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                  <text>12- The Daily S&lt;:ntinel, Middlcport·Pomeroy , 0 ., Thursdov, Sept. 20,

George Oil~r offi&lt;'la tin g. Bunal will
be in ST Virginia La bor er s Union .
In addition to tus mot her, he 1s

survived by his wife. Ann Hamson
Fleming; 60e son and daughler·inlaw, .Bruce and Debra F\emmg, Rt.

1, Long Bottom; two. da u ~hters,
Mrs. Johnnie tPamela l Johnson Rt .
I, Portland and Mrs. Ronme (G ma r
John son . Rt . 3. Pomeroy; three
sisters, Mrs. Leonard 1Kathleen)
Coursin, East IJverpool ; Mrs. E. P.
(Josephin e 1 Stephens. Parkersburg
and Mrs. Don 1Wanda l Donaldson,
Fmdley ; two grandchildren. Bruc
Fleming, Jr .. and Charles Johnson.
Fri02,687 has been fil ed in Meigs
CoA suit in the amount of $102,68i
has been filed in Me1gs Cu wlly
Common Pleas Co urt for in jur ies

and damages as the result of an
accident on July 2, 1978 on SR 7 near
Five Points Grill.
Filing the suit were Andrew J.
Gibbs, Don na Gibbs, and Vickie
Gibbs by her next fried, Andrew J.
Gibbs, all of Rt. 1, Letart , W. Va .,
against Robert Lagucki , North Field
Center, Ohios.
A suit in the amount of $16,215.43
was filed by the Citizens National
Bank, Middleport, aga inst James R
Pooler and Beverly Marlene Pooler,
Middleport and George W. Collins as
treasurer of Meigs County.
INAP.RIFE
Death came at 8 p. m. Tuesday to
Mrs. Ina Pearl Rife on the 83rd anniversary of her birth. She died in
Holzer Medical Center, where she
had been a patient since Friday. A
stroke was the cause of death.
She was one of nine children of
John Nathan Scott and Ida E. Hood
Scott, only one of whom survives:
Michael S&lt;:ott, Lufkin, Texas. Her
birth place was Cheshire Twp.
She attended school at Cheshire,
where she met and married Charles
B. Rlfe, who died in 1960. They moved 1to Gallipolis in 1937 and both
worked at the O.H.E. - now the
Gallipolis Developmental Center.
Her father-in-law was a widely
known physician.
Ina Rlfe was a member of the

VISIT BAKER'$
BUDGET SHOP

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FOR NEW HOME
FURNISHINGS AT A
BUDGET PRICE

BA~ER

O.E:.S i, l Cheshire, and it will hold
services for her at Miller's Home for
Funerals at 7:30p.m. Thursday. She
also was a charter member of the
Daughters of America at Kyger .
Mrs. Rife had a special affinity for
dags and cats. and she has a pet
cemetery in ~er backyard. She also
loved nowers, and her home at 925
Fourth Ave. is beautifully ornamented with blooms and other
planls around the house.
Services will be held at 10:30 a . m.
Friday at Miller's Home for
Funerals. The Rev. Alfred Holley,
pastor of Elizabeth Chapel at
Yellowtown, will officiate, and interment will be at Gravel Hill
Ceme tery back of Cheshire.
Pallbearers will "be Clair Athey,
Robert Carson, Junior Plymale,
Woodrow Burnett, the Rev. Marion
Williams and Maurice Walker.
Friends.may call 2-4 and 7.g p.m.
Thur~day at Miller's Home for
Funerals.

PEARL ESTHER SMmt
Pearl Esther Smith, 51, died at
3:15 p.m. Wednesday at Northland
Terrace Nursing Home in Cohunbus. She had also been a patient at
Doctors' Hospital, where she was
employed for years as senior
technician, and at Holzer Medical
Center.
Her home was at Cheshire.
She was born Dec. 4, 1927, at
Logan, W. Va., to the late Montie
and Brook Martin Hunter. She was
twice married and divorced, but the
lather of her five children is Chester
Sutphin. The children are Chester in
Indiana; Mrs. Monita Deardurff,
Coltunbus; Bill, Colwnbus; Becky
Sutphin, Cheshire ; and Bryan Sutphin, Middleport.
•
Five sisters survive: Mrs. June
Stowers of Peck's Mill, W. Va.; Mrs.
Goldie Morrow and Mrs. Roberta
Temple of Colwnbus; Mrs. Wilma
Gilkey of Middleport; and Mrs. Edna Freeman, Chapmansville.
Three brotliers survive: Bernard
Hunter, Gallipolis; Roger Hunter,
Rutland ; and Dallas Hunter with the
U.S. ArmedForce8inGermany.
Last rites will be held at J:ll p.m.
Saturday at Miller's Home lor
Funerals, Eugene Anspach of the
Pomeroy House of Prayer of'ficiating. Bulial will lie in Mlna
Chapel cemetery.
caUlng hours will be 2-4 and 7-9
p.m. Friday.

FURNITURE

BARGAIN DAYS

A marriage license was issued to
Ronald Eugene Smith , 43 ,'
Middleport , and Linda Gayle Walls,
31, Middleport.

VOL. XXVIII

AND SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER .2 2nd.

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EU':fE~[:~GHT
Regular $109.90 value. (sweeper
$89 .95 and tools $19.95). Has
chrome vibra groomer, light, six
position
height adjustment, edge
11
kleener" .

SALE PRICE

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JUNIOR
TOPS

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1 $7.00 Tops ......................... Sale $5 .59 I
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I $10.00 Tops ............... ...... ... Sale $7.99 1
Excellent for wea r with jeans, knits,
sweater looks, lor]g arid short sleeve
styles, sweat shirt look s. Junior sizes
small , medium and large .

. 1995 . l

$17.00 Tops ............ :......... ,. Sale $13.59

SeARFs

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EMBROIInED TRIM, GOOD

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SELECTION OF COLORS AND

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SIZES. MACHINE WASHABLE.

FROM $200.00 TO $700.00
1-Reg. $1,098.00, 2 pc. sectional matching, 1 corner table, 1 end table, 1 coffee
table S73S.OO.

SALE

$999.00

I 1-Reg. 5867.00 Sofa and loveseat, green
REGUlAR PRICE $2.79 TO $6.99 1 and gold plaid, nylon .
I
SALE $666.00
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I nylon,
2-Reg. 5889.00 2 pt . Early American
PRICE .
rust or gold.
___ :.,.... ______ ,:.. ____ _!
SALE $688.00

lh

FRIDAY

&amp; SATURDAY SALffl

1-Reg . S895.002pc. Contemporarysuite,

~ greennyl;~e~;t.$695.00

BOYS' J£A.NS
Blue denims, corduroys, cotton
twills, cotton polyester blends.
Our entire stock included. Sizes
8 to 18 in regulars. slims,
huskies, plus studert sizes 26

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to 30 waist in 30 32 34 inch

1- Reg. 5798.00 Incliner sofa, contem ·
porary, rust nylon velvet.

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SALE
PRICES
_____...,._______,__ j!
SA LEI

Regular price $1.25. Choose bulky
knit orion or banlon panel. One
size fits all sizes 10 thru 13.

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SALE
l-Reg.
white . ·

$589.00

5729 .00 Sofa,

SALE

traditional,

off

$529.00

1-Reg. $598 .00 loveseat Incliner, off
green, beige and rust .

SALE

$398.00

1-Reg. $684.00 2 pc . Traditional gold,
green, beige-rust . ·

SALE

TABLE
COVERS
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72 PRICE

l MEN'S QUILT
l· LINED COVERALLS
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and

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•2711

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SAL£1

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HALLMARK
CANDLES

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2"x6", 3"x3", 3"X6", 3"x9" and
tapers . Selected from stock.
Regular 40c to $4.25. While they
last .

lh PRICE
.

That 's the way to have

lnclinS;~~·

ON THE 2ND FLOOR

JEANS SALE!
Our entire stock of junior size jeans
misse~ sizes and women 's sizes. A big
· selectoon of styles, straight legs and flare
styles, corduroys, blue denims and white
painters jeans.
·

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I $14.00 Jeans.. ................... Sale $11.33
j $16.00 Jeans .......... ........... Sale $12.93
I $17.00 Jeans .................... Sale $13.73.
$18.00 Jeans ..................... Sale $14.53

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SALE PRICE

$988
.

M_E_N-,S--$7_95___ _

fLANNEL SHIRTS

Savings Account now.

sHI RTs AN D TOPS !1 $3495KODAK
HANDLE
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LNSTANT CAMERA 1

Sizes o to 7. in
looks, sweat
number shirts,
this selection .
Saturday .

flannels , sweater
shirts, velours,
vests. You ' ll l!ke
Save Friday and

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Discontinued Model No. EK2. No focus ing required, automatic focus control.
I. Built in hand grip.

SALE $24.00

Meip-s Co unty

Pwple

RACINE

~LL

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HOME NATIONAL

' BANK •
c:__./

FDII.
.....- ot.po:••u lo r •n•ur.,;l

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BANK
Racine, Ohio

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Sizes small (neck 14·14112 ),
medium (15· 15 '12), large t16·16 112)
and extra large ( 17·17 112) SO per
cent polyester, 50 per cent colton,
two pockets, long tails, plaid pat·
terns .

$}89

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Pomeroy many years ago. The wheel is one of two
found in the structure which is being torn down.

brewery operation, look the product
to neighborinl! lowiJs in Mason and
Gallia Counties.
Then came prohibition. The
brewery, which had an accompanying ice plant, closed down.
Workers at the plant lor years were
unemployed. Attem]ll.'l were made·
to keep the Ice plant operating but it
soon folded also.
·
Following the lifting of

prohibition, an attempt was made to
reopen the brewery . Remodeling
was done by several local business
people and a Colwnbus brewery
operator came to town to look over
the possibilities of getting the
establishment back into business.
However, the deal fell through and
the huge building was never
reopened as a brewery.
. Through the years, it chal!ged

Meigs' teachers
will meet Sunday

Wreck claims 3

Claims increase

.

CONTINUES
All weather coats, winter jackets, .
dressy _c oats, all of our ladies'
coats tncluded . Junior sizes l
misses. sizes, half sizes, extr~ '
large stzes. Regular prices from
S56.00to$225.00.
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7-----------------0PEN SATURDAY 9:30 AM TO 5 PM

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. ... in the world .'

SALE

EtBERFELDS IN POMEROY

"

.~rodayJ

60, 75 and 100 waH sizes.
Regular price $2.36.
Package of 4 bulbs.

