<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="15583" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/15583?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-05T07:55:50+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="48705">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/3f34d6bc70ecca6877cad834c4c4044a.pdf</src>
      <authentication>44763b5eed0cfb3141cef10070386e11</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="49957">
                  <text>r

12-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Ponieroy, 0 ., Thursday. Od. ~WL------------------"""--.__,..

ANNIVERSARY SALE

MEN'S SWEATERS
VESTS.· SLIPOVERS - CARDIGANS - EXCELLENT
STYLES ~ND COLORS - All SIZES

SALE PRICES
BOYS'

WINTER JACKETS
Sizes 8 to 20- excellent selection of styles
for cold weather wear.

SALE PRICES
CARHARTT BROWN DUCK

3:00-Southem Appalachian Cloggers
3: ~untry Twins
3:41;--Grande Chorale
4: !&gt;-Stone Mountain Boys

Coveralls - jackets - bib overalls- dungarees
- Our entire stock included.

SALE PRICES

OF :

:.::.· Complete shows~ t~:.~~~.N3~~RATIONS
Bradford's Border Collies (herding sheep and ducks)
;;;; Trick Mules -Richard Sheets

1

!;[[

~.:;::::!_ Bo~ag'an~~~gey

ANNIVERSARY SALE
····

READY-MADE DRAPERIES
Lined and unlined styles- choose 63- 72 or
84 in(:h lengths.
Regular Price$10.99to$14.99

Complete show:"a~·~O~~~~~f~ATIONS
Logrolling (amateurs invited to participate)
:
··:· Watercraft demonstrations
:,:,!,·

1h PRICE

H2~:ESHOE

•. :. .:::. Friday at 12:30 &amp;
PffCHING
Saturday
and
Sunday
at
10
:30,
12
:30, 2:30
.:
..
Championship Reno Family
:.::.:
COUNI'RY MUSIC CENTER
Country Expressions Hillfolk Dancers

ANNIVERSARY SALE

1.:!~~:.::~::::1:::~~'

JUST 25
MEN'S 149.95 AND '59.95

SPORT COATS .
Selected from our regular stock. Broken
sizes 38 to 46.

'19"
ODD LOTS AREA RUGS
DISCONTINUED SlYLES - LIMITED
QUANTilY - WHILE lHEY LAST
I

lh·PRICE
ANNIVERSARY SALE

Bath Tow.el Ensemble ·
Floral pattern on white background. Choose
blue, pink or gold.

WE'RE
PEOPLE
HELPING
PEOPLE
Your money in a savings account is there when you need it,
in a safe, convenient place. But
while it's there, we put it to work.
By arranging money for home
mortgage loans, building loans,
and hundreds of other community uses, we're helping our
community change for the better.

A Home Bank
Fur

Mew• Counr,
People

~··I

RACINEHOME NATIONAL

BANK
·,MtiNE

RSARY SALE

JUNIOR'S
SKI JACKETS
VERY POPULAR WINTER FASHIONS
AT SAil PRICES!
-MACHINE WASHABLE
~SHELL AND LINING 100% NYLON
-100% POLYESTER FILL

REG. s3r........................ ~. SALE $32.95
REG. '461......................... SALE '38.95
REG. '5~ ......................... SALE '43.95
REG. SSS.OO ...................... SALE $49.95
REG. 'Gr.......................... SALE s57.95
'

ANNIVERSARY SALE

:~ t!f!:~~=En~{!rs

::::

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHTTIL 8

. ..

WORK CLOTHES

441;--GooserownA~~=~EDAYS

OHIO

By JOHN T. KADY
souUJeastern Ohio coWJties, purchase &lt;•f m11re than 50 oil
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The and have made contact with and gas lea ses near
Ohio atrorney general 's office numerous energy producers Cambridge.
.
said Thursday it does not sa1d Jack McCormick, head
Jim Gravelle, a spokesman
have the authority ro initiate of the Bureau of Crimina I for Ohio Attorney General
an investigation into rep«ted Identification .
·
William J . Brown, said a bill
involvement of organized
Sam Garfield, who has that passed the Ohio Senate
crime figures in oil and gas given addresses . of Clare, but that has been stall"&lt;! in
production in Southeastern Mich . and LaCosta, Calif., · the House would have given
Ohio.
and was one time owner of the attorney genera l powers
Organized crime figures, the Rivera Hotel, a gambling to conduct an investigation of
including reputed Mafia .casino and hotel in Havana in such purchases.
banker Meyer Lansky, have the pre-Castto days, has been
"If that bill had been
been seen in enerev-rich involved in the sale and · oassed three years ago when

.

9 : 3~rande do~~RDAY,OCTOBER14

····
{

Organized crime figures active in SE Ohio
.

:.•,:.:
: 10 :00-Stone Mountain Boys
{ 10 :41;--Goosetown Astonishers .
·:·: 11 : 3~uthem Appalachian Cloggers
} 12 :IJO.-Grande Chorale
· · 12:31f-Stone Mountain Boys
\ 1:11;--Gooserown Astonishers
2:00-Country Twins
2: l~uthem Appalachian Cloggers
2:41;--Grande Chorale
3:1&gt;---Stone Mountain Boys
4:IJO.-Gooserown Astonishers
4:41&gt;--CQuntry Twins
5: 00-Southem Appalachian Cloggers
SUNDAY, OCI'OBER 15
9:~cred Music-,Joyce Hawks
;·,=.!,'
Congregational SingRing-PMerlinH Rokss
.
10 :00-Worship Service- ev. au1 aw s
!.!,!.! 10 :4&gt;---Stone Mountain Boys
•
11 : 3~ooserown Astonishers
! j 12 :Jf&gt;-CQuntry Twins
;::: 12 : 3~uthem Appalachian Cloggers

...

·Attorney g~neral helpless

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
FRIDAY &amp; -SATURDAY
LAST TWO DAYS

Eighth ADIIIIal
BOB EVANS FARM FESTIVAL
OUIDOOR THEATER
Paul E. Wagner, Emcee
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 13
School, Senior Citizen 811d Tour Bus Day
10:00-Hillfolk Dancer~
lO : ~one Mountain Boys
11 :3()-{;rande Chorale
12: 00-Southem Appalachian Cloggers
12 : ~Introductions and Announcements
12 :45-Stone Mountaip Boys
1 : 3~rande Chorale
2:00-Southem Appalachian Cloggers
2: 2ti--Announcements
2:30-Stone Mountain Boys
3: 11;--Grande Chorale
3:45-Southem Appalachian Cloggers
4: Ii;-Gooserown Astonishers
5:00-Hillfolk Dancers

...'•...·'!.··'·

___________________,. ________,. ____.,1.

3A9 BATH TOWEL. ••••••••••..•••••••••••• 12.49
12.49 HAND TOWEL •••••••.•.••••••••.••••. 11.49
11.39 WASH CL0111 ..••••••••••••••.•.••• ••• 79'

1

ANNIVERSARY SALE

Dutch Rower Bulbs
Now is the time to plant Dutch Flower bulbs
- Save on our fine selection of tulips,
hyacinths, crocus, iris and many others.

SALE PRICES
ANNIVERSARY SALE

REGULAR $149
RED HEART WINTUK
Knitting Yarn -

Big selection of colors.

•11•

Skein

MEN'S $1395
WRANGLER JEANS
14 oz. blue denim - limited quantity.
Slraight and flare leg styles. Broken sizes 27
to 42 waist - not every length .

'6"

36.

VOL. XXIX

ANNIVE" ..""'

School Name Toboggans

WILLOW ISLAND, W.Va.
(UP!) Poorly mixed concrete
that was too wet for use was
poured a day before a
scaffolding broke loose high
inside a power plant 's cooling
lower where 51 workmen died
last spring, a Charleston
newspaper reported roday.
The Charleston Gazette
.quoted Ty Looney, an
investigator · hired by the
Occupational Safety and
Health Admini stration, as
saying tests he undertook
wtcovered many m~croscopic
air pockets in the concrete.
OSHA still hasn't unveiled
Its official report on the April
27
accident
at
the
Monongahela Power Co .
plant.
Looney, on the scene a day
after the tragedy, said his

'5395

WAREHOUSE

REG. sl2.oo ... ········ ············SALE $1055
Color Television Special
REG. '16.00 ···· ··········· ····•·· · SALE $1 4.05
G.E. 19 INQf COLOR PORTABLE
REG. '20.00 ....................... SALE '17.60
* 100. SOLID STATE
REG. $24.00 ....................... SALE $21.15
*HANDSOME STYLING
REG. 528.00 ...................... SALE 524.65
ONLY '39900
REG. '33.00 ............. ;......... SALE '29.05 1---·--·--WO-M-EN_'S_W_IN-TE-R- - - - - -

CHILDREN'S COAT SALE
Buy the c·o-ats. your children will be needing
for the winter months.
Many styles and colors for little boys and
girls.
Sizes 2-4, 4-6x, 7-14.

PAJAMAS AND GOWNS
Special sale on our new winter ·line of
palamas and gowns.

FROM

$525

REG. '18.00 ........................SAI.E $14.39 )------SA_L_E_ _ _......_...
REG. s2Z.OO ....................... SALE ' 17•59
DAYTIME DRESSES
REG. '27.oo ....................... SALE '21.59
Special group selected from stock.
REG. 132.00....................... SALE '25.59 ·
Regular and extra sizes.
REG. '54.00 ....................... SALE '43.19

lf2. PRICE

ANNIVERSARY SALE!

MEN'S WINTER JACKETS
Save Friday and Saturday on our entire
stock men's jackets- waist length and car
coat length styles. Excellent selection
including winter vests in blue denim or
quilted.

ANNIVERSARY SALE!

MEN'S SUITS
SIZES 36 TO 46 - REGULAR AND LONG

'89.95 SUITS ..........................'71.94
MEN'S s22.95 JACKETS ............ ,...$19.54 S99.95 SUITS...... ................... '79.94
MEN'S $24.95 JACKETS ................ '21.24 ,_____A-NN-1-VE_R,_SA_R_Y~-S~A-LE--·---........
MEN'S $29.95 JDETS ............... $25.44 BOYS' FlANNEL SHIRTS
MEN'S s34.95 JACKETS ............... $29.74
Sizes 8 to 20 - plaid patterns. Regular and
MEN'S '54.95 JACKETS............~ .. :'46.14 western styles.
MEN'S '79.95 JDETS ...............'67.94

SALE PRICES

ANNIVERSARY SALE!

MEN'S
SPORT SHIRTS

OPEN
TOPS
·
Cowl Necks, turtle necks, V-necks.

Includes all our men's hanging sport shirts
and table shirts- S., M., Land XL sizes. A
tremendous selection.

._ ,

SPORT SHIRTS...................•....... ..'7:J.4
MEN'S $10.95
SBJ4
~1-CJRT SHifllr!) .......................... .
MEN'S $12.95
s
SPORT SHIRTS ...;.............•........ 10.44
MEN'S 514.95
sPoRT SHillS...........................$12.04
MEN'S S16.9S
SPORT SHIRTS .......................... '13.74

Dressy and·casual styles in assorted colors
and prints.
Sizes S-M-L·XL.
Reg. $7.00 •• Sales 5.59 Reg. Sll.OO ••Sale s 8.79 .
Reg.$9.00 ··Sale$ 7.19 Reg.$13.00•_-5aleS10.39
Reg.S10.00•·SafeS 7.99 , Reg.S14.00••SaleS11.19

-NFL Colors -Great for Autumn weather
·-Months sizes thru size 6
REG. S4.50 .................... ~ ••• SALE $ 3.95

REG. S6 .oo ........................ SALE S 5.25

REG. sa.oo ..•..••..•......••.•..•. SALES 7.05
REG. $11.00. ................... ·· ·SALES 9.65
REG. $13.00 ...................... SALE $11 .45

....

' .

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1978

concrete, should have know
the batch wasn't a proper
one.
The Gazette quoted Looney
as saying Pittsburgh Testing
Laboratories "didn't test it
right. If they had, they would
have stopped work."
Looney disparaged a Pitts·
burgh Testing official 's claim
that he tested the concrete by
smacking a hanuner against
it.
"If he had, it would have
been like taking a hanuner to
a watermelon," Looney said. •
H.e also blamed, to some
extent, the men working on
the tower.
"Any man who has been
pouring concrete any time
knows if it 's too wet,'' he said.
"It doesn't take a lot of
smarts to test that."

A~~entee ball~ting
Meigs County's Board of
Election is maintaining daily
hours for the convenience of
voters wishing to cast absentee ballots.
The board office, located in
the
Masonic
Temple,
Mullberry Ave., Pomeroy,
will be open from 9 a.m. to 4
p.m. Monday through Saturday , for the convenience of the absentee and
disabled voter. Deadline for
such voting is 12 noon on Noy.
4.

There is one local race to be
decided in the fall election,
and that is for the one commissioner post. Candidates
are Giles Smith, D., and
incumbent, Henry Wells, R.
Howard Frank is ruming
unopposed lor the auditor's
post, a position which he now
holda.
Robec Buck is unopposed
for the probate court ,
juvenile division, judgship
since Manning Webster ,
incumbent, did not file for

i ..

reelection. Judge Buck will
be leaving the county court
next year. Unopposed as
candidate for the county
court judgeship is Attorney
.
Charles Knight.
The county does have some
tax issues Nov. 7. A 1.25 mill
levy, a new tax for five years,
to provide operating funds for ·
facilities for the county's
retarded is the only measure
of a county-wide scope.
In Pomeroy Village, voters
will decide a .9 of a one mill
renewal and .1 of a miU new
tax for lire protection, and in
Middleport, a new one mill
levy will be voted on' with
proceeda from the levy being
used to purchase a new fire
truck .
In Syracuse, there is a
renewal of a lire levy with a
decrease making the renewal
to be voted upon just one mill.
Rutland Township voters
will decide the renewal of a .3
of a one mill levy for lire

')_r_h....,e_w_o_r_ld_T_o_d_a_y_
·-..

Lack of funds force closing
NEW WASHINGTON, Ohio (UP!)- The Buckeye Central
Local School Board voted Thursday night to close the district's
schools until Jan. I, 1979, because of a projected deficit of more
than $150,000 by the end of the year.
The board voted 3-2 to close its schools despite James
Rhodes' promise that no Ohio school district will close this fall
~cause of lack of funds.
The Crawford County district thus becomes the first
already open school district in the state to close Ibis fall
because of lack of funps.

10 fudi~ents expected
CANTON, Ohio (UP!) - Search raids Thursday by the
FBI in suburban Perry Township, including one on the offi ce of
Township Pollee Olief Salvatore Birone, are expected ro lead
to at least 10 inductments, authorities said. .
' There were no arrests during the raida, conducted as part
of an investigatioo of alleged pollee-protected gambling in the
township.
·

Steelworkers like Celeste

COLUMBUS (UP!) - The United Steelworkers of
America Legislative Committee of Ohio announced Thursday
it haa endorsed Democratic Lt. Gov. Richard F. Celeste for
governor, as weD as the entire Democratic statewide slate for
· electloo in November.
·
·
· The committee represents all sill USWA districts in Ohio,
taking In Cleveland, Canton, YoiD'Igstown, 90utheaslem Ohio,
southwestern Ohio and northwestern Ohio.

~;LEVELAND

Elbertelds In Pomeroy

tests showed 50 percent more
voida in the concrete level
poured on the day before the
tower collapse than in any
other. level, the Gazette said.
Each day, workers tried to
· add another level to the
cooling tower. The victims
plunged 168 feet to their
deaths while trying to add the
27th level.
"It had th e rig ht ingredients," Looney was
quoted by the newspaper. "It
just wasn't mixed properly."
According to Looney; the
only poorly mixed concrete
was in the level where the
sca ffolding tore loose in the
fashion of an apple being
peeled.
Looney was quoted as
saying Criss Concrete, St.
Marys, which . supplied the

.Kennedy s~umping for Celeste

OPEN SATURDAY 9:30A.M. TO 5 P.M.

entine
PRICE FIFTEEN -CENTS

Poorly mixed concrete strike ends
poured before a Cc l•dent

., ..

. SALE PRICES FROM

PILE, BRUSHED TRICOT AND FLANNEL

at

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT; OHIO

gas leases dating back to 1968
in the Guernsey County Court
House and determined .that
Garfield had been involved in
the purchase and sale of at
least 50 nil and gas leases
over the last 10 years.
The leases have been sold
or transferred to individuals
(lf C
flrpr(1atiQns in Las Vega s,
South
Orange,
N.J .,
Carlsblad, Calif and Salt
Lake City. Utah .

Oeveland

Regularly $2.95 For these schools :
Eastern Eagles, Meigs Marauders,
Southern Tornadoes and Wahama Falcons.

Dressy and casual styles, wools, fur. trim,
knit . Many, many more!
Reg. $64 .00 to $248 .00

LONG AND SHORT STYLES IN FLEECE,

NO. 127

"any infiltration or control
that the mob could get over
such a vital area affects all nf
~
us."
"What happens when one
day we all turn around and
find nut that one of the most
importa nt things we haveene rgy - is owned by the
mob ," said McCormick .
" We'd be in pretty bad
shape."
The
Cam bridg e
Jeffersoni;m checked (Iii rmd

•

e

Regular price $14.95. Straight leg or boot
flare. All sizes 29 to 42 waist- lengths 30 to

WOMEN'S
WINTER ·COAT SALE
Jr. Missy - Extra Sizes.

WOMEN'S
.WINTER ROBES

MEN'S 58.95

.ANNIVERSARY SALE!

SAVE ON.
MEN'S .WRANGLER NO FAULT
. BLUE DENIM JEANS .

we proposed it, we would
have the necessary authority
to
condu ct such
an
investigation ,".said Gravelle.
"It is incredible the state of
Ohio does not have a multicounty or a sta tewide
nrga niz e d
c rim e
investigative arm," said
Gravelle: " It simply doesn 't
exist."
McCormick said with
energy beiqg .0 important

(UP!) -:- Sen. ~ard M. Kemedy; [)..
Man., will campaign l&lt;r Lt. (l(lv. Richard F. Celeste, the
Democratic gubernatorial candidate, Tuesday in Cleveland.
Kennedy, It was announced ~y, also will speak
about hll ·natlonal health insurance plan upon arriVing fr.om
YOWigstown, Ohio .

..

None of the concrete wall
that crumble&lt;! clung to steel
rods used as reinf{lrcements,
he said.
"If the concrete had dried
at all, it would have st uck to
those roda ," he said.
The Gazette said an OSHA
official refused to comment
on Looney 's findings, saying
only that a report is to be
publicized soon.
"They ca n't prove me
wrong,'~ Looney challenged.
" I can't see how they can."
The tower's subcontactor ,
Research Cottrell, was fined
$105,100 by OSHA. Pittsburgh
Test was lined $1,600, and
general contractor United
Engineers and Construction
of Philadelphia was assessed
a $1,600 fine .

underway

prot ect ion . liW Salisbury
Township, two nl.'W levies are
up to voters. They include a
one mill for cemeteri es and
two mills for dust control.
In Olive Township, there is

a new . three-mill levy ' to
provid e money for dust
controL All levies renewals or
new taxes will be for a li ve
year periotl.
·
In Bedford Township,
voters will decide upon a
local option as to' whether
ma lt and mixed beverages
and wine should be sold for
off Premise consumption .

Officers named,
three accepted
Officers were. elected and
three new members were
accepted when the GalliaMeigs Fraternal Order of
Police met in regular session
Wednesday night.
Elected were James Rife,
president, Steve Hartenbach,
v ice-presiden t, Larr y
Co leman , chaplain Larry
Hudson , condu ctor, Carl
Hysell , guard and Ray
Manley,
secretary
treasurer.
New members acc epted
were Kenny Hoffman, Eric
Chamb ers
and
Dale
Rockhold.
In other business, plans for
the annual Christmas dinner
were formulated. It wili be
held in November by the
ladies auxiliary of the Mid·
dleport Fire Department.
1

. RETIREMENT ANNOUNCEMENT - The
retirement of Gladys Eo
Walker of Pomeroy was
announced today by
General Telephone Co. of
Ohio.
An operator se rvi ces
clerk at Athens , Walker
launched her telephone
career In 1951 as an
operator In Pomeroy. She
was an operator for 17
years
before
being
promoted to the clerical
position.
Friends and associates
recently honored her at a '
retirement party at The
Sportsman, Athens . Sbe
retired · under tbe firm 's ·
early retirement plan with
an effective date of Oct. 8.
She resides at 838 E.
Malo St., Pomeroy.

u nited Press International
The 101,000 public schoo l
students in Cleveland finally
should begin the fall semester
next week and th eir st riking
teachers return to the classrooms wday with the promise
of an 8 percent pay raise,
their rirst in two years.
The 10,000 union teachers
and support personnel voted
by a
narrow margin
Thursday to end a 5-week-old
strike
against
Ohio 's
,largest school district. The
DR. E. J: LOWD
2,358 t~ 2,212 approval vote
was conducted by about 45
percent of union members.
"It's been a long five weeks
and we're very glad th at the
strike is over and we'll be
able to get on ·with the
educational process,'' said a
boar d
relieved school
Dr. Edwin Jerome Lowd,
President John Gallagher .
an
0 1thopedic Surgeon. has
In Memphis ,
Tenn .,
JOined
the staff of Holzer
striking teachers urged the
Clinic
Ltd.;
according to an
school board to resume
announcement
made today
negotiations today and union
by
Robert
E.
Daniel,
Clinic
leaders faced a contempt
Admi
ni
strato
r
.
Dr.
Lowd
hearin g for failing to obey a
comes
to
the
clinic
after
court's order to teach classes
completing
two
years
with
for the city's 113,000 students.
tbe
.United
States
Navy
strikes Ill ·.x' other!rtates
Medical Corps at Camp
curtailed or halted classes for
Lejune,
North Carolina .
about 400,000 students at
A
native
of Waycross, Ga .,
week's end.
Dr.
Lowd
receiyed his
Teachers in the Long Island
bachelor 's and master's
sc hool dist rict of Rocky
Point, N.Y., approved a degree education at Tennessee State University and
contr act settlem ent · and
hi
s medical degree from
return ed to th eir jobs
Medica l College in
Meharry
Thursday, ending a strike
Nashville,
Tennessee m 1969.
that began last week and
,Subsequently,
he had a
idled 2, 700 students.
g
internship
at Harlem
rotatin
Other, smaller strikes were
Hospital
Center,
New
York
reported in Ohio, Indiana ,
City,
and
received
three
Illi n o is,
Main e ,
years or general surgery
Pennsylvania, New Jersey
residency training at Harl em
and New York.
Hos pita l and Col umbi a
Presbyterian Medica l Center
from 1969-1973. He then
comp leted hi s orthop edi c

New doctor
joins Holzer
Clinic staff

OSP checks
two wrecks
Th e Ga llia-Me igs Po st
State Highway Patrol investiga ted a two-car accident
at 8:40 a .m. Thursday on SR
124, two tenths of a mile east
of the entrance to Meigs Mine
1, west of Langsville.
Offi cers sa id an auto
operated by John Gaus, 30,
Rutland, has pulled from a
private drive to travel east on
SR 124 when an auto driven
by Wanda B. Johnson, 51,
Langsville , going east, came
over a hillcrest.
Mrs. Johnson swerved to
avo1d the Gaus auto and her
vehicle Struck a n em(Continued on page 141

residency training at Harlem

Hospital from June 1973 to
June 1976.
Dr. Lowd is a member of
the Medical Association and
American
Co ll ege
of
Emergency Physicians.
Dr . Lowd, his wile,
Carolyn, who is a nurse, a nd

their youn g da ughter,
Charmaine, have purchased
a home in the Gallipolis area.

Weather
Showers, turn ing coo ler

tonight. Lows in the mid 40s.
Cloudy , coo ler Sa turday.
Hi ghs in the mid 50s.
Probability of precipitation
70 percent tonight, 30 percent
Saturday .

Five hurt by
severe storms

United Press International
At least fiv e people were
injured, one or them
se riousJy ,
as
sev ere
thunderstorms that spawned
at least one tornado pounded
parts of eastern and southern
Ohio Thursday night.
Alisha Sims, 3, ol
Baltimore, was seriously hurt

winds, passed through the
areal leaving a widespread
area

of

Lancaster

a nd

Fairfie ld County wit hout
power for a short time and
ca us in g
some
mint•r
structura l damage.
At least one tent at the
fairgrounds collapsed during
the storm, but nCI one was
when a lar ge \imb, blown reported injured.
from a tree d~rin g a
The •torms, touched off by
thunderstorm, struck her on a cold fnmt that moved
the head at the Fairfield through the sla te today, also
Co unty fai r gro unds in dumped heavy rain in several
Lancaster.
areas.
Four Columbiana County
Kidron in Wayne County
residents were injured when reported receiving 1\'z inches
a wrnado destro yed \heir of n un during a 311-minute
Winona home.
period Thursday night, while
Howard Bailey , his wife, Massillon got 1 •inch in less
Myrlle, a nd thei r tw o than two hours and Cincinnati
daughters were hospitalized a half-inch in six hours.
in satisfactory ccmdition at
Salem Community Hospital
FUN DS DISTRIBUTED
with injuries s uffered when
Governor
J ames A. Rhodes
their bri ck home was
ha
s
a'
n
n
ounced
the Bureau of
destroyed by the twister U&gt; at
hit the Winona area , fi ve Motor Vehicles is releasing
the sixth installment or 1978
miles south of Salem.
The tornado also heavil y li cc ns€' revenues totaling
a
Ge ner al $10,488,Hl8.64 for distribution
dama ge d
Te lepho ne Co. equipment among co unty a nd loca l
building, downed trees and governm ents of t he state. Of
power lines, ripped the roof the total, Meigs County will
off of another home and receive $34,090.34.
overturned several mobile
homes at th e Spring Valley
Trailer Park as it skipped
across an area about 100
yards wide and one-!! all mile
long.
The tornado fir st touched
down at Winona then hit the
trailer park about one half
mile east. Th ere were no
other injuries reported.
Miss Sims was in criti cal
LOTTERY
condition ear ly
today
CLEVELAND
(IJ PI)
following
sur ge ry "•.at
This
week's
winning
Ohio
Chi ldren's Hospit al in
Lott
ery
number
s:
Columbus.
Gold
numb
e
r
-3
.
She was attending the Fair·wh
ite
number
-H.
field County Fair when that
Blue number-421.
storm, accompanied by
Win-A·Thon
marble-s ized hail and high
JJ787.

Wahama homecoming

•
EXTENDED FORECAST
Very cool through the
period, with a ehanee of ·
showers late Sunday and
again Monday and a
chance of snow Dorries In
eastern Ohio Monday Dlgbt
and Tuesday. Highs
Sunday will be In the low or
mid 50s, falling to the mid
.tOs or the lower 50s Monday
an&amp; Tuesday. Lows will be
in the upper 30s Sunday,
but In the mid ZOs to the
lower 30s by Tuesday.

FIELD CO MMA NDER
Jody Grueser , a
sophomore, is field commander of the Southern High
School band this year. Jody is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Don K. Grueser, Route 1, Minersville.

HOMECOMING CANDIDATES- The boys, as well as the gills, get in on the
act.at Wahama's homecoming. In addition to !he selection of queen candidates,
escorla also are named Vying for queen, left to right, front row, are Carina Roth,
Tracey Roach and Susan. Edwards. Behind them are escorts Kenny Hankinson,
David Camp and Da'o'id Knight. Voting will decide which of the lucky guys will
escort the queen .
'
·

Thr ee seni or girls and
senior boys are vying for the
title of "Homecoming Queen
and Escort" this week at
Wa(lama High School.
Several activities have
been planned at the school in
preparation for the game between Wahama and Spencer
to be played Saturday, 8 p.m.
on the local field.
A parade will form in New
Haven Saturday 1:30 p.m.,
and proceed toward Mason.
Friday has been set aside as
red and white day (school
colors! at the school. with
students dressed in these
colors. Also on Friday a
snake dance and pep rally
will be held in the evening.
The queen candidates are
Ca rina Roth, Susan Edwarda
and Tracey Roach . At the
schoo l. escorts are also
selected by the student body

..,.

for the candidates. They are
David Camp, son of Mr. and
Mrs. William Camp, Mason ;
Kenny Hankison. son of Mr.
and Mrs. J ohn Hankison,
Mount Baldy, Calif., and
David Knight. son of Robert
Knight and Mrs. Barbara
Roush, Hartforu.
Miss Roth is a Rotary
Exchange Student from
Sweden . She is the daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Mitchell
Roth, Gothenbourg, Sweden.
She is presently making her
home with Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Moxley, New Haven.
Susa n is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Edwin T. Edwards, New ·Haven. She is a
cileerlead.?i'lll!d a member of
the National Honor Society.
Miss Roach Is the daughter
of Bob Roach and Ms. Zelma
Roach of New Haven.

