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                  <text>12- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 ., Thursday . Nov.

i

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.........."'11'11111111111~111111-...-------------,

9~,~19~78~.---------------------------------.:..~111111

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

Area Deaths 1

the MarY Rutan Hospital.
Mrs. Rice had been a
resident of the Huntsville
area for the past several
years. She was born July 26,
1919 in Hartford, W. Va.,
daughter of the late Burley
and Ruby Board.
Surviving are her husband,
John F. Rice, Sr., Huntsville;
two sons, Clyde K. Board Qf
Huntsville, and George Board
of Columbus; a stepson, John
F. Rice, Jr., Huntsville; 12
grandchildren ; five
stepgrandchildren ; two
brothers, Burley A. Board,
Jr., and John A. Board,
Crooksville, and three
sisters , Juanita Knapp,
Columbus; Thelma Filson, '
Point Pleasant, and Mary . ·
Roush, Letart, W. Va.
Funeral services will be
held at I p.m. Friday at the
VanHorn Funeral Horne ,
ANNABELL RICE
Mrs. Annabell Rice, 59, Main St., Lakeview with the
Huntsville, formerly of Rev . Jack Reprogle of·
Middleport , died Tuesday at ficiating.

MILDRED SPENCER
Mrs. Mildred F. Spencer,
61, Ormond Beach, Fla .,
formerly of Pomeroy, died
Wednesday in Florida.
Born in Pomeroy, Mrs.
Spencer moved to Daytona
Beach, Fla., 22 years ago.
She Is survived by her
husband,
Otis;
two
daughters, Mildred Jane
Cullum and Betty Ann Pat·
terson, both of Ormond Beach
and five grandchildren. She
was a member of the
Pomeroy First Baptist
Church.
Funeral services will be ·
held at the Haigh-Biank
Funeral Home in Ormond
Beach and burial wUI be jn
Florida.

Artist Rockwell
dies Wednesday
STOCKBRIDGE, Mass .
(UPI) -Norman Rockwell,
whose hundreds of homey
pointing&amp; depleted the fabric
of American We like no other
artist, died at his hmne late
Wed~!!!sdaY . He was 84.
Rockwell, who drew 317
covers for the weekly
Saturday Evening Post, was
in failing health fll' two years
and had been unable to work
in the studio he kept In the
Berkshire mountain town of
Stockbridge.
On the easel at the time of
his death was his last
painting - an unfinished
depletion of Stockbridge.
Rockwell's personal physl·
clan, Dr. Franklin Paddock,
said the painter died at 11:15
p.m. EST, of an undisclosed
illness.
The funeral was expecte&lt;j
to be at St. Paul's Episcopal
Church with burial in the
town cemetery.
"Norman Rockwell as a
man was very much like his
paintings, :• said Paddock.
"He had a mOill deliglltful
and charming peraonallty
and .was a wonderful person.
Bufln addition, beneath that,
he was a vety well..-ead man
of much greater depth than
his illustrations would appear
to show."
If he was !OIIietimes dismissed as a panderer to
sentiment -one critic called
· him the "Lawrence Welk of
painting" - he alto was
praised as "America's Rem·
brandt" and its favorite painter.
His gaunt figure, wavy hair
and everopresent pipe were
as much his trademark as the
signature that appeared on
One Table
"Fashion Fabrics"

%Price
Lay-a-way your
White or Elna
Sewing Machines
Desk or Console
Cabinet Now!

On !he T
Middleport, 0.

hundreds of his works. He
.consistently referred to
himself as an "illustrator" or
"a storyteller" but not an
artist, although an original
Rockwell fetched $27,000 and
he was once asked to make an
even trade of one of his own
paintings for an original
Andrew Wyeth valued at
$50,000.
"If you can tell a story in a
picture and if a reasonable
number of people like your
work, it is art," he said.
Born in New York City Feb.
31 1894, Rockwell dropped out
of high school at 16 and on the
strength of a few months'
education at the ·Acaderny of
Design, began illustrating
youth magazines. In three
years he Was art director of
Boys Life Magazine.
He sold his first painting to
the Post when he was 22 for
$50. It showed a young boy
reluctantly pushing a baby
carriage and marked the
beginning of an era.
"I'm
really
almost
religious about the Post," he
once said, although he also
was the illustrator lor the
Annual Boy Scout Calendar,
· the Top Value Stamp and ·
Franklin Mint catalogues.
Over the next four decades,
he turned out throatcatching, eye-wetting scenes
that caught Americans being
American a doctor
patiently examining a little
girl's doll, a barebottorned
boy ready to receive a shot, a
family solemnly giving
thanks before dinner, Rosie
•the Riveter doing her psrt for
the war effort, an Army
veteran's homecoming.
"I didn't set out on purpose
to paint a sunny America,"
he said. But gentle humor and
charm characterized the
Rockwell style until the
troubled and divisive 1960s
drove him to comment with
his paintbrush.
"For 47 years, I portrayed
the best of all possible worlds
- grandfathers, puppy dogs
-things like that. That kind
of stuff is dead now," he said
at age 7S. "And I think It's
about time .
In place of Uttle Leaguers
and soreopawed puppies appeared a portrait of three
slain Southern civil rights
workers and a wide-eyed
pigtailed black girl on her
way to a segregated school,
nanked by four u.s.
marshals.

NEW HAVEN FURNITURE
Save On Order•
For Chrilltmas

.

SPECIAL SALE PRICES
MEN'S WRANGLER
TURTLE NECK SHIRTS

.,••

·Cfearancef Just 20

HOODED SWEAT SHIRTS

SO Pel. Cotton 50 pet. Polyester . Sizes small (6-8). medium (10-12) ,
large (14-16), extra large (18-2). Inside layer next to skin is all
cotton. outside layer is polyester.

.s3.99 Thermal Tops .............................................. '3.45
s3.99 Thermal Bottoms .........................................s3.45

•

BOYS $895

WEST BEND

TWIN BURGER COOKER AND
SANDWICH GRILL REG. 34.95

FLANNEL SKI PAJAMAS

SPECIAL
PRICE

Sizes 8 to 18. Boxer style waist bottoms with
cuftlet ankle, pullover crew neck top with
cufflet wrist. colorful patterns .

•7••

Make hamburgers one side or make
sandwiches or more on the other side. non
stick cooking surface.

SALE

$1995

TWO DAY SALE

ELECTRIC DEEP FRYER
.
Perfect size for ·couples, singles, students.
Uses 2 cups of oi I to fry one or two servings
in a few minutes.
I

Plastic cover and slotted frying spoon
included.

REG. 27.50

PORTABLE PHONOGRAPHS
.

Wildcat Automatic Phonograph·-

Drop down full size Changer. Ploys 33 and 45
RPM records; 2 self contained speakers. tone
control, headphone jack, chalk gray in color.
11

Big-Big" Pol1able

Separate volume and tone control
Front Speakers
.
3

speeds with built-in

45

/

Record Adapter

Sulfcase cabinet with case.

, 3 speeds with 45 record adapter Volume, tone, and tuning control
Front speaker
Leathe~-look case with" handle

COTTON FLANNEL
36 inches wide · fast color · solid
colors and prints.

SAl£

PR~E $1

28
10.