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$4.00 Shirts and Tops ......... $3.34 1I Regular $7.95 Kodak Instant Print Film 1
I $68.00 Coats............. Sale $58.00 .
$5.00 Shirt~ and Tops .......... $4.14 1 PR1o
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I $84.00 Coats ............ Sale $71.00
Sl!lE$7.15
I$9200Coa
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$6.00 Shirts and Tops .......... $4.94 I
.
ts ........ .. . Sale $78.00
I Regular ·sl5 .75 Double Pack Kodak Ins- 1I $10800
$7.00 Shirts and Tops ..... .... $5.83 1 tant Film.
• Coals........... Sale $92J)0
. .
$7 43 I
SALE $13 75
I Use Our Lay-A-Way Plan To Hold
$!0~ ~h~rt~a~d.-~.:::.:.::_:::_::_:_._L__. - - -·-· ____ ,_:__,______ i The Coat You Like.
~~~~~·~·~

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Due to tbe lack of significant Rock Springll Fairgrounds.
Mrs. Bonnie Fisher, president of
pnl8l'elll during a led4!ral mediation
the
Bssociation, 81Ulounced the
~~e~~~~loo held in Columbus Thursday,
meeting
today following yesterday's
a meetJng of the Meigs Local School
·
session
in
Columbus attended by
District Teachers A.siociatlon has
David
Gleason,
superintendent ol
been aet lor 2 p.m. Sunday at the
the district who represented the
board of eduClltion; and Rlta Slavin,
•.'
Don Dlxon, David Bowen of the local
•'
teachers group and Ted Bibler, Ohio
Education Association representative.
Supt. Gleason declined to comment at this time on the Thursday
session and the reported lack &lt;1
.
significant progress made. Bill
Lewis !.s the federal negotiator will!
whom ThUI'llday 's meeting was held.
Mrs. Fl.!her said the association
GREENVIUE, Ohio (AP) Sunday will,discuss the progress of
Three pe~ · were killed Thurnegotiations for a new contract and
sday night in a twOK:ar collision
any action to be taken at this time.
on Ohio 49 near Greenvtlle, the
Gleason Indicated when the
Highway Patrol reported .
district's board of education met ·
The victimS were identified as
Monday that the big difference betLena Lawson, 73, of Pitts)&gt;urg,
ween the board and the association
Ohio; Ollford Gearhart, 61, and
Ia a salary problem.
his wife, Freda, 62, ofGreenvtlle.

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---Lnmu:~--i~~~~;;~~~!~~~~ ·

carefree fun. Open your

' SERVICE

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Known as the Wildennuth
Brewery, the busine&amp;1 once thrived
In upper Pomeroy .
Some residents remember when
you coold purcbasci a mug r:i. beer at
the front ol the buildlng lor five cen• Ia and keep the nwg. Others remember when a boat owned by the

100 per cent cotton, straight leg
style with hammer look and rule
pocket, very popular, while or
blue denim. Sizes 27-to 38 waist.

! GE .LIGHT BULBS
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A Pomeroy landmark, a massive
structure oo Condor St., well over
100 yean, Ia coming down .

SALEI

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TinS PART OF TilE old Wlldennuth Brewery in
Pomeroy, known as the ice plant, is the first section of

the lll8S.'live structure on Condor st., to be tom down . A
tree can be seen growing at the top r:i. the building.

!"'''~ '"Old"t;;,d=;;;k:""'Wifd;;;;,";th"B;;;;;;y:l;;r;;g*;;;;d''='*"-1

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GENE WOLFE, PRESENT owner r:i. the Wilder·
muth Brewery building In Pomeroy, with a wooden
wheel which wu used in the lee plant r:1. the firm in

MR. LEGGS $11.95
~ PAINTERS JEANS

SALE

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SALE PRICE

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Brown duck or olive with red quilt
lining . Sizes small, medi11m , large
and extra large in regulars, shorts
or longs. Permanent press. I deal
for construction workers , hunters
or general wear. Zips from top or
bottom. Action back .

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$666.00
1-Reg. $1,762.00 Sofa, Incliner Loveseat

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SALE

$777.00
1-Reg. 5940.00 2 pc. Contemporary,
multi color stripe herculon .

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 21 , 1979

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I SALE FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
¢ .
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FURNITURE DEPARTMENT
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$599
99
PAIR
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JRD FLOOR
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tor your next vacation.

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Discont inued pa!terns and colors
from our regular stock. Squares,
ovals, oblongs and rounds.
Regular price $5.4910$9 .99.

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$484.00

1-Reg. $1,073.00 Sofa, loveseat, chair,
floral matalasse, rust.

enttn·e

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DOILIES AND

at

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SAI.fl THIS WEEKENt&gt;

l s12.oo tops... .................... Sale $9.59 l " ll L

$

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MEN'S DRESS !1
SOCKS
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SPECIAL SALE PRICES IN EFFECT ALL OVER THE STORE ON FRIDAY, SEPTEMB~R 21st

lengths.
·ASK TOWED

MIDDLEPORT

e

LBERFELDS iri POMEROY

Area Deaths
JOHN W. FI.~~ MINf;
Funeral services for J ohn W.
Fleming, 47 .l.un g Bot tom. who &lt;lll'd
Tuesday will be held Sa turd&lt;1y at 1
p.m. at Ewing Chapel with the HeY .

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COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) - The
Ohio Bureau of Employment Services reported Thursday there
was a 6.1 percent increase in the
nwnber cl. persons filing first
clalma for benefits In the week
ending Sept. 15 over the previowi
week.
The bureau reported 16,Wl2
newly unemployed persons filled
initial clalm8 for the week ending
WI Saturday. 'I'h1s compares
with 15,3.'1l filing the prevloUB
week.
Bureau Atlmlnl.!trator Albert
G. GUes said 735 initial claims
were fUed \Bider all ·other
pi'Oflrams WI week. This brings
overall initial claims \0 16,997,
which Ia 5.4 percent higher than
the previous week.

Wants flood probe
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Robert W. Teater, director of the
Ohio Department of Natural
Resources, has asked the Army
Corps of Engineers to investigate
flooding problems along
Blacklick Creek near~lwnbus.
Residents of over :llO houses
were affected by floodwaters of
the creek Sept. 14 after about six
inches Of rain fell on ceJ!tral Ohio.

Stewart
released
on bond
Tom Matthew Stewart, 31, Mid·
dleporl, charged with murder In the
gunshot death of his slefHion, Keith
Landers, wu released following
pooling of bond ln Meigs County
Court Thursday.
The incident occurred at the
Stewart residence, 235 S. Fourth
Ave. at 12:lla.m. Sunday.
Mrs. Stewart, who Ia separated
from her husband had left the home
about 15 minutes before the
shooting.
Landers was lying on a bed watching TV when' the shooting occurred, it is reported. He was ·struck
in the face.
On Monday Meigs County Court
Judge Charles Knight set bond at
$10,000 and appointed J. B. O'Biien,
attorney , as Stewart's legal counsel.
Prosecuting attorney Rlck Crow
had suggested bond be set in the
amount &lt;1 $100,000 due to the
animosity toward other family
members.

:·:·

hands several times and served as a
garage for large trucks, a tractor
'lales store, an auto repair garage
and more recently lor tbe body shop
of Gene Wolle, a resident of
Riggscrest Manor.
However, time has taken its toll on
the aged structure and it has become
dangerous to leave it stand.
Wolle, along with others, is
tearing down the entire !root part of
the structure.
At prei!ent, it Ia the ice plant portion of the building which is coming

down. A rear section r:i. the building
will remain standing lor me in the
Wolle business. The entire front seclion which faces Condor St., will
come down and Wolle will use that
as a parking lot, again ln conjunction with his business.
Wolle reporta he has been
besieged by souvenir collectors who
would like some object from the
building. There's really very IIWe in
the way of souveft!n left-In the age(!
structure but Wolle did flnd two
aged wooden wheels which were

used in the ice plant to help 1Ift
things to the second story ol the
building.
One of these he hopes to keep for
himself, perhaps, to fuhioo Into a
table.
·
Progress on the tearing down is \.'
slow so it will be actually quite a
1
time before residents find the
. familiar aged building -which has
-.....-~at cia fuelnatlnt

.,._

vers&amp;tlon&amp;l ·j&gt;leee 'for JMriy, iiiiUiY
years - gone from the Pomeroy
scene.

Influenza vaccine available .
CLEVELAND (AP)- Here are
lbe wlnniDg II11Dibert dra'IID
1bunsday ID the Oblo Lottery:

Blue 1!3; Wblte 34 ; Gold I;
WID..-1bon zrtz9.

Substitute rural
carrier exam set
The United States Postal Service
announces an eXamination for substitute rural carrier of record at the
Racine Post Office with the
examinatioo to be given at Parkersburg, W. Va.
Applicants must have reached
their 18th birthday on the date of
filing their applications and must be
citizens who can be noo-citizens who
have been accorded permanent
resident alien statwi in the United
States.
A.ll substitute rural carriers of
record must furnish and maintain at
their own expense vehicle equipment necessary for prompt handling
of mail, but they are given an equipment maintenance allowance based
on the dally mileage scheduled or a
minlmwn allowance per day,
whichever Is greater.
Subetltute rural carriers of record
starting salarlea range from $40.99
per day to $411.61 per day depending
on. the length and character of the
route.
Clsoing date .for submitting application card, PS Form 2479AB, to
the posbnaster at Racine Ia Sept. 26.

Weather
Raln likely tonight. Low ln the low
to mid 50s. Mostly cloudy Saturday
with a chance of showers. High in
the mid to upper 6011. The chance of
rain is 70 pj!rcent tonight and 30 percent Saturday.
EXTENDED OU1UlOK
Fair Swiday aud Monday. A
chance of sbowens Tuesday. WarmiDI during the period. Highs ID
tbe low to mid 7011 Sunday, warmlD&amp;to tbe upper 70&amp; to low 80s
on Tuesday. Overnight lows ID
tbe mid 4011 to low 50s early Sunday, rlslog to tbe low to mid 50s
early Tuesday.

The Meigs County Health Depart- any person with a history of hyperment has received the recom- sensitivity to eggs, chicken, or
mended Influenza Virus Vaccine chicl&lt;en leathers.
from the Ohio Department of
The Illfiuenza Vinla Vaccine lor
Health. 'I'h1s year the vaccine con- 1!118-79 has been assocaited with
tains A-USSR, A-Texas and IHioog
fewer side effects than previous inKong Influenza viruses.
fluenza vaccines. Tenderness, redThe inoculation of antigen ness or induratioo at the site &lt;1 inprepared from inactivated Influenza jection lasting for one or two days
virus stimulates the production &lt;1
have been obeerved in only about
specific antibodies. Protection is af. one third of vaccines.
lorded against only those strains of
The Meigs County Jlealth Departvirus from which the vaccine is
ment Public Health Nurses will be
prepared or closely re!ated strains.
administering the Trivalent Flu
~ual vaccination i.s recomVacclne at the Pomeroy Senl~r
mended lor adults who have such Citizen Center on Monday, Sepchronic conditions as heart disease
of ·any etiology, particularly with
mitral stenosis or cardiac failure ;
chronic
bronchopulmonary
diseases, such as chronic bronchitis,
bronchiectasis, tuberculosis, emphysema, chronic astluna and cystic
fibrosis; chronic renal disease, and
diabetes mellitus and other chronic
A•tociated Preu
metabolic disorders.
School districts in Ohio and PenUse of this vaccine in persons un- nsylvania were lbe latest to be slapder the age of 26 years is not recom- ped with strikea, while legions of
mended .
picketing teachers nationwide kept
Annual vaccinatloo is recom- classes disrupted lor nearly 700,000
mended lor older persons, par- pupils in 11 states.
ticularly those over the age 65 years,
Striking Spokane, Wash., teachers
because influenza outbreaks are . have appealed a judge's back~
cmunoliiy associated with excess work order, and classes opened
death in older age groups. This vac- Thursday for elementary pupils in
cine should not be administered to the strike-bound San Francisco

tember 24, and Wednesday, September 26, 1979 from 10 a.m. to 2
p.m.; Tuesday, Sept. 25, at the lAng
Bottom Methodist Church from 10
a.m. to 12 noon; Thlll'!lday, Sept. 'l1,
at the old Township building In
HarrisOnville from 9:lJ a.m. to 11
a.m.; Wednesday, October 3, at the
Meigs COunty Health Department
Offices located at 238 West ?Ad,
Pomeroy,froin 9a.m. to1 p.m.
U you are unable to.attend one of
these cllnlcs please call the gealth
Department, Opal Grueser, R. N., to
arrange a special time. Phone 9112- •·
6626 or 992.f627.

School strikes keep
700,000 from class

Fleming

'

s~rvices

Saturday

The Dally Seulloel Wiabe11 to ex- 3 Pomeroy; three sisters, Mrs.
tend moot sincere apologle11 to tbe Leonard (Kathleen) Coursin, East
(amlly of John W. Fleming. Due to a Liverpool; Mrs. E. P. (Josephine )
major malluDcUou ID tbe computer stephens, Parkersburg, and Mrs.
ll)lotem, tbe ollllaary for Mr. Don (Wanda) Donaldson, Findlay ;
FlemlD&amp; coulalned errors aud newa two
grandchildren ,
Bruce
material completely ~~~~related to bls Fleming,Jr. and Charles Johnson .
deatb. Followfug II a corrected Also surviving are several nieces,
obituary.
nephews, uncles, aunts, sisters-inFuneral services for John W. law and his mother·in·l~w , Mrs.
Fleming, 47, Long Bottom , who died Bertha Harrison, Apple Grove, W.
Tuesday, will be held at 1 p.m. Va . Mr. Fleming was preceded in
Saturday at the Ewing Funeral death by his father , Charles Bernard
'
Home with the Rev. George Oiler Fleming, Portland.
• Mr. Fleming was a member of the
officiating.
Mr . Fleming is survived by his Veterans of Foreign Wars and the
West Virginia Labor Unions.
V.:lfe, Mrs. Ann Harrison Fleming;
Burial will be in the Bald Knob
his mother, Mrs. Minnie Fleming
Carroll, East Liverpool; one son and .Cemetery. Military rites will be
conducted by the Racine Post,
daughter-in~aw , Bruce and Debra
Fleming, Route I, Long Bottom; two American Legion. Friends may Cll\1
daughters; Mrs . Johrmic (Pamela) at the Ewing Funeral Home
anytime.
J~hnson , Route 1, Portland, and
Mrs. Roonie (Gba) Johnson, Route
1

\

district.
More than 32,500 teachers were on
strike nationwide today.
In Pennsylvania, 811 Neshannocll
district teachers in New Castle went
on strike Thursday; forcing l,DOO
students to go horDe:
The teachers, who are In the ftnal .
year r:i. a ~ear contract, want
negotiations reopened, claiming
there Is too great a dlapartty bef.
ween salaries for teachers with
graduate degrees and new teachens.
Sixteen other dlstrlcls ln Uie state
have strlkea \Bider way, affecting
more than 52,000 pupils.
Middletown, Ohio, teachens voted
Thursday to strike that 11,\JOO.pupD
dlstlict after contract talks with the
board of education collilpsed.
The action by some BOO teachens
came after Middletown voters rejec·
ted a 6-mlll emergency tax levy last
week. The schOol board contends
that without the additional revenue,
it has no money lor salary increues
this year.
In Spokane, where 1,400 teachens
have ]IOitponed the Sept. 5 opening
of 54 schools, the unioo asked the
Court of Appeals to stay Judge
Donald Olson's order to go back to
work Monday.
Public school strikM are illegal In
Washington, the judge ruled.
Despite pickets, IIChoola opened
· Thursday In San Franciaco for
pupils in kindergarten through
grade five ; but only about lwiHblrds
ol the 24,1t'Jl students sho~ up,
district officials said.

�•

I

·-M~;,:r;.;;r wins another twinbill

· 2- The Dally Sentinel. Middleoort-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Sept. 21 , 1979

Carter turned to Ohio city
SfEUBENVIU..E . Ohio 1AP I With his ·popularity sagging in the
polls, President Carter needed a
transfusion of public adulation from
middle Ameri ca and it 's not
surprising he turned to this solidlyDemocratic city last week to get it.

It's not often that the nationa l
spotlig~l fa ll s on s ma ll town
America. President Taft. 67 years
ago, was th e last chief executive to
visit Steubenville.
Conseq!Jently, the people of this

Editorial .opinions,
comments

Capital briefs.• ,• •
COLUMBUS, Ohw (API - Ohio
fanners could someday become
"tenants on thell' own land" without
some check on foreign ownership of
farmland, an Ohio Farm Union
spokesman says.
Charlie Nash, executive director
of the group, told a recent House
Agriculture and Natural Resources
meeting that purchases of farms by
foreign interests are artificially
inflating land values .
Testifying in favor of legislation
sponsored by Rep. Eugene
Branstool, D-Utica, prohibiting the
purchase of agricultural property by
non-resident aliens, Nash said Ohio
experienced a 20 percent increase in
farmland values last year, while the
national average was 14 percent.
Nash cited the example of a
fanner who did not want to sell his
land to foreign investors and sold his
440 acres instead to another farmer
for $525 an acre.
"This fanner, in tum, sold the
same 440 acres to a West German for
$76Z.85 per acre," Nash said. "The '
transactions took place within a
month of each other.
"Within a month, the land in
question had artificially appreciated
$237.85 an acre, a 45 percent
increase in property values," he
said.
Nash · said the Ohio Farmers
Union, an affiliate of the National
Farmers Union , has about 10,000
memberships representing up to
30,000 rural persons in the state.

1.

Senate President Oliver Ocasek, DAkron, got more prizes for his
the
Rhodes
district
in
Administration's$764 million capital
improvements bill than any of the
other three top legislative leaders.
The bill would allocate $35 .3

million worth of projects for Summit
Co unty , $26.3 million of it'!or a new
natatorium and other major
improvements at the University of
Akron . Summit also is down for
more than $5 million in new or
improved mental health facilities .
House Speaker Vernal G. Riffe
Jr ., D-New Boston, would see $5
million go to Shawnee State
Community College, in his native
Scioto County, if the bill. were
approved in its present form .
Portsmouth Receiving Hospital
would get $321!,000 . ·
Senate Minority Leader Paul E.
Gillmor, R-Port "Clinton, would· see
only two Ottawa County projects - a
$100,000 improvement at Camp
Perry and $120',000 worth of mental
health facilities.
House Minority Leader Corwin M.
Nixon, R-Lebanon, might claim
some of the credit for a $7.4 million
developmental center planned for
Warren County.
But the bill still must go through
several stages of consideration in
the Legislature , and could be
changed by amendment
Ohio's Department of Energy is
promoting "van pooling," a
different tyPe of commuter system
in which eight to twelve employees
agree to ride to work and back in
vans purchased by their employers.
Energy Director Robert S. Ryan
says van pooling is becoming
increasingly pcpular across the
country. The department plans to
conduct a series of eight seminars on
the subject for employers around the
state, starting in October.
Sessions are on tap m Cambridge,
Columbus, Youngstown, Cleveland,
Akron, Dayton, Cincinnati, and
To1edo.

but

depressed city pulled out a ll stops to
give Pre•ident Carter the full red
carpet treaunent.
During the week prior to the
presiden t 's vis it , we lcoming
banners were st retched acr oss wide
intersections while storefronts and
windows of modest homes displayed
similar signs and posters.
The mood cr eated by the
president's visit ranged from sheer
excitement to a fairly passive
attitude.
•fl.t least the place finally got a
good sc rubbing," satd one elderly
man who sat on the steps of a church
along the parade route waiting on
Carter 's arrival .
A woman nearby agreed. "You
know," she said. "I hadn 't even
realized that we had a sign at the
city limits till this week , The weeds
were so high , you couldn 't read it. "
In another part of the city, the_
Holiday Inn - which had served as
the headquarters . for the Secret
Service - was now quiet and almost
deserted.
"Isn 't this something?" remarked
Judie Davis, a desk clerk. "When
the Secret Service moved in here a
few days ago, they took over the
entire first floor . Some guests had to
be moved to other rooms . Others
decided not to put up with the hassle
and decided to leave."
.
Back along the motorcade route,
thousands of people were crowding
and manuevering into pcsition for a
chance to see the president.
The first hint of his arrival came
when a police car - lights flashing
- raced between the lines of people
flanking the main street, followed by
a squad of motorcycle policemen.
Several blocks away, the
president's arrival was confirmed
by the sound of yells and applause
that grew louder as his entourage
neared.

As the bla ck limousine,
surrounded by jogging Secret
Service agents wearing sunglasses,
moved past flag-waving and
cheering crowd, President Carter
smiled and waved- clearly pleased
by the response .
Raising a homemade pester that
read "Welcome to Steubenville,
Ohio, Jimmy Carter" above· her
head, a woman wearing a red
blouse blue skirt and white shoes
stepped off the curb to greet ' the
president.
"1 wouldn't vote for him," she
remarked later, "but this sure is

Oil prices
scrutinized

WASHINGTON (AP ) - Texaco's
visit and typically refused to sit for announced plans to hold the line on
NEW YORK (AP) - Still at.his
the telecast. Sheen said he always heating oil prices are being
desk despite heart surgery two
stood
on his old TV shows and he scrutinized by a skeptical House
years ago, Bishop Fulton J. Sheen
stood
again
for this one.
celelrated the 60\h anniver!lMY of
energy subcommittee.
.
·
his ordination and is looking forward
' PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Former
Texaco officials were going before
to meeting the pope.
ABC news commentator Howard K.
the panel today after being
"! always wanted to be a priest,"
theatened with a possible subpoena
Smith is going back in front of the
said the 84-year-&lt;&gt;ld Sheen, who was
for not 'showing up Monday.
television cameras.
ocdained Sep(. 20, 1919, at St. Mary's
The oil company's announced
Smith will anchor a three-part
Cathedral in Peoria, Ill. "My
series on the history and workings of freeze on· heating oil prices for the
lrother, Joe, always said that I was
the A(nerican presidency, a public rest of the year won the public
practicing preaching even as a kid ."
broadcasting station here has commendation of President Carter,
Sheen, who puts in a morning's
who urged the rest of the industry to
announced.
work each day although under
Read Jackson , vice president for
follow Texaco·~ lead.
doctors' orders to rest, marked the _programming at WHYY ·TV,
However, when 'Texaco failed to
anniversary
Thursday
by · said Thursday the series, "Ev· show up at a Monday hearing by the
concelebrating Mass with two other
·ery Four Years," will be aired on Government Operation ~
priests in the chapel of his East Side
the Public Broadcasting System in subcommittee on energy, Chairman
apartment.
·
January and February of 1980. Toby Moffett, D-Conn., threatened
The bishop said he- is looking
WHYY will produce the series, ·to compel the firm 's appearance
forward to meeting Pope John Paul
financed by Sun Co. Inc. and the with a subpoena .
n when the pontiff visits New York Corporation
for
Public
Texaco said it was all a
on his six-&lt;lay U.S. tour next month .
Broadcasting, Jackson said.
misunderstanding - and Moffett
Sheen recently filmed a half·hour
The project will be Smith's first dropped plans to ask the full
television program on the pcpe's
since leaving ABC in June, he added. committee to issue the subpoena in
exchange for Texaco's pledge to
testify voluntarily.
Meanwhile, H9use Democrats
have declared their support for
clamping federal price controls
back on home heating oil and similar
fuels .
The voice vote :ruesday is not
- binding. But spcnsors said it was a
gesture of congressional frustration
over the fact that heating oil prices
have soared by 60 percent since last
winter , to more than :80 cents a
gallon .

Berry's World

J •

I

. e..

-

ba ck - moved a half-game ahead of
Pittsburgh. It was the biggest firstplace margin for Montreal since
Aug. 4.
" I think we've got a right'to be
whooping and hollering a little bit," .
said Expos Manager Dick Williams

The Expos swept th eir sec"nd
consec utive twinbill from the New
York Mets with &amp;-3 and ~victories
Thur sda y. With the P i ttsbu ~g h
Pirates fallin g to Philadelphia 2-1 ,
the Expos - who lost a pair of
games to the Pirates in Montreal
earlier this week to fall two ~-ames

in ihe exhuberBI;t Montreal locker
room. "It's great. We've really
battled."
Th ey 've battled through six
double-lleaders this month , winning
10 of the 12 games. They still have
two more to go , including one during
a four-game visit to Pittsburgh next

~Five run rally gives Reds 8-5 v.ictory

•t-.a.

:;:. SAN DIEGO (AP I - Trailing 5-2,
.,._-with two outs in the eighth inning
: -.the Cincinnati Red s were infermed
-"'~ b Y the San Diego Stadium
'l!coreboard that the Houston Aslros
' . had ju•t won their game with
, Atlanta .
7 "The Houston score was staring us
, . in the face as we were getting beat,"
- said Cin cinnati ManaRer J ohn

-·

-

....
e

.

National

WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen .
Edward M. Kennedy, facing
increased threats in the two weeks
since he said he might challenge
President . Carter, is under Secret
Service protection ordered by the
president.
Neither White House aides nor
Kennedy's staff would discuss
whether the threats received by the
senator 's office had increased , but it
was learned that the number was
sharply higher since Kennedy
disclosed he is considering running
for president.
Dispatched by Carter, several
agents a~eared at Kennedy's office
on the second floor of the Dirksen
Senate Office Building shortly
before 6 p.m. Thursday .
They accompanied the senator
when he left his office about an hour
later, heading. down a stairwell and
driving off in a three-&lt;!at caravan.
Carter ordered the protection
after receiving what the While
House described as a Secret Service
analysis of the senator 's safety.
There also were discussions between
administration officials and
members of Kennedy's staff.
"1 have accepted Pr esident
Carter's generous offer of ~cret
Service protection and my family

and I deeply appreciate his action on
this matter," Kennedy said in a
statement issued by his office.
Asked about the Secret Service
analysis and the conversations with
the Kennedy staff, White House
press secretary Jody Powell said, " I
just really don 't want.to talk about
that sort of thing very much."
A
Kennedy
spokesman .
acknowledged
that
the
Massachusetts senator regularly
receives threats and that an average
of ooe a week is eonsidered serious
enough to be referred to authorities .
Tom Southwick, the Kennedy
press aide, declined comment when
asked whether there has been an
increase in the number of threats
since Kennedy disclosed Sept. 7 that
he is considering challenging Carter
for the 19!1() Democratic presidential
nomination .
However , a source who asked not
to be identified said the number of
.threats received by Kennedy's office
had .increased sharply in the last two
weeks.
Powell said the president was
actmg under authority given him in
the Constitution rather than under
any specific statutory , Jwer - an
apparent reference to federal law
which authorize s protection for

Today's commentary
_Divorce, form _10~0 style
to be realized in a joint return tilted
the tax laws heavily in favor of a
wage-!' arning hUB band and nonemployed spouse.
Tax code revisions in 1969 were
designed to gave singles a better
break. But with the subsequent
rapid increaae in both tw!Hn~me
families and cohabitation outaide of
marriage, one couple's break has
turned into another couple's penalty.
Or to put it in terms of Newton's
Law as revised for tax purposes : To
each and every action in the way of
special treatment for one class of
taiJlllyers' there is an opposite and
frequently more than equal reaction
in the form of heavier burdens for
other taipayers.
So it has been since the beginnlng
of taxation and so it is likely to remain,at least so long as the tax laws
are so complex.
The odds are probably again5t the
Boyters in their court confrontation
with the IRS, which rarely loses one.
There cause stands a better chance
with _Congress, which probably Will
get around to a revision of the 1969
revisions reconciling tsx law with
changed lifestyles. But it in all
likelihood will be another quick fix
that eventually will produce new inequities.

BaskitiNII Association
New Jersey 102, Philadelphia 98
National Hoc~ey Leogue
Fivers 5, Sabres 5, l ie

Back when he was TilE tax
authority in Congress, W'llbur MillB
recognized that tax breaks tended to
cancel out and become burdens. Ilia
vision of an ideal tax system, allowing virtually no exemptions and
other special treabnents, would levy
a universal and _much lower rate on
everyone.
· Perhaps the Mllls Ideal could
never meet- the tests of reality although It would seem that the
money saved In tax law administration as a result of the dismantling ol
most of the IRS apparatus alone
might make up for major losses
through lowered rates.It does,
however, still appear to make more
common sense than the traditional
patch and paste approach to tax
pcllcy.
But then, when has common sense
ever determined government
pclicy•

'(

ST . LOUIS CARDINALS ·· Sl gned
Bill M\Jrrell , t ight end .
HOCKEY

National Hockey

LeJ~gue

ADMONTON 01 LERS - Released
Greg Carroll. center ; Larry Hen ·
drlck , goal tender, and Dick. Popiel,
detenseman .
COLLEGE
ST . FRANCIS COLLEGE -

Thursday's

Spor1s Tnns1ctions
By The Associated Press
BASKETBALL
National

Named

Mary

Convy

women 's

boskelball coach .

BasketNII Association
WASHINGTON BU L LETS
Signed Kev i ~ard .

Nallclllll Football Leagoe
TIUSTLE DOWNS

Placed Henry Monroe , c ornerbac k ,

NORTH RANDALL , Ohio (API Au burn Corn ers , with Bennie
Feliciano aboard, raced six fw·Iongs
in 1:13 ThurSday to win the featured
eighth race a t Thistledown and pay
$3.80, $3.20 and $2.40.
Second-place Barb ' s Dream
returned $7.20 and $3.80, while
Dearby Dipper paid $3.80 fer a third·
place finish .
A crowd of 3,738 bel $446,662.

on the injured reserve list. Signed
Wylie Tur~r . cornerback .
NEW ORLEANS SAlNTS Signed Rick Partridge, punter .
Placed Alex Pri ce defensive teack le,
on the injured reserve l ist .
NEW YORK GIANTS - Signed
R ic ~ Par1rldge, punter . Placed Alex
Pri Ce defensive t ackle, on t he reser -

ve list .
NEW YORK GIANTS -

Released

J im P ietrzak , c enter . Si gned Ke ith

EC:k ,

ouard,

and

Calv in

Mil ler,

SPECIAL NOI'E
Are11 YOIIIIPien ...., remllllded
that loolomnr Ia Nallclllll Huolioi aDd FllhiDI O.y. , . day
will be celebrated at Royal Oat
Put IJioclnolng Ill t:• a.m.
There ...W be loll of door prlzes
aDd free hmch.

CINCINNATI - The Cincinnati
Reds wiU begin accepting maU orders postmarked today for a maU
sale of sa reaerved seat tickets to
1979 National League Championship
Series games at Riverfroot Stadium.
Fans may order up to two seats for
one game only and mWit specify
whether they want tickets for the
Tuesday, Oct. 2 game; the Wednesday, Oct. 3 game ; or any game
available. Game.tlme is 8:00 p.m. on
Tuesday, Oct. 2, and 3:15 p.m. on
Wednesday, Oct. 3.
There is a $2 handling charge per
order and fans are requested to enclose a large stamped, seUaddressed return enveloee. There is
a limit of one order per penrnn and
any orders postmarked prior to
Friday, Sept.21 will not be filled . .

Interior or E•terior Latex &amp; Oilvariety of Colors

BAUM TRUE VALUE

Chester, 0.

DAVID L. CARR, D. 0.

Meigs golfers
beaten again

Announces The Relocation Of His Office
FOR
GENERAL PRACTICE
And
ALLERGY AND DERMATOLOGY
At

FAMILY CLINIC
292 4

JA C KSON AV EN UE

P L EASAN T . W EST V I RG I N IA

Tonight's games
Coal Grove at GaiUpolis
Athens at Circleville
Ironton at Wa shing ton CH
Jackson at Gr~nfield
Logan at Nelsonv i lle·Y ork
Unioto at WaYerly
Vinton County at W ell ston
Ceredo -K enova at Rock H i ll
Hurri can e at Pt. P leasant
Wahama at Belpre
Southwestern at North Gallia
Kyger Creek at Oak H ill
Eastern et Parkersburg Catholic
Ca !dwell at Southern
(Saturday)
Hannan
T race
at
Ross ·
Southeastern

the€&lt;! a nine-llitter. Manny Trillo's
·RBI sing le in the seventh off Pirates
relief ace Kent Tekulve, 10-8,
provided th e decisive run and Pete
Roe had two hits to. extend his
consecutive -game hitting streak to
18.
A~tros 7, Braves 1
Apair of fielding errors by· Darrel
Chan ey and Terry Puhl 's · two
doubles keyed the Houston victory.
Ken Forsch, who threw his first
complete game since July 28,
pitched a nine-flitter.
Dodgers 3, Giants 0
Bob Welch and Joe Beckwith
~ombined on a seven-llitter, Welch,
5~. winning his first g~me since
May 15.
Cardinals 2, Cubs I
Silvio Martinez , 15-7, hurled a sixhitter to outduel Dennis Lamp, 11-9,
who had a five-hitter . The unearned
winning run was scored by
Keithernan\)ez, who reached on an
error.

r-------~-----~
I
MEIGS

l EQUIPMENT
CO.
.
I Pomeroy, 0 . Ph. 992-2176

Hours : B-5 Mon.-Fri .
8· 12 Sat.
I
Closed sunday
I International
New Idea
..._
1 Harvesler
Equipment
I
I

I
II
I

I
I
I

_____________ ...I

J .R. Richard, Jt).J3, will face the
Reds' Tom Seaver, !:Hi, in Houston
tonight. The Padres will host Los
Angeles fer a three-game series with
Juan Eichelberger, 0-1, facing the
Dodgers' Gerald Hannahs, 0-0,
tonight.

Mail orders now
ac~epted by Reds

25% OFF PER GALLON
SUPREME PAINT LINE
985-3301

San Diego its seventh loss il:l the last
eight games.
" I went out in the seventh to talk to
Randy, but he was pitching so good
and had a three-run lead so I just
wanted. to build his confidence by
leaving him in there," said PBdre
Manager Roger Craig of Jones, who
is still trying to regain his 1976 Cy
Young Award-winning form .
" We played sloppy in the
seventh," said Bench. "A lot of clubs
would have laid down right then . I'm
real pleased that we're going into
Houston 2\l games in front."
Cincinnati begins a crucial threegame series with Houston at the
Astrodome tonight. The Reds, who
have won the division tiUe five times
in the last nine years, feel they may
ha ve an advantage over the young
·
Astro club.
" In a series like this, I don 't know
what experience will mean, but I'd
rather be the club that has it," srud
McNamara .
Reliever DOug Bair, 11-7, pitched
the final two and one-third innings
and allowed just one hit to earn the

week.
"I felt all along that those doubleheaders in front of us were our only
obstacle," said catcher Gary Carter,
whose run:ocoring single in the ninth
inning of the nightcap broke a
scorel ess battle between Scott
San derson and the Mets' Mike Scott.
"We sweep two here, go to a big
series (thre e ga mes ) with
Philadelphia, and then comes th e
showdown."
Sanderson, 9-7, threw a seven·
hitter and struck out nine. Andre
Dawson and Rusty Staub singled
prior to Carter's RBI hit and J erry
Whit e got another RBI sin gle off
Scott , 1·2.
In the opener , White led off the
eighth with a home run and the
Expos tallied three more times in

win.

: ;:::::;:::::::::;:;:::::;:::;:;:;:;:;:; : ;: ;:;:;:;:;:~;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;: ;:::;:::;:;:;:;:;::·

PAINT SPECIAL

POI N T

by three straight walks and a tworun single by Dave Winfield .
"The ball just came through my
legs," said Cincinnati shortstop
Con cepcion of the error . "When I
saw all the walks , my heart was
lroken.
"The next inning , I started the
rally off with a do11ble and we scored
five runs. I messed it up and I had to
do something," Concepcion said.
