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                  <text>Thursday, November 6, 291 '

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
NOVEMBER SALE DAYS
.FRIDAY
8th.
.
' NOVEMBER 7th &amp; SATURDAY, NOVEMBER
.

OPEN FRIDAY TILL 8
SPECIAL SALE PRICES ALL OVER THE STORE AND AT THE WAREHOUSE ON MECHA,.IC STREET

EXCELLENT TIME FOR CHRISTMAS S"OPPING

Men's and Boys'

TUBE SOCKS
Men' s sizes. 9 to 15, Boys 7 to 11.
Famous Spr ingfoot quality wh ite with colored t ops. Many
school co lors.

SMILING LOSER - VicePresident Walter Mondaie
manages to smile Wednesday as
he chatted with members of the
mt•dla during a press conference
regarding huge campaign spendi ng. (AP Laserpbolo)
-- - ·- --------------------~i

l Area Deaths l
I

James Garnes
Funeral services for James Garnes, 36, Pomeroy, who died of an apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound
will be held Friday at 1 p.m. at
Ew ing Chapel. Burial will be in
!leech Grove Cemetgery. Fiends
may call at fwleral home at 1

USE OUR
CONVENIENT
'LAY-A-WAY PLAN

Sa turday Sale.

SKEIN

WINTER

.

:t

.James A. Will, Jr., 19, Pomeroy,
was sentenced to a term of six mon·
ths to five years in a proper penal in·
sti(ution when he &lt;tppeared before
Meigs County Common Pleas Judge
· John C. Bacon Wednesday on
ch•rges of breaking and entering.
Will appearing on a bill of infonnation presented by Fred W.
Crow, II, prosecutor entered a
voluntary pleas of guilty to the
breaking and entering charge. The
breaking and entering occurred
Nov. 2, at Modern Supply Co., West
Main St. Pomeroy.
Will was remanded to the custody
of the sheriff until such time as he
may be taken to a proper penal institution.

COAT SALE
Short and finger length

~Q

coat ~

MEN'S
SHIRTS
Entire stock of men's dress •nd
SPOrt shirts lndudlng:
Flannel sport shirts - westorn
SPOrt Shirts · flannel work shirts ·
van Heusen dress shirts · knit shirts.
Regular western · velour shirts ·
SPOrt shirts.

Terrific selection in all sizes.
Regular prlcesS'I .95to$32.95 .

REDUCED 20%

.SALE

1

• Purse Kits
• Travel Kits
• Mak~up Cases

Reg. $4.25. ; •••.••••• Sa Ie $3.59
Reg ..$6.50........... Sale $5.49
Reg. $9.oo •••••.•••. Sale $7.69
Reg. $12.00 .• •••••.. Sale $10.19

Including Dress Coats
A big selection of styles and
· sizes to fit everyone quilted jackets and vests ·
leathers · vi nyl s · nylons.
Al l warmly li ned .

A

complete

selection

of

regular and extra Iaroe sizes.
lnsul•ted

coveralls

•

big

overalls · jackets and coats hoods · vests . Lay·away for
Christmas if you wish.

SALE PRICES
SALE

Local emergency units answered
three calls on Wednesday, the Meigs
County Medical Services Headquarters reports.
At 6:55 p.m., the Midleport Unit
took Grace Andrew from her
residence on Beech St. to Veterans,
Memorial Hospital and the Middleport Unit at 2:48 a.m., took
· James Hill from Pomeroy Health
Care Center to O'Bleness Hospital in
Athens. The Pomeroy tlnit at ·4:28
p.m., took Henry Cunningham from
Pomeroy Health Care Center to
Veterans Memorial.

SAL£ PRICES

WOMEN'S

l

Leo C. Kenneily, Jr., Julia A. Kennedy to Carl E. Snnith, Inc., Right of
Way, Oiive.
· Laura J. Fields, Gay Fields to
Carl E. Smith, Inc., Right of Way,
Orange.
Charles L. Davidson, dec. aka
Charles Lloyd Davidson to Frances
J. Davidson, aka Frances Juanita
Davidson, Affidavit, Rutland.
Alma Young to AHred E. Young, 3
acres, Salisbury. ·
·
Harold W. Hanson, Vicki A. Hanson to Ronald A, Hanson, 5.07 acres,
Rutland.
,
Ruby ·c. qr&lt;)uch to Maurice E.
Durst, Marcella G. Durst, Lots 12,
13, Middlepofl.
Gathie D. Sanders to Andrew J.
Jordan, Dorothy M. Jordan, parcel,
Olive. ·

Special

l

, r·
~\;

Reg. $7.00' •.•.• Sale $5.95
Reg. $11 .00 ..... Sale $9.35
Reg. $18.00 .. ·. Sale$15.30
Reg. $27.00 •. • Sale$22.95
Reg. $35.00 .. . Sale $29.75

100% Solid State
- Custom Picture Control

Meigs
Property
Transfers

police said the explosion occurred about 6:45 a.m: at Wesbnoreland
Coal Co.'s Ferrell Mine in Robinson, a small wunco~~t.ed com- ·
munity near tJje Logan County border in southern West V1rguua.
Authorities said smoke was pouring from the mine shaft and that
Wesbnoreland had called in Its own rescue squad. I

Three Iranian students indicted

BuRuNGTON, V,t.- Three Iranian studen(!1 have been indicted oq
charges of trying to buy guns from an FBI agent.
. .
A federal gralid jury on Thursday handed ·up two-count mdictments
charging the Iranians with illegal purchase and possession of weapons
and conspiracy. The three were scheduled for arraignment on Nov. 14.
The studenl!1 who attended colleges in Massachusetts on student
visas, were arr'estect here Saturday after a;I~gedly trying to buy two
automatic weapons, two pistols !llld anunwution from~ federal ~gent.
They have been held at the Chittenden County Correctioilal Center for
lack of $100,000 ball each since their arrest.

axririiim ·benefits wtll incf'ease

r..os ANGELES - Deliberations in the bial of five reputed underworld figures went into the fourth day today, as jurors grappled
.with a relatively new organized crime law.
The jurors sent notes to U.S. District Judge Terry Hatter on Thursday, saying they needed help understanding conspiracy charges
against the five defendants.
.
The seven. women and five men have also asked to hear.ag&amp;lll portions of testimony by the government's star wi~ ,about th~
gangland slaying of San Diego underworld figure Frank . The Bomp
Bompen.siero.

Ohioans to receive trip 'refuntb
COLUMBUS Ohio- Ohio Attorney General William J . Brown says
Ohioans who ~d $59.90 each for an aUegedly free trip to Las Vegas
will receive full refunds.
. ·
In a news release Thursday, his office said it's received complainl!1
from more than 200 people who Jl!lid more than $12,000 to D. x E. In~.
The company did business as Vegas International Travel and Tours m
19'19.

Weather

Long and short gowns,
robes, pajamas and night
shirts.
Flannel, brushed tricot
.and quilted.
Sizes Petite thru XXL

'\

LlffiE GIRLS'

·SLIPS

CARPET
SPECIAL
- All nylon pile in assorted
tweed colors
-6'x9'
-Bound edges
- Rubber backing '

SPECIAL

135 00

Mechanic St. Warehouse

OPEN SATURDAY 9130 A.M. ·TO 5aOO ·P.M.

RFELD IN

SONJA HILL

MARLA GEORGE

Three Meigs girls to compete in even't
, _ ,- . . &lt;;• l j hi8h -aehoal
senior girls will compete for the
Meigs County Junior Mlsa tiUe at the
Meigs Junior High .School in Middleport at 3:10p.m. Sunday, Nov. 16.
The trio includes Peebles Blake,
daughter of Helen and Elden Blake,
Reedsville; Bonita Louise Boso,
daughter of Clair and Ann Boso of
Portland, and Sonja Denise Hill,
daughter of Sandra Hill and Dennie
Hill, Racine.
Compeling for preliminary awardS will be the Vinton County Junior
Mlsa, 1981, Marla George of McArthur. She is the daughter of James
and Nancy-George and is a senior at
the Vinton County High School.

Mimi B\alle o! E8litem ftllb '11111
present a pom-pom routine In the
creative and perfonning ari1
division of the competition. Shefall's homecoming ~ I&amp;
Eastern and is a member of the
voUeyball team, is a cheerlead~~'
and a member of the National HCDII'
Society. She plans to attend 01*1
State University.
Mlsa Boso is active in chOir crl
which she is president and serves u
president and member of the pep
club. She is secretary of the senior
class.· She · has participated In
basketball, volleyball and track and
took part in the musical "Li'l A)).
ner" at Southern High School.

this

Sbew\ll preaent a-vocal from ''u'l

Abner" in the creative and performing arts c:ompetition. She plans
to attend Glenville State.
Mlsa Hill, Southern senior, will
present a dance in the talent portion
of the pageant. She is active in
volleyball, softball, pep club, ·
cheerleader, captain for four years,
and a member of the basketball
team. She plans to attend Shawnee
State.
Mlsa George, who plans to attend
Ohio State, is vice president ·of her
class. This is her fourth year as a
cheerleader. She is a member of the
scholarship team, three years, and
is a member of the biology club,

a

Spanish c\ub, pop club, cboJ'wo, rainbow girls, was 1979 Miss Vinton
County, was FFA queen. She hllS
been a junio~ 4-H leader for two
years. She represented Vinton County at the Ohio state 4-H horse show in
1978 and 1980 and in 1979 she was
selected to represent Vinton County
as the 4-H press corps representative at the Ohio State Fair. Mlsa
George will present a vocal solo.
Tickets for the pageant will be $2
for adults and $1.50 for students..
Tickets can be purchased from thc
Southeast Ohio Junior Miss, Inc., ·
board members, at the Meigs Inn or ..,
at the door.
&gt;

Reagan won't
interfere
with
Carter's
.
foreign policies. uritil January 20th
. LOS ANGELES (AP)
President-elect Ronald {leagan says
he will not "intrude" in President
Carter's foreign policy but will make
a change in the way the United
states deals with the Soviet Union
once he takes office.
And, he aaid, Iran should not expect to benefit by continuing to hold
its American hostages until Reagan
becomes president on Jan. 20.
"I hopj! the Iranians will not have
any Idea there will be any profit to
them in waiUng," Reagan said.
·
· At a news conference Th1111'8CiaYI

his first such meeting with reporters
following his landslide election victory on Tuesday, Reagan also said
tbe people who engineered his successful election campaign will be in
charge of planning his take-over of
power.
The Republican president-elect
went directly from the news conference to a private meeting in
downtown LOs Angeles with tbe
leaders of his transition team and
some of the men who served in his
"kitchen cabinet" while be was
governor of California.

Much of the news conference was
devoted to foreign policy questions,
and Reagan made clear that while
he hopes to maintain the traditional
nonpartisan nature of American
foreign policy, he ~ts to make
some immediate ch8nges.
For instance, he rejected Carter's
contention that strategic arms
limitation talks between the United
States and the Soviet Union are too
important to await resolution of such
international crises as the Soviet's
occupation of Afghanistan.·
"I don't tblnk you simply sit down

at the table with the Soviet Union to
discuss inilitary arms, for example," Reagan said. "You discuss the
whole attitude, world attitude, as to
whether·we're gping to have a world
at peace or whether we're simply
going to talk about weaponry and not
bring up these other subjects.
" In· other words, " ·he said, "I

liiilieve in linkage.''
Carter, recently asked whether he
would ask for Senate approval of the
SALT ll treaty while the Soviels
kept troops in Afghanistan, said the
(Continued on page 10)

Water board losses outlined

I

f

Partly cloudy tonight and·Saturday. Lows tonight in the nnid-tOs.
Highs Saturday in the nnid and upper 60s. Chance of rain 20 percent
tonight and 10 percent Saturday. SouthweSterly winds around 10 mph
tonigh,t.
EsteadedObloForecast- SundaythroughTuesday:Achanceof
I showers over the state Sunday and showers or snow fiurriea in northern sections Monday. Fair Tuesday. Highs in tbe nnid-508 to nnid-eOs.
Sunday and in tbe nnid-tOs to the nnid-508 Monday and Tuesday. Lows
in the low to nnid-tOs Sw!day, dropping to the low to nnid-30s by
Tuesday morning.

BONITA IIClSO

PEEBLF.S BLAKE

.

Warehou se'on Mechanic St.

Hanes
lHEFlMI\LS

FRIDAY NOVEM B~E.::..R.:,;.7~1~98:,::.0__,..~__,.._ _,__ _ _ _ _ _.:. :;FIFT~E:.:.EN;.:..;;.:CE;;.;.;.;;;NTS

coal miners

Jury deliberations in fourth day

WORK CLOTHES

WONDERFUL GIFTS!

AND ·VESTS

Emergency squad. runs·

CARHARn
BROWN DUCK

TRAVEL ACCESSORY BAGS

WINTER JACKETS

POM EROY·M IDDLEPORT, OHIO

COLUMBUS ohio - Maximum weekly bene"'ts for unemployed
.Ohioans ate to'climb to $215 for eligible claimants wi~ at least three
dependenl!1, says the state Bureau of Employment Semces •
. The current maximum level is $202 a week.
Weekly benefiis also are to be increased from $128 to $136 for
claimants with no cjependents and from $193 to $206 for !hose with one
or two dependents .

Brad ley, Trissi , Dotty
Mann and Russ Teen.
Reg. $26.00 Sale $20.00
Reg. $31.00 Sale$25.00
~eg . $38.00
Sale $30.00
Reg. $49.00 Sale $40.00

MEN's

enttne

~~kesrnen for tbe Boone County Sheriff's Department and state

Douglas Mart, Devon,

SALE PRICE

•

e·

XXI NO. 146

Price changes at the producer
level often are reflected at the consumer level within a few weeks or
months.
The department said prlc~ for all
conswner foods moved up 0.5 percent over the month. After declining
in September, wholesale prices for
beef, veal and pork rose moderately.
Prices also jumped for dairy products, bakery goods, processed poultry,
eggs, flour and milled rice.
However, fresh fruit and
vegetable prices were sharply
lower, as were the cost of fish and
roasted coffee.
Energy goods at the finished level
declined 0.4 percent, the same as in
(Conlinued on page 10)

ROBINSON, W.Va.- An explosion ripped ~oug~ a Boone Co~ty
coal mine this morning, apparenUy trappmg hve rruners, authonties

Special week-end sale of
pre-teen, junior, misses
and helf size blazers.

Reg . $24.00 . . .... Sale S19 .19
Reg. 542.00 ...... Sale $33.59
Reg. $53.00 ... . Sale $42.39
Reg. $78.00 ••••.• Sale $62.39

VO~.

Explosion traps

IWER SALE

in

.
r

consumers; intermediate items,
which are senni-processed; and raw
or crude materials, such as iron ore
or grain .
In October, intermediate goods
ro5e 0.9 percent, compared with 0.6
percent the month before. Raw
material cosbl climbed a steep 1.9
percent after rising 1.3 percent in
September and about 6. percent in ·
both months before that, the departmentsaid.
All of the figures are adjusted for
seasonal variations.
When the effect of car prices is
subtracted from other finished
goods, wholesale prices rose only
about 0.4 percent last month, about a
5 percent annual rate.

Reg. $8.00 ••• •• Sale $6.80
Reg. 512.00 ••• Sale$10.20
Reg. $18.00 •• ·. Sale $15.30
· Reg. $23.00··· Sale$19.55

WOMEN ' S

qumed nylon. fur look, Sherpa
and poplin.
Ju nior Sizes 5 to 15.

counted for most of the rest of the
advance.
The introduction of 1981 model
vehicles in October foUowed large
price decreases in September, when
Detroit closed out its ·1980 model
year with across-tire-board discount
to dealers.
That dip. in September became an
instant campaign issue in the
presidential camp.aign, with
Republican nominee Ronald Reagan
accusing the Carter administration
of "jimmying"the figures. The
claim was strongly denied by government officials.
The · Produeer Price Index includes three categories: finished
goods, whicl) are ready for sale to

H.

SALE PRICES

H!ld one son, Lee, all of Akron; his

workers, at about 8 nnillion, returned
to its August level following a September dip. Joblessne&amp;'! was up 1.7 ·
nnilllon from October 1979, with
adult men accounting for about I
nnilllon . of the over-the-year increase, the department said.
The factory work week rose,
reflecting the nation's apparent
emergence from the shar,r but short
recession that began late last winter.
·
On the inflation front, the Labor
Department reported that wholesale
prices at the finished goods level
rose 0.8 percent, with half tbe jwnp
caused by higher prices for cars and
trucks.
Sharply rising food prices ac-

su its In velour, terry
and polyester/cotton.
Sizes 2 to 4, 4 to 6x, 7 to

" I

Boys sizes 8 to 20. A truly flne
group. Entire stock . includes
den ims - quilted styles - nylons
and more. All warmlY lined,
rr any hooded styles.

'119

JUNIOR

~

JACKETS
AND VESTS

Excellent quality hand kn it·
ting yarn in a big selection of
sol id variegated co lors. 3 1/ 8
ounce ske ins. Special Fr iday -

double digit mark of 1979 and further
evidence of inflation's persistent
nature despite the recent recession.
Wholesale prices had risen 1.5 percent in both July and Augilst.
Unemployment, meanwhile, inched up 0.1 of a percentage point
from 7.5 percent' in September, the
department said. But behind the
nearly stable figure, there was
significant movement. The unem- ·
plo)'ment rate for adult men
declined over the .month to M percent, while the rate for women rose
sharply to 6.8 percent.
Unemployment among teen-agers
rose to 18.4 percent last month
followin g a decline in September.
The number of unemployed

Winter dresses and pant

BOYS' WINTER

WINTUK YARN

wif e, Mary Garnes; three
daughters , Teresa, Loria and Mary

Pomeroy man
gets prison
sentence

,,... ..SALE

SALE PRICES

Mr. Garnes is survived by his

one niece, several aunts and uncles
and cousins.

DRESS

Select items on sale - while selections
are best. Make a down payment and we'll
lay-away til Christmas .
$1 .49 RED HEART

WASiflNGTON (AP)- Wholesale
prices jumped 0.8 percent in Qc.
tober, equal to a 10.6 percent compound annual rate, and the nation 's
unemployment figure edged up one
notch to, 7.6 percent, the government
reported todiQ'.
.
October's jump in the Producer.
Price lndex contrasted markedly
with september's .0.2 percent dip.
The inCI'elllle was fueled by r~ing
automobile prices and significant
boost in the cost of sugar, meat and
other foods , the Labor Department
said.
For the first 10 months of 1980,
wholesale, or producer, prices have
accelerated ·a t a 12.4 percent annual
pace, a rate very .similar to the

T

-~

anytime.

m"rher, Mabel Fowler, Colwnbus;

,

ctoher wholesale prices increase

ROY

The financial condition of the
Syracuse Board of Public Affairs
was discussed at length Thursday
night at tbe re~ meeting of
Syracuse Vlliage Council.
.
Clerk Janice Lawson presented
members with a cost analysis sheet
for the last 10 months of operation.
The infonnation showed t11e water
board lost money six months of the
10montha.
'
Council raiaed tbe water rates in
March, 19'19;· from $4.75 a month to
$5.75 hoping the increase would help
offllet the infiatioo rate.
Council will study the cost of the
operatioo and determine how much ·
of a rate increase will be made .00
wheli tbe increase will take effect.
Mayor Eber Pickens informed
council that he had recei\'4ld a bid
from Ohio VaUey ~ence Co., Belpre
for 100 feet of eight foot fence at a
cost of $859.12.
The 'tence will be placed on the
right of tbe backstop replacing the
four foot fence. The cost of tbe fence
does not indued installation. Mayor

\,

Pickens is to get a cost figure on iiJ.
stallation.
Pollee Chief Milton Varian and
council members conunended the
youngsters of tbe village for their
fine ·l;lehavior during the HaUoween
season.
Council extended thanks to Chief
Varian for the long hours he worked
and for a job well done.
Chief Varian reported tbe guar- .
drail along SR 124 in front of Hubbard's Greenhouse had been
replaced.
Council agreed to advertise for
bids for insurance coverage oo all
village owned property
equ)p-

ment.

..

r
,

.

It was decided to draw up an ordinance wblch will require a depo&amp;lt
of $251or penoils placing postei'IJ in
the village. II tbe posters are
removed within a ' designated time
the depo&amp;lt will be refunded.
A crackdown on drivei'IJ will be
made of thole I'UIIIiing atop signa,
speeding, and using loud mufflei'IJ
(Continued on page 10)

IJt

I .

�•
3-TheDallySentinel,Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday,Nov. 7, t9eo

Und·erdogs could pull
•
off surprises agazn

.2-TheDailySeotinel, MiddlejJOrt-Pomel'9y, 0 ., Friday, Nov. 7,1980

.

Opinions &amp;
Comments

.

1

.

