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                  <text>12-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Thursday, Nov . 15, 1979

Fire hits r-------E-LB_E_R_F_E-LD-5-IN_P_O_M_E_R_O_Y_ _ ____,

'!~~· - -~,

sons suffered smoke inhalation and
several hundred employees at the
Logan Division of Goodyear Tlre x
Rubber Co. were evacuated from the
area when a fire broke out at the
plant.
Anthony Beverly of Logan and
Michael Simms from Nelsonville,
both 23, were reported in stable condition after being admitted to
Hocking Valley Community Hospital
Wednesday evening.
Firefighters were called to lhe
plant about 7 p.m . when "a static
spark ignited the wax compound on
a foam mold," a firefighter said.
"! was about 50 feet from the fire
when it started," said Mark Carner,
an employee. "I had my back to it,
but when I turned around, alii saw
was flames going to the ceiling."
A total of 350 employees were
evacuated from the plant to a nMr·
by Ohio National Guard armory .
" It started on the line where we
make forms for dashboards in
automobiles," said Carrier.
Several other eyewitnesses confirmed that the fire broke out while a
bot wax process was heing completed. The process is used to form
molds for automobile dashboards .
Carrier said he saw the flames
burn through the roof, which is about
4li feet high .
''I ran to the nearest exit," he
said. "I told the people in my section
about the fire and we got out fast. "
He estimated that it required only
about five minutes to evacuate the
building.
Plant Manager B.C. Jolmson said
the blaze was contained in a rear
area by the plant's automatic
sprinkler system . He refused,
however, to list a ca\llle.
Logan firefighters, who got help
from firefighting units from
Hocking, Athens, Vinton and Perry
counties, say the blaze was extinguished about an hour after they
arrived on the scene .

B RGA I

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16TH AND SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 17TH
OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT

I WOMEN'S WINTER

SALE PRICES
EASY
CHAIRS
Selec t a c hair now , la y it
away and we ' ll d e li ver
for Christmas . Kroehler
and Berkline c hairs in a
wide array of s tyl es,
fabric covers and col
ors.

PAJAMAS
AND NIGHT SHIRTS

I
I

I
I
I
I
I
I
i
I

WOMENS WINTER
.
GOWNS
Lon g and shor t styles . Sizes xs,
smal l, medium. la rge, ex tr a

large and ex tr a, ex tra large . En
ti r e stock o n sale_ Solid colors.

al l

f amous

!
!I

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
!Disebarges Nov. 14!
Juanita Arthur, William Battrell,
Ruth Bowling, Janie Bowman, Alice
Croyle, Mrs. Douglas Davis and
daughter ; Mrs. John Davis and son;
Mrs. Rodney Frecker and son;
Angella Garten, Tera Goodwin,
Ronald Hawleyh, Mrs. Charles
Howard and son; Vivian Jolly,
Albert Keaton, Jr., Cecil Kirk,
Preston Mustard, Mrs. John Nibert
and son; Maude Persinger, Mrs.
Marvin Rocchi and son; RJyan
Russell, Michael Sanders, Joseph
Schirmer, Anna Shaw, Richard
Shaw, Bette Sheets, Gertrude Short,
Mary Skaggs, David Stamper and
PAtrick Stanton.
(Birtb)
Mr. and Mrs. George Allen,
Gallipolis, daughter.

Boys
Boys
Boys
Boys

WESTMORELAND
GLASSWARE

and
and
and
and

Vests ............
Vests ............
Vests ............
Vests ............

S14 . 76
$19 .46
$23 .36
531.16

THIS CHRISTMAS
GIVE A DESK
FROM OUR SELECTION
FURNITURE, lrd FLOOR

brands

Another big shipment, new coloiS of

SAVE 20%

'6 40
sa 00
60
'12 ()()

WOMEN ' S S8 .00
WINTER GOWNS ... . .. ,
•
WOMEN 'S SlO .OO
WINTER GOWNS ........
,
WOMEN 'S S12 .00
U1
WINTER GOWNS .. .... , · ;,,
WOMEN ' S SlS.OO
WINTER GOWNS ......
,

coral and green, also white. Arranged
lor your easy selection.

ARTIFICIAL

Dried flowers and leaves, silk flowers,

SALE PRICES

SALE I

CHRISTMAS

A big selection of s tyl es in s lipov ers, car
digans and sleeveless s w ea ter s. S izes S, M, L
and XL . ,-he perf ec t Christmas gift for the
m e n on your list .

you need now.
Housewares Department, 1st Floor

TABLE
COVERS

SALE PRICES

fR.~
CHILDREN ' S
~~
.-,r ~:T:" COATS AND JACKETS
{· .· ,:''; Jl(: ~, two
Entire stock on sa le for th.ese
days . Si2es 2 to 14. Man y

~

l.'·' .

f' \ · .•.
·~ft ;
\.
. "'•\ , ' , ~
-·

hooded sty les . 100 per ce nt
nyl on a n d co tton and nylon
b lenas . Ch ildre n 's Depart
ment, 2nd F loor . Reg . pn ces
520 .00 lo 166.00 .

SAVE 20%
Buy t ab le covers you ' ll nee d for Thanksgiving
(November 22) and the holiday season. Entir e
s tock included . Oblongs, ovals, squares,
rounds . Big se lec t ion of co lors and patterns .

SALE PRICES

Children's
Children's
Children's
Children's

'20.00 Coats and
'27 .00 Coats and
'32.00 Coats and
'48.00 Coats and

Jackets .......... '16.00
Jackets .......... '21.60
Jackets .......... 125.60
Jackets ......... '38.40

Autu workers oul

SAVE FRIDAY AND SATURDAY

WOMEN'S WINTER

ROBES

WOMEN'S
ANGEL
TREADS

GIRLS' KNIT TOPS
Pullovers , turtle nec k s and some hooded tops .
Sizes 2 to 4, 6 to 8 and 10 through 14. Regular
prices $5 .00 to $13.00 .

Regular $4 .00 and S-4 .50
Angel
T r eads
Good
selection of colors . An
ideal Chri stm as gif t S,
M . L . )( L . Limited quan
1ity

SAVE 20%

Girls '6.00 Tops .......................... Sale '4.80
Girls '7.00 Tops. ......................... Sale 15.60
Girls '9.00 Tops .. ........ ....... .......... Sale '7.20
Girls '11.00 Tops ......................... . Sale '8.80

20~.

Women ' s SIS .OO Winter Robes •••• Sl2 .00
Women ' s $21 .00 Winter Robes .,., Sl6 .80

Women 's S25.00 Winter Robes • ..• $20 .00
Women ' s $32.00 Winter Robes ••••

us.6G

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY SALE!

JUNIOR TOPS
An excellent selection of junior size tops in
knits , suedes, solid colors and stripes . Junior
sizes s, M , Land XL. Regular pri ces are from
$7.00 to $18 .00 .

Junior 18.00 Tops .......................... ... '6.56
Junior 110.00 Tops. ............. .. .... ........ 18.20
Junior '12.00 Tops ...... _..................... '9.84
Junior 16.00 Tops .............. , ........... 13.12
1

SPECIAL TWO DAY SALE!

WINTER COATS

l

1/2

KROMEX
QUART CASSEROLE

Microwave oven sale with metal casserole
holder.

OOLUMBUS, Ohio lAP ! More than 4,1100 members of
United Auto Workers Local 969
went on strike Thursday against
the General Motors Fisher Body
plant in Columbus.
The union and tbe company had
been trying to negotiate a new
three-year contract since mid
July . Negotiations
were
scheduled to resume Friday .
Union spokesmen said a strike
waa necessary because many
d.iaagreetlll?flts remained .

built by the Pomeroy Otamber of Commerce . Pictured
are, front, Guy Morris ; back , 1-r, Chuck Mullen, Kenn y
Klein, and Don Snyder .

Teacher rally slated
Saturday in Pomeroy
A rally will be staged in Pomeroy
at 1:30 p.m. Saturday to demonstra te the solidarity of teachers
across the state in &gt;l!lpport of the
Meigs Loca l Teachers eight week
old strike, Eugene Brundige,
president of the Ohio Education
Assoctaton, sald late Friday mor·
ning .
In a press conference Brundige
announced the rally which will be
he ld in fr ont of the Meigs Inn . He
said that ed ucation associations
across t he state ha ve been invited to
attend the rally.
Brundige indicated that he is
hopeful that a negotiations session
being held in Columbus starting at 2

Two men injured

A t remendous selection of styles and
col or s in long and short style$. An e)(
ce ll en t time to buy for Christmas oiv ·
ing . L.orralne , Phil Maid and Katl
makes . All si zes i nc luding ex frli Iaroe
sizes. Reg . pri ces$1J.OO to536.00.

SAVE

WORK ON STAGE UNDERWAY - Work on the
stage located on the up per parking lot in Pomeroy was
in full swing Thursday morning. The stage is being

...

Slip into something Playtex and get
$1.00 refund on any Playtex bra or girdle in stock. Details available in
Lingerie Department, 2nd Floor.

SPECIAL SALE!

PRE CHRISTMAS SALEI

Junior , missy si zes . hal t si zes and extra
large sHes Big selection of st ye ts . Ou r
all weather coats are included in this
sa le. Buy for yoursel f or Chris tm as Qi\1
1ng Regular prt c e~ S56 00 to S155 00.

SPECIAll

SALE PRICES
/.

TWO DAY SALE!

Secretaries, roll tops and knee hole
desks in many different styles. Choose
walnut, oak or maple finishes.

Housewares, 1st Floor

MEN'S
EATERS

FLOWERS

FRIDAY . NOVEMBER 16, 1979

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

1

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY SALE

MEN'S WINTER

JACKETS AND
VESTS

Two men are listed in guarded
condition tile intensive care unit of
Holzer Medical Center following a
two-vehicle, head-&lt;Jn collision last
night on SR 7, five-tenths of a mile
north of Georges Creek Rd .
Called t.o tb e scene at 10 : :;o p .m ,
the Gallia-Meigs Post, Highway
Patol, r eports tbat a nortb bound
auto operated by Nathaniel T . Rife,
17, Cheshire, and a south bound
vehicle operated by Charles Adams.
25, Sandyville , W.Va ., colllded head on on the state route .
The patrol reports a minor hre,
whic h was extinquished by an
unid enti fi ed passing motorisl ,
erupted following impa ct. The
Gallipolis City Flre Department was
called t.o the scene, but tbe blaze was
out upon it 's arrival.
The GaUia County Em ergency
Medical Service reports tbal upon
it 's arrival at th&lt;' accident, Adams
was pinned in his vehicle . Rife had
reportedly been removed from his
auto and was ready lor transport.
Both drivers were transported by
tb e squad to Holzer Med ical Center ,
where Adams was taken into
surgery at 11 :45 p.m and later
transferred to tbe ICU . Adams
suffers from a fractured left leg,

fractured ribs and multiple
lacerations.
Rife w85 admitted to tbe ICU for
treatment of a flail chest wound,
pulmonary and cerebral contusions.
Botb vehicles were demolished .

The

accident

rema ins

under

10 vest 1ga lion .

A Vinton
woman, Odessa
Morrison. 27, was cited on charges of
DWl and operating a vehicle witbout
a license following an accident on SR
5&gt;4, a t milepost 10. at 5: 15 p.m .
The patrol reports an east bound
auto operated by Morrison struck a
parked veh icle owned by J oyce
Cremeans , Bidwell
There was moderate damage tu
the Cr emeans auto. slig ht damage to
the Morrison veh..i cle.
A Kw Grande man, Elijah Y1sa,
18. was Cited on a charge of reckless
operation followirg a mishap on
East College Avenue at 7:20p.m .
Officers report an aulD operated
by Yisa turned onto College Ave ,
slid off tb e right side of the roadway
and struck a parked vehicle owned
hy Joseph Leach, Bidwell .
There was severe damage to the
Leach auto, moderate damage to tbe
Yisa vehicle .

p.m. today under the auspices of the
Ohio Department of Education wiU
bring a settlement to the strike
which is the longest in duration in
Ohio this year .
Should a settlement fail to be forthcoming at the Columbus sess1on
being attended by full teams of
negotiators from the Meigs Local
Board of Ed ucation and the Meigs
Loca l Teachers Association, the
Ohio Education Association will appeal to the community for a settlement, Brundige indicated . The
stated that Judge Robert E . Buck,
Meigs County Probate Court Judge,
will be asked to act upon a suit In his
court requesting that the court take
over tbe functions of the Meigs Local
Board of Education if the settlement
does not evolve .
Keynote speaker at the Saturday
rally, Brundige reports, will be Don
Hill who is president of the Minnesota Ed ucation Association . The
Ohio Education Association stated
that the 113,1100 members of the
organization are behind a settlement
of the local strike as well as the
Natioru.l Education Association.
On a proposal of tbe teachers
group for 60 percent of new moneys
coming into the Meigs Local
District. Brundige reports that the
proposal pertains to genera l
operating funds and not funds for
building improvement and other
capital improvements. He said that
tbe figure is not excessive.
He indicat es that the strike should
be ended but only through fair and
eq uitable contra ct agreements
reached at the hargairung table.

Iranian situation worsens
By The Associated Press
An
estimated
80,000
demonstrator s marched on tbe U.S.
Embassy in Tehran today and
Moslem militants tbrMtened to lake
harsh action against thelr hostages
inside tb e mission if the United
States forced tbe shah to go to any
country but Iran.
NBC-TV news in Tehran said the
march on the embassy was the
biggest since the hostages were
seized Nov. 4. After Moselm Sabbath
prayers, loudSJ!e8kers broadcasting
from
minibuses
led
the
demonstrators in anti -American
chants.
The protest took oo a carnival
atmosphere,
the
British
Broadcasting Corp . reported, with
families and vendors minng with
the demoostrat.ors . A loog line of
Tehran taxis drove past the
embassy carrying stuffed animal
effigies of woed and straw which
pe&lt;~ple in the crowd struck while
shouting anti-American slogans. It
' was not clear what tbe animals
signified.
A spokesman for the militants
inside tbe embassy told Tehran
Radio : " We announce tbe message
of the Iranian people to the world
that if America expeLs the shah, it
will be committing an offense even
greater than its previous ooes. The
shah should be delivered to the
Iranian nation with his hands tied. If
America expels the shah, it must be
certain that harsher decisions will
be taken against the hostages."
The Associated Press in Bonn .

Weather
P"rt ly cloudy torught and Satur·
day . Lows tonight around -10 and
highs Saturday bet ween &gt;5 and 60
The chance of precipiLllton is 19 percent tonight and near z.•ro SatUI dar .
EXTENDEU ounOOK
Extended forecast for Sunday
lhrough Tuesday : Fair and mDd
Sunday lhrougb Tuesday . Hlgbo
In the 50o and lows In tbe upper
30sand40o.

CLEVELAND !AP) - H~are

the numben dntWII Thursday In
the weet.ly Ohio Lottery game :
Boii81Wl %1; flO; 7686;,22331;
211!173.
Pryamld: 83; 284 ; 1075 .

West Germany reached tbe embassy
rn Tehran by telephooe and spoke
with a student who said, "So far
those hostages are safe here and in a
comfortable condition ."
"'But I'm not sure what would
happen if the United States lets tb e
shah leave. I'm not sure what action
the people will take."
The broadcast. monitored in
London , also said the militants
would boycott American goods and
that they urged other Iranians to ban
U S. products in any way possible

during the coming week.
So far tbe U.S. government baa
refused to meet the militants'
demand for the shah's extradltim,
and has given no indication It
planned to expel him .
Ayatollah Ruhollah Kbomelnl,
Iran's 79-year-old revolutionary
leader ,
has
canceled
all
appointments f!l' the next three
weeks because of "sllght fatlgue and ·.
illness," the state radio said, and'
foreign diplomats In Tehran
predicted a loog siege for the
hostages .
As the crisis entered its 13th day
today, the United States mounted a
new initiative to win lncreaaed
domestic and International pressure
for release of the captives, said by
the State Department to number 10
to 62 Americana and eight nonAmericans.
Tbe
number
ol 11011\aaea
prevlolllllY hid WB~··.......•ed at
nearly 100, but the State Department
said
Thursday night that about 30
Judges for the 1!1111 Meigs County
Iranian employees were freed
and Vinion County Junior MiM
shortly after the embauy tateowr
Programs were announced today by
Nov.
4.
Southeast Ohlo Junior Miss , Inc .,
Iran was stlll in!lstlng that Shah
sponsors of the annual event.
Mohanunad Reza Pahlavi, Oll8ted
Meigs County Judges are Mrs.
by Kbometni 's f&lt;rcesln January, be
Jayne Eddy, vocal instructor at Vin·
extradited from the United States
ton County high school; Merlin Ross,
before the captives could be
Rio Grande College, and Terry
released, and there was no sign the
Collins, chairman of the Social
crisis was about to end soon , foreign
Studies Department at Vinton Coun diplomats
In Tehran told The
ty high school.
Associated
Press In Bonn, West
Judges for tbe Vinton County
Germany,
by
telephme .
program are Mrs. Janet Korn, past
Further
complicating
the situation
judge for the local Junior Miss
rwas
an
apparenUy
growing
tfupute
Program, Pomeroy; Ron Vance,
between
some
Iranian
goverrunent
assistant principal at Wahama High
offictal.s and the demmstrators who
School, and past judge for the Junior
seized
tbe embassy . The conflict,
Miss Program, and Rick Patrick,
which
intensified
Thursday, left It
Athens, representative of The Blue
unclear
who
would
decide th&lt;
Cross of Central Ohio.
hostages'
fate
.
Finals for both programs will be
held Saturday night, November 17 ,
at Southern high school, Racine,
LOCATION CHANGE
beginning at 8:10p.m .
Salllrday DlCbt'• Melp Jwlior
The two local winners wlli
Mila Pageant bu been moved
represent their county at the Ohio
from lbe Melgo Junior High
Junior Miss Finals in Columbus,
School
to tbe SGalbem Hlgb
Ohio, January 12, l!WI.
Scboolln
Racine llDII will olarl at
Special guests will be the recent
8:
10
p.m.
There are oeven cwinners of tbe Gallia and Jackson
testanlll
tbls
year, !oar fnm
County Junior Miss Programs, sponMeigs aud three from Vlnloll.
sored by Lear Photography ot
Galli polls.

Pageant
judges

announced

Entire stock sa le pr iced . Sizes 36 to
48 Good style selection in wa ist
length and l onger lengt h sty l es.

Regular '16.00

SQUAD CAlLED
Tbe Pomeroy Emergency Squad
was called to Route 143 at 12 :59 a .m.
Thursday for Rita Roush who had an
arm laceration . She was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

JEANS

LANE
CEDAR
CHESTS

New sh1pment just received Choose

straight leg or bool fl are !.fyle •n
si zes 18 to 41 waist, lengths 30 to 36
inches . wrangler 1-4 ounce, No
FAu lt, Pre washed Blue Den im

SEEKUCENSE
A marriage licell.!le was issued tu
James David Barrett, 29, Rt. I,
Lanpvllle and Virginia Gail
Wbafey, 30, Middleport.

no later lllan 2 p.m . Friday, Nov. 16.
~ will be a limite&lt;: lo.unber of
Uclletsat the door.

SAVE 22%
Jackets
Jackets
Jackets
Jackets

enttne
A break in the eight week old Meigs Local Teachers Strike appeared quite possible today.
According to a release from the Meigs Local TMchers Association a meeting was to get Ullderway
in Columbus today and it was indicated that an agreement between the Meigs Local Board of
Education and the Meigs Local Teachers As.ociation might be reached by 6 p.m. Sunday .
The release states :
" David Gleason, superintendent of the Meigs Local School District and Bonnie Fisher, president of
tbe Meigs Local Teachers Association, announced toda y that negotiators representing the board of
education and tbe teachers' association will meet Friday, at 2 p.m. in the offices of the State Department of Education to seek a solution to tbe e1ght week teachers' strike.
"Talks are scheduled to be conducted through tbe weekend and an agreement is hoped for by 6 p.rr.
on Sunday, Nov . l8.
Both Supt. Gleason and Mrs . Fisher urge thelr constituent representatives to respect the process
which has been set in motion to fina • workable solution ."
Meigs Probate Court Judge Robert E . Buck who had oeeu providing quarters for negotiations in the
teachers strike of tbe Meigs Local School DL•tnct last week today issued a statement in regard to
negotiations heing held in Columbu.s.
He said:
"I am hopeful that positive actwn will come from the current talks heing conducted in Columbus
and feel that each of us should endeavor to maintain a positive attitude toward these negotiations.
Furthermore, I feel satisfied that botb sides have been able to meet in a neutral forum at this time.
As I previously indicated, I feel that urgency in tbe negotiation process should out..t.rip either side 's
comrnittment to strict policy considerallons ."

Boy s sizes 8 through 20 in a fine setec
l ion of styles Many are hooded Pick

518.95
S24 .95
S29 .95
S39.95

•

Strike may end

JACKETS &amp; VESTS

Women's
Women 's
Women's
Women 's

Regu lar prices S6 .00 to 518 .00 .

MEETS MONDAY
The Meigs County Men 's
Fellowship of the Meigs County
Clwrches of ChriSt will meet at 7:30
p.m. Monday at the Middleport
Church.
Carl Hysell, county
juvenile officer, will be speaker and
will show a film.

. FRIDAY DEADLINE
'l'fcllet:J·to 'the Eastern banquet to
be help Montlay mu.st be purchased

POMEROY -MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

SEE OUR LINE OF

in grapes and many more. Select what

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted-Eloise E blin , Mid dleport ; Clara Heines, Hemlock
Grove; Malvera Wheeler, Middleport; Flora McCoy, Shade ; Ronda Hoekstra, New Haven.
Discharged-Linda Bailey, Edwin
Corzart, Pansy Young, Shelly Roush ,
Paul Nease. Harold Demosky,
Michael Harbour.

VOL. XXVIII NO . 152

BOYS' WINTER

out tne jackets you need now .

$7.00 Winter PJ 's and Shirts ..•. SS.60
$9.00 Winter PJ's and Shirts .... $7.20
S 11.00 Winter PJ's and Shirts ... $8.80
S1S.OO Winter PJ's and Shirts .. 512.00

(USPS 145-960)

at

TWO DAYS ONLY

Shorties and regu lar s tyl es, all sizes. Flannels
and brushed nylon . Entire stock included in
this IWo day sa le. Regular prices $6.00 to
18 00
$ · ·
SAVE 20%

TWO DAY SALE!

patterns,

---·-·-·-·---r

poly ferns in various sizes. Assorted coloiS

WATER MEETING
There will be a m eeting of tbe
Southeast Ohio Tributaries River
Basin Policy adVISory committee
and citizen-technical advisory committee Nov. 27 at 7:30 p.m. in the
Lyne Center (upstairs in gymnasium) of Rio Grande College, Rio
Grande . Purpoee will be for committee review and approval consideration ot the revised mine
drainage section of the Part lll
Water Quality Management Plan .

e

DAYS

~;;;;;-~;·;-o~;;;;Me-;T,";;d"F"LooR'-1--------·----

•

$13 99

We have an excellent se lection of Lane Cedar
Chests . Wond e rful for giving a t Christ m as
time . Select yours now . f ur nitur e d e partment ,
3rdf loor .

SALE PRICES

SPECIAL SALEI

MEN'S TRYELLA
FLANNEL SHIRTS
campus Tryella shirts, 65 per cent
polyester, JS per cen t cotton
Regular and western st yles Siz~ S.
M, L. XL and XXL Plaid patterns

Men 's
Men 's
Men ' s
Men ' s

513 .95
515.95
516.95
$17 .95

Flannels
Flannels
Flannels
Flannels

.... . .. .. . . ..... S11.8S
........ . , . ..... Sl3. 55
. ....... . . . ..... S14.40
..... . .......... S1S.25

OPEN SATURDAY 9:30AM TO 5 PM

---"""-

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

A SANDYVILLE , W. VA., MAN was pinned in this
vehicl•late last night following a two-vehicle, head-&lt;Jn
collision on SR 7, near the Sta le Roadside Park at
K~nauga . Charles Adams , ~.and Nathaniel T. Rile,

17, Cheshire, the operator of the other vehicle, are both
listed in guarded condition in the intensive care unil of
Holzer Medica ; Center .

TOYS PRESENTED - More than 30 toys, made
by members of Meigs County Granges were presented
to Teresa Collins, director of nurses at Veterans
Memorial Hospital, Thursday afternoon . The toys will
be given to children who are patients in the hospital. '
Each toy was filled with Poly.fil which is made by the
Fairfield Processing Company . The National Grange,
along with Fairfield Processing Company , sponsor the ,
program each year witb tbousands of toys giv~n to
hospitals throughout the United States. This is orie of

many communty service adlvitiM !lpOIISC)I"eel by the
Grange. Participating Granges were Rock Sprtnga,
Hemlock Grove, Racine, HarrlaonviUe, Star, IJid
Columbia. Pictured are,l-4', Mrs. Colllns, Mrs. Mendall
Jordan, Colwnbia ; Mrs. Herbert Roush, Oblo Valley,
Goldie Reed, Hemlock Grove; Barbera Fry, Rock
Springs; Bernice Midkiff, Star, lioldiDg ~
Vaughan, Emma Adams, Racine, and Ruby 14mhert,
Star.
~

~·

�:&gt;---The Daily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., t'n&lt;lllv

2-The Dllily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Nov . 16, 1979

J~

,

Touay s commentary
By Don Graff
We've been hearing a lot of late
about the events of 1929 - more,
quite likely, than most of us really
want to hear.
The subject today lsn 't the Crash,
bowever, but the administration's
decision to toss a financial line to the

foundering Chrysler Corporation.
There is a nice If unintended touch
In the timing of the latter event in
that it should come during the anniversary of the fonner.
When the economic roof feU in a
half century ago, Herbert Hoover
had the ml9fortune not only to be

Editorial opinions,
comments

'Ohio Perspective'

"Come on, I'll take you to lunch ."

Bond's opinions
By Julian Bond
In much of black America, three
framed faces grace humble mantles
or peer from the tops of shabby
chests of drawers .
One fa ce is black - Martm Luther
King Jr. Two are white, the bearded
face ol Jesus Christ and the
youthful, smiling John F . Kermedy .
So powerful is the Kennedy mystique among many black voters that
the surviving son can collect a
respectable share of black
America 's votes in any election by
simply showing up.
But if Sen. Edwanl Kennedy
wants to get those votes and more
from the constituency that helped
transfonn " Jimmy Who '" into
"President carter, " here's what
presidential candidate Kennedy will
have to do :
- Hire additional blacks on his
Senate staff. In spite rl his excellent
reconl on civil righta, Kermedy has
few black faces on his Senate
payroll, and only one - Peter·
Pavhom - occupiea a position o1 real
. power- He llllllt allo intei!J'Bte his
campaign organization. Carter campaignen are certain to remind black
voters that the entire Carter campaign - froot the original Peanut
Brigade in 1978- ill wen integrated.
- Explain his role 1n helpin!! to
defeat Sen. Edward Brooke, R·
Mass., the Senate's only black
member. Kennedy can argue that
Brooke's public divorce as weD as
his quarrels with the Senate Ethics

Committee contributed more to
Brooke's downfaU thsn Kermedy's
endorsement of his opponent. But
the C&amp;rterites are already " blammg " Kennedy for depriving the
black electorate of its only voice in
America's most exclusive club.
- Promote his voting record more,
and attack President Carter's
leadership failings less. Black
voters - and liberal whites too need to be reminded that Kennedy
was battling for civil rights legislation back when Georgia State Sen.
Jinuny Carter was avoiding any entanglement in the civil rights movement sweepinl! through his native
state.
- !Wcognize black political leadership. Carter's 1976 campaign tried to
run roughshod over the political fiefdams ~ members of the Congressional Black caucwo, and as a result
alienated all but Andrew YoWlg.
Most black big-ctty mayors like Los
Angeles' Tom Bradley, Detroit's
Coleman YOWlg and Atlanta's
Maynard Jackson now support
Carter, in part because the president
has finally learned bow to use the
power - and the purse - ol his in·
cumbency.
-Be seen, heard and felt by black
America. Black voters sensed that
Jinuny Carter feh at ease with black
people, a casual familiarity most
white potiticians - and most white
people- do not share. If Carter's acquaintance with black gospel hymns
dlaguised his ignorance of black

What Teddy
must do
America's low economic status, and
the magnitude of the effort required
to correct it, his sympathetic
amiability endeared him to un·
critical black voters.
- Propose definite solutions to
definite problems in black America .
Too many politicians have either
over-promised or under~ellvered to
black voters. Census data charts a
:!D-year decline in the rela live status
of black Americans to their white
countrymen and women.
- Promise to continue and expand
the Carter administration policies in
black Africa . A growing body of
black Americans want presidential
candidates to couple concern for
Israel and Ireland with interest in
•· he Sudan and South Africa .
- Remain true to his convictions of
the last 17 years. If bLack voters admired John F. Kermedy for what
they thought he was, and loved
Robert Kennedy for what he could
have been, they will adore Edward
Kennedy for what he already is - a
solid supporter of civil rights, a
vocal proponent for the concenu~ rl
the working man and woman, and a
strong internationalist, mindful rl
America's past arrogrance and
eager to insure thst American miglt
intrudes - if at all -oo behalf of the
universal striving for freedom .
111E DAO..YSElmNEL
!USPS l4$--t

&amp;:;;~~~~
....Cllv
OEVOI'ED TO 11IE

Washington today:
WASHINGTON ( AP l - This is the
era of political fine tuning, but the
Ronald Reagan show hasn ' t
changed.
The Reagan campaign is the
longest running program in
Republican presidential politics,
unless you count perennial
candidate Harold E. Stassen.
The former Califocnia governor
began the active phase of his 1980 bid
fa- the White House with themes,
and words, which could have been
lifted intact from his 1976 campaign.
So much for the advan ce
suggestions that the new Reagan
would tone down his conservatism
and shift toward the GOP center.
Indeed, the center may have shifted
toward him as politicians in both
parties try to cope with a public
mood that is down on big
government and big spending.
That accolDits f&lt;r 30me of the
tuning of images as the 1980
campaign begins. Uberals would
rather be called progressives. Sen.
Edward M. Kennedy often cites hill
alliances wlth congressional
cmservatlves on such matters as
law enforcement and airline
deregulation.
Reagan's image is finnly set, and
he probably couldn't change It if he
wanted to. His conservative
~llosophy has been spelled out in
hundreds of speeches and papers
over the past 15 years.
While the platfa-m is the same,
the strategy is different in thill
Reagan campaign . In 19'16, he was
the challenger, tackling an
incwnbent Republican president. In
19110, Reagan is the challenged acknowledged by his rival
candidates to be leading the field.
Last time, one of Reagan's
problems was to dispel the
suggestion that he was too far right,
too extreme a cooservatlve, for the
nomination or the presidency. When
that came up, as it often did, Reagan
would recite his record as a
candidate and as governor of
CaUfornla. When President Gerald
Ford called him too far right,
Reagan rEplied that the president
~ had tried to recruit ,llim for
cabinet positions.