ONE SPECIAl. GROUP

WOMEN'S DOUGLAS MARC
COORDINATE SPORTSWEAR

Match,i ng skirts, slacks. sweaters in green, blue, and bayberry. Sizes
5-6
17-18.
P·!~ .............................................SALE '14AO
~~~~-!~" ......................................
SALE '16.00
I ••••

••••......••.•.....•..••••.•........•.•..

EUREKA $9995
UPRIGHT SWEEPER SALE PRICE

Chrome beater bar brush
roller, 6 position height, edge
cleaner, light.

'7995
With free tools

PLAYTEX CROSS YOUR HEART
SOFT SIDE COTTON BRA
BUY ONE AND GET ONE FREE
Offer .good until Dec. 31, 1978. Stop in lingerie department on the
second floor for details.

CHILDREN'S

TWO DAY SA I.E

_

COORDrNATE SPORTSWEAR

JUN lOR DRESSES
This sale includes our entire stock of junior dresses in sizes 3 to 15.
Excellent selection.
Ready to Wear - 2nd floor

In sizes 2 to 6 and 7 to 14. Our entire stock included for this sale;
sweaters, tops. skirts, slacks, jackets.
Famous names like Russ Girl, Girl Town, Buster Brown, Bottoms
-and Tops.
Save Friday and Saturday •.

SALE PRICES

SALE PRICES

MEN'S $8
PAJAMAS

$pedal Sale Prfcesf

Coat style top, adjustable gripper boxer waist
bottoms. Full cut sizes A .(small) , B (medium) C
(large) D (extra large) . Solid colors or pattern'S .
Polyester cotton blend .

New selection, solid -colors and neat patterns.
Four-ln-harid ties and ready tied ones. Two
days only .

95

MEN'S
WEM BLEY TIES
15.50 WEMBLEY TIES ................... SALE '4.20
'6:50 WEMBLEY TIES ................... SALE '4.90
17.5o WEMBLEY TIES.................. SALE '5.20

OPEN SATURDAY '9:30 TO 5 'P.M •.

You can't beat our price11

POMROY

NEW HAVEN FURNITURE
112·2462
I,

Agriculture Secretary Bob
Bergland promised that a set·
aside prog ram would be
announced in mid-October , a
month ahead of the Nov. 15
legal deadline, but it has yet
to be announced because of
delays at the White House.
Department officials said
alternatives varying from a
10 to 20 percent production
cutback were on the
president's desk. ·
At a news conference two

hours before that crop report,
President Carter reaffirmed
support for a " moderate set·
asi de" in response to a
questioner who asked if
production curtailment was
inconsistent
with
the
pr~s id e nt 's
anti-inflation
effort .
This year's record crop
carne despite a feed grains
set-aside , partly because
farmers' participation was
less than hoped for and

GALUPOL!S, Ohio (UP!) necessary to protect the
- An attorney with the Ohio rights of the residents
Legal Rights Service has involved.''
Ms Haller said the depart·
accused Gallipolis State
ment
was :
Institute and the Department
Putting
residents in
of Mental Health and Mental
nursing
homes
which do not
Retardation with violating
meet
federal
standards.
the law in placement of
- Putting residents in
Institute residents into
nursing
homes when they
nursing homes.
.
Kathryn Haller, in a letter have no physical problems
to Department Director Dr . , requiring nursing horne care.
- Using state money to pay
Timothy B. Moritz , said
Gallipolis officials ·had placed for these placements instead
70 to 80 residents into nursing of federal Medicaid funds.
- Failing to consider the
homes across the state within
traumatic effects of sudden
only six weeks last spring.
"I am dissatisfied with the moves on the retarded resi·
Department's handling of . dents.
Ms Haller also said many of
these placements," she said,
th
e
residents relocated need
"and its continuing failure to
physical
a nd occ upational
correct
these . illega l
·
therapy
and
the homes had no
conditions and prac~s, I
therapists
on
the staff.
shall take whatever action is

favorable weather increased
yields beyond the previous
record of 97.1 bushels set in
1972.
Officials said yields also
were boosted as a result of
less productive land being
taken out of production under
the set-aside.
The Crop Reporting Board
estimated that total feed
grain production of corn,
sorghum, oats and barley
would be a record 21Lrnillion
metric tons, 5 percent more

'-·-·-

'•

hobbies include photography,
tnusic, tennis, writing,
cabinet making, reading and
public speaking among
others. He is listed .in Who's
Who in Ohio.
.
His wife is Meryl Riley
Abraham , registered and
certified schooi psychologist,
certified guidance counselor
and certified secondary
teacher.
They have two children;
Michele Diana Abraham, 23,
who was ''Miss Petite USA"
in \973-74 and graduated from
Bowling Green University
magna cum laude, and
Daniel Nolan Abraham, 21,
student at West Liberty State
College, letter winner in
soccer and on the dean's list.
Others to be honored will be
Ben Quisenberry, Syracuse,
Norma Goodwin, and Robert
D. Roberts, both of Pomeroy.
Tickets are $5 and reser·
vations may be made by
calling Paul Simon, president
of the chamber, at 992-3830 or
Tarn Bearhs, secretary to the
chamber, at 992·5005 on
Monday, Tuesday or Friday
from 9 to 4.

Generllffor the Ohio National
Guard Brlgad.ier ·General
James M. Abraham, will be
one of four persons honored
at an appreciation banquet
Wednesday, Nov. 15 at the
Meigs Inn. The event,
sponsored by the Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce, will
begin at 6:30 p.m.
Brigadier General
Abraham Is being honored for
his role in the Ohio National
Guard's snow removal work
in the Village of Pomeroy last
winter.
Gen. Abraham was born in
Athens Nov. 21, 1922. He is a
registered profess ional
engineer and has his own
firm at Gahanna which was
established in 1964.
Gen. Abraham graduated
from Athens High School in
1940, received a BSEE degree
in 1943 at the age of 20, BSIE
in 1948 and MSPM in !950, all
at Ohio University. He was a
graduate assistant at Ohio
University from 1948 to 1951.
He was the owner of the
Athens Appliance Company
from 1951 to 1963. The corn·
pany became the mo st
/ •
successful business of its type :;:;:::::;:;:;:::::;:::;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
in Athens County,
He ser'led in World War II
HOME DESTROYED
The Delbert Fridley
with General Patton's Third
United States Army in · home on Union Ave., was
destroyed by fire about
Europe, He was a Fire
1:Z6 a .m. Friday. The
Marshal in post-war Europe
Pomeroy Fire Department
in charge of Western Europe
and a graduate of the resident
was on the scene along with
a tanker from the Mid·
course of the United States
dleport Department.
Army Command and General
Pomeroy Fire Chief
Staff College in·l963.
Charles
Legar was called
The honoree was instructor
again later Friday morning
of ROTC at 0. u. from 1958 to
when the fire threatened to
·1961. Executive officer of the
break out again. Canoe of
73rd Infantry Brigade which
the fire and monetary loss
had just been reorganized in
were not reported this
1968. Commander of the !66th
morning.
Infantry Battalion with
perhaps the greatest amount
of riot experience in the State
of Ohio from 1969 to 1970.
He graduated from the
United States Army War
College in 1973 and became
asalatant ' Adjutant General
lor the Army, State of Ohio on
· .tan. 13, 1975.
.
Gen. Abraham bad his own
dance orchestra while a
student at Ohio university.
ThJa campus band, which .
followed Sammy Kaye after
his graduation, was given a
rating by the 0. u . Post as
CLEVELAND (UPI) being the better performer·
This week's winDing Ohio
He has · been an avid
Lottery numbers:
photographer for many
Gold nomber ....! 1.
years.
White nomber - 26.
In addition to other
.Blue nomber - 971.
teaching . experiences, he
.Wln-A·Tbon
taught electronics at East·
13048.
land Vocation School. His

Fiftee n Cents
Vol. 29, No. 147

than a year ago. Grain
sorghum produ ction was
estimated at 704 milli on
bushels. a I percent increase
from last month's prediction.
The latest estimate for
soybean product ion indicated
a record crop of 1.81 billion
bushels, I percent above last
month's forecast .
C.o It o n
produ ction
estimates rose 1 percent from
last month to 11 million
bushels. The crop is expected
to be 24 percent smaller than

last year.
Ohio's corn production was
estimated at 371.2 million
bushels, or 104 bushels per
acre, down 3.5 million bushels
from last month's forecast
and B.B·million bushels lower
than la st year's production.
The soybean crop in the
Buckeye State was estimated
at 119 million bushels, or 32
bushels per acre, duplicating
last month's estimate but
950,000 bushels lower than
1977 production.

"

traveling west.
Smith was cited on charges
of left of center.
There was severe damage·
to the Holter auto, moderate
damage to the Smith vehicle.
Officers investigated a twovehicle mishap on Hannan
Trace Rd. , seven-tenths of a
mile east of Lincoln Pike, at
8:45a.m.
The patrol reports that
Anthony
Salyers ,
21,
Waterloo, was cited on
charges of left of center
following an accident involving a secon d auto
operated by James Addis, 45, .
Crown City.
The patrol was called to the
scene of a one-auto accident
at 9:50a.m. on Rodney-Cora
Rd ., at the junction of
Starcher - Hambrick Rd.
Officers report that a
southbound auto operated by
Linda S. Gillespie, 17, New
Haven, went off the right side
of the roadway and struck an
embankment.
Gillespie claimed injury,
but was not immediately
treated. The auto incurred
moderate damage.

--~

By ROBERT KAYLOR

WASffiNGTON (UP!) - A
just completed test showed
U.S. forces would face
shortages of equipment and
ammunition if they had to
fight a high-intensity war in
Europe for more than a few
weeks, defense SOUf\'es said
today.
The sources said Exercise
Nifty Nugget 78, as the test
was ca lled, also showe d
serious manpower problems
and difficulties in using
civilian airliners to transport
troops to mobilization points
and overseas in a crisis.
The test ran from Oct. 10 to
Nov. 8, based on a scenario of
a major European war that
fo!lowed months of increased
tensions with the Communist
bloc, thus providing adequate
warning of attack.
Although about 600 reserve
units underwent bri ef
mobilization alerts, the test
was conducted mainly at
headquarters levels and did
not involve large numbers of
troops in war games. Instead,
it tested administrative and
logis t i c mob iliz at ion
requirements.
In an announcement of the
test's completion, Gen. David
· Jones, chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff, said it
"revealed a number of shortcomings in examined categories." Defense sources said
those
included
the
fo!lowing :

-shortfalls in major items bring mobilized units up to result in getting planes where
such as armored troop full combat strength and they were needed in time to
fill requirements.
carriers, trucks and some · replace early casualties,
Sources said these types of
-Although there are
types of artillery ammunition
stockpil ed for use until enough u .S. commercia l problems had been expected.
wartime production could he jetliners of transcontinental They said a similar test two·
geared up . The sta tus range to meet firs t years ago showed serious
indicated they "were not mobilization needs, available deficiencies among reserve
sufficient to sustain a long numbers would drop sharply WJits in meeting mobilization
war" after losses that could because of main tenance schedules, but these were
be expected in the first few requirements as fighting considerably improved this
sta rted. Problems would year.
weeks.
- Because the mothballed
draft system would not be
able to produce recruits for
110 days and a reserve pool of
filler personnel is at rqughly
half of the 400,000 men
required, there would not be
enough trained troops to

Board seeking
advance draw
In order to meet the Nov.
lOth payroll, the Southern
Local Board of Education
Thursday night authorized its
clerk , Linda Spencer, to
request an advance draw on
the December tax settlement.
The request goes to Meigs
Co un ty Auditor Howard
Frank .
The board set the next
regular meeting for 7:30 on
Nov, 24 . Attending the
meeting were Dallas Hill,
David Nease, Shirley
Johnson and Sue Grueser,
board members; Supt. Bob
Ord and Mrs. Spencer.
GIVES CHECK - Mrs. Rachel Downie on behaU of
the Meigs County Pleasure Riders 4-H Club presents a
check to the Canters Cave upgrading fund to Mrs . Jean
Spencer, right, 4-H assistant of the Meigs Extension
Service. See P..'i for additional pic;)"res and story .

Deputies check
minor accident
The Meigs County Sheriff's
Department Investigated a
two-car accident on the Meigs
High School parking lot
Thursday morning.
Debra
Jewett,
17,
Pomeroy, was traveling· east
on the lot when her car
collided with a vehicle driven
by Elaine Barnhart, 17, also
of Pomeroy, who had pulled
from a parking place. There
, was slight damage to both
vehicles and no injuries.
QUICKENS TALKS
Israel decided today to
quicken its expansion of
settlements in occupied
territory but Egyptian
President Anwar Sadat
vowed to impose Palestinian
rule on the same lands,
setting the nations 1 on a
collision course that could
imperil their historic peace
talks.

fa cility, as well as all other areas of the high school, may
be toured by parents, patrons, and the p&lt;~bli c on
November 14 at 7:30p.m. Refreshments will be served. at
9 p,m,

Forces would face shortages

Four mishaps ·.
probed by Qs.'P
The Gallia-Meigs Post ,
Highway Patrol, investigated
four accidents Thursday.
Officers report that at 7 a.m.,
autos operated by George A.
Scott, 25, Albany, and Debbie
K. Hill, 25, Racine, met in a
curve on U.S, 33, two-tenths
of a mile north of CR 37, in
Meigs County.
The patrol said the north
bound Hill auto was forced off
the road by the south bound
Scott vehicle, whi ch was
traveling left of center.
The Hill auto passed off the
left side of the roadway into a
sign post.
Hill claimed injury, but
was not immediately treated.
The Hill auto incurred
moderate damage. Scott was
cited on charges of left of
center.
At 8:30 a.m., officers were
called to the scene of a second
Meigs County accident on CR
26, one and one-tenth of a mile
west of SR 7.
The patrol reports an east
bound auto operated by
James H. Smith, 17, Racine,
came over a hillcrest left of
center and sideswiped a
vehicle driven by Jeffrey
Holter,
20,
Pomeroy,

·-·-·-

PUBUC WELCOMED - ·One seldom-seen area of
Meigs High School which will be open to the public during
open house is the school 's language lab, being used here
by Spanish instructor Fred Baloy's Spanish II class. This

'

SALE '67.88

REG. '76.95
Deluxe Monaural

Guard·leader ·
to be honored
; '!!lie . 8-sststan\ -~ !lj utan t

Phooo with built-in AM Radio

1

'759"

Brigadier General Abraham

1

-

WEST BEND FRYETTE

Reg. price '1.59 yd.

$1375

S, M, L. and XL sizes, zipper . front coat
style, drawstring hood, · warm thermal
lining , muff pockets, solid colors .

enttne

at

accused of
violations

MEN'S $1495

BOYS HANES THERMAL UNDERWEAR

'1540".. :................~14991
'1386 11 ..................~739"
Order By NoHmber 15 Onlr
STOREWIDE SALE

'

•a••

•

G·SI, state

•a••

Sizes 8 through 18, 100 pet. cotton, heavy
weight, colorful plaid patterns, permanent
press.

TWO DAY SA LEI

Regular '549" .. ........ X-MAS '35991
Broyhill Living Room
Sofa, Love Seat &amp; Ch•l.r

..

'7"

Men's 511.95 pre-washed Denim Jeans. Sizes 29 to
38 waist, sale.

yield per acre will also be a a rate of 10 percent.
For farmers, the record
record - an Impressive 101.2
keeps up pressure on the
bushels per acre.
The huge crop could help administration to annoWJce a
slo'w the rise in food prices, 1979 feed grains program
since it wlll add to the supply which will take land out of
of feed grains and moderate · production, thereby reducing
the cost of producing feed grains -supplies and
propping up prices.
livestock and poultry.
The crop is ~xpected to be 8
The record crop does not
gua rantee lower prices, percent larger than last
however. Record crops were year's record 6.4 billion
harvested this year also, but bushels . Last month's
food prices have increased at projection was 6.82 billion
bushels,

BOYS SIZES
$1095 ALASKAN FLANNEL SHIRTS ·

MEN'S WESTERN DENIM JACKETS
True Western style Wrangler, 14 oz. blue denim .
Sizes 40 and 42 only . Regular price $15.95.

WASffiNGTQN (UP!) The Agriculture Department
says the nation's corn crop
will probably add up to a
record 6.89 billion bushels
this year, a development that
· could provide some down·
ward pressure on food prices.
In its latest report on farm
producton, the department
Thursday increased it s
estimate ofthe corn crop by a
full I percent oyer last
month's report .
The department said the

Sizes S, M, L, and XL. Two snap flap
pockets, snaps on wrist cuffs and front.
colorful pla id pattern s, well known
brands .

Assorted solid color, machine washable.
Sizes small ; medium, large, and extra
large. Special sale prices.

e

••

Record crop could.slow rise in food prices

MEN'S $11 95
WESTERN FLANNEL
SHIRTS

$795

H1ndcr1ft1d, All Wood-

·New Hoen

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Friday, November 10, 1978

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 10th &amp; SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 11th
·oPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8

Grandfather Clocks

Regular '1441 11.........X·MAS

. I

Two youths charged

•
POLICE OFFICER OF THE YEAR- Edith Sisson, dispatcher for the Pomeroy Police
Department, center, was named Officer of the Year at the Gallia-Meigs Fraternal Order of
PoliCj' Banquet held Thursday night at Middleport Fire Station. Pictured with Mrs. Sisson
are,left, Larry Hudson , pr osident and Ray Manley, secretary ·treasurer. Mrs. Sisson was
presentro a Smith and Wesson revolver.

NEW YORK (UP! ) - Two
14-year-old boys were
arrested ·early today on ·
charges they set a fire that
killed six people, including
two children, at a two-family
house in the South Bronx •
Wednesday police said.
The boy~. whose names
were not released because of
their age, were each charged
with six counts of homicide ,
one count of arson and one
countofburglary,pollce said.
Bronx
District
The
Attorney and a Family Court
judge will decide whether the
boys will tle'&lt;,;rosecuted under
a tough new juvenile law,
which allows youths who
commit violent crimes to be
sentenced as adUlts.
The boys were being held at
the women 's detention

facility at Rikers Island.
The blaze began in the
basement of the South Bronx
hous e about 4:30 a.m .
Wednesday and raced
through the structure, killing
Josephine Rodriguez, 50,
Lydia Rodriguez, 16, Kim
Lucas, 6, Michael Rodriguez,
5, Eddie Johnston, 15, and
John Rodriguez , 18. .
Seven others ,were mjured
in the blaze that investigators
originally thought was
caused by spontaneous
combustion .

Weather
Mostly clear tonight, with
patchy dense log and lov- 1 in
the lower 40s. Partly cloudy
Saturday, with highs in the
low or mid 60s.

�.

.. . ~

. . .

2- The Dally Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday , Nuv. 10, 1978

'

E:&gt;'TA

IN WASHINGTON

f&lt;II':I''NOIQ\I ~·Tfl£6l&lt;AM.
N.E.A. 78

3-Tbe Da1ly Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Nov . 10, 1978

\\ULME

COMMENTARY

Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

Donald F. Graff

Problem$, problem$

Atomic waste cleanup

By ponGraff

By Martha Angle and Robert Walters

The problem with the dollar is that lt is not on.e problem
but
several.
.
RI CHLAND. Wash. (NEA l - Every parent 1s familiar
There
is
the
problem
of
the
dollar
Ill!
the
domestic
with the tra1l of clothes, toys and games scattered behind
currency of the United States. Inflation lB steadily and
by ch1ldren as they proceed from one new adventure ,to
rapidly diminishing its value - certamly no revel~tion to
another, bhthely ignoring the discards left m the1r wake.
any
American wage earner or bUI payer.
But in households across the land, k1ds eventually are
Then
there is the problem of the dollar as the principal
forced to heed the WJiversal command : " You'd better
mediwn
of world trade. When Mideast oil producers sell
clean up the mess you left behind, because Mommy and
their product to Europe or Japan, the mediwn of exchange
Daddv aren't going to do it for you."
is dollars. When .China places massive o~ders for ele~
That analogy lS espec1ally appropriate to the probl~m ?f
tronic equipment with France, the deal 18 reckoned m
nuclear waste disposal - and nowhere m the nat10n 1s
dollars.
there a more compelhng case for a lo':'g-ove~due
The United States is also a trading nation, which for the
housecleaning than here in south-central Washmgton. .
past
several years has been lmporting considerably more
Sprawling over 570 square miles just northwest of th1s
than
it has been exporting, covering the difference with
commumty is the Hanford Reservation , one of three sites
dollars
which are ln effect IOUs on the future of the U.S.
selected in 1943 by the federal government for the World
economy.
The result is to oversupply world markets. A.•
War II " Manhattan Project" that produced the world's
much as $400 blltion - no one knows the exact total- may
first atomic bombs .
.
be sloshing aroWJd out there, beyond U.S. control. In
But long after that weapon brought the war to a dr":":"'tlC
essence
these expatriated dollars are a conunodlty, like
conclusion the research and development of both nulitary
rice. When there's ali oversupply, rice Is cheap.
,
and comm"erc1al applical!ons of atomic energy cont1nued
There
is
also
the
problem
of
the
dollar
as
the
wodd
s
unabated at Hanford.
principal
reserve
currency,
the
cash
held
m
other
For more than three decades, both federal agencies and. "I've rounded up a construction crew that can save us a bundle on this
cowllries' banks to backstop their own currencies and
major corporations holdmg government contracts have
economies.
Of the more than $300 bOlton worth of assests
project.''
been engaged in a constant search for more soph1st1cated
estlmated
to
be held by foreign central banks, some $200
next·generatJOn nuclear theories, techniques and equipbillion of it is in dollars. The dollar is in effect a second
ment.
currency for these countries. When its value declines, they
In the process of explonng those scientif1c frontiers,
are the losers without being m a position to · take direct
however, they produced an incredible amoWJt of nuclear
corrective action as they could with their own currencies.
waste - and nobody ever bothered to really clean up. .
These several problems ·are interrelated - internal
Today th~re are more than 50 million .gallons of liqwd
inflation
for example, fuels the demand for imports which
and solid high-level commerc1al and nuhtary radtoacllve
boost thti trade def1cit - and are factors in the long decline
wastes be1ng "temporarily" held at Hanford, at a.n annual
BY MARGARET PARKER
in the dollar's value which has become the world's No. 1
cost of $166 million. That represents almost one-third of the
Coordluator of the Meigs Museum
headache. They are not, however, susceptible to
economic
total Department of Energy (DoE) budget at Hanford.
Have you writien your story for the Meigs History Book,
the
same
correctives - short of a serious recession, or
A disingenuous DoE slide show and speech offered to yet? The deadline foc submission of stories Is less than a month
worse depression. And the United States has not been
members of the public v1siting the federal reservat10n lS away, December 5. Without your story, this histo~y cannot be
OU College of Osteopathic Medicine under' the same compulsion tQ deal with them that any
replete with hath deceptive and blatantly false statements complete and will not represent all Meigs Counttans.
other coWJtry would be.
about the scope and seriousness of the problem.
Your story can be written however you wish it to be. Many
BY LAMAR MilLER D o
· Domestic lnfiation is in large part a consequence of rapid
For instance, DoE clalms that all high-level wastes are
·
inf
ti
Th' · fine
' • •
economic expansion which has its beneficial aspects at
isolated in concrete and steel tanks. In fact, more than 350 will mclude a 1ot 0 1 genea1oglca1 orma on.
lS lS
·
Associate Professor of Family Medicine
home such as decreasing WJemployment, and also abroad.
pounds of plutonium, one of th~ most toxic materials Others may only write about wbat bas taken place ln the day to
Ohio Uolversltv Colle•e of
U.S. 'growth has been the locomotiv~ pulling other
known to man, has been dwnped mto open trenches.
day lives of tbe family about which tbey write. There is no
Osteopathic Medicine
industrialized
economies out of the early 708 recession.
After becoming belatedly concerned about that situa- standard way of writing the stories. You are the author, and
CANCER QUIZ -PART II
As for the trade problem, any other coWJtry running the
lion, Hanford officials now are spending approxlmately $7 each person has an indiv(dual way of storytelling.
Answer the following true or false.
deficits which have become U.S. habit rapidly would
million to excavate a single trench containing more than 83
You are allowed 500 words and one picture per household
1. The incidence of cancer of the prostate gland in men
become an economic basket case. It would have to be
poWlds of plutomwn waste.
. free. This history will only be as good a source of information continually increases with age.
.
bailed out by massive outside loans- viz. Britain and l~ly
Most of the radioactive waste has been stored m and as complete in representing families, as you, the residents
Answer : True. This is a cancer we rarely seem men under
in recent years- or face bankruptcy. Not so the Uruted
supposedly safe tanks. But at least 20 of the 152 storage now liv;na, or who have lived in Me;os County make it. Tbe
f 0 I has be
tulated b some cancer
States. The reason, in a word, is size.
structures have developed leaks, releasmg
· 450,000 gallons
-...
.,
the age o 6 • t
en pos
Y
The U.S. economy is so huge ~ a gross national product
Meigs
County
Pioneer
and
Historical
Society
is
the
publisher.
·
"~th
t
if
lived
long
enough
virtually
100
per
of high-level waste into the ground.
specta...., · a
men
'
of two-plus trlltion dollars at latest estlmates- that It Is to
Another 14 tanks have been emptied because of fears You are the writers. U you don't write your family's story • it cent would eventually develop cancer of the prostate.
a considerable extent insulated from the ups and downs of
about the1r structural integrity. Only during the last 10 wiD not be written.
Fortunately, this cancer is easi!Y detected by a simple rectal
international markets. The United States Is a major
years have Hanford officials started constructing doubleWriting workshops are being held at the Senior Citizens examination. Also, the seventy of the cancer seems to
trading nation but trade is a minor factor in its economy,
walled tanks to provide greater security.
Center on Mondays at 1:00 and the Meigs County Museum on diminish wlth age ·and spreads slower in older men than in
exports
(1976 figures) representing 6.7 percent of GNP
.
Some of the waste has been solidified into " saltcake," a Friday at 1:00. Other workshops are ,being scheduled younger men.
compared to 12.1 percent for Japan and23 percent for W~st
temporary solution to the storage problem, but capsules throughout tbe county. Watch this newspaper for tlme and,
The blood cancers, such as leukemia and Hodgkin's Germany. While these and other U.S. partners would like
2
containing strontiwn and cesium generate such intense place. u you have questions, phone one of the contact people dis~ase, remain the most lethal and continue to carry a high
the American trade deficit controlled, they would prefer
heat that they must be held in specially cooled water listed on the letter mailed last month to residents, or township
that it not be at the expense of their own surpluses.
basins.
mortality rate.
7
The United States has been able to continue buying more
Answer: False. Probably more progress has been nade in
Similarly, no pennanent solution has been foWJd for the chairpersons: Rosalie Story, 99~944; Keith Ashley, 985-J89 ;
than it sells abroad because there Is no substitpte for the
problem of safely disposing of 12 million gallons of highly Clifford Hayes, 985-3503; Mrs. Mendal Jordan, 698-2282; BiD treating these cancers than in any other type ~I cancel'. Sol!'e
dollar in world trade. Nor as a reserve currency. No other
toJUc and corrosive " tenninal liquors" that remain after McKelvey, 843-2111; Euta Wolfe, 247-3638; Norma Newland, centers have been reporting a 90 per cent renuss10n rate With
economy,
not even the Japanese and Ge_rman
the separation process used to solidify other wastes. '
667-3271; Leona Hensley and Mae McPeek, 985-3320; Agnes Hodgkin's disease. Abou\ 50 pet. of all leukemic patients are
powerhouses,
is large enough to generate the quanttty the
At Hanford and elsewhere, DoE officials have for far too Hill, 667-3183; Vernon Weber, 742-2143; Pat Lochary, 993-2802; now living after five years. This is a remarkable recovery rate
world
requires.
long been content to spend milllons of dollars in public Mrs. Duane Stanley, 742-3127; or Ben Philson, 949-2771.
compared to those even ten years ago. Most of this progress is
Benign neglect, promises to reform and occasional
!WJds each year on ''waste management."
Remember! We need vnnr story!
due to the newer drugs (chemotherapy) which have come on
gestures such as gold sales by the Treasury· have had no
But the permanent and safe disposal of radioactive ..--~~~-==--:-==.::-:=:--I
the market in the last decade.
effect on the complex of dollar problems. The campaign
· fuU f
·
waste has emerged as a major public concern in the
now laWJched by the Carter administration seeks to deal
0
increasmgly mtense debate over the futur,e of nuclear
3. Since most of what we eat today 1S
cancer caus~g
with them as a package. Tightened interest rates, wage
power and other commercial applications.
·
·
chem1cals, the only safe way to live is to consume only orgaruc
and
price guidelines and tax ince~tives are designed to
Mother and father - the country's citizens - belatedly
foods .
slow
inflation. The dollar abroad will be supported with a
have told the kids that it's tlme to stop playing with their
Answer: False. 1n general, food conswnption appears not
$30 billion fund of marks, yen and Swiss fra~cs. .
. .
to be linked with the development of cancer m humans.
new toys and to clean up the mess they've made for more
With effective persuasion, skillful administration and
than 30 years. The youngsters should have done the job
However, the annoWJcement last week about sacc~arin by t~
extensive cooperation, the measures may prove effective
long ago.
,,
National Academy of Aciences bears watching. While
without triggering the economic downturn which no one
wants.
Amerlcln C~neer Society
admitting that saccharin is only a weak cancer-causing agent,
Luck will also help.
,_...;:;;:,::;;;,;.~;;..:..:,.
it was found in anlmal studies to promote the activity of other
A regular feature prepared ANSWE me : The likelihood cancer causing substances. Surprisingly, some of the strongest
by the American Cancer of spontaneous remission- evidence to date of canc&lt;i{ causing potential ~ hllffil;lns ~omes
Society, to help save your life unexplained disappearance from one of tbe chemicals wh1ch has been m man s d1et the
from cancer.
·
of cancer-is extremely longest - alcohol. This naturally occurring chemical has been
A woman writes: "Three remote and has been linked with an increase of mouth, esophageal and stomach
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.p.
years ago I had breast cancer documented only m a very cancers and possibly with liver cancer. In general, though,
surgery and I am doing weD.
small number of cases. any d~ger from the food we eat is much less than from
By KENNETH R. CLARK
My problem now is the fact Cancer is a disease that can exposure to many industrial cbenucals o.r even cigarette
Uolted Presslnlemallooal
that I am looking for a job occur in many different smoke.
A BOW FOR BETl'Y ... : Betty Ford was the star of tQe
it . Address your request to and my cancer history is an forms but the characteristics
·. Information
4. The yoWJger a woman ls when she develops cancer of the show 'fl!ursday night at New York's Waldorf Astoria, blit
me. m care of this obstacle. What should I do?" are the same- uncontrolled breast the leSs optimistic the outlook.
plenty of olher stars were on hand to help celebrate publication
on insulin
newspaper, P.O. Box 1551, ANSWERline : Federal and growth of abnormal cells.
AJ{swer: True . Unfoctunately, women in their 30s and 4ns of her memoirs, "'!be Times of My Ufe." The former first lady
Rad10 C1ty Station, New state laws prohibit job Unless the original cancerous have a greatly decreased five-year survival rate compared to
showed off her celebrated face-lift, did a soft-6hoe with Pearl
discrimination. However, growth ls removed by women past the menopause age of 50 or 55. Tbis cancer, then, Halley, the bump with Toay Orlando and heard herself called
DEAR DR. LAMB - I York, NY 10019. •
DEAR DR. LAMB- About some cancer patients may surgery or destroyed by resembles cancer of tbe prostate in men- a better outlook as
would like to know if you have
"First Mama" by Flip WUson. She received tribute from
any information about the two years ago I was cutting face WJfair attitudes because radiation or drugs, cancer age increases.
.
husband
Gerald - and from Master of Ceremonies Henry
make cells will invade nearby
drug insulin? What diseases grass with a gas lawnmower. employers may
5. Most lumps on the body or sores which w1ll ~al are Klulnger, this one-liner: "Betty and Ihave a lot in conunon is this drug used for? What In order to start it l would decisions based on m1sin· tissue and eventually travel due to cancer.
a withdrawn personallty and an uncommon reluctance to see
or
misun- to other parts of the body.
are the aftereffects of msulm have to wind up the arm of formation
Answer: False. This Is a misconception created ill part by our names in print." Says Mrs. Ford of the White House yesra,
and what happens 1f you have the mower. It was not easy to derstanding about cancer. ·Once cancer is widely spread, the American Cancer Society itself, which Usts these two "It was one of the happiest times of my life."
