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12-The DallySentlnei,MJddleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Nov . 1,1979

OSP recruitment
effort underway
Today, mark:; the kr c k~ff of
recruibnent efforts for Oluu State
Highway Patrol Troopers.
Lt. E .W. Wigglesworth . rom ·
mander of the Hrghway Patrol 's
Galla-Meigs Hwy . Patrol Post , announced the opening of recruibnent
for Patrol Academy classes to ~
conducted durmg 1900. He as ked al l
young men and women interested in
pursuing a career as a Troope,· to
contact their nearest patrol post for
further information .
" The position of Oluo State llrg hway Patrol Trooper offers applicants the chance of a challengmg
career ." U . Wigglesworth saru .
" Troopers are frequently called
upon to take charge of vanous . often
emergency situation~ . For ttus
reason they are thoroughly trarned
to handle peopl e and srtuati oll'
calm l y ,
efficient l y ,
and
dipl omatrcally " Applicants for th e
position of Trooper must meet the
folloWlllg qualifi cations : 21-35 year;
of age . a rrunimum height of 5'8"
rm easured in stockmg feet 1 with
body weight proportronal to herg ht ;
have a val id driver 's license : mlliit
have graduated from lugh school or
~ able to show satisfactory COIII pletion of the G.E. D or equivalent

Starting s alary for Troopers IS
$14,248 per year wrth maximum
potenlial . through yearly increases ,
of $18,428 annually. Benefits include
paid holida ys . vacation . and sick
leave, a comprehensi ve retirement
and pensron plan : group medical.
surgi cal . dental, vision, and life insurance programs
" The Ohw State Highway Patrol
needs slrll·ere , you~&lt;g people who are
mterested m developing a sotid,
secure future in law enforl·ement,"
Lt . Wigglesworth s a1d . "Men and
women who wrsh to apply for the
position of Trouper are asked to call
their local patrol post U!lmedia tely .
The Ga lha -Me1gs Hwy . Patrol
Post rs located at lhe State Highway
Department garage on U.S No 35
Calli1 . Wigglesworth al446-2433 for
further mfom~ation . The Highway
Patrol IS an equal opport wlily employer . any qualified resident of
Oluo may a pply

Ord rnance ro su p
pl('mf'nl th e Park nnd Poo l
Orrc&gt;f ror s Sa l My tor 1979
Oe rf ordd rnt.&gt;d by the
~ ~ ·r

tt ro •

AVAILABILITY
OF UNCOMPEN SATED
SERVICES

of M.1y

15,

19!9

se r v,ces

dur i n g
the
ti scal
y ea r
wh ic h begins on January 1,
1980 and ends on Decem ber
31 . 1980 Un co mpe nsa ted
se r v ices will be avadablf'
u pon reque st t o e lrg rb le
pe r son s on a fr rst cOm f' lr r
s r se r ve oasr s un t il the an
nual co mplran c '- le v el ot
$48 , 206 00
rs
sat rs lr ed
El rg i b le persons ar e Those
w ho are m need of care an d
w h o se tam rly rncome does
not e x ceed t he c u r rent

CORNING MICROWAVE

TEA KETTLES

BROWNING GRILL

2': , quart, tr igger o p erated spout.
fast heat ing aluminum , fade and
stain resistant exterior . Go ld or
Brown .

FLANNEL SHIRTS
REG. 11.00 ...... ....... SALE 8.79
1

Large selection of
vinyls and
fabrics.
Recliners
Rock -0 Loungers - Waii -Aways - Swivel
Rockers .
Lay -Away For Christmas!

ALL CHAIRS
REDUCED

REG . $1.49 WJNTUK

KNITTING YARN

AU PURPOSE

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On Oc tober 19th. 1979 , rn
th e M ergs Count y Prob r'll f"
Court , Case No '1186 7, Fred
W Cr o w . P 0
Bo_- 486,
Pomer o y , Otl ro 45769 wa s
appo in ted An c il lary A d
m rni str a t or of the e state of
Ber nrce C Tuc k e r d ece a s
ed . l at e of 25 00 OnP ln d 1a na
Square , lndr anapo lr s, lnd

pov e rty rnc ome gu rdel rnes
by H1 e Co M
munrty
Se rv rces
Ad
m rn r straT ro n G ur delrnes
def i n i t rons T h is no:ru: rs
pub l rs ne d pu r su a nt To
F ederal Law ser io rttl dl 47
C FR
124 ,5{)5
N ot rce o f
A var la bilrt y
of
un
com pe ns ette-d St=&gt;r vr ces
( 1 I J I. If &lt;

Robert E Bu c k
Cler k. r il l

P r o b.~ t cJud q c

l , 8 I S JTc

Sizes S (30 32 wai st), M (3 4 J6J, L ,:38 40) and
X L ( 42 44 ) 50~ Po ly ester
50' Cotton
draw str 1ng war sf fl eec e tined .

FLANNEL SHIRTS
Sizes

s, M,

E xce llent selection of paterns and
colors
non slip
washabl e . For
c hair s, sofas , cha ises. sectionals,
s tudio couc hes .
Home Furnishings Dept. - lsi Floor

L and XL, 50% cott on and

KOOet po ly es r er Two pockets,
ra i l s, co lorf ul plaid pa tt erns

SPECIAL

ANOTHER SHIPMENT
ANOTHER SALE

50~

ful l length

$]49

Although a temporary r estrarni ng
order was issued by Judge John C.
Bacon against the striking Meigs
Local Teachers Associa tion Thursday morning, picketing by teachers
a t lhe school• was heaVIer than
usual Friday morn mg .
A spokesman for the teac hers
associatron sard teachers who had
~ occupying the administrative
atfices of lhe Meigs Local School
District sine'€ Oct. 22 were removed
Thursday afternoon and this freed
more teacher.; to picket at lhe
schools.
The temporarv rniunctioo issued

MEN'S $31.95

INSULATED
COVERALLS

MEN'S MR. LEGGS

FURNITURE THROWS

13.95 BWE DENIM JEANS

1

S izes 29 to 42 waist , 30 to 36 inch
length s . 14 ounce pre washed blue
denim . Boot flar e o r s traight leg .
Two Day Special.

Size s mall (34 · 36), medium (38 ·40) ,
large (42 · 44) and extra large (4648)
Shorts, Regulars and Longs .
Red quilt lined , adjustable snaps
on legs , permanent press in brown
or oliv e green .

SAVE 20%

SPECIAL

·~'!(

SALE

SALE

GUN CABINETS

TABLE LAMPS

Stop in wh i le th e

Lay -Away" For Christmas

SAVE 20%

;

ARMSTRONG
LINOLEUM

~ '·I

$349

-~

Dromedary
Brushed
Pigskm

'

j~

/

...

.' "'

\
\ ";\

Sizes 8 to 18 Snap fr on t , wrists and po c kets ,
co lorfu l plaids Wr ang ler . Leggs and Ca mpu s.
makes

Puppies·

'1.

";\

'

.\

~---.::..

Boys S7.95
Western Flannel Shirt ........... S7.07
Boys SB .95
Western Flannel Shirt .......... . 57 . 96
Boys 510.95
Western Flannel Shirt ........... $9.74

'

-~
.'

l

BOYS'
SWEATSHIRTS

FLANNEL SHIRTS

Hush

(

, ,j

by:

Sq . Yd .

_j

'

THE SHOE BOX
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Bath room rug with matchrng l id cover or lid

Sol id colo r s

15.95 CREW NECK STYLE
1
9.95 HOODED STYLE

FALL SPECIAL!

je ans

of

1 00~

Last

~JO . OO Value

8 PM
NOV. 2nd

FRIDAY

THROUGH

NIGHTS!

NOV. 10th

Phrlma i d , Lorra rne and Figurefit
While and assort ed color s of IOO ~ ny ton
Srzes X S thru XXL

1 REG. 16.0Q ................... SALE 14.79
REG. 7.00 ...... .. ....... ..... SALE 15.59
1

REG. '8.00 ......... .. ........ SALE 16.39
LIM IT EO SUPPLY

SPECIAL

$1200

SALE

MEN'S CORDUROY

Buy While Sizes are complete.
Small deposit will hold your selection.

heritage house
Of SHOES
N. 2nct AVE.

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Good se lection o f s tyle s in boot flar e
and straight leg s tyles . Many styles
that you 'll like !
MEN'S $14 .95
CORDUROY JEANS . .......... $12.19
MEN'S $16 .95
CORDUROY JEANS ........... $13 .89
MEN'S $17 .95
CORDUROY JEANS ............ $14.79
MEN'S 519.95
CORDUROY JEANS .......... . $16.39

lAYAWAY FOR CHRISTMAS
S159 .95 .. . .. .. ..... SALE
$199 .95. . . .... . .... SALE
$279 .95 .. . .... .. .. SALE
$299 .95............ SALE

colorful

REG. 137.00 SUIT.......... SALE 125.00

Miller in hospillll

MEN'S WRANGLER
LINED

Large se lec ti on of quality Lane Cedar Ch es t !
in many styl es and fi n i she s
In c luded are th e popular love chesf5 with
upholstered tops

REG .
REG.
REG.
REG .

in

REG. 140.00 SUIT.. ........ SALE '28.00

CHESTS

JEANS
LAYAWAY
FOR CHRISTMAS

100% Polyester suits
raspberry and tea 1.

CEDAR

SPECIAL SALE

ClflU.ICOTHE. Oluo I AP I
Poli ce in Ch illi coth e have
charged Ohio Supreme Court
Justice Willlam B. Brown with
operating a motor vehicle while
intolicated, following a two-car
accident Wednesday .
Police in lhe Ross County community said Brown was drivrn g
on a city street at about 9 p.m .
when his car ran into lhe rear of a
car driven by Marilyn J . Eitel, 34 ,
of Chillicothe . Brown also Jives in ·
Chillicothe .
Although Brown reportedly
refused to take an int oxication
test, officers oaid Ius physical
movements and the •mell of his
breath indicated he had been
drinking .

PRE-TEEN
2 PIECE SUITS

REG. 15.00 ....... .......... ... SALE 13.99

- Blue de nim arm length jacket
-contrasting s titc hes
- Slight irregulars in sizes S ·M L .

Cited for DWI

Reg . Sl.SO heavy knit tobo9g~;n s witfi school
and colors . Wahama · Eiutern · Meigs. ·
Southern .

REG. '4.00 .................... SALE 3.19

JACKETS
TIL

H .OI
$10 .91

TOBOGGANS

1

WOMEN'S WRANGLER

ON WOMEN'S

$1 .64

n11me
~

ssooOFF

SA .2.

55 .0'1

SCHOOL NAME

HALF SLIPS

creetm

colored cotton t\vrtl with tapered leg s Wa• S1
sr zes 26 thru 31
Whtle They

Aeg . $4 .99 Bath Set.. ................ .
Reg . $5 .9'1 Bath Set. ............... .. .
Reg $1 .99 Bath Sel .... ......... ... .. .
Reg $9 .49 Bath Set ...... .. ......... . .
Reg . Sll .99 Bath Set .. .... ......... ...

SALE

JUNIOR JEANS
Wrangler

SALE 18.65

cove r and toilet tank - big ra nge of color s

Children's

Reg . $12.00

Qudlity

SALE 15.17

S128.00
$159.00
$234 .00
$240.00

CHARLESTON, W.Va. I API United Mine Workers President
Arnold Miller has entered the
hospital for the third time since
June .
Miller , se, was admitted to a
Charleston hoBpital Thursday for
what a Wlion source said was
ulcers. A hospital spokesworr.an .
however. said there would be no
official comment on Miller 's
ailment until the completion of
t.e.ts sometime Friday or after .
Earlier this week Miller told
members at the Wlion 's International E xecutive Board,
who were meeting in Marion . ru ..
that he would ~ taking time off
to ponder his fu ture, according to
Sam Qrurch. the UMW's .ice
pr!!Sident.

JACKETS AND .VESTS
Sizes S, M , L and XL -

denim or corduroy

Sh~rpa lined blue

western stvle jackets.

Vests are western sty le wi t h sherpa lining .

Ut. 95 Waist Length Corduroy or

.

CINCIN NATI I AP I
A
federal judge has thrown out the
Oncinnati schoo l board's surt
against the State of Ohio, ruling
that education is the respon ·
sibrlil y of the state. not the
federal government .
The 56,000-pupil system had
asked the federal court to order
lhe state to fund its $7 .7 millron
deficit.
Thursday 's actioo by U.S.
District Judge Timothy S I logan
came after two days of hearings
on the swt.
Q ting legal precedents , th e
judge sard there is no fede rally guaranteed rig ht to an education
and that a state system of finan cing schooL&lt; sha ll not ~ subjected to strict scrutiny by
federal courts .

BATH SETS

Made by Spr i ngfoof of 50~ co tt on and 50'
Kodel polyester . Boy s sizes S (6 8) . M ( 10· 12 ),
L 11416 1 a nd XL (181 Warm fleece 11n1ng

.

~ · '•
' .,

Case thrown oul

2 AND 3 PIECE

SPECIAL SALE

a·y·.·:_

Thursday morrung by Judge Aacon
ordered vacating of builditlj(s of the
Meigs Local Boa rd of Education by
the teachers and also forbids
pi cketing at the schools during nor mal school hours on week days
It was reported that Sheriff James
J . Proffitt, Middleport Police Chief
J J Cremeans and several other officers were at the Meigs junior High
School Thursday afternoon for
removal of teachers who have con·
dueled a 24 hour sit 1n for well over a
week . There were 13 teachers occupying the builoling at the tinne, a
teacher said . and the teacher s were
told severai times that they were Wl der arrest. But opce the y left the
building they wer'f told lhal the y
were not under arrest the teache r
Sll ld .
Meantime,
Thursday
night
teachers met at the carpenter's hall

.·... in the world '

- - -~--,..~-

BOYS WESTERN STYLE

.

.,_·

'

- 12ft . Width
- 2.colorful patterns

SPECIAL

• f• • •

.·.~.T
.· . '. d . . , ~_,:_:.
..
-.. o·

WAREHOUSE
REG. S4.45 sq. yd.

Save 20 % on any table lamp in
stock . Wood, ceramic and brass
styles.

20% OFF

-

COLOR:

'·:.-;,

:i ..

maple and pi ne finishes
sele c tion is good

-·

FRIIJA Y. NOVEMB ER 2. 1979

suppl em enl&lt;ll s urvey of business establishments reported a cootradictory
nse of employment by 300,000 jobs.
The Labor Department . whi ch uses the household s urvey to detemtine
JObless fi gures , was at a loss to explain the diScrepancy, other than to note
that such a result has oc curred oceass1ooal ly in the past.
The jobless rate amon!( adult women rooe from 5.5 percen t 1n Septem~r to
5. 8 percent in October , and the rate for blacks jumped from 10.6 percent to
I1.7 percent.
The jobless rate among mrnority teen-ager.; went fr&lt;m 31.5 percent tn Septem~r to 35. 7 percent , the highest in nearly a year .
The department provided these other breakdoWTJS on unemployment rates
for October :
- Adult men : 4.3 percent in Octo~r . up from 4.2 percent in September.
- Teen-age rs: 16.6 percent, up from 16 .4 percent.
- Whites : S.2percent, up from 5. 1 percent.
- Full-time workers : S.5percent , up from 5.4 percent.
- Part-tune workers · 9 percent, up fnrn 8.3 percent .
- Blue-&lt;:ollar workers, 7.3 percent, up from 7.I percent.
- White-collar workers, 3.5 percent, up from 3.3 percent.
AdminJ.Stration economists were surprised las t month, however. when lhe
Labor Department reported that the JObless rate fell from 6 percent to 5.8
percent between August and Se ptem~r . The administratioo had predicted

Despite order, picketing
•
zncreases in Meigs strike

FOR THIS SALE!
WRANGLER $8.95

7 SWEAT PANTS

Ni c e group o f 6. 7 a n d 10 g u n c abinets in

THE "YUMA" WARM ll NED BOOT

20%

TWO DAYS
ONLY

th e 'nn d d a y a t

$295

Reg . 53 .00
Panty Hose ... . .............. Sale $2.39
Reg . 53.95
Panty Hose .............. . .. · Sale U- 29
Reg. $5 .95
Suppor t H ose ..... .. ........ . Sale $3 .95
Reg . $6.95
Suppor t H ose ............... . Sale $4 .95

5 95

Red H ea rt 4 p l y hand knitt , ng yarn in a big
se l e-c ti on of S.Oiid co l ors , varrega l ed and
~parkle co lor s. 31 2 0 1 . skein

SALE

PANTYHOSE
SALE

Men's and Young Men ' s

IOt&gt;('r ,

11 ! I {f r

enttne

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

WASHINGTO N 1AP1- A s purt of layoffs, most ly among women and
blacks, pushed the nation 's unemployment rate back up to 6 percent rn Oc tober, the goverrunent reported today .
The Labor Depanbnent said the nurn~r of W1employed persons rose by
200,000 from September to 6.2 million . As a result, the JObless rate returned
to lhe level reached in August following a drop to 5.8 percent in Septem~r .
Desprte the nse , Labor Department ana lysts said the figures did not
provide signs that a recession is takmg hold .
"You would have to have a crystal ball to say these are indications to say
we're in or about to enter a recession," said Labor economist Norman
Bowers . " The figures don 't say that .··
&amp;wers said the risrng unemployment appeared to stem fr om the fa ct that
new jobs were not created at a fast enough rate to provide employment opportunities for those who had lost their jobs.
The nation 's unemployment rate has nuttered ~tween 5.6 percent and 6
percent for th• past IS months .
The Labor Department said lhe increa,., m unemployment last month
resul ted from workers losrng their jobs, as opposed to people who entered
the job market but were unable to find work . Two-thirds of the job losses
struck women or blacks .
Total employment, as measured by the government's survey of
households , declined by 220 ,000 during October, to 97.3 million . However. a

PLAYTEX CONTROL TOP

KROEHLER AND
BERKLINE CHAIRSI

REG. 126.00 ........... SAU 120.79

'"wPrl ')';,ed

ti O r 15

Reg. $3 .39

20% SAVINGS ON

Warm 100% cot ton flannel plaids in
junior s1zes s M L .

TWO DAY SALE

19 79
A ttest

Automat ica lly removes rust, lime ,
minerals . Deodor izes , sanitizes ,and
cleans toil et bow ls with every flush .

CHAIR SALE

JUNIOR GIRLS '

1

AUTOMATIC BOWL CLEANER

SALE 5lSOO

Reg . 521 50

to Sep

Ge n e G r a te
( IPr k
M L K elly
Prf'Srdent o f Counrr t

e s tabli sh ed

-.' :

11'h x12
in c he s
Improved
b rowning
per for mance, specialy
desig n ed drip well , easy to use · easy
to c lea n . Dishwasher safe.

Reg . $S.95

I I Thr '\ Or d rnan oe
~r.11 1 t nk r et ten an d bern
tor r P f ro m and a f1 e r 1t1e
f'&lt;H i r('&lt;;l PNr o d al lowe d by

Or

at

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Nation's unemployment rate hits 6 percent

DAY

WEST BEND WHISTLING

Scr

at

Mulberry Hgt s. Pomr-r olf
Oh io , will mak e ava , la blc
S48 .1 06 00
1n
un

co mp e nsat e d

Poo l Orr er to r

VOL. XXVIII NO 142

•

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8:00

tr·n•lx• r I S, 197 9, rn rlusr ve

M emor1 d l
lo c at e d

P,H ~&lt;, r~n o

..,tl ,)ll bf' &lt;; up pl emented by
&lt;-.r1 111r r l' .1:,c o f $40 00 ppr
mon th t or l he Pay p er rods

NOTI CE OF

H oo;.pital.

Ttlrtl th e S&lt;i iM)I o t

1

(USPS 145 960 J

FRIDAY, NOV. 2ND, SATURDAY, NOV. 3RD

r,n

Courv rl at !he V tf ldQt' o f
M rllrJi r·pur t as fo llows

veteran s

NOVEMBER SALE DAYS

REG. 116.00 ........... SAU 112.79
LEGAL N OTICE
ORD INANCE No . 1086 ·79

e

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

Denim

Jacket • • ••• •••••• •• . • ••. ••• • ••••••• • SJ1 ...
loM.tS Longer Lenvlh Dttllrn J•cket •.• $:Jol ...
sn.u Denim or Corduroy Yost .. ..... . . 117 ...
nc.tSSuede·look Vest. ........... ..... Sit ...

OPEN SATURDAY 9-.30 TO 5:00 PM

ELBERfELD$ IN POMEROY
•

I

Crump Dies
In 'Copter Crash

acc ident.

lW 2 CrWlrp was serv1ng a tour of
dut y ln Korr CI a fter recentl y corn·
pletmg the tow co bra gunne ry
qual1fl catwns co ur se at th e Am·1y
Avi a t1on Crnter . Fort Hu c ke r .
Alabam a . He ha d served in the U.S .
Anny for nin e y ear s.

ment.
Surviving. other than hi' mother.
are his wife, Diana Ferrell Cnunp ;

two daughters, Melis.'a Dawn, ageS ,
a nrl .Jamre ~oel Crump. age 8. both

CW2 JAMES H. CRUMP
at

hom e;

a

s1st er . Mrs.

L,ar y

rSharon 1 Cochran . P oint Pleasant .
one brother . l,'aul Crump, Mason,
maternal grandmoth e r .
Mrs .
Thelma Elliott. Point Pleasant; and
mother and father-in-l aw , Betty and
Ra ym ond Ferrell. P oint Pleasant.
Funeral arra nRement s will be
announ ced at a later date .

Banquet tickets
being sold now
Tickets are now ~ing sold for the
Meigs Soil and Water Conservatior
District annual meeting and banquet
to be held at 7: 15 p. m . Nov . 15, a t
Chester Grade School .
Following a steak'dinner served
by the EaBtern Band B0011ters, there
will ~ an election of two super visors, an interesting speaker.
special music, and presentations r:i
District awards.
Candidates for the s upervisor
election are Larry Hollon , Thereon
Johnson, James Lucas and Rlly
Miller .
Featured speaker will be Walt
Buescher from Tennessee. who is a
Widely re n ow n ed spea ker
throughout the Uruted States and
Olnada . He is sponsored by Sperl')
New Holl and .

JACK W. CRISP

Crisp

SEORC
I

Word ha s ~e n rereJ ved by local
relatr ves of th e dea th of CW2 Jam es
H. Crump. 29. who wa s krlled
Thllr sda y mormn ,~:; 1n a hel!copt c r

Crump was barr June 25 , 1950 U1
Pomt Pl easant . a son of Julra Crump
Long. Pomt Pleasant . and the late
James A. Crump .
He had recentl y ~ e n awarded the
Me r it orious Sen·ic e \1t!dal, th e
second highest award a serviceman
ran r eceive duri ng pe&lt;'~cetim e, fo r
his outstanding a bliltJ' as a Medical
Evac uat 1on Helicopter Pilot dunn g
a searc h emU resc ue lllissiun in
Florence . South Carolina
Crump was a 1969 graduat e of
Point Pleasant Hrgh School . an d
served a s a former patrolman wnn
the Point Pleasant Police Depart-

Authority given
for user survey

m Pomeroy to dL'ICuss the s trike
which is now in it.. sixth week .
··It's time to put an end to strikes
m Me1gs Local. Don't accept
anything less than what you need.
The Ohio Educ.ation association will
~here to hel p see you get it" .
This was the comme nt of Eugene
Brundige .
Ohio
Education
Association presrdent, who spoke lhe
approximate 130 teachers who attended Thursday .night's meeting to
re\iew the court action sought by the
Me1gs Local School Board .
" When you hear criticism about
·outs iders· coming to help teachers,
remem~ r what this community has
had to s uffer through - strike a ft er
strike because of ouL&lt;ide superin tendents and attorneys ," Brundige
stated .
Dunng lhe meehn~. assocrati on
1Continued on page 10 t

cW2

Special mii.Src will be proVIded by
Mr. and Mrs . Brll St ockwell
Goodyear , F .F .A. Land Judging.
Outstanding ram~er. and SuperviSOr Service a wands will be given at
the meeting .
Reservations should ~ made
before Novem~r 9 and tickets at $4
each are available from the
foll owing : Extension Offic-.,, John
Rice: Landmark. Jack Carsey :
ASCS, Dave Fox ; SCS. Boyd Ruth ,
Reid Young or Leota Young; Meigs
SWCD supervisors , Rex Shenefi eld,
Tom Theiss, Rlly Miller, Thereon
Johnson , and David Gloeckner ;
James Lucas , Rutland; J.m-ry
Hollon , Rt. I, Minersville ; Horace
Karr. Baum Addition on Route 7,
and at Sugar Run Flour Mills, Thee
Smi th .

unemployment would snow an mcr ease in September, bas1ng that estimate
oo an assumption that the economy was headed into a recession .
However. subseque nt fig ures showed that rather than ~gistering a
decline , economic activity grew at an annual rate of 2.4 percent during the
July-September quarter . That report put predictions of imminent, sharp
nses in unemployment on the back burner .
The Federal Reserve Board , the nation's central back , moved to slow innation Oct . 6 by increasing interest rates to linut credit and by restricting
the money s upply . Administration economists say those mov!!S will trigger
an econontic slowdown and higher unemployment furthe r down the road,
perhaps bringing on the long-anticipated recession .
Meanwhile, a natioral employment commission urge&lt;! President Carter to
push for exparided job programs for the nation ·s disadvantaged young
people, who suffer from chrome Wlemployment.
" Youth from low-in come famili es and commwlities, particularly mem·
~rs of minority groups, often face severe, long-temJ barriers to jobs," Eti
Ginz~rg , chainnan of the National Commission for Employment Policy,
said Thursday in a report to the president .
"Even though the youth population wtll decline in the ·~. without a comprehensive and concentrated attack on the problem, this group will still be in
trouble, a nd this is where federal resources should be targeted," said Ginzberg , a professor at ColumbJa Unrversity

honoree

Author ization was given to
proceed with an archaeological and
user charge survey for lhe villages
of Racine , Syracuse and Rutland.
when officials of Racine , Syracuse
and Rutland met Thursday night at
Syracuse Mwlicipal Building.
The archaeological and user
charge surveys are necessary i.n order to proceed with a sewage system
in aU three villages.
Estinnated cost for the ar chaeological study in Syracuse and
Racine. IS $20,000 and in lhe village

More rain expected
By The A!lliOdated Preu
A cold front spread rain today
from western New York across the
Ohio Valley and the Appalachians to
the soutll east .
Another front moving into the
Pacific Northwest produced light
rain from northern California across
westerr Oregon and Washington
Ught snow fell over parts of upper
Michigan , nort her n Minnesot a .
Wyom ing and eastern Colorado.
Showers and tllundersto rms were
predicted rn the upper Ohio Valley
tllrough the Atlantic Coast states .
Rain also was expected rn the
Pacific Northwest and northern
Ca liforn ia, with s catter ed sn ow
showers from northern Minnesota to
upper Michigan . Partly cloudy skres
were forecast over the remamder of
the nort~rn part of tlle nation and
sunny rn the so uth .

Ja c k W. Cris p, Langsville ,
president of the Leading creek Con·
servancy District. has ~en named
Meigs County's outstanding man of
the year by the Southeastern Ohio
Regiollal Council .
Crisp is one of 13 outstanding
Southeastern Ohio men who will ~
honored by lhe council on Thursday.
Ro~rt L. (Bob 1 Evans, president of
the council , announced, when lhe
organization holds its annual awards
dinner at the Ohio University ltuJ in
Athens .
The honored guests represent 10
counties in Southeastern Ohio and
LO'ITER V WINNERS
were nominated for the awards by
Two Meigs Countians were a bit
the Cham~rs of Commerce and
n cher Thursday as a result of a visrt
business groups in their home counby Bill Abdella , Ohio Lottery Com ties and cooununi ties.
mission representati ve . NaomJ D
According to Evans, this will be
Wyatt, Minersville, received a check
the 11th annual awards meeting.
for $5,00J for her win in the lhree of a
Honorees in c! ud e educators.
kind instant game and Patricia
physicians , optometrists, attorreys,
Kloes, Middleport , received a $500
merchants and Industrialists .
check as a wiMer in the regular
Awards are made by the council
weekly game.
on the basis of contributions to
Southeastern Ohio by participation
and leadership in the communi ty affairs .
Born in West Vlfgirua , Crisp has
been a resident of Meigs County sin Plant one, get one free . That's the
ce 1946 and in his position With the
word to landowners in Gallia County
conservancy district has been
and 11 other southeastern Ohio counbeneficial towards the development
ties . Landowners in the area a r e
of Western Meigs County . He and
receiving a boost from Westvaco, a
his wife, Glenna, have four children
pr ivate paper com pany . in
who are James, Tom and Carla
reforesting their land .
•
Crisp Large, all of the Langsville
Westvaco is renewing an annual
area, and Glen of Salem Center .
offer to match every tree seedling
They have five grandchrldr en .
purchased for planting with another
.&lt;·:·:-:-:-:-:-:·.·:····
seedling .
The trees come from nurseries
LEAF PICKUP
operated
by the Division of Forestry
Leaves lu lbe vlllage of Pomeroy
of lhe Oluo Department of Natural
will be picked up beginning
Resources .
Tuesday, Nov. 6. All leaves are w be
The division bas been promoting
In bag• and at tbe curb.
reforestation
in southeastern Ohio
The foUowlug Is 0.., scbeduled for
for
years
.
The
southeast, once
pickup: Nov. 6, flnt ward ; Nov. 7,
nearly
denuded
at
timber
in the 19th
second ward; Nov . 8, tblrd wand;
century from lumbering, ironNov , 9, fourtb war:d : ... ·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.
making and stripmining, has the
·.·.·.·.·.·.·,·. ·-:-:·&gt; .. ·.·.·.· ... . ·.· ·.·.·.·
vast majority of Ohio's forest lands .
Now in its 13th year, Harold Todd
at the Division of Forestry, said
Partly cloudy tonight. Low in the
Westvaco has matched ~ween
low or mid~ - Mostly sunny Satur140,000 and 400,000 tree seedlings a
day . High in the low !iOs. The chance
year to reforest about 4,500 acres in
southeast Ohio since 1966.
of rain is 20 percent ton1ght and 10
percent Saturday .
Landowners in Athens, Belmont,
Gallia, Hocking, Jackson , Lawren·
ce, Meigs, Monroe , Noble , Vinton
EXTENDED FORECAST
and Washington counties can parFair Sunday and a chance ol
ticipate .
sbowen Monday aDd Tuesday.
The counties are m the malt' j mHJgbs In tbe 501. Lows lu tbe 30o Sun·
~r buying area of We.'Vaco 's Luke,
day and Monday and near 40
Md. mill. The mill manufactures
Tue•day.
high quality, white printing papers
for books and magazines. Todd said

of Rutland $10,000.
Cia ude White will begin the ar·
chaeological study as soon as the
ground where the treatment planlll
and pumprng stations are to be
located IS plowed . White hopes to get
started Ill two weeks.
If anything of value, such as ar·
lifacts . are found they will be kept
one year and then returned to the
property owner. Frank Porter,
solicitor , stated.
The next step, according lD Ed
Tinkle of Commonwealth Engineers,
will ~ to acqulfe easements from
property owners and appraisals
made . lt was suggested that
Freeland Norris be named the appraiser .
There will be one treabnent plant
for the Syracuse-Racine Regional
Sewage District which will be
located in Racine and three pumping
staliom, two in Racine and One in
Syracuse. It was indicated that the
village of Rutland will have fewer
problems that the other two villages.
The plowing and bulldozing of the
ground in various loca tions will be
done by local people .

