela Pennington ; Duris
Pervatt; Timothy Powell;
Geneviene Price ; Loretta
Roberts; Edna Rogers;
Genieve Sehneider; Mrs.
Ronald . Stiffler and son;
Shannon Tucker; Jane
Walton; Judy Warren; Mrs.
James Watson and son;
Sharon Webb ; Paul
Williams; Joyce Winters.
Births, Nov.!
Mr. and Mrs: Ernie Fisher,
daughter, Oak Hill.
Mr. and Mrs. David David·
son, son , Oak Hill.

•Black

THE SHOE BOX
Middleport. Ohio

...
'•

CHARGES REAFFIRMED
FORT JACKSON, S.C.
UPI-Maj. John B. BloUilt .
has reaffirmed charges
agalnsl a drill instructor
accused of the heatstroke
deaths of two Anny recruits.
Blouni reaffirmed the
charges after studying a
revised sununary given him
late Wednesday. U. Col.
Richard P. Scheff, a military
circuit judge, had told
Blount's legal . advisor to
submit the revised summary.

RACINE HOME NATIONAL BANK

KITCHEN-AID
MIXER
SALE'6995
.,_,
1- ---- - - - - - - - - - · _., '- ....

WEEKEND

Statement of Resources and Liabilities

-----r~

-....t...:
....
Ill

ID

o(

----+-&gt;- :
... '"'

5

O
Ill

!::

A.
uo(

---+-

•

•

Thousands

Cash and due from banks ........ .. .... . .. .. ..... ...... ... .. ............... 771,000.00
U.S. Treasury securities ... .. ..... . ........ .. .......... ... . ......... .. ... 1,206,000.00
Obligations of States and political subdivisions ...... •.. .. . . .. .. .. . . . .••.... . . 379,000.00
Federal Reserve stock and c-orporate stoek ........ ... ........ .. ....... .... .. .. 8,000.00
Federal lunda sold and securities purchased
under agreements to resell .... . ....... . ........... .. ..................... 896,000.00
Loans, Total (excluding unearned income) ........ , ..... .. . ... 7,700,000.00
Less: Reserve for possibl e loan losses ... .. . ......... ... .. ....... 79,000.00
Loans, Net . ........................ . ... .. .......... .. ... . ............ 7,621,000.00
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
other assets representing bank premises . .... .. .•..... .•... . . , . .. .. ..... . .. 153,000.00
Other assets . ..... . ..... .. ....... . ........... . ...... .. ..... ...... .... . . . .. . 1,000.00
TOTAL ASSETS ...................... ...... . .... . . .. . . .... .. .. .. ..... . 11 ,035,000.00

Reg. S84 ••• • ••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••• Sale $'7
Reg. $76 ••••••••••••• • ••••••••••••••••••••••Sale $61
Reg . S74•••• ••• ••• •••• ••••••••••••••• •• •••••SaleS59
Reg. S72 •••••••• • ••••••••••• ••• ••••••••••••• Sale $57
Reg. S70 •• • ••••• • •••••••••••••• ••••••••••• , .Sale S56
Reg. S68 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Sale SS4
Reg. S66 ••••••••• •••••• •• •••••••• •• ••• •• •••• Si le SS:Z
Reg. $60
sale S4B
Reg. S58 • • •..__.._._
••• • •• •••• • ••• • • ••• •• • • • • • • • • • • ••S.Ie S46
Reg. $54 ••••••••••••••••••••• •• ••••••••••••• Sile S43

_______

.

.'.

0~

Blq SAYINGS

REG. 14.50 TO 117.00

TO

SALE

$

1359

-·-w~~-W"IW_W__.....,..________ -

I, John T. Wolfe, President, of the above-named bilnk do

hereby declare that this Report of Condition is true and correct to the best of my knowledge and belief. ·
John T. Wolfe
October2!j, 1978

.

I·

•.

Clarence V. Price - Directors

l'
lI

Sizes Medium (15-15'1•1. large (16-16'12), and
extra l.arge (17-17 '12 ), "Wrangler" "Mr
Leggs" and Ely Brands . Plaid ~atterns :
Reg. price $7.95 . •

633

1

TUBE SOCKS
Boys' sizes 7 to 11 . Men's sizes 9 to 15, white
with colored top, an excellent selection.
Save on what you need Friday and
Saturday .

One size fits sizes 10 to 13. Tremendous
selection- of solid colors, and heather
tones. Bulky knit orion.

99~

.

Men's .Flannel Shirts

"---+-------------:o-1
MEN'S AND BOYS s1.25

ORLON DRESS SOCKS
PR.

j

99~

.

PR.

- - - - - · --.--.---..-.--.--.-.-+-_.,_..__.._._, ___,,...,~,--,-~w-•w-••-...,;-1

•a••

1---·--w--w___________.......,_.

SALE

•988

! ·4 qt. RIVAL CRQCK;.POT

I

Removable Stoneware for convenient
serving - easiest cleaning ever! Made by
the orig ina I crock-pot.

REG. 131.50

_..

.....

SALE
~

•24..

...,.......,

tW"'w:!~.,...._..-

.....

SAVE.20%

OUR ENTIRE STOCK

TABLE COVERS
Buy now for Thanksgiving or Olristmas, an
excellent selection In Ol!als, squares, rounds .
and oblong , vinyls, cloth covers and lace.

SAVE 20%

...
SPECIAL SELECTIONS FROM
OUR JEWELRY COUNTER

-·~~~-"~------~---------w--·----4· ---------------------_.~~~----~---

MEN'S VAN HEUSEN

DRESS SHIRTS

STICKPINS, NECKLACES, EARRINGS.

Neck sizes 14112 to 17, Sleeve lengths 32 to 35
inches , solid colors, white and patterns,
Quina or Splendor knits and · cotton
polyester blends.

Reg. S2.00 to ss .oo Values

20% SAVINGS SALE
KNIT BRIEFS
AND T SHIRTS
-

Sizes S. M, L. and XL. 3 garments in a
package. 75 pet. cotton , 25 pet. polyester.

'6.29 Pkg. T.SHIRTS........... ;......SS.Q3 pkg• .
'5.99 pkg. KNIT BRIEFS. ............ 14.79 pkg.

!

Our entire stock on sate Friday and Saturday. All sizes,
collar"ed sweater shirts, turtle neck, crew neck styles,
jean shirts, all arranged for your easy Selection.

STEP 2- Be sure the two holes at the top of the card
fit over the two red pins on tbe vote recorder.

Meigs voters .will use
votomatic machines
On Tuesday, Meigs Countians going to the polls will be
using small machines called votomatics to cast their ballots.
The machines are new and &amp;I e expected to greatly
increase not only the simplicity of voting, but the count as well.
All of the votes cast should be tabulated by late Tuesday night.
In past years the hand-counting has taken all night and into the
wee hours of the following morning.
· Voters can use the votomatic by following four easy steps
which are explained In the above.
Use of the machines will reduce poll workers from the
usual six to four and there will be a fifth person at each polling
location to provide instruc'tion to any voter who needs help in
using the votomatic.
·

STEP 3 - To vote -Hold the punch straight up and
push down through the card for each candidate of your
choice. Vote all pages. Do not use a pen or pencil.

•

e
VOL. XXIX

NO. 142

•

at

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

STEP 4- Mter voting, slide the card out of the vote
recorder and place it under the flap in the write-in
envelope. Note: If you make a mistake, ask for another
ballot card.

enttne
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1978

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

I

Celeste's platform attacked
l''ormer

L ie utenant

Governor, John W. Brown
· charged Thursday Richard
Celeste is seeking the best of
two worlda when he refuses to
make decisions on issues that
concern all Ohioans.
"How difficult can it be for
a candidate for Governor to
decide whether or not he is
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The deadline for applying for .for or against the Legislature
black lung medical benefits has been further extended to June enacting a new Death
30, 1979, Rep. Carl Perkins, 0-Ky., announced Thursday. He Penalty Law?" Brown asked.
14
said miners presently receiving benefits became eligible for
Why can't 1 Dick Celeste
the payment of their medical expenses resulting , from . the make these decisions' Is he
disease with the enactment 1lf the Black Lung Reform Act afraid that he will lose the
earlier this year.
vote of those who advocate
The original deadline was Nov. 3, 1978, but as a result of a Capital Punishment if he
request lrom Perk\ns, the deadline was ext~nded initially to opposes them, or conversely
mid-February of next year and now to June 30, 1979.
is be afraid he will lose the
vote of those who oppose
Capital Punishment if he
takes a different stand,"
CINCINNATI (UP!) - It is now against the law to buy Brown asked.
cigarettes in Cincinnati if you are under 16 years old.
This is an issue in Ohio that
The Cincinnati City CowiCU ordinance, passed Wednesday needs leadership. The polls
after considerable dellate over its necessity and ability to be
indicate that the majority of
enforceability, Is similar to a state law repealed In 1974 that the people advocate capital
ballneci clptelte aale to persons 18 and un_der. ,, ... ~pu~ishment. These same
polls ln&lt;\lcate that there is a
CAMPAIGN'S IN MEIGS COUNTY - John Brown, former lieutenant governor of the
growing feeling of being soft
State
of Ohio, was in Pomeroy Thursday afternoon to speak to some 25 residents on the
COLUMBUS (UP!) - State Agriculture Director JOI)n on criminals.
Republican
slate of candidates in next Tuesday's election. With Brown, left, are Henry
Where is Dick Celeste on
Stackhouse announced Thursday that producers voting at
Wells,
incumbent,
Republican candidate for county commissioner, ·and Howard Frank,
Agricultural Extension Offices_in each county have passed the this issue? Will he make a
incumbent,
unopposed
for county auditor.
decision and announce it
Ohio beef referendwn.
He said passatie Ql.eans the voluntary assessment will be publicly before November 7
increased from 10 to 25 cents per animal marketed for beef, or will be continue to give you
the Jinuny Carter treatment,
beginning Jan. 1, 1979.
'smile and trust me ,' "
Brown concluded.
Brown addressed some 25
Meigs
Countians at a meeting
WASIDNGTON (UP!) - _The gove'1"11edt says It's high
Thursday afternoon at the
time we recognize the lull potential of our traSh.
· The Environmental Protection Agency said Thursday it Meigs Inn:
will make $15 million available to state and local governments
to help them turn garbage into energy and recycle valuable
with a wage reopener clause
Lake County Common
Uoiled Press Intemalional
trash. "Technologies are now available to recover this energy
for the second year of the Pleas Judge John M. Parks
and materials," said Deputy EPA Administrator Barbara
Non--academic workers in pact.
had ruled earlier that tbe
Blum.
the Logan School District will
A strike continued today at school board didn 'I have to
vote tonight on ratification of the Lorain County Joint negotiate with the teachers
a new contract and striking Vocational Sehool in Oberlin. for a new contract until they
Painesville Township school
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPl) -The Colwnbus Dispatch has
Striking Painesville ended their walkout.
teachers, faced with the Township school teachers
reported that the Massachusetts religious crusader who
"It's a crime that the board
impending loss of their jobs, voted late Thursday to return would decide to spend lunda
pushed the Ohio General Assembly for silent meditation in
· have voted to return to work to work today.
public schools and now is wanted for kidnapping her grandson
to eliminate the competent
today.
is in the Mansfield, Ohio, area.
The action ending .the 1&gt;- staff it now has instead of
Teachers in the Logan weekold strike came after the using the money to improve
The newspaper said Thursday it received a call from Rita
Sehool District, who struck system's board of education the educational programs of
Warren, who said she had her 3-year-&lt;&gt;ld grandaon, James and
Aug. 29, voted earlier this decided to invoke. the state's the system," said Kathleen
admitted laking the child from her daughter Teresa Warren,
week to accept a new Ferguson Act against the Riley, president -of the
22. Brockton, Mass.
contract, but remained on teachers. The act bans Painesville Township
strike while negotiations strikes by public employees. Education Association.
continued between the Logan The board had warned that
CLEVE!4ND (UPI) In Cincinnati, the current
CLEVELAND ( UPI) - Two city councilmen, a former
Board of Education and non· teachers not reporting to contract between the
This
week's
wlnniog
Ohio
councilman and a former Deffiocratic ward leader pleaded
teaching employees.
Lottery numbers:
work today would have lost. Cincinnati Federation of
innocent Thursday to charges that they accepted kick hacks to
Negotiators
for
the
120
non·
Gold
number
0.
their jobs. •
Teachers and city school
allow carnivals to operate in their wards.
academic employees in
White
number
-00.
Some 13 of the system's 210 hoard continues through Dec .
Free on f500 bond each are Counclhnen Lonnie Burten and
Logan and the board of teachers
Blue number - 468.
returned
to 31, 1979, but union and board
Mary Ann Lecate, f(l'mer council member Carol McClendon
education
reached classrooms
Wfn..A·Thon
.
Thursday,
officials
have
been
and former Democratic ward leader Walter L. cOx.
agreement early today on a making a total of 89 teachers negotiating off and on tbe
79%83•
tentative two-year contract, who had decided to cross past six months on wage and
picket lines and go back to class size reopener clauses m
work.
the pact.

i~J"-·_r_h_e_w_or_ld_To_d_a_y_

Extend black lung deadline

Cigarette buyer8 must be 16

Beef referendum approved

Logan's .OAPSE voting
tonight on new pact

Garbage potential stressed

Religious crusader sought

Four enter innocent pleas

VISITS POMEROY - Congressman Clarence Miller
was in Pomeroy Thursday afternoon on the campaign
trail. Cong. Miller, left, confers with Meigs Auditor
Howard Frank on the steps of the county courthouse.
EXTENDED FORECAST
Sunday
through
Tuesday, dry and mild
Sunday and Monday, with a
chance of

showers

and

turning cooler on Tuesday.
Highs will he In the upper
50s or the lower 60s Sunday
and Monday and In the
loWer or middle . 50s
Tuesday. Lows generally
will be In the upper 30s or
the lower 40s.

Middleport
squad has
busy night

The Middleport emergency
unit of the fire department
was hit with a wave of calls
Thursday and Friday.
At 10:26 a.m. Thursday, the
unit went to 186 North Second
~-· for Lois Com ell;. "'l!o ·
had fa llen down some stairs.
She was taken to Holzer
Medical Center.
At 10 :40 a.m. the unit was
Pomeroy police are in· sent to the front of the
vestigating a breaking and Elberfeld store in Pomeroy
entering at the K. and C. where
Ernesti ne
Jewelry Store on E . Main St. Wi nebrenner had fa llen
Police chief ·Jed Webster against a front window glass.
said that the entry was The glass was broken and
discovered at 7:56 a.m. Mrs. Winebrenner cut her
Friday by Mrs. Edna Schoen- head in the fall. She was
leb who was enroute to her taken to Veterans Memorial
employment at the Reuter· Hospital.
Broga n Insurance Services
At 3:04 p.m., the squad
office. Glass had been broken went to the Village Manor
from the front door to ga in Apartments for Jackie
entrance. One showcase in Powers, who was treated on
the est ablishment was the scene and at 8:47 p.m.,
brok en. The amo unt of the squad went to 648 S.
merchandise stolen had not Second Ave., for Clay Bums,
been determined this mor- a medical patient, who was
ning.
taken to Holzer Medical
Chief Webster said Herman Center.
Henry, Logan, of the Bureau
At 2:42 a.m. today, the
of Crim inal In vestigation, squad was called to the
has been called to assist with railroad cross ing near
the investigation.
(Continued on page 12 1

Pomeroy B&amp;E
investigated

Men's $8.95 Shirts .......... ; ............. ,7.16
Men's 510.95 Shirts .......... ·............. $8.76

Men's $12 .95 Shirts ...................... $10.36
Men's $14.00 Shirts ...................... $11 .96
Men's $15.95 Shirts ...................... 512.76

----·I,,...,..,_

MEN'S ·wiNTER JACKETSRegAND
LINED VESTS
. $19.95 Jackets ..................... $16.55

"Excellent selection of styles in men's warm
winter jackets and coats. Regular and extra
large si~es. Buy what y0\1 need now for
yourself or for Christmas giving .

.

We, the undersigned directors attest the correctne.S"of this statement of resuurces .and
llabiHties. We declare that it has been examined by !IS, and to the best of our knowledge and
belief is true and correct.
r :1·
Earl Cross

SPECIAL ~ROUP

I

Gl RLS BLOUSES

2nd Floor

_.._.._._.._.._. ....... .._..__._.._._.__ _, '"~w~"'""

REG. 115.95

,, ,

..

,,.,

... .., ... I.

STEP I - Using both hands, slide the ballot card all
the way Into the vote recorder .

I •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

Ready To Wear -

_ ; . ...
-~- ~

TO NEXT
PACE

Reg. S20 •••• ."••• ••••••••••••••••••••• Sale $16.00
Reg. $19. .... ........................ . Sale $15.20
Reg . $16 .... . ..... . .................. Sale $12.80
Reg. $15 •••••••••••• •• ••••••••••••••• Sale $12.00

11h qt Covered Gourmet
Doubki Boiler

------

.I'ACf.

SALE

Junior, Misses, and hall-siies

________

co

co

JUNIOR SLACKS

PYREX DOUBLE BOILER

O.,mand deposits of individuals,
.
prtnshps., and corps ....... . ..... , ................. . . . .. . ... . .......... 1,311,000.00
Time and savings deposits of individuals,
prtnshps., and corps.... ... ... ... ...... .. .. . ........ . ........ . .. . .. . ... 6,955,000.00
Deposits of United Stales Government ........ . ... . ...... . ........ .... .. .. .. 239,000.00
Deposits of States and political subdivisions ... .. . .... ...... . . . . .. .... ... ..... 596,000.00
Certified and officers ' checks ......... . .. .. ..... . ............. .. .... ...... ... 54,000.00
TOTAL DOMESTIC DEPOSITS ............. . . . ...... .. , ........ .... . ... 10,155,000.00
Total demand deposits .. . .. . . . ... . .... . . .................. .. 2,943,000.00
Total time and savings deposits .................... . ......... 7,212,000.00
Total O.,pusits in Domestic and Foreign Offices . . . . . . . .... .... . ......... . . . 10,155,000.00
TOTAL LIABILITIES (excluding subordinated notes and debentures ) ... ... .. 10,155,000.00 - - - a. No. shared authorized 5,000 (par value)
b. No. shares outstanding 5,000 (par value) .. . ..... . .. . . . ...... . ............ 125,000.00
Surplus ................ .... ... . .......... ... .. .... . ... . .. .. . . . .......... 125,000.00
Undivided profits ...... . ..... .. .. .. ..... .. .... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .... .. ...... 629,000.00
Reserve for contingencies and
other capital reserves .. . .......... . ........... ... ........ . .. ... .. . .. . ..... 1,000.00
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL .. . ..... , ................. .. . . .... .............. 880,000.00
TOTAL LIABILITIES AND EQUITY CAPITAL . . ..... . .. . . .. ........ . . .. .. 11,035,000.00 - - - Average for 30 calendar days ending with report date :
Cash and due from banks . .... .. ...... . ....... . . ..... . .., , ... . .... . ...... 695,000.00
Fed. funds sold and securities purchased
under agreements to resell .... .. ........ ....... ............ .. ..... . ...... 936,000.00
Total loans . .. .............. ... .......... ... .. ... .. . ....... . .......... 7,637,000.00
Total deposits ..,...... . . : ........ ........ ... : ... .... ....... .. .. . .... .. 10,077,000.00
TOTAL ASSETS ....... ...... ... . .............. . . ... . . . ................
10,3113,000.00
,.,
.
~

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I

~·.

10 NEXT

DRESS
~.~~~

r

length. flare leg style, pre-washed blue
denim.

National Bank Region Number 4

VfvMEN'S DAY TIME

Reg. $1&lt;l ....... .......
. .. . .... Sale $11 .20
Reg. S12 ................... ........... Sale 59.60
Reg. $11 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• SaleS8.80
Reg. $10 •••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••• Sale $8.00
Reg . S9 .oo ............. ; .............. Sale$7 .20
.I,......,..._.._.. __ _ . . _ - - - - - "W .,...,_.,__._..__.....

Coat sale by Jerold

in tpe state of Ohio, at the close of business u·n September 30, 1978 published in response to
call made by Comptroller of the Currency, under title 12, United States Code, Section 161.
Charter nwnber 9815

#.

'\ ·,

,

;::

,~.~~:~ !~u~~}~,~~~

. Consolidating domestic subsidiaries of the

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

'

I

Special Two Day Salel

..

~·
'"'"

I

MEN'S s1.25 pr. T.V.
MEET MONDAY
The
Salem ·Center
Educational Organization
will meet Monday, Nov. 6, at
7:30 p.m. at Salem Center
elementary school.
All parents are urged to
attend to help improve
educational standards at
their school.

~ull

FRIDAy NOVEMBER 3RD AND
SATURDAy NOVEMBER 4TH

1 ONlY REG. '99.95

Pleasant Valley Hospital
Discharged
Mrs.
Michael Thomas, Point
Pleasant; Robert Martin,
Sissonville ; Roy Flint,
Gallipolis Ferry; Steven
Fowler, Point Pleasant;
Hatold
Blaine,
Point
Pleasant;
Mrs. Jerry
Johnson and son, Rutland;
Mrs. Eugene · Prunty and
daughter,Sandyville, W.Va.;
Tammy Henry, Point
Pleasant; Carlos McKnight,
Middleport; Mrs. Julia Long,
Point Pleasant; Norman
Benson, Southside.

. ... . .,

BARGAIN DAYS

Shelby, N. C., Dallas,
Paul, Robert, and William,
Racine , aqd Betty ·Me·
Murray,Columbus.onesister
Hazel Bearhs, Racine, 17
grandchildren, 23 great
grandchildren.
Private funeral . services
will be held Saturday at 1
p.m. at Ewing Funeral
Home. Burial will be in
Greenwood
Cemetery.
Frienda may call at · the
uneral homethis evening
from 7 to 9 and friday from 2
to 4 and 7 to 9.

HOSPITAL NEWS
.

UNDERGOEs SURGERY
Mrs.
Grace
Glaze,
Pomeroy, underwent major
surgery today at the Holzer
Medical
Center.
Her
daughter, Mrs. Louise
Radford, has been joined by a
.sister, Anna Pullins, and a
brother, George of Rock
Bridge.

•Brown

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

I

.

Reg, '$22.95 Jackets... ••p••••oo•o•oo•oo $19.•00
Reg. S34.95 Jackets..................... S29.00
Reg. $39.95 Jackets...................... $33.15