�. Sentinel , Middl cpurt-Pumcruy . 0 .. Fmlay, Oct . 1:1. 1078

.,

IN WASHINGTON
Congress: rule thyself
By Martlul Angle and Robert Walters

Congress rises again

(Second of two related columns)

By Doll Graff

WASHINGTON (NEA ) - Judging by the reaction from
most members of the Senate, you'd thinkS. 3086 was a bill
advocating the spread of bubonic plague across the
country.
,
.
The bill's author, Sen. Patrick J . Leahy, D-Vt., has been
the target of rnuch of that reaction from his colleagues.
Most of their responses are supposed to be funny,.some are
snide and they almost never are complimentary.
Only two senators have s igned up as co-sponsors of the
legislation: Sens. James G. Abourezk , D.S.D., and Henry
L. Belin1on, R-Okla. , both of whom are mavericks.
One veteran Capitol Hill observer calls S. ·3086 " the most
radicul proposal to surface during the 95til Congress."
What terrible fate would be visited upon the Republic if
Leahy's bill becomes law ? The act would simply require
that Congress itself comply with eight major pieces of
previous legislation that included unwarranted exemptions for the House and Senate at the time of their passage.
That includes almost every major law approved by
Congress since the New Deal to provide protection of
. workers' rights :
The Civil Rights Act of 1964, the Equal Employment
Opporlwtity Act, the National Labor Relations Act, the
Fair Labor Standards Act and the Occupational Safety
annd Health Act.
But the duplicity doesn't end there, because Congress
has il penchant for excluding itself from laws it Imposes
upon everyone else.
.
F'or example, members of the HoWle and Senate, th~or
staffs and other federal employees have thetr own penston
plan and don't have to make any contributions to support
the Social Security system.
(That may explain why the lawmakers were obliviolL'l to
the impact of their actions when they voted late last year to
require millions of other Americans to almost double thetr
mandatory Social Security contributions in just four
years.)
.
·
When Congress passed the Freedom of Information Act,
it mandated that every department and agency in the
executive branch .of the federal government make available for public inspection the papers and documents in
their possession.
Everything Congress does in its !)f!icial capacity also is
the public's business - but in drafting the act, the
legislators excluded their files from public scrutiny.
When it became apparent that some Freedom of
Jnfonnatlon Act disclosures were violating personal
privacy, Congress passed the Privacy Act to safeguard
government-held information relating to individual citizens. Again, Congress was exempted.
Leahy 's bill would require that Congress obey aU of those
laws. Although its chances of passage currently range
!rom slim to n&lt;w, Common Cause has suggested still other
areas of potentim future Improvement.
For instance, when Congress voted to authorize public
financing of presidential elections, one conunittee report
cited Hthe pervi:lsive evils of our prese.nt system for
campaign financing" and warned that " the potentials for
abuse are aU too clear."
Yet members of Congress repeatedly ·have rejected
proposals to finance their own campaigns with fede_ral
funds, preferring instead the present system of accepting
money from special interest groups.
.
·
Congress rightfully demands a full accountmg f~m
every federal department and agency before approproating funds to meet annual budgets. The General Acco~tmg
·office, an arm of Congress, IS empowered to audit the
financial records of every component of the executive
branch.
But no independent auditor bas authority to review
Congress' financial recorda. The Hous.: last year ~ven
refused to consider a proposal to h1re mternal audotors
with authority to check its books.
The case for refonn is a strong one , and Ulere's no need
to Impose any special requirements on Congress. All that's
necessary is that the legislators abide by the laws they've
already written for the country's mere mortals. ,

HEALTH ·
lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

DEAR DR. LAMB - I
would · like to know about
penidlliamine which is used

i n th e treatment of
r heumatoid arthritis. Many
palients in my area are interested in this drug , parlieularly since we have read
glowing reporl.t; about it in
newspapers. Is it really a
miracle drug in curing
rhewnatoid arthritis ?
DEAR READER - Judging
fro m some reports , you wo uld
think there was a new cure in·
vented fur some or our l0ngterm: diseases ahnost every
lliOnth. I am afra1d this is
more sensationali sm than
.science. The news stories in
reference to peni cilliamine in
some papers is a classic exa mple of this problem. •
Penicilliamine is a good
medid ne. As the Arthritis
r'oundation has pointed out, it
is nut a miracle drug to cure
ull eases of rheumatoid a rthritis. In fad, it can cause a
liHt u! complication:; as long,
a:; your a rm. Some u! these
complications are worse than
rhewnatoid arthritis .
It can affed blood elements
leading to bleeding , cause
kidney problems and other
disorders . No one should be
on this medicine without be·
ing carefully followed by hls
physidan . .
P e ni c illiamin e
w as
pioneered by Dr. Israili Jaffe.
The use uf the medidnc for
treatment of rheumatoid arthritis has nul been approved
by the Food and Dl'llg Administration at thi:; writing.
Dr . Jaffe felt that some of the
newspaper stories that
ove rstated th e case fur
penicilliamine in treating
rhewnatoid arlltrilis was
really a "cruel disservice to
arthriti :; sufferers. ·•

Meet the 1978 Meigs Marauders

COMMENTARY
Donald F. Graff

reserved
fu r thu:;e cases uf lungstanding, recurrent attacks
The m edicme

1s

uf l:ieve re rhewnatoitl

ar~

It has - or will have, when and if completed according to
pl!&gt;n - 1~foot ceilings, elaborate re,staurant and recreation facilities and a pricetag of $115 million. Or maybe $113
million. Or possibly $135 million.
It is ihe new Senate office building, construction of which
promises to set a new high for federal government
spending on Its own housing .
.
It is .an issue in Washington - even the Senate prefers
putting off $54 miiiJon in next-step construction fwuls. untU
after the November elections. It is also a symbol, a
particularly flamboyant one, ol a significant shift In the
balance of federal government P."wers.
·
The building is needed, Capotol Hill leaders argue, to
accommodate the burgeoning congressional Infrastructure. Whether staff, or even senators, need be acc~nuno­
dated in quite such Caracallan splendor Is a pomt for
argwnent. But there's no arguing the fact of staff growth.
In the current decade, congressional employment has
increased by two-thlrda - from ~orne 11,000 In 197~ to
18,370 by latest count. The increase mcludes personal aodes
!or senators and representatives, greatly expanded com·
mlttee staffs and personnel for such\!'ew congressional
support services as the Congressional Budget Office.
There is more to It than routine empire building and the
riatural tendency of government to ~ultiply, although a
~~£iM:~~~~[~~ congressional
little of that Is certainlY lnvolve&lt;j. It IS a cor::::::!uence of •
determination to equip itself to dea with the ~
executive branch of government on an equal footing; ••
developing Its own sources of lnfonnation and ·expertise
independent of the executive bureaucracy.
'And it is a major factor in the development of what
commentators have taken to referring to as the ''imperial''
Congress, successor to the Johnson-Nixon "Imperial"
helping their needy btethren. traded up over the years imtil presidencies and source of much frustration for the down- , "
""
The Patterson farm is a we acquired this large, home presidency of Jinuny carter.
Congress
in
effect,
has
seized
power
In
Washington,
stake area welfare project of valuable
farm
near
Business Week magazine notes In a current analysis. This, ,,1
the San Francisco Bay area Patterson," be explained.
rather than carter's status as a Washington outsider,
Mormons. Its sugar beet crop
The harvested crops and largely explains the president's difficulties In getting ' "
is sold or exchanged lor sugar th e_ meat
from
the . congressional action on his programs. AB insider Rep. ' " ·
to be _used in the church's slaughtered cattle are Morris Udall, D-Ariz., observes, under prevaUing circum- ""
welfare work. The wheat is delivered in the autwnn fAt the stances a synthesiS of Lincoln, Washington and the second
stored and sold to buy flour or Oakland bishop's storehouse. Roosevelt taking tbe · presidential oath in January 1977
.,J
bread for the needy. The Hoopes said the bishop and would have bad rough going with this Congress.
The balance in the American system of separation of ,,~
alfalfa feeds the beef and his aides lind members of the
dairy cattle reared on the church who need more food powers has shifted before. In fact, it Is constantly
fann for the same purpose. • or clothing and the bishop changing. Congress was dominant following the Civil War
to a lesser degree, after World War I. The present " o
The farm, once operated writes an order to supply and,
congressional resurgence reverses a trend toward execuentirely by volunteers, is so ·them.
tive dominance golilg back to FOR's New Deal.
:"
big now that it bas to have a
" At the same time, the
And it can be argued that it is actually a righting of the .. ,
professional manager and bishop draws up a work plan balance, beneficial for both the govenunent and the
some full -tilne hired banda of'labor to be-contributed by governed . Congress for too many years was outmaMed,
but the labor of the 100 or the family receiving the help . outresearched, outcomputered in dealing with the execu- . ~
more volunteers still is commensurate with the Uve establishment.
"'·
Today, with its .vastly expanded staff and facilities,
important. It is, of course, amount of goods they have
only one of the enterprises received and their capacity to Congress has its own resources)! Is ,In a position to ~?-ct . ln ,-;;
operated by the church to contribute work based on cooperation with rather than in reaction to the admlnistra· .",
In charting national policy.
satisfy its welfare needs.
their
circu~stances, " · .Uon
So far. however, that IS not what has been happening. · •·
Hoopes, who is president of Hoopes said.
The problem Is that while· .Congress may have seized
the church's Oakland stake,
"This contributes to self- power, it is not structured to exercise It eftectively. c.:
said the local Mormons began reliance thrift and industry · Congress Is essentially a collection of Independent power · ·'
with small farms to raise food in contrast with public centers which, without the strong controiling band of a .,!
Lyndon Johnson, tend to head off in their own directions. It : ;·
for their welfare needs in the welfare programs."
can . thwart administration leadership, but It cannot
late 1941&lt;;, "We gradually
provide cohesive leadership Itself.
~)
The consequence is the current state of government by
stalemate - stalled energy, tax refonn and government '· '
Local Bowling
·
reorganization bills and confusion In foreign policy.
Friday Night ladies
The new balance may eventually work out foc the better.
Standings
Oct.
6,
1978
Early SUnday Mixed
Mine No .3
25 particularly if pOSt-election reforms In COlUII'elllional
Del. a. 1978
procedures now being discussed are carried thiOugh. But
Kenny's
Angels
,
24
Team
Bill 's Quality Bodies
24 to make it really work, Congress is going to have to find Its
Jack 's Dairy Bar
38 Parker's A-1 Serv .
21
own balance.
No. 6
38 Team No . 2
•
14
31n One
34 Don's Upholstering
12
Gibb's Grocery
20
tnd . High Game - Dottie
Royal Crown
20
215, Lorie Moore 164,
Meigs' Inn
18 Will
Team High Game Team High Series - . ,
High Team Series - 3 In Ellamay Norton 163.
Kenny's Angels 505, Parker's Parkers A-1 Serv . 1315,
Ind
.
High
Series
Dottle
One. 1971. .
A-1 Serv. 473 and 447 , Mine Kenny's Angels 1309, Bill's
•
High Team Game - 3 In Will 462, Lori Moore 422,
No . 3 436.
Quality Body Shop 1250.
Ellamay Norton 415.
One, 7110.
••
Ind. High Series - IMen l
•
•
•
Ed Voss 565. Darrell Dugan
•
520;
!Women )
Betty
Whi t latch 552 , Marlene
Wi lson 505.
High Ind. Game - (Men)
Ed Voss 222, Bill Willford 189;
•
(Women) Be1ty Whit latch
'
195, Bet!y Whitlatch 187.

Farm business meets welfare needs
By LeROY POPE
There are 100 of these wellUPI Business Writer
to -do -and not·so-well-lo-do
NEW YORK (UPI) _ On volunteers who contribute
any Saturday you can lind a labor to the P111terson farm.
lair handful of highly paid They do it because the farm is
busine·s s
executives, a venture of the Mormon
physicians or lawyers Church, of whlcb they are
working with hoe or pitchfork devout members.
under the hot California sun
There are 100,000 Mormons
on a 2,0IJO.acre farm near In the San Francisco Bay
Patterson, Calif.
area and one of the tenets of
Lorenzo Hoopes, a senior their discipline is that the
vice president of Safeway church lakes care of its own.
Stores of Oakland, the Mormons look on public
c o u n t r Y' s
I a r g e s t welfare with disdain but
supermarket chain, is one . regard it their firm obligation
Hoopes spends five days a to assist any family in the
week buying produce and church who falls in need .
supervising private canning
They call this church
operations for Safeway 's welfare the stake area
welfare program and they
2 262 51
'
ores.
·
But on some Saturdays, he employ many ways of
gets up at 5 a.m. and rides a meeting the need, all based
bus to the Patterson farm to on one overriding principle,
work a longside the hired that those who are helped
hands and the other volunteer should work lor it and that it
is the duty of nearly all
workers raising sugar beets,
wheat and alfalfa and tending Mormons to contribute some
a herd of cattle .
of their time and labor to

Sermonette
Pastor Albert Dlttes, Seventh-day Adventist Church, Pomeroy
One of the !mdest memciries of my childhood is of a deepsea fishing trip I took with my Dad off Miami Beach, Fla. It
was the first time either of us had been fishing there. We
chartered a fishing boat and went out to sea .on the waters of
the blue Atlantic, cast out our lines, and caught two beautiful
sailfish that very day . (You might call it beginners' luck
because the men who took us out talked about people who went
out day after day trying to catch a sailfish but never could.)
Dad sent the fish to a taxidermist who mounted them. They
have been hanging m our walls ever since.
These two fish were caught with bait that initially looked
like a feast, but in reality were slices of fish flesh mounted on
hooks. That was the catch. The bait was entirely different on
the inside than what it looked like on the outside to the
fish .When they swallowed the bait,' those poor sailfish thought
they were getting a feast, and found out about the real facts of
the matter too late.
·
Many things in life are like that fishbait: they look real
good on the outside, bot have a hook on the inside that destroys.
Jesus Christ warned that people like this would. infiltrate the
church. " Beware of false prophets, who come to you in sheep 's
clothlng but inwardly are ravenous wolves." (Matthew 7:15)
And bow can we tell the difference between the counterfeit and
the real thing ? " You will know them by their fruits," Christ
tells us. "Are grapes gathered from thorns, or figs from
thistles ? So, very sound tree bears good fruit, but the bad tree
bears evil fruit. A sound tree cannot bear evil fruit , nor can a
. bad tree bear good fruit. Every tree .. that does not bear good
fruit is cut down and thrown into the fire. 'flms you will know
them by their fruils." (Matthew 7:16-20)
The real people of God, of course, are the same without
-and within. In the fourteenth chapter of Revelation, verse five,
we read, " And in their mouth no lie was found, for they are
spotless."

smokes an awful lot, lhen you
might have a point.
More than likely, you 're
jogging tuu fa:;t. A proper jug
is done at a speed which
doesn't cause a person to
become breathless. rr you
can't U.lk comfortably While
you ar'l.,jugging , you are jogg.
ing luu"!ast. The purpose of
jogging is to cover dist..nce,
nut :;peed. It 's usually just as
guud for the body to jug three
miles slowly as it is lo jug it a
litt.! e faster,

•
•
••

•

Early Wednesday Mixed
Oct. 4,1918
Team

Team No. 1
Longshots
Zide's Sport Shop
No. 3
Young's Market
No. 2

rOUT It' I'

w ll 'l1'

1\'\'t•k By

Mul&lt;~r' J'luuh' wllt'l t' t 'liiTi er'

~ ., n 11'1 ' rwt avt~ iiYblt•. Out•

I!Htntlr .

:lli. 1~ .\ 111111! Ill Ul1111 ;wd W VII,
Orw Yt•: u , $?:1.rl0 : .Srx rrwutlr :.,
$1i . .JII . 'J'hn't' lll&lt; l ll lli ~ . $ 7. 011 .
[··l..,,·" llt' tt' ,C:!ti rill )"1'11 1': SIX IIHIIIlh'i
$ 1:t..i tl : T h fl •t' IIIUillh~ . }ii.fitt .
.Suh....•·nptl llfl pnr , . r u d udt·.~ ."iuruh11
;i:;l

"1'11111 '.~ ...... \'II IUII ' i

CINCINNATI (UPI)
Pete ROse has played his
entire 16-year major ~gue
career in a Cincinnati Reds
uniform, but indications
today were stronger than
ever that Rose might be with
a new team for season No. 17
next year.
Rose on Thursday rejected
a Cincinnati contract that
Reds' President Dick Wagner
te1med "as high as we can

go."
Wagner said he· was "saddened" at Rose's rejection,
but repeated that be felt the
club had offered as much as it
could.
Rose's attorney, Reuven
Katz, Interpreting Wagner's
statement as a "final offer,"
said the turn of events means
it is now "much more likely"
than ever that Rose may sign
with another team.
"Future negotiations with
· the Reds at this time would be
futile," Katz said after
talking
with
Wagner
Thursday. "Unless a miracle
occurs, Pete will participate
in the free agent draft next
monUl."
nwt "miracle,'' explained

II&gt; the . . .

Sl ,000.00

minimum

ec:counts

....

•

..c=
It

:•
••
M

503, Betty Smith 500.
High Ind . Game (Men)
Larry Dugan 224, John Tyree
215 ; (Women) Isabelle Couch
180, Maxine Dugan 178.

The Athens eo;lnty
Savlnp &amp; L011n Co.
296 Sacend St.

Pom.....,, Ohio

...•
~

;•

1976 AMC PACER 2 DR ................ ........................... '3495
1976 FORD PINTO. WAGON ....................................... '2895
1975 CHEVROLET IMPAlA 4 DR................................. 12995
1975 AMC PACER................................................ 12495
1975 BUICK LESABRE 2 DR..................................... 13495
1975 PONTIAC LEMANS 4 DR.................................. '2795
1974 AMC MATADOR 4 DR...................................... 11895
1973 BUICK ELECTRA 225 4 DR ............................... 11795
1973 CENTURY WAGON ............................... ;.......... 12495
1973 OLDSMOBILE 98 2 DR.................................... 12295
1973 MERCURY MONTEGO 2 DR.............................. . 1l695
1972 CHEV~OLET CAPRICE WAGON ............................. '995
1972 CHEVROLET MAUBU ...................... ..................11595
1971 DODGE CORONET 4 DR ...................... :.............. 1795
1971 CHEVROLET MALIBU ....................................... 11195
1972
__
_ CHRYSLER NEWPORT 4 DR...............................11095

..__________

"About this civil service reform business was it minimum waste and maximum efficiency we're after, or the other way
around?"

year certificate of

•• It

Larry Dugan 583, John Tyree
552 ; (Women) Maxine Dugan

Inc~~

4

•
· ~

Team High Series- No. l,

Berry's World

7-'h Pet. per year on

deposit
A subst•ntl•l
lnv'*-" 011

2058.
High Team Game - No . 1,
697.
High Ind . Series- (Meil)

rqll t'St'I J·

;wa ilniJI~· 7~ n·nts pt•r

By RICK VANSANT

!;.•
•••
••:
.

28
28
25
23
22
18

B u s mt.'~S Offkt• Phunc 99'1- 'l l;iti.
Etli l"nlll Phont' !J'..I'2·:.!157.
&amp; t·urld duss ~JS l&lt;j).(c [J&lt;ml ut
p, ~m•· • · • •Y. 01111 1.
;uhNiis llll{

Jerry Fields
6-0, ZOO lbs.
Soph. FB-LB

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

.SMITH NELSON MOTORS, .1NC.
992-2174
500 E. MAIN ST.

. .

PoMEROY; OHIO

"Your Friendly Dealership"
to youneH to check wltto us befare you buy any aor, New or
Used. We aon save you money. We ••• Tile Friendly Dulerslllp. SN or Coli ane of
these Friendly S•tesmen: J . D. Stwy, R•y Dltuglesor Bill N•l-.
Don1 forget you owe It

....•.

.."'..,.

Katz, would have to be the
Reds' offering Rose a lot
more mooey than they have
so far .
"Money," said Katz.
"that's what it's all come
down to. I don 't think the
Reds have offered Pete the
kind of money he deserves.
"The Reds said they were
offering Pete the highest
salary in club history. But
salary is only one part of
contracts. Even the latest
offer would not make Pete the
hlghest paid Red. He would
be no better than second or
third.
" The latest Reds' offer still
would put Pete in the second
10, or maybe not even the top
20, of the best paid in

......
=

baseball," he added.'"! think
Pete m~ps a lot more to
baseball than what he's been
offered by the Reds ."
Katz , asked about the
chances of the 37-year old
Rose not playing again for
Cincinnatl, said, "It's much
more likely now, especially
when you begin thinking
other
teams
about
negotiating for him."
.
Katz added , however , "the
Reds have indicated they will
preserve their ri ght to
negotiate with Pete (along
with other teams) after the
free agent draft."
Katz complained about the
Reds' telling Rose it was
imperative he act on their

By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
Kent State Coach Ron
Blackledge is looking down
the barrel of a gun lor the
second week in a row.
Kent did an excellent job
last week on the nation's
leading rusher , Western
Michigan's Jerome Persell,
holding him to 99 yards in 30
carries, although losing I W
to the Broncos.
Now, the Golden F'lashes
are faced with trying to stop
Bowling Green's Mike
Wright, who is No. 2 in the
6ountry in total offense and
who accounted for 341 yards a
week ago in the Falcons' 45-27
win over Toledo.
That game a I BG is one of
two
Mid-American
Conference con tests on the
schedule Ibis week , with
Western Michigan hosting
Toledo in the other .
Non-conference games invo
ving MAC teams include
unbeaten Ball State at
Louisiana Tech , illinois State
at Central Michlgan, Akron
at Eastern Michigan, Miami
at Marshall, Western Jllinois
at Northern lllinois and Ohio
University at South Carolina.
"Bowling Green is a very
good football team," said
Blackledge, a BG graduate.
"They lead the nation in total
offense and have excellent
skilled position players. Mike
Wright is an outstanding
quarterback ."
Bowling Green is 3-2
overall and 2-1 in the MAC
and needs a win over Kent to

RED BRAND

..
~

I

NBA season opens this evening
United Press International
New York fans will have to
check the rosters tonight
when the Knicks open the
NBA season against the
Houston Rockets. Both clubs
have gone the free agent
route and are sporting a
"new-look" image.
Coach Willis Reed, who
threatened Knick brass with
his resignation . if he wasn't
given a blg center to .work
with, got his wish in Marvin
Webster, a 7-foot-1 center,
who defected from the Seattle
SuperSonics for $3 million.
The Rockets, now with Rick
Barry at forward, are vastly
improved as well . Calvin
Murphy, the little guard who
averaged better than 25
points per game last season ,
should loosen up defenses
sufficiently for Barry to. have
operating room . It also will
be interesting to note the
success
of
Rudy
Tomjanovicb, the gifted for ·

ward who missed virtually all,
of last season thanks to the
fist of Kermit Washington.
Rounding out the opening
night's sked, Cleveland is at
Boston, New Jersey at
'Detroit, San Antonio at
Denver, Atlanta at Indiana,
San Diego at Phoenix and
Chicago at Seattle , San Diego
. is the old Buffalo franchise
that was transferred to the
West Coast when the Boston
and Buffalo owners sold their
teams to each other.
The league opens with new
coaches at Chlcago (Larry
Costello), Detr oit (Dick
Vitale), Kansas City (Cotton
Fitzsimmons) and San Diego
(Gene Shue), but starts
without Portland's exciting
vegetarian, Bill Walton, who
may be sidelined for most of
the season because of the foot
that was broken during the
1978 playoffs and hasn't
healed.
Some familiar faces have

WINTERIZE YOUR

We offer a complete service department to
service your boat now.

OPEN 10 A.M . to 6 P.M .
MONDAYTHRUSATURDAY

PLENTY OF FENCING

••

I
•.

Pro

The

WE HAVE OUTDOOR
BOAT STORAGE AVAILABLE

ZINN'S LANDING
Upper Rt. 7

Kanauga;Ohio

ff

camouflaging yourself. You
ca nnot
make
youself
invisible, so yow goal must
be to break up your outline.
Tests indicate that deer
cannot ·see color s. This black
and white image may make it
easier lor you. You do not
need
to
match
the
background colors, just the
shape and general tone.
You may also want to
disguise the hwnan scent that
follows you everywhere with
one of the many products
available. Also, watch the
direction of the wind and keep
your quarry upwind from
you.
The challenge or hunting
such a wary creature as a
deer with such a primitive
device as the bow is part of
the lure for most hunters.
Anot her reason is the safety
of the sport compared to gun
hunting.

NHL Standings

By United Press International
Campbell Conference
Patr1ck Oi'l&lt;ision
w. L. r . Pts .
Atl an ta
a a 1
1
NY Isl an d er s
0 a 1
1
Ph i ladel phia
0 0 I
1
NY Rangers
0 0 1
1
Smy t h e Div is ion
W. L . T. Pts.
Vanco uv er
1 0 0
2
St . Lo u is
1 0 0
2
Ch•cago
a o 1
1
Co lora do
0 1 0
0
Wal es Conference
Norris Oi\o·ision
W. L. T. Pts.
Montreal
1 0 0
2
Was h ing ton
1 0 0
2

Los

0

Ang~ l es

1 0

SAVE YOUR RC, NEHI, UPPER 10.
DIET RITE &amp; DAD'S ROOT BEE~
BOTTlE CAPS FOR CHARITY

'RC BOTTLING CO.
MILL STREET '
Middleport, Ohio
992-3542 or 992-3344

0

Det.ro•l
a 1 0
0
Pi tt sbu rg h
0 2 0
0
Adam s Division
W . L . T . Pts.
Tor onto
1 0 0
2
Boston
1 0 0
2
Buffalo
0 0 1
1
Minnesota
0 1 0
0
Thursday's Resulh
PhII a 3, N.Y . Rangers J , l ie
N .Y . l sl ndrs 2, Buffal o 2. tie
Bos ton 8, Pittsbu rgh 1
Frida y's Games
w ashington aT A tla nta ·
St Louis at Va ncouver
Saturday's Games
N .Y .. Isl ander s at Toronto
Ph iladel ph ia a t Detroit
Atlanta at Wash in gton
Co lorado at Montrea l
Bos ton at Pi ttsbrugh

Buffa lo at M innesota
St . Lou is a t Los Angel es

Plli:E AND
SERVICE
A Great
Combination
For Southeastern Ohio

Starcraft/Quachita Boa
Mercury Outboards &amp;
Mercrulser

NORTHFIELD
N,ORTHFtELD,
Ohi o
(UPI ) - Cableline led from
wire to wire Thursday night
in winning the featured ninth
Sales &amp; Service
race at Northfield Park .
(614)992-5652
Cableline, driven by Ron
Barker, finished 1\2 lengths
ahead of C W Yorktown to
earn his eighth victory or t he
NOTICE
year. Bad Eye finished third .
Tuxed0 Will captured the
Through the fall season
first race, kicking off a 4-1-10
and win1er months we
will be closed on Sunday .
big triple combination that
was worth $828.60. H A F orst
Ch
placed
and
amps
808 W. M :1n St .,
Commander shQwed.
Pomeroy. OH •5769
A crowd Q{ 2,669 wagered
,$;;;3;;;
38;,5;;8;;,7·; ..._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. ,
I

DOUG'S
MARINE

~

Happy Days'
ga!'l is here.
On special
Nehi®cans.
12 ' oz.

'

This is an important factor

(other s)

IN STOCK

":=

9"'

•

changed uniform s this Portsmouth N otre Dam e a t
season . Barry, who holds the Trimble
M iller at Danvill e
unique distinction of being Oak Hill , W. Va. at Point
the only player to win the Pl easant 17 :30 p.m.)
NBA and the old American Wayne at Rock Hill
Basketball Association Coal G r ove at Chesa pea ke
SATURDAY
scoring titles, left Golden Spencer at Wahama
State to sign with Houston as
a free agent. The Warriors
playo S
were awarded John Lucas as
compensation. The presence
World S-er ie s Standing s
By United Pr ess Intern a ti ona l
of Barry creates a natural
New York ... s. Lo s Ang eles
scoring rivalry in the Central
( Bes t -Of· Se ve n )
(All T;mes eon
Division between the 34-year(Lo s Angel es l eads, 2-01
old forward and defending
oc t . 10 Los Ange l es 11 ,
champion George Gervin of N ew York s
Oc t . 1 1 - L os Ange les 4, N ew
San Antonio.
Webster cost the Knicks v~;t.3 13 - Los Angel es a t New
Lonnie Shelton, who was York , B: JO p . m .
Oc t . 14 - Los A ng el es a t N ew
awarded to the Sonics as York
, 3:30p .m .
·
compensation. Eric Money
Oct . 15 --:- X·LOS Ang eles at
York , 4 : 30p .m .
went from Detroit to New New
Oc t . 17 - x .N ew Yor k at Los
Jersey, and Ron Bo one A nge les, B: 30 p .m .
Oct . 18 - x . New York at Los
switched from Kansas City to
Angeles , 8:30 p .m .
Los Angeles.
x -if ne cessa r y

••

to keep in mind when you're

Southern at Kyger Cr eek

I

:i

§

Henry McCoy
5·5,115lbs.
Jr. End-F'S

Reds· statements are full of
fluff like : "We want to assure
our great fan s that Pete will
remain with the Reds, where
he belongs .. . We want him to
stay here and we hope he
wants to slay ... We sincerely
appr eciate a ll that bpete has
done for the club ... We
intended lor (our contract
offer ) to recognize Pete and
his accomplishments."
On the other hand, Katz is
concerned with pointin g out
in his carefully worded
statements that fa ns are
seeing "business decisions"
!rom the Reds.
Some Katz examples:
"Reds mana gement has .
made a business decision to
TOLEDO RESULTS
make a final offer to Pete ...
TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI )
It is a management business With a burst of speed in the
decision to insist that Pete str etch, Enid Angus paced to
give his answer quickly. "
a halflength victory over Sam
Wagnec admitted that his Bengazi in Thursday night's
"as high as we can go" offe r fea tur ed eighth race at
to
Rose only answere d Raceway Park.
point of the season to be in being slowed by Kent State.
Driver Bryce F~nn brought
title contention."
· Ohio University is looking '·some" of RQse' s requests.
th e winner from fifth at the
Toledo is winless in five for its first win since an
top of the stretch, 7'h lengths
games overall, but has shown opening 23-22 victory over
behind the leader, to the
signs of improvement, Eastern Michi gan. The Tonight 's games
victory that was worth $9.20,
leading BG 20-10 at halftime Bobcats dropped a 17-3
$5.60 and $6. Coalmont Titan
last week before Wright's verdict to Central Michigan
ISEOALJ
came in third.
dazzling
second-half last week.
Wa 11erl y at A th ens
Alta Kid won the first race
performance.
South Carolina is 2-2-1 after Gallipolis at Wellston
and Irish Amber captured the
The Rockets are faced with losing 6-3 to Georgia Tech last Ja ckson at ~eigs
(TRI -VALLEYl
second to set up a 6-7 ni~hUy
the task this week of stopping week . The Gamecocl&lt;s wm
Cou nty at Alexan der double combination that paid
Persell, who had reeled off the only oth er meeting Vinton
Feder al Hocki ng at Be lpre
three consecutive 20().yard between the two schools, 38-22 Warren at Ne l sonville-York $564.20 - highest of t he
season at Raceway Park.
!SVACJ
plus rushing games before in 1973.
Ea stern at Sou thwestern
A crowd of 1,485 wager ed
Ha nnan T race at N o rth $122,338.
Ga llia

NOW I

..
2.""
...

-=:....

'

. make our plans now if we are
contract offer "quickly."
"Pete probably becomes going to have a championship
the first player in the history team again in 1979."
An important consideration
of baseball asked to make a
decision for next year even running all through the Reds·
before this season's World Rose dispute is !an reaction.
Rose is the Reds' most
Series is over," he said.
The Reds, in their first popular player because he is
cmtract proposal to Rose last a hometown boy and because
week, set an Oct. 10 deadline he's pr obably the most
for Rose's reply. And, in their enthusiastic player in the
answer to a Rose counter- game. He alone attracts a lot
proposal this week, the Reds of paying customers to the
again said they wanted a hall park.
All of the Reds' public
reply right away.
Wagner explained he has to statements during the
know as soon as possible contract dispute have been
whether to incJude a search carefully cr.afled to try to
for a new third baseman In convince Rose fans that the
· his revamping of the Reds. lront-{lffice is interested in
"We can't sit back and keeping their hero at home .
wait," be said. " We need to

stay on the heels of highflying Ball State.
Western Michigan also
faces a win-{lr-else situation
in its game against Toledo.
The Broncos stand 3-1 in the
conference and, like BG,
can't
afford
anothe.r
cooference loss.
"Toledo has improved each
week and has a young and
very physical club," said
Western
C o ach
Ellioth Uzelac. " I knew we
would have to be 4-1 at this

........
...
,.:;:

"...01

Tim Wyant
5-10, %0llbs.
Sr. Guard-tackle

"'

·"'W t

Marshall hosts Miami Saturday

,

.,..•

Brian Swann
5-10, 142lbs.
Soph. End-HB

BobSeeiig
6-1, 18e lbs.
Sr.End·MG

..

Rose expects to play elsewhere next ·year-

depoSit.

•
•c

INTEREST OF
~1F. IGS.f\-1AS(lN AREA
RORF:RT HO EFI.ICII
City Edi\11r
J&gt;ul •h:;llt•tl dai ly exct•pl Slllurdi:l)'
hv ·nw Ohio Vetlll'}' PuhlishmJ.\
f :•••nJIIIIlr·Mul tirnt'tlia, lnt·. ,
Ill
f 11111'1 !iii.. Purnc n•y, Ohio 45il1!!.

:\'l t\llll l&lt;t l

•

I

' .Y SENTINEL
THE ll.\II
OE\'OTF.D TO Til f.

(,11 1\'t'. l .;ll liltoll r\ SSI Il' l!lh '~. :1 ]111
Enditl tli vt' .. (" 11'\'dtmtl . Oliit l Hil i~ .
Su iJ.'il"l'll l!lull rat ..•s : IJclinn•tl IJ,\"

....,..

Dan Thomas
5-10, 155 lbs.
Jr.QB-FS

By Jerry Pickrell
Ohio Fisherman
Magazine
Distributed by UPJ
The deer hunting seaso n tor
Ohio longbow hunters began
one-half hour before sunrise
today and runs through onehalf hour after sun set on Jan .
20, 1979.
The season will not be open
"" Kellys Island, and will also
be closed elsewhere during
the regular shotgun season.
Besides the Ohio hunting
license, deer hunters ar e
require.1 to purchase a deer
permit and tag. The tag
portion of the permit should
be left attached until a deer is
harvested. It may then be
removed and attached to the
animal. This must be done
befor e moving the deer from
where it fell, and prior to any
skinning or field dressing.
But these are easy tasks .
The hard part of gettin g the
deer is before you see one. If
you've prepared properly,
you ~ ve already made sure
that you are proficient with
your bow and scouted the
area you plan to hunt.
Beyond these things, you'll
need stealth and c~mouflage
on your side if you are to be
successful. Being quiet is a
must, since deer have
excellent hearin g. But
camouflage may be even
mor e important. A certain
amount of noise is natural to
a forest, especially one with
deer walkin g about . The
outline of a human body,
however, is not natural and is
certain 'to spook the animals.

..

•·

~

lhritis t hat have nul been ef·
fecti vely controlled with
other measures.
In some patient:; , who do
not develop any cumpliealiuns from the penicilliamine
treatment, it has proved to be
an important addition to their
medical-management program . In short , it is a very
useful medicine in a small
number of selected ca:;e:; of
the much larger nwnber u!
people who have rheumatoid
arthriti:;.
Tu give you more information about rhewnatoid arthriti:;, I am sending you The
Health Letter nwnber 4-l l.
Other readers who want this
information can send 50 cents
with a lung, stamped, selfaddressed envelope for it. Address your request to me in
car e of this newspaper, P.O.
Bux.l551, Radio City Station,
New York , NY 10019.
. DEAR DR. LAMB- I am 16
yea rs old and jug three ur
four times a week, bul l seem
to be breathing ha rder than I
should when I jug. I was
wondering if it is becau:;e my
lather smokes heavily and I
breathe the smoke !rum his
t:lgarettes?
DEAR READER- You can
get harmful effects from
second-hand smoke. PerhaJl"
one of the best examples is if
peopl e smoke heavily in a
closed room. In the eoursc of
time, the carbonmunoxide
level can build up lu . levels
higher than allowed in indust1'ial environments. There
is no way I can tell whether
your
father's smokin g
pollutes the air in your !louse
enough to cause you a sig~ifi·
ca nt problem. I would be In·
eli ned to doubt it, no ma tter ·
how irritating the smoke may
be to yvu . Of t•nurse, if the
house is clu:;ed up, and 11&lt;'

r

Ohio Outdoors

I

Martha Angle and
·Robert Walters

Mort· St'nsalion
than s&lt;:it•nct'

3-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Od. 13, 1978

-t

1111

F

111 '111::

111 111

1111
R I1111111 l,lllnll11

111

1 11 1 11 11 11 1
1111:::::
, 11 1\ ', " 1111 111 ''
111111 ,11 11, n 11 11 l11

Heating Cable
• Saler,longer lasting, more reliable
Pipe Freeze Protection .
• Regulates Its own heat output.
Won 't ove rheat -even when overlapped.
Needs no thermos ta t. Use it on any
piFJe -even pla stic .
• Cut it to any length.
'

405 N. Second Aye.

Mlddlepwt, O.