Striking teachers
to remove pickets
At lhe request of Meigs Local
school board candidate Rllbert
Snowden. teachers have agreed to
"ithdraw pickets from polling sites
on elocbon day , Novem~r6 .
In making the announcement the
Meigs Local Teachers Assn. said :
"The right to vote is precious no
matter what election. With the crisJs
m Meigs schools going into its seventh weedk by election day, voters will
have a real opportunity to make a
difference .
" Removal of pickets in no way indicates a change in MLTA 's position
that contract issues must ~ settled
at the bargaining table . ..

Westvaco renews annual offer
there's no requirement that landowners sell the mature tim~r to
the company .
The main requirement is that landowners buy at least 500 tree
seedlings . Landowners can buy hardwoods or pine, but Westvaco will
only match seedlings with pine.
"Hardwood comes back naturally.
The pine does not come back as
easily," said Harris LeFew, public
relations manager for lbe company 's Luke mill .
LeFew said similar programs 81'1!
offered to landowners in Kentucky,
Pennsylvania, and Maryland .
The c""pany, which is headquar.
tered in New York City, operates in
the eastern and southeastern United
States.

Weather

CLEVELAND (AP) - Here U'll
tbe 'll'inDinl -ben drawa 'JW.

oday lu the Oblo Lottery:
I BoiiiUlla: 85, LTI, UIS, 12111,
100!90; 5kenll'yramld25, la, . .7.
·'

�3-- The Daily Senllnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Nov . 2, 1979

2- The Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ·· F'nday , NOV 2, 1979

~October marketbasket prices show decrease
By LOUISE COOK
Associated Press Wrlt.r
Shoppers got a rare lreak at the
grocery store during October.
according to an Associated Press
marketbskel survey which showed
the first drop in priQJ!i since JW1e .
The decrease - two-tenths of a
percent in the average cost of a
random selection of food and non·
food items - was on lv the third

decline thls year. Prict&gt;!'i have
inc reased m ea('h of the other se\·en
month s of 1979 .
The AP drew up a random list of 15
co mm only

pur ch ased

after the manufacturer diSCOntinued
th e pa ckage Size used in the survey .
The latest check showed that the
market ba s ket t otal increased at the
survey store in five cities last month
and decreased In e1ght cities . On an
ove rall
basis , the
average
marketbasket bill at the checklist
stores was two-tenths of a percent
lower a t the end of October than 11
was at th e start .

item s ,

chec ked the pri ce
at
one
supermarket 1n ea ch of 13 cities on
March I , 1973 and has rechecked or
or about the start of each succeeding
morth . One item , chocolate chip
cookies . was dropped from the l1sl

Today's Commentary

Editorial opinions,
comments

If we can't lick inflation
By Don Graff
"lndenng" is a b!IlZ word of par·
ticular interest ror Californians
these days .
It is the idea behind Proposition 4.
a follow-up to last year 's lax·
slashing Proposition 13 that voters
will find on their ballots Nov . 6
Proposition 4 would put a state
constitutional lid on public spendl.ng
by reqUiring that increases
henceforth correspond to the rates of
population growth and price inflation . State and local government
budgets would be indexed to these
economic indicators .
This is of inunediate concern only
Ill CaWornians . But the concept of
indexing may soon be uf considerable interest to the rest of the
country in another context : the
federal income tax .
Congress is beginning to g1ve
serious thought Ill revising the lax
laws so as Ill link rates Wlth the cost of·Uving index . In other word.s , Inflation, which is in effect a hidden tax
since it cancels out wage increases,
cosl-&lt;&gt;f-living adjustments and other
income boosters by boosting reci ·
pients into higher tax brackeis . They
may end up with no gain or an actual
loss in take-home purchasing power
Congress has dealt with the SI\Ua ·
lion up to now through penodic tax
cuts that are really no cuts at all. By
adjusting downward the rates on 1n·
flated incomes, they simply return
the situation to what it was before
the m06! recent inflationary spurt .
Indexing , which has been m effect
in Canada since 1!174 with encouraging results, would build inflationbased reductions into the tax laws .
removing the necessity of legiSlating
retief every two or three years . Tax rate brackets would be adjusted annually to reflect changes in the
conswner-price index .
It is likely Ill be a few years before
indexing sees the light ri legisla tive
day in the United States. And even
its m06t dedicated advocates do not
tout it as a cure for infla!lon .
But if we aren't able to lick what
ails us, joining it through indexing
: may be the fa est alternative . It at
least acknowledges and repeals thai
Iudden tax.

On another front 1n the economic
wars , the Treasury Department is
switclw1g tactics for its !"'rtodic
sales of gold .
Since May of last year. 7:ill,OOJ
ounces have been withdrawn from
the Fort Knox hoard monthly and
sold at public auctiOn. The purpose
has been to hold down prices in the
pnvaU! gold markets by assuring a
continuing supply and, as a conse·
quence, halt the depreciation of the
dollar in terms of gold.
The problem is that the a uctiol\.&lt;
have proved if anything too suc cessful - in the wrong way . They
have attracted lile speculators and
the bidding has been every bit as
spirited as in Zurich and London.
Wllh prices going aimOilt as !ugh .
That may be good for the Treasury
balance sheet, but it is bad for the
dollar
So now the Treasury has decided
to keep the gold merchants m
suspense by varying the amoWlts to
be sold and holding the auctions ir·
regularly, with announcement of the
dates withheld until the last mer
ment. This , it is reasoned, will keep
speculators guessing as to the supply coming onto the rket and make it
more difficult Ill marupulate prices .
Well , maybe . But it marks a com·
plete turnabout m gold-selting
theory . Originally,the idea was that
the certainty of a steady supply of
gold would have a calming effect on
the market. Now it's uncertainty
that's supposed Ill bnng it to heel.
The real surprise in this e&lt;pen ment Wlth economic policy lJy sur·
prise will be if it works .
jimmy·~
" Whatever it lakes to control in-

J-Im,·" thulugain.

flation, that's what I will do "
President Carter, in a pressconference declaration of support
for the Federal Reserve 's tight·
money policies designed to slow
economic activity with increased
unemployment a likely conse·
quence .

" I will not fight inflation w1th your
jobs.··
PreSident Ca rter. addressing
building and construction unior
leaders .

•

Business mirror
~

i
(
:

.
;
'
•

CHICAGO !API - Don't expect
interest rates to fall sharply . Be
prepared for a continued siege of
tight money . Don't expect Ill get ll&gt;p
price U you have Ill sen your house m
a hurry .
If thill sounds very negative it is
becuase the irrunedate outlook for
housing is too, as judged from
speeches and interviews w1th
regulators and mortgage lenders
gathered at their convention here .
It might even mean the end of the
old conventional mortgage, in which
a borrower's interest payments
remained fiXed for the 20-year or 3(}.
year life of the mortgage .
In short, there's much bad news at
this year's aMual convention of the
U . S_
League of
Savings
Associations, whose members
collectively claim more than 50 per·
cent of all residential mortgages outstanding.
" Housing starts are going to fall 22
percent no matter what actior we
take," said Jay Janis, chairman of
the Federal Home Loan Bank
Board. Said Kenneth Thygerson, the
league's chief economist, " Most of

us see a recession.''
Joseph
Benedict ,
league
president, said it succinctly: "Inflation is our worst enemy . II is at
the root of most of our problems.·'
"Be prepared for a relatively
lengthy period of very high interest
rates and very tight credit," he said .
He was vague on the precise length
of time because of questions about a
related problem energy .
Should there be another increase
in prices by the Organization of
Petroleum Exporting Countries, he
explained, his most optimistic
forecast - of some easing of tiglt
' mooey by January - goes out the
window. Tight money might then
persist into mid-year, he said.
Most of the 7,000 delegates here
'seem to agree with Benedict 's
IISBI!ssment that the Federal Reser·
ve 's anti-inflation policy has to be
given a chance "even though it will
adversely affect our earnings.''

.

•

Jimmy~s

Surpri"t&gt; is goldt&gt;n

A recession is viewed by them as a
purgatory through wluch they must
pass if monetary conditions are to
return to near nonnal. But near nor·
mal, too , is one of those vague
phrases .
In the near future . say eronorrusts
and others here . smgle wgit mortgage rates are wilikely . If mor·
!gages rates reach 13 perce nt
generally, sa1d Thygerson. "I don 't
see a drop below II percent."
What will the recessioo mean for
owners of oomes whose values were
pumped up by demand. by inflation ,
by speculatwn'
Statements here indicate prices
should hold fairly well. "No coUapse
or holocaust ." srud Philip Jackson , a
former Federal Reserve Board
member .
One factor bolstering the market
IS demographics. In the next 10
years, Benedict said in an interview ,
"there will be about a Uurd more
people reaching age 30 as reached
that age in the past 10 years ."

Whitehouse

WASH JNGTON I AP l - In another
month, Hamilton Jordan and other
U&gt;p a1des to President Carter will
begm paying $32.:i0 a month for the
privilege of parking inside lile White
House fen ce
Carter's principal assistants hold
assigned parking slots right bes1de
the White House West Wing . For
many years , these slots have been
provided free of charge as a fringe
benefit Ill presidential aides .
Last April 1. Carter announced
that regular fees would be charged
for these and thousands of other
parking spaces allotted to federal
workers in the Washingwn area .
[f parking costs money, Carter
reasoned, rureaucrats might be
motivated Ill take public transit or
jom ca r pools. The objective. of
course. ts to save energy.
Carter said the fees would be
imposed Oct. 1 but, perhaps
predictably. the red tape involved
has delayed Implementation of the
fee system until Dec. I.
At $32 .50 a month, staff chief

perform is to walk mto a press
ce nter crowded with expectant
reporters and begin distributing
texts of major presidential speeches
or docwnents . A person can gel
crushed oc bowled over doing that
Beth Lumpkin of Jody Powell's
press office staff, a wisp of a woman
barely five feet tall and weighing
hardly 100 pounds. has found a way
Ill short-circuit the onslaught. And
now others are playing variations on
her theme .
Before Carter delivered his
troops-In-Cuba
speech.
Ms .
Lumpkin , arms filled with advance
texts, walked out of the While House
office wing through a door barred to
reporters, then climbed mto the
press room through a window After
sw-reptitiously placing the texts in
"handout" racks, she returned to
her office and , only !hen, aMounced
over the public address system that
the documents were available in the
bins .

Jordan 's parking tab will be a
bargain . Commercial rates near the
White HoU.'le run to $5 a day or more
in many cases.
The imposition of parking charges
represents such a jolt to the personal
budgets of many federal employees,
however, that a decision has been
made to have a one year, half1'rice
transition period . After 12 months,
the fee for parking mside the White
House compound will jump to $65 a
month
Although located closest to the
seat of power, parkmg spots like
Jordan 's won't be the most
expensive under White House
jurisdiction . The stiffest char~e $80 a month after 12 months - will
be levied a block away at the
W1dergroWld garage in the New
Executive Office Building .
The $15 price advantage at the
Wlute House is compensation for
exJX)sure to rain and snow .

a

One of the most haUll'dous chores
White House staff aide can

\

ri JSPSJU--,.1

ooh

~

""'"

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

ssooOFF

So the Kennedy partisans will
have another outing in Boston Nov.
7, President Carter will declare !urnsell to be a candidate Dec. 4, and the
difficult part of the contest will be
underway .
Kennedy has said he expects a
long. closely fought campaign
But so far, the speculation _
published and gossiped - is cen·
tered on the possibility Kennedy will
so far outdistance Carter in the
presidential primary elections that
the president will be forced to drop
from competition .
Kennedy never has suggested he
Uunks he can score an early season
victory over the president. He says
he expects Carter will be in the race
for the duration .
For that to happen , Carter is gomg
to have Ill win a good nwnber of
presidential primaries and Kennedy
is going to have to lose more than his
family's politicians ever have
before .
The Kennedys are not accustomed
to losing elections . John never did
Edward never has and Robert lost
only ooce, 1n the 1968 Oregon
presidential pnmary .

ON WOMEN'S

BOOTS

TIL

NOV. 2nd

I

FRIDAY

THROUGH

1
1

NIGHTS I

I

NOV. 10th

I
I
1

LAYAWAY

I

FOR CHRISTMAS
Buy While Sizes are complete.
depos~

Small

will hold your selection.

heritage house

OYSTER STEW
DINNER SET
The Pomeroy American Legion
will have its annual oyster stew din·
ner followmg the regular meeting
Tuesday , Nov . 6, at 8 p.m. There will
also be a memberhsip roundup .

N. 2nd AVE.

SMITH NELSON MOTORS, INC.
500 E. MAIN

PH. 992-2174

-

0

N.

w. COMPTON, O.D.

:

OPTOMETRIST

I
f

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

0 ••• 0

••

•••• •••••••

•

•••••••• •

••••••

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•••• ••• ••

o.

l "1

Phoenix
Golden State
Sea tt le
San Diego

7 4
5 6

2

•••••••••••••••

•• •• •

•••

•

••

0 ••••••••••••••

4

7

J'h
3'
5

1

Thursday's Games
Cleveland 127, Detroit 125

New York 134. Utah 118
Friday's Gam&amp;s

tnd ,ana at New Jersev
Atlanta at Philadelphit!

New York at Kansas Citv
Chi cago at Denver
Portland at San Diego
Phoenix at Los Angeles
San Antonio at Seattle

Saturd•y 's Games
New Jersey at Atlanta
Kansas City at Cleveland
Houston at Detroit
Philadelphia at I ndiana
Boston at washington
Milwt~ukee at Chicago
Utah at san Diego
Denver at Golden State
Sunday's Games
Kan!)aS Ci ty at New Jersey
Seatt le at Milwaukee
Sa n Antonio af Portland

Atlanta

I
1
I
I

NY Islanders
NY Rangers

5 4 1 11 36
4 3 2 10 JO
4 .5 1 9 43
3 6 I
7 J6

46

32
21

28
Jl

Wash1ng1on
Smythe Division
Va ncou'Yer
4 3 3 11
Winnipeg
4 5 1
9
Chicago
3 4 3 9
St . Louis
J 5 J 9
Edmonton
1 5 4 6
Colorado
I 7 2
4
Wales conference
Adams Division
Buffalo
6 3 1 14
Minnesota
6 3 I 13
Boston
5 2 ) 12
Toronto
4 5 I
9
Quebec
3 5 I
7
Norris Division
Montreal
7 1 1 16
Los Angeles
6 3 2 ,.
Pittsburgh
4 4 I
9
Hartford
2 4 4 8
Detroit
2 5 2 6

11.8

( 81

Logan

68

1))

99
9.7

.... .·... ..... .. .· ·· · · · ·······
ANYONE INTEREYI'ED?
Any alwnni of Southern High
School interested in playing football
is asked to be at the high school in
Racine at 2 p.m. Sunday .

30
15

If 1 am elected Trustee. I will intercede at once to try
to obtain part of the revenue collected by this project, as
1 fully feel it is due us .

ELECT FRANCIS ANDREW
AS TRUSTEE OF OLIVE TOWNSHIP

""'

Pd Pol. Adv .

by un official count 34 millwnatres

since it was introduced m 1~76
Amon~ the more exCllm~ players
available today were flame ·
throwin ~
Nol a n llyan of the
CaWornia Angels ; Brucf! KlSOn, who
started the openin~ game of the
World Series for the Pittsburgh
Pirates: Dave Gollz . former 2().
game wi..nner fCK" tht· Minne sota
Twins , and re!ie&lt;·er AI Hrabos ky ,
the Mad HW1ganan of t he Kansas
City fWyals
The draf t also offered s ome
vete ran sluggers llkr Tony Pe rt&gt;z uf
th e Montreal Expos. Will1e P rt on of
the Seattle Mariners and llob
Watson of the l:lostm Red Sox .
Al.so up for walls were longtime
regulars tike shortstop Fred PaLek
of Kansas City and second baseman
Joe Mor gan of Cincinnati.
With more than 40 players
available, each warn could s1gn up
to three free agents W1less it stood' to
lose more. 'llle New York Yankees.
for example. had five players in the
draft pool - pitchers Don Hood and
Jim Kaat , outfielder Roy 'Nhlte,
mhelder Lenny Randle and f1rst
baseman George Scott - and so
coul d s1gn f ive free agents .
Eac h pla yer could be selected bv
13 teams and. if it wanted to. h is old
team could also select negotiatmg
righls . as wen
But drafting players and Si gning
them are two very different jobs. ln
the first three drafts. the No. I
selectioo has never Signed with the
first team to draft him . In 1976, the
Montreal Expos ma de Reggie
Jackson the opening selection. bu t
he subsequenUy signed with the
Yankee,&lt;; ln 1977. the first p1ck was
Lyman Bostock , lJy Toronto. He
Sl l(ned with California . In 1978, the
New York Mets made Pete Rose the
first p1 ck and he wound up Wlth
Philadelphia
Toronto made the first ch01ce in
loda y's draft followed by the :-&lt;cw
York Mets Teams r otated by
league , drafting in inver"' order
according to their won~ost records
for the 1979 season .

27

36'

47

23

35

Frt&lt;lay's Games
Toron to \IS Hartford at Spr. ngf1eld ,
Mass
Quebec ~t Atlanta
washington at Winnipeg
New York Islanders at Edmonton
Boston at vancouver
Saturday's Games
Chicago a1 Detroit
Philade!hia at Montr eal
Atlanta at Pittsburgh
Buffalo at Toronto
WashinQton at M i nnesota
Los Angeles at St . Louis
New Yorl( Rangers at Colorad o
Sunday 's G•mes
Buffalo at Phi ladelphia
Detroif at Quebec
LO!i Angeles at Chicago
New York I slanders at Winn ipeg
Boston at Edmonton
New York Ranqers at Vancouver

31 16
31
33 25
41

31
14

34
30

46

33

54
35

48
35

14

30

19

31

For all your home entertainment

and appliance nPHs .

DOXOL SERVICE

RIDENOUR'S
TV &amp; APPLIANCE
GAS SEt&gt;! VICE
Chester. 0 .

CLARENCE ANDREWS
WRITE-IN CANDIDATE FOR
MAYOR OF POMEROY, OHIO
Just write my name and office on the back of your gray
ballot envelope.
Your write -in vote will be appreciated .
Pd. Pol. Adv.

SEE and
HEAR
A
TECHNICAL KNOCKOUT
ON SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 3
TOM'S STEREO CENTER AND J.V.C.

'F••e•tone
~t/(i/Aaw"tlf'
r

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~35

35

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3~

1\ 7-· 14

39

E7K· I4
F 7K t4
(; 1~ - 14

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$1

71 )

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;, f)(l . J :.
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$1 ."\2

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·IS

POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO
Pomeroy, OH .
\II

DON'T MISS ITI

·1~ I

Si1.1'!!i t.n fit mu~ril l " S . 11nd imporl nu~

-

SESSIONS WILL BE AT 11 AM · l PM . 3 PM

:.: :H;

All p nZ;!!p~~ ~ u.;··:"Ju lrlld~ ·in ·-;~;dt&gt;d'

992 -2094
"Front End Alignm •

Along with our product seminar, we will have
the following offers:
(1 l Prices will be reduced on selected items.
(2) We will clean, demagnetize and spec
check your present cassette deck FREE.
(3) Bring in your 1 oz. disc washer solution
bottle and we will refill it for only $1.00 - A
regular $2.25 value.
(4) Everyone who attends one of our sessions
will receive a FREE "Technical Knockout"
poster .

SATURDAY NOVEMBER 3RD
AT

~om'l g~ e~
!1\

TII:A~"

.\\TNtT , , 1;.\UJI''Ollo;. 01110

Ph . 446-7116
I

Racine, 0.

RE-ELECT

11 11
33

Stobart of his ninth-place team a
year ago .
So the media fo~ecast a seventhplace finish for Toledo in the MldAmencan 1n 1979. lnslead, the
Rockets ( 6-() to Central Michigan's 70 MAC mark) will finish first or
second .
All other teams have been
eliminated from the Mid-American
race.
In other games Saturday, Miami
12-J 1 plays at Western Michigan (241, Eastern Michigan (1-3-1) at Ball
State 12·31 and Kent State (1~) at
Ncrlhern Illinois 11}.2-1 ). Bowling
Green visits Kentucky In a nonconference conU!st . Ohio University
is idle .
" Physically, we knew we were
capable of playing anybody In the
league . But we were worried about
our mental confidence. We were
fortW1aU! enough to win a few games
early this year ," he said .
This 1s still an extremely your1g
Tol edo learn . Thll'ty.four of the 43man traveling squad Ill Miami last
we€k were either freshmen or
sophomores. Eight sophomores and
two freshmen are regulars.
A year ago Toledo had 32
turnovers 1n 11 games. Now they
have for ced 33 errors by the
opposition and conunitted just 17
turnovers of their own in a IH
overaLl start . That t urnover ratio
has the Rockets ranking first
nationally this week .
" That ·s one of the reasons for our
suc cess and the other is our
expenence We toought we were at
least a year away from going into
every game witil a chance to win."
he sa1d .
While Toledo has struggled Ill just
10 league VIctories in 34 games in the
previous four seasons, Central
Michigan has been ooe of the most
s ucce ssful Mid-American teams
since joining the conference race in
1975.
The Olippewas finished second in
1975. 1977 and 1978 and fifth in 1978.
Central Michigan went :I.J.G.l against
Mid-American opposi tion that span.
Th1s year all seven of their victories
have been over MAC rivals, pushing
their overall wmning streak to 14
games, seeood longest in the nation
to wp-r an ked Alabama .
Central Michigan Coach Herb
Deromedl sa1d of Toledo: "You can
dlscoWlt those losses at Marshall
and Arirona State early in the
season . This is a very impressive
team . You don 't win at Bowling
Green or Miami unless you have
talent"

WILL INTRODUCE THE HOTTEST NEW PRODUCTS IN THE
Hl-fl INDUS.TRY.

606 E . Main

these Friendly Salesmen: J.D . Story, Jimmy Deem or Bill

Rudy May of the Mntreal Expos
provid e d
teams
a
unique
opporturuty to acqu1re a smgle·
named battery , both at the S&lt;:t Jm:
time.
There wttre also some glamorous
names 1n a draft that has produced

39

Winter Tires With Bite

1-i. OO - l ~

'2295

·----------------------~
•

5 5

.6.36
.500
.500
.36-4

181

79

Polyester cord
At the present time the State Park owns nearly 3,000
acres on which we receive no taxes for schools or roads .

THE FRIENDLY DEALER
one of

7 3 .700

102

Vinton County

Warren
66 {8 )
83
Athens
47 ( 8 )
59
Sou thern
3.4
(8)
4 3
Federal Hocking
33 ( 8 )
4 1
Alexander
\9 &lt;Bl
24
TEAMS RANKED DEFENSIVELY
Team
Pts . (G J Avg .
Point Pleasant
41
(9 J
4 6
Kyger Creek
45 18 :1
56
North Ga l l in
49 ( 8 )
6 \
Ironton
50 (lJ
7 1
Miller
bO 18)
7 .s
Hannan Trace
69 19}
1 7
Jackson
55 (7)
79
Ga llipolis
78 {8)
98
Eastern
88 i9J
9.8
Belpre
81 I BI 10 9
N elsonville York
93 (6) 11 6
Wahama
108 ( 9 )
12 0
Vinton County
103 {8) 11.8
Southwestern
12-4 (9 ) 13 B
Wellston
11 7 ( B) 146
Me 1gs
44 ( 3 ) 14 7
Tri mbl e
l2~
( 8 ) 16 l
Warren
138 (8 1 17 3
Athens
145 ( 8 J 18 1
Logan
128 fl) 18 J
Waverly
151 (8 ) 18 9
Alexander
159 ( 8 l 19 9
Federal Hocl&lt;.ing
199 ( 8 ) 24 9
Southern
/54 t 8l 31 8

.818

Los Angeles

Pol Adv

I thought at that time 1 was doing something to im·
prove Olive Township .

1974 Bulclc: Century 4 dr..... .... .... .... ~~~- ;,'~.·.~~~~~~~::~:~~~~~.".~ . . . . . . . . .. '2195

CNrml e in or call
e son.

2 a
Pacific D i vision
Portland
9 2

Gallipolis

Ph i ladel phia 3, Sf Louis 1
Montreat 5, Minnesota 1
Los Angeles A, New York Rangers 3

0

lisa Scaggs
Operator

U tah

4

.17J 6 111
.200 7
.200 )

Thursd•v 's Games

Several years ago 1 was the first man to sell acreage
to the Forked Run lake project, 150acres .

0

Red and whit e A r eal n ice 75 model
•••••••• •••

3 8
2 8

OF OLIVE TOWNSHIP

.............. •2695

•••••••••••

21' '
31,;2
4

ATTENTION VOTERS

Make a nice fami ly van

1975 Pontiac Catalina 2 dr

Corner Third &amp; Cherry St., Syracuse,

'

0

.4JO
.333
.222

Pro Hockey At A Gl•nce
By The- Associatfld Press
National Hockey Le•oue
Campbell Conference
Patrick Division
W L T Pis GF GA
Philadelphia
7 1 1 15 .4J 32

------------y

Pd

1975 Ford 1 Ton Van
'2695
1975 B • 1c L• i d
d
Bu•ck "sbestand lowmdeaQefor ' 75
u1c
1m te 4 r HT ........ .... ........................................ •2795

LOOK FOR THE HOLIDAYS!

992 3982

18
16
D
16
11
12

Election, November 6, t979
Experienced Accountant &amp; Tax Consulant

let Smith Nelson buy you, your Thanksgiving Turkey . If you buy a new or used
car pnced $500.00 or more now till Thanksgiving we will buy your turkey for you
up to 15 lbs. Shop Smith Nelson before you buy any car, New or Used. we only
have seven 1979 models in stock, so come in and save many dollars . we also have
some great used car buys . Check the prices on these.,.. .,.. Used Cars .

•• 0

Debbie Powell
Owner-Operator

19

0
4
0
4

Ch icago
Denver

POMEROY, OHIO

1976 Chev. Vega Wagon 4 cyl ......... ~~~~:.'~~:':.·.~~.~-i ~:

NOW FOR YOUR NEW

10

SALISBURY TOWNSHIP

1976 Chev. Luv Plclc:up 4 cyl...... ...... ~.s.".':~·.~~~-~.;~:~~~................... •2995

MAKE YOUR APPOINTMENT

2

CLERK

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

1977 Bu I ck Le 5 a b re 4 c:J r 5e d . ...............................................
Sold fhis new . extra ni ce
•4395

NOV. 6 THRU NOV. 24

I
1

JO

7

- Candidate For -

1977 Toyota Celica GT, 5 Speed .......L.~~·m·i ~e·?~:. ~.~~~~:~ . . . . . . . . . . . . . '4795

ON ALL PERMS STARTING

8· 12Sat .
Clo\ed Sundo1y
International
New ldei
Harve-ster
Equ 1pmen .

3

26

37

WANDA L. EBLIN

OF SHOES

0

10% OFF

Houn : 8 · ~Mon . · Fri

Russell , Sou tnwest

Bray, Hannan Trace
2
Shu pe , N or thGalli a
3
Howeii , NorthGallia
2
Van Sic k le. K Creek
2
Potter , Southwestern
1
G r een , Hannan Trace 2
Wol fe , Eastern
2
x I ncludes field goa l(s )

1

.455 2

Midwest Division
Milwaukee
9 1 .900
Kansas City
5 5 .500

2
0

Your vote and Influence Appreciated

1977 Ford Pinto 4 cyl. ~Speed ........ ~.":.~'.~~:. .":'~:~ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . '2995

SPECIAL

·~

5

5 6
A 6
.4 8
2 7

3
6

Western Conference

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

.

PRE-HOLIDAY PERMANENT

Ph . 992 -2176

1

4

1 1 .718 1

Indiana
Detroit
Cleveland
Houston

r --~--------------- ·

0

(Formerly Dorothy's Beauty Salon)

Pomeroy , 0 .

Boston

GB

New York
6 5 .545
Washington
2 7 .222
Central Division
San Antonio
6 3 .667
Atlanta
6 5 .545

.... ugg1es
, L 09an x VALLEY
1
J
11
SOUTHERN
ATHLETIC CONFERENCE
Player , Team
TO PAT Ph .

