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. 12-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Oct. Io, 19&amp;1

EMS implements new procedures
M··•gs County Emergency Medical
Services h~s bcgur! implementation
uf new atlvanrt:!d procedures uf

patient care by area sq uads in Meigs
County. T~is new program is being
e&gt;iablished (u provide a higher level
of patient care and care rendered to
the 1·esidents of Meigs County.
Throu ~h lht&gt; n;1rt;,..i!"l'"'t;"r&gt; •\' ··11

ATIEND FARM FESTIVAL
Several res idents of the Pomeroy
Health Care Center attended the Bob
Evans Farms ·Festival Friday. Accompan ied by Terry Stotts, activities dir~ctor{, with the assistance
of volunteers, Dorothy Morris and
Donna Good, and Yvonne Massie
social director, were Ann and
Jerome Cook, Gertie Kloes, Lucy
Spencer, Henry Cunn ingham, Pearl
Little, Jessie Carr, Flossie Story,
and John Dill.

PARAMEDICS: Kenny Byer and Gary Ellis administrating advanced proeedu1·e to a patient during training exerciS€s:

Welsh reacts to sheriff's chamber talk
Republican candidates for Meigs
County Sheriff John C. Wel ~h has
reacted to the October•7 speech of
County Sheriff James Proffitt when
Proffitt alleged that most marijuana
in Meigs County is grown by welfare
and food sta mp recipients.
Welsh sa id he believes that the olr

Welsh further said, "Possibly the
current Sheriff would be better advised to attempt to control the
violators who threaten Meigs County
residents and their property ·ra ther
than to make publicity ra1ds

designed to enhance his re.elec;:tion."
"'"-~ ,_.,-.,, .';·- •
Weish made those. observations
following the opening of the Meigs
·coun ty Republican Headquarters -in
Pomeory;October 14:

In Meigs County
.'

t·uunty squad units working wilh
Life Lines to patients requiring atlhigher level o(care.
ph)'SICialls fl·mp Veterans Memorial
di tional care while prior to arrival at
These new procedures are being :
H.n spita I in . P&lt;11fl eruy , new
the lu ispil,al.
.
implemented and additional ;
pn &gt;&lt;;cdurcs and guidelines have
The implementation of this intraining to the Licensed Emergency ·
been drawn up and i111plementL-d to
!ravenous therapy program will
Medical Technicians of each squad :
allow squad personnel's License'&lt;:!
enable· the squad personnel to
station in the county, is .being con- :
Emergency Medical Technicians to
stabilize critjca}ly iU or \njured vicdueled to initiate these new •
establish and maintain lnlr~v~n&lt;l.Yli- .!im~.Jl!OJ:I' jn their. preparations and --~lll:!l.S..:-~-:-- :':--;:;:-:-:- ~;;--;-~
transport to the nearest medical · The total concept of these ad- •.
facility. . .
.
van~ procedures will allow Meigs :
FALL FESTIVAL OCT. 25
Ii helps S!!Uads to help stabilize the County Emergency Medical Ser- '
· Afall festival will be held at Letart
patient's condition prior to their
vices to provide more and better ser- :
Falls Elementary on Oct. 25, beginvice to the residents of Meigs Coun- :
arrival at the hospital, thus enabling
ning with a turkey dinner with all the
the patient transported to be given a
ty.
trimmings at 6 p.m.
.The dinner includes turkey, r-;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;~
dressing, homemade nOodles, green
beans, slaw, beverage and dessert.
Dinners are $3 for· a&lt;lults and $1.50
for children 12 and under.
Following th~ dinner games wlll
PROGRESS
be played. There will also be a country store, rna I«!up lady, and disco
room. Door prizes will be a warded.
The event is being sponsored by
Letart Falls PTO ..

30TH ANNIVERSARY SALE

NOW IN
All UVING ROOM SUITES REOUCID

30% TO CELEBRATE OUR 30TH YEAR
« IN BUSINESS.

RETURN FROM CHARLESTON
Mr. and Mrs. James Criswell have
returned after spending two weeks
in Charleston, W. Va. caring for
their grandchildren whose parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Custer, were on
vacation.

MASON FURNITURE CO. ,
Mason,

Hert,nan Grate, Owner

773-5592

w. Va.

vious purpose of these marijuana

S€izures was politically motivated
and designed solely for publicity just
prior to the election.
Continuing. Welsh said, "If the
sheriff has ev idence of such illegal
activities as he stated, then arrests
should have occurred during the
past three years. It is strange that
the sheriff can find and seize
marijuana only a couple of weeks.
prior to the election and be unable to •
consistently control this problem for
the othe&lt;· years of his term ...
·Welsh stated furth er that " If, in
fa ct. Proffitt has the information
relating to welfare fra ud and food
stamp fraud, then he should provide
this informa tion to the propc•·
authorities wl1o would be able to

FRIDAY.
:OOOBER
17th- SATURDAY. OCTOBER 18th
•
I
!
OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT
-..-...----.
_________________ ._.._.._.._.._,_
.-.~--·-...J.-------~·----.._....__.._.._..__._.._._

Cloc~s

r-.. .

Course completed

£requencies.

Williams is a central office equipment installer in the company's
Athens district. He has been with
General12years.
Courses at the development center
arc designed to enhance employees'
job skills. The subjects range from
basic electronics to management
skills.

I
I

and knlt sla cks. Sizes

to 24 months and 2 .
to 7

6

SPECIAL
SAL£

JUNIOR JEANS

1

I
I

Special group of Wrangler denim jeans in
junior sizes 3 to 15.

II

REG. su.OO •••••••••••• SALE s7.88

I ..........___, I
i
1

PRICES .

----_..·-~·-~----_.._.._..._,_._..-

_!

.

FASHION
JEANS
MEN.'S 11895

FASHION

JEAN~

MEN'S 119.95

1

14.20

FASHION JEANS 114.90

FLANNELSHIRTS

1 Sizes 30 through 42 wa is!.
DEE CEE brand. SOlid col·

Colorful plaid patterns - 50% Kodel
polyester; 50% cot-·
ton. Sizes S (1414112), M (15·151/2),
L (16-16112), and XL
(17·17'12).
Two
pockets, full tails.
Excellent quality.

or grey or brown. 84% cot·
too, 18% .polyester. save

this wee k' End.

$}688

MEN'SS21.95

Carter· and other officials, meanwhile, were playing down the United
States' tensions with Iran.
The president, who called Iraq an
"invading nation" Wednesctaynight,
contirJued to emphasize U.S. support
for Iran's national integrity.
Asked on a campaign stop if the
administration would suppqrt Iran's
complaints against Iraq at the
United Nations, Carter said,
"Disputes like this should riot be settled throueh aggression or invasion
· of another country's territory."
The Pentagon denied a published
report that the United States and its
allies have built up an annada of 60
warships to keep the Strait of Hormuz open to Persian Gl!lf oil traffic.

$699

MEN ' S 122.95

FASHION JEANS 117.20

,VAN HEUSEN"'
.~. . .~vv,

MUBkie stressed that if the
hostages are returned, the United
States would lift its economic sanctions against Iran and possibly allow .
the shipment to Iran of military
spare par\3 now stockpiled around
the country.
Chicago television station WLS,
quoting what it said were four
"highly placed sources" on three
continents, reported Thursday that a
deal is in the work io the United
States to trade milik.~- spare parts
for release of the hostages, now
spending their 349th day in captivity.

WASIUNGTON (AP) _ In a
report that could signal an end to the
191M) receMion the Commerce
Department said today that the U.S
economy grew by 1 percent in th~
third quarter due chiefly to a sharp
rebound in personal spending.
A preliminary report showed the
lnflatiOIHidjusted value of all goods
and aervlces - the real gross
. national product - rose by $3.5
bJWon . during the July-september
period to an annual rate of $1.41
trilli011.
' ·
Before . adj!Liting for inflation
GNP I'OIJe 10.2 percent during th~
quarter, to $2.511 trillim.

The third-quarter perfonnance
contrasted with the recoi-d 9.6 percent decline in real GNP 'in the
-second quarter. The Corrunerce
Department S&amp;id the turnaround
was caUBed by a 3.7 percent, or $91
billion, increase in final sales after a
10.2 percent decline during the
previous three months.
~ersonal spending, which had
fallen $2.9 billion in the second quarter, rose $55.2 billion in the third. A
key factor in that increase was
higher automobile sales, which
raised the purchase of durable goods
by $24.5 billion in _the third quarter

after a decline in the second.
·
, deflator Indicated prices rose by 9.1
After-tax ·personal income rose
percent m the third quarter com$51.6 billion during the quarter and pared with 10.7 percent in the
spending was up $54.7 billion. second.
. .
Savings as a-portion of personal inToday's report. '?dicated tha' by
come,dropped from 4.9 percent in one popular _defm!lion, there ":as no
the second quarter to 4.6 percent in 19110 recessiOn at all - sunply
the third.
because the downturn was limited to
Business investment rose $3.2 one calendarqua~_r..
.
billion in the third quarter after a . The popular defwtion of recess10n
$4.4 billion plunge in the second IS .two consecutive quarters of GNP
threemonlhsoftheyear.
decline. Statlsticl~ns . say the
The Commerce Department's economy began sliding. m January
measure of inflation, called the GNP or. Feb~ry, but the first quarter
deflator, showed the price spiral still registered an overall growth
slowed in the third quarter. The rate of 1.2 percent.

... '

.

-

./

...... '-...._...
~

{ /~ \
I; I I
.·. I

The original heavyweight
un· washed Levi jeans.

•FLARES
•STRAIGHT LEG

SALEI
VAN HEUSEN

·, I

&lt; _.,J

our new f-all selection in

neck sizes 141/z to

17 1J:~,

sleeve lengths 32 to 35.
Solid colors including
Super Silk and Qui ana, ·plus
a fihe groUp of patterns .

VAN HEUSEN $14.00
I ••

I~

•• I I ••• I

••••••• I

I •• •••

'10.92

VAN HEUSEN 116.00

DRESS SHIRTS ..•••..•••.•...••..•. , .••••••••111.70
N 116.50

............... ~ ............... '12.87

NEW YORK
CLOTHING HOUSE

•

. POMEROY, OH.
&lt;

a _aoe»oo1'n~

DUTCH FLOWER BULBS

FORT SilL, Okla. - An investigation is under way into the crash of
a C-123 cargo plane that killed four crewmen, including three Ohioans,
at Fort Sill.
The Air Force Reserve plane crasbed at the artiUery center's west
range Thursday less than 30 minutes after its 8:30·a.m. takeoff from
the fort's Henry Post Airfield.
The plane left Rickenbacker Air National Guard Base in ColwnbUB,
Ohio, Qn Wednesday. A Rickenbacker spokesman said its crew spent
the night at Fort Sill as part of a training exercise.
Air Force spokesmen identified the dead as Lt. Col. Donald Griffith,
42, of Clarion, Pa.; Maj. Thomas Brady, 38, of Reynoldsburg, Ohio;
Capt. George Freeland, 32, of ColumbUB, Ohio, and TechnicaL Sgt.
Michael Snodgrass of Blanchester, Ohio.

Flood relief help deadline set
COLUMBUS, Ohio - The federal Small BUBiness Administration
says victims of August floods in five Ohio counties have ul!til Oct. 23 to
apply for SBA loans.
.
.
SBA disaster branch manager Nonn Davis said a loan off1cet' Will ·
take applications at .welfare offices in Colwnbiana, Guernsey,
MUBkingwn, Jefferson and Belmont counties during the next two
weeks.
"We want to insure that everyone who may need an SBA Joan has the
opportunity to file for it," he said.

Gasohol explosion victim dies
DAYTON, Ohio - One of seven people injured in an explosion last
· month at the Farm Science Review at Ohio State University has died
inDayton.
,
Richard Williamson, 48, of Cedarville died Thursday everung in the
• bw-n unit of Miami Valley HOspital where he was ll'ansferred after the
Sept. 26 accident in ColwnbUB.
•
The explosion occurred when a spectator inadvertently lit a container full of gasohol. The con~iner was part of an alcohol still display
which demonstrated how grain alcohol could be distiUed and UBed as
fuel.

CINCINNATI - Fifty-six firefighters probing the still-smouldering
rubble of a coal powder plant have been unable to locate the body of a
34 year-old roofing contractor.
Seven of eight people injured in the spectacular explosion of the Hill
&amp; Griffith Foundry Supply Co. plant Wednesday remained
hospitalized, three critical.
Wells said a head count indicated all 13 workers employed at the
:V plant made their way to safety.

. f

Gunman had killed girlfriend •

FLANNEL
SHIRTS
Sizes 8 to 20. plaid patterns In

CINCINNATI - The Hamilton County Coroner says James Hoskins,
who took control of a Cincinnati television station for 12 hours, shot his
·girlfriend several times before going to the station and eventually
killing himself.
Coroner Frank Cleveland ruled Thursday that Hoskins, an artist,
died of a self-inflicted gunahot wound to the head.
Hoeklns, 41, took nine employees hostage at WCPO-TV for anJ10ur
and a half early Wednesday morning, telling them he had killed his
girlfriend, Melanie Finlay, in his apartment.

'

DRESS SHIRTS

!

DRESS SHIRTS ..•...

•

Probe begins in cargo plane crash

Firefighters check ruins for body

BOYS'

FOR TWO DAYS ONLY

.~ ''

FIFTEEN CENTS

The Iranians have threatened to
mine the strait.

FASHION JEANS 116.40

' )

and chainnan of the Local Corrections Planning
Board center back, were among those. who met with
Gatz Thursday to discuss the program which is
designed to work toward community correctional
programs.

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1980

U.S. economy shows ·third quarter gain

.

MEN'S WRANG'ERL $9.95

. Size 44 thru
1I ,$.21.95 Extra
1
Sale $18.88

.•

..

REG. s3.00 ••••••••••••SALE '2.39
REG. $4.00 ••••••••••• SALE S3.19
REG. SS.QO ••••••••••• SALE s3.99
REG. '6.00•••••••••• •·SALE S4.79

WORK PANTS

l!

denim . Many new styles
in the selec tion.

and carson Crow, assistant Meig:~ County prosecutor,

enttne

at

Could recession be over?

Decorative scarves
. add just the right
touch. Squares and
oblongs In prints
and solids.

REG. s16.00. •• •• : ....... SALE sg,58
REG. S19.00 ............. SALE sn.38
REG. s24.00 ............. SALE s14.38

SALE

Waist sizes 27 to 38
lengths 30 lhru 36. Most
all are pre·washed blue

relurned from a vacation in the

FASHION
SCARVES

:rr~;--

SPECIAL SALE!
MEN'S BLUE DENIM

Smoky Mounta ins. .

SALE $12.79
SALE $14.39
SALE $17.59
SALE $22.39
SALE$28.79

11

1
1·

RETURN HOME . •
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Arnold, Mr.
and Mrs. Herman Kasper, Mr. and
Mrs. Danny Smith and Mandy have

.. .... . ... ..... ,
•.•. , ..••• , .....
....... ••. ... .. .
, .............. ,
............... .

I

slacks, denim slacks

i
I

$16.00
$18.00
$22,00
$28.00
$36.00

I

1

II
I

vests .

REG.
.R!:G.
REG .
1' E.G.
R, ' G.

r

•

•

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

•·

I

i

'

SALE

Kni t top s, swea t
s hirt s, cor du ro y

l
·

I

---;.;-;-;:-;~-;.-;-----,1 .

1
1

MARION - Charles Williams of
Vine Street. Racine , a General
Telephone Co. of Ohio employee, has
completed a course al the company's Robert M. Wopat Employee
Development Center in J\1arion.
Students learned how to test and
repair " carrier " equipment.
Carriers can transmit several
telcphorye conversations over a pair
of wires by using different radio

,

' The Meigs County Local Col're(l&gt; Licking, Franklin, Ma ri on , emP!lasW: . co?U"unity place~ent ·
Uons Planning Board was presented Muskingum, Summit, Pike and ross.
and rehabilitation r~ther thanpr1son
a check for $1,682 in state funds to
In making the award, Gatz noted
for norH!anger9UB VIolators.
develop a wide range of community this is a demonstration progralil
It . was noted that ~e amount
correctional progr8ltl!l Thursday.
which will be evaluated on a con- rece1ve~ by each co?"ty IS based on
Thecheeltr:epresentsone-fourthof tinuing hasis to determine if parpopulation, per c~p1ta income, and
taxation along ~th seve.r al other
the money which Meigs County will ticipating commwtities can limit the
conunitment of non~gerous of- factors. Conurussione_r, R_tchard
receive {or the year ending June 30.
A total of $6,728 in Community fenderil to crowded state prisons, a
Jo?~ pro~s~ ~1cab~n of
.\
ColTectlons Act funds has been set major objective of the program.·
e_XIStirJg legiSlation t~ mc!ude a floor
aside for use here.
Gatz reported Ohio has an all-time figure for the counties mvolved in ( "" ,
Nick Gatz, Administrator, Board liigh of 13,500 persons in the eight the program.
of Community Services .of the
penal institutions of the state. he
. Last spnng, the county received
Department of Rehabilitation and said this is an increase of about 5,500, $10,000. under the C~rnmun ity
Correction, presented the check on since 1973 and that the capacity of Corrections Act as a plannmg grant.
behaU of the Governor's office to the
the eight institutions is considered to
Meigs County Commissioners.
be 10,1110. .
Ohio lottery winner
Also present were Carson Crow,
Emphasis of the community
CLEVELAND (AP) - The winassistant Meigs County prosecutor
correctional programs over the
ning
nwnbers selected Thursday
and chainnan of the planning board,
state will be to reduce the nwnber o~
night
in the Ohio Lottery's daily
imd Paul Gerard administrative
non-dangerous offenders sent to
"The Number" and the
game
1188istant.
',
prisons through rehabilitation
Ii.ECEIVES CHECK - Richard Jones, president of
weekly
"Pyramid" and "Lucky
Meigs County is one of nine · · programs in the counties. The ·
the Board of Meigs County Commissioners, left,
Buck"
games
are:
demonstration areas .In Ohio
program is expected to continue for
.received a $eck for $1,692, the first of four payments
The Number -148
receiving funds under the program
atlea.,tanotheryear.
to total $6,728, in Corrununlty Corrections Act funds,
Pyramid- 40 ; 539; 1628
created by the Ohio General AssemLocally, the plan is to use the
from Nick Gatz, administrator of the Bureau of Coin-.
money from the state to employ a
blyinJuly,1979.0therparticipating
Lucky Buck - 96; 373; 5678; 67627;
munity Services of the Departm!\llt 9f Rehabilitation
counties. and cities include Clark,
parWrne probation officer who will 3400112
and Correction. Commissioner Chester Wells, right,

WASIUNGTON (AP) - U.S. of- hottrs after Carter had attended a
ficials from President Carter on charity banquet in the city, and was
down, while denying that any deal to plead Iran's case in its ?Jklay war
has been made or is being with Iraq before the U.N. Security
negotiated, are sending conciliatory
Council later today.
signals to Iran in a bid to free the 52 ' Rajai is the · high~st-ranking
American hostages.
Iranian official to visi! the United
Carter Said Thursday he would be States since revolutionary forces
Willing to meet and diScuss the overthrew the late Shah Mohammad
· hostages with Iranian Prime Reza Pahlavi in January 1979.
Minister Mohammad Ali Raja!, in
There were no indications the
Neo;r York for an ~xpected ap- hard.line Islamic fundamentalist
· pellnlllCe at_the United Nations; "if · would meet with carter or any other
he should be amenable." Secretary U.S. off'-,laJ, but Rajai's trip neverof State Edmund S. Mwrkie added
theless fueled frenzied speculation
that "the door is open" for
about the hostages and U.S.
negotiations.
relations with Iran- all of which the
Rajal·arrived in New York shortly
Pentagon and the State Department
after midnight Thursday, about two
tried to dispel.

Wine or blue Devon Coordinates in misses sizes.
Blouses, i ackets, slacks, skirts, sweater and sweater ·

REG. $525.00 Che ~ ry . ... .. . .. . . . Sa I.e $420.00
REG. $630.00 Mallie or Oak ,. , ... Sale $504.00
IR EG . $695.00 Oak .............. Sale 5556.00
IR EG. $875.00 Pin ~ .... , ......... Sale $700.00
IR EG. $975.00 Che ~ ry., ., .. , , .... Sale $780.00
Lay-Away for C~ristmas
At These Special sa te Prices!

.! ·]..~1\usterlJtolVt\~
II SPORTSWEAR

Columbus Police Department and
the Ohio State PatroL

SALE

Howard Mi ller Graddtather
are exqu isite time
pieces that will give your hom e a per sona lity a11its own.

consistent enforcerrienl combi ned
with loose accusations of criminal

criminal investigations with the

'

Hostage deal denied

_._... ..

WOMEN'S DEVON SPORThl'IEAR'

CLOCK SALE
.

assa ults.
Utilizing his long experience in

I

VOL. 31 NO. 131

As a police officer with over 25 years
of experience. I find such in·

\'iolent crimes such cts shooting and

'

e

adequateiy investigate this misuse.

activity intole•·able in an electi on en' furcement offi cial.··
Welsh sa id the policy of his office
if elected sheriff would be to concentrate on. the crimes that affect
Meigs County residents daily suoh
as tl1eft. b1·eaking and entering, and

Funds .allocated for
.~ -·r.ange__ progr_am -.-·

regular styles plus westerns.
Wrangler , Mr. Leggs and
Campus brands. Friday &amp;
Saturday Only.

BOYS $6.95 FLANNEL SHIRTS •••••••••••••.. ' 5.93
BOYS '8.95 RNINEL SHillS ................. '7.63
BOYS '9.95 FIMNEL SHillS ................ '8.43
BOYS '10.95 FLANrtn SHillS ............... '9~

Weather forecast

.

Showers and thundersto1111!1 likely tonight. Lows in the low to 1flld508. Partly cloudy Saturday, Highs near 70. Chance of rain 70 percent
tonight and 20 percent Saturday. Winds southerly to southwesterly 1~
25 mph tonight.

SATURDAY STORE HOURS 9130 AM TO 5 PM.

EROY

the daJ wttb the old fashioned long handled tltlrren. Another 60 or so
aenlor cltlzaw helped Widnesday with peeling the apples. The proceeds
go Into the IOCillhare of funds required for operation of the Center.

,,
v

~

ExteudedObloForecallt-SundaythroughTueada)':Varlable
cloudiness and cool through the period, Highs in the mid-50a to mid60s. Lows in the 40s Sunday imd Monday; cooling to the mld-308 to low
40s Tuesday. .

�- 3--The DllilySentinel, Mlddleport-Pornel'Oy, O.,Fritlay, Oct. 17,1980

2- TheDaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, OCt. 17,1.9110

Opinions &amp;
Comments

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP)- The

m E DAILY SENTINEL ,
tUSFS1t5-M0)
DEVOTEDT011f£"""" -~~­

Publlt~hing

Company• Multimedia. Inc••

Suoad class poatage paid at Pomero}', Oh.lo.

Na tloaal udnr11slng reprtsentatin, Landon Associates, 3101 Euclid A\'e., Clenlaod, OhJo
44 115.
The .bsoclated Press is exclusively e otilled to the use lor publica tion of all new&amp; dispatches

Robert Wtugen
Robert Hodllch
Dale Rnthgeb, Jr.
Carl Gheen

qj~

~.-.

Ohio editorial
commentary
YOUNGSTOWN VINDICATOR: "Two year:;; ago, Ohio
legislators attracted nationwide attention and considerable criticism by voting themselves a 28 percent
salary increase of $5,000.
"At $22,000 a year, the 33 senators and 99 state representatives collect $2.9 million in regular salaries. Extra
stipends for the leadership and conunittee chairm~m raise
the nieipbers' payroll to close to $3 miillon. That leaves
$7.9 million in other legislative expenses. Part of this goes
for printing, telephones, travel and the like, but much' of it
is needed to support the Legislature's staff.
" A few decades ago, Ohio legislators got $1,000, held
relatively brief sessions and got along with a stenographic
pool and a handful of secretaries. The members of the
General Assembly may point to a heavier volwne o(
legislation and work of the other kinds.
" More legislation isn't necessarily better legislation...
And as for the increased load ... the taxpayer wonders if
this is not one more proof of Parkinson's Law: 'Work expands to fill the time allotted to it."'

•

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

.,

" ,

I

....... ... ,

.

