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                  <text>12- The Oailv St•HtinPI Mulcllt·porl·Punll'rny . t J•• Thunitla.\ . ~u\·. Hi.

i!•i~

Wor:Di rumors denied
United Preulnlernattonal
Three more fast-food
·chains have taken the
offensive against a nasty
rumor that's been squirming
across the country.
The hamburger honchos
deny that worms are being
used as protein additives in
their food.
Burger Chef, Wendy 's and
White Castle were the latest
to denounce the rumors .
Earlier in the week
McDooald Corp. held a news
conference to make 'its
denial.
"There is absolutely no
truth to this rumor . Frankly,
we are amazed that such an
outlandish story could spread
iiS quickly as it has," Burger

'Chef's public relations
manager Rick Bollinger told
reporters at the firm's
Indianapolis headquarters
Wednesday.
Bollinger sa id adding
worms to hamburger meat
wouldn 't even make much
economic sell$e. He said he
has been told worms sell for
$4 to $8 a poWJd.
Burger Chef Systems, with
900 restaurants in 40 states,
also took out full-page ads in
Indianapolis newspapers and
denoWlced the worm story as
"outlandish."
The ads proclaimed Burger
Chef hamburgers contained
"No additives. No extenders,
Just tOO-percent pure beef."
Wendy's, based in Dublin,

Three mishaps investigated
Meigs county sheriff James
J. Proffitt reports deputies
investigated three accidents
Wednesday, two involving
deer.
The first accident occured
at 4:30 p.m. when Timothy
Da ~ idson,
20, Pomeroy
traveling west on the Forest
Run Road, lost control of his
vehicle which slid into a
ditch. There was moderated
damage to the vehicle and
Davidson is charged with
driving while intoxicated.
At 5:30p.m. on State Route
124, just east of The Bastian
Road, Michael A. Cordner,
23, Route 2, Racine, was
traveling west when his car
strcuk and killed a five-point
buck that had jumped into the
path of his vehicle. The
driver was not injured and
there
were
moderate
damages to the car.
At 9:00 p.m., a car driven
west on Forest Run Road by
Ricky Smith, 18, Middleport,
struck and killed a two-point
buck deer that had jwnped
. into the path of his car. Smith·
was not injured and there
were moderate da'mages to
the car.
Sheriff Proffitt reports the
arrest of Robert A. Edwards,
45, Beverly, on charges of
driving while intoxicated.
Edwards was apparentlv

CONCERT CANCELLED
A concert planned lor
Friday evening at the
Southern High School by the
marching band has he cancelled.

attempting to turn around hls
pickup truck near the State
Highway Garage when he
missed a· driveway, He was
attempting to get his vehicle
out of a ditch when deputies
arrived. The sheriff reports.

Hospital News
VETERANS MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL
ADMITTED - Donald
Weaver, Pomeroy; David
Brickles, Pomeroy ; Anna
Powers, Huntington; Norma
Long, Rutland; Mark Mat~
son, Racine; · Jess Pickens,

Racine.
' DISCHARGED - Kenneth
Mullins, Clifford Icenhower,
Edith Betzing.

WOMAN INJURED
The emergency wtit of the
Middleport Fire Department
was called to the Route 7
bypass near Bradford at 4:45
p.m. Wedpesday for Cindy
· glaze who Willi injured in an
auto accident. She was taken
to Holzer Medical Center.
FALSE ALARM ·
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad was apparently. giveri
a false alarm call at 2:54p.m.
Wednesday. The squad was
called to a roadside park on
Route 33 where a man
reportedly was suffering
from head laceratl9ns.
However, there was -no one at
the park when the squad
arrived.

HUMBUG ...

ELBERFELD$ IN .POMEROY·
SPECIAL WEEK-END SALE

Ohio , has been running
similar ads nationally since
the beginning of the month.
Dave Longest, manager of
the Wendy's eatery in down·
U&gt;wn Columbus, Ohio, said
people were asking him about
the worm
every day,
"but I doo 't have anything to
hide, so it doesn't bother
me ."
A Wendy's spokesman sa.id
the firm is making some
attempts to find out how the
rumors began.
Athird chain, White Castle,
· based in Indianapolis, also
i5sued a denial Wednesday.
McDonald's held its news
conference Tuesday, saying
the tale has caused up to a~
percent drop in sales at
· outlets in its southeastern
marketing region .

FRIDAY NOV. 17TH AND SATURDAY NOV. 18TH

OPEN FRIDAY TIL 8 P.M.

rwnor

·SAUl · ----~----w

all the fun out of Christmas and
make you a Scrooge. That's why
a Christmas Club savings plan is·
so grea't. You have money w~en
you need it. You can get into the
holiday spirit and enjoyl