.S

TEAMS RANKED OFFENSIVELY
Pts . Avg .
Ironton
181 (7) 25 q
Wellston
170 ( 81 21 J
Hannan Trac e
187 ( 9 ) 10 8
North Gallia
161 ( 8 1 20 1
Belpre
_
1S6 ( 81 19 5
Southwestern
168 ( 91 18 7
Mil ler
146 181 18 J
Eastern
161 ( 9 ) 17 9
N elsonvill e York
138 I BJ 17 J
Jacks,on
114 (1)
16 3
Meigs
48 (JJ 16 o
Waverly
126 ( 8)
15 8
Point Pleasant
14 1 (9) 15 .7
Kyger Creek
124 (8) 15 5
Wahama
119 191 13.1
Trimble
105 (8) 13 I

Team

Atlantic Division
W. W . Pet .
Philadelphia
8 1 .889

l AS ol Oct . 2))

_assile r , K Creek

How they rate

Eastern Conference

Player , T .
TO PAT Pts .
Hodges, I r onton
15
2
92
Patton. Wellston
15
0
90
Sibl ey , Hannan Trace lJ
0
78
La ndrum , Ja c kson
10
0
60
Bisse i i.Eas ter n
11
2
68
N owell , North Gall•a
8
12
60
Baker , Belpre
10
0
6(1
Boston . Nels York
9
4
5S
Potter . Sou mwestern
9
10
64
Brny , Hannan Trd ce x 4
15
45
W 1ga1. Eas t ern
7
4
46
SOUTHEASTERN OHIO
ATHLETIC LEAGUE
Player, Team
TO PAT Ph.
HOdges, I ronton
14
2
86
Landrum . Jackson
7
0
41
Fle t c her , Ironton
1
14
20
Jenkin s. Jac kson
J
0
18
Patton . Wellston
J
0
18
Morris , Ironton
2
4
16
M o rr ison , GallipoliS
2
7
19
She-e t s . Gall ipol is
J
0
18
Con l ey . Wa'Yerly
I
1
14
M ·- ~ 1 dna way , Well ston 2
0
11
Ma:s. ~ 1 e, Wellston
2
0
12

Bis se ii .Eas t ern
Si bley . Han Tra ce

at bats . Kessinger is 37 years old .
The coach is Jesus Alou of the
Houstoo Astros, who directed traffic
at first base last season . Alou also
was a part-time player , batting 43
times and hitting .256. He is 36.
The draft also had two player s
named May - one a catcher and the
other a pitcher. Catcher Milt Ma y of
the Olicago White Sox and pitcher

Nafional Basketball Association
At A Glance
By The Associated Press

OVERALL SCORING

.,.

of the Qticago White Sox. He gave
up both jobs in midseason after
batting .200 in 56 games with just l!O

NEW RK ( AP) - For baseball
owners equipped with a sense of
nostalgia seasoned by a dose of good
hwnor, there were some interesting
names available in today's #.player
free agent draft.
Clubs who might need help
running the show, for example,
could go after an ex-manager and a
coach, both up for grabs.
The f&lt;rmer manager was Don
Kessinger, woo started last season
as both pilot and part-time shortstop

Area scoring

~-------------"*'

1978 Ford T-Bird Diamond Jub. Ed .... ?~':.~~·.~.'.":::~ .................... '5995
"FOR THE BOTH OF
YOU BEAUTY SALON"

MEIGS
EQUIPMENT CO,

the line bef&lt;.-e a regwnal television
audience I ABC.TV. 4. 07 p.m . EST 1.
" We started eight fresh men last
year who never had the benefit of
spring pra ctice . They were only on
campus for two weeks of fall
practice and then had w play ," sa1d

Baseball's annual auction
•
slated teday In New York

gravitated to the Yankees, returned
to the Dodgers and this year got his
walking papers.
"The present salaries appear out
of proportion," said McNally, a W.
game winner with the Orioles . "The
owners brought their problems on
themselves - they were obstinate
and refliSed to budge . Now that the
players have the upper hand, they
don't want to give up their gains .
Two minutes after his decision.
Seitz was fired by the owners. "I'd
never been dismissed like that
before," he said. "I was fuming ."
In effect, he held that once a
contract is terminated, the player
has the right Ill offer his services to
another club. Under the reserve
clause, a club could hold - and even
cover up - a player as long as he
stayed in the game .
Seitz insists now he doesn't know
how an equitable agreement can be
reached .
" It ' s a puzzle," he said,
"protecting a player's rights on the
one hand and the owners '
investment on the other while being
fair to the rans. The answer
probably ties in good heads and
collective bargaining ."

~------------•
,
.

8 PM

cmU!nders .
The Toledo r oach, a former
as:nstant at Michigan, will find out
just how far the Rockets have come
since he ll&gt;ok over the sagging
program three years ago Toledo
entertains Ce ntral
Michigan
Saturday Wlth the l•ague crown on

A better turnover ratio and
maturity is the way Chuck Sll&gt;bart
accounts f&lt;r the swift development
of hiS. Toledo Rockets into Mid·
Amencan
Conference
title

NF:W YORK I AP J - Base ball 's
fourth annual garage sale - the free
agent draft - pitched its tent today
with price tags on some 44 majo~
league players who hope I&lt;&gt; become
instant millionaires.
U one.fourth of them doo 't, it will
be an upset. The first year of player
freedom in 197~. saw 14 sign for Sl
million and more while 10
millionaires have emerged from
each of the last two grab bags .
" I am glad I am not involved "
said Dave McNally. former all-&lt;rt~r
pitcher of the Ballimore Orioles
now retired and prospering in th~
aull&gt;mobile business in Billings,
Moot. " Bef&lt;re the big decision, the
cards were stacked heavily in favor
of the owners. Now they are stacked
in fav&lt;r of the players.
"One of the reasons I quit - other
than my bad arrn - wa• that I don 't
think 1 could have stood shuttling
from ooe team to another . It 's bad
for everybody ...
Dave McNally and another
pitcher, Andy Messersmith , lately of
the Los Angeles Dodgers. were
&gt;Fincipais in the historic arbitration
ruling by Peter Seitz that a ball club
co uld not bind a player to his
coo tract for life as specified by the
reserve claU.'le .
Seitz's ruling on Dec 23. 197&gt; had a
cyclonic effect on the lords of the
game .
U allowed to prevail. warned
Co mmissioner Bowie Kuhn, "i t
would be a disaster for most of the
players, the clubs and, most of all,
the fans."
" Financially suicidal." said Lee
Ma c Phail , president of the
American L.eag ue .
Both proved to be pamcky Chicken
Littles . The sky didn 't fall, after aU
- not even when Pew Rose and
Dave Parker signed for almost Sl
rrullion a year . The game drew 43
million people the past season and is
healthier than ever in its century of
existence .
Seltz and McNally can look back
and view the landmark decision with
detached objectivity . Messersmith ,
picked up by Atlanta for $1 million,

1liE D..\IL Y SENTINEL

tilT'- ~

By GEORGE STRODE
AP Sports Writer

By Will Grimsley

FALL .SPECIAL!

Washington Today
WASHINGTON f AP) +It was like
a college rewtion, convened to
celebrate the obvious. But for the
Class of 1980, the task is just begin·
mng .
In a sweltering automobile
showroom. where Cadillac salesmen
used to show thelf wares, Sen . Edward M. Kennedy's brother-in-law
was armoWlcing what everyone
already knew . He also was an·
nouncing that Kennedy would an·
nounce the same thing in person
next Wednesday at Faneuil Han in
Boston .
Yes, Kennedy is running for
president in 1980. So what else is
new ?
··The Kennedy for President Com·
mittee is now officially under way ,
and we look forward to an active and
successful campaign ," said Stephen
E . Smith.
Kennedy already had said as
much, in succinct if inelegant terms .
" I'm tired of screwing around with
thi s,.. the sena tor
from
Massachusel:t'l said . " I want to get
going "
Preswnably, so do.the Kennedys,
the Kennedy In-laws , and the once,
present and future Kennedy cam·
paigners and aides who came to the
showroom for Monday's per formance.
Incidentally, Smith said there is
no symbolism in the fact that Kennedy headquarters U.'led to be a
CadJUac agency . " I think this is the
only campaign that is paying under
$5 a foot for rent," he said .
Announcements of candidacy are
a ntual of American potitics . Any
su.•pense is coincidental. By the lime
the candidate declares he IS running
for president. he 1s hard at the cam·
palgn .
Announcement day is a time to
repea&gt; the slogans , rally the troops,
whoop it up a bit and try to get the
orgamzation ready for busmess. The
grind of a presidential campaign IS
not nearly so glamorous - - and
nowhere near as much fun - as
shouting for a candidate who has
just confirmed that he is one .

Sports
World

Th e foo d component of the
marketbasket has been responsible
for much of the increase . When the
food items in the marketbasket were
tallied separately, the AP foW1d that
the !&lt;&gt;tal at the checklist stores was
up an a verage of 7.3 percent- more
than ooe percentage point higher
than the total for the food and nonfood items together.
The items on the AP checklist
were : chopped chuck. center cut
pork chops, froren orange juice
concentrate , coffee, paper towels,
butter. Grade-A mediwn while eggs,
creamy peanut butter, laundry
detergent, fabric softener, tomato
sauce, milk, frankfurters and
granulated sugar . The cities
checked were : Albuquerque, N.M .,
Atlanta, Bosll&gt;n, Chicago, Dallas ,
Detroit!, Los Angeles, Miami, New
York. Philadelphia, Providence.
R.I. , Salt Lake aty and Seattle.

according to the U.S. Department of
Agriculture . But cooswners have
been turning Ill cheese and other
milk products as an alternative
source of protein to expensive meat,
keeping demand and prices high . An
inc rease in government pri ce
supp&lt;rta f&lt;r milk also has boosted
priceit .
The October decrease in the
marketbasket bill compared with a
September increase of four .tenths of
a percent and an October 1978 rise of
1.7 percent .
Looking at today's prices and
those at the start of the year, the AP
found that the marketbasket bill at
the checklist store increased by just
under 6 percent during the first 10
months of 1979. The only declines
ca me in February , .June and
October .

The news was not all good .
oowever C.msurners found higher
prices for breakfast staples like
butter, eg gs and milk whi ch
partially offset declmes in the cost of
meat.
·
The rises refle c t increased
demand which has risen faster than
the supply . Milk production, for
example . is expected to be about I
per ce nt larger than in 1978,

Toledo in championshipga,e

Today's

·i~f,\1

�~'The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , ~nday.

4---The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Fridav . Nov . 2 1979

Ht&gt;lt·n Ht·lp

Members of the Loyal Women and
Men's Class of the Middleport

lh lldo •JI Boll..!

Polly Cramer

Brass won't shine
DEAR POLLY- I have two lamps
with brass bases that appear to be
c'Orroded. and I have used several
brass cleaners but they do not
remove this . I hope you can leU me
how to clean these lamps . - K.R.
DEAR K.R. - Most " brass " lamp
bases are plated and come with a
lacquer finish that is appUed at the
factory . Metal polish should never
be used on them . Dusting with a soft.
polish-free cloth and an infrequent
coat of paste wax should keep them
in good shape . You have doubtless
made matters worse and the corroded look may be from polish that was
not thoroughly removed .
Take your bases to a brass plater .
have them relacquered after be1ng
replated and then forget the poUsh
and follow the above directions . POLLY
DEAR POLLY - To remove oil or
grease from a driveway, pour charcoallighter fluid on it, let it set and
then rinse off with the hose.
To remove ballpoint ink or carbon
from your clothes or hands pour rubbing alcohol directly on the ink and

rub lightly , let 1t stand for a few
minutes and then wa sh .
When loading s ~verware in the
dishwasher separate it by placing all
forks together' knives together, etc.
This makes for easier unloading as
you pi ck up the vanous pieces by
~roups and put them away . -KITTY
DEAR POLLY- I save the rubber
bands that come around the dally
paper but often need larger ones , so
I cut the ela•tic waistbands from old
panty hUI!e abuut one-half inch below
the sutchmg . I do the same \\1th
knee-hlgh and ankle length socks
and have great bands that cost
nothlng . Also when I need elastic for
a pair of slacks I fmd the elashc
band from a p811' of my husband 's
under short• works fine .
A large screw fr&lt;m your husband's work box ts perfect for getting a cork out of a bottle 1n one
ptC&lt;:e . -GERTRUDE
Polly will send you one of her sign ed thank -you newspaper coupan
clippers if she u..•ie.s your fa\·orite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem 1n her
column .
Wrtte
POLLY 'S
POINTERS 1n care of thts
newspaper

Officers elected by church
Officers were elected at the recent
annual business meeting of the
Reo11!aniZed Church of Jesus Chrl.!&gt;1
of Latter Day Saints, Racine ·
Portland Branch.
Wilham Roush , pastor, had
charge of the opening service whlch
included a hymn, and the invocatiOn .
John Anderson presided at the
business meeting with rificers bemg
elected as follows : Wi!Uam R. Roush
retained as pastor; Roy Proffitt and
Frederic J
Stobart, owointed
counselors; Maxine D. Sellers.

MOTifERS ' CLUB MEETS
MASON - The Mason Mothers'
Oub, at its October 17 meehng at the
h&lt;Ine of Sally Ross, gave a cash
donation to each of the folloWing
grou!)ll : Mason CUb Scout Pack 253.
and Mason Community Action Committee . Co-hostes.""s were Joyce
Redman and Vickie Yeager.
The group ci 19 enjoyed a
scavanger hunt, relay race and
other games.
Refreshments were served to
Earlene
Burr.gardner, Helen
Ellison, Donna Fowler, Rita Hayes,
Susan Kincaid, Betty Lish, Jody
Noble, Mamie Noble, Carol Proffitt,
Ruth Ryan, Ann Smith, Gladdie
Stewart, Lucille Swackhamer, Lois
Test, MaDora Wildman, Bonnie MeFarland by hostesses Mrs Ross,
Mrs. Redman and Mr.; . Yeager .
__

secretary ; Daniel Roush, treasurer;
Pllyllli; Stobart, church school director : Nancy Adams, music director ;
Janice Lee , young adult leader; Unds Evans, youth leader; llah Roush.
hbranan : Goldie Clendenin, publicity agent : Nancy Adams and Gary D.
Evans , auditors.
Appomted officers are Thomas
Stobart. Gary D. Evans, Russell
Radcliff and Daruel Roush, building
and finance committee; Thomas
Stobart, solicitor ; Ruth Bradford,
branch recorder ; Dab Roush , book
stewa rd ; Fredric J . Stobart,
evange li stic dtrector ; Sharon
Russell, Junior steward director. No
appomtments were made to the p,.;i twns or historian, higher education
ste ward, and Camp Bounttful
representative.
A hymn and the benediction by the
pastor closed the meeting .

SCOUTS MAKE POSTERS
Carrying out the October national
theme in cub scouting , Den 2, Pack
235 al Chester made flfemen·s hats
and posters or the theme "SIX Ways
to Foil ~)res ." The bottom of each
poster read " We have studied and
are going to follow these rules, and
be extraordinary cub scouts "Ea&lt;:h
cub also took a set of rules home .
Cheryl Laudemult ts the Den 2
leader . with flonna Randolph as her
asSistant.

SHE'S PLAYING WITH FIRE
AND HER HUSBAND WIU . BURN!
DEAR HELEN :
I'm a quite happily married
woman ; Wllil six months ago I was
also bored . I've got a good, depen dable , loving man, but he'd rather
work than go out. He stays in town
one night a week, sleeping at the office and catching up on briefs, etc .
A woman friend asked me to a
singles disco on one of those nights .
Since then I've become a regular.
I'm wild about dancing - Sidney
isn't. Naturally I get the "Your
place or mine'" routine, and once I
tried it, just to see how things are in
the singles world . They weren't
great 1 So I go home alone, even
though I'll have to admit a couple of
men I've met sort of stay on my
mind.
I really don't think Sidney would
object, but I haven 't told hlrn yet.
This is the most aUve I've been tn
years 1 Am I doing wrong ' - AN NALEA
DEAR ANNALEA
You might-any night now .
When a woman plays with fire . her
husband usually burns.
Tell Sidney . And then suggest Joining a dance club : together . - H.
DEAR HELEN :
I have a problem saying " no" to
men. I have a wonderful husband
but when I meet a handsome. well built, successful male my resistance
goes out the window
I've had three affairs in two years,
and I'm sure something is wrong
with me . Don't suggest asking my
clergyman because I'd lose my
status. Everyone thinks I'm a model
wife, including my husband .
I hate living these lies and I'm
really crazy abo ut my man . Trouble
is I'm crazy about other men too .
Help ' -CAN "f STOP
DEARC.S.:
You're not as unusual as you
think . Just as some males are incurable womanizers, a number of
females likewise feel compelled to
seduce men .
Whether you can change depends
on how much you value marriage .
Talk out your needs with a
psychiatnst - preferably a woman,
but if not , be sure he L&lt;n 't handsome
and well -built ! -H .
DEAR HELEN :
We invited 35 couples to our
housewarming . I put RSVP on the
mvitations, and they knew we were
going to have the party catered, with
champagne , etc .
Only about half came, and no one
bothered to send or call regrets .
Next day I wrote those thoughtless
people and told them I no longer
wanted their friendship. Wasn 't I
right ' -T.J.
DEART .:
Let's put 11 this way : your n&lt;H~how
friends were wrong when they ignored the RSVP. But those angry letters turned your circle or fnends toto
a half moon . You may regret this
hasty action . -H .

HAYMAN BARNITZ
H~PITALIZED

Hayman Barrut:z 1s a surgical patient at the Holzer Medical Center
His room number is 204.

Pom~

PIERCED
EARS

Flower ShOll

FREE

r-- --------------,
: MaSDn CouniJ
I

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News Notes

·tlm.M 'f~t,..,.ha/1

I
I
I

MRS. ROUSH SURPRISED
POINT PLEASANT Mrs .
Walden ! Louise l Roush was
pleasantly surprised when she was
presented with a picture of herself
and husband, Walden, at the County
Festival held recently at Mason
CoWlty Fairgrounds . Mr. John E .
Greene, of Milton, W.Va., made the
presentation as a token Of appreciation for their services on
behalf of the Farm Museum .
Mrs . Cecil (Hazel) Smith served
as General Chairperaon of the
Festival and there was all kinds of
entertairunent. Country music, cake
walk, cider making to mention a few
of the activities . The festival was a
big success due to the cooperation rl
a lot of good workers too numerous
to mention .
Greene is an active participant in
promoting the museum. Besides
donating the Morgan Museum, he
provided the country store, kitchen
and carpenter shop.
lllSTORICAL SOCIETY
ACQUffiE'l MATERIAL
MASON - The Mason Historical
Society has acquired many things
related to the historical Virgil A.
Lewis and Ed Roush home on Brown
Street, Mason. Pictured is Mrs. Earl
Ingles Sr., holding a lodge book enclosed in glass covered box of Lodge
23, A F%AM of Clifron, which was
presented to the late Brother Virgil
A. Lewis, and reads as follows :
initiated Sept. 28, 1907. passed Oct .
26, 1907, and raised November 16,
1907, by secretary, W. E. Ruttencutter. Tills book was given by
Mrs. AdaM . (Roush ) Kinney, whose
parents were the last persons to
restde in the h&lt;me before it was purchased by the Mason County Court .
, Mr. and Mrs. Charles (Ada) Kinney,
reside at Kissimmee, Florida , and
visit in the area quite frequently .
The Historical Society, vice
president, Mrs. Ingles, expressed
appreciation for the donation .
VIEW HISTORIC HOME
MASON - Mrs. Ray Proffitt and
Mr.; . Earllngles, Sr ., members of
Mason's Historical Society, accompanied several ladies from
Rockport
Homemakers
Club
through the Virgil A. Lewis hlsblric
home recently. Alsp acc&lt;mpanying
the ladies was Mrs. Elmer (Marjorie ) Grueser, former Mason County
E•tension Homemakers
president and Charleston Area
Representative from Pt. Pleasant .
The Rockport Homemakers from
Wood County include Betty Harvey ,
Ruth Conrad, Tennie Thompaon,
Agatha Morgan, Wilma Yoho, Gail
Lockhart , Dola Rogers, Lena
Conrad, Judy Deem, Lenora Low
and Frances Conrad .
FALL FESTIVAL SA nJRDA Y
WEST COLUMBIA - All are invited to attend the West Columbia
Fall Festival this Saturday, November 3, at West Columbus Elementary
School. They will have pony rides
and games which start at 4 p . m.
Food will be served starting at
noon and this includes homemade
soup and all kinds of desseris and
sandwiches .

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted--Joyce Ebersbach, Middleport ; Okey Meadows, Pomeroy .
Discharged-Dora Pierce, Mary
Tyler , Edwin Clarke, Laura
Pickens .

With
Purc.hase of

01Urch of Christ enjoyed a potlucl&lt;
dinner Thursday night at the church .
Mrs . Martha Childs gave the
blessing. She and Mrs. Nina Bland
had charge of the preparation for
and beverages served at the dinner .
During the business meeting the
Lord's Prayer was given in lUlison .
Mrs. Grace Pratt welc&lt;med the
members and a guest. Mrs . Alma
White . Mrs. Re&lt;~e Reynolds reported
that $1,000 had been paid on the
church roof as voted by the class at
an ear tier meehng.
MiSil Frances Roush gave the
flower and card report and il was
decided to put the entire collection
for the night in the flower fund .
Reported ill were Paul Lewis, a
former member of the church, con-

fined to the Holzer Medical Center,
Lawrence Reed, Arcadia Nursing
home patient, Mildred Riley, Holzer
Medical Center, and Mrs . Nelle
Bahr with a broken ann.
Named to the nominatmg corrunittee to present new officers at the
nut meeting were Mrs. Reva
Beach, Mrs. Mabel · Walburn, and
Mrs. Eleanor Lohse. The benedic tion closed the meeting .
Mrs . Bland read Psalm 103 and
" An Evening Resolution" from the
booklet, " Courage for Days of Illness" whlch is given by her church
in Akron to ill and shutin members.
Mrs . Childs read a meditation written from a hospital bed and taken
from the church paper, Christian
Standard.

OUTSTANDING YOUNG WOMAN - Opal Grueser, R.N ., Pomeroy,
with the Meigs County Department of Health, has been selected for inclusion in the 1979 edition of Outstanding Young Women or America . The
program is designed to hooor and encourage e1ceptional yowtg w&lt;rnen
between the ages ri 21 and 36 who have distinguished themselves in their
homes, their professioos and their corrununities. Some 15,000 outstanding
young women will be presented in the volumage . In addition, they are
now being considered for one of the 51 slaw awards to be presented to
those women who have made the most noteworthy contri buti0115 in their
individual states. From these 51 state winners, the 10 outstanding women
of America will be chosen and honored .

Friday sermonette
YFSrERDAYS WILL
BE REMEMBERED
I saw the ruins of a house the other
day. I had seen it as an abandoned
house and thought to myself, I like
the style of that house and its slate
roof . I never thought of it as a pile of
I walked over and looked at the
.ou,HC of wallil still standing . There
hung oo two hooks were a man's suit
coat and a once white night gown . In
the rubble was an old book, tattered
and tom . It was a book of swries
from th, ··' Te.'!lament I wish now
J WOulL
picked it up and
brought 1t home .
I woodered then, who had Uved
there and how many years of life had
gone on in those I'OOfl'lS, the winter
nights with farruly and frienda and
what had gone on, the laughter and
tears, the conversations and· the
prayers . God had to be there
becal!Sf! of the swry book &lt;i Old
Testament lives was the only book or
paper I saw there . That house was a
home and oh the many stories those
rooms could tell. That house and
those rooms have many tales to tell
lbere was a reason for its being but
now today, its task is over . We will
sooo forget but in Gods high heaven
it will be remembered. A reason foc
its being over, a task well dooe but
now finished.
'This area of Ohio i.'l old, the fir.;t
settled part of the old Northwest territory. A few names remain but
many faces and lives have come and
gone and are no more . The past is
past, all but forgotten, except in
HeaverL . God does not forget. God
wild! never forget. Still many today
will not care if God is a part of their
llfe, ooe hundred years from now, ,
who will remember each of us who
walk these streets and lan es and how

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lng/c1

RE-ELECT

VIRGIL KING
MEIGS LOCAL SCHOOL BOARD
FOR THE UNEXPIRED TERM (2 YRS.)
PD . POL. ADV .

L Smith Circle mcrt.r
Officers were elected at the recent
meeting ol the Emma Smith Circle
Women's Department of the
Reorganized Church ri. Jesus Christ
ri Latter Day Saints .
Tile new officers are Unda Evans,
women's leader ; Eula Proffitt,
assistAnt leader ; Beulah Roush,
secretary and treasurer; Goldie
Gillilan, devotiollS; Lucy Taylor ,
study teacher ; Goldie Oendenin,
publicity chairman ; and llah Roush,
yearbook chairman.
The friendly visitor will be che&lt;~en
by the w&lt;rnen 's leader and the
pastor . Hostesses volunteered for
the year, and cards were sent to the
•
ill.
Refreshments were served by
Eula Proffitt, hostess .

TAKE PART
IN A

REVOLUTION 1
TOM'S STEREO CENTER INVITES YOU TO A NEW
PRODUCT SEMINAR.
SEE AND HEAR THE HOTTEST NEW IDEA IN THE
AUDIO INDUSTRY.

METAL COMPATIBLE
TAPE DECKS

EAR RINGS
4 STYLES

24 Carat
Gold
Over

Get An Introduction To These New Products From
Our JIIC Rep.

To represent Meigs

Get A Free Poster Just For Com1ng ln.

in history contest

Get A Reduction On The Price Of These New
Products.

Surgical
Steel

Get Your Present Tape Deck Cleaned and
Demagnetized FREE!

company representative will be in our store .

SATURDAY, NOV. 3, 1979
10 TIL 4:00

WHEN: SAT., NOV. 3rd
WHERE: TOM'S STEREO CENTER

r--~--~-..........;::.....-. .--~ ·-·.~. ~~~-------,

ATTENTION CHURCH TEACHERS

SPECIAL FRIDAY NIGHT 6 TIL 8 CRAFT PKGS.
Reg . $4.95-$5.98 Now
'1.00

Middleport Book Store
Middleport, Ohio

Potluck
dinner
Thursday

Loyal Women, Men 's Class meets

US • • •

POLLY'S POINTERS

Ph. 992-2641

Those under 18 years of age must be accompanied by
parent or guardian .

Nov . 2, 1979

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

R. C. BOTTLING CO.
Middleport, Ohio

Mill Street
992 -3 j42 or 992 -3344

-

Teresa L. Spencer, a student at
Eastern High Scbool, will represent
Meigs County in the final round of
Ohio University's annual American
History Contest on Saturday at the
Athens campus with the first prize
wiMer to receive $100 and a lull
tuition Ohio University scholarship
equal to $1 ,100.
Those eligible for the final round's
three-quesUoo essay examination
include the 25 top scorers in the state
oo a preliminary multlpl4H:hoice
test, the top scorer from each of
Ohio's 88 counties, and the second
place scorer fr&lt;In each cowtty if he
or she ranked in the 95th percentile
rJ scores for all entrants.
Approximately 12,000 students
took the preliminary examina !Jon at
their local high scbools earlier this
month .

•

many houses will remain. These last
couple of cool evenings brought us
mside our houses, so think of all the
conversatiollS, the words spoken and
the thoughts unspoken. They will be
lost to time except to God and
Heaven. He will remember . The
togetherness of families and friends,
the books and magazines and
newspapers that are read, and the
conversations . The school books that
are studied or not studied and the silly reasons why some children did
study and others did not or could not.
I wonder if those in Heaven will look
back and feel sadness or disgust
over the selfishness and greed and
stupidity or these days . As we grow
older we tend to look back at what
we were and why we did or did not do
certain things . Where was God in
our lives and where is He today .
Yeswrdays are past and are
hlstory . It may be good or bad but
there was a reason for what we did.
These reasons were eilher good or
had or selfish. The future will decide
what the past has done . People may
not remember or care. Only God will
care one way or the other. That old
house had seen its days. A new
building becoming II home, warm
and CfYlY . Then an old house soon to
be vacant and then empty wall3 with
only memories. Today it's a pile of
rubble. We will soon forget , but God
will never forget. Our own Uves will
be over one day soon and wbo will
remember us . Who will remember
each of us ? Only God, he will
remember . Our yesterdays will be
remembered . " God? " He never
forgets .
Rev . Wi!Uam Middlesworth
I . teran Church
Pomeroy, Ohio

'The annual Halloween party and
potlucl&lt; dinner of the Big Bend
L1tizens Band Radio Club, Inc . was
he ld Friday night at the Rock Springs Grange Hall.
Approximately 50 members and
guests attended the party with
costume prizes going to Penny
Aeiker, the ugliest; Rhonda Gibbs,
the most original; Tammy
Capehart, the funni¢; and Lenna
McFann, the pretti..,t, in the
children's category; and Shirley
Gibbs, the most original; Pat
Aeiker, the ugliest; Margaret
Wyatt, the fWliliest; and Etta WUI,
the prettiest .
Cider, coffee and punch were served by the dub at the potluck dinner .
Wtnners of the cake walks were Walt
Wilson and Nettie Hayes, and
receivmg door prizes were Pat
Aeiker, Eitel Drake, and Walt
Wilaon.
Next meeting will be held on Nov .
13 at the Grange hall 7:30 p.m.
Visitor.; are welcome .

r---Social Calendar
FRIDAY
POMONA GRANGE, 8 p.m. Friday at the Rocl&lt; Springs Grange hall
with Rock Springs members as
hosts.
MEIGS COUNTY Pamona Grange
46 Friday 8 p.m . at Rock Springs
Grange Hall .
MEIGS COUNTY REACf Team,
7:30p.m. Friday at Senior Citizens
Center in Pomeroy; all members
urged to attend .
SAnJRDAY

BOARD OF Columbus Township
Trustees, Saturday, 4 p.m . at the
township building , Gloria Hutton,
clerk, reports .
MONDAY
MEIGS COUNTY SALON 710,
Mooday, 7: 30 p.m. at the Riverboat
Room. J uUa Hysell and Eileen
Searles, hostesses.
LETART FALI.S PTO meeting,
7:30p.m. Mooday at the school.
nJESDAY
HOMEMADE VEGETABLE bed
supper Tuesday 10 a.m . to 4 p.m. at
Harrisonville Town Hall . Sponsored
by senior citizellB . Bring containers
for carry -&lt;lilt orders of soup.
ELECMON DAY Dinner and fall
bazaar in soci.al rooms rl Chester
Methodist Church Tuesday . Dinner
served from II a.m. w I p.m. Bazaar
from 9a.m. to 7p.m.
OYSTE R STEW dinner at
Pcmeroy American Legion following regular meeting Tuesday at 8
p.m. Membership roundup.

