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                  <text>12 _The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pom.~e;;,;r,;;o11y,~000.;.,T00h•u•rsd-ay;,;,0S0e•p;.t•. l3....;.,1 • 9 7 • 9 - - - - - - - - - . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ! " '

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1
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I

ELBERFELD$

I

EARL RICHMAN
Earl M. (Pappy ) Riclunan, 72, a
resident of Parkersburg and formerly a resident of the Gallipolis
area, died Wednesday in Marietta
Memorial Hospital. He was a retired
construction millwright.
He was born in Baltimore, Md.,
son of the late George A. and Katie
Mae Peer Richman. He was a member of the Lutheran church.
He is survived by his wife, Mrs.
Evelyn Higgins Richman; three
daughters : Mrs. Norman (Sue) McDowell, Stow, Ohio; Mrs. Ralph
· (Rose) Phipps, Owensville, Ohio and
Mrs. Virgil (Carol) South,
.Kaiser lantern, Germany. Eight
grandchildren survive.
One brother and one sister
preceded hini in death.
Friends may call at the Leavitt
Fwleral Home in Parkersburg after
7:30p.tn. Thursday.
ANITA LYNN BALL
Anita Lynn Ball, 22, Minersville,
died Tuesday at the St. Joseph
Hospital in Parkersburg, w. Va.
Mrs. Ball attended the Minersville
United Methodist Church and was a
laboratory assistant at Veterans
Memorial Hospital . She was a 1975
graduate of Eastern High School.
Surviving are her husband,
Thomas E. Ball; a son, Christopher
· Ryan ; her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Rog er Buckley, Route 3, Pomeroy;
two brothers, Kevin and Bryce, and
a sister, Renee Buckley, and
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. John
Bailey and Benjamin~' . Buckley , all
of Route 3, Pomeroy . Also surviving
are her great-grandmother, Mae
Reitmire, New Haven, W.Va .; a
sister-in -law , Diana Buckley,
Pomeroy, and several aunts, uncles
and cousins.
Funeral services will be held at 1
p.m. Friday at the Ewing Funeral
Home with the Rev. Harvey Koch
and th e· Rev. James Leach
officiating. Burial will he in the Mt.
Hermon Cemetery. Friends may
call at the funer al home anytime.

SPECIAL REDUCED PRICES FOR FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 14th
and SATURDAY. SEPTEMBER 15th.
OPEN . FRIDAY NIGHT TIL
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY SALE

5Uf=TE_R

COATS AND ClARKS

SAL~

*Cross Your Heart bras.
*Support Can Be Beautiful •'ras.
*Living bras.
*I Can't Believe It's A Girdle.

WOMEN'S
COAT SALE

Big selection of solid colors and variegated
colors. 3'12 ounce skeins, stock up now.

Junior 5/6 thru 15/16
Missy 6 thru 20
Extra sizes 12'12thru 24 112

Sizes up to
60 inches long.

, I

SAVE 25 PER CENT

TO

· ----·-~·-··--·--·----·--~----·--·--·-·------~~-·--·--~-·-4
DISCONTINUED

RUSSTEEN SPOR~EAR

STYLES AND COLORS

QUILTED
BEDSPREADS

Two racks of quality pre-teen
fashions.
Mix and match blouses,
sweaters, skirts, slacks,
jackets and tops .

The Editor:
Horray for Senator Frank Church
and the United States Senate! It's
about time we stop mollycoddling
the Russians and conceding to their
demands! Mr. Church :s statement
that the Senate will not ratify SALT
· U unless the Russians withdraw
their troops from Cuba is the best
news I've heard in awhile, and
hopefully the beginning of a new era
of much !inner dealings with our
enemy, the Soviet Union.
We must be sure, also, that SALT
U is designed in the best interests of
our national security, and not the
best interests of detente. Nikita
Khrushchev sald in 1960 "We will
bury you," and no matter what they
say in 1979, that is still their goal :
The conquering of the United States.
Witness the gradual buildup of
~ir navy, air force, and civil defen·
ae over the last 15 years.
The answer to this country's
problems lie not in seeking "detente" with our enemies, but in seeking
to follow the admonition · of God to
Solomon in Second Chronicles cha!&gt;'
ter 7:
"If my people, which are called
according to my name, shall humble
themselves, and pray, and seek my
face, and tum from their wicked
ways, then will I hear from heaven,
and forgive their sin, and heal their
land.''
Sincerely, Greg Hines, 42712 St.
Rt. 124, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

. COUPLES END MARRIAGES
In Meigs County Common Pleas
Court Rhonda A. SmaU filed for
support und er the Reciprocal
Agreement Act against Raymond E.
Lyons, Jr .
Marriages dissolved were Wanda
Caruthers and Bernard Caruthers;
Stephen R. Pullen and Janel Sut
Pullen . Jan et Sue Pullen was
restored to her former name of
Janet Sue Slaven.
·
Julie Richmond was granted a
divorce from Larr y Richmond .

Reg. 112.00 ........... Sale '10.19

Full sizes, twins, kings
and
queen
slies .
Regular prices up to
$43.99. Limited quanti ·
ty,

Reg. 14.00 ........... Sale 11.89
1

1

Reg. '17.00 ........... Sale '14.49

1h PRICE

1

Reg. 22~00 ....... .: ... Sale 118.69
SALE

CHANNEL MASTER

WOMEN'S BLOUSES
Special two day sale prices on our
stylish wnd colorful lines of

women's blouses.

Regular slzes~Oto38

CB ANTENNAS
Power wings, gutter mount styles,
mirror mount styles and trunk

Reg. '13.00 ....... Sale 111.09

mount styles. Coaxial cable and

Reg. 1l6.00 ........ Sale 113.59

mounting hardware included.

Reg. 118.00 ......... Sale 115.29

REDUCED 20 PER CENT

MEETS FRIDAY
Mary Shrine 37, White Shrine of
Jerusalem, will meet Friday, Sept.
14, at 8 p.m. There will be potluck
refreshments .

Policies changed

denims, corduroys . 100 per cent

cotton twills and colton·poly
blends. Walot sizes 28 to ,j2,
lengths 30 to 36 Inches. Tremeri·
dOus 5election of styles. Save
now.
Fashion Jeans
Fashion Jeans
Fashion Jeans
Fashion Jeans
Fashion Jeans
Fashion Jeans

MIDDtf;TOWN, Ohio (AP I The Middletown Board of
Education reinstatated Thursday
night the school district 1s
program ol extra-eurricular activities, which was cut after
voten rejected an operating levy
this week.
School Superintendent Sam
Daltm and personnel director
Marion McEvoy BMOunced they
will take early retirement.
Dalton will leave Dec. 31, and
McEvoy next April! .
Also, board president Betty
Lou Nein and board member
James Shull sald they will withdraw .., candidates for reelection.
Announcement of the reversal
of 11\e earlier decision was
greeted by cheers from some 700
•.. people who jammed the meeting

$9.56
$11.96
$12-76
$13.56
$14.36
$15.96

MEN'S
WORK UNIFORMS
Another shipment just rece l v@d.
Complete selection of sizes In

'NOrk trousers from 29 to SO, all
lengths and shirts In sizes 14'h to
20. Solid color khaki, charcoal,
navv blue, dark olive or forest
green .

Trouser sizes 2f to ••

room.

$1.95

Trquser sizes.-. to so
Sf.f5
Matching Shirts Silts 14'h to
17
S7.f5
Matching Shirts SIIH 11 to

20

Incident no issue
WASHINGTON ( AP) - Sen.
Howard H. Baker Jr. sald Thur·
aday the Chappaqulddlck accident would not be a legitimate
laaue in the 1'*1 presidential
campaign lf Sen . Edward M.
Kennedy Is the Democratic

sus

Matchint Short 51"•• Shlrta
$6.95

nominee.

Baker, who Is campaigning for
the Republican nomination, said
that if he and Kennedy were the
majoc party presidential candidates "I would never mention
Chappaquiddick."
In July !969, a car 'driven by
Kennedy went off a bridge on
Chappaqulddlck IBland, which Is
part of Martha's Vineyard, oft
the Massachusetts coast. Mary
Jo Kopechne, who had worked for
Robert F . Kemedy , was a
passenger in the car and
drowned .
Baker called a news conference
to announce the support ol Sens.
William Cohen, R-Malne, and
Robert Stafford, R-Vt., for his
presidential bid.
But most of the questions concerned a potential KeMedy candidacy.

SAL£!
caPhar•tt
CARHARTT BROWN DUCK

WORK CLOTHES
Ideal for construction workers,
fermers, hunters and general Wear .
Complete 5eloctlon of styles and alzes.

Bib overall•, lined coveralls, lined
jackets, h00d5, coats and vests.

SALE PRICES

SALE

COSMETIC SALE

SWIVEL
ROCKERS

REVLDN

Reg. $189.00 to $259.00

Save 20 per cent on our entire stock
of Coty and Revlon cosmetics. Nail
polish, powder, moisturizers,
lipsticks', cologne, hair products,
mascara and eye shadow.

Famous Kroehler quail . ty in a large array of
colors, fabrics and
styles.

YOUR CHOICE

$158

88

Gowns, pajamas, sleepers, robes.
Takj' advantage of these sale
pr ices on quality sleepwear your

MEN'S AND YOUNG MEN'S

$16.95 BLUE DENIM

Driving rains from what was left
of Frederic - little more than a low
pressure system - swept north to
New York state today sending
streams over their banks in western
New York and backing up mocning
rush hour traffic in Buffalo.
The storm, which already had
pelted parts of Tennessee,
Kentucky , West Virginia an \I
western Pemsylvania with heavy
rains, had dumped more than 5
inches of rain on Buffalo, N.Y. , by 9
a.m., foccing the closing of all
schools in the state's second largest
city . Many suburban schools also
closed.
SoJ;JJe roads in Buffalo were
flooded. stacking up traffic jams
several miles long .
Heavy rains in northwestern
Pemsyivania this !Jlorning caved in
the roof of the municipal bus station
in Erie, Pa. No injuries were
reported but five buses were
damaged.
Earier the storm dumped as much
as 7 inches of rain on western and
central Kentucky and up to 6 inches
oo eastern Tenn-. Three inches
fell on Cincinnati and Erie as the
.Vstem moved north.

flood warnings posted.
BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
F1ood warnings remained in effect

today in 17 counties across the state.
Central Ohio appeared to be
hardest hit by the rains. Schools
were closed in Co lumbus and
·several suburban districts as high
water made a nwnber of roads
impassable . The start of the
workday at state offi ces in
Columbus was delayed until 10 a.m.
because of the weather.
1n Akron, police said residents of
low~ying areas along the Cuyahoga
River were advised to leave their
homes and apartments because of
the threat of flooding. More than
three inches of rain feU overnight in
the Akron area, causing widespread
flooding of streets and basements.
Dozens of streets and roads were
dosed because of flooding in Akron
and Barberton. General Tire &amp;
Rubber Co. dosed its plant and
offices in Akron .
Some minoc evacuations were also
repocted in southwestern Ohio and
oorthern Kentucky .

MEN'S 113.95

Men's Western Shirts -

children will need This winter.
Sizes 4to6• and 71o 14.
Reg . $6.00 ........ Sale $4.79
Reg, $8.00 ........ Sale$6.39
~!it-"'" Reg. $11.00 ....... Sale$8.79
Reg. $16:oo ..... .. Sale 12.79

Saturday .

S}Q99

Long sleeve styles In size•
•moll, medium, large and
extra large. Chambray•.
flannels, gingham checks,
plald5, solid color suedes,
POlyester knits. Entire
stock on sole.
·
Men's $12.95
WESTERN SHIRTS
Mtn'S$1U5
WESTi!RN SHIRTS
Mtn'I$1U5

._,."".·"' WESTERN SHIRTS
Mtn'l $17.95

WESTERN SHIRTS

MARIJUANA DFSTROYED - The Meiga County Sheriff's Department Thursday destroyed 184 plants of marijuana that was confiscated
recently in Columbia Township. On hand for the burning were Sheriff

$10.30
$11.20
$13.50

f14 .40 .

ELBERFELD$ IN POME_·ROY
~

....

FRED TAYLOR, Rt. 2Bidwell, (Gallia County), center, and Vaughn
(right) who operate Valley View Dalry Fann - location of the 1979
Jackson Eltel18ion Area Dairy Day, Sept. 25. The "challenge feeder " pic·
tured shove wlll be one of the tour stops.

James Proffitt, Deputy Dave Ohlinger and sheriff investigator Gary
WoHe. The burning took place at the Meigs County Highway Department.

Ohio River traffic hitting bottleneck
Herald Dilpaltb
Another bottleneck occurred at
the Ga!Upo~ Locks and Dam 1'hursday .., barge tows waited in !smile-long Unes to get through the
Ohio River facliity.

And Thursday's scene up and
down the river could prevail for a
week or longer.
The reason: repairs are being

made to the upper gates in the main

Dr. Witherelljoins
Meigs Medical ·Center
The Ohio Valley Health Services
Foundation President, Dr. William
H. Allen, Jr., announced today the
addition of a second family practice
physician at the Meigs County
Medical Clinic in Pomeroy.
Dr. James Wetherell will begin his
practice on September 00 in the
same suite of offices currently oc. cupled by Dr. Wilma Mansfield.
Dr. Witherell, his wife Jeanie and
sons, Jason and Joshua, have moved
into their newly purchased home oil
Naylors Run. The Witherells recenUy moved to Pomeroy from
Tacoma, Washington where Dr.
WethereU, then a Major in the Army
Medical Corps, served oo the
Family Practice staff of Madigan
Army Medical Center for two years.
Prior to this, Dr. Witherell cmpleted a three year farnlly practice
residency at Tripier Army Medical
Center, Honolulu , Hawaii.
A diplomat ci the American

Academy of Family Practice, Dr.
Witherell, a 1974 graduate of the
Ohio State University School of
Medicine, will be providing much
needed health care for the community.
The Meigs County Medical Clinic,
located in the Medical Building ad·
jacent to Veterans · Memorial
HOIIJlital, is managed by the Ohio
Valley Health Services Foundation
in space leased from the ho8pital.
Scott LuC?as, Administrator of
Vetei'ans Memorial has indicated
the hospital is initiating plans to expand the patient treatment area in
the Medical Building. Lucas sald the
Board ci Trustees ci Veterans
Memorial feels that this expansion is
necessary to provide appropriate
treatment and examination
facilities to· meet the increasing
demand for primary health care services in the Pomeroy area.

Two persons injured
in four auto wrecks

100 per cent coHon denim, 5anlorlzed
shrunk. Wal•t sizes 27 to 50 lengths 29
t034.
,

FRIDAY &amp; smJRDAf SALE

14 ounce blue denim pre-washed,

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1979

F1a .

BIB
OVERALLS

REPEAT SA LEI

Sizes 29 to 42 waist, 30 to 36 Inch
lengths - Choose boot flare or
straight leg style. Friday and

enttne

and Florida as disaster areas.
Presidential press secretary Jody
Powell said the recovery of the Gulf
Coast "is going to take years."
Frederic left six confinned dead
and two others .missing and
presumed dead on the Gulf Cst and
property damage so extensive
officials were reluctant to make
estimates.
But Florida Gov. Bob Graham
said he ieared the damage toll from
the latest tropical devastation might
surpass the $95 million racked up
David there.
The 300-year-&lt;Jld port city of
Mobile suffered the brunt of the
storm Thursday , along with
Pascagoula, Mi5,'! ., and Pensacola,

Lay-Away for
Chrlstmasl

DENIM JEANS
HOMECOM INGSERVlCES
The annual homecoming of the
Miners \' ill e United Methodist
Church will be held Sunday with
Sunday schoo l at 9 a.m. and morning
worship at 10 followed by a basket
dinner at noon. An aft ernoon
program will begin at 2 p.m. and
singers w1ll he prese nt from
Rockbrodge .

. ... in the world ·

Our entire 51ock on sale Including

M&amp;n's $11.95
Men's $14.95
Men's $15.95
Men's $16.95
Men's $17.95
Men's $19.95

..

_Today·(

Men's
Fashion Jeans

TWO
DAY'

Extra slzes40to .U,

Reg. 111.00 ........ Sale '9.39

$12.29
$13 .09
$16.39
$17.99

.

100 per cent cotton, white
with embroidered color trim.

$4500

some areas.
Cotting normal red tape, the White ·
House on Thursday designated 30
countie~ ravaged by Hurricane
Frederic in Mississippi, Alabama

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY SALE I

Dollies and Scarfs

Reg. $56.00 to $255.00

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Associated Press
President Carter 'new South today
to personally inspect the suffering
cities of the GuU Coast while the
remnants of Hurricane Frederic
dumped heavy rains west of the
Appalachians, causing flooding in

Regular •lze• 29 to 42 and extra ·
sizes 4.4to so. SOlidS and poHern•.
Most all are 100 per cent
polyester. You'll like this new
selection.

TWO DAY SALE

Our lovely new coats of the
season are at "Buy Now"
prices ... in a selection
that's not to be missed.

SALE

ON OUR
NEW FALL SELECTION

'
Men's $14.95 Slacks
Men's S15:95 Slacks
Men's $19.95 Slacks
Men's $21.95 Slacks

at y

•

Carter visits
storm damage

MEN'S
DRESS SLACKS

WINTUK
YARN

FINAL TWO DAYS

VOL XXVIII NO. 107

SAVE FRIDAY
AND SATURDAY

$149

SALE

Applauds church

.e

FRIDAY &amp;·sATURDAY SALE

PLAYTEX

•

Two per!lms were injured during
four accidents
investigated
Thursday by the Gallia,Meigs Post,
Highway Patrol.
Officers investigated a one•vehicle
mishap on Haman Trace Rd., just
north of SR 790, at 6:45 p.m.
The patrol reports a south bound
auto operated by David Mohler, 30,
Patriot Star Route, swerved to avoid
an oncoming unidentified vehicle.
The rear wheel of the Mohler auto
dropped off the right side of the
roadway and the birm gave way
overturning the vehicle . ·
Mohler was transported by a
relative to Holzer Medical Center for
treatment.
TI1e Mohler auto was demolished.
Officers investigated a twovehicle accident on U.S. 35, at the
junction of SR 7, at 4:30p.m .
The patrol reports that vehicles
driven by Luther Lemley, 57,
Gallipolis, and John Watkins, ' 69,
Gallipolis Ferry, collided.
A passenger in the Lemley auto,
Pearl Lemley, 79, Gallipolis,
claimed injury but was not
immediately treated.

Watkins was cited on a charge of
failure to yield while turning left.
Both vehicles incurred moderate
damage .
One driver was cited following a
two-vehicle accident in Meigs
County on CR 24, just east of SR 7, at
4:36 p.in.
The patrol reports a north bound
auto operated by Edna Stewart,. 56,
Pomeroy, slid into a west bound
vehicle driven by J.C. Mulholand ,
34, Radcliff, 0., while attempting a
tum ooto CR 24.
Both vehicles incurred moderate
damage. Stewart was cited on a
charge of left of center.
Officers inv~stigated a twovehicle mishap on SR 7, four-tenths
of a mile south of TR 207, in Meigs
County, at 3:25p.m.
·
The patrol reports a south bound
auto operated by Larry Tucker, 16,
Pomeroy, had stopped in traffic on 7.
A vehicle driven by Timothy Fry,
!8, Middleport, failed to stop and
struck the Tucker auto in the rear.
Both vehicles incurred moderate
damage . Fry was cited on a charge
of failure to maintain an assured
clear distance .

lock chamber,- forcing tows up to the locks has delays of more than
1,500 feet long to lock through a 36(). three hours because of the small
foot-long lockchamber, according to lock siz.es.
Jim Wheeler, chief of the lock and
The locks and dam project here
dam branch in the operations was completed in the 1930s and was
division of the U. S. Army Corps of built to serve for 50 years, said
Engineers:
Wheeler.
"Traffic is backed up because we
"It's evident that the structure ia
have to use the smaller chamber to . now outdated. The COIIUIIerclal
boats being used today are much
handle northbound and southbound
boats while ·repairs are being made larger than the locks and dam were
designed for," he said.
to the main chamber," said
''We have a self-help program for
Wheeler, who wasatthe site .
Late Thursday morning, 20 nor- situations like this. It 's a
thbound towboats were backed up
cooperative effort between in·
for 15 miles and 15 tows were waiting dustries and the Corps. Industries
apply additional boats and personnel
togo south.
Under present conditions and until to help in getting the boats through."
repairs to the 601J.loot-iong main lock
chamber are completed, the
average wai~ period for a single
boat to Jl88S through the smaller
chamber will be 54 hours, or two and
on~ourth days, Wheeler said.
Wheeler said that under normal
Three calls . were answered
conditions, every tow going through
Thursday evening and Friday
morning by the Middleport
Emergency Squad.
At 6:50p.m. the squad went to the
junior high foothall field where Bill
Blount was hurt during a practice
session. He was taken to Holzer
Medical Center.
At 6:37a.m., the unit went to an
,auto accident at Cheshire where
Miles Puckett, Salyers, Ky., had
'
received a possible broken leg and a
laceratiov. He was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital. At
CLEVELAND (AP) -Here are
7:04a.m. Friday, the squad went to
33 Coster St., for Martha Hwuiel who
lbe wiJmlD&amp; 1111111ben drawn
'lbursday Ia the Oblo Lottery:
had a high temperature and chest
pains. She, too, was taken to
Blue OM; Wblte 11; Gold 5;
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Wln..,·thon 13817.

Squad has
busy day

Man, 27, charged in
March 19 incident
p

A Middleport man , Phillip A.
Bradbury, '!7, has been charged in
connection with the March 19
vandalism of Kyger Creek High
School.
Appearing in Gallipolis Municipal
Court Wednesday on a charge of
criminal damaging, bOnd for
Bradbury was set at $5,000. A
preliminary hearing on the charge
was set for today .
According to a spokesman for the
Gallia County Sheriff's Department,
similar charges are pending against
two other Gallia County adults.
The spokesman emphasized that
the department 's investigation of

Weather
Clearing and cooler tonight. Low
in the low 5&amp;. Sunny, cooler and less
humid Saturday. High near 70. The
chance of rain is 20 percent tonight
and near zero percent Saturday.

the March 19 incident , during which
the building was forcibly entered
and school property damaged, has
revealed oo juvenile involvement.

Racine man wins $500
Paul Cleland, Racine, was presernted his second prize in the Ohio Lot·
tery - ,a check for $500 - at
Gloeckner's Cafe in Pomeroy Thur·
sday afternoon.
Cleland won the $000 in the weekly
50&lt;ent ticket play and was presen- ·
ted his prize at Gloeckner's where he
purchased his ticket.

Making the presentation wu Bill
Abdella, area representative Of the
Ohio Lottery.
Cleland's first prize came in
August, 1978, when .be was awarded
a new automobile as the result of a
drawing held to award prizes to lot·
tery ticket purchasers of non·
winning ticket holders.

�2- The Daily Sentinel , Midd!eport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, Sept. 14, 1979

In Washington
Victim of peace bid?
By Robert Wallen
are in the custody of state and
WASHINGTON (NEA)
federal correctiolll! authorities.
President. Carter's widely acRecenUy released Justice Departclaimed decision to play a pivotal ment statistics show that at the end
role in negotiating an Egyptian- of last year, the prison population
Israeli peace treaty bas claimed an stood at !l07 ,384, up 3 percent over
unezpected victim.
the previous year. Increases have
Business
opportunities for been recorded for 'four colll!ecutive
American corporatiolll! are dwin- years.
dling rapidly in the Middle Eastern
Prisoners Wider federal jurisdiccountries that are hostile to the ter- tion totaled 29,1103, down 7 percent
ms rl. the peace treaty.
from a year earlier. But the nwnber
That litUeofloticed development
of statHncarcerated irunates rose 4
first reported by the FlnancW percent to 277,581.
·
Tlmes of Londoo in itll World
The West has the dubious honor of
Business Review, has been con- leading the nation with a 7 percent
finned by unhappy government of. increase in prisoners. Gains were
ficlals here.
recorded in every state of the region
Vast amounts of money are In- except Oregon and New Mexico. In
volved because many of the nations other areas of the country •. the Inbordering on the Persian Gull are creases ranged from 3 to 5 percent.
spending their new.found oil wealth
The largest declines in prison
on 1118SSive public works projeots
population were registered in North
that often cost hiUidreds of millions
Carolina and Alabama. The biggest
of dollars apiece.
increases came in Texas, California,
Included in that categQcy are
Florida, Michigan and New York.
nationwide highway nefworks,
telephone systems and power grids
• E'lTER STICK
as well as pipelines, refineries and
TOWEATIIER
petrochemical facilities to
Some predictiolll! of things to
maximize domestic utilization of the come: Space explorers from Earth
region's vast oU resources.
will reach Mars by 1992. A woman ·
The recent chilliness is evident win be elected president in the same
even in Saudi Arabls, a nation
year. American troops will be
traditionally syropathetlc to the
fighting a war in Africa by 1985.
United States and the temIf you believe those forecsstll,
poAmericans, many of them em- here's another from the same group
ployees of U. S. contractors.
of prescient prognosticators : .
Construction contracts in the
Gasoline won't reach the dollar-aregion were estimated at ~ billion . gallon level until1982.
laSt year - but the U. S. share was
Onmi, a magazine that attempts to
only 3 percent, compared with 9 perpopularize · science- and futurecent of the total only three years
related subjects, last October asked
earlier.
its readers to predict when a variety
Much of the business lost by
of events might occur.
American finns is being picked up
Claiming that approximately
by companies based in South Korea,
20,000 responses were received, the
Japan, Taiwan and India, as weU as
publication last March released the .:
various European countries.
findings with' appropriate fanfare.
The
predictions
covered
PRI.SON POPULATION
everything from nuclear war with
BOOM
the Soviet Union to the cloning of a
The, population boom may be
hwnan. But the abysmal lsck of
slowing in the maternity wards, but
foresight on gasoline prices suggests
not in the nation's prisolll!. For the
that mere mortals ought to stick to
first time In the country's history,
predicting tomorrow's weather.
more than 300,000 men and women

Business mirror
NEW YORK (AP) -A batUe for
talented managers is leading to
sharply higher .salaries in the
executive sUite , with incomes of
some key people jumping 5C percent
and even 60 percent at a time .
"Corporate America is on the
biggest binge of hoarding and
pirating key executives since the
early \9608,'·' said Eugene Jennings,
an authority on corporate affairs
who has been tracking the situation.
The surge of increases isn't Wiique
in U.S. industrial history, but ·it is
pushing incomes to previously
unheard of levels, and seems
destined to make million-dollar
incomes far more common .
"We'll see more millon dollar
salaries in the next live years than
we did in the previoUs ten ,'' said
Jennings . "The clear winners are
top level executives with good
records as general managers. "
The condition leading to the higher
salaries results from an economy in
which some old-line companies are
stagnated while newer concerns are
forging ahead. Needing talent, the
latter raid the former .
As an inducement, the expansion
companies once offerlid 40 percent
or a bit more to obtain from a
stagnant company a key executive,
wmaUy a the manager of a corporate
division, or even the corporation
itself.
Now, with professional search
firms adding to the pressure, the pot
has been increased to as much as 60
percent of existing salaries. "Good ..
genera1 managers are scarce ," said
JeMing.s.'
Jennings , a
professo r of
management at Michigan State,
author of many books on ·
corporations , and confidential
adviser to top corporate officials,
has spent years tracking executive
rout.es to success.