That issue is almost c-ertainly
behind him . In its place, Reagan will
have to deal with the suggestin that
at 68 , he' s too old for tbe job . He will
be 70 shortly after tbe next president
is inaugurated .
He says his age Is not a problem,
Wid his managers are planning a
cam paign pace designed to
demoostrate health and vigor .
Defending a lead beats playing
catch-up. But it means that every
rival will be looking for an openmg,
a misstep a- a misstatement . He
walked into some in 1976. He can't
alfocd many in 1980.
His strategy this time has no place
for face-to-face appearances with
other GOP candidates. Reagan says
he' s not going to debate them, and
sees no point in joint appearances
that create the impressioo of a I
contest.
Last time, Reagan wanted to
debate Ford. The president wasn 't
interested.
That's the difference between
being the challenger and the target

Need more

refin erit·.~

MANCHESI'ER, N.H. (AP) Republican presidential candidate
Ronald Reagan, seeking to build
suppa-t in the Northeast , says the
region needs more refineries to
lessen its dependence on foreign oil.
The fii'JIIer Calif&lt;rnia governor
aJao called Wednesday for quicker
decuttrol of prices on domestic oil
than advocated by President Carter
and said the president's proposed
"windfaU" tax on oil company
revenues should be rejected .
Reagan made administration
energy policy a rnaja- target as he
spent his first fuU day on the
campaign trail In the Northeast - a
part of the nation he told various
audiences he was determined not to
''write off.''
Reagan, who formally declared
his candidacy Tuesday, was to hold
a news conference today in New
York City before fl ying to
PhilaJelphi9 for a rally.

INTERFSTOF

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f•rwiUed \o dlf DtWtpaper ud a.IH tbe loeal
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COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
Dayton lawmaker says judges
should have some additional leeway
in sentencing offenders who claim
mental problems caused them to
break the law .
Under a bill introduced this week
in the House , Rep. Paul R. Leonard,
D-Dayton, would estabUsh a new
verdict of "guilty, with diminished
capacity due to mental defect ."
Leonard, a veteran Montgomery
County lawmaker, offered his bill
with 'J:/ co-sponsors. He said judges
two
currently are offered
alternatives :
- Finding the defendant guilty ,
with no opportWlity for treatment of
mental illness, or;
- Finding the defendant not guilty
by reason of insanity, with no
opportunity for punishment for
cmuniting the crime,
Leonard said "there are criminal
defendants who commit crimes and
are afflicted with mental illness
short of legal insanity. These
individuals would be eligible for
treatment and ptmishment because
the current void in the law would be
filled '"
Leonard said his proposal
represents the culmination of efforts
by a House subcmunittee that
conducted hearings and Invited
testimony from various experts and
interested parties earlier this year .
Veteran Sen. Anthony 0 . C&amp;labrese,
D-Cleveland , praised his city's
newly elected mayor, George V.
Voinovich, at a committee hearing
this week .
Calabrese told the Senate Ways
and Means Committee, 1ilhlch was
considering legislation to help
Cleveland put its financial house into
order, that "I am very confident in
the leadership of George V.
Voinovich.' '
Then,
as
an
apparent
afterthought, he said , " It's
Wlfortunate he 's a Republican."
Senate President Oliver Ocasek, DAkroo, apparently has had a change
of heart about bills that give
industries tax breaks fa- creating
new jobs.
Ocasek said this week he was
"coming around slowly" to agree, at
least in part, with the philosophy of
GOP Gov . James A. Rhodes.
Rhodes sent the Legislature a new
plan to use about $15 million a year
in liquor profits as seed money for
revenue boods to fund IX'ograms
helping industries that provides
joba.
The Senate leader said the
proposal "merits cmsideration'' He
withheld endorsement of it,
however .
Ocasek was reminded that he

Business mirror
NE W • YORK ( AP )
An
government official was e&lt;plaining
why President Carter's freeze of
Iranian government assets could
boomerang on the United States,
especially if it frightens off foreign
investment.
"The oil producing coWltries dig
up and send us a finite asset that
took millions of years to produce. We
bum it up, and in return we send
them pieces of green paper that we
can manufacture in huge quantities .
"They accept the paper , but then
they leave it with us. They invest it
in tbe United States, and the money
then Is lent out to Americans to build
homes and factories and create jobs.
They help finance us.
" And now , in effect, we tell them
'watch out, you can't do that: you
can't take your money back.' I ask
you, who was getting the better part
of the deal' We were. And now we
may be cutting our own throats."
Carter 's freeze of asseta applies
ooly to Iran, and then only to
government rather than private
holdings. But ..me officials, private
and governmental, fear it co uld
tmnerve other foreign investors.
Oil producing nations, for
example, have joined Japan and
Europe in viewing the United States
as a sanctuary both fa- liquid assets,
such as stocks, boods and savings,
and as a pla ce for direct
investments.
Will they continue ID express this
faith if they fear their national
assets might be frozen , or tha t a
freeze could spread to private liquid

assets and then to direct
investments, such as manufcturing .
plants •
The Iranian situation also
resurrects an American fear : Do
foreigners , particularly
oll~oducing nations, own enough of
the United States to seriously
disrupt the domestic economy
should they decide to do .., ?
The General Accotmting Office
answers no to the latter question,
concluding that the entire OPEC
portfolio of stock.s, bonds, Treasury
bills and the like could be absorbed
by U.S. markets in two or three
days, albeit with serious price
changes.
Still, one Commerce Department
official estimated that ~Ice declines
would not even be as bad as 11tose
created in October when the F&amp;!eral
Reserve raised the U.S. dlacount
rate by ~e percentage point .
Portfolio in vestments such as
these are one aspect of foreign
investment. Direct investment, such
as in facta-ies , businesses and real
estate, is another .
Commerce Department figures
show that direct foreign investment
U\rough 1978 totaled $40.83 bUlion,
but this amoW!t minimizes the true
value of the assets controlled, which
was last estimated in 1974 .
At that time, the foreign direct
investment position was about $25
billion, but the value of assets was
seven times that, or $175 billion .
Using the same ratio, current asseta
might be more than $2110 billion .

•

~bably

would have oppoaeo such a
proposal four years ago when
Rhodes returned to tbe governor's
office after a four-year absence . But
hesaid, "These are not normal times
we are li vlng In, economically."
Rhodes, Ocasek, and House
Speaker Vernal G. Riffe Jr ., D-New
Boston, have been cooperating in the
search for answers to state
~blems, Ocasek said.
"While l reoerve the right to
disagree, the governor has been
veryfrlendiy, veryhOIIPitable, In the
past six months," he said.

Billions
involved
NEW YORK (AP) The
mooetary stakes in the economic
war between the United States and
Iran are in the billloos, and the same
may be true for the man at the
center of the cootroversy - Shah
Mooanuned Reza Pahlavi .
The stakes for the shah,
hospitalized in New Y&lt;rk for cancer
treatment, are the hardest to pin
down.
Supporters of the Ayatollah
Ruhollah Khomeini claim the shah
took between $5 billloo and S6 billlon
when he left Iran. But others close to
the shah . estimate he is worth
between S60 million and ~ million.
Befa-e he left Iran in February,
holdings in the shah&lt;ontrolled
Pahlavl Foundalkln were said to be
close to S25 billion . But no balaoce
sheet ever WIIB filed foc the
foWldatlon in Iran.
The fol.lldatloo's holdings, now
cmtrolled by Iran, included an oil
COOipany, 12 sugar companies, four
cement factories, bread factories
and a General Motors plant in Iran.
In addition, a Palilavi Foundation
wu incocpa-ated in New York in
1973 as a nonprofit, charitable
organization . It listed asseta of $31.7
millloo in 1977, but reportedly ill now
operating in the red.
The Iranian students holding
American hostages at the U.S.
embassy in Tehran have demanded
that the shah be turned over for
trial.
Aholhassan Bani Sadr, acting
head of the Iranian Foreign
Ministry, has proposed instead that
the U.S. support an investigation of
the shah 's aUeged crimes and tum
over the shah's fa-tune to Iran .
However,
the
Carter
adminiatralkln has said it would not
negotiate with Iran as long as
Americans were held hostage .
Instead, it is using economic
~essure to pry coocessioM out of
the capt«s.
On Wednesday, President Carter
answered an Iranian government
threat to withdraw aU its funds from
U.S. banks by freezing those funds.

Georgia on everyone's mind

The Chrysler
case
president but to have inherited a
philosophy of government which
held that Ita proper role in economic
matters wu to keep out.
As the magnitude of the
catutrophe became apparent,
Hoover sought to reverse
philosophical course and to find in
the resources of governnaent
remedies for the ills of the econa-ny.
Too late. He wu overtaken by
events and a successor who W88
swept into office by an electorate
that wu not sure euctly what lt
wanted government to do about the
situation but knew It wanted
something done.
Franklin RooleveJt certainly did
something, althoulb muted debate
continues as to bow desirable andor. effective mucll ~It wu. But u a
reault, the philosophy rl government
has changed greatly during the last
50 years. It lB now an a~
responsiblllty of government to concern itself actively not only with the
economic weU·beinl! of the nation as
a whole but of Its citizens as individuals.
Now we would appear to be eitendlng this responsiblllty to corporate
entitles.
The Chrysler package that the administration wants Coogress to approve by the end of the year Is a
stunner. At $1.5 billlon In federal
guarantees, it exceeds the annual
federal budget preceding the first
world war. Of courae, we are really
talking about different doliartl here.
A lot has happened to the value since
that conruct, but that's a different
disaster story.
No cash lB immediately involved;
the Treasury would be backing
Chrysler's loana from private
sources. Nevertheless, the government would become deeply involved
in the affairs ol a major corporation
in a key industry. The Treasury
secretary's oversight authority
would make him something ol a
super-dlainnan of the Chrysler
board. And in case the rescue falled
and Cltrysler should be forced into
bankruptcy, the govenunent would
have first dibs on picking up Its
facilities - raising the p1 aspect that
the govenunent could become an
auto producer.
There are good and oft.reclted
reasons for supporting public aid to
O!ryaler. There lB allo a precedent
in the llllCCel8ful If much smaller $250 mllllon - federal ball-oot ol
Lockheed earlier in the decade . The
govenunent actually made money
on that one.
But there are allo argumenta
against it. A (]u-ysler rescue,
especially if equally successful,
would tnmsfonn tx'ecedent into
practice. The United States would be
moving down the road previously
traveled by major European natiOIB
of proppinl! up an economy's
weakening sisters. Future rescue efforts might not be so successful. The
result would be to overload the
economy with subsidized enterprises incapable of meeting the competition on their own, a situation that
continues to plague many European
economies.
Particularly disturbing, u The
Washington Post notea edltor1ally, lB
that this significant lrmovation in
policy is beinl! taken In an emergency situation, not as the result rl a
thorough and unpressured study of
its elements and lmpllcations.
None of this lB to uy that in the
end public aid for O!ryaler may not
be In the best public interest. But it
ts to say that the public should be fully aware rl where it may be heading,
that the government role in the
economy may be u significantly expanded liB it was by the events beginning SO years ago.

Berry's World

" It seems I've made an error m my report on
our money supply this week . I'm high by 800
mtllion dollars "

••
I

- ---~----J

By The Associated Preos
A lot of people connected with
coll ege football 's bowl games will
have Georgia on their minds

KEN GRIFFEY

TOM SPENCER

Griffey, Spencer
visiting Bastille
Ken Griffey, tw&lt;&gt;-tirne All .Star
rightfielder of the Cincinnati Reds is
coming back to Gallipolis for a
second visit. He , along with
Gallipolis' own Tom Spencer, will be
at the Bastille, 300Second Ave., Nov .
19 from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m.
Griffey and Spencer played Minor
League ball together while Tom was
with the Reds' organization. Spencer
was traded to the Chicago White Sox
in the winter of 1!116 for infielder
Hugh Yancey . Tom played the 1!117
season with the Iowa Oaks of the
American Association.
In 1!118, be sput fus time between

Carew leaves

AL team tour
ANAHEIM, Calif. I API - An
incensed ROO Carew says he quit the
maj&lt;r league baseball all-6\ar tour
of Japan earlier this week mostly
beca use he felt major leag ue
offi cials
had
reneged
on
endorsement and appearance
commitments and he felt he was
"being used."
The Ca lifornia Angels' first
baseman left the tour, scheduled for
nine games and 16 da ys , after four
games and six days, returning to his
home oo Monday .
Robert Fishel , an Ameri can
League official, had earlier said
Carew left the tour ooly because of a
heel injury. Carew said Thursday
that the heel injury was just part of
hls decillion to return home .
Carew said he was Initially
hesitant to make the trip because of
the heel injury that had bothered
him during the last two months of
the past season . But he said
promises from the buseball
commissioner 's office and the Major
League Promotions Bureau that he
could make "$40,000 to $50,000" in
endorsem ents and appearan ces
convnced hun to make the trip.
"Now I can't help but feel that we
were told those things simply so that
we would say ·yes' to making the
trip ," Carew said. "Now l definttely
doubt that I'd ever make another ."
The tour matches National and
Amertcan League stars, with the
"'ries winners receiving $10,000
each and the losers getting $7,500.
"ll !left only because of the heel,"
Ca rew said, " I wouldn't have gone in
the first place. I wanted to stay
home ... But they made it soWld as if
it was 30mething I couldn't pass up .
They made all these ~omises to me
and the others and they kept passing
tile buck.
"You either couldn't find them or
they'd tell you to go talk to someone
eise. Nobody knew what was going
on " Carew continued. "I don 't
ap~reciate people giving me their
wocd and then avoiding me."
Carew, a seven-time AL batting
champion, also was upset by what he
thought was WleQUBI treatment of
National and American Leaguers.
"The worst thing was that they
were pushing the National Leaguers
and treating the Annerican Leaguers
like dogs ," he said . "It's the same
thing that always happens at the AllStar Game."
Carew said that after he inf&lt;rmed
AL team MW&gt;ger Earl Weaver and a
few others that he was going borne,
some of the major league executives
approached him and offered
endorsement opportunities.
"But by then," Carew said , "the
~inciple was more important than
th e money "

GENERAL
MOBil.£ , Ala . 1AP) - Veteran
ba se ball pla ye r -ma na ger Eddie
Stanky was in guarded condition in a
coconary unit at a Mobile Hospital.
Stanky , 64, was adm itted after
suffer ing from a fever of
undetermined ongm .
Stanky played on two World Series
teams during his »-year baseball
career . He managed three different
clubs an&lt;! is currently baseball
coach at the University of South
Alatwna

Knoxville of the Southern League
and the parent club, Chicago White
So&lt;. While getting the chance of
playing with the So&lt; 's, he made the
most of it.
While only playing two months in
the majora Tom only batted .187 , but
played brilliant defense . He was sent
back to Knoxville to finish out the
season with that club. He started the
'79 season with Knoxville as a
player-eoach . He was released in
July and picked up by the Charleston
(W. Va .) Charlies. The Charlies
were affiliated with the Houston
Astros, the club that finished second
to the Reds in a tight National West
race . Spencer finished out the '79
season with the Charlies and hopes
to be played as a back-up outfielder
with the Astros next season.
Griffey, huri most of last season,
Is trying to come back from knee
surgery he had in August .
Only in his sixth year in the Major
Leagues, Ken quickly developed into
one of the League's top hitters. He
batted only .251 his first season but
has since put together five .300-plus
seasons, including a career-high .336
in 1976 which he finished second in
the batting title to Bill Madlock, now
at the world&lt;hampion Pittsburgh
Pirates . Ken's lifetime totals
average id .310 with more than 40
home runs and 300 or more RBis .

Garcia
•
wms
award
CLEV ELAND I APl - The
Cleveland Chapter of the Baseball
Writers ' AssOCiation of America has
named Cleveland Indians Mana111r
Dave Garcia as the American
League team's 1979 " Man of the
Year ."
Garcia, 59, took over the reins of
the Indians on July 23, following the
firing of Jeff Tor borg, and directed
the team to a 3~29 and an 61-80
ftnish .
Garcia is the first manager ID get
the honor since player-manager Lou
Boudreau was named " Man of the
Year" tn 1947 .
Others nominated by the baseball
writers were left -f ie lder Mike
Hargrove , relief pitcher Sid Monge
and third baseman Toby Harrah .
Monge, the Indians ' only All-Star
last season, woo the writers' "Good
Guy " Award . Others oominated for
thai honor were Harrah , third-base
coach Joe Nossek, pitcher Rick
Waits and Indians pu'Jlic relations
secr etary Rosemary O'Connor .

Saturday.
The Wlranked Bulldogs, with an
Wltidy H overall record - but a tidy
:&gt;-0 in the Southeastern Conference
- can clinch a berth in the Sugar
Bowl by defeating l~th-ranked
Auburn .
U Georgia wins, and top;anked
Alabama beats Auburn Dec.!, the
Bulldogs and Crimson Tide would
finish in a tie for the SEC title with SOrecords . But Gear bia would get the
coveted Sugar Bowl spot because
Alabama went last season as the
league representative .
However , if Auburn beats
Georgia, then the Sugar Bowl would
have to wait foc the AlabamaAuburn result. U Alabama wins or
ties that game, then the Tide would
go to New Orleans for the New
Year's Day bowl game.
But if Auburn - which ill oo NCAA
~obation and ineligible for bowl
participation - also beats Alabama,
then Georgia would back into the
Sugar Bowl, and the Crim30n Tide
might get shut out of a bowl
altogether because by that late date,
all the major pairings would be
completed .
Alabama , sporting the nation's

longest winrung streak 1IB games 1
Wid wtnners of 17 in a row at home,
races non-conference oppone nt
Miami of Florida Saturday at
Tuscaloosa.
"It is the opportunity of a
lifetime," Miami Coach Howard
Schnellenberger said about playtng
the nation 's No.I team and trymg to
beat Bear BryWit, hill former coach
in college and the man he once
served Wider as an assistWit.
Bryant said he was wary of the
Hurricanes despite their 4-4 record,
including a 21&gt;-10 upset over Penn
State two weeks ago .
''Any time you win at Penn State,
and they woo going away, you have
done something," Bryant said .
Saturday at 6 p.m . is th e time
when bowl invitations can be

••tended officially, and many of the
choice spots will be filled then .
One bowl not wa-ried about its
matchup is the Rose . No . ~ Southern
California, idle Saturday, will be the
host team for the lOth time in the
past II years if tt beats UCLA next
week . The other Rose Bowl
participant will he either secondranked Ohio State or No . 13
Michigan . The two Big Ten
powerhouses meet Saturday at Ann
Arbor , Mich .
Both coaches, Earle Bruce of Ohio
State and Bo Schembe chler of

,.

Defense key in
annual big ga111e
ANN ARBOR, Mich . (AP) - Ohio
State Coach Earle Bruce and
Michigan Coach Bo Schembechler
both agree that defense will be the
key to Saturday's showdown in The
Big Game between the two Big Ten
rivals .
The problem is complicated,
however, by the fact that both teams
have high-powered offensive units,
each led by a quarterback having a
good season .
"The defenses will be strong on
both teams," Schembechler said .
"The two are hard to COOipare ,
however, because we've played a
little different schedule than Ohio
State .' '
Michigan enters the game 8-2
overall and 8-1 In the Big Ten after
last Saturday's 24-21 defeat at
Purdue .
"I think Ohio State's defense ill
better
than
Purdue's, "
Schembechler said _
The Buclreyes are I~ under
Bruce, who took over at Ohio State
after Woody Hayes was fired for
slugginl! an opposing player in last
year's Gator Bowl game. The Bucks
are 7.() in the conference.
Michigan must have a victory in
' the game before an SRO crowd of
1115 000 and a national television
audJence via ABC-TV. But even if
the Wolverines do manage to upset
the third..-W&gt;ked Buckeyes and earn
a share of the Big Ten title, they 'll
still need help from Indiana if they
hope to return to the Rose Bowl.
U Indiana can defeat Purdue ,
which also ill S-1 in the Big Ten, and
Michigan gets by Ohio State, then
the Wolverines will go to the Rose
Bowl. Any other scenario but that
one sends Ohio State to Pasadena .
Bruce makes no bones about the
fact that the Buckeyes want ID win
the conference championship
outright and go out west oo New
Year's Day with no blemishes
against their record .
"It's been three years since we' ve
beaten Michigan ." Bruce noted this
week , "three years since we scored
a touchdown against them' '
The Buckeyes' main weapon this

FEED THE BIRDS

*WILD BIRD SEED
*SUNFLOWER SEED
*SEEDS
*CRACKED CORN

season has been sophomore
quarterback Art Schlichter, who has
thrown for 1,323 yards and 12
tnuchdowns.
The Wolverines rely on a tw&lt;&gt;~onged attack that com bines th e
passing of quarterback John
Wangler and the rtmning of tailback
Butch Woolfolk .
"Wangler has displayed great
consistency," Bruce said, " and
Michigan's offensive line is just
enormous - huge - with a pair of
271li&gt;otmd tackles . Doug Marsh ,
their tight erd, catches the ball all
over the field and Woolfolk has
blazing speed.
"Above all , Michigan is an
extremelly well..:oached team ."
Michigan holds a •2-28·5
advantage in the series that started
in 1897. Schembechler, who has
never coached against a Bruce
team, Is 5+1 against the Buckeyes.
Kickoff for the game has been
moved up 10 l'!llnutes to 12 :50 p.m. to
acca-nmndate ABC-1V .

Mwhigan , agree that the game will
hinge oo defense .

"The defenses Will be strong on
boU1 teams. .. said Schembechler
"It 's ~n three years since we've
heaten Michigan ," no ted Bruce , in
his fir;t year as Ohw State coach

after succeeding the con troversial
Woody Hayes, "three years since we
scored .a touchdown on til em .·'
The other games involving Top

Ten teams Saturday UJclude Iowa
State at No 3 Ne braska , Memph 10
State at No.5 Vlortda Sl&lt;lte. Texas
Christian at No 6 Texa s. !'J o 7

Oklahoma at Missouri , No 6
Arkansa s at TeJ&lt;as A&amp;M . &lt;llld Utah

at No.IO Brigham YOWlg. No.9
Houston is idle .
[n the Second Ten, it will No.ll
Pitt at Army, No.12 Purdue at
lndiana, No.l4 Cle!TI900 at Notre
Dame, Washington State at No.I&amp;
Washington, No.17 Wake Fa-est at
South Carolina, No.18 Temple at
Penn .
[n the Second Ten, it willNo.ll Pitt
at Army, No.l2 Purdue at Indiana,
No. ll Clemson at Notre Dame,
Washington State at No.l8
Washington, No.17 Wake Fa-est at
South Carolina, No.18 Temple at
Penn State, No.19 Termessee at
MISsissippi and Rice at No.20
Baylor.

Chippewa.&lt;&gt; want post-season bowl .
By GEORGE STRODE
AP Sport s Writer
Central Michtgan has established
Mid-Amencan Conference football
history and now the Chippewas set
out after a big~er goa l. a txJSt-season

bowl bid .
Central Michigan lS the ftrst
Michigan member ul the 1(geam
league to w1I1 ar1 undisputed Mid -

Amencan football crown and the
ftrst to wade through II games m
b.ack-to-back seasons without los1ng
to a league opponent

"It's a real tri bute to any team to
come through the way our team has
the• year. rtaymg a full nme-game
conference schedule. " said Herb
Deromedi, the Chippewas' coach .
·· we traUed Ul five of tllose mne
~ames and twice had to make gamewrnning drives against tile clock .
"I t speaks well of the character of
thts team ."
With Central Michigan through ""
8-0-1

conference

season,

the

Ch ip pewas try to extend their
overall unbeaten streak to 16 games
at Northwest Lowsiana Satur day
night.
If they can win thl!S week and next

week at San Jose Sl&lt;lte, the
Chippewas nurse hopes of a bid from
me of the nation 's 15 post-seaoon
bowls.
Toledo. &amp;-1 -l in the league , already
ha• clinched the runner -llll spot, ""

the battle is fa- third place among
five schools : Northern Illlnolll, Ohio
Unive rsity, Ball State, Western
Michiga n and Bowling Green.
In games Saturday, Kent State ( 1·
J 1 pla ys at Toledo, Ohio (3-3)
entertains Bowling Green (~),
Northern Illinois (2--2--1) plays at Ball
State 13-4), Western Michigan(~)
at East em Michigan I1-H) and In a
awaits
non-leaguer,
Miami
Cincinnati .
Central Michigan's visit to San
Jose State could be a preview to the
maugural California Bowl In 1180.
The cha mpions of the Mid-American
and Pacific Coast Athletic
Asoocia tion will be paired in the new
post-season attraction .
San Jose State already has
clinched a share of the 1979 Pacific
Coast championship .

LA TONIA RESULTS
FLORENCE, Ky. (AP )- Love It
Away romped to victory Thursday
night in 2:02.1~ winning the $1,000
fea tured pace mile at Latonia and
paid $37 .20, $9.80 and $4.
Call The Jury placed, $4.60 and
$3.60 and Miss Pebbles, third, $2.60.
Paper Ba ck and DR's Rhythm
combined 1~ in the double for
$142.80. The crowd of 1,1S5 bet
$12,886.

AN IMPORTANT MESSAGE FROM

COLUMBIA GAS:

or

Appllcation forms for the Ohio Energy Credits program•
are now available at your nearest Columbia Gas office.
we urge you to apply for this program ... even if you
have already received heating discounts ... because the
1979-80 Ohio Energy Credits program is now permanent and expands discounts for low-income elderly and
disabled rente rs and homeowner s
Every qualifle d citizen who wants to participate
must complete and rue an application by November
30 ... whether you've received discounts previously, or
are newly -eligible ... to be part of the program.
Pick up your application form now Just to be sure
you get al l t he credit you deserve
•House Bill 857 passed by the General Assembly and signed by ;;e
Governor Program t o be enttrely admlnlstered by the Ohio ep&amp;rtment of 'l&amp;xa.tlon .
Ellglbtllty requirements for homeowners, I .enters . and houaetratler
residents:
• Al,e 64 or older In 1978
• Permanently and Totally Disabled (any age)
• Head of Household or Spouse
• Annual Total Income $9,000 or less for 1978 or 1979

•MBIAGAS
Oll

Still your best energy value.
And we want to keep it that way.

�~The

Mtsstonary Society
·~ plans annual visit

4-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday. Nov . 16. l!r/9

Goltz now Dodger,Ryan headed to Housto
LOS ANGELES I API - Dave
Goltz, the newest Los Angeles
Dodger, is also now apparently thr
highest-paid Los Angeles Dodger .
With a
six-year
contra c t
reportedly worth some $500,000 a
year, the free agent pitcher with a
96-79 career record will make m ore
than such Dodger stalwarts as Steve
Garvey, Davey Lopes. Ron Cey and
Reggie Smith .
Although that news concetveably
c"O uld start a Dodger player contract
revolt, the soft-&lt;1poken Goltz satd he
didn't feel his salary will cause any
friction on the team .
"I'm from the li'Jdwest and money
doesn't mean that much to me. '· said
the former Minnesota Twins right·
hander , not explaining regiona I
differences regarding !if•enbacks .
" I have some per9Jnal goals , and I
just want to do a good job for the
Dodgers."
While someone with $500.000 a
year rolling in can alford to be
nonchalant about money. Goltz satd
at a Thursday press conference he is
coocemed with the possible negative
aspect of his new-found ri ches .
" I'm going to try not to let it
change my lifestyle ," he said " !
don't want In go back home r Fergus
Falls, Minn . ! and have people think
I've changed because of th e
money ."
The 3().year&lt;Jid Goltz , who signed
with the Dodgers on Wednesday ,
said he does not feel there will be
added pressure on him because of
tus salary . He said, in fact. alter thi s
past season of being WJCertain about
tus future , he felt a burden has been
lifted .
"The pressure of fret' agency .
wanting to stay with Minnesota and
not getting an offer from them. that
was oo my mind a lot," he satd.
describing his 14-13 record of this
past season as an "off year ...
Goltz was the first player in the
four-year history of the re-entry
draft In be picked on the first round
by the maximum number of !3
clubs, and that plus subsequent
offers from some of the teams gave
hio agent, U.rue Har court . good
bargaining leverage
"I was reaUy surpnsed to be
drafted by 13 teams," said Goltz
"At first, we wanted a fiv~&gt;-year
coolract, but after finding out how
many teams drafted me and see mg
what some of them offered, we
decided on six years. "
Gdtz is the latest of a group of
Mlnne110ta players that Twin•'
owner Calvin Griffith has watched
turn free agent and sign with other
clubs. The list includes Rod Carew.

CORRECTION
VOTERS OF
CHESTER TOWNSHIP

THANK YOU
For Your vote and Support on

Nov . 6.

JOHN D. RIEBEL, SR.
ClERK
Pd Pol Adv

Larry Hisle. Bill Campbell and the
late Lyman Bostock
Meanwhll. , the Hou.&gt;1on Astros
will own two of the strongest right
arms in the major leagues if Nolan
Hyan joins the GlasshouSf' Gang, a
poss ibility that seerns to have
become a probability .
Houston. which already owns the
mtumtdating fastbaU of last year's
rnajO!" league strikeout king, J R
Richard . "·"s one of 12 clubs to select
Hyan m the recent free agent draft.
Other
se nous
co ntenders
rrportt•dl) werr thr New York
Yankt&gt;l'S . Tex&lt;Js n :-1n gP r s anrl

Milwaukee Brewers.

tltett .

Although no one on ~1Lher s1de was

saying mu c h Thur sda y, all
indications were tha t the 32-year-&lt;&gt;ld
pitcher plans to stgn a four -year
Astros contract for $4 million-plus
And Ryan, who grew up on
schoolboy dtamonds 26 m iles from
th e Astro do m e, sai d fr om hts
hometown of AlVUl that he had
chosen the team he would Join . llut
he wouldn 't say wtuch one
" I'U let the club make its own
announcemen t, " he satd "llut I've
made up my mmd. you can sa;.

Wl11:n H)

&lt;til

·s agt'nt , Ul(:k MI)Sb,

was as ked tn l'&lt;•w York tf the
free agent had signed
With the Astros. ho wt&gt;ver, he sai d , " I
f!rt•ba! !Jn~

can 't deny lht&gt; obvious ."

llut Moss also said he and Ryan
felt a ·dutv to let the club involved
make 1ts a n no \.Ul c~:ment th e way tt
wants to rnakc 1t. and when it wants
!J:J lll~lkt.•

il."