One year ago: The Securities and
Ex change Comm ission publicly
accused ITI' of paying mtllions of
dollars in bribes overseas.
Today's birthday : Actor Burt
Lancaster is 66
Thought for loday : War IS a
contagion . - Franklin D. Roosevelt
I 1882-19451

Meigs History book finds publishe·r
By Margaret Parker, Co-ordlna tor
Melg• County Museum
In July of 1978, the Meigs County
Pioneer and Historical Society entered into agreement with Taylor
Publishing C&lt;mpany w publish a
county family history . In October ri.
1978, RSVP people addressed and
stuffed 7500 letters to residents of the
county, tnviting them to write , in
their words , a family history of :;oo
words or less, and also offering them
the opportunity to have one picture
tncluded free .
At the deadline of December 5,
1978, approximately 400 stories had
been received . Due to numerous re quests, the deadline was extended to
February 5, 1979. At that deadline,
there were approximately 600
stories. Still feeUng that many people were working on sblries , the final
deadUne was set for April 5. At that

SERVlCE'l ANNOUNCED
All Eastern Star members and
MasollS are invited to attend the 11
a .m. services at the Syracuse
A.&lt;! bury United Methodist Church on
Nov . 4. The A.&lt;!bury Cburch is where
Ann Hemsley, worthy matron and
Thomas Edwards, worthy patron,
Pomeroy Chapter 1136, attend .
Members are requested to meet at
10 :45 a .m . to enter the church in a

If you haven't ordel'ed your copy
yet, we urge you not w wait. We do
not know the final cut-df datefor accepting orders, but with the book ao
near w final publication, it cannot be
much longer. We have stressed time
and again that the society will not be
ordenng additional books. H a few
individuals wish to invest in extra
copies , they will undoubtably sell for
a much higher price and there is no
guarantee there will be any extra
volumes purchased. To be sure rl
gej:ting a copy send your order with
$26 if picked up, 128 if mailed, to
Metgs History Book, Pomeroy, Ohio
4!i769.

deadUne there were about 1,050
stories . The committee felt that this
as a very good response and that
ample time had been given for submitting. However, &amp;nee book orders
would only be taken on a prepublication basis, the deadUne for
accepting them would be extended
until further notice .
On June 30, all original
manuscripts (family and topical)
and the special paid pages were submitted to the publisher. On August
26, the slick proofs were hack and
proofing of them was begun. Two
weeks laster, September 7, 00
pounds of proof and pictures were
shipped to Dallas . The book, thus
rar, has been on the projected
schedule of the Taylor Publishing
C&lt;Inpany and the Historical Society.
We are awaiting the brownlines
for proofing at this time . With nounforeseen breakdowns, the book will
be delivered in mid-December . The
c&lt;IIUIIIttee that has worked on this
book from the beginning, feel that il
has been well worth the effort and
that the finished product will
become an he1rlo&lt;m to be cherished
for generations.

STATE OF OHIO. DEPARTMENT Of INSUR -

AN CE

CERTIFICATE Or COMf'LIANCE. The

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Seed and Milling
HEADQUARTERS

body .

BAZAARSAnJRDAY
Women of the Asbury United
Methodist Church will hold a bazaar
Saturday frt111 10 a.m . to 3 p .m . on
the parking lot of the Teaford Realty
Co. There 'lll'ill be a vareity or
ceramic, crocheted, macrame and
other handmade articles sold .

•

SUPPER SLATED
A h&lt;Inemade vegetable beef supper will be held at the Harrisonville
Town Hall Tuesay, Nov. 6, from 10
a.m . to 4 p .m.
Soup will also be available for
carry-&lt;&gt;ut but containers must be
provided . The menu also includE!!
pies, donuts and coffee. 'The supper
i.'l being sponsored by the Senior
Citizens of Harrisonville.
Seed~

SOUP DINNER
Women of the Forest Run United
Methodist Church will hold an election day soup dinner at the church
from 9 a.m . to 6 p.m. Besides aoups,
the gorup will sell desserts and
beverages .

· Bird Seeds - Ovster Shells

~nd

Grit · Fer1ilizers · L me . Ce -

ment &amp; Mortar - Stock Salt · Water Softener · Rem @dies - Salt - Liters .
Vaccine - Roofing · Paints - Red Brand Fencing - Baler and Binder

Twine · Sprays - Gates.

SUGAR RUN MILLS
Mulberry Ave .

Pomeroy

992-2 115

POMEROY VILLAGE
INCOME TAX
VOTE YES FOR BETTER STREETS,
WATER~ FIRE

&amp; POLICE

PROTECTION AND A VILLAGE

YOUR VOTE WILL BE APPRECIATED

CHARLES H. (CHUCK) BARTELS
CANDIDATE FOR
TRUSTEE OF SALISBURY TWP.
PD . POL ADV

YOU CAN BE PROUD TO
LIVE IN.
THOSE WHO WILL PAY - ANYONE LIVING OR
WORKING IN POMEROY.
THOSE WHO DO NOT PAY:

1. Anyone on Disability

EMERGENCY ROAD SERVICE

FAf 1LITIES

2. Those on Social Security

Phone
Day
CHESTER
Newell's Sunoco
LANGSVILLE
'Smith Auto Service
MIDDLEPORT
French's Sunoco
POMEROY
Pomeroy Motors
Grindstafl Penntoil
RACINE
Eber's Gulf
WILKESVILLE
Mollohan Texaco

Night

98S-llSO

985-335 I

742 -2489

742-2489

4. Those on other Fixed Income

992-3451
992-2126
992-6027

992 -2076
949-2061

948-9200

949 -9200

669-4234

669-4234

AUTOMOBILE CLUB OF
SOUTHERN OHIO
33 Court St .

3. Those on Pensions and Retirement Income

Gallipolis, Ohio

MAKE POMEROY
A BETTER VILLAGE

TO· LIVE IN

PD. POL ADV.

�7- The n.; 1v Senllnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Nov . 2,JW9

6- The DailY Sentinel, Micldleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Nov . 2. 1979
MH · 165

Pets for Sa Ie
HOOF HO LLOW , EngHsh

Auto Sal es
1971 DATSUN FLAT bed .

and Western . Saddles and
h a rn es.s .
H orses
and
ponies . R:u1 h Reeves . 614

new t tres . 742 2256 .

698 32 90.

Bording

and

R id i ng Lessons and Horse
Care prod ucts . Western
boots . Children ' s Sl5 . .SO

Adults S29.00 .

GROOMING

Jud y Tay lor 614 367 7110

HILLCREST

KENNEL S

Boar di ng , all bret"'ds Clean
i ndoor -o u tdoor
facilities
A l so
AKC
registert- d
Dobermans 614 446 7795

VERY

CHEVY

REASO NABLE

br itt an y Sp an iel, female , 21
m o o l d . Can be regist ered

Phone 992 5267 .
UKC REG . treetng wa l kt&gt;r
pu pp ies
3 females , 2
m a les. H a~e N ite ChCh
Gri ffi ns Rock. , N ile Ch
blairs Banjo B abe , Nite Ch
1973 AC H A
Wor ld Ch
Bea nbl ossom Buck , 1970
AC HA World Ch Nile Ch ,
Gann ' s Fin•sner and other
c h am p ions
,n
3
gene r ations . Finley Rtver
breeding both sides 150
ei ther sex wiTh reg papers
H ave been wormed and
will have 4·way shots Call
742 22 14 or 992 3023 dnd
leave name and number

VAN ,

c ustomized ,
c hrome
wheels , wide tires , good
shape 992 6288 or 992 3312

LOCAL

R I SIN G STAR
Kenne l
Boarding . Call 367 0292

POODLE

1977

1977 CHEVETTE 992 7378
WANT SOMEONE to take
over paymen t s on 1979
Buick Skyh awk 6 c ylinder ,
1iltw .s., P .S. , P 8 , AM FM
' radio, 5,000 miles, will take
1973 or 1974 mOde l car in
good condition as down
paymen t 992 5270 .

FEMALE

OWNER . 1977 Camara L T
350 auto , AC , AM FM
s. lereo 8 track. cruise con
lrol, ti l t wheel. front and
rear spoiler , rally wheels ,
very tow mileage
Blue
book , S5 100
Sale pr ic e
S4/00 . Ingels Furniture ,
992 2635 or afler 5, 304 882

7037
197 1 PLYMOUTH SCAMP,
sla1t 6 . 37,000 mites . Kept
tn si de . Looks and runs like
new Asking $1100 . 378 ·6276
1976 CHEV . Malib u, 4 door ,
6 cy linder , P S., and P B .
au to , make good work ca r
\1950 . Ca ll dft er 5, Rd l ph
r russell , 949 2660 .

1973 PONT lAC GRANO
VILLE 4 door hardtop , ex
c ellen t condition Loaded
with elCtras . 741 2880.

LEGA L NOTI CE
PUBLI C SAL E
The following described
c o l lateral will be s.ol d for
cash at a p ub l ic sa le at 9 30
A M . on N ovem ber 20, 1979
a t Smith N el son M otors,
Inc, SOO E . Main Sf .,
Pomeroy , Ohio . W r itten
bids ma y be submi ffed to

GMAC ol 318 Main St reet,
Bel pre, Oh io . T he seller
rese-rves te righ t to bid
1972
Po nt iac , Lemans
Ser~al

NO. 2037N2A I79837 .

Ac c ount N a . 232 1925 ·88067 .
1976 L T O , good shape , 2 ex
lrd
snow
fi res .
low
mrle age
Take
over
payments 985 4185

GE NE RAL MOTORS
ACCE P TA NCE
CORPORATION
11111. 11c

NOTICE TO BIDDERS

Sea ted
b1ds. wtt l be
recetved by the Board ol
County Commissioners of
Gallia County . Ohto . at the
olftce of the Ga llt.=t County
Commtss•oners. until 10 .00
A.M .. on NO\Iember ' · 197~
and opened tmme di atetv

tnereafter

for f urnishtng

the necessary labor and
materials ,
tool ~.
machinery and appl iances
required tor th e Annex t o
Gallipolis
Co mmuntl'r'
M en t a l H ealth Center , 412
VI n ton
Pike . Gallipolts .
Oh io, 45631 a cc ording to th e
drawings
and
specifications on tile'" th e
oft tce Of the Ar c h tlec t
Copies ot sa•d drawtngs
and .s pecit ic altons may be
obtatned by pr ime btdder\
Bidde r s sha ll note that
the P r evailing Wage Rar es
publtstled by the Dep a rt
ment
of
tndustr•al
Relations are to be c om
Pl ted wlfh throughout H1t'io
or oiec t
f rom David ( J.lers.er, Ar
c hitec fs, 131 West Sta te
Str ee t, A t hens, Ohio 4570 1,
(6 14 1 592 56 15 upon the
deposit with t hem of 150 00
in c ash or check for each
set
of
draw i ng s
and
spec if ica t ions .
The I Ul l SS(l 00 de pos t I On
sets . of
drawtngs and
spectf•cations , wilt
be
retu r ned to b idders upon
re t ur n of drnwings and
specifications in qood con

dt! 1on w 1th.n te n l l OJ days
aff er t:l!d opentng a ore .
8 1dS t or
the
at&gt;ove
descr•bed w ork must be
made on blan k s t o be fur
n ished by th e Ar c h i tect
Eng11WN
here inbefo re
named
Btds mus1 be addressed
to me Gallia County Com
m1ss•oners of r.all•polis,
Ohto . and endorsed on out
Stde of envelope the items
ot work bid upon
Eac ll bid must c onta in
th e full name of every per ·
son or company interested
tn
the
same ,
s h all
sepa ra t el y state the p r ice
for labor and materidL and
must be dnompnnied by a
btd bond or a c ertified
chec k tn some solvent bank
.n an amount of no t less
than ftve per cent ( 5 ~) . i n
spe-c 1ftc amount s of dollars
and ren ts , of the total o f the
ba se bid and all add al ter
nate btds, as a gua r antee
that d the bid is ac ce pt ed a
contra c t will be entered in
fa and 1ts per forma nce
proper l y secured .
The sunesslu l bidd er s,
uron receipt of ac c eptan ce
o tn e tr proposals, mus t
furn is h 100%Pertor ma nce
Bond and 10014oLabor and
Mdl erial Pavmen t Bond to
the Owner
B idde rs sha l l also no te
that
th e
Rules ·a n d
Regula t •ons on Equal Em
p loym ent Oppor tunity shall
be made a pan of th1s con
lra r r

n

cc, J door hat
chbac k . auto . P S , AM
,F M , rear w1 ndow de f ogger
Ll'SS than
1500 m1 les
Phone 949 2B20
1q]J PINTO , A C
~

au t o.,

)47 3077

R~Jge~t

1ft. 'Dcwid6~J~t

d11ayo~ a{ (_Pome:&lt;'!f
" The People and the
Taxpavers Candiate "

ROG _
E R M . DAVIDSON , ltnc oln H i ll , Pomeroy , tS se-eking the
poll1 tca t post fl on as M ayor ol the Village of Pomeroy .
Mr . Oa v td son t&lt;r. a gr ad uate of Pomeroy High School , Class of 19 52.
He ha s att ended sever al co ll eges and un ivenities, the litest being
West T ex a s Sfilf e
Mr . oa v td son IS a Serv tce Conn ected v eter•n of the Korean Conflict
and rec ei ved an Hon or abl e Disc harge from the United States Air For ·

ce.

Mr . David son wa s e mpl o y~ in the mass appraisal and computer
bus1n ess far th e pas t 20 yea rs . H e pioneered the use of the computer in
tmplem entmg fa x st r uctur es •nc:l coll ections . He is well known in hi s
field bv city , county , and state ta )( ing officials a s well as being a past
member of the Inter nat iona l As sociation of Assessing Officers . He is
currently employed b y Tom Rue Motors in Middleport , as a
Chrysler · Piymouth Sa les Represe nta1ive .
Mr. Davidson i s the son of the late Clara Ebersbach David son and
Ernest " RINK " Dav i dson , both l i fet i me residents of Pom er oy. He i s
the grandson ot the tate B elle Da v idson Gri ffith and Edward Griffith
He is also the great grandson of th e late Catr'l erine and Jacob Eber sba ch wno came to Ponteroy in the Year 1850, from Germany .
Upon returning to Pomeroy, Mr . D•vldson m•rrled the tormer Mila
Jane Stark .

( 11)

County

Court of (.; ammon

Pleas, P r ob4t t e Divi sion

To t he E)(ecutor or Ad
minis trator ot t he es , a re, t o
suc h of 1he fo llowing as are
residents of the St a t e of
Ohio, viz :
the surviving
spou se. t he next of kin , the
beneficiarie$
under
me
w ill ; and to t he a"orney or
anor neys represenrtng anv
of t he a foremen t ioned per
~ns ·

P hy llia A . M ul len ( Case

No .

22833) ,

605

First

Aven ue, M iddleport, Ohio
You are hereb y notif ied
th at the In ven to r y and Ap
pr aisem en t of the est ate of
t he
aforement i oned .
decea sed late of said Coun
ty, were /ited in this Court .
Said tn~o~ en 1 o r y and Ap
pr a ise m en t will be lor
hearing bef ore th is Court
on t he 14th day of October,
1979, at 1: 30 o ' c lock P .M .
An y per son desi rin g t o
fi le e)(ce pti o ns th er et o
must fil e t hem at least fi ve
da ys pri or to the d ate !.et
for he-aring
Gi ven u nder m y hand
and se a l of said Court , th is

On Oc tober 16, 1979, 111
the Meigs County Probalt
Court, C!tse No . 22847,
Albert Quivey , Route t
Box 194, Strasburg, Oh•o
44680
was
appoint e d
E•ecutor of the es t ate of
Martha c. MiJyS, deceased ,
ta t e of Route 3, Albany ,
Ohio 45710
John c. Bacon
A c t tng Probate Judge
Clerk
( 10 ) 19 , 26(11 )2, Jtc

RE PORT ON FIL E
copy of t he federal
reve nue shar ing is o n fUe at
t he home of Nina Robinson ,
Ora nge T w p . Cler k, R . 2,
Coo lv ille, OHi o tor PUblic
i nspe-c t ion
A

111J2, 1tc

LEGAL NOTI CE

2•m day of Oc lober 1979

Rober t E Buck

J udge

By Carolyn G T hom as

Deputy Clerk
110) 16 111 12. ltc

2

P ROBA TE COU RT OF
ME IGS COUN TY, OHI O
EST ATE OF MAR THA C.
MAYS. DECEA SED
case No . 22~847
NOtiCE OF
APP OINTMEN T
OF F IDU CIAR Y

Ora nge Twp . Trust ee will
m e-et Monda v N ov 5 a t 7 :00
P .M . at the hom e of the
clerk, Ni na Robinson , R 2,

Your Best Buys Are Found in the Sentinel Classifieds
1~ Worda or Under
Cuh
Ow-ge
J~y

100

1 ~

2days
ldl ys
ldays

I~
J.lll
J .OO

1110

Each word over the minimwn
1~ "orda ia 4 centa per wont perday . Ads ruJliUJlli uthrr t.han coo !«'Utlve days wiU be chargtd a t
the 1 day r~ te .

Tho""'

In mernooy ' Can! ol
and Obi tuary . 5 c-enb per word,
t3.00 minimwn. Cuh ln ad -

1'....,.

'S'mokeout '
planned

cash with order 25 cent clw"gl!
ftr ads carryif18 Box. Numller In
Care of The Sentinel

dt-emed

Au t om at ic 4 cyl, Rad io &amp; hea ter Ni c e

1974 MUSTANG II 4 CYL ••••••••••••••• s1795
A speed tr a ns ShM !J

1974 CADIUAC EL DORADO .............. '1995
Fully equi pp ed N ic e car

1977 CHEV. NOVA 4 DR.................. s3695
6 _cyt ., power st eer i ng&amp;. br &lt;t k es, air cone11f1oning rad i o &amp; hedter r eal
nt ce
'
'

1974 MERCURY MONTEGO ........... MX s1095
P .S .• P B , ai r , auto

1974 CHEVY BELAIR ••••••••••••••••••••• s1095
avt o., P.S .

1975 MERCURY BOBCAT................ '1995
4 c yl. , aut omatic, rad io &amp; hea ter , ni ce!

1975 BUICK LESABRE. .................. s1995
Or . sediln , loca l, 1 owner

1971 FORD STATIONWAGON .............. SS95
1973 CHEV. BELAIRE ..................... SS95
1977 FORD LID WAGON ••••••••••••••••• s2595
9 Pass .• auto ., P .S.• P B ., ai r .

1978 DODGE POWER WAGON ............ st;995
0 · 150 .4 wheel drive, A dvent ure r S.E . Pk g ., A speed trans .• 2 g as tank s,
AM ·FM stereo w 1ape p l ayer , CB r ad io , we ath er ra d io, spoke wheels ,
wide tires , bucke t sea ts , g auges, Reese trai ler hitch , 20,000 ml l ·loc al
owner . Sharp .

ob jectional.

The

Pu bliAhl!r will noe bl&gt; respoo.~~ble
for tnOt"e than one i.ncotTect
aert.i on .

1n-

The executive c onunittee of the
Meigs Chapter of the Ame rican
Cancer Society met recently at
VeterliJI.'j Memorial Hoopital with
Bernadette Anderson, preside nt ,
pres iding.
Pat Arnold, public ed ucati on
chainnan, reported that there were
seven new films purchased nd
available for use in schools, clubs or
organizations. She s tated that m ore
programs should be started in
va rioll:l organizations .
Delores Frank, director , reported
that more people we re called in for
assistance.
It was agreed that Dr. Wilma
Mansfield would be the medica l a dvisor for the unit. Ginger Cullums,
Miss Hope of Meigs County, thanked
everyone who made it possible for
her to become Miss Hope and SUi ted
that s he hoped to help others become
less fearful of cancer , edu cate
others in the fight ag ainst cancer
and get more people involved in the
unit .
Mrs. Pat Ingels, chairman of t he
"smokeout " reported that the event
will be held No v. 15. Last minute
details were discussed for the
smokeoul .
The next meeting will be held Nov .
Tl, at 8 p.m . in the east-west dining
room at Vete rans Mem orial
Hospital.
Attending were : Mrs. Anderson ,
Mary O'Brien, J o Ann Anderson ,
Clara Lochary , Dr. Mansfield , Ester
Simpson , Pat Arnold , Melanie Arnold, Pat Ingels , Crenson R. Pra tt,
Harl1s F rank, Delores Frank .
Ging er Cullums a nd Sha r o n
Michael.

Rick and Nancy O ark , Lincoln
Heights , Pomeroy, are announc ing
the birth of a daughter , J erica
Renee , Oct. 10 at the Holzer Medical
Center.
The baby weighed seven pounds,
14 ounces and was 21 inches long.
Maternal grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Cecil St. Marie, Cadiz, and lhe
paternal grandparents are Harry C.
CLark , Athens, and J081Ul Oark,
Pomeroy. Great-grandparents are
Mrs. Etoilla Cassell , Middleport,
and Mrs. E velyn Spencer , Pom eroy .
Mrs. Bessie Quillen of Middleport is
a gr eat-j!reat-j!tandmotller .

.)out/Jem honor mil
These students a t Southern Junior
High School made the honor roll for
the llrst six wee ks . !The students
whose names are in capital letters
received all A's ) Seventh Grade:
Olris Arnold, Alan Crisp , Richard
Davis, Ralph Fisher, Sandy Harden,
Ka ren Hemsley , Debbie Holter ,
LOIS lliLE , Shane Kincaid , James
Leamond , DAVID POWELL, LO RI
SIMPSON, Lor i Stewart . Eighth
Grade : LEE DILL, Jane Manuel,
Debbie Mi chael, LAREN WOLFE ,
Tony Wolfe .

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

:

HI ( h.liiC"Il l I hdlil ll

SALISBURY BROWNIE
11tOOPI%20

A meeting of the Pome roy
Br owni es will be beld at the Grace
E piscopal Olurch in Pomeroy on
Tuesday from I to 3 p .m . This will be
the firs t meeting &lt;X the troop.

SYRACUSE JUNIOR TROOP 1204
The Juliet Lowe rededication
cer em ony took place at the meeting
of the Syracuse juniors this week at
the school. A party was held to
celebra te her birthday and all of the
members gave a donation to the
J uliet Lowe Fund .
Tracy Hubbard had the pledge ,
J ennife r Arnold gave the pronllile ,
and Kim Adams hlld the prayer . 1be
14 scouts at tending responded to roll
call by naming their favorite halloween candy . The scout troop made a
visit to the Jaycee haunted house in
Pomeroy last week .
The meeting closed with a friendslup circ le.

r ----

school.
TIJESDAY
RUMMAGE SALE , Masonic Hall ,
Olester , s ponsored by U.F.O. of
Silver Ridge Croununily.
ARTS AND CRAFTS Fair Tuesday across from Olester Fire House,
sponsored by U.F .O. of Silver Ridge
Community .

HAVE HAYRIDE
The Bulaville Christian Church
held a ha yride and wiener roast on
Oct . 19.
A !tending were Rev. and Mrs.
Stine Robbins , a long with about 50
other members of the community .

Master Mason Deg ree .

In 1972, American Indian activists
se1zed the Bureau of Indian Affair s
btnld mg in Wash m gton , demanding
refor ms m the treatme nt of native

Amer icans.

LOST I N Che-ster ar ea
smal l brown male pood le
w earing c hoker Call 985

3597 .
Wanted to Buy
CHIP WOOD. Poles max .

OLD

FUR NITURE.

ice

bOxes, b r ass beds, tron
beds, desks, etc , com p let e
househol ds . Write
M .D
Mi ll e r . R1. -4 , Po m e r oy or
call 992 7760 .

Notices
M E I GS
COU N TY
HUM ANE SOC IETY 992

Wheel

HorsePower

now on

We' re deolin' now on 'Nhttl HOf ~e powtr We "llloke trodt!s ond oUow topS Stop ()IJf Dnd
tok1 o demomtration ride . We'll moke 11 eos., lOt you to own tht f,ntut
WhHI Horse
• Four speed all ifO' troo sm1Ut()(l~
e Co1t 1r()(l fronf o• lt
• All steel ~grill ood f ender\
• Soft -ru:le \eat wtth spr 11'1Q svs~s·on
We riNd ut t&lt;l troctOI'"s

G-et

fOQ

trode -m now

ralWHF:t~:J. HORSE
~lawn &amp; garden tractors

BAUM TRUE ., ALU
915-3301

CHESTER, 0 .

SA W

logs

Payment upon de l ivery to
our yard, 7 30 to 3 30 week
days . Bl aney H ardwOOds,
SR 339, Barlow , OH 678

F'r1day aftemooo

6260
P et s ava il able f or
adop tion a nd informa t ion
ser v ice

GU N SHOOT EVE R Y
SU NDAY I PM FACTORY
CHOKE ONLY RACINE
GUN CLUB
NO
HUNTING ,
no
tr espassing w i th no ex
c e-pt ions on my properl y
Judy McGraw Sel f

GU N
SHOOT
Rac , ne
volu n teer
F tr e
Dept
Every Sat urd ay 6 30 p m
At f heir bui l dingin Bas han
Fa c t ory c hoke- g uns on I y
GU N SH OOT every Su nday
12 00 Fac t or y c hok e on ly .
Cor n H oll ow Gun Club,
R uTland P r oceed~ don at e-d
to Boy 5cou t T r oop 249

1980
A NT I Q U ES,

F UR

NITU RE, gl ass,
ch ina ,
an ymin g . See or ca ll Ruth
Gosney, ant iq ues, 26 N.
2nd, M iddl eport , O H 992

J l61
ANT IQUE POCKET wat
ches . Willing to p ay t op
do l la r
Ca l l
I 592 2q73
evenings .

JUNK

WANT ED

Ba l

terr es, radt a tor s, mo tors ,
dulo
trans
No Sunday
call s 949 2563
WA N T TO buy to t in Mid
d leport Call9&lt;12 :35 11

Yard Sale
-'-=----

389 1.
WINTER

PO TATOES

C.W Proffi tt fa rm , Por
ttand, O H . S8 a nun dred and
S5 a hundred .

FIREWOOD

FOR

sa le .

N ow taking or ders
de l iver , 742 2056

EMERGE NCY

W ill

PO WER

a lter na t ors own the

~st

buy WIN PO WER . Ca ll 513
788 1589.
A P P L ES

CIDE R

H O N EY
F ilzpa tri c k O r
c ha r d, St at e Rout e 689
Phone Wi l kesvi l le, 669

3785.
H OUSE COAL, lump or
s t oke r , wi ll de l iver 742

2183

PORC H

SALE

Sta r ls

ED
BURKET T B a r oer
Shop now open full t ime i n
M tdd leporr

CE RAM IC CLASS ES. Mon

GARAGE

CLEARA NCE

Sale T hurs. , N ov 1 only
J4285 FlatwOOds Rd . 992
733 1 9 5

2nd . Midd leport . OH 992

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT
SALE
1979 CADILLAC CPE OEVIUE
NOW '12,000
--

1977

1977 CADillAC CPE. DEVIllE ... .. ... ___ ............... .17295
1977 CHEVROlET CAPRICE SED ................ ........ 14195
1977 BUICK leSABRE CPL ......... --- -.............. '3895
1977 MERCURY COUGAR XR7 CPE .................... 14195

55611

INSI DE

SERVI NG

BREAKFAST

at Five Pot nts 5 30 am t o
.fOam Biscuttsandg r avv,
~llu!.age, bacon ~ comple t e
breakf ast menu
SLUG MATC H at tzaaK
W al ton C l ub Ground!. near
(:hester every Sunday un t i l
C!eer
sedson
Ba con ,
tvrke y s , hams
She l ls
avt'!i l able I 00 p m

__ ~_!l_ll__W a n:_:_t"'
ed=--LPN F OR 3 to 11 or 11 to 7
ltlift Ptnecrest Care Cen
te r . Contact J ud y Barcus ,
AN , Di r ec t or of Nusi ng
406 ·7117

NEEDED NURSES for 11
7 shi ft
Pome r oy H ealth
Car e Cen t er Conta c t Mr
Zidian , Admtnistr a l or . ?92

6606

1975
1975 OLDSMOBILE 98 LS ....... .. ... .. ....... .... ..... '2795
1975 CHEVROLET MONTE CARL0 .... ................... '2795
1975 OlDSMOBILE CUT. SUP. SED... .. ................ '1795

1974-1973
1974 CADILLAC SED. DeVILLE.. .... .. ...... __ ........ .. '1295

SIX FAMILY Ga r dge Sa le
Starttng 10 a m Nov I t hru
-4 SR 1A3 on C R 17 W atch
tor si g ns
PATIO SALE
Fisni ng
rods, t oo ls, d i shes , rock tng
cha1r, co i ns, coin f o lde r s,
house p l ant s a nd mor e
i t ems N ov 2 and J 10·5
930 Logdn St , Mi dd leor t,

OH
E I G H T FAM I LY
Y ar d
Sa l e A t 810 Sou th 3r d Ave .,
Midd leport
Friday and
Sdt u r day . 9 t il3 Nov . 2 and
3

GA RAGE

'

Mu st be good , accurate
typist, shorthand re ~1Uired , good hours , gOOd
1r i nge
b e netih .
If
employed ,
pres e nt
employer won ' t be con Jacted withOut permis sion , interview will be
~ arranged .
Write Bo•
•06 , Pomeroy , Ohio
45769, g i v i ng comple'e
qualifications and in ·
for mati on .