Reagan's . positi~n
spent billions on anti-pollution
devices for cars to reduce oxides of
nitrogen, but that 93 percent of the
oxides of nitrogen are produced by
trees and decaying vegetRtion.
He said these oxides cause the
haze on the Smoky Mountains, and
·that some doctors believe the smoke
might be good for tubercular patients.
He said there are 16 pennanent oil
slicks in the Santa Barbara Channel,
and that it was believed in the late
1800s that fwnes from the slick
purified the air and prevented the
spread of disease ..
Reagan also said he would, as
president, tum to industry for help
in drafting "reasonable rules" for
environmentRJ standards.
A presidential candidate's views
on the environment are not tRken
lightly. The president appoints the
chief of the EnvironmentRI Protec-

. . .:

~·- -~·

4

on pollution
lion Agency, which sets and polices
pollution rules.
Reagan's speech began to set off
alanns in.environmental circles.
In Ohio, he blamed imports . and
EPA rules for the closing of a steel
mill. He said 11ir pollution was substantially Wider control.
Meanwhile, his hometown of Los
Angeles had its worst smog attack in
years. He stRrted getting questioned
closely about his stRtements. •
At first Reagan told reporters they
were "nit-picky." He proclaimed
himself an environmentalist, but added that EPA proposed
unreasonable, untrif!l stRnilards on
industry at the expense of productivity, and said industry should be
given more leeway.
There was confusion when he
denied he had ever said poUution
was ·substantially Wider control.
Reagan later repeatet' '.tiS con-

tention that pollution was largely under control.
·
By week's end, Reagan was under
attack from enviromnentalists and
was forced to soften his pro-industry
stRnd.
Arriving In smog.ciJo!ted Los
AngeleB, Reagan lamented the
pollution and said he never intended
to suggest a lessening of clean air
rules.
He was confronted by pickets
carrying signs reading, "Mount St.
Reagan Blows Again," and "Trees
Don't Pollute, Reagan Does."
In an editorial, ·The San Jose
(Calif.) Mercury suggested a
solution:

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) ~Two of
the nation's leading quarterbacks,
Art Schlichter of No. 9 Ohio State
and Tim Clifford of Indiana, match
talents Saturday in a key Big Ten .
Conferenlle coUege football game.
· Schlichter is the Buckeyes' aJJtime passing-yardage champion and

"Put the president of the Sierra
Club In a sealed garage with a tree.
Put Ronald Reagan in another
sealed garage with a nmn1ng
automobile. Then walt to see which
of them yells to get out iirst."

~., )lasafiockpfOhloStaterecords.

.

The Ohio StRte Bar Association has
.employed a new method for
evaluating Supreme Court can- ·
didates which the group's immediate past president says is more
objective than past procedures.
A 19-member commission,
representing geographic districts
throughout the stRte, rated candidates in the Nov. 4 election on the
basis of biographical information,
legal experience, judicial writings ·
and personal interviews. Also considered were interviews with attorneys who are knowledgeable
about the candidates' qualifications.
"This is the first time we have undertaken this type of rating
procedure," sald Josepl;l A. Oths,
Wellston, the former association
president who was chairman of the
conunission.

but injurious too, particularly since
institutions of the independent sector ·gepend on contributions for
health and survival.
In the past decade, he said, giving
is down 10 percent, and at least part
of the reason is a consequence of the
sector's poor recognition.
O'Connell is president of the sixmonth-old Independent Sector - the
organization and the sector share
the name - so named by members
who seek to be more clearly ·
categorized as the third sector of
society.
Business isn't the guilty one, said
0' Connell, fanner director of the
MentRI Health Association. Last
year corporations gave'a record$2.3
billion, exceeding foundation con. tributions for the first time.
He tloesn 't place blame directly on
individuals either, because they continue to provide 90 percent of
charitRble and philanthropic giving.
In fact, O'Connell declares, neither
does he blame government.
Still, he concedes, the federal
government has created a problem,
one that is related to the third sector's lack.of recognition. It was done
inadvertently, he said; The intent
was to help, not hinder,
The source of the damage appears
to be tl)e Internal Revenue Service
code relating to charitable, tRxdeductible contributions. .Six times
In the past eight years the standard
deduction has bl:en increased, Wltil
it is now $3,400 for a married couple,

compared with$1,000 in 1970.
Itemization is better for those who
depend on contributions, according
to O'Connell. He refers to a survey
showing ltemizers contribute three
times as much to charity as those
who take the standard deduction.

Now, says O'Connell, almost
every independent sector
organization, large or small, community-based or nationwide,,
religious or secular, "is faced with
the prospect of having to curtail its
activities."

0

.,

roo

7

was on the fmal day of the
· regular aeason, Oct. s, .
A 6-foot.7 fastballer, Gale won 11 ·
straight games for the RoyalS from
· Junel7-Sept.l.
"Our basic problem In tlwi Series
is we have not been able to control
Philadelphia's offense," Frey 541id.
The Phillies scored 13 runs in the first two games against the RoyalS.
"Gale had. tendinitiS early In the
year, but his statement to me was
·that his arm feels better now than at
any time during the aeason," Frey
said. "He's the kind of guy who can
keep them down for five or six innings.lf he does that, I'll be happy."
Ruthven, whose last appearance
was in relief In the final game of the
playoffs, had a strong finish in 1980.
He is a fastball, curveball, changeup
pitcher who relies on location.
"He's gotten progressively better
this season," Green said. Green also
said left-handed reliever Tug
McGraw, who had his streak of consecutive-game appearances snapped at six on Wednesday, would be
ready.
.
"Tugger's had two days off, and
he's claiming he's ·rusty already,"
Green said. "We'll crank him up if
we need him."
Green was asked if overconfidence could become a problem
with his team now.
He admitted it could·, adding: "We
won two In a row, but that just
proves one thing, it's possible to win
two in a row. Kansas City's a good
ballthincl~,b, and they could do the same
g.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
Ohio High School Athletic
Association denied an appeal Thursday.by Newark Catholic High over
the ineligibility of a football player
that caused it to forfeit a game last
week.
The Green Wave forfeited a" 37~
victory over Utica for using the
player, who was not identified by
OHSAA Commissioner Dick Armstrong.
Newark Catholic is ranked second
in Class A in the Associated Press
Ohio high school football poU this
season.
OHSAA rules say a player who
changes schools without moving
from the school district where he
lives is ineligible for one year after

-.
Friday's Games.
Jackson at Meigs
Gallipolis at Wellston
I ron ton at Logan
Waverly at Athens
Pt . Pleasant at Ripley
Coal Grove at Symmes Vall ey
Oak Hill at Rock Hill
Wahama at Wayne
Hannan T race at Eastern
Southwestern at Southern
North Galli a at Hannan
Kyger Creek - open .

YOLK~ AGEN

34

Reiiter-Brogan Ins .

30

ROyal Crown

24

~~

14

12
High individual game - Carolyn Bachner 204 ;
Marlene Wilson • Pat Car:ion 189; Carolyn
Bachner 1M.
High series - Catolyn Bachner &gt;18 ; Marlene

Wilson 539; PS:t Carson S23.
Team high game - Meigs Inn 561.
Team high series- Meigs Inn 1557.

Tueaday TrlpUcate League
October 14, 1980
Sta~ga

Team

Pes.

Jim'sGuH

to

Reuter-Brogan Ins.
Mcig!J Inn
Royal Crown Cola

38

LATONIA RESULTS
FLORENCE, Ky. (AP) - Silent
Colby captured the $1,000 featured
pace mile at Latonia in 2:04.1-5
Thursday .night and paid $34, $16.80
and$7.40.
Kenny's Kitty placed, $13.20 and
$7.40 and Andy:s Country Boy, third,
$5.60.
You Guessed It and Billy Mahoney
combined 5-3 in the double for $30.60
and the crowd of 1,107 bet $106,360.

32

u

N~l

16

Mike's Trio

12

High ,individual game - Carolyn Bachner 196,

193; Mel Holman 192.
High series - Carolyn Bachner S-l6 ; ~b i hellsley S26; Mel Holman 523.
Team high game - Reuter-Brogan 53{1,
Team high se ries - Reuter-Brogan 1493:

' COLO\' · .
,

*

fht•tJ{I e

•

FRIDAY-THURSDAY
Oct. 17-23

'THIS
NIGHTMARE
NEVER ENDS.

DRESSED

TO}\ILL

.. MICHAEL c·AIN[ ·~""
ANGI E DI CKINSON ~

DOG FOOD HEADQUARTERS

__ _

Casper Is one &lt;if 23 communities
ranging 1n population from 800 to
885,000 where an Acton-Jed consortium has JaWIChed a Jilot
program testing techniques to
rnaxlmlze public Involvement in nocostconservaorICJ\1M:GIIttloneff~.therizaUon and

•

f,l •
~.,.
.evasion.
Despite the government's rule, the
In lt.13, phyliciBt Albert Ellllteln . project wu speclflcaJb' dellcned to
arrived in the u.s. 81 a refucee from
preclude · ~~rp upendJtuna ·of
Nazi Germany.
federal funds, with the AcUaa pant-" of the ,_...__
_,...._H_ .......,,
_..._
In 1945, Co). Juan Peron ltqed a' to ea""
coup In BueriOII ~ beeonllnc the _ towns and COIIIItieJJ ~limited
abllolute dictator of Argentina.
to ~.1100.
In 11178, wall pollen In aw. 8~ 1
In an experimental publle-prlvate
____.. u_
'
_ __.., h
tile John A
c..-. .,..o T...wng'a widow
.-w--wP, 10wewer,
.
'Odani Clmlc, of hutenlnB _;. Hartford Foundation of N-.r York
'husband'1
·has ...
tal•000 ,.._.,
_,.. to tile
·
death by ll8llllinll hbn In
,..ven a
hla Jut WNkl.
Unlfed Way of ~

'.

CARRIER
NEEDED

MODERN SUPPLY

IN
SYRACUSE
'
.
'

m w. Main Strettfri-21M P9ni...Oy, o •
The Store With" All kinds of.StvH"
FOr Pets- Stables- Large and Small

CA~

THE• DAILY SENTINEL

Atllmals. l,..awns -

G.-dens:

RUN FLOUR MILLS
POMEROY, OHIO
' ..;..I

•

\

.

"Newark ,

Pis.

Jirn'sGuH

I

.

+

sa·id.

Catholic has sent letters to their
other schools they played, to see if
the player appears in their game
films. They want it report~d."
The setback gives the 1978 Class A
state playoff champions a 6-1 record
and may hurt Newark Catholic's bid
to make the 1980 playoffs. The Green
Wave and Woodafield were tied for
third in the computer point rankings
in Region 19 this week. The top two
finishe rs in each region will qualify
for the playoffs.

I,.
l

___

,_,

· ~ omm issioner

Standlngs
Team

Mike's Trio

.........ATTENTION
....._

.

Pomeroy Bowling Lanes

Tuesday TripUcate Lea~e
Ottober 7, me

said the situation was caused by an
administrative error.
"To Newark Catholic's credit,
they turned thelilselves in," the

.

.IYERSIDE

SIJAA'f!

"

Local
bowling

HIGH GASOLINE BILLS
1981 VOLKSWAGEN RABBITS

Wl'nt D1i1E~S.

a

his enroUment in the new school if a
fonnal release is not obtained from
the other district's school board.
Newark Catholic did not obtain a
release for the player. He was a
student at Utica 'during the last
school year.
J.D. Graham, Newark Catholic's'
athletic director and football coach,

·STOP

CO~NED

a

Charlie Mas son
5-10, 195lbs.
Junior Tackle

Newark Catholic's appeal denied

·Ohio State has posted two
Hoosiers' senior star In both
shutouts,
Including a ~ rout of .
categories.
Northwestern
a week ago. But the
Still, Indiana Coach !.Ale Corso
Buckeyes'
veteran
defense gave up
believes the early matchup ol' Big
59
points
in
its
first
four
1980 starts.
Ten tiUe contenders will be settled In
Earle
Bruce,
searching
for his
other ways. The BuckeyeB are M in
16th
victory
in
17
regular
season
the conference and the Hoosiers are ·
Woody
Hayes'
successor,
games
as
1-1.
.
shows his partisapship in his quar"While these two are great quar.
terbacking choice.
terbacks,"Corscisaid, ''they will not
THISTLEDOWNS
"Schlichter is a great player.
decide Saturday's game.' The game
When he does the job,. we're an exwill be decided on three things NORTH RANDALL, Ohio (AP) cellent team. And I can't remember
defense, kicking game and the of·
the Jut time he didn't do the job for Antonio Graell guided Pirate
fensive line."
.
us. As for my choice of the two, I'd Mission to a first-place finish in
The Hoosiers' defense may have
take Art because he's got another Thursday's featured eighth race at
arrived in a 24-0 blanldng of Wlsconyear left, he's at Ohio State and I ThisUedown, going the six furlongs
· . sin last week, proinptlng Corso to
in I :13 3-5.
love him," Bruce said.
say:· "They did not allow the big play
Pirate Mission paid $15.80 to win,
Ohio
State,
which
will
be
playing
and held Wisconsin, to just over 200
$11
to place and $5.80 to show. CajlUI
before
the
75th
consecutive
aellout
Yartls in total offense."
Miss
paid$17 and$9.60, and the third
crowd
at
Ohio
Stadium,
hasn't
I~
to
But Indiana surrendered 74 points
horse,
Pi Phi Prez, paid$3.40.
Indiana
since
Hayes'
first
year
in
In its first four games, with 30 of
The
last trlfecta ~10-8 com.
1951.
The
Buckeyes
have
whipped.
them coming against Kentucky.
the Hoosiers 16 straight times, and bination of Hungry Qtjeen, Gil's Last
and La~'s I.Algacy paid $1,878.60.
routed them 47-61ast fall.
The crowd of 3,519 wagered
. Both · sides are In excellent
$462,881.
physical condition.

.

TDBE

h z•s*orv.
J ,

Dennis Durst
5-10, 160 lbs.
Senior Back

Dave Gaul
6-1, 2051bs.
Sophomore Tackle

GAS AND .D IESEL MODELS
AVAILABLE FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
15% INCREASED FUEL MILEAGE
OVER 1980 MODELS

WITH MYSELF

problems- without meddling' from •
Cheyenne (the state capital) or
Washington," adds Garber a
weatherization specialist in 'the
Wyoming governor's office.

players •••

.NOW IN STOCK

PR£fJ«//P!B)

'

y z•n

..

..

Reduction of energy through
winterization
'

.
.
.
By Robert Walters
JSnergy Project. The project is ad:
CASPER, Wyo. (NEA)- No mere , ministered by Action, the federal
mortal ever .defeated Jack Frost,
voiWJteeragency.
but two enterprising young men,
"You've got to give people credit
Francis Luzzatto and Gary Garber,
for the ability to solve their own
have ambitious plans to aineliorate
.
the impact of the winter stonns that
.".J.Pj (J.I a
,..
soon will swirlthrough the Rockies.
They are working to marshal the
Today 18 Friday, Oct. 17 , the 291st
financial, technical and hwnan .daY of 1980. There are 75 days left In
resources of this conununity as part the year.
of a unique experimentRI grass-roots
Today's highlight In biatory:
program to, substantially
reduce
On
. b .
.
Oct. 17, 1TT7, there wu a turenergy conswnpt10n y wmter1zing n1ng point In the RevolutJonary War
homes here. •
when British forces under Gen. John
" People are finally realizing they Burgoyne surrendered to · the
have to stRrt solving their own •--ri
In Sa
energy problerruJ instead of waltlng. """' catll
ratoga,N.Y.
Onthladate:
for government solutions," says
In 1931
Luzzatto, director of the Community
' notorious mobster AI
Clpone was convicted of Income tax

Clifford, the Big Ten's Most
Valuable Player a year ago, has a
good shot at becoming the Hoosiers'
career passing leader before the
season ends;
· Between them, Schlichter and
Clifford have thrown 94 completions
for 1,475 yards and 14 touchdowns
this seascm, as both their teams have
gotten off to 4-1 starts.
Clifford Is the Big Ten passing efficlency leader and ranks second In
total conference offense this week.
Schlichter iS one spot behind the

var~ity

~Ame:n~·cant:;~~~~:~,~=~~~:-~.

PI

lndiana-OSU clash features
.· n&amp;tion~s top quarterbacks

Independent sector: general welfare business

Glenn brushes aside
ducking innuendo
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) - U.S.
Sen. John H. Glenn, D-Ohio, brushes
aside the notion he is ducking
President Carter's campaign visits
to Ohio.
Tbe senior senator, who has his reelection campaign to worry about;
was not on hand for recent campaign
appearanceB by Carter in Dayton
and Cleveland.
However, Glenn said he was busy
in Washington on both occasions and
had explained his scheduling difficulties to Carter who understood
and accepted his regrels.
He said he expects to be with Carter in Youngstown on Monday where
he hopes he will be able to reassure
Ohioans -of his support for the
president.
Some of bhio's congressional candidates have been reluctRnt to appear with Carter, they have said
privateiy, in a belief that the
president has no significant political
coat ll!ils and could hurt their

•••

• •
..:;LJ..,_h ••

M

LOS ANGELES (AP) - The way
Ronald Reagan tells it, Mother
Nature is a far worse polluter than
man. And what's more, he almost
makes it sound like pollution is good
for you.
Reagan said recently suspected
that Mount St. Helens had spewed
more sulfur dioxide than all the cars
in the world over the last 10 years.
He said nature is responsible for
two-thirds of the world's sulphur
dioxide pollutRnts and that man is
responsible for only a third.
This was not a carefully packaged
Reagan speaking from a prepared
speech. It was an end-of-the-day
campaign stop where he spoke off
Carter isn't being kind, he's being the cuff and wasn't supposed to
careful. These days, many of his
campaign speeches come with what make any news except by listening
to the complaints of steel and coal inamounls to footnotes, citations from ' dustry leaders in Steubenville, Ohio.
the ·Reagan record as points of atBut that's not the way it worked
tack. Perhaps the old style was too
out.
shrill to be effective; the new style is
. Reagan said Americans have
just about as tough.
There's nothing wrong with that.
Nowhere is . it written that the
Democratic presidential nominee is
supposed to be gentle when speaking
of the Republican nominee. ThRt's
not the WI\Y it works. Reagan at. tacks, too,'when it suits his political
NEW YORK (AP) - You are
purpose.
familiar with the business sector.
And it may, during these final
You are aware of the government
campaign weeks. Carter strategists
sector. But you probably do not even
claim to be closing fast, although
recognize this sector of American
they acknowledge Reilgan probably
life, or if you do, cannot name it:
. remains ahead. And Carter seems'to
It is one of the largest influences in
be hitting his campaign stride.
American
life, but as one comCarter and his team once seemed
mentator said, some of the simplest
reluctant to rely much on Kennedy,
stRtistics about it are not collected,
their vanquished rival for the
scholars rarely study it, teachers
nomination, as a partner and proxy
seldom teach about it.
in the general election campaign.
I~ consists of a vast array of vitRI
Not now. With Carter beaming at his
entities
such as colleges, churches,
side, the Massachusetts senator said
voluntary hospitals, philanthropic
the president offers the voters
foundations , symphony societies and
"hope, not deBpair; progress, n&lt;t
research centers devoted to the
reaction; reconciliation, not
general welfare.
division. "
Its {11embers are private and non"I said last year that on Oct. I~ I
profit, but they operate for the
would be campaigning in New Jersey for the presidency of the United
general welfare and spend more
SIRles, and you know what - here I
than $80 billion a ,year. An~. they
am, campaigning for Jinuny Cardepend on donations of 50 million
ter," Kennedy joked.
Americans to continue their work.
This is the independent sector.
He's on the road for the ticket now,
"We believe passionately in it," said
and Carter Is stepping up his own
Brian O'Connell. It is, he said, a
political operation for the final push
creative force, an outlet (or free exto the Nov. 4 election, toward a fullpression, a voluntary mQvement, a
time effort during the last 10 days.
u,niquely ' American development, .
and an alternative to business and
govermnent, the two other sectors.
He fears, however, that it is often
· overlooked, as unkriown in some
respects as the dark side of the
moon, although in his view it not
only represents the American people
but IS the American people.
I
To be overlooked is not just difrespective local campaigns.
ficult
to understand, he comments,
Glenn said he disagrees.

O'Neill acknowledges
his reply overstated
DOSTON (AP ) -Tip O'Neill put it
eight up front : "Call it the high road
or call it the low road, that•s the fac.s." No apologist he, not when
denouncing Ronald Reagan.
·But then, O'Neill is speaker of the
House, not a presidenNr,ing to get
re-elected. That's Jinuny Carter's
role, and he has tempered his antiReagan rhetoric just a bit, Jest the
hard line backfire.
So he acknowledged that he might
have overstated when he said the
choice was war or peace, and when
he claimed a Republican victory
would divide Americans, black from
white, Christian from Jew.
The new Carter tends to use more
recent Reagan quotations as the
tRrgets of his campaign attacks. He
. doesn't say flaUy that it is a· war-orP.,ce election. But he certainly
gives that impression.
·
"I'm not insinuating anything underhandedly about my opponent, but
there's ll pattern that coneerns me,"
Carter said, campaigning in Boston
with Sen." Edward M. Kennedy and
O'Neill . cheering him on. "My
Republican opponent has called for
the injection of American military
forces repeatedly into trouble spots
aroWld the world.
"You might say that's ancient
history, he's changed. This year Cuba, PakistRn, the Middle East.
'!'he choice Is a very serious one.''
He conjured up a 200-mile-Jong
train filled with TNT to illustrate the
Jl(&gt;wer of a one megaton nuclear
weapon, then quoted Reagan :
"He said that he thought the best
approach to anns control was to
threaten the possibility of a nuclear
anns race.''

~

.

. Slugging outfielder Greg Ulzinsld,

e&amp;$1er today when they learneg they
who was used as a designated hitter
probably would have the se.rvlces. of in the Series opener, missed Wed- ·
George Brett In tonight's third game . nesday night's game with the flu and
of the World SerieB against the
did not make the-trip to Kansas City.
PhlladelphlaPhiJJies.
He had a temperature of 103 WedTrailjng M In the Series, the
nesday night and 101 Thursday mor·Royals face a virtual do-or-ille
ning.
•
PhiJlles Manager Dallas Green
situation. A loss would all but hand
the PhiJlles their first World Series
!laid Luzlns!d probably would join
tiUe on a gilded platter. No team In
the team today. Green said he planthe 78 years of World Series play has
ned to ~ rookie Keith Moreland In
rebounded from a ~ deficit to win
lbe designated hitter's role, as he did
the best--of-seven-game set.
Wednesday.
·
Brett, whq ·hit .390 during the
Also slightly Injured were center
aeason and drove in 118 runs, unfielder Garry Maddox and c,atcher
derwent minor surgery Thursday to
Bob Boone.
bl!ve a painfully swollen.hemorrhoid
Maddox Injured his left knee when
he foUled off a pitch against i~ In
lanced. The operation, Performed by
Kansas City proctologist John
Game Two. X-rays were negative,
Heryer took about 20 minutes.
but there was some fluid In the knee.
Heryer said Brett would remain in
He was expected to play. Boone still
b recovering from an Injured left·
the hospital until this morning.
. "It was a siffiple operation,"
foot..sus~ed In a home plate
Heryer said. "We simply lanced a
colllinon m the playoffs with
blood clot and removed it thereby
Houston.
removing the pressure and hopefully
"It's still black and blue, but the
the pain."
swelling has .gone down," Boone
Heryer said Brett would soak in
said. "It's getting better."
hot tubs and keep off his feet WltU
The PhiJlles arrived here Thur·
sday. afternoon and ~ed . imthis moriting.
mediatelY to Royals Stadiwn for a
Heryer said Brett probably would
not be 100 percent for the game but
brief workout. The . Royals, who
that he should have no problems
traveled home right lifter the game
,Playing. Kansas City Manager Jim
Wednesday night, cancelled their
plans to workout Thursday because
Frey had to replace Brett 1n the sixof rain and thunderstonns In the
th inning of Game Two when the
problem became too painful. Brett
mornlng ·
was limping and had trouble runFrey planned to start right-hander
ning.
Rich Gale, ~ in .~ regular
At the same time, the Phlllles, who
season, against Phlllles rightwon the first and second games of
bander Dick Ru~en, _17-10, tonight.,
the Series at home, had problems
Gale did not pitch m the Royals

. t II Court St., Pomeroy , Ohio ~169. Business Office Pbome !19Z· t156. EdHoria l Pboae 992-!15'1' ·

tredlted to the oewspaper and also the local oews publlshfil here ln.
Publl!iher
General Mgr. &amp; City Edltur
News Editor
~~
Ad .... Manager
.,....,.m~
u
....... r"T""'-.8~-r· r""r'E:!!dl~

withtheirowncasualties.