By Auoclated Prelll
A betting man would have to say

dinal routs of WBahington State and no different," said Pell. "Georgia is
Oregon State. But Wiggin is quick to undefeated and untied, the No.2
there won't he much of iln ~ncore
point out that those teams dim't mat· team In the nation, and It's obv!OU8
when the nation's coUege football
ch up to USC.
.
to everybody in the United States
teams go at It again Saturday, but
"The rea1 test will be this week," . that they're playing this game for
then many a betting • man didn't he said.
·
the natiOnal championship.
·
collect last week oo what were suP.
· The Trojan defense, not likely to
"Georgia is a veteran, battleposed to be me sure things.
permit a damaging aerial circus by scarred Iteam without a weakness
But, In the wake of Missiasippl . Elway, has surrendered just 238 yar- and an unstoppable tailback in HerState's shocking upset of Alabama,
ds per game.
schel Walker." ·
AriZona's · stunning victory over
And then there is~ USC offense, . Georgia Tech's ! 7 record· would
UCLA and San Jose State's surled by tailback !\{a~ Allen, the Indicate It doesn't stand much of
CALVIN IDLLAND LYLE ALZADO- Cleveland 77) lunges at Bears quarterback Vince Evans In the
prising defeat of Baylor, one ean't nation's third-leading rusher with chance against unbeaten Notre
same game. Both Hill and Alzado are now valuable:
Browns running hack Calvin Hill (left) is shown
help butB$11 who's next?
1,080 yards. He will be going against Dame. Butlbe Irish didn't gel to 7.0
assets for the Cleveland Brown•, after having been.
carrying the ball against the Chicago Bears last MonPerhaps with that thought in rnirlll a Stanford defense that ranks ninth 1n Coach Dan Devine's flrull season
released by their ·former teams because they were
day. Browns defensive end Lyle Alzado (fBI' right, No.
Southern California Coach John in the ~c-10, giving up 414 yards per without elpel'iencing their siJani of
thought to be "over the hill." (APLaserphoto).
Robinson said he didn't Intend to see game. ,
problems. So, they're taking nothing
his fourtiH'anked Trojans join the
Clearly, those trends must be for granted. ·
~test trend, which this week Inrevers!!d if stanford is to win. ·
"Tech's record right now II ex·
cludes the smoldering ruins of four
Floridl!'s assignment sounds slm- tremely deceiving because of the
Top Ten ~.,In !101110 C88es their pie enough on the surface. Stop Her- caliber of teams It has played," said
national championship aspirations scbel Walker imd probably wind up Devine. "I think the last time the
went up In flames.
·
beating GeorgUi t~ move Into con- NCAA updated the strength of the
"We've never lost a payback tenlion lq the Sobtheastern Con- schedules, Tech's was. rated fourth
game, and this is In that category," ference race.
,
toughest in the nation. Three of their
said Robinson of the Trojans'
But that's easier said than done, l0811es came to Alabama, ~orth
. •meeting with Stanford.
and tbe sensational Bulldog fresh- Carolina and Florida ~ and those
looking down at the Steelers, not up tbe line.
By Asloclated PmiB
So they ask - and the master an-· ·
Southern Cal narrowly lost the man running back has racked up teams hive a combined 20-3 record
You can almost envision some of at them. For the first time in those
national title last season ·despite 1,096 yards to prove it. Florida right now." ·
\
the younger players curling up at the many years, they believe they are swe~ .
~~r tell 'em, 'Hey, it's really just a
finishing with an 11.0.1 record. That Coach Charley Pell says a pro scout
In other games Involving Top knees of the masters, the guys who winners - capable of being winners
blemish was a 21-21 lie with Stan- this week told him he considered Twenty teams, 11th-ranked have been THERE! "Tell us," they the way Hill and Alzado and Reggie game,"' says Hill. "The first lime I '
ford, something USC would like to Walker "the best running back to Ok]ahoina visits Kansas, No.l2 implore, "\ell us what it's like to be Rucker and Autry Beamon were. played in one I found out around the ·
avenge in ·its regionally televised .come into college football in the last Michigan II at Wisconsin, 13th- In a Super Bowl."
They KNOW they can.get to the Holy middle of the first quarter that it
meeting with the Cardinals at Stan25 years." ,
ranked Brigham Young entertains
Grail of pro football, the Super BowL was · just another game. It's
ford Stadium.
Pell said Georgia, 8-0, is in ex- North Texas Slate, No.l4 North
"We realize that our destiny is . promoted so much it's built up to
And Lyle Alzado and Calvin Hill
Elsewhere in games ir1volving Top cellent position to win .the national Carolina visits Clemson, 15th- lean back, a wistful look clouding ours and we ' can control it, where it's almost like a war, like the"·
Ten teams, second-ranked Georgia title beca:use Notre Dame still must ranked South Carolina hosts The their eyes, and tell the rest of the literally," says Hill. "CQrilpare the · fate of the country is in your hands.
meets 20th-ranked Florida in their play Alabama and Southern Cal. He Citade~ No.l6 Baylor entertains Cleveland Browns of those once- team to last year. That's a good Then you start playing and realiZe
annual scrap at the Gator Bowl in figUreS that, plus the tradition of the Arkansas, 17th-ranked Purdue hosts upon-a-time days. They're among example. Some of the guys kept it's justa game."
But in tbe NFL, it's the only g1UJ11i
Jacksonville, · Fla., third-ranked matchup, will put the&amp;-1 Gators Ina IowaandNo.J8SMUisatRice.
the few links the Browns have with waiting for things to go wrong, so
that
matters.
Florida State hosts Virginia Tech, precarious spot.
Mlssisalppl State, ranked 19th af· days which haven't been filled with naturally they did ... This year we
No.5 Nebraska entertslns Kansas
"Tbe Florida-Georgia game is a ter its upset of Alabama, is Idle.
"If onlys ••• "
know we can win every time we go . - - - - - - - - - - ·
State, sl%th-ranked Al&amp;bama hosts classic any year, and this year it's
out. And ive realize that every game
L
LSU, No.7 Ohio State entertains
.,...,. "U only we played .in another is important, that any one can i;!e the
Dllnois, eighth-ranked UCLA hosts
one that keeps you out of the playofdivision ... If only Pittsburgh did ...
Oregon, No.9 Pitt entertains
fs.''
or Houston did. "
,
FOR FALL SEASON
Louisville . and loth-ranked PeM
Despite all the confidence; aU the
"If
only
we
coUld
finish
as
strongly
Large
selection of house · ·.
State hosts North Carolina State.
current success, the ·Browns are still
as
we
start."
plants and hanging:
The revenge. factor and national
strangers when It comes to the highOhio. hjgh school playoffs tonight
"lionly .•. "
baskets.
hopes are all the InCentive USC has
pressure world of the Super Bowl
this year because the Trojans are
The Browni1 are a team with a whirL They've never experienced
one of fivePac-10 teams eliminated
history as glorious as any in the the extraordinary bedlam which
Byn.-....Preu
· Carlille . t-1.0 va. Hamllton Badln 11).6.0
from the conference race and the
National Football league, starting · leads up to the game ("It's like the
Ftnt-l'l!rlap
al Middletown's Barnlb Stadium.
Rose Bowl picture for various rules
FrldoyGSalurdayGameo
Syraucse, Oh.
992-5776 .
with 1950 when, as one of the few sur- game becomes secondary to the par·J
violtations. A victory by the Trojans,
DI-IV
ties and everything else," Alzado
Open Daily Mon.-Sat.
viving
Cleveland St J - h 1.W at Willoughby
franchises
of
the
crwnbling
Burton Berbhlre ~1" at Garfield
6-0-1, would eliminate the Cardinals, South IIHHI
Helghto Trinity &amp;-1-41 at Rlpp Field
All-America Football Conference, says) and they can't imagine what
9 to5
5andullly f.:H at Upper Arlinlllon f-1·1
Bucynas Wynford 9-1.0 at Archbold 10.0.
6-3 and 3--2 in the Pac-10, from the
they were absorbed into the NFL. it's like when. the whole season is on
Mullllon 1-1-l va. Canton McRinley ._l· 0
Rose Bowl picture.
0 at Canton Fawcett Stadiwn
Tiltonmlle Buckeye Sooth 1-1-l at
They promptly won the NFL tiUe, ~----------~---.--,--------:.:,
Cln. Princeton 9-1.(1' VI. ctn. Moeller 10.
CrooUville a.t-1
USC's incentive may be good
(14 at Nippert Sladlwn
beating - of all teams - the Los
CinclnnaU Mariemont s-u at Weot Jef.
press for the game, but Stanford
DlvtllooD
feroon f.:H
Angeles .Rams. the team which had
Rkbfleld Rev.,. &amp;4-2 at Soloo . &amp;-1-41
Coach Paul Wiggin isn't even conToledo St. Francia J.S.O vs. ColwnbWI
forSaken Cleveland for the sunny
Mogadore
IIHHI
at
Lorain Clearvlew f.
sidering II in his preparations for the Wattenon ~1.(1 at Columbul WbetltOne
I;
1-l
west a few yearaearlier.
Dover ~1-1 va. Y011D811Gtm MooDer Nl
game. All be can see II wbat he calls
The
Browns
·are
meiimrles
o!
UborV
£oalo&lt;
.......
'
~
..
o, Akroi\'S Rubber Bowl
M at Tlfftft.
"the best defense USC has ever
Dayton Rolh IIHHI at Leb&lt;non 1(14.0
Glouate Trimble 10.0.0 va. Newark
Marion MoUey, Otto Graham, Lou
Cotl&gt;ollc •1-41 at Newarll'e While Field
had."
GI'QZ!I,
Dante Layelli, Mac Speedie
Wamn
f-2-&lt;1 vs. Clevoland
Qrvinc1on f.O.I at . Wlllllmlburg IH.O
stanford quarterback John Elway Beoedtctine
1-1·1 at Panna
~Y
and, of course, Jim Brown.
OrrviUe g..o.o at F.toria IN-0
is hot, having thrown 11 touchdown
(se&lt;OIId
""""'
and
to
be
And for the first lime since Pit·
N.,. Conconl JoiJn Glem IIHHI at Jroo.
detonnlne!l Sunday)
passes the last two weeks in Car- 1m ~I
tsbur&amp;h emerged as a power in the
early 1970s, the Browns are a team
to be reckoned with. For the first
Has Been MOVED
time in a long, lol)8 lime, they are

Browns'~

Hill, Alzado look
forward to '81 Super Bowl

Lettt;rs to editorr
Election thoughts
Dear Editor:
A couple of after election thoughts

come to mind. First pollsters are not
infallible. Not one of them anticipated the tum of events that unfolded election night. That shows
that what goes on in people's minds
is not easy to determine nor easy to
control.
. Second, Ron James' big plurality
in .this election is not a mandate for
him or the legislature to get on the
~taxes band-wagon. He seemed

to indicate in his interview on
television on election night that
something like that is planned.
Waiting till ·after election to talk
that way might be politically good
practice but a whiff of the air now
coming out of Washington bodes
caution to tax booster.
Meigs voters didn't treat tax
issues very favorably either and its
not likely increasing state taxes will
make them salaam.
Gale Price

Business world
-d onating to groups
: wASHINGTON (AP) - The
~ess world's political f~
raising groups are donating heavily
tit the power&amp;-that-be in Congress
despite challenges to some of them
11y conservative Republlc.a ns ··
espousing pro-business views.
: It may not be the philosophies of
the key Democratic leaders that impress the fund-raising business
g_roupa, however, as much as the
power they will continue to wield in
the next Congress once they are reelected.
House . Majority leader Jim
Wright, D-Texas, pointedly reminded potential contributors of that ·
political fact of life in an unusual letter to business fund-raising groups
last month.
In the letter, Wright, facing a
tough race in his nonnally safe
district, no~ the importance of his
party post and added: " I will be
cOming hack to Congress. But
anything you give to my opponent

just maltes it that much more costly

for me."
Asked about the letter, Dave Lindsey, a Wright aide, said, "Jim
Wright isn't vindictive but be does
remember who supports him and
who opposes him."
Wright, who is considered a
leading contender to eventually succeed House Speaker Thomas P.
O'Neill Jr., has receivt1&lt;1 $85,7fl
from business groups, compared to
~.950 for GOP challenger, James
E. Bradshaw, according to figures
compiled recenUy by the F.edera1
Election Commission.
Sen. Warren Magnuson, D-Wub.,
chairman of the Senate Appropriations Committee, and Rep.
Al Ulbnan, D-Ore., chainnan of the
tax-writing House Ways and Means
Committee, are two other
congressional leaders fighting for
their P'llilicallives.
They have both received considerable donations from
businesses.

Today in history_•.· •
Tooay is Friday, Nov. 7, the 312th
day of.l980. There are 54 days left in
the year.
Today's highlight in history:
. ·On Nov. 7, 1917, Nikolai Lenin
bllcame the top man in Russia when
the Bolsheviks overthrew the shortlived government of Alexander
Kerensky.
this date:
·in 1811, the Shawnee-Indians were
d8feated in the Battle of Tippecanoe

.on·

ilandiana.

· in 1885, the Canadian Pacific
Rauroad was completed.
ln 1942, the Allied invasion of Norti(Africa began in World War II.
'And in 1944, President Franklin D.
ROOsevelt was elected to an unpiecedented fourth term.

Ten years ago: four people were
arrested in connection with the kid- :
napping and death of Quebec's ,
minister oflahor, Pierre Laporte.
Five years ago: India's supreme '
court reversed Prime Minister Indira Gandhi's conviction on two elec- ·
toral offenses.
One year ago: Sen. Edward M.
Kennedy, D-Mass., announced he'd
challenge President Carter for the,
Democratic Party's presidential
nonUnation. ~
~
Today's birthdays : Singei'·
songwriter Joni Mitchell is :r1 years
old. Evangelist Billy Graham is 62.
And soprano Joan Sutherland is 54.
Thought for today! There is no
substitute for brains, but the next
best thing is silence- Anonymous.

Berry's World

"Fundamentally, we're herf3 to do a little s.creening for you."
,

•

r

•

Washington today

Election
'80:
the
also
rans
limped
I
.
WASHINGON (AP) - It was. a
bad year for the third parties, too.
Uke the Democrats, the also rans
also limped.
But both the Libertarian Party,
which thinks that government ought
to limit its role to protectin~ the
nation and fighting crime, and the
Citizens Party, which thinks corporations have too much power, said
1980 established them as pennanent
fixtures on the political landscape.
The Libertarian Party spent $3.2
million on its campaign for nominee
Ed Clark, and had hoped to finish
with "double digit" figures - at
least 10 pen;ent of the.vote.
·
Clark always told reporters he
would not win but he would get
"millions of votes." He had to settle
for about 880,000 votes, 1 percent of
the total. He went back to his job

NOW OPEN

An uproar ensued, 1111d the ·party million doors."
WednesdaY as a laWYer for the flickered into the public eye, for a
The Libertarians also managed to
Atlantic Richfield Co. in Lm
.
get
on every ballot In America- the
moment.
Angeles.
·
first
third party aince 1916 to achieve
Tbe Citizens Party represented a
Envirorunentalist · Barry Comthat.
The Citizens Party was on the
. moner, candidate of the new Citizens coalition of the remnants of the . ballots of 29 stales and ihe Diatricl of
Party, had hoped to win 5 percent of peace and environment movements. Columbia.
advocated ending "corthe vote, qualifying the Citizens Par- Commoner
The Libertarians said they elected·
porate control of the economy" and·
ty (Qr federal financing. But ComMary
Shell as mayor of Bakersfield,
moner won only about m,ooo votes. told followers Tuesday night the par- Calif, and two state legislators In
ty now must .become the rallying
He left Wednesday on a Caribbean
Alaska.
point for "progressive forces." ·
vacatiOn.
But they had hoped to finish
Both
parties
said
they
would
be
"We all thought we'd do a little
second in Alaska, behind Ronald
back
with
candidates
for
Congress
in
better, but no one I've talked to is
Reagan and ahead of Jimmy Carter,
crushed," said Citizens Party 1912. The Libertarians intend to a most unpopular figure In Alaaka.
·JIOmlnilte a candidate in every
spokesman Steve Dombrosk.
They didn't.
The Citizens Party's big moment House and Senate race- something
Clark wound up With 12 percent of
111 the campaign came when.!~. raD a the RepubllcaDI and ~.ts Alaska's vote - more tban in·
network radio commercial don'tdo.
dependent John Anderson's 7 per''Our
big
accompllslll"•nt
was
describing the campaigns of its big
cent, but 1!!88 than Jimmy Carter's ·
league competition the building local organizalio..s," said 31 percent or Ronald Reagan's ~
Libertarian spokesman Tom.
Democrats and the Republicans ·
Palmer. "We knocked on eight percent.
as " bull-."

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE.

-m

The RANDY BARLOW SHOW
Sponsored

.

President
elect to sweep out Cabinet, agencies
.
.

LOS ANGELES (AP)
President-elect Ronald Reagan's
chief of staff said today the new
Republican administration will
make a clean sweep of President
Carter's Cabinet and all appointed
agency heads In Washington.
Edwin Meese, who served as
Reagan's staff chief through the 1980
presidential campaign and also
when Reagan was governor of
California, was asked at a news
briefing whether there.would be any
holdovers from the Carter administration.
"Out of humanitarian concern for
all the time and effort they've put in
recently, we think the only decent
thirig to do is to allow them a welldeserved rest," Meese quipped.
Although it is to be expected that
most of the old- order would be
replaced in the transfer of power,
past presidents have made it a praC:
lice to keep a few holdovers for
unity's sake, particularly those who
may have .their own powerful con-

stituencies or whose jobs are regar·
ded as non-partisan.
Meese said Reagan would name
his transition team at a news con·
ference Thursday morning but that
some talks, such as those with

PHILADELPHIA (AP)- Dallas

Green, the gruff, get-the-jolHione
skipper of the world champion
Philadelphia Phillies, said Thursday
he doesn't envision a major shakeup
In 1981, .but hinted that none of the
starters' jobs is safe either.
Green, appearing at a news conference to confirm reports that he
had aigned a one-year contract to
manage ·the · National League club
next season, aald one thing was certain: "My personality is not going to
change. I'll still be the same pain In
the rear end that! am now."
Tbe 46-year-old Green was named
manager of the Pblllles In August
1979, replacing Danny Ol.ark, a mlld!118Mered man who led the club to
three division ~ps, but
never could capture a pennant.
Green's no-nonsense approaCh to
tbe game - his use of ambltiOU8
youngster~ in place of pouting
veterans, his refusal to pamper aolid
gold egos - irked some of the club's
superstars. But It got results, with
some ol the Phlllles blck~ all the
way to the World Series. ·~
"We've got a . good blend of
veterans and ldde llld we're &amp;oing to
continue that blend and we're going
to continue with the ~man theory,''
GreeR said Thursday. "I think we
have a chance to repeat it. It's that

.

in the last week of the campalgn realignment of trao1tfiiiiai
following published reports that he Republican and Democratic
·
had sought to use his job at the White loyalties.
House during the Nixon ad· · "I don't believe we experienced a
ministration for personal gain,
~
realigJiineilt last nll!ht." wtr:.
returned to the Reagan camp · thful told reporters. "However, we
bruised and cracked the Democratic
coalition" that traditionally has In-·
eluded organized labor, the South,
liberals, blacks and ethnic·
minorities. ·
Wlrthlin said that based on Ida
polllne, the electorate's Fimary Cit·
pectation "II that ~ ecomny will
Tuesday night aa the election retur- improve and we will get Inflation under control."
'
ns were pouring in.
· He was )vel1ring a Reagan staff . Reapn, who had campaigned
pin, but Meese • refused to say
against Carter's handling of the
whether he had fonnelly been retur- · economy and aplnst the notion the
ned to the personnel roster. That nation's ec:onomlc problems were
"will be clarified" at the nl!WS con- too complex to be solved, accepted
ference, Meese said.
hill victory ru.lay nl8bt by sayinR:
Richard Wlrthlin, Reagan's chief
"I aim to try llld tap that cr-t
pollster and campaign strategist, American spirit that opened up this
said the landslide for Reagan was "a completely undeveloped contlned
refem!dwn on Jimmy Carter's · from coast' to cout and made It a
leadership" and did. not signify a great nation."

Toilay's commentary
'congressional allies arid enemies,
already have begun In an effort to
map a strategy · for a smooth
changeover.
He also said there has · been no
agreement that Reagan representatives would be added to the administration task force dealing with
the hostage crtsis, but that he hopes
;orne arrangement can be worked
out.
Richard V. Allen, the senior
foreign policy ad~ who resigned

-

.

~

of almost Uo-1 11&lt;1ge over
Reagan. The Incumbent also bad a

majority among tho8e who . cited
honelity and integrity.
But six olaeven voters who cited ·
linnMM llld declalv- u lmpon.Dt cut ballOII:fEReagan. The
r.u. c.utonda
al8o had
an edp of almost
1 among thole '
who made IJ:&gt;tel'ill rjce a criterton.
And mare thaD
In flve
said their vote in part on·
their f1lellnc tbat
had ldone a
bad tobIn olflce. 1

=olen

· ileagari even did nil lll1lOIIII
groups that were .thought to be
heavily Democrltlc.
Carter WU1 the Jewllh vate, but
not by the margin~ be hid hoped for.
Be got about hllf the .ote, wllb
llelgan taking better than a third·

1/1

. j

·

"We don't need to make a lot of

.

NEW YORK (AP) - To the last;
Jimmy Carter retained his
reputation among the American
electorate as a man of honesty, Integrity and strong religiOU8 beliefs.
But he also retained a reputa~on for
indeclalvenesa and that, In the end,
helped do him in.
The A.uoclated Press-NBC News
polls of voters In 10 key lllatea. and
acrou the ·nation showed RAinald
Reagan defeated Carter n-s.y at
least In put becauae ol that intangible "leaderlblp" qaellillll tt.t
has plagued Carter througboul IU
presidency.
Voten were uked to list one or
two penonal characlerlltit'a that
were most impQrtant to them in
their choice of a candidate. Among
voters who cited deep moral and
religious beliefs, Carter had a

Pitt.sburgh proved that to
degree this season.
"If we can make a deal, a trade
that will improve us, we'll do thal
And we'D also look long and hard at
some of the kids that might be ready
to continue that pushing of vetenlns
and continue that freshness that we
need. I'm not going to let us. sink
back Into the ~falre. the

. changes. But we have to make
c1Jaaps becauae I don't,think any .

.

team'*' stay lllagn8nt Ud coutlnue

In a

I

·who could be c:ouuted on to
·blm wllb

what.

entlul"l•n

.

believing that we're the world champs and .the 25 guys I went IJ'Ith are
safe."
.
Green has made It clear that he
would prefer a job In the front office,
where he worked unW replacing
Ow'k. But be said that club owner
R!IIY Carpenter· had made him
"very happy" with the new contract.
"Naturally winning (the World
Series) put me in a situation where I
could certainly hit Ruly for a few ex·
Ira bucks," Green aald. "But I would
prefer again not to get into a .career
managing situatitin."
'
As for restoring some hannony to
the club, the 11-foot-4 Green said he
plans to reflect on the past season
over the winter, adding that lime
will help him to better understand
hill players' personalities. ·
"And I think in tum they too will
understand my personality a little
bit better. So I dm't think we'll have
the continual fr!ction that we had in
ISM. I will try to Improve. I hope '
scme players will, too."

LA'IONIA RE'lULTS

I

I EQUIPMENT

lPomeroy, 0.

co.

Ph. 992-2176

II
Hours: 8·5 Mon.· Fri .
8·12 Sat.
I
Closed Sund~y
l!ntern•tlonal
·
New Idea
I H•rvester
Equipment

.
.
~---------------

'

Dalla• Green
Back again

Ir

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FOR MEN &amp; WOMEN

And I think

Fringed

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Lined and Unlined ·

. LEATHER VESlS
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But Reapn, by vtn. ol Ida-;

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NEW sHIPMENT - JUST ARRIVED

Wilen Carter Ida bue - the Soatb, • reclllll:
wl!lcll felt ltlllf IIIIIIIC.'ted In nalloaal.
poUtlca
eolledlvely, w0Unt to iiiiPii(M1 I Dltift Mi11 htf4icJ

lUI llld U., dallirl 10 wllll r
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Ill - till
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matter·
.
'
elected 1n tm,.

!

ao

Ir--------------~
MEIGS . .
I

1111

...............
,.bw. . Tinl:
at_, lift ..............

1SHOW-8 p.m. Sat., Nov. 8,1980
ALL TICKETS WQJ. BE HONORED
1J~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiil;;;;;;;.·

FLORENCE, Ky. (AP) - Ditter
Hill, a 21·1 longshot, captured the
$1,:100 featured mile trot Thursday
night In the sixth race at Latonia and
paid $45.80, $lUI and $10,80.
Bayans Bank placed, $1UO and
$8.20, and Big Sur, third, $4.80.
True Angel combined 3-7 with
Vicky Jay in the double for $116.20
and the crowd of 1,064 bet $1119,026.

saP!Mt.

.....Uw polilkl, allo lllda bue ~
the Saulb fnm bill!!!••
... rla1
• ' till ......... . .. ,•• ,•• 1
llllllllllatlllll In . . lrll. Olli
'l'ulldaJ, a.pn carded tile
ap'"IIIIIIIMIYtlllll.
·
Nldlllllwlde, Clrtlr'a II!Ck at •·

From
Gallia Academy High School
Auditorium to Middleport High
School - S. 3rd Ave., Middleport

Seed
and Mllll"g
.
.
HEADQUARTERS
.

.almple• .

some

.
some
'

The

· Meigs.GaWa
FRATERNAL ORDER of POLICE

Phils rehire gruff Green

Carter: repu~tion of honesty, indecisiven~ss

t

ATTENTION!!

It""""""

Today's politicalround~p

"There now! Happy to be inside tor the
wtnttH.? "

-v

SUGAR RUN MILLs·
Mulberry Ave.

992-2115
.

II

Pomeroy

399 w. Main Street
992· 2164
Pomeroy, O.
The Store With" All Kinds of Stuff"
For Pets- Stables .... Large and Small Animals
Lawns· Gardens

�•
4-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport·Pomer&lt;)y, 0 ., Friday, Nov. 7, 1980

Athens UMW hears Rev. Edwards

11IE REV. Benjamin Edwards, snperlntendent, Athens
District United Methodist Chill'
cb, and Mrs. Benjamin Edwards,
honorary vice president, Athens
District, United Methodist
Womea, participate in Methodist
WoQten'sannual meeting.

The seventh annual meeting of

Athellll Dlstrici United Methodist
Women was addressed by the Rev.
Benjamin EdwardS, superintendent,
Athell!l District United Methodist
Church, and the Rev. David Frazier,
Reynoldsburg, both of whom commented on the endurance of the
church, and the importance of
facing problems with personal commitment to the mission of the church.
Mrs.. Benjamin Edwards ,
honorary vice president of the
group, introduced Mr; Frazier, was
a minister from a family of committed Christians.
The group had the foUowing four
Methodist Women's conference officers participating in the day's activities : Mrs. Billie Curfman,
Delaware, vice president; Mrs.
Harold Jeffers, Chesterhill,
christian 'Personhood coordinator ;
Mrs. John Cady, Athens, supportive
community coordinator, and Mrs.
Richard Ward, New Carlisle,
president.

t,

'

f
I

Mrs. James Lehman, Logan, g!ive
formal recognition to Mrs. Everett
Mowrey, Logan; MJ1!. Ralph Robinson, Logan; and Mrs. John Glick,
New Lexington, for years of service
to the group, and stated that a gift
for missions would be sent to the
Board of Global Missions for them.
Mrs . Everett McMahon,
president, Gallipolis, caUed for
moments of silence to he observed
for the deceased memhers. Special
mention was made of the loss of Mrs.
Roy BaUard, Nelsonville, first
president' of the group, and Mrs.
John Wickline, Rio Grande, formerly memhership chairperson.
Syracuse Asbury and Gallipolis
Grace United Methodist Church
units received recognition for ex·
ceUent participation in the Christian
reading program. During the Pledge
Service, treasurers were complimented on their giving for
missions. Mrs. Homer Matheney,
Chesterhill, led in worship, and Mrs.
James MaUett, Athellll, conducted
the offering for mission work in

Zaire.
Mrs. Raymond Willis; chairperson, nominations, presented the
foUowing slate of officers which
were approved by the group and installed for 1981, by Mrs. Richard
Ward, conference president; Mrs.
Everett McMahon, Gallipolis,
president; Mrs. James Mallett,
Athellll, vice president; Mrs. Benjamin Edwards, Athens, honorary
vice president; Mrs. Rohert McGee,
Pomeroy, secretary; Mrs. Clyde
Cottrill, · Hamden, treasurer; Mrs.
Wilbur FuUer, Logan, chairperson,
committee on nomllliltions; Mrs.
James Lehman, Logan, program
resources; Mrs. Raymond Willis,
Gallipolis, membership; and the
mission coordinators: Mrs. Homer
Matheney, Chesterhill, cbristian
personhood; Marjorie Malone,
Coolville, supportive community;
Mrs. Harry Mock, Logan, social involvement; and Mrs. Everett
Mowrey, Rockbridge, global concerns•

BUCKLEY
Mr. and Mrs. Kevin Buckley,
Route 3, Pomeroy, announce the birth of their first child, a daughter,
Michelle Dawn, Oci. 14, at Camden
Clark Memorial Hospital, Parkersburg, W.Va.
The maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Starling Massar, and
the great-grandparents are Mrs.
Leota Massar, Mrs. Eleanor Boyles.