Intensifying the present battle , he
believes, is the tenacity with which
t)le stagnant corPOrations, the ones

mEDAll.VSENTINEJ.
IUSP8 ltWIOI

~~ ~~ ..._cd._
DEVOTED TO 11IE
INTERE'Sl'OF

MEIGS-MASON AREA
ROBERT HOEFLICH
City EdJtor

~ Pvbl!Jbed dally urtpt Saturday by Tbt OhJo

VtUey Publilhlq Company· Mllltlmed£1, Inr.,
111 Court SL, Pomeroy, Oltl4! ~7• . Bulinels
Offk't Pbooe 112:· USol. Edttortal PboDt
IIW:157.
Secuud d••• JKIII.II&amp;r paid 111 Pomeroy, ObJo.
N•doDIII•dvuUILct: rt&gt;pmtntatln, I...11Ddoo
AuQ('lllel, Jlfl EucUd ..h'~ .. Clevrland. Ohio

Hill.

Subttrtpdoa rll~l ; ~llvt"red by carrier
•l:w:~ av11U.ble Jl n:ata ~r wttk , By Molor

R011k wbf~ c.rritr RM-1&lt;"~ aut available, 0Df
moral!!, SUO.
Tbe DaUy SeaUDel. by maU In OIUo aod West
Vlrp.JI , OOf' year PUi i SIJ: moulhs $17.50:
thrM mootbl UD.SO. Elftwbere 13S.!JQ; 11J:
EDOIU.PI.W; dlrM moatbl IJUCI.
Tbt Auocillted Preu ill t:~.ciWIIve ly euUUtG
10 Uw LlJt' for pu1JIIc11tlon of 1U DtWI dtspatcllel
erecl.lll!d to the OIPWipilper lod 11blo the local
lrW'I

pubu.bfd H:~ta.

so often raided, are fighting to retain
their best employees.
Once, said JeMings, they would
light to the extent of offering their
key people up to 20 percent to 25
percent to turn down• the raider's
offer. Now, he said, many
companies will go as high as 40 to 50.
Recognizing that their companies
cannot move ahead without talented
executives, many companies have
developed contingency packljges so
alluring they make it almost
impossible for an executive to leave.
When the executive is likely to be
tempted, the package is presented .
Typically, it includes a long-term
commitment to the executive and
benefits designed to win the same
commitme!lt from him.
"We are in the retaining erid of a
cycle," said Jennings. He spotted
the beg innings of the cycle 2 or 21h
year ago. At first the stagnant
companies were caught off guard.
Now they are fighting hard, he said .
Such sequences, he observes ,
develop whenever an economy is
mixed, in the sense that some
companies are in the forefront of
expansion while others lag behind.
" Whenever you have this situation
you have talent on the move,
crossing organizational and job
boWidaries," he said.

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, Sept. 14, 1979

I'LL &amp;EE YouR RAig,E,
AND I'LL

UP Tj..jt: §TAKE§
ANOTHER 12% •

Editorial opinions,
comments

Marauders hosting White Falcons tonight
BYGARYCulut

As the high school grid foothall
aeason enters itll third week of the
1979 school year Coach BiB JeweU 's
Wabama White ~alcona prepare for
their toughest game to date and
poaslbly their toughest of the entire
10 game schedule at Meigs tonight.
Wahama, stlll hurting following ._
dlllappointing 15-12 loas last week to
Kyger Creek, will take a 1-1 slate into Friday's match. Meig8 currenUy

Washington today

Today's commentary
The inscrutable Soviets
By Don Graff
A riddle wrapped in a mystery inside an enigma.
Winston Churchill had the words
for Soviet policy back then at the
onset of World War I. It has become
no less mysterious In the Intervening
40 years.
Why, for example, those combat
troops in Cuba?
The 1962 misSile crisis ~ediately comes to mind, but no one sees a
replay - yet. And that is precisely
the point of the question.
Two or three thousand Russians even representing, as the Pentagon
says, the equivalent of a brigade
with armored, artillery and infantry
elements - do not pose a direct
physical threat to the United States
or any other of Cuba's neighbors
with the possible exception of a
Dominican Republic already flattened by Hurricane David.
.
There is some spectllation, of the
hopeful variety, that the troops may
be nothing more than a Soviet
gesture, a quid pro quo for the
Cubans who have been Moscow's
point men in Africa .
But if so, there is considerably less
quid than quo involved. Best
estimates put the Cuban expeditionary Ioree at something like
40,000 men, compared to which the
few tholl88nd Russians are a very
small gesture indeed. Furthermore,
when the Cubans have some 140,000
men under anns still on their island
who needs Russialll! to buck up the
home front?
While the military purposes, if
any, of the new troops may be a
mystery, the political consequences
are something else again -multiple
andalltooobvious.
If Moscow had set out to disrupt
congressiorial consideration of SALT
ll and convert doubters into opponents of the anns-limitation
agreement, they could not hav.e
devised a better low-risk strategy .
The troops are not sufficient to trig.

ger a . blockade and an eyeball.W.
eyeball confrontation 88 did the
misS'(
is'
the
I e cr IS. But
y are enough
.to put SALT on the shelf as the
Senate Foreign Relations Committee 111mB totheCubansitustlon.
And there's more. Committee
chairman Frank Church will be a
key figure 1n the upeomlng ratifiestlon floor debate. He also happelll! to
be facing a tough r!H!lection campaign hack home in Idaho, where
soft lines in foreign policy are nd
popular with the voters. The
senator-candidate bas let it be
known he may be reconsidering his
position on the treaty.
Then there is the delay in detecling the Soviet newcomers - for aU
the vast U.S. Intelligence aJlPII!"atus
knows, or is letting an, they may
have been in Cuba unnoticed for a
year or more. It is not the sort of
demonstJ:ation of intelligence effectiveness to reassure those doubting
U.S. ability to police the SALT arms
restrictiolll! an.d verify Soviet comP!iance.
But none of this squares with
readings up to now of Mq;cow's interest 1n securing ratification of the
treaty with no or a bare minimum of
congressional tinkering. Which brings us hack to the mystery.
The troops may, of ·course, be a
Soviet way of acting tough at little
cost, possibly timed to coincide with
the conference of nonaligned natiolll!
in Havana where host Fidel Castro
bas pressed for a pro-Soviet course .
l:lut it should be obvious even in
the Innermost recesses ri the
Kremlin that such a show for any
reason at such a selll!itive point can
only compel an Anierican govemment to act tougher, particularly
one In the loosely stuck together condillon of the Carter administration
with an election looming.
Secretary of State Cyrus Vance is
holding the no-panic line, but even
he says tt the status quo won't do. In
other words, the Soviet troops must
go.

Ohio briefs. ..

PM-{)hlo Briefs
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ohio
comparties wishing to participate in
the Canton Fair in the People's
Republic of China are urged to
contact the state Division of
International Trade by Friday to
reserve space.
While the Canton Fair will rWI
from Oct. 15 through Nov. 15, the
Ohio group is currenUy scheduled to
Today In History
be at the fair only until Oct. 26.
By The Associated Press
International trade director
Today is Friday, Sept. 14, the 257th
Frederick A. Sexton said eligible
day of 1979. There are 108 days left in
businesses include immediate
the year.
.''lluyers of Chinese products and
• On this date in 1901, President
sellers of products needed by the
William McKinley died in Buffalo,
country.
N.Y. , of a gWishot wound inflicted by
The international trade division
an assassin. Vice President
reports that m;~jor U.S. exports to
Theodore Roosevelt was sworn In as
China include wheat, corn,
president.
soybeans, fertilizers, coal, drilling
On this date :
equipment, engine parts, trucks and
in 1629, the second settlement In
tractors.
Massachusetts - Salem - was
Imports from China have been
chartered .
"
cotton clothing, tin, carpeting, tea,
1n 1778, Benjamin Franklin was
tungsten ore and fireworks.
sent to France as an American
minister.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) r- A new
In 1812, Russians set fire to
state program regulating. the
Moscow after an invasion by
harvest and sale of native Ohio
Napoleon Bonaparte.
ginseng will be reviewed by the state
In 1945, after World War ll,
Division of Natural Areas and
Premier Higashi Kuni of Japan
Preserves at a public meeting Sept.
said : "People of America, won 't you
25 at the Department of Natural
forget Pearl Harbor?"
in 1960, the United States notified Resources headquarters.
Ohio's regulations establish a
:Cuba that Premier Fidel Castro
harvest season from Aug . 15 to Dec.
would be restricted to Manhattan
31 and require glngseng deqlers to
during a visit U&gt; America.
register with the state and submit an
In 1970, the fowth and final session
annual report of their operations.
of the Roman Catholic Church's
Under the program dealers selfEcumenical Council was opened by
Pope Paul VI in St. Peter's Basilica. certify the ginseng they buy as
Ten years ago: For the fifth time legslly collected in Ohio .
Individuals who collect ginseng to
in less than a week, Israeli
warplanes attacked Egyptian sell or trade to dealers are not
military objectives on the west shore required to obtain permits, but they
must abide by the collecting season
of the Gulf of Suez.

and
provide
dealers
with
infomratlon about the counties
where the ginseng was collected.
The root has been used for
medicinal purposes and has beep
exported to China for use as tea and
in making bread, the department
said.
The United States is the third
largest producer of ginseng with
annual exports totaling $25 million in
1978.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Increases in costs at Ohio hospitals
have been held to 3 percent less than
the natiooal inflation rate this year,
thanks to their own efforts to hold
the line, according to the president
of the Ohio Hospital Association.
Donald R. Newkirk colltends
Ohio's hospitals do not need federal
controls which have been proposed
by President Carter.
"These controls, if enacted, would
signal the beginning of rationing·.
hospital care to the entire population
of this nation ," he told a news
conference 'l'uesday.
. Newkirk said that in the first five
months of this year, costll at Ohio's
206 communitY hospitals increased .
at the rate of 10.21 percent.
By comparison, Newkirk said, the
Consumer Price Index for the same
period shot ·up at an average annual
rate of 13.2 percent.
Newkirk said in the first five
months of 1978, the hospitals had
increased 16.52 percent over the
comparable period of 1977.
Among reasons cited by the
hospital spokesman for holding the
line on costs were voluntary
reductions in the length of hospital
stay, expanding outpatient clinics,
decreasing ,ne number of hospital
beds and "improved productivity."

WASHINGTON (AP) -Walter F.
Mondale got his election bet down
early: Jinuny Carter to win, with his
own career in national politics riding
on the outcome.
Tnose are high stakes for a man
who can't do very much to change
the race. But that's the way it is for ·
vice presidents.
So long as Carter is running,
Mondale has no options . And Carter·
has made it clear that he intends to
run aU the way to the Democratic
National · Convention, no matter
what happens in the early primary
elections.
That could change, and Mondale
hasn't foreclosed the possibility that
he'd be a presidential candidate if
Carter were not. That is not likely .
Besides, if Carter did falter during
the primary season, it probably
would be too late for Moodale to
move in ariyhow.
.It already has been suggested, by
Rep. Morris K. Udall, that Mondale
might be a good alternative for
Democrats dissatisfied with Carter .
But they already have one in Sen.
Edward M. KeMedy, who sounds
more like a candidate every day.
Mondale says he doesn't krtow
what Kennedy is going to do. But he
does krtow what Carter will do, and
that is run for a second term.
Mondale says he believes Carter will
be renominated and re-elected, and
will be proud to run with him.
Mondale's political career and.
that of his mentor, the late Hubert H.
Humphrey , always had intertwined.

Now Vice President Mondale faces a
situation not unlike the one that
co nfronted
Vice
President
Humphrey in the 1968 campaign.
Huinphrey was tied then, 88
Mondale is now, to a president
whose popularity was on the wane.
Lyndon B. Johnson faced a
challenge in the presidential
primaries, first from Sen. Eugene J .
McCarthy, tben from Sen. Robert F .
Kennedy as well.
Johnson renounced candidacy,
Humphrey ran and, as the
presidential nominee of a bitterly
divided Democratic Party, lost the
election to Richard M. Nixon .
For a time, it seemed possible that
1980 might be a partial replay, with
Gov. EdmWid Q. Brown Jr . of
California as Carter's Initial
opponent and with Edward Kennedy
entering the contest later, if the
president looked as vulnerable by
late winter as he does in lste

Visitors to the Statehouse soon may
get to see a movie, if they have
called their state representatives
ahead of time.

Back in 1968, Meigs' tJnt year,
MHS defeated Wahama by a ~7
margin. The following seaaon it was
13-7 and last year the Marauders ran

intD I!OIDe difficulty before winning,
1~.

Once again, the Meigs CoiUitians
will be heavily favored despite their
·
two opening loues.
In their aeason opener the Belpre
Eagles surpriaed Coach Olarlle
Chancey's crew with a 24-22 score on

a 92-yard run with just six minutes to
play.
Then last week, Meigs faDed to
cap!taijze on some excellent scoring
opportunities before succumbing to
a powerful Pt. Pleasant outfit.
Meigs Is led by the premier quar·
terback In the area, !Ophomore Bob
Ashley. The lanky lllgnal caller bas
completed 17 of 40J)IISIIell for 179yards. He bas yet to throw a touchdown
pus, but has rushecHer...Dro .Of his .

BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
Whatever it is - luck, talent,
clean living - that makes a winner ,
the Montreal Expos seem to have it.
"It 's not only being good, you've
got to be lucky in this game too, "
Expos outfielder Ellis Valentine
says. "We've had th e talent for two
years, but now we 're getting the
breaks to go along with it."
A big· break gave Montreal a 4-3
victory over the Chicago Cubs
Thursday night and helped the
Expos open up a .003 lead over the
Pittsburgh Pirates in the National .
League East.
Trailing 3·2, pinch-hitter Rusty
Staub came to bat in th e bottom of
the ninth with two out and the bases
loaded. Cubs s uper-reliever Bruce
Sutter was looking for save No .36.
Staub chopped a groWider down
the first-base line . It hit il seam in
the carpet at Olympic St.adiwn and
boWided away from Chicago first
baseman Larry BUttner. scoring two

summer.
But KeMedy isn't going to wait.
He now says he'll decide before the
primaries whether he win run.
His brother stayed out in 1968 until
the Democratic split had been
dramatized by primary election
results. Then he was gunned down
by an assassin . Humphrey won the
nomination without entering a
primary .
Democrats fear, and Republicans
relish, another possible parallel to
the 1968 campaign: the prospeCt that
a Carter-Kennedy contest would
split the party and make the
nomination worthless .

runs .
"There are seams all over this
ballpark and there 's no way you can
adjust quickly m a bad hop, " Staub
said. "We 've been getting some
breaks, but we're playing like
anything and it sure makes you feel
like this is our year ."
The Expos entered the coolest a
hall-game behind Pittsburgh but
actually in first place by less than
one one-hundredth of a percentage
point since U1ey had played [ive
fewer games. The Pirates had a
home game against St. Louis rained
out Thursday n ight. Montreal now
has won six in a row and 16 of 17.
In !ther Natiooal League games.
Atlanta whipped San Francisco 4-1.
Philadelphia edged New York 2-1
and Los Angeles downed San Diego
8-6 . Both Cincinnati and Houston,
£ighting for the NL West lead, were
Idle Thursday .

EntiUed "Ohio Adopta a Budget,"
the 27-mlnute documenlary contains
footage of actual committee .!Ctlon,
charts and narration to describe the
process from the time of the
oodget's introduction to Its being
signed by the governor.
•
House Minority Leader Corwin M.
Nixon, R-Lebanon, who alao hew
the le.gislative budget committee,
said th~ 111m reflecta a joint effort of
the Legi.slature and the department
of photography and cinematography
at Ohio State University.
Prints will be. made available to
Ia wmakers for
showing to
Statehouse visitors or other
interested groups around the atate,
Nillon satd.
He said he hopes the documentary
will add to "citiZen awareness and
Widerstanding of the legislative
process ."
Gov . James A. Rhodes' battle with
federal
Environmental
the
Protection Agency, over alr
pollution standards that restrict
burning of Ohio's coal, goes
Wichecked.
Rhodes, who raps EPA at every ,
tum, was being interviewed about
his 70th birthday this week but
couldn't Stay away from the subject
of EPA bureaucracy for very long.
Apparently referring to an
environmental Impact study, the
governor said "!just got back from
dedicating an Interchange in
Warren. They held It up for two or
three years until they could find
somebody to be custodian of a
mosquito bed. !agreed to do that, ao
we could get on with it."

Braves t;Gialllo I
Phil Niekro picked up victory
No.l8 with a six-hitter, going the
route for Atlanta for the 20th time
this season.
Gary ·Matthews drove In two runs
for the Braves. He capped a two-run
fourth inning and gave Atlanta a 3-0
lead with a foreceout grounder. His
RBI single made it 4-l .in the ninth .
Niekro struck out nirte, including
Willie McCovey three times, and lost
his shutout in the eighth when Mike
1vie htmered, No.25. Niekro has lost
19.
Phils z, Mets 1
Philadelphia left-hander Steve
Carlton went 81-3 innings, getting
last-inning relief help from Tug
McGraw to withstand a Mets rally .
Pete Rose had four hits for the Pllils
and scored a run.
After Carltoo allowed a r:un oo
Dan Norman 's infield hit wtth one
out in the ninth. the Mets loaded the
bases for McGraw.
Doug Flynn lofted McGraw's first
pitch intll shallow center. -Greg
Gross made the catch and threw
home on ooe bounce , where catcher
Bob Boone made the tag on Joel

LATONIA RESULTS
FLORENCE, Ky. ( AP ) - Silt
sprinted to a one~ength victory in
the $3,700 feature race Thursday
night at Latonia Race Course.
'
Ridden by jockey Martin Arnold ,
Silt rovered th e six furlongs in 1:11
3-5 to return 16.40, .$4 and $2.60.
Charming Red Dab paid S7 lind $2.80
to pl~c e , and Estudiante returned
$2.40 to show.
The 1-12 da.ily double, Miss
Servitude and Howdi Audi, paid
$24.20.
A crowd of 3,016 wagered $417 ,247.

wnpire Terry Tata stuck with his
original call.
Dodgers 8, Padres 6
Bill Russell slugged a two-run
homer and drove in three fiUIS as the
Dodgers held off a late San Diego

Youngblood to complete the double
play.
The Mets disputed the call,
however, saying Boone had dropped
. the baU . Television replays seemed
to support the Mets, but home plate

New machine grinds it out
CINGJNNAT! (AP) - Cincinnati
Reds catcher Johnny ·Bench has
driven along with both the 197~76
and 1979 models of the "Big Red
Machine" and he admits there is a
difference.
"It's just a matter of a new
machine," Bench said of this year 's
team . "The shocks are not quite as
good; the oil has to be checked; you
have to put a few spark plugs here
and there ; it doesn 't hit on aU
cylinders, and it's not a smoothfWining machine.
"But it grinds it out. Who cares as
long as you get there? "
·
Grlndlng it out is what this year 's
Reds have had to do since they
whittled down what on July 4 was a.
!().game deficit in the National
League West standings. They now
are llf.. games in front of the secondplace Houston Astros going into
·
tonight 's game.
The Big Red Machine, as it was
known in 1975 and 1976, won two
world championships by ccmbining
strong relief pitching with the power
of Bench, Tony Perez and George
FosteJ; and the hitting of Pete Rose.
"We had four , five , six guys who
could hit the ball out of the
baUpark, " Bench recalled. "We had
speed. We had relief pitchers who
didn't give up any runs. When the
call was there , we did it."
Bench said that the way the
Pittsburgh Pirates have played in
the last month recalls what the Reds
used to do.
''They've won a lot of games in the
late innings," Bench said. '.'The ·ball
club we had back then was just a
rare club.
" BaU clubs are just too wellbalanced today. With the free agent
market, you can keep your players if
you want to pay them ... you can go
out and get one that fits in if you
don ' t want to cultivate your own."
Bench, who hit .283 in 1975 but
slipped to .234 in 1976, is hitting .272

this season, with 19 home runs and 71
runs batted in.
And he is having fun.
"The character of this club is the
type that makes you enjoy winning
because everybody is contributing,"
he said.

By The Assocleted Press
HOCKEY
, Notional Hockey League
NEW YORK RANGERS - Signed

Jim Petti~, goalie.

BASKETBALL
Notional
Buketball Association
CHICAGO BULLS Signed

Lawrence Butler, guard.

DENVER NUGGETS - Released
Cedric Milton and Larry Williams,
forwards; Brian Hochevar, Carl
Rustin, Jonn Johnson, and Emmett
Lewis, guards.
KANSAS CITY KINGS - Traded
a second -round 1980 draft choice to
the San Antonio Spurs for Mike

Green, center .

NEW
YORK
KNICKER ·
BOCKERS - Released Phil Abney
and Johnny Green, forward5; Dave
Marls, Henry Ray, Gordon Thomas
and Brett Wyatt, guards; and Paul

Zaretsky, forward -center.

.

PHILADELPH lA
76ERS
Sig~ Carl McPipe, forward, to a
multi-year contract.
PORTLAND TRAIL BLAZERSSigned Bob Gross, forward , to a
multl·year contract.
UTAH JAZZ - Traded Spencer
Haywood, forward. to the Los
Angeles Lakers for Adrian Dantley,
forward. Signed Greg Deans. for·
ward , and Arvid Kramer, forward-

0.

T••estone FOREVER®
Maintenance free!

SA

•

·ElSE TOO~Y

Standings

Pts.

Reuter · Br&lt;~an

6
6

No .. 1
No.5
Friendly Tavern

4

4

No. 4
2
No. 2
2
High individual game ·· Debi
Hawley 211 ; Pat Carson 204 ; Deb'l
Hawley 195.
Hlgh · sertes .. Debi Hawley 597;
Pat Carson 50S; Maxine Dugan 437.
Team high game .. No . 5 488.
Team high series · · Reuter·Brogan
1378.

r------~~----,·
1
MEIGS .
1

:
I

EQUIPMENT CO.
.

1 Pomeroy, 0.

I

I
Ph. 992·2176 I

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8·12 Sat.
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Equipment
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And lor a ltmttecl l trne_Punna •s ol tenng tiSto ugh C hecker OOard
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See you r Punna dealer tOday 101 det ails
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1973 CADillAC CPE. DEVILLE.. ..........&lt;.~~-~~!......... '995
1975 FORD COUNTRY SQUIRE WAGON ............... 11995
1975 MONTE CARLO .................................... 13295
1974 OM EGA CPE.......................................'1295

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1~75 98 LS 4 DR .................................... : •• '2995
1976 CUTLASS SUP. SED............................... 13495
197rcADIUAC SED. DEVILLE ..........................'1295
1973 BUICK REGAL CPE................................ '1495
1972 98 LS 4 DR ........................ ~~:.~~~ •....••• '995
1976 88 ROYALE CPE ............ _•. .. .. .. ... •.. •••• •• '3495

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1979 ELDORADO . Big Savings
1979 98 REGENCY SED.

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with research tod:l)l

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MODERN SUPPLY
Pomeroy

''The Store With
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See one of the courteous salesmen:
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FOR PETS STABLES LARGE
ANIMALS. LAWNS - GARDENS.

League

Team

1979
1977
1973
1973

.A

&lt;ft-;'\'-Cit.r&gt;tRA~A

Aug. Zl, 1979

No-hitters were pitched on
successive nights in 1968 by Gaylord
Perry of the Giants against the
Cardinals, and by Ray Washburn of
, the Cards against the Giants.

Maintenanc e free!

C 1979 by NE.\ , Inc

"Sday Triplicate

Huntington Ross at Hannan Trace
Alexander at K vger Creek
Southwestern at Hannan
·
Miller at Eastern
Ross Southeastern at Nor1h Galli a
Parkersburg Catholic at Southern
Gallipolis ot Pt. Pleasant
Minford at Rock Hill
Portsmouth West at Coal Grove
Teays Valley at Athens
Portsmouth at Ironton
Wheelersburg at Jackson
Columbus Central at Logan
Wahama at Meigs
Nelsonville· York at Wellston

DRIVERS ED.

.