do and I had to do this several On a national level, the it is extremely difficult to conditions as part of the eight warning signs of cancer·
an overdosage?
DEAR READER - Insulin tlmes a day with my nght ' Amencan Cancer Society is control. However, if cancer Obviously, this was not intended. Probably less than one per
... AND ONE FOR JOE: It might be easier to llst the
is not a drug. It is a hormone. arm.
workmg to inform employers is stopped in an early stage, cent of these lesions are actnaUy due to canc~r. The names of tbose who were not at "A Night with the Champ" in
That summer I nol!ced that of the fact that most cancer the chance of cure may be remainder, once positively identified, can u~ually be 1gnored.
It IS a protem. The insulin
the
right s1de of my chest was patients not only are able to excellent. This is true for However the intent was to have all these leSioos cbecked by a Las Vegas than the ones who were. The guest llst reads llke the
protein is made up of a comCelelrlty Register. The occasion - an all~r tribute to Joe
bination of many different larger than the left s1de. I do good work, but become many major forms of cancer physicia~ since even one chance in 100 or 200 is too high. And, Louis, the ooe-llme "Brown Bomber" honored Thursday night
amino ac1ds. It's chemical also noted that the left side highly-motivated employees including colorectal can- many tunes the physician cannot~ a~lutely .sure Without a
at Caesars Palace in an extravaganza hosted by Fnulk
structure is relatively com- went m, especially at the top, with sick leave records no cer, skin cancer, uterine biopsy . Therefoce, the action reqmred lS attention, not wocry.
SIDatra.
One of hundreds on hand was the man Louis once
WJder the collar bone to the different from - and fre- cancer and breast cancer.
plex.
bombed
in a devastaling first:rolUid knockout, film clipa of
The islets of Langer hans in left of my breast bone. My quently better than This is why there are so many
which
capped
the evening. Says Max Sebmelfag, "There are
: your pancreas form insulin. pediatrician said I have a those of fellow work- public education programs to
only
two
reasons
why I won't mind watching that horrible film
· The insulin is a major factor pigeon chest. Could this have ers who have not had alert people to the imagain.
One,
Joe
Is
a great friend of mine and I love him. And
' m controllmg the level of your been caused by the excessive cancer. Your physic~an and
portance of early detection
,
.two,
I
was
41
years
younger and looked pretty good."
: blood glucose (sugar ). If you development from starting your local ACS Unit should be and prompt treatment.
· don't produce enough msulin, the lawnmower? I am 14 able to help you.
Your Cancer definitely does not get'
CHANNEL"' When King Kbaled wants television, King ·
· that IS one cause of diabetes, years old, 5-feet-8 and weigh physician can attest to your
better or "Go away." It must
Khaled
gets television -even U the tab does come to $5,000 an
.
ability to work and your ACS be treated ; and the earlier the
: meaning a high blood glucose llOpounds.
hour.
While
the Saudi Arabian monarch is re.:uperating in
DEAR READER- A defor- Unit may be able to suggest better.
· level. This is the mam reason
Geneva,
fram
heart surgery performed in the United States,
mity of the breast bone (ster- practial approaches to use in
: for giving msuhn to anybody .
his
fellow
Moslems
are marking the end of Ramadan, their
; In the past, small amoWJts num 1 and chest area is not convincing potential em- A cooking instructor asks:
holy
fasting
period,
and
religious festivities in the Holy City of
· have been used in an effort to WJcommon. This can be with ployers that decisions about "Do smoked meats cause
Mecca
dcminate
the
occasion,
Khaled learned ceremonies
; try to stimulate people's ap- the breast bone bowed for- cancer cannot be generalized cancer?
there
were
being
televised
via
satellite
transmiasion to several
. petites , or larger amoWJts ward causing the chest cage but must be made on an in· ANSWERline : There is no
and
he
asked
to
be
let
in on it. A special link
Moslem
countries
· have been used to induce in- to be in the shape of a dividua1 basis.
proof that eating smoked
to Switzerland was arranged and the king was able to view. the
ch1cken
's
breast,
which
is
the
; sulin shock in psychiatricmeat causes cancer.
twooour broadcast on a video playback screen at hla mansloo.
• therapy. But, in general, the source of the term pigeon
A high school student asks:
The Jrice - $10,000 .
; main purpose of insulin is in chest. Or, the breast bone "Why is it so Important for
.
could
be
depressed
inward,
cancer to be treated quickly?
·: individuals who don't proSHOW
BIZ:
Lou
Holtz
does more than just coach the
, dul'e enough insulin hor- called pectus excavatum. Does 'it ever go away?"
,
r
'
1
Arkansas
Razorbacka.
On
the
side; he's an amateur m&amp;glclan
: manes themselves, and that Then it is quite common for
THE DAILY SENTINEL
who
carries
the
reputation
in
FayettevWe,
Ark., of being king
: means in the treatment of one side of the body to be a bit
DEVOTED TO THE
of
the
one-llnfrs
amoog
bis
colleagues
in the Southwest
INTEREST OF
larger than the other side.
· diabetes.
MEIGS-MASON
ARn
Cooference.
But
the
1881
thing
he
expected
was
an lrtvltallon to
As long as these are minor
: Too much msulm can cause
ROBERT HOEIUCH
I
appear
on
the
JoiiDDy
c.non
show
Dec.
16.
Holtz
jp'8bbed the
heart,
aM
perhaps
cause
City Ed.lklr
· you to develop a low blood variations, they usually
but
he'astlllmystlfied
about
beU.
picked
by
Carlonchance,
Pubhsbed~al1)'
excep\
Slllurday
changes
in
the
normal
1by 1')w Ohio VHltey Publishing
; sugar. You can have mild cause no disorder in body
says
"I
dm
't
Ir:now
what
they
want
me
for.
Atfirlt
I
!bought
it
dynamics
of
breathing
.
These
Cucnpany·Mullimedh:t, Inc.,
Ill
: symptoms of th1s with function. But they can cause
~
was
a
hoax.
Maybe
he
wants
to
ann
wrestle
and
needs
Court
St
,
Ptlmeruy,
Ohiu
16769.
sometimes
need
surgical
cor; sweating and tremulousness, a person to be concerned
Bmnne~ Office Phooe 1192-. 2156!
li)l918 by NEA, Ioc
SM!eone he can beat."
. or the symptoms can pro- a bout his physical ap· rection.
Edltorial Phont&gt;992-2157 .
f don't believe your condiSet•urxl cia~ ~Utgt! paid al
; gress to the point of shock. To pearance, usually more con·
Punwruy, Ohw.
GLIMPSES: Melba Moore hosted a party celebrating the
tiOn
was
caused
by
running
cerned
than
the
condition
· give you a better understanNittwm:il Hdvertl!ling represen· ' .
300th
performance of "On the Twentieth Century" Thunday at
the lawnmower. The fact that
Wtivc, Lanlkln A!lllQCia~e!l, • 3101
. ding of insulin 's role in warrants .
New
Y&lt;rk's
Hippopotamus di8co for, IIIIIODC others, l'llyllil
Eud1d
Ave.,
Clevdand,
Ohlu44115
If they are slmply mmor you are able to do that
; diabetes, I am sending you
Subscriptwn niles Dcllvered by
Dllier,
Theodore
BO.el, Pb)'illa Newmaa, ~e ADdre'lll,
· c&lt;~rrier where I:IVallablc 7f) coot~:! per
· The He~lth Letter number , deformities, you are probably amoWJt of physical exertion
"/
have
this
'st/ly
grin
on
my
face'
/;Jecause
Mlllleent
IIK!In,
Clovll Raflbl, Ann Rel•"lnl aDd of eo.M,
week: Hy Motor Roule wht!N Cltlrrlef
: 3·11, Diabetes: Diagnosis, better off not to worry about su9gests to me that the deforserVit'tt
not
available,
One
monll~.
I'm
so
happy
about
the
change
in
the
capital
''Ceatury"
liars
Judy Kaye liDil Kevin ~ ,, Barb.r a
$32S By mt~il in Ohiu , o~~.nd W. Vii.,
; Prevention and Manage- them, or to do anything about mity you have does not limit
gains
lax
for
next
year.
"
Streiaaad
Is
doing
a
new movie - so far unnamed -to be !lliot
your
physical
capacity.
You
One Year , 12200. S11&lt; mvnlh:i,
them. If there is a major
ment.
$11.ril. Three munth!i, $7.00:
around
Lake
Tahoe,
CaW., as a vehicle f!ll' Dttle lister
will
probably
always
have
a
: Other readers who want distortiop , particularly a
El.st&gt;whcrc $26 00 year : S1x munlh»
Ralallad
Kbtd,
with
Ryan
O'Neal tbe COllar ... VloUn 'l'irtudisproportion
in
the
size
of
$1:1.50 ; Three munlhs , S7 .30.
. this information can send 50 depression of the . sternum,
lnac·lltenl
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with
the
Boatoo Symphony Oreheatra at a
Sublleriptwn
prkl'
mdudt:s
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your
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and
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deformi·
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Meigs historical notes

Health Review
By Dr. Lamar Miller

CANCER

_______

Answe
·· T l•lne

__...,:,__.::C:---"':"....-:--

Peopletalk

HEALTH

Berry's World

--

~ ~~

I

Former Red Caldwell AL's Comeback Player
By FRED McMANE
UPI Sports Writer
NEW YORK ((UP!)- He
was the pitcher no one
wanted . "Damaged goods"
was the reply whenever his

name was mentioned.
But Mike Caldwell refused
to believe his big league
career was over just because
a surgeon's knife cut into his

elbow four years ago.
It took tlme and a lot of selfevaluation and heartache,
but the 30-year-old hiltbander proved himself this
season by becoming the top
winner in the history of the
Milwaukee Brewers.
As the cu!minat10n of the
dogged detenninat1on, the
United Press International

Wednesday named Caldwell
the Amencan League 's
Comeback Player of the Year
for 1978. ·
Caldwell was an easy
winner in a balloting of 30
UP! baseball correspondents
from across the nation. He
received 15 votes to beat out
pitcher Jim "Catfish" Hunter
of the New York Yankees by

six votes .
Pitcher David Clyde of
Cleveland, first baseman
Andre Thornton of Cleveland,
pitcher Ferguson Jenkms of
Texas and outfielder Amos
Otis of Kansas City each
received one vote.
Given a chance to start on
an every day basis by new
Manager George Bamberger,

Green· Bay ready for Cowboys
By IRA KAUFMAN
UPI Sports Writer
Vince l..ombardi's Green
Bay Packers frustrated the
Super Bowl hopes of .the
Dallas Cowboys in 1966 and
1967 behind a cool quarterback named Bart Starr.
Sunday, revitalized Green
Bay gets a chance to resume
its traditional role' with Starr
roaming the sidelines as
coach, when the NFC Central
Division leader hosts the
fading
Cowboys
at
Milwaukee .
Green Bay, 7-3, and leading
the division by one game over
oncoming Minnesota, have
lost to Dallas only once in
nine meetings, but one of the
Packers' main strengths - a
low turnover rate - deserted
them last week in a 10-3 loss
to Philadelphia.
The Packers turned the ball
over five times, undermining
a 385-148 yardage advantage
and infuriating Starr.
"Quite frankly, I thought it
was a game we should win

and could win," Starr said.
"We have three huge
toughies coming up in a row
(Denver and Minnesota
follow ), and we have to be
ready to play."
The
defending
NFL
champion Cowboys are 6-4
and two games behind
Washington in the NFC
Eastern Division. Dallas has
dropped tow straight and is in

MORTON STARTS
DENVER
(UP!)
Veteran quarterback Craig
Morton will start against the
Browns Sunday in Cleveland,
said Denver Broncos head
coach Red Miller.
Miller also said Thursday
reserve quarterback Norris
Weese now is "100 percent
physically, but Craig Penrose
still has some slightly painful
ribs."
Both Weese and Penrose
are recovering from injuries
suffered in earlier games this

season.

danger of suffering the
1gnominy of missing the
playoffs just one year after
winning the Super Bowl.
" I don't think the players
really recognized the opposition would be so good,"
said Dallas Coach Tom
Landry. "I don't think I've
ever seen teams play as
tough as they've played
against us."
· The Cowboys have scored
the most points in the NFC
and lead the conference in
total offense by a w1de
margin, but the Dallas attack
has been sporadic due to a
recent flurry of ""~lv tnm-

overs. Green Bay has yielded better now than they did
more yardage than it's before."
gained this year, but the
Elsewhere in the NFL
Packers have forced 35 turn- Sunday, Pittsburgh 1s at
overs and two exc11ing lils Angeles in a televised
players have mjected life in a night game, Houston is at
long-dormant Packer of- New England, Denver at
fense.
Cleveland, Baltimore at
Wide receiver James Seattle, Kansas City at San
!..olton is a legitimate can- Diego, Mianu at Buffalo,
didate for NFC Rookie of the Atlanta at New Orleans,
Year with 29 receptions and Ch1cago at Minnesota, the
five TDs and Terdell Mid- New
York G1ants at
dleton ranks second in the Washington, St. Lou1s at San
conference with 842 yards Francisco , Tampa Bay at
rushing.
Detroit and the New York
"Lofton is simply a great Jets at Philadelphia
receiver," said Landry, "and
Cincinnati hosts Oakland
the Packers play so much Monday night.

OSU continues march

Caldwell responded by
posting a 22-9 record and a
2.37 earned run average, to

N BA Stand ings

Uh•ted Pren tnternat•onal
Eastern Conference
Atlantic O i 'JISion
W . L . Pet, GB
Phila
8 1 889
wash
7 5 .583 2112
· N ew J ers ey
a 6 571 2112
N ew York
6 8
429 .:t V:z
Bos ton
2 9
182 7
Central DIVISIOn
W . L. Pet . GB
H ouston
6 4 600
7 6 .538
li-•
San Anto nio
A tl anta
5 6 .455 l 1r:.~
New Or leans 5 7 417 2
Cleve
5 8 .385 2 1/:z
Detro1t
4 9
308 J 111
Western Conference
Midwest Division
W . L. Pet. GB
Denver
8 4 667
K C
7 6 . 538 l'b
tnd •ana
5 6
45 5 21/ z
MJi w .
5 10 333 4 112
Ch 1cago
2 11
154 6 1h
Pacific Oivrs1on
W . L. P Pet . GB
So::a tt.le
9 2
Rl8
P~.oc nix
9 4
692 1
LA
B 4 .667 11' 7
Go ld en St
B 5 615 2
Por11and
7 5 .583 21'1
Sa n Diego
6 11
353 6
Thursday's Results
Atlanta 125 , San D •ego 10 1
Denv er 116, N ew York 109
Today's Games
Atla nta at Boston
Por tl and at New Jer sey
Phila at Washin g ton
Chicago at Detroit
San Anton 10 at New Orl ean s
Houston at Milwaukee
Denv er at Phoen ix
Indiana at Go ld en Stat e
Kan City at Lo s Ang e les
Clevelan d at Se attle
Saturday's Games
Bos t on at N ew York
Det r oit at Phila delphia
M ilw aukee at Atlant a
San D •ego at Hou ston
washmgton af San Anlon1 o
New Je r sey at Ch •cego
Kansas City at Denver
1

By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) Ohio State continues its
march through the Big Ten
also ... ans Saturday, hosting
an Illinois team which
Buckeye Coach Woody Hayes
claims he is not taking
lightly.
Ohio State, 5-2-1 overall and
4-1 in the Big Ten, has
projected itself back into the
title picture with consecutive

wins

over

Iowa,

Nocthwestern and Wisconsin.
And, the punchless Fighting
Dlini don't figure to be much
of a threat.
''Their record is not
lmpressive ," Hayes said of
the 1-6-2 lliini, "but they are
an
improving
team.
Therefoce, we will not take
them lightly."
Hayes has been singing the
same tune tbe past three
weeks as his team rolled up
convincing; if not impressive,
wins.

But, it's difficult to
determine if Ohio State, 2-2-1
at one point of the season, Is
getting better, although
Hayes clalms it is, especially
the defense.
It might be Nov . 25 (Mi-

ch1gan) before he finds out
for sure.
For the third time in the
last five weeks, Hayes wiD be
coaching against a former
player or assistant.
This time it is Gary
Moeller,
a
Buckeye
linebacker and co-captain
of
the
1962
Buckeye
team .. under
Hayes. But, Moeller's eight
years as an assistant to Bo
Schembechler at Michigan
may
have
somewhat
dampened his enthusiasm for
his abna mater.
Dlinois has lost three in a
row since a 20-20 tie with
Wisconsin and was' buried in
the second half last week by
Michigan Stale, losing 59-19.
The Illini have been
outscored 72-7 in the second
half of those three contests.
The Illinois offense, which
has scored only 90 points in
nine games, is paced by a
pair
of
sophomores,
quarterback Rick Weiss and

How teams
are ranked
TEAMS RANKED
OFFENSIVELY
Team
Pis. (G)
Ironton
292 (8)
Eastern
243 (9)
Wellston
204 (8)
Trimb le
214 (9)
Miller
228 (10)
North Gall1a 172 (8)
Wahama
185 (9)
Southwestern 153 (9)
Nels· York
150 (9)
Meigs
147 (9)
Belpre
137 (9)
Waverly
118 (8)
Warren
129 (9)
Alexander
125 (9)
Pl . Pleasant
131 (10)
Kyger Creek 104 (9)
Athens
100 (9)
Gallipolis
88 (9)
Hannan Trace 89 (10)
Jackson
64 (9)
Fed. Hocking
46 (9)
Vinton Co
42 (10)
Logan
6 (2)
Southern
0 (8)
DEFENSIVELY
Team
Pis (G)
Eastern
65 (9)
Ironton

Dick, Don, and Dad work hand in
hand to help you with your freezer
problems. We still do ~ustom
cutting, wrapping and freezmg. We
offer for sale hinds, sides, fronts, or
anything you want for your freezer.
Plus: lunch meat platters for your
bridge parties, meetings, gettoge,thers, and more.

Trimble
Alexander
Meigs
Belpre
Pl . Pleasant
Athens
Miller
Waverly
Wahama
Southwestern
Fed. Hock ing
North Gallia
Wellston

Avg .
36.5

69 {8)

100
107
111
117
136
123
140
113
131
136
140
126
135

(9)

(9)
(9)

(9)
(10)
(9)
(10)
(8)

(9)
(9)
(9)

(8)
( 8)

Hannan Trace 186 (10 )

Nels· York
173 (9)
Kyger Creek . 194 (9)
Jackson
196 (9)
· Vinton Co.
253 (10)
Logan
55 (2)
Warren
252 (9)
Gallipolis
260 (9)
Southern
237 (8)

21.0
25 5

23.8
22 .8
21.5
20.6
17.0
16 7
16 3
15 2
14.8
14.3
13.9
13 I
116
11.1
9.8
8.9
7.1
5 1

4.2
3.0
0.0
Avg.
7.2
8.6
11.1
11.9
12.3
13.0
13.6
13 .7

14.0
14.1
14.6
15.1
15.6
15.8
16.9
18.6
19.2
21.6
21.8
25.3
27.5
28.0
28.9
29.6

Sports Tran.sactions

united Press International
Thursday
Baseball

Chicago

Wh i te

Sox

-

Bought pitcher Lamarr Hoyt
from their Appleton, W1s.,
farm c lu b.

fullback Wayne Strader.
Strader has rushed lor 181
yards the past two games and
Weiss since returning from
an ea~ly season knee injury ,
has completed 33 of 54 passes,
which could mean the
maligned Ohio Stale pass
defense will get tested again.
" I look at their defense on
film and I don't see a weak
defense," Moeller srud of the
Buckeyes. "They 're stronger
than the Michigan State
defense . Their players are
very active."
Ohio State goes into the
game in relatively good
health .
Defensive back Ray Ellis is
out for a couple of weeks and
perhaps the rest of the season
with a shoulder seperation
suffered in the Wiconsm
game and backup linebacker
Terry Vogler will miss tbe
game with a broken thumb .
Tight end Ron Barwig, who
misSed the last two games
with a case of tonsilitis, is
expected back .
The contest is the 67th in
the series between the two
schools with Ohio State,
which has won the last 10,
leading it 43-19-4.

OHSAA reports
computer off
COLUMBUS (UP[) - The
Ohio High School Athletic
Associa t10n Thursday announced an error had been
found in Region 10 of this
week's computerized high
school football ratings.
Assistant commissioner
Richard Termeer said the
error mvolved a game
between Fremont St. Joseph
and Fostoria St. Wendelin in
which St. Wendelin was given
credit for beating St. Joseph .
St. Joe won the Saturday
game 7-!;.
The erroneous ratings
originally put out this week
showed Fremont St. Joseph
in fourth place in Region 10
with 63.5 points, 12 behind
region leader Crestline.
The corrected Region 10
figures, which elevate St.
Joseph mto second place with
74.50 pomts and drop St.
Wende lin from sixth to ninth ,

N H L Standings
United Pres s Inte-rnational
Campbell Conference
PatriCk DIViSion
W . L.T . Pts
11 1 2 24
Atlanta
8 2 3 19
NY Rangers
7 3 2 16
NY Island ers
6 5 3 15
Phil ad elphia
Smythe D iv ision
W. L T Pts
Ch1cago
6 2 4 16
vancou&gt;Jer
6 1 1 13
St Louis
2 8 4 8
Co lorado
2 10 2 6
Wales Conference

fmish second behind New
York's Ron Gmdry in the
votmg for the AL Cy Young
Award. Caldwell also was
third in the league in innings
pitched (293).
Not bad for a guy many
teams wouldn't touch for
three years.
A 14-5 pitcher with a 2.95
earned run average for th e
San Francisco Giants 1n 1974,
Ca ldw ell underwent an

operat10n for removal of a
bone spur in his left elbow 1n
October of '74 Scorned by
many teams who felt he

wouldn't recover completely
from the surgery, Caldwell
shifted between four clubs
and had three poor seasons in
a row before findmg himself
agam th1s year.
" It was a combmation of
things," he said from his
home m Tarboro , N. C. in

seasons. ' '
He also attnbuteshis comeback season m part to h1s
decisioq to play for h1mself
instead of trymg to please

management .
Caldwell IS quick to credit
Bamberg e r and General
Manager Harry Dalton for
his success.

" They believed in me,"
said Caldwell . " Dalton
treated each player like an
md1vidual and you're able to

well wants desperately to

prove this season was no
fluke.
" I don't think one season
can make a superstar ," he

adds.

" F or

me ,

every

professional athlete has to
ha ve some consi&amp;.ency to
have real success. I'd live to
have two , three, four or f1ve
more good years."
Hunte r 's come back also

was qUite dramat1c. Injured
for much of last season and
bot hered by arm and
shoulder miseries fo r the flrst
half of this year, Hunter
made a spa rkllng recovery
and won mne of 11 decisions
dowr the stretch to help the
Yankees win the American
League East championship.
He f1n1shed w1th a 12-6
record.

commumcate with hlm."

Lookmg to the future, Ca ld-

For all -;our home
Entertamment and

Appliance Needs

DOXOL
SERVICE

Ohio outdoors
expensive gear.
If you want to use artifical
bait, try using various sizes
and colors of j1gs fished
beneath a bobber. Cast th1s
rig to a likely looking spot and
retreive slowly unlll a stnke
occurs. You can keep
adjusting the he1ght of the
bobber WJtll you find the
depth at wh1ch the fish are
hangmg
Crappie fishin g outin gs
needn't be limited to the
winter, too.
Res1dents of deeper ponds spring of the year . They're
and lakes, crappies are said great eating all year long .
to be schooling fish . "Catch
one dnd you can catch a

By JERRY PICKRELL
Ohio Fish erman Magazine
Distributed by UP!
One of the first fish Ohio
anglers w1U go out after next
spring will be the cmppie .
Most of us think of this
species as a cold water fish,
but for some reason most
people limit this fish to the
early season.
Crapp1es are great fun to
catch m the late fall and

hundred," some old-timers

say. In the late autumn this
may not always be true.
This tlme of ye~r may find
crappies alone, m pairs, or
Norn s OPnSion
schooled as they're supposed
W. L. T . Ph
to be. They might be near the
M onlr ea I
9 4 2 20
De tro•!
4 6 4 12
surface or down m the deep
PittSburgh
3 8 3 9
water depending on the
Lo s An ge l es
4 7 o 8
Washington
2 9 3 7
conditions of the day you're
Adams Oi'JISion
W L T . Pts . flshing. Finding them is part
of the challenge.
Bo ston
8 2 3 19
Toronto
7 6 2 16
You can reduce the area
Buffalo
3 5 4 10
you try somewhat by looking
Mmn
4 6 2 10
Thursday 's Results
for dead trees in the water.
Mo ntrea l 8, De tr o it 3
Crappies are drawn to such
Bos to n 6, Wa shmgton 2
P 1tt sburgh 4 , Bu ff alo 4 , t1 e
places. Research has shown
WHA Standings
that
the species prefers
United Press tnternat 1onal
timber that occurs due to
W . L . T Pa.
New Engla nd
7 4 2 16
·some natural event. They use
cmcin nat1
7 4 1 15
trees that have been placed m
Queb ec
7 1 1 15
Winn1peg
6 5 2 14
order to congregate there,
B1rm1ngham
6 5 0 12
but not as heavily.
Edmonlon
5 7 0 10
Fishermen who prefer to
Indian apo li s
2 8 2 6
Thursday's Results
use
live bait almost always
81rm1ngham 6, Wmn1p eg 5
choose
minnows when fishing
New England 6, Edmo nt on I
Today's Game
for crappies. The method of
W1nnipeg at Cin ci nnati
delivery, however, varies
Saturday's Game s
Edmonlon a t Bir m ingham considerably .
Cin c1 at New England
Bait casting, spincastmg,
Indianapo li s at Quebec
and spinning ngs are all

Tonight's games

trymg to explam h1s sudden
resurgence. " J was fortunate
enough for the first time to
play on a team that was a
good, solid baseball club ...
" Pitching good early and
being able to pitch regularly
was also a fact or. That was
something I haven 't had a
chance to do in the last three

~&lt;swear by's" for one angler
or another . Some hook the

mmnow only through the lips,
some only through the tail
Athens at Wellston
and others insist on the back.
GallipoliS at Ja ckson
Which ever you decide to try,
Waverly at Ironton
TRI .VALLEY
make the cast as gentle as
Alexander at Ne lsonville · possible so the bait will make
York
the trip in as good a shape as
VVarren at Belpre
Trimble at Federa l Hocking possible. You want it to be
active where it counts .
SVAC
North Gallia at Kyger Creek
Another method which pro·
(Others)
duces
some excellent catches
Hannan , W
Va . at South involves using a long light
western
Wahama at Winfield (7 :30 cane pole with a light line
p.m.)
attached to lower the minnow
SATURDAY
to the precise target without
SVAC
havmg
to ca'st at all.
Southern at Eastern
ThlS is becoming more rare
N ote : Meigs at Logan
SEOAL game wh ich was th ese days because it takes
schedu led
Friday
was some boat handling skill and
cancelled due to teac hers'
doesn't involve colorful or
strike at Logan .
SEOAL

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are :
1. Crestline, 75.50; 2.
Fremont St. Joseph, 74.50; 3.
Harnier Patrick Henry, 74.00;
4. Carey, 65.00; 5. Tiffin
Calvert, 62.25; 6. Montpelier,
57.00;77. Gibsonburg, 56.50; 8.
Milfocd Center Fairbanks,
54.50; 9. Fostoria St.
Wendelln, 49.78; 10. Liberty
Benton, 49.00 .
The OHSAA's computer
ratings are used to select the
12 teams which will play in
the association football
playoff semi-finals.

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"Front End Alignments"
'
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�Honored by shower

4-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friuay , Nov . 10, 1978

Buckeyes solid favorite over lllini squad
By GENE CADDES
UPI SporiJ Writer
Gary Moeller and his
Dlinois team won't faU to ·
show up Saturday in Ohio
Stadium just because I pick
them to lose big. But, mayb!!
they should.
The lllini, coached by the
former Ohio State linebacker,
figure to provide the
Buckeyes with their fourth
·" laugher" in a row.
Ohio State is coming off
consecutive lo~ded wins
over Iowa, Northwestern and
Wiscoosin, even though the
Buckeye defense has yet ~
convince me it has what it
takes to win the big one.
Dlinois, however, should
not be mistaken f~r a big one.
That's two weeks away when
11
the team up north" invades
Columbus.
The Illini, 1~2 overall and
0-4-2 in the Big Ten, were
beaten last week by Michigan
State, 59-19, and followed a·
pattern of their last three
games - being annihilated in
the second half.
Moeller represents the
third former player or
assistant that Woody Hayes
has coached against the past
five games. Nevertheless ,
Hayes says, "they're no

friends of mine now."
If I were Gary, I wouldn't
want to get Woody upset. It's
going to be bad enough as it
is. Ohio State 45, llllnoil 10.
Bowling Green, one of the
most awesome offensive rna·
chines in the nation the first
half of the season, sputters

into Hattiesburg, Miss., to
play Southern Mississippi
Saturdsy night. The Falcons'
defense has not been good all
year and with the offense also

misfiring, th~y are in trouble .
Southern Mississippi 35,
BowllDg Green 14.
Miami continues its drive
to salvage a pretty good

season after lOSing Its first
two games. The Redllkins are
now S-2-1 and should make
Kent State its sixth straight
victim. Miami za, Kent State

N~rthem

Illinois invades
Toledo with both teams
desperately trying to elude
the MidAmerican Conference
basement. Northern is

7.

Bearcats, however, have wm
their last two and stand 3-5,
while OU's claim to Imrie is
handing Western Michigan a
costly 10..7 two weeks ago.
Cincinnati
24,
Oblo
University 21.
Youngstown State 40,
Western Illinois 14 Penguins win outright MidContinent Conference title.
Eastern Kentucky 24,
Akron 21 - Zips stiU in shock
week's good, but losing effort already locked up, can win it from Temple trwnpllng.
Dayton 27, St. Norbert 7 against Mismi.
all Saturday with a victory at The Flyers finish 9-1·1.
Bowling Green, which has Western Illinois.
Saturday is playoff day for
now dropped its last three
The Penguins are 4-ll in the the Ohio Conference, with six
games and seen its high- league and S-1 overall. A win
powered offense fizzle in the Saturdsy would give the Pen- liames matching the c~rre­
process, ""ravels
to guins a final 9-1 regular sponding finishers in the Red
Hattiesburg, Miss. ; to meet season record, the most wins and Blue divisions, capped, of
course, by the title game
Southern Mississippi.
ever recorded
by a between unbeatens
BG, which led the nation in Youngstown team.
Wittenberg and Baldwintotal offense f~r a while , has
Unbeaten Findlay, which Wallace.
scored only 28 points in its thought it wrapped up the
There is little to choose in
last three games and could be Hoosier-Buckeye Conference
that
contest since they bring
in for more trouble against title last week, hosts Defiance
identical
~ records into the
the Golden Eagles, who bring with a share of the league
game,
with
statistics to
a 5-4 record into the contest. title on the line after Defiance
match.
But,
f~r
some reason, ·
The
four
Southern was awarded a forfeit win
we like the home.;,tanding
Mississippi losses have been over Anderson this week.
Yellow Jackets. Baldwin·
to Cincinnati, Mississippi ,
Defiance lost 38-19 to
Florida State and North Anderson on Sept. 23, but; Wallace 21, Wittenberg 14.
Picked in the other OC
Texas State.
because · Anderson used an games are . Denison over
Youngstown State, with a ineligible player, it forfeited
piece of the first Mid- the contest. That left Findlay Capital; Wooster over Ohio .
Continent Conference title with a 7-ll HBC rec~rd and Nocthern; Marietta over Ohio
Wesleyan; Otterbein over
Defiance S-1.
Union;
and
Mount
In other games this week, Muskingum over Heidelberg .,
Akron is · at Eastern
In the week's other
K'llltucky, Illinois at Ohio contests, I like Albion over
State, Albion at Ashland, Ashland; Ferris State over;
Ferris State at Central State, Central State; Hiram over,
''The more you can do in , St. Norbert at Dayton, Oberlin;
Kenyon
ove ~
the less time, the more Oberlin at Hiram, Bethany at Bethany; Manchester over!
constructive it is," said Kenyon and Bluffton at Bluffton; and Findlay ove...:
punter Pat Mclnally, who Manchester.
Defiance.
'
said the players were " 100
'
percent" in favor of the new
routine. "When you draw
something out, you lose
interest and motivation ."
. The Bengals will see if their
new
practice
routine
produces better results when
they entertain the Oakland
Raiders in Monday night 's
nationally-televised game.
coming off two straight wins
While Toledo played its worst
game in several :weeks in
losing to Central ~chigan
last week. Northern Illinois

17, Toledo 10.
Cincinnati and Ohio
University, a couple of teams
who began the season with
wins and high h~es, have
seen things tum sour. The

Ohio Conference title on line
United Press International
The Ohio Conference
couldn't hav.e written a better
script f~r . its championship
game Saturdsy.
Baldwin-Wallace and
Wittenberg, who meet f~r the
title f~r the third straight
year, bring identical 8-0
records into the contest and
are led by two of the t~
Division III running backs in
the country.
Wittenberg's Dave Merritt,
a 5-10, l7().pound tailback, is
the nation's leading Division
III ground gainer, averaging
130.7 yards per game and ·&amp;.8
yards per carry. He has 915
yards in seven games.
B·W will counter with
Roger Andracllik, a bruising
5-11, 210-pound fuUback, who
has averaged 105.5 yards per
game to rank in the top ten
and leads the nation's small
·. schools in scoring, with 16
touchdowns.
And the similarities
between the two league
powers don't st~ there.
Baldwin·WaUace, the OC
Red Division champion, has

s

A

v

E

$20

rolled up 280 points and
allowed only 64 in posting its
S.Q mark. Wittenberg, which
lost io Ute Yellow Jackets 14-7
in last year's title game,
shows a 277~ spread over its
eight victims.
f!'he Tigers we•e · rated
fourth in last week's NCAA
Division III poll and B·W one
notch behind in fifth.
All Ulis boils down to what
should be a.classic battle for
the crown, with the winner,
and possibly both teams,
getting berths in the NCAA
Division lli playoffs which
begin Nov .. 18.
Five other Ohio Conference
playoff games are oo tap
under a new fonnat which
matches the correspooding
winners in the Red and Blue
divisions against e~ch other,

hosted this year by the Red game out of the cellar, is 3-6
overall but 1·5 in the
Division schools.
The other games Saturdsy conference..
The other conference game
find Capital at Denison,
Wooster at Ohio Northern, involving an Ohio team finds
Marietta at Ohio Wesleyan, Toledo hosting Northern 11·
Otterbein at Mount Union and linois.
The Huskies have won two
Muskingum at Heidelberg. ·
Three of Ohio's Mid-Ameri- in a row, leveling their record
can Cooference teams are at 4-4, while Toledo, needing a
involved in league actioo victory to escape the
Saturdsy, whUe the other basement, is 1-8 and
two, Ohio University and continues to have the
Bowling Green, meet noo· offensive problems which
conference foes Cincinnati bave plague(J Coach ChUck
Stobart all season.
and Southern Mississippi.
The Cincinnati.OU gaine
Miami, now officially out of
the title chase, continues its will be the 48th meeting
drive f~r a second place finish between the two schools and a
Bearcat win will even the
when it hosts Kent State.
The RedsklDs are 4-.2 in the series at 22-22-4.
conference and 6-2-1 overall
Cincinnati has won two in a
after losing their first two row and stands at 3-5 overall,
games. Kent, only a half while Ohio is 2-6 after last

Rice institutes training session
CINCINNATI (UPI)- The and just whiled away the time
1·9 Cincinnati Bengals are so between morning and
hungry for victories that afternoon practice · sessions.
"When you have time you
they've cut out lunch in favor
do with,"
of a better conditioning pro· don't know what to
reasOned Rice, 11it can be
gram.
New Head Coach H001er · very negative."
In the new conditioning
Rice this week eliminated the
program,
hall the team runs
lunch hour from the daily
wind
sprints
and the other
practice schedule and added
works
on
weight-lifting
half
a supervised running and
machines,
'l'ith
activities
weight-lifting time.
following
dsy.
switched
the
The players seem to like
"If
you're
not
careful
late
the change because a lot of
in
the
year,
