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                  <text>12- The Daily Sent mel, Middleport-Pomer oy . 0 .. Thursday. Oct. 18, 1979

Guards facing additional charges
MANSFIE LD. Ohm 1 API
!&lt;I gl ,l
Mansfte ld Rcfonnat.ur _
l.' L' lll p iU ) 'l'l' :-.
who we re tn d.a('ted la:-;t August fu,vtolating th t! ctv1 l rtJ.;!ht s of tnJII&lt;J 1L'
Sam uel Moor e h n \'t~ bet·n l · h ar ~ ed
wa th an ad&lt;Jttwna l 20 count s 11 f
assault.
Th t! assault char ge s

ftled

Wt'n'

111

Munici pal Court Wednesda y by the·
Ohio

Htghw t:~y

Patro l ag&lt;:Hn st the
samr cmployt'es who wen · tn&lt;.lldcd
by a gran d j ur ~· m co nnedton wtt h

the l}t,atmg of Moor&lt;• . who d1ed la st
.'\ pril 9 whil e bt'mg t ran s f~._· r rt• d from
lh ~ reformatory to ttw l.uJ ta Statt•

Hos pital
Th e vw lat ton uf

&lt; ' l~· d

.-h ;t~"/..! 1 '11 \-\ I IIi l ltl t'

t ti ll Il l 1d a s:-,ctU I!
Tht· •1'.. :-.&lt;1 uJt ('haq.(t' 1 ~ a ftrst
deg n •t• n ns d t'fllt'O:inor MH l l"f:i r rl t'S it
11\&lt;t :'l: llllU II l (Jt'nalt y of ~~ $1,000 fllh '
;, nt) SIX ltlo lllh s Ill j &lt;JII tf 1'0/l Vl d l'd
( ifflt"t&lt;iJ S SiiUJ fht' l'Jgh t Will l.&gt;t'
tss ut·U s ulJ pot.•nc:Ls ro appt.•a r m
IIIUilit"l pa l t 'our t The.' alr l'ady &lt;irt'
sd !t•dull'd tu i:I J&gt;pt•&lt;t r on Ot't 26 111 a
pn•trwl ht·anng on lht· c..w tl n gh ts
\"Wla t tull c h&lt;:1r gc..•s . It h&lt;:e:i nut bt&gt;t•JJ
dt• !eJ-J!IIfl t• U Wh t•ther th t• CIVIl n g hts
and nssa u.J t c tl ;.t r gt•.s will bt.• ht•a nll n
t·ourt Sl/l lUlt aneousl.\
'I1h· t•tgh t t•rnployt't:'S a lrt'ady han-·
p!t ·:u lt-tl Jllll UL' t~ lll tu t.ht• t' l\"ll ri ~ ht s

r1 g ht s

d l&lt;-i q..! t' S

mdl('l!Tlt'n t s ami addt! tonal &lt;:t.ss~:mlt

I . 111 1&lt;1

charges wt&gt; r e Lh t• dtrec t n .·sult of an
mvesltgatwn heackd by Trooper T

co un t s

Willia m Dun n 1 thr et&gt;
Lt"' n Luce llwu co unt s1;
Carl Ha r t so n 1 two counts 1, rin d
Robert Br andl 1oue L'O UJlt 1
Char le s
Hu we ,
nss 1s t nn t
supcrm te nderll tn ch a r gl' o f cu stod\·
at tht• r t&gt; f ormit lo r ~ . &lt;tlso wa s
1,

counts f;

Mr.s . Townsend was born April 2,

1893. a da ughter of the late J ohn a nd
Amy BnckJ es Gra ha m .

She wets

also

pre&lt;·eded 111 dea th by her
hu i&gt;; b£~ nd .
Gath T own s hip ; Cl
da ught&lt;• r. F:ve lyn l.ou ise . lhre&lt;'
brotht•rs anrl a h8lf siste r

P om eroy. and l .orene &amp;·ott . Haute 2.
1\.l ba n) . SIX grandchild ren and eight
l{r eat i::: ra ndc hrldren also s urvi ve-d

Mrs . Tuwns end and her hus band
the genera l store at
Pag t'vi iie frulll 1924 to 1956. After his
dea th . she contmoed ln operate the
store until J uly , 197Q when she
moved to Alba ny .
F wwral se r vices will be held at
I :JO p.m . Sunday al the Blgonyupc ra k d

CLEANING
Ge t p rofess io na l
re sults at a
fract io n of th e cost.

J urd cm F u nl~ ra l Home in Albany

·
f
f
•
••,.,
"
IIIISf;u...., '. ·
Rent

~l

A me rr c a s No , 1
Hom e C a r p er

h,

1

wllh Hobert Purtell officiatin g .
Bun a l ,., ll be In Wells Cemetery.
f' n e nds may c&lt;Jtl at Ule funeralhome
from 7 tu 9 p .rn Fnday a nd (rum 2 to
4 a nd 7 tu 9 p.m . on Saturda y.

-....¥ ..

l::_
/' ' ,:. \

":S ~

-

_f.

.

'

)

'

.--------------·
I
$100
I
I
I ONLY

12 Hro.1d wa y in Albany .

da ug hters. Hazel Stanley, Houte 4.

CARPET

RENT
FOR

&lt;bed Wednesday &lt;:t t he r res idenc~ a t

Townsend .

FOR

Cl eam n g
Sys tem

NADAALTHEATOWNSEND
Mrs. Nada Althea Townsend . 116.

Survivmg are a .son. John Franklin
Wes terville , and two

\,HV
PAY
MORE

I
(4 -Hour Min1mum) I
PER HOUR

L-------------J

STAR SUPPLY CO.

W l tll t_'SS t_' S

h;.i \ ' l'

"EF:D SL:BSTITh'TES
Tht• M ~ 1gs I Meal S&lt;'iwols 1n Mtd dle port an· lookmg for s ubs titute
lt'&lt;H: he rs who wu ld like to work
d unng tht' prt_·se nt work stoppage .

Th e board Will puy each s ubstitute
teac her $52 pe r day. If you are Inte rested please call DaV1d (; Iea son.
su permtende nt . at 614-992-2153 aS
soun as possible .

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 19th
NEW SHIPMENT

( "(J ill C

CARPET
MILL
ENDS

fo rw.arli r! amun g Moor e was bca tl'JI
hy re form a to r y gua ffi'l a f ter an
&lt;dJur tL&gt;d t•sc.·apc..• att e111pt Mar ch 30

frurn Peop le 's Hospital Ill Ma nsfield .
i\ Wt•ck latt•r he was tak~n to a
pnso n van fur tran sfer to Luna
Sl:"ne wJt nesst•s s aJd Mour l' wa s
stra pJWd ulto a wht•c..•lcha! r for thl'
JOIH'Ill' ~ bt•ca ust• he
s1t up on h1s own .

wa ~

trac t iv e

hand c rafted

Reg . $199 .95
7 pc . Metal Dinette ...... . . ... . . Sale $149 . 00
Reg. $259 .00
5 pc . Pine Dinette .. ....... .... . Sale $199 .00
Reg. 5358.00
5 pc . Maple... . ......... ... .. ... . Sale 5269 .00
Reg. S3S9 oo
5 pc. Walnut -Pedestal ........ ,Sale $269 .00
Reg. $389 .00
7 pc . Pine .... ........ . .. ..... . .. Sale $299 .00
Reg . $298.00
Maple Corner Cabmet .... . .... Sale $228.00
Reg. 5319 .00
Pine or Maple Buffet &amp; Hutch Sale $242 .00

dresses

S11 esJ to 15

_.;

sn.oo. .....

Sale$14.00
$22.00...... Sale 517.00
529.00 ...... Sale $23 .00
$37 . 00 .. .... Sale $29.00
S46.00 ...... Sale S37.00

MEN'S

SPORT
SHIRTS
1/2 PRICE

MEN'S
SUITS
lf2PRICE

MEN'S

INSULATED
SHIRTS
&amp;

DRAWERS

20% OFF
MEN'S
h.i.s.
PRE-WASHED

JEANS
25%0FF

Evan..c.; .

The "Rogue"
- l~
.. .
'.I

-,

r

MEN'S
OUTERWEAR SWEATERS

15%0FF ·lh PRICE
Take Advantage of Our Raincheck
(10% Off On Your Next Purchase)
IW!!IIIII

11111!11111~

- - .,---

(

I

REG . $21 .95

SLEEPWEAR
SALE

VOL. XXVIII

S i zes XS 1o XX L

REG . $7.00 ...... SALE $6.19
REG. $9.00 ...... SALE $7 .89
REG. $13.00 .. .. SALE $11.39
REG . S17.00 .• • . SALE $14.99
REG . $28 .00.... SALE $24 .95

HANES
THERMAL
UNDERWEAR

,

!1\

~;'

Tw o p1 ec e slyl e RC'gular ~ 5 49
m en' !:. a nd $4 49 boys· rnerm at s
tn c fuded i n the sa te S1IC"S ":.ma l l,

me0 1um , large a nd e.: rr a l a r ge

Men'sSS .49
Thermal Underwear • • ••• • • . S4 .84
Boys 14.49
Thermal Underwear .• •.•.. U .84

L ar ge

~e l e c t1 o n

Mast e r

a nd

SALE PRICES!

I

I

~\ ~

ot C han ne l
P an ason1 r s ter eo

eq u1pme nt 1n sroc k

Lay ·away lor Christmas!

Orde r !he c ustom made
drapes you need now . Big
se leclion of paNerns and
solid
co lors .
ex ce llent
workmanship,
prompt
d e livery . Sale ends Oc
Iobe r 27th .

MEN'S 14 OUNCE

BLUE JEANS
Ba s1 r styl e by M r L egg s, Pre
wa she-d 14 ounc e b lue de nim boot
f la r e &amp; "iolr a1Qh l l eg st y le s S1 zes
').9 to 36 w aist Regular p r i r e
Sl J 95 - Sp e-ci al

sgs9
LITTLE GIRLS'

l

I

WHITE SYNTHETIC FUR WITH

") :
/

HAND MUFF AND HOOD

(' .

I

I

REG. '44.00 TODDLER SIZES .... SALE '29.00

,

I
I

l

\

\\ I
~/

tBRU Sii lD I'I G,J WJJ
COLOR S
•DROMEDAR Y
•COPPERTONF
(SMOOT H LEATH ER(
COLOR • CAM EL

THE
SHOE BOX
MIDDI C:PQRT, OHIO

;tretching west from Steubenvi lle lo
Canton and Lima , north to Tiffm and
So uth to Portsmouth .
He r e ls how Ohio's oth~r major
utili ties stand on compliance with
U.S E nVIr onmental Prote ction
Agency regula tion s effective today
for s ulfur d iol&lt;ide emission s :
Cin cinnati Gas &amp; Ele ctric Co . says
it " in complian ce . It operates two
coal !ired plants , one ea ch m
O ennon t and Ha milton counties ,
and has partnerships in two others .
It will generate about 14 billion

WOMEN'S

BlOUSE
SALE
Fl or a ! pr 1nts a n d so l 1d co lors

- Long s leeves
- Size s 31 to 46

NO. 132

of tl fro m Ohio mines, 10 Ihe I wo
who lly owned plants . It bu ys non e
for the two partnership plants.
CG &amp;E serves 580.000 customers in
southwest Ohio, northern Kentuck y
and southeast Indiana.
O eveland Electric Illuminating
Co. has two coal-fired plants and two
steam powered plants affected by
E PA em iSsion standards . II wil l
meet standards by blending coa l
from traditional sources . It has
recei ved EPA exemptions for tw o
other plants The bulk of its coal
comes from Ohio min es.
700 ,000
CEI s erves abou t

billion kilowa tt hours of e let1rie it y

Col u m bu s &amp; So uthe rn Ohi o
F.lect nc Co . says 11 wil l meet EPA
sta n da rds b y was htn g coa l t o
remove

sulfu r

at

its

lar ge st

Kene r at 1ng plan t, U1e Conesville
statwn in Coshocwn Co un ty . C&amp;soF:
spok esrn an Bob J on es estimates it

wlll take thr ee year s to put th e
wash tng fa c1ht y mlo opera tiOn . It
has t wo other coal burning pl ants
that m ee t emiSSIOn standard-, and

wtll co nt mue burning a U Ohio coal.
F o r tile year endin g la st J ul y ,
C&amp;SOE burned 5.1 lllillion tons of
coal a nd had sa les totaling 9.05

•

WASHINGTON 1AP 1 - The U. S .
economy rebounded from a secondquarter slump to grow at an annual
rate of 2.4 P&lt;"rcent from July through
Septem ber , the government reported today .
The ligure from the Commerce
Departmen t was stronge r than ex pected and threw doubt on whether
the nation's seventh r el'ession s ince
World War II was under wa y.
Much of the growth was attributed
to a surge ln sales, wh1 ch had suffered !rom April through JWJe
because gasoline lin es inhibited

at

Buy your bulbs now . Good
se le c t ion - c roc us , tulips,
daffod i ls,
hya c inths .
R e gular prices 15c to 55c.

SALE PRICES

SPECIAL GROUP

MEN 'S '7.95

SPORT
SHIRTS

. ,.

.~I:oday
~
wotid .·

· .·.. in the
•

TOKYO I AP I - A fuel tank e• ploded at a U.S. Marme Corps
cam p this afternoon , killing one
person and in junng 60, a Marine
spokesman sa id. At least 10 of the
in jured were in c ntu;al conditiOn
with burns .
The spokesman , Gunner y Sgt .
Robert Green, said no tmmedlllte
infonnation was available on the
identity of the victlms, or
whether they were Arnerican.s or
Japanese.
The blast occurred at the
Marines ' Camp Fuji 10 Shizuoka ,
a bout 90 miles wuthwest uf
Tokyo.
Green said the cause of the ex plosion had not been de tennined .
" The fuel tank leaked, flowed and
then ignited . that's all I know ,"
he said.
The worst mjured were bum

BOYS' '7.95

FLANNEL
WESTERN
SHIRTS
S i zes 8 t o 18, assorted plaid patterns .
True western style with snaps on front,
c uffs and poc ke ts . Special Two DaY. Sale
Pri c e .

cases, Green said.
The injured were bemg treated
at a Japanese JJlllitary hospital
near the Marine base .

Still debating
TWO DAY SALE I

WASHINGTON ! AP I - Sen .
Edward M. Kennedy and h1s
politi cal advisers s till are
debating whether he, should annoWJce his presidentihl intentions
before or after President Carter
makes his expected re..,jection
announcement on Dec . 4.
.
While there remains the
possibility that Kennedy could
WJnoWJce he has decided against
running , repeated hints from the
senator as well as the
preparation being made , leave
little doubt he intends to
challenge Carter for the 1980
Democrati c
pr es id e ntial

MEN'S 19.95 MANFIT

SPORT SHIRTS
A full c ut shirt with two pockets. long
tails . Never iron 65% polyester 35% c ot ton . Exce ll ent selection of patterns .
M,
L a nd XL sizes .

s,

REG . '1 1.00 ...... ...... .............SALE '8.89
REG. '13.00 ......... ... .. -.. ...... SALE '10.49
REG. '16.00 ........ ......... .. .... SALE '12.79
REG. '21.00 ......... .............. SALE '16.89

nomination.
Tom SouthWick, Kennedy 's
press aide, said Thursday that an
" exploratory" camprugn com mittee would be formed in ' the
not too distant)uture. " possibly

OPEN FRIDAY .NIGHT TIL 8: SATURDAY TIL 5 PM

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

pext week .

•

two

consecuti ve

quarters

of

declining output .

Tanker explodes

Po ly colton blend in
sizes s. M, Land XL
Assorted patterns .
L imited quantity .
Sav e This Wee kend .

shopptng and a shortage ol crude oil
depressed trade, said a Commerce
analyst who asked not to be identifi ed .
The Ul~rd.quarter growth, whic h
some analysiB say could be a temporary plateau before the nation 's
output agatn turns down , lollowed a
second .quarter decline or 2.3 percent
at an annual rate .
Had the third-quarter figure also
shown a drop, the statistics would
hav e lined up well witll Ule
traditional defirution of a recession :

The third-quarter growth ligure
was Ule strongest so far this year ,
though stili weaker than the 3.5 percent expansion in the thrrd quarter
of 1978 .
And it occ urred, m good part,
because Ameri cans saved a mere 4.1
percent of their earnings - the
lowest savings rate in mor e lhan 25
years , Commerce analyst Adren
Cooper said
Is the economy m recession ?
" We don 't know from Ulis ,"
Cooper sa1d . " If you look at the
figures, gross national product is
back almost to the level of the fir!lt
quarter ...
Inflation adjusted gross nations I
produc t stood at Sl.43 triWon, about
$2 million higher than the first quar·
ter level, the report showed.
Consumer purchases from July
through September rooe 1.1 percent
to $924 .6 billion , more than

recovering from the 0. 7 percent
decline of the previous quarter , the
report indicated .
Trade surged 47 percent to $19 .4
billion, again more than making up
for the 22 percent drop in the second
quarter .
Although the report indicates that
inflation slowed from an annual rate
of 9.3 percent in the first two quarters of the year to 8.4 percent in the
third quarter, the income of
Americans suffered.
Income adjusted for both inflation
and taxes was down 0.3 percent 111
the third quarter to $990.3 billion . It
had fallen 0.4 percent in the
preceding quarter .
" Heallncome is down , yet there 's
a strong recovery in conswner spending, " Cooper noted. "Consumers
didn 't save. They just spent moot of
their money ."
Before adjustment for inflation ,
the value of the nation's goods and
services stood at an annual $2 .39
trillion in the third quarter, up at an
11 percent annual rate from the
second quarter.
The statistics are likely to
heighten, ratller than depress.
debate over whether there is a
recession .

Many experts. includi~ Treasury
Secretary G. William Miller, argue
that Ule July-September data is a
' false signal" and that Ule economy
remains in "a recessionary mode . "
Others. including Walter E .
!Continued on pa~e 121

Clean air standards
are imposed today
By JOE McKNIGHT
Assoriated Press Writer
F ederal clean air standards were
IITlposed on Oh10 today , forcmg
ut thtles W stop burnlng high-sulfur
coal to generate electricity .
The move is blamed for l'Osting
mor e than 1,750 coal m me jobs and
industry spokesmen sa y job losses
could go w 4,000.
Th e
U.S .
En vironmental
ProtecllOn Agency enforced the
deadline after earlier this montll
rc)ecting the state's proposal for
conlrollmg sulfur dioxide emissions .
A federal EPA spokesman saJd the
federal rules primarily alfect
e lectri c utilities and that most have
e1Uler complied or have temporary
exemption s from compliance .
Ohio officials and mdustry
executives are seeking to have the
federal agency to alter the yardstick
1t uses w measure sulfur dioX&gt;de
emissions. The lederal agency is
averaging air pollution levels every
24 hours. Ohio wants the level
averaged over a J(klay penod.
The ~mplementatlon of the federal
rules means U1at , With a few
exc eptions, Ohto 's s e ven major
electric utilities must bum coal with
less sulfur than most of that mmed
in eastern Cflio. Most uti lities hav e
reduced pollution levels by washing
or mixing coal or by taking other
steps .
The E PA gave reprieves lo som e
plants of Ohio Edison and Cle veland
Electric lllun1inating compames .
The two firms are preparing further
tests and argwnents on behalf of
continued use of Ohio coal.
Ohio Power Co. of Akron still is
negotiating with the EPA over
acceptable limitations fer its giant
Beverly plant , located 20 miles up
the Muskin g um River from
Mar1e tta .
John Guzek, president of United

RALLYSATIJRDAY
A pa rent rally for ail interested
taxpayers of he Meigs Local School
Distn ct will be held at the norUlbound Route 33 roadside park at 2
p.m . Saturday . Doris McDonald announced tcda y .

Mme Workers Umon District 6, said
from hi s office 111 Dilles Bottom that
1,750 miners ar e on permanent
layoff because of the new emission
rules . Some m ines are closed and
others operate part-tlme, he added .
Other m ine officers say job los.s&lt;!S
could reach 4,000 when lmpa c1 of the
action hils allied industnes .
Meanwhile , efforts are conlmuing
to come up w1Ul a mutuall y
acceptabl e state plan . Oh io EPA
ch1ef
James
M cAvoy
m et
Wedn esdav with federal EPA
re gi onal - admmistrator John
McGuire to discuss a proposal for
major mdustries to continue using
Oluo' s high sulfur co al . There was no
a greem ent, but Mc Guire s a 1d
another meeting is scheduled m
Columbus on Oct. 26.
The U .S. EPA has al"' schedu led a
hearing Nov. 10 at St. Clrursville for
testlmony on the econom1c IJJlpact of
its a ction .

OhiO 1s the only state that did not
submit a cceptable rules lo the U .S.
EPA for limiting sulfur dioxide
emission s WJder the 1970 Clean Air
Act.
McG uire sa id the standards appl y
only w boilers rated at more than 10
ntillion British Thermal Units of
heat per hoW'. But there is no one
standard lo apply statewide, he said .
" It depends oo the location and Ule
densi t y of industry," McGuire said .
implementation
plan
" Th e
determines what emission level is
necessary lo protect the standards ."

mostl y

low

sulfur

coal

fro m

Kentuc ky and West Virg mia to
produ ce about 98 percent of Its tota l
elec tri c output.

DP&amp;L buys a bo ut 6.6 m ill ion tons
of coal a year , less than I 0 percent of
tt from Ohio, to produce tO. I bi llion
kilowatt hours of electri city for sal e
w 410 ,000 customer s in west central
Ohi O.
Oh 1o Ediso f1 Co ., Akron , ope rales

FRIDAY. OCfOBER 19. 1979

northeas t Ohio.

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Football game,
band show off

MARSHALL GORDON

1

Gordon
named
director
An expert on corrections has been
appotnted director ol the new
Southeastern
Ohio
F o rensic
Psy chiatnc Center.
Marshall Gordon, who moved to
GallipoliS after a stmt as a research
associate with the Joint Mental
Health and Mental Retardation Advisory and Review Commission in
Columbus. is enthusiasti c about
returning to work ln mental health
and correctiollS .
The new ForeMi c Center will serve six counties in Southeastern
Ohio : Athens , Ga11ia, Hocking ,
Ja ckson, Me.gs and Vinton . Com ·
petency and Insanity evaluations for
the courts and other related services
wi il be provided through the Center
Headquarters are located at 412 Vtn ·
ton Pike, Gallipolis , Ohio .
Gordon is the co-author of the book
Juvenile

Justi ce

in

Ameri c a .

1published by Glencoe Publishers in
California 1 which came out in
January, l979 .
For the three years that he was
worklng on the t.Jok Gordon also
directed a research proJect 011
delinquency for the State of
Washington .
Gordon has worked erte!l'i vely m
Ule State ri Ohio . From 1973 to 1975
he worked as a P olicy PlannerAnalyst for the Ohi o Department of
Public Wellare. He started hi s
profess1ooal career as a caseworker
a nd superviSor for t he F ra nklin
County Welfare Department.
During that lime he received a
Master&gt; Degree in Social Work from
The Ohio State University .

His undergraduat~ work was completed at West Virgin&gt;a Universit y 1n
Morgantown.
The Gordon fa!Tilly is ic the
process of movmg to Gallipolis from
Colwnbus . Gordon 's wife of II
years , Eileen , has been working as a
teacher in Columbus . The Gordons
have two children

EXTENDED FORECAST
A chance of •howero dally Sunday through Tuesday. Warm Sunday oDd Monday ,.,tb low• In the
5811 and highs In upper • to low
70o. Cooler Tuesday ,.,th Iowa In
upper 411 tn low 5GB 1111d lows to
upper 5011 to low SO..

Weather

Wln-41 -thoD 50411.

E PA has approved emission levels

at 1ts Ulree coal fir ed plants . It burn s

12 ge nerating plants . EPA has
granted deadline extensions for
three plants and Ohio Ediron says
til e others are in compliance. The
finn burns 9.9 million tons of coal a
year , m or e than 60 percent coming
from Ohio mines. A spokesman said
if it has to switch to low sulfur coal at
th e three mmes operating WJder
• •tensions it would
reduce
consumption of Ohio coal by about
1. 7 m illion tons a year .
Ohio Edison sold 22.3 billion
kilowatt hours of electrieity in 1978
to some 936,000 customers. The firm
se rv es a broad area of central and

enttne

·:-:-.·.·.·.·.·. :-:······

CLEVELAND CAP) - Here
are the winning oumbel'll drawu
Tbunday In the Oblo Lollery :
Blu~ %12; White 75; Gold 9:

tnllion kilowatt hour s of e lectricity
to 450.000 custom ers Ln cenlral a nd
southern Ohto .
Dayton Power &amp; !Jght Co. says

•

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

C LEVELAND ! AP r
Cleveland firemen are seeking
t he cause of" fire in a 2...,_story
frame house that killed two
women and in jured nine other
persons .
Killed despite rescue efforts of
neighbors and fireme n were
Theresa Hewins . 25, and Loretta
Johnson, 18.
Zynette Hewins , 7, was repor ted 10 critical condition Thursda y
rtight in the burn uni t of
Oeveland Metropoljt.an General
Hoopital.
A 2-year-{)ld boy suffered a
broken leg when thro,.11 from a
second-floor window to a rescuer ,
who later was over come by
smoke from the earl y morning
fi re .

REG. '54,00 SIZES 4 TO 6X.. .. SALE '39.00

I

ina n ar ea

r u s tu111er s, 1nustly 1n gre a te r
Cl ev e land , an d lost year so ld IR .:I

burn 6 nulilon tons of eo al , one-Hu rd

e

Fire kills two

FLOWER
BULBS

SAVE 30%

TWO DAY SALE!

riJ

DUTCH

SAVE 30%
I
I
I
I
I
I
i

cus to m e r s

kilowatt ho ur s th1s year . and will

Economy rebounds slightly

Waltz lengths, short ies a n d m in i
gOWfl S

DRAPERY SALE

With !he purchase of any
stereo component ~ystem .

whic h becam e effec ti ve today .
A spokesman sa1d E PA will
approv e emissions at the St ubenvllle
area Cardinal plant ,a lso jointly
owned, an d negott a t1 o ns ar c
unde rwa y for accepta ble emission
levels at 1ts Mws lun gum River
Plant.
Ohio Power burned 22 mil lion Ion s
of coal in 1978 . about on e third of 1t

600 ,000

(U SPS 145960)

Winter Gowns, Night Shirts
and Robes

CUSTOM MADE

COAT SPECIAL

'
I
I

SELECTED GROUP OF

MEN'S

Flannel Shirts...~1L70
Flannel Shirts ...'13.20
Flannel Shirts... ~14.80

Hush Puppies·

I

GROUP OF

by

"'"""'

\I
-~·-·--~--r--~----·-1.~-·-·----·-r·--·-----..- ·}:i ·-·-·-t

FREE
STEREO

Fun e ral Hom e .

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted-Alice Oark, Midleport ,
Handy 1\rms, Minersville; James
Miller , Middleport; Jessie Kuhl ,
Cheshire; Samuel Mc Kinney,
Hotland; Dale Bmg. Hutland ; Hilda
Dav1s, Hacine; Ella Barham. Mid dleport ; Roy Jones, Pomeroy ;
l.uc1ll e Cundiff . Miners ville ;
Franklin l.emley , Portland .
Dis c ha r ged--Pri cey
Ta c kett,
Margaret Houdas helt . F:dna Ken nedy, Hobert Van Meter, Nonnan

Flan1~e1

Friday-Saturday Sale

Te r r y , velo ur s. oo tye!. t er b l e nds ,
kn its., d 1sco styles . 2 pi e ce

which he made at his home .
Fune ral services Yrill be announced by the H.awltngs-coats

r

·- ~~~~.~

JUNIOR
DRESSES

i

•

XL Sna p Ir a ni , sna ps on cuff s
and poc ke t s

SALE

furnitur e

sulfur dioxide emi ssion regulat iOns

from Ohio m mes II sold 37.5 billion
lulo wall hno urs '" the 12 month s
ending la st March 3t , an d ser ves

WOMEN'S

DINETTE SALE

STAND
FRI., OCT. 19TH THRU SAT., OCT. 27TH

FRIDAY-SATURDAY SALE

Men's '1 1.95 Western
Men's '14.95 Western
Men's '16.95 Western
Men's '18.95 Western

1AP I· OhiO

tw o gen eratr ng fal'l litJ t• s and
shareholder of two oth er s , says its
Ga vin Plant at Chesh ~re and the
jom tly owned Kyger Creek pla nt
near by com ply with federal EPA

an d Ca m pfi re S1 zes S. M , L an d

Sc ulp t ure d S h ags and Plushes .

Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg ,
Reg .

CO LUMBUS, Oh10

Po w~r Company of Can ton . owner of

Leggs , Wa gon Boss, Wr a ngl e r

Mechanic St. Warehouse

IIOSI'IT \L '\1·,\\ S

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 20th

A n exc toll enf sel ec tion , c ol orful
pla ids an d so lid color s, too Mr

9'x 12'..... ...... ......... ONLY '74.00
12'x12'.. .. ... .. .... .... . ONLY '94.00
12'x15: ... .. ..... ..... . ONLY '114.00
12'x 18~ .. .. .... ....... ONLY '134.00

ROSCOE SA TIER FIELD
Hoscoe Satterfi eld , 86, Maple St .,
Middleport , died at his residence at
6:30p.m . Wednesday of an apparent
s elf-mfllcted gunshot wound to the
head, officials said .
The Middleport Emerge ncy Squad
was called to the scene but Mr . Satterfield was dead upon the unt t's
arrival.
Also on the scene were
Middleport poli ce . Coroner Dr H. ft
Picke ns, Shenff James Proffitt and
members of his department.
Mr . Satterfield was born July 24,
1893 at Knoxville, Tenn ., a son of the
late Hobert and Mary Smith Satte rfield . He was also preceded in
death by his first wife, Jennie Pierce
Satte rfield in 1966 and his second
wife , Allene Maxine Henry Sat terfield in 1973, fiv e s is ters and four
brothers .
Survi vmg are a daughter . Mrs
CurtiS 1Dorothy I Jenk inson . Middleport; two sons, Jack of Mid ~
dleport and Dan of Toledo; a SISter,
Mrs Walter i Hoxi e ) Breede n, Knox vtlle ; seven grandchildren and
several great·grandchildren .
Mr . Satterfield wa.5 a member of
the Middleport Church of Christ.
Before his retirement Mr . Satterfield was employed for many
years w1th the New York Central
Koilroad at Hobson .
After his
ret i rement, he wa s known
throughout Meigs County for at -

Gavin, KC plants comply with regulations

MEN'S WESTERN
FlANNEL SHIRTS

t oo wej:jk t u

Area Deaths

M. Km gh t of tht&gt; Bu l' yrus P&lt;1trol

post
Rdurm a tury gua r ds nam eJ m the
addltt~n a l Lh ~rges a r e Bt.· n Ra clwl
1four ('Ollilt s 1; Htchard Kam 1 four
co un ts 1; J e ss e Owt•n s 1 t hrt•t.•

St' \' t_' l' ct !

iN POMEROY

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY SALE

Hu bbar d say s Mwrl' w a ~ dt•:H I
bdore nJor rnal or y 1-! Uartb tlro ppt.'c l
lu rn o ff 111 !.un a Hut rl'f ur m.&lt;l toq
Sup t.: n n tt: rl li t.·nt
F r &lt;Hi k
(i ray
cort ll' nd s ht.~:fh l' d it flt •r rT &lt;wlnng tlw
IJm.a fanll ty .

Hn n :llrl

S U I H ' I l ll l l'll dl' rl f

ELBERFELli~

Partly cloudy and wann tonight
and Saturday . Low tonight ln the
mid to upper stfi. High Saturday in
the mid to upper 508. High Saturday
in the mid to upper '109 . The chance
of rain 20 p&lt; cent tonight and Saturday .

For the fourth straight week ,
tonight 's scheduled football game
and band show involving Meigs Hlgh
School has been cancelled du e to the
teachers' strike.
Today marked the 20th day of the
strike by the district 's teachers . In
some quarters, it had been felt that
closing of Ule schools which had
been "officially open" until last
Tuesday, would lead to more intensive negotiations.
However ,
these negotiations have not
matenalized and there ar e no
sessiOns set tor the future at thiS
tUne.

Although district sc hools were officially closed Tuesday , there are
st tll no negotiating sessions
scheduled between the Meigs Local

Board of EducatiOn and the Meigs
Local Teachers' Association.
Saturday 's band competition also
is cancelled, it was reported.
A move by the teachers'
association to accept an offer of Rep.
Hon James to come in and try to help
settle the strike has apparently been
turned down by Ule board or
education.
TI1e board of education has had
special meetmgs set for every
evening this week but has not met
except for the regular session on
Monday nght when wme 150 parents and teachers held a question
and answer session with Ule board
and Supt. David Gleason. The next
board session is scheduled for 5 p.m.
on Sunday .

AEP moving service
headquarters to Ohio
COLUMBUS, Ohio I AP 1 - The Amencan Electric Powe r Co .. the
nation 's largest shareholderoQwned power system, wlil move its service corporati on headquarters from New York to Columbus beginning
early nert year. AEP officials ""'d today .
Company officials made the announcement sunultaneously at a
morning news conference m Columbus and to AEP employees in New
York .
The first of three phases In th e move will transfer about 440
professional and teclmical empl oyees to Columbus between June and
Labor Day .
Th e second phase wi ll involve moving an additional 200 to 250 jobe ln
the swnmer of 1981 , with the final move corrung after construction of a
new building is COJI1plete .
The entire relocation is expected to be c omplete within three years ,,
officials sa1d .
Besides the semce corporation. AEP encompasses seven power
companies, mcluding Ohio Power Co. in Canton, Ohio , seven coal

mining comparues i.n seven states.
The company IS trymg to acquire Cohunbus and Southern Ohio Electnc Co .. which would become its largest company .
However , federal approval of that acquisiti on hinges on voter approva l in Ohio of a constitutional amendment allowlng municipal electric corporatiOns to own generating fa cilities . The amendment will be
on the statewide ballot next June .
AEP previously announced its mtentioTL' to move from New York to
Columbus foll owing the acquisitiOn of C&amp;SOE .