When Hy an declared his free a~L·nt statu s. he said the nearness of
tile Aslrodonw to Alvm was an
H!!~1rtant consHieration for hi.m
Houston has everyttung in its
I)UWH tA l s1gn me," he said.

The Houston Post reported
Thursday that the formal contract
signing would be held Monday , but
Astros owner John McMullen and
Manager Bill Virdon, said they knew
of no such plans .
McMullen,
a
New
York
shipbuilder, said no deal had been
made with Ryan, but he planned to
fl)• to Houston Monday for an
afternoon meeting wtth tus partners
on the matter .
Virdon said from his hom e in
Springfield, Mo., that he knew
nothing definite about a contract. He
sa id Ryan would make an
outstanding attraction for the

11111111 Ill II

two of tile t op leCims m the ll•aguc,"
said King.
Spurs 136, Knkks 132
George Gervin scored 33 puinl"
and Larry Kenon broke ou t of "
slump wtth 2\1 points and 12 rebound s
as San Antomo handed New York its
fourth consecutive loss .
The Spurs, who hit 52 per cent of
thcLr field goal attempts . outs&lt;"orcd
the Knicks llh5 to build a 10:1-90 lead
and coasted home . The Knirks mf.ldl
the final score close by scoring ~H·
game's last ctght poin ts after the
outcome was d~c idt"d
Warriors UO, Nuggets 102
Guard John Luca s scored a
se ason-high
27
po~nts
"'1d
backcourtmate JoJo White added IB
as the Warrior s handed Denvt•r 1L.,
eighth loss in mne road games
Golden State led &gt;6-44 at halftmw
alu,r outscoring the Nuggets 2.1-IG on
the second period and sta yed
comfortabl y ahead in the se&lt;·ond
half.

gram and party on Dec. 6 was planned during a meeting of the Women's
Mlaslonary Society of the Pomeroy
First Baptist Church.
A 6 p.m. dinner preceded the
meeting with II women and four
attending. With Mrs. Phillis
Skinner presiding, the meeting opened with group singing of "Have
Thine Own Way, Lord" and the
"Lord's Prayer'" in unison. The love
gift was dedicated by Mrs. Margaret
Balley. Mrs. Betty WUes reportcl
that the overland quota had been
sent to Miaslsaippi, and also that the
Latin American quota has been
taken care of for the year.

men

Get white hot clean

WAHMING UP- Area youths are taking advantage
of the boxmg program being sponsored by the Jaycees .
Oasses are being held atthe old senior tugh building in
Pomeroy unde r the direction of Roger Stewart.

16 GAUGE
5 pk. •2.12
410 Gauge
5 pks. '2.02

l.~&lt;1t

d! ~~.J7:.:

'lla· ftdd was c ut frum
18 I&lt;· lite tup 11 Lvwle" Thursday
.lun l'lt' 3Sin~er averag&lt;-rl 237 fur
Uw ru uiJd tu 1 hmiJ from fifth to third
h

111 ~~

,.

Steve Martin
matn\.{l\!lt-d fourth positiOn wtth 9,24:1
and Warren ~;l.' l.son dropped from
~cond tu ftf th place at 9,238, despite
rolliiig .t :HHJ ~iiiTlL' 1n h1s opemng
£Jt

!1 .237

By The Associated Press
TENNIS
WEMBLEY, England 1 AP 1 - John
McEnroe routed Britain 's Robin
rysdale &amp;-2, &amp;-2 to advance in a
$175,000 Grand Prix oournament.
In other matches, Poland's Wojtek
Fibak defeated Marty Riessen &amp;-1 &amp;4, Stan Smith came from behind to
overcome Sherwood Stewart 2-6, 6-4 .
&amp;-2 and Ttm Gullikson be.a t Hi chard
Lewis of Britain 6-3, 4~ . 6-4 .
TAIPEI.
Tat wan I AP 1
Austraban Mark Edmondson upset
l:lutch Walts 7-5, f&gt;-7,6-4 in th e seeond
ro und of the $75,000 Taipei Open.
In other action, Sweden's Stefan
Simonsson upset John Sadri &amp;-1, 7~.
Bill Scanlon ousted Australia 's Brad
Drewett 7~. 6-4 and Bob Lutz
eliminated Rhodesian Haroon
Ismail 7-5. &amp;-2 .
BUENOS AIRES . Argentina 1API
- Zenda Liess defeated Paula Smith
6-4, H and Claudia Casabianca of
Argentina downed compatriot
Viviana Gonzalez Locicero &amp;-2, &amp;-2 in
~1 e Ar~entine Women's Open .
GOLF
~ILLBOUHNE. Australia 1 API lleray Simon of the Umted States .

Pau.l Hart of Australia and Trevor
Johnson of Brttain aU shot 70s to
share the first..-ound lead at the
$150,000 Australian Open .
One stroke back at 71 were Walter
Godfrey . SU,wart Reese and Terry
KendaU, aU of New Zealand , and a
pair of Australians, Terry Gale and
Glenn McCully .
GOTEMBA, Japan I API Japan's Masaru Amano shattered
the course record with a &amp;-under-jl8r
66 to grab a two-&lt;Jtroke lead in the
first round of the $300,000 Taiheiyo
Club Masters Tournament.
Jerry Pate was secood with a 68,
along with Lu Liang-Huane of
Taiwan and Kbosaku Skimeda of
Japan .

A program oo cmtrlved Dowers
WU !liven by Melanle stethem at a
recent meetin8 of the Shade Valley
Council of Floral Arts held at the

Olester Fire Station.
Mrs. Stetbem used corn hwtb
magnolia leaves, wood shavings, ~
cluster of grapes made from
buckeyes, along with Dowers made
of sycamore balls and plnecmes to
create flower arrangements Mrs.
Maida Long presented a book review
on "Dried Flowers for Decoratlona"

FDr all your home entertainment
and appliance needs .

_Halloween party held

DOXOL SERVICE

: A HaUoween party spomored by

:the Ohio Valley Grange 2612, Letart

RIDENOUR'S

,-a~~~,

TV &amp; APPLIANCE

waa held at the Letart ComHaU Oct. 3l for all the
;children in Letart Township.
·; Prizes Wen! given to age up to six
ears. Winning were m081 original,
le Wldlllne' prettiest Robin '
.Manuel; ugliest, Marcia Craig;
: youngest, Tammy Lane.
Age sis years and up winners were
• moet original, Cmnle Mllliron;
~ty

GAS SERVICE
Racine, 0 .

:

:

OPTOMETRIST

.I

I

OFFICE HOURS: 9:30 to 12, 2 to S (CLOSE AT NOON
ON THURS . l - EAST COU RJ" ST ., POMEROY.

:

ugliest, Kevin Roush; prettiest,
Melllla Jones; most comical, Donnlta ManueL Each was awarded a
eilver doUr.

.'

L------------------------------1

CARRIER
NEEDED IN
CLIFTON, W. Va.

R

E
D

u

II Girl Scout Diary• :
I

lh (

li,ii i!'TI&lt;

II. · ·II!. It

:

MIDDLEPORT JUNIOR
TROOP 1039
New officers have been named for
the Middleport juniors wtuch meet
at the home of Mrs. Cherry Cadle,
394 Beach St. on Tuesday evenings.
They are Crystal Manley ,
secretary; Christy Farley, attendance officer ; Denise Gilbeaut, in
charge of collecting dues ; Kim Armstrong and Kim Steward, refreshment conunittee; and Penny Clark ,
Tish Jarvis, and Teresa Whittington ,
patrol leaders.
Plans were made to march in the
Middleport Christmas parade . The
girls are selling Kathryn Belch candy bars. A Halloween party was held
recently at the Cadle home and the
troop now has 18 members. Mrs . Joy
Clark and Mrs. Cadle are the
leaders .
POMEROY JUNIOR TROOP 1!76
Regular meetings of the Pomeroy
juniors began this week at the Riverboat Room of the Athens County
Savings and Loan Co., I to 3 p.m. on
Thursdays. The meetings will be
held there until school starts and
then will be returned to the school.
Any girl in the fourth, fifth or sixth
grades interested in joining the
troop is invited to attend the Thursday meeting to complete regiStration. A parent must accompany the
student.
CHESI'ER TROOP IOU
The active citizens badge was
completed by Chester Troop HH9
and work was started on the community safety badge and My CommWlity badge at this week's
meeting.
The pledge to the flag and girl
scout promise opened the meeting
with Tina Gibbs taking up dues and
having roll call. The leader assigned
. work to be completed on the badges
before the nen meeting. Work was
cootlnued on the patrol banners .
Refreslunents were served. Attending were 12 juniors and two
leaders.
SYRACUSE JUNIOR TROOP J2JN
Plans for ushering at the Junior
Miss Pageant to be held Saturday
night were made when the Syracuse
Junior Troop 1204 met at the
Syracuse School this week .
Kim Adams led in the pledge,
Angie Grueser, the girl scout pr~&gt;o
mise, and Jennifer Arnold, the
Lord's Prayer. Mrs. Shirley Cogar,
assistant leader, talked about the
pageant and noted that the girls
should be there at 7 p.m. Work was
continued during the meeting on the
toymaker badge.
SALISBURY TROOP 1%20
A practice for investiture and
rededication ceremony was held at
this week's meeting of the Salisbury
Brownies held at the Enterprise
United Methodist Church.
Ruth Fry. a cadette, was present
to work with the brownies on the flag
and investiture ceremonies, and all
of the Brownies took turns in participating in the ceremony.
During a meeting of the mothers
plans were made for the brownies to
take part in the Pomeroy Christmas
parade . A visit to a Phone Mart was

also discussed along with making
frutt baskets and coolties trays for
the elderly of the corrununity at
Christmas time .
SAUSBURY JUNIOR TROOP llOO
Marching in the Pomeroy parade
on Nov. 24 and Christmas caroling
were among the holiday acttvities
planned during a recent meeting of
the Salisbury juruors at the Meigs
Museunn .
The girls also dectded to take canned food to their next meeting for
use in a service project. Learning to
embroidery was discussed and the
girls wiU begin work on a project
soon. Two films, "How to Make Puppets" and the "Legend of John
Henry " were shown .
Costume prizes were awarded at
the recent Halloween party of the
troop held at the Museum. Mrs. Nancy Reed judged the costumes with
the prizes going to Susan Jones, the
prettiest; Brenda Sinclair, the
ugliest; Sally Radford, the funniest;
Sue Fry, the scariest; and Lisa
Pullins , the most originaL
Games were played and
refreshments served. Films on fire
safety in the home were shown.
MRS. MARGARET PARKER and
Mrs . Barbara Fry of the Salisbury
· Junior Troop, were in BarboursviUe
Wednesday for a craft workshop
held at the Pearidge Methodist
Church by the Black Diamond Girl
Scout Council.

Many were rescued , some were
delivered, and a few were purchased
for nominal fees from owners whose
methods Mrs . F:llis disapproved .
Congo the lion was gJven to her by
Ule Mesker Zoo tn !Ovansville Her
llknonth assigrunent - to tame hint
stJ he could be led on a leash
was
soccessful But the happ y liason
ended in tragedy .
Back at the wo. Congo was unable
oo adjust tn being behind bar s, and
eventually, he was put w sll-ep
More than a decade later , Mrs. F:llts
still grieves. But she say s sh e
learned long ago that wildlife does
not always end happily
" I've been at it all my ltfe . My
anima ls t ook the pla &lt;"P uf
playmates. " Mrs . F:llts sa t d. and
that hasn 't changed .
Shr still prefers the company of
anim"ls to that of people , at least
"the average bunch of d olts you
come across ."
OuLo;;poken, almost fiesty at tlmes,
Mrs. Ellis isn't un e to mince words.
especia lly where animals are
concerned .
"Tell 'em exotic antmals shouldn 't
be kept as pets, " she barked -- U1i s
from a lady with a ferret draped
aro und her neck .
" Well. " she satd slowly . · 'thts is
different My ferret goes where he
wants to . I put p"pers down for htrn
aU over my house .
"But most people wouldn't do ~tat
Most people aren 't willing to It ve tht s

watchwords.
" We do terrible ttungs to animals
in the name of love," she said .
" WeU, I treat 'em like animals . I
don't dress 'em up , I don't put nail
poltsh on ' em and I doo 't think of 'em
as little people.
" I don't take away their dignity ."

SQUARE DANCE SET
The " Hillbillies" with caller Bob
Pickett will perfonn at the Shade
River jaycees first old fashioned
square dance to be held Saturday,
Nov . 24. at the Chester Elementary
School from 8 p.m. midnight.
The square dance was erroneously
amwunced for this Saturday night.
Proceeds from the dance will be to
support the Jaycees' toys for tots
and Christmas food baskets
program . Admission is $2.50 a person with children 12 and under admitted free of charge. Refreshments
will be available.

w

JAMES BEARHS
HOSPITAIJZEO
James Bearhs. Route 3, Pomeroy,
ts a patten! at Holzer Medical Center
following his second heart attack .
Cards may be sent to Room 411 -B at
the center.

w~y . ''

:-!either, she added, are they
wil!mg to ltve with mockingbird s
with drinktng problems , nor
possums that like to "kiss. ltiss. klss
aU night long when you're trying to
get some sleep ."
But here at Humble Acres , kissing
the proprietor is permitted, and a
little nightca p every now and then is
aU right , too . so long as it's done with
digmty . one of Mrs . F:llt s'

DINNER SLATED
The annual Thanksgiving dinner
of the Pomeroy United Methodist
Church will be h·eld Sunday at 6 p.m.
"t the church . The meat and
beverage will be furnished and those
attending are to take their own table
service.

LARRY HUBBARD &amp; TriE COUNTRY RAMBLIRS
WILL APPEAR AT THE
MASON V.F.W. POST 9926
IN MASON, W. VA. ON
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1979
FROM 9 PM TO 1:30 AM

Judgea were Darla White, Cindy
Roush, and Lester Roberts.
of cup cakes, hot
Kool-Aid were served . Each
~d was given a treat.

:dogs,

c

The Middleport Business and
Professional Wtmen's aub will

Jneet Monday,

Nov. 19, at 7:30p.m.

:.t Columbia GasiiOCial rocm.

.. The YOWit! Careerlst corrunlttee
~.m be In charge ol the program.
.They are Terrie Walli:er, chalnnan,
: wanc~a Eblin, Unda Lambert,
~catherine Welsh and Jean Will .
~Special gueat wt11 be Lucy Earwood,
;J;alllpolls, district director of
~ct 17. All members are urged

CALL THE
DAILY SENTINEL
COLLECT

E
D
SAVE YOUR Rf.. i-fEHI. UPPER 10, DIU RITt &amp;
LlAD'S ROOT BEER BOTTLE CAPS FOR CHARITY

~- ~e~ c. BOTTll NG M£~p1ort, J
Onio

~·--.-------....1-------------·

Between 8:30 a.m.
and 5:00p.m.
1-614-992-2156

to

attend.

'

:!

OINNERMONDAY

:: The COAD,

99U i U or 991 -3344

noting that the book is available
from the Pomeroy Public Library.
It was noted that arrangements
had been made and taken to the
DBlry Association dinner, and that
for the Fann Bureau dinner at
Cbester, each member had made
four arrangements.
Mrs. T. J. Boler welcomed the
club to the Ohio Association of
Garden Clubs at the recent regional
meeting held recently in Marietta,
and membership cards were
tllstrlbuted at the meeting . Four
members of the club attended the
meeting.
The Christmas flower show was
tliscussed and bulbs brought by the
members will be used in a planting
at the GallJpolis state Institute .
Next meeting will be held on Nov.
3l at 8 p.m. at the fire station. Mrs.
Allee Thompson will present a program on borticulture, and Mrs . Betty Dean will give a demonstration on
assemblages. Fall leaf specimens
are to be taken to the meeting and
identified with the botonical name.
Karla Chevalier will be hostess.
Mrs. Stethem presided at the
meeting and Mrs. Chevalier gave
the devotions.

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

and a mockingbird known as the
village drunk .
" I never turn anything down - not
even the snakes," satd the gray .
haired woman . In a voice that ·s a
tToss between a bark and a growl,
she speaks with afteet1on of all wild
Ulmgs .
Besides. Mrs . F:llis, has faced far
bigger problems - like how to coo l
the ardor of a love-starved posswn
and how oo paper-train " pig
These days, she shares her home
with a ferret that has taken a shine
w a warm kitchen drawer. The
living room walls are covered with
photos of Charles Herbert , ferret No .
1, and with blue ribbons won by the
show dogs Mrs . E llis has owned .
Alon~ with the ferrets. and th e
dogs that live in her Humble Ac res
Kennel out back, there have been
three raccoons, a lion and a pig ; a
duck, a deer , a crow and a
mocktngbtrd .

TO MEET MONDAY

ALL MASSEY FERGUSON TOYS

-"''It
....

.

.

: N. W. COMPTON. O.D.

ATTENTION

SALE

399 W. Main Street
992 -2164
Pomeroy, o .
The Store With "All Kinds of Stuff"
For "'ets- Stables - Large and small Animals . Lawns
-Garde ns .

Program heard on flowers

,-----------------------------~-,

I

DEAR POLLY- W.W. asked how
much juice is in a lemon and I have a
better answer than the one you gave .
My kltchen chart of equivalents and
substltutioll8 says that for the juice
of a medltmH!ize lemon one may use
two tablespoons. I feel that if a
recipe caU. for the juice of one
lemon the measurement is not
critical and the above amount could
be used.- AlJCE
DEAR POU.Y - When okra is
tough you do not have to throw it
away. CUtting It on a slant makes the
job a cinch.
When freezinl! hamburger patties
I first spread them out on a cookle
sheet and package them after they
are frozen so they are separate and
the required amowtt can be easily
removed.- SUSAN
Polly will send you one of her signed thank-you newspaper coupon
clipper if she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in her
column.
Write
POLLY'S
POINTERS in care of this
newspaper.

By NANCY SHUUNS
Associated Press Writer
PATRONVILLE, Ind . ( AP )
Jeanne Ellis ' cozy homestead has
sheltered more than a dozen exotic
creatures over the years, includtng a
lion " who'd follow me anywhere "

~ : Refreshments

Met~~tdmy

Chester, OH .

CLOSEOUT

• •

rnat ! h a~ . · 1 n~ t H.e')sln .

BAUM TRUE VALUE
985· 3301

AslliSting Stewart are Carl Hysell and lJoyd Kmg.
Classes are held on Tuesday and Thursday from 6 p.m .
to 8 p.m . and Saturday from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m . A bout will
be held at Belpre HighSchool Saturday at 7:30p.m.

Sports briefs.

BOWLIN(;
DEEH FIEI. D, lll . 1 AP 1 :vtarshall
Holman surged from third place m!u
the lead by wmmng s 1x uf t: l ~ht
matches with a 238 a\·er,&lt;jgt• aftt·r tlw
fifth round of a $1 30,000 PrufPSStonal
Bowlers· Assoc iation tournament
After 40 games of play. HDlma;l
totab 9,400 wtth l·:d He ss ler . wh"
averaged 222 for th r row1d , 2B pm .~

sionaries about their work in the
fields .
Taking part were Mrs. Wiles " My
Daily Prayer" ; Mrs. Audrey Young,
"What is Prayer•"; Mrs. EUen
Couch, " A Prayer" ; Mrs. Georgia
Watson, " What Would You Do
Without Prayer"; Marla Foster,
"No Prayer goes Unanswered";
George Skinner, "Pray Without
Ceasing"; Mrs. Caryl Cook, "Lord,
Teach Us to Pray"; and Mrs. Skinner, read scripture from Matthew 6,
verses five and six.
A thanksgiving prayer was given
by Mrs. Maraaret Bailey . William
Watson sang "Teach Me to Pray",
and Mrs. Cook closed the meeting
with prayer.

bag can hang oo the shower rod in
the bathroom. -V.A.H.

DEAR POLLY - Do you know of
anythlnjj that will clean a white
Panama hat? -MRS. J.R.
DEAR MRS. J.R .- Of course, the
age of the hat may have something
to do with the final result. One
authority BUggesta that the hat be
entirely covered with a thick paste
made with gloss starch and water.
Put In the sun to dry and then brush
thoroughly. Be sure not to saturate
the hat so go easy on the water. POLLY
DEAR POLLY - Rather than
waste any leftover waffles I place
paper towels between the small
oquare oectlons, put them In a
plastic bag and then in the
refrigerator. The nen day. I pop
tbo8e squares in the toaster and they
taste as good and fresh as they did
ortginally. - PA'ITY
DEAR POLLY- U you need a free
clothes hamper for baby just attach
a plllowcaae to a clothes hanser with
two diaper pins. This makes a great
bag for baby's dirty things. Such a

The lady with the patience to paper
train a pig, put a bird on the wagon

pen sketches from the various mis-

Polly Cramer

Cheder, 0 .

12 &amp; 20 GAUGE
5 pk. '1.92

Infinnary for a holiday pro-

Genuine animal house...

POLLY"$ POINTERS

DEER SLUGS

STOCK

The 81Ulual visit to the Meigs
County

~- HarieU SletTett had the pr~&gt;o
gram on prayer reading a number of

LARRY STEWART works out on une of the punctung bags at the boxing
program being held at the old sc nwr ht gh school sponsored by the
Jaycees . On the left is Roger Cotte n II. The prpgram is for all boys age 10
through 25. A boxtng matc h Will be ht' ld SiJtunl&lt;lv at Belpre at 7::!0 p.m .
The program is under the dtred1 on uf H o~r r Sll'wa rt Boys under 18 must
have parents pemuss ton to partH·tpate .

• •

IN

Houston area.
When asked If Ryan 'a previollll
team, the califocnla Angel.s, had
made a serlollll attempt to retain the
pitcher, Moss ooly said, " I'd rather
not comment on that right now.
Maybe in a couple of weeks Nolan
and 1 will have somethlns to say
about tllat ."
Ryan was 11&gt;-14 in 1979 while
leading the American League in
strikeouts with 223. He will be
joining a pitching staff that includes
Richard , who hurled 313 strlkl'outs
while going 18-13 last year , and Joe
Niekro, who was the only National
League pitcher to win 21 games.

Reggie King~ another
great KC rookie star
BY ASSOOATED PRESS
Kan sas City Coach Cotton
Fit1.sunmons. who had a Rookie of
tl1e Yt!ar last season in Phil Ford,
thtnks he's got another f1ne
freshman thts year m Re~g i e Kmg .
" Someday we'll be able to send
hull uut bear-hwtting with a switch,"
Fttzsimmons said of the muscular
young forward . " I ttunk we got us a
good one I can't believe he was still
avatlable on th e 18th pick ."
F:ven though they didn't get to pick
until late in the ftrst round. Kansas
City was still abte to get the
reboundmg forward it was hopmg
for m the &amp;-foot~ King, from
AI" bama And he 's already paymg
dtvidends
King hauled down four defenstve
rebounds m the last two minutes
Thursday ntght to help Kansas City
defea t the Los Angeles !..akers 114108. f"ord prov ided the offense.
scoring 34 pomts for the second
game m a row _
In other NBA games Thursday
night . the San Antoni o S purs
outscored the New York Knicks 136132 and the Golden StaU, Warriors
beat the Denver :-luggets 120-102.
The I ,akers, who had a threeilame
winnmg streak snapped and lost for
just the third time in 13 starts, led
throughout the first half and held a
61-52 advantage at intermisston .
Rut the Kings closed the gap in the
third period and played the Lakers
even for most of the fourth quarter
before gomg ahead to stay 107-106 on
a free throw by King . Baskets by
Ford and Scott Wedman , one free
throw by King and two foul shots by
Ford kept the Kings oo top
" Tne second half we went out and
playing
aggressive
started
defense," said Ford. "And Reggie
did a good job oo the boards ."
" In college I scored a lot of pomts
but I was mostly a rebounder."said
King . ·'This was my best g"rne
reboundmg as a pro .··
Kansas City has now beaten
Phtladelphia and Los Angeles .
following a six~ame losing streak .
·· J thtnk tht s gJvcs us a lift. beatin~

Dail Sen '
.
• Y • tine!, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday , Nov . 16. l!r/9

senior

nutrition

jlrocram, wtll serve Thank.sglvtng
~ at

~~y,

Racine Satellite site on

Nav. lht noon for persollll

;:ace 60 and over. Those wishing to at' lend must register before Monday

:llY
.. calling 843-3364.
:i

I

O
.

many friends.
Sbe 1a a student at Ohio University
a member of the marching 110.

95

Over a hundred
year s agn a Bulova

was one of the most
advancEd wettc tle'S you
could buy It sflil1 s
~ Accu1ron 0LJarv
~9 2505

B . Accu tron

Ouar .L

1192946

INHOSPffAL

:;. Teresa Buckley, Rt . 2, Coolville, is
; pall,!nt at St. Joeeph Hospital.
ifarkersburg.
~ MlBII Buckley 1.1 not allowed
~ton but would Uke to hear from

•

From our

USE OUR CONVENIENT LAYAWAY

~0\91
~Jetrelers

212 E. Mlln, Pomeroy

LARRY'S
WAYSIDE FURNITURE
THIRD "' OLIVE

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

&lt;!

~

...
~

j

�6--- The Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy , U., Fnday , Nov . 16. 1979

junior Miss, Inc.
hosts parents dinner
SWlday, Nov . 11 , Southeast Ohio
Junior Miss, Inc., hosted the Annual
Parents-Sponsor Buffet at the Mei gs

Irm.
Ralph H. Werry, president, introduced the board of directors who
were vice president . Mrs. Joyce
Quilley ; secretary, Mrs. Nancy Carnahan; treasurer, Miss Calista
Searls ; board members, Mrs .
Pauline Reuter. Janis Carnahan,
Kim Taylor adn new board member
Mrs. Mmdy Hill.
Sponsors present were : Mr . and
Mrs . Gary Norris representing the
Hac me Home National Bank ; Mr .
and Mrs . George Ingels , Candy
Ingels representing Ingels Furniture
and Jewelry , Middleport .
Parents attending we" Mr . and
Mrs. Gary G1bbs, Rac ine ; Mr . and
Mrs. James Quivey, Shade: Mr. and
Mrs . l.awrence George, Po~ l and .

and Mrs . Jenni e Grinstead.
Pomeroy, representing daughters ;
Julie Gibbs, Kathy Quivey, Amy
Souder and Lynette Whittington, all
mmpeting for the Meigs County
Junior Miss title . Mr. and Mr~.
Charles Waldron, McArthur, Mr .
and Mrs. James Rishel, McArthur ,
and Mrs . Phyllis Mace, McArthur
representing
Dana
Waldron ,
Michele Rishel and Sherry Mace all
competing for the Vinton County
Junior Miss title .
The finals for both programs will
be held Saturday night, November
17. It is scheduled for the Meigs
Jw1ior High School auditorium, Middleport, but may have to be changed
due to the teachers' strike .
Other sponsors for the event are
Francis Florist, the official Oorist ,
Elliott Appliance ll, Karr and Van
Zandt ancfo~~ter Accountlng .

'

Quarterly birthdays observed
CHESTER~ua~erly
birthdays
will be observed at the Nov 20
meeting, it was ammunced at a re-cent meeting of Chester Council 323 ,
Da ughters of Amenca, held at the
hall.
Mrs. Leona Hensley, councilor .
pres1ded with 18 members attending
It wa., noted that Mrs Dorothy
R1tchie rema= in Mt. Carmel
Hospital, Columbus, and w1ll be
there four to s u weeks yet. She and
Mrs.Dorothy !...awson would apopreciate cards.
Mrs. Ada Morris thanked the
member,; who sent her birthday
cards. The Past Councilors' Clu b

,

w1ll meet Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. at
the hall with Mary Showalter, Ada
Neutzhng , and Sadie Trussell as
hostesses. Potluck refr.,.hments will
be served at the next meeting.
Attending besides those named
were Margaret Amberger, Mary K.
Holter. Erma Cleland, Goldie
Frederick, Ada Neutzling, Margaret
Tuttle, Julie Rose, Leona Hensley ,
Ada Bissell, Ethel Orr, Doris
Grueser, lnzy Newell, Charlotte
Grant, Letha Wood, Opal Hollon.
Virginia Newlun, and Esther
Ridenour .
WEEKEND AT RICKENBACHER
Mr. and Mrs . Karl Kloes of
Syracuse, spent the weekend at
Rickenbacher Air Force Base
I visiting Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
I Kloes, Kimberly , Kelly and
I Kristopher .

-1

MEIGS
I
I
EQUIPMENT CO.
I
I
1 Pomeroy , 0 . Ph. 992 ·2176
I
I

Hoon ~ -~ · S ~~n · Fr..
•
1
2
I
Closed Sunda)l
I
I Internat i onal
New Idea r
1 Harvester
EQu1pmen J

REVIVAL SET
A revival will be held at tbe Mt.
Olive Community Church, Long Bot·
tom, beginning Sunday, Nov . 18,
~---------------- through Nov . ~. at 7 p.m. nightly .

Middleport Amateur Gardeners observe
annual 'guest night' last Wednesday
Wednesday night meeting ol the
Middleport Amateur Gardeners held
at the home of Mrs. Walter Crooks
with Mrs. Dan Thomas and Mrs .
Grace Pratt as ro-hostesses .
Miss Erma Smith, president,
welmmed the members and guests
with Mrs . Marjorie Goett giving
devotions ustng "Chrysanthemums
of Compassion" as her theme. Mrs.
Rose Reynolds, program chainnan ,
also welcomed the guests and thank·
ed Mrs. Crooks for her hospitality .
She also thanked Miss Smith for
making the new yearbooks.
Mrs . Margaret Ella Lewis, nower
show chairman, was at the meeting
to talk about the Christmas show,

Friday
Sertnonette
Tbanbglvlng Medllatioo
Scrpture, Psahn 103, verses I thru
4: Bless the Lord, 0 my soul: and all
that is within me, bless His holy
name. Bless the Lord, 0 my soul ,
and forget not all His benefits : Who
forgiveth all thine iniquities; who
healeth all thy diseases: Who
redeemeth thy life from destruction ;
who crowneth thee with loving·
kindness and tender mercies.
In these verses the Psalmist calls
forth all that is within him to thank
and praise the Lord for all His
benefits and for His loving kindness
and tender mercies. David did not
forget how the Lord had crowned
him with all loving kindness and tender mercies. Nor should we forget
the goodness and the mercies of the
Lord which all of us enjoy . Every
good and every perfect gift we have
in this life comes from the Heavenly
Father above.
ln one of Dr. J _ Wilbur Cllapman's
meetings, a man rose to give the
following remarkable testimony : " I
got off at the Pennsylvania depot one
day as a tramp, and for a year I
begged on the streets for a living .
One day I touched a man on the
shoulder and said, "Mr., please give
me a dime." As soon as he turned
and I saw his face, I recognized him
as my aged father. "Father, don 't
you know me'' I asked. Throwing
his anus around me, he cried, "I
have found you, I have found you, I
have found you; Alii have is yours ."
Think of it, that I, a tramp, stood
begging my father for ten cents
when, for eighteen years, he had
been looking for me, to give me all
he was worth."
How similar this J. to the loving
kindness and tender mercies of the
Lord which accompany our lives
every day . Like the Psalinist, we
need to call forth all that is within us
to bless His holy name! - Floyd F .
Shook, Pastor, Laurel Cliff Free
Methodist Church.
MEETS TUESDAY
Mary Shrine 37 will hold a regular
meeting at 8 p.m. Tuesday . There
will be potluck refreshments .