After Coocepcion doubled with two
outs in the eighth, George Foster
walked and Johnny Bench doubled
both runners home to chase Padre
starter Randy Jones.
Padre reliever Steve Mura, .3-3,
surrendered a run-scering single to
Ray Knight and an RBI double to
·Dan Driessen for a go-ahead run.
Jones, seeking his 12th win of the
year, cruised into the eighth inning
having allowed two unearned runs
oo just three hits before the Reds
staged tbeir &lt;;«neback rally to
sweep the two-game series and hand
:;:::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;

BALTIMORE COLT S - Wa i ved
Toni L inhart, k icker .
GREEN BAY PACKERS -

l

Today lo History
By The Auoclaled Press
Today is Friday, Sept. 21, the 264th
day of 1979. There are 101 days left in
the year , ·
Today's highlight In histery :
On this date in 1776, the first naval
battle of the American Revolution
was fought by British and American
ships on Lake Champlain.
On this date:
In 1792, the French Assembly
voted to abolish France's monarchy .
In 1938, Czechoslovakia agreed to
cede the Sudeten Gennan area of
that countty to Nazi Germany .
In 1949, West Germany came into
existence as the U.S., British and
French occuption zones were
transferred to Germany control .'
In 1953, during the Korean War, a
North Korean pilot landed his
Soviet-built MiG in South Korea to
collect a $100,000 reward for the fwst
MIG delivered to the U.N. forces .
In 1964, the Mediterranean
fortress island of Malta became an
independent state within the BritiSh
Commonwealth.
In 1977, Bert Lance resigned as
Oirecter of the Budget after weeks
of controversy over his past oosinesa
and banking prilctices.
Ten years ago : More thali 120
persons were killed In rioting
hetween Moslems and Hindua in
western India In a dispute over
treatment of sacred Hindu cows.
Five years ago: The U.N. General
Assembly overrode Israeli protests
and decided to debate the
Palestinian question .
Thought for today·: Have no ·
friends not equal to yourself
Confucius, Chinese phUoaopher, 551479 B-C. .

lineman .

•

Transactions

presidential candidates.
That law was passed in 1968, after
the assassination of Robert F.
Kennedy, the senator's brother.
An()( her brother, President John F.
Kennedy, was assassinated in 1963.
In an interview Thursday with The
Nounces candidacy.
Reporters were in Powell 's office
when he talked by telephooe with
Southwick.
"We're glad to do it," said Powell.
"Tell them the most impcrtant thing
to say about serurity is nothing ."
Then Powell read the following
announcement to reporters:
"The president, based on Secret
Service
reports · and
on
conversations with the Treasury
Department by members of Sen .
Kennedy's staff, directed the
Secretary of the Treasury to contac
Sen. Kennedy and !Bke whatever
steps are n"'-'!ssary to provide for
the senator's protecUoo."
Powell indicated that similar
protection could be given other
potential presidential · candidates.
Under federal law, presidential
candidates become eligible for
protectioo when they qualify· for
!""lcl)ing funds from the Federal
l'lection C001mission . Protection
~der those provisions would not
begin befere January .
,, The question of Secret Service
PrOtection foc KeMedy first came
up in a telephone conversation
between Lawrence Horowitz, a
Kennedy aide , and . Rear Adm .
William Lukash. the president's
physician.
Horowitz called Lukash to ask .
what sort of medical equipment the
admiral carried with him when
traveling with the president.
Horowitz is a doctor woo also has a
law degree. He is chief counsel on
the Health subcommittee, chaired
by Kennedy .
Powell said the matter of Secret
Service protectioo came up "in a
very infocmal manner" during that
conversat ion. He said that
discussion had no bearing on
Carter's decision to order protection
for Kennedy.

McNamara, whose Reds raUied for
fi ve r uns in the eighth to defeat the
San Diego Padres !Hi Thursday
night a nd maintain a 2\l game lead
over the Astros 1n the National
League Weatem Divisioo .
San Diego had scored three
1lneamed runs with two outs in the
seventh to break a 2-2 tie , when a
Dave Con cepcion error was followed ·
defensive tackle .
NEW YORK JETS - Signed Jonn
Sul livan , linebacKer .
PHILADELPHIA EAGLES Si gned Gary Puetz , offensive

Exhibition Scores
Exhibition Se~son
Results
By The Assocloled Press
Thursday

Secret Service protecting Kennedy

ByDooGraff
Divorce in recent years has
become an increasingly accepted
part of the American lifestyle fQr mcreasing numbers of Americans.
But for a Maryland couple it has
become something more - an accounting procedure that has led to a
confrontation with the Internal
Revenue Service.
At the end of each of the last three
years, David and Angela Boyter
have gotten divorced. The following
January theyiiave remarried.
Although everyone has a right to a
, change of mind-even •epe!'tedly there is more than that to the on-lllldoff marriage of the Boyters, .as
recently reported at length in The
Washington Post.
The Boyters are taking advantage
of a provision in the tax code that
detennines marital statUB for tax
Plii'Jl(lSeS as of December .31 of each
year. The purpose, beyond the
sizable bucks saved on their tax
rettll'll8, is to protest what they contend is unequal tax treatment of
working married couples as compared with cohabitating singles.
Under current tax law, a inarried
couple filing a joint return can end
up paying significantly more to the
IRS than two single people living
together without legal bond.
The Boyters are fill\ from the first
to protest this particular quirk in our
pervasively quirky tax laws. But
is the most dramtic and, to
theirs
THE D~IL V SENTINEL
!USPS 145-lfO)
date, most effective fonn of protest.
The IRS, however, says It has had
. ~~ ,...,_,~ · ~"""·enough and is taking the Boyters and
the case of the "tax Sham" divorces
DEVOTED TO THE
' INTEREST OF
to court.
MEIGS-MASON AREA
There are acknowledged ineROBERT HOEFLICH
City Edllor
quities in taxation of cohal)ltating
PubU1bed daUy uctptS.Iutdly b:y Tbe OhJo
earners. All an example, the stan-.
Valley Publlah.Lu8 Compaoy· Multimedia, Joe.,
Ill Court St, Po~roy , Ohio 457a. Buliaa•
dard deduction of $2,200 per inOffice Phooe !m· ZlM. EdUorlal Pholle
dividual adds up to $4,400 for anon·
!92-2157.
Seco1KI dan posllige paid 1t Pomeroy, Ohio.
married couple filing separately.
National advertiAiog reprneoLidve, Llodoo
But a married couple filing jointly is
Auodates, 3101 Euclid A\'e ., Clevelaod, Ohio
44115.
limited to a inaxinnwn $3,200.
Sub~~erlptloo ralt's: Oe\lvertd by carrier
The tax men point out that inllny
where &amp;\'a liable 90 cetlll per week. By MoU!r
Koot.e where tarrier service not an liable, One
of the provisions now perceived as
mollth, $3.90.
inequable came about as the result
The Dally Seatioel, by malllnOblo and Well
VIrginia , one year $33.00; SJJ: monlhl $11.58 ;
of earlier complaints of unfair treatlhrff monlbl U0.5Cl. Elsewhere PUO; Jlx
ment on the part of wunarried taxmunlh8 PO.OO; three months $11.00. · ,
The Associated Press iJJ exclusively eotltled
payers. This was before vast
W the Ulf for publit ·atiou uf all mews d.Jspatches
of w, ~es entered or returned
numbes
crOOHed lo the uew&amp;pa~r atld aiBo the loeal
oew•·publlshed herein.
__
1 to the job market, when the savings

"..,

" There IS no plot. It's just a half how of
screeching tires.··

APSports
The Montreal Expos have been so
:1Jusy playing double-ll eaders this
-.mth its a wonder they've had the
-nergy to do anything else. After
:;::moving back into firs t place,
::bowever, Montreal found time for a
:utue celebratin g.
. .

econ()m ic all y

exciting.''

Names. • •
in the news

r

C&lt;J&lt;J l-ric h ,

2 ~!HI O

Office Hours: Monday-Friday 9 a.m . · 6 p.m .
Telephone: Office 304·675·6971 Home 675-6517

TRY THE NEW

Fans ordering League Own·
pionship Series tickets . by mail
should use the following procedures:
(I) Make check payable to "Cincinnati Reds, Agent"
(2) Order up to two S8 tickets for
onepme.
(3 ) State whether the order is for
the game of Tuesday, Oct. 2; Wednesday, Oct. 3; or any game
available.
(4) Mail order to : Cincinnati Reds,
Agent; Box 1976; Cincinnati, OH
452111.
(5) Add $2 handling charge to each
order.
(61 Enclose large seU-eddressed,
stamped envelope.
(7) Limit one order per pei'SOII.
(8) No order accepted il postmarked prior to Friday, Sept. 21.
Information oo the sale of possible
World Series tickets will be announced at a later date.

$32

Blnl'kwall .
P l u s~ ~

14
F. E .T and

old 1ire .

DOUBLE BELTED

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Size

Black White

n :.T.

Bi8- 14

536 I S38
37
39
38 l 40
42
44
43
46
47
49

$ 1. ~4

C&lt;S -14
E 7R · I~

. F78- 14
G78- 14
HiH- 1·1

BEGIN SATURDAY

In a goU match Tutisday at Riverside, Melga was bested by Wahafua
and Warren Local. Wahama shot a
167, and Warren Local edged out
Meigs by one stroke, 188-189.
.
The scorers for Wahama were: Ty
Rous!J 37, Jeff Arnold, 38, Randy
Pierce 41, Todd Kitchen 51, Jeff
Fowler42.
Splrers for Warren Local were:
Scott Wynn 38, Jinn Brant 48, Dave
Lane 50, Mark Aebl52, Kirk King 55.
Scorers for Meigs were: Scott
McKinney 43, J. R. Wamaley 48;
Fred Young 49, David Kennedy 49,
Brian Will 56.
Reserve scorers were: Wahama Wally Raynes 47, Chuck Stodola 61,
and Mark Fowler 62. Warren LocalNate Proctor 49, Malt Praetor 49.
Meigs - Tony Jewell, 46, Scott
Harrison 59.
Wednesday night at Oxbow,
Wahama came out
top of a
quadrangular match with a 184.
Belpre was second with a 166.
Warren was third with 181, and
Meigs was fourth with 191.
· The scorers for Wahama were: Ty
Rous!J 38, Jeff Arnold 38, Randy
Pierce 44, Jeff Fowler 44, Tod Kitchen 51.
.
Scorers for Belpre were: John
Turrlll39, Steve Legg 40, Mike Lewis
43, Jeff Higgins 44, Tony Eliopcltlll
48 ..
Scorers for Warren Loclll were:
Scott Wynn 41, Dave Lane 44, Mark
Staton 48, Jim Brant 50, Dave Cowell
51.
Scorers for Meigs · ere: Scott
McKinney 46, Fred Young 47, J . R.
Wamsley 47, David Kennedy 51,
Tony Jewell 54.
Reserve scorers were: WahamaWally Raynes 49. Warren - Nate
Proctor 41, Matt Proctor 41. Meiss _,
Scott Harrison 54, Brian Will 57.
Meiss is now 1..'i iliside the SEOAL
and 2-13 overall.

A i~- 1:1

The Middltp~rt Slo-Pitch Softball
triple-eliminatioo tournament wiU
begin at 10 a,m, Saturday with
Hockenbeny opposing Midwest
Steel. At 11:00 the Middleport
Rookies will play Mine No. 3, then at
12:00 Royal Crown wiU oppose City
Umits, and flnally at 1:00 Blue Tartan will play Mallohan Texaco.

Black
J 78- 14
S,i ze

2.2 1

F7 8- 15
G 78- 15

2.34

H7 8- 15

2.53
2.76

.178- 15

2. 01

L78- 15

White

$52
$43
46
44
47
48
51
50 i 53
52
55

F.E.T.
$3.02
2.45

2.59
2.82
3.06

3.11

Al l pnces plus tax and old tt re.

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Find out how you can use this
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We offer you a choice of calf
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Ask your Purina Dealer about
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IZI Purina..:

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�~-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Sept.

~-TheDailySentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, S&lt;&gt;pt. 21,1979

21, 1979

Homecoming held at Minersville church
Annual homecoming of the
Minersville United Methodist
Church was held Sunday and
featured , in addition to recognition

BASEBALL ·. SCOREBOARD
By The Associ•ted Press
AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST .

W.L. Pet. GB
9'1 S2 .656
90 62 .592 91f:z

Baltimore
Milwaukee
Boston

8S 66 .563 14

Detroit

82 71 .536 18
81 70 .536 18

New York
Clevel.!nd
Toronto

77 75

.507 22'1'

51 102 .33

California

Kansas City

Minnesota

WEST
83
110
79

Texas

77

70

49

.542

73 .523 3
74 .516 4

76

.SOJ

6

California 11. Kansas City 6
Games

Detroit (Rozema 4·3) at Boston

(Tudor 0·21
Cleveland

( Barker

6·SJ

at

Baltimore (Palmer 9· 1)
New York (Guidry 17·7) at Toron -

to (Underwood 8·151
Minnesota

(Koosman

MilwauKee CHassll-91

18·13)

at

Te)(as (Medich 9-7) at California
(Tanana 6-5)

Kansas City (Splittorff 13·17) at
Oakland (Langford 12·141

1S

35 1f,
2lf:z
12
191J:z

Pittsburgh

(Robinson

at

Philadelphia (Car lton 16·11)
St. Louis (Denny 7·111 at New
York (Falcone 6·13)
Cincinnati

(Seaver

Houston (Ric hard 16·131

15·6)

at

· Los Angeles (Hannahs 0-Ql at San
D iego (Eichelberger0·1)

New York at Toronto

St. Louis at New York
Montreal at Philadelphia

Detroit at Boston
Minnesota.at Milwaukee

HI

Chicago (McGlothen 11 ·3 or Krukow
9·9)
Montreal
(Palmer
9·2)
at

Only games scheduled

Saturday's Games
Pittsburgh at Chicago

San Francisco at Atlanta
Cincinnati at Houston

Tex"s at California

Los Angeles at san Diego

Kansas City at Oakland
Cleveland at Baltimore
Chicago at Seattle

Sundily 's G•mes

Sundily's Games
New York at Toronto
Cleveland a1 Baltimore
Minnesota at Milwaukee
Texas at California

V:z
11 V:z
12 1h

Monfreal6·2, New York 3-0
St. Louis2, Chicago 1
HoUstonJ, Atlanta 1
Cincinnati 8, San Diego S
Los Angeles 3, San Francisco 0
Friday's Ga.mes

Chicago (Trout 9·8) at Sea"le

(Parrott 13·111
Saturday's Games

Detroit at Boston

GB

63 90 .412 24
60 91 .397 26
Thursday's Games
Ph iladelphia 2, Pittsburgh 1

Thursday's Games
Minnesota J, New York 1
Toronto6, Boston 2
Baltimore 8. Detro i t~
Friday~s

US • • •lh H,·lo•n lluilt-1

NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST
W. L. Pet.
Montreal
91 59 .607
Pittsburgn
91 60 .603
St . Louis
80 71 .530
Philadelphia
80 73 .512
Chicago
77 75 .507
New York
56 95 .371
WEST
.87 66 .569
Cincinnati
Houston
8.4 68 .553
Los Angeles
7S 78 .490
San Francisco
68 86 .....2

San DII!IIO
Atlanta

..u. 15
63 90 .412 20
51 101 .340 31
67 u

Chicago
Seattle
Oakland ·

Helen Help

Kansas City at Oakland
Chicago at Seattle

B•sebilll At A Glance

Montreal at Phllodelphia
St. LOU iSat New YOrk
San Francisco at Atlanta
Pittsburgh at Chicago
Cinc innati at Houston
Los~Angeles at San Diego

TillS 'GIVEAWAY' MADE HER

ELDERLY 'TIIROWAWAY'
By Helen Bolle!
DEAR HELEN:
This is a warning to other old people : don't sign your property over to
your children, no matter how they
argue that it will save on inheritance
taxes.
I "gave" my house and furniture
to my daughter and her husband
with the understanding that I'd live
there with them until I died or
became so bad-&lt;&gt;ff they couldn't take
care of me.
Two years later, I'm quite ablebodied, but in a rest home. Naturally
. my daughter doesn't come to see me
- she 's too asharped. What's more,
they 've sold my house (for about
$100,000 ) and are moving away.
They explain that "traveling would .
be too hard on me."
I'm not a mean old biddy that
nobody can get along with. Many
friends visit me here so I'm not lonely, and my widow's Social Security
and pension pays my way (barely ).
But I know now I was very foolish
not to have a lawyer make up an
agreement so I'd be protected. And I
was foolish to think "living with the
children" would work. As soon as it
became "their" house, I was an intruder. - TOO LATE SMART (age
AN

113)

DEARTOOLATESMART :
Let's hope your letter shows other
elders that, no matler how much
they love their children, business
· matters should be conducted in
business-like fashion .
This includes lending money as
,
well
as giving away property.
Association Press by telephone.
NEW YORK (AP) - "Foul" says
Sometimes
trust is not enough! - H
"Yet the replacement umpires who
the Major League Umpires
war ked during the strike were
Assocation about labor practices
DEAR HELEN :
rewarded
with
three-year
involving salaries and frin ge
Regarding the "Dr. Jekyll - Mr.
benefits in the National Leagu•. guaran~ed contracts. The league Hyde" husband : you suggest that
gave them more than it ever will
"Fair" says the National League.
the woman 's aversion to her husgive us.
Richie Phillips, counsel for the
" It's the same for them as it is for band, dating back to almost Daywnpires association, met Thursday
the
. uniori mnpires," CUllen said·, One of their marriage might have
with NLRB representatives for six
stating the replacement umpires turned him bossy and Wlfesponsive ;
hours and charged the NL with five
and, after the divorce, "Don 't be
separate counts of discrimination • had two-year contracts covering surprised if he becomes a pussycat
1979-80.
against union wnpires.
Phillips ·also said th ere was in the anns of another woman."
The NLRB must now conduct an
discrimination against minor league · Maybe the wife had ample reason
investigation into the charges.
umpires who refused to work during ' to dislike her demanding husband,
Earlier in the season, the wnpires
the strike and that the league had right .from the start. Some people
association struck both the National
respond to a ugiver" by becoming
(~Ued to provide the union with
and American leagues, but the
evaluations of umpires that are !teller and better "takers." The
games went oo, with most of them
routinely made by supervisors, more the "giving" spouse tries, the
worked by non-major legue
managers and general· managers. wol'lle the marriage: Then if the give
wnpires.
The evaluations were part of the starts expecting a little return - givThursday's charges were denied
settlement that ended the strike last ing from Mr. Hyde, he may look for
by Blake Cullen, supervisor of
a new giver. And, of course, he 'll be
May , Phillips said.
wnpires for the National League.
Cullen denied the charge of happier with No. 2- until she starts
No charges were !Ued against the
discrimination
against minor league expecting some return for her efAL, but Phillips said it "has been
forts . - MRS. 27 YEARS, 4 KIDS,
umpires who had refused promotion
guilty of some of · the same
to the major leagues during the AND STIU.. TRYING
infractions, but the pattern of
DEAR MRS. 27 YEARS :
strike
and added, " I've never been
conduct has not continued
Complete
givers, in many cases,
asked fer employee evaulations.
throughout the season . The
And besides, the season 's not over , create insensitive takers. Too many
American League did not grant
now middle-aged people were inso
they're not in yet anyway."
extra vacation time to the non-w~ion
doctrinated
with the "90-10" theory :
Another umpires association
wnpires and didn't deduct rental car
A
successful
union is 90 percent the
charge was that the NL had granted
expense charges from the
woman
's
doing,
and if sbe married a
additional vacation time and related
paychecks of the regular umpires."
"difficult"
man,
she endured rather
benefits to non-union umpires while
The
umpires
association
than demanded change.
withholding tMIT! from umpires who
specifically charged the National
A good marriage incorporalf&gt;.s lovstruck.
League with discrimination in the
ing selfishness as well as giving.
areas of guaranteed salaries,
Spouses who always caved in to their
advancement opportunities for
ma~s because they "wouldn't have
minor league wnpires who honored
it any other way" might have changthe strike, vacation time ; wnpire
ed things yeal'8 ago with planned
evaluation and expense money .
assertiveness.
" Until this year, no union
Perhaps it still isn't too late , Mrs.
CINCINNATI (AP) - The
employee has ever been given more
'l/ Years. You're overdue for a little
Cincinnati Reds today began
than a one-year contract and there
"taking!''- H.
accepting mail orders fer sale of $8
was never any salary guarantees for
reserved seat tickets to the 1979
umpir es," Phillips told The
Got a problem? An adult subject
National League Championship
for discussion? You can talk it over
Series games at Riverfront Stadium.
in her colWlUl if you write to Helen
The Reds said orders of up to two
Batte!, care of this newspaper.
seats for -one game only will be
accep~d and must specify whether
HOCKNEY SHOW
tickets are fer Tuesday , Oct. 2,
TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) - An
Wednesday , Oct. 3 or any game
exhibition of 150 prints and drawings
·
available.
by English artist David Hackney
Game time is 8:30 on Tuesday,
will be shown at the Toledo Museum
Oct. 2, and 3:15 p.m. on Wednesday,
of Art through Oct. 14.
Oct. 3.
The museum says the show,
The Reds will charge a $2 handling
"Travels With Pen, Pencil and Ink,"
charge per order and request an
surveys Hackney's career as . a
enclosed large stamped , self
printmaker and draftsman from
addressed envelope.
1962 'to 1977.
'
The Reds said checks should be
It says Hackney's sub jects are
made payable to "Cincinnati Reds ,
"actual persons ... and locations
Agent."
encountered either first hand or
Address is: Cincinnati Reds,
through literature, art or magazine
Agent, Box 1976, Cincinnati, Ohio,
and newspaper illustrations."
45201.

Umpires yell. 'foul'

NL championship
tickets on sale

The Rev. Harvey Koch, pastor,
of senior citizens and former
and his wife were recognized as was
ministers, the dedication of flags, a
the Rev. Ri~ Jarvis, fonner
piano, and a sound system.
The
all - pastor, and his wife.
The Rev. Mr. Koch presented the
day celebration ' began with Sunday
dedication service for the new
school at 9 a.m. under tbe directiun
American and Christian flags, given
of KeMy Wiggins, superintendent,
· by the United Methodist Women ; the
and worship service at 10 a.m.
piano given in memory of Mert and
The afternoon program followed a
basket dinner and opened with con- Edna Wiggins, Bradford Maag, and
gregational singing of "How Great the Adolph Grueser family; and the
sound system given in memory of
Thou Art." Senior citizens honored
~ . Otto Hartenbach and Pearl
and presented ~sag~ and boutonPhUllps.
nieres were Sadie Brown, .Elsie
During tbe afternoon program, the
Forbes, Ethel Stewart, Fannie
choir sang "What a Glad Reunion
Phillips, Margaretta Wise, Gladys
Day." Featured singers were the
Hood, Hazel McCullum, Rita
Rev. · and Mrs.' Wendell Stutler
RllllS&lt;!ll, Stella Grueser, Gertrude
MitChell, lillie Starcher, Zona anil Duane Stutie~ accompanied by
Withrow, Rolland Rwrunell, otto Paula Swabel. Other music was by
Rolland RIDIIIIlell, Myrna Lowe,
Hartenbach, and Hosmer Roush.

Hot Hitter wins ·
annual Brown Jug
By GEORGE STRODE
AP Sports Writer
DELAWARE; Ohio (AP ) -Herve
Filion says he felt just like Ben Hur ,
standing in his sulky behind Little
Brown Jug winner Hot Hit~r and
waving his whip to the cheering
crowd .
Filion was taking a victory lap
Thursday befor e 41,027 at the
Delaware
(Ohio)
County
Fairgrounds, scene of Hot Hitter 's
straight vic\(Jries in 1:57:1-5 and 1::&gt;5
3-S in the middle leg of 3-year-old
pacing's Triple Crown.
"I've ooly done it half a dozen
times in my career. The first time
was in Montreal in 1968 just after I
had scored the most wins in a
season, 1 ' said the driver who now
owns an unprecendented 6,600
victories .
"Just like Ben Hur ?
"Yeah, just like him," Filion told
a cluster of newsmen in the·winner's
circle. " I love that picture. I saw it
six times."
But you could bet Ben Hur had no
horse pulling his chariot like Hot
Hitter, now the richest single seaS&lt;Jn
harn ess horse in history . His
ea rnings of $716,939 eclipses
Abercrombie's previous standard of
$703,260 set in 1978.
Perhaps his train er, Lou Meittinis,
describes this newest pa cing
sensation best .
" I've never had this kind. of horse
before," said the veteran Meittinis.
" Last year I 'bandied him like a
piece of gold. I never foresaw him
developing into tbe kind of horse he
is."
The Strike Out colt will carry a 1().
race winning streak this week at the
Red Mile in Lexingtoo, Ky ., where
Meittinis will send him after the alltime record for a :&gt;-year-old pacer.
Falcon -Aimahurst has that mark,
1:52 2.0, in a 1978 time trial on the
same mile track.
Af~r Hot Hitter's neck victory
over first division winner Tijuana
Taxi in the raceoff, Filioo had only
roe regret. " I wanted to go foc the
(half-mile track ) world record but
lhe track was a. bit off. I really would
have been disappointed if I got beat.
"This is the best :&gt;-year-old I ever

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Cathenne Welsh agreed to help with
the highway safety program.
Acknowledged at the meeting was
a gift of hospital equipment from,
Miss N~cy Reed on behalf of her
latemother,Mrs. Elmer Reed.
Plans were made for the .observanceof National BPW Week, Oct.
'12.-'l/. Mrs. A!wilda Werner attended
a dinner on Saturday night at the .
Holiday lrm, Gallipolis,with Mrs.
Lucy Earwood, member of the
Gallipolis Club and District 17 director, Delores Chambers, past. state
president; Loretta Jones, state
recording secretary ; and Fran

Ripley, first vice president of Ohio.
On Sunday the district meeting
was held and at that time Mrs. Edith
Forest of the Middleport Club was
honored as the only charter member
attending. She was presented a
.flower and a pin by Mrs. Ripley.
Five membel'8 of the Middleport
Club atlended : Mrs, Korn, Ml'8.
Wel1)er, Mrs. Terrie Walker, Mrs.
Forest, and Mrs. Marjorie Goett.
Guests at the Monday night meeting
were Sheriff and Mrs. Proffitt, Ml'8.
Margaret Parker, and Mrs. Kathryn
Werner. Next meeting .will he Oct.
15.

There will be plenty of good oldtime musi~ during the Country
Festival which will be held at the
Mason County Farm Museum,
Saturday and Sunday, Sept. '12. and
23, according to Frank Thomas,
Chainnan of tile Music committee .

MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE

A group of outstanding local
groups will participate in the two
days d. festivities. Burl Tennent,
Frank Thomas and Gewanna John ·
son will open the program at 10 a.m.
Saturday. Linda Rust and Kendra
Ward of Gallipolis will play lwnmered dulcimers . Dulcimers are a
unique ·instrument havng been
developed many years ago, and they
are the forerunners of all stringed
instrwnents.
Everett Wedge and his band and
Bernard CoMelly and his band will
pllly and also play for the square
dance Saturday, beginning at 3 p.m.
D. s. Hall, known to many as he has
played the organ for many years at
the Mason County Fair, will be here
•ilnd play at 2 p.m. Hall says be is
looking forward to seeing many of
hill old friends during the Festival.
· Robin Kessinger, an outstanding
guitarist, will play both Saturday
'and Sunday .

on

· MASON - The Country Kitchen at
the Mason County Farm Museum
will provide good food during the
Festival.
Mrs. Ruth Roush, Chainnan of the
kitchen committee, says that the
menu will include beans and combread, hot dOf!s, pit-roasted lwn,
sandwiches, coffee, pop and ice
cream.
The kitchen will be open at I a.m.
on Saturday and Sudnay, and will
close at 6 p.m.

99 MILL ST.

AotterShop
W -511 1

~------------------------------,·

f

N. W. COMPTON. O.D·.

:

I

OPTOMETRIST

1

l

OFFICE HOURS : 9 : 30 to 12, 2 to 5 (CLOSE AT NOON
ON THURS . ) - EAST COURT ST ., POMEROY .

I

L------------~--~--------------·
(Bacll In t l - for CHRIITMAIJ

4*C::IWI1r"-ir
'-----The Saving Place _ _ _ _..,

SEPT. 19 - SEPT 23.
WEDNESDAY · SUNDAY

2-Poses, 18 Color Prints,
One Fantastic Kmart Price!

•l'

That adds up to a Perfect Portrait Package

• All lift welcome. • Groups $1 .00 e:dra per person. • Comp.lfe ·
tht viilue 1tless than 61c .1 picture. • Scenic ;m d creil ti~e bile• around&amp;
available. • hst deli ve ry. • htisf1ction Ahn y• or full depo1it cheer·
fully rtlunded.

"Ask aboUt our exciting Echo Portrait" tM

2-8x10's
2-5x7's
10-wallet size ..~~·;::.:~-::::..
4- color charms

18 prints just

${0.96

.

plus tax

. r~f{~itlt n

f!rr
"l!fFR~ ~
~ ~ ~ ~ ~

••

·.~....

~

With a· name like Poulan. getting
people to ·say the .name right may
be ask ing a lot.

CHRISTMAS
COLOR SPECIAL! .

-

'W'i'

On the ot her hand , p~ople ask an
aWful lot of our saws. Qu ick start ing . Extra cutting power . OUiet
operation. Beautiful styling. Ourability. Aflo rdability. And we deli·
ver all that plus a lot ot other stan dard features . no matter wh 1ch
Poulan saw they b~y . From the
POulan Micro XXV nght on up to
our Pro models.

Cut your own firewood
and save money!

.......

Po.. ZI

"''Y

h .. all

PHOTOORAF'HEA HOUAI:

R. C. BOTTLING CO.
Mill Street

992:3542 or 992·3344

185 UPPER RIVER RD., GALLIPOLIS, OH.
'I

MASON, W.VA.
1 am pleased to have Connie Swisher joining the staff on
Thurs., Sept. 20th.

SPfCIAL THIS MONTH
U Nl PERM Reg. 522.50 NOW $18.50
SENSOR CURLY Reg . $28.00 NOW $23.50
SENSOR BODY Reg. $30.00
NOW $27.50
Price Unless Condition &amp; Treatment Needed :

TO BEHELD
The Young Adult Class of the
Women's Department of the
Reorganized Church d. Jesus Christ,
LaUer Day Saints, Portland-Racine
Branch, will have an old fashioned
bean supper at the church on Sept.
29, vith serving from 5 to. 7:30p.m.
Everyone is welcome.

HUNTINGTON, W. Va . - "LocoMotion Vaudeville," an acrobatic .
clown !rio, will present a free, public
performance at Marshall 'Univetslty
at noon Tuesday, Sept. 25, on the
Memorial Student Center Plaza.
Sponsored by the Contemporary
Arts Committee ct. Marshall 's
Student Activities and Organizations
Office, " Loco-Motion " features
Bounce, the clown, along with Cyrus
P. Kiskii III and Flip, who combine
juggling, humor, acrobatics and
hand-body balancing with the
imaginatioo of the mime.
Currently on its third national
tour, "Loco-Motion" was one of the
features d. Marshall 's Homecoming
1978 celebration. Trio of performers
also has taught at the Ringling
Brothers-Barnum and Bailey Circus
Clown College and has appeared on
ABC-TV 's Wide World ct. Sports.

FROSTINGS, Reg. $20
NOW $18
HAIR CUT, BLOW DRY CONDITION
FOR GUYS &amp; GALS Reg . $8.50
NOW $7.50 &amp; $6.50
Individual Styling &amp; Hair Care Where the Newest Looks
Are Yours .

CALL 773-5404

Gospel Meeting
SEPTEMBER 23 to 28, 1979
~
.
. MAURICE BARNETI, Speaker
.

llutt••rm•l mttl M11i11 .'it•·••••l
l'(lMEHOY . OHIO

and

SUNDAY TIMES-SENTINEL
FOR ONLY

Poulan

'22.00

, I U.-t4. SN
•tom•uc:

~,,,,..

lHEY WILL
RECEIVE
9 MONTHS OF
THE HOMETOWN
· NEWSPAPER BY MAIL

Poulan

.....,.-sN

SEE
PouL~

TEAM
IN

IUfOmll K:
)l ltAf

Joulan ·
•

CUic16"SN

Counfc:lft!il
auomaht
Otlll'lt

SN models are eouiooed
wtth sprocke.l nOse bars.

,.

~RAVELY TRACTOR ·SALES &amp; SERVICE and WILCOX SERVICE

'Aiddleport, Ohio

BEAN SUPPER

JANErS HAIR-GO-ROUND

THE DAILY SENTINEL

IU10ifll(t(

Sponsored by:

Wed. -Sat, 10to1-2to6
thurs. -Fri. 10 till- 2 to 5:30 - 6-8
Sun, 1 to 5

AAUW
GUEST NIGHI'
Middleport-PomeroY Area Branch
of the American Assoclatioo of,
University Women will hOld a guest
night on Tuesday at the Riverboat
Room ci the Athell.9 County Savings
and Loan Co. beginning with a 6:30
potiuck dinner. Beverage will be furnished. Each member is asked to
take a guest, food and lable servire
for two. Aprogram is being planned.

· Festival activities. 'ro order apple c,·~m&gt;r,
or 992-7886. The cost is $2.50 per quart;
your own clean jars.
··

WHY NOT SEND ALONG

...,.-sN

FREE COFFEE, DOUGHNUTS &amp; SOH DHINI&lt;S
SAVE YOUR R.C .• NEHI. UPPER 10, DIET RIT
uAD'S ROOT BEER BOTILE t:APS FOR CHARITY

APPLE BUTI'ER TIME - Jerome Cook and
!)lythe'Theiss will be busy Oct. 5 preparing apple butter the "old-fashioned" way as part of the Center's Fall

[liS

........ K

Otl ....

Olltftt

At Populan . we figure the more
we put Into 9ur saws . the less
people have to put into c uttl~g .
Maybe that's wtiy mo re and more
peoplti keep asKing for our nws .
And ta ,long as they keep ~oing
· tMt.
can say the name any
way they likt.

......____,

Performance slated

~in JJebi.Qrn.l
aruL~iL~
Pomeroy

UMWTOMEET

'

County Festival planned at
Mason County Museum

cise;

The Athens District United ·
Methodist Women will hold their annual meeting on Sunday at the Immanuel Church, Logan, beginning at
2 pm. A social hour will begin at I
p.ril. The 19tl program material will
be on display.

had ."

Hot hit~r , owned by Solomon-Katz
Stables and S.A.J . Stables of Rye,
N.Y., and Al~nnan Stables of
Paramus, N.J ., now has scored 22
victories in « Starts for earnings of
$847,776 in his two seasons.
His Jug victory ended Happy
Motoring's bid to become the sport's
first Triple Crown winner since Most
Happy Fella in 1970. , Happy
Motoring, the winner of the first leg,
the Cane Pace, finished a badly
beaten seventh in the raceoff.

RIDENOUR'S

RIO GRANDE - ExerCising the
total you is the object rJ a workshop
to be offered at Rio Grande College
and Conununity College.
Bob Hwnphreys, instructor d the
psychocallsthenics (a service mark
d. Arica Institute, Inc.), t"JJlained
the workshop as "the integration rJ
mind, body, and emotions in lwle
with each other for stronger exerIn callsthe!lics, movement 1.!
done by muscle , but in
psychocalbthenics movement is
controlled by the breath, '' he added.
The workshop, offered through the
Rio Grande Office d. Cootinuing
Education, will meet Monday ·
through Thursday, September 24 to
October 4. Times are 6-7:15 p.m. and
participants will meet in Allen Hall
Room 1 on the college campus.
Registratioo fee is SIS and par·
ticipants are encouraged to wear
IO&lt;llle fitting clothes.
" The
benefits
of
psychocalistheniCI are nwnerous,"
Hwnphreys said. "Our nonnal aperience in a technological oociety
causes stress and tension. To
eliminate stress and tension we can
use psychocalisthenics."
Those persons Interested in
registering foc the worblwp should
ca11 Bernie Murphy. Office d. Continuing Education, 24~. ext. 255
or atlend the September 24 ctaas
session.

~

~

Sheriff James Proffitt was guest
speaker at the Monday night
meeting of the Middleport Business
and Professional Women's Club held
at the Columbia Gas Co. office. ·
Introduced by Becky Mohler,
legislative cl\;;irmail for the club,
the county official talked on legislation and how it effects the wprkings
cl hill department and discussed
some local problems relating to drug
incidents.
Mrs. Frances Louise Davis presided at the meeting. Reports were
given by Mrs. Barbara Roush oo
financial projects, Mni. Janet Korn
on nurses
Mrs .
. . ... -·scholarship.
.

Workshop offered

•••

NOW ON SALE

Pomeroy,

A mild controversy marred the
opening division, won by Tijuana
Taxi by one-hall length over 99-1
longsh« Oil Strike in 1:57.
General Star, co-favored wtth
Tijuana Taxi in that division, was
demoted from third to sixlh by the .
judges foc stretch in~rference with
Alaskan Strike.
Retired New York Ranger
defenseman Rod Seiling, whose
father, Donald, owns General Star,
marched to the judges' quarters
atop the grandstand roof demanding
an explanation .
Presiding Judge Robert Steele
showed Seiling lhe race !Urns five
times and said afterward, "It's the
rules of harness racing . He's
(General Star) always set behind
the offended horse ( Alaskan
Strike )."
Seiling told newsmen , " I guess
that 's the rule. We have to' live with
it. It 's unf&lt;X'Iuna~ . The horse pays
lhe penalty."
In the raceoH, Striking Force
fin !Shed thrid and was followed by
Set Point, Maple Lanes Strike; Good
To See You, Happy Motoring and Oil
Strike .
Hot Hit~r ·s payday was $83,788,
while $47,555 Wl!flt to Tijuana Taxi
and $23,777 to Set Point from the
record purse of $226,4:&gt;5.

'&lt;:'Yi

FOSTORIA
COIN GLASS

Of}'•

Mrs. Swabel, Kenny Wiggins and
MaryBentz.
·
Flowel'8 to decorate the' church
were given by Mrs. Hiram Flaher
and by Mrs. Rae Reynolds in
memory of Brad Maag.
Among tiiiR atlendlng from outof-the county were Mr. and Mrs. Ed·
die Fatley, Newport, Mich., Mr. and
Mrs. KIWI)' Farley, Oleylon, W.
Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Blll Parker, Columbus ; Mr. and Mrs. Rolland Rummell and daughters, Colmnbus; Mr.
and Mrs. Dick Lowe, Pickerington ;
Mr. and Mrs. Dick ' Rummell,
Omaha, Neb.; Paula Swatzel,
Marietta ; Ullie Starcher and
daugbter, Newporl; Mrs. Pat Quinn,
McConnelsvllle ; Mrs. Koch, mother
rJ the pastor, Cincinnati, and Mr.
and Mrs. Victor Jarvis, lancaster.

DOXOL SERVICE

LMPERIAL
GLASSWARE
AND

Middleport B&amp;PW meets Monday

To Be
At:
GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES &amp; SERVICE
210 Condor St.
992-2975

THIS
OFFER
GOOD
AT ANY
COLLEGE
IN THE
UNITED
STATES

&lt;::/:

~~~
CLIP &amp; MAIL
The Daily Sentinel, Court St., Pomeroy, 0. 4576,9

NAME ••••••••••.•.••••••••...•••.....••• •••••••••••••.••••••
ADDRESS •••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••

OFFER
EXPIRES
.
OCTOBER

15, .

I •••• 0 •••• 0 I •••••

CITY ......................................................... .
STATE •••••••••••••••• •••• •••••• ••. •••• ZIP CODE .••••• .••• :

0
0

SORRY,

CHECK .... ,........ 0 MONEY ORDER ........... ..

NO

AMT............ ......................................... .

REFUNDS

�6- The Datly Sentinel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Fnday, Sept 21, 1979
For Siile

For Sale

COAL
li MESTONE
sand
gro..-el ca lcium chlonde fe r
t tll t.er dog food ond a ll type s

BALDWIN PIANO 1 year ol d
Ca ll cr e d •t deporlment
61 A · ~&lt;n 5112

of salt hc e ls.or Salt Works
Inc

~2

E Mo tn St

-

Pom eroy

• -- -

BAL DWIN organ • ye ll&amp; old

389l

Call cred• t
bl45925122

WINTE R PO TATOES C W Pro
!ftU fo rm Port land OH $8 o
hundred and IS o hund red

WESTING HO USG UP RIG HT
f reeutrwt th qi..IICklr eeze un tl
Con be seen '"servt ce a t 121
7th Ave
Mtddleport OH

DUR OC BOAR S
Purebred
Reedsvttle 61 4 378 63 11
11 FOOT O F wroug ht 1ron
m g Be1ge ca rpe t 8.10
down cetling light Mov te
le&lt;:to r and scree n Afte r 5
7.&amp; 2 2020

depa rtment

Pnce S50
FIRE WOO D lor sole Now tak
Wil l de l'"" '
tn g ord e rs
•
7.c2 2056
BIG BEN D CB cl ub ve st S•ze
12 '192 3~6

ro d
Pull
pr oco il

POTATOES Red Pon ttac Ken
n ebec $8 p er 100 lb Smal l $.c
per 100 lb 3 mdes wast of
Oa rwm be tween G old Rtdge
ond CR U o n TR 1~ 5 Ceq l
l101bon

GiveAway
BEAUTIFUl HAIRY laced blac k
a nd wh 11e female Benp type
Humane Soc1ety 992 6260

ClARK RESID ENCE Syrocu u
Corne r Cr ooks o nd ~th 3
p• ece bedr oom set k ttch e n
!a ble 4 chmn ~ dtmng room
ch01 rs wall mtrro r co rd tabl e
r od1o, 2 lamps TV R C A Call
W2 3083 or 992 2720

TO GOOD home two block
pupp1es Wtll grow mto Iorge
dog Coll992 3580
TO GOOD HOME , I m&amp;dtum
s tze brown and whtte do g
Also wdl gtve dn g house Call
9'12 3560

t:: ARK PINE dmmg room table

w•th e xtra leaf and~ captoms
IQif S 992 5083

I

KITTENS KITTENS Ktllens All
s •zes and types Humane
Soc •ety 99'2 6260

l1J( 1S RUG $15 992 5S3A

197 8
STARCRAFT
bo ot
C:. tordeck 19h 140 h p Mer
r ury eng m e and tr01ler Ex
l !lent all purpo se boot Pnc
r J to sell 992 21 96

LEGAL NOTICE
Not tce ts her eby gtven
th at the Public UtilltteS
Comm tSStOn o f O htO h as
sched uled a public hear ing
r elatt ng to proposals by
T he 'Newar k
Te lephone
Co m pa ny (Case No 79 595
TP A T A ) ,
Un•ted
Telephone Company ot
Oh•o (Case No 16 451 T P
PEX)
and
G eneral
Te le phone Co m pany of
OhtO ! Case No 79 702 TP
ATA) to mod tfy thetr
respe c t iv e
t a n ffs
to
p rov1d e for a charge
a SSOCiate d With mst1tUt1ng
Opt1onal Off Pea k Toll Ser
v 1ce The Co mm lss ton has
determ 1ned that thtS may
be un1 u st or un reason able
a nd
a c cord 1ngly
has
sc hed u led these matters
for publt c
hea rmg on
T ue sday , Oc tobe r 16, 1979
at 9 30 a m at 180 East
Broad Street , Co lumbus,
Ohto At the hear1ng al l
partte s of mterest will be
g1ven an opport un1ty to
present evtdence matenal
to the •ssues m these cases
Further .ntormatton may
be obtatned from oav •d M
Polk Sec retary
THE PUBLIC UT ILITIES
COMMISSION OF OHIO
lBO East Broad Street
Columbus, Oh10 43215
BY
Oavtd M
Polk,
Sec retary
(9 1 21. ltc

PUBLIC NOTICE
For Rent
Buc keye
H il ls Ho c kmg
Va tt e v R eg tonal Develcp
COU NTR V MOBI LE Ho !Tie Pork
m e nt 01s tr 1c t a nn oun ces
Rou te 33 nor th of Pom"roy
the avatl a brllty of fu nds u n
Lorge lots Coll992 747CJ
de r Tttle I l l of the O lder
Am enca ns ot 1965. as
am e nd ed
to •m pl eme nt
3 AN D 4 RM lurms hed and un
se rv ice provts1on s of th a t
furntshe d
opts
Phone
Ac t Pr torttt es for fn nd m g
992 543-4
m Me tQS Co u nty are
A
N u tn t to n
M ea ts
O NE BE DROO M opts Con tact
{congreg at e an d
ho m e
Vtlloge Man o r 992 7787
deltve r e d)
B Nutrtfto n Su ppo rt Ser
VICeS
SENIOR CITIZENS 1 bed room
C Soct al Sent tces
In
o pts
for
re nt
Re nt a l
forma t ton a nd Ref e r ra l,
os
s1
s
ton
c
e
a
v
a
i
la
bl e
Outreac h, Tra nsportatton ,
992 7721
Esc ort Res1 dent1af Repa 1r ,
c ounse ling , Prot ecttve Ser
12 • 60 2 bed roo m mob1le
E mergen c {.
v •ces
ho
me Roc me o reo 991 5858
Ass1stan ce , Em ptoy m en,
Heal t h
Servt ces,
APT IN Po meroy ·3 r ooms and
Edu c at1on ,
DI SC OUnt
bath 992 5621 aft e r 5 30
Rec reat1o n, Vol unt ee rs ,
Cent e r
Ac 1tv•t• es
a nd
HAVE ROOMS an d boa rd
Legal Servt ces
Alas wtll core fo r el d erly peo
0 Mutt. Purpose Sen tor
ple m our ho me m 73 14
Ce nter Fac tltttes
Proposals are welcome
ONE SMALL lrmler 1 o r 2 per
fr o m any e ltg1ble publt c
sons Clf/2 7785
ag e ncy or pnvate non
proftt
c orporatiOn
FURNISHED THREE bed room
Proposals
must
be
rec e 1ved by 3 00 P M ,
troll er wtth washer and dryer
November 2, 1979
No pets
no
c hddren
Appltcat ton forms and
949 22S3
additional
111format•on
may be obtame d by cattmg I
or wntmg
( !
Saturday, Sept 22
Buckeye
Htlls Hockmg
Valley Re5ponat Develop
m e nt D1 s tnct
.410 St Clatr Bu.tdmg
216 Put nam Street
Berntce Bede Osol
Man e tta , OH 45750

(9) 21 , 28, 21 c
IN THE COMMON
PLEAS COURT,
PROBATE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF SET
T~EMENT
OF
AC ·
COUNTS,
PROBATE
COURT, MEIGS COUNTY ,
OHIO
Accounts and vouchers of
the
following
named
ftdtcuanes have been ftled
•n the Probate Court, Metgs
County , Ohto for approval
and settlement
CASE No 21960 F'"al
and Dtstrtbuttve Account of
Bernard V Fultz, Executor
of the Estate of Mary A
Park, OEfceased
CASE NO 22279 F'"al
and Otstnbuhve Ac count of
Pau l A Smart, Executor of
the Estate of frene T
Cross, Deceased
CASE NO 22091 F '"a/
and Otstrtbuttye Account of
Rebecca J Brodenck, Ad
mmtstratnx of the Estate
of
Ruth
E
Steele,
Deceased
CASE NO 20199 N•nth
Annual Account of Paul D
Sturgeon, Guardtan of John
o Sturgeon, Paul w
Sturgeon ,
Dwtght
E
Sturgeon, and Mary L
Sturgeon,Mtnors
CASE NO 2210-4 F •nal
and O!strtbut •ve Account of
J B 0 Bnen, Exec utor of
the Estate of Nett1e Smtfh,
Deceased
Unless exceptions are
f1led thereto, satd accounts ..
wtll be for heanng before
satd Court on the 22nd day
of October, 1979 at wh1ch
t1me satd a c counts Will be
cons1dered and conttnued
from day to day unttl
ftnally d1sposed of
Any person mterested
may ftl e wntten exceptions
to satd accounts or to mat
ters pertatmng
to
the
executton of the trust, not
less than ftve days pnor to
the date set for hearmg

1974 CHEVY SUBURBAN. C-20 •••••••••••••$1695
AT PS, PB , Rack
1978 CHEVY IMPALA SEDAN 4

DR ••••••••$3895

Red , 4dr , AT , Atr , P S, PB
1978 FORD PINTO STATIONWAGON •••••••$2995
4 cyl , AT , whtte('eal n•ce car

'

1977 CHEVY NOVA 4
6 cyt , PS, PB , Air

$3695

DR

1976 AMC GREMLIN ••••••••••••••••••••• $1895
Auto , rack, P S , 6 cyl
1976 FORD TORINO ••
1975 FORD

$1795

MAVERICK..:~r;:~~ •••••••••••• $1995

1975 HORNET ST

. WGN 6 cyl A or, AT, rack
$1495
· l •••eeeeeeeee•••••
AT, P S, PB
$1895
DR •••e•eeeeeeeeeeeeee

1975 FORD LTD,
1975 FORD

".~~ ·:.u!~.a~~ ••••••••••

LTD

2

AT, A or, PS, PB, V•nyl top $1895
DR ••••••e•••e••••e••••

1975 MONTE CARLO LANDAU TOP •••••••• $2995
AT , PS, PB , A or
25,000mlles,AT,PS,PB
$2595
1976 FORD RANCHERO ·······••eeee••••••
1975 FORD SUPER

CAB-AC ••• ~ ••••••••• $n95

Robert E Buck
JUDGE
COMMON PLEAS
COURT, PROBATE
DIVISION. MEIGS
COUNTY , OHIO
19 ) 21 ltc
PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF ELMONT L
BOSWORTH, DECEASED
Case No. 22_,_777
NOrlCEOF
APOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On Sepf 4, 1979, m the
Me tgs county
Probate
Court, Case No
22 ,777,
John T
Hol1tday
and
Eugene Holltday , Box 60,
Dexter , Oh10 45725 were ap
potnted Co executors of the
es t at e
of
Elmont
L
Bosworth 1 decease d , tate of
Dexter , Ont o 45726
Robert E Buck
Probate Judge -

TAGGED ,

Dual a.r cond , am fm built 1n C B, P S , P B, ttlt whee l, c r use con
trol Sharo
6

:.·:!! !!~~~.$1895

19/5

CHRYSLER CORDOBA ••••
Atr, auto , P S , P B , ttltwheel. P s e ats, P wmdows

1975 BUICK LESABRE. ••••••••
4 Dr , atr , auto , P S , P B
1975 FORD GRAN TORINO ••••
2 Or , a tr , auto , P S , P B
197·5 PLYMOUTH DUSTER
Stant6. 3 s pd P S
1974 CHEVY MALIBU 2
V 8. AT, PS , PB

::!!2:~s.~~~-$_1695

(9 ) 7, 14, 21 .

~·::~':!~~~. $1495

DR ••••••••••••••

1974 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX ••

5

1095

::!!~::s.~~~.$1495

SJ Senes , loade d

..

.'1! 2:!~~~ ~95

1974 CHEV. IMPALA CUSTOM ••":•

Was $149S NOW
$895
1974 FORD TO RINO ••••••••••••••••••••••
:l or , atr , auto , P

s

5
1973 PONTIAC GRAND AM ••••••••••••••• 895
VB. AT , P S, PB A.r
1973 CHEVY NOVA 6
3 Sp , hatc hba c k, littl e r o ugh

CYL •••••••••••••••• $395

1971 CAMERO .• eeeeee••eeeeee•ee•eeee•ee'l695
Fac tor y bore 302 , A T , P S, PB A tr , AM FM, 8 t r ack
1969 DODGE DART ••••••••••••
6 cyl , auto , P S , 2 Or

~·::!'!:.o.~. ~295

1969 BUICK LESABRE :.D:••••••••••••••••• $295
1965 CHEVY IMPALA

SS ••••••••• ~~~::•••. $295

TRUCKS
24

1974 FORD WINDOW VAN ••••
11 Pa sse nger

,

1973 CHEVY C10

:::: • :s.~~~. 51695

CU~~-·JM ••••••••••••••••$595

RIEBEL'S USED CARS
51. Rl.

7

S ee Roger R tebel
985 -3345 or 667·3463
Tuppers Platns , 0.

1 mtle north

3tc

19) 19, 20 21 ,

Ct ~ rk

r

Social Calendar

FRIDAY
SHADE IUVER Lodge 4f&gt;3, F and
AM, Chester, Fnday, 7 p.m. Work m
master mason degree . All master
masons mvtled
PAST MATRONS, Evangeline
Chapter, Order of the Eastern Star,
7 30 p.ln Frtday rught at the temple.
SATURDAY
, SMORGASBORD SatW'day from 5
to 8 p m. at Wtlkesville Pythian
Ststers hall, children, $1 25 , adults,
$3. Proceeds wlU help pay for
building.
KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS, monthly
meeting, 6 30 p m Brmg covered
dish, table servtce •
MONDAY
RUTLAND GARDEN CLUB, 7 30
p m Monday rught at the home of
Mrs. Eugene Atkins and MiSs Ruby
Diehl Mrs Marvin Wilson to pre·
sent, "Plenty of Bulbs."
TUESDAY
DREW WEBSTER POST 39,
American Leg10n Auxihary, 7. 30
p.m. Tuesday. Dorothy Jenkins,
mus1c cha1nnan, to present the pro·

gram

1972 l YNN HAVEN l~ x6 S 3
bedroom
1970 Vm dale 121(63 w1th e x
pondo 2bed•
) 970 New Moon 12x60 3 bed r
1973 Skylme 12x55 2 bedroom
1972 Sononzo 12•52 '1 b&amp;dr
B &amp; S MOBILE HOME SALES
PT
PLEA S ANT
WV
JO.il -675 ~42-&lt;t

services Offered
NOW HAUliNG ltmeston8 10
M tddleport Po emroy ar ea
Cal l fo r fr ee e s t tmote
367 71 01
PA INTI NG AND sandl;tlostmg
Free eSf1mol es Coll9,.9 2686

FO UR FAMILY Go•age Solo
O ne day on ly Sot , Sept 22 ot
lo47 South 3rd Ave . Middleport Ohto 8 om 0 2 wh ite
uniforms s1ze 16 1n good con
d1t1 on Chtldren s doth81 Ntce
dress es and many ttems
YARD SAlE Thurs and Frt
9-5 761 Ash 51 , Middleport

HOUSE WORK done m e ven
tngs a nd Saturdays
Co li
7 42 3119

Yard Sale
YARD SALE Frt and Sat Sept
21 22 Motn St Rutland at
Gold 1e Graham s New and
used ttems I 0 om to 6 pm

DOZER END loader brus h
hog
Wtl l do basemen ts
po nds brush limbe r la nd
cl llfOrtng
Charles Butch er
742 2940

YARD SAlE Fn and Sot 10
om ttl ? at Buck s rest dence
129 Mulberry Ave Pomeroy
Stereo stand wtnler coots
cl oth ing children s women s
and men s and m11C ttems

For Lease
lARGE BUSINESS bUt ldmg m
Pomeroy fo r Iees e Fo rmer
Worner Barber ond Beauty
Shbp Also 3 bedroom opt
u.pstotrs furmshed or un
furmshed 99'1 2528 evemngs

GARAGE SAlE Sept 20-22
ac ross form M1nersv1lle Boll
F1eld

GARAGE SALE
3 lom•ly
Ga rage Sale Saturday Sept
22 lasts all dov Clothes and
lots of mise ItemS Da ve
Grueser res tdenct beside
Soltsbury Elementary School ,
Old Rt 33 PI-tone 992.3564
YARD SALE tn progress All
s ttes
cl o th tng
cu rtoms
bedspreads lamp1 sew ing
machtne also (8 I mt le wett
of Ceder on CR 4
GARAGB SAlE Fndoy and
Saturday 9 ' Green house
bes ide State H1ghwoy Garage
on Rt 7 MtsC

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT
BARGAIN

HUNTERS

W'Birthday
September 22, 1!179
E&lt;plore furt her the poss1btli lles
of pulling some ol your more
creattve Ideas to work for you
thiS commg year You hav e the
pote nfla l to deo'le la rge matenal
rewards !rom them
VIRGO (Aug :23-Sepl 2:2)
Yot:J re en title d to do sometht ng
mce for yoursell so a sma ll
shopptng spree mtg ht be the
answer See tf thaf 1tem you ve
bee n wan hng could be work ed
mto your budget Dtscover W1lh
whom you best get along roman
ttcal ly by sendmg for yo ur As tra
Gra ph Letter whiCh beg1ns an e w
w1th your btrth day Matl $ 1 lor
each to Astra Graph 8011 41!!9
Aad1o C1ty Sta t1on N Y 100 19
Be su re to spec1ty b1rtt1 date
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct 23) Th1s 1s
one ol !hose days where you
have that extra someth ng wh1 ct1
e nab les yo u to li ght up a room
when you enter It rl be dllf1cult
lor yo u nol to be admtred
SCORPIO (Ocl 24-Now 22)
Today yo u are likely to teel 11 15
betl er to g1ve tha n to rece1ve
However beca use of you r unsel
!tshness you ma y rake m la1
mo re than you g ve out
SAGITTARIUS (Nm1 23-Dec 21)
Pe rso ns you assoc•a te w1tt1
today \'IIIII be msptred by your
rea lls t•c hopelulness You u
en a ble them to see thmg s as
111ey could be no t 1ust as they
ace
CAPRICORN (D.c 22 Jen 19)
Your tntu t1ve percept1ons are
very Keen today espec•aHy m
matte rs affect ng career or
statu s Couple them w1l h your
tog1c and move on war d and
upw ard
AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb t9)
Thr ough personal exper1ences
today you may le arn a very vatu
a ble lesso n F11e lh1 s knowledge
a way to be used w1sely at a la te1
date
,
PISCES (Feb 20-March 20) In
)Otn t ven tures today be more
support ve than asserhve Tht s
w111 encou rage you1 counterpar t
to use ht s or her best ab11ii18S
and tal ents lor your mutual
bene!tt
ARIES (Merch 21 -Aprlt 19} Your
greates t asse t today 1s you r w II
tng ness 10 coo perate and to
sha re any good thmgs that may
happe n to you Others w1ll rec•p
rocate
TAURUS (April :ZO Mt»' 20 )
Chores challe ngt ng your arttst•c
abtht y a nd c rea ttv1ty wtll be the
ones to please you the mosl
today II 1mag na!IOn 1S requ1red
11 becomes a labor ol love
GEMINI (M•»' 21-June 20) You
a re a ble to de al wt th othf! rs very
e ttect t\l ely today Th•s wtll do
much to wm you new allies l et
charm dom1nate your acttons
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Tile
wants and needs of loved ones
w•ll lake prec edence ove r you r
own Inter ests today Fortunate
are those vou care tor You IH!
no sacrtl1ce •s too great
LEO (July 23· Auv 2:2) In sltua·
lions where you re reqwr ed to
manage or contr ol 01ners d o so
lo da y w1th gentle words and
compassionate gestures The
results Will be rewardtng

YARD SALE Mason WV 10
Foster Or , up str. .t at ca r
wa sh 10 om to 6 pm Fr iday
and Saturday , s..,t 21 -22

1979 OLDS CUT. SALON BROUGHAN SED............. 16500
DRI&gt;VERS EO

Sticker Pnce 57691

1979 FORD LTO LANDAU SED........................... 16895
1977 BUICK LESABRE CPE •.•,.......... ................ '4095
1973 CUT. SEDAN ........................ ~~-~ ~ ~: .. .. ...... '995
1976 HONDA ACCORD 2 DR .................... ....... '3995
1974 CADILlAC SED. DEVIUE... .......... ............. '1595
l AS 13 )
1973 CADIUAC CPE. DEVIUE.. ..... ..................
.. '995
1975 FORD COUNTRY SQUIRE WAGON ............... '1995
1975 MONTE CARLO .................................... '2995
1974 OMEGA CPE ......... .. ... ... ........ .... ..........'1295
1975 CUTLASS SUP. SED .. .......... .. .... ... .... ... ... '1995
1975 98 LS 4 DR ................................ ....... '2995
1976 CUTLASS SUP. SED ........... .. .. ................ '3495

.

1971 CADILlAC SED. DEVILLE ..... .............. ....... '1295
1973 BUICK REGAL CPE................................ '1495
1972 n~ LS 4 DR .... ....... ..... ......~ -~~.5. ~~~ ........ '995
w

i?OYALE CPE ...... .. ... .... ........ ........... 13295

197
1975

~01

J 1/z TON FIOO ...... ............. .. .... ...... '1995

1979 ELDORADO

B1g Savings

1979 98 REGENCY SED.

! NEWSP APER ENTERPRISE ASS N )

Mr. Karr's Demo

SAVE.

George's Demo.

DRIVE HOME A WINNER
See one ol the courteous salesmen ·
Pete Burris, Marvtn Keebaugh or George Harris

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
"You Like Our Qaalll)' Way of
Dolug BUBIDels"
G.M .A.C . Financing
992·5342- Pomeroy
Open Evenings Unttl6:00-'lil

s PM Sat .