The foUowing members of the
Riverview Garden Club enjoyed
eating out at a restaurant at Parkersburg, W. Va. recently: Mrs. Frank
Bise, Mrs. Walter Brown, Mrs. Okey
ConnoUy, Mrs. Ray Young, Mrs.
Harlis Frank, Mrs. Roy Hannum,
Mrs. Gerald Johnson, Mrs. Lyle
Balderson, Mrs. Donald Myers, Mrs.
Donald Putman, Mrs. Richard
Roberts, Mrs. Tom Spencer, Mrs.
Denver Weber, Mrs. Ernest
Whitehead and Mrs. Gene Young.
Grace was given by Mrs. ConnoUy.
A short business meting was conducted by the president, Mrs.
Whitehead.
Members were reminded to bring
gifts for the Athens Mental Health
Center patients to the November
meeting. Attractive new year books
were given to each member. A
Christmas workshop conducted by
Mrs. Gene Wilson and Mrs. BalderBOll will be the program for the
·November meeting. The next
meeting will be Nov. 20 at the home
of Mrs. Denver Weber. Hostesses
will be the Program Planning Committee. ·

Paternal grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Buckley and the paternal great-grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. John Bailey and Mrs. Ben
Buckley. Mrs. Mae Reitmire is a
great-great grandmother.
COLL1NS

Mr. and Mrs. Glenn R. Collins, Jr.,
Syracuse, are announcing the birth
of a daughter, Rebecca Lea, Oct. 13
at the Pleasant VaUey Hospital. Mr.
and Mrs. CoUins have another
daughter, Anita Gayle. Mrs. Collins
is the former Colinie Tackett of Flatwoods, Ky.

tray of evergreen Clittings to be Identified. .
Mrs. Canaday presented the
program on evergreens llling
material from Better Hlllllell and
Gardellll. She talked about the two
main groups which are needle leafed
and borad leafed, each with · color
variations. Evergn!ellll can be
teamed with bulbi, annuals and
plans for aU growing seasons. 'l1Kiee
bought with balled . roots are best,
she said, and include lmtruction.s fOI'
planting and care. .
Mrs. Eugene Alklns reported. on
the growing elf lloUy, the types, planting and care. HoUy is a popular
evergreen with few diseases and Insects 11!111 can be pruned at Christ·
mas time for special needs. ·
Gardening hillts .for November
weather such as cutting brancbes on
which bagworms bave nested,
cleaning up, mulching, fertllizlJ\g,
and trall!lplanting &lt;i bulbs "Were
given by Mrs. Carl Denison.
Next meeting will be held Nov. 24
at the home fl. Mrs. James
Nicholson. John Rice of the County
Extension Office will he the speaker.

IMtallatlon of new officers
highlighted the recent meeting of the
Rutland Garden ()lub held at the
home of Mrs. Rohert Cailaday on
Hysell Run Road.
·
llllltalled in a cermony usil)g silk
l'(lSeS in colors symbolic &lt;i their
. respective offices wire Mrs. Virgil
Atkins, president ; Mrs. Carl
Denison, vice president; Mrs. Albert
WoOdard, secretary; and Mrs. Roy
Snowden, treasurer. Mrs. Ralph
Turner conducted the instaUation
·ceremony.
Presented. at the meetin!i was the
certificate ol award won by the
Rutland Club fOI' its publicity boOk at
the state convention. A report was
given on the faU regional meeting
held recently in Gallipolis and asttended by Mrs. Denlsoin, Mrs.
James NicholsOn, Mrs. Eugene
Atkins, Mrs. Eva Robaon, Mrs.Roy
Snowden and Mrs . . Turner. Mrs.
Janet Bolin and Mrs. Unda Sue Carpenter were the demonstrators.
Owing that meeting the Rio Grande
Club was honOI'ed on its 50th 811niversary and the Gallipolis
Developmental Center's Nature
Garden Club on its :lath aliniversary.
It was noted that floral r----------~-i
arrangements for churches and
'
other meetings had been made by
Miss Ruby Diehl, Mrs. Canaday,
Mrs. Snowden, Mrs. Virgil Atkins,
"
IJHIIIf '
•
Mrs. Nicholson, Mrs. Marvin
Wilson, and Mrs. Turner during the
' THRU NOV. 13 .
past month.
Mrs. Atkins also
displayed a mum arrangement fOI'
the evening.
Walt Disney's
Mrs. Snowden, co-hostess, opened
the meeting with devotions using
~ms, "The Garden" and "TrUst
and Believe" followed by prayer.
The 14 members attending aJI!Iwered
[g]o
roU call . by naming a favorite
TE(:BNn:oa..ea• e,,. _ _,.._
evergreen. Mrs. Turner displayed a

New arrival-_,;_- Group makes
contribution

Riverview Club meets

'.

WEST omo United Methodist Women's
Officers participate in annual meeting of Athellll District Methodist Women. (Left
to righi), Mrs. Billie Curfman, Delaware, vice president; Mrs. Harold
Jeffers, Chesterhill, mission coordinator, chirstian personhood; Mrs.
John Cady, Athens, mission coordinator, supportivecorrununity; Mrs.
Richard Ward, New Carlisle, president.

Officer elec~on highlights meeting

A$50 contribution was made to the
children's prison ministry in Zaire
when the United Methodist Women
of the Asbury United Methodist
Church, Syracuse, met with Mrs.
Nancy Merrifield as hc8teas.
Mrs. Mary Cun!iiff, president,
opened the meeting with a reading
and Mrs. Margaret Eichinger gave
devotions on ThanksgiVing. A total
of 36 shutin visits were reported. ' .
Plans were made for hosting the
. charge conference to be held at the
Asbury Church with the UMW to
'have charge of arrangements. Committees were appointed. The annual
Christmas party was set for Dec. 9
at the home of Mrs. Beulah Ward
'with a $2 gift excbange. Toys are to
be taken to the party for the children
at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
The birthdsy card of the month
was send to a missionary in Espirito
.Santo, Brazil. The program by Mrs.
Mary Cundiff was entitled ''Grateful
Heart" and she was assisted in the
presentation by Mrs. Helen Teruord ·
and Mrs. Mary Lisle. A thank offering was taken.
Mrs. Opal Kloes closed the
meeting with a reading entitled
" Ain't You Ashamed of Yourself."
Refreshments were served.

~£

Soidh

FRIIATIUN
NOV 7 8 9 ·

1) Nu:•;~"':----...,-~~----...2)
Address:~,......__ _ _ _ _ __
3) Phone No,_.--.,.,.--.....,...---4) Contact Pel'liOll!l (101' emergency use

Mid-Ohio VaUey Mothers of
Twin Club will be holding a meeting
Monday night at the Wood County
Public . Library, Parkersburg, W.
Va. at7p.m.
The meeting will feature a "twin
panel" with older sets of twins
preseht to answer questions about
being twins and how it has affected
their lives.
For more infonnation !rom any
. mothers of twins in the area who are
interested In becoming a member 01'
juat attending the ..-Jng, CQnlact

Cindy Aeiker, 992-0060, or the
presid~nt, Lois McVey, at ~
'DOl.

A,,_.,.&lt;.."""""...... '- ""

.""-o•c-.
.,_ """'"

CIIW~ ... ~ .. .,....,..~ ....

· "AIIasi.Mr. Wrong."

~~
P.M.

SAT A SU~ MATIN EES ONlY 1:00 &amp; 3:.20

Church plans revival

.

llffl/lli!
.itriwii'MW

•a::aw
of...

FRIDAY &amp; MrVIIDAY SPECIAL' MIONIOHT $HOW I

A
WE AIJ. W

JUST WHAT

NEED...

~..,; CHEECH MARN""" THOMAS CHONG

USE OUR
LAY-A-WAY
PLAN
FOR
CHRISTMAS

•

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'

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_-;-:-. ~ - - -

I
j

~thabOid,dramatic look.

~~
' ~

• American Ar1 Potlery a~.~en
u Cl.. ell, Clifton , Cam·

. . :

M~a, Cowan, Dorct\ester,
onr, Plu! .Revere and otl'lera
• Pl'loenb: Bird Patltm •
F!tz huQh • Goss Clilna
• ,l.utu mn Ll!laf Pattern •
Engllah YellOw-Glued Ear·
thenware • Kltctlen Collec·
tlbles • H1lr Ornamen\1 •
Degenhart Glasa • Yellow
Ware • Pearlware • Design
Sl)ltterware • McKee Glasa
• Nanking • PlayinG Cards •
Norm.n Rockwell Items •
Tin Containers • Swanau •
Sl\l~er Items • EXPANDED
LIITINQI " Cup Platet "
Salle (listed by 'Nul
Numbers ~ • Schlegelmllctl
Porcelain incl udinp A.8 .
POland and R.S. Suh • Bot.
lin with additiOn of Col·
oone, Mineral Water. Nurs·
lng , Scen t a nd Earll
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T!lftllY MOChl 1 Pewltr •

With an easy-to-afford price.
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• Instant setting bilinguoi' Ehglishj Sponish
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• Approximate four·yeor battery life
• Wide selection of models
. • Choice of stainless steel or gold tone
• Easily ad1ustoble bracelet or matching strop

Nf'.w Hall •

•• .colledols and dealers 11Jee:
"the new 151H is the one book
ttiat does ~ Au. and does ~

Pulsar·• Quartz. Always o beat beyond.
In technology. In value.

PAT HILL FORD
New Car Specials
-

1980 MUSTANG 2 DR ..•...... ,................ '569511

••

4 cyJ.. auto~ trans., PS, WSW tires, pin stripes. List price
t6,251.00.
.

•

. .

.

-

1980 FAIRMONT FUIURA CPE. ...............SJ35(JD
4 cyl. Turbo,- gauges, auto. trans., speed -control,
AMIFM, Ghla option, tilt wheel, rear defroster, PS,
br\h'''l
lots more. List Price
TAKE /'DVANTAGE OF THE 2% TAX. BREAK WHICH
IS MATCHED BY FORD MOTOR CO. &amp; PAT HILL
FORD FORA TOTAL OF 4% SAVINGS.

·1980 FAIRMONT FUIURA ................. ;... SS59r
. 4 cyl., _auto. trans;, radio, WSW, and more. List Price
16103.00.

i91) a.IJB WI.GON 8 PASSENGER ........ '789511
E-150, 302 V-8, . auto. trans., AMIFM/Ste.reo, custom
trim, PS, t.Jtone palntand more. List price S7,651.00

1980 PINIO PONY.............................;. '4950"
:11,

'•

"

..

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Auto. trans., radio, llsnt group, ·sport wheels, tinted

.MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE

Save our RC, RC-100, Nehi, Upper fo, DiefRrte
and Dad's Root Beer bottle taps for charity.
992·Z691

305VB.4D r. 11895''
1976 CHEVY NOVA •••••••••••••••••••••
1976 DODGE ASPEN ••••••••••••••• :~:~. 1 1695
1975. CHEVY CAPRICE SlWGN ••:':·:.\~~~. 11695
Marquis, 2 door, hardtop, 11395
1975 MERCURY•••••••••••••••••••••••••
1975 DODGE DART 4 DR
' ••6cyl.,auto
1,1........power.
.. ... 11295·
-·- .
1973 CHEVY STAnONWAGON ••• ~~s~,:~:~ .. SS95
.
' 2 dr, auto., PS, PB, air 11295 .
1974 l'nllt'AD
~························••i
1974 FORD MAVERICK •••• :~:'~!~~:;:.s.; .. 11195
Automatic, power brakes, 11:
95
1971 FORD I"JD
L •••••••~~P•••••. •ipowersTeering .
lAII BUG
GoodCondition. 11495
1973 wn
••••••••••••••••••••••••••
1973 FORD LTD ••••••••••••••••••••••••• '995
1975 OLDS CUTLASS ••••••••••••••••••• '1795
1973 PINTO WAGON ••••••••••••••s:::"~-••11495
AI\1
2door,Ghia,6cyl. , alr, '2495
••••••••••• •p.s., p.b.
1975 FORD GRANnun
1976 FORD GRAN TORINO STA. WGN.••••11895
Full power, air, cruisecOfltrol, low mileage, all theexrrliS.
Goodcondltlon. 1•95
1959 FORD PICKU-p
1975 CHEVY PICKUP••••••••••••••••• ~. '2195
1974 CHEVY PICKUP••••••••••••••••••• ,'1895
1979 FORD.PICKUP•••••••••••••••••••• !4995
.

.

.•

d tement than usual .

VIRGO IAq. zs.&amp;pt ZZ) Financial and ·
material upecta are extremely encouraging
today. Something worthwhile could come into
your pouaalon, either through a member of • ' •
your immediate family or through a relaUve.
.·
LlBRA (Sept. 23-0cL !S) If you're a blt restlesa
today, thla Ls a good Ume 1.0 take a short trip to
visit someone afwhomyou'refond.. The welcome
mal will be out.

r•·---------iiiil

,.....-------------l

lfS NOT TOO
EARLY TO THINK
ABOUT

WINTER!
AND

WINTER TIRES
ARRIVING DAILY!

CHECK NOW FOR
LOW PRICES!

t~~;;~M~A;t;N;S;T;·;9Y;'J..~·;21;2;6;;~~~~~~~~~~~i

gtars, nat Pf'lte ss,I16:00.

BEST!"
99 MILL STREET

. \hlue

for eachN.toY.Astro-Graph,
Box 489, Radio City
StaUon,
10019.. Be!llll'etospecify~W.te.
SAGmARIUS (Nov. Z3-Dec:. ZU You'll not be
lost in the crowd today. Whether You seek It or
not, your peers are apt to place the mantle rl
leadership Gn your sboulders.
CAPRICORN (0... !Wau. 191 Although the

LEO IJuly ZJ-Aq. 22) You're the type- enjoys social gatherings and being around people. ,
Today you could have even more fun and ex·

American politics this year Is
feeling the force of "the new right,"
evangelical Christiallll crusading for
thought8 of others are likely t() be on trivial
political action against porthings today, you'll be th1nk1ng of ways to further
nography, drinking, abortion,
yourambitiorut and goals. Success is likely.
AQUARIUS (Jan. zt.Feb. 11) You haw the
homosexuality, inflation, and child
ability to outdl.Jtance your eompeUUon today,
abuse. One right-wing journal
but m.tud ollnvolrlnt! mwill your tactic. tum
them into rooters and :supporters.
states, "Many fear that active parPlliCFS !Feb. Ill) Challenge toclay
ticipation in politics wiU weaken the
awakeN! In you a strong drive for success, rather
than causing you to wilt. Once you set your mind
work of the church and effectiveness
to something, there 's UtUe doubt you'll succeed.
of ministers, but if Christians do not
All1&amp;11 IMareb Zl·Aorll U) Although you '"'
good at making snap dectaions, today you'll do
soon become involved in governeven better if yOu sift UJrough the !acts more
ment and work to change the directhorouahJy. Allow youraelf plenty of time.
TAUIWS (AprU ZI-Miy 10) You have the
tion of this nation,. we may lose our
ability today to find r profit in things others
right of freedom to assemble, to witoverlook, if you choose . aooly yourself. It won't
be In your oonnal chann• -,income.
ness, and to preach. Our oppootuhity
GEMINI (Maly ~1-June ...., Take advantage of
to lead men and women to Jesus, to
any opportunities today tomeetnewpeople. You
could lllBke contact with one with whom you 'll
train our children and evangelize the
have much ln conunon.
. world will be gone."
CANCER (Jaae Zl-Jaly 22) Tills ~a good clay
to complete !IOillething you 'd like to get wrapped
ReaUy? Can a corrupt govern·
up and tucked away. Luck lB In your comer, ao
tnent run by homosexuals or porstrive to close the matter now.
nographers actually stop the
progress of the gospel? Alook at the
New Testament record !jhows what singing hymns to God." Theli- ·wit- frr.=:iiffii~:iiii"ii0imt1
neu wu instrumental In the cOn- I I
happened tq t,lle clu!rch when It was
on the wrong side of a pagan govern- version· of the jailer and his family.
" ... and he was baptized at once with
•New Chevrolet
ment.
Cars &amp; Trucks
Acts 4 tells the story of Peter and aU his family." (Acts 16:33). The
•Used Cars &amp; Trucks
John getting in troubfe for preaching · pagan Phliippian politicians had
•Genuine . Chevrolet
Parts
·
the gospel in Jerusalem. "And as failed to stop the progress of the
gospel
in
their
city.
•Alignment
and
Frame
they were speaking to the people, the
So a government of communists,
Straightening
priests and the captain of the temple
pornographers,
homosexuals,
and
•Collision
Repair
and the Sadduces came upon ~em,
annoyed becallse they were teaching
child-abusers
can deny
us of
to assemble,
to witness,
the people and proclaiming in Jesus freedom
the resurrection from the dead. And and to preach. But it cannot keep
they arrested them and put them in God's word from spreading. custody until the morrow, for it was Pastor Albert Dittes, Seventh Day
already evening." (Acts 4:1-3). And Adventist Church, Pomeroy.

.

"CHEECH AND CHONG'S
NEXT MOVIE'' . 111

·{)wirtz acctiracy

Cl\lldran ·s ltama • Cork.

what the result? "But many of those
who heard the word believed; and
the number of the men came to
about five thousand." (Acts ~:4) . In
the next chapter, it states, "And
more than ever believers were added to the Lord, multitudes both of
men and women ... " (Acts5:14 ).
Once, after Paul and Silas had
cast out the demon of a slave girl in
Philippi, her owners took them
before the city magistrates and accused them of disturbing the city.
"The crowd joined in attacking
them; and the niaglstrates tore the
gannents off them and gave orders
to beat them with rods. And when
they had inflicted many blows upon
them, they threw them into prison,
charging the jailer to keep them
safely." (Acts 16:23).
Paul and Silas responded to this
inhwnan treatment by "praying and

··a95

NEW CAU:QOAIU • Whlta
Pattarnad lronllilone •
screws • Blown Three MOI(I

Friday 's Sermonette

Social
Calendar
.

JilL

CLAYIIUIIGH

.

'(

NJember I , 1180
~In the years ahead you 're likely tel be far
luckier than u.sual where your work or career is
concerned, or when it comes to making money.
SOme big opportunities could unexpectedly come
your way.
SCORPIO (Od. !4-Nov. t!~ Vou could be a bit
luckier than usual today in money or bwllness
matters. ll an insider haa a hot tip for ycu, by au
means be attentive. Romance, truel, luck,
resourcea, possible pltfalla and career for the
coming months are all d.lscussed In your ~
Graph wbieh begina with your birthday. Mall $1

16, at the Syracuse Church of the Nazarene. PastOI' James B. Kittle invites the public.

'

.,..t. Sl·
i ···

"""".

R ,.,_ ,,,
A
R ,,.. !1 .'tli•,.t ~-·(·

ASTROGRAPH

· REVIVAL - The Rev. Don Bock, evangelist from Washington C. H.,

a.m., Maxine Griffith of Bank One
will be at the Cente~ to explain new
banking procedures and will answer
any questioll!l you may bave.
Have a nice week.

. (Ill

I
8

.,..,

.,.,uo~ ,

...

will he the speaker at a revival to be beld at 7 p.m. each evening Nov. 11-

DATE:---

,.,'l.

,~\':'!

L

. By Ellen Bell
Just as a guess, I'd say the · ·
Meigs County Ubrarlan
buildings wiU tie open no more than
Sometimes writing this colwnn is five days a week, no more thari eigtt • · ·
very hard to do. This is one of those · hours a day. That would mean a
timl!ll. It feels very much lUte the fir· ma)rimum of 40 hours per week inst verse of the swan's song.
steal~ of the 56"" hours per week
AU of us. who work at your Pom~roy Library was open last
·· · ·
librilries are grateful to the many y,ear.
P"Qple who voted for the library
You already know that book·
levy. It would be nice if we could mobile service will be cut to 440 : · ;
pledge you better service for your ef- hours for the year instead of the · ·
forts, but that's · not a realistic ex- present 625 hours.
pectation.
Any speculation in addition to that
The board of trustees · will be just wouldn't be fair to you or to the
meeting on Tuesday, Nov. 28 at staff. Just as soon as the board has
noon. At that time, They should made plans, we will let you know.
Meantime, thanks to lill of you who .
know how mmany hours of service
to cut at Pomeroy Library and at voted for the levy. It's nice to know :
Middleport Ubrary, which hours that you caJ"l enough about your
should be the first to go, and when libraries to want the vecy best!
the cuts should begin.

• Meigs Senior CltiJens Center ac- Pressure C1inic, 10 a.m.-12 noon;
tivities located in the Multipurpose Games, 1-2 p.m.
SeniOI' Center on Mulberry Heights
Thursday, Nov. 13 .:.. Speaker on
in Pomeroy Is·open 9 a.m.-4:30p.m., Checking One and Two, 11:15 a.m.;
MondaythroughFriday. .
.Kltcben Band, 12:45-2 p.m.
..Monday ' 'nv. 10- Square Dance,
Friday, Nov. 14- Art Class, 9:31).
ij::I0-3 p,m.
12 noon; Pa~kersburg MaU Trip,
• Tuesday, Nov. 11.- Chorus, 12:45- Leave Center at 9:30a.m.; Bowling,
lfp.m.
1-3p.m.
Wedneaday, Nov. 12 - Social
Senior Nutrition Program, 12 noon
securtty Representative, 9:30 a.m.· to_ 2_:_45 p.m., Monday through
U:30 p.m.; Golden Buckeye Card Friday.
.
Singup, 10 a.m.-2 P•DL; Blood
Monday - Mardi Gras casserole,
parslied carrots, broccoli, brownie,
bread, butter, millt.
Tuesday- Swills ~ in tomato.
sauce,
wlflpped potatoes,
FRJI)AY
lpeasl'onions,
applesauce, brelid, but'.MEIGS REACT meeting, 7: 30'
ter,
millt.
r!Jn. Friday (tonight) at former
Wednesday- Pineapple pouches,
~or citlzellll center, East Main,
cottage
potatoes, carrot penny
Pomeroy; anyone interested inviied
salad,
rolls,
butter baked crushed
19attend.
pineapple, milk. . 1
.
Thursday - Baked spaghetti/cheese toiJpii)g, green beans,
SOUL SEEKERS
tossed salad/dressing, peach cob•
TOSING
bler, bread, butter, milk.
~Tbe Soul Seekers of Lancaster will
Friday - Ham salad sandwich,
be at the House of Prayer and
bot
baked beallll, cole slaw, stewed
Pralae, Uberty Ave., Pomeroy, for a
pnDJeS,
bread, butter, milk.
hYmn sing at 7:30p.m. Saturdsy.
Coffee, tea and a cbolce of whole
mile or buttermilk served daUy.
Please
register in advance fOI' your ,---------------------~----1
:
BOOSTERS TO MEET
lunch.
Pomeroy.
992-2161.
. The Eastern Band Boosters ·will
~at 7:30p.m. Tuesday in the
SPECIAL
'
bplld room of E88tem High School.
TO MEET TUESDAY
Parents of aU band students in high
1973 OLDS TORONADA
The Pomeroy Chamber of Com.&amp;ool, junior high and grade -merce
will meet Tuesday, Nov. 11,
Nice Car
achools are invited. Refreshments
at
noon
at
tbll
Meigs
Inn.
will be served.

FRIDAY ~hn.i THURSDAY - NOVEMBER 7 thru 13

JG062 $105

~

Special events for the week of
Noveq1ber 10 Include a blood
preiiSill'e clinic . on Wednesday,
.November 12 from 10 unW noon. On
Thursday, Novemher 13 at 11:15

· 531 JACKSON PtKE ·At.35 NORTH - Phone 446· "524

Two-tone model

PRICES
--- - . . .

SIGNEun_ _ _ _ _ -:--:-----

...