Deputy Keith Wood named instructor
Mei gs CoWJty Sheriff James J .
Pr offitt announced today that
Deputy Keith Wood will be condueling an Ohio Hunter Safety Course in the briefing room at the
sheriff's offi ce 1n Pomeroy , Oct . JO,
Nov . 1, and2at6p .m.
Deputy Wood is a certified in-

l'atrol inwstigalt•s
min or lruek m i!'hap
A pi ckup incurred severe damage
during a two-vehicle accident investigated Thursday in Meigs County by the Gallia-Meigs Post , Highway Patrol.
Called to the scene on SR 7, just
soutll of CR 26, at 7:40p .m ., officers
report a south bound pickup
operated by Leslie Frank, 18,
Pomeroy , was struck ln the rear by
a truck driven by Michael Gard, 22,
Fteedsville, while the Frank vehicle
was attempting to change lanes.
There was severe damage to the
Gard vehicle, moderate damage to
the Frank pickup.

SQUADCAIJ ED
The Pomeroy Emergency Squad
WBll called to the home of Sue Zirkle
at 6 :34 p.m . Thursday for Mrs .
Dolores Donohue wbo was ill. She
was taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital. At 12:02 a .m . Friday, Ule
squad went to a Sugar Run cafe for
Jim Haltq' who w1111 also taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

structor for the Ohio Divison of
Wildlife and will be teaching fireann
safety , gun handling, personal
safety , wildlife indentification, and
show films on hunting tips.
The couse is being held for men,
women and children interested in
obtaining their Ohio Hunter Safety
Card as needed to purchase and Ohio
Hunters license if persons have
never purchased a hunting license
before or taken a hunters safety
course in Ohio .
Those interested are asked tn call
Keith Wood at 9&amp;.-4236 or call 9923889 at the sheriff's office and leave
name and pbone number in order
that Wood may contact those
calling .

MINERS STRIKING
AD appareol crtevBDCe over tbe
alleged firing of an employee accused of a theft offe111e bu retlllled
In a wallloul al the RaCCOOD Creel
Mille of the Soullmern Ololo Coal
Compauy.

Acconllllg to llllofftdal IHIIIn:el,
millen walked off their jobl Moadlly
nlgbl bul returned lo work Tae.day
night.
Wedlleeday night, tbe mldalillt
llhlft f.Ued le work IUid 'l'llanday, It
wu decided darlac a meellq at
Wllke1vtlle 1e remalD out alleut g.
til tbe DlkiDIJbt lbiH Saaday.
ADotber meeUac bu beta 1laled

Sunday aftell-.

�2- The Da tly Sent me !, Mtddlepurt-Pomeru) . 0 . rnday . Oct 19. 1979

Pros-cons of Issue I given
B~

TOM G ULEM

Assol'ial t&gt;d Prt&gt;Ss Wril rr

WOO STER . Ohtu I tiP '
Supporters and upporw n Ls vf "
proposed law ma nJa lm~ 10-n:nt
depos its on bt-er and PJP cuntalflt' r s
dtsa g r~ on whelher lss ut' I Will
sc.ve mont' ~ . conSt&gt; r n • l' n er~y and

do wn on roadstdt• hlt t•r
'!l it' t WU Sl d t&gt;S tang it'd m C1 I WU·
ho ur dt&gt; ba lt&gt; Wedn t&gt;sda) m~ ht bt:ofort&gt;
about 200 pt&gt;r son~ .at th t' Cull t&gt;gt' of
C'U t

~\' ()U .&gt;1 tT

I .yndC:t J cunes . t' Xt' l' UI J\'t:' lh r t&gt;ctu r
uf tht' Oh10 A.ll ta ncl' for Ht'tU m.a bit'S.
and Clt·\·l'l a nd &lt;:J tt urn t'\ Ar thu r V \

Editorial opinions~
comments

Washington
By Clarence
Report :\1 iller
It ts a c ur to u.s par adox. Vtrtua lly
everyone in thts country IS a larmed
about our growtng energy c mts .
about our mrreasing dependenc y on
foretgn source; of su pply . VIrt ually
eve ry one "·ants the fede ral go vernme nt to ta ke strong and dec L"ilve a ction to make our country e n erg~ self s uffi c ient. But Vlrtual ly no one wan ts to see an ene rgy prod uctt on
fa ctlit y. be tl a powe r plant . a
refinery . or a pipeline built tn thetr
region of the coun try, in the tr
backyard so to speak .
We have seen project a ft er projec t
stalled by a maze uf regulator y
pape rwork and by a lac k of support
on the part of local ci ttzens . We ba ve
seen pub\Jcly e le cted offi nals , out of
fear of vo te r rep risa l ca pt tulate to
the demands of projeet a dve rsa ri es
In Virginia the r e IS an a ppli ca tion
pendmg for the construction of a
refinery smce 1969. Kee entl y , d ue in
large pa rt to the regulatory ha ss les
it encountered tn dealing wtt h the
stat.. of C.a hrornia. Standa rd Oil of
OhiO dropped pla ns for conve rting
an ex..isllng transcontine ntal gas line
to a n oll pt pe ltne T he prnJed . w ht c h
was t o be a costl y ur1e , w as one only
a la rge company could ha ve hoped
to ta ke on in the f irst place . At t he
ttme the y aba ndoned the proJel1
earlie r this year they had alread y
obta med some 700 plus construction
and e nvi ronmental permits and ba d
mvest.ed som e 50 m Lilton doUa r s a nd
still had an anti cipated t wo year
wa tt before they could begin work on
the proJect. The project tf compl eted
would ha ve e nabled the surplus
Alaskan oil being s htpped mto
Ca ~fo rnia to move by ptpeltne to the
rest of the Umon Sta tes . As tt " no w
the s urpl us bas to be s tupped vta
smaU tanke rs throuR)l the P a nama
Ca nal to New Orleans . the log tst ws
of whJch a dd conside rable expense
to the ultimate cost of the product .
The lls1 of sta ll ed a nd aba nd oned
projects is long - the Alas ka ~as
ptpelin e, the Sea brook nu d e;~ r p lant
... the list could go on a nd on. E ner gy
de velopment ts at an tmpasse
because much of the general pubh c
has been convi nced t ha t m ost suc h
fa c ilities are dirt y a nd dange rous .
Additi onally they reason tha t since
muc h of the ene rgy pr od uced at such
facilities is for the bene fit of others
far re moved, wh y shoul d the y have
the fa cility in thei r area . Wh y is n 'I tt
located where the use rs ar e"~
Suc h are the fr ustra ti ons of trymg
to deal with the ene r gy probl em . I n
an attempt to ease som e of these
frustrations and t o c ut through the
regulato r y thic ket s ur roundi n g
energy fac ility si ting a nd deve lop-

ment, the Prestdent has proposed
th e format ion of an E ne rgy
Mobtltzatton Board The m a in p ur pc.;e of the board would be to e xpedite ener gy de velopment . to ge t
priority ene rgy p roJccLs off dead
centr r and mt o th e con.&lt;;tructlon
pl1a.&gt;e . The Senate has a lr eady
responded to the Prestden t's ca ll for
ac tton ha vmg passed a btl! 15.1308 1
las t week whteh c lose ly co nfor m ed
tu !he Adrrunis1ration 's proposal.
l,; nder the Sena te btll , sponsors of
ener gy projects could appl y to a four
member E ne rgy Mobilizat iOn Board
for Spel'ial stat us . T)le boad wo uld
tde ntif y those projects tba l would
redu ce U.S . de pendence on fore tgn
oil or petroleum prod ucts and g ive
the m a pn orit y des igna tion . Such
clest gna tton would facilita te ra ptd
cons ide r a t iOn of e project 1n
q ues t10n The boa rd wuu! J have the
power to se t dea dlt nes for fede ra l.
sta te an d local agenctes faced wtth
pn onty project dectsions . The boa rd
co uld a lso alter procedura l aspecl'
of feder a l, state a ndl oca l la ws. suc h
as th e l unt' of lime set astde for
ll could nut.
pub\ w · leartngs
hu wev . set as1de s ubstantt ve
prov !s ons such as a ir quality stcm dards . If an a gency m1ssed a
deadhne . the fe deral board cou ld
step in and ma ke the de&lt;:is1on for th e
agency . Howe v er , if a n a ge ncy
ma de a de cision not to a Uow a
proJect to proceed , tbat deci5 ton
could not be ove rruled by the boa rd .
Crtt tcs of the board express concern that til tts urge nc y to develop
dom e~·ti c energy r esources.
th e
boa rd wiU ign ore envi rorun ental
conce rns and will preempt the
prerogatt ves of loca l and s tate
JUrisdictions I s ha re some of these
same conce r ns But a t the same
u rne we've put off long enoug h
comtng to gri ps Wlth the b lackmail
tactics of OPE C The only w• y we
c an get out from under the yoke of
foreign oil su pplies is lo develop'
a lte rna ti ve r esources of our own
TI1e boa rd could be a btg help towar dthe end . and I for one intend to support tt when tt comes before the
House for COrL&lt;iide ration la ter this
month .

A mdr ked sluwtluwu un·urrLil tn
l.n tHl Amcn ca·s ag n c ul t urt· st' ct or
tu th t• l nt cr Ra nk .
wh tch satd thl· g rowtl1 uf fJgfl r ultu r l'
va lul' added wa s 1.8 PL'rCL'nl
s ubstan tial\} bt·kna,· lht:· J 6 JJCr L·cnt
repor-ted Lil 197'i
1n

19/B . anD r dm g

t\r rH' rl( &lt;Jn

Dt-~\ ·e lo p!! lt' n l

Berry's World

I::Lruo ks. a r g ued that tht.•

:\o\

Sports

~ia t e wuJt•

lSS Ut• tu be deh .' rtJllnt&gt;d b )

~a \ t '

t:A 1th t'lll' r ~y and mo n t·~
But Wa rrt'n J Smtth . chcurrnctn of
ltlt uc:m~ fur &lt;t P rac ll ca l l. tttt•r ! ..d w ,
an d Ch n~11an K. Ktnds\·attt&gt;r. tht•
i!, r u up :.; ~ ec retary - tr l' a .s ur c r .
IIIOUltaUlt'tJ lht&gt; OppOSi tt&gt;
\b .Jamt•s sau.l tt takes 20
tl1ru wavoa~ L'O nta uw r s w equal one
rt•t urn~blt• L'Ontmncr . whtdl ra n bt·
f t'U:-;t.·J up tu 20 t unes
·Yuu h g u r ~ out who pay ~ thdt L'tJSt
of 10 L&gt;ut ties "s opposed to one
ooll le, sh e S"ld
St &lt;H ISllC'!-1 frvm tht· gi1rt:rn or 's
vtf 1n • m \1I ch1gan . CJ stale " 1th a
dt.·po s lt law suntlar tu tht' one
propoSt•d for Ohio. sh ow a ~ 1.5
pt:' rcent red uct iOn m roads tdl' litt er
an d CJ. s.avmgs of $18 md hon 1n t ax
dol lar s fur litter pick up . sh•· satd .
But Sm tth . an Otuo AF! rC IO
ufftuol. sa td bot tle and t· an ht ter
rt:prest"flts a \'e ry sm all pe rcentage
of the total tr ash tha t IS to sse d along
st r"'Ls "n d ht gh ways :n t he st a te .
Smtth and Km dsvatter SaJd an
a ntt -hlte r btll now before the Ohio
Senate ts a mor e practi ca l way to
com bat the prob lem . It would place
a tax on th e wholesale sale of
\'a n ous ttems . incl ud mg OOttl es.
ca ns and pa per produ cL&lt;, tha t
ultimately becom e !titer . wi th the
proceeds ea r m ark ed for clea nup
pro jecls .
Kind svat ter , exec uti ve secretar y
of t he Oh to Wholes a le Beer
As soc talton. smd Ohtoans would pay
up to SI more f or a cast;&gt; of bee r , plus
a $2.40 depost t, if Issue 1 ts enac ted .
" You 'll be vottn g away your
fr eedom of chotce on c onve m ~ n ct:."
Kmdsv atter said " You'll be fumed
to pay deposits tf thts bill becomes
law Yo u 'l l be ' 'otmg a wa y your
rt ght to c hoose to pay de postts ...
Tht' l11 ght"r pn ces for be\'er &lt;Jge!'&gt;
w JIJ on : ur bt&gt;-cause ret urnables takl'
rnor t: s ptH'l' on de iJ\·er y tru c ks .and
on st urt' sh el\t's. makm g them m ort:'
l' Xpt·n -" 1\'t.' fur wh o l es~tle r s &lt;HH.l
r~:•ta J ler s . hi! sa td . In addition , m ore
cmpluyees would ha\'l' to I~ hlr t' cl to
handle ti':t' rt·t ur n t:'{ l hottlt·s a nd
C CI I I ~

a

for me r
s tal l'
c alled tal k of pr! t'L'
lnnt'a ses a th r eat.
" It ·s s1mple e on1mon sense . 1f Wl'
ar L' b u~ mg one c on tamer and us1ng
ll 20 tun es . the r e 1s gmng to be a
sav m gs .'' he sa1d _ ·· And tf they don 't
pass th at s ann~:; s on to us . I' 11 1 go m~
tu be rnad ..
&amp; stdes a !!kent de postt on
be\'t&gt;ragt' con tatnt:'r s. the Ja w would
lkl11
det achab le pull-la b can s.
Pff ectl w De c . 6, 1981.

Business
•
mirror
B)' JOHN &lt;.:L: NN IFF
AI' Busin ess Analyst
\ EW YORK t AP 1 Ar nold
Be rnha n l clauns to h&lt;:Ave some
und e r s tand1 n g
of
p ra c ti ca l
t'ccJno mJ c s . hav 1n g es tabli shed
hm 1sdf as a .se c unt1e:-; a na lyst a nd
bu sl!lL'SS m&lt;tn dun n g th e G r ea t
flepresston uf the 1930s
He has ot her crede nt1 als. too .
Jn (' lud mg ha \' tn g found ed the Va lue
l.1ne Im ·e st ment Su rvey, t he
t'o untry ·~ liirges t St' eu ntles a dv1sor y
f1r m . f l\'t' m u t ua l fu n d s. a nd
resea rch e~n tl a s sets man age men t
opt:r a twn s
Bemhord thtn ks Amer tcans a t th ts
moment are blunde nng by see km~
~c un t y m an uwestment tha t has
none . In set'klllg to~vwoi d n sk. he
s ;-1y s . t hey an· g u a r an t ee m ~
th emse lves a luss
Be ex pl a m s h1s Ci:lse :

~r ealt!r .

't

By Will Grimsley
lll«AI 00 WE K'!OW
1' 0~ SU11£ A'aOtlf
T ~ ' SOVtEI IQOOPS
THAT'VE SEE&gt;J
t&gt;J CUBA
17 ~E A~S ?

.

~-~ .,; ' 11~ 1 1
~ .~ ~

nl

Som e peop le r a u onallze t he
pur chase b y sa ymg they ha ve at
le.rt st cu t thet r losses whtle wa ttt ng
for the stock m a rket to l&gt;et.:om e less
rt sky . Bernha rd doesn \ bu y it.
"Ther e's no way to a vot d nsk ... he
says .
By his ca r eful calculations, the
stock mark et could shtft into a
strong advanc e so quickl y that tt
might be 46 percent higher before
such people a r e r eady to switch from
debt securities .
Bernhard could be hurt som ewhat
by following his own a dvice . since
his company operates a money
market fund that could be seriously
hurt . Whi le that does c oncern him , it
is not his pri n1ary concern

How they rank
TEAMS RANKED

OFFENS!VEL Y
TEAM

PTS (G) AVG .

Wellston
Belpre
Ironton
North Go Il ia
Hannan Tra ce
Eastern
SOuttlwes Tern

147 (6 1 24 .5
118 (61 19 .7
98 &lt;5 l 1~ _ 6
11 0 t61 18 .3
177 (7)
115 (7)
110 ( 7)

Pl . Pleasant

tl l

Jackson

&gt;&lt;yger Cree k

(7)

15.9

9.4 (6)
98 (7)

14.0

l'O LU\1B US. Oh10 1t\P 1 - Gov
James A. Khodes says Oh1o 's vot er s
should be more receptive to a state
constitutional housing a m endment ,
now that m ortga ge interest rates
lla ve soar ed almost out of sight.
The go vernor r efe rred Uus week to
an ame nd m en t similar to two others
whtc h were de feated by voters tn
1975 an d 1977.
Hnwe\·er . Rh odes no t e d th at
111urt gage tntt&gt; rest rates in those
day s we re low. compared wtth wh a t
th ey a re no w.
He wtll offer to the l £g tslature
soon th e proposal enablm~ th e sta te
ID borrow funds wh1ch would be
d umneJeJ to mdiv1dual borrowers
th r o ugh
ex is tin g
le nd in g
mstltU tlons .

Bv us mg its htgh credl! rating,
Khodes sa1d th e sta te co uld borrow
more c heaply than mdividuals, and
th en make loans available a t a
percentage point or two below the
marke t r ate, which curre ntl y is 11
percent tn 12 percent
If the Legts!ature approves by the
require d three-fifths ma jority of
each ho use. the ame ndmen t would
be on the ballot next June .
Oh to a lready ha s an a gen cy - the
Ohto HoUSJng Developmen t Boa rd whtc h co ul d a drntnts te r lh e
program
The State or Otuo gets ca ugh t up tn
1ts own bureauc r ac y.
For e xample, nme boar ds a nd
eunmttssions were supposed t o move

Today's commentary
The- gre-at mao gOlf's
By Don Graff
For a quarter of a century a s
prestdent of the AF L-GO . George
Mea ny bas so dominated the labor
scene that hts public image has
been . in effect , that of labor .
No w. 85 a nd a t ling , he has made
off ic i a l his lon g- rumor e d

It ts a muc h diffe re nt labor seen e
he depa rts from what he s urveyed at
the begmning of hts long retgn bac k
111 the nud - '50s . Those we re the days
of consolidating the ga ms of lwo
decades of Ne w and F a ir Dea l
legts!a tion.
The me r ger of the American
F eder a tion of La bor and the
C o n g r ess
of
I n d us trial
Orga ml&lt;ltiuns, endmg years ti
org a mzali ona l and
d oc trinal
feud tng , confumed labor 's status as
one of the natioo 's social and
political powe r centers . With a thtrd
of the work force already in the fold.
the move m ent appeared poised t o
m o ve fr um strength t o g reater
Jtre nl(lh .
But tha t IS not qui te the way t!
worked out.
TI1e re has been a massi ve in crease tn t he labor force , to almost
100 rmll ton cu rrently , but orgaruze d
la bo r ha s inc re ased accordmgl y .
11te grea test growth spurts have
been tn se rvi ces and a wide range of
wtu te-eoll a r occupations . The AFL(' !0. However . remains in a blueco ll a r ru t , its membership conce ntra ted tn and tts policies ortented
towa r d t he old-style manufa ctunng
mdustn es whe re the most part jobs
a r e tn decl1ning supply .
W1th the nota ble exc eption of the
Amen can Federa tion of State. County and Muni ctpal Employees , now
the largest cons tituent wtion w1Lh
more than a rrullioo members , the
AF! rCIO 's pene tration of the growth
e mpl o ym e nt s tress ha s bee n
m in im a l. Serv ice occ upations ,
whe re m ore than 5 million joa; have
opened up tn recent years , are onl y
som e 15 per cent organized .
Big Labor has also fa iled to
respond to the lnflux of women into
the Job market. With wom en now
re presenting better than 40 percent
of the work fora' , onl y 16 percent are
umon me m bers .
Instead of acqulrlng new strength ,
the umon movement during the
Meany q uarte r of a centu ry has seen
the orga nized s~ of the work for ce drop from a third to less than a
qua rte r . It has also seen its inlluence
diminish. Organized labor still has
a nd e xerts political power, parti c ularly through Its ability to
provide campaign financing for its
frtends . But it has been noticeably
less successful of late in making this
pay off where it counts - in
fa vora ble leg isla tion . It has lost a
number of roWlds on ~herished
issues tn the current Democratic

Congress, defeats that unde r s imJ!ar
circW!llltanc es would have been tn·
conce ivable a few years bac k
Meany ha s a rranged an orde rl y
Lr•nsfer of power to a des ignated
success or. Lane Kirkland . AFI .-&lt;:10
secretary -treasurer who bas labored
\0 years tn the great man 's s hadow
Kirkland, 57 , is said w s hare
Mea ny's vtews . But without h is me n·
tor' s p o w e rful p e r s on a ltty ,
Kirkland's !eader shlp could be tran sient with a new Mr . Big em e rgi ng
after a diVI stve atrtng of inte rna l an·
ttpathi es and policy disagreem ents
long surpressed by Meany 's ove rwhelming presen ce .
Amon g the new gener a lion of
leade rs, there a re som e, s uc h as
J erry Wurf of the aforementi oned
State, County and Mum cipal Ern ·
p\oyees. who already have made it
clear they want to see some c hanges
made in more t han the staffing of the
top posts .
During the Meany era , organized
Ia bor de veloped - deg ene rated .
some mig ht say - tnto one of the
most conse rvative elements of the
social structure. Having won its own
rights, it was less than e nthusiastic
in dotng battle for those of oth ers. It
was not in the forefroot of the ctvi l
rights movements, and unions m
some c ases have been resistant to
opening thetr ranks and opportunities for advancement to
minoritie~.

· There is a strong possibility that
the tmmedtate post-Meany era will
be one of factional infighting , fur ther s apping the fe de ration ·s
strength . But it could lead t o a reevaluation of policies and purpose
and a restructuring of the old
movement according to the r ealities
of the new times.
Whatever the outcome of the pos tMeany adjustment , Big Labor will
never be the same - for wht ch labor
may we ll have the most cause to be
thankful.

THF. DAD... Y SENTINEL

(USPSl..- 1

e ~--~

. ..-

by Oct. 1. from ren"'d quart ers in a
private ly owned offi ce buildtng in
Columbus mto a remodeled sec tion
nf th e old Oh to Dep a rtment s
Bulldtn g
But th e public works di vision
co uldn't get the industnal relations
de partment lo approve plan s fo r the
re m o de ltn g. a nd one of it s
employees told the stale C.on Lrolhng
Board thts week be didn 't know wha t
was holdmg things up .
One apparen t objection wa s tha t
p ublt c work s co uldn 't ~e t a n
ar c hll ect, a nd bad the pla ns drawn
by a dr altsman.
Add another iro ny On e of th e
ten ant s to bt? mo ved is the state
Board of Ar chttec t E XBminers.
As a result of th e bureauc ratic
ta ngle , the con trollin g board had to
re le a se $01 ,000 to pay rent for th e
ve ar 's last ca lendar quarter , a nd the
Sl&amp;4.550 rem ode ling proJect re mrun s
m lun bo.
Sen . Harry Meshe l, D-Yo ungstown ,
looks wtth disdatn on an mc reasing
tren d for bulidm gs to be named aft er
former and prese nt sUite offi ci als.
He apparently learned only thts
week thai the n ew state o ffice
butldtn g tn Cleve land is the Frank J .
La usc he Offtre Buildmg, named for
th e former five-t e rm gove mor and
tw&lt;H erm U.S. senator who now It ves
tn Washin gton . D C.
T he s ame d a y , th e st ate
Con trolling Board, on whtch Meshel
ser ves. was as ked to re lease funds to
htre secur tt y guards for the Martin
Ja nis Semor Ci tizen Ce nte r on th e
sta te fatrgrounds . Jan iS ts currentl y
di rector of the commtsston tlrl a g ing .
" What are we gotng to do next,
na me all the state parks after
'Na tura l Resource s Dlrec wr 1 Bob
Teete r ' ," Meshel as ked .

Today In Hl•tory
By The Associated Preu
Today ts Frida y, Oct . 19, the 292nd
da y of 1979. There are 73 da ys le ft tn
th e year
Toda y's highlight in histor y :
On thts date in 1781, the Br itish
surr en d e re d tn Yorkt own , Va .
tring ing the Revolut tonary War
ne ar its cloSt! .
On thi5 date :
In 1812. Na po!eoo Bonaparte's
Fre nc h troops began thei.r retreat

from Moscow .
In 1960, ctvil rights leader Martin
l.uther King Jr . was amoog 53
protesters arrested during a sit-in in
an Atlanta department store.
In 1962, Chinese and lndlan troops
clashed oo two fronts along th e
disputed Himalayan border .
In 1964, leaders of th e post Krush chev governmeht made their
first appearance in the Soviet Union,
greetin g three cosmonauts .
In 1967, 40 students were arrested
man anti-war demonstration at New
York 's Brooklyn College.
In 1973, Libya , angered b y
American Mideast policies, ordered
a halt to oil exports to the United
States and nearl y doubled petroleum
prtces .
T e n years ago : Two East
Germa ns htjac ke d a Polish airliner
and for ced it to land in West Berlin .
Five years ago: The White House
said Russia would be allowed to buy
2.2 millioo metric tons of American
wheat over the next nine months .
One year ago : Veteran actor Gig
Young and hi• wde were found shot
to death In their New York
a partment.
Toda y's birthday : ColurnrWtl Jack
Ander90tl is 57 .
Thought f..- today : Hwnan h!Mory
becmte• more and more a race
between education and catastroghe
H.G . Wells \ 1866-1946 ).

15. 7

Mil ler
Gallipoli s
Waverly

76 ( 6 )

Nei. ·York

71 (61 11 .8
4&lt;1 111 91

7.4

(6 )
71 (6 )

Logan
Wahama
641 7)
• 'Trimble
64 1n
V i nton Co.
.48 161
Warren
47 161
Southern
26 161
AThens
26 161
Fe&lt;J . Hock i ng
16 161
Al exander
19 161
TEAMS RANKED

Voters should be more receptive_,._-

18 . 1
17.9
17. 1

48 tl 1 16 .0

Meigs

reti re ment .

peop le look for secur ity tn r elativel y
h1~h-m tt!rest debt secuntles. such a s
sllcJ rt-term bon ds and mont&gt;'y m a r ke t
mutual funds .
l11e 1r av1dness IS un der standa blt•,
Ht·r n hard co nce des. be c ause ll
percent m1t"rest 1s ra r ely earned at
an~ tu ue by md r v 1dual~ . But , hl'
as ks. a r"'r ded uetmg fur mfl a tton
rmd t axes. wh at do th ey hav e:
Stn ce mflatlon 1s nmn mg aro und
t:i rx: r cer11 a year , the arlS Wl'r I S
ob\·lou.o:; . TI1ey an: " ee~rm ng" a loss .
An d a f ~r they pay ta xes on the
11lusor y ea rmngs , lh ttr loss IS even

I

World

n·p r e sentatln~ .

In tlH·se da ys of unc:er tamt y.

" No, 1 didn 't have a tough day a t the office. I'm
up- tight about Jane Fonda agam ...

..

\ 'O il'f S

6 Wi ll dean up iltt t&gt;r anU

Br uuk.'-..

Meet Southern Tornadoes

Today's

12. 7
12.3
11. 8

9. 1
9 1
8.0
7.8
.4 .3
4 J
.4 .]
3_7

OEFENS!VEL Y
TEAM
Hannan Tra ce
North Galli a
Pt . P leasant
I ronton
Kyger Cr ee k
Jackson
Eastern
Well5ton
Gallipolis
Miller
Belpre
Wahama
Southwestern
Vinton Co
Logan
Nei. ·York
Meigs
Alexander
Tri mble
Warre n
Athen s

Fed ·Hoc king
waver ly
Southern

PTS tG I AVG .

33 170
19 161
35171

47
4 8

50
:&gt;9 (51
58
45 !71
64
39 !61 6 5
54 !71
77
55 !6) 9.2
56 (6) 9.3
60 16) 10.0
1&gt;4 16) 10.7
80171 114
8217) 11 7
10 16) 11.1
6215 1 12.4
81 16) 135
.. Il l 14.1
105 16) 11 5
119 17) 18 4
11 1 161 18 7
I 18 16) 19 7
114 16) ?0 7
1&lt;4 16) 14 0
176 16) :&gt;9 3

Th e co ldes t , d ankest , m os t
exaspe ratm g World Series in history
ha s faded mto th e r ecord books, and
baseba ll finds ttself juggling a
ula sted hot pot a to .
As Caesar on ce satd : " Quo hin c
rwmus?" 1" Where do we go from
he r e.,n 1
Wh&lt;l t can the administrators of the
ga me do to restore their blue ribbon
cham ptonshtp eve nt to the pl easant ,
cro wd-pleasing spectacle that it
mce was ?
Liste n to the amateur physic ians .
Harken the architects of change .
Sugg es!tons are cascading like the
Ntag ara Falls .
Here are a few of the proposals good , bad and indtfferent : -Shorten
the schedule to target the World
Ser ies fnr the first week in October ,
when milder wea the r condition s
pr e va t!.
-Gtve mght games bac k to the jet
set a nd the dJ sco rev elers.
- If night games are essential , at
lea st set a more re a sonable starting
time - 7 :30 p.m rather !ban 8 :30
p .m . EDT to a vo id midni g ht
finishes.
- Take a tip from pro football and
pla y the sen es m neutral sites,
chos en well in advance, with
g ut:~ranteed

weather conditions

1s ubtro pt c al c itie s or e nclosed
arenas, whtch now abound 1
Giv e n these c ure-ail s, le t 's
examine the feas ibility of change.
- Reducing the present 162i:ame
schedule is out of the question ,
ba seball men argue . E xpa nsion in
big -time sports has becom e a way of
life . with clubs co ntending they need
every gale posstble to help pay
exist ing sa lari es, runnin g into Ow

m tlhon-dollar brac ke ts .
- Retr enc hme nt ls m ade m ore
difficult by the fa ct tha t the r e a re
now 26 major lea gue teams mst ead
of 16 as in the halcyoo day s wtlh
divisional playoffs r eq uiring an
extra we ek for de cisio n .
- Nigh t games a r e here t o stay,
di c tated by both econ om 1cs and
tele VIsion dema nds. TV pr ef ers
prUne bme showin g but msist s it 1s
bending nooody 's arm on the ISS Ue.
Baseball has made thi5 decisiOn a ll
its own - and it's mfle xi ble . '!lie
earlier starting time is n egotia ble.
- As for the neutr a l wa nn w~a tlwr
site - no. s a ys base ball firmly, th e
World Series will ne ver be taken
from th e home fan s who s uppo rtctl
the team throughout the yea r .
The 1979 World Se ri es should have
been one of th e m os t e lec tric 1n
years w1th lwo fme tea m s m the
swashbuckling, hard-hittmg Pir ates
and poised, business-like Orioles.
It turned to be a m ess fr om the
beginmng . In Baltimor e , th ousands
huddled for hour s in th e chilling ram
waitin g for a dec tsion on the fir st
game, ultimate ly postponed .
Th e e arly gam es pr ove d a
trave sty, staged on we t fie lds pockmarked by football sptkes . Th e
finest pro fielder s threw th e boll
away . TV ratm gs s uffered .

Doug Duvall
6-3, Z50 lbs.
Junlor tar k.le

Cincy absent from

In Eng land , abo ut a C'€ nt ur y ag o. tf
a wea lth y bridegroom d id not Wish
ID ass ume any debts ht s futur e wtfe
rntght ha ve. she would a rn ve a l th e
weddin g m ju st a shtft . Thts stgntfied
tha t her future hus band was free
from any of her obligatiO n$.

Saturday's Toledo-OU
game on regional TV
By GEORGE STRODE
AP Sport! Writer
For the first lime .in tts 22--yea r
his tory ,
the
Mtd -Ame ri ca n
Conference Wlll have two of tL•
football games on te!evtsion thts
week .
Two unlikely title coo tender s, host
Toledo and Ohio Uni verstt y, ba ttle
before an ABC-TV r egional audi enc e
Saturday 14: 10 p.m . EDT I. The
Rockets were forecast to finish
seventh and Ohto in eighth place .
To ledo is runn tng seco nd to
Central Michigan , ~ lo !Hl tn the
conference, whtle Ohto st ands third
with a ~~ start .
The league-leading Chippewas'
mvasion of defendmg charnpton Ball
State 11-2) al!iO will be carried
nationally by the Entertamrnent a nd
Sports Programmmg Network tlrl a
delayed basis .
Officials of ESPN said it will be
shown at 9 a .m . Sunday • nd a t
m1dnight Monda y.
In other Mid-American ga m es
Saturday, Miami 11-2) ts at Bow ling
Green ( 1-2) and Kent State ll-3 t a t
Eastern Michtgan 10-3-1 ).
Noo-conference play calls for
Northern illinois to play at Illinois
State and Westem Mi chtgan to
entertain Grand Valley.

Toledo 's swift start has Coa ch
Ol uc k Stobart tn a ttuy . " Whoeve r
said vo u can sleep and not be
nervo~ when yo u win i.s a darned
liar . I can't sl ee p . I can't ea t . My
stoma ch ts a lway s in a knot. " he
satd
S tobart co nce des the youn g
Roc kets are on e year ahe ad of his
tlffieta bl e. " I don 't kn ow if we're
r ead y fo r what 's happened or not .
It's hard to sa y what 's ahead ," said
th e Toledo coa ch , bidding for a thtrd
strat ghl trturnph over his alma

HT junior high
tops Eastern, 14-0
HaMan Trace 's JUnior high footbail team posted a 1~ victory over
visiting Eastern Thursday evening .
Melvin Clagg got Coach Don Saunde rs · Wildkittens rolling with a 50
yard run in the first statll8 A run for
the con version failed .
In the thin! quarter, Mahlon Eblin
dropped on a blocked punt for the
second HT score.
Quarterback Olris Johnson added
the extra points . Clagg was the top
offensive player with 99 yards
rushing .

mater .
Kookte Ohto Coach Bnan Burke
wo rrie s a bo ut s t op p tn g s peedy
Toledo quarterbac k Maunce Ha ll.
" He's been the d ifferen ete for them
thts year ." said Burke . " Hall wtll be
the quickest quarte rback we've met.
We're gotn g to have to come up wtth
som ethmg spec tal for him "
Central Michigan and Ball Sta te
joined the Mtd -Ame n can a t th e
same time m 197 5. Stnce the n , they
have been the conference 's most
s uccessful foot ba U teams .
Ball State has won two titl es and
fintsh ed thtrd twtce . c omptling a 22-0
record agatnst le a gue oppostlion.
Ce ntr a l Mt cht ga n o wn s three
seconds and one fifth-pl ace fimsh cs
wilh a 28-6-1 ac c om pli s hm enl
aKamst Mid-Am erican f oes.