Reg. $54.95 JaC:kets ...................... $45.60

~~~~-"--~~W"WN-"~•WW~IWW"-W~~~··---~-·--------------"W"W~~~--~~---1
;

·,

.OPEN FRibA Y NIGHT TIL 8:0~ PM
SATURDAY TIL 5:00 PM

Carrol R. Norris

.'

ELBERFELDS IN· POMEROY ...

f

(

I

INSPECI' FIRE TRUCK - Middleport firemen
lnttpect a new lire ellldne which Is similar to the one they

-

.

i

hope to be able t~ ~rchase if Middleport voters approve
one mill, five year. levy at Tllesday's election.

-~

a

FREE PARKING FACIUTIES - The Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co. parking lot beside tile ·vacant

Middleport office Is now serving shoppers as a free
parking place. However it could be cutting down on
parking meler receipts.

�2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, Nov . 3. 1978

3-The Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy. 0., Friday, Nov. 3, 1!J78

~

•

~

'\1

Miami at OU in MAC tilt,
Meet the Southern Tornadoes
Falcons host Ball State

COMMENTARY

.-: IN WASHINGTON
Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

Too close to call

The 95th's record

By Martha Angle and Rubert Walters
EVANSTON, Iii. 1NEA 1 • When politic ians start claim·
ing that "y our vote could decide this election. " the typical
audience response is a yawn and a grimace . But nobody
sneers when Rep . Abne r Mikva, D-Ill. , delivers the pitch.
"Close" is not the word £or congressional elections here
in the lOth District, which was created from the affluent
North Shore suburbs of Chicago by court order in 1971.
Elections here are invitations to a coronary.
In 1972, the year of the Nixon landslide, Mikva lost to
Repu blican attorney Samuel Yo11ng by 7,000 votes, a 52-48
· percent margin . In the Wa tergate year of 1974, he took the
seat back by 3,000 votes, 51 to 49 percent. And in 1976, he
beat off a comeback attempt by Young by a grand total of
201 votes of the 213,000 cast, a winning margin of 50.04
percent.
·
With a history like that, it is no wonder that both political
pa rties consider the lOth District of lllinois the most
marginal in the nation . If there is to be a discernible
pattern to this off-year e lection, it should - in theory show up here .
The Republicans thi s year have put up a different
candidate; sta te legislator John Porter, hoping that a
change of face will he lp r ecapture the seat. The national
GOP is pouring money and expertise into the campaign ,
incl uding the services of Bailey. Deardourff &amp; Associates,
the top Republican political cons ulting firm in the nation,
a nd one which normally stic ks to presidential ·and
statewide races .
The issues this year would appear to cut in Porter's
favor. especially in a district that is one of the most
afflue nt in the na tion. The GOP candidate is running hard
on the antl ~spending, anti-tax themes so popular with
Republicans everywhere, seeking to label Mikva as a freespending libera l out of touch with the mood of his
constitutuents.
But Mikva, who is indeed an unabashed liberal, counters
with figures showing he has voted for more cuts and less
spending than any member of the big lllinois congressional
delegation except ultra-conservative GOP Rep. Phil
Crane . The distinction, of course, is that he votes for
cutbacks in pork barrel public works and defense
s pending, while others vote to slash social programs .
Issues may not matter as much in this election as voter
turnout and campa ign tactics, a nd here the edge appears
to be with Mikva . In contrast to the pattern which usually
prevails elsewhere, turnout in an off-year election generally drops more among Republican voters than Democrats
in the Chicago suburbs and " collar counties."
Furthermore, Mikva has one of the best volunteer
organizations of any politician in the country. Wherever
you drive in the lOth District - Evanston, Skokie,
Winnetka, Glencoe, Wilmette - there are cars on the
streets with big " Mikva!" s igns on top. Some 500 high
school students and thousands of college kids prowl the
di st rict on Mikva 's behalf, canvassing voters, identifying
potential s upport, passing otit literature.
Mikva regularly works the high schools in his acea,
winning adherents even before they are old enough to vote .
At graduation time, he makes s ure thef register - and
then keeps trac k of them when they go of to college. " I get
the largest absentee vote of anyone in the state- and it's
all kids," he says.
.
·
Porter is relying on more "modern" campaign tactics,
using heavy radio advertising, sophisticated polling,
computerized phone bank lists. He hasn't much choice,
since no first-time candidate could possibly match the
seasoned Mikva volunteer organization.
·
As us ual, the election this' time is way too close to call.
Both' parties are throwing their big guns into the race.
Gerald Ford has made a campaign stop for Porter, while
President Carter is appearing for Mikva in the final week
before the election.
But in the end , it will all come down to the voters- and a
few hundred out of thousands will probably decide the
outcome. In this district, every vote really does count.

·'

HEALTH
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

Estrogen has
good effects
DEAR DR. LAMB - Is it a
known fact that estrngen pills
cause cancer, and what part
of the body does it affect
mostly? Also, when cancer is
found in the human body by
surgery, does it grow faster
when it is exposed to air?
DEAR READER - There
are an awful lot of people who
take estrogen who never
develop cancer. I might also
point out that estrogen alone
isn 't a cancer causing agent,
because both men and women
nonnaliy produce estrogen.
In fact, there are several dif·
ferent chemical kinds of
estrogen.
At this writing, there has
not been a careful separation
of the different effects ofthe
different types of estrogen in
relation to any cancer effects
they may have. This is a
relatively pertinent point in
determinino the danger from
·
taking estrogen .
With the regular administration of at least one
type of estrngen, there does
seem to be an increased rate
of cancer of the uterus. This
may tlot be Important to the
women who takes estrogen
intennittently, meaning for
three weeks and stopping for
one week. It certainly is not
Important to the woman who
has already had a hysterec·
tomy. It is difficult to develop
cancer of the uterus if you
don'thaveone.
Giving additional estrogen
is also a poor idea in a woman
who has lumpy breasts, or if a
woman develops lumpy
breasts while she is taking
estrogen, usually she should
siop it.
Cancer of the uterus and
breast are the two main conslderations about the relationship of estrog~n to
cancer. Otherwise, there is a
great deal of eVidence in the
scientific literature that sug·
ge.sta the adminlstration of
estrogen protects a woman's
health and prolGDgs her life.
In fact, the statistics for the
goo¥eatures of ~en far

· In less than three months, the 96th Congress - most of
which will be chosen in the Nov. 7 mid-term election starts on a whole new workload .
Convening Jan . 15, it will face many of the Issues the 96th
did not complete - rlus a probable u .S.-&amp;vlet Salt n deal
and bills on nationa health insurance, welfare reform, and
energy producti on.
At stake in the general election are 435 seats In the Hou;se
of Representatives and 35 seats In the Senate.
'
As usual, most of the incumbents are running on records
established during the 95th Congress ..;.. the first under
President Carter, who ended an eight-year Republican
hold on the White House.
Of course, Carter - fighting strong domestic criticism
over inflation -- has a big stake in the results of the, voting
for the House and Senate.
The heavily Democratic 95th Congress overcame Initial
friction with the Carter administration to produce major
legislation - much during a marathon final session.
· Carter triwnphed when he finally got the Senate and
House to give h&gt;m an energy bill, jobs legislation a11d a tax
cut, all of which cleared on the final day. And Congress
upheld his vetoes of a " pork barrel"-style public works bill
and funds for a nuclear-powered aircraft carrier.
But the 95th never became a rubber-stamp Congress.
It did not enact such legislation as Carter's four-part .. .
election reform package; creation of a separate education
department; n&lt;rfault auto Insurance; labor law reform ; a
proposal to hold down rising hdspital costs ; the Alaska
land bill and major revision of the federal criminal code.
Some of the legislation Congress did approve :
- A five-part energy package - the president's toppriority issue. {t includes a controversial provision phasing
out U.S. regulations on the price of natural gas by 198S.
Carter fought that.
- A treaty , ratified by the Senate, ceding the U.S.-bullt
Panama Canal in the year 2000. It was the first issue on
.
.,
which Carter lobbied face-t&lt;rface.
- The Humphrey-Hawkins Bill setting a 4 percent ·
unemployment goal by 1983, with the federal ·government
as employer of last resort.
- An $18.7 billion tax cut, Including $12.7 billion for :
individuals. The individual tax cut- except In the cases of "
the very poor or large families - will not offset "
congressional-approved hikes in January in Social Securi- .

"He just tipped me with his tax cut."

Lottery clean-up ordered
By ROBERT .SANGEORGE
CLEVELANB (UPI) The scandal-plagued Ohio
Lottery may be abolished if
an ongoing investigation ·
doesn't place it above
suspicion and restore public
confidence, the man picked
by Gov. James A. Rhodes to
"clean up" the troubled game
has declllred.
And Richard L . Krabach
denied ~Y there was
anything irregular about the
appointment of Evelyn
Scbrenk as interim lottery
director.
Krabach called a news
conference to eKplained that
health
problems
specifically · the flu
prevented him from making
an earlier announcement of
Mrs. Schrenk's appoinlment.
The 54-year~ld Mrs.
Schrenk, deputy lottery
director, · was appointed to
bead the agency last week by
Rhodes, but the appointment
was not made public until thb
week. She replaced Krabach,
whose
emergency
appointment was announced
two. weeks ago when David
Harbarger resigned amid
kickback allegations.
The lottery is under investigation
for
alleged
irregularities in its contract
bidding.
"Nothing was kept secret. I
intended to call a news
conference, but I caught a
bug and became quite ill,"
Krabach said. He added that
he was unable to formally
assume the job of lottery
director llecause of conflicts
with other state posts he
bolds.
"Mrs. Schrenk seemed to
be the logical choice (to
formally head the agency),"
Krabach added. As acting
director slle IB responsible for
the day-to-day operation of
the lottery.

Krabach said he is serving contractocs for both games.
The most recent charges of
in an unpaid capacity as a
"laison" between the lottery scandal directed .at the
and the state attorney lottery were made in a suit
general's office. He disclosed against MCA by Scientific
that the investigation of the Games Inc., losing bidder in
agency will be completed in a June on a contract for two
instant games.
few weeks.
The lawsuit charged that
"The governoc first called
MCA
won the $2.3 million
me on Oct. 13 - it was a
instant-games
contract after
Sunday - and he said,
hiring
Terrence
B.
'There's a mess in the lottery
an
associate
of
McCarthy,
in Cleveland' and he asked if
CUyahoga
County
Republican
I'd go up there and clean it
Chairman Robert E. Hughes
up," Krabach noted.
other
influential
Declaring that the current and
investigation Is the last Republicans.
Scientific Games lawyers
chance to save the agency,
Jroduced
bank records last
Krabach told repcrters, "My
week
showing
that Hughes'
objective is to preserve the
consulting
firm
received
lottery. There are a lot of
'
$2,500
from
McCarthy's
,
people who just want It
consulting
firm
only
eight
abolished. We've got to
operate it above suSpicion so days after MCA paid
McCarthy $3,000 and just four
people will buy tickets."
He also acknowledged that days after MCA won the
pressure has been mounting lottery contract.
Krabach said he has asked
in Columbus and other parts
state Attorney General's
the
of the state to move the
office
to expedite its probe of
lottery's headquarters to
the
lottery
and has told
Coltimbus.
.
lottery
staff
members they
"Two top (state) senators
must
cooperate
fully with .
both suggested that part of
:•1
told
them we
investigation.
· an)' repll"t I sulmlt to the
are
going
to
remove
any
governor should reconunend
question
of
fraud."
moving the lottery to
Columbus," he said. "The
attitude is, 'As long as it's up
there in Cleveland it's going
· to be crooked.'"
Dogged by allegations of
·scandal,
the
Lottery
Commission voted this week
to surrender much of its
contracting power to the
state's purchasing office in
·
Columbus.
By
doing
so,
the
commissioners acted to
withdraw bidding invitations
on their new numbers game
rescind the secood half of
their instant-game contract
with MCA Games Inc. they
also gave the purchasing
office power to recWllllend

outweigh the statistics that
suggest there may be some
bad features of estrogen.
How do you resolve this
problem ? Well, you go to your
doctor and let him find out if
you need estrogen or not, and
let him decide whether your
breasts are nonnal enough
that you won't have a problem there. And let him
decide about the status of
your uterus, if you have one .
And if there reallly is any
dsnger posed by the type of
estrogen he wants to a~­
minister on the schedule he
reconunendsthatitbetaken.
So, there is no one little pat
By BRENT BOWERS
coffee in Japan dropped irom
answer that can be included
$1.40 to $1.33 overnight.
on the evening TV news to United Preu IDternaUOIUII
Beer,
bullfights and
-A quarter liter of Stella
solve this problem for
busiilesa
lunches
for Artois beer in Brussels, was
everybody . Sorry about that!
I don't know where the idea Americans abroad all cost available for 18 Belgian
comes from that if cancer is less today and both the francs or 59 cents Thursday
exposed to air, it will grow jubilant expatriates and instead of Tuesday's prtce of
faster. That is totally untrue. monetary experts said the 65 cents.
-A ticket to a bullfight in
Cancer cells are body cells. newly Invigorated dollar may
True, they are abnonnal, but herald the end of the Spain sank from $5.95 to $5.60.
worldwide greenback slump.
-A businessman's lunch
that's what they are.
"President' Carter's move for two in a "Jroper" London
They depend on nutrition,
· just like your other body cells (to stre~en the dollar l restaurant cost f80 Thursday,
do. In fact, YOll can kill Wednesday is the first giant $3 less than the previous
cancer if you are able to step to help the weak dollar. I day's !ab foc the same meal.
-A pack of cigarettes in
eliminate its blood supply, hope it really does something
to
stablllzlrmoney
marketa,"
West
Gennany dipped from
because it can't get nutrients
and have the normal ex· said a leading banker In $i.67 to $1.53 and a dinner for
change of oxygen and carbon London, where the dollar four in Parts from $114 to
gained three centa on the · $103.
dioxide needed for cells.
I suspect the idea is the pound Tlmaday.
Gold opened $4.75 lower in
result of discovering cancer
when the body is opened, for London at $222.25 and $1.25
example during an ab· lower in Zurich at $219.25.
11
l'm happy," crowed' an
dominal operation, and seeAmerican
businessman In
ing that the cancer has
where
a dollar bought
Tokyo,
already spread beyond the
ntEDAILYSENTINEL
186yen
at
the
close
of trading.
point that anything can be
DEWOTEDTOTHE
done surgically. In such in· The Tokyo market was closed
INTEREST OF
ME1GS-MA80N AREA
stances, the course of the pa· today due to a national
ROBERT HOI!fl.lCH
tient is downhill and holiday.
' ctly I'Atltor
PUblilhed dally m:opt Soiutday
AmerlcallB In Japan sometimes it is very rapid.
1
by The 01\lo Vlllley Pu.bliahing
But, it is the result of the . including more than 40,000
ComJU'ny-MultbiM!dbt, Inc.,
111
Court St., Pomeruy, Ohiu D7Bll.
disease that already existed . military personnel and their
Bwinns Ol'fie~ Phone IM· 2156,
also looked
and not because of exposing families F.:ditorill Phone 992-2157.
forward to lower prices.
the cancer to air.
Sei..'Ufld dus pur41lg~ pM id al
Pmneruy, Otdu.
"We haven't been going out
Readers who want more in·
Nlllh.nJMI adverti.'Jin~ rep~n­
fonnation about female hor· as much as we u.aed IG," said · \oltiw, I..Mndun M~~Uelalft · 3101
Euclid A\'e., Clevehmd, Ohio:« liS.
mones can 'Send 50 cents with an Air Force captain. "I hope
Subt!cripllon rMh!ll: IA!Iivered by
the
dollar
will
become
more
a long, stamped, selfc11rrier where MVaibtble 75 cen!Ji per
addressed enveldpe for The stabilized.'' Hec!ID now buy a
wt!t•k. ny Motor Roalt whitrl! carrier
~fV iL-.! not BVIIi!.ble, (}ne month,
Health Letter number ~12, glasa fll Dr81111e juice that C!JIIl
$:1.:!!i. Ry m».il in Ohlu IUKI W, VM .,
Menopause. Address your re- '-1 Wednellday for $2.87.
Ont• Yl!ar, 122.00 ; Six munlhs,
$1 J.:iO ; Thrt.'l! munth.H, t7 .00:
For the beleaguered
quest to Dr. Lamb in care of
J-:1.-wwht"·t· S'lfi.OO year ; Six months
this newspaper, P.O. Box American touri8!, there was
$ l :1.50: 'rttr1•l' munthK. $7.an
SuL...... -rlplhm IJI"It.."t· Uk·lutks ~ und~}
1551, Radio City station, New inunedlate relief:
-The price ~ a cup of . TIIIW!:'""'WIIIIfh·l..
. York, NY llfl9.

ty.

JENELLKELLY
KNOW YOUR CARRIER
Jenell Kelly, 16,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Tom Kelly, Chestnut
Street, Middleport, bas
been a carrier for The
Dally Sentinel for five
years. She Is a junior at '
Meigs High. She enjoys
sports and likes to read.
She Is a member of tbe
Uulted Pentecostal Church
In Middleport.

,,

- Reform of the Civil Service - a major revamping that ·
could lead to Carter's key campaign goal : making the
federal bureaucracy more efficient.
·
- An extension for three years and three months of the ':
Equal Righis Amendment ratification deadliile, giving '
backers a chance to win approval from the needed three
more states.
other key congressional achievements: creation of the ·
energy department ; an increase in the minimum wage; a ,
,constitutional amendment giving.the District of Columbia ·
voting representation in Congress; a government wideethics code; establislunent of a national consumer bank; ,
new loan guarantees to New York City; reduction of U .S.
regulations on airlines and the nation's first Inland '
waterway fees .
·
In the last days, the House reprimanded three of its
members ·accused of involvement m the Korean scandal.
A final note : In 1977, Congress appro\red a raise from ·
$44,600 to $57,500 for all its members and corresponding
pay boosts for the top echelons of the federal government.
This year it voted to freeze those salaries.
--------.--........, '
~ ·---~~ -~~

Peopletalk ·
By KENNETH R. CLARK
Ualted Pna lateraau..I
110MB RUN: Grace JGDea' Halloween spectacular at RaeelandhadbeenbilledinNewYorkasa bcmblheli. It turned Into
a bomb of multi-megaton yield and dlsgrunUed ticketholders
st1U are howling. The disco diva sank NO,OOO of her own cub
into a complicated battery of special effecta machinery. None
of it worked. With the sllow oversold, as many as 500 fallB were
left waving their '15 ticketa on the outside. lnllde It was no
better. Hoping to sell a tape of the show to television, Grace
hired a TV camera crew which blocked her act from the view
of the audience and when some crowded the stage, security
men started punching noses whlle the "cat lady" spat '
obscenities. Trick oc treat, It seems, gets more dangerous
every year.
COUNTRY WC: Texas Congrasnan Bob Eckhardt IIIUit
have been overwhelmed when United Nations 'Ambuaador
Alld!W YOWIII showed up in Houston to campalcn for him.
During a meeting withYoung, Eckhardt came down with wbat ,
the doctors call an "e~~ophagealiiPUIIl," and It put him in the
hospital for three hours. And just what Is an esophageal ..
spasm? It's translated as "a slldden vast hiccup" that caiMI
intense pain In the throat and chest. After medical tests, ,
Eckhardt finished afternoon campaign rouncls with Young In
tow.

Beef, bullfights
cost less totlay

COMI!LETE REQUIREMENTS - Kenneth E . .
"Gene" Riggs has just completed requirements for the
President's Honor Club of the John Hancock Life
Insurance Company for 1978. He will be attending the
meeting to be held in Los Angeles, california, March 1418, 1979. A representative of the John Hancock Life
Insurance Company for the past 13 years, Mr. Riggs has
his office at 104 Mulberry Street in Pomeroy.

Berry 's Wo rId

'DIE UNINVITED: Even with a )loyfriend In the cast,
Stephaale Ml11a couldn't wangle an Invitation to last week's
New York World Premiere of '"!.be Wiz"- the fllm ·venlon of
ihe Broadway play In which she stars as Dorothy. Her pre•
agent, John Carmea, revealed Tlllrsday tickets Initially sent
were canceled, on grounds too many had been distributed. At
his ptotest, two ducats finally sllowed up at the last minlte but by then, Stephanie's dander was up over the anub. "I'll go
on my own" slle huffed - and slle did, alter the preml.-e.
Boyfrtend Michael JacllloD plays the Scarecrow In the fllm,
with Dlaoa Rea In the role of Dorothy. .

QUOTE OF 'DIE DAY: From the 8188Y that WGII first prize
of $100 and a howlr balloon ride for Greeley, Colo.,lllll grader
r---:---=---- · - - - - - - - ----.Dawn McNeette: " ... rtdlng In a hoHir ballOCNl would be like
having the whole ally to yourseH, being on top of the world free to do whatever you want. Look as the !reel get lllllllller ,
and smaller and tbe clouds bigger. Hear the wind whistling as ,
It sings your 1011g."

Pff'ARTMEKT

Of FEDERAL

~EGULATIONS

l't\ICK£'1' MOUSE.
DIVI$1011

oUMPSES: Actre• ADIIe Jackloa and husl!end Ell '
Wallach are on a committee to ral.se money In the Dime fll the
late acl.ol" Gig Yo181f1, to build a heme for retarded chlldnln ... ,
Betty Fonlls hitUnc the prmtotlcin trail and will be In New
Ycrk Sunday to push her autobiography ' 1'1111 'l'lmel of My .
Life," written In collaboration with~ a..e ... Bela v -"
will ccHiost NBC-TV's "America Alive" 111011' Monday and.
Tuesday with JIICII LIDJetter ... lllfrlieJ Mad•'- will mab
coneert appearancee Nvv: 11-23 In Melbcturne and SydDey, .
Australia ... Dellllfl Weaver Is In San Frandlco to CCIItar Ill''
.ABC-TV's "Get Pa~ty Hearst," In wi*h be playa fCII'IIIII' FBI~
agent Cbarlea Bate. who auperviled invtltlption Of ..r ~
kidnappin- with
Eilllacber In the title role :..
,

u.a

~1978byNEA. I~~

The " Holy Shroud," not
found in the Bible, means
the winding cloth in which
Jesus was burled. The Holy
Shroud at Turin, Italy, according to the Catholic tradlUon, is the actual "clean
linen cloth" supplied by Joser.h of Arlnathea .
' Aad be boupt IIDe 11Dea
aad look him ~ 111111
wrapped blm ID the u-."

• -~--t,----· ·-----,---'---~-!lfl•rllli:H

.

....
..

Louvre U..p
tbe Louvre Musewn In

Paris was first opened to the •1
public on Nov. 8, 1'193. The"
construction of the Louvl'e, ~
,
origlnaiJy Intended ah royal
byreaiKing~Phlllppe.
was ~!'a~: i
....· fine art collection was !JeCun•:
by Francis lin the 18th Clll-·•

tury.

'!

I· •

Tony Adkins
5-9, 150 lbs .
Soph. End

Doug DuVall
6-0, 265lbs .
Soph. Tackle

Rick Allen
6-0, 145lbs.
Soph. Back

Danny Talbott
5-9, 140 lbs .
Soph. Back

Player bidding begins
NEW YORK (UP! ) The top pitchers available
There ~ren't likely to be are 3f&gt;.year-&lt;&gt;ld Tommy John
many additions this year to of J;os Angeles, 16-game
baseball's elite class of · winner Larry Gura of Kansas
million-dollar, free-a gent City, Jim Slaton of Detroit ,
players.
Jim Ba rr of San Francisco,
The bidding begins · today 37-year-old Luis 'l'iant of
after the major league 's 26 Boston and reliever Elias
teams divide up
the Sosa of Oakland.
Other players who will
negotiating rights to ttie 42
players who have decla red draw. interest are third
themselves free agents. But baseman Darrell Evans of
the
most
notabl e San Francisco, outfielders
characteristic of this year's l.ee Lacy and Bill North of
group is .t hat it's the least the Dodgers and outfielder AI
impressive since free agency Bumbry of Baltimore .
A player is eligible to be
began three years ago.
The biggest prize is Pete picked by 13 teams and the
Rose, the lifetime .300-hitting draft will continue until every
third baseman of the team has passed twice .
Cincinnati Reds. Rose, who Teams can sign only three
hit .302, ·h ad 198 hits, scored free agents each except
103 runs and had a 441lame Pittsburgh, San Francisco
hitting streak last season, and Los Angeles . Those clubs
turned down the Reds' Ia test each have four names on the
offer fer a reported $400,000 a list and would be able to sign
year, saying he wants to be a fourth free agent if they
the highest paid player in the wound up losing four players.
Beginning at 11 a.m., teams
game.
But like so many of his will choose in reverse order
fellow free a gents, Rose, at of their standing last season
37, is nearing the end of his with the first choice going to
career. . He may find the New YorkMets, who were
surprisingly few teams minimally active in the freewilling~ pay him the kindOf agent market the first two
· years. The Mets will be
money he "itnts.
.....
·i~

followed by SeatUe, Atlanta,
Toronto, St. Louis , Oakland,
H o uston, Cleveland,
Montreal, the Chicago White
Sox, the Chicago Cubs,
Minnes 0 ta , San Dieg o,
Detroit, Pittsburgh, Texas,
San Francisco, California,
Philadelphia, Balt imore ,
Cincinnati, Kansas City , Los
Angeles, Milwaukee, Boston
and the New York Yankees.
The 42 free agents this year
is less than the 89 available
last year but more than the 25
of 1976.
Rose has said he wants to
play· with a contender but
may be willing to sign with
Atlanta or San Diego if the
money is right. Both teams
have expressed interest in
acquiring the All-Star third
baseman.
John , who won 37 games for
the Dodgers in the past two
seasons, said his first choice
is Cincinnati. But the world
champion Yankees, whose
persuasive owner, Geor ge
Steinbrenner, has had more
success signing free agents
than others, are interested in
the veteran left-bander to
bol ster their pitching staff.

NBA Sfandings
By United Press Internation al

Eastern Conference
Atla ntic Di Yision
W . L. Pet.
Ph i la
6 1 857
New Jersey
7 4 .636
Washing t n
5 5 .500
New York
5 5 .500
Bos ton
2 6 .250

Central Division
W . l. P et .

GB

1
21 ~
21 '&lt;
41,

GB

H ous ton
5 4 . 55~
San Anton io
5 5 .500
A tl ant a
&lt;1
5 .444
Clevel and
4 5 .444
New Or lens
4 ~ .400
De tr oit
2 8 .200
. West ern Conference

11

1
1
11

~

31

~

Midwes t Di vision
W L. Pet .
6 3 .667
4
4 .500
5 5 .500
4 7 .364
I 9 .1 00

GB

Denver
I ndian a
p ._
Kansas City
11 2
Milwauke
3
Ch icago
5' '•
Pacific Di vi sion
W . L . Pc1. GB
Se a ttl e
1 .889
Ph o en ix
a 3 .72 7 I
Gold en St .
7 4 .636 2
Portla nd
4 4 .500 31,2
Los Angeles
4 A .500 31 1
San D ieg o
5 1 ..:117
41 1
Thu rsday 's Result s
Seattl e 95 , Detroit 94
Golden St . 113, Atl anta 106
Ph oenix 106, N ew Or lea ns 99
New York 127, Sa n Di ego 122
Friday's Gam es
San Antoni o at Boston
Seatt le at New Jer sey
M il waukee a t P hil adel p hia
Kansas Ci t y at Indiana
D etroi t a t Ch icago
Clev el and a t D en ve r
New York a t Los Angel es
San Diego at Portl and
Saturday's Gam es
San Antonio at washington
New Jersey at Atl ant a
Golden State at Detroi t
Phoenix a I Houston
Ind iana at Chicago
Denv er at Ka n sas Ci t y
Ne w Orl ea ns at Mi l wauke e
Cleveland at San Diego

a

"!,,

•.•

NHL Standdings
By United Press International
Campb ell Conference

Warriors record fifth win in row
By FRED UEF
UPI Sports Writer
When National Basketball
Association
Commissioner
Larry 0 'Brien sent John
Lucas to the Golden State
Warriors as compensation
when the Houston Rockets
signed free agent Rick Barry,
he lightened the Warriors'
-· payroll and strengthen ed
their backcourt.
Thursday night , Lucas
scored 18 points and teamed
with guard Phil Smith to help
down the the Atlanta Hawks,
113-106, for Golden State's
fifth straight victory . The

Warriors are now a sur·

prising 7-4 and they have
never looked better bringing
the ball up the fleor and
creating movement .
In fact , Barry is the first to.
agree.
"John Lucas is better than
any player we ever had

Rose on
•
auctzon
block
CINCINNATI (UP!) - The
·cincinnati Reds obviously
had a lot to lose in today's
free agent draft, but it was
unknown If they would try to
gain anything.
Reds' star Pete Rose went
m the auction block and
Cincy could wind up losing
him to any of a dozen teams
that might draft him.
But would the Reds do any
drafting of their own?
In the past, former Reds'
President Bob Howsam
refulled to draft anybody
because he didn 't think the
draft was good 'for b&amp;sebaU.
But, the Reds now have a new
Jresldent, Dick Wagner, artd
that could bring about a
c;hange in policy.
Wagner, in Japan with the
to\ll'lng Reds, dispatched his
player personnel director,
Sbeldm "Chief" Bender, IG
New Yqrk for . today's draft.
If the Reds do decide to
jump in the free agent swim,
It's been speculated they'll go
aft.- Tommy Jo!m because
the club needs a lefthanded
lla&gt;$ing pitcher.

(running the offense) in the
six years I was at Golden
State," Barry said.
The Warriors took a 55-48
lead at the half thanks to the
fil\e play of Smith, who
finished with 26 points while
playing his 257th consecutive
game.
By the end of the third
quarter, Golden
State
extended the score to 116-71
with Lucas doing most of the
damage.
" Lucas played extremely
well," Golden State coach AI
Attles said.
Atlanta, paced by ,John
Drew's 28 points, dropped to
4-5 and didn't look good in the
process .
"There's not much to say,"
said Hawks coach Hubie
Brown, "except that we were
embarrassed."
Elsewhere on an odd night
in the NBA when all the road
teams carne away with victories, Seattle beat Detroit,
95-94, Phoenix downed New
Orleans, 106-99, and New
York took San Diego, 127-122.
SuperSonics 95, Pistons 94:
Gus Williams scored five of
his 19 points in the final 18
seconds to give Seattle its
eighth victory in nine
games.
Suns 106, Jazz 99:
Paul Westphal had 27
points and Walter Davis 20 as
Phoenix capitalized on a
third'fleriod surge to ' defeat
New Orleans.
Knlcks 1%7, Clippers 122:
New York offset a 42-point
effort by San Diego's Uoyd
Free on the strength of 29
points by Ray Williams and
27 by Spencer Haywood.

Patrick Di vi sion

OU eager
drop$ out
of school
ATHENS, Ohio (UP!) David Tompkins, freshman
basketball · guard at Ohio
University, was back at his
Lexington, Ky ., home today
after deciding that he 's not
interested in college studies
any more.
Tompkins first ·entered
Ohio U in the fall of 1977, but
withdrew after one week . He
asked to return this fall but
-after several wee ks of
classes, he decided this week
not to continue.
"David feels he lacks the
motivation necessary to succeed
academically
in
college," Ohio U basketball
coach Dale Bandy said
Friday.

a

" We're naturally

W. L.
Atlanta
9 o
NY Rangers
6 1
N Y I sl anders
5 3
Phil adelphia
3 5
Smythe Divi sion

3

w. L. T .

Boston 4, N .Y . Islander s 1
Buffa lo 3, Phi l a 3, tte
Montr ea l 4, Wash in gt on 2
N.Y . Rangers 3, Co lora do o
Friday' s Games
Pittsburgh at At lanta

Toronto at Vancouver

Saturday's Games
Wash a t N . Y I slander s
Phi l ad elphia at Boston
A tlanta at Montreal
Detro it at Pi tt sbu rgh
Ch icago at St . Lou is
Buffalo at Minneso t a
Toron to at Colorado
N .Y . Rang er s a t LOs Ang

I nternationa I
Hockey League
United Press International

North
w I tpts. gf ga
Port Huron

F-lint
Kalamazoo
Saginaw

Muskegon

34174032
3 3 0 6 28 31
2 4 0 4 21 29

2 4 0 4 30 36
0700945

Soulh
wIt pts. gf ga
Ft . Wayne
7 0 0 14 38 15
Grand Rapids 4 2 1 9 29 23
Milw .
4 2 I 9 29 26
Toledo
3 2 1 7 29 26
Thursday's Games

•·
22-0
grade wtns,
Coach
Bill
Leedy's
Gallipolis eighth grad~rs
oompleted their 1978 campaign with a 22~ victory over
visiting Meigs on Memorial
Field Thursday evening. '
The victory left Gallipolis
with a 6-1~ season mark.
After a scoreless fir st
period, lleron Haner scored
from three yards out to give
GaUls a 6-0 lead.
In the third period, Haner
scored from four yards J;IUt
I

and ran the extra points.
Final Gallia soore came in
the fourth period when Aaron
Saunders galloped 80 yards.
Haner added the extra points.
Gallla rushed for 368 yards
and added six via passing.
The winners had 15 first
downs . Meigs had 36 yards
and four first downs.
Score by quarters:
0 6 8 8-22
Gallipolis
Meigs
0 0 0 0-· 0

per contest . The Falcons,
however, have scored only
seven points in each of their
last two games .
Ball State, which brings a 71 overall mark into the game,
has allowed only 190.9 yards
and 5.1 points per game .
"They (Ball State ) are an
outstanding team with a
strong offense and defense,"
said BG Coach Denny Stolz,
"and if we aren't ready, we
may be in for a long

afternoon.''
Meanwhile, Central, which
has scored 117 points in its
last thee games, must keep
winning if it hopes to
overtake Ball State.
Coach Chuck Stobart's
Rockets are 1-7 overall,
having lost 28-7 to Miami last
week .
"Coach Stobart has his
players
doing
some

impressive things," said
Central
Coac h
Herb
Deromedi, " and we have to
respect their ability to take it
to· us tike they did Ohio and

Western. "
Miami, refusing to concede
the defense of its title despite
losing its first two games of
the season, goes for its fifth
straight win at Ohio
University.
The Redskins a re now 5-2·1
overall and 3-2 in the conference and Coach Tom Reed
insists, "we are not out of the
race until we heve been
mathematically eilminated.
"Our players realize that
they must continue to win to
have a shot at the title,"

Badgers .hope to he
competitive Saturday ·
MADISON, Wis. (UP!) Wis co nsin Coach Dave
McClain says Woody Hayes
has the Ohio State Buckeyes
running a gain a nd they're
kn ocking the tar out of
people.
The Badgers will play the
Buckeyes Saturday in camp
Randall before a crowd of
80 ,000, who are all too
familiar with Hayes and the
art of running a football.
In four years, the Buckeyes
have run over the Badgers 527, 5!Hl, 3().20 and 4:W. Until
last Saturday, when the
Buckeyes beat Northwestern
63-20, the Badgers had the
dubious distinction of letting
a Hayes team score the most
points in one game, 62-7 in
1969.
Things could be worse. The
Badgers could be playing. the
Buckey~ in Ohio Stadium.
They ha ven't won at Ohio
State in 60 years.
The sometimes irascible
Hayes, !!Qach of the Buckeyes
for the last 28 years and
owner of a 24-1-2 record

agaimt Wisconsin, was more
than diplomatic as he looked
forwa rd to the game and a
meeting with his one-time
assistant McClain , who is in
his fir st year as the Badgers'
head coach.
" We expect a tough, hardfou ght football game, " Hayes
said. " Coach McClain is a
fine coach and I am sure he
will have his team ready for
us. We know that we will have
to be ready to play .''

Help Us!
Help You!

Wisconsin won its first four
games against Richmond,
Oregon, Northwestern and
Indiana - all of them having
off seasons . Then, the
Badgers tied Illinois, anothe r
team in a down year .
Two weeks ago, Wisconsin
got Michigan on the rebound
from its loss to .Michigan
State and was drubbed 4:W .
The Spartans scored a 5f&gt;.2
win over Wisconsin a week
ago.
"The first five games, Wisconsin played like world beaters,
although
their
competition was not as tough
as the last two games. I hope
we can make it three," Hayes
said . "We have had some
rousing
games
with
Wisconsin. I hope we can win

it.

added Reed . " We will not
have time to worry about any
other league game this
Saturday beause we will have
our hands full in Athens as
usual.' '
OU, 2-5 and 2-3, surprised
Western Michigan 1().7 last
weekend , dropping the
Broncos from the ranks of the
hot contenders.
"It's a typica l Miami
team," said OU Coach Bob
Kappas. "They have a great,
swarming defense, some
outstanding running backs
and Larry Fortner is a great
quarterback."
Northern Olinois (().2 ), the
only MAC team without a
conference win, will be trying
to get out of the cellar against
Kent State 1-4.
The Huskies are 3-1 ov era ll
after a H-13 win over
Southern Illinois last week,
while Kent is 3-5, losing 26-10
to Air Force a week ago .
Cincinnati, which snapped
a five-game losing streak
with an impressive 38-13 win
over Southwestern Louisiana
Saturday
night,
last
e ntertain s
Northeast
Louisiana this week.
Northeast, coac hed by
former Heisman Trophy
winner a nd pro star John
David Crow, is f&gt;-2-1.
Cincinnati smoth e r ed
Northeast Louisiana 63-{) last
year, but Bearca t Coach
Ralph Staub warned, "you
don't play last year's ball
game. We're only 2-5, so we
can't be looking ahead or take
them lightly ."
Youngstown
State
entertains Northern
Michigan in a night game,
trying to rebound from last
week 's 22-17loss to Villanova ,
its first of the season, while
Akron hosts Temple in
another night game and

Central State visits Ashland.
Ohio Conference action
finds Capital at Marietta ,
Muskingum at Wooster and
Wittenberg at Otterbein in
the Blue Division, and
Heid elberg at BaldwinWallace, Ohio Wesleyen at
Denison and Mount Union at
Ohio Northern in Red
Division play.
Other games Saturday find
Wabash at Oberlin , Centre at
Kenyon, Bluffton at Wilmington , Hanover at Findlay,
Hiram at Case Western and
John Carroll at Allegheny .

71;, Pet . per year on a
4 year certificate of
deposit .
$1,000.00
minimum
depos it
A substantial penally Is
on a II certificate

·

withdrawn prior
th e date of maturity.

Meigs Co. Branch
~

r;sA
The Athens County
Savings &amp; Loan Co.

296 Second AI .
Pomeroy, Ohio

WINTERIZE YOUR

We offer a complete service department to
service your boat now.
OPEN lOA .M. to6 P .M .
MONDAYTHRUSATURDAY
I

\

II

The Buckeyes started
slowly , losing to Penn State
beating Minnesota and
Baylor, tying SMU and losing
to Purdue . Since then,
however, they have been
unbeatable
rolling
up
successive Big Ten wins over
Iowa and Northwestern .
"You know, Woody came in
and said, 'I'm going to open
up my offense,' and lost two
games," said McClain , an
obvious disciple of the Hayes
philosophy of sticking to a
running game .

.

/

I

\,~""""""""

I

_____

WE HAVE OUTDOOR
BOAT STORAGE AVAILABLE

ZINN'S LANDING
Upper Rt . 7

Kanauga, Ohio

THE FARM BOSS"IS DESIGNED
TO lAST YOU TWICE AS IDNG
AND COST YOU HALF AS MUCH.

Vote Yes
for
Middleport
Fire levy

No games scheduled

Today's Games
Saginaw at Kalama zoo

Port Huro n a! Flinl
Toledo at Milwaukee
Muskegon at Grand Rapids
Saturday's Game s

Gallipolis eighth

9

Pts.
4 2 3
11
5 5 1
11
2 6 3
7
Co lora do
2 a 1
5
Wales Conferenc e
Norri s Di11ision
W . L. T . Pt s.
M ontreal
6 4 1
13
Detro it
4 3 3
11
Los A n geles
4 5 0
a
washington
2 6 2
6
Pittsbur gh
1 7 2
Ad am s Di Vision
w L. T . Pt s.
Bos ton
7 1 2
16
T oronto
5 5 1
11
Buffa lo
2 4 3
7
Minnesota
2 4 2
6
Thur sday's Results
Chi cago
Vanco uver
S t . Louis

dis-

appointed with his decision to
leave, but we respect it and
understa nd it.
"When we discussed his
return this fall , we realized
the possibility of his not
making necessary academic
adjustments. He was actually
more motiva ted to come
because of his basketball
abilities rather than his
desire
for a
college
education .''
The 6-3 guard prospect ;
of Lexington's Tates Creek
High School returned home
Thursday.

T . Pts.
2
20
3
15
2
12

By GENE CAD DES
UPI Sports Writer
Although out of the MidAmerican Conference race,
Bowling Green finds itself the
center of a ttention Saturday
when it hosts league-leading
Ball State .
The Falcons had the fmal
nail driven into their
champ ionship hopes last
week in a 38-7 loss to Central
Michigan, but still can have a
lot to say a bout who does win
the title ..
Central, which entertains
Toledo Saturday in one of
three other Mid-Am games,
would stand to gain the most
from a BG win .
The Chippewas are f&gt;-1 with
three more conference games
to play and could finish at 8-1.
Ball State, fHI , plays one less
than
confer ence ga me
Central and a loss by the
Cardinals in their final three
games would leave them at 71.