~ Cityc..ltoyals..rested ~-little

-------.-·---

INTERESTOF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
l.ettenJ .ol opiDJon are welcomfd. Th~ •hou ld tie.leu thaD 300 wordS long 'or inibje.«!l to ndi.Jt...
tion by lbt ettitor) and must be Slgatd with lbe signee's add~ll . Name!i .maY be wlthbeld upon
pubUc•tloa. Howev~ r. oa request. names wW be disclosed. Letters should be 1a good tasle, ad-

dresslfl8 lssurs, not penonHIIties .
P'\tbi.J.Ihed daily except Saturday by Tht Ohio V•Uey

Eastern

Brett should play in
World Series .game 3

•

�4-The Daily Sentinel, ¥iddleport·Pom~roy, 0 ., Friday, Oct. l7, 1980 .
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&lt;•

;

r

Food for Thought
By Myrtle Clark and
AnuleMooa
Melga County CooperaUve
EI1elllloo Service
DEEP YELLOW VEGEI'ABLES
Pwnpkin, hard-shelled or winter squas!!.._
~_llweet potatoes are
among the best sources of vilamin•A. .
. . Serve a vegetable or fruit rich in vitamin A every day.
. Determine the COst Jier serving ' to decide which form of ' a
·
vegetable is the most economical.
One pound of fresh winter squash or pumpkin will make 1 to 111!
saervings.
Cook vegetables in as Uttle water as possible to avoid loss of
nutrients.
·
Never store \UICOOked winter squash, pumpkins, or sweet potatoes
i.il the refrigerator ,
.
Store acorn squash in a fairly dry place at 4:i to 50 degrees F. Store
other winter squashes and pumpkins in a dry place at 55 to 60 degrees
. F. Store sweet potatoes in a dry place at 55 to65 degrees f .
Choose sweet potatoes which are deep orange, mois~ and sweet.
They contain more vitamio A, vitamio C, and ·other nutrients than
sweet potatoes which are mealy, bland, and light colored. ·
Bake sweet potatoes and serve them whole as you would baked
white potatoes.
For the kilocalorie conscious, add spices such as cinnamon, nut·
meg, or ginger for flavor to deep yellow vegetables rather than butter
and brown sugar. One teaspoon butter add!! approximately 35
kilocalories; one tablespoon brown sugar adds approximately 50
kilocalories.
One medium size boiled white potato has approxima!ely 100
kilocalories while one medium size boiled sweet potato has approximately 130 kilocalories.
.
One-half cup boiled winter squash has approximately 50
kilocalories; one-half cup boiled pumpkin has approximatelar. tO
kilocalories.
Eat your jack-9-lantern! Carve it on Halloween Day. The next day
cook it and eat it.
Recipe- Sweet Potato
and Apple Casserole
6medium sweet potatoes, cooked and peeled
2peeled apples, cut in squares
6tablespoons margarine
11! teaspoon iodized salt
\2 cup brown sugar.
Slice potatoes, Put half in greased two quart baking dish. Remove
cores from apples and slice. Add half of apples, salt, brown sugar, and
margarine. Add layer of potatoes. Add rest ingredients. Cover and
bake at 350 degrees F. for 60 minutes. Eight servings.
About four cups,(two pounds ) of cooked sliced or mashed winter
squash or pumpkin can be used in place of sweet potatoes.
Note: The margarine and brown sugar may be decreased in
amount, or omitted, to reduce the kilocalorie content.
OveaMenu
MeatLoaf
Sweet Potato aad
Apple Casserole
Cabbage Slaw
Bread Spread
Custard
Milk, Coffee or Tea
Set oven at 325 degrees F. Put in meat and casserole, also custard
dish set in a pan of hot water. Bake about 30 lninutes or until a table
knife stuck into the custard comes out with no custard on it. Increase
the temperature to 350 degrees F. and finish baking meat loaf and
casserole. They will take 15 or more minutes longer to bake than the
recipe says.

''

:Girl Scout Diary
. A senior sco ut
troop
organizational meeting was held
Tuesday night at the home of Mrs.
Shirley Cogar.
Requirements for the gold award
: were discussed with members
: making suggestions on how to
-achieve the 25 hours of service
·required for the award. The gold
award is the highest award in senior
Scouting. Plans were made to sell
peanuts as a money-making project.
. Officers elected were Shari Cogar,
:president; Karen Boggess, vice
;president; Susan Jett, secretary.. treasurer; and Kathy Parker, repor·

ter.

• Next meeting will be held Monday
night at 6:30p.m. at the home ofPat-cy Capehart at which time a
:halloween party will be planned for
·:Oct. 28. There will also be a regular
meeting of the troop on-Tuesday at
ij!e Cogar home.
!YALJSBURY
JUNIOR TROOP 1100
"World of Change, World of
-Promise" was the title of a movi~

.

.

about girl scouts and 'girl guides
around the world shown at a meeting
of the Salisbury Junior Troop 1100
Tuesday rught. Meeting at the high
school, the troop planned a
halloween party for Oct. 28. The six·
th grade members had the flag
ceremony, pledge and girl scout
promise.
.
Susan Jones, Arica McClintock
and Vanessa Jay served refreslr
ments and the meeting closed with
the friendship circle.
CADETrE TROOP,
SALISBURY
Ann and Jane Sisson are the
leaders of the newly organized
cadette troop which met Thursday
night at the Enterprise United
Methodist Church.
Badge work was discussed and the
girls planned to jlldge the halloween
party for the Brownie trpop on Oct.
28. A caper chart was made up and
the members decided on a wildflower as the troop crest. Next
meeting will be held on Nov. 6.
.

c

::School of religion to begin
· There will be a School of Religion .
at the Chester United Methodist
L'hurch, Oct. 21·23 from 7-9:30 p.m.
Five workshops are being offered:
the 1980 Book of Discipline, led by
Qr. Hughey Jones, administrative
assistant to Bishop Dwight Loder of
tfte West Ohio Conference of the
United Methodist Church; ComParative Religion, led by Dr.
William Smith, professor of religion
at Marietta College, and a United
Methodist minister;. The Sacramen\3, led by Rev. David Toon, Hamden
United Methodist Church, Hamden;
dn Death and Dying, conducted by
Rev. Arthur Lurid, director ol
Chaplaincy Services at Holzer ,
Medical Center, Gallipolis; and
1\.lcohol and Drug Abuse, led by Jim
Mutein, Athens.
:The cost Is $4 for persons from
Meigs County United Methodist
Churches; $10 for other persons
(those outside Meigs County or per··

!f

VISIT HERE
Mr. and Mrs. David Eskew and
c:hildren, Kandi, Beth and Amy,
Newark, spent the · weekend here
villtlng Mr. and Mrs. Harvey
Erlewlne and Mr. and Mnl. Charles
Eskew, other gueatl at the
Erlewines were Janie SnllU! and
daughters, LOuiiYIIle, K}'. ·

•

sons of other deil&lt;imlnatlons).
The School of Religion 18 sponsored by the MelgB County Council
on Ministries ·of the United
Methodist ChurCb, Rev. ·Richard
Thomas, coordinator..

.Bessie King gueSt .of Easte-rn .Star
·t
the n1y
Mrs. Bessie King, deputy grand
herthanksnotingthat t was
o
matron of District 25, Grand Chaphonorary membership which she
ter of .Ohio, was a guest of Harrison·
has received throilghout the Wstrlct ville Chapter 255, Order of the ' since being
'deputy grand
Eastern Star, at a recent meeting.
matron.
·
Mrs. King entered the chapter
She was escorted to the East by
nxlm through a daisy entrance way .. conductress, Stella Atkins. Other
and was welcomed by Janice
grand officers presented were ~nDeBord, worthy-matrorr, and
11a McKlean;:-grand--representative- Chester King, associate patron. She
to South Dakota;. Joan Mchaffie,
was presented an honorary mem· · grand representative to Vermont.
bership by King. Mrs. King extended
Other guests were Bob King,

named

The chapter room was decorated
with mums from the garden of f.fr.
and Mrs. Norman Will. Invitations
· for lllstallation were read from New
~ted Iiiii ~ by .Mtil. Marllhfleld, Nov.•· I•:, Marietta, Nov.
Atldt)ll ·
Oftlde Wlll!ln, Bettf 5; Belpre, Noy. 29. Harrisonville will
Blahop, li'rlncel · Young, Joan !lave installation on Dec. 11 at 7:30
Kaldore, ·Allegra Will. Marjorie
m.
.
Rice, Pearle . canaday, Ruth_ ~~....were-.given__by " ..Mrs. ~
Erlewlne;" and-Pilullnel\tklns:-Past Kaldore budget; Douglas Bishop,
patrons pi !I !tted were Charles
trustee;'HaroldRice,audit.
Klnl!, NOI'Illlll WW, Harold Rice and
officers elected were Mrs .
Douglas.Blahop. ,
Kaldore, worthy matron; Chester ·
King, worthy patrol); · Paullne
Atkins, associate matron; cparles
Have 'tiJ~e#nd guests King,
associate patton; Lois Pauley,
Mr. and
J("enneth R119SeU of secretary; Betty Bishop, treasurer;
Racine were week~ .8~ oftlleir Shirley Wilson, conductress; Goldie ·
·son and his faiillly, MariDe Capt. alld Ree.d, associate conductresS. Harold
Mrs. Karl RUssin, Melilia and Ken- Rice tool! the sunsblne fund.
The "ding~ts" presented the
neth, at their: new ltontil.in Apple
program
dedicating it to the deputy
Estates, Scattl)epot, W; Va .
Capt. RUIIII!il and :,f8mily were grand matron. Taking part were
trsnsfe~Te!l trOm Camp l.A!june, N. · Chester Klnl!, Betty Bishop, Douglas
c. in June. He attended college at Bishop, Lois Pauley, Pauline Atkins,
Jo8n Kaldore and Norman Will.
Wilmington, N. C. for 18 _months
before becmllng chief executive of. · Refreshments ivere s.erved by Mr.
ficer at omc.s located ·on McCorkle and Mrs. Nonnan Will, Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Rice, Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Ave., in Charleston, W. -Va. He ls
currently the chief executive officer Reed, and Mr. and Mrs. Charles
over parts of Ohio, Wesf VIrginia, . King.
Kentucky and Virginia, ·
While vlsltlng In Scott l&gt;epot, the
Russells toured !M!Veral plllces of In•,
terest Including ·• the' New River
Gorge. . Capt. Rllllliell IS · a 1966
.. ""'""" mrem
graduateof!IOiJthemHlghSchooL

wwe

Methodists ·meet at Sa1em
The Rev. Jeffrey Stemple, newly from 7·91l.m. The Nov. 12 seminar Is
·assigned minister of the Rutland and · on Drug Abuse and will be conducted
Salem Center United Methodist at the Morningstar United Methodist
Church. The Nov. 19 seminar will be
Church~ , was devotional leader
when the County Council on on concerns of the elderly and the
Ministries of the Meigs County location will be announced later.
United Met.'todist Churches met Bulletin inserts will be available
Monday evening at the Salem Center soon for distribution across the coun.
Church. Following group singing ac- ty.
The
Food
Co-op
was
featured
in
companied by Mrs. Catherine
Shenefield at the piano, Rev. Stem- the September..Qctober Issue ol
ple ~red some insights from Mark "Ohio's Heritage," published by the
2:41'44,
stre Ohio Commission on Aging. The acssing the need for selfless giving and companying picture showed Rev.
courageous living, all based on the ' Richard Thomas and Vernon Nease
abundance of God's riches. Prayer unloading the food. The onlers for
was offered by the Rev. Rlchanl ~tweekshavebeenin~
steadily and the next delivery will be
Thomas, parish coordinator.
The minutes of the previous on Oct. 23 . .
Rev. Florence Smith, commeeting were distributed by Mrs.
munications
coordinator, reported
Dorothy Smith. The Rev. Florence
Smith gave the treasurer's report, on the need for the new addresses for
noting an increase of 12 percent for the Contact mailing list. Churches
pur program Sunday mornings over completed are: Pomeroy, Forest
Run, and Morningstar. Rev. McGee
WMPO beginning Nov. 1.
The Rev. Robert McGee reported will interview Rev. Stemple on our
on the upcoming School of Religion radio program in the near future,
Oct. 21).23 at the Chester United along with Mrs. Harold Sauer, CounMethodist Church. Information has ty Councll president, at a later date.
The dates of Nov. 21·22 were conbeen going out to all of the United
finned
for a combined staff and
Methodist churches. , Registrations
county
council
retreat. Dr. Harold·
may be channelled through each
McSwain
and
Jim
Sayars of Rural
local pastor, or persons may preMinistries
Training
Program have
register the first night. The Rev.
to
conduct
the
programming
agreed
Florence Smith is registrar for the
for the retreat. The staff will meet
Schoof of Religion.
Rev. McGee also reported on the the evening of Nov. 21, while the
· success of the recent County-Wide county council will meet the mOI'Revival at the Pomeroy United ning of Nov. 22. The location for the
Methodist Church. The average ·retreat will be announced l!tter.
A letter of appreciation was.read
nightly attendance was 95. Letters of
appreciation have been sent lo the from the Meigs COunty Board of
Rev. Paul Hawks and to the Rev. Mental Retardation thanking the
Benjamin Edwards. · The council United Methodists of Meigs County
voted a word of thanks to the for their generous financial ' help
.Pomeroy United Methodist Church toward the school for the mentally
retarded.
·
for allowing the use of their facilities
The
next
meeting
of
the
County
to host the CoWlty·Wide Revival.
The Social Concerns Conunittee is
be Nov.
10 at the
MOl'ning Starwill
United
Methodist
Church.
sponsoring three one-night seminars Council
The
December
meeting
will
be
at
the
on problems of the community in
Forest Run United Methodist Chll!'November. The dates are: Nov. 5,
Nov. 12, and Nov. 19. The Nov. 5 ch, and will include a Chrl.stmaa (181'ty for one and all.
seminar is on AlcoholiSm and will be
The following · churches were
held at the St Paul's United
represented: Alfred, Apple Grove,
Methodist Church in Tuppers Plains
Bethany, Enterprise, Forest Run,
Morningstar, Pomeroy, Rutland and
Salem Center. The following pastors
attended:. the Rev. Mark Flynn,
Southern
Clitster II; the Rev. Robert
SATURDAY
McGee,
Pomeroy
U. M. Church; the
BAKE SALE Saturday beginning
Rev.
Florence
Smith,
Morningstar;
at 10 a.m. at Kroger Store, Pomeroy,
the
Rev.
Richard
l'homas,
Norsponsored by Pomeroy Kin·
theast
Cluster;
and
the
host
pastor,
dergarten Class.
·
Hev. Jeffrey Stemple. ·
NEW HAVEN Volunteer Fire
Dept. Auxiliary public chicken barbecue Saturday, starting at 11 a.m.
at fire station.
MIDDlEPORT FIRE Department chicken barbecue at station
JOHNSON'S
beginning at noon Saturday.
ENERGY
SQUARE DANCE Saturday, 8 to
11 p.m. at Multlpurpos~ Building;
CONVERTER
music by Stringdusters. $1 for adults
with chlldren under 12 admitted free
when accompanying an adult.
MINISTERS OF Love will be at
Freewill Baptist Church, Ash St.,
Middleport, 7:30 p.m. Saturday;
Pastor Ralph Butcher invites public.
SUNDAY "
A wood burning addition to
HOMECOMING at Morning Star
your existing furnace, at·
United . Methodist Church Sunday
tached
to your duct V~~Ork.
with worship at 9:30 a.m.; Sunday ,
school at 10:30; basket dinner at
985-3301
12:30 p.m. Afternoon service, 1:30
CHESTER, OHIO
p.m. fealUnng The Harvest Trio
from Reedsville. Pastor Florence
Smith Invites public.
MEIGS COUN1Y Genealogical
Society meeting, 2 p.m. Sunday at
Meigs MuseiUil, Pomeroy; new
me!Jlbers and beginners welcome.

.

Social .Calendar

BAUM'S TRUE
VALUE

**************************************:

l

POLITICAL
:~
j ADVERTISERS: !
•
•*
*'
:
Do Your Need Assistance?
:
•
•
·~
*
*
••
••

Mrs:

D~n

ONLQwJiW

:
•~

In. Meigs Qlunty CcrJuilon Pleas
Court MUdred Karr, Middleport,
flied suit for dlvoree 8galrist Chailea
R. Karr, Jr~, &amp;illta'!lprings, Fla.

DR.. .. JAMES. P. CONDE, INC.

**
·~

~

:

CARL GHEEN
992-2156

:
•~

TIM HAi.STEAD
.
.
. 9H4156

*·

**

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'

OSTEOPA.TtUC PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
.· ISO Mill Street, 'Middleport, Ohio 45760
. (614) 992-7271

·.

'

,. ·
.' NOTICE .,. ·
Effective Monday; October 20, 1980 new hours for the of·
P. Conde will be: •r ,
fice of-Dr. Jame5
•
Monday
Tuesday
Friday
. Saturday

9:00 A.M. to 4:00 P.M.
9:00A.M. to4:00 P.M.
9: 00A.M.to4:00P.M.
9:00A.M. to 4:00P.M.

t~;;;:::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

MORNING &amp; KING

.

..

STOVES '&amp; SUPPLIES
'.

•FloUt
. Beads
•F'n Shonls
.

·-

'.

Ebersbach
Hardware
"
.

~

'.

.

.

..

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PH. 992·2811

AS IS

Serenity House meeting set
Serenity House, Inc., a recently
formed private non-profit corporation, will hold an open meeting
at the Gallia Mental Health Clinic at
3:30p.m. on Monday, Oct. 20. The
purpose of this meeting will be to
discuss progranis to assist victims
of family violence. Lucy Amsbary,
Serenity House Board President,
noted that the new agency has applied for local marriage license fee
monies in Gallia, Jackson and Meigs
·Counties. "The funds, however, are
a drop in the bucket and will pay for
only a few of the services that are

~tiated

An exercise program will pe ways to increase the number of poin·
initiated at the next meeting of . ts. Winner of the contest will have
TOPS OH 14fi6, Rutland, it was her choice of either having her dues
decided at the Oct. 8 meeting .?f _the paid for the month of December or
group.
receiving a charm.
Members who gained during the
Members will exercise at each
meeting and then will be awarded week paid their fines with the
points if they continue to exercise proceeds of the piggy bank to be
each day during the week. Shorty divided among the division winhers
Wright presided at the meeting with as 1980 ends and the club goes into
.
Lynda Adkins being honored as the 1981.
It was noted that Nellie Haggy has
weekly queen and'Phyllis Clay at the
runner-up. Mrs. Adkins was presen- been hospitalized and members
ted a dollar and a ribbon as the club were encouraged to send cards. Inmembers sang to her.
formation on the club may be ob?oints were madded to the buddy tained from 742-3062.
board and a discusSion was held on

hunts.
Sunday they participated in the
Scouts Own and closing ceremony,
• Going from Meigs County were
Carolyn Casto, Tammy Capehart,
Brenda White, Shari Cogar, Susan

m.3694:

IS NOW SELLING

.,
'

1

•'

.'-~··Pel:~
~-~D ' :·:'
::;p:•t~~~~an prtee · .
·

.t t -·Rtsltlints.
_. ·,' Stve. · · . ·
OIIIO*A* T..x Sav41
'

..

...

·,

$9633.64

..

'38.5.35
714 62

• St440.6t

Josten's Class Rings

Acontribution to the Olive Branch
School in illinois was made when the
. Laurel Cliff Free Methodist Church
WMFI met recently at the home of
Mrs. Iva Powell.
Prayer by Mrs. Donna Gilmore,
Mrs. Evelyn Young and Mrs. Jean
Wright opened the meeting and Mrs.
Young also had devotions from Eph.
1 with the meditation "Millions Harvest Heard." Officers' reports were
givep by Mrs. Ann Mash and Mrs.,.Gilmore. A telephone pJ;ayer circle
has been formed, it was noted. Mrs.
Betty Stewart was a guest ai the
meeting.
Mrs. Wright will host the Novem·
ber meeting with Mrs. Doris Shook
to have devotins and Mrs. Shook and
Mrs. Mash to serve refreshments.
Mrs. Powell closed the meeting with
rprayer.

. --~---------~I

SAME RING AS SOLD AT HIGH SCHOOLS

$7995.
Price includes engraving, stone selec·
tion, specia I. gemstone features,
classical designs, round &amp; square
cuts; all at no extra cost.
Come in and see the great selection.

.

The Johnson Co. of Gitlllpolls hilS been appointed Special Sales Representative .,f
Pat Hill Ford. Several models are on diJplay there. Stop In and order a n.ew Ford
to your speclflcittlon.
·
·

..

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

9,92·6614 POMEROY
Open Evenings 6:00- tii 5:00P.M. Sat .

WINTER!
AND

ECONOMY MINDED

WINTER TllfES
ARRIVING DAILY!

USED CARS

CHECK NOW FOR
LOW PRICES! .

1980 Chevrolet Citation

II
I

4 spd ., air, p.s., p.b., AM· FM, 2-tone
paint, V-6economy.

Sat.
·I
Closed
Sunday
_____________
I.,_International
New Idea_.1I
Equipment
I Harvesler

1979 Pontiac Sunbird Cpe.

1Pomeroy, 0 .. Ph. 992·2176
I
Hours : 8-S Mon.· Fri.
~
I
8· 12
I

All rings will be serviced and
guar.anteed by the store.

1976 CHEVY. NOVA ••••••••••••
.. S1895
1976 DoDGE ASPEN ••••••••••••••• ~~;-••• '169~
White, Dr.,auto., P!S., P.B. $2195
1977 AMC HORNET.~ ······················
Blue,4 Dr..auto..P.S.. P.B.. '2195
1977 HORNET •••••••••••••••••••••••••••
1974. FORD MAVERICK ••••• ;~:~!~:~::~~~ .. '1495
1974 FORD MAVERICK ;~;~:~":·.6.c:~~:u;:~:·!~'1495
1975· DODG£ DART 4 DR ••••••••••••••••
6 cyl. ,auto.,power. $1295
•
· Auto.. air, P.S.,P .8 . $1295
1974 FORD Lm••••••••••••••••••••••••••
1973 CHEVY STATIONWAGON ••••• t~!;:~s~ .. '895
'1974 BUICK CENlURY ••••••••••••••• :~:-•• $1o95
. Localowner,fully eQuipped. Jftftl:
1973 OI.DS 98
·~;J;,J
1973 VOLKSWAGEN nBUG'! ••••••••••••••• '1595
1971 OLDS •••••••••••••••••• ,•••••• ~ ••••••• '295
Pickup like new. 1.1995
FO. RD F100
1979
302 V-8, auto .. p.s. custom.S
harp.
_
' •••••••••••••••••••.'2995
1977 DATSUN PICKUP
1976 FORD SUPER CAB ••••••••• ~=~~~:e:~.'il~
1976 tractor,
SAlAH3 P&lt;&gt;l
1RACTOR
· 25 HP, u,s.ed 400'3195
nt hitch, PTO,Si506
PS, roll bar,
hrs.,'
•

···!························

. ........................ 1.. .

4 cyl., automatic, p.s., p.b., vinyl
top.

1978 VW Dasher Hatchback
4 cyl., 4 spd., AM· FM stereo tape,
sunroof. 28,00,0 miles.

1977 Dodge Aspen 4 Dr•
Slant 6 cyl~, p.s., p.b., vinyl top, air
conditioning .
·

1976 AMC .Hornet Wagon
Automatic, air condition, p.s., p.b., 6
cyl.

1975· AMC Hornet Wagon
'

'

3 spd. trans., 6 cyl. Low Miles.

,

GIVE OUR SALESMEN A CALL
ON OUR ECONOMY CARS. ASK
FOR J.D. STORY, JIMMY DEEM,
OR BILL NELSON. OR JUST DROP
IN AT:

SMITH NELSON MOTORS

a,.

;******************************~*****:.

SIMMONS OLDS-CADILLAC INC.

•

'

BIG
SAVINGS

.

lfS. NOT. 10
EARLY TO THINK
ABOUT

.

.

3-Cutlass Sedans, 1-Diesel
2-Cutlass Supreme Cpes. a.
1-0megas
1-Rcrtale Cpe, Diesel
1-98 Regency Sedan, Demo
1-Cadillac DeVille Cpe, Diesel

See One of These Courteous Salesmen
Pete Burris, Marvin Keebaugh, George Harris

Contributions noted

Jett,
Capehart,
Reeves,Michelle
Dawnette
Norris, Mandy
Darla t;;;;;;;~~~;~;;;;;:;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~--~~
Norris, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Norris,
Gertrude Casto, Shirley Cogar, and
Patty Capehart.
.
The Southeastern Meigs County
Cadette Troop meets every two
weeks on Monday from 6:30 to 8:30
.
p.m. at the Five Points home of Mrs.
0
6
! !~~ ~!~:
Petty Capehart, leader. Girls bet·
ween ages of 12 and 15 are invited to
join and further information can be .
obtained 'by telephoning 992-5882 or
4

JEWELRY

··It
! 11..I

Davis, Mr. and Mrs. Eber Pickens,
Sis Cundiff, Jan Lavender, Mrs.
Hayes, Ora Bass, Artie Grindley,
Thelma Miller,·Marie Rizer, Junior
Martin and Vicki Rizer.
Refreshments were served by Ar·
tie Grindley, Sis Cundiff· and
Elladene Watson.

The Adult Fellowship Class of the
Syracuse Church of the l';lazarene
held its monthly meetihg Thursday
night at the fellowship room, with
some members dressed in
Halloween costumes.
• Attending were Rev. and Mrs.
James B. Kittle, Mr. and Mrs. Nor·
man Presley, Mr. and Mrs. Harold

MEIGS
EQUIPMENT CO.

&amp;

"\
I, ;.r.:'

NEW 1980

Adult class meets

needed," states Ms. Amshary.
Amshary strongly urges local
residents to take an active role in the
new agency. She stated that Serenity
House can best address conununity
needs through community input and
support. Wife and child abuse are
serious social problems. If anyone is
interested in planning or volun·
teering transportation and other
necessary services, contact Ms. Am·
sbary at the Middleport Library 992·
5713 or Orman Hall at the Gallia
Mental Health Center at 446-5500.

'1095

1975 BUICK
. ESTATE WAGON
1975 ROYALE SEDAN
1975 CUT. SUP. SEDAN
1974 98 SEDAN
1974 PINTO WAGON

AN APJi'LE A DAY ... If apples are good for you, then apple butter must be fantastic- at least that's the opinion of these senior citizens ten·
ding the Iron kettles yesterday at the Meigs Senior Citizens' Center.
.

INGELS FURNITURE

ft•t HIIJ ~ .DIICOIIIIt
··· T~Siylnts
'·

'

f

Otf.