The G ulf Str ea m ts e~ vast nvt·r 1n
the se a , a bo ut 50 rmles wtd e •nd
1,500 feet d eep . It flo ws at t he r ate of
a bout 50 mtles dail y and ca rnes
2 000 tunes as mu ch watt:&gt;r a s the
MISSissi ppi. It IS so named because
it ts fe d partly by wa ter from the
Gulf of Mex ieu.

ARMSTRONG

TRY THE NEW

Mark Simpson
5-8, 1461bs.
Junlor Guard

NE W YORK I API - Bt ll Lee, an
injury-plagued Am erican Lea guer
for th e past few seaso ns, was among
th os e name d t oday t o T h e
Assoc tated Press · Na tion a l l£ague
Al l-Star baseball tea m for 1979
U,, selected as th e left-h a nded
pitcher tlrl the AP's N L team ,
r eversed hts fie ld th1s year by
wmning 16 games for the Mon tr eal
Expos and compiling a 3.04 ear ned
r un a verage in 222 innings .
'fll e vtct ory total wa s the most th a i
Lee had co mpiled since win ning 17
games for the Boston Red So:~~: in
19 75. In the three s ubs eque nt
sea so ns for Bos ton , Le e had
amassed a total of just 24 triumphs
whi le s uffenn g th r oug h a n
a sso rtment of hurts tha t included a
bad pttc htng arm .
u, polled 95 votes fr om a
nationwide pan el o f sports wr ite r s
and broadcasters to win t he berth
over Philade lphia 's Steve Carlton ,
who had 76. Joe Niekro, a 21-gam e
winner wi th t he Houston Astros, wa s
th e chote c as the right-handed
pit c her over t eamm a.t e J .R .
Rtchard . The votmg marg m the re
was 12()..1\.1
Bruce Sutter , who posted e~lee~g ue­
leading 37 sa ves for the Chicago
Cubs, was thr runa wa y c hoice a s the
N l. 's All -Star r elie f pitche r ,
collectin g 196 votes .
San Otego ' s Da ve Winfiel d , with 34
ho mers, 118 RBI and a .301! battmg
average , was the le adin g vot e-getter
with 216 for on e of th e outfield
berths . The rest of the N L ' s All-Star
outfield tncluded Dave Kingman or
the Chtca go Cubs wi th 199 vot es and
Dave Parke r of the Pittsburgh
Pirates with 152, both easy winn en;
ove r th e ir ne arest co mpetit or,
Cin cmna tJ 's George Fost er .
Kingman led th e NL m hom ers
with 48 and dro ve m liB runs . Parker
ha d a .310 batttng aver • • e. 25
hom ers and 94 RBI.
The r emainder of th e te am
mc luded t hr ee pla yers from th e St.
Lo ms Cardinal s - fir ~1 baseman
Ket t h He rnand ez 1 176 vo t es 1.
shortstop Garr y Templeton 11291
and c atch er Te d Simmons 1114 1 a long with se&lt;: ond ba sem a n Da ve
U&gt;pes of the L&lt;&gt;s Angeles Dodger s
' 15a 1 a nd thtrd base ma n Mike
Sc hmidt of th e Philadelphia Phtllies

Danny Tablott
5-8, 146 lbo.
Freshman Back

AP~s

l09t
Al l were re la tively easy winne r s
a t the ir p osi t ion s He r nandez's
seasun included a le ag ue-lea ding
.344 battm g a ve rage and 105 RBI.
Tem p letoo h tt .314 a nd Simmons .283
wt th 26 hom er s and B7 RBI.
Lop es hit 28 homer s and drove tn
7:1 r uns . Schrmdt was the NL
r un ncrup in hom er s with 45 and
produ ce d 114 RBI.
The Ame n c an League Al l-Star
team, announced e arlie r , fea tured
fo ur members of the califorma
An~ el s : Don E&gt;a y lor a s de"tgn a ted
I

all-stars
httter, Rod Carew at first brule,
Bobby Grich at second and Brian
Downmg behind the plate .
Th e rest of the team included
Boston 's Fred Lynn and Jim Rice
and Baltimore's Ken Singletoo in the
outfie ld, Minnesota 's Roy Smalley
a t short stop , Kansas City's George
Bre tt at !turd, Boston's Dennis
Ec ke r s le y as the rtght-handed
pttche r , Baltimore's Mike Flanagan
as th e left-handed pitcher and
Texas· Jtm Kern a s the relief
pitc he r

-CORRECTION~-­

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5- The Dally Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Friday, Oct . 19, 1979

1~7 9

Middleport man 100 years Sunday

Notre Dame hosts Southern Cal Saturday
By KEN RAPPOPORT
AP Sports Writer

team hC:tU bt'er1 bea lt&gt;n b)' Junt&gt;.s ·
Iowa Hawkt'yes H.ocknt&gt; a!'ikerl for a

It was just a handsha ke. buill had
a pretty strong grip at that.
When Knute Rockre and Howard
Jon es shook on a gentlemen' s
agreement in the 1920s. the seed wa s
planted for the grea t Southern Ca lNotre Dame football senes.
The handshake took place m th e
1920s after Rockne's Notre Damt·

retum match - and he got It after

l'Oflllll~

Jones had moved to Southern Ca l.
Notre Dame and Southern Cal
have blos~med since . of cour se , and
Saturtlaj· they'll ha ve lht• 51st

w1th Stanford. Uley still rate as
Si :&lt;.-pomt favorites over No .9 Notre
n.. m- before an e&lt;pected sellout
n uwd at South Bend .
Southern Cal Coac h J ohn
Hob 1nson does n 't feel like the
upperdog 1n the nationall y televised
~ &lt;:nne , though .

tht' last IJ years.

Although the No .4 Trojans are
off an ego-puncturing 21 -21

lit'

renewal of their often-spectacular

nvalry . Th e Ftgh ttng lnsh hold a 2719-4\ead Ut the senes. allllough they
he~vt'

" It looks like a very even game to

won only thret' of the games m

me ." says Robinson . "Notre Dame
" a great football team, as alway s.
Vagas Ferguson looks improved
over last y,..r , and the y do with him
what we do with Olarles White give him the football a lot. "
Ferguoon needs only 21 yards to
surpa ss the Notre Dame career
rushmg record of 2,6132 ya rds set by
Jerome Heavens last season . Wlut e.

another m a loog line of great

t81lbacks at Southern Ca l, lS the
nation 's leadtn ~ rusher with a 148ya rdilt'r ~ame ave rage.
Meanwhile , Alabama puts 1ts
rl&gt;cently acqmred No. I rankmg on
Ul e line against No . 18 Tennesste at
B1rmmgham . The Crlnlson Tide wa s
elevated In the top spot tlu s past
week after Southern Cal was tied by
the Ca rdinals.
F:tsewhere.ll's 1\o.Z Texas aga•nst

Anderson living up to Cardinals' expectations
••'

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By BRUCE WWITT
AP Sports Writer
It 's been a long time ' " "" Ot t1s
Ander,.,n eJq&gt;loded onto the Nat10nal
Football League scene wtth a 193yard rushmg performance . a very .
very lon g lime for the St. Lou1 s
Cardinals.

Ander,.,n , the Cardmols No.I
draft choice out of Miami. has done
just about everythmg expected of
huu . He's llurd Ln tiu.• Nc:ltiUneil
Conference Ln rushing with 663 yards
and has added 21 receptwns for 150
add1tJon al yards

startmg w1th that near -record
ya rda ge agatnst Dallas - the
Co wboys woo the game 22-21 on a
late field goal - St. Louis has failed
In become the N~C East coo tenders
that so many fa · s figured they'd be.
They're 2-5 , rattling around the
dJv1sion basement along w1th the
New York Giants. four ga mes

But dt."s pll e his performan ce.

I'

I

behind co-leaders Dallas a nd
Philadelphia - and they play the
Cowboys in Dallas this Sunday .
Sunday's other games are
Philadelphia al Washington, the
Giants at Kansas City, Atlanta at
San Francisco , Baltimore at
Buffalo. CLncmnatt at Cleveland,

NY Rang ers
2 I 0 4 IS II
wast"lington
2 2 0 4 18 20
At lanta
2 3 0 4 t8 19
NY 1 sl anders
I 3 0 2 II 14
Smythe Oiv1sion
Chi cago
2 I I 5 II 12
Van co uve r
1 1 t 5 17 17
St . Loui s
I 1 I J 11 15
Edmon to n
0 I 1 1 9 tI
Winnipeg
I 3 0 1 7 I5
Col orado
0 3 I I I 8 14
Wales Conference
Adams Division
Buffalo
J I 0 6 18 It
Minneso ta
3 I 0 6 16 11
Bos ton
3 I 0 6 13 8
Toronto
2 1 0 4 14 13
Quebec
t 2 0 1 9 10
Norris Oivi s1on
Los Angeles
'1 1 1 5 10 19
PitTsburgh
2 t 1 5 15 11
Detroit
1 1 2 4 13 11
Montreat
2 I 0 4 8
5

Green Bay at Tampa Bay, Oakland
at the New York Jets , Mtami at New
Englarxl, Chicago at Minnesota ,
Detroit at New Orleans, Houston at
Seattle and San Diego at Los
Angeles. On Monday night it 's
Denver at Pittsburgh .
After being chewed up so royally
by Anderoon, who came within one
yard of Alan Ameche 's first pro
game record, the Cowboys began rees tablishmg their
Doomsday
Defense, to the point that it is now
the cooference's best against th e
rush .
They take a &amp;-1 record inw the
game and are rated roughly tO-point
favor ites In beat the CardJnals - but
Cowboys Coach Tom Landry , never
one to take matters lig htl y,
observes : "O.J ts still rWIIIin g well .
It 's not going to be an easy day ."
Ander,.,n gained 73 yards in St
Louis' 24-20 loss to Philadelphia la st
Sunday .
As if facmg Dallas' defense wasn't
enough, the Cards must aloo try lo
prep theu- own defense (second in
the NFC against the rush but ninth
against the pass 1for an onslaught by
Roger Staubach.
The Cowboys' quarterback is No .I
among conference passers and has
thrown 11 touchdowns while being
intercepted only three times . Last
Sunday mght agamst Los Angeles he
completed 13 of 18 passes for 176
yards and three TDs . He now owns
the Cowboys' TD passtng record of
137. havmg passed Don Meredith 's
135 durmg the ~ 111ctnry over the
Rams .
Considering a ll of that, St. Lou&lt;S
Coach Bud Wtlktnson was asked
what the Cardinals would have to do
w defeat Dallas.
" Be very lucky ," he said .
The Eagles are riding a five-game
winning streak, their longest smce
starting the 19tll season 7-1, thank s
to Wilbert Montgomery's thundermg
hoofbeats He 's secood m the NFC m
rush mg with 696 yards 130 behmd
Ol•cago's Walter Payton J. and leads

Hartford

the con feren ce's non-kic k ers

II

••

1:
'

•'•

:

II
't
'
I

I
.,
I

"

Perdue, Iowa face stern tests Saturday
By JOE MOOSHIL
AP Sports Writ•r
Purdue and Iowa. a c-ouple of
teams still Ln the runn mg for the B1g
Ten footba ll champ•onsh 1p w1th 2- 1
records, fat-e stern tests Saturda y
while undefeated Ohio Stale and
Michigan fi gur e to wm as they
please .
Purdue mvades Miehtgan State
where the Spartans are brtstling
from three straight defeats and Iowa
takes on a dangerous Mmnesota
team which earlier defeated Purdue
and last Saturday gave Michigan fits
before bowing 31-21.
Ohio State, the Big Ten's only
undefeated team over all and ranked
stxth nationally . will be home
agatnst Wtsco nstn . Michtgan
invades lllinois and Northwestern
will be at Indiana .
The Purdue -Mi chi ga n Stat e
encounter lS a " ba cks-aga mst-tllewall" aff811', according to both
coachesm ·'but our backs are deeper
against th e wall. " sa1d Darryl
Rogers. r eferrtng to M1 ch1 gan
State's successive Btg Ten losses to
Micl)_igan and Wisconstn .
wliile Michtgan State no longer 1s
a titl e co ntender with tw o
cooference defeats , the Spartans
still hope to close with a rush as they
did last season when they won their
last seven games .
Purdue, ranked 16th, ca nnot
afford another loss and Coach Jim
Young is aware that the Spartans
will have quarterhack Bert Vaughn

b&lt;ick m the li neup
· 'Mtc:higan Statt' IS

vctt&gt;ran team
With a qu1ck. hard.hlttlng defenSt· ."
SBid Yow1g . "They have oul'.tandmg
runm ng bttc ks .an d r ere 1vers
They've Oet&gt;n hurt by mj ur1es a t
quarterba ck. t ·rn sure they'll be
ready for us but I have to feel our
plners Wil l be read) too."
lowi:l puts a three~~anw wmning
streak . 1ts first m 15 years. on th e
lme aga mst Mmnesota tn what could
be a tremendous battle Both teams
have been tested . Iowa played tough
in losses to the likes of Oklahoma
and Nebraska . Mmneso ta played
tnugh in losses against Ohio State
and Miclugan.
&lt;1

" Mmn esota prese nt s a gr ea t

Hayden F'ry "Am - tl:'am that

Flower

~op

" ' -H11

the Badgers don't figure In do 1t this
lime around either, not with Art
Schlichter at the cootrols for the
Buckeyes. But Coach Dave McClain
claims the vtctory over Mtchtgan
State "shows we're not that far
away from playing with the tnp
teams - Ohio State, Michigan,
Michigan State ."
Indiana, another team with a 2-1
record and still in contention in the
Big Ten, will try to wipe out the
memory of a 4Hi loss to Ohio State
agamst a Northwestern team which
is commg off a 58-6 loss tn Iowa . The
Hoosiers figure tn prevail.

STANDINGS

challenge to us." sa1d Iowa Coac h
e&lt;Ul

Four players added
to lndians · roster
Cl. EVE I.A '\D 1 AP 1
The
Oeveland Indians have added four
mtnor league players, mcludmg
Southern Le ague batting champ Joe
Charboneau. to the1.r roster .

The 24-year-o ld Cha rbooeau had a
.302 batting average, With 21 home
run s, wtth the Class AA Chattanooga
club
Indian s' Vt ce PreSide nt and
General Manager Phll Seghi satd
Thursday contracts of two other
players - knuckeblall pitcher Todd
Heimer and ftrst baseman Sal
Rende
LATONIA RESULTS
FLORENCE , Ky . 1AP I - Lone
Mountain ca ptured the $1,100
featurL'&lt;i pace m•le Thursday night
al Lawnia pa ymg $18 40. $61l0 and

Pomero,

score three limes again~1 Michigan
has tn have an outstanding offense."
lllmots 1s a better team than its
record of ~3 in the Big Ten and 1-.'i
over all would indicate but appears
no match for the Wolverines and
thetr tremendous defense.
Mi c higan
Coa c h
Bo
But
Schembechler said, " We have to go
down there in the proper frame of
mtnd . Even though Ohio State and
M•chigan are still at the top of the
co nferen ce, it's getting much
tougher to stay up there ."
Wisconstn hasn 't defeated Ohto
State in Columbus since 1918. and

$.1 .80 .

Hon est Mtn was serond . $4 .20 and
$2.80 and Lunber l_,.gs. Uurd. $3.80 .
The 2-J double of Heed 's Chuck
and Mister Squeek pa id $163 .60 . The
cr owd of 1,092 bet $110 ,014 .

Nationa I Football League
At A Glance
By The Associatec:l Press r
American Conference
"
East
W . L. Pet . PF PA
M1am1
5 1 0 133 98
New England
5 1 0 I 8I lOS
Buffa lo
J 4 0 161 118
N Y Jets
J 4 0 141 18!
Balt1more
l 6 0
88 I-tO
Central
Houston
5 1 0 161 148
Pitt sburgh
1 0 170 !40
Clevela nd
4 3 0 145 158
C1 nci nna t i
I 6 0 t 19 169

s

We,t
5
5

Denver
1 0 110 101
$an Diego
2 0 162 98
Kan sas ( 1ty
4 3 0 113
91
4 3 0 141 134
Oa kland
se attle
1 5 0 I38 167
National Conference
East
Da ll as
6 I 0 178 119
Philad elphia
6 I 0 145 109
Wa shi ngt on
5 2 0 144 104
N . Y . G1an ts
2 5 0 107 148
St Lou is
1 5 0 110 139
Central
T rtmpa Bay
5 1 0 !47 130
Ch1 cago
3 4 0 95 !09
Gr een Bay
3 4 0 !20 118
Mmnesola
J 4 0 114 156
Detroit
I 6 0 117 !73
west
Los An geles
4 3 0 125 125
A tlanta
3 4 0 145 161
New Orlean s
3 4 0 lBO 178
San Francisc o
0 7 0 129 204
Sunday ' s Games
Baltimore a1 Buffalo
Cinci nnati at C leveland
Green Bay at Tampa Bay
Oa kland at New York Jets
Philadelpt"lia at Wa shington
Miami at New E ngland
Chicago at Minnesota
Detroit at New Orleans
Sl Louis al Dallas
Atlanla at San F ra ncisc o
Houston at Seattle
San D iego at Los Angeles
New York G 1ants a! Kansas City
Monday, Oct . 22
Den ver at Pittsburgh

Pro Hockey
At A Glance
By The Associated Press
Nat1ona1 Hockey League
Campbell Conference
Patrick Division
Philade lph ia

W.L.T . Pts GF GA
31061 7 18

A Proven Energy Saver!

GENU\NE

0 1 2 1

8 13

Thursday's Games
Boston J. New York I slanders '1
New York Rangers 6, vancouver 3
Philadelphia 6, Atlanta 2
Quebe c S, Colorado 2
Friday's Games
Los Angeles vs.' Harti ord a t
Springf ield , Mass .
Toronto at WashingTon
Minnewta at W i nnipeg
Quebec at Edmonton
Saturday ' s Games
Los Angeles at Boston
Philade lphia at Detroit
Chicago at Atlanta
New York Rangers at Montre a l
Washington at Pittsburgh
Vancouve r at Toronto
Buffalo at Sf Louis
Winnipeg at Colorado
Sunday's Games
Vancouver at Buffalo
Montreal at Philadelphia
Pittsburgh at New York Ranger s
Qu ebec at Chi cago
M1nnesota at Edmonton

National
8a5ketball Auociation

At A Gtance
By The Associated Pres5
E•Sfern Conference
Atl•ntic Division
W , L. Pel. GB
Bos ton
3 0 1 000
Pt"liladelphia
J 0 1.000
New York
2 2 .SOO 1 11:2
New Jersey
1 2 . 333 2
Washington
1 2 .33 3 2
Central Division
Detroit
3 1 7.5()
Atl&lt;1nta
2 J .400 11: 1
Cleve land
1 J .400 11/ 1
Ind ia na
2 J .400 1
I 1 .33 3 1 111
San Antonio
Houston
I J .250 1
Eastern Conference
Midwest Division
Milwaukee
3 1 . 750
K"'nsas City
1 1 .500 1

Chi cago

t 3

Utah

0

3

.000

Denver

0 "

.(XX)

1n

scoring with 48 points on e1ght
tnuchdowns, five rushing and three
receiVIng .
The Redskins , 5-2, will have to
contain him if they are In stay m the
East Division race . They dtdn 'I do 1t
very well in Philadelplua two weeks
ago, when Montgomery scored all
four wuchdowns in the Eagles · 23-17
triumph .
The Giants , who ha ve won thetr
last two games with rookle Phil
Sirruns as the starting quarterba ck,
head mto Kansa s City, where Chtefs
Coach Marv Levy has reinstated
veteran Mike Living ston a t
quarlerback 111 place of rookle teve
Fuller .
With Cincmnati having beaten
last
Sunday,
Pittsburgh
C001pliments of the Steelers· nine
turnovers, San Francisco remain s
the NFL's only winless team . The
49ers will be trying In pick up that
elusive first victory against the
Falcons, out to rebound from their
!)().19 shellacking by Oakland .

No .IO Arkansas at Little Hock; No.3
Nebraska at Oklahoma State; SMU
at No .5 Houston ; W•scoosin at No.6
Ohio State: No.8 Oklahoma at
Kansas State; No. ll Michigan at
lll ino1s; No 17 Pitt at No . 12
Wa s hlnKton ; No.13 BYU at
Wyommg; No.H Auburn at Georgia
Tech; No.l9 North Carolina at No. 15
North Carolina State; No .l6 Purdu e
at Mich1gan State and Virginia at
No .20 Navy.
The Alabama-Tennessee game is
another of college fotball's storied
n valries, dating back to 1901. The
CrullSon Tide holds a 31-:1.3 edge m
t.hr se ries with seven ties.
" You must have poise, emotion,
ability and a few breaks In play with
a team l1ke Alabama ," says
Ten nessee Coach Johnny Majors,
who was brought back In coach at
his alma mater in 1977 to - among
other things - stem Alabama 's
recent dommation of the series.
" Th1 s 1s probably the best team we
have faced in the three years i have

C L Snutb

r----------__,

l

been at Tennessee ."

Arkansas Coach Lou Holtz knows
he 'II have problems movmg the ball
m Texas, especially through the air.
"They' re sixth m the country in
pass defense. " says Holtz . "You
ta ke 1t fro m there."

Green named

Phils' pilot
PHILADELP HIA 1 AP 1 - Dallas
Green stepped tnto the driver's seat
of the Phuadelphta Plullies with a
one-year managerial contract and a
guarantee against get Ling fired .
But the self-&lt;lescnbed "rough-andgruff " dugo ut boss
said his mam concern IS winning a
champ10nsh1p for the Phillies with
ba s ica lly the s ame te am that
fintshed fourth m 1\,e Na tiona l
l.eag ue East th1s season.
Gr een, wh o too k over as interim
manager wh~n Danny Ozark was
fired Aug. 31, was lla.Jllcd manager

at a press cooference Thursday .
" I thtnk Pa ul 1 Owens. dJrector of
player perso nnel ! and l or e
prepared w do what we have w to
make a winner . We don 't want to
break up Ule nu cleus of the team , but
we' ll do what we have In, " sa1d
Green. the Pltllltes' dJrectnr of farm
l&lt;!arns stnce 1972.
Green sa1d he would .institute an
off ~ason L(odiliontng
program ,
altho ugh .•,any of the players
already work out during th e wmter
month s . Grei'n al,., said pttchers
would run , wlu ch some d1d not do
under Ozark .
Coaches Bobby Wm e. Bllly
DeMar s and Herm Starrette will be
retauwd wlule Bob Tiefenauer will
return to Ille Phillies' minor league
system as a ptt chmg mstructor
Tony Taylt,r. now managin g the
Zul 1a clu b m the Venezuelan Wint er
l.eague. has been offered a mmor
league managmg job.
Lee Ella . wh o coached 1he
Phillies' AAA fa r m tea m in
Okl ahoma Ci ty to a diviSIOn lltle m "

Social Calendar

FRIDAY
REVIVAL oow in progress at
Salv•tion Army, Butternut Ave ..
Pomeroy, at 7:15p.m. nightly . Services through Sunday The Rev .
Larry Lewis, Ma80n and associate
will be the ev angeUsts and WPSM
El oise Adamsand Bob Step, song
leaders. Special singing nightly .
Public invited.
BAKE SALE Friday. beginning 9
a .m . at Kroger 's by Women's
Auxil iary, Vete ra ns Memorial
Hospital , with proceeds to go towards the purchase of new hos pital
equipment.
SQUARE DANCE Fnday at
Pomeroy Semor Citizens Center
from 8 to II. Adnusston Sl. Children
under 12 admited frei' . Mus1c by
String dusters .
SATIJRDAY
RUSS AND the Gospel Tones at
Gospel Mission at Parker..burg ,
Saturday 7: 30p.m.
SUNDAY
SINGING at Mt. Moriah Church of
God Sunday 7 p.m. The Eternal
Youth group of Wellston will be
featured. Other singers mvited to
participate .
COUNTY WIDE Prayer Meellng
Sunday al 2 p.m. at Middleport
C'hurch of Christ in Christian Union.
Glen Bissell class leader .
HOMECOMING of Morning Star
United Methodist Olurch Sunday
begiruting with worship at 9:45
followed by Sunday school at 10 :45.
Carry-in dinner al 12 :30 p.m . Af ternoon service at 2 p.m. F1orence
Smith, pastor. invites the public .

Acelebration of the tOOth birthday
of C. L. Smith, South Second Ave .,
Middlepurt. will be held Sunday at
the Mount Moriah Baptist · Church,
comer of Main and Fourth. from 2 to
4p.m .
The Mount Moriah Missionary
Society is hosllng the celebration to
which the public is being invited.
Mr. Smith, born on Oct . 22, 1879 in
Piketon, has made his home in Middleport since 1968 with his sister~n­
law, Mrs. Nellie Winston .
He's a ctive, interested in
everything, and says he's "not
homesick yet," but leaves that all up
to the Lord .
His constant companion is a radio
on a table next to his favorite chair
wluch remains tuned to a station
which carries only religious
programs. Before he has breakfast
he sits down for his daily devotion on
radio, and listens to spiritual music
and medJtation at intervals during
the day and until his bedtime.
Mr. Smith's wife, Iva, died in 1970,
and he was tearful as he talked
about their good years together.
Their 80n, Clint, and a sister, Mary
Saunders, of Columbus. will be

Inspiration Day set
in Gallipolis Nov. 17

MONDAY
BETHEL 62. lntemational Order
of Job 's Daughtel'3, 7: 30 Monday
night at the Middleport Masonic
Temple.

Autwnn Inspiration Day to be held
in GaUipotis on Nov. 17 was announced when the TOPS OH-1546
met recently at Rutland .
Jackie Justice was named the new
co-weight recorder . Members
dJscussed articles to read on excuses
whey people overeat. At the last
meeting Linda Bailey, Beulah
Collier, and Sandra Sargent were
wlHcomed as new members . Mar jorie Davis was paid for the scrapbook wluch she purchased for the
club and money was collected for the
flower fund .
It was decided that if a member is
hospitalized more than once a year
then she will receive a flower the fir st time and cards thereafter .
A suggestioo box was started .