,~

Your
Libraries

y

me,

A
FORCE

JG060 $125

15

Io&lt;

, IWIOAIH MATIHEE$ ON SAT &amp; SUN
ALL SEAT$ JUST S 1.50
ADMISSION E'IEIIY TVESOAY S !.50

9 ~20

fl
A
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Apt. No. - - Zip Cadle---~

Sr. Citizen Calendar

1st WEEK! 7:00 S

8

Post Office

Name:~--------------­ RelatioMhip&gt;--PhoneNo. ~·--------------~--­
Name
Phone'-=N-=-o---------- Relatiollship&gt;--Name .
~latioll!lhiiop--PhoneNo.
I hereby a'-u""th,...orlze..,--the,-,P-ostal-..,..-Securi--ty-Al-ert Prograni in my
persons named above, and the police, if necessary, to take action to give
me aid when there Is reason to believe tbat-1 am in need of help.

CHUCK NORRIS
L£EVAN CLEEF

MATINEE SUNDAY
ISHOWAT2PM

i The

L rO"'.._,o"'i
I

ter carriers and postal workers.
They bave always more or less
provided this service on an tn:
dividual basis. We are simply for·
malizlng it Into a special outreach
Pr&lt;)8ram for the elderly.
The main purpose of this program
is to provide older persons with a
&amp;ell!le of security through daUy ob!Jilrvance and someone to summo11;
emergency help when they may be ·
unable to caU for help themselves.
Any Senior Citizen who wanla to
participate in Postal Security Alert
may do so by.filling ~ut the foUowing
application and return it to : Senior
Citizens Center, P. ·0. Box 722,
Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769.
Contact person should be
relatives, friends or neighbors. This
program is designed to help you, so
if you have any questions or problems, please feel free to caU us at
992-2i61.

POSTAL S~JTY ALERT REGISTRATION

Gold-tone model

th AN!1.9,UES

POSTAL SECURrry
ALERT REGISTRATION
Tbe ~or CltiJens Center is ui the
proceu lif providing another service
for Senior Citizens. The new service
is caUed Postal Security Alert.
Poetal Security Alert in Meigs
COunty Ia a cooperative effort of the
SeniOI' CltiJens Center and u. s.
Poltal Workers. This coordinated ef.
fOI't ln8ures that the letter carriers
!ind JIQstal workers voluntBrUy
check up on Older pel'liOns on their
routes. U th4! postal worker or letter
carrier SUSpects trouble they will
J!otlfy the Center. We will take the
necessary steps to try to handle the
problem.
AU of the postmasters in the county have been contacted and bave
agreed to be a part of Postal
Security Alert. We appreciate their
willingness to help.
This service is not new to most·let-

_.,......,...,.,~--eo. ""'

Mothers of
'
twins meet

'.

Senior Citizens 'Scenes

lhd!~~!::~~~=f

' ('01.0'\' '

Final plans fOI' Iii revival to be held
Nov. 21, 22 and 23, were made at the
recent meeting of the Martha Bible
Class of the Bradbury Church of
Christ:
Jeff Ranson will be the evangelist
and
following the Sunday service a
FRIDAY
turkey
dinner will be served in the
MEIGS COJJNTY Pomona
church
social
room. Plans were also
Grange, Rock Springs Grange haU,
made
to
host
the
next meeting of the
potluck dinner at 7 p.m. Gallia CounMeig:~
County
Churches
of Christ
ty to visit and iDstall the new
Women's Fellowship on Nov. 20 at
Pomona officers as weU as officers
7:30
p.m. The annual Christmas
of the subordinate granges.
party
was set for Dec. 21 at 6:30p.m.
SATURDAY
at
the
home of Jerry and Karen
" TilE GRIM REAPER" wiU be
Pingley.
There will be devotions and
shown at the Midway Community
a
gift
exchange.
Church, located on County Road 10,
Bill King had devotions using John ·
Langsville. Public invited, 8 p.m.
3
and
refreshments of cake, nuts, hot
Saturday.
chocolate and coffee were served by
Kathy Johnsou and Elsie Barnhart.
JOB'S DAUGHTERS
Others attending were Paul and 11a
TO MEET
-DameU, Paula HayJ1fS and Kristi,
Officers will be elected when
P'l'OMEETSMONDAY
Dale Barnhart,. Bob and Besslei
The Portland PTO will have a
BetheI 62 , International order of
King, Karen Meadows and Elisha,
Job's Daughters, meets Monday meeting Monday at 7' 30 p.m. at the Adam and Rebecca Pingley, and
night at 7:30 at the Middleport school.
NoamiKing.
Masonic Temple. AU members are ,.----'; ___________.._..__._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _-11
urged to attend.

Social Calendar

5--Tbe DallySentineJ, Middleport-Pomeroy, O., Friday, Nov. 7,11180

SIMMONS OLD-CADILLAC INC.

MEANS A GREAT DEAL FOR YOU

1978 NOVA SEDAN •••••••••••••••••••• 13695
1980 AMC ·SPIRIT CPE••••••••••••••••• '4595
1978 98 REGENCY CPE. ················'4995
1977 PONTIAC GP CPE. ••••••••••••••• '3595
1980 CHEV. MONZA CPE ••••••• !~~.... ~ '5395
1976 OI.DS CUT. BRN. CPE............. '3695

SUP.
AS IS

•......... '1495

'99500

.1975 BUICK-ESTATE WAGON
1975· ROYALE SEDAN
1975 CUT. SUP. SEDAN
1974 98 SEDAN

-;J

..... ,................ r.

NEW 1980
2-Cutl&amp; Sedans

2-Cutlass Supreme Cpes.
1-0mega
Sedan, Demo
1-98

'

BIG
SAVINGS

OLDS.- MATCHES
- OHIO STATE TAX CUT
.
BUY ANY NEW 1910-1911 MODEL
2% SALP TAX SAVINGS
2% 01.1&gt;-S MATCHING .S~VINGS
See One ol These courteous
Pete Burris, Marvin Keebaugh, George Harris

SIMMONS OLDs-cADILLAC INC.
"You'll Like Our Qualify Way of Doing Business"

992-6614 POMEROY

�G-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport·
Pomeroy, 0., Friday, Nov. 7,19110

Attend

CHURCH
NEWS

Zllf"·

EWS &amp; SOliS SOHIO

-

..............
......... .....
Complete

S.rftct

This Sunday

\

..

·~

Locust &amp; 1e1ctt S

The Background Of Integrity

TRINITY CHURCH, Rev . W, H. Perrin , . Jl't.I.U::Uu
pastor; Roy Mayer , Sunday school ~upt .
Church School , 9: 15 o.m.; worship ser vice . I 0:30a .m . Choir rehearsaL Tuesday ,
7:30 p .nl . unC.~ .. directipn of Alice Nease.
POMEROY CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE ,
There an millions. of men in !his world
whose word is tnmed-whose handshake is a
Corner Union and Mulberry, Rev. Clyde V.
Henderson , pastor. Sunday school. 9:30
bind ing contract-whost integrit)' rn:hers ac~~ P' without questiort .
a. m ., Glen McClung , sup t.; morning wor ship, 10:30 a .m .; evening service, 7:30;
INC~
We've cOme a long· way froJill the dt)$
mid -week Servic'8 , Wednesday , 7·:30 p.m .
e::-d.-&gt;c_
whe-n a strong m11n and a Sll1U1 club ... ere thJ:o
GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH ~ 326 E.
social gn~cc:s
Moin . St., Pomeroy . The Rev. Robert B.
And th i ~ grOwth in man 's l'a pal'ity for
ll.ly A: ins
Groves , rector . Sunday services at 1Q:30
integrity h a~ paral_lelcd his grQwth.in n:lig10u'
51.
Rl.
7
a.m. Holy Communion on the first Sunday
ex pression.
Ph. MS- ~ltG
of each month , and combine-d With morn Of cOO rSC'. tht fynics will po1n1 to nwn
Ing prOyer on the th ird Sunday . Morning
prayer and sermon on all other Sundoys
of the month . Church School and nurserv
(~re provided. Coffee hour in the Parish
'
Hall immediately fo llowing the service.
POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST, 212 W .
John F . Futt1, MJr.
Main 51. Ne ll Proudfoot, pastor , Bible
.
Ph. 9n-21G1
Pomeroy
sc hool , 9:30a .m .; morning worship , 10:30
a .m .: Youth meetings, 6:30p .m .; evening
worship , 7:30. Wednesday night prayer
meetiflg and Bible study , 7: 30p .m .
THE SALVATION ARMY , 115 Butternut
Ave ., Pomeroy . Envoy and Mrs. Ray Win ing, officers in charge. Sunday -holiness
W! Fill Doctors'
meeting, ·JO a.m .,' Sunday School. 10:30
Prescriptions
a .m . Sunday school leader , YPSM . Eloise
9f'H 9U
~meror
Adams . 7:30 p.'"". , salve:fion meeting .
va rious speakers and music specials .
Thursdoy- 10 a .m . to 2 p .m . ladies Home
League, all women _invited; 7:30 p.m .
prayer meeting and Bible study . Re&gt;J . Noel
Herman , teacher .
BURLIN GTON
SOUTHERN
BAPTIST
CHAPEl , Route 1, Shade . Bible sct-.ool. 7
p.m. Thursday ; wo rsMip ser&gt;Jice . B p .m .
POMEROY WESTSIDE CHURCH OF
CHRIST , 200 W. Main St .. 992 -5235. Vocal
miJsic . Sunday worsf'lip , 10 a.m .: Bible
study , 11 a .m .; worship . 6 p.m . Wednes Reuter.Sropn
day Bible study , 7 p .m.
OLD DE XTER BIBLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH .
lllSIIrance
Rev .Ralph Smith , pastor . Sunday school ,
a .m ., Mrs . Worley Francis ,
9·30
superintendent. Preaching services first &amp;
214 E. Mlin
th ird Sundays fo llowing Sunday School .
m -sno Pomeroy
GRAHAM
UNITEO
METHOO IST .
Preaching 9:30a .m . , first and second Sun days of each month ; third and fourth Sun days· each month , worsh ip ser...-ice at 7:30
p .m . wednesday evenings at 7:30. Pra yer
and Bible Study .
· Groc-.rieiSEVENTH -DAY ADVENTIST, Mu lberry
Gentral MercMndlll
Heigh ts Road , Pomeroy , Pastor , A lbert .
R•cine Mt-HSO
Dill es . Sabbath SchOol Superjntendent.
Rita Whi te . Sabbath School . Sa tu rday
afternoon at 2:00 . with Worship Service
f ollowin g of 3: 15.
RUTL A ND FIRST BAPTIST C HURCH ~
Sister Harriett Worner , Supt . Sunday
Chur ch &amp; Offi ce Supplies
School , 9:30 a.m .: morni ng worship . 10:45
GIFTS
a .m .
THE HI LAND CHAPEL, George Costa .
M iddl eport
pastor . Sun day School , 9:30a .m .: evening
worship , 7:30. Thursday evening prayer
service, 7:30p .m .
( ~- POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST , David Mann.
minister : William Watson , Sunday schoo l
supt . Sunde'( schoo l , 9:30a. m .: morning
F URNITURE &amp; HARDWARE
, wo r ship 10:30a .m.
Homelite S.ws
KERMIT' S KORNER
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST , 282 Mulberry
Pomert~ y . Ohio
Ave ., Pomero y, Rev . William R. Newman ,
pa stor ; Hershel McClure . Sunday school
superintendent . Sunday school . 9:30 o .m.:
morning worship 10:30: e...-en ing worship .
7· 00 p .m . _
M idwee k prayer ser&gt;Jice. 7:00
ship 10:30 a .m . UM YF 6 p.m . Robert
p .m .
NEW
STIVERSVILLE
COMM UNITY
MIDWAY COMMUNI TY CHURCH , Dex · Robinson , Pes tor .
Church
,
Sunday
School
service,
9:45a .m .;
RUTlAND , Church School 9:30 a .m.
ter Rd. Rd . longs...-ille. Rev . A. A .
Worsh ip service, 10:30; Evangel istic Ser Hughes . Pastor . Sunday School 10 a .m . Wo r sliip 10:30 a .m .
SALEM CENTER, Wo rship 9 a .m . Church vice , 7:30 p.m . Wednesday , Prayer
Services on Tuesday . Thursday and Sun ·
mea I .mg , 7 : 30 .
School q :4S a .m .
day , 7 :30p .m.
'
ZION CHURCH OF QIRIST , Pomeroy SYRACUSE CLUSTER
FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH , Bail ey
Harrisonville Rd. : Robert PurtelL pastor ;
Re...- . Stanl ey Merrified , Minister
Run Rood , Rev . Emmett Rowson , pas tor .
FOREST RUN : Wors hp 9 a .m . Church Bill McElroy . Sunday school supt . Sunday
Handley Dunn, supt . Sunday school. 10
school. 9:30 a .m.; morning wonhip and
a .m . Sunday evening service 7:30; Bible SchoollO a.m .
MINERSVIll-1: , Church School 9 a .m . communion , 10:30 a .m .; Sundo)l worship
teac hing , 7:30p .m . Th ursday . .
service , 7 p.m. Wednesday e\len ing
Worsh ip 10o.m .
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
ASBURY : Church School 9:50a.m. Wor- prayer mee'linganP Bible study , 7 p.m .
CHRISTIAN UNION , l awrence Manley .
ST. JOHN "LUTHERAN CHURCH , Pine
pas to r : Mrs . Ru sse ll You ng , Sun da y ship 11 a.m . Bible Study 7:30p.m . Thurs Gro...-e. The Rev . William Middlesworth,
day
.
UMW
fi
st
Tuesday
.
School Supt. Sunday School 9:30 a .m .
Pastor . Church ser vices 9:30 a.m . Sunday
SOUTHERN CLU STER
Even ing worship , 7 :30, Wed nesday prayer
School 10:30o .m .
Rev . Davi d Harris
mee ting , 7:30p .m.
BRADBURY CH URCH OF CHRIST. Jerry
.
Mark
Flynn
Rev
MI. MORI A H CHURCH OF GOD ,
Pingley , pastor . Sunday !lchool , 9:30a .m.:
Rev . Florence Smith
Raci ne- Rev. Jam es Satterfield , pa stor.
morning worship , 10:30 a .m .. Wednesd ay
Hilton Wolfe
Morning wor shi p . 9'; 45 a .m .: Sun day
e&gt;Jeni ng service , 7:30,
BETHANY,
(Dorcas
).
Worship
9:30a
.m
.
school , 10:45 a.m .; evening wors hip , 7.
A NTIQUITY BAPTIST, Re&gt;J . Earl Shuler.
Tuesda'JI , 7:30 p .m., ladies prayer Ch urch Schoo l 10:30 a .m. Bible study ,
pastor . Sunday school 9:30a.m., Church
Thu rsday , 7 :30p.m.
meeti ng: Wednesda y 7:30p.m . YPE .
CARMEL. Worship second and fourth service, 7 p .m.: you th meeting , 6
MIDDLE PORT FIRST BAPTIST , Corner
Six th and Palmer , the Rev . Mark McClung , Sundays at 10:45 a. m. Sunday School , se- p.m .Tuesdoy Bible Study , 7 p.m.
RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE,
Sunday school, 9: 15 a.m .; Randy Hayes , cond and fourth Sundays , 9:30 o . m . Wor Rev
. John A . Coffman , pas tor. Martha
ship
and
Sunday
School
ot
Sutton
United
Sunday School , superi ntendent . Oon
Rigg s, asst. sup t. Morni ng Worshi p, 10:15 Methodist Ct-.urch on first and thi rd Sun. Wolfe , Chairman ot the Boord of Christ ion
o .m . YoYih meeting , 7:30 p.m . Wednes· days . Bible study togeth&amp;r each Wednes - life . Sunday School , 9:30a.m .; morning
day , including wee to ts ~ eager beavers , day at 7:30 p .m . Family night dinner wors hip , 10:30: Sunday even ing worship,
7:30 p.m . Prayer "meeting , Wednesdqy,
together each third Th ursday at 6:30.
junio r ostroho uts , and junior and senior
APPLE GROVE , Sunday School 9:30a. m . 7,30 p.m .
high BY F: choir practice , 8:30 p.m .
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST , Don L. Walker ,
Wednesday pray er mee ting and Bibl e Worship 7:30 p.m . 1st and 3rd Sundays:
Prayer mee ting Wednesday 7:30 p .m. Pastor , Robert Smith , Sunday school
study , Wedn es day , 7:30p. m .
·
CHURCH OF CHRIST , Middleport , 5t h Fellowship supper first Saturday 6 p .m . supt.; Sunday sc hool , 9:30 o.rn. ; morn ing
worship , 10:40 a.m .: Sunday evening wor and Main , Bob Melton , minister , Scott UMW 2nd Tuesday 7:30p .m .
EAST LETART, Chruch School 9 a .fr\ . ship, 7:30 ; Wednesday evening Bible
minister . Bibl e
Saltsman , associate
School. 9:30 o. m .; morning worship , Worshi p service 10 a.m . Prayer meeting study , 7:30.
DANVILLE WESLEYAN , Rev. R. D.
10:30 a, m .: evening service , 7:30 p.m . 7:30 p.m . Wednesday . UMW second Tues Brow.n , pastor . Sunday School , 9:30a .m .;
Wednesday Bible Study and youth group day 7:30 p.m .
RACINE WESLEYAN - Sund~;~y school lO morning worship 10:45; youth service,
meetings , 7:30p .m .
a.m .; worship . 11 a .m . Choir practice, 6:4S p.m .; evening worship , 7:30 p .m .;
MIDDLEPOR T
CHURCH
OF
THE
prayer and praise, Wednesday , 7:30p .m .
·
NAZARENE . Rev. Jim Broome . pastor : Bil l Thursday , 8 p .m .
SILVER RUN FREE BAPTIST , Rev. Marvin
LETART FALLS- Worship service 9 a .m .
White , Sunday school supt. Sunday
Morkin, pastor; Steve Little Sunday school
school , 9:30a .m.; morning worsh ip, 10:30 Church Schooi iOo.m .
MORNING STAR, Worship 9;30 a .m .; supt. Sunday school , 10 a.m.; morn ing
o .m .; Sunday evangelistic meetin g. 7:00
worship , 11 a .m . Sunday evening wor p .m . Prayer meet ing, Wednesd ay , 7 p.m . Church Schoo l 10:30 a.m .
MORSE CHAPEL . Church Sc hoo l 9 ,30 ship, 7:30. Prayer meeting and Bible
UNITED PRESBYTERIAN MINISTRY OF
study , Thursday , 7:30p.m .; youth service,
MEIGS COUNTY , Dwight L. Zovitz , direc - a.m . Worship 11 a.m.
PORTLAND , Sunday School 6:30 p.m., 6 p.m. Sunday .
tor.
CHESTER CHURCH OF GOD . Rev . R. E.
Evening Worship , ?:30 p.m. Yovrh
HARRISON VILL E PRESBYTERIAN . Re, ,
Ernest StriCkl in , pastor . Sunday chu rch Meeting, Tuesday 7:30p .m. Bible Study , Robinson , pastor . Sunday school , 9:30
a.m. ; worship servica, 11 a.m.; eveni ng
school , 9:30·o .m ., Mrs . Homer lee, supt .: Thursday , 7:30p.m . .
SUTTON , Su nday Schoo l first and t hird service, 7:00: you th service , Wednesday .
morning wors hip , 10:30.
Sundays , 9:30 a . m. : wors hip, first and HO p.m.
MIDDLEPORT , Sunday sc hool . 9:30a .m ..
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH ,
Richard Vaughan , supt . Morning worship , th ird Sundays, 10:,.5 o. m. Worship and
Sunday . School at Carmel United Robert E. Musser , pastor. Sunday school ,
10,30.
Methodist Church on second and fo\lrth 9:30a.m. ; Paul Musser. supt.; morning
SYRACUSE FIRST UNITED PRESBYTERIAN
Church . Worship service 9:30a .m . Sunday Sundays. Bible stu dy together e;Och worship , 10:30; Sunday evening service ,
Wednesday , 7:30p.m . Family night dinner 7:00; mid - week service, Wednesday , 7
School 10:30 a .m . Mrs . Sampson Hall,
p.m.
together each third Thursday at 6:30 p ,m .
supt .
4
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE ,
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
RUTL AND CHURCH OF GOD . Randall
Rev , James B. Kitt le , pastor ; Norman
Rev. Ri chord W. Thomas
Bpiley , pa slor. Sunday school, 10 a .m .:
Pnnley , Sund ay School Superintendent.
Duane Sydenstricker, S.r.
Su nday worship, 11 a .m .; Chil dren 's
Sunday school 9:30a.m .; morning wor John W. Doug las
church , 11 a.m .; Sunday evening service,
ship , 10:-45 a.m .; e&gt;Jangel istic service . 7
Charles Domigon
7:30 p .m .; Wednesday evening young
JOPPA, Worship 9:00 a.m . Church p.m . Prayer and Pr aise Wednesday. 7
ladies auxi liary , 6 p .m . Wednesday family
p.m. ; youth meeting, 7 p .m .
.
SchooiiO:OO ·o .m .
worship , 7:30p.m .
EDEN UNITEO BRETHREN IN CHRIST.
CHESTER, Worsh ip 9 a.m ., Church
HAZEL COMMUN IT Y CHURCH , Near
Long Bottom , Edsel Hart , pastor , Sunday Schoo l 10 a.m . Choir Rehearsal 7 p .m ., Elden R. Bloke, pastor. Sunday School 10
a.m. ; Robert .Reed, supt.; Morning .serschool . l Oa .m .; Church . 7:30p.m .; p_tay~r Thursdays. Bible Study, Thursdays .
man, II a .m .; Sunday night ser...-Jces
7:30 p.m.
,
meeting . 7:30p.m . Thursday ,
LONG BOTTOM, Sunday School at 9,Jo Chr istian Endeavor, 7:30 p .m .: Song serMIDDLEPORT
PENTECOSTAL . Th;rd
Ave ., the Re...- . Will iam Knittel , pos1or. a.m . E&gt;Jening Worship at 7:30p.m. Thurs - vice , 8 p .m .; Preaching 8:30 p.m.
Midweek Prover me eting. Wednesday , 7
Thomas Kell y, Sunday School Supt . Sun- day Bible Study, 7:30p.m .
REEDSVILLE ' Sunday School 9,30 a .m . p.m.; Alvin Reed, loy leader.
day school , 10 a.m. Classes for all ages;
CH URCH OF JESUS CHRIST. Located ol
evening service . 7:30; Bible · study, Morning Worship 10:30a .m . Evening War Wednesday . 7:30 p .m.; youth services . . ohp 7,30 p .m. Bible Study Wednesdays al Rutland on New Lima Road. ne~et to Fares1
Acre Pork; Rev. Ray Rouse. pastor; Robert
7:30 p.m .
Friday . 7:30p.m .
ALFRED, Sunday School at 9:-45 a .m . Musser , Sunday School supf, Sunday
MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST , Corner
Ash and Plum : Rolph Butcher, pastor. Morning Worship at 11 a .m . Youth . 6:30 school, 10:30 a .m .; worship 7·30 p.m . BiSaturday evening service, 7 :30p.m .; Su n· p.m . Sunday! . Wednesday Night Prayer bla Study , Wednesday , 7 :30 p.m .i Soturdoynightproyerservice , 7:30p .m.
Meeting , 7:30p.m .
day School, 10:30 a.m .
HEMLOCI'!: GROVE CHRISTIAN , Roger
ST . PAUL, (Tuppers Plains}: Sunday
MEIGS
School 9:00 a .m . Morning Worship at · Watson, pastor; Mildred Ziegler, Sunday
COOPERATIVE PARISH
10:00a .m. Bible Study. 7:30p.m. Tuesday. schoQI supt. Morning wotship , 9:30a.m .;
METHODIST CHURCH
SOUTH BETHEL (S;lver Ridge); Sunday Sundayschool , 10:30 a .m .: e...-ening ser Richard W. Thomas . Oii-ector
Sch~l
9:00a.m . Morning Woshlp 10:00 ...-Ice, 7:30.
POMEROY CLUSTER
MT. UNION BAPTI ST. Joe Sayre. Sunday
a.m . Wednesdo)IBible Study, 7:30p.m .
Rev ~ Robert McGee
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST. OUver School Superlntonent. Sunday school ,'9,45
Re&gt;J . James Corbitt
POMEROY . Sunday School 9, 15 o .m . Swolr:t, Superintendent. Sunday school a.m.; evening worsh ip . 7:30p.m, Prayer '
mHtlng, 7:30p.m. Wednesday .
Wors hip ser...-ice 10:30 a .m . Choir rehear · 9:30evAryweek,
TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF CHRIST,
HOBS&lt;ilN CHRISTIAN UNION , Rev . Keith
sol , Wednesday , 7 p.m . Rev . Robert
Vincent
Waters, pastor:· Howard Blair Co lEblin
,
pastor
.
Sundoy
School.
9:30a.m
.;
McGee . pastor .
ENTERPRISE , Worship 9 a .m. Church Leqnord Gilmore, fi rst alder; evening ser· well , superin tendent . Sunday Scrhool, 9:30
vice , 7:30 p .m . Wednesday prayer ci.m.; morning church, 10:30 a.m .; Sunday
SchoollOo.m.
evening oervlco NO; Wednesday Bible
meeting
, 7:30p .m .
ROCK SPRINGS, Sunday School 9, 15 o.
BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF Srudy,7:30p.m.
m . Worship service, 10 a. m.
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE NAZARrNE,
FLATWOODS , Church School 10 a .m. CHRIST. Duone Worden . minister. Blbl•
Rev .. Herbert Grate. pastor. Fronk Riffle, ,
doss.
9
:30a.m.
;
morning
worship
,
10:30
Worshi p 11 a .m.
a.m .; evening worship , 6:30 p .m : supt, Sunday School. 9 :30 a .m. Worship
MIDDLEPORT CLUSTER
ttrvlce. 11 a .m . and 7:30 p.m. Prayer
Wedne1day
Bible study, 6 '30 p .m .
HEATH , Church SChool 9:30a.m . Wor mNflng. W.cfnesdov . 7:30p.m.

of Your Choice

.