Phone H2-S7• or fft·SD20

Convenient FrH hrlllfll

�5- The Daily Sentinel, Middlepui1-Pomeroy , 0 .. ~·riday , Oel.
. 13. 197~
'

4- The Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., friday, Oct. 13, 1978

FALL OF '78

ELLIOTT APPLIANCE II
220 EAST MAIN STREET
PHONE 992-711~
POM

4. HOURS ONLY. • .MONDAY, OCTOBER 16th
WINNERS NAMED - These are the . first place
wirmers in the Meigs Comly Jaycee punt, pass and kick
C!lmpetition held on the Middleport field Saturday. Each
received a trophy and win take part in regional
competition at the Marshall University practice field ,

Hmlington, W. Va, Saturday. From the left are the
winners in their respective age groups: Rick Edwards,
13 ; Chris Burdette, 12; Shawn Doidge, II; Hobert Eason , .
10 ; Donnie Becker, 9, and Jeff Acres. With the group is
Pat Hill, of Dan Thompson Ford, sponsor of the contest.

Browns must beat Steelers
or it's over in AFC Central ::

RIDENOUR'$

yawning in the AFC Central
Division if the .Cleveland
Browns can't bring the Pittsburgh Steelers back to earth
Sunday.
The Steelers are wheaten
in six games and looking
better each week as they
continue to make the preseason
pundits ,
who
predicted their demise, look
foolish. Pittsburgh, IHl, leads ·
the AFC Central by two
games over the 4-2 Browns
• and they meet this week in
Cleveland.
The Browns are seeking
sweet
revenge
after
unleashing a barrage of sour
grapes three weeks ago,

The Gift of Year-Round Pets

W~ID lB~RD

f lE lEDlERS

5 LB. WILD BIRD SEED

MODERN SUPPLY

:;:

~

p

~~

d ;::

NEW YORK (UPI) - In
spite of the winds of turmoil

Sport ara e _::,': ~~~lin:~he~~~;nd~~~~~

Meigs 7th
graders post
16-0 victory

not going to win a 10-0 game. I
keep thinking that Guidry is
Sandy Koufax reincarnated.
It takes skill, luck and
motivation,"
Meanwhile, the Yankees
appeared to be-seeking their
motivation from a familiar
source - tunnoil.
Prior t o Wednesday 's
game, center-fielder Mickey
Rivers attempted to bring a
relative on the zearn bus.
When Bill Kane, the Yankees'
traveling secretary refused
him, Rivers began shouting
and shoving. After the game,
Reggie Jackson, who struck
out Ill end it, flmg his bat
against the dugout wall and
began nailing away at his
teammates - both verbally
and physically .
. In both cases, Yankee
Manager Bob Lemon got
caught in the middle. Lemon
tried to step between Rivers
and Kane and was jostled
aromd in the process. When
Jackson began pushing his
way through th e dugout
tunnel that leads into the
Yankee clubhouse, the first
man he knocked aside was

606E.

992-2094
,_

II'

•

111&lt;"" &gt;Ill!- -~~
''

•
•

r&lt;!! H !RI'

-----··•••··•···~V-·V, ---··--·~--~-----•-••'&gt;~-~--

;.._
....:'1@4W&lt;i ·-;· .· .~ ,&amp;.. ' ·· ••I
:;. ,~ -~,'::"".';:&gt;:''''"'! y·&amp;~,, i..;.:;.;;~ ,l;!:{t;%,ci0' \

~iili~ii
ftCJI

Model GB695

RCA
19"

du!ogooal

'388

WAS
7225
M 17745
18110
111,000
1
14,300
116,000

••
••

•••

••
•

88

~

•

EXTRA SPECIAL

-

MF • 30B Loader, Backhoe
now 119,900

Pat Carson 179.

. ,

POMEROY, 0.

High Series - Betty Smith
412. Pat Carson 489, Debbie

"FRONT END
ALIGNMENTS"

Hawley 488.
Team High Game- Reuter
Brogan Ins. 505.
Team High Series - Royal
Oak Park 1339.

COLOR TV

hOII

AS LOW AS

Sportable
Model AC012
12" diagonal

'2888

ZENITH
BLACK &amp; WHITE
TELEVISION

12"
01.-.G O N~ L

•EVEREADY BATTERIES

.,•••

11e EA.

REGULAR '119.95

4 HOURS ONLY

MODEL K-1912

REG. 149.95

•9aoo

88

REG. '449.95

•RCA TV ANTENNAS

4 HOURS ONLY

REG. 1119.95
'4 HOURS ONLY

--

-Whirlpool
WASHER &amp; DRYER

MAGIC CHEFoo

•SOFA •CHAIR

2 PIECE
LIVING ROOM
SUITE

30"
GAS OR

ELECTRIC

RANGE
•

'228

88

REG. 1299.95

DRYER

WASHER

'298

88

ONLY 2 GAS

'19888
REG. 1249.95

REG. '349.95

-CBLITTON
Microwave Cooking

5 ELECTRIC
M odel 356W -1

4 HOURS ONLY

Philco 19" Color·Tv. ...................... ~368 88
Panasonic AM-FM Radios ...~~..L.&lt;?.~.~~. •2 3 88

* Free Refreshments

*Complete"' Service

*Free Delivery

* Everything Reduced

Model 413
REG, 1379.95
ONLY 2 TO SE:&amp;.L

4 HOURS ONLY!

Standings

Team
Royal Oak Park
311
Reuter -Brogan Insurance 36
Royal Crown Cola
35
Doug's Marine
24
Friendly Tavern
23
Robert Roble Const.
12
High Ind . Game - Debbl.e
Hawley 223, Betty Smith 187,

19"
'388

RCA BLACK &amp; WHITE
. TELEVISION

~

••

$58888

$888(0NLY 10)

.•
••

and base of
· simu lated wood .
Casters.

•CB ANTENNAS

•

'