MAKE. 49 PROMPT
PAYMENTS AND WE'LL
MAKE THE 50TH •
FREE GIFT WITH EVERY
CHRISTMAS CLUB
ACC&lt;liUNT OPENED.

~~~~~~iNA Home
Bank
For

~

Meigs County
People

RACINE
HOME NATIONAL

BANK ·
Racine, Ohio

----------1---;;,Eri;sho-iiss-siAchKs
!!

QUEEN CASUAL
SPORTSW.EAR

_w

..
.
.

h

•

.

Regular sizes 30 to 42 and extra large sizes 44. to 48. Solid
colors and neat patterns. This special sale includes our
entire stock of men's dress slacks.

1

Missy and extra sizes

I MEN'S 111.95 DRESS SLACKS ............................ '9.90

'

..
..
.

,

'

t

MEN'S '15.95 DRESS SLACKS ..... , .....................113.50
'15.20
1
I MEN'S 17.95 DRESS SlACKS .......................... :.
1 . 1 D.RE'ss SLAC·Ks ·
· · '1690
·1MEN'S 19.95
..................... ;.... ~·· •

Reg . S20.oo....... SaleS13.19
Reg . S23.00 ...... .Sale $15.19
Reg. S28.00....... Sale $18.49
Reg . SJ2.oo ....... sa.leS21.19

Heating costs higher

''

Jackets, Vests, Skirts, Slacks, and Blouses .
Reg . S12 .00 •••••••• SaieS7 .99
Reg. $14.00 ....... Sale $9.29
Reg. $16.00 ...... Sale $10.59
Reg . S17.oo ...... SaleS11.29
Reg.$18.00....... SaieS11.89

•'.

1

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1

&lt;

•-

. -----2o-%-oi:I:--------T·-·-·MEN'S-WRANGLER 5795 --· .
.

.

Eastern
has busy
chapter
The Future Farmers of
America Chapter of Eastern
High School have had· a busy
fall. At a meeting on Nov. 8,
Bill Nease of the Tuppers
Plains Branch of the
Pomeroy National Bank
addressed members on loan
and bauk matters. There
were 24 members and two
guests present. After the
meeting the group played
dodgeball and refreshments
were served.
The Eastern Chapter attended the Farm Science
Review in Colwnbus and
recently held Greenhand
initiation for new members
who are Charles Massar, Bill
Frederick, Charles Ritchie,
Lee . Swain, Renee Riebel,
Kenny Reed, Nicky Leonard,
Tad Darling, Scott Van
Meter, Terry Pooler, Darrel
Krautter, Greg Scarbrough,
Larry Patterson, C.J
Morlan, Rick Putman, Darrel
Henderson, Rodney Wood,
Jerry Davis and Booy
. Barringer.
Officers elected for the
year are Don Eynon ,
president; Charles Massar,
assistant president; Dennis
Durst, vice president; Nicky

1·

..r _

Sizes smalL medium, large, and
extra large, plaid patterns, 2.
pockets, full shirt tails. 50 pet .
polyester, 50 pet. cotton.

..----- - -· --· ·-~ -· --------------r"--·----_...-sPICiALiA-iEI

If

CORNING WARE

Open Roaster A21 -7-S. Open roaster size 12'14" x 10 '14''
Recommended for Micro-wave ovens.
Wildflower or Spice O' Life Patterns.
·

Includes !Ill of our men's winter
tackets, hned vests, dressy coats.
Sizes 36 to 50. An excellent selection,
buy
for yourself or for Christ·
· mas g1vrng al)d save.

t

.

II
$250 l1

KITCHEN MATE SET
Set consists of 1 terry cloth
kitchen towel. 1 matching dish
cloth and one matching pot
holder . Assorted ·patterns . and
colors. Ideal Christmas gift .

Pitzer, treasurer, Charles

Ritchie, assistant treasurer;
Scott Chevalier, reporter ;
Rick Putman, assistant
reporter; Ed Scyoc, sentinel;
Renee Riebe[, assistant
sentinel; Eric Schmucker,
student
advisor;
Bill
Frederick, assistant student
advisor.
Alan Holter is
faculty advisor.
The chapter members went
to the county soil judging at
the Roy H01ter dairy farm
this fall and the chapter was
represented by Dennis Durst,
Scott Van Meter, Tad Darling
and Nicky Leonard at the
district soil judging held at
Wellston.

-·

..

$199

I-...

I

I ....

1

MEN'S 117.95 FASHION DENIMS ...................... ..

- -------------I
.
---·. ._-_..
SPECIAL TWO ~A YS ONLYI

r---~1 .

! s~12-esE36Nto'Sso 1_nSRpeguOiarsRaTnd Lon~~.TSoiSid
!
137.50

KNIT GOODS

SCARFS, HATS, MITTENS, GLOVES, SETS.

.,

MANY STYLES IN ASSORTED COLORS.

colors and patterns.

REG. •3.00 .................................. SA.LE '2.59
'49.95 SPORT mATS ..................:............
REG. •5.00 ...... .'.~ ......................... SALE '4.29 I
145 00
REG. •8.00 .................................. SALE 16.79 . 159.95 SPORT COATS ..... :........................; •

!

REG. '11.00 ................................ SALE '9.39
REG •13 OQ............................... SALE '11.09

I '69.95 SPORT COATS ...............................SS3.00
-f--.
. " -· . -· ·- _:.___

L;v~"iY"~~~ING l.·- ~:;r~~~AL

Rings l ike china. resist~ breaking,
chipping, and staining, decoration
design. · dishwasher safe, oven safe,
available in open stock.
Colors old town blue, spring green.
butterfly gold, woodland brown.

has size

Reg. $36.95
Sale

$2 ggs .

1
!I

1
I

_: Popular Sculptured Plush

·

.

•1ONLY
QM

-100% Nylon in 12 ft. Width

CLARKSBURG, W.Va ,
(UP!) - At 7 feel 4 inches
and 335 pounds, Nicholas Ira
Arthur has trouble fitting in
his Uoot prison cell. He has
asked a federal coiU'I to help.
him obtain more spacious
accornrnodations. '
Arthur, who began serving
a one-to-10 year sentence for
grand larceny in March 1977,
must sleep in a 6-foot metal
bed in the ceB at the West
Virginia Penitentiary at
Moundsville.
His Petition, filed in U.S.
District CoiU'I in Clarksburg,
said he is having cruel and
WJusual punishment inflicted
upon him because he wants
proper clothing and shoes to
wear and more spacious
living quarters, a spokesman
in the attorney general's
office said Wednesday.
"Plaintiff Is four inches
looger than the length of cell
and 16 inches longer than his
bed," the petitioo · said, in

BRA SALE
.
bras. and
Group of discontinued styles Bras, long I1ne
briefs. Broken sizes.

I
1

Officers for 1979 were
elected when the Middleport
Qwnber of Commerce met
Thursday night at the Meigs
Inn.
The new officers include
.Cash Babr, president; Candy
Ingels vice president;
Alwil~ Werner, treasurer,
and Sara Owen, secretary. •
, Candy Ingels, chainnan,

SHEET BLANKETS .

833

$

Size 70 by ~ 100 inches, 65 pet.
polyester, 35 pet. 'dcotton,I'dwarmly
1
napped on both s1 es, so 1 co ~r,

!· ·
I r~~e~~~:!~:: pink.,or blue.

1.1:2 PRICE
&gt;--- ·- - SAVr i:wiR-'ro.Oii MATiiiiSSLANiili)j("sH,,.O-sPiiiAL
Special

Choose signature if you want superior. sleeping comfort

.
---T
1--------BOYS;--AND-GiRiS:_____

THERMAL
UNDERWEAR
-Tops and Bottolns. Sizes 2 to 14. -White,

RIG. '319.90 FULL 51ZI SET
..

SAU

'24900SI~~J.~ET

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

.

.

SAUl

,

.......

__

.

....,..;......

I BOYS WINTER JACKETS

pink, blue, and lace trimmed.
REG. '3.. 50 ...........•....... ~ ................. SALE '2.99
REG. •3.75 ................ .................... SALE •3.19

part.

The petitioo said Arthur
• wears a 15'h-lnch shoe and
since April 1978 has been in
need of shoes. He said four
months has elapsed since he
. complained and the state has
failed w supply shoes in that
time.

REG. '4.00 .... ~.,~.····~······· , ·············· SALE •3.39
REG. •4.50 ....... ... , .. : ...................... SALE •3.79

What do you do," one

I

,

'
I

Jones of · Virginia at the
accident scene, but when law
officers in Hancock County,
Va. went to her home to
lnferm her parents of her
death, Miss Jooes herself
ansWered the door.
She said her purse had been ·
stolen a week ago by three
women,

and

gave

a

description of one of them
that "fit Miss Shambley to a

·r·," Gnrmen said.

On
Thursday,
an
anonymous pllbne caller told
stale police the dead woman
was
Denise
Yvonne
Shambley\ 26, of Charlotte,
N.C. Gribben said police then
received a call from Miss
Shambley's parents, of
Brooklyn, N.Y., who hsd also
received an anonymous
phone call.
Gribben said there was
nothing in the car with Miss
Shambley's name on . II .
However, her parents
identified the body Thursday
afternoon.
The other victim was Charline Brown, 49, of Detroit.
Gribben said be received

reported that excellept
progress is being made on the
annual Christmas parade
which will welcome in tbe
holiday season.
The event will he held at
6:30p.m. on Monday, Nov. 'l:l,
and area residents or groups
wishing to take part are
asked to complete a
registration form which is

Elderly man
hurt in wreck

PERFECT SLEEPER SIGNAlURE
Famous Perfect Sleeper Construction plus lavish antique gold damask covers.

•

at

Exxon gasoline.

YACC program offers _
experience, fair wages

•

enttne

Fifteen Cents
Vol. 29, 1o. 152

Sheriff Efaw,
wife indicted
Ullited Press International
Athens County Sheriff Gary
Efaw Thursday became the
tllird Ohio sheriff in less than
two weeks to be indicted on
charges of malfeasance in
office. •
Efaw, who took office the
first of last year, and his wife
Betty, a deputy in the
' department, were indicted by
an Athens County Grand Jury
on chsrges of theft In office,
tampering1with evidence and
eavesdropping.
On Nov. 6, Richland CoWlty
Sheriff Thomas E. Weikel
and II of his ' current or
former employes were
indicted by a special COWlty
grand jury empaneled after a ·
series of articles by the
Mansfield New's Journal
outlined brutality and thett in
the sheriff's department.

werd Thursday that she had
jumped bail on a charge of
using false pretenses in Erie,
Pa., several months ago. He
said Mrs. Brown was wanted ·
on a similar charge in Mount
Kl.sco, N.Y. and she served
seven years in a New York
State prison f..- that offense.
Gribben said the car the
women were riding in was
registered to Jessica Ann
Bryant of Charlotte, N.C., but
when authorities went to the
address, they found a vacant
lot. Later Thursday, police
AN APPLE FOR THE TEACHER - As a part of the observance of National Education
found that Miss Bryant is a
Week,
teachers at tlx! Pomeroy Elementary School were recognized and presen_ted apples
19-year-old college student
by the American Legion Auxiliary of Drew Webster Post 39. Mrs. Faye Wildermuth,
from Melrose, Ill. She said
Auxiliary chainnan for the observance, holds the basket from which these teachers, seated,
her wallet and identification
left to right, Mrs. Mary Carolyn WUey, Mrs. Jeanette Th~mas, Mrs. Eleanor Blaettnar,
were stolen last JWJe.
Mrs. Carol Ohlinger, and standing, Paula Whitt, Mrs. Ida Diehl, Mrs. Mae Young and Mrs.
"We've got a total of eight
Carol Wolfe, received their apples. See more pictures page 7.
or nine people who have been
film.flammed, but how many
more we don't know," said
Gribben. He said all the
victims are yoWJg women.
Authorities
in West
Virginia, North Carolina ,
ByJOHNT.KADY
"bring this conflict uilder the strike.
steel-haulers in the country
Virginia, Michigan, Illinois,
UDited Press Interna!1onal control."
"I
am
glad
to
have
the
will be participating.
Pennsylvania and New York
FBI agents and U.S. attorThe strike has interrupted federal government finally
Independent steel-llaulers
are l involved in
the neys have been ordered into shipments
of steel from the involved," said HiU. "But Thursday disrupted
investigation, he said.
four states to investigate over nation's top steel producers they are just looking into the
•
130 acts of violence, including to varying .degrees. F ASH violence. I want them to take shipments to two of the
16 shooting incidents, during has been using roving pickets a look at the !sues, take a look nation's leading steel
producers, Republic Steel
the strike by independent who sho\v up at one plant one at the whole thing.
Corp.
and U.S. Steel Corp.
steel haulers.
day and another the next day.
"I keep telling our people
"The
situation
is
The agents and attorneys
Bell said he and Labor ihat
violence
isn 't deteriorating somewhat,''
appearing in the Daily were ordered to asseSs the
said a spokesman for
Sentinel and send the form to situation by U.S. Attorney Secretary Ray Marshall necessary,' ' said Hill ,
"have
also
received
ASpokesman for the Team- Republic in Cleveland. "We
Miss Ingels.
Gneeral Griffin Bell who communications from the sters Union told UP! today had 15 (pickets) show up at
The group wrapped up brought · the
federal
holiday promotional plans government into the case at steel industry expressing that "our policy in this has our strip mill in Cleveland.
"The pickets in Cleveland .
with each store to stage its the request of Teamsters their concern" about the been one of restraint and will
strike.
continue to be one of hsve had an effect .., the
own ilift give-away. 1
President
Frank
FASH President Bill Hill, restraint. ''
movement
of
trucks,
Following the dinner and Fitzsimmons.
Pittsburgh,
told UP! in a
Hill said Thursday the although we are still getting a
meeting, members prepared
The strike by the Fraternal
candy bags to be distributed Association of Steel Haulers telephone interview today FASH strike has been 75 significant number of trucks
by Santa Claus during the began Nov. 10 and has been that the violence could percent effective and that by in and out, " said the
"damned well" be caused by next week, the ''overholiday season.
bitterly opposed by the the Teamsters "to discredit whelming majority" of spokesman.
(Continued on page 12)
Attending were Mr. and Teamsters Union.
Mrs. Cash Babr, Mr. and
FASH said It called the
Mrs. John Werner, Mr. and strike to emphasize a series
Mrs. George Ingels, Candy 'of demands including the
Ingels, Edison Baker, right for
independent
Elizabeth Stumbo, Edna truckers
to
bargain
Wilson and Mr. and Mrs. collectively and fer lndepend·
Richard Owen. George ence from the Teamsters
Ingels, president, was in Union.
·
charge.
Most of the violence has
In
been
reported
EXTENDED FORECAST . Pennsylvania and Ohio with
Sunday lhrougli- sea tiered incidents also
Tuesday, cold Saaday, with
reported in Indiana and New
a chance of snow llurrles Ia York.
northern counUeo. Warmer
Ohio State Rep. Thomas
Monday and Tuesday, with
Carney,
from
the
a chance of rain showers. Youngstown area, also asked
Hlgbs will be In the upper
Gov. James A. Rhodes to
3011 aortb to near 50 lOUth
on Sunday, but warming by
Tuesday. to the upper tOo or
lower 50s. Low• wW range
SQUAD RUNS
from tbe middle %to to the
The emergency WJit of the
lower 30s early Sunct.y and
Middleport Fire Department
will be In the 30s early
was called to North Second
Tueoday.
Ave., at 1:34 p.m. Thursday
for Esther Kissell who wa;
Partly cloudy, cooler taken to Holzer Medical
Saturday. Highs in mid 50s. Center. At 7:30 a.m. Frida;
Probability of precipitation the squad went to 206 Beech
near 100 percent today, 50 St., for Jerry Ward who: was
. NUTRITION AWARDS- Receiving GOAD Senior Nutrition awarda at the Racine
percent tonight, 20 percent reported dead upon the Jlnit 's
Satellite Site are: Inez Wickline, Linda Holter, and Paul Smit~.
arrival.
,.
jiaturday.

FBI entering haulers strike

Chamber officers elected

installed over
, inch pad.

-Brown, Green, or Rust

12
-f-..- ·-----------... ,_ ,. . _...,.., .,....,_.,_
t--------LlNGERifDEPt-~------ ! _,
SAUl CANNON '9.49 .

problems

prison official shrugged,
"when a guy is 7-loot.four·
and-a-llalf inches tall and
you've got a Uoot ceU•"

CHARLESTON, W.Va.
(UPI)- The head of the West
Virginia Turnpike state
police detachment says
!nvestlgators from seven
states are slowly piecing
to&amp;alher the "slnl.s.ter"
eve11il IIUITOIIDding a traffic
accident that left three people
delld.
.
"It's just a puzzle that's
coming together, piece by
piece," said Lt. Jack
Gribben, He said the case Is
84!tting "more sinl.ster all the
tim e. ..
Two women ldlled in the
Wednesday accident near
Chelyan were in (lOII&amp;esslon of
·sevearl
wallets
and
Identification cards not
!lelonging to them, touching
off an Investigation of
swindles throughout the east.
'lbe wcmen's car slammed
into • pickup truck, killing
Ernest Manning, 41, of
Amella, Ohli&gt;, and critically
lnjW"lng his brother Gerald,
39, of Felicity, Ohio.
Pollee found a purse_
belmging to Sharon Renee

I MEN'S
MEN'S 15.95 FASHION DENIMS .......... ,.............'1~76
116.95 FASHION DE.NIMS ........................ ',1134.36.56
·

an

The American Petroleum of the Petroleum Research has affected the price of
Institute in Washington Institute, said the price small quantities of oil.
reported the nationwide Increase over a year ago was
"All fuel costs are going
inventory of distillate, mostly on the order of 6 percent, not up," Lichtblau said. "Gas for
honie heating oU, stood at even as much as inflation:
home heating use has
217.9 million barrels in the
Stocks are a little below' increased In price by 11
week ending Nov. 10.
industry expectations, jler~t at the retail level
That was slightly up from according to other experts, over the last year. So the
the previous week, when the and the situation in Iran heating oil increases are part
stocks stood at 217.6 million where oil production has been of a trend."
barrels, but way down on the · cut to a fraction of normal260.5 mllllon barrels at the
same time last year.
Production for the week
ending Nov. 10 was 3.3 million
barrels, same as the previous
week and the same period of
last year. Refineries that
normally
would
have
switched from gasoline to
Would anyone in Meigs County between 16 and 23like a job
heating oil have continued orl which training is provided and the minimum wage ~d?
producing gasoline because
U you fall into the category you should be pleased to know
of the continued heavy there are several vacancies now in the Ohio Department of
demand from automobile Natural Resource program, Civilian Conservation Corp., in
owners.
Meigs County.
Ed Morgan of the WashingThis program called the YoWJg Adult Conserva lion Corps
ton-based National Oil (YACC ) is modeled after the CCC program which was initiated
Jobbers
Council
said in the 19311!!.
members of the organization
The YACC program is involved with a broad range of
had been so concerned with projects including timber management, recreation
recent price increases they management, disaster assistance and aiding cities and
had asked the Department of villages with special projects.
Energy for guidance.
It is designed to provide employment for yoWJg people "All we're doing is passing regardless of financial status- while providing manpower for
oo •increases from the oil projects tllat would not otherwise be done.
companies, nothing more,"
Any young adult, male or female, between the ages of 16
Morgan said. Jobbers usually and 23, out of school, and unemployed may apply at tlle local
act as middlemen between Ohio Bureau of Employment Services offices located on
the oil companies and Sycamore St., in Pomeroy.
retailers but sometimes act
The YACC program operates 26 satellite camps in Ohio.
also as retailers.
The Meigs County camp serves Shade River State Forest and
John Lich(blau, president
(Continued on pal(e 12 )

-.... Investigators enter
fatal accident probe

i
I
I MEN'S 114.95 FASHION DENIMS ............... ,........ '11.96

SPECIAL TWO DAYS ONL Y1

conditions,"

spokesman said.
Other
oil
company
executives agreed, and one
added : "U you had bought
SI!Owshoes two months ago
you would have paid less than
you would now. That's Just
the way the market wcrks."
Rhode
Island
State
Petroleum Allocation Officer
Santo Amato said the price of
home heating oil has gone up
nearly 4 cents a gallon since
early September, the
traditional start oi the
heating season.
The average price of No. 2
, oil that more than 75 percent
of Rhode lslallders use in
their homes is 53.78 cents. It
was an even 50 cents in
September, he said.
The home heating oil price
In Seattle, Wash., is 47.9 cents
per gallon. That's been in
effect since two months ago,
when it went up 2 cents, and
dealers said they don 't
foresee any big increase in
the near fulllre.
Maine's Office ' of Energy
Resources said the average
price of home healing oil in
the state is 52.9 cents a gallon.
Energy Office official
George Tibbetts said the
retailers are trying to
establish healthy profit
margins in case they get
locked into them by federal
reg ulations like those on

..·

size .29 to 42, length JO to 36. Most all styles are
prewashed, an excellent selection of styles. Save Friday
and Saturday.
.

____.._.___

e

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Friday, November 17, 1978

a few m

-

By JOHN F. SIMS
Ullited Press lnternatlonal
It's going to cost you more
to heat your house this
winter .
Blame it oo the Indian
swnmer.
The . balmy fall weather
that has kept car driving and
gasoline .coosumption at a
higher level than usual is one
of the reasons you're paying
between I and 4 cents more
per galloo of home heating
oil.
A UPI nationwide survey
shows that the higher oil
prices are in effect aimost
everywhere.
The Atlantic Coal &amp; Oil Co.,
whi&lt;:h services the greater
Providence area in Rhode
Lsland, said No. 2 home
heating oil is at 53.9 cents per
galloo and might rise even
higher because the wholesale
price just went up again
Thursday.
"It's the wholesalers that
are \loing it," a spokesman
said. "They're the ones that
are raising the prices. It 's not
the regular retail dealer."
Erl&lt;II increased the price
it charges fer No. 2heating oil
by ooe penny per gallon Sept.
26 and by another penny Oct.
24.
"These were typical
seasonal increases and a
response
to
market

~

MEN'S BLUE DENIM
FASHION JEANS

~Waist

Reg. 538.00...... Sale $30.39
Reg. S46.oo ...... Sale $36.79
· Reg. $62.00 ...... Sale $49.59

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

DAVID
, a Mason, points to a new Ohio historical marker erected last Sunday
(Nov.!2) in front of the enyrance to the Gallipolis Masonic Hall on Second Ave. With Meigs
and Gallia County Masons participating in the ceremony. 'I'he marker reads: "Morning
Dawn Lodge No. 7 Free and Accepted Masons. 'Morning Dawn' was the first lOdge to be
chartered, on January 5, 1810, by the Grand Lodge of Ohio. Andrew Lewis was the first Worshipful Master. Meetings were originally held in A J. B. Ferrard's house on the north corner
of Locust and Third streets. In 1816 the lodge moved to the Galli a Academy buildmg on the
west corner of State and Second streets"' Signature is "the 19 lodges of the 12th Masonic
district. Meigs, Jackson, Lawrence, and Gallia Counties and the Ohio Historical Soeiety .
1978..... 2-27." Looking on is a non-Mason, J . Shennan Porter, reporter for the Ohio Valley
Publishing Company.

• --

brass, or tangerine on inside,

-----·----'-J!~!!&lt;L~~a.!l!ifyl,

. BUY NOW FOR THE APPROACHING HOLIDAYS!

secretary; Greg Scarbrough,
assistant secretary; Rocky

-

SALE
PRICES..,...
__________

~:~vx/~oom
~arkening ~inyl
white on outs1de and Willow,

---·"·"·------sru.- - · l
PANTSUITS -AND DRESSES I
Reg. $16.00 ...... .Saie $12.79
Reg. m .oo. ...... sate 514.39
Reg. $23.00 ...... Sale $18.39
Reg. s3o.oo ...... sate S23.99

h. - · -

WINQOW SHADES

Mostly size 37'1• x 6 -

1

Junior sizes 3 to 13
Missy sizes 6 to 20
Half sizes 12112 to 26 112

'6 35

,

_

SALE

.
MEN'S
WINTER JACKETS AND COATS

~

$}399

SPECIAL

SALE
n~w
.
. - --------1- -._.._..
__._._.._.._.._..
r------·--HO.MECARE
•2.99
1 ---·
·
CLEARANCE SALE
REG. '17.25 ·

Leonard, assistaQt vice
president ; Larry Harris,

11

SAVE
%
20 O

.

FLANNEL SHIRTS

~

REVLON AND COTY

Lipstick, Nail Polish, Powder, Perfume,
Lotions Deodorants, Shamnnn Hair Spray
'
......,
'
Creams, Soap and Gift Sets.

.'

l

COSMETIC SALE

Prisoner
Scrimpi~g and scraping can take

I,

The Gallla·Melgs Post,
Highway Patrol, investigated
three accidents • Thursday.
Uoyd Sullth, 73, Rt. 1,
GaWpoUa, was admitted for
treatment at Holzer Medical
Center following a one·
vehicle accident on Reese
&amp;Dow Rd., one-tenth of a
mile north of Addison •
Bulavllle Rd., at 6:10 p.m.
Officers report a south
bound vehicle operated by ·
Smith went off the right side
of the roadway Into a ditch
after Smith became W at the
wheel.
: Smith wu transported to
.Holler Medical Center by the
:O.W. Volunteer Squad. He
wu •dmltted to the Intensive
'care unit, and Is listed In

'curded oonclltlon.
:
Tbe •c:ctdell
. t is still under
\
•
1a
·•~
. · ....vest..,a......
Two veblcl~• Incurred

severe damage in an accident
in Meigs County on CR 32, two

and five-tenths of a mile east
of SR 7, at 3:15 p.m.
Officers report autos
operated by Bruce Conde, 17,
Pomeroy and Marlin Evans,
19, Minersville, sideswiped In
a curve on Reese Hollow.
Conde was cited on charges
of left of Center.
At 8:20 p.m., officers were
called to the scene of a onevehicle mishap on SR 7, at
milepost 20, in Meigs County.
Officers report that John
Hlgginbothafm, 20, ·Pometrtohy,
apparently e11 as1eep a e
wheel of his south bound auto.
The vehicle went off the left
side of the roadway, passed
over an embankment and
struck two treft.
There was moderate
damage to theedauto. No
citation was 1ssu ·

.

i~

.

Weikel was named in six
indlcbnents on five charges
of theft in office from 1974
through part of 1978, assault
and interfering with the civil
rights of inmates.
His chief deputy, Raymond
Hart, was named in three
indicbnents on charges of
theft in office, sale of
handgwts,

aggravate~

assault and interfering with
the civil rights of inmates.
The same day, Guernsey
County Sheriff Andrew
Beros, his wife Mary, and two
deputies were indicted in
Cambridge oo 25 counts of
bribery, theft in office,
improper compensation;
improper solicitation, two
counts of falsification ,
gambling and falsifying
records.
The specific charges have
not been revealed. The grand
jury was empaneled after a