992-2164

Pts.
10
Nq. 5
8
Reuter·Brogan Ins.
8
No.2
8
No.1
9
No.4
6
High individual game ·· Betty
Whitlatch 206 • 200; Deb I Hawley 188.
Hign series -· Betty Whitlatch 590;
Deb I Hawley 521; Betty Smith 498.
Team high Game .. No. 5 522.
Team high series .. No. 51442.

1979 OLDS CUT. SALON BROUGHAN SED.... _. __ ..... '6500

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Friendly Tavern

NEW ORLEANS "SAINTS Signed .. Garo
Yeprem i an,
placekicker.

Interior or Exterior Latex &amp; OilVariety of Colors

(

Tonight's games

League

Standings

T~o~

tor

nerback.

T••estone 48 Battery
SOME.60Vf

Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
Sept. 4, 1979
Tuesday Triplicate

Weaver has grabbed four .JI8MM
for (f1 yards and R touchdown and
Roush has caught two J18MM 'for 23
yards and a touchdown. Weaver allo
iB the leading l"ll8her with 85 yards in
31 tries while Fred Smith baa growtd
out 45 yards in 16 attempts.
Last year, Meigs Umlted the White
Falcons to a minus 39 yards ruslllng
but gave up 89 yards through the air.
The Marauders wound up with 175
yards on the growid and 35 more vis
the pass for a total of 210 yards
enroute to that 140 triumph.
No doubt the Wahama gridclers
will be the decided underdotls
tonight's colliaion with the heavD,
favored Marauders. However,
weren't those same White Fa!COIII
picked to defeat Kyger Creek last
week by some 50 points?

FOOTBALL
Ne11onol Football League
ATLANTA FALCONS - Placed
R. C. Thielemann, guard, on the In·
jured reseroe list . Signed ·Tony
Daykin, linebacker .
·
NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS Signed Mark Washington. cor·

,.

985-3301

dowl18.

center.

12· VOLT EX CHANG~

YALUf Ot-l

12last week.
The White Falcons .have also
established themselves a a Jlllll
oriented team behind the throwing
ann of se!lior Rick BamltZ who baa
oompleted 10 rl. 23 for 188 yards and
five touchdowns.
The 5' 9" Bamltz bas been in·
tercepte(l twice and has rusbed for
39 yards in nine carries.
·
"
Tlm Young, Vince Weaver and
Tlm Roush have been Bamltz'
largetll with Young llharlng four
.aerials for 98yards and three touch-

rally.
Russell 's fifth-inning homer, his
seventh of the season , gave the
Dodgers a 4-ilead, and Los Angeles
picked up two runs each in the fifth
and sixth innings.
San Diego scored four runs in the
eighth, capped by Dave Winfield's
three-run homer off reliever Dave ·
Patterson . It was No.3! for the San
Diego slugger .
Jerry Reuss , 11-13, got the win with
five innings' work before leaving for
a pinch-runner. Ken Brett relieved
Patterson after Winfield's homer
and got his second save of the year.

Transactions

25% OFF PER GALLON
SUPREME PAINT LINE

Berry's World
I~FL-\CT

team's four six pointers.
Rick Bla~ttr)ar Is the Marauders'
leadlng rusher with 127 yards in 31
ccarries followed by ~ey .with 10
yards and Jerry Fields with 51.
Ashley's main large! is Bryan
Swann while Van Winford and
Richard Dean pace the defel18ive
unit.
Wahama, after opening up with a
tO.O rout of Southern WBB stwmed by
a "fired-up" Kyger Creek eleven 15-

Montreal's good .luck continues in 4.;3 victory

Capitai ·ideas
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - State
revenues for the new fiscal year
started July I have perked up a bit ,
oot fiscal officers say they stlll don't
have enough data to determine any
kind of trend.
The Legislative Budget Office said
sales tax revenues In August were
about $10 million above estimates,
after they had · fsllen short of
estimates in July by about $11
milllon .
However, . collections of the
personal income tax of about $99 •
milliQII for August were $5.4 million
lower than budget planners had
anticipated. In July, the Income tax
also was down - about r6 million
below estimates, the budget office
said.
William Keip, Gov . James A.
Rhodes' director of budget and
management, said he was still
reviewing the final data and was
unable to determine a trend .
Irregular receipts of federal funds
due the !tate tend to cloud the
picture to some extent, Keip and the
oodget office both said .
The state Is watching a precarious
cash flow situation, anti~ipated
when the new budget was ·enacted
oot apparenUy not to the ex"'% to
which it is developing .
However, the governor gave
reassurances last week that the
problem can be resolved by
withholding payment of certain bills
such as state allocations to th'e five
state retirement systems.

bas an 0-2 record following consecutive l0118es to Selpre 24-22, and
Pt. Pleasant 1~.
Tonight's claSh between the neighboring schools will be the fourth
meeting since consolidation of
P0111eroy, Middleport and RuUand
high schools. Wahama bas never
beaten the Marauders, bUt aU three
previous encounters have been
decided by less than two touchdowns.

&amp; SMALL

G.M.A.C. Financing
992·5342- Pomeroy
Open Evenings Untll6:00-'til5 PM Sat.
';

�5- The.Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., FridBy, Sept. 14, 1979

Oriental a"angements subject of meeting
CHESTER-Japanese
period
flower arranging was the
demoostration program theme carried out at the recent meeting ol the
Chester Garden Club held at the new
C(lWitry home ri Mrs. Dale Machlr.
Mrs. Randy Young and Mrs.
Donald Mora had charge ol tKe
teaclllng demonstration entiUed
''Serenity." Mrs. Young showed
morimon floral desjgn using fruit or
vegetables with grass or leaves, suggestive of the se;ISOII, and placed in a
flat basket. For her uklbllna ar-

rangement; Mrs. Young floated
Queen Anne's lace and a small vine
in a black frillbee containing water.
She noted' that ukibana arrangments
are always on water in a shallow
container. Another uklbana design
showed bright colored impatiens
and creeping Charlie. ·
Mrs. Mora's part on the pi'ogram
dealt with other oriental form including the nazeire sty le
demonstrated with a dogwood shrub
arrangement and a cosmoe design in
a tall blue oriental container. For a

jacks reunion held
team reach over the net in the action shot from Timrsday's SEOAL victory over Waverly.

NET SERVE - Sonia Ash and Beth Bartrwn
'
seruor
members of the Meigs Marauder volleyball'

The BMual Jacks family rewlion Ricky, Shaunda, Taunda, and Misty,
was held recenUy at the Forest Kathy Van Meter.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Goheen and
Acres Part in RuUand.
family,
Mr· and Mrs. Daniel HutGifts were presented to the oldest
chinson
and Damy, Mr. and Mrs.
man, Roy Allen, Huntington, W'
Va.; the oldest woman, Zena Smith, Hansel Clark and granddaughter,
Huntington, W. Va. ; the youngest, Usa, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Merrill,
Bobby Dee Jack8, Springfield; and Teresa, Charles, Jam\!S and Timmy,
the one traveling · the farthest , Mr. and Mrs. George Bing, Judy and
Willlam Justis, Miama, Fla. Lula Georgina , Mr. and Mrs. David Paul,
Jack8, RuUand W88 recognized for Tera, and Charles, Mrs. Virginia
Kessinger, Mr. and Mrs. Jack
havinll the mm children present.
Door prizes were won by Don Azbell, Mr. and Mrs. Larry Rupe,
Foley, Richmond; Dwayne Self, . Jason, Amy and Jeremy, Mr. and
Greenfield, and Robbie Jacks, Mrs. Don Foley, Kevin and Lee, Mr.
and Mrs. Lawrence Rupe and BrenChester. .
Attending were Mr, and Mrs. da, Mr. and Mrs. Junior Jacks,
Robert Jacks, Melissa, Robbie, and Gary, Traci, Debbie, Donnie, Dacyl,
Donna Carol, Mr. and Mrs. Michael Dana and Mylie.
Capehart and Tanuny, Michelle,
Mrs. Lula Jacks, Mr. and Mrs.
..00 Tinuny, Mr. and Mrs . Clarence William Justis, Mr. and Mrs. Tim
Jordan, Mr. and Mrs. Pat Aeiker, Jacks, Mrs. Richard Jacks, Jr., Mr.
Penny, Patay and Patrick, Mr. and
and Mrs. Hurley Rife and Jinuny,
Mrs. Charles Rife, Valerie, Larry,
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Brendler and
Debbie, Teresa, Olucky and Shain, family, Mr. and Mrs. Dwayne Self
Rick Willa, Mr. and Mrs. Jerry · and family, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Jacks ,
Jacks, Mr. and Mrs. Randall Gibbs,
Jodi and Amy. Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Gina and Rhonda, Mrs. Eliza
Wharton, Jermlfer and Robbie, Mr.
Powell, Mr. and Mrs. Victor
and Mrs . Wllliam Jacka, Dean and
GWchall, Mr, and Mrs. Roy Prickly,
Don, Mr. and Mrs. Alex Turner, Mia·
Mr. and Mrs. W1lllam Van Meter, ty and Jeff, Mr. and Mrs. Billy
Jacks, Kelly and Billy, Mr. and Mrs.
David Jacka, Ritdlle and steven,
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Moore, Paula and
Angle, Mr. ad Mrs. Floyd Jorilan,
Mrs. Virgie Hyaell, Mr. and Mrs.
George Eatep and family, Mrs. Zena
Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Allen,
Everett Jaclrs and family, Mr. and
Mrs. Nicholas Snow, Mr. and Mrs.
Olester Jobnaon and son, Mrs.
Belinda Shuler and daughters, Mr.
and Mrs. Lewis Grimes, Scott,
Lewi.s, Steve, Eric. and Kenny, Mr.
and Mrs. Baail Jacks, Buddy White,
Sarah Louise Camfield, Mr. and
Mrs. Fred Nease and family, Mr.
and Mrs. Leland Wade and family ,
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Marzinko and
family, Mr. and Mrs. Andy Dooley,
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Kessinger and
daughter, Mr. 'llfld Mrs: Ray Kess-.
Inger, Mr. and Mrs. Danny Jacb
and family, Mr. and Mrs . Charle~~
Cleland and family, Mr. and Mrs.
Hurst and fll11lily , Mr. and Mrs. D.
C. Darst and granddaughter, Mrs.
Ardella Hawk, Elijah Wade, Miss
IN STOCK
Vicki Conelson, Mrs. Ralph Stewart
and Jeni Lynn, Mrs. LoiJ! Snodgrass
AT THE
and Janlie, Jim Wells, Mr. and Mrs.
Cleo Roee Selles and family. Mr.
and Mrs. Raymond Brown and
daughten, Miss Pearl Harshborger,
Jay and Tonuny Mua!er, Tim
Graham, Tawny Finley, Dennis Con·
rsd, and Tony Priddy.
The Jacb rewtion will be beld the
third Sunday in August held next
year at the Forest Acres Park,
99 MIU STREET
RuUand.

with a serve in Thursday league batUe with Waverly.

HERE IT COMES - Cherie Ught, senior member
of the Meigs Marauder girls' volleyball squad lets go

Meigs
W
ahama
golfers
beat
Meigs
••••••• •••••••
••••• •••••
dumps BASEBALL SCOREBOARD
Waverly
Baseball AI A Glance
By The Associated Press
American l eague

TI1e Meigs Volleyball team scored
'a victory over visiting Wav erly
Th ursday evening to bring its record
to 1 ~ in lea gue play ;md 4-0 overall.
The match went two games with
Meigs girls coming out on top 15-7
and 15-10.
The Marauders played excellent
team ball, working together on
many point-making plays.
In the first game Cheri lightfoot
se rved eleven of the total points in
the game. Leading setters for the
match were Sonia and Tonia Ash
with a total of 21 sets between them.
Dodie Chapman a nd Terri Wilson
led the spiking action for the Meigs
team with 5 each.
The next contest will be a trimatch against Nelsonville-York and
Alexander on Monday , Sept. 17, at 5
p.m. at Meigs High School.
'

95
85
81
79
78
74

49

Ca lifo rn ia

WEST
80 66

.548

69

.527

.660

.582 11
.566 13'12
64 .552 15'12
61
62

.534 18
71 .51 0 21'12
46 99 .317 49 1f2
66

Ka n sasC it y

77
75

Texa s

73 7.4
63 82
61 86
51 96

Minnesota
Chi cago
Sealll e
Oak land

.514

71

3
5

.497 7 1h
.434 16'12
.415 19'1&gt;
.347 29'h

Thursday's Games

New York 10, Boston 3

Ba ltimore 10, Toronto 4

. COLO\' ·· .
..

•

rlu ·u/r- r ..

TONIGHTTHRU
THURSDAY
SEPT. '0
!'ill Murray

MEAT BALLS
C::. RTOON

Friday 's Games

Cleveland !Barker 6·4 ) al Toronto
(Stieb 6·6 ) ·
Boston (Sta nl ey IHI at Baliimore
!Slone 10·7l
Det roit (hr is 3·1) at New York

Oakland (Langford 12·13) at
Chi cago !Baumgarten 12·8)
Seattle IBannister 8·14) at Kansas
City IGura II ~ 10)
Minnesota {Goltz 14·10) at Texas

!Jenkins 13·13) ·

Saturday 's Games
Cleveland a t Tor onto
Detroit at N ew Y or k
Oakl and a t Chicago

·

Boston at Milwaukee
Ca lifor nia at Milwaukee

Sea !lie at Kansas City
Minnesota at Texas

Sunday's Games
Clevel and at Toronto
Bost on at Baltimore
Detroit at New York
Oakl an d at Chicago
Ca lifor nia at Milwau kee
Sea t He at Ka nsas Ci t y

EA

ST

PLUS

fHE REDEAM ER

Cincinnati ( Bonham 8-5} at Los

Angeles !Sutcli ffe 14·9)
Houston !Ruble 1·3) a! San Fran·
ci sco IHalick i 5·5)
Only games scheduled

Saturday 's Games
New York at Pittsburgh
Ci ncinnati at Los Ang eles
Houston at San Francisco

St . Lou is at Montrea l
Atlanta at San D iego
Sunday 's Games
New York at Pittsbu rgh
Chicago at Phi lade lphia
St. Louis a t Montrea l
Cincinnati at Los A ngeles
At lanta at San Diego
Houston at San F ra ncisco

Sports briefs .
By'The Associated Press
TENNIS
TOKYO (AP)
Dia nne
Fromholt z of Australia easily
defeated Laura Dupont 6-1, 7-'; and
Evonne Goolagong Cawley got by
Anne Smith 6-7, !Hl, 6-4 in the second
round of the $150,000 Toray Sillook
Tournament.
In other matches, Australia 's
Wendy Turnbull beat Sharon Walsh
6-2, 7-5 ; Kerry Reid of Australia
defeated Kate Latham 6-3, 6-1; Billie
Jean Kin g got by Peanut Louie 6-2, 64: and Betty Stove of th e

• •

Netherlands beat Zenda Liess 6-3, 62.

WOODLANDS, Texas (AP ) Marty Riessen and Sherwood
Stewart struggled to get by Tom
Leonard and Jerry Linge 6-7, 6-2, 6-4
in the second round of the $150,000
ATP World Doubles tournament.
In other second-round matches,
Gene and Sandy Mayer downed Roy
Emerson and Syd Ball of Australia
&amp;-:l , &amp;-:l ; while Australians Ross Case
an~ Phil Dent beat countrymen
Colin Dibley and John James 6-1, 6-3.
ATLANTA (AP )
J ohn

at

"AT IONAL LEAGUE

SCREAMS OF A
WINTER NIGHT

Atlanta !Boggs 0·0) a! San Diego
(Jones I I-I I)

(Hood 4·0)

Min nesota a t Texas

TONIGHT
SAT. &amp; SUN .

Friday's Games
St. Louis (Vuckovi ch 13·10 and
Martinez 13 -7) at M ontrea l (M ay 9-2
and Sa nderson 7-7)
Chi ca go (Mc Glothen 11 ·12 or He r ,
nandez 4·4) at Philadelphi a (Noles 3·
3)

Chicago at Philadelph ia

Clev el an d at Detroi t, ppd ., r ai n
Oa k ! and 8, Milwaukee 3
M i nneso ta 7, Texas 4, 121 nni ngs
Onl y gam es schedu led

Ca liforni a
(Barr
9-121
Milwau kee (Sorensen l4· 13)

'

•

Pel. GB

W. L.

Bal t imo re
Mi lwaukee
Boston
New Yor k
Detr oi t
Cleveland
Tor onto

Philadelphia 2, New York 1
Angeles 8, San Diego 6
Onl y games scheduled
Los

match, with a low score of 37.
Scores of each Wahama team
member includes Ty Roush, 39; Jeff
Arnold, 40; J eff Fowler, 42; Todd
Kitchen, 45: Wally Raynes, 52; Mark
Fowler, 53 ; and Chuck Stadola, 55.
Individual scores for Meigs in·
elude Scott McKinney, who shot the
low team score of 44: Fred Young,
45; Brian Will, 48 ; David Kennedy,

The Wahama White Falcon Golf
Team won its second match of the
season Thursday evening against
Meigs High School, at the Riverside
Golf Club in Mason.
Heavy rains hindered both teams,
and the Wahama golfers scored 158
against a Meigs score of 198.
RandY Pierce, a sophomore at
Wahama, was the med"li't of the

M ontreal
Pittsburgh
St. L oui s
Ph i lade lphia
Chicago
New Yor k
Cinci nnat i
Hou ston
Los Angeles
San Fr ancisco
San Di ego

Aflanta

W. L. Pel. GB
55 .607
87 57 .6Q4
76 66 .535 10
74 71 .510 13'h
73 71 .507 14
55 88 .385 31'12

65

WEST
83

63
81 64
70 76
6A 30
62

85

.568
.559 111:2
.479 13
.435 19'12
.422 21 'h

57 88 .393 25 '1&gt;

Thursday 's Games

A tla nta 4, Sa n Franci sco 1
St. Louis at Pittsbur gh , ppd ., ra in
Montr eal 4, Chicago 3

Tight race doesn 't. worry managers
By TERRY KINNEY
AP Sports Writer
CINCINN ATI (AP) - 1f the tight
penna nt drive in the Nat ional
League West has either Cincinnati
Ma nager . John McNamara or
Houston's Bill Virdon wor r ied,
they're doing a pretty good job of
hiding it.
The Reds moved l'·2 games ahead
of Houston by swee ping a two-game
se ries this week, but neither
manager said that alone will
determine the outcome of the race.
" We said all alon g that if either
one of the clubs swept the series, the
thing tsn 't over," McNamara said .
"I honestly haven't gon e beyond
those two games. Now we play 'em
one game at a tim e."
Each team had a day off Thursday
before beginning a West Coast trip,
Cincinnati at Los Angeles and the
Astros at San Fr ancisco.
"That series wasn 't that drastic.
There's too much time left ," Virdon
said ~ " If it had been at home and we
had lost, it would have been much
more serious.
" ! don't think they (Reds ) are
good enough to win every day, "
Virdon said. " All we have to do is
win as often as th ey 1lo and then,
when they get to Houston, do to them
what they did to us."
TI1e showdown is scheduled ·for
Sept. 21, 22 and 23 in the Astrodome,
where Houston has a 5-1 mastery
over the the Reds this sea son.
Houston , wh ich dominated

Western Division for three months,
let the Jl).game lead it held on July 4
slowly slip away. Then, before the
Reds co mpleted' the two-gam e
sweep Wednesday night, the lead
went back and forth seven times in
two weeks .
Cin cin na ti shortstop Dave
Concepcio n said the road t r ip
leading up to the Houston sh o wdO~
will determ ine who wins the
pennant.
"I don't think this series was th e
key," said Concepcion, who is
having the best year of his career P'
th e plate. " We have to play well in
Los Angeles, San Francisco and San
Diego and have a game or a twogame lead -when we go to Houston. "
Astro pitcher J .R. Richard, whose
263 strikeouts lead the National
League, said he's confident that
pitching can carry the team but he
refuses to predict the outcome of the
race.
"I don't make predictions because
they can come back in your face,"
Richard said. "We've had great
pitching all year , and we have good
hitting, too . Whoever's leading at the
end of September will win the
pennant. ' '
Virdon admitted that he has lots of
young players, but he refused to say
th at pennant pressure would bother
them more than the Reds, many of
whom are World Series veterans .
"I think you can expect some
tightness from both clubs," said
Virdon, whose only concession to the

pressure has been to give up
chewing tobacco to avoid btomach
trouble. "Some guys sluff it off and
oth ers crea te pro blems · for
themselves.
"You don 't get panicky until the
day before you're eliminated, and
we're only one game behind on the
loss side."
Lo u Brock, the all-time basestealing king, on three occasions stole
four bases in one game .

53; Tony J ewell , 56 ; J .R. Wamsley,
60 ; and Scott Harris, 60.
The next match for Wahama is
Tuesday at Riverside in a triangular
against Me igs and Warren Local. A
match has been scheduled against
Warren Local and Belpre Wednesday at Ox Bow Course in
Beverly, Ohio.

Alexander crushed fellow Aussie
Alvin Gardiner !Hl, !Hl, to move into
the fifth round of the Atlanta
Journal.(;onstitution Open.
In ot her matches, ur.seeded Terry ·
Rocavert of AustraUa advanced by
upsettin g Kim Warwick, also of
Australia , 6-4 , 7~ ; and Eric Fliedler
defea(ed Ricky Meyer 6-4, 7~ .
BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP ) Yugoslavia won both reverse singles
mat ches fa' a ~ victory over
Portugal and advanced to the third
round of the European Zone B Davis
Cup tournament.
WORLD UNIVERISTY GAMES
MEXICO CITY (AP ) - Romanian
Die Floroiu completed a distance
double, the United States won two
gold medals a nd world -re cord
holder Pie tro Mennea led a winning
Italian 400-rneter relay team in
track and field even is that closed the
lOth World University Games.
F1oroiu , who previously had laken
the 10,000-meter run, won the 5,000 ln
14 minutes, 12.9 seconds.

THE

NEW

INTERNATIONAL
VERSION

For all your home enter11inment

and appliance needs.

DOXOL SERVICE

RIDENOUR'S
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

The playi ng field at Bu sc h
Memoria l Stadium in St. Louis is 10 to
30 feet lower th an the str""ts outside
the pa rk .

GAS SERVICE
R~eine ,

Chester, 0 .

MIDDLEPORT
BOOK
STORE

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N. W. COMPTON. O.D. .::
OPTOMETRISl

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OFFICE HOURS : 9: 30 to 12, 2 to S CCLOSE AT NOON

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We have programs for clubs

~ organi~ations ~
If you na ve I he program rc,pon·;ib ilit y for yo ur group, we'd lik e
lo help.
We have available without co'l illu, lra ied lalk s and film presentalions dea li n ~ wi lh man y aspel"IS of 1hc energy situal ion. Ca llu s
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al IIW7111.

OHIO POWER COMPANY

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TRY THE NEW
CLOSING

Jimmie's Pastry Shop
Middleport, Ohio

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moribana arrangement she noted
that the needlepoin\ iJ! placed to the
back for spring and to the front for
winter, but is rarely ever placed in
the center of the container. To show
the kabuwake design, Mrs. Mora used yellow glads, rush reed and canna
leaves to make two arrangements,

and the chlbana arrangements ·
which consisted of a single bloom in
an upright container with a flowing
line material.
Mrs. Mora also told of special
ways which the Japanese lllje to
preserve cut 'plant material. She
said they cut Dowers early in the

Friday's sennonette
Perhaps the most famous .citizen
in the history of Meigs County is
Valentine B. Horton. He excelled
here as an industrialist, inventor,
and politician. Michael Gerlach, in
Ilia history cl Meigs County, says of
him, "No other Meigs CounUan has
achieved so much."
Valentine B. Horton started out
here 88 a young ·man in 1830 to
manage some coal mines owned by
bis father-in-law. Within a few
years, Meigs CoWlty coal became
the moet sought after coal in what
was then the West. In order to fill
this big demand, Horton needed bet·
ter methods of getting the coal to
market. So, in 1836, he ordered the
building of a boat called the Condor
at a Cincinnati boatyard. By doing
so, Mr. Horton changed the future ol
river boating because the Condor
W88 the firtlt boat in the world to use
coal rather than wood for fuel. Hor·
ton designed it to tow barges, which
he invented while the Condor was
under construction. At its completion, the Condor could pull eight
barges.
So, Valentine B. Horton started
out as a mine manager, and succeeded at that .so well that it
spawned a new talent : inventing.
Thele achievements naturally in·
creaaed his stature in the commwtity, and led him into politics. He
founded the town of P001eray, and
helped make II the county seal On

the state level, he served as a member of the Ohio Constitutional Convention, President of the board that
established . Ohio State University,
and trustee of Ohio State University
and Ohio University for thirty years .
On the national level, he served 88 a
member of the 34th, 35th, and .37th
Congresses and as a member of
Abraham Lincoln 's Peace Conference in 11160.
'
Valentine B. Horton typifies the
kind of person mentioned in a
parable that Jesus told of how bis
followers will spend their time while
awaiting His return. "For it will be
88 when a man going on a journey
called his servants and entrusted to
them bis property; to one he gave
five talents, to another two, to
another one, to each according to bis
ability. Then he went away. He who
had received the five talents went at
once and traded with them; and he
made five talents more. So also be
who had the two talents made two
talel)ts more." (Matthew 25: 14-17 ).
'J'hese two talent and five talent
persons both received the same
reward. "His master said to him,
'Well done, good and faithful servant: you have been faithful over a
litUe, I will set you over much ; enter
into the joy of your master.' " (Mat·
thew 25:21) -Pastor Albert Dittes,
Pomeroy SeventlHiay Adventist
Church, Pomeroy. ·

Thank Y u For Letting Us
Serve You For 33 Years

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Parents advised to
watch for tell-tale
signs offibrosis
· Mrs. Mary MarUn and Mrs. Ruby
Marshall, co-chairmen of the cystic
fibrosis fund drive of Meigs Salon
710, 8 and 40, have issued an alert to
parents in regard to the disease.
"When we ask you to please
recognize the signs of cystic fibrosis
and other damagiJig diseases, we're
not trying to alarm you.
"Look at it this way. If your child
does not have cystic fibrosis or
another serious lung-damaging
disease, be has nothing to lose by
checldng with a doctor, or by taking
a simple dlagnoetic test.
"If your child does have cystic
fibrosis or another condition tbat
could damage bis lungs, be has a lot
to loee by not havinll the chance for .
early diagnosis and pr001pt medical
care.
"So, when you look at it like that,
we hope you 'I look and learn the
following," the CIH:hairmen said.
' IGNS OF LUNGDAMAGING DISEASE
1. Recurrent wheezing
2. Persistent coughing-excessive
mucus
3. Pnewnonia more than once
4. Excessive appetite-poor weight
gain
5. Clubbing (enlargement of
fingertips)
Cystic fibroeis signs also may include salty taste of the skin ; persistent, bulky diarrhea ; nasal
polyps.