~

ZENITH

••

•
•••

~~~ and ends. Front

ALL TV's REDUCED

•••
•••
••
•••
••
••

grained finish
applied to
durab le wood
produc ts on top

REG. 1679.95

•••

NOW
15150
16250
16175
'9000
111,750
113,200

Maple WOOd -

FOR 4 HOURS

;•

these specials
1

..•••

K2316M

ALL CARPET REDUCED

4 HO!JRS ONLY

••

••
•••

MACDOWELL

EACH

REGULAR '449.95

i '

•
A

..

The

LIMIT 10 TO A CUSTOMER

RCA 19"
COLOR TV

XL-100

~

..••

Early
American

6 PM TIL 10 PM

..

..
••
•.
••

88

REGULAR 1675.00

ONLY

..

saveI

o?/:iW&lt;;

8~

ONLY

4 HOURS ONLY

The Berming1on

•

Look, and you'll see big savings
o~ the new MF farm tractor
you need!

SAMPLES

••

....

was 122,900

•Yo

~~.;,..,...t' g,//,-'/q'~F,N/41,(

HOURS
ONLY

598

~WI'I !I! ta ·,. ""'~'~ ,. ,,,,.. .. ''~ '""'

~''''''!!J';:/j$1/f'":;"'"v

CARPET

4 HOURS

..

MF 245 Diesel
'
MF 255 Diesel
MF 275 Diesel
MF 215 Diesel

~ ~ ~~1

4

•

••
••
•
....

MF 230 Diesel

~

••

-at-

MF-230 Gas

I ..

diagonal

2

MODELS . on

I ',

;-_:;.:,.;,,,;;;&gt;;:W~411/~Aff~~PII1J!I$4~i&lt;';!Wn;&lt;

•

HERE'S WHY IT'S ASTIBI'.

POMEROY HOME &amp;AUTO

I

•

the manager.
•
Lemon has been a calming
force on this tempestuous
•••
team of high-salaried stars.
••
But when Jackson barreled
•
into him, Lemon shoved back
•
and told his tempermental
••
slugger w cool off.
•
"!shouldn't have said any·
••
thing to Reggie," Lemon said
•
later . "Reggie was upset
•••
about a few things. 1 can
understand that."
•
Jacks&lt;in refused to say just ·
what things, ):lesides the spec••
ta c ular
game-ending
•
strikeout at the hands of
••
rookie Bob Welch, were
••
bothering him. As for Lemon,
there were more questions
••
regarding Rivers (who was
benched along with Chris
•••
Chambliss
Wednesday
because of injuries ) and the
••
half-share embarrassment.
•"
"He said, " In Rivers' case, •
there was no discipline. That
•
~
was just an unfoctunate in·
•
cident."
•
Pressed about the World •
•
Series share, Lemon replied:
•••
"Hell, I don 't give a damn
about the money. I'm just ·-. •
happy Ill be here."

RCA
XL-100
25"

i

•

-BERE~s THE 015.

AND HERE'S THE BEST PlACE
AROUND TO GET IT.

••
••
••
•••

:-:.:-_::::::;::::::·::::&lt;:=::::::::::::&gt;::::::::::::: _=.:·:

Today

RCA 25"

....
•
. J World Series reswnes in New York .
:

Guidry, the New York
;:;:
:::: Yankees'
seasonlong
(
By MILTON RICHMAN
·,:_.:_: lifesaver, remains calm.
;:::
UP! Sports Editor
With the Yankees trailing
;:;:
&lt;&lt;
in the World Series two
For all your home
Entertainment and
NEW YORK (UPI) - Whitey Herzog is one of the hest games t o none ,
his
Appliance lileeds
m;magers in baseball , and he knows it.
teammates are squabbling
He also has one of the hest jobs around, and he knows that, again.
His
manager,
DOXOL
too, but he could talk himself out of it the same way the late reportedly voted only a halfCllarlieDressendid25yearsagoalmosttotheday.
share of the World Series
SERVICE
Charlie created pretty much the same situation Whitey is in booty, is finding that patience
now. He had led the Dodgers to the Natinnal League pennant in and good fortune can he
1953 and although th e Yankees beat him in the World Series, he fleeting. And, his opponents,
had done such a gond job overall that he was in the position to the Los Angeles Dodgers, are
TV &amp; Apeliance
call his shots . At least he thought he was.
pointing Ill him and thinking
Gas Serv•ce
The Dodgers offered him another me-year contract for 1954 "sweep."
Racine, Ohio
with a nice raise.
" U we heat Guidry, we can
Chester, Ohio
Dressen's wife, Ruth , and all his friends told him not to be a sweep this series," said Ron
fool, to insist upon a multi-year contract. Why not? Other Cey , who drove in four
managers in the league were getting them and they weren't Dodger runs in Wednesday
nearly as successful.
· night's 4-3 thriller with a
.
Charlie listened to his friends . He told Walter O'Malley if he homer and a single.
didn 't get a contract for mor e than one year, he wouldn't he
This was the pressureback. O'Ma iley said bye-bye and wished him luck, and Dressen cooker situation that Guidry,
always regretted having brought about his own departure.
the
major
leagues '
HEATH Redwood
Herwg has done an exceptionally fine job for the Kansas outstanding pitcher this year
City Royals since taking over as their manager on July 25, with a 25-3 record, laced
1975, and they have done weil by him.
Friday night as the series
He's in the $90,000 bracket, making him one of the highest shifted to Yankee Stadium.
paid managers, and draws no interference from either Ewing
"My arm {eels as strong
Kauffman, the Royals ' owner, or from Joe Burke, their now as it was throughout the
general manager. •
'
.season," the :'&gt;-11, l~und
. What Herf.Og Is demanding now is a multi-year contract, the Guidry, who thus far has
I Large Seed Capacity wit h Easl!
same as Dressen did . The Royals are offering only one year, pitched 281 inni~ g s, said
of l oading
the same as the Dodgers did, and Herzog is taking the same calmly. "I don't know what
f Modern Oe-;ign t o Co mp liment
stand Dressen did.
effect the number of innings I
Your Grounds
t Redwood Constru cti on
Burke and Herwg discussed the stalemate in Kansas City have worked will have on me
last Monday. When they got thrnngh talking, they hadn't in the World Series, but you
settled anything and Herzog went off bird hunting somewhere can always call upon yourself
in Missouri.
to get up one more time. "
"Whitey would like to have a multi-year contract, " Burke
Opposing Guidry for the
told me Thursday. "I've offered him a one-year contract, Dodgers will be righthander
which is as far as we will go."
Don Sutton, a formidable
While the length of contract ostensibly is at the root of the veteran of post-season play.
problem, it goes deeper than that.
Until his loss to Philadelphia
He is often two jumps ahead of most other managers and can in last year 's playoffs, Sutton
show you a tough exterior, but he's sufficiently sensitive so had won five straight posteven.a joke ca n sometimes bruise his feelings .
season games including two
The Royals have finished fi rst in their division three straight in the World Series..
times nnw, and the Yankees heat them in the playoffs each
Sutton, however, oonceded,
time, twice by no more than a single out and this last time by the matchup against Guidry
only one run.
could be a most difficult task.
WITH PURCHASE Of-ANY
That hurts Whitey Herzog.ltalso rankles him enough so that
"! don't know if pitching
he isn 't in any mood to hear jokes about it.
against a ~ winner is a
HEATH WILD BIRD FEEDER
When the Royals clinched their division Iitle by beating pressure situation," said
Seattle last month , Ewing Kauffman, talking about Herzog, Sutton."! do believe that I'm
laughingly commented, "I ought Ill. cut his salary for not
clinching it sooner. ..
It was merely a joke on Kauffman's part but Herzog didn't
appreciate it.
399 W. Main Street 992-2 164 Pomeroy, o..
Herwg fee ls, with some justification, he is the single person
The Store With" All Kinils of Stuff"
most
responsible for the Royals' success, but he has not done it
For Pels - Stables - Large and Small
completely
alone.
Animals. Lawns - Gardens.
He has had help from Kauffman , Burke, the Royals' front
office, the scouts and the coaches, and he should hear that in
In a game played October
. . . . . . . .- . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . rrrind .
Like Charlie Dressen, Whitey Herwg talks quite a bit. He
10 at Racine, the Meigs
talks about offers he has had from other clubs and the front Seventh Grade footbilll team
office doesn't like to pick up a newspaper every day and see defeated Southern 16-0.
where he may go somewhere else.
Tailback Jon Perrin scored
When he signed one-year c~ntraets to manage the Royals both Meigs touchdowns on
last year and the year before, Herzog expressed himself as end sweeps and also tallied
be ing com pletely satisfied with them.
the first extra point con" I'd like to be another Walter Alston," he said, referring to version.
the 23 consecutive one-year contracts Alston signed with the
Fullback Chris Burdette
Dodgers.
·
picked up the other two extra
Somewhere along the line, Wllltey Herzog obviously had a points. On the offensive line;
change nf heart. Maybe some of his friends helped influence Jim Farley, Dave Barr, Andy
him.
Iannerelli, and Eddie Bishop
Charlie Dressen also had a lot of friends.
all turned in good blocking
· Most of them weren 't arnmd, though, when he really needed efforts.
them.
On defense the winners
were led by Perrin, Jan·
BEULAH RESULTS
second, paying $4.40 and $2.80 nerelli, and Barr. Safety Nick
GROVE CITY, Ohio (UP! ) and Pussian Lou was third Riggs also had a pass in·
terception for Meigs,
- T.J .'s Pet ran the mile in and paid $2.2Q.
The Meigs team travels to
I :38.2 Thursday night Ill win
The 4-3 daily double of Sir
l. A high voltage ignition 3. Hot chamber magneS.lt's been designed to
system and an efficient
sium die·casting makes the last at least twice as long as
the feature race at Beulah Hasty Research and Morning Chancey-Dover next Monday.
Park and pay $10.20, $4.60 and Love paid 55. 60.
housing tougher. And the as any other saw like it.
combustion chamber
$2.80.
A crowd of 3,397 bet
whole saw lighter.
6. And by lasting twice as
means it'Dstart work
SWinging Affair finished $407,727.
long it'll re aDy only cost
when you do. Every time. 4. Balanced fue l and oil
Z. A"no-thumbs:· fully
tank capacities keep you
about haD as much.
from having to refill on e
POMEROY
automatic chain oiler
BOWLING LANES
when there's still plenty
lets you concentrate on
Tuesday Triplicate
in the other.
cutting. Notoiling,
Oct. to, 1978
By IRA KAUFMAN
UPI Sports Writer
It may be all over oot the

when they dropped a J:'&gt;-9
overtime decis ion to the
Steelers after a controversial
non-fumble call went Pitts·
burgh's way early in the fifth
quarter. Revenge will have to
he earned, however.
Pittsburgh has scored · the
most points (151) and allowed
the fewest (63) in all of pro
football ,
a nd
veteran
quarterback Terry Bradshaw
is enjoying his best season
ever. Rated the AFC's No. I
passe r , Bradshaw has
reunited with hiS fa vorite
receiver, Lynn Swann, to
form perhaps the league's
deadliest aerial combination .
Swann leads the conference
with 30 receptions.
The Browns counter with a
less
intimidoting,
uu t
scarcely less effective
defense of their own.
. Cleveland hasn't allowed an ·
opponent over 16 points this
year and the Steelers had Ill
rely on a razzle-dazzle pass to
tight end Benny Cmmingham
to beat the Browns in
Pittsburgh .
Shifty Greg Pruitt, who
spearheads the Cleveland
rmning game, returns w
action against Pitts burgh
after being sidelined for four
weeks, but Pittsburgh gets
Jack Ham back, called
" probably the best outside
linebacker in pro football, "
by Cleveland Coach Sam
Rutigliano.
Bennie Cunningha , who
was blossoming into a sta~. is
out for the year after
suffering a knee injury in last
week's 31-7 triumph over
Atlanta, and the Steelers will
miss his presence.
.
Elsewhere Smday, Los Angeles is at Minnesota ,
Washington at Philadelphia,
Buffalo at Houston, Kansas
City at Oakland, Miami at
San Diego, New England at
Cincinnati, the New York
Jets at Baltimore, Dallas at
St. Louis, Detroit at Atlanta ,
New Orleans at San Franciso,
Tampa Bay at the New York
Giants and Seattle versus
Green Bay at Milwauk.ee.
Denver host s Chicago
Monday night.

gro ups : Shawn Eads, 13; Joey Barten, 12; Trey Casselj,
11; Darrin Drenner , 9, and' Richard Long, 8. Ten-year.(lld
winner not pictured was Lee Powell. With the.group is Pat
Hill representing the sponsoring business establishment.
Trophies were presented the winners.

SECOND PLACE WINNERS - These are the' second
place winners of the Meigs Com~ty Jaycee punt, pass and
kick competition. held Saturday at the Middleport field
under the sponsorship of Dan Thompson Ford. From the
left are second place winners in their respective age

·-..:..

- 6 PM TIL 10 PM

ELLI IT AP PLIAN ·E II

SHINNS
Tracto.r Sales
LEON

~58-1630'

'

W.VA.

220 EAST MAIN STREET

PHONE 992-7113

'POMEROY,, .OHIO

Mar. Fttif a n •

••

�'

•

I

, . Helen Help

I

~ US , , , By Helen Bottelj

l

~

~

United Methodist Women meet recently•
Th~

Reedsville U.M.W. met
at the home of Mrs. Verna
Ros~
for the October
meeting. The meeting was
op~n~d with the Lord's
Prayer. Topic of devotions
was "Who ia·God?" Sue Reed
sang a sang, "Come Follow
Me". Connie Rucker gave a
read~g ... An Old Fashion

Humphrey, ·president;
Darlene
Reed,
vice·
president; Pat Martin,
secretary; Lorraine Wigal,
treasurer, and Sandra
Cowdery, program director.
Mrs. Martin reported on
purchase of an awning for the
church. The meeting date
was changed back to the first
Prayer;,.
Thursday of each month at
The nominating committee 7:30. Nineteen shut-in calls
agreed on the same slate of were made. Next meeting .
officers as last. vP.flr· Vivirm

TRANSV E.STITE 'S W!FE SPEAKS...
DEAR HE! .EN.
About the woman whose husband wears female underclothes
when lie comes home at night: My advice, and I've been !hero,
is to examine his altitudes, preferences and aversiulll'.
Can he have sex without wearing feminine clothing?
Docs he want to be a woman~
~
Is he jealous because you are a woman and he isn't'
Do your clothes fil him? I Two people wearing your under·
things may be more than you can stand.)
·
Does he insist on picking out your clothing, and in general
making you over'
0
Is he critical of how you look? I In other. words. if he were
you, he'd.look more feminine.)
.
Maybe, as he says, he only wants comfort, but chances are
he's a transvestite, and the problem increases with time.
When you find him trying on your dresses and make-up,
don't say I didn't warn you. It's no fun, living with a man who
FRIDAY
prefers your clothes to his! - EX-WIFE OF A
PAST
MATRONS ,
TRANSVESTITE
Evangeline
Chapter
172 ,
DEAR HELEN :
OES,
special
meeting,
2
p.m
.
Why is it that a woman looks "cute,' in her husband's over·
Friday
at
the
masonic
tern·
sized shirts or pajamas, but if a man puts on woman's clothes,
pie.
.
he's some kind of freak ?
Yet logk at the jewelry, frilly dress shirts, purses and flow·
YARD ANP BAKE Sale
ing at·home robes for males, shown in all the high fashion Friday at Bethany Church
magazines.
.
annex, one mile east of
Seems to me one generation's transvestite is another Racine on SR 124. Sponsored
generation's high-stylist. Consider how men dressed in Queen by
Dorcas
Women's
TOP SALESMAN - John Miller, right, who is .an
Elizabeth's court.- OBSERVER
Fellowship. Open from 9 a.m.
insurance agent for Western and Southern Life Insurance
Co., Pomeroy, was presented a trophy at the Western &amp;
DEAR EX·WIFE AND OBSERVER :
until dark.
You're both saying in different ways: It's nul what a man
So uthern 56th Legion anniversary held at · Marietta
DAUGHTERS of the
wears but why he wears it that counts. And sometimes even he American Revolution, Return
recently. Miller placed sixth in sales in a field force of
isn'tsure oftbe real reasons . - H.
over 5,000 agents. He began his employment at the
Jonathan Meigs Chapter
Pomeroy office on March 7, 1977. He has completed part
Friday, 1:30 p.m. home of
DEAR HELEN :
one of the Ufe Underwriters course and resides iri'
Mrs. James O'Brien . Guest
I'm upset with t~e survey you mentioned which states the speaker Mrs. Hilda Grace
Rutland with his wife, Janet. With Miller is Bob Hill,
majority of women want boy babies. Many of us set:retly hope McPherson, registrar of Ohio
associate sales manager of Western &amp; Southern Life
for girls but society dictates that we should yearn fur boys- at DAR: Coshocton. Hostesses,
Insurance Co., Pomeroy.
least the first time pr.egnartt. This probably comes from an· Mrs. O'Brien, Mrs. Larry
dent days when many males were lost in wars and had to be .Wiley, Mrs. Nancy Reed and
YARD SALE
replaced. Also, they made the living while females were weak Mrs. A. R. Knight. Guests
SALEM CENTER - The and "inferior." And they don'tcarry on the family name.
members of French Colony .
Salem Center PTA will stage
But no matter what our preferentoes, we still end up with Chapter of Gallipolis.
a yard sale from 10 a.m. to 5 more females than males in the United States because we
MARY SHRINE 37, Ort:ler
p.m. Saturday at the school. " weaklings" live longer.- LAST LAUGH
of
the White Shrine of
Anyone wishing to donate DEAR HELEN :
Jerusalem,
ceremonial at 8
items ls asked to take them to
I don't want a boy baby flrst because I'm "heir· p.m. Friday at Pomeroy
the school.
conditioned," but simply because I know how wonderful big Masonl~. Temple. Officers are
brothers are. If women, as the survey states, prefer male first· to ·wear formals; potluck
burns lt 's because they want protection for the girls to come. If refreshments
served
they
want all boys, it's because they don't have to worry so following ceremonial.
THISTLEDOWN
NORTH RANDALL, Ohio much about them. (Or maybe because they've been brain·
SATURDAY
(UPI ) - Jockey Mike Moran washed by husbands who dream of fishing trips lllld baseball
SALEM CENTER
guided Martha My Love to with their suns.)- B.L.
Educational Organization
victory ln Thursday's
yard sale Saturday from 10
featured eighth race at
a.m. to 5 p.m.
Thistledown. ·
·
FALL FESTIVAL Satur·
The 4-yearo(Jld !lily covered
day at
Letart Falls
the six furlongs ln 1: 10 2-6
Elementary School by PTO
over a fast track to pay $6.20,
with meat loaf and turkey
$2.60 and $2.40. Market
dinners, games and country
Leader placed and Deseronto
store; serving starts at 5:30
showed.
William Chevalier
Noel Bar and Rip Van·
The Ohio University Artist overseas tour sponsored by P·~isll FRY, Saturday, 7
Winkle returned $92 on the 3-4 Series will present John Birks · the U.S. government. Two of p.m. by Modern Woodmen of
daily double, and there were
"DID.y" GWeaple ln caneert .tl\ese tool! place that year, Am~• Camp 7230 at 1\aU ln
16 winning tickets on the &amp;-Sol
on Thursday, Oct. :Ill, at 6 · the first in Pakistan, Turkey • Burllngham. Fish dinner free
grouping of Best Start, Be
p.m.
ln
Memorial Lebanon,. Syria, Yugoslavia of charge and members to
Somebody's
Son
and
Auditorium.
and Greece, and the second ln take a cove.red dish; business
Northern Splash ln the ninth
Born
ln
Cheraw,
South
Latin America. Glllelflie baa meeting will follow.
Marine Pvt. William Ed· race trlfecta - each worth
Carolina, GWesple was ln· continued to travel outalde
ward Chevalier, son of Mr, t2,780.10.
traduced to music by his the U. S. In 1966 his
NEW HAVEN Volunteer
and Mrs. Lowell D. Chevalier
A crowd of 3,616 bet
father, an amateur muslcil!n "Reunion" band toured Flre Department chicken
of Reedsville, graduated $422,039.
who taught him proficiency Europe and was recorded at barbecue beginning 11 a.m.
from basic training at Parris
on several tnatruments. ~e the Berlin Festival. In 1971·72 Saturday at New Haven clty
Island. S. C. Following a
started playing trombone at he traveled to Europe, Japan buUdlng; full dinner to be
leave at home, he will report
ROAD CLOSING
the age of fourteen, switching and in this country with The served.
to Camp Lejeune, N. C. for
State Route 681, one mile to trumpet the following year, Giants of Jan, a star-studded
SUNDAY
tra inin g
in
combat east of Junction 692, will be and studied hannony and group which Included such
HYMN SING, 1:30 p.m.
engineering.
closed approximately two theory at the Laurinburg names as Sonny Stitt and Sunday at Nease Settlement
He is a graduaLe of Eastern weeks to all traffic except Institute of North Carolina Thelonlus Monk. In the IJirlng Church with music by the
High School with the class of school buses.
until hls family moved to of 1977 he traveled to Cuba for Gospeltones of Chester.
1978.
Philadelphia in 1935. During a concert dedicated to the
ANNUAL Homecoming
this time Gillespie was known memory of the great Culno Morning
Star
United
for
his
emulation
of
Roy
Pazzo,
who
taught
Gillespie
Methodist
Church
Sunday.
~c=====~~========~o
Eldrige whose place he took the congo drums and Afro- Carry·ln dinner ai 12 :15,
in the T~dy Hill band ln 1937, Cuban . rhythms which afternoon program at 1:30.
traveling with 11&gt;• .band to Gillespie lntrod,uced ,to Wesley Clark, district
France and England.
American jan in the 1940 s. superintendent,
Athens,
6 Miller Street
For the next decade his · In January, 1977 • .he ap- guest speaker. Special
reputation grew steadily, peared at Radio City Music singing.
Box 487
along with the music and Hall in a gala concert with
.
MONDAY
Mason, W. Va.
lifestyle called 'bop'. He Sarah _Vaughan, Mercer
"THE MANY • Splendored
worked briefly wlth Mercer Ellington leading the Duke Sell" will be the program
Elllnglon
In New York, then Ellington Orchestra and Stan . topic consisting of readings,
Sunday Morning
joined
Cab
Calloway's band Getz. In September, 1975 music, slides and public
Bible Study 10 :00 a.m.
in 1939 where he was one of Avery Fisher Hall was the discussion at the Pomeroy
Sunday Morning
threefeaturedsololatsfortwo scene of a "Tribute to Oluy Public Library at 7:30p.m.
Worship 11:00 a.m.
years . After leaving the Gillespie" with guest stars Monday. The program is
Calloway band he was such as · Stan Getz, Lalo sponsored byothe Washington
Evening Services
associated with the bands of Scbilrin, Max Roach, Percy County Friends of the
at 7:00p.m.
Ella Fitzgerald, Benny Heath, John Lewis, James Library and the Ohio
Wednesday Evening
Carter, Charlie Barnet, Les Moody and Buddy Rlch. Program in the Humanities.
Bible Study 7:00p.m.
Hite Calvin Jackson Flet· Other honors bestowed upon · Speakers will be Carol
cher' and Horace Henderson Gillespie have included the steinhagen and Steve Blume
Lucky Millinder, Earl Hines: Down Beat Crltlcs' Polls of of the English department
·Visitors Welcome
Woody Herman, John Kirby 1954, 1956, 1957, and 1971 •7~· and WUllam Hartel of the
and
Billy Eckstein, among .He was awarded an Honorary hlatory department of
The Churches
· many others.
Doctorate from Rutgers Marietta College.
In 1956 Gillespie was University In 1970, the Handel
of Christ salute
honored ~. the first jan Medallion from New York
CHESTER PTO Mooday
(presented to him by 7:30p.m. at school. Program
Romans 16:16 :-.. leader ever to have an City
then-mayor John Lindsay), by Meigs County Historical
IV
and was named Musician of Society .
Clark
Lees,
the Year (1975) from the ·superintendent, guest
Institute of High Fidelity.
speaker. Babysitting will be
Tickets are $5 for non· provided and refreshments
students and $2 for all served. All parents and ln·
A Program ~f Readings, Music, Slides and
students.
terested clttzeDa asked to
Reservations
may
be
made
attend.
Public Discussion
at the auditoriwn box office
MEIGS BAND Boosters,
Monday, October l6th •At 7:30P.M.
12 noon • 4 p.m., Monday • 7:30 Monday in the band
Friday or by calling 594-6807.

~----- Deadline Sunday

I
II
I
I

l

Socia] I
· ..
.
Calend ar I

Miss Calista Sears!, con·
testant's chairman. for th•
1971!-79 Southeast Ohio Junior
Miss finals, announced today
that the deadline • for the
Jumor M1ss program 1s
Sunday, Oct. 15 at 2 p.m.
Any high school senior girl
of Southern Ohio planning to
enter the finals should con·
tact Southeast Ohio Junior
MiS'I, Inc., P.O. Box 104,
Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769, or by
attending the second practice
session at ·the Meigs Inn
banquet room Sunday at 2
p.m.
Eight contestants from
Meigs and Vinton counties so
far are competing for the two
Junior Miss crowns.
The finals will be an event
of Sunday, Nov. 19 beginning
at 3:15 p.m. at the Meigs
Junior
High
School
Auditorium, Middleport.

Laurel Oiff
Attendance at the morning
services Oct. 8 was 91. Choir
members present ~as 11.
Rev. Cecil Wise, Chester,
preached Sunday morning in
the absence of Rev. Shook.
Rev. and Mrs. Floyd Shook
were in Columbus Sunday· for
the baptism of their grand·
chlld, Erin , daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Joseph Higgen·
bot ham.
Mr. and Mrs. Lennie Lyons,
Rock Springs, were dinner
guests Sunday of Mrs. Ema
Fox. .
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Archer,
Columbus, called on friends
here Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Phil Wise,
Beverly, attended services at
the local church Sunday
morning.
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Fox,
ZaliesvlUe, visited recently
,\flth Mrs. Ema Fox.
Mrs. John Douglas, Guys·
ville, visited recently with
her mother, Mrs. Ema Fox.
The singsplration held at
the local church Sunday
evening was well attended.
Mrs. Ed Bauer, New
Philadelphia, was here for a
week due to the illness of her
father, Mr. Dlck KarT, who ls
a patient in Veterams
Memorial Hospital. Mr.
Bauer came Friday for a
couple of days. The Bauers
returned home Sunday .
Mrs. Ted Mathew, Huron,
is visiting with her mother
and her father , Mr. Dick
Karr.

'Dizzy ' Gillespie
to be in Athens

Pvt. Chevalier
graduated

be with Sandra
Cowdery. Mrs. Martin won
the door prize. Fruit salad,
cheese crackers, mints, nuts,
coffee and tea were served to
Dorotha Riebel, Sandra
Cowdery, Violet Butterfield,
Marlene Putman, Sue Reed,
will

HYMN SING
The Salvation Army will
hold a hymn sing Sunday,
Oct. 22 at their' hall at 115
Butternut Ave. at 2 p.m.
The senior citizens chorus
of Meigs County will be
featured. All singers are
invited to attend. There will
be readings and instrumental
numbers. Leading the hymn
sing will be Robert Estep of
Mason , a soldier of the local
corps. The·public ls invited to
attend.

•'

Angela Reed, Lorraine
Wigal, Beverly Wigal, Ma,mle ~
Buckley, Darlene Reed and
Pat Martin.
•

7- The Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, o.. Frida)'. (kt. 1:1, 1978

.

:Observance of National Business Women's Week begins
Tht··uuservam·t• nf National
Business Wumen 's Wct!k for
tlw Middleport Busm&lt;'" and

'

Professional Club will llfgin
SmHIH}

HOMECOMING SET
Homecoming will be held at
the Rutland United Methodist
Church Sunday when the 80th
anniversary of the church is ·
observed.
· After ·the usual morning
services, there will be a ~
carry·in dinner at 12:30 p.m. ·
with rolls , beverage and ·
dessert to be pr 0vlded.
In the afternoon there wiD
be recognition of former : ·
members and pastors and the .
Angelaires of Lancaster will ~
present musical selections.
The afternoon program will
begin at 2 p.m.

with group alt~n­

dant'C at the Sacred Jieal't
Cathnic: Chun·h in Pomt.·roy .

Yellow film

in kitchen
DEAR POLLY - ll1ave us·
white meta~ kitchen cupboards but they still have a
yellow !ibn. Even scouring
powders will not remove the
yellow. I would like to know
how some of the readers have

NATIONAL BUSINESS WOME N'S WEEK, 0&lt;:1.15-21·
Mayor Fred Hoffman of Middleport signs a proclamation
designating the week of Oct. 15-21 as Nalwnal Busmess
Women 's WEek. Pictured with him is Mrs . Janet Korn,

GALLIPOLIS BUSINESS
COLLEGE

· co-cha irman of the pu blic r·elati uns cnnunitlt!e, which is

heading up the observance for lhe Middlepm'l Business
and Professional Women's Club.

REVIVAL
Revival services at White's
Chapel Wesleyan Church on
Olive Township Road 313 will
conclude Sunday evening.

STARTING OCT•.30, 1978

Services are conducted by the
Rev . and Mrs. John Minsker
III at 7:30 each evening and
at 10:30 a.m. on Sunday. The
public is invited.

A BI::AUTIFUL WAY
TO START THE DAY

Classes being offered can be applied
toward your diploma. G.B.C. is a
college with you in mind. We can
give you the training that you need
to qualify for the job of your future.
We have more calls from employers
in the area for our ·graduates, than
we have graduates.

BULOVA
BOUTIQUE
ALARM CLOCK

Awaken to th·e ring
of this elegant clock
with diamond -cut
case design and
regal Ramen dial.
Choose it in
gleami ng gold or
silvertone fi nish .
6 V2" high. Key-woun d
movement. A
beautiful and
practical gift. 532 .95

Join the employables. take the first
step. Enroll at G.B.C., .receive your
marketable skills and then the jobs
will come to you.

Reg. No. 75.{)2-04728

,

...
'

,:
1
:

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

solved this problem.
My Pet Peeve is an old but
very annoying one . lt is with
pet owners wi10 let their pets
run wild in the neighboring
yards. Also there are those
dogs thai are tied outside for
24 hours every day and then
bark al their own shadows.
This is quite annoying at 3
a.m.-SUE
DEAR SUE - I am sure we
will be heari ng from readers
concerning the yellow on your
kitchen cabinets but in the
meantime you might sprinkle
dry. baking soda on a damp
sponge. This will remove
many discolorations. Wipe off
with a clean moist sponge and
buff dry .- POLLY
DEAR POLLY - The lint
can be easily removed from
your dryer screen by hltreh•

By ANN LO LORDO
BALTIMORE (UPI) - A
72-year-old magici~n whv
looks moce like Rip Van
Winkle than Houdini packs in
the crowds -even though his
sleighto(Jf·hand tricks are as
oldasheis and couldn't fool a
chi!~ .

But when Dantini the Mag·
nilicent steps lnto the
spotlight at the Peabody
Bookshop and Beer Stube,
drinkers give the man wlth
the long white beard their
atten:ion.
Daritinl's act has not
changed since he began
performing at Peabody 13
years ago, but the patrons
keep coming back.
He .rolls a worn playing
card between his fingers :
Presto! It disappears.
He pauses, slaps his palm
and waves the Queen of Cluba
into the light from between
his fingers, where everyone
in the audience knew It was
hidden.
The applause ripples

APPEAR lNG THIS WEEKEND
AT THE

INN PLACE

The purpose of the program Is to show ~ow the
nurndr Illes serve to make us recogn1ze the
uniqueness and significance of the individual.
"The Many -Splendored Self" will also . open for
discuss ion the question of how public poloc1es such
as affirmative action and retirement laws attempt
to deal with the needs of the Individual.
.
This program is sponsored by the Pomeroy·
Middleport Library &amp; .Washington County Friends
of the Library and the · Ohio Program in the
Humanities . The speakers will be Carol Steinhagen
and Steve Blume of the English Department and
William Hartel of the History Department,
Marietta College .

EASY

Right now, at your kitchen.
dealer, right here in town1
for a limited time only, you
can buy modular pieces of
your.!lew kitchen at a l54Jij
discOunt off list price!

NIGHTS
4 PIECE GROUP

. You can save another 20% if you instal
l!d~you r.kitchen yourself. And we're happy to
you h_ow to do it right. Come in and talk to IVWI
of our kitchen e~perts.

toom.

FROM HAYDENVILLE, OHIO

.TONIGHT &amp;SATURDAY

10·2THE MEIGS INN

TUESDAY
SALISBURY PTO, Tuesday, 7:30 at the the school
with the Meigs County
Hl•torical Society to have the

0.

MEETING CHANGED
Meeting of the Past
President. Parley of the' pro~1·am .
. American Legioo Auxiliary ·
CLINIC TO BE HELD
of Drew Webster Post 39 has
PIIMed Parenthood clinic'
been changed !11 Thursday wW be held Nov. %. An ap- ,
night at 7:30p.m. at the home · polntment lJ neceasary and
of Mrs. Veda oavis.
per10na int•ruted are to calli
112-6812.

r---R:W~COMPlbl,o:ir~-1
I

.

OPTOMITIIIT

I·

l

OFFICE HOURS: 9:30to 12,2 to 5 (CLOSE

I

J

AT NOON ON THURS.) ST., POMEROY.

I

EAST COURT

.. Mrs. P.S.
POLLY'S NOTE: Just keep

moistening a fing~r and running it .. across the lint. It will

come off instantly. -ANN
· DEAR POLLY·- Though 11
may cost H few pennies more
I have heard that sending a
bank ur postal money order
with a mail order will speed
up delivery. It see1ns some

them ou t of the way uf small

children who might try to
play with them.
DEAR POLl. Y -- Tu
remo ve

wri nkle s

from

clothes left in the dryer lou
long I dampen a terry bath
towel and put rt back in the
dryer with tile clothes. Turn
the dryer on for five minutes
companies wait for personal or so and the clothes should
checks to clear before sen· come out wrinkle fr ee. ding
merc•ha""li""
t o JEANS.
customers. We certainly can·
Polly will send you one of
not blame them when !hero he r s igned thank-you
seem to be so many cheeks newspaper coupon clippers if
bouncing. Maybe this is why she use .:; your fayu rite
so many ads tell us to allow Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
4-6 weeks for deliv.ery. This
colwnn. Write POLLY'S
gives them lime tu get their her
POINTERS in care of this
statements back and check to newspaper .
See if any check!::&gt; were return-

program , am.l parti ci pe~t i o n in
local pw·ades.
Four ~r.:HJuatc ll UI'!)~S who
ha ve l'l'ecivcd schola rships
Sgt. and Mrs. Greg Fra!)ce
from the dub an~ Pauline have left Scott Air force
Zirkle, Betsy Cunningham, Base in Illino is and C:lrl:!
DebiJi e Wood, cw d Mary ·en routc to thei r new base at
Kntwst·z vu.
... ...~ Mv1·t1e Beach, S. C. They are
AnuLhdr SJlt'l'ittl proj ect of cu"rnmtly visi ting with their
the cluiJ i!-i sponsur!-ihip uf a parents, Mr. and Mrs. Walter ·
euntestttnl in the Young Fram:c and Mr . and Mrs.
Ca re cri st cu ntesL Su zy Eu gene Bir c.h [ ie ld of
Carpenter, Karen Goins and
Hutlanu .
Jan Hill have been sent by tht.·
Sgt. F rant:c recently signed
l'iu!J tu state spc&lt;:tk-&lt;Jffs.
up fur hi s sccuntl enlistment.
Officet·s uf th e dub this He is in the field of cumyear arc Frances Loui se lll U!lications. Tile t:uup!e in~
Davis, president; EvH Rub· vitc fr iends of this i:II"Ca tu ei:lll
sun , v ice pr esi d e nt : un thL'm during their vaca ~
Catheri ne Welsh, seLTdary. tiuns Ci t Mrytle Rcc.H. "h during
&lt;:tnd Ter ri e Wal ke r , the next couple of years.
treasurer .

Has birthday
Tamara Hcwman. da ughter

of Dan and failh Hayman,
Syracuse,

celebrated

Excellence tn
Design and
Qualitv
.Pomero,

her

~wer

fou rth birthday on Oct. 5. Her

Shop

gra ndparents, the Rev. and

Mrs. Willard f. Carney,
Charleston , W. Va .. surprised
her w1th a Raggedy Ann cake
and gifts. ·

Tamara Hayman

Mrs. Millard

vm..-..-lOJt
erm-5721.

ed.
This morning I saw an ·idea
on TV for making a quick
raincoat to use while camp·
ing. I thought il would also be
great to have ready for guests
when il slarts to rain before
they leave for home. Cut a
hole for necks and anns in a
large plastic garbage bag.
Slip this over the head and
have instant coverage for
clothes. It would be nice to
keep a few sizes ready for

through
the
former
speakeasy where Baltimore's
· most famous literary figure,
H.L. Mencken, used to drop
by to chat with the previous
owner, who was assembling a
collection of Menckenanla.
Dantlnl, born VIncent
Cierkes In 1906, could be
mistaken flT a bum. But he
C(lffim&amp;nds a honorary seat
next to the mayor and other
prominent offlclala at many
functions in a clty ~~ere