seven-mooth investigation of
the sheriff's office by the
Bureau
of
Criminal
Identification and
Investigation.
Some of the charges
against Efaw stem from an
alleged sale of a .:!kallber
rifle, which was evidence in a
case, and a sheriff's
department pistol.
Sheriff Efaw is charged
with
with . · tampering
evidence, eavesdropping,
four counts of theft in office
and one count of complicity to
commit theft in office.
Mrs. Efaw is charged with
forgery- she Is suspected of
forging the initials of a
deputy oo office recerds and complicity to commit
theft in office. The couple was
instructed by their attorney
not to comment on the
indlcbnents.
Evidence
for
the
indictments in Athena County
included two of the Efaw's
bank statements. Witnesses
testifying to the grand jury
included an Athens gun
dealer who allegedly was sold
the guns, and a BCI agent.
The Efaws are scheduled to
be arraigned Tuesday.

CLEVELAND (UPI) 'I'Illl week'• wbullag Oblo
·Lonery nwnben:
Three digit amnber 7M. Two digit aamber - U.
SJncle digit awnber

•• WJn.A·Thoa -

55158.

�3-:-The Daily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Fr1day, Nov. 17. 19'18

••
'

••'

Den Talk

•

'' .
)

COMMENTARY
Donald F. Graff

Gun lobby contributions
By Martha Angle and Robert Walters
WASHINGTON ( NEA l- In an election characterized by
" me lirst " politics , no single-issue zealots outworked or
outspent the oldest prachtioners of the trade - the s&lt;&gt;called g un lobby.
·
Gun control wasn't even a visible issue in most
campaigns this yea r, especially when compared with taxes
and government spending. Even among the growing list of
wtth-us-or-agamst-us tssues, it didn't cut as deeply as the
abort ton controve rsy. the death penalty, the Boundary
Waters Canoe Ar ea and the like.
But that dtdn't stop three well-financed anti-gun control
orgamzattons, led by the venerable National Rifle Associa- ll'lv,; ,, jlr,,,,
bon, from ratsmg and spendmg something over $1 million
to mfluence the makeup of the 96th Congress.
One reason for the unprecedented flow of money into
congressional campaigns was the fact that President
Carte r, _precluded by budget constraints from pressing
new soc18l programs next year, may decide the time is ripe
to seek fulfillment of his campaign commitment to
ha ndgun control.
And wtth Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D. -Mass., the
natwn 's leading gun control proponent, due to become
chairman of the Senate Judic iary Committee, such
legtslatwn would be assured a friendly hearing in one part
of Congress at least.
The gun lobby , consequently , put most of its money and
muscle mto House races, contributing to more than a third
of the m embers of the House Judiciary Conunlltee whtch
has jurisdiction over gun control bills.
'

Women and blacks
Election '78 did little to correct the political underrepresentation of either women or blacks, although both
groups contmue to make small gains each year, especially
at the state and local levels.
Although the breakdowns won't be available for awhile
wome n _probably have won about 10 percent of all stat~
legtslallve seats and occupy roughly the same proportion
of all p~blt c offices, state, local and federal . That's a
• marked unprovement over their standing at the start of
thts decade, but hardly spectacular for a group that
compnses more than half the total population.
Blacks, who constitute roughly 11 percent of the total
population,_ still account for less than I percent of all
elected offtctals, wtth the heaviest concentration at the
municipal level of govenunent.
According to a pre-election study by the Joint Center of
Poltt1cal Stud1es m Washington, D.C., black elected
offtctals are most heavily concentrated in the South and
thetr numbers there are mcreasing faster than elsewhere.
Lowsiana and Mississippi lead the way.

Fiscal fallout
The Rand Corporation, one of the nation's leading think
tanks, has undertaken three separate studies aimed at
a_ssessmg the effects of California's tax-slashing Proposition 13 and the fiscal fallout in other states.
Among other areas, Rand intends to analyze the impact
of the prop~rty tax c ut on the criminal justice system and
on school fmancmg. The answers it comes up with will be
too late to help other states where tax..:utting initiatives
were adopted, but may provide guidance to legislatures
around the country facing new pressure for cutbacks.

Business vs. governm'ent
Just in case there's a major business left that has failed
to sense the potential of the public's current antigovernment temper , one of the nation's leading opinion
survey_oulfits plans to spell it out for one and all.
. Opinion Research Corp., of Princeton, N.J., is sponsormg a day-long session in Washington'on Nov. 30 to help big
bustness "capitalize on this trend."
In a letter outlining the program to potential participants, ORC vice president Kenneth Schwartz noted his
fi"!''s polls " indicate that now is the time when concerted
action by bustness can have an unusually jlOSitive impact
on !(Overnment regulation . The probability of a revolt
agarnst government regulation of business is increasing ...''
. Compames planning to attend the seminar include such
gmnts as IBM, General Motors, Xerox, Standard Oil of
Ohio and Blue Cross-Blue Shield.

HEALTH
lawrence E.lamb, M.D.
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I
suffer from gassy bowels
very much. I read your
article on cereal without milk
and I bought a quart of
ProSobee. It is helping me,
but there is one drawback. I
am wondering if it is too rich
for me at age 67.
Each quart contains 640
kilocalories,
and
one
kilocalorie equals 1,000
calories. Does that mean that
a single quart contains
640,000 calories? I noticed
also that it contains 0.1
percent of lecithin, which is
egg yolk , and I am not
supposed to use any o! that. I
have had open heart surgery
and am very worried . If you
can help me I would be very
grateful.
DEAR READER - As far
as worrying about calories
and lecithin in ProSobee is
concerned, you can pack up
your troubles and quit wocrying . You have fallen into the
trap that so many people will
do about the meamng of
calories.
In
engineering
cir-

cles , one calorie is the 1
amount of heal required to
railw the temperature of one
milliliter of water one degree
centigrade. That's not an
awful lot of energy. F&lt;r that
reason, the calories we speak
of in terms of your dllily diet,
foods and so forth, are
kilocalories.
· If you were to eat a whole
pOWld of lean, raw roWld
steak with all the fat
removed, it would only be
about 600 calories. That
really means 600 kilocalories.
!'&lt;&gt; when you talk about fond
and nutrition and you use the
)vqrd calorie , remember
everyone is tallting about
kilocalories. If you say a
1&gt;erson consumes 2,000
calories a day, you really
~

.

mean he should consume
2,000 kilocalories a day.
So ProSobee and 'other milk
substitute products are not
excessively high in calories.
They compare favorably to
milk. IncidenlaUy, ! am not
recommending
mtlk
substitutes for everybody,
justf&lt;r those who have symptoms of milk intolerance and
problems with consuming
natural milk.
give
you
more
To
information about milk and
milk intolerance , I am
sending you' The Health
Letter number 7-2, Milk
Products : Good and Bad.
Others who want this issue
can send 50 cents with a long,
stamped , self-addressed
envelope,for it. Address your
request to me in care of this
newspaper, P. 0 . Box 1551,
Radio City Station, New
Y&lt;rk, NY 10019.
Now, about lecithin. It is
true yqu can find It In egg
yolk, but lecithin is a
separate substance in its own
rtght and foWld in many other
foods. Therefore, you should
not think that when you see
lecithin on a food label that it
means the product contains
egg yolk. It does not.
In sununary, neither the
calories nor the lecithin
content or any other factors
about its cootents should keep
you from using ProSobee. It
is not the only milk IUhatitute
made from soybean products,
how~ver. There are other
milk substitutes that are free
of lactose , but it is perhaps
one of the most widely
available ooes.
There is no advantage to
using one of the milk
substitutes over ordinary
milk unless you do have
lactose intolerance. The
exception to thil!, of course,
are babies who may be truly
allergic to milk which is a

"

The shah at bay
By Don Graff

The Mideast is certainly the place for crises these days, ,
but Iran is not the place in the Mideast where a crisis was :
supposed to occur.
This is the country that virtually invented the power
politics of oU, the producer that pressed earliest and most "
persistently to maximize the rej!ion's return on Its "
resources while at the same time piling up political capital :
in the West as its staunchest adherent.
&lt;
This is the politically stable, economically strong, "
militarily powerful country that counterbalanced Arab ;
radicalism and increasingly dominated the entire region,
the subject not so long ago of strategic scenarios in which,
acting as an agent for the West or on Its own, it used its "
might to take physical control of the entire Persian Gulf oil 3

reservoir.

Child abuse· center working
(editors: cathy martin, the angry," s,atd 24-year-old
vohmteer coordinator In the Cathy Martin, volunteer
following story, is a graduate coordinater for the Rochester
of Rio Grande College, Rio office of'Parents Anonymous.
Grande, Ohio. I
"We just try to teach better
ways of dealing with this
" We aU snap, we just need anger. We need different
different ways to vent our ways of venting our anger.

anger."

By MARK FRANK
ROCHESTER, N.Y. (UPI )
- More parents these days
are screaming into plllows,
throwing plllows against the
wall or taking 20 minute

" Instead of abusing a child
and venting anger that way,
we may suggest screaming
into a pillow, hitting a pillow
against a wall, or taking a 21}.

showers "to cool down."

she said.
"It may sound ridiculous,
but if it works it's worth it."

It's not parents gone mad.
Those are just some of the
methods active or potential
child abu"'lrs are using to get
over the growing social problem.
"We all snap, we all get

minute shower to cool down,''

Miss Martin, a Syracuse
native, is a psychology
graduate from Rio Grande
College in Rio Grande, Ohio.

Parents Anonymous is a
Californiabased national selfhelp agency for people who
realize they are active or
potential abusers of children.
New York has 58 Parents
Anonymous chapters . The
state's resource center is in
Rochester.
"We hoped to establish 30
chapters throughout the
state, but we ' ve almost
doubled that," said Miss
Martin, who has been at her
job about a year.
Miss Martin said child
abuse is not necessarily
getting worse, but more
people are admitting the
problem.
"It's a very topical
subject," she explained . " It's
been a big movement since

1973 since the lllO(!el child
abuse law came into effect .
''Child abuse cuts across aU
social lines," she continued .
"It's not limited to the lower
class like many people
tllink ,II
A teen-ager who failed to
get past the fifth grade and a
woman in her 30s with a
doctorate are among the 60
persons presently seeking
counseling through Parents
Anonymous in Monroe
County.
Miss Martin said six types
of child abuse are physical
abuse, physical neglect,
emotional abuse, emotional
neglect, verbal abuse and
sexual abuse.
"The type of abuse varies
from (social) class to class,"

she said. "There's more

Ohio drivers may get
reminder from state
,.

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
OOLUMBUS (UPI)- Ohio
drivers 'Who forget to renew
their licenses may get a
reminder from the state to
avoid a rHxamination if
legislation approved by the
Ohio Senate becomes law.
The blll, passed Thursday
before the Senate joined the
House
in
weekend
adjourrunent, still has to be
returned \o the House for
coocurrence in changes. It
would then go to Gov. James
A. Rhodes for signature.
A House-passed resolution
calling for a special
legislative investigation of
rising hospital and other
medical costs wtll have to
walt Willi next week for
Senate approval.
It fell four votes short
Thursday because of heavy
absenteeism and Republican
opposition . One proponent,
Sen. Marigene Valiquette, DToledo, said she will ask for
reconsideration next week.
The license
renewal
notification bill cleared the
Senate unanimously after
sponsors explained it is a
moneyo5aving measure.
Sen . Jerome Stano, DParma, said that although it
would cost $40,000 to notify
drivers of expired licenses, it
would save the state several
times that amount by
avoiding re-examination of
the drivers, who heed the
notice and renew their
licenses.
To further offset costs, the
Senate amended the bill by
tacking on a $3 fee f&lt;r any
driver required to take an
examination following a
lapsed Ucense. •
Under the bill, the state
' Bureau of Motor Vehicles will
give notice to anyone whose
license has lapsed for 45 days.
The low Senate attendance,
which contributed to 'the
downfall ol the health care
cost. inquiry, resulted in part
frrim a meeting of the CouncU
of State Govenunents in New
different problem entirely.
One advantage of the milk
substitutes made from
soybllans is'that they are low
in saturated fat and cootaln
no cholesterol. That might be
important to you if your heart
SIU'gery was for coronary
artery disease. These
products often make a
satisfactory no-cholesterol
low~turated fat substitu~
for cream it you use an
undiluted can .

Orleans.
Among those attending that
conference were Senate
President Pro Tempore
Oliver Ocasek, D-Northfield,
~ Senate Majority Whip
Harry
Meshel,
D·
Youngstown.
Sen. Charles L. Butts, DCleveland, said an eightmember special committee
should he appointed to look
into "spiraling medical and
hospital costs," reporting
back by January 1980.
11

Health

insurance · is

becoming so expensive that
people are having to drop it,"
said Butts, adding that even
short-term illnesses "can
wipe out a family's savings,
leaving them at the mercy of
what we can provide for them
on the public rolls."
Sen. Richard H. Finan, RCincinnati,
noted
the
proposed length of the
investigation had doubled,
and asked if the $65,000 cost
would also .
"It might be a little more
than $65,000," replied Butts,
"but that's not much when
we're talking about billions of
dollars drained away from
families and the pain of losing
their
financial
inde-

pendence.''
Finan and Sen. Theodore
M. Gray, R-Columbus, also
objected to establishing a
special legislative committee
to do the wock .
"We already have the
Leg isla live Service
Commission
which
is
designed to evaluate the
critical areas coofrooting us,
and they have a built-in
staff," said Gray.
Democrats favored the
special committee, while aU
six Republicans on the floor
voted agai!lst the proposal.
Rep. Myrl H. Shoemaker.
D-BoumevlUe, chairman of
THE DAILY SENTINEL
DEVOTED TO THE '
INTERE.'fl' OF
MEIGS.MASON ARE.\

ROBERT HOEfLICH
CllyEdllur
Publi~ &lt;'lJHi l )' cxt'cpt &amp;llurdlly
by The Ohto Valley Publishin~

Inc.,
111
Cuurt St., Pom~roy, Ohio 457!!1
BWSIIl~ Off1 c ~ Pltune 992- 2156 1
F.dilorilll Phune992·2157
1
&amp;-cund clall'i ~Wgt: l)ltld 1:1\

the House Appropriations
Committee, submitted a
school fmance reform bill but
said its enactment will have
to wait Wltil next year.
He said he will encourage
public discussion of the bill,
which he described as "one
piece in'the jigsaw puzzle that
represents school fmance in

Ohio."
Shoemaker's bill would
repeal the current statute
governing school closures in
Ohio and would not allow
schools to close for financial
reasons.
Instead, school districts
would he given tools to better
estimate their fmanciaf resources so they could tailor
their budgets to available
revenues.
The bill would confarm the
fiscal
year
schools'
(beginning in January) to the
state's fiscal year (beginning
in July) to make budgeting
easier, and would set a June
deadline for passing levies to
remove uncertainties about
revenues.
The House wlll recoovene
at 4 p.m. next Monday, and
the Senate at 7:30 p.m. that
evenblg .
'

physical abuse in' lower
classes. In higher strata,
th~e·s more emotional abuse
in which the child gets
everything materially, but no
love."
One doesn't have to be a
parent to seek help from
Parents Anonymous.
"We have babysitters ,
grandparents and social
workers," Miss Martin sa!d.
"We try to reach adolescent
mothers - subcultures we
haven't effectively reached
before."
·
Members
meet
at
undisclosed locations once a
week in groups of 10 with a
mental health professional
serving as group leader. They
talk among themselves and
try to find the root of their
problem and learn how to rid themselves of "destructive
tendencies."
"PA offers an emotional
support system for parents to
come and express their feelings," Miss Martin said.
"It's a very therapeutic
experience
because
sometimes parents feel
Isolated with these feelings
but can't express them," she
said. "We hope to reduce that
sense of iaolation." ·
Although the group attracts
some men, most of its
members are women.
"Some spouses do not
realize the tensloos a woman
has being h001e day in and
day out," Miss Martin stated.
"Sometimes the man doesn't
understand her and she's

Berry's wa·rld

This is the country whose ruler was regarded as the &lt;
Mideast's shrewdest and surest, the potentate whOI'I\ :
former Secretary of State Dean Rusk once singled out as .
" the best-informed ruler in the world" after the president o( the United States.
'
Yet Iran does indeed have a crisis, a bloody, destructive
one that has the shrewd shah trying every expedient in a ':
powerholder's bag of tricks to reassert control and has his '
friends, particularly in Washington, increasingly con- '
cerned about his and his country's future.
::
If the situation is unexpeCted, so is the nature of shah's
opposition - an unnatural alliance between westernized ··
left-leaning students and ultraconservative religious lead: ,
ers. The former object to the shah's authoritarianism, his i
disregard of legal niceties in pursuit of modernization and the corruption of the ruling elite surrounding him. The ·
latter resist his modernization period, the transfonnation
of Iran into a secular mndern state in disregard of '
traditional Moslem values.
. ,
What they have in coaqnon is determination to over- ·
throw the shah. His likely lnunediate replacement, given
the unlikelihood that the two factions could ever agree 'on a
conunon program, would most probably be anarchy and
quite possibly dissolution of the Iranian state.
,
The shah brought much of his trouble upon himself. After ,
a shaky beginning to his reign -the World War II allies placed him on the throne in 1941 after removing hs ·
WlCooperative father - he gradually acquired both
confidence and assertiveness, particularly after a 1950s
attempt to overthrow him was squelched with the aid of the
CIA.
As oil wealth rolled in, he launched an ambitious
program to make Iran both a modern and a great power.
Education was vastly expanded- current annual expendi·
ture is $4.3 billion and !here are 150,000 students on the
teeming and rebeUous campuses. Women were encouraged to come out from behind their veils and business
expansion was puahed, at the expense of the traditional
bazaar economy.
But the shah pushed faster than most of his people were
capable of moving into the modern world. He did it with a
take-it-or-else attitude, and he coupled social and ee&lt;&gt;nomic modernization with political reliance on an ancient
tool. His secret pollee, Savak, gave a new meaning to
ruthlessness.
In the face of riots and spreading defiance of his ·
authority, the shah has turned to military govenunent of
which Iran has had plentiful experience in the past.
strong arm may work, and the shah's promise to reform
once order is restored, to eUminate corruption and crueltY
and to heed the "revolutionary me,uage" now being heard in the land, may put Iran back on the track to ~ntury
nationhood.
But it is also possible that the shah, who has fancied
himself something of an irresistible Mideast force In
recent years, may have encountered, in the strange
coupling oi revolutionary students and conservative
mullahs, an lnunovable object.

The ·

0

a-·•

Cvmpa.ny - Mul~hnetha ,

Pomeroy. Ohio,

Nallc&gt;nal advertlsln~ reprt!sen~
La:ttivt: , l.andun A~i al~. • 3101
F.I.K.llll A v~ .• Ch:vt&lt;land, Oh io 441 IS
Sub.'lc:r1ptior1 rat~ s · l'lclrveted· b~
carrter where a var~blc 7~ L't'nls per

WL&gt;ck Ry Motor Ruple wherl• ea rn er
st!tvtce nut av~ulable, Om~ m~H~ll\,
J3 ,25. By rJUiil ill Ohiu c:111d W Va ,
One Vt!i:t t , t l2.00 ; Six months,
Il l SO , Three months , li 110,
F:lscwh~n · flf\.00 year : Sr x monltt~

$1.1 :til . ' l'hti't' months , S i·. ~C\­
SuUst r lllllur l lll"i ct• uwlm.les Surllla~
l'lllll'l: ~· n tt r w r
•

I
afraid to talk about problems
with the kids.
"Men always want quick
aolulions, but there isn't a
quick solution to child

abule."
The average •ay in a
Parents Anooymoua group ia
"about 7 ar amooth8" during
which time the group
members
olten
grow
emotionally close to one
~

Pro Standings

'

·

BLOOMINGTON,
Ind.
(UP!) -Now that Ohio State
has a foot in the door again
for a possible Rose Bowl trip,
it's up to the Buckeyes to
keep it there.
Purdue'stie with Wiscoosin
last Saturday brought new
hope far an Ohio State trip to
Pasadena, but it aU rests oo
whal happens this weekend.
If Purdue loses at Michigan
and Ohio State beats Indiana,
the Buckeyes and Wolverines
\viii once again decide who
wlU spend the holidays in
Southern California when
they meet Nov. 25 in
Columbus. A Purdue win
locks up a Rose Bowl trip for
the Boilermakers.
Ohio State, 6-2-1 overall and
:&gt;-1 in the Big Ten, has won
four in a row, but tbe
Hoosiers, despite their 4-5

record, appear to be a cut
above the last four Buckeye
opponents.
"I never like to build up a
team too much," Hayes said
of the Hoosiers of Coach U:e
Corso, "but they have the
ability to play good football,
as evidenced by their record.
We won't go out there and
regard them lightly."
That had better be the case
because lndiana'soffense has
aU of a sudden come to lile,
sparked by the ruMing of
former Ohio UP! Class A
back of the year Mike
Harkrader of Middletown
Fenwick.
Harkrader, who missed ail
of last year with a knee
injury, is the Hoosiers •
leading rusher and has taken
over the No. 1 tailback spot
after sharmg it most of the

.1
'

!
I
!
•

~

~
•

DEER

l

•
;
:
•
j

/fiJ/f!"t!is

RIFLE
SLUGS

:
;

!
l

12 to 6 gauge 5 pt.

••'

.
~
"If someone needs to cry or l
vent qer, that's accepted ;
and enco_uraged," l\llss :
Martin silld. ''They have a 24- :
hour criallllne to aacb otber. :
Instead of vemu. qer at 1
the cbUd, they caD." ·
.:
"Having
fee)lnp is :
bmnan," llhe said, "Directing •
thOle feelings til the proper
cbannel Ia the hard p!ll't.!' i

20 to 4-10 gauge 5 pk.

BAUM TRUE VALU

u-

I

anchored by 200-pound
middle
guard
Tom my
Willtamson, ga ve up only 14
points in the first half a ll
year, all against F indlay in
1t's lone loss of the season (27·
0) .

Zan es vill e,
wlit c h
completed its first perfect
season since 1951, is led
offenstvely by the tailback
Leonard Napper, fullba c k
Jeff Smith and quarterback
Scott McGlade and t1ght end
Dan Vara no, all tw&lt;&gt;-year
starters.
Napper; a 5-l!, 160-pounder,
gamed 1,117 yards and scored
etght touchdowns and the 510, 17:;..pound Smith added 815
yards and nine touchdowns.
McGlade htt on 57 of 97
passes for 725 yards and nine
touchdowns with 17 of his
complehons gomg to Larry
Lavy . 13 to Rich Hollins and
11 to Smith.
Berea rode a rugged
defense into the playoffs,
losm g 7-3 to Cleveland
Benedictine and 20-6 to North
Obnsted in its opener in the
only game all year in which it
allowed more than one
touchdown.
Newark Catholi c and
Fenwick will he making their
and
fifth appearances
meeting each other for the
third time.
NC Coach J .D. Graham
labeled this year's team
"very typiCal , not very big

By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
"Just being there before
should help, " said St. Marys
Memorial Coach Skip Baughman. "Our kids are not as

the Akron Rubber Bowl.
In Class · A, top-ranked
Newark Catholic takes on No.
NBA Stand•ngs
Ch icag o at Golden State
7 Middletown Fenwick at
By United Press International
New Orleans at Los Angel es
E•stern Conference
ln d 1ttna at seaffle
Groveport-Madison High
Atlantic Division
Saturday's Games
School,
while No. 6 Lorain
W. L Pet. GB
Milwaukee at New York
antsy,,
'
Philadlph
11
2 .846
Clearview plays Fremont St.
Denver at wash ington
New Jersy
11
6 .647
2
Philadelphia at Atlanta
Baughman's Roughnders Joseph at George Daniel
washingtn
9 7 .563 311:2
Boston at Cleve lend
are
the only one of the four Field in Lorain.
New York
9 8 .529 4
Phoenix &lt;!'It Detroit
. Boston
2 12 143 9117
Class AA teams in the state
San Antonio at Houston
Baughman had e1ght
Central Division
New Jersey at Kansa S Cit y
high school football playoffs starters hack on defense from
w. L. Pet. GB
Seattle at Golden Sta te
who have been there before, a year ago, but had to build
Houston
7 6 .538
Indiana at Por tl and