This Su!lday

RIGGS USED CARS,

~

MARK t STORE
Middleport

and nations who still live by the code of tht
cave man. Must we believe that the clock of
progfC!ss has turned .. . is runnin&amp; baciCwan:17

FAITH BAPTIST Church, Moaon. mHt ot
United St"l Workers Union Hall . Railroad
Street. Mason. Pastor, Rev. Rkhard Jordan . Morning wor~hip 9:30a.m ..· Sunday
School 10:30 a .m. Prayer m"tlng
Wednosdoy , 7,30 p.m .
FOREST RUN BAPTIST ~ Rev. Nyl'
. Borden,
pastor . C:orn~lius Bunch .
superintendent. Sunday sdiool, ·9:30a .m.;
second and fourth Sundays worship ser·
·
vlce at2:30p.m.
MT. MORIAH BAPTIST - Fourth and
Main St., Middleport. Rev. Colvin Minnis ,
pastor. M rs, Etvln Bumgardner, .sup1 . Sun·
day school, 9:30a.m.; worship service,
I 0:-45a.m.
. NORTH , BETHB. . United Methodist
Church, Rev. Charles Ooml~ , pastor.
Sunday School, 9:30 a.m.; Wonhlp ~r­
vice, 10:45 a .m .; Sunday Bible Study, 7:00
p.m.; Wednesd~ prayer meeting, 7:30
p.m.
BURLINGHAM SOUTHERN BAPTI ST
CHURCH, Route I, Shade. Pastor Don
Block. AHiliated with Southern Baptls~
Convention. Sunday school , 1:30 p.m .;
Sunday worship, . 2:30 p.m . Thursday
evehlng Blble•tudy, 7 p.m .
PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY,
Rqclno ,
Route 124, William Hoback , pastor. Sun day school, 10 a.m .; Sunday evening sar ·
vice, 6:30 P·'"· Wednesday Hnlng ser·
,
vice, 7.
CARPENTER BAPTIST, ROI(.. Fr. .lond
Norris , pastor. Don Cheadle , Supt . Sun ·
day School, 9:30a .m . Morning Wor~ hip ,
10:30 a.m. Prayer Service, alternate Sun days.
NEASE SETTLEMENT FREE WILL BAPTIST ,
Donald R. Karr, Sr., pastor. Friday even ln'g service, 7 :30p.m.; Sunday school , 10
a .m .

.., ,__.....

· The! sound, the scnsibli, tht sinc:ere still
feel the strengthofGod's Bible in every hand ·
sha"ke . With their childrtn they are AndinJ
new spiri tua l opponunity and hope in thcchl.lrches t~y chtrlsh.

PIZZA SHACK
COrry CM
1261. Mlln

Art' you wlth them ? .~rr- you. too, p1.1shing
forward lhe fro ntiers tl f f~til h ?

pomtroy

MEIGS TIRE
CENTER, INC.

HElliER'S
IIMERY

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY

I

f92 -2 1M

Melfi County Brooch

. Athens CountY
Sllin&amp;S &amp; LDin

Co.

21' E. Mlin

•

I

I
I

..

P. J. PAULIY, .

ot Cot•mllus. 0 .

·~)

i·

f

Rill- SUPPLY

1

Poet's
Corner

ICMW. Mlin

m -23:11 ,.,...,...,.

~rr ;:-~ ~r;::,.;.::-;;;.!~~~

S&lt;:r"'._.., WO«IK &amp;j f'&gt;t .....,..,.., k&gt;'40 S..O.!j

•SOICS STORE

•

Dally Sentinel, MlddloporH'~rrnei'Vl', 0., Friday, Nov. 7,111111

.•

..

'

~'

'

.

..

CRASS, CR.&lt;\VEN
AND VENAL. ARE
''SUS/NESS MEN"

I •

WHO COMe INTO

CONT'ACT WIT'H
DOZENS

or:

PEOPLE· EACH

STOP TAL~I"'G AS
IP THE MU~fACH11 KID
IS A t~TTf~I~G OLD
F0591L!

TH~ MA8AZ INI1
STORY M~ Hi·s
STILL ~~AI$HT At;
A RAMROD•• AND
HIS 6U"' HAND 'S
MSTeAI&gt;YM

SO WHY
DO.,•rvou
J USreo HOM&amp;
1\.111&gt; L!AVE THE

kiD lfrtl

IF YO U'LL.

K!.ep QUIE;r
FOI&lt; A MINUTe

I'LL EXPLAIN!

P!~CE-!

APPARENT LY HE'S
IEfN LIVJN6 AT
THE- SILVE-R
DOLLAR-

EV~R~

:.. i. '

.

• f •!

''

...

'"

.... ..
•

Hallonwklt Ins. Ca.

WAID CROSS

~:·~
NEW YORK
CLOTHING HOUSE

........

•''' '

.,

. AGENT

Services

\ !

Suporlntondont . Sunday School and morn·
lng worship, 9:30 a.m . Sundoy ev.,i~
servke. 7 p.m .; Youth m"flng _Gnd Bible
otudy, Wednosdoy, 7 p.m. ·
UNITED FAITH CHURCH ~ Routo 7 on
Pomei'"Oy.. bypou. Rev . :Ro!Mrt Smith , Sr.,
pastor; Rev. James Cundiff. Ollittant
postor. Sunday School , 9:30 o.m .: mornIng wonrhlp , 10:30 a.; m.; eventng wor·
ship. 7 ,30 . WednesdaY nlghl prayor oor·
vice, 7:30 p.m. Women 's' Fellowship,
Thursday , 9,30o . m.

VlimiL 8.

TLVORD SR.
u•s.conct
......... y
m-~~~

m JDo.-.....
~·

J

~ I ,~ . ~

of Your Choice
This Sunday
FRENCH'S

SUNOCO

SERVICE
CENTERS

212W. ~in

...W'&amp;;:LL , LOOK WHO'S

'
'''•,

HERE! ITS OUR GORILLA
MAN! HELLO, ALLEY/

ASINNIIIIRED£DII!D

A

r.naer wu tneeUnc: at t'Tflltlde,

anatlendllldtom.

IDolacewulum&gt;nd wltbmarb olllln,
Wbldr IOidol t h e - be'd borne.
He -dcnmblo lad in &amp;rut agony,
Andpn,ed In the Lonl up o\ove,
'!'ben the saviour comellld l&lt;lrpve bill slna,

..

Attend The
Church of
Your Choi&lt;;e
This

"I~

,..

~
510 .. . 2nd

Pomeroy 9f2-9f62 .Middtt,Gtt tf2·M51

And IWod bbn with wnonderfallove.

He to blo leet with. joylul ahoul,
IDoheort wuoohoppy !Uldlne,
1111 face was lhinfnc .t.th Beaven'sligbt.,
"''Wu • beoulllul right to oee.

Tbelotfol'edoki~IIOOilcutuide,

1

Exchan(od !oro llllttbetwu ..,.,
Tbenhe toot blo- rrltb the- oiGod,
And proved whet Hlo power con do. ·

Own•r
PI'IOMC6141PU-l7J7

GASOUNE ALLEY

That aiDner ..-.edllolhlnll!l lilbl.
Hlllllellllod wlthoervlce ood! do,y,
No more- be tmellnpotbo olllll,
But wolb In the llnl8htnonvwwoy.
He's trultibl the&amp;lvlour and QlJ greet love,

llelievlni
Hli prqnlot .. .
A. be Jcumeyo onword In tbol folr home
"' beyond the lirllbl blue.
LAUREL CLI FF FREE . METHODIST
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH, now 'located
CHURCH , Rev . Floyd F. Shook , pastor ; on Pomeroy Pike , County Rood 25 , near
Lloyd Wright , Director of Christian Educo - f;lotwoods. Rev. Blackwood, pastor. Ser·
tion . Sunday SchC?ol , 9:30a . m. ; Morning vices on ·sunday at 10:30 a .m . and 7:30
Wors hip, 10:30 a . m .; Choir Practice , Sun - p.m . with Sunday school , 9:30a.m . Bible
day . 6:30 p . m~; Evaning Worahlp r 7: 30 study, Wedrlftday, 7'30p.m .
·
p .m . Wedn8sday Prayer and Bible Study,
INDEPENDENT HOLINESS CHURCH. INC.
1 :30p .m.
.
~ Pearl Sr .• Middleport . Re,. O 'Dell
DEXTER CHURC H OF CHRIST , Charles Manley , pastor; Arthur Barr, Sundar
Russel l, Sr . , minister; Ri ck Macomber, school superintendent. Sunday :schoo ,
supt . Sunday school, 9:30a.m .; worship 9:30 a.m.: evening worship , 7:30 p.m .
servic.e , 10:30 a .m . Bible Study, Tuesday , Prayer and praise service, Wednesday ,
7 :30p.m .
.
'
7:30p.m.
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS
RUTLAND APOSTOLIC CHURCH OF
CHRIST OF LATTER DAY SAINTS, Portland JESUS CHRIST, Elder Jomes Miller. Bible
Rodne Rood. William Roush , pastor. study, Wednesday , 7:30 p. m .; Sunday
Phyl lis Stobart, Sunday Schooi .Supt. Sun - School. lO_a.m . Sunday nlghtservice, 7:30
day Schoo l , 9:30a.m .: Morning worship , p .m .
10:30 a.m. ; Sundoy evening service 7 p .m . ·
POMEROY WESLEYAN HOLINESS ~
Wednesday evening prayer ser-....lces, 7:30 Harrisonville Rood ; Dewey King, pastor ;
p .m .
Henry Eblin , Jr .• Sunday School Supt. Sun BETHLEHEM BAPTIST, Rev. Earl Shuler, day School 9:30 a. m. ; Morning Worship
pastor. Wors hip service , 9:30 a .m . Sunday 11 a. m .; Sunday evening service, 7:30
school . 10:30 a .m. Bible Study and prayer .m .: Prayer MHtlng , Thursdo)l, 7 :30 p.in .
service Thursday , 7:30p .m .
SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF GOD ~
CARlETON CHURCH , Kingsbury Rood. Not Pentecostal. Rev. George Oiler \
Tommy
~er, Linda B.
Gory Kif)g , pastor . Sunday school , 9:30 pastor. WorshiP serviCe Sunday, 9:·45
a .m ., Rolph Carl , superintendent ; evening a.m .; Sunday sc:hool, 11 a.m .; worship Miller to Delores A. Miller, Parcels,
worship , 7:30 p.m . Prayer meeting , service, 7:30 p .m. Thuriday prayer Salisbury.
Wednesdoy, 7:30 p.m .
meeting . 7:30p .m .
Roy T. McAlllster, Nolen
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN , Tom
MT. HERMON United Brethren in Christ
Richeson , pa stor: Wallace Damewood , Church. Rev . ~Qbert -Sonders, pastor ; Oan McAlllster to Roger J. Taylor,
Sunday School Superi ntendent : Worship Will , loy leoder . ·located in Texas Com- Lucille Taylor, Lots, Pomeroy. ·
service at9 a .m. Bible School 10 a .m.
munity off CR 82. Sundby school, 9 :30
Edwin S. Cozart to Gene Roy
HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH , Sun - a .m .; Morning worship service, l0:-45
day Schoo l at 9:30a.m. ; worship services a .m .; evening preaching service second Lawrence, Beverly Lawrence, Lots·
at 10:30a. m . Pastor Rev. Theron Durham . and fourth Sundays, 7:30 p .m .; Christian II and 12, Sutton.
Thursday services at 7 p. m . with Re\1, Endeavor , finrt and third Sundays , 7:30
Richard A. Warner, Sharon K.
OkeyCart.
p.m . Wednesdoy proyer meeting and Bl·
Warner,
Grace M. Warner; George
• FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION at Bald bleotudy , 7'30p .m .
Knob , locat ed on County Rood 31. Rev .
H.
Warner
to Herald 011 and Gas
JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES, 37319 State
lawrence Gluesencomp ,· pastor: Rev . Route 124 {One mlleeost of Rutland}. Sun
Co.,IUghtofWay,Sallsbury.
Roger Willford, assi stant pa stor . do)l , Blblelec:tura 9:30a, m .; Watchtower
Donald Pigott
Henry Bahr,
Preaching services, Sunday 7:30 p.m. , study , i0:20· o. m .; Tuesday, Bible study ,
Rroye r meeting . Wednesday . 7:30p.m .. 7:30 p.m. ; Thursday , Theacrall&lt; School, · Eileen Bahr, Betty Pigott, Lorena
' Gory Gri ffith, leader. Youth groups , Sun- 7:30p.m.; Service MMting , 8:·20 p.m .
Wolfe, Parcela, OUve.
day eveing , 6:30 p'.m. with Roger and
RUTLAND FREEWILL BAPTIST Church LoreDB Wolfe to Henry Bahr, Bet· •
Violet Willford as leaders. Communion Sunday school, 10 a.m .; Sunday evening
sarvices first Sunday each month,
service, 7:30; Wednesday prayer ty Pigott, Donald Pigott, EUeen
Wfl iT fS CHAPEL . Cooi,Uie RD . Rev . Ray
m"ting, 7:30p.m.
Bahr, parcels, Olive.
Deet er , pastor . Sunday school 9:3Q a .m .;
CHURCH OF GOD of Prophecy, located
Henry Bahr, Eileen Babr, Betty
worship service, 10:30 a .m. Bible study on the 0 . J. White Rood oH highway 160.
and prayer service, Wednesday , 7 :30p.m . . Sunday School 10 a.m . Superintendent ~ott. Donald Pigott to Lorena
RUTLAND CHU RCH OF CHRIST, Brad John Loveday. Flrsr Wednosdoy night of Wolfe, Parcela, OUve.
Henderson, pastor; Herb Elliott ~ Sunday month CPMA servlcea, s~and Wedn ...
Raymond E. Wbaley, Dorothy
s'Chool supt. Sunday school, 9:30 a .m. ;
day WMB meeting, third through fifth Whaley to Raymond E. Whaley,
morning wors hip and comunion, 10:30 youth service. George CrO)IIe, pastor. ·
a .m.
Wbaley, Parcel, Bedford
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL ~ 570 Grant 51 .,
RUTLAND BIBLE METHODIST CHURCH,
Middleport; Sunday School , lOa . m .; morDeloris
J. Corbin
Amos Tillis, pastor : Donny Tillis, Sunday ning wor&amp;hlp, I 1 a . m. evening worship, 7
Corbin, Parcela, l.eblnoo ·Letart.
School Supl. Sunday School , 9,30 a .m.;
p.m . Wednosdoy ovoning Biblo oludy ond
followed by morning worship . Sunday prayer mHtlng, 7 p . m. AHIUoted with
Patricia Spencer to Jolm Marcus
evening ser-wice, 7:00 p .m . Prayer ' Southern Baptist Convention .
Fultz,
Pt. LotiiO'l,lllll, Middleport.
meeting. Wednesday . 7:00p.m.
BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHRISTRUTLAND CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE,
Danny.
Wayne ~ · Sr.,
Eu~e Underwood, pastor; Harry HenRev. Lloyd 0 . Grimm , Jr., pastor. Sunday dricks , ouporlntondonl. Sunday Khaol, Rebec.u Sue
to Ricbard 0.
school , 9:30a .m .; worship service, 10:30 9:30a.m. ; moming wonhlp, 10:30 a .m .;
Ble.lns,
Stella
Blessing,
1.4
a.m . Broadc ast live over WMPO ; young, evening worship, 7 p.m . Wedneodoy diblo
SaJ!IdNry,
people 's service , 7 p.m . Evangelistic ser- . study, 7 p .m.
. ·
vice , 7:30p .m. Wednasdo)l service, 7:30
JIIIIICII J. Proffitt, Sheriff, Nancy
JUBILEE CHRISTIAN CENTER- George's
p.m .
.
Cr. .k Rood. Rov. C. J. Lomley, P&lt;Jtlar; CUmmlnl, eta!, to Mattie Alllaon,
. FIRST SOUTHERN,BAPTJST, Corner of Se· John Fellure, ·superintendent. Church
con d and Anderson, Moton. Pastor Fronk achool. 9:30 a .m .; morning worthlp, Mlnerala, Chester.
Low1her . Sunday school, 9:;45 a.m . ; -war10:30; evening service, 7 p .m . Youth
ship service , 11 a .m . and 7:30p.m . WHkmHtlng Sunday, 6 p .m. Blblo otudy ln .
1, Bible Sludy, Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
dopth, Wodnooday , 7 p .m. Clauoo for all
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST, Miller St ..
ages . Nuraery provided for WOI'Ihip 1er·
Mason, W. Vo . Aurice Mlck, pastor, Sun - vice.
.
day Bible StudllO a .m .; Worship 11 a.m.
5T. PAUL LUTIIERAN CHURCH, Corner
and 7 p.m . Bib e Study Wednesday 7 p.m .. ol Sycamoro and Second Sb.,' Pomeroy.
Vocal music .
The Rov. William Mlddloowarlh, Poolor.
MASON ASSEMBLY OF GOO, Dudding Sunday 5choal qt 9:45 a .m. and Church
at tbe
Lone . Mason , W. V.o. Rev. Ronnie 8 , Rose. ServlcM 11 a.m.
Clurch
wu '18. ~
Pastor . Sunday School 9:-45a.m .; Morning
SACRED HEAIIT, Rov . Fot'- Paul D.
ben ~t were
Worship 11 a .m . Evenln9 Service 7:30 Wolton , potta&lt;. Phone 992-2825. Satunlay
p .m . Wadnesdoy Women s Ministriet "9 evening Mall, 7:30; Sunday Moll, I anc.'
'lben wiD be a revival at tbe
a.m . (meeting and prayer . Prayer and BI 1
10 a.m.; Cont.oolon , Saturday, 7-7' 30
ble Study 7 p .m.
p .m .
,8, Rev. Dcm Glaa! will be tbe ~
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
VICTORY BAPTIST - 525 N. 2nd St ..
CHRISTIAN UNION, The Rev , William Mllldl-'. Jomoo E. K - . pottor,
~peeker,
.
. .
Campbell, pastor. Sunday School, 9:30 S,.nday lllOfnlng ·wonhlp, 10 a.m .; . ..,.
Mr.
llld
Mn.
Wiae, Belpre
a.m.; Jome• HughM:, supt., evening let·
Mrvlce , 7; Wedne.day evening worvice. 7:3q "p.m . Wednnday evening ohlp, 7 p.m.; Vlollallon , Thursday, 6:30 •'I idld Sunday aenices at ~
prayer meeting , 7:30 p.m. Youth pray• p .m. ,
local~
service each Tuesday.
TRINITY Chrlotlan A on mblt, CooiYIIIe
.l in. Laalle.
wbo bu been
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH, l.elort, W. Gdbert s,-., paotor. s..ndot
111r
11me,
11
....._ ;.......
Va ., Rt . I , Mark lfwln, pa~tat, Wonhlp
tichaol , 9:30 a.m.; mOrning -.hlp, II
ser'oflces, 9,30 a .m .; Sunday oct-1, 11
a .m . Sufttlay _..,. - · 7;30 p.m.;
a.m .; e"enlngworshlp, 7:30p.m. T...., mlct\u1 ..: pray.r MI'Yice w.dl 11d.., , 7:30
cottaptr prayer meeting and
ttudy,
p.m.
.
.
9:30 a.m . Worship service,
MOUNT Ol1w C...........ty Olurdt,
fa.
·
7:30p.m ..
LOW.... ICO lush , potlor; Mo. Folmer, lr.

&lt;WINNIE

• ~M, I RUBHEV

Meigs
Property
Transfers

o.'ER AB SOON

AB I

1: BUPPOoE &amp;OME OF
WEVE HAD A FEW 60017 OUR COMPETIIOR&amp;
5EABON&amp;.ANDWENI7Y'8 · M16HT BE: &lt;.IEAWUS
DIVISION HAS 13EEN
... ~ESENT OJR
EXTREMELY .
5UCCE55 ...
PROFITABLE !

EVE!&lt;:Y 171?E55
DO YOU HAVE
6/.A6HEIJ...I!IO/toE. ANY~NEMIES
cur10
· 11-IAT l'OU

IT'o f4WI=ULf
THE &amp;ALON 15
MHAM~LES!

HEARD ...

.

. '

OH 1 WE NDY,

1?18/JON6!

KNONOF?

BUT 51/BOTIIGE ?'
AND WHY DID
TI&lt;EY CH005 f;

1'1115 TIME 10
STRIKE?