eccentric figures
are
esteemed as part ·of the
culture.
Dantlnl became Intrigued
with magic as a child
listening to stories from
boarders at his mother's
home In the waterfront
section of Baltimore called
Fells Point.
"Every Saturday night
they'd sit around the table
playing cards," he said. "One
guy was a storyteller. Every
once ln awhile he would talk
about a magician in Poland
who made things disappear
and appear.
"At 9 years old, I saw a
local magician do slelgbto(Jf·
hand stuff, card tricks," be
added . "I thought I knew how
they were done. So I went
home and stood in front of a
mirror.
" I passed my. hand over a
card
and
the
card
disappeared and that started

RE BATE PROG RAM Jom Wl !h us and Zenith 1n thiS exc111ng c~Jiebr "t ' on
by t a~m g lull aovant age of the b+g Zenitn 60th Ann•v er~a •y Custon.1e1 Rebate
Program You ' ll save sign• ticant dollars on ~lected Zen1 lh SYSTEM J TV models
.. . up to 560.00 d epenomg on the se t purchased Here 's how the progr am wor~s
Just ou.,. any one of tne qual .tyn1 g mode ls . I+ II our the moncy-oack cou pon fr om
~our Zen ith dealer ana send m e coupon bac~ to Zcnilh w!lh .,.our owr.er' b
reg1strett1on card as your proof o f purc hase You·u qot a chec k d11ect hom
Zenll h Program starts Sept 4 and ends Nov l t97B

Featuring exciting new

7NirH

1979
ce\ebratinQ! ZENITH ...

~mer\ca's ·No.1 TV
't'EAR AFTER YEAR!

QIA, QO N.l L

The best Zenith ever!
TRI·FOCUS
PICTURE TUBE

I

CO LOR SENTRY
Ze nrT'&gt;~ rnos:

fl;e s!l;uoesl Ze n•t!l
~·~ru•e

SOP"

e'·er'

p

~1 Cil!i'~

~core

olu!nm~•·c

conrr ol

s ,~rc~r

-....

•.;;'

- -J . .

me."

";The Many-Splendored Self'

Pomeroy,

d udl·d support of lllc local
hu!)pltal, Ct.'isistancc wtlh sending girls to Buckcve Girls'

State, sponsorship uf .;;i:lfety

Bad magician commands attention

Mason Omrch of Christ

Po10:eroy Library, 200 E! 2nd St.,

tlnvcs .
Other Hctivil ies htt vc in-

just such a guest emergent.')-' .

Polly Cramer

IT•s NOT
TOO LATEI

CALL TODAY AT
446-4367
OR STOP IN AND
VISIT US AT THE
SPRING VALLEY PLAZA

t.:o~ •pi.! rate 111 1'I VIr atldll's,.amJ
fur the pa st :l9 yc&lt;~r·s ha ve
I'Olldu cted Ule heart ruml
dnvc in Muldll'purt. More
l't't.'cnt ly · tilt dub members
het vc k.!S~ i sh.•d with tlw t:d nl'er
ami l')'sti&lt;: fiiJI'u sis fuml

POLLY.$ POINTERS.

ell many deansers on our

IS STILL TAKING
APPLICATIONS FOR CLASSES

Other activities of the week !lay tu jmn 111 that dull 's 50th
will includf.• a tliruwr 111i.~t·t i r1 g unniVl' I'SHI'J' &lt;·clcbrati rm.·
at 6:ao p.m. on Munday at tht•
&lt;'luiJ mcmiJ~.· rs t.:ont ril&gt;utc
Mt.•h,::; Inn when the "Woman tu tilt• I..'CIIJllllUnity throug h
or the Year" and the "Woman sev\·ral spctial p roj t:cls.
of the Wet!k" will bt• named. Tlu:;· operate ii lmspJt;ll lmw
and a trip tu !\then:; on Thurs- l'Cillt~ r. provide sdwlarships
for JIUI'SC i'i lnt lning VI'Hj.! l'iiiJlS
at the Holzer Mcdi re~ l Ccntl'r .

Frenches
en route
to base

I

----------------·-~-----~

rDALE'S
'

.

KITCH·EN CENTER
!119 JICbon A,l,

.

!
'

675-2318

Point Pltaaat
WE SERVICE Y·lfAT WE SELL.-. ·

..
I

!

992-3629

POMEROY, 0.

He ran away from home
several times, trying each
time to peddle his magic
wherever be could.
He hopped a freight train to
Pittsburgh in 1921, ran
errands for extras in a film
and worked as a busboy. But
he tired of 12-hour days
cleaning tables. Then he
stopped In a theater.
"I don't know what made
me do it to this day . But I
walked in and said, 'Could .
you use a magician'' The
woman said I could rent the
theater for $35," he reealled.
Dantlni sald he fllled the
theater, but soon realized he
lacked experience .
He returned to Baltimore
and got a jop in a museum
"side-by-side with a bearded
lady." From there, he hit the
carnival circuit at 16 and
went to New York when he
thought he was "ready to
conquer the world."
One day he walked into a
big Manhattan magic store
and met Harry Houdini.
The magician said his
name - Dantlnl - is a
COOlbination of Houdlnl and"
another great trickster ,
Dante.
"After 11 years I went back
out M the road and here l am
at the Peabody Bookshop,"
he said.
Will anyone Inherit hls
legacy of magic and mime?
He frowned and shook hls
head decisively: "I'll be like
Houdini. When Houdini went,
nobody took his place."

..

Me&lt;:11tenanean Styled Con~ole
Genu me Oak wood veneers
on top and en ds Front ana
ba se or Slmutat Cfl wood
Ant 1oue Oak culor
frm sh ca:~ lt!l '&gt;

The f\IE S • K2S44 M

Emt.,. Am('rrc:an Stylt'd

Con~olf'
Maple wood-gr&lt;:llned f m1 ~ h
appl•ed ro gcnwn~J Maple wooa

veniH!f b on top and end,.; Ganury
o l '&gt;l:' ll:'tl ha rtJ wood '-Ohd~ rront
and ba&lt;of' o ! 'ilmu\alf'd
1~ood Cas: er :o

Th e liSZT • K2:.42E
Trarhrtoon al Styl1&gt;d Console
Gr nu1rh' On ~ wond 'l'n f'er s
on lOP and end~ Front and
ba~e of ~rmul at e d wooo
rrn~ehed rn Antrauo
Oa~ color Caster~

Celebrating! ZENITH. ..
p.. proud history of
nearly 50 MILLION
TV
SOLO!

Celebrating! Zenttns
20 Miii/IHIIIJ C,for 1'Y
rolls Off the h'ne f.J. •
ti/S Fa!!!

Th e RAVEL • K253 0E
Countr.,. French Styled
Console Arlliquc OR~
wood·gra •ned lr ms h
appl •ed to durabl e wood
products on top arJd
ends Front £Hi d oaso
of Simul ated wood
Caster s

The NIELSEN • K1 5~ 4M
E11 rty Ame11can St~tcd Co nsole
Map le wood·grained l m1sh
applied to durante w ood
products on lop and ends
r=wnt and ba~u ol ~r mule~ t ed
wood Ct~~ t ers

' "'

aeb1\e

14811

Rebar!

reatprice
Getour9
tupto
PLUS you ge . h'
$60oo from Zentt .
The HAYDN • K 25t 2W
T !l bl e T IJ featu11ng Amon can
Walnut wood · gr&lt;un frn 1:.;h
app!red 10 dura ole
wood products.

Gune in bday! .

-INGELS FURNITURE

106 N, 2ND AVE.

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

�. ~-The Dally Senllnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Fnday, Oct. 13, 1978

oavs" a.

&amp;LOHSE

PHARMACY

----

These Messages Of Our Religious Heritage

r

RIGGS USED CARS, INC.

9)

...

aEN POMEROY

Are Sponsored Each Week By The Following:

___...~ _,L-

TELEVISION
VIEWING

." ,

l RINI TY CHURC H R e~ W H
IHJ lL A NO CHUIK H O t- GOU
~I
~e r rtn pastor Bob Buck Sunday
Re... Bobby Pot teo ~a ~ 1 01 ~ur1
- I
.,c hoot wpt Churc h School 9 15 do~ ~c h oo l lO a rn Sunday w ar
o m worsh1p serviCe lU 30 a m
~h • p l I o rn
Sunday toO "'E' n111 9
Chou rehearsal T u~s dov . 7 30 se t v•c~ . 7 p rn Wedne sda y Fo rn 1
We Fill Doctors'
p m under dtrec 11on al Altce ly Tro rlng Hour 7 p m W ednesday
Prescriptions
Nease
wo • shrp servrc.:.o, 7 30 p m
992-2955
f.IOMEHOY CHUHCH 0~ THl:
Pomeroy , Ohio
HAZH COMMUN IT Y CHU HCH
Pomeroy
NAL ANfNl: Co rn er Ut1ton an d Near l ong Bottom Ed sel Hart
Mulberry Rev Clyd e V Hender
pos ror ~un doy sc hool lO om
SO tl pas. lor Sunday sc hool 9 JO Chu rch
I 30
p rn
p10y er
om Glen McClung , sup! morn
rnt:!e tmg , 7 30 p m 1hu rs do 11
_
'"9 wo rsht p 10 30 a m e... enmg
MILJ OUPORT Pl: N r t: COSTA l
&lt;;f'rw rce 7 30 mtd w eek ~e r v t c e , lhud A ve , th e Rev W rlltom Kml
FURNITURE &amp; HARDWARE
We dnesday , 7 30 p m
tel pa sto r Ronald Dugan Sun
Homelile Sows
Rav Riggs
Gfo!A O 1:1-'ISCOPAL CHURCH
day Schoo l Supt Classes lor all
St.
Rl.
7
32o ~ Mom St Pomeroy Th e oges even 1ng serlJ rCe 1 30 !!1 ble
Chester
Chesler
Ph. 985-3308
RcY Hobert B Gro ve,; rec tor
study Wed nesday 7 JO p m
Sun day ~ervtces I I a m morn 1ng youth -..erviCP.!i f nday , 7 JO p m
pr ayer (Holy Commun1on hrst
MIDDli:YOHl FRHWILL BAP
~
Sunday o f each mont h) ond ser- fi ST Corner Ash and Plum Noe l'
mo n Church chu rch school and
Herrman pastor Sa turday e ... en
nu1sery car e prov •ded Collee tng ser viC e 7 30 p m
Sun day
ho ur m pon sh hou se l ollow tng Schoo l 10 30 a m
rhe scrvrce
Mt iGS
SIIH-Sirvlco-Accossorlos
POMEROY CHURCH O F CHRIST
COOPE RATI VE PAHISH
Ph. 949-9130
220
E . Mil in
:n 2 W Mo 1n St John McArthur
MfTHODI ST CHU RCH
paslor Brble schoo l q 30 am
Robert T Bumgarne r
rno nJi ng worshrp
10 30 a m
Dlfector
Yo uth mee t1ngs b 30 p m eve n
1-'0MEROV CLU SH:: H
•ng worsh rp , 7 30 Wed nesday
Re v Ja mes Corb 11t
mg hr prayer meetr ng and B1b le
POMERO Y wor sh1p ser vtce
The Store
study 7 30 p m
9 15 a m Sun da y sc hool 10 30
With A Heart
r HE SAL VA TI ON ARM Y 115 o m
Rev
Naber!
M&lt;Gee
Racine
Bull ernu t A&gt;J e Pam er oy Envoy mrnt st e t
212 W . Main
510 N . 2nd
Ph . 949-2626
and Mrs Hoy Wtnrng o fl~ee r s tn
fNHRPRI SE Wo r sh rp 9 o m
ch ar ge
Su n d ay t;)o l tn ess Church SchoollO a m
meetmg, 10 a m , Sunday School
2 Convenient
ROC K SPfH NGS W ors htp 10
10 30 am Sunday school leader , o m Church Schoo l q !So rn
Markets
YPSM E lo r~ e Ada m !i 7 30 p.m .
UMY F b 30 p m
so l vo tron
mee tr n g
v&lt;Hi ou s.
f LATWOODS Wo r shrp II a m
speak er s and mu s1c speCi als Church Schoo l 10 am
Nationwide Ins. Co.
Thu rs da y 10 a m
to 2 p m
of Columbus, 0 .
MIDDLEPOHT CLU STE R
Pomeroy 992-2512
Lod ~es Home l eague a ll women
104W. Main
Rev Robert Bum gar ner
Mason 773-5721
onv.ted 7 30 p m praye r meelrng
992-2318 Pomeroy
HEA TH
Hobert Bum garn er
and B1bl e study
Bob Estep
Pastor
Worshop
10 30 a m
leader
Rev
Noe l
Hermon
Churc h School q 30 a m UM Yf b
reache r
pm
BURLING TON SOUTHERN BAP
ftut lond· Solem Center Charge
rt ST CHA PE L Route 1 ShadeRU TLAND W1lbur Hrlt Pastor
Pas tor Bobby l: lk~n s
Sunday Wor sh•p 10 30o m Ch urc h School
sc hool 5 p m Sunday wo rshr p q30 om
~ 45 p m Wednesday prayer ser
SALI:M CEN H R Ch urch School
vr ce 7 30 p n1
9 45 a m worsh1p 9 a m
POME RO Y WES TSIDE CHURCH
SYRACU SE CLU STER
OF CHRIST 100 W Ma1 n St , Jer ry
Rev Harvey Koch , Jr
Pou l, m rni sl er ph on e 992 l b6b
ASBURY
Wor shrp 11 om
Co ns ervct rve non-•ns trumental , Church School q 50 a m UMW
Su ndov wo rshrp , 10 om, Btble l1rst Tuesd ay Btble Study Thur s
study 11 am . wor shrp, b p m
l 30 p m
New Holland
When Grandma wants to get a good look at you, she takes off her
Wednesday Brble study 7 p m
FOREST HUN , Wor shrp 9 a m
glasses. She needs them for reading and for needlepoint, but not for
OLD DEXTCR BIBLE CHRISTIAN Church School I 0 o m
·
9925101
CHURCH
Re v Ra l ph Sm 1th
distance. Her sister, however, wears glasses for distance, but takes them
MINERSV ILLE Wo rsh1p 10 a m
pas tor Sunday sc hoo l 9 30 om
Chu rc h School 'il a m
off when she reads or sews. ·
M rs Wo r ley Fronc rs, superrnlen
SYRACUSE, Church School 9 00
dtml Pr eochrn g servrc es frrs. t &amp; o m Worshrp se rvrc e 7 30 p m
Our physical vision spells out the way we see, yet 11 is our mental
t h~r d Su ndays followtng Sunda y
SO UTHERN CLU STER
School J
vision
that determines th e way we look at things . We form opinions, we
Re.,. Da v1d Horrr s
216 Second
G RA HA M UNITED M ETHODIS T,
Cluster leade r
judge,
according to our background, education , experience, the way we
Preod·ung 9 30 a m , frr st and se
Pomeroy
Re v Steven Wi lson
214 E. Main
were taught when we were young. Like our eyesight, the way we think
cond Sunday s o f each mo nth
992·3325
Florence Sm rth
992-5130 Pomeroy
th1rd and fou r th Sundays each
becomes a part of us.
Htl ton Wolfe
month, wo rshr p serv rce ot 7 30
Assoctat es
p m Wed ne sday eve n+n gs at
l:IETHAN Y. [Dorcas ). Wor shrp
Sometimes we are wrong. Sometimes we judge too quickly. In our
7 30 Prayer an d Bible Study
9 00 o m Church Schoo l 10 00
humanness
we need help, guidance, particularly when the going gets
SEVEN TH DAY
AD VENTI ST a .m
rough.
Mu lberry He1ghts Rood Pomer oy .
CARMEL , Chruch School 9 30
Pas tor, Albert Drtte s Sabbath o.m Wor sh1p 10 30 o .m 2nd end
GrocerlesSc h ool Supenn l endent , Rrfo 4th Sundays
Genenl Merchandise
' The Church, remember, is the re fora// times-good and bad. Have
161 5. Third, Middleport
Whr te Sabbat h Sch ool , Saturday
Racine 949-2550
AP PLE GROV E Sunday Sc hoo l
you visited it recently?
992-2196
olternoon at 2 00 w rth Wo rs hrp 9 30 a m Wor shrp -, 30 p.m I st
Servrc e f ollowrng at 3 15
and Jrd Sundays Pray e r meelm g
RUTLAND FIR ST
BAPTI ST WedMsdoy 7 30 p m Fell owship
CH'URC H S1st e r
Horrt e ll su pper frr st Saturda y 0 p m UMW
Sunday Monday Tu ~sday W ednesday Thursday Friday Saturday
Worn er Supr Sunday School , 2nd Tuesday 7 30 p m
I Kings Isaiah II Chronicles Psalms
Psalms Psalms Psa lms
9 JO a m
morn mg wors hrp
I::A ST LETART. Chru ch Schoo l 9
10 45 a m
3.5-10 37 14·20 29:10-19
5.1-12
7:1·17 llj 1-11 22.1-31
a m Wo r ship s. er v•c e 10 a m
! HI: HI LAN D CHAP EL , George Pr aye r
meet rng 7 30 p m
8.22-30
For The Be1t In TV Viewing
•
Casto pastor Sund ay Schoo l Wed nes da y UMW h r sl Tu esday
Copynght1978 Kerster Advertising Service Strasburg, Virginia
9 30 a m evenrn g wor sh 1p , 7 30
7 30p m
~
Thursday 9\l enmg pr ayer serviC e
HAC INE WE SLEY AN
Sun day
7 30 p m
uau ••••
schoo l 10 am wo rsh tp 11 a m
POM ERO Y FIR ST
BI\P TI ST
Chorr proctrce , Thur sday, 8 p m
Do v1d Mann m1nrste r Wrl l1om
LHAR T FALLS-- Churc h Schoo l
,,.,
Equipment
Watson , Sunday !ichool supt Sun
........u
10 a m Wors hip ser viCe, 9 a m ,
Sales-Service
do v schoo l 9 30 a m marnrng
MORNING STAR W o rsh1p 9 30
wor sh1p I 0 30 a m
Fire Extinguishers
om Church Schoo l 10 30 a m
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTl ST 28 2 M1 d Week Se rvrce Wednesday 8
Fire Dept. Equip.
M ulberry Ave Pomeroy Paul J p m
~
Rutl•od 742-2777
~
Wh1te, Past or Gory Bo shorn Sun
MORSE ChAPEL Worshp 11
da y sch ool sup! Sun da y sc hool
Pho~phy
a m Church Schoo l 9 30 o m
9 30 om
mornmg worshrp
POR TLAN D Wor sh•p 7 30 p m ,
10 30, ev enm g wo r sh 1p b 30 p m Church Sc hoo l 9 30 a m
Let us capture the story
Ealln or
Mtdweek prayer ,.e r v1ce, 7 30
SUTTON Church Schoo l q 30
Carry Out
of your Wedding.
p m
Bakers of
o m Wor shrp l sl and Jrd Sundays
Featuring Deep Sleam
126 E . Main
MIDWA Y COMMUNITY CE NTER , 10 30 a m
Good Bre•d
985 ·4155
Extraction
De&gt;11ter Rd l on gs, di e, Oh1o Reli
992-1304
NORTH EAST CL USTE R
Chesler, Ohio 45720
992
-2206
or 992-7630
Huntinalon,
W.
Clyde Fer rell Pa stor Sunday
Rev Rrchord Th omas
At. 3, Pomeroy
School
11 a m
Satu rd ay
Pa stor
pr eochrn g serv1ces 7 30 P. m
Duane Syd ens lr rc ker
Wednesday even1n g B1 ble study
John Douglas
you th mee tmg 0 p m Tuesdoy 81· doy scho ol 10 30 o m wors htp
at 7J0 pm
CARLETO N CHURCH, Kr ngsbur y Ser.. tce 6 45 P m EvangeliStiC - MT HEHMON Un 1ted Breth ren
ASSOC IOies
ble Stud y ~ p m
VICTORY BAPTI ST - On the :
'I 30 p m B1bl e Study Wednes
FAIT H TABER NACLE CHIJRCH,
JOPPA
Worsh•p
10 am .,
RACINE CHURCH Of THE day , 7 30 p m , Saturday nrg hr Rood Gory Krng p as tor Sunday Servrce 7 30 P rn Wom en s M1 s Church Su nday Schoo l 9 30 0 m
Rout
e 7 by pass James E Keesee '11
Bodey Run Rood . Rev Emm ett Chu rch School 9 a .m
schoo l, 9 30 o m , Ro lph Carl
S1 onory Counc1l 10 a m first and Worsh 1p serlJICe
10 .-4 5 0 m
Preyer NAZARENE Rev John A Co fl · prayer serv1ce 7 30 p m
pa stor . Sun day sc hool 10 am.: 1Q
Rowso n pastor Handley Dunn, Meettn g Wednesday 8 p m
ng
serviCes
superi
ntendent
eve
nrng
worshrp
,
lhtrd
Tuesday
s
Pray
er
and
B•bl
e
Preoch
e
very
Sunday
1
man pa sto r Fronk lm Imboden
Hl:MLOCK GROVf CHRISTIAN 7 30 p rn
supt Sunday school , 10 a m Sun
Praye r
meetmg
Study, Wed nes day 7 30 p.m
olternohng wrth
E Wednesday morn1ng worshrp, I I o,m , eve n· :
CHESTER Wor sh 1p 9 a m
cholfman of th e Boord of Chrt s·
•ng servrce, 7
,.
Hoge
r
Wat
son
pa
st
or
Kenne
th
day elJ entng servt ce 7 30, Btble Ch urch Scho ol 10 a m
7
30
p
m
HARTFORD
CHURCH
OF
CHRI
ST
prayer
mee
trng
7
30
p m Re v
Wednesday
Iron l tf e Sunday School, q 30 ~ ye r Sunda y sc hoo l sup! . Morn
T R I ~ITY Chri stian A ssembly, ;t!
teachong , 7 30 p m Th ur sday
LONG
BO
TTOM
CHRISTIA
N
IN
CHRISTIAN
UNION
,
Th
e
Rev
Jam
es
Leach,
pas
to
r
Oov
td
LONG BOTTOM , Wo rsh1p 7 30 o m
mo rnmg wor shrp 10 30
mg wor sh1p 9 30 a m , Sun
Coo l,.•lle Gilbert Spencer, 1111
OY ES V ll lE
C OMM UN ITY p m Churc h Schoo19 30 a
W alloc~ W1 llt am Campbell pastor, Sunday Holte r, loy leade r
Sunday evenrng wo r sh1p, 7 30 doysc hool, 10 30 o m e~e n.n g Bruce Smrth , pos to r
CHURCH Roger C. Tu rner, pas t or
JEHOV AH s WITNESS ES, 1 mrl e pastor Sunday sc hoo l 9 30 a.m .. :
AL FRED Worsh1p 7 30 p m , p rn Pr ayer mee trn g Wednes· serv+ee , 7 30 Wednesday B1bl e Damewood Supf B1bl e School , Schoo l 9·30 a.m ., J~mes Hughes ,
Sunday sc hool q 30 a m Sunday Church Sc hool9 30 a m
Pr each1ng serv1ce
sup! event ng serv+ce , 7 30 P m . east of Rutland, 1unc tro n o f Route mornrng worship 11 a m Sunday :
9 30 a m
d o y 7~ 0prn
Study 7 30 p m
ell'enr n g serviCe , 7 30 p.m ;
mornmg worshtp , 10 30 Sunday
l 04S o m Naevenr ngser v1ce
Wednesday even 1n g pray er 124 and Noble Su mmit Rood (T
ST 1-'AU L Wo r sh ip II om ,
RAC INl: FIRST BA PTI ST Don L
mtdwee k pray er ser viCe WednesMT
UNION BAPTI ST
Don
e\l enrn g serv•ce , 7 30
HYS
ELL
HUN
FRH
M
eTHODIST
me
eltng
7
30
P
m
Yo
uth
pra
yer
174)
Sunday
Brble
Lectu
re
9
30
Chur ch Schoo19 30 a m
Walker Pastor Ro nn•e Sal ser , Wil so n , Su n day
day, 7 30 p m
•
s c h o o l CHURCH Hev Herb er t Atlm g
MIDDLEPORT
ser
v1
ce
each
Tu
esday
a
,
Watchto
we
r
study,
10
30
HI:EDSV ILLl: Su nday Schoo19 30 Sunday school sup!. , Sunday
UNT
O
I11Je
Communrty
:
M
O
MIDD LI:PO RT CH URCH OF a m Wo rs hrp ., 30 p m Pray er s&lt;. hool , 9 30 o m mo r n1 ng war · su pero nlendent Sundov sc hoo l pastor Sunday Schoo l 9 30 a m
fAIR VIEW BIBLE CHUH CH am Tuesd ay, Brble stud y, 7 and
9 45 a m eve nrng worsh1p 7 JO
CHRI ST IN CHRISTIAN UNI ON
Leta rt , W Yo , Rt. I Re v C ho rl e~ 81 5 p m
Thursday theocr oh c Church , long Bottom lawrence ,.
Mee trng ., 30 p m
1 ue sdoy shtp I 0 40 o m Sunday e\lentng p Ill Proyf!r meehng, 7 30 p m Mornrn g servrce, 10 30 a m
low rence Manl ey , pa stor Mrs
E
vongelts
t~e
serv
•ce
7
30
p
m
Hargrave
s
pastor
Worship
ser·
school
7
30
p m ,, serviCe Bush._ pa stor Betti e Pigott Sun til
Vos ltOt lon·t 30 p m I sl Th ursd ay
wor shrp 7 30 Wednesday e ... en· Wednesday
1
day sc hool supt Sunday Sc hool 10
Hus~el l Young
Su nda y Schoo l
Pro
yer
meetrng
,
Wedn
esda
y
7
30
v•ces
q
30
a
m
Sunday
sc
hool
mee
t
ng,
8
30
p.m
1
SIL VER RID GE Wor ship 10 a m mg B1bl e study 7 30
TUPPERS PL A INS CHRI STI A N
a.m . Yo uth grou p and pray er •
Sup! Su nday Schoo l 9 30 om
m
11
a
m.
even
mg
worshrp,
7
30
HOPE
BAPTIST
_
570
Grant
St.,
p
Church Schoo l 9 a m
DAN V ILLE WESLEYAN . Re\1 R CHURCH Eugene Underwood
meef1ngs Wed nesd ay 7 JO p m :
Cvenmg worsh1 p, 7 30 Wedne s
1=
RH
DOM
G
OSPEL
M
ISSION
ot
P
m
Tu
esdav
co
ttage·
prayer
Mtdd
leport
.
Bobby
Elktns
pasto
r
TUPPER S PLAIN S Worsh 1p 9 D Bro wn pasto r Sun da y School , pastor Howard Coldwe ll , Jr ,
~
da y prayer mee tm g 7 30 p m.
Rev
Lawr ence mee tr ng an d Brble study . 9 30 Sun day School 10 0 m wors hip Church services Sunday 7 30 p.m
0 m Church School 10 am
9 30 o rn
rn orn1 ng wors h1p Sunday School Supt , Sunday Bald Knob
FAI TH BAPTIST Chur ch, Mason,
MT. MORIAH CHU RCH OF G OD
Gluesencom p, Sr , pastor, Roge r am . Worshtp serviCe , Wed nes - serv 1ce , 11 a.m ., evenrng servr ce
I&lt; I::NO CHURCH O F CHRI ST ser 10 45 you th servtce , b 45 p m
School , 9 30 0 m Morm ng Ser- Wrllford Sr Sun da y schoo l supt
Roone Route 2 th f! Rev James v1ces each Sunday 9 30 o m event n
do~ 'I 30 P m .
7·30 p m
Thursday p roy e~ m e et at United Steel Work 11 rs •
worshrp , 7 30 p m
mo
n
10
30
a
m
..
Sunday
evenrng
Ro1lrood Str eet •
M Muncy pasto r Sunday sc hool
Sunday sc hool 9 30 a , elJenrng
CAL VARY 811:1LE CHURCH, now m ee tmg and Bible study 7 30 Unron Hall
Geo rge Prck ens, pas tor w1th pray er and pro1se Wednesday
• worshrp , 7 30 p m
Sf!o i VICe , 7 pm
Mason . Pastor , Rev Joy Mrlchell .
Praye r loc ated on Po meroy Pr ke County p.m
'
9 45 a m morntng worshrp 11 prcachmg on f ~rs t a nd tht rd Sun· ~ JO p m
li:TA HT
FALL S
UNIH D meetrng Wednesda y 7 30 p m . Rood 25 n ear Fl atwoods Rev
am
e venmg worshrp, 7 30 day o f month Olt ver Sworn Sup I
RUTLAND FR EEWILL BAPT IST Morn1n g worshtp 9 45 a m Sun- 1:11
SIL VER RUN FNE E BAPTIST Rev
BRETHREN Rev . Fr eeland Norm
day School I 0 30 a m . Prayer :
Prayer meet1ng Tu esdoy 7 30
Youth meetrn g, Sunday , 5 30 p.m . Bl ackwood pastor Services on Church _ Leland Holey pastor
HO BSO N CHRI STI A N UNION , Morv 1n Mark1n, posfo r Ste11e Lit.,.
p m
Yo ung peopl e s meeltng , ReY Ke1th Eblm pas tor Sunday tle Sun da y ~ chool sup! Sunday pastor Floyd Norrt s, su p! Sunday wrth Don an d M artha M eado w!- tn Sun day a! 10 30 o.m and 7 30 Sunday s.chool 10 0 m evenrng meettng Wednesday, 7 30 p m .
sc hoo l , 9 30 om ., morn 1n g se r ch arge
FOREST RUN BAPTIST - Rev "
7 30 p m Thursday
P
m
,
wrth
Sunday
sc
hool
,
q
30
se
r
rce
,
7
JO
p
m
'
Pro
11
Schoo l, 9 30 o.m , leonard sc hoo l, 10 am
mo r ntng wa r
MIDDLEPOR T FIRST BA PTI ST Gilmor e ftr st elder evenrng ser - shtp II a m Sunday evenrng man , 10 30 o.m Pray er serlJrce
WHIT!: S CHAPEL Coolville RO
a ~ Bibl e study . Wedn esday , mceltng Wednesdo; , 30 p ;: e r Nyl e Borden, pastor Cornellu ~ 11:
We
dnesday
,
7
30
p
m
Bunch supen ntendent Sunrlo y
7
Corner Sr11 th and Palm er , the Re\1
Rev Roy Deeter pas lor Sunda y
GOP m
CHURCH OF GOD of Proph ecy
voce 7 30 p m Wedn esday prayer worsh•p , 7 30 Pra yer meell ng
CHESTER CHURCH O F THE school 9 30 om ., wor sh 1p ser vrc e
school , 9 30 a m
secon(! 111 d :
K!f by
Oil er
pastor
Robert mee tt ng 7 30 p m
,
IND~
P
ENDENT
HOLINE
SS
locate
d
on
the
0
J
Whtfe
Rood
and Bibl e study , Thursday, 7 30 NAZARENf Rev Herbert Grote
fou
rt
h
Sunda
y~
worsh
1p ser v1ce at •
Porke r supen ntend ent Sunday ,
10 30 om. Br ble study and prover CHURCH. INC -- ~earl St , Mid- off htghwoy 160 Sunday School
MT MORIAH CHU RCH OF GOD p m , yo uth se rvte e b p m Sun
2 ~pm
•
pa stor Worshtp servrce 11 a m ' servrce , Wednesday , 7 30 p m
1
WMPO R.od10 program 7 45 a f'n
d
epor,t
Rev
0
Dell
Manley
,
10
a,m
Superrntendent
John
Roc1ne Rout e 2 The Rev Charles day
ond 7 30 p m Sunday
Su nda y
Sunday School 9 I S o m _ Morn- Hand pa stor Sunday school 9 45
RUTLAND
pas
to
r,
Sonny
Hudson,
Sunday
Lo
veday
First
Wednesday
nlgh
l
CHESTER CHURCH OF GO D
rng Worsh1p , 10 15 a .m Youth oc- a m , morm ng wor shr p 11 a m Rev Donny R Cook pastor Sun· School , 9 30 o m Rrchord Borton
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST
school Jt.upt Su nda, school 9 30 of month CPMA ser vtce s se co nd
11\lrtl eS and fellowsh1 p for 1umor hen 1ng ser\llces Tuesdo11 an d day sc h oo l 9 30 a m , wo rship sup! Prayer meetrng , Wednes· lorry Co leman pastor Co- S un~ om .. eveni ng wo rshrp. 7 30 ~ m
Wedn es day WMB meeti~g th ird
da
y
7 JOp m
and senror h1gh studen ts, 6 p.m. f r rday , 7 30 p m
doy school supts , Sam McKrn ne y WProyer and prm se ser \l rce, · through frft h youth ser vte e .
ser Yte e 11 o m , e venrn g ser vtce
BRADF O RD
CHURCH
OF an d Herb Ellrtt Sunday school and
Sunday eve mng wor sh1p 7 30
ednesdoy , 7 30 p.m
George Croy le pastor
BEA RWALLOW RID GI:. CHURCH 7 00 yo uth ser\i •ce W e dn e sda~
CHRIST Gabr~ e l Mzrs pastor ar - commllnr on 9 3D a m Wors hip
p m Mrd - week pray er servrces , OF CHRIST, Dua n e Worden 7 00 pm
THE PEOPLES C!iURCH OF
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEl _ 570
bl
e
Sunda
y
School
9
30
o
m
mor
Wednesda y 7 30 p m
~OMERO Y - Carner Main and Grant St., Middleport; Rev Bobb y
mmr ster t:l rbl e class 9 30 am LAN GSV ILl E
C H RI STIAN n1ng chu rch 10 30 a m Sundoy ond comu nron, 10.30 a m .
•
CHURCH OF CHRIST, M •d- mornmg worsh tp , 10 30 a m , CHURCH Rober t Muss er pastor
RUTLAND
COMMUNIT Y Co urt St s.
th1rd floor o ver Elkrns Sunday sch ool 10
event
ng
se
rv
tce
,
7
00
p
m
CHURCH Sunday Schoo l 9 30 Lr gh fhou se Restaurant
Henry morn mg wor ship, 11' ev: n'::,g
dleporl , 5th ond Mom George evenrng wors hrp , b 30 p m Sun day sc hoo l 9 30 o m RoY
G loz e, m tm ster. M tke Gerlac h, Wedn esda y Brble stud y b 30 p m S1gmon. sup! mo r ntn g worsh tp , Wednesday serv1ce 7 30 p m
a m wo rsh1p servrce , II o m
Cook , pas to r Sunday sc hool, 10 worshrp 7 30 p m
Thur sday
LAUHH CLIFF FREE METHODIST Wednesday pr ayer meellng, 7 30 a m .. mornlfl~ wo r sh1p, 11 a m , evenmg Bibl e stu dy and prayer
superin tendent
Te r r y Yankey
NEW STIVERSVILLE COMMUNI
10 30 Sunday evenm g serviC e
Monday Nile Late
you th mrn1 s t ~ r Brble school 9 30 TY Churc h Sunday School ser "I 30 m1d week se r v •ce Wednes- CHURCH, Hev Floyd F Shook
p m yo uth serv rces Sunday, 7 evenrng ser v1ce . 7 30 Wednes· mee tmg 7·30 p m Aff rlloted w 1th
pa stor Ll oyd Wnghl , Sunday P m Sunday mght wo rsh1 p, 7 30
Oct. 9, 1978
day e\l enrng se rviC e, 7 30, In- s B·C
a m , morn1ng wo r sh1p 10 30 vice, 9 45 am Wo r shtp servr ce day 7 p m .
Schoo l Supl , Mornrng Wors htp
W. L. ..
HUTLANO CHURCH OF THI: terdenommotron ol. full gospel
a m
e ven1 ng worsh1p 7 30
BRADFO RD
CHUR CH
OF
10 JO EYan ge ii SI!C Serv1ce l 30
SYR AC USE CH URCH OF TH t 9.30 0 m Sunday Schoo l 10 20
Roach ' s Gun Shop
52
4 :
pr o11 e• ser vtce, 7 p .m Wednes p m
NAZAH
C
NE
Rev
Lloyd
D
Gnmm
RUTLAND
CHURCH
OF
GOD
CHRI
ST-G
obr~
e
l
Mroz
pastor
Wedn es day ,
Pr ay e r NA ZA RI: NE
Rev . Dol e Boss
a m Wednes day Prayer and 81
Fr~e's Pennzoll
36 20 •
da y
Jr
pas
for
Sunday
school
9
30
Pa
stOr
Denn
1
s
Bale
s
Sunday
Su
nday
school
,
9·30
a
m
marn
mce trng 7 30
pa stor , Bob Moore , Sunda y bl e Study 7 30 p m . Sun day even
Schoo l 10 a.m w orshrp servic e, ing churc h 10·30 0 m Jv
a m wo rshtp serviCe , IU 30 o m
MIDDLEPOR T CHURCH OF THE
ZION CHURCH OF CHR IST, Schoo l sup! Sunday :,chool , 9 30 1ng wor shrp 7 30 p.m , Chorr Proc
Broo d cosII •ve
' over WMPO , yo ung I I 30 a m on d 7 30 p.m . Pray e r church program
'
· dtrectton
nl or
NAZARENE Rev J1m Broom e
under
Pomer o y Horrr sonvrll e
Rd
o m _. mornmg wor sh1p 10 45 t1ce Thu rs day 7 p m
Heiner ' s Bakerv
16 40 :
peopl
e'
s
se
r
vice
,
7
p
m
mee
trng
,
Wednes
day,
7
.30p
m
oll&lt;o
re
n
Mro:z
for
children
210
pas tor 1:1111 Whrt e, Sunday sc hool Rober t Pur tell ,
p a sto r
Btl! a r+r evon gel rstte ser v1ce, "J p m
UfXl ER CHURCH OF CHRI Sl
10~ .h onge lr str c ser vice · 7 30 p.m.
Rut .LANO _APO STOLI C CHURCH durmg regular church h~ ur 1 ~ No. 2
sup t Sunda y schoo l. 9.JO o m
Mct:. lroy Sunday schoo l supt Sun Wedn es doy servrces
pra yer C horl e ~ Hu ssell Sr
mrn 1ster
Team High Series
•
mornrng worshtp
I 0 30 o m , day school 9 30 a m mornmg oM pr ots.e 7 p m
Wednes
day
serv1
c.e
.
7.30
p
m
0~
JI:SUS
CHRIST,
Elder
James
church
basement.
Sunday
even
·
Nazar ene Rtck Macomber sup! Sunda y
Roach's
Gun
Shop
2286,
;
MASON COUNTY
~;I fer. Btb!e study, Wednesday , rn g serv 1ce, 7 p.m Wednesday
Sunday
evongeh s!1C mee11ng . wo r sh1 p and co mm unron 10 30 you th
1 pm
Dody prayer sc hool , 9 30 a m wor sh1p ser Frye's
Pennzoll
2068, "
FIRST SOUTHERN rUAPTI ST Cor30 p m., Sundoy S ch~~ l . 10 a.m
servrce, 7 30 p m
l 00
p m
Pr ayer mee tmg
a m Sunday worsh tp serv•ce, 7 mee trng 8 30 a m Mens pray er vrce 10 30 o.r'n Brble Study TuesPowell's Mkt. W6S.
~
ncr ol Second and Anderson , Su;day n1ght serv rce , i' -30 p m.
JU!ill£E CHRISTIAN CENTEH _
We dn es day ,
7
p . m . p m Wednesday evem ng pray er lfleetrng Soturdov, 7 p m
day, 7 3Up rn
Team
High
Game
•
Mason Pastor Fronk t owtherf
OM EROY
W ES LE Y AN George's Creek Roo d . Church
UN ITED
PR ES B YTE RIAN meetin g an d Brbl e study _7 p m
EDf N UNITED BRHHHEN IN
REORG ANIZED CHURCH Of Sunday school , 9 45 a m wor'- HOLINESS - Harrr sonv1lle .R ~od
Roach ' s Gun Shop 824, '
school
9"30
m
morn
m
'wor
M INISTRY OF M EIGS COU NTY,
0
51 JO HN LUTH ER AN C HUR ~ H CHHIST, Elden R Blak e pastor
JESUS CHRI ST OF LATTE R DAY shrp servrce, 11 om an d 7 30 Dewey Kmg~ poster
Po well ' s Mkt. 757, Roach ' s '
Edrson ship , 10 30 even rng servrci. 7·30
Ow1ght l lavrlz dt rect or
Pm e Gr ove Th e Rev Wr lltom Sunday School I 0 o m , Howa rd SAINTS, Por tlan d HaCi ne Rood
•
Proyer meetrngWednesdo y 7 30 Gun Shop 744.
HARR I SO N VI L L E Middleswor th
Po s for
Ch urch McCoy sup! Mornr ng sermon. Wdloam Hou sh, pastor. Hu ss ell p m ~., Weekly Urbl e Study~ ....l We av er , ossrstant Henry Eblrn
Men's High Series - Ron ~
Jr , Sunday school sup! Sunda y pm 1
Wndne sdoy, 7 30 p m .
PR ESBYH RIAN ,
Rev
Er nes t servr ce s 9 30 a m Sundov School I I o m , Sunday n +g ht ser v1ces
Hatclrlf , church sc hool D11 ector
Smith 508, Larry Hendrltks
MASON CHUR CH Of CHRI ST. P
school 9 30 o m mornrng wor
ST PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH
Stnckt.n , posl or. Sunday church 10 ~ 0 a m
Chrt s. t ton l:ndeovor , 7 30 p m , Sun day School , 9 30 a m Mor n
496,
Raymond Roach 472.
Ship _11 o .m Sundqy evenmg ser· Corner of Syca more on d Second
sc hool 9 30 a m . Mrs Homer
8RADBUR Y
C HUR CH
OF Song ser vice , 8 p m , fl reach rng rng wor sh 1p , 10 30 o m , Sunday 0 !io11 4l:l i' , Mrl!er St , Moson W
Men ' s High Gome - Ron
Vo
Sunday
B1
bl
e
S!udy
10
a
m
\liCe
,
_
7
.30
pray
er
rneetrng
Thur
s
Sfs
,
Pomeroy.
The
Reli
Wtl
lr
am
Le e sup!
morn 1n g wor sh+ p, CHRIST Mr. Donald Roley pastor 8 J O p m
Mrdw ee k Prayer even1ng serv1ce 7 p m Wednes
Smith 196, Bill Marcum 191, ~
Middlesworth
Past or
Sundo
10 80.
Sunday sc hoo l, 9 30 o m , w ar mee11ng Wednesda y 1 p m Roy doy P. venm g proy~r ser v1ces, ·r 30 Worshrp I I a m . and 7 p rn Brbl e day, 'I 30 p.m.
Study Wednesd a y 7 p .m , Voc al
.. SYRACUSE F I ~ ST CHURCH OF Schoo l al 9
a,m and Church Raymond Roach 1n.
M I ODLE P O~ T . Sunday sc hool ,
shrp serv tce, 10 ~0 am · Sunday Adam s loy l(!oder
pm
Women ' s High Series GOO
Not ~e nteco stol Rev
Ser.,. 1ces )I 0 m
mi.Js rl
9 30 a m ,, Richard Vaughan supt
ser v1ces 7 p m
youth group
CHUfK H OF JfS US CHH!ST,
1:11- THL EHfM BAPTI ST Rev Earl
Naomi
Floyd 561, Bess 11
MASO
N
A
SSE
MI:tl
V
Of
GOO,
Gc
o•~
a
01ler,
pa
stor
Wor
ship
SACRED
HEART
R
Father
Morn rng worsh tp, I 0 30
Wednesday. 7 p.rlt
Located at Huflo nd on New lrrno Shuler pastor Wor shrp l&gt; e i \I IC ~
Hendricks
490, Morgaret j
0 :1ddrnq I ctr1o M o o;.on w Vcr . se r11 1Ce Sunday, 9 45 o.m Su n - Paul 0 . Welton , ·~as~;; Phone
SY RACUSE. Morn tng worshrp, 9
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST. Hev Earl Rood n el( t to For est A cre Pork
9 J O a.m Sunday sr hoo l 10 30
Wyatt 459.
·
•
Chu:;
ter
Tt•nnaot
Po~
tor
~undoy
doll
sc
h?o
l
II
am
;
wor&lt;;h!P
ser·
99'1.2625
Saturday
e
\lening,Mass,
o m . Sunda y school , 10 o m Mrs
Shuler pastor Su nday ~c hoo l Rev ~ oy H o u~ e pastor Robe rt a rn Bible Study and pr oye r ser
Women's High Game . ~c
hon(
q
45
o
m
Ch
lld
~tm
s
VI
Ce
'I
~0
~,
m
,
Thursday
pro'(er
·
-;
30;
Sunday
Mass
,
8
and
10
a.m
;
Sompson Hall , supt.
9 30 a m Chu rch ser vk e ! p •n
Mu s~e f ~u n d oy !,chnn l ~u p ! 'wn
v1rt rtu or ~ d ay 7 30 p rl"t
Naomi Floyd 196 and 192,
Churdl b .J'&gt; pIn Y oun ~ t'Porl.,. ~ mpc l rng 7 JO r m
Con less ton , Satu rday , 7.7 30 p m

RANKU~

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1978
s: oo-voyage to tne ~onom 01 tne Sea 3; Star Trek 4,
Beverly Hillbillies 8; Mister Rogers' Neighborhood
20,33; Emergency One 131 Brady Bunch 15.
5 :30-News 6; Sanford &amp; Son 8; Elec Co. 20,33, Mar y
Tyler Moore 10; Odd Couple 15 .
6 : QO--News 3,4,8, 10, 13, 15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33
6 : 30-NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Carol Burnell &amp;
Friends 6; CBS News 8, 10; Over Easy 20 .
7 : oo-&lt;ross-Wils 3; PM Magazine 4; Newlywed Game
6, 13; Moppet Show 8; News 10; Love, American
Style 15; Consumer Survival Kit 20, lnslqht 33
7 : 3G-Hee Haw Honeys 3; Dating Game 41 S1.98 Beauly
Show 6; Bonkers 8; Pop Goes The Country 15 ,
5100,000 Name That Tune 13. MacNeii · Lehrer
R01&gt;0rl 20,33 .
8 :00-World Series Pregame Show 3,4, 15; bonny &amp;
Marie 6, 13; Wonder Wmoman 8, 10; Washington
Week In Review 20,33 .
8 : 15--World ~erles ; 8 : ~Wall Street Week 20,33.
9 : 00;41ovle A Guide for the Married Woman" 6, 13,
Incredible Hulk 8, 10, Congressional Outlook 20, 33
9 : ~Turnabout 20; Charleston Jaycee's Report 33
10 :QO--Fivlng High 8, 10; News 20; Movie " Word Is

RIDENOUR SUPPLY

~ ,

{\f"'

ROSEBERRY'S
PENNZOIL

Whirlpool

APPLIANCE II
S!..

RACINE
FOOD MARKET

non

SUNOCO

SERVICE
CENTERS

12 :QO--Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Monty Pylhon 33.
12 : 30-Twlggy's Jukebox 8: 12 :4D-Ironslde 13.
1 :CIO-folews 8; Movie "Ten Little Indians" 10.
I :30-Midnlght Special 3,4, 15; I :40-News 13
3:QO--News 3; 3 : 3D-Movle "Madigan " 3.
4 :45--Movle "River of Mystery" 3.

by Roger Bollen

O VUt!:r l: ~~
Au ~ II al to
) O!J! h Amcl r{U ~ U I OP'-'
, It
{ 011" 1' II ( !ro n
~ o ltl' ~ ,
! Jlqii ii'Ut" CIPt t&lt;O I C l { Sij()()O
l o S~ {J()(J fl lu~ l- .otpt' II ~ P'o pood
I t H ' ' r"ploy rm..•tl l rnl at r1 10iion
wlll l.' Ovu • "&gt;t.: a ~ l- rnpiD'(IIlCiot
Bo• l Ul l !Jo, fOII Mo o:nw

WU WK

A t rr 1t1

M l OICAl . 1~( HN OLO C I ~I 111ok•
nt h•1nnlt• AHc pl 11 19 opplrl a
han ~ l or t .. ll !uno' p1• r ononl,1nt
t u dm olo~ ! \ t Mll 01 lL 1 w•th
Ht- W R •• :, IJ!H !'~ or opp lr &lt;otr o n ~
( 011
bt• ntotled to V u rme n ~
M&lt;•mDi tOI H o~p il o l 8o.ot 7-l lf
M11lht•r• y He•ght.,
f.l amero y
Oh •o
4 S"'t:J 9
f.l ho n e
bl ~ 'N1 4:'1 U4 (l: 0 1- )

HELP WANTED
N e ed Office Grrl for
G e ne r al Oflrc e Work .
Must be good typ1 st tl nd

know

shorth a nd

Ex

pen encc helpful but not
ne cessa ry
G oo d
fnnge
ben e ftt s Wnte B o x 40 6,
P om er oy, Ohro, g rvrn g full
r esum e tnt erv• ew s wrll be
a r ra ng ed
All
re p11 es
strtckly c onttd enh a l .

Spo,.ts Transactrons
By United P r es s lnfef"natronat
Thursday
Football
Prtt sbuf" gh - Re si gn ed r un
ntng b ack Ja ck Oelopl arne and
put rook1 e co rn er bac k Nat
Terr y on w a ivers
SOCCE!f"
Philadelphr a (N ASU - Sold
forw ard Mar t1n Hend er son to
L e1cest er
Cit y
of
Engltsh
Second DrVISIOn .

PUBLIC NOTICE
T h e Tu pp er s P l ar n s
Ch es t er W a ter D 1str +cl rs n ow
accepf tng bi ds f or a ne w 1978
p1c k up tru ck , w 360 eng ine or
co mpa r abl e s+te 6060 Gros s
V ehiC le w e1gh l , wr th power
brak es TTu c k. tS t o have e· tt
bed w 1lh ln "i+ de f en der s , wes t
co ast rn1 r ror s ~ ~ D step r ear
b um p e r , a ut o mat rc t rans.
m +ss ron . delu,.; e c ab rn ter ror
w rth r u bbe r ma t on fl oor and
f r&lt;Je (5 ) H78 x l5 trr es. P S_,_ ~
Brds arc sub m rtt ed to 1n
el ud e tra de rn ot 1974 F 100
long bed , sta ndard tr ans
m1SS 1on, H D
r ea r s t ep
bump er , mu d and sn ow rear
!Ir es an d we st coas t m 1r ro r s
w1th delu xe cab
Al so b 1ds are to be sub
m 1ll ed fo r t h e ou1r rg h t
purchas e o f th rs tru c k
B1d s ar e to be opened at t he
Wat er Off rce a t 12 00 noon ,
N o\lem ber l, 1978 Su cc essf ul
btdd er 1s to del1ve r tru ck not
mare tha n 30 d a ys aft er
awa r d rs m ade to dea ler
Qu otes w 1t1 a I so be rece •vea
on a 1979 m od el p rc kup w rl h
t he
sa me
g en er a l
spec 1f1Cal ro n s as abo ve
( 10) 13, 20 , 27 , Jt c

"Finally, I've found
a MAN-SIZE tractor"
~~~ft0M'