Atlanta
1 1 .sao
lf:z
New Or leans at San Dreg o
losing last year in the semi- an offenstve unit .
san Antonio
8 a .500
11:~
finals .
"We felt going into the
New Orlens
6 10 375 21/:z
Detroit
6 1 1 353 3
St . Marys ( 10-0) opens season that our strength
Cleveland
5 12 29-4
4
another bid for the champion- would be defense ," said
Western conference
Midwest Division
ship Saturday night when it Baughman, "and that the
W L. Pet . GB
takes on Brookfield (9-0) at offense would catch up. That
Denver
9 7 563
Baldwin-Wallace College.
Kansas City
9 7 S63
pretty much proved true . We
Ind iana
5 9 357 3
The other AA game have an offenstve !me which
WHA
Standmgs
Milwauke
6 13 .316 4 1h
By United Press International matches New Concord John
JUSt
developed
like
Chicago
3 13 .188 6
W. l T . Pts.
Pacific Divi510n
Glenn
( 10-0)
against gangbllsters and, of course,
Quebec
10
·7
1
21
W. L Pet. GB New England
8 4 4
20 Hamilton Badin (I~) at backs who could run."
Seattle
11 2 .846
Cincinnati
9 5 2
20
LOS AngelS
12 4 .750
lf:2 Winnipeg
Baughman's top backs are
6 8 2
14 Dayton's Welcome Stadium.
Phoenix
11 s .688 llf:~ Birmingham
6 6 1
13
The
other
four
playoff
junior
Jeff Cisco, a 5-10, 171}.
Golden Stat
9 6 600 .3
Edmonton
6 a o
12 semifinal games are on tap
Portland
9 6 .600 3
pounder
who finished with
2 9 2
6
Sen Clego .
8 12 .400 6 1J~ Indianapolis
tonight.
Thursday's
Games
Thursday's Results
( No games schedu led)
Class AAA action pits topNew York 97, Cleveland 93
Today's Games
San Diego 112, Gold en Stat e
New England at Bi r mingham ranked Cincinnati Princeton
109
Indianapolis at Edmonton
against
Sandusky
at
Today's Games
Cincinnat i at Winnipeg
Denver at Boston
Welcome
Stadiwn
and
No.
3
Saturday •s Game
Washington at New Jersey
B 1 rmin g ~am at New Engla nd ' Zanesville against Berea at
Phoenix at Ph iladelphia

:
~r.

final contests will be played
Saturday night, pitting No. 2
New Concord John Glenn ( Jl}.
0) against No . 9 Hamilton
Badin ( I~) at Welcome
Stadium, and No. 3St. Marys
(10-0) against
No . 4
Brookfield (9-0) at BaldwinWallace College In Berea.
Mancuso, in his 19th year
as head coach at Princeton
declined to compare thi~
year's Viking team with the
1972 squad, led by UP! ba ck
of the year Mike Gayles, but
did say this year's edition is
"more difficult to defense ."
That's because Mancuso
has a pair of fine runmng
backs this year in first
cousins Ken RoWldtree and
Leroy Stenson , both 5-10 , 165poWld seniors.
Roundtree gained 1 151
yards and scored ' 13
touchdowns during the
regular season, while Stenson
finished with 1,072 yards and
14 TDs.
"We felt at the begmning of
the year we would be a good
football
team "
satd
Mancuso. "When' we heat
Moeller, it gave our k1ds a lot
of confidence."
Sandusky is led by senior
tailback Kelvin Lindsey, a 6I, 1115-pound tailback who
rushed for 1,589 yards and 18
touchdowns m leadmg the
Blue Streaks to a 9-1 mark
this year .
The Blue Streak defense ,

Hours .

Wttlcdlys 7:30-5:00 P.M.
Stt. 7:30 lll•:oo P.M.

,,

but with excelle nt team
quickness.' '
The Green Wave shut out
their last seven oppone nts
and a llowed only 19 points in
10 games .
Chris Marsha ll a nd Da n
McKenna , " the best two runnin g backs we' ve eve r had
together," run behind •'one of

our better offensive lines,"
said Graha m
Marshall had 1,315 yards
and 18 touchdowns the past
season and McKenna 856
yards and 10 TDs .•
Rob Ha rkrader, younger
brother of Mike , former UPI
Class A back of the year now
starring at Indiana, leads
Fenwi ck with 1,317 yards and
18 touchdowns and also plays
·
linebacker on defense.
A 5-10, 1115-pounder, Rob "is

in its own league, vaulted into
the playoffs with victories
ove r previously unbeate n
Fostor ia St. Wendetin and
Wauseon the final two games
of the season .
But St. Joe paid dearly in
the win over Wauseon , in
which star running back Jeff
Gottron , who rushed f&lt;r over
1,000 yards, bro¥ his collar
bone and is out of the
playoffs.
Coach Ric k Wonderly
inserted sophomore Roger
Darr into Gottron's spot and

he responded with 52 yards in
six carries.
For all vour hom e
Entertainment 1nd

Apptianc;e Needs

DOXOL
SERVICE

RIDENOUR'S
TV &amp; Apeliance
Gas Serv1ce
Racine, Ohio
Chester, Ohio

more of a power runner than
Mike ," said head coach and
fath e r J erry Harkrader .
" Mike relied more on his
quickness and agility ."

Clearv1ew's only two losses
came against AAA North
Ridgeville and AA Elyna
Catholic, who were 111-1-1
between them.
Speedy Mark Walden is the
Clippers' big offensive threat .
Last year's Class A state 22().
yard dash champiOn gained
1,1163 yards and had five
touchdown runs of over 75
yards durmg the ' regular
season.
St. Joe, which fintshed third

Class AA playoffs set

OSU still eyes Rose Bowl

the'

0

By GENE CADD~
UPI_Sports Writer
.
Prmceton Coac h Pal
Manc_uso has ,a ready answer
for his team s 1978 success.
" Speed,
quickness,
confidence and execution,"
replies the 19-year Viking
mentor.
.
.
. Prmceton will he making
tts second playOffappearance
F~i~ay night when the
Vikmgs take on Sandusky At ·
Dayton's Welcome Stadiwn
m one of two Class AAA
play?ff contests. They lost in
the fmals to Warren Western
Reserve in 1972.
_Keyed ~y a 13-12 wip over
Cincmnati Moeller the s~cond
gnme of the
season,
Princeton went o~ to a 9-0
record, the No. I m the UPI
Board of Coaches Class AAA
ratings and the Region 4
playoff spot, ending Moeller's
five-year reign .
The other AAA contest, at
the Akron Rubber Bowl,
matches unbeaten and No . 3'
ranked Zanesville (11}.0 )
against unranked Berea (II2), while Class A action
Friday night has No. 1
Newark Catholic (I~) going
against No. 7 Middletown
Fem~ick ( 11-2) at GroveportMadlson High School and No .
6 Lorain Clearvtew (8-2)
meetmg No. 11 Fremont St..
Joseph (11-2) at George Daniel
Field in Lorain.
The two Class AA semt-

Powder puff
game Saturday

Peopletalk
· ByKENNETHR.CLARK
United Press International
GI.JJOMY PROGNOSIS : That tumble disco queen Grace
Jones took rlr001 a 20-foot scaffold Tuesday in Fort
Lauderdale, F:la., threatens now to eclipse her meteoric
career. She's in a New Orleans hospital- with a severe knee
infection. She is to stay in New Orleans for a while before
transfer back tO' New York - that "it's very serlous, to the
point where she could lose her kneecap." Would such a blow
em! her career? Says Berlin, "It could curtail it to a great
extent. It wouldn'~pennlt her to be the Grace Jones of old. She
isn't the standup type of singer."
HOPE ETERNAL: Rarely, if ever, has Bob Hope appeared
as a co-host oo a daytime talk show, bui that's where the
audience foWld him Tln!r8day, in usual form taping NBC-TV's
"America Alive" with Jack Unkletter, ftr ~Dec. 1. The
old master fielded questions from the audience and was asked
what he'd like to do that he hasn't done. The response: "Win an
Ol!car. Maybe I'D have Paul Williams bronzed." Who would he
like to meet? "I've met about everybody." What's the best
training tnday for an aspiring c001edian? "Hecklers - they
really make you think oo your feet." Finally Indicative of
what life with Hope can be, the title of the book Dolores Hopehis wife of 45 years- is writing: "If You See Bob, Say Hello."
CATCHING HEAT: Steve Martin may be ''wild and crazy "
but he lsn 't alr-&lt;:ondltioned, and he found the heat was ~
Thursday in KnOxvUie, Tenn. The frenetic comedian was
forced to cancel the last 10 minutes ol his act before 14,000 fans
when heat exhaustion landed him in the hospital. His agent,
Marty Klein, says he's aU right now and heading f&lt;r Wichita
Kan., for his next gig. Klein said the temperature In
auditorium wa~ 110 degrees - hotter under the llghta - and
that even though he was drenched in perspiration, Martin
refused to shed his traditiooal three-piece suit. The fana were
disappointed, but not one demanded a refund.
GIJMPSES: Fonner screen star Merle Oberon is said to
be making "excellent prO(!resa" in recovery from heart
surgery Tuesday In a Los Angeles hoepital ... MlltoB Berle wu
the roastee Thursday in Hollywood when Jack Albertaon, Tom
Rlcldes, Jeae Willie, Jackie Muoll, Jack Carter, Pat
McCermlck and SUgar Ray Robluell turned him on the apll on
behalf of the &lt;;tty of Hope charity hoepltal .":. Rex .H arrllon,
Claudelte Colbert and Geoq:e Role wrap up their Boelon
production of "The Klngfilber" Nov . 25andheadfar New Yark
ftr previews of WDIJam Doalla
new ~ at the
Btltmare ... Peter and Pavia Ulltlnov will be in New York nut
week to promote "The Thief of BaiJhdad" - NBC.TV'a twohour apeclal cOB!arrlng Roddy McDeweU and TeftDee SIUip
m Nov. 24 ... Olivia New!cJn.Joba opena cmcerta Nov. 'Zl in
L&lt;rtdon ...
.

BY GREG BAD..EY
With deer season just around the corner there are lots of
deer notes. The season in Zone 4 (Southea~tern Ohio) runs
from November 'lf through December 2. Only bucks with fiveinch antlers are legal unless you have a special antlerless
pennlt. Bowhunlers are doing well, but the rutting season has
been delayed due to the warmer weather . So far , 39 deer have
been bagg~ with a bow in Meigs County.
The Jrimltlve weapons muzzle loader season saw a
harvest of 176 bucks In the three special areas. The 7 500
hunters kllled 81 deer in Wildcat Hollow, 86 at Salt Fork, ;u;d 9
at Shawnee State Forest. '
Here are some points of special emphasis for the deer
sea~ -you lancklwners must remember that although you
don I have a special deer tag, you must still tag your deer
before it Is moved. Sunply make your own tag in advance with
your name and address and the date killed, and attach it to
your deer . A good tag maker is one of the simple labeimakers
that you use aroWJd the house ,
The Division of Wildlife is going to crack down this season
on VIolators. All hunters must check their deer by noon the day
after the klll.
If you want to tWJe up your shotguns for season the lzaak
Walton league still has two slug mali!hes left bef;re season .
The mali!hes will be the next two Sundays at 1 o'clock at the
clubhouse near Chester. You will lind good friends, gond
prizes, and a good way to get ready for the upcoming season.
_Again this year, an emergency radio service will be
available to the sporlsmen in Ohio. The emergency numbers to
caD in Zone 4 are : 594-2211 or 59341933. Radio station WMPO
wlll broadcast emergencies each day of the season at 12:50
p.m. and WATH in Athens wUI broadcast at 12:30 p.m.
Rabbit season came in Wednesday and nms through
January '!1. A first day bag check has the count down slightly .
~ reminder to any of you hunters afield that it is still very
unportant that you report any quail sightings to game
protector Andy Lyles. His number is 985-3947. A current
restocking program and coWJt survey hinges on cooperation
from you sportsmen afield.
Your help is still needed to put a stop to the illegal deer
kills ~ the area. Seems like there are still many (shooters)
who still !lave much disregard for our wildlife. Please report
any suspicious activity at all to Mr. Lyles.
A side note - A Troy, Ohio firm has. paid $13,250 in
damages to the Ohio Department of Nai,ural Resources as a
result of a pollution incident in the Grdt Miami River.
Eighteen thousand fish were killed after ammonia spilled into
the water accidentally. Funds from any of these types of fines
are used for fish management, research ,' and protection.
Have a safe hunt and a succe"'!ful one, but above aU, be a
good sportsman.

Princeton plays Sandusky tonight

season with senior Darrick
'Burnett.
Harkrader has 764 yards in
169 carries and has Buckeye
coaches concerned .
"He (Harkrader) has the
abtllty to find a hole,' ' said
·Ohio State assistant Dave
Adolph . " He is not an
overpowering guy, but he's a
very talented runner . He is
extremely dangerous when
he
breaks
into
the

secondarY."
The Hoosiers are primarily
a ruMing team, centered
aroWld their tailbacks, and
that might be a break for tbe
Buckeyes, who have had
most of their defensive
problems this year against
the pass.
Indiana quarterbacks Scott
Arnett and Tim Clifford, also
both Ohioans, have thrown
seven touchdown passes between them.
Arnett , of
Columbus
Walnut Ridge, has completed
32 of 78 for 395 yards and
Cliffor~, of Colerain, 31 of 69
for 470 yards.
Defensively, Indiana is led
by another former Ohio high
school star - linebacker Joe
Norman of West Holmes,
Millersburg.
"Norman is their best
defensive player by far," said
Mickey Jackson, another
Ohio State assistant. " He
means as much to them as
(Tom) Cousineau does to us .
He's always aroWJd the ball."
Ohio State, which will go
into the Indiana contest with
all hands available with the
exception of defensive hack
Ray Ellis, out for the year
with a shoulder injury, leads
the series between the two
schools 41·10-4 . The Buckeyes
'have won 21 of the last 22
games
with
Indiana
managing a ~ tie in 1959.
"We have new life now and
are looking focward to a post
season football game ," said.
Jackson. "But we can't look
past Indiana ."

The jumor class of Meigs
H1gh School is sponsoring a
Powder Puff Football game
Saturday, Nov. i8, featunn g
the junior girls against a
senior
and
sophomore
combination team in a flag football contest. Kick-off time
is 2 p.m . at the Meigs Junior
High School football stadium
in Middleport .
In addition to female football
players,
mal e
cheerleading squads will help
make this a "different"
game . A smaU pep band is
scheduled to perform for halfhme entertamment, an d
popcorn will be sold in the
stands.
All this entertamment costs
only $1 with proceeds going to
defray costs of the junior·
senior prom.
Coaches John Bentley and
Bob Oliver have both expressed confidence in a
victory on Saturday in this
clash of the powder puffs.

Sports
transactions
SP:orts transactions
Bv Un1ted Press International
Thursdav
ColleQe
Iowa State - E xtended the

I ,340 . ya rds
and
24
touchdowns, and sophomore
fullba ck Scott Shelby, who
chtpped m with 889 yards.
In Brookfteld , the Riders
Will be lacing a club w1th an
equally potent pair of runmng
backs m Darwin Ulmer and
Marc Marek.
Ulmer, a 6-2, 1911-pounder
wh o ben c h presses 330
poWlds, ran for 1,349 yards in
mne games and scored 18
touchdowns. Marek , 1&gt;-2, 204,
added another 600 yards on
the groWJd .
" Our football pr og ram
came of age last year ," sa1d
Coach John Delserone. " We
had three starters back on
defense and five back on
offense and some others with
good potential. We felt at the
very best we would be an
outstanding team and things
just jelled."
John Glenn, which finished
second to Wyommg m the
final UPI Board of Coac hes
AA ratings ~ is another team

DEADLINE NOTED
COLUMBUS - There is
S1 ill time for Ohto fisherm en
to enter their priz e !all
catches in the "Fish0hio11
awards compe tition sponsored by the Ohio Department of Natural Resources'
D1v1sion of Wildlife.
To date, entrtes have been
rece1ved in 23 of the 29
categories. The entries lor
the 1978 contest which ends on
Dec. 31 include three new
stale records.

PRICE AND
SERVICE
A Great

Combm at ion
For Sou t hea stern Oh10

Kansas - Fired head football
cMc h Bud Moore
Missi SSIPP i St . E x tended
the contract of head football
coach Bob Tyle r tor one ye a,r

Baseball
New

York

M et s

-

Sold

pitcher

Mard1 c Corn ejo to
T r dew a t e r of International
Leag ue.
Montrea l -

Hired Ver n Rapp

and Felipe Al ou as coa ches ,
re tained coa ches Owe Virgd
and Jim Br ewer tor 1979 ;
offered B1l ly Gardn er . -last
year 's f1 r st base co ach, a minor
leag ue coach ing job .
Hockey
New York Rang er s INHL ) Assi gn ed tef1 w lng Greg Pol is

· ~a~~~ 9~~~ erN~~~~e_A~~S ign ed

defensem an Gor d Sm ith to the
Hershey Bears ot the Am errcan
Hoc key League.
I n d 1 an a p 0 t 1 S (WHA ) Trad ed center RiChie Ledu c
and def enseman Kev in Mo r -: i son to Quebec in exc hang e for
th r ee l v tur e dr att cho1ces
\

As low as ...

&amp;
22FM. exchange

quick defensive unit," he
added ."! don't know whether
we can run against them, but
I think we can pass. If one
can 't go, I'm hoping the other
can ."
Malone 's passer is his son,
John , a 1&gt;-1, 202i&gt;oWJder who
threw nine touchdown passes
during the season .
The Rams' big offensive
line is anchored by tackle
Keith Spaeth , a 6-3, 241}.
poWJder , and " two excellent
guards," 6-1 , 212-vound Jeff
Lamb, aitd 6-foot, 20:;..poWJd
Matt Korna u, both of whom
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contr act of football coach Earl
Bru ce for two years, through
1982.

with a strong tw o-man
running attack .
Seniors Ron Colby and
Garland Lewis most of John
Firestone 36
Glenn 's off ense , Colby
3 -year warranted. qualtty·
gettmg l ,229 yards and 20
st r u cte d vnlu e f o r
touchdowns and Lewis 1,223
veh1
cles
w 1th light ro n o r
&gt;ards and 17 TDs.
mal
needs
(290 c rankm g
" Offensively, we've been
l
am
ps
.)
able to run," said Litile
Muskie Coach Dave Stockum.
" We've been able to run both
sides and our opponents have
not been able to key ." ·
But, that might change
Saturday night.
" They ' re primarily a
running team and I think
we ' re strong again st the
running game," said Badin
Coach Terry Malone.
" They look like they have a

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�4- The Daily S!'ntinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Friday, Nov. 17 . 197R

Redskin -Bearcat tilt not just another game
By GENE CADDES
UPI Sporll Writer
When Cincinnati and
Miami play football, It's not
just another game.
"There are a lot of people
from both Cincinnati and
Miami who Uve in the area,"
explains Cincin.nati Coach
Ralph Stilub, who played in
three of the Bearcat-Redskin
skirmishes. ~~There's great
tradition . Everybody gets
emotionally involved. It
should be a fine football
game.

"The two biggest games
were always the Xavier and
Miami games," Staub said in
reflecting back on his playing
days at UC. " Now that
Xavier is no longer playing
football , this should be the big
gl!file year end and year out .''
The two southwestern Ohio
ilchoois meet for the 83rd time
Saturday at Oxford in what is
the oldest rivalry west of the
Allegheny Mountains, with
Miami leading the series 443U .
Miami, which lost its first

two games, will bring a 7·2-1
record and a six-gam e
winni ng st rea k·. into the
contest.
Cincinnati is 4~ . but the
Bearcats have won their last
three games, including a 3:Hl
decision over Ohio University
last weekend. .
Tom Reed, Miami's first
year coach, remembers his •
thr e~
.games
against
Cincmnati.
"When I was a player, I can
remember We always looked
forward to the Cincinnati
game. We lost to the Bearcats
my sophomore year, but we
won the next two years. ThiS
game has always held special
meaning for the se~iors ."
Staub, with h1s tea m

Ohio Outdoors
By JERRY PICKRELL
Oblo Flsbermu Magazine
DQtrlbuted by UPI
The hunting 'seasons f(r small game species such as ducks
and squirrels have been in for some time now, but for most
hunters the big one started Nov. 15. That was the opening day
for upland game-rabbits, pheasants and chuka partridge.
Bobwhite quail ~ normally a part of the upland game
hunter's bag, but the past two winters have so reduced their
nwnbers that the sea&amp;on has been eliminated this year . (You
should note that the c~y of the hunting laws digest that you
receive with your hunting Ucense still Usts a quail season. This
should be disregarded.) ·
Ohio's pheasant p~ulatlon has also suffered a reduction due
to a nmnber of fact(rS related in part to current agricultural
procedures. However, the pheasant is still present in huntable
nwnbers in many psrts of the state. The Ohio Depsrtment of
Natural Resources is maldng efforts to increase the population
. of both birds . .
Rabbits are always responsible for sending more hunters
into the field each year than any other game animal. This
year's cl'()p is expected to be as productive as usual in most
portiQDs of the state.
Both pheasants and rabbits inhabit open fields though good
shooting for the latter can also be found in wooded areas . Look
for pheasants in unmowed fields and along the edges of
cultivated land. Pheasants and rabbits are both hunted by
using dogs though a different breed is UBed for each.
The seaaon for pheasant will run through Dec. 9 on private
land and through Jan , 'll in public hunting areas. The rabbit
season extends through Jan. 'll on both public and private
property.
.
The hiDiting hours fer both species is froin 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
The daily Umlt is two pheasant and four rabbit with the
·possession Umlt after the first day just twice those numbers.

BY JOE CARNICELLI
UPI Executive Sports Editor
NEW YORK (UPI) They 'll be playing tie breaker
in Denver Sunday.
The Denver Broncos are
tied with Oakland for first
place in the AFC Western
Division and the Green Bay
Packers are deadlocked with
Minne.Ota for first in the
NFC Central. The Packers
and Broncos square off at
Mile High Stadium in Denver
Sunday and one probably will
end the day in secQnd place.
Denver, stulll)ed by the
New York Jets two weeks,
came back last week to
defeat Cleveland 19-7 and
remain tied with the Raiders
at 7-4. The Packers, on the
other hand, were crushed 4214 by Dallas, one of 'their
worst beatings in years, to
fall into a tie with the Vikings.
Both clubs also are 7-4.
Packer quarterback David
Whitehurst had a horrendous
afternoon against Dallas,
I completing only 3-of-16

NFL St1ndinn
By United Press International

American conlerence
East
w. L. T. Pet.
New England
8 3 o .727
Miami
8 3 0 .727
6 5 o .545.
NV J ets
Baltimore
5 6 o .455
Buffalo
centri 1' 8 0 ·273
w. L. T. Pel .
·Pittsburgh
9 2 o .818
Hou ston
' 1 o4 0 .636
5
6 o .&lt;55
Clew eland
Cinc innari
I 10 o .091
west
w L . T. Pet.
Denv er
1 • o .636
Oakland
7 ' 0 ·636 ·
Seattle
5 6 0 .455

The Big Bend area has been '
without a local football
forecast voice long enough.
The National Football
League refuses to wait , so we
have decided to junip in right
in the middle. This week, only
II weeks into the 16 week
season, we introduce you to
TAG.
Heretofore ' unknown, TAG
combines a bold, analytical
approach to the complicated
pro grame, with a desire to San Diego
~
make
Ratings
un- Kan sas·Ci t y
derstandable to the average
· National Confer ence
East
,
fan. We think you will enjoy
W. L T. Pet.
TAG 's forecast. (TAG 's w ashington
a 3 o .727
ratings are directed and
:
computed in Middleport.)
5
N Y Gi ant s
The Power Index Ratings St . Lou is
3 8 0 .273
and the Forecast will appear
C01&gt;tral
w. L. T. Per.
in the Sentinel weekly, Minnesota
1 • o .636
7 4 0 .636
usually on Friday. Next Green Ba y
Ba y
4 7 o .36&lt;
week, they will be printed on Tampa
Detr oi t
4 7 0
364
Chicago
3.
a o .273
Wednesday. ·because of the
west
Thanksgiving Day games.
w. L. T. Pet.
Lo s Angeles
9
2 o .818
.
TAG'S
Atlanta
1
4 o .636
NATIONAL FOOTBALL
LEAGUE
~:~ F~~~~i~~
~ 1 ~ ~ :~t
FORECAST
Sunday's Results
Power Index Rating
Denver 19, Clev eland 7
Following Week No. 11
Houston 26, New England 23
Miam i 25 , Buffalo 24
·1. Pittsburgh
95.2
Wa
shington 16. New York
2. Los Angeles
91
Giant
s 13 (ot ~
3. Dallas
90.6
Philad elph ia 11, N ew Yo r k
4. Washington
87.6 JeiS 9
5. New England
87.4
Detroit 34, Tampa Ba y 23
Minnesota 17, Chi cago 14
6. Miami
85.9
All anta 20. New Orleans 11
7. Green Bay
84.7
Call as 42, Green Bay l d
B. Philadelphia
83
St . Lo uis 16, San Fran c isc o 10
9. Denver
82.7
Baltimore 11, seattl e 14

l

~~:::~elphl•

10. Minnesota

81 .9

11. Oakland
80.4.
12. Houslon
80.1
13. New York Giants
79.6
14. New York Jels
79.5
15. Atlanta
79.3
16. Cleveland
78.8
· t7 . NewOrleans
77 .5
18. Tampa Bay
76.7
19. Seattle
76 .6
20. Ba lt imore
74.7
21. Chicago
70.5
22. Buffafo
68.4
23. San Diego
67.9
24. Kansas City
64.7
25. Detroit
·
64.6
26. St. Louis
63
27. Cincinnati
61 .5
28. San Fran.
59.9
Based upon the Power
Index Ratings, TAG forecasts
the winners for Week No. 12
Sundoy, Nov . 19
Higher

Te1m,

R1ting,

Margin, and Lower Team are

ll5te;:i :

Pittsburgh, 95.2, 34, Cin·

d nnatl.

Los Angeles, 91 , 31, San

Frcanclsco.

Dallas, 90 .6, 13, New
Orleans.
washington , 87.6, 25, St.
Louis.
New England, 87.4, 8, New
York Jets.
Green Bay, BA.7, 2, Denver.
Philadelphia, 83, J, New
York Glanls.
Minnesota , '81.9. 14, San
Diego.
Oakland. 80.4, 16, ~[)&amp;troll .
Cleveland,
Bal timore..

78.1,

4,

Tampa Bay, 76.7, 8, Buf·
falo .
Seattle, 76 .6, 12, Kansas
City.
Altanta, 79.3, 9, Chicago.
Mondly, Nov. 20

Miami, 85.9, '6, Housfon .

•

..

*

\ll

~. ~0 •. ~45~~5

Staub. "I've never seen anY
better. From the first snap
until the end he goes full go. "
Saturdily's other games in
a limited Ohio ·college
schedule find Ohio University
at Bowling Green and Toledo
at Kent State in Mid·
American Conference
contests , Ohio State at
Indiana·; Central State at
Alabama A &amp;M and Northern
Iowa at Akron in a night
. game .
Toledo, U overall and U
in the MAC , is coming off its
top performance of the year,
a 35-16 win over Northern
lliinois last week.
OU is one notch ahead of
. the Rockets in the conference
standings at 2-4 and is 2-7

CINCINNATI (UPI) _ Atthough just about everything
appears to be going against
them, the Cincinnati Bengals
will be "ready" for the