Downie, vice president; Miss Mrytis
Parker, treasurer ; Mrs. Antone
Lucke, secretary; Mrs. Charles
Goeglein, secretary of program
resources; Mrs. Allen Eichinger,
Christian personhood ; Mrs. Marie
Chapman, supportative conununity;
Mrs. Dwight Parter, Christian
social involvement ; and Mrs.
Robert Warner, Christian global

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UMW elects officers

Letters

September 12, 1979
JohnBranuner
Commwllty Mental Health
236 W. Second Street
P001eroy, Ohio &gt;15769
DearJolm:
How fortunate I was to nm into

DANNY LEWIS
The fifth birthday of Danny Lewis
was celebrated at the home of his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Dan Lewis,
Langsville, recenUy.
A cake decorated as a race track
with hot wheel cars w88 served with
Ice ereani and koolaide . Attending
were bis brother, Timmy, his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Delbert
Putney and Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Lewis, Sr., his great-l!l'andmother,
Mrs. Ben Batey, and Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Lewis, Jr., Kenny and Ellen,
Diane and Linda Marr, Darrell
Putney, Danny and Cindy Marr, Mr.
and Mrs. Paul Clay, Unable to attend were bis great1!1'11Jldfather,
Ben Batey , and his greatgrandmother, Allie Marr.
Also in honor of Damy's birthday,
cookies and koolaid were served to
his Sunday school class at the Middleport First Baptistsit Church.

BOOSTERS TO MEEl'
Kyger

'R "'""'""'

Creek

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you just when I was wondering wbo
sliould get the next Ubrary Letter!
As I told you, Middleport Library
. will be having Saturday Afternoon at
the Movies for the schoolage
children every Saturday afternoon
from2to3p.m. That would certainly
seem to be a good lime to have ·
discussions oo parenting.
Parents could leave their children
upstairs to watch movies, read
books, and play while they go downstairs to talk with you and other
parents about ewing with tile
problems parents face.
I like the idea of having the parents decide exactly which aspect of
parenting they will cover and how
many times they will meel. Perhaps
some parents will feel that a single
discussion Is enough: others may
want to "rap"again. Our program
room will be available fl)l' as many
or 88 few sessions as you and the
parents would like.
I look forward to seeing you and
all interested parents on Saturday,
October 6th at 2 p.m.
Sincerely yours,
(Mrs.) Ellen Bell,
Librarian
Serving all of
Meigs County

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concerns.
Conducted at the meeting was a
memorial service for Miss Lucretia
Genheimer and Mrs. Marie Custer,
both long-time faithful members of
the church and the women 's
organization. Mrs. Glenn Dill, Mrs.
Boney Mitchell, and Mrs. Warner
took part in the service. The piano
prelude to open the meeting was by
Miss Grace Campbell. Mrs. Gerald
W'lldennuth, chainnan, greeted the
members.
Mrs. Vaughan's program was on
"Loneliness and Aloneness." Pur·
pose was to recognize tbat loneliness
is a common human situation, to
develop individual or group
responses to loneliness, and to
recognize distinction between
loneliness and aloneness.
·
The treasurer read a letter from
the district tre88urer asking that the
unit raise their pledge by five per·
cent.
The district "day apart" program
was attended by Mrs. Wildermuth,
Mrs. McGee, Mrs. Everett Thomas,
and Mrs. Eichinger. They reported
inspirational meetings on prayer.
Note of appreciation was read
from the family of Mrs. Custer. Correspondence from Bernice McMann,
district president, announced the annual district meeting to be held at
the United Methodist . Church in
Logan, Sept. 23. Members were asked for action on the charter for
racial justice policies and voted to
go on record as supporting the
charter.
A prayer circle closed the
meeting. Mrs. Eichinger and Mrs.
Dill served refreslunents during a
concluding social hour.

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New officer&amp; were elected at the
Tue8day night meeting of the
Pomeroy United Methodist Women
held at the P&lt;meroy Chw-ch.
Elected following a report by Mrs.
Robert Vaughan of the nominating
committee were Mrs . Robert
McGee , . president ; Mrs . Ted

County Fair Flower Shows, with
Mrs. Dean taking the best of show at
the Wednesday show in artistic arrangements, with Mrs. E:rwtn taking
reservtt best of show a the WEdnesday sllow, and both best. of show and
reserved best of show at the Friday
display. Mrs . Homer Holter was the
horticulture sweepstakes winner at
the Friday show. Eight club
members entered 39 artistic arrangements and had 46 horticulture
entries.
The fall regional meting was announced for Oct. 'llat Marietta. Mrs.
Kuhl auctioned off plants and
hostess awards went to Mrs. Erwin,
Mrs. Woodrow Mora, ~d Mrs.
Charles Knight.
Mrs. Wllliam Buckley and Mrs.
Horace Karr judged the flower
specimens giving ribbo1111 to Mrs .
Randy Young, Mrs. Earl Dean, Mrs.
Erwin, Mrs. Charles Knight, Mrs.
Homer Holter ,l ©er, and Mrs.
Donald Mora. For arrangmenets,
awards went to Mrs. Randy Young,
Mrs. Mora, Mrs. Barton, and Mrs.
Roy Holter.
The October meeting will be an
open meeting with a special invitation to members of all Meigs County
Garden Clubs. It will be held at the
Chester United Methodist Church on
Oct. 3 at 8 p. m. with Mrs. Pauline
Collett, Belpre Garden Club, as the
guest arranger.
.
Mrs. Earl Dean and Mrs. Roy
Miller were co-hostesses for the
meeting. The 24 members and one
guest, Mrs. Crystal Rayburn,
responded to roll call by ezhibiting
fall blooming specimens.

Library

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Athletic

Boosters will meet at the high school
at 7:30p.m. this evening.

o:;f~ ~D~rt
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cuuLQ~
Pomny
Flower Shop
99? -S721

'~9~~IDit')I®(;L\.~4oiRIX(I
PWS FREE eU~'TO~I F&amp;\TUKES!
DeBign your own class ring

Their Program of
CONTEMPORARY CHRISTIAN MUSIC

M a M•n l

und er

Fir c&gt; lm rst
undt•r 11tune

lil&lt; ll ll'

Su nlile
urul .. r stont&gt;

FINAL DAY OF BUSINESS
SAT., SEPT. 15th

morning or late in the evening, then
recut the ~tern under water.
Methods of preserving include applying salt to the cut edge, dipping
the cut stems in boiling water for
two seconds, or dipping them in
alcohol or vinegar for two or three
seconds. It was also noted that oil of
peppermint lliay be applied to the
cut sterns on roses.
During the business meeting it
was noted that Mrs. Richard Barton,
Mrs. Buel lUdenour, Mrs. Charles
Kuhl, Mrs. Earl Dean and Mrs. Roy
Holter attended the Ohio AssociaUon
of Graden Clubs' convention held at
the Akron University.
Mrs. Kuhl presented there an attractive display of 36 different types
of ground rover. Mrs. Dean took a
second place ribbon in the convention flower show, and awards coming to the county included a first
place in the state in the Meigs Coun·
ty Christmas flower sllow; and a
third in the state for the 1978 Meigs
County Fair flower sllow.
Mrs. and Mrs. Charles Kuhl, Mrs.
Ridneour, mrs. Barton and Mrs.
Leonard Erwin attended the
Gardeners Day Out at the Kingwood
Center at Mansfield. It was noted
that Mrs. Dean gave a demonstra·
tion for the open meeting of the
RuUand Garden Club.
It was also noted that Mrs. Jim
Andrews iS the new regional
secretFY, and that Mrs. Richard
Koblentz, Mrs. ReidYoung and mrs.
Kuhl have accepted regional committee chairmanships.
A report was given on the Meigs

a1·ti viticli

.. The perfect solution
for calves."

SUGAR RUN MILLS
180 Mulberry Ave.

Pomeroy, 0.
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BRING IN THI S o\0 TO GET Till S OFF ER WHF.N
YO U ORDER YO UR SIL \lli UM RI NG .

JOHN ROBERTS
m''""'''"'Y"""""'
CLASS RINGS
~C»­

JEWELRY STORE
POMEROY, 0.
We Will Close at 5 p.m . Firdays
Until Further Notice

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.'Q'Jettelers

SAVE YOUR R.C., NEHI, UPPER 10, DIET Rll

LlAD'S ROOT BEER BOTILE CAPS FOR CHARITY

R. C. BOTTLING C().
992·3542 or 992·3344

21&lt; E . MAIN . POMEROY

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Middleport, Ohio

Mill Street
I,.

�,
CHURCH

I- The DB.ily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Sept. H, 1979
MIDDLEPORT CLUSTER
HEATH, Church School 9.30 o m. Wor·
sh1p 10:30 o m UMYF 6 p.m Robert
Robmson , Pastor.
RUTLAND ,. Church School 9 30 om
Worshtp 10 30 a.m. Wilbur H1h. Pastor
SALEM CENTER , Worsh•p 9 a.m. Church
School 9 •s o m
SYRACUSE CLUSTER
TltiNITY CHURCH , Rev W H . Perrin ,
Rev. Har vey Koch , Jr.
pastor. Bob Buck . Sunday school sup!
FOREST RUN Worshp 9 o.m Church
Church School, 9:15 o.m,; worshi p ser·
\'ice , 10·30o m. Choir rehearsal, Tuesday . School 10 a m.
MINERSVILLE , Chu rch School 9 a.m.
7 ·30 p. m. under d lrect1on of Alice NtKne.
Worship lOo .m
POMEROY CHURCH OF THE NAZA RENE
ASBURY. Ch urch School9·50 a .m . Wor·
Cor,.r Union and Mulberry , Rev . Clyde V
Church &amp; Offici.' 5Ufl1Jht' ~
Henderson . pastor. Sunday school 9 30 • h•p 11 o.m, Bible Study 7 30 p.m. Thurso .m .. Glen McClung. supt., morn ing wor- day UMW l ist Tuesda y.
GIFTS
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
sh•p. 10:30 a .m.; evening serJice, 7 30,
KERMIT' S KORNER
Re~ . David Horns
mid-wMktervice Wednesday , 7 30p.m
Pom eroy , Oh1o
M1ddlepor1
Rev Mark Flynn
GRACE EPISCOPAl CHURCH - 321&gt; E
Florence Sm1th
Ma in St , Pomeroy . The Rev Robert 8
Hilton Wolfe
Groves , rector Sunday servtces (summer
BETHANY, [Dorcas) . Worship 9 00 a.m.
schedule begmning June 3) at )0:301 . Service w1ll alternate between the Holy Church School 'O:OOa.m
We Fi ll Doctors'
CARMEL , Chruch School9·30 o.m WorP're scnpt1on s
Euchonst and morning prayer, effective
shtp 10 30o.m. 2nd and 4th Sundays.
t92-79SS
June 3. Holy Communion every other SunPomeroy
APPLE GROVE . Sunday Schoo19:30 a m.
day of each month and sermon. Church
school and nursery co re provtded Coffee WorstHp 7 30 p m. 1st and 3rd Sundays.
hou r in parish house following the ser- Proy•r meeting Wednesday 7.30 p.m.
Fellowshtp supper first Saturday 6 p.m.
VIC8 .
- ~J, _
POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST, 212 W. UMW 2nd Tuesday 7.30 p.m.
EAST
LETART,
Chruch
School
9
o
m
Mom St.John McArthur, pastor , 81ble
school , 9.30 om .. mornmg worship, 10.30 Wonh1p service 10 o m Prayer meeting
Ray R199 s
1 30 p m Wednesday UMW second Tues
Sl At. 7
om', Youth meetings , 6 30 p. m , evamng
Chest ~r
wonf·up , 7 .30. Wednesday night prayer day7·30 p m.
RACINE WESLEYAN - Sunday school10
meeting and B1ble study 7·30 p m
a.m .. worship , I I o.m Choir pract•ce.
THE SALVATION ARMY , 115 Butternut
Ave , Pomeroy. Envoy and Mrs. Roy Win· Thursday, 8 p.m.
What varied sluncs th1s anc1en1 span could reveal If
LET ART FALLS- Worsh1p servtce 9 o m
mg. officers 1n charge. Sunday holmess
only II were capable - excili ng tales oflhe Civil War ..
ChurchSchool10a
m
meeting 10 o m ; Sunday School. 10.30
of cnchan11ng lovers trysts beneath il s tall arched roof.
MORNING STAR , Wor1h1p 9 30 a.m. ;
a .m . Sunday school leader. YPSM Eloise
Church
School
10.30
o.m
;
Youth,
~nu . gloom y sloncs. too. like the de sponden1 old man
Ph
949-,
130
Adams . 7 30 p . m
sai'Woflon m'eeflng,
14
various speakers and mustc spectols . Tuesdays , 7 p.m.
ho snuff,•d out h1s life by plunging from lis edge into the
MORSE CHAPEL, Church School 9.30
Thursdoy- 10 o m to 2 p m . Lodtes Home
sw
1f1 waters of the creek below .
a.m. Worsh ip 11 a.m.
League all women tnvt ted , 7 :30 p m
PORTLAND. Church School 9 30 o m
prayer meellng and Bible study, Bob
Y e~. th" wc&lt;~l herbcmen struct ure has sum ved the
Worship 11 a. m.
btep, leader. Rev
Noel Hermon
years
. II has endured . And. God wil ling, it will stand for
SUITON, Church School 9 30 a. m. Wor
teacher.
pe rh&lt;1ps anDther gener a11 o n - a un1que symbol of yesterBURLINGTON SOUTHERN
BAPTIST Sh•p I stand Jrd Sundays 10:30 o.m
uay .
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
CHAPEl. Route 1, Shade- Pastor Bobby
Rev
R1chord
W.
Thomes
Elk tns Sunday school. 5 p m .; Sunday
The Church and thi s st urdy bndge have a great deal in
Duane Sydenstricker Sr.
worship. 5·•5 p.m , Wednesday prayer
common 1. he Church has wi1hs10od lhe tes1 of time be·
John W. Douglas
S81'"VIC8, 7 •30 p m
.
Charles Oom1gan
cause no1h1ng has yet been discove red lo supplant the
POMEROY WESTS IDE CHURCH OF
JOPPA, Worship 9:00 a.m. Church
CHRIST, 200 W Motn St . Jerry Pout
prolound peace and screnuy jl supplies. The Church will
SchoollO·OO am.
minister, phone 992-7666 Conservative
~
mlurc for :JJI ltrnc - afler the picturesque old covered
CHESTER
,
Worship
9
a.
m.,
Church
non-ms frumentol Sunday worsh1p, 10
bndg
t' 1 ~ o nl y a mem o ry
School
10
o.m
Choir
Rehearsal
7
p.
m
a.m .. Bible study 11 am.; worshtp, 6
Wednesday Btble Study Wednesdays ,
p m Wednesday Btble study , 7 p.m .
7 30 p.m
OlD DEXTER BIBLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH
Ccpyro9h1 1979 Ke1ster "ct~ert•s•n9 Serv.ce Slrasburg v 1rgm1a
LONG BOTTOM, Sunday School ot 9 30
Rev .Ralph Smith , pastor Sunday school:
Scr•pJures
SCit."Ciec1 by The Amencan B•ble Soc1elv
am
Evenmg
Worship
of
7·30
p.m.
Thurs9 30
a m , Mrs. Worley Franci s,
supenntendent Precching serv•ces f1rst &amp; day Btble Study 7·30 p.m
REEDSVIllE . Sunday School 9 :30 o .m
third Sundays followtng Sunday School
Morn1ng Worsh tp 10.30 a.m. Evening Wor·
GRAHAM
UNITED
METHODIST ,
shp 7 30 p.m Bible Study Wednesdays at
Preachtng 9 30 a m . , f1 rst ond second Sun7 30p.m.
days of &amp;ach month; th1rd and fourth Sun·
ALFRED , Sunday School at 9.45 a.m.
days each month, worship se~ice at 7 30
Morning Worship at 11 a.m. Wednesday
p m. Wednesday evemngs of 7:30 Prayer
N1ght Prover Meeting, 7:30pm.
and Bible Study.
ST. PAUL , (Tuppers Plains) . Sunday
SEVENTH· DAY ADVENTIST , Mulberry
School 9:00 a .m. Morning Worship at
Heights Rood , Pomeroy. Pastor, A lbert
10 00 a.m. Monday Night Bible Study 7·30
Dtnes Sabbath School Superintendent,
p.m.
R1to Wh1te . Sabbath School , Saturday
SOUTH BETHEL {S ilver R1dge) Sunday
afternoon ot 2.00, with Worship Service
School 9 00 a.m. Morning Woship 10:00
followmg at 3 15.
am. Wednesday Bible Study, 1 30 p.m.
RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCHKENO CHURCH OF CHRIST, se~ices
Sis ter Harriett Worner, Supt Sunday
each Sunday 9.30 a .m George Pickens,
School 9·30 a m mornmg worship, 10.45
pastor wtth preaching on first and third
om
Sunday of month Oliver Swain , Supt.
THE HILAND CHAPEL , George Casto,
HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION, Rev . Keith
poster. Sunday School, 9 30 a m .. evening
Eblm, pastor. Sunday School. 9:30a. m..
wors h1p, 7 .30. Thursday eventng prayer
Leonard G1lmore, f~rst elder, evenmg ser·
serviCe. 7 30 p.m.
W&amp;dnesdoy prayer
vtee , 7:30 p.m
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST. Dov1d Mann ,
Grocerieimeetmg, 7:30p.m
mmlster. Wi lliam Watson , Sunday school
Gtntr•l Merch.JndiM
BEARWAl
lOW
RIDGE
CHURCH
OF
sup! Sunday schooL 9:30a.m .; mornmg
RlciM 949-2550
CHRIST, Duane Worden miniSter B1ble
worship I 0 30 a~ m
class 9·30 a m mornmg worsh1p , 10 30
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST. 262 Mu lberry
o.m . evemng worship
6.30 p.m
Ave ., Pomeroy. Paul Silver, Pastor.
Wednesday Bible study , 6:30p.m.
Woodrow T Zwi ling, Sunday schpo l
NEW
STIVERSVIllE
COMMUNITY
Of
superintendent Sunday school , 9 :30a.m.;
Church, Sunday School servtee, 9 ~5 a m
morntng wor1h1p, 10:30; even1ng worshtp ,
Worshtp service, 10:30, Evangelistic Ser·
7·00 p m. Midweek prayer se\r,..ice, 7 00
SWiday
v1ce. 7·30 p m
Wednesday , Prayer
p.m.
meetmg, 7 30.
MIDWAY COMMUNITY CENTER. Dex l er
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST, Pomeroy
Rd., langsville. Ohio. Rev . Clyde Ferrell.
Horrlsonvllle Rd ., Robert Purtell , pastor,
Pastor Sunday School 11 a m Saturday
811/ McElroy, Sunday school supt. Sunday
preaching services 7·30 p m Wednesday
school. 9:30 o.m , mormng worshtp and
evening B1ble study at 7:30p.m .
communton 10.30 a .m .. Sunday worshtp
FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH , Bai ley
serv1ce, 7 p.m Wednesday even1ng
Run Rood , Rev. Emmett Rawson, pastor.
prayer meet1ng ond Btble stl•dy, 7 p.m.
Handley Dunn, supt Sunday schoo l, 10
ST. JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH , Pine
a m Sunday evening service 7 30, Bible
Grove The Rev. WfJ.Jiam M tddleswarth,
teo c h~ng . 7 30 p m. Thursday
Pastor. Chu rch services 9.30 a .m . Sunday
OYESVIllE COMMUNITY
CHUR CH,
E~t I nor
School10:30 om.
Roger C Turner . pastor. Sunday sc hool ,
C1rry Out
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHR IST. Edwa rd
9 30 o.m ; Sunday morning worsh tp,
&amp;.kers of
126 E ~m
Fryman . pastor Sunday school. 9·30 a m .,
10:30. Sunday evening seNice, 7:30,
Good Bread "-'"'ollt'
worshtp
servtee,
10·30
a
m
..
Sunday
ser·
"1-il04
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
Hun1inaton , W
pomer oy
v1ces 7:30 p.m .. youth group, WednesCHRISTIAN UNION lawrence Manley,
day, 7 p.m.
pastor. Mrs. Russell Young , Sunday
ANTIQUITY BAPTI ST, Rev Earl Shu ler.
School Supt Sunday School 9:30 a.m.
pastor. Sunday school 9 30 a.m , Church
Eventng worshtp, 7 30, Wednesday prayer
service, 7 p m
youth meet.ng, 6
meetmg, 7·30 p.m
p.m Tuesday Bible Study. 7 p.m.
MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF GOO.
RAC INE CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE ,
Racln.- Rev. W. H. lylo.ins , pastor. MornRev . John A Coffman, pos1or. Frankltn
ing worship , 9' &lt;45 a m. Sunday school,
Imboden, chairman of the Boord of Chris10 : ~5 a.m.: evening worsh1p 7 _ Tuesday,
t•on l1fe. Sunday School. 9.30 a.m .. morn70:)0 p m . ladtes prayer meet1ng;
ing worship, 10.30 . Sunday evenmg worWednesday , 7.30 _p.m. YPE.
ship. 7 30 p m. Prayer meettng, WednesM IDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST , Corner
day. 7·30 p m.
Silcth and Palmer the Rev Mark McClung ,
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST, Don L. Walker ,
Sunday school, 9 15 a.m.. Don Wil son ,
Pastor, Ronn1e Salser, Sunday schoo l
superintenden1. lacy Borton, osst sup! .
supt. ; Sunday school, 9.30 o. m., morning
Morning Worship. 10· 15 a.m 8tble study ,
worship , 10 ~0 a m .. Sunday evenmg wor10·30 o m at church : Youth meeting, 7 30
ship 7.30. Wednesday eyening Bible
p.m. Wednesday Wednesday night 81ble
Freeland Norris pa stor; Fl oyd NorNs
study, 7·30
study and prayer service, 7 30 p .m
sup!. Sunday sc hool, 9 30 a m , mornmg
DANVIllE WESLEYAN , Rev . R. D.
CHUACH OF CHRIST Middleporl. 5ih
sermon, 10 30 a.m. Prayer ser 'o'ICe, Ttllts , pastor; Donny T11!is, Sunday Schoo l
Brown pastor. Sunday School , 9:30a.m .:
and Main , Bob Melton , minister, Mike
Ed•son Weaver. osslslon t: Henry Eblin,
Wednesday , 7.30 p.m
morn tng worship 10 45, youth service.
Gerlach. superintendent Terry Yankey ,
Jr., Sunday school supt. Sunday school,
Supt Sunday School , 9 30 a m , followed
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE.
6 45 p.m.; evening worship. 7.30 p.m..
youth m1nlster Btble school , 9·30 a.m.,
9 30 a m ; morn1ng worship, II a.m. Sunby mornmg worshtp. Sunday evening se r·
Rev. Herbert Grote, pastor. Worship ser·
prayer and praise. Wednesday 7.30 p.m
morning worsh ip, 10 30 a.m. ; even tng
day evening seNtee , 7 :30; prayer
vi ce, 7 30 p m. Pray er meetmg, Wednes·
v1ce , 11 o.m and 7 JO p m Sunday
SILVER RUN FREE BAPTIST Rev Morv1n
me•ting, Thursday, 7·30 p.m
worship , 7:30; praye r service, 7 p.m.
day . 7 30 p.m. WMPO Radio broadcast
School, 9 30 (] m Charles Btssall . sup!
Mork1n. pastor; Steve little Sunday school
Wednesday .
SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF GOD Sunday morning, 7 &lt;45
Prayer meetmg, Wednesday , 7 ·30 p. m .
supt Sunday school , 10 a.m .. morning
MIDDLEPORT
CHURCH
OF
THE
Not Pen1ecostal. Rev . G.orge Oiler,
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE ,
lAUREl
CLI FF
FREE METHODI ST
worship , 11 a.m. Sunday evening wor·
NAZARENE , Rev Jim Broome, pastor. Bill
pastor. Worship seNice Sunday, 9:45
Ro v lloyd 0 Gnmm, Jr. , pastor. Sunday
CHURCH , Rev . Floyd F. $hook , pa stor. school , 9 30 a m , wo r~ hip servtce , 10 30
ship, 7 30 Prayer meeting and Bible
White, Sunday school supt. Sunday
o.m . Sunday s-chool, I' a.m .. worship
lloyd Wright, Sunday School Supt. M orn- a m. Broadcast l•ve over WMPO , yo ung
study, Thursday, 7 30 p.m. ; you th serv1ce,
school, 9·30 o.m ; mornmg wor sh1p, 10 30
serv1ce, 7.30 p.m. Thursday prayer
mg Worship 9.30 a .m .. Sunday School
6 p.m. Sunday.
meeting , 7:30pm.
a.m.; Sunday evangeliStic meetmg, 7 00
people's servtce, 7 p.m . Eva ngelistic ser10.20 a m .. Wednesday Prayer and 81ble
CHESTER CHURCH OF GOO, Rev. R. E.
p.m . Prayer meehng, Wednesday , 7 p.m
MT. HERMON United Brethren Church.
vtce . 7 30 p m Wednesday serVI Ce, 7 ·30
Study 7 30 p m . Sunday eventn g worship p m.
Robmson, pastor. Sunday school , 9 30
UNITED PRESBYTERIAN MINISTRY OF
Sunday Sc~l 9 30 a.m . Worship s•rvlce
FIRST SOU TH ERN BAPTIST, Corner
7 ·30 p.m : Cho1r Pract tce Thursday, 7 p m.
a.m ; worship servtce, 11 a.m.; evenmg
MEIGS COUNTY Owtght l. Zovitz direc10 ~5 a.m. Preaching servlc•s every Sunof Second and Anderson, Mason Pastor
DE XT ER CHURCH OF CHRIST, Charles
serv1ce, 7 00, youth serv•ce , Wednesday.
tor.
day olternoling with C E Wednesday
Fronk Lowthe r. Sunday school. 9 45 a .m.,
Rus se ll, Sr., mtnlster Rtck Macomber , w orsh1p sorv1co, 11 a m and 7 30 p.m
7 00 p.m.
HARRISONVILLE PRESBYTERIAN, Rev
prayer meeting 1 30 p.m. Rev . James
supt Sunday school, 9 30 a m., worsh1p Weekly B1bl e Study , Wednesday . 7.30
LANGSVIllE CHRISTIAN
CHURCH .
leach, pastor Dovtd Holter, loy leod•r.
Ernest Slrtcklin , pastor Sunday church
servtce, 10:30 a m. B1ble Study , Tuesday ,
Robert Musser pastor Sunday school,
school. 9 30 o.m .. Mrs Homer Lee, supt. ,
pm
JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES, I mile eool of
7 30 p.m
9 30 o m . Roy Stgmon, supt ; mormng
morning worship, 10.30
Rutland , jUnction of Route 12&lt;4 ond Noble
MASON CHURCH O F CHRIST Moile r St .
REORGANIZED
CHURCH
OF
JESUS
worship , 10 30, Sunday evening servtce,
MIDDLEPORT, Sunday school, 9 30 o m.,
Summit Rood (T· 174). Sunday Bible lecMason W Va Auflce M1ck, pastor SunCHRIST OF LATTER DAY SAINTS , Portla nd
7 30; mid· week service, Wednesday , 7
ture , 9 ·30 a. ; Watchtower ltudy, 10:30
Richard Vaughan . sup! Morntng worsh1p,
day Btble Study 10om , Worshtp 11 a.m
p.m.
Rocme Rood . Wdl1om Roush, pa stor
10 30
o.m ; Tuesday, Bible study, 7 and 8 :15
and 7 p.m Btble Study Wednesday 7 p.m.,
Phyllis Stobort, Sunday School Sup t. Sun - Voc al muSi c.
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE ,
SYRACUSE, Morntng worsh1p , 9 a.m ,
p m : Thursday, th•ocratlc school. 7:30
day School, 9 30 a. m .. M ormng worship
Rev Dale T. Boss, pottor, Norman
Sunday school , 10 a.m Mrs . Sampson
p m ; servtce meeting, 8:30 p.m.
' MASON ASSEMSLY OF GOO Oudd1ng
10 30 a .m., Sunday evenmg serv1ce 7 p m
Presley, Sunday school superintendent.
HaiL supt.
RUTLAND FREEWILL BAPTIST Church lone, Mason . W Va . Ches ter Tennant
Wednesday even1ng prayer serv1ces , 7 30 Postor
Sunday school 9·30 a.m.; morning wor·
RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOO . Rev Bob·
leland Holey, pastor Sunday school, 10
Sunday School 9 AS o.m ,
pm
ship, 10·45; eventng worship, 7 p m.
by Porter, pastor. Sunday school. IOo .m ·
o.m ., evening service, 7:30 p.m Prayer
Children's Church 6 45 p m Young PeoWednesday evenmg worsh1p, 7. Young
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST. Rev. Earl Shuler, ple's. Servtce 6 45 p.m Evangelistic Sermeeting, Wednesday , 7·30 p m.
Sunday worship , 11 a m . Sunday even1ng
peoples soetety, Wednesday , 7 p m.
pastor Worship serv tce , 9.30 o.m Sunday VIC&amp; 7 30 p m. Wom en's MisSionary Counservice. 7 p m Wednesday Fam•ly Trot CHURCH OF GOO of Prorhecy, located
N. Y I pres1dent, Paul Imboden, Misschool , 10.30 o.m Bible Study and prayer CII 10 a m. f irst ond th ~rd Tuesdays Prl.lyer on the 0 . J. White Road of 1-tighway 160,
ing Hour. 7 p m Wednesday worship sersionary Soc1ety , second Wednesday , 7
7
30
p
m
.
service
Thursday.
vice, 7·30 p m
Sunday School 10 o. m. Superintendent
ond B1bl e Study, Wednesday. 7.30 p m .
p m . soctety pres1dent, Elizabeth Cundiff .
CARLETON CHURCH Kmgsbury Rood
HAZEL COMMUNITY CHUACH , Near
John Loveday. First Wednesday night of
HARTFO RD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
Gory Kmg , po stor Sunday school , 9 30 CHRISTIAN UNION The Rev Wdhom
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN CHRIST
long Bo ttom . Edsel Ha rt. pastor . Sunday
month CPMA services second WednesElden R. Bloke , pastor. Sunday School 10 am . Rolph Carl . su per~n te ndent , even •ng Campbe ll . pas tor Sunday Schoo l, 9 30
schooL 10o. m. Church 7 30p m prayer
day WMB meet ing, third through fifth
a m .. Robert Reed . supt .. Morning ser- worship, 7 30 p m Pray er meehng, o m , James Hughes. sup! ., evening ser·
meeting 7·30 p m Thursday.
youth service George Croyle, pastor.
Wednesday , 7 30 p m .
mon, II a.m.. Sunday n1ght serv1ces
MIDDLEPORT PE NTECOSTAL . Th ird
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEl - 570 Grant St. ,
v~e e , 7 30 p m
Wednesday evening
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN . George F
Christ1on Endeo vor. 7 30 p.m ; Song ser Ave ., the Rev Wlll •om Kn ittel , pastor.
prayer meeting, 7 30 p.m . You th praye r Mtddleport. Rev . Don Bloke, pastor. SunPickens,
pa
stor.
Wallace
Dam
ewood
vice B p m , Preaching 8 30 p m
Thomas Kelly , Sunday School Supt. Sun·
serv1 ce each l uesdoy
day school , 9.30 a.m.; morning worship,
M1dweek Prayer meeting, Wednes day. 7 Supt B1ble School, 9 45 a m Preochmg
doy school, 10 am Clones f or all ages,
10 30 a .m , evening worship , 7 p.m ;
FAIR VIEW BIBlE CHURCH Le ta rt , W.
sennce, 10 45 am. f1rs t and th1rd Sun
p.m . Ray Adam s, loy leader .
evenmg se rv1 ct1
7 30
Bible study
Vo . Rt 1. Rev Ch arles Hargraves , Wednesday evenmg Bible study and
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST. locoled or · days; 7 p m. second and fourth Sundays
Wednftday 7 30 p m you th serv1ces ,
pos ter Worship S&amp;rv1ces , 9 JO o m , Sun - proyer meeftng. 7 p m . Affiliated with
Btble study . 8 p,m Tuesdays.
Rutland on New limo Rood ne wt to Forest
Friday, 7·30 p m
day sc hoo l II a.m.; evenmg wors h1p , Southern Baptist Convention.
HYSELL RUN FREE METHODIST CH UR CH
Acre Por~ . Rev Roy Rouse, pa stor. Robert
MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST, Corner
BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST7 30 p m Tuesday cottage prayer mee ting
Rev Okey Cart pastor. M ornmg service
Musser, Sunday School sup! . Sunday
Ash and Plum . Noel Herrman , pastor
Eugene Underwood, pastor, Harry Henand B1ble study , 9 30 a m . Wor!hlp se r·
10.30
o.m
,
Sunday
eveni
ng
and
Thursday
school, 10 30 o.m ; worship 7 30 p m.Bi·
Saturday evening serv1ce , 7.30 p.m ., Sun·
dricks, superintendent. Sunday sc~oal ,
VICe Wednesday , 7 JO p m
even1ng &amp;ervtces at 7 30 p.m.
ble Study , Wednesday, 7 30 p.m , Sotur·
doy School. I 0 30 o m
CALVARY BIBLE CH URCH, now loca ted 9:30 o .m , morning worship, 10:30 o .m ;
FREEDOM GOSPEL M ISSION at Bold on Pomeroy P1ke. County Road 25 near evening worship , 7 p.m Wednesday Bible
day nigh I prayer service , 7 30 p m .
MEIGS
Knob . Rev . l awrence Gluesencomp , Sr , Flatwoods Rev . Blackwood. pastor. Ser·
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN Roge '
study , 7 p m
COOPERATIVE PARISH
pastor , RogerW1IIford Sr. Sunday. sc hool
Watson pa stor· Mild red Zteg ler, Sunday
METHODIST CHURCH
JUBILEE CHRISTIAN CENTER - George's
v1ce s on Sunday of 10 30 om and 7 30
supt. Sunday ~ choo l 9 30 a .. evening w or- p m w1th Sundoy sc hoo l, 9 30 a m B1ble Creek Rood . Rev C. J. Lemley, postor.
school sup! Morn.ng worshtp , 9 30 a m
R• chard W Thomas , Dlfe&lt;tor
ship. 7 30 p m Prayer meet tng , Wednes
Sundoyschool, 10 30 o.m , evenmg ser
POMEROY CL USTER
study, Wed nesday 7 30 p m
John Failure , superintendent. Church
doy 7 30 p m You th meettng Sunday ,
vice, 7.30.
Rev Robert McGee
school, 9 30 a.m.. morning worship,
INDEPENDENT HOLINESS CHUR CH , INC
S·30
p
m
w
1th
Don
and
Martha
M
eadows
MT
UNION BAPTI ST. Ceci l Cox .
Rev James Corbttt
10 30, evening service, 7 p m Youth
Pearl St . M•ddleport Rev. 0 Dell
1n charge
m1n•ster; Joe Sayre. Sunday School
POMEROY Sunday Schoo l 9 15 o m
M anley , pos ror Sonny Hudso n, Su nday meeting Sunday, 6 p m . Btble study in
WHITES CHAPEL Coo lv ille RD . Rev Roy sc hoo l sup! Sunday sc hoo l 9 30 o m.
Supenntenent. Sunday school, 9 45 o m ,
Wors.h 1p serv• ce 10 30 a m Cho •r rehe-a r
depth , Wednetdoy , 7 p.m Classes for all
Deeter, pa stor Sunda r sc hool 9 30 tJ rn
eventng worsh1p, 7 30 p m . Prayer
'-O I. W•dnesdo y, 7 p m Re v. Robert
evenmg wors h•p 7·30 p m Pray er and ages . Nursery provided for worshtp ter·
w or ~ h1p serviCa, tO 30 a m B1bl e study
meeting, 7 30 p m Wednesday
'
vice .
McGee, pas tor .
pralse se, .1c: o: Wedne ~d oy , 7 30 p m
ort d prayer service Wedn eo;dcy 7 10 f) rn
TUPPERS PLAINS CH URCH OF CHRIST
ENTERPRISE , Worsh1p 9 a m Church
~ U Tl /
D 1\POSTOLIC C HUilCH OF
ST. PAUL lUTHERAN CHURCH, Corner
RU TL AND CHURCH Of l R l~ ! 8r,)d JESUS 0...1121ST Elder Jam es. M.ll er. B1ble of Sycamore and Second Sts., Pomeroy.
Randy Koehler , Po stQr Denn l!i Newland
Scllool 10 o m.
Hendersm1 , pa stor, Her b Ellio tt , Sund oy ~ r u dy , Wedn esday, 7 30 p m ; Sunday The Rev William Middlesworth, Pastor.
Sundcy sthoo l supennfefld en t. Sunday
ROCK SPRINGS Church School 10 o m
school supt Sunday school, 9 30 o .m , Sch oo l, 10 a rr Sunday n1~ht serv• ce, 7 30 Sunday Schoof ot 9 :~5 a .m. and Church
School, 9 30 am mornmg chu rch s"r·
Worship l 0 a m UMVF 6·30 p m
mornmg wor~ h • p and comUn1on. 10 30
vic e I 0 30 o m Sunday evenmg 81ble
Services 11 a m.
fl~TWOODS , Chu rc h Schoo l 10 om
p '" ·
a .m
srudy 7 p m
Worsh•p II a m .
PO MEROY WE SLEYAN HOLINESS
SACRED HEART, Rev. Falher Paul D.
RUTLAND COMMUNIT Y CHURCH A mos Ho rrlsonv11/e Rood. Dewey Kmg pas tor, Welton , pastor Phone 992-2B25. Soturdoy
LHART FALL S UN!HD BRETHREN . RPv