POTATOES , S8 pe r hun
dred 3 m il es w e~t of D a r
win , Cecil T oba n, TR 1-45,
be-tw een Go ld Ridge a nd

CR 14
DE L U XE GE w ash er and
dryer , 1150 p r Ca ll 992

3023 .
ELECTRIC CLOC K. fl oor
lam p, table tamp, Gossi p
bench , Pr incess Eu r eka
sweep e r
and
al l
at
tac hments and vaporizer

992 3430
REGI ST ERED 1 "
A r ab
Mare
and
Gelding .
Registered Arab stallion, 8
years ol d P ri ced rig ht tor
qui c k sl e
Es k y
Hi l l,
Pome r oy, O H
992 38 85
event ngs .

old Good condition
many extras S3850

Ha s
9-49

1377
8~ "

EARLY
American
~fa , 5 years old . Good con
dit ion \50 9'92 789 1
D E LI C IOU S A PP LE but
t er S2 .50 pe r quart Call
c;q1 6095 o r 9.49 1355

1060

CLE ARAN CE

SALE

co mponen t sys t e m s
in
m atc hed sets of mix and
ma tc h. Spea ker s t or h om e
en t ertai n m e nt ce n te r s,
r adios , auto m ob iles and
pa ti os . Combinat ion AM ·
FM ster eos a nd t a pe dec k .
ca~se tt e
or 8·tr ack, CB
base sta t ions and m o b i le
uni t s. Po r1 ab le AM F M
radios wi t h tape p laye r and
r ecor de r . Digi t al AM · F M
cloc k r ad ios dnd com pa c t
AM F M poc ket r ad tOS . Por
t ab le r ecor der Te levision s
por t a bl e and console
model s. R ege ncy ~ an n ers .
An t ennas
and
mas ting .
M a ny opti oniJ I accesso ries
an d general ele-ctro ni c sup·
pl ies Fra nce TV a nd Elec
tr onics , 39260 Bradbury

HOTPOINT

BI G A U C TI O N eve r- y We-d .,
7 p m . Hartfo rd Com mun ity
Ce nter , Hartford , WV , A
m iles abo v e Pome r oy
M ason Bri dge.

and

Headqu1rters
Appll•nces
Sales &amp; Service

1973 BUICK REGAL CP£ .. .................... ......... ..11295
1972 OLDSMOBILE 98 SED..... .. .. .. .. .... ...... .. ... .. '895

1976 FORD F-150 ....................... SJ295
Automati c, power st eering &amp; bra k es, ra dio &amp; hea t er , loc al o-wner,
" Black D i amond Se r ies", A ·l condit ion .

1976 FORD F-100 ....................... '1895

EXPERIENCED AUTO OR
TRUCK MECHANIC

DRIVE HOME A WINNER

Automa11c , power steering &amp; b r ak e!, r adio &amp; heater .

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

1976 GMC SPRINT ...................... '2995
Auto ., P .S., P . B.

Karr &amp; Van Zandt

Must have own tools . Hourly rates,
numerous fringe benefits, salarv neg.
depending on experience. Apply at Two
River Ford , Inc ., Rt . 62 N ., Pt . Pleasant,

r w. va.

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

~

TIRESALES

~ N. 2110 AVE.

OHIO

G .M .A . C . Financing
992 · 5342 - Pomerov
Open Evenings Until6 : 00- 'tll P.M . Sat .

s

Ask for David Moore

a nd white, fema l e, lovel y .
P ut a col d nose in your li f e .
we have kittens, a ll sizes
a nd all
sh ap es
Very
specia l , a ll w h i le wit h b lue
eye and green one, spayed,
a nd w or me-d . A loveabl e
mother an d kittens. A bar
der co lli e shep herd t ype ,
black , brown and whi t e
fem d le, had a ll shots. Male
b l ack a nd t a n shetl a nd
ty pe, worm ed a nd sho1s .
Lov abl e h uski e sheph er d,
spayed, c hecked b y vet ,
good hea lth and shots
Fe mal e be ag le, blac k a nd
w h i t e, bro wn , good wi th
chi ldren . Pomera ni an t y pe
fe m a le-, t an a nd bl ack, good
wi th c hil dre n , shot s . Two
Pom e r a nian ·co lli e t ype
puppi es, f e mal es - 1 bl ac k
w ith cu r ly hd ir a nd l i ttl e
ta n , 1 s leek bla ck , m ar ked
wi th t an Hu ma ne Socie t y ,

992 626()
Mobile Homes - Sale
1972 L YNN HAVE N 14x 65 3
bed r oo m
1970 V i nd al e 12x63 wi th e•
pan do , 2 bedr .
1970 New M oon 12x60 3 bdr .
1973
Sk y lin e
12x55 1
bed r oo m
·
1972 Bonanza 12x 52, 2 be dr .
B 8. S MOBI LE HOM E

SAL ES. PT. PLE ASA NT,
wv . 304 · 675 · ..., 2 ~ .

Real Estate for Sale

ERA MERCER
REALTY
TWO

HOUSES -

In

M iddl eport . Live i n one ,
rent the oth er . Both
houses remode led in
side . One ha ~ 3 bd rm s .,
the o1her ha s 1 bed r m .
L oc ated on P ow e ll St . at
lower end ot town

MODERN HOUSE with
3 plus flat acres and
Oh io R iv er tron1aoe .
Th is house is well bu i lt
and nicely kept . ~2 . 600

HOUSE WITH business
building in Reedsvi l le .
G arden spot plus 2 c ar
g ar age
House has 1

bdrm s . Asking $25 ,000
LOOKING FOR a house
you like i n you r pr ice
r a nge . Wh y opt build t o
su it yourself on one of
the 2. SOac relo1!onR1 . 7
n ear
Eastern
H ig h
341 ACRES
Silver
Ridge Rd. across from
Eastern
H igh . Many
building si 1es . Sell part
or all.
116,000 - J bedrm . 1112
bath trail er , Ex pa nd o
l ivin g rm . , underp inned ,
w e ll wa t er , Ohio Rive r
frontage on Rt . 114 a t
·-L ong Bo11om
12,000
o ne ac r e
bui ldi ng si te or insta ll
t rail er .
C i ty
w at e r
avai la bl e Ju st off 681
near RE'E'dS ville , 0

Q" _

~

"

Mgr . ··
Phonet92 ·1181

985·&lt;197

t - XL Hom elit e

' W2-ll1S

m ob ile no m e on 11' J
acres of land wi t h
s t ocked
f i sh
pond
A '5 king Only S1 2,00
COUNTRY HOME - 2
acres of la nd w i th a J
bedroom hom e, b ath &amp;
Leading Cr w a t er on
&amp;

HOME fu r ·
this
tor

SITES

22

Nice

la ying 80 acres, t ract o r
t i ll a ble . Good
far m
house, bath , and lots of
bu ildings . $80 ,000 .

FRONT -

3

27

acres North of For k e-d
Run . Deer and other
w i ld game .

S7S .OO

PRIVATE - I oedroom

1 New Fu el Ott furnace
1 New Electric turnace
NI!W Gener1l Elec tric

stone hom e w i th bath ,
nat . giJS F .A furna ce
dnd over 2 acres. N ow

B&amp;W TV

$2(),000 .
FAMILY

Only S99 .9S

POMEROY
LANDMARK

~
~-

Juk W. Carsey

Mgr _
Phone 992 -2 111

S1 0, 500.
BUILDING

1972 12x60 h o u ~e t rai ler,
$1(y l ine . M os t ly fu r nished .

1oca11ons

9~9

2860

Charl es Bisse ll ,
Bottom , OH

~t .

or

see

1, Long

HOME

Good Olde r 3 bedr oom
home on 2 level acr es on
R t . 124. G ar age and
covered p ic nic are a .
1 ACRE - .4 bed r oom
o ld er home, ba th , g a s
..fu rna ce. nice k it . and
b ase m en t
As king

Mobile Homes - Sale

S5900 .

TWO

BEDROOM

mobile home near Rac ine

991 5858
T H REE ROOM furnished
house
Adu lt s on ly . W2

7598

LOTS

Elev en t o sell in g ood

•,-:---Hoiismg ""
Headquarters_

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING

SMALL

11 mile oft R1 7 b y pass
on St Rl 1H to ward
1-lutland .

( FRE E ESTIMA TE!

Au t o &amp; Truck
R e p air
Also T ra n s m issio n
R e p air
P h on e 992 -5682

V. C. YOUNG Ill
RACIN E, 0 .
949 -2748 or
9n ·7l 14
11 I ! Pd )

FURNISHED

S MALL

HOUSE

on

H ar r isonv i lle , across from
st a l ion S125 per month
Call614 928 4417

H. L Writesel
Roofing

Rea
I Estate for Sale
- - - - - · - ----

Ne w , re p a" ,
gutte r s and
d o wn s ptJuts.
W i n.d~ cl e aning
Gutt e r c lea n ing
F re" ' Es tim a t es

I

HOBSTETTER
REALTY
PHONE 742-2003
NEW

LISTING -

LANGSVILLE - NICe 1
bed room home on a I it
ti e over an ac r e . Stor m
w indows and
doors.
aluminum Si ding , new
ga s furnace , n ew !.ept ie,
ne w root and m ore Onl y

BUILD IN G LOTS , I acre
each , L eading Creek R d , )
mtles otf Rt
1 Bypa ss
Si gns V•tatoe
LARGE L OT on dead end
stree t
wit h wate-r and
Will f inance to
sewage
r el ia bl e cou pl e at 9 Pet
9'12 57116 No realtors

RUN

Mi c k 's
B a rber &amp;
Styl e Center
Introdu ces -

ms .
Call f or appt or wa lk tn
Pom eroy , 0
10 19 1 mo
W ILL HA UL l1mestone and
gravel Also , time hau1 1ng
and '5o redd lnQ Leo Morr ts
Tru ck tng Pnone 742 2455
PA I N TING A ND o;,and
blast ,n g Fr E'e es t 1ma le-s
Ca l l 949 7b86
DOZER , END Loader.
brush
hog
W1ll
ao
basements, pond s, orusn .
limber,
land
c 1ear1 ng
Charles But cher 742 2940

el ns llil ation
• Sto r m Doors
• Storm Wind ow s
• R e place m e n t
dows

Wi n ·

Free Eslimate

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992·2772
10 19 l mo .

RE;AL ESTATE
F I NANCING
F- -· d e~a l
Hou 'i ing
&amp;
Vd er ... 1s Admm . Loan s.

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.
1-io u~s 9. 1 M., W ., F .
Otr1er rt m e bV appoint ·
me nt .
"IJ7 Syc a more ( R ear)
P om erov , 0 .

CALL 992 -7544

SE W I NG

MACHI N E

Repairs.
service,
all
makes
992 228-4
The
Fabr1c
Shop , Pomeroy .
Au th or1 zed 51 nger Sales
and Serv1ce We sharQ€n
Sc tsso rs
EXCAVATING ,
dozer,
loa de r and backhoe work ·
ctump t r uc k. &lt;; and lo boys
t o r h•re, wtll haul f ill d 1rt ,
lop soil, l1mes t one and
gravel Call Bob or Roger
JeffPrs. day phon e 992 70 89.
n1ght phone 992 3525 or Y91

HOWERY AND MARTIN
septic
Exc avat • ng ,
SoY":&gt;1em'5, dozer , backhoe
Rl 143 Phone 1 ( 614 ) 698

2

NEW LISTING -

4 ., 1 "' (\

5711

Real E s tat e fo r Sal e

bedroo m ho m e on a l it
ti e ove r seven ac r es.
Make us a r e asonable
otter!

!&gt; lOCK

992 -2367

SI X ROOM S and bath , an
Che r ry St , Syracue , OH

'I'll 5989

GOOSE

TRA!l £R N OWAVAILA6LE

9 28 1 rno Pd

MARK MORA
HAIR STYLIST

4

be dr ooms, liv i ng r oom ,
d in i ng room , kitchen
a nd bath . Basement and
g ar a ge Si tuat ea on .75
ot
an acr e
As ki ng
$35. 000 .00

HYSELL

Ro oftng . gutter ..,
and
dO \ .r1Sp 1J Ut •.
Free
~st
ldf•·'&gt;
All
wo r k
1ua, 1n1 • ,.d JO yl·,lr!&gt; , . ..
er1 rlC t' Ct~ l l .ldhen'l ,
olll ·c t, Gerald Clar k
97 48S1 or T om H u-:, km '&gt;
!97 214S

l§_ q_u i_p m_E!l'l_t

R e al Estat e for Sal e
FINAN CIN G VA FHA LD
ANS. LOW OR NO DOWN
PAY ME NT
PURC HASE
OR
REFI N A N CE
IR E LA ND MORTGAGE .
77 E STATE, ATHEN S
614·592 3051

5U Pf~

Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum S id ing

Fea tu n ng : m en ' s &amp;
w o m en 's st y li ng, per ·

80

1 M•lt"~ Ed ~ lof Wolkn ~· tlle

INSULATION

ROOFIN G

I !I

3311 or 997 6788

acre fa r m about 5 miles
fr o m
Pom e r o y
1n
Chester Towns hip . Ap
pr oxi mately 40 acres
til l able and .a acre-s
pas tu re . B i g 10 r oo m
fa rm house with barn
and sev eral sheds. Nice
roil i ng land f or f armin g
or
su b -d ivi d ing . Se ll
price $80,000 .00 . Ca ll f or
you r appt

$22.500 .00
FAMILY HOME -

~

11l111 Monfgom ep y Rd
L a•u;~ w oll t&gt; Oh oo
~o&gt;l4 ~~ ·lHS E"enon91

J&amp;L BLOWN

OHIO VALLEY

1975 WI L OERNESS cam
oer , 25ft tong , ne w carpet ,
a.r c ond1l•oner . cle an 991

acres wi t h 4 bed r oom
hom e ,
b a th ,
li vi ng
room , k it chen and laun
d r y . Loca ted on Sil ve r
Ridge
Road . Wo u l d
make a n ice hu nt i ng
l odge Ca ll f or mo re in
to
Ask t n g
o nl y
SJO,OOO 00

NEW LISTING -

.1

TRAILfR SALES

d10 11 r

949 -2862----94 9 -2160

Campi ~

42

Roger Hysell
Garage

wo r k , down
spouts, som e co ncret e
work ,
wa l ks
an d
drieway s.

MOBILE home
Utilitie-s
pa id Coup le only . 992 7479

FOR SALE

733 1or 741 1593
AUTO MOB ILE
IN
SURA N CE
been
c an
cel l ed?
LOSI
you r
operdtor 's ltcense? Phone
99') ') 143

A

v er y gOOd busi nes s i n
ves tm ent oppor-tunitv

WE NEED LISTINGS!!
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc .

I N STOCK for tmrnedldle
deltvery var1ous StleS of
pool · ktts Do 11 yourse li or
le t us 1nsta11 tor you D
Bumgardner S.=t iPs, Inc

Phone 742 -2003
Velma Nicinsky, Assoc .

Phone 742 -3092
GeorgeS. HobsteNer,

Jr .

991 5774

Broker Phone 9'92 -57l9

RE YNOLD 'S ELECTRIC
ROCK SPRINGS - Near Meigs H tgh School
A
n ice litt le st., rter home, 2 bedrooms , I1V1ng roo rn .
d ining rm ., k i tc he n , ful ly equipped. bath . b a S• ' m~"&gt;n f .
f u r ntture goes, t oo. J ust $25.000 00

DOWNING-CHILDS

lots of capr e ti ng an d
pa neling , new garage,
m ust se ll $1 9, 900
LIKE BRICK? - Her e' s
one'
N ice
l oc a ti on ,
bU i lt i n
k.i f ch en ,
3
bed room s,
lt'! rge l ot,
por c h es
JU ST
$13. 500 .00 .

WANT

ACREAGE

Por t land, 56 acres, ap
p rox . S ltl l able , 15
pasture , balance t im
ber , pa rt ly f e nced, ex

cellent . J us t S2J, 900.00
ACREAGE INTOWN P o m eroy , a bout 1 iJcres,
nic e home , J bedroo m s,
n 1ce
kit c h e n ,
p a rt
b a seme n t,
ga ra g e,
glassed in porc h, fru i t
trees. $25,000 .00

BUILDING

SITES -

About 25 a cres , some
lot s surve yed , w at e r
a nd e lec tr ic avail&amp;bl e,
adi a cent t o OOOd sub
divi sion , $27, 500 .00.

MIDDLEPORT
Fra m e duple x, a lwa ys
re nted, pri vat e bathS ,
cor ner lot, need s a l i Nie
rep ai r . m a ke monev

he re . SI0,900 .00 .
LOCATED ON ST . RT .
124
Al mo st new
bu i ld i ng, AO 'x60 ', corne-r
lot , lots 01 fronta ge, tue t
oil forced iJ i r furnace

S55,000 .00
RECENTLY REMODE LED - Lovel y 2 stor y
fra m e ,
J
l a rge
bed r ooms .
fo rm a l
dining , l a rge l ivi ng
roo m
wi th
fi r epla ce ,

N.G F .A

he al, love ly

tor ch ild r en . SlA,.SOO.OO

WHY PAY RENT, WE
HAVE PfiiCES AND
FINANCING AVAILA BLE TO MOST ANY
POCKETBOOK . STOP
AND SEE US TOOAY!'
REALTORS
Henry E . Cleland, SR
Res. f92 -2S61
H enry E . Clel•nd, J R
Res. "2-6191

ASSOCIATES
R09er &amp; Do' tie Turner

Res.

7~2 - 2474

Rodnev . Broker
Bill , Br . Mgr .
Phone 992 -2342, Eve . 992 -249 9
Middleport, 0 .

Mid

bedroms, NG F A heat ,

$45,000 .
HUNTING LAND -

SIU.OO

11&gt;60

NEW LISTING

216 E . Second Street

Business Services
Gutter

dleport , 2 stor y frame , 3

RIVER

\60.00

1-McCulloch

3457

608 E . ' 1ooloa~W.ol
MAIN
POMEROY , O.
PH . ¥92 -21 59

bedr oom bri ck r anc h
home . 2 car g arage,
dining, pat io and 4 tot s .

FOR SALE

TRAILER SPA C E lor rent
in Midleport Phone 992

Vi r ginia Haym•n

$9,500.
NEW LISTING -

Jack W. C•rsey

J AND 4 RM lurn iShed ap
ts Pho ne 992 54.34

Phone

acr es near Reedsvil le
on 68 1. Will sell f or onl y

1-Rem i Yardmaster

per .

COLLIE TYPE . red, block

A-FJ!AME

POMEROY
LANDMARK
,.

HELP WANTED

BORDER

co l lie
shepherd,
bl ack ,
brown and white female ,
hdve had all shots Large
11mid German she pherd ,
male , brown and black ,
shots and wo r med . 2 perky
Sh et l an d collie type bl ack
and t an, 1 mal e, 1 f emale,
wormed
and
s h ots
H umane Society 992·6260

L oc k . St ock dnd
n ishino s go w• l h
sate . Extra lot
park ing .

1973 CADILLAC CPE DeVILLE ................... ......... '895
1973 OlDSMOBILE CUT. SUP. SED ...................... '995

BEAU TIFUL

991 7.79

Rl. IH.
BUSINESS

GENERAL
ELECTRIC

F IR ST CHRISTMAS Auc·

Automatic, power ste ering &amp; bra kes, r adi o &amp; he ater , aluminum top ·

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park , Rou le 33, north a t
Pomeroy L arge lots Ca ll

REASONABLE - llxSO
ANT IQUE B A TH TU B w i th
cl aw feet Don Say r e , « J
6fh Ave , Middleport 992

Help wanted

1974 CHEV. C-10 PICKUP. ............... s2195

BEAUTIFUL HEAL T HY
kittens 992 5019

Rd , M idd leport . OH VW
VA N camper , excellent
co ndi t ion New engi ne and
pa r ts , gOOd mi leage, c on
side r t ra de on sma ll c ar .
Ca l l992 ·5236 aft er -4 : 30p.m .

Auctions

ti on Sa le. F r ida y , Nov . 2, 6
pm T wo truckl odds of t oy
and g i ft 1tem s as w ell as
m ise at Oh io Ri v er A ut ion ,
SR 7, south of M i ddleort ,
OH . Howa rd
Beas ley ,
owner -auctionee r

F or R e nt

School&gt; Each lot 16,000.
TWO RAD I AL snow t ir es
on r ims, us.ed 1 w i nte r .. 9'91·

3029 .

I

Office Help Needed
Bv Local Pomerov
Business

Phone 4-46 3670 .

Sale.

moved . Sat ur day , N ov 3
Jea n
Stout ' s r esidence ,
_, yracuse Wa t ch t or signs

1976
1976 OLDSMOBILE ROYALE CPE ............. .... ..... 13495

HOUS E sa le.

m it e sou th of Midd leport on
Rt 7. Thur s., Nov 1st , thru
Sat., Nov 3r d t r oom of
new f abrics from cl oseou t ,
rock. bottom p r ices . 1 r oom
of used misc. , inc l ud i ng
used meal sca les , g&lt;:KJd
used c loth in g and more .
Starts at 9 a m

LARGE

N Bens, G l assview, Leyden
Heart h, Old T imer, Fi r e
v iew
Su bu rban
m ob i le
home wood hea ter s, U L ap
proved , an d Subu r ba n f u r
n acemaslers .
Out d oor
Equ ip men t Sa les , Je t R t s
7 and :35 , Ga l lipo l is, O H

GLAST RO N BOAT IS mo

- - - --

Wed , runs t ill al l so ld , Out
!.tde
Christ m as
decora tions, br ow n ~elvet
pic t ures and misc. i tems
Ka rl Kloes , Co ll ec;,e Sl ,
Syrac uSE- , OH 992 30 14

day an d Thu r sd ay , 7 9 p m
Sta rl ing Thursday , Oc t 25
Or ehe t· s Ce r amics 59 N

1976 FORO GRANADA CPE .... ...... ............ .. ... . '3195
TO MEET TIRJRSDA Y
Shade River Lodge 453 will m eet
Thursday , Nov . 1, at 7 p.m . Work in

L OST
TWO handmade
baby quilts, one painled,
one embmidered , bot h b lue
and wh i te Monday bet
ween t O and 11 a . m . in
Pomer oy on Main Street
Wo v ld
ap precia t e
their
ret urn Cal l ~2 2066 .

WAN T ED

• p"

MONDAY
E ASTE R N ATHLETic Boosters
Monday a t 7: 30 p.m . at the lugh

sa nd , gra ve l , calcium
chlorrde , fertilize r , dog
food, and all types o f salt .
Excelsior Salt Works , I n c .,
E Main St, Pomeroy , 992

747 133 1

Sum.Uty

"GETTING READY FOR NEW
DEALER"

Social Calendar

992 5354

OLD COINS, pocke t wi
ches, c l ass rings, wed d ing
band&lt;; , diamonds Gol d or
silver . Ca l l J . A . Wamsley ,"

Tue.day
t.hru F riday
4 P.M .
thf! day before pUblication

0 1Ur ch .

POMEROY BROWNIE 11tOOP 1%71

00 babysitting

WOOD STOVES by Bette r

The Salisbury Brownies enjoyed a
halloween party Wednesday night at
the E nterprise United Methodist
Costumes were judged with prizes
going to Staci Young , the prettiest ;
Tara Humphre ys, the ugliest ;
Melanie Beeg le , the most original.
All of the Brownies won prizes in the
games played .
Attending besides those named
were Joan Simpson, Amy Warth,
Tracy Bartels, Heidi caruthers ,
Tracy Casto, Amy Brothers, Kristm
Klng , Marsha King, Stacy Eblin,
Amy Rouse , and Janel Simpson,
leader , a nd J ennife r Wartll, coleade r.

WILL

For Sale
COAL.
LIM ESTONE .

d iame te r 10" on ta r ge'5 t
end . S12 pe r ton . B un d led
sl ab $ 10 pe r to n . Del i ve r ed
t o Ohi o Pal let co ., R t . 2,
Pomeroy 992·2689

Phone99'2-2l$6

I

992 50 11 or 9971771

LOST MALE lam c at , lab
by . Answers to Tommy
HiJS flea coll .-.r Reward

Tbt Publiaher reserves thr
right to edit or rtjtct any W

Coolvil le , 0
1111 1. ltc

: Girl Scout Diary

LOST . LARGE Saint Ber
nard dog above Eastern
High School , Rt . 7 drea
Child ' s pet 985 3323

Mobile Horne sales and Yard
sales are accepted only with

NOTICE

. h announced
Bzrt
1974 PINTO STA. WAGON •••••••••••••••~ s1595

1. ~

3 75

_ _.G,..i""v e_a_w a'I

Ser vi c es Offe r e d

Los t and Found

WANT AD
CHARGES

r----------------~

1

Loaded . ~

1] 0) 11, 19, 26,

NO TIC E ON
F ILI NG OF
INV E NTORY AND
APPRAISEMENT
The Stole of Oh i'!, M eigs

19 79 MER CU RY BO BCAT ,
4 cy t ,

t:Lt:CT

~O r .,

No Otdder may Wtfhdraw
h tS b •d wtthin s1x l y (60)
days affer the actval_ date
of theooening t hereof
1 t , in th e opi n ion ot the
Owner and the Di r ec t or of
the DE-pa r tme nt of M ental
Hea ltn a nd M ent a l Re1ar
da t ion or his d ele9a t ed
represen t at ive,
th e ac
cep t ance ol the lowes t bid
is not tn the be~ t interests
of all concerned, t he Owner
may ac cept , wit h t he con
currence of the Direc tor of
.h1S delegated r epresen
t ative , a no ther proposal so
opened
or
re j ec t
all
proposals and ad vertise f or
other bids . The Owner w ith
concurre nce of th e Oirec
tor of the Dep ar t ment of
Mental H eal th a nd M ental
Re t arda t io n
rese r ves
therig h t to wa tve iJn y i n
for mali ti es
Shoul d an y bi d be rejec
ted , such c hec k will be
re tu rned to the b idder , and
sho u ld a n y bid be acc epte d ,
suc h c hec k w ill be r eturned
upon the proper e)(ec uti on
and sec ur ing of th e c o n ·
trac t
Separate bi d s shal l be
rece1ved f or : 1) Gen e ra l
Construc t ion , 2) P lumb in g,
3) H eat i n ~ , Ven ti lat ion a nd
Air Cond tl ioni ng , 4) E l ec
tr ic a l.
A pprove d as t o f o rm :
Joseph Ca in
Gallia Coun ty
P r osecuting A tto rne y
Se-p t e m ber 30, 1979

CENTRAL REALTY CO.
~o,o

DOWN .
NEW LI STIN G
Real n tre J BR home w 1lh t&gt;~~: tra
large ltvi ng room . equ ipped lut e hen , wa sher , dr f er ,
fu l l basem e nt , w 1th centra l arr Large breeH•w•w
l ead•ng to e •lr&lt;'l large garage Th 1S w ell cared t or
house has many ex tra s and o;.evera11ru 1t rrp~, ~ ot rtd
terenl vnr1el1("&gt; &amp; n• r e gd r den ) P" 10 opr PI (lt('
Ver y ntfe I()(ClltOn on lowr&gt;r Syr&lt;l u\1" Pr or i• CJ dl
S&lt;\3 . 900
CHEST E R
4 9 R home, nardw ooc t toon; , large
LR , tam tly rm . g arage , oulOutldJn g. lr ulllree~ ana
garden space Asktng \.48,900
THIS IS WHAT Y OU A SKED FOR
14 acre'5 w1th a
1•. 2 st o r y home , s• t s back off road surroundea wi l h
m a pl e trees . LQ . pond, lacd t ed tn Morning Sta r
area Price SJ3,900
FAMILY HOME - Lo t s of posstbtl•ttes w 1lh fhis
nice 2 st or y M a n y fea tu res, cen t ral atr , bu i l t tn ap
p lianc es, al l carpeted , good investment with seve rdl
ni&lt;.e butldt ng lot s . On ap pr ol&lt; . 41 -. ac res n me center
of Ra ci ne Asking $5.4,000 .
COUNTRY SP EC IAL - - Rt'•IIOut:'leu i tiR home on
blac k. toP road Mostly carpeted . F A . nat gas fur
nace, attract ive sma l l home and 1 acre l and Pri ced
for qu,c k !&gt;ale, SI 7,SOO
»2, 000 .00 -Goo d J BR , all carpe t ed home close t o
Pome roy &amp; M •dd teporl Located on 1 11 acres
FARM -over 70 acres borde • .ng Pomer oy w i th ex
tra lctrge barna and old farm house . but pl enty of
pasture and some fctrm ground priced Only S-49 ,000.
LOTS OF LOT S - From 1 to 75 aues , bordering
Pomer oy
MIDDLEPORT - 3 BR hom e approx 10 y r s. ol d,
Sto "e &amp; r efrigera t or, lg . st o r age bldg . Pr.ced at
$35,000 .
RACINE - 2 B R t r ailer on ni ce tot Asking S11,500.
20 WOODED ACRES ~-can be divided S12.(X)() .
LARGE SPLIT LEVEL - 3 Acres, 4 BR home , lully
carpe t ed, equipped K. it . tam room has fireplac e, I g .
ut ili t y rm .• p l enty of storage, two -c ar garage, el ec .
door opene r us ted $75 ,500
JUST LISTED - 6 Yr . old home , l BR , dinin g a~d
util i ty room , kit equi p ped w stove and ret ng .
M ostly ca r peted fo r ced air gas fu rn ace , 1 vr old .
Gar age, d comp let e tra i ler hook uP witn nat gas
t ap a nd sept ic can add income . Over i acres .
$19,900 Cal l for appointment
.
.
.
JUST LISTED -Mini f arm w beautdul brt c k. bt
level, w 3 B R &amp; fu ll baseme nt , lg c arport, t otal
el ec ., i nsu la t d, a ll hardwood floors, 31 1g hot houses,
Wi th aporox . 5 acres . $63,500 .