Besides the Ball State-BG
and Central-Toledo contests,
other conference games find
Kent State at Northern
illinois and Miami at Ohio
University, while Western
Mi chigan hosts Marshall in
the only other game involving
a Mid-Am team .
Th e Bowling Green-Ball
State game matches the
league's best offense against
llie top defense.
BG, paced by quarterback
Mike Wright , is averaging
435 .5 yards per game and is
second in conference scoring
to Central Michigan at 2R .4

T ol e do at Fort Wayne
Ka lamazoo at Muskegon

Fl int at Pori Huron
Grand Rapids at Saginaw

Tuesday
Nov. 7th
Pd. Pol. Adv.

Part for part, the Farm Boss
has been designed to last at
least twice as long as any
other popular saw in its class.
And by lasting twice as long,
you'll save about twice as
much to make the Farm Boss
the only farm saw on the
market that's more than a
deal. It's a Stihl®

POMEROY HOME &amp;AUTO
606 MAIN

992-2094
"FRONT END ALIGNMENTS"

POMEROY, 0.

�•

5--The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, Nov. 3, 1978
4- The Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy. 0., Friday, Nov. 3, 1978

-

.

SEO area grid statisticsDolphins,_C~wboys
m•LEAGUE FOOTBALL- As

SOUTHEASTER~ 'OHIOATHLETIC

of Oct. 20
TEAM STATISTICS
FIRST OOW~S
TEAM
Tm. Av . Clpf'. Avg.
Athens
60 12.0 76 15.2
Gallipolis
43 10.8 71 17.8
Ironton
81 20.3 38 9.5
Jackson
50 12.5 52
13.0
0 o.o 0 0.0
Logan
Meigs
77 15. 4 56 11. 2
Waverly
54 13.5 65 16.3
Well st on
48 12.0 65 16.3

PASSING
SCRIMMAGE PLAYS
Cmp-Att Int. Cpg
Tm. Avg. Opp. Avg.,
17-40 6 3.4
287 57.4 272 54.4
20-43 1 5.0
207 51 .8 213 53.3
13-23 1 3.3
214 53.5 202 50.5
18-36 4 4.5
219 54.8 202 50.5
0-0 0 0.0
0 0.0 0 0.0
42-73 4 8.4
274 54.8 244 48.8
13-34 8 3.3
189 47.3 239 59.8
12-30 0 3.0
182 45.5 197 49.3
TOTAL
TOTAL
RUSHING
PASSING
OFFENSE
DEFENSE
Yds. Avg. Yds. Avg.
TEAM
Yds. Avg.
Yds Avg .
981 196.2 232 46.4
Athens
1213 24M
1271 254.2
540 135.0 293 73.3
Gallipolis
833 208.3
1389 347.3
1J31 332.8 241 60.3
Ironton
1572 393.0
711 180.3
592 148.0 268 67.0
'Jackson
860 215.0
988• 247.0
0 0.0 0 0.0
Logan
0 0.0
0
0.0 .
830 166.0 466 93.2
Meigs
1296 259.2
1013 202.6
739 184.8 190 47.5
Wav erly
92'1 232.3
1251 312.8
853 213.3 161 40.3
Well ston
1004 251.0
1074 268.5
1978 SOUTHEASTERN OHIO ATHLETIC
teams Ranked
LEAGUE FOOTBALL- As of Oct. 20
Offensively
Team
Pis. IGJ Avg.
INDIVIDUAL LEADERS
Ironton
251 (7) 35.9
RUSHING
Wellston
183 (7) 26.1
Yds. Car. Avg.
Eastern
199 18) 24.9 Royal , Ironton
546 56 9.8
Miller
214 19) 23.8 Smathers, Athens
636 113 5.6
North Gallia
112 18) 21.5 Jay john , Wellston
456 66 6.9
Trimble
166 (8 ) 20.8 Patton, Wellston
386 47 8.2
Wahama
145 (B ) IB.1 Boykin , Ironton
372 64 5.8
Nel. -York
129 (B ) 16.1
PASSING
Meigs
120 IBl 15.0
Cmp-Atl-lnt Yds. TO
Alexander
117 '(B) 14.6 Ashley , Meigs
42- 70- 4 466· 0
/
Waverly
102 Ill 14.6 Harrington , Gallla
20-43- 1 293 1
Pl . Pleas.
125 19) 13.9 Jenk ins, Jackson
17- 32- 4 261 2
Belpre
109 (B ) 13.6 Ross, Athens ·
17-40-6 249
Southwestern
109· (B ) 13.6 Settles. Wellston
12-2B- 1 161 2
Warren
104 (B) 13.0
PUNTING
Kyger Creek
97 IBl 12. 1
Yds No. Avg.
Athens
94 IBl 11.8 Ashley , Meigs
456 13 35.0
Gallipolis
69 IB) B.6 Harrington , Gal.
542 16 33.9
Hannan Trace
63 { 9) 8.0
Patton, Wel lston
403 12 33.6
Ja ckson
"
56 (B) 7.0
Hodges, Ironton
263 8 32.B
Fed: Hocking
40 18) 5.0 Adams, Athens
690 22 31.4
VInton Co.
35 (9) 3.9
To be included among punting leaders, an IOdividual must
Logan
6 121 3.0 have averaged at least two punts per game played by his team .
Southern
0 ( 71 0.0
RECEIVING ·
Teams Ranked
No. Yds. TO CPG
Defensively
15 226 2 3.0
Schanzenbach
,
Ath.
Pis( G) Avg. Seelig, Meigs
Team
15 170 0 3.0
49 ( B) 6.1 Stewart. Meigs
Fastern
13 180 0 2.6
61 ( 7) 8.7 Roya l, Ironton
lr onton.
7 177 3 1.8
79 ( 8) 9.9 Noble, Waverly
Alexander
6 117 0 1.5
.Miller
92 (9) 10.2
KORETURNS
B6 (B) 10.B
Trimble
Yds No. TO
92 (B) '11 .5 Althouse, Waverly
Meigs '
179 8 0
I 92 (7) 13.1
Waverly
128 7 0
Robinson , Gallia
107 (8) 13.4 Music, Jackson
Athens
125 6 0
109 (B) 13.6 Becker , Meigs
Belpre
123 7 0
124 (9) 13.8 Patton , Wellston
Pl. Pleas.
98 4 0
115 (B) 14.4
Fed. Hocking
PUNT
RETURNS
126 (B). 15.8
North Gallia
Yds No. TO
131 (8) 16 .4 Abdella, Athens
Wahama ·
42 7 0
117 ( 7) 16.7 Hodges. Ironton
Southwestern
25 4 0
119 (7) 17.0 Conley, Waverly
Wellston
18 2 0
150 ( B) IB.B Claytor, Waverly
Kyger Creek
12 1 ' 0
155 18) 19.4 Cosby, Jackson
Jackson
. 11 4 0
IB6 (9) 20.7
Hannan Trace
11 3 0
166 IB) 20.B Patton, Wellston
Nei. -- York
I
NTE
RC
E
PTIDN
S
232 (9) 25.B
Vinton Co.
No. Yds TO
55 (2) 27.5
Logan
4 41 0
Kranylk,
Athens
223 (B) 27.9 Sc~anzenbach, Ath.
Gallipolis
-- ~~, JS 0
211 171 30.1
Southern
Warren
US 181 30.R
This Week's Schedule
Friday
(SEOALJ
Gallipolis at Meigs

Meigs Tire Center, Inc.
ANNOUNCING

•

lR

top NFL clash :_. Syracuse Cub Scout Pack 242

United Preslllllematioaal
Jls cuStomarUy cnsp game. agallist.
The Miami Dolphins and
"Right oow we are not
"Their
defense
is
the Dallas Cowboys - the superior to a lot rJ. football awesome," said running back
NFL's two d&lt;minant teams of teams in Ibis business," Delvin Williams, the league's
the decade - get together for Dallas Coach Tom Laoory leading rusher with · 887
the first time in five years said.
'
yards. "They 've played
Sunday In a game that can
However, the Dolphins under that system foc years
send ooe of them into first know the Super Sow! and have aU their teclmiques
champioos well enough to down pat. And they've got
place.
Miami, 6-3in the AFC East , realize what they're up great personnel."
can grab a share of first place
•
.
·

~ng~':!~a~u::,sr;

inN:
NFC East, elm pull into a
first-place tie ~ Baltimore

~:~.

Redwomen to end
•
reP'JI.lar campazgn
e- .
.

·

.

Washington Mooday •
These have not been the
best oflimes f&lt;r the Cowboys.
RIO GRANDE - Rio
Ccming off a 21·10 loss to
Minnesota Thursday night, Grande's powerf\11 women's
Dallas has not been playing volleyball oouad completes

2 18 0
2 0 0

Hodges, Ironton
Waugh, Jac~son

1 0 0

Williams, Ironton
x - Includes lntercepfed fumble

OVERALL SCORING
I As of Oct.21)
NAME, TEAM
TO Pat Pis (G) Av.
Rod Boykln, Iron.
20 2 122 17) 17.4
Randy Browning, East.
12 8 80 (8) 10.0
Jerry Patton, Well.
11 0 66 17)
9.4Kevln Roush, Wahama
9 4 58 (8)
7.3
John Knight, Way.
8 2 50 (7)
7.1
Joe Fletcher, Iron.
3 25 49 (7)xx 7.0
Jeff McClelland, Trim.
9 0 54 (8)
6.8
'f.J.m Howell, NG
6 16 52 (8)
6.5·
B 2 50 (8)
6.3
Da.e Boslon;"Ne[-York
Greg-Becker, Meigs
8 0 48 (8)
6.0
SOUTHEASTERN OHIO
ATHLETIC LEAGUE SCORING Name, Team
TD Pat Pts ((I) Avg.
Rod Boykln, Iron.
13 2 80 (4) '20.0
Terry Royal, Iron .
6 4 40 14)
10.0
Jerry Patton, Well.
6 0 36 (4)
9.0
Greg Becker, Meigs
7 0 42 (5)
8.4
Jack Smathers, Ath.
5 0 30 (5)
6.0
John Knight, Wav.
4 0 24 (4)
6.0
Curt Jayiohn, Well.
4 0 24 (4)
6.0
Joe Fletchet, Iron.
1 14 20 (4)' 5.0
Dave Blake, Melgo
1 10 ·22 · (S)xx 4.4
Mark Sheets, Gar.
2 2 14 (-4)
3.5
Scott Morrison, Gal.
2 2 14 (4)
3.5
SOUTHERNVALLEY
.
4T.HLETIC CONF!RENCE SCORING
Name, Team · •
TO Pat Pis IGl Avg.
Randy Browning, Ea•l.
6 . 4 40 (4)
10.0
Dan Spencer, East.
6 0 36 (4)
9.0
Paul Lasseter, KC
4 o 24 (3)
B.O
Brian Bissell, East.
4 2 26 (4)
6.5
Stacy Winston, NG
4 2 26 (4)
6.5
Tim Howell, NG
3 6 24 (4)
6.0
Vic!or Van Sickle, KC
2 0 23 (3)
4.0
Roger Cremeans, NG
2 2 14 (4)
3.5
Archie Meadows, HT
2 2 14 (4)
3.5
Jay Bray, HT
2 0 12 (4)
3.0
Joe Potter, SW
2 0 12 (4)
3.0
Sherman Potter, SW
· 2 0 12 (4)
3.0
Marty Glassburn
2 0 12 (4)
3.0
~- "lndudes field goal(s)

its finest regular season ever
this weekend.
Tonight at 7 the-Redwomen
host Ashland College and .
Urbana College at Lyne
Center Athletic Complex. On
Saturday,
Wilmington
College and Ohio Northern
University invade Lyne
Center for a triangular match
beginning at 10 a.m. •
Coach Diane Lewis looks
with anticipation at this
weekend's schedule. Said
Lewis, 11 Here's where we find
out how tournament tough-we
ate at this moment. Ashland
College finished fourth in last
year's state tournament and
Ohio Northern University
ahnost U!l!el Ashland in a
recent match."
The other two teams also
hold a great deal of interest to
Coach Lewis and her spikers.
"Wibnington College," Lewis
added, "They're one of the
six losses on this year's
record. It was a game where
we heat ourselves, We've got
a score to settle. Urbana is a
young and buDding program.
They could he the surprise
team of the weekend."
The Redwomen, under
Coach Lewis, have compiled
a 24-6 record thus far and
have established themselves
as one of the small college
favorites in the state tour·
nament to be held at Ohio
Northern
University
November 9, 10, U .

· .The game ~ played befoce _Griele ~ces Dallas quarter- :
ananticipatedcrowdof75,000 back Roger Staubach .,. the ,
at ·the Orange Bowl - will tojH'ated ~rs In the NFL ·
feature some alluring LD 1977. At running back, It
matchups.
will be DaUas' Tooy Doraett
Miami quarterback Bob against Williams.

LIGHTWEIGHT

EASY TO HANDLE ~

REMINGTON.

CHAIN ·SAW

Warren at Federal- Hocking
Nelsonville· York at VInton

-PLAN AHEAD

(SVACl

JOIN OUR

County

-

COMPUTERIZED·
WHEEL BALANCING

Southern at Hannan Trace

Kyger Creek at Souhwestern
IOihersl
Columbus Central at Athens
Eastern a! Symmes Valley
Miller ~t Trimble
.
Sissonville at Point Pleasant
(7:30p.m.)
Saturday
Buffalo Putnam at Wahama
17:.30 p:m.)
Note: Columbus Central at

Featuring our FMC
Electronic Wheel Balancer

Awards were presented ~~
the Thursday night meeting
of the Syracuse Cub Scout
Pack 242 held at the Syracuse
Elementary School. .
Receiving the awards were
Todd Davidson, bobcat; Todd
Adams, Eric Thoren, David
Duffy, Jeff Frank, and Brian
Freeman, aquanaut pins ;
Chris Deemer, Jerry
Aleshire, Scull McPhail, gold
arrows; ~nd Chris Deemer,
and Mike · Patter$on, denner
cords.

Canter's Cave 4-H Camp is
set in a 60-acre valley
surrounded by unique rock
formations. Three maj or
caves or caverns are included
in the trails around the ~amp .
Huge hemlock and beech
trees populate the area.
Canter's Cave is located in
the unglaciated part of Ohio
which means-that there are a
variety of resources sUitable
for outdoor education. The
outstanding scenic beauty of
the camp is enhanced by the
rugged terra in of the
surrounding cliffs.
The camp is also located on

The pledge of allegiance L. Jeffers, Cindy Patterson;
and prayer were led.by Chris Mike Patterson, Mrs. Greg
Deemer and Mike Patterson Railey, Chris and Andy Raer.
who also participated in cam- Mrs. Jerry Aleshire, Jerry
paign talks for a mock elec- . Aleshire, Mrs. Allen David·
lion. Brian Freeman explain- son, Todd and Lois, Tara and
ed the requirements for the Todd Wolfe, Mr. and Mrs.
aquanaut pin. Den I and Den Jim Adams , Todd and Kim,
2 gave "Good Night, CubMrs. Jeanette Duffv and
hers" and the meeting .closed David, Mrs. Clarence "Frank,
wilhthelivingcircle.Marilyn Jeff and John· Mrs. Gary
Deemer, Louise Frank and Frl:!eman and Brian, Mrs.
Diana Davidson served Pete Thoren and Eric, Mr.
and Mrs. Hugh McPhail,
· refreslunents.
Attending were Mrs . Scott and Heather.
Deemer, Chri.!-i ~nrl

KP"'"

.f •

Cuts Trees Up To 32" Thick. New Stylin11
Full Power

Here' s t~e lightweight Remington Chain Saw that ~tarted
the trend to the lightweights. Now equipped with new low- .
tone muffler for quiet operation.

assembled . Weighing iust 10•
lbs. It has o powerful 46 cc displacement engine that delivers
more power per pound than
mony Iorge f. cho.in sows. Insist on
a· Remington SL-16 Chain ~ow.

'

399 W. Main Street 992-2164 · Pomeroy, 0.
The Store With" All Kinds of Stuff"
For Pets - Stables - Large and Small
Animals. Lawns - Gardens.

Athens game replaces Logan
at
Athens
game
In

Southeastern Oh io Athletic
League which was cancelled

due to the teachers' strike at

Log&amp;n.

r

MEIGS TIRE CENTER, INC.
John Fultz. Mgr.
700 E. Main, Pomeroy

wlrlh $68.

GALLI POLIS BUSINESS
COLLEGE

Marathon
successful

IS STILL TAKING
APPLICATIONS FOR CLASSES

CALL TODAY AT
446-4367
OR STOP IN AND
.VISIT US AT THE
SPR·ING VALLEY PLAZA

A cro'Yd"of 1,114 wagered
$125,146.

••

992-2101

'

Disco Class to ·begin

lHIS YEAR WE MAILED $171,364.50
TO OUR TO OUR 1978 F~RMERS BANK CHRISTMAS
.CWB MEMBERS. BE SURE TO GET YOUR
.SHARE NEXT YEAR. STOP BY NOW AND ••
'

'
•''

,.......................I
I piCK

SENATOR COLLINS already kn~ws .....; what

would take another Individual yean to
learn- SOUTHERN OHIO•s problems and
the Legislative action naadecl.
v

RE-ELECT----

OAKLEY COLLINS

JOIN OUR 1979 CHRISTMAS CLUB

•

·

YOUR Ci.U8

~Deposi~ Eii!C:h
i Week For
I

49 Weeks
SOc

~ S1.00

.

_NoW _. .

Recieve Next
Year For
Christmas

1 ,1
I

S2S.OO ~
150.00 .
100... .
.

I S2.00
.
Sl.CK
1154).10 w
I ss.oo
nH,IO
·'II s1o.oo
SSII.oo 1
$20.00
~~--· J
rh .......................
I(

'

---State Senator

1

.

YOU PAY 49 PAYMENTS
WE WILL

•••

t

Open ·Bible. For
good reason.

Announce birth

'

PAY· THE 50TH

Farmers Bank.

OHIO NEEDS OF lHE SECURITY .
PD. POl: ADV.

e ca

l

POMEROY I OHIO

ISSUED: COLLINS FOR SENATE COMMITTEE

ers

IT'S NOT
TOO LATEI

Halloween prizes awarded

NEW AT:

G)1!03&gt;
Lei

STARTING OCT. 30, 1978

. . NOW

LEBANON REsULTS
LEBANON, Ohio (UPI) Siler's Key grabbed the early .
lead and stayed In front the
rest of the way Thursday
night In scoring a half~ength
victory over Glory's Best in
the featured eighth race at
Lebanon Raceway.
Wally's Tar was third.
The winner, driven by
Alvin Long, covered the mile
in 2:08 1-S and returned $-4.20,
$3.40 aod $2.40. Glory's Best
kicked back $4.40 and $3 to
i=--" place and _Wally's Tar paid
$t.20 to show.
The 5·7 nightly double
combination of Laurie's
Bullett and Scout's Star was

recreation,

conservation, crafts, gun
safety, archery, nature in·
1 terpretation ,
vespers,
campfires, Indian lore and
other special activities.
The camp corporation is
involved in developing the
camp from a summer only
use to year round use. The
scenic beauty of the camp is
enhanced by winter snowfall
and the freezing of ice formations in the cave areas.
· t st d ·
An yone mere
e U1 more
infonnation or in donating
funds can contact the Meigs
County Extension Office at

Rutla nd Garuen •
Cl:ub h 0 ld.s mee tzn:g

inch diameter tree , clearing brush or cutting firewood . It
comes to you reody for use, fully

MODERN SUPPLY

s wlmming ,

,J

It makes all cutting iobs easy whether you're felling a 32

Remington Chain Saw
prices start at $29.99

a major Indian trail. This
makes it ideal for history and
cultural programs.
Canter's Cave is presently
the camp site for 4· H
members from Meigs, Gallia,
Jackson, Highland, Adams,
and Lawrence Counties.
Located six miles north of
Jackson on Route 35, the
camp provides an opportunity for 4-H'ers to experience outdoor living in an ~
exceptionally scenic valley. I
Camping programs include -

were distributed on mulching
a garden, inviting birds,
drainage around a house.
~
The meeting was conducted
by the president, Anna
A crafls, songs ~nd games workshop was held Monday at the
Turner,
with devotions by
Rook Springs Grange Hall with Debbie Hillard. of Athens in
Starfire diamonds bring
you guaranteed f ine q uality ,
Reva
Snowden,
and roil call
CHESTER
GARDEN
CLUB
Leota
Young;'
charge. She displayed a variety of crafts including Christmas
bea utiful ly mounted in 14K
answered with a conservation
president of the Chester Garden Club, is representing the I
Mrs. Orville Freeman of
ornaments, and taught several new games and songs.
yellow or white gold .. . w ith
practice being observed .
Chester Garden Club which has made a sublltantlal
Participating were Rhea and Harold Norris; Carolyn King, Ardsley·on·Hudson, New
permanent regislration .
Program books for the ne.w
contribution to the Canters Cave 4-H Camp improvement'
Merle Johnson, Pat Thoma, JaniCe Haggy and Martha• York was elected president of
year of 1978-79 were 992-3895.
fund .
the Girl Scouts of the United
Graves.
Latest contributors to the
distributed.
Officers installed
states of America at the
camp
fund include Mr. and
J
by
Ruby
Diehl,
a
past
Service unit meeting will be held Thursday from 9:30 to 11 : 30 National Girl Scout CoWlcil
Mrs.
Thomas
Sayre,
Joyce
.
....
president, who presented
at the Meigs Inn, Mrs. Thoma, service unit diredor, announc· Meeting held in Denver
Bowen,
Royal
Crown
Bottling
each with a colored carnation
ed today. All leaders and co-leaders are urged to attend since October 22-25.
2l·l E. Ma ·
were
president, Anna Tur- Company, Mr. and Mrs. Gene
For Jane C. Fre~man ,
plans will be made for Christmas parade participation and
Jeffers,
and
the
Chester
Po
'0"
ner;
vice
pre.
•
ident,
Pauline
conuniltees for the Meigs County Fair program will be named. working with people means
Garden
Club.
merov
•
·
Atkins; secretary, Dorothy
more than just on.,lo-&lt;~ne
POMEROY JUNIOR TROOP 1276
Boyd Ruth; District Con- Science, and has worked in Woodard; treasurer, Reva
A Halloween party was held at this week's meeting of the relationships. She also enjoys
servationist,
USDA , was varied parts of Ohio in soil Snowden.
helping
whole
groups,
even
Pomeroy jWliors at the Pomeroy Elementary School. Robert
introduced
by
~auline
Atkins, and water conservation and
Plans were made to conwhole
nations,
to
work
Morris judged the costumes with Jennifer Swartz receiving
program
chainnan,
at
the
a
g
r
i
c
u
1
t
u
r
a
1
c
m
•
tinue
with Christmas gifts
together.
Since
1972,
her
0
the prize for the ugliest, Laura McCullough!, the prettiest;
Trina Reeves, the most origi_nal; and Suzan Thoma, the fWl- position as Girl Scouts of the October 30 meeting of the munications. The Meigs and table arrangements for
niest. Donuts and cider were served. Mrs. Betty Lane is the United states International Rutland Garden Club held at CoWliY office is located on the Athens Mental Health .
Commissioner has given full the home of Reva Snowden in second floor of the Fanners . Center. The civic community
·Ieader.
Bank Building. SCS also project of planting tulip bulbs
rein to this talent. In that Rutland.
MIDDLEPORT JUNIOR TROOP 1039
Mr.
Ruth
came
to
Meigs
provides a technician Reid in the Rutland park wUI be
Officers have been named for the newly organized Mid· capacity, she has served as
County
in
1975
to
work
in
Soil
Young
and an 'office conducted soon.
dleport jWlior troop. The patrol leaders are Tamara Clark, U.S. Delegate to the World
Conservation
Service,
one
of
secretary,
Leota YoWlg. The
Reva Snowden, Ruby Diehl
Rhonda Rathburn, Christy 'Farley. Officers to serve for the Conference of Girl Scout
several
governme_
nt
agen·
Vo
Ag
Department
of
Meigs
and
Pauline Atkins attended
next month are Shannon Hindy and Tammy Cremeans, International Commissioners
cies.
He
is
a
native
of
Athens
H'.gh
School
provides
aide
the
final
and special meeting
refreshments; Wendy Barker, attendance; Lisa Ashely, In Ghana ( 1973), ·to the
County,
an
Ohio
State
help
lor
interested
students.
·
of
Flower
Arranging class
ConWestern
Hemisphere
treasurer; and Kim Stewart, secretary.
University
graduate
with
a
Five
Meigs
County
men
make
taught
by
Janet
Bolin and
ference
of
Girl
Scouts
in
Peru
The troop meets on Tuesdays at the home of Cherry Cadle,
degree
in
Plant
and
Soil
up
the
district
board:
Rex
reported
on
such
as being
(1973),
to
the
21st
World
assistant leader. Mrs. Joy Clark is the troop leader and other
Shenefield, David Gloeckner, most
successful.
Anassistants are Judy Laudennilt, Esther Bacon, and Barbara Conference of WAGGGS in
Roy
Miller,
Thereon
Johnsdn
nouncements
of
future
Canada
(1972),
the
22nd
Phillips.
and Joseph Bailey. One ac· meetings ·include: Fall
World Conference in-England
SYRACUSE TROOP 1204
tivity
of this board is to create Regional Meeting ill Marietta
Halloween decorations were made by the Syracuse (1975), and sh will be a
for donations into an on November 4; County
sources
Brqwnies at a recent meeting held at the Syracuse Elementary delegate to the 23rd World
educational
fund which' - Christmas Flower Show at
School. Visiting the haWlled house in Pomeroy were Kim Conference in Iran this
provides
a
yearly con· Pomeroy Elementary School
Adams, Jayne Goode, Alicia Van Meter, Tracy Hubbard, Jill september.
servation
.
poster
contest for on December 2 and 3; inJane got her start in Girl
Nease, Terri Roush, Kim Cogar, Sherri Sisson, Shriely Cogar,
Meigs
CQunty
fourth
grades. vitation by Mr. Ruth to An·
RIO
GRANDE-Carl
Scouting as a Brownie and
leader, and Joyce Sisson, helper.
Mr.
Ruth
stated
that ·nual Conservation dinner
Meyers,
Jr.
,
and
Theodore
The girls are now selling girl scout calendars and pucket Girl Scout in North Carolina,
assistance
in
conservation
meeting at Southern JW1ior
Misner
of
Cheshire,
Robert
and
later,
on
Girl
Scout
planners. Participating in openings recently have been Kim
planning
and
application
is
High on November 16.
Swank
of
Rio
Grande,
and
committees
and
the
Girl
·
Adams, Jayne Goode, Sherrie Sisson, Tammy Theiss, Kim
given
without
discrimination
Binda Diehl gave "Ideas
Stephen
Wilson
of
Gallipolis
Scout
board
of
Minneapolis.
Cogar and Jill Nease.
Classes being.offered can be applied
At this week's meeting, the girls had a halloween party and She has also been a board were four of twenty-three for any non-merit reason for for November" by saying
toward
your diploma. G.B.C. is a
one
acre
or
1,000
acres,
in
that
in
this
region,
November
l"eiebrated Juliette Lowe's birthday. Tracy Hubbard had the member of Girl Scout Council members of Alpha Sigma Phi
town
or
out
within
the
conis
considered
the
first
month
college with you in mind. We can
promise, Terri Roush, the pledge, and Paula Winebrenner, the ofthe Nation's Capital. Since fraternity at Rio Grande
prayer.
her election to the National College and Community servation district. The local of winter season and that we
give you the training that you need
Invested were Kim Adams, Kim Cogar, Jayne Goode, Tracy Board In 1966, she has been College who conducted •the offic~ accepts requests for must hurry with bulb planto
qualify for the job of your future.
mulching ,
soil
Hubbard, Terri Roush, and Alicia Van Meter. Rededicated most active, serving on many college's second annual replacement of land such as ling,
stripmine sites. The Snow· preparation, and propagation
We have more calls from employers
were Sherri Sisson, Regina Nance, Paul'!. Winebrenner, and committees, and since 1972 teeter-totter marathon.
ville
area
of
old
abandoned
of
plants.
Different
plants
The
marathon,
which
·
Jill Nease. The leaders served refreslunents. ·
served as Third Vice
in the area for our graduates, than
HARRISONVILLEGIRLSCOUTTROOP 1155
P_resldent and International began at noon, October 16, mine land was completed need varied care and
.we have graduates.
because
concluded after 150 hOurs on around August I, 1978. precautions
The Harrisonville Jlinior troop and the new Cadette troop Commissioner.
held a meeting and Halloween party at the home of their
Her long-time involvement Sunday, October 22. On the Federal fWldsand stale funds mulching too. early en·
used
differently, courages mice that damage
leaders, Rhea and Harold Norris.
with international concerns is spot donations and proceeds are
Join the employables, take the first
the
state
program
is roots, and too much cutting·
Attending were Valeria and Kim Deskins, Lisa and Linda reflected in other adivities from pledges all went to
called
Land
Reborn.
back
causes
tips
to
die.
step.
Enroll at G.B.C .• receive your
Riggs, Kenda Donahue, Darla Norris, Sherrie Cornwell, Susan too: She was U.S. Delegate to Southeastern Ohio charities.
The
consumer
sup·
Covering
should
be
done
as
Arnold, Mandy Reeves, Dawnette Norris, and Christina Hann- the United Nations Freedom The March of Dimes , was
marketable skills and then the jobs
from Hunger Conferences in again the primary recipient plies a part of the money, freezing of ground arrives.
ing.
will come to you.
and public land Is handled November is also a good time
Prizes were given -for the prettiest, ngiiest, funniest, and Rome and on the executive of the proceeds.
This year's effort raised before privately owned land. for garden cleanup, tool
most original with winners being Kenda Donahue, Sherrie Cor- committee of the American
Vinton and Gallia counties oiling and storage of supplies
nwell, Dawnette Norris , and Christiana Haning.
Freedom from Hunger over $850.
also show improvement in that will freeze.
Refreslunents were served and treats were given to those at- Foundation (1963-1972). She is
Eva Robson, Margaret
now on the board of the New political science from the reclaiming of land. The Strip
tending.
Mine
Law
has
been
improved
Lewis
and Ruby Diehl judged
York Conunittee for UNICEF University of Minnesota. The
and a member of the Freemans have two grown and mine companies now arrangements that were
brought by members to ex·
Hospitality Committee for children : son Michael is a reclaim as they move.
Mr.
Ruth
showed
slides
and
press "Fall's Blaze of Color"
the United Nations.
lawyer, daughter Constance
explained the types . of with Emma Ledlie, Pauline
Jane holds a B.A. in is a Congressional staffer.
Costume prizes were Judy Hwnphreys and Martha
planning and engineermg Atkins and Reva Snowden
awarded at the Rock Springs King, had charge !i a
work that has been done in receiVIng honors. The
conunWlitY halloween party scavenger hWll for the youth,
different areas of Meigs traveling prize · donated by
held at the grange hail Satur- and a spook house was in
County. Soil and water Grace Colwell was drawn by
day night.
operation during the evening.
erosion is the most common Emma Lediie, and the door
Winners In the categories of It was prepared by Lois
RIO GRANDEr-You can class as " ... teaching students problem. Help can be given prize giveri by_ the hostess
prettiest, ugliest, most Evans, Rita Eblin, and learn the dances that are to dance and making them from the SCS office in went to Stella Atkins.
origin~! and funniest in the
several youth.
sweeping the oalioo.
look good on the dance floor." mapping of land, types of Refreslunents were served
various age divisions were as
Donuts, cookies, potato
The Rio Grande College
Cost for the five sessions is drainage needed, deter· by Reva Snowden and Pearl
follows:
.
chips, cider, pop and l'&lt;lffee and Community College $35 per student or $60 per mining best rotation of crops Canaday following adReg. No. 75-{)2-04728 .
Infant
through were served. Each of the Office
of
Continuing couple.
to provide least loss of water. joumment.
kindergarten : Mandy Eblin, children received a bag of · Education will offer its . There is no '!It• limit and The office works with the
Dale Eblin Chris Sloan, and candy as a treat. Candy was second disco class as part of students should bring pen and · land owner io p'rovfde contour
Brian Walker.
collected from the residents lts offerings.
stripa, grass waterways to
notebook to class.
First through third grades: of the community In lieu of a . Starting November 6 and
prevent sheet erosion;
Marsha King, · Michael trick-&lt;Jr-lreat night._ Dona· continuing for five Monday
spraying instead of plowing
Parker, Tanuni Eblin, and lions were made by the Ohio nights through Nov. 27,
for weeds, winter crop covers
Joey Parker.
Pallet Co., Rock Springs Bet· the Lyne Center gymnasiwn
or corn residue. Other
You hardly ever see one closed. Here's why:
Fourth through sixth : April ter Health Club, the Rock will be filled with the lastest
engineering practice was
Clark, Tim Sloan, Pam Springs Grange, Ben Tom in disco sounds.
shown in no·till grass
There's so much information in it th~
Lawrence, and Ruth Ann Corp., and residents of the
Hours for the course will be
seeding, planning pasture
affects us every day. The Open Bible is
Fry.
conununity.
7-9;30 p.m.
land, spring·water developwhere you'll turn first when you have a
Seventh through 12th:
Insturctor Mikki Casto of
In
menl and ponds for livestock;
question
about God's Word - It has over 650
Kathy Parker, James Smith,
the Mikld Casto Ballroom
Extra s..,unty
Design
and
'
and better use of baled hay.
pages
·
of
study aids. There's so much
Studio,
Point
Patty Parker, and Kathy
Private pension plans now Dance
1
They also work with woodinformation in it that it comes with a free
Lawrence.
cover more than 30 million Pleasant, W. Va., will teach
Qua#lY -.. land -and tree replacement
Owner's
Guide to let you know how to use it.
Adults : Lois Evans, Paul U.S. workers, The Con- the latest steps, including
. and planting . The slides
The
Bible
is always a cherished gift.
Rice, Rita ·Eblin, and Harold ference B011rd notes. Half of "The Boston Bus Stop" and
Porn ''""J
demonstrated the practice of.
"The
Spanish
Hustle."
Blackston.
Especially
when
it has been stamped in 23K
all corporate employees are
~er :
services offered by the
Mike Parker won the door now covered by these retire·
Casto statea the goal of the
gold
with
i)le
proud
.new owner 's nam e.
association. WildHfe plan·
prize, and Alberta Smith and menl plans, up from 20 per·
Shop
lings and cooperation with
Over three-q-uarters of a million copies in
Carol 'Lyons were winners of cent in 1950. More than $990
the county game protector
print. Shouldn't you look into The Open
Mlltlrd
the ~;akes. Games were con· per worker was paid into
are other areas as well as
Bible?
ducted for the children by private pension funds in 1975,
association
with Ohio
iaren Sloan, Kay Walker, with employers accounting
·' Department of Natural
Sharon Darst, Susie Pullins 'for 90 percent of the contribu·
Robert and Barbara
Resources. Various booklets
and Barbara Fry. Paul Rice, lions.
(Horak) Smith, Pomeroy,
armoWjCe the birth of a son,
Roliert Adam, on Oct. 26 at
st. Joseph Hospital, Parkersburg. The infant weighed nine
pounda and llix ouncea.
Grandparents are Mr, and
Mrs.
. George
Horak,
Okeechobee, Fla., and Mr.
See Sandy, ·Kay, or Deb Tuesday thru
and Mrs. Harold Smith,
'
Saturday Evenings by Appointment~
Pomeroy; · · great-grand·
:
parents are Mrs. Julia
I
Glbbll,' .Pomeroy, and Mrs,'
}
Oma Smith, Sydney, Ohio.
2nd St., Pomeroy. 0.
The couple have two other
992-7606
99
St.
children, Todd and Jody.
,,

elected

Welislon at Waverly
Tri-Valley)
Belpre at Alexander

For a smoother ride .. .

holds Thursday night meeting

r--..----..-----------, N . l
I Girl Scout Diary I patt~~a
I By Charlene Hoeflich I restuent

MODEL SL-16

•••AT THE FARMERS BANK

Ironton at .Jackson

Contributions mounting
to Canter's Caves 'fund

YOUR FULL SERVICE BANK

N-O·T-1-C-E
DR. CONDE ANNOUNCES HIS RElURN

'·

10 PREVIOUS OFFICE HOURS.
EFFECTIVE lHIS DATE APPOINTMENTS
ARE.BEING M:CEPTED AS BEFORE.

CHATEAU BEAUlY SALON

STORE

PORT

'J

�l lt''' .'' ' ' 'i i'; }';;'' 'H;'J'p
,,, , , , , ,,, , ·i] Powe# 's Super Vatu hosts part;

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Nov .
•

::uS·
}

:;:

Cash prizes were awarded
and refreshments served
.:,,'!,,:
Tuesday night when Powell's
• • e
Super Valu Store public
····
·.: Halloween party was held at
the Haunted House of the
THE RliADERS AL.WA YS WRITE
Meigs Jaycees in Pomeroy.
DEAR HELEN:
First, second and third
It was good to rea!{ ~bout the Rahway l.ifers' Group in your prizes of $5, $2 and $1 were
column. Thtose Prilon'lnmalt:s lead many potential delinquents awarded
in
several
away from a life of' crime, simply by demonstralin~ what it's categories of several age
like behind bars.
groups.
Could I adf,l a few c-onunenls :
,
Following are the winners
I. Expenses incurred by the Lifers (postage, printed
listed in the first, second and
materials, eic.) are paid fur by the "len themselves . And they .third places, respectively for
don 'I earn very much .
the age groups of five and
2. Time spent talking to the juveniles is time off the job. under; six through nine, and
Thus, the Lifers lose th~ir pay for hours they devote to the over 10, respectively:
youngsters.
•.
··
Scariest - Roger Smith,
3. The program was running into financial trouble and was
Pomeroy;
Joan Tillis,
rec-ently in danger of being 'dropped. It would be cheaper for Rutland;
!(en
Eblin ,
. the state of New Jersey to vote a grant-in-aid, rather than P9meroy; Tracy Eblin,
house a young criminal. I hope something ill' done to insure the Pomeroy; Brian Korn,
group's continuation. Thto good evolving from it, both to the
juveniles and to the inmates, is tremendous. I know 1 - ANNE

; ~•

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•

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\

By Helen Bo·ttel'·.:, :,

A.
•

:..
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SYRACUSE FIFTH GRADE CHEERLEADERS- Michelle McCoy, front, is mascot for
the ftfth grade cheerleaders at the Syracuse School,. The cheerleaders, pictured left to right
m thetr new green and white uniforms, are Kelly Clar~. Sherri Sisson, Juanita Guinther, Jill
Nease, and Regina Nance, wtth Becky Adkins on top. Joyce Sii!son;aild Lori Chapman are
the advisors.
..
~· 1
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,...'.
'.
'

,.' .
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,.''
I'

••

,.r·

••

DEAR HELEN :
This is for "Active" whose husband bought a marriage
manual and now bores her with the " 1,2,3,4,5" approach to sex.
I wish my man would find that manual and get back to the
foreplay he ll,'led to do- and I loved it.
Eve~ though she lik.~s lots of action and doesn't need a
" Warm..up," she should t'llnsider that her husband may fed
he'smissing·out. . '· . ·
It sounds like she is doing all the rei:eiving. Instead of lying
there bored, trying not to fall asleep, she cou)d reciprocate and
please him. She's lucky he's interested enough to try making
her happy, Many men only consider their own needs.
. If she returns his loving gestures, it won't be a "routine" any
more anU chances are she'll discover erogenous zones she
never knew. And he'll get so aroused he'll get down to the
finals sooner.l'm sure he would like response instead of a halfasleeping beauty.-W.H.W.
DEAR HELEN:
I'm with "Clipper's Daughter" who thinks grocery coupons
are a nujsance. They 're too time-£onswning. Also they're
discriminatory. If the manufacturer simply lowered the price,
everyone would benefit, not just the clippers.
I use coupons because I can't afford nut to, but I resent the
time and trouble. And I know in my heart that no one makes
one item less ex~nsive without charging more for another, so
we shoppers lose m the lung run.- M.C.
DEAR HELEN.
Shoppers can save more by buying house brands or "no
label" products at big disc-ounts, than they can by trading in
coupons on highly advertised products. -SMART
DEAR HELEN.
Here's a Coupon Clipper's Lament:
I saved about six dimes today. But how much time I threw
away! · ·
·
While I was standing in that Jane, part of my life went down
the drain.
My supper was a little late . I still had chores left that I hate.
I 'II never use all that I bought. So what did I gain? Less than
naught! -ETHEL
DEAR READERS :
Last week I gave youpro-eoupon letters. This week you've
heard from the anti-£oupon people: They are now rut;
nwnbered more than two to one.

YARD SALE
The
Alfred
United
Methodist Church will be the
location of a yard and bake
sale from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Friday and Saturday, The
church is located on Route
681.

Pomeroy; Lisa Ferrell,
Hartford, W. Va. ; Bonnie
Allen, Racine; Timmy
Colmer, Pomeroy; James
Smith, Pomeroy.
Most Original - Kimberly
Jenkins, Pomer6y; Bracy
Korn, Pomeroy; Charles
Davis, Middleport; Shilo
Moore, Pomeroy; Kenda
Carsey, Middleport; Mike
Schlass, Pomeroy; John
Moore, Jr., Pomeroy; Gerald
Moore, Pomeroy; Trina
Reeves, Pomeroy.
Prettiest - Sbllo Moore,
Pomeroy ; Dina Manley ,
Pomeroy; Carrie · Korn,
Middleport; Holly Williams,
Minersville; Darcie Hysell,
Pomeroy; Connie Smith,
Pomeroy; Travis Drenner,
Pomeroy ; Kenda Carsey,
Middleport; Trina Reeves,
Pomeroy.
Kimberly Jenkins won a
large prize contributed by the

,------"-1
1 Social . 1
1 Calendar 1
FRIDAY
POMONA GRANGE, 8
p.m. Friday at the Rock Springs Gr~nge Hall. Hemlock
Grove to be host.
SATIJRDAY
MIDDLEPORT GARDEN
CLU B, Saturday, 10 a.m. to 2

rI
1
I
1

p.m. workshop on Christmas
arrangements and decoralions . Members to take a sack
lunch, materials and ideas .
Some materials will be
ava ilable fur purchase.
REACT
MEETING
Saturday, Senior Citizen~
Center in Pomeroy with John
Leist, president of the Ohio
REACT Council as speaker.
Also featured will be a IS
minute film, "Where Seconds
Count"
and
special
recognition will be given
..._

N. W~OOMPTON,
OP OMETRIST

REACT members. An attractive door prize will be
given and the public is invited.
ANNUAL HARVEST
dinner and bazaar at the
firehouse . In Coolville,
beginning 5:30p.m. Saturday
by Coo.Iville United Methodist
Church Women . Complete
dinner, adults, $3; children,

$1.75.
PUBLIC
DINNER
&gt;aturday at hall by Wilkesville Pythian Sisters Lodge
591. Complete dinner, $2.50
adults; children, $1.25.

eveqjng with Rev. Ralph
Smith, Coolville, speaking.
Gabriel Quartet on Saturday
apd The Messengers on

Church, West Colwnbla, on
Lleving Road. Services 7:30
p.m. nightly. Speaker the
Rev. Herman Jordan. Special
singing each evening. Pastor
is the Rev . .George Hoschar.
Public invited.
MONDAY
ME.IGS CHAPTER _Order
,of DeMolay semi-annual
elections Monday 7:30 p.m. at
Middleport
Masonic
building.

ELECT

HAROLD SCHRITTER
AS YOUR:NEXT
.

STATr·REPRESENTATIVE

F!UENDS OF the Meigs
County Libraries will meet at
7:30 . p.m. Monday at the
Middleport Library; all
persohl interested in good
library service are invited.
POMEROY Garden Club,
7:30p.m. Monday at home of
Mrs. Waher Grueser. Roll
· call wtll be Thanksgiving
thoughts or poems.

•.••

TO ALL PROPERTY OWNERS
Did you know that a new law enacted by the Democrat Controlled
Legislature is responsible for th.e new burdensome increase i'l taxes
on your homes and your property?
The new Department of Tax Equalization establishes ·the rate of
taxation and forces your local county government to appraise your
home and your property at inflationary market prices.
This new system · of 'taxation has created new hardships on
property owners in Ohio and especially the low income families, and
in many cases have caused them to lose their home and their
property.

SALEM
CENTER
Educational Organization
Monday 7:30 p.m. at Salem
Center School. All parents
are urged to attend to help
improve educat'lonal stan. dards at their schooi.

If elected you can be sure that I shall do everything in my power to'
reduce property taxes to a common sense level.

I AM PROPOSING TO FREEZE PROPERTY TAXES AT 1977 LEVEL
'

~ ELECT HAROLD SCHRIITER AS YOUR NEXT

STATE REPRESENTAnVE

1.---------------------•P•d•.

B-AI&lt;ER
FURNITURE
Middleport, 0.

Meigs County

YOUR VOTE AND INFLUENCE APPRECIATED
Thank You
Pd . Pol. Adv . Candidate

LOWER TAXES?

Yes! Ron James has never voted for a tax increase or a
new tax. In fact he has proposed a plan to actually reduce
property taxes and still keep our schools open. We can
have lower taxes!

John Jay was the first chief
justice of the United States,
serving 1789-95.

Polly Cramer

Ink got
on plastic
DEAR POLL.Y - One of our
children got ballpoint ink on
our kitchen booth. I have
tried everything on it but
nothing has removed the
spots. Can you help me'
1
A cheap way to have a better picnic is to use ·empty tin
pie plates under paper plates.
-MRS. G.T.B., Jr.
DEAR MRS. G.T.B.- I do
wish you had explained a bit
more about the "booth." I am
presuming you refer to builtin seats around a breakfast
table. Usually sueh seating is
covered with a plastic or
vi~yl material and, if so, you
mtght try rubbing in a bit of
petroleum jelly and then
washing with detergent suds.
I am surprised that hair
spray in an aerosol can did
not do the job. It has always
worked on such materials for

STATE REPRESENTATIVE

RON JAMES

._

•••

•

&lt;

Po
...
I .•AIJ_v_
.

DAVID HARRISDavid Hir~ls, u 1978
graduate Of Meigs High
School; Is a stbdent at the '
American School of Broad•
casting In Colwnbus. David is
taking a four-month course of
training there. He is the son
of Mr. hnd Mrs. Kenneth Har?is, Pomeroy.

FOR I'OUNTY
!'OMMISSIONER

PATRICIA H . WRIGHT

+

(Full

RICHARD F. CELESTE
Democrat