1/Je WIIJ' togo
••• IN ON£OFOUR GASMISER /1/RS/

3tc

----- --,

2 Dr

14 • 70 mob1le home
Good cond •t1on 992-5,858

~'"Your

PUBLIC NOTICE
Not1ce IS hereby g1ven
that on September 22nd
1979, at 10 00 A M a publ• c
sa le wtll be held at 105
Unton Avenue, Pomeroy
Ohto, to sell for cash the
tottowmg coltatera I to·Wl t
1971 Chevrolet Monte
Carlo No 13857\K 144030
1976 Ford Granada 2 or
Sedan NO 6E82F 162223
The Farm ers Bank &amp;
Sav • ngs
Company ,
PomerQ,v., Ohto, reserves
the rigHt to btd at thts sale

CUSTOM;t"{s.tt~~s1495.

197 ~

FOR SAl E or re n t Nt ce 3
b ed room modula r located In
Po rtland or eo Set u p on lot or
co n be moved Coli ott e r 4 30
304 273 5272

·ASTRO ·GRAPH

Contact Ms Mary A ltce
Varner
Ms CtndY Farson
Mrs Sandt W1se
(614) 374 9436

FIVE COLLIE pupptes ol! mole
992 2389 or 992 5073

Yard Sale

Mob i le Homes Sale's

Sale, R.ent or Trade

1978 PINTO 2 DR ••••••.•••••••••••••• :::~~:·.~,: ••• ~4395
Lt Blue , .t cyt. a uto trans , PS, Atr Cond , rad1 0, lnte rror dec or, 13,000 m1 1es, v.nyt root. sport mirrors,
rear wtndowde fr ost N1c e

1978 PINTO 3 DR RUNABOUT ••••• ::o:~::.~':.. ..S4295

Tutone It blue and dark blue, 4 cyl, auto trans, PS , rad1 0, r e ar w1ndow defrost , sport m.rrors, tots
more

1978 PINTO 3 DR RUNABOUT. •••• :~::::·.u.,: .. }4195
Tu to ne b lue, 4 c yl, auto trans, atr c on d, ra d 1o, r ear w1ndow de frost

1978 PINTO 2 DR •••••••••••••••.•..• ::::::~~:••• }4195
Stiver m e ta !l tc, 4 cyl. auto trans, PS, radto , spor t mtrror s, rear Wtndow defrost

8

1977 PINTO 3 DR RUNABOUT.....~::k.:o.~:: : $3695

•••
4 cyt , 4 speed tran s, P S, rad!O, r a lly whe e ls, sport mtrrors, s port package , les than 32,000 mtles, wh•te
wtth red tnm Sharp 1

1975 PINTO 2 DR •••••••.••••••••.•••• ::::::~::: •••$2695
4 c yl , auto tr a ns , rad 1o, lots more

PAT HILL FORD, INC.
For A FrtenCtly Deal See: Rocky Hupp, Darrel Doddril, or Pat Hill, Gen Mgr.
3RD AVE.

992·2196

MIDDLEPORT,

0.

1 -The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Sept. 21 , 1979

CHURCH

MIODlEPORT CLUSTER
HEATH Church Schoo l 9 30 a m Wa r
sM1p 10 30 a m UMYF 6 p m Robert
Robinson Pastor
RUTLAND Church School 9 JO 0 m
Wor shtp 10 30om Wt lbur Htlt, Pas tor
SAlEM CENTER Wors h1p 9 o .m Churc h
School9 45 a m
TRINITY CHURCH Rev . W H Pernn
SVRACUSE CLUSTER
pastor 8ob Buck, Sunday school supt'
• Rev Harvey Koch Jr
Church SchooJ 9 15 om worshtp ser
FOREST RUN Worshp 9 o m Church
vice 10 30om Choir rehearsal Tuesday
SchoollO a m
7 30 p m under dtrec:tton of Altce Nease
MINERSVIL LE, Churcl-i School 9 0 m
POMEROY CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE
Won hlp 10 o m
MEIGS TIRE
Corner Union and Mulb.rry, Rev Clyde v
ASBURY Churcl-t Scl-iool9 SO a m WorK&amp;C JEWELERS
Atte11d Th e Church
Henderton, pastor Sunday school 9 30 sh1p 11 o m Btble Study 7 30 p m Thu rs·
Co mplete
CENTER,
INC.
o m , Glen McClung , supt mornmg wor
d e y UMW fist Tuesday
Automoltve
~
ship 10 30 o m., evening service, 7 30
SOUTHERN ClUSTER
of Your Choice
John F Fultt, Mgr
Service
mld·w"k service. Wednesday , 7 30 p m
Rev Oov•d Harm
Ph m 21t:t1
Pomeroy
GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH _ 326 f
Rev Mo•k Flynn
This Sundny
Moln St , Pom.roy The Rev Robert 8
Florence Sm ttl-t
Groves rector Sunday se,.....ices (summer
Htlton Wolfe
SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
RACINE
,f31~irl,l '
sctl.dule beatnm~ June 3) at )l) !)()l Ser
BETHANY (Dorcas) Wo rshtp 9 00 o m
PHARMACY
PLANING
~~,o.:
vice will alternate betw. .n the Holy Cl-lurcl-t School10 00 o m
Euchorist and morning prayer , eHecttve
CARMEl Chruch School9 30 o .m Wor
We Fin Dodors'
PreS&lt;rlpt1ons
June3 Holy Commun 1on every other Sun
shtp 10 30o m 2nd ond-&lt;tth Sundays
"22f55
day of each month and aermon Church ~
APPlE GROVE Sunday Sthoof 9 30 am
CabmetMakmg - - - ·
Pomtn~y
school and nurnry care prav 1ded CoHee Warth tp 7 30 p m ht and 3rd Sundays
Syracuse 992 3978
hour tn parish house follow 1ng the aer
Prayer meetmg Wednesdov 7 30 p m
vice
FeJiowshlp supper f1rs1 Saturday 6 p m
FRENCH'S
POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST 212 W
UMW2nd Tuesday 7 30 p m
SUNOCO
Mom StJohn McArtl-iur, pastor Btbf~
EAST lETART Chruc h School 9 am
SERVICE
school 9 30om morning wonhlp 10 30 Worsh1p servtee 10 a m Prayer m .. hng
am , Youth m.ettngs 6 30 p m e~nl ng 7 30 p m Wednesday UMW second Tues
CENTERS
worsMip, 7 30 Wednesday night proyer day 7 30 p m
~tlngond Bible stuct.,. , 7 30 p m
RAC INE WESLEYAN - Sunday school10
THE SALVATION ARMY , 115 Butternut am worsh1p I 1 om Chotr proct1ce
P. I. PAULEY,
ROSEBERRY'S
Ave . Pomeroy Envoy and Mrs Ray Wm
Thursday, 8 p m
lng , officers In charge Sundoy-1-iallness
lETART FAllS- Worship serv•c• 9 a m
AGENT
PENNZOIL
10 om , Sunday School , 10 30 Church Sc hool10o m
Nattonw1de Ins Co
Jrd
Strut
om Sunday school leader , YPSM Elotse
MORNING STAR Worsh tp 9 30 om
of Columbus 0
R~Cirlt 0
Adams 7 30 p m , solvation matting. Chu rch School 10 30 o m
Youth
804 w Matn
Ph f4"1:t0
vonous speakers ond music spectals
Tuesdays 1 p m
992 2318 Pomeroy
Thursday- 10 o m to :2 p m Ladles Home
MORSE CHAPEl Church School 9 30
league , all women tnvlted 7 30 p m
a m Worshtp 11 o m
RACINE
prayer m"tlng and B1ble study , Bob
PORTLAND Church Schoof 9 30 a m
Estep. l110der
Rev
Noel Hermon
Wor1hlp 11 o m
MARKET
teocl-ter
SUnON Church School9 30 a m Wor
BURLINGTON SOUTHERN BAP ~ ST
ahtp htond3rd Sundays 10 30om
CHAPEL, RO&lt;Jto I , Shodo- Postor Bobby
NORTHEAST C~USTER
216 E Matn
Elktns Sunday school S p m , Sunday
Rev R1chord W Thomas
worship S ~5 p m Wednesday prayer
Duane Sydenstrtck•r Sr
service, 7 30 p m
John W Douglas
POMEROY WESfSIOf CHURCH OF
Chodes Dom•gon
TV &amp; Appliance
CHRIST 200 W Main St Jerry Paul
JOPPA Worsh ip 9 00 o m Church
Gas Service
minister phone 992-7666 Conservative
SchooiiO OOo m
non. Instrumental Sunday worship 10
CHESTER Worship 9 o m , Church
om Bible study , 11 0 m worshtp 6
School 10 am Chotr Rehearsal 7 p.m
p m Wedn"doy Blbfe study 7 p m
Wednttday B1ble Study Wednesdays
OlD DEXTER BIBlE CHRISTIAN CHURCH
7 30 P m
Rev Ra lph Sm 1th po•tor Sunday school
LONG BOITOM Sunday School ot 9 30
9 30
a m
Mrs
Worl.., Franc II
o m Evenmg Worshtp ot 7 30 p m Thun
supemnendent Preach 1ng services first &amp;
day B1ble Study 7 30 p m
th1rd Sundays follow ing Sunday School
REEDSVIllE Sunday Schoof 9 30 o m
GRAHAM
UNITED
METHODIST
Morntng Worshtp 10 30om Event'lg Wor
'reochtnQ 9 30 0 m flrst ond second Sun.
•hp 7 30 p m Btbl• Study Wednesdays at
days of each month thtrd ond fourth Sun7 30 P m
days eoch month, worsh ip servtce 0 1 7 30
AlFRED Sundav School at 9 ~5 o m
DOUG'S
p m Wedn..doy evenings 01 7 30 Pro er
Morn1ng Worsh1p at 11 o m Wednesday
Eat In or
MARINE
atld ltble Study
y
Night Prayer MN!Ing, 7 30 p m
Carry Out
SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST Mulberry
ST PAUl (Tuppers Ploms) Sunday
&amp; SERVICE "
126 E Matn
Helgl'lts Road, Pomeroy Pastor Albert
School 9 00 a m Morn tnv Worsi-Hp ot
Sh"co'•" Pleesure&amp; F ish ing
Outboard
Oltt• Sobboth Scl\ool Su~rlnttndent
10 ~ o m Monday Night Bible Study 7 30
ftl ,.,,,
pomeroy
R:lto White Sabbath School Saturday
p.m
What a disappomtmentl You had a a tremendous dnve, 1--..,..:,,.--~----,
ofternoon at 2 00 w1 tM Wor"h1p Servke
SOUTH BETHEl (Stiver R1d~) SunckJy
the perfect chtp shot, an d a bnlhant putt, then your ball
IL B.
School 9 00 om Morning Woshlp 10 00
follow ing otl tS
RUTLAND FIRS T BAPTIST CHURC Ho m Wo.jnndey l lb/o SI\Jdy 1 30 p m
stopped a ha1rsbreadth from the edge of &lt;he cup The b1rd1 e
TEAFORD SR.
Sister Hornell Wo r~ Supt Sunday
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST servrus
yo u thought was yours d1dn t malenahze
216 S second
Services
School 9 30 0 m I'TtOf'"ntng worsMtp 10 d
eoch Sunday 9 30 a m George P1ckens
Pomeroy
m
pastor
w
tth
preochmg
on
first
and
thtrd
0
214 E Mltn
Of course, 1t's only a game, 1t doesn ' t rea lly matter But
992 JJ2S
THE HILAND CHAPEl Geor;e Casto
Sunday of month Olt wer Swo tn Supt
m 5130 Ptmeroy
bhghted
hopes
are
not
always
so
tnv1al
What
1f
somethmg
pastor Sunday School , 9 30 am event ng
HOBSON CHR ISTIAN UN ION Rev Ke1th
really b1g passes you by 7 Suppose you don t get that promo
worship 7 30 Thursday e ven 1ng prover
Eblin pastor Sunday School 9 30 o m
. . ,.....,, 8 7 30 p m
leonard G tlmore f1nt elde r evening ser
tion, you r son s sc holarship ts gtven to someo ne else , an
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST Oavtd Mann
v1ce 7 30 P m Wednesday proyer
Important
d ent chan.)les h1s mmd or the stoc~ mar~et Wipes
min ister W1 lllom Watson Sunday school
meettng 7 30 P m
out your Investment Where do you rum? Where do you
supt Sunday school ' 30 0 m morn 1n
BEARWAUOW RIDGE CHURCH OF
4e 1 S Th trd, Middleport
find strength to meet hfe s diSilluSionments?
worship 10 30 0 m
g
CHR IST Ouan• Worden m lmst•r Btble
992·2196
FIRST SoUTHERN BAPTIST 2:82 Mulberry
clan 9 J0 a m morni ng wonl-ttp 10 30
of
Spmtual values are constant Fortunes may shift and
a m • ev•nrn~ worsl'1 1p
6 30 p m
Ave , Pomeroy Paul Sll~ Potter
change but your Church stands fi rm The truths and msplraWoodrow T Zwtllng Suridov school
W~En.;dolT~~E~~~~:7lE6 30c1Q~MUNITY
auper lntendent Sundoy •ckool. 9 30 a m
•
tion yo u find there 91ve meanmg purpose. and s1ab1hty to
I
"'...,'~"~
1979
morning worship 10 JO ewemng wor.. hlp
Cl'turch SundaY Schoolt•rvlce 9 .. 5 a m
Sunday,
your hfe
K(Oister AoveruSiog Servoce
7 00 p m Mtdweek prayer servtce 7 00
Worsl'1ip serv1c~, 10:30, Evangelistic S•r
Slras.burg V1rgmta
pm
vtce 7 JO p !" Wednesday , Prayer
MIDWAY COMMUNITY CENTER DeiCter
rnMtmg 7 30
Ad Lon 1v111e Ohio R8'¥ Cl.,de Ferrell
ZION CHURCH Of CHRIST Pomeroy
Postor lundoy School II 0 m Soturdov
Homsonvllle ftd Robert Purtell pastor,
WAID CROSS
preat:hlng serv lcet 7 30 p m Wednesd9)'
Bill Mcflroy Sunday school supt Sunday
even ing Bib le •tudy at 7 30 p m
·
school ~ 30 am mornmg worship ond
SONS
STORE
FAITH TABERNAClE CHURCH Batley _ communton 10 30om Sunday worsh1p
Orocer,es lllun Rood , Rev Emmett Rowson pottor
servtct 7 p m Wednetd9y even1ng
Generat Mert:hltndiM
prayer mee ting and Btblestudy 7 p m
Handley Dunn 1 upt Sunday sckool 10
Raclne•u 2UO
am Sunday ewentng senuc• 7 30 Bible
St JOHN lUTHERAN CHURCH p,~
teaching 7 30 p m T'"""~y
Grove The Rev William M iddlesworth
DYESv'lllE COMMUNITY CHURCH
Pastor Church serv1cM 9 30 a m Sunday
TlfE DAILY
~
C T
s
ndo
hool
S&lt;hool tO 30om
o;er
urner pastor u
Y sc
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST Ed rd
SENTINEL
Middleport
9 30 o m
Sunday morning worship
wo
!For A Real Auction CAll
10 30. Sunday evening service 7 30
Fryman pas lor Sunday school 9 30 o m
The Real McCoy)
44 8 Locuo;;l
Mrddleport
MIDDlEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
worshtp serx 1ce 10 30om Sunday t er
t 0 . &lt;Mac) McCov
91'2 lOll]
Pomeroy,
0
CHRISTIAN UNION , lowrenct Monle
VICet 7 30"fJ m youtl-t group Wednes
985·3944
Mtddleport
0
pastor Mrs Russe ll Young
BAPTIST R
E I Shul
School Supt Sundoy School 9 30 o m
ev or
er
fven lng won hip 7 30 Wednetdoy prayer
pastor Sunday school 9 30 a m Church
meetlno 7 30 p '"
service , 7 p m
youth mHttng 6
~IAH CHURCH OF ~~
p m Tu••doy81bloS•udy 7 p m
MT
M~
~
RACINE CHURCH Of THE NAZ4RENE
fltacln._ Rev W H ly.uns pastor Morn.
R
Joh A (off
t
F kl
ing worsM 1p 9' ~5 0 m Sunday school
ev
n
man pas o r ran tn
10 "5 0 m . evemng wonhlp. 7 Tuesdoy
Imboden , chairman of the Boord of Ch n s
m
ladles prover mHttng,
lion l1fe Sunday School 9 30 am morn
7.30
Wedne:day 7 30 P m YPE
mg worship 10 lO Sunday even ing war
MIDDLEPORT FIRST 8APTIST Corner
:•P / : P m Prayer mee t1ng Wednes
S.•th ond Palmer theRe~ Mark McClung
F~ST BAPTIST b 0 n l w0 lk r
Suncloy school 9 IS a m ., Don Wt lson
~""'
·
•
wperlnrendent lacy Borton 0111 supt
Pastor Roome Sol1er Sunday school
supt Sunday school 9 30 a m morn•ng
Morning Worship , 10 15 am Btble Jtudy
10 !10 0 m ot church Youth mHt lng 7 30
worship 10-40 am Sunday eventng wor
Wednesdoy Wednesdoy nl"'hl Bible
shtp 7 30 Wednesday evening Bible
Fr. . lond Norm , postor Flovd Norris ,
Pm
•
•tvdy 730
study and proyer servtce, 7 30 P m
DANVIl lE WESLEYAN
R
A D
•upt Sunday sci-tool, 9 30 a m , mormng
CHURCH Of CHRIST M1ddleport Sth
ev
sermon 10 30 om
Proyer servtee
Ed1son Weo vf!r csstsfont Henry Eb lin , e venmg Moss 7 JO , ::.undoy Moss, 8 and
Ttlt ts pastor Donny Ttll1s Sunday School
and Mam Bob Melton, mtnl•ter Mike
Brown pastor Sunday School 9 30 a m
Wednesday
7
30
p
m
Jr
Sunday schoof supt Sunda y u hoo l
10 om Confession Saturday 7 7 30
Sup!
Sunday
School
9
30
a
m
followed
Gerlach tuperlntendent Terry Yankey
mormng worthlp 10 d
youth serv1ce
9 30 Q. m , morntng worshtp 11 a m Sun- pm
CHESTER CHURCH Of THf NAZARENE
by mornmg worsh1p Sunday eventng ser
th minister Bible school 9 30 o m ,
6 45 p m ev•nmg worship 7 30 p m
Rev Herbert Grate, pastor Worshtp ser
day evemng servtce
7 30, prayer
VICTORY BAPTIST - On the Route 7
v1ce 7 30 p m Prayer meettng Wednes
you
h
10 30 0
pra~er and pro1se W.dne1day 7 30 p m
meetmg Thursday, 7 30 p m
moc-nlng wo1'11 ip,
m · tven lng
SILVER RUN FREE BAPTIST Rev Morvtn
vtee 11 am and 7 30 p m Sundoy day 7 30 p m WMPO Rodto b roadcast
bypass James E Keesee, pastor Sunday
wonh1p 7 30 prayer sen-tce 7 p m
1 S nd
hool
School 9 30 a m Charles Btssell supt
SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF GOO school 10 o m morning worshtp , II
Sunday morntng , 7 45
Wed
do
Marktn pastor, Stevtlttt e u oy sc
Not Pentecostal Re v George 01ler
meeting Wednesday 7 30 p m
a m evening servt ce 7
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THf NAZARENE,
Ml~e~lE~ORT CHURCH OF THE supt Sunday school, 10 am , mormng Prayer
pastor Worship service Sunday 9 ~5
lAUREL CliFF FREE METHODIST Rev lloyd D Gr~mm , Jr , pastor Sunday
TRINITY Chrtsllon Assembly, Coolvtlte
NAZARENE, Rev J•m Broome pastor Bill
worship 11 om Sunday evening wor
CHURCH
,
Rev
Floyd
F
Shook
pastor
o
m Sunday !chool 11 a m , worsh1p G1lbert Spencer, pastor Sunday
school
9
30
o
m
worshtp
servtce
10
30
White Sunday school •upl Sunday
sh1p 1 30 Prayer mMtlng and Btble
lloyd Wnght Sunday Sc:hool Supt Mornserv1 ce
7 30 p m Thur!ldoy prayer school , 9 30 o m , morning worshtp 11
om Broadcast hve over WMPO . young
hool 9 30 0 m morning worlhlp 1o 30
study Thursday 7 30 p m youth Sef'\'tCe
•ng Wars!,ip 9 30 o m Sunday School
meet •ng 7 30 p m
a m Sunday evemng servtce, 7 30 p m ,
peoples servtce 7 p m Evonge ltShc ser
IC
)I I
II
7 00
6 p m Sunday
o m Sundov evonge st c mH ng
CHESTER CHURCH OF GOO Rev R E
10 20 a m , Wednesday Prayer and Bible vtce 7 30 p m Wednesday servtce 7 30
MT HERMON Untied Brethren Church
mtdweek prayer servtce Wednesday 7 .30
p m Prayer rne.tlng Wednetday, 7 p m
d
• )
Study 1 30 p m , Sunday evening worsh1p p m
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST, Corner Sunday School 9 30 o m Worsh tp servtce om
UNITED PRESBYTERIAN MINISTRY OF
~Roblnlon pastor Sun ay acnoo 9 30
MOUNT OLIVE Commun ity church of Second and 4nderson Mason Pastor 10 o45 om Preo ch 1ng serv1 ces avery SunMEIGS COUNTY Dw ight l Zovltz dlrec:
a m worship service 11 o m evening 1 30 p m Chotr Practice Thursday, 7 p m
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST Cfoodes Frank Lowther Sunday school 9 •s o m
day olternotmg w ith C E Wednesday lawrence pastor Max Folmer Sr,
se,.....•ce 7 00. youth service. Wednesday
prayer meetmg 7 30 p m Rev James supermtendent Sundav school and morn·
Ruuell Sr minister Rick Macomber
tor
700pm
worsh1p servi ce , II a m and 7 JO p m
HARRISONVIllE PRESBYTERIAN Rov
lANGSVIllE CHRISTIAN CHURCH
1ng wonhlp , 9 30 a m Sunday evening
supt Sundav school, 9 30 o m , worsh1p Weekly Bible Study Wo.jnosdey, 7 30 leach, pastor Oovtd Holter loy leoder
Ernest Stncklln pastorH Sundoy
church
R -• ~ 1 M
JEHOVAH S WITNESSES 1 mile east of service, 7 Youth m"tlng and Bible study,
servtce 10 lOam Blbfe Study, Tuesday
uger
usser pos 1or sun d oy sc hool.
pm
l
Rutland 1unctmn of Rou te I 24 and Noble Wednesday 7 p m
Khool, 9 30 o m • Mrs omer " · supt
9 30 0 m Roy S•gmon supt morning 730pm
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST M•ll•• St
Summtt Rood (T 17_.) Sunday Btble lee·
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS Mosan, W Va Aurlce M1ck , pastor Sun
n-ornlng wor1hlp 10 30
worship 10 30 Sundov even ing service,
FAITH BAPTIST Church, Mason meet at
ture , 9 30 o
Watchtower study 10 30 Umted Steel Workers Umon Holt R01lrood
MIDDLEPORT Sunday schooL 9.30 a m
7 30 mtd week urvlce Wedntsday 7 CHRIST 9F lATifR DAY SAINTS Po•llond day Btble Studr, 10om, Worship 11 am
Rtchard Vaughan supt Morning worship
'
'
a m Tuesday Bible study, 7 and 6 15 Street, Mason Pastor Rev Joy Mitchell
Roc lnt Rood Will iam Roush pastor
and 7 p m Btb e Study Wednesday 7 p m
1030
pm
p m Thursday theoc:rat1c sc hool 7 30 Mornmg wors!,tp 9 45 o m • Sunday
Phylhs Stobort Sunday School Supt Sun· Vocal mustc
SYRACUSE Momlng wo.,hlp 9 0 m
SYRACUSE C~URCH Of THE NAZARENE.
J.1 m serviCe meellng 8 30 p m
day School 9 30 a m Mot nlng worsl-i1p
School 10 30 o m
Prayer meet1ng
MASON ASSEMBLY OF GOD Duddmg
10
M
Sa
Rev
Dole
T
Bon
poator
Norman
t
0 m
10 30 o m Sunday evening servtce 7 p m
RUTLAND FREEWill BAPTIST Chu " h Wednesday 7 30 p m
Sunday sc hoo
n
mp!on
Presley Sunday school 1uperlntendent
lone Mason, W Va Chester Tennant
Wednesday evenmg prayer services 7 30 Pastor
leland Holey, pastor Sunday school 10
Hal supt
Sunday school 9 30 o m mommg wor
FOREST RUN BAPTIST
Rev Nyle
Sunday School 9 d
a m
RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOO , Rev Bobship 10 ~5, even1ng worship, T p m
a m even tng servtce 7 30 p m Prayer Borden
pastor
Cornelius Bunch
Children s Church 6 45 p m Young Peo
by Porter pastor Sundqy school 10 ° m
we&lt;tnesdoy evemng worshtp, 7 Young
~ETHLEHEM BAPTIST, R•v Eod Shule• pies Service 6 45 p m E~angehsflc Ser meeting Wednesday 7 30 p m
supenntendent Sundav school , 9 30 a m
~oples society Wednesday , 7 p m
Sundav worship 11 om Sunde~ evening
pastor Worshtp service 9 30 a m Sunday vice 7 30 p m Women s MISSionary Coun
CHURCH OF GOO of Prophecy loc ated sec ond ond fourth Sundays worsh tp ser
sef Ice 7 p m Wednesday Fomlly Trol
N.Y 1 president , Paul ImbOden , Mls
school 10 30 o .m Bible Study and prayer ctiiOo m flrstondthlrdTuesdoys Prayer on the 0 J Whtte Rood ofl h tghwoy 160
vt ceot2 30 p m
lng Hour 7 p m Wednesday worship ter
a•onory Soctety •econd Wednesday 7 service Thursday 7 30 p m.
Sunday School 10 om Superintendent
MT MORIAH BAPTIST - Fourth and
and Btble Study Wednesday 7 30 p m
vlc:e 7 30 p. m
p m society preaident Ellxabtth Cund1ff
CARLETON CHURCH Klngsbu'Y Rood
HARTFORO CHURCH OF CHRIST· IN John Loveday ftrs t Wednesday mght of Mom St , Middleport Rev Colvtn Mmnts
Gory Kmg pastor Sunday school 9 30 CHRISTIAN UNION The Rev W1ll1om month CPMA servtces second Wednes
HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH Nom
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN CHRIST
pastor Mrs Elvtn Bumgardner, supt Sun
long Bottom E~•el Hart, pastor Sunday
Elden R Bloke ...,..stor Sunday School 10 a m , Rolph Carl superintendent evenmg Campbell , pastor Sunday School. 9 30 day WMB meet1ng thtrd through ftfth
day school 9 30 a m worsh1p serviCe
•chool 10 o m thurch 7 ·30 p m , prayer
r-worsh ip, 7 30 p m Prayer meeting
youth service George Croy le pastor
10 45o m
·
om James Hughes supt eventng ·ser
mHtlng 7 30 p. m Thursday
a m Robert Reed, supt., Morntng ser
Wednesday , 7 30 p m
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL- 570Gronl St ,
NORTH BETHEl Untted Methodist
vtce 7 30 p m Wednesday evemng
MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL, Tl-tird
mon II om · Sunday n ight services
LONG BOTIOM CHRISTIAN , Geo•g• F
Church, Rev Charles Dormgon pastor
prayer meehng 7 30 p m Youth prayer Middleport Rev Don Bloke pas tor Sun
Ave ' the Rev Willtom Kntttel pastor
Christian Endeavor 7 30 p m Song ser- • Pickens, postor Wallace Damewood
doy school 9 30 o m mormng wc rsh1p
Sunday School , 9 30 o m Worship Ser
service each Tuesday
Thomos Kelly, Sunday School Supt Sun
vice, 8 p m , Preaching 8 30 p m
Supt Bible School. 9 45 a .m Preaching
10 30 a m , e ventng worshtp 7 p m
vtce 10 _.5o m Sunday Btble Study 7 00
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH, letart W
day tchool 10 0 m Ctoues lor all ages
Mtdweek Prayer meeting Wedneadoy 7 strv1ce, 10 ~5 a m , first and thtrd Sun
Vo , Rt I , Rev Charles Hargraves, W&amp;dnesday e venmg Bible study and p m Wednesday prayer meeting 7 30
evening 1ervlce 7 30, 81bft study
p m Roy Adams, lay leader
days 1 p m second and fourth Sundays
p rayer meettng 7 p m Afflhated wtth pm
pastor Worship servi ces 9 30 a m Sun
Wednesday , 1 30 p m youth services
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST located at
Southern Bophst Convention
HOUSE OF PRAYER AND PRAISE, l•b•"Y
day school 11 a m evemng worshtp
Rutland on New lima Road ne•t to forest Bible study 8 p m Tuesdays
Friday , 7 30p m
k
R
HY~Ell RUN FREE METHODIST CHURCH
BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHRISTAve
post Burger Chef Pomeroy Eugene
7
30
p
m
Tuesday
collage
prayer
meeltng
MIDDLEPORT FAEEWillBAPTfST Corner
Acre Par Rev Roy ouse f)Ostor Robert Rev Okay Cart, paator Morn ing tervlce
Eugene Underwood pas tor, Harry Hen
Anspah pastor Sunday school, 10 a m
Asl-t and Plum. Noel Herrman, pastor
Musser Sunday School supt Sunday 10 30 o . m , Sunday evening and Thursday and B1ble study , 9 30 om Wors~tp ser
drlcks , supenntendent Sunday school
mormng wOrshtp 11 o m Eventng worvice, Wednesday 7 30 p m
7 30
school 10 30 o m, worsh ip 7 30 p m 81
Saturday evening serv 1ce.
Pm
un·
ble Study Wednetdoy, l 30 p m Sotur- evenmg serv1ces ot7 30 p m
shp, Sunday Tuesday ond Friday, 7 30
CAL VARY BIBlE CHURCH now tocated 9 30 o m mormng wonh1p, 10 30 om
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION ot Bold on Pomeroy P ike , County Road 25 , near evening worshtp 7 p m Wednesday B1ble
pm
doy School , 10 30 ~E';GS
day n1ght prayer service 7 30 p m
Knob Rev. lawrence Gluesencomp, Sr
study 7 p m
BURLINGHAM SOUTHERN BAPTIST
COOPERATIVE PARISH
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN, Rogt" poSior, Roger Wtllford, Sr , Sunday school Flatwoods Rev Blockwaod , poster. Ser
JUBILEE CHRISTIAN CENTER - Georges
CHURCH Route 1 Shade Pastor Don
vtces on Sunday ot 10 30 o m and 7 30
METHODIST CHURCH
Watson, pastor, Mildred Ziegler , Sunday
supt Sunday school 9 30 o evening wor
Block Affiliated with Southern Baptist
p m wtlh Sunday school 9 30 o m Bible Creek Rood R8\l C J Lem ley pastor
RlchordW Thames , Director
school sup! Morntng worship, 9 30 a . m. ,
sh1p,
7
30
p
m
Prayer
m-flng
Wednes
John Failure supennte ndent Church
Convention Sunday school I 30 p m
study
Wednesday. 7 30 p m .
POMEROY CLUSTER
Sundayschool l\l30 o m ' evemng ser·
day 7 30 p m Youth meetmg Sunday
mo rmng worshi'p
school, CJ 30 a m
Sunday worship, 2 30 p m Thursdoy
INDEPENDENT HOLINESS CHURCH INC
Rev Robert McGH
vice 7 30
5 30 p m with Don ond Martha Meadows e venmg Btble study 7 p m
Pearl St , Middleport . Rev 0 Dell 10 30. evemAg servtce 7 p m Youth
Rev J&amp;mesCorbltl--..
MT
UNION BAPTIST. Cectl Cox,
In charge
meetmg Sundov 6 p m Btbl e studv m
PENTECOSTAl ASSEMBlY
Ra ci ne
Manley
pas
tor
Sonny
Hudson,
Sunday
POMEROY, Su'nday School 9 15 0 m
mln111er Joe Sayre Sunday School
WHITES CH4PEL, Coalville RD Rev Roy school supt Sunday school 9 30 o m
depth, Wednesday 7 p m Cla sse s for a ll
Rou te I 2~ . Wtlhom Hoback pastor Sun
Worship servlceiO 30 0 m Choir rehear
Su~nntenent Sunday ~ehool, 9:45 om. ,
o..'ter pastor Sunday school 9 30 o m
ages Nurs e ry prov1ded fo r worship ser
day schoo l. 10 o m , Sunday evening ser
sOl. W.dnesdoy, 7 p m Rev Robert
evenrng worsh tp 7 30 p m Prayer worship service, 10 30 a m Bible study e vening worship 7 30 p m Proyer and VI Ce
v1ce 6 30 p m Wednesday eemng ser·
praise service Wednesday, 7 30 p m
meeting
7
30
p
m
Wednesdo
f
McGee, pastor
and prayer servtce, Wednesday , 7 30 p m
ST PAUl LUTHERAN CHURCH Corne r
vice 7
RUTlAND APOSTOLIC CHURCH OF
ENTERPRISE. Wo.,hlp 9 a m Chu"h
TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF CHRIST
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST, B•od JESUS CHRIST Elder James Mtller Bible of Sycamore and Second Sts , Pomeroy
CARPENTER BAPTIST, Rev Freeland
School10o m
Randy Koel-iler , pastor Dennis Newland
Henderson poator Herb Elliott Sunday studv Wednesday. 7 30 p m , Sunday The Re... William Mlddleswortl-t, Pa1tor.
Norns , pastor. Don Cheadle, Supt Sun
ROCK SPRINGS Church School 10 0 m
Sunday school superintendent Sunday
sci-tool supt Sundav school 9 30 a m
dey School, 9 30 a m Morning Worsh ip,
School, 10 o rr Sunday n1ght serv1ce 7 30 Sunday School at 9 .45 o m and Church
WorsMip10o m UMYF630pm
School 930 om mormng church s,.r.
morning worship ond comunlon 10 30 pm
ServtCes II o m
10 30 a m Prayer Serv1ce alternate SunFLATWOODS C!,urch School 10 0 m
'l ice 10 30 om Sunday evenlnq Bible om
SACRED HEART Rev Father Pou t D
dovs
POMEROY WESL EYAN HOLINESS
study , 7 p m
RUTLAND COMMUNITY CHURCH, Amos Horrtsonvllle Rood Oe~tey K•ng pastor. Welron pas tor Phon e 992 2815 Satu rday
Worshtp 1l 0 m.
LETART FAllS UNITED BRETHREN , Rev