Lee

to

Ilorotb¥

to Dwllbt

RObinson

w.

acre,

~;:! Television
NOV. 7 , 1•80
QUl-

())STUFF
STANDING ROOII ONLY;

-"

GLEI\I AND TANYA Thiaexcltlng

pop-country muaic preaari tallon
features Glen Campbell and Tenya

Au.nda!W
Nov. 2

'V' •

~~~

u.

Bartel.,
m
Mn.llllrJCiie&amp;
--..... ......

•1e
WeclnftdaY,

·-~ ::~ .:.:: r:

8±

·•

aa the bom ·tQIIn playboy .

-·-"""-"··

'Coma' 1878 Stars: Genevieve

tM AlilnoM IMHebefofenewt of
the fletda ' MrtllftiiiZ .. IOn II IMide
pubtlc wtpee out th• fortuft. . "Of
Ewing otl'i former bualneU ae·
aoclat" IMIIIO createa.ntold
hawoowlthlnthefemlly.(Repe.t;80
mlnO.)
.

·

~NIMAL.S

.

wiLD WILD WORUI OF

Actre11 ReqHt Welch.

(jJ)

eJ~J*f

and

•
blackboard

%Z Triple this
•
~
\. ,fOra
\.

Queen ••

movie Utle

current

Tlti!A-

boum, ldtlaa reconclllallon wltf'l

.,.

zt " ... Ruler

%3 Gathers

7 According to
&amp;Hoodwink
I Unending
It Good

Catline,whO. .InUmelfthettiLong-

NICJc Buonicontland Len Da•eon _
bring you •pacial gueata, action
hlgh!Jghta

IIAm-CI!

19 Fleming and
namesakes

f Mort!

'Prldaand~'EpiiOdeM . Mr.

.,A...l:OO Cl}.PMMAOAZINE
•
()) -STORY
·
i~:~•
ffi FOOTBALL: ....,. Til! . .L

eumplu

Bennet~~w~:~~~·

I

Ytolonllly'o-r

- Ringiag' '

sDid the

•()) BIU.MOYIR8' .lOU-t

liZ. AIIC llt!WI
8;118 ()) N!WI UPDATE

...
•"

3 Ravenoila
(sl.) .
4 "lbe Bell.!l

()) I!Zie FlltDAY NIGHT ilovtt:

(fiJ DICK CAV!TT SHOW Guett:

·

!Initiate
an initiate
ZCUpid

eCIJ(JII DAUAIJ.R. 'o oofllog ol

• ())!JII cas News

by THOMAS JOSEPH
A~Ross ·
4CI October
I Laughing
diamond
oound
festival
5 Tooth
41 Remotely
substance · DOWN

•:oo ()) 100 ewe

(I) lOB N!'WHAAT SHOW
(j) FACE THE MUSIC

())

byHenriArnoldandJ?oblee

())(jj) WAU.~TWI!!KHool
loula Ruke~eer talk a with aome ol
the nltion 'a laac;Ung 11nalyllata
about the wMa financial trends.
8'58 ()) lti!WSUI'OATE

,.:NEws
()) IN 1118 LABOR

II Gumbo

olthe
- '." "\ • 4
33 Sicilian

city

%4 German

wine
!5 Do roadwork
Z7 Russian
Industrial
11111n

M Unkindly
' loot
3t Black
cuckoo
37 Allnt,

inTabosco

commentary,

•..

--,

ill AU_IN-FAMLY

())Ill). F...aYFEUD

BRIDGE

e((l
Cll i'OI'TIC
-fAC
· DOUGit
- COUimiY

.' t.

=

iJ.liiACIII!I.~IIIIII!I'OIIT

.....
•

/ID
I!ASY Gueat: Actre11
Jel'let Olynor." Hoata: ..... Downa

~;

~IIUUIIYI
-LI!5801t

and Frank • Blair.
Captioned; U S.A.)

7:30

~f

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

,,

(CioHCI·

.......,

ii!'OIID AND-

(()_

WOIIUJ .

.

HOLLYW0008CIU-

DICKCAWfT-O..or,
AoiOHIIIIIrltot fred (JwyMe,

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10:...
10:58

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7 ;58

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.FACiliE.DUfDATII

,

•m,...••-•Tna
110¥111 ~Ret•r• Of :fhe PtMI
Paftther'1875SI.,.:Petetlelere,
C h r l o l - -.

rn•TDUCII
&lt;DONt.OCA~·--1

mem.

PbiU

I'll A BIG GIRL NOW
DivOrced Diana II aurprla·ed when
httr daughter decldea to live with
her tether, but nothalfaasurprlaed

mem

e:30

Fnji.Metbodlit

local
9ircb from Nov: 12. throuch Nov.

1,.

Tucker.
())
CAROL BUAN!fT AltO
FRIENDS
&lt;I) Aac N!WS ··
&lt;I) illl ;l-2-'1 CONTACf

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

l..!:!J ~~ 5

Unscrambl&amp; these lo.ur Jumbles,
One le"er to each square, to form
tour ordinary words .

()) liZ.

-

:&amp;.&amp;oollitiiD11m~~liiiiii

Laurel Cliff

News Notes ··

Log

EVENING

&lt;D

1t lllll.\.ft ID1il

~

Rich littlt .c1 the OrMt ltretenderi' Then\trat•lmpllltl ...

IIMcktorlnotherluenltt~~Qf-*

and ,...tory with guate Oel:*ie

AerMfdi,OvdtlyMaoreeld.....,

Pno.w.av ' .

•.-nr.cc:...-.c
Dr. DoYida.-ltl~y

lftrough 111tet8lft0t'IM!IIIa u TMr
ljulk,
• .......in .._lhtr Wlldemeu, bf.

Int._-hotplng· """a'*

11:20
11:21

n.ao =~=~;::l~E-.'Ci.o.t:

.QT3
9111
tQII

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h:n•

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' Openlq load:• 7

r8CIItkM ffOM a
1
that oralhaa a•r ttMM II , ...
wooda. Part I. of a two..,.rt

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

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''

a.:.-'l'be n.l1y Sentluel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, Nov. 7, iMO

on lif'tiDg ·So~et grain ·embargo

1

-

•

'

.

.'
. ' '"

Bergland .feels· campaign. promise ·wiil ·be hard fo keep
WASHINGToN (AP) -Outgoing
Agriculture~ Bob Bergland
thinks it Will be diffic:Ult for
Preetdent-ti~ ROnald Rllagan to
keep biB campaign pledge of ending
the partial embargo on U.S. grain
shlprneilts to the Soviet Union.
ln fact, Bergland said ThurSday, it
would be "dwnb" for Reagan to do
80.

BerglaDd added uiat lifting the
grain etnbargo would be a grim

I ,

'f
•
'

'

developm,ent tor poor nations In light
of anticipated food shortages next
year.
During a post-election interview
with reportetS, Bergland also ruled
out any move by President Carter to
lift the embargo l:lefore Reagan
takes office Jan. Jl.
Reagan ll8id during the campaign
that be favored Uftlng the embargo,
and the Republican plaUorm on
which he ran also called for its end.
''I know people believe he will and
be said be will, but I don't think he
will - not without a 'quid pro quo,'
some response from the Soviet
Union,'' Bergland.
"I don't believe Mr. Reagan wiD
suspend the embargo ... because it
would be dumb," Bergland said.
"Give it (the embargOed grain) aU
away to the Russians? The Russians
need this grain and for him
(Reagan) just to unllateriaUy
suspend it and give up all that
'
-

~of

selves at 't he Ui*11fJ the Tlllrd
leverage Is jllllt b11:91Jeeivable,"
World''
countries, wlllch doo't ba~~e
Bergland said.
·I,
the
to -·"""'·- the
Carter'lnlp!N!ed tile biD oni ..,atll •_,.,.....
.._~
_.......,.
fii'IID
sal!!S abOve pnYioull1 iiegotlated
"Tile rlcb ,COIIIIlrlei will &amp;Ill aD
level8 In tetailation
lha Soviet oo.
. tbey JMd" 11'14 If ~ 11fta unccupatlon of
8nt the ac- tiOIIII Clll grain trade wUh the Soviet
tion became the tar1et Qf QliiJ1Y
groups that said the embargo was Unioo and aDows J'nlriEet forces to
do the aDocatlnll, "lJ'III!IIcatlons far
more damaglrig for ~ncan
the poorest half, of the world are
producers thanfoctheSOviet..
grim," be said.
Bergland said- tllat If (teagan
. Meanwhil
. ,e, Bergland Ia not
removes the re8trllntll from Soviet
pleued l)y the directloo he see~
purchaseS of grain wltboul gaining fann poUcy taking under ae.g
80
·COncessions on Atgbanistan, " You and
riew Congress in Wllidl
11
can ask' aD klnda of rhetOrical
Republicans w1iJ have control of the
questions. Like, 'What about
Sena.te and the I&gt;emoCralll' majority

tm;
Afs'w!"""'".

tarm

'l'lle food iJtall!p Jll'GII'III1 doel not
have enoagb II!Oney to run
''1-tMayorJune,"Berglandaald.
..
~~- _,
--·d ...........
_,.
.,..-.,u ''-'t....
... ,,.
Wilald lllllke trimrJ!1D1 the hOdllmDj) pi'OIIIIII aDe of bill top
prlarities, He aid it "bas sot to be
diiDCed IP you WOn't have 80 many
fioeelcJaderaooiL"
·
Beqlandsaldtheso-ea!led"WIC"

foOd program f&lt;ir Wlllllell, lnfanU
and .d ildnn all well is the federal

.
pointed out to kgtand that
Reapn hid laid be woulcl bike a
"personal intere•t In market
develop!lent."
tellpOIIded: ''Yeah. ...
He'D have a pet'IOII8) interest in
IIMIII&amp;tojtlhatthegralncomjlanies

~~;·~.}

resist aflnal jab at Reagan: "I don't ~~
money under
miniBtration. "

a

Reagan

.ad~,-~;:

• "-'

ldad!' •

It"'-

·~

'

Public Notice
W
PUBLIC HEARING
j'
NOTICE
RE : Federal and State

I can't imagine thai any preSident of
lhe United Sllites·lwoutd aDow the
Soviet Union to corner the world's
grain reserve,'' Bergland said.
" And that's what he (Reagan)
said be would do. He said It time after time. "
.
Bergland said bad planting conditions worldwide mean there will be
food problems next
In addition, the Soviet hal'vest this year is
falling below expectations:
" Would it make sense for Mr.
Reagan to let the Russians get their
share now ... and take care of them-

;m ~.· ~

affect today's FBr_·;~~
·- ...

PubliC NOtiCe
dlnance shall take effect
and be In force from and af·

Public Notice

ter

the

earliest

•

Transportation Act of 1978
and the .Ohio Department
of Transportation Ohio
Mass Transportation Grant

Mae Cleland
CLERK

Program.

toys in good
baby clothes.

in Bashan. One half acre
immediate
possession.

Price reduced. Phone 949·
2042.
11

the County of A!hens . The
Public

Transgortation
q_per~lor I&amp; thO! 11\0R'T I» •nd
"'"
-~• · ..,. ._,cfi
federal and state operating
assistance are be1ng sought
is . from January 1, 1981

l·&gt;&lt;•trs.

Sfreei:S.

...'."..,,
Mobile Homes
for Sale
1970 Regal mobile home, 12
x 65 with 7 x 21 expando.
992-7274 after 5 p.m .

bedroom, 11/:z baths, water
bed, new central air,

ow At
Pomeroy
Landmark

tnrougn.December 31, 1981.

3

r--------------------·----·•' !~
Curb Inflation.
Pay Cash fot"

'

t

Print one word In each
space below. each in·
lllal or group of figures
counts as a word. Count

or Write Daily Sentinel C'lassified Dept.
111 Court St., PomeroY', o., 45769

'
'eANNOUNCEMENT$

•RENTALS

I-card of Thlnkl

"-'ttouws for Rent

. . . . . . . 4·•t-MMIII Morrin

......,MOifnc•m•nh

Ct-!llllotmt

46-S,.c•tar•••
; U - W1ntttl tt Rtnt'

• ~lli"utpmln1 fer Rent

&amp;AtJC:tltl'l

1-Wantocl to Buy

14-atlslne&amp;s Tr1lltl"1

15-ScltoottlnttriiCtillll

71-TrvdllfwS•N
...,_LIVHtock

~nlty

12-MMIY Ia LDI"
StrwiCH

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

e IU!AI. ESTATE

:

.992-2342
DCMN~NG-afllDS AGENCY, INC.

'

h-v. . a•w.D.
rt-Mtttrcycltt

l~ ..omH

n-

for lltl

~utoJIIartt

IACCnMI'iel
17- AtiltO ltepalr

l»--tanM JwSa11

...

CALL 'US:

·'

e TltANSI'ORTATfON

H--lvllftift1 l•lldMit•

23. = = = = =
24.
25. _ _ _ _ __
26. _ _.:_;_ __
27 . _ _ _ _ __
28._ __,.,..._ _

6370 .

FOR ALL YOUR INSURANCE NEEDS

M-Hay
.f.:-'
. . . .&amp;..'"'"
.,,.,. ,

'D -ProffttiOMt

....

No Item too largel ,or toO
small . Check prices befoto- -.
selling. Also do appraising, : :
Osby (Ossie) Marlin. 992· ,

·ARE YOU PAYING TOO MUCH?
DO.YOU'HAVE THE COVERAGE?

61-Fir.. ·~,. .u - w...-.tttuy

n
· -' liltiiiHI

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

dollar,·or 'omplete estate(.;·~:~

SOUTHEASTERN OHIO SINCE

a FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

e P:INANCIAL .

.

G~ld, sliver or forelg~ : ·
coms or any gold or sllv~o;:,~
items. Antique furnltu tll;.
glass or china, will pay 1'11!;~

IXMNINGatiLDS
INSURANCE

I

IMIO, TV
. &amp;~aa. .tr
11-WaflfN To Do

It-

,.....Left lAc~
,._.......... WMtMI

,_ ,.....

eSERVICES

SHOOTING
Rutland
IV.... Y
pr11es
chokes

11-tfomtl ......,..,.
11-PIUmr.i. . llxCI'IINftll

W•nt-Ad Advertising
Dad lines

a-•JLU'#attftt
M-1 ttctrlcal

•

29 ·--~--'-...,....
30.
_____
.._.......~;...

31. '

32.

lltwhlpiaMuri
a 111-aiHt......_

- ·"··'""

11-11-....

.

.•

33.
95.-r--~----

'
I

12

·~ ·
Ul,

.'

us

GOLD, RUST
'

Situations Wanted

wILL do odds &amp; ends,
paneling, floor tile, ceiling
llloo.Call Fred Miller at992·
6338.

''"l"lb I1-1::l

Re'1n ode-llng,

walls,

pam:llng, ceiling~. tiles,
floors, doors, painting. 9922759.

.'

13

Insurance

IN AUTOMOBILE
SURANCE been can·
your
celled?
Lost
operator's license? Phone

&amp; ILUI! PATTERN
'

,.

Homes for Sale

BARTELS,Loan
ttm&gt;resentallve, 1100 East
St., Pomerov, Oh.
Mortgage
money
~allable. All types home

IIIli'"

ft.nanclng,

new,

old,

olt(lnanclng, and 2nd mor·
ttages. Phone 992·7000 or

.

~5732.

1

.

'

. atAUTIFUL 3 bedroom
raiiCh brick home In Baum
.ll;ddltlon. With new garage
I. ' genie door, Gas heat,
'neWly Installed central a1r,
cplldlllonlng, family room
a. stone fireplace, apj)tlances buill In, newly In·
stalled electric breaker
svstem,
attracllvel y
decorated baaement, 2
. .lhs. fully carpeted with
~I attractive drapes.
~1985-3814 or992-2571.
1' ROOM brick, 3 baths, 1'1•
,.:re; 6 rooms, 2 batlls, .1'h
~~ 6 rooms be~~tment,
blth,. 2 mobile ·hOmes; ,
A8a!fon, 3 bedroom never
1~ In, 2 bedroom, rented
2• lcres. John Sheets, 3'12
mn.. 10Uih ot Mlddleporl.
Rt. 1.

'

s'illaled ranch stvle nome
Wtftl electric heat, ~
Qllrnet, gaa •vallable on
lllree ICrta Of II'QIInd 11'1111 from Racine.
"--able prlcedo' 949·

.
I

2N6.
'

'

1973 EAGLE 12x65, 2
bedrooms, Jlh baths, total
electric, exc . cond. 993·
7473.
'

TWO BEDROOM un·
furnished house, also two
bedroom furn ished &amp; one
bedroom furnished apart·
ments. ca 11 after 6 p, m,
992-2288.
Modern home, six rooms,

bath, partially furnished .

Call Howard
949-2862
949·2160
1·22·tfc

I,4H160
10·13·1 me

::==============~E;;;~~=;;;;;;:==:::;:::~:;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;::::::;

I Ewrythl

@).
.
nQ
United States Steel
only

ALL STEEL
I

liftS

..uc. 15

vo

_

Farm Buildings

....]! m:tJ, IIMK

J

Slloc::.

"From 30x30"

SMALL

slcllnQI"

Apartment·

44

f R t
or en
3 AND 4 RM fu rnished ap·
ts. Phone 992·5434_

Furnished Rooms

PRIVATE rooms, cooking,

cable TV, $40. per week .
773-5651.
~

-:==:::;==;:=;;:_.:,___

949·2591.

MOBILE HOME
FOR SALE
2 Bedroom, 1V2 bath,
with expando. On 1 acre
land. IS min. to
Ravenswood Bridge •
Located In Eastern
School Dislict, Bank appraisal $15,000. Will sell
to highest reasonable ofw
,
fer on or befor'e Nov.

lOth. Immediate posses·
ston.
Ph. 247-3561 or843-4802

REALTY
-

' 742-2003
Broker

A LITTLE OVER AN
ACRE - With lovely
total electric, 3 bedroom
home. extra detached.
garage, Close to mines.
ONLY $39,900.00.
POMEROY - Lovely
bay window accents this
home on Union Avenue,
One floor plan with full
basement. 3 bedrooms,
living room, dining
room, kitchen and bath.
Nice Size lot 75'x170'
with garage. owner will
consider land contract.
Call
now,
Only
527,000.00. '
MIDDLEPORT - High
St. Nice yard and excellent
location .
Spacious rooms. 4
bedl'looms, 2 baths, nice
klt~hen

and breakfast
nook. Beaullful French
doors and woodwork.
Call to see this one today! I
INVESTMENT PRO·
PERTIES - We hove
several. Call for toea·,
Ilona and details.
MIDDLEPORT- Lovely 2 story home. Decor
througtH&gt;ut Is excellent.
Gas forced ·air furNtCe
with
low utilities.
Located on S. 3fd Ave.
Sri Is for So!O,OOO.OO.
2 ACRES - With 1979
Windsor home. This
home IS fumlllled and
has central afr and
stereo. The land Is nice
and flat wlfll some chain
link fence, dwarf orchard and anlmll barn. .
All for onlY $29,500.00.
CllerYII..emley,
..tnAuoc.
P-742-3171
Vllllll Nlclnaky,
Slit• A -,
Phone 7ii2·JCW2 _

cents
Vanaman

FRANKLIN Wood stove.
Used 1 year, ideal for small
home, trailer or basement
Reasonably priced. carl

basement,

block garage on approx .

2 acres. $24,900.00.
SOUTHERN DISTRICT
.Approx. 6'12 acres
with a nice 3 bedroom
house. Rec.

room

with

fireplace. sunporch, full
basement, central air.
Large

barn,

storage

building. $39.900.00.
REDUCED.!. GRAVEl.
HILL in Mlddleportl 3
bedroom home, 2 baths,
large living room with
fireplace, equipped kit·
chen,

full

basement,

large lot. Garge apart·
ment (rented) plus a
garage and workshop.
$51,500.00.
SOUTHERN DISTRICT
- 2 bedroom home with
full basement, tully
carpeted, dishwasher I~
kitchen. Forced air
heat, also woodburner.

Storage building.
$29,900.00 .
S BIG BEDROOMS!
And lots of closets In this
lovely home that shows
excellent care. Owner
financing
available .
$32,000.00. '

EASY
ON
THE
BUDGET! This home
offers s rqoms, 3
bedrooms, wUh forced
air .gas heat and at this
budget stretching price.
$19,500.00.
REALTOR
__H_e,~ry E. Cleland, Jr.
992·6191
,' - - .ASSOCIATES
Jean Trussell M9·2660
Roger &amp; Dottle Turner ·
992-5692
'
OFFICE 992-2259
1

A ·~m

NEW

LIStiNG

-

56

HOOF HOLLOW ; Horses
2

level lots on Rt. 124 near 1
Racine . Want just $5,m
for both. Ideal for house
or-trailer.

POMEROY - Good , 4
bedroom nome with
family room, dining,
modern

kitchen,

basement

r1.,::::::::::::::::::.~

little

upkeep lot near shopp·
i ng for mom and

EasytSew!

playground for the kids.
BARGAIN - 5 rooms
and bath on level lot.

Printed Pattern

Can even have a small
business under the same
roof. Has city water and
natural
gas .
Only

$11,000.
BUILDING

LOT

-

and ponies and riding
lessons.
Everything
imaginable ln horse e'q uip·
ment. BlanKets, belts,
boots, etc. EngUsh and
western. Ruth Re~ves

(614) 698 3290.

full

and

Pets tor Sale

4708

,

FRErESTIMATES

AAA"Your
Aluminum
Needs

992·5682

Are My Business"

Ph .
56

10·7-tfc
71

County

'

1980 Special Edition Trans
Am, still under warranty,
Tuesdays. Slack &amp;. tan loaded. Take over paymenKerr, tri-colored beagle, ts. 949·2793.

four

Shephards,

four

LaPradors, very pretty,
special chocolate colored,
lovable dog, if you like
choco late &amp; van illa sundaes, she' s sweet, she
barks, with a great personality. You'll love this

dog. 992-6260 .

shade

LOWERY etectnc organ,
chord &amp; rhytym section,
perfect condition. Not a
toy. $550. 992·2044 .

1s. Renovation In pr.o·
now

car

only

l f[=:=f~li~~~=

Goy a guitar with case. Like
new, $100 .00. 992·7663,

acre of land. $27,500 as
buy

cassette tape deck, 21,000
actual miles, in excellent
condition, only one owner
Great Buy I! ! Phone 992 ·

Musical
Instruments

and

62

CHIP WOOD. Poles max.

10" on largest

for your garden·. Near
ballpark and pool.
·
124 WEST - Vacant
land. 10 acres more or
less with Leading Creek

$12 p·er ton. Bundled
. S10 per ton . Delivered
to Ohio Pallet Co., Rt. 2,
Pomeroy 992·2689.

water near. Hill or bot:

tom land, which do you
prefer?
REDUCED
FOR
QUICK SALE - Large

Registered American sad ·
die bred mare, five years

old, dapple grey, excellent

sunny lot ideal for
flowers and shrubs.

English pleasure or good
brood mare . Shown ih .4-H.

&lt;;;ood 5 room home with

Phone 614-592 1963 or 592 -

central heat, storm
doors and windows.

Should be cozy with low
heal bills. Full base-

ASking $3,200.00. 992-6323
automatic, power steering,
power brakes, e)(cellent
condition . Askmg $3,400 oo.

REALTY

"Co-,;~fi;'~~A-BLE" 3 bedrooms, large living room,

also fa "lilY room, storage bldg. and Iorge garage
space. Asking $37,000. Give us your offer.
LAND FOR SALE - Close lo .town, will consider
dividing this 100 plus acres. Take all or your cnotce
of possible 3 way split,
THIS HOME has3 BR'swllh hardwood floors large
eal·ln kitchen, bulll·in ca!llnets, full ba111me~t. has
been taken good care of and waiting for new owner
toglveltequat care. S39,000.
QUIET COUNTRY HOME avallabl~ for only
$40,000. 37 plus acres. Call now, thiS one won't las!,

1979 CHEVY truck, 6 cyl., 3
speed standard, short bed,

step side, 18,000 miles, 21
m.p.g . $3,800. Like * new
condition. 949·2288.
1976 Chevy one half ton
pickup, 350 automatic,
$1.800.00. Also topper,
$20.00. 992-3611 or 992·3281.

h ll

0

71

Vans&amp;4W.D .
CHEVY VAN,

ex-

ceptional body, runs good,
ca rpeted. Price $995. firm.
Motorcycles

tras, must sell. 992·7060.
1972

Chevrolet

very

good

running con·

cellent

condition,

1979 Pontiac Sunbird . Am ·
fm radio, sunroof, ex·
cellent condition . 29 mpg,
$2,600. or best offer. 985-

3596.

htllnt Dlpt.

I WANT to trade my rusty
old postal van with 1·1,.,~..,
automatic transmission &amp;

p.s., for your rusty old com-. IIC"T,,\:&lt;::l.s~

pact car with
mileage. 742-2090.

good

1976 Ford Granada In ex·

'C

c;eltent condition, new tires,

LAND - Lots of land, located beautliul Soutllerli.
Ohio hills. Peaceful and pri ale, also mineral
rights.
·
CALL US TO BUY OR SELL
Nancy J11pen- AIIOCille
f49-H54
Or To Love M-e. . M9·ZS91

extra sharp. Must sell for
$2, 100.00. 9~9-2021 '

Dollies. , I

GENE'S
CARPET
CLEANING. Deep stream
clean puts nu-look back In
your carpet, highly recom mended, reasonable rates,

Scotchguard.

Free

estimates. Gene Smith, call

now992·6309 or 742·2211.
E)(cavating

layout. 992·7201.
DOZER work. Small jobs a
specially. Dependable ser·
vi ce. 742·2753.
84

Electrital
&amp; Refrigeration

SEWING

MACHINE
all
makes! 992:228~. The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales
Repairs,

service,

and Service. We sharpen
scissors.

ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR Sweepers,
toasters, irons, all small
appliances. Lawn mower.

Hlghwav

3825.
APPLIANCE

SERVICE:

all makes washer, dryers,
ranges , dlshwashers ,
disposals, ,water tanks. Call

Young

at

985·3561

before 9 a.m. or after 6

p.m.

to

7,000

sell.

85
General Hauling
1
AGRI -LIME spreading,
limestone

and

fill

dirt

hauling. Leo Morris, 7~2·
2455.

l,:;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;:::;;..l,.~~-----=;;;;&lt;
~

......

243 IIIII 17 St, lltw Ytrl 1ft
10011. !'riot IWIE AIJDMSS,
DP, SIZE, •• mil NUIIIU.

blue.

Kawasaki 500 cc in ex·

1ar IICII pe111m 1ar fim.Cias
linnall Md ltandlin(. Setl4 lo:

4, J
DailY Seallilet --- ---.

color

priced
Impala ," $550.00 . 949-2021.

dillon. $400.00 992-7658.

Home
1mprovements

Call94'1-2649.

miles,

ll's gomg lo be a cold wmler'
mdooiS and out' Top ofl th iS
action-lo•ing jumpsuil w1th 1ls
own lurtlelop and her f.,or,le
sweaters. Elastic snugs waist and
top-easy filling m an ·inslant
Pnnted P'altern 4708· Child's
S11e1 2, 4, 6, 8 SiZe 6 ;ump
I 5/ 8 yds 45", sh1rt 718 yd
$1.75 lar IICII jlllllm. Add 5GC

81

Ken

1978 KAWASAKI KZ 650
motorcycle,

1978 Camaro, 27,000 miles,
air shocks, keystones, F·60
white lettered radials. ex·

ser.lees

Garage on Route 1, 985- .

II -'..._, . . . II

Autos for Sale

of

Chester .

Next to State
73
1971

74

only$19,900.
ENJOY YOUR MONEY
BY BUYING ONE OF
THE ABOVE BEFORE
CHRISTMAS
AND
STAY WARM THIS
WINTER.

Real Estate- General

..0.. 11

Route 7

north

cavating work &amp; transit

1977 Ford E250 van , v-8

• • · •• .. , .,., ., .• n•••
•

mHes

J &amp; F BACKHOE SER·
VICE liscensed &amp; bonded,
septic tank lnstallallon,
water &amp; gas lines. Ex·

742·2005.

ment and garage. Now

Housing
Headquarters

Livestock

63

three

83

1978 F-250 4 x 4 super cab,
loaded. extra good condition . Phone 742-2068.

Wanted to Buy

hitch . $2400.00.

1976 Chevy Luv Pickup,

992-6011 .

basement, natural gas
furnace, and extra lot

foot, clean, self-contained,
awning, screen room, reese

four cylinder, four speed,