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No~tionwidt

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Attend The Church

by THOMAS JOSEPH
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ZHad hmch
1 Olof'a
lllraell

creaUon

Of Your Choice This Sunday

airport

I Glutted

I Buga

ahriven
1% Spanish city

I Naples' Carlo Opera
7 ConiA!nd
I Baahlul
t Hearten
111Ullan

Martin -

BURLINGHAM
CHURCH . Roule

SOUTHERN BAPTIST
Shade. Poslor Don

I.

Black. Affiliated with Southern Baptlat
Convention. Sunday school, 1:30 p.m ..
Sunday warship, 2:30 p.m. Thursday
evening Bible study, 7 p.m.
PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY , Roclno ,
Route 124, William Hoback, pastor. Sunday school, 10 o m., Sunday evening ser·
vice, 6:30 p .m . Wednesday Mnlng ser·
vice, 7.
CARPENTER BAPTIST, Rev . Freeland
Norris, pastor. Don Cheadle, Supt. Sunday School, 9:30 a .m. Morning Worship
10 30 o.m Prayer Service , alternate Sun:
days

6 3D-NBC News 3, 15 ; ABC News 13 :

Ca rol Burnett 6. CBS News 8. 10,
Bob Newhart 17, Over Easy
20.33
7 00-Cross-W•ts J . Tic Tac Dough
8; Ne.,..lywed Game 6 13; News
10 ; Love Amer1can Style 15;
Dick Ca,..elt 10,33.
7 »-Hollywood Squares 3, Sl 98
Bea uty Show 6, Family Feud 10,
Pop Goes The Country 15. 13; My
Three Sons 17; MacNeil Lehrer
Report 20,33
8 00-0iff' rent Strokes 3, 1S . Fan
tasy Is 6,13, Incredib le Hulk
8, 10 , Wash i ngton Week In
Revlew 20.33, Movie " Curse of
the Voodoo'' 11
8 JO- F.r~ c t s of L•fe 3 15 . Wal l Stree,l
Week 20,33
9 00-Movie " Not Abo\le Suspicion"
3; Movie " The Bad News Bears
In Brea ki ng Trol inlng " 6, 13,
Rockford Fi les 15, Dukes of
Hazzard 8,10, Buckeye Holiday
2(1 ; Maney, News and Views 33
9 30- lssues
tn
World
Com muni cations 20 . La Grande
Parade Ou Jau 33.
10 Oo--New s 3,20 ; Dallas 8, 10,
Baseball 17
10 JO- Baseball
3,
Consumer
Survival K1t 20; David Su~s k lnd
33
11 ·00 - N ews 3,618, 10.13. 1s· Two
Ronnles 20
11 .3()-Aia n Kmg Goes Nashvt lle 6 ;
Johnny Carson 15 , Movie " One
Deadly Owner " 8; ABC News 33;
Mollie " The Nanny " \0 , M iss
Nat tona l ieen-Ager Pageant 13
12 00- Mon ty Python ' s Fly mg
C1r cus 33 12 JG-Mov1e " Mr
Ace' ' 17
1 00-M idnlght Specie i 3,15 , J uke·
Box 8: Movi e " The Lost Con·
nnent · 10 ; Ironsi de 13 . 2.0GNews 13.
2 25-News 17 . 2 30-News 3; 2·45-Movie " The P1geon That Took
Rome " 17 . ~ so-Dragnet 17 .

tratllfer

U Tribal V.I.P
15 In 1 tluy
11 D!nctor.

p.m

FRIDAY , SEPTEMBER U , 1979

Bunny I!
5 Pidute

II Berome

evening Man, 7:JU, ~unday Mass, 8 and
10 am . Confession, Saturday, 7-7 30
p m.
VICTORY BAPTIST - On lhe Roole 7
bypass. James E. K...... pastor Sunday
school, 10 a .m , morning worship, 11
a.m.: •vening sef'lice, 1 ,
TRINITY Christian Au•mbly , Coolville
Gilbert Spenc•r. 'pastor. Sunday
school, 9:30 a .m., morning worship, 11
a.m. Sunday evening service, 7 30 p m.:
midweek prayer service Wednesday , 7:30
om.
MOUNT OLIVE Community church Lawrence, pastor; Max Folmer, Sr.,
superlntencMnt, Sundoy school and morn·
ing worship, 9:30 a . m. Sunday evenlnu
se~lce . 7. Youth meeting and Bible study ,
Wednesday, 7 p . m.
FAITH BAPTIST Church, Mason, m. .t at
United Steel Workers Union Hall , Rol l rood
Str..t, Mason. Poltor, Rev . Joy Mitchell
Morning worship 9: &lt;4~ o.m , Sunday
lchool 10:30 o.m
Prayer mHtlng
Nednesdoy, 7-:10pm
FOREST RUN BAPTIST Rev . Nyle
Borden, pastor . Cornelius Bunch ,
superintend•nt. Sunday school, 9.30o.m ;
sttcond and fourth Sunday1 worship ser·
vice at 2 30 p.m.
MT. MORIAH BAPTIST - Fourth ond
Main St., Middleport. Re.... Ca lvin Minnis,
pastor. Mrs. Elvin Bumgardner, supt. Sunday school. 9:30 a.m.; worship se~lce,
10 : ~5 a.m.
• NORTH
BETHEL
Uniled Me1hodlst
Church, Rev. Charles Domlgan, pastor.
Sunday School, 9·30 a.m., Wor~hip Service , 10·45 om .. Sundoy Bible Sludy, 7 :00
p.m ; Wednesday prayer me•ting, 7:30
p.m
HOUSE OF PRAYER AND PRAISE , Llbor1y
Ave., post Burger Chef , Pomeroy. Eug•n•
Anspoh, pottor. Sunday school, 10 a.m.;
morning worship , II a. m . Evening war·
shp, Sundoy, TuHdoy ond Frldoy, 7 30

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•:.'I.;L..""C--~ '

__ ...

hor-t-t-t-t-

plano
player

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how
AXYDLBAAXR
Is

WHA"T A WISE MAi-.1
NEVER' DOE5.

LONGFI!LLOW

One letter 11imply :~ lands for another In this sample A i.t
used for the three L 's, X tor the two 0'&amp;, etc. Sinele !etten,
apos~ropbes, the length and formation of the words are all

hints. Each day the code letters are dlfl'erent

CRYPTOQUOTES
OK
JLG
BXID
DL
WGAA
JLGTHCAK
O!DL
RALTOLGH
XYGADULLY
YL
ILD
WCTFOD
JLGTHCAK
DL
AOPC
XI
GIQUXTDCY AOKC.- TULYJI!. AXQU]!:T
Yeolerday'o Cryp!Gqaele: CHARITY IS INJURIOUS 11NLESS
IT HELPS THE RECIPIENT BECOME INDEPENDENT OF
IT. -JOHN D. ROCKEFELLER, TlllRD
Cl " " lOtiO Fel""' lyndk..., lrte

IUNBOADb

(XJ

[I I I I

Answer.

Now arrange the circled letters to
fonn lhe Sllrprlae answef, as sug·
gested by lhe otrove cartoon

)His"[

1

I I XI)"
(Answeralomorrow)

Yesterdays

I

Jumbleo EPOCH

CREEK FAMOUS ROBBCR
A.nswer· What the monster ~Jistted fils aslrologer
for - HIS " HORRORSCOPE'

Jumble look No 12, con•tl n l ~ 1 tO puUI.. , lt1Vtlltb .. fOtl1 7fipotlplld
trom Jumblt,c/o Ihis newtplptr, 1011 3o4, Norwood, tU.07f.48 lnchtdt your
nsrwt, **lrtll, lip code 1nd make ~:htck.t p11ylblt lo Ntwtplptrhoolta.

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1979
5 2!&gt;-World at Large 17 ; 6 GOSummer Semester 10; 6. 1oHumHn Dimension 11 .
6 30 - Saturday Report J, TV
Classroom a, U S Farm Report
10; Kentucky Afield 13; 6· AoNews 17 .
7 oo-B ig Blue M arble 3, Porky Pig
&amp; Friends a, Publi c Polley
Foru ms 10. Animals, An imal s,
Animals 13. Thr ee Stooges Little
Rascals 17
1 JO--Little Rascal s 3; Bay City
Rol lers 15; M atters of Life 6;
Kids ai'e People Tnn 13.
a·oo - Dafly u uck 3, 15; Superfrlen ds
6. 13. Mighty Mou se Heckle &amp;

Mustc 17
9·00--Movie " The E iger Sanclion"
3, 15 ; Love Boat 6,13 ; Movie " The
Paradise Co nnection " 8 ,10.
Su mmertest '79 33 , M aven ck 17;
Upstairs, Downstai r s 20
IO.oo-Baseball 17, All Crea tur es
Great and Small 20
1H lO- News 3.6,8, 10,13,15.
11 15-ABC News 6,
11 30Saturday Night Live 3,15 M ovie
" Carry On Admiral " 8, Earle
Bru ce · Football 10 ; College
Foolball 13.
12 oo-Movle " Dead Men Tell No
Tales" 10 , College Football 33
12 .1o-Rat Patrol 17. 1.()()-M ovle
" Better a Widow " 3, Juke BoK
17
1.3()-Movle " The- Gamma People"
17, 2 00--ABC News 13
2;31)-News 3; 3 .oo-Movie " Dtai
Hot Line" 3; Movie " Sylvia
Scarlett " 17.
4 3D-Movie " The Corn Is Green" ] ,
5 DO-Dragnet 17 .

Jeckle 8.1 0; Ultra Man 17
8 JG-Partrldge Family 11
9·00-Fred &amp; Barney 3,15; Plasti c
Man 6,1 3; Bugs Bunny Road
Runner 8, 10. Maverick 17
9 30-Jetsons
3, 15,
10 00Giobetrotters and Oynamutt
3,15; Out of the Blue 6,13 ; MoYle
" The Bridge of San Luis Rey" 17
t0 . 30-Popeye 8. Movie " Bi lly lhe
Kid" 10.
n ·oo-Ftash Gordon J.lS , Kids are
People Too 6, Tom &amp; Jerry 13
11 ·30-Godzllla J , I S; Fat Albert 8;
Action News far Kids 13.
12 oo--Jonny Quest 3,15; Weekend
Speclol 6, 13, Joson of Slar
Command 8 ; Movie "Capt
Scarlett" 17
12 · ~ong
Kong Phooey 3, 15,
American Bandstand 13; NFL
Game of the Week 6; Tarzan
SUNDAY, 5EPTEMBER 16,1979
Super 7 8; Crockett's Victory
5·Jo-AG -USA 17; 6 ~American
Garden 33
Problems &amp; Challenges 10;
t.QO-Thls Is the NFL 3,6; , In The
Action Newsmaker 13; It' s Your
Know 10. PTL Club lS. West
Business 17
Vi rgi nla Outdoors 33
6 .30--Chrlstopher Closeup 3; Kids
1·30- This Week In Baseball J; Wide
are People Too 13; Between the
World ot Sports,6,13; 30-Minutes
Lines 17, Treehouse Club 10.
8,10; Movie "The Big Heat" 17;
7 :oo-This Is The Life 3, Pub lic
Fireside Kitchen 33
Affairs 10; Jimmy Swaggart 17
2:(X)-Movle "How to Frame e
7·3()-TV Chapel 3; Eddie Saunders
Figg" 3; VIewpoint 8, Movie
6; Jerry Fa lwell 8, 10. The Bible
" Run Wild, Run Free" 10;
Answers 13 ; J lmmy Swaggart
Forsyte Saga 33.
IS ; Christ for the World 17.
2·30-Movle " The Big Wheel " 8;
8.00- Mormon Choir 3; Gra ce
3 :00-College Football Pregame
Cathedral6, Christ for the Work
Show 6 , 13; Sportsworld IS :
13 , Three Stooges &amp; Friends 17,
Upstairs, Downstairs 33.
Sesame Sf 20.33
, College Football 6, 13.
8·30-Qr!!lll Roberts 3. Contact 6.
3 30-Misslon. Impossible 17 . 4.DOJames Robi son PreS@nts 10;,
Baseba11 Warm -Up 3,15 : Nash
Lower
Ligh thouse 13; Open
ville on the Road 10; When the
Bible I S
Boat Comes In 33.
&lt;1 15-Baseball 3,15 ; 4 ·3o-Sports
9 co-Gospe l S l ng lr~ Jubilee 3, Oral
Rober ts 10. Rex Humbard 6;
Spectacular a, Pop Goes Th e
Country 10; Th is Week In
Rev Jim Frankli n 13, Ernest
Baseb111i 17.
Angtey 15; Losl In Space 11 ,
S oo-Oolly 10; American Life Style
Mister Rogers 20,33
17 ; Coping with Kleis 20: Catch -33
9:30-Chrlstian Center 8: Elec Co.
33
33; It Is Written 10; Gospe l
5 30-Porter Wagoner 10. Love
Out reach 13 ; Sesame ST 20.
10 GO-Human Dimension J; Kids
American STyle 17 ; Lock Stock
&amp; Bo~~rrel 20 ; 5 : SS - Co llege
ere People Too 6; Robert
Scoreboard 17.
SchL.'IIer 8; Movie "Samson &amp;
6 00- Concern
8;
News
10 ,
Delilah " 10; J immy Swagg~rt
Wrestling 17; Crockett's VIctory
13; Gospel Singing Jubilee 1S ,
Garden 20; Like tt Is 33.
Hazel 17 ; Studio See 33.
6:30-News 6; CBS News 8,10;
10 : 30-Rex Hu mbard 3, Movie
Actloa N~wsmakor 13; Elw;, &lt;;~
- • &gt; "~mson &amp; Qellloh " 17 : Zoom
20; 1&lt;MW Y~li 314 "
•. ~ !ll,ld.eiiJe Ma- 33.
7:oo-N.ws J; ~aw ~. 8 r $1.98 - ··II :~"t rnes l • Angley B; Rex
Beauty Show" 13, Masterpiece
Humbard IS; Rev . Henry Mahan
Theatre 20.
13 ,
Que
P cua USA 20 ;
7 · 3~An Inside Look 3; Kicks 10;
Photograph y 33.
5100,000 Name That Tune 13;
11 30- At
Issue 3.
Animals ,
Animals, Animals 6; Re'tl R A.
World War I I. G. I. Diary 33
8 00- Chips 3,15 ; Ropers 6, 13 ;
Westl3 ; Elec. Co 20, Turnabout
Working Stltfs 8,10; Meeting of
33.
Minds 20 133; Pop Goes The
12 ·oo-Meet1ne Press 3,15, Issues &amp;
Country 17.
Answers 6,13, Time E xposu re
8·3Q- 0 P. tective School 6, 13; Bt~d
20; Netlonal Geographic 33.
·
News Bears 8,1 0; That Nashville

I,

. '

..