These Messages Of Our Religious Heritage

NE ftj':s
"

1

Are Sponsored Each Week By The Following:

---

l\iM.

MJ!;J-w.,•

tJd

Attend The Church
of Your Choice
This. Sunday

,..,,ng

FOOD

Insurance

Attend The Church

Pat Hill Ford, Inc.

Your Choice

This

Su~ dc~:rro~ITY

Attend The Church

Of Your Choice This Sunday

l•CtNl

f

s

(

�8 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Sept. 21 ,1979

~_,oun•f lll
••

Your Best Buys Are
uo
1.110
J.oo

Weste rn .
Sa dd le s
a nd
horneu . Hors e s a nd poni es .

and

GENERAL
ELECTRIC

Ruth Reeves. 6 14-698-3290 .
Bar ding &amp; Rid ing l esson s and

Horse Co re prod ucts .We st&amp;rn
b oots , Ch ild ren' s $15 .50 .
Ad ult s $~ . 00 .

1.90

2.25

Headquarters
Appliances
Sales &amp; Service

:u:;.
RI SING STAR Ken ne l. Boor-

F~ch

word over the minimum
words is 4 cenl.s pt&gt;t word J)f't
dlly Ad.~ ru nnmg other than ('00·
~.: uiJ\"C' clays wil l IX' t•haq(t'tl lll
1 ~ lday rak

POOD LE GROOMING . J udy
Ta y lor . 614-367 -7220 .
HILLCREST

In ml"mon·, Card of Tiu! nb
and Oblt~U~IJ; · fi l~ nts per word,
C&lt;:~:~ h

POMEROY
LANDMARK

d ing . Call367-0292 .

1~

$3.00 rnmimum .

HOTPOINT

HOOF HOLLOW, Engli sh and

15 Word.'l: nr Under
C.ash
C"h&lt;t r)!r
l d&lt;!}'
I 00
I~

2 days
:lrlHy!J
6 rl11yx

KENNELS .

Bo o r -

d ing, all breeds . Clea n indoor
· outdoo r facil ities . Also AKC
reg i ste r e d
O o bermans .

in ;td-

vanl' l' .

614 -44 6- 7795.

Mobil t• llomt&gt; sa les and Vt~rd
· !lltles 11.re &lt;~ C&lt;' t'ph!d onl y with
l'ash ~1lh order . :'.5 l'f"nt clu!rt:t·
for Hd.'l ..:arryin ~ Box Numi:M•r ln

Auto Sales
1974 V EGA HATCHBACK . coli
303-675- 1501 o r 305·675-2488

The Pu blisher reSf'n:es 11w'
n~ h! to edit or rc jl'&lt;'l an)· :id!l
dee med objertio n&lt;J I. TtJc
Publishl'r will aqt lJto respc111si\J it•
for mort' than one in('orrt•t·t HI·
-'*'rtion.
Plumt&gt; m-215fi

o.r 304-675- 1553.
' 1976 PlYMOUTH .VOLARE . Ex·

condition . 29,000
m il es . $2~()). 992-3198.

ce llent

1977 THUNDERBIRD . ex cellent
con dition. Radials , AM· FM,
air, PS . PB, recl ining seats, 2
new studded radial snow
tires. 2-47-359.t after 5.

NOTICE
WANT~AD

V ~"'~ _Jack W. Carsey
~
Mgr.
~-Mo•-• Phone 992 -2181

Monda y
Noon on Sll tLJrday
Tuesday

thru Pr i dt~y
'P.M.
lhl' day bcfvrc publicatioo

7•2-2.42 .
ClARK RESIDENCE. Syracuse,
corner of Crooks and Fourth.
Near ~wim club, ball field ,
tenni s courts , pro posed
marino. 6 rooms and both
frame . Lot 100 IC 150' $40 ,000.

mi . per gal. Auto. , trans., im·
maculate. 378·6155 .

4 P. M~

Friday aftt•nmon

1973 FORO F-100. 8 cyl. , std .
shift. $1500.742-1978.

Notices
COUNTY

1967 MUSTANG GTA fastback ..
One owner . 41~ . 000 miles.

HUMANE

$2000. 992· 5761.

SOCIETY . 992-6260 . Pats
available for adoption and information ser..-ice.

1970 GMC CHURCH bus . 54
passenger
in
good shape, ready to go. Con
be 5een of 394 Beech St .. Mid-dleport o r coli 992-5770 or

GUN SHOOT EVERY SUNDAY 1
PM . FACTORY CHOKE ONLY .
RACINE GUN CLUB.

9•9-2200 .

LOST: BLACK cocker spaniel in .
Cherry Ridge-681 area. Call

1971 FORD LTD, runs good,
body rough. 4 good tires .
$125 . 22 Beach St .. Mid·
dleport.

992-6093 .

1973

FOUND RACINE oreo : School
ring . Gold in color. 9-49-2122 .

Type LT. 350. 8 cyl. Phone

Lost and Found

CHEVROLET

NEW LISTING -

i::RA MERCER
REALTY
FROST

-

Total

electr ic, J bedroom
home . Dining room , kit·
chen, living room and
l 1/ 2 baths . Carpet
throughout.
This
beaUtiful home is bri ck
with a garage and full
basement. Call for your

appt. today. $47,500.00 .
TUPPERS PLAINS Nice lot in ArbOugh Ad·
d ition
with
septic
system and water tap.

75x15

ft .
Hock ing River lot. All
flat and elec . in. $3,.500 .
84 FT. OHIO RIVER
FRONT 3.77 acre
with mobile home. J
brm, 1IJ:~ baths, expando
lv . rm . $16,000.
LONG BOTTOM - 6
rm . older
home ,
carpeted, bBrn, plus 2
outbuidings, on .10 lots.
$18,900.
REEDSVILLE
2
bdrm . trailer, 2 covered
porches, 3 car garage,
flat lot. S2J,OOO. Owner
willing to talk.
REEDSVILLE- Home
with 2 car garage and
nice business building
with
2
restrooms .
$25 .000.
FORKED RUN AREA
- Neat sm. 6 rm . fur ·
nished summer house
on 1..50 acre. S21 ,500 .
Call
Virginia Hayman
985-4197

POMEROY -'We have
2 nice homes that are
real buys.

RUTLAND ·-

Lovely •

bedroom home. You
must see it to appreciate
it's
beauty .
Only

$35.000.00.
LANGSVILLE- N;ce 2
bedroom home on a lit·
tie over an acre . Sell
price $22,500 .00 .

WE

NEED

LISTINGS!!! It you are
thinking at selling give
us a call.
Cheryl Lemley
Associate

Ph. 742-200J
Velma Nlcinsky
Associate

Ph. 742· 3092
Hilton Wolfe
Associate
GeorgeS.
Hobstenerl Jr. , Broker

Broker, 992·5739

CAMERO

Help Wanted

for

1976

MONTE

ports .

CARLO,

1973

BUICK

REGAL .

radial lire5. Good
$800. 949-2234 .

New

POMEROY -

Nearly

maintenance

2

free .

bedroom home with full
basement and extra lot.
Walk to the store .

$25,000.
22 ACRES- With water
and
elec t ricity
available . Good home
s i tes for A -Frames .

$9,500.
RENOVATED

2

bedroom home, nat. gas
furnace, carpeting, d i n ·
ing area , 2 car garage
and extra lot . $25,000.

Wanted to Buy

NEW

CHIP WOOD. Poles max .
diameter 10" on largest end.
$12 per ton . Bundled slob. $10
per ton. Delivered lo Ohio
Pollet Co ., Rt. 2, Pomeroy.

DOWNING-CHILDS
ROdf!ey, Broker
Bill, Br. Mgr.
Phone 992·2342, Eve. 992' 2449
M
Oh.

LISTING

01 E SHOPPE " , Call for
details.

~c~~. L~s:~~n~
~n~
on a good

992-2689.

CENTRAL REALTY CO,

WE H

secluded,

townsh;p road . 7 a c res
t ; llable ,
balance
woodland . Has many
uses . ONLY $13,350.00.
NEW LISTING - Ap·
proximatel y 25 acres of

OLD COINS , pocket watches ,
da5s rings . wadding bonds.
diamonds. Gold or silver. Call
J. A . Wamsley . 742-2331.
WANTED: SAW logs . Payment
upon deli..-ery to our yard. 7:30
to 3:30 weekdays. Blaney
Hardwoods , SR 339 , Barlow ,

OH . 678-2'180.
ANTIQUES , FURNITURE . gloss,
chino . anything. See or coli
'Rutn Gosney, antiques. 26 N.
Middleport .
OH .
2nd .,

AVE CONV.ENTIONI\J.. FINANe- ·
lNG FOR MOST OF OUR HOMES FOR
AS LOW AS 5% DOWN.
NEW LISTING -

building si tes, 4 lots
already
survey e d .
Water,
electric
available , on a raod ad ·
jacent to good subdivi ·
sian . Call for financing
-1 bl S
ava• a e. 27,500.00.

4 BR home, hardwood floors
arage and good out ~
building , Many nice features, lentv of fruit trees
and garden 'Spa ce . Asking $48,9 . Just off Rt. 7 in
Chester .
·
T
.HI IS_WHAT YOU ASK-ED OR ~ 14 acres of
n• ce rolling land w i th a 1'12 story osue f a sits back.off the road surrounded with ma
tr es Lg pond
stocked with fish . Nicely located i
nin9 star

LOIIELY

area . Pr;ce$33 ,900 .

la~ge_ LR, also family rm ,

s

2·STORY -

FR~ME - 4 bedrooms,
equ i ped
kitchen ,
2
baths, lots of carpeting
and paneling, N .G . fore ed air heat, full "base·
ment, ge~rage, carpOrt,
pat;o _A low $28,500.00 .

992-3161.
WANTED: SAW logs. Payment
upon deli..-ery to our yard.
7_:3().3:30 weekdays . Blaney
Hardwoods. SR 339, Barlow,

N 1C E

OH 67B-2'160 .
WANTED : JUNK . Batteries ,
rodio1ors, motors, auto. Irons .
No Sunday coils. 9-49· 2563 .
WANTED: CHEVROLET sedan
body .
Mo r..- in
Reed .
Reeds vi lle , OH . 378-6237.
-

Auctions
BIG AUCTION every Wed .,
pm . Hartford Community
Center, Hartford . WV. -4 miles
abo v e
Po meroy - Mason
Bridge.

FAMILY HOME - Lots of pos · i ities with this
real nice 2 storv home. Many f e tu
, like centra l
alr, bu i lt -in appliances, all ca pe d &amp; so forth . A
very good investment with e.v ral nice building
lots. On approx . 41!2 acres
the
fer of Racine,

Ohio. Ask;ng only $54,000.
HOME &amp; INCOME - I

1 · FLO 0 R

FRAME- 3 be drooms ,
bath , N .G. heat, storms,
glass enclosed porch ,
part basement, garage,
abou t J acres , fru its and
grapes and others .
$25,000.00.
MIDDLEPORT - Love ly home located in ex ·
1--eel-lent neighborhood
bric
nd__frame .
bedr ms, 1 1?2-ba~-1----1•
c r rt, patio, fenced

5

yard . Th;s you[Tlust see .
$59,500.00.
REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland, Sr.
Henrv E. Cleland, Jr.

992-2259

992-6191

COUNTRY SPECI L - N ice remodeled 2 bedroom
home on bla cktoP, road . Mostly carpeted . F .A . nat .
gas furnace. A ery attract ive small home andl
acre land . F'r
dtorquicksalefor$17,500.
53 000.:
- Good 3 b edroom , all carpeted home
ose to Pomer oy &amp; Mi ddl eport. Loca te d on g ood l 'h
ac r es of land .
a~out 1,000 feet of beautifu l Ohio River frontage.

r ·-

N1ce recreation spot, minerals, too. Let's have an
offer. Price $57,000.

LOTS OF LOTS -

Warehouse Auction on Columbus Road, Athens, 0 .,
has moved to Key Mart (former Ziegler Grocery),
The Plains , 0 .

From 1 to 75 acres, border;ng

Pomeroy .

MIDDLEPORT -

2 Evening Sales, Fri., Sept. 21
Sat., Sept. 22, 7:00 P.M.

ale possess; on , large

SHOULD BE SOLD - 70 a c res, house .&amp; good barn,

__...;.________~::;:;~~======~

AUCTION

e

3 _bedroom hom e, livi
room &amp; family r oom , all
ntce ly carpeted . Eat m equipped k.itchen, 2 f ull
baths , lf2 basem ent, arage, nice garden area . In~
com e from trail e r -a
roperty , Racine, S-'5,000 .

Good 3 BR home approx . 10 yrs .

Old, stove &amp; refrl.gerator, Ig . storag e bldg. Priced at

$35,000.
RACINE - 2 BR trailer o n nice lot . Ask.ing $11, 500,

20 WOODED ACRES- Can be diV ided. $22,000.
LARGE SPLIT LEVEL - on 3 Acres, 4 BR home
f~lly carpeted, equipped kit., family room has nice
f•replace, large utilitv rO&lt;!m and plenty of storage,
two -car garage has electnc door opener. One great
fe ature after another . Listed $75,500.
JUST LISTED+ 6 year old home with 3 bedrooms,

For your con ven ience we moved to a lar ger
bu ild i ng wit h more par King space . our Friday night
&amp;a le is for consignments . Anyone having merchan ·
d i se to sell , bring it in Fr iday afternoon or early Fri ·
day evening . F ir st Come, FirsT Sold .

dlntng and uttlity room , kitchen equipped with stove
and refr igerator . Most of the house newly carpeted
Forced air gas furnace only 10 vears old. AlsO
garage . A complete t r ailer hook up with nat. gas tap
and septic can add income to the home. Over 2 acres

of lend. AO for $29,900. Call for appo;ntment.
Our regular Satu rd ay eveni ng sa le w i ll be mostlv
new m erchandi se, a f ew p ieces of used f urniture .
All k inds of new toots, t oot box es, toys, furnitur e,
stereos, Si lverstone pans , auto and b ike a c: ·
cessor ies, BM sou nd mov ie camera , car pe ts, a p pl i a nces, severa l load s comi ng in too late to li st .
(Don ' t forget to bring a c ha ir . )
Not Responsible For AccidE!nh
Terms of Sale: Cash or Check with Positive I .D.

A.UCTIONEER BILL i:SROWN

JUST LISTED - Mini farm W/ a beaut iful briCk bi ·
leveL w / 3 bedrooms &amp; full basemen1, 1arge carport ,
total elec . Not ex pensive, fu l ly insulated , all hard ·
w ood fl oor ~. 3 l a r ge hoth ouses. You can have all th is
w ith approx i mate l y 5 ac res of land fo r only $63, 500.

WANT TO SELL? - GIVE US A tAll
CALL JIMMY DEEM. ASSOCIATE 949· 2388
OR NANCY JASPERS, ASSOCIATE
949·26S4 or 949·2S91

Classes : Ballet

Tap&amp; Jan
Ages-undup

Shirley Carpenter
Instructor·

Choreographer
Located In Racine, 0 .
(formerly
Weavers

IRELAND
MORTGAGE CO.

9·14·1 mo.

~0 I LOOK LIKE A~
ID IOH IF I TOLD HER.

WHOA! SLOW POWtr.H ...
AAI' YOU TELLIN6 ""
YOU 'VE' HEAR.P FROM
&gt;'OIJ!l. FATHER 1

SHE-'D 8LA8 TO M.Y

S T E P FAT H&amp;~ ·-

OKAY, OKAY! ,;0 HOY/ DID YOU
HEAR FR OM HI M~ SY P~Ot.le'f­
LETT E~!-'.• T E: L E 6RAM~•. HOW f

AND

HS:'D TIP O FF ~...,-: . •
THE- MAF•tiA
.._:_!~')f!l{l

~o. vL1 rc;. 1 M t~7

FOl.L ETT! WE' R.E

THAT'S

JU$T PLAYIN 6 &lt;:tAMES ;
SOM80D&gt;''S TRYING TO 1&lt;/L/.
~OT

•XACTL"'

HOW [

!ooiEARD FROM HIM! HERE-••
I'L L. SHOW '/(j)U ~

80TH OF US.~ •. P~f~UMAB LY
TI-lE MAFIA !

77 E . State, Athens

Skill Building&gt;
Ph. 949·2710 or 949·2150
·
8-29 ·1 mo

592-3051

-4·23 -1 mo.

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING

C. R. MASH
VINYL &amp; ALUM.
SIDING

Gutter work, down
spouts, some concrete
work,
walks
and
drivew1ys .

MONTGOMERY
UTTIE ORPHAN ANNIE

TRAILER SALES

, I FREE ESTIMATE)

•New Home
•Add ons
* Remoldings
*Free estimates

RAClNE,O.
949· 2741 or

ORPHAN ANNIE-TIME TO GO

_27 320 MOfl tgom ery Rd.
Langu llle . otuo

V.C. YOUNG Ill

SlfEP All NIGHT···

2 Mil t s E1 st of Wilk es viii•

WHA"T COUl 0 liAVf

GOOSE

SARAH SA'fS THE ONLY l"Hit.tG
TO DO IS JUST Sli AND WAll ···
8iJT · 1 CAN ' T ·· ' 5 t'I · H ··· S~ R A I·fS
OO"Z. IN " ..

s~u~ '

J.. I COOLDN'l

• U·U•·•1 45 E ven lnt•

S UPER

WHY. SOME
HMES LEM ~I
COM E BA CK FOR

HN'PfNfD ?'

A

IMQNTrl ···

~ l 'S LOADED· ·· GOOD ·~ ­

C'MON, SA NDY --- YOU GOT
A I="INE NOSE 'FOR T~ACKS --·

·. '

S TOCM

TRAILER NOW AVAILAitlE .

992-6011
7·12

a little over $200.00 per
acre.

9-7·1mo.

NEW LISTING -

27

avanable . $15,000.

-

2

level acres with large
shade trees. 3 bedroom
home, ceram ic bath,
nat . gas F . A . furnace .
Garage with tool room .
Ideal for family .

.NEW LISTING- Clean

60 acre farm at Alfred.

I"

Sweepers , toasters, irons, oil
small appliances . Lawn moer,
ne)(t to State Highway Go rage
on Route 7, 985-3825.
SEWING MACHINE Repairs,
ser..-ice. all makes, 992-2284 .
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorired Singer Soles and
Service. We sharpen Scissors .
EXCAVATING, dozer , loader'
and backhoe work; dump
trucks and lo-boys for hire,
will haul f ill dirt, top soil ,
limestone and gro..-el. Call Bob
or Roger Jeffers, day phone
992-7089 ,
night
phone

992-3S2S or 992-5232.
EXCAVATING .
dozer ,
backhoe and dltcher , Charles
R. Hatfield. Black Hoe Ser..-ice,
Rutland . Ohio. Pone 7-42-2(X)fl .

PUlliNS

E~CAVA TING.

Com -

plete Ser..-ice. Phone 992-2-478 .