87th birthchy noted
The 87th birthday of Mrs . Bessie
Quillen was observed recently at her
Middleport home .
,
Attending were Mrs. Luella King, &lt;
Mr. and Mrs. James Fisher and 80n,
J . P, Mr. and Mrs . George Quillen ,
William Quillen and daughters,
Brenda and Sandra Preston and her
children, Mrs . Nora Van Meter,
Mrs. Daisy Marie Saunders, Mrs .
Mary Roberts, Mrs. Viola Bailes ,
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Persinger, Mr .
and Mrs . Gerald Persinger and two
granddaughters, Gail and Diane
Persinger, Ashland, Ky. , whocaUed .
Mrs. Quillen received cards and gifts from relatives and friends .

~~~--..
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and appliance needs .

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Pl[)n em ~~ P 1~s T1CS S1ncp 197 4

Take lh•s ad 10 you r Ha1awa1e. Lumber or Bl og Suppl-y S1ore

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FLEX O·GLASS

The 43rd arm1versary of the Laurel
Cliff Better Health Club was obse rved recently with a potluck dinner at the Meigs County Infirmary .
Plans were made during the
meettng for a trip to Fenton Glass on
Oct. 22 . It was noted that the oxygen
gauge and one hospital bed have
been returned . Donations from Max
Harrah and Edison Hobstetter in appreciation for the use of hosp•tal
equipment were ackrowledged .
Sunshine sisters were revealed
and new names drawn . Next
meeting wil be at the home of Mrs .
Madeline Chaffin, with Mrs. fva
Powell as hostess . Members are to
respond to roll call with 80mething
for wluch they are thankful .
Attending besides those named
were Mildred Bowen, Donna
Gilmore, Doris Shook, Ann Mash,
Mildred Jacobs, Ruby Frick, Polly
Ei chinger, Jean Wnght , Della Curtis, Bertha Parker, Iva Powell . and
Mrs. Mash's sister-in-law .

Laurel Cliff
News Notes
Attendance at the Free Methodist
Olurch on Oct. 7 was 81. The conterence superintendent Mr. Ray D.
Altman was guest speaker.
Ernest Powell remains ill at his
home.
Bruce Rife of California recently
called on Mrs. Bertha Parker.
Mr. and Mrs . Dick Karr is visiting
their daughter and son-in-law, Mr .
and Mrs . Ed Bauer, New
Philadelphia , and their daughter
and 80n-in.Jaw , Mr. and Mrs . Ted
Mathew, Alabama .
There will be a revival at the local
church Oct. 24 through Oct. 28 with
Mr. James Mason, O..yton, as guest
speaker.

.

seas missionaries tube supported by

the circle this year . Mrs . June Kloes
gave the white cross quota for the
year . Members were asked to make
cookies for the World Community
O..y, Nov . 2 at the Middleport F1rst
Baptist Omrch, 1:30 p.m.
It was noted that the red socks for
spec ial projects are to be taken to
th e December Sanborn meeting .
There was a dJscussion on having an

EDWARD O'CONNOR
HOSPITAU ZED
Edward O'Connor, long-time
resident of Racine, is cmfined to St.
Luke's Hospital in Bellingham,
Wash . He recently underwent
surgery . Cards may be sent to Mr.
O'Cormor at St. Luke's H011pltal, 809
East Chestnut St., Bellingham,
Wash. 98225.

From our
I

Over a hund red
yea rs ago a Bu1ova
was one oi the mos1

advanced watcnes you
could buy 11st1II 1S
A. Accutron Ouartz

#9 2505
8 .Accutron Ouar .1..

, 92946

USE OUR CONVENIENT LAYAWAY

~uti'
~Jetteler.s
Ill E.

~tn.

Pomoroy

Thomas Clothiers, GAlLIPous
New York Clothing House,

PoMERoY

LIFESTYLE 'SWEEPSTAKES HIGHLIGHT OUR

'LONDON FOG. WEEK'

15.000 10 . 2 S!Jt-'c:"d , I i k e new , 825 t ir es. 108" c ab to axle .

1977 CHEVY % l.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . '3995

DOXOL SERVICE

8' Ft ee ts ioe, 350 en g , au1o , P S , P B , So l iding R . glass, local owner
and low m il es .

RIDENOUR'S

1976 CHEVY 20t TEC

TV &amp; APPLIANCE

M ini Home , air on ch ass is a nd body , less than 25,000 mi l es, fu ll equ i p
men f.

GAS SERVICE
Chuter. 0 .
Racine, 0 .

1976 CHEVY C60 •••••••••••••••••••••••• '4895
'191 engi ne, 2 speed ax le. 875 t ir es, 102 " c ab to axl e .

1
1975 CHEVY VAN ••••••••••••••••••••••• • 2295

•

1972 V'N •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• '2295
Fold dOwn seaL ice box , c lean interior . table , good t 1res .

1971 CHEVY ClO ••••••••••••••••••••••••• '1295
Good tires, 8' a lum . tope r . 350 V 8. a uto, P S .. P. B ., Cheyenne cab.
Runs good

15() 2

2' ''
3

1976 CHEVEUE MALIBU

'

•
•

4 DR .. ~2295

v 8, automatic. power st . and brakes , fa ctory air . tint . glass. AM FM
_stereo rad io, c lean 1nter1or
.

1973 CHEV. IMPALA. .............................'l295
cpe ., air , V 8. auto ., P. S., P B , c lean 1 owner .

NOW ON DISPLAY

Middleport, Ohio

Mill Street
991 - ~ j4l

or 992 -3344

115.00

C Glencoe --- Imag ine te)(tured
Dacron pol vester , tailored to a
lining _ British tan, navy, or tan
minlbone.

Clo_th shell that
works beautitully 1n Spring or
early autumn _lip -i n warmer and
hood lin i ng of deep, ri ch Orion
pile to keep you coly all fhrough
the burr -iest Winter.
1

WIN I
A Clr\bbean CruiM
For 2 On Your Own
Chartered Vacht

115.00

••

•

B. Andrea - Ciae t l'l Cloth Fortrel
polyester and c ombed cott on ,
with a zip -in li ning of Orion
acrylic pile and man tailortod
detniling .
1

o. Clara ----&lt;! aPth

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

R. C. BOTTLING CO.

100.00

1

STYLE NEWS ON NATIONAL NEWS
The gr eateSt styles by London Fog wil l be mak i ng a
major network telev ision news debut on ABC , CBS,
and NBC nightly ne~ c as t dur i ng London F09 Week.
These styles of a l l weather coats and j ackets for
men and wo men will be shown and seen daily by
over 115 million 'Viewers tr a m coast to coast . We 've
c ollected the s tars of the show in every style at
Thomas Clo tt'li ers and New York Clothing House.
ComE&gt; see them , and try them on
WINI

120.00

1980'S CHEVROLnS

•

A . Qxbo'IN - the c lassic town anu
country sty I ing for the man who
wants fashion in his outer gar ·
ments . Natural , brown, or grey
heather .

If's th e b1g event . Our saluTe 10 fashion, inspired by
London Foo and featured in our Men 's &amp; Women's
Co at Departments Throughout all of our stores, star ·
• t ing Monday , October 15. Check. the London Fog
c oats and tne exci ting prize you may win during
London Fog Week

1

Games

SAVE YOUR R.C., NEHI, UPPER 10, DIET RITE &amp;
OAOIS ROOT BEER BOTTLE CAPS FOR CHARITY

EXCITING "LONDO N FOG WEEK"

6 cvl std _ tran s, R&amp;M , partial conoyers10n, int . carpet , bed, skyroot,
air vent.

Detroit 129. New York 115
Portland 107. Utah 92
:ian DiO!IO 111, Ch icago 107

ONLY

nhsen 'es anniL'£'nan

attemoon circle. Members signed a
card and enclosed a gift ~ mooey to
be sent to Keith Johnson, w11o1e birthday is today .
Mrs . Kloes presented the program
enlltled "All God's Children are 0.
K." using scripture fr&lt;m PBalma,
Proverbs and First Corinthlanll.
There was a quiz and Mrs . Mary
Brewer served pumpkin pie and cdfee .

1977 CHEVY C60. •••••••••••••••••••••••• '5695

Clevel and 141 , San Antonio 13.4

FLEX-0 -GLASS COSTS SO
LITTLE - ANYONE CAN AFFORD fT.I

1lealtiJ Uuh

llst Church mel Tuesday rught ~~ the
home of Mrs . Sarah Fowler .
Devollons to open the meeting
were given by the hostess from
Catherine Marshall 's book. "He Is
W1th Thee Ln Everyday Situations ."
Mrs. Mary Brewer read a card of
thanks from Glinda H.Jce, scholarslu p student at Judson College,
Elgin, m.
Mrs . Fowler read pen sketches of
Mr . and Mrs. Murray Sharp, over-

\like Ryan w•ll join the coachmg
sta ff .

At lanta t 15. Indiana 85

washington at Boston
New York at New Jersey
Detroit at Philadelphia
Phoenix at M i lwaukee
Kansas City at Denver
Portland at Los Angel ~
San Diego at SeaNteo
Saturday's Go~mes
Philadelphia at New York
Boston at Indiana
Detroit at Washington
Phoenix at Chicago
Cleveland at San Anton io
Atlanta at Houston
Utah at Golden State
Sunday's Game-s
Chicago at Milwaukee
PhOenix at ~ ansas City
SeattiP at Los Angeles
Golden State at Portland

Queen for the week at the Oct. 2
meeting was Ruby Hysell with Marcia Barrett as runner-ilp . She was
presented a dollar and members
sang in her honor. She was also the
monthly queen for September and
was presented $3 . The 24 members
weighing in showed a net gain of
over nine pounds .
The contest was explained and it
was decided that if the member is a
KIW she will receive two fish when
she aclueves that status, and one for
every pound she loses.
At the Oct. 9 meet.lng Sandra
Sargent wits the queen with Louise
Eads the runner-i!p. With the 20
weighing in, there was a net loss of
30 pounds. Cindy Krautter is the
leader. The club pledge and roll call.
along with officers' reports are
given at each meeting .

Halloween and Thanksg1 v~ng
remembrances fo r shut-tns were
arranged when the Dorcas O rcle of
the B. H. Saubom Missionary
Society of the Middleport First Bap-

·~

the Arner1can A"isociation this
season . and r n mer Phillies catcher

Pacitic Division
Portland
4 0 1.000
Phoeni)(
1/J
3 0 1.000
Los Ange les
2 1 .667 1112
Go lden State
22 5001
San Diego
1 2 .500 1
Seatt le
1 2 .33J 11/2
Thursday's Game

Frid~y·s

among the relatives here for the
celebration Sunday .
A member of the Providence Baptist Olurch in Gallia County, Mr.
S1nith was a farmer in the Rodney
community most of his life . He says
he was " raised to work and not fool
around about it " and is a finn
believer that "work doesn 1 hurt
anyone ."
And he pra.cti ces what he
preaches.
Since 1968 when he and his wife
came to Middleport, he has raised a
big garden every year , doing all (f
the cultivating, planting and harvesllng himself.
His legs aren't as good as they
used to be, he says, so this past week
when he decided it was time to get
the land ready for a garden next
year, he found it was easier to sit oo
a chair and move it along using a hoe
and spade to turn the soil.
So with his IOOth birthday on Monday and a ready admission that he's
not "homesick yet," Mr. Smith's
thoughts this week have been about
the beans, tomatoes, onions and cabbage he'll grow next summer- "the
Lord willing."

Dorcas Circle arranges remembrances

992-2126

"Your Ghevy Dealer"

Open Even1ngs III 8 p.m.

POMEROY

See our c mplete line of London
Foo coars in our men ·s and
Women'!. Coat Department at
Thomas Clothier~ . Men's 5tyles
on ly at N~ York Clotning House .

NEW YORK CLOtHING

OOUSE

�7-The Do~y Senttnel. Middleport -Po me ro). 0 . Fnd.ay. Oct 19 _1979

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Fnday . Oct . 19, 1979
MI DDL EP O RT ClUS! ER

CHURCH
NEWS
:Il

~

,I'
•

I
I

'•

HEATH C h urc h Slhool q 30 or"
sh rp

.

.,"

SAlE M C ENH R
4 'i,.., rn

TRINITY CHURCH Rev W H Pe rrrn
pastor Bob Buck Sunday school supt
Church School 9 15 o m
wor~h1p se1
v fce 10 lOam Chorr r ehearsal. Tues.doy ,
7 30 p . m und•r d~rectron of Al r&lt; e Nea se
POMEROY CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE
Corner Unron and Mulberry , Rev Clyde V
Henderson pastor Sunday school 9 30
a m Glen McClung , sup! mornmg war
shrp 10 JO o m
B'&lt;'enrng servrce 7 30
mtd- wHk ser..,rce . Wednesday , 7 JO p m

GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH -

.

.,
'·

Morn St , Pomeroy The Rev Robert B
Groves rector Sunday ser-v1ces . ( ,ummer
schedu le begrnnrng June 3) at lO 30' Ser
voce wrl l alternate between t he Holy
Eu chor111 and mornmg prayer etfectr va
June 3 Holy Commun ron every other Sun
dav of each month and sermon Church
scl"'ool and nursery core pr ovr ded C otfea
ho ur 1n porrsh house followrng the ser
vrce
Mo1n Ne•l Pr oudf oo t posto1 Brble schal
9 30om morn1ng worhsh rp 10 30 a m
Yourh rneetrng!o 6 JO p m e ven111 9 war
sh rp , 7 30
Wadne1odoy nrght prayer
mee tr ng and Brb le study l JO
THE SALV ATION ARMY 115 But l ern ur
A ve Pomeroy Envoy and Mn Ray Wtn
rng oft1 cers rn charge Sunday holmess
meetrng 10 am
Sunday School 10 30
o m Sunday schoo l leader YPSM Elor se
Adams 7 30 p m
sai\/Oiron maetrng
vonous speakers and musr c spec1als
Thursday I 0 a m to') p m ladre ~ Home
league oil women 1nvr ted 7 30 p m
prayer meat~ng and 8rble 'tudy Bob
htep
leader
Re"'
Noel
Her mon
teac her
BURLINGT O N
SOU THERN
BAPTIST
'
CHAPEL Route I Shade- Pas tor Bobby
Elkrns Sunday school 5 p m
Sunday
wo rshtp 5 A5 p m
Wednesdav p r ayer
!o9rYIC8 7 J0 p m

Re"' Rolph Smt ih pastor Sunday scnool
9 30
o m
Mrs
Worley
Francis
superintendent Praochmg sarvrcas lrrs1 &amp;
thrrd Sundayslollowtng Sunday School
GR AHAM
UN I TED
METHODI ST
Preochrng 9 30 o m frr,t and second Sun
days of each m o nth thtrd and fou rt h Sun
days each montl"' worshrp servrc e at 7 30
p m Wednesday evenrngs 01 7 30 Prayer
and Brbl e Studv
SEVE NTH OAV ADVENTIST
Mu lberry
He1gh h Rood . Pome roy Pa stor Albert
t&gt;rttes Sabbath School Superrntendent
R1to Whtte
Sabbath School Sa turda y
aflernoon at 1 00 wtfh Worshrp Sa rv l(8
follow rng at 3 I 5
RUTLAND FIRS T BAP TIST CHURCH
Srster Harnett Worner Sup!
Sunday
School q 30 a m mornrng worshrp 10 AS
om .
TH E HILAND CHAPEL George Cas to
pastor Sunday School q 30om evanrng
worst'llp 7 30 lhursday evan tng prayer
servl&lt;• 7 30 p m
POMEROY FIRST BA PTIST Oovrd Monn
m rms tar Wrll 1am Watson Sunday sc hool
supt Sunday school Q 30 o m morntng
worshrp 10 30 o m
FIRST SOUT HERN BAP11Sl 28'1 Mulbe rry
A v e Pomeroy Hershel McClu re Sunday
'!O c hool ~uptHinlendenl Suf"doy schol Q 30
om
m or n1ng w o rshp 10 30 aven ong
w ors hrp 7 p m M •dwel prayer ser "'C 8 7
om
MIDWAY COMMUNITY CENTE R Outer
Rd ~ ongsvrlle Oh10 R•" Clyde Ferrell
Pastor Sunday Sc hool II o m Saturday
p reo&lt;hrng servtces 7 30 p m Wednesday
ev enrng B1b le study of 7 30 p m
FA ITH TABERNACLE CHURCH 8a1ley
Run Rood Re... Emmell Ro wson pastor
Hand ley Dun n supt Sunday §Chool I 0
o m Sunday evenmg servrce 7 30 Brble
teo ch1ng 7 30 p m Thu"day

DYEIV ILLE

COMMUNIT Y

CHURCH

Roger C lu rner pastor Su nday schoo l
9 30 o m
Sunday mornrng w o rshtp
10 30 Sunday 8\/entng '!Oer\IICE! 7 30

MIDDLEPO RT CHURCH Of CHRIST IN

:I
I

CHRI STIAN UNION
l aw r ence Ma nley
poster
Mr s
Ru ssell Young
Sunda..,.
School Supt Sunday Sc hool 9 30 a m
Evenrng worsh1p l 30 Wednesday prover
m . . trng 7 30 p m
Ml
MORIAH CHUR CH Of GOD
Roc rna- Re v W H Lykms pastor Morn
rng worshrp 9 45 o m Sunday ~chool
10 A5 om e"'enrng wm,hrp 7 Tua~day
7 30 p m
lodres
prayer
meetrng
Wednesday 7 30 p m YPE
MIDDLEPORT fiRST BAPTIS 1 Corner
Sul l h and Palmar rhe Rev Mar k M cClung
Sunday sch ool 9 15 om
Don W1 lson
su perrnta nd ent la cy Bo rton osst supt
Morn1ng Wors hrp 10 15 o m Btble stu d y
10 30 o m at ch u rch Yo~Jth mee t tng 7 30
p m Wednesday Wednesday nt ght 8 rb le
study and prayer lef'llCe 7 30 p m
CHUR CH OF CHRI ST Mrdd leport 5rh
and Morn Bob M•lton mmtster Mrke
G•rlo&lt;h super rntendent Terry Yankey
youth m rmster Brb le school 9 30 o m
mornrng worsh•p 10 30 o m
evenrng
won h tp , 7 30 prover servtce 7 p m
W.dnesdoy
MIDDLEPO~T

CHURC H

OF

THE

NAZARENE . Rev Jrm 8 roome pastor 8dl
Whrte
Sunda y schoo l supt
Sunday
school , 9 30 am mornrng worshrp 10 30
a m , Sunday evangeliSti C meetrng 7 00
p m Prayer meeting Wednesday 7 p m
UNITED PRESBY TE RIAN MINISTRY OF
MEIGS COUNT Y Dwtght l Zavrtz drrec ·
tor .

HARRISO NVILLE

PREIBYTE~IAN

Rov

Ernest Slrrcklrn pastor Sunday c hu rc ~
school 9 30 a . m Mrs Homer lee supt
mornmg worshtp , 10 JO
MIDDLEPORT Su nday school 9 30 o m
Rrcho rd Vaughan , s.up t Morn rng worshrp

10 30
SYRACUSE. Morntng worshrp 9 o m
Sunday school , 10 o m M rs Sampson
Hall . supt

RUTLAND

CH U~ CH

Of GOD . Rev Bob

by Porter , po\for Sundoy sc h oo l 10 am
Sunday worsh!p , II o m , Sunday e"'enrng
serv rce , 7 p m , W.dnesdov Fomrly Tro r
lng Hour, 7 p . m . Wednesday worst11p ser
VICe, 7 30 p m
Near
HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH
Long Bottom . Edsel Hort pastor 3undoy
school, 10 o . m , Church 7.30 p m , prayer
m-tlng. 7 30 p . m . Thursday .
MTDDLEPO~T

PENTECOSTAL

!turd

Av• , the Rev Wrlliom Knrttel pas. tor
Thomas Kelly , Sunday School Sup1 Sun·
ctay school , 10 a . m Classes for oil ages .
eYenmg servrc• , 7 30, B1ble study
Wednesday . 7 :30 p .m . youth serv1ces ,
Frtday , 7·:)() p . m .

MIDDlEPORT FREEWill BAPTIST . C,.-ne&lt;
Ash and Plum ; Noel Herrmon postor
Saturday evening servrce, 7 JO p m , Sun
doy School , 10 30 a m

MEIGS

9 om Church

Harvey K O&lt;h Jr

FOREST RUN
Schooi !O am
MINERS V IllE
Worsh1p 10 a m

Wor$hp 9 om

These 1l1essages Of Our Religious Heritage

METHODIST CHURCH
),. Richard W Thomas , D~rector

· POME~OY CLUSTE~
ReY Robert McGee
Rev . Jam•s Corb1tt
POMEROY , Sunday School 9 15 o m
Worship service 10 30 o m Choir rehea r
sol . W.dnasdoy 7 p m Rev Robert
McGH, postor
ENTf!WRISE , W orship 9 o m Church

SchoollOa.m.
~OCK ' SPRINGS. Sunday School . 9, 15
o m ; worship service , 10 a m

10

om

Are Sponsored Each Week By The Following:

Churc h Sc hool 9

am

MEIGS TIRE
CENTER. INC.

C h urch ~c h oo l 9 5{) am W a r

A SBURY

sh1p 1 I a m Brble Study 7 30 p m
day UMW lrst Tuesdoy

Thurs

MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE
( h urrh&amp;QI I ocl

\u pplu ~

G IF T \

John F Fult1 Mq r

SO UTHERN CLUSTER
Rev Dovrd

NEW YOR~
CLOTHING HOUSE

Mrs

K(AMIT ' ~I(QANEA

Ph 997 1101

Hor "~

Poml'roy

99 M1ll Sl

..,...,.

locusf &amp;

Pomeroy Oh1o

M •ddtppor I

Flo rence Smrth

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY

Hrlton Wo lle
(Dort&lt;n r W or~hrp 9 00 a rn

Chur c h Sch ool 10 00 am
CARMEl Chruch Sc hool9 30 am W ar
shrp 10 JOa m 2ndand.(thSundays
APPLE GROVE Svr~day School 9 JO a m
Wor shrp 7 30 p m 1lt and 3rd Sundays
Prayer meet rng Wednesday l 30 p m
Fell o ws~·u p supper hrst Saturday b p m
UMW 2nd Tuesday 7 30 p m
EA.S T lET ARl Chr vch School 9 o m
W o rs~·up servrce 10om Prayer meehng
7 30 p m W&amp;dne sdoy UMW second Tuas
day730pm
RACINE WESLE YAN
Sunday sc hool 10
a m
worsl·u p 11 o m (he rr p r octrce
Thursday Bp m
LETART FALLS.
Wor~h·p servrce 9 om
Church Schoo l 10om
MORNING STAR Worsh tp ~;~ 30 a m
Church
School
10 30 om
Youth
1uesdays l p rn
MORSE CHAPEl Church School 9 JO
a m W orshrp 11 o m
PORTLAND Churci'· Sc hool 9 30 am
Worshrp 1 1 a m
SUTTON Church S(hool 9 30om W ar
!hip 1st and 3rd Sundays I 0 30 a m

(For A Real Auctton Call
The Real McCoy)
1. 0 . ( Mac McCoy

W" J:rll Docton '
Prts&lt;rrPIIOns
tt7 nB
Poml!'roy

RIGGS USED CARS, INC.

-! o

'

o·

FUANITUME &amp; HARDWARE
Homelt1e ~"'"

A•y At!IQ S

St Rt 1

Chnft&gt;r
Pt'r US

~100

ROSEBERRY'S
PENNZOIL
Slln-S.ntce -AcefltoriH

no E

""''"
""711]

RACINE
FOOD MARKET

.......,
~rn

212W

P.

AGENT

Athens County
&amp; loan
Co.
116 E

EDEN UNifED SRETHRfN IN CHRIST
Elden R Bl oke pmtor Sunday School 10
a rn
Robert Reed ~upt
Mornrng ser
mon 11 o m
Sunday n1ght sar ... tcas
Chrrstron Endec 'O r 7 30 p m Song ser
v1ce
8 p m , Pr&amp;ae htng 8 JO p m
Mrdweelor Prayer meetrng Wed nes day 7
p m Roy Adams , loy leader
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST Loc orttd or
Rutland on New ltma Rood nell' I to l=o res1
A cre Pork . Rev Roy Rouse pastor Robert
Musser
Sunday School supt
Sunday
school . 10 30om worshrp 7 30 p m Br
ble Study Wednesday 7 30 p m Satur·
dov nrght prover servrce 7 30 p m

Roll" '

Watson pastor M rld red lregler Sunday
school supt , Mornmg worshtp q 30 o m
Sundays&lt;hool , 10 30 om ., evenrng ser vrc.e 7 30
MT
UNION BAP TIST
Cecrl Co.minrster. Joe Sayre
Sunday School
Supertntenent Sunday sch ool , 9 AS o m ,
evenrng wonhrp
7 30 p .m
Prayer
meo t rng , 7 30 p m Wedn•sdoy

TUPPER S PlAINS CH URCH Of

C H~I S T

Randy Koehler pouor Dennr s Newland
Sundav sc h ool super tntendent Sunday
School , 9 30 om
mornrng church sor vrce 10 30 o m Sunday evenrng Brble
stud~ 7 p "''

LETART fAL LI UNITED BPETHREN Rev

M.m

tlw Church
of ) our Uwiet'
llt'tHI

The Ninth Annual Ant ique
Semmar, spoTLSored by the French
Art Colony and lea turing Orva
Wa l k e r He1sse nbutt el from
Washington, D C . will be he ld next

Tuesday and Wednesday , Oct 2J
and 24, a t Kiverby, home of the
French Art Colony on F'1rst Ave tn
Galli polis
OlaJrtng ili1s yea r's Sem111ar t!l

Chernn gton, reser.·attuns

fur the SemmC::Ir sh()u ld be m.ad e I TTl ·
med1tely Ln order to adequate!; plan
fur the lun ch&lt;'Dns that w11l be
ava ilable both da) s alit! verb)
Tu esday m om1ng , the sesswn w 1H
open at 9 30 a rn . and the tota l day
w11l be spent on Anllque Toy s and
Dull' A b n •ak for lunch from 12 :10
p 111 Ulllll I p m will be observed,
~&lt;Ilh the da y endm~ al3 30 p rn THe
Wedn esday mormng program from
9 30 am un til 12 30 p m will be on
Anl1que GIC::ISS
The after noon
sess ion from I p m until 3 30 p m
will feature ml ormaUon on antiques
and the begmmng eollector This
w1 ll 1nclude ltps on ref1rushmg fur mture, fa cts on silver, glass, etc All
those who parti clpa~ may bnng one
small Item for personal consultation
w1lh Mrs He1ss.nbuttel
The ~' rench Arl Colony feels most
fortunate that Mrs. Hei ssen buttel , a
nat1ve of Gallla County , who 1s
nettlonally recogmzed as a n t'X(lert
on the subJect of ant1ques, L"etn
retum to Galllpohs each fall to conduc1this two da y serrunar
To make reservallons for the Ntn·
th Annual Antique Semmar, call
Mrs Chernngtonat446-1317,orPJ's
al446-1 819 The cost for each day , mc ludmg lunch , Is $7 50 or $1 5 lo
reg1ster fo r both de~y s a nd have lu!l ·
c hat !uverby The fee LS $4 for a
half -&lt;:Ia) session. or $5 for a ha lf day
and lunch
The deadl w e for reset-va twns
must be at noon Sunday H oweve r ,
l'ar!Jer r es ervations are en lu uraged

Th i~ Sunda \'.

Services
WAID CROSS
SONS STORE

ll r11A ~1m ph,.

dTl ' td-.k'&gt;

~ ·,

•ul fdl hv hum?!n t! lf o r1 ?!nd undc:iakmgs
J.:tthr Jll l th t' fil•lp I r! (uJd

This Sunday

,, ' &gt;I

~~
UJ.\

MillE SWIGER
STATE FARM
INSURANCE

(f i l l

l- .

l4t 5 Thrrd

Pat Hill Ford, Inc.
U I S Third , MlddMiport

wh1 c h

m '"'

I ht.., ltcHVt'':l t ~l 'd-.r 11 1 111tn thl' mtlhon s 111 ch llrc hes across the la nd
\,h, , ._~,_, ,Jl t&gt;,, thdllK lng (;, J( j f 11 1 r) ur part - and H ts - tn all ea rthl y
J( h1e\. FtnL'n l

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+

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,

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FOf' TM a.st If'! TV V~ewlnrg
u

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C. I I

(f i l l

Middleport
Ph. 992 -71U
OlrKtDry I
Ct'ltWdl ... fftlly ...
Comp ..tw c._,rch ,tM
...,.,.._ 111' your local pro

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KEN

GROVER
., PHOTOGRAPHY
ftl ., n

HEINER'S
BAKERY
Sa ken of
Good Brud

PIZZA SHACK
In or
C•rry 0\J t
t16 E M.a1n
E~l

yq ] .)04

poml'ro y

cttett.,., o

•

Altend The Oturch

JJ

of Your Choice
Thi~

Sunday

Attend The Church
Of Your Lhoice This Sunday
Freelorld N o rrr s pusTur Fl oyd N orr1~
su or Sunday schoo l Q 30 a m mor nmq
5ermon
10 JO om
Pray er serv•&lt;e
Wedne\day 7 30 p m
CHE STER CHUR CH OF THE NAlAR !:. N ~
Rev Herbert Grata pastor Worsh rp ~er
vrce II om and 7 JO p m Sunday
School 9 JO om Charles 8 rss ell ~up!
Pra yer meet rn g Wednesdov 7 lOp m
CLIFF
FREE
ME THODI ST
l AUREl
CH UR CH Re"' Fl oyd F Shook pa st or
lloyd W 119ht Sunday School Supt Morn
on g Wo•sh •p 9 30 o m
Sunday School
I 0 10 a m Wedne!odoy Prayer and 8 1ble
Srudy 7 30 p m Sunday evenrng wor~h1p
l 30 p rn Chorr Proct rce Thursday 7 p m
mxTER C HURCH O F CHRIST C horle ~
Ru ss ell Sr
mrn15ter Rr ck Maco mber
sup ! Sunday H hoo l q 30 om
wor\hlp
5er .. rce I 0 30 o m B1ble Study Tuesdoy
7 30 p m

RE ORGANIZED

CHU RCH

Of

JESUS

CHRI ST O F lA TlER DAY SAI NTS Ponlond
Ro crne Rood
Wrll rom Roush , pastor
Phyll r, Stobart Sunday School Supl Sun
day School 9 30 o m M orn rng warsh• o
10 30 am Sunday ev enrng se rvrce 7 p m
Wednesday evenrng prayer ~erv t c es. l 30

pm
BE THLEHEM BAPTIST , Re.. Ear l Shu le r
pastor W ar shrp serv rc e 9 30om Sunday
school 10 30om 8rble Study and prayer
servt ce Thur sday 7 30 p m
CARlETON CHUR CH , l&gt;( rngsbvry Rood
Gory I&lt; 1ng past or Sunday school 9 30
om Rolph Carl 5upermtendent evenong
wort.htp
7 30 p m
Prayer meet 1ng
Wednesday 7 30 p m
lONG BO TTOM CHRISTIAN George f
Pr ckens
posror
Wallace Damew ooJ
Su p! Bob le Schoo l Gl -i 5 om Preo&lt;h1ng
serviCe 10 o4 S om
frnt and lhrrd Sun
doys 7 p m second and fourt h Sunday \
B1bla sludy 8 p m Tuesday s
HY SEll RU N FREE METHODI ST CHUR CH
Rt&gt;Pv Olo.ey Ca rt pastor Mornr ng sfH v,&lt; e
10 30om Sunday evemng and Th ur\doy
evenrng ser vrc e s ot 7 30 p m
FREEDOM GOSPEL M ISSIO N 01 Bo ld
Knob Rev lawrence Glue~e nc omp S1
po"or Roger W1 l lf ord Sr Sunday H h on l
supr Sunday !&gt;Chool 9 .30 o evenmg w or
shrp 7 30 p m Prayar meelt ng Wedmn
day 7 30 p m Youth meelrng Sunday
5 30 p m w rth Do n and Morth6J Mea dow~
rn charge
WHITE S CHAPEl Cool v1l!e RO Re v Roy
Deeter , past o r Sundo1 school q 30 a m
wonhrp serv rce 10 30 am Brble sfudy
and praye r servrce Wednosdoy 1 30 p m

RUTLA ND CHURCH OF CHRIST

B&lt;od

Hender son poslor Herb Ello o t! Su nday
sc hool sup! Sund ay sc hool 9 30 am
morn rng worsh1p and comu nr o n 10 30
c on
MASON ASSEMBlY O F GOD Dudd •ng •
lone Ma son W Va Rev Ronn1e R

prorse serv1 ce Wedne !oday 7 30 p m
SulldOy :Ochool q 45 o rT1
RUTLAND AP OSTOliC CH URC H Of
o rn E v~rll'lg ~1::!1
· •Ce '30 p rn
Wedne~doy M • n•o; t r · e~
.JESU~ CHRI ST Elde1 Jame\ Mil ler 8 rble
rl("t!!' ' 'Y and proye1 10 a rn Wednesday
\lu dy Wednesday l 30 p m
Sunday
Pra yer ~(' I voce 7 :lOp m
Stl"'oo l 10 a m Sunday n1 gh t HHvoce l JO
RUlLAN D BIBLE MUHOD t ~r CH URCH
p m
f (Jl "lf'r! v Rutland Conomun •ly (hur&lt;h
POMEROY WESlEYAN HO liNE SS
A rno~ ! .! Irs po' To r Don ny l oll,~ :-wndoy
Ho rrrson vrlle Roo d Dewey Kmg pastor
~ r h o ( l l ~u pe-r .n lendent Sun do )' o;c h oo l
Ed1son Wea ver ossrstont Henry Eblr n
9 )0 am Sunday e .,en ong w o1~h·p 7 )0
p rn WMPO rad 10 p r oqrom PO &lt; h Sun
Jr
Sunday Hhool supt Sunday Hhool
do)' •norn1nq 7 45 o m
Q 30 o m
m o rn rng worshrp 11 o m Sur
day
evenrng
ser\lr ce
7 30
pray At
l , tt ,~ po\ tor Donny lrllos Sundo)' School
Supl Sunday Sc hool 9 30 o m f o l lowed meetrng Thur!odoy ! 30 p m
SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF GOD
by mar nong wors h rp Sunc-lo y ev P. n ong ser
N o r Pen reco!otol
Re v
George O,Jer
... ,ce 7 30 p m Prayer meot1ng Wednes
pt:nl or W o1 shrp ~er v r c e Sunday q -4 5
dO'f 7 30 p m WMPO Rodro broodcmr
o m
Sunday school 11 a m
w or~h 1p
Sun day mornong 7 .(5
~erv r ce
7 30 p m
Thursday prayer
RUTLAND CH URCH OF TH[ NA. ZARE NE
Re"' lloyd D Grrmm J r po\ tOr Sun day meet1n9 l 30 p m
MT HERMO N Un rted Brethren Chur ch
~ c h oo l 9 30 a rn
wm sh tp ser vtce 10 30
o ' 1'1 Braod(as r 11.,0 over WMP O young Su nday Sc hoo l q JO om Wor~h1p sarv1 ce
I 0 45 a m Preach rng servtces every Sun
people~ st&gt;rvr{e l p m E van gel1 ~ t !C stH
.,He 1 JO p m Wednes day ser vrce 7 )Q doy ahernorrng wrth C E Wedne sday
p 111
f iRST SOUTH ERN B.A.PllST Corne r prayer meettng 7 30 p rl'l thfev Jomes
ol Second and And e r~o n Mo~ on Pos.to r leoch po~tor Oo v rd H olter I~ leader
JEHOVAH S W I TNESSES I mtle eost of
fronk Iow ther Sunday school 9 •5 om
Ru 1lond 1unct ron of Route 124 and Noble
w o • ~ h op servoce
I 1 o m and 1 30 p m
Week ly Brb l e Study Wednesday 7 30 Su mmil Rood ( T 174 ) Sunday 8rble lee
tura q 30 a
Wa tchtower study 10 30
pm
am
Tu esday Btble study 7 and 8 15
MA SON CHURCH OF CHRI ST Mrller St
p m
Thursday theocratt c school 7 30
Mo .. on W Vo Aur•ce M 1c k po s1or Sun
p m !ervrce m . .t 1ng 8 30 p m
day B·ble Stud y 10om Worsh1p I I a m
RUTlAND FREEWill 6APliST Church
and 7 p m 81b le STudy Wedne~doy 7 p m
leland Holey pastor S.undoy school 10
Voc al mu5rc
MA SON A SSEMBlY O F GOD Duddt ng o m , •venrn~ 5ervrce 7 30 p m Pr ayer
m eelrng Wednesday 7 30 p m
Lone Mas on W Yo Chester Tan non!
CHURCH OF GOD o f Prophecy loc ated
Pm r01
Sunde,$( h oo l q .(5
o m
o n the 0 J Whrta Rood o ff h1ghwoy 160
Ch1ld ren s ( hur(h b 45 p m Young Pe a
Su nday School 10 om Svperrntendenl
pie~ Servllf' 6 45 p m
Evangelrslrc Se1
Jo h n l ovadoy F~r~t Wttdnesdoy nrght of
v •&lt;e 1 30 p m W omen s Mr u1onar y Coun
m onth CPMA ser ... rces second Wednet
(IIIO o m fn st ond thrrd lue!odoy' Pr ay er
dov WMB m-tmg . thud through lrhh
an d Sob le Study Wednesday 7 30 p m
youth 'ervrce George Croyle pas t or
HAR TFORD CHURCH O F CHRIST IN
HO PE BAPT1S T CHAPEL - 570 Grant St
( HRI ~TI AN
UNIO N
The ilev W ' tom
Campbell poSf o r Sunday ~rhoo!
JO M1dd leporf Rev Don Bloke pastor Sun
dov sc hool 9 30 a m mornrny w o rsh rp
n m James H ughes sup! evenrng •er
10 30 om
evenrng worsh1p 7 p m ,
v• ce
7 30 p m
Wednesday aven11Q
W.dne,doy ev enmg Brble ttud)' ond
p10yer meettng 7 30 p m Youth p r ayer
proye• mee tr ng 7 p m A ffr hoted wrth
se rvrce eo&lt;h I ue 5da)'
Southern Bapti st Convenhon
FAIRVIEW BIBL E CHUR CH le tart W
BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST Va
Rt
1 Rev Chorl e \ Hargra ves
Eugene Underwood poslor Horf)' Hen
po~tor W orsh1p ser\i1C e s q 30om
Sun
dri(k' superrnfendanl Sunday school
day sc hool I 1 o m
evenong worsh•p
7 30 p rn Tuesda y (Qttoge prayer meeto ng q JO om mornrng wor shtp 10 30om
evenrng wor shtp 7 p m Wedna1day B1ble
and Brble study q JO o m Wo"h'p H~ r
study 7 p m
voce Wednesday 7 30 p m
JUBi lEE CHRISTIAN CENTER - George •
CAlVARY BIBlE CHURCH now located
on Pomeroy Pr"e Coun ty Rood 7S near Cr..ak Rood R&amp;\1 C J Lemley pastor
John Fellure
super1ntendent
Church
Flntwood! Re"' Blor kwood pastor Se1
mornmg worshtp
..... r es on Svnday at 10 30 o m and 7 30 H h ool Q 30 a m
I 0. 30 evenrng servtc e 7 p m Vouth
f1 rn wr th Sunday ~choo! 9 30 o m 8 rh le
m•et1ng Sunday 6 p m Brble uudy 1n
':o tudy Wednesday 1 30 p 111
depth Wttdnesdoy 7 p m C lau•s for all
IN OE PENDE Nl HO I ' NES S CHURCH INC
Mrddlepvot Rev 0 Dell
age' Nursery prov rd,d l or wonh tp \er
Peort S•
'o'l(.
M anley pas tor Sonny Huds on Sunday
ST · PAUl lUTHfRAN CHUR CH Cor ne r
v hou '&gt;u pt S-..ndoy school q 30 o rn
e•f'n onq .... on hrp 1 30 p m Prayer and of Svcomore and Second Sts Pome •oy