'·

.'

.,
•'

�8- The Daily Sent mel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Sept. 14, 1979
Yard

S;~le

•es ldence .

SA

17•

towof ds llutlond . One day on-

ly Some gorden_Jooll .
THREE FAMILY yard solo . Se pt .

1,.

~

15

197&lt; VEGA HATCHBACK . call
303-675· 1501 or 305·675·2466
or 304-675-I 553.
1974 DODGE CORONET 4-door
Custom . 992-5858 .
197b PlYMOUTH VOL ARE . hcellen t condition . 2Gl ,OOO
miles . ~2•00 . 992-3198.
1969 FORD BRONCO 4-wheel
dr ive . White spo ~e wheels , 3
speed
frons ,
Call
614·«6·9595 .
197~ Gfi:AND PR IX . good .con·
dition . sun roof . tope. $1700.
9'12-5083 .
1Gl7b FORO VAN . b cyl. , auto ..
AM -FM cassette . 992-b1 37 .

197.6 CAMARO, 12,000 mHes ,

Yard Sales

Y'ARO SALE . Sotu,day. Sept .
15 1979. 9.30-5.00 . Doyle T
Hudson

Auto Sales

Auto Sales

5, h t tra iler on left

post Metg~ Co . Fa irgrounds on
CR 70
Baby and Junior
dot has 'W2 -7738 .

LAR GE Se vera l lom ily

yard
~ o le
Thru Sot. , Sept . 15.
Clo th 1ng. all sizes . ieons . tops .
dr'e sses . sleepweor , le isure
!i.U l ls hot water heater . old
lu rn1 ture , o ld rodlo . bottl es ,
Tupperwore, end lots of o the r
thing s On O ld Rt , 33 01 end ol
CR 19 . Wotch for Si gns .

VARO SALE . Wed. 12th thru
Sun .
16.
Wolter Wilson
res idence on CR lQ between 4

lone 33 and· Old Rt . 33. First
yard sole ever . B o ~ ~ · pont~ . 10
and12husky . 9ti1 a eochdoy .
Rein ccncels unfit fo llowing
week .

YARD SAlE .

Appro~e .

3 miles

above Fai rgrou nds on Old 33 .
Erne~t Cullums . Thurs .. Fri.
Sa t . 9-4.

PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY OHIO

a5g~~1~W'J'E~~!i~~l;case No. 22.1.777

. N011CE OF
AP01NTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On Sept . 4, 1 979~ in the
Meigs County t-'robate
Cour t, Case No. 22,777,
John T. Holl ida y and
Eugene Ho lliday , Box. 60,
Dexter , Ohio 45725 were ap ·
pointed Co-executors of th e
es tate of Elmont L .
Bosworth, deceased, late of
Dex ter , Ohio.t5726.
Robert E . Buc k

YARD SALE . Fodoy and So tur·
dciy , Sept . 14- 15. Something
for everyone . Cl othes . toys .
hou~e

pl an ts . m isc. items. 3rd
on left on 684 in Hor·
nso nv1 lle . ~ot c h for signs .
hou~ e

YARD SALE . Sepl . 1&lt;·21.
Household goods, women 's,
men's and chi ld ren 's doth1ng ,
misc. items . 1 mile from
Langsville. CR 100. 9 til do rk.
Phone 742·2668 .

Probate J udge

(9) 7, 14, 21.

3tc

Clerk

305 engine . A .C ., rear defogger, e•ca\lent condition . Toke
over payments . 247 -3863.

1973

DODGE pickup . 316
engine, A. C., whi te s~ke
w"'eels , sliding back gloss .

good condition . 247 -3863.
1'977 FORD F- 150, 6 cyl. • ·
speed . b cellent condition.

992-5529.

NOTICE OF
PUBLIC SALE .
Notice is hereby gtven
that on September 25th,
1979, at 10 AM a public sale
wi 11 be held at the offices of
the Citizens National Bank,
Middleport, Ohio to sell,for
cash the follow1ng
collateral to wit: .
_
1969 Commumty Mobtle
Home Serial No. 489 . .
The Citizens Nat1onal
Bank Middleport, Ohio!
reserVes the r ight to bid a
the sale .

1970 T-BIRD, 2 door coupu ,
new ,.29 engine. 4 barrel. new
e~~:hcust . less than 3000 miles
on engine . P.S.. P.B.. cruise
control , electric b i cl~et seats
wi th console, reo r defogger,
new tires , new e xhau st.
$1800. 7-42-2-io.t before 2 pm
or alte r Spm .
1963 CADILLAC
excellent
shape. 9n-2205, or ofter 4
p .m . '992-7315.

1975 CHEVROLET NOVA. 6
cyl. , std. shift , 4 new rad ials.
$9'15 . 992·3A06 .

(9113. 14, 15, 3tc

r---- - - - ---.

I

Social Calendar
FRIDAV
ROUND AND SQUARE DANCE

1977 CHEVY C.20•••••••••••••••• !S:~:;·:.B••s3895
Scottsdal e Ca mper Special,
long bed

1974 CHEVY SUBURBAN C-20 •••••••••••••'1695
AT , PS, PB , Rack

1978 CHEVY IMPALA SEDAN 4 DR.•••••••s3895
Red,4 dr ,A T, A ir, PS. PB

1978 FORD PINTO STATIONWAGON •••••••s2995
4 cy l. , A. T .• white, real nice car .

1976
AMC GREMLIN .. ••••••••••••••••••• s1895
Aufo .. rack, P.S.. 6cyl .
1976 FORD TORINO •• ~~~-:."~"o ·.·~~ .•••.....• s1795
1976
OODGE DART ••••••••••••••••••••••• s1695
Slant6, air.
1974 GREMLIN •••••••••••••••••••••••••••sll95
Bittersweet Color, AT , Rac k

1974 COMET ••••••••e••••••••:~Y~·;!~r~·.r:~-. $1095
1975 FORD RANCHERO ••••••••••••••••• '2595
24,000 mles, A.T. . P.S., P B .

·1974 CHEVY TRUCK CUSTOM C.10 •••••• :.s1695
A.T .• P.S., P.B·.

1967 FOR~ /z IDN e~ia."ete.d•e•eeee•eeee •• e-. s995
1

HELP US TO CLEAR OUR INVENTORY

I

SEl.I.-A -rujn
1976 CHEV. SUBURBAN •••••••••••••••••• s4295
Du a l air cond .. am ·f m bu ilt -in C. B.. P.S.• P.B., tilt wheel, cru se contro l. Sharp .
.
6

1975 CHRYSLER CORDOBA .••• ~·::~ :~~~~. s1895
Air, auto., P.S., P. B., tilt whee l, P. seats, P. windows .

1975 BUICK LESABRE. •••••••• ~:~ !2::5.~~~ _$_1695
4 Dr .• air. au to .• P.S., P.B.

9

1975 FORD GRAN TORINO .• ~.::a::: ::~~~.'1695
2 Dr ., air , au to ., P .S., P.B.

1975 PLYMOUTii DUSTER CUSTOM~i~.".'l.~s1495
Slant 6, 3 spd .. P.S.

1974 CHEVY MALIBU 2 DR•.•••••• e. e•• •• 51095
V·8, A T, PS , PB
Was 51995 NOW $1695
1974 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX •••••••
e•• •e.
SJ Series, loaded .

1974 CHEV. IMPALA CUSTOM ••~·::! 2:!~~:'..?95
2 Dr .
Wa s 51495 NOW
1974 FORD li0RIN 0.....................
.$995
'I

Or ., a ir, auto ., P.S.

1973 PONTIAC GT AM .••••••••••••••••••• sags
lf ·B, AT , PS , PB, A ir

1973 CHEVY NOVA 6 CYL •••••••••••••••• '495
3 Sp , hat chba ck , l il lie rough

1971 CAMERO .......................... ;1695
F ac t o r y bore 302, AT , PS , PB , Air, AM -FM , Strack

1969
DODGE DART •••••• ee •••••~a.s:; ;.~o.~. s295
6 c yl. , au to., P S ., 2 Dr .
9

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

1969 BUICK LESABRE :.~r
s295
1965 CHEVY IMPALA SS ••••••••• !~~:.r•••. s295

TRUCKS
1974 FORD WINOOW ·VAN .... ~:~: • : 5.~~~. '1895

24

11 Passenge r

1973 CHEVY C-10 CUSTOM ................s595
V B. 3 Sp

RIEBEL'S USED CARS
St . Rt . 7

See Roger Riebel
985 -3345 or 667-3463
Tuppers Plains, 0 .

1 mile north

Syracuse News, Society

Friday from 8 to 11 p.m. at senior
citizens center, Pomeroy. Ad·
mission $1 for adults, children under
12 admitted free. _ Music by
Stringdusters. Open to public.
COMMITTEE MEETING for
Chester Cub Scout Pack Zl5 at 7 p.m.
at the Chester scout hall. Pack
meeting at the same time.
RETURN JONATHAN Meigs
Chapter, Daughters of the American
Revolution, meeting 1:30 p.m.
Friday at home of Mrs. Paul Eich
with attorney, Mrs. Barbara Knight,
as speaker.
MARY SHRINE 37, White Shrine
of Jerusalem, Friday, 8 p.m.
Potluck refreshments.
SATURDAY
MEIGS COUNTY Retired
Teachers Association luncheon
meeting at 12 noon Saturday at
Meigs Inn with Phyllis Hackett
speaking on her trip to Japan.
Reservations must be in no later
than Thursday. ·
WALTER GILMORE family
reunion, Saturday, roadside park on
Route 33, on right going north.
Covered dish dinner at noon.
SUNDAY
DEEM F;AMILY reunion Sunday
at Royal Oak Park; relatives and
friends invited.
COUNTY-WIDE prayer meeting,
2 p.m. Sunday at Rutland Community Church with Glen BisseU,
class leader.
MORRIS CHAPEL UNITED
Methodist Church homecoming Sunday. School School at 10 a.m. Afternoon program 1:30 to 4. Everyone
welcome to attend and take part.
MINERSVILLE
UNITED
METHODIST Church homecoming
Sunday. Sunday School and worship
service at regular hours. Basket dinner 12 noon to 1:30 p.m. Afternoon
service 2 p.m. .Singers from Rockbridge.
DINNER Sunday for Legion members who worked parking cars at the
Fair at Drew Webster Post Home at
I p.m.
LANGSVILLE Christian Church
annual homecoming Sunday with a
basket dinner at 12:30 p.m. ; af·
ternoon service, 2 p.m., special
singing. Public invited.
THOSE WISIDNG to stop smoking
may attend the five-day plan to
"kick the habit" at Veterans
MemoriaiHOBpital, Pomeroy, beginning Sunday evening and continuing
through Sept. 20. The clinic begins at
7 : ~p.m. All persons are welcome to
attend.
ANNUAL HOMECOMING, Minersville United Methodist Church Sunday with Sunday school, 9 a.m. and
morning service, 10, followed by
basket dinner at noon and program
at2p.m.
REV. EDDIE BUFFINGTON guest
speaker at Forest Run United
MethodlstChurchSundayllt9a .m. MONDAY
CANDYSTRIPERS of Veterans
Memorial Hospital . will resume
meetings at 7 p.m. Monday at the
hospital. Girls interested in
becoming members are invited.
REV!VAL at Silver Run Freewill
Baptist Church, Monday through
Sept. 22, at 7:30 each evening with
Bill Price as the evangelist and ·
special singing each evening; public
invited.
MEIGS COUNTY JAYCEES
holding work sessions on haunted
house Monday, Wednesday and
Thursday 7 p.m. at fonner Pomeroy
Senior High Building.
MIDDLEPORT Business and
Professional Women's Club Monday
at Columbia . Gas Office in Middleport. The legislation committee
will be in charge. Mrs. Becky
Moehler is chairman. Sheriff James
Proffitt will be the guest speaker.
Members urged to attend.

•

j eremy Smith

Birthday
Jeremy Alan Smith, son of Terry
and Becky Smith, celebrated his second birthday at his Racine home
with a surprise barbecue chicken
dinner prepared by his great-uncle,
Eddie Farley.
A Mickey Mouse theme was carried out for the party. Cupcakes and
cake made by his aunt, Melinda
Smith, ice cream and koolaid were
served to the guests.
Attending were Mary Ann Fowler,
Pat, Mike, Craig, Michelle and
Christopher Brown, Bill Harris,
Sonia Ash, Phyllis Harris, Esther
Joseph, Eddie and Mary Farley,
Perry Smith, Barry and Melinda
Smith, Garry and Melissa Smith,
Delbert Smith, Larry Smith and
Lisa Warner. Cards and gifts were
presented to Jeremy.

BILLBOARD'S HOT HITS
The following are Billboard's hot
record hits for the week ending
September 22 as they appear in next
week's issue of Billboard magazine.
HOT SINGLES
L "My Sharona" The Knack
I Ca pitol)
2. "After The Love Has Gone"
Earth, Wind &amp; Fire (Arc)
3. "The Devil Went Down To
Georgia" Charlie Daniels Band
I Epic )
4. "Rise " Herb Alpert (A&amp;M)
5.

" Lead

Me On"

Maxine

Nightingale (Windsong)
6. "Sad Eyes" Roher! John (EM!)
7. "Lonesome Loser" Little River
Band (Capitol )
8. "I'll Never Love This Way
Again" Dionne Warwick (Arista)
9. "Sail On" Commodores
(Motown )
•
10. "Don't Bring Me Down"
Electric Light Orchestra (Jet)
TOP LP's
L " In Through The Out Door" Led
Zeppe lin !Swan Song)
2. "Get The Knack" Th e Knack
1Capitol)
3. "Slow Train Comin g" Bob
Dylan (Columbia )
4. " Breakfast In America "
Supertramp (A&amp;M)
5. "Risque" Chic (Atlantic )
6. " Off The Wall " Mi chael
Jackson (Epic)
7. "Midnight Magic" Commodores
(Motown)
8. " I Am " Earth, Wind &amp; Fire
(Arc)
9. "Candy.O " Cars (Elektra)
10. "Reality What A Concept"
Robin Williams (Casablanca)

BY MAURICEM. TIIOMAS
Early in this century many interesting events took place, some I'll
relate from time to lime. The event I
am going to tell you is one that had
varied reactions on the people of this
community, with children scared,
teenagers less responsive and elders
taking it in stride:
One afternoon the telephone started ringing, announcing a medicine
show was to be at the local
schoolhouse. The interest was high
as no one was sure of the retinue of
the "showmen, " in this case one lone
man wilh his light buck-board enclosed and artistry of one type or
other to attract the "wonders" as to
the many hidden treasures within.
The team was a pair of Sfllltted
hinnies hitched to the vehicle,
behind was an old buffalo cow tied to
a ring attached to the rear of the
wagon, within were two cages in one
a wUdcat and in other a "bobcat."
They were fierce looking to any
four yearo(lld and probably as oad to
the next age group. Anyway interest
ran high as time for show to start kerosene or gasoline lamps were
hung with their flickering lights
yellow and smoking adding to the
strange setting of the evening.
Short musical numbers were .
given; as to its rendition I cannot
judge because if I bad given it would
have been less musical, next a short
rendition of some poem. Then the

·your Best Buys Are Found in the Sentinel Classifieds

coSt of seeing tile caged, ferocious
denizens of tile wild which abn08t
cOBt the life and limb of tile captors,
nonetheless the final subduing of the
captured, "The cow was scraggly
with long hair, short hair and no hair
at all. She was brownish in color as I
remember also very docile.
The team and buffalo cow found
their livellliood from roadsides and a
farmer's cilrn-patch, if one was unfortunate to be away from the house.
The cats were fed by the people
that came to see them or this particular showman demonstrated his
ability with a rifle, also it supplied

Help Wanted

WANT AD

CHARGES

passing leaflets endorsing his "cure
all" elixir, probably waterflavoring
and alcohol, anyway cheap at $1 per
bottle, also some artifacts gatllered
at battle.field of Bull Run or at the
site of Custer's Last S1and were
really CheaP toys of lead, little
money banks and other S1118ll
momen!OB. The fee for getting into
schoolhouse usually 5 cents for
school-ag'e and 10 cents for adults
and some people lOBI age quickly for
the five cents admittance . .
These shows were somethi!Jg to
talk about, but when the cats were
left in our ghmary overnight our
parents kept us in the house, I cannot say whether it wsa the
''yowling" or thoughts anyway, we ·
remained within house and tile dogs

CaJh

1.00

uo

1.11
1.110

session.

1.25 1

uo

2.1::1 .
1.!$

Each wM:t over the minimwn 1
15 wonll is 4 cents prr word per '
day. Ml nann1na othrr thin con.

secutive dly1 wlU be charxed al
the 1day rete.

sertion.

Pbooe 99'.!-2150!

NOTICE

.'

WANT·AD

A nVERTISING

•

' DEADUNES
loloodoy
Noon on Saturday

card of Thanks
MANY THANKS lo th. many
fr iends who ·remembered me
with cords and lett.,.. and
glfto on my """ blt1hday . It
mocle mo 10 happy.
Sincerely, with my lo-.,e, Mn.
Nellie H. Troc., .

•

AVENUE

Notices

MIDDLEPORT,
OHIO

ENERAL

TIRE SALES

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
1979 CLOSE OUT SALE

GUN SHOOT ~ EVERY fRIDAY
7:30 PM IIAClNE GUN aua.
Fl'oCTOflY CHOKE GUNS ONLY .
MEIGS COUNTY HUMANE
SOCIETY . 992·6260. Poll
ovoUable for adoption and Information aervl(e.
GUN SHOOT EVERY SUNDAY 1
PM. FACT OilY CHOKE ONLY .
IIACINE GUN CLUB.

•

ABSOlUTE! Y no l&gt;unting an
my farm . Freemon Williama,
Ml _,vile. Oil .

FACTORY DISCOUNTS GOOD THROUGH 9/17/79
(3) OLDS. 98 REGENCY SEDANS
(2) 88 ROYALE CPES.
1-Dk. Brown-black Landau roof, tan cloth :
1- Beige; tan cloth.

(3) CUTlASS
1-cut. Sup. Cpe. Dk. brown, Beige Landau.
1-cut. Cruiser Wagon, green, green vinyl.
1- Cut. Salon Brougham Sed. Med . brown, brown vinyl
(Drivers Ed . )

wanted to Buy
CHIP WOOD. Palea max.
diameter 10'' on lorptt end.
$12 por ton . lwndled slab. $10
per ton. o.llvered to Oftla
Pollet Ca.. Rt. 2, Pamer&lt;&gt;'(.
992·2611'1.
olD FU.NITURE, leo baxH.
broal bedt, Iron beds. desks.
etc.. complete kouteholdt.
Write M.D. Miller , Rr. 4,
Pomeroy ar ca11992- n61J.

(2) CADIUACS
1-DeVille Cpe. Lt. Blue, blue. Leather seating.
1-Eidorado Colonnial yellow leather sealing (mr.
Karr's Demo. l

ALL CARS HAVE AIR CONDITIONI.NG,
UNDERCOATING AND WAX

READY FOR
DELIVERY

.-

______

some think they save money buying out of town- AC
TUALL Y you save MORE buying at home, with service
after the sate.

..

Of.D COINS , packet wotcMI .
clo11 rings, wedding bancb ,
diamondt. GokJ or lilvet . Coli
J . A. Wo'"IIIOJ . 742·2331.
WANTED' SAW loga. Poy.-t
upon delivery to our yard . 7:30
to 3,30 -"dov•· ·atoney
Hordwooda. 511 33'1 , Barlow ,
011. b78- 2'1110.
ANTIQUES. FURNITURE , glon.
china . anything. See or call
Ruth Gosney , antiques. 26 N.
lnd ~ .
Middleport ,
OH .
992·3161.

HURRY IN TODA Yl

Kart &amp; Van Zandt

WANTtO: JUNK. BoHII\'1 ...
rodiotora. mOtors , auto. trant .
No Sunday collo. 949·2563.

"You'll like our Quality Way of Doing Business"
GMC Financing

: Pets for sate

992-5342
Pomeroy
See Pete lil'urrls, Marvin Keebaugh or G~rge Harris

SEE OUR BIG
,·CHOIC~ OF SURE
SAVINGS FORD TRUCKS

"

-.
'"

Step bumper, std . tran s ., silver.

'"
Step bumper, std . trans .• PS, bsw tires, maroon me1 .

""

HOOF HOlLOW. E"'lll•h ond
Western .
Saddles
and
hornen. HorMt oM ponies.
Ruth ReevH. 614·698-3290.
Bordlng &amp; Riding l"aons on~
Horse Core producta.Wfttern
boots , Children' s $15 .50,
Aduho $29.00.
RISING STAR Kennel. lloor·
ding. Coll367-0292 .
POOOt.E G•OOMING. Judy
ToyiO&lt;. 614·361·7220.
BEAGLE PUPS. well bred,
trained and started beagl ...
R.asonably priced. TrocM for
gun of equal value.
HI~LCREST

'4895

Step bumper, std . trans .• PS, candy apple red .

'79 F-100, V-8

.'

KENNELS. Boord·
lng, all br1Nd1. Clean Indoor·
outdOor facllltiet . Also AKC
reg~uered
Dobermana .

614 - ~46-77'15.

REGISTUED BEAGLES. $2S. 7
wook• ald. 304·882-3242.

'"

Step bumper, std . trans., PS, AM radio, 5·F7Bx15 tires, white.

Wanted to Rent

'79 F-100, 6 cyl.

'5850

' ,,,

Auto trans., PS, AM radio, Ranger pack, air cond., tinted glass, step bumper, pltJS more . Black .

PAT HILL FORD, INC.

Auctions

• For A Friendly Deal See : Rocky Hupp, Darrel Doctdrll, or Pat Hill, Gen. Mgr.
461 S. Nrd AVE.

992·2196

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

\~----------------------------------------~

WANTED TO Loooe : Cool pro·
perty for dHp mine opera·
tlon . Must be ,.8 .. In thlcknen.
367-759:1.

..

""
"

BIG AUCTION ovory Wed., 7
pm. • Hartford Community
Contlr, Hor!lord. WV, 4 mliH
oba.,e
Pomeray·Maaan
Brld(le.

!JIGS. seven weeks old , $20
eoc:h. Strow , $1.25 bole .
985-4104 .

.-

TWO 50 gallon oil drums and
stand.
at1047 S. 2nd Ave .,

s..

Middleport .

SUfPING ROOMS for rent in
Roclne . 949-2591 ,

1979 HONDA XL 500 . Low
mile991f- Ell:cellent condition .
992- ~969 .

TRAILER SI'ACE . Soo Mrs.'
Wah•r Hoyn , ~ Mill St ..
Middleport.

ELECTRIC LAWNMOWER , 14 '.
fires ,
electric
motors .
742·Z78S.

MOillE Home, un·
furnished. 21ft miiH hom Mkidleport. Interested pertons
calf 992-6305.

ONE

12' ALUMINUM BOAT. Mercury motor, troller, life locket
ond oars. 667-3025.

LAI!GE • - ..,lldlng 40x60.
for garop or storage. Corner
Pomeroy ' 2nd St. , Moaon .
Phone ~ - 882· 2'171.

EARLY AMERICAN couch and
velvet choir. hcelfent condi- ·
tlon. Contact lob Aahley,
Cheshire. OH. 367-0480.
WOOD DRY Oak and hickory .
Some green wood. $18 pickup
load. will deliver . 985--3906.
2 1ft mU" east of Chester on
SR 248.

ROOM houM with
garage. \lory nice . 992·2502 .