~~~

For Lieutenant Governor:

"*'NrtHs
'

··oR GOVERNOR
AND
LIEUTENANT
GOVERNOR
n~ote

not

more than once)

MICHAEL J, DORRIAN

Comm encing
January I. 1979)

October 19, 1978
"It is my pleasure to support
a fine State Senator and
Education Leader.
May the fine people of the 17th
District again return Senator
Collins to the legislature." C.
Rennder, Dunkirk, 0.

'
''

FOR !'OllNTY AUDITOR
(Vofe for not more thu one )

+

FOR ME~IIlER OF STATE
BOMIIJ 01-' EIJUCATION
(10th l)istricl)
( Vote for not mort! th1n one)

For Governor:

+

ALLAN FRIEDMAN
For Lieutenant Governor:
BRUCE WOOD

October 24, 1978
· "Your support to education in
Southern Ohio has been
outstanding. Without your
help I'm sure Southern Ohio
would have · had_ a lot of
problems.
I'm
looking
forward to your continued
presence in the Ohio Senate."
R. Bowen, 17th District.

Hours

WHkdoys 7:30-5:00 P.M.
sat. 7:301114:00 P.M.

t'OR t' HIEf" JIISTICE OF
THE SUPREME COURT

-------

"

GEORGE C. SMITH
t'OR ATTORNEY GENERAL
(Vote for not mor. th•n onel

FOR AUDITOR OF STATE
(Vet. for not more th•n INM)

.h ere.

.
.
'
'' '

October 23, 1978
"We appreciate your interest in taking the time to be a
part of governmental devl;!lopment. Our system needs
men and women who a.r e truly interested in good fiscal
policy. We wish you success in the forthcoming election."
C. Boring, Columbus, 0.
·

WILLIAM J . BROWN
Democr~t

l •

DONALD E. LUKENS
THOMAS E. FERGUSON

TED W. BROWN

FOR SECRETARY
OF STATE

ANTHONY J. CELEBREZZE, JR.
Democrat

GERTRUDE W. DONAHEY

October 24, 1978
"I sincerely hope the electors of your District recognize
the ·invaluable service you have rendered to them, as
well as your service to all school districts in the State of
~hi~ .. In mropinion, you have done more than any other
tndivtdual m the State to promote quality Education in
Ohio." W. Haney, Coshocton, 0.

~mocrat

FOR TREASURER
OF STATE

cv...

,.r net mere th•n

eM)

12 oz.

FOR REPRESENTATIVE
TO CONGRESS
(lOth Dlotrid)
(Y..,. fw Mt.,..... th•n ont)

RE·ELECT--~-------

O.AKLEY C. COLLINS

RC BOTTLING CO.

STATE SENATOR

'

'

•

MILL STREET
Mlcidleport, Ohio

·992.3542 ur 992-3344

17th D·l strlct

•
_,

·' I

GEORGE C. ROGERS
Republican

0

-

FOR STATE SENATOR
(17lll Dlotrlct)

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

Democrat

.

CLARENCE E. MILLER
Republican

OAKLEY C. CoLLINS
ReoVblloan

,_ ... _____,
(ltlld Dl8trld)

Reoubll&lt;an

RONALD H. JAMES
Democ:nt

Punch here

HOWARD E. FRANK

I

f Vo t

for not more th•n on•)

FOR JUSTI CE OF THE
SU'REME fOURT

{Vote for not more th•n on•)

'

FOR .Jllli!;E OF THE
COI 'RT OF APPEALS
(~ lh !Jislrict)
(Full Ti!nn Commencing
February 9, 1979)

Republic&lt;~n

.

WALLACE E. BLAKE

THOMAS M. HERBERT
FRANK D. CE LEBREZZF.

IIIC'HARD M. MARKUS
WILLIAM R. BIIOWN

PAUL W. RROWN

CLIFFORD F. BROWN

HOMER E. ABELE

Punch here
0

Punch here
0

Punch here
0

Punch here
0

0

Punch here
ROBERT E. BUCK

I Vote for not mo.-. ttten eno)

FOR JUIJGE OF THE
COUNTY COURT
(Full Term Commendng
January I, 1979)

0

Punch here

(Vote for not mor1 thu one)

FOR JUDGE OF THE
COURT OF COMMON PLEAS
(PROBATE DIVISION)

0

0

Punch here
CHARLES H. KNIGHT

-

(Vote for not more 'thin one I

0

....

****'*'******************************************** ****
'************************************************
It Is Legal To Take This Sample Ballot

~

O.moc:rot

'
FOR STATB
REPRBBBNTATIVE

+
+
Punch here
+
+
Punch here
+
+
+
Punch here
+
+
Punch here
+
0

JACK HILLYER

HAROLD BCHHITTER

Democrat

(Full Term Commenci nR
January t. Ui9)

0

JAMES A. PLUMMER

sAVE YOUR RC, NEHI, UPPER 10,
.DIET RITE &amp; DAD'S ROOT BEER
BOTTLE CAPS FOR CHARITY

+

0

ReDubllcan

·:~IVote ,.,. not more than tnel

On special
Nehi®cans.

(Full Ttrm Commenting
.January 1, 19i9)

0

Republican

Demoent

..

i '

(;tLES SMITH

0

~publican

[ I

i

FOR JIISTIC'E OF THE
SUPUEME COURT

Punch here

I

..

Pd. Pol. Adv.

--~

+
Punch here

For Lieutenant Go\lemor:
GEORGE V. VOINOVICH
Republican

Chester, o.
985-3301

Republican

I

....
..
..
....
....
..+
..
..
..

Punch here

HENRY WELLS

O.c•mber ll , 1980 )

For Governor :
JAMES A. RHODES
Republican

BAUM TRUE VALU

~imP'i';

DOGS

( Unexpired Term End ing

For Lieutenant Governor:
CONRAD GUTERMUTH

$}49

20 to 4-10 gauge 5 pk.

THE
BEST NUTRITION
FOR YOUR

(Vote for · not mor• than one)

Democrat

For Governor:
JOHN O'NEILL

$}68

12 to 6 gauge 5 pl

~·

T~rm

(Vote for not more th1n on•)

Dear Oakley:
19,
1978
September
"You continue to be an elected official fo~ whom I have
great respect and admiration. You always make a
supreme effort to help, no matter what type of problem
one has." B. Bush, 17th District.

DOG FOOD

1100 E .

For Governor: ·

"

.,

Red Rose

KINGSBURY HOME SALES, INC.

For Lieutenant Governor:
JOHN M. GAIGE

•'

first pari-mutuel victory
finishing a neck ahead of
Golden Widow Maker in 2:07.
A crowd of 2,600 wagered
$341,326,

W®@DMASTER'"

For Governor :

•'

RIFLE
SLUGS

In the fifth race - a maiden

pace, Llela Break scored her

UNOFFICIAL SAMPLE BALLOT ISSUED BY THE MEIGS COUNTY REPUBLICAN EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE, RICHARD E. JONES, CHAIRMAN
41098 LAUREL CLIFF ROAD
POMEROY, OHIO 45769

•

DEER

came in third.

\VOTE REPUBLICAN

·~

·Pd. by ConflniHeeto Elect R. James, C. Allen. Olairman .

2:06 3-li and returned $3.80,

$3.60 81\d $3. Floras Project

with theomulng, work oavlng

6:oo-News 3,4, 10; Gong Show 8; God Has The Answer
15; Over Easy 33; Crockett's Victory Garden 20.
6:30--NBC News 3,15; World War II : G., l. Diary 4;
Porter Wagoner 8; CBS News 10; Ohio Journal 20;
Life Around Us 33.
.
7:()()--Abbolt &amp; Costello 3; Lawrence Welk 4, 13, IS; Hee
Haw 6,8; Bugs Bunny 10; Onedln Line 20; Sugar In
The Gourd 33.
7:30--We Think You Should Know 3; Please Stand By
10; World War II ; G.l. Diary 33.
8:DO-Chlps 3,4.15: Love Boat 6,13: Jelfersons 8,10;
Once Upon A Classic 20,33 .
8:3()-Moyle "The Poseidon Adventure" 8,10; Great
Performances 20; Thieves ol Time 33.
9:00-Centennlal 3,4, 15; The Long Search 33.
9:3~Fantasy Island 6,13; 10:00-Three by Four 33.
11 :oo-News 3,4,6,8,10.
12:110-Movle "See No Evil" 10.
1:Oil-Movie "Fire Down Below" 3; Movie 'Killer
Bats" 4.
2:()()--Movle "The Severed Arm" 13; 2 : 3~News 3.
3:00-Movle " Biuebeard's Ten Honeymoons" 13.
S:oo-Movle " Johnny Allegro" 3; ABC News 13.

.

LErS KEEP

me .- POLLY
DEAR POLLY - All who
sew know how annoying it is
to lose needles in a pin
cushion. I pinned a strip of
colored felt to my pin cushion
and use it just for holding
sewing needles. They are
easy to find and always
separated from the pins. MARGE
DEAR POLLY- When you
take a barbecue grill to the
beach rub the grill under the
sand after using it. All excess
food is rubbed off and the
cleaning is much easier when
you get the grill home.- IJNDA
DEAR POLLY - Several
years ago the timer on my
spin dry washer would no
longer work so I bought a
minute minder. The washer
was working fine otherwise
and I did not want to pay a
repair man to just fix that one
little .thing. The few dollars I
paid for this timer have been

'

NORTIIFIELD RESULTS
NORTHFIELD ,
Ohio
(UP!) - Projects Godiva led
from wire to wire Thuraday
night to gain a one length
victory over Willowonder ·in
the first race at Northfield
Park.
Driven by Thad McRae, the
winner covered the mile in

SUBURBAN

.

Gener•l Election, November 7, '78

repaid many limes. I use it
11
lor timing my cooking,
'-'
telephone calls, etc., as well
Mr . · and Mrs . Chuck
as my washing .
- M
of Ra .
My Pet Peeve is with the
ugrage
· cme, Rt. 2,
glass left in the street after an • hel? a dinn~r and party at
accident. No one sweeps it up thetr home m honor of thetr
and other motorists drive son, Tyson, who was
over it unknowingly. 1. wish ·~lebratmg his fourth birthY on Oct. 6.
the pollee could sweep. it
against the curb after they
Tyson was presented a
de~orated
with
make their investigation. It cake
wouJd be such a help. _ chocolate lcmg, yellow stars,
MARY B
. and a slogan which read,
Polly ~II send you one of "Happy Birthday, Tyson." t
her ' signed thank -yo u was . served later rn the
newspaper coupon clippers if evenm~ with Ice cr.•~ to th,~
she uses your favorite followt~g guests. Pap~
P~inlt:r, Peeve or Problem in John Htll, Aunt Erma Hill,
her L-olumn. Write POLLY'S Mr . and Mrs: Chuck
POINTERS, in care of this Mugrage, Sr., Mtckey and
newspaper.
Todd, PI! rents, Mr. and Mrs.
Chuck Mugrage, and brother,
Travis.
Bangladesh
Tyson also received cards,
Chronic destitution among
the densely crowded popula- gifts and money.
Sending gi fts were his
tion of Bangladesh has been
worsened by the decline of grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
jute as amajur world com- Ray Bowers, Mrs. Taylor,
modity. A 1970 cyclone killed Mr. and Mrs . Charles
300,000, and 1974 floods, com- Chapman and family, Mr.
bined with the world oil price and Mrs. Roy Bowers, all of
hike, caused famine deaths to New Matamoras ; Mr. and
Mrs. Rusty Lillie, Columbus.
soar .

POLLY'S POIITERS

SUNDAY
REVIVAL Friday through

saturday 7:30 to midnight at
T
·
I the recreational building of
OFFICE HOURS: 9:30 to 12,2 to 5 !CLOSE . I Royal Oak Park.
AT NOON ON THURS.) - EAST COURT I

I".

SALE

c

O.o~--,1 fo~A~~!b~r~N a~3b :~~ ~~~~~. ~~30 o~~m.0 ee~~~

'

Bridge Sets

funds.

l-!~._P2~!~2.l--------------..:
Sunday.
at Salem Conununlty
--~-::~:-""'!'-:""~~~------------------, . Sunday
REVIVAL
beginning

'

6:DO-:-News 3,4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
News3,4,15; ABC News 13; Carol Burnell &amp;
·
Friends 6; Over Easy 20.
7 : ~rosa-Wit5 3; PM Magazine 4; Newlywed Game
6, 13; Muppet Show 8; News 10; Love American
Style 15; Con5umer Survival Kit 20; Insight 33 .
7 :30--Hee Haw Honeys 3; Dating Game 4; S1.98 Beauty
Show6; Family Feud 10; Bonkers 8; $100,000 Nome
That Tune 13; Pop Goes The Country 15; MacNeil·
Lehrer Report 20,33.
8:011-Different Strokes 3,4, 15; Happy Days 6, 13;
Wonder Woman 8,10; Washington Week In Review
20.S3.
8:30--Who's Watching The Kids 3,4, 15; Welcome Back,
Kolter 6, 13; Wall Street Week 20,33.
9:00-Rockford Flies 3,4,15; Movie "How To Pick Up
.
Girls" 6.13: Incredible Hulk 8,10;. Congressional
Outlook 20,33.
'
9:30--Turnabout 20; Real People 33.
·
10 :00-Eddle Capra Mystrles 3,4, 15; Flying High 8, 10;
News 20; Faces of Communism 33 .
11 :DO-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15; Dick Cavett 20; Sound·
stage 33.
11 :30--Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Baretta 13: Movie "The
Hellbenders" 6; Gunsmoke 8; Movie "Who Slew
Auntie Ro?" 10.
12:00-Monty PythQn 33.
12:30--Twlggy's Jukebox 8; 12:4~1ronslde 13.
''
1 :DO-Midnight Special 3,4, 15; News 8; Movie "The
Mummy's Revenge" 10.
1: 4~ews 13; 2:30--News 3.
3:00-Movle "Three for the Show" 3; 5:011-Movle
"The Juggler" 3.
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER4, 1978
6:011-Sunrlse Semester 10; 6 : 3~Sat'urday Report 3;
&gt;
. Vegetable Soup 4; TV Clasroom 8; U.S. Farm
'·'
Report 10; Kentucky Afield 13.
7:00-Go 3; Marlo &amp; the Maglr. Movie Machine 4;
Mailers of (Jfe 6; Mr . Magoo 8; Public Polley 10;
Animals, Animals, Animals 13.
7:3~Land Of the Lost 3; World ol Survival 4; Dusty's
Treehouse 6; Porky Pig &amp; Friends 8; Pink Panther
13; Vegetable Soup 1s.
8:oo-Galaicy Goolups 3,4,15; Scooby's All -Stars 6,13:
Popeye 8,10.
8:3~Fantastlc Four 3,4, 15; 9:()()--Godzllla 3,4, 15;
• . Bugs Bunny-Road Runner a; 10.
10:30--Dalfy Duck 3,15; Tarzan-super 8,10.
11 :00-Yogl's Space Race 3,15; Fangface 13.
i
11:30--LIItle
Rascals 4; NFL Game of the Week 6;
''•
Action
News
Kids 13.
• 12:00-Fabuious for
Funnies 3, 15; Weekend Special 6, 13;
Movie "Tarzan &amp; the Jungle Boy" 4; Space
' '
Academy 8, 10.
12:3~Bay City Rollers 3, 15;
College Football
Pregame Show 6,13: Fat Albert 8, 10.
12:45--&lt;::ollege Football 6, 13.
1:DO-Famous Classic Ta les 3; Ark II 8; In The Know
r.
•
10; PTL Club 15; John Cage 33 .
1: 30--BQb Jones 8; Hogan's Heroes 10; Consumer
•"
' '
Survival Kit 33.
·
' ·~
•• 2:()()--Big Blue Marble 3; Movie "The Hound of the
Baskervllles" 4; VlewJI(llnt 8; Movie "Ski Party"
"•
10; When the Boat Comes In 33.
2 :30--Rebel Slave 3: Movie "The Naked &amp; the Deed" 8.
•'
3:DO-'-ThlsisTheNFL3; Wrestling 15; Mar leCurle33.
3:30--Star Trek 3; Movie "The Scarlet Claw"4.
• 4:DO-College Football 6,13; Nashville On The Fire 33.
' '
• 4 : 3~Movle "More Than Magic" 3; Sports Spec·
'
locular 8; Pop Goes The Country 10; Catch 33.
5:oo-Gong Show 4; Dolly 10; Gilligan's Is. 15; The
. long Search 20; Studio See 33.
S:JG-Cheap Show 4;; Porter Wagoner 10; Cliffwood
'·;. "
I?
A
~tv~le~D.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . .
6 : 3~NBC

County Commissioner

SYRACUSE .SIXTH GRADE CHEERLEADERS-Chris Arnold, Lori· Stewart, and
Karen Hemsley, front , left to right, and Julie Huudashelt, Chasity Jacks, mascot, and Becky
Amott, make up the sixth grade cheerleading c-orps. Mrs. Chris Jacks is the advisor.
SATIJRDAY
CHURCH BAZAAR Friday
and Saturday 9 to 6 at Asbury
Methodist Church, Syracuse.
Variety of itentB for sale.
SQUARE DANCE at Eli
Dennison .Post 487, American
Legion, Rutland, 9 to 1.
PIE SOCiAL, Clay .school,
Nov. 4; 7 p.m. to 10 p.m.
Sponsored by Ohio River
Ranchers and Thivener
Pioneers 4-H Clubs. Proceeds
go to Canter's Caves camp

5 Piece

Birthda celebrated

TELEVISION
VIEWING
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER3, 197t
5:()()-Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea 3; Star 1 rek 4;
Beverly Hillbillies 8; Mister Rogers 20,33; Gomer
rte USMC 10; Emergency One 13; Brady Bunch

GILES SMITH

.