Ro w

Po ~ t o r

M o rr " l\~ Wor~hop II

Build

ARE MoST MALES

us

r u rr

( QIIT)O/ O.,lJl l l!l'd

! , •'
r ,

I.•.Y

11.-l, •tl

"1 JJlS

o f th e partnership between man
,1 nd ( J[1d whtch -,tJst nJns and enndws ltfe on th1 s ear1h Th at part ne ro.,h ip l ci lll'Xll:' nd t1r ! ~\-Prj nt'i:'d and c hal len ge we f ace ln all thmgs th e re

Groc•rael Gflter•l ~rdwrndiM
Racuw t4t 2SSO

Auend The Church
Of Your Choi&lt;'t'

the v.-&lt; nc:s rt:&gt;mmd

U~ • • •lh

Pom•roy

Th e good seed o n th e land .
But it is led and watere d
By God's almighty hand _"'

tn 5130 Pclm•ro y

HeiPn HPip

1" S.Concl

" We plough the fi e ld s and scatter

:l l ~EM•rn

..-....
A

VIRGil B.
TEAFORD SR.

l h1s beautiful harvesT hymn by th e German puel , Maithias
l" laud ius IS snll su ng loday by millions

Reuler-Brogan
lnSLJrance

RACIN! CH UR CH Of THE NAZARENE

SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE
R..,.
Dole 1 Bou
postor
N orman
Pres l•y Sunday uhool sup•rmlende n t
Sunday 1chool 9 lO o m mornH"'Q worsh rp 10 -iS . evenrng worship , 7 p m
Wedne•doy e venrng worsh1p . 7 Young
peoples soc tel)'
Wednesday
7 p m
N Y I
presrdent Pau l Imboden M 1!o
sronary Sa&lt;rety tacond Wednesday 7
p m , soc,ety pre,.denl Elrzobeth Cundrff

J_ PAULEY,

N•flonw1d• Ins. Co
of Cot umbu s, 0
104 w ~1ft
m 2]11 Pomeroy

pm

pm

st

FRENCH'S
SUNOCO
SERVICE
CENTERS

Re v Rrc hard W Thomas
Dua n e Sydenstrrcker Sr
John W Douglas
Charles Damrgan
JOPPA
Worshrp 9 00 am
Church
School 10 00 o m
CHESlER
Wor\hr p 9 am
Chur t h
School I 0 a m Chorr Rehearsal 7 p m
Wednesday Brble Study Wednesday s
730 pm
LONG BOTTOM Sunday Sc hool at q 30
o m Evenmg W orshrp at 7 JO p m 1 hurs
day Brbla Study 7 30 p m
REEDSVILLE Sunday School 9 30 om
Mormng War sh rp 10 30 a m Evenrng Wa r
shp 7 X! p m Bible Study Wednesdays at
7 30pm
ALFRED , Sunday School at &lt;;l 45 o m
Mornmg Worsh ip at 11 am Wednesday
Nrght Prayer Meetrng 7 30 p m
ST
PAUL
( Tuppers Plams ) Sunday
Sch ool 9 00 a m Mornmg Worshrp at
10 00 am Monday Nrght Brble Study 7 30

Rev John A Coflmon pastor Fronld rn
Imboden d'la1rmon ol the Boa r d o f ( hfi !L.
t ton lde Sunday Sc hool q 30om mor n
rng w or shrp 10 JO Sunday e ... en •ng w ar
5h1p 7 JO p m Praye1 meet1ng Wednes
day 7 30 p m
RACINE FIRST BAPTI ST Don l Wol~er
Past or Ronn•e ~OIHtr
Sunday school
su p ! Sunday uhool 9 30 a ll1 morn rng
.... o rshrp 10 AO a m Sun day e"'enrn g war
shop l 30
Wednesday evenrng Brble
\tud-,o l 30
DANVIllE WES lE YAN
Rev
R
0
8r o wn pa s to r Sunday School q JO o m
mornrng w or~h tp 10 45 youth sennce
6 ·~ p m
ev en •ng wars h op 7 30 p m
prayer and p10t59 Wednesday 7 30 p m
Sll VE R RUN FREE BAP TIST Re v Mor \ltn
Marlorr n pastor Steve l rflle Sunday schoo l
supt Sunday $Chool 10 am
mor n tng
worshrp II o m Sunday even rng .... or
shtp 7 3() Prayer meetrng and Btble
study Thursday 7 30 p m you th servr&lt;e
b p m Sunday
,
CHESTER CHURCH O F GOO Rev R E
Robrnson poo;!Qr Sunday \chool q 30
a m
worsh•p servoc e 11 a m evenmg
servtce 7 00 ym, th \er vr(e Wednesday
7 OOp m
LANG SV ILU
CH RISTIAN
CH UR C H
Rob.r t Musser pO!t. I Or Sun day sc hoo l
9 30 a m
Roy St gmon sup!
mormng
w onhrp 10 30 Sun day evemng serviCe
7 30 mrd· week ,e,vtl9 Wttdnesday 7

1

RIDENOUR SUPPLY

NORTHEAST CLUITER

SOUTH BETHEL (Srl ver R1dge ) Sunday
Scho ol q 00 o m Mornrng Wos h1p 10 00
o m Wednesday Brb le Study l 30 p m
KENO CHUR CH Of CHRIST ser vl&lt; e'&gt;
eo c h Sunday q 30 a m George Pr cke ns
po~tor wtth pr90chrng on f rrst and th rt d
Su nday o f m on th O l rver Swo on Sup I
HOB SO N CHRISTIAN UNION Re v Ker!h
Ebl1n past o r Sunday Sc hool q 30 o rn
leonard Grlmore l1rsr elder Uw'tHl1ng ~er
vtce
7 30
p m
Wednesday
prayer
meetrng 7 JO p m
BEARWALLOV.. RIDGE CHURCH OF
CHRI ST Duane Worden mrnrster 81ble
class Gl 30 a m morn1ng worsh1p 10 30
a m
evenrng
wonh1p
6 JO
p m
Wednesday B1b l e study 6 JO p m
NEW
STIVERSV ILLE
CO MMUNIT Y
Church Sunday School UH VIC &amp; 9 A5 a m
Worshrp servrca 10 30 Evonge lt st1c Ser
7 30 p m
Wednesday
Prayer
vrce
meetrng 7 30
ZION CHUR CH OF CHRI ST Pomeroy
Horrrs onv rlle Rd Robert Purtell pastor
8 111 McElr o y Sunday school !oupf Sunday
'd"'ool q 30 o m mor nr ng worsh1p and
communron 10 30 am Sunday wonhrp
'er-.11 ce
7 p m
Wednesday e ... enrng
prayer meetr n g and B1ble study 7 p m
ST
JO HN lUTHERAN CHURCH P1ne
Grove The Rev Wrii10 1Tl M1ddle~worth
Pastor Church ~erv•C9!&gt; Q 30 o m Su nday
School I 0 30 a rn
BRADBURY CHUR CH OF ( HR:tST Edward
Frvmon post e r )unday ~ch o ol 9 30 am
w o rshrp 5ervl ( ~ 10 )(I a m Sunday \er
vKes 7 JO p m ytuth group Wedne s
day 7 p m
ANTIQUIT Y BAP1 1Sl Re, Eorl Shuler
posl or Sun da y Hhool q 300m cnurch
se r-voc e
7 p m
yourh mee trng
6
p m Tu~n.doy B1ble ~tu dy 7 p m

l!J Mr s

lhe Nav W•IL10m M•clcllesworth Pas.far
Sundoy Sc hool ot q 4) om and Cl"'urch
Sa rv rces II o rn
SA CRED HEARl Re v Father Paul D
Welto n past or Phone m 4615 Saturdoy
e ven .ng Mass 7 30 Sunday Mon 8 and
10 orr
Confeu ron Saturday 7 7 30

pm
VICTO RY BAPTIST
On the Rout• 7
bypou James E K . .ue poslor Sunday
school 10 om
morn1 ng wor sh1p 11
0 m e"'enong \•r\11Ce 7
TRINITY Chrrstton Anemb l.,. Coolvd le
G tlbert Spencer
po1t or
Sunday
!&gt;&lt;hool q 30 am
mornrn g wont-up 11
o m Sunday evemng s•r\lrCe 7 30 p m
m rdwee" proyer servrce W.dnesdoy 7 30
om
MOUNl OLIVE Communr ty chu r ch l awrence Bush post or Max Folm•r Sr
\upermTandant Sunday school and 'm or
nrng worhsop q JO o m Sunday e'&lt;'enrng
\ er ... rce 7 Youth mnltng and Brble uud';'
Wednesday 7 p m
FAITH BAPllST Church Ma1on , mHI ot
Unrt.d Steel W a d~. en Unran Holl Rarlrood
Stree t Moson Pasto r Rev Joy Mrtchell
Mornrng worlhtp 9 45 a m
Sundoy
Sc hool
10 JO om
Prayer
m . .t rng
Wadn•sdoy , 7 30 p m
FOREST RUN BAPTIST
Rev Nyle
Bo rden
pastor
Corneltus
Bunch
super mrand•nt Sundov schoo l 9 JO a m ,
second and fourth ~undayt won~·up aer ·
II' ICe Of J 30 p m
Fourth and
MT MORIAH BAPTIST Morn St Mrddleport Rev Co!vrn Mrnn11
pastor Mrs Elvtn Bumgardner supt Sunday s.chaol q 30 o m
worshtp aervtce ,
10 A5 om
NORTH
BETHEl
United
M•thodls t
C hurch , R•"' Charles Oomlgon , pollOI
Sunda y School 9 lO o m Wouhrp S.r IIICa 10 45 am Su ndo';' 81ble Stud)- , 7 00
p m
Wednes.doy prayer meeting 7 30

pm
HOUSE

OH~AYER

AND PRAISE L1be&lt;ty

A va post 8urgrer Ct...~ Pomeroy Evg•n•
Anspoh pastor Sunday •chool 10 o m
mornrng wors.hrp I I o m Ev•nrng wor
s.hp Sunday , Tue1doy and frrdoy 7 30

pm
BURLINGHAM

SOUTHE~N

BAP TIST

CHURCH Route 1. Shode Pastor Don
Blo ck Affllrated wtth South•rn Baptl•t
Con ... entron Sundoy school 1 JO p m ,
Sunday wor• ~'llp , 2 JO p m
fhundov
evening Bib le • tudy 7 p m
PENTECOSTAl
ASSEMBLY
Racin•
Route 124 Will iam Hobo&lt;:k pos.tor Sun·
day s.chool 10 a m Sundoy • v enmg •er·
vrce , 6 JO p m Wednetdoy Hnrng s.er·
vice 7
C A~PENlER

BAPTIST

Rev . Fr. .lond

N orris pas tor Don Cheadle Sup1 Sun·
day School , q 30 o m M orning Wor•htp ,
10 30 o m Pr ayer Service olternote .. ,J n-

d&lt; •

GUILTY OF TillS

SELDOM-DISCUSSED HABIT?
BY HELEN BOTTEL
DEAH HE I.EN ·
I am a wtman who until re cently
worked mostly with women . Two
months ago I accepted a pos ition
wtth a compony having predonunanUy male personnel
I've had no problems w1th
chauvinism or sexism. Howwer, I
do have difficulty dealing wtth
men's wandering hands. Now you're
probably thinking that's se!OSt -but
the hands are not W'l/ldenng on m e
They 're on themselves !
Maybe you could t£ll me why me n
must contmuall y be adjustmg them ·
se lv e:~ · pulli ng , tugging, shiftmg,
and scratc hing m the nether reg LOllS
- and all m plam vtew When a
woman's bra strap breaks, at least
she excuses herself to go to the
ladies room But men ' It 's almost as
II they feel tha t so long as the)' mal11taln eye contact wLth you,
everythmg from their waLSts down LS
invisible Embarra8SLng'
Could you suggest a cure lor these
grabby genL'l , or at least ~ll me how
to ignore the 1tchers ? - EYES
TOWARD TilE CEIIJNG
DEAHEITC :
Out.stde of asking the men to cease
and deoLSt, there LSll't a whole lot you
can do (e&lt;cept mamtain eye con tact! .
I'm told that baseball playel'l! are
especially instructed to " watch
tltose hands" when they 're on
nationwide TV
Perhaps the sign that flashes
across the tube freque ntly should apply lor all males - " No adjustment to
your set Ill necessary . " - SUE
("GUEST ANSWEREK"I
DEAR HEI.EN:
Whenever my wife wants me to do
something I 'm not likely to enJOY.
she always clears her throat before
asking If 1 hear a " Ha-.a-&lt;-&lt;mJ," I
know it 's conung !
ntis Lrrila U,s me more than Il
should . I get the reeling she's
ochenung on me, and ' 'telescopes"
because she LSll 't sure how to begm ,
as In "Ha-.a -r-um, would you like to
clean out the garage, honey '" Of
course I wou!dn 't ' 1ike to, '' not when
I'm watching Saturday football !
I get tense waiting for her special
" I've got a job for you" sound .
Should I teD her how 1t annoys me, or
ahould I work em quelling my
wu-easonable quirk ' - BUGGED
TilE HELL OUT OF

t'\ll)l;•rt

ttw prugnuu

Ma ry Beth ('hernngton Accordi ng

-

AUCTION SERVICE

Compt.ll'
Automol t'o'•
Soervr&lt;•

Re,.. Ma rk Fl., nn

BETHANY

Mrs. l Voodard presents Friendly Circle fare

Ninth Antique, S'eminar slated
October 23, 24 at Riverby

ChuHh

HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN

COO PE~ATIVE PA~ISH

FlATWOODS. Church School
Worship 1I o .m

Wor~hrp

IYR A CUIE CLUSTER
Re "

J2b E

OLD DEXTER BIBLE CH RI STIAN CHURCH .

I
:I

Wor
~ oberl

p m

~&lt;h oo l9

no n- Instrumental
Sunday w orshrp
10
o m , Brble 'tudy I I o m
worsh 1p 6
p m Wed nes.doy B1ble study 7 p m

I~

UMYF 6

IWflAND
C h u rch Sc hool 9 30 am
Wor"So.t'up 10 30o rn Wrlbur Hoi• Po~ tor

POMEROY
WEITIIDE CHURCH OF
CHRIST , 10J W Morn St
Jerry Pau l
mtnrster phone 992 7b61J Conservo t1ve

••I

c m

R ob m ~ on P a~tor

POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRI ST lll W

'

10 30

tt•n dl\ ('u;de of Tnmty Ch un h Jrwt 111 ttw
:;()(ta l room rt'l 't' rl l h
Stl'p.s fc!l B1blt' stud\ omd dd t\\
devoti on s v.a s the stud\ topiC !Y1r"&gt;
WOOdard ust•d &lt;:J ~·IH'\Tr s ~uldt to
evcr yda} llv1ng b:- Dr Donald r
Demorray
She p111ntt1.l out rtw·
baste step.s as a LTilena for a successf ul attitude toward e\'er)dGI\

rt&gt;sponsthllllies d nd nhlH~a t1 nn s Th~

1

'*:"- •.• ._

God ·~

All

Cluldren" wets the

prugnun theme presented

b} Mr s

Belly Wiles and Mrs Nettie Har
nhart at the recent m~t'lm g uf the
~hss10nary Soctet) of tht· Pomeroy
First Bapti st Church
Mrs Barnhart read scnpture
from Matt 18. I to 6, on the sermon
uf Chnst to his disc iples, and then
the members sang · Jesus Loves

;I

I

Girl Scout Diarv

I

!1

I

'

I

11 11

II •

I

GIRL SCOUT DIAK Y
Cn tcna for sc lectJn J.! the uut standlng browme , Juruor dnd cadettt·
scout lJl et:tch troop a nd un the lUW Jt}
level, a nd genera l rules fur the
Meigs Co unt y Fair exhlb1ts were
dJSCUS..&lt;ied dun ng a recPn t \1 e1g.s
Count y
G ir l Scou t st&gt;rVICt' urut
mcetmg held at tht twnw of :v1r s
Ma rtha Graves
Harold Norns and Pat Thum&lt;:~ .... 111
represent the seouL-; at thL' Tlll'etmgs
of the Meigs Count) Fair Board A
~e nera l dtscus.c;;ton on tht scou L'l ·
role was ht&gt;ld wtlh membrrs rnaktng
s ug~est1orLS fur changes
Blue ribbon tr oo p awa rds """'
presented to Shirle} Cogar. f'at
llys ell and Joy Clark
The Area 3 newsletter '1.\&lt;:t.&lt;, dt'ltrbuted and a report was g1ve n on the
cadelle weekend at Cam p Sandy
Bend , EIIZ&lt;lbeth, W Va altended by
Patty WU\!dard
Peggy Crane led m a game De e
Law re nce. d1.s tnct a dvtsur , wa s
present for the mPt:'tln~ and nthr rs
attendu1g "ere Pal Hy sell and Jud)
F:blm, Kutland. Shirl e) Cog or.
Syracuse. Pegg) Crane and l.mda
Pomern)

Mr:ml! n Me1 er

d 1rector

SALISBURY TROOP 1100
Plans for pl anllng s pnng
bloorrung bulbs around the nag pole
at the Salisbury Elementary· School
and at Hock Spn ngs were madt'
when the Salisbury Troop 111et at the

'

llll

lllt'eltng

\k .. Mrs Mana Foster read

ll igh t s
S p ecial Tr ea tm ent.
Educattun . and Care tf llan UI&lt;appetl " Mrs BaLle} read 'All
r;ud's Children Need Love , UnIIer&gt;tnnd in g. Protrrl10n Against All
F onn s of "leglecl. Cru elty and Explottal tort" while Mrs Phyl li s Sktnner
re;-~ d
an art1cle on self-

Meigs ~1 useurn this week
A Hall oween party was se t for Oct
:n. and a bake sale a t Kr oger's on
N!JV ~

It was voted tu camp at K1ashuta
some tune th1s mon th Mrs
Margaret Parker. leader. sh o w ed
~ll dt·s nf OhlU and Sue Fry served
Ku&lt;JI -Aid
At last "eek 's meetmg , officers
elected were l .ynn Chase. president
I Jst:t Pullm s \1 {'E' pre."'ildent . Susan
.Jont.·s . secretaq.. Apnl Clark .
trPasure r

Brenda Sin clair and Sally Hadford
v.crf' namffi to the refreshment
Lo nuntttee, e~nd TanUTl) Burrt':i, Beth
I&gt;! a me and Sue Fry lu the game comtnJ ttec
Hea rt -shaped r han~e purses were
lfl~dt' b) thl• scouts out of pu~ces of
lea ther Koo i-Ai d was served
SYRACCSE BROWNIE TROOP
11 20
tlaU uween bal\ were made b; Lhe

Browme troop meetmg Thu rsda ) afternoon Cit the Svra cuse El eme ntar)'
~hoot Mr~ Pett Philson ex ple~tned
utstru l·ttun~ fur ex.hJbillng al the
~ e1gs Count) Fair Chnsty Brwnfield kd In the pl edge to the nag . and
&lt;1I&lt;~St l l) .l ar ks had the promi se l.m da W&lt;tll er l'(ct\'e the prayer wtt.h
~1 L&gt;l! Swisher and K.achelle Davis
sen·m.k:! refreshments
SYHAC USF. JUNIOR TROOP
l.21l4
HeqUirement.s for t h e toy badge
were d1seussed dunng th e Tuesda y
night meetmg of the Syra cuse
JUmors Can d:- b.irs to be sold by the

memben

for

o

dete rnunal LUn and Informatton. and
Mrs Ha rnett Sterrett on freedom
frum phystcal pun1slunent along
With ]USI!ee
Mrs Wiles talked on som e
proble!Tl.'i whi ch clllldren endure.
such as l hil d abuse e~nd JUvemle m JUStlcc Others takmg part wer e
Susan Sanders . an artLcle on the
onental chLld. Mrs Bailey on the
"leg ro child , and Mrs Sterrett on the
wtu te child , and Oat lene Curray on
the Indian chi ld .
Then: was ~roup s1ngmg of "Onward Chrtstian SoldLers.. and a
prayer for c onfession and em powerment b} Mrs Wiles
Bible qutzzes wer e conducted With
pnzes gomg to the wmners Kef reshmenl'i were served by Mrs Phyllis
Ski nner w1Lh Mrs Audre} Young a
co ntnbutmg hostess

~---Social Cale~
SUNDAY
MEET! I&gt;C
Me 1gs
County Ploneer and Ht stonLat
Soc· 1ety, I p m Sunday begmnin~
w1th a potluc k dinner at Meigs
Musewn Butternut Ave . Pomeroy
Those altemlm~ are to take a
Lover&lt;'&lt;! di sh a nd their own table se r At\N UAL

\ I CC

Announce birth
Mr and Mrs Kobe rt Karns burg ,
Pomeroy. announce the birth of
theLI fir st e hdd _a dau ghter . Meli ss1a
LJay at Holzer Medical Center on
(X't 16 The mfant "e1ghed SIX poun ds and Sut oUnl'Cf:i
Materne~! g randparenl~ arr Mr
and \1r!; Homer Hy sell. Pomeroy
Pot emal grandparents are Mr and
Mrs Ha rold Kamsburg , Middleport
Great~ ra n dparents are F.arl H.a.m·
sbur g. Middleport
F:the l Mace,
Charle•1on. and Synth1a Cardwell ,
Vmton

mone) -rnak m~

pr uJ~c·t

were distrbuted
Kelly
~ull en led In t he pledge , Paul a
W1n e br enner and Kl.m Cogar. the
IJI &lt;:tyer Due~ w ere collected from
the 1:1 &lt;J tlend!Tig For roll ca ll the
S( ouL._ res ponded With the name of

f avon t e mov1e s tar
Je nrufer Anwld and Jane .lett served refreshments The fnencbhtp
c 1rcle c losed the meetmg
the1r

PRICES
REDUCED!

j

rtrestone

Bible School, and received hiS
Ma., ter of D1v 1mty d eg ree from
Asbury Seminary He was ordamed
E lder m the Free MethodLst Church
1n 19M and \S a successful pastor
Befor e rec e1vtng his call to the
numstry , Mason spent eight years m
the U S . Army, havmg served m
Hawan , England, France. Holland ,
BelgLUm and Germany On D-Day m
1944 , he was servmg wi th the lOlsl
Airborne Divtswn
Special ml!SIC wtll be a part of
each mght 's service Those parllapatmg wLII mclude the local church chOir, Russ and the Gospel Tones.
the Keith KeMedy Smgers from
Rutland the Kev James Broom
from the Middl eport Church of the
Nazarene, the Kev Floyd Shook,
pa•1or of the Laurel Olff church ,
and others from the local churc h
The publi c IS InVited

Polyester «:ord
Deluxe Champion'
Our

best- selling tirer

95

$

R e~.

Price
$22

\7 X l 'l

HfUI k\\HII
"1

! · ·

I I " ,

r~h I fftld

"111 r~- -- -

Ill. \I 1\
.... '"

~.

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II

"I'&gt; II
[) " I I
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r~

$!tl

813

lt

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l~

33

n

18

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.10

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HR ..

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·15

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DEARBTiiOO:
TeD her - in a kidding on-the~evel
sortolway .
Uttle rrritations left to fester ,
grow out of all proportion to their
importance. Consider the wife who
WtCOILSCiously drums her fingers or
jiggles her foot while reading, or the
husband who s lurps~ food . Those
habits can drive a mate wlld, but 1l
mentioned, a ruce-l.ype spouse tries
to correct them.
I'm sure the Ha-.a..--wrung will
stop when your wtfe becomes aware
she's doing it. The reminders and or
requeats' WeD _ you can't have
everything . - H .

All

r;\)(1 s 011ldren Need Enju}ment of

Special services Sunday

MISS!OS AR Y TO SPEAK
Ben)arrun Salvant, TTU8SLonary
from HallL, will be speaker at a
rrusswnary service to be h eld at 7 30
p.m . Sunday at the Middleport In depe nde nt Holmess Churc h M USLC
will be presented by the Pomt
Pleasant Training School ChoLr - The
Rev . O'Dell Manley , pastor . mv1tes
the public

even

lfelt•n Steuwr H.1ce concluded the
pr 1.grcun
I )unn g tht: busJness meeting 111
( hargt· 11f l .ltzabeth F1ck, pluns were
made for a ('hnstmas party and
('hn~tnkis remembrann· Miss Fu·k
renunded mctnbers tu take Chnstmas SO&lt;' k money to the November

,\ 1. 1111!/

Special services WLll be he ld In the
Laurel C1Lff F ree Methodist Church
Wedncsda) through Sunday, October 24 through 28 featurmg the
Rev . James L Mason from Canton
as gu est speak er
The Kev Mason a ttended the
Clan on Pa Stale College. God's

A re p11rt was given on the sa le of
baskets, a project of the cLrcle . Mrs
Donald Hauck and Mrs Roy Mayer
were named to the nommat.mg com·
m1 ttee
Mrs Lawrence Stewart and Mrs.
LJav1d Kussell served a dessert course The refreshment table earned
out a fall and Halloween motif
Favors were refngerator owls made
by the hostesses

-;tw saai, V\-uuld tJe an

unttl deoth
Pr &lt;1yer and rm 1ns ptrattonat poem by

dbumi.&lt;wt

[- ---------- ------~

I

Middlepo rt, Mr and Mr s Ha ro ld
No rn s.
Harn son,·IIIe.
Pall~
Sha eke ll . Chest er . Pat Philson .
S) r&lt;tClL"it' , Ma rth.o (~rd\t 'S a nd
Jam ce Haggy , Pom~ro} . \1argcuet
Parker and Barbara Fry . Salisbury,
and Becky Manktn . cu-M&gt;rvtee umt

,_

1'/ld n·~ult

Missionary Society meets at Pomeroy church

Mayer ,

&lt;1&lt;1/(;i""'

Wur;~l.tr \l prL'"&gt;1 nll'd

v.lu: n tilL Fr

We ' ll Print
Names on
Bible s Free
With Purchase .
6 Til8 P .M . FRIDAY
NIGHT .
For Shopp1ng Conve n1 ence

Open Fnday

Night Til 8

MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE
99MILL

4

41

"

.

4

I

2% I

"-

POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO
606 E. MAIN

992-2094
FRONT END ALIGNMENTS

-··

POMEROY

�8- The Da1ly Senttnel, Middleport-Pomer oy. 0 .. friday . Oct . 19, 1979

9-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport -Pomeroy . 0 ., frtday, Oct. 19, 1979

The farm scene

Beef crUnch will remain relatively light
WA SHINGTON 1 AP 1 - Ne w
c•ttle feedlot s tatis ti cs by the
1\gnculture Ot!parlmen t sho w th e
crunch un beef s upp ll~s w11l contm ue
relatlvt&gt;l) tigh t at leetst through th e

wm ter .
The n um ber of cHt tlt' betn g
fattent·d for the slaughter market the sour ce uf mo~1 supermarket cuts
uf t&gt;eef totaled 9.93 million head on
Oct. 1. a drup of 13 Jl&lt;'rcent from a

year ogu, the department said
Th ursday 1n a quarterl y report.
AOO ut 5.95 mill wn hecnl of new
I'Httle wt•rt• placed m fe edlots m

.Ju ly. Augu.;1 and Septem ber . That
was down 19 perrent from the same
pt·nud of last yea r and wa s the
srnallt• st stnct:&gt; t.hl' s wmner of 1976.
T ll u~w
ca ttle .
ca llt&gt;d
.. pla cetnt•nLo;.·· represent ammals
lhat wil l bt· sent to c;; Jaugh tt'r tht.s fa ll
a ntl wm tt•r

Ca ttk producer s n•duced their
ht·r(b .',t'vt'f l'iy s1nn· 1!::1 15 a s market

boost beef output.
Steers U1 feedlots tota led abo ut
6.69 rn ~lton head on Oct. I. do wn 11
pcrn~nt from a year ago, the r~ po rt
said . He1fers bt!mg fed for the
sJaug hter market were estim ated a t
:1.2 millton head . down 16 percent
fr ol!l a vear ear h er Ol der cows a nd
" ot her' : stuck cH..'l'O Wlted for tht•
r errwmder .

Mar keltn gs of fl'edlot catt le tn tl1e
tht rd quart~r were a four -year lo w of
5.98 mill10n head , down 8 perrt•nt
from July-September of la'1 year,
the report smd .
llJOiun g at posstbllttles this fall.
the report sa 1d fe edlot marketmgs
may to ta l 5.98 million he3d durmg
th e la st quarter of 1979, down 11
per cent from a year ago.
Cattlt• pnces slum ped m the
s wnrner from record peaks last
spnng but smce ha ve tmproved .
Anothe r fc.u.: lor that tended to redu ce
feedlot r lacemen t s has been
gt:' n e r a ll y

pnn·.-, dru ppe(J Althoul:(h rnarkt't
IJ' u t'~ kn'l' ge11 erally renJn•red 111
tlu· last Yt' &lt;H ·, 11 wtll bt• at lea s t
~·\' t·rcd t j 1on· ~ea r s before bret'dm~=:

good

pa sture

f ee d

conditiOn s . enabhng producers to
gra lt' ammal s 1nstead of having to
sln p them ID fec•dlol s

(_ 'hou:t· s1ecr prices on the Omaha.
Neb . market averaged $72_51 pt&gt;r
100 puwu.ls m the st&gt;eund quart~r

be fore slwnpinK sharply

m

the
·swnmer, a t some pomts around $55
per 100 pounds .
Recently . a ccordm g to USDA
flgW"e s. Omaha steer pnces have
been a round $66 IX' bt!ttt•r
l11e report showed Oct. 1. feedlot
m ventori es m the 23 states and tht•!r
percentage of a year ago as :
Anwna, 340,000 on fet'&lt;l on Oct. 1,
and 77 percent o f a year ago;
Ca ltforn 1a. 765.000 and 91 : Colorad o
640.000and90: Idaho, 217,000and99 ;
lllin01s, 340 ,000 and 85: Indiana,
180.000 and 95: Iowa, 1,100,000 and
88 : Ka n sas . 1.190 ,000 and 85:
130, 000
a nd
84 :
Mi c hi ga n ,
Mmnesota , 265,000 and 95: Missouri ,
85,000 and 68 : Montana , 32,000 and
107: and Nebraska. UOO.OOO and 85 .
AISJ, New MeXI co. 187.000 and 97;
North Dakota . :10 .000 and 111 : Ohw ,
115,000 and 74 : Oklahoma. 298,000
a nd 84 : Oregon . 59,000 and 87:
Pennsy l varua, 50,(H)() and 86 : S1J Uth
Dakota. 265.000 and 100. TelCls.

1.7BO.OOOand 88 : Washmgton . 165,000
a nd 82: and Wtsconsm. 95,000 and 95 .
WASHIN GTON 1AP1 The
Harr y S. Trurn•n Anunal Impo r t
l'ente r was to be dt&gt;d ica ted today m
Flonda
l,c $7 null10n fa c1hty 1s located on
Flemmg Key, " ju s t across a
restncted brtdge " from Key West ,
says the Ag ric ulture Ot!partment,
wh1 ch wil l be m c ha rgt.' of the eenter .
Officials sa id Thursda y the l'Cnter
w1ll handle ··anunals from countries

restnctcd from e;.cport lng animals to
Ul t: Uruted States because of foot and -mouth di sease" an d other
dtse ases tha t eould ga in entry mto
the eountry .
The cen ter will ena ble two groups
of cattle of 400 each lu l&gt;e isolated in
qu aran tine security eac h year . After
th e animals arc fotUld free of
w sease. they wtll be added to U.S

of
throughbred
move ment
breedinghorses from Kentucky .
TI1e quHiantine was imposed more
than two years ago to help control a

new venereal disease of horses .
In the department's o fficial
announcement, it said the statewide
federal quarantine " has been lifted "
oo the movement of thoroughbred
breedmg stock out of Kentucky .
A spokesman said added that the
fede ral quarantine was replaced by
state quarantlnes on 41 " premises
where mfected mares " are located.
However, Stdney R . Moore of the
department's Animal and Plant
Health Inspection Service said
Thursday that federal quaran tines
would conttnue on the same 41
premises where state restrictions

ar~ ln

plate .

Moor e said he was told by
Kentu cky officials the 41 places
represen t "onl y a drop in the
bucket " of the state's throughbred
industry .
Moore satd the quarantine action
took pla ce Oct . 12 and that Kenluck}
officials were notified then .
Th e federal . quarantine was
ordered April 13, 1978, to help
prevent the spread of contagious
equine metritis - called CEM by
animal health authonlies.
Officials said the disease was
introduced 11110 Kentucky by lxlrses
imported from France prior to a ban
in Septembt!r 1977 on imported stock
from there and other cotllllries
where CEM was known to exist

•
Your Best Buys Are Found In
the Sentinel Classifieds
Lost and Found
LOS T :
Oct
16
1n
Burl ingnam area , German
Pol ice dog , black and jtan
w ith flea collar , male, an
swers to Poncho. HumdnP

NO HUN T IN G on thp Gene
Humphrey property on Rl
143 or th e Andv Grover
p ro ~ rt y on Bai l ey Run Rd

a lter 4: 30. 304 17J.5272.

ANYO NE WH O has had
probl ems w ith spray or
towe l ette
t ype
insect
repel len t , send
all in
formation
to Box .475.
Rac ine, OH .

Notices
MEIGS
COUNTY
HUMANE SOC&lt; ETY '192
6760. Pets avai Iable lor
adopfion and intormat 1on
service .

·- - - - - - -

GUN SHOOT EVERY
SUNDAY t PM. FACTORY
CHOKE ONLY RA CfNE
GU N CLUB .
NO

HUNTING .

SHOOT .

TR AVE LER S

Racine

BURKETT

Hun

ting day or night on the
following farms : Charles S.
Beller,
Alma
Peterson ,
New Lima Rd , Rutland ,
OH . Violator5 will be
prosecuted

one beautiful border coli ie
beagle, brown , blac k and
while, i ntelligent .
good
with children , shots, wor
med , Hum ane Soc i ety . 99'1
6260.

GET MARKET VALUE tor
vour gold and silver coins .
Wr i te or conta ct
Ed
Burkett Barber Shop, Mid dleport .

Yard Sale

housebroken . good w ith
children, shots, wormed.
Humane Society, 992 6260 .

KITTENS .
Starts

Wed _, runs till al l sold, Out
s r de
Christmas
decorations, brown velvet
pi ctures and misc. items .
Karl Kloes. Col lege St ,
S'(racuse, OH . 992 301.4

KfTTEN S,

5

blac k , 1 while . tiger . tabby ,
tiger
k i ft en . Humane
Society _997·6260 .

HOUSEBROKEN

female

chihuahua,
c ho c olate
brown, to special home.
Humane Socie1y, 992 -6260

GUN SHOOT every Sunday
12 :00 . Factory c hoke only .
Corn Hol low Gun Club,
Rutland . Proceeds donated
to Boy Scout Troop 749

&lt;AP &lt;

( )IJwan s 111:1y han' to pay a tugher

prwl' for the1r specli:tl reserved
!wen se platl'S when tllt• ~tate ndopL&lt;i
a r ornputt•r1 :•.ed n u mbt~rm~ system
Ja n l
Tlw s,•nate F 1nanee Comrmttec

plate ,.· wh1ch se ll fur S51l . ur $45 If
th ert IS no $5 county add-on tax . to .
Oh1oan s who want spt•na! names or
slogans.
~etther

does 1t affect the eXJstmg
$10 fee for r c~ular la~ s. although a
b 1ll n ow pen d1n g 1n a joint

lx•gUJ ~ hl•anngs next week on n bill

tlw s upplemental fee f or
s ud1 piHll's fr om $5 to $1 0 to runtmut•
tlw ';('r\' JCL'
\'tutor Veh1des Heg1str ar Dt..•an L
llollis on s ;.~Jd
Thu r~d ay
t h t•
ln!l'ilatiOn
IS
nl' t'dt•d
to
&lt;It ('O tl lfllrlrl&lt;.tlt'
motortsts who. m
r nan~ mstaJices. ha\'t' had tht• sanw
ratsUlg

nundl\'fS

fur ye ar s and want tu kt't'p

lh l'lll

111e hill. "!ready a pproved by the
llouSt· IS pcndmg lfl tht" Senate
Fma nn• l'ormmttee whert! heanng s
art· set to begLn TUesday. satd
llonald M PeSich . admmtstrati ve
;j~SISlfJTll

tu

Ch airman

Harr y

\leshel. l). Yo ungstown
Dollison said the bureau asked for
th e \,•giSiatiOn after It was dectded
the state needed a new numbrnng
'i)"stern to ubtatn more nwnber letlt'r cn rnb1natwns . OhiO no w
registe rs atxJut 8 rmllwn mot or
n· hu: les each year
11w swtt ch meant 11 wuuld wst the
st ab' rno r e to prov ide the special
rl«tes . which In the past have been
r es~ ·n·pd at the n .-q uest of customer s
by rleputy registra r s.
l.lollt.•m smd the bill does no t
1-lff t· r·t rHo10's

so-f" all ~ d

"v anity

Wolf Pen
News Notes
Mr and Mrs. Harley Johns on and
fanul y were Sunday dinn e r guests of
Iva Johnson .
Mr . and Mrs T(tTl Surrunerfield
a nd dau ghters of Medtna were las t
weekend visitors of Mr. and Mrs
Robert Russe ll and other relatives .
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Haggy,
Stephanie and Brad , were weekend
visitors of Mr. and Mrs . Tom Summerfield and candy. Wend y and
Crystal of Medma .
Mr. a nd Mrs . Guy Sargent .
Jonathan and Kristi, were visitors a
recent weekend with Carol Sprouse
and Kim of St. I ,ouis, Mo.
Iva Johnson was a Thursday
visitor of Mr . and Mrs . Charley
Smith , Ka il. KeYJ n and Olarles
Knapp .

Long Bottom
News Notes
By Melody Roberts
Mrs. Irene Starcher and son,
Je rry . vi.stted her sister. Jean Dixon .
of Ravenswood, W. Va . and also the
Melvin Beshes of Covington, Ky .,
were visiting in the Dixon home .
They attended the Anderson -Starcher reunion at Parkersburg . W Va .
There were 49 present and a great
time was had by all .
Mrs. I.eot.a Ferrell , Medway .
Ohio , wand Mrs . Ernest Jackson and
Mrs . Gary Johnson of Fort Lauderdale, Fla ., visited the Leona Hensley
· Mae Mc Peek h ome recently .
Mr . and Mrs . Mark Miller and
family, Mr. and Mrs . Tom Greunweld and Tommy , Mr . and Mrs .
Mlke BISsell. all of Columbus ,
visited their parenl';, Mr. and
Mrs.Joseph Bissell and Kenneth .
The Golden Rule SWlday School
classes at the [,ong Bottom churches
met for their class meeting at the
Methodist Olurch basement for the
September meeting .
Mrs . Anna I Jter is a patient al the
Veterans Mernonal Hospital Cards
would be appreciated .
Col. and Mrs . R L. Wlule of Los
Angeles, Calif .. visited with Mrs .
Leona Hensley and Mrs . Mae Mc·
Peek recently .
Vtsitors at the L1yde (Bud I Adams
home have been Mr. and Mrs . Joe
Evans, Reynoldsburg ; Dale Evans