Pittsburgh Steeiers Sunday,
insists Bengals' head coach
Homer Rice .
Butit'sgoingtotakealotof
getting ' 'ready' ' for the
Bengais to beat the Steelers
in the late-starting 4 p.m.
(EST ) contest.
To start with, the Bengals
ha ve compiled the worst
record in the NFL this sea~on
( 1-10), while Pittsburgh has

Reds edge
G"Ian
· t s 3 •2
-

'

KUMAMOTo, Japan (UPI)
- Geor ge Foster and Johnny
~nch smashed solo homers,
th en teamed up for th e
winnin g run in the seventh
inning today to lead the
Cincinnati Reds to a J..2

victory over the Yomiuri
Gian t~.

""'

•••
••
•

overall after last week 's
Four Ohio teams will be
taking part in post...ason
blanking by Cincinnati.
Bowling Green, which at competition this weekend.
Findlay, the Hoosier one time was coosidered a
con tender for the 'Mid-Am Buck ey e Conferen·ce
· title, has lost four in a row champion with a ~ record
and stands 3-4 in the hosts Tarleton Stale (Tex. ) in
conference and 4-6 over all. NAIA Division II play, while
Kent State, which needs a Dayton , Wittenberg and
win over the Falcons to Baldwin-Wallace are all in •
escape the MAC basement, is ·the NCAA Division III
1-6 in league play and a-1 playoffs.
Dayton (9-1-1) plays at
overall.
Akron, after two straight Ca rnegie-Mellon (Pa .) , '
losses, stands at 5-5 as it hosts Wittenberg (8-().1) at IUtaca
Nocthern Iowa, while Central (N.Y.) and Baldwin-Wallace
State is coming off its second (11-G-1) hosts St . Lawrence
win in nine games as it goes (N.Y.), all in first round
against Alabama A &amp; M.
games.

..--~-----------~~---------,

I

N. W. COM'-lON, O.D~

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1;

I

OFFICE HOUR$! 9:30 to 12,2 to 5 !CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS.)- EAST COURT
ST., POMEROY.
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--------------~~---------~

passes ·for 31 yards. His first place in NFC Central.
Washington 24, St. Louis 17
replacement, Dennis Sproul, Erratic Chargers will make - Redskins, struggling to
remain ahead of Dallas in
had to be carried off with a them work, though .
NFC
East, have a little tOO
kn\,e injury.
New England 'll, New York
for
resurgent
On Sunday, Whitehurst Jets 20 - Patriots should much
must go against another of come back strong after cardinals, who 150t new Ufe
the toughest defensive units blowing 23-point lead in loss with three-game winning
in the league . Despite to Houston . Jets QB Richard streak.
Philadelphia 17, New York
surrendering 31 points to the Todd returns but rust from
Jets two weeks ago, the seven-week layoff should Giants 10
·E~gles
scratching and clawing to
Broncos have allowed 9nly show.
148 points, the lowest figure in
Dallas 34, New Orleans 21 stay alive in wild card playoff
the AFG and second only to - Every game is critical now picture. Giants attack is total
Los Angeles (136 ) in the for Cowboys, who finally mess .- people are starting to
entire league.
showed championship form call it the "Prevent Offense."
While the Packers and in rout of Green Bay. Saints
Baltimore 20, Cleveland 13
Broncos go at it, Minnesota blew big one to Atlanta last - Colts are coming on strong
will play host to San Diego . week and may still show after dismal start while
and the Raiders will take on effects.
injury-riddled Browns are
Detroit in Oakland.
Los Angeles 20, San starting to fade.
Here 's the way the NFL Francisco 14 - 49ers have
Pittsburgh 27, Cincinnati 10
shapes up this weekend:
history of getting up for this - Steelers get back on
one and Rams may be a titUe winning track and move a
Suoday
Denver 23, Green Bay 10- sluggish after big victory step closer to AFC Central
title after tough loss to Los
Bronco defense much too over Pittsburgh .
strong for young Packers, · Atlanta 17, Chicago 10 Angeles.
who have brutal second half Falcons got big tift from lastoakland 24, Detroit 14 schedule. Denver QB Craig gasp win over New Orleans . Raiders continue to struggle
Morton needs only to provide and are rolling with five- but they also continue to win.
game winning streak . Bears Lions have bounced back
some offense.
Minnesota 'll, San Diego 21 going just the other way with somewhat but they're still not
- Vikings end long cUmb to eight straight losses.
in same class.
Seattle 27, Kansas City 17 Seahawks' offense stopped
last week for one of few times
this season but . Chiefs'
defense doesn't seem up to
turnovers
a pass similar effort.
the best (9-2).
Buffalo 20, Tampa Bay 17
Then , the game is a t inter'ception and three
fumbles
.
Bills have been losing
Pittsburgh, where the
"Fumbles
just
killed
us,"
some
heartbreakers and may
Bengals have never won,
said'Rice.
"Our
guys
have
got
have
enough to push them
even though they've been
to
be
aware
that
the
defense
top against Bues.
over
the
playing there every year
is
going
to
try
to
strip
too
ball
Monday
nlght
since 1970.
--Miami
24,
Houston
20 from
them
on
every
play."
Also, earlier this year in
Dolphins got big break when
Cincinnati, the Steelers
Oilers dumped New England
· wrecked the Bengals, 28-3.
last week to create first place
And, the Bengals now
•
tie in AFC East. Don Sbula
appear to be emotionally low.
THISTLEDOWN
They managed to get fired up
NORTH RANDALL, Ohio will find a way to keep tbem
for
Monday
night's (UP! ) - Jockey Mike Moran there.
nationally-televised game guided George's Gem to
against Oakland but lost 34- victory
in Thursday's
2! .
featured eighth ra ce at
So, getting "up" again Thistledown.
figures to be a tough thing to
The 4-year-old winner
do.
.
covered the six furlongs in
· "Pittsburgh just might be a I : 12 1-!i over a slow track to
better team than. Oakland," pay $4.40, $3 and $2.40. Social
concedes Rice . "But I really Streaker placed and Pat
believe we're going to be Quinn showed.
ready to play .
Darlyne 's Ginger and
"We're getting to be a Overdue Blossom returned
tough football team. Our $43.20 on the I-ll daily double,
defense
is
playing and there were 271 winning
wonderfully well. "
tickets on the 4-ll-10 grouping
Even though Cincy gave up of Go Viking, Mytato and
five touchdowns to Oakland, Jubilant Jack on the ninth
four of them really were the race trifecta - each worth
fault of the Bengals' offense, $146.50.
not the defense. Four of the
Attendance was 3,486 and
Raiders' scores were the the handle totaled $442,425.
direct results of Cincy

Rice says Bengals ready

The Giants, runners-up in
J apan's Central Lea gue pen ..
nant race this season, .took a
2..0lead · th f 0urthm
'
m e
n on
Toshit Shinozuka's RBI
double and Kazwnasa Kono's
nmscoring triple.
San Diego 29, Ka nsas Ci t y 23
The Reds countered with
{oL)os An gel es 10, Pitt sbUrgh· 7
two runs in the fifth when
Monday's Result
Foster belled his third homer
Oakland 34, CinCinnati 21
in Japan and Bench followed
Sunday , Novem'ber 19
Buffalo at Ta mpa Bay, 1 p.m. with his eighth. Bench then
New England at New York drove Foster home with a
Jets, 1 p.m .
.
double ll1
, the
·Philadelph ia at New York · rurt-;SConng
Giants , 1 p.m.
seventh to give the Reds their
st. Louis at Washington, 1 ninth straight victory on the
p.m.
San Oiego at Mi nnesota , 1 17-game tour. Cincinnati's
p.m.
record now stands at 11-2-1.
Atlanta at Chi cago, 2 p .m .
Cleveland .a t Baltimore, 7
Mike LaCoss yielded nine
p.m.
hits in a complete-game
New Orleans a! Oa ll as, 2 effort and picked . up his
p.m .
Sea ttle at Ka nsas Ci t y , 2 p.m. fourth victory in as many
. Cincinnati et Pitts burgh, 4 -~ appearan c es . Pete Rose
P -~e1ro1t at oakland , 4 p.m. ..)doubled in his final trip to the
Green Bay at Denver, 4 P·"'! ' plate and has now hit safely
LOS Ang eles at San Fra nCIS· in aU l4 gMles in Ja an .
co, 4 p .m .
P
Mond•Y• November 20
An estimated 26,000 fans
M ia m i i!lt Houston. 9 p .m .
saw the game played at ·
Tnursd•Y· November 23
..
. .
Denver at Oetroll, 12 :30 p.m. F u]1sak1da1 Stadium in
washington at · Da ll as, 3:30 Kurhamoto
on
Japan 's
p.m.
southernmost main island of
Kyushu. The Reds will play a
LEBANON
combined team of Giants and
LEBANON, Ohio (UPI) - Cr own Lighter Lions at
Royal Dude captured Thui-s- Helwadai Stadimn in nearby
day night's featured eighth Fukuoka on Saturday.
race at Lebanon Raceway,
finishing three lengths ahead
of Thunder AbiliiY·
Ms Virginia Ace came in
$2.40 show.
.
third.
Dr
LaMonica
won.
the
first
The wiMer, driven by Bill
ltennman, covered the mile race and El Magnifico took
in 2:07- a lifetilne low- and the second to provide a 4-1
returned $4.60, .3 .80 and nightly double combination
$2.60. Thunder Abbey paid that was worth $157.20.
1
A crowd of 1,059 wagered
$11.60 aDd $4.20 to place and
Ms Virginia Ace kicked back $125,358.

antifreeze &amp;coolant

'325 GALLON

NOW
ONLY

Rules and regulations regarding the awa rd system lor
scouts we~e outlin ed at the recent meeting of the Meigs Girl
Scout servll,'e umt held at the Meigs Inn.
Mrs . Pat Thoma, servit'e unit director and Mrs. Dee
Lawrence, district Black Diamond representative, presented
proposals for the award system which were accepted by the
leaders .
It was decided that the judging for the Meigs County Fair
will take place m J une. A bl ue- rosette will be given to the
outstandmg g1~l of each troop with the selection to be made by
the troop members. From the troop outstandi ng scouts, an
outstandmg g1rl from each level will be selected to receive a
trophy. This judging will be done by the service team .
From these three girls will he selected one to recei ve the
county outstanding scout award. This judging will he by people
·
from outside the count v.
Outstanding troops on the three levels will also be selected
and then from these one outstanding troop will he named t~
receive a revolving trophy.
It was also decided during the meeting that a banner should
be used at each booth and these, too, will be judged. A display
of day camp materi als will also be on exhibit at the Meigs
County fair with Mrs. Thoma to arrange it. Mrs. Shirley Cogar
was named chairman of the trophy committee.
SYRACUSE BROWNIE TROOP 1120
Plans to march in both the Middleport and Pomeroy
Chnstmas parades were made at a recent meeting of the
Brow.nies. A Thanksgiving projeci was Worked on during t he
meetmg. Angle Grueser had the pledge·, Micheiie Harris, the
p,romise, and Jayne Ann Williams served the re!reslunents.
SALISBURY TROOP 1100 Scouts of Troop 1100 went to Veterans Memori al Hospital
Tuesday to present " worm" fa vors to Mrs. Teresa Collins,
supervisor of nurses, for the trays of patients.
·
· They then went to Meigs High School for a meeting and planned for an investit ure for new members. The troop will march
in the Pomeroy Christmas parade. Plans were made to go
caroling. at the Veterans Memorial Hospital arid the Meigs
County Infirmary. Refreshments were served by Kim Roush
and Valerie Simpson.
SYRACUSE .nJNIOR TROOP 1204
A tour of the Burger Chef was taken by t he Syracuse Junior
Troop this week. They were joined by several members of the
Cadette Troop for the outing. In the group were Paula
Winebrenner, Kim Cogar , Alicia Van Meter , Jayne Goode, Ji ll
Nease, Kim Adams, Terri Roush, Tarnmi Theiss, Sherri e
,
Sisson , and Tracy Hubbard.
Accompanying the group were Sherri e Cogar, Dorinda Cun ningham , Susan Jett , Shirley Coga r, Ca rol Adams, J oyce
Sisson and Samantha.
· Sunday the junior scouts will serve as ushers lor the Junior
Miss Pageant at Meigs Junior High School.

Nine Southern Ohio
girls to compete for
Junior
Miss
title
'
Nine high school semor
girls from Southern Ohio will
compete for two Junior Miss
titles Sunday at the Meigs
Junior
High
school
a udlt'o rhim, Middleport,
starting at 3:15p.m.
' Those participating are :
Mis s
Carol
Morris,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Carl Morris, Route 1, Long
Bottom, a senior at
Southern High School and is
sponsored by the Racine
Home National Bank.
Miss, Lori Chapman,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Chapman, Syracuse,
sponsored by The City Loan
of Pomeroy.
Miss
Sherri
Rishel,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
James Rishel , Route 2,
McArthur, sponsored by the
Elliott
Appliance
II,
Pomeroy.
Miss Becky Crow, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Crow,
Racine, sponsored by the
Meigs Inn of Pomeroy.
· Miss Debbie Pickens,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Carl Vanover and Mr. and
Mrs. Eller Pickens, Syracuse
and Racine, sponsored by the

Meigs Inn of Pomeroy.
Miss Janis Carnahan,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
James Carnahan, Racine,
sponsored by the . Racine
Home National Bank.
. Miss Doll ie
Rousey ,
Pomeroy, daughter of Mr.
Hugh Rousey and grand&lt;laughter of Mrs. Katherine
Millikan, sponsored by the
Meigs Inn Pizza Shack,
Pomeroy.
Miss Belinda McGraw ,
daughter of Mrs. Laura
McGraw, Racine, sponsored
by the Francis Florist of
Pomeroy .
Miss Cindy Patterson ,
daughter of Mr . and Mrs.
Corbett Patterson, Syracuse,
sponsored by the Racine
Home National Bank.
Advance tickets are on sale
at The New York Clothing
House and the Meigs Inn,
besides ail contestants.
Advance student is $1 , advance adult, $1.25; door ·student is $1.50 and door
adult , $1.75. ·
The Junior Miss program is
sponsored by the Southeast
Ohio Junior Miss, Inc., a non·
profit organization.

Eastern honor roll

.
Scott Van Meter .
Tenth Grade : "A" honor
roll - Melanie Root, Tracl
Sayre, Marcie Sexson; "B"
honor roll - Brenda Ballard,
Richard Bearhs, Tammy
Curtis, Brett Matthews, April
Parker, Beth Riebel, Brenda
Rucker , Tammie Starcher ,
Ray Werry.
Eleventh Grade : " A"
honor roll - Becky Edwards;

'

·992-2115

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THIS WEEK'S
LIVE ENTERTAINMENT

THE MEIGS INN

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3 Piece Band From
From Fredericktown, Ohio

The Gift of Year-Round Pets
HEATH

R edwood

W~lLlD lB~RD

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Dance from 10:00 til 2:00
'

ALL LEGAL BEVERAGES SOLD

• Large Seed Capacity with Ease
o f Load ing
e f'Aod ern Des ig n to Compliment
Your Grounds

\

•Redwood Cons tru ctio n

Get Out and
Have A Good Time At

THE
INN·PLACE

5 LB. WILD BIRD SEED

THE MEIGS INN

WITH PURCHASE OF ANY
HEATH WILD BIRD FEEDER

PH. 992-3629

Ofler Good thru November 30, 1978

POMEROY, 0.

MODERN SUPPLY

399 W. Main Street 992-2164
Pomeroy, 0 .
The Store With "Ali Kinds of Stuff"
For Pets - Stables - large and Small
Animai.s. Lawns - Gardens.

..

---~I.

'

r------..-..,. •

Judges named for junior Miss
Social
I
·
I
Ralph H. Werry, president, Television. She Is a member boa rd to the Education
Ohio Junior Miss, of the Middleport Business Department at Ohio Northern
1 Calendar I Southeast
Inc., today · aiUiounced the and . Professi onal Women's University in Ada , Ohi o. .

I Gtr~, ~~~~~"'~!ary I

m
·
g

to

I

Miami's 33-13 win over Kent
State last Saturday, gaining
165 yards in 'll carries and
Scoring four touchdowns.
"Hunter does everything
for us," said Reed. "He runs,
passes, catches passes and
returns punts and kickoffs.
But he is also a good
blocker."
" We're Ve ry concerned
about Hunter ," said Staub.
"He is a fine back who has
breakaway speed . We 'll have
to contain him."
Much of Staub'~ h~es of
containing Hunter, along with
quarterback Larry Fortner,
rest with senior middle guard
Howie Kurnjck.
"Howie is the best middle
guard in the country," said

dominated by freshmen and
sophomoces, points to expertence as the reason for his
team's improvement.
" Th e fres hmen are no
longer freshmen," said
Staub .
One of his top first-year
players is running back Allen
H11rvin , a 5-9, 190-pound
fr eshman from New Jersey,
who went over the 1,000 yard
rushing mark in the OU
game.
"We're very happy with
Alien " said Staub "he's
come' on strong. He r~ns well
and catcbes it well. He's
really a fine football player."
Miami counters with junior
Mark Hunter, who had his
biggest game of the year in

Tiebreaker set Sunday

p ro 1
Local NFL II------------,
predictions IStandings I

r-·-·:--·-·-----7----,

5- The Daily S!'ntind, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Friday, Nov . 17, 1978

-

· The Eastern Junior and
&amp;nior High School honor roll
has been announced for the
first nine week grading
period.
Named to the roll were:
Seventh Grade : '' A" honor
roll - Randall Bahr; " B"
honor roll - Rick Barton,
Shelly Bearhs, William Call, "B" honor roll - Donna
Cathy Chichster, Gregory Bennett, Todd Bissell, Jim
Collins, Ann Diddle, Paul . Osborne, Laurie P,rovence,
Harris, Aaron Parker, Tim Teresa Spencer , Sheila
Probert , An gela Rhodes, White, Lila Young.
'
Pamela
Riebel ,
Lori
Twelfth Grade: "A" honor
Robinson, Meli ssa Scar-. roll - Cindy Pitzer, Karen
,brough, Ray Smith, Scott Probert, Diane Rice, Dawn
Sorden, Debbie Spencer ,
'Upton .
Eighth Grade : "A" honor Rusty Wigal; "B" honor roll
roll - Ed Werry; "B" honor - Kay Balderson, Shiriy
:roll : Becky Ambrose, Bennett, Joe Boyles, Barbara
~ athan Boatright,
Lisa Buchanan, Debbie Durst, Jeff
Colllns, Lawrence Collins, Goebel, Dave Hedrick ,
;JuUe Elberlield, David Gaul, Randy Keller, Lawrence
:Mark Holter, Deron Jewett , Pollen, Besty Riffle, Sherrie
~It Justice, Pam Murphy, Starcher, Vida Weber.
',Rhonda Riebel, Jeff Sbrivers,
Diana Smith, Tina Spencer,
Brian Well.
(.. Ninth Grade: u A" honor
'roil - Sarah Goebel , Terry
SPEAKER SET
lioowden, Tammy Spencer;
The Rev . Sammy Davis
l''B"
honer
roll- John
will be speaker at a
,Beaver, Carolyn Bowen ,
missionary service to be held
:Sheryl
Bush, , Alison
at the Pomeroy Wesleyan
•Cauthern, Brian Connolly,
Holiness Church at 7:30 p.m.
cScott Dillon, Dee Durst, Mike
Sunday. The pastor, the Rev.
:Hauber, Crystal Jacobs,
Dewey King, invites the
'Margery Myers , Renee
Riebel, Charles Ritchi e, public.
•

••

•

II

Navyman Robert Tobin

Navyman Robert
Tobin transfers
ETN -3 Robert R. Tobin,
Jr ., sun of the late Robert R.
Tobin, Sr., and Mrs. Bess
Hendricks, Middleport , was
home on leave r cccn,tl y prior

to his transfer to Pew·J Ha r·
bor from,Great I .akes, Mich .
A di nner was given in hi s
honor Sundav by his mother
and his gra ndmother, M1·s.
Neva Gary, who was visiting
here from Colwnbus. Attending the dinner were his
sisters , Mrs. Terr i Smith,
Tina Hendricks, Mrs . Barbara Huffman, her husband,
Kenneth, and their son, Bobby. Also attending were his
brotl)er, Arthur , I.ar ry Hen-

dr icks, Mr , a nd Mrs. Roger
Carpenter and their sons,

Roger, Jr., and Greg.
After the dinner, Navyman
Tobin was presented his
Christma s gifts . Oth e•·s
visiting were Mr. ami Mrs.
Harrv Roush and children.
Harry, Jr . Samantha and
Sa ra Beth.
Anoth e r d inn e r for
Navyman Tobin was hosted
by Mr. and Mrs. Hoffman and
attended by the immediate
family. Robert has anothe1·
brother Thom~ s Ray, sta tioned with the U. S. Navy at
Groton, Conn .
1

Guests of Sew-Rite Club
Two forme r members,
Joyce Blankenship and
Ja cki e Butler were guests at
a recent meeting of the &amp; wRite-Sewing Club held at the
Fairview Heights home of
Mrs. Lucy White.
Mrs. Nettie Boyer presioed
at the business meeting with
Mrs. Evelyn Gilmore giving
the secreta ry 's report. A
white elephant sale will be
held at the next meeting at
the home of Mrs. Jon i Hoff.

five judges for the 1978-79
.' RIDAY
Southeast Ohio Junior Miss
EV ANGE LI NE
CH AP- Finals to be held Sunday,
TER, Order of Eastern Star, Nov. 29, at the Meigs Junior
potluck dinner, 6 p.m. Friday high sc hool a uditor ium ,
at temple; take own table ljliddleport, beginning at 3:15
serv ice.
p.m.
Th e judges are: Mrs.
SPECIA L ME E TING , Beck y Gilmore Kinge ry,
Eastern Local School District Point Pleasant ; Mrs. Janet
Board of Education, 6:30p.m. Korn, Pomeroy; Ri.chard 1..
Frida y at the high school
Johnson, Ada; Mr. Ronald
WRITING WORKSHOP for Vance, Middleport, and John
those with questions about Zell~ Russell Point.
writing family history for t he
Mrs . Kingery received her
Meigs History book, 7 p.m. B.S.
in
Elementa r y
Friday in the Lon g ·Bottom Educati on fr om Ma rshall
Methodist Church basement. Universit y. She has studied
MARCHING BAND Con- dancin~ for fourt een years at
ce rt Friday, 8 p.m. in t he Suzanne Ri ce Da nce
Southern
High Schoo l Studio, Charleston, W. Va.,
auditorium, Racine: public appeared in Gallia Country at
the Bob Evans Farms, was
invited.
REVIVAL
AT
MT. Miss Mason Co unty , Mason
HERMON U.S. Church 7:30 County Fair Queen, finalist in
p.m. through Nov . 26., Hev the Miss Marshall University
Richard Jam es, Bell efon - Pageant , and was in the Miss
taine as evangelist. Special West Virginia Pageant, a
music by Gospel tones and preliminary to the Miss
others. Rev. James Lea ch, America P a geant. She
graduat ed fr om Wahama
pastor , invites the public.
lligh School where she was
BAKE SALE beginning 9 head majorette. While ata .m. Friday at Trinity tending Marshall University,
by
Chur ch, Pomer oy,
she. was a majorette and is
Auxili a ry of Veterans married to Attorney Donald
Memorial Hospital.
C. Kingery.
SATURDAY
Mrs. Korn has been in radio
SPECI AL MEETING, lor 15 years. She se rved as
Shade River Lodge 453,
bookkeeper and secretary in
F&amp;AM, 7:30 p.m. Saturday.
addition to being hostess of
Work in Ma ster Mason
her own program , "Coffee
degr ee and all Master
with Janet 11 fot seven' years,
Maso ns invited.
with W.M.P.O. in Middleport.
MISCELLANEOliS Shower She served as sales
for Jim and Mary Wyant . representative for WJEH in
Heming, whose home was Gallipolis, with an office in
destroyed by fi re, 7:30 Satur- Point Pleasant, and hostess
day night at the Pageville of another talk prog ram,
Town Hal l. Com mun ity "Mid Day at the Point " for
shower, household items eight years. Janet has served
needed.
as a judge of pageant lor the
MEIGS COUNTY Retired Point Pleasant Jaycees and
Teachers Association , Sa tur· has served as a judge for the
day noon at the Meigs Inn . Meigs County Junior Miss
Luncheon , business meeting Pageant and the Southeast
and guest speaker; Miss Ann Ohio Junior Miss Finals, as
Bradbury, Gallipolis. Reser- well as being a judge of the
vations to be made by Tues- Farm Bureau Dairy Pr incess
day at 992-5345 or 992-5123.
fof several years, she was a
SALISB URY PTO , annual member of The American
fa ll carnival. Serving to begin Women in Radio and
at 5 p.m. Saturday , count1·y
store and bazactr to open

man .

Games were played with
prizes going to Mrs. Shi riev
Baity and Mrs. Gilmore .
Refr eshments were served

by the hostess to those named
and Mrs. Pandora Collins,
Mrs. Betty Wehrung, Mrs.
Ma rtha
· Hoffman , Mrs .
Lenora McKn ight, and Mrs.
F lo Stri ckland. The annual
Christma s party will be held
at the Meigs Inn , Dec. 13.

Rocky Hupps honored by
housewarming shower

C~ l

EDITH SPENCER
Mrs. Edith Spencer, Main
St. , Middleoorl, is confined to
her home. She recently broke
her ankle in a !all at her
home . Visits from friends and
relatives will be appreciated
by Mrs. Spent-er.

many positions. As a member

l

• Euy-VIew Surface Unit
controls
• Broiler-router Pan

Now Only

$349

. Mr. Vance received his B.S.
in Mathematics !rom Salem
College, Salem, W. Va:; M.A.
in Education Administration
from West Virginia College of
Graduate Studies, Institut e,
W. Va. He is a former
mathematics instructor at
Wahama High School and
vision. Part of Johnson's presently is assistant princi pa l at Wahama High
grat.lu.::~.te work was done in
School.
Vance is vice
schools on London, England .
chair
person
o(
Maso n
He taught fo r 15 years in
Co
unty
's
Pr
ofessio
na l
the Maumee , 0 ., city schools
Education
Coun
cil,
is
a
before takmg his present
pos ition as principa l a t former member of the Meigs
Hardin Northern School m Count y Jaycees and has
Hardin County. Johnson is a · judged the Jun ior Miss
past member of the Maumee programs for two years.
Jaycees where he served in
df the Toledo Barber Shop
Smgers and other musical
organizations, J ohnson has
be en involved in many
musica l programs , as a
partic ipant , acco mpani st ,
a nd-or di rector . He · is
presently a member of the
O hi o Ed .u cation a i
As s oc i a t i on , O h io
Association of Elementary
Schoo l Principals, Phi Kappa
Tau, Phi Delta Kappa, and a
member of t he advisor y

.,

.

,.-.---·--~- · ._..-..-

Excellence in I
Design and
Quality I

l
Pomeroy l
Flower 1

1
1

lI

Shop

1,
1

I

Mrs. Mi ll ard \
Va nM eter

I
i
t,..._.._.._..__.._.._,.__..._..._. r

I
I

'

Y9nOJY
or 99'l -57t l

Me and my

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MlLLSTREET
Middleport , Ohio.
992-3542 or 992 -3344

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No mu ss · no fuss - no
need to tear off your
roof to renew &amp; insulate
slate, metal , shingle or
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MIDDLEPORT, 0.

four years.

6

•Glass 'window In oven
door

THANKSGIVING POTLUCK
There will be a Thanksgiving potluck and fellowship
Sunday morning at the Bradbury Church of Christ follo wing the worship service.
Members are to take a
covered dish and their own
ta ble service.

Johnson has been a judge for
the Junior Miss programs for

p.m. and games at 6:30 p.m.
SUNDAY
,
REORGANIZED CHURCH