air conditioning, am·fm
eight track rad io, topper.

,

SYRACUSE - 5 room '
nome with bath, large •
eat·ln kitchen, large
front and back porches,

Terry Travel Trailer, 23

1979 CHEVY MONZA, still
under warranty, loaded, in·
eluding, air conditioning,
power brakes , power
steering, am ·fm stereo

mo.

Camping
Equipment

78

Society, 992-6260,
the hours of 12-7,

S7

home wiht nat. gas and
city water. Almost 1

save.

Autos for Sale

Put a cold nose In your 1970 Buick LaSa bre. 992future!! Shots, wormed 727 4 after 5 p. m

378·6369.

A 3 bedroom

gress.

10· 2~ · 1

Pets for Sale

Meigs

•New Homes - extensive remodeling
•Eiedrical work
•Roofing work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph . 99H583

pd

shots. 6 months old, white brand
new
with black ears . 667-6344 or cheaper!!

SIZES
2-11

NEW LISTING - Out of
trees.

CONSTRUCilON

Installed
&amp;
Repaired
12
years
experience

COCKAPOO dog. Had all 3110 alter 5 p.m. Just like a

Large residential lot
near sewer -l!lnd water
for your new home.
Beautiful spot with wide
· view lh Pomeroy
town with tall

ROUSH

&amp; Siding

Kloes. 992-3014.

Phone
1-(614)·992·3325

POMEROY,O.
992·2259

a bale . Nate
Rutland . 742·

2761.

_ 216 E. Second Street

full

new .

Reese hitch &amp; hay for sale.
75

Tv~~~~.~~~.~~

chen, woodburner stove
to supplement forced air,

992·3457.

$1,500.00 992·7354 evenings.

Headquarters

siding, on 50'x200' lot.
$26,900.00.
..
NEW LISTING
!iASTERN DISTRICT
- · Ranch house with 2
bedrooms, equipped kit-

Kenmore

One 8,000 gallon under
ground fuel storage tank.

Housing

dleport. N1ct kitchen,
basement, aluminum

duty

Home Park, Cheshire, Oh.

9n3954.
Real Estate- General

NEW LI,STING - Lots
of room in this 3 4
bedroom house fn Mid·

Heavy

washer &amp; dryer Like

6
4~-21SPI!!a~c'!e..!!fo!!!r:..!R~en!!!!t
__
TRAILER spaces for rent.
Southern V,alley Mobile

On Racine Bashan Road.

heat,

George s'.''Hobstetter Jr.\

9eWn room double -In·

~

1960 MODEL 10&gt;&lt;50 Mobile
Home. Partially furnished
&amp; set up at local , trailor
court. Phone 992·3857. -

reading

~2143.

»-Antlq•••
M-Misc. Mtrellandlll
H-lutldinel..,...ill
u--....tt for Salt

11-Sihlltwd~•nted

client , assessment
&amp;
tra .l nlng
programs,

,,~ ,, 11

$1-Housetlcllel 000111
n--clj TV, RICIIO l!ql.llpm.nt

11-lntvr•ncl

18. = = = =
19.
20.
21 . _ _ _ _ __
22. _ _ _ _ __

'•'

Individualized

Champion mobile home, 12
x 60 two bedroom, nas been
remodeled. Mostly fur·
nlshed. $5,500.00 . 992-3281
or992-3611.

-------'-".

•MERCHANDISE

e EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

'

Red, &amp;

Golden Delicious. Now
selling at $4.00 &amp; up per
buschel. Flllpatrlctc Or.· LOST: Dinner bucket &amp;
chards, State Route 689. stainless steel thermos con·
lalnlng valuable &amp; . senPhone 669·3~ .
timental papers &amp; pictures.
Also c9nfalned one pair of
new safely glasses. Lost in
the vlc(nlty Of the trash
dumPSters on Route r &amp;
124. Reward. No questions
alked. Call992·3407.

.......... .

1-111 MM!ert.m

ll- lhiPWI"'-

17. _ _ _,...;.._ _

Romes, Grimes,

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

Houses for Rent

1978 12x65 Bayview mobile
home, 2 bedrooms, located
near Southern Ohio coal
mines, $6,500. 992·7667.

etc. Compl~le. households ,
Write M. D. Miller, Rl. ""'-"'
~ q~
Pome ro y, OH1 or call 992:
,
7760 .
' l , ... 'i

Apples &amp;, Sweet Cider:

._,Vtflehll

include discount

..

o!d furniture, desks, gQJd!.~
nngs, Jewelry, silve-rn1•
~ollars, sterling, etc., wOOd·:·;
1ce boxes, jars antlques_J, _

PHONE 992-2156

I

7-Yanlhlt

You~ I get better results ,--+~1c~~~!j!!!!!.!

1.1 1'1.1

Wanted to Buy

Include

progr•'Tis would be helpful.
Submit resumes by
November 18, to David
Gloeckner, CETA Director,
Gallla·Melgs C.A.A. Box
272, Cheshire, Ohio 45620.
For . further Information
call (614) 367-73~2 or 992·
6629, M·F.

---------"flf''~ ~

9

developing

remedi •a l

Yard Sale, Tnursdayj
Friday, Saturday. Not.;.;
responsible for any ac· ~ ~-,

inside. ·

Responsibilities

working with tlje Adult
Basic Education system, &amp;
area community colleges
to develop training opportunities.
Applicants
must possess a valid State
of Ohio teaching certificate
for ' full lime position .
· Ability to establish

:~ ''
I .I~~'
Novem",. ~

IROI'I AND BRASS BEDS)"'

6-Lost 1ild 'ound

These cash rates

·, '·'

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

'

WANT AD INFORMATION

,t---C.li'IHWy
S-H•pp,Ads

give price. The Sentinel
reserves the right to
, classify, edit or reject
any ad . Your ad will be
put In tne proper
claslflcation If you' 11
check the proper box
below

I

Salisbury School. Will be• c

Phon•·~-----------

If you describe fully,

The Gallla·Meigs CAA
CETA Program Is ac·
cepllng applications for full
&amp; part·lime positions of
Edocatlon Specialist.

cidents. First house on Ctx;.J J
Rd.
25 · across from~ ,

I
I
I
I
Write your own ad and order by ma il with this I
coupon. Cancel your ad by phone when you get I
results. Money not refundable.
I
I
Name ,- - - - - - - - - - - II
Aclclreu_____•_ _ __ I

name and address or
phone number if used . Words

Babysitter needed In my
horne. Call after 6 p.m. 99262~ .

ber 4-8 at 128 one half Mjll •

..

,c arpel.
1970 PMC,
12 x 60, two bedrooms, new
carpet. B x s Sales, Inc.,
2nd x Viand Street, Point
Pleasant, wv Phone 675·

367-0~12.

Street in Middleport..., ~tl
Above Spencer's Market. " ':·
Color TV, air cohditione,;-~~h1 ..
ladies
jeans,
infant(s, ~
clothing, toys galore, muc~ ~, ,
more.
· r ~o~ ·

SHOOTING. MATCH at
corn· Hollow . in Rutland.
Every Sungay starting at
noon.
Proceeds being
donated to the Boy scout
Troop 2~9. 12 gauge factory
choke gun only!

c~;r~~~)~~i~:~1~j~:~·:r~~:;~

Classlfleds and
Savell I

Announcements

Indoor yard sale,

FREE ESTI/11\A ' '-Call Tom Hask

::;::::::=;::=.==

bedrooms, bath &amp; 1/3, new

' Included.
Owner moved out of state.
$7,500. firm. 992-5893 8:305:00 after 5:00 992-2271 or

~==~~iiii=::=j'"'
,,1,..

All work guaranteed.

1972 Champion, 12x 60, two deposit required. Inquire at
bedrooms, new carpet. 1976 324 Beech Street, - Mid·
Cameron, 12 x 60, two
bedrooms, all electric. 197ld;l;e:p:or: t:.
Skyline, 12 x 65, two

wasn_er · dry~r

1,t·l" ,..

Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices

10·9-

1

Three bedroom trailer fur·
nished, large expando on
living room . Immediate oc·
cupancy, references &amp;

45

· 1971 HDME'rTE furnished
mobile home . 56x12, 2

chain. 992·5325.

Y~rd Sale

1973 Crown HaVen, l4 x 65,
three bedrooms, new car·
pet. 1971 Cameron, 14 x 6.4,
two bedrooms, new carpet.

All types of remodeling,
inside and out.

Evenings &amp; Weekends

Prices. Excelsior Co. 614· · •1110992·2205.
~·
Firewood tor sale. 992·5449.

cleaning and painting ..

Ph. 614·949·2358

2. Buy now at summer

ti:32~~iM~o~b~il~eiH~o~m~e~s~~t4;2:::::;M;:;;ob~i~le~H;o~m:e:s::::1
for Sale
for Rent

41

FOUI'ID . Dog. Resemble~c ..
St. Bernard, , red with ,~ ,,
while feet, male, on a' -

7.

see
you from the Audubon Society!"

new or repair gutters

and downspouts, gutter

20 Years Experic:,
All types roofing worK,
New &amp;' Repair.

anything!"

HEATING otL. No. ' &amp; No . . _

are here to

All types of roof work,

992·5914,
or 1·304·882
~~2~·~i~i~~~n 3J29,
Furnished
apartments,
9922566.

'

Aline
9A9-,2666
&amp; for
Cathie
apFIHII &amp; Vine
Racine. Ohio.

"COlonel, some

' Shop

H. L WHITESEL
ROOFING

44 4

foster homes will be paid $8.15 per day per youth . If
Interested coll696-1240 (collect I or write•

on all dresses, pant

S108,55~

3, acres, 6 room frame
house, 2 baths, l'h miles
South of Reedsville, Oh. on
S.R. 124. lSVEU miles nor·
tn of Forked Run Lake. 378·
636:).

OHIO YOUTH .ADVOCATE PROGRAM
P.O. Box 367 I
Athens,
Ohio 45701
•

The location 'of the service
area of the project are the
c oun ti es
of
A t hens ,
Hocking, Perry Meigs anQ
. Vinton. Esti mated nP. t rn~t

Help Wonted

We •re looking for slr'lgle or married adults who
have love. and who can provide acceptance, support
and supervision. Tr•ining will •be provided . All

Weaver'.s Dress &amp;
Beauty Shop, Curly perms,
$10.00 &amp; up, Monday,
Tuesday, Wednesday until
Thanksgiving. One-third

Attractive nome In Mid·
dleport, five bedrooms. two
baths, rental apartment
over double garage. Good
location . 742·2095.
Attractive two story home

FOR YOUTH AGED 10-18

'

767 3167 or 557-3411.
54
Misc. Merchanise

cir ·

'

Commissioners' Offi ce, for
the purpose of consider ing
a project for whi ch Federa·l
and State
oJ;~ erat i ng
assistance under Section 18
1 of the surface T r an ·
I sportation Act of 1978 and
· the Oh 10 Department of
Transportation is bet.ng
sought generally described
as follows: The applicant is

( ) For Sale
( ) Announcement
( ) For Rent

windows. on large lot. carport 't&amp; garage. Price
reduced to $12,500. 742- 307~.

FOSTER HOMES NEEDED

tllJ 7, 14, 2tc .

Notice is hereby given

guns, .qocket watches and
coin collections. Ca ll 614·

Print

Shirts &amp; HatSS4.00 &amp; U.P
Special School Rates
"We print ALI\IOST
anything on ALMOST

Nothing too large. Also,

in Rutland. Three bedroom'
with c:entral heat, storm

VALLEY
_ROOFING &amp;
E MAINTENA
.SERVICE

IRdiVIcfUals,

pay cash or certified check
for antiques and collec·
t ibles or entire estates.

Older home on Long Slrff!l

' ,, ...
'"

that a Public Hearing will
be he ld by the County of
Athens on November 24,
1980 at 7:00 p.m .. County

basement, dtlltiulldlng. Has

custom

T ~ ~hirts and novelty
Sh•rts for POliticians,
~al! ~earns, bus1ness or

53
Antiques
ATTENTION :
( IM ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will

enclosed ,

b@en remodeled. On corner

··
I i --~---~~--..
Announcements~
......

' \';harl~s Pyles
MAYOR

one

,,._,,, ,

They'll Do It Every Time

period

DOORS, fully insulated ex·
doors,, also new in·
tenor doors, a 11 types of
molding . 992-6173.

House &amp; lot for sale, eight
room &amp; bath, with fireplace
In fa'mily room. Two por·

ches,

ft

Household Goods

ter~or

9~9- 2778 .

~1119dbQeims."
Durinl a ~te inter'flew with
farm broedcasters, BerglaJid even

allowed by law.
Passed this 3rd day of
November, 1980.

51

of Main &amp; Tyree in Racine.'

semce,

year.

as added by the Surface

&lt; I Wanted

COINS, pocket watclass rings, W@ddtng
diamonds. Gold or
Call J . A. Wamsley,
. Treasure Chest
tohi-SI!oo. Athens, OH , 592·

balal'cing

operatinQ assistance under
Se~tion 18 _ o]__ t_he Ur:_ban
Mass Transportation Act

' iS $250,387 92, With

~1\..
.,,,,~

Convictions won l :,,;,:

Small investment, ·large returns, Sentinel Want Ads
I

Beautiful private location.
Eight room house on SR 7
near Memory Gardens .
Two &amp; one hal'f acres. 985·
3934.

think tllllt I can go home and make ' ::;.

WASHINGTON (AP) - The civil:~··~
rights conviction of two former FBI · · ~~••
~ the Carter llllmilllitrBUoo wiJI.
officials who ordered warrantless :,.'-4'
\Iii ~ lHraland lllid, no long- .._ted tllat Reagan IDlY cut ~ =~~ ininthe search for left..wing :~;~
ranp decllkni will ~made at'the Ml!lc!ulture Dl!partment'a $19.5
·~"' the early 1970s may ·
intheHOIIIIew!Dbecut11y33v~. · ~Department. .
. biiiica~~uqetbyf&amp;bllliaii.
haveUttleeffectontOday'sFBI.
: ., ...
Bergland, former congre8BIJI8II
We ate not committing ·
PriJ..c1
later oo bow be arrived at Edwal'\1 S. ~er, convicted Thlll'- ..,, '"
8
from MinDesota said the Reagan . Prestdent-elec:t Reapn to any spen- lbe flc\lre. , Berglalid laid, it wils lday a!~ With W. Mark Felt, said admlniBttation ~bly wiD be slow din&amp; decllll01111 at aD;" BerglaJid bUild 011 Reagan JII"'PPOIIIIB fOr a 10 the decision will not hann the FBI, u :: ~;
tomoveonanewfarmbill
said
, ·
·
pen:enttu:.cut,a5percentincrease which he called still a " great atid ~·,~~~
"I e;Iilect the ·Jteagan PeoPle wiD
"We're~ every spending in de(enile spendln&amp; 'and a balanced grand organization. "
-•
extend the current program for 8 decision," including 1181 crop SUP' ~~in 11111.
:
An FBI s~k~srnan ~id agents
year, until they get time to get them- port rates and target pt'kes, the llel•
He s got this magic of
now have SJI!!CiflC guldelmes in such
selves organized," Bergland said.
. tlng ot Interest rates on Fartner$ the bUdget, cutting apendlng and in- cases.
But he has more definite ideas Home Administration loans and' crellllng opending for natiO!J&amp;\ Felt and Miller, who rose through · ·
about the food-st!unp program, "ariythingthatcommltsmoney."
~."Berg!andsaid. "I have no the ranks under the late J. Edgar '·'
Berg~decllnedtoofferwbatbe ulellbowthey'regojngloJllllll88eaD Hoover, .were the highest-ranking . ·:.;•
especially since conservative Sen.
Jesse Helms, R·N.C., appears eel' . thought mi&amp;ht be the speclflca of the tllla.''
. ·
,
FBI officials ever to be convicted of ,, ""·
lain to become chairman of the Reagan farm pr'Otll'alll, beyond i&amp;
FipaJiy, Bergland said that,! now a crime. The U.S. District Court jury ; ":
Senate Agriculture Committee.
dicating it will InvOlve leug~ tharlie Is leaving public
be f?URd them .~ty of conspiracy to . ··~·
"KnoWing Mr. Helms and 'c on. ~ spendlllg and less government ~ ~ filld·a job that wiD .Uow Viola~ the Civil rights of friends and ' u·
servatfve membeni of that SeDate ~~t in various areas of far._ him 'tii lltay lit W'asbington.
· • rellitives of members of the radical "" '
Whinutildiftllatmeanthedidn't Weather .Underground by approving ··: ;
Agriculture Committee, the food nungiiJIIImarketlnll.
stamp program is 1n big trouble " he .
For ~le, Bergland said, "my think be Could make a decent Uvillg illegal le&amp;rChes at their homes in
said.
'
gu~ is· that government will be on his Minnel!Ota farm, he colildn't 1972 and 11173.
', ·.~ .

Poland?"'
,
"When eonf~ with the flicts 1
that the RUSSians bal!'l! the world's
largest reserve of gold and that the
crop conilitions ID the world don' t
look very attraetive ai the mainent,

ICbeailuachprogru~alaomayllave
• bard time In lbe -~·

mudllesuetive in m.rbt developadministration of·
fldaia will leave that to the grain
..• and '' pei'IIOils 'of that
nompan-

ment." Relpn

. Business Services

., ,.,

-

I r ·----"'

'"

�I
U~The.Daily
Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Nov. 7, 1980
..

Iraqi doctors try to save .
life of Iranian oil leader

First maneuvers
begin next week
WASHINGTON (AP) ,.- The first the maneuvers.
maneuvers of tile United States' new
Pentagon officials say they are
Rapid De!&gt;lt..flllent )orce are to puzzled about Egyptian reasons for
. begin next week, but Egypt, site of requiring the blackout because
the exercise, has insiSted on a news Defense Minister Ahmed BadaWY
bJl!ckout of the operation.
gave details of the impending exer·
American officials say they 're cise last month in an official Middle
puzzled.
East News Agency dispatch.
The first 9f about 1,400 soldiers
However , the officials
plus ainnen and eight A-7 ground at- acknowledged the Egyptian action
tack planes are to arrive in Egypt . could reflect some concern about
. Monday. The overall movement highlighting the presence of U.S. ·
from the United States will continue troops at a time when Arab colinuntil Wednesday. .
tries are split over the Iran-Iraq
The Army ·troops will then move war.
Although the deployment · of
from the Cairo West Airport into the
Egyptian desert for 10 days of elements of · the 101st Airmobile
maneuvers, beginning Nov. 15. ·
Division from Fort Campbell, Ky.,
The Pentagon was expected today · to Egypt is the first U.S. action of its
to announce the operation, which kind in the Middle East in more than
will be the first test of the unit
20 years, senior military officerS are
designed to be dispatched rapidly U: cautioning against regarding this as
case of.a crisis.
a demOIJ!itration of any U.S. ability
But Afllerican officials who asked ·, to project major forces and their
not to be identified said Egyptian equipment over thousands of miles
authorities have baiTed a0y on-the- from the United States to the Middle
spot news coverage of the arrival or East.

I'UBUSIIER DIES - J. KeUy
Sisk, pui!Usher of The Greenville

News and the Greenville Pledmont and chairman of the board
of Mu!Umedta, Inc., died Thursday. He was 67. CAP Laserphoto).

BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) ~ Iraqi
doct~rs are fighting to save the life
of Iran's captured oil minister, who
suffeted a "massive hemorrhage
cause!~ by serious wounds"
sustained at the Abadan battlefront,
· the Iraqi press said. .
It was the first report that ~year­
old Mohammad Jawad ·Baguir
Tonguyan was wounded when he
was ,captured a week ago, ;md ·Wa's
surprising since he seemed to be in .
good health when European TV net- .
works filmed bini in captivity.
There was no ihunediate eli:·
planation for the apparent mystery.
Iran has demanded his release,
citing "all international norms and
treaties," but Ir11q refuses on grounds he and others captured with hirn
are "prisoners of war."

Reagan

Iraq said its tank-led infantry,
backed by roeket-firing helicopter
gunships, killed 60 Iranians and suf·
.fered 21 ~cl in "noose-tightening"
operations !!round .\badan 8$ the
war entered its 47th day today.
.
. Tehran Radio conceded heavy
fighting raged in the eastern districts of . Abadan. after. Iraqi troops
crossed the Bahmanshir River into
Iran's besieged refinery city on the
northernfringesofthePersianGulf.
But the broadCast said Iranian forees were holding out and that they
retaliated ThUrsday in a fierce bat·'
tie along the Abadan-Mahsbahr
highway about two miles east of
Abadan. It said Iranian Phantoms
att,acked Iraqi pn,ition8 alQng the.
Bahmanshir River, leaving the
ground "littered with Iraqi dead."
Iranian Prime Minister Mohammad Ali Rajai visited the war front
and declared, "We will fight to our
last breath.. We will show (Iraqi.
President) S,addam Hussein that he ·
can never become the region's gendarme," lriUI'S official Pars news
agency said.
It said Iranian warplanes also
bombed Iraqi pn,itions near Ahwaz,
the capital of Iran's oil-ri~h
Khuzistan Province 70 miles north of
Ahadan, and outside , Dezful. the
garrison city 60 miles further north
and midpoint of Iraq's :IOO'mll~ .iitvasion front.
·
The agency claimed 160 Iraqis
were killed in fighting in Susangerd,
25 miles north of Abadan, Iran's last
stronghold on the Shalt aJ..Arab
whose capture would give Iraq complete control of the estuary that con~!:~es its only outlet to the Persian

College football scores ·
Ohio State ...... 49 Michigan ••..... 42 Georgia Tech • . . • 3 Kentucky ; . . . • . • 31 CMU ..... ·..... . 32 ·Ohio University .• 28
Dlinois . . . . • . . • . 42 Northwestern ••• 10 Notre Dame ...... 3 Vanderbilt .. .. .. 10 Bowling Green .-. 10 Marshall . . .. .. . 20
.

shahr, the oil port 10 miles north of
Abadan that the Iraqis seized two
Wtleks ago, were still ke~Wing the lnvaders from selzlng the.bridge over
tile Kilrun River that leads to the
highway soutll to Abadan.
But Associated Press correspon- ·
dent Alex Efty and other journalists
brougl)t to Kh01Tamshahr by the ·
Iraqis said mlY me incoming'
Iranian shell .exploded during the
five hours tlley spent on the noclh
side of the river by the bridge, and .
~twitecacanusedcnrosso
dama
. thgee..n·ver onto: ~

Area ·Deaths

l

Wholesale

Abadan island immediately if we
Abadan city and lis refinery without
any cllfficulty," Aluned IJaBhlm, a
paratroop eolonel and Iraq's commander in the region, tOld Efty and
the others in an interview in a sheU.
poclted house in Khorramshabr.
"But since we have surrounded
thewholeAbadanislandcompletely,
our political lead~rsh!p prefers a
policy of weakening the enemy down
until they are forced to surrender,".
he said.

'~·

~-

.....~

.

Boxing matches
slated Saturday

-

,,"'

-...

"" . . ,;;.
· · ·· ~.. ~

..

···'/·"··· .. :·

,...

"'""' !!":.~·!" "~

'

...

•

.
.g

... .

GREEN BOX SERVIcE TO BE TERMINATEDGteen box collection service will be ierminated beginning Monday. This was the decision made by the Meigs
County Co~issioners Friday· morning during a

special session. The action was necessary due to the
defeat of the landfil) levy in last TuesdaY:s election.
Pictured are several of many green boxes in Meigs
County that will be removed.

tmts
GALLIPOLIS-POINT PLEASANT

VOL. 15 NO. 41

•

· BEIRUT, Lebanoo (AP) - Iran miles.
and Iraq reported new land and sea
Iraq says its forces surround the
city
and a military commander at
batUes Satin-day and Iran claimed
its troops forced Iraqi retreats at . the front told The Associated Press
Abadan; its besieged southwestern his troops could take Abadim at will.
stronghold.
Capture of Abadan would give
Baghda~ Radio bJ'Ol!dcast an Iraqi Iraq control over the Shalt ah\rab
war communique saying its forces River, Iraq's only water route to the
killed Tl Iranians in fighting at · Persian Guif. Under a 1975 .treaty,
Abadan - site of.one of the world's the wliterway fonned the border betlargest.oil-refineries .,- at the head of ween tiJi, tWo Moslem nations, ·bli~
· the Persian Gulf where Iran and Iraqi Presideni Saddain ' Htissejn
abrogated the treaty and the war
Iraq have been fighting for 4a days.
Tehran Radio JW011ec1 fierce began ·a week later, on Sept. 22.
The B11ghdad communique
fighting near. the city and 'said air
and. guerrilla attacks on Iraqi claiJned the Iraqi navy sank 'two , ·
positions east of Abadan at the Bah- . Iranian gunboats on the Shalt and lm
. nianshir River and the Abadan- Iranian steam-po~red vessel on the
Mahshllhr highway forced "a tac- . Karun River near the Iranian port of
(Continued on page A3)
tical (Iraqi) Wlthdrt!wal" of several '

RE:!ICtliE ·'IIEAM WAITS- Members of a mine niiiCII8'team walt to go
'underground in search of the bodies of .five men killed in a mine explOsion
· at a Westmoreland Coal Co. mine near Madison, W.Va. (AP Luerphoto).

Inside .t oday• ••

NEW STYLES INClUDE

'

'

Wh1". tehead
promote.d

THE FINAL WOODEN BARN at the former