you
can
lose
your
them didn't eat lunch anyway

conditioning," said Rice .
"You get colder weather and
you don't wock as long.
"I don't think we're in bad
condition. We've maybe just
slipped a little bit. We've had
a weight training program all
along, but some players did it
and some didn't. We felt we
needed to supervise it
better."
The new r.outine also
shortens the practice day,
which the players like.

TV ... in Review Marietta crafts show set

SALE

REGULAR 1149.95

$}2995

All the basics you'll ever need are right here
in the Fashion Mate zig-zag machine . With
15 interchangeable Fashion stitches. a 4·
step built-in buttonholer , front drop·in
bobbin and more. "h&gt;del 248.
Isn't it time to trade in your old sewing maGhine
lor a new one'? Ask about trade-i ns on any make
and mode\,whether it's a ~g~• machine or not

THE FABRIC SHOP
11 s W. 2nd, Pomeroy, 0 .

..
_,,.

.. f'P.·· ·

~1'·1 ·

1\f'' '\a'l

p.f'·!J'•

\r:fiWI'

By joan hanauer
·UP! Televlrilon Writer
NEW YORK (UP!) - Irving Wallace's " The Word," for
those who dido 't read the best«lling novel, was the last
syllable in what-if stories - what if Jesus Christ lived for 19
years after his crucifixion?
·
Further, what if a scroll were discovered written by Jesus'
brother, James, revealing that new Gpspel to the modern
world7
That's the miniseries CBS is bringing to television in four
two-hour segments to be shown Nov. 12-15, 9-11 p.m., Eastern
time. It's an intriguing thriller, full of ominous glances and
mysterious people, once you leap the wide credibility gap more like a chasm- excavated along with the Dead Sea type
scroll by Wallace's wild plot.
The first thing James' text would need, according to
Wallace, is a good public relations man. Enter David Janssen,
who drinks before breakfast, is separated from his wife
(Janice Rule), has a teenage dsughter with a drinking
problem and is bedding a 21-year-old girl (Kate Mulgrew) . He
switches bedmates in midstream and spends more time
detecting than publicizing, but nobody ever called "The Word"
realistic.
Janssen may have backslid, but his father was a Protestant
minister (played by John Huston, who appears so patriarchal
he looks more Old Testament than New).
James Whitmore plans to . publish a new Bible based on
James' revelation, assisted by Geraldine Chaplin as an ex-nun
who abnost rapes Janssen in a stateroom on the way to
Europe.
·
There are forces that oppose publication - the
traditionalists who would preserve the status quo at all costs,
and the heretics who would use Resurrection II, as it is called
in the series, in an attempt to destroy Christianfty.
Throughout the series, the primary question Ues with the
authenticity of the new text. But in this fast-moving thriller,
many more questions crop up. For instance:
Is tycoon Eddie Albert on the side of the angels7 For that
matter, which is the side of the angels? What was the signifi·
cance of the envelope Albert's lawyer handed the man in the
wheelchair? Was that the same envelope the bearded cripple
gave Janssen's mistress7 And why did he push his wheelchair
in front of a car 7
Does Hurd Hatfield as a British television reporter have a
more than professional interest in Resurrecion 117 To what
lengths would Dominie Maertin de Vroome (Nicol Williamson)
go to protect his brand of Christianity?
The questions build as the personnel struts or skulks about as
befits their rilles, in settings that include Los Angeles, .New
Y~rk, London, Amsterdsm and Rome. How reliable is Janss-

MARIETTA-Artists and
craftpeople will exhibit their
wares and ,p resent craft
a
demonstrations
in
Thanksgiving Crafts Show
November 24 at the Ohio
·Historical Society's Campus
Martius Museum in Marietta.
Exhibitors will display
works ranging from dolls,
doll houses and miniature
furnishings to baskets,
ceramics and traditional
decorative tole painting.
Most exhibitors and the
Campus Martius gunsmith
will demonstrate their crafts
during the show.
The Thanksgiving Crafts
Show will open at 10 a.m.
November 24 and continue
until 4:30 p.m. ·The Campus
Martlus Museum, featuring
exhibits such as the tools,
furniture , arts and examples

Fl e)I-0-GI ;u e requires
lo ins tall. II i s easy to
10 l it window open ings'.
sharp cutting edges. It

NO TWO
ALIKE! !

•

'

EveJY Used car Is

DIFFERENT .

SEEK APPLICANTS
RUTLAND - Rutland
Village is looking for a part
time police officer and em·
ploye. Those wishing to apply
should contact Village Clerk
Vernon Weber at 742·2143
after 5 p.m. who will give
details and specifications for
the job to applicants.

We invite you to compare the Quality,
Appearance and Performance of our Value
Rated Used Cars with any cars. anywhere!
You'll
quickly
recognize
the
DIFFERENCE!
1977 PLYMOUTH VOLARE 4 dr., 6 cyl., automatic p.s.
&amp;p.b.
$3795
1976 PLYMOUTH DUSTER. 2 dr .• 6 cyl., A.T.. ps., p.b.,
A.C.
53295
1976 AMC PACER CDLl. 6 cyl .. A.T., p.s., p.b ..
A.C .
53295
1975 CHEVROLET IMPALA, 4 dr.. A. T., p.s .. p.b.,
A.C .
.
52995
1975 CHRYSLER CORDOBA, A. C., p.s.. p.b., vinyl top,
AM-FM.
53895
1976 GMC .SPRING, a.c., p.s., p.b., an all around
·
$3795
vehicle.
1973 BUICK ELECTRA225,4dr.,stillquileaca r. $1695
1973 PLYMOUTH GRAN FURY. a good second

en's new lady-love, Florinda Bolkan, the dsughter of the
discoverer of the James text? What will Nehemiah Persoff as a
holy and academically honored abbot discover about the
gospel according to James ?
The questions multiply, but the only answer is to tune in.

~~

51m

1973 CHEVROLET IMPALA4 Dr.
19730LDSMOBILE4dr., DellaBB.
1973 OLDSMOBILE 2 dr. 98, on ucellenl buy.
1972FORDGALAXIE5004Dr.
1972 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX, •'I':Y clean.
1912 CHEVROLET IMPALA 2 dr . No rust.
1912 CHRYSLER NEWPORT, quality checked.
1972 PONTIAC LEMANS

$1895
51295
$1795
5995
$1295
$1295
5895

------

sm

1974 CHEVROLET

CAMARO

$3498

4-speeil
The cleanest
in town.

AT NO EXTRA CHARGE
Amana Aadarange Popcorn Popper ......... .

FIRST epprovod

•

. .. $29.95

tPGpt without oil 01 grene. No Smo~lng)

Kooker Kit one'-· ,~ . .,., ....~,.,,;.., *""if""' ,,,, ,,,.., . , . . . . .
Country Cooker - ...,.,,,_, ..... .. . ........ . ... .
2 Cook ing Schools -(One basic, One advanced) .... . . ..

Total Value of Bonus E&lt;tras .. . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ..

29.50 .
12.50
20.00

$!11.95

I

GIFTY IDEAS
FOR PROUD
MOTHERS

rtiilt~
SCARFPIN

She 'II love showing off her
c hildren's birthmonths with
thi s smart, contemporary pin.

Up 'to she simulated births tones, custom-set in precious ster ling .

PENDANTS
•PIERCED
EAR RINGS
•IDENTIFICATION
BRACELET
•CHARM
BRACELETS
• WATCHES
• STONE
RINGS
• DIAMOND
RINGS

e 4 DOOR HARDTOP
ow~er

One
and low mileage.

antifreeze &amp; coolant
. NOW
t325
ONLY

Don't forget you owe it' to yourself lo 'check ,with us.
. before you buy any c:11r, New or Used. We can save you
money. We are the Friendly Dealership. See or Call
one of these Friendly Salesmen: J . D. Story, Roy
Douglas or Bill Nelson.

GAU.ON

Closing at 6:00 On Week Days

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

by

Gift boxed

~~
~J-

11? f . MAIN · POMEROY

$2600

"Your Friendly Deal.,rship"

~-

1250

I

1975 FORD LT.D.

•14 KT. CHAINS

f?kr.;/,,&gt;

SPECIALS

992-2115

, soo E. Main

..

992-2174

. Pomeroy, o.
•
/•

'

GETS CAP -~s. Lilllan Moore, left, representing the Royal Crown Bottling Co., is
presented a Canters cave Camp hat by Mrs. Diana Eberts, county extension service home
economics agent. Contributors of at least $100 to the camp upgrading fund receive
mementos.

.Funds mount for Canter's Caves camp
Christmas project planned for library
. A spec1al Chnstmas pro)ect for the Middleport
Library was planned as was
the trad1honal holiday
hghtlng contest for the
village at . the Wt&gt;dnesday
mght meell.ng of the Mid·
dleport Amateur Gardeners
held at the home of Mrs. Rose
R'iJ:'oldsi b .
e cut will

ree

'

'

along with a Readers Digt!l&gt;t
Book of Christmas stories.
Mrs. Walter Crooks and her
eommittee of Mrs. Daniel
Thomas, Mrs. Edgar Pratt
and Mrs. Harry Moore will
work with the Middleport
Garden Club corruruttee on
the village decorating con·
te~L Det~ils of the contest
wtll be worked out at a
of the

'
for toc~aY's

no spec ial sk il ls
cut, saw and tr im
Ha!i no dangerous
is bTenk rasl6tont.

:~~,~~~~~:r.~;'~,:~~'lthc

of the structurE!S of ·the
earliest settlement of the
Ohio, is open from 9:30 a.m.
to 5 p.m. dsUy, with an ad·
mission price of $1.50 'for
adults and 75 cents for '
children aged six through 12.
Children live and under are
admitted free in the company
of a parent.
The museum is located at
the comer of Washington and
Second Streets in Marietta.

AMERICAN EDUCATION WEEK - Pomeroy May~r Clarence Andrews signs a
J)l'oclamatlon in observance of American Education Week with.Mrs. Faye Wildennuth, left,
chairman of the observance Drew Webster Post 39, American Legion , Auxiliary, and· Mrs.
Graee Pratt, president of the Drew Webster Auxiliary looking on. The auxiliary annually
observes the week with several special activities.

The KING JAMES VERSION with,.

• 4 equal-size columns to a page-2 of
text, 2 of notes; nearly 9,000 in. formative . headings dividing the
. text.
• Over 1 14QO pages; more than 3,400
note-columns, counting the extra
note-pages ; 8,000 outlines; and
2,000 illustrations.
• 500,000 cross-references and chainreferences throughout 35,000 notes
and comments.
• A Complete Concordance com·

bined with a Cyclopedic Index
under one alphabet.

ON DISPLAY AT:
MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE
99 Mill St.

from lhe two clubs to be called by Mrs. Crooks.
Mrs. Sally Ingels cochainnan of the Meigs 'county Garden Clubs Association
annual Christmas flow er
show, was guest speaker at
the meeting. She reviewed for
the club members the
categories of the show and
urged participation . The club
members will be exhibiting in
the show and will also provide
cookies and sandwiches for
the sale table.
Miss Erma Smith, Region
11 secretary, gave a report on
the fall meeting held in
Marietta recently. Mrs. Ed·
die Burkett presided at the
meeting and welcomed Mrs.
Ingels and Mrs. Carroll
Swanson and Mrs . .Ted Riley,
guests. Mrs. Graee Pratt had
the verse for the month whieh
was on Thanksgiving. For
roll call members gave
Thanksgiving thoughts .
Mrs. Beulah Strauss in·
vi ted the club members to her
home for th e annual
Christmas party . Mrs.
Everett Taylor and Miss Bernice Ann Durst will be co·
hostesses. There will be a $3
.gift exchange with the gift
wrappings to be judged. Mrs.
Reynolds .furnished th e
traveling prize which was
won by Mrs. Swanson.
Refreshments were served
from a dining room table
centered with an arrangement of roses from the
Strauss garden. There was
also an arrangement of fall
m\uns on the entry table, and
a cornicopia with fruit and
vegetables on the desk.
The hostess gift was won by
Mrs. Swanson. Mrs. Reynolds
and Mrs. Erroll Conroy serv·
ed a dessert course. Copies of
tlie recipe were given to the
members as favors.

The Meigs County Ex·
tension Service is currently
conducting a fund drive to
raise some $42,000 needed to
paying the county's portion of
an upgrading of the Canter
Cave Camp.
In the early 1900's, the are~
now comprising Canter's
Cave 4·H Camp was
originally a farm . The
reputation of its spectacular
rock lonnation spread by
word of mouth. So many
visitors came that the owner
began to charge admission.
The site was then
developed as a commercial
recreation center for group
and family camping. Then, in
the 1920's, the present dining
hall was built as a dance hall
for camp guests.
Some of the present girls'
cabins are the original log
cabins built as part of the
recreation center camping
facilities in the early 1900's.
The great depression
brought an end to this era and
in 1950, a corporation of 4-H
committees in Gallia,
Jackson, and Lawrence
Counties bought the property
for use as a 4-H camp. At
present, there are six
counties involved in the non·
profit corporation. Meigs
joined in 1951, Highland in
1954, and Adams in 1974.
The camp is presently in a
major fund raising campaign
to raise $250,000 by December
31, 1978. This is the first time
the camp has gone to the
public for funds to develop
the camp. In the past, the
camp has been supported
entirely through the 4-H Club
program and from donations.
The camp is not govern·
mentally funded.
Anyone interested in more
information or in donating
funds can contact the Meigs
County Extension Office at
992-3895:
The Meigs County Ex·
tension staff would like to
thank
the
following

organizations and individualS
who have donated or pledged
money to the Canter's Cave 4H Camp Fund Raising in
Meigs County:
Hillbillies 4-H Club, Irish
Leprechauns 4-H Club, Meigs
County 4-H Junior Leader·
ship Club, Meigs County
Better Livestock Dairy 4-H
Club, Five Point Star Stit· ·
chers J. L. 4-H Club, Meigs
County Camp Fund Raising
Committee, Diana Eberts,

John Rice, Sumner Farms
(Mr. and Mrs. Roger Gaul ),
Racine Firemen's Auxiliary,
Reuter-Brogan Insurance
(Larry Brogan), Mr. and
Mrs. Thomas Sayre, Joyce
Bowen, R. C. Bottling Co.,
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Jeffers,
Chester Garden Club, Mr .
and Mrs . Carl Barnhill,
Meigs Pleasure Riders 4-H
Club, Mr. and Mrs. C. E.
Blakeslee, and Five Point
Bucks 4-H Club.

Malinda Sue Dailey,
Portland, bride-elect of
Barry Smith of fulcine was
honored with a bridal shower
Monday evening at the
Portland Elemenl&lt;!ry School .
The shower was given by
Betty Ward and Patty
Gluesen.camp. Games were
played and refreshments
served. The honored guest
received numerous gifts.
Attending were Nancy Cornell, Lee Cornell, Lora Cor·
nell, Johnny Cornell, Frankie
Cornell, Florence Deeter,
Sherry Deeter, Shawn Bobo,
Kim Friend, Diana Ward,
Tressia Dail ey, Sue Dailey,
Judy Murphy, Sharon Mur·
phy, Patty Allensworth,
Brenda Allensworth, Mrs.
Mike Evans, Linda Ward,
Vi olet Fitch , Charlene ·
Wallbrown, Cindy Pitch,
James Carnahan, Jeannie
Johnson , Carol Morris,
Kathleen Ward, Ada Van
Meter, Shirley Johnson,
Becky and Shannon Codner,
Penny
Middleswart ,
Shawnna Bobo, Carol Dailey,

Dee D-di!ey, Rends Fitch
Sara Wells , Candy Milhoan:
B. J . Murphy, Connie Mur-.
phy , Bonnie Milhoan , and
Terressa Dailey.

NORTH RANDALL, Ohio
(UPI) - Jockey Steve
Bruder suffered a fractured
skull when tossed from his
mount during the first race at
Thistledown Wednesday.
He is confined at Suburban
Comn\unity Hospital.

Visit

LIN-DEE'S CRAFT
BOUTIQUE
lor that unusual
handmade gilt item.
Across from ·Ooro1hy's

Beauty Shop in Syracuse.
Mon . thru Thurs., 10-5

Fri. &amp; Sal. 10·6

S6888
SALE

DOWNING-CHILDS
,REAL ESTATE
Do you want to sell a home?
Business? Land? List with usl

Complete With
Tools

•r.,

e'1t a.ts. Alit SwJ
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We have a complete real
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CALL 992-2342
EVE. 992-2449

The best way to care for carpet'ls a·
Hoover Convertable Cleaner .

RODNEY DOWNING • BROKER
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

OIL &amp; OIL FILTER SPECIAL
Includes ins tall ation of Motorc r alt oil fi lter
and up 10 5 quans ot Ford oi l. PBrls and
labor incl uded.

~~;; ~~~''' p,$
,,.... PartQsand Laoor
Until

·

Dec. 30, 1978

1 54
•

e~lra

Any appl.cable I EI)j&amp;S

DAN THOMPSON FORD

BAKER FURNITURE
Middleport,

o.

HOT DEALS ON
COLD WEATHER
CAR SERVICE

ENGINE TUNE-UP SPECIAL
Jeffrey and Teresa Patterson, Pomeroy, are announcing ·the birth of their first
child, Aric Owen, on Oct. 28 at
the Holzer Medical Center.
The infant weighed eight
pounds and five ounces. 1
Grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs . Charles Musser ,
Pomeroy, and Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Patterson, Rutland.
Great-grandparents are Flet·
cher Welsh and Anna Welsh,
Middleport; Mr. and Mrs. Ar·
thur Musser, Rutland, Mrs.
Audrey Patterson, Rutland,
and Mr. and Mrs. Hiram
Slawter, Mason, W.Va. Mrs.
Maude Smith, Rutland, is a
great-greatgrandmother.
JAMES FERRELL
Marine Lance Corporal
James F. Ferrell, son of
EUford and Lous Ferrell of
Syracuse, has reported for
duty with 1st Marine
Division, Marine Corps Base,
Camp Pendleton, Calif.
He joined the Marine Corps
in December, 1976.

TODDLER INJURED
CINCINNATI (UP!)
Police are investigating the
apparent beating of a 21·
month·&lt;&gt;ld boy who was fo1)11d
at his uncle's doorstep with
serious multiple injuries.
The boy, Ted Garity Jr.,
was in critical condition early
today at Children's Hospital.
Suburban Springfield
Township pollee said the boy
sustained brain damage,
internal injuries and bruise•
from an apparent beating . .

Includes : Installation of Motorcrafl points , condenser
and Auto lite spark 111ugs. Inspection of choke , throttle
linkage, spark plug wire s and distributor ciip , adjLISt ment ol carbu retor artd timing . Cars with 4-cylind ers
an d solid-st ate ignition slig ht ly less . Econolines
slightly more . Total Special Pr tce-Parts and Labor ;
Ollar Valid

Until
09C. 30, 1978

'33.46 523.67
S·cy~nder

6-C}IIinder
Any appbcable trows B)l ra

DAN THOMPSON FOR.D

FRONT END ALIGNMENT SPECIAL
Check an d adjust caster, camber and toe-in.
Domestic passenger cars only.

~; ::1 :97:olelS$1' P
ie:

95

Any applte11ble taKes

e~tra

DAN THOMPSON FORD

COOLING SYSTEM CHECK
SPECIAL

Check rad iator cap ; check all litlings and
hoses : cnec~ water pump : pressure -test
cooling system lor leaks. Pans and coolant
extra if required.
Total Special Price as Described
Offe r Valid
Until

Dec. 30, 1 9~6 .

ss.oo

Winter's cold and dampness show
no mercy on a car that's not in
shape. Why take a chance? Get
your car ready for Winter now,
with these special cold weather
deals from our service professionals. Stop in soon while these
heart - warm inq pr ices ::&lt;r e st il l
in efl ect.
i '

DAN THOMPSON FORD
Middleport, Ohio 45760

�.

-.

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6-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, Nov . 10, 1978
'::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::

\l.l

Mr. and Mrs. Parry

~ celebrate anniversary

7-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .. Friday, Nov. iO. 1978
8.

l

Social l
ICalendar 1I
1,

:l:l

I

~;!::
CHESTER - Mr. and Mrs. Bennie Perry of Chester· :;~;
{ will celebrate their 50th wedding anniversary this ;~:~
::~: Saturday.
· .
~:~:
;'::
Mr. and Mrs. Perry have six children who include :;;: .
;::; Harry ofUnionville, Ohio; Mary Nottingham of Pomeroy; ;:;:
::;: Jack, Jim and Sue Roberts, all of Milton, W. Va., and · :::i
:;:; Linda Acree of Middleport. The couple has 21 :;:;
{; grandchildren and six great'tlrandchildren. .
. :;~;
;:;:
The daughters of Mr. and Mrs. Perry w1ll entertam ;:;:
;:;: with an open house at the Perry home from 2 to 5 p.m. ;:;:
;~;~ Saturday. All friends and relatives of the family are :i:~
:;::cordially invited to attend .
:;;:

Polly Cramer

FRIDAY
RETURN
JONATHAN
Meigs Chapter, Daughters of
the American Revolution, ,
1:30 p.m. Friday at hallie of
Miss Eleanor Smith with
Mrs. Gerald I;'owell, Mrs.
inton Fisher and Miss
ucille Smith, hostesses.
rogram on "The First
~erican" by Mrs. Dorothy
Shaw, Gallipolis.
ROUND AND square
dance, Friday, at Meigs
Senior Citizens Center in
Pomeroy, open to the public
with music by the Stringdusters. Admission, $1 adults,
children under 12 free .
MARY SHRINE 37, Order
of White Shrine of Jerusalem
ceremonial, 8 p.m. Friday at
Pomeroy Masonic Temple;
potluck refreshments
following ,the meetlng.

Stubborn
mildew stains
DEAR POLLY - I would
like to know how to get
mildew stains out of colorfast
colton. I have. tried
everything I know of and
nothing has worked. -JULIE
DEAR JULIE - Mildew
stains should· be treated as
soon as possible. Try pretreating the stains with
detergent and then launder.
If they remain sponge with
hydrogen peroxide. (Test
first.) Next launder with a
bleach that is safe for the
fabric in question. The above
is suggested by a leading
washing machine manufac-

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By Charlene Hoeflich
INVESTED-These 10 Syracuse girls were invested into the Syracuse Girl Scouts,
sOUTHEASTERN MEIGS COUNTY CADEITES
Brownie Troop 1120, in ceremonies held rec-ently at the sehoul. They are, left to right, front,
Meeting Tuesday night at the old Chesler courthouse, the
Michelle Harris, Angie Grueser, Jennifer Arnold, Tricia Michael, Misty Swisher, and back
Meigs Cadettes planned a bike hike for Nov .. 18.
row, Rochelle Davis, Kristen Pape, Melinda Lemley, Shellie Arnold, and Tara Wolfe.
The girls will meet at the court house and then go to the
Izaak Walton farm on their bicycles. Arrangements were also
made for the troop to begin first aid training next wee~ under
the direction of Mrs. Merle Johnson.
·
A health and safely report was given at the meeting. Candles
and jewelry are being sold by the troop.
SALISBURY JUNIOR TROOP 1100
Costume prizes were awarded at last week's Halloween par- '
ty held at the high school. Winning the prizes were Lin Chase,
the prettiest ; Kim Roush, the fumtiest ; Sally Radford, the
most original; Beverly Kauff, the scarriesl; and Brenda St.
Clair, the ugliest. Games were played and refreshments of
donuts, Kool-aid, cider, cookies and candy were served.
The advocates of the Per· Charles Bush, Conley Cole, jamin, Mr . and Mrs. Richard
Tuesday 's meeting opening with the pledge to the flag and sonal Advocacy Program David Diddle, Etta Mae Ellis, Grueser and Charles, Mr. and
work during the meeting continued on the worm replica favors entertained their proteges Maggie Hoys , Venedia Mrs. Purl Van Meter,
which will be taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital next week.
and friends at the Riverboat Knight, Unda Watson, Leona Theresa and Greg, Mr. and
Plans were made for the Christmas party to be held at the Room of the Athens Savings Marlin, Sarah McCarty, Mrs. Robert ' Eason and
!ugh school on Dec. 19. There will be a gill exchange by the and Loan Co. with a buffet Judith McHaffie, Oscar Angela, Mr. and Mrs. Gene
members.
dinner and record hop.
Price, Arthur Reeves, Virgil Lake, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
POMEROY JUNIOR TROOP 1276
This was their first gel- Saunders, Mauritoe Smith, Skinner, Lula B. Hampton,
Meeting at the Pomeroy Elementary School the juniors together for the fall season Betty Wills, Sandra Whit~, the Rev . William Midworked on making pompons out of yarn. They planned a hike and 50 were in alloindancoe. Pauline Derenberger, Jess1e dleswarlh, Erma Yoho ,
for next week and discussed their sale of china bell Christmas Plans were made for a Might and David, Rea Roush Sharon Buffington, Sharon
ornaments.
Christmas party to be held on and Hugh, Jr., Josephine Folmer, Waneta Bowman,
SALISBURY BROWNIE TROOP
Mallory, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest and Helen Bailey.
Dec.19.
The Salisbury brownies mel Tuesday night for a halloween
Mrs. Mary Skinner is coorAllending were Maxine Wingett, Mr. and Mrs.
party and a tribute to Juliet Lowe, founder of girl scouting in Black, Don Buffington , George Skinner and Ben- dinator for the program .
America.
Mrs. Fran Moxley and Mrs. Linda Wyatt were judges for the
costumes with pr~es going to Tammi Eblin, the ugliest; Jody
Taylor, the prettiest ; Joan Simpson, the funniest; and Marsha
King, the most original. Several mothers and Carla Kauff'
('
served cupcakes, cider and donuts. Mrs. Shirley Kauff and
Mrs. R1ta Ebhn are the leaders. .
Ul U.
I c;.-

POMEROY Chamber of
Commerce Friday at noon at
Meigs Inn.
WESTERN CB Club Friday
7 p.m. at club house. Gift
exchange.
Christmas
projects will be discussed. All
members urged to attend.
SUNDAY
TRI GRANDE Square
Western Dance will start
lessons, beginning Sunday,
Nov. 12, at Old Kings Arms
Building, Rt. 7. Hours will be
from 4 until 6 p.m. John
Waugh, instructor.
MONDAY
POMEROY PTA, Munday,
7:30 p.m. room visitation .
Program on taxes by Carl
and Mary Teaford of Hand R
Block. Fourth and fifth grade
parents with Corky Kennedy,
chairman of hostesses.
Nursery will be provided.
BETilEL 62, International
Order of Jobs' Daughters,
7:30 p.m. Monday at the
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
RUTLAND PTO open
llouse, 7:30 p.m. Monday at
Rutland gymnasium with
Dan Morris, Meigs Local
director of curriculum,
speaking. Plans will be made
for Christmas festival, Dec.
Shannon Riffle.
2; all parents urged to attend.
The program opeped with · LE LECHE LEAGUE
the . pledge to the flag led by meeting 7:30 p.m. Monday at
Marty Cleland and Deon home of Chris Mitchell. For
Jones. There was a rhythmic more information call Bev
exercise in which everyone Splete 446-4010 or Betsy
participate. The scouts in In- Crank, 675-2776.
dian, pilgrim, and mountain
TUESDAY
men coslwnes tdok part in 8
RACINE LODGE 461
musical skit: There was a F&amp;AM Tuesday. Election of
demonstration on how to officers. All members urged
build a volcano and how to to attend.
SYRACUSE PTO Tuesday
form the lava by the webelos.
The living circle closed the 7:30p.m. Program "effective
meeting and refreshments parenting."
Babysitting
were served.
service available. Everyone
Allending were Mr. and welcome.
Mrs. Earl Cleland, Jim
OHIO ETA PHI Chapter,
Cleland, Tracy Cleland, Mar- Bela Sigma Phi Sorority, 7::m
ty Cleland, Libbie Fisehr, Tuesday night at the Meigs
Ralph Fisher, Damon Fisher, Office of the Athens County
Lucille Diehl, Brian Diehl, Savings and Luan Co.
Ann Layne, Kenny Layne,
WEDNESDAY
·Karen Layne, Kevin Layne . ANNUAL INSPECTION of
and Joseph, Dorothy Riffle, Bosworth Council 46 Royal
Donnie Riffle, Phyllis and Select Masters WednesMcMillian, David McMillian, day. All companions invited
Vivian Jones, Brenda Jones, to attend. Work in select
Billy Jones, Dean Jones, · master degree.
Diann Jewell, Matt Jewell,
Raymond Oliver, Ryan
Oliver, Linda Diddle, Cris
College Football
Diddle, Pam Riffle, Sean Rif·
Bates Named Web
Harrison head footba ll coach.
fie, and Shannon Riffle.

LIVING WITNESSES
RUTLAND - A living
witness group from the
Mount Vernon Nazarene
College will be at the Rutland
Church of the Nazarene
Saturday and Sunday. The ·
Saturday service will be for
children and young people at
7::m p.m. The Sunday services are open to all ~ges. The
group will sing Sunday
morning and present a
drama at 7:30 p.m. The
public is Invited.

Personal Advocacy Program advocates

entertain friends, proteges with dinner

AW'/'1-YJS

p.r"Sented to Racine Cub .:&gt;COUtS
Receiving a wards were
Tracy Cleland, Ryan Oliver,
Donnie Riffle, Chris Diddle,
Brian Diehl, Matt Jewell and

•

By Helen Bottel:::·.·

Hallo.ween party held

COLD'FREEZE THIS TEASER!
DEAR HELEN:
I'm in love with a married women but it's hopeless. In the
LETART FALLS _ The
first place, her husband is a fine person and I couldn't hurt
·
h
Halloween pB\'IY hosted by
him. Besides, she has cunfi ded m me (s e sees me as a good . the Ohio Valley Grange 2612
friend) that she enjoys teasing men and getting them wrapped
around her little finger. Her husband is already her willing Letart Falls, was attended by
slave, so she "just can't help" seeking other conquests. They a large crowd of children and
slop barely short of being physical.
adults Saturday evening, Oct.
Now she's having lunches ilnd cocktails w1th a new man. 28.
She'll flirt around, but cool it before things gel out of control.
Prizes were given to those
That 's the pattern.
masked, infant to six years
Is it normal for women to seek this kind of attention' She old. Winning were: most
evidently wants all men falling for her, but, she says, she loves comical, Jodi Hill; most
only one person: her husband . _ CY
original, Robin Manuel;
ugliest, Christine Cooper;
Cy
. DEAR :
Co Hill
It's normal for anyone to want attention from the opposite youngest, rey
·
sex, but seeking it in active flirtation that "stops barely short
In the category of children
of being physical" is a real marriage-blaster.
from six years and over,
One of these days your friend's husband will knock off the
willing-slave role. Don't accept the title by default! -H.
DEAR HELEN:
My advice to the woman who complained about the "outguingness" of her new man friend: grab the guy and turn him
every way but loose! A man who hugs your mother the first
time he meets her -and she likes it- has gut to be super.
It's sad, but all too many people are suspicious of .
" touchers." Yet think how warm and at'Cepled we feel when
someone we like gives us a hug. A few of the very blessed are
able to do this ;-pontaneously, knowing in;tinclively the right
persons to touch.
Since I may never be one of them, the next best thing is
knowing such a wonderful person. If your correspondent
doesn 't want him, I hope she'll pass him on! -WISHING
DEAR HELEN.
My elderly father has become a great problem. since my
mother's death. He's petulant and childish, demanding too
much attention, and getting his feelings hurt at nothing . We 've

DEER
•

!•

••

had several fights, something that never happened before.
How can I cope, outside of avoiding him more, which is really
cruel' -DAUGHTER
DEAR DAUGHTER :
Here 's a letter which might help :
DEAR HELEN:
I'm saddened by those colwnn-complainls about "old folks."
My father changed radically after Mom's death. II caused
many problems until I changed my outlook and tried putting
myself in his place. II gets lonely spending the days and nights
without your spouse and living in a house that was once fill~
with laughter and the joys of your family still at home.
Being cheerful and taking extra time just for Dad helped
make his attitude brighter. Showing him we loved him did
much to " un-sour" his personality. Soon he was getting back in
the swing of things. It took patience and a lot of endurance too.
Now that he's gone, [ have no regrets. He knew he was loved!-P.M.

llulfrt,s

•

12 to 6 gauae 5 pl

BAUM TRUE VALU
. Haurs

Woelcdlys7:l0·5:00 P.M.
Sal. 7:lOIII4:00 P.M,

Corner Main &amp; Butternut

NOV. 10, 11 and 12
7:30 p.m. Each Eve~ing

20 to 4-10 gauge 5 pk.

CHESTER, 0•
985-3301
.
v

PurinalZJ.

RAT CONTROL Pfll EIS
.

Sunday - 10 a.m. and 6 p.m.

DAVID JAY, LEXINGTON, KENTUCKY

·

MEETING SET
Meigs Chapter 53, Disabled
American Veterans, will
meet in regular session at
7:30 · p.m. Tuesday at the
chapter home, Butternut
Ave., Pomeroy. The district
commander will be present
and the auxiliary will serve
refreshments.

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 10,1978
3 : ~ash ·a, Joker's Wild 10; You Bet Your Life 20.
4:0Q-Mlster Cartoon 3; Battle of the Planets 4; Merv
Griffin 6; Porky Pig &amp; Friend• 8; Sesame St. 20,33;
Batman 10; Dinah 13; Hollywood Squares 15.
4:3G-Bewltched 3; Gilligan's Is. 4,8 ; Brady Bunch 10;
Petticoat Junction 15.
5:oo-Star Trek 3,4; Bever·ly Hillbillies 8; Mister
Rogers20,33; Gomer Pyle, USMC 10; Emergency One
13; Brady Bunch 15.
5:30-News 6; Sanford &amp; Son 8; Elec. Co. 20.33; Mary
. Tyler· Moore 10; Odd Couple 15.
6:oo-Nows 3,4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6 ; Zoom 20,33.
6:3G-NBC News 3.4,15; ABC News 13; Carol Burnett &amp;
Friends 6;, CBS News 8,10; Over Easy 20.
7:0G-Cross.Wits 3; PM Magazine 4; Newlywed Game
6, 13; News 10; Love. American STyle 15; Consumer
Survival Kit 20; Big Blue Marble 33.
7:3G-Hee Haw Honeys 3; Dating Game 4; Family
Fe~ 10; Bonkers 8; $100,000 Name That Tune 13; Pop
. ~ The Country 15; MacNeil-lehrer Reoort 20.~~
a:oo-Oifferent Strokes 3,4,15; Boxing 6,13; Wonder
Wo")an 8,10; Washington Week In Review 20,33.
8:30-Who's Watching The Kids 3,4,15; Wall Street
· Week 20,33.
.. 9:oo-~ockford Files 3,4,5; Incredible Hulk 8,10;
Congressional Outlook 20,33.
·
.' 9:3G-Turnabout 20; 10 :oo-Eddle Capra Mysteries
3,4,15; American Girls 8,10; News 20; Faces of Com.
munlsm 33.
'
10 :30-Monty Python's Flying Circus 20; 11 :oo-News
3,4,6,1,10,13, 15; Dick Cavett 20; Soundstage 33.
11:3Q-Johnny Carson 3.4.15; Barett 13; Movie "The
Bounty Killer" 6; Gunsmoke 8; Movie "Cry of the
Banshee" 10.
, 12:oo-Monty Python 33; 12:3Q-Juke-Box 8; 12:4olronslcle 13.
1:0Q-Midnlght Speclal3,4,15; News 8: Movie "Horror
Rises from the Tomb" 10.
1:4Q-Ne)NS 13; 2:3G-News 3.
3:00-Movle "Queen Bee" 3; 5:00-Movle
"Homicidal" 3.

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1978
6:oo-Sunrlse Semester 10; 6:311-Saturday Report 3;
Vegetable' Soup 4; TV Classroom 8; U.S. Farm
Report tO; Kentucky Afield 13.
7:oo-Go 3; Mario &amp; the Magk Movie Machine 4;
Matters of Life 6; Mr. Magoo 8; Public Polley
Forums 10; Animals. Animals, Animals 13.
7:3G-landofthe Lost 3; World of Survlval4; Dusty's
Treellouse 6; Porky Pig &amp; Frlends 8; Pink Panther
13; Vegetable Soup 15.
B:oo-Galexy Goof. Ups 3,4,15; Scoob(s All -Stars 6',13;
Popeye e. 1o.
8:3o-Fantasllc Four 3,4,15; 9:oo-Godzllla 3,4, 15;
Bugs Bunny. Road Runner 8,10.
9:3G-Superlrlends 6,13; 10:oo10:30-Daffy Duck 3,15; Movie "Bowery Battalion" 4;
Tar~ar\.Super·i 8,10.
11:0Q-Yogl's Space Race 3,15; Fangtace 13; Point of
View 6;.
11 :3G-llltle Rascals 4; NFL Game of the Week 6;
Action News for Kids 13 .
12:oo-Fabulous Funnies 3,15; Weekend Special 6, 13;
Movle·."The Hunters" 4; Space Academy 8. 10.
12:30-Bay City Rollers 3.15; College Football
Pregame Show 6,13; Fat Albert 8,10.
12:45--College Football 6,13.
1:oo-Famous Classic Tales 3; Ark II 8; In The Know
10; PTL Club 15; Oasis in Space 33.
· ·
: I :3G-Sho\v My People 8; Hogan's Heroes 10; Con·
sumer Survival Kit 33.
2:0Q-Big Blue Marble 3; Movie "The House of Fear"
,.
4: VlewpQintlr Movie "How To Stuff a Wild Bikini"
··,-, 10; . When the Boat Comes In 33.
2:30-This is The NFL 3; Movie "Great Expectations"

WRITING WORKSHOP
RUTLAND - A writing
workshop for anyone having
questions about writing
family history for the Meigs
History Book will be held at
7:30 p.m. Monday . at .!he
home of Mt. and M:rs. Vernon
Weber.

ILES FAMILY -Tim and Audrey Des and Family
will appear at the United Pentecostal Church, s. Third
Ave., Middleport, this weekend with an evangelistic

1:oo-Movle "Experiment In Terror" 3; Movie "Halls
of Montezuma" 4 .
·

2:oo-Movle "Dracula vs . Frankenstein" 13 .
2:311-News3; 3:oo-Movle "Mr . Soft Touch" 3: 3:311Movle "Night of the Blood Monster" 13 .