•

R. C. Bottling Co. for the most
unique costume.
Refreslunents and prize~
were provided by Powell's.

Candidate For
GUEST SPEAKER
Mrs. Rosemarie Fahrion,
Columbus, will be the guest
speaker at the both the
Syracuse and Middleport
United Presbyterian Churches for the next two Sundays .. She will speak at the
Syracuse church at 9 a.m.
and at the Middleport church
at 10:30 a.m.

7-Tho. DAily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. FridMv. Nov. 3.I!U8

Punch here
)Ia

0

to the Polls When You Vote on Election

Punch here
)la1o~

0

'

Day

*************************************************•••
' ·•••*******************************'****** Pd. Pol. Adv.•••

�MEIGS TIRE
CENTER, INC.
John F . Fultz, Mgr.
Ph 992-2101

ELLIS &amp; SONS SOHIO

K&amp;C JEWELERS

Complete
Automotlv•

b

Service

SERVICE

..

Locust &amp; Beech Str!!Ot
l12 E . Main Street
Middleport, Ohio
~undoy evenmg
TRINITY CHURCH Rev W H ~h1p 11 o m
Pomeroy
992-9921 Middleport
992 -3785,
Pernn pastor Bob Buck . Sunday serv1ce 7 p m Wednesday Forni
school supt Church Sc hool. 9 1S ly Tro l1ng Hour . 7 p m Wedn •~d oy
o m worsh1p servtee ro 30 o m worsh1p serv1ce 7.30 p, m
HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH
Cho•r rehearsal Tuesday 7 30
p m under d1rect•on of Al1ce Near Long tsottom Edsel Hart
r
pastor Sunde.,. schoo l. 10 am
We Fill Doctors'
Nease.
7 30 p m
proyvr
Mill Work.
POMEROY CHURCH OF THE Church
Prescr1plions
Cabinet Making
NAZARENE Corner Un•on and meetmg 7 30 p m Thursday
m -m5
MIODLI:::PORT PENTt:COSTAL
Mulberry , Rev Clyde V Hendel
Syr•cuse 992-3978
Pomeroy
son. pastor Sunday school. 9 30 Thtrd Ave the Rev Wtll1om Kml
tel. po!ifor Ron ald Dugan Sun
om Glen M cClung supf , morn
11MI ,AIM
lng worsh1p 10 JO a m evemng doy School Sup1 Classes for all
serv•ce 7 30 m•d·week serv •ce , ages even.ng serv1ce 7 30 B1ble
study Wednesday 7 30 p m.
Wednesday 7, 30 p m
youth serv•ces , Fnda.,. 7 30 p m
GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH
MIDDLEPORT FREEWill BAP326 E Motn St Pomeroy The
143 S. Third
TIST Corner Ash and Plum, Noel
Rew Robert 8 Groves re&lt;tor
282W. Main
Middleport
Sundov serviCes , II a m mormng Herrman pastor Saturday even·
992·9962
Ph. 992-7155
Su nday
prayer (Holy Co mmunton first tng sen11ce 7 30 p m
!;chool
,
10
30
a.m
Sunday of each month) and ser
MEIGS
man Church c hurc h sch oo l and
COOPERATIVE PARISH
nursery core pro.., •ded Coffee
METHODIST CHUNCH
,hour tn pansh house fo ll owing
Nationwide Ins. Co.
HoWrt T Bumgarner
the sent lee
01rector
of Columbus, 0.
POMEIIOY CHURCH OF CHRIS T
POMEROY CLUSTER
804W. Main
212 W Mom StJohn McArth ur
Rev James Corb1H
992·2318
Pomeroy
pastor, Bible school , 9 30 a m
Ph. 949-9130
POMEROY, worsh1p ser1J1ce.
morn•ng worsh1p , 10.30 o.m
Youth meehngs, 6 30 p m , even· 9 15 a m. Sunday school , 10 30
Rev
Robert M cGee.
mg w orsh1p , 7 30 Wedmnday a m
mght prayer meettng and B1ble m1ntster
ENTERrRISE Worsh1p 9 a m
study 7 30 p m .
THE SALVATION ARMY 115 Church School 10 a m .
The Store
ROCK SPRINGS Worshtp 10
Butternut Ave Pomeroy Envoy
With A Heart
and Mrs Ray W1n1ng , off1cers .n o m Church Schoo l 9 lSo m
216 E. Main
Racine
charge
Sunday - holiness UMYFb30pm
· m -6655
Ph.
949-2626
FLATWOODS Wor5h1p , 11 a m
meet1ng 10 a Ill Sunday School
10 30 o m Sunday school leader Church School10 a m
M IDDLEPORT CLUSTER
V!JSM , Eloise Adams 7 30 p m
Rev Robert Bumgarner
sol vatiOn
meet ing
var~ous
HEATH , Robert Bumgarner,
speaker s and mus1c spec1ols
Pa$tOr
Wor sh1p
10 30 am.
Thursd ay ~· IO a m
to 2 pm
Lod1es Home lea gue, oil women Church School 9 30 o m UMYF 6
Chester 985-3307
mv• ted . 7 30 p.m prayer meet1ng pm
Racine 949-2G20
Rutland-Salem
Center
Charge
and B1ble study
Bob Estep
RUTLAND. W1lbur H1lt , Pastor
leader
Rev
Noel Hermon
Worsh•p 10 30 a m Church School
teacher
BURLINGTON SOUTHERN BAP 930am
SALEM CENTER Church School
liST CHAPEL Route I ShadePastor Bobby Elk1ns
Sunday 9 45a m worship9a m
SYRACUSE CLUSTER
school 5 p m . Sunday worsh1p
Rev Hor\'ey Koch Jr
5 45 p m Wednes.day pray er ser
ASBURY , Worsh•)' 11 om
VIC9 7 30 p m
Pomeroy, 1100 E. Main
POMEROY WESTS IDE CHURCH Church School 9 50 a m UMW
OF CHRIST 200 W Mom St , Jerry f1r$t Tuesday Btble Study Thurs
992,7034
Paul mm1ster phone 992 76M 7 30p m
They say you don't really know a man
FOREST RUN . Worsh•p 9 a m
Conservati ve non-•nstrumental.
Sunday worsh1p . 10 o m B1ble Church School10 a m .
until you've walked a mile in his shoes.
Eat In or
MINERSVILLE , Worshtp 10 am .
study 11 a m , worsh1p , 6 p m
Carry
Out
Church
School9
o
m
Wednesday B1ble study . 7 p m,
It's
impossible
to
know
our
Maybe
SYRACUSE Ch urch School 9 00
126 E. Main
OLD OEXTER BIBLE CHRISTIAN
own children because we can't fit into
a .m. Worshlpservice7 30p m
CHURCH
Rev Rolph
Sm1th
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
their shoes.
pastor Sunday school. 9 30 a m
pomeroy
t:lev Do111d Horns
Mrs Worley Francis , supennten·
Cl uster leader
dent Preach1ng sennces f•rst &amp;
Our sons and daughters at every level
Rev Steven W tlson
th1rd Sundays followmg Sunday
of
growth
have needs which depend for
Florence
Smtih
School
Ht1ton Wolfe
fulfllment on our awareness. One of
GRAHAM UNITED METHODIST
A&lt;iisoc•otes
Preoching 9 30 am., ftrst and se
these is their need for early and continu216 S.. second
BETHANY , (Oar&lt;: as) , W~,. rs h1p
cond Sundays of each month
Pomeroy
ing
religious
education.
9 00 o m Church School 10 00
t h~rd and fou r th Sundays each
992-3325
214 E. Main
month , worsh1p serv1ce at 7 30 om
CARMEL.
Chruch
School
9
30
The
Church
is
your
ally
in
providing
992·5130 Pomeroy
p m Wednesday evenmgs at
om Worsh•p 10 30 am 2nd and
7 30 Prayer and B1ble Stud.,.
your youngsters moral and spiritu111 train4th Sundays.
SEVE NTH DAY ADVENTIST
ing. The initiative must come from you.
APPLE
GROVE
Sundo~
School
Mulberry Hetghts Rood , Pomeroy
And the example. But the Church's eduPastor Albert 01ttes Sobboth 9 30 o m Worsh1p 7 30 p m 1sf
School
Supenntendent
R•to and 3rd Sundays Prayer meeting
cational program can be a decisive factor
Deuii Tractors, New Holland
Wh1te Sabbath Sct:lool . Saturday Wednesday 7 30 p m Fellowship
in
fashioning your child's future.
Farm Machinery
afternoon at 2 00, w1th Worsh1p supper f~rst Saturday 6 p .m UMW
461 S. Third, Middleport
2nd
Tuesday
7
30
p
m
Scrlplures selected by The American Bible Society
Spring
Ave.
9925101
Serv1ce follow.ng at 3 15
992·2196
EAST LETART , Chruch School 9
Bring your child to church this SunRUTLAND FIRST
BAPTIST
Pomeroy
Coovnght
19n!
KB1.ster
Adver11.s1ng
Serv1ce
Strasburg
Virg1n1a
S1 ster
Homett o . m Worship sen11ce 10 a m.
CHURCH day!
Worner , Supt Sunday School , Prayer meettng 7 JO p.m
Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday
Friday
Saturday
9 30 a m
morn.ng worshtp , Wednesday UMW f1rst Tuesday
7 30p m
John
10 45o m.
Acts
Romans 1 Connthians 1 Corinthians 1 Corinthrans
RACINE WESLEYAN - Sunday
TH E HilAND CHAPEL George
17
4 24·31
1 1-17
11-17
1:1 B-31
2:1-16
Costa , pastor Sunday Scho'ol, school lO a m .. worsh1p. 11 a m
9 30 a m , evenmg worsh1p , 7 30 Cho1r proct1ce Thursday . 8 p m
lETART FALLS- Church School
Thursday even1ng p rayer serv1ce.
Rutland, 0.
Rt. 1
10 a m Worship serv1ce, 9 am ,
7 30pm
MORNING
STAR,
Worsh1p
9
30
POMEROY FIRST
BAPTIST
Dav1d Mann m•n•ster. W1lhom am Church School 10 30 a.m
Mid·Week Serv•ce Wednesday 8
Watson . Sunday school supt Sun
day school . 9·30 o m morn1ng pm
MORSE CHAPEL , Wo,.hp I I
worshtp 10 30a m
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST , 282 a.m Church School9·30 o m
GroceriesPORTLAND. Worsh1p 7 30 p m
Mulberry Ave Pofl'JefOY Pau l J
General
Merchandise
Church School9 30 o m
Wh1te . Pastor Gory·Boshom Sun
Racine 949·2550
SUTTON
,
Church
School
9
30
day school su pt Sunday sc hoo l
9 30 o Ill , marnmg worship, a m Worsh1p ht and 3rd Sundays
IOJOom
10 30, e.,.en1ng worsh1p , 6 30 p m
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
M1dweek prayer ser.,.•ce 7 30
'
Rev R1chard W . Thomas
pm
Pastor
MIDWAY COMMUNITY CENTER ,
Professional service .
Featuring
sieom
Duane Sydenstrteker
OeJCter Rd . Langsville Oh1o Rev
Bakers of
448l.ocust
Aeria i.SclloGisJohn W Douglas
Extraction
MiddleportClyde Ferrell Pastor Sunday
Good
Bread
992-3093
Weddings
Charles Oomigan
992·2206 or 992-7630
School
11 o m
Saturday
Pomeroy. 0.
Middleport
Assoc1otes
Chester9B5·4155
Rt. 3, Pomeroy
preachmg serv1ces 7 30 p m
JOPPA
Worsh1p 9 00 o m
Wednesday even1ng 81ble study
Church School 10 00 a m
ol 7 30p m
CHESTER
Worsh1p 9 a.m .,
FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH,
M iddlesworth
Pastor
Sunday
SETHLI:::HEM BAPTIST, Rev i:::arl muSIC
SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF
Bo1ley Run Rood , Re11 Emmett Church School 10 am 81ble
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST Hev Earl Located at Rutland on New L1mo
MASON ASSEMBLY OF GOD GOO School at 9 45 a m and Church
Shuler pastor Wo rs h•p ser v1ce
Not Pentecostal RE&gt;v
Raw son . pastor Handley Dunn, Studv Wednesdays 7 30 p m.
Sunday school Rood ne xt to Fores t Acre Pork
Shuler pastor
supl Sunday school 10 o .m Sun- (Commum on first Sunday each 9 30 a m . Ch urch serv tce 7 p m
Rev Roy Ro use pastor Rober t 9 JO a m Sunday sc hool 1CY.30 Dudd1ng lane Mason. W Va George Oiler pastor . Worsh•p Serv1ces 11 a.m
SACRED HEART. Rev Father
day even1 ng serv1 ce 7 30 B1ble month)
youth meeting , 6 p m Tuesday B•· Musser Sunday Sc hoo l supt Sun- om B1ble Study 0 11 d prayer ser Ch ester Tennant, Pa$tor Sunday se rv1ce Sunday 9 45 o m . Sun·
LONG BOTTOM Sunday School ble Study 7 p.m .
Ch1ldren s day schoo l, 11 o m worshtp ser·
Schoo l 9 45 a m
Paul D Welto n. pastor Phone
teoch 1119 7 30 p m Thursday
day school I0 30 o m wor shtp VICe Thursday 7 30 p m
CAIUETON CHURCH K~ngsbury Church b 45 p m Young Peoples v1ce 1 30 p m Thursday prayer 992-2825 Saturday even1ng Moss,
OY E~VIL LE
COMM.UNITY at 9 30 o m Even •ng Worsh1p ot
RACINE CHURCH OF THE 7 30 p m B1ble Study Wedn es
7 JO p m Thursday Bible Study, NAZARENE Rev John A Coff
EyongJtlishc meeting 7 30 p m
7 30, Sunday Moss , 8 ond 10 a.m .
CHURr f ager C Turner pastor
day , 7 30 p m Saturday n1gh t Rood Gory Kmg pastor Sunday Serv1ce 6 45 p m
Serv1ce 7 30 p m Women s M1s
sc hoo l 9 30 o m
Ro lph Carl
MT HERMON Un1ted Br ethren Confess•on Saturday . 7-7 30p m
Sunday :&gt;C • JOI, 9 30 o m . Sunday 7 JOp m
man pastor Fr ank l1n Imboden
prayer serv1ce , 7 30 p m
REEDSVILLE Sunday School 'I 30 cho1rmon of the Boord of Chns
VICTORY BAPTIST On the
su permt en den t evenmg worsh ip, s1onory Coun c1 l 10 am first a nd Church . Sunday School 9 30 a m
morn.ng wors h1p, 10 30 Sunday
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN
am Mornmg Worsh1p 10 30om
Pr aye r mee t mg . th1rd Tues days Prayer and 81bl e Worship ser vice 10 45 om , Route 7 bypass James E. Keesee ,
e'w'en•ng serv1ce. 7 30
ttan Lde Sunday School 9 30 Roger Wat so n pastor Kenneth 7 30 p m
Evening Worshp 7 30 p m Bible
Study , Wednesday , 7 30 p rn
Wedn esday 7 30 p m
MIDDLEPORT
Preachmg ser111Ces every Sunday poster. Sunday school , 10 a.m ..
am . mormng worsh1p 10 30
By er Sunday school supt Morn
Study Wednesdays at 7 30 p m.
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST olternohng w1th C E Wednesday morn mg worship. 11 o.m even·
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF
Sunday even tng worsh1 p, 7 30 1ng worsh1p, 9 30 o m
Sun
ALFRED Sunday School at 9 45
mg serv1ce 7
prayer meetmg 7 30 p m Re ,.
CHRIST IN CH RISTIAN UNION ,
p .m Prayer meetmg Wed nes
dovschool. 10 30 o m .. evemng Bruce Sm dh , pasto r Walioce IN CHRISTIAN UNION. The Re"
o m Morn1ng Worsh•p at II o m
TRINITY Christian Assembly ,
la wrence Manley pasto r, Mrs
Oov1d
day 7 30 p.m
serviCe 7 30 Wednesday B1ble Damewood Supt B•ble School , Wt ll ~am Campbell pastor Sunday James leach . pastor
N1ght
Prayer
Sc hool 9 30 o m James Hughes , Holler . loy leader
Coolville G1lbert Spencer,
9 30 a m Preoch •ng servi ce
Ru s!lell Young Sunday School Wednesday
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST Don L
Study , 7 30 p m
Meeting , 7 30 p m
sup! eYenmg serv1ce. 7 30 p m .
Supt Sunday School 9 30 o m
JEHOVAH S WITN ESSES . I m1le pastor. Sunday school, 9 30 am ,
Walker , Poslor , Ronn 1e Salser
MT
UNION BAPTIST , Don 10 45 om No even•ng serv1ce
ST. PAUL (Tuppers Plams ).
prayer east of Rutland , JUncllon of Route mornmg worsh1p, II a m Sunday
HYSEll RUN FREE METHODIST Wednesday evenmg
Even mg worship, 7 30, Wednes Sunday schoo l supt , Sunda y Wilson
Sunday
sc h ool
Su nday School 9 00 o m Mornmg school 9 30 o m morn1ng wor
day pr ayer meeting . 7 30 p m,
super.ntendenl Sunday school. CHURCH, Rev Herbert A1lmg . meet• ng. 7 30 p m Youth prayer 124 and Noble Summit Rood (T - evening serv1ce, 7 30 p.m .;
Worsh1p at 10 00 o m Mondo.,. shtp , 10 40 om Sunday even1ng 9 415 o m evemng wo rs htp 7 30 pastor Sunday School 9 30 o m . serv1ce each Tuesd ay.
MT MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD
174 ) Sunday B1ble Lectura , 9 30 m1dweek prayer ser111Ce WednesFAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH , o
Roc1 neRev W H Lykins . Ntght Btble Study 7.30 p.m
Morn•ng serv •ce
10 30 om
Watchtower study
10 30 day, NO p .m .
worsh1p 7 30 , Wednesday e~Jen · p.m Prayer meet1ng , 7 JO p m
Letart. W Vo Rt I Rev Ch arles a m , Tuesday, 81ble study 7 and
MOUNT Olive Community ,
l:::vo ngel•sl1c serv 1ce 7 30 p m
pa stor . Mornmg worship 9' ,45 Un1ted Method1st Women . second 1ng S1ble study , 7 30.
Wednesday.
om Sunday schoo l 10 45 om . Wednesdoy of each month 1 30
DANVILLE WESLEYAN , Rev R
TUPPER S PLAIN S CHRISTIAN Pray er meeti ng. Wednesday 7 30 Hargraves , pastor W orsh1p ser· 8 15 p m. Thursday theocrat ic Church Long Bottom. lawrence ,.
v•ces 9 30 a m , Sunday sc hool, school
e'w'emng worshtp 7 Tuesday 7 30 pm
pm
7 30 p m . seP/ICe Bush pastor. Bathe Ptgott , Sun- ·
0 Brown. pastor Sunday School , CHURCH Eugene Underwood
SOUTH BETHEL (Silver Ridge)
dey school supt . Sunday School10 ..
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION at 11 a m cvenmg worsh1p, 7·30 meetmg, 8 30 p m
p m , lod1es prayer meetmg
9 30 om ., mornmg worsh1p pastor, Howprd Coldwell , Jr
Sunday School 9 00 a m Marmng 10 4S. youth serv1ce b 45 p m . Sunday School Supl ., Sunday Bold Knob
Tuesday cottage pray er
Rev
Lawrence p m
HOPE BAPTIST - 570 Grant St , am Youth group a~ prayer ~
Wednesday , 7 30 p m YPE
Wosh•p 10 00 o m Wednesday 81· evenmg worsh1p
Glues encamp Sr , past or Roger meetmg and Bible st udy , 9 30 Middleport , Bobby Elkms, pastor. meetings Wednesday 7 30 p.m
MIDDLEPOR T FIRST BAPTIST
7 30 p m
School 9 30 o m . Mormng Ser
bleStudy , 7 30p m
a m Worsh1p serv1ce , We-dnes · Su nday School 10 a m .. worship Church serv1ces Sunday 7 30 p m.
Corner S1xth and Palmer the Re11
prayer and pra1se . Wednesday . mon 10 30om Sunday even1ng Willfo rd Sr Sunday sc hoo l supt
TUPPERS PLAINS , Worship 9 7 30 p m
FAITH BAPTIST Church. Mason . •
Sunday sc hool 9 30 o evemng day 7 30 p m
serv1ce. 11 a m , even1ng serv1 ce,
K.rby
Oder
pastor.
Robert
serv1ce 7 p m .
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH . now 7 30 p m
p m
Prayer
Thu rsday prayer meet at Un1ted Steel Workers
Porker . supermlendent Sunday , a.m Church School tO am
Sll VER RUN FREE BAPTIS T, Rev .
LETART
FALLS
UNITED worsh1p , 7 30
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST. ser
Ro1lrood Street,
mee ting , Wednesday 7 30 p m , located on Pomeroy Pike County meet1ng and Bible study, 7·30 Umon Hall
WMPO Rad•o program 7 4S o m ,
Morvm Mork1n pa stor Steve L1t· BRETHREN Rev Freeland Noms
v1 r;es each Sunday 9 30 a m
~ood :2S, near Flatwoods Rev
Mason . Pastor, Rev. Joy Mitchell
Su nday School 9 15 o m Morn·
tie Sunday sc hoo l sup ! Sunday pastor Floyd Noms , supt Sunday Youth meet mg Sunday 5 30 p m
pm
RUT~AND FREEWill BAPTIST M ormng warsh1p '1:45am , Sun- ;
1ng Worsh1p 10 15 o m Youth oc· George P1ckens , pastor wtth school, 10 o .m , mornmg wor- school , 9·30 a m . morning ser· w1th Don an d Mdrtho Meadows 1n Blackwood. pasto r Serv•ces on
Sunday at 10 30 am and 7 30 Church - leland Holey , pastor day School 10 30 o m Pro'f'tr 1
charge
t1v 111es and ~ellow s h1 p for tun •or preoch1ng on f1rst and third Sun
ship, II o m Sunday even1ng mon, 10 30 om Prayer serv1 ce
p m
w1th Sunday school 9 30 Sunday school , 10 o.m , evening meehng Wednesdov , 7 30 p m.
WHITES CHAPEL , Coo lvil le RO
and sen1or h1gh students 6 p.m. day of month Oliver Swa1n Supt
wors h1p 7 30 Prayer meet1ng Wednesday 7 30 p m
HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION , ond B1ble study Thursdoy 7 30
FOREST RUN BAPTIST - Rev.
service , 7 .30 p.m . Prayer
Sunday even1ng worsh1p 7 30
CHESTER CHUR CH OF TH E Rev Roy Deeter pastor Sunday o m B1b le study, Wednesday
Nyle Borden . pastor. Cornelius ',
meeting, Wednesday 7 30 p m
p m M•d wee!. prayer serv1ces . Rev . Ke1th t:blin , pastor Sunday p.m . youth terv 1ce , 6 p m Sun · NAZARENE, Rev Herber t Grote , school 9 30 o m worsh1p se r v1ce . 7 30 p.m
School.
9 30
a m , Leonard day.
INDEPENDENT
H9LINESS
10 30 o m B•ble study and p rayer
Wednesday , 7 30 p m
CHURCH OF GOD of Prophecy, Bunch , superintendent Sunday 1
poster . Worsh1p serviCe, 11 am
CHURCH, INC - Pearl Sf . M•d· located on the 0 . J Whtte Rood school , 9 30 o m
second and
CHURCH OF CHRIST
M•d- Gtlmore, f1rst elder evenmg ser·
and 7 30 p m Sunday . Sunday serv1ce Wednesday , 7 30 p m
CHESTER CHURCH OF GOO
dleport . Rev
O 'Dell Manley, off h1ghwoy 160. Suodoy School fourth Sundays worship serv1ce at
RUTLAND
dleport 5th and Mom George 'w'ice 7 30 p m Wednesday prayer Rev Donny R Cool. pastor Sun · Sch oo l . 9 30 a m R1chord Bart on
pastor, Sonny Hud son, Sunday 1(j o m. Supennlendenl John 2 30p .m .
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHR IST
Gloze , m1n1ster Mtke Gerlach , meeting 7 .30 p m
day schoo l, 9 30 om ., wo r sh1p supt . Prayer meeltng , Wednes BEARWALLOW MIDGE CHURCH !Htrv1ce I I o.rn evemng serviCe
lorry Coleman pa stor, Co Sun· school supt Sunday school 9 30 Loveday. F1rst Wednesdov night
supenntendent Terry Yankey,
day . 7 30 p.m.
Duane Worden . "! 00 youth service Wednesday
of month. CPMA servtces , second
youth mm1ster B1ble sc hool. 9 30 OF CHRIST
BRADFORD
CHURCH
OF day sc hool sup ts , Sam McK1nney o m evening worsh1p, 7 30 p m
a m . morn1ng worsh1p I 0 30 minister B1ble class. 9 30 o m . 7 OOp m
CHRIST , Gabnel M:z:rs pastor B• · and Herb Ellitt Sunday school and Prayer and praise serv1ce. Wednesday WMB meeting. th 1rd
morn1ng worship , 10.30 om ,
through fifth youth service
am ., evenmg wor~htp , 7 30
LANGSVILLE
CHRISTIAN ble Sunddy Schoo l9 30 a m mar· commun1on 9 30 o m Worsh1p Wednesday, 7 30 p.m .
THE PEO PLE' S CHURCH OF George Croyle, pastor .
nmg church 10 30 o m , Sunday and comur11 on 10 30 a m.
prayer sen11ce 7 p .m . Wednes· evening worship , 6 30 p.m . CHURCH , Robert Musser pastor
Wednesdo~ Btble study 6 30 p m
RUTLAND
COMMUNITY POMEROY - Corner Mom and
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL - 570
Sunday school 9 JO o m
Roy evenmg ser111ce
7 00 p m
do~
NEW STIVERSVIllE COMMUNI- Stgman supt , morn1ng worshtp
CHURCH Sunday School 9 30 Court Sis , th.rd floor over Grant St , Middleport: Rev . Bobby
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF THE
Wednesday se rvice , 7 30 R m
l •ghthouse Restaurant. Henry Elkins Sunday school , 10 o.m
TY Ch urch, Sunday S&lt;:hool ier- 10 30, Sundoy evemng serv1ce ,
NAZARENE Rev Jtm Broome
LAUREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST o m wor sh•p ser111Ce 11 a m
V!Ce, 9 45 o.m
Worship serv1ce, 7·30 m1d - week serv 1ce Wednes - CHURCH Rev Floyd F Shoo!. , Wedn esday prayer meeting , 7·30 Cook , past.or. Sunday school, 10 morning warship, 11 evening
pastor B1ll White , Sunday school
-'
10 30 Evongellshc Ser .... lce 7 30 day , 7pm
worship,' 7 30 p.m.; Thursday
pastor
Ll oyd Wright
Sunday p m youth serv1ces. Sunday. 7 o m mornmg worsh 1p, 11 o .m
supt Sunday schoo l . 9 30 a.m
Pomeroy
Bowling
L.lnos
eventng service, 7 30 Wednes· even1ng B1ble study ond prayer
p m.
Wednesday .
Prayer
mornmg w orshtp
10 30 a m
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE Sc hool Supt . M arn 1ng Warshtp p m Sunday n1ght worsh tp. 7 30
Tue.-y
Trlpllate
doy
evening
service,
7
30.
In·
meetmg
7·30
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE
meeting. 7 30 p m Aff1l1oted with
9 30 a m , Sunday School 10 20
Sunday
evangel!ihC meeting,
NAZARENE, Rev . Dole Boss
Lugue
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST. po$1or
terdenom•nollonal. full gospel
S B.C.
7 00
p .m . Prayer meeting ,
Bob Moore
Sunc:!oy a m , Wednesday Prayer and B• NAZARI:::NE , Rev . Lloyd D Gnmm
Od.
31, 1978
RUTLAND
CHURCH
OF
GOD
Pomeroy·Horrisonvdle
Rd
Jr
pastor
.
Sunday
school,.
9
30
BRADFORD
CHURCH
,
OF
·
School
supt
Sundoy
school
9
30
ble
Study
7
30
p
m
..
Sunday
even
Wedn esday
7
p m
Stondlngs
Pastor
O~nn1s
Boles
Sunday
R.obert
Purtell
pastor
Bill
CHRIST- Gabrtel Mraz. pastor.
o m
mornmg worsh1p , 10 45 lng worship 7 30 p m Cho1r Proc· om . w or sh ip se rv1ce 10 30 a.m
UNITED
PRESBYTERIAN
Teem
Pis.
McElroy . Sunday school tupt . Sun· a m , evongefiific serv1ce , 7 p m
Broadca st l1ve over WMPO , young School , 10om , worsh1p service, Sunday school 9 30 a.m. morn
11ce Thursday. 7 p m
MINISTRY OF MEIGS COUNTY ,
541
Royal O..k Park
11
30
a.m.
and
7
30
p.m
Prayer
do{
school.
9
30
a.m.;
morning
pe
o
ple
'
s
se
rv
1ce.
7
p
m
mg
church
.
10
30
a
m
Jurlior
DEXTER
CHURCH
OF
CHRIST,
Wednesday
services
prayer
Ow1ght l Za"1tt d1rector .
Reuter-Brogan
Ins.
50
meeting.
Wednesday
7
JO
p
m
.
worsh1p
and
communion
,
10
30
church p rogram under directlon
ond pra1se, 7 p m. Nazarene Charles Ru ssell Sr
mm1ster· Evangelistic serv1ce 7 30 p m
HARR I SONVILLE
~
RUTLAND APOSTOLIC CHURCH of Koren Mraz for ch•ldren. 2· 10, Royal Crown Cola
am., Sunday worship serviCe, 7 youth 7 p m
Do•ly prayer R•ck Macomber. supt Sunday Wednesday serv1ce 7 30 p.m
PRESBYTERIAN
Rev
Ernest
lloug'a Marine Sales
38
OF
JESUS
CHRIST
,
Elder
James
p.m.
Wednesday
evening
prayer
MASON
COUNTY
during
regular
church
hour
in
meetmg
,
8
30
o
m
M
en
's
prayer
school
'I
30
o
m
.
worsh
tp
ser·
Strtcklin , pastor Sunday church
Friendly
Tavern
35
M1ller
B1ble
study
,
Wednesday
.
meeting
and
B1ble
study,
7
p.m.
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST Co'
church basement Sunday e\'en·
vice , 10 30a m . B•bleStudy , lues
meetmg, Saturday 7 p m
school . 9.30 o.m
Mrs. Homer
16
ST JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH ,
ner of Second and Anden;on , 7 30 p m . Sunday School, 10 o m.
mg service, 7 p m.; Wednesday Robert Roble Canst_
EDEN UNI TED BRETHREN IN do~ ~ : 30 p m
lee, supt
morn1ng worsh1p .
High Individual game Sunday
night
servi
ce
.
7
30
p
m
P1ne
Grove.
The
Rev
William
Maso
n
Pastor
Fronk
lnwther
serv1ce.
7
30
p.m
.
CHRIST
Elden
R
Bloke.
postpr
REORGAN
IZED
CHURCH
OF
10·30.
Pat Carton 202; Betty Smith
POMEROY
WESLEYAN
Middlesworth
Pastor , Church Sunday School-4{)-o m Robert JESUS CHRIST OF lATTER DAY Sunday school 9 45 o m wa r
JUBILEE CHRISTIAN CENTER MIDDlEPORT, Sunday school.
112; Maxine Dugan cJ 79,
9 Xt o m .. R1chord Vaughan, supt . services 9 30 a m. Sunday School Reed. supt Morning sermon , II SAINTS, Por tland Rocme Road sh1p serv •ce 11 om and 7 30 HOLINESS - Hornsonvtlle Rood ; Georges Creek Rood Church
High -les - Pat Cor1011
pastor , Ed1son school, 9'130 Q m. , mom•ng wor10 30a.m
We ekly B•bl e Study , Dewey K1ng
W1lhom Roush pastor Phyll• s p m
o m Sunday mght ser'w'ices Chns
Morning worsh1p 10 30
537;
Betty Smith •7•; Bev
Weaver
assistant
,
Henry
Eblin
.
BRADBURY
CHURCH
OF
We
dne
s~oy
7
30
p
m
ship,
10:30:
evening
service
7
:30.
110n Endeavo r. 7 30 p m Song Stobort Sunday School Sup! Sun
SYRACUSE , Morning worship, 9
1
Jr., Sunday s.chool supt Sunday Prayer meehng Wednesday, 7:30 Hensley 453.
MASpN CHURCH OF CHRI ST P
serv1ce. 8 p m , Preoch1ng 8.30 day Sc hool, 9 30 o m . Morn mg
om ; Sunday school. lOa m. Mrs . CHRIST. Mr Donald Roley pauor
Teem hlgh game- Reuter.
sch ool 9 30 a m .; mornmg war ~ pm
Sunday school . 9 JO a m war· p m Midweek Prayer meetmg
wors t-up
10 JO o m .. Sunday 0 , Box 487 M dler St Mason, W
Sampson Hall , supt
BrCJgan
Ins. &lt;195.
sh1p
.
II
o
m
Sunday
even•ng
ser·
ship
service,
10
30
om
Sunday
Vo
~undoy
B•bl
e
Study
10
a.m
ST PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH,
evenm8 ser'w'ICe 7 p.m. Wcdres.
Wednesday . 7 p m . Roy Adam~
RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD ,
Tum
~lgh series - Roy11 •
v1
ce
,
7
30.
prover
meeting
Thurs·
serviCes. 7 p.m .. youth group. lay leader .
Corner of Sycamore and Second
day evening prayer serv 1ces 7 :JO Wor$h lp ll am anrl7 p,m Bibl e
Re11. Bobby Porter, pastor Sun·
Oak Pork 1:160 1
1 p m
day
730pm
Wednesday
7
p.m
.
:i
tud.Wedne
sd
ay
Vocal
Sts
,
Pomeroy
The
Re11.
W1lham
pm
CHURCH OF JFSUS CHRIST
day school. 10 o.m , Sunday wor

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY

The8e Messages Of Our Religious HeritJige

Are Sponsored Each Week By The Following:

A

RACINE
PlANING
MILL

-·

FRENCH'S
SUNOCO
SERVICE
CENTERS

MIKE
STATE FARM
INSURANCE

P. J. PAULEY,
AGENT

ROSEBERRY'S
PENNZOIL

RACINE
FOOD MARKET

ONE DAY'S HOUSEWORK
A WEEK , FOI=I A SELECT
L.IST OF CLIENTS;=..---

(ForA Reel
Colt

CAPTAIN EASY
tiE' 'TURI&gt;lE'D UP AT
MeKE'S INDLI~TR I E5 M

WHEilE DID

'IOU KNOW

TH1!7 HOM&amp;RS ,
VOLTA- OR
VOLTellRI\i

OUR

.....