WANT TO SELL? - GIVE

1):, "

A&amp;H UPholst er ing, across
from me Te:.a co Stat ton 1n
Sy raucse 992 37 4.3 or 992
)752
BRADFORD, Auct1oneer ,
Co mplete se rv 1ce- Phone
949 7.4137 or 949 2000 racine ,
on1o, Cr ttt Brad ford

E L WOOD

WE HA VE CONVENTIONAL FIN ANCING FOR
MOST OF OUR HOM ES F OR AS LOW AS

M otors , rewrnd and repatr
992 23 56, 56 1 Bee ch St .
M i dd l eport . Oh• o

GALL

CALL JIMMY DEEM, AhOC1ATE 949-UBI
OR NANCY JA~PEfiS , ASSOCIATE
949 -26St or 949-2591

BOWER S

REPAIR
Swee pers ,
toa s ters , iron s. all sma l l
app l1anc es La wn mower
Ne :tf to Sl c~IP Highway
Ga r age on Route l , 985

J875
S &amp; G Carpe t Clea n. ng
5t e am
c leaned
F r ee
ec;t,mafe
Reasonable
rill •·s
Scorchguora
9q 2
6JOQ or 742 2348

SAVE 'oN cA'lP~T
ORIVE AtnnE
SAVE -A LOT
RUBBER BAC:K
CARPET

•4"

and up

Cash &amp; Carrv

SALf ON ALL
IN STOCK

·9~~dup

ln stalledwithPad Free

GOOD REMNANT
:smCTION
6'X12'tO 12'K16'

$3800

anaup

Call 742 · 221 1

RUTlAND

FURNITURE
Rutland,

o.

-

-

�8-The Daily Sentmel , Muldlepon-Pomeroy, 0 . Fnday, Nov 2, 1979

CHURCH
NEWS
TRINIT't' CHUR CH

Re11

W

H

P&amp;rr rn

posior Bob Bu ck Sunde)' !School ~upr
Chu rc h School Q 15 a m wor~hrp Htl
Y tCe 10 lOam Chorr rehearsal luesda.,.
7 30 p m under dHe&lt; tr on of Ail ee Nease
POMEROY CH URCH OF THE NAZAREN~
Corner Unron and Mulberry Re " C lyde V

He nderson poster Sunday school q 30
am Glen McClung •wpr morn ong wor
shtp 10 30 a m evenrng ser'llr ce 7 30
m rd we~ servu::e Wttdne!&gt;day 7 30 p m

GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH
326 E.
St Pomerov The Rev Raben 8
Gra ... es rector Sunday ser"r ces at 10 30
Ma~n

am

wdh Holy Co rnmunrun orr the

lu~l

Sunday of &amp;ech month and co mbrn&amp;C
wrth Mou rrng Prayer orr teh th11d Su11d&lt;ly
M ornrng Prayer and Sermon on all other

Sundoy5 ol the month

Chvrc~

Schoo l and

nursery care provrded Coltee hour on the

Por1$h Hall,mmedtately followmg 1htJ Htt
VIC9
POMER OY CHUR CH OF CHRI S! }I] W
Mo on St N~J ol Pt oud l ool pa s t or Btble
l rhooli;lJOorn morru11gwcr~hD 1030
o rn Youth me&amp; l ings b 30 p m
evo;,nong
worshop 7 30 Wedne!&gt;doy nrgh1 prate •
mee t ong end B1ble sTudy 7 JO p m
THE SALVAT ION ARM Y 115 Bu!!e rnu t
Ave Pom fH o y En"'oy and M r s Rny W m
mg o lt 1t ers 1n c harge Sunday holn1e~~
meeTong I 0 n m
Sunday School 10 30
o rn Sunday !ochool leoder YPSM ~l otse
Adams l JO p m
\O i vo11 0n m Aeh ng
var1ous \peoker !i and mu~o c 5peuol!&gt;
rhu r sdoy 10 u rTl to] p fTI l oJ1to Hume
7 JO p rn
lea gue oil women on , d&amp;d
prayer rnet!TifT9 u11d Btb le ~tudy Bob
E!ihtp
l eoder
~e v
N oe l
Hermon
teal httr
BURLIN GTON
SOUTHUU~
BAPII':.T
CHAPEl Route I Shade
Po ; t or B c bb~
£1k.ns Sunday \Ch&lt;.&gt;ol 5 &gt; "
'wr do~
worshop S 45 p rn
\o\e&lt;i •H·~ • • o , proptr
serv• Ce 7 30 p m
POMEROY
Wf ) ISIO l
Jl&lt; ( . _. 01
CHRI ST ]00 W M o .n l
Pr• ;. PmJI
m on 1\le r phO'lt:l QQ'} "1bt.-t• ~ .~ r ,o r , ~e
no n '"~ lr u menlo l
SundOf ,., ur ~h , p 10
a rn
B•ble ~tudy I I o m
.-. o r-.h. p b
p rn Wedne~do y B•ble ~rudy T p rn
OLD DEXTER 81Bt! CHRIST IAN ( HUF! ( H
~e v Ralpt1 Sm llh
p05Tor Su nday \ ( nno l
9 )0
om
M r&lt;;
Wor i9'V
f rQPI(•"&gt;
\uper •n l~nde n l Pr 00d1 ng serv1 c e~ f,r\1 &amp;
th,rd Sundoy5 lo llo "" •ng Sunday Schoo l
UN TFO
MflH OOIST
G RAHAM
Preo ch•ng 9 30 a rn l.r~l and \econd ~u ,
days ol &amp;O ch rn on rh rhrrl anrllniH th Su'l
doys each month wo r"&gt;h'P ~erv•Le at T 30
p rn Wednesday evfH11ngs or 7 30 Pruyet
and B•b le Study
Mulber r y
SEv'l:NTH DAY A D\o'lN11ST
He1ght s Jo! ood f-' o oner oy Past o r Albert
D1HB!r Sabboth Se hou l Su~~r"ll t;nda nl
R.r o While Sobbo ' 'l ') ( ho ed
').a turdoy
afternoon o ] 00
•'• or .,nq. . Sar~l(t!
l ollo w 1ng o1 i 1')
RUTl AN D f t ~ &lt;., r ftAPr 1)1 l HLJRCH
&lt;,, r '
'lu,Ooy
S.~rer
Horo ~··
0 4S
Sc haul q 30 c '"

""'"h

"'

om
THE HILAND CH APU Gt&gt;or ge Co"&gt; l o
pasTor Sunday Sd1ool Q 30 u m e"'enong
w or:!rhop 7 30 1 hur~day t'~en rn g pra yer
servoce 7 JO p m
PO M£R OY FIR S I BAPT IST Dovtd M ann
m1n1!h~r Wdl,om Wolson Sunday Hhool
sup t Sunday schoo ' q 30 a m
morr\rng
warshrp I 0 30 o m
FIRS T SOUfHERN BAPT ISr 282 M ul btt rry
Ave Pomeroy Her'i.hel M cClu re Sunday
Hhool !upen n tenden' Sunday Hhool
q 30om morn •ng w o r!t.h•p 10 30 even
rng w o rshrp 7 00 p rp M.dweek prayer
~er .... rc e 700p m
".A.IDWA't' CO MMUN ITY Cl~lER Oede r
Rd L ong~~·l!e Ot; o Ro&gt; , ( (de Fer re l
Po51Qr Sv nd oy s( hoo l 11 a m S&lt;lhHdOt
preochtng !!lerv rc es 7 30 p m Wedne5doy
8\o/01'1 1ng B•ble ~rudy a t 1 JO p m
FAITH TABfPNA ( L£ CHURCH Bod ey
~un ~ o od Re v [rn rroetl Raw~ or1 pmt or
Handley Dunrt ~u~ t Su11do y ~chuol 10
am Sund ay even,ng serv1ce 7 30 Sr ble
reo chmg 7 ::K)p m Thur~doy
DYESVILLE
COMMUNITY
CHUR CH
Roger C Tu r ner po!ilor Sunday ~choo l
q 30 om
Sunday mornong worsh rp
10 30 Sun day eve rung !&gt;e rv1 ce 7 J0
MI DD LEP O RT CHUR CH O F CHRIST IN
lawren(e Ma nia.,
CHRI ST IAN UNION
pastor
Mr5
Ruuel l Young
Sunday
School Suo! Sun day School 9 30 o m
E.... enrng wor\hrp 7 30 W&amp;dner.day pr ayer
m eet1 ng 7 30 p m
MT
MORI AH
CHUR CH O F GOD
Ra (1'18
Re v W u • ,1. ~ ~ r&gt;O~' Q r M o r n
ng wo•,h•p q A ) n •
~. '• r1 n ~ c.choo l
l u e,d o ~
10 4 ) &lt;I •n eve•'• "q ..,.. , ,,h p
f 30
p m
lor1 1f'O'
t r nyP
rn &lt;e&amp; ' •n q
Wed ne, da., l JO D rn YPl
MIDDLEP O RT FIRST BAPTIST
Corner
S1)11!h and Palme r theRe .. Ma r l-. M ,Ciun g
Dnn Wd~on
Sunday 'iChool q 15 a m
r.upeflnlendent lacy Bart on os~ l ~upt
M orn 1ng W o r \h1p 10 15 urn B·ble c. rudy
10 30 am at chu rch Youth meer,ng 7 )(}
p m Wedne'idoy Wedne~doy nrght B1ble
study and praye r servrce J JO p rr
CHURCH OF CHRIST M rddl eporl 5th
ond Mo •n Bob Melt on mtn•ster M ok e
Gerlach wper 1n1endent Terry Yankey
youth mrn1ster B1ble school Q JO om
m o rn1ng wor~h 10 10 30 a rn
evttrHng
worshrp 7 30 prayer ~er ... tc e 7 p m
Wedmndoy
MlOO LE PO RT
C H URCH
O fTHE
NAZARENE Rev J ,m Broome po'&gt;t ot Btl I
Wh •l e
Sunday sc hool wpt
Sunday
srhool q JO o rn morn.ng w or ~hr p 10 30
am
Sunday e ... ong@l,~t &lt; rne"'' '''9 J 00
p 1n PtOyer rnee!ong 1/&gt;ied n e~doy 7 !J tn
UNITE D PRESBYTERIAN MINt5TRv OF
MEIGS COUN TY Owtght l Zo .. ill d•nH

10'
HARRISONVIllE PRESBYTERIAN Rev
Ernest Stn ckltn pO!!Itor Sunday chu rch
school q 30 a m Mrs Homer lee sup!
mornrng worshtp I 0 30
MIDDLEPORT Sunday 5choo l q 30 a m
R1 c hard Vaughan supr M orn mg worsh •p

10 30
SYRACUSE Mornrng worshrp q om
Sundoy school 10 am M rs Sampson
Holl sup!
RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD Rev Bob
by Porter pas lor Sunday sr hool 10 u m
Sunday wor!hlp II a m Sunday ~Nen•ng
serviCe 7 p m
W&amp;dne'iodo y Fomtly fro •
1ng Hour 7 p m Wednesday worshrp 59r
v tCe 7 30 p m
HA ZE l COMMUNI TY CHURCH
Neoc
Long BoTt o m Edse l Hart pa~tur Sunday
schoo l 10 a rn Churrh 7 30 p on prOJ'IH
mrBetmg 7 3C p m 1 hur~doy
MIDDLEPORT
PENTEC OSTAl
Th1rd
Ava
the Rt~v Wtlltarn Kn11tel po~to r
Tt,omas Kelly Sunday School Supt Sun
day !chao I 10 a m Clones for all oges
7 30
Brble study
e .... entng servrce
Wedmndoy 7 30 p m
youth !erv rces
Fndoy , 7 JO p m
MIDDLEPORT FREEWill BAPTIST Corner
Ash and Plum Noel Herrman poster
Saturday evenrng se rv tce 7 30 p m Sun
day School 10 30 o m

MEIGS
COOPERATIVE PAR IS H
METHODIS T CHURCH
Rt chord W Thomes Drrector

P.O MER OY CLusr ER
li' o"' ~ abo rT M cGee
Re"' james Carbrll
POMERO Y Sunday School 9 15 n m
W or lhtp serv rce 10 30 am C ho rr rehear
sol , W..:tnesdoy
7 p m
Rev
Robert
McGee, pastor
r
ENTERPRISE , Worsh1p q o m Churc h

School lOam
ROCK SPRINGS , Church School '')a m
Worship lOam UMVF630p m
FLATWOODS , Chur ch School 10 om
Wonhtpll am

M IDOL EPOR r ClUSTER
HEA TH Chur ch Sc h ool 9 30 om War
sh 1p 10 30 o m
UMYF 6 p m
Robert
Rob1n'i on Pastor
RUHAND Church S&lt;:hool 9 30 om
Wor~h,p 10 30 a m Wdbur Hrlt Pmrar
SA LEM CE NTER Worshrp q am Church
S(hoo 19 &lt;iS am
SYRACUSE CLUSTER
Rc., Har .. ey Koch Jr
f OREST RUN Wor~hp 9 om Chur(h
)thaoiiOo m
MINERSVILLE Church S&lt;hool 9 om
W a r~h,p 10 am
ASBURY Churt h Slhuol 9 50 am Wo r
\h,p !I am Htble Study 7 J0 p m Thu1'io
day UMW lr:!rl 1ue5doy
':&gt;OUT Ht:R N CLUSllR
R6v Dav1d Horrr~
~ev Mark Flynn
florence Sm1th
Hilton Wolle
BETHANY (Dor cas } W or' h'p q 00 om
Ch ur ch Sc h ool 10 00 o m
CARMEl C hruc h School 9 30om W ar
\h•p I 0 30 o rn ]nd ond 4th Sundays
APPLE GROV E Su nday Sc hool 9 30 am
W o t~ hl p 7 30 p m
I \T and 3rd Sunday\
Prayer meetong Wedne)day 7 30 p m
Fe llow.,hrp \llPP"'' ftr\T Sa turday 6 p rn
UMW 7nd Tue~day 7 30 p m
lAS I lETARI Chrurh S&lt;hnol Q om
W o r~htp ~erv•ce 10 o rn Prayer mee!tng
? J(J p rn Wedne~doy UMW setond Tue\
day 7 JO p rn
RACINE WESl t YAN
Surtdo.,. \Lhool 10
a m
w ar &lt;;,hrp I 1 a m C ho" pro ct ,c e
Th ur,Joy Spm
UIART ~AlLS
W o rsh1p ser v i{O q am
Church School 10 o m
MORNIN G S TA~ Wor~htp 9 30 om
Chur ch
Sc hoo l
10 30
om
You l h
lue\da.,.~ 7 p rn
MORSE CH APEl
Church School Q 30
omW o rshp t ' am
PORTLAND Church School q 30 am
W o r~h1p 11 n rn
SUlT O N Chu r ch Sc"ool 9 30 a rn W ar
,h,p I\ and J rd Sunda y~ 10 30om
NOR1HEAST ClUSHR
Rt:t v Rrthard W Thoma\
Duane Syden&lt;; !rtc~er Sr
!ohn W Douglo\

These Messages Of Our Religious Heritage
Are Sponsored Each Week By The Following:

TU R,Q,I S f

pm
SV RA CUSE CH URCH O F THE NAZARENE
Re v Dole Bm ~ po~tor
Sunday \ chool
q 30 am
mornmg worsh.p 10 45 om
evu nglil ll\ l l l ~erv1u1 7 p ,,, Weclntnday
serv1ces
prayer and pra 1 ~e 7 p m
you l h meetrng 7 p rn
Men~
p r aye1
meelong So turduy 7 p m
W~N UN I HO BRETHREN IN CHR IST
Elden R B loke po\t o r Sunda y S&lt; h ool 10
o r11 Ro bert Reed '\vpt
M orn1ng ~er
fll('rt
I1 o m
Sun day nog ht Htrv• C4H
Song ~er
Chrt)t,a n Endeo~ o r 7 30 p m
\11(9
8 p m
Preochrng 8 :30
p m
M1dweek P r ayer meet1ng Wedne $day
p m Ray Adoms loy leader
CHUR CH OF JESUS CHRIST loc o ted at
Rutland a n New l1mo Road ne:~t t o Forest
A cre Pa rk Re v Roy Rou!!le pas lor Robe r t
Mu~ur
Sunday Schoo l supt
Sunday
s.chool 10 JO om worshtp 7 30 p m Br
ble Study Wadnesdoy 7 30 p m
Sotur
day n1ght prayer ser .... 1ce 7 lOp m
HEMLOC1'4: GROVE CH RISTIAN Roger
Wohon po!!ltor M1ldred lregler Sunday
school supt Mormng wonh 1p q J0 a m
Su ndoy sc h ool 10 J0 o m
e .... enrng ser
vrce 7 J0
M1
U NI ON
BAPT IST
Cecil
Co•
rn • nr~ter
Jo~
Sayre
Sundo.,. School
Supenntent!nt ~und ay ~chool Q 45 am
even1ng
wor$h1p
7 30 p m
Pruyer
mee tlflg I 30 p m Wedn&lt;esdoy

!UPPERS PlAINS CH UR CH OF CHRIST
Randy Koehler pastor Dennrs Newland
Sunday ~ c hool superrntendenf Sunday
School 9 30 a m
fl'Orntng church ser
111Ctt 10 JO am
Sunday e"'entng 81ble
study 7 p m
LETART FALlS UNITED BRETHREN Rev
Freeland N ..J rr rs pastor Fl oyd Norrrs

!\.1U".' ~Y

" DEMO

MEIGS TIRE
CENTER, INC.

)I

MIPDLEPDRT BOOK STORE

11

Jotln f

Futfl Mgr
p~ ,,, 1 101
Pomrroy

r

•

( hurlh &amp; Oftr (l Supphr '
GIF TS

99 Mtl l !il l

Mrddl epo r1

NEW ~ORK
KERMIT S KORNER
Pome rov Otlto

~(li-J

&gt;&lt;e• - UHP .

McCOY

,, . ~

AUCTION SERVICE

Com pl,pt,p
Automotive
S«rvtce

CLOTHING HOUSE

A ~eal Auc11on Call

(For

The Real McCoy 1
1 0 (Mac) McCay

lO&lt; usr &amp;
991 9921

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY
We Fill Docton
PrrPscr rpttOn \
'il'1

Pomeroy

RIGGS USED CARS, INC.
__4...::::;

!!.1 Rl

RIDENOUR SUPPLY

~

IF 'IOLJ WILL CO ME
WIZ ME- , MAM Z~LLE
FOLLETT 1 GH4L ~
TAKE "0LJ TO "'0L.R
C HER PAPA;

1

nu

E t 'T '15~

( CME~

~ ... ~' R I Eoi... f'
W Tr; Yf l~;z

I M NC ·

,;. ('I I'\. ~._-

r

•q:ES

E"'

"'R Zf :

~'-

...,

'. r-

PE RHAPS.

CO ...... E WI Z ME. "v\"r C AR IS
PA~KED OUTSIDE ; WE SHALL

;:. (J ~I &lt;;T &gt;~"-' : F S

\0:. ..., ..._

Afo..,

T

BE- LE A VIIJG PAI&lt;:I S AT ONCE
ON ~ RllZZAIR. /...(}N6

JOI.J 'ZNE'-1;
r~---cll~~~

fURNITURE &amp; HARDWARE
Hom•hliP S.ws

1

Ph 9154100

ROSEBERRY'S
PENNZOIL
S.ln S..rvtCI
rMin St

A&lt;~nortn

no E
m

Pn ~"~ tll(}

SUNOCO

The Lighthouse Principle
Maybe few of us landlu bbers eve r
thought about 11. but those graceful old
light houses were burlt on a firm and log
1cal pr~nc1ple
They assu m ed thelf ltghl would be
seen an d understood In focJ sh1ps drd
not see the ltgh t and many foundered on
the sh oa ls Occas1onally capW 1ns m1s
too k th e lt ght for that of an other ve;sel
and sa i11ng across 1Ls bow o r stern th ey
ca me to gnef upon the roc ks Ye t desp1te
hJza rd s of nature and blunder s of man.
lrghthouses bec am e th e landmarks of
our coasts
Whenever m your travels work or
~ldy you see a chu rch thtnk of rt a&gt; a
ltghth ouse ll5 gl eam rndy not reach
every sou l But 1t s lhcte for th ose who
see and understa nd

Insurance

Services
114 E Ma1n
"2

~

llO Pomero y

WAIP CROSS
SONS STORE

SHORTEST WAY HOME

SERVICE
CENTERS

IH()•__,f- fh )(I I)LUM'::&gt;

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A~f:- At.IE~D

0' Mf
J f\l ~ ONL'1 TRAIL

212 W M,m
~10 N 2nd
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VIRGIL B.

TEAFORD SR .

I'd have saved

htm a pennlj IT ra '
JUSt Jumped o~t;J

Cable TV Systems, Inc

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Attend The Ch u rr h
of 'our Choict&gt;

This

and I

three cents wo"ihJ up a f,ve dollar
, of qas / "-- headache'
r

adJustments. 1t
' tooh an hour 1

[_c- - ~- ..----.

BROWN'S
,['
'--""'-' FIRE &amp; SAFETY J.

116 E ~~n
992 U04
pom•rov

I 1 HI &lt;( JW

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Athens CountyL@

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Eat In or
Carry Out

1111

&gt;, 1 N

lnl Co
of Columbus, 0
104 W Main
H11lll Pomeroy

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Sa tur da,..
M a t1hew
21 18 22

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P. J. PAUL£Y.
AGENT

...., ]1"

Tuesday
II \. H1n1h 1ans

Monday

l1

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••1 S Tt'lird Mlddleporl
Sunday
I T hessa1on1a ns

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1l ' 'fi

Pat Hill Ford, Inc.

us off 1he shoals

a.n.,-al MerchndiM
RacJne't&lt;4t USO

Th i"

BEST L\ID PL,&amp;WS

It lrghl5 ou r way to port whrle keep1nq

GrocerteS -

4 )f )

Jill

FRENCH'S

RACINE
FOOD MARKET

l horle~ Domtgon

!VI'PA
W or~h•p
9 00 am Churc h
) , l iN)• 10 OOo rn
( HfS TfR
Wo r.,hrr 9 am
Church
Sr hool 10 am C ho11 Re heo r'!tol 7 p m
WI1(Jr leH.kl"t' Brble Study
Wed n e~doy~
'30 p&lt;n
LO NG BOT TOM Sunday St houl ot q 30
o rn ~ ... en •n g Wo r r.hrp al 7 30 p rn Thurs
day B1ble Study 7 30 p rn
RHOS VIllE Sunday Sc h ool 9 30 om
M u•111ng W orsh1p 10 JO am Eventng W or
~hp 7 30 p m
B1 ble ~tudy Wedne!odoy~ a!
7 30 p rn
ALFRED Sunday Schoo l at 9 4S am
M o' n 1ng Wo r \h1u o r II a rn Wsdne~day
N1 gh t Prayer Meet 1n g 7 JO p m
sr PAUl i Tupperr. Pla,ra ) Sunday
School 9 00 am M orn1n g W ors h1p at
10 00 am M onday N rg h1 Brble Study 7 30
p m
SOUTH BETH El ( S,lver Rrdge ) Sunday
S&lt;hool q 00 om M orn•ng Woshtp 10 00
a m Wedne!iday B1ble Study 7 30 !..l rn
IHN O C H U ~ ( H O F CHRIST
Htrv• t e~
e&lt;l&lt;h Sund ay 9 30 am Geor ge P,cken5
1-10\IOr w.rh preo ch•ng on h rst end th rrd
Sunday ol month Ohver Sworn Sup!
HOBSO N CHRI STI AN UNION Fie .., Kerth
Ebl1n poster Sunday Schoo l q J0 om
Leona rd Gilmore forst elder e ve nrng ser
v•ce
7 30 p m
Nedne ~d ay
prayer
meetmg 7 30 p m
BEARWALLOvV
RIDG E CHUR CH OF
CHRI S1 D uane Worden m , n,~ler
do~' 9 30 o m
morn 1ng wor'!thop
om
even1ng
wOr\hrp
tJ 30
p m
Wednesday S,b! e &lt;; tudy 6 30 p m
N fW
STIV FR SVILL F
CO MMUNITY
Chur ch Sunday Sd1ool servoce 9 45 a rn
Wont-up serv•rP. 10 30 Fvongeli51 1C )er
n&lt;e
J 30
p rn
Wedne~day
Prayer
•n o&gt;er mg 7 ]()
liO ~~ CHUP ( H O F CHRI51
Po rnero't'
Hornson \ol tlle Rd Raben Purtel l pasl o r
B&gt;fl .V. ( [Ir o y Sunday S&lt; hool supt Sunday
Hhnol 9 30 a m
morwng wo r~ h 1 p und
ro rnmun •o n 10 30 om Sunda y wor\hop
Hn~• l e
7 p n1
Wedne~da.,.
e 11en1 ng
prayer 1'11&amp;&amp; 1•11g and B1b le \ludy 7 p m
ST JOHN lUTHERAN CHURCH
P1ne
Gro~e The Rev Wrlltom M1ddleswarth
Po!itor Ch u rch r. er\11 Ce~ 9 30 am Sunday
Schoo iiO 30om
BRAD6UR'f' CHUR CH OF CH RI ST Edward
Fryman posto f Sun day school Q 30 am
wo r ~h,p ser ..... ce 10 30om
Sundoy ser
vll&amp;~ 7 30 p m
youth gr ou p Wed nss
do'l' 7 p '""
ANTIQUITY BAP TIST ~e v Earl Shule r
pa~ l o r Sunday Hhool 9 30om
Church
\erv i( Q
7 p m
you 1h m9fHtng
6
p m l11e"&gt;day B·b le S•vd'l' 7 p m
PA CI NI ( H U "' ( H ()f THf NA ZAR ENE
R1 . Joh n A f.. o tl rnofl pa-,tor F&lt;o n lo l.n
l"' horlro r&gt; , ho •rmo n n l thf! B()(]rri o f ( h r.~
r.o,, l.!e Sunday School II 30 u m
m o rn
ng ,.,or~h1p 10 30 Sunda y even1ng wor
~h·p J JO p m Prayer meet,ng Wednes
do)'l30pm
J\ACIN I: FIRS! BAPIIST Don L Welker
Pa~ t or
Ronnlt! Sol'!t or
Sunday H hool
~up !
Su"''doy sctlool q JO am morn1ng
wo • ~h 1 p 10 40 om
Sunday even1ng war
1 30
s~•p
Wednesday e ven•n g B· b le
\Judy 7 30
DANVIllE WESlEYAN
Re v
R
D
Br o w11 pO'!t101 Sur1doy Slhool 9 30 am
morn1ng worc.h•p 10 ~5 youlh \OfviCf!o
6 45 p rn tt vf111•ng - or ~h 1p 7 30 p m
prayer a!'d pro•stt Wednesday 7 30 p m
SILVER RUN FRFE BAPTIST Re.., M orvrn
Madu n pasto r Stev e l ottie Svndoy S&lt;hool
~ u pt Su••day Hhool
10 om
rnormng
w o r\h•p 1 t om Sur"~ doy even•ng w a r
\h op
l 10
Prayt'' m eet11 )g end B 1bl~
~ · ·~ rly ·nvr~doy ' JO p m
you th ~or v•ce
1: 1.1 rn )ur;do y
C HE ~,I ER CHUR CH OF GOD Re"' R E
R o b, n~on
pa$t o r Sunrloy Hhool
9 )(}
o rll w o rshrp ~erv•ce 11 om e"'en1nq
~er~ , &lt;e 7 00 t ou •h serv1ce Wed n e$dOy
700prr
LAN GSVILLE
CHRI STIAN
CHURCH
Rober• M uB er pastor Sunday school
q 30 am
Roy St gmo n "&gt;up!
rroorntng
wor\hop 10 30 Sun day AvAnong ~erv1cr9
7 30 m rd week !i6r\o/1C e Wedn&amp;'idOy J

''\IE TALhErJ Tr) :lllf-'f-', • ,-~
AN D I I U)()lo(S Ll i'\i: et) "JY:,;
R IME WAVf r-....r-l.
(If ':_ ih iJf(J

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Sunda~

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'

.