SIMMONS OLDS-CADILLAC INC.
Pomeroy, 0 .

242 W . Main St.

1979 FORD BRONCO 4X4 RANGER XlT

MEETS SUNDAY
The Meigs County Genealogical
Society will meet at 2 p.m. Sunday at
the Meigs Museum, Butternut Ave .,
Pomeroy Dues are payable at this
time . There will be a "share time "
lor exchanging lllfonnation. All interested persons are invited .

Auto . , p s .. p .b ., air cond . Low mileilge .

'8795 00
1977 CADILLAC CPE DEVIUE ............. .. . -....... .... '7295
1977 MERCURY COUGAR XR7............................ '4195
1976 OLDS ROYALE CPL ....... ........ ......... ....... '3495
1975 OLDS 98 LS ....... ... .............. ........ ........ '2795
1975 OLDS 98 REGENCY SEDAN ....................... .'2995
1974 CAD. CPE DEVILLE ................................. '1295
1973 CAD. CPE DEVILLE ............................ ..... .. '895
1973 BUICK REGAL CPE.. ............................... '1295
1974 OLDS CUT. SUP. SEDAN....... ................ .. .. . '2195
1971 BUICK LESABRE SEDAN ...... ....... .............. .. '295
1973 OLDS. CUT. SUP. SEDAN... ....................... .. '995
See One of These Courteous Salesmen
Pete Burris , Marvin Keebaugh, George Harris

SIMMONS OLDS.CADILLAC, INC.
"You'll Like Our Quality Way of Doing Business "

GMAC FINANCING
992·5342 .. POMEROY
Open Evenings 6:00-til5 : 00 P . M . Sat.

DANCE SET NOV. %4
An old fashioned square dance to
be held on Saturday, Nov . 24, was
erronously armounced for tomorrow
night. The dance is being sponsored
by the Shade River Jaycees and will
be held on Nov. 24 at the Chester
Elementary School.

Dec. I and 2, scheduled to be held at
the Pomeroy Elementary School ti
the teachers' strike ts settled, and
otherwise at the Cheste r Elemen·
tary School.
Also present at the meeting and
speaking was Mrs . Roy Holter,
regional director. who talk&lt;'&lt;l about
ga rden club activities tn the region.
She especially me nti oned the
"Garden of the Senses" wh1eh IS a
public beauhf1cation proj ef'l at
Wright University in Dayton for tile
benefit of disabled people.
Following her tall&lt;, Mrs. Holter
entertained with several munbers.
singing and accompanying her self
on the piano. ' p. As the guests at the
meeting signed a reg1ster. Cindy
Crooks, granddau ghte r of t he

hostess, entertained with severa l
piano nwnbers .
For the re freshments, Miss Smith
was at the silver coffee serv1ce. The
table was covered with lace and
centered with an antique crystal
epergne and candles. Chicken salad,
cranberry relish, hot rolls, and
plates of homemade candies were
served. Mrs . Esther Simpson won
the door prize.
Guests were members of the Middle port Garden Club, along with
several former members of the host
club, and others im1ted to attend.
The group included Mrs. Holter,
Mrs. LeWIS, Mrs. Dorothy RoUer,
Mrs. Mary Skinner, Kathy Thomas,
Cin dy Crooks, Mrs . Juanita
Bachtel, Mrs . Esther Simpson, Mrs.

Hilda Harris, Mrs . Kathryn Rail,
Mrs. R1ta Hanun, Mrs. France.s
Wilson, Mrs. Sibley Slack , Mrs .
Michael Fry , Mrs. Dorothy Morris ,
Mrs. Helen Sauer, Mrs. Kathryn
Swanson, Mrs. Irene Davis, Mrs.
Ruth Anderson, Mrs. Beulah Hayes,
Mrs. Lennie Haptonstall, Mn .
Genevieve Meinhart, Mrs. Louise
Thompson, Mrs. Grace French,
Mrs. John Kincaid, Mrs. MBLXine
Gaskill, Mrs . Jean Moore, Me.,
Kathryn Hysell, Mrs . Beula h
Strauss, Miss Bernice Durst, Mrs.
Jeanette Thomas, Mrs. Grace Pratt,
Mrs. Rose Reynolds, Mrs . Elizabeth
Lohse, Mrs. Marjorie Goett, and
Mrs.
Crooks .

TIRE

Holiday program Nov. 28
" Hints for the Holidays," an a n.
nual program spollSored by the
Meig s
Coun ty
F:xtension
Homemakers Club, will be held on
Wednesday, Nov . 28, at St. Paul
Lutheran Church, 2JJ East Second
Street, Pomeroy . The public is
welcome to view the demonstralion.s
and displays from 10 a.m . to 3 p.m .
and from 7 p.m. to9 p.m . Door pnzes
will be provided and a 75 cents
registration fee per person will be
requested .
Demonstrations durLJJ ~ the mur·
ning Will mclude: "Chns tmas
Dough Ornaments " by Marianna
Mitchell, " Managmg Your Time
Around the Hobdays ,.. by Betty
Reese , and "Cookie Decorating" by
Sharon Stewart.
" Prepare your favonte holiday
recipe and jotn us for a potluck lunch . Please bring your own table ser·
vice. Coffee and tea will be
provided , .. say prog ram off1c1als.
Afternoon demonstrati ons will
feature microwave cookmg by J udy
Burgess. Iris Baker mak1ng JUte
flower s and wreath s. and
homemade gift JteJm by Barb&lt;lra
Hackett .
The everung session will also tn clude the cook1e decorating , jute
flower s and wr e ath s, an d
homemade gift 1tems plu.' Patt y

Committees n.amed
Committees to plan lor the annual
banquet to be held in April wer e
named when the Pomona (;ran ~e

met recently at the Rock Sp r ~'
Grange Hall .
Stanford Stockton , mas ter. named
Mrs. Elizabeth Jordan and Earl
Starkey to arrange for the spea kt• r ,
Paulme Atkm_, for the emcee and
program, and Helen Quivey for the

dirmer .
One appli catwn for membership
was read . Mrs . Jordan gave a report
on the ate contest, and Mendal Jor·
dan commented on the coal issue
which is of prune importance to
Ohio. A report on the litter bill was
given by Francis Shaeffer .
A thank you letter was read from
Billy Dyer who was selected
representative from Meigs Co wlt y
as prin"' to the State conven tiOn . He
also reported on his activities at the
convention and noted that he had
placed seventh in the state. Keith
Ashley , Meigs County delegat e to
the convention , gave a report on the
activities of the meetin g
Mrs . Atkins presented a prog ram
of readings and had a contst . con·
test . Refreshments were served by
the Rock Sr ings Grange .

WINIER

Wanted to Buy
-

CHIP W OOD P o les m,n
diame ter 10 " on IMgest
end _ S17 per ton Bunolcd
slab s 10 per ton . De livered
to Ohto Pallet Co , Rt 'l.
Pomeroy 99'1 2689
OLD
FURNtlURE . tce
boxes, brass bed s, •ron
beds , oesks, e tc , comple te
households
Wr i te MD
Miller . Rt 4 , Pomeroy or
c all997 1760
OLD COI NS . pocke t w l
c hes. cl ass r 1ngs, wedding
oands , diamonds Gold or
silver . Call J A Wrtmsley,
7477311.
WANTED
SAW
l ogs
Paym ent upon del ivery to
our yard, 7 30 to J JO week
days . B laney Hardwoods.
SR 339, Ba rlow , O H 678
79BO
A N TIQUES .
FUR
NITUR E , glass . china.
any thmg see or ca ll Ruth
Gosney, ~nliQues , 26 N
2nd, M iddle por t , OH 992

1161
ANTIQUE POCKET wa t
c hes . W ill1ng to pay top
dollar
Call
I 597 7971

SEASON

A.sbeck making a cheese ball and Jo
Wi les demonstrating candy making .
Additional demonstrations with a
holiday theme may be included if
time allows . Displays on all of the
demonstration topics will be
provided for viewing during the entire day . Babysitters will be
available at the program.
F or additional details, call the
Me1gs County Extension Office at
992.illl96
All educational programs and a c·
ttvities conducted by the Meigs
County Cooperative Extension &amp;rvJce are available to all potential
clientele on a non-discriminatory
bas1s with regard to race, sex, color,
national origm, or religious af.
filiation .

7- The Daily Senti nel. Middleport· Pome ruy, 0 ., Friday, Nov . 16, 1979

•RADIALS
•BIAS PLY
•RETREADS
•4 WHEEL DRIVE

WE HAVE
THEM All!!!!

TIRE SALES

~venings

PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF HOWARD H .
DAILEY DECEASED
Case No. 22873
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Ut- 1-IUULIAR Y

On November 5. 19 79 , tn
the Meigs Cou nt y Probate
Court. Case No
77873,
Ja nice L
Da v 1s , 451 70
Coolville Rd , Reedsv ille,
Ohto 45 772 , was a ppo1nted
E)(ecu tr i)( of th e esta te of
Howar d
H
Oi'lt l ey ,
deceased . I a tl' of 45110
(OOivtlle Rd , Re-eOsvtlle,
OhtO 4577']
Ro oe rt
E
Buck
Probate Judge
Cler k
( 11 ; 9. 16./J . 3tc

IN THE
COM MON PLEAS COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
EVAMAE PHILLIPS,
Pla1ntdf.
...,~

EDITH GILKEY.., FT AL ,
Defendants
No . 11 ,332
- NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION T o Marq1e
Capehe~rt,
Frank
F1elds.
Anna
Capeh art . ShPrman E
(apehar t ,
Juanita
Banevich, and
Blanche
Capehart ,
addresses
unknown If liv tnQ , and d
deceased the1r -unknown
helPS, dev•sees. lega tees .
eJ&lt;ecu tors. administ rators.
and assig no;, , w hose ad
dres&lt;&gt;es are unknown, a nd
the
unknown
het r s.
devtsees,
te9atees.
exe c u tors, admin1st rilf or "&gt;.
and assigns of each ot the
following, all of whom are
deceased ,
A bn e r
w.
Capeh a r t, Nelli e v Ables,
Frank Capehart , Eva L
Fields, B ert
Capehart,
Walt e r
Cape h ar t ,
Raymond Cape hart , Em
ma l. Cook , C lare nce C
Cape hart, W il liam
H
Cape hart.
Harriet
Dill ,
Da.na Ab ies, James Ab ies,
A l 1ce
Capehart,
Do n
Ca pehart , l)ert Capehart,
Jr,
Mar 1e
Donovan ,
Har ol d
Capehart
and
Gilbe rt Donovan, all wnose
add r esses are unknown :
You are her e by notified
that a Compla in t ha s been
I ited in the Common Pl eas
Court ot Me1gs County,
Ohio, case
No _ 17 3Jt
dema nd •ng part1tion of the
t ollow1ng dcscr1bed r eal
es tate, to wit
Si tuated in the Villdgt&gt; of
Syracus.e , in the County of
Mei~s . a nd State of Oh iO,
to w1 t A pan at Lo t No 36
s1tuated 1n sa id VdlaQe.
Coun ty and Sta te, beg1n
ning at the sou thwe st cor
ne r of Apple and Second
Stre(&gt;t , running South 75
fe e t , the nce West 50 fe et to
Lot No 35 . thence N orth 75
fee t to Sec ond Stree t , and
then ce E ast 50 teet t;:&gt; the
pla c e of beginn1ng . Being
the same premtses con
veyed by Solomon Crew
and wtfe to Mary M Flan
n1gdn record ed tn Vol 81 ,
page 165 of the Records of
Deed of M eigs County,
Ohio
Y ov dre not1fie d that you

Me requrred to dnswer t he
Comp ldint wllhm 28 days
after the last publi ca t 1on
The last publica tion will be
made on the 71~1 day of

De ce mber, tn9
Larry E Spe ncer.
Cler k of Court!i,
Mc 1gsCounty O hi o
t il ) q, 16 13. JO ( 17) 7, 14 ,
71. 7tc

MH · I65
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Sealed
bids w ill be
rece1ved by the Boa r d ot
County Comm 1ssioners of
Gall1a Coun ty , Ohio , at me
off tce of the Ga ll ia County
Comm+ssioners. until 11 : 00
A M , on December 4th,
1979 a nd
op ened
1m
mediately thereafter tor
f urntshing the necessa ry
labor and m a terials, Toots,
machinery a nd appli a nces
r equired for th e Annex to
Ga lllpo lt s
Co mmunity
M en t a l Health Center , 412
V1n t on
Pi k e, Ga ll i polis,
Oh io, 45631 acc ording to the
drawings
and
speci fi ca ti on5 on f i le in the
off ice of the ArC hitec t .
Cop ies of sa id drawings
and speci fi c at ions may be
obta.ne d b y pr i me bidders
from David C. Re iser , Ar
ch 1tec rs, 131 Wes t St ate
Str ee t . Athens, Ohio 45701.
(614 ) 592 5615 upon th e
deposit with them of $50 .00
•n c ash or check for each
se t of
drawings and
spec it •ca t1 o ns.
The full S50 00 deposit on
sets
of
drawings and
spe c ifi ca tions, will
be
r eturned to bidders upon
r eturn of drawings and
speci fications in gOOd con
dit1on within ( 10 ] days at
ter bid opening date .
B i ds
f or the above
described work must be
made on blanks to be fur
nished by tne Architect
Engineer
h e re i nbefore
named
Bids must be addressed
to the Gallia County Com
m1ssioners of Gallipolis,
Ohio. and endorsed on out
S1de ot enve lope the 1te ms
of work bid upon .
E ac h bid must contain
the lull name of every per son or co mpany interes ted

N. 2nd Ave.
Midd
0.

Carpenter
Personals

II[C'
lt1!f !Uti man. El' nII!!)]l
~'til yoa lll're beard oar deal• oa tbeH can!lJ
ued

1978 MERCURY MONARCH .•••••• ~ •••••• 3895
1

7 Or , dUfO . P S , P B

1977 GREMLIN •••A."~:. .':~ •••••••••••••••• 12195
1977 CHEV. NOVA 4 DR .••••••••••••••••. 13695
6

(') cy l . powe r st ee r i ng&amp;. brakes, arr condifionmg radr o &amp; 'lt&gt;ate r , real
nrce

1974 MERCURY MONTEGO MX •••••••••• !1095
P S . P B , air, aufo .

1974 PINTO STA. WAGON ••••••••••••••• "1495
Au Iamar re, .t cyl. Radio &amp; hea te r N rce

1975 MERCURY BOBCAT•••••••••••••••• 11995
.a r y

1

•

&lt;lU i omcHic, rad io &amp; heater , nr t e 1

Quilted nylon
suede like boot ,
soft so le and
sheading lining .
co lors .

1975 BUICK LESABRE. •••••••••••••••••• 11995
Loa ded 4 Dr se dan , loca l , I owner

1973 OLDS TORNADO ••••••••••••••••••• 11595

boot and
both with
similated
Choice of

Full power . 1'\0.Io tone blue

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8 P .M .

1

1973 CHEV. BELAIRE •••••••••••••••••••• , 595
1977 FORD LTD WAGON ••••••••••••••••• 12695
9 Pass . auto, P S., P B , arr

1978 DODGE POWER WAGON •••••••••••• 16995
4X 4, p S , P B ., 4 sp . go&lt;Xl cond

1970 FORD FLATBED TRUCK ••• ::~ ••••••• 1795
RIGGS USED CARS, INC.
985-4100
Ray Riggs - Chester, 0. - Ken Grover.

Prices you
won't believe!
Ladies Diamond Cluster
Rings In Solid Gold

1/!unk offering noted
The thank offering service for the
women of the churches was announced for Nov . 2!i when the
American Lutheran Church Women
of St. Paul and St. John Lutheran
Churches met recently at the
Pomeroy C'lurch.
Mrs. Rachael Downie will have
charge of the service. Plans were
· discussed for the arulUal Christmas
party to be held on Dec. 11 at 8 p.m .
at the home of Mrs. Edie King, Bradbury Road, Middleport . Members
are to take cookies and candies for
refreshment and also for trays to be
prepared for shutin.s. Mrs. Jean
Braun will have charge of games,
and Mrs. Downie the program .
It was noted that the Meigs County
Extension Service will sponsor
Christmas happenings at St.Paul's
fellowship hall on Nov . :18. The
Christmas tree for the church will be
donated by Mr. and Mrs. John Keck .
Mrs. Wilma Mees, vice preside!,
presided in the absence of Miss Erna
Jesse. The Bible study, " There is
Plenty for All" was led by the Pastor
William Middleswarth . The meeting
closed with a meditatioo prayer by
Mrs . Downie . Others attending were
Mrs. Margaret Blaettnar. Mrs. Barbara Fry. and Mrs. Kathryn Mees .

$}4
PRICES STARTING FROM

'95.00

Vi be-less

3SIVL

•n
th e
same .
shall
separa te l y stnte the pr iCe
fo r labor ano matenal , and
must be accompanied by a
bid bond or a certtt ied
c hec k on some solvent
bank in an amou nt of nof
less than five per ce nt (5&lt;1,-o) ,
tn spec if ic a mOtmts of
dollars and c ents, ot the
total of the base bid and all
add alternate bids, as a
guaran tee that if the btd 1S
accepted a contrac t w i ll oe
entered into a nd 1ts per
forman ce
propf:'rly
secured
The successful btdders.
upon recei pt of acceptance
of the i r pr oposa ls, must
furnish 100 perce nt Per
formanc e Bond and 100
percent
Labor
and
Material Paym en t Bond to
tneOwner .
Bidders shall note tha t
the Prevailing Wage Rate s
published by the Depart
ment of lndu s tr t al
Relations are to be co m
plied with throughout thi s
project .
Bidders shall also note
th!t
the
Rul es
and
Regulations on E qua l Em
ployment Opportun ity shall
be made a part ot thi s con
tract .
No bidder may withdraw
hiS bid With tn SIXty (60)
days after the actual date
of the opening thereof
If. in the opin ion of the
Owner and the D1rcctor of
the Department of Menta 1
Health and Mentdl Retar
dation or his deleg~ted
representatille , the ac
ceptanc e of the lowest bid
is not in the best interests
of all concerned, the Owner
may accept, w i th the co n
cur renc e of the Director or
his delegt'!ted represen
tative, another proposal so
opened
or
reject all
proposals and advertise for
oth!r bids. The Owner with
concu rrence of the Oi rec
tor of the Department of
Menta l Health and Mental
Retardation reserved th e
right to waive any in
f ormalities .
Should any bid be rejec
t ed, such check will be
returned to the bidder, and

Mrs. Ralph Frazier, Gallipolis,
recently spent several days here
with her brother and sister-in-law,
Mr. and Mn. Harold Gillogly and
did some research at Ohio University.
LeWIS Smith is convalescing at his
home following a stay in Holzer
Hospital following a stroke. His
daughters and sons-In-law, Mr. and
Mrs. Reece Prather, Westerville,
and Mr. and Mrs . Larry Stanley and
Anna, of Edillon, spent lllOIIt weekends here and other recent guests were
Mr. and Mn. Arthur Crabtree and
Mr. and Mn. Tad Dye and children .
Mr. and mrs. Roger Spiegel ol
Columbwl and Mr. and tlll'!l. Dan
Cotterill and Cynthia Ann' Harrisonville, \'Wted Mr. and Mrs. Rex
Cheadle.
Mrs. Glen Irwin came here and
took her father, Dale Dye, and Murl
Galaway to her borne for the
weekend . While In Marysville, they
accompanied the Irwin family to an
Ohio State University band concert
at St. John's Arena, attended church
at the Marysville Presbyterian
Church where the Irwin family are
very active, joined in a family
gathering attended also by Lucy dye
Bawngardner and friends ol Coshoc·
ton, and on Sunday afternoon, Mrs .
Irwin, Mr. Dye and Mn . Gala way,
visited Mrs. Galaway's sisll!r,
Goldie Chase, at Kettering Heartland Nursing Home near Dayton
where a niece and Mn, Mrs . Dena
Parsons and Ricky met the group.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Shiltz, local ,
have received word that their Mn,
Sgt. Everett Shilt:z, is now serving
with the Marines in Cuba .
jA. R. (Ben) Caster, Charleston,
W. Va., spent several days in this
area visiting his brother-in-law and
sister, Mr. and Mn . H. E . Starkey,
local, and other relatives and friends. Mr. and Mrs . Starkey and
daughter, Wilda Wiseman, of
Harrisonville, returned him to his
home on Tuesday .
Mr. and Mn. Frank Shilt:z are announcing the birth of a granddaughter, Daphne Lynn , born on October 16 to Keith and Peggy Lynn
Shiltz. Mrs . Shiltz and the baby are
bere while Sgt. Shilt:z is being transferred to Norfolk, Va., where he is
now slatiooed with the U.S. Navy.
Mr . and Mrs. Richard Parsons,
Dayton, visited her aunt, Murl
Galaway, and other friends and
relatives in the area .
Mrs . Walter Jordan , new
president of the Temple United

( 11)16.71

ASTRO·GRAPH
Bernt ce Bede O sol

ARIES

tress.

(March

21 - April

111)

$hlfttng condt t1ons tend to work
to yoLJr ad .. a.ntage today Yoo
could be tlrougMt tnto a jomt
ven ture that oilers you a surprts lnr;; gam
TAtJRU8
Hllv•mbe' 11, 197a
S ~:~ve•at

1htF1Q S you nave been
nopmg lor are hlo.ely to be real·
11ed th15 co m1ny ye&lt;tr Luck w111
play a part
Your pract tcal
appr oacn wHI ao the rest
SCORPIO (Oct . 24 -Nov. 221 Tne

Just north of Moab, Utah,
is the greatest concentration of natura l ar·
ches in the West and
possibly the world. So far
88 have been discovered,
but no one knows how
many more might be concealed in the maze of
canyons there . They include every type of arch,
single, double, triple, tunnels and turrets. Landscape Arch, possibly the
longest natural stone span
in the world, measures 291
feet from buttress to but·

odds IO ward you
PISCES (hb 2()..March 20)
Your tuOt; ment regardtnQ large
•!&gt;SLJeS tS qwte keen today YoLJ
should be abte 10 S6e the wMole
ptcture where other s see only
sma ll fragment s

mo1e trytng

the S1tua h on the
m o re pr onounced your le&lt;tder ·
Shtp qual1 t1es wtll become You 11
kn o w now t o d o th tngs as they
stl o uld be d o ne l odaJ' Fmd ou t
m or e ot wha t lte s ahead tor 'fOU
m t h e year lollowmg )'Our btr1h ·
day tly ~endmg to r your copy o l
A str o·G rap F1 L e tter Matl $1 lor
ea01 lo Astr a -Graph , Bo~ 489
Rado o C•ly Stalion N Y tOO 19

Be sure to speu ly tw tn dare
SAGITTARIUS (Npv . ZJ-O.c. . 21)
Amb111ons you hope to real1ze

can be ach1eved tod ay su r pns ·
mgl y perhaps n o t trr the manner
wh tCh you ltrst en.,..tsloned

CAPRICORN (D.c . 22 -Jan. 1i)
Good lh tngs could ha ppen to f OU
t oday thr o ugh lrtends and
acQuamtances you know soc.at.

ly Be aler t lor profitable ltps
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-F•b . Ha) Be
tenac1ous Put for th your best
eff or t but also trust )'Our llJck tn
co mo~1t11ve
'iltualtons toaay
n~m P Fnrlune ,e; slanltn(J the

(April

10-Ma.,

20)

Involvemen ts where you will be
work1ng 1n con tuncllon wit h part ·
ner s wtll be 1he ones ottenng t11fl
largest rewards today tney
could even De ot a SOCI I I nature
GEMINI CM•r 2, · June 20) You
ha"e the knack ol ut tltzlng your
talents to tl1e•r fullest advsntage
Thus. you should be abte 10 take
small opponuntt1es and turn
them tnto large ones
CANCER (June 21 -July 22)
Don ., deny your sell any opportu ·
n1t1 es lor SOC I8 1 expreS!IIOn
1oday You could be the 11te ot
the party 11 you let your hatr
down a btl
LEO (July 23- Aug . Z2) Trea t
matters whtch mean some tMtng
to you ltnanc18tl}' or mater~ally
optlmtsttcatly today Your P051 ·
ttve attrtude wtlt carry yOlJ over
the top
VIRGO (Aug_ 21--S•pt . 22 ) To
adva nce your sell· tn terests
tod ay let your sense ol numor
supersede your assert•veness
'f our w tt has mo• e power tnan a
punch does
LIBRA (S•pt. 23-0ct. 23) Your
poss1b1hhes lor per son al gam are
e-.cept ronal ly stron'il tod ay
Breaks cou ld come umupect ed ty
thr OLJQh unLJSual sour ces
+NEW SP "-PER HolE11PR tSf

~ss

... 1

LEGAL NOTICE
sea led bids for electric
energy
to
operate
munici pal electric motor
dri ve n pumps u!ted in
Sewage Disposal System in
the Village of Pomeroy,
Ohio, for~ term of ten (10)
years from and after the
22nd day of December,
1979, will be received by
said Village at the oHice of
the Clerk of the Board of
Trustees of Public Affairs
until 12 :00 o' clock noon on
the 30th day of November ,

1979. Each bid must con ·
ra i n the full names of every
c hec k in the sum of $50.00
d rawn on a solvent bank, as
a guarantee that if the bid
is a cc epted a contract wi II
be entered info. AI 1 b ids
must be
based upon
specifica t ions adopted by

the Council of said VIllage

on me 14th day of Novem ·
ber, 1979, and now on file in
the office of the Clerk of the

Board of Trustees of Public
Affairs, copies of which
speci fi ca t ions will be fur
n ished prospective bidders
upon application. The right
is reserved to reject any
and all bids .
8 y order of the Board of
T rustees of Publ ic Affairs
of the Vi l lage of Pomeroy ,
Ohio .
David Nardei

Clerk of the
Board of Trustees
of Public Affairs

16 ,

I I I)

73,

$12

CONCERNED MEIGS
LOCAl STIJDENTS
AND PARENTS

Illus trations en la rg ed l o snow delart
LAY -AWAY NOW FOR CHRISTMAS

CANDY'S CLASSIC COLLECTIONS

INGELS FURNITURE &amp; JEWELRY
Middl e port, 0 .

MEET AT 1:30
SATURDAY, NOV. 17, 1979
POMEROY PARAING LOT
To rally against the school
strike . Please help us .
Schools have to be reopen ·
ed and we're the only one
who can do it.
Ann Morri ~
Concerned Par~n1

2t c

Harrisonville
Mr. and Mrs. James Davis of
Chauncey and Joyce Waggoner,
AthellS, were weekend visitors ci
Mr. and Mrs . Clair Waggoner.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Ball and
Chuck Ball and girlfriend, Colum·
bus, spent the weekend with Frances

NEw '79 CHEVY 4 WHEEL DRIVE
WITH LR.P. CONVERSION

YOIIng

Mr. and Mrs. Dutch Hewitt ,
Columbus, were Sunday dirmer
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Bob Alkire .
Mn. Bessie Graham spent the
past week with her sist..r, Helen
YoUJJf! of Charleston, W. Va., and
visited ber brother, Hubert Price a t
a Charleston hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Bud Douglas visited
his sbter, Mr . and Mrs. Walter Huff.
man on Sunday afternoon .
Otis McGrath and friend were
Sunday dinner guests of his parents,
Mr . and Mrs . Earl McGrath.
Mr. and Mn. Jeff Birchfield and
son, Albany visited his mother and
grandmother, Rosella Birchfield
and Nellie Borgan, Sonday.
Methodist Church Women's Society,
attended the district workshop m
Athens .
The Carpenter Baptist Church
held its aMual supper and bazaar It
was well attended.
Goldie Gillogly of Albany was a
Sunday dinner guest at the home ol
her oon and daughter·in-law, Mr .
and Mrs. Harold Gillogly and
famJly . Her son-in-law and
daughter, Mr. and Mrs . Ralph
Frazier, Gallipolis, were also guests
at the Gillogly home.
Edith Talbert, Salem Center,
visited Ida Denison and took her to
her home where she spent the afternoon and evening before returning home .
Dean Wooten, son of Mr. and Mrs .
Anderson Wooten , who was
seriously injured in a motorcycle ·
car accident remains in critical condltloo in a Parkersburg, W. Va .,
hospital .
Earl Starkey, Bertha Crippen, Mr .
and Mrs. Eldon Barrows and Mr.
and Mrs . Mends! Jordan, Columbia
Grange, attended Me1gs County
Pomona Grange at Rock Springs
Grange .
Mr . and Mrs. Arthur Crabtree at·
tended the Gideon Supper at Baker
Center, Ohio Uruversity , Athens , on
Saturday evening and also attended
Bishop Day on the District at the
Firat United Methodist C'hurch in
Athens on Sunday afll!rnoon and
evening .

-

STAR STRUCK-

A1 r co ndit ioning , lock i ng diff.. 350 eng ine. automati c trans., speed con ·
trot. tilt st whe-el , aux f uel tank, chrome gr i lle &amp; gril le guard, H . Duty
battery, spec ial wheel s, tires. roll bar, lights , CB, AM· FM stereo,
tape Special Interior Trim

RETAIL $13,738.00
CLOSEOUT DISCOUNT$ 2,238.00
YOUR

SAVINGS PRICE

'11,500

NEW '79 BLAZER 4 WH. DRIVE CHEYENNE
5 10 -15

white lelfered tires, Rall y wheels, fold down R . seat,
automatic, power steering &amp; brakes, air, t int g lass, co mtortilt , cru ise
con trol , lock tng differentiaL '1 tone charcoa l &amp; wh ite, radio &amp; R .
SPe a kers A sharp un1t ·

'9782

=i;"~~.

NEW '79 CHEVY
8' FLEETSIDE
Retail $5811 .75 Close Out Price
'5149

6 cy! engine. std trans . AM radio , S radial tires, mirrors, P . steering.

ARRIVING SOON. NEW
LUV 4 WHEEL DRIVE TRUCKS

ALSO NEW '79 CAPRICE,
IMPALA IN 2 AND 4 DOOR MODELS.
ALSO MONTE CARLOS

FUU WARRANTY - GOOD SELECTION

SAVINGS TIME
IS NOWJ

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
992·2126

"Your Chevy Dealer"
Open Evenings fil 8 p.m.