and daughters, Lancaster : Mrll .
!,orella Ware and daughters ,
Buc keye Lake; Mr. Ronnie Kewitt
and fri end, Nelsonville: Mr . and
Mrs . Everett Hewttt of Buckeye
Lake : Mr . and Mrs . ltichard Adams
and son , Lancaster ; Mr . and Mrs .
Cha rl es Hauber , Reedsville; John
Suttle. Portland : Kate and Bernand
Bobo, Reedsville : Mrs . Wilma
Baker, Reedsville : Mr. and Mrs .
Paul Hauber , local : Donny Rood,
local.
Guesl'; at lhe Paul Hauber home
ha ve been Mr . and Mrs. Doug
Hauber, Tun a nd Kim, Bashan : Mr.
and Mrs . I.awrencey Johnson, Jr.
and son, Jeremy, Portland: Mr . and
Mrs . Robert J . Hawk and son, Robbie, Pomeroy : Mr . and Mrs. Clyde
Adams and Cindy Thomas, all local.

Carmel News.
By the Day

con ference cumrntttee would hikl'
those Ill $20 .
Dol lison Si!id the s pectal reserved
plat~:s arc !XJpular among those who
want to bt! able to easily rememt&gt;er
their plate n umbt!r s. In many c ases ,
he sa1d , the numbers coincide w1th
street addresses
The pending bill , sponsored by
Rep . Arthur R . Bower s, D·
Steubenville . ha s bt!en given h1gh
prtority due to the m an y requ ests
which have conH:' in from Ohioans
who wa n t to keep thetr eXJstmg
number s .

Dollison

sa1d

the

bur ea u

has

Alfred
Social Notes
Sept. 31 Sunda y School attendance
was 35 with 32 in attendance the worship service wtlh KEv . Richard
Thonw using Genests 3:1-19 for
scr ipture .
Mr. and Mrs . Ray Roderhaver of
Florida . former ly of Alfred, vis1led
here for a week with farni ly and
friends.
Mr . and Mrs . Ronnie Russell , for ·
mer Robin Swartz , are announclng
the birth of a daughter born Sept. 20
at Camden Clark Hospital.
George Guthrie vistted Mr. and
Mrs. Charlie Woode one evening last
week .
l.ee Henderson of Alfred was surprised with a family gathering Sept.
31 for his 88th birthday at t he home
of his son . Mr. and Mrs . Sherman
Henderson of Alfred .
Mr. and Mrs. Wil son Henderson of
Florida we re visiting here w1th
family and fnends . They spent
Saturday evening with Mr . and Mrs.
Sherman Henderson and Sunday
e vening with Mr . and Mrs. Claren ce
Henderson .
Mrs . Mattie Pullins, a s urg1ca l
patten! at Camden Oark Hospital , 1s
domg very well.
The Alfred UMW group served the
food at the Icy Taylor sale on Dutch
Ridge, Saluray, Oct. 6.
The Alfred United Methodist Olur ·
ch has formed a youth group which
will meet each SWlday everung , 6:30
to 8 p.m . All youth of the area are
welcome to join.
We are sorry to see Mr . anc Mrs .
Charlie Woode leave our commw1ity . They have been helpful and
done a lot for this community . We
wish them a lot of luck ln their new
home . They will have a sa le October
20.

~

Visiting recently ~I the home of
Mr. and Mrs . Douglas Circle were
Mrs. Ernest Johnson, Mrs. Howard
Blazer of Belpre, Mrs . Glen Tuttle ,
Mrs. Ray Johnson and son, Billy.
Eagle Ridge, Mrs. Mary Holter of
Bashan . Mr . and Mrs. Richard Ables
of Bald Knobs, Mrs. Margaret
Eynon and daughter, Morning Star,
Mr. and Mrll . James Patterson and
sons of Racine R. D . and Rocky Pitzer of Bashan.
Florence Circle attended the
Silver Wedding anniversary of Mr.
and Mrs . Hayward Bissell at
Olester on Sa luray evening.
Mrs . Robert Lee and daughter,
Becky, called at the home of Mr . and
Mrs . Arthur Orr of Olester on Sunday afternoon.
James Circle ol New Haven was at
the home of Mary Circle nn Monday
PVPJ iil~ .

NEW!

rl' Ct'Iv e d

at

lea st

f'l'QUl'StS .

'1
The bill appropnates $1.38 mtlhon
1n antiCipated revt&gt;nues from sale of
the 'lJecial plates, three-fourths of
whic h would bt! earmarked for
produ c tton and adm mi s lraliv e
costs. The other one-fourth would go
mto a speCial fund for construc tion
and rnatntenan ce of Ohw's roadside
parks

f9

CAMPER ,

contained
'1'17 7810 .

s ell

19FT . CAMPER . sell con
tained . Sleeps 6. $.850. 992

7810 .

ESTIMATOR / INSPECTOR ~ A ssess and es tim ate
homes to be weather i zed to determrne the most cost
eff ective and efficient work that c an be done .
Posit ion also requires supervision of fi eld crew .
Other duties include working with applicant on
procedures and work to be done- , prepa ring work or
ders, I 1St1ng materials. cos ting of job, and com
pleting form s and reco rds . Other r el evan t duti es as
assigned by supervisor

FIELD SUPERVISOR Ill - Responsible tor day to

ALL CHIEF AND ALL ALSTAR PAINTS
CLEARANCE PRICED!
MATCH YOUR COLORS NOWI
WE'RE MAKING ROOM FOR
A NEW PAINT LINE.

day w e ather i zation and home repair activities i n
el uding supervision of weafher i zation pers.onnel.
Other dut res 1nc lude job scheduling , main ta ining in
ventory re cord s, tool control , safety , qua l1fy con
trol . and vehi cl e and 1ool ma i ntenanc e. Other
rele'Wanl dufies as ass rgne-d bY superV ISO r Two (2)
Superv1sors needed , one l or ea ch co un t y
Qualifications for the above positions include : High
School Diploma or Equivalent, two ye.us ex ·
perience related to housing construction or
weatherization, supervisory experience in housing
trades, sensitive to needs of IOW ·income and elderly .
Must have dependable trnsportation and valid
drivt'r 's licenn Rate of pay is ~ . 81 per hour .
Fringe benefits include paid hospitalization . Ap ·
plications are available from the C.A.A. Central Of fice or the ODES Offices . Further information can
be obtained from Mr . Ron Crawford at 367 ·7341 or
9•1 ·7000 , or by writing P.O . Box 272 , Cheshire, Ohio
45610 .
Equal Opportunity ·Affirmat ive Act 1on Employer .

1

F&lt;REWOOD

FOR

Now tak i ng orde rs
del iv er . 7-'2 2056 .

EMERGENCY

sal e.
Will

POWER

alternators ·own the best

buy WIN POWER . Ca U 513 ·
788 2.189
APPLES

C &lt;DER

HONEY
Fitzpatri c k Or
chard , State Route 689 .
Phone W il kesvil le, 669 ·

3785
TWO

AXLE

tra i ler .

Phone

POMEROY
LANDMARK

Vn _J ack W. Caney

BEAUTIFUL

Mgr.
Phone992-2tll

27J.ll76.
Real Estate for Sale
HOUSE
ON large
Ra c ine . 9-'9 ·23.40.

lot .

J&amp;L Blown Insulation

Fitzpatrick

orchard ,

SR

689

19 72

CHRY S LER

NEWPORT Custom . fac
tory wheels , $1200. Antique
doll made in Germany bet
ween 19 15 and 1925, $235.

Cut the cost of heating and cooling with
cellulose insulation. Meets Federal

TOWN .

One

Kenmore
wash i ng
machine . less than a month
old , 1200. 1 chain saw,
Pioneer used very l ittl e,
S125 . 1 lawn mower . used
one summer, SSO. 1 desk.,
solid wood, $200 _ 1 17' Star
craft aluminum
canoe,

SJOO Ca(( '192 5301 .

1183

specification HH-1-515-t

CALL 992-2772

ANT IQUE

PSYCHIATRIC AIDES/Assistants
Mental Health Center has openings in
psychiatric
inpatient
hospitalization
program.
Previous
psychtatnc _ex perience not required. R otat1ng shiftS.
salary and fringes excellent. An E EOAffirmative Action employer . Contact :
Juanita Atha, Personel Administrator, G J -M rl:o-mmunity Mental Health Center,
412 Vinton Pike . Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 or
caii614-446 · 5SOO.

GALLIA-JACKSON-MEIGS
COMMUNITY MENTAL HEALTH CENTER, INC.
CENTER DIRECTOR. Menta~ health profes~ional
in the fields of psychology , soc1al work, psychliJfry,
or related mental health discipline , or equival~nt
education and experience, for a comprehensive
mental health center funded under the mandates of

P .L. 94·63 .
The center Director is the chief employee of the
center B~rd and responsible for the day to da_y
operations of the Center . F~i~ge benefit pack~ge •~
comprehensive and compet1t~ve . Salary negotiable.
An EEO-Affirma1ive Act1on employ~r. Send
resume to : Juanita Atha, Personnel Admmis1rator,
G-J ·M Community Mental H~tth Center , Inc ., 412
Vinton Pike, Gallipolis , Ohio 4S6JI.

side chair ,
case, bed ,
blue tweed
rubber pad.

corn .

VICTOR fAN
marble bOOk ·
full size , 9xl2
rug w i Th new
redwood picni c

tab le . Calf 985·3805 .

CORRUGATED
ASPHALT

SHEETS

- -- - - - lh HP DEMMING deep
well pump , 85ft of fl exibl e
pipe and storage rank . 9.49
:1008

.
HOBSTETTER.

REALTY
PHONE 742-2003
ATTENTION and lots of
tender loving c are is
what thi s home has had .
"
bedrooms ,
living
room . dining room . bath
and basement . Gas for ·
ced a i r lurnace Call for
all
details .
On l y

S35.000 .00
CHOICE LOT in Ar ·
baugh
Addition .
100' &gt;&lt;100' with water tap
and septi c system .
Selling Pr ice SS ,OOO .OO .

RACINE AREA -

6'1&gt;

acres on Basha n Road
Lovely 3 bedroom nome,
carpet throughout Full
basement with family
room and laundry room
Nice barn and lots of
room for the
kid! .

25 Year Warranty

4 Colors to chose from
CALL TODAY
FOR A QUOTE

BAUM TRUE VALUE
985-3 301

HYSELL

RUN

Almost eight ac res wilh
2 bedroom home . Use
your IMag ination with
this place
L ots of
poss ibilit i es .
On l y
$23,500 .00.

-

NEW

Ll

LL ·· iN POMEROY -

ntce 3

bedroom , 1 bath frame ~ome . Conv_e~ient location.
Large living room witn fireplace , d+nmg room, eat ·
In kitchen , fu l l basement , new Qas furnace .

S25.000 .00 .

DOWNING-CHILDS
Rodney, Broker
Bill, Br . Mgr.
Phone 992-2342, Eve. 992-2449
Middleport, 0 .

carl James lngels 61042·
2182 .

S BEDROOMS

LISTING

A

familv home . l 1/ 2 ba ths ,
nat
gas furnac e,
paneled kit .. plush ca r ·
pet i ng , and
2 ca r

garage . $17 ,500.
GARDEN - Renovated
2 bedroom home , nice
kitchen with
dining
area . Living rm . 171&lt;17
with
wood burning
f 1repla ce, basement, 2
car garage and extra

lot . S25,000.
FRESH AIR -

New 3

bedroom. di$hwasher,
c c) pper
plumb i ng
gc:r age, Ohio power and
one large acre of nice
laying land, fenced

-

3 bedroom

frame with nat. gas F .A.
furna ce, city utilities
near Krogers $15 ,500.

To the

store. 3 bedrooms, bath,
nat. oas furna ce, city
wafer and garage with
view of r iver. ASking
$17 ,500.

NOW IS THE TIME TO
BUY OR SELL WHILE
PEOPLE ARE EAR ·
NEST, BEFORE WIN ·
TER.

-

2

bedrOO"l home on Union
Avenue . Extra lot,
readv to put trailer on .
Ca ll - we won't have
this one long at a price

ot
S20 . 50000 .
EX
CELLE NT BUY!!
WE NEEDLfSTINGSlr
Cheryl Lernlty, Assoc.

Phone 742 ·2003
vetma Nicinslcy

Phone 742 ·3092
Georges. Hobs.tetrer Jr.
Broker , Phone 992 ·S739

mile off Rt. 7 by -pass
124 toward
Rutland .

DECORATING
SUPPLIES
Osborn

S071

]4

on St . Rt

Rd . ,

Reed&gt;ville, OH, 45772.
For

information

Call

667 ·648S. Will be OPen
late
if
y-ou
somethin9.

need

608 E . '
MAIN ....... _.....
POMEROY . O
PH . 992 ·2259
NEW LISTING - 3 vear
old
ran c h
with
basement in Syracuse. J
bedrooms, equipped kit·
chen, large rec room,
al l new. all electric , nice
level lot in an excellent
location . $«,000.00.

LISTING

34

acres land in Eastern
school district, close to
St. Rt . 7, 20x30 new
block. building plus a
mobile home to live in .

$17,900.00 .
MIDDLEPORT -

N;ce

home with 2 car garage
and workshop on a good
street. S18,900 .00

R UTLANO -

Site tor

trailer or home, water
and electricity on si te.
Priced
reduced
to

$2,400.00 .
STATELY -

2 slor y,

tvl l

basement , wood
burn~r in fam i ly room ,
up to 4 bedrooms, nice
yard, garage, other
features, should V .A . or

F.HA $18.900 .00
MINI FARM - rn Coun
try 6 acres. nice
home, large living room
With W. B.F .P ., large
.newer
kit c hen ,
J
bedrooms,
part
basement, In gOOd con
dit ion . SH,500 .00.

BUSINESS

BUILDNG

1n Middleport, 2
business rooms down . 2
apartments up . Ca l l tor

detaHs. S33.500 .00 .
REALTORS
Henry E . Cleland, Sr.

Res . 99l ·lS68
Res. 992-&lt;1191
ASSOCIATES
Roger &amp; Dottie Turner
Res . 74l ·l474

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992 · 5682
l
4 30 ti c
REAL ESTATE
FINANCING

H. L Writesel
Roofing

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

Y49 -2862-94Y -2160

CALL 992 ·7544

5 tt c

Gutter work. down
spouts, somt concre1e
JWOrk.
walks
and
driveways.

(FREE ESTIMATE I

V. C. YOUNG Ill
RACINE. 0.
Mt·2741 or

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION
VINYl AND
ALUMINUM SIDING
eStorm o-s
e Storm Windows
• Replacement
Windows
• Gutters and

Free Estimates

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

BOWERS

REPAIR
Sweepers.
toasters, i rons, all small
appliances . Lawn mower
Ne)(f to State Highway
Garage on Route 7, 985

3825 .

MARK MORA
HAIR STYLIST
FeaturinG : men 's &amp;
women 's styling, per ·

ms.
Lane

Daniels . New phone num ·
ber : 7A22951. Servi ce to
schools and homes since
1965 .
BEAT THE high cost of
heating your home- this
winter by insulating now .
Ca ll J im Johnwn, who is
exper i enced in b(ow -in
sulation servi ces . For tre-e
home evaluation , call and
make an appointment now .

Ravenswood .

References available upon
reQuest .

Mobile Homes - Sale
1972 LYNN HAVEN t&gt;llC65 3
bedroom
t 970 Vinda le llx63 with ex ·
pando, 2 bt"dr .

1970 New Moon 12x6() 3 b&lt;!r .
1973 SkyHne 12x55 2
bedroom
1972 Bonanza 12x52, 2 bedr .
B &amp; S MOBlLE HOME

SALES. PT . PLEASANT .
WV . JOH75 ·.U24
BfG SELECTfON ot pre
owned 10, 12, and U ' wide
mobile homes Kanauga
Mobil e H ome Sa les 446-

9662

Call for appt . or walk in .

992-2367
Main St.

Pomeroy , o .
10· 19 ·1 mo .

WILL HAUL limest one and
gravel. Also, lime hau ling
and spreading . Leo Morris
Trucking . Phone 742 -2--455 .

PAINTfNG

AND

CaU 949·2680 .
END

Loader .

brush
hoo . W i ll do
basements, ponds, brush,
timber,
land c learing .
Charles Butcher 742 · 2940

SEWING

MACHINE

Repairs,
service ,
all
makes .
992 ·228-A .
The
Fabr ic Shop, Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer
Sales
and service . we sharpen
Scissors .

CENTRAL REALTY CO.
NEW LISTING - Real ni ce 3 BR home with extra
large l i ving room , equipped k i1chen , washer , dryer ,
full basement , with central air . Large breezeway
leading to extra large garage. Th is well cared tor
house nas many extras and several fruit trees of dif ·
teren1 varieties . &amp; ni ce garden . see to apreciate.
very nice location in tower Syracuse Pri ced at

163,900.
CHESTER - 4 BR home , hardwood floors , large
LR, family rm , garage, outbuilding, lruif trees and
garden space. Asking ~ ,900 .

THIS &lt;S WHAT YOU ASKED FOR - 14acres with a
l'h story home, sits back off road surrounded with
maple trees . LQ . pond, l oca ted in Morning Star
area . Price SJ3,900 .

FAMILY HOME - Loh of possibilities with t his
nice 2 stor y Many features . c entral air , buiH ·in ap pl iances, al l carpeted , goqd investment with several
nice buildi ng lots . On appro)( . 4" ' ac res n the center
of Ra c ine . Asking SSA.OOO
COUNTRY SPECIAL Remodeled 1 BR home on
blacktop road . Mostl y carpeted . F A . nat . gas _fur ·
nace , a"racti ve small home and 1 a cre land . Pr+ced
for qu ick. sale , $.17 ,500.
p:z,ooo.oo -&lt;;ood 3 BR . all carpeted home c lose to
Pomeroy &amp; Middlepor t . Located on 111, acres.
FARM --&lt;&gt;ver 70 a cres bordering Pomeroy with ex
tra large barna and Old farm house, but plenty of
pasture and some farm ground . pri ced Only $49,000.
' LOTS OF LOTS - From 1 to 75 acres , border ing
Pomeroy

MIDDLEPORT - 3 BR home opprox . 10 yrs old ,

stove &amp; refrigerator, lg . storage bldg

Priced at

$35 .000.

RACINE - 7 BR trailer on nic e lot . Asking Sl1 ,500 .
:ZO WOODED ACRES -&lt;:an be d;vided . Sll.OOO.

LARGE SPLIT LEVEL - 3 Acre•. 4 BR home, tufly
carpeted , equ ipped kit., tam room has firep lace, lg
utility rm .• plenty of !tor age, two·c ar garage , elec .
door opener . L i sted S75,500.

JUST LISTED - 6 Yr . ord home, 3 BR . d ining and
utilifV room , kit . equipped w ·stove and refng .
Mosflv carpeted . for ced air gas furna ce, 1 yr old .
Garage, a comp lete trailer hook ·uP with nat gas
MP and septic ~an add Income . Over 2 acres.
S29.900-Call for appointment .
JUST LISTED ----Mini farm w ·beautitul brick bi ·
tevel , w -3 SR &amp; full basement, IQ. carpor1, total
elec., insulato, all hardwood floors. 311g hothouses,
with approx . 5 acres . S63 .SOO.

WANT TO SELL? - GIVE US A t;ALL
CALL JIMMY DEEM, ASSOCIATE 949·13k
OR NANCY JASPERS, ASSOCI# TE
949·2U4 or t4f-2Stl

Gerold

Clark

797-4857 or Tom Hoskins

797 ·2HS.

MONTGOMERY

SU PER
GOOSE
~TOCt&lt;
TRAILER HOW AVAILABLE

• 51 m o

JgL BLOWN
INSULATION

\linyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding
elnsulation
• Storm Doors
eStorm Windows
eReplacement Win dows

Free Estimate

JAMES KEESEE
PH_ 992-2772
to 19·1 mo .
HOWERY AND MARTIN
Excavating ,
septic
systems, dozer, backhoe .

Rt . 1.0 . Phone 1
7331 or 742 ·2593.

t61~)

699 ·

AUTOMOBfLE

fN ·

SU RANCE
been
can ·
celled?
Lost
your
operator's license? Phone

'1922143.
IN STOCK for immediate
deliverv . various sizes of
pool kits. Do ·if ·yourself or
let us install for you . D .
Bumgardne-r Sales, Inc .
992 ·5124 .

REYNOLD'S

ELECTRlC

Motors , rewind and repa i r .

99J.2356 ,

561

Beech

St.,

Middleport , Ohio
EXCAVAT I NG ,
dozer .
loader and backhoe work ·
dump tru cks .end lo ·boys
for h i re, will haul fill din,
top soil , limestone and
gravel . Call BOb or Roger

A&amp;H Upholstering , across
from the Texa co Station in
Syraucse. 992 ·37.0 or 992 ·

3752 .

Jeffers, day phone 992 ·7089.
night phone 99'1 -3525 or ffi ·

5232 .

1975 wr NDSOR MOB&lt; LE

WE HAVE CONVENTIONAL FINANCING FOR
MOST OF OUR HOMES FOR AS LOW AS S%
DOWN .

collect,

sand

blasting . Free estima tes .

DOZER .

Rooting, gutters, and
downspouts .
Free
Estima1es.
All work
guaranteed. 20 years ex·
perience . call Athens,

11)10 Muntvomer'r lhl .
L•"vnille, Ohio
~I • -W' -&lt;11145 f: l'f!RinG!
J Moll!' E •st of Willlnvrlle

JAMES KEESEE
Phonem-2772
81].1 mo .

BRADFORD. Auctioneer,
Complete Service . Phone
9-'9·2487 or 949 -2000 . racine ,
Ohio, Critt Bradford .

ROOFING

TRAIL£R SALES

elnsulation

9-7·1 mo.

273 2064,

9 U ·tPd .l

9·28 ·1 mo . Pd.

DownSpout&gt;

TUNING .

RUTLAND
742 -2328

OtfiO VALLEY

~Ollrs9 - 1 M,, W., F .
Other time ~. bot ippolntment.
VJ1 Sycamore CRear]
Pomeroy, 0 .

PfANO

AL TROMM
CON ST.

Housing &amp;
VeterullS Admin . Loans .

N'ew, repair,
gutters and
down spouts .
Win,dow cleaning
Gutter cleaning
Fre~ Estimates

ELWOOD

Rool=ING
REM o"Ot.ll NG
lt"vM imDITIO~S
HOUSES BUILT

f ~· deral

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING

$35,000.00 .
NEW LISTING :z 16 E. SeCOf'ld Sfre.t

Roger Hysell
Gaige

),jlJ~~/p :~s

d

Beautiful 2 story home
with river view in
Pomeroy , 3 bedrooms,
basement , new car
pefing ,
aluminum
siding , 11h baths. Very
good
co nd i t ion .
1!1rl .JJ25

Business Services

tiger . $35,000. 985·3563 .

NEW

Housing
Headquarters

Fl REWOOD 247 31161

two nomes that are good
values
on
today 's
market . Call fN more
info.

I DING

HOUSE , 6 acres, in Chester
Township .
Aluminum
siding, storm windows,
carpeted, insulated . 70 pet .
baement . Clayton Shar

Henry E . Cleland, Jr.

Asking onry S39,900.00 .
POMEROY - We have

•

OWNER WI L L sell 40 acres
or ore with 1978 Hollypark
mobile home Ux70 with ex
panda, plus 14xJ6 family
r oom attached, fully ca r ·
peted, rural waer , some
pasture. fence. standing
timber, some walnut, sun
deck front and
back .
Located on New Lima Rd .

EASY WALK -

GOOD YELLOW
S2 .50 bu 742 ·ll59.

Free Estimate

BEDROOM

74J.l074.

COZY

HOUSE COAL. lump or
stoker, will deliver . 742 ·

T HREE

VA or FHA loan . $33 ,500 .

· - - ·-ROME Beauty

LEAVfNG

NOW'S THE TIME TO
INSULATE!

or 4 bedroom home on 2lh
acres
of
land,
full
basement. dr i lied well, car ·
peted, storm windows ,
fu l ly insu l ated . Al$0. 16)(32
building . Would consider

2432.

s.. per bu . Best for

WDDDED

lot , 1.18 acres . City water
Close to schools , near Rock
Springs . After 5, ca l l 304·

white and yellow Rf . 2,
Rac i ne . R . W. Lew+ s . ~J ·

apples at

~

BEDROOM ,

$11.500 . Call667 3082 .

ba ckhoe

apple butter . Ca ll 669 3795.

THREE

FOR SALE : In Chester ,
OH . 6 room house with
bath. Big beautifu l lot.

SWEET POTATOE S, red ,

~~-----

992 2106 .

2183 .

..., 4792 .

APPLES

FOUR ROOM house in
Syra cuse on 2ndj St . S6.000 .

st oker. will deliver . 7A2

Headquarters
Appliances
Sales &amp; Service

Ga ll ipoli s,

'192 ·JJ4l

®

Chester, Ohio

For Sale

Sl eeps 6 S8SO

The Gallia Meigs Community Action Agency is ac cepting applications unt11 October 24 , 1979, for the
following positions to be fille-d by November 1, IIJ79 .

80 ,0 00 s uc h

Ht:' sa l(! Uw need to speed the
leK •slaiiOII res ults from the fact that
under th e new s ystem, plates will go
on sale m January of next year,
tnsl ead of April. as in the past .
Thl' plates ar~ manufactured at
the Leba non Correctwna l Institute .
and Dol lison sa id . " We have to have
some lead t une ''
Unde r the new system of
staKgert•d sales, motorists whose
la'1 na m es bo.•gm wtth the te llers A,
tl . and C will purchase thelf plate s m
.Janunry .
Prev iou s ly, a ll Ohio vcht cle
() Vm er s w er e requtred to txly tilem
Wllllln the penod of Apnl 1 to May

Camping Equipment

FfNANCfNG VA FHA LO
ANS . LOW OR NO DOWN
PAYMENT
PURCHASE
OR
R E FlNAN CE .
IREL AND MORTGAGE ,
77 E . STATE , ATHENS.
614 597 3051

HOUSE COAL, lump or

MODERN FfVE year ofd 3

Ohioans may have to pay higher fees
OIIIU

GENERAL
ELECTRIC

~
~-

Real Estate for Sale

room house with bath . 59'1
Pearl
St . , Middleport .
Remodeled , all new inside
and out . Phone 742:.2405 or
992 2729

SfLVER POODLE . mare.

ht•rtb call ht• t•x pandt·d t&gt;nrJll)!h tn

t 'fll.l ' Mil US.

----

and

Barber

SALE

--~

HOTPOINT

2234

Shop now open full time in
MiddlepOrt .

Vo l unteer
Fire
Dept .
Every Saturday . 6: 30p .m .
At their buildingin Bash an
Factory choke guns only .

NO

LONG HAIRED beautiful
kittens, .4 weeks old, males,
c ream . silver. calico . 8-'3

ot

POTATOE S

C W . Proffitt farm , Por
tland, OH . SB a hundred and
S5 a hundred

Giveaway

At hens, appea r i ng at the
Jones· Bar . Wes t Colu m
bia Fri . Sat 9 JOto'l 00

ED

sand,
gravel, cal cium
c hloride , terti lizer , dog
food, and a( I types of salt
Excel s1or Sail works, Inc .,
E Main SL Pomero v. 992

WINT ER

no

trespassing with no ex
ceptions on my property
Judy M c Graw Self .

GUN

THE

For Sale
Lf ME STO NE ,

3891

any

ABSOLUTELY

WA S HING TON i AI' 1 The
Agr ic ultur e
Departmen t
has
rt&gt;moved
m ost of a federal
quarantin e on the ou t-of -s tat e

COAL.

FOR SALE or rent. Ni ce J
bedroom , modular loc ale-d
in Portland area . Set up on
l ot' or can be mo'Wed Cal l

soci ety , '192·626()

PORCH

brl' l"(Ji.ng herds .

For Sale,
Rent or Trade

home . Sl8, 000 new Special
ordered . Doubl'e insulated .
Best paneling throughout
tra i ler 2x.t's instead ot
2x2' S. 2 bedroom . Kitchen .
hand painted Dut ch style .
Fully carpeted. To1al elec tric . A .C. Asking Sl2. SOO .
Must see to appreciate 992 -

POMEROY
LANDMARK
GOOD USED
CHAIN SAWS

31&gt;18.

McCutlocft Pro

Auctions

S1SO .DO

~css

BIG AUCTION every Wed ..
7 pm . Harttord Community
Center , Hartford, WV , 4
miles above Pomeroy ·
Mason Bridge .

Real Estate for Sale

MCCutlocft
M.,·tO
sns.oo
Remington J4
S100 .00
1SOAulo
Homotllt
sns.oo
XK 12 Homtlllt S11S .DO
KL&lt;IOO Homtlllt noo.oo
Remington
Yardmuter
S7S.OO
Ren1iRgton

ERA MERCER
REALTY
MINt

FARM

-

Super 754
Seors
XL Hometite

-

S100.00
$100.00
S7S.OO

1 Excellent Un1eo 16 cu.

14

acres, J bedrm . nouse .
Very
f i replace .
secluded . Cash or con ·
ventlona l finance only .

S2l.500 . Scout Camp Rd
Ba ck of Chester

fl.

Copportone

R.,rtger11or, Ulce new,
~2SO
I New Electric Fum•ce,
clear•nce priced
1 n. . Fuel 011 Furn•ce,
clur•nce Dtlctcl

114 FT . OHIO R&lt;VER
FRONT - 3.77 acre

t GOOd Cold&gt;pot

with mobile home _ 3
brm ., JII:J baths, ex ·
pando I'W . rm . S16.000.

'\?...,_
MAINST.
~ Jock w. Carsey

LONG BOTTOM -

6

rm . older home, car
peted . barn , plus 2 out ·
buildinos. on 10 lots .

S18,900 .
REEDSVILLE

REEDSVILLE - Home
with 2 ca r garage and
n ice business building
with
2
re!trooms .
Hocking -

Little
River tron ·

lage , for bOOI dock and
swimming, plus home
building spot . 1..u acres .

S19.900.

C•ll Virginia Hayman

Ph. 91Hl97

SIS.DO

Pft.MJllll

RUBBER BACK
CARPET

'4"

lind UP

Cash &amp; car 1

SALE ON ALL
IN STOCK

fCl95
and uo
6

lnst~llech

th PiJd Free

GOOD R.:MNANT
SELECTION
6'x12' to 12'x16'

$3800

anct 11p

Call 742-2211

RUTIAND
fURNITURE
Rutland,

0.

2

bdrm trailer , '1 covred
porches , 3 ca r oarage ,
flat lot . 121.000. Owner
will ing to talk .

$25,000 .
BOATERS

R'efriger1tar

SAVE -ON ~cAlPEf
DRIVE A·tlmE
SAVE~ LOt

MACHINIST
Permanent position for individual with
job shop experience. Must be able to do
own set-up on conventional and horizontal mills, lathe s, and grinders_
Respond to Personnel Department, Appalachian Power Co ., Mountaineer Plant
Operations, Post Office Box 398, New
Haven,
v a _ 25265 - Area Code 304 882-

w_

2151.
we are an Equal Opportunity Employer.

�10- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport -Pomeroy , 0 ., rnday, Oct . 19, 1979
'

Me tgS County
Farm Bureau

Auto SaleS
197 6 M O N TE CA R LO . 3&gt;0

Annual Meeting

engine . tow mil e a ge

T U E SDAY NI G HT

992 2656

Help

19/6 FO R D V A N . C B. AM
ca p
FM { dSSe tt&gt; . 6 r y l
1a 1n s c h a •r s ~ 1 613 7

Ti Ck ets
Ad u lts
Sl.SO
1.00
Ch il d re n
H e ld at t h e
Ch est er
Gr ad e Sc h ooL Ch ester .

s

M E R C URY

19/J

MO N

TEGO MX , 56 ,1))(1 m il es .
good c o nd• t •on Drop lea f
t ao te A l so. fir ewood f or
sa te H• c kory and oak . W tll
d£&gt; 11ve r 84J 1703

0.
St ea k d mn e r . p n l es . en
t ert a 1nm enr .
For R ese r var1o n s

Call : 992 -2181

1~ 57 C H EV RO L E T on e t on
f la t bed tru c k 30 ga ll on
e l ec tr~ r hot w a ter hea ter ,
11 5 v 4 ( y l •nder w . sc ons•n
m o to r 843 '1 701

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIG S COUNTY , OHIO
ESTATE OF MARTHA C
MAYS , DECEASED
case No . 22,847
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY

1977 TH U N DERB I RD , AM
F M , AC. rad ia l s. SA ,OOO
Must st&gt; ll 247 3594 be f or e 2

O n Oc tober 16 , 197 9, 1n
t h£&gt; M ei gs County Pr ob a 1P
Co urt . Ca se
No
22 84 / .
Albert Qu i vey , Ro u te 1,
Bo x 194 . Strasburg , O h •o
JA68 0
wa ~
n pp o.n t ed
l:: x e&lt;: uto r of 1he e-. 1dl f' o l
Mart ha c M ays , dereas ed .
!a t (' o f Route 3, Atoant~
Oh•0 457 10
John C Bd c.on
A ( 11119 P r n h nle Jud Qt'
(IPr k
1 10 1 19 ] 6 1 11 1 "} ]U

p m
1978 OLO S. 4 door . 16.000
mil es , a1r and pow er , V 6
e n g .n e
G ood
mileage
~9 5

Oed 9'111101

S2600

OC TOBER: 2lrd

7. 14PM .

PO N TIA C
Che&gt;w y t ru c k

19 73
CATALI N A

Call'l'/1 1] 19

19 73 C AMERO . body y ood .
ru ns e• cellent Can be ~n
107 L OC USt St , Po mer oy
( Mon k ey Run ) .

Wan ~_

BARPER SO N

N EEDED
Call be tween 9 a nd 5 . 992
5509
S H EET

METAL

men

ne ed£&gt;d GOOd be ne f i t s an d
salar y 446 4066or 446 27 16

GAS ST A T IO N atte nda n l ,
•nqu 1re d t E .. rels i o r O i l Co

636 Eas r M a •n , P o m e r oy ,
OH
LADY TO l i ve in , he lp c a r e
f or
e lderly
la dy .
u
h ousew o rk . 7i.2 2282.

POO D LE
GROO M I N G
J u dy T ay tor 6 14 36 7 7220
HI L LC R ES T

CHIP WOOD . Poles m ax .
di a m et er 10 " on large st
en d $12 P·E.'r 't on Bun dl ed
s l ab . SlOper ton . D e li ve r ed
t o O hi o Pall e t Co .. Rt . 2.
P o m eroy ~2 2689

C H AMP IO N

1&lt;11336 .
TW O B L UE t i c k coon dogs
A ft er 5, c a l l 99 2 5705

OL D
F URN I TUR E ,
1c e
bo •es. brdss beds . 1ron
t&gt;e-ds. desks, etc .• c o mplet e
households . Wr i te
M .D
Miller Rt .t, P omE.' r oy o r

c all'l'/2 7760 .
M EDICAL T EC HNOLO G I
ST . m al e o r f e mal e A c
ce pt i ng
a ppl ica tion s tor
full tim e
p er m a ne n t
tec hn o l og i St · MT (e li g ibl e

ASCPI .

MLT

IHEW I

Sa l a r y co m m ens urate with
ex p e ri ence R es um e c an be
ma il e d
to ·
VetE." r an s.
M emo r •at
H osp i ta l , B ox
749 ,
Mulberry
Ht s.
P o m er oy , O H ,.5769 . Phone
6 14 991 2 10.1111
E qual
Qp
po r t un 1t y E mp toyer

OLD COIN S.

poc kel

c hes . c lass ring s, wedding
bands, diamond s. Gold o r
s. il\ler Call J A Wam s l e y ,

Seal ed
bid s will
be
r ece i ved b y th e Board of
County Comm is sion e r s of
Gallia County , Ohio, l'lt the
o ffi c e of th e Galtia Cou n t y
C ommissioners . until 10 :00
A . M .• on Nove mber 7, 19 79
and opened immed i ate l y
th e r eafter for furn i shing
t he necessar y labor and
materials .
tools
ma c hinery and applian c eS
r e quired for th e Annex to
Gallipolis
C ommunity
Mental Health Center, .i,l2
Vinton
Pike ,
Gllllipol i s .
Ohio , 45631 a c c ord •ng to t h e
drawings
and
specifi cations on file in th e
offi c e of the Ar c hitec t
Copies of said drawings
and specifi c ations may be
obtained by prime bidd e r s
from David C. Reiser Ar
c hitec ts , 131 west State
Street , Athens, Ohio 45701.

747 2331.
WANTED :

SA W

log s

Payment upon del i ver y to
o u r yard , 7 :30 to 3:30 w eek
days . Blaney Hardwoods ,
SR 339, Bartow , OH 6 78

2980
FUR

3161
&lt;

WANTED ·

J UNK

.

.

.

WANTED .

Bal

161&lt;1

Au to . P S . P B

&lt;Jium rapper , g ood r a nd '

1

set
of
draw i ngs
and
spec if ic ations .
The tutt $50 .00 deposi t on
se t s
of
draw 1ngs an d
sp eci f ic at i on s ,
w i lt
be
re turned t o b idder s upon
r e turn of draw ings an d
SPE.' Cil 1c ations tn good c on
dit 1on with1n ten (10 ) dav s
after bid opening date .
Bids
for
the
above
desc ribed work must be
made on blanks to be fur ·
nished by th e Archit ec t
Engine e r
her e inbefor e
named
Bids mu s t be addressed
to the Gallia County Com
mi ssioners of Gall ipoli s,
Oh 10 , and e ndorsed on out
si d e oi enve lope The ite m s
of work bid upon .
Each b id mus t contain
the full name of everv per
son or company interested
in
the
same ,
shall
separate l y state the pri ce
for labor and materiaL and
mu st be ac c o mpan ied by a
b i d bond or a certif1e-d
c hE.'c k in some solvent bank
in an amount of not less
than five per c ent (5 O.O L i n
spe c ific amounts of dollars
and c enT s, of The total of the
base bid and all add alter
nate bids , a s a guarantee
that If the bid i s ac cepted a
c ontra c t wilt be entered i n
t o and its p e rformance