&lt;;UPPOSIO YOU'D
GO"E ALd NG WITH
VOLTA- HOW WOUCO
;Qu HAVE GO TTEN
IN TOUCH- TO SAY

TRU CK~R-S 'I

AN OR6ANIZ.~R - FOR
THe C!l-00K8DE5T
UNION IN THE:

THRSW HIM
OUT!

COLJNTRY!

~OU

A PHONE
CAl-l YA 5TILL-

12.EMEMB!:R
I T~

0 TAKE HI,
6RIIlE

l VE 60T AN ID EA ~ OW T'PROVE
B066~ WA? IN W I TH VOL-TA
AND THE MOE-: LET 5 6 0
BA CK UP TO HIZZO&gt;JER~
S TUD Y

N UMBER~...

~

Athens County
Savings &amp; Loan_n

Co.

Ridenour
1V &amp; Appliance
Gas Service

M1dway Market
Bob's Market

NO WONDER

I DON 'T

LIKE 'eM!

ELLIOTT
APPLIANCE II

PIZZA SHACK

DOUG'S
MARINE
SALES &amp;

Ll TTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-FAR AWAY VOICES
THERE MU5T
BE A WAY INTO
THIS (AVE THAT

IT' S QUIET
NOW '" MAYBE

WE OON'i

MISTAKEN,.,

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-DEAD END

KtiOW ABOUT

VIRGIL B.
TEAFORD SR.

Reuter-Brogan
Insurance
Services

Fulton-Thompson
Tractor Sales, Inc.

I-IC1;Ui1114,

Don Thorn pson Ford, Inc.

it's

TH GR EEN WHISTLI:
I G G Gur:Ss IF

Q· QU1C.K, ~~Ntf
· 'TOOT 11

IT IS AN Y GOOD
NOW' S TH ' liME TO
~ ~ FIN D 01..11

IT'S O UR O NLY
C~AN L E " ·

WE WERE

Wh4

Yo\J've been chosen!
l've dec1ded to &lt;;i:lrr1P

l lool-\ed 40u up '

on

LjOU

b04 1

Cable TV Systems, Inc.

WILL'S LOCK &amp; KEY
SERVICE

Attend The Church

WAID CROSS
SONS STORE

Of Your Choice

This Sunday

KEN GROVER
PHOTOGRAPHY

HEINER'S
BAKERY

THE DAILY
SENTINEL

MARK V STORE
Middleport

YE&amp;,
ANC? WITH
YOUR EX Wi r;:E, TOO.

YOUNG'S
CARPETING

NOW ISN'T IT
ABOUT TIME:
YOU KEPT A
PROM15E 1

GARY&lt;&gt;

Diop

YOU ..YOU
MEAN TO
STOP

GAMBliNG?

I WISH I COULD SAY
I WILL, BUT I CAN
ONLY PROMISE !HAT
I 'LL TRY .. Rt:ALLV
TRY!

• WHEN "THOSE GUYS THR::ATENEI7

TOKI LLME, MYWHOLE LIF!:
FLASHW BEFORE MY EYES.

..ANPI PI.PAI7
L/!(E WHAT I

SAW/

IVE BE EN A FAILURE

~;;

A

HUSBANR cMPLOYo:O .At\!:7

M4N! I'M --· IM 601N&amp; TO
MEND MY WAYS. IF IT 5
NOT TOO LATE

ITS N::JT TOO

LATE A~ FAR
AS IM CJNCER•~ED

GARY

w.

FRANK&amp;F.RNTE

Friday, Nov. 3

.:t WAS Ju.9r'
Bf:I\,.!N BY A
PAl~

_,

'•

..

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby

Di~covery

~

•

NORTH

+ K J 10
¥A J 6
t KQ J

+AQJ9
WEST

• 6
•10 9874

BORN LOSER

• 97543

• 63

EAST
• Q9!54!
• 53
• 10 6
• 10 8 2

SOUTH
+A 7 3
¥ KQ 2
t A82
+ K 7 54

DOIJ'T
TOOC.f\ M~,
~~lAIJ(o!

~
\• .

South

Pass

I NT
Pass

Pass

Opening lead : •10

I FEEL LIKE
SOMETHIN'
TH'CAT
DRUG IN

I I K 0

ICABEEM
I n I. 0

~ 1JJ3 ~ L......L.___._,.
u....a._----'-.J:&gt;_.....!J

BARNEY

OH.LAWSY!!

I

rJ I I

Pass

Local Bowling

Edgewood Roybess won
Wednesday rught's feat ured
erghth
race at Lebanon Race· race and Nowana T1p
and Alan Sontag
way, bea tin g out Popprn ca ptured the second to set up
doubl e
Fresh and Brlly Jack' s a 1-7 mghlly
combmatwn that was worth
Kmght m a photo fuush _
The wrnner , dnven by John $60.40
and a two-way spade finesse Roach, covered the mile m
A crowd of 1,233 wage red
for the 13th.
2.09 4-0 and pmd $21 60, $9 40 $1 2.1,460
Should South toss a com to and $3.60. Poppm Fresh was
decide which way to go?
That gives him a 50 percent chance but the use of
discovery technique can
surely tncrease th1s chance.
If he can find out how many
spades each opponent holds,
he can play that the man
with the greater number Unscramble these lour Jumbles
one lener to each square, to form
holds that missing card.
So South runs off all the !our ordtnary words
hearts, diamonds and clubs
and in the process discovers
that West was dealt exactly
five cards in each red suit
(smce East showed out on
the third lead) and exactly
two clubs since he failed to
follow to the third club.
That left West with exactly one spade. A spade
lead to dununy's king shows
that it was the SIX spot SO r:=-7':::-:=:=~
South finesses against East
With absolute certamty.
-

KLEAY

Vulnerable; Both
Dealer: South
West North East
7 NT

GO TO BED,
LOWEEZV --

SAKES ALIVE!!
'IO'RE ALWAYS
HELPIN' ME
OUT WHEN
I FEEL
PORELV

,.--------,----- - -- - - - - B y Oswald Jacoby
aad Alaa Sontag
ONE GOOD CHURN

' DESERVES ANOTHER

second and B11l y J ack ·s
Knight showed.
Rudy Adros won lbe f1rsl

technique wins

of &amp;JAGIC..S.
'

LEBANON, Oh10 ( UP! ) -

~..:cV,IQ
:=---=;LrJ'
I - -1'-;,A;...j-d-~~

COUL.D

CLA IMED-

TO E!&gt;E A MATTEI&lt;:
FOI&lt;: THE DOCTOR.

A Canadian reader asks
Now arrange the circled letlers to
what a relay bid is .
V
V 'I form
the surpnse answer as sug
It is an artificial bid de· L-- ' - --'--- .11-..._,_.a___ _ci-...~...J gested by the above cartoon
signed to ask partner to tell
you more about his hand
Print answer here:
wh1ch conveys no information about the bidder 's own
(An swers tomorrow)
hand . I~ is primarily an
yester day's Jumbles BLIMP ACRID CEMENT HELPER
expert's gadget.

'lXIIIIIJ"

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPR1SE ASSN J

I

Answer

What he got when he went to one of those
' 'htgh·class" ha1r sl yllsts-''CUPPEO"

(For a copy o1JA CO 8 Y MOD· r-;:::;:;:-;;:::;:-::::-;-;---:::::-:::--;::::::::::-:-::--:--::-:-:-:-'7'-::----,
ERN, send S1 to " W1n at J
umb1e
No 10. with the latett 110 puzzlel, 111 avallab6e forSt 35 post·
Bridge' " care ol thiS newspa- paid
from Jumble, clo tt11s newspaper, Box :M, Norwood, N J 07648 Include
per, P 0. Box 489, Rad10 C1l) yourname. addreu, zlpoodeandm•QchecksPiy.tMtof"'"'"ll~ .
Slatlon New York , N Y 10019

�10- The Daily S&lt;nlinel , Middleport-f'omt&gt;roy. 0., friday . Nov. ~. 1978

Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash
WANT AD
CHARGES
I &lt;lli~

t da\ li

;JUa\·s

tida ~s

F.at:h

~

U \ lllLJIIWU

15

wvnls b ~ ro.·nls po..·r wort! po.•r tlay
.o\ds JU II I\ III ,k! otht'f \l ~&lt;tll l'O ilSCl' UiiVl'
tLI:iys Wil l I)(• dun !!t•d ,1\ lht• l IIH\'
nth· .

In Ult'll\01'\', C:ml t~f TILcmh ami
ObLtuary : Li · n~uls pt•r wur d S.\00
uw timwll . Cash 111 aJ, cmt-.:Muht lt• Hutnt' saiL'S 111111 Va n ! SilkS
llrl' ;u •t•cph'&lt;l only "tth l'a sh wtth

4

on.lt•r. 2S l't' lll ehat'io!t' ftw &lt;L II s t':i i'!'YBo,.; Numlk'r ILLt'att• ufTIIt' St•tt-

!llg

Unt&gt;l
Tht• P u blisht'r tt' St' t \' t'!'; tht • n~ht
W t'lht ur ft' JCl't llll}' ad s dt'l' l llt'tl thjt•d hlltHI. Tht• Publtsln:r wLIIIIItt lx·
n.'Spu t~i blt•

for ltlun• thwL um' llll 'tll'-

n &gt;t:t lll st'l'\lUIL
P hurw !192-:! 15ti

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
Mumh:i\'

Nuun un Satiu day
Tu c~~'da .1

thru rndi.l\'
~P. M . .
Llw day bdurc pub!katLt'll

Sunda\'

&lt;t fh•ntotolt

NOT.ICE OF
PUBLIC MEETING
Area residents are en ·
couraged to attend public
hearings
scheduled
to
provide public comment on
the first Health Systems Plan
of the Area Six He~lth
Systems
Agency,
Inc
(A.SHSA ).
The Hea lth Systems Plan is
ASHSA ' S
statement
Of
desired health status of area
residents and of the desired
characteristics of health
systems serv ing the ASHSA
health service l!rea . The
, Health Systems Plan a lso
identif i es act ions which
should be taken to reach
these desired conditions .
The public hearings are
scheduled as follows :
Hocking Valley Mot or
Lodge , Ne l son~o~ille, Tuesday ,
December 5, 1978, 7 :30 p m . .9
p.m .
Bethesda Hosp ital , Zanes .
ville , Tuesday , December 5,
1978, 7: 30 p.m .-9 p.m .
HOliday Inn, St. Clairsville,
Wednesday , December 6,
1978, 7:30 p.m .-9 p .m .
Holiday Inn. Gallipolis.
Wednesday, December 6,
1978, 7 : 30-0 p.m
Any cit izen or group may
submit either writt~n or ora l
testimony to the Agenc\1 at
the
meetings .
Written
testimony also may be
submitted at any t ime pr ior
to De cember 6, 1978 in pe rson
or by mail to :
AREA
SIX
HEALTH
SYSTEMS AGENCY , INC .
216 Pu tnam Street
P . O . BoxH
Mar ietta, Ohio 45750.
Complete copies of the
Draft Healt h System Plan
will be a~o~ailable for in spection and copying during
regular bus i ness hours .
Monday through Fr iday,
beginning November 6, 1978
at the following locations :
Ohio
Mid . Eastern
1
Governments
Association ,
326
H igh land
Avenue ,
Cambridge , Ohio .43725
2. St. Clai rsv ill e Public
Library , 198 west Main
St reet, St . Cla irsville , Ohio
43950.
3.
Coshocton
Public
Library, .4th and Chestnut,
Coshocton, Ohio 43812 .
4 . Cadiz Publ ic Library.
Cadiz , Oh io 43907 .
5. Monroe Coun ty Library,
101 N. Main Sf , woodsf ield,
Ohio .43793 .
6. Kate Love Simpson
Librar\1 . 35 8 East Main
Street , McConnels~o~llle, Ohio
43756 .
7. Mcintire Li brary , North
5~h Street , Zanesville , Oh io
43701.
8. Noble coun ty Health
Department , Courthouse ,
Ca ldwell , Oh io 43724 .
9 . r.:e rr y county District
Library , 11 3 South Mai n
Stree't, New Le x ington , Oh io
43764 .
10. Brooke - Hancock
Jefferson
Metropolitan
Plan n ing Commission , 814
Adams St reet , Steu benv ill e.
Ohio -43952
11. Buckeye Hills . Hock ing
Valley J;~egional Develop ·
me nt District , 216 Putnam
St reet , Marietta , Oh io 45750·.
12 . Athe ns Publ ic Library ,
25 West Wash ing ton , Athens ,
Ohio 45701.
13 Vetera n s Memorial

-

1
I Hllllller

·1 New IdeI
. I Ectuipment

Open Friday
Tii!7 , 00p .m .
For Your
5hopp;ne
f' -v"!ntence

St. Pomeroy . To clo1m. iee o!
IOi' Sycamore or cal l qrn .bi:J71

I
I

~

~

~

~

·-~~·

LUMP HO U S~ cool. $35 per ton
de livered. 992· 7 126

-

-

-·-·~-

~

-

-~-----"

CI::MHARY l OTS , Beech Grove
grove ~ S 8. b . lot 45. $50 .
b14 J/3-36T/ , H.!: . Bone y.
Mor~ e llo . Of:\10 . lnqutre at City
Hall . Pome roy . . ____ ~
HI:::OU Ct SAFE end fa st with
Go!lese foblel s &amp; E·Vop "water
p1ll s Ne lso n Drug .
21

color TV console . Needs
mma r re pot r . S45_ Gas range
$1 5 991 -7236 .
~CA MARK fj solid sta te stereo !l·
troclo. tope player ; home untl
wi th butlt· in speakers and au11 .
jocks Very good condttton
Mu5t sell . Coli alter Spm ,
-~

-

---~--

stonol ho urly wo rk, weekday s,
q. s . phy s•colly mvenlorytng and
verifying ser iol tzed merchon dts e ot retai l stores in Middle port. ln venc hek . Box 70680.
A Lion to. GA 30378

HRP WANTED
Licensed Boiler

-

-

I

SCREW type lo.g spli tter.
Holltl cra ft er
hom ro dto .
992·0229
GOLF SHOES for Christmas John
Teaford. 985 ·3961

~

---

~

-

- - - - --- - ·-·-

"

ANTI-FREEZE

992-3325

PERMANENT
ANTI-FREEZE
Why pay $3.99

011\_o&gt;ll o&gt;ll

216 E. Second Street

,&lt;-"- $347

~(L gat

'-'

Town

&amp; Counby

Pomeroy Landmark
9,..:!_ack W. Carsey, Mgr.
...
,...--..

Phone 992-2 181

-·-·~--

~------

Operator with State of Ohio license.
Rotating shift. Excellent
fringe benefits . Apply
Personnel office.
HOLZER MEDICAl
CENTER
Gallipolis, 0 .
446-S 105

LOST in flatw oods area White
Chorolot s calf we 1ghing bOO lb
Con ta ct
Virg il
Windon ,
9li5·3B46 .

Hospttal , Mulberry Hts . ,
Pomeroy , Ohio &lt;15769 .
14 . Holzer Medical Center
Library , Route 35, Gallipolis,
Ohio &lt;~5631.
15 .
Herbert
westcoat
Memorial Library, 122 W.
Main Street , McArthur, Ohio
45651 .
16. Logan - Hocking County
Distr ict Library , 120 E . Main
Street. Logan , Ohio 43138
17 .
Lawrence
County
General H05pital , 22211 south
9th St ree t, Ironton , Ohio
45638 .
18. Jackson county Health
Department, B. J . Allison
Heal th Center , 200 Main
Street, Jackson , Ohio 45640.
I

+++++

For further informo!ltion
co nta c t
AREA
S IX
HEAL TH
SYST E MS AGENCY , INC.
216 Putnam Street, P . 0 .
, Box H
Mar ietta , Oh lo &lt;~5750
~
PHONE : (614) 37-4 .2200

'L---------.JI

SEE THEM TODAY

REED'S COUNTRY STORE
Reedsville,

1977 MONZA SPYDI::R 305 e ngi ne .
Power sleermg Power brakes.
AM · ~M radio More e~ttro s . Col\
742-2tl20.
1974 PONTIAC Catalina . 4·doo r,
A.C.. 5b ,OOU mil es . Make ott e r.
902-3890
----

-~----

0.

od

~

Helen L. T~aford
G. Bruce Teaford
Suo P . Mu rphy
Associates

SNOW TIRES
ON SALE AT
POMEROY ALNDMARK
SERVICE STATION

-·

For Rent
COUNT RY MOBILE Home Po rk .
Route 33, north of Pomeroy .
l a rge lots. Coli 992-7479 ,
·--~~-----~--

-

TWO BEDROOM trailer . Ad·Jits
only No pets . $135 per month
plus utilities . Securi ty depos it
requi red. Phone 9~9:2~5~ . ~ _ _
ONE smROOM iurni•hed hou••·
Wroking !n: n on ly . ~&lt;~2_. 2~9~ . _
TWO BI::DROOM mobile home.
Poid utt tl ti es . Ad ults only or
wi ll conside r I child. 2 mileS out
on SR 14 3. Refere nces and
depos tt reqULred . 992-364"/ or
997 -lH59.
. UNFURN ISHED 2 bedroom opt . ·
Upstairs. Close ln. 992·S.f3b .
ONE BI:::DHOOM furni shed house
Walking dt sto nce to Pom eroy
No pels ~ec urity de posi t re
quH P.d 4'11 3d OS

Fr,

/\11 YtiiJI

G!fV,/1,
Holpo11ll /1ppi
') , l

If •

J ' r r c , •,

J ,)( k W (

.II , 1 '

fv'\ q r
f)tl1H1• '/'1'

1

('

services Offered
WATtR WELL drilling. William T.
Grant. 742-28! 9. ___ ~
FOR YOUR comple!e housing
remodeling . construction and
motnlenon ce , give J.R. o try .
Re f e r e n ce
a va ilab le .
Rea&gt;onoble pnces . Phone
11'12-5191 ~
,
DUSTLESS FIREPLACE ond chim ney
deoning. The Chimney Sweep
Call 6 1 4-373-6057 .
WILL 1A Kt cu 1~· of the elderly •n
mY home . 9CI'J · 7 ~11 .f .

H. L WRITESR
ROOFING
. New or Repaii

.

GuHets and

.

•

'

Carpentry, ElettJ:ical,
Painting

MOORE'S
.

Ph. 991-2848

Construction
Maintenance

-

Reasonable Prices
References Available
Phone 742-2029
10-22-1 ino.

Pomeroy, 0.
3-15-Hc

ROGER HYSEll
GARAGE

Real Estate for Sale
HOMl:SIT~S

tar sole. 1 acre and
·up Mid.d leport . near Rutland :
Coll 992-7481

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

'¥4 mile oft Rt. 7 by-pan on
St. Rt. 12419ward Rutland,

0.
Auto&amp; Truck
..
Repair
·Atso Transmission
Repair
Phooe 992-5682

L,!;liQir,U...I
POMEROY, 0.

MAl N

NEW LISTING In
Pomeroy, nice 2 be~room
12 x 60 mobi le home, level
lot , patio, fencing , off
street park;ng . ONLY
$1,500.
NEW LISTING - Small
Business opport u nity, car
wash and lot In good
location on St. Rt. 7. Good
potential for a 'part time
job . Cal l for defalls.
IN THE COUNTRY - 10
lots , barn, fencing, 8
storage building, plus a
nice 1 floor plan, 3 bedroom
home wi.t h basement. View
of Hio River . Garden, fruit
trees - all for only $17,70.
RANCH
Excel lent
neighborhood, 3 bedrooms,
built-in kitchen. basement,
2 level lots, serarate
utility, owner wi l he lp
finance . $27,300.
BEAUTIFUL BRICK Ranch, 3 bedrooms, 1V2
baths, nice kitchen, dining
room.
covered oatin
central air , wood ourn tng
firep lace. Belg,w market
va lue , _$31,600:
COUNTRY Great 2
bedroom home In excellent
condition, must be moved
to new location. A steal at
$6,000. ·Also owner wi ll sel l
1-15 acres for the house . ,
PRICE REDUCED FOR
QUICK SALE - Th is 2
bedroom home in good
condition with many new
veatures.
Exce ll ent
neighborhood
in
Middleport. Now $9,500.
USE
OUR · PHOTO
LISTING SERV ICE
HENRY E. CLELAND
HENRY E. CLELAND,
JR .
REALTORS
992-2259,992-6191
Leona-Kathy
Realtor -Associates

one-sixth of an acre of ground on Union
Ave. , known as the Alice Spencer Home.
Going fast at $6,300.00. For more info call
George S. Hobstetter, Pomeroy, Ohio. 9925739.

CENTRAL REALTY CO.
LOTS - 1 Acre and up near Pomeroy .
so ACRES FREE GAS- Good Jl; , story house with full
basement. Large pond stocked with fish. Priced for
quick sale, $40,000.
SPACIOUS Bl-LEVEL - This may be your dream
home. II has a large kitchen with lots of cabinets,
sfove, refrigerator and dishwasher. Beeutlful dining
room with sliding glass doors . Large living room and
family room , and to finish this well-laid out home we
have five bedrooms, utility room and garage. Very low
heating bill. Red barn-like storage building . L,ocaled
about ten minutes north of Pomeroy just 10ff Rt . 7.
Asking $55,000.
MIDDLEPORT - This well cared for newer home has
3 BRs. living room / bath, most ly carpeted, kitchen Is
equipped with refrigerator and stove, utility room ,
natural gas forced air heel, outside storage building .
Prlte S27,000.
·

.....

BRAOFOHD, . Auctioneer , Complete Service. Phone 949-2487
or 949 2000. Racine , Ohio, Crill
Bradford.
~ LWOOD -::,..80-:-W
- -::E::RS: -::RE
:.::P:--A-:-1R
: ::--_
Sweepers toOsters , irons . oil
small appliances. laWn mower ,
next to Stote Highway Goroge
01'1 Route 7 Phone (014) 9853825::·- - -- - - - SEWING MACHINE Repoir!l . servtce , oil 1119kes, 992-228.4. The
Fobr1c Shop,
Pomeroy .
Authorized Stnger Soles and
Service. We sharpen Scissors
.

EXCAVATING dozer backhoe
and d1tCher Char les R. !&gt;tatfield , . Bock Hoe Service ,
Rut land. Ohio . Phone 742-2008 .
WILL do roofing , construction,
plumbing a nd heating . No job
too Iorge or too small. Phone
742-2348
HOWERY AND · MARTIN E~·
coveting . septic systems ,
dozer . backhoe. dump truck.
limestone, grovel. blacktop
pavi ng, Rt 143 Phone 1 (014)
b9B·7331 .
Mohilt• Hom~s

--

Wee n•d Iorge &amp; omall Farms
ond Many typeaof property.
,
CALL JIMMY DEEM, Aaaoclale949-2'311
• ..._ _.,._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. . .
-~

Mary G. Durst to Ronald J .
Raymond,
Luella
C.
Rayroond, Lot, Pomeroy
Dallas
B.
Cleland,
Geraldine Cleland to Manuel
E . Gheen, Barbara G. Gheen,
Lot, Racine.
· CecU P. Wagoner, Lessie R.
:wagoner to Opal A. Duff,
Lots, Rutland.
Llllle Cummings to Roger
Adams, R-W, Sallllbury.
Hubert Stafford, Frankie
Stafford to Roger Adams, RW, Sallllbury.
Thelma Montgomery to
William Haptonstall, Jenelle
V. Haptonstall, parcel,
Sallllbury.
Marshall
R.
Roush,
DebOrah V. RoUBb to Roger
Adams, R-W, Letart.
Early M. Rouse to Roger
Adams, R·W, Letart.
Elmo F. Smith, Virginia
Smith to Roger Adams, R-W,
Bedford.
Lewis C. Ours, Ruth V.
Ours to Roger Adams, R-W,

Phone 992-4144
992-7547
10-18-1 mo.

·J&amp;L

Blown Insulation
JIM KEESEE
Cellulosic '(wood' fiberl ·
Thermal insulation
Save 30 pet. to 50 pet.
on heating tosl
Experience ind
lully Insured
Free Est.

·ca•m2-2m

11-3-1 mo.
BATHROOMS ANO K~tchens
remodeled , ceramic tile. plum ~
bi ng, carpentry, ond general
ma intenance . 13 years experience. 992-3685.
PULLINS EXCAVATING . Complete
Ser~o~ice . Phone992-2478 .
R~EVES TRADING Post, Pogeville:
Groceries. dry goods. hardwore, feed , tack shop . Special
251b. of dog food . $3.88.

--AUTOMOBILE

DRIVE A

Charles T. Albert to Herbert Rice, 20 A., Olive.
William A. Young, Ramona
C. Young to Fred W. Crow,
lot, Middleport.
Pat Mitchell, Marcella Sue •
Mitchell to Myrtle M. Gard·
ner, Lot, Rutland.
Richard M. Reuter to
Hartwell B. Curd, Ellen
Marte
Curd,
parcel,
Sallllbury.
Ebner W. Hysell, Flossie A.
Hysell to Sherman A .
Basham,
Dorothy
E.
Basham, parcels, Rutland.
James Robert Whlte, Test.
Trus., Joseph I. White, dec.,
to James Robert White, Int.
In Parcels, Scipio.

m,

LimE

&amp;.
SAVE A LOT

Rubber

Back Carpet
INDIANAPOIJS (UP!) The gutted shell of the
Indialiapollll Racers is still in
the
World
Hockey
Associatloo, but some fans of
the financially troubled club
demanded refunds oo their
selllliXI tickets after the sale
It the Racers' two !ql scorers
and Its best goaltender

'4.88 ' sq.lup
yd.

9' and

12'

Floor Cowering

Vinyl

Stock

In

' 'lburllday.
· Canadian Nelson Skalbanla

stocked.
(111742-:1211
TAt.K TO
Wendell or Herb Grote
or~eSmlth

RUnAND
FURNITURE
742-2211

Rutland

, ~ Gretzky, the 17-yearold scoring sensatloo, left
, wing Peter Driscoll, and
, goalie Eddie Mlo, who flew to
: Edmonton. to the Edmontoo
Oilers for an undisclosed
' amount, wltb publlabed
·reports putting the figure at
• between 1600,000 arxl $850,000.
• Enculive Vice President
Don LeRose and other
• IIII!Uibers of the front office
fli-ed or reassigned to
• help cut operating costs.

' were

I

1973 CHEV. CHEVELLE

~

..

In

The Vai•~Y

1973 OLDS TORONAOO..................... '1995

6 cyL. auto.

1977 CHEV. NEWPORT SED...... .. ....... '5295

' Dr., V-B. auto.

1973 MERCURY MONTEGO
4 Dr .. V-8, auto., a/ ir.
.

~
•

:

!
:
'
•

Ga. (UP!) NASCAR Grand National
alar · Darrell
Waltrip
anilounced 'ltlurlllay he has
reached
an
agreement
settUng his · longstanding
dllpute, lnvolvlllg financial
arranaementa of hla tract,
with the DIGard racing team
IIIII wUI hooor hla five-year
C~~Dtract.
in anotiJ• driver aMOUD·
cement, Dave Marcia of
W-11, Wla., Aid he m
lon11er will drive· the
01terlund
Enterprlaea

w.-e to buy a 19711 Caprice
: IIIII Itt up hla own team nest
')'QI'.

.

88

ROYALE SED. .............. '2495

1974 OLDS

88

ROYALE CPE ............ .. 12295

F-150 RANGER LARIAT
SAVE UP TO
1
1400.00

1973 CAD. DEVILLE CPE ............. .. ... ' 1795

1973 PLYMOUTH DUSTER 2 Dr., 6 cyl., auto.

1972 CHRYSLER

:i~r.• v-8• auto ..

1976 AMC PACER CPE.. ...... .. ........... '2095

V-8, auto., air.

RANGER LARIAT

1973 CHEV. IMPALA SED........... ........ '895

1970 MUSTANG MACH I V-8, 4 sp.

1975 DATSON 210 CPL .. . ....... .... .... '1295

F-150 RANGER XLT

1969 BUICK SKYLARK 2 Dr . H T ' V-8. auto .. air.
1976 OLDS CUTLASS "S" SED........ .. .. . '4295
1967 CADILLAC COUPE,

liz

1976 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME SED ...... 14395 .

6 cyl., stand.

1962 MERCURY COMET
1973 FORD CUSTOM

TON

v-8 • auto ..

1973 DODGE CHARGER CPE...... . ........ '1795

p.s .

1975 OLDS 98 LS SED.......... .. . .. ...... 14295

RIEBEL'S USED CARS
See

SED......................... 11795

DAN THOMPSON FORD

1975 CHEV. CAPRICE 3 SEAT WAGON .. : .. '3495

I mile north

St. Rt. 7

lS

1973 BUICK

Roger Riebel

2 Convenient Numbers
985-3345 or 667-3463

•

SAVE UP TO
1
1300.00

V-8, auto., air .