POMEROY'

SMITH NELSON MOTORS, INC.
500 E. MAIN

PH. 992·2174

POMEROY, OHIO

Let Smith Nelson buy you, your Thanksgiving Turkey . If you buy a new or used
car priced S500.00 or more now till Thanksgiving we will buy your turkey for you
up to IS lbs . Shop Smilh 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 .

1977
Ford Pinto 2 Dr•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• '2995
4 Spd . c yl. , e:. &lt;. C'llent snape
1977
Toyota Celica GT 2 dr••••••••••••••••••••••••••• '4795
Sspd ., AM FM Gr ea t ec onomy
-4

1976 Chevrolet Luv Pickup ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• '2895
"cyl , 4 spd ., 30,000 mtl es Sa le Pr tced

ATTENTION

N. 2nd Ave .

shovld any b1d be acte pled ,
suc h c heck will be r e tu rned
upon the proper e&gt;:e c ut1on
and se cu ring of the con
tra ct .
Se parat e bids shnll h e
received f or · 11 General
Constru cti on, 1) Plumb1ng .
3) Heating, Ven tl lattng and
Air Condtt1oning, 4 J El cc
tri ca l
Approved as to form
s Joseph L Catn
Pm~P c uting Attorne'(
J oseph Catn
Gallia County
Prosecult ng
A ltorney

1977
Chevrolet
Vega 4 cyl ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• '2595
4 spd .,
th e perf ect second ca r
ma~e

1976 Chevrolet Vega Estate Wagon .•••••••••••••• '2495
A

c. . 5 spd

, 4 cyl., v•ny 1top, one ot rn e ctpa nes t

1975 Pontiac Catalina 2 dr••••••....•.••.•••••••••.••. '2295
V inyl l op , Rally I I wheels TH •s •S one of the
f 1 ne~t

1975 Chevrolet Caprice 4 dr......................... '2295
A C clo th,ntenor . Dinc ke)( fe r ~or vouwan ·tt i nda cle aner .

AS IS SPECIALS CHECK WITH US FOR THESE PRICES
1973 PONTIAC LEMANS
1972 PONTIAC 4 DR.
1974 CHEVROLET NOVA
THE FRIENDLY DEALER
Come in or call one of these Friendly Salesmen: J . D. Story, Jimmy Deem or Bill
Nelson .

'

�t-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy . 0 ., ~-riday. Nov . 16. 1979

MATCHED HI-FI
COMPONENTS

•

Your Best Buys Are t'ound In the Sentinel Classifieds
WANT AD
CHARGES
I~ WIJI""dll lW

Idly
Zdlya

FROM

Undfor

Cull

Ida"

aday11

L'harge

1.00

1.~

1.50
1.11
3.00

1 9(1
2.1:1
3 . 7~

LARRY'S WAYSIDE FURNITURE

•

THIRD &amp; OLIVE STREET

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

Ill memory , Cant of ThaW
.and OOtuary : 8 ('(!htl per word,
$3 .00 muUmwn. Cash tn ad ·
MobUe Heme aa.le&lt;~ and Yard
-..Ies lin" IK'~ oruy with
cuh with order. ~ CUlt charge
lor 1118 carrymg &amp;1:. Nwnber In
care of The Sentinel

: The Publbher ~r.r~ tht
right to rdl.t or rt.)ect any ads
deemed
object ional
The
'Publisher wtll not be responsible
"for mote than Oil"' IJlCOrrect ifl -

I

l

Kin,~;

acrtJm .

.j
STEREO RECEIVERS
SR-508

7 W,t'h

-

-

PRECEPTOR Chapter, Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority preferential tea
canceUed.
MONDAY
MEIGS CoWJty Churches of Christ
Men's Fellowship, 7:30p.m. Monday
at Middleport Olurch of Christ wilh
Carl Hysell, Meigs Juvenile officer,
as speaker and he will also show a
film.
REVIVAL now in progress at Mt.
Olive Community Church, Long Botlim, through Nov. 25, at 7 p.m .
nightly.
EASTERN ffiGH fall sports banquet Mooday 6:30 p.m. Tickets may
be purchased fr001 John Boston at
school office or at door. Tickets are
f'each.
SAUSAGE PANCAKE Super Monday at Heatll United Methodist
Chuch, Middleport from 4 p.m. to 7

p.m

r tJII·S IZe Turnta ble . Umbr el la s plfldl~ tor playing up
to 5 records automat1c a11y o Ce ram1 c c artr1dg e.
d ta m ond sly Ius • V1scous da lllped cue/pa use contr ol
• STy lus pre ssu re J d iu Si ment o Wal nut -gram vmy l
veneer ba se du sTcover 45 rpm adapte r
• D1rnen&lt;;10n&lt;; 18 W" w x 711-i"' h x 15v..-· d

51Tl2

CERAMIC C LA SS E S. Mon

Aulo ,

day , Thursday , 7 9 pm ,
Tu esd ay and Fri da y 2 4
and
5 7 pm . Orehel 's
Ceramics, 59 N 2nd Ave .

ANYONE HAVING bought
baby furniture at 1 price on
Nov. 12 at Dick Waever's
residence , please co nldct
99? ·3.502 immediately

CERA MIC CLASSES star
ting Nove mber 17 each
Saturday, 6 30·9 : 30 p .m .
Beginning and advanced
ce ramics .
Drehel ' s
Ceramics, 59 N . 2nd Ave .•
Middleport. OH Phone 992 ·

27Sl .

)JI.J y s

0974

· r r r

r

--f~

I

• •

I

4

I

_h~

lf) .;, ., , •

J

CD-48~

LS-71 0

f

\
LINDA BROWN

SALE 1139.95

Front loading Stereo Cassette Deck

...

0

0
-

ON YOUR
BIRTHDAY
There are some th~t we
meet in passing
And forget them cas soon
as they goThere are some we
remember
with
ptecasure
And feel honored an'"'
privile9ecl to know And You are the kind of
a person
Who
leaves
lovely
memorie~ behind ,
And special days like
your Birthday
Bring
many
fond
memories to mind And
memories
are
pricelss possesions
That t i me can nev er
destroo;
For it i~ 1n happy
remembrance
The heart
finds
1ts
grute~t joy .
Loved cand Misse&lt;l by
Family and Friends .

SALE '89.95

10" woofe r
ln!d ra nge 3" tweeter. E lec troni C
,- ruso;.over nerow rlo:. • Fr ont mounted speaker s
• Rernovat:de scu ptur ed !oam grille s o Wal n ut -gra1n
" '' 'Y ' ~pncpr r. a1 J IIIf'l ~ Wlltl pro f e ss ~onally fl ntshed
:j d'fles o Protec t,ve scree ns OYe r eac h speaker o Max
f l i'lnd l,ng l.ap 25 watt s RM S • Impedanc e 8 ohms
o Tenr ·tnal bo ard to r e 1!her RC A 1a ck or sc rew type
o, nea ker conne c11nn o 01mens,on s 26"" h x 161;,·· w
• 'jl ;&gt;"" ·:::l

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, ,,., !~ (J'·,

i ~'
I

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n ppPi'PP r • •

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. oW

•&lt;11!,1&lt;, l·rr H{· HI H1·11 · l I d'"&gt;l
!
r,·. 1' ·1 r'·n~ l&gt;l (• I •· 1 11•0 P.t u'&gt;• o [; 'j ld ' •tl •
~·lr' -' t' .', '' • f&lt; , .•,, ' I r" I 0 LttJt· '-, • • I 1 •, ,.. ' I
o (Jt 1 1
l ' I• I) ·~'lJ 'JH·Jo·to., ./,II Ro· r •' !• nq I :1· -tl I
•ljh l • I • ' I 1 I•· •: ri\ u•llo'1un• I• 111 ° l•to )o, I•Jrll I• 1.;• 1
R1• r 1 rrt •tq I r&gt;vr~l · 1,nt rol&lt;:. l nr rt yl lt 11 1 " 11 , ' ,p,r• r·
o A,.r , : :o r. n o .J,j• t..·, r. • 11 · ,1,,, .,r ""· •,1, ·· ·r
I &gt;•it tlpllf l ·o·•, IIIIP 111 p11l dr ill I 111 • •ulp,: • ln. I rrJI' &lt;;
•1, " )\lh · II·', .~ nd iJu oll•·
,., ,, , .. , • 1)11''• 110.,1(111' 1 1\)1~ ··
t-. •

6'•"

r

•

'U""rl

lS-720

SALE 5124.95

Regular 5149.95

1-

. em

Juke Box With Adjustable Disco lights
• liM f M FM ~\ Ho •r 'i&gt; • PI·•P' ,., ,n, IJu&lt;l l &lt;11 d\JIIIIn JI I(
rndl tual /i 1'J • t-- li1 tlf' nla·,..t~ r o f u' ~·I'' BSR re( Ord
r 11drlgr•r .._.,Il l fl odrll(·nl1 ~,tylus uf· 11au Sr: lf'Yt:r &lt;; tyltJ"i
P'"',&lt;;ur•· adHrc:.trnenr • P&gt;y h•·•J• .r,r ''' Jhl1ng systern
b r·r I ll(] d•·t l .. t,J f lf·fl'-,'· f ha n ~ .. &lt;, I• I'· · · ' 11"1/ y ot
•nu•;1 o Rotary C.• ll lr orl~ l r. i"l 1 r&lt;t nt •·TI&lt;.,•I )' 1 11ghtt,
• I"· • 1 · j Ad I' t•l g ra• n ~ 10 € IJ&lt;illt •~ o '~1" ,,..,,., t&gt;&lt;H ~
i •· tr•' t •·" ·•·1 ·,.
•d' ' ' d" '9 '" o Tapr• ..,rr•llti.JI • ·"'" II
• lnr lt l')t ". hr&lt;,l
v~&gt; r d "l rp 1n c~d ,lp'"' o UonJf:ns1on~
;1

t\t· " .

~(

n • . ,. ..

t

SALE 110.00
1

Regular $149.95 Set

:oo

lo·
II

Card ot Thanks
1 WISH to express my sin
cere thanks to the friend s
and ne i ghbors. Also , to the
doctors ana nurses at the
Holzer Medi ca l Center for
their thoughtfulness and
kindness dudng my la t e
husband,
Leonard
Van
Meter's illness. Forever
grateful ,
Wif e,
Mr s
Leo nard van Meter and
Ch ildren

Deluxe Three-Way Speaker System
10" woo ler r, .. m1d ra ng e J'" tw eete r. elec tro nt c
r rosso ... er ne twork • Fron t mounted s peak ers
o Rern o ~a ole sc u lr ttur t-&gt;d y r1lle c lo Th • 8nll1an ce
l_ont •o l o Wa ln ut q ra1n v1ny l ve nee r cab, ne ts
o P·oleo:- t1 vf' SU f'f&gt;n s ove r eac h speake r • Imped ance
R u ~ 1rrs • Ma, Hand l,ng Cap 2S Wa!s RMS • Sc rew
te1n,,na 1S and RC A 1ac~ o 0 1rnens1·:..&gt;rlS 26" h x 1S" w
• Y11;:o"' d

I
I

Notices

J,.~ --·

MEIGS
COUNTY
HUMANE SOCIETY 992

SALE 299.95

6260 Pets a'lailable t or
adoption and information
service

SALE '74.95

5

Regular 5379.95

G UN SHOOT
EVERY
S UNDAY 1 PM. FACTORY
CHOKE ONLY . RACINE
G UN CLUB .

Deluxe IJ. Track Recording Console Stereo
11- Track Recording Console Stereo
• (ourtl ry frf'n ch crt&gt;dE&gt; n.t.a l•n•\hpd on l 1~hr no~&gt; -r""' .,.. ,rh
\ plu rmbo\\t'd ll!l
• 1'\M / fM / rM (, f f'ft"'"O r(' CPovl'f w ,th hu1 l! &lt;M dull llnil fl( ,
manu~tl 6-tril clr. lApP Jli.I Yt'r (rN o rdrr
o .A.uiO·, Iop wtth ond,c at or lo ~ ht
• At ( R('C0 rd•ng hu nnn w11h ,nr:i ,r atn• ltght
• Fuii ·StlE' BSR record chilngrr w+ft . do amond ~l;· lv\
cue/ pilu ~~ control .tnd ~ r yl u~ flf £"\\ U rt' .a rlJu,tmf'nl
• 8" du ocone ~peoll.('r

• Headphone and m,crophoM 1.a clt:s
• Aul! sp~.ak. P. r and Tape Output 1ad ~
• Hind -rubbed , oven -c urpd ftnt~h fo r l .1 ~11 n~ hr.wty
• Solid wood top and bo llom ra 1 l ~ o~nd in!f'tn al fro~mm~

• bclu~ ~ ve on e- p•e ce wrap -around h1gh
poly\tyrene decorat rve area
0 Splii!Op lid
• lnclude&lt;J f&gt;A·o mtnophone-s
o Dimension ~ · 2&amp;" h x 45 " w ~ IB'h

Regular S419.9S

mr •cr

• Country Fren ch credenu f1n1 \ hed •n fru1twood
w1 th ~pitt embos~ ltd
• AM / FM/ FM -Stereo tr&lt;:e1 ver vmh butlr -m ,;automa.t1c/
manua18-trick tape olaver / reco rder
• ALC R:e&lt;:ordmg button wnh md totor light
• Pause, repeat, f. fwd, button s
• Fu1l-11Zt BSR rl?(ord changer with d1amond sty lu~ .
c ue/ pau~e contro l. stylu&lt;t pre&lt;t&lt;ture adJustment, .an It-skate
• 10" woofer, r tweeter . c ross-over network
• Speaker selector sw1 tches for 2 idd~t,orwl ~•lerna/
speaken (not mcluded)
• Headphone and mr cro phonr iacks
• hpe/ Aull. Input , hpe Output and .A.u~~: \pea Iter JiCks
• Hand· rubbed , oven-cured frn1sh
• So lrd wood top t!nd bonom ra1ls lind 1nternal fr1m1ng
• One-p1ece- h1gh 1mp•ct polystyrenE decorative area
• Include-s two ml&lt;rophone\ and Tit~ uor18e well
• 01mens1om · 27 " 1111. 55 "' w K l8 V1 " d

NO
HUNTIN G,
no
trespassing with no ex
c toptions on my property
J udy McGraw Self
G UN
SHOOT .
Ra c 1n e
Volunteer
Fire
Dep t
Everv S-aturday . 6 . 30 P m
At their building in Bashan
Factory c hot&lt;.e guns on l y
G UN SHOOT every Sunday
12 00 Factory choke only
Corn HoiiCMro' Gun C lub ,
Rutland . Proceeds oonareo
to Boy Scout Troop 149 .

G ET TODAY "S ~Ail,KET
V ALUE
FOR [)YOUR
GOLD OR SILVER . CON
TACT
F.O
BURKETT
BARBER
S HOP. M ID
DLEPOIH

d

SALE $349.95

FEMALE

hound

Regular S469. 95

Walke r

Flatwood s

area

247 312 S
LOS l
BLUE Ti c k f emale
coon hound in Ball Run
Bunker HIll area
Roxie
belonQS to my son John
Smith, b ut has col lar with
Osc ar T . Smith, Rt . 2,
Pomeroy . 992 559A , reward

WANTED :

OPERATOR

wittl rig that can auger post
hol es 8 " diameter and 42"
deep in sha le hill with 16"
soil cove r Reply Bo x 729
K . c o the Daily SentineL
Pomeroy , OH 45769.

Yard Sale
SALE . Lots of c lothes . soc
dnd c hedper Any evening
alter 5 at 364 E Ma i n St .
Pomeroy. 2nd house above Fran&lt; IS Fl or rst
BA C KY A RD
S ALE
Mulberry HIS , next t o
ceme t e r y 10 am to 5 p m
Sat, 17th Ra 1n c an cels

Auctions
BIG AUCTION every Wed .,
7 pm Hartford commun1ty
Center , Hartford , WY . 4
miles
above
Pomeroy
Mason Bridge.

-·--

~--;:-:,-;::--

Pets lor Sale

~6800

s.

1976 GMC 3 .- ton pi ck up,
P . S., P B . AM FM radi o

23,000
70SS

miles

$3,000

1977

DOD GE

992

ROYA L
Mona co wa gon. 4-40 v 8,
P . S., P. B . . A. C. . t i l t wheeL
AM FM stereo, 5 steel
be l ted radials , chromium
plated roof ra &lt;k . Excel lent
cond i t ion . Ideal for large
fam i ly and haul ing c am
pe-r . Ask i ng $3614 fi rm . Call
between 5 and 7 p .m 992

7019
19 74 CHEVY 1 1 t on pi ckup,
3.50 auto. P S.. P B . runs

gOOd $1100 . 1974 Mazda
pickup, Rotary e ngine, o4
speed, AM FM radio, run s
gOOd, $1650 . 992 7841

1974

FORD

MU STAN G

Ghia. auto , 6 cyl., low
mileage .
$1900 . 614 942

FORD

1914

MU S TANG

and Western Sadd les and
harness
Hor se s
and
ponies Rulh Reeves 614
698 3290
Barding
and
Riding Lessons and Horse
Ca r e prOdu&lt;ls
w es tern
boo t s
C hildren' s SlS.50

Adu lts $2'1 .00.

POODLE

GROOMI NG .

Judy Taylor . 614 367 7220

SALE '399.95
I

KENNELS

Boarding, all breeds. Clean
i ndoor outdoor
facilit i es ..
A lso
AKC
registered
Oobermans . 61A 440 7195 .
THREE
WELL
Tra i ned
beagles 3 pups , my broo r

stoc k 7&lt;2 2S2 1

-vYanted to Rent

For Rent
COU NTRY MOBILE Ho me
P a rk , Route 33 . north of
Pom erov Large lots Call
W7 ! 479
3 A ND A RM lu r n 1s hed ap
ts pho n e ~ 2 5434
TRA ILER LOT
Ca ll 742 3 111

21

FD DT

TRAILER

one
U t i lil ie\
svra c u se 992 2897

Wh ite

FOR

SALE :

1973

Dodge

Charger , good co ndition ,
$750 Larry Hi II. 985 3335

1973
PLYMOUTH
ROADRUNNER . J40 4 s p ,
new tire s a n d mag s 92 77bB
or 991 5671 .

For Sale

FREE GRINDING

AT POMEROY
LANDMARK
This
week

EME R GE N CY

P O W ER

alternators own th e b es t
buy WIN POWER Call 513

788 7589
APPLE S

ClOER

HONEY
F 1tzpa tr 1Ck Or
c hard, S tdt P Route 689
Phone Wdk eSYdle.
669

378S

LIKE TO DO baby s ,ttinq 1n
my home 8 5 99'1 744B

ANYONE WIS H I NG an old
barn torn down and haul ed
away free , c a l l 985 4365 .

_ _Qi_veawa_y
H A I R ED

SMALL KITTEN S. 3 m a les

,s

Mobile Homes - Sale
1972 L YNN HAV E N 14x6 5 3
bedroom
1970 Y i ndale l2x63 with ex
pando , 2 bed f
19 70 New M oon 1?.:60 3 bdr
1973
Skyl i ne
1h 55
1
bed r oom
1972 Bonanza 11)(51 . 2 bedr

B &amp;

S MOBILE

SA L E S, PT

HOM E

P LEASA N T .

wv 304 67S 4424 .

MILE OPEN
8 · 30 til S M· F

8 : 30 til11 Noon
Jcadt W . Carsey
~
Mgr .
~--·
Phone 991 -2181

Vr.. ~

Can Be
Purchased with
low Down
Payment
Call Joe Young
At
992-2133

HOUSE COAL . lump or
stoKer, w i ll de liver 74'1

2183
WDDD STOVES by Better

N Bens,

G lttss.v iew, Leyden
Hearth, Old Timer , Fire
view .
Suburban
mobile
nome wOOd heaters, UL ap
proved, and Suburban fur
na c emasters .
Outdoor
Equipment Sale s, Jet . Rts .
7 and 35, Gallipol is. O H .
Phone 446 3670

THREE m e n ' s su, t s, s ize s
41 and 42 L1ke new Phone
992 7331
RUTLAND H AR DW ARE ,
P lumbtng, H ea t,n g, E le e
: al an d Auto Supl ies 822
Main St, Rutland. O H
Plasri c sewer and drain
pipe , 250 fl . c oil, S90 Cu t m
any lengths, 37c a 11 'J.O,OOO
BTU
Circu l ating
g as
neater. \208 K mg 0 H ea t
five room
coal h eat e r .
\1:26 .95
Bond T i re
auto
repa1r
k i ts
w 1th
1n
stru c lions . A lso Bo nd T1 1e
body putt.,. , SQ a gal Ra p 1d
repair,
Sll 99
gal
Busin esses
c all
to f
wnolesale pr i ces
APPLES - ROME be au t y
appl es at $4 pe r b u Best for
apple butter Call b69 37 85 .
F i U~atr ic k
Qr cn ard , SR

689
EARLY AMERICAN sofa
$125 . 304 882 29S8
LUMP
l ocally
7126

COAL. deltve red
$39 per ton W ?

MU ST SE LL Ha ve many
baby 1tems le ft, c o nsole
stereo, sew i ng ma c h in e

P lease ca ll992 3502
TWO

FIRE S TONE

Town

and Country sn ow tires
w1th s tuds , t ubel ess S1 ze
E78 14 S25 tor bot h 992
368J or 1628 unc oln Hts
1952 WIL LY"S J eep tru ck
41&lt;.4 v
body good. runs
gOOd 99 1 192 A
BEAUTIFUL M I NK het l
Dark
ran ch colo r
S1 5
L adi es size 10 dnd
1'}
des1gner labe l c l oth es N e w
cond i t ion ~2 3283

HOTPOINT
and

GENERAL
ELECTRIC
Headquarters
Appliances
"Sales &amp; Service

Pilid

POMEROY
LANDMARK

-

Jac .. W . Carsey
Mgr .
Phont '92 · 2181

Real Estate lor Sale
1972 !Zx60 mobile ho me
$5900 . 949 ·2860or949 280T or
see Charles Bissell , Rt 1.
Long B ottom Ba s h an
OWNER WI LL sell .4 0 a cr(&gt;S
or
more
wdh
1978
Ho tlyp ark
mobile h ome
14)(70 w1lh rxpand o, p lus
14)(36 lrt rn ily
r oom
at
tached .
fully
c arpe ted .
rural water , so mP pil st urf' .
l encc.
stand1 ng
t rm ber .
"&gt;OITP
walnut. sun de ck
Ir on I and ba c k Lo ca ted on
New Limit Rd Call 614 747

liB2

l

·-

MONTGOMERY

PHONE 742-2003
POMEROY
4
bed r oom home on Ea ~ T
Ma1 n Street
Modern
kitchen. l t·v, ng r oom
bath and u fil1l y
Lo w
nea lm g bills Alum,num
s iding rtn d &lt;; torm w1n
dows
E XCE LLE NT
BU Y itt only $'15 .500 00
MIDDLEPORT
LOIJC
ly 5 bed r oom hom e, i
ba th s.
11vrng
r oom ,
fami ly
room , d 1n1ng
room ,
ut1 ! 1fy
and
mod e r n ktf chen
Full
bd'iPm en l w i t h n di iJ r a l
gas fu rnace
An c -,
ecu f1 vt&gt; &lt;, l y l e home Cal l
f o r y ou r p r tv a te sh ow
FA~M

BABYSITTER
in
my
home . Five aays a w eek
Two children . R efer e nces a
must
Conta c t
Oen 1se
Wolfe at 949 2377 after 5 30

and larger kitten . Mother
Sia mese W2 3216

HOB STETTER
REALTY

Business Services

TRAILER SALES
,' 11?0 Mo"I IJ ll ~"t"•'l' Rd
I ~'' 'I '

BO acres Wi th
10 r oom farm hou se
Locat ed abou t 1 mile out
Flat W oods Road Sel 1
price taO.OCXl .OO

HYSELL

RUN

1

bedroom fr a m e home on
a litt le over se ~Jen a cre&lt;;.
There ' s
lo ts
ol
possibili t ie s w tf h lh1 s
o ne As king $23 . 500 DO

vlllo• Oh1 1J

~11 ~"" 1/4~ f n• nlllfl '

l M il ··; I ,,

r o' .N.Il&lt; l'&gt;vdiF

(,OO\ !.
'ro rw
1\JLIII FW NO.NLI. V"-Il.ti i:H E

;11 P~ ~o~

Roger Hysell

$25 .000 .00
We are selling our pro
perti es. If you want to
sel l your-s give u~ a call.
W e' ll be glad to help .
Cheryl Lemley , A ssoc
Phone 742 -2003
Velma N 1ci nsky , Assoc.
Phone 742 -3092
George S. Hobstetter,
Jr .
Brok er
Phone 992 ·5719

ERA MERCER
REALTY
TWO HOUSES
In
Middl eport Live in on e.
rent th e other
Both
houses r emodeled 1n
side O ne has 3 bdrm s,
th e other has 1 be&lt;Jrm
Loca t ed on Powell St at
lower end of town
MODERN HOUSE Wi th
3 plu '5 lla t ac r es and
Ohi o River ir ontal}e
Thts house '" well bu il t
and n icely k ep t 141 ,600
HOUSE WITH bUStness
budding in R eedsville
G arden spot p lu s 2 ca r
gar age . H ouse has 2
bd rm s Asking 115,000
LOOK lNG FOR a house
you like in your pr1ce
range . Why not build to
s uit vourself on one of
the 2 50 ac r e lot s on R1 7
near Easte rn H i gh
Sc hool., Each tor S6.000
34 ACRES
Si lver
R1a g e Rd auos'io from
Eastern
H 1gh
Many
butld1 ng s1 fPS Sell pnrt

or alf
S16 ,000
) tledr m I 1
ba th tra ,ler . E)(pi!ndo
ltYtng rm unde r p ,nned
w ell water , Oh10 R 1ver
lrontage on Rt 12J a t
Long Bonom
J2 ,000
One
acre
b uild i ng SI TE' Or 1nSI,ll
trad er
C t! f
w a t er
avarlable Jus t a ll 6fl1
n car R eedsv 1tic. 0
Phone
v~rgmta Hayman
985 -41 1H

Auto &amp; Truck
R e pa1r
Al so Transmission
R e pa1r
Phon e 992 · 5682

fF REE ESTIMATE)

&lt;1

ELWO OD
BOWERS
REP AIR
SwPE'p e r s.
toa s ter s. •r ons . all &lt;;mall
app l, an ce'.:i Lr1 w n mowe r
N e)( t ro St a rr
H 1g hwa y
Garage on R ou te 7. 9A5

187 5
S &amp; G (Mpe· Cl ean,ng
Sl eam
c leaned
Free
cs t 1n1n 1P
R e asonable
ra teo;
::.cot c hguard
992
6309 or 74.') / 148

PROPER IN SUL ATION "

JUST LISTED - Beauty Salon
Fu l ly equ1p ped.
ready to go. Inc ludes two w ork 1ng st at,ons and 5
rooms, bath Cold dr 1nk ma ch, ne , et c A mane,.
maker i n good loc 10 Ra ic ne Pr iced at Si 5.000
NEW LISTING - Trail ef &amp; lot in Rac ,ne, 3 B R . all
c rpeted . front por c h with awning , wood underpinn
ing, also 1nc lud es pool t o r tht&gt; c h 1ldren Anx 1o us to
se ll $11 .000
TRAILER - 1 BR on pe ace ful s 1de s tree t . a l l eq u1p
pedkitchen,n c ludingdinelles.e t Mu'&gt;l'&gt;f:'ll \1 0. 500
NEW - WON ' T LAST - 4 yr s ol d, 3 BR . bat h &amp;
utili t ies. k1tchen w dishwasher , DR w s l id tng glass
door s to pat io , on nearly r,. acre Carpeted 1n
beaut i ful tas te . $44 .900
MINI FARM - Bea u t i f ul bri Ck br l evel w 1t h 3
bedrm . large l1vmg room w 1th fireplace Total ele c
rr ic and ful ly insulated All hardwOOd f loors Ba se
ment could be fin 1sht"d f or ex tra Irvi ng quarters At
ta ched garage J large ho t hOUM"S a nd ma ny e)(.tras
on 5acr es LO&lt;. c lose to Ra ci ne Ask t ngU3,500
NEW LISTING - N 1ce 3 BR ho m e , e)(.tra large LR .
equ1 pped k1 f . washer . a ryer , f u ll basemen t , ce nTral
air, breezew;:,y leildmg t o g.arye We ll c ared i or
hou se has man y extra!i . several fru 1t tr ees of dr f
ter enr v.'lt,et ,es &amp; nr ce garden See to app rec1 dte
very n1 c e l oca t ion 1n lower Syracu se on 51 Rt 174
Prt ct&gt;d at ~3 . 900
CHESTER -- 4 BR home . hardwood ll oors . lar ge
LR , tamil ·; rm .. garage . ou tbu r:dtng , f ru 1f t rees and
garden space . ASking S.A8 ,900

THIS IS WHAT YOU ASKED FOR

Lane
Oan,cl~
New p h one num
hPr 74 '1 '1951
Servtc e lo
schools ond nom e S1 n ce
196')
TU N I N G.

Real Estate tor Sale
FINANCING VA FHA LO
ANS LO W DR ND DOWN
PAYMENT
PURCHASE
DR
REFINANCE
IRELAND MORTGAGE .
77 E S TATE .
61 4 592 JO ) l

perience. Call Athens,
collect, Gerald Clark
797-4857 or Tom Hoskins
797 -2745.
9 ·28 ·1 mo. Pd .

ATHENS

II I I Pd I

.500
PPERS PLAINS
One
f Ia or
5 room
b unga l ow w1 1h bath , 1
be d roorn 5. and large lot
on R 1 7 A sk,nq\18 ,500
RENOVATED
NI CC 2
Oed r oorn '&gt; nat gd S fur
na ce. c arpcf,ng, base
men! ,') e M garage and ')
HOME

J
c era m1 c
bafh . r.-HDt •'1ng,
n1ce
c at 1n k .tc11en . full ·r 1n
w lrtted
garage . and
l a rge fen ced tot
IN TOWN
6 ro oms , J
be a r ooms . baTh , narura1
gas fu r na ce . and 3 lots
W ! th
a rl CI TY u t ili tie S

$1 5.SOO
MILLFIE LD
1
bedr oom&lt;;. ,
ba t h.
f ull
bast&gt;men t and la ryt&gt; lot
l60x 160 f o r on I'( S1-4,000
VIEW OF RIVER
Eat ·,..our meal s as you
wat c h th e t rrllf ic go by
3 bed room s. na I ga s
furna ce and abo 'o'e al l
f loods St 7.SOO

WE
HAVE A ONE
YEAR
PROTECTION
PLAN IF YOU WANT
CALL
'9 2 · 1325
or
9H-l876 lor INFORMA
TlON .

ms.