AUTOMOBILE

INSURANCE

been cancelled? Lost your
license?
Phone
operators

992-21'3 .
E-C ELECTRICAL Contractor
serving Ohio Volley region .
Six doy11 a week , 2111 nours ser·
..-ice. Emergency cells. Call

882-2'152 or 882-3454 .
HOWERY AND MARTIN Excavating, septic systems ,
doter. backhoe. Rt. 1.43.
Phone I (61-4) 698·7331 or

7·2-2593 .
IN STcicK for immediate
delivery ; various sins of pool
kits. D.o-it- yourself or let us
install for you . D. Bumgardner
Sales , Inc. 992-572.4 .

The

Gallla·Melgs

Com munitv
Action
Agency is accepting applications for the following position :
Counselor/Job
Developer - This position is responsible for
counseling and providing auxiliary ser viCes to and for CETA
participants as well as
providing Job Develop ment services for par·
ticipants . Duties include
interfacing with par ticipants to assure an
understanding of ~ the
CETA Program and its
goals, working with job
site supervisors, maintaining current files and
communications regar ·

d;ng

Employabllily

Development Plans and
tracking, Requirements
include a degree in Ad·
ministration, · Social
Work, or Related Field.

Knowledge

of

Radiator·~
.
Servlctr ~
From the

mile oft Rt. 1 by -pass
on St. Rt . 1"24 toward
Rutland .
J 11

STONE Nice one
bedroom home with
bath, nat. gas F .A. fur nace wi t h c ity water and
2'12 acres. Reduced to

$20 ,000.
NEW LISTING

E~PERIENCED

Roger Hysell
Garage

acres near Forked Run
Lake . Water and elec.

BRADFORD , Auctioneer, Com·
plete Service. Phone 9.49-2.487
or 9•9-2000 . Racine, Ohio.
Critt Bradford ,

Established business in
Pomeroy , " THE KID ·

OLD FURNITURE , ice bo)(es,
brass beds , iron beds, desks,
etc.. complete households .
Write M .D. Miller, Rt . -4 ,
Pomeroy o r coll992- n60.

DECORATING
SUPPLIES

70 ACRES- Will sell at

Busin~ss Services

608 E.
MAIN
POMEI!OY , 0 .

OPENING SEPT. lith

Real Estate Loans
Purchase
and
Refinance
30 Year Ter"'s
A - No money down
(eligible veterans •
FHA - AS low as 3%
down (non -veterans)
·

992·3325
. 216. E. Second Street

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR -

WAITRESS WANTED. Day shift.
8--4 . 992-9919, or apply of
Headquarters Bar . Mid ·
dleport.

....,.

something .

shape.

Real Estate tor Sale
-· -

NEED BABYSinER , mature ,
variable hours. One 1 year old
child. 992-6087'

CARPENTER'S
DANCE STUDIO

$071
Osborn
Rd ..
Reedsville, OH, 45772.
For information Call
6&lt;17·648S. Will be OPen
late It
you ·need

Housing
Headquarters

engine, low mileage, $2600.

Announcing Opening of

r.r·7fli~ ANN'S
).(~J
. I JJ!l.z CAKE

acres. 992-2523 .

Caii992-332S or 992-3876

350

992-2656.-

CAR SALESMAN . Send resume
to Box 7-43, Pomeroy. OH
45769 . No ,. ft)(perience
necessary .

Business Services

SEVEN ROOMS and bath . 2

Baum Sl,.lbdivision , w i ll
welcome Offer . Others
at Syracuse, Rockspr ·
ings, Rutland, Pomeroy
and near Rutland.

992-2503.

RN OR LPN with Phor·
macology , full time. 3-11 shift .
Shifting differentoil. Pinecrest
Core Center , Judy Barkus ,
-446-7112 .

r

Both

gscrest Monor, between Tup·
pen Plains and Chaster .
Pnone 985-3929 and 985-A129.

BUILDING LOTS -

1971 VEGA AND 1969 Ford LTD
wagon .

REAL ESTATE : 1 acre lot in Rig-

fences, minerals and
farm house. A real trac ·
tor farm .

cellent condition. Auto. frons .
20,000 miles. $2000 or best offer . 992 -37 17.

992-5300.

VA . No mont:tr do wn (eligi ble
vete rans). FHA · As low os 3
per cent down (non-veterans).
Ireland Mortgage Co .. 77 E.
.St.at.e, Athans . 61•·592-3051.

Lots ol bund;ngs, good

992-6093.
1976 VEGA HATCHBACK . Ex-

fOUND : COLLIE dog on Kroger
parking lot . Friday evening.
Dog grieving for owner . Call

REAL ESTATE Loon5 . Purc hase

Ond ret inanca. 30 year terms .

PHONE 742-2003

Co1 1992-3083 or992·2720.

1973 VW STATIONWAGON 30

Sundav

Real Estate lor Sale

H.OBSTEITER
REALTY

40 ACRES LAND· on Bailey Run
Rood. Good hunting , timber,
all mineral rights . $12 ,000.

1970 T-BIRO. 2 door coupe,
new .429 engine, -4 barrel. new
exhaust , less than 300 miles
on engine. PS . PB. Cruise con·
trol. electric buckef seats with
console , reOr defogger , new
tires,. new e~ehousf . $1800.
7-42-2-404 before 2 p.m. or
otter 5 p. m.

DEADLINES

1-4 ROOM HOUSE and store.
Born and outbuildings . 2'1t
acres of ground. Pogeville,

the Sentinel Classifieds

OH . $35 .000. 698-3290 .

1973 Chevrolet Camero Type
L1, 350 . 8 cy\. Phone 992-6093 .

~_DVERTISING

TWO BLOCKS from bus •nen
di!&gt;tdct in Middleport . out of
high wa ter, 3 bedroo m. eo t· in
kitchen. pant ry , dining room,
living room and both. Natural
gas furnace. full ba sement
and Ottjc," enclosed bock yard ,
wo sne, .
d ryer·.
ra nge .
refrigerator , cur.toins, ond
ca rpeting included in purchas·
ing price. Call 992-32-4 3 after
6pm for appointment.

Real Estate for Sale

REGISTERED CHOCOLATE poo·
die . $6() 992-6280.

C.1u l' of The Sentinel.

MEIGS

-·-·--·---,--Real Estate lor Sale
·----

Pets lor Sale

WANT AD
CHARGES

,

9-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport .Pomeroy, O., Friday;Sept . Zl, l979

CETA

Smith Nelsoo
Motors, Inc.
Ph , 992 ·2174

992·5304,992· 2238

Pomeroy

8-21 -1 mo .

•

AL TROMM
CON ST.

·

Mick'S
Barber&amp;
Style Center
.. lntroduces' -

Featuring :
wom•n's
perms.

mtn ' s &amp;
stylinw.

J&amp;L BL'OWN
INSUlATION
VINYL AND
ALUMINUM SIDING

f l·der-al ·Hou s ing &amp;
Veter oJ ilS Admin . Loans .

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

elnsulatlon
• Storm Doors
eStorm Windows
• Replacement
Windows
•GuHers and

"1ours9-1 Mq-w., f: ,
Otner fime · by appoint ment.
107 Sycamore (Rear)
Pomeroy , 0.

Down Spouts
FrH Estlm•tes

JAMES KEESEE
Phone H2·2772
8-ln mo .

CALL 992-7544
WILL HAUL limestone and
grovel. Also. lime hauling and
spreading. Leo Morris Truck·
ing. Phone 7-42-2-455.

The
Gallia -Meigs
Community- . Action
Agency is accepting applications for the follow ing positions:

LIKE NEW

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

ficer - This position is
responsible for com plete determination of

• ellg;bllity lor all CETA

Acllon/Equal

Dp ·

-:: _A'- \,3 1\ -,....

- \.\ \\'-

O F i UTJ:S
TALEN'5-?

'&lt;E5. 11\A'AM, I THINK
REPORT IS READL

Television Viewing

11 :3o-Saturday Night Live 3,1.5;
Earle Bruce : Football 10;
College FootbaiO
13; Don Klr·
shner '! Rock Concert 17.
11: 45-Movle "The Deep Slx" B;
12:QO-Mo..-ie " Bad Company "
~
10.
1 :oo-Movle "The Time, the Place &amp;
i he Glrl " J; Juke-Box 17.
t :J(}-Movie '' Gunman' s Walk" 17;
2:0D-ABC News 13; 2:30--News

M~

DOWN

.
Q

JUST A UTTLE

M/l.AM

zs

SAVE ON CARPET
DRIVE ALIITLE
SAVE A LOT
RUBBERBACK CARPET

This pcsl-

portunity Employer.

:- - .::--::--::-'&gt;.:CR.

HMM\1\ ... I WONDER

IF 81£/.'5 AWARE ·

.......

ou

Education

Affirmative

'250

MAIN ST.
JACK W. CARSEY, MGR.
PHONE 992-2181

Programs helpful. some
travel required. Entry-.~
level salary i5 $9,755.
Application deadline Is
September 'lS, 1979.

Cheshire.

\,::ACT 1..1=-S AV:c::
S:JI&gt;.\ :;: LOVE-LY
n- 1.'\J6S F::-R. OL. ~
A&gt;ART WcN T.

- ~S

News for Kids 13.
FRIDAY , SEPTEMBER 21, 197'
12 :oo-Jonny Quest 3; Weekend
8 .00-0 iff 'rent Strokes 3, 1.5; FanSpecial 6, 13; Jason of Star
I N'ol moving
tasy Island 6, 13 ; Incredible Hulk
Command 8; Pn: Club 15; Movie
8, 10;
Wa shington Week in
Upanisharb
ZTiUe
" Slave Girls of Sheba" 11.
~ ev l ew 20,33:
Movie " Dimen5 Participant
in Tijuana
12
:30-Jetsons
3; AmeriCI!In Bitnd.
sioo S" 17.
11 Approximate
3 11586 Chi cago,
stand 13; Point of View 6; Tar .
8:30-Wall Street Week 20,33.
zan -Super-7 8; Hogan's Heroes
12 Distillery
incident
9:00-Eischled 3,15: Movie " Diary
3.
10; Crockell 's VIctory Garden 33. "'
of a Teenage Hitchhiker " 6,13;
r..ldue ....,
4 Nigerian
3:00--Mavle " Nora Prentiss" 3;
1:
00-This
Is
the
NFL
3,6;
In
T1"1e
1
Dukes of Hazzard 8, 10; To ee
13 Mother of Ares
tribesman
3:25- Movie "Machine Gun
Know 10; West Virginia Outdoors
Announced 20; Money, News and
Kelly" 17 : 4: 3(}-Mov\e "Men
14 Got around
s Exuded
• 33.
Views
33
.
Ynttrdlly's Anlwer
Are Such Fools" 3.
1:30-This Week in Baseball J;
15 Kind of
i Be wafted
9 : 30 - lssues in World Com ·
Footbal
l
Pregame
Show
College
zz
Leave
zt
Skinflint
20:
To
Be
mun lca tl ons
nose : abbr.
76, 13 ; 30-Minutes 8, 10; Small
31 Be nuts
~ undpne
Announced 33.
II Daunt
slandslill
Businesses
Keep America
IO:ooOa
llas
8.1
0;
Winston
Chur
·
about
Z3 Indite
17 "So - heard" 8 Complete
SUNDA.Y. SEPTEMBER 23,1979
. Working 33.
17;
News
20
;
Da
v
id
chill
31 Mute.
s :1.s-World at Large 17; 5 : 3~AG­
Zt Operatic
l
:AS-Colleoe
Football
6,
13;
2:oo11 Hide seeker
alteration
AN~WA\', I'LL GIVE IT
Susskind 33.
USA
17 ;
6: 00:;_Amerlcan
as a
Baseball Warm. Up J, 1.5; Movie
song
Zllslet
I Ennoble
10 :3G-Up Close with Ted Patrick
COLLOQU
IALISM,
M'&lt;
SHOT
Problems &amp; Cha l lenges 10;
17 ;
" Arrivederci , Baby! "
radio
17;
Consumer
Survival
Kit
20
.
%5
Fairway
Zl Clarinet part 10 Having
Action Newsmaker 13 ; Belween
THERE,
F orsyte Sl!lga Jl .
36 Turltish
11 ~ 00 - New s 3,6,8, 10,13, 1.5 ; New
zz Spouse
wept much
call
the Line 17.
5Baseball
3,
1
S;
2:
30Mov
le
2:
1
Soupy Sales 17 ; Two ROnnles 20:
weight
6: 30- Chri:stopher Closeup
3;
27 Food estab13 Encrusted
II Cj&gt;pied
Stor
y"
8.
"
Carnival
Book Beat 33. .
Treehouse Club 10; Kids areo37 Earth
lishment
3:oo-Upstalrs, Downstairs 33.
Did clerical
19 Skin
11 : 3D-Johnny
Carson
3,15;
People Too 13.
- .o~ :ro-Nashvllle on the ~oad 10; A
Charlie' s Angels 6 ; Movie " Spell
7: oo--This Is The Life 3; Urban .
11
;
When
the
Time
for
Choice
of Evi l'' 8; ABC News 33; Movie
League 10; Jimmy Swaggart 17.
Zl City
Boat Comes In 33.
''The Curse ot the Fly'' 10 ; MoVie
7:30-TV Chapell; Jerry Falwell B;
oo the
~+-+--i4: 3 0-L~st of the Wild B; ~ap Goes
" Amelia Earhart" ll ; Movie
Eddie Sl!lunders 6; The Bible
lhe Country 10; This Week In
27 Winter
" The Harder They Fall" 17 .
Answers 13; .Jimmy Swaggart
17
.
·
Ba5eball
-12 :00- Monty Pyth on' s Flying
Zl School
15; Chr ist for the World 17.
S:OO-Voyage to the Bottom of. the
Circus
33 ;
12 :40- Movie
engineers : 1.--+-~8: oo....;..Mormon Choir 3; Gface
Sea3; WldeWorldofSporb6,13;
" Re..-enge! " 6.
Cathedral6; Christ for the World
Sportsworld 15; Horse Racing 8;
1:QO-Midnight Special 3,IS; Juke ·
- abbr . ..~.,l~t-"T13; Thr.ee Stooges &amp; Friends 17;
Dolly
10;
American
Ufe
St~·!!!
17;
2tSet in
Bo)( 8; Movie ''The Castle of
Sesame Sf. 'lO,JJ.
Coping with Kids 20; Catch-33 33.
Terror '' 10.
3% Apiece
8:30--Qral Roberts 3; Celebrl!ltlon of
5: 30- Porter WaQoner 10,· Love
1
:3o-Movle
"
Son
of
Slnbad"
17.
'ilft\l~ 1])11 ~THAT SCRAIIBLED WORO GA"E
33E.T.O.
Praise 6 ; Day at Di:sco~ery B;
American Style 17; Lock Sleek
~ · ~ ~~~
byHtnri,Amold • nd.BoblH 2:0G-News 13; 2:30-News 3; 3: 2()-James Robison Presents 10;
&amp;
Barrel
'
2
:0;
Issues
In
World
News 17: 3:45-Movie " Re..-enoe
Lower Lighthouse 13; Open Bible
Communications ·JJ ; 5:5534 Fuss
Unscramble these lour J1.1mbles.
is My Destiny " 17.
IS.
~ o llege Scoreboard 17.
·
~
one
let1tH
10
eac1"1
SQuare.
to
torm
35 LilY
9:oo-Gospel Singing· Jubllee 3; ReK
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 22,1979 1 6.00--News 3,10; Concern 8; God
lo\Jr orelinary words .
:rr Skier's
Humbard 6; Oral Roberts 10;
5:-4s---World at Large 17; 6:01&gt;Has The Answer IS ; Wrestling
Rev . Leonard Repass B; Re~ .
favorite
Health Field 10; 6:1o-Human
17; Crockett's Victory Garden
Jim Franklin 1J; Ernest Angley
Dimension 17.
20; Like It Is 33.
fo~st
15; Lost in Space 17: Mister
30
Saturday
Report
3;
TV
6
.
6:
3Q-NBC
News
3,15;
N~ws 6 ;
II Dracula's
Rogers 20.33 .
.
.
Classroom 8; U.S. Farm Report
Muppet Shaw 8; CBS News 10;
creator
· 9:31)--.Chrlstlan Center 8; Elec. Co.
10; Kentucky Afield 13; 6 : 4~
Act ion Newsml!lker 13; Elec. Co.
33; It Is Written 10; Gospel ·
It Scary
News 17.
10: Know Your schools 33:
Outreach 13: Sesame St.. 20.
7:oo-Big Blue Marble 3; Porky Pig
7:oo-O.ince Fever 3; Lawrence
41 Sloppy
lO :QO-Human Dimension 3; Kld:s ·
&amp; Friends B; It' s Your Business
Welk 15; Hee Haw 6,8; Bugs
pilce. e.g.
Are People Too · 6 ; Robert
10; An i mals Animals Animals
Bunny 10; $1 .98 Beauty Show 13;
41 Stag
schuller 8; Movie "Northwest
1J : Three Stooges -Little Rascals
Masterpiece Theat~e 20; Who Is
Passage" 10: Jimmy Swaggart
Man? 33.
-·
17 .
13; Gospel Singing Jubilee 15;
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work it:
7:JG-Little Ra scals 3: Bay City
7:3G-An Inside Look 3; Kicks 10;
Hazel 17; Studio See 33.
·
Rollers 15 ; Matters of Life 6 ; Not
5100,000 Name · Th~ t Tune 13:
. AXYDLBII.AXR
10: 30-Rex Humbard 3; Movie " The
For Women Only 10.
World
War
II
:
G.!.
Diary
33
.
11 LONGFELLOW
Spy Who Came In from the Cold"
8: 00- Dafty Duck 3,15; World ' s
B : OO ~ Chlp s 3,15 ;
Ropers 6, 13;
17; Zoom 20; Blg Bl_ue Morble 3:1Greatest Superfrlends 6.13 ;
One l ett er simply st ands for ~ noth e r .. In th is sample A is,
Working Stiffs 8, 10; Meeting of
11 :oo-t;:rnest Angley ,8; Rev. Henry
Mighty Mouse-Heckle &amp; Jeckle
used for th e three L 's, X for the two 0 s, etc. Stngl e lcttt!fs.
Minds 20,33 ; Pop Goes the
Mahan 13; Que Pasl!l, U.S.A. 20;
8,10i Ultra M;:~n 17.
apoalrophes, th e length and form ali?n or the wor~s are all
Country 17.
Now arrange · the Circled ·leners to
Photography: Here's Ho~ 33.
8:
30Ca
sper
3_.
15:
Partridge
hint!!. Each day th_e cotl e \e ltcrs are different.
30-Detective
School
6,
13;
Bad
8:
form lhe surprise answer, as sug I
11 :30- At Issue 3; Anfmals.
Family 17.
News Bears 8, 10; That Nash..-I lie
gested
by
the
above
cartoon.
CRYPTOQUOTES
·Animals, Animals 6/ Rev. R. A.
9:00-Fred &amp; Barney 3,15: Plas11c
Music 17.
West 13; Elec. Co. 20: Turnabout
Man 6, 13; Bugs Bunny-Road
9:oo-Love Boat 6, 13; Movie " Luckv
·B K I!\
y
NKEXF
33.
Runner 8,10; Ma..-erlck 17.
Lady " 8,10: Summerfest '79 33;
Print answer here:
_ _ '+'
J. _ _ ,!. _ 'f"
A
BTYEW
12 :0D-Meet the Press 15; Issues &amp;
Mo..-ie "Soldier ol Fortune" 17;
(Answerstomr'! row) 10 :00- Si.Jper Glo~etrotters 3, 15 ;
Answers 6.13; Face the Nation 8;
Y W F
Movie " The Fight ing Seabees"
Z
L
Upstairs,
Downstarls
VKLOXF
20.
KR
J
.
Jumbles. YOKEL CURIO UTMOST BIKINI
Nallonal Geo;raphlc 33: 27th
17 .
10: 00-Man Called Sloane 3, 15 ; Hart
National Squ41re. Dance 20.
Yesleroav s 1 Answer: What something In a pl.lnch mlghl do10:JO- New Shmoo 3,15; Papeye 8;
lo Hart 6. 13 ; Al l Creatures Great
SLOTVRXH
LWNR
B'
K
R
T
R
.J YXQ
12 :30-Sonny Randle: Foolboll 3;
KNOCK YOU OUT
.
Movie "Road to Bail" 10.
&amp; Small 20.
~
NFL '79 IS; Ohio Unlv. Football
11 :00- Fiash Gordon 3,1.5; Spider·
11 : 00- News
3, 6, 13, 15 ;
Love
EW
y
JKEXR . ~ ULIIK
IEXXEWZV
J~tmblllook No. 13, cont1lnlng 110 puz1111,l1 IVIlllbletorS1 .75poltplld
Highlights . 6; ~The Issue 10;
Woman 1 ,13.
'
American
Style
11
;
College
I rom Jumble,dotl"llt: np1p1p1r, Boll 34, Norwood, N.J. 07141.1nclud• ~our
Yeotenby't Cryploquote: IT MADE ME GLADSOME TO BE
Evlllngellstlc Outreach 13; l:stut!'·
Football JJ .
l'jlml, ltkltlll, r.1p COdl 1nd m1k1 c;:hKh p1y1b\1 I~ NIWip.fbOOII.I • . 11: 30- Godzi!la 3. 15; GiggleS(lort
GETnNG SOME EDUCATION, IT BEING UKE A BIG
in World Comrunlcatlons 20.
Hotel 6; Fat Al~ert 8: Action
11 : 15-AB_C Nr,w s 6; News 8,10;

ACR06S
I One of !he

CLEARANCE PRICED

field .
CETA

or the C.A.A. Office In

.•

by IHOMAS JOSEPH

1 NEW FUEL OIL FURNACE

using the lnlake System

September ,., 1979. AI·

,..,.-~

v.EE. .... ·-. ,.: .-. .,.._

~~u•wd'

/

and forms established
by the Prime Sponsor,
referring eligible applicants to appropriate
programs or other ser wice · prowiders, and
preparing and "Submit·
tlng
required
documents and reports
to the Office ot Manpower Development.
Requirements include a
degree in Administra tion, Social Work, or

Applications for these
positions are available
tram the Ohio Bureau of
Employment Services

lo .:".•.;

__ ,,..::;..._

,;:::::- ::X-&lt;.il\...&amp;

1·1 mo .

CLEARANCE PJUCEIJ'

Tlttes or Programs and
for Targeted Jobs Ta•
Credit_ Duties include

Seplember 26, 1979 .

~,o !:

FOR YOUR
NEW HOME OR
EXTENSIVE
HOME
REMODELING
AlsoMuonrv
Work
992 · 7583, or 992·2212

1 USED FREEZER '7500
1 NEW ELECTRIC FURNACE

1. CETA Intake 01·

tion is responsible for
assisting participants in
obtaining their GED;
providing
part-time
work experience, SUP·
portive service, and job
plac:ement. Duties include
providing
classroom training, test
assessment,
in di\fidualiled instruction,
and counseling. Re quirements include a
minimum of a Bachelor
Degree in Education
with teaching e• ·
perience in reading . EIC perience with CETA
Programs helpful, some
travel required . Entry
level salary is $10,504.
Application deadline Is

1 has devise a plan w
will save
our qreat
nat
-,.-,J,_ ron from

ctoinq
back

M1ln st.
Pomtroy,O .
..__ __ __ 1:.·.::.
26-1 mo .

COPPERTONE REFRIGERATOR

Spec;alist -

1)18nkincl '

ljOU

v

1 EXCELLENT UNICO 16 CU. FT.

7•2· 2348.

of

I is about t o embark on
th' qreates· feat in th'
histon-1 o'

Pomeroy Landmark

S &amp; G Corp~t Cleaning. Steam
cleaned . Free estimate .
Reasonable rates . Scot·
chguord .
9fi2 -630fi
or

Related
Knowledge

are

992· 2367

9-U -!Pd. )

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING

Newton Fiqbl.l 1
What ___..-,r

Coli tor 1ppt. or wolk ln.

742·2328

5·tf c

GASOUNE AUEY

MARK MORA .
HAIR STYLIST

RUTLAND

949 -2862-949·2160

IT! THEY TOOK OFF
L.SFT ME/ WHA.i 1LL
t DO 1-JOW??'.~

Free Estimates

REMODELING
ROOM ADDITIONS
HOUSES BUILT

New, ~epair,
gutters and
down spouts .
Window cleaning
Gutter cleaning
Free Estima·tes

2.

All Masonary Work
Foundation,
Brick Laying,
Concrete Finishing.•

ROO~ING

H. L Writesel
Roofing

Programs helpful . Area
travel required. Entry
level salary is $9,7SS.
Applications
are
available from the Ohio
Bureau of Employment
Services or. the C.A.A.
Office in Cheshire. Application deadline · is
firmatiW! A~.tion/Equal
Opportunity Employer.

\m o~ Hu t

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992· 5682
• 30-tt c

4

l•rg•st Truc.k or
~t'•di •tor
He•l•r C•re .

Bullcto ter

Services
Offered

•4••
•,.5

Ill

AND UP
CASH &amp; CARRY

•

I KI

SALE ON All CARPET IN STOCK

IINGROI
j
I I (

AND UP
Installed and Pad FREE
GOOD SELECTION OF
CUSHION VINYL

742·2211

R'utland,

'

.

[)

I I

"( I

oc

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

RUTLAND FURNITURE

0

ys

o.
I•

' WINDOW OPENING.- MARY WEBB

1 X .., I

"'

\

..

'

'

�10 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, Sept. 21, 1979.
TO BE NAMED
EAGLESCOUT
•
The rank of Eagle Scout, the
highest conferred in Boy Scout
Work, will be p.-nted to Terry
Snowden at 2 p.m. Sunday at the
Middleport First Baptist Church.
Terry, a sophomore at Eutem
High School, la a _J)Ielllber of
Pomeroy Troop 249. He ls the 1100 of
Doris Snowden, Pomeroy, and Jerry
Snowden, Doarvllle, Ga. A r~tion
will be held follOwing the ceremony.

Senate will debate capital improvement pac~age
· COLUMB US , Ohio (AP ) Hearings begin ln the Senate next
·week on a controversial, $775 million
capital improvements bill that has
SOOJe lawmakers muttering under
their brealha.
It cleared the House 7().23 Thursday, but only after stormy debate
dl\ring which opponents assailed it
as ~ 'pork," and' a ' J»hony."
The massive document - $275
million more than the last two-year

Middletown

.lnstructors
.