of Jesus Christ of Latter Day day, 7 p.m . room visitation ;
Saints. potluck dinner im· 7:30 p.m. progra m by Meigs
mediately following the wor- County juvenile officer, and
ship se r vice Su nda y . business meetinl:! .
Members are to take a
covered dish.
MONDAY
COUNTY WIDE prayer
RACINE Elementary PTO
meeting, 2 p.m. Sunday at the 7:30 p.m. Monday at the
Hobson Church of Ghrist in school. Parents of sixth
Christian Union with Glen graders · wiii serve refreshBissell, class leader .
ment s and babysitting serBILL HAYMAN, Leon, W. vices will be provided.
Va., will preach at House of
TUESDAY
Pra yer, Locu st St. , Mi dHARRISONVI LLE Sen ior
dleport, 7:30p.m. Sunday.
Citizens
Club
r eg ular
meeting and Th anksgiving
MONDAY
observance, Tuesday , 7 p.m.
JEWELRY FASHIO N in the town house at
show sponsored by Constant Harrisonville. Pumpkin pie
Builders Class , Ra cin e and coffee to be served.
Wesleyan Methodist Church,
7:30 p.m. Monday at church
ann ex; public is invited.

Gloria Jean Manuel and Mrs.
Russell Roush.
Mr. and Mrs. Hupp are still
receiving gifts from friends
and neighbors.
CANDY STRIPERS,
Attending were Mrs. Gloria
Vetera ns Memorial Hospital,
Jean Manuel, Mrs. Arnold 7 p.m. Monday at the hospital
Hupp, Mrs. Flossie Bush, cafete ria . All members
Mrs. Lawrence Bush , Mrs. should attend, new members
Russell Roush and Cindy, are welcome.
Mrs. Herbert Roush, Mrs.
MEIGS COUNTY SALON
Dorsa Parsons, Mrs. Bob 71'0, Eight and Forty, Monday
Roush, Mrs. Edith Manuel, at the home of Mrs. Harry
Thanksgiving supper Mrs.
Eula Wolfe , Mrs. Iva Davis, 7:30 p.m. Take sunOrr, Mrs. Gary Wilford and shine items and food for a
hosted by Mrs. Lee children, Shirley Belt, Mrs. basket for a needy family.
Gertie Manuel.
TUESDAY
Mrs. Vazie Lee hosted a
The refreshments of a cake
COUNT Y OFFI CE RS
Thanksgiving supper at her decorated with white Icin g
home Tuesday evening for 20 with fruit fl owers and Grange meeting , 7:30 Tuesguests fr om the Racine Bap- pumpkin, coffee and punch day at the Rock Sprinqs
Grange Hall.
tist Church.
were served.
SALISBURY PTO. TuesFollowing the dinner a prooram was given with Wanda·
Powell telling of the origin of
thanksgi ving. The group
divided into three groups to
dramatize Bible characters.
There was a song by Mrs.
Grella Simpson and Mrs.
Helen Slack. Ronald Salser
and Harry Pickens conducted
games, there was a Bible
spell down , and ali of the
gue s t s t ook p art in
" predicament~ and cures."
Th e Rev . Don Walk er
presented "Smiles" and the
• Automatic Cook-Master
program .conclud ed with
Oven Control
··can You Remember ?''.
APPLE GROV E - A
housewarming shower was
held recently for Mr. and
Mrs .
Rocky
Hupp
(newlyweds) at their home at
Portland . Ho stesse s were
Mrs. Sharon Hupp and
Brenda Lawrence.
Games were played with
prizes going to Mrs. Eula
Wolfe, Mrs. Herbert Roush,

Club where recently she was
chosen Woman of the Week.
She is a member of Sacred
Hea rt Church, Pomeroy.
Mr. Johnson is a native of
Sa !em, Ohio , graduatin g
from Salem High School,
Bow ling
Gr een
State
University with a B.S. in
Education and from Toledo
University with an M.A. in
Administration and Super-

PHONE 992-2444

93 7TH AVE.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

�\

6- The Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pum••nw n . F1idav . Nov . 17, 1978
10:3()-0afly Duck 3. 15; Movie "Fighting Trouble" 4;
Tarzan-Super-7 8.10.
11 :0()-Vogl 's Space Race 3,15; Fangface 13; Point of
VIew 6.
11 :3()-LIItle Rascals 4; NFL Game of the Week 6;
Action News for 14ids 13.
12 : 0()-Fa~~lous Funnies J, 15; Weekend Special 6, 13; .
Movie The Bravados" 4; Space Academy•8, 10.
12:3()-Bay C•ty Rollers 3, 15; College Foolball6,13; Fat
FRIDAY , NOVEMBER 11,1971
Albert 8. 10.
4:3()-Bewllched 3; Gilligan's Is. 4,8 ; tlrodv Bunch 10;
12:4s-College Football 6, 13.
Petticoat Junction 15.
1:0()-Famous Claulc Tales 3; Ark Ill; In The Know
5:0()-Sior Trek 3; Star Trek 4; Beverly Hillbillies 8;
10; PTL Club 15;. Oasis In Space 33.
Mister Rogers' NeighborhOOd 20.33; Gomer Pyle,
1:3()-Show My People 8; Hogan's Heroes 10; Con.
USMC 10; Emergency One 13; Brody Bunch 15.
sumer Survival Kit 33.
5:JG-News 6; Sanford &amp; Son B; -Eiec. Co. 20,33; Marv
2:0()-Big
Blue Marble 3; Movie " LIII" 4; Viewpoint 8;
Tyler Moore 10; Odd Couple 15. .
Movie
"Muscle
Beach Party" 10; When The Boat
6:0()-News 3,4.8,10, 13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33,
Comes In 33.
·
6:3()-NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Carol Burnell &amp;
2:3()-Thls Is The NFL 3; Movie "The Count of Monte ·

TELEVISION
VIEWING

Friend~ A ~

r"RC. N•w-. 11.10: Over Easy 20.

Cristo " 8.

7:0()-Cross-Wits 3; PM Magazine 4; Newlywed Gam•
6.13; News 10; Love, American Style 15; Consumer
Survival Kit 20; Big Blue Marble 33.
7:3()-Hee Haw Honeys 3; Dating Game4; $1.98 Beaufy
Show61 Family Feud 10; Bonkers 8; $100,000 Name
That Tune 13; Pop Goes The Country 15; MacNeilLehrer Report 20,33.
8 : 0()-Qiff'rent Strokes 3,4,15; Love Boat 6, 13; Slar
Wars Holiday Special 8, 10; Washington Week In
Review 20,33.
'8:3()-ROCkford Flies 3.4.15; Wall Street Week 20,33.
9:0()-Peorl 6,13; Congressional Outlook 20,33.
9:3()-Hall of Fame 3,4,15; Turnabout 20; Real People
33.
10 :0()-Fiylng High 8, 10; Nows20;Facesor Communism
33.
'
10:»-Monly Python's Flying Circus 20.
11 :0()-News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, 15; Dick Cavett 20; Soundstage 33.
11 :3()-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Bretta 13; Movie "South
of St. Louis" 6; Gunsmoke 8; Movie " The Curse of

3:0()-Star Trek 3; Wrestling 15; Elections '78 : 33.
3:3()-Movle "Gypsy Colt" 4.
4 :0()-Movle " Duel" 3; College Football 6,1 3; Nashville '
On The Road 10; Better Way 15; Where The
Twisted Laurel Grows 33.
4:3()-Sports Spec!acular 8; Pop Goes The Country 10;
Gilligan's Is. 15; Calch-33 33.
5:0()-Gong Show4; Dolly 10; Love, American Style 15;
The Long Search 20; Studio See 33.
5:3()-Cheap Show 4; Porter Wagoner 10; CliffwOOd
Ave. Kids 15; Freestyle 33.
6:0()-News 3,4,10; Gong Show 8; ; God Has l'he Answer 15; Crockelt's Victory Garden 20; Over Easy
33.
6:3()-NBC News 3,15; World War II : G.l. Diary 4;
Porter Wagoner 8; CBS News 10; Ohio Journal 20;
Life Around Us 33.
7:0()-Abbott &amp; Costello 3; Lawrence Welk 4, 13,-15; Hee
Haw 6,8; ; Bugs Bunn;y 10; Onedln Line 20; Sugar
In The Gourd 33.
7::!()-Cricket In Times Sq~are 3; Please Stand By 10;
World War II; G. I. Diary 33.
·
8:0()-Chlps 3,4,15; Bailie of the Network Stars 6;13;
Movie "The Bible" 8.10; Once Upon A Classic 20,33.
8:3()-Great Performances 20; Turnabout 33.
9:0()-PIIot "Frankie &amp; Annette" 3 A 15 • The. Lonq

Frankenstein" 10.

12 :0()-Monty Python 33; 12 :3()-Juke-Box 8.
12 :4()-lronslde 13; 1:0()-Midnlght Special 3,4, 15;
News 8; Movie "Dracula-Prlnce of Darkness" 10.
1:4()-News 13; 2:,JG-News 3.
3:0()-Movle "Love Has Many FAces" ·3.

Search 33.

5:00--Movle " Scream ot Fear" J.

•• •

10 :0()-Lifellne 3&lt;1,15; Fantasy Is. 6,13; Great Performances 20; Movie " Distant Thunder" 33.
11 :0()-News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, 15; News 8,10, 13, 15.
11 : 1s-ABC News 6.
11 :3()-Saturday Night Live 3,4,15; Movie "Shoot Loud,
Louder ... ! Don't Understand" 6; Movie " Paradise
Hawaiian Style" 8; Woody Hayes: Football 10;
College Football 13.
12 :0()-Movle " Three On A Couch" 10; Ripping Yarns

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 18,1978
6:0()-Sunrlse Semester 10; 6:3()-Saturdoy Report 3;
Vegel~ble Soup 4; TV Classroom 8; U.S. Form
Report 10; Kentucky AfleiQ 13. ,
7:0()-Go 3; Mario &amp; the Magic Movie Machine 4; Mr.
Magoo 8; Public Policy Forums 10; Animals,
Animals, Animals 13.
7:3o-Land of the Lost 3; World of Survlvol4; Dusty's
Treehouse 6; Porky Pig &amp; Friends 8; Pink Panther
13; V-Iable Soup 15.
8:0()-Galoxy Goofups 3,4, 15; Scooby's All-Stars 6, 13;
Popeye 8,10.
8:3()-Fantasllc Four 3.~.15; 9:0()-Godzllla 3,4,15;
Bugs Bunny-Road Runner 8. 10.
9: 3()-Superfrlen~s 6,13 ..

33..

1:0()-Movle "The Running Man " 3; Movie "King of
the Khyber Riffles" 4.
2:0()-Movle "Frankenstein's Bloody Terror" 13;
2:3()-News 3.
3:0()-Movle " Strait-Jacket" 3.
3:3()-Movle "The Astra Zombies" 13.
5:0()-Movle "Snake People" 3; ABC News 13.

..., .,.,

~~

...

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Nov . !7, 1978

CRYPTOQUOTES

by THOMAS JOSEPH
NYQ
LTGYHIT
BKTE
Y J T L
ACROSS
DOWN
DTHEA NYQEA,
MEP
EYV .HIT
·I Roast
1 JuatiflcaUon
5 Of a si111ing zWatchful
KYB
BTWW
NYQ
CTT W,
VKMV
group
3 " Land of the
11 Indonesian
Morning Calm"
H F
M A T . - G .Q W T F
L T E M L P
Island
fPrioriO
Yetlenlay'o Cryploquote: POWER IS A SUBSTITUTE FOR
12 Bandleader 5 Grade .rA beef
HAPPINESS , THAT'S WHY IT HAS NONE.-FRIEDRICH
Heidt
6 RJ:todeil8HEBBEL
13 Withered
land't motto
CiJ li78 Kiar Fea1u;..1 Syndicate, Inc.
7 Mlnllll find
14 "I'mYeolenlay's,ADiftr
suggestions'' 8 Sounded,
!0 Irish
Z8 Planlecl ,
15 Rage
as a bell
county
31 European
IS ReCline
9 Put into
Z3 Richard
river
-17Weapon
_ motion
Boone role 3Z Swindle
ReedsvUie Penoulo
Virginia Walton and Susie
II Inactive
Mr. and Mrs. Frederick were Mr . and Mrs. Leo
10 "Winter's Tale" !4 Windflower 33 Register
Bise of Hockingport are ·Haidet of Upland, Calif. and
20 Layer
Z5 Prospective 35 Head
king
announcing the birth of a friends , Due. and Marie of
of paint
16 Symbol
buyer:
38 Family
21 Pothouse
of purity
slang ·
member daughter, Therese Dawn, Columbus. Mr. and Mrs. Jim
weighing 6 lbs., 15 oz. born at Cowdery and family were
specialty
19 Tote
%1' Clanuny
38 Dilly
Caniden-Clark
hospltpl, Oct. Sunday dinner guests.
22 Old
31. Maternal grandparents
Mrs. Mabel Hetzer is
instrwnent
IT;-+-t-+--+-+--1
'
are
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Brice
visiting
with Mr. and Mrs.
23 Buddyb.-+-+-tRoberts, Hockingport, and Arthur H!![zer at Belle, W.
buddy
parental grandparents . are Va .
2i Fruits
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Bise of
Susie Cowdery went to see
Reedsville . Great - &amp;nnie Milsap at Veterans
271ndigo
grandparents · are Mr. and Memorial Auditorium at
plant
Mrs. Mellie Parsons of Columbus.
28 Medit. isHockingport
and Mrs. Mabel
Mr. and Mrs. John Calaway
land : abbr .
Hetzer
of
Reedsville.
and
family of Marion visited
29 Assess
&amp;ott
Foster was recently with Mrs. Yirginia Walton
30 Appear
bonored with a party on his and Susie this weekend.
34 Soul: Fr.
12th birthday. Guests In Mrs. Bess Webster of
35 Vitality
cluded Brian Reed, Beth Tuppers Plains spent a day
36 Sweetie pie 1;;;:-t-+--tBerkhimer, Angie Collins , with Mrs. Gladys Williams.
37 Thingama.
Kevin Griggs, Michael
Mrs. L. Balderson
jig
t:;-;c-t--1Martin, Anita Reed, and
Sarah and Sibyl Foster and
39 Sulk
Mrs. Mabel Hetzer, Mrs.
40 Instinctive
Mary Allee Bise and Mrs.
41 "Picnic" IA:::-t-+--t...,_t-+Dolores Foster. Games were
playwright rnr-+-t-+--t-tST. WUIS (UPI) - The St.
enjoyed with Angie Collins,
421Wqtiired
Louis
Cardinals Thursday
Kevin Griggs and Scott
43 Equal
upgraded
the status of
winning prizes. Gifts were
presented to Scott and rwmlng back Jim Otis from
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it: refreshments were served to doubtful Ia questionable for
AXYDLBAAXR
Sunday's
game
in ·
the guests.
Is LONGFELLOW
Mrs. Eva Miller . of Washipgton against the
Redskins.
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is Hockingport and Mr. and
Otis, who leads the
Mrs.
Frank
Bise
visited
with
used lor 'the three L's, X lor the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all Mr . and Mrs. Denver Brown Cardinals in rushing with 534
yards in 1M carries, has a leg
hints. Each day the code letters are diiTerent.
at Lancaster.
Visiting recently with Mrs. injury.

675-1490

POINT PLEASANT
.

CL.OSE·OUT PRICES
.

.

BUY A USED AU·T OMOBILE OR TRUCK
,&gt;

,.

''

AT A .REDUCED PRICE. WE'RE LOWERING
30 DA l 50·50 WARRANTY ON MOST USED CARS

was 2495
1

'

'2295

was 2395

Ten and dk. bro..-n, wire wheel covers, cruise, flit

wheel , air, AM-FM, 17,000 miles

1977 CHRYSLER CORDOBA
Dk. green, 2-dr., low miles, Air Auto, PS, PB, cruise,
AM-FM Stereo

I
'

•

•

'4950

1977 FORD MUSTANG COBRA

1979 FORD LTD II

1976 FORD COUNTRY SQUIRE

Jade green, Aulo, air , PS, PB, low miles, AM-FM, wire

Station wagon, while, low miles, auto, air, PS, PB, AM .
One Owner

wheel covers

A Very Sharp Qr

$AVE

1975 PONTIAC LeMANS

was 12995

..

•2895

While, 57,000 miles, auto, PS, PB, AM· FM radlo, .local

owner

was 12995

.

'2895

'

SHARP USED TRUC-KS
''

'
''

'3895
. '3495
'2195
'2695
'1295

WEDNESDAY, NOV. 22
.

'
i

'3295
'4695
'4895
'2595
'4595

Crafty

•

•

Ladies Handicraft

See- lob Crosswhite· lobby Roush· lllllOieJ'Hoss
OPEN 'MONDAY • FRIDAY 9:00 • 7:00 SATURDAY 9:00 • 5:00 .
I

l

OCT. 30, 1978

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

'

1975 FORD COURIER • green
1977 FORD.F·100 • red
1978' FORD '·100 CUSTOM • blue
1975 FORD F-100 RANGER ·· dk. blue
1976 FORD' RANCHERO • lt. blue

IS STILL TAKING
APPLICATIONS FOR CLASSES
STARTING

SALE PRICES GOOD THRU

•

'1977 FORD F-100 • lt. blue
1976 FORD F-250 • green
1975 FORD COURIER • yellow
1975 FORD F-250 • silver
1972 FORD F-100 • areen

Comer

Stop In and
Register To Win

'

•

'
•'

1

ON All MACRAME, ART
SUPPLIES, DECOUPAGE,
BEADS, ETC.

'4495

was 14695

GALLIPOLIS BUSINESS
COLLEGE

1- The Poet's '

STOREWIDE
SALE PRICES

$AVE

1978 FORD T·BIRD

2-dr, while, 20,000 miles, Auto, PS, PB. AM RlidiO

'4195

$AVE

$AVE

lt•s NOT
TOO LATE!

POLLY'S POINTERS

.Dk. Blue, 4-dr., '30 mllea, PS, PB, AM Radio, tinted
glass, 351 , Air, body slda moldings

1975 PLYMOUTH SCA.,P ,

Block, 4-Speed, AM-FM, I Owner

was 14395

'1995

Green, while landau top, olr PS., PB., AM-FM stereo, 1
Owner. Exceptionally Nice.

$AVE

'

'

1977 FORD LTD

1978 FORD T·BIRD

was.15195

Black, grey Int., 2-&amp; ., 4,000 miles, Save on lhlsllke new
car

'

1

that
Father's Night will he observed in January with fa lhers tu
count two and if they take
part in the program to count
three.
The room count was won by
the first grade. It was proposed by Mrs. Roa ch that the
awa rd go from $5 to $10.
There was a program on income tax by Mary Keebler.
Door prizes went to l.ela h
Haggy, Kathy Cleland, Grace
Olaney, Joan Wears, and
Joan Ward.
RefreshmenLli were served
by the fourth and fifth grade
mothers .

DALE'S KITCHEN
CENTER, INC.

1978 FORD LTD II

Yellow, black lnl., 4-speed, 53,000 miles

Silver, red Int., auto, air, 'local owner

93 pa1tl members.
It was announced

A potluck Thanksgiving
dinner hosted by Mrs. Harry
Moore was held Tuesday
night preceding a meeting a
meeting of Group II of the
Middleport Presbyterian ,__________________..,.
1
Church.
The meeting opened with
the group reading the poem,
"The Cross in my Pocket. "
Mrs. Moore had devotions
which included a prayer from
an even number of each size. Dally Word , and the prayer
- HELEN
.' 'Triulogy" by Winifred
Polly will send you une of Brand. Mrs . Kathryn Miller
. JENNIFER COUCH, a Pomeroy Elementary School
her sign ed . thank-you ga ve "The Fuliness of Life"
fow1h grader and active member of the Junior American
newspaper coupon clippers if from the book, Circle of
Legion Auxiliary , presented an apple 10 her teacher,
s he uses your favorite Prayer, as the least coin ofPolly Cramer
Marjorie Gibbs.
·
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in fe:\flg was being taken up.
her column. Write POl~LY'S
f1!rs. Mlldred Karr had the
POINTERS in care of this lesson entitled " What is
and dust catching scarves. newspaper.
Looking for
Salvation'' from the book,
Audioos; thrift shops and
"The Christian's Answer to
scarf
sets
garage sales would be good
~--------,
Life's
Urgent Problems"
places to find such sets.
'D
·
h
d
,
with
Mrs.
Gladys Cununin9s
DEAR POLLY - I wonder Beautiful embroidered one
own
tn
t
e
umps
giving the prayer.
if you or any of the readers often seli for a song. - POLOthers attending were Mrs.
could teil me where I can buy
Lennie Haplonstall , Mrs.
L1EAR
POLLY
_
I
have
-quite
literally
dresser scarf sets for my
Faye Wallace, Mrs. Vdma
bedroom furniture. I was something lo add tu the ·
Rue, Mrs. Ethel Lowery,
I AM THANKt' UL
raise din the days when they Pointers about getting food
Mrs.
Mildred Bailey, Mrs.
out of cans. For years I have
IOWA CITY, Iowa (UP!)I am thankful to our were always used.
Martha
Anderson, Mrs.' Kate
opened cans of cranberrv When Proctor and Gamble
ANGELINE
Saviour
Brown,
and Miss Kathryn
DEAR ANGELINE - I, sauce, tamales and even dog makes a mistake producing HyselL Mrs. Patricia McCarFor the gift of His great love,
Aild the promise He has given too, was raised in that era . food at one end andturned the toothpaste, it can he a big ty and Mrs . Celeste Bush
Classes being offered can be applied
Of a Home with Him above. When I . discovered the can upside down in a bowl. one.
were
guests.
Mrs.
Moore
"We do make batches in
toward your diploma. G.B.C. is a
I am thankful for aU blessings beautiful wood in most table Open the other end and use
presented each member with
He has given here below, and dresser lops; I joined the the lid as a pusher su the food pretty good size lots - a t't!ramie shepherd boy
college with you in mind. We can
Thankful Jor rain and sun- crowd and forgot those dirt can he pushed out in one several thousand pounds," which she and Mrs. Bailey
give you the training that you need
piece. This is so simple to do. company spokesman Joe
shine
had made.
-JENNIFER
qualify for the job of your future .
to
Segretti
says.
"So,
when
we
Which has made our crops to
DEAR
POLLY
I
have
have
to
dispose
of
the
batch,
We have more calls from employers
grow.
found the perfect way lo keep it means several thousand
in the area for our graduates, than
me.
MEETING SET
the burners on my eleciric pounds. ·we make about aU
I am thankf!ll for our family ,
we have graduates.
The regular meeting of the
For each neighbor and each 0, it seems I cannot mention range clean. I bought flat the toothpaste for Crest that's
aluminum
lids
the
Gallia
Jackson
size
of
the
Meigs
shipped
west
of
the
friend,
All the things I'm thankful burners. While I am cooking I Mississippi.''
Community Health and
Thankful for the acts of . for,
Mental Retardation "648"
Join the employables, take the first
c'Over
the
burners
not
being
The
company
recently
obkindness,
But I want to keep on living used with the lids and only tained permission from the Board will be held monday,
step. Enroll at G.B.C., receive your
On their love I can depend.
For our Lord thru peace and have to clean the top of the state Department of Environ· November 20, at the ComI am thankful that thru
marketable skills and then the jobs
stove. I am saved a lot of lime mental Quality to dump up to munity Mental Health
illn
war.
.. We aU have a lot of problems, - it is troublesome lu clean 10,000 pounds of toothpaste Center, Gallipolis, beginning
ess,
will come to you .
There are places folks can go Many things to make us sad, those pesky burners , per day in the Iowa City at 7:30p.m.
To rece1ve good care as But if w~l1!7P tr usting Jesu~ •. e~peci~lly · after frying Sanitary Landfill.
needed,
.
He'll revive and make us something in a skillet.- WRB.Z. .Karachiwala, cliief of
And relief from pam and w~e .
glad.
POISE
GOLD EN ACCENI
RAINE
permits for the DEQ, said his
- By Mrs. Riley Pigott
DEAR POLLY - In the department limited the two reasons.
G ua ra nt e~d by Keepsake
··I am thankful for the Chur"Well, if it's a bad batch,
elementary school where I company to dumping up to
for perfect clarit y, pr ecise
· ches
then
obViously we don't want
teach, we must lllllke bulletin 10,000 pounds per day
c ut. fine white co lor_ PerWhich are in our neighboranybody
10 be using that,
boards each month . To because
the
toothpaste
m anenlly registered .
A BEAUTIFUL DREAM
hood,
we
say anything we
because
preserve
'my
lettter
andcontains
sodium
flouride,
Law-a-way
And for aU who take an in- I dreamed that I was stansell
or
give
away Is of the
rats
·
when
which
kills
number
patterns,
I
trace
Plans Sufficient
ding
terest
highest quality," he said.
administered
in
large
quaneach
one
on
•
plastic
lid
For Any Type
In the things that's pure and Outside the old church door, (from coffee cans, margarine tities. But humans face no
His company also dwnps
A crowd was in the churchgood.
· Gift
if it is produced
toothpaste
tubs, etc .) and then cut them danger from the deposits, he
yard,
I am thankful for the serexperimentally,
he said, heLike there had heen before; out to use as needed. I nev,er said.
mons,
cause
"it
is
certainly
not in
"It would take 485 years for
I stepped out from the others, have to worry about a pattern
And
the
singing
on
TV,
our
minds
for
us
to
say
this is
being bent or worn out as they liquid to travel five feel"
1D"S
Which give praise unto our And gazed into the sky,
a
new
product
P&amp;G
is
ready
212 E . MAIN • POMEROY
The stars were brightly are really quite pennanenl. from the landfill, he said. to put on the market. In either
Saviour
Hope other teachers will find "Very few materials have
shining,
For His love '!ward you and
case, it 's a product we
this
helpful.- KATHY
that kind of persistence ."
Reg. No. 75.02.{)4728
And Heaven seemed so nigh.
DEAR POLLY - My Pel
Proctor and Gamble has certainly wouldn't want have
Peeve is that when I buy heen located at Iowa City used."
At once my mouth was
packages
of foil burner bibs, I since 1956, Segretti said, and
opened,
find they always include has
been
depositing
And God filled it with song,
toothpaste
in
doubles
of
the
smaller
size,
the
area
since.
A song of wondrous beauty,
such as eight small and four
"What we're doing is pretty
Not one smaU word was
large or four small and two much the same as we've
wrong,
large. AI; a result, I ac- always been/' he said. "This
Each word to me was given
cumulate
stacks of small represents no change in
As fast as I could sing,
ones. My four-burnewr stove procedure."
Each word gave joyful
He said Proctor and
has two small and two large
praises
burners so I would like to get Gamble dumps toothpaste for
To my dear Lord and King.

Q:..

•

1974 FORD MUSTANG

Mrs. Moore
hosts dinner

nuant't! of the bookmobile on
Jan . I and the need for the
sehoul to develope a library.
He suggested donation of
books and asked the PTA to
provide carpet for the room.
Mrs . Dorothy Ruach, president, appointed Jim Soulsby,
Martha Graves, and Juan
Ward to check into the price
and report at the next
meeting.
Boy Scouts of Troop 249 led
in the pledge and the Rev.
Wilham Knittle had prayer.
It was reported that $508.50
was lllllde on the ro:cent
Hallow""n carnival. Mrs.
Jim Souls by, membership
chairman, reported a total of

c::s9'

THE COST TO GIVE YOU A SUPER BUY.
1975 AMC PACER

Development uf a sehoul
library was discussed by
Robert Morris , Pomeroy
Elementary Sehoul principal,
at a meeting of the Pomeroy
PTA Munday ni ght.
Morris discussed discunti-

Reedsville News Notes

TWO RIVERS FORD, INC.
RT. 62 NORTH

Development of school library
discussed by Pomeroy PTA

·804 West Main St

•

Pome,oy, Ohio
992-2298

Then when it was completed,
A lady near the door
Told me "That song was
pretty
I've never heard it before;"
Nor have I ever heard it,
I said unto the throng,
But when my mouth was open
God filled it with a song.
That dream has been a
blessing
To me along life's way,
And God has really given
Sweet songs both night and
day,
But none of them has equaled
The song I sang that night
While I lay there a dreaming
Of Him and stars so briglit;
Nor have ! ·had such feelings
Of ecstasy and joy,
Uke I had while a dreaming,
Tho' time does not destroy
The memory of rapture
That filled my heart that
night, ·
'Twas like a taste of Heaven,
And God's Eternal Light.
But, when I reach that City,
With joy divine I'll sing
A song that's even sweeter
To my dear [.()rd and King;
I'll sing with saints and
angels
Upon the Golden Shore,
And then, I may remember
The song , I dreamed once

Pierced Ears

November 15 Thru November 18

FREE

35% OFF MARBLE TOPS
IN STOCK
ANY BASE IN STOCK
OR ORDER BASE OF YOUR
CHOICE 25% OFF LIST

With
Purchase of
EAR RINGS

24 Carat·
Gold

Riviera &amp; Kemper

Over
Surgical
Steel

Kitchen Cabinets
Check Our Extra
Savings On Do It
Your Self Kitchens

Company representative will be in our
store.

NOVEMBER 18, 1978, SATURDAY

10:00 • 4:30
Middleport Book Store

more.
Composed June 23, 1985,
by Mrs . Riley Pigott. In
remembrance of a dream I
had Ol\e night in the fall of
1951 .

VANITY SALE

Midd leporl, Ohio

2199 Jackson Ave. Point Pleasant

675-2318

Ph. 992 -2641

Those under 18 years of age ' must be
accompanied by po1rent or ·guardian.

,.

DALE'S KITCHEN
CENTER, INC.
Home Of Beautiful Kitchen•
'

'

. '

�' I

•

'

"" '

•

•

"•• •

" " " ,' •

· ""

ll

I

' I IJ

DICK TRACY

MEIGS TIRE
CENTER, INC.
TRINITY CHURCH

Rev . W. H

Pemn pasto r Bob Buck , Sunday

school supt Church Sc hool 9 15
om -dorship servtce 10 30om ,
Chotr rehearsa l. Y.:uesdoy \7 30

p m

under dt rec lton of Allee

Neese
POMEROY CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE Corner Unton and
Mulbe rry Rev Clyde V . Hender
son pas tor , Sunday school 9 30