Main St .

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.
Hours 9-1 M ., w ., F" .
Other times by appoint·
ment.
107 Sycamore 1Rear
Pomeroy , 0 .

INSULATION

Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding
el nsulation
• Storm Doors
eStorm Windo ws
• Replacement
dows

SHOE IN G
tor

Ca ll

Darre l l

R ea l Estate
- tor Sale
COMM ERCIAL BU IL DIN
G on 132 ft lot a t 1600 Ny e
Ave , Pomer o·; d ') H W oll
f inance at 9 Pe t t o r e l iab l e
roupl e No realtor s 991
57 86
HOU SE FOR SALE b€h1 n0
Jone'5 B ovs S5500 . C all 30 4
17 3 5029 Sharon Star k

Win -

Free Estimate

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

CALl992 -7544

992 3288 . ask
M c C l anahan

Pomeroy , 0 .
10-19 · 1 mo .

J&amp;l BLOWN

Federal Hous 1ng &amp;
Veterans Admin . Loans .

10 ·19 ·1 mo.
W IL L 1-II AUL l imestone and
gravel Also. l i me hau\inQ
and sp read ing . Leo Morris
Tru c k 1ng . Phone 742 2455 .
--·

- - - -- -

P AINTING AND
sand
blas ting Free estimates
a 11 949 2b86

c

DOZER , END
LOilder ,
brus h
hog
Will
do
basements. pondo:., brush,
11mber . la nd
c learing .
Cha rles Butcher . 742·29.40

---·--S EWING

MACH I NE

Repairs ,
servi ce,
all
makes
q92 2284 .
The
Fdbr i c
Shop,
Pomeroy .
AuTtlor ized Singer Sales
and Service We sha r pen
Sc 1Ssors .

- - - - - --

SYRACUSE

11 ROOMS
La rge
r ame wtlh ga s furna ce .
. b aths . p.-1 ne led k 11
and 1 e M garage

Featuring : men's &amp;
women 's stylin9, per -

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING

MIDDLEPORT - Very
ni ce l floor p lan, 2
bedrooms , bath . some
c arpe ting ,
lar ge l o t
S0X260 JU ST $16 ,100
W1 JJ25

MARK MORA
HAl R STYLIST

992-2367

L ARGE LOT on dea d end
~ t ree-t
w tt h
waiN
and
sew age
W •ll linctn u• lo
r e- ltable c ou pl e a t 9 Pet
991 5786 N o realtor s

21 6 E &gt;ecor1d Strf'el

Mick 's
Barber &amp;
Style Center
Introduces -

La rge

bri c k duple• . live in
part , rent part nd have
an 1ncome $18 ,000 00

POMEROY

S231
HOWERY AND MARTIN
E)( c avat1ng ,
se pti c
sys1ern s. doze,. , backhoe.
R t 14.3 . PhOne 1 (614) 698·
7]] 1 or 742 2593 .

E&lt;

r e i le nt 1 story Ira me . all
renova ted , J be droom s,
1'7 baths . lovelv 1111
c nen . full
o asement .
utili ty $40,000 00
ALMOST NEW
._ove
I'( b r ick &amp;. frame. 3
bedroom'ii . ni ce ktf chen,
util ity, storagt&gt; bldg .
c h~ in fence yard About
I leve l acre $37 ,500 .00

NEAR

EXCAVAT IN G ,
dozer,
loader and backhoe work :
dump tru c ks and l o boys
f or h i re . witr haul t il t dirt ,
top soil , limestone and
gravel Ca ll Bob or Rog er
Jeff ers, da'( phone 992 ·7089,
night phone ~2 3515 or 992 -

CHESTER

N 1ccly remodeled 1
bedroom home . bud t 1n
k 1Tc hen .
c arp e r ,ng .
tlt~sement . t'lnd about '15
acres w 1th 3 sp rmgs .

CA N ' T BE
BEA T
S38 .950 00
LOVELY
FAMILY
HOME - OverloOk S the
r •ver . 3 bedroom , eQu i p
ped '&lt; i tchen. rec room s
LO ADS of remode l 1ng

A MERE S35.000 00
WE HAVE 5&lt;1 PROER
TIES
TO
CHOOSE
FROM STOP lN .
REAL ESTATE IS OUR
BUSINESS (NOT A
SIDELINE) .
ACT
QUICK ON THESE GE ·
NUINE BARGAINS .
REALTORS
Henry E . Cleland Sr.
992 -1568

H e nry E . Cleland Jr .
992 -&amp;191

ASSOCIATES

AUTOMOBILE

IN

SURANCE
been
c an
your
ce lled?
Lost
ope rator ·s. 11c ense ? Phone

992 2143
I N ST OCK tor im mediate
delllterr var~ous sizes of
pool k t t s Do it yourse lf or
let us i ns t all f or you . D .
Bumgardner Sa l es, Inc .

992 S72 4
REY NOLD ' S

ELECTRIC

Motor s, r ewtnd and repair .
992 23.56 . 561
Be e&lt;h St .,
M1d o leport. Oh 10
A&amp;H U ohol ster tng , across
from ttte Tex aco Staf ion in
Syretu cse 992 3743 o r 992
3751
BRAO FOR D, Auc ti onee r ,
Co mpl ete Serv1ce Phone
949 'J d8 7 or 949 2000 . racine.
Oh10. Cr, tf Bradford

SAVE ·oN~cARPET
DRIVE AllffiE
SAVE A. lUI

Roqer &amp; Dottie Turner

Housing
Headqua,te's

742·2474
Jeo1n Tru ssell

949 2660
Office 992 ·1159

RUBBER BACK
CARPET

'4"

and up
Cash &amp; Carry

FOR SALE

SALE ON ALL

14 a cres woth

1' z story home, sits back. off roa d s urrounded w 1tn
maple tree s Lg pond , loca led 1n Morn ing Star
area P rice $33 ,900
FAMILY HOME - Lot s of POSS1bi111 1eS w 1f h lh rs
n ic e 1 stor y Many feat u r es . central a ir, o u i tt 1n a p
p ltances, a l l carpeted , good 1nves tm ent wlfh seve ra l
n ice b i ld i ng tot!. On a p p r ox
acres i n the center
ot Rac 1ne Asking $54,000
S31 ,000.00 - GoOO 3 BR . a ll CMJ)(•fed horne cl~ to
Po m ero y &amp;. Middleport Loca t ed on 1' 1 Mres
LOTS OF LOTS
F rom 1 t o 7S acres. borrler1ng
Po m e r oy
6 YEAR OLD HOME , 3 BR . d1n 1ng rtnd u t il1ty room .
1o: 11 equ i pped w stove and re fr1g M os tly c arpeted ,
f or ced a 1r gas f urnace, ! y r otd Gara ge. a complete
trailer hook up with n at gas tap and septic can add
income over 1 a cres $19 ,900. Ca ll l or appointment
J ust off Rt 7 below Middleport

WANT TO SEll? - GIVI:. US A !.All
CALL JIMMY DEEM, ASSOCIATE ?-4'1 .t3 88
0~ NANC'r" JASPERS, ASSOCIATE

949·26S4 or 949·2S91

949 -2748 or
992 ·7]14

HORSE
PIANO

Rooting, gutters , and
downspouts .
Free
Estimates.
All work
guaranteed. 20 years t)( ·

Call tor appt . or walk in .

RACINE, 0 .

cheaper t han heat tng oil
Take adYan t age of a good
1nvestm en T Ca ll ~2 3288
f or mor e inlor m at i on .

NEW

WE HAVE CONVENTIONAL FINANCING FOR

V. C. YOUNG Ill

30 II

b edroom~

MOST OF OUR HOMES FOR AS LOW AS S"•
DOWN

A It type!t roof work , new
or repair gutters and
downspouts,
gutter
cleani ng and painting .
All work guaranteed .
Free E!tlimate s
Reas.onabte Pnces
Call Howard
949 -1862
11 14 mo

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

lots S2S.OOO

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING

1, mtl e off R t 7 by pa ss.
on St Rf 174 toward
Rufl i) nd .

T UPPERS PLAINS
Choice corm• r lot 1n the
A rba u gh Addilion Lot
1S 100 'x200 " ;:,nd h;:,s sep
t 1c sys t em a nd w a ter
t a p . Sells f o r 15.000 00
NEW LISTING
Co r
ner lot on Grave l H il l 1n
M iddl ep ort with 9 r oo m
home
Full basement
and 1 car garage ONLY

H. L WRITESEL
ROOFING

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING

Garage

,ng

__,S,..e'-'-r--'v-'-ic=-e=-~ _O_It_e_r e_d

celebrating
40
years ot service to
the farmers.

fo r

THR E E ROOM turn apt
Ut tl i t 1es pa1d Adul t s, no
pr'tS ,
no d runks
John
Sheet s . 31, miles ~ou th . Rt
7. Mtctd teport

FOR
sa le
F I REWOOO
N ow taking orde r s Will
c1elive r . 741 1056

19 7S EL CAMINO
Cadilla c Ca ll9'92 7448

rent

lor

WINTER
POT ATOt::.S
C W Pr offitt farm , Par
!land , OH sa a hundred and
$5 a hundred .

SHO RT

a.

SMALL FARM with house
o r tra i l e r 992 5298

~ rlnr1 ,
gravel ,
ca 1c1um
c hlo11de,
f c rt il t zer .
dog
f ood, a nd all typ es o f salt
Excelsior Sa I t Wo r k s. 1n c .
E Ma1n Sf , Pomeroy. 99'}
J891

chihuahua , b l a c k and wh1f e
female,
loves c hi ld r e n
Humane Socie t y, 9916260

and c hai r . Good cond1tion.

RI SING
STAR
Kennel .
Boarding Ca ll367 0'292

Real E s tate tor Sale

L IM ESTO N e

Ghia , auto. , 6 cyl , l ow
mileage . $1900. 949 2042 .

HDDF HOLLOW . Engl ish

HILLCRE S T

0

Regular $99.95 Each

P B

MU S T
SE L L
1979
Chevro le t 4x 4, short bed,
350 auto, P
P B . AM
FM radio, 3,000 mile s,
$6500 . 992 ·5396 anytime

Rd

Help wanted

Three-Way Speaker System

I

Hobson

JUST FOR YOU

s··

Q

P S ,

COAL

Phon e 985 4339

Special No limit
LOST

SALE '81.95

Regular Sl29.95 Set

1979 FORO F 150. 4 whee l
d r ive.
f acrory
t o pp er

Leading
Creek
area
B ea gl e . black . brown t'lnd
white
female .
Humane
Socie ty , 992 ·6260

· ·,

fl t· f(i &lt;, l•t II . • · ~ !f fi,,Jo rp , PJ'o'flf '1-' &lt; Il l I dllJ• ·I I
1 "' ,~; •!~"- ., . , .p h'"""; o Pv,h : ,Jifl . r.
•t tr •1l• t •
Pt '') ' ·I" •, rol • · \ •lllJ L l '-! !r'r""' d' •l PrJ .,\•• flt •r ,,rll cll1f 1
lli &lt;JI • rdl •·j• I • f-lrr ,t.p rlmi Tl &lt;itJI•· A11k· ! I'
l l ·or •·&lt;t t \1
11. 1
d. ,t I ll' ,tj 0 R !ld l ~. plrt •yt·T II ' 11 /.IJ ·r /l.IH I
d&lt;il 11 d'
~~ ~ .. qrJIT I rHi1 · ,1 !11 1 l•qh t•, 0 [1 .;, 11 ll j hl&lt; ·&lt;l VLJ
" 1 , _,, , •·H·!• •l ' • Ooldl '1 •1 &lt;· ri·Ji i'll l ·ll 1111 \11 1',
o 1 '1 il 1J'd l•·vl"l
r1 nl r•li • In , l tr(ir• s m1 1 1 ,! It '' II('\
o /) Jilll"' • r ,c, lh ~ A • f,•~· t1 X " () 1 ;&gt; " 11

Regular $169 .95

FOUND

A"" woofer a·· pa SS tV€ radta tor 2v4·· tweet e r
• L lertron, c c rossov er netowrll • Fr ont mou nted
s pea ~ ers • Remov able scu lpTur ed foam grilles
o Wa tnut grar n v'nyt veneer c ab1net s wtt h
~ ·ul 1 PSSI (J r t ,:j l\•r l int shed n aMi es o Pr ol ect,v e scre ens
.+'1 hlrt1 "&gt;P • · a ~. er • M a ~ Handl1rHd Cap 10 wall s
f-1M~) o t1npf-'danc e lj o ~rn s • Screw 1erm1n a1 s and
H( ./• I&lt;J( 1- • DnnP.nsoor , ~ 24'" h 1 15" "" • 9 1.-J " d

Deluxe 8- Track Stereo Tape
Player /Recorder Deck

04T1

or

LOST : tiger cat , neutered
ma le, flea co llar , answers
ro nam e of Tommy
Rewa rd . 992 ·5354

•

Two-Way Speaker System with
Passive Radiator

SALE 5124.95

Regular 5149.95

•

LOUDSPEAKERS

P i J ~, ,l t : ur: ,,,
"1 lr " l '~ I. r Pr,)qr al' '· "" ~ ""~ Ht ·( •'".t!
r o~ '"ll I ,,.., 1,
r'ntr'&gt;t -1t1d f-l,. •1 r\J o U 1 1 ~1 1 ~
fJ1.lf• ·l •·· .,rr J•·r 1\. 1\' , d ,I !flt d! lr p 'uc_; r. :" •i, J, .11 1
ll{_}l lh • /i 1Jt• ''li d !'' ·• "l d,.I,Jcll pr 1 lj l d 11 ·, pi" 1•· 11
0 r ~tr t.• J •·' I ,.Ji ilfllllli dl l tr Jf1 1• AIJ! (I Si r· ) '
II H ro c '· ' "'lj
f,t1 •h .·."' 11 :• ,!i ' l,ijll! • [ Jttil.IIICJI '• ; 1 /~! '•'
111.r ·q
It•··· i ·• · ·:• ·'' o lr •f11&lt;1fl ,..11 A(•l urdi' •Y l ··.&lt;·1 1 l r• I&lt; I r
lli 1r1t ,11H1 , f•
I .-j C1f"PI o Ja1 ~ &lt;; f•1 f rr 1 ' p flll"''-.
•.\•• '~•• I · 1 !l •h . r . ~ ~c; '• '1&lt; &lt;tt n ut .t nr t
' • '· 'l •ul

'1 • IU',

•

SALE JS9.95

Regular S99.9S

8- Track Stereo Tape Player/Recorder Deck

1 t)·~· N • L' ~

HUNTING

trespassing day or night on
the C harles Yost and Ivan
Well farms

Sem r-auto mat 1C S1ng 1e p lay BSR turnta b le • In
d ul o mn t1c mode . tone arm cu es to fir STgroove on
rer c.,rrJ and then returns to rest atter record IS played
• M cJy'll'll l ca rtr1dge d1amond sty lus o V1SCOuS
dcimped c ue /p ause l ever • AdJu St&lt;tbl e stylu s
pu ~._,..,,t ll:' • Ant 1-ska te • rnc lude s dus f cover wal nu t
q tc11n ,.,nyl venee r ba se 45 rpm adap te r
• ~)H 11f'n'&gt;tUII'&gt; 1 81!~·· W 1 61!2"" h ( 15 1/.. . d

TAPE RECORDER DECKS

o fJr'"ll'&gt;"r·~

ND

Deluxe Semi-Automatic Magnetic
Record Player

SAU 1219.95

o~t

33 and 4S rpm record s o B el t-Or1ve turntable

l(egular 599.95

lS-700

lut l•· ', "', · •uh ,,r , ·\ rtl• t l aur1 11

Frrday aft.emooo

SLUG MATCH at l zaak
Walton c lubg rounds near
Chester every Sunday until
deer
se ason .
Ba con.
turKeys ,
hams
She lls
availab l e . l. OOp. m .

lost and Found

101f?" d

• lr~&lt;

,.....,

• Al.;nlllllJm S sh ape d rone a rrn • Ma gne lt c c artr1dge
(J, nmo,,o sty lu s o V1 scous damped c ue /pause contr ol
• Sty lus press ure adjus tmer"l t • Ant 1-skate control
o Waln ul ·yra 1n v n·,..l veneer ba se. dust c. ove r. 45 rpm
dddp tf'r • D1men s,o n s 18 1r;·· w )( 6W" h)( 15Y4' d

,'0 Wa ll e, p f", r ,"1nr1el m1n mum HM S dl 8 •lh rr•--. lr ;J rl •
;;o ~ H ; w1!1 1 nn rr1 o rt' ' ' 'an 0 ]"',., 1,,,,1,
H arn-t(l' ll i o,~ ;l"; r t l()'l 0 SpCl.i&lt;ll dub!JiflQ llf Ul try
a l in.,...,' ' "~-' () ltii\IU dl' t ~ '&gt; s,rn,JI Ianeousl y ano
r(-&gt; r u rc1n1\.J tr c- n o ne :u ano !t"1er • f-M Ste reo 1nri 1' u to r
• Lr n!'cl rH ~ r 1 .-·Hl dl f•Ta i ~-, IC fi lte r 0 r t yw~ l('l.:l flJIIII)y
• I1JUdi1C'~'o 111Cjh Foltcr dfld M c~ t 1n q &lt;;v, 1t1 h!'') o fir1td ry
u 1nt rt i l". • C1· r1tf'l o l ,. harlf"f!l lllrl lf1Y lri~&gt;lt-r o d p()o; IT, On
S !..'ea ~ e' sw1lr h o f- u:.c·s fo r spcJ I&lt; (:r JJ!UT(:&lt;..11on .tnd
AL Im P o Jii, ~ ., 101 li e&lt;tLJpllOr1e s magnetH... ptlono
tnpu l tape mpu ! au)C tn put tape ou tnu t o Scre w
term,na!') l or lfli1111 and a u1 s pP.il~. P r'-r. pt1ono gr ou na
e)( te rna t antennas • 0 1mens,ons 16 1.~&amp;" w )( 61/e" h )C

TD-460

&lt;IP.M
UJf' d.ay ~fon! publicl!bon

Deluxe Magnetic Stereo Record Changer

disabled persons · Energy
discount. Y01..1 have until
Nov . 30 to apply for your
e nergy
discount.
Ap
plications may be obtained
a t local banks, post office,
veterans serv~ce ce nter ,
senior
citizens
cente rs,
senior citizens c lubs, Coun ·
ty Auditors Offi ce. Also,
c heck w i th the pastor of
your c h urch .

For Sale

2042

&lt;PM

t'D H r 111

Regular S259.9S

Noon on S8turday

SALE 169.95

Regular $79.95

SALE $165.00

Regular$199 .95
. '

M(Jida.y

"T'ue.oday
Lhru Friday

0985
10 Wall &lt;., ce 1 cnan r1 [•l rr lri lrT'um RMS dl 8 o ~m"•, fr n1n
100 H; I:J 10 kH 1 W1!h n o more thr1 n 1°•r To ta l
ftar'11 Qf11 1 o .sf(J r!lon . Spe c~.:JI dub 1)1 f1Q (. lf (. Uilry
.all o w s u se n t twn rfe r: ks -,,rnu lt a neous1y ancj
·er o1 d 1ng fr o m o ne to an o the r o lr. t c gra~ cd C r( llli':i
i iC) lo r ,ncre i'! &lt;;P. rlr ellatJIIily • FET dnr1 S\loid t haole
Ar C • FM Stereo W·d 1c at o r ·Flywheel tun ng con tro l
o S1gn al stre ng th tun1ng mete r • Pllase Luc kPd Loup
1Pll ) MPX cuc u1 1 • Le ... er l)' p e swd c hcs ~ o r H 1 f 11!1·r
Lo r li ter I oudnesc, ~nd Mode 0 .J ar ks lor ste rP(J
Hea(l p hones Phono Input Au k lnvut TFIIJC lnDul
Ti'iJW Oulput • Srrew te Hlllrl diS fu r Md,rl and Au •
Spf'.-i i- CI&lt;; pl i(.!'IIJ ground and e ,..t crn J I A M dnd r M
,tr11ennas o AC r1u llf'l ftln"&gt; w ,l rhPl1) • V1nyl venee1
c aD, net o lnr lu ci P&lt;; r M d1pole an ten n(] o D1mrns,on..,
f6'11'" 1/v ~ ') 1 / ~ ~ I q· • d

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES

Stereo Record Changer

SALE 1145.00

Regular $169.95

BAKE SALE, LeLeche League,
beginning at 10 a.m. at Kroger.

paator.

0919

rL· r:u r:1my lr on1 u ne to another • FET sw• l c habte AF C.

hostess.

ANNUAL THANKSGIVING
Agape supper Sunday 6 p.m . at Enterprise United Methodist Church.
Program followed by candlelight
supper and supper and Holy Communion . Rev . James Corbett,

RM S dl 8 o hm c; !ro rn

Jnd c cra m• c: hiler • FM -S ter eo lnd •C ator • Ro tary
tunHHJ cu nt rol • S• gnat streng!h Tun1ny mete r o Pha~e
Loc. lo. cd Loop ! PLL) MPX CtrCu tT o 8u dT-1n lo udne ss
1 unt rul • Jac ks tor sTereo Headph ones. Tdpe Inpu t
Phono/Aux In p uT tape ou tput Mam all(l Au :..
Spf'd k~r s/Wd lnu t gra1n v1 ny1veneer cab• nf' !
0 0tfll€'f1'&gt;11)f1&lt;",
lb'" w ~I) '&gt;.&gt;a" hI( 9~.... d

FRIDAY
PAST MATRONS CLUB,
Evangeline Chapter, Order of the
Eastern Star, 7:30 Friday at the
home of Mrs. Marie Hawkins, with
Mrs . Beulah Hayes, assisting

SATURDAY
MEIGS RETIRED TEACHERS
ASSOCIATION, Me1g.• Inn, Saturday noon IWJCheon. Mrs. Patnck
Lochary to give a book review .
RAlservations to be made by Thursday at 99~123 or~HOLSTEIN CATTLE CLUB
covered dlah dinner Satun:'.1y 8 p.m .
at Meigs Museum. Sterling Ti.nr
moos, state president, will speak on
benefit of membership. Holstein
breeders urged to attend.
HIILBILLJES with caller Rob
Pickett will present old fashioned
square dance Saturday at Chester
Grade School from 8 p.M. until midnight. Admission $2.50 per person.
Children under 12 free . Refreshments will be available. Proceeds to
support the toys for totB and Christmas food basket programs sponsored by Shade River Jaycees .
TIJRKEY DINNER Saturday at
tuppers Plains Fire Department
from 4:0 to 7 p.m. For carry out orders bring containers. Adults $o4 and
$2 for children. Sponsored by ladies
&amp;UJ:iliary rl: Orange Township
Volunteer Fire Department.
ORGANIZATION of District Six
Junior Holstein Club Satruday at
Meigs County Museum 8 p.m. with
potluck dinner. For persons age 9
through 21 who own Holsteins. Any
queati0113 call992-2264.
FIF'Ill AND SIX'lli grade girls in
Southern Local School District interested in playing basketball to
meet Saturday at 9 a .m. at junior
high.
BAKE SALE, Gaul's Grocery,
Chester, at 9 a.m. Sponsored by
Chester Cub Scout Pack 23!i, Saturday .
SUNDAY
COUNTY WIDE Prayer Meeting,
Hobson Church of Christ In
Christian Union at 2 p.m. Glen
Blsoell, class leader, Sunday.

~er L hdr•n el (rn n •murr

90 H ;to 121-.H; w ,Hl no m o re lha r l u'o lu ta l
H cmn o n1c D'stort10n • Sp ec1 al dutlb1ng ::: I' ClJ• l •y
ill lo ws use o f tw o d ec ks 51muttaneously and

---.,

.,

NOTICE

TURNTABLES

SR-510

Silver Bridge Plaza .

FREE
CA NOY
demon
st r ation ever y Satur d ay at
I D m . at me ca ro u5el en
f e c t ionerv , 317 N 2nd Ave ,
Middleport

ATTENTION
SE NIOR
CITIZENS and totally

Celebrates bitthday
Jason Loren King, son of Phillip
and Carla King, celebrated his first
birthday at his home in Mason, W.
Va. A clown cake made by his grandmother, Mrs. Carl H. Norton, was
served with ice cream and punch.
Attending were his grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs. Edwin King and Mr.
and Mrs. Carl H. Norton. Mr. and
Mrs. Lew King, RomofiB and Nancy,
Mr. and Mrs. John King, Mrs . Allen
King, Ada and Kelly Stewart, and
Jason 's brother, Carl Loren King .

Auto Sales
19 73 N OVA 350 4 speed
P B , good condil10n After
6 , 98 5 3541

MiddlepOrl , DH . \192 27SI.

IVMCt .

jasun

Notices

IN STOCK
l

t

S9~~dup

II

lnstalledwithPad Free

I

GOOD REMNANT
SEL£CTION

RUTLAND
l 11 storv frame , 3 bedroom , 1 bath,
n1 ce l a r ge to t. 3 c ar gar age. needs a little repai r ,
coutd be a beaut.itul hom e Only S 12.900.00.

··'"

DOWNING-CHILDS
Middlepor1, Ohio

Rodn ey, Broker
PHONE 992 -2342
EVE. 992 -2449

Bill, Mgr.

6'x12' to 12'x16'

$3800

and up

Call 742-2211

RUTlAND
fURNituRE
Rutland, C.

�11 - Thto Daily &amp;ntmd. Mrddt•••u•rl I'

10-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday , Nov 16, 1979

CHURCH
NEWS

lRINI fY CHURCH Rev W H Perr•n
post01 Bob Bu ck Sunday school tupt
C hur ch School q 15 am
worsh•p se1

.,,,. 10 J0 om Cho1r reheonol Tuesday
7 JO p m under dtrect•on of Alice Ne-ase
POMEROY CHURCH Of THE "'AlARE"'E
Corner Umon ond Mulberry, Rev Clyde V

Hendenon

po11or

Sunday school

9 30

o m Glen McClung, 1upt morntng war
st-up 10 30 om
even1ng serv•&lt;• 7 30
m•d-week 18PIIC8 Wednesday . 7 JO p m

GRACI EPISCOPAl CHURCH Ma•n St

Pomeroy

The Rev

326 E

Robert B

C roYes rec tor Sunday serv •ces at 10 30
am

w1th H oi~ Commumon on the hrst

Sunday of &amp;ach monttl and combmed
wtth Morn,ng Prayer on teh th 1rd Sunday
Mornmg Prayer and Sermon on all other
Su ndays of the month Church School and
nursery core provided CoHee hour '" the
Poruh Holllmmechotely fol lo w1ng the ser
vrce
POMEROY CHURCH OF CHR IST 211 W
Mo rn St Netl Proudfoot poster Btble
school q 30om morn tng worshtp 10 30
a m Youth meef tngs b 30 p m O'w'entng
worshtp 7 JO Wednesda..,. ntght prayer
m eet rng and Btb le stud..,. ! 30 p m
THE SAlVATION ARMY 115 Butternut
A ve Pomeroy Envoy and Mrs Roy Wtn
rng o Htcers 1n charge Sunday holtn eu
m&amp;el•ng 10 o m
Sunday Schoo l I 0 30
om Sunday school leader YPSM Elotut
Adams 7 30 p m
salvo! ron meet•ng
'&lt;'OrtOus !opeoker~ and musK Sp41llals
Thursday 10 a m •o J p m Lod•es Home
l eague all w omen tnvrl~ 7 JO p rn
p rayer meet•ng and Btble study Bob
Estep
leader
Rev
Noel
Herman
teoch91'

BURLINGTO"'

SOUTHER"'

BAPTIST

CHAPEL Route 1 Shade.Pastor Bo bby
Elktns Sunday school 5 p m
Sunday
wor sh•p 5 A5 p m
Wedne1doy prayer
servrc e 7 30 p m
POMEROY
WE S TSl OE
CHURCH
Of
CHRI ST 100 W Morn St
Jer r y Paul
tnHlt!.1 er phone
7tHJ Corae rvo hve
non rnstrumental
Sunday worsh rp
I0
om
Btble study II om
worsh tp 6
p m Wednesday Brble study 7 p m
OlD DEX TER BIBLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH
Rev Ralph Smrth past or Sun day school
9 30
am
Mrs
Worley
Fronc ts
superrntenden' Preochrng servrcet lrrst &amp;
thrrd Sunday\ f ( llo ...... rng Sund ay School
GRAHAM
UNITED
METHODIST
Preochrng q JO a m lrrst and second Sun ·
do..,.s o f eoch month th1rd and fou rth Sun ·
days each momh worsh1p .,ervtce aT 7 )Q
p m Wedn e1day e,..enrngs at 7 JO Prayer
and Brbla STudy
SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST
Mulberr y
HtughT!o Rood Pomeroy Pastor Alber'
D11tes Sobboth School Superrntendent
R.to White Sabbath School Saturday
af1ern oon at ]. 00 wrlh Worshrp Serv1ce
follow mg at J 15
RUHAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
S•ster Harr rttll Warne•
Supt
Sunday
School q 30 am mornrnn wor~h 1 p 10 AS

m

om
THE HILAND CHAPEl George Casto
pastor Su nday ~H hool 9 30 a m ~~~ven,ng
worshrp 7 JO Thur~day e"enH'lQ prayer
~ervrce 7 30 p •n
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST Da ... rd Mann
mrnrs!er Wtllrom WotMJn Sunday \Chool
su pt Sunday school q 30 o m morn1 n g
WOr!lhrp I 0 lOa m
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST 787 Mulberry
A ... e Pomeroy Her~hel McClure Sunday
school superrntendent
Sunday "hool
q 30 am mornmg worshtp 10 30 even
rng wo r th•p 7 00 p m Mtdw~ prayer
!t ervice 7 00 p m
M.IOWAY COMMUNITY CE NUR Oe~Ctet"
Rd longsv 1lle Ohro Re" C lyde Ferrell
Pastor Sunday School II a m Saturday
p r eochrng ser..,•ces 7 30 p m Wedne•day
even1ng Brble study 01 7 30 p m
FAITH TABERNAClE CHURCH Barley
Run Rood Re v Emmen Rawwn pastor
Handley Dunn sup! Sunday school 10
a m Sunday e'w'enrng servrce 7 30 8•ble
teochtng 7 30 p m Thursday
DYESVIllE
CO MMUNITY
CHURCH
Roger C Turner pastor Sunday school
9 30 am
Sunday mornrng worsh 1p
10 30 Sunday evenmg servrce 7 JO
MIDDlEPORT CHURCH OF (HA IST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION
lawrence Manley
past or
Mrs
Russell Young
Sunday
~chaol Supt
Sunday Srhool 9 J0 a m
Even1ng worshtp 7 30 Wednesdo'f p r ayer
meet rng 7 J0 p m
MT
MORIAH CHURCH Of GOO
Ra&lt;tneRe.., James Satterf teld poster
Mornrng worshrp q 45 a m
Sunday
Khool l Q 45 0 m
ENen1ng INOrShip 7
1 uesdoy
7 30 p m
la d1e~
prayer
meetrng Wednesday 7 30 p m YPE
MIDDlEPORT FIRST BAPTIS T Corner
Srxfh and Palmer the Ae"' Merlo. M cC lung
Sunday school 9 15 a m
Don Wilson
superrn t endent lacy Barton out supt
Mornrng Wor$hrp 10 15om 61ble study
10 30om at chur ch Youth mee trng 7 JO
p m Wednesday Wednesday n1ght B1ble
study and prayer servr ce 7 JO p m
CHURCH OF CHRI ST Mtddleport 5th
ond Mom Bob Melt on m•n•sfer Mrlo.e
Gerlach tuper rntend&amp;nt Terry Yankey
youth mtnrsler Btble school 9 30 a m
morntng worshtp 10 30 om
eventng
worsh1p 7 30 prayer !.ervtce 7 p m
Wednesda.,
MIDDLEPORT
CHURCH
OF
THE
NAZARENE Re" J•m Broome pastor Brll
Wh rte
Sunday school supt
Sunday
school q 30 am mornrng worsh1p 10 lO
am Sunday evongeltst1&lt; meettn~ 7 00
p m Prayer meeftng Wednesday 7 p m
UNITED PRESBYTERIAN MINISTRY Of
MEIG S COUN TY Dwtght l Zavrtz dtrec