OPEN TILL 1 P .M.
Except Thursday &amp;
Saturday til 5' 00
Closed Sunday

~~~
~
,., _

See Rocky Hupp, Darrell Dodrill or Pat Hill, General Manager, for a

Good Oea I on a New or Used Vehicle .
992 -2196

1972 OLDS 98 LS. CPE.. .................. '1895

MIDDLE PORT, 0 .

Tuppers Plains, Ohio

GMQUALITY

SERVICE/PARTS
ENERAL MOTORS PARTS D
"KEEP THAT GREAT GM FEELING
WITH GENUINE GM

GIGANTIC
USED CAR SALE

Drive Home A Winner
See one of these courteous salesmen: Pete Burris,
Marvin Keebaugh or George Harris ..

1975 GRAN TORINO

Karr &amp; Van Zandt

1975 GRAN TORINO

.

SAVE .'200 · '500

2 OR.

GMC Financing .
992~S342 '

1975 CHEt.' MONZA

Pomeroy

Open EveningsuntU6:00-Til5p.m . Sat.

Gas saver.

1974 FORD GALAXIE 4 dr., auto., air.

std.

1973 OLDS CUTLASS, 2 dr. 1 auto.,

p.b.,

p.s.,

air.

n

•4495

1975 FORD GRANADA
Dr ., au to y p.s .• p.b., a ir .
Wasl2795
1
NOW

•2395

TORINO
auto, p .s ., p .b., low
sharp.

2595

1

2695

'1995

1

2595

2995

1967 PLYMOUTll

FORD PINTO
2 Dr ., automatic.

1975 CHEV. IMPALA

DOWN
I Boxes at
the Met
Z Tea ~arty
guest
3 Fail to gel it

glasses: st.
II Potpourri
12 "Young

Doctor -

n

'

li Session's
bu5iness
15 Medieval
shield
16 Vineyard : Fr.
17 Old boat
18 Experienced
by touch
20 Three,
in Messina

Born and -

Z3Saucy
Z4 Recom-

Slant 6, 4-dr., auto.

295

1

1974 GRAND TORINO
Brougham , spt.
auto., p.s ., p .b ., air.

•

MUSTANG

4r'SQUl

395

1

•

'1395
TRUCKS
Yesterday's Answer
2Z Horror
28 Setting
flicks name
29 Put to
Z3 Former R.I.
U .S. senator

1976 CHEV. 4X4
Short bed . sharp.

'4995
1977 CHEV. 4X4
LWB , sharp.

Z4Shed
Z5 Tormentor
26Stored,

'5495

as....s_up,.,.pl-ie,.,
s ,....,.,,........,,.....,r::::--~1'978 CHEV.

••••••••• ••• •••••••• 0

••••• 0 ••• •

0

••••

Except : The Cars , the
Guarantee, the Staff
the Service.

rui~VJ:'NN

1972 Pontiac Lemans 4 Dr ....... ... ... $795
1972 Pontiac Grand Prix .... .• . •.... $1695
1973 Oldsmobile 98 2 Dr . . . . . . . • . • . . . . $2395
1973 Pontiac Catalina ....•..•••..... $1395
1973 Oldsmobile Della 88 • ••. .••••••• $1395
1974 Ford L TO 2 Dr •••..•....••••..• $2195
1975 Pontiac LeMans 4 Dr .•...••••..• 52995
1975 Dodge Dart, 4 Dr . . . . . . . . . . . . ... 53195
1975 Ford L TO, 4 Dr ... . .. . ... . . . . . . . $2995
1975 Chrysler Cordoba, 2 Dr ...•. c .. .. $3895
1975 Chevrolet Impala .......• .• .. .. $2995
1976 GMC Sprint 2 Dr . . . . . . . . . . .. . ... $3695
1976 AMC Pacer 2 Dr . . . . • . . . .• . ....• $3495
1976 Plymouth Duster 2 Dr .. . . • •..... $3195
1977 Plymouth Vol are 4 Dr. Sed •• ••.•• $3795
1977 Pontiac Grand Pri • •• . ..• .•..•• $5695

Loaded 13 ,000 miles.

I:-:-+-+-I-

'4895
,.,-+--+-t-+-+---1 1978

zs Vetch seed
21 Ms Falana
Z7 Before tee
Z8 Crusaders'

foe
31 The D.A. Is
one : abbr.
3% Townsman
33 Leru10n's
Yoko
34 Sho~ up
36lnside of
37 Verdi oDE:ra 1
38 Prayer
ending
39 Blush
to Simple

•

'1495

1974 CHEV. CAPRICE
35,000 mi.
WAGON
loaded .

IIKitty"

6 The - , Peace
Palace site
7 Foamy drink
8 Motto of
the first
Amer. flag
9 Put up with
10 Ocean floor
11 Wagon
1t Painful

'1595

Nice

5 Wiseacre

pense

1977 PINTO WAGON
2
dr .•. p.s .• p.b .. auto .. AMcyl .. 4 speed, mag wheels.
FM
stereo,
radials.
•
Luggage rack. ,

•895

by THOMAS JOSEPH

5 Sun-

%2

II

looks,

6 cyl. Stan.

%1 Boat

MAVERICK
4 Dr ., automatic .

~~~12195

~~~~~J
ra;

13 Pith

1
CHRYSLER
1976 GREMLIN X
Loade s .~l\1
0 ml l eS,JSport pkg ., auto .. 6 cyl .,
sharp . ~
, p.b., rad ia l t ires.
14995
$2591

GRIIIUIDIII

~~
ACROSS
I Sun .:_

1974 FORD PINTO 2 SOLD uto.

'1395

1975 FORD

rSOLDo.

1974 FORD PINTO WAGON, 2 dr.,

'1595
'1595

4 DR.

"You'll Like Our Quality Way of Doing Business"

YOUR CHOICE '1295
1974 CHEVY BELAIR 4

OUR
USED CAR LOT
ISN7 MUCH
DIFFERENT THAN
ANYONE ELSES!

.

HELD OVER ONE MORE WEEK!

em

• &lt;llm'olet after the end of the
' year "for persanll reaSIXII."
· He Aid hla present plans

1974 OLDS

1973 CHEV. CHEVELLE 4 Dr. Wagon, V-8, auto.

'2995
HAMPTON,

U IN STOCK

1976 CAD. DEVILLE SED.............. .... . 15495

"CARS UNDER '1 ,000"
1973 PONTIAC HATCHBACK

F-150 CUSTOM
SAVE UP TO
1
1200.00

REGENCY SED. (Demo.) .. '9500

1977 CHEV. EL CAMINO ............. .. ... 14995

4 cyl .. 4Sp.
$149
1974 CHEV • Luv .............................
5

'

•

Largnt Selection

~-~~~-: .'.t~.n-~:?:

SAVE

As Low As

NICE PUPPY to good home.
992 ·7115.
FREE TURI\i i-P~S-."'P--ic7k~y-o u_r_
ow
_n
_.
Paul Hilt residence . letart Falls.
-~_!Sring o_wn container.
TO GOOD home . Port beagle .
female. Spayed, lo ~o~e, childrvn.
TWO YELLOW half grown cots .
985-4150::;._ _ __ _

TON ..

.

...... . 11695

1973 CHRYSLER WAGON, auto. Loaded.

Buy wlltrt you can anntln
ond- what you're gottlng ,
-Good Mlttllona- Fully
Give Away

lfz

•
All tarpel inllal14d with
paddiho ot no charge .
Expart lnllallollan.

1' 1 ACRE. 12 x bO mobi le home
near Dexter . 997-SBSB .
1967 HOUSE TRA ILER 12 x 60 All
e lectr ic, furnished , air conditiOned washer ond dryer . Also
2 lots in Harrison ville .
742-2820 .

Lot, Pomeroy.

~

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

1970 Amherst SOx 12 2 BR
1970 Champion 60x 12 2 BR
I 965 Generol601( 12 2 BR
19bll PMC 52x 122 DR
1955 Prairie Schooner 261(81 BR
1973 Roya l Em bossy 681( 14 3 BR
I 959 Star SOx 10 2 BR
1973 Storb01(14 2 BR
19bt:l Star 60!&gt;C 12 2 BR
1970 Sy lvob0x12 2 BR
1968 Villages bOx 12 2 BR
1964 Windsor 51-10 2 BR
1970 Kirkwood 121o(b() 3 BR
B&amp;S MOBILE HOME SALES
PT . PLEASANT. W.VA .

Mary C. Myers to Roger S.
Alkire, Charldlne R . Alkire,

SAVE ON
CARPETING

8&lt;3 -3311.

1973 CHEV.

.

Letart.

INSURANCE been
cancelled? lost your o perator~
license? Phone 992-2143 .

1976 NASHUA 14 x 65 3 bedroom
1'1 both . underpinning . $1500
and assume loon . q.4q-2b83 or

~·

98

1978 OLDS

1973 GMC VAN .............................. 2895
V-8, auto., P.S., P.B., AM-FM stereo. air, tompleled

1973 MERCURY MONTEGO MX

All
Type
l~dustrial
Commercial and Home
Building
.Any Type lmprov,ments
To Existing Structures
AU Type Concrete Work
No Contratl Too Large Or
Too Small
25 Years Experience
All Work Guaranteed

for Sale

1

Meigs
Property
Transfers

Mo&amp;uning and
Price Buildels

GREAT SELECTION OF NEW TRUCKS

PRIX.~~-d-~·........ 11495

1973 PONTIAC GRAN

Mann ing D. Webster
Probate Judge -Clerk 1
11 01 20, 27 · 1111 3, 3tc

P~ IIZ-Zl74

------

I::XCAVATING , doze r , loader and
backhoe work ; dump trucks
and lo-boys for hire: wtll houl
fill dirt, to sod . limestone and
grovel. Coli Bob or Roger Jeffers . day phone 992-7089, night
_ __p hone 992-3525 or 992 - 5232.

.8 .

NOTICE OF

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

4-30-IIC

1973 FORD LTD ............................. '1695
2 Dr. fi .T., V-8. auto.. P .S., P. B., vinyl roof. lilt wheel,
AM- FM stereo. Clean .
1
1974 FORD TORINO......................... 1495
4 Dr., wagon, air, auto., P .S., P.B.

APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On October 14, 1978, in the
Meigs County Probate Court ,
Case
No .
22512 ,
June
Wickersham,
Route
2,
Recine , Ohio was appo inted
Executrix of the Estate of
Ferne 8 . Hayman , deceased ,
late of ~oute , 2, Racine , Ohio .

CHESTER Good 5 bedroom house with full
basement &amp; 2 baths. Nat. gas heat, approx . 1 acre land
and large storage building . Price $21,500.
TWO ACRES - Abeau l iful4 yeacold, 3 bedroom home
with large eat-In kitchen, 2 bedrooms, all nltely
carpeted, 2 baths, full basement with TV room . Many
more .e•tras, low heat bill with nat. oas forted air
furnace . All this and two nice acres of land In a good
location. Will go quick for $35,000.
40 ACRES of land In SuHon Twp. Nice building sites,
small barn. Priced at on ly S21.500.
·
SIS,OOO - Good 5 bedroom house with. 2 full baths .
. Natural gas forced air heat. located In Chester.

'

J. R. Construction
Co.

I,

For The Best
Price In Town
See
Denver Kapple
At

11-3-1 mo.

ESTATE OF
Ferne
Heyman, DECEASED
Case No . 2251-2

HUNTERS

1
1975 HONDA CVCC CIVIC ............... . .. 2295
4 Or~ Wagon,~ cyl ., Asp ., gas economy Plus.

PROBATE COURT OF
f\\EIGS COUNTY, OHIO

..

PHONE 992-2772 ·

Chester, Ohio
10·30-c

BoX 3

Has Tough Ford Pickups...
with prices that are easy to take.

.

CURASS ....................... '2495

1974 OLDS
4 Or., V-8, auto., P .S., P . B.. air. Sharp.

Manning 0 . Webster
Judge -Clerk
(10) 20 , 27 {11) 3, 3tc

Tank Service

8-20-1 mo. (Pd. I

Muffler
Brakes
Shocks .
Tires
Battery .
Installation Service

I ',

J&amp;L INSULATION
JIM KEESEE

J a c k ' s Septic

Free Estimates
Phone 949-2862
or 949-2160

mann, Route 1, Cheshire,
Oh io
was
appointed
EKecutrlx of the estate of Ro~
c. Herrmann. deceased , late
of Route 1, Cheshire , Ohio .

.

DAN THOMPSON FORD, INC.

BARGAIN

On October 16, 1978, In the

Meigs County Probate Court,
Case No . 22513, Gail Herr .

Probat~

Phone 915·:1806
Jatk Ginther 985 -:1806

Downspouts

NOTICE OF
APOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY

f6.50 per bag

Hour Service. Any day,
anytime.

6 room Frame, 2 story, gas heat, located on

I

ReSidential and commer·

clal. C•ll for estimate. 24

KARR &amp;VAN lANDT

ESTAl:E OF Roy .C. Her mann, DECEASED
Case No. 22513

CEIIII!DSE
INSULATION

CLEANING

-~

PROlATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO

...:.

SEPTIC TANK

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

Pomeroy Landmark

POMEROY
LANDMARK

..

- -

Housing
Headquarters

19'12 FORO l TO hlro se t of
9.~tk W. Carsey, Mgr.
wheel!. and snow tires. low
mdeoge. Call Ci tiz ens Nottonol
. . . Phone 992-2 181
Bonk_, ~92- 300! :_ _ _ ~ _
PO NTIA C 350 mo tor . Coli
E:l43-4802 .
APPLE BUTTEH . 957 Broadway ,
Mid~lep r_o t 9~2_:_2~9~ . __ _
19'13 FORD PI CKUP b cyl. . std
1975 VW Rabbit . $1 850 . GOOD EAR corn . $2 o bu . Model
992·2987 ,
12~ s~ot_g~n ._ s~-,~ . ? 4~ --~359._ -1914 MUSTANG II. .4 cyl inder , 4- HREWOOD ali hardwood split
and delive red . $35truck load or
:pe~d _C'!I I_~2:,?~5_olte! ~P':'
S50 o cord . 992-0295 or
1'164 BUICK ELECTRA
Good
B43-2922 .
shape 992-7766 or 992 ·5671
ssoo.
, ON!:: HOT Point dryer ln good con.
dition. SOS . 991·b009.
19'14 FORD ' 1 ton picku p with top!974 ~ORO F-100 1 , ton pickup . b
pe_r..c~ll98~ · ~3~9 _at: e~ Spm.
cyl . Good body Good tires
19b4 CHEVN:OLH VAN , cus tom
992-6227
or 992-5991 .
point job. In side carpeted .
13
CU
FT
.
fr
eezer. Very good con·
_$850; 9'12:0()_
1: ._ - - - - . .
di tion 992-7507.
19"12 OLOS CUTlASS S 2-door
hardtop $1200 . Phone 992-2298
or &lt;192 71:Jt.J6 ofteT 5pm .

992 -2288 .

"Finally, I've found
. a MAN-SIZE tractor"

WE CAN GET MOST
PROPERTIES
Fl NANCED IF IN G
D
REPAIR. CALL 992-3325
FOR THE TEAFORDS.

Auto Sales

3 AND 4 RM . fu rnished and un lurni s hed opts . Ph one
992·5434.
---~----TWO 8~:::0ROOM , kitchen furnish ed . apt . Call before B om

( 11) 3, He

FAMILY HOME
4
bedrooms, bath, nafural
gas heat , dishwasher in the
kitchen.
drilled
well,
carport. and nice level lot .
$27,500.
CONDOR STREET - . 3
bedroom home,
bath,
natural
gas
furnace,
parking , and garden space.
Oi ly $9,500.
30 ACRES - and 6 room
house with city water. new
bath, and two outbuildings.
In back of PomeroY. just off
Rt. 7. $24,500 or wtll trade.
BASHAN
Large 3
bedroom home wit h over
an acre of land . Natura l
gas,
woodburnlng
firep lace, T . P. water, and
lots of outbui ldings _ Just
$16,000.
NEW LISTING - 1 yr. old
3 bedroom home with bath,
garage , nice kitchen,
dining -e-rea with glass
door , garage and 1 acre.
INVESTMENT Brick
business
location
or
residence with natural gas
furnace , bath, and garage.

TIRE SALE

--~--~

Lost and Found

GeorgeS. Hobsletler Jr.
Broker
Complete Real Estate
service. Call us for what we
have available. Listings of
all kinds wanted. Homes ,
farms, commercial. Your
satisfaction is our goal.
Give us a try .
Cheryl Lemley
Associate
New Lima Road
Hutchinson Sub-Div.
Rutland, Ohio
Phone742-2003

992 · 299~ .

HAY'S USED Furniture . Addison .
Ohio . tll4 -3b7-0b37 . Ziegler
oulomol tc gas hea ter. 65.000
BTU $100 bother gas healers .
SIS to $35. 4 electric heate rs ,
• $8 to $1 5. Gas cook stove. $35.
Hoo..,er por table 1 washer $45 . .
Dresser with Iorge round mirror , $20. Sewing rocker , $22 .50.
_Lo_:n~s ~ P? l~e!_y ~~~w~o:!_
· _
1973 CHEVROLH C20 campe r
special 1974 Chevrolet C20
AKC REGISTERED Beagle. 8 mon pickup. All m good conditi on .
th s old. Mole . $75. 3b7- 02Ci'2
992-2724
or 992 ·2143 .
AKC REG ISTERED Block Labrador FOUH CRAGAR mags
for
re lnever puppies . Wo rmed.
Chevrole t. 992-2205: alter Spm
Shots . E~tcellen t wi Th children.
coi i 992·Sb2l
Phone 614 667-3039. tv en ings
TWO
ITALIAN styl e sw iv el
or weekends
rockers , rust Scotchguo rd
MCL EAD'S POODLE Groommg.
upholste ry . :.!8 x 14 pl ush olive
Hove AKC registered toy
green wool carpel. All tn ex ·
poodles for sole . Ready to go.
cellenf shape . Coli 9d9-2b61
1st ot December . Quality pricafter 5 pm .
---·
ed, $ 150 eoch . Pet groomi ng
don e for $5 , with both $7. 6
day s o week . 9-9. Coolville ,
SNOW
614 ·667 ·3915
-~

REALTY

N~

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

--

HOBSIEIIER

·------·---·

1970 !'ORO I ton s toke bed tru ck .
_$2000. CJq_2· 75~ _of_te~ 6p~ · .
HAY FOR SAU: 992-2453 .

~

1II
I

Real Estate for Sale

VA.fHA 30 yr . ti norlCIIll') , a lso
H OUS~ to ren t: a good re nt
re finanCing Ire land Mortgage
on Tonne r's Run , Raci ne, Ohio .
77 1::. . Stat e . Athe ns. phone (b t4 )
Ht 1 3 bedr6oms Ins ulat ed
597 305 I .
home, od fur noc·e . garage .
gordun, 1 umpu s room , Iorge THREE BEDROOM fram e hnme in
ha seiTle nt , both , hot oncl cold
M1 dd leport. Call 'f94' . :J4~7
water. sp ring . dnlled well .
Ava ilabl e abou t De&lt; 1st 19'18. FAHM F O~ sole House 2 bor n!. .
tr ailer Large pcmd . 10 ncres or
Ren t $1 75 . per mon th in ad·
6'2 acre~ . '142-2566.
vance . All.o 'iec ur ity deposit at
Sl'l~ To see call Mrs . Es ther
FIVE ROOM hou!&gt;e and both ,
West 1{1 . 1. Phone 949-21Ul'i .
re modele d, tully corpe Led . May
be seen alter 3 pm Phone
991-3q3:J
~~~-- _For Sale
rHRH OH .ol bed roo m house for
CO Al. liM~S TONE . sond, grovel ,
~o le
in Pomeroy . Central
ba semen t.
he at ing . Full
calcium chlond e . ferfll tter dog
992 7074,
food , and a ll types of salt. fx .
celsior Salt Wo rlo. s. I nc. . ~ . Main REMODHW OL DER horne on ',
St. Pome roy 992·:J891
ac re J o r 4' bed rooms f ull
HURHOUC.HS SENSI-MATIC ac
basement , Go~ centra l hea l,
budge t $50 o month . Detached
counting ma c hin e . Pho ne
9rn.'J IS6, The Doi ly Sentinel.
garage. 992-7.03_6
111 Court Stree t, Pomeroy . MODERN 3 bedroom house. Fu lly
Ohto.
carpeted. Central air . ful l
bas em e nt with fir e place .
GR IM ~S GOLDEN . Red Delicious .
l::ncloscd sun porch . l ocated on
&amp; Go lden Oe licto us apple s. ~ tfz b', acres hear Roc1ne on
polrtek Orcha rd . SR M19
blacktop rood Price $40.000
61H&gt;69·3i' BS
Contoc t Lo ~ ry Wol fe weekdays
1974 DATSUN PICKUP PHONE
ofter 7p m, b14 949 1836.
992-tl192 .

.'

I

Business
Services
.

r Of keys fo und on Sycam ore foAHM

~

II Equipment Co. II
l'OIIIEIIOY' 0.
PH. 992-211&amp;
lntem~tianat

tre sp a ~~ing

~ 1::.

GU N SHOOT Ro ct nc Gur' Club
_ _ ~t_ed_ to B_uy__ _
l:lle ry Sunday I pm . t- octory
choke gv ns on ly
CHIP WOOO . P ole~ mo 11
diam e te r 10" on largest e nd ,
GU N ~ HO OT . Racine Volunteer
Sll !:iO per lon . Bundl ed slo b.
J:t re Dep t ~very Saturday b:30
$6 .50 per Lon. De li vered to
pm 0 1 their bu dding tn So sho n
Ohio Pol le t Co., Rt . 'J , Pomeroy .
fa ctory choke guns only.
l.J92·2bH9 .
ARE YOU troubled w1th wtld
onimo ls? fox . mink racoo n, TIMBEf&lt;. P O M ~ ROY Fomst Pro
d ud~ , Top pr 1c e lor stondtng
opo!&gt;s um beaver etc? Call th e
sow lim ber. Ca ll qq'l -59h5 01
trapper . 'IB5·3964 . Wdl con ta c t
Kent Ha nby , 1-446·B5i'O.
m pe rson for signed pe rmi s ·
sia n.
OLD FURNITURE . 1ce boxes. brms' '
beds. tr a n bedS. deslo. s. e tc.\
RA(I NE GUN Club is ha vi ng o parcomplete households Write
ty at Roya l Oak Pork , Sot. nit e ,
M 0 . Miller . Rt . 4 Pome roy or
Nov . 4 7:30 t1ll M1dn1t e. All
members and wtves im11ted
call 992-7!60.
A fH N ri ON SHIRU:Y'S l:klrvty OLD COINS. pocket watches
cla ss rings. wedding bo nds.
Nook Cuslome 1s Due to ft re ,
di amond s. Go ld or silver Coi l
Shirl ey will now be locat ed at
.Hoger W~m s l ~y; i'~::J - 23 3 1 .
Ltndo 's Lady la 1r. Ro c1ne .
9d9-1B3!l .
Wl: PIC K up junM auto bodies buy ·
tng 1unk cars scra p iron , bot·
slo re word tor th e return of my
tenes and me tol s . Rtd e r' s
dinne r bucke t wh1ch was pic lo. ·
Sal va ge , SR· 1l.ol , Pomeroy .
eCI up at Old Town Creek last
\ un doy Conlatned my glosses
99 2·5408 ·
a nd im porlonl pape rs No
que st tons as k ed
franklm
Yard Sale
Wtlson. 949 2322 .
If YOU hove a service to offer .
fR~E CANOY Classes · Coke
won! to buy or sell somethmg ,
decoroflng classes now form· · ae loolo.tng tor work
or
tng . Co li The Ca ndy Carousel
whatever . . you'll gel resu lts
Co nf ectio nery , 992-6342. Come
foster wtth a Se ntinel Wont Ad
tn a nd reg tster fo r free cak e
Col i 992·2156
pan .
MIS( YARD Sole leta rt Fal ls
GUN SHOOT . Sunda y. Nov 5
Co mmun ity Hall Sot .. No v 4
S,:o rn Hollow G un Club. 12 go .
9·4. Clothes for all ages , coo ts,
toc Lor y choke only. Starts 0 1 12
shoes. curloms. bedspre ads
noon . f-'raceeds donat ed to
an d e tc. ~lec lric appliances .-·
T1 90 p 249
Potted fl owers . Mory Hill , Lois
Be ll and Lorna Ho rt.
SHOTGUN SLU G Match every
!:iun doy tn Novemb er Isaac RUMMAG~ SAU E~Jerythi n g must
Walto n Form neor Chester. 1
go . Shrine Club. Racine. Ohio .
pm. Hams . turkeys other
No v. 3 ond dlh . 9 ..4 .
·
meats Shells ovotlobl e All
MISC. SA L~ . Fndoy a nd Sot. , Nov
gouges . _ ~ ~ ~ --~ ~ _
3 8. Nov . 4 at 701 Beech Street .
NO HUNTING on followi ng pro·
M ~d~le_P~rl : 9~~ '? 5_P~ · ~ __
perttes day or night · Gory Dill &amp;
Raymond Hoolwr•ght proper· THRH FAMILY Yord Solo Fr1. Sot
and Sun . 2nd hou~e on rtght .
ti es , Che!&gt;ler . Town10hip.
- -·- Pmt Smith Grocery in Wo!lpen
EARLY CHRISTMAS Shoppers .
on SR 143 .
need money? You con ea rn
good e)( tro 1ncome as Amwoy AlFRm UNIHO Methodist Church
wi ll ha ve combined yard and
Dis tributor a few hours per
ba ke sole fr i. ond Sot. Nov
day , For in terview , Phone
3rd and 4th from 9om to 4pm .
992 -2319
Route tl81 .
FALL YARD Sa le . Friday 3rd and
Help Wanted
Saturday 4th at Pearl W1llis·
huUse , l etart Fall s.
WANHD . AUTO mechanic for
- - .
new coo dealersh ip. Writr~ Bo!&gt;C CARPORT SAL!: Sot dth . Bicycles.
·i'.i3 , Pomeroy . Ohio or pi1one
tools . misc. 930 l ogon St . , Mid-~19~ ~ I ~4 - -::---::-~~ =~~~!· ~~0~57~0 :...._ - · ACCEPTING opplicotions for lu ll GARAGI:: SALE . Ni ce win ter
time position : Combination
clothi ng. ch1ld ren 's and odulls .
swLtchboard -odmis sions c lerlo.
Blankets and misc. Sot. , Nov .
for Ofte rnoon shift . Immediate
4th . El til 1. Rocksprtngs Twp .
opem ng . Good frtnge benefit s.
Rd_. ~9 ~e_h inc~_fot rgr~u_l2d_; . _ ..
Resumeor application con be
moiled to Veterens Memorial
Pets for Sale
Hospi ta l, Bo11 7.49 , Mu lberry
Hts .. Pomeroy 45769 . Eq ua l Op· f-fOOF HOLLOW Horses . Buy . sell
_p ~r!,:' nitr_E_!:"p loy er ._·~- __
trade or train . New and used
OI:: P ENDABl ~ BAR he lp. Must be
saddles. Ruth Reeves. Albany .
ovotlob le
nights and
[014) 098 -3290.
weekends . occasional days .
RISING STAR Kennels. Boording
Five Poi nts Gril l. Rt . 7.
and grooming all breeds .
00 YOU run out of money before
Ches h1 re , 367 ·0292 .
you run out of mont h? Turn !he
LOVABLE WHITE snow drift great
ta bles with extra income from
PYR~N~E S
Puppies . Pho ne
tniE?resting port time work .
1-b14·b67-383tl .
locol Amway Distributor troin s
-·you for splendid opportumty. GOI NG OUT of Busi ness Sale !
Poodles, Pekingese , PomeroPho ne992·2319 .
mon , Teacup, Tin ies . $35 to
MATURE IND IVIDUALS WITH re·
$125
. Phonebl4 -b9b· l297 .
cent work elo(perience . Occo·

r---------,
I MEiGS I
I
I

~

---

~ P. M~

fo"r kla~

~-

on
my proper ty w1 thout pe r mt sston Judy McG rew .

,_,.

the

~

For Rent

Lost and Found

Notices
-

NO HUN TING or

15 Wl'l"tls ur Unt lt•r
l '.ts il
l ' hatj.!t'
!.:!:)
\ l.llll
I. all
U)
1.1:111
:J.i[l
I.IJil
w u rtl l.'Vt"l"

~

ll-11leDaily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., F · ;..• . ,,.,,. :1. l!ti'

'
I

FORD RANGER
Loaded.

1974 CHEVROLET

'4795

CAMARO

1976 FORD 4X4
Extra nice

350, 4 s peed, 'l bbl e ng1ne, a m tm ,
rall y whee ls, average mi les .

'2995

'4495

•

PUBLIC NOTICE

Ap prox im ~t te ly S250,000 w ilt
be
avail ll ble
to
fU 11 d,
programs of direct soclel
t..+-t-- ser v ces to persons over the
a ge of 60 in the counties of
t-+-t-- Athens , Hock tng , Meigs ,
Monr oe , Mo r gan , Noble ,
Perry and Wash ington . Any
g ov e rnmental
agency ,
public , or private non -private
o-+1---t- --i co
rp orat io n
des i r i ng
to
.A.
prov tde serv ices in these
counties is eligi ble to submit
_...__L-....J.~~ p ropo sa l s . Th e dea dline tor
I
s ubm issio n of co mpl ell!!
pr oposals is November 30,
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it : 11178 Pro iect budgets can
co ve r only the period of June
AXYDLBAAXR
1. 1979 to May 31, 1980.
la ' LONGFELLOW
Prop osals must be submitted
on the for m a t developed for
One letter simply stands lor anoLhcr. In lhis samp le A is th ts purpose and avllilable
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single le tt er s, from the Area Agency on
Agrng . The prior it y se rvi ces
apostrophes, the length and formati on of the word s are all are
in ho me, access. and
hints. Each day the code !ellen are d illere nl.
le gal services, su b other
services may also be ad CRYPTOQUOTES
dr essed . Direct inquiries and
requests for the proposal
for ma t package to :
UQFWQGDPAZ,
Mil
EAKQZ
MFQ
Ms . Mary All ee Varner ,
Area Agency on Aging No . 8,
H iiiS · Hocking
QJUQGPMIIO
JBQ
EBA
IAN Q J Bu ckey e
Valley Regio na l Develop ment Dis tr ict, 410 St. Cla lr
OAR.
DRFXPJB
UFANQFH Bu ilding , 216 Putnam Street.
Yestenlay'a Cryptoquele: LONEIJNESS IS ONLY AN OP- Mar iet ta , Oh io 45750, (614)
37..&amp; .9-4 36.
PORTUNITY TO CUT ADRIFT AND FIND YOURSELF. ANNAMONROE
(11J J , 10, 2tc
«!) 1178 Kine f'1aLu~ SJndi(;li.e, In(;.

"Your Friendly Dealership"

1

1

i;u;c+- +--t--

Don 't forget you· owe it to yourselt to check with us
before you buy any car, New or Used . We can save yov
mon ey. we are The Fnendly Dea le rship _ See or Call
one of th ese Friendly Sal es men : J . 0 . Story, Ray
D9uglas or Bill Ne lson .
CLOSING AT 6 :000N WEEK DAYS .

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
500 E . Main

Pomeroy, 0 .