property secu red
The SU CC E.' SSfUI bidders ,
upon rece i pt ot a cc eptan c e
ot their proposal s, mu st
fur n ish IOO~Performance
Bond and lOO~Labor dnd
Mate ria l Payment Bond t o
th e Owner .

STANDING

992 ·6319
BUYING
S ILVER
US
COINS WILL PAY 9Sc
FOR DIMES , S2 .37 FOR
QUARTERS , $05 FOR
HA L VES.
$11.50
FOR
SILVER DOLLARS , SUS
FOR CLAD HALVES (1965 ·
1969) . ALSO $190 PER
POUND FOR STERLING
S ILVER . ALSO WANT
GOLD CLASS RINGS ,
WEDDING BANDS, DEN
TAL GOLD , PLATINUM .
TREASURE CHEST COIN
SHOP , TOP OF HILL , RT .
33 SOUTH
I POMEROY
RO ),
ATHENS ,
OH .
PRICES
GOOD
TILL
MONDAY .

to n

13695
1977
CHEVY
NOVA
4
DR
···--.........
6
PB ,
1977 CHEVY IMPALA SEDAN 4 DR.•••••••13895
c y l , PS,

Air

Red , Ad r . AT . A1r , P S. PB

1978 FORD PINTO STATIONWAGON ••••• ,, 12795
1976 AMC GREMLIN ..................... 11395
1974 PINTO STATIONWAGON ............. 11595
O. u to ., ra c k , P . S . 6 cyt

A N T IQUE

POCKET wal
c hes W i lting to pay rop
d o llar
Call
I 592 1973

4 r v l. r ad 10 . a ut o

1974 FORD MUSTANG ................... 11795
1974 CADILlAC EL DORADO .............. 12195

evenings

Pets for Sale
HOOF HOLLOW, English
and Western . Saddles and
harnE.'ss .
Horses
ana
ponies . Ruth Reeves . 61.t ·

Loa d ed . SO .OOO m ill:' '"&gt;

Dr . a u ro ,
11295
1974 uno NET•...................•.....•..
1973 CHEVY BELAIR ............. :~:~:~'~ .. 1695
1978 [XXX;[ PCNt'ER 15()......... ••••• ••• '6995
2

6 c;l

698 -3290 .

~

Bordlng

and

Riding Lessons and Horse
Care products . Western

bools .

Ch il dren 's

591 561 5

upon lhe
deposit with them of S50 .00
i n c ash or c heck f o r ea c h

timber . SIOO a thou san d .

1974 CHEV. PICKUP••••••••••••••••••• 12195

8 1dde r s snail n o t e that
th e P r e vailing W age Rates
publ • ~ hed b y th e Dep art
mer. r
of
Indus t rial
~e l a l t o n s d r e t o be com
pl ied w •th thr oug h ou t t h i s
pro je c t
B 1dde r s s ha ll al so no t e
!'hat
th e
Ru les
an d
Reg u la ti o n s on E qual Em
pt oym e nt Oppo r t un i ty sh a ll
be made a par t of th tS con
lr ac t
N o bidde r m ay with dra w
his bid wit h in six t y ( 60 )
ct ay s a tt er the ac tua l date
oi the o peni n g thereof .
If . i n the opin i on of the
Owne r and t he Direc to r of
th e De p a rt men t of M e ntal
t(f_alt h and M en tal Re t ar
ct'al i b n o r h is d e l ega ted
r epr ese nt a tf ve ,
the
ac
cept ance o f the lowes t bid
is not in th e best in te r e sts
of a ll con ce r n('d , the O w n er
may acc ept , with the c on
c urre ncE.' of th e Direc tor of
h is
de l egated
repr esen
t a t ive . a n o ther propo sal so

opened
or
r eje c t
a ll
pr oposa ls and a d vert ise f o r
o the r b 1d S. The Owne r w i th
con c u r r en ce of th e O i r ec
to r of the Departme nt of
Men ta l Hea lth and Mental
R t&gt; l a r d at io n
r es e rves
th e r ig hl to w aive an y in
f o rm a liTies .
Sh ou ld an y b id be r e jec
t ed , su ch c hec k will be
r e tu r ned to the bi dder , a nd
should a ny b 1d be acce p ted ,
s uc h c hec k w i ll be re tu rn e d
upon th e p ro pe r ex ec u ti on
a n d se cu r.n g of th e c on
trac t .
Sep a rat e bt d S sh all b e
rece1ved f or · 1) G eneral
Con str uc tion . 2) Plumbing ,
3) Heat i n ~ •. Ven t ilati on and
A lf Cond1 f1oning, 4 ) E lect ric a l .
A ppr ove d as TO f o rm :
Jose ph Ca i n
Ga ll i a Coun ty
Prosec uting Attorney
Septe mber 30, 1979

LARGE HOUSE for renT in
eastern part of c ounty . For
information , c all Fred W .

110 1 12. 19, 26 . ( 11 ) 2

Crow, IlL day , 9'1226'12 or
nlghi992 ·7S11 .

For Rent

11- The Oail y Sent mel . M tddl eport -Porneroy . 0 ., F n da y. Ot't . 1 ~ . l!!1!!
DICK TRACY

COUN T RY MOB ILE Hom e
Park , Route 33 , nor t h ot
Pomeroy . L.!lrge to ts Cal l

J:..U G• T IVE S H A VE- ABANDO NED
T HEIR STOL E ,"-1 VH-41C ~E AND
A&gt;-&lt;~ EI T HER ON I=OOT.
HAVE

9'1'21&lt; 79

oR

J AN o .t RM fu r ni s hed ap

t (..MMAN DEE RE D

t s Phone 991 ·S.O.i, .

APT ,

S11 5.

$50

"

VE I--fiCL

deposll .

Furnished . No c h ildren .
pet s . 307 Spr i ng Ave .

SMALL

AN01 ~ EH

A~ E P ROBABLY S TI /...L.
SOM EWHERE ON iHE YA..-c:IM A

no

EFFECIEN C Y

apartment suitable tor one
wor kino or reti r ed per

son .C all

991 5738

offer 6

p .m .

r!1Er.J KINDLY 6 tol YUV"-

OFF

M~ - Sf; FO ~~
A CO P ~

HA~

l CALL

MH -16S
NOTICE TO BIDDERS

wl

Teries , radiaTors . motor s,
auto . trans
No Sun d ay
c alls . ~49 · 2563 .
.

S IR E D AK C

re g ist e re d
German
Shephe rd pup p ies. 5 w eeks
o l d , r eady in 1 wee k $1 25

NITURE . glas s,
c h i na ,
a nything . See o r c all Ruth
Gosney . antiques . 26 N
2nd , Middleport , OH . 992

~

K E NN EL S

B oa rding , all bree d s . Cl ean
i ndoor ·outdoor
f ac i l i ti es
Als o
AKC
regis t e r eo
Dober m an s . 6 14 «6 779S·•

wanted to Buy

A NTIQUES .

· ... • .. .. ··· . . .·

R I SI NG
S TAR
Kenn e l
Boa r diniJ Ca ll 367 0191

O FFICE
H EL P nee d ed .
p art li m e a n d f ull t ime
gen e r a l offi c~ w o rk Must
be a b le to type an d t a k e
shorth an d
Send rete r en
re s . tr ai n 1ng and
ex
penence to B ox 72'9 L . c o
the
Da il y . Se nt i ne l ,
Pomero v . O H .45169 .

SlS .SO.

Acutts $29 .00 .

UITLE ORPHAN ANNIF.
ORPHAN ANNIE-AFTER DINNER SP£AKERS

1979 FORD LTD LANDAU 302 V8 .. ,. , ., .... ,., ... .. ,l6795
1979 FORD LTD LANDAU 351 V8 ... ,,. .... , ..... ,. ..• . JG895
-1973 CUTlASS SEDAN .... ....... ... ... ... ... ........... ... ~5
1973 CAD. CPE. DEVILlE .. .... .... ., ...... , ... ,, , .,.,~5

\.&gt;MY ,
..,. ~~ ()UG H r I
K.N 0 W1-r-• ~'lf i·{Y IN L H
0' TH IS ("(I N '(0 !1
R t ll 1 Nf- Vf h lCl t l ', l t fJ
I !-1A. [ S PRI''H i

"

I&gt; H \• !M ~
JU· ~ T 1, (\ •·I I

FH ?

Yf S

" )!'

HOP£

1&lt;1'·1'

!il;ollloM~' ,wns

•1 _ _ .....

WE'

A IN ' T TA~I"' ' 1\

Bf'G INME R 'S I '&lt;'CI (t ( ' . · ~
LUCK
THAl ( KIMt- r HI N ~·

:,r f cK o·

·~ o tD

H0 1 'f E f

,r , ,_ :t

~·

6U l Wf' VE
FOUHD l HE WLOST
AR M f MIA ... " MI N E

'lOll¥

ELS E CAN

WE PROVE 11 ?

- Jr--

TIM E ENO...IG H TO
S TAt R'T BRA6c3tN '. .,.

FuST WE GOTT A
ROU ND UP~ GANG
WE CAN. TRuST •· ·

J

•

1972 OLDS 98 SEDAN ..... ,..... ,.., _, .,.. _, ...... ...... 1995
1974 OLDS OMEGA CPE .. ._, .. __.. _,.... ,, .. , .. ___.__ , _'1295
1974
1975
1975
l975

CAD. SED. DEVILLE ... ... , ..... .. , .. ..... , .. ,... .. 11595
CHEV. MONTE CARLO .. .... .. ....... .. .... .... .. ....12995
OLOS CUT, SEDAN .... ... ...... ,.. ... .... ,... ....... 11995
1
FORO COUNTRY SQUIRE WAGON ........ ,., .... ,. 1995

ALLEYOOP
THER£ .1 I THINK Th iS 'LL
HOL D HIM UN TIL W E
CAN GET AWAY
FROM HE RE 1

1977 BUICK LESABRE CPE .... ,.. .... , .......... ,.... .... 13995
76 OLDS CUT. SEDAN .. ..... ,.. , , .., ... ,... ,........ 13495
973 BUICK REGAL CPE, ,.. , ....... ,., ......... , .. ... . 11495
975 OLDS DELTA 88 SEDAN .. ... ... ... ......... ,., ...... 12495
)

OLDS 98 LS ......... ,•.. ,, ...... . , .... ,.. , ,~ ..•.. 12995
q one up a
dtme St nce I

Ev' r L&lt; th1n's

98 REGENCY SED.

SAVE

Marvin's Demo
George's Demo,

SAVE.

Po' Newton
need ·

s tand1n·

here 1

food.
RLlft;S .

DRIVE HOME A WINNER
•
See one of the courteous salesmen:
Pete Burris, Marvin Keebaugh or George Harris

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
"You Ulte Our Quallty Way fll

4 wh ee l dr 1v e
Ad\'e n tur e S E P k g 4 speed tran s m issi on , 2 ga s
ra nK s. AM F M Sf(' r e-o w ta pe , c B ra d 10 , bu c ke t sears , g a uge s. R eese
tr o •ler h •f c h . load ed w• l n e )( t ra s, Sh a rp , 20.000 m i

Dolq Bu"-i"

1976 FORD F-100........................ 11895

bo~ling

Local

P S . P G . rad1o , au l o . L WB

G.M.A.C . Financing
992-5342- Pomeroy
Open Evenings Until6:00-'til5 PM Sat.

GREAT'

. :. ::A·J

.

.. :

r~·,

" '-"' r&lt; Y()(JR_

.. . .: ·,.7

A~ ~

.].C:::

~

· ... E

~

""'":'. ;:_ -=- ~_:: ..::&gt;....: ;::_
&amp;5. l.i=S 5

..:t. :Jfl:Z TI." :;'\J T r,

1976 FORD F-150 ....................... '3295
Bowllluz LaDes
Tuesday Trip !Teate

L X T, ot a c k , au to., loca l own er , A 1 co nd

Pomeroy

League
October 9, 1979

Standlligs

Team

3&lt;
2•

No . 1

18

l~j '~~ ~~ l'illiJ :I t]~!,l~[li','~

1976 CHEV. SUBURBAN .................. 14495
D u al a i r c ond , am tm o uil f i n C B , P S . P 8 . til t w hee l . cru!.E' c on
trot Sharp

1
1975 BUICK LESABRE. .................. 1895
P S.P B
1975 FORD GRAN TORIN0 ............... _1l695
4 D r . air . a uto,

:.. Or ., ai r , auTo., P S. P B

1974 CHEVY MALIBU 2 DR .•••••••••••• , 11255
V ·8, AT , P S, P B
1974 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX ............. 11695
SJ Senes , l oaded

1

1974 CHEV. IMPALA CUSTOM ............ 1295
2 Or.
1974 FORD TORINO ......................11095
'l Ur ., a ir . a u t o ., P .S

1973 DtEV. MONT£ CARLO ................ '1695
'] Dr ., la nd a u . V 8. aut o , P S . P B . ai r , h a lf v in y l roof

1973 PONTIAC GRAND AM ••••••••••••••• '895
V -8, AT , PS , PB , Air

1

1973 CHEVY NOVA 6 CYL ............... , 395

38

Y&lt;S ierday's Cryploquol&lt; : A FR EE PRESS IS NOT ·~
PRIVILEGE BUT AI' ORGANIC NE CESS ITY 1N A G REAT

Mixed League
ocr. !&lt;, 1979

Cobra Pa &lt;k ., a1r , ster eo, pow er tu ck gr p ., r e•r wi ndow Clef roster . lots more

Standings

MUSTANG 3 DR SEDAN
MUSTANG PACE CAR LOADED
Spl1f bench
m,,.ror
s, to ts more
LTD 2 DR.

~
Team
Pts .
Sara h G •bb s. Depu ty R e gi st ra r
A6
Wat d n 1g Truc k i ng Co .
36
P ic k ens Hardware
3A
J a c k 's Dai r y Bar
28
3 i n 0ne
24
Royal Cr own
2..(
H •gh series
John T';"ree .,.91 .
Helen Phelps 518 , Bitt Carsw£'11 -489,
Margaret Wyatt 495 .
H i gh game
Joe van Meter 1111,
Helen Phelps 102 ; Bi l l Willford lind
John Tyree 183, Lena Howard 192 .
Team se r ies
Sarah G i bbs ,
Deput y Regi 'S trar 20l.t .
T eam gam e
Sarah Gibbs, Dep
Registrar 723 .

GRANADA 2 DR
FlOO 133" WB STYLESIDE

Early Wedn•sdav
Mi•ed Le.-gue
Oct . 10, lt79
Standings
Team

Long Shors

«

Headquarters

19

18
Smith ·Nelson Motors
2fl
Tony ' s carry Out
11
Swisher Lohse Drugs
18
High series
John Tyree 554 ,
Delores Tyree -461. Bob Couc h 515 ,

remote conlrat

1

6 c::vl.. • 1 "'""'roof, delu)(e seets , .auto t r 11ns ., P . steeru'IQi, P . butu~s . ••r c::ond .,

stereo . cast alum . wh eeh , 1oh mo re .
Gh•e Model. ~ cyt, 1·, v.nyt root . •uto . tran s. w - :~o · w radi•h . P . stee ri ng, P
brakes . reu window detroster . a.r cond .. dual sport m•rrors, tots mon

•
)07 V-8, P . steenn; , R . slep bumper.

F150 133" WB STYLESIDE

101 v -1. V·l , delu•e tutone , tcni"H vinyl sut , gauves , sl •dint r . window , aula .
lrans .. P . stetor1ng . sport wheel. briet'lt wnt~n m irron , slereo, c•b tights , ctttr
liihter , styled steel wneets, RWL !ir-es

BRONCO 4X4
chrome bumpen ,
F250 155" WB STYLESIDE 4X4 Super ceb , H.O ., loh of options .
fl50 117" WB STYLESIDE 4X4 Loodedw-optlon•.
ci~r li9~ter

ElOO 138" WB CARGO VAN

Tea m g ame · HeadquartN s 71 3 .

2

1974 FORD WINDOW VAN .... ~::! ::s.~~~. '1895

MORE '79's IN STOCK. All ARE PRICED BELOW INVOICE

12 l'assenge r

6 CyL , sta n d ., LWB , c a b tight s , ra d io . Extra ni ce .

1973 FORD 1/z TON •••••••••••••••••••••• 12295
V B. 4 Sp . , 4x4 .

RIEBEL'S USED CARS
See Roger Riebel
985 -3345 or 667-3463

St. Rt. 7

Tuppers Plains, 0.

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

1 EQUIPMENT co.

I
I

0

omeroy, 0 .

I

I

Ph. 992 -2176 I

I

Hours : 1-5 Mon. -Fri.

t

1-USet.

Closod Sund•y

1 mile north

I International

1 Hor•ostor

Now ldoa I
o;qulpmtttt

l

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

~ ~a c

Yl' ~ tt'rday ' s

or

Z3 B{·es
!.5 Sub Ju ~ atc
!6 l'h 1ld 's
vehicle
Z8 Na d

H e tt ~

·~ ~ f Sf

Vole
tnto offt n •
9 Fl ower p.art
tl

- hatter

18 Henungwa y
l9 Son of Jacob
21 D ant el 's
arena
ZZ Watch ove r

10 Approached

jXJI Is h

16 Boredom
2()

AruiY"t" r

31
:t2
:t1
36

Hesped

CognWt.nt
1-"a d al
reature
39 '" Sa id

30 Kmd of e~u

Habit !late

Hread end

PAT HILL FORD, INC.
FOR ~ FRIE"OLY DEAL SEE ROCKY HUPP. DARREL DODORIL, OR
9'l2-2196

1,'

I {)() M,dn1 Q1"1 1 5pe co dl
h k e B o;o.
8
M cv •e
M ,l c nbr e
10 Ne ws 17
0 ', M c &lt;H2
D~
Gol df oo l &amp; I ~('
c, ,r l B omb&lt;;
! ' J S N i' V• ~ ol

THAT WASN': VER\
GOO() SIR

~

N e w '&gt; )

Mcvi P Cdf r'j O n Doc to r
) ) ) lrtr Trek ' 7

~

SA TUR OA Y OCTOSE R 10 . 1979
rtl L arge 17 6 00
on Tr a n\ 1l 10n 1 C
HurP ct n D , men~·on 17
!0 ) rtl ur cJ a y Re p or t
TV
C l d ':&gt;&lt;:.rOOm 8 U S Fa r m Re por'
0 t&lt; Pnl uc ky Al1el d I) It 'io Vour
(3 u&lt;,, n(' &lt;,&lt;, ll
00 A1q Alue Mdfble 3 P ork y P og
&amp; F• •end&lt;,8 l i S You r B u ~ ln f'~ ~
10 An ,m al ~ Antm a ls A rnrnal \
1 J T n ree Slooges L ittle R a ~ f a l~
&lt;,~
-N•1• ld
)oco &lt;&gt;l &gt; c~

nver

31 Famous

r,

ferryman

l4 Our .s un

ml\f'

1}f}ij1Nf
~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
~ ~ ~~ ..,
oy Henr 1\rnold !lndBot Lee

he r ome
16 lnkslatn
17 - voce
poco fa

unsc 1amtJ !e these 1 o~;r J~;mt&gt; les
one letter to each SQu are to fo•"'

lour orcJ,nal)

Ul Arab1an
r ealm

t~rol d '

Yes. .,.e r11S ir 10Ui f!
&lt;&gt;v e· vwher»

RUCOS

tO Spa m.sh

number
43 l nfenor
1n rank

II

(J

·-··--

.... h - .. ·- . .

"

'T

• •

Is

WHAT

one l tllt•r s•nrply 51ii1Hl s f,. r an nthl'r I n 1h u samp le A i1
f ur 1ht' thrt• e L &lt;; X f u r 1 1 1 ~ · I'"' " ! J , • t c 'l llll&gt;( l t· l eu er s
apollropht's . tht• l tnfl" l h an(! ftm n,o1l un ol lh t· '&gt;' u r&lt;ls ar t all
l'un ts E1ctl d a ~ 1h1· rrH if' lf·ll t'l' a1l' dllft·H·nt

IYC::OON \\'AS.
No.,.. arr ange the ClfCieo •ener!&gt; ll
form !he surpr1 se answe· a' sug
ge ' ted t&gt;y lhe aoolfe cllnoon

I'R YI'TIJQI IOT ES

AB CBDEFE GH

FI C GE GDG

-.-~ E

DO..,G'"' "-~- ­

u~d

m Hill. GE" . MGR.

'

E I'
Answer here

A

"r I 1 I )-r I I 1 1 1"
i .\ f"1!W9 f ~ I (J1'1(H'fl ""

JKLIM NO E C P

Q

I MJ

KAAIJD G
A n ~ "" "'

QIM

B E H

-

S BT K

\Ntr ;al lt1P I)J \' .,. ., • '' ' &lt;~&lt;11fl6d ' ' ''
n ,~

N

I

1' .

1ee1 was.- NO T ON HER S

AI JPID DK C
Ju m tt~e S ~X~t~; No l ) ,cQfltl lnlf19 110puute1, 11 " ' liable lor 11 7!l~ II P 1 1d
!r om Jumble cJo l hll rte-papet .lo• 34. Norwood. N.J OJMII ·• -:..u&lt;ll 't'GU!

PK1J P K

G B CD BQB CB

n e ml eEkltiU . liP c ode 1nd M l ~ l c h lol: kl

ply lbll

IC NI""' 'II I PitOOO U

-~--~----·---

--

,

- --

( it Spe c
cl'Tl dy I}

) 15

Parlrl d()fl

Fre d &amp; Barne v 3. I ~ P las hc
B •tQ&lt;,. B un n.,. Roctd
M ,l n r, lJ
Runn er 8 10 M a v er J( Io 1 !
0 00 5upN (, l obet r otter~ ] 1)
M ov•e
M dn of a Th ov!&gt;dnd
f ME'S . 17
10 )0 New Sl"lmoo 3. 1') P opeye 8
M ov!f• Tr acke n " 10
11 00 F l a&lt;&gt; l"1 Gor don J. l 5. Sp1der
Wom r1n 13 T hi ~ •s the N FL 6
11 30 Godrill a 3 . 1~ . G +g g lesn or t
Hol el 6 F ,.,, A lber t 8 A cl •on
NP W!i l or l&lt;ld!i. 13
11 00 Jonny Que st 3. 15 Weekend
) pt:&gt; udl 6. 13. Jason ol Star
Co m mand 1:1
' 1 10 Jehon!i l l s Co ll ege Foot
nail b. I J Tar; an Su p ~ r 7 B
H o qM1 s H er oes
10
M ov 1e
t s l ~ rH'il o ! TI:' rra r' 17 . Croc kett ' s
V•c tor y GM den ]]
11 J~ Co llege Foot ball 6,1 )
1 00 H dybu rn e r ~ J . In The K now
10 PTL Club 1S. w, .. t Vir gini a
Ou• door ~ ))
10 : '"''" 1\ the NF L 3 JO M •nu l es

'&lt; 00

.

it :

I.ON(;Ft:I.I.OW

~

'

"&lt;)

fl 00 Da ll y Du ck 3 I~ Su perlr 1e nd ~
to I J
M•qt,•y M ous e Hec k le &amp;
Jf ·( ~ le 8 10 Ul t r a M an .'

e w

-,
....... ..

I
~· ork

I ..

b l~~ :~,,

k

I&gt;AILY ( ' RYI'TO&lt;IL IOTE - ll &lt;r&lt;'&lt; hnw to
A X V D I. R A A X R

L •ll le Rrt v. a l~ 3. M.t tt er ~ ot
._ de 6 Not l or Wo m en Onl y 10
Sc ooby &amp; Scr ~PD"~ Doo 13

' 10

i\ ~'(I; --.
• ' ·~I

\

[J I

compose r

U Place aDolle f.;;:-1- + tz Italian

· Q I MJ

t HI b

J

J '&gt;'&gt;

!9 S.A Indian

R SK C

I}

10

fii}" Sdf

24 Club fee
Z7 E n ~ I IS h

OPEN EVENINGS TIL f»&gt;O ~OPEN TIL 5:00 THURSDAY &amp; SATURDAY

1973 FORD······························ '1695

[ GOT TU:O Rl6tH
OUT OF TUJE ,\i ~ '

sell1.sh sl

J.:Ot a secret 6 N1 tflb lc

lS Ivanhoe
Ranger LHUI1 w -tors ol options .
HI V-1, Ol• . tufone . c::aptains ctlain . auto t r ens .. trection to&lt;:ll RR aJ.It , S· IOt lJ
RWL tires . Bru~tnt western m•rron , 11r cond ., reer se•r. S1er.o , tlntecl g11u ,

Helen Phelps -456 .
High game
Don Beegl e and
Ri c hard Russett 199, Delores Tyree

DID 'IOU DO
Or-&lt; THE TE 5-;" SIR.,

B1ble abbr

17 Mad

302 v -t , sliding rear window , •uto. trans ., P . stHring . weuern bngnr mirrors,
r•d•o . conv liJn» .. 0 1• . whee l co..,. en, R. step bumper , w-s -w tires .

fl50 133" WB STYLESIDE

Zlo e· s Spocl Sh op

s ler~ .

~OuJ

5 Was

14 Tune m o ffi L'l'
w ·w nd•als , e1r c ond .,

Surnmr&gt;rJ e&lt;; t 7Q JJ
E ,~ c h • e d 3 IS
Dal l as B
N o n~ l on Chu r chil l 17
N I" W ~ 1C
10 10 Uo Cl ose 'No1h 17 L oc i&lt; ) t ee ~
/1, Anr rPI ?0
II 00 Nr·.,.,. s l b 8 10 lJ 15 La~ t 01
11w 'l"w'd d I 7 D1 ck Cavel l ?0
M nn't Py 11"1on., F ly ,ng (•r eus J J
•• JO J ohnn v
C an o n
1 1~
(l, dr lo f' ~ .C nqe l &lt;, 0
M ov t•
Someone a• the To p ot lhe
':. 'il ' ' ~
8 M ov •e · F r an kpns.lf'ln
(oi"'Quer 5 lhe Wor ld ' 10 . M ov•e
G..thl f' &amp; 1 om bdrd 13 M o v •e
I Wd s ,\ T !!-en a g e W er e w o ll"
!0

~e &lt;t l

V• e..vpo1nl 8 M ov •e " B lue
10
M a~t e r pi ec e
T h ee~ t r e 33
JO M ov, e
The Pr oud g, ltw
Dnmned ' 8 M ov •e Anq e l &amp; the
Bad m&lt;tn 1 r
J 00 M ov•e M ,, n on the M o11e 3
.,•.u e ., ll •ng 15 IJ p \t~ lf'&gt; Down
' 1,)1 f ') ]J
.1 00 Col leg e F uutbe~ il o 1J
Na $h
.,.d ie On l he J;l oad 10 W t"leM the
Boa t Comes In 33
J JO 5 po rt~
Specl acul ar a
Pop
Gee -, lh e Country 10 M o v• e X
I he Un known
Ir
'&gt; 00 Free To Be Me ) D olly 10
Copmg w !l h K i d !i-10 Cct lch 33 J3
JO F &lt;.'e lmgs 33 P or lf' r W etgoner
1(&gt;
Be' ler Wa v IS Crocke tt ' s
V•c tor y Gardt&gt;M 10
~S College Scoreboard 17
0 00
N ew!&gt; J . 10. Concer n 8 G od hi'~
ll"'e A n-, wer IS Wr e"J I I• ng II
Up"J 1a1 r s Oowns t;w s 10
o 30 N BC New ~ 3 15 M uppe• Show
C BS Nf"' w~ 10 Know You r
')( hoots Jl
1 00 D c1n&lt;.e Ft'v e•
Law r ence
Wel l&lt; I S Hee Haw 0 8 . Once
U D&lt;Jn A ( la nK D B ug s. B unn y
10 \ 1 91! Beauty Shaw 13 . All
(r ealu r e ~ Gre a t &amp; Sm all 2()
)0 An I n~ 1 de LOO ~ )
I( tCkS 10
S 100 000 N ame Tha t T une 13,
Wor ld Will II G I DiMy )]
8 00 ( hi p S ) . I S Roper s. ~ . 1 3 .
C t• leb r ll v Chall enge o f t h e Se ...es
~ 10
Thom a s. A
E d ison
Rrol lecl •ons. of a Gen i us 17
Ma slerp• Pce Theat r e 10 Eur ope
th€ M 1q hly Con t inent JJ
II 10 D e tPc t ve )c hool b . 1J
Tha t
Nits h v , ll e Mus• c 17
4 00
f1J 6 •he Bear 3. 1S, Lov e Boat
6 IJ
NBA B ask etball 11 .
Shakespeare Pl ays 20 , M ovie
Three S•s ten " 33
10 00 Man Call ed Sloa ne 3,15 ;
F .:.ntao;y lsl ond 6. 13 Pari"' 8. 10
I I 00 New s J.6.8.10,1J, I S; 11 IsA BC New~ 0
11 )0- Satur day N•ght li v e ) , IS;
M ov• e " Dart •ng " 6. M o v i e
C la ~n
t&gt;y N1ghl " 8.
Ea rle
B r uce
Fo ol ball 10 . C olleg e
Foo t b al l 13 . Don Ki r s hner 's
Roc k Concer t 17
1 OO. - Mo11ie "lord J im " J ; Juke
H ~ w a11

Bo:.~

17

1 JO

A

the l• ne!. 17
JO. Ch r 1s.lopher Closeup ] . B ell~ .
Way 8. Tre-ehOuse Club 10. Ki d s
Are P eop le Too 13
l 00- Th1s t s The L• te J . Jerr y
Fal we ll 8, Urban L eague 10 ;
J rnmy Sw ~g ga rt 17
1 JO- TV Chape l 3. Edd ie Saunders
6. Jerry Fal w ~t l LO : The Bible
Answer!. 13 J 1mmy Sw aggar l
13 (hnst tor the World 17
a 00 Mormon Choi r J . Day ot
D • ~ c over'y B. Gr ace C ~thedra l 6 .
(hr •st tor the Wor ld 13. Th ree
Stooges&amp; F r iends 17. Sesame St
10.B
B JG -Or at Robert s 3. Rev Leonard
Reposs 8 . Contac t 6 . J &lt;Jme'5
Rob1wn 10; O pen Bibl e 15:
Lower L• gh thouse 13
9 OO- Go'5pet Si ngi ng Jubi lee J: Oral
Robert s 10 . Chri~t ia n Center a.
E rne!&gt;f Angl ey IS . Rev Jim
Fr ank l in 13 . Los t in Space 17.
M 1~ t e r Rogen 20.33
9 JG - Robe r l Sc huller e: Elec Co
33. It Is W ri tten 10 . Gospel
Ou treach 13, Sesame St 20 .
10 00- - Human 0 '1men sl on J, K i ds
&lt;ue Peo p le T oo 6 , M ovie
" Hatar i " 10. J immy Swaggart
13. Gospe l Singing Jubi lee 15.
Hazel 17 . St udio See 33
10 30- Re)l; H u mbard J ; Ern est
Angley 11 . Zoom 20. Movi e " The
Soli d Gold Ca dill ac ·· 17 , B ig Blue
Marbl e 33
I I 00 - R e)(. H um bard IS . Re Y
Hffiry Mahan 13: E tee Co . 20 :
Feelings 33
11 30-At I ssue 3; F .Jce t he Nation 8 ;
Rev R. A Wes t 13: Over Ea sy
20, Wild, Wild World ol Animals
6

B 10 O ld Housework s JJ
00 Vo yage to the Bot tom o f the

F RIDAY OCTOSE A 19, 197'i
' 0 00

:1 Jot
4 Bool&lt; of the

sw« theart
13

F150 133" WB STYLESIDE
Pts .

9Pa rt of a
sea plan t·
I I (iuy 's

12 OvN ea t

~ ~ ah w -r~ cl men ,

GRANADA 2 DR

6 Frwt dn nk

Television Viewing
\i

I&gt;OWN
I Merhcet l ht' rb
2 1-:lch

ACROSS
I Ca bana s1te

1979 LEFTOVERS. THEY MUST GOlll

Early Sunday

SOCIETY - WALT E R ll PP&gt;,tANN

bv THOMA~ JO~EPH

OM • WEW CAA.S

192 ; John Tyree 193. Helen Phe lps
189 .
T eam series Headquar t er s 1953.

J Sp, hatchback , little r ough

TRUCKS

4()

Conric h Coat
I&lt;
High ind •vi dual gam e
Anne tte
Phalin 200 : Pat Carson 183 ; Debi
Hawlev 177
High series Pat Cano n 511 ; Debi
Hawley .683 ; Ann ette Ph a lin .480.
Team high game
F r iendly
Tave rn .t7J .
T eam high serie ~
Friendly
T ave rn 1358 .

Were Jammed Uo With Cars!

I

Pis.

R oy al Crown Cola
F r iendly Tavern
M E.'i gs Inn
Reuter Brogan I ns

N BA Basketball 17 ; 2 :00ABC N ews 13
oo- Ne ws 3. J Jo-MoYie " Castle
on 111e Hu dson" J
00 - Movi e " The N ight Rider s" 17.
s JO- Voya ge to the Bottom of
the Sea J

19"

SUNOA Y , OCTOBER li ,
s »-AG U SA 17 ; 6 :QO-A m P. rlcan
Pro bl ems &amp; C h&lt;tlleng es 10:
Ach on N ew~ma ker 13; B e t w ~n

33
11 00- Meellhe Pre:n 3, I S: Issues &amp;
Answers 6. 13: Oh io Journal 10;
Mov•e " H om e on the Range " JJ
12 30-Sonny R&lt;tndle · Football 3;
Oh io
Un i versit~ . Football
Hi ghl ight s 6 . ttF'""L Today 8 :
Eva ngelis ti c Out r each 13 : Movie
" From the Terrace" 11 : All
Creat ure s Greal &amp; S mall 20.
00- NFL Football 3,15 : Amer ica's
Black For um 6; NF L Football 8:
Foce the Nation 10; Frank
Cl gnetti : Football 13; Movie
"' Three Si ster s" 33.
. 30-Cotlege Football '79 6, 13; The
Issue 10: Here to Make Music 20;
1 55-NFL F urmles 10.
2·00-Communlque6; NFL Football
10; Mario &amp; the Magic Movie
Mt~c htne 13.
2 30-Movle " The Last Child" 6;
Battle of the Planets 13; Hocking
Valley Bfuegrass 20.
3 00- Trl State : Today &amp; Tomorrow
13; Poldark 20; ~aul Robeson JJ .
3:30-Movle " The SIP"cier Thread "
13 ; M ov i e " Man ' s Favorite
Sport?" 17.
4 :QO-NF l
Football 3,1!1; Movie
" Thief of Baghdad '' 6; One to
One 8; Consumer Svrvlvat Kit 20.
.t ·30-Watt Street Week 20.

�'/ul• ·tl•1 11 Ul

1.'1

II ir11m

12- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 , Fnday , Oct. 19, 1979

Dallas county o'f ficials want .body exhumed
DALLAS ( AP 1 - Enough doubt
has been cast on the identity of the
body buried in assassm Lee Harvey
Oswald 's grave that the remams
should be dug up to see if P~s1dent
John F . Kennedy was killed by an
impostor , say Dalla s County
medical offtcials
The Dallas Cow1ty offic1al s pomt
to discrepancies found by I heir own
check of records and UJ others
alleged by a Bnt1sh auU10r wh o says
Oswald
may
have
been
unper!!llnated by a S&lt;JVJet agent.

Rut officials m adjaeent Tarrant
C'ow1ty . where Oswald's grave IS
loc ated 1n Rose Hill Cemetery , have
re"sted the proposed exh uma tion .
They say the)· Will do "" only 1f
orderl'&lt;l by a court.
Os wald , nanwd as Kennedy 's lone
a ss assm
by
the
Warr en
CommJ ssiun. was shot to death whlle
m police custody two days after

Comm iss ion
was
wrong
tn
concl udmg that Oswald acted a lone
but saJd 11 had no solid evidence . '
'l'tle assassination spawned many
th eo ries , including so m e that
Oswald was part of a conspiracy,
that CUban Prestdent Fidel Cast ro
or orga nized crime played a role in
the murder or that Oswald himself

Kennedy's assassinatiOn m 1963.

··somebody has ra1sed the
quest ion a s to who is m that grave
The ea'iiest way to find out is to ... rW1
some tests," Dallas County Medical

was a

Ear her

Uws year. Ole House
A s sassmation~ Co mnuttee sa id
there was a posstbthly the Warren

n

Sovi~t

agent.

vc prOd UCzng

Carter feels O_r L
as much oil as possible.
l

President Carter says he llunks
the members of the OrganizatiOn of
Petroleum Exporting Countri es are
producing as much ml "' they can .
He also told delegates tu a national
energy conservation confer enee in
Washington on Thursday that ,
"There ill no way to reduce pri ces . "
Carter's tone was milder than it
has been several times in the past
when he has criticized OPEC sharply
Carter praised S..uw Arabia ,
saying the country .. " producmg
more oil than th ey want. ·· But he
was still critical of [jbya . "They arc
eager to cut back for pol11lcal pur-

HARDY MUMS
61!2'' POT
11.()() each or

6/1500

Large selection of House
Plants
and
Hanging
Baskets .

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE
Syracuse , Ohio

992 -5776

poses, harassment or even blackmali," he said .
Libya , Kuwa1t, Iran and

Venezuela ha ve tncreased the pri ces
of some or all of their oil m the past
two weeks and mdustry sources say
Iraq will boost its prices by about 10
percent on Saturday .
OPEC had set a ceiUng price of
$23 .50 a barrel on oil prices at its last
meeting . Ubya , however, broke the
cei ling , raising its price to about $26
a barrel.
The next OPEC meeting is in
December and analysts say that if
enough of the organization's mem bers increa se prices before the
meeting, the increases probably will
be a pplied to the whole cartel.
Saudt Arabia 's oil minister , Shetk
Ahmed Zakl Yamani, said Thursday
thaI the key to prices could lie with
Iran . Discussing the OPEC meeting
in Venezuela on Dec . 'tl, Yamani
said that if production in Iran is
maintained at current levels , " I
thmk the increase, if any , won't be
what we're afraid of. "
If Irarua n production is c ut,
Yamani said, the United States
should ration gaso line .

r~------------------------ -- - - - - ,

:

N.

f

l

w. COMPTON. O.D.

I

OPTOMETRIST

:

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

1

I

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

POMEROY NATIONAL BANK
in tht· stalt: of Ohio , at thl' dose of business on September 29, 1979 published to
resJl&lt;m.e to cal l mado· by Comptroller of the Currency, under dUe 12, Uolted
Stales Code, Section 161 .
National Bank Region Number t

Cash and due from depository institutions, . •. .. , , . ... , •.. , , , • , . $2,137,000.00
U.S. Tre as ury securities ......... .... .... , , .. , ....... , ..... 6,402.000 .00
Obl!galtons of States and polillcal
subdivi s ions in t he United States, ......................... , .. 2,335,000 00
All other securities_ . . . ..... . .. .... ... _... , , ,, .. .. .... , , . , .. 5e,OOO.OO
Federal funds sold and secunties purchased
under agreements to resell . -- .- . ... .... - ..... .. .. , .......... 5,475,000.00
Loans , Total~excludmg unearned income),,., .. , 13,742,000.00
Less : Allowance for possible loan losses .... , ....... 91.000 .00
Loans , Net ........... ,. . , . , .,. ..... , , ......... .. , ...... 13,651,000.00
Bank prem1ses . fum1tu re and ftxtures, and
other assets representmg bank premtses . . .. ,., .. , .. ,, ......... 'lSJI ,000.00
All other assets .........• , ....•••..••.••.•••••••.••..•.••••••• ?1)1 000 QQ
TOTAl. ASSETS .. _.... . .. . .......... -.- ................... $30 1614 0000.00

lit

---........
Ill

-

....

....&gt;- ........c

-0 ... c
::::»

A.

u

Demand deposits of mdividuals, partnerships, and corps .... . -- . .. 5,632,000.00
Time and savings deposits of indiVIduals ,
partnerships, and corporations . .. .... ... ..... - .. ... .... . .•. 18,512,000.00
Deposits of Uruted Swtes Government. ..... , ,,., .. ........ ,., .... 8,000.00
Deposits of States and political subdivisiOns
i• the United States· · .. · · · .. · · · · .. · .. · .... · · • · .. • ...... , . , 3,009,000.00
Certified and off1cers' c hecks ........ . . , .... .... ...•• , .... ,,,,, 215,000.00
Total Deposits .. · .. ·····" .. ······· .... , ................... '!7,576,000.00
Total demand depoSits ... . . . ........ ,._ ..... , .. 6,666 ,000 .00
Total time and savmgs deposit.-.- .... .. , ........ 20,910,000 .00
All other liabiUties ....... . ...... . ............ , • . ,,.,. , .. ,, .... 189,000.00
TOTAl , IJABIIJTIES \excl uding s ubordinated notes
debentures\..,, ...... , .. , ........... , ...... , ... , ...... ,. f27J65 1000.00
rA&gt;rrunon stock :
a . No . shares authorized
12,000
b. No. shares outstanding 12,000
1par va lue I,,., •. •. ,., ,., ... S300,000.00
Surplus ............ - . . ... .. ........ .... . . ........... , . .... 1,500,000.00
Unwvided profits and reserve for contingencies
and other capital res&lt;lrves .. · · ·- · · .. · · · · · · · · .. . . . ... , . . - .... 1.049,000.00
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL
$2 8491000.00
TOTALIJABILITIES AND EQUITY CAPIT AI., ••.• , .••.•• .• AAt,OOO.OO
Amounts outstanding as of report dale :
Time certificates of deposit in denommatins of $100,000
or more .•.• · • · • · · • · • • · · · · · • · • · · · · · • · · · • . • • . • . . • . . . . . • . . • $1 ,fJ71 ,()(K).OO
Average for 30calendar days (or ca lendar month ) ending with report date :
Total deposits ................................ , ... ,. ,, ..• , $27,120,000.00

I, Joan Wolfe, Assistant Cashier, of the above-named bank do hereby
declare that this Report of Conditionis true and correct to the best of my
knowledge and belief.
Joon Wolfe
Oct. 11, 1979
We, the undersigned directors attest the correctness of this statement aC rl!$lurces and liabilities. We declare that it has been examined by us, and to the best of
ourknowledge and belief is true and correct .
Edison Hobstetter
Horace Karr - Directors
Philip W. Kelly

'