.

out on strike
MIDDlETOWN, Ohio (AP) Teachers were on the picket line as
school opened today in the Middletown School District.
There also was no bus service
when drivers faU.!d to report in the
ll,OOO&lt;rtudent district.
,
The board of education met this
morning to discuss ·their poticy on
the walkout, while Superintendent
Samuel Dalton · said aU athletics
would be canceled for the duration of
the strike.
The executive council of the Mid dletown Teachers Association voted
Thursday to strike after the latest
round of wage negotiatiol18 broke
down.
School officials claim that there is
no money for a raise after six consecutive tax levy defeats, including
two this year.
The 641 teachers·are currently under a contract which has a $9.800
base salary.
Teachers Association President
Doug Alder said teachers are
prepared to stay o' until demand'!
are met. These include demands
that the educational programs not
be cut further, a fair and equitable
salary adjustment; a negotiated and
signed master contract ; and no
reprisals agail18t teachers. -as the
,result of any job action.
The last levy defeat last week
touched off demonstratiol18 by local
high school students who urged that
extra-&lt;:urricuiar activities, particularly football, be restored to the .
school program.
The school hoard had eartier said
such · activities would have to be
dropped because of alack of funds.
The strike raises to nearly 50,000
tlie number of pupils in six districts
around Ohio hit by teachers strikes. ·

HOW'S YOUR
HOSPITALIZATION?

cALLMutual C'\.
o/Qmaha.\ 11

,...,.....Colli--..
Gregg Gibbs

I

99?. -3443

capital improvements bill - 'containS promises for pork barrel
projects that can 1 be kept because
of lackr-ut'- funds , the opponents
charged, without ever reaDy beina
challenged.
House Finance Chairman Myrl H.
Shoemaker, D-BoumeviUe, the chief
sponsor, ignored criticisms during
debate lasting about 40 minut!!5.
However; at one point, Speaker
Vernal G. Jllife Jr., D-New Boston,
gaveled down a Republican whO
deplored, among other things, the
speed with which the bill .was being
. approved.

Meigs
Property
Transfers
Hilger L. Bissell, Mary Sue Bissell
to Charles L. Bissell, Margaret K.
Bisseli, l.50acres, Chester.
E. P. Anderson, Esther F . Anderson to Richard Hatfield, Karen
Hatfield, l,ots, Salem.
Robert Jeffers, Helen Jeffers to '
Rodney D. Jones, Linda S. Jones, I'
acre, Satisbury.
George A. Meinhart, dec. to Barbara Jane Mayer, Cert. of Trans.,
Middleport- Lebanon -Sutton.
Berthald 0 . Marshington to
Donald Wooten, Phyllis Wooten, 75
sq. rd., Columbia.

Rain will continue,
cold front expected
The Associated Press
A low pressure system moving out
of the western Gulf was expected to
spread rain over aU of Ohio by
afternoon . A cold f"¥)t extending
from Lake Huron so uth to northern
Missouri will move east and help to
keep temperatures down around the
Buckeye State.
Rain will end over aU but
so uthea stern sections tonight ,
altho48h some showers may linger
in eastern and southern Ohio, the
National Weather Service said.
After highs today in the upper 60s
to low 70s, overnight readings will
cool to the mid 40s to mid 50s.
Mostly cloudy skies are forecast
tor Saturday \n the east and partly

cloudy skies in the west with a
chance of showers in th e southeast.
Highs Saturday will be in the mid to
upper 60s.

SQUAD CALLED
The Pomeroy ER Squad was
called Thursday at 5:57 p.m. to
Minersville for Roy Frecker who
was taken to Veter8118 Memorial
HospitaL

CONVENIENC6

•

For real convenience . ·.. use
our Drive-in service.
Out Auto Bank is open 15 hours longer each week - for
your conv enience. Open from 8 a.m . to s p. m . daily with
the exception of Thursday a11d Saturday, when our
hours are 8 a . m . to 3 p , m .

pomeroy
rutland
tuppers plains

pomeroy
national
bank
the bank of
the century
established 1872
FDIC

.I

But Rep. William G. Batchelder,
R-Medina, who had likened tbe
proceedings to "a rape of the
leglslaiive process,'·' subsequently ·
was permitted to resume his attack
on the bill.
·
The proposal was introduced by
Shoemaker on Tuesday at the
request of GOP Gov. James A.
Rhodes. It cleared Shoemaker's
committee Wednesday after only
one hearing '
Something is in it for every
legislator 's district, a fact that accounts for the bi-partisan support.
Five Democrats joined 18
Repubticans in voting againsJ it. Fifty-five Democrats and 15
Republicans supported it. Four
Republicans and two Democrats
were absent or recorded as mt
voting.
.
The biU contains f471 million for
, higher education, $161 miUlon for
inental health improvements - including more than $74 million for
community projects - and about
$110 miUlon for various other agencies.
Shoemaker, in presenting it to the
House, noted Rhodes' claim that It
would create 35,000 jobs In Ohio's
construcllon industry.
He said be does not know if the
number of jobs would be that high,
but be said the construction activity
.could be helpful to tbe state.

required revenue oonas.
He noted language that leaves to
well-lulown for fiscal COI18ervatlsm,
Rhodes'
budget and management
called the bill "~hony." He added
director
and
the state Controlling
tluit already declining tax revenues
Board
the
decision
about what
will be insufficient to back the·
projects can move ahead, and wben.
The Legislature should retain the
right to make such 'decisions ''instead of abdicating itS reponCOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A sibilities to a handful of people," the
complaint against Columbia Gas of veteran Miami County lawmaker
Ohio alleging that a Columbus home
said.
was supplied "extremely lethal and
Rep . Robert 'raft II, R-Cincinnati,
toxic" fuel in the summer of 1977
COMPI.E'ID COURSE
predicted legislators will have
was filed in U.S. District Court
MARION
- Glenn E. Thompson of
trouble back home explaining the
Thursday.
Rt
.
2,
Pomeroy,
a General
huge outlay for higher education at a
John A. Castagna, tempndon, time when ebrollments are
Telephone Co. of Ohio employee, hu
Ohio, is asking for $30 million in
completed a. course at · the . comdecreasing.
damages from the gas company and
pany
's Employee Development CenBatchelder, the only member to
a Columbus couple, James arid
ter
here.
·
pubticly mention the word ''pOrk "Virginia Carte. The Cartes rented
The
two-week
course covered in·
although it was heard in mumbles the north Columbus hom e to
lricate
adjustments
of aU moving
got in one last jab about the speed of
!;;~ stagna in May 1977.
parts
of
switches
and
rela)'B uied In
passage, Describing himself as a
The complairit charged that the
the
central
office.
'l'homplon
la a
hog raiser, he said one thing is leargas company began supplying and ,'ned last in that undertaking : "You
switchworker in the company's
charging for the dangerous f!lel on .don't let just-ldUed pork sit around
Athens district. He hu .been with
June 23, 1977. In September 1977,
General17
years.
very long, because it gets rll!lcid
Columbia refused to conduct a
pretty fast. "
safety survey and Castagna asked
the city to do one, according to the
HYMNTIMERS
complaint .
TO MEET WEDNESDAY
TO SING
A regular meeting ol Ohio Valley
Dan
Hayman
and thi Country
Commandery 24, Knights Templar,
Hymntimers
will
sing at the Fairwill be held at 7:30p.m. Wednesday. •
view
Christian
Union
COOrch near
Today's birthdays : White House
Officers are to take swords and
Vinton
at
7:
:1!
p.m.
Sunday.
Joe
Chief of Staff Hamilton Jordan is 35.
belts. AU Knights Ten;~plar are
Gwinn,
pastor,
invites
the
public.
Secretary of the Army Clifford
welcome.
Alexander is 46.
Rep. Robert E. Netzley, R-Laura,

Gas suit filed.

'

&gt;

'

'
I

'

overall inctea.!e In enrollment. Since schOlarship opportunities for the
·the .first Ye&amp;l7 of the private college area's stodents. In addition to
and community college partnership private donor schoiarShs, the college ·
in 19'14-75, enrollment at Rio Grande in the past two years has offered
has doubled. This certainly Indicates twelve full tultloo acadEmic scholaran acceptance and approval ol our shi]JII to the four-&lt;:ounty high
educational directions."
schools."
"Secondly," he added, ''in recent
"And the response to the current
years our resident student 'Challenge for the Second Century·
population has reached a peak not capital campaign will only increaae
seen since the early 60s."
agaiit the scholarship offerings."
When asked for an explanation of
Brown indicated. that enrollment
these successes in an era ol figures may rise slightly once late
declining national college . registration, cia&amp;&lt;! additions, and off·
enrollments, Brown noted , "Our campus credit class registrations
costs have much to do with it. Af- are completed. "It's usually late
ford8bie educaton will never go out September before our complete
of style."
-' · '
enrollment report is finished."
"Another plus is the recent inFor the second straight year, Rio
stitutional commitment to increas_ed

•
FALL QUARTER UNDERWAY - Twenty-s!I
·students make up the "Class of 111112" Holzer Medical
. ' . . .Center School ol NW'Bing. nessea got underway earner
this month. Pictured above, first row, left to right are
Teresa Danner;- Gallipolis; Juanita Arrington ,
-Gallipolls; Suzi Stroth, South Webllter ; Anita Bishop,
·South Webster; Dianne Ward, GalliPOlis: Sherry
·Ev1111, Pedro, and Nancy Espenshied, Canton. Second
row -andy Williams, AlhviBe: Pit Boswell, Leon;

.

I

'

Gold prices fall
sharply today •• •

ENT£Al~EHT

Aud~um

PERFECTION ·HEATE-RS
0

.

QUALITY NATURAL GAS

H~ATERS

WITH BEAUTIFUL

Letart; Sherri Rishel, McArthur, and Leslie Devis,
lrontoo. Third row - S.Ody Brown, AlbviBe; Glad)'II
DodrtU, Vinton; Lana Bonecutter, Gallipolls Ferry;
Allee Wllllama, Gallipolis Ferry; Tami Phllli]JII, Bidwell: Joanna Hayes, Zaleski ; Robin Rider, SciotoviUe;
Diane Osier, McArthur; -Shaflene Fultz, Oak Hill;
Vicki Scott, Jacksall and Lisa Osborne, Jackson.

. ' ANY HOME FURNISHING.

70,000 BTU
•THERMOSTATICALLY .CONTROLLED
•3 SPEED BLOWER
•VENTED
ONLY

$34800

35,000 BTIJ
•VENTED

·. '
&gt;

EAST MEIGS - Alpec!a of the
.._nt agreement between tile bowd

will be above the SUite mandates
ralles, of about 27 cents average

of education and non&lt;ertified
employes were outlined by Supt.
Richard Roberta when the Eastern
Local .Board of Educatioo held ;,.
-r-

per employe .
Colt to be board will be about
U,Bl8.56 for th.e sb mooth period
from Jan . I, 19111 to July I, 1980,
When the contract expires or about'
al,447.26 per mooth.
Roberta indicated thla should be
within the budget with the increaaed
lltate funding taldng care of the

September meeting .

· Roberta reported the contract
does nat include any ralles for any
, employe~ at this time over the state
•; mandated ralles, but doea include
Ill increase in the board'• llhare of
Blue ero.. and Blue Shield to
include, nat fuU ]JII)'Til«&lt;t, but about
93 pertent of the dallar figure of the
iillurance.
- This· is an lncreued cost to the
board of about M'ieo 1 year, or S3tO a
month.
"' ·
.....
Rlgular employ111 Will receive a

Elberfeldt In PomerOy
,-

.

.

ttttmt
SUNDAY. SEPTEMBER 23, 1979

mandates ralae .

The resignation of Joe Mitchem as
athletic director was accepted. The
board went into execuUve session to
Interview candidates for the
posltloo. ~r the eucUIIw ~
employment of personnel for
aapplemental contracts wer~
approved u follows: lunch room
~q~erv~.~or. Mrs. Mary Role; aehool

newspaper, Gale Douthitt ; audio
visual director, Thomas KeDy; play
advisor , Gale Douthitt: student
council aljvisor, Arch Rooe ; head
track coach, Dennis Eichinger;
junior high boys basketball coach, ·
Tim Simpson; freshman class
advisor , Gale Douthitt; sophomore
class advisor, Dennis Eichinger;
junior class advisors, Mrs. Nancy
Larkins and Arch ~: athletic·
director ,John Boston. The selection
of senior cJau advtaors was tabled
ooW the October meeting.
James Wilhelm waa given a twoyear coo tract as inltrumentalmuac
director a!ld Mra. Nancy Cole
recelv'ed a contract for the
remainder of the year at study hall ·
monitor. Mrs. MulDe Whitehead
was given a cootract fill' elementary

Dr. John Light, Nelsonville,

'I.

MIDDLEPORT -POMEROY

PRICE 35 CENTS

music .
educational TV contract was
approved; a contract for
The use of school facilities twas
supervision services for E. M. R.
noted by Roberts including the
from Athens County Schools and a
school ' carnivals: Tuppers Plains,
Oct. 6; Riverview, Oct. 13, and contract for the driver's education
multi-media center, approved.
Olester, Oct. 27 .Roberts noted that
A contract for. the driver's
these are the main projects of the
education car was approved for
PTO' s and expressed bope f&lt;r public
support_
.
Gribble Chevrolet of Athens: It was
Use of facilities was granted to . noted that no local dealer was ·
willing to furnish a car for that
the Meigs Soil an~ Water
Conservation Distr ict for their_ program. •
Reports were given as 'follows :
ann~Jal dinner at the
Olester
treasurer's report by Mrs. Eloise
Elementary School and Bar 30 Club
was given permission to use the
Boston: activities account by Mrs.
'l'LIA¥rs . Plains building for ita Debra Rose; transportation by
Arch Rose lind maintenance .by
81111lllll ~ow~· ~- .. ~,
Roberts.
.
Profeaslonal ' meeting's ' ~pPI'OIIed
lllclude Mrs.
Carol King to a
The reports indicated that because
yearbook seminar; Jclln Boston and
of state funding on school b~~~~es, the
district Will be W18ble to apply for
Dennis Elchin"r to the annual Ohio
any new buS(!S Wltil the spr.ing of
State Bisketb8tl Cllnlc and ROberts
to · Ill~ state ·1meeting for new . 1980 .with delivery of illses to be
~len!lena.:
..
about gne,year later.
On service contracts , the
Rose and Roberts indicated the

bus fleet needs upgrading, but muat

be kept up until buses can be
approved by the state 118 the
reembursement from the state Is 80
perCl!flt oo each bus.
Also it was noted that tl'le heating
system fans at the high school and
Chester Elementary have been
repaired and are ready for winter.
With the repair of the fans in the
gym, which have n&lt;JI worked for .
three years, the ventilation is
expected to be better this year.
Meetings for October, November
and December fill' the board of
education were set· for the
elementao' llchools. The October
meetin« will be Oct. 18; 7:30 p.ril. at
the Olester Elementary School.
Attending the me11ting were
Dorset Larkins, pr~; Qeryl
Weil, vice. president! Ja.m es
Caldwell, r,frs. J)orothy' Calaway
and Douglli.s B~lt. BiUo!ll gave
prayer preceding the meeting,

•

named Davis award wznner
GALLIPOUS - Dr. John J . Ught,
president ol Hocldng Technical
College, Nelionville, lathe 19'19 win: , ner ol the E. E. Davl.l award, which
wu ellabllahed In IIH!IIIOI')' ol Eddie
O.vla, prwident olthe Ohio Valley
Health Services FounciAton unW Ilia
dellb in December of 1874.
· Offlcen were re-elected at the
. Thursday meeting In Athens. 1bey
are Dr. WWlam H. Allen, Jr.,
Athens, president, who made the
•

presentatioo to Dr. Ught : John L.
Becldey, vice president, Vinton
County; Bernard Fultz, another vice
president, Melp County ; 0... A.
Burton Payne, vice president,
unrrence County; Dr. Thomas
Price, vice president, Hocking County; Joeepl\ B. Vanity, Jr., vice
president, Athelll County; Mu w.
MOITOW, tre&amp;!urer, Jacbon County; Einon Plwnmer, secretary and

OVRDC grant 8;WaPds
:get final approval
PORTSMOtmi - The Ohio
Valley Regional Development Commlaaicm (OVRDC)hureeeivedfinal
authorization oo several grant awards made to local qendea by the Appalachian Regional Qmmlsslon
(ARC).
They include : ruo Grande Community College Student Center, aerj_llll! the Ga!Ua.Jacbon-Vinton
· UIUilties area, in the amount ol
$90,000 for Phase I construction ;
Medical Adaptation of Microwave to
Health Care Delivery, serving
Gallia, Jacbon, Vinton and Lawrence Counties, in the amount of ~,334.
Tom C. Smith Medical Center
Operatia, in Lawrence County, In
the amount of $100,000; and the
South , Central Ohio Regional
Education Service Agency
(SCORESA), serVing Lawrence
County, in the amount of $90,000.
Several addiUonal local grant
requests are still pending fQr fiscal
year 1879 ARC funding .

~OBECEMETERYDAMAGE

ELBERFELD$· WAREHOUSE MECHANIC. ST., POMEROY

Classified ads • . .... . ••....•. .. .•. . •• . •..•.•• •• .•.. D-1-11
~estyle ... . .... ... ... . ..... . ..... . . . . . ....... . .... B-1·12
Farmoews . •~ ••. .. .•. ..... ... ..• .. .. ....••••.• •••.•• D-1
Sports .. . ... . .. . .. ..... . .. . ...·.. . . . . . .... .... ...... . ~·1·7
StJte aod national .. . .. .... . . ... . . ... .... . .. •·••.. . ..• .• D-1

~

GALLIPOLIS-POINT PLEASANT

'

AUTUMN BROWN BAKED-ON FINISH BLEND I~ WITH

•THERMOSTATICALLY CONTROLLED
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admissions --- Allee · Wise ,
Pomeroy : Clarence Longstreth,
Middleport ; Clarence Norris,
Racine ; " Eileen Smith, Syracuse;
Roy Frecker, Minersville: George
Bentley, Rutland .
Discharges-James Meadows,
Wanda Guinther, Frances; Whittington, Reta Roush, Stella Grueser,
Clarence Hill, Wilma Riggs, Robert
Hawley, Walter Jewell.

'

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 8 PM

Charleston Municipal

Inside today . • •
.
Area death&amp; • •• •••• . •• • ••••••••••• ; •• •••• • •• • •• • •• •• • A-4

}: :: {~~,,~,~' ::t~:u::: : : :::::::::;:::;:::;:::;:=;:{{::=;: :::::t!'ttt{'t!t:=tt':: ':tt':

:, Eastern superintendent outlines agreement

JOE STAMPLEY

e·conomi c s

only with the school, its facitities and
routine of operation, but lj]so to
learn about,.the community, and in
particular, the hospital. Students
toured many points of interest in
downtown Gallipotis, and received a
complete orientation to the hospital
complex.''
The second week featured the
Striping and Chevron ceremony for
the juniors and seniors. This
traditional event took place.,in the
main lounge of Davis Hall, home of

:

for tomorrow
(Monday) evening at 6 o'clock.
The students dressed In their
uniforms, carrY lighted candles at
t!Jey walk, single fOe, completely
aroWld the holpital. All·metnbel'll of
the freshrna\1 and junior clares par·
ticlpate, hoping their candle flamea
continue to burn throughout their
walk to predict the successful conelusion of their nursing education.

'

.AND

correspondent Peter Riddell.
European
commen t at or s
generally have been sKeptical about
the dollar. for some time. They point
to United States' . inflation , the
steadily soaring price of gold bullion
- gold usually goes up when the
dollar goes down - and apparent
decisions by oil-producing countries
to switch their surplus revenues into
non-dollar assets.

NO. 34

wage increase oo Jan. I, 1MO which

TICKETS : SS.OO &amp; N .OO. ALL SEATS RESERVED
ON SALE : CIVIC CENTER &amp; ALL ENTAM
OUTLETS
MAIL ORDERS : MO BANDY, C/ 0 CIVIC
CENTER , ONE CIVIC CENTER PLAZA, HUN TINGTON , WV , lS7l7. CERTIFIED CHECKS OR
MONEY ORDERS ONLY, AND SELF ADDRESS ED STAMPED ENVELOPE . CALL, 696-4400 FOR
INFORMATION.

the hospital's school of nursing, to
recognize student entry into bothothe
junior and senior classes. Women
students receive a navy blue band
for their nursing cap and men a blue
chevron for the sleeve of their ilursing unlfonn each of these year.s.
The annual "Walk-Around-theHospital" for freshman and junior
classes was postponed, due to
weather conditiol18 10 days ago, and

unba

.~

MO BANDY

daily, which reported rumors that a
heavy seDer was trying to dispose of
$500 million in U.S markets late
Wednesday.
"The Federal Reserve did not
want to absorb
egan to fall," repocted the respected
newspaper's

MIJSEMENT CO.

PRESENT$

-.

LONOON (AP )- Gold prices feU
sharply in Europe today after
soaring to record peaks the day
before, while the slide of the dollar
appeared t!J slow somewhat on
European money markets.
Gold opened in London at $374 an
ounce and was trading at $375 by
mid-morning. That was down $11
dollars from Thursday's aU-time
closing high of $386 an ounce.
In Zurich, gold opened at $374.50,
down from Thursday's closing
record there of $381.50.
Dealers said the European gold
slump mirrored an easing on the
New York gold market Thursday
and indicated some nervous profittaking was under way after gold's
spectacular $33 advance earlier this
week. Gold prices have ctimbed $63
so far this moo th as investors,·
worried by continuin g world
inflation , traded in paper money for
the precious metal.
In Tokyo, where currency
markets close bef&lt;re trading begins
in Europe, the dollar lost just under
one yen, closing at 221.375 yen , down
from Thursday's close of 222.35 yen.
Morning dollar rates in Europe,
compared with late Thursday:
Frankfurt..:. 1.7620 Gennan marks,
down from 1.7680.
Zurich-1.5725 Swiss francs, down
from 1.57~5. ·
Paris- 4.1475French francs, down
from 4.1620.
'
Am sterdam-1.94 21 Dutch
guilders, down from 1.9535.
Milan- 803.5 Italian tire, down
from 806.5, the dollar's lowest level
there since last October.
In ll&gt;ndon , the pound was worth
$2.1718, rompared with $2.1650 late
Thursday.
Th e plight of the American
currency was the main story today
on the front page of the Financial
Times, the big ll&gt;ndon business ·

Grande will have a ll'ilY international Davor. Students from
Iran, Japan, Nigeria, Venezuela,
and Truck Ialand (Mlcroneeia ) have·
returned to campus to complete
their educatioo. Thirty~ In- ·
ternational students will study at
Rio Grande this year compared to 'l1
students 1¥.1 year.
"Much Of the credit for our success," Brown COncluded, '-must go
to the Innovators olthe college and
conununity college concept. Tbe
' combination ol over 100 years ol
quality educatioo coupled with community college tuitloo and creer
prograrn.o is a distinct recruiting advantage in a highly competitive
college market."

Deborah Danner, Middleport; Leill8 Wedge, Pt.
Pleasant ; Lori Darst, Pl. Pleasant; Krista Wedge ,

11as

G.Jirrous - Classes are ·underway at the Holier.Medical Center
School of Nursing, With a newFreshman Class consisting of 26 students.
11w: Class of I~ has 20. Ohio
residents and SIX West VtrglDla
res1den_ts enrolled.
The fii'St w~k of the new fall quarter was specifically for freshman
orientation, according to Janet
Byers, R.N., director of the schooL

~~ ~ds~;":ec.i:;::t ~

VOL. B

r.:==ENLw====
The

.

''.
••

Rio has record fall enrollment
Rio Grande College and Community College officials announced
today a record fall enrollment with
1,135 students registered for classes
which began Sept. S.
Compared with last year's figures
of 1,103,the new figure repreents the
sixth straight year for an enrollment
increase at Rio Grande.
Both actual head count and the
full-time · equivalence (FTE ) increased. FTE, which is the number
of full-time students the 1,135 headcount represents, rose from 944 to
975.
Dean S. Brown, director of ad- '
missions and records for the college, .
commented on two recent trends
which continued in this year's
enrollment.
''First,'' Brown said, "is the

Classes ·begin for 26 at
Holzer·School of Nursing
..
~rescheduled

' '

POMEROY - The Meigs County
Sheriff's Department ls in·
vestitlatlng reported damage at the
Carmel Cemetery- Sheriff James J _
Proffitt reports nve tombstones
were pushed over some time alter
the township lrulteel had the\
. cemetery mond during the last .
week of

AUflBI. ·

tt

In ·addition, OVROC received ap- ·
)llm'al of two lldmlnistraUve grants:
OVRDC .Child Development Planntng and Program Development in
the amount of S54,275i and Enlerprtse Development Technical
Aalstance In the amount of $30,000.
'lbese programs provide technical
ualltance to the len-eount7 dlatrlct
which Includes Adams; Brown, Clermont, GaiDa, Jackson, . Lawrence,
Pike, Ross, Scioto, and Vinton Cowl ·
ties.

executive director, Jacllson County.
Executive ·C&lt;DIIIllttee - Helen
Bater, Athenli County; William
Boume, I.awr&amp;lCle County ; Dr.
Ftant W. Myers, Athens County;
Miles Waggoner, Ill* County; and
Dr. Thomas Wubam, legal~edical
advl8er, Pike Olunty.
Reappointed • to the board of
trustees for three-year terms starting next ~ were Dr. Meno
Lovensteln and WWiam Tbelsen,
Athe111 County; Otto Shaw, Hocking
County: and Hudson Jeffreys
(honorary), Lawrence County.
, The E. E. O.vls award went to Dr.
Ught because of Ilia ''nolewortby ac- .
coroplislments in the development
of health manpower training
prog!UIIil" to enhlnce the meeting
of educational and health care needs
of area residents.

EXTENDFJ&gt;OUTLOOK
Fair Mlllllay tllroqil WedDtlday, e•cept for a cbuiee of
abowen In lbe DOrtb Tllelday
DJcbt. Jll8latt ill tile '1111 Maaday'
8lld from tlie aiJd Jill MODday 1
8lld from lbe mid 7el to low 811
'I'IJesday illld Wet hy.I.Anra ID
lbe mid til to low Ill Moaday,
8lld ID lbe Ml Tueaday 8lld Wed·
-.lay.

..

Weather
Sunny today. High In the mid to.
upper 6011. The chance ol rain Ia near
zero percent today.

Offer free flu vaccine
GALLIPOUS - The Gallla County' Hwth Department will Cllllduct a
free nu vacctne clinic oo -.Wednesday, Sept. 28, and Wedneaday, .
Oct. 3, frml 9 a.m. to 12 noOn and I
Wlti!S ::Il p.m.
Trlva1ent ·nu vaccine (A lfliasl.an,
A Taan, and Hong Kong) will be olfered to PeoPle 85 yean of qe and
older and tholle wbo have a chronic
Illness (such as . dlabetu,
reeplralor)', ·_cardiac, or kidney
d~Maae.)

A GIGANTIC SYCAMORE in the back yard of Our
. • House ~usewn .hill grown to the point that it seems
'. about read~ push over part of the brick fence which

:,0

·;

• 1

surrounds the yard. See story on pqe 8-7. (~
Ewingphoto).

1!

.

.

\1

'

'

1

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