I1JCI01

..

Attend The Church Of Your Choice

:;

FIRE &amp; SAFETY

=

....
"''•
••'
...

This Sunday

PillA SHACK

tl

-

iJ

-

MARK V STORE
Middleport

...•.
.....•

YOUNG'S
CARPETING

•

Ntnd\1$ .IIIII. IO"!rrh••

...,... Mort WQI. PO • IIII
le»we• tyral cost , all 011 ,
du"

SEE THEM

TODAY'

REED'S COUNTRY STORE
"eedsville ,

&lt;X C!-lARLIE •I

BUY-NOW!
JOHNS.MANVIUE

3 TAB ROOF SHINGLES
20 YEAR WARRANTY

OftLY
STOP IN SOON, LOOK OVER

BAUM
TRUE VALUE

Middleport Book Store
99 Mill St

$222~
CASH &amp; CARRY

OUR NEW COLLECTION

RT. 62 NORTH

Middleport, 0.

985-3301

CHESTER, 0.

POINT PLEASANT
675-1490

'"•

••
•

SHARP USED CARS

!

!

=
!

i

•••
•••

.•••

Local Bowling

•

•
••

•••

JO DAY S0-50 WARRANTY ON MO.ST USED CARS

..

1976 TRIUMPH TR7-TOPEZ
' 1974 MUSTANG-Yellow
1974 C0MET":"4 dr., green
1973. PLYMOUtH DUSTER-Blue
I
-'1975 NOVA-Red
1915 PLYMOUTH DUSTER-Blue
1973 FORD GAI.AXIE 500-Copper
1975 PIN10 STATION WAGON-White
1973 ·MAVERICK- Gold, 4 Dr:
1972.CHEVEllE-2 dr., white
1975 CAPRICE STATION WAGON-Green
P1976 amASS SUPREME

.t5

Qau,

Hendrlcks 191.

~ ~

:

~2395 1976 LTD-Green

'2195: 1976 MUSTANG COBRA-Blue
'1795 1971 FORD TORINO-Lt. blue
'2595 1975 LID-Yellatv
'1895 1972 LID-4 Dr., gold
'1895 1974 CHEVEllE MALIBU CLASSIC-Bronze
•2150 1972 ,MUSTANG FASTBACK-Yellow
'1295 1976 PONTIAC AREBIRD-Red
'2100 1977 MUSTANG 2-2 COBRA-Black
'3595 .1976 FORD MUSTANG-White
. .SCAMP -White
.
'4595"·1975. PLlMOOTH

'

.