~~~~d~e~~:!~

and is hur ler! tn

Eddowes says he has ev idence
indicatin g that I A't' HEt rwy Osw11lrl .

• •

Saudi oil is the cheapest in OPEC
and Yamani said- his country is under pressure to raise prices. He
repeated calls for consuming
nations to cut back their use of
petroleum .
In other energy developments :
- Republicans on the Senate
Finance Com.'llittee tried to tie a
Social Security tax freeze to
President Carter's proposed "wind·
fall-profits" tax on the oil industry .
The administration opposes any acl!on now to cut taxes , but Carter
could be forced to accept the freeze
as the price for getting the windfall
tax .
- The Senate approved a $1.2
billion emergency fuel assistance
program , tying it to an Interior
Department appropriation bill. The
House-passed version of the Intenor
bill does not include such a
provision . Sen Jacob Javits, HN Y., the sponsor of the fuel
provision , said: "The important
thing is to get the dough out before
people freeze to death ."
- Rising oil prices have meant
nstng fuel bills for airlmes which
are laying off employees and
boosting far ... Thomas G . Plaskett,
a senior vice president of American
Airlines, said that by the end of this
year, fares will be at least 't7 percent
higher than they were a year earlier.
Wall Street analysts also said the
airlmes were preparing for the
recession which is e,MJeCted to cut
travel.

Consolidating domestic subsidiaries of Ute

Charter number 1980

e

E:x.ammer Ll1a rles S . Pt&gt;tty saJd
Thursday .
" We said to Tarrant Coun ty, if you
exh wne him we 'll te~t him . We h£tvc
more capabilit y along that line than
they do, " Petty sa1d. " If there 's a
question and a reaso nable quest1on
that sc1enee can resolve. then that's
our business ."
Petty's offi ce was approached tn
August by an attorney representing
Br1t1sh author Michael Eddowes.
whose book " The Oswald File"
sugges ts a Sov1et agent to ok
Oswald 's place wh1le Oswald was in
Russ1a. came Ul the Umted States,

who defected Ul the Soviet Umon m
1959, was not the man who returned
to the Ulllted States in 1962 with a
Sov iet wife and represented htmself
as Oswald .
Oswa ld's wtft&gt; , Marina , who has
s mce
r~marrie d ,
could not
1mmediate ly be rt:ache d for
c:omment .
F.ddowes satd the 1963 autopsy
records fail to reco rd a scar lwhind
the body's le ft ear from a
ma~toidectomy Oswald underwent .
He cords also mdicat e Oswald's
dental x.,ays were not compared
wiU1 the corpse's t..,u, , he adds .
Petty's offi ce decided Ul compare
1ts auUl psy records with records
from Os wald 's Ma rine Co rps

I ."iC 1:L .\ . /Jam•' 1:$

1/allilnlil '17

f,.,,.

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted -- Jerry
Stobart,
Pomeroy: Unda Dye , Lancaster:
Barbara Harris , Chester : Flnyd
Williams , Langsvi lle: Delord
Donohue, P omeroy: Martin l{oush,
Kutland.
Discharged --S haron
Bailey.
l{oberta Dimll, !;Jances Howery,
Mary Gilkey, Randy Arms , Diana
Herdman. Jerry Stobart, Edna
Wayland .

REVIVAL SPEAKER
The associate of the Rev . Lew1s,
Chuck McPherson, will be the guest
speaker this evening and Sunda}
e vening at a revial being held at The
Salval!on Army , 115 Butt&lt;&gt;rnut Ave .
Pcrneroy, at 7:15p .m .
Saturday an Open Air will be held
at the lower parking lot at 6:30 p .m.
followed by the regular service at
the Salvation hall . The Hev . Larry
Lewis will will deliver the mesS&lt;J ge
Saturday everring and Sunday morning at 10 a.m. The public is mvited
to attend .

following and extended illness
Mr . Baker was bom at Reedsville
the son of the late Linley and Addie
H.andolph Raker . He was also
preceded 1n dea th by his wife, one
son, t hree daughters , three brothers,
and two sisters.
Mr . Baker was a carpenter by
trade in the Columbus and Reeds ville area the greater part of his
life .
Survivor~ include one brother,
Michael B. Baker , Coolville one
sL,ter , Mrs . Alwilda Wilson, Point
Arena, Ca lif , and several meces and
nephews.
Funera l serv1ces will be held
S..turday at 2 p .m. at the White
Funeral Home m Coolville, With the
l{ev . Eldon Bla ke officiating . Burial
will be m the Wetherby Cemetery
near Coolville. Friends may call at
the funeral home anytime .

unba
VOL. 13

NO. 38

lll(/iun11 .'JO N-we.~tern 0

+

SUNDAY . OCfOBER 21. 1979

FRI., SAT ., SUN .

•

Court Hobert J . Hawley, d1vorce
In Meigs County Common Pleas
Court Robert J . Hawley , Pomeroy .
filed suit for divorce against Joyce
E. Hawley , Hawarden. Iowa .

TRICK OR TREAT NIGIIT
The Chester Fire Department has
set Tuesday , Oct. 30, for trick or
treat night in the Chester Community . The event will begin at 6 and
end at 7 with the siren to blow
marking the beginning and end.
GOt:;K:'IE:R WINS
NEW YORK I AP I - Lee Goerner
has been selected as the fourth
wmner of th e Tony Gddw1n
Memona l Award
Goerner 1s an assistant editor at
Alfred A. Knopf . Th e award,
est ab~shed tn 1976, 1s presented
annually "to an outstandmg yo un g
edJtor , in alternate y~ars fnml
I::ngland and the Umted States. and
mcludes a stipend lor travel and
li\1ng e:q&gt;enses.

Economy.

• •

!Continued from page 11
Hoadley, chief economist of the
natioo's largest bank, the Rank of
America, say the real decltne ma y
still be ahead .
Hoadley told a gathenng Thursday that , " If the third quarter IS
positive , we 're not in it (a recession )
and haven't been in it but we have
been doing a lot of worrying about
it. "
But pinpointing" the start of a
recession is an academic nicety .
There is litUe debat&lt;&gt; among
analysts that the nation is in for its
seventh recession since World War

II .
Whether it started in March or in
October, analysts 1n and out of
government say that by the end of
the year business activity l'ill ha ve
slowed dramatically .
The Carter
administrat io n
forecasts tha t nearly I million
Americans wiU lose their jobs by the
end of next year.
Data Resources In c., o f
Lexington, Mass ., the •·natioo 's
largest private forecasting linn,
believes the downturn will take an
even worse employment toll ,
especially in the wake of the Federal
Heserve Board 's action Oct. 6 to
sharply tighten credit.
Robert Gough, director of the
firm's forecasting operation, said
Data Resources is predictiflE an
unemployment peak of 7.8 percent
late next year. That's 2 percentage
points - or 2 million people higher than .he current 5.8 percent
· unemployment rate .

•

ln

POMEKOY-A strike by the Me1gs
I .ocal School Olst nct teachers ended
1ts fourth week Fn da y with no sdtlem ent tn sight.
NegotiatiOns were simp ly nonexistent during the week desp1te the
fact that schools were officiall y
closed for the first tinw on Tuesday
morrung .
Parents, teachers and the boa rd
indicated that they felt the closmg of
schools would expedite a settlement.
However, it has not worked out that
way .
There ha ve been no
negotiations during the entire week .
Apparently , the board of
educallon has turned down an offer

Bruce Lee•
spirit lives in ...

Circle
cf Iron
«~[RI I,

from f\ep . Hon James to come into
the d~;tnc t and do what he can to
resolve the differences between the
teachers and the board.
The
tea chers association indicated it
would accept help from Rep . James .
The d1stnct's board of education
has had speCial meetings set for
every mght during the past week but
met only on Monday night, the
regular meeting night, when a
diScussion of the strike situatioo was
held with some !50 parents and
teachers. The board is scheduled to
meet again at 5 p.m. Sunday.
Meantime , Friday afternoon
Continued on Page A-2

t.._....

Avco

. COLO\' · '
•

,

•

,.t,

fJ, •.

f

•

ONE WEEK
Friday -Thursday
Oct . 19 -25

ROSCOE SATfERFIELD
Fuueral services for Roscoe Satterfield, 86, Maple St., Middl eport ,
who died Wednesday night at his
home will be held at 2 p.m. Saturday
at the Haw li ngs-Olats Fw1eral
Home With the l{ev . Ed Fryman orft c Jatmg . l:lur&gt;al will be in Gravel
Hill Cemetery at Cheshire. Friends
m ay caU at the fw1eral home from 2
t o 4 a nd from 7 to 9 p .m. today .

oom Oeloise
Jerry Reed
Susan Pleshett in

SEVERAL hundred persons were on hand lor Friday's three-hour
celebration of the 50th anniversary of Ute completion of the Ohio Hiver

Navigation System . The event was held along the Gallipolis park front.
See page B-1 feature on the event.- Larry Ewing photos.

HOT STUFF

EXTENDED FORECAST
A chance of showers Monday
and Tuesday. Fair Wednesday.
Cooling Utrougb the period . Lows
Monday in Ute mid 50s to low tills .
Highs Monday near 80. Lowo
Tuesday and Wedneoday S5 to ts
and hlghli in the 51111 by Wed·
nesday.

PG

GRANTED DIVORCE

In Meigs County Common Pleas

PRICE 35 CENTS

sight,
strike continues

.'

OCT . 19-20 -21

MIDDLEPORT -POMER OY

,.,.- No end

I .N

'

tntint

tnttS

GALLIPOLIS- POINT PLEASANl

7

Cfl

Purtllw 14 MSU 7
..,j

se r vice, which it obtained from tlle
Navy Reference Department in St.
Louis under a court of mquest order,
accord mg to Assistant Med 1cal
EKamlner Dr . Linda Nor ton .

f'tints by

Carm/1 -;

17

Area Deaths
RAYMOND R. BAKER
Raymond R. Baker , 83, Ht. 1,
Reedsville, died Thursday evening
at St. Joseph Hospital , Parkersburg,

;!() }.

ELBERFELDS WAREHOUSE
CARPET MILL ENDS

Weather

•MOSTlY JUTE BACKS
•BOUND EDGES

Mostly sunny but continu ed breezy
and mild today. High in the upr 7U.
to low 80s . The chance of rain near
zero.

• EXCELLENT QUALITY

9'xl2' ........... s74.00

Meigs planners

12'x12'.- ....... sg4.00

receive grant

12'x15~ .. ..... , 114.00

POMEROY - The Meigs County
'RegiOnal Planning Commission has
received a $10,000 grant - $7,500 in
cash and $2,500 matchmg, in kind ,
from the Farmers Home Admtnistrahon for comprehensive
planning as it relates to economic
development, water supply, waste
disposal and housing .
The commissiOn has signed a contract
with
James Jennings
Associates to be consultant on this
project. The conunission will meet
at 1:45 p .m . Monday with Jennings
to start determination on the exac-t
direction and the work plan. A
regular meellng of the conunission
will start at 3:10p.m .

1

Shop Friday until 8:00 and Saturday
until 5:00 and save on special
weekend sale items throughout the
store.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

e,.,fP CJ'nto Our

~cutKcrs"

'10cuBs

Meigs County Jaycees 2nd Annual
WE'RE OPEN

MON·THURS.

7:30 til 10:00
FRI.·SAT.

7:30 til 11:00
OCT, 19-QCT . 31, 1979

ADMISSION: 11.00 per person
Located In the Old
Pomeroy High School
- GUIDED TOURSCome see: • Dracula
• Wolfman • And More
Refreshment Stand
by Meigs County Jaycettes

GAHS ROYALTY - Gallia Academy High
School's 1979 homecoming queen, Bedt Yoho, center, ts
flanked by Janyellen Wood , left , first runnerup, and

Karen Browning , right, second runmerup , during pregame ceremonies on Memonal Field 1n Galltpol1 s
Fnday night .

Miss Beth Y oho crowned
GAHS homecoming queen
GALUPOLJS - Miss Beth Yoho,
was crowned Gallia Academy High
School's 33rd homecoming queen
during pr"1!ame ceremonies on
Memorial Field before approximately 2,500 Wellston and
Gallipolis fans Friday night .
Miss Yoho, a G AHS senior , is the
daughter of Mr . and Mrs . Allen
Yoho . She was sponsored by the Key
Club.
Greg Harrington, student body
president and one or the Blue Devils
senior co&lt;aptains, crowned Gallia
Academy's lt'19 homecoming queen .
Miss Karen Browning, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs . Howard Browning ,
was second runnerup. She was sponaored by the Future Homemakers of
America .
Miss Jaynellen Wood, daughter of
RU.'!St!ll Wood, was first runnerup .
She was sponsored by the Thespian
Club

Jay Sexton, vice preside nt of the
student body, prese nted the
honorees fl owers.
Parade Downtown
Prior to the homecomin g
festivities on Memorial Field, the
Gallia Academy High School mar ching band , under the direction of
Hod Tolti ver and Brian Oglesbee.
led a parade through downtown
Gallipolis . It was the band 's second
appearance over town Within three
hours - the GAHS musicia n.s also
performed during the L'elebralion of
the 50th anniversary of the completion of the original navigation
sy!lem of the Ohio Hiver during
park front c-eremonies around 4 p.m .
Prior to the GAl-IS-Wellston game,
the 16 queen candidates were
paraded around Memorial Field in
convertibles donated by Willis
Wilcoxen , Ike Wiseman and Thaler
Ford .

Listed 1n the order of their appearance were : Karen Brow n tn~.
Br~nda Dav1 s, Chn sty Dillon and
Joey Wil coxen, driver; Am1 Eplin ~.
Carol ~' elure, J oy Hen derson and
Randy Orr, dnver: Carolyn John ·
son. Ka ren K1s k1s and J eff Beattie.
driver: Lori Meadows. Cynth1a
Hupe and Phil Massie , dnvcr :
Jayne Simpkins , Beth Thoma s and
Kent Price, dri ver : Patty Slayton ,
Teri Wei her and Greg Atk.tns.
driver : J anyellen Wood , Beth Yuho
and Mike Dyer , dnver .
Gallia Academy 's annua l
homecoming dance Saturday n1ght
concludetl weekend activi ties
Bands Sparkle
l!oth Wellston and Gallipolis ban ds prese nted sparkling shows for the
hvmeeoming cruwd in perfect Ill
degrl'c weather .
l11c two ha nds presented their 1979
Continued on Page A-2

I

DEAN Epling , left , representing the local Propeller Club, accepted a
bronze plaque from the Propeller Clubs of the United States during
Friday 's 50th anniversary of the completion of the Ohio River Navigstion
System. Congratulating Epling during the park front ceremony is
Hichard Mackenzie. president of the ctty corruru.ssion.

Inside today.

••

Area deaths .. ...... , ...... , , .. , ........ , ... .. , , , , .. - A-4
Classified ads .... ......... ... .. .. . . , . , ... , .. . . . , .. D-5-11
Farm news .......... ... ...... . . . .. . ... . ..... .. , , . , . , ~
Lifestyle , .. ..... . ... _............................. 8-1-12

Local . . .. ..... ... ...... .... . . ............... . ... . . A-2-8
Sports , , . , , , .. , .. . . . ... ...... , , .. .......... - ....... C·l-8
State and national ...... . . . . .. . .. .......... . .......... D-1
TV gll.ide ....... .... ..... . .........•..•... . .....••••• D-6

Auditor Condee
issues reminder
GAI .LIPOIJS - Gallia County
Auditor Dorothy I.. Condee issued a
reminder here Saturday that farm
owne rs have until Nov. I to rile application for the two and one-half
percent rollback .
Applications are required for
owners with more than 20 acres who
used 1t for a place of permanent
r~sitlence .

If persons cannot pi ck up applications, contact the auditor's office whi ch will mail farmers an applicatiOn .

AGREEMENT REACHED
ST . LOUIS, Mo . ( AP l - Tentative
agreemen t was reached early
S.. turday on a new cootract in the
mo nth -old stnk e against Ozark
Alrlines, officials said .
Gilbert Kannenberg, a former
fl'&lt;lcral mediator and chairman of
the New Spirit of St. Louis Labor
Management Committee, reported a
maratllon bargaining session that
t.oegan FritLy had resulted In the
'·

' a l t ~l'

p;,w l

NORTH GALLJA HOMECOMING QUEEN - Miss Cindy Sillllon,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Sisson, Porter, and a aenior at North
Gallia High School, was crowned 1979 homecoming queen during pregame ceremonies at North Gallia's stadiwn Friday night. Mls8 Silllm
was crowned by Dr. Gary Toothaker, county superintendent II. schooJa,
To make the event a complete success, the Pirates blanked vlsltlni Bin·
nan, W. Va ., 43-41, to remain unbeaten in seven games this fall. -Bruce 1
Gabriel photo.

.,

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