'

_,

1978 NOVA SEDAN ••••••••••••••••••••••s3695
1980 AMC SPIRIT CPE••••••••••••••••••• s4795
1978 98 REGENCY CPE.. •••••••••••••••• SS295
1 .
'
..
$3095
1977 CHEV. Y2 TON ••••••••••••••••••••• .
1974 .CUT. SUP. SEDAN ••••••••••••••••••.'1495
1974 CAD. CPE. DEVILL£ •••••••••••••••••'1595

The Southeastern Meigs County
Cadette Troop 1180 and the
Harrjsonville Cadette Troop lll6
·spent a recent w.eekend at Camp
Sandy Bend, Elizabeth, W. Va.
Activities supervised by the Green
1Jerets of the Huntington National
Guard Special Forces consisted of
·using rifles to shoot at target, car·
diac pulmonary resuscitation
training, compass work, making
rope bridges and raft building.
Attending the camp out were approximately 200 cadettes from area
councils participating in the dif·
_ferent. events. On Saturday evening
the group enjoyed a campfire with
skits and songs exchanged, after
which the Green Berets divided the
girls Into groups and went on snipe

•sfel\1 t~a~~Jmers
·.a.....

-- --

.....__

MEANS A.GREAT DEAL FOR YOU

Visits Camp Sandy Bend

•StOue'Pipe

' . . -'

I

_....,...

''"

eQII 'Ildets

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted-Floyd Reynolds, Mid·
dleport;. Barbara Mullen, Mid- .
dleport; Ernest Roach, Racine;
Ross Kent, Addison.
Discharged-Cloyd Brookover,
Janna Wolfe, William Adkins, Nora
Pearson, Lynn Crow, Alfred Gans,

OLD-CADILLAC
INC._
----- --------

Exercise program

Closed All Day Wednesd(ly and Thursday

' '• "
:"?'

For fast, courteous information, regarding rates, dead·
lines, sizes, sp;~ce reservations, copy and lay·outs..

CALL: -

Pom*'f
Flower Shop

.... oiv.ciRCE

Our Residents are exempt from the Oct: 7tfi Price Increase O!l all new Fords.
Combined with Ford 2% Sales Tak .Rebate lnd Ohio 2% Sales Tax reduction and
Pat Hill Ford Discount represents tremendoui Sitvings up to $1,5000 on some
models.
Time is of the essence- You must pu[ChiiSe ilnd register your new Ford before
November 18th. Buy one from ·stock or let us order our ·Ford to suit YIIUr taste and
needs.
··. ·
·
•·
·

EXAMPLE:

ATrEND SEssiON
Three local representatives of The
Salvation Army will be in Cincinnati
·over the weekend to attend the
Salvation Army Youth Councils.
They are Eloise Adams, Y.P.S.M.,
and Rhonda Barnhart and Jackie
J tistis, corps cadets.

Ev•naeline n..:te.o·, 8Jid Wllbut
-...
______.
Mcldean, Atbllnl Chltpter. Put
matron~~ and put patrOns wen

...

:

s-The Dally sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy1 0., Friday, Oct. 17, 1980

PH. 992-2174

.' ..

•

,

�.
7-The DaUy Sentlfiel, Middleport·t-omeroy, 0 ., Fri• . ,

6-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, Oct. 17, 1900

'

f, , b :}J

•

ESTILL

•

--

USEC LLS

----~---- T-heir wor'Kcan~-~­

mean the succe$S
or failure of our
newspaper .. .and
we greatly rely on
them. All the newspaper carriers in
our area have
earned our pride
for doing a top .
notch job for us!

•

You turn on 01 light switch, and the light -~-omes on. You turn on your car, and It starts up.
What about your newspaper? ·

CHARLES KNAPP

Yes, your newspaper is another one of the many things we all take for g~nted. This
Saturday, Octqber 18, Is a day we

~hould

..

'

stop to think for a minute.

'

,.

Every day you step out your door to pick up your paper, and It's there. Magic didn't put It
there, your carrier did.,.

'

BRENDA: RUNDOLPH

'

WE

'All the edit ors;: all the advertising people, all the preumen In the :world would be worth

'

&lt;('

•

'

. \

-

RODNEY ROUSH

nothing if it wasn't for that carrier delivering your paper. ·

SALUTE

,_

He or she Is .a combination business person,

OUR CARRIERS

salesperson, human relations expert, and yes,
a human beln~

Rain, snow,
P. J. HARRIS

heat, or cold,

they know

r

JEFF HILLEARY

•

you are reading this now lust goes to show:
'
your carriGr Is Important.
So the next time you see your carrier, let him

..

- -~

THOMAS BUMGARDNER

NEWSPAPER
CARRIER

or her know ' you appreciate their service.
'

Thank your carrier today because

DAY

-··

WE STILL MAKE HOUSE

SYLVIA ROUSH

OCTOBER 18th

CALLS~

TIM CASSELL

JEFF HOOD

Sentine l

ERIC JOHNSON

STEVEN CASSELL

JOEMONLEY

RICK HAWLEY

'

BERNICE DURST

MELISSA WISE

LUCKY WALKER

JEFFNEUION

)

.
ent1ne

"

e
. ..

.

. .

.

••

·e.

'

•

at .Y

'

••
'

'

en tine
•

•

�~The Daily sentinel, Middleport-

10 am , Confe.,u ion, Sat urday. 7-7 30

Pomeroy, 0., Friday, Oct 17, 1980

ElLIS &amp; sONS SOHIO
Complete
Automohve
Servtce

CHURCH
NEWS

-·

John F Fu ltz, Mgr
.Ph 9f1 1101
Pome~o't'

RAll'S
BEN

~f=RANKLIN"

I

Mtddleport, OhiO

b

POMEROY CHURCH OF TH E NAZAREN E
Corner Unton and Mulberry , Rev Clyde V

Henderson, pastor Sunday school 9 30
o m , Glen McClung , supt , morn1ng wo r shi p, 10.30 am evenmg serv1ce 7 30
mtd week serv1ce , Wednesday 7 30 p m

32b E

Ma1n St Por11eroy The Rev Rober t B
Graves, rector Sunday sefvtces at 10 30
o m Holy Commumon on the ftrst Sunday
of each month , and com bmed wt th morn
mg prayer on the th1rd Sunday Mornmg
prayer an d sermon on all other Sunda ys
of the month Church School and nur sery
car e provtded Coffee hour 1n th e Pam h
Ho ll 1mmedlal ely fc llow tng the serv1ce
POMEROY CH URCH OF CHR IST 212 W

J

---~u-

- P ft&amp;M-+61A J-.l.U lJ lJ__:_

P. J. PAULEY,
AGENT

-c•enty

UN ITED

METH O DI ST,

Preachtng 9 30 a m first end second Sun
1oys of each month th1rd and f ourth Su n
days each mon th worsh tp serv1 ce ol 7 30
p m Wed nesday evenmgs at 7 30 Prayer
cmd B1bl e Study
SEVENTH DAY AD VEN TI ST Mulberry
He1ghts Rood Pomeroy Pas t or Alb ert
[,li lies Sabbat h School Supenn tendent
R1ta Wh1 te Sabba th School Sa turday
ohernoon ot 2 00 w1th Wor sh 1p Serv1ce
!ollow1n g at 3 15
.
RUTLAND FI RST BAPTIS T CHURCH'I $1er Ha melt Worner Sup! Sunday
')chool , 9 30om morn1ng worsh 1p 10 45
1 fn

'"~
I Ill'

~

" f l frnd

t.Q1 Ill 1111 fR ull lu with th o t:• h t l ~l·)f' Nu alllloti••ntl y !I !t \\llhrr•uu r~~lvo•, Our
tow n &lt;lt i hul,·&lt; our !!WI &gt; m l&lt;! lolrnsluJJ) uur II Wil llrtdt•I ~I An d mK h oH!' ~ri8UJI } o1Tod1
I&gt;Uf

fi tM f ,.;l l lsf111 I U)I!

llu .. llu n m WI' fu rl1•t1vn l h ll jlll t llf'~l hi .~S IIl/o[&lt; fn orn th e gOQd~" hrr11 hu1 , b~~n
I"'' ·•I uur • fr ~ JII~~ 11 1 l hu li+'SI 1111uI• lu lii•Mi n u at J&lt;Hir t•lll(:~ nf worsl11p 1J 11 r~ In It
Jl!. fMn otl ~•·..r &lt; h ftor I "d a ud ••m uwn u ndtr, ta nd ilil't t)i ll •m " " mnv Holr 1m o 11
~i&gt;rr&lt; lu~ l hlll llllllV w h u h ""l ll l&gt;lt!S&lt; &lt;Mtr II•"~ und 1111..;• ,( &lt;lilt f~ tl o" m oll

00 p

1· 111

~ ' "1 1 0 ~

216 S second
Pom eroy
99Z-l325

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, , 11

~;::::=

MT

Pat Hill Ford, Inc.

I h u"'&lt;ltl\

lh oo ln h n"
f r ..luo

Rl"'\ o'luhUir
1:! 10 p

E.at tn or
Carry Out
12t E Mam

BURLING HAM

PENTECOSTAL

CARPENTER

992 2955
Pom ero y

T'h :5 Sunday

De•

l(lr Rd
Rd , Longsvtlle Rev A A
Hughes ~as to r Sunda y School 10 a m
Serv iCes on Tuesday Thursd ay and Sun
doy, 730pm .
FAIT H TABERNACLE CHURCH Bo dey
Run Rood Rev Emmett Rowson pa stor
Ha ndley Du nn sup! Su nda y school 10
a m Sun day evenmg serv1ce 7 30. B1ble
teoch mg , 7 30 p m Thursday
' M IDDLEPORT CH URCH OF CHR IST IN

CHRISTIAN UNION lawrence Manley
pas tor
M rs Russ ell Young, Sunday
School Supt Sunday Sch ool 9 30 o m
Ev enmg wo r sh1p 7 30 Wedn esday prayer
meet1ng 7 30 p m
MORI AH

CHURC H

OF

GG D

BEARWA LLOW

MIDDLEPORT CLUSTER

HEATH Chu rch School 9 30 am War·
sh1p 10 30 o m UMYF 6 p m Robert
Rob1n son , Pa stor
RUTLAND Chu rch School 9 30 a m
Wo rship 10 30 om
SA LEM CENTER Worsh1p 9 a m Church
School 9 45 a m
SYRAC USE CLUSTER

Rev Stan ley Mern f 1ed M1nt ster
FOREST RU N Worshp 9 a m Church
School10 o m
M IN ERSV ILLE Church Sch ool 9 o m
wo~s h 1p lOam
A SBURY Chu rc h School 9 50 o m Wor shtp 11 o m Bt ble Study 7 30 p m Thurs
day UMW f 1st Tuesday

Roc1ne- Re v James Sotterf1el d pa stor
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
Morn1 ng wo rsh1p, 9 45 o m
Sund ay
Rev Dav1 d Horn $
schoo l , 10 45 a m , eventng wo rsh1p 7
Rev Mork Flynn
Tues day
7 30 p m , lod1e s praye r
Rev Florence Sm1 th
meet1ng , Wednesday, 7 30 p m YP E
Hil ton Wo lfe
MIDDlEPOR T FI RST BAPTI ST Corner
BET HANY, (Dorcas ) Worsh1p 9 30 o m
S1 xt h end Pol mer the Rev MarK McClung
Chu rc h School 10 30 am B1ble sl udy
Sunday scho ol , 9 15 a m Ran dy Hayes
Thursday , 7 30 p m
Sunday School
supenn tenden t
Don
CARMEL. Wo rsh1p second end fourth
R1gg s, asst sup t Morning Worsh1p 10 15
Sundays at 10 45 a nl Sunday School , se
o m Youth meetmg 7 30 p m Wed nes .. co nd and fou rt h Sundays q 30 o m Wa r
day mdud1ng wee tots eager beaver s
sh tp and Sunday School at Sutton Un 1ted
JVrl iOr astronaut s, and tuntor and sen1or
Me thodnt Church on f1 rsl and th~r d Sunh1 gh BYF chm r pr oct1 ce 8 30 p m
days Btble study toge ther eoch Wednes
Wednesday prayer meetmg and B1ble
day at 7 30 p m Famdy mght d 1nner
stud y Wednesday 7 30 p m
toge th er each thtrd Thu rsday ot 6 30
CHURCH OF CHRIST M1 ddleport 5th
APP LE GRO VE Sun day School 9 30 o m
ond Mom Sob Melton rnmt sfer Scott
Worsh1p 7 30 p m l st and Jrd Sundays,
Saltsm an , assoc 1ote m1n1ster
B1ble
Pray er mee tmg Wednesday 7 30 p m
School 9 30 o m mornmg wors h1p
Fellowsh1p supper f1 rst Satu rday 6 p m
10 30 a m , evenmg serv tce , 7 30 p m
UMW 2nd Tuesdoy 7 30 p m
Wednesday Btble Study and yout h group
EAST lET ART Chruch School 9 o m
meetmgs . 7 30 p m
Wor sh1p servtce 10 a m Prayer meehng
M I DDL EP OR T
CHURCH
OF
THE
7 30 p m Wednesday UMW second TuesNA ZARENE , Rev J1m Broome, pa st or Bdl
doy7 30 p m
Sunday
Wh1ie, Sunday schoo l sup!
RACI NE WESl EYAN - Sunday school l O
school . 9 30 o m mornmg worsh 1p 10 30 am ., worsh1p , 11 o m Cho1r prachce
a m , Sunday evangeliS t iC meeftng 7 00
Thu r sday 8 p m
p m Prayer meehng Wednesday , 1 p m
LET ART FALLS- Wor shtp serv tc:e 9 c m
UNITED P.R ESBYTERIAN M INI STR Y O F Church School 10 am
MEIGS COUNTY Dw1 ght l Zo vttz d1rec
MORNING STA R, Worshtp 9 30 a m
tor
Church School 10 30 o m
HARR ISON VI LL E PR ESBYTERIAN

Rev

Ernest Stnck lm , pa stor Sunday church
school 9 30 a m Mrs Homer lee sup t
mor nmg wo r ship , 10 30
MIDDL EPORT Sunday school q 30om
R1 chord Vaughan supt Morntng worsh1p

10 30
SYRACU SE FIRST UNITED PRES BYTER IA N

Church Worship servt ce 9 30 a m Sunday
School 10 30 om Mrs Samp son Hall ,
supt
RUTLA ND CHURCH OF GOD

Rondoll

Bo 1ley, pastor Sunday school 10 am
Sunday wors hip, 11 a m , Ch1ldren s
church , 11 a m , Sunday evemng serv1ce .
7 30 p m , Wednesday evemng young
lod1es au )(1 l 1ory , 6 p m Wednesday fam1ly
wors h1p 7 30 p m
HAZEL COMMUNITY CHU RCH Near
l ong Bottom , Eds el Hart po!!! for Sunday
schoo l, 10 o m , Church, 7 JO p m , praye r
meeti ng 7 30 p m Thu rsday
• M IDD LE PO RT

PENTECOSTAL,

Thtr d

Ave th e Rev. W dltam Kn 11tel , pa stor
f homas Kelly , Sunday School Supt Sun
day schoo l 10 a m Cl asses for all age s
evening service , 7 30, Btble study,
Wednesday 7 30 p.m youth serv1ces
Fndoy 1 7 30 p m
MI DDLEPORT FREEWI LL BA PTI ST Co rner

Ash and Plum Rolph Butcher pastor
Saturday evening serv tce. 7 30 p m Sun·
day School 10 30 o m
MEIGS
COOPERATIVE PARISH
METHODI St CH l! nCH

Richard W Thomas, Dtn;.::tor
POMER OY CLUSTER

· ~ev :'oberl McGee
Rev. James r
POMER OY Slrnc._ 1 ;:,chu,...
j am
Worshtp serv•ce 1{t30 o m, r...hq rr rehear
sui Wedne sday, 7 p m RrN
Rober1
McGee, pastor
ENTERPRISE Worsh1p 9 a m Church
SChoollO a m
,
ROCK SPRING S Sunday School 9 I S a
m Worsh1p serv1ce, lOa . m.
FlATWOODS Church Schdol 10 a m .
Worship 11 o.m

MORSE CHAPEL

Church Sc hoo l 9 30

a m Worshtp 11 a m
PORTLA ND, Sunda y School 6 30 p m
Evening Wor shi p 7 30 p m
Vo\H h
Meetm g Tu esday 7 30 p m Btble Study ,
Thu r sday 7 30 p m
SUTTON, Sunday Sc hool firs t and thtrd
Sundays 9 30 o m worsh tp ftrst and
thtrd Sundays 10 45 a m Worsh1p and
Sunday Schoo l at Car mel Un1ted
Method tst" Church on second ond fo ur th
S\Jndays B1ble study together ea ch
Wednesday , 7 30 p m Fam tly ntght dtnner
together each th1rd Thursday at 6 30 p m
NORTHEA ST CLU STER

Rev R1dlard W Thoma s
Duane Sydenstr icker , Sr
John W Douglas
Charles Dom1 gon
JO PPA , Worsh tp 9 00 o m . Church
School l O 00 a m
CHESTER , Wors htp 9 a m , Chur ch
School 10 a m Chotr Rehearsal 7 p m
Thursdays Btble Study , Thur sdays
7-30 p m.
LO NG BOTTOM, Sunday School at q 30
a m Evenmg Worsh1p at 7 30 p m Thu rs day B1bl e Study 7 30 p m
REEDSVILLE Sunday School 9 30 o m
Mormng Worship 10 30 a m Even 1ng War
shp 7 30 p m Btble Study Wednesdays at
7 30 p m
ALFRED, Sunday School ot 9 45 a .m
Morn ing Worshtp al 11 a m Yo uth, 6 30
~., 1Y'I Sundov" 111/ednesdo y N tg ht Prayer
\'ee tmg, 7
ST PA U
pers Plam s) Sunday
School 9 00
Mornmg Worship at
10 00 a .m Bt b
.,~ dy 7 30 p m Tu es day
SOUTH BET/to.~ (S1Iver Ridge) Sunday
School 9·00 a m Morn1ng Woshtp 10·00
a m Wednesday Btble Study, 7 30 p m
KENO

CHURCH

OF

CHRIST,

Sw ain Supenntendent
9 30 every week

Ol; ver

Sunday school

HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNIC N Rev Keo lh

Eblm , pa stor. 3unday School. 9 30 a.m
l eonard Gilmore ftrst elder dvenmg servt ce , 7 30 p. m
Wednes day prayer
meeting , 7 30 p m

•

RIDGE

CH UR CH

OF

CHRI ST, Duane Warden miniS te r Stble
d oss , 9 30o m mornmg wor ship 10 30
am
even1ng wo rsh1p , 6 30 p m
We dnes day B1bl e sJudy 6 30 p m

of Your Choice
This Sunday.

NEW

STI V.ERSVI LL E

COMMUN IT Y

Church , Sunday Sc hool serv1ce, 9 45 o m ,
Worshtp ser vtce 10 30 Evongeltstlc Ser .
v1ce
7 30 p m Wednesday Pray er
meeting 7 30
ZION CH URCH OF CHR IST, Pomeroy
Harn sonvtlle Rd Robert Pu rte ll pas to r,
B1ll McElroy Su nday school supt Sun day
school 9 30 o m morn mg worshtp o nd
commu nion 10 30 o m Sunday wors hrp
serv 1ce 7 p m Wednesday ev enmg
prayer meet 1ng and 81ble study, 7 p m
ST JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH Pm e
Grov e The R;ev Wilham M1ddlesworth ,
Po slor Chu rch serv 1ces 9 30 a m Sunday
SchoollO 30 o m
BR AD BUR Y CHU RC H OF CH RI ST

Jerry

Ptngley pas tor Sund ay school 9 30 o m ,
morn~ng worsh1p 10 30 om Wednes day
even 1ng se rv1c e 7 30
ANTIQUITY BA PTIST Rev Earl Shuler
pos1or Sunday sc hool 9 30 a m , Churc h
se nnce
7 p m , you th mee tmg
6
p m Tue\doy Btble Study 7 p m
RA CI N E CHURC H O F THE NAZ A RENE

Rev Jo hn A Coff man, pa stor Martha
Wolfe . Cho trmon of the Board of Chnst1 on
l1 fe Sunday School 9 30 o m , mornmg
wo rsh1p 10 30 Sunday eventng worsh 1p
7 30 p m Prayer meetmg Wedne sday ,
730 pm
RACINE FIRST BA PTI ST Don l Wa lke r ,
Pas tor Robert Smtt h Sunday school
supt , Sunday school 9 30 a m morn1ng
worsh1p , 10 40 am , Sunday even1ng wo r·
sh tp, 7 30 Wed nesday evenmg B1ble
study , 7 30
"
DANVILLE

WE SLEYA N

Rev

R

D

Brown pastor Sun day School, 9 30 a m ,
morning worshtp 10 45 youth serv tce ,
6 45 p m , evenmg wors h1p, 7 30 p m ,
pra'{er and pra1se Wednesday 7 30 p m
SILVER RUN FREE BA PTIST Rev Morvtn
Mork.n , pa stor, Steve L1ttle Sunday school
su pt Sunday school I 0 a m , mormng
worshtp , 11 a m Sunday even ing wor·
sh tp 7 30 Pr ayer rttee ttng and 81b le
study, Thursd ay 7 30 p m , youth ser vtce
6 p m Sunday
CHESTE R CHURCH O F GOD Rev R E

Robm son past or Sunday school , 9 30
o rn ., worsh tp servtce , I I o.m evemng
servtce 7 00 you th serv1ce. Wednesday ,
7 00 p.m
LANG SVILLE

CH RI STI AN

CHURCH ,

Robert Musser , pastor Sun day school,
9 30 p .m Roy Stgman supt morning
wors htp, 10 30, Su nday even 1ng service ,
7.30 m id· w eek s&amp;rv1ce Wednesday 7
pm
•
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE N AZAREN E.

a m morm ng churc h 10 30 o m Sunday
evenmg serviCe 7 30, Wednesday 81bla
Study , 7 30 p m
CHES TE R CHURCH OF THE N AZAR EN E,

Rev Herbert Grote, pas tor Fr onk R1ffle
sup t Sun day School, 9 30 a m Wo rshtp
serv1 ce 11 a m and 7 30 p m Pra yer
meet mg . Wednes day , 7 30 p m
LAU REL

CLIFF

FR EE

M ETHODIST

CHURCH Rev Floyd F Shook, pastor,
Ll oyd Wn ght D1rector of Chn st 1an Ed ucatiOn Sunday Scho ol, 9•30 a m .. Mornmg
Wor sh1p, 10 30 a m , Chotr Procl 1ce Sunday 6 30 p m , Even mg Worsh1p , 7 30
p m Wednesday Pra ye r and Bible Study
7 30 p m
DE XTER CHURCH O F CHRIST

Charl es

Russell Sr , mm1ster , R1ck Macomber,
supt Sunday schoo l, 9 30 o m , wors h1p
servtce 10 30 a m Bible Stud y , Tuesday,
7 30 p m
RE ORG AN IZED CHURCH O F JESUS
CHR IST O F LATTER DA Y SAINTS. Portland

Rocme Roqd Wdliom Ro ush , pa stor
Phylli s Stobart Sunday Schoo l Supt Sun·
day School 9 30 a m Morning wors htp,
10 30 o.m , Sunday eventng serv1ce 7 p m
Wednesday evenmg praye r services, 7 30
p m

BETHLEHEM BAPTIST Rev Earl Shuler,
pastor Wor shtp serv 1c:e , 9 30 a .m. Sunday
school I 0 30 a m Blb)e Study a nd prayer
ser vtce Thu rsday , 7 30 p m
CARLETON CHURCH Kmgsbury Rood
Gory Kmg pos1or Sunday school , 9 30
o m Ralph Carl supen ntenden t evemng
worshtp, 7 30 p.m Prayer meet1ng,
Wed nesday 7 30 p.m .
LON G

BOTTOM

CHRISTIAN ,

Tom

R1cho son, past or , Wallace Damewood,
Sunday School Supeh ntendent Wo rship
serv1ce at 9 a m Bible School 10 a m
HYSELL RUN HO LINESS CHURCH Thu rs

da y evening serv 1ces 7 30 . Rev. Cart Sun·
day morni ng servtces 9 30 and evenmg
services 7 30 p m , Rev Durham
FREEDOM GO SPEL MISSION o l Bo ld

Knob , located on County Rood 31. Rev
l awrence Glues encamp , pastor, Rev.
Ro ge r Willford , oui stant pastor
Preoch1ng services Sunday 7 30 p m .,
prayer meetmg , Wednesday , 7 30 p .m .
Gory Griffith leader Youtf1 groups , Sunday ev eing, 6 30 p. m. w ith Roger and
V1olet Wil lford c s ~ ers Communio n
ser vtces first Sunday each mo nth
WHITE'S CHAPEL Coolville RD Rev Roy
Deeter, pastor. Sunday school 9·30 a .m ..
wors h1p serviCe 10 30 o m Bible study
and prayer serv1ce, Wednesday 7·:30 p.m
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST

Bro d

Henderson, pastor Herb El liott , Sunday
school supt., Sunday school. 9 30 a m .
morning Worsh1p and comumon , 10 30

a.m

RUTLAND BIBLE METHODIST CHURCH,

Rev James B K1ttle, pastor , Norm an
Presley, Sunday Schoo l Supen nt endent
Sunday school 9 30 o m.: mornmg wor
sh tp , )0.45 o m , evan gelistic serv ice , 7
p m Pray er an d Pratse Wednesday 7
p.m youth meetmg , 7 p m

1
Am os T1 ll1s, Postor, Donny Till is Sunday
School Supt Sunday School , 9 30 a .m ,
followed by morni ng worship Sunday
evenmg service , 7 00 p.m . Prayer
meeting , Wednesday 7 00 p .m .

EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN CHRI ST,

Rev . Lloyd 0 Gnmm , Jr . pastor Sunday
school , 9 30 am worship service, 10•30
om Broadcast li ve O\'er WMPO , young
peoples service 7 p m Evangel iS ti c ser.
v1ce 7 30 p.m Wednesday serv1ce 7 30

Elde n 'R. Blak e pastor Sunday Sc hoo l 10
o m Rober t Ree d ' supt Mornm g ser mon, 11 a m , Sunday ntght serv1ces
Chrlshan Endeavor . 7 30 p m Song ser VICe, B p m , Preach1ng 8 '\ ) p m
M1dweek Pr ayer meehng Wednesday , 7
p m . Al vm Reec:P.' Iay leader
CH UR CH O F JESUS CHRIST l oco ted o t

Rutland on New Ltmo Road, ne)( t to For es t
Acre Pork , Rev Ray Rouse pastor Rober t
Musser Sun day School sup! Sunday
school , 10 30o m , worshtp 7 30 p m Bl·
ble Study, Wednes day , 7 30 p m ; Satur day ntght prayer serv 1ce 7 30 p m
HEMLOCK G ROVE CHRISTI '-"N . Roge r

Wa tson, pas to r , Mtldred Ztegler Sunday
school supt Morning worshtp , 9.30 am ,
Sundayschool 1 10 30 a m , evening 1er ·
VI Ce 7~ 30
MT. UNION BAPTIST, Joe Sayre Sundqy
School Supermtenen1 Sunday school , 9 4S
om , eventng worshtp , 7 30 p m Praye r
meeting , 7 30 p m Wednesday
TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF CHRIST.

Vmce nt Wat er s, past or Howard Blair Col.
well, superm tendent Sunday School , 9 30

RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE,

p m

FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST , Corner of Se·
con d on.d Anderson, Mason . Pastor Fronk
Lowther Sunday school, 9 45 o m., war·
sh1p service, 11 o m and 7 30 p m Week·
ly Btble Study, Wednesday , 7 :30pm .
MASO N CHURCH OF CHRIST MUier St ,

Mason, W Vo Aun ce M1ck , pastor Sun
day B1bl e Studr, 10 a.m .. Worship 11 a m
and 7 p m Bib e Study Wedn•sdoy 7 p .m. ,
Vocal MUSIC
M A SON A SS EMBLY OF GOD, Duddtng

lone, Mason W Va Rev Ronnie B Rose.
Pastor, Sunday School9·415 o m ; Mormng
Wors hip 11 a m Eve.,in9 S•r vlce 7 .30
p m Wedne~day Woman s Ministries 9
o m (mHtlng and prayer Prayer G!"d BI b le Study 7 p .m .
, HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHR ISTIAN UNION The Rev Wllllom

v1ce 7 30 p m. Wednesday even tng
prayer meetmg , 7 30 p m Youth prayer
servtce each Tuesday
FA IRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH

Lefort . W

Vo , Rt 1, Mark lrwm , pastor Worshi p
services. 9.30 am .. Sunday schoo l, 11
om , even1ng worsh1p, 7 30 p m. Tuesday
cott age prayer meeting and Btble study ,
9 30 a m Worsh1p servtce , Wednesday ,
730pm .
CAlVARY BIBLE CHURCH , now located
on Pomeroy Plke , County Rood 25 near
Flatwood s Rev Blackwood , pa stor Ser VICes on Sunday at 10 30 o m . and 7 30
p m w1 th Sunday school , 9 30 a m Bible
study , Wednesday 7 30 p m
INDEPENDENT HOLI NESS CHUR CH, INC

Pearl St ., M1ddleport Rev . 0 Dell
Manley, pas tor Arthu r Barr, Sunday
school supenntendent Sunday school
9 30 c m evemng wprship , 7 30 p m .
Praye r and pro1se serv 1ce , Wednesday ,
7 30 p m
RUTLA ND

APOSTOLIC

CHURCH

OF

JESUS CHRIST, Elder James Mtller Btble
study, Wed nesday 7 .30 p m , Sunday
School , 10 am Sunday mght service, 7·30

p m.
POMEROY

WESLEYAN

HOLINESS

-

Homson vdle Rood , Dewey Kmg , pas tor,
Ed1son Wea ve r oss1stant Henry Eblin,
Jr ., Sunday school supt. Sunday school.
9 30om . morning woFShlp 11 a m. ~ n­
doy evemng serv1ce
7 30
prayer
meetmg, Thursday 7 30 p m
SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF GOD -

Not Pente costal. Rev George Ot ler ,
pastor Worsh1p service Sunday , 9..45
o .m., Sunday school , 11 a m worship
serv ice , 7 30 p.m Thut1do y prayer
meeting , 7:30pm.
MT HERMON Untted Brethren m Chri st
Church. Re\1 , Robert Sanders , pa stor: Dan
Will , loy leader located m Te~a s Com munity off CR 82 Sunday school , 9 30
om ; Morning worsh1p serv1ce, IO ·oi5
am ., 8\'enmg preoch1ng servi ce second
ond fourth Sundays, 7.30 p .m .; Christian
Endeavor, first and thtrd Sundays 7 ·30
p m Wednesday prayer meetmg and Bi ·
ble study , 7·30 p.m
JEHOVAH' S WITNESSES , I mole easf of

Rutland, junction of Route 124 and Noble
Summ1t Rood (T· 174) Sundoy Bible Lec-

ture , 9· ~ am. , Watchtower study, 10.30
o .m Tuesday Bible study, 7 and 8: 15
p.m , Thursday theo~ratlc 1chool , 7 30
p m servtce meeting, 8·30 p .m.
RUTLAND FREEWILL BAPTIST Church -

Churck M cPherson , pastor, Guy Priddy,
superintendent Sunday school , 10 o m ,
Sunday evening and Wednesday services ,

7·30 p .m .
CHURCH OF GOD of Prophecy , located

on the 0. J. Wh1te Rood off highway 160.
Sunday School 10 a m Superrntendent
John Loveday Ftr1t Wednesday nlght of
month CPMA services. second Wednel doy WMB meeting 1 th~rd through flfttl
youth serv1ce George Croyle, pastor .
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL - 570 Gront St .,
Middleport; Sunday School 10 a m , morning worship , 11 a m. e\olenlng woi-shlp, 7
p. m . Wednesday evening Bible study and
prayer meeting 7 p m . Affiliated with
Southern Baptist Convention .
BRADFORD

ASSEMBLY,

Ro c1ne ,

BAPTIST ,

Rev.

Freelond

Meigs
Property
Transfers

SONS STORE

214 E Ma1n
992 5130 Pomeroy

' '
BAPTIST

om

WAID CROSS

Your Choice
T his

SOUTHERN

NEASE SETTLEMENT FREE WILL BAPTIST

Pra sc r~pt 1o n s

Ser~ices

~~~r,,A GOOD

Method ,. t

Donald R Kerr, Sr. , pastor, Friday even·
mg serv1ce 7 30 p m Sunday school , I 0

Middlepori·
Pomeroy, O.

Attend The
Church of

United

YOU VILL ADffiES5 ME
A5 "'MADAME "' 1 VILL
NOT TELL YOU A6AIN,
SK.EEP!

Norris pastor Don Cheadle , Supt Sunda y Sch ool 9 30 a m. Momlng Worsh1p
10 30 a m Prayer Service, alternate ,Sun
days.

THE DAILY
SENTINEL

We F1U [)o(tor s'

NAH- THESE - 6\JT THAT
KIDS ARE
LITT LE
JUGT REDHEAD· 15
RUHHII'i ' RUNNIN' AliAY

Fourth ond

Route 124, Wtl liam Hoback , pastor Sun·
da y school 10 a m . Sunday evening service, 6 30 p m . Wednesday eening ser·
VICe, 7

448 Locu1t
992-]1)9]
Mtddleport

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY

Nylo

CHURCH, Rou te 1, Shade . Pa stor Don
Block Aff1ltoted w1th Southern Bopt1st
Convention. Sunday school , 1.30 p m
Sunday w orship, 2·30 p. m Thursday
evemng B1 ~ le study , 7 p.m

Middleport

S,k er's of
Good Bread '~~
Huntmgton, W

BETHEL

Pm

pameroy

HEINER'S
BAKERY

•

Church , Rev Charles Domigon , pa stor
Sunday School 9 30 o m . Worship Ser
v1ce 10 45 am ., Sunday Bible Study 7 00
p m , Wednesday prayer meeting~ 7·30 ,.. ,

PIZZA SHACK

M11l Work
Ca bmet Mali1ng
Syracuse 992 lf18

Rev

MO RIAH BAPTIST -

NORTH

:-inlur. lo o
111'\l' lllllfl
19 ~ f '

OK.AY.. 1 THIIJK $HE WA~T$ TO
HIRE HIM A$ A HIT M AN!

SI-\E ~- ?0 M J)(.IC U5 TO t: IN D
THS M LJ S TA~ HE KID ~

Mom St., Middleport Rev Colv1n Mmn1s,
pa sto r Mrs. E!vm Bumgardner , supt Sun·
da y sc hoo l, 9 30 a m , worsh ip se rv 1ce,
10 45om .

46 1 S -Third, Mrddleport
"2·2196

H Ill

Ml tJD YOU •• JU LIE 8LA11l.
J.JE:VE'R DID 1 EL. L ME- WH'/

VIEW THAT HI? ONLY
REAL FR IEND WM A
GAL OOT NAMED
CAP f AI"-1 EASY !

Bor den
pa st or , Cornel1us Bunch ,
superintendent Sunday school , 9 30 am ,
second and fourth Sundays worshi p ser·
VICe Of :,2 30 p m

zs l6

\\ ,.,J,.,~, ru ,

Attend T he Church
of Your Choice

TRUE- ,. &amp; UnHE t..,
READ IN SOME: I ~T ER­

"i' DID ~' T TELl.
f~E ?HER. IFF- !

FAITH BAPTIST Church, Mason, mee t ot
Umted Steel Worke rs Umon Hall , Railroad
Stree t, Ma son Pa stor Rev Jay Mitchel l
Mormng w ors h1p 9·&lt;45 a.m . Sunday
Sc hool 10 30 o m
Prayer meetmg
Wednes day , 7 30 p m
FOREST RUN BAPTIST

r ....,.... ,
lit hro" ~

m

M IDWAY COMMUNITY CHUR CH

MT

rB

VIRGIL B.
TEAFORD SR.

MARK V STORE

Reuter-Brogan
Insurance

OKAY, CORY- -LEiT''
HEAR. THE PART

Route 7 on

mg worship, 10 30 o. m.; ev en1ng WQrshlp , 7 30 W&amp;d nesday m"ht prayer serviCe 7.:30 p.m Women :s Fellowship
Thursday 9·30 a m

lh 11

Wl ti

1

:auNT

pastor Sunday School. 9 30 a m.; morn-

~\.lllll 111UI h

RACINE
PLANING
MIU

,

7

P

Pomeroy bypass Rev Robert Sm1th, Sr ,
pastor Rev James Cu ndiff , OSS istant

\luno lu 1
Ill • m ofhoun,

T his Sunda'y

1HE HILA ND CHAPEL George Cas to
pus tor Sunday School Q 30 o m even1ng
worc; htp 7 30 Thu rsda y evenmg prayer
~C I V I C e 7 JO p m
POMER OY FIRST BAPTI ST Do v1 d Mann
mtmster W1 l ltom Watson Sunday school
upt Sunday school 9 30 o m morn1 ng
vorshtp 10 30om
I-IR ST SOUTHERN BAP TIST 282 Mulberry
Av&gt;" Pomeroy Hershel McClu r e Sund ay
~ dwo l supermten dent Sunda y school
Q 30 om
morntng wors h1p 10 30 eve n
1ng Worsh ip 7 00 p m MtdweeK praye r
'-&amp;fVIC e

mdweek prayer serv1c e Wednesday, 7 30

ttUr i'1il j)IIHH:U"

UIUII lu d u "' It ~

m. Sunda y ove nong se&lt;VIce , 7·30 p.m ,

0

OF

CHRI ST 200 W Mo 1n St , 99 2 5::135 Voc al
rn us1c Sun day wors htp, 10 a m Bible
stu dy 11 am wo rsh1p 6 p m Wednes
day B1 bl e study , 7 p m
Ol D OEXlE R BIBLE CHRISTI AN CHURCH
Rev Rolp h Sm 1th , pa sto r Sunday school
9 30
am
Mrs
Worley Fronc1s
supenn tenden t Preoch1ng serv tces ftr sl &amp;
l fnrd Sundoys follow tng Sun day School
G RA HAM

' '-' '

UN ITED FAITH CHURCH -

This Sunday

CHURCH

TRINITY Christian Auembl,-. Coolv•lle
_ Gilbert Spencer, pgstor. Sunday
,choo l 9 30 a m ; mor n1ng w ors hip, 11

serv1ce 7 p m. ; Youth meeting
study , Wednesday . 7 p m .•

1\ li uf u ~ ha\'tl C)Jl l rll• no otd Y oti.O:R)J))IIIn l ~ tlfll ~~finally Jl6riS.:S,.I Itjl.
d.,st r... t ~rlu,.lt• Afh•r WI'O U an d ~m u~•l tml'5 tellr~ oflnukm11 for .. a1d tn 11
tho ~t~;;lu.tl U\'HU'tshl 1• l&gt;r m11~ lttl lu 11h ~'Uill

Attend the Church
oJ' Your Choice

R ACKET -

_:_.:_This_SI!llday... .----·~~~;5,~:~n.d*~~~'ii~lng
a m

~-(;01----~~·--

~Uilntn h'tl

ARSON-FORPROFIT

pm .

llirs f!tl!.l lliitld of \JUt) ha~ l"&gt;t: n h le!IJt'(l with ltw m ht51:l lht e&lt;~rth gnd "11h tile
lrL~l um~ and n Jtht ~ fo e-njuy thllrn Rut dtle! 1 h ~ m1rl' owne"h 'P of thw.~ ~ riOds

Nat1onw1de Ins Co
of Colum bu s, 0
804 W Ma m
992 2l l 8 Pomeroy

WE'RE CLOS IN G
IN ON 4N

2nd St ,

Lawrence

of \ our Choice

WESTSIDE

E, Main StrNt
992 3115 , PomtraY

of Yo ur (.;hoice

-- or~~

Ru11and, 0 h lll 4$175
w m Htll 8r.Jwn, Owner

Mo1n St Ned Proudfoot pa stor B1ble
school , 9.30 a m mormng worst·up 10,30
a m Youth meeftngs 6 30 p m eventn g
worsh1p , 7 30 Wednesday mgh t pr a)ler
meetmg and B1ble study 7 30 p m
THE SAL VATION ARM Y, 115 Butternut
Ave , Pomeroy En voy and Mrs Roy W1n·
mg off 1cen tn charge Sunday holme ss
mee t1ng 10 a m Sunday School , 10 30 ·
a m Sunda y school leader YPSM Elotse 1-------~------1
1\dmns 7 30 p m sal vah on mee tm ~
venou s speakers and mu siC specta ls
Th t..H sdoy 10 a m to 2 p m Lod1es Home
league all women 1n1111ed 7 30 p m
pray er meettng ond B1 ble study Rev Noel
H (H rnon teacher
BURLI NGTO N SOUTHER N BAPTIST
(;HAPEL "' Route 1 Shade, 81bl e school 7
p m Th ur sday wo r sh1p serv1c e, 8 p m
POM EROY

......

1a

V • 11•

525 N

M1ddleport James E KqsM, pastor
Sund ay mormng worship, 10 a .m., ev•nlng serv1ce. 7, Wednesdov e ven•ng wor &lt;Shlp 7 p.m Visitation , Thursday, 6 30

Keepsa!&lt;L'
._.... ._

tten d Tll e

SALES 41 nd SER VI CE

p "'·
VICTORY BAPTIST -

K&amp;C JEWELERS

Brown's Fire &amp;
Equipment

TRINITY CH URCH Re v W. H Pern n,
pastor Roy May,er , Sunday school sup t
Churc h School, 9 15 am wo rsh1p ser
111Ce -t 0:-30o m:-Eho1r-rehearsol , Tcrasday ·
7 30 p m under d1rect1on of Ailee Nease

GRA CE EPISCOPAL CHURCH -

A ttend The
Church of
You r Cho e
This Sun

MEIGS TI RE
CENTER, INC.

CHURCH

OF

CHRIST-

Eugene Underwood, pGstor Harry Hendricks. superintendent Sunday school ,
9 30 a .m ; morn ing worsh1p, 10 30 o m . :
ev enmg worship , 7 p m Wednesday 81ble
study , 1 p m.
JUBILEE CHRISTIAN CENTER -

George 's

Cre ek Rood Rev . C J Lemley , pastor;
John Fellure . superintendent Church
school , 9 30 a.m., morning worship ,
10.30, even ing 1ervice , 7 p .m Youth
mee ting Sunday , 6 p.m. Bible 1tudy In
depth, Wednesday . 7 p.m Cla11es for oil
ages Nursery provided for wonhip ·~­
vi ce
ST. PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH, Comer

of SW'camore and Second Stt , Pom•roy.
Tho Rev WUIIam Mld'tleswan~. Pastor.'
Sunday School at 9.45 a .m . ond Church

Services 11 o.m
SACRED HEART, Rev . Fother Paul D.

Campbell , pastor . Sunday SChool, 9.30 Welton, pastor Phone 992 -2825. Saturday
am .. James Hughes. sup!. . evening ser. • evening Mau , 7:30, Sunday Mass 8 ond

Elaine Spires to Charles Laing
SptreS, Parcel, Rutland.
Robert E. Peoples, George Anna
Peo11les, Wallace B. Ford, Edythe F.
Ford to Fred W. Crow W, Henry E.
Cleland, Jr., Lot, Pomeroy.
Clifford E. Smith to Glen R. Caton,
Kathleen Caton, Parcel, Pomeroy.
Donald A. May, Vivian M. May to
Darrell Brewer, Parcel, Pomeory.
Seven Rights of Way, James E.
Diddle, Pomeroy.
Eva Schreiber, Walter W.
Schreiber to Herald Oil and Gas Co.,
Right of Way, Salisbury,
James W. Johnson, Zorra Johnson
to Herald Oil and Gas Co., Right of'
1
Way, Salisbury.
Teddy A. Warner, Suzanne Warner to Herald Oil and Gas Co., Right
of Way, Salisbury.
Three Righ~ of Way, Herald Oil
and Gas Co., Pomeroy.
Charles D. Carr, !{ose D. Carr to
Michael E. Guess, Marcia R. Guess,
Lot 10, Weathennan's Sub., Orange;
George W. Bauer, dec. to Robert
J. Bauer, Cert. of Trans., Sutton.
Margaret 0 . Amberger to Michael
Low~ll Bing, Diana L Bing, 1.34
acres, Sutton.
Drema Roach to Raymond Roach,
2.35 acres, Salisbury.
John R. Murphy, Ida M. Murphy
to James E. Diddle, Right of Way,
Rutland.
'Selim J. Blaiewicz; M.D. ,-Virglnia
BlBzewicz, Burnell Stephenson,
Sophia B. Stephenson, John
Sullivan, Lili Sullivan, Eva B.
Wilton, Jack Hall, Helen B. Hall to
Lawrence G. Clark, LaDoiUl8 M.
Clark, Lots, Pomeroy,
Wilda I. Haning to Dena H.
Raymond, Ease., Pomeroy.
Willlam C. Christian. Kathryn M.
Christian to Sandy G. Starr, Sue A.
Starr, .42acre, Lot3, Pomeroy.

.
Poet's Comer

GASOIJNE AlLEY

Or, be-lnCIIIterIn etemlty'l clort ni&amp;bl

COlA:' CUT WITH

!701NG 1l1E

H~

Television- Log
OCT. 17, 11110

10:00
EVENING

ITUFF
'
CAROL BURNETT AND
F ENDS
NEWI
),2-1 CONTACT
8:30
(!) NIC NEWS

id

tNHtS~

808 NEWHAIIT IHOW
U.CI! ntE JIUIIC
(l)&lt;la) CIIIINEWS
~ WILD WORLD OF

·-r~=--

7:00

PIIIIAOAZINE

STORY
TIALL: tNIJDE THE NFL

Lan Oewaon end Nick Buonlcontl
combine

llJ

10:30

IJ:IEVEHtNG
He
lflil MCNEWSCLOSEUP
WI

l

::::UPDATE
lltCIWID HOGUE
QOVE-HT AI IT 18

•Judlclel Branch' Walbklgton In·
tlder Jack Andaraan tocu••• on
thaludlel.llbrtnch,tromlho-al
court IYttem to the U.S Juatlce
rtrnent (80 mlna )

:~: n.mirl~·~~~wa
DAN-FIN
MGIT.GALL!RY

11:18
11:11
11 :30

.wJUPOATE

•rn THETONtOHTSHOW

•

CAVEn SHOW
RIDAYI
12:30
ffi THE MIDNIGHT
~CIALHoat MacDnla Gue11a·

OOitlbt111 (10 mlna.)

M

~IAOUYSHOW

MOVII-(~DY)~ ..

"'More

e(I)CIILATIIIOYII'~riiHCI'
117 4 Stare: Joe Doll Balr.•, Conny
Van 01kt A a-nbfer ftnda hlmltiH
without frtende when M 11 fremecs
fora crlme.AfterfouryHr8otlmprl·
toomoef,hoi.I-Htl,vowtngto
find llf1d leek revenge on thou rt·

12:40 IDI.MOVtE~HORRORl" "Ba~
Ill! ltoocf" 1172
12:41 liJ lOUD GOLD Co-hoate· Glen
Campbell, Dionne Werwkk Gold
record winnera perform their hit
1cnge. Oue1t1 Peecheaand Herb,
12:61
1:00
1: 16

I

NEWS ~ATE
JJIIIIIY IWAOOART
MOV. -(DRAMA) •

twut'' IN7

lion

have I
new
about the existence of the

l

~matural

llJ

ROSS IIAOLEY SHOW

.

700CI.UB

IIAT~ATtiDL

- - --

•

• Qi8 75 l

.J 82
WEST

I DOTUB

J - llledllll blood for llnners,
Sttl!ered dealh for,... ond me,

He lli'Oie and went to Heaven,
And 1111 blood wti!IOIUI free.
He hu ofteredfrtealvaUon
Unto each and everyone,

--lftdCillllelbellevin(
On lhe Falhet ond 1111 Soo

.AKJIU

.QHJ

All God's people wtU arile 1

Cumpooed Oct. 2 ond I, U., by ltln. lllkty
I~'~~Jot~. Lq llotlam, Oltioe7tl,

.Q8 !3

"•+lot

.AKI071 5
SOUTH

.6542

:~-~J

....
1:10

¥ulnerable Both
Dealer South

I.

0

KJ

Onlhe~... momlnf!

u,..
- be...
-....
Sad, .. lid..will
,...r.

EAST

"K IOOI75

AI HllblooddldfnolyO....

Go lo Hlm, believe llDd lruat Hlm,
Lei Him beyouraU!naD.
Doo't=lhll-tal..atton,
Doo, ctll Ulllllloo IIIIo,

10-17 80

"Q J 32

•u
tJG

I

&amp;outh opens one heart with
only 10 htgh·card potnls

NORTH

JUST PA881NG THRU

byHenriAinoldandBoblee

Well

WHA'T A LEOP"A~D
M115H'T ALSO I!E
CALLED.

tNOYCOTI
tettn
) I [J [J arrange
Anmrhara: A r l I l Xl) (I I I1

llbl
llbl

.

••s•

Pua

&lt;"'--1

because Ius hand has such nace
dlstrrbution

West

has a

mighty sound overcall but
prefers tt to a double because
h1s strength ISconcen tra ted m
heart b1d shows distribution
rather than h1gh cards wh1lc
East's four-spade call is JUSt a

where the thtnkmg

comes in South is gomg to bid

agam and chooses five clubs
to tell his partner what to lead
aeainst any final

DOWN

ACROSS

I Pohsh cake
5 1929 Wall St

1 Support

2 Mennomte
sect

word

lD Chmese port
3 Unending
11 CBS newsman
de pth
13 Locahty
4 Cox:swam's
II Chng
assent
15 Doctrmau e
5 Feartul
I '
Yesterday 's Answer
(SuffiX)
6 Eledromc
16 Eggs (bioi. I
sentmel
19 Energy
21 Pnnl •t not
11 Knotts
1 Bclg1an
source
29 Jury list
or Adams
corrunune 22 Subtracted :W Afrtcan
18 B1g surprtse
by
beast
8 Solve
20 Author,
3! Ganglmg
9 Brave one 23 Stack
- Yutang _
12 Pudding
24 School sup- 36 Creeper
Zl LamentatiOn
ply tterns
31 Health
angredient
22 "A Chrous
16 Approve
25 Curse
resort
: ~E~ng~e~n:~d~e•r~catek-;::--J:---1-:_~
26 RUSSian City
21 Panache
28..-French
stockmg
29 Hack wrtter
32 Letter
33 Beverage
34 The gwns
35 Be fretful
37 Stretch
38 Hot-dish
support
39 Comparuon
of pmg
40 Fash1on
4! ciiarlesCorrell role

ncmnal sound bid.
tS

by THOMAS JOSEPH

across

the spade suit North 's four-

Now

~Ht:W"",(

spade

contract West doubles. North
goes to five hearts East carries on to flve spades and
South goes to six hearts.
West decides to double Who

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work it:
l1

AXYDLBAA X R
LONGFELLOW

One lc tt ~ r s1mply stands for another In th1s sampl e A i s

can blame him" He leads the

used for the_ three L's, X for the two O's, etc SingJe letters,

kln11 of spade! and Soulb has

apostrophes, the length and fo rmatmn of t he words are aU
t'11 nts E ach day the code le tl era ar e dtfferent.

no trouble brmging in the

slam

Now look a t wha t might

Openlnslead:t K

Now
the CirCled
to
form me IUrpriM answer, •• aug
!If- by tho above Cll1oon

JumlttH KNIFE CROAK sPLICE NATURE
v e11erday • [
Answer •wnat they ca1tec:1 tne hospitalized mtcnanic
who was 1n old grouch ~
THE "CRANK CASE "

BATUIIIIAYNIGHT AT

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

UWIUPOATE

NeWSUPOATE

w e &lt;IJ

BRIDGE

MOYIIoCHOAROR) •••• ..Hat'---"1171
(I) MOYIE -(DAAMA) 00 \i

~

AN INSIDE LOOK

THE LUN08TROM8
ONCE UPON A CLASSIC 'Tolo

THE "OVIES 'Centennial Th e
Crime' 1979 Stars Brian Keith,
Lvnn Redgrave

Ed
Mchbhon , Bellamy Brother•

• N!WI~ l
N!W1I UPDATE

"eor-- I• ",,...,...,...

1:11
.._'00
1:11
8:10
8:11

8:00

SATURDAY

~aa-c~r.t~E HAW Gueate

IJeUEVE

~:11

FODTIALL

~

•

of Two Clliea' Part Ill In Part e, the
fury of the poor people continues to
grow egaln1t the aril tocracy
(Cioeed·Ceptloned)
(HJ THISOLOHOUSEWorkontha
house h.. uncovered aome unfore·
sean problema from the roo! to the
plumbing and at the moment. llle
~am kitchen 1
1 a nightmare

that

CIRT'Thle one· hour epeelei take a
u]lJCk to rock' a gokten era
2:00
• N!WS
~tN~TEI WITH FATHER

ror belfevera, doolh wuconqtten!d
By cturS.vlour lq qo,
When He a:•ve lUI we on Calvary,

Uyou have nollrulted J - .

1:30

"Brea-

1:10 (!) ntE MACH BOYS IN CON-

2:21
2:30

BUGS BUNNY
ONCE UPON A CLASSIC 'Tolo

of Two Cities' Parllll. ln Parhs.lhe
fury oflha poor people cantln uesto
grow agalnat the arlatocracy
(Ciosed·Ciptloned)
!lZl.BOUDQOLDCo·hoata Glen
Campbell , Dionne Warwick Gold
record wlnna ra ~erform thelr hit
aongs Gueata PaacheaandHerb,
Blondie, Supenremp Nlcoletlfl

8:30

\1Jl9f.\.ft \D)'(l jil THAT SCRAMBLED WOAD GAME

ELBIG

He' d f"''fvoondfroely~an.

GOD HAB THE ANSWER

7:00

Unscramble lheae four Jumblea,
one letter to eech square, to rorm
four Ofdmary words

That whotoever ~beUeve,

NnNUEI

Bio::., Supertramp, Nlcoletlo

~ ~ ~~ s

Godoolovedlhllworld o f - ,
1batHisOnlySooHepve,

CIJ CHAIIPIDHSHtP WRESTUNG
COSMOS 'Harmony of the
Worlde' Aalronomy and ..trology ,
lntlmatet)l connected through the
agee, are •~•mlneq lnthlaapilode
u Or Car1 Sagen attempts to dll ·
cover the reallnfluencee of celes
tlaleventa on the llvea of men and
earth
(Cioaed·

OHvil NeW10I'I·John, Cher, CliH Ri·
ctlerd, F'eacl'lll and Herb, Black
!lgu, (OO mint.)

2:10

AIBericeft Clr.mtt"

I

tiJeeCIJGil NEWS

~

1M2

Gunta: Devld Lettennan, Dr. Mor·

'

8:00

aal MOYIE -(ADVI!NTUR!) ••• ~

-

J imm~ Henley ,Marly Stuart, Gumlla
Hutton (60 mlns )
LAWRENCE WELK SHOW
MUPPETSHOW

EVENING

'jlock t o . _ , 11145

CLOSIDOOOftSAnexploratlonof
the corruption lfJ8wned bW'the purautt or power In the nauon '1 cephol.
Ster1: J .. an Robarde, Cliff
ob.......

1~18

'
W

~T. 18,1880

MOVIE

"(ADVEtiTUAI!-DRAMA) •••

WA=ON: IEHtND

8:00 ~-(I)·CIJI!Ji!li. NEWS

.,

WOII'f youllllen to 1111 ceDI

I

fOR THI B CHARilY
~r--..-_;ollfllo.EVENT I

monalble (Repeat)

7:30

Ia a grand and blllt reward.

TRUCK AND
ffiLLC\\ US

H U ~T I

EXACTLY 1?16HT

OFF !

1•

And- to moetoarSovlour

VITO GEl" IN 11-lC

WI L L GET

BIERY!l41N6 'S

(I) ttOVII ~ICtiNCI-fltCTtDNI
•• ~ ""Uftlutown" 1117

On lhe cl- wttlinlho sldeo
EachIOU! wtiJ have a - OOt!J,
Cbanced"""f''ot.lyby our Lord
And to be wtlh Him 1oroYer
'

OKA&gt; JOE
TIE THEM UP /

VOUR HANDS UP
A ND NO ONE

COMM ENTARY A NP
I WANT 10 BE Sll~E

LOTS AND DE5EIZTED BUILD ING(; 'TliAT'S
WHERE': WE
HE1\D THEM

OIJaiiOIJLS WilL
LIVEnJIIEVBII

llealh wtiJ end aD IOithiJ For tbe ones He tlka away
Back todllll will 10011' iiCidi..,
But our 11111111 wtiJ lln for.,.
Yes, ouriiiNls wtU Hve forever
In lltttt plo&lt;o of joy ond ~

YEE'J,

UP AHEAD 117 A
DE5EI&lt;TED, OVER GRO\vN AREA 0"

Sally Job111011 or New York,

winner of many women's
cbampiiHIIbljll, II oow concetltrliiDC on te~tbln&amp; bndee.
Here II - of ber bands lor
advanced players, which she
calli "CompetlUve Blddln&amp;
Plus 'lltinkln&amp; "

CRYPTOQUOTES

have been Suppoee South had
not stuck tn !bat live-club bid.

U West became declarer at

R PIN B 0 B

any number of spades, be
would make all the trtcks

o·.

ROKXW

YX

against a heart lead by North.
Alter that club bid, North
would open a club asalnst that

BFIQNJL

spade contract. An easygomg
S"outlt would ruff, cash two

ROKXW

and hold West to 10
tricks. A hufj Sooth would
cuh one hi diamond , put
North In wit the queen and
get a se&lt;:on~ club ruff

y T
'K E 0

R P IN

YX

0 Y W P N

YT

KD

RK 0 J Z

YT

0 Y W PN

KD

'
YXZYOYZEIJ

NPB

diamonds

PESIX PBIDN - SIOWII)BN JBQVYB
Yeatei..s.y'o CryploqUOte : NOTHING SETS A PERSON SO
MUCH OUT OF THE OEVIL'S REACH AS HUMIUTY.JONA11IAN EDWARDS •

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRI SE ASSN)

"

,

1&gt;

�1Q-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, Oct. 17, 19110

Small investme~t, large
returns, Se:ptinel ant Ads

Mondale believes neither
· candidate has votes sealed
L:I.JEVELAND (AP) - Vice
were clearly behind. Every survey
President Waller F . Mondale sa~
I've seen suggest.s we're even, a litPresident carter Is closing In on
tie ahead, a little behind."
Republican Ronald Reagan's lead in
Mondale called mdependent canOhio and that neither candidate Is didate John B. Anderson inassured at this point of the state's 25 creaslngly less a factor in the elec1--- - - ---~- _e!ec!oralxotea.
-·-·---- lion.
~ - -~ - Mondale sa1d T!Jursday while
"He started out with ro percent or
campaigning in Toledo and so, slipped to 8 percent, and be's stlJl
Cleveland that the Carter-Mondale slipping," he said.
Democratic ticket could win in Ohio
Mondale said Carter already has
Nov. 4 if there ts a large voter ttir· done much to solve the problems of
nout
cities.
He said revitalization of Ohio's
He said Toledo Is moving speccities would progress faster under tacularly because of $1&amp;0 million In
four more years of Carter than un- federal aJd, help from local leaderder a Reagan administration. He ship and government programs.
Mondale spoke to a Toledo
also said the elderly would be better
off With a continued Carter presiden- Revitalization Forum luncheon and
cy.
VISited a high school. He told a lun''I feel good about Ohio," Mondale cheon audience of 150 that about 8.5
said, "I think we're going to win it. I million workers, mcluding 15,000 in
will be frank to say we haven't got it Toledo, gained jobs during the Carwon yet.
ter presidency.
He took Issue with Reagan's
"The race is tighterung up from a
s1tuatton a few months ago when we criticism of federal urban spending,

~ti~thanCarter ~

done dmore for
,any
r presi ent.
Mondale said Carter had been instrumental in changing the fonnula
for awarding Housing and Urban

es

He told 300 senior citizer!S in
Cleveland at the dedication of a
housing complex that the Carter administration had doubled government programs for the elderly.
"Reagan has refused to debate,"
Mondale said, referring tQ a League
of Women Voters invitation to the
candidates to share a platfonn a
week before the election.

or Write Dally Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomero'f, 0., 45769

eANNOUNCEMENTS

light dusting of ash had been reported m the area.
'
A red glow was seen at the bottom
of the volcano's crater by a U.S.
Forest Serv1ce pilot who flew over
the 8,400-foot-high mountain less
than an hour after the eruption.
" We've go&amp; reports of ash falling
m LaCenter, Amboy, Richfield, Bat·
tie Ground and Hazel Dell, but no accidents or complications reported
yet," said Unda Simpson, an lnfomiation officer for Clark County,
south of the volcano. "It was late
enough that few people were out on
the road. "
The' National Weather Service
ISSued a three-county ash warning
for the Portiand, Ore., area and two
southwest counties of Washington,
saying ash could make for possible
hazardous driving conditions with
slippery roads or reduced visibility.
The eruption was accomparued by
hannoruc tremors - which indicate
the' movement of molten rock - for
nearly 10 mmutes, S8.1d Don Leaver
of the Uruvers1ty of W~on
geophysics center.
By 11 p.m., the Forest Service

2- ln Memoriam

eRENTALS
42-Mobllt Hom.s

l-•nnounctm•nts

lor Rent

4-0tYHWiy

4+-AINirfmMt'
O-lllltoomt

5-HuoyAds
..._Lost and FOt.tnd

reported the volcano had ceased
venting ash and only a minor steam
plume to 9,500 feet was reported.
Uruversity spokesman Bob Norris
said the mountain was seismically
quiet after the eruption, adding :
"It's not necessarily the end of it.
We've seen activity die down Uke
this before renewed activity."
At a news conference in Hazel Dell
late Thursday, U.S. Geological Sur·
vey geologist Don Peterson said the
eruption did not catch scientist.s
totally by surpnse. He put the time
of the blastat9:58 p.m.
From about 1 p.m. to 2 p.m. Thur·
sda) there were three to four
seismic events per hour, he said, and
at 7 p.m. an earthquake measuring
about 3.0 on the Richter scale of
ground motion was recorded
beneath the volcano's crater.
The mountain's ftve previous
significant eruptions all occurred
durmg daylight. The last major
eruption was Aug. 7.
The blast followed a week of minor
earthquakes. Geologists seemed un·
concerned about the activity until
the 7 p.m. quake.

47-Wantecll .. a ..t
• ~l~tulpmeflt for llt..W

1- Publl' S.lt

&amp;

,.

er ....,

46--SpaCI for liM

J- Yant Salt
A~r,~ctlon

9-Wanted to Buy

eMERCHANDISE

•EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

51-JotouMhokl ca.-.

52-cl, TV, RM6o . . .lpnMii'

,,_Http w1 ntl(t

5)-'-AfttiQvet

12-llllutted »'•ntH
13- lnsurlnct
14- lusintn Training
15-Sttlools lnstruc:l•on
UR1d10, TV
&amp; Cl AtjNIIr
It-Wanted To Oo

54-MIIC MtrchMidlH
u-lulldlnt su_.l..
56-Ptfl for hit

•FINANCIAL

n-WafttMteluy

:u-

~FARM SUPPLIES ·
&amp;

LIVESTOCK

tl-F•rm 8ctUf...,tnt
72-Trutlll,.,. Sa ..

at.~slnesa

63--Liwstock

Opportunity
22-Monly to Lo.an

M-HIVAOr.. ll
•s- SMd &amp; IIIK1Hit.,

2:1-Profeulonal

Servku

e TRANSPORTATION ·

• REAL ESTATE

yi-Autos tor S.te

71-Yins&amp;4W.D.

Jt-Homts for Sale I
31'-MoblltoHomts
11)1" hit

74-Mitfi!'CyCiel
7$... UfGI'•rtJ
A AcceiiOfiH
n - Auta Roalr

U - Farmslor Salt
34-luslntss Buildlnts
35-Lots &amp; Atreage
36-Rt.JI Elftlt Wanted

eSERVICES

J1-Realtors

11-HOMtlmproYemHh

Wani·Ad Advertising
Deadlines
1 lO

'It

n- Pt~o~mbtne 1

.

l•canti .. ,

U-EJ~cawatlftl

M-EIKtrlcal

U- -Gtneral Haullne

....._M••H, R.,atr
11-Upholstwy

Rates and Other Information
I

1s Wol'as or Under

....
....

Cash

·Major snowstorm attacks Rockies
By Associated Press
The f1rst major snowstonn of
autumn attacked the Rocky Mountam states Thursday, clogging roads
with chest-high drifts and ripping
down power lines, while tornadoes
whipped through the Plams.
Twisters smashed houses and barns and injured several people m
Kansas , Nebraska, Colorado and
Oklahoma, while ll).mch snows crt~
pled mountam towns and ctties such
as Billmgs, Mont
In Wyonung, the stonn that started moving m Wednesday a~
parently contrtbuted to at least one
fatal auto accident and the crash of a
light plane that killed one man In
Freemon! County, searchers on

Thursday found six of eight peop\e
who had been lost in the rugged
mountains, but two teen-age hunters
were still missing.
Caught in the path of one of the tornadoes was Randy Gordon, 26, of
rural Burden, Kan., who watched
the roof of his house being snatched
away.
"I just heard the thing starting to
crunch and I told my wife to hit the
floor," Gol;lion said. "I just kind of
heard a growling noise, then I heard
the wood spitting."
Along the Rocky range from New
Mexico to Montana, the story was
much the same. Highways were
closed and schools were out. The

ld•l'~l

.

ficer, e:q~ired operator's license,
trespassmg, caUsing physical hann,
2 each; criminal trespassing, 5;
misconduct, 3; disturbing the peace,
discharging fireanns In the village,
vehicle causing accident, petty
theft, possession stolen property,
operating vehicle without regard for
safety, defective muffler, driving
under suspension, failure to maintain control, public Indecency,
causing public inconvenience,
failure to stop, displ!lylng illegal
plate, obstruction of traffic, wrong

Area deaths
Mildred

R. Mankin

Mildred Russell Mankin, 64, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy, died Thursday morning at
University Hospital, Columbus.
Mrs. Mankin was preceded m
death by her mother, Agnes Russell
McGreevey.
. Mrs. Mankin was a graduate of
Pomeroy High School and a long
time employe of Elberfelds m
Pomeroy.
She is survived by three children,
Mary Mankin Gloeckner,
Colmubus; Thomas E. Mankin

Pomeroy, and Charles R. Mankin,
Canal Winchester; her father,
Charles Theron Russell, Sr.,
Pomeroy; one sister, Maxine
Russell-Ray, New Orleans; one borther, Charles T. Russell, Jr., RD,
Pomeroy, and six grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held Sunday at 2 p.m. at Ewing Chapel with
the, Rev. Robert McGee officiating.
Burial will be in Beech Grove
Cemetery. Friends nlay call at the
funeral home after 7 p.m. this
evening.

• Dues deadline set
Eli Denison Post 467, American
Legion, Rutland, would like to have
all1981 dues paid before Nov. I.
The Voiture train will be at the
post at 11 :30 a.m. on Nov. 9 to pick
up dues and per capita tax. The post
is attempting to win the little brown
jug membership contest again this

Donation at the door Is $1.50 per
adult.
All members are being urged to
attend the post meetings which are
held on the first and third Wednesdays of each month at 8 p.m.

year.

To remove grease from soups and
stews, add a few ice cubea when the
dish has cooled slightly, to solidify
the fat.

The post is staging a dance every
Saturday night at the post home m
(!., Rutland from 9 p.m. to .1 a.m.

HOW TO REMOVE GREASE

••

.

at-

1.11
1.71

,.,.

nll!fllcrawler$ for sale.

e.nc:h grlnderll. " bench

In m•mory , Clnl ol ThoniC'I and Oblhtlry 'c•nfl..,. ..nil. ltll
mln1mum Clllh In lld'tllnc•

.

~

'