.

1972 F~100-Red ,
.J976 F·250-Tan &amp; White
19,76 f·250-Green
1975..COURIER-Yellow
.

'5195
'4295
'3995
'795
•3195
'995
•1995
'650
'5195
'4395
'2295
'.2.995

'4495 1977 COROOBA-Dk. green

'

•

~~!::;g~~~·

0.

Hock ey
Sf L our s - Sen t d ef ensem.:.n
Gor don B uynak on loa n to
Tulsa of C en t r a 1 Hockey
L ea gue
Bask etba II
Detrot t Plac ed fo rward
John Shum ate on 1n 1ured ltsf
Golden
State
Placed
forwar ds Wesley Cox and E C
Colema n on rn1u r ed li st
Boston P laced for ward
Curtr s Rowe on 1n1ured l rs.t
San D iego _,__ AcQu tr ed guard
Ll oyd Fr ee fr om Phrladelphl a
f or a 1984 f1r st r o und dr aft
cho1ce , P.laced forwards W1ll
Jones and Bill Willough by and
gua rd Bi rd Averrtt on warvers. ,
placed rookr E' center Jer om e
Whrteh ead on tnl ured l rs t
Ph rtad elph ra - T rad ed gua r d
Lloyd F r ee to San Or ega for a
198!1 fir st r ound draf t ch 01ce

TWO RIVERS ,FORD, INC.

c

'

ro... Maw ph t ~ l b Yihlo~u 20 anach

...

ER'S
BAKERY

r

BUSINESS

... AND lHIS 16

6 :00-Sunrlse ·Semesler 8, 10.
6:30-Saturday Report 3; Vegelable Soup 4; TV
Classroom 8; U .S. Farm Report 10; Kentuckv
Alleld 13.
7 : 1l0-Go 3; Mario &amp; the Mogle Movie Machine 4 ,
Matters of Life 6; Mr. Magoo 8; Public Polley
Forums 10; Animals, Animals, Animals 13.
7 : 3o-Lard of the Lost 3; World of Survival 4; Dusty's
Treenause 6: Porky Pig &amp; Friends B; Pink Panther
13; Vegetable Soup 15.
8 : 00-Yogi'l Space Race 3,4, 15; Scooby -Doo 6, 13 ;
Popeye 8,1 0.
8:~Fangface 6,13; 9: CJO-&lt;hallenge of the Super.
friends 6, 13; Bugs Bunny- Road Runner B. 10.
9:30-Godzllla Power Hour 3,4, 15.
10:QO--Scooby's All-Stars 6, 13.
10 : ~Fenlasllc Four 3,15; Movie "Jungle Gents" 4,
Torzon-Super-7 8,10.
•
11 :QO--Krofff Superstar Hour 3, 15.
11 : 3D-Little Rascals 4; Bewllched 6; Action News for
Kids 13.
12:Cl0--Fabulous Funnies 3, Weekend Special 6, 13;
Movie "The Barbarlaan &amp; the Geisha" 4 ; Space
Acodemy
8, 10;
PTL
Club
15 .
12: 3D-Baggy Pants 3; Fat Albert 8,10. •
1 : QO--Big Blue Marble 3; Ark II 8; In The Know 10;
Sugar In The Gourd 33.
! : ~Movie "The Feminist &amp; the Fuzz" 3; Show My
People 8; Hogan's Heroes 10; Consumer Survival
Kll 33.
2:00-Gong 1how 4; Viewpoint 8; Movie "Bikini
Beach" 10, Wrestling 15; When The Boat Comes In
33.
2::10--&lt;:hoap Show 4; Movie "Hitler : The Last Ten

Cable TV Systems, inc.

MIKE SWIGER
STATE FARM
INSURANCE

Ken Gnwer

FUNNY

SATURDAY, OCTOBEtt 14, 1978

Dan Thompson Ford, Inc.

Of Your Choice
This Sunday

Creature' s Revenge" 6; Boxing 8; Woody Haves :
Football 10; College Football 13.
12.00-The ,Desperados" 10,· 1: ~Movie "Paula" 3,
Movie "Red Skies ot Montana" 4
2·oo-Movle "Baron Blood" 13.
2 :3D-News 3; 3 ·3D-Movle "The Famliv Secret" 3.
3·3o-Movle "The Frozen Dead" 13.
S oo-Movle "Cry for Happy " 3; ABC News 13

Next Door" 6; Gunsmoke 8, Movie "The Devll's

Services

Attend The Church

3,,.,15; Movie "Fort Apache" ..-; Movie " The

Own" 10.

VIRGIL B.
TEAFORD SR.

WAID
SONS STORE

9·oo-Movle " Rescue from Gilligan ' s Is. " 3,4, 15; Love
Boal6,13 ; American Girls 8,10; The Long Search
33.
IO:QO--Sword of Justice 3,4, 15; Fantasy Is. 6, 13; Dallas
8, 10; Reel West 20 ; Champions 33.
11 QO--News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, IS; Marshall football 33.
11 · 15--ABC News 6; 11 :3D-Saturday Night Live

10: 30--Monty Python ' s Flying Circus 20.
l i :QO--News 6,8,10, 13; Dick Cavell 20.
11 : 3D-News 3,4, 15; Baratta 13; Movie " The People

Tractor Sales, Inc.

Reuter-Brogan
Insurance

Previews_ 33.

Out" 33.

P. J. PAULEY,
AGENT

Midway Market
Bob's Market

3: QO--World Series Pregame Show 3,4, 15; Marie Cur ie
33.
3 15--World Series 3,4,15.
4 QO--Polnt of View 6, Nashvil le On The Road 10:
Ironside 13; Wilder Wilder 33 .
4· 3D-NFL Game of the Week 6; Sports Speclacular 8,
Pop Goes The Country 10, Catch -33 33.
S:QO--Wide World of Sports 6, 13 ; Dolly 10; The L oog
Search 20; Sudlo See 33.
S . ~Porler Wagoner 10; Freestyle 33.
6:oo-Gong Show 8; News 10; Cr ockett's Vlclory
Garden 20; Over Easy 33.
6 ·3o-NBC News3,1S; ABC News 13, News 4,6 ; Porter
Wagoner 8; CBS News 10; Ohio Journal 20; West
Virginia Outdoors 33.
7 .QO--Abboll &amp; Costello 3; Lawrence Welk 4, 13, 15; Hee
How 6,8; Bugs Bunny 10; Dnedln L.lne 20; Sound·
stage 33.
7· 3D-We Think You Should Know 3; Please Stand By
10.
B:CJO-&lt;hlps 3,4, 15; Osmond Brothers 6, 13; Rhoda 8, 10;
Once Upon A Classic 20,33.
8 :3o-Good T i mes 8,10: Great Performances 20, Sneak

SHARP USED TRUCKS
'

•795 1975 COURIER-Green
.
'4195
··3495 1977 F-100-Recf w/topper
•2895 1978 f·100 CUSTOM-Blue

"

)
'

•3295
~

!

-

..

'

'4t95
'4'8 95

..

See Our Fine And. Experienced Sales Staff
'
Bobby Roush, Bill (Ole) Ross, Bob Crosswhite
'

'

�11-·f,.~ flailv Sentinel, Middlepurt-Pumcn" 0 . F'ritla)' o 1·t 1'1 1978
DICK TRACY
•. '
'
. '' '

'

10- The Daily Sentme!, Mitltllcport·Pomcroy, 0 ., l'ntlay, 0l't. 1:1. ID7H

BUSINESSMAN

.

NOW THERE'S BEEN A
AND WE'RE

MUADE~ ,

BACK TO SQUARE ONEYOU 'RE

SORRV.

MEET AN 11-YEAR-OLD WHO OWNS. HIS OWN BUSINESS

CAPTAIN EASY
I DON'T WANT
VOLT!\ I!'VE'N

THINK I 'M CRAz.Yn
l 5ENT EVERYONE
OUTA TfiE HOUSE THE'
MINUTE I HI!'ARP
THAT TRUCKLOAD
OF POT WAS ON
THE WAY!

SHOWING UP

AROUND

HERE l

.
•

•

AT THe SIGHT OF THe TWO INTRUDERS MAYOR e'&gt;OGG5 YAI.II&lt;S OPEN HIS DeSK

T HEON WHO'LL , ' - - - - - - - . . . . , . . - .

EVER KNOW
VOLTA PAYt;
YA A LITHe'

DRAWER !

Vl!i'IT!

.,
A~

WE GO·

lNG 10 E9LLOW

iHBM?

6Ul ISN' i IT
AGAIN ST 1'H ' LAW

oo HAVE GOLD
MONE'f?

.IN E ALLEY

Morninq,
Major... Countess~

WE'LL NEVER KEEP UP Wl'fl-i
"THEM, ALLEY! 1'1-t!:Y'RE MOV·

L!:TS SEE It=' 11-iEY LE'AD US
VALLEY OF' SMOKes! C'"'IN!

lNG 1tX&gt; FAST!

15 IS WI'JNIE WINKLE 1

Desk, with all its electronic gadgetry, by Paul Zell Designs, Petaluma, California. It's similar to one ~sed in SIX MILLION DOLLAR MAN TV series.

HAV EN'T EVEN
lOO~EO A1 YE1 " '

WH OLo ROOr--1 ...

&lt;EEP COUMliN' .. .
IT'S A 81Q J08 .. .

I thouqht

Is this what

........,

BUT I CA N

NOTHING HE CAN 'T
HANDLE ... WITI-f

GET THE
MONEY I
OWE YOU ...

YOUR HElP!

R EX-HU51JAND'5
;:MPcOYER ...

One should do what
one does best!

L\OU

qUI't ... LJears aqo .'

I think ·1t 1S,
Mother?

WINNIE
BERNICE:? BERNICE FA61N?

OTHER ROD /.\S, WE

ALL THAI PA PER. .
MONE'f ·· · AN OT HER.

YE T KNOWS WE
HAVe IT·· · C' MO N .. ·

NO ri M E LIKE NCM/. ·
WOW! WE
MU 51 BE COMIN I
HEY --· LOOt-', 1\T
10 SOMETHIH'
1!11 5 MAGIC GEM
LIGHT UP ...
SPE CIAL , EH 7

A NV THERE' S

YFAH ~ TH ERE'S

ANYWAY --· ND60DY

O) IIO. CM ..o,; "·"""' ~ • "'' • oS,.n &gt; lo&lt;

'" " .. "

I'LL SAY! 'THE N IT'D
SE A SN.&lt;&gt;P "1'0
KeE'P UP Wn14 'EM!

YEOAH, :r'M
AFR'AID YOU'RE
R K;HT!

5UR:O WE

MRS.FASIN? II= ITS A;SOUT SA'&lt;Y, I

HEARD ALL
THAT BE ·

SEE YOU I

I MUST
ITS ... IT'S

FORE .

URGENT.'

I

___

v:: HELPED AS

MUCt-.1 AS 2: · c~ U !..) .
I 'V:O NOTHIN(; c ~FT
, TO GIVE /

And very suitable, of course, for any one of our six million dollar newspaper carriers.

IT'S TOUGH TO OWN YOUR OWN BUSINESS!
' '""

Your Daily Sentinel carrier probably doesn't handle his business behind a fancy executi\le desk, but

r--------------------------------------""'1 ---------------------------F'RANK &amp; E RNIE

that doesn't mean that he's not a real businessman in his own right.

No, NO, eRNIE

BRIDGE

."••

- - .JuS'r' THE ""-...

He is. He's an independent contractor who buys the Daily Sentinel from us, and in tum sells it to
our ·home subscribers, keeping the difference as his profit.

I

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

~

S't-OGI&lt;ING , ..

championship players

,1.---------.
ii

NORTH

~

• K6

~

+ A8654~
EAST

WEST

Tasting real personal responsibility for perhaps the first time.
•

"~raJT

I WLL 'fCIJ, I CAIJ'T. l...IV~

tOur only product.)

OUT!"

Some of the finest professionals in the

1.

Opening lead : +Q

e

By Oswald Jacoby

enttne

Providing local young people .the opportunity
to.leam and earn.
,,

''

,.

I

ONE OF THESE DA'{S
'{E DON'T HAVE
I'M GOit'.i'TO LAS VEGAS
TO GO All TH' WAY
AN' WATCH
- - . TO LAS VEGAS
SHOWGALS
FER THAT, PAW
KICK UP
THEIR HEELS

trwnp trick whenever West
chose to take it.
This play was safe against
all 4-2 trwnp breaks. Suppose that trwnp finesse had
lost. East would be on lead.
If he led a fourth spade
South would ruff in dummy,

United Press International

Today is Friday, Oct. 13,
the 286lh day of 1978 with 79lo
follow .
The moon is approaching
its full phase.
The morning sta rs are
Jupiter and Saturn.
The evening stars are Mer~
cury, Mars and Venus.
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Libra.
. Spanish King Ferdinand
VII was born Oct. 13, 1784.
Actor Cornel Wilde was born ·

1 and Alan Sontag
I

1 Here Is another no-,swing
hand from the Spingold
finals. The defense started
with three rounds of spades
at both tables. Nonnan Kay
of the runners-up and Paul
:::=:::::~ F..l: Soloway of the winners
. ruffed-that third spade, led
the jack of hearts and let it
! ride. When the jack held,
1 they each led a second
" trwnp to dummy's kinl!,
came to their own hands

on ttus date in 1918.
On this day in history:
In 1775, the Continental
Co n g re ss
ordered

construction of a naval fleet ,
thus originating the U.S . ·
Navy.
In !937, Germany promised
Britain and F'rance it would
not violate the neutrality of
Belgium, a promise lat er
broken.
In 1943, Italy declared war
on Germa ny, her Axis
partner earlier in World War

n.

1tWJWffi!1W

~

THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
~ '!l ~
by Henri Arnold and Bob Lee

m

Unscramble these four Jumbles ,
one letter to each squa re. to form

come to his hand with that

same king of diamonds, pull four ordinary words.
the rest of the trwnps and
run off the rest of the tricks.
Now look what would have
happened to either declarer
if he had played the first
trwnp to dummy's king and
finessed on the way back.
West would take his queen
and lead the fourth spade.
South would have to ruff and
West would be left with a
sure trwnp trick and South ...
w1th a severe headache.
.
-~

SNAIE

Ill

0

b
I I I

I EWTIE

L_A_R_N_A_fj_C....,

~ ®3 !m-p:D};l 1L--1..1___...1._
1 ---'-"-"'L-L-

BARNEY

•

at y

10 9 7

Vulnerable : Neither
Dealer : North
West North East
Pass
Pass
2+
Pass
Pass
Pass a•
Pass Pass Pass

called trust, and our carriers earri andre-earn it every day of the year.

•

t74

• 3

1971

Th~t's

•Q

+KJ

• A J 10 9 7
t K Q J 10 9

business work hard to produce it for you. And when every edition rolls off the press~, we place it in the
capable hands· of 11 to 15~year-old boys and girls for safe delivery to your door.
·•

+A 8 7 5
• 84

SOUTH
•&amp;2

AlJD .;TAl./

WITH THAT WOIIA~ Aftt'R
SH~ SAID 1D MS!

How do we at the Daily Sentinel feel about our carriers? Let us put it this way:

• Q J 10 9
• Q 53 2

• a 6 53

BORN LOSER

w1th the king of diamonds ,
led the ace of trumps while
discarding dununy's ace of
diamonds, ran the rest of the

diamonds to concede one

t A2

'

The Daily Sentinel trains him and provides incentive and guidance. But essentially, he's on his .own.

16-13-A

+ K 43

;r

The Daily Sentinel is our product.

The Almanac

Friday, Oct.13

10 . , ,

NOIODD10~E

IN THE !&gt;EVENT/

A Mississippi reader
wants to know if thre is any
Now arrange the circled leners 10
simple rule to tell if a partie· ~~~~;,K.;..::;;~r=-4-..--, form the surprise answer. as sug ular double is for penalty or
.
_ Ll
gested by the above car1oon.
for takeout.
The answer is in the negative, except that all doubles
Print answer here:
of seven notrump have to be
(Answers tomorrow)
for penalty.

NAVI ED

"(I I I r"

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN . )

(For a copy of JACOBY MODto: " Win at
Bridge , '' care of this newspaper, P. 0 . Box 489, Radio City
Station , New York , N. Y. 10019.)

ERN, send Sl

.
Yester day s

I

Jumbles: OAKEN WHISK ARTFUL MASCOT
Ans wer. Agitated where cocktails are concernedTRESHAKER
'

""*

Jumblo
No . 1a...., .,. '"IMI''o puu~oo, "' . - 1or $1 .35 poo1·
pekt from Jumbfe, cto this nenp.pr1 b 3-4, Nol ood, N.J. CJ7&amp;41. lncludt
your name, P::lr~, zlpoode and mlkeoheCMPIYfib'ltDtKu; ;:wt ••·

..'

�The l)aily Sentinel, Middleport· Pomeroy, 0 .. fnllay. Ol'l. I:!. i!liK

12-

i - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1 .· ,.

Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash
WANT AD
CHARGES
13 Wun ls ,... Umlt•r
~ 'ash

1'1\0ll't{l'

I d.on·
~Ja~~

150

JchlyN

1.11&lt;\

1.25

6days

.l.OO

3.75

"'

1.1)11

190

For&amp;l&lt;·

I~

14/J BRO NCO
I' )
t &lt;rdto

YOU ho ve o s~uvrct:- to oiler
wont to buy or sel l sornethu1y
oe Joo krng for work
or
whateve r . , you II get re!&gt;u lt s.
fo ster w1lh o Sentmel Wont Ad
Call 991&lt;11 ~6

YA RD SALl: . Oct 5-6 Gr eton hou se
Green house beh1 t1d Stolt·
Hrghway Garage on Ht 'I tO 4

F.ill l'h word UVt't' lht• 111111UI1Wl\ 15

~~o unls ts 4 l't&gt;rlls P''l' wun l ~· ·· d11y

All-;

rumlU i ioi

wall lit•

lill Y~

ulhtor than

u&gt;I\St!t'U iivt.'

at tht• 1 diiy

t•har~owd

rah'

In Ult!lll Ul }', C11rJ of Thcwb a nd
Obrluary. 6 t't'llb pt•r \llunl. SJ .OO
mmunUJtl. G a~h m at.lvant't!.

Mubt lc Hunw lOI:IIt•ti anti Yart.l SC!lL&gt;s
an• lU'l't' pl t:ll only wrth Ot.!ih wrttl
un.l~tr 25L't'lll chwr~t&gt;
ur ~

rur

ad~ n..- r~ ­

t~.llt

or rejec\&lt;111) &lt;~Wi dt&gt;t'lnt'll uiJ..
jt&gt;t'IIOnal. Tlwt Publblwr wtll nut lx•

1\'Sp OU!:iiblt.' rur 111\fl't' tha n Olll' Ull'Hf·
lll.'&gt;l' I'L\ Ul \.

"reel

Phoo e~.!-1. 1 :iti

w"' rrtc
~ p o h L•
wh€'L'Is ~\'IY qC'&gt;.nfl \ Ondrii Ol1
~3 400 or h L·~ I nil &lt;21 'J4'l b:J'l 3
•

Pet. fill' Sale
HOOf-= HOLLOW Horses Buy , sell
trade or trorn New and used
sadd les Huth Heeves Albany .
(614 ) 6&lt;18 -3'290 .

GOING OUl ol Busllless Sole i
Poodles Peking ese . Pomero
nion , Teacup, Trn res $3S to
S l 1S . Phone b 14·696· l 297 .

tab le t.. K .. Yap
Nels o.!~ Ot U9

l'fiH ( H.. VRO Lil 4 whPel cl!rvt.'
:J)O au to P ) , P H !&gt;ho r r wrd e
bed eooo rnrl t;.•:. h bl•t glos!&gt; lop
p ~t
· ~ Ots of t:oxtra ~
SHOUO
1-J'l 2336
.. 11-HWOOU ~OR , ol~&gt; S/U
prc kup lool'l 94'1 60)7
~ pen wr

AutosaMei • : ' -

Uu u F rili11y

1'175 CADIL LAC I:L OORAOO. Ful l
power and A.t . AM 1-=M rod1o
power seot.s. Call99'1 -"1 4b'l .

~ P. M

lht' day bt'furc publlt•a tl"ll
Suw.l ll}
~ P.M

powe • and air . AM-FM •ad to
~ ue lrnrectron Cotl992-146'l

af1t•rnuo11

-- -- - --

- . -- -

-

"

PARASOL BOUTIQUE Beauty
Solon nezt to Slcote- o· woy
Roller Rink announ ces October
Special
Permanents JO •;, off . Operators:
Sandra Kern s. Crystal Rayburn .
Phone . 985 -.4141 .

NOTICE
Too ~u our friends and
former customers. We are
Nck in busiri•ss again and
taking orders for furniture

be

upholstered.

UPHOLSTERING SHOP
Mrs. Woodrow T. Zwelllng
Syracuse, Ohio

~O RO

ce llenf

1901 CHfVHOLET PICK UP truck
bcce llenf co ndition . $550 .
9Q2 -291:J7 .

i:J~~W~~~s~y~~gr.

1'UO CADILLAC SEDAN . l oaded
Call 992-6107 or 991-21 40.
1970 l TO WITH p.s t. p b o .c.
vinyl top 4-door . Port s l or 1955
Chevy . 992 -2779

-

- .

JCii'S CHC VkOLET IMPALA . 2 door
25,000 miles. . l:xcel len t con ditron . 992-776~ or Y9'l-56'/l
1910 FORO VAN . customized
new p01nt , tir es and wheels.
S1200 or bes t offer 747 -2396

992-3B59.

1976 fOHO PINTO ~ uno b o ut. h ce l le n t
co ndi t io n . Call
614 -698· 7255 .

F~$H

1Ei' l- --

- ---

- - - --- --

YARD SALE b 11 S. 2nd, M iddleport. Teenage boys' and
pre -teen . girls' dothe s. Also
misc . ite ms . Fri . and Sat. l Oom
to bpm .
FAMil-Y Yard
Oct. 1-4 . 10-5. Clo thes of all
eizes . 90 Kawasaki . 125 Hondo .
Some fu rniture . Other items
too numerous to men tion .
Hoci ne , ne xt to Gulf Stollen .
t:ldon Kroeuter Ho1n cancels.

Sol;- s;t..

vARD
-;-h;;Mon . -o~;.
IJ· l b. 2 miles ou t l eading
Creek . 9-dark .
SrX - FAMILY - Va rdS~i;-- li bb~
Fisher'1, Racine . Monday and
Tuesday . Oct lb&amp; 17. TV . electric corn popper, ice cream
freezer , snow plow for garden
tractor . clothing and misc . lo&lt;lk
for sign s__ - - - - VA NO -sALE.R~in or shine . Oc ·
Iober 1-4th. 9:30 om til 3pm . Jo
ann Cri sp\
trailer , CR 28
(Apple·Dorcos Road) in Oorcos
(turn right . first trailer on left/ Early American stereo . Boy_'
20" bicycle , Woman s coal,
boy's leisure suit . toys , other
boy's and wom!.~ · !. c~~hi~~ · _
·LE: Harry Hailey's.
112b f . Main St ., Pomeroy.
luel ., Wed Thurs Oct . 17, 18,
19
Cho 1rs. bed springs 1
clothing . knick-knacks , near
M iners ville Corp .

-

- - - - -

GRIMES GOLDEN . Red DeltCmus.
&amp; Colden Delici ous. apples . Frt;r potrick Or chard
SR . 089.
014-bb9 -3785 .

- -

----- - - --

SHAPE!{ Sf ANL&gt; and blad es . com
pres so r wi th hose end sp1oy
gun Craft sm an Bo ndsow 9
thr oat Homelrte chain sow .
new . Mdler loll mi ter sow
985 -0385

PAINTS

-

.

- -

1./Y'/

~lY I

Will lJO haby ~ rltrr r g 111 my horne
rrr Mrddlt.•pOr t Co ii4CJ'J :.14~'1

- - . --

Oulsi de While

Red roof painf

Pomeroy. landmark

. . ~Jack w. Carsey, Mgr.
-

Phone992-2181

1961 t-:O RO T ~U CK . ' • to,,
shape . $250 992 7330
HI:: AVY HI::N )
99'2 70S~

.