5:QO-Movle "Two of a Kind'' 3; ABC News 13.

.

.

'I~------------------------,
N. w. COMPTON, 0.0. I
OPTOMETRIST
I1
I·1I OFFICEHOURS:9:30to12,2toSICLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS. ) -;-- EAST COURT I

program which includes ventriloquism, trunk escapes and
gospel magic. They will be atthe services at 7:30p.m. this
evening; 10 am . Saturday and Sunday at 10 a.m. The
public is invited.

Me and my

.!

Mayor Jun Marlett saLd __
_. ______________________
...I
ST.,
POMEROY.

WAN RECEIVED

FAYETTE, Ohio (UP!)The Fulton County villiige of
Fayette received a loan of
$808,100 from the Farmers
Home Administration
Thursday to cmnplete its
water system, bringing it up
to Environmental Protecfion
Agency standards.

work will begin Nov . 15 on a
central water system, which
will take the discoloration out
of the water.
Residents have been
getting their water from
wells, but with this project,
will soon be served by the
central water system.

NEW HAVEN FURNITURE
.Thanksgiving Specials
Broyhill Dining Room

Regular

Special
95

1599'"' --· -- ·- ··- -- ...........~99 5

1

'999".- .-.----.----.- ...... -~699 95
American of Martinsville
Dining Room

Placed on a 11" x 14"
Deco Plaque at the .
Middleport Fire Station.
Two Days
December 2nd and 3rd

Regular

Sponsored by: Ohio Eta Phi Chapter of
Beta Sigma Phi

CAll:

'2995"... -. --·-- ----- ----~-199 5
'1699" .. -- ..... --.- ......... ~989 95

95

Photos Taken by Majestic Studios

Sonya Ohlinger 992 -2726
Patsy Ogdin 992·7487

Special

SAVE YOUR R.C., ·NEHI, UPPER 10,
DIET RITE &amp; DADS ROOT BEER
BOffiE CAPS FOR CHARITY

I,

STOREWIDE SALE
You can't beat our priceB

NEW HAVEN FURNITURE
New Haven

882-2462

R. C. BOTTLING CO.
MILL STREET
Middleport, Ohio
992-3542 or 992 -3344

.,

IT'S NOT
TOO LATEI

,

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fI .
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GALLIPOLIS BUSINESS
COLLEGE
IS STILL TAKING
APPLICATIONS FOR CLASSES

'I .

AND "GOOD LUCK" FROM FARMERS BANK TO THE MEIGS MARAUDER GIRLS
VOLLEYBALL TEAM AS YOU TRAVEL TO WAVERLY SATURDAY FOR DISTRICT

I .
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I.
{

I

i i
.:

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STARTI"G OCT. 30, 1978

The rats prefer it

Classes being oHered can be applied
toward your diploma. G.B.C. is a
college with you in mind. We can
give you the training that you need
to qualify for the job of your future.
We have more ca lis from employers
in the area for our graduates, than .
, we have graduates•

TERRIE' WILSON

Front, L·R, Sonia Ash, Kim Seth, Tonia Ash, and Carol Morris; back, Karen
Walker, coach. Cherie Lightfoot, Beth Bartrum, Terri Wilson. Dodie Chapman.

.

at the

WESTSIDE
CHURCH OF CHRIST

RTA MEETING
The
Meigs
Retired
Teachers Association will
meet Saturday Nov. 18 at
noon at the Meigs Inn.
There will be a guest
speaker and reservations
must be made by Tuesday by
calling 992-5345 or 992-5123.

turer. - POLLY
DEAR POLLY -I have two
ways for attaching small
B\t!ns to posts or trees without
using nails. One is to center
two small holes in a piece of
sturdy. cardboard or Ugh!
wood. The distance between
the holes should be· equal to
the diameter of the post. Feed
wire through the holes and
around the post and twist the
ends to secure it.
Another way is to feed a
length of elastic (Oiifl-half
inch wide ) through the holes
and around the post, then
knot. For a larger sign one
could use four holes and two
lengths of the desired
material to secure tightly. AUDREY
DEAR AUDREY - I am .
sure your Pointer will lie POl
to use by the many who are
putting up signs for garage
and yard les.- POLLY
DEAR PO!.LY - PerhaPII
other readers have had the
same problem I have 'had
with curtain hooks that never
run smoothly along the rod or
are always coming off. I
threw my hooks in the garbage can and ·made my o)YII.
by finger knitting a row about
an inch and a half wide with
regular thread and then sewing these on the top of a curtain for the rod to go through.
Make enough so y~u have one
for each pleat and you are
guaranteed an easy opening .
and closing. It is easier to
first make a few stitChes on
the curtain so you can see
how far you have to knit. ANNA
DEAR POLLY - Breaking
in a new pair of shoes can
often be painful but ease this .
pain by making the leather
more pliable. Just peel a
potato and leave it in the shoe
overnight. You'll notice the
difference. - illLDA
Polly will send ·you one of
her signed thank-you
newspaper coupon clippei'B if ..
she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
' her colwnn·.

j

GOSPEL MEETING

. RIFLE
SLUGS

••

those wuuung were: Ricky
Sellers, most original;
ugliest, Jan Wolfe; prettiest,
Tracy Beegle; most comical,
Candy Milliron; oldest, Ruth
Greene. Each was presented
a silver dollar.
Each child was given .a
treat .and served refreshments of cupcakes, hot dogs
and Kool-Aid.
The Grange Hall was
decorated with black cats,
witches, pumpkins, leaves
with orange, black and white
streamers.

TELEVISION
VIEWING

"LLY·s POINTERS

3:oo-Star Trek 3; Wrestling 15.
3:30-Movle "The Woman In Green" 4.
4:0Q-Movle "Two Mules lor Sister Sara" 3; College
Football 6,13; Nashville On The Road 10; Better
. Way 15; Where The Twisted laurel Gows 33.
4:30-Sports Spectacular B; Pop Goes The Country 10;
Gilligan's Is. 15; Catch-33 33.
5:oo-Gong Show 4; Dolly 10.15; The Long Search 20;
Studio See 33.
5:3Q-Cheap Show 4 ; Porter Wagoner 10; Cliffwood
Ave. Kids 15; Freestyle 33.
6:oo-News3,4,10; Gong ShowS; God Has The Answer
15; Crockett's VIctory Garden 20; Over Easy 33.
6:3G-NBC News 3,15; World War II: G.l. Diary 4;
Porter Wagoner 8; CBS News 10; Ohio Journal 20;
West VIrginia Outdoors 33.
7:oo-Abbott&amp; Costello 3; Lawrence Welk 4,13,15; l:lee
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. I. Diary 33 .
8:oo-Chlps 3.4.15; Welcome Back, Kotter 6,13; People
8.10; Once Upon A Classic 20,33.
8:311-Carter Country 6,13; Rhoda 8,10; Glullnl 's
Beethoven Nlnth.Live 20; Turnabout 33.
9:oo-Centennlal 3,4,15; love Boai 6,13; Hollywood 's
Diamond Jubilee B, 10; The Long Search 33.
IO:oo-Fantasy Island 6,13; Boston's Marathon Man
20; Arts &amp; Business 33.
11 :oo-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15; ; College Football 33 .
11 :15-ABC News 6.
11 :3G-Saturday Night Live 3,4,5; Miss World-America
Beauty Pageant 6; Boxing 8; WOody Hayes:
Football 10.
12 :oo-Movle "A Guide for the Married Man" 10.

LEADING

P!AaNA

FRESH

COMPETITIVE
flAT BAIT

RAT CONTROL
P£LLETS

CORN

Purina Rat Co ntrol Pellets - :!t-1 with the farm
market. # 1 with rats, shouldn't they be 1t 1 with you?
w e·re also featuring Purina's new place pack
- NEW PLACE PACK RAT CONTROL

MODERN ·suPPLY
. 399 W. Main Street

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

~Purina...

·

planning tomorrow
with research~

Join the employables, take the first
step. Enroll at G.B.C., receive your
marketable skills and then the jobs
will come to you.
·

CALL TODAY AT
446-4367
OR STOP IN A~.D
VISIT US ·AT THE
SPRING VALLEY PLAZA
Reg. No. 75-02-04721

OODIE CHAPMAN

~.

COACH
KAREN WALKER

'

~

KIM SETH

BETH BARTRUM

SONIA ASH

CAROL MORRIS

; ~~~~--~~~~~------------~~----~~

�MEIGS TIRE
CENTER, INC.
TR INITY (H UNCH , Rev . W H.
Pernn , pastor ; Sob Buel-l , Sunday
school supt Churc_h School If 15
a m worship servtce· I 0 30 a m
Ch otr rehearsa l , Tuesdoy

pm

7 30

und er d.r ec llon of Ahcv

Nease

POMEROY CHURCH

m THf

NAZARENE Corner Un ton and
Mulberry Re v Clyde V Hender-

son , pa stor Sunday school 9 .JO
o m Glen McClung supl mornIng worshtp , 10 JO o rn e¥enmg
servtce, 7 30, mtd week servtce
Wednesday 7 30 p m.

GRACUPISCOPAl CHURCH
376 E Main St . Pom eroy The
Hev Robe r t 8 Gra ... es rector
Sunday servt ces , II a m mo rmng
prayer (Ho ly Commumon fi rst
Sunday of each month) and ser

mon

Church chur ch schoo l a nd

nur sery core

hour

provtded

snip , I I am . &gt;und'ay even mg
s.e r v•ce "/ p m Wednesday !-=orm ·
l y Trating Hour 7 p m Wednesday
wors htp sc r vtce 7 30 p m
HA ZEl COMMUNITY CHURCH
Neor Long Bo ttom, t:d sel Hart
pa stor Sunday school 10 o m
Chu rch , 7 30 p m , praye r
meet tng, 7 30 p m Thur!. doy
M IDDLEPORT
Pt NlECOSTAl
Thtrd A ve the He" Wtlltom Kn tt ·
tel pa stor Honold Dugan Sun
day School Supt Classes for all
ages , eve n•ng servt ce 7 3(}, Bibl e
study , Wednesday 7 30 p .m ,
you th se rvtces , f rrdoy , l 30 p m ,
M IDDLEPORT fRHWILL SAP fi ST Co rner Ash and Plum Noel
Herrman po ste r Saturday e-.en ·
tng serv 1ce 7 30 p m
Sunday
Sc hool , 10 JO a m
MEIGS

the '!lenltce

THE SAl VATION ARMY

l iS

Butternut Ave , Pomeroy En voy
and M rs Roy Wmmg offt cers tn
c harge
Sunday h olt ness
meeftng 10 a m Sunday School
10 30 a m Sunday sc hool leader .
YPSM Elo tse Adam s 7 30 p m .
solvot to n
mee t t r,g . vorto u's
spea k ers and mus tc speetals
Th ursday - 10 om
to 2 p,m
lod te s Home l eag ue , a ll women
tnvtted . 7 30 p m prayer mee tmg
and Btble study , Bob Estep
leader
Rev
Noel
Hermon
teacher

BURliNGTON SO UTHERN BAPTI ST CHAPEL Rou te 1 ShadePastor Bo bby Elkm s
Sunday
sc hool 5 p m , Sunday wo r shtp ,
5 -45 p .m , Wednesday prayer se r
YICe 7 30 p m

POMEROY WES TSID&lt; CH URCH
OF CH RI ST 200 W Mom St , Jerry
Pau l mtms ter phone 992 7bbb
Conser vati ve , no n -Instrument a l
Sunday wor sht p, 10 o m Btble
study 11 am . wor sh ip 6 p m
Wedn esday Btb le st udy , 7 p m .

OlD DE XTER BIBU CHRISTIAN
CHU RCH,
Rev R(llph
Smtth
po ste r Sunday sc hoo l 9 30 o .m
Mr s. Worley Fran cis , supennten
dent . Preachtng serv tces ft rs t &amp;
th tr d Sundays follow ing Sunday
School

GRAHAM UNITED METHODI ST
Preac hmg 9 30 o m ftr st and se
cond Sundays of each mon th ,
thnd and l ourth Sunday s each
month worshtp se rv tce o l 7 30
p m
Wednesday evemn gs at
7 30 Prayer and Btbl e Study

SE VENTH DAY

ADVENTIST ,

Mulberry He1g ht s Rood Pome roy
Pa stor , A lbert Dlltes. Sabbath
School
Sup e rmt e ndenl
R1to
Wh1te Sabbath School Sa turda y
aft ernoon at 2 00 wtfh Worshtp
~·Se r viCe to ll owm g at 3 15

RUTlAND

)f

r.

FIR ST

BAPTI ST

"" CHURCH Sts t er
Harn ett
Worne r Supf Su nday School
"' 9 30 am .
morn tng wors hip
~ l0-45om
~~ THE HILAND CHA PEL , George
Ca sto , pas tor Sunday Sch oo l,
9 30 o .m , evemng wo r sh tp 7 30
i h hursdoy even tng pray er se rviCe ,
7-:-30 p.m .
~ ~tPOM E ROY
FIRST
BAPTIST ,
&lt;::: Dov1d Mann , m.n •sle r Wtl l1om
. Watson , Sunday school sup! Sun
' day sc hool , 9 30 o .m , mornmg
' wors h•p 10 30 o m

1:!

FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST 282
: Mulberry Ave .. Pom eroy Paul J
' :ll,/h1te, Pastor. Gory Ba sham , Sun
;, day schoo l supt Sunday school,
9 30 a m
mo rn tng worshtp
10 30 evemng wors htp , b 30 p m
M tdwee~ prayer serv1ce, 7 30

pm

MIDWAY COMMUN ITY CENTER ,

De~~: fe r Rd

Lo ng s'v tll e O ht o Rev
Clyde Ferrell . Pasto r
Sunday
School
11
a m
Sa turda y
preochmg serv tces 7 30 p m .
1Wednesdoy even m g 8 tb1e study
ot 730p m

FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH,
,Bod ey Run Rood , Rev Emme tt
Row son , pastor Handley Dunn ,
su p! Sunday school. lOam Sun
da y even tng se r vtce 7 30 Btble
teoch 119 7 30 p m Thursday
D Y t SIJ I LLE
CO MMUN I TY
CHUR "'H • oger C Turne r pastor
Sun da 1 " ' oal 9 30 o m Sunday
morm ng wo rshtp , 10 30, Sunday
eve ntng se rvtce , 7 •30.

MIDDlEPORT
MIDDl EPORT CHUR CH OF
CHRIST IN CHRISTIAN UNION
Lawrence Manl ey, pastor. Mrs
Ru ss e ll Young , Sunday School
Supt Sunda y School 9 30 a m
Even•ng wo rsh tp 7 30 Wedn es day p ra yer meettng , 7 30 p m .

MT MOR IAH CHU RCH OF GOD ,
Ra cmeRev
W
H
Lyk ins ,
pastor Mornrng wors h tp 9' 45
am . Sunday sc ho ol 10 4$5 o .m .
evemngworsh1p, 7 Tuesday , 7 30
p m
lod• es prayer m eet tng .
Wed nesday 7 30 p m YPE

MIDDlEPORT

FIRST BAPTIST

Corner Sod h and Palmer. the Rev
Ktrby O tler,
pa sto r
Robert
Porker, supenntendent Sunday ,
WMPO Rodt o p rog ram 7 .aS o m
Sunday Sc hoo l 9· 15 a m . Morn
.ng Wor sh tp , 10 15 o .m Youth oc
t1vtt1es and fell owsh ip fo r jUntor
and semo r htgh st ud e nts b p m
Sun day even tng worsh 1p 7 30
p m Mtd· week prayer se rvt ces .
Wednesday . 7 30 p m

CH URCH

OF

CHRIST

M;d.

/ dleport , Sth and Ma1n Geor ge
\ Glaze . m 1n1s ter M tkc Gerlach
l supe nntendent
Terry Yankey
- yo uth mtnt ster 81bl e schoo l , 9 30
a m , mar nmg wors h•p 10 30
l om .. evemng wo r shtp , 7 .30
prayer se rvtce . 7 p m Wednes -

ll

day
MIDDlEPORT CH URCH OF THE
\
1NA.ZARENE

Rev Jtm Br oome
' pa st or . B•ll Wh1t e Sunday sc hoo l
su p ! Sunday school , 9 JO a ..., .
' mo rntng wo rshi p , 1030 om
Sunday evo ngeltsl•c meetmg,
7 00 p .m
Prayer meeltng,
t Wedn es day ,
7
p m.

!

'

I

UN ITE D PRE S BYTERIA~
MINISTRY OF MEIGS COUNTY
Dwight L Zovitz dt rec tor.

\

HARR ISO NVIllE

' PRE SBYTER IAN ,
Rev . Erne st
, Stnckltn , pastor Sunday chu rc h
school. 9 30 o m , Mrs Homer
r lee
supt , morntng worship

10

3()_

•

MIDDLEPORT, Sunday sc hoo l
9 ·30 a .m , R ~ehord Vaughan, supt
,, M ormngworsh tp , 10 30
' SYRACUSE, Morning wors htp, 9
··a m Sunday schoo l. lO a .m . Mrs .
I J. ~ sompson Hall , su pt

RUTlAND CHURCH OF GOD.
Rev Bobby Porter, pastor Sun·
day school. 10 a m .. Sunday wo r -

Church &amp; Office Supplies
GIFTS

NEW YORK
CLOTHING HOUSE

Middleport

KERMIT'S KORNER
Pomeroy, Ohio

These Messages

We Fl ll Doctors'
PrescriptiCHJ s
992-2955
Pomeroy

ELLIS &amp; SONS SOHIO
Complete
Automotive

Service

_,_,____y"' -

~

GREAT

FRIENDS, NOW
-TONIGHT
THEY'VE GONE
TO A D ISCO
TOGETHER. ''

DANGEROUS

Are Sponsored Each Week By The Following:

'FRIENDS! '•

Pomeroy, Ohio

"

RIDENOUR SUPPLY

....,

FURNITURE &amp; HARDWARE
Homelllt Sows

. o---:-1&gt;

Pll. tas.uoa

Chester

ROSEBERRY'S
PENNZOIL

·Chester

' CAP!'AIN EASY
tlOLD I~ ROCKY!

1hirlpool

NO~ODY LIVI'-J "
AROUND HERE
WOULD OWN A
CRUMMY OLD
PICKUP elK&amp;
THAT!

'5MATTE~.

~TOP THE CAR!

MR. VOLTA 1 ••.
SUMTHIN FI,HY
Ai!&gt;OUT THAr

APPUANCE II

PICKUP~

Sllet·~•vice-AccetiOrl"
220 E. Main St.

• Rev Jam es Cor bt t t
POMEROY , wo r sh tp servt ce,
9 15 o m Sund ay schoo l 10 30
a m
Rev
Robe rt
McGee
mtn rsle r
ENTERPfH St:: , Wo rs h1p q a .m
Church SchoollO om
ROCK SPH INGS Warsh tp 10
am Church School 9 15a m .
UMYF630pm
FLATWOODS Wor sh•p l I am .
Ch urch Schoo llO o m

CHiiCI&lt;! 50ME ·
ONS DROVS IT
HERE AND TRIE D
T"PARK IT WHERE
IT WOUL D~'T ~E
TOO NOTI CEA!LE!

!&gt;OC:.C:.S SPOKE OF TWO GUYS
M4KIN ' TROU~ LE ... MAYBE HE
WAS TRY IN" T' WARN ME
WHEN HE US ED MY NAME:
OVER TH!i PHOt-IJ;

'IO U WANT
US TO COME
WI T.H YOU•

MR. VOLTA

FOOD MARKET
The Store
With A Heart
Racine
Ph. "9·2626

MI DDlE PO RT ClUSTfR

P. J. PAULEY,

2 CCHJvenient
Markets

Re" Roberl Bumgarn er
HE ATH
Robert
Bumgarne r ,
Pa stor
Wor sht p 10 30 o m
Church Sc hool 9 30 a m UMYF 6
pm
Rutland-Salem Cen l er Charge
RUTLAND W1lbur Htlt, Pasto r
Wor sh tp 10 30 a m Chur ch Sc hoo l
9 30a m
SA LEM CEN Tt::R, Church Sc hool
9 4S a m worshtp9o m

AGENT

Midway Market
Bob's Market

••• LET 'S SEE Wf.IAT

oW REST 01" IT

Nationwide Ins. Co.
of Columbus, 0.
to4W. Main
992·2311 Pomeroy

Pomeroy 992·2512
Mason 773-5721

~OOKS LIKE!

Cl USHR

Rev Har vey Koch Jr
ASB URY
Wo rs htp 11 a m
Church Sc hool 9 50 o m UMW
f trsl Tuesday B~b le Study lhur s
7 30 p m
FORE ST RUN Wor shtp 9 o m
Chur ch Sc hoo llO a m
MINERSVILLE Worsh1p 10 a m
Chur ch Sc hool 9 am
SYRACUSE Church Sc hool 9 00
o m Worsh tp servt ce 7 30 p m

Fulton·

Tractor Sales, Inc.

STRONG HANDS OF PRAYER

SOUTHERN ClUSTER
Rev Dovtd Horns
Cl uste r lead er
Rev Steven Wtlson
Floren ce Sm1 th
Htl ton Wolle
As soCiate s
SUHANY (Dorcas) Wo rshtp
9 00 o .m Chur ch Sc hool 10 00

I

Services

CARMEL , Chruch Schoql 9 30
om. Worshtp 10 30om 2n d and
4th Sundays
APPLE GROVE , Su nda y Schoo l
9 30 a m Worshtp 7 30 p m lsi
and 3rd Su nday s Prayer meetmg
Wednesday 7 30 p m Fellowsh•p
supper f•r st Sofurdoy 6 p m UMW
2nd Tu esday 7 30 p m
EAST LET ART Chruc h Schoo l 9
am Worsh tp serviCe 10 o .m
Prayer' m eett n g 7 30 p . m
Wednesday UMW f trsl Tuesday
7 30p m
RACINI: WI:SLEYAN - Sunday
school 10 om worshtp 11 am
Chotr practtce , Thursday , 8 p m .
LETART fALLS- Church School
10 c m Worsh tp servtce q o m .
MORNING STAH , Worsh tp 9 30
om . Church School 10 30 a. m .
Mtd-Week Se rv•ce Wednesday 8

pm
MORSE CHAPEL Wor sh p 11
a m , Church School 9 30 a.m
PORTlAND Worsh1p 7 30 p m ,
Church Sc hool9 30 o .m
SUTTON Chu rch School 9 ·30
a m Worshtp I sf and 3rd Sunday s
10 30 a .m

NORTHEAST ClUSTfR
Rev Rt ch ord W Thomas

214 E. Main
992·5130 Pomeroy

History documents the c onfusion
and futility thai h ave marked man·
kind 's efforts to solve problems without God . When we have chosen to
struggle alone-{] lon e we have strug·
1
gled .

WAID CROSS
SONS STORE
GrocerieSGeneral Merchandise
Racine 949-2550

•

It is not weakness then, but wis·

CHUR CH

OF

CHRIST, Mr Dona ld Roley , pastor
Sunday sc hoo l. q 3\J om , wo 1
sh 1p serv•ce. 10 30 o m ; Sunday
StH VICeS, 1 p .m . yout h group
Wednesday 1 p m
'

VIRGIL B.
TEAFORD SR.

.......
A,
.......
.,

,liND THERt'S
EH?GREAT GODFREY I
IT 'S REAL - WHY,
BUSHELS MORE
IT MUST BE WORlH
AHD EMERAlPS· ·
HALF A Mil liON·-AND 6ARREL5 0 '
DIAMO"OS·--

--- SCHOO~ ··· STORES "' •
FARMS· ·· AHD Al~ RUH

13Y TH' KIDS THEMSELVES···

THEY' RE FROM AN OlD
RoeSERS' CAVE I FOOND
•·• I WANT TO SPEND
IH IT

216 Second
Pomeroy
m-3325

In church 'next Sunday ... and in
the privacy of your own home today
.. . make positive use of the precious
· gift ofprayer.lt will make your hands
s tronger for the tasks at hand.

Dan Thompson Ford, Inc.
GASOLINE ALLEY

461 S. Third, Middleport
992-2196

lar 1n advance.
nota word

I
don't:
think

f'T.:--)---,f,J

You're sweet to
help Papa, Rufus~

to an~one

makes
me feel
ver4
close

I

to LjOU

want

MIKE SWIGER
STATE FARM
INSURANCE

Rufus!

th

Rutladd , 0.

Rl . 1

WHO'S CRAZY NOW!
I WAI'\1 A TOWM "' CUTE
liTTLE HOUSES •._ C~URCH

Cable TV Systems, Inc.

Attend The Church

Grover Photography

WEN UNITED BRETHREN IN
CH RI ST. Elden R Bloke , pastor.
Sur-Joy School 10 a m . Robert

day , 7.30p.m
FEORGANIZED CHURCH OF
•JESUS CHRIST OF lATTER DAY

RePd . supt . Morning sermon , 11
a m Sunda y n tghl s~r v1c es Chri s·
tton End ea vo r 7 :.10 p m
Song
serv tce , 8 p .m , l-lr eochtng t:l 30
p m M td week Prayer mec tmg
Wednes day. 'I p m Roy Adam s
l oy leader
CHUHCH O F Jf ) lb
CHRI \T

~ AINTS ,

Port land Racine Road
Wdltom Roush, posl o • Phy llt s
Stobort, Sunday !:.c hool Supt Sun
day Sc hool , 9 30 om M ornmg
wor'\h i!J
I 0 30 o m , Su nday
ev{&gt;nmg se r vrce 7 p,m Wedn• ~:;·
doy even ing praye r !i erv •cE's I :.o
I m
I

BROWN'S
FIRE &amp; SAFETY

Of Your Choice

PIZZA SHACK

MARK V STORE
Middleport

Eallnor
Carry Out
T26 E. Main
m-t304

job.

sir'

Equipment
Sole.. Service
Fire Exttnguishers
Flro Oopt. Equip.
Rutl&lt;tnd 7••-nn

This SundRy

143 S. Third
Middioport
992-7155

Pasto r
Duane Sydenst n cker
John W Dougla s
915-4155
Cha rles Domigon
Chester. Ohio 45120
A ssoctotes
JOPPA
Wor sh1p 9.00 a .m
Ch urch Sc hool 10·00 o m
CHE STER , Worsh ip 9 a m
Ch urch Sc hool 10 om. 81bl e
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST , Rev Earl Located at Rutland on New L• mo
Study Wednesdays , 7 30 p m. Shuler , pastor Sunday sc hoo l Road , nex t to Forest Acre Pork ,
(Communron f~rst Sunday ea ch
9 30 a m Chu rch serviCe, 7 p m , Rev Ray Rouse , pa stor Robe rt
mon1h)
yo uth meeting b p m Tu es day B•· Musser Sunday Schoo l sup! Sun LONG BOTTOM Sunday Sch ool
ble Study 7 p.m
dey sc hool 10 30 o m. wo rshtp
at ? 30 a m • Evenmg Wor sh1p ot
RACINE CHURCH OF THE 7 30 p m ~1bl e Study , W ed ne!&gt;
7 30 p m . Th ursday 81ble Study , NAZA~ENE . Rev John A Cofl
day 7 30 p m , Saturday ntght
7 30 p m
man pa sto r franklin Imboden
praye r serviCe 7 30 p m
REE DSVILLE Sunday School q 30 chotrmon of the Boord ol Chr ts
HEMlOCK GROV~ CHR ISTIAN
o m M crmng Wors hip 10 30 o m
!ton Ltfe Sunday Sc hool 9 30 Roger Watson pastor . Kenn eth
Evenm g Worshp 7 30 p m 1:5tb le om , morn mg worshtp, 10·30
1:5yer, Sunday schoo l supt M orn
St udy Wednesday s at 7·30 p m .
Sunday evemng worship 7 30 tng wo rshr p , 9 30 .om ., Sun
ALFRED . Sunday School ot 9 45 p m Prayer meetmg Wedne ~
doy sc hool , 10 30 am , e ven•ng
a m M orn ing Worsh1p at 11 o m
d ay 7 30 p .m
se r vtce 7 30 Wednesd ay Btble
Wednesday
Ntg h t
Pra yer
RACI NI:: FIRST BAPTIS T Don L
St udy . 7 JO p m
Meet•ng, 7 30 p m
Wa lke r Pa stor , Ronnte Sa lser
MT
UNI O N , BAPTI ST, Don
ST. PAUL , (Tupper s Plotns )
Sunday sc hool supt
Sunday Wil so n ,
Sunday
sc h oo l
Sund oy School 9 00 a m Mor ning sc hoo l, 9 30 o m mornmg wor
su pe rm tendent Sunday school
Worsh tp at 10 00 o m Monday sh1p 10 40 a .m .. Sunday eve nt ng 9 45 am .. eve n tng worshtp 7 30
N tght 81ble Study 7 30 p m
wor shtp, 7 30 . Wedne sday even
p m . Prayer meeflng 7 30 p m
Um ted Method1st Women , second tng Btbl e study , 7 30
Wednesday
Wednesday of eac h month , I 30
DANVIllE WESLE YAN Rev R
TU PPfR S PlAINS CHR ISTIAN
p m
0 Brown pa sto r . Sunday School
CHURCH . Eugene Unde rwood
SOUTH BETHEL (S1Iver Rtdge )
9 30 o m , mo rnmg worsh 1p pa sto r . Howard Ca ld we ll , Jr
Sunday Schoo l 9 00 a m Mormng 10 45 yo uth se rvtce, b -4 5 p m.
Sunday School Supt
Sunday
Woshrp 10 00 o m Wednesday Bt· eventng worsh1p
7 30 p m
Sc hool , 9 30 a m , Mo rmng Ser
bl e Slu dy 7 30 p m
prayer ond pro• se Wednesday
man 10 30om . Sunday evemng
TUPP ERS PLAINS , Wor sh1p 9 7 30 p.m
ser vtc e . 7 p .m
a m Church Sc hool 10 a m
S IL V~ R RUN FREE BAP TIST, Rev
LETART
FAllS
UNI TED
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST, ser · Morv m Markm pastor , Steve l•t
1:5RETHREN , Rev Free land Noms,
v tces eac h Sunday 9 30 o m
ti e Sunday sc hool su pt Sunday past or , Floy d N o m s, sup! Sunday
George Prc ken s
pa sl or w1th sc hool 10 o m .. mornmg wor
sc hool 9·30 a m. mormng ser
preochtng on f~r st and th~rd Sun
sh 1p, 11 a.m . Su nday evenmg man , 10 30 o.m , Prayer se rvtce,
day of month Oli ve r Swotn , Su p!
wor~h tp
7 30. Prayer m ee tt ng Wednesday , 7 30 p m
HO BSON CHRISTI AN UNION
and Btble study Thur sday 7 30
CHE STER CH URCH OF THE
Rev Ketth Eblm pas tor Sunday p m youlh se rv tce 6 p m Sun
NAZARENE Rev He rbe rt Grate
Sc hool
9 ·30
o m
Leonard day .
pastor Wo (shtp, se r vtce , 11 o m
Gilmo re flf st e lde r eve nmg ser CHESTER CHURCH OF GOD, and 7 30 p m Sunday . Su nday
v •ce 7·30 p .m . Wednesday prayer Re" Donny R Cook po ~t or Su n- School 9 30 a m R1 chord Borton ,
meetmg 7 30 p m
day sc hool 9 30 a .m
wors htp sup ! Prayer meeting WednesBEARWAllOW RIDGE CHUR CH se rviCe I I a m . evemng se rviCe , day 7 30 p. m
OF CHRIST, Duane Worden , 7 00, you th serv1ce . Wednesd ay,
BRADFORD
CHUR CH OF
mmt ster Btble class . 9 30 om .. 7 00pm
CHRIST , Gobrtel Mzrs pa sto r Bt·
mormng worsh1p 10 30 am
l AN GSVIl l E
CHR IST IAN ble Sunday Sc hoo l 9 30 o m moreven tn g w orsht p , 6 30 p m
CHURCH Hobert Musser pas tor
ntng church 10 30 o .m , Su nday
Wednesday Btbl e study . b 30 p m
Sunday sc hoo l. q 30 o m
Roy even1ng
serviCe, 7 00 p m
Nf W STIVERSVIllE COMMUNI- Stgm on , supt mornmg worsh1p , W ednesday se rviC e , 1 30 p m
TY Ch urch , Sun day Sc hool ~e r ­ 10 30 ' undoy ev entng serv •ce ,
lAUREl CliF F FR EE METHODIST
vtce , 9 45 am Worsh1p se rvtce , 7 JO m• d- week servtce Wednes· CHURCH Rev Floyd F. Shook
lO 30 Ev a ngelis t iC ServiCe 7 30 doy , 7 pm .
pa stor
lloyd Wr.ght , Sund ay
p m
Wednesday ,
Prayer
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE Scho o l Supt .. M ormng Worshtp
m eet1ng, 7 30
NAZARI:NE , Rev
Dole Boss, 9 30 o m . Su.ndoy Sc hoo l 10 20
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST, pa ~ t or
Bob M oore , Sunday o m Wednesday Prayer and B•Po m e roy Ho rr~ sonv lll e
Rd .. Sc hoo l supt ., Sunday school. 9 ,30 b le Study 7 30 p m., SJndoy evenRobe rt
Pur te ll
pasto r
Btl l o m
mornmg worship , 10 -45 Ing worshtp 7 30 p m , Cho1 r Prac
McElr oy, Sun day sc hool supt . Sun - a m evangelist ic se rviCe , 7 p m . lice Thursday 7 p m
day sc hool , 9 30 om morn rng Wednesda y serviCes prayer
DfX TER CHURCH OF CHRIST
worsh •p and com munt on 10 30 and pra ise 7 p m
Na zarene Charles Ru sse ll Sr
m tmsler
a m Sunday worsh•p serv •ce 7 yout h 7 p. m
Do•ly prayer Rtc k Mac ombe r , supt Su nday
p m Wednesday evenmg prayer mee ttng , 8 30 a .m . Men 's proyf!'r school. 9 30 o m . wors htp sermee ttng and Bible study , 7 p .m
mee ttng Sotur~ay , 7 p m
VICe \0 30 0 m s.bl e Study Tues·
Pine Grove lhe Rev . Wtlliom
M iddlesworth . Pa stor . Ch urch
serv•ces 9·30 a.m . Sunday School
l030om .

New Holland
Form Machinery
Ave.m5T01

WILl'S LOCK &amp; KEY
SERVICE

Let us capture the story
of your Wedding .

ST JO HN lUTHERAN CHURC H

Deutz Troctors.

dom, which inspires prayer. Those
disciples of Jesus who were destined
to share their faith With men of all
nations and times asked very simply:
"Lord, teach us to pray."

A man's hands grow stronger when
he clasps them reverently in prayer.
seeking the power and love of God .

Insurance

am

BRADB URY

SHE AND
LIZZ ARE

I HAVE
SOME

POMEROY ClUSTER

SY R AC U S~

J06 .

Of Our Religious Heritage

Roy Riggs
St. RI.7

9-The Daily Sentinel. Middleporl·Pumeruy, 0 ., Friday, Nuv . 10, i978
··DICK TRACY

This Sunday

LOcust &amp; heel!
992-9921

RIGGS USED CARS, INC.
- -~-

-•'

Attend the Oturch
of Your Choice

D ~r ector

POMEROY CHUR CH OF CHR IS T
2 12 W Mo tn StJohn McArthur ,
pastor , Btble school, 9 30 om ,
mormng worship
10 30 a m
Yout h meetings 6 30 p m even·
1ng w o rship, 7·30 Wednesday
ntght prayer meettng and Btble
study 7 30 p m

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY

Mt:THODIST CHU HCH
l&lt;ober t T Bumgarner

po n sh house tollowmg

tn

John F. Fultr, Mtr.
Ph. 992-2101
Pomeroy

COOPERATM PARISH

Coffee

MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE

®
•
I

WINNIE

YOUNG'S
CARPETING

• WELL,GARY:'s BACK WITH HI&amp; WIF5,
13ACK ON TH E JOB/ AND ATTENDING
GAMBLERS ANONYMOUS
·
REGULARLY.

I. CAN SOLVE E VERYONE~
PROBLeM&amp; BUT MY ONN
WHEN AM I 601N61D
FIND &amp;OMEONE
I. CAN LOVE?

AND BIRDIE WAS
RIGHT. WHeRE
DOES THAT
LEAVE !v\E?

•SO 15.~RY FAGIN

WENT BACK
WITH HIS
WI FE, EH?

THE Y WERE
REMARRIED
YEBTERPAY.

HOWS

IF SHES HEART-

WINNIE
TAKI N'

BROKEN &amp;H::5

IT ?

MI6HW WELL!

tjiDIN IT

I.V\YBEI OUG HT TO
LOOK AROUND 5EE
IF ICAN COME UP WITH SOME
ELIGIBLE BACHELORS&gt; PJR HER

THE ONLY ELIGIBLE

BACHELOR&amp; YOU KNOW
AREN 'T INTERESTED IN
GETTIN ' I.'ARRIED..
THEY'RE INTERESTED
IN !7RAWIN 1 TrlEIR

NEXT BREATt-1 I
BHHLEHEM BAI-ITIS T, Rev. Earl
Shu ler pastor Worsh tp serviCe
9 :JO a m Sun day ~chool 10 30
a m Eltble Study and pray er se r
vtce Thursday , 7 30 p .m
CARLETON CHURCH. Kmgsbury
Rood G ary Ktng , pastor Sunday
schoo l 9 30 o m
Rolph Carl ,
supenn tend en t evem ng worsh1p
I 30 p m
Pr ay e r m eell ng
Wednesd ay , 7 30 p m.

l O NG

BOTTOM

CHRISTIAN

Bru ce Smtih
pasto r Wallace 1
Damewood, Su pt. B•ble School
9 30 o m
Pre achmg serviCe
10 45 a m No e venmgserv~ee .

HYSE ll RUN FREE METHODIST

musrc

SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF

MASO N ASSEMBlY OF GOD. GOO - Not Pentecolfol , Rev .
Duddmg lone . Mason. W Va. George Oiler , pester. Worship
Chester Tennant, Pastor . Sunday servtce Sunday. 9 ..s a .m ., Sun·
School 9 45 om . Children' s day school, 11 a .m .. warship serChurch 6 45 p m Young People' s vice 7 30 p.m . Thursday prayer
Servtce 6 ·45 p.m. Evangelistic meetmg , 7:30p.m .
ServiCe 7 30 p m . Women' s Mis·
MT. HERMON Untted Bret,ren
s1ona ry Council 10 a.m . first and Cnu"H Sunday Schaal 9 30 o m.
thtrd Tuesdays . Prayer and. Btble
Study. Wednesday , 7 30p m

HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHR IST
IN CHRISTIAN UNION, The Rev.
Wtlliom Campbell , pas tor. Sundoy
Schoo l. 9 30 o m , James Hughes,
sup! , eventng servtce 7.30 p m .
Wednesday
evenmg
prayer
meetmg, 7 30 p .m Youth prayer
se rvtce each Tuesday

CHURCH Rev Herbert Ailing
pastor Sunday Sc hool 9 30 o m 1
FAIRVIEW BIBlE CHURCH ,
Morn tng serviCe, 10 30 am ,
letart . W. Va .. Rt. I . Rev Charles
Evangelis t iC ~erv ~ee 7 30 p m
Prayer meeting Wednesday , 7 30 Hargraves, pastor . Worsh1p serVICes , 9 30 a .m .. Sunday school ,
pm
FREEDOM GOSPEl MISS ION al II o m , evening worsh ip , 7 30
Bold Knob
Re v
lawrence p.m. Tuesday cottage prayer
Gl uesencom p Sr , pastor Roger meeltng and - B1ble study, 9 30
am . Worsh1p serviCe , WednesWtlltord Sr . Sunday school supt
Sund ay school 9 30 a evenmg day, 7 30p m .
CAl VARY BIBlE CHURCH . now
w o r sh ip
7 30
p .m . Prayer
located on Pomeroy Pike , County
m ee ttn ~ Wed nesday 7 30 p m
Ro od 25 , near Flatwoods Rev .
You th 1.. eeling Sunday , 5 30 p m
wt!h Don a nd Martha Meado ws tn 1:51ockwood , pastor. Services on
Sunday at l 0 ·30 a m. and 1 30
char ge.
WH ITE' S CHAPEL Cool v1 lle RD . p m wtlh Sunday school , 9 30
Rev Roy Dee ter pa stor Sunday a .m . Btble study Wednesday.
7·30 p m
sc hoo l 9 30 a m ; worshtp serv1ce
INDEPENDoNT HOLINESS
lO 30 a m 1:5tble study and prayer
CHURCH , INC. - Pearl SJ , Mid se r vtce , Wednesday 7 30 p m .
dleport
Re v. 0 Dell Manley ,
RU TlAND
RUTlAND CH UR CH OF C\-tRIST, pastor, Sonny Hudson, SUnday
school supt. Sunday school , 9·30
lorry Co leman , ' pastor , Co Su n
day sc hool supts ., Sc m McK1nney am , evening wor sh ip , 7 30 p m .
pratse
service,
ond He rb Ell rtt Sunday schoo l and Prayer and
co mmunion 9 30 a m Worsh1p Wednesday , 7:30pm.
THE PEOPLE 'S CHURCH OF
and co mun ton , 10 30 am
RUTlAND
COMMUNITY POMEROY - Corner Main and
CHUf.I CH, Sunday School 9 30 Court Sts ., third floor over
o m , wo rshtp se rvtce, 11 o m , ltghthouse Restaurant . Henry
Wedn es day prayer meelmg, 7 30 Cook , postor . Sunday school, 10
p m youth ser v iCeS, Sunday. 7 a .m .: morning worship , 11 om ,
evening ~!! rvtce . 7·30 Wednes ·
p n • · Sunday mght wo rshtp, 7 30 .
RUTlAND CHURCH OF THE day evening service, 7:30 ln NAZAR ENE, Rev . lloyd 0 Gnmm, terdenominottonol , full gospel .
RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOO Jr
pa stor Sunday school 9 :30
o m ., wo rship ser v ice, 10 30 a .m. Pastor Dennis Bales . Sunday
Elroodcosl live over WMI'O, young School. 10 a.m.: worship service,
ll ·lO om. ond 7 30 p .m. Prayer
peop le s
ser vtc e .
7 p m
Evonge hsttc serviCe 7 30 p m . meeting, Wttdnesdoy, 7·30 p.m .
RUTLAND APOSTOLIC CHURCH
Wedn es day se rv•ce, 7 30 p m.

M"'SON COUNTY
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST, ( a,.
ner ol Se&lt;.on d and Anderson ,
Ma son Pastor Frank Lowth er.
Sunday sc hoo l 9 45 a.m . wor'&gt; htp serv tc e 11 a m and 7 30
p m . W eekl y Bt ble Study ,
Wednesday , 7 30 p m

MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST, P
U !il ,• 49 1 Mil ler St Mason . W
\. a ~ u ndoy Bib le St udy 10 am ,
Worsh tp ! I o m and l ;&gt; m Bibl e
SltJtiy VJt'dnes day i r&gt; m Voc~ JI

OF JESUS CHRIST, Elder James
Miller. 81ble study Wednesday ,
7:30p.m. Sunday School , 10 am
Sunday night service, 7 lO p .m .

POMEROY

WESLEYAN

HOLINESS - Homsanville Road ,
Dewey Ktng , pallor: Edtson
Weaver onistont. Henry Eblin,
Jr , Sunday school supt Sunday
school. 9 30 a .m .. morning wor·
shtp, 11 a.m . Sunday Pvenmg service 7 30. prayer meeting. Tl'lun·
d o~ 7 30pm

Middlesworth , Pastor. Sunday
School at 9 ·415 am. ond Church
Services 11 a m .
SACRED HEART . Rev Father
Paul D. Welton , pastor . Phone
992-2825 . Saturday Gvening Moss ,
7 30. Sunday Mon. 8 and 10 a.m .,
Confession , Saturday . 7-7 30 p.m

VICTORY BAPTIST -

On the

Worshtp
serv1ce
10 .-45 a .m . Route 7 bypass. James E. Keesee ,
Preachmg strvtces every Sunday pastor Sunday school , 10 a .m . ,
alternating w tth C . E. Wednesday morning worship 11 am , evenprayer meeting 7 30 p m. Rev.
ing service. 7.
Jomes Leach , pastor
Davi d
TRINITY Chrtsttan Assembly
Holter , lay leader
Coolville Gtlbert Spencer ,
JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES , 1 mile pastor Sunday school. 9 30 a.m .
east ol Rutland , junction of Route morning wonhip , 11 o m Sunday
124 and Noble Summit Rood (T- eventng
service . 7 30 p.m
17,.) Sunday Bible lecture. 9.30 midweek prayer se rVt ce Wednes
a .: Watchtower study , 10:30 day , 7·30p m
om. Tuesday , Bible study, 7 and
MOUNT Olive Community
8 .1S p.m .: Thursday theocretic Church . long Bottom . lawrence
school
7 30 p.m .: aervice Bush , pastor , Bethe Pigott. Sun·
meeting, 8.30 p .m .
day school supt. Sunday SchooiiO
HOPE BAPTIST - 570Gront St . , om Youth group and prayer
Middleport. Bobby Elkins, pastor . meetings Wednesday 7 30 p.m
Sunday School , lO a.m. worthip Church serl,.icea Sunday 7:30p .m.
service 11 o.m.; eventng servtce.
FAITH BAPTIST Church , Mason ,
7 ·30 p m . Thursday prayer · meet at United Steel Workers
mee!lng and B1bte study, 7 30 Union Hall, Railroad Street ,
p m.
Mason. Pastor. Rev . Joy Mitchell
RUTLAND FREEWILL BAPTIST Morn1ng worship 9·45 a .m. , Sun ·
Church - leland Haley, pastor . doy School 10.30 9 .m . Prayer
Sunday school, 10 a.m.: evening meeting Wednesday , 7 30 p m .
service,
7 :30
p m
Prayer
FOREST RUN BAPTIST - Rev
meeting, Wednesday , 7 30p.m.
Nyle Borden, poster. Cornelius
CHURCH OF GOD of Prophecy , Bunch, ~ superintendent . Sunday
located on the 0 . J . White Rood school, 9 30 a m
second and
off highway l60 Sunday School fourth Sundays worshtp servtce ot
10 a .m . Superintendent John 2 30 p.m.
Loveday . First Wednesday night
of month CPMA aervlctt, second
Wednesdor WMB mNting, third
In 1917, 41 wcmen from 15
through
ifth youth service
were BJTested outside
George Croyle, pastor.

states

HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEl -

S70

Grant St ., Middleport; Rev . Bobby
Elkins Sunday school , 10 a m .;
morning warship . ' ll , eve:ning
worship , 7:30 p .m .. Thurtday
ev•nlng Bible atudy end prayer
mGeting , 7:30p.m . Affiliated with

the

White

House for
suffragette demonatratlms.
American women woo tbe
rilbt to vote three years

school , 9"30 a .m ., morning wor·
ship, 10·30, •v•nlng Mrvlce, 7 ,30,
Prover mNtlrig Wednesday. 7:30

pm.

ST. PAUl lUTHERAN CHURCH.
Corner of Sycamore ond SKond
Sts Po meroy. The M•v. Wilham

A lboughl lor the day:
Martin Lutba' said, "Tbete Ia
no more lovely, friendly and
charming

relationship,

COOIIIIUIIiGn or company than
a good marriage."

Friday, Nov. 10

.r.• o -reL.\. You