o m . Glen McClung su pt morn ·
tng worshtp 10 30 o m evenmg
serv tce 7 30 m td · week ser v tce ,
Wednesday , 7 30 p m
G RACE EPIS COPAl CHURCH
326 E Mom St , Pom eroy The
Re"' Robert 8 Groves rector
Sunday servtces , 11 a m mornmg
prayer

( Holy

Comm un •on

hrs l

Sunday of e ach month ) and ser
man Church churc h school and
nursery core provtded Coffee
hour tn ponsh house foll owmg
the serYtce.

shtp. I I a m
3unday e\lentng
serv1ce. 7 p .m , Wednesday Fomi
ly Tra11 ng Hour. 7 p m Wednesday
warsh•p ser vtce . 7 JO p .m
HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH
Near l ong Haltom Edsel Har t
pastor Sunday school 10 am
Church
1 30 p m
prayer
meettng, 7 30 p m. Thursday
MIDDl~PORT
PENTECOSTAl
Tktrd A ve , the Rev Wtlltom Kmt
tel. pastor Ronald Dugan Sun
day Sc kool Supt . Classes tor all
ages eventng servtce 7 30 Btb le
study Wednesday , 7 30 p m ,
youth ser vtces , Fndoy , 1 30 p.m
MIDDLEPORT FREEWill BAP
TIST , Corner Ash and Plum Noel
Herrm an pastor Saturday even
•ng service, 7 30 p m
Sunday
School 10 JOo m

Youth meettngs. 6 30 p m ., even
tng wo rskip, 7 30, Wednesday
ntght prayer meettng and B1ble
study 7 30 p m
THE SALVATION ARMY
liS
Butternut Ave Pomeroy Envoy
and Mr s Roy Wt n mg off tcers 1n
c harge
Sunday · hol tneu
meettng, 10 a m Sunday School
10 30 am Sunday sckool leader
YPSM Elotse Adams . 7 30 p m
sol'w'a lton
meeltng
venous
speaKers and musi c speetals
Thursdoy- 10 am to 2 p .m
Ladi es Home league, all women
tnv lted 7 30 p m. prayer meetmg
and Bible stu dy
Bob Estep
leader
Rev
Noel Hermon
teocke r
,.
BURLINGTON SOUTHERN BAP
TIST CHAPEL , Route 1 ShadeSunday
Pastor Bobby Elkms
school, 5 p m Sunday worsk1p
5 45 p m Wednesday prayer ser
vtce 7 30 p m.
POMEROY WESTSIDE CHURCH
OF CHRIST 200 W Mom St , Jerry
Paul , mimster, phone 992 7666
Conservative, non· tnstrumental
Sunday worshtp, 10 am , Btble
study , 11 am .. worshtp, 6 p m
Wednesday B•ble study . 7 p m
OLD DEXTER BIBLE CHRISTIAN
CHURCH
Rev Ralpk
Smith
pastor Sunday school 9,30 a m ,
Mrs . Worley FranCis , supertnten
dent . Preockmg serviCes f trs t &amp;
thtrd Sundays followtng Sunday
Sckool
GRAHAM UNITED METHODIST,
Preoch mg 9 30 o m ftrsl and se
cand Sundays of each month,
thtrd and fourth Sundays each
montn worsh tp serviCe at 7 30
p m . Wednesday evenmgs at
7 30. Prayer and Btble Study
SEVENTH · DAY
ADVENTIST ,
Mulberry He1gkts Rood !Jomeroy.
Pastor , Albert Dttfes, Sabbath
Sckool
Supenntendent ,
Rtto
Whtte Sabbath School, Saturday
afternoon of 2 00 w1tk Worskt'p
Servtce loll ow tng at 3 15
RUTLAND
FIRST
BAPTIST
CHURCH Stste r
Harr telt
Worne r , Supt Sunday Sckool
q 30 a m ., mornmg worsktp
10 -45o m
THE HILAND CHAPEL , George
Costa , pastor Sunday School.
9 30 o .m . evemng worsh1p 7 30
Tkursdoy evenmg prayer service,
7 32p m
POMEROY
FIRST BAPTIS T,
Dovtd Mann , mimster, Wtlllom
Watson , Sunday schoolsupt Sun
day school, 9 30 am , mornmg
worshtp 10 30 o .m
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST 282
Mu lberry Ave Pomeroy Poul J
Whtte , Pastor, Gory Basha m , Sun·
doy school su pt Sunday school ,
9 30 a m
mornmg worship
10 30, evenmg worshtp , b 30 p m.
Mtdweek prayer serviCe 7 JO
pm
MIDWAY COMMUNITY CENTER ,
De.ocler Rd , Longs,. ille, Ohto . Rev
Clyde Ferr ell , Pastor Sunday
School
11
a .m
Saturday
preochmg sen,tCes 7 30 p m.
Wednesday event ng B1ble study
at? 30p m
FAITH TABERNACLE CHURC H,
Bo dey Run Rood , Rev . Emmett
Rowson , pastor . Hendley Dunn ,
supt Sunday sc.kool , 10 o.m Sun
day eventng servtce 7 30 Btble
teochtng 7 30 p m Thursday
OYESV I LLE
COMMUNITY
CHURCH Roger C Turner , pastor
Sur1doy schoo l 9 30 a m Sunday
mornmg worsh tp , 10 JO Sunday
even1ng ser\IICe , 7 30
MIDDLEPORT
MIDDLEPORT CH URCH OF
CHRIST IN CHRISTIAN UNION ,
Lawrence Ma nley, pa st or , Mrs
Rus sell Young , Sunday Sckool
Supt. Sun day School 9 30 a m
E\lemng worshtp , 7 30 Wednes·
day praye r meettng 7 30 p m
MT MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD,
Rocm eRev • W H lyktns ,
pa stor Mo rning worshtp , 9 ,-4 5
am Sunday sc kool. 10 45 a m
eventng worshtp , 7 Tuesday 7 30
p m , lodt es prayer meettng
Wedne sday 7 30 p m YPE
MIDDlEPORT FIR ST BAPTIST,
Corner Soo:tk end Palmer , the Rev
l&lt;.rby
O tler ,
pastor
Robert
Park er, supenntendent Sunday ,
I WMPO Rad1 0 prog ram 7 -45 a m
Sunday School. 9 15 a m Morn·
1ngWors1'11p, 10 15om Youthoc
llvtftes and fell ows h1p lor 1unior
and sentor htgh students 6 p m
Sunday evenmg worsktp , 1 30
p.m . Mtd· week praye r s.e rvtces
Wednesday , 7 30 p m
CHURCH OF CHRIST
Mtd·
dleport , 5th and Mom George
G loze m1n1ster Mtke Gerloch
supenntendent Terry Yankey
youth mtmster B•ble school , 9 30
o.m , mornmg worshtp , 10 30
a.m .
even•ng worshtp . 7 30
prayer servt c.e. 7 p m Wednes
day .
• MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE , Rev J•m Broome,
pastor: Bil l White , Sunday sc koo l
supt . Sunday school , 9 30 o.m ,
mornmg worshtp , 10 30 a m
Sunday evangelistic meeting
7 00 p m . Prayer meet tng
Wednesday ,
7
p m
UNITED
PRESBYTERIAN
MINISTRY OF MEIGS COUNTY ,
Dwignt l Zovitz dtrec.tor .
HARRISONVIllE
PRESBYTERIAN
Rev
Ernest
Stricklin , pastor Sunday church
sthool, 9·30 a.m , Mrs Homer
Lee. supt .; morntng worship ,

10 30
MIDDLEPORT, Sunday school.
9·30 a m .. Rtckard Vougkan , sup!
Morntng worship , 10 30
SYRACUSE , Morning worshtp, q
a.m ., Sunday school , 10 a.m . Mn
Sompson Hall , supt
RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD,
Rev Bobby Porter. pastor . Sun·
day school , 10 a .m Sunday war·

Pomeroy

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9?2-2955
Pameroy

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992-3785, Pomeroy

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These Messages

Of Our Religious !feritage

Attend The Church

LII'&lt;E TO KEEP

WORKIN'ON
THAT HOTEL

of Yo.ur Choice
This Sunday

MURDER-

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RACUU
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992-2318 Pameroy

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ElliOll
APPLIANCE II
ORPHAN ANNIE-QUOTE-- UNQUOTE

DOUG'S
History has painted our pilgrim
ancestors m the somber tones of
formality and austerity. Yet they
were really a bold and vigorous
band-a society of brave believers
who lived their beliefs.
Thanksgiving Day Ill 1621
marked the reaping of their first
harves t in what they quaintly
called New England.

Services
214 E. Mlin
9?2-5130 Pomeroy

Fulton-Thompson
Tractor Sales, Inc.
Tractors, New

Holland

Farm Machinery
Spring Ave. 9925101
Pameroy

WILL'S LOCK &amp; KEY
SERVICE

Sunday
Colossians
1'3-29

Monday
Romans
6 1-23

Thursday
1 Connth1ans
4 1-21

Tuesday
Romans
8 1·39

Friday
Connth1ans
12 1-31

Saturday
1 Connthians
15 :1-19

Wednesday

1 Corinthians
3·1·23

But never forget. it also marked
their filhng of the bams and stock·
mg of the farders for what men still
describe with awe as a "New England Wmter."
Thanksgiving is not just a look
back in gratitude. It 1s a look for ward in fa1th. It is a People remembering their dependence on
God'
Copyrt!111 t 979 Katster AdvertiSing Service Strasburg. Vlr!Jni8

Rutland, 0 .

Rl. 1

8· BUT WE DON'T
VVANT To GET
INTO TH' PAPERS
YET If COULD S POil
EVER'THING --·~·~c-,

HM · I RECOGNIZE
SEVERAL OF
THEM,.,fifPOR TER5

PIZZA SHACK

Reuter-Brogan
Insurance

am
CARMEl, Chruch School 9 30
am Worshtp 10:30 om . 2nd and
4tk Sundays
APPLE GROVE, ,Sunday Sckool
9 30 a .m. Worshtp 7 30 p m 1st
and 3rd Sundays Prayer meetmg
Wednesday 7 30 p.m Fellowship
supper ftrst Saturday 6 p.m. UMW
2nd Tuesday 7 30 p m .
EAST LETART Chruch School 9
om . Worshtp serviCe 10 am
Prayer meettng 7 30 p m .
Wednesday UMW first Tuesday
730pm
•
RACINE WESLEYAN - Sunday
sckool 10 a .m .; wors1'11p , 11 am .
Chotr practice , Thursday , B p.m
LET ART FALL&gt;- Ckurch School
10 a.m Worship serviCe, 9 am.;
MORNING STAR , Worship 9 30
a m , Ckurck School I 0 30 o m ..
Mtd-Week Ser,.ICe Wednesday 8
pm
MORSE CHAPEL, Worshp 11
o m .. Ckurcn School9 30 a.m .
PORTLAND Worsh1p 7 30 p.m
Church School9 30 o.m
SUTTON Church School q 30
a m Worsl}tp 1sl and 3rd Sundays
10 30a .m
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
Rev. Rtchord W. Thomas
Pastor
Duane Sydenstricker
John W Douglas
Charles Domigon
Associates
JOPPA , Worshtp 9 00 om.
Church School 10 00 a m .
CHESTER , Worsktp 9 am
Cku rc h School 10 a .m
Btble
Study , Wednesdays , 7 30 p m
(Communton fin! Sunday each
month) .
LONG BOTTOM, Sunday School
at 9 30 o .m Even1ng Worsh1p at
7 30 p m Thursday Btble Study ,
730p m
REEDSVILLE· Sunday School9·30
o m Morntng Worskip 10·30 om.
Evemng Worshp 7·30 p .m. B1ble
Study Wednesdays at 7:30p.m
ALFRED Sunday Sckool at 9 4S
a m Morning Worsk ip at 11 a m
Wednesday
Night
Prayer
Meet mg. 7.30 p m.
ST PAUL , (Tuppers Plotns)·
Sund ay School 9 00 a.m . Mormng
Worshtp at 10 00 a.m Monday
Ntght Bible Study 7 30 p m
Untied Method tsl Women, second
Wednesday of each month , I 30
p m.
SOUTH BETHEL (Silver Rtdge)
Sunday School 9 00 a.m . Mormng
Woshtp 10 00 o.m Wednesday a,.
ble Study 7 30 p m. •
TUPPERS PLAINS Worsh tp 9
a m . Ckurch School10 a m .
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST , ser·
"''Ce$ eocn Sunday 9 30 a m .
George Ptckens
pastor wtth
preockmg on first and thtrd Sun·
day of montn Oliver Swam , Supt
HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION ,
Rev Ke1tk Eblin . pastor . Sunday
leonard
School
9·30 a.m. ,
Gtlmore. f~rst elder ; evemng servtce 7 30 p.m Wednesday prayer
meeting . 7 30 p m
BEARWAllOW RIDGE CHURCH
OF CHRIST , Duane Warden ,
mtnister . B1ble class, 9 30 am .,
morning Worskip 10:30 om .;
e\lenmg worshtp , 6.30 p m.
Wednesday Btble study. b 30 p m.
NEW STIVERSVIllE COMMUNI TY Cku rch , Sunday Sckool sar·
vtce 9 "'5 o.m , Worship 58f'Jice ,
10.30, Evongeltst tc Sen~tce , 7:30
p m.
Wednesday ,
Prayer
meeting. 7 30
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST ,
Pomer o y · Horrisonville
Rd . ;
Robert Purtell , pastor , Bdl
McElroy , Sunday school 5upt . Sun·
day school , q 30 am.: morning
word·11p and communton , 10:30
o.m , Sunday worship serv1ce 7
p.m Wednesday eventng prayer
meeting and Btble study , 7 p.m
ST JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH ,
Pine Gro,.e The Rav . William
Middlesworth , Poster. Churcn
servlcas 9:30 om , Sunday Sckool
10:30 o .m
BRADBURY
CHURCH
OF
CHRIST, Mr . Donald Raley , pastor
Sun.,doy sckool 9 30 a m
war·
ship service , 10 30 a.m , Sunday
svrvicel, 1 p .m , youth group,
Wednesday , 7 p m.

Complete

MIKE
STATE FARM
INSURANCE

~ E IG S

POMEROY CLUSTER
Rev James Corbtlt
POMEROY
worski p ser,.tee
9 15 am . Sunday school . 10 30
o m .,
Re v
Robert
McGee
mintster .
ENTERPRISE Worsktp 9 o m
Ch urch School10 a m
ROCK S!JRINGS Worsktp 10
o m
Ckurck Schoo l 9 1So m
UMYF630p m
FLATWOODS, Worsh•P . 11om
Church Sckool 10 a m
MIDDI~PORT CLUSTER
Rev . Robert Bumgarner
HEATH , Robert Bumgarner
Pastor
Worsh1p 10 30 o m
Church School 9 30 o m UMVF 6
p m.
Rutland · Solem Center Charge
RUTLAND , Wtlbur Htlt , Pastor.
Wors1'11p 10 30 o.m Church School
9·30 am
SALEM CENTER Church Sckool
9 45 am worshtp9o m
SYRACUSE CLUSTER
Rev . Hor,.ey Kocn , Jr
ASBURV , Worst11p 11 o m.
Churcn School 9 50 a .m. UMW
f1rst Tuesday Btble Study Thurs.
7.30 p m .
FOREST RUN Worshtp 9 om
Church School10 a m .
MINERSVILLE, Worshtp 10 o m
Churcn School9 o m
SYRACUSE. Church Sckool 9 00
a m Worship serv1ce 7 30 p m
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
Rev Dovtd Horns
Cluster Leeder
Rev Steven Wilson
Florence Smith
Htlton Wolfe
Assoc•otes
BETHANY , (Dorcas) . Warship
9 00 a m Church School 10 00

ElliS &amp; SONS SOHIO

K&amp;C JEWELERS

I

We Fill Doctors'

COOPERATIVE PARISH
METHODIST CHURCH
Robert T. Bumgarner

POMEilOY CHURCH OF CHRIST

212 W. Mom St John McArthur ,
poster, Bible school 9 30 a m.,
mo rn mg worshtp , 10 30 o m ;

John F. Fultz, Mgr.
Ph. 992-7101

't \

BUT

WOULD

Eal1n or
Carr_v Out
126 E. Main

HOLD IT, ANNIE
AH ' ~ INE ·--

Attend The Church

GroceriesGeneral Merchandise

Of Your Choice

PICTURE · GREAT .

Professional Serviee,
Aerial-SchoolsWeddings
Chester 985-4155

HEINER'S
BAKERY
Bakers of
Good Bread

Middleport·
Pomeroy, 0.

.w.

ANT IQUITY BAPTIST , Re"' Earl located ot Rutland on New ltmo
Shuler, pastor Sunday sckool Rood , ne)(l to Forest Acr e Pork
9 30 o m , Church serv1ce 7 p .m ; Rev Roy Rouse pa stor Robe rt
youtn meeting , 6 p .m Tuesday B1· Musser, Sunday Sckool su pt Sun
ble Study, 7 p m.
day sckoa l 10 30 o m worsh•p
RAC INE CHURCH
OF THE 7 30 p m Btble Study Wedne s·
NAZARENE Rev Jokn A Coif
day , 7 30 p .m
Saturday ntght
man , pester Franklin Imboden, prayer serviCe , 7 30 p m
chairman of the Boord of Chr•s
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN .
llon ltfe . Sunday School, 9 JO Roger Wat so n pastor Ke nnetn
a.m.. mornmg worship , 10:30, Byer . Sunday sc koo l sup! Morn·
Sunday evenmg wonhtp, 7 30 tn g worship , 9 30 o m
Sun·
p m Prayer meeting , Wedne s· doyschool , 10 30 o m . e\le ntng
day , 7 30p m
serviCe, 7 30 Wednesday Btbl e
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST, Don l
Study 7 30 p .m
Walker , Pastor , Ronnie Salser.
MT
UNION BAPTIST. Don
Sunday sc hool supt.; Sunday Wdson
Sunday
sckoo l
sc hool. 9.30 a.m .: mormng war
supen ntendent . Sunday sc kool
shtp, 10 40 am , Sunday e11en1ng 9 4S a m evenmg wo rs hip 7 30
worshtp , 7 30 .Wednesday even - p.rn Prayer meetmg , 7 30 p rn
tog Btble study, 7 30.
Wednesday.
DANVIllE WESLEYAN , Rev R
TUPPERS PlAINS CHRISTIAN
D Brown , pastor Sunday School. CHURCH, Eugene Underwood,
9.30 a.m .; mornmg worshtp pastor Howard Coldwell. Jr ..
10 45 youth serviCe , 6 ·-45 p m.
Sunday School Supt. · Sunday
evemng worship
7 30 p m
School, 9 30 o m
Mormng Ser·
prayer and protse, Wednesday , man, 10 30 o m Sunday eve ru ng
1·30 p.m
service, 7 p m.
Sll VER RUN FR~E BAPTIST , Rev .
lETART
FAll S
UNITED
Morvm Morkm , pastor: Steve L1t· BRETHREN , Rev. Freeland Noms,
tle Sunday school supt Sunday pastor. Floyd Noms supt'. Sun day
sckoal. 10 o .m , morn tng wor· school. 9·30 a m morning ser ·
sktp, 11 o m Sunday eventng mon. 10 30 a m., Prayer service
worshtp , 7 30 Prayer meettng Wednesday , 7 30 p m
and Bible study , Thursday , 7 30
CHESTER CHURCH OF T H~
p .m., youtn serviCe b p m. Sun· NAZARENE , Rev . Herbert Grote ,
pastor . Worsh•p servtce , I I a .m.
doy
CHESTER CHURCH OF GOD . and 7 30 p m Sunday
Sunday
Rev ~anny R Cook pastor . Sun· School 9·30 a m R1 chord Horton
doy sch oo l, 9 30 o m
worship supt Prayer meetmg Wednes ·
sarvtce , 11 o m .. eventng service, doy , 730pm
7:00; youtn servtce, Wednesday ,
BRADFORD
CHURCH
OF
CHRIST, Gabriel Mus, pastor Bt·
7:00pm .
lANGSVIllE
CHRISTIAN ble Sunday School9 ·30 a .m .; mer
CHURCH , Robert Musser , pastor. nmg church 10.30 o .m , Sunday
Sunday sckool. 9 30 om ., Roy evening service
7 00 p m.
Sigmon supt morning worshtp, Wednesday service, 7 30 p m
lAUREl CUFF FREE METHODIST
10 30 Sunday evening service,
7 .30; mid· week serv1ce Wednes· CHURCH, Rev . Floyd F. Shook ,
pastor . Lloyd Wright
Sunday
day , 7 p .m.
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE School Supt .. Morning Worship
9!30 am .; Sunday School 10 20
NAZARENE, Rev . Dole Boss
pastor
Bob Moore , Sunday o .m , Wednesday Prayer and Bl·
School supt .; Sunday sckool 9 30 ble Study 7 30 p .m Sunday even ·
o .m.; morntng worship, 10: 45 tng worship 7·30 p m , Choir Proc·
a.m., evangelistic service, 7 p m. flee Thundoy , 7 p m
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST,
Wednesday services prayer
and praise. 7 p.m .. Nazarene Charles Russell , Sr , mln tste r ,
youth 7 p m . Oatly prayer Rtck Macomber. supt . Sunday
meeting. B 30 o.m Men' s prayer 5ckoal. 9 30 a .m .: worshtp ser
vice . 10 30om atble Study lues·
meeting, Saturday, 7 p .m
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN day , 7 30 p .m
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF
CHRIST, Elden R Bloke , pastor.
Sunday School 10 a .m., Robert JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER DAY
Reed. supl. ; Morning sermon, 1l SAINTS, Portland Racine Rood
a.m. ; Sunday ntght services Chns· Wilham Roush , pastor Pkyllts
t lan Endeavor , 7 :1) p m Song Stobort, Sunday School Supt. Sun
service, B p m . Preochmg 8 30 day School. 9 30 o .m Mormng
Sunday
p .m. Midwevk Prayer meeting, worshtp , 10 30 o m
evening serviCe 7 p m Wedn es ·
Wednesdo~. 7 p .m .; Roy Adams ,
· day evening prayer services , 7 30
loy leader .
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST.
p .m.

;'

THE DAILY
'
SENTINEL

VIRGIL B.
TEAFORD SR.
216 S.. second
Pameroy
992-3325

chiler I'se
s anyth1n' 1 can
5UCIQ€1n~J---,r'lo~::---,
do_?

Don Thom DSOn Forcl. Inc.

dyin' w1sh was that
he be borne to his rest in'
place on

1 has

Brother
could not
Mr. Lump a fr'en' who owns
is
a hearse' qasoline
ma!l,inq
the

arranqements have
all been
ta\i.en
care of'

461 5. Third. Middleport
992-,2196

992-3093
Middleport

papa'

a cart~

For The Best In TV Viewmg
(~

BROWN'S
FIRE SAFID
I'M GOIN

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YOU

ARE YOU HAVINS A
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DAYLIGHTS CUT

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Featurtng Deep Steam
E:draction
992-2206 or m -7630

Rt. 3, Pomeroy

BETHLEHEM BAPTI ST , Re"' Earl mustc
SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF
Shuler , post or Wor shtp se rvtce,
MASON ASSEMBLY OF GOO , GOO - Not Pentecostal. Rev
9 JO a m Sunday sch oo l 10 30 Ouddmg lone, Mason W. Vo
George Oiler, pastor Worsh•p
o .m Btble Study and prayer ser· Chester Tennant Pastor. Sunday se rvtce Sunday, 9 45 om .. Sun·
viCe Thu rsday 7 30 p m
School q 45 om ' Children 's day school 11 a .m .; worshtp ser·
CAR LETO N CHURCH Kmg sbu•y Church 6..45 p.m. Young People 's vice, 7·30 p .m. Thursday prayer
Rood Gary Kmg pa stor Sunday Ser,.ICe 6 45 p.m Evangelt5flc meeting 7.30 p .m
sc hool 9 30 o m , Rolph Carl , Serv tce 7 30 p m Women's Mis ·
MT HERMON Untied Bretkren
supermtendent, evenmg wor shtp
!iionary Council 10 am ftrst and Church. Sunday School 9·30 o m.
thtrd Tuesdays Prayer and Bible Worskip service
lO 4S a.m.
7 30 p m
Prayer m ee ttng
Wednes day , 7 30 p m
Study , Wedne sday , 7 30 p.m
Preachmg serv• ces every Sunday
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST alternotmg w 1th C E Wednesday
LON G BOTTOM CHRI STI AN ,
Bruce Sm tlk
pas tor
Wallace IN CH RISTIAN UNION The Rev
prayer meeting 7 30 p m. Rev.
Damewood Sup t 8tbl e Sch ool. Wilham Campbell, pastor. Sunday James Leach , pastor
Oov1d
9 30 om
Preochmg se rv iCe , School 9 30 am James Hughes
Holter , loy leader .
10 45 om No e"'en mg ser vtce .
supt , eventng serv tce , 7 30 p m
JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES, 1 mtle
HYSEll RUN FREE METHODIST Wednesday
eventng prayer east of Rutland , JUnctton of Route
CHURCH Hev Herbert Atll ng , meeting . 7 30 p .m . Youtti prayer 124 and Noble Summit Road (T·
pa stor Sunday School q 30 o m , ser v1ce eacn Tuesday
174) Sunday Bible lecture, 9 30
Mormng ~erv 1ce
10 30 om. ,
a , Watchtower study, 10.30
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH
Evangel tSIIC se rvtce 7 30 p m . l etart , W Vo .. Rt I, Rev. Charles 0 m .: Tuesday, Btble study, 7 and
Pray er meetmg , Wednesday, 7 30 Hargraves, pastor Worship ser· ·8 15 p.m : Thursday. tkeocrot1C.
p m.
v1ces, q 30 am , Sunday school
sckool, 7 30
p m. , serviCe
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION of 11 om , evening worship, 7 30 meetmg, 8 30 p .m
Bald Knob
Rev
lawrence p.m . Tuesday cottage prayer
HOPE BAPTIST - 570 Grant St ,
G lu esencom p Sr pa sto r Roger meetmg and Bible study, 9 30 Middleport Bobby Elkins, pastor.
a.m . Worsh1p servtce. Wednes
Willford Sr Sunday sc hoo l supt
Sunday School, 10 a .m., worshtp
Sun doy school 9 30 o , evenmg day, 7 30 p m
servtce, 11 am .; even1ng ser,.Jce,
worshtp , 7 30 p m
Prayer
CAlVARY BIBLE CHURCH , now 7 30 p.m
Thursday prayer
mee t tn g, Wednes day 7 30 p m
located on Pomeroy Pike, County meeting and Bible study 7:30
Road 2S, near Flatwoods Rev
p m.
Yo uth mee llng, Sunday 5:30pm
RUTlAND FREEWILL BAPTIST
wttk Don and Mar tha Meadows 1n Bla ckwood, pastor Services on
char ge
Sunday at 10 30 a .m . and 7 30 Churcn - Leland Ho ley . pastor
WH ITES CHAPEL Coo lv tlle RD
p m w ttk Sunday school. 9 30 Sunday school , 10 a .m ., evening
Rev Roy Deeter , pastor Sunday o.m B1ble study Wednesday , servtce. 7:30
p.m. Prayer
sc hool 9 30 a m. , worship ser,.ice , 7 30 p m
meetmg , Wednesday , 7 30 p.m
10 30 a m Btble study and prayer
INDEPENDENT
HOLINESS
CHURCH OF GOD of Prophecy ,
serviCe , Wedn esday 7 30 p .m .
CHURCH , INC. - Pearl St., Mid· located on the 0 J . Whtte Rood
dleport. Rev
O'Dell Mbnley, off kighwoy 160. Sunday Sckool
RUTLAND
RUTLAND CHURC H OF CHRIST , pastor; Sonny Hudson , Su'ndoy 10 o.m
Superintendent John
lorry Colemon pastor Co· Sun· school supt. Sunday school , 9 30 Loveday . First Wednesday night
d ay sc hoo l supt s , Sam McKinney om eve mng worsh!p, 7.30 p .m. of month CPMA services, second
a nd Herb Elhtt Sunday sc hool and Prayer and protse servtce, Wednesday WMB meet1ng thtrd
communion , 9 30 a m. Worship Wednesday. 7 30 p m
tkrough fifth
youth servtce
andcomunton 1030a m ,
THE PEOPlE 'S CHURCH OF George Croyle, pastor .
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL - 570
RUTLAND
COMMUNITY POMEROY - Corner Main and
CHURCH Sunday School , 9 30 Court Sts , third floor aver Grant St , Mtddleport, Rev Bobby
a m , worsktp servtee 11 a m : Lighthouse Restaurant. Henry Elkins . Sunday school, 10 o.m ,
Wednesday prayer meeting 7:$0 Cook . pastor . Sunday school. 10 morning worship, 11; evening
p m youth services , Sunday, 7 om , marmng worshtp, 11 a.m.,
warship , 7:30 p.m
Thu,rsdoy
p m., Sunday n ight worshtp , 7 30. evening serviCe 7 30 Wednes· evening ' Bible study and prayer
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE day evening service, 7 30 In· meeting 7 30 p.m. Afftliated witk
S.B C
NAZARENE, Rev . lloyd D. Grtmm , ter denomtnol to nol , full gospel.
Jr . pastor Sunday sc hool. 9.30
RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD BRADFORD
CHURCH
OF
om .. worsktp ser,.ICe , 10·30 a m . Pastor Oennts Boles. Sunday CHRIST- Gobnel Mraz, pastor
Broadcast l tve over WMPO , young Sc hool. 10 a .m. ; worship servtce, Sunday school , 9:30a.m ., morn·
peo ple s
se rvi ce ,
7
p m
11 30 o m. and 7.30 p.m Prayer mg church. 10:30 am. Junior
EvangelistiC serv ice 7 30 p .m . meeting Wednesday , 7 30 p.m
churcn p ro gram under d1rect1on
Wednesday servtce, 7 30 p m .
RUTLAND APOSTOliC CHURCH at Koren Mroz for chtldren, 2·10,
MASON COUNTY
OF JESU~ CHRIST, Elder Jamvs during regular church hour ' in
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST - cor - Mtller. Btble study, Wednesday, · t nurch basement . Sunday even·
ner o l Second and Anderson , 7.30 p m.: Sunday. School, 10 a.m.
lng servlcv, 7 p .m .. Wednesday
Meson Pastor Fronk Lowther
Sunday n1ght serv1ce, 7:30p .m .
service, 7:30pm.
Sunday sckool , 9 45 om war ·
POMEROY
WESLEYAN
JUBILEE CHRISTIAN CENTER shtp serv tce 11 a m a nd 7.30 HOLINESS :- Horrlsonvllle R~ad,
George's Creek Road. Church
p m
Weekly Bible Study , Dewey Kmg , pastor, Edtson school, 9030 a.m.; morning wor·
Weaver . assistant Henry Eblin, shtp 10·30, evening service, 7:30.
Wednesday , 7 30 p.m .
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST P. Jr ., Sundo)l school supt. Sunday
Pro.fvr meeting Wednesday , 7:30
.
0 Box o4B7 M tller St . Mason W. sc hool, 9:30 a.m , morning wor· pm.
Va . Sund ay Stble Study 10 am , shtp, 11 a.m. Sunde~ e11vning ser·
ST. PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH,
Worshtp 11 o m and 7 p m Bible v1ce . 7:30 : praye r meeting , Thurs·
Corner of Sycamore and Second
Study Wednesday 7 p m , Vocal day . 7·30 p.m .
)
Sts .. Pomeroy. The Rev. Wtlllam
(

He loo\1, a
lot 1,~-;e
sE lva's

Cabie TV Systems, Inc..

UPSET rv\E 100 MUCH.
GOTTA FI6 UREo OUT

448 Locust

t:IGbER'

pcpmeroy

I GUE&amp;S LOSING MY J OB

MARK V STORE
Middleport

I DIDN'l STEAL
11 OR MAKE

~..,_,-~'

t-10 ME '

WHAT

KEN GROVER
PHOTO,GRAPHY

111 E TAXES

~~'?-"'''--

This Sunday

Racine 949-25$~

WH A~ .~ BOUT

GOIN' TO SPEND
ON A
'
I FOUND
lT · BUJ LD A
HUNDRED
!T " F! I'JO E~ &lt;;.
WONDERFUL O~PHAN M lll/ON 7 KI-H&gt;LRS" t

JUST ONE MORE

Call 992·2505

WAID CROSS
SONS STORE

fHf BIG 510R'(
IS HOw YOl)'t(F

Middleswortk, Pastor
Sunday
School at 9 -45 o m and Ckurch
Ser,.ICes 11 o. m.
SACRED HEART , Rev Father
Pou l D Welton, pastor. Phon e
992·2825 Saturday e\lentng Moss.
7 30, Sunday Moss, 8 and I 0 a m ;
Confession. Saturday 7 -7 30 p m
VICTORY BAPTIST - On the
Route 7 bypass James E Keesee ,
pastor. Sunday sckoo l , 10 o m ,
mornmg wor ship , 11 a.m., even ·
tng service, 7.
TRINITY Chmttan Assembly .
Coolville Gilbert Spencer ,
pastor. Sunday sck ool, 9 30 a m ,
mo rn mg worshtp , 11 o m Sunday
evemng servtce, 7 30 p .m ..
mtdweek prayer service Wednes ·
day , 7 30 p.m
MOUNT O live Communtty
Church long Bottom. Lawrence
Busn pastor. Bettte P•gott, Sun ·
day sckool supt Sunday SchoollO
o .m Voutk group and prayer
meetings Wednesday 7:30 p .m .
Church servtces Sunday 7 30 p .m
FAITH BAPTIST Church Mason