- - -

LUMP HOUSE cooL $35 per ton
delivered . 992 -7 126.
1974 SATOH TRACTOR ·;n h.p . 2b0
hours w ith front loader, powe r
steerrng. 3 pl . b 1tch. d lff eren·
tiol loc k 1 boflom 16" plow . I
row cultiva tor and 12" post hole
~~~g ~r _b 1_4 -_98_5 -~ 5~8 _
SE ARS KENMONi: elec tr ic washer
l or po rts Good motor SI S.
992 5410 .

111

S /')

good

Phone

THI-IH 1-lt:GISHRI::O Su llollo. rom !&gt; .
1 yearlings l lour ,ear old
94&lt;1 -2008 .
CHf VROl i::T PI CKUP
h ce ll enr cond rtron w 1rh cop
~ I HSU
6'1':! Olrver St. . Middleport .

JCriL

19'/() Arn her sl 5!J~&lt; 12 '1 BR
l fJ'/U Champion bU •I '} 'I_ BR
I Clb:i Gene1 o l bU~t: 1'1. 'I BR
t'IOI:lPMCS:txl:l'lH R
l Y~:i PrGr11 e Schooner 11:lxl:l l Hf.l
t '11:; Royal l:rnbossy bl:l~&lt; 14 J BR
t 'I~~S i o r SOxi():!Hfl
I'T/ J ~ t or bOx I &lt;I 'l Hh'
1408 Star bOx I [ 'J. Bfl
141() Sylva 60• 11 2 BR
I fJO!l Vrl loges bU~&lt; 12 2 BR
190·1Wrnd ~o r 5 1• 10 2 BR
IY'/() Kr rlcwood l'J.OU ] BR
B&amp;S MOtm l:: HOM~ SA L ~~
PI'. Pl ~ASA N l W.VA
I ', ACRI: t '1 .c 60 mobJle home
rrt-or De xte r. 992-50'!.-iB .
t9e.l HOUSI:: TRAi li::R 12 ~e bU . All
elec l rt c. turnr shed , air condr·
l ioned was her n11rl dr yer' AI 'loa
1 lot!&gt;
in
Hm 1isonv i'l le .
'/4'2 -'1!:126 .
l &lt;rn ACAOI::MY MOHIL I:: horne. ')
bedroo tn wi t h horseshoe k11
r hen . Iorge drn rn g room Seen
at '/J '/ Beech St Mrddl epor l
Ohio

For All Your
GE T.V.'s &amp;

Hotpotnt Appl.
S,11t• Pr1cc·s
Jilek W Cilr'icy
Mq1·

Phoow q92-2181

Heal t:statdor Sale _ ' j
Nlc W I Hfl ~ l: bedroom home rec
room fir eplace. Iorge deck .
garage . basemen t one ond a
holt ba ths Ph one l ee CollstrU(·
IIO il
99'1 -J 4S4 , w e ek e nds
l b 14-440 9568.
J 1, A(fiES rn Pomeroy secl uded
wooded area on l ap of h1ll.
Overlook s ri11er Wat er end
electric avail able. 992 -Jij8b

HO US~

IN Pomero,. Lorge lot .
~o m e recent remodel rng New
carpet. Cen tral heorr ng Utllrty
room . r ull base ment . ') par
che"&gt; . Furn rshed or unl urnished .
99') '1074 .

1HRI:: I: : BI::O O ROM , fully Carpe ted .
ba semen t. garag e Ha ven His
304 88'1 - 'l~9b
OfJI::: N HOUSE ~un doy . Oc t l 51h
lr om l pm to 4 pm . lhrs oil
b11 ck . 'J • corns , 2 ba ths, 2 cor
garage . Iorge potro porch. 'l
ceres land w ith chorn lrn k
l ence
Beouti l ul pr oper t y .
l yom Addrt ron Ma son , WV .
Jok e Sorncrv 1llc . Real !::state .
PI
Pl easan t, WV . Pho ne
b75-3tJ30 or 6'15 -47J2
l WO AC .S loca ted on floute 60' 1.
Coll61 4-b9B -Ti'55

SAT., OCT.- 14, 10:00 A.M.
STEWART, OHIO
&amp;

turn right onto

Because of ill health . Mr. Howard E. Hawk will sell all

his CARPENTER TOOLS AND SUPPLES (power
tools, hand tools, electrical supplies. etc. I: ANTIQUE
FURNITURE ; MANY OLD COINS : 2-8 DAY
GILBERT CLOCKS (banjo &amp; mantel) ; 2 GOLD
WATCHES in dome display cases ; POTTERY, CHINA
&amp; GLASSWARE - includes 30 pes. old Engl ish
dinnerware In Lahore &amp; Edgevale pattern s ; sev. nice
~d dishes, sfoneware ( 112 &amp; 3 gal. DonaghhosJ , coli .

wire top fruit jars; HOUSEHOLD ITEMS. Eats
available.
Ttrms : Cosh or Ck. w.Io.
C. E. SHERI DAN, AUCT.-448·426l

SJS,OOO.OO.

tALL US FOR ALL YOUR
REAL ESTATE NEEDS.

,,_ , .....,..... '""" lliMIIrltor t• tM

804 W. Main
Pomeroy
992-2298
Affer Hours

'
Free Estimates
Phone 949-2862
or 949-2160
8-20·1mo. (Pd.)

on heating cost
Experience and
tully insured
Free Est.

Call992.713l
CONTACT :

Lois Paulev
Branch Manager

... fl4.,.'...

Call992·2772
8-10·1mo !Pd.)

SMITH NEILSC•N
MOTORS, INC •
p~ 992·2174

ROGER HYSELL

We are currently making
appointments for senior
portraits . We use tradi tiona l settings and also
feature
outdoor
por traiture.
Call Us Today

698·6l00
44 STATE STREET
ALBANY, OHIO

St. Rt. 124 toward Rutland,
0.

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5682
4·30-ttc

The Photo Place

Y OUR CHOIC E
Buy t hese two hom es for
ll1e pri ce of one- or spl1 t
th em up Owner says se ll~
M Cl k e us t'1n o tl er .

220

109 High St .
Pomeroy
8·2·1 mo.

992·l325

tt.,aJl::otaiC f~ SRI~ o

-

-

HOM~ S I HS

l o r sol e . 1 acre and
up. Mrddleport , nea r Hutla nd .
Coll992-74B l

VA - ~HA .

30 yr f ino nctng also
reft non&lt;: rng Ire land Mor tgage :
f7 ~ - S!ore. Athens . phone (6 14)
592 -]{)51 .

FAMILY

HOME

- 10

rooms , 4 to 5 bedrooms,
family room, base men!,
shop, natur al 9as fu rnace,
ca rpet ing , garage , and 3
lots

LISTING

- campsites on the Oh1o
Rive r on Route 12 4.
LIKE NEW - 3 bed roo m
split -level hOme . Enclosed
bath , d rill ed well an d 24
acres 1n L etart Township.

NEW

LISTING

- J

bedroom 7 room house with
ba th , natural gas h ea t . and
c ity w a ter in town .
NEW LISTING - 1.46 acre
bu ildin g Iotan 124 West .

ly Pa rk m q,bi le home. 3
bedrooms, 2 fu ll baths, cen ·
lr at air and heat , an d,.l .66
acres on St ate Route.
'Adjusf yOurself to modern
livmg. Invest in your
family's dream home .

WOULD YOU LIKE SOLD
ON YOUR PROPERTY?
TRY US, IT JUST MIGHT
WORK, BUT IT MUST
MEET OUR APPROVAL.
Helen L. Teaford .
G , Bruce Teaford
Sue P. Murphy

.

HDIISillg
Headquarters

II

E. Main Street,
Pomeroy, 0 .

Call992·701l

For Free Estimates
9-21 -lmo.

l:IRADfO I-tO. Au cl 1oneer . Comple te Se1vrce Phone 949 - 24~'/
or 94Crl-2000. ~a crne . Ohi o . Crrlt
Br odlo.- d.
I:LW00[) BOWI::RS fH:PAIR
Sweepers , toa sters . irol'ts. all
srno ll opplr onces . lawn nwwe r.
n e~&lt; t to Stole Highw ay Garoge
on Rou te 7. Phone (014 ) 985
:m1~ .

SEWIN G MACHINE flepol r5 . ser vrce . a ll rno kes . 991 -22!:14 The
fabnc
Sho p
Pomeroy
Aut horized Srnger Soles and
Servrce We ~ho rpen Sosso r s

Janice I. GeHies,
Rea lfor
Roberta Huffman
AssociatesL
Bozicevic

Tom

669-S06l

Kenneth Crabtree

698-6196

GENUINE

HOBSTElTER
REALTY

1975 FIREBIRD ••• ...... ............. '3695
P B tape deck, spoiler .
V-8, auto., P·S" · ·•

..'

1974 FORD TORINO .................. '1495

. .•••.

..,,
.'

19J3 CHEV. CHEVELLL . ...... . .... . '1395
4 Dr. Wagon.

..'
j

•

1971 MERCURY 4 DR. .. ......... .. ....

Tony's Carry Out.
Open Saturday 10-4 p.m.
Sunday 12 noon fo l p.m .
8-31·1 mo.

"

RANCH

AU t TI 0 N FRIDAY and Saturday
nrght ot '/ pm . N ew and used
merchandise includ ing 2 an ti que butt er chur ns at Ohio River
Auctton . 537 High St . Middleport . O hio.

2 STORY REMODELED

HOME ~ .4 bedroom s, for
mal dining , enc losed front
porch, 2 ca r garage, oth er.
storage bldg . L ow gas bil ls .

$29,500.00.
NEWER BUILDING

Sells for $25,000.00.
MIDDLEPORT - Owner

BA 1 HROOM S A ND Kn chens
remodeled &lt;:e romrc tile, plumbing carpen try . and general
moin tenon,ce. 13 years e1&lt;
penence 992 -36H5 .
PULLINS EXCA VATING. Complete
Ser vice. Phone 9&lt;;12 -24lB.
·

DOUBLE YOUR JOY IN
ONE OF THESE FINE
BUYS. WE ALSO HVE
OTHERS .

padding at no charge.
Expert installation.

HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
992-2259
992-6191
Hank, Kathv &amp; Leona
Cleland

As Low As

&amp;m

CENTRAL REALTY CO.
2

Rubber Back Carpet
White-Wall Co-Op
Custom Po~
A78xl3

for $21.500.
JUST LISTED- Over4acresofland with a 2 bedroom

house. City wafer. House needs some repair. Located
in Minersville. Price S-4,000.

9' and 12' Vinyl

Floor Covering

Stock

In

Prices includes

Fed. Ta.
I does not include
sales tax or
balancing)

FULLY
GUARANTEED
Other siJes
compar1bly

priced .

story older home, nicely

carpeted with 5 bedrooms. large kitchen &amp; dining room
and 2 baths. Basemenf with nat. gas heat . Approx. 1
acre of land w lfh nice garden. Located In Chesfer . All

•4•88 sq.lfup
yd.

Buy where you can come in
and see what you're getting

-Good selections - Fully
Call '742·2211
TALK TO
Wendell or Herb Grete

or G4ne Smith

Pomeroy Landmark
Jo~ck

w. carse_y,

Phone 992·2181

to a poet

5 Contemporary

DOWN
I Swedish

. RUTLAND
FURNITURE
742-2211

SO ACRES FREE GAS - Good 1•;, story house with full
basemenf. Large pond stocked with fish . Priced for
qu ick sale, 540,000.

Rutland

4 Or ., auJo .• p .s .,
Pa ck ., a uto ., 6
p b. , ai r , on l y
1., p .s., p .b . r adio,
40,000
act u a l
belted
· a r , sl eet
mrles, viny l top ,
rad ial t1r es, ra lley
like new.
wheels . Showroom
clea n &amp; sharp.
"'"~·"\.

12 Respire
13 Athirst
14 Pluto

2 Face with

u-

a

3 Apart from
4 Wbat the

•

decorator

PoweU

°

haTidht.
g ·- 11 mA·deau~y
con·
(secretive) nent: Fr.
:eyltered :

~rrowgelf,;' role 31 ~~peel

temple
qed shoes
ruler
8 Clarion's Z4 Early
!I Turkish

canoe
Z2Condltion

23 Mercury's

religionist

1975 FORD GRAND TORINO ................ .'2895
Low mileage, 2 Or., auto.. P.S., P.B. ,
1975 FORD MAVERICK ......•. ~~;·..~~~~ ·...... '2195

weight

i973 FORD GRAND TORINO.:~::.".':::~.d-i~; . '1695

zs "The -Is

heating bill. Red· barn-like storage building. Located
Ask ing $55,000.
MIDDLEPORT - This well cared for newer home has

II 318 ............... 1495

VB .........$1895
1

1972 CHEVELLE MALIBU ......... 795

1976 GMC % TON ............ .'3695
1 owner, good tires, V-8, automatic, P .S ., P B., radio .

1975 CHEVROLET% T

)!U .•••• , 3895
1

Camper Spe c ial. 454 v.o, automat1c tr ans .• P . sfeertng
&amp; bra kes, H . duty ti r es, R. st ep bumper, radio,
Cheyenne cab, loca l I owner .

1973 CHEVROLET

lf2

TON ••••••• '1995

8' Fleet side, good tire s, clean
automatic, P. S., P. B., rad io.

interio r , 350 V-8,

WAGONS
s

p B

1975 CHEVY WAGON ... .. :;.;·•• :.:....... ... '2495

=·.

:~.~:.'.:;~ ....'1495

:Thrash

1974 FORD PINTO WAGON . . ...

3li

1973 CHRYSLER WAGON.~.~~~.~.~?.~~.~~.~ 11595
Rack, P.S., P.B., air.

TRUCKS &amp; VANS
=+-+-+--11973 FORD FlOO ............................ '1695
Standard. P.S .• 8 cvlinder , w ith topper .

ante

1967
I

CHEVY lh

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

CIX H P

• xHP ... UKTIQK

WHC

F X J •

TIQEFKDKFM

WUNILUKC
IG

XH

FXJXHP. -

DSK

UZNXHKNN

LSICW

r,

p.s ..

AM-FM

tape. silver .
stn

4 dr . sed .. air,
auto. , p.s., p. b .,
am -fm .

1975
98 LS. SED.
Air,
p s,
Au to., air ,
Am. fm, air, au•ro .. op.b . . a m -fm tape,
p.b , a m -fm latoe, lp s., p . b .,
c lea n &amp; ne w f or
good tires.
model. '1895

CADILLAC
Devi l le sedan , f ull

M. blue.

•6495
1973

'795
1975 DATSUN
210

BUICK
L S. Sed. Ai r .

N eeds some body
work .

1973
CHEVROLET
Imp a la
4
need s some
work .

'1295

'895

1973

1973
DODGE

1976

CADILLAC

rger ,

2 dr .,

dr ..

body

'1795

PACER
3 spee d .

'1895

GMQUALITY

SERVICE/PARTS
AL MOTORS PARTS Dl
THAT GREAT GM FEELING _
WITH uENIJINE GMPARTS

Drive Home A Winner
See one of these courteous salesmen : Pete Burris,
Marvin Keebaugh or George Harris.

" You 'll Like Our Quality Way of Doing Business"
GMC Financing .
992-5342
Pomeroy

Pomeroy
Open Evenings Til8 :00 p.m.

Nafura l gas forced air heat, located ln Chesfer.

UZNM

tape,

p.b..

1976 CUTLASS
SUPREME

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
992-2126

OK,KE

50-50
low

ON DISPLAY NOW
SEVERAL NEW 1978 CARS &amp;
TRUCKS AT DISCOUNT PRICES

"Your Chevy Dealer"

location. Will go quick for $35,000.
40 ACRES of land In Sutton Twp. Nice building sites,
small parn. Priced at only $21,500.
S15,000 - Good 5 bedroom house with 2 full baths.

Newport sed ., ai r .
to ., p s., p.b ..

l979CHEVROLETS

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

· Largest Selection In The Valley

CHRYSLER

·',•

Demo . Au to ., p .s ..
p. b ., a ir , p.s. &amp;
windows, d ivided
seat. CB &amp; more .

1m, , ndau

•

..

1978 98 .
REGENCY SED.

low

Devi lle cpe.

TON ............. ~::~~~...... '395

AXYDLBA.,.XK
LONGFELL'OW

T.wheel , tape, 50SO seat , a ir &amp;
more .

1976 CHEV. T.E.C. MINI HOME

SEE THE NEW

It

,.--

1975

1973 FORD TORINO WAGON ••••••'995

1971 FORD GALAX IE 500 .......... ..... ..... 1395
Automatic, P S_, P.B., air .

15 IN STOCK

1978
ROYALE
Air, ~\.'i)

Cpc. Whi te.

prop
Z7 Hipster
aCiaytoday

te Hash houseL.LL.L..LL-

•nd Many ty,.s ot proporty.
CALL JIMMY DEEM, Associale949·2388

CARLO

COME ON IN FOLKS

6 ACRES -

Wee need l1rge &amp; small F1rms -

$795

Au lo ., Air .

1971 GREMLIN ................... -~.~~·.~!~; ... '595

;18 Chanced
39- spwn-

or 4 bedrms ., living rm ., family rm ., wlfh fireplace,
basemenf , fuel oil furnace. Loc . close to hospital and

1973 MONTE

~:~·

•

3 BRs, living room, bath, mostly carpeted , kitchen is
equipped with refrigerator and stove, utility room,
natural gas fore~ air heat, outs ide storage building .
Price $27,000 .

Nlcel'l,·story home mostly carpeted with 3

I .............

1972 PLYMOUTH FURY

by melody
31 Baby
carriage

abouf ten minutes north of Pomeroy just off Rt . 7.

2 DR ••

a Looety

Rita

home. I t has a large kitchen with lois of cabinets,
stove, refrigerafor and dishwasher . Beautiful dining
room with sliding glass doors . Large living room and
family room, and to finish fhls well -laid out home we
have f ive bedrooms, utlllfy room and garage. Very lOw

more extras, low heat bill with nat. gas forced air
furnace . All this and two nice acres of land In a good

34 Arab

1975 FORD GRANADA ....................... '2795

. 4 Or., auto ., P.S., P. B .• air .

Zl Actress

SPACIOUS BI.LEVEL - This may be your dream

school at Laurel Cliff. Asking s•2,500.
TWO ACRES - Abeautitul4 year old, 3 bedroom home
with large eat.ln kitchen, 2 bedrooms, all nicely
carpeted. 2 baths, full ba~menl with TV room. Many

MERCURY BROUGHAN ............ ... . '3295
' Dr., fu ll y e9u lpped. While 8. Red Int .

30 Scandi·

1 Shln!D

blare

22,000 miles, air con d. , P.S .. P. B ., AM- FM stereo, 2 dr .,
blue with wh ite vin\11 roof .

:!.. TVMeastanfpell~e.,...11975

"Symphony

n South Seas

Loaded wrth ex t ras.

1977 CHRYSLER CORDOBA ................. ~4895

Instrument

suffix
"

1971 BUICK LESABRE 4 DR ••••• 695

1974 CHEVY BELAIR •••~ ~~:!:.5.:!:.~:.~~ :~ ..'1595

Yeoterday's Alllwer
9 Dancer
Z5 Celestial

bankrupt

1

1695
1

1974 PINTO • ; ................ ?.~::. ~.u.'?; ..... '1495

1

•• bosteSSChemical

••••••••

HT Cpe .• Air .

1974 BUICK REG.AL. ~.u.'~;::".:;:;': .~:.a.;:: .... '2495

stone

5

1971 BUICK SKYLARK •• I

V 8, Au tom a t ic

wine
measure

17 Sailor
18Prideofa
,
London

1973

1970 NOVA

of Pasteur
11 Aritona
city

or Saturn
15 Symbol of
bureaucracy

88 HT CPE •••••••••• '395
1
VEGA ST. WAGON •••••••••• 399

1967 OLDS

1973 Ford .,
Grand Torino

41 Not at aU,

1 Horse

·~~~-

a

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT
1977
ROYALE CPE.

~-"t~Y
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

crsed~unday

WHERE
YOU GET ABETTER DEAL

See Roger Riebel
2 Convenient Numbers
995.3345 or 667-3463
1 mile north
Tuppers Plains, Ohio

St. Rt. 7

Except Thursday &amp;
Satu r daytiiS : OO

MIDDLEPORT, 0 .

992-2196

RIEBEL'S USED CARS

.

stocked.
. ~,--

See Rocky Hupp, Darrell Oodrill ~r Pat Hill , General Manager. for
Good Dea 1 on a New or Used Vehtcle.

CASE FARM TRACTOR ...................11''q"

·••

SAVE ON
CARPETING

All carpel Installed with

DAN THOMPSON FORD

TRACTOR

..

SAVE A LOT

OPEN TILL7 P.M.

446-9800

Flat Bed .

..
•

i; ~ tH~n

&amp;.

- 5

( Rea I tor Associates)

Home Phone 992-S7l9

AUTOMOBI U INSURAN C!: been
cancel led? l ost your ope1otors
lice nse? Phone 992 -2143

more .

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

UPPER RT. 7

1967 FORD % TON ............ .......... ~395

DRIVE A LlffiE

r e ntal s,
good
g oin g
business, very ni ce income
property . $47 ,200.00.

:-Jas reduced price of fh is
n ice 3 bedroom home. If
has a del ached garage .a nd
is situated on one-third of
an acre. Only $26,000.00.
We have other listings to
choose from. Call us today
for more information on
buying and selling your
home.
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.

1970 FORD CUSTOM .. . .................'895
F-100, V-8, standard, L.W.B.

RfEVES l NAIJI NG Post , Pogevrlle .
Groceries . dry goods har dwore. leed lock shop. Spec JOI
:.OS lb . o f dog f~o d . _$~_Bt:l

2300cc eng ., 4 speed,
XL T opt ion , western
mir rors, AM rad io,
ste p bum per and

RIVERSIDE Jeep.

V -100, V-8 auto .• p .S.,.Q:ed.cover , rear step bumper·

••

HOWI::RY AND
MARliN !:xco vo l ing , sep t ic sys tems .
dozer back hoe . dump tr uck ,
lrme stone . gra ~Je l . blac kt op
pov ir,g , Ut 143 . Phorr e I (b14 )
098 733 1

s ACRES - with fruit and
nut trees, ni ce 3 or 4
be droom home, nat gas
heat, fi r eplac e, bas em ent ,
2 car ga r age, overlooks th e
r iver . $32,000.00.

Middleport
Charming
ol'der home l oc ated on
Soufh Jrd Avenue . 3
bedrooms, l'h bafhs, new
gas furnace and new roof.

10·30-c

Au~tiui. ~

$11 ,000.00.

FORD RANGER .. .. , ... . .......... '2195

Chester, Ohio

$476500

Available for order 10-10-78 .. 10·31 -78
These vehicles must be ordered during our October allocation
period. We are limited to the number we can receive.

TRUCKS

WILL do roo fi ng . constru ctiOn ,
plumbing and hea ting. No jOb
too Iorge or too small . Ph one
/ 42-234 8

- 2 bedrooms , ca r peting
and paneling, base m ent ,
nat. gas heat, sm all lot ,
for
a
c oupl e.
i d ea l

Office 992-63l3

1972 CHEVY... .... . . .. ~.~~~.: .s.t ~.~~~~~: .•• 12495

Jack's Septic
Tank Service

NOW

LIMITED TIME ONLY

V-8, automatic, air, AM-F M w -tape , complete inside.

··''

WAS '5205.00

All Dealer Prep and Transportation Charges are Included in this
Sale Price.

1973 GMC .............................. '2895

ReSidential and commer·
cial. Call for estimate. 24
Hour Service. Any day,
anytime .
Phone 985-3806
Jack Ginther 985-3806

.'

............. 1895
VANS

'

n 1ce level lot 50&gt;&lt;1 20, r eady
ro move into. 12x60 - 2
be droom s, ni ce kitchen and

HOME - with

'2951

Country Squire Wagon, 4 Or , a 1r

,,'
•

STYLE - 3 bedrooms,
built in kitc hen , electric
heat, insulated. carport.
storage bldg ., $28,500.00.

Iiving R. JUST $8,500.00.
ABOVE THE AVERAGE

Racine Beaut i ful 3
bedroom home, dining
room , family room and sun
porch It has gas hot water
heat, fir eplace and a wood
and coal burner also .
Situated on a I most one acre
on State Route 338. Call
today for more inf o.

fXCAVAl'ING . doze r . loader and
bac kh oe work ; d ump tr uck.,
ond Ia - boy~ lo r hr re. wi ll hau l
fill dirt. to sorl l1mestone and
gro11el. Co il Bob or koger Jef
lers. day phone 9&lt;12 -'1089 , night
phone 9&lt;,i:J .JS')5 or 992 - 5232

LTD

1971 FORD

"

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

BoX 3

• Custom package
• Power steering
• Chrome front bumper
• Full guage package
• Rustprooling
, Sliding rear window

1973 PLYMOUTH DUSTER .... . ..... ..
6 cyl .. auto.

Third &amp; Fourth Street-off
Mill Street just behind

more .

• Free wheeling hubs
• AM radio
·
• Power brakes
• Step bumper
• H78x15 black mud and snow tires
• 1/inyl floor covering
• Low profile. dual mirrors.

• J speed transmission

4 dr. auto . air , o .s., p.b .

between

'•

THIS OCTOBER SALE PRICE' INCLUDES:

1973 MERCURY MONTEGO ... ...... ~1295

M

' '•
....

2300cc eng . XL T, free
whee li ng pack age , 4
speed tr ans. and

RETAIL PRICE IS MUCH HIGHER.

Auto ., p.s ., p.b ., vinyl roof , air .

•

'1118 AI'PAiftiGHIAH

"' .

*RIVERSIDE JEEP SALE PRICE. MANUFACTURER'S SUGGESTED
1973 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX .......!1495

I

QUALITY
WOOD HEAT
CHEAP!

'6,695°0*

1973 PONTIAC VENTURA ............ '995
Hatchback, 6 cvl .. auto.

•

· S'IOVE GOMPANY

1979 JEEP J·10, 1/2 TON, 8 FOOT BED

1973· CHEVY NOVA -~-c.~~:~.~~~~·:.;.~~·-'1495

,

&amp; downspouts, 20 vears
experience .
All
work
guaranteed . Call Tom
Hoskins, 949-2160. Free
Estimates.
9-7- lmo.

Middleport

CUT1ASS ,................ '2495

1974 OLDS
4 Dr.. automatic, P.S., P.B., air.

•

SERVICE
All types of rooting, gutter~

In

Jeep J·l 0 Pickup

4-dr. Wgn., ps, pb, ac.

EX(AVA1 1NG. dozer . backho e
and di tcher. Ch arl es R Hol f, eld , Bock
Hoe Se r ~Jice .
Rutland. Ohra . Ph one 742 -'1008.

MOBILE

GeorgeS. Hobstetfer Jr. ·
Broker
Your Full Time
Real Estate Broker

JUST LISTED -Good

'

.,•

No 1 You w ill nnve to see
this 2 bedr oom home to
bel ieve th e p rice Features
n la r ge I1V1ng room w n ~ w
cilrpe tmy, e.x l rCl lar ge d1n
tn q room .· T wo n1 ce lot s
w it n p len t y of shJde . Now
rentr nn lnrflxtr .:r IN COME~
Low Price! S12,000.
No 2 l lx bO Elcona mobile
11o me co mplet el y fu rn1s hed
on a n1c e y nrr co ncllfOn
eel , ce m en t
pa t iO and
.&amp;riveway . Now! S10,500.

GeorgeS. Hobstetter, Jr .,
Broker

good older home that has 9
room s,
4 bedrooms, 2
baths fu rnace, and large
yard with 2 ca r garage?
NEW LISTING - Like new :
Only 7 years old . H as 3
bedrooms, enc losed bath ,
modern
kitchen .
Larg e
car peted f am ily room with
woodb u rn in g f i rep l ace .
Lar ge lot too . Just $29.500 .

Civ ic Stafion Wagon , 4 dr .

....·'

HOME MAINTENANCE

ELLIOTT

j Bo'b Hoeflich)

Home Phone 949·2589

216 E. Second Street

Armstrong Carpeting
APPLIANCE

HONDA CUCC ... ........... ; ••• ..S2295

'•

AND

-¥.. mile off Rt. 7 by-pass on

2300cc eng ., 4 speed
overdr ive tran s .• AM
radio, ·
western
mirrors , slid ing rear
window, and more.

1977 AMC HORNET.... ...... .... . . ....13695
X Station Wagon, 6 cyl. , PS, Auto.

'

OHIO VALLEY ROOFING

GARAGE

Your HeadquarteiS For

SENIORS

SHOP THI!SI! SPECIALS I

.•"

Brakes
Muffler
.
Tires
Shocks
Battery.
Installation Service
Pomeroy, 0.
Ph . 992-2848
J-15-tfc

.

High School

••

NOW

:

thefJth

_,

WAS '4825.00

pickup thit
does the b1g job

...'

MOORE'S

eo...

JIM KEESEE
Cellulosic (wood· fiber)
·Thermal insulation
saveJo pet. to 5o pet.

Hilton Wolfe, Assoc.

NEW LISTING - 1976 Hoi ·

Follow RIO West of R-7 to Guysville
SR l29.

Radiator~

J&amp;L
Blown Insulation

Home Phone 742-2003

NEW

AUCTION SALE

11 ACRES - More or less, 4
bedrooms, modern bath,
large kitchen &amp; dining
room, f i replace, several
outbuildings . ONner being
t ran s fer re d .
Price

EXPERIENCED

tough

INEXPENSIVE FOUR WHEEL DRIVE

•.,,
•
.,

For The Best
Pric"e In Town
See
· Denver Kapple
AI

Service-

New or Repair
Gutteis and
Downspouts

Branch Mgr. 698-6300

FAMILY HOME - Wan I a

LANDMARK

L WRITESEL

H.

Courier

OCTOBER SPECIAL

..•••'
~

ROOFING

19 /6 NASHU A 14 x 05 J bedroom
! '1 bo th undcrpinntqg St SU()
ond ossu rn e loon "149 -'.lb!:IJ or
84] -3311

TRACTOR sprayer .
~or moll B ll oclor Wheels and
a• le ro bu tl d 11orle r. ~ our ELi'S x
16.) !ruclo. tires like new Form
wagon
Gro rn
e leva tor .
949-2763 .

POMEROY

'

Mobile Homes for Sale

MOUNT!: [)

19n HON d A SL ] ~ S'JOO. Windshield . luggage roclc
Days
985·330 1. N ighfs9~5 - 4140

nr

-

FOH YOUR (Qtn pleh r hou ~ rng
, ,,,nodt_•lrnq c on ~ t ru(li(ln ond
fllOIIlt l'l l(li;Cl' . grvL' J k 0 tr y
R'" l t_•rt_' " 'H
o v orlobf,, _
Ro ' O ~nn abll.'
prrCelo
Phone

fiOO M house and both ,
•emodeled . tully car pe ted May
be ~een alter 3 pm . Phone
fJ92 -39J3

During
Our · Seasonal
• Closeout,

~u r L'~

SJI&amp;OUf·

WAH-l&lt; WI-l l dt~llr "~ WrllrtHil l'
Gr nnl I ~/ IH'/9

~ l VI:

DISCOUNT
PRICES!!!

-

SCHOOL
8U S cam pe r . bO
pos!&gt;enger wrth new 1rres
Good cond1tio n. Contact Tom
Mankin at 992 -220 1

Phone 992 -:Z 111

Ml::l'Al BOOKCASE . 4 :.he lve-s
Motchrng rnetol st~p table wrlh
3 shelVes. Small ~tereo end
r odio combrnat ron Lorge Ph i leo
slereo w J(h rodr o co mbrno tr on
Revolvtng wrough t iron TV
slond Boys lined CPO si1e l'J
G rr ls wmt er cool ~ ~z e 10
M en s dress shoes ~ i z e 9 ''
steel toe . Boys Thorn MeA n
shoes 6 ' , D and rnony toehr
boys '.
gir l-s , ju niors
and
women s clothing 491 -'177':!

F-i..)a
,"
·--' HJh~
---- -- [ ~---

OLD COINS, pocket ·watches ,
doss rtngs wedd1ng bonds .
·--- -··diamonds . Gold or silver . Call
~o_ge r W&lt;:m_s l ~~- 7!_2_: 2~3.! ___ _
WANTED to buy : 1 to 3 acres of COAL . UMESTONL sand. grovel.
calcium chloride. fertilizer, dog
land, priced low or not to ex food , and oil types of salt . b: ceed $500 per oae Wr tle bo •
ce lsi or Soli Works Inc .. 1:: . Mo1 n
223 , Rutland, Ohio 45775 .
-- - - - ----- - - St Pomeroy . 992 -3891 .
- - ---WE PI CK up junlc auto bod tes buy BURROUGH
S SENSI MAliC acing junk cars. scrap 1ron . bat co un ti ng moch1ne . Pho ne
teries and metals . Rider's
992·2156 , Th e Daily Sen1 rn el ,
Salvage. SR 124, Pomeroy
I l l Court Street . Pomeroy .
902-5•61!.
Ohio.

--- ---- ---

..-..

1957 CHE VROlH . 2-door hardtop .
Ver y g~o_d ~o~ d~tion . 9119-202 1.

OLD FURNITURE. ice bo•es, brass
- · -· -bed s. 1ron bed s. desks. e tc .. HOUSE IN Bradbury 1 ch1ld con
stdered no pef&lt;i . Rel eren&lt;e recomplete households . Write
qUI red . $150 per month
M . D. Mtller Rt. 4, Pomeroy or
304 -675 -3834
call 992 77b0 .

lOsf .I NR~cin;:-m oi-;-Biue Tick
hound . 40·50 lb . New coll ar . No
1.0. tog Heward. Eli Van ce
9-49 -2124 '
--- ·-·-

309,95

Let us test your wa1er
Free

9'12-SBSB .

LOST· BRITTANY Spaniel. Mole ,
w hite and br own . Solid brown
head
Around Vande rhoof
Ridge . Tuppers Plains ar ea
614 -667 ·3908.

Now Only ,

992-S'I~b.

T1MBEH . POMERO'.' Forest Pro - 12 z bO M081LE home in Rocrne
ducts . Top pric e for standin g
area. 992-5858 .
sow timber Cal l 992-5965 or
11 x 60 mo bil e hom&amp; near Dexter
_ _K ~ n_bt !__:- 4~6~~70. _ __ _

--

Roy curnper
ton truck

1958 ~o rd 1 ton 1ruck . phone
949-2508.

992-22UB .

.

I

M A YlAG CO PP ~h'10 N ~ Porto
Pair wa sher and dryer . Very
good condrti on s~c• ll o ~ ~e t . (oil
aft er 5pm YY'l ')9Q~

SlATION wagon b: ·
runn ing car . $750.

_L o_rg~ l ? t ~ ~ o_ll ?92 -~479

s. .

on

1913

CHIP
WOOD .
Po les max 3 ANO 4 RM . lurn is.hed and unf u r n r5 he d
opt5.
Pho ne
diameter 10" on largest end .
991-5434.
$8 .50 per ton Bundled slob ,
$6.50 per ton Deli vere d to
TWO BI:'DROOM , kitc hen furni sh
Ohio Pollet Co., HI . 2. flom eroy.
ed opt Coli before B om
992 -2b89 .

GAFiAGf

0!::1

moun ted

Let Pomeroy Landmark
soften &amp; condition your
water with Co -op wa1e_~
softener , Model UC -SVI .

F- 100 FORD NGt:k pi ckup
truclo. . t&gt;~p l or~r pac kage P ~- ­
p B.. auto Ir on s .. '1 ton :ruu
C.I.D 0 cyl. eng1ne. 742 2820 .

COUNTHY MOBIU Home Parle
Route 33 . north of Pomeroy .

SALE.Fri.

~001

IL

f AHM ~O R ~o olt• Hau'&gt;t' :J harr1 ~

Offered

'"
~RH 10 qoo d horne block . rnole
Moron l l lur ll ro b i ~J . u ~r.:d 'I
Gc•rr nO;l ~lwphord I yeur old
rnonths A f h' '~ ~ 1J&lt;rl - l~bf
Coorl wtrh (hrld rcn HouSe
br ok er• Coll 3l8 OJ it,l ,
K AWA~AKI
11:1'1]
Co li
PUI-'1-111::~
por t beag le
l orn
'N1 -b')b3
Gr u e~e t 49'} 31353 .
l&lt;rn !-=OR[) HIUCK sh ot I bed . 3~1
BlACK 9 rno 11 th -,tonrlord poodle
e11grne . oul o 54 :tOO. '-14'1 'l b~ J
V&lt;•ry fr rendly Housebroken
PI GS ~OR ~ ole , r;J4t Jl41
Al~o cou(h to onyor~ ~c• who con
prck tt up 9'1 2·613 4
1'-111
YAMAHA XSb'.lU. low
rnrleoge . ~x cc ll e nt condrt ton
lWO nAt&lt; old lr1~h Sell er .
S'/00 Reas on l or ~ ~o&gt; ll i ng o wner
ft~ male
Ia
go od
horn e
44'1 ~,, ., _
gone on to mrlrtory ~~" • ~ro:-12 . Col!
Y9/ ~0~5 or 94'1 niY or•ylrrn e

t9 'l~

1911 (AMARO . 350, aut o .. new
tir es
an d
po int
$ 1500

SYLVIA'S

FOuR

J.l:l'N

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER?

19'/ S CHE VROLET CA MARO
991 -5621 or 992 -2105.

to

YB~

Mo e

IQTf CADILLAC HOORADO . Ful l

NO HUNTING or tres passing on
my properly w1thout permis·
~ i~n~ J ~d! ~c~ ~o ~ . .
GU N SHOOT Hacme Gun Club .
Every Sunday 1 pm. Factory
~ h_ok_e_~u..:n :_ o~l_r_. _ _. _ _ . .
GUN SHOOT . 'Raci ne Volunteer
Fir e Dept . !:very Saturday 6 :30
pm al their building in 8oshon .
Fa cto ry choke guns only

-

~ alo.•

l or

p~' r

~niceo

I IUUt tUDHOOM IIUIIIt • h('\1111' '"
M1ddk•po1l ( oiiYY'J J..t'.ll
lr orler lor q~ ' po111f I 0
l:l'l OCH''&gt; ! 4'/ l'~bb

614 6CJ~ - :moq

M0.nd11y

F'ritJa~

wa h•• prlh.

491. -:tf94 .

Tut&gt;!U.Ia ~

I J[ '.! t 4'}

JV( IH:: C~IV ~ R 'I JV( -. p,.aket :.
Cen tre ~&lt; 13 tro d• lop e deck

LOVAIRE WHIH snow dr ift great
PYRt:N~ ES
Puppies
Phone
\ ·0 14 -bO'/ -3838 .

Noun un&amp;ttur·day

Good
currdrlr nrr . lrml v lo o lrou sl.'
trnrl t•r o r w rll '&gt;ell f01 51~9~

l4b4 V W~A ( I01{Y (O II1Pl' r

The Daily Sent in,•I. :-lldtllcp.. rH '""" ' ~'~ •). 0., Frid"y ,lll'l. 1:1. ~i!;'7;8_______________________________. ,

~

Business Services

For ~al•· · Hcnt or Trarlt·

R.. DUO ~ All r!t la!&gt; l w rlh Gol:h.,•!&gt;&lt;J

KIN G WOOD h L•o t ~c•r wrlh blowur
Used l ~t: os on Air t'l b call

STAH Kenne ls . Boarding
and grooming , all br eeds.
Che s.h tre . :.16 'f .tJ192 or ]67 -0 106

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES

nu to

.JU/

fOUR fAMILY Yard Saito Sot.
Oc t. 14 across. !ram th e ~rre
L&gt;epl. i11 Sy racuse .

ki~ IN G

NOTICE

4~-J

CORNPIC Kl:R

tin d .

tv

'

YARD SALI: . fhur&lt;&gt; . 11. frr IJ
Sot.
14 . Cli tl or d 8eegle
res1dence On Rt )24 m Dor ea!&gt;
ladies wh rte uni forms qurltrng
frames , Men 's, women s ond
ch1ldren s clothrng · oil sr1es
drs.hes etc. Hoin will cancel

BoK Numbt! r In Cltt't.' uf Tht• Sto rt·

T he Pulllisht'r rt'~Mi cs lht· I'IJ;( hl

11

\ard~,.

13-

FWTSWL

Open Evenings unlll6 :00-Til5 p.m. Sal.

Yesterday'• Cryploquole: NOTHING ASTONISHES MEN SO
MUCH AS COMMON SENSE , AND PLAIN DEAUNG.EMERSON
rf'I IMR Kinlt Features Syndiu te , Inc.

In 1972, in the worst civil air
disaster in history at thal
time, more than 170 persons
were kiUed when a Russian
airliner crashed near the
Moscow airport.

,
' !

,.,.'
c

�.II

·Congress taking backward stepS
Spending to 20 percent of the
Gross National Product by
1983.
.
The House also remained
entangled in the fight over

federal funding of abortions
by refusing to accept a
compromise to
soften
language
restricting
abor.t,ions in the $56 billion

The following report has
been issued by the Bureau of
Employment Services on the
emp loyment situation in
Meigs Co unty as of August ,
tllis year:
Labor Force - In August
the Meigs County civilian
labor force was an estimated
11,875 persons, based on place
of residence. Of this total,
approximately 11,250 were
emp loyed and 625 we re
jobless. The unemployment
rate stood at 5.3 percent of the
labor force .
Location - Situated in the
southeastern portion of the
&gt;iate, Meigs County is adjacent to Athens, Gallia, and
Vinton Counties in.. Ohio and
Jackson, Mason, and Wood
Counties in West Virginia. 1ts
population was estimated at
21,500 in July 1976, showing
an advance of 1,700 from the
1970 en um eration (U.S.
Ce nsus) . Middleport, the
largest community , had 2,800
resident s in 1970 while
Pomeroy, the County seat,
inhabitants .
had .2,7 00
Smaller communities include
Syracu se, Rutland, and
Racine.
Industries - Accord~ to
1970 U.S . Censu~ mforrnation ,
close ;o t--:o-ftfths of the
County s restdent J~bholder s
co~muted to. work m ne1ghbormg counties. In August,
about one-third of all workers
living in the county held
mining jobs and around oneninth worked for various
government agencies. Annual av~ra~e employment

data for 1977 indicate that the
leading factory industries in
the county were food, electric
equipm e nt , fabricated
metals, lumber and wood
products, tr ansportation
equipment, and chemicals.
Items turned out locally
included bakery products,
non-alcoholic beverages ,
processe d salt, wooden
pallets, electric motors and

1

By JACK R. PAYTON
VATICAN CITY (UP!) The Vatican's bronze doors
opened wide today with the
end of the official mourning
for the "pastoral" pope, John
Paul I, and the secret
conclave to elect his
successor as shepherd to the
world's 700 million Roman
Catholics one day away.
But officials at the Vatican
announced that Polish
Cardinal Boleslaw Filipiak,
77, died of a stroke Thursday
at his home in Poznan,
Poland, reducing the number
of papal electors to 111.

checks

n

MDOt,O.
I'll "2-217~
llltitltti Ill

&lt;tuppers plams

IIIII

I

•-1...
mrw

E•;,tnllll

· "'pen F rtday

Till 7 :00p.m .

ForYour
·o•v4nience
Shopping

Filipiak was the third
cardinal to die since the death
of Pnpe Paul VI Aug. 6.
Utinese Cardinal Paul Yu Pin
died in Rome before the lilsl
conclave
and
India's
Cardinal Valerian · Gracias
died Sept. 11 In Bombay.
Official mourning for John
Paul ended Thursday night.
There were no more flags at
haH staff on Vatican
buildings
today .
The
vatican's bronze door waa
fully open instead of half
closed and the bells of
St.Peter's did not ring a deatll
knell.
The Vatican newspaper
L'Osservatore Rmlano was
no longer lxrdere&lt;l In black.
The ll1 cardinals who will
choose a new pope to lead the
world's 700 million Ronan
Catholics seem to have narrowed their ltst of candidates
to a few Italian churchmen,
all doctrin!li cooservatives,
church experts say.
As the church princea gathered today for their 6nal
coosultative meeting before

Poet's comer
Lamentation
Enmity
Erupting,
Sometimes
Exuding ...
Against self,
or surroundings.
A love that. suffices
is not love
for nothing completely
results
in total consummation.
Except red
into a precise flow
·that somehow gives life.
0' a love
that does enable
black to become pearl.
·Smooth,
not ragged.
Washed away
by the sea
that endures morning pain.
Maybe to be remembered
never again.
By Jim Brewer, Jr.

SPRING
AIR

pomeroy ·
nationa
bank .
the bank of

l

Do you want the most In

the century

established 1872

~r:!~:~~~t~:~. -Am:u::::i::

Vatican's doors open

Equipment Co.

futiC!nd

___s___

during the reference month,
approximately three-tenths
had backgrounds in structural work, one-seventh were
in the machine trades
classification, and onetwelfth had service experience. Of the women,
nearly two-lift!};! were in the
service category, a like
proportion were in the
clerical-sales group, and onetwelfth were in
the

these jobseekers had been
administrative clerks,
Charles Jones of Pomeroy ; waiters and waitresses, ahd
INFANT JONES
·maternal
grandparents, Mr. carpentry laborers.
Funeral services for Paul
.and
Mrs.
Cecil White, , Shortages - !;luring the
Joseph Jones, Jr., fiv!l-week
Gallipolis,
and
several aunts, · month of August there was a
old son of Paul and Rosalee
need for mechanical drafters
White Jones of Tarawa uncles and cousins.
Friends may call at the and television repairers in
Terrence, N. C., who died
Tuesday will be held at 2:30 Ewing ·Funeral Home in Meigs County.
Wage
Ranges
p.m. Sunday at the Rock Pomeroy anytime Saturday.
Manufacturing employers in
Springs Cemetery with the
the county generally offer
Rev. William Knittel ofbeginning workers hourly
FIRE
MEETING
SET
ficiating.
wage
rates which vary as
Tbe
area
Volunteer
Fire
Surviving besides his
follows
: unskilled, $2.110 to
and
'
E
mergency
Association
parents are a brother, Jeffrey
$4.35;
semiskilled,
$3 to $4.75 ;
will
meet
at
7:30
p.m.
paternal
Allan Jones;
skilled,
$3.50
to
$6.
For the
fire
station
in
Tuesday
at
the
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. _
Ripley, W. Va., Bob Byer, . past several years, average
Middleport, president, an- weekly· earnings of county
factory emJJioyees covered
nounced
today.
MEET TUESDAY
by the Ohio Unemployment
for
the
departments
Decals
The Southern Local School
Compensation
Law have been
involved
will
be
available
at
District Board of Education
approximately
two-fifths
the
meeting.
The
November
. will meet in regular session
below
the
average
for the
at 7,30 p.m. Tuesda at the meeting will be held at the
state.
New Haven Fire Station.
high school.
Y

1Continued from page I )
bankment then overturned.
There was no contact between the two vehicles.
Mod~rate damage resuhed
and no citation was Issued.
At 12 :30 p.m. , officers were
called to the •scene of a twovehicle collision on SR 554,
three miles west of Cheshire.
The patrol said a vehicle
driven by James Cains, 16,
Bidwell, was. traveling \"est
on SR 554 while transporting
a scaffold. As the Cains
vehicle met an eastbOund
auto operated by Albert
Loveday, 23, Bidwell, the
scaffold fell from the Cains
vehicle into the path of the
Loveday
car.
Again,
moderate damage resulted
and no charges were filed .

Tum the key.
Glide away.
Nothing li~e a new car!
A low-cost•Auto Loan is waiting.
To make it happen to you.

relays, and concrete blocks.
Jobaeekers - Around onehall of those persons who
were actively seeking work
through the Pomeroy office of
the Ohio Bureau of Employment Services were men
and the remaining one-hall
were women; more than fivesixths of all applicants were
not yet 45 years of age.
Among the male applicants

~---A--r--e--a---D--e--a--t-h

u~.r

pomeroy

prompted assistant senate
Republican Leader Ted
Stevens to say his "cr)'stal
ball" showed Congress in
session Swtday and the early

Meigs employment situation given

£}~

·

appropriation bill for the
Departments of Lalxr and
Health, Education and
Welfare.
The pace of the progress·

durability, comfort and support?
See the Spring Air Back Supporter
Mattress with the Unique 'Karr'
Innerspring Unit.

being locked into the Vatican
Palace Saturday for their
S!!CI'et conclave, the experts
said it was evident they
seemed intent on maintaining
a 451&gt;-year-old tradition by
choosing another Italian
pontiff.
Th.e cardinals' own statements Indicate the 26~ih
pope, successor to the shortlived but warm-hearted John
Paul I, will be a doctrinal
conservatlve who can
maintain coorch discipline,
control the vast Vatican bu·
reaucracy and establish a
warm, human cootact with
Roman Catholics around the
world.
Speculation centered on
two so-called "pastoral"
cardinals - Corrado Ursl., 70,
archbishop of Naples, and
Salvatore Pappalardo, 60,
archbishop of Palermo,
Sicily.
Conservative cardinals expected to gain support in the
voting include Pericle Felici,
67, prefect of the Vatican
Court of Appeals, and
Giuseppe Siri, 72, the
archbishop of Genoa, wbo has
been a member of the college
of cardinals for 25 years.
AWARDED CONTRACT
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Gladieux Corp., Toledo, has
been awarded a contract to
operate Shawnee State Park
Lodge, the Ohio Department
of Natural Resources announced today_
Gladieux, one of three
firms submitting bida, will
operate the lodge at Shawnee
State Park near Portsmouth
In Scioto County from Nov. I,
.1978, to Dec. I, 1985.
I~~t addition to the 50-room
lodge at Shawnee, Gladieux
also will operate the park's 25
deluxe housekeeping cabins
and the lodge gift shop and
restaurant. •

.

(

...

••

•.

Murder . s~spe·ct pleads guilty
RALEIGH , N.C. t UPI J ~Mike Reyes
Llamas, 22,ol Wake Forest, pleaded guilty
to first degree murder aod nine other
charges Friday in the August highway
ambush death in rural Wake County of a
teacher from West Virginia.
Uamas, one of three persons accused in
the shooting death of Jerry Romine of
Pnlnt Pleasant, W. Va., was scheduled to
go on trial Monday. He pleaded guilty to
first degree murder, four Counts of armed
robbery; three counts of kiduaping and
two counts of conspiracy.
·
· If convict«!, Llamas faced the death
penalty plus a maximum of ii81l years in
prison if convicted. The minimum prison
term would have )leen 103 years. Because
of tlle plea bargain. Assistant District
attorney Nicholas J . Dombalis said he
will not seek the death penalty for
Uamas.
However. uilder North carolina law a
jury ·must be drawn before Dec. I to

decide if Uamas should be given life
imprlaorunent in the murder case or the

death penalty. It IS not bound by llombalis'
decision .

JAMES DIEHL, principal of Meigs High School, crowned Judy Hall, daughter
of Mrs. Betty Reed and Buck Hall, the 1978 homecoming queen Friday night at
.Marauder Stadium. With them is Judy 's escort, Raymond Andrews, son of
Pomeroy Mayor and Mrs. Clarence Andrews. 1Bob Hoeflich photo) .

·ER squads kept busy

· G&amp;J AUTO PARTS
POMEROY, OHIO

BIG TWO DAY SALE
TODAY &amp; SATURDAY

Discharges, Oct. 12
Holzer Medical Center
Orey Argabright; William
Beaver ; Rachel Cochran;
Emily Collier ; Thomas
Cooper; Lewis Elkins; Verlie
Evans; Donald Gardner Jr.;
Carrie. Halley ; Joan Hollingshead i Zenon Hunt;
Clayton Lambert ; Mrs. ·
· Stanley Lewis and daughter;
Cyril Maybe Jr ; Eutha
McDaniel; Mrs. David Me. Quiad; and son; Carolyn Norman ; Sue Oesch; Audrey
Patterson ; Ina Pratt;
Chester Ratliff; Homer ·
Rees; Wendy Seaver; Mrs.
James Sisson and daughter ; ·
Carroll Smith; Clara Smith;
Betty Spaun; Willie Thompson; Mary Wells; Ralph
Wiseman.
'
Births, Oct. 12
Mr. and Mrs. Michael
Powell, son, Gallipolis.
Mr. and Mrs. Leslie ·
Burgess, son, Gallipolis.
Mr. and Mrs. John Stevens,
son, Wellston.

REDDY
HEATERS

'15495

VALVOLINE
ALL CLIMATE···
MOTOR OIL

59C:

BOOSTER
CABLES

.,.5

QT.

·-

GALLON

There is no arrangement in the plea

bargain for Llamas to testify and
llomballs would not say if Llamas will be

motorists in two separate incidents to Lhe

side of the road aod robbing them. Police
said victims lllld them they stopped to help
a girl who appeared to have car trouble

GALLIPOLI S '
Dedication
ceremooles for the new Activity Center at
the Gallipolis State Institute is scheduled
for .2 p.m. on Friday, Oct. 'ZI.
Guest speaker win be Dr. Timothy B.
Moritz, Director of the Ohio Department of
Mental Health and Mental Retardation.
The new activity ·center houses a PJOl,
gym, classrooms, music room , workshop,
learning center, art area, living skills
area, beauty and barber shop, game room,
TV lounge and quiet room, craft area
'
rea din groom.
·
The mullii&gt;urpose room will be used for
reli~ious ser~ces, sllowing or movies,
vartety shows, plus classrooms as needed,
and a large meeting room. The room has
one very special feature; a stained glass
window which was designed by the art
students under Nelle Shaw, past art
instructor . The chaplain's offices are also

:tmts
NO. 37

VOL 13

GALLIPOLIS- POINT PLEASANT

·FRA powerless
to police railroads
PT. PLEASANT - As tlle town sleeps,
a freight train rolls through .
On board are enough chemica ls
to poison every human being for miles
around.
.
All it takes is an unseen break in the
track, and then comes a deraihnent, a
chemical leak, and mass death . ·
People in Point Pleasant share this
fear. They have been near disaster before,
and it appears that regulatory agencies
can do little to remedy the situation.
Mason Comty CDIJ!'!iasioners were.'
informed last week by officials of the
-they
were power!... til pollee railroads
to
prevent derallments, even though the
agency provides safety regulations.
"We Inspect the track and relet It to
the carrier (railroad), wbo can lower the
&gt;-peed or cease operation," the FRA 's R.C.
Ketenheim b)ld the county. "What transpires bet ween local municipalities and the
carrier (railroad) is of no concern to thO'

Maso n County
commissioners
complained that in many cases,

comm unity officials weren't told of
derailments until they found trains
unattended afterwards.
But, if the damage falls ·under $23,000,
railroads aren't required to report

deraihnents, noted Ketenhelni.
"! want to see headlines lit tlle paper
tllat say people were saved - not how
many people died," implored corrtmlssion
president Bob Powera, Who urged that the
oolll!lf emerMDCY ....vices director be
infm:med in all derallments.
it reoponoe, Ketenheiin said the FRA
Inspected wack from Parkersburg to
Huntington Aug. 8, but many other
derailments occurred afterwards - three
in a week. A secood inspection has begun.
The PSC recently found defects in
track from Point Pleasant to Huntington,
which the Baltimore &amp; Ohio Railroad
t'epaired in two days, Dwyer said.
Dwyer said most track was installed
federal govenunent." ·
50 years ago when train car loads weighed
Chessie System spokesman Willis 40 to 5Q tons, compared til the present 100
Conk in Huntington ·sees dark days ahead tons or more.
for towns like Point Pleasant.
Durin g the meeting, Cbessie officials
"The
nation li\'es on hazardous said they were carrying out a program to
materials," he said. "It's going to get replace old rails with welded continuous
worse."
rails, and that 16.5 miles of rail in Mason
Ketenheim, along with ' Chessie O,unty would be replaced next year.
officials and tlle state Public Service
Commission, attended the PSC meeting to
field queries about several deraihnents in
this county.
APPROVES PROGRAM
Nine have occurred this year, among
GALUPOUS
- Governor James A.
them an eight-&lt;:ar spill in this town. In
Rhodes
announced
Friday he has
January , 20,700 gallons of poison
approved
the
spending
of 13.4 million in
eplchlorophydrin drove 300 persons from
federal
Comprehensive
Employment and
their homes and contaminated the
Training
Act
(CETA)
funds
to provide
drinking water.
training
and
jobs
for
970
young
people In
That accident could cost Chessle $1
th.e
Youtll
Employment
and
Training
million, according to J . J. Dwyer, head of
Program
IYETP).
the PSC's Railroad·Division, who said the
The Gallia-Meigs Community Action
two broken joint bars that caused It
Commission
in Cheshire was allocated
weren't in evidence in an inspection of
$84,222 for 25 employees.
track two days before it occurred.

,_,.. -

-·lltrlillon

'325

.,.,
..-------..
El berfeIds· In pomero,
STP SON.OF·A-GUN
SPRAY BOTTLE

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1978
EXTENDED FORECAST
United Pretis International
Cool through the period, with a
cblllice of SIIUW Harries northeast early
Monday.ll will be fair TUesday, with a
chance of showers Tuesday. Highs will
be In Lhe 60s Munday and In the upper
50s or the 60s Tuesday and Wednesday.
LJws will be In the 30s Monday and
Tuesday and In the lower 40s
Wednesday.
.::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

:a!~er~!d~;~~~.ft=.i

President Carter's 1976
camJJalgn committee for

ill~~~~:=~~!~c

levied a $1,000 fine against .
Carter's general election
campaign committee and
ordered It to repay more than
,17,000.
The
money
repraented the amount of
federal campaign funds Uled
to pay salaries of 2ll campaign aides alter Carter won
the 1976 election but before be
waa inaugura~ed'llow you know
The last person to be
convlded In Los Angeles of
attempted murder by use of a
rattlesnake - James "The
Barber" Smith, who held his
preganl wife's foot in a
snakepll - also was the last ·
murderer to be execut,od by
hanging In C.llfornla. He,
dropped through the trap In
1

SPECIAL SAVINGS DURING THIS ANNUAL
IT'LL PAY Y:OU TO VISIT ELBERFELD$

.

AND STOCK UP ON WHAT YOU
. NEED.
.

SALE ENDS SAT., OCT. 14 AT 5 PM ·

mf')fnin ~

county , Romine and two companions
traveling to Nags Head stopped and were
robbed at gunpoint.
Romine was allegedly driven off and

murdered. His two companions were
but in a different area of the locked in the trunk of their car.

construction projected at the starting of
construction was $2,434,997. The project
covermg 47,214 sq. fl. Approximate cost of was designed for the State of Ohio,
Department of Mental Health and Mental
Retardation by Urban, calabretta and
Associates, Inc., Columbus, Oilio, ProJect
WORUJ WAR I OBSERVANCE
POMEROY - World War I Night will Architects and was coostructed by Karr
be observed at a meeting of the Drew Construction Company of Diester, Ohio,
·
Webster Post 39, American Legion , to be gene ral contractllrs.
The facility will allow the staff to plan
held at 8 p. m. TUesday. An oyster supper
will be served. Any World War I veterans and administer a comprehensive schedule
needing transportation to the observance of activities suited to the individual and
may call Leonard Jewell, Charles Swatzel group needs of the clients. The primary
thrust of the design was to ·promote the
or Paul Casci. ·
clients' awareness of his surroundings
POSTPONED
while meeting special and .functional
VINTON
Friday's
annual requirements.
homecoming activities at Nortll Gallia
Area residents are invited to attend
High School were postponed, due to the . dedication ceremonies. Tours will follow
weather . Events were ·resch eduled ribbon cutting activities. Refreshments
will be served in the multl-J&gt;uf!Xlse.room.
Saturday night at tbe high school.

in the center.
~e

activity center is a one floor plan ,

tntintl

DESPITE rain ull day Friday and brief showers just before noon on Siturday,
thousands of vliltors from Ill ovel' the country gathered at Bob Evans Fatms, Rio
G.-..cle, to take p11rt In the eighth annual fall festival. In Brenda Wilson photo
abave, Robbie Combo, Dayton, is ohown at rope making machine. Looking on from
bthlnd II Brad Kimel, F~ay, Ohio. ,

I ,

~

~

PRICE 25 CENTS

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY

Gallia board proceeds with
pla~s on -building program
GALUPOUS - Gallia County I..ocal
Board of Education Chairman· James
Blevins announced Saturday the board is
oroceeding with feasibility studies and site
1Vestigation for 0 major building .
. rogram , pending , passage of the
upcoming bond issue 'and operating leyy.
The proposed bond i!lsue would generate
approximately $21 mllllon that wouTd be
spent on two new high schools, four new
elementary schools, and the renovation of
lour high schools for middle schools.
While all 1""'!\!ona del!"nd 1 on the
avlillilblllty ohltel, 1t !~iiiroilllletl to locate
one high school in the general area of tlle
intersection of SR554 and SR!IiO to
accommodate the students in tlle northern
part of the ,county. The high school
serving the students In the '"'uthern areas
would be located in the vicinity of SR775
and Patriot.
"These schools would be equipped witll
modern science laboratories, media
centers and adequate classroom space as
well as areas for art, music, athletics and
other electives. Both schools would be
located on thirty or mare acres and would
house grades nine tllrough 12," Blevins
said.
Plans call for new elementary schools in
the vicinity of Vinton , Bidwell, Crown City
and the Southwestern High School.
These schools would, according to

Ju dgment sought
•
a
mn
£
h Y Galli
GALUPOUS - In a suit med Friday

in GaUia Q&gt;unty Common Pleas Court,

Jackoon Production Credit Asaoclatlon,
JaCkson, seeka judgment against Charles
R. McGraw, Lake Worth, Fla., In the
amomt of $13,000, plus punitive damages
amomtlog to $200,000.
The credit asooclation claims that on
March 11, 1971, in Gallipolis, McGraw
"falsely and fraudulently" stated that he
was the owner of 229 head of cattle, valued
at more than $50,000, that he had a net
worth in excess of $1 milliop, a~d
unencumbered land In Florida.
Based upon this Information, the
association claims that they were .
"induced" to loan McGraw $37,813.98.
The suit charges that based upon
McGraw's failure to pay on the note the
association was awarded, in an earlier

'

0

·~··· ·

~ IGH 5C I-I OO LS

{:; MIDDL£ oC HOO LS

Q

GHRD£ SCHJOLI

suit, judgment demanding McGraw to
APPROXIMATE sites for the construction of two new high schools and four
pay.
new
elementary schools to serve the students of the Gallla County Local School
On Aug . 9, 1978, the suit claims, the
·District
are pictured above. The proposed building program is contingent upon
credit association had a security interest
tile passage of the board's 5.1 mill, $21 million, bond issile which is to be placed
in all cattle located oo the McGraw farm . Blevins, relieve the present overcrowded
before district voters on Nov. 7. The exact locations of the proposed faciliti es
On tlle same day, the association condition in some areas as weD as replace
would
be determined by site availability.
charges, McGraw removed tile cattle from antiquated facilities with modern ones
tlle !ann, located in Racine, in violation of designed for an expanded curriculum.
a security agreement and financing
The elementary schools
would be
located on 1~ acre school sites-the exact
statement signed by McGraw.
In brining suit, ·the credit association location being determined 'by site
claims that the act of taking the cattie was availability.
Judge Robert Buck has ordered Buskirk'
POMEROY - Meigs County Sheriff
" In an attempt to provide a program
done "willfully and maliciously", and tlle
conveyed
to Athens Mental Health Center
association thus seeks damages uniquely designed til fit the needs of James J. Proffitt reported Saturday that for evaluation. Buskirk is confmed to tlle
!/trough
the
cooperation
and
efforts
of
amounting to $213,000.
Continued on PaRe A-2
Rutland VIllage Marlitall Larry Coleman, Meigs County Jail pending transportation
charges have been filed and a guilty plea to .Athens. Buskirk has admitted giving
has been entered in Meigs County Court false calls Ill the U.S. Secret Service,
bv a 31-year-old Rutland man in Banquet Foods in Jackson Co. and tlle
connection witll tlle series of false alarms Ymton County Sheriff's Dept. as well as
the other calls in Meigs County.
being given area departments.
Sheriff Proflitt al'"' reported Johnny
Clarence Robert · Buskirk, 31, Rutland
was arrested following investigation of the Wimley, 37, Winchester, Tenn., was
Monday night and Tuesday night false arrested Friday morning and taken before
alarms to Middleport, Pomeroy and Meigs County Court on a charge of issuing
Racine Fire Departments. He entered a bad check. He entered a guilty plea aod
guilty pleas in Meigs County Court to tlle was fined $500 and costs and ordered to
charges of making false alanns during his make restitution for the check.
Wimley had returned from Tennessee on
Friday court appearance.
his own after being notified of the warrant
in Ohio .
Restitutioo, fine and costs were paid and
he was released from custody.

Rutland man pleads guilty

Fire destroys
another auto

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8

SALE -

during tlle early mornin~ hours.
In the lirst incident , a Shaw University
student was robbed and locked in the trunk
of his car.
•
In . the second incident, the same

Dedication set Oct. 27

+

-

ZEREX
ANTI-FREEZE

Bland Julius Hill Jr., 19, of Youngsville,
will go on trial Moriday and during the
trial the third person charged in ti!Ei case,
Terry Ann Harnm, 11, of Wake Forest, Is
expected to testify for the prosecution.

c·alled .
The three are accused of luring

WASHINGTON (UPI) - , - - - -....~--~~!1!11----~For the third time this year,

19J8,

•

days of next week.
Congress
did
make
progress In other areas,
,.
however. Members of the
U.S. military were paid today
after all, following passage
first by the House and then
the Senate of a $117.3 billion
defense appropriation bill,
the biggest mmey legislatioo
in the nation's history.
Paychecks for most of the
1.5 million Gls in the United
States had been . held up
he~use of Congress' failure
to act.
And the House passed a
compromise $7.3 billion
foreign aid appropriations·
bill that had been in trouble
over objections that U.S.
money would be going for
water projects in other
countries while President
Carter blocked several such
projects at home .
The House also approved a
TAKES SECOND - The Meigs FFA Chapter won
new ethics bill, previously
second place in the District SoU judging contest at
passed by the Senate, that
Wellston this past week. Billy and Patty Dyer lied for
would require congressmen,
second place in the district contest with 340 poin~ out of a
federal judges and alniost
possible 450 total. Bill Dyer, Patty Dyer and Blair Windon
everyone in the federal
will be accompanied by advisor Arthur Arnold in state
government making more
competition this Saturday, Oct. 14, at Knox County,
than $47,500 to submit a
Centerburg, Ohio.
personalliilanclal disclosure
statement.
The bill also would llmlt
contact with the government
after officials leave employment, preventing ex-emThe emergency unit of the
ployees from cashing in oo 'Middleport Fire Department Hill Road at 3:43a.m. l''rlday
the influence they gained was called to 1633 Lincoln for Richard (Die~) Neutzllng
who was reported in a coma.
while in the govenunent.
Heights, Pomeroy, at 12:18 He was taken to Holzer
p.m . Thursday for Edith Medical Center.
Rizer who was taken to
Hospital News
At 1:45 p.m. Thuraday the
Ple~sant Valley Hospital.
squad went to 139 Butternut '
Veteran&amp; Memorial Hospital
At 6:47 p.m., the unit went Ave. for Allen B. Ray who
ADMITTED
Marie to Route I, Cheshire, f0r had fallen. He was taken to
Custer., Pomeroy; Marilyn Marilyn Snyder, a medical Veterans Memorial Hospital
Powell, Racine; Bret Korn, patient, who was also taken to where he was examined nd
Pomeroy; William Harris, Pleasant Valley Hospital.
released.
Pomeroy; Sara Diddle,
Middleport; Loretta
The Pomeroy Emergency
Holsinger, Racine ; Roy Fox, SQuad was called to Lincoln DIRECTOR SUBPOENAED
Clifton, W. Va.
CLEVELAND (UP!) DISCHARGED - Patsy
The private business records
Laudermilt, Beatrice
ACTIONS FILED
of Ohio Lottery Director·
Rairden, Frances Morris,
A suit in the ainount or' David Harharger have been
Lucy Spencer, .Ronald $6,724.20 was filed in Meigs subpoenaed by an Atlanta
Rigsby.
County Common Pleas Court company contesting the
by Associates Commercial lottery's award of a $2.3
Corp., Cincinnati, against , million contract.
Pleasani Valley lluopltal
Stanley D. Trout, Rt. I;
Harberger has been asked
DISCHARGED - Steve
Albany. The action is for to produce the records of
Fowler, Apple Grove; Steven
money due on a tractor.
H&amp;L Consulting Co., his
Bemesderfer, Pt. Pleasant;
A notice of appeal was filed partnership with Daniel
Snyder,
Pt.
William
Pleasant; Roger Wright, by Carroll If.. White, Rt. 2, Lyon, head of the Cuyahoga
Glenwood ; Mrs. Joseph Racine, · against Robert ·County Republic Party's
Relsser, Pomeroy; Mrs. Daugherty, administrator of finance committee, The
Douglas Phalan and son, Bureau of Workers Com- Cleveland Press reported
today.
Pomeroy; Freda Turley, pensation, et al.
Hartford; Sara Woods,
Gallipolis Ferry; Mrs. Frank
Hensley, Vinton; Hdpe Rice,
Pt. Pleasant; Mrs. Fred
Wilson, New Haven; · Andrea
Hall, Apple Grove; Sandra
Ball, Gallipolis; Bernice
Fultz, Cottageville; Donald
Zuspan, Mason; Bryan
Stump, Henderson ; Andrew
Beattie, Leon; George Beller,
Leon.

COMMITI'EE PENALIZED

•

-

14- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Oct. 13, 1978

By PA'fRlCIAA KOZA.
WASIDNGTON (UP! )
As the clock winds down.
some members say Congress
is taking two steps hack for
every one step forward. And
whispers about a possible
postponement of Saturday's
adjoununent deadline begin
to be heard.
In near round-the-clock
sessions Thursday and early
today, three of the top bills
made virtually no progress
toward passage;
-Ulnferees started work
on the tax-cut bill, but
suffered a setback when the
House
instructed
its
negotiators to accept a
Senate-approved Proposition13 type amendment tying a
$165 billion tax cut over a
five-year period to resd-ained
federal · spending and a balanced budget . President
Carter renewed his threat to
veto anything resembling the
Senate-approved version.
- The energy pa ckage ,
,Preside}lt Carter's key
domestic initiative, met two
new obstacles : d'elaying
tactics by Sen . James
Abourezk , D-S.D., . an
opponent of gas price
deregulations, and a setback
in
the House Rules
Committee that refused til
wrap up the five separate
bills into one neat package for
an up-&lt;&gt;r-&lt;lown vote of the
House. The committee meets
again today.
-A coalition of proponents
and critics of the HumphreyHawkins full employment bill
reached a compromise that
i!nmediately drew objections
from the Congressional Black
Caucus, the same group that
has lobbied so hard for the
bill and persuaded Carter til
·throw his power behind if.
,The caucus objected to tying
·the bill's goal o( reducing
unemployment to another
goal : reducing federal

•

'-- GALUPOUS - The Gallia County
Sheriff's Department was informed
Saturday that a 1977 Plymouth station
wa~on was burning at the corner of Blll
George Rd. and Morgan Lane, near Eno.
The vehicle was discovered by J elf
Hash, Bidwell, who was hunting in the
area.
After checking the registration, the
owner of tlle auto, Katllerine Booten,
Bidwell, was contacted by the sheriff's
department.
Booten told the department lite had left
tlle car parked with a fiat tire an Ward Rd .,
approximately two miles off SR 554, at 3 a.
m., Saturday.
The vehicle was recovered, completely
destroyed, at tlle intersection of Bill
George Rd. and Morgan Lane,
approximately six miles from where it had
been parked.
Officers report tllat, although there were
tools and other items in the auto, there was
N&lt;Yr MUDDY UP HERE - That appears to be what Derlk Farrar, son of Mr. ·
apparently nothing stolen.
and Mrs. Steve Farrar, Fainnoot, W. Va., Is saying to 'the Times;SenUnel
Saturday morning's Incident is tlle third
litolographer during Saturday's activities at tlle eighth annual Bob Evans Farm
such
act to have occurred In Gallia County
Fall Festival at Rio Grande. Young Farrar is standing on a bnle of hay, one of
during
the past two weeks.
many brought In bY local offil'ials because of heavy weekeod rains .
;~

I

Bloodmobile seeks

125 pints Thursday
GALUPOUS - The Huntington TriState Red Cross bloodmobile will be at
Grace United Methodist Church In
Gallipolis next Thursday to seek a quota of
125 pints.
"
Mrs. Thelma Shaver, Gallia Cowty Red
Crosa blood chairman, appesled to dooors
til come to the church between noon and 6
p. m.

Auto reported stolen .
GALLIPOLIS - Elmer King,
Gallipolis, reported the theft of a 1974
maroon Oldsmobile Cutlass to the
Gallipolis Oty Pollee Friday at 10:35 p, m.
According to the report, the vehicle bad
been parked at the OiliD Bure ,~ of
Employment Services parking lot, 45 Ollve

St.
King discoVered the aut.: , .·
10:30 pm.
·
1

q

ng at

.

~

0

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="808">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11451">
                <text>10. October</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="49959">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="49958">
              <text>October 13, 1978</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="63">
      <name>jones</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