992-2174
. . .~IIJ!II~!!!J!'....~....---~~~~....,~~~~~
Sports Transactions
California - Asked wa rven
By united Press International on pitcher Tom Griffin for the
Thursday
purpose ot giv ing him h is
Hac:key
uncondit ional release .
Indianapolis {WHA} - Sold
Chicago Cubs· Named
center wayne Gretzky. left Harry Dunlop as minor league
wing ' Peter Driscoll and goal - coordinator ; Jim Saul
as
tender EddieMioto Edmonton ; manageratWlchlta ; JackHiatt
bought out the contract of as menager at Midland ; Randy
center -left wing Don Burgess Hundley as manager at Quad
and assigned defenseman Kevin Cities ; Barney Schultz as mtnor
Morr ison and . center Ange teague pitching coach; and
Moretto to the minors .
Pete Reiser and Billv Jurges I!!IS
Base.. ll
scouts. It"
f"

�~

12-The

Daily

Sentinel,

Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .,

Friday , Nov . ~;

1978

•

Analysts
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Staiehoase Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP!) - For
a variety of reasons, Ohio's
school financing problems
have been brewing f« years.
The state has long provided
a basic per-pupil subsidy with
additions fer vocational and
special education programs
and extra grants for school
districts with unusually high
education costs, mainly in the
big cities;
Local real estate taxes
have been required to furnish
the bulk of the cost of
educating children, however.
And in districts without
business and industry to help
with the tax load, the brunt
hlis fallen on homeownersCost of teachers' salaries,
materials, utilities, building
maintenance has risen
steadily with inflation.
In 1971, the state income
iax was enacted, and the
state also agreed to pay for a
· 10 percent reduction in real
estate taxes. But money from
the income tax only went to

·For all your home
Entertainment and
Appliance N-s

DOXOL

SERVICE

RIDENOUR'S
TV &amp; Aeeliance
Gas servtce
R•cine, .Otiio

Chester, Ohio

CHRISTMAS CLUB
CHECKS
ARE IN THE
MAIL!
Thousands of dollars have just
gone out to the members of
our 1978 Christmas Club and
we hope that some of them
were delivered to your home.
It will mean happier holidays
for everyone.
Our Christmas Club for 1979
is now open. Join this week.

pomeroy
national
bank
the bank of
the century
established 1872

•
Bv CUFFORD KRAUSS
SANCHEZ
MAGA~
LANES , Mexico (UPI )
- A gas pipeline that
exploded in a tiuge fireball
wiped 0 ut an oilfield camp
town and surrounding
villages, killing ~2 people and
leaving a scene of utler
devastation. ,
.
" It was like an atomic
bomb explosion must be,"
said one oilfield worker, who
witnessed the explosion
Thursday.
"At first the whole sky lit
up and it looked as if it were
day," he said. "The flames
were 50 feet high. Animals,
bodies and houses . were
hurled through the air .
Nothing was left alive."
Officials
of
the
government-&lt;Jwned Petroleos
Mexicanos oil company said
12 miles of pipeline were
ripped open by the explosion,
which they said occurred
when natural gas escaped
and Ignited near the Sanchez
Magallanes camp, 560 miles
southeast of Mexico City.
The oil company in a
statement said 52 people were
killed and 21 otqers taken to
hospitals with serious

There were eight of us and
now I'm the only one left,"
said another oil worker who
helped remove the bodies.
"The bodies were charred
beyond recognition and the
stench of burned human flesh
was horrifying."

Army troops cordoned off
the area while 200 workers
repaired the pipeline, which
ran

from

Mexico's

5 Piece Band
From Sciotollille

Vewrans Memorial Hospital
Admitted
Shirley
Hubbard, Pomeroy ; Paul
Burns,
Pomeroy ;
Alice Rairden, Long Bottom;

-

department. "So we made the
By TIM MilLER
computer tapes to explain to
COLUMBUS ( UP!)
each
employee the benefits."
When more than 50,000 state
Efaw
said there was no
employees opened their pay
otlw
·
method
available to
envelopes today, they found
reach
all
of
the state
inside a supplement prepared
employees.
by the Ohio Department of
"We have no statewide
Administrative Services
newsletter,
and no other way
telling how they would benefit
under terms of a salary of detailing it for each
Increase Gov. James A. employee," he said.
And, Efaw said, "It was
Rhodes has promised if recheaper to do li this way - to
·
elected.
The computer printout - include it in the pay en·
individualized according to vel opes ." But, he said,
employee classifications - figures were not available on
tells the employee how much how much the supplements
his salary will increase, how cost the state.
The new salary schedule
much his take-home pay ·will
was
submitted by the
go up, and whether his health
department to the State
insurance will be paid.
Although the supplements Employee Compensation
were issued just four days . Board, which will review. it
and make recommendations
before the general election in which Rhodes faces a stiff to the governor and the legischallenge frol)l Democratic lature .
"State law mandated that
Lt. Gov. Richard Celeste the
director prepare the
the department denied .
recommendations
, " said
political intentions.
Efaw.
"And
after
we
did the
"MI!!r we proposed the pay ·
division
of
personnel
was
raise and increased fringe
benefits (Oct. 13), we were asked by many employees
asked what it would mean to what the proposal would
each employee," said Paul mean to them·. So that's why
Efaw, director of public we included this in the pay
o
information
for
the envelopes.''

GET READY FOR ANIGHT OF
DINING, DRINKING AND DANCING

WITH

much good anyway and now
it has brought disaster to our
people," said his wife.
But the couple had more to
mourn than just their newphews. Their village, Colonia
Benito Juarez, had 60 inhabitants before the disaster_
Forty of them were killed and
11 were injured.
METS PICK ROSE
NEWYORK(UPI) The New York Mets
selected negotiating
rights to Pete Rose, the
37-year-old all-star
third baseman of the
Cincinnati Reds, today
.to open the Third An·
nual major League
Baseball Free Agent
Reentry Draft.
The Mels have not
pursued high-priced
free agents In the past,
however, and they are
not expected to make a
serious bid for R05e,
who says be wants to be
the highest paid player
In the game.
The Mets received
the first pick by
finishing with the worst ·
record in baseball last
season. Teams draft In
Inverse order of their
final standings.
SEEK DIVORCES
Two suits for divorce have
been filed in Meigs County
common pleas court. Filing
for divorce were Clifford R.
Griffith, Middleport, against
Cecilia Griffith , address
unknown ; Vicie
Jane
Williams, Rt. 1, Cheshire,
against John R. Williams,
Knox, Ind.

"THE INN PLACE"
&lt;

'

\

hardwork ing t r ead edges for
traction. A ' welt -groo ved
tread for adhes ion In the rain .
A smooth , quiet ride . Plus
gas -saving
radial
con struction .. Get Tiempo - the
one tire that does It all. ·

.

Ctsln11

"CHICK OUR PRICIS AND QUALITY"

MEIGS TIRE CENTER. INC.
700 E. Main,

'·

•"

the grip .you need for al m ost

POMEROY, 0.

I

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

env road , anv weather . 10,000

(Good 'Til No\1. 30, '78)

RACINE - The annual meeting and
banquet of the Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation District (SWCD) will be held
on Nov. 16, in the Racine Junior High
School.

S££ ll!EM IN THE FURNITURE DEPT. 3n1 FLOOR

You 'll neve r have to put on
snow tires again . Here's all

992-3629

.

We have just .received a new ehlpment of

Plus 51.'3 FE. ET.
Old Tire

•

•

Voinovich, 42, is a former county auditor

and state legislator with a reputation of
expertise in finance and local government.

He is also highly popular in the Cleveland
area, where he resides in Euclid.

Dorrian, 48, is a contractor with strong
experience in cow ty government and has
.demonstrated political popularity in the
Colwnbus area.
Three independent teams are also
rwming for govetnor.lieutenant governor.

T. Ferguson, has campaigned on his
t' ranklin County Prosecutor George C.
efforts to bring state audits current and Smith. 43, his Republican opponent ,
recover illegal welfare payments.
charges Brown has been negligent in
Lukens, a former congressman and a
state senator for six years, has waged a

heavyhitting campaign on alleged
corruption and inefficiency in the auditor's
office.
An investigation by Lukens ' campaign
team produced charges of irregularities in

to recover state funds, has
mishandled a security fraud c ase to
trying

protect political friends and has failed to
go after organized crime.
Democratic State Treasurer Gertrude

W. Donahey, 70 , is seeking a third term

based m tarning mor e than $400 million
Fergusop 's office. Indictments were , for Ohio Ulrough prudent investments of

sought but none have been rendered.
SetTetary of State Brown , 72, has been in
office since 1951 and boasts of the finest
operation in the country . He claims to have

They are Allan Friedman, 'II, and Bruce overseen honest elections and has sought
Wood, both from Cleveland, representing to eliminate the possibility of fraud . .
the U.S. Labor party; John O'Neill, 53, of
State Sen. Anthony J. Celebrezze Jr ., DFairview Park, and Conrad Gutermuth; Cleveland, the 37-year old Democratic
49, of Uniontown, Socialist Labor party; nominee, charges Brown has allowed the
and Patricia H. Wright, 28, of Cleveland, office to fall . into a state of "benign
and John M. Gaige , 31, of Toledo, Socialist neglect" alid has not done enough to
Workers party _
encourage vo ter registration and
Tile state auditor's race pits Democratic participation.
Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson, 49, against
Democratic Attorney General William
Republican state Sen. Donald E. Lukens, J. Brown, also 37, is seeking a third term
47, of Middletown.
based on his off ice 's accomplishments in
Ferguson, a one-termer who took over enforcement of conswner protection laws
from his father, longtime Auditor Joseph and overhauling Ohio's drug Jaws.

state funds.

Whitehall City Attorney George C.
!Wgers, 31, her Republican opponent,
charges Mrs. Donahey ha s ignored Ohio
fin ancial institutions in investing Ohio)s
tax money .

State Supreme Court Justic-e Paul W.
Brown , 63, a Republican who has served

lor 10 years on the bench , is seeking reelection against Judge Clilford F. Brown,
62, of Norwalk , an appellate court judge
who lost a bid for the SUpreme Court four
years ago.
Justice

Willi am

B.

Brown ,

65,

a

Democrat , is seekin g a second six.year
term against Judge Richard M. Markus,
46, of Cuyahoga County Common Pleas
Court.

tnfitttl
MIDDLEPORT - POMEROY

PR ICE 25 CENTS

CHARLESTONr -W. Va. (UPI) Serious traffic snarls might result on the
Ohio River if lwo loc ks aren't bull! at
GaJUpolis, says West Virginia Gov. Jay
Rockefeller.
Construction of tw o Jocks was
suggested by Rockefeller in a letter to Col.
·George Bieber of the Huntington District
of Army Engineers.
"If steps aren 1 soon taken to address
these problems, we may be faced with a
serious bottleneck to traffic on the Ohio

q.,. (kt

Steel Belted Radiils
EJimilate wmrer
Ttte Changeo¥er

Rhodes to ''pack your bags" and make
way for new leadership.

SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 5. 1978

GALliPOliS-POINT PLEASANT

Meigs S&amp; WCD banquet
scheduled Nov. 16th

RAIN TIRE

...

Tworlocks
necessary:
Rockefeller

CLINICS SLATED
Athens Birth Center
meetings will be held the first
and third Mondays at four
and One-Half State St.,
Athens, above the Casa Que
Pasa Restaurant.
For additional information
call992-3886 and ask for Barb.

~nd

THE MEIGS INN

NO. 40

•
INVESTIGATION UNDERWAY- Hennan Henry, Logan, of the Bureau of
- frirnlnal InveStigation, takes fingerprints at the K. and C. Jewelry Store on
. ,_ Pol)leroy's East Main Street during Friday morning's investigation. Standing in
background is Pomeroy police Officer, Roger Durst. The B&amp;E was discovered at
7:56am. Friday by Mrs. Edna Schoenleb, who was enroute to her employment at
·the Reuter-Brogan Insurance Services office. The front door glass was broken to
gain entrance.One showcase in the establishment was broken.

WHITEWALL

AT:

'

f •urm ''""'=''-'~"'· T his Citri~tmus ,..~ J!.,,.,. "" i mp,...ulvf &lt;UJUP1ml'lll
.. owuNI(I'ul&gt;lyln ui/Jinu.lwd i11 jilw &lt;'llbi" "'".,."'' 11m./ li11rd ,..;,h 1nsww•t
,,,/ ci'J~r C.m "'" rlriulf ..( u ,..,,... imurim11i•.,. ,...,,, '" Ju_~ "//.,,·r .1«&gt;~• .' " .

'37!''-~SR!J

10:00 'til 2:00

VOL 13

INSPECTION SET
Meigs Chapter Order of
DeMolay will hold inspection
· Nov. 6 at 7:30 p.m. at the ·
Middleport Masonic Temple.
All active DeMolay members
and Master Masons are invited.

Lane Cedar Chelle in oak • cherry • pine
and maple. Now lA the time to lay one away
for Chrietmas "Delivery.

state problems. He .says it's time . for

tmts

l{"'"'l i tl i fJ

SERVING DINNER
The Forest Run Methodist
Church will serve Election
Day dinner Tuesday, Nov, 7.

has a "report card of failure" to deal w1th

•

Meigs County sheriff's
deputies investigated an
accident Thursday 't 4:15
p.m. at Evelyn's Grocery on
SR 7 on Rutland Road.
According to the report
Deborah Hatfield, 17, Rt. I,
Rutland, came out of the
store and got into her vehicle
and backed it into the side of
a pickup truck that had pulled
in behind her, The pickup was
owned by Stephen Taylor, 25,
Summit Road, Middleport.
Miss Hatfield was cited to
Meigs County juvenile courl
for improper backing. There
were no injuries.

Tlw J.n~ · rho'JI. If 'J rlr .. Ill&lt; \If Jl&lt;'rW~&lt;ll. rh~ri•ArJ 11ifi"r 1(/}i.mit~ rf Jhr 'H
,.,.,,,.,.,., _A fllf t ~' ''"P"d ill C''"'"rirJ u.f fl'&gt;mU II NIIIId foogo'lrd. 01 /r~dili&lt;m ll1111

(Continued from page I )
Cheshire for Philip Price,
Gallipolis. It was reported
Price's vehicle had struck a
train. Price was treated on
the scene. The squad answered another call at 3:05
a.m. Friday for Nancy Pope,
76 Laurel St., who was taken
to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.

Edith Davi s ; • Donn a
freeman·; Smith Henderson ;
Tabitha Hill; Mrs. Robert
Kincaid and daughter; Mrs.
Phillip King and sun ; Donald
Kirk ; Danny Maynard ;
Sheila McGuire; J ohn
Musgrave, Jr ; Ruth Nichols;
Ja sper Oli ve t ;" ' J uliu s
Preston; Fredigh Price; Mrs.
Stephen Richards and son ;
Dorsey Scott ; Eberttte
Simms; Paul Sizemore;
Lilian Tedrow ; Ma ry
Thacker ; Job Thompson ;
Amy Wedemeyer ; Dennis
Young.
Births, Nov. 2
Mr. and Mrs. Merrill Detty,
daughter, O:ok Hill.

following wreck

with your Christ~.&lt;~ gih of a lore Ch~t.

Holzer Medical Center
Discharges, Nov. 2
Helen Arnott ; Charles
Bush ; Annabelle Caldwell ;
Robert Caldwell; Edith
0 (::1vis ;

Citation issued

With Rhodes apparently having erased
an early deficit in available surveys, the
contest is rated a tossup depending on
Tuesday's turnout.
The issues have chiefly centered around
keeping Ohio's schools operating,
promoting industrial expansion at~d jobs,
and providing for domestic fuel for Ohio
utilities at reasonable cost.
Rhodes, the oldest governor in the
United States at 69, has displayed his
customary vigor and blasted Celeste as a
man with no experience whowants to raise
·(a xes.
The governor says he has delivered for
Ohioans, attracting Industry, creating
481,000 jobs, developing fuel sources,
fighting lor the use of Ohio coal, cutting
government costs and red tape, and
keeping schools open.
"We bave solved the school finance
.problem," says Rhodes.
No such thin g, repli es challenger
Celeste, a 40-year old suburban Cleveland
native who has vaulted to the top of the
Democratic ticket in eight years from the
time he became a state representatives.
Ceieste claimsRhodes has left a ''trail of
tx-oken promises and closed schools" and

~ gthtJr&gt;,tott-!kattltj/r~ .

Middleport

Barbara

IIY LE~ LEOrlARD
state make up this board, along with one
UPI statehouse Reporler
legislator from each party.
COLUMBUS (UP!)- Some long-.-ange
Competitive races for attorney general,
d~isions af,fectlng . the course of treasurer and three Ohio Supreme Court
go_yemment in Ohio going into the 1981E seats. including chief justice, complete the
will be fl!cing voters Tuesday as they visit statewide slate.
their polling places.
Ohioans also will be choosing 23
Heading the list is the race for governor, members of Congress,17 state senators, 99
where three-term Republican Gov. James Ohio House members and a variety of
A: Rhodes faces a stiff challenge from county , municipal and township officials.
lle1nocratic U . Gov. Richard F. Celeste.
Two state constitutional amendments For the first time in Ohio history, the on county charters and prison labor _ are
candidates for governor and lieutenant on the ballot along with 1.700 local issues,
governor will run in tandem, guaranteeing · _including 111-1 · school tax issues and 40
their election from the same party.
'school bond issues.
Rhodes' partner Is Cuyahoga County
Secretary of State Ted w. Brown has
Commissioner George V. Voinovich. projected a voter turnout of almost 3.3
CeJeste 's
is
Fra nklin
County million , or 63 percent of. the registered
Commissioner Michael J . Dorrian.
voters, approaching the record of 3.4
Rhodes,. claiming he has "delivered for lnillion for agubernatorial election in 1958.
Ohio" for 12 years, is seeking a record
Other political observers have detected
fourth four-year term. Celeste, promising a degree of apathy among the voters and
"fresh leadership" and a new tack on are anticipating a lower turnout.
solving the problems of the 1 -. is
The feature attracUon is clearly the
making his secon~statewide run.
matchup between Rhodes and Celeste,
Also at stake is control of the state where record spending 6f at least $1.5
"PP«tionment Board, wllich will realign million apiece has gone into proclaiming
state legislative boundaries for the 1__ their messages and mobilizing their
The governor, auditor and secretary of supporters.

million of a state surplus,
which Rhodes said his
administration had saved by
car eful management , to
schools. Most ollt was in the
form of special grants. But
$40 mUlloo was contained in a
loan program to keep schools,
again mainly in the big cities,
afloat for the rest of 1978. In
all but a few cases, it has
done so.
Now Rhodes projects the
state can spend an extra Sl.l ·
billlon ,... again one-third of
the additional revenues
generated by existing taxes
over the next four yellrs - on
schools.

River, " the

Bernice Brothers, Bidwell.
Discharged - Edward
Lemaster.
..'\

Crosier ;

Assembly adopted and
Rhodes signed a bill designed
to correct what legislators
called " unbelievable "
management practices in the
Strict
state
schools.
supervision was brought 'into
play for any district having to
close for lack of money.
At the same time, the
Legislature all oc ated $115

State employees
.
get PQ-Y promzse

oil

NEW YORK &lt;UPil - Citibank, the country's
second largest bank, today boosted its prime rate
a full half JMIInt to 1()3/4 percent, effective
immediately,
·
The action by Citibank, a trendsetter in
movements of this benchmark rate, came three
days after most major banks, led by ·Chase
Manhattan, sent the rate up a quarter JMiint to 10 112
percent.
Citibank, in a statement, said it was
"anticipating the rate which strict adherence to
il!i formula would produce the following week."
It noted that the "extraordinary" actions by
the Federal Reserve Wedneslfay to buoy the
dollar had not been fully reflected in the rate for
90-day commercial paper on wliich its formula is
based.

NIGHTSHIFT''

From

subsidy program
was
declared unconstitutional in
Hamilton County on grounds
it did not provide a " thorough
and efficient" education for
children, as required by the
state Constitution.
That case is currently on
appeal to the Ohio Supreme
Courl,
Last · June, the General

school administrators ' were
reluctant to cut programs.
- The General Assembly
chipped aw ay at local
revenues for schools by
granting property tax relief
and denying collection of
taxes based on inflated land
values.
,
In brief, the "carrot" approach did not work. It was
futile to ask voters to raise
their own taxes to generate
more state funds for schools.
Although
the
state
Le gislature sh ar ply
increased· state s~pport, the
"equal yield" formula was
only about half funded.
Late last year, the school

Explosion claims 52

THIS .WEEK'S LIVE BAND IS
11

formu la. Gov. James A.
Rhodes vetoed several parts
of the legislation, but he
accepted the concept.
Several things soon became
apparent :
- Some school districts,
mainly in the big cities, still
had special needs. Their
education c05ts were higher,
"Equa l yield" was not
enough for them.,
- -Taxpayers thought the .
income tax was taking care of
the schools. They also
objected to some bad
management practi ces by
school administrators. Local
tax levies failed .
,
- Inf:ation skyrocketed and

producing region to Mexico
City, and filled in a 100-yard,
)llack crater left by the blast.
We e-ping survivor s
gathered in a small, white ,
stucco church to mourn their
dead brought to the Adorada
Sea el Santismo Church.
·
The tragedy occurred on
the Mexican Day of the Dead
holiday, when dead relatives
and friends are honored by
having candies placed on
their graves . Some local
residents speculated the
candles caused the explosion.
"There was a flash . Then it
spread across the sky and lit
up the land," said Jose
Ramirez Gomez, 60, a taco
stand owner who sold food to
oil workers. He and his wife,
Sarah, came to the church to
mourn for their two nephews
killed in the blast.
burns.
•
"The pipe doesn't do us
''I lost my whole family.

OUR

· pomeroy
rutl~nd
tuppers plams

schools in proportion to the
amount from the general
state budget - about onethird.
In 1974, the state lottery
money was added - less than
2 percent of the amount
required for schools.
In 197~. the General Assembly tried to "equalize" the
distribution of the state
subsidy so that a mill of real
estate tax in one district
would be equal , for
distribution purposes, to a
mill in the other 616 districts.
Districts levying more local
property taxes would get
more state assistance.
This was the "equal yield "

•

f)hio voters face long-range decisions

·

Ohio's school finan-c ing problems have been brewing for years
EDITOR'S NOTE: Gov.
Jame~~ A. Rhodes ud Democralk pbematorlal nomlaee
Rltllard F. Celeste have dlf.
fered sharply over lbe
method of dealblg wltb Oblo's
public aebool financing
prolllem, one of the major
lnuea In tbio year's
campaign. In a two-part
ualyals, UPI statehouse Re·
porter Lee LeOIW'd outlines
the problem aDd bow each
caodiclate plans to deal with
II, Toclay's ~tailmenltraces
the blltory of the school
finance dilemma.

1\..

Posts join
to obserVe
vets' day

Dinner-wiD be served by the Southern
Band Boosters at 7:11 p.m. Tickets are $4
each and may he purchased from SWCD
supervisors Rex Shenefield, David
Gloeckner, Roy Miller, Thereon Johnson
and Joe Bailey; Soil Conservation Service
personnel, Boyd Ruth and Reid Young ;
SWCD office on the second floor of the
Farmers Bank or Bob Mattox, Curtis
Balthaser, Dave Fox, Paul Sayre, ·Tom
Theiss, Horace Karr, Virgil King or
Warren Pickens. Prepaid reservations
should be made by Nov, 9, However, if
· residents caMot purchase tickets by this
Continued on Page A·2

gov~rnor

said.

Rockefeller said the present Jock
sy'!(em was "rapidly becoming outdated
and incapable of efficiently handling the
high volumes of river traffic that must
pass through the gates."
Construction of two, parallel, 1,200foot locks "appears not only to provide an
adequate solution to existing problems,
but It iB foresightel! enough to an.ticlpate
future growth and the possibility of
accompanying problems," he said,
According to Rockefeller, a single,
1,200-ioot lock would be "functionally
outdated before the end of the 50-year
projected life of new locks."
Double Jocks also would increase the
safety and recreational potential on the
r iver, and guarantee that energy
commodities aren 't tied up there,

Rnckeleller added.

MEIGS BAND SENIORS HONORED - Twenty-four
seniors of the 1978 Meigs Marauders High School marching
hand of Director Randy Hunt were honored prior to Friday's
Meigs'{lallipolis football game at Marauder Stadium,
Pomeroy. Pictured in this Greg Bailey photograph ,lirst row,
left to right ate: Mary Johnson , Dave Riggs, Susie Smith,
Dollie Rousey, Don Richmond and Beverly Hoffman . Second

row - Julie Byer, Pam )\lees, Patty Dyer, Lisa Nash,
Tanuny Charles and Jana Burson. Third row - Dorsel
Thomas, Lori Wood, Kevin King, John Story, Sherrie
Osborne and Jo McKinney. Fourth row - Brenda Foster,
Jeff Daniels, Jamie Johnson, Stephanie Radford, Carin
Bailey and Mandy Sisson.

Myths differ on schooling
EDITOR'S NOTE: Gov, James A.
Rhodes and Dem&lt;H:ratic gubernatorial
oomloee Richard F. Celeste have dif-fered
sharply over the method of dea!iDg with
Ohio's public schoolllnaoclng problem. Io
the secuod of two Installments, UP!
Statehouse Reporter Lee Leonard
s1811marlzes their real and imagined
differences.
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - Ohio's school
finan cing problems, and any likely
solutions, have been twisted beyond any

reasonable recognition in a barrage of
television and radio advertisements by
Gov. James A. Rhodes and his Democratic
opponent, Lt. Gov. Richard F. Celeste.
Each candidate has proposed a plan to
deal with the serious situation, which has
come to be regarded as perhaps the No. 1

RHODES MY'lll - Celeste has no plan
to dea l with the education financing
problem.
CELESTE MY'l1l - Rhodes ' plan will
cause property taxes to rise by $800 million
in four years.
RHODES MY'l1l -Celeste will double

The differ ence is in how they operate
and whelher they can meet the
constitutional requirement of a '1horough
and efficient" system of education as
defined by the Ohio SUpreme Court when it
rules on the current state subsidy formula.
Rhodes says an extra Sl.l billion from

issue in the campaign.

tlle state income tax if he is elected

the state plus strict management practices

But the political advertising and rhetoric
from the candidates themselves have

governor.
will do the job for four years. Property
Although schools have had to close while owners will share an extra $250 million in

distorted the realities :
CELESTE MYTII -

School closings
durin g Rhodes' administration ha ~e
deprived thousands of children of tbelf
education, and will continue to do so under
his plan .

Rhodes was governor, no child was

automatic taxes from new construction
and improvements, not $600 milllon .

deprived of his education. The lost days
had to be made up . Schools have cut
corners and borrowed money, but most
are still operating and will continue to
operate if Rhodes is re-&lt;lected.

Another $300million will be reimbursed
by the state under Rhodes' tax reduction
plan, and $250 million more may be
enacted by the choice of local voters.
Rhode s' plan is based on fuil funding of

Three county-wide races 'UP for choice
of 13,800; two school levies on ballot

POMEROY - Meigs County's four
American Legion Posts at Rutland ,
Rlicine , Middleport and Pomeroy will
cO!nbine for a public observance of
Veterans Day Saturday .
·
Members will be in front of the Meigs
County Courthouse at 10:45 a.m. to hold a
P"Ogram which will include speakers and a
C«Dp1ete service.
, . Pumeroy will serve as the host post
BY LARRY EWING
8Jld will serve dinner at the post home at
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County's
11:30 am.
.
record 13,800 registered voters will go to
' The posts are asking that aU local the polls Tuesday to decide three countychurches ring their hells in the usual wide races, a proposed .6 mill tax levy for
custom starting at 11 am. untilll:OO a.m. the operation of Guiding Hand School, and
to mark the signing of the treaty that miscellaneous village and township issues
ended World War I. Since that time the and tues.
obServance which was named "Armistice
Residents of the Gallia County Local
Day" has been renamed "Veterans Day" School District wtll further aee~ae tne tate
lif permit tbe observance of ceremonies of a proposed 5.1 mill, $21 milllon building
marking the ending of aU wars.
levy, as well as a 2.9 mill operating mill
The Saturday program includes levy.
members of the eighth district officials
Officials of the Gallla County B.oard of
111\d the district commander, Gerald Elections are expecting a relatively high
Bolyard, who will deliver the, main. turn-out at the county's 36 voting places.
address.
As of 2pm. Friday, 'I/5Gallians had voted
· The Eighth DiJtrict traditionally makes absentee.
In the county's most publicly
1 round up at this time for memberships
and will be picking up the membership contested raee Republican challenger Jo
carda for the Meigs posts. The pubUc is Ann Allen is vying to unaeat inCijlllbent
invited 1o attend the program.
County Auditor Dorothy Candee.
Pomeroy ·Mayor Clarence Andrews
Unv..ted Tax Sbwmed
has indicated he will reroute traffic away
Candee has maintained throughout the
fnm the courthouse- He, too, will be campaign that her refusal to sccept the
p:eaent 1u- the program.
State Department of Tax Equalization's
· Iii conjunction with the observance, update of county real estate values Is
l't!lidents are being asked to display their based upon her opposition ·to forced ,
America flags. Veterans Day, the date of unvoted taxation.
Nov 11 1s a holiday for aU federal and
Allen
asserts
that
the
einployea Ibis vear having been incumbentAuditor's action was politically
!J.l!lVed to another date I'!" the past several ·. motivated, and charges that the refusal
-~~ previously.
will allow the lllate department to mandate

ata.;

a higher percentage of increase than
The main issue of cont ention
woulil have been necessary.
seemingly revolves around where the
In what many observers consider to be political candid ates maintain their
a potentially close race, Democratic residences.
Candi~ate Lonnie W. Burger and
Democratic Burger resides in SpringRepublican Robert R. Saunders are field Township. Saunders is a resident of
seeking the open seat on the Galtia County Gallipolis.
Burger has insisted throughout his
Board of Commissioners.
Agree on Roads, Taxes
campaign that a county commissioner
Both candidates have emphasized the should live in the county , or, apparently,
repair and maintenance of county roads outside Gallipolis.
and 'lower taxes.
Saunders has emphasized the fact that

be complete hours and hours ahead of
previous years.
Actually, Meigs Countians have only
one race on the local level Tuesday . This is
for a seat on the county commissioners
The 41votomatic'' is a small machine board with Democrat Giles Smith seeking
which will record the votes of residents to unseat the Republican incumbent
'
and the long, pencil-marked ballot iB out Henry Wells.
County Auditor Howard Frank
When the polls close at 7:30p.m. Tuesday,
the small t.liots will be taken from the Republican, is running unopposed for h~
polling places to the county hoard o' ofiice and Rober! Buck, Republican, is
elections where compull!rs will turn out unopposed for the probate court, juvenile
the final vote totals. Totals are expected to div!aion Jud~eship . Manning Webster,

will be held constitutional.
Although school lobbyists believe it will
take at least $2.4 billion over fo ur years
just to keep up with inflation , the schools
can probably operate on $l.J billion.
Rhodes is assuming an inflation rate of 6 or
7 percent to provide enough revenues

without new taxes .
However , if the current system is ruled

he bas maintained a business in the

Continued on Page A-2
community lor 26 years, and thus, he
claims, has a thorough knowledge oi the
county and its problems.
Mollltoo vs. Betz
Seeking the judgeship of the Juvenile
and Probate Division of 1Common Pleas
•
Court are Republican Thiltnas E . Moulton g~ven
and Democrat Rllbert S. Betz.
Moulton has practiced law in Gallia
County for ov_er ~~e ~ears and was on
POMEROY - Debbie Blair, Pomeroy,

Fine of $500
woman

was arrested by Pomeroy Police on

Continued on Page A-2

New 'votomatic' system to be used
first time by Meigs voters Tuesday
BY BOB HOEFUCH
POMEROY - With few local races
and iuues, the Meigs County Board of
El&lt;Ctions has probably selected a good
year to start the use of the "votomatic."

the existing subsidy system. He asswnes it

incumbent, did not file for reelection.
Judge Buck is vacating the county judge
court p05t and unopposed lor that office is
Pomeroy Attorney Charles Knight. .
Me1gs CounUans w1ll he helpmg dw de
on their di s trl~t r epr esentative and
senator to the legiSlature and on the state
candidates to be elected as well as casting
ballots on the representative from the
district to Congress and the judicial
winners.
There is one tax levy, 1.25 mills lor five
Continued oo Page A·2

charges filed by carl R. Hysell, Meigs
County Juvenile officer, for contri buting to

the delinquency of three minors. She was
charged with purchasing liquor for them.
in cormection with
numerous acts of vandalism that occurred

1lte arrest was

,

in the countr last weekend.
Mayor Clarence Andrews sentenced
Mrs. Blair to 90 days in jail and fined her
$500 and costs. She is presently lodgeQ in
jail . On Friday Hysell transported two
youths to the Ohio Youth Conunission,
Columbus. They had appeared in juvenile
court on charges of breaking and entering
of the Jay Mar Coal Co., and the theft of
$2,400. The pair faced an additional charge
of aoto theft. Both were . AWOL from
Fairfield School for Boys, LancaSter.
Hysell indic~ted an adult will be
arrested in the near future re~ardiru! the
money that was stolen.

•

..

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