~~~-- WHil,. ICIIVP OF Dl'rf
% HI\D,

Jvr ,::

DON•.,. WI\N'r 'fo HEI\Jl

ftBOUT tr

ACW\IN.

The Alamanac
Martm LUtner, founder of
Unlled Press loternatlooal
Protestantism , was born
Today is Fnday , Nov. 10, - Nov_ 10, 1483. This is actor
the 314th day of 1978 witll51 to Richard Burton's 53rd
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag
follow .
buthday.
The moon is between its
On tllis day in hiatory:
f1rst quarter and Eull phase.
In 1871, journalist Henry
The morning sta r s are Stanley found missing
ers frnessed the queen un· Venus, Jupiter and Saturn. Scottish missiooary David
successfully and won the
The evening stars are Mars Livingstone in a small
11-iO
NORTH
spade return. Others rose and Mercury.
Mrican village and asked :
• 8 54
with the ace right away.
Those
born
on
tllis
date
are
" Dr .
Livingstone,
I
.. Q 10 8
All went after diamonds. A
under
the
SJgn
of
Scorpio.
preswne
?"
+ A7542
diamond to the ace , ruff a
+K7
diamond, trump to the eight,
EAST
ruff a diamond, trump to the
WEST
+ J 10 9
10 ruff a diamond, trump to
+ K 762
N} \li)'\l ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
th~ queen and discard the
•&amp;3
•5
+ K Q 10 9
three of spades on dwnmy 's ~
~~~L!l ®
by Henn Arnold and Bob Lee
• 863
+A Q 9 3
• 10 8 6 52
last diamond.
Then what happened to Unscramble these four Jumbles,
SOUTH
one letter to each square, to torm
our
unfortunate friend?
+ AQ3
lour ordmary words
Against
him
East
did
•AKJI11!
some high-powered think·
• J
ing. He saw that there was
• J 4
no hurry about the spade
Vulnerable: Both
play and that all dwnrny_'s
possible entries were tn
Dealer: South
trumps. So at trick three he
Soulb
North
East
West
led his three of
simply
1•
trum;rs-•
This simple play
Pass
4•
Pass 2•
kille one of dummy's reen·
Pass Pass Pass
tries . There was no way to
set up that fifth diamond and
South was doomed to defeat.
Opening lead : + 5
WHA'T 'THE

BRIDGE

Admirable defense scores

l.!J1

BORN LOSER

HE' PATS IIJ'51A).)T OATME'f&gt;.!.
AIJD D!&lt;IIJK'? I~Am COFFB£'
FOR ~FASf, &lt;;;~t;D­
Rf3ADS 1\-1~ MORI.lltJfa

P/\Pf3R 01-.l Th~ BXPR695

0
0

BUS Ai-JD STIU.. C.»l'T
MA.~ IT TO ltl(:; afla

\KOBORl

BY 1-.ln-l~!

later.

In 1919, the American
S.B C.
Leglorl beld Ill first national
BRADFORD
CHURCH
OF convention In Mlnneapolla.
CHRIST- Gabriel Mroz. pastor.
In 1975, dellplte strong U.S.
Sunday achoof. 9 :30 a .m .: morn·
United
ing church, 10.30 a .m . Junior opposition, · the
church program under direction · Natlllna General AJaembly
of Koren Mro1 for children . 2· 10, adopted an Arab-Inspired
during regular church hour 1n
church basement. Sunday even- ~utlon deflnlnl7lonilrn In
ing serYICe, 1 p .m ., Wedn•sdoy !be Middle Eut as a form of
••rvlce, 7.30 p .m .
racllm.
JU~IlEE CHRISTIAN CENTER G~rge 1 CrMk Road. Church

FRANK &amp; ERNIE

I K~

~~~ITRIEHDj

I ! ! (_

BARNEY

DON'T TELL

ME 'IOU BEEN
CHOPPIN'
WOOD!!

NOPE··

TH'ROOF
CAVED IN

By Oswald Jacoby
ud Alaa Soalag
The unlucky expert had
: just finished second m the
! weekly duplicate game and
- as usual has a sad story to
I explain the bad luck that had
l hit him. This time he really
i was unlucky. It seems that
i he was the only deciarer to
j" ' go down at four hearts.
The five of clubs was the
standard lead. East cashed
two clubs and shifted to the
jack of spades. Some declar-

.
kd
We keep gettrng as e
when we must declare hon· ,...,,..-~-=~:-;-;-,!
ors In rubber bridge.
In theory , you can declare
V:
them any time before the
rubber has been scored- In .
~ ~
_
.
practice, they should be declared as soon as the band is
finished so that the claim
may be substantiated.

II

OERMA101.061ST~
&amp;E.HAVIO~ WA6, 'TO

e&gt;A"f 'THE LEA5"T.

IGALEGH
I
I \

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN l

(For a copy of JACOBY MOD·
ERN, send Sl ro. 'Win ar
Bndge " care of lhls newspa·
per p'0 Box 489. Radio City
Sta t10n , Aew York. N Y. 10019)

Print answer here:
(AniW8fl tc.norrow)

' Jumbles OIZZV EXUDE FACING BEYOND
Yesterd ay's \
Answer More than an Igloo-won!! Ice loiii~Y

used In Its construction- ED-IF-ICE''

--:--:-

�r-----------------------------~--11 '

10-The Ollily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday , Nov. 10, Jll78

Want Ads Tw-o. Unwanted Items .Into Cash
---

WANT AD
CHARGES
lduy
2da)'li

__

15 Wurtb ur Undl'r
C&lt;tlih . l 'lwn"•·
1.0\1
1.23

3 d~ys

1.50

I 1•1

1.&amp;1

1 25

:u10

6tlays

:17)

f'. ;nh wurd U\'t'l' tlw IIUIHII\Uill l.l
wurtls IIi -1 l~nl.s pt'l' wunl pt•J' d&lt;1 _1 .

All"i

runu lu~

(Ui }'~

Will bt.•

ulht•r tiUlll l'tl!L"it'\' UHn&gt;
l' har~t't l lll tlw I •lo1y

ri:l tt•.

In

lnl' ltlUI)'.

Canl uf Thank:- a111l

UIJHW1ry : 6 t•cnts pt' l' Wl•l'd ,
uunirnum. Ui s~1111 a(lymlw.

S:U~I

MuiJilt• Hum~ salt's and Yard s&lt;~l •· ~
an· t~n~p led only w1th c &lt;~ .s h l o'l\h
on lt•r. 25 ct'nl d1.ii.J'~t· fur atls t' Hrr~·111!-!,

-~~

Rux Numbt'r ln Cure uf The St·• •-

tmt'l .

Tht• Pulllis l~ r rt'!Wn't•s tlw n.:ht
~~~ t: Jit ur rt'je1.:t li llY. 11t!.s d l~ lm· d ulJ..
lt•rtJumtl. The Pubhslwr wtll uul !Jt·
reSI)I)II.Siblt! fur mort' lhan Oltl' lllt'UI'·
n.:l'IH1llt'I11Urt.

Phont'99'l·2156

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES
Montla!&lt;·

Nwr1 onSatunl&lt;~y
Tut'.sda\'

lhru Ftl{ia~·
'I P.M.

Lht' r.lay bt&lt;fol'l' publl&lt;'ation
Sund&lt;~ y

4 r .M

Frili&lt;iy aftt't'llOUil

Notices
NO HUNTING or trespassing on
my properly without permi s·
sion, Judy McGraw .
GUN SHOOT . Racine Gun Club.
Every Sunday 1 pm . Factory
__i ~ok e guns only .
GUN SHOOT , Racine Vo lunteer
Fire Dept . Every Satu rday 0:30
pm at their building in Bo sh on.
Fac tory cho~e guns o~.._lycc__
ARE YOU troubl ed with wild
animals? Fox , mink , racoon ,
opossum , beaver , etc? Call the
trapper, 985 -3984 . Will co ntact
in person for signed permission.

-

- -

- - -

Auto -Sales
- - -

For Rent

:J05 engi ne,
Powe• !&gt; leer mg Pow er b• ak e.!&gt;.
AM -FM radio More ex tras . Colt
l .. :J.2t:l20.

(0\JNJH Y MOBil !: Home Po•k .
Routo 3 ~ . north of Pomeroy.
l o•ge lot!&gt; . Co ii991.-747 Y. •, •

Hel !!_~a!lted__

POSJTlONS A VAILASLE
The Go ll •o-M e •g.s Cornmuntl'tl A c
l oon Age ncy 1S see ktng Op ·
phc ont s lo r rhc lol lowing posi tio ns:

-----

------~--

I ) Co unse lo r Thi s person wil l
be directly respo n!i bl e l or th e
d ay to day co un se li ng o l Cl: TA
Ti tle t Work E)(pe rience l-'1 o ·
g ram p a rt ici porils. . Dut ie s In clude : co o rdi na ting th e hi r in g
and p la ce m en t o f qua l if ied a p -

plic ant s in to m eaningfu l wo • k
ex pe rience st luations. Sal ar y
l o r this pos iti on is $9 .:J98 ,
L) T10in er . The Trainer wil l b e
res pon s1ble

J&lt;rn MON ZA SP YDER

to

the

Tr o imn g

Coo rdirwt o r an d w ill assis t in

the sch ed uling ol tro •ni ng lo r
the CnA Tit le Ill { YU"P ) 1-'ro ·
£ rOm po rl 1c ipon t!&gt; . Salary lo•

th1 s position is $9 . ~ 9 ~ .
3) Tra ining Coord inator (Y(CIP). The Coor dinator will . b e
respon sible l or pro grorn i nr·
plementotion , !&gt;cheduli ng and
coordmoting th e Speci al Titl e Ill
Youth Con ser vation an d Com·
munily Improvemen t Pr ogram.
Knowledge
of Agricultu relh.J5iness
Forestr y Managem e nt
an d
Agri cult u ra l
Chemical Applicati o n~ wou ld
be ben eficial. Sa lary lor thi s
po s1tion is S9 755'.
APpl icants l or the above po si·
ti ons should po ssess a degree
in Psychology . Social Worlo. ,
~du c ati o n . Bus iness Management or othe r related lield !&gt;
Prefer cmnbi no ti on of degr~? e
and re lated work e&gt;eperience .
Applications · fu rther informo
lion i ~ available tram the Ohio
Job s Serv ice Ollices or the
C. A .A. Off ic es in Cheshire at
992 -7000 or 307 -7341 . Moil
resumes to Dav 1d ~ . G loeckne r .
Manpower Director, P.O. Box
272 . Cheshire , Ohio 45620.
lJeodline for Opfi'licotions is
November 27 . 197!l . l He Ga llic Meigs Community Acti on Age n·
cy i~ on Equal Opportu nity
!:mpl oye r . M- F
---·-MATUH~ RESPONSIBLE bobys iller
needed. Prefer someone to live
in. 992-35 11.

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

.
l or

ACCEPTING APPLI CATIONS
full time posilion : Medical
Tran sc riptionist . Experience
necessary Immediate opening
Good tr inge benefits _ Re~ume
or appl ica ti on con be moil ed to
Veterem Memorial Hospi tal .
Box 749 . Mulberry Ht s..
Pomeroy. "Ohio Equa l Op·

_E_c:_r_t~n!ty_ l::: ~p~l o~e_r .

~--_:.F_,o,_,_r. Sa~e__ . __

COAL. LIMI:::STONC, sa nd , gra . . cl .
calcium ch!or1de. fer tili zer . dog
food. and all types o f sal t t:xce lsior Sol! W o r~ s. Inc. . 1: . Ma in
St Porn eroy. 992 -3891
BUHROUGH S SENSI-MA TIC oc
co unting machine . Phohe
t19;l. :J I 5b . The Datly Senti nel.
Ill Court Street. Pon1 e1oy.
Ohio
GRIME S GOLDEN . Red D e l ic i ou~ .
8. Golden Delicious appl es . Fill
porri ck Or chard
SR bt:l9
01 4-b69 -3lH5

J AN O 4 RM
l ulnll. h cd
li'J'l-5434.

-

lum i~ herl

ap b .

and un Ph one

Auction
---·--

•llllt1rrl I""'"'' I . . ,
f O!pe l e d .
C.;-11l ro l 011 . Fu ll
ho~cmen t
wi th firep la ce .
Cndosed sun porc h. l oco l ed on
I:J ', oc reo; neor Rod ne on
bloclo,top 100d . f-' 11Hl $40,000 .
Cm1 forf Lorr y Wolle week day s
alt er /p m, 014-949 ~t:l30.

Ml )l)ii&lt;N

--

REAli::: STAH:: LOAN S. CAN' T FINO
MOIHGAGI::: MONEY 7 We hove
plen ty at co mpetitive rat es.with
tc1ms to 30 yea rs. Ve terens
and non. vcterem. VA 8. FHA
loans ore availabl e. IRHAND
MORl GAGI: CO .. 7l 1:: . Srote
--·
Ph o ne
St
A t h ens
Mobile Homes for
Sale
014 ,59'1 -3051 .
---· - - ·
J&lt;f/6 NA SHUf' 1&lt;1 • b5 3 bed r~ om
I ' , barh . underpinning , $1500
and assu me loon . QJf9 20B3 · or
843-J:J II
~--

AU CTION . f-r i and Sot .. 7pm . l ots
o f ( h, istmos items and other
rn1sr 1tems or Ohio Ri ver Au clton _ 531 High St. . Middleport .
OH

-

--

F!H EWOOD . all hardwood spl it
and delivered. S35 truck load 01
S50 · o cord . 99'1·6295 or

1910 Amhers t SOx 12 2 BR
l 9l0 Chon1pion b(h 12 '} BR
Jqo~ Genera l 00• 12 2 BR
~o:lJ - 2Q:.t3 .
l90BPMC 5:.! x1:.!2BR
lUMP HOUSE co oL $35 Per ton . t 9~5 Prairie Schooner 28x8 I HR
l&lt;/i'3 Royol EmbOS5 y I:Jt:l• ~.4 31:\ R
cosh only . del ivered: 9Q2 -'i' 120.
1959 Star 50•10 2 BR
SIX MONTHS old kid nan·n y goat ~ .
19'lJ Sto r .OO•I 4 'J BR
SJS each 74'1 -2292 .
I'Jbt:l 5tor bO &gt;e 12 'J BR
1470 Sylva bOx l '1 1 BR
fiREWOOO FOH sole. 949-LJSO .
191:J 8 Vi llages (&gt;(j)( 1'12 BR
Al liS (HALMt:H S W•D &lt;1 5 diesel . 19MWindso_r5 1.K 10'1BR
tr ac tor wi th mower . New Idea
1'110 Kirkw ood 12.:b0 J !:IR
corn picker . GM C '1 ton Iarm
B&amp;S MOBIL I:. HOM!: SALES
tr uck Joe Sayre. Rl. 1, Rutland. PT. PL.EASANT , W_VA .
Phone 742-21 JS .
REDU CE SAH and fa st with
GoBese Tablet s 8. 1:: -Vop " water
pill s" . Nel son lJ ~ ug .
21 " MCCUllOUGH chain sow.
t:l43-22b4 .
1964 CI;HVY
992 -60b7 .

PICKUP.

$400 .

SNOW

TIRE SALE
SNOW TIRES
ON SA.LE AT
POMEROY ALNDMARK
SERVICE STATION

Pomeroy Landmark

9 .. ~ck

W. Carsey, Mgr.

. . . . Phone 992 ~2181

:LUIMMIN•

HEATWAVC WOOD burner. Thermos tat ond fan . Coll 992-'lOOI .
NI:W REMINGTON :1006 automatic
wi th Weaver K3 scope and sl ing
, strop . 5 '7 bo.:es shel ls. extra
fan cy wa lnut stock. S3JO. 12 go .
Ithaca pump shot gun . JO" lull
choke. ve nt rib barrel. almost
new . 5200. Real nice ear corn .
~~~p:r E u.: ~h':'n ~ 7_42 - 2~59 .
SHAKESPEARE LONG bow . 45 lb ..
SJO . Qo:l9 -2042.

PART TIME Opportunity available
Auto Sales
for house wife . Needing hours
" 1971 BRONCO 4-wheel dr 1ve.
for interviews. c.a ii949-280J .
$1450 lirm . 992-1054 .
NO HUNTING or tresp assing do~
or night on my property without 1977 AMC PACEH b cyl auto ..
P.S., P . B ~ .
AM -FM stereo
written permis5ion.
cassette . Asking $3200. Call
Carl Findl ing.
992 -0352 befor e 1:30pm or after
SHOTGUN SLUG Match ever y
10:30 10 :30 pm .
FIREWOOD . $30 to $35 a load .
Sunday in November at Isaac ------ -· - . -- - - .
7&lt;12 -2451 .
Walton Farm near Ches ter. 1977 DODGE C H AHG~ H S E . 10.000
miles _ Well
eq ui pped .
lj,m . Hems , tu rk eys , other
CAMPER TOP l or sma ll picku p.
992·2063 .
meats . Shells avoiloble . All
Cxce ll ent · cond ition
$150 .
_ gouges .
1975 MONTE CARL O_ hcel lenl
'142 -21:J92 .
condit ion . Lot s ol e&gt;etro s, $27CKl.
SHOOTING MATCH . Sunday I pm.
1970 HONDA CB. Red, like new .
992·7089 .
Corn Hollow Rood, Rutland .
oWner 45 years old. 950 miles .
Red Eblin's residence .
1971 PL YMOUTH DUSTI:::R , 0 cyl.
992 -759&lt;1 or 'N-2-3&lt;189
""--Standard .
$525
Ph on e
PLASTit BED liner lor pickup
992-3717 .
truck Alter 6, 698 -3809.
197 0 CHR YS LEH CORDOBA .
Lost and Found
Yellow,. with whi te leather in· OE LTA TIRES. Qual ity and performance . On !&gt;o le no....,. .
teri or . loaded. like new .
LOST , STRAYED or ~to l e n .
l4'2-2J2B .
992-2594
or
992-J4H
9.
Miniature mole Schnauzer .
Tnos
co mmun ity .
Call
1~ 0 5 FORD VAN . o cyl. , auto . RUt.INC.TON MODH 31 12 go lull
985·3952 .
choke . Reming to n model 10 12
Irons.. low mileage S400 .
go . lull choke. very good condi ·
742-307
4.
LOST: BORDER collie . brown and
lion. Phone 742·2QJ4 .
white , in langsville area . mole. 1975 CUTLASS 350 engine, auto .
Phone 742-3019 or U2-2571 .
TWO
SWIVH r o c~e r !&gt;. Ru st Sco t·
on tloor , 5wivel bucket5 . air .
chguard
upholstery 14&gt;e22 It .
sha
rp
.
Red
and
wh
ite
.
I
owner.
lOST: BLACK end white female
olive green . Plush wool l ee's
1975 f -250 Fred 4x4, block . 4 Walker in Ra ci ne-Por tland
carpet 2 lamp~ . 949-2M 1 alter
5peed. 14x35 white spo~ e
area . Coll949-2281 or 949 -2129.
Spm
wheel!&gt; . good shape. Phone
LOST: BLACK . brown and wt .
8.43 -2734.
19l 0 FOHD '' ton or 1967 Ford I
mole Woll'! er dog. Fri . Tonne~ · s
ton stok e, dual wheel s. $1000
1972
SCOUT
&lt;l
·wheel
dr
.,
new
Run area , bock of Recine. $20
or best off er. 992 -7050.
tran s. Very good shape . $2300
reward. Don Stobart . 94Q-2342 .
or best aft er . 992-5784.
COONDOG and rabbit dog
•-----LOST: TWO Tree Welker ·coon
Phone 742-21t:l5 .
1907
CUTLASS,
good
condi
t
ion
.
hounds. (femal e dog and mole
$300 or best offer . 992-5784 .
pup). In Chester area . lester
SI:::T OF Q)(/es with tir es. Cool
Porker . 985 -~61 . Reword for 1970 GA LAX IE 500 2-door sedan .
stov e. New rocking choir. I on·
return .
tique rille . I ' ' ton InternaAir condi tion ing. P.5. . P.l:l ., AT
ti onal tr uclo. lor por ts. 1965
Good condi tion inside and out .
Comet station wagon for por ts.
Exc el lent gas mileage. Good
1890 Winchester pump 22 rifle.
lire!. . Must drive to apprecia te
Yard Sale
992 -7330.
_ - ~ ~!~ f ~e__':_s e~ ~9"!.:_~9-s __ ~
IF YOU hove o service to off er . 1969 OLOS CUTLASS CONVI:R
wont to buy or sell something ,
TABL E. P.S. . D.l:l., push button
oe looking lor work . . . or
top control. In dash factory 8whatever . . you'll get results
trock tope player. Good runn ;
fost er with a Sentinel Wont Ad.
PERMANENT
ing Condi ti on . Ca ll after 5pm .
Ca\1992~ 2156
992 -2Q95 .
ANTI·FREEZE
GARAGE SAl!::: . Jo mes Titu s MUST SEl L immediately: 1977 Pin·
Why pay $3.99
residence . Water St .. Syracuse,
to
3door
Runabout
.
lu
ll
bock
two blocks up from park . Next
()ll\_o'~~ o'~&gt;~ ,c..'&lt;gloss . 4 cyl. auto .. air cond .
~oa r to Sam . Arnold _ h i. and
~ q~gal.
3000 m iles . $2JOO . Call
'sot. Nov . 10-11 .
992 -5456.
--~

1' , ACIU . 12 • 60 mobi le home
near Oc xter . 991 -5858 .
19b7 TOTAL ElECT RI C: mobile
hom e. furni shed. 3 bedr ..
wa sher and d ry~r . Air condi ti onyd. 1 lot . :.!10 ft . fr ontag e.
$1 :.1 .000. Phone 741-2H20 .
1972 HOll ¥PARK M081 l t: home . 5
lr . tip out . 05 &gt;e 12. 992 -0031 . 9
til 4 weekday s. alter 4:30
weekends. Ca ii i:J 1&lt;1. -36'l-7150
.
l9i'J ACADEMY 11x60 in good
con dition with furnitu r e and
gas furn ace . Coll l - 9~9 - 2593 .