'"'HARRISONVILLE

PRESBYTERIAN
Rev
Ernest Strrddrn pastor Sunday church
school q 30 o m Mrs Homer lee sup!
mornmg worshtp , 10 30
MIDDLEPORT Sunday school 9 30 a m
Rtchord Vaughan supt Mornrng ...... arshtp

10 30
SYRACUSE FIRST UNITED PRESBYTERIAN
Church Worshtp servtce 9 30 o m Sunday
School I 0 30 a m Mrs Sampson Hall
supt
RU TLAND CHURCH Of GOO Re\1 Bot&gt;
by Porter pastor Sundav ,chool 10 o m ,
Sunday worshrp II am Sunday eventng
servrce 7 p m
Wednesday Fom rly frat
mg Hour 7 p m Wednesday worsh tp t.er .
... ice, 7 30 p m .
HAZEL COMMUNITY C HURCH
Near
.ong Boltam , Edsel Hart pastor St.Jndoy
school 10 o m Church 7 30 p m pmyer
-neetlng 7 30 p .m Thursday

MIDDLEPORT

PE ... TECOSTAL

Th"d

Ave, the Rev Wtlltam Kntttel poster
Thomas Kelly . Sunday School Supf Sun day school , 10om Classes tor aU ages
evening serviCe
7 30
Brble study
Wednesday 7 30 p .m . youth servtces .
Frldoy 7 30 p . m .
MIDDlEPORT FREEWilL BAPTIST , Corner
Ash ond Plum ; Noel Herrman . pastor
Saturday even1ng serv1ce , 7 30 p m . Sun ·
day Schoo l, 10 JO om

MEIGS
COOPERATIVE PARISH
METHODIST CHURCH
R1chord W Thomas , O.rector

POMEROY CLUSTER
Rev Robert M cGee
Rev Jome5 Corbt11
POMEROY Sunday Schoo l 9 15 o m
Wor5htp ser ... tce 10 30om Ch01r reheor
sol , Wednesday , 7 p .m
Rev Robert
McGee posto1
ENTERPRISE , Worshtp q o m Church
Schoo/10 om
ROCK SP'fiNGS, Church School 10 o m
Worshtp 10 a m UMVF 6 30 p m
FLATWOODS . Church School 10 om
Wer~h·p II o m

MIDOLEPO~l CLUSTER
HEATH Church School 9 30 om War
thlp 10 30 a m UMYF 6 p m Robert
Robm1on Pastor
RUTLAND Church School q .30 am
Wor~htp 10 30 a m Wilbur H1lt Pastor
SAlEM CENTER Wor!hrp q om Church
School q 45 a m
SYR ACUSE CLUSTER
Rev Harvey f( och Jr
FOREST RUN Wor1hp 9 am Chur ch
Sch oo llO a m
MINERSVIllE Church School q a m
W o rsh tp 10 c m
ASBURY Church School 9 50 a m War
sh1p 11 o m Btble Study 7 J0 p m Thursday UMW f~t l Tuesday
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
Rev Dov•d Horns
Rev Mar k Flynn
Fl o ren ce Smtih
Hdton Wolff!
BUHANV \ 00f(0SI Worsh•p 9 00 om
Chu rch School 10 00 a m
CARMEl Chruch School 9 30 o m War
shrp 10 JO om 2nd and .. th Sundays
APPLE GROVE Sunday Schoo l 9 30 o m
Worshtp 7 .)() p m I st and Jrd Sundays
Pr ayer meetmg Wadnesdoy 7 30 p m
Fellowshrp supper l~rst Saturday 6 p m
UMW 1nd Tu etdoy 7 JO p m
EAST lETART Chruch Schoo l 9 om
Wo rsh tp s9rv•ce 10 am Prayer meellng
7 30 p m Wedne1dor UMW se&lt;ond Tue~

These Messages Of Our Religious Heritage
MEIGS TIRE
CENTER, INC.

MIDOLE PORT BOOK STORE

RIDGE

CHURCH

)\

GI F , &lt;;

Ph '91 1101

CHURCH

Robert Musser pat.lor Sunday school
q 30 om Roy S•gmon sup! morn•ng
worsh 1p 10 30 Sunday evemng serv• ce
7 30 mrd- w"k ser ... •ce Wednesday 7

pm
SYRACUSE CHURCH Of TH E NAZARENE
Rev Dole Bon. pastor
Sunday school
mormng worshrp 10 45 o m
evongel1!t1C sttr'w'tce 7 p m Wednesday
serv1ces ~ prayer and pro1M 7 p m
youth meettng 7 p m
Men' prayer
meel1ng Saturday 7 p m

q 30 a m

EDEN U"'ITED BRETHRE"' IN CHRIST
Elden R Bloke , pastor Sunday School 10
o m
Robert Reed sup!
Morntng ser
man
11 a m
Sunday ntght servrces
Chnshon Endeavor 7 30 p m
Song t.er
v tce
8 p m . Pre-ochtng B 30
p m
M idweek Prayer meeltng Wednesday
p m Alvtn Reed loy leader
CHURCH Of JESUS CHRIST located at
Rutland on New Ltmo Rood neKt to Forest
Acre Pork Rev Ray Rouse pastor Ro bert
Musser Sunday School supt
Sunday
school . 10 30 0 m . wor,hrp 7 30 p me.
ble Srudy . Wednet.do~ . 7 30 p m . Sotur
doy ntght prayer 1erv1ce 7 30 p m
HEMlOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN Ro9e r
Woft.on , poster Mildred Z•egler Sunday
school supt Mornmg worshtp 9 30 o m
Sundavschool 10 30 am
evenmg ser

'Vice, 7 30
MT
UNION
BAPTIST , Cec•l CoK
mmlst&amp;r. Joe So~re
Sunday School
Supermfenent Sunday school 9 45 o m
evening worshrp
7 30 p m
Prayer
meetrng, 7 30 p m Wednesday

TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH Of CHRIST
Randy Koehler pastor Dennts Newland
Sunday school super~ntendent Sunday
Sc hool , 9 30 o m , morntng church ser
vtce, 10 30 om
Sunday even1ng Brble
study 7 p m
lETART FALLS UNITED BRETHREN Rev
Freeland N .1rru pastor . Fftyd Norns

' '

F-U'&lt;' GO' T EN
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IN THE SC~A~~U()~

TESS

I\IIY .5 UN AND 1 O WE
YOU P.. G H'EAT UE AL ~
VITAMIN. WE ARE
HEM'E . ALIVE AND
WELL, THANKS T O
YO UR COURAGE AND

H,tl., S

T O SPY

&lt;:1'1111_~----

MARKED

''SHOW BIZ': .

COO L - HEADEDNE SS .

.,

'~&lt;F
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fall
CAPTAIN F.ASY

SWISHER &amp;
PHARMACY

PtPE C'O WN. ILl
HANDLE TH s:
HOW Af!. OUT 11
JACQUE 5o?

w, r111 Doctors
Preoscnpt1ons
¥9'] 19SS

Pomeroy

RIGGS USED CARS, INC.

RIDENOOR SUPPLY

.;'._ E 1L1W I.J l"J F~ H·J

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f=AR "''WAY ~R.'M VL!R TJO:UE
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FULL 1E:H

O R A SHORT

H&lt;!'ANS.~AllOIV

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I Tl, L D HIM YOU
WERE 5U ~FE-RIN6
FR O M TERMINAL

AHLETE'5 FOOT!

4N0 YOU
W.:\IVT ME TO
0\., rHERE FIRST
AN D &lt;;c OUT THE
PLACE f.. LEAVE

'5 &lt;\-,. ?E,R: H..:I, F'5 ·
C HERj:; Cll'l": l.. !

FURNITURE &amp; HARDWARE
Home lite S.wt

ITT(' ,Y.E, OLD

1!-UDD Y'

HOD

ROSEBERRY'S
PENNZOIL

LfiTLE ORPHAN ANNIE
58 tn-s.r~ let- Ac: C't'ISO rlet
Mlln St

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Ph 9~9 IIllO

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ORPHAII ANNIE-THE MAGIC TOUCH
!I MO[)OM WfH

FRENCH'S

RACINE
FOOD MARKET

ORPILU( ANNIE-WHEN DREAMS COME TRUE

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CML ( f-l(fK EN
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SUNOCO

SERVICE
CENTERS

212 W ~In

(.q8rN S (OW OR TABlE

H(\IO'{)Il (\

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l) u I THf N Yr) L)
ALWAYS HAVE
ro ME.

lHAI rPfN C H'I'

HENISI1 '

'fOI J I uo..:

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YOU'RE

CQ rH A Pf?E f TY
GOOD JOB A T

WIIFN O N Pf(

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IN FORTY 1 fAR 5 PJi'OSPI"CfiN'
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P. J. PAULIY,

AGENT
N•tionwld• Ins Co
of Cofumbus, 0
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lJll Pomeroy

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SUR£ ' .JU~f !Hl
' EM YOU DON 1
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ltt·nd The Chureh
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Pnd tht' Church
ol' ) our Choice

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Thi~ ~unday.

eyes of a Child

VIRGIL B.
TEAFORD SR.

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Pomeroy
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every su 't yo u own . 1n I know'

the so fa the cha1rs.
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Pat Hill Ford, Inc.

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Fir• Out Equip
Avtland 7421177

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BAKERY
fW1ter1 ot
Good Br•act ..._. .,."'-"..,
Hunl rnaton w

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ttl 6304
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PAPPY 1(1 \1\HA- .:Jr'\!
MR7H AR.E

.V&gt;-tA- : ;:: 'J ISSE:3~ 1 \r -J

L

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of

~-

r our Choice

Thi~

Sunda)

Of Your Choice This Sunday

Television Viewing

T,.,E PR1 ~CPAL 7-:'LD
THE -EACHER S~E
MIG&gt;\T CONSIDER MOVING
TJ A~O THEI&lt;. DEs~. SIR

by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
co lsrae\J port
1 SJtwell's lith~ U SuH fabri c
S Beauty lover cz Useless
10 MaJor Hoople's plant

pm
BETHlEHEM BAPTIST Rev Earl Shu l e r
po~lor W o rshrp sel"rce q JO om Sun do.,.
set-Tool 10 30om 81ble Study and proye •
servtce Thursday l 30 p m
CARLE TON CHURCH I'( tng sb ur y Rood
Gory Krng pastor Sunday schoo l Q 30
am Ralph Carl superrntenrler1t ev9nrng
worshrp
7 30 p rn
Prayer mee t on q
Wednesday 7 30 p m
LONG BO TTOM CHRI STIAN Geo•ge r
Pr ck..ens
pastor
Wallace Domewourl
Sup1 Btble School 9 .45 am Pr eoch•ng
~er ... rce
10 45 om
l.rst and thrr J )ufl
days 7 p m aecond and f o ur1h S un day~
Btble study 8 p m Tuesday s
HYSEll RUN FREE METHODI ST CHURCH
Rev Okey Cart pastor M ornrn g serw ru•
I 0 30 a m Sunday even1ng and l hursdoy
evenrng ser..,tces ot7 JO p m
FREEDOM GOSPEl MIS SION at Bald
Knob Rev law r ence Gluesencornp S1
pastor Roger Wdllord Sr Sunday sch oo l
sup! Sunday 1chool q 30 o even 1ng INOr
shtp 7 30 p m Pr oyflr meel rng Wednf's
day 7 30 p m Youth meetmg _ Sunde,.
5 30 p m wllh Don and Mar tho Mea do w ..
tn char ge
WHITE'S CHAPEl Coolville RD Re v ~ c) .
DeeTer postor Sun day sch oo l 9 JO a m
worshtp servtce 10 30 o rn Brble sT u d11
and proy•r servtc&amp; W&amp;dnesdoy ! JO p m

RUTlA"'D CHURCH OF CHRIST

Bead

Hender son pastor Herb Elbo tt Sunday
school supt Sunday ltchool 9 30 a m
mornrng ...... orsh•p and comun•on
!0 30

om
RUTLAND CO MMUNITY CHURCH AmO$

p '"

PO MER OY

WE \l H'AN H0ttNES5
Ho ui~Qnvdle Roo d Oe ... ey K•n g poster

Edrson Weaver onrstont Henry Eblrn
Jr
Sunday school sup! Sundov school
q 30 o rn morntng worsh i p 11 o m Sun
doy
evenmg
servt(8
7 30
prayer
meetrng Thurt.doy 7 30 p m

SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF GOO
Not Pentecot.to l
Rev Geo r ge Otler
pastor
Worshtp ser vrce Sunday q 45
a m
Sunday school 11 o m
fvOr!hrp
servrce
7 JO p m
Thundoy prayer
meet,ng 7 JO p m
MT HERMON Un11trd Brethren Church
Sunday School 9 J0 a m Worshtp serviCe
10 45 om P1eachrng servtces every Sun
day ollernottng wrth C E Wednet.doy
prayer meeltng 7 30 p m Rev James
Leach pastor Dovtd Ho lte r loy leader
JEHOVAH S WITNESSES I m1le eosl of
Rutland 1unc11on o f Route 174 ond Noble
Summtt Rood (T· 174) Sunday Btbla lee:·
lure q 30 o . Watchtower study 10 30
om
Tuesday Btble study . 7 and B 15
p m
Thursday thll!()crotrc school 7 30
p m ,ervtce meelrng 8 30 p m
RUTlAND FREEWill BAPTIST Chu rc h ~
leland Holey pasto r Sunday school . 10
am even1n~ terv1ce 7 Xl p m Prayer
meetmg Wednet.dav 7 30 p m
CHURC H OF GOO of Prophecy lo&lt;oted
on the 0 J Whtte Rood off h1ghway 160
Sunday School 10 am Supenntend.nt
Jo hn lov~oy F1rst Wednesday ntght of
month CPMA serviCes uw:ond Wedn•s doy WMB m"tlng, thrrd througt1 lrfth
yo uth 1erv1ce George Croy le pa1tor
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEl - 570 Granl St
M1ddleport Rev Don Blake poslor Sun
day schoo l 9 30 o m morntng worshtp
10 30 om
eventng worshtp 7 p m
WIK:Inet.doy eventng B1bla t.tudy and
praye r meetrng 7 p m AH1I1ated ~1th
Sou thern 8opllst ConventiOn

BRADFORD

'\liE

Attend The Omrch

PEANUTS

lr 1. \ pO\t C. r ;) ar w y T.lf ,~ Sun day School
l)., pl ~vnd ov ) d~(,pl q 30 om followed
by rnornrn g wt:~ rshrp Sun day evenrng se r
"" f." l JO p m Pre yer me-et.n g Wednes
do.,. 7 Xl p m \'/ MP O Rod&gt; o br o ad cast
Svn d oy '00 " ""9 7 45
RUTLAND ( HUR ( H O f THE NAZARENl:
Fie .. lloyd 0 Gr rmm Jr po5tor Sun day
\rhlull q 30 O trl
wo rshrp ~er.., rc e 10 J0
o rn B• o odcost l rve o" e • WMPO yo ung
p&amp;uple \ \~r vrrt! 7 p m l:vong ~t lrs t r( ~er
•• Ce 7 30 p n1 Wedne~doy ~er..,o c e 7 30
p f'l
flf.I S! 50 U!HERNBAP T:ST Co rner o i Setot~d ond Ar· de•\oo n Mason Pastor Fronk
l o wth(l l Sun day ltchool 9 45 o m
wo r
,lr J .-, ~~ • 1 e II o m anrl 7 30 p m Week
l y B ble S!u dy Wedne ~ doy 7 30 p m
MA SON CHUR CH OF CHRI ST Mrller St
M o~o" W Va A u rr ce M1ck pasto r Sun
do v Brb tt St ud y 10 am W o t~h t p 11 om
and .' p r'l'\ Brble Study We&lt;Jne.,doy 7 p m
Voc a l mu~r c
MA SON AS SEMBLY OF GOO Duddrng
lone Mo~ o n W Vo Re v Ron n•e B Rose
Po \r01 Sv •1do y School q AS o m M or mng
W o •~h1p II o &lt;'!'\
Evenr ng Ser11 tce 7 30
p m WtOtdne~doy Wome n s Mtn•slrres q
o rn m eet rn g on d o•a ye • Praye r and 8r
hle 'i tud y 7 p rn
HARTr QRO C HURC H OF CHRIST IN
r •1 f./ 1') T!AN UNI O N
Tht! Re v
Wtll•om
( ,,,, pbflll past or Sun day Sc h ool 9 J0
n m
Jnme~ Hughff \ ~up!
evenrng ser
7 30 p on
Wcd n e ~ doy
e,.enrng
• '' "'
pro yet rn eelrr g 7 JO r.. m 1'ou1h prayer
'&gt;'-'' •• (euo(h Tue sday
~AIR Yi fW BI8L~ CHUR CH
Letmt W
\a
R!
J{e v
Charle s Horg ra"e~
po~'"' W o·~ h r p ser"tiS l 9 30 o m
Sun
e v en ,n g ...... a r shrp
doy ~ ( ho ot 11 o rn
l JO p rn Tuesday co r l oge prayer meetrng
O"d B rb te s• u d'l' 9 30 om Wor sh1p ser
"'c~ Wttdne~doy 7 30 p m
CA L VAJn BIBLE CH URC H no w loc ated
on Po m eroy Po ke County Road 25 near
Flo t w r&gt;t"J di Re .,. Blod........ o o d past or 5er
voce~ on ~undo y at 10 30 a m
an d 7 30
p •n wolh Sund ar ')( hoo l 9 )() a m B•ble
'&gt;'ud v Wed ne~do y ] 30 p m
tN OFPl: NOfNJ H O LINES S CHURCH tNC
Pf'ot I St
"-" ·ddlepor t Rev 0 Dell
1\~ar d fr y
po~t o r
Sonn y Hurh on Sun day
~ c h ool 'iu pl
~uncloy "Lhool
9 30 o m
P• ' '"I"Q ~~~,ur \ hrp f )(I u , , Ptoypr a nd
j &gt;rOrv&gt; &lt;,ef, f.(&gt; { p o ) flf·~&lt;io y ! JO p m
~\ ,l lAN lJ
t;, P{)SIOIK CHUR CH Of
JESU~ C HI-l! ~ T
f lder Ja mes Mdler llrble
~ r ud .,.
Wed ne~ doy
7 30 p m
Sunday
Sc hool 10 a rn Sun day n oght servr ce 7 JO

V0L-

5CA &lt;:: D TJ.-&lt;E
_ IV 1\.:J :7-l.-.._IG"'TS _:.u-

:/Qir-.,G IN\\-... ReO\\

A·IIA'r A LL

Attend The Church

supt Su11doy sc hool "'30 om rn o rnrng
'ermon
10 30 om
Prays• HH "'ce
Wednesda..,. 7 JO p m
CHESTER CHURCH Of fHf NAZAR E N ~
Re v Herbert Grole pa5t o r Worsh •p -.e •
11 a m
and 7 30 p m
Sur&gt;day
"''ce
Schoo l 9 30 om Charles BrHell .,up!
Prayer meetmg Wednesday 7 30 p m
lAUREl
Cl 1FF
FR~E
METH OD I SI
CHURCH Rev Floyd F Shoo k pa st o r
Llo yd Wflght Sunday Schoo l Supt M or n
rng W o rsh•p q 30 a m
Su n day Srhool
10 20 am Wednet.doy Prayer and B rb l e
Study 7 J0 p m Sunday e"ttnrng w m~h p
7 JO p rn Chon Proctt (e Thursday 7 p m
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST Chotle§
Rus~ell
Sr
m1n111er R1ck Macom b er
$up! Sunday school 9 30om
w u r '&gt;h rp
sf!rvtce 10 30 am Brble Study Tue sda y
730prn
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF
JE~ U~
CHRIST OF LATTER DAY SAINTS Pot t l o nd
Rarm e Ro od
Wrlltom Roush
po~1 or
Phy lla Stobort Sunday School Sup! Su n
day Schaa l q 30om M a rn rng w orsh p
10 J0 om Sunday eYen 1n9 )ervrce 7 p m
Wednesday evenmg prayer serv •ce s 7 30

PAPPY II/

&gt;:::)_1

c::.

PIZZA SHACK
Eat In or
C1rry Out

_:):)+&lt;., A~~=~
~~A .... ~i= __

a

CHRISTIA"'

A

PITY -

I HNU\1\.' THAT J AM
RUT A FADED PA GE

This Sunda

Pomf' ro, Ohro

M1ddlt'porl

CHRI ST

LA ... GSVILLE

~Y I LL NU T

NO! r

T OLERATE

lU

KE RMJT S KORNER

Pom~ro.,.

1

Of

Duane Worden m.ntster Btble
don 9 ~om morn•ng worshtp 10 30
om
even•ng
worshtp
6 30 p m
Wednesda., B,b\e t.lud)' 6 30 p m
NEW
STIVERSV1LLE
COMMUNITY
Church Sunday School ser..,~ee 9 _.S a m
Wort.htp servKe 10 30 Evangel ISt re Ser
v•c •
7 30 p m
Wednesday
Preyer
meettng 7 30
ZION CHURC H Of CHR IS J Pomeroy
Horn10nv•lle Rd Robert Purl&amp;! I pastor
8dl McE lroy Sunday school sup! Sunday
school 9 30 o m
mornmg worshtp and
communton 10 30 am , Sundav worsh1p
ser ... rce
p m
Wednesday evttntng
prayer meet.ng and Brble study 7 p m
5 T JOHN lUTHERAN CHURCH Pme
Grove The Rev Will1om Mtddleswor1h
Pastor Church servrces 9 Xl o m Sunday
SchooiiO 30om
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST Edward
Fryman pastor Sunday school 9 30 a m
w o rshrp servrce 10 30om Sunday ser
vrc es 7 30 p m
youth gr ou p Wednes
day 7 p m
ANTIQUITl' BAPTIST Rev Earl Shuler
pastor Sunda., school 9 30 o m Church
servrce
7 p m
youth meet rng
6
p m TuesdcyBrbleStudy 7 p m
RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE
Rev John A Coffman poster Fronlo.l rn
Imboden chorrmon of the Boord ol Chrrs
!tan Ltle Sunday School 9 30om morn
rng worship ! 0 30 Sunday even.ng wor
sh•p 7 JO p m Prayer meetrng Wedne~
doy7JOpm
RA CINE FIRST BAPliS l Don l Walker
Pastor
Ronnre Sol'i.~r
Sunday schoo l
supt Sunday school 9 30 a m mornmg
1N01~h1p 10 .. am Sunday e'&lt;'enrng war
~hrp
7 30
Wednesday eve111ng Brble
study 7 30
DANV ILLE WESLEYAN
Rev
R
D
Br o w n pastor Sunday School 9 30 a m
mornrng worsh1p 10 45 . r out h ser,..rce
6 AS p m
evenmg worshtp 7 30 p m
prayer and pratse Wednesday 7 30 p m
Sll VER RUN FREE BAPTI ST Rev Mor v1n
Modun pastor Steve lrflle Sunday school
sup! Sunday school I 0 a m
morn rng
wotshrp II om Sunday e'&lt;'entng wor
shrp 7 30 Prayef mee!1119 and Brb l e
study Thursday 7 JO p m youlh servrce
6 p m Sunday
CH ESTER CHUR CH Of GOO Rev R £
Robmson pastor Sunday school 9 30
a m
worsh1p ser'w'l(e II a m
even•ng
servr&lt;e 7 00 .,outh ser ... •ce Wednesday
7 00 p m

lb EJill

:"l tJ\

ttend The Ch •c•u
of \'our Choice

NEW YORK
CLOTHING f!OUSE

( h urc h,lt. OI1111 \u pp l•f'\

John F Fultz . Mgr

r

BEARWALLOW

t- tu l&lt;n

'G

NOR THE AS T CLUS fER

SOUTH BETHEl (S, Ive r R•dge) Sunday
School 9 00 am M orn tng Woshtp 10 00
o m Wednesday Brb le Study 7 JO p m
KENO CHURCH Of CHRIST servrces
eo ch Sunday 9 J0 a m Gt!'Orge Pte kens
po,tor w rth preochrng on f.rst and th 1rd
Sunday ol month Olrver Swo1n Sup!
HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION Rev t-::erth
Eblrn pastor Sunday School q 30 a m
leonard Gdmore f.rs! elder eY&amp;nrng $&amp;r
"'ce
7 30 p m
W ednesdoy pr oyer
mtte! rng 7 30 p m

11/Tit'JrJ) ()

I t .•

RACINE WESLEYAN
Sunday school 10
o m
worshrp 11 o m (horr proct 1c e
Thursday B p m
lETART FAL LS ~ Wo r\hrp ser ... tce 9 om
Chur ch School 10 am
MORNING STAR W ors h•p 9 30 am
Churc h
School
10 JO
om
Youth
Tuesdays 7 p m
MORSE CHAPEL Church School q 30
a rn Wo r sh•p 11 a m
PORTLAND Church School 9 30 o m
W o nhrp 11om
SUn ON Ctlurch School 9 30 o m War
sh1p I stand Jrd Su ndays 10 30om

pm

"" ~

Are Sponsored Each Week By The Following:

do~730pm

Rev RIChard W Thomas
Duane Sydens!rtcker Sr
John W Douglas
Charles Domtgon
JOPPA
Worsh1p 9 00 om
Church
School 10 00 o m
CHESTER
War shtp 9 o m
Church
School 10 om Chou Rehearsal 7 p m
Wedne1doy Brble Studv
W~tdnf!~doy~
7 30 p m
LONG BOTTOM Sunday S(hool at 9 30
om Eventng Worshtp of 7 30 p m Thurs
day Btble Study 7 30 p m
REEDSVILLE Sunday School 9 30 om
Morntng Worshtp 10 30 o m Even•ng War
shp 7 30 p m Btble Study Wednesdays ot
730pm
AlFRED Sunday School of 9 _..5 o m
Morn tng Wo r sh•p at 11 a m Wednesday
N1gh1 Prayer Me-etrng 7 30 p m
ST
PAUl
( Tuppers Plorns) Sunday
School 9 00 o m Morntng Wor\htp of
10 00 om Monday N tght Btble Study 7 30

DICK THACY

CHURC H

OF

CHRIS T-

Eugene Underwood pot.tor Harry Hen .
drr cks supe11ntendent Sundoy school
9 30 o m
mornmg worsh•p 10 30 a m
even rng worsh•p 7 p m Wedne1doy Btble
studv 7 p m
JUBILEE CHRIS TlAN CENTER - Georges
Cre ek Rood Rev C J Lamie.,- po1tar
John Fellure
supertntendenl
Church
Mhool
q 30 om
mormng worshtp
10 30 even1ng t.ervt&lt;e 7 p m
Youth
meet1ng Sunday 6 p m Btble study 1n
depth Wednesday 7 p m Class es for all
oge s Nursery pr o vrded fo r worshtp \er
vrc e
ST PAUl LUTHERAN CHURCH Corner
of Sycamore and Se&lt;ond Sh
Pomefoy
The Rev W1lltom Mtddlesworth Pot.lor
Sunday School at q A5 om and Church
Set vtces I I om
SACRED HEART Rev Fother Paul 0
Welton pastor Phone 9'91 2B25 Soturdor

e"enrng Mou 7 30 Sunday Man 8 and
!0 a m
Con feuton Saturday 7 7 30

pm
VICTORY 8APTIS T - On the Route 7
by pan James E t&lt; .. see potl o, Sunday
school !0 a m
morning worshtp . 11
a m eventng sefv lce 7
TRINITY Chmllan Anembly Coo l..,rlte
Grlbert Spencer
pastor
Sunday
school q lO a m
morntng worsh1p 11
o m Sunday evenrng serv•ce 7 30 p m .
mtdweel.. proy•r serv1ce Wedne1doy . 7 JO

pm
MOUNT Ohve Communrty Church .
lawrence Bu1h pot.tor MoK Folm ... Sr
Superr nlendent Sunday SchQOI and mornrng worship 9 30 om Sunday evenrng
sel'\llce 7 p m
Youth meetmg and 81ble
study Wednesday 7 p m
FAITH BAPTIST Church Mown meet at
Unrted Steel Worker~ Unton Hall Ratlrood
Street Moaon Pastor , Rev Joy Mitchell
M o rn•ng worshtp 9 A5 om . Sundcl'y
School
10 30 a m
Prayer
meettng
Wednesday. 7 lOp m
FOREST RUN BA?TIST Rev Nyle
Borden
pastor
Corne ltul
Bun&lt;h.
superintendent Sunday school q 30 o m .
second and fou rt h Sundays worshtp ,.,.
vrce at 2 30 p m
MT MORIAH BAPTIST ~ Fourth and
Mom St M•ddteport Rev Colvtn Mtnnis.
posto1 Mrs Elv1n Bumgardner supt Sun
day school 9 30 o m
wont·up Mrv•ce.
10 _.5o m
NORTH
BETHEl
Un1tad
M•thodist
Church Ra\1 Chorle1 Dom tgan postor
Sunday Sc hool 9 )() o m
Worsh1p Ser
vtce 10 .. S o m Sunday 6rble Study 7 00
p m
W sdnes doy prayer meettng 7 30

pm
HOUSE OF PRAYER AND PRAISE Ltberty
Av• post Burg., Chef . Pomeroy Eugene
Anspoh po•tar Sunday school . I 0 o m .
mormng worshtp 11 om [venmg war
shp Sunday Tuatdov and Fr1d0.,. , 7 30

word
DOWN
11 &amp;rtum sulfate 1 Account
I! 'llcll 's Angel " entry
Z :'litmble vehacle
root.cd
13 Actres.'i
J Rave about
Merit&gt;
U Suff11 fur tniS."i 4 Duteh
township
15 Wool f&lt;:lVer
5
Confusion
li Cons tellation
of tongues
17 Beverage
6
Pn or to
18 - AVIV

7 Gnpe

19 Bnt crown

9 Defensible
II Arbor

n Clly

SOUTHER"'

's-nest

Vl( e

7

CARPENTER BAPTIST. A:ev Freeland
Norris pastor Don Ch.odle Supt Sun.
day School 9 JO o m Morn •ng Worshi p
10 30 a m Prayer Set"viu. alternate Sun·

doyo

Z9

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511E S.l.ID IT

uiOULD DESTRO'r HER
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31 Habituate
32 Conf1ned
U Nel'ion F:ddy 37 Pa rt1 c1ple
ft lrn
ending
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l8 Aphonsm

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Yesttrda) 's ( ryptoquut('

TO MAt\Y PEOPLE, VIRTIJE

CONSISTS MAINLY IN HEPENTING SINS, NOT AVOIDli'iG
rnEM --G C LI CilTE NHE RG

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35 AnecdoUil

BAPTIS T

CHURCH Route 1. Shode Pastor Don
, Block Afftltoted with Southern Baptist
. Conventron Svndoy sc hool 1 30 p m
Sunday worshtp
2 lO p m
Thurt.doy
evenfng B rble study 7 p m
PENTECOSTAl
ASSEMBlY
Rodne
Route 12.4 Wtlham Hoback pastor Son
day school 10 o m . Sunday evemng ,.,
v1ce 6 30 p m Wedneldoy eentng ser

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on the Oka

77

FRIDAY NOVEMBER 16 19111
)I}- Pr rc e IS R rghl J
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DO MO'w'le A Brrdge Too Far
J 15 Celebrdy Comedy Football
c tassr c ,., 1) Dulu::os ot Hal rard B

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BUT SHE S.l.ID SHE
CAN'T DO TH.\T

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4 30
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8
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SUNOAV NOVEMBER 18, 1979
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A '- tron N ev..srna k er lJ B etween
the L•nes 11
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10 ]0 ~ e .. Humbard J
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Mo v•e
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II 00
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oo- Trl Sta l e Todl!IV &amp; Tomorrow
TJ. Poldark 20
JG--MiWf Tyler Moore 13. Great
P edoo manc&amp;s JJ.