1111

I ,I

t'il·~• l
I

Attend The Church
Of Your Choice This Sunday

I

'· I

~~t¥
by THOMA5 JOSEPH

J8 T;pe
of bt&gt;r tlt&gt;
39 ~ew Hoc helle

ACROSS

ll'lr&lt;u.s
perfonm·r

5 Ll11n e~ port
sup! Sunday Hhool 9 30 u m
m orn 1ng
stt rmon
10 30 am
Prayer serv1ce
Wedne~doy 7 30 p m
CH ES TER CHUR CH OF THE NAZARENE
Rev He r bert Grate po~tor Worsh1p ser
and 7 30 p m Sunday
vrce 11 om
S&lt;hool 9 JO om Cherie$ B1uell ~upt
Prays• m ee t •ng Wedne5doy 7 30 p m
LA U REl
CLI FF
FREE
METHO D I ST
CHURC H Re "' floyd F Shook past or
ll o yrl Wugh t Sunday Sc hoo l Sup! M orn
•ng W or~hop q JO o m
Sun day School
10 ?0 om Wednesday Prayer and 8 1bl e
Srudy 7 30 p m Sunday even• ng w or~ h,p
7 30 p m Cho•r Pr ocf1 ce Thur5doy 7 p rn
DEXTEFI CHURCH OF CHRIST Chorle~
Russf'll l Sr
mon1ster Rr ck Ma co mber
~up! Srmdoy Hhool q JO o m
w o r!h •p
serviCe 10 30om Brbl e Study Tue'iday
7 30 p m

REORGANIZED CHURCH Of j ESUS
CH RI ST OF LAnFR DAY SA INT S Por tland
Racrrre Rood
Wdl ,om Roush
past or
Phyll1\ Stobart Sun do'( Sc hool Supt Sun
day Sc hool q 30 a m M orn1ng w orshrp
10 30 o fT1 Sun day evenrng !iervrce 7 p m
W.dne1day evenm9 prayer serv1ces 7 30
pm

BETH LE HEM BAPTI ST Re v Earl Shuler
pa$10r W on.htp ~erv t c e 9 30 o m Sunday
$Chool 10 30 am B•b le Study ond prayer
serv•&lt;e Thursda.,. 7 30 p m
CARLET O N CHUR CH K1ngsbury Ro ad
Gory K.ng poslor Sundoy Hhool q 30
o rn Rolph C o r I .,upe11n tende n t e"'en1ng
wor~h p
7 JO p m
Prayer meet1ng
Wttd nlndoy 7 30 p m
LONG BO TlOM CHRISTIAN George F
P1ckens
past o r
Wallace Damewood
Sup! Brble School q 45 o m Preoch1ng
ser vr&lt;tt 10 45 am
f1rst and fh1rd Sun
doys 7 p m lecand and fourth Sundays
Brble study 8 p m Tu1ndoy!!1
HYSEll RUN FREE METHODIST CHURCH
Rev OkE~Y Cart pastor Mornrng servrce
10 JO am Svnday e .... enrng ond Thursdoy
e"'enrng serv 1c es at 7 30 p m
FREEDOM C.OSPEl MISSION ol Sold
Knob Re"' lawrence Gluesencomp Sr
po!!lt or Roge r Wtmord Sr Sunday school
$Vpt Sunday school q 30 o e"'en1ng w a r
., hrp 7 30 p m Pr ayer m.et1ng. Wednes
doy 7 30 p m Vouth meetrng Sunday
5 JO p rn w •th Don and Martha Meadow ~
111 charge
WHITES CHAPEL Coolville RD R.e "' Roy
D ee ter pO$tor Sunday school 9 30om
wonh1p se r\olr Ce 10 30 am 81ble study
and prayer se rvrce, Wednesday 7 30 p m

RUflAND CHURCH OF CHRIST

Bmd

Henderson poslor Herb Ellrott Sun day
school supt Sunday uhoot q 30 a m
mo r nrn g wor~h·~ end com umo n
10 30
am

RUTLAND COMMUNITY CHURC H Am os
T.ll, 5 pastor Donny Trl lrs Sunday Schoo l
Sup ! Sun day S&lt;hool 9 30om foll o wed
by morn1ng .,.,or5h1p Sunday even tng ser
v1c e 7 30 p m Pray er meetlllQ Wedne!!l
doy 7 30 p m WMPO Rodro br oo dcast
Sun day mornmg 7 45
RUTlAND CHU RCH O F THE NAZARENE
Rsv Lloyd D Grrmm Jr pas l o r Sunday
Hhool 9 JO om ""Orshrp S f!!'"\! te e 10 30
o rn Brood&lt;ost lov e o"'er WMPO young
people r. $erv•ce 7 p rn Evong e lr'itiC ser
voce 7 30 p m Wedne5day servtce 7 30
pm

FIR ST S0U1HERN BAPTIST Corner at Se
cond and Ander !an Mason Past o r Fronk
Lo wther Sunday ! c hool 9 A5 o m war
Sh •p ~erv rce II am and 7 30 p m Week
ly Brbl9 Stud't' Wednesday 7 30 p m
MASON CHUR CH OF CH RIST Mrlter St
Mason W Va Aurr ce Mr clc. pastor Sun
doy Btble Stvdy 10 am Worshtp 11 om
and 7 p m 81ble Study Wednesday 7 p m
Voc al mus• c
MA SO N ASSEMBLY OF GOO Oudd tng
to ne Mas on W Va Re"' Ronnre 8 Rose
Pa!&gt;t or Su nda.,. Sc hool q 45 o m Mornrng
Wo"h'P 11 a m Chrldren s Church 6 4S
p m Yoong Peoples Servrce 6 AS p m
fven ong Serv•Ce 7 30
m Wednesday
M1 nutr 11U meetrng on
prayer 10 am
Wedmndoy Prayer S.er .... tce 7 XI p m
HARTF O RD CH URCH OF CHRI ST IN
CHRISIIAN UNION
The Rev Wrll 1om
Campbe l l pos t er Sun day School q 30
u m Jame! Hughe! !oUp l evenrng ier
v1ce
7 30 p m ' Wedne!!ldoy evenrng
prOylilr meelmg 7 30 p m Youth prayer
! 8f&gt;r' lc e eocn luesday
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHUR CH letart W
Vo
Rt
I
Rev
Cha rl es Hargraves
pa l lor Worlhlp !!lllr\'tcea ~ 30 o m SUr\·
doy schoo l II o m
e"'enrng wor&amp;hlp
7 30 p m Tuesday cottage prayer m . .ting
and Brble study q 30 o m Worat,tp ser
\lrCe Wednesday 7 30 p m
'
CAL VA RY BIBLE CHURCH now located
o n Pomeroy Ptlo.e County Rood 25 near
Fla twood' Rev Blackwood pastor Ser
\!ICes on Sunday ot 10 30 om ond 7 30
p m .,..,,h Sunday sc hool 9 .XI o m 81ble
!tudy Wednesday 7 30 p m
IN D£PE N D fNI HOliNESS CHU RCH INC
Pearl St
Moddleport Re.... 0 Dell
M an ley pO!il o r Sonny Hud'ion Su nday
school \upt Sunday sc h oo l 9 30 o m
even1ng worshrp 7 30 p m Prayer ond
pro1§8 UHv rc e Wedneldoy 7 30 p m

J

RUtlAND

APOSTOliC

CltURCH

OF

JE SUS CHRIST E!der James Miller Bible
5tudy Wednesdav 7 30 p m
Sufldoy
Sc hool 10 o rr Sunday ntght serv•ce 7 JO
pm
POM~ROV

WE~lfl' AN

HO LI NE SS

Horr.ton\ldl e Rood Dewey K1ng pc.:alor
Edoson Weaver antstant Henry Ebltn
Jr Sunday ,chool sup! Sunday Ehool
q 30 o m morn1ng w o rsh1p 11 a m Sun
do,.
even.ng
5ervrce
7 30
proyfH
meet1ng Thu rsday 7 30 p m

SYRACUSE FIRi r CHURCH OF GOD
N o t Penle&lt;astal
Re....
George O.ler
paHor
Worshtp lBr \lrC e Su nd ay
9 •5
o m Su nday school I 1 o m
worshrp
se1~1ce
7 30 p m
Thur1doy
prayer
meermg 7 30 p m
Mf HERMON Unrted Breth r en C hurc h
Sunday Schoo l 9 30 o m Wor§hlp ~er\o/1 C e
10 • 5 om Preoch1ng !erv 1ces e"'ery Sun
day oherno11ng w11h C E Wedne!day
prayer meet1ng 7 JO p m Rev Jamel
Leoch p0!!1tor Oa .... ld Holter loy leader
JEHOVAH S WITNESSES I mrle east of
Rutland 1unctton of Route 114 and Noble
Summi t Rood [ T 174 ) Sundoy B rble L&amp;e
ture 9 30 o
Wat chtower study 10 30
om Tuesday 81ble study 7 and 8 15
p m
Thursday theoc::rot1c school 7 30
p m servtce meetmg 8 JO p m

RUHAND FREEWill BAPTIST Crnmh leland Ha ley pastor Sunday school , 10
o m e"'en1ng ser.-tee 7 30 p m Prayer
meetrng Wednesday 7 lOp m
CHURCH OF GOO of Prorhec:y located
on the 0 J White Rood of hrghwoy 160
Sunday Sc hool 10 a m Superr nfendent
Jo hn lo.... edoy Frrst Wtrdnesdoy n rght of
month CPMA tervrcel second Wedne1
day WM8 meetrng thtrd through lrfth
youth ler .... lce G.arge Croyle po1tar
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL - 570 Grant St
Mrddleport Rev Don Bloke pastor Sun
doy school 9 JO a m
marn1ng worsh•p
10 30 a m
evemng WOflhrp 7 p m
Wednesday evening B1ble •tudy end
prayer m4etlng 7 p m Affil1oted wlth
Soulhern Boplttt Convention
BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHRIS TEugene Underwood po1tor Horry Hen
drr cks supertntendent Sunday scnool
'II Xl o m mornmg wor1h1p l 0 30 a m
eventng wonhtp 7 p m WrednMdoy Brble
study 1 p m
JUBILEE CHRISTIAN CENTER - George's
Creek Pood Re"' C J Lemley pastor
Jo hn Fellure
super1ntendan1
Church
S&lt;hool
q lO o rn
morf"•ng worshtp
10 30 e"' en1ng lltr'W•Ce 7 p m
Youth
mef!l•ng Sunday 6 p m Brble study 1n
depth Wedne•doy 7 p m Clones lor oil
ages Nursery pr ov 1d~ far wo uhtp ser
vrce
ST PAUL LUTHfltAN CHURCH Corner
o f Sycamore ond Second its Pomeroy
The Rev Wllliom M lddiMworth PoSTer
Sunday School at 9 .tS a m ond (t,urch
ServiC I!I'i 11 o r'n
SACRED HEART Re"' Fathe r P01.11 D

Welfon po$tor Phone 9'9') 1615 Saturday
e\olen1ng Man 7 .30 Sunday MoH 8 and
10 om
Con len 1on Saturday
7 7 3(J

pm
VIC TO RY BAPIIST
On the Route 7
bypcn Jome! E KtUtSN pall or Sunday
uhool 10 o m
motntng .... or!hi!J I I
o m av enrng servrce 7
HUNI TV Chrrstron Assembly Coulvrl le
Gtlbert 5pencer
polt or
Sund'ly
Hhool , 9 JO 0 m
m orn1ng wor!h,p 11
a m Svndoy e•enmg !oer .... tc,e 7 )() p m
m1dwe~ proyer ser.... rce Wed ne!!ldoy 7 )J

pm
MOUNT Olive Communt ty C h u rch
law r ence Bulh pallor Ma x Fol rrr• r Sr
Super1ntenden t 5undoy School and mo• 11
mg worship 'II 30 o m Sundoy e"'en1ng
servrce 7 p m
Youth meet1ng and B· bl e
study Wednesday 7 p m
FAIT H BAPTIST Church Mas on meet 01
Unrted Steel Workerl Un1on Halt Rotlr oad
StrHt Mason Pallor Ae"' Joy M 1t chell
Morntng worshtp 'II 45 o m
Sunday
Schorn
10 30 a m
Prayer
m~ ef 1 q g
Wednesday 7 30 p m
FOREST RUN BAPTIST Aa"'
Ny le
Borden
pasto r
Corneltut
B unch
$Uperm tenden t Sunday school 9 30 o m
lecond ond fourth Sundays worsh tp 1 er
v•ceat2 JOp m
MT MORIAH BAPTIST - Fourth a nd
Mo rn St Mrddlepo rt Re .... Col .... ln M •nnrs
poster Mn Elvtn 8umgo rdner sup! Sun
doy school q 30 o m
worshrp serv1 ce

10 45o m
NORTH
BETHEl
Untted
Me1h od 1H
Chu rch Re" Charles Oomtgan past or
Sunday School 9 30 o m
Wor-.h 1p ~sr
vtee 10 4~ o m Sunday Brble Study 7 00
P m Wednesday prayer meat1 ng 7 30
pm

HOUSE Of PRAYER AND PRAISE l •ber ty
Ave poll 8ur1111r Chef Pomeroy Evgene
An!!lpah po1tor Sunday achool 10 u m
morntng wor1h1p 11 o m Even m g wor
sl-&gt;p Sundoy Tuesday and frtdoy 7 ]()

pm
BURliNGHAM
SOUT HERN
SAP liST
CHURCH Route I Shade Pas ror Don
&amp;lock AHrhated with Southern Bop trtt
Convent ton Sundoy 1chool 1 XI p m
Sunday wonh1p 2 30 p m
Thu rsdo
ttvenrng Brble1tudy 7 p m
y
PENTE COS TAl
ASSEMBLY
Racrne
Route 124 W l lltom Hoback post er Sun
doy school 10om Sunday evenrng ser
vr ce 6 30 p m Wednea.dov " n tng ler
'WICe 7
C-.RPfNTfR BAPTIST
A..., Freeland
Norm pastor Dan Cheodle Supt Sun
day School 9 lO a m Morntng Wonhtp
10 30 a m Prayer Sv,...., tce oharnote Surt

doys

!:t Jran1an c:ash
10 Wood a stx:s
de nvatl\'C

LAiE L;

Z 1Jqutd
measun•
1 Fum Jlurl:'
sty It'

16 Wntten
letter

llEngl1 sh
es~} l.'&gt;t

12 C;oosc

4 l'oa m y dnnk Ui Mood

17 See 18 Acros."i

) Atta ch tu

IS W1lh 11
!\eros." noted

6 Add1t10na I

19 llunun1n~
~uund

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hockt&gt;y
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mgenuJt}

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25f.ctsp
27 l akeuff
:W Jo rcn&lt;: h
nver
J l Spa c l OLL'l
lJ Over a~am
Jti C.:o to rad&lt;i

20 Hljol, spc ndl'r
Z3 Nur~t·r~· lll'm
!ndwn
24 With out
J7 Senonlil

lnd1an

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a hook

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~ iHAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAWE

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pa1rs

DyHenr.AmotCianoBoo Lee

Un scramore tnese tour Jv,.,Di e~
:)ne 1ene• 10 eac'1 SQuare ro ' 0'""
'our o•CI nary woras

!i Word
&lt;tfl('f
~race

l7 l.&gt;u~ru: o ne 1l '
Z8 l..ace raled
Z!J Hury
.IZ rhrrtf old
I .Jkel~

).4

Event of
1812

00

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Lo v•• Arnp r r nn 'ltv IE' l 'i San tora
&amp; '}an 11 O'ck C hett 70 JJ
)()
Prl({'
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Jo ~e r '&gt; W •l d 8
Pop Goe'&gt; Ttw
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Pop Goes The
Covn lry I ~ A ll tn The tomdy
) / MACN e il Lehrer Report 70 J J
R 00 ) r&gt;,r ley 1 1 S Batt le ol thP
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' 0 00 Orilla\ B 10 Nl' W'i 70 O,tv rct
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IIAILY CRYPTO(jl iOTt; - llert',
IJ

ho~

to "'ork it

ST~FL~)j_l____,

One lf'11N sJmp h ! l and! lnr anotht&gt;r Jn fh1s umpl t- \ t!r

•

U!'lt'f1 for lhf' lhrN' 1 " X fnr lhf' t"'n o , ttl "''n!.:l r lf• !IN ~
apo1trophc s lh~ l t&gt;nctt1 .'tnd fnrrnalt&lt;Hl o f lh&lt;' \\orrl~ .HI' al l
h1nl&amp; F:arh fir) the (nd~ lt&gt;lll'r:! a re d1tf('n·n t

A B ll t'

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F H M

AOBJA O

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Ans we r here

HIS

R\' PTOQl 1 fiTF.:~

DAf. I:F

F

I H r K
IJ B J

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YOUTH , SO LET THEM HAVE THEIR lJAY
Rlm.F.R YF:ATS

Wl i.LJAM

arrange 1'"\f.&gt; _, ... led ere•s •
'r rrn tt1e 'io&lt;!'P"S"' a"~ ""e ' a5 !&gt; ... c
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con l ;m,~-;-;Qpuulll Ia n.,t,bl• l or S1 75po• tp~d .

tromJum ble clo lhll nlwiP':J''' Boo

I KNEW A PHOENI X 11' MY

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:

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t:l

V~HO

W'T&gt;-&lt;
'T.-iE L&gt; &gt;'PE~ SE'T
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Yesterday's Cryploquote

r

[ TI_i_U

~ X V 0 I. 8 A A X R
I . 0 N G F E r I. 0 W

(

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; ntme 1dd"U up Codl 1n

NlHeMBERJ 19!9
World rtt L arQe 17 6 00
S.o(l e t •es 1n Tran&lt;;1tron 10
~ u n' &lt;tn Ol m('nS•on 17
6 JO S nr J rdr~y
R,.por'
TV
Cl ac. \ room 8 US "'c~rm Report
IQ KPnfu( Oy t.t,eld I) I t~ You r
~ S(l

VOGEL ,I~

lS Gap

I I. Y K

T ,(

)4 Norwooo N J 0715olll r nd~evour
m 1~ 1 ChKir.a Plytbll to N•wsplptrboo ~

A u\ln P &lt;,~ 17

00

Uncle 'Ar ,l ld u J Por~y Prg &amp;
Frrend \B I! s Y our Bus1ne!t.s 10
Anrrnals An1m3 l~ An t mttl~ IJ
Thret&gt; SI OOQ€'&gt; L 11t le R..tscalo; 17
I lO L• lllt&gt; R..t\Ca ls J
Matters of
l •le 6 N ot For Wom en Only 10
"&gt; rootJy &amp;. S&lt; rappy Doo 13
')Q
D affy Duc k. 3 I S W orlds
G rp.,t po;,t 'S11p erlr re nd'io 6 l ]
M rqhly M ou5e H,-.c lo. le &amp; Jec~!e
B l(] U tra MtH1 17
10 C A \ J&gt;' r &amp; The /\n qels J IS
Part r~ {lq(' r arnil; 17
00- Fred &amp; Barney J 1)
P l a~ltc
Man 6 tJ
Bug'&gt; Bunny Road
Runner 8 10 Maverrc~ 17
10 00 Su per Globe lr otters 3 15
Mov1e Crash D1ve· 17
IQ JO N ew 5hmoo 3 1S Papeye B
Mo v1 e lrrbe~ 10
11 00 J= la~ nGo rCionJ , 15 Thrststhe
N FL 6
I I 10- GOull ll tl 1 IS G1ggiE'Sn or
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M o o~ •c
Tt,e D rty Game 17
tO Mo~&gt;l€
Coun 1 the (lue~
V. o,ne Benq.-ll1 B
Wr1 ' ~tl1ng

5

00"-nSI&lt;t•rs JJ
JO College li o( kev ?0
00 Att!&gt;trtrd J
Co llege Footbdll
!J )
Spori\I"¥Qr td IS
Pol1trcal
.ti l&lt;. a ~~rl&lt;,h "' ' IP On Tne Rond
10 M O&gt;tlf'
Thf' Boq Tre-e&lt;, I I
Wtw n ntl ' Bnnl Cum!-''&gt; In)]
10 ) porr~ SpeOr'IC u lar 8
Pop
G OO' \ Tho Cou ntry 10
00 D oll y 10 Co p •nq W th II: •Cis 70
Conn('( t •on&lt;, JJ
10 Por 1er Wagonf!r 10
Better
Wn1
~
C ra c kel! s V1ct11ry
Collpge
Gt~r df •n
JO
~ ~5
\ r orf'board 17
00 Np,.,.., 3 I 0
God Has The
.'l.n\......er
1~
~re stl1ng
1!
T

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Up~fcws

~

Down~l a1r!&gt;

10 NBC New !&gt; J
M uppet Show
'{ noel~

10

1~

CBS N ews 10
B Know Yovr

n

00 Dance Fever
lawrence
"e lk I~ H.- Haw 6 B Once
u pon A (l a\S P( JJ t'ug~ lj urHI)
10 Sl 98 BPCiuty Show 13 All
Creatures Great &amp; Sm a l l 20
)(} An lnsrde Look 3 K1cks 10
\100000 Name That Tune 13 ,
World Wa r I I G I Otary 33
8 00 Ch1ps 3 IS Ropers 6, 13 Mov re
Race tor You r L1fe . Ch arlfe
Brown 8 10 NHL H oc ke y 17
Ma\lerprece Thea•re '10 Europe
ltle M •gtlly Conltnenl 13
JO Oe re-c t rve Schoo l 6, 13
9 00 Movte
Mac Arthur ·
3 IS
Lo"'e Boat 6 13
Sh akespeare
Plays '10 Movre Ga ltleo" 13
9 30-- Movte Avalanche B 10
10 00- Fantasy I s 6 13 10 30-Pop
Goes The Cou ntry 17
IT oo- Newc; 3,6 , 13. 15, Don K~r
~ '"rne r 's R:ock Con cer l 17
11 lS - ABC ,._.ewso 11 25 - :C' •ege
Football 33
11 lt}-Sa turday N1gh, L1ve 3, 15,
M av1e " R us'itan Rouletfe" 6,
N ew., B 10 Colll!i}e Football 13

'

Mu ,
A r v.t&gt; o ' Retpf
17
M ov oP Tli P l I'Opnrd
::&gt;0 A8 ( NeM 13 J 30 N ew~
1 00 \\o.t•P Ttte Cornrl J
)0
Sta1 r .. ,. II
~ 00
Mov1e
Tt-11 Tr,· m Wrll1e B a y I~ Here
3
OC•

'J it~r

M ov•e
0Pme tr •us &amp; th{'
(Ji ttdi&lt;H Oro;,
1'
1? JO Jc t san s J I S Co llege Foor
b n I Tuday 6 I] T~r1nn Super 1
!l Hoqitn s 1-h •roe\ 10 Crock e ll ~
v, c rorv G&lt;trden JJ
J,
Coili&gt;ge Footb,..ll o t J 1 00
'-. rl' urdrty ( r'triOOn J
In rhe
K now 10 PTL Clutr 1~
\1\/P ~I
v .rq1n•a Ouldoorr, J3
l 10 13rq Rlue Mnrb le 1 JO Mtnutes
8 10 Old H ouseworks J3
oo Our G nnq 3 li•ewpc11n1 a
M O\Ire
Gho~ 1 111 the fnv•sr ble
fj, lu n • '0 Ma ~ terp,ece Thif&lt;'Jirr&gt;

Hr .., u• Foo 'b.'!ll 10
Bul l,' 10 J uke eo~

M o•,..

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37 By way of

y

J \ A Cr owd J

~ ATUR O AY

prt'f1x

l3

00

T

HE SAIS ITS LATE
IN THE GA ~IE ANr'
HE 'S AF~Air THAT LIFE
1-&lt;AS H1~1 BEATEN

slar
!l Spamsh
Ra ymond

' l 30

FRIDAY NOVEMBER 1 1979

00

ll&lt;IWN
I On parole

f e llo~

on a

DEP~E55c~

DOEs ,~ · ­

Kt-&lt;011.' WHAT TC C'J

10 Small
salalllilnfif"r
II lla uniA'd

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15 Slippery

(~o

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ri..\5 3EEN \ E&lt;:l'

('OI It' ~e

IJ To I&gt;&lt; Fr
14 W1lhout

to

t-c~' ' ~"'

t\\'{ G~,\~C'F..\~HER

~

SU NDAY NOll EMBER 4, 19711
AG U) A ll
(l OU A m tr t( ., ,
P ro b l em.,
&amp;.
C h &lt;t l lenqe-'&gt;
tO
Act1on
N f'w'&gt;md lt. t'r 1)
Between thP
L ne~ 17
t1 )0 (nr rstoph('r Clo!&gt;eup J
Better
W..-.. y B T reenouse C lutJ )Q K rds
/',rePeople Too l )
00 H11s ~~ tht&gt; Lt1e J
U rban
L ,-.ague tO Jrmmy Swaggarf 11
JO fV ( hdpel J E dd1 ~ Saunde r !to
b
jerrf Falwell 10 The B1ble
An5wer~ 13
Jrmmy S.wagg nrt
I 'I Cnr ,s t l or the World 17
B 00 - M ormon Choir ], Gr a ce
Cr'l lhedr&lt;!16 Chr is t tor the World
13 fh r ee Stooges &amp; Friends 17
Sesame St 10 JJ
ij JO
Oral Roberts J Contact 6
James Rob1san
10
Lower
L•gh thou!&gt;e 1) , Open Btble 15
9 00 Gos pel Srng 1ng Jubilee J Re11
Humhard 6 Ora l R obe rt s 10,
l&lt;e"' J1m Frankl1n 13 . E rne.,t
Angl ey 15 lo\ t rn Space 17
Mrster Rogers 20 ]J
30 Robert Sc huller fl E lee Co
JJ
It Is Wrl llen 10, Go!&gt;pel
Outreach 13 Ses ame $1 20
10 00 Th l \ I s T he N FL J K1ds arc
Peop leToo6 M ovie J ou rneyto
the Ce nter of the Earth' 10
J 1m my Swaggart T3 , Gospel
Sr ngmg Jubilee IS
Hazel 17
Sl udra S~ 33
0 30 Rex H umb e r d 3 Ernes1
Angley B Zoom 20. Mav re " The
Br •dgesal Toko Rl " 17 , B1g Blut!
Mnrble l'l
II 00 - Re)( H u mbard 15 . Rev
Henry Mdhan 11 E lee Co 20
F eell ng s ]]
It JO. At Issue J. An imal!! Antmd ls
Anrm al ~ 6 Face the Nation 8.
Rev R A We!t 13 , Over E&lt;1sy
20 Wild Wrld World of Animals
30

))
12 oo- M~t the Pre5s l 15 Issues &amp;
Answers 6 13 Vtewpa ml 8 , Ohi o
Journal 20
Movte ' Westward
Ho JJ
12 30--Sonny RMdle
Foo\ball ],
College Footba ll ' 79 6; NFL
T oday B
The
Issue 10
Evange ll..t 1c Outreach 13, All
Creatures G reat &amp; Small 20
12 45 - Mov re "S ince You Went

Away " 17
10

12 5s--NF l

Funnies

oo--N F L Football 3, 1s · Directions

6.

NF L Football B, 10.

C1gnettl

•

Footb3JI

13;

Frank
Movlt

�!()-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0, Fnday , Nov . 2, 1979

Ohio second largest
waste area m
WASHINGT ON 1,\P 1 - Thr
Environmental Prote&lt;Uon Agency
says Ohio has the second largest
concentration
or
potent1ally
hazardou chemical wast~ sites in tllt'
COW!Iry . The EPA says it will begin
an immediate revtew of a new
national list of sites In determme
which are dangerous.
EPA Director Douglas Costle sa1d
Thursday the agency w111 usc "all ,,f
its . available resour ces and legal
authorities" toward cleanmg u~
dangerous s1 tes from the li st
compiled by a House subcommittee .
The
House
Com m erl·t•
investigations sub cu rnmittce
released the list Thursday and
criticized the EPA fer not makmg 1ts
own nationwide inventory of where
toxic chemical wastes art' buned
The subcommittee report shows
that there are 2.\3 cherrucal wast e
dumps scattered throughout Ohio
Oly Texas has more potential!)
hazardous chemic al dumps than
Ohio .
The report opens b~~ S£~ymg, " The
hazardous waste dispo sal prublem

Pe re nn 1dl
Rose s.

, '/

· ./ \ i f

I

llff II ::

I'

111ay

Area Deaths

u.s.

•

v. L'll

be

thP

single

most

:-; 1gn1fh ant (!nvi r u niJJ~rJtal he&lt;:~ lth

Issue uf lh1 s d£&gt;cade ."

Rep Bub Eckhardt. D-Tex ..
subcom mittee
rha1rman.
emphasiZed howe,·er, that many of
the sites on the hst may not be
danKerous at all He smd 11 IS up to
the EPA and state and local
agencies to Jt&gt;termine the rx:&gt;tential
nsk or each

Despite
1Continued from fXI.L:t'll

attorneys told teachers they were at

a handwap to go over t he restrammg
order SUJl"e they had yet tu receive a
copy of the order :-lo hearin~ was
g1vcn before Judge Johi1 C. Bacon
IS."i u ed the order
Despite the order, sc hools
I'€TTJBinec officially closed Fnday
mom mg .
" It's ironic that we 've bft'n or·
de red mto schools that are off1c1ally
c losed ," sa1 d Bonnie Fisher,
presrdent of th e Me1gs Loca l
Teachers Associat.Jon

'Supt. Gleason 's run to the co urts
1sn 't going to solve this problem .
The bargainmg table IS the on ly
place to solve ttus cnsis. · ·
FISher added, " We have only one
reason to remove p1ckct lines
without an agreement a nd that's
when people go to the polls Tuesday .
We hav e been asked to remove
pickets at pollmg s1tes election day
and are more than willing to do so .
It's tune for a change in Meigs
LocaJ Schools and voters have a
democratic right to go to the poUs .
On election day, pickets Will be
removed from Pomeroy Elemen ·
tary. Midd le port Elementary,
Harn.'iOnville F:lementllry and Brad ·
bury Elementary Schools, Mrs.
Fisher said .
Supt. David Gleason sa1d this mornmg that paper s dealm~ With the
temporary restraimng urder will be
served by the colUIIY sheriff' s department to all schooLs Ul the district
where the pickt:&gt;t." arc on the lme .
Common Pleao 0Jurt Judge Bacon
commented that a deciSion will be
forthrummg on the p:-oceedJn~ s to
bP fq\\o wt•d Irl ("il\t·.-.. wht· rt•
provisions or th{' tt·mporory
re.!:itraming order art· vtolated

1' •"

Use Our Convement
Lay -Away

FUNDS RECEIVED
State
Auditor Thomas
Fer.l{lL'IDn 's officf'

11 7 r

N'I\IN

POIIf l:l()y

EARL H. DEAN
Prorninenl Meigs CoWlty fanner,
Earl H. Dean , 53, Ht. 3, Pomeroy,
dJec Thursday at Holzer Medical
Center.
Mr. Dean was born Jan . 4, 1926,
the son of the late Hartis and Norma
EiS€Iste1n Dean.
Mr . Dean was a 'member of lhe
· Olester United Methodist Church,
Farm Burea u, A.S.C.S., (ormer
member of Eastern Local Board of
Education and former member of
the Meigs County Fair Board .
He is survived Ill' h!S wile, Betty
Genheimer Vcan : three daughters,
Mrs. Dale 1Jennifer! Machir and
Mrs. Terry 1Melame I Stethem both
of Pomeroy, and Mrs . John 1Oen!Se 1
Payne, Vinton : four grandchildren :
four brothers , Woodrow Dean,
Morehead, Ky.: Uoyd Dea n, Hendecson, Ky .: Bob Dean and Clarence
Dean both of Columbus ; one sister,
Betty Cheva li er , Tuppers pi ;ains,
one uncle, Wilbur Dean . Pomeroy ,
and several nieces and nephews
FUneral semces will be held
Saturday at I p.m. at the Chester
Unitec Methodist Church with the
Rev Richard Thomas officiatin g .
Burial will be in Meigs Memory Gardens . Friend&lt; may ca ll at Ewing
Funeral Home at anytime .In lieu of
flowers f.tie family asks tha t
donations ~ made to the Olester
United Methodist Clmrch building
fu nd .
NEVA KENNEDY
Mrs. Neva Kennedy, 76 , Route I.
Mi ddleport, dJec Thursday aftemoon at the Holzer Medical Center following a lengthy illness.
Mrs . Kennedy was born Aug . 28,
190.1. a t Dexter , a daughter of the
late John and Kate Chase Nelson .
She married on March 24, 1923, Guy
Kennedy who survives. Also sur\~ving are two sons, Wa)1le, Route 1,
Middlepurt. and Carl, Rutland: two
daughters, Mrs . Robert 1Beulah 1
STlllth, Cmcmna U, and Mrs. U oyd
&lt;Beatrice 1 f)ugan, Rutland : nine
gra nd ch1 ildren ;
a
grea tgranddaughter, a sister, Mrs . Vona
Chapman of Carpenter and several
nieces, nephews and cousins . She
was preceded in death by her paren ts, a son, a sister and five brothers.
Mr.; . Kennedy was a member of
thr Wes ley Chapel United Methodist
Church .
Funeral services will be held at 2
p.m. Sunday at the Ru tland Church
of the Nazarene with the Rev . Uoyd
D. Gnmm officiating. Burial wiU be
Ill the Standc•h Cemetery . Friends
may call at the Walker ~· lUieral
Horne in Rutland from 2 p m Satur day unlll 12 noon on Sunday when the
body will be taken to the church to
lie m state . The family will receive
[fiends a t the fun eral home from 2 to
4 and from 7 to 9 p.m. Saturday .