~~~.. ·•.

Name _ _ _ _ _ _ _.......;...;;.;.;;,;;..

..

'.'
Addreu._______________._

partJes, when the sewage
treatment plant located in
our back yards starts
stinking.

OLD COl NS, pocket wat
ches, class rin~s, wedding

bands, diamonds. Gold or
silver. Call J. A. Wamsley ,
742·2331. Treasure Chest
coin Shop, Athens, OH 592
6-162

any ad. Your ad will be
put In the proper

check the proper box
below

17. _ _ _ _ _'~.;_.::.
J

develop your tdeas m
resident care w1th a htghly
mot1vated staff? Pomeroy
Health Care Center has the
answer · for you. Due to
achieving near maximum
census, we now have

openings lor lull and part
time AOSillons on day shift,
but will consider other Shil·
ts. Competitive salary, excellent working condtt1ons,
Ide
insurance and
disability policy at no cost

to

FOUR room house for sale
May be seen at 110 Lynn
Street, M1ddleport or call

742·2607 $7500 DO .

basement. out bUilding. All

32

employee,

2042

must sell, two
bedroom mobile home one
acre, much, much more.
No reasonable offer

refused. May take some

The Daily Sentinel
Box 729

ends,

&amp;

paneling, floor tile, cellmg

' Ide. Call Fred Miller at 992·
6338.
13

dry

. ... .

·~

"

'

bath, unfurn iShed,
carpeted 992 3090

HOUSE For rent, six
rooms, bath , garage, fu ll
basement, central heat, a1r
cond JtiOnJng, ntce garage
949·2734.

has

possibilities

overlooking

the

county hills 20 acres
plus wtth some woods
for hunt1ng Near new

brtdge 550,000
COUNTRY LIVING -

come. Can be turned m
to 4 apts very eastiY
T P water and 3 acres 1
plus Building's only 12

yd.

e2 Dozers

• Dump Trucks

All related equipment

of

motor, l1 ke new
Also
f1rebr.ck &amp; approximately
2,000 regular bnck color
grey 992·2805 or contact

ren1odel1ng
- Roofing and gutter
work
-Concrete work
-Piumbmg and
electncal work

Ftrewood, $30 00 per load.

992·6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Oh.

NEW LISTING
CLOSE · TO MEIGS

HIGH - A SIX year old
house w ith 3 bedrooms,
extra large living room,
and a full basement Cnot
f1n1sh ed) Has a wood
burn 1ng !;tove and 2
acres w 1th a garden

$29,900
EASTERN SCHOOL
DISTRICT - A big
beauti f ul
ktt c hen ,
heat1lator fireplace, full
basement, and 4112 ac r es
1S 1ust part of the charm
of th1 s 2 bedroom home

All for $36,500
FEEL CRAMPED? -

You won't tn this 4
bedroom home Ha s a
n •ce 1&lt; 1tchen w1th lots of
cabinets and 1S Situated
on 4 lev el lots several
storage bU1Id1n gs an d IS
close to th e mines

$26,900
ROMPING ROOM - On

th 1s 2 4 acres children or
animals can have the
ttm e of thetr l1fe In·
eludes a 12x60 mob1le
home w 1th 2 rooms at
tached And a storage

building JUST' $17,000
REAL CHEAP! - With
a little work you can

1 Good

-

ptus blower
S7S

Used

~LANDMARK

56

English

Ruth

~nd

Reeves

(614) 698 3290

turn thiS 6 room house
m to a home ONLY'

wood burner •s all you
need to heat th1s 7 room
unusually shaped house.

Shots x wormed, one
m 1n1ature collie type
female, one Shephard type
female, one black X tan
Kerr female, one walker
hound male

11 also has a hot water

furnace and a ntce level
yard With b1g shade

trees JUST! $29,500
OPEN6DAYSAWEEK
· 9 To 5 • ALSO OPEN
MON. AND FRIDAY
UNTIL 8 P.M. FULL
TIME STAFF!
REALTOR
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.

992-6191
ASSOCIATES

Jean Trussell949~2660
Roger &amp; Dott•e Turner

992·5692
OFFICE 992·2259

Get a happy pet! From
your Humane Soctety.
Shots &amp; wormed. 992·6260.
Hours 12·7 daily closed on
Tuesday One male beagle,
young; one black &amp; tan
Kerr; one female Labrador

12'x1J'2"

Sq. Yd

3 YEAR OLO registered

76

cmated &amp; wormed

(304 )

773 5381 or 773·5397.
I MASBRFtatjdR

71

Wh1te

12' X 15'
1
Honey Green .•• • ••

French Blue
Rubber Back • • ••

1971 Vega , two door, good

tires, runs fine , some r ust

Drive A Little
Save A Lot

CARPET SHOP

Rutland
Furniture
742·2211

topper

for al um mum &amp; difference
949 2631 or949 2181

Ma1n St.

82
78

Plumbing

&amp; Heatmg

Camping

Gerlach, -463 Grant Street, ___,E::q~u~·~p:'.!m:'.!c'!.n'!.t_ __
Middleport 992·5877 alter 4 Camper, excellent con
pm
dtt1on , so ltd s1d es, pop up
furnace, stove with oven,

HEATING &amp; a1r con
dJtJon,ng ,
furnace
cleaning,plumbing . Call
992·2364 alter 5 p m

1974 Datsun 210 hatchback, fndge, sleeps 7 985 4279

contact

Wayne

Turner,

83

Rutland , Oh•o

Sc!rvltes

1968 Chevy Malibu, runs
needs mechantcal work .

1979 Olds Royale 88, two

81
door,
menl,
rear
seats,

fu ll power equ1p
am fm stereo, cb,
defogger , leather
sports wheels, lan-

dau roof , more. Only 9,1DO
m11es. Sharp. $7200 00. Cali

Home
tmprovements

S &amp; G Carpet Cleaning

St eam
cleaned.
Free
esttmate
R easonable
rates. Scotchguard 992
6309 or 742 2211

992·6614 offer 7 cal l 985· Remo d et JAQ, paneling ,
ceilings , painting , 992 · ~759
3913

Excavating

DOZER work, smalliObs a
specialty, quick depen
dable serv ice 742 2753
J &amp; F BACKHOE SER·

VICE hsce'nsed &amp; bonded,
septiC tank installation,
water &amp; gas lines E:x·
cavatmg .work &amp; trans1t

layout. 992-7201

84

E lectrica 1
&amp; Refrtgeratton

SEWING
Repairs,

makes!
Farm Equipment

Dozer,

diesel

six

Deere,

backhoe,

way

LAND FOR SALE - Close to town, will consider
diV1d1ng this 100 plus acres Take all or your choice
of pos~uble l way split.

THIS HOME has 3 BR's With hardwood floors, large

micro·wave oven Home

to give It equal care $39,000.

all

The

Fabric Shop,
Pomeroy.
Authortzed Singer Sales
and Serv1ce We sharpen
SCISSOrS

ELWOOD
REPAIR -

BOWERS
Sweepers,

$3,300;

Garage on Route 7,

Trailer,

3

axle.

•5-

Next to State Highway

new. 51,600 Call 1-614-&lt;157·
3139.
·-

3825.

Older Allee Chalm&amp;rs tree·

all makes washer, dryers,
ranges, dishwashers,

New Holland baler for sale.

742 201A

QUIET COUNTRY HOME ava ilable for only

992·2284

toasters, irons, all small
appliances. Lawn mower.

tor
Needs mechonl&lt;;al
work . $275.00. 985·43&lt;16.

eat· in k1tchen, built· in cabinets, full basement, has
been taken good care of and wa1t1ng for new oWner

MACHINE
service ,

trencher $3,500; Vermeer

trencher, 100 h.p. : $17,500;
Gooseneck trailer, 3 oxle:

space. Asking 537,000. Give us your otter.

nlshed wllh -nice furniture linG appliances.
Kltche~
teaturoa a

diesel

e.c. $9,750, Bobcat, diesel
loader: $6,000; Ditch Witch

S}56

Autos for Sale

57

SELMER,
wooden
clan net, $100 00 Holton

12' x19' .5"

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessones
ftbe r glass

1

w•fh sliding glass, lighl.
Lik e new. $400 DO will trade

$75.00. 985 43-46

MUSICal
Instruments

Trucks for Sale

1971 Ford F100 PI Ckup,
auiomafiC. V 8 $525 oo. 992·
6326

Polled Hereford cow w1th

12 ' x15 '4"
SlateStone·· ·· ···

78

Horse for sale, one &amp; one
half year old sorrel f1lly,
very gentle, reasonably

bull calf Good milker, vac

!CO

:uo

78
12'X11 '3" Pecan,, S58
12' x14'4"'"
Clad Wood ••••• • '66
12 ' x15 '2"
Canyon Rust •• • •• $79
12'x14'
Sand Be1ge ••• • •• '75

Cash &amp; Carry

12

'64

Summer Brown • ••

Marvin Keebaugh, Days .