meet at Umted Steel Wo rker~
Un1on Hall , Ro1lrood Street
Mason. Pastor. Rev Joy Mttchell :
Morning worship 9 .45 a.m ., Sun·
day School 10 30 o m. Prayer
meehng Wednesday , 7 30 p .m
FOREST RUN BAPTIST - Rev
Nyle Borden , pastor Cornelius
Bunch , supermtendenf Sunday
school. q ,30 o m
second and
fourth Sundays worskip service at
2 30 p.m

FRANK &amp; ERNIE

FRANK AND ERNEST

PEDIA

HE:'S S"I"A~E::o
/ I:A,.ING' SOt-IDS
NOW--··•
PENGILS. 1'-E:VS,
N~WSPAP£12S. ••

CLINIC

lluBileR gANOS,

6

"

ASH,.RAY5. • ••
THINE$

II. 17

TheAtmanac
United Press lnlemational
Today 1s Fnday, Nov . 17,
the 321st day of 1978 w1th 44 to
follow .
The moon 1s between Its full
phase and last quarter.
The mornmg stars are
Venus, Jupiter and Saturn .
The evenmg stars are Mars
and Mercur y
Those born on this day In
history are under the Sign of
ScorpiO

Ai ~~AST 114~;v'RI~' __,,.. ~ ,._
flJT 0t..UBO TO
THE?- TV.

WH/&gt;.i WE 'iOV
KIDS r::ouJ0
lfJ

1).1~~~

c::oes

flf:;'{, Pef,
lWO PAIR 13~AT
THI&lt;I:'~-OF -AKifJD'?

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Stayman with two notrump
of r lubs
NORTH

ranean .

11 - 17·1\

+K.1 7 H

+ 983 2

fii}'\1

WEST

• Q 108 6:1

Un scramble these lou r Jumbles.
one leiter to each square , to fo rm
four ord1nary word s

•Ql09 2
+ A .I

I [J

Vulnerable. Both
Dealer: South
Wcst.l North East

r

and he Will probably mak e
f1vc odd. but West plunks the

ace on South 's ktng a nd

South has to lose two clubs
South
2 NT

.

Pass

:1+

Pils:-&gt;

.,

P f:ISS

4 ..

Pa ss

P.ass

\.U~•UAl-1..1' L.OOK RleMT..

SILAS

r

I I

SNUFFY

and a hea rt

You hold
11· 1i' - U .

Opening lea d : • 6

DO I THEY

t=REE PEPPERMINT STICK
PER CUSTOMER iODF\'-1,

you want to be m r ve ry tm1 r
you get lh esc t:ards.
The pl ay ts s1m plc Sou t h
w1ns th e tw~trl. pla vs thre e
round.s of tru m ps wh1le s top·
ping 111 dummy and leads a

G1ve East the ace of clubs

WHEN !S&lt;OLDIER~

THANKY,

cl ub

club toward his own hand

Pi:i S.S

BARNEY

GIVIN' AWA'-1 ONE

10 7 4

+KQ 65

tGUYSARt
I'M

• KJ 5
• J 8 5 :1
•

the dC'fcnsl'

IS t he so1t of contr a c t th at

SOUTH
+ A Q8 ~
• A 72
t AK

REV NY

I I

EAST
.. lO 5 2

.. 9 3

~IIIli

collects four hea r t s a nd a
Four spades 1s a far l.Jeller
contract Of course , \ ' OU c ~m
dtvlCic ttw Ea st· We; t ca rd s
so that It won't make , but 1t

• 94

lfff~'l.\lt
~THAT SCRAMBLED WOAD GAME
~ ~ ~~~~ ®
byHennArnoldandBobLee

Now arrange the c1rcled letters to

By Os\\ald .Jacoby

• 87
• J 2
t 9 4 'I
• AKJn i 5 4

A I .out stana reader wa nts '

to know what we btd m
and Alan Sontag
gested by the above cartoon
response t o partne r ' s o pe n~
mg one notrwnp .
'
.Can the Stayman conven·
We ratse htm to three Il
Print answer here· "(
llon be used m response to a may not m&lt;.~kc , but we want
- two-notrump openmg ?
(Answers tomorrow )
Of course, 1t can 't ObVI- to t ry for tht s gam e rather
torm the surpr ise answe r, as sug ·

I XX l )"

Jumbles SNOWY

Ye sterday s

IIJ thought fw the day:
Martin LUther said, "There Ia

no more lovely, friendly and

1

Answer

0

EXTOL

PEPTIC

MALADY

1 bl lloncouldbeadangerous

o~:~:~vE.AaPO~ "

Jumble Boot! Na 12 containing 110puzzln, is IVIIIIbltfoJ $1.75f:ctlptld
from Jumble c/o thiS newsplptr, Box34, Norwood, N J 07646.1nc udt~tut
name, addre'u , Jlp code end make checks payable 10 Newspaper~oo s

charming relationship,
communion w company than
a' good marriage."
,_

Friday, Nov. li

• 76~

In 1917, 41 women from IS

states were arrested outside
the White House for
suffragette demonstrations .
American women won the
right to vote three years
later.
In 1919, the American
Legion held Its first national
cooventlon In Minneapolis.
In 1975, de!pite strong u.s.
opposition, the United
Natloos General Aslembly
adopted an Arab·insplred
resolution defining Zlonilm In
the Middle Eut as a form.of ·
racism.

Amen ca n soc1al wo rk er
Grace Abbott was born Nov
17, 1878. Th1s lS the 53rd
buthday of American actor
Rock Hud son 1 bor n Ruy
Fitzgerald) .
On thiS day in h1story ·
In 1800, the US. Congress
conve ned in Washington,
DC , for the flrst Lime .
ln !869 , the Suez Canal In
Egypt was opened , linking
the Red Sea and the Mediter-

than for a l'iub game or part ·
ously. you are almost s ureI; score
looktng for game or s l ain,
but you sttll want to ~e able
to find those 4-4 major suit
(For alliopy o l JA CO BY MOD·
Ills.
ERN send $1 to ' Wrn at,
Three notrump really tsn 't Bnage care of th ts ne wspa ~
a bad contract. It goes down

· because Wesl holds the ace
'I

1

per. P 0 Box 489, RadiO C1ty
Sla/lon . New Ydr~ N Y 10019 )

�1o-'!be Dailv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Friday. Nov. 17. 1978

Want Ad·s Tum Unwanted Items Into Cash
WANT AD
CHARGES
13Wul"'lborUrldt&gt;r

Cct.sh
100

l clay
2t1Mys

....ISO

Jdays
6tlays

In Memory

Char,:c
I.!S
1.00

"'

Each wurd

uv~r tht• mmunwn 15
l-.:!tlts pt'r word pt'f r.lay .

Al1s f11Jlnlll~ uther tll&lt;!tl CUilSL't' UtiVt'
th.ys will I.-e lhafl{t'l.l 111 the I dllY

rate.
fn memury , Card of Thanks

~tnd

OllitWiry .s cents per word. 13.00
mrnnnwn. CCI::th madvant·e
Mobile H~ne sa les and Yard .sa les
an~ &lt;tt:t.'tp~

IN LOVING memory of o u r deer
father , Ste..,e Eblin. wl-!o passed
away 3 years ago, Nov 18,
!fil75 .
No one heard the footstpes
Of the Angels drowmg nea r
When they took form us to

:U5

!00

word!! ill t

7
..,L
,_o- s-=-t-a-nd

only wrlh c1:1sh Wl~h

Heaven

The one we loved so dea r
No hand s so swee t and gnetle

And we who loved you dearly
Miss you more each day

Sadly missed by children Edith,
Arti e Myrtle , Madeline and
9r~:.m_dt::ht!dr_e~. ___ _

THE ~A MIL Y o f Eveleno James
Hammonds wtshes to express

thetr opprectol ton to fnends

ft.'C:l rn.Sertion.
PhOne 992-2156

and neighbors in the l tme of
their berevemenl . The Forest

Run Bopltst Church. the Re11 AI
Borden .

~h_e ~~!_5 £a~~ _____ _

4P.M.
tllt! Wty before pubheatiUn

my p roperty

without permtS ·

stan . Judy McGraw
-GUN
- - - -· - - - -- -- SHOOT . Roctne Gun
_c h~':e ~u.ns_ or;_~-

fodory

_____ _

Bernice Bede Osol

~W0m

W0crww~ill\J
November 18, 1878
This coming year an older
friend might figu re in helping
mto reality an

Apply in person
Ill Court St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

992-6198

HOME

FOR

IN
MY

BROTHER , LEO GILMORE
PRE~ER HURAL HOME
CAN
PAV $190 PER MONTH . CALL
COLLECT 1-486·6077 BETWEEN 7
AN09PM . HELEN G BRVAN.

- PUBLIC NOTICEDiana K . Wells, whose

residence is unknown. but
whose last known address
was Box :a, Long Bottom ,
h
Something you learned t at · Ohio, will take notice that on
you ne-ver dreamed you'd ha\le the 14th day of November ,
any reason to use will surpris· 1978, that Ralph Wells,
lngly work well for you today. · Pla int i ff , filed his Complaint
her in the Common
Ftn d ou t 'h e secre ts Of getting agaln!lt
Pleas court of Meigs County,
along with others by sending
Ohio, case No . 1702" praying
for your copy of Astra-Graph for divor ce upon the grounds
Letter . Mail 50 cents for each of gross neglect of duty , for
and a lang, self-addressed,
custody of the two minor
stamped envelope to Astra- children, for settlement ot
property rights, and will
Graph, P.O Box 4&amp;9, RadiO City further take notice that th1S
Station, N.Y . •10019. Be sure to
cause can be heard at any

ZC-Nov. 22)

CHIP
WOOD
Polef&gt;
mo;~~ .
d1ometer 10" o n la rgest end ,
$M .50 per ton Bund led sl ob ,
$b .50 per ton . Oel1vered to
Oh10 Poll e t Co , Rt . 2 Pom eroy.
99'l-'Jt:J89

------··-------

A friend will come up w1th the

solullon Ia a difficult problem
you've been faced wtth . You
can now make a quick decision

for fun today .

Coll992-2156 .

- -- ----

2.1020 A:, Sutton.
Bertha C. Canaday Af.
fidavit, Pomeroy.
Penn
Central
Tran·
sportation. Company (Con·
swrunalion Order and final
•

Trans., Salem

You'll b...,surprlsed at how
qu1ckly you come up w1th the
answers.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Your
realisllc approach to things
today is a lar cry lrom yester·
day . You're now able to f1g ure
out pracllcal ways to be nelil
yoursell.
CANCER (June 21.Jul 22)

Paula Jane Brewer Fitch,
Bobby Fitch to Nanna Rit·
h.
J
h.
Rlt hi
c le,
os~p me
c e,
Ronald Ritchie, Barbara
Ritchie, Parcels, O.ester.
C.R. Gorrell, Lorean K.
Gorrell to Edward O.evaller,
B Ch r
0 67A
Lona .
eva lor, .
'
Olive.
Roger T. Bissell, Mary S.
Bissell to Larry R. Lee.
Vir~inla Lee,Virginia Lee, lot
,.., st
18 , '"'ne er ·
Donald
L.
Bennett,
Marjorie S. Bennett, lot to
Kingsbury Home Sales and
Se · In
Lot 8 T
s
rytce c ., , , upper
Plams, Arbaugh s 4th.
Ada Starcher to Russell
Eugene Starcher, 1.18A,
a.ester.
Ada Stacher to Coy B.

how unusual your .;ays appear
10 others . Once !hey see the
type al res~lts you achieve,
everyone w1ll JUmp on your
bandwagon .

LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) Someone
may aile~ you something today
lhat you ve bee.n wantmg lor
your home ThiS person no
longer needs it. You ' ll be able
to put il 1o goOd use
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) A
chance to reestablish a bond
with one wllh whom you 've had
a disagreement w1ll be presented to you today . A stronger

friendship w111 resu lt
•
LIBRA (Sepl . 23-0cl. 23) A
sudden opportunity 10 play !hat
ace-In-the-hole you 've been
holding will be yours today.
giving you the advan1age over
your

Starcher, Jr., 1.18 A.,
O.ester.
Harvey' E. vogel to Mary
Lou Gogel
57 acres
Columbia.
'
'

--------- -------

-

-

l o1

5ole

Phone

.PERMANENT
ANTI-FREEZE
Why pay 53.9'1

••

"" '-o"" oll'l ,c.~ $347
~-' ~~gal.

Town &amp; Country
Pomeroy Landmark
. . . l_ack W. Carsey, Mgr.
Phone 992-2181

,-lAiiil·

3 VEAR OLD gen tl e JerSey cow ,
m1lking now 19 mo o ld Holsl eJO Heifer . freshen f1r st of
May Phone 304 -773 -5821 or
304 773-5bl9.

- - -·-

... - - - - - -

- .

VI::R Y NICE , tru ck camper lop.

- -- - -- -- - - - - 1962 FO~D ' '• ton truc k S'J'J5 Set
!200. 992-3187.

.- -

of a xles with tires . $35 1965
Comet sto t1onwogon for par ts.
$20. I 948 1 ''~ ton lnt ernot1 onol
truck lor port s, SJS . Coa l stove.
$45 New rocki ng cho.r , $45
Hopkm s and All en single shot
rifle antique. $150 1890 Wm·
ches ter pump 22 ni le ant ique

ssoo. 992 7330
KCNMORE SEWING machine w1th
ca binet An tique square table

949 2317. - - -

POMEROY
LANDMARK
For All Your
GET V •, &amp;
HotpOH11 Appl
S.\lr· PnCt'l:,
Jack W. C(lr',('V
Mq1
Phnn1 '-!0/ .! !H •

1969 OLDS CUTLASS CONVER·

LUMP HOUSl: cool delivered . $35
per to n cash . Call anytime
992·7126.
-

- -·-

- ----- - - - -

SMAll
HECTHIC
organ and
Homelit e XL2 sow. Coli oflyt ime
843 -2645.

-~

AS I om. qu1tting forming I'm se ll 1961::1
mg 50 model Mossey Ferg uson
work cor . $495 992 -2429.
tractor , just b een overhauled.
1976 PlYMOUTH VOlAIU ~oo d
New 5 ft . b rus h hog, new disc,
Runner 992 -5724
new 6 h . blade and set ol l4
inch plows. All for $45 , Note
1970 Z28 Came r o . Red Carmine
Vanaman on New lima 'Rd .
v1n).J automatic, console Cro1 g
•Te lephone 742 -2761 . Strow
AM -FM stereo B sty le trim
Sl 25 bo
= le::.·_ _ __
Rustproofed . 985 -3928, Gar fie ld residence.
15 CU. H freezer like new .

------

1972 OLDS CU TLA SS 2-door hardtop , Olf , AM -FM rodio w ith
speakers, $1000. 992-'2298 or
J~~ 7bbb_?~e r 5pm .___ _

_

1953 FORO F-1 OC) pickup. Flat
head V·B, orig.nol AM rod 1o, 3speed std . Less than 84 .000
odg1nol mdes
Very good
shape Call eveni ngs 843 -2092
o r 8.4 3-2093

- v-----'-·---- - -·• MUST
SA CRIFICE
1972 Olds
~

Cutlosss'upreme
Very good
condition . $1300 . 843-223.4 ,

ENTERPRISE ASSN )

992 7639.

SNOW
TIRE SALE
SNOW TIRES
ONSALE·AT
POMEROY LANDMARK
SERVICE STATION

1974 DODGE CHALLENGER 381
eng., 2-door hard top, auto on
tho tloor . Book value $2100.
w1l l sell lor $1450. 1969 Dodge
Montego 4-door sedan, auto.,
air . S800. 992-612.4 .

IMMIDIA Tl OPINING$
FOR R.N.'s AND L.P.N.'s
ALL SHIFTS ON CCU, 08,
AND MEDICAL-SURGICAL

-.. - ---

Contact: Holzer Medical Center, P. O. Box
280, Gallipolis, Oh.
446-5105
An Affirmative Action
Equal Opportunity Employer
(

- - ------ -----·--

1975 PINTO STA TION w agon , V ·6,
auto , air cond New tires, lug gage rock . Good condit ion .
Priced . reason ably .
Call

Competitive salary' excellent benefits, shift
differential, and tuition
assistance
program.

9BS-427B
_ _!:_!!mping Equipment
1974 STARCRAFT GALAXY fold
dow n hard top COfTip&amp;r. Sleeps
new gas furnace, 3 burner
range, own.ng and poles, 'l gas
bettles , excellent condition

a,

~

ROOFING

GiveAway

&amp; HOME ' MAJNTENAN~I'I:
1~
New or Repair
Gutters and
Downspouts

--

THRH KITH::NS to g1ve to good
home. 985-3871
.
.

Free Estimates
Phone 949-2862
or 949-2160
11 -17-1 mo .

I HRH MALE black ond brown and
1 female brown pu pp1 es . b
weeks old to ogaod hom e. 'lOb
Moln St Mo~ o n WV

Auction

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING
Re-Sidential and commer ·
c:ial. Call for estimate. 24
Hour Service. Any da_y,
- anytime.
Phone 985-3806

Jack Ginther 985-3806

THRH

bed r oom home
sun deck 1'• , acre
wooded lo t 667 -3890 . Tuppe rs
Plo1n s.

Jack's Septic
Tank Senice

~ irep lo ce.

Co.

PHONE 992-2772

REALTY

ROGER HYSEU
GARAGE

GeorgeS. Hobsteller Jr.
Broker

Estate

1'• mile off Rl. 7 by-pass on

service. can us for what we
have available. listings of
all kinds wanted. Homes,
farms, commercial. Your
satisfadion is our goal.
Give us a try.

St . Rt. T24 tpward, Rutland,
o.
·
Auf• &amp; Truck
Repair
-l(ilso Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5682

Cheryl Lemley

Associate
New lima Road
Hutchinson Sub- Div.

Rutland, Ohio
Phone 742·2003

Your HeadquarteiS For
Armstrong Carpeting

EWOTT
APPUANCE II
220 E. Mlln Street,
Pomeroy, 0 .

Call992-7013
For Free Estimates
11·9·1 mo.

J&amp;L

Blown Insulation
JIM KEESEE
Cellulosic (wood· fiber)
Therma I insulation
S.ve30 pet. to 50 pet.
on heating cost
Experience and
Jfully Insured ,

-c;[ur:i2 ~2

PI!. 9'12-2848

1

992-3325
216 E. Second Street
NEW LISTING - 3 year
old 5 bedroom 'home Has 5
bedrooms, walk -in closets,
large family room, dining,
sun deck and 2 car garage

on large lotb$65.000.
MIDDLE P RT
-

4

bedroom brick &amp; frame .
ll12 baths, natural gas heat,
equipped kitchen, 2 car
garage with shop over.

Bus iness

building, approx. 26x80, air
con ditioned, office, loading
dock, city utilities, and out

9

s 1950. '192·2·1Bb.

I

A WONDERFUL Christmas gift for
your husband , provid.ng he IS a
golf lover . A set of used Rom
golf dubs . righ t handed Indudes - 1rons 2, 3. 4, S. b, 7 B,
9, &amp; P.W Wood!&gt; 1, 3. 4 5 Head
rovers and bog with trOveling
hood . for more informati on ,

•coll949-2b98.
COUCH choi r leather like vinyl ,
breolc.fost se t with 4 (hairs, 2
end tables . '1411·2514 .

Mldt!_lo_Po_r t~_a.!!_ 9~?.:_3~52_. _ _

HARM FOR sole . House . 2 barns ,
I troller . l arge pond. 10 ceres o r
1:12 acres . 742 2566.

SEWING MACHINE Repa irs, serREAL ESTATE lOANS. CA N'TFIND
v~ee , all mak es 992.2284 . The
MORTGAGE: MONEY? We ho ve
Fabri c Shop ,
Pomero tf.
plenty ot compe1111ve rates with
Authorized Singer Soles and
te rms t o 30 veors. Veterens
Service . We sharpen Scissor'S.
and non-veteren s VA 8 ~HA EXCAVATING.
dozer . loader and
loans ore available IRELAND
backhoe work, dump trucks
MOHTGAGE CO., 77 1: State
and lo-boys for hire, will haul
St ,
Athens .
Phone
till dirt, to so il , limesto ne and
614 ·592 -305 1.
groveL Call Hob or Roge r JefNln O LD EH HOME m good ··
fers . cloy phone 992 -7089, night
1n
Pomeroy.
ne1ghborhood
phone 992·3525 or 992- 5232 .
Some recenT remodeling. Cen EXC
AVA TING, dozer , backhoe
tral heating. 3 o r 4 bed rooms .
and
d1tcher. Charles R. HotQQ-2 -707 4.
held , ' Bock Hoe Service.
Rutland, Oh1o. Phone 742 -2008.

-- -----·---

Will do roofi ng. cons tru ction ,
p lumbing ond he9hng . No job
too Jorge or lao small Phone

bedroom , air conditioned
home. Natural gas furnace,
bath ,
eat - In
kitchen,
basement, and .66 of an

acre. $25,000.
RUTLAND
24x80
business building with
bath, kitchen, natural gas,
&amp; city water . Now only

$11,000.
IN THE COUNTRY- New
3 bedroom fashionable
home. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths.
nice kit. with bar. dining
overlooking the country
side . Plenty of fire wood
and lots of country road .

$40,000. May take less.
MOB I ~E HOME LOTS - 2
already for your trailer.
Water taps, septic tanks
and electricity, on hard
roads .•

POMEROY- Want a good
buy lor $16,500. We have a 3
bdroomer, bath, · new
furnace,

basement, yard out of high
water for you . Aluminum
siding, storm windows and
doors,

WE HAVE NO OTHER
SIDELINES. All OF OUR
TIME IS SPENT SELLING
PROPERTY . IF YOU
WANT IT SOLD TRY US
AT 992-3325.
VIRGIL B. SR: AND
GORDON
B.
ARE
REALTORS
&amp;
APPRAISERS. HELEN l.
TEAFORD AND SUE P.
MURPHY
ARE
ASSOCIATE REALTORS.

3825•e-··- - -

- - - - - - ~-"-~=-:c'.

of high wafer . Want $40,000.
RACINE Good 4

742-2348

NEW
LISTING
Established for many
years. Bar and restaurant

In Middleport . 2 buildings,

several

Call

rentals.

for"

Information. $55,000.00.
NEW LISTING - •In
Pomeroy, 1'12 story, part

basement . 3 bedrooms,

garage. ONLY $11,900.00.
RANCH - 3 bedroom,
large nIce kitchen . 1.10
acres.

Carport,

excellent

condition.
close
to
Pomeroy. V.A. $29,500.00.
FARM -

70

acres, ranch

type house, barn, other
buildings, r i ver
BE~OW FAIR

frontage.

MARKET
VALUE . 533.000.00.
NEW HOME - 1 acre, In

the country, family room,
dining room , deck, l lf2

baths, basement, wood

burning

fireplace.

$51,500.00.
NOW
FEATURING
AERIAL PHOTOGRAPHY
AS A SALES AlD.
REA\.TORS
Henry E. Cleland
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
REAL TOR-ASSOCIATES
Leona Cleland
Kathy Cleland
CALL TODAY
992-2259 992-6191 992-2561

Housing
Headquarters

CENTRAL REALTY CO.
LOTS - 1 Acre al')d up rl ear Pomeroy .

50 ACRES FREE GAS- Good 1112 story house with full
basement. Large pond stocked with flsh . Priced for
quick sale, $40,000.
SPACIOUS BI-LEVEL - · This may be your dream
home. lt has a large kitchen with lots of cabinets,
stove, refrigerator and dl5hwasher . Beautiful dlnlng
r&lt;Sam with slldlng glass doors. Large living room and
family room, and to finish this well-lal,d out home we
have live bedrooms. utlllty room and garage. Very low
heating bill. Red barn-llke storage building. Located
about ten minutes north ol Pomeroy lust off Rt. 7.
Asking $55,000.
.
MIDDLEPORT - This well cared for newer home has
3 BRs, living room, bath,' mostly carpeted, kitchen Is
equipped with refrigerator and !love, utility room,
natural gas forced air heat, outside storage building.
'
Price $27,000.

TWO ACRES-Abeautlful4 year old, 3 bedroom hoine
with Iaroe eal-ln kllchen, 2 bedrooms, all nicely
carpeted, 2 baths. full basement with TV room. M/Jny
more e.tras, low heat bill lllllh nat. go• forced alr
furnace. All this and two nice acre• of land In a good
locaHon. Will go quick far $35,000.
115,000 - Good 5 bedroom hou5e with 2 full baths ..
Natural gas forced air heat, located In Che5ter.
Wee nead .. rge &amp; small Farms
and Many types of property.
CALL JIMMY DEEM, Assocltfe949·2311

(

2 dr ., auto, p s., p .b ., low
mileage , sharp .

1

HOWERY
AND MARTIN
Ex·
co vet ing,
se pti c sys t erps,
dozer backhoe , dump tr uck.
lim eston e, gravel. blacktop
pov1ng, Rt . 143. Phone 1 (614)

1968PMC52&lt;122BR
l955 Pro1r1e Schooner 281C8 1 8R
1973 Royo l embassy 68x14 3 BR
1959 Star 50xl0 2 BR
1973 Stor 60x14 2 BR
1968 Star 60xl2 2 BR
1970 Sylva 601e 12 2 BR
1968 Villages 60x12 2 BR
1%4 W indsor 511C l 0 2 BR
1970 Kirkwood 12x60 3 BR

B&amp;S MOBILE HOME SALES
PT. PLEASANT, W VA .

1'1, ACRt::: 12 x 60 mobi le home
near Dexter 992-5858 .
-~~~-~~--~
1967 TOTAL ELECTRIC mobile
home, furnished , 3 bedr.,
washer end dryer. Air condi·
tioned . 1 lot, 210ft . frontage.
$12,000. Phone742-2826.

Equipped for you and easy

1974 BUICK REGAL
1973 CHRYSLER

1970 PONTIAC 4 DR

WAGON

Auto .• p.s .. air.

Automatic, radio. ra ck.

PICKUP

See and Test drive the new breed at ..
992-2196

1970 DATSUN PICKUP

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

1974 OLDS CUTLASS ........................ 12495

DRIVE A UTILE

·1973 FORD LTD ............................. 11695
.1973 HORNET SPORTABOUT................ 11495
4i Dr . Wagon, 6 cy l , automatic.

--~1174,·2211

TALK-TO

Wtndllll or Herb Grift

or Gone Smith

RUnANI)
FURNITURE

p.s. , a 1r .

1974 FORD TORINO ............ ;............ 11495

All carpet · Installed with ·
paddln' at .no charge. ·
Expert onstallatlon.

74i-:i~·n

s., P .b

·2 Or . HT, automatic, p .s ., p .b ., vinyl roof , a 1r , am l m

SAVE A LOT

4 Dr Wagon, V ·B, automnt1c, a1r

•

1973 CHEVY CHEVELLE...................... 11195
' a Dr . Wagon , automatic, p.s., p .b .

i1973 MERCURY MONTEG0. .................1ll95
'

4 Dr ., air, p s ., p b

!1973 v.w.............................~;p~;~.... sggs
·1973 PONTIAC VENTURA.....................1995
' 1 or ., b cy l. , a vtomat1 c

1972 MERCURY MONTEGO MX ............ 1895
4 Dr , air, automatic , p.s.

1973 CHEVY DELUXE ........................ 1895
4 Dr , V ·8, automatic
.
Automa ti c.
1495
1970 v.W······················•··············

"VANS"
1973 GMC VANDURA % TON

2895

1

V·S, automatic , p .s, p .b ., ai r, fini shed Inside

RittMIIf

1978 GMC l/4 Ton
1977 Plymouth Volare 4 Dr.
1977 Pontiac Grand Prix
1977 Pontiac Phenix 4 Dr.
1976 AMC Pacer
1976 Plymouth Duster
1975 Chrysler Cordoba
1975 Dodge Dart4 Dart
1975 Ford LTO
19·75 Pontiac Lemans 4 Dr.
1974 Ford LTO 2 Dr. HT
1974 Chevrolet Camaro
1974 Ford Thunderbird
1973 Buick Electra 225 4 Dr.
1973 Chevrolet Impala 4 Dr.
1973 Ford Custom 500 4 Dr.
1973 Pontiac Catalina 4 Dr.
1973 Plymouth Gran Fury
1973 Mercury Montego
1973 Olds Delta 88 4 Dr.
1973 Mercury Montego MX
1972 Newport Royal4 Dr.
1972 Chevrolet Impala
1972 Ga laxie 500 4 Dr.
1972 Pontiac Grand Prix
1972 Pontiac Lemans 4 Dr.

$5695
$3795
$5495
$4495
$2695
$2895
$3895
$3195
$2995
$2895
$1995
$3198
$3195
$1595
$1695
$1695
$1295
$1495
$q95
$1295
$1595
$795
$795
$895
$1495
$695

''TRUCKS"
1974 TOYOTA HILUX ....................... 11995
4 cy lind er,

aspeed

1971 CHEVY CHEYENNE ................... 11395
v a, automatic. p.s

1974 CHEvY LUV ..... ...................... 11295

bon ' t forget you owe it to yourse-lf to check with us
before you buy any car, New or Used. We can save you

money . We are the Friendly Dealership. See or Call
one of these Friendly Salesmen : J . D. Story, Ray

Douglas or Bill Nelson.

4 cylinder, 4 speed

1

1973 FORD CUSTOM ......................... 895

lED FOR

V 8. automatic.

1966 FORD ¥2 TON ...........................1595
V 8, standard

1950 FORD % TON ..~=~~~~15 IN STOCK
Largest Se.l ectiolt 'In

.........

1

495

RIEBEL'S USED CARS
See Roger Riebel
985·3345 or 667· 3463

111• Val~y
St. Rt. 7

1795

1975 CUT. 442

1973 BUICK LS

1974 CADILlAC

,

CPE.

SEDAN

DEVIUE

Sil ver, b lack stripe.

A1r , auto , p .s, rad1o

.Yellow - gold .

S1795

1t;l

1 mile north
Tuppers Plains , Ohio

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
"Your Friendly Dealership"

By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mr. and Mrs . Wayne
Wilson. Mrs. Kathryn Hunt,
met Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Burri of Bolivar Dam
were
at
the
Area·
dia Nursing Home and
helped Mrs. Erma Wi,lson
celebrat e her birthday
Friday. Mrs. Wilson received
many carqs and gifts.
Mr . and Mrs. Herbert
Ht:.L 1 ~h visited Mr. and Mrs .
Otis Hussell, Mrs. Jo?ie
Sayre at Millwood, W. Va.
Sunday and also called on Mr.
and Mrs. George Thaxton and
son, Cottageville, Mr. and
Mrs . E lmer Click at Mt. Alto ,
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Lew1s at
Clifton .
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Qavidson
of Syracuse were Sunday
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Rhodes.
Mr . and Mrs. Ronald
Russell, Michael and Mandy ,
visited Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Russell, Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Venoy at Wolf Pen Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Allen Cun·
ningham and children of
Racine, Mrs. Linda Jewell
and two children of Letart, W.
Va . visited Mr. and Mrs.
Gerald Hayman and Mandy
Sunday evening.
Mr. and Mrs . Gerald
Hayman, Mr. and Mrs. M1lo
Richardson, Mrs . Ruby
Wolfe,
Dan
Hayman ,
Syracuse, Mr . and Mrs. Waid
Hayman met at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. LeWIS Ours and
surprised Mrs. Ours on her
birthday Wednesday evening.
Jeff Donohew of Belpre
spent Saturday evening with
his parents, Mr . and Mrs.
Roy Donohew. They were
joined on Sunday by Mrs.
Donohew and children of
Belpre and Mr. and Mrs.
George
Donohew
and
children of Circleville.
Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Hill
entertained with a dinner on
Sunday m honor of their
daughter, Mrs . Marshall

Ali.Stars in the first game of
the Bengals' 19711-79 season.
lWblnson scored 15 points
in the first half, Including 12
points in the first eight

Ill

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
992 -5342

"You' ll like Our Quality Way of Doing Business" GMC Financing
Open Evenings Until6 : 00 + Til S p.m . Sat.
Pomeroy

Roush . Attending were Mr.
and Mrs. Darrell