Gallipolis State Institute dairy farm w.as razed by fire
early Saturday afternoon. Called to the scene at shortiy
before 1·p.m., the Gallipolis City Fire Department was
joined in its effort to battle the bam fire and numerous

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mid 3011.)

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grass blazes that ignited in the field adjacent to the
structure by the Gallipolis Developmental Center Fire
Department. The only structure that remains standing
at the farm si\e is a concrete building which is currently used by the county as a dog shelter.

Meigs Juvenile Court
•
recezves $50,000 grartt

COLUMBUS - Ohio Youth Commission Director William K. Willi:!
Saturday announced ·approvai of a
$50,000 block grant to Meigs County
Juvenile Court for the development ·
of five projects designed to provide
better local dellvery of services to
delinquent youth and to proVide
community alternatives for unruly
ROBINSON, W.Va. (AP)
and delinquent youth in Ueu of comRescue t!l8JDS ·entered a narrow · mitment to the ·Ohio Youth Commine shaft Saturday in a second at· mission.
tempt to remove the bodies of five
The proposal, submitted to the
coal miners' killed in a powerful OYC by Meigs County Juvenile
metllane gas explosion.
Court Judge Robert E. Buck, conStrong fumes forced the searchers sists of five components: a $17,545
to aband011 an earller effort to bring, wOrk experience project, 11 $13,976
the bodies out of Westmoreland Coal counseling services project, . a
· Co.'sFerreU~o: 17mine.
residential care progralh funded in
"It looks Uke tlley
aU pretty the amount of $10,000, a $1,240
close together," said Everett Acord, tutorial program and a $1,~ foster
international safety director of the · ca~ project.
United Mine Workers. The miners · Through the work experience
"more than lltely were killed in-· program, the court intends to place
stantaneously, '' he said.
15 youth in jobs in the private and
The lle'lll wu delivered to the public sectors. Youth will be selecmineri' wl~ and cloae relatives; ;ted according to the need for work
us mbled _ , lb6 m1pe opening, activity rather than on the basis of
sliortly lftlrS a:m., eodlnc a 17-hour ·financial aid. The court will contract
vt,~~. In the houn of waltl.bg, sym-·
with Gallia·Meigs Community Acp!lt!Uera r.l CGftll'tllted on the tionAgency (CAl\) ,
road oullide the mine to walt for ·
Under the counseling services
word on the miners' fate.
· ·
. program, the court will alsO contract
COIIIPUY clfflciala said the men
lrith Gallia·Meigs CAA to provide
auxiliary
counseling service to
(Continued on paJ~e A3l
'~•

Second
attempt
made

NEW SHIPMENT

ELBERFELDS IN ·POMEROY

35 CENTS

•

GALUPOUS - Pat Whitehead,
manager of the internal audit depar•
tment of Multimedia, Inc., has been
promoted to assistant publisher and
controller of the Ohio Valley
Publishing Co., according to
Publisher Robert Wingett.
Ohio Valley Newspapers, a subsidiary of Multimedia, publishes the
Sunday Times-Sentinel, Galliplilis
Daily Tribune, Pomeroy-Middleport
Daily · Sentinel, Point Pleasant
Register and the Tri-County News.
Whitehead, 31, came to
Multimedia in August, 1979, after
working for three years as an accounting manager and internal
auditor for Reliance Electric Co.,
Cleveland.
A native of Columbus, Whitehead
earned his business administration
degree from Notre Danie University
, and a masters in finance and accounting fmn Ohio State Univer·
sity. He is a mellJber of the Institute
of Internal Auditors.
Pat and his wife, Kitty, are the
parents of two sons,· David and
Kevin. They will be moving to this
area later this year.

Racine youths will auend
FFA convention next week

DEEP DRUMS AND BR'IXiE .· SHADES

MIDDLEPORT -POMEROY

,

BAUM'S TRUE
VALUE

CALIFORNIA, PLEAlED,
PIJWPS, "
BOUDOIR, DRUMS,

SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1980

New land, ·sea
battles kill 27

vaUd '

LAMP SHADES

terminated from dumping at the lan- continue to operate the landfill with
dfill due to its · limited space and a dozer operator only, uniil at least
requested that a study of the Cl)n- the first ol the year,
tinuation of the landfiU operation be
Henry Wells pointed out that
made after Jan. l.
possibly the county could lease the
AU three commissioners approved landfill making it a private business.
the motion.
Wells also ohaei"Ved that EPA enters
Richard Jones, preside.nt, said the into the picture.
purpose of Friday's special meeting
He said he did not know whether
was to discuss the · continued the EPA would let them continue
operation of the solid waste program · with the prese.nt operation.
in Meigs County. Jones also added,
Wells also said that without money
" It was necessary for the board to he did not see how the county could
take immediate action."
operate the green box service. The
Jones listed three options: (1) boxes need to be updated and the
Continue with the landfill and green county cannot afford to update them
box operation and run the account in and have them destroyed, Wells
the red, adding that it was his stated.
opinion the county auditor would not
Chester Wells said he had studied
permit S\lch action; (2) Close the the problem for sometime and added
landfill completely and terminate that the county has been operating in
the green box service immediately;
(Continued on page A3)
(3) Terminate the green box service,

•

Fines, bond forfeitures
collected in Meigs Court

till':a

BYKATIECROW
POMEROY- Gr~n box garbage
· coUection service in Meigs County
will be terminated immediately tin·
der action taken Friday by the
Meigs County Corrunissioners. Action terminating the green box service resUlted from defeat of a land·
fill levy last Tuesday. The levy was
defeated by 1,200yotes.
Commissioner Chester Wells
moved that green boxes be picked
up, placed in storage, and areas
cleaned w~ere boxes had been
placed. In addition no dumping signs
will be posted.
In his lengthy motion, Wells asked
that legislation he drafted through
ihe prosecuting attorney's office to
impose fines upon anyone found
dumping. anywhere other than the
landfill. He also asked that out of
county and out of state residents be

are ordered. to do so and capture .

(Continued from page 1)
treaty was so important it should be
ratified " under any cir·
cumstances."
Reagan has vowed to throw out the
Ohio Lottery winner
CUITent arms treaty with the Sovieis
CLEVELAND (AP) _ The win-' .
and begin anew to gain a tougher
ning numbers selected · Thursday· ..
treaty.
He
was
as}ted
if
he
would
(Continued from page 1)
night in .the Ohio Lottery's daily
within the viUage Chief Varian war- communicate with the Soviets
game "The Number" and its weekly.
during his transition to power to
tral Hotel Building.
ned.
·
Leopold Hysell
begin
such
negotiations.
·
"Pyramid" and "Lucky Buck".
In 1943, Real Estate was added
Attending were Mayor Pickens!
He said that be and Vice
and the business is now located at Janice Lawson, clerk, GeorgJ
games are:
LeOpold Hysell, 85, Route 3,
President-elect
George Bush do not
500
Second
Ave.
and
known
as
The
·The Number ~ 309
Holman,
treasurer,
Chief
Varian,
Pomeroy, died Thursday at Wiseman Agency.
Pyramid.- 49; 170; 5823
"want
to
do
anything
that
indicates
Troy Zwilling, Mike Struble, Mick
Veterans Memorial Hospital . ..
that we ·are not a unified country and
LuCky Buck -70; 510; 8413; 06550;
Mr. Wiseman was active in .civic Ash, Willie Guinther and Katie
Mr. Hysell was a son of the late
that we are in any way trying to
917237
Wesley and Merian Davis Hysell. and college affairs. He was the first Crow, council members, and Jim speak with a different voice than the
The Number ~ three-zero-nine
mayor of Rio Grande and was in· Teaford .
He was also preceded in death by a
Pyramid _ four-nine; one-seven-'
administration.''
daughter, Freda Hysell; a grandson, strumental in securing Rio Grande's
zerc;
fiv&amp;eight·twO'three
·
"The
president
is
still
the
Harold Lee Hysell, a sister and two first water and sewage system.
president,"
he
said.
"We
are
not
Lucky
Buck
._
seven-zero;
five-'
He was a member of Simpson
brothers.
going to intrude and .we are going to
Chapel
Methodist Church where he
The Tehran comrtumd said Iran's ~e-~ro; ei~t.four-o~e-three; zerO:
Stirviving are his wife, Millia
recognize the fact that this ad- ·.snipers
and gunners near Khorrann- . SJX·flve:fi'le-zero; · rune-one-seven-.
Hysell; a son, Harold, Pomeroy'; a served in many capacities. He
ministration is still.in office and that
(Continued from page 1)
two-tllree-seven
,
•
daughter, Dorothy , Hysell, moved to Gallipolis in May, 1961. He
foreign
leaders
must
be
aware
that
was
director
of
Mayflower
InSeptember. From April through OcPomeroy; a granddaughter, Ada
the president is still the president:''
Starcher, Pomeroy; three great- surance Co., director of Ohio Valley tober, these prices have edged down
Reagan also announced that
Bank,
member
Centerville
Masonic
at an annual 2 percent clip, in
grandchildren, Coy Starcher, Jr.,
LOdge, Cadmus Redman LOdge and dramatic contrast to the 72 percent William·Casey, Sen. Paul Laxalt, R· '
and Russell and Sherrie Starcher; a
was a 37 .year member and past increase during the preceding six Nev., an!) former Ambassador Anne
great-grandchildren, Joshua Starpresident of Wiseman Agency, Inc., months. Gasoline prices in October Armstrong, the three people who
cher; two brothers, Chester of
West Virginia; member of Gallia ' moved down a modest 0.2 percent, headed his election campaign, would
Twenty-six defendants were fined · costs, no motorcycle endorsement; '
Ravenswood, and Denver, Colum· . County Historical Society,
now
be
in
cha'rge
of
the
transition.
and
14 others forfeited bonds in Mike Layne, Coolville, $250 an(!
marking the fifth consecutive monbus and several nieces and nephews.
Edwin Meese, Reagan's chief of Meigs County Court Wednesday.
genealogist and historian for, the thly decline.
costs, taking fox in closed season,.
Funeral services will be held at 2 Wiseman Family Association;
staff,
will
be
transition
director
and
Fined by Judge Patrick O'Brien $250 and costs, tllking raccoon by,
Before seasonal adjustment, the
p.m. Sunday at the Ewing Funeral president of The Wiseman Agency,
will
work
with
the
president:elect's
were
Larry R. Baley, Che5ter, $10 trap in closed season, must forfeit·
Home where friends may call at Inc. of Gallipolis and member of Producer Price Index stood at 252.2 other top campaign aides, Reagan and costs, failure4o stop within furs and traps, one year probation,:
in October. That means that a said.
anytime. Burial will be in Rock Grace United Methodist Church.
·
assured clear distance; Warren hunting and trapping -privileges'.
marketllasket of items that cost $100
Springs Cemtery.
He also said many of the same David Reeves, Albany, Lavonda takep for three years.
Funeral services will be 2:30p.m. in the 1967 base period cost $25.2.:ll
people who advised him on policy Douglas, Stewart, Pamela Forrest,
Ronnie Campbell, Pomeroy, $aSSunday at the Grace United last month.
Ernest Wis~man
matters
during
the
campaign
will Waterford, Ralph PraU!er, ·Belpre,
Methodist Church with Pastor
and
costs, Impeding public official;
Based on this index consumer,
continue
to
serve
in
a
similar
James Frazier officiating .
Laimmce
Babbitt,
Racine,
and
JamesCounts, Racine, $300 and
food prices have increased 8.5 per·
Ernest Newton Wiseman, 83; died
capacity
in
the
coming
2t
months
The
body will lie in state one and
Ronald
Vanmeter,
Portland,.
$
23
and
costs,
five
days confinement, six
cent from October 1979 to last monat 6 p.m. at Holzer Medical Center
before
he
takes
office.
·
one-half
hour
prior
to
service.
Burial
·
costs
each,
speeding.
··
months
probation,
reimburse Ohio
th; energy prices climbed 30 per·
Thursday. He was born March 2;
They
include
former
Treasury
will follow in Mound Hill Cemetery.
John
.
SWtner,
Mansfield,
Roberts
Employment
Services,
falsification,
cent; and capital equipment, which
.1897 to John N. and Bertha Pyles
SecretarY
William
Simon;
retired
Friends
may
call
at
the
Willis
Edwards,
Tuppers
Plains,
and
Vln.
Forfeiting
bonds
were
Dennis
are used to produce other items,
Wiseman on Wiseman Road in
Gen.
Alexander
M.
Haig;
Caspar
Funeral
Home
Saturday
2
to
5:30
cent·
MIJSl!lTlan,
Pomeroy,
$22
and
Clark,
Pomeroy,
$360.50,
DWI;
rose by 11.4 percent.
WalnutTwp.
Weinberger, former budget director cOsts, speeding; James Stanton, Douglas Miller, Xenia; Terry 'A,
p.m. and 7 until9 p.m.
' On Aug. 13, 1920, he was married
and secretary of health, · education Beckley, W. Va., $10 and costs, Shepherd, Proctorville, Harold L.
Grandsons will serve as
to Alice Clyse who survives along
and welfare; and George Shultz, for- foUowing too closely; Sarah Welsh, Borton, Quaker City, stephen K.
with five children: Betty Brown, pallbearers. Directors of Ohio Tuberculosis clinic
mer chairman of the Council of . Marietta, costs only, make Nelson, Pomeroy, Nunicia S.
Valley Bank and three members of
Minford; Hope Davidson, Riclr
Economic
Advisers.
restitution, insufficient funds; Dale Larosa, Wintersville, Curtis B.
slated for Monday
mondale; Merrill, Gallipolis; the Rotary will serve as honorary
On
other
issues,
Reagan
said:
bearers.
American
Legion
Post
27
Wilfong,
Reedsville, $150 and costs, Good, Wellston, Jon M. Sommer, ·
Rosena Rees, Rio Grande, and John
The Meigs County tuberculosis of'
-It would be "just fine" witll him hunting raccoon with a fi~nn Gallipolis, and Bobby Stover, Buf·
will
conduct
military
rites
at
of Point Pleasant, W.Va.
lice will oo holding a community lf CQngress went ahead and con- during closed season.
graveside.
falo, W. Va., $40.50 each, speeding;
Also surviving are three brothers :
skin
testing clinic at the Rutland ,sidered a tax-cut proposal during its
Anna
Linderman,
ClintQn,
$21
and
Jay. H.. Ridgeway, .New Haven,
In
lieu
of
flowers,
friends
may
Orin, Patriot; Eldon, Boulder,
Emergency
'Squad
Building,
on
lame-duck
session
before
he
takes
costs,
speeding;
Violet
Saylor,
$60.50,
speeding; Robert Walllon,
Colo.; Robert, Gallipolis; two donate to the Grace United Larkin St. in Rutland, on Monday, office.
Athens,
Barbara
McGhee,
Athens,
Cleveland,
and Lisa K. Poling,
sisters&lt; Viola, Columbus, and Sara Methodist building fund.
Nov. 10, from5:30,7:30 p.m.
He would give special con- . Gary Gibbs, Charleston, W.Va .• and Marietta, $30.50 each, speeding;
Smith, Los Angeles, Calif.
AU persons who receive the test on sideration to finding qualified blacks Garland Kidwell, Worthington, $20 Rory Stanley, Crown City, $35.50, unHe was preceded in death by two
Monday must return on Wednesday and members of' other minority and costs each, speeding; Joyce safe venicle; Moses C. .Nevaokoro,·
infant daughters, a son, Harold; one
evening, during the same hours, to groups to fill Cabinet posts and that l!Iad, Pomeroy, $24 and costs, Maconbill, Ill., $35.50, no
grandson, Rex Brown, and two half·
have the results read.
he hopes to name his Cabinet by late speeding; William Collins, Rt. 3, plat~.
brothers. Also surviving are 27 granJoan Tewksbary, R.N., tuber· November or early December.
Pomeroy, $10 and costs, ilnBafe ,----------~
dchildren and 22 great- His staff had examined vehicle; James L. McHaffie, Par·
Six
teams
of
boxers
will be on culosis nurse, will be giving the tests
'
grandchildren.
. and urges all area residents, in- allegations against Richard V. Allen tland, $100 and costs, ' one year
hand
for
boxing
matches
to
be
After serving in the U. S. Army at
staged at the Meigs High School cluding food handlers, boosters, "and we find abBolutely no evidence probation, DWI. .
~
Camp Gordon, Ga. during World
firemen, EMS personnel and church of wrongdoing whatsoever."
beginning
at
7
p.m.
Saturday
under
Cynthia
B.
Nav,
POmeroy,
$20 and·
War I, be completed his education at
groups to take advantage of this free Published reports said Allen, costs, failure to display registration;
the
sponsorship
of
the
Meigs
•
JOHNSON'S
Rio Grande College. He later taught
service.
Jaycees.
Reagan's
chief
adviser
on
foreign
Rickie
Icenhower,
Pomeroy,
$50
and
school for nine years at Cadmus
ENlRGY
Besides the local Jaycee sponpolicy during much of the campaign, .
where be was principal and a sucsored team, there will be teams
VETERANS MEMORIAL
had profited personally from his
COI\IVERTER .
cessful coach.
BOOSTERS TO MEET
from
Glouster,
Ripley,
Zanesville,
Admitted-Olga
Lewis,
Clifton;
position
in
the
administration
of
In 1929, he moved his family to Rio
'l'he Meigs Higb Vocal Music
Grande at which time he entered the Parkersburg and Coshocton. Some David Landaker, Pomeroy; Myrtle ~esident Richard M. Nixon. Allen Boosters will meet Tuesday, Nov.ll,
18
to
20
bouts
will
be
held.
Boxes
Craft,
Reedsville;
Patricia
Hoff·
has
denied
the
allegations.
Insurance business with T. S.
range in age from 10 through 25.
man, Pomeroy; Hubert Farms,
-He will listen to the advice of at 7:30 p.m_in the music room at the
Berridge.
·
Admission
is
$3
for
adults;
$2
for
Parsons,
such
campaign supporters as mem- high school.
Nelsonville
;
Preston
In 1~34, he and Hobart Wickline
students
and
pre-school
children
will
Racine; Veima Brown, Langsville; bers of the Moral Majority, a
bought the Boatman Insurance
be
admitted
free.
Leola Schaeffer, Chauncey, and religious group backing con·
Agency with offices in the Park Cerr
UNDERGOES SURGERY
Kathryn Metzger, Middleport.
servative causes. "I am going to be
Mrs.
Thelma Grueser, Plum St., '
A wood burning addition tq . ·
Discharged--Catherine Mees, open to these people... l'm not going
Pomeroy,
underwent
major
surgery
your existing furnace, · at· . ·
Debora Faulk, Vonda Johnson, · to separate myself from the people
tachecl
Tuesday
at
University
Hospital,
to your dud work.
William Wise, Bernice Molden, who elected us," he said.
Columbus.
Her
room
number
is
857.
Donald Bromfieid, Doris Haynes,
-Bush would have an important
985-3301
. Lura Counts, Frank Levacy, role in the administration, but he did She would appreciate receiving carCHESTER, OHIO
Five Racine FFA members have
not spell out what it might be. "No, · ds.
The Racine FFA is proud to send Rudolph Gordon.
been selected to represent the such a fine representation an(! exhe's not going to be going to a lot of r--:--------;------,--.L...---:-----....,...---''HYMM SING SET
Racine chapter at the 53rd annual tend thanks to the following for their
funerals," Reagan said.
A hymn sing will be held at the
FFA Convention to be held at Kan- contributions which made the trip
An(! when asked whether he, at
Salvation
Army
Headquarters,
115
sas City, Mo. next week.
age 69 the oldest man ever elected to
possible.
Butternut Ave.; at 2 p.m. Sunday.
Leaving Monday for the con· . Landmark, Inc. ; Farmers Bank;
the White House, would be a one·Instrumental and vocal .music will tenn president, Reagan declined to
vention from Racine are Bob Lee, Brodhead-Garrett;
Larry.' s
be provided along with recitations. rule out a second term.
Albert Holman, David Lawson, Todd Grocery; Star Supply; James
The
Rev. Chuck McPherson will be
1 Mllgrage and A. J. Willbarger. Ap- Brace; Gene Yost; Charles Yost.
"I haven't thought beyond the
the speaker. The public is invited term to whic:h I've been elected," he
proximately 22,000 FFA members
Parkersburg Datsun; Charles R.
and singers are welcome to par- said. "Heel just fine."
are expected to attend the con· Harris ~oduce; Mary Easterday;
·
ticipate.
·
vention.
Arthur Hill Greenhouse; DaUas Hill
Those attending will have the op- Farm; John "Hill Farm; Sugar Run
portunity to meet FF A members Mill, .Bill Cross Store; Ace Harfrom all over the United.States and dware.
share ideas as to how to improve
Miller's Mobile. Homes; ViUage
local chapters.
Cut. Rate; Frehel's Ceramic Gift
Members will have the op- Shop; Meigs Motor Parts; V. D. Edportunity to participate in ·con- wards Insurance; Ohio Power;
vention sessions and leadership Modem Supply; Village Drug; G&amp;J
training workshops as well as ob- Auto Parts.
serving agricultural career exhibits
Fab&amp; Shop; Swisher· and Lohse
and various agriCultural contests.
Drugs; New York Clothing; Green
~
The group hopes to go on some Lantern Cafe; Hartley Shoes, Inc.;
..
educational tours, ·such as the Marguerite Shoe Shop; Kingsbury
Truman Library, the Agricultural Mobile Homes; Junior Salser; .
3rd Floor - Furnilut'e Dept. ·
Hall of Fame and. the Pu.rJna Charles Theiss, Hank Lemsley;· EdResearch ,Farm. Each day will be na Baker; Shirley Lambert; Carol
filled with educational op- Salmons;
Cornell; · Edgar
.portunities.
Willbarger . James
.
'
.
r Proffitt. .
'
.

Water board .

County commissioners . end
Meigs green box program

were

\

.

youth on probation. A staff person
from the community action agency'
will be assigned to the court, and will
do home vis(ts, supervise families
involved in neglect cases, and meet
with school officials regarding at·

tendance and academic status of
youth on probation.
In order to provide for tutorial services, the court will again contract
with Gallia•Meigs CAA to provide
(ContinuedonpageA3)

Mark .Kiesling joins law
finn of Eachus and Boster
GALIJPOUS - Mark Kiesling,
sworn in Friday as a laWyer by Chief
Justice Frank Celebrezze in
Veterans Memorial auditorium,
SatUrday went to work as a member
of the new law finn of Eachus;
Boster and Kiesling in Gallipolis.
A 1973 graduate of Gallia
Academy High School, Atty.
Kiesling got his bachelor of science
degree with a major in accounting
frqm Ohio State Uruve!'Sity, and his
doctor of jurisprudence degree from
Capital University last May 25.
During his last year in law school,
Atty. Kiesling worked for Arthur ·
· Young and Co., internationally .
respected as one of the top eight accounting finns. The Gallia Countian
worked in the tax department of the .
Colwnbllll office.
·
He was a clerk for Halliday and
(Continued on.page A3)

1

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