FOUR

Services Offered
NOW •HAUliNG lim"tone In
oreo .
Coli for free estimate.
367-7101.
Mi~dleport - Poemroy

REGISTERED Appaloosa coltt .
3 weonllngs , I 1.7 mof . old .
Good bloodlin.. . good con -

PAINTING AND liOndblou;ng.
Fr" fttlmor ... Coll949-2686.

formation , ond good b lanket.
Coll614·59:1·7390.

WILL DO baby alttlng In my
home for a child hom 3 to 9
.,.art of • · Coil Alice
Wllllama. ~49. :ZS71 .

FIREWOOD for aale'. Now 1ak ·
inQ orders. Will deliver. Pt-.one

· · BABY • lttor
Monday thru Frldoy . 2
children. Coil DeniM Wolfe.
949·2377oftor6p.m.
Will

DO

houM

cleaning.

Hours to call 9 am to 6 pm

11 ROOMS - l'l2 baths,
carpeting, knotting pine
kit., full basement, 2car
garage, and storage
bldg. Only $17.500.
S1 5.000.00 - Big 9 room
home, 1'1:1 baths, nat.
gas heat , city water, 2
car garage on corner
lot. Can be made into a
duplex .
NEW LISTING - New3
bedroom ranch nome.
Dishwasher, disposaL
Obi. sink, eat·ln kit .,
copper plumbing over 1
acre. American Home
protected plan . $46,250 .
NEW LISTING - Coal
miners look at this one
that has 3 bedrooms,
enclosed ceramic bath,
2 car garages, Ohio
Power heat, and over 1
acre for the children .
$45,250.
NEW LISTING 3
bedrooms, bath , front &amp;
back pOrches, storage,
one extra building on
large lot . City water
n~ar
stores .
Want
$15,500.
RIVER FRONT LOTS
- On the Oh io River.
We can also. sell 5 acres
of woods for only V .500,
on blacktop road, near
water line.
WILL BARGAIN - 3
bedroom home above a II
flOOds . Nat. gas furnace,
city water, bath, block
garage and 2 lots
overlOOking the river .
Asking $17.500.
WANT TO
REST
ASSUIIED YOUR HOT
WATEII
HEATER,
ELECTRIC
AND
HEATING SYSTEMS
ARE PROTECTED
DURING
YOUR
LISTING TIME WITH
US, AND FOR ONE
YEAR AFTER YOU
SELL CALL 992-332S.

Jock w. Carsey
~
Mgr.
~ - Phone 992-1111

SYRACUSE . y, double, 2
bedroom, semi furnished
odult1 only, no children o;
pets. Depoolt992-2749.

DE~ENDAIL£

1011
Osborn
Rd.,
RHdsvlllo, OH, 45772.
For lnformollon Call
..7~5. Will lit OPen
111e If you
need
oomothlnt.
9·1•·1 mo.

116 E. Second StrHt

Q;.:::

m -n21.

JANITORIAL Services
In offk:", new or
remodeled hom.. and aport·
menh . Call Iunny , 698-6031 or
Judy 698·67'14.

f92 .JJ2S

POMEROY
LANDMARK

SENIOR CITIZENS. I bedroom
opts .
for rn•t . Rental
ouiltonce available .

a~iallzint

1-Red-White vinyl roof, red cloth
1-While-white vinyl roof, blue cloth. Demo.
1-Red-Red vinyl roof, red cloth. Demo.

APPLES. Now pick ing Grimes
Golden. Other varieties to
follow . Fitzpatrick OrchordJ ,
SR _689 . Phone Wilkenille
66'1-378S.

SALE PRICES

ONE BEDROOM opts . Contact
VIllage Manor . 992-nff!.

,

Housing
Headquarters

742&lt;2056,

SOliD MAPLE b.lnk bed• .
bookca•• headboards with S
dro._.r dr..,ler, hutch. 1963
camper .
Vo -Ko · shun· •tte
ai..P. ·ala. horcot lll!lconner.
women ' s coot , s ize 16.
·
. 742·=
- - - - - - -- - IIG lllUE manure spreader .
Zip o..der. Woods pull type
brush hog, 5 ft . Ford scra~r .
Afl like new condition .
992·5266.

304. n3-S.22,. 304· n3-:l069.
WILLING TO ~ive tra&lt;!ar·
trolt.r frH for 21h month. In
e•chonge for e•perlence on
the rood . I will poy my own
personal eapenaea . Call
992-5no .

GiveAway
BEAUTIFUL block and whlto
female medium sire dog. long
haired face . Humane Society.
992·6260.
TWO PUPPIES. good wl!h
children. 247·3863.
BLACK AND white
shepard, male dog . 3 vears
old . Very ventle . Excellent
watch dog. 992·5992.
SIX YEAR old border collie.
minch good, ew:cellent wotch
dog: 8 ma. old mole. port
block and tan coon hound.

1m KAWASAKI 400. Only
10()) mil", blue in color. Like
new . Call after 5 p. m.
992-5-421.

Real Estate for Sale
REAL ESTATE loans . Purchas•
ond refinance . 30 year term• .
VA. No money down (eligible
veterona ). FHA · As low 011 3
per cent down (non-veteran1).

Ireland Mortgoge Co .. n E.
State, AthenJ. 61•·592-3051.
REAL ESTATE : I ocrelot In Rl~
gscr" t Manor, between Tuppers Pla int and Chester .
Phone 985-3'129 and 985-412'1.
TWO BLOCKS from business
district in Middleport , out of
high woter , 3 bedraom , eat-In .
kitchen , pantry , dining room,
living room and both. Natural
gas furnoce, full botement,
and ottlc, •ndosed bock yard,
washer ,
dr-yer .
rang•.
refrigerator , curtains and
carpellnQ Included In purchasIng ~rice. Call 992-3:2,.3 after 6
p. m . for appointment.

--:J$57.

LOOKING FOR o good harM
for a brawn and wfllte female
terrl•r, 3 to 6 mo. old. Also
ahtrp/lerd beagle, female,
very young, Ia~" people,
frisky. Must IHto oppreclote.
Humane Society . 992·6260.
COLLIE , FEMALE, medium to
Iorge , red and white .
American domeatka, 8 kit·
teno. 3 blocl&lt; . 1 tiger. 1 yellow.
1 calico. 1 grey, I grey and
white . 1 miniature Louie type
mole , young , ton ond white.
Collie terrier , block and
whit•. young, male, thort
hair , shots. Humone Society.

.tO ACRES lAND on Bailey Run
Road . Good hunting , timber
all m ineral rights . $12,000.

742-2442.
MODERN THREE bedroom.
Total electric home on a Iorge
lot i'n-Hutchison Sub-Oivlaion.
742-20&gt;17.
200 ACRE FARM bolw"n
Pomeroy and Athens. '1
bedroom house and good
born. $97,500. Only $25,000
down. Owner will finance.
Coli 992·5266.
HOUSE FOR sole on Brownell
Ave. '192·5204.

608 E .
MAIN
POMERDY,O.
NEW LISTING - Com ·
mercia! lots East
Main Street , PomerOy ,
priced as land \lalue on ·
ly, contains old houses
that could be used . Call
for details.
BEAUTIFUL RANCH
- Syracuse Elementary
- Large fam ily room
with
woodburning
fireplace, large garage,
3 bedrooms, dining,
bu ilt -in kitchen , ex cellent cond itlon. ex ·
cellent location, many
features .
ONLY
$42,200.00.
POMEROY ELEMEN·
TARY - Owner wants
quick sal,e and will deal,
nice home w i th full
basement, large lot.
$19,900 .00.
MIDDLEPORT
ELEMENTAllY
Brick 1'12 story on a
good street. Built -in kitchen, 3 bedrooms , Iaroe
101. S23.500.oo.
SALEM
CENTER
EI,.EMENTARY -Mini
farm , over 6 acres, nice
1t/ 1 story home with new
addition. Woodburning
fireplace, close to the
mines. $24,500 .00.
NEW LISTING - L~rge
older home in Pomeroy,
large lot. Needs some
Interior repa irs. ONLY
$6,000.00.
NEW LISTING
Beautiful brick and
frame ranch type home
about 7 years old. The
lot size Is approximately
·100 ' x400 '.
Three
bedrooms with double
closets, nice kitchen,
dining room, utility ,
carpeting, garage ,
storage building . Priced
at just $37,500.00.
REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland, Sr.
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
992·2259
992-6191

992-6260.

1974 14 x 70 mobil• hom•.
Good condition. 992·5858.

e

1-----.....,--:------------------------'
0 ----:--::--:--:-,
Announcing Opening of

H. L Writesel
Roofing

CARPENTER'S
DANCE STUDIO
OPENINGSEPT.llth

R£ALTY
INVESTMENT - Mid·
dleport, 1284 Powell St. 2
houses; bath remOdeled
Inside. Each with 1·car
garage plus nice yard .
Fully carpeted, In ·
eluding kit. appliances.
LONG BOTTOM ' Lovely neat 5 rm. hOUse.
1 car garage, full base·
ment, bullt·ln kitchen.
Sets on over 3 acres with
Ohio IUver front.
LONG BOTTOM- Nice
6 rm. older home,
carpeted. Sarn plus 2
out buildings on approx.
t!zacre. $18,900.
HOCKING PORT - 10
rm. house on 1 acre •
Could be 2 apts. $35,000.
LONG BOTTOM - 3
bed., l'h bath, trail.,- on
Ohio River. ExpandO
living rm. $16,000.

Call
Virginia Hayman
915-&lt;tl97·

HOBSIEIIER
REALTY
PHOrt£ 742·2003
NEW LISTING- To! a I
electric, J bedroom
home . Dining room, kit·
chen, living room and
1'/2 baths .
Carpet
throughout .
This
beautiful hol'he is brick
with a garage and full
basement. Call for your
appt. today . $47.500.00.
TUPPERS PLAINS N Ice lot In Arbough Ad·
ditlon
with
septi c
system and water tap.
POMEROY - W~ have
2 nice hOmes that are
real buys.
RUTLAND - Lovely 4
bedroom home . You
must see it to appreciate
it's
beauty _ Only
$35,000.00.
LANGSVILLE- Nice 2
bedroom home on a lit·
tie over an acre. Sell
price 122.500.00.
WE
NEED
LISTINGS! II If you iire
thinking of selling give
US I Clll.

Cheryl Lemley

Assocl11te
Ph. 742·2003
Velma Nlclnsky
ASSOCIIte
Hilton Wolfe
Associate
Georges.
Hobstetter, Jr., Broker
Broker, 992-5739

r.p&amp;Jan
Ages-4 and up
Shirley carpenter
1nstructorChoreographer
Located in Racine, 0 .
(formerly
Weavers
Skiff Building)
Ph. 949·2110or 949·2150
8·29·1 mo

New, repair,
gutters and
down spouts.
Window cleaning
Gutter cleaning
Free Estimates
949-2862-949-2160
&lt;1

Gaage
3, mile off Rt. 7 by-pass
on St . Rt . 114 toward
Rutland .

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

COUNTRY

VING

w11n01J1

care of . l,!4 acre lot -

'
from town on Hysell Run.
room, dining room, family room
burning flrelace. Peaceful. $25,000.

DOWNING-CHILDS
Rodney, Broker
Bill, Br. Mgr.
Phone 992·2342, Eve. 992·2449
Middleport, Oh.

'

27l!O Monfgomer'y Rd.

L•ngsvilte, Ohio
·~~ -U9 -41U Ev~mlngl

lMllet E•stofWilktsvlllt
~ UPER

4-.'H m o .

Real Estate

From

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

tht

30 Year Terms
A-No money down
(eligible veterans)
FHA-AS low as l%
down (non-veterans)

IRElAND
MORTGAGE
CO.
77 E. State, Athens
592·3051

4-23·1 mo.

C. R. MASH
VINYL &amp;ALUM.

Ingest

R'•t~l•tor
sm• ll est Heater Care.

euuoour

Hours9~1 M., W., F .
Othertimes by appointment.
107 Sycamore (Rear)
Pomeroy, 0.

SIDING
•New Home
*Addons
Remotillngs
* Fr\!C estimates
992-6011

Sm~h

Nebm
Motors, Inc.

CALL 992-7544

Ph . 992·2 174

Mick's
Barber&amp;
Style Center
, Introduces--

MARK MORA
HAIR STYLIST
men's &amp;
styling,

Call forappt . or walk ln .

*

7·12

Pomeroy

J&amp;L B(OWN
INSULATION
VINYL AND
ALUMINUM 1SIDmG

ADD ONS &amp; '
REMODELING
Gutter work, down
spouts, some concrete

•Insulation ~
• Storm l)oors
• Storm Windows
• Repl1cement
Windows
eGutters 11nd
DownSpouts

work,
walks
end
driveways.
(FREE ESTIMATE)

V.C. YOUNG Ill
RACIN!!,O.
949·2741 or

Free Estim11tes

992-2367
Main 51.
Pomeroy, o.
....__ _ _ _;::
·B;::-2.:.
6·1 mo.
E·C ELECTRICAL Contractor
aerving Ohio Valley region .
She doys a w. . k . 24 hours service. Emergency calls. Call
882·2952 or 882·345-4.
HOWERY AND MARTIN Ex·
cavating. septic srstems ,
do1or. backhoe. Rt. 143.
Phono 1 (614) 698-7331 or
742-2S93.
fer Immediate
delivery: various sil:ea of pool
kits , D~it· yourself or let us
inatolllor you. D. Bumgardner
Solos. Inc. 992·5724 .
IN

STOCK

Will HAUL limestone and
gravel. Also . lime hauling ond
spreading . leo Morris Truck·
ing , Phone 7•2· 2455.

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

..

AL TROMM
CONST.
9·14· (Pd.)
BRADFORD. AuctionHr. Complete Service. Phone 1'149·2487
or -9•9-2000. Racine, Ohio,
Critt Bradford .

SEWING MACHINE Repairs.
serv ice , ell makes , 992-2284.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer SoleJ and
Service. We sharpen Scissors.
EXCAVATING , doter. loader
and backhoe Work; dump
trucks and lo-boys for hire,
will haul fill dirt, top soil,
limestone and grovel. Call Bob
or Roger Jeffers , day phon•
992· 7089 ,
night
phone
992-3525 or 992-5232.
EXCAVATING ,
dozer ,
backhoe and dltchor, Charles
R. Hatfield ; Black Hoe Service,
Rutland, Ohio. Pone 742·2008.

PULLINS EXCAVATING. Com·
plete Service. Phon• 992·2,.78 .
AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE
been cancelled? lost your
operators
license? Phone
992·2143 .

COUNTRY SPECIAL - Nice remodeled 2 bedroom
home on blacktop road. Mostly carpeted. F.A . nat.
gas furnace . A very attractive small home and1
·acre land . Priced for quick sale for $17,500.

25 LADIES to do tem·porary,
telephone
survey work for Meigs
co . Jaycees' Shop·A-·
Thon Program. No age
limit, no educational re·
qulrements, no ex ·
perlence necessary.
Must speak clearly and
be able to read well . .Pay 1
hour plus lii)Jral bonus
for prOduction. Two
shifts available, 9 a . m .
to 330 p. m. and 4 p . m.
to 9 p. m. dally. High
school age OK. For,
more Information calf
992 ·5900. Do not · call
Jaycees concerning this
ad.

RUTLAND
742·2328

NEW LISTING - 4 BR home, hardwood floors
large LR, also family rm, garage and gOOd out ~
building, Many nlc:e features, plenty of fruit trees
and garden space. Asking $.48,900. Just off Rt. 7 in
Chester .

HOME &amp; INCOME - Immediate possession, large
3 bedroom home, living room &amp; family room, all
nicely carpeted . Eat -in equipped kitchen, 2 full
baths, 1h basement, garage, nice garden area . In · 1
come from trailer on property. Racine, W,OOO.

ANN'S CAKE Dec:orotlng Supplies, 50716 Osborn Rd . ,
Reedsville, OH 45n2. For ln.
formation call, 667-6(85. Will
be op,n late If you need
something.

ROOtiNG
.
REMODELING
ROOM ADDITIONS
HOUSES BUILT

UWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweepers, toaaters , Irons, all
Jmoll op~liances. lown moer,
next to State Highway Go rag•
on Route 7. 985-3825 .

FAMILY HOME - Lots of possibilities wl!h !his
real nice 2 story home. Many features, like central
air, built·in appliances. all carpeted &amp; so forth. A
very good Investment with several nice building
lots. On approx . 4112 acres In the center of Racine,
Ohio. Asking only $5-4,000.

JAMES KEESEE
Phone 992-2772
8· 17·1 mo .

,__ _ _ _......:_9·7-1 mo.

WE HAVE CONV.ENTIONM. FINANC-'
lNG FOR MOST OF OUR HOMES .FOR
AS LOW ASS% D6WN .
.

THIS lS WHAT YOU ASKED FOR - lA acres of
nice rolling land with a 1112 story hosue that sits back
off the road su~rounded with maple trees . Lg . pond
stocked with f1sh . Nicely located In Morning Star
area . Price $33,900.

and

Refinance

Radiator·.---.....
Servlc•

Federal Housing &amp;
Veter"ns Admin. Loans.

~ns

Purchase

E~PERIENCED

F~NANCING

STOCk

5 tf c

8·21 -1 mo.

REAL ESTATE

GOQSE

TRAILER NOWAVAILAII'-E -

Free Estimates
992-5304,992-2238

4-JO ·tf c

FNturing :
women's
perms.

TRAIL£R $II ES

Service$
OHered
All Masonary Work
Foundation,
snck t.ayiog,
Concrete Finishing.

Roger Hysell

1

MEN, WOMEN, BOYS
OR GIRLS to do light,
temporary
delivery
work for Meigs Co.
J a y c e e s
Shop·A·Thon Program.
No educational re quirements, no age
limit, no experience
necessary. Must have
neat appearance, a
valid driver's license
and your own transpor·
tatlon. Must know Meigs
Co. area well. Earn up
to $SO per day. Work any
hours you like between 9
a. m. and 9 p.m. dally.
H lgh School age 0 K .
For more Information
call 992·5900. Do not call
the Jaycees concerning
thlsad.

SAVE ON CARPEr' .

532,000.00 - Good 3 bedroom, all carpeted home'
close to Pomeroy &amp; Middleport. Located on good 111:
acres of land .
2

DRIVE ALITTLE
SAVE A LOT

SHOULD liE SOLD - 70 acres, house &amp; gOOd barn,
about 1,000 feet of beautiful Ohio River frontage .
Nice recreation spot, minerals, too. Let's have an
off~. Price $57,000.
LOTS OF LOTS - From 1 to 75 acres, bordering
Pomeroy.
MIDDLEPORT - Good 3 BR home approx . 10 yrs .
old·, stove &amp; refrigerator, Ig. storage bldg. Priced at
$35,000.

RUBBERBACK CARPO

'4''

AND UP
CASH &amp;CARRY

LARGE SPLIT LEVEL - on 3 Acres 4 BR· home
fully carpeted, equipped kit .. family r;,m has nice
fireplace, large utility room and plenty of storage
two-car garage has efectric: door opener. One great
feature after another . Listed $75,500.

1965GENERAL60x12, 2bedr.
1970 Svlvo, 60x12, 2 bedr.
1970Cootlo. 60x12, 2bedr .
1974 Marlcllno, 50x12, 2 bedr.
1969\follont, 12x60, 2 bedr . ·
1967 Natlonal.12xSO. 2bedr.
B'S MOBILE HOME SALES . PT.
PLEASANT. Wlf. ~-67~·4424 . ·

1975 KIRKWOOD 14 x 70, lotol
efectrlc, 3 bedroom. Excellent
condition. l•t offer, muat
aell. Phone985·355-4 .

B USlness servlces
. .

RACINE - 2 BR trailer on nice lot. Asking $11.500.
20 WOODED ACRES- Can be divided. $22,000.

Mobile Hpmes Sale's

1972 LYNN HAllEN 14x65 3
bedroom.
1970 Vlndale 12x63 with expondo, 2 bodr.
1970NowMoon 12x603bedr.
1973 Skyline 12x5S 2 bedroom.
1972 Bonanza 12x52. 2 bedr.
B &amp; S MOBILE HOME SALES.
PT .
PLEASANT . WV .
304·675-4424.

Sweep, 1·373-6057.
S &amp; G Carpel Cleaning. Steam
cleaned . - Free estimcte .
Reasonable ra t es . Scot chguard .
992-6309
or
742-2348.

ERA MERCER

PIGS . SEVEN wooks old, $20
eoch . Straw, $1 .25 a bole.

Sales &amp; Service

Phone

CHIMNEY CLEANED .
stove Installed . Redsonable
rate, · Call the Chimney

I

Cl11sses: Ballet

HOT POINT
and
GENERAL
ELECTRIC
Headquarters
Appliances

3 AND 4 RM furnlah.d and un-

Business Services

Real Estate for Sale

POTATOES for winter. Cobbler. Kennebec and Suparior.
Phone 80-2491. Tom Sayre,
SR 338 .

COUNTRY MOBILE Homo Parle
Route 33, north of Pomeroy :
Large lots . Col1992·7•79 .
opts.

19 ACRES. 2•1, miles from Middleport. 2 mobile homes completely set up. Rurcl water.
Mineral rights . Interes ted persons, call 992-6305.

WINTER POTATOES. C.W. Pro·

Monday night. Coli 992-:Jem
or 742-2214. All information
confidential .

furn ished
992-5434.

SEVEN ROOMS and bath. 2
acres . 992-2523.

ffitt form . Portland , OH. $8 'o
hundred and S5 a hundred.

lOST , , Pre1umed 1.ioleil. 1
male Walker, 3 years old all
white . ton head and biack
apot left aide. Tattooed
S.W.M . left ear. Antwers to
"Ranger." Apple Grove area

NEW

\4

'79 F-100, V-8

RESPONSIBLE PERSON to baby
aft In my f'lome for one child
that's two years old. Five daya
a wHit. Contoct Mrs . Gregory
Grover at ~-5620 aft.,·.C.

For Rent

fP.M.
Friday afternoon

SECOND

CANNING PEACHES now thru
Sept . 15. Bob'J Market,
Mason , WV. Open 7 days .
Phone ~ - n:J.S721 .

Lost and Found

Sunday

GEN!J!AL
TIRE

CAR SALESMAN. Send rHurM
to Box 743. Pomeroy. OH
45769 . No eJCperienc-•
necenory.

Mobile Home sales and Yard
sales are accept«! only with
cull wtlh ordl!r. 25 cent cha'l!e
for ads Clrrylfll Bo1 Numbtr Jn
ear. 1'1 The Sentinel.

fP.M.
the day bdor-t publk•Um

NORTH

COAL . LIMESTONE . •and.
grovel. calcium chloride, fertilizer. dog food . and all Types
of salt . Ew:celslor Soh Work, ,
lrtc., E. Ma in St., Pomeroy ,
992-3891.

CITY
LIMITS . Bartender
wanted. Evening ,.,lh. Must
· be 21 . Apply In prson.
·

roc men than one litcorra1. In-

Real Estate for Sale

For Sate

LIIIE·IN HOUSEKEEPER wonled
In exchange for home and
security. 985-4392 or write box
no. 4611911. Long Bottom, OH.

ln momory, Card ~ Thanb
and Obituary: • .,.... por won!
J3,00 minlmwn. Cash In ad:
Van«.

The Publisher rtxrVes the ~
rlgllt 1&lt;1 edit or "'jed on)' odo
deemed objectional.
The
Publbherw:Ul not~responstble

"'•

BOARD TO MEET
The Meigs County Tuberculosis
Board of Trustees wili meet at 7:30
p.m. Thursday at the Meigs Inn,
Pomeroy, for a regular business

Charge

l'uesday
lhnl Fridoy

OUT FRONT
IN TRUCKS
'79 f.}{)(), V-8
'79 f-100, V-8

1

15 Words or Ulidtr

llim meat likewise.
The main part rl the program was

.._-:.~:::...:.:...:..:..:.:..:..:..:...::.....:..:.:~.:..:..:...::..:.__

Five years ago : The General
Accounting Office accused the
Federal Pow?!' Commission of
acting impr&lt;!Jlerly in allowing a
number of natural gas producers to
raise their prices to millions of
customers.
One year ago: Marina Oswald
Porter, now a 37-yearo(lld Dallas
housewife, told the House
Assasinations Committee she
believed her late husband, · Lee
Harvey Oswald, killed President
John F. Kennedy.
·

9-TheDaUySentinel, Mlddleport-P&lt;meroy, O.,Friday,Sept. 14, 1979

SALE ON ALL CARPET IN STOCK

•9~fouf

JUST LISTED+ 6 year old home with 3 bedrooms
dining and utility room, kitchen equipped with stove
and refrigerator. Most of the house newly carpeted
Forced air gas furnace only 10 years old. Also
garage. A complete trailer hook up with nat. gas tap
and sept•c can add Income to I he home. over 2 acres
of land . All for $29,900. Call for appointment.

Installed and Pad FREE

GOOD SELECTION"OF
CUSHION VINYL

JUST LISTED - Mini farm wta beaut iful brick bi ·
level, w / J bedrooms &amp; full basement, large carport,
total elec . Not expensive, fully insulated, all hardwood floor s. 31arge hothouses . You can have all this
wllh approximately 5 acres Of land for only $63,500.

WANT TO SELL? - ·GIVE US A CALL

CALL 742·2211 TALK TO
Wendell or Herb Grate or Gene Smith

CALL JIMMY DEEM. ASSOCIATE 949·23B8
0" NANCY JASPERS, ASSOCIATE
949·26S4 or 949·1591

RUTLAND FURNITURE

Rutland, o.

742-2211

..