•

�·12- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pom eroy, 0 ., Fnday , Nov . 16, 1979

~~------------College

Senate rejects
hospital plan

GROWS THEM BIG - Thre€-year old Randy Eugene Bing, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Bmg, Rt. 1, Lon ~ Bottom, stands beside a pumpkin
that weighs over 100 pounds . TI1e pumpkiru; was grown by Randy's grandfather, Ralph Painte r, Rt. I , Middlepo rt . Mrs Pamter sa1d the pumpkin
ITUlde over W p1es.

TO END MARRIAGES
In ..Meigs C&lt;Junt y Common Pl ea.&lt;
C&lt;Jurt Shirley A.Roush, Pomeroy
filed suit for d! vorce agatns t Bobby
R. Roush, Pomeroy .
Paula Sue Jones, Middleport , an d
Jeffrey Allen Jones. Pomeroy, fli ed
for dissolution of marriage

RAN OFF HJGHWA Y
In order to keep from hitting a
dee r Howard Cra1g , Rt 4, Pomeroy ,
traveling on county road 17 in Scipio
Townslu p, ~·ent off the highway, the
...,e1gs County Sheriff's department
repo rted .
Th e re was heavy damage to the
('r JJK truck. The dr1ver was not mJured.

,

•

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SOME

EXTRA

Area deaths
DARRELL JENKS
Darrell Jenks, 70, Mason, died
Thursday in Pleasant Valley
Hospital .
He was born Oct. 4, 1909, in
Newark, Oh. . son of the late
Fremont and Hattie Wagner
Jenltin8 .
He was a retired electrician with
Kaiser Aluminum, member of the
Christian Brethren Church, charter
member of the Mason Historical
Society , a member of IBEW, local
968, Parkersburg, the Mason Fire
Dept and an associate member of
theVFW .
Surviving are his wife, Charlotte
M. Jenkins, a step-&lt;laughter , Mrs .

Howard (Mary) Huck, Rocky
Mount, Va.
Two step-sons, Frank L. Roush ,
Sevron, Md ., and Chester Roush,
Gallipolis, aiso survive .
Eleven step-grandchildren survive along with two step greatgrandchildren .
A brother, Fremont Jenks, Flatwoods, Ky., and a sister survive.
Funeral services will be Sunday at
1:30 p.m . at the Foglesong Funeral
Home, with the Rev. James Lewis
officiating. Burtal will follow in the
Adamsville Cemetery .
Friends llUlY call at the funeral
home Saturday from z..4 p.m. and 7-9
p.m .

UMW's president
will step down

CASH

Makes the holidays so much more fun . Join
our Christmas Club lor 1980. Now open.
. PICK YOUR CLUB NOW . ..
Deposot Each
Receive Ne•t
Week For
Year For
. 49 Weeks
Christmas
SOc .. . .. . . ..... . ... . ............. S25.00
Sl.OO ... . . ... . . . . . . . . . . .. ... . .. $50.00
$2.00 . . . • . ....................... SlOO.OO
$3.00 .. .................. . .. .. ... SlSO.OO
$5.00 . ...... . .. ..... .. . ... . .. . . . . S250.00
$10.00 ... ' . . ' . . ... ' .. . . . ' . . . . .... ssoo.oo
$20.00 ... . . ... ...... . . . . . ..... . S I ,000.00
Open your Christmas Club before January 1, 1980, make
49 prompt weekly payments, and the Pomeroy National
Bank will make the 50th payment for you.
You will also receive a FREE Christmas corsage when
you open your club .

pomeroy
rutland
tuppers plains

lor the commoo good ."
He said he was referring to the
hospital iiJdustry .
As members filed into the House
) chwnber to vote Thursday , they
passed through a waiting throng of
hospital lobbyists packed in the
hallway . There was a handful of
administration lobbyists, too.
"We worked our heads off," said
ooe White House repre5entative who
asked not to be named . " It was
disappointing . We thought more
members would ccme with us .. .. We
didn't think it would be this bad."
House Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill,
D-Mass ., however, wasn't sw-prised
at the defeat. He said he was never
optimistic about passage, even
though he pleaded with the House to
save the Carter bill.
Asked why the administration
pressed for House actioo, O'Neill
said, "I guess they figured they're in
as good a shape as they'll ever be."
For two years, the administration
has been promoting its own
legislation that would have
established guidelines fer increases
in hospital expenditures.
Carter 's plan said hospitals that
failed to stay within the federal
guidelines - last calculated at 11 .6
percent this year - would have been
s ubj ect to mandatory federal
conlrols on how much they could
Spt·ciaJ appt'aJ issut·d
charge for iniJIItient services . The
hospital inflation rate was 12.8
An appeal has been issued for ' ' percent last year.
Charles Leonard Cornell whose
Arguments
against
the
home and belongings were comadministration plan centered on
pletely destroyed by fire this week .
charges it would lessen the quality of
C&lt;Jrnell needs furniture, bedding,
care for patients while increasing
dishes and clothing and items
the volume of red tape.
donated can be left at the location of
"It would be a bureaucratic
his former home from 10 a.m. to 4 monstrosity." said Robert H.
p.m . each day . The location is on
Mlchel,arter , vowing that America
C&lt;Jrnell Road, near Stiversville in
won't sell freedom for oil, wants the
the Portland area .
nation ·s governors to help cui
Cornell wears lSI&gt; shirts, 3-1 waist
pelroleum consumption by 4 percent
and JO length !rousers, bib overalls,
to ITUlke up for the loss of Iranian
size 8 shoes and coats in size J&amp;.oiO.
imports .
WASHINGTON ! AP I The
Carter administration is blaming
resounding House rejection of the
president's standby hospital cost
conlrol plan on the medical lobby.
but says it isn 't about to admit
defeat.
Although administration officiais
were surprised and upset over the
House action Thursday, White
House jress secretary Jody Powell
said "the ball game is not over yet"
and vowed to get the hospital cost
conlrol legislation passed.
The next step may be to try to get
the Senate to adopt the bill first .
On Thurrsday, the House voted
234-166 to dump Carter's plan in
favor of a measure that would let the
hospitals voluntarily police their
own costs. It was a heavy blow to the
administration smce the bill had
been touted as a key element in
Carter's fight against inflation .
The new bill, authored by Rep .
Richard A. Gephardt, D-Mo., and
approved on a 321-75 vote, would aiso
establish a special conunission to
study the causes of rising hospital
costs and report its findings to
Congress .
Powell described the House action
as a " victory for the highly financed
special illterest lobby and. a .defeat .

pomeroy
national
bank
the bonk of
the century
established 1872

FDIC

WASHINGTON 1 AP )
A
hospJtatized Arnold Miller. whose
fillless to run the United Mine
Workers has come under increasing
debate, is giving up conlrol just one
week after accusing union vice
president Sam Chur c h,
his
successor , of plotting his ouster.
The union's executive board was
meeting today to formally accept
Miller 's resigna!Jon and to nwne
him president emeritus, at1 action
that automatically makes Church
head of the 270,000-rnember union .
Uruon General C.runsel Harrison
Combs said in advance of the
meetin~ that he had seen a copy of
the board 's resolution . He said he
learned Thursday that Miller had
decided to resign .
In fragile health for ITU!Dy years ,
Miller. 56. has been bospitalized m
Charleston , W.Va, since suffering a
heart attack while hunting four days
ago .
His frequent absences from the
union headquarters here have led

more and more board members to
question whether he was still fit to
run the un1on . One. who asked not to

EGG REPORT
O)LUMBUS, Ohio (API - Eggs
- Prices paid to counlry paclting
plants for eggs delivered to major
Ohio cities . Cases included
consumer grades including U.S .
grades, minimum 50 case lots .
Carton Large A &amp;s-&lt;19, Medium A
~2. Small A 4~2 .
Sales to retailers in major Ohio
cities , cartons delivered : Large A
white 77~. mostly 77-79, medium 71 110, mostly 71 -73.
Poultry jrices at Ohio farms, light
type hens to few too report .
Cincinnati Jrucklot Jrading on
fryers 42-44 . and Cleveland is ~-

be identllled . said Miller " is
incapable because of his sickness .
He can't run the union ."
Monday 's heart attack was
Miller's second. He had a stroke in
1978 and suffers from spinal arthritis
and black lung disease , both the
result of the more than 20 years
Miller spent m the mmes of West

Virginia
As the executive board looked for
a graceful way to ease Miller out of
day-to-&lt;lay control , there was talk or
forcing him to take indefinite sick
leave or the hooorary post of
president emeritus.
But Miller apparently decided to
take matters into hiss own hands
after his latest heart attack and
began making plans to step aside ,
said a union official who asked not to
be named .

SQUADS CALLED
The Middleport Emergency Squad
was ca lled to Brownell Ave ., at 1:15
a .m . Friday for Martha Burns .
Treatment was provided on the
scene .
The Pomeroy Emergency Squad
was called to Naylor's Run Hill at
S: 30 a .m . Friday for Victor Leifheit.
Mr. Leifheit who has been ill was
dead upon the unit's arrival.

SEEN AND HEARD
OCALA, Fla . - Thirty-six people
from the Gallia County Senior
Citizens Center left Florida in a
chartered Greyhound bus driven by
Randy Munnell . The group includes
three men, other than Randy . In
charge is Director Jean Niday . Last
night abroad will be at Clllwnbia , s.
!1:., Friday night .

Football Scores--------------..

Ohio State · · · · · · · · 18

Ohio U. . ......... 38

Kentucky . ....... 31

Purdue ...... . ... 37

Miami ....... . ... 25

IDinois ........... 29;

"'Michigan · · · · · · .. 15

Bowling Green .... 21

Florida ... . ....... 3

Indiana ......... . 21

Cincinnati ........ 14

Northwestern .... 13
~

•

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·"

FLAGS PRESENTED - Meigs Probate C&lt;Jurt Judge Robert E .
Buck, left, has received new Amencan and Ohio flags for his courtroom.
With him is Christopher M . Custer, an assistant to C&lt;Jngressman Miller
who presented the Americar flag. The Ohio flag was presented by Ohio
Senator Oakley Collins.

Death benefit will be paid
provides that officers of FeeneyBennett Post will g;ve to the widow
of a deceased legionnaire or the
nearest of kin of a post member as
follows : $50 for one to five years con·
tinuous year membership ; $100 for
su through 12 years of continuous
m embers !up ; $150 for 13 through 19
years of continuous membership,
and $200 for 20 years and over con·
tinuous membership .
The post member must be in good
sU!nding at the time of his death.
Any trllllSferred member into the
post wlll go by the above categories
until he has been a member in good
standm~ for seven contin uous years
before his prevJOus contin uous membership is countl'd .
Offi cers ha ve · the power to in·
c rease the amount set forth or if the
post should mc ur financial diffi culties . the officers have the right,
acting m good faith . to discontinue

A death benefit will be paid by
Feeney-Bennett Post 128, American
Legion , as a part of its new membership incentive pro~ram .
The constitution and by-laws of the
Middleport post were updated and
approved by the American Legion
State Department of Oluo.
The new incentive program 1s
retroaclive to Jan. 1, 1978 and

ASC committee
members attend
two-day seminar
Meig s
County
Agr ic ultural
Stabilization and C&lt;Jnservat1on Service iASCS ) chairperson Clarence
Price, VJce-&lt;ohairperson Virgil King
ard Reed Jeffers. member of Meigs
County ASC committee , along With
C&lt;Junty Executive Dlredor Dav1d
Fo• attended 3 two-&lt;l.ay seminar
November 13 and 14 at Zanesville .
The local AS\ committee IS
responsible for administenng the
Federal Farm Program at the local
level.
The seminar was to inform and UJ&gt;date the ASC l-ommittees and CEDS
of changes in the 1980 !ann
program .
C&lt;Jnservatoon cost-t~hanng and
price support are only two of the
local progr!llTl.'l utillzed here in
Meigs County .
By working closely with the farmers in this area, all of the com·
munity benefits through such things
as cleaner water in our streams and
lakes. By adhering to good conservation practices, f anne~ are
able to produce an abundance of
food and fiber lor domes tic use and
exports
The Price Support Program permits farmers to build grain storage
and contam their gram on the farm
and market l t more evenly
throughout the year, helpmg to keep
food prices more stable .

the Uon.alton.
A committee composed of three offi ce rs wlu r h wtll mclode the com·
rnander . the adjutant and the finance offocer w1ll venfy eligibility
requirements .
Anyone Wlshing to join the post
may contact any member or is
welcome to attend the regular
meetings which are held at 7:30p.m .
on the second and fourth Wedne.'!days of eac h month Dues are $8
a year .

. ( :OLO\' · .
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•

Tonight thru T~esday
Tlll•

act"••••r• ~at dnt•

vo•

In, p•ll• \'O• •Nat
and t•an yo• ap.~~rll

I II..Uao.

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ELBERFELD$

'

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As Unique As You
Chn . . un;L\ \..J.rd" ram· vnur l)t'!"'lona.J lllt' \ \.;lgt ' [II r~:oplt•
who k11n"' ;J.fld lo\l' you 'Iltat' . , ~h ~ dt'..,l~rl I" '41 unporttnl
and wh1 ~ll' wor&lt;b 11&lt;~-d to ht· Jl" l nght ll&lt;!llmark make'

Teacher leader
•
•
•
not optzmzstzc
POMEROY, Ohio lAP 1
Marathon negotiating sessions
aimed at ending the eight-week old
teachers strike in the Meigs Local
School District by Sunday night
were underway this weekend .
David Bowen, president-elect of
the Meigs Local Teachers
Association, said Saturday he was
not "overly" optimistic a settlement
would be reached .
"I like to call it ·guarded op timism' because we've been through
this before,'' said Bowen .
Representatives for the
association and for the board of
education reswned contract talks
Friday and were scheduled to spend
the weekend bargaining around-theclock in Columbus at the Ohio
Department of Education offices.
"I'm glad the state (education)
department is involved . That's a
good sign," Bowen said . The
association , he sa1d . represents ~24
of the district's I45 ed ucators
Teachers have been on •trike since Sept . 24. In an effort to facilitate
negotiations, the board of education
closed schools Oct. 16.
The tactic failed, however,
because "we did not negotiate for
about two weeks after that," said
Bowen.
He said that if the matter isn'
resolved Sunday night, the
discussions would probably be
moved back to Pomeroy.
A parent in the school district has
filed suit in an effort to get Probate

Judge Robert Buck to assume con trol of the school district, as
provided by state law .
"As l understand it, Judge Buck
could take over the school district
according to sUite law provided it 's

'.,,

involved

a

fair

dismissal policy and an annual wage
scale .
·
"We have right now on the
!bargaining I table what we call a
'disciplinary clause . 'In other words,
it requires just cause to dismiss a
teacher." said Bowen . ' That seems
to be the main slicking point "
Teachers have offered to accept a
base pay of $10,000 a year along with
some charges in the salary steps .
said Bowen .

L;UUDYEAR WINNER - Paul
Baer, Route 1. MIDersvllle , was winner of the Goodyear Award for outstanding cooaervatioo practices at
lbe 111111.W meeting ol the Meigs SoU
and Water CODBervatlon Dlsbict
beld Thursday nlght at the Chester
Elementary School. Baer •••
pre.eoted lbe awlll'd by Bob Adam•,
Goodyear Co. represeolallve.

Special
•
meetmg

Tuesday

GALI..IPOLIS - The Gallipolis
City Commission wlll meet on
specoal session Tuesday at 8 p .m. in
the Municipal Court Room .
Agenda items include :
--Consideratiion of a resolution
Area deaths . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . A -4 authonzmg the city manager to
Classified ads ....... . ... .. ..... . .......... .. ... . ... D+9 advertiSe for b1ds f&lt;r the home
Farm news ..... . ......... . .................... . ... C+ 7 improvement and r epair project for
the Maple Shade area H . U. D.
Lifestyle ....... , .......... . ..... , ... . ............. 8·1·12 Co mmunit y Dev elopment Blo ck
Local News , ......... . ... , ... . ........ . ... . ........ A-2,11 Grant Program
Sports ....................... . ............... . ... . . C· 1·5 --Gm sideration of a resolution
authorizing the city manager to
TV gulde . . . . . . . . . . . . .. .. . . .. . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . .. .. . D· 7 accept easements from Spruce St.
residents for the c onstruction of the
Spruce Street water lone relocatiOn .
-Coosideralion of a resolution
authorizin g the city manager to
acce pt ea sements from Chlllicothe
Rd . rcsodcnts for the construclion of
the Ll11lllcothe Road sarutary sewer
line .
--C.onsideration of an ordina ne e
appoinling Alma C. Martin as City
student ·s use of Ideas . Moreo ver . Auditor .
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County
--Consideration of an ordinanc e
education should stri ve to de ve lop in
I neal Schroll! Superintendent Gary
authorizing
the city manager to
each student a feeling of pride and a
Toothaker announced Saturday Mrs .
en ter into a contract with Sommer 's
sense of responsibility and empathy
Connie Bradbury was recently selecGMC for replacement parts ftr the
toward other people , the school . the
ted as the 1~ Galiia County Local
Sanitation Department.
town, the state , and the nation. The
Teacher of the Year . Mrs . Bradbury
student
should be taught to aim high
is a Vocational Home Economics
in
his
ability
to achieve and to go as
teacher at Kyger Q-eek High School
far
as
his
sensitivity
will take lum .
where she has taught lor six years.
In
order
for
education
to reach the
~e is a former graduate of Kyger
different
interests
and
talents
of the
Q-eek High School and Morehead
students,
it
must
be
flexible
and
Slate, Morehead, Ky.
modified
when
necessary
to
meet
ln Teacher nominees were recomdivi
dual
needs.
mended by their building prlncipal.
Dr . Toothaker said that the entire
Selection is made on the basis of the
schoo
l
district
extend s
individual representing the finest
congratulations
to
Connie
. The
qualities of classroom teaching .
selection was d!fflc ult , he sa1d ,
Mrs . Bradbury had to submit a
PARI S 1AP 1 - lraruan Foreign
because we have so many fine
biographical sketch, her philosophy
AlfaU" s Supervisor Abolhassan Bani
teachers in the district . He went on
of teaching, and a SWJUlUtry of
Sadr has confirmed Iran no longer
to
say that Bradbury e xemplifies
professional and civic activities .
wUI tak e dollars in payment for its
those qualltoec in teachm ~ whic h we .
In her philosophy Bradbury said ,
oil , today ·s ed1tion of the French
a.o; educators , should all strive to
'1 believe that each student should
newspaper Le Monde reported from
emulate
.
be enl-ouraged to formulate a sense

Inside today.

PRICE 35 CENTS

Ohio won't
ration gas

1the sotuatwn I has gone through the
county board of education , " Bowen
exp!aJDed .
The Meigs County Board of
EducatiOn has officially declined to
enter the dispute, saying it supports
the actions of the local school board .
·'Once county board has made that
decisoon, the JUdge can step in , " s.aid
Bowen who emphasized that Buck
has been playing a key role in at tempts to settle the strike .
The two main areas of

disagreement

• •

Iran not

DA VID.GRUESER

Grueser
promoted

by OVEC
CHESIDRE - I. 0 . Hawk, vice
president-&lt;&gt;perations, Oluo Valley
Electric Corporation, Saturday an ·
nounced the promotiOn of David E.
Grueser to the position of pur ·
chasmg coordina tor at the system
division, effective Nov . 1, 1979.
In this position, Mr . Grueser will
be relocated to the Piketon, Ohio, office and become a member of Mr .
HAwk's operating staff, replacing
Robert F . Joseph, who wi II be
retiring in the near future .
Grue""r joined OVEC in July 19(&gt;5
as a temporary guard at Kyger
creek Plant. In July 1956, he transf~rred to l.he stores deparunent as a
stores attendant, and in April 1!175,
he was p.-omoted to stores supervisor, the position he held WIW Ius
recent promotion .
Grueser ard his wife, Eileen,
presently reside at 41735 Pomeroy
Pike, Pomeroy. They plan on
moving closer to the Piketon area in
the near future

Northup man
arrested
l. AI .l..IPOUS - A !'lorthup man .
(;arry D. Church, 21 . was caught m
the act of allegedly burglarizing the
Swisher Implement Company, 539
Upper River Rd ., late Friday night.
According to a report filed by the
Gallia County Sheriff's Department.
followmg the receipt of a report of
suspicious activtty at the implement
company ,
Deputy
Timothy
Brumfield was dispatched to the
scene He arrived at 10 :09 p.m .
Discol'cring a window broken at
the front of the building and
suspecting the presence of a subjec t
within t he st ru cture . O!ftce r
Br"mfield radioed for back-up . That
call was answered by additior
courty unil•, as well a s by Gallipoli s
Clty Police officers
Arr e st ed insid e th e building,
r eport edly unarmed. was Garry D.
Church. who has been c harged with
burglary and mcarcerated m the
county jail.

C"OLUMBUS, Ohio I APl - Ohio 's
decision to cooperate with the Carter
administration
for
en ergy
conservation apparently will not
include gasoline rationing o r
minimum purchase requirements .
Robert S. Ryan, director of the
state Department of Energy , wa s
among representatives of 50 states
- including 39 governors - who
attended a White House meeting
Friday to hear President Carter 's
appeal for energy c-onservation .
The president urged states to take
U"nmediate steps to curb demand for
oil and suggested institutmg
mandatory odd~ven gasoline buying rules as well as mlmmum
purchase plans
"Gov. Rhodes has agreed that we
would cooperate in thi s urgent
request for conservation. " Ryan
eonfirmed. But he emphasized said
there would be no need to impose
mandatory purchase requirements
m Ohio.
"The shortfall in supply does not
look as if it will reach the
proportions of the first several
months of this year . And Ohioan•
pulled through wtthout mandatory
measures then and I am sure they
will continue to conserve on a
voluntary basis," he said .

Governors were encouraged to
voluntarily develop conservation
programs. The president, however,
has the power to fa-ce states lD
adopt mandatory ratiooing plans or
he can impose a federal plan.
State officials will reportedly
foc us their conservatioo efforts on
pubtic transportatioo, park and ride
programs and l'OIIUilUter car pools.
In addition to rigid enforet"ment of
the 55 mile an hour speed limit,
federal energy officials asked the
governors reduce the fuel used in
state-&lt;Jwned motor vehicles by 10
percent; they aiso encouraged the
chief executives to !rim the overall
energy used in the daily operation of
state government by S percent
Ohio appears to be in fairly good
shape as far
as
gasoline
conservation efforts . Gasoline
consumption in the sUite is down
near ly 7 percent since earlier this
ye ar. according to Ryan.
The director said the U.S.
Department of Energy will
announce specific state targets for
reducing gasoline consumption ne:rt
week . These target areas will
include reducing consumption of
heating oil and other producta
relined from crude oil.

Decision welcomed
by White House
WASHINGTON I APJ - The White
House welcomed Iran's decision
Saturday to free women and black
hostages at the U.S. embassy ill
Tehran, but urged the release of all
captives held f&lt;r two weeks by
militant
Islamic
students
demanding the return of the shah .
White House press secretary Jody
Powell said the order bjr Ayatollah
Ruhollah Khomeini could lead to the
release of about a dozen of the
appro&lt;imately
60
American
hostages in the lr an ian capital .
While one of the captors reported
all hostages to be well , Pr esident
Carter urged An .
With Thanksgiving approaching .
Carter issued a statement saying.
··The hearts or Cill Americaris are
heavy with concern for th e safet y of
those held hostage m Iran :
" On Thanksgiving Day and durmg
the holiday weekend . I ask all
Americans to make a special prayer
at churches and synagogues and
places of pubhc meeting . Let us seek
God's guidanN' in our searc h for
peace and human brotherhood. and
pray fore return .
With Thanksgiving approa chmg .
Carter 1ssued a statement saying,
" The hearts of all Americans are
heavy with concern for the safety of
those held hostage in Iran :
·•()n Thanksgiving Day and during
the holiday weekend, l ask all

Americans to mal!:e a spedaJ jrayer
at c hurches and synagogues and
places of pubUc meeting. Let us aeek
God's guidance in ow- search f&lt;r .•
peace and human brotherhood, and ..
jray f&lt;r the sale return of thooe whose lives are threatened."
Carter's statement, five days
before Thanksgiving, seemed to
indicate he had little hope the crisis
would be over by then .
Khomeini ·s order, issued in the
name of " Islamic mercy," did not
catch the administration entirely by
surprise, Powell said. But the press
secretary refused to explaiiJ why
Carter had "reason to believe some,
hostages were about to be released." .
The announcemen t reached
Carter between 5: JO a.m. and 6 a.m.
EST . It led to a hasty telephooe
conferenet' with Secretary o state
l'vrus R. Vance . This was followed
b) a meeling of the Special
"Coordinating C&lt;Jrrunittee comprised
of top government officials who have
been keeping track of developments
m Tehran
Carter did not attend the 00.
minut e meeting, presided over
Saturday morning by Zbigniew
Brzezinski. his national security
affaU"s adviser. The session was
attended by Vance, Defense
Secretary Harold Brown, and Vice
President Walter F. Mondale .

St•lt·cl \ou r. to(in'
.

Tf&gt;hran .

of moral, social and realistic values.
The teacher should also encourage
imagination and inventiveness in the

'

Clt&gt;vdand ~t'l~ ~rant

'

MIDDLEPORT - POMEROY

more dollars

(hrisfmas (ards
'

''·
.

SUNDAY . NOV EMBER 18. 1979

taking any

OPEN FRIDAY TIL 8 PM

.., u1t l-"l'fi.'Ollt'

.• '

GALLIPOLIS- POINT PLEASANT

tntine

Connie Gradbury GalliJJ
Local 'Teacher of the Year'

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted-John Blosser , Middleport; Kathryn Evaru;, Portland ;
Charles Knapp, Middleport; Florence 11lornton, Ra c me; John Hobbs,
Albany ; Andrew Batey , Middleport :
Deborah Yates , Mason .
Discharged-Mark Boyd, Earl
Snyder, Otis Casto. Roy Parker ,
Oretha Durst, Maurice Hotz, Lillie
Robinson, Charles Griffis , AlUla
Wheeler, William Easterday ,
George Hackett, Sr ., Nancy Deem.
Ronda Uoekstra . Oarence Norris .

card"' to

•

' " I'

VOL 13 NO. 42

tmts

•

_,..,u......,~t.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

CLEVELAND I AP) - "i he city of
Cleveland has been given a $466,000
federal grant to purchase 30 electric
police cars as part of a five-year test
to be conducted by the U.S .
Department of Energy to determine
if they are feasible for police use .
Former Maya- Dennis J . Kucinich
applied f&lt;r the llJ"ant in August after
he inspected a model car, powered
by 21 batteries, that can go 72 miles
an hour and has a range of 50 miles .
Steve Hurko , a safety department
spokesman, said aU the cars will be
assigned to non..,mergency jobs .

COlliN IE BRADBURY

Asked about a c-omment on Friday
by Oil Minister Ali Akhbar Moinfar
that he 1Moinfar 1 had not ordered
such a move, Bani Sadr was quoted
as saymg : "Given my responsibility
fur ecmomy and finance . I decide.
and not Mr . Moinfar "
The report sa1d he added he would
not contact Moinfar until the next
me etin g of the Re volutionary
Council " lo clanfy the Situation ."
but did not say when the meetmg
would be .
On Friday· Le Monde quoted Bani
Sadr a s ha v ing said Tuesday that oil
bills were being issued demanding
pa yment m French and Swiss
francs. West Gennan marks and the
.Japan ese yen. a move he said would
be "the end of the domiatJon of the
t!ull ar ." •h e wo rld monetary
st a nd~nl for od tran sactions.

TEN GALLIA COUNTY
EMERGENCY
MEDI CAL SERVICE EMT 's are currently par·
ticipating in a four mo11th, 100 hour, parantedla

training course. The classroom work, which will end In
January, will be followed by 125 houn of cllnlcal
traiuin~. This cow-se is taught by Sharon Dailey, Mid·
dleport .

•

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