Real Estate for Sale
J ' , ACRtS IN Pomeroy : Secl uded
wooded area on top of hill .
Overl ook s Ri ver . Wa ter and
elec tric available . 992 -3880.
NfW THRH be.droom home .
Fireplace, sun deck . J l . acre
wood ed lot . b67· 3tlqo. Tuppers
Plains .
NICI: OLOEH HOME in good
neighborhood 1n Pomeroy .
~0 111 e re,cent remodel ing . (en ·
trol heating . J or 4 bedrooms
992·'fU74 .

YOUR CHOICE
Buy lhese two homes fo r
. th e price o f on e or split
them up . Owner says sell !
M ake u s an o ffer
No. 1. You will ha ve to see
th i s 2 b ed room nome to
bel ieve th e pr ice . F eatures
a l ar ge l i uing room w ·new
ca rpe ti n g, ex tr a larg e di n·
inq r oom . T wo ni ce lots
with plen t y of shade . Now
rent inn frv r&gt;-ttril I N COME!
Low Price! S12,000.
No. 2. 12x o0 Elcona mobi le
hOm e compl etely furni shed
on a nic e y. air cond i ton
cd, c em ent p ati o and
&lt;drivewa y . Now! S10,500.
Janice I. Gettles ,
Realtor
Roberta Huffman
Branch Mgr . 698~6300
Associatesl
Tom Bozicevic

J&amp;L

Blown Insulation
JIM KEESEE

All
Type
l~dustrial
Commercial and Home
Building
Any Type Improvements
To Existing Structures
All Type Concrete Work
No Contract Too Large Or
Tao Small
·
25 Y~ar~ Experience
All Work Guaranteed

Cellulosic (wood· fiberl
Thermal insulation
Save 3D pel. to 50 pet.
on heating cost
Experience and
*u lly insured
Free Est.
Call992 ~ 2772

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

11 · 3 ~ 1 mo..

CEllULOSE
INSULATION
'6.50 per bag
J&amp;L INSULAnON
JIM KEESEE

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING
NEW LISTING ~ Truly
one of th e nicest homes in
the country, beauti ful 2
story
colonial
in
Middleport , nice corner lot ,
garage and storage space.
3 spaci ous bedrooms, 1'1~
baths, large livi ng room
with double fireplace, large
rec. room , family room,
dining room , and farge
modern built~) n kitchen,
fully equipped. Central air .
Many, rriany features, in
e&gt;&lt;cellent condition . ONLY
$49,000.00.
RANCH With 'full
basement, 3 bedrooms, 2
bath s, carpeting, large lot.
Central air, good condition.
ONLY $21 .000 .00.
NICE MINI FARM - Over
5 acres, barn and other
buildi ngs, fencing . Good 1
floor plan home . Secluded.
516,500.00.
V.A. APPROVED ~ IN
HARRISONVILLE, $800.00
down, $124 .65 · month, 9lf2
pet. interest for 30 years.
Ph
story w ith wood
burning firep lac e, carport,
3
bedrooms .
Total
$15,000.00.
NEWER RANCH - Good
neighborhood ,
t his
3
bedroom home is
iR
excell ~ nt
condition.
Equipped kit chen , air
condition,
carpeted .
$78,500.00.
48 '1, ACRES - More or less
plus a real nice 14x70 1978
mobi le home with large
add-a-room and expan·do.
Decking
and
many
features . Fair value at
$48,000.00.
.
WE HAVE BUYERS FOR
ALL
TYPES
OF
PROPERTIES. IF YOU
REALLY WANT TO SELL.
CALL TODAY,
REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
REALTOR ·ASSOCIATES
Leona Cleland
Kathy Cleland
CALL
992-2259- 992-6191

Residential and com mercia I. Call for estimate ~ 24
Hour Service. Any day,
anytime.
Phone 985-3806
Jack Ginther 98S-JB06

Jack's Septic
Tank Service

PHONE 992·2772

.C hester, Ohio
10·30·c

New or Re~&gt;air
Gutters and
Downspouts

'

Town &amp; Country

Pomeroy Landmark
IMMEr:IIATE OPENINGS
FOR R.N.'s AND L.P.N.'s
ALL ~HIFTS ON CCU, 08,
AND MEDICAL-SURGICAL

. .,...:!,ack W. Carsey, Mgr.
....

,. . _ . !

Phone

992~2181

Competitive salary, excellent benefits. shift
differential, and tuition assistance
program.

EXCLHENT RIDING horse . t:1 year s
old. Been used for 4·H. Glen
_ _D-:e~e r~ l ong Bott ~ m_. _9h_io.
WHl TRAINED and storied Beagle
rabbit dogs. Sell or trade for
guns or anything ol equal
value . 014·'142-252 1.

Contact: Holzer Medical Center, P.O. Box
280, Gallipolis, Oh.
446-5105
An Affi rrnative Action
Equal Opportunity Employer

75 ACRES FOR lease l or gas and
oi l on wesl side of New limo
rood where th e gas is. II in·
terested and wi ll drill right
away , come out : if not don't
bother . Al so ba led strow for
sole . $1 _AS a bole. Ph one
'l&lt;l2-2'l61 . Note Vanaman.
FIREPLACE WITH gloss door,
mobile home approved . Ph one
147 -207"J .

PUBLIC AUCTION
NOVEMBER 10,
FRIDAY EVENING 7:00 P.M.
SOUllfERN AUTO SAl£S BUILDING
BIDWELL, OHIO
Christmas toys. tools, furniture. Wearever
cookware, other numerous· items. not
responsible for accidents, terms of sale
cash, or check w-positive I. D.

UTIONEER: BILL BROWN

POMEROY
LANDMARK
All Your
GFTV•,&amp;

Fot

HolpiHtlt IIppi

Srllt· Pr I( 1'',
J ,Jck W C.!t ·.t·y,
M cp
Pt11Hl&lt;•'f(J/

.'lBl

- ---'F
,__,or Rent
TWO 8EDROOM, kitchen furnish ·
ed , op t . Call bilore H om
'1'17· 2288

GARAGE

.
'~'• m.ile off Rt.

St . Rt. T24lpward Rutland,

0.

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5682

Free Estimates
Phone 949-2862
or 949-2160
8~20 · 1

7 by~pass on

mo . {Pd.)

Business Services

HOMESITI:::S lor so le. I acre an d BHADFORD , Auctioneer, Com ple te Serv ice, Ph one 949 -2487
up. Middlepor t, near R~tlond.
or 949-2000. Racine, Ohio. Crill
Call992 -748 1.
Bradford.
THREt BEDROOM frame ho me in
ELWOOD
BOWERS REPAIR Middleport . Call992 ·3457.
- - - - --- . - - -Sweepers, toa sters , irons , all
FARM FOR so le. House . 2 barn s.
sm all appliances. l awn mower .
trader . Lorge pond . 10 acres or
next to Stole Highway Garage
IJ'J acre s. 742-2560 .
on Rou te 'l . Phone (0 14) 985 - .
3825.
FIVE ROOM house and both,
remodeled , fully carpeted. May S~WING MA CHINE Repairs. Serbe seen otter J pm . Phone
vice. all mak es. 992 -2284. The
'1'12 ·3933 .
Fabric Shop . Pome ro y .
Authoriz ed Singer Soles pnd
Service . We sha rpen Sc issors.

-

--

-~

HOBSIEI IER
REALTY .
· GeorgeS. Hobstener Jr.
Broker
Complete Real Estate
service. Ca II 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

---

-

--~----

New Lima Road
Hutchinson Sub. Div .
Rutland, Ohio
Phone 742 ·2003

FOR SALE

MIDDLEPORT

DON'T GET HURT BY
INFLATION . MAKE A
SOLID INVESTMENT.
Helen L . Teaford
G. Bruce Teaford
Supe P. Murphy
Associates

Housing ...._
Headquarters

3 bedroom home located In a nice quiet neighborhood
an a large lot, {100'K150'). Central heat and air
conditioning. Conveni~nt one floor plan with basement .
Priced for fast sale, $20,000.

"HILD$
DOWNINV.....
I'!_

Phone 992~2342
Eve . 992-2449
Rodney Downing, Broker
Bill thllds, Manager

L;;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::::::::::::
1
CENTRAL REALTY CO.
LOTS - 1 Acre and up near Pomeroy.

so ACRES FREE GAS -

Good 1'12 story house with full
ba sement . Large pond stocked with fish . Priced for
quick sale, $40,000.
SPACIOUS BI~LEVEL - This may be your dream
home. It has a large kitchen w ith lois of cabinets,
stove, refrigerator and dishwasher . Beautiful 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
healing bill. Red barn.llke ~f orage build ing . Located
about ten minutes north of Pomeroy just off Rt . 7.
Asking $55,000. _
MIDDLEPORT - This well cared lor newer home has
3 BRs, living room, bath, mostly carpeted, kitchen Is
equipped with refrigerator end stove, utility room ,
natural gas forced air heat, oulslde storage building.
Pr ic e $27,000.

4cyl., 4 speed, mag wheels.
1

--

·-

-do-

Will
roofing, construction,
plumbing and heating , No job
too Iorge or too smal l. Phone
"/42-23Afl .
HOWERY AND MARTIN EK ·
co ve ting , sep tic sys tems ,
doz er. backhoe. dump truck ,
limeston e. grav el. blacktop
paving . Rt . 143 . Phone 1 (b14)
098-733 1.
BATHROOMS AND Kitchen5
remodele d, cerami c tile. plum bing, carpentry. and general
maintenance . 13 years e)( ·
~ .Y-~.i~n:_e . 992...:._3 68~ ---­
PUlliNS EXCAVATING : Complete
Ser vice. Phone 992-247 8.

1

_
.....

Service
,_

...........
,
c....

1

1695

2 Dr ., stand .

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

1495

1974 BUICK REGAL
Auto .• loaded.

'1495

1995
1973 CHRYSLER
1

Dr .. p .b·.. p.s., auto., air,
42,000 miles.

"'192·2174

Your HeadquarleiS For

495

'

Wee need l1rge &amp; smtll Ftrms
and Many types of property .
CALL JIMMY DEEM, Associ1to 94f~2388
.

F-150
RANGER
XLT

'DATSUN PICKUP

EWOTT
APPUANCE II
220 E. Main Street,

Pomeroy, 0.

Services Offered
DUSTLESS FIREPLACE and chimney
cleaning . The Chi mney Sweep .

TWO CHIHUAHUAS. fema le . age
4&amp;'6 . 742 ·2322.
LAYAWAY for Christmas : AKC
regist ered cod1er spani el pups .
992 -7059 aher Spm .

R.OYALE SEDAN

Low mileage, sharp, nice
fam il y car .

Air, AM-FM, good ti res · &amp;

Dark bl ue, v . r oof. AM-FM.

more

50 -50 seat, ai r . Good rires .

'5295

'1995

1973 DODGE CHARGER

1975 DATSUN 210

1976 OLDS CUTlASS

S.E. CPE.

CPE.

SUPREME SEDAN

Rad io, AM-FM, auto., p.s.,
p. b., air, good 1ires.

Had v al ve job, has som e
r ust .

Cl ean , good t i res . M. blue.

1974 OLDS CUTlASS ....................... 12495

FIVE MONTHS old long haired
golden mole cot, litter trai nee!
l ovable. Also block kittens.
Meigs
Humane
Socie ty .
992.2592 or 992 -2639.

992 ~ 2196

LS SED.

SED.

ROYALE CPE.

Equi pped for yo u and easy
dr ivin g.

Sil ver , blue .tr im , ready to
go .

A nice wor k car .

2 Dr. H.T., V~8, auto.,

SAVE ON
CARPETING

P.S., P. B., vinyl roof, till wheel,
AM-FM stereo. Clean.

1974 FORD TORINO......................... '1495
4 Dr., wagon, air, auto., P.S., P. B.

DRIVE A LimE

1974 TOYOTA PICKUP....................... 11995
1973 GMC VAN ..............................12895

&amp;.

v .8, auto., P.S., P. B ., AM~ FM stereo, air , completed
Inside.

WAGON
New tir es. air , auto., p.s..
p.b., AM·FM. 3 seats, l ug .
rack .

•

1973 CHEV. 1f2 TON .. ~.~;~:.'.'?.n.~~~~: ....... l695
4 cyl., 4Sp .
11
1974 CHEV. LUV ............................ . 495
1

Rubber Bac11 clrret

"CARS UNDER '7,000"
1973 PONTIAC HATCHBACK 6 cyl., auto
1973 CHEV. CHEVELLE 4 or · v.a, auto.

'4.88 •qt~p

9' and 12' Vinyl
Floor Cowering In StoU

1973 MERCURY MONTEGO 4 Dr • H auto., air.
1973 CHEV. CHEVELLE 4 Dr . Wagon, V.S. auto.
1973 PLYMOUTH DUSTER 2 Dr., 6 cy l., auto.
•
1973 MERCURY MONTEGO MX ~i?r., v.a. auto.

Buy where yuu can come in
1nd '"wflll you're gttii"'J
- ~ sel&lt;tctlons- F 111!y
stocked.
~ · ·· ··-·· -

IA11742-2211
' TALKTO
Wendell or Htrb Grtle
, or Gone Smith

1972 CHRYSLER

V-8, auto., air.

1970 MUSTANG MACH I v 8• 4 sp.
1969 BUICK SKYlARK 2 Dr . H .T.. VB, auto, air.

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

1967 CADIUAC COUPE, V-8, auto., air.
·1964 CHEVY lf2 TON V~8 , standard.

742-2211

4 Speed .

RIEBEL'S USED CARS
See Roger Riebel

2 convenient Numbers

985-3345 or 667-3463
1 mile north

St . Rt. 7

Tuppers Plains. Ohio

15 IN STOCK
Selection In Tbe Valley

•

LEWISTON, Maine (UP!)
- Web, Harrison, who led
Bates College to Its best
season In more than a decade
as acting football coach,
Thursday was named head
coach.
· School President Thomas
Hedley Reynolds annoWiced

Harrison's appointment in an
Wiexpected visit to a team
practice .
Harrison,
38,
became coach this season
following the departure of VIc
Gatto Jr., who resigned to'
become head football coach
.at Tufts.

1976 CAD.

1973 CAD.

DEVILLE SED.

DEVILLE CPE.

Ni ce Lu x . ca r .

Needs pai nt job.

'5995

'1795

1975 CUT. 442

1973 BUICK LS

1978 OLDS 98

CPE.

SEDAN

REGENCY
SEDAN DEMO

Ai r , a uTO .. p.s., radio .

'1795
-

-~

---

'9500

OPENTILLT P.M :
Except Thursday &amp;
Saturday ti Is :00
Closed Sunday

a

'li. ):.·:'_
.·
.

MIDDLEPORT,O. 115-ANH\'!l1SA11V
"

--

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

Karr &amp; Van Zandt

ASTRO·GRAPH

38 Gudrun's

I Goggle

husband-king
5 Man of word s 39 It may
10 Hautboy
be Dutch
II Mass. resort 40 " I G et the
12 II Across
Blues is one
It Rains"
13l.egatee's
DOWN

Bernice Bede Osol

" You ' ll Lik e Our Quality Wav of Doing Business" GMC Financing
Open Evenings Unti i6:00+ Til S p.m . Sat.
Pomeroy

992-5342

lain adv an tage s to be gain ed
today can be lo st or diluted if
you exert too m uc h press ure .
Know when to stop pushing .
LEO (July 23 ~Aug . 22) Siluation s you di rec t today will turn
out to be rort unate . so don ' tlet
a pe ss im isti c friend diss uade
you from doing what you feel is
right.
·
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sepl. 22) You 'll
get better terms today if yo u
allow the oth er part y to ma Ke
the offer . You' ll be treated
rnore generously th an you
eKpec ted .
LIBRA (Sepl. 23-0C1. 23) .As
long as everyon.e is m~k !~g
concessions you II rema1n JO·
vial and easy to gel along w ith .
Yo u won ' t respond congenial·
ly , however , to one who is
conlradic tary .

November 11, 1978
Oppo rt unitie s thai co uld re sul t
in a ri se in your statu s and
drink
3 Behind-the9 Reservat ion 24 H andle
pos ition are lorlh c oming in the
15 Threefold:
scenes contest
sights
r oughly
months be lore nexl yea(s
preflx
4 Yet, lo
11 Swiss city
26 Sweep
b~rlhday . Plant lhe seeds and
16 Get up and go
Shakespeare 15 Hondura s
28 Decimal or galher your harves l whil e lhe
..
gettmg 1s good.
17 Earthly
5 Riveter of
seaport
bo1hng
SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-Nov . 22)
19 Prefix
WWII fame
18 - avis
29 Golf score You'l l be lu c kier lhan u sual in
lor view
6 Unsuccessful 21 Mark of 30 Sink
bnng ing in l o r e~li zati on male ~
nal goals you re purs utng .
ZO.Money-saving
tennis return 22 Reli gious
fea ture
Don·l lei you rsell gel s ide~
event
7 Giving
primitive
35 Inlet
\ra cked . Fin d oul to wh om
21 Re&lt;lshank
battle
23 Study
36 Brutally
you ' re suited by sending for
your c opy of Astra-Graph Let ·
22 " Ad - per
8 Listed
course
frank
1er. Mail SO ce nls for eac h and a
Aspera"
long , se lf·addresse d, sfamped
24 Upstairs,
envelope 10 Asl ro-Graph . P.O.
downstairs
Box 489 , Radio Ci ty Slation ,
{NEWSPAPER ENTER PRI SE ASSN .)
N.Y. 1001 9. Be sure to specify
people
,...-+-l---4-+-l---ib~rlh s ign .
25 Tiber
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23 ~ Dec .
.,--+--1f---J21) Social s ituation s are ex ·
tributary
trerne ly fortunate for y ou
26 Pick up
~+--11----Ji oday . Some thi ng qu ite b e nefi points
cial co uld come from one o f
th em. .O,void th ose pe.rson s
27 Hawaiian
-+-1f--t with dour ou tl ooks , howe ver.
baking pit
1 - + - - + -1---J CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
28 Took a
r
Th ose yo u beha\le gen erously
toward today wi ll treat yo u in a
dive.
li
ke mann er . Person s yo u spil l
PUBLIC NOTICE
31 Russian jet
hairs with , however, won ' t be
Approximatel y 5250,000 w ill
32 OPEC
will ing to share anything wilh
be
avai lab le
to
fund
you.
programs of d ire c t soc ial
money•+~f----1 AOUAAIUS (Jan . 2o-Feb. 191 ser vice s to persons over the
maker
7age of 60 in the coun t ies of
Do n ' l wa ste yo ur lim e arguin g Athens , Hocking , Meig s,
33 Hostilities
- +--1f---Ji oday with som eone wh o has a Monroe , Morgan , Nob le.
closed mind . The re are so Perry and Washington. Any
34 Actress,
o ve rn menta l
age n cy ,
- TliUlin
b--+-+----1---l many Oth ers eager IO go a1on g gpublic
, or priva te non .private
wll.h your ideas .
corpo rati on
d esi ring
to
36 Latvian
PISCES (Feb . 20-March 20) Put provide services in thes e
capital
aside any involvements laking co unties is elig i bl e to submit
-L.-,...L-.1..,.,! yo u away rrom all end ing to pr oposa ls. The dead l ine for
37 Salty
o f comp l et e
sub m i ssion
persona I goa Is. Luck Is on your proposals is No vember 30,
side so long as yo u pay atte n- 1 1978 Project budgets can
!)AlLY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it: tioh
10 what you're doing .
cover onl y th e period of June
AXYDLBAAXR
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19) Pro ~ 1, 1979 to May 31, 1980.
ceed w ith your plans . Don ' t let Proposa l s must be submi1f ed
Is LONGFELLoW
an t he fo rmat deve loped for
set f -dou b ts d eprive you Of w h aI thi s purpo se and available
One lett e r simply stands for another. In this sample A is should be a fo rtun ate da y. fr om th e Area Agency on
used for t h e three L's, X for the two O's, et c. Single lette r s, You ' re the one who could walk Aging . Th e priority services
apost rophes, th e len g th and for mat ion of the words are all away with the prize .
ar e in -hOme , ac cess , and
TAURUS (Apri1 20-May 20) l egal senices , sub o t her
hints. Each day the code l etters arc differt"n t.
services ma y al so b e ad .
8 rea k s co mIng your way aren 't dressed
. Dir ect inQ uirie s an d
CRYPTOQUOTES
com pl e tely visib le to yo u, but requests tor the proposal
you ' ll have to tak e advantage of format pa ckage to :
'
Ms . Mary Alice Va rn er,
Q0 I
G E E T D.
B I
E W I U
K U G lhem yo urself. Do n' t ask anArea Agency on Aging No . a, ·
other to do your job .
X V E D I
I K X 0
G K S
G I X Y G I GEMINI (Mau 21-June 20) This B uc keye Hil ls . Hock.i ng
,
Vall ey R egiona l Develop QOI
VYRID
Bl
VYRI . PVETK should b e a fun day, provided ment Distr ict , 410 St . Cl a ir
B 0 y Q Q I N E T 1
.
you don ' t make too late a nig ht Building , 216 Putnam Stree t.
of
it. If yo u o veri ndulge in the Marietta , Ohio 457.50 , (614 )
Yesterday's Cryploquole:TO MAKE TilE DESTRUCTION OF
good th ings you ' ll have to pay 374 .9436 .
A CHILD SURE, GIVE HIM UNWATCHED UBERTY AFTER
th e price .
( 11) 3, 10, 2tc
DARK.- H.W .BEECHER
CANCER (June 21 -July 221 Cer@ UJ'F8 Kinr feaLure• Syndicate, Inc.
boon

'1995

"KEEP THAT GREAT GM FEELING
WITH GENUINE GM PARTS.'

THOMAS JOSEPH

14 Punchbowl

'4295

GENERAL MOTORS PARTS DIVISION

1975 HONDA CVCC CIVIC ................... 2295
1973 FORD LTD.............. -.............. '1695

1974 OLDS 88

SERVICE/PARTS

Saturday , Nov. 11
by

1976 OLDS CUT "S"

GMQUALITY

1

ACROSS

'4395

1975 OLDS 98

3495

4 Dr., V-8, auto., P.S., P . B., air . Sharp.
4 Dr . Wagon, .4 cyl ., 4sp., gas economy P lus.

'2495

'1795

1

See Rocky Hupp, Darrell Dodrill or Pal Hill, Genera I Manager, for

1950 FORD % TON

Lart~est

TORONADA

RE DUC ED

Good Deal on a New or Used Vehicle.

As low As

AKC REGISTER ED co!!ie puppies .
$60 each. 742 -2292 .

NEWPORT SEDAN

Sil ve r , black s1ripe.

DAN THOMPSON FORD

Ca ll6 14 · 373 ~6057 .

For Sale, Rent or Trade

RISING STAR Kennel• . 8oarding
and grooming, all breed5.
__C_h_e_
s~e_
7.:':.0::.
29:.:2::_
. ~;;:----,
-~~ , .36::
lOVABlE WHITE snow drift great
PY RENEE S Puppies . Phone
l ~6 14 ·667~3838 .

1974 OLOS 88

'1300°0

11·9·1 mo.

All carpel · 1nst1lled with
padding · 11 no charge.
Expert lns1111111on.
.

HOOF HOLLOW Horse5 . Buy , sel l
trade or trai n. New and used
saddles. Ru th ReeiJes. A/bony .
{61 4) 698~ 3790 .
.

1973 OLDS

SAVE UP TO

Cell992-7013
For Fr8e Estimates

GiveAway

C/)

1977 CHRYSLER

'3495

Auto., p.s., air .

Armstrong Carpeting

RHVES TRADING Post, Pogeville.
Groceries, dry goods, hard·
wore. feed. tack shop . Special
__?~!~ of dog ~od , ~.~·::..
88-::-.---:-­
AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE been
conceited? Lost your operators
license? Phone 992 -2143.

Pets for Sale

RANGER lARIAT

'1400°

1495
1970 PONTIAC 4 OR
1

z

;;II\

Ci'&gt;

975 CHEV. CAPRICE

0

1

'1

THANKSGIVING

'4395

SAVE UP TO

Town &amp; Country Wagon,
auto. Loaded.

CHESTER Good 5 bedroom house with full
basement &amp; 2 baths . Nat. gas t-teat, approx . 1 acre land
and large storage building. Pri ce $21,500,
TWO ACRES - Abeaotilul4 year old, 3 bedroom home
wlfh large eal·ln kitchen, 2 bedrooms, all nicely
carpeted, 2 baths, full basement with TV room. Many
more eKiras, low heat bill with nal. gas forced air
furnace. All this and two nice acres of land In a good
location . Will go qu ick for $35,000. ,
'
40 ACRES of land In sunan Twp. Nice· building sites,
small barn . Priced at only $21,500 .
· $15,000 - Good 5 bedroom house with 2 lull bolhs.
Natural gas forced air heat, localed In Chesler .

F-150
RANGER
LARIAT

4 Dr. , auto., air.

FORD PINTO
WAGON

00

1095

1974 FORD GALAXIE ·

Pickup, good condition.

SAVE A LOT

TEST DRIVE
THE TRUCK OF
YOUR CHOICE
AT DAN THOMPSON
FORD!

2 Dr ., 6 cyl. , p.s.. red &amp; blk.

1895

1

'1200

1974 AM MATADOR

1975 MUSTANG II

1974 CHEVY LUV

Will 00 baby sitti ng in my hom('
anytime. 992 ·5327.

Associate

2195

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

FOR RENT or sol e. broom home,
all electri c Ca ll 992 -27 11.

2 StORY Bu s iness
bui lding in the heart of
PomerO}I' . 4 r ooms up, 3
down . Good loca tion for
res i dence and business .
$75,000.
STUCCO HOME - 3 or 4
bedrooms, 9 ro o ms , 2
baths, furnace , fireplace, 2
car .garage on nice corner
lot . $35,000.
SYRACUSE - Nice 9
home, 3 or 4 bedrooms,
forma l dining , 2 baths, nice
kitchen with dishwasher,
garage, and 1.9 acre l evel
lol. Just 548,500.
RUTLAND - 4 bedrooms,
bath, gas heat. fireplace, 2
car garage, and 2 lo ts.
S\4,000.
12 YEARS OLD- Frame 3
bedroom home with bath,
natura l
gas
central
heating , city water, out of
lown . $29,500.
1 YEAR OLD- Here's a
fine spotless 3 bedroom
~ome with family room
that has a fireplace and
la rge glass door . Large
fran t porch and back
sundeck on 1 acre of level
land. Want $69.900.
RACINE 3 bedrooms,
ba t h, ni ce
woodwork ,
natural gas and ci ty water .
Will sell for only $12,000.
CAMPSITES - On Rt . 124
to the Ohio River. Any size
you want . Buy now before
anothe r round of Increases .

1

Pomeroy, 0 . ,
3·15-ffc

. EX't AVA TING . dozer . backhoe
and ditcher. Charles R. Hot lield.
Bo c~
Hoe Se rvic e,
Rutlor}d . Ohio. Phone 742-2008.

Kenneth Crabtree
698·6196

992·3325

Muffler
Brakes
Shocks
Tires
Battery. ·
Installation Service

WATER WEll drilling . Wilham T.
Gront . 742-2879.

~

SAVE UP TO

4 Dr., aUtomatic .

EXCAVATING . dozer, loader and
backho e work : dump trucks
and lo-bays for hire: wi ll haul
till dirt . to soiL lim estone ond
grovel. Coli Bob or Roger Jef,fers, day pho ne 992-7089, night
phone 992 -3525 or 992- 5232 .

---

2 dr ., auto, p .s., p .b ., low
mileage, sharp .

FORD MAVERICK

MOORE'S

....

F.150
CUSTOM

TORINO

or ., auto .• p.s ., p.b ., air .

4-30-IIC

Real Estate for Sale

-~

1975 FORD GRANADA

)&gt;

SPECIALS • THANKSGIVING

Sport pk g .. auto ., 6 cyl.,

2395

For The Best
Price In Town
See
Denver Kapple
At

• •

p .s ., p .b ., rad ia l t ires.

1

--i

:I:

Great Selection Of New Trucks

$$$SAVE$
FORD MAYER
1976 GREMLIN X

4 Dr ., a~t!&gt; .. p.s.

•

USED CAR

with prices that are easy to take.

'1895

Reasonable Prices
Referentes Available
Phone 742~2029
10~ 22~1 mo.

ROGER HYSEll

669~5063

216 E . Second Street

Has Tough Ford Pickups.

Automatic, only 38,000 miles .

Construction ·
Maintenance

11 ·3· 1 mo.

H. L WRITESEL

ROOFING

Carpentry , Electrical,
Painting

C/)

RATED

1975 FORD PINTO
STATION WAGON

J. R. Construction ·
Co.

Ph. 992 ~ 2848

5&gt;
,.....

:ALUE
SPECIAL

ANTI-FREEZE

$347

(')

,J in

Mourning and
Price Buildets

"0

m

Business Services

Real Estate for Sale

C/)

SPECIALS • THANKSGIVING

I

!Influenced

2 Habitation

Yesterday's.Answei'·

...-+-+---+--1

'

_ _wanted to Buy_ _
CH IP W OOD
Po l e s max .
diameter 10 on large ~! end
SH.SO per ron . Bu nd le-d slob
Sb .SD pc1 ron . Dc ll . . crP-d to
Ohio Pollet Co . Rt . 2 Pomeroy .