"COMFOR-T
3 bedrooms, large liv ing room,
also family room. storage bldg. and large garage

APPLIANCE

SERVICE:

dis1,10sals, water tanks Call
Ken You~g at 985·356i
before 9 a.m. or olter 6
p.m

SAO,OOO. 37 plus acres. Call now, this one won ' t last.

LAND - Lots ot land, located in beautiful Southern
Ohio hills. Peaceful and pr1vate, also m10eral

rigllls.

·
CAL US TO BUY OR SELL
Nancy Jaspers- Associate

949-2654

\

L•vestock

type; brown &amp; black
shephard type, female .

tenor saxophone, $250 00 ,
992·2429 alter 5 p.m.

CENTRAL
R
A-lii"

P'llfle14NI71

63

f69

12' XI2'4 " Blue
Rubber Back •• • • •

742-2211

priced. 992·6134

CALL today for a beauflful
puppy or dog. Humane
Soc•ety, shots &amp; wormed
992 6260
PUT a cold nose In your
future. Meigs County
Humane Society, 992-6260.

$6,200
A
CRACKLING
FIREPLACE - And a

12' X13 '

Green .... .. .....

'9"

S499

Main St.

Horses

and pon1es and riding
lessons .
·Everything
1maglnable In horse equip
ment. Blankets, belts,
Western

1 22 tic

RUTLAND. FURNITURE

Pets for Sale

boots. etc

CLOSEOUT
PRICES

Nice Seleclton of Carpet Remnants and
Linoleum Remnants at Big Discounts.

Pomeroy

HOOF HOLLOW

949·2862
949· 2160

GOLD, RUST
&amp; BLUE PATTERN

POMEROY

e . Mam St

SALE

'5"

Gas Range
SlOO
1 Good used Frigidaire
Refrigerator
S150

V "" -

Free Est1mates
Reasonable Pr•ces
Call Howard

ROLL
REMNAN T

"Driv-e A Little-Save A Lot" •
SHOP IS FULLY STOCKED
BROWN
CARPET
Rubber Back
RUBBER
W/Pad
BACK
Installed
SHAG
SQ. Yd .
$995 Sq. Yd.
Sq. Yd
Installed Cash &amp; Carry

On tv $395

Electric Range

CARPET SHOP

CARPET SHOP

New Wood Burner

1 G9od M. Ward

FURNITURE'S

RUTLAND'S FURNITURE'S

Now At
Pomerov
Landmark
stoves

RUnAND

G

V.C. YOUNG II

1·614 694

7842

992-2259

• oraper1es
• Furniture
c"We're No. l Jn
Serv•ce &amp;

All types ot , of work,
new or repa1r gutters
and downspou1s, gutter
cleanmg and painting ..
All work guaran1eed.

(Free Estimates!

tut,

• carpet

H. L WRITESEL
ROOFING

- Addonsancl

blade, 197•: $10,500; JohO

11_,.2-3092

Ph. 614·843·2591
6 15 tic

"YOUNGS
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

Complete Dry Cleamng
and Laundry

Call 949·2710
9 28 1 mo

Racine, Oh

3790

MORTAR mixer, make IS
Stone, 2 bag, 1 horse power

Now open with a studiO
in Pomeroy and Racme.
Classes offered are
Ballet, Tap and Jazz
For mfo and enrollment

Rt. 3, Box 54

New dtnene table &amp; 19' 1
camper self conta 1ned
Priced reasonable
992·

cher wtth hoe.

POMEROY, 0.

6

Cheryl Ltmley1 Auoc.

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Sundays. South of Reed·
SVille, Oh 1o. 614·378·6295

61

has central air and
stereo; Dw~rf orchard
and bul(dJng on
acreage. $ells lor
$29,500 DO .
Wt bevt other propertill to ~llooae lromj
GIVI US I cart.
Vllme Nlclnsky, Auoc.

S1zes from 4x6 to 12x40

hand now
Large size, $8 00 per 100 ibs
1n ybur containers. Closed

9 26 1 m o

CARPENTER'S
DANCE STUDIO

Utility Buildings

on

992·7354

10 13 I mo pd

SMALL

Housing
Headquarters

on almost 2 acres. Fur·

-

potatoes

Call:

949-2160

Sizes

~~~f;!~~ipiy Ea~~;n~~~~

- Backhoe
and
Dump Truck Ser·
vice
-Shop and Portable Welding.

Call Tom Ha skm s

" From 30x30"

Misc. Merchanlse

SHULER
CONSTRUCTION

FREE ESTIMATES

Farm Buildings

Used V 30 Ditch W1tch tren·

yrs. old. Askmg $&lt;15,000
HAVING A PROBLEM
SELLING, TRY THE
TEAFORDS AT 992-3325
or 992·3876.

heating bills
Ap·
pllances stay Several
nice buildings. Call to·
day, only $35,000.00.
GOOD BUY - 1979
Windsor home situated

1

family room, on high

dyman off 33 North .
Duplex for additional in

acrl!s w1th 3 bedroom
home . central air,
aluminum siding, storm
windows, new roof Low

Estate

water

Workshop for the han ·

overhead apartment.
Corn crib, cellar and
antmal shelter. Asking

$52,000.00.
NEW LISTING -

30

NEW LISTING - 4 yr
old country home of 3
'bedrooms , bath, large
land

S4

20 Years EKpenence
All types root1ng work,
New&amp; Repa1r
All types of r emodeling,
•nstde and out

ALL STEEL

767 3167 or 557·3411.

delivered,
spl1t,
stacked 247 2424

Five room house with bath
near Racine 992 5858

T P.

pay cash or cert1f1ed chec~
for anttques and collec
t1bles or entire estates
Nothing too large. Also,
guns, pocket watches and
com collections. Cal l 614·

Elden Walburn, 380 South
Th.rd, Middleport.

fully

$65,000 00
OPPORTUNITY

acres with nice 4
bedroom home. Garage

Price reduced, owner must
Hll, 3 bedrooms, 2 'h baths,

\/

One bedroom apartment,
completely furn 1shed. off
street parking, fully car
peted , $165 .00 month,
depos•t requ 1red No pets
Between A-6 call992·2362

70 acres with good
fences on old 33 . Two
houses, 2 bedroom
tra 11er. natural sprmg
and all mmerals Th1s IS
a h1ll farm w1th some
nice t1mber
Asking

men! property.
NEW LISTING- Mlnlc
farm In Rutland. 17

\ ' 3j "'"" --t!!'~~_!O!_ ~.!! _-.~.._

----------·-·-··-·-·.:.·_..;,,_,,._~··-·"

Two bedroom apartment
with large ltvtng room &amp;
kitchen Furnished Adults
on l y
Brown ' s Tratler

ava11able

home with gas floor fur·
nace S1tuated on ntce
size lot on Condor St.
Would make a great
starter home or Invest·

'1 ; -- - - - -- - - - --

Pomeroy, Ohio 41769

ts Phone 992·5434

rooms,

If you really want to sell
list w1th us today.

at$29,000.00.
ONLY SB.SOOIII What a
buy. 3 bedroom frame

laundry, ,
6022

extr~ lots, ell In one
block on Ohio R lver In
RHCitVIIle.
All ronled.
tllneu farced ucrlflce et
ontv S37.S far ell. Prlv1te
1*1V. Diet 614-37N&lt;ZIL

rent, four

53
Antoques
ATTENTION·
(1M
PORTANT TO YOU) W1il

12 Park St.
Middleport, Oh.
Ph. 992-6263
Anytime
10 5 I mo

992·2205.

Real Estate- General

acres plus on old 33 near
the new rest home. Idea l
for plotting Into a mce

corner lot overlookmg
river Can be used as tnvestment property Live
downstairs and rent the
upstairs. Won't l~st long

can be ieen Saturday from
Ill-S call992-625ol evenings.

&amp; five

un

$32,500
SUB·DtVISION -

NEW LISTING - In
Middleport. Home on

For sale, quality used tum·

Apartment
for Rent

3 AND 4 RM furnished ap

bedrooms , mod e r n
bath , large eat m kit
chen, full basement. oil
forced a1r furna ce, T P
water, out 33 way

Geqrge S. t10bste1ter Jr.
Brc}ker

ber, slate roofing, doors,
windows, pine floor.lng, etc,

I'our houiH (one 1 double l

BEDROOM

NR · U Riggs Add llton
bea utttu l spilt lev el home on
IMege lot, famti V r oom , recrea
lion room, two ca r ga rage, bu 11t
In a ppliances, plenty ol room tor
e verythi ng you wa nl e xecut1ve
home P ncec:l fo r qut ck sele

742-2003

&amp;

large family room with
flroplec:e, fully carpeted,
large sun deck, patio.
Within walking distance of
etemonlary &amp; high schOOls.
Dwight Goins. 992·7132

TWO

furn1shed house, also two
bedroom furn1shed &amp; one
bedroom furnished apart
ments Call after 6 p m

MEFEbjJbdlst

44

NICE
COUNTRY
ha s 3
HOME ·-

HOBSTETTER
REALTY

some green. $20.DO pickup
load. 985·3906.

Hill

Houses for Rent

592·6076

2 Buy now at Summer
Prices. Excelsior Co. 614

1-(614)-992·3325

Real Estate- General

Miscellaneous
some

41

pro 1eel

Insurance

F l rewood,

payment 992·3921

Call

HEATING OIL No 1 &amp; No

Phone

'"

IN ·
AUTOMOBILE
SURANCE been can·
~elled?
Lost your
operator's 11cense? Phone
• 992 2143.
17

building, 514

available.
(Athens)

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING &amp;
HOME MAINTENANC
SERVICE

KAUFF'S
PWMBING
AND
HEATING

WORK I NG couple needs
house 10 rent in Me1gs
Gallta area Prefer country
setting
References

992 3324

_ 216 E. Second Street

61~·992 ·6606.

,

-~·

67~

Business Buildmgs

A FRAME

rent, four
992·5742 or 992

TWO bedroom mobile
home, real ntce, Brown '.s
Trailer Park Adults only

t~~~L~~:,U3

NR· N- New Listing - Rustle
Httl s, beaut •ful n ew t hree
b«&lt;room home, fam ily room,
la rge te nced In ya r d Tnls one
wo n tlasl long Priced In teh low

lee paid. Call Mrs. Cadle,

..

Pleasant, WV Phone
4&lt;124

for

Mobtle Homes
tor Rent

42

Headquar ters

Charles M Hayes, Realtor
Neac1 l E Carsey, Br Mgr
Ph 991 1403 or 99t 1110

visor Needed on weekdays
only M1n1mum of 10 hours
monthly Mileage &amp; hourly

15 _ _ _ ___..:_ _
16. _ _ _ _ _ __

PMC ,

12 x 60, two bedrooms. new
carpe1 B x S Sales, Inc .,
2nd x Viand Street, Point

Real Estate- General

HAYES
REALTY
. . . . POMEROY, 0.

Insurance

WILL do odds

bedroom
2094

Housing

and

S1tuat1ons Wanted

House

Call anytime, 949·

2038, 843 2971, or 843 All02

suit with dietary super·

• reasonable. 992

Mail This Coupon with Remlttartca .',, .

un
'992

x 60 wlth built on room for
wood burner $5,000. 949 ·

trade

Complete pr 1vacv

Park 992·3324

2 bedroom mob1le home, 12

for elderly person. Room,

35. _ _ _ _ _ __

1970

=

$200 oo per month . 949·2057

bedrooms, bath &amp; 1!:1, new

House for

Registered diet•cian ADA
w1th experience '" nursing
home consultation. To con·

12

Hrs. Mon.-Fn
9 AM · SolO PM.

Wanted to Rent

Three bedroom house for
ren t on St Rt 143 3 mdes
from Pomeroy. Free gas,

bedrooms, all eleclrtc. 1971
Skyline, 12 x 65, two

7473

t1ally
furn1shed ,
derp1nn1ng, anchors

Telephone workers needed.
773 5476 or 773 5-465.

board,

34.

1973 crown Haven, 14 x 65,
three bedrooms, new car·
pet 1971 cameron, 1.4 x 64,
two bedrooms, new carpet
1972 Champion, 12 x 60, two
bedrooms, new carpet. 1976
Cameron, 12 x 60, two

992·2288.

Have vacancy In my home

1...2.-===== 33.===::::::=

=

~1 =}t~uses fo.~:.~en (

Mobile Homes
for Sale

1973 EAGLE 12 x 65 two
bedroom, 1 &amp; one half bath,
excellent cond•llon. Par·

7593.

•'

32

Mob1le Homes
for Sale

742 3030 or 742 2728

ter, 614·992·6606.

6
-_
-' -_-_ 7. ..._
__

~----------l""'---------~

carpet

St., Rutland 3 bedroom ,
bath, central heat, in
sulated, storm wmdows
Prtced reduced to $12,500

call : Nancy Van Meter,
R N , Director of Nursmg,
Pomeroy Health Care Cen-

5~-----_ _ _ _ __

I,

well At Letart Fails, along
51 Rt. 338 Call 614 247
2097.

available. Come visit us or

2-----...,-3 _ _ _ _....;..._

13.
u __ _ _ _ _ __

the

hospitalization

l

JO.:::::±~~E:

"Thanks, Dadl"

4 r oom
hous e w1th
bathroom , sun porch , &amp; a
back porch, carpeting ,
fi replace, new fuel 011 fur
nac e, new roof , &amp; spouting ,
basement, · cement block
storage bu il ding Drilled

18
Wanted to Do
WANTED to Lease, coal
property for underground
mining operation. Call 367·

31.
32.

·

East
Main
Street,
Pomeroy, will sell on land
contract, small down

shifts? Feel the need to

1. _ _ _ _ __

9.========

Must see 985·3934

have been remodeled Cor·
ner of Ma 1n &amp; Tyree,
Rae me, Ohto 949 2778.

RNs,
looking
for
challenging and rewarding
work? Ttred of rotating

Pomeroy. Large lots Call

992·7479

47

total electrt c, fireplace,
carpet, woodburn, ng stove,
10x27 deck , 2 ca r garage

Mov~ng

20.
21. _ _ _ _ __

10.
11 . _ _ _ _ _ __

2V:z acres, l or 4 bedroom ,

34

I need the chlmney sweep
&amp; a load of firewood. 992·
2044.

46
Space lor Rent
COUNTRY MOB ILIE Home
Park, Route 33, North of

'
--E-JC.par
. u~ncfMI-O fltrators- ava1lable for local work .
• 2 rubber hre backhoes
al excavator hoe 11/4

drapes

House &amp; lo t for sale. 8
rooms, bath, 2 porchs,

us right away and get on
the ellgiblliiV list at 992
2156 or 992 2157

· lg . brass kettle, miners
ItemS! br!ISS gas light,

8. _ _ _ _ __

attra ctive

pocket watches Call Joe
Clark, 992 2054, Clark's
Jewelry1, Pomeroy, Ohio. ·

as a young business person
and earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Sentmel route carrier . Phone

buckets; brass bucket, oak

•
18:=~

most

742·3074

Help Wanted•
GET VALUABLE train ing

w/1\end ·P4111!1Wd ihadea; Aladdin lamp, costume
[Wielry; 2 dtilo. hanging tamps w/.red Inserts; can·
die holders; pr. marble based lamps; 2 Ig. Iron ket
ttfl; tin lamP.; fuel ott stove; coffee grinder;
boXes; Mall Pouch thermometer,

•

-Auto and Y ru~
Repair
-Transmission
Repair

Ca il985 3814 or992·2571

t1

·.LAMPS. ·~ttiMITtVl!S, aTC.t Oil lamps; all lamp

you'll

!'

GARAGE

baths, full y carpeted With

With 7 x 24 expando Ex
cellent cond•t• on Phone

• 1

•I

&amp; genie door Gas heat,
newl y mstal led central air
cond1t1 oning , tam 11 y room
&amp; . stone fireplace, ~ ap
pltances built m, newly in·
sta,tled electn c breaker
sys t em,
a1tra c t1ve l y
decorated ba sem ent , 2

1980 10 x 14 mobile home

(no 1unkl

bedroom suite wtrope twiSt front bed, dresser
w/mtrror, hlllh bOy cnest, dropleaf night stand, ex
th nice; ctaw foot stantfront desk; Victorian linq~r
carved 'side chair; .oak lelly cabinet w/top door &amp;
'drawers; ~ fuah bottom ladder back chairs, plank
bottom chairs; old picture frames &amp; pictures,
walnut arm chair; sm. pie crust stand; lg. gold leal
mirror; oak htgh boy chest w/mlrror; old ox yoke;
Queen Anne sofa IN/cushions &amp; cane back; old
trunks; Wicker rocker; sm. wicker table ; sq
llttlcktr tablel wicker couch, oak chairs; nice oak 3
i:f!irMr stahG; QUeen Anne lobi*; other stands,
·,~-;walnUt Lincoln rocker, al\d many other

reserves the right to
classify, edit or reject

19.

Addition With "'&gt;w-garoge

·Pullins
Excavating

ROGER HYSELl'S

vaca nctes. Tra i ned &amp; ex·
per1en c ed .
E l derly

BE AUTIFUL 3 bedroom

WANTED TO BUY : Class
rtngs, wedding bands ,
anything stamped 10K ,
14K, 18K gold. Silver cotns,

condition, sheets, curtams,
• bedspreads, blankets, 1n
tant &amp; chtldren ' s clothing,
whatnots, lamps, stands, or
what have you! Phone 992·
7494

Furnished Rooms

ROOM S for rent, room &amp;
boar d by the month ·

ranch bnck home in Baum

OLDER HOME on Long

Yard'Sale Items, in gOOd

round walnut stand 4 pc. Honduras mahogany

You'.ll get beMer results
II you describe fully,
give price The Sentinel

( ) Wanted
( l For Sale
1 ) Announcement
( l For Rent

WANTED TO BUY ·
GOLD,
SILVER ,
PLATINUM, STERLING
COINS, RINGS,JEWELR
Y, MISC . ITEMS AB
SOLUTE
MARKET
PRICE GUARANTED. ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP, MIDDI:.EPORT ,
OHIO 992 · 3~76.

resPQnsible

seat w/gbld velllet; 2 walnut stands lyre shaped bot
toms w/whlte marble tops, lg. ornate gold mirror,
walnut dresser w/marbie Insert w/candle shelves;

Print one word 1n each
space below l:ech In·
it1al or group of figures
counts as a word. Count
name and address or
phone number If used.

If

against

drfiJSier, walnut •rose back VIctorian side chair
w/green vefvet1 walnut rose back Victorian love

Phone~-----~-----------

clasification

suit

"
(LARGE SALE I
T•ke St. Rt. 33 oouth out of Columbus through Lan·
"caster &amp; LO!I&lt;In to Nelsonvllte or take St. Rt. 33 north
out of Athens to Nelsonville, Oh. Turn off Rt. 33 to
doWntown Nelsonville at,1.52 W. Washington 51. next
HI Peoples Drloe-IR B.nk,
'
ANTIQUES, CHINA, CLASS
' &amp;.MODERN FURNITURE
Having m41Vtil &amp; prOpertY tor Sale, will sell the
"IQIIowlng:
ANTIQUES &amp; OLD ITEMS; Sq. grand piano
(Samuel Gltbel"t, Boston) extra fancy &amp; nice , lg.
walnut wardrobe w/drawers "&amp; teardrop pulls;
walnut knee hole desk w/leather insert, lg. ornate
walnut bed (Victorian style!; matching marble top

Write your own ad and order by malt will\, lflls'
coupon. Cancel your ad by Phone when VOlt 'jjet

Village funds
total $406,520

bring a $500,000.00 damage

PUBLIC AUCTION
SUNDAY,
OCT. 19 AT 10:30
O'CLOCK A.M.
.
.
151W. WASHINGTON ST., NELSONVILLE, OHIO

Curb Inflation.
Pay Cash for
Classlfleds and....
Savell I ·

results. Money not refundable

&amp; Interested residents will

p.m Au&lt;:tioneer Howard
Beasley, apprentice auc
tioneer, Osbv A. Martin

-·

r------------·--------·-~··

'\

Notice: Bernard J. Diddle

West Virginia 773·5471. Sale
every Friday night at 7

vi- Iota of 10011, Chrlst·

mas toys, gifts for
Mob• It Home sales and Y~rd NitS lrelctlipt.d only wltfli:ca. . Wiftl
eVeryone. 7 p.m. Friday at
onler 2S cenr charge lor IdS cerrylng 1011 NumMr I• Cart., TIM •'
Ollie's Auction 1'19use,
Sentinel
,' Middleport, Ohio.

lI

'

furniture business.
We
take consignments For In·
formation end pickup ser·
vice, call 992-6370 or in

Ietty's Carry Oiit """' has

Eechwordo't•r th• minimum 1Sworclslse c1111ta..,...,. ,.,. • .,.
...., runnlnt 11tt1•r ttlon CMMC'Utl'#t clays will M chatM
t a.y- ,

way on one way street, old fines,
reckless opera,uon, contempt,
destruction of prbperty, disobeying
stop sign, left of center, weaving
course, allowing dog to riUl loose,
allowmg garbage to accumulate,
and assault, one each.
Five ases were dismissed by the
mayor, charges were dropped in
three instances and three cases were
transferred to county court. Cruiser
mileage for the month totaled 3,335
and 370 parking meter tickets were
Issued.

The total of all Middleport Village
funds as of Oct. 1 totaled $f00,520.89,
according to the monthly report oc
Clerk-Treasurer Jon Buck.
Receipts, disbursements during
September and the balance In each
fund at the first of October include:
general, $25,522.~, $18,354.38,
$8,889.116; street light, $3,649.16,
$1,0116.21, $11,154; cemetery, f$72.41,
$1,735.22, ~.28; fire equipment,
$75, t&amp;W.39, $2,151.22 deficit; planning commission, rib receipt.s, $12.72,
$1.39 deficit; street maintenance,
$8,077.116, $4,292.12, $587.68 deficit; .
street levy, •$3,649.16, $13,982.44,
$1,133.34; federal revenue sharing,
no receipts, $4,720.77, $2,564.39;
HUD, $17,000, $17,056, $11,158.84;
general bond retirement, $1,216.39;
$28.07, $ro,643.41; senltary sewer,
$6,333.48, $6,287.80, $15,615.22;
sarutary sewer escrow, no receipts,
no disbursements, $188,392.24;
water, $9,391.55, $9,200.63,
$33,9118.50; water meter trusb, $325,
$439.89,$7,578.751 water tank, $1,000,
no diabunements, $113,1100.
Receipts for the month totaled
$77,821.96 while d.isburset:)enta
amounted to $79,231.75.

1.10

ldlys

99 arrests made during September
Ninety-nine arrests were made by
the Middleport Pollee Department
during the month of September, according to the monthly report of
Police Chief J . J Cremeans. Of the
total, 15 arrests " ere made on disor·
derly manner charges, 10 on open
flask charges and nine on speeding
charges.
Other charges and the number of
arrest.s on each mcluded drivmg
while mtoxicated, 8; fighting in
public, 2; intoxtcatlon, 2; possession
of .marijuana,
3; Illegal exhaust 3;
.
spmnmg ttres, 5; fieemg a police of:

Ito

ldeys

heavy wet snow snapped tree limbs

that brought down power lines,
leavmg thousands of homes without
electricity.
In Wyoming, where 10 mches accumulated in Rawhns and
elsewhere, Interstate 80 was closed
from Cheyenne to Walcott, more
than 100 miles to the west, the Highway Patrol sa1d.
Laramie, Wyo., got 8 mches and a
patrol spokesman SBid all highways
serving the home city of the University of Wyoming were closed. The
university canceled classes for Its
9,000 students as did the Albany
County public schools. U.S. 287 was
shut off between Rawlins and
·casper, the patrol spokesman said.

CMrwo

....

Idly

Announcements

.

&lt;\"

a R:efriteraflon

M Da1ly

l!NoonSaturdr¥"
lor Monday

3

No Item too large or too
small. Check prices before
selling. Also do appra•sing
Osby (0Ssie) Martin 992
6370

RACINE GUN SHOOT,
Racine Gun Club, every
Friday night starting at
Lost and Found
7:30 p.m. Factory choke 6
gu'!a only. .
LARGE TAN female dog
found In Rock Springs
Decorated cakes lor all oc· llrea Cal1992·2770.
cassloo15, character cakes
' "Sheet cakes. Call992·63.42 FOUND; trailer liscence
or 992·2583.
plate, no. 5557UI . Owner
can cal1985-3581 .
APPLES, $4.95 &amp; up In your
containers. cl-. potatoes,
In the Rutland area
·lunon's u.s. 33, 12 miles C!lf
7~2·2014.
north 01 Pomeroy.
7
Yard Sale
LEARN tO make your own YARD SALE Sun.·Frl.
Chocolate
covered Oct. 13·18, IQ,? Gene Riggs
.cherries. peanut butter reslden,ce above Eastern
CUP$, candy
bars, clip High Scl1ool on Rt. 7. Win
chocolates, &amp; more. Free ter clothes for men, women
candy class starting this &amp; bOys. misc. hOUsehOld
week. Call Caro~~Sel Con· ltema, auto parts &amp; ace.
tec:llonery, 992·6:!42 for In· small farm tractor, toys
!ormation.
sale, In BASHAN
VISIT our new gift section. GARAGE
ThurSday, Fr&gt;day, Satur·
. handcrafted gifts, seasonal da"f,
•6,17,18 at Frank Rifdecorotlons by local ar· fle residence.
LiHie girl's
tltls.· Hall.....,.,;,n Items on clotnlng, shoes,
ladles,
sal&amp; now. Check our prices teens, dresse5, slacks,
pan
&amp; setec:tlon flnt. Also wltl
Jeans, so forth, some
accept handcrafted Items tsults,
,for constgnrn&amp;~~t sale. 992· men's clothing, collector
Jim Beam bontes, Avon
6193, The Tackle Box, SR bottles,
electric typewriter,
·124, Syracuse, Ohio. J,5779
ceramic Illes,. good por·
.
Apples &amp; SWeet Cider . table color t v ., misc.
Ro,., Grllrlel. Red, &amp; items.
GOlde" Delicious. NoW
selllnQ at $4.00 &amp; up per 8
Public Sale
buschel. Fitzpatrick Or·
&amp; AuCltion
chards, State Route 689.
Phone 669·3785.
OSSI E'S AUCTION Hou1e,
20 N. 2nd Street, Mid
Blue Band wltl be en· ~leport, Ohio. We sell one
tertalnlng at Osshrs Auc· piece or entire households.
tlon House In Middleport, New, used, or antiques, tostarting at 7 p.m. Saturday, eluding homes, farms, or
Oc;1,"Dber 18. ' Bluegrass · &amp; liquidation sates. Get fop
country music. Admission dollar. List with the man
$3.00 each, half price lor who nas over 25 years in
dllldren under 12.
the new, used and antiQue

41-Hou•n tor lltlflt

45

Gold, silver or foreign
coins or any gold or silver
items Antique furntture,
glass or china) will pay top
dol lar, or complete estates

Business Services

387 4

tga ges Phone 992 7000 or
992·5732.

CALL US.

PRONE 992-2156

1- C•r'd ol Tl\anks

fi nanci ng,
new ,
old,
refi nancing., and 2nd mar

a.va•lable All types home

FOR AU. YOUR INSURANCE NEEDS

)
Announcements
JONES Meat Pocking ...
slaughtering, custom
procesSing, retail meat.
Washington ·Co. Rd. 24,
Little Hocking, OH 667·
6133.

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

sl ns.

Silver

OHIO

Apartm ent
tor Rent
~----

Furn1 shed apart m ent, four
r ooms, bath, adults on ly,
no pet s Middleport '992

9
Wanted to Buy
IRON AND BRA'ss BEDS,
old
desks, gold

992·2342
DOWNINGQtllDS AGENCY, INC.

44

z:a• nt St • Pomer oy, Oh
or gag e
mon e y

g

SOUTHEASTERN OHIO SINCE

'

rad io, bed spreads, othe r
hOusehold items On Route

681 at Allred Wsll: h for

ARE YOU PAYING TOO MU~H?
- Do-YOU-HAVE-THE-COVERAGE?

WANT AD INFORMAOON

system.

-n:.::==-=...,..--

DOWNIN&amp;QIILDS AGENCY INC.
INSURANCE

Announc•mMtt

3

PAY h·lghest prices -GUN SHOOT :
possible for gold and silver evening startlnQ at
coins, rings, 1ewelry, etc. p.m sponsored by
Contact Ed Burkett Barber Racine Volunteer
Shop, Middleport.
~Department, at building In
Bashan. Factory choko
Development [)epartment block
SHOOTING MATCH ,tL gun~J1f!!Y.L _ _ • ~~grants; -~ikiJng-·it···easieJr-f•or~ sU1clr-l 'l:Om Hollow 1n Rutland
metropolitan areas as Toledo to obEvery Sundoy starting at 30 percent off grHnwant
talnfederala!d.
noon
Proceeds being " for the month of October.
Mondale said the Carter a~
donated to the Boy Scout Drehel's Ceramles, " N.
uTroop 249 12 gauge factory
Second
Avenue, Mid ·
minstra lion
has
moved
choke gun only I
dleport . 992·2751.
dramatically to help solve other
problems, taking such steps as
upgrading the quality of education
and improving the Social Security
ct

St. Helens erupts for sixth .time
VANCOUVER, Wash. (AP) Mount St. Helens coughed a layer of
ash onto nearby communities overnight, belching steam and ash
nearly etght miles mto the dark sky
m its sixth major eruption tn as
many months.
The blast, less powerful than other
recent eruptions, carne late Thur·
sday, three hours after SCientists
warned the volcano rrught erupt - a
warning that followed repeated earthquakes at the mountain.
There were no munediate reports
of injury or damages from the eru~
,tion. On May 18, Mount St. Helens
blew its top m a devastating eruption
of super-heated gas and ash that
killed 34 people and left 28 people
mlssmg and presumed dead. That
blast paralyuld parts of eastern
Washington with a thick cover of
ash.
"A very black cloud" of steam and
ash spewed to more than 40,000 feet
after Thursday's eruption, sa1d U.S.
Forest Service spokesman Jun Unterwegner.
The volcano qweted after the 9:58
p m blast, and bv nudnight, only a

Announcemtnts

3
1

11- The Dllily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Frtday, Oct. 17 1980
:1- - A-nnounc- e-menls- 3-1
----- - - - - - - · omestorSale
SIOEGLANCES
,byGIIIFox
Yard Sale, Friday &amp; Satur
ED
r~=::.:::::~:.....--------~~..::::..:._::::,_,
day , October 17·18 Baby
BA RTE LS . Loan
Items, 10 speed bicycle, ce Representative , 1100 East

~~-\

62
Wanted to Buy
CHIP WOOD. Poles max.
diameter 10" on largest
el"ld. $12 p·er ton. Bundled
slab. S 10 per ton. Delivered
to OhiO Pallet CO, Rt 2,
Pomeroy 992 2689.

M. H. Repolr
South~rn
Sorvlce Com·
pany, ~eating, mObile
home furnetn, elec;.trlc hot
water tank ropelr. Caii.U.·
3001 emergency night num·
bar, 367·7131.

16

,,

�..

--

12-Tbe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Oct. 17, 1980
_

_,~

· EMS communication number issued

•

.

Recently Meigs County Emergency. Medical Service's county
program initiated a new central
·~;
communication
system with a new
....
telephone nwnber for area residents
Qf. Meigs County to utilize when
calling for Emergency Medical Services.
~:....---- ~-new number !"ill· allow-any
area· residents in·.Meigs County to
dial one telephone number, regardless of where they live. in Meigs

..

•

By Supt. David L. Gleason

can

or the county emergency medical
please feel free to
collect w~n
County, to obtain emergency
service office by calling the office ·requesting service. Thla can be done
medical ambulance service. This
the "operator upon the.
by ...,.;lviM
new number is 99'M663. . All area
and notifying personnel there. These
·~'""'
labels tnay be mailed ·to area
placement of the call. Melp County
residents are urged to utilize thl$
Emergency Medical Service~ hopeS·
new number.
· residents per their request.
For individuals iivinil in Meigs
that in the future there will be a way
If residents wish, there are
County that ire not in the Pomeroy . of nm~ the toll charge for
aviillable labels to apply to their
area exchanges, sue)! 88 jleople
people livinl! in these areas to call
telephones so that time may not be
-living-in
the
AJbany-exchlmglf!llld··-Pomeroy~but·untll
such umun"'-"''-- --~'l09t· in:searehil}g-for whiclt-number
areas
of
Coolville
telephone
exin
effect,
please
feel
free to call fo~
to clill for emergency servl.ces.
changes,
which
are
long
distance
or
services
collect.
Tbe
service
will aC'
These telephone labels may be obtoll
calls
to
the
village
of
·Pomeroy
·
.
cept
any
and
all
charges
for
these
tained from any suqad in the county
•
calls.

'

Torch touches
off explosion •

A spa~k
a welder's torch may have
touched off an explosion that llilled
two workers and seriously burned a
third at an Ashland on chemical
plant, authorities say.
.
A Kenova firefighter, Raymond '•
Mann, 31, rlf Scottown, Ohio, was
hospitalized after he inhaled
chemical fwnes and smoke while
fighting the blaze.
"The only thing I can figure was
that it was the arc from the welder
"
people were in attendaf\ce.l')le kin- . said Lane Chandler, chief of. the
dergarten class of Mrs. Mary
carolyn Wiley performed splendidly
CHURCH PLANS ·
to the delight of everyone. They
ANNUAL HOMECOMING
should be proud.
The St. Paul's United Methodist
I also attended to explain the
boiler problem and to answer any · Church in Tuppers Plains, Ohio will
hold its Annual Homecoming on Sunquestions anyone might have conday,
Oct. 19. Sunday School hegins at
cerning the boiler and the upcoming
9
a.m.
followed IJy morning worship
levy.
at
10
a.m.
The fellowship dinner will
Some very good suggestions were
begin
at
noon
with an afternoon sermade concerning the levy.
vice at 1:30 p.m. The featured
singers will be The Duncan Family
I met with the Salem Center
from Columbus who will sing at the
parents on Tuesday evening. We
10 a.m. and I: 30 p.m. services. The
discussed plans for the building, the
public is cordially invited to take
curriculum, and the di strict.
part. Rev. Richard Thomas ls the
Questions we~ answered con'
cerning the building improvement - regular minister.
levy and it was discussed how such a
levy could help the facility at Salem
(Thursday ) and will be meeting with
Center. Chuck Holliday, the new
the Middleport PTA next Tuesday
principal, and I discussed our
evening.
philosophies and explained how we
are going to implement imIf I can be of any assistance to you
provements.
or if you feel you can be of assistsnce
to us, please feel free to call 'me at
I met with the Bradbury PTA
992-2153.
NEAL, W.Va. (AP) -

fr~m

.

Kenova Volunteer Fire Department.
Chandler's crew was among the
first fireflghting units to reach the
plant Thursday. It's located· two
miles south of Kenova and eight
miles south of Huntington.
• Chandler's crew and members of
the Ceredo Volunteer Fire Department brought the blast's ensuing f1re
under control within 1$ minutes.
But there was nothing "nybody .
could do for the two victims, one of
whom was thrown by the explosion
· into a huge tank of acid.
· Company officials identified the
·dead men as Everett "Bo" Perdue,
34, of Kenova and Glen E~. 40, of
rural Wayne County. Perdue was
dead on anival at a HuntingtQn
hospital, and Ellis' body was not
recovered from the vat of acid for
more than three hours after the I :'11
p.m. expl09ion.

SPEAKERS ANNOUNCED
The Rev. Randall Bailey announces that the Church of God
Youth and Christian Education
Director of Ohio, the Rev. Rolland
Pendley, will be speaking at the
Rutland Church of God this Sunday
at 11 a.m. and at 7:30p.m. There will
be special vocal music. The public is
invited.

Parent-teacher conferences for
the Meigs Local Schools will be held
on Saturday, Oct 25, from 8:30a.m.
to 3 p.m. Students will be bringing
· ·• home a brochure which wiD explain
the procedures parents are to follow
in scheduling conferences.
This day will present you with an
excellent opportunity to get to know
your child's teacher, to learn about
the school and curriculum, and to
discuss your child's strengths and
weaknesses in· various areas. It is
also a chance for you to ask
TOMEETMONDAY .
questions, to give teachers in'
The Meigs County Churches of
fonnation that will help them unChrist Men's Fellowship will meet at
derstand your child's needs, and to
6:30 p.m. Monday at the Bradford
work with us in planning your child's
Church to load · the truck for the
school year.
~
Gruridy MOWltain Mission School.
You can help the conference be
Speaker for the evening will be
more meaningful by coming
Bill Morgan, president of the El
prepared with a list of things that
Paso, Tex., Christian College.
will explain your child more fully to
Ladies of the churches are also inthe teacher and a list of things you
vited to attend. Refreshments will
want to ask the teacher. Your child's
be served.
teacher in turn will be able to tell
you test results, how your child is
SQUAD RUNS
doing, how your child gets along
.
Two
runs were made by local units
with others, how he/she feels about
himseli/herself, and the behavior in r - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - --------, Thursday, the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services reporand out of the classroom.
ts. At 11: 18 a.m., the Tuppers Plains
When the conference ·is over you
Unit took Sandra Powell from Reedshould have a better understanding.
sville
to Holzer Medicai Center and
of all aspects of your child's ex.
at
6:44 p.m., the Pomeroy Unit took
perience at school. You should also
Sarah Pierce from Wetzgaii ·St., to ·
have a plan to help your child do .
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
his/her very best from now on.
Discuss the conference with your
child, making ' sure he/she understands fully everything that was
said including any changes or new
plans that may have been made.
If for some reason you did not
receive a brochure, call the school
'
I'
and they will help you.
)
Special efforts will alSo be made
by each teacher to reach those
parents who are not able to attend.
Each teacher has been instructed to
place a minimum of four phone calls
on Saturday (or before) to parents
they need or would like to talk to.
Let's make Saturday a very special
day - a day to communicate -- a
ltAI.UMEEN
day to be positive, a day to remember.
*FALl PARnES
We are looking forward to seeing
you then.

SPEAKERNAMED
.
. Special speaker at the Salvation
Army, Butternut Ave., Sunday mor'
n1ng and evening will be tbe
Charles McPberson. The lllOI'IIini
service will be at 10. a.m. and the
evening service at 7:30. There will .
be special music and the public is in; ,
vlted.
.

aev:

DOXOLGAS
AVAilABLE AT

MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE

Ohio State ......... 27
Indiana ••••..•..•.• 17

Ohio University •••. 17 Chattanooga ..•.... 21
Miami ............ ~ 7 Marshall ....... ; .. 11

...
By MIKE FEINSILBER

Representatives of "Carter and Relgan will meet
Monday to agree on a date and a format.
The league sugge,'lted Oct. ?.&amp; - a week before the
nation votes- as the date and Cleveland as the site.
The debate between Carter and Reagan will be only .
the second between the Democratic and Republican
candidates for president since John F. Kennedy and
Richard M. Nixon squared off four times in 1960. Carter and President Gerald Ford debated in the 1976 campaign.
Tacticians for both Reagan a!lll Carter apparently
decided that their campaigns would be erihanced by a
debate.
On Sept. 26, Reagan adviser James H. Baker n said
Reagan would dehate if his camp decided a debate
would help. "We'D keep an eye on the polls," he said
then, "and lteep that tactical option open.
Reagan's aides have been concerned in recent days
about evidence that Reagan's campaign bad leveled
off, leaving carter plenty of time to catch Reagan who still leads in the p&lt;illl- and win the election.
They wanted Reagan to go Into the final weeks of the ·
campaign with a strong lead in the polls on the grounds
that th~ incumbent generally picks 4P strength in the
closing days of a campaign.

AnoctstedP~sWriter

.
. The details are s!ill to be worked out, but it appears
certain now that President Carter and RQnald Reagan
will dehate, head-«~, shortly before the election.
Both agreed Friday to a proposal by the League of
'#&lt;men Voters for on4H!n-one debate after the league
Oecided_that Independent candidate John B. Anderson
had fallen so severely in the polls that he w~ no longer
alerious candidate. ·
Robert :reeter, a Rtipub_Ucan pollster, said the debate
eQuid dectde the election.
·
:;:'B~ of them (Carter and Reagan) recognize that
the hi8h:-':illk, high-payoff strategy is the debate,"
~eeter said m a speech to. the Ohio Manufacturers
Association.
·
!'They're going to bave 70 mlillon to 80 million ~ple
watching and if you come out of the debate successfully
that .w~ ":in the .election, because the potential for .
milking a mistake m the debate would set you into a
sl{de that you might not recover from."
. j\nderson, campaigning in California, complained
bitterly that lt was unfair to exclude him. " It is a simple 1Jllltter of equity, a simple matter of fairness, " he
said.
·
· .

VOL 15 NO. 38

•OUR HARVEST SAlf CONnNUES
FRIDAY NIGHT AND All DAY
SAtURDAY
•BIG SAVINGS All OVER THE
STORE AND THE
WAREHOUSE
.
.
ON MECHANIC SlREET
.

.ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
' .

,,

POMEROY··Meigs
County
property OWIIWI paying their real
estate taxea OGiile thla December
ari apparently ·in for a financial
shock-a shock of probably ~ to 70
percent increase in those taxes.
This was brought out Friday by
one IIJiddleport resident who went to
the eourthouse to check the
valuation of his property and the
amount of taxes be will pay in
December. He learned that 1M! will
Plll:"t:no.88 in December-for the fir·
st baH of 1960-compared to the
Sl71.38 he paid on his home in taxes
last June,
A,·check was made with Meigs

:tmes -

l&gt;egialature.
1
A reappraisal of real estate-

Edlterlal • . •

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Insert

••••••••••••••

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Extended forecast, state weather
· : Mostly swmy SWJday. High in the upper 50s. The chance of rain ls near
1411'0 today.
.
: Oblo EstetlidedForecut- Monday through Wednesday- a chance of
sbcl!l'ers Monday and Wednesday and in the east half Tuesday. Highs l.n the
50a:Moitday, mid 40&amp; to low 50s Tuesday and in the mid 50s to low 60s Wed·
. nellllay. LoWs In tbe mid 30s to low ((Is Monday and mainly in the 30s early
TuosdaY and Wednesday.

MIDDLEPORT
. BOOK STORE
99 MILL ST.

•

MIDDLEPORT, 0. :5t~

ROOF REPLACEMENT- Work began last week on constructing a
new roof for St. Louis Catholic Church in Galllpolll. The project, costing
approximately $18,000, la being ,undertaken by Conley·Meyer Con-

Bates pleads not

Fire loss
:~et at
$20,000

guilty on charges
GALI.JPOLIS - Two-time jail
eacapee Jolm I.: Bates, 26, pl~dejl
not guilty to cbarges of escape and
&amp;J'IIId Jareeny In Gallla Cowlty ComIIIOJI Pleas Court~ . .
upoit a motloo entered by Sheriff
JalDII Mootcomery. Bates will be
tranlferred to the Ohlo Sla(ll
Penetentllt'Y and will remain tbere
UDW a trial date la set.
Bates waiVed his righla durinC
Friday'• u •an, three days after
hll. Jut. UIIIUCCe8lful escape from

'

OHIO LOTTERY'S DAILY NUMBER GAME.

the county JaiL

'

OHIO'S NEWESTI

BANG ONE LEASING

NOW AVAILABLE AT

SHAMMY'S CARRYOUT
Play 50c to $5.00 and pick your favorite 3 digit
number and win.

992-5716
The Number

•

struction Co., Piqua. So far, workers have stripped the old slate from the
present roof, and the projected completion date will be the beginning of
.DeCember.

ll

•

The Number

35 CENTS

o ••••••••••••••

•

o ••• o • • • • • • o. o • • • • • • • • • •

•••••••••

•••••

•

• • o • o • • • • • •

Sta~NaUonal ·..... ·.•......

STOP &amp; SEE US

605 W. Main St., Pomeroy

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY

required every six years-has taken
place in the county and goes in,to ef· .
feet on the payment 9f the taxes· in
December. Evaluations were in- ·
creased and House Bill 920 erases
the power of the Meigs County
(Continued onpal!eA3)

Farm ., .................... :

*FALl CARDS

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1980

COWity Auditor Howard Frank who
hu been ill Frank vertifled that
real estate tax JI8YIIII!Illa in Decem- .
ber are to be lnlll ned CGillllcterably
in most cases. Auditor Frank said
the situation .hu been created by
Hou.se · BID 920 which he · fought
before lt Wllll passed by the Ohio

4

*

· Andersqn, told reporters, "I will continue to campaign. I don't think that this is going to bounce me otlt
of the race by any means."
·
'
· .~derson said he will try to.buy television Ume ,;m_
mediately before or after the dehate , to ·get· his
message across to the public.
·
" .. .I think I've earned a place in any dehate that
takes place and I'm going to appeal to the court of
public opinion," the congressman said.
Reagan won the endorsement Friday of police and
firefighters unions in New York City, then met with
Mayor Ed Koch to discuss the city's fiscal problems.
He emerged from the meeting reaffirming his commltment to federal aid to the city, something he opposed until a few weeks ago.
In another development, fonner Secretary of State
Henry Kissinger predicted that an agreement may be
reached on releasing the American hostages from Iran
before the election.
Kissinger, campaigning in California for Reagan,
declined to speculate on what effect such a release
would have on Carter's re-election chances.
"I would think that the release would be balanced by
the length of the hostages' captivity," Kissinger told a
news conference at the Los Angeles Press Club.

Meigs property
DU?ners face big·
·tax hike in '81
,,

ClassUied • • •

DECORATIONS FOR

Reagan dehated Anderson last month in Baltimore
and said he ~d rtot meet Carter one-on-one until
car;ter, Anderson and Reagan all debated together.
The Californian ~id he would stlll prefer a thl'ee- ··
way fo~, but sa~d he would leave .to Carter's con. sctence and the JUdgment of tbe American people
whether Mr. Cart~ sh.ould.me~t Mr. Anderson."
' Reagan, campa1g?mg m New York and Illinois,
· suggested a format like the one used in the 1976 debate
between Carter and Ford. It included a moderator and
a panel of four que~tioners, with the _candidates pernutted~ make operung and cl~ing statements as well
as required to.respond to questions.
.. cartet;. ~lking to reporters at the White House, said,
Whati d like to have IS a maxnnum opportunity, in as
unstructured ~y 88 ~ble, answering any question,
to exchange Ideas With Governor Reagan so the
Amef'\can people can see the sharp differnces between
me and him on the basic issues that face our country.''
Jody Powell, Carter's press st;cretary, said Carter
~uld. like. to have a debate lasting "a couple hOUPs"
smce It IS likely to be the only debate between the two.
Carter ~~d he ho~ there also would be a debate
betwee~ V1ce. President Walter F. Mondale and
Reagan s runrung mate, George Bush.

•

GALLIPOLIS-POINT PLEASANT

today...
.Atft deathsInside
.•••...••.••.. : .........

WE HAVE

.

....... 17 Duke •..•••••••••• ." 34
Syracuse .. -. ~ ..•••••. 7 Toledo ,, .......•.. , . 7 Clemson ... ~ . . . .. .. . 7
.

unba

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8

.

·w. Michigan

r-Reagan debate appears certain

r
f • ••

CHESTER, OHIO

ELBERFELDS

Penn St. ...•... .... 24

.

RIDENOUR'S GAS SERVICE

AT

Monday night parents were
treated to a surprise at Rutland
Elementary when they entered the
building. It was quite obvious that
Doug Behnke (the new Rutland principal) and Bob JMore (the Rutland
custodian) had bee!l'quite busy over
the laat ·several months. Paents'
comments included such things as
" This is as clean as I have ever seen
the bull ding," and " Look at the
halls! We have never seen so many
fine displays of student work
before!" Congratulations, Rutland
Elementary, for a very fine job and
an excellent start.
·

,-------_;_----College football scores ......- - - - - - - - - - ,

Two workers killed

DiSPATCHER - Kay Davis working at the new CommunicatiOn ceo- .
ter where all calls for Emergency Medical Services are now received and
AU. EMERGENCY run data is keptlor the county.

'Round
Meigs
Local

'

Be fied from the cout1houae ·
around 12:30 p.m. 'l'olldly and ...

•

"YYUR EQUIPMENT I EASING CEN1ER"
POMIROY, 0.
TUPPERS PLAINS, 0.
IU'O,AND, 0. ·

recapQtred at 2:30p.m. W~y
at lite !lome ol Ida wife, the' former
GIWIGE HALL LilVELED- '!be apd Hemioet Granp H.n at
Ren!Hir Grove ·, .. leveled by f1nl Friday an.-. Fire ljepaft·
menta olPGmeioy, Chester, Middleport lOll Rutland tattled the blaze.

'

CALL IIU NIAll

bulldln11, COl'llb acted In • · and
called Baring Ollpel. The hall wu
Jllir.') I d In 1122 II)' the llJ'IIIIIII IIIII
addiU- of a ~ta~e 'lOll ldtdlen
.were ICitled 1o the bulldlnllln J!Dl
....... price ot the bull~ wu

f300. ·

lantlla J. Otmel, Gall~.
On Sept. 1•. Bat. lOll three other
Inmates ,.... aUepdly involved in
~ jallbnak. He and the oUlen
nre relaken by depallea half an

'lbe:p!IM olf1ce and store bellde
the ball and &amp;Ill ..... "Llola Smith

hourlatlr.
Bates wai ortpui)J Incarcerated
on a grand tlleft charge, lltert1mlng
from an aJ1epd fraudulant Pllllllll
ola bid cbeck, for wblch he hu Iin-

dep ' a r t m e n t a •

ce bttn Indicted~

to the rear Ill tla IIIII wwe
tlnatenld bt &amp;Ill Ire wllleb wu
bpt frllni • nlnl '" lite f1nl

•

7

GETS THE ROSES - Teresa.· Hollteln, crowned 1il80 Southern
lllgh School Homt!comlng . Qlteen during halftime fllllllvlties of the
Friday night Tornado-Southweatem pme, Ia ~ getting ~
from 19'19 Homecoming Queen came Guinther. Looking on Ia the
queen's escort, Dwayile Curfman. Teresa Ia the daughter of Mrs.-Ern- ·
mogene ~olstem of Sy!Juse and the late Rollert Holst~. .
,

J

.

'.·.

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