~

)

·

�10- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Fridav. Sent. 14 1!1'1!1

Gasoline tax talks continue
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) - Talk
matching funds .
Deering's bill appropriate• $1.18
continues in Ohio ' s Legislatur e
Heportedly, only about a dozen of bill ion for the transportation
about 'a proposed gasoline tax boost
the 33 state senators are willing to department , with most of the money
to finance road and bridg e projects.
support the tax, while the holdouts going for res_urfacing , patch work,
The House approved by an 86-9
are conce rned about political bridge
repair
and
other
vote on Thursday and sent to the
reprisals in 1980, an election year. maintenance.
Senate a bill appropriating $1.37
It provides for only one new
billion for the st;lte transportation
construction
project - part of an
and highway safety departments
interstate
highway
in the Mount
over the next two years . The bill did
Adamssectlon
of
Cincinnati
- in the
not mdude the tax boost.
1979-1981
period.
After they approved the measure,
The blll extends until Jan. I, 1981, .
some House members claimed that
the
deadline for local governments
Middleport
Clerk-Treasurer
Gene
!he public is ''losing patience"
to
claim
about $28 !Jlillion held in
Grate
reports
balance
In
the
various
because of deteriorating roads and
escrow
for
them as residue from a
village
council
expendable
funds
as
called on the Senate to insert the tax
1968 bond issue.
of
Aug.
31.
increase in !he bill .
Deering said the money has gone
Receipts and expenditures during
Across the Statehouse. senators
unclaimed
for several reasons,
August
and
the
balance
of
each
fll!lli
approved by a 31-0 margin a House
including
the
stipulation that the
include:
general,
$4,412.71,
$7,441.1!';
blll tightening statutes that ban job
allocations would require local as
$2,04Ul;
cemetery,
$775,85;
$896.22,
discrimination based on pregnancy.
$2,442.86; fire equipment, $1,965.12, well as state expenditures. The bond
Sen . Marigene Valiquette , D$923.69, $1,548.87; swimming pool, issue was to have lapsed on Jan. 1,
Toledo. was fl oo r sponsor of the bill ,
$2,497.41), $3,961.70, $5,645; fire truck, 1980.
which is designed to include small
In other business, the House voted
no receipts, no disbtm~ements,
employers . The present law
by
a 92-3 margin to approve a Senate
$4,412.33; planning commission, no
exempts employers o('fewer than 15
bill
setting up a demonstration
receipts, $18.10, $205.14; street mainpersons from the pregnancy rule.
project
encouraging welfare
tenance, $1,405.20, $3,290.32,
j The
new measure reduces. that
recipients
to seek jobs. That
$6,450.35; feden!l revenue sharing,
number to four.
measure,
which
was returned to the
no receipts, $649.45, $6,102.39; antiThe House has adjourne&lt;:l until
Senate
with
amendments,
allows
recession, no receipts, $34.63,
Tuesday, but the Senate returns
to
work
in
public
welfare
recipients
$400.93. Receipts for the month
today for a vote on a home heating
service
jobs
for
up
to
20
hours
a
week
totaled $11,006.28 while disburcredits bill.
without
having
their
g~ants reduced.
sements from the expendable funds
House leaders decided to take the
totaled $17,215.99.
tu boost out of the budget bill until
Obligated funds of council stood at
they have "assurances from the
$22,062.66
as of Aug. 31 with no
governor and Senate that they will
receipts
and
no disbursements
support addi tiona I revenues,"
during
the
month.
according to the measure's sponsor,
The balance of the obligated funds
Rep. Ftederick H. Deering, Dof
the board of public affairs as of
Monroeville.
Aug.
31 totaled $231,705.62.
' Gov. James A. Rhodes has refused
Receipts
and disbursements,
to endorse the tax increase because
respectively,
of each fund and the
of a 1978 campaign promise to hold
balance
making
up the obligated .
the line on state taxes. However, he
Katerine Millikan, dec. to Jennie
moneys Include: sanitary sewer,
le t his transportation director,
Sue
Tarowsky, Sara Lee Joakam,
$5,202.31,
$4,261.88,
$19,457.59;
David L. Weir, back it publicly.
Hugh
C. Rousey, Rlta (Dollie)
sanitary
sewer
escrow,
$100,
no
Deering has proposed a 4 percent
Rousey, Nonnan S. Rousey, redisbursements, $100,821.09; water,
levy on wholsesale gas purchases,
record Cert. of trans., Lebanon .
which would mean an increase of . $6,869.75, $7,636.50, $23,1101.94; water
Norman Woodrow Mora, Kathryn
trustS,
$350,
$211.09,
$7,625.
meter
two to three cents in the price of
Mora to George Mora, 1.005 acres,
Receipts for the month totaled
gasoline. He said the new t;lx could
Chester.
raise $300 million, and· trigger $14,527.06 and disbursements
Joann T. Coliins, Lowell Thomas
amounted
to
$12,109.47.
another $546 million in federal
Collins, Jesse E . Brinker, Naomi T.
Brinker to Village of Syracuse, Lots,
Syracuse Village.
Citizens National Bank to Richard
S. Owen, Sara H. Owen, Lot 7,
Goeglein 's Sub., Salisbury.
Granvll V. Wamsley, Juanita
Wamsley to Thomas W. George,
Meter Slte Agree., Rutland.
Leo H. Wllllams, dec. to Bertha F.
Williams, Cert. for trans., Bedford.
Bertha F . Williams, dec. to Ralph
B. Williams, Charles D. Williams,
Peark K. Haning, Cert. of Trans.,
....
Bedford.
Lawrence M. Wilcoxen, aka Martin Wilcoxen to Debra Hill, Roger
Hill, 1U3,acres, Lebanon.
·
Lawrence Martin WIIC'OXen, Adm.,
Edna Faye WilCOJ:on, dec. to Debra
Hill, Roger Hill, 14.13 acres,
Lebanon.
Oscar P. Klein to Peter F. Klein,
Jr., Richard H. Klein, Sub. 9 and 10
ci Lot 65, Middleport.
Larry M. Well, Judy A. Well to
Ricky Allen Stobart, Melba Stobart,
Lot, Middleport.
Robert G. Davis, Kathern Ann
Davis to Ronald E. Zidtan, Helene
Zldlan, Lot6, Baum'sSub., Chester.
POMEROY, 0.
Richard I. Haggerty to Richard s.
Owen, Sara H. Owen, Lot 8,

Financial report
released by clerk

. Meigs
Property
Transfers

TRY OUR

KFC

BAR-B-QUE
·CHICKEN

tt~~r:~~

It's

Farmers get boost

Area Deaths
BRYAN UARRIS
Bryan Harris . Jr., 53, Rt. 1,
Reedsville, died unexpe ctedly
Thursday morning at his residence:
Mr. Harris was born in Portland,
Ohio the son of Helen Proffitt Harris
of Portland and the late Dexter
jlryan Harris, Sr.
He was a member of the Great
Bend United Methodist Church,
Racine American Legion , Post 602,
and oversees Veteran of W. W. II,
was and employe of the Ashland Oil
Co. and was a farmer the greater
part of his Ute.
He is survived by his wife, Betty
Pickens Harris, one daughter, Mrs.
Randy (Patricia) Hand, Veto Lake,
Ohio ; one sister , Mrs. Howard
(Emogene) Allen, New Knoxville,
Ohi ; five brothers, Mayford A., R\l,
Long Bottom; James E., Rt. I ,
Yellow Springs, Ohio ; Charles R.,
Rt. 1, Portland; Dale D., Grove Hill,
Alabama; Paul E., Rt. 3, Pomeroy;
one grandson, Bryan Oladwell, Veto
Lake.
F"neral services will be held
Sunday! at 1 p.m. at the White
Funeral Home in Coolville. Burial
will be in Success Olurch of Olrist
Cemetery. Military graveside rites
jl'ill be conducted by Racine
j~meri can Legion Post 602. Friends
may call at the funeral home after
noon Saturday.

PERAMELIA HOFFMAN
Peramelia Hoffman, 82 , Hartford,
died Thursday evening at Pleasant
Valley Hospital.
Born April 20, 1897. at Letart , she
Goeglein's Sub., Salisbury.
Jaymar Coal Cmpany to Columbia
Gas Transmission Corp., Right of
Way, RuUand.
·
•
Ell Dennison Post 467 of Americah
Legion to Columbia Gas Transmission Corp., Right of Way,
Rutland.
Beatrice E . HoweU to Keith Kennaw Howell , Virginia Arlene Howell
Lots · 38 and 39, Merrill 's Add. :
·
Rutland Village.
Joann Oark to Richard A. Finlaw,
Gertrude F1nlaw, Parcel, Salisb~ry.
Ellis McMillan, Phyllis McMillan
to John M. Wells, 1.002 acres
Chester.
'
Michael T. Johnson,, Ann Y. Johnson to Estil Johnson, Reva Johnson,
-~acre, Salem.
Edith E. Sauer to Terry S. Whitlatch, Rita J. WHitlatch, Lot, Middleport.
Carl E. Knight, Kathryn W.
Knight to Paul Hoffman, Maxine
Hoffman, 9acres ; Chester.
Paul Edward Voss, Beverly Voss
to Jack E. Curry, Darlene A. Curry,
Lots, Pomeroy.
Jimmy W. Alexander, Janet T.
Alexander to Columbia Gas Trans.
Corp., Right of Way, Rutland .

was the daughter of the late Lewts
and Lydia Roush and was a member
of the Hartford Baptist Church.
Her husband, Earl H. Hoffman,
died Sept. 13, 1972.
Surviving are four daughters,
Mrs . Ethel Hall , Nitro, Mrs.
Ernestine MacKnight, Huntington,
Mrs . Eliza beth Grinstead, New
Haen, and Miss Edna Hoffman,
Clifton; and five grandchildren and
six great-grandchildren.
Services wiill be conducted
Sunday at 12:30 p.m. at the
Foglesong Funeral Home at Mason
by the Rev. William "Bud" Hatfield.
Burial will be in the Hoffman
Cemetery.
Friends are being received at the
funeral home Saturday from 2 to 4
and 7 to 9 pro.

divorces granted
One decree of divorce arid two of
dissolution of marriage were filed in
Gallia County Common Pleas Court
Wednesday .
Granted divorce was Louise White
from Jessie C. White.
Granted dissolution of marriage
were :
Regina Oary and Clarence E.
Oary.
Sharon Morris and Lester S.
Morris Jr.

WASHINGTON (..\P) + Dairy
fanners will get a boost of about 6.8
percent in government price
supports for milk beginning Oct. 1,
Agriculture Secret.ilry Bob Bergland
announced Thursday.
Although the exact support price
will not be determined until later,
officials said it appears the new rate
will be $11.22 per 100 pounds, up
from the present support of $10.51.
The 71-cent increase is equal to
about 6.1 cents a gallon. But the
increase "will have lltUe effect on
consumer prices" because market
prices of milk are expected to ~
above the new support level by the
end of this month , the announcement
said.

..
l\
•
•.

I

Ninth annual farm
festival Oct. 12-14

'

.·

'

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted-Alice Brauer, Racine ;;'
Roger Athey, Cheshire; Robert
Flanagan ,
Gallipolis ;
John
Landaker, Pomeroy; Mary Kiser,
Racine .
..
Discharged-Bessie Sellers, Paul
Van Cooney, William E. Morriis;
Bernard Diddle, Mary Tyler, Robert
Fife, Harry Erwin.
;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:

LOG HEWING, an old-time method of shaping and
notching logs for building use, will be among over 100
heritage crafts demonstrated at the ninth Annual Bob

Evans Farm Festival on Oct. 12, 13, and U at tbe Bob
Evans Farm near Rlo Grande.

EXTENDED OU'n.OOK

•

Fair Sandlly tllreuP 'l'llelday.
Lon bt the appel' ... to low • •
Hllb iD lbe mid to upper 'lll.

tmts

;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:::::::::::::::;:;:::::::::::

ELBERFELD$

VOL. 13 NO. 33

GALLIPOLIS- POINT PLEASANT

SPRING

GARDEN JUST
ARRIVED FROM
Ch0ose fro m q ur qre ~11 somct iO fl.
CJf ,tyres and colur&gt;. rney' re "St•r&lt;Ho- Bioorn .
and ea :... y tl pld' l l

SURE-TO-BLOOM

where there is a savings plan for everyone
with higiTer interest rates, made possible
by new Federal regulations

Tulips.

Hyacinths C.rocus

ELDS IN POMEROY
THIS Ia a front view of the new recreation facility at the Gallipolis
Developmental Center, fonnerly known as tbe Gallipolis State Institute.

.

PASSBOOK SAVINGS coMPUTED DAILY, COMPOUNDED QUARTERLY 5%%
CERTIFICATES OF DEPOSIT
Minimum Deposit of SI ,OOO

90 Day Certificate ................•...••..•......•...•.•.•• 5~%
1 Year Certificate............................................ 6%
3 Year Certificate .. ~ ..............................•••••......61/z%
4 Year Certificate .....................•.••.•......••..••..•.7%%
6 Year Certificate ........................................... 7~%
8 Year Certificate .......••.....••••~························7%- %
Substantial interest penalty is required lor early withdrawal

26-WEEK MONEY MARKET
CERTIFICATE
4 YEAR MONEY CERTIFICATE
10.294% ANNUAL-INTEREST RATE 7.95 ANNUAL INTEREST RATE
Rates effective one week starting Septe!"~r 13 through September 19, 1979.
Mint mum deposit of Slo,ooo.
Fede:ral r egula t ions pr oh 1b 1f th e compounding
the 1n1e~es~ dunng the term of t he deposit.

Substantta l mterest penalty

withdrawal .

IS

req uired for early

Ren~e

Gallipolis
State Institute

FAMOUS NAME
BEDD_ING!

GALUPOLIS ~ Supt. Jom A.
Beattie &amp;MOWlced Saturday the
Gallipolis State Institute (GSI) has a
new~

It 's now the Gallipolis Develop-

Just received a load of
Sealy box springs and
mattresses. 75 pieces .
(Factory Mis-match sale).

men(!~! Center.

AccordJ.n&amp; to Supt. Beattie, this 8C'

lion was taken 88 a result of an administrative rule Issued by the Ohio

FULL, QUEEN AND
KING SIZE
REG. S99.9S
STARTING
AT

$7995

8 PC.
SUITE

INCLUDES
ROCKER, CHAIR,
SOFA,
FOOT
STOOL AND 3
TABLES.

$49995

(LOVES EAT
NOT PICTURED)

'169.95 LOVE SfAT

fREE

WITH THE PUR·
CHASE
OF
OTHER 7 PIECES

~

.

Weather
Zoning board to
meet Sept. 20

found almost one of five American
workers is worried about losing his
job in the near future .
Taken altogether, the poll found
GALUPOUS - The Gallipolis
the public perplexed and worried by
City
Board of Zoning Appeals will
the twin demons of inflation and
on Thursday, Sept. 20, at 10
meet
recession and suspicious of the
a.m. in the City Building.
"cures" that have been offered for
Purpose of the meeting will be to
the nation's economic woes.
review
an application for a building
Half of those questioned Monday
permit
to construct a two-.story
and Tuesday opposed " strict ·
building.
The first story will be
economic policies to control inflation
divided to house four automobiles
and the second story will be divided
Continued on A-2
to accorrunodate two, tw~oom
apartments. This is adjacent.to 1057
Fourth Avenue. The application was
submitted by D. Kenneth Morgan.
Area deaths ••••••••••••••••••••••••••.••••.••.•.•• • • A-3 Also, the board of zoning appeals
aa.lflecl ada ••••••••• ••• ••.••••••• ~ ••••.•..•.•.••• D-&amp;-11 will be reviewing an application for
Ilfestyle ~ •••••••.•......•..... o • • • • • • • • • • • o • • • • o • o B·l·lZ a bulldng permit received from
Farm news ••••••..•.•........•. ; •.•.• o • • • • o • • o • • • • • D-!J-1 Ronald L. Saunders who ·wishes to
Sports •••••••••••• o • • • • • • • • • • • • • • o • • • • • • • • o • • o • • • • o C-1-8 collStruct a one family dwelling and
ac~ory garage at 15 Belmont
State and naUo1181 ••• o • o o • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • D-1 Drive
.
. ,,

Inside Today...

Substantial interest ·penalty is required
lor early withdrawal.

GALI,IPOUS - One person was
killed and another illjured during a
one-vehicle accident early Saturday
on Butaville - Addison Rd., Metenths d. a mile west of SR 7.
Killed was Ronald E.J&lt;ingery Jr .,
IS, E;ureka Star Route . Injured was
Jonathan A. McWhorter, t6, Eureka
Star Route.
caned to the scene at 12:511 a.m .,
the Gallia-Meigs Post, Highway
Patrol. reports that i' west bound
auto operated by Kingery slid
through a sharp right curve on
Bulaville-Addison and struck a large
. tree .
Kingery was pronounced dead at
the scene by Gallia County Coroner
Dr. Donald R. Warehime.
Passenger McWhorter displayed
incapacitating signs of injury and
was transported to Holzer Medical
Center for treatment.
The accident remains under
investiga tion .
Three per~ms were injured during
three accidents investigated Friday
by the Gallia-Meigs Post.
Marri Ann Darst, 16, Gallipolis,
was injured during a one-vehicle
accident on SR 51&gt;4, just off SR 160, at
9:40p.m .
Office rs report the accelerator of
an auto operated by Darst stuck .
The vehicle passed off the right side
of the roadway , rec rosse d the
pavement, went off the left side 'and
struck a tree .
Darst displ ayed incapacitatin g
signs of injury and was transported
to Holzer Medical Center for
Continued on A-2

Sunny today, with highs in the mid
70s. The chance of rain is near zero
percent.

BYEVANSWIIT .
Associated Press Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - Despite the
continuing ravages of inflation,
Americans are not ready for tough
economic measures that might stop
the upward price spiral at the cost of
throwing millions out of work , an
Associated Press-NBC News poll
says.
The fear of unemployment is a
very present threat to some
segments of the public, as the poll

Rates effective one month starting
September 1 through September 30, 1979.
Minimum deposit of Sl,OOO.

(

Department ol Mental Health and
Mental RetardaUon. In order to
econcmi2e, the name will not be
changed on stationery and fonns WI·
til the prcMmt supply Ia exhausted.
The change iD li8Dlf! reflects the
shift in purpose, goals and
phlloeophy of the Center, Once the
Institution served more than 2,000 individuals who had been placed there
due to epilepsy and« mental retardation. Utue more than basic
custodial care could be given to

the!e clients.
The Ohio General Assembly , In
August of i890, reconunended that
land in Gallipolis be set aside for an
Institution. The area chosen had
previously been used as a general
and field hospital by the Union forces dur!ni the Civil War.
The name "The Asylum for
Epileptic Insane " was chosen,
probably because many falsely
thought retardation caused epilepsy.
Buildings were erected in 1892, only
a few years after the first institutions for the mentally retarded
were founded in the United States.
The first d. three name changes
took place in 1894, wpen it became
"The Ohio Hospital for Epileptics."
A:l a facility housing epileptics, it
became the largest as well as the
Continued on A-2

Inflation seen better
than unemployment

Member F edera I Deposit 1nsurance Corporation
(

MIDDLEPORT - POMEROY

PRICE 35 CENTS

Gallian
dies in
crash -

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT

pomeroy
nationa
bank -

entint

·::::::::::::::::::::;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;.

Delicious

pomeroy
. - rutland
tuppers plains

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1979

. ces and will he on hand slngin' and
pickin' toe Iappin' tunes.
Clogging, a dance In which a
distinct rhytlun is beat 011t by foot,
will be perfonned by the Southern
Appalacblan Cloggen. The Alan
Freeman Trio will fill the air with
dulcimer lllllBic, and songwritersinger Roger Bryant will play
autoharp and guitar 88 well 88
dulcimer as he perfonna original
compositiollS.
Three times each day there will be
field demonatratlons rl sheep and
duck herding, sheep shearing, bor·
seshoeing, chicken flying and harnessed hog driving. Tobact;O spitting
contests will be held daily, and
Festival visitors are invited to try
logrolling.
There is a $1 per car admlllslon
fee, and camping is available on the
Continued on A-2

EXTENDED OU'n.OOK
Mooday through WedDesday Fair Mooday thrOIIgb Wed~y. Hllb ID the upper 70s
Mooday Wlll'llliDil lo lbe low lo
mid . . Tuelday aud WedDesday.
Lon Ill. the upper 4411 Mooday
mOI'IIIug lied !tom the mid 5811 lo
low . . Tuesday aitd w..Jiletday.

HOLLAND
DaJfodils

RIO GRANDE - The Bob Evans lifestyles were I~ hun-led.
The Festivallsset on the 1,100-acre
Farm Festival, a three-day tribute
to America's rural heritage, will lie Bob Evans Fann which is at its best
held Oct. 12, 13 and 14 at the Bob as the l~ves begin to tilm and the
Evans Farm, just east rl Rio Gran- southeastern Ohio hills come alive
with color. The sprawling Festival
de on State Route 35;
Bob Evana is best known for his grounds provide ample roqm for
coWttry..fresh sausage produt!ts and wheat threshing, log hewing, shingle
family restaurants. Because of his splitting, blacksmithing and colonial
rural background, be has a deep ap- coopering, which are among the
preciation and respect for the older, traditional craft!! demonstrated.
!!Qmetlmes slower, yet highly skilled Also to be seen are flax llCUtchlng
way of doing things which results in and spinning, butter and cheese
quality products. It was this attitude making, quilting, wood carving,
that led to the first Bob Evans Fann dulcimer making, tinsmithlng,
Festival beld in 1971, giving modern- wheat weaving and glass blowing.
Coll!ltry entertainment iB conday Americans a glimpse of how
tinuous during the Festival. The
things used to be.
Today, the Festival is. still a WBT Briarhoppers, fonned in 1934
nostalgic journey back in time, with . at radio station WBT In Charlotte,
over 100 craftsmen who demollStrate North carolina and later reigning as
18th, 19th and early roth century the South's m011t popular group for
sltllls once commonplace when 16 years, are still dellghllng audien-

.

•'

.I

REPAIRS to the main lock at Gallipolis are expected to be completed· today if river stages to not interfere. When the repairs are coinpleted, It will require
about five dsys iooelimlnate the traffic backup caused
by the main lock closure. t:hlrtY~our towboats were
waiting to lock at 7 a.m. Saturday morning and the
average delay for the ~ven boats which locked
throUgh since Frtday was 79 hotmi each. The backup of

traffic Is being caused by the necessity for all tows to
use the small auxiliary chamber which cannot handle
the normal project traffic. The work being done consists d. repairs to damages caused by accidents, which
the towing companies pay for, and rehabilltatlon of
worn water seals wblch require periodic ~cement.
-Larry Ewing Photo.

Annexation proposal tabled
RACINE- Racine Village Coun- '"" the village guaranteeing payment of
cU, in accordance with regulatiOII!I,
the loan in the event of default..by the
has tabled for 60 days the proposed
annexation of property to Racine
Village and will accept or reject the
annexation after the GO day waiting
period.
Council, meeting In regular
session, passed a resolution to
borrow $17,500 at six percent In·
teres! for a five year period payable
at $3,500 a year to pay for part of the
construction d. an emergency
building adjacent to the present
structure.
The vlilage committed Itself to
such a loan on the conditions that a
mortgage securing loan be granted
on property where the building will
be erected. Another condition has

ADEQUATE SUPPLIES
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
Heating oil supplies in Ohio this.·
winter should be adequaie ,
according to a Jetter from the state
Department of Energy to Gov.
James A. Rhodes . However, the
department warns that a number of
factor s- could cause problems for
heating oil users.
·
Any interruption in foreign
supplies could lead to a serious
shortage of oil in. Ohio and other
states , said. Robert S. Ryan,
department director.
Ryan said any major refinery
· problems or severe weather
conditions which disrupt distribution
could also ·esult in a serious
shortage.

BRANCH MANAGER Dully Crow bu beell 118med
b11111eb maii8Jer of lhe Pomeroy
Offiee ol the Albellll COUDiy
Sa\'lbgs aud Lou Co. Crow will
.be responsible for tile operaUon
'elUte office aud will be uslsled
by two loag-teuured employes,
Gerl Waltou aud CODDle Waruer.
Craw, sou of Mr. aud· Mrs.
TboDl81 D. Cro,., Pomeroy, II a
veteran olthe U. S. Navy, amem·
ber of lhe Melp COUDty Jaycees
aud lhe Pomeroy Gua Club. He II
a graduate of Pomeroy H11b
School aDd Oblo UDlvently willa a ,
degree In &amp;CCOWIIID&amp;. Crow aud
blowife, Carol, aud two eblldn!u,
DaDielle aud Clayteu 1bomao,
·•
reside ID Middleport.

,.

l

Racine Volunteer Emergency
Squad.
Council also pasaed a resolutim88
the grantee iD a deed of conveyance
fr&lt;m Roger L. Adams and Nancy
Adams conveying a strip of land for
the planned emergency bul,lding.
Under emergency action, council
passed an ordinance lo vacate in
alley from Third to Fourth St.

SCHOOLS lilt TOO
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
financial problems of Youngstown's
steel industry are also bitting area
schools in the pocketbook, according
to state Auditor Thomas E. • ·
Ferguson.
Ferguson said Campbell City
School District has lost $717,421 In
tax dollars because of a series of
reductions in the tangible personal
property of Jones and Laughlin Co.,
formerly . Youngstown Sheet and
Tube Co.
Details of the tax reductions were
included In a financial analysis of
the Mahoning County school district
released Friday. The analysis
projects a year-end deficit of nealy
$800,000 for Campbell schools.
IMMUNIZATIONS MANDATORY
. COLUMBUS, Ohlo (AP) Thousands of Oltio students could be •
excluded from llchool if they bave
not complied with the state's
immunization schedule by the 15th
day of the school year, according to
· state Health Director John H.
· school
Ackerman
and
Superintendent FJanklln B. Walter.·
'!

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