NEW YORK (UP!\ - L e
A nne Schreiber , ass istan t
sp orts editor of Th e N ew

York Tim es, was na med

OLD FURNifURf ice bo)(es , bra ss
beds . iron beds desks. et c.
complete h o u ~e h o l rls W ritf'
M .D. M iller. Rt. 4, Pomeroy or
caii 9Q2. 7160.

sport s ed i t or , th e pap er
announced Thursday . Harold
Classen, who agr eed t o serve
briefly as act ing sp ort s
edi t or , will r es ume his
position as deputy sports
edilor.
Schr eiber , 33 , came to the
Times l ast F ebruary from
Women Sport s m agazin e ,

OlD COINS. pocket watche s
d oss ri ngs , wedding bonds
d10monds . Gold or s1lver . Col!
~ oge r Wam sley . 741-23:11 .

chi ef. She a lso worked l or
Time ma gazine and covered
t he Mont r eal Ol ym piCS in

&lt;-~ n - ?Ml9

PO M ~ROY Forest Pro·
duch Top price lor slonding
sow timber. Colt 992 -59/:JS or
Kent Hanbv. 1-446-!l570 .

TIMB ~ R .

WE PICK up jun lo. auto bod ie~ buy
ing junk co1~ . ~cr o p iron. bat·
teries and metal!&gt; . Rider' s
Sal v age . SR 124 , Pomero., .

997- 54~8 .
_ _
JUNK BATfERifS. S7: Co.pper $35
per lb . Clean alum mum SIS per
lb , no co ns. For li mrt ed lime
onl y. R1der's Sol vog o. SR 12&lt;1 .

where she was editor- in -

1976.

r-----·
M ---,
I
I
I
I

E~GS

•

Equ1pment Co. 1
1
1
I

PITTsBuRGH ( UPII Three P ittsburgh Steelers,
defen sive end L . C. Green~
I!OMEIOY, 0.
wood , ti ght end Bennie
PH. 992-2176
Cunningham and offensi v e llnlemationll

1

1

ta ckle Larry Brown, wW
miss Sunday night 's gam(

·

wilh the I..&lt;Js Angeles Rams.
Greenwood has a sprained
knee, Brown a sprained ankle
and C unningha m a kn ee

Open

1L lllriiS!If
N ldtl
ew
Equipment

I

,,

Friday

T ill7 •00p .m.
For Your
Shaoo ing

..

1·
I

I
1

~ c. v~ ni enct.J

--------·

iniur v

"Finally, fve found
a MAN-SIZE tractor"
lCO,.OM1 trtctor lludltt biQQtL to~~t h er
iobt.. Mow , 111low, tal . bulldGn. 20 lntchmllllts , More WOI~'· POWIJ .
!~11111 filii COli , 111·9811
dfi...

rcoNO/ttr

~,'TRA CT Oit

SEE THEM TODAY

REED'S .COUNTRY STORE

Reedsville, o.

lt

•

••
•t

�'

12- The Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Nov . lO , 1978
'

State orders Auditor Condee to submit
figure
.

to increase the taxable values of real property in Gallia County original' determination by the state department that property at 35 per cent of true value.
By Larry Ewing
by (h~ following pcrccntl;tgcs:
,
Interviewed this morning Condee said that even thciugh the
values should be raised in the county by tbe following
Gallia County Auditor Dorothy Condee was ordered Monday
- Agricultural real property by 23 per cent ; 25 per cent on percentages : Agricultural , iiO per cent; Commercial and most recent order does allow for a significant decrease over
to submit to the Commissioner of Tax Equalization, Robert R. land and 20 per cent oo buildings.
Industrial, 21 per cent ; and residential; 4~ per cent.
the original determination (especlally for agricultural and
Kinney , an adjusted abstract of real property in Gallia County
- Industrial and Commercial real property by 25 percent .
residential property), she will try again to have the amount of
Condee
had
refused
to.
raise
the
property
evaluations
by
to comply with the requirement of the Ohi o Revised Code that
- Residential real estate by 24 per cent.
increase lowered before she ·submits the required abstract.
th
ose
percentages,
and
has
since
that
time
been
negotiating
all real estate be valued at 35 per cent of trut•value.
It was the determination and order of the Commissioner of
According to Section ~715. 26 of the Ohio Revised Code, If a
The order which was received by registreed mail in the ' Tax Equalization that after the addition of the percentage with the Department of Tax Equalization.
county
auditor fails to coinply with the order of the
The
original
determination
by
the
Department
would
have
court house ~n Tuesday afternoon, directs the county auditor increases is made the total aggregate tax value of .real
raised property values in Gallia County by an average of 39 per Department of Tax Equalization, the State Auditor may
property in Gallia County be reported as $84,965,490.
cent.
withhold 50 per cent of the county's share in the dlstribulton of
On Sept. 14, Candee had filed an abstract with the
Monday's order by Tax Commissioner Kinney.will set values state revenues .
Department of Tax Equalization showing no increase in
property values for Gallia County.
The county auditor had submitted the abstract followin~ the in Columbus for the past 22
years.
Preceding her in death
besides her parents was"her
husblind, Tony Hammond.
Survivors include four
I
I sisters, Mrs. James (Iva Lee)
Stanal, Detroit, Mich.; Mrs.
the church .
JOHN M. CASEY
VETERANS
He
also
attended
Paint
Ardella Jones, Columbus,
John M. Casey, Jr., 7~, a
and
Creek
Baptist
Church.
Mrs. Mary Qualls and
resident of 840 Third Ave.,
Mr.
Casey
served
as
a
Boy
Mrs.
Ruth Buffington, both of
DAY
died at 12:30 p.m. Thursday
Scout
leader
for
many
years,
Pomeroy,
and two brothers,
in Holzer Medical Center.
was
a
member
of
Masonic
Wilbur
James,
Detroit, and
Mr. Casey, a member of the
Lodge
No.
33
and
the
Gallia
Johnnie
James,
Jr.,
Gallipolis Post Office staff for
County
Senior
Citizens.
Pomeroy.
35 years before retiring in
Funeral services will be
Funeral services will be
19~9 , worked for the Gallia
held
at 1 p.m. Monday at the
held
at
2
p.m.
Sunday
at
~e
County District . Library as
John
Gee
AME
Church
with
J.
W.
Ross Funeral Home,
bookmobile driver for eight
Rev
.
James
Fanning
and
East
Broad
St., Columbus
years . Mr. Casey then
ofRev.
Grover
Turner
and
burial
will
be In a
worked in the district
Time passes but memories remain of those
ficiating.
Burial
will
be
in
cemetery,
Columbus
library ' s
processing
Pine Street Cemetery.
brav e men and wo men who man the ramparts
department until 1971.
Friends may · call at the
th roughout the worl d and have sacrificed their
He was born June 27, 1903,
GUY E. RUSSELL
Waugh
- Halley - Wood
in Gallipolis, son of the late
lives that our nation migh t live on . .. in f reeGuy E. Russell, Lees burgh,
John Melton and Hattie Funeral Home from 2-4 and 7- Fla., formerly of Bradbury,
dom.
9 p.m. Saturday. Masonic
Thompson Casey.
died In Florida. Thursday
He married Sadie Smith on services by Lodge No. 33 will following a heart attack.
MADE HONORARY MEMBER - Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews was made an
LEGAL HOLIDAY · VETERANS' DAY
June 1, 1927, at Kerr. She be held 8 p.m. Saturday.
He Is survived by his wife,
honorary member of the Gallia - Meigs Fraternal Order of Police at the annual banquet held
survives, along with the
Thursday night at Middleport Fire Station. Left to right are, Larry Hudson, president,
Helen; two sons, Shannon of
following children : Milton E.
Hilliard, and David of
Mayor Andrews and Ray Manley, secretary - treasurer.
Saturday, November 11th
JOSEPHINE CROW
Casey, Penryn, Calif.; Arthur
Mrs.
Thomas
H. Orlando, Fla.; a daughter
Casey, Gallipolis; Lawrence
Crow, 91, Judy of Hillard, and t\'IO
(Josephine)
Casey, Dayton; Mrs. Herbert
Pomeroy, died early this brothers, Harold of Leesburg
(Betty ) Burton, Dayton and morning at Pinecrest Care and Leo of Denver, Colo.
Mrs. Ewing (Mary) Diggs, Center. Mrs. Crow was born
Funeral services will be
Dayton. One daughter, Doris Jan. 23, 1887 in Syracuse the held at 10 .a.m. Tuesday at a
E. Hogan, preceded him in daughter of the late Manning Hilliard funeral home and
pomeroy
death in 1961. Fourteen grand and Mina Stobart Webster. burial will be there.
and five great-grandchildren She was also preceded in
'
rutl'!nd
ZELLA WHITE
survive.
tuppers plams
death by her husband, Dr. T.
Zelia E. White, 61 , a
Brothers and sisters sur- H. Crow, one son , Webster
resident of 1107 Teodora Ave.,
viving are: Thompson Casey,
Hodge, one daughter-in-law, Gallipolis, died at 10 a.m.
the bank of
He said on more than one· call by AFirCIO President
By Laurence McQuillan
William Casey and Robert Sue Hodge, one sister, Helen
occasion,
negotiators for both George Meany for mandatory
WAS!flNGTON
(UPI)
the century
Thursday
in
Holzer
Medical
Casey, all of Gallipolis ;
Webster, two brothers, Drew Center.
sides
agreed
to specific wage and price standards. "I
President
Cal'ler,
comestablished 1872
James Casey, New York Webster and R. G. Webster.
language
on
an
issue.
"When do not have any Intention of
plaining
that
Egypt
and
She
was
a
former
teacher
City; Paul Casey, Columbus;
Mrs. Crow was a member in the Gallipolis City and Israel have " partially un- they refer the text back to the doing this," he said, adding
Mr s. William (Elizabeth)
of the Episcopal Church and
County
School done" some of the progress leaders at home in Egypt .and he was determined "to make'
Leigh, Dayton; three sisters the Auxiliary of Drew Mason
made in the current Mideast Israel, sometimes the work the anti-inflation package
systems.
preceded him in de~th.
Webster Post 39, American
She was born April29, 1917, peace talks, says "any failure that has been done is par- ' work. I don't · intend to back
Mr. Casey was a member
Legion, Pomeroy.
out."
in Man, W. Va., daughter of ... could rebound to the tiaJly undone:' he said.
of the John Gee A.M.E.
She is survived by two sons, the .late W. L. and Bessie discredit of the leaqers" who . The talks hit a snag after
During his Kansas · City
Church most of his life and Robert H. Crow, Syracuse,
the
Israeli
delegation
was
stop,
Carter:
sought
an
accord.
was se~retary and trustee of and Thomas D. Crow, Mills Ellis.
Carter
had
no
official
instructed
to
remove
Said he favored a
She is survived by her
Pomeroy, two daughters-in- husband , R. D. White whom public schedule today, but references to settling the moderate farm sei-aside
law,
Kathryn
Crow, she married Oct. 25, 1941, in was being kept informed of West Bank dispute.
program with no embargoes
Syracuse, and Vera Crow, Louisa, Ky .
In· his talk to the future on
the
shipment
of
developments between
Pomeroy, one nephew,
Carter
also · agricultural products.·
One daughter, Mrs. Tim representatives of Cairo and farmers,
Manning Webster, Pomeroy, (Connie) Chapman, South Jerusalem.
a c know I edged t h a.t
- Expressed doubt that
,
six grandchildren and four Point, and one son, David
During a speech Thursday politically, "there is no way "my presence either caused a
great-grandchildren.
White, Columbus, survive. to a Future Farmers of to win the effort to stop in- victory ·or a defeat" during
Funeral services will be Two grandsons, Scott and America convention in: flation" because "it is his campaign efforts.
held Monday at 2 p.ni. at Sean Smith, survive.
- Said he has found it
Kansas City, Mo., Carter inevitable that you aggravate
Ewing Chapel with the Rev.
very
fine
special
Interest
.
("much
more difficult to be a
gave
some
insights
into
his
One brother, William Ellis,
Carl C. Hicks officiating. Parkersburg and one sister, own attitudes, telling ap- · groups" even with voluntary leader In a time of calm than
Burial will be in Letart Falls · Mrs. Pate (Judy) Lyken, proximately 21,000 young controls.
In a time of crisis,'' because It
Cemetery. Friends will be Huntington, survive.
During the news con- is easy to arouse support in a
men and women, "The fear of
received at the funeral home
She was a member of failure is orie of the greatest terence, Carter rejected a crisis situation.
Saturday from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
Grace United Methodist obstacles to progress."
and Sunday from 2 to 4 and·7
He cited the Middle East as
Church, Gallipolis Emblem
,,,,,,,,L,,,,,,,,,B
,,,,,,,,,,,,E
,,,,,,,,,R
,,,,,,,,,,,F,,
,,,,,,,,E
,,,,,,,,,L,,,
,,,,,,D,
,,,,,,,,,,s,,'"'''":,:,""~':'''f.,::.:
to 9 p.m.
an
example and said an easy f,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,E,,
Club, ~·rench Art Colony and
alternative would be to
Gallipolis Golf Club.
Funeral services will be sidestep the thorny questions,
held 11 a.m. Saturday at the "because any failure there
FAY CURTIS .
Waugh - Halley - Wood now or in the future could
Mrs. Fay Curtis of Tooele,
~~~:
Funeral Home with Rev. rebound to the discredit of the ·.·.
ANOnfER SHIPMENT
Utah, a former Meigs County
James M. Clark officiating. leaders who triefl to bring
resident, died Nov. 7 at a Salt
Burial will be in Hill&gt;rest peace."
Lake City, Utah, hospital.
!j:arller, during a regional
Cemetery near Kenova, W.
She is survived by her
news
conference in Kansas ::;:
Va .
daughter, Mrs. Jack (Polly)
City,
Carter
chided what he
Davis, a son, Albert, Jr., and · Friends may call at the sai~ amounted to steps backfuneral borne from 4~ and 7-9
Everything a jean shou ld be ...
four grandchildren, all of p.m. today.
ward in the negotiating
exce
llent fit 1 comfor t , ex pert
California. Several local
process.
;I!
nieces and nephew also
tailoring and style details
~""'~
survive. Burial will be in
like fl are legs plus sw ing
~
' .:lX''Ii ~
ii/i),&lt;
.
t'Veterans Memorial Hospital
California.
pockets.
All
thi
s
piu
s
·
-"~· , ·.·
ADMITTED
Nell
something extra . . . rugged
·
Graves, Pomeroy.
No
-Fault"
100%
cott.on
'
"
DISCHARGED - Edna
EVALINA HAMMOND
14 oz. denim with
Mrs. Evalina Jane Ham- Wiggins, Gay Fields and
\I\
mond, 47, Columbus, a for- ·George Hackett, Sr.
Sanfor-Set• .It will
mer resident of Pomeroy,
wash cl eaner and dry
died Tuesday morning in a
ready to wear
Columbus hospital.
witho ut puckers
She '\vas a daughter of the
be offered by Rio Grande '. :.:'·.
BANKS
CLOSED
or wrinkles,
late Mr. and Mrs. John
lege at the Meigs Junior
All Meigs County Banks
James of Pomeroy and a
neve r shr ink
will close Saturday in obmember of the Forest Run
ou~ of size.
Baptist Church. She had lived servance of Veterans Day.
Navy .l~
····
1
10 p.m. for a period of 10
weeks. Registration will be :~:~:
qn the first night of class and
the total cost per student is
$39 plus books.
Instructor will be Henry E.
Sixty years ago- at 11:00 A.M., November 11 , 1918- the
Cleland, Jr., Cleland Realty,
Pomeroy. Cleland is a
guns of World War I were stilled. For the first lime In our
graduate
of Ohio University
Nation's history , Americans on European soil had defended
where
he
completed
the cause of freedom. Since that day, other generations of
requjrements for his bro~er's
Americans have answere-d the Nation's call to arms to defend
licenses.
thai lofty cause throughout the world.
He is a senior certified real
estate appraiser and a realtor
This is VETERANS DAY- a time to honor the millions of men
Be sure to see all
member of the National .:..:.,:.: the
other sty Its
and women who .have served our Nation in lime of war,
Association of Realtors, The
Wrangler Denim
Ohio Association of Realtors,
Through their valor and their sacrifice they have met the
Jean5 . Western
•••.
Jackets . Western
::::
The Southeastern Ohio Board
highest obligation of their citizenship, Now, in all walks olllle,
Shirts In tho
';!;
of
Realtors
and
the
Inthey continue to strive lor new pinnacles of achievement lor
men's and boys
::::
dependent Real Estate
the benellt of mankind.
deportment on the
.:.:.::.·
Consultants.
ist floor .
,.,.
•'•'
Residents wishing niore
On this VETERANS DAY 1978 we salute the veterans of our
Information concerning the
~i~~
community in grateful appreciation of their sacrifice and
course, may call 99U009.
::::
....
continued service.
::~
·.:~.: ~.:
::::
:·:·
MIDDLEPORT POST.. ........... l28
:;:::
·:·:
In 1930, Charles Creighton
and James Hargis of
RACINE POST....................... 510
Maplewood, IWJ.• drove their
1929 Ford Model A roodster
from New York to Los
RUTLAND POST.................. 467
Angeles anij back again - a
total of 7,180 miles In 42 days

Real estate
course will
be offered

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Now You K:riow

POMEROY POST .................. 39
I

I

-

In ' reverse,

without

stopping the engine once.

j Elberfelds In Pameror I

,.

#

'

•

tmts

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•

SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1978

'

.'

are interviewed

"Cold weather, apparently light clothing
United Press International
- chances are slim, but that's something
Rescue teams, illolated by a howling we've got to play'to the end,' ' Lie said.
blizzard sweeping the Rockies and the
Lander, Wyo., had Hlnches of the snow.
Plains, .tracked a plane crash survivor Evanston , Wyo., had 9 inches and 8 inches
lhrough the snow-i!hrouded wilderness of · feU at Sheridan, Wyo. Billings, Mont. , had
Wyoming Saturday but held out little hope 7-inch accumulationS and Bismarck, N.D.,
of finding him alive .
had' 6 Inches.
. The storm- the first major blast of the
Higher mountain elevations got as much
season - buried portions of the Rockies as two inches of snow and portions of South
under two feet of snow and spread a foot- Dakota's Black Hills reported a foot and a
and :a-half of snow over the Black Hills. At half of snow. Nearly a foot of snow covered
least six deaths have been blamed on the the canyons of northern U!Bh.
storm, three in traffic accidents on iceBlizzard · warnings were in effect
and-611dw·dogged roads in Utah, Wyoming Saturday for Wyoming and winter storm
and Nebraska and three In a light plane warnings extended from Utah and Texas
crash in Wyoming.
to Minnesota .
A helicopter, taking advantage of a lull
Freezing rain spread as far south as
in the storm, dropped searchers on a Oklahoma.
l-ugged, snow-covered mountain near the
wreckage of the single-engine plane which
went down in the mountains outside Cody,
DANIEL ICEMAN
Wyo .
The searchers founcl tnree Domes m me
·plane and tracks, apparently made by a
GALUPOUS - The GaUia County
survivor, leading away from the wreckSheriff's '!lepartment recovered a stolen
age. They began tracking .
But the wind and snow kicked up again, car Saturday morning, within an hour of
and the rescue team was stranded in the the report of Its theft.
Absoraka wilderness, one of the most · Carl Halley, Jackson Pike, reported to
the department Saturday at 10 a.m. that
Inhospitable places In Wyoming .
MIDDLEPORT - Daniel F. Iceman,
search and rescue spokesman Eric Lie his 197~ Dodge had been !Bken from in Grand Master of ail Masons in Ohio, will
In Cody said the search team, able to .front of his residence.
awards to ~0, 60 a~d 65. Y"!'r
The vehicle was discovered within the present
communiate only with aircraft, was last
Masons in the 12th Masomc D1str1ct
reported following the tracks and trying to hour behind the Gallipolis Gun Club, where Monday at the Middleport Masomc
reach a cabin at lower elevation, in Umber it had been abandoned. Officers report Temple, beginning at 7:30p.m.
··nine miles from the crash site, Lie said. that the aulD had been wrecked, incurring
Grand Master Iceman IS a member of
But there was litUe hope the crash heavy damage tD the front door and side Ebenezer Lodge 33, F&amp;AM, Wooster and a
panels .
survivor would be found alive.
member of the York Rite bodies there . He
is a member of the Ancient Accepted
Scottish Rite in the VaUey of Canton, Ohio,
and was made an honorary 33rd degree
Mason In Atlantic City, N. J., In 1974. He is
also a member of the AI Koran Temple,
Ancient Arabic Order, Nobles of Mystic
Shrine.
Mr . Iceman was installed Grand
Master of all Masons In Ohio on Oct. 21,
POMEROY - Robert D. (Bob) In the establishment of that program.
this year, and a large nwnber of Masons
Roberts and his wife, Nonga have two from the 12th District - Meigs, Jackson,
Roberts well-known Pomeroy resident,
' will be honored by the Pomeroy Chamber sons, Robert and Mike, and five Gailia and Lawrence Counties - attended
of Commerce at 6:30p.m. Wednesday at grandchildren.
the Grand Lodge session in Columbus.
the Meigs Inn.
Grand Master Iceman is a member of
The chamber has selected Roberts as
the St. James Episcopal Church in
me of the honorees tngether with Norma
Wooster where he served on the vestry and
Goodwin and Ben F. ~isenberry .
was church treasurer for 18 years. He has
Roberts graduated from Pomeroy
been employed by the Gersteinslager
High School, class of 1928. He was a
Manufacturing Co. In Wooster since 1946.
member of the P(l!leroy High Scbool
Recently, he was appointed director of
football squad, glee club and took part in
manufacturing for the custom truck and
•the various high school theatrical
trailer division. He also has been active In
. productioos. FQI' about a year he work&lt;:&lt;f
veterans affairs In Wooster Whe•e be is a
as· a railroader . He graduated from Oh1o
member of the American Legion and past
University and received his B.S. degree In
commander of Wqoster Post 68.
All Master Masons are invited to
education .
"Bob " as he is known throughout the
attend .
communitr, taught at the SUgar Run
Grade School for many years and he.
coached at tbe Pomeroy High School.
During this time he was a eli ve in coaching
EXTENDED FORECAST
many star athletes who performed for
Munday through Wednesday,
Pomeroy High School.
sh 0wers Monday, ending TUesday aod
For many many years, Roberts was a
tumiDg cooler. Fair on Wednesday.
scorekeeper f~r the Pomeroy High Scbooi
Highs wlll be In tbe 5GB Mooday, eooUng
basketball and football teams. He is a
, 1u the 40s by Wednesday. Early
Maaon and a 'member of the Green aod
morning lows wUI range from the upper
White Club. Throughout the years he bas
30s
tu the middle 40s Moo day, cooling to
heen active In civic affairs. He has been
lhe upper 20s or lower 30s by
known throughout Southeastern Ohio as a
Wednesday mornin~.
·
pel'8011 who would dmate his time willingly
,tD help students, particularly athletes; In
lpal't8mllll8hip and fair play- He Is also
ROBERT ROBERTS
' imown aa "Mr. Uttle Leaguer" and helped

Sheriff's department
recovers stolen car

POMEROY - Two architect firms
were interviewed in reference tD being
hired \0 design !be planned facilities for
Meigs County's retarded wben the Meigs
County Board of Commis,sioners met In
special session Thursday. ·
Interviewed were J . E. Bletzacker,
Lancaster, and Easley, Lee, Vargo and
Cassiday of Marietta . The board stated
that a decision on the hirihg of an architect
wUI be made no later than Nov. 21.
Wesley Buehl, county engineer,
discussed specifications for a new beating
system at the county highWay garage, the
present system being non-reparable . The
board authorized Buehl to advertise for
bids on a new fuel oil system with bids to
be opened on Nov. 28 • .
In an earlier session, Buehl also met
with the board to discuss tbe purchase of
two new dump trucks for his department.
It was agreed tD advertise lor the vehicles
with delivery to be after the fi,rst of the
year .

Mrs. Dick Freeze met with the
Masons to be boardMr.toanddiscuss
the road running to their
'1ome in the Riggs Crest Manor
The commissioners agreed to
honored Monday ;ubdivision.
neet w1th the prosecuting attorney and the

Pomeroy Chamber to
honor Bob Roberts

• . 'r '
~l

·r'

PRICE 25 CENTS

MIDDLEPORT -POMEROY

Architect firms

Rescue teams ·search
for cr.a sh. survivors
'

tntintl

subdivision owner in an attempt to resolve
the problem.
Mrs . Mildred Jacobs, county home .
superintendent , discussed operating
policies at the Infirmary and was
instructed to follow the adopted operating
policy in regaro to charges for all patients
at the home.

MEMBERS of American Legion Posts in Pomeroy, Middleport, Racine and
Rutland joined forces Saturday to present a Veterans Day program in front of the
county courthouse. Principals pictured from the left are Rodney Karr,
commander of Pomeroy 's Drew Webster Post 39, who pres1ded ; Pomeroy Mayor

Clarence Andrews who gav ~ Ol e welcome and received a flag for the to.wn .sent .bY

Cong . Clarence Miller, and James H. Hampson, Lancaster , second d1stnct ~ce
conunander who spoke on the importance of Veter an:s Day and preservtng
America. Representing other posts were Albert Roush ,' past commander of

Feeney • Bennett Post 128, Middleport; Elmer Pickens, commander of Racme
Post, and Lyle Hysell , commander of the Rutland Post.

Gallia-Jackson-Vinton vocational
school selected for pilot project .
. RIO GRANDE- The Galli~- Jackson
- Vlntnn Joint Vocational Sch"i'l District
has been selected by. the Department of
Vocational Education liS one of the three
pilot sehools In the state to ~tablish a
Hwnan Resource Student Service Center
for the students of the three county area.
Major purpose of the program is to
mount a comprehensive coordinated
human service effort focused tDward a
student constituency. The educational
program with the direct cooperation and
support of several community agencies,
could provide a coordinated approach in
working toward· solving the needs of the
"whole person," while he-ohe is still within
the educational domain.
.
The goal of the pilot center would be :
I - To provide appropriate student
diagnosis and evaluation as well as
professional treatment to referred youth
and adult students who have concerns,
problems or disorders that Interfere with
their educational, social, economic and
physical development.
•
2 - .To provide a multi-disciplinary
consulllve technical assistance approach
in cespondlng to the needs of the various
local educational district staff. Leadership
and technical assistance concerning
student needs might be provided tQ such
personnel as : the district superintendent,
building supervisor. appropriate building

specialists and classroom teacners.

3 - To provide multi-disciplinary
counseling to parents when specialized
services are requested or required.
4 - To provide needed staff training
using a multi-disciplinary approach for
local education constituent districts that
will further enhance the ability of staff to
plan for and implement appropriate
referral mechanisms that are designed to
meet the human needs of students.

·

&gt;- To develop a network of formal
and inform al linkages (out reach
capability) with local human service
agencies in order t• appropriately pian
and provide for further client services, if
such se ... vices are warranted.
The various cooperating agencies that
are in the design a re the Bureau of

Vocational Rehabilitation, Ohio Bureau of
Empl oyment
Service,
Juvenile
(Continued on page A-2 )

Gallia board meets Saturday
GALLJPOUS - Meeting iq regular
session Saturday, the Gallia County Board
of Education granted Super!ntendent Tom
Hairston permission to attend the

American Association of Supervision and
Curriculum Development (ASCS)
meeting , which is to be held in Detroit,
Mich., from March 3 tD 7, 1979.
SUperintendent Hairston will present
Kaye Michael, teacher at Bidwell-Porter
Elementary School, to the convention to
receive an award for&gt;placing fourth in t)le
nation for a paper which she wrote on
teaching economic education.
In further action, William Cremeans,
. Bidwell, S~phen Wilson, Gallipolis, John

i::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;;;:;:;:~;!;~:;:;:::::::;~!;!;:;:;:;:;::i:
)

,,
,_.

GALLIPOLIS-POINT PLEASANT

VOL 13 NO. 41

I
1

· ~_{.-'

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unbar

BER 11.1918-

f.

.

VErEBANS J)ay was observed In tbe
Gallipolis Public Square Saturday
·mornmg. Post No. 4464, Veterans of
Foreign Wan, was In charge of
services, held near the World War I
mOD.wneot. Guest speaker was Rev.
Everett Delaney, American Legion
(Lafayette Post No. %7) chaplain.

Carter feels accords
now partially undone

WRANGLER BOOT RARE JEANS

i

PARIS ( UPI) - Eleven doughty
1\!lchigan doughboys saluted Saturday, 60
)'!!BrS tD the minute after the end of World
'Rar I, as France's President Valery
(i.l.scard d'Estaing tald a wreath at the
tomb of France's unknown soldier.
-The leader of the group, Oral "Moose "
LaCombe, shook hands with Giscard after
l!je ceremony at the Arch of Triumph.
uWhere are you from?" Giscard asked
In English. "From Michigan," replied the
voluble LaCombe, speechless for once.
:rhe 11 are part of the last surViving
World War · I veterans drum and bugle
corps. Their trip was paid for in a fund"
raising drive by their fellow townspeople
of Sault Sainu Marie, Mich.
The old soldiers, aged 79 tD 87, their
wives and friends - about 50 people in all
- earlier attended a memorial mass at
Notre Dame Cathedral with the French
president and other French and foreign
dignitaries.
· The veterans shivered in the pale
autumn sunlight as Giscard J1)aced the
wreath at the arch at the stroke of the lith
hour of the lith day of the lith month - 60
years to the minute of the end of .the "war
to end all wars." They shivered again as a
military parade wound down the Champs
Eiysees.
(Continued on pa~e A-21

!. Area Deaths !

~1~:

\

-,, "t \.

~

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

pomeroy
nationa
bank

..~'

Doughboys
in. Paris
for event

'

.

Poll':, C~own City, and James E. Sprague,
Gallipolis, were granted certification as
bus drivers.
Eugenia
F. Gardner, EMR
SUpervisor , was granted permission to

attend the State Con vention of the Ohio
CoWicil for Exceptional Children tD be held
in Cincinnati on Nov. 16, 17, and 18.
Gardner and Elementary SUpervisor
Adelaide Sanders were granted permission to atten~ a Title I Meeting · In
Columbus on Nov. 28.
· Speech and Hearing Therapist Sharon
R. Cain was granted permission tD attend
the Ohio Council of Audiology Meeting to
be held on Friday, Dec. 8, in Columbus.

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