E

announced the

November diStribution of $39,094,222
in Aid to Dependent Children to
4:&gt;8)% rec·1p1ents 1n Ohio 's 8!1 coun·
IJ es Meigs County rece1red $107 .996
for 1,.309 reci ptenl'l .

JESSIE MCCALL
.Jess ie McCall, 91, Rt. 2, Albany,
c~ed Thursday afternoon at Well ston
Nursu~g Home
Mrs . McCall was the daughter of
the late George and Patience

Golden Gloves

RE-ELECT

•

m second year

FRED HOFFMAN
REPUBLICAN

MAYOR OF MIDDLEPORT
Keep Middleport On The Move

RE-ELECT FRED HOFFMAN
Dedicated to Serve the Needs of
Pd . Pol. Adv .

Christmas War Cry scheduled Saturday

A II M lddleport Residents

-- - -==:cWE'VE CLEANED OFF OUR SHELVES

LARGE lOT

ACME &amp; DINGO
WESTERN BOOTS

30%
DISCOUNT
Just Arrived - New Shipment of Parakeet &amp; Canaries

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

·-

The Go ld en Gloves Box1ng
prog ram 1s now beginnmg its second
year for area youths .
Tra1mng for the program is be in g
conducted at the Pomeroy Senior
Hlgh School gym on Tuesday and
Thursda y evenmgs at 6 p .m . and
Saturday afternoons at4 p .m .
The program. which was huge success and vrry popular among area
youth las t year IS being backed by
the Me•gs County Jaycees and
managed by Hoger Stewart .
The program accepts youths from
10 years of a~e to 25 years of age . All
youth under 18 must have consent of
their parents to partic1pa te .
The first competition for those
who are mvolved in the program will
be held m Belpre on Nov . 17, wlu ch lS
consi dered a warm up to the main
events to take place 1n March.
AssiSting with the program is Carl
R. Hysell. Meigs County Juveni le Of·
fi cer. who says he feels the boxing
program is a very worthwhile
project. Hysell encourages the youth
to get involved. also any adults who
Dllght have the time to help tram er
supervise the program . This year's
pro~ra m s hould be bigger and bette r .

Funds mismanaged
COLUMBUS, Ohio !API - The
Columbus Dispatch says federal
auditors will issue a report showmg
the Oh io Departmer.t of Mental
Health a nd Mental Retardation h•s
improperly managed federal funds .
federal a udit ors meeting in
Cleveland con firmed the results of
the audit to the paper. The Dispatch
earlier reported the federal a uditors
recommender! Ohio return $900.000
to Uw U..S . Treasury .

Knights Reeves . She was a lso
preceded in death by five sisters.
two brothers, and one stepgrandchild. She was a member of
Pearl Chapel Umted Methodist
Church
She is surviv"'t, by her husband,
Elza McCall ; two stepsons, Carlos
McCall,lticlunondale, and Robert
McCall,
Clifton .
five stepgrandchildren , one step-great great
grandchild, and several nieces and
nephews
Funeral services will be held Sun·
day at 2 p .m . at the Bigamy-Jordan
Funeral Home with the Rev . Ray
Price officiating . Burial will be in
Wells Cemetery . Friends may call at
the funeral home Fnday from ito 9
and Saturday from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9.

WIS G. MCKENZIE
Mrs. Lois G. McKenzie, 91, Rt. 3,
Racine , died Thursday at Veterans
Memorial HospitaL
Mrs. Mckenzie was born Nov ., 23,
1887. the daughter of the late Silas
and Ella Landon Frank . In 1924 she
was preet!ded in death by her
husband, Edward McKenz1e . She
was also preceded in death by five
brothers, Jim, Edward, Dan , Herbert and Jesse Frank, and tw o
sister s, Kate Orr and Mable Lytle .
She was a member of the ReOrganized Church of J esus Christ
Latter Day Saints
She is survived by one son. Lester
McKenzie , Racine; two daugh ters,
l.ucy Taylor and Golda Gilli la n, both
of Racine: three grandchi lden,
seven great grandchildren, and
several nieces and nephews.
FlUiera l services will be held Sunday at I p .m . at the Ewing Fune ral
Home with Pastor WiUiam Roush offlclatmg . Bur1al will be in the farruly
cemetery at Mc Kenzi e Ridge. Frien·
ds may call at the funeral home
anytime .

The Salvation Anny of Meigs
ColUIIy will introduet! its Christmas
Wa r Cry Satuniay at 2:30 at open
airs on Main St ., Pomeroy, and 3:30
on Second St. in Middleport .
The public is invited to listed or
participate . The gospel of Jesus,
hymns and testimonies will be

ACTIONS FILED
A suit in the amount of $1,106.03
has been flied in Meigs County Common P leas Court by John Gibson
Motor City, Inc., Athens. against
Charles Houdashelt, Rt. 2, Pomeroy,
for overdue accolUits .
George Gordoo Warner, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, filed for divoret! against
Cynthia Gay Warner, a minor in
care of Robert Conkle.
Tamela Bearhs, ~ville , and .
Timothy Bearhs, Rt. 3, Pomeroy,
filed for dissolution of marriage .

ANSWER FIRE CALL
The Orange Township VollUiteer
F'tre Department answered a call
hack of the Tuppers Plains School,
where a dumpster was on fi re, Thursday a t 8:41p.m. Seven firemen answered the call.

JOHN M. PENNELL
John M1chael Penne ll , 43, husband
of U1e former Janet Kiught, Olester,
dJec Oct 26 at Grant Hoopital in
Columbus following a lengthy
illness .
Mr . Pennell was born in Columbus
on July 24, 1936. He was a systems
analyst for Borden, Inc ., from 1970
to Sept., 1978.
He rece1vec an
associate degree il1 professiOnal
management from John Carroll
Uruversity, Cleveland, in !969. He
served m the Uni ted States Anny
Reserves Medical Services Corps
from Jtu~e 1~9 . through May. 1968.
Preceding hi m in death was Ius
father, Dana L. PennelL
Surviving are his wife, Janet
Klugh! Pennell, daughter of Mr . and
Mrs . Howard Krught. Chester: his
mother, Margaret Freeland Pen·
nell, Columbus ; a daughter, Tracy
Lyn Pennell , United States Navy,
Orlando. Fla.: a son, John M. P ennell, Jr , Columbus ; a sister ,
Carolyn Case Wright, Quebec ,
Canada: a brother, Thomas A. Pennell . Phoenu, Ari1.. , and a num ber of
cousins , aunts, uncles . nephews and
rueces.
Memonal se rvices were held Oct.
29 at St. Alban's of Hexley, 333 S.
Drexel Ave .. with the Rev . John J .
Morrell officiating
In lieu ol
Oowers, friends ma y contribute to
the Grant Onocology Umt, Grant
Hospital. Columbus, Ohio 43215

features .
Ten free copies of the Olristmas
War Cry will be given out at each d.
the open air services . The door to
door sale of the magazine will begin
Nov . 5 in Middleport and Nov . 19 in
Pomeroy .
Anyone missed and
wishing a copy may call 992-6472 or
992-7480.
The soldiers will attempt to hold
an open air service in Gallipolis next
Saturday .

_,-------------College Football S c o r e s - - - - - - - - - - -----.

osu .......... 44

Dlinois . .. • . . . . 7

Michigan •..... 54

Wisconsin . . . . . 0

Kentucky . . . . . 20
B. Green ...... 14

VETERANS MEMORIAL

Admitted-Raymond Justice, Middleport :
Mabel Kesterson,
Pomeroy; Anna Wheeler, Racine ;
Sheila Haley , Middleport : Kimberly
Petrie, Pomeroy .
Discharged-Henry Werry, Ethel
Evans, Grace Smith, Phyllis Custer ,
Dorothy Anthony, Okey Meadows,
Dorothy Thurston, Richard Grady.

\

\

.....

26

21

•

Squad called twice
The Middleport Emergency Squad
was called to the lobby of the LaSalle
Hotel at I :34 a.m . Friday for Eddie
Fife, Route I, Middleport. Fife who
was ill was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital
The squad went to 1525 Nye Ave .,
Pomeroy , at 8: 2li a.m. Friday for
George Landaker who was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital

Fla. State
Cincinnati

VOL 13 NO. 40

GALLIPOLIS- POINT PLEASAN I

Open a sav mgs account that ea rns 5 '1.% or
buy a Ce rt1f1 ca te that pays much . much
more Sav1ng somet h 1n g now wh1le the
90 ,ng ,s good will do so much fo r you r future
for after all. 1sn't that where you're go mg to
spend the re st of your life?
26 - WEEK
MONEY
MARKET CERTIFICATE
rate effective November 1,
t 979 through November 7,
t979, is 12 . 193%.
Minimum depos1t ot S10,000.

4 YEAR MONEY CER TIFICATE rate effective
November
I
through
November 30, 1979, is
l 0.30% .
Mtn1mum

d~posit

of Sl, OOO

Federal regulations pr oh1b1t the com pound1ng of in t erest ctu r 1ng the
term of the deposit
Subs tantial int eres t penalty 1s re-qutred tor ear ly withdrawal.

pomeroy
rutland
tuppers plains

pomeroy
nationa
bank
the bank of
the century
established 1872
FDIC

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
NOVEMBER SALE DAYS
OPEN FRIDAY TIL 8 P.M.
THIS SPECIAL WEEKEND SALE BRINGS SUPER SAVINGS ON:
Women's Panty Hose
Browning Grills

Whistling Tea Kettles
Kroehler Chairs

Girls Flannel Shirts

Wintuk Yarn

120 Day Bowl Cleaner

Men's Sweat Pants

Men's Flannel Shirts

Furniture Throws

Men's Basic Jeans

Insulated Coveralls

Gun CabineL

Table lamps

Armstrong Linoleum

Boys Flannel Shirts

Boys Sweat Shirts

Bath Sets

Wrangler Junior Jeans

Women's Half Slips

School Name Toboggans

Pre-Teen 2 Pc. Suits

Women's Wrangler Jacket

Men's Corduroy Jeans

lane Cedar Chests

Wrangler Men's Jackets

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

etdint

SU NDAY. NOVEMB ER 4. 19/9

MIDDLEPORT- POMEROY

PRICE 35 CENTS

County hoard supports Meigs Local
POMEROY - The Meigs Count y
Board of Education Friday night
wumimously passed a resolution
strongly supporting the Meigs Local
School District Board of Educa lion
during the six week teacher 's strike
in the district.
Pomeroy
Attorney
Charles
Knight, accunpanied by a group of
some 25 parents, attended the
meeting and presented a peti lion
signed by a rep&lt;rted 600 persons.
The petition requested and demanded that the Meigs Local Teachers
Association and the Meigs Local
Board of Education inunediately
reswne negotiations and attempt to
compromille their demands in order
to resolve the current strike and to
re!l)en public education for the
children of the Meigs Local School
District .
It further stated :

" We further demand that both the
association and the school board
negotiate on a 24-hour a day bas1s,
utilizing neutral facilities until these
issues ar~ resolved .
" We further demand that Ohio
State Representative Ronald James
be accepted by both tbe board and
the association as a liaison representing the interest of tbe parents and
· the taxpayers of this district , and
that he .be fully informed by both
sides as to their current positions so
that the parents and taxpayers may
be in tum accurately tnformed of the
p&lt;A'Iition of each side."
Last Saturday, Knight had
delivered letters to Meigs County
Superintendent Robert Bowen
requesting that the Meigs CoWity
Board take over the duti~ of the
Meigs Local Board . The Meigs
ColUity Board had a reRular

scheduled meeting for Friday night
and it was expected that Knight's
request would be taken up at that
time. However, Knight apparently,
dissatisfied that a meeting was not
set up earlier by the Meigs CoWity
Board of Education on Wednesday
filec an action in the Meigs CoWity
Probate Court urging the court to
take over the duties of the Meigs
Local Board ci Education and
charging that neither the Meigs
Local Board nor the Meigs County
Board had performed its duti es.
Meigs Prosecutor Rick Crow met
with the Meigs ColUity Board Friday
night and following an executive
session, the colUity board passed iL•
supportive resolution of the Meigs
Local Board.
The resolution reads :
" Whereas, the Meigs County
Board of Education received a letter
on Saturday , Oct. '1:7 , 1979. from

Charles Knigh t alleging that the
Me1gs Local Board of Education was
not performing il• duties, and
" Whereas, no facts were presentee to this board m said letter which
substantiated any such failure, and
" Whereas, Attorney Knight has
filed a premature lawsuit on Wednesday, Oct . 31, 1979, and
" Whereas , this board was not .
given the opportunity to invest igate,
to meet , and to make a deter.
mina lion and
" Whereas. it was impossible to investigate such allegations within
such a short period of time,
especially since the uns ubstantiated
allegallons were received at noon
Sa tu rday .
"Now, therefore. be it resolved by
the Me1gs Cou nt y Board of
Education as follows·
" 1. That the allegations contained

Meigs election may bring out
'silent majority' on Tuesday
POMEROY-Tueaday 's electioo in
Metg:~ County will be enhaoced In
the Meig:~ Local School District
becalllle rl a six week old strike tr:YI
the lelldlers rllhe di.atrict.
•
In acme qurten It 1.1 believed the
vot~ne TuNday will brlnl! out an expreaaion by the "silent majority" of
the Meigs Local District in that
these per.lOllS will either support
stroogly the district 's present board
d. education or the vote will go
stroogly agaiMI those board members nmnlng for reelection as a
display rl disapproval .
Tbere are 10 candidates running
for the board in the Meig:~ Local
District, !IeVen f&lt;X the full term and
Uree for the unezplred two year
term . Incumbents 1'111111ing for the
full term are Larry D. Powell and
Or. Keith Rlgga. Incumbent, Mrs .
Jennifer Sheets did file a petition for
reelection but later withdrew that
petition because rlber law studies in
Columbus. Other candidates for the
full term are Larry W. Colmer.
Pomeroy ; C. Arland King, Route 3,
Pomeroy; Warren L. Perrine, Middleport; Ellen Jane Rought ,
P&lt;meroy, and Richard W. Vaughan ,
Middleport .
Candldat.es for the two year term
Include incwnbent, Vlrgil C. Klng,
near Pomeroy; Robert F . Snowden,

Rutland, a former member of the
board and Ruby Vaughan, Mid-

dleport.

In contrast to the Meig:~ Local
School District with ila abundance of
candldat.es Ia the Eastern Local
School District wbere only ooe candidate, incumbent, Jimmy C. Caldwell seeks election.
There are
several
wrlte-in
candidates,
bowever.
In the Southern Local District
there are four candidates for two full
term seats on the board. They are
Dmald A. Dudding, David Lynn
Shuler, Cllarles F Pyles and Don P .
Smith, all rl Radne.
'!be Meiga County Board of
Education will have two openings
and there are just two candidates .
Tbey. are tncumben Ia, Harold
llooah, Route 3, Racine, and Oris
Smith, Route I, Loog Bottom.
All five Meigs County villages will
olfer races In Tuesday 's election.
In Pomeroy Village, cantlldat.es
for mayoc are Roger M. Davidson ,
an independent, and Hollie E.
Green, Republlcan. Clarence AndreW! Incumbent, Ia a declared
candidates . There are only

wrttek

two candidates for two sea !.'1 on
council and they are incumbents,
Dr . Harold D Brown and Rodney C.
Karr. E . F Robinson is the only candidate for the one Je81 oo the board
of public affain and Jane Walton is
U~~®posed in her bid for reelection
M clerll-treasurer.
Pomeroy residents will also vote
on a 1.1 percent income tax which
has been placed on the ballot by the
present village officials.
In Middleport , i n c umbent
Republican mayor, Fred L. Hoffman. will be opposed in his bid foc
reelection by Edward M. Blake, Jr .,
who filed for the pool as an independent . Tbere is no candidate
for the clerk- treasurer post held
now by Gene Grate who did not !Ue
fer reelection . There are, however,
three candidates for two sea!.'l on
village council. Tbe candidates are
incumbents, William G. Walters and
Carl Horky, lti!publicans , and Jack
Satterfield, a Democrat. Thomas R.
Anderson and Freddie Houdashelt
are unopposed for their election to
the two seats on the board of public
affairs.
Voters of Middleport will also
decide upon a referendwn action on
an ordinance passed by the present
council to place a S5 permissive
license tag fee in effect in the
village.
Syracuse village has an abundance of candidates for the mayor's
posttion . Candidates include Eber 0 .
Pickens, incumbent, and A. Jean
Hall, JimmY Joe Hemsley, and
Terry D. Moore . Janice Lawson is
unopposed in her bid for election as
clerk.
Kathryn H. Crow is tbe only candidate for two seats on the Syracuse
VIllage Council and there are no candidates for the two sea!.'l open on the
board of public affairs .
Racine Village will have races for
both mayor and two seats on village
council .
Mayor candidates are Charles F .
Pyles, incumbent, and Louie Dale
tee and council candidates, a total
of five , Include Lois Jeanette
Lawrence, Wanda L. Ly0115, Ben
Petrel, Cressa Mae Swain and
William Michael Lawson . Bobble E.
Roy is the only candidate for two
Jeats oo the board rl public affairs
and Mae Cleland is unopposed in her
bid for reelection as clerk-treasurer .
Tbere are two candidates for the
post rl. Mayor of Rutland. They are
John L. Miller and Worthy Stanley ,

Jr . Vernon Weber is Wiopposed for
reelection as clerk- treasurer and
there are no candidates for villa ge
council with two seats opening this
year.
All Meip County Townships with
the aception of Orange will have
races for township positions . There
is to be one trustee and a clerk
named in each. The candidates are :
Salisbury--Olarles Bartels, Denver Hysell and Albert Roush , for
trustee; Richard Bailey and Wanda
L. Eblin for clerk .
Scipio-Melvin C. Morris and
Donald Weaver, for trustee: Glenn
E. J ewell, for clerk .
Suttoo--Oris A. Hubbard and
Delbert A. Smith, for trustee : Paul
Moore, for clerk.
Bedford~ames W. Qifford, Jr .,
Robert G . Pickett and Stanford
Stockton, for trustee : Helen Swartz,
for clerk.
Diester-Georg e Alfred Wolle, for
trustee : John D . Riebel , Sr .. Elmer
G. Young , Sr ., for clerk.
Colwnbia - William Stout and
Ronald A. Whittington , for trustee,
Gloria Hutton , for clerk.
Lebanoo- Elson Dailey and Joe
Proffln, for trustee ; Shirley A Johnson and Vlrginia S. Pickens, for
clerk .
Letart-Harry Hill and Donald W.
MarJuel, for trustee : Darrell E
Norris, for clerk.
Olive ~Francis H. Andrew . EW.
Bartirnus, William A Connolly.
Henry Hensley and James Starcher,
for trustee ; Ada Bissell, for clerk .
Orange - Edgar Pullins, for
trustee; Nina R. Robinson, for clerk .
Rutland - David W. Haggy , Leo
Morris, Charles E . Rife, William J .
Smith. Robert G. Swick, for trwlte :
Edna M . Swick, for clerk.
Salem- John F . Colwell and R.
Keith Oiler , for trustee : Debbie L.
McGuire and John C. Welsh , for
clerk.
Two villages and four townships
have taJ; measures before their
voters. In Racine Village, vote r.;
will decide upon the renew aJ of a 1.7
mill levy for five years for current
apenses and in Syracuse Village,
voters will decide upon a 2.3 mill tax
levy renewal for fl ve years for
current expenses. Townships 1n
which tax me&amp;llllres are up for
voters Include Chester, . 4 of one mi U
renewal, five years, for fire protection; Ollve Township, .~of one mill ,
a new tu, for five yean for fire
protecUon; Orange Township, .7 of

Expect 2.5 million voters in Ohio Tuesday
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
Secretary of State Anthony J .
Celelnae Jr. said today he projects
a voter tum out nat Tllesday of 2.95
mlllloo.
But the flrst-term secretary ;
callq hla pro)ection "my first
attempt at crystal ball gazing," said
he hopes tht figure is low and that a

bigger percentage of the state 's 5.4S
miJUon registered voters will cast
bellots .
His projected figure represent.'~
about $-1 percent of the registered
voters, which Celebrezze said would
be slightly below nonnal for an offyear election.
There will be only one slflewide
l

'

Minnesota . . . . . 24

Notre Dame ... 14
Navy . . . . . • . . . 0

tmes

Ten seeking seats on Meigs board
Turn Over A New Leaf
FOR FALL

Indiana ....... 42

Q

·
issue on the ballot - a citizenlnltiated proposal requiring ltkent'
deposits on beverage containers and
outlawing CWIS with detadlable snap
tabs .
But 2,153 local questions are to be
decided, including 1,392 tax levies,
Celebrezze said .

one mill. renewal for five years for
fire prot•-ction, and Scipio Township,
.7 of one T!llll , renewal for f1ve years
for fire protection .
In Rutland Township, excluding
the Village of Rutland, voters will
vote on the sale of beer by holders of
C and D permits and there will be a
local wet-dry option voted upon in
that township.

Complaints
investigated
by deputies
Pomeroy ~ The
Meigs Count y
She r iff's Department rece ived
reports of two acc1dents that occurred Friday . No personal 1njur1es
were reported.
The first accident occurred at 9:30
a. m . on Sutton Towrcship Road 100.
Jeffrey L. Bable, 18, Rt. 2, Racine,
mformed deputies that he was
traveling east on Yellowbush Road
and observed a utiUty truck parked
along the road where workmen were
making repalrs. The brakes failed
on the Bable vehicle and the vehi cle
went off the hig hway on the right
and struck a section of guardrail .
At 8:50p.m. on SR 124 in Rutland,
Mr . and Mrs . Jim Fink were
traveling west when the windshield
of their car was struck by an
tu~known object that was either
thrown from a passing vehicle or
was kicked up !rom the roadway . No
description of the other vehicle was
obtained. The wiindshield had a hole
approximately one and one-half inres m diameter .
RJchard Thomas , RD. Cheshire,
reported Friday morning that
around 12:38 a .m . he discovered his
mailbox and newspaper box had
been torn down . It is believed that
someone walking along the road was
involved. The incident is lUider investigation.
Deputies are also invesigatmg the
theft of a 22 caliber handgun. Mike
Ellis, Rl. 3, Pomeroy, reported
Thursday that sometune between
Oct . 26 and Or!. 28 the trailer behind
Tall Timbers was entered and the
gun taken .
Deputies are also investigatmg a
report from Virgil King, Smith
Road , Pomeroy. King reported that
at approximatewly I :20 a .m . Friday
two shots from a shotglUI struck Wid
damaged his electrical box near his
Tlllikhou.se.
King, a member of the Meigs Local
Board of Education, was standing
about 30 feet from it. Power was
knocked out of his cooler and
milklng machine resulting in $200
worth of repair bills.
Ben Ball, Albany, reported Friday
afternoon that he had a stlhl chainsaw stolen from the porch of his
residence on cotu~ty road 10 in
Columbia Township on Sunday, Oct.

28.

il1 Charles Knight's letter are
Without merit and without foun dation.
"2. That the Me1gs Local Board
has made a substantial effort to perform all its duties.
"3. The Meigs Local School Board
has made an extraordinary effort to
carry out its ecucational ftu~ctions
under exceedingly difficult cir cumstanet!s.
" 4. The Meigs Local School Board
has sucet!eded on a timited scale m
proVJdJng a meaningful educal!on
for 16 days even though confronted
with an unlawful strike by the Meigs
Local Teachers Association .
")."That We, the Meigs ColUIIY
Boa rd of Education, have not failed
to perform the duti es imposed upon
us as alleged by the sUi t filed on October 31, 1979, in the Meigs CoWity
Probate Court . Therefore , we
. respectfully request that this matter

be referred to the Meig:~ County
Prosecuting Attorney Fred W. Crow I
Ill and be be instructed to take the
proper legal action.''
The resolution is signed by members of the board who include Harold
G. Roush, president ; Oris Smith,
Robert B. Burdette, George Perry
and Hafold Lohse.
The county board during ita
session also approved school bus
drivers c ertificates for Aaron Sayre,
Paul Sellers, Kathleen Morris, Bonrue Barringer, Nita Ritchie, Sarah
Welsh, Opal Hupp, Ruth Masters,
Raymond OUver, Marcia Guess ,
Brian Windon and Bobby Arnold.
Meantime, Saturday morning
there were no statements whatsoever issued by the Meigs Local
Board of Education or the Meigs
Local Teachers Association ln the
strike which has gooe on for the past
six weeks.

Inside today.

• •

Area deatlls . ...•..•.. .. . .......•..••.•......••.•• A-4

Classified Ads ...... . . _........ .... ... . . _......

D-~7

Farm news ........... .. .... ~ .. .. .. .. _.... _.... C-7-3
Ufesty\e ... ................. ... . .... -.- . . ... - . . B-1·7
I.Mal news ................. .. . .........

o ••••••

A-W

Sports ............................. - .... -- . .... C-1-41
State .
D-1
TV Log . .. . .. .. .. .. . . . .. .. .. . .. . . .. .. .. .. .. .. • .. 0-2
0

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0

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0

•••••••••••••••••••••

o •• o • o o • o •• o o •

Major local. issue

Future of Gallia
schools at stake
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia county
voters will elect five members to
local board's or education ' and
decide the fate of two operating
levies at Tuesday's general election
Passage or defeat of a five year .
2 6 mill, levy fer the current
Hpenses of the Gallia Local School
District may decide whether that
system closes during parts of
November and Oecember-&lt;&gt;r is
subjected In State control, if the
District should seek emergency
funding from 'the DepartmenL of
Education .
Facing a 1282,000 deficit this year
and a $953 ,000 next year, that school
district will be forced to deCide
whether to opt for temporary
closure or State cootrol if Tuesday's
additional tax is not ratified by
district voters.
Closure would result in the lay-&lt;&gt;ff
of district certificated and non ·
certificated persoonel , as well as the
loss of time in the classroom for that
system's student body .
Opting for an emergency loan
from the State would result in a
significant loss of local control , as
well as the imposition by the State of
a diStrict-wide income tax to cover
the cost of the Joan, mterest and
management charges
U the levy should fail, the local
board's abWty to choose from either
of those two optiOns will be
restricted to the remainder of the
current calender year. Beginning in
January 1980, as the result of
r=ntlv enacted legislation, school
district~ are forbidden to close-they
must seek State emergency loans.
Two seats on that system's board
of education will be filled on
Tuesday as district voters choose
between fi ve candidates seeking
those positions .
Incum bent David Arrowood,
Hobart L. Daniela, ~'red J. Oeel,
Billey Halley , and former board
member Bruet! S. Stou; are vying for
the ava ilable seats . Current Board
President James Blevins, whose
term expires on December 31 , is not
seeking r...,lection .
Five candidates are seeking three
seats operl on the Board of
Education of the Gallipolis City

School Dlstrlct. None at the current
members-Paul Niday, Bob Marchi,
or Elizabeth Cornell-whose terms
exptre at the end of this year, are
seeking reelection.
Candidates for the city's board of
education are Gene H . Abels, E .V.
Clarke . James N.M . Davis, Tura J .
Hayes, and Jay M. SimmS.
The Gallia County Board of
Commissioners have placed a five
year, .S mill, levy for tbe JIUiliOS'! of
providing for the collection and
disposal of gsrbage and refuse
before county voters .
The Cornmissim maintains that if
the levy is defeated the green boxes
which are currently maintained
throughout tbe county will be pulled
by the end of November.
The village of Oleshire has placed
a 3.S mill, five year, levy before
voters lor the purpose of fire
protecllon .
Five year levies for fire protection
will also be considered In two Gallia
lnwnships. Huntingtoo Township is
seeking .4 mills ;. 7 mills is being
sought in Clay ToWilBhip.
In addition, a JocaJ option for the
sale of malt beverages, wine and
mixed beverages by the package lor
off -premise consumption will be
decided In precincts A and B of the
fourth Ward of the dty of Gall1polis.
The only State-wide issue to be
considered by Gallia voters is Issue
I, a ballot initiative which seeks a 10
cent deposit on beverage containers. ~
The
only
apparent
local
campaigning has been cooducted by
opponents of the issue-prirnarlly
brewers and distributers of malt
liquor- who have supplied many
local retailers with posters, napllinB
and bwnper-etlckers urging defeat
of the deposit initiative.
City polling places are: 1-A, WU1Ia
Tire , 217 Thlrd Avenue; l·B,
Washington School Building; ?rA
City Building; 7r8, Saundl!l'l Quaker
State, Second Ave. and Pine St.; ~A.
Washington School Building; ~B.
Masonlc Building on Third Ave.; 4A, ~ Third Averme; 4-8, Oty
Garage, Chestnut St.; 4-C, Bastlanl
BuUdlng, Central Soya, 95 Sycamore
St.; Gallipolis Township, Court
House; Kanauga Precinct, Court

House.
COMMISSION TO MEET
GALLIPOUS - The Gall1polla
Ci ty Commiseion will meet ln
regular session Tllesday at 8 p.m . in
the MWiicipal Court Rood{.

County voters, with the ~

of Bidwell Precinct retddenll wbo
will vote at the fann I~
company oo SR 554, wW eatlt blllota
at their normal polling places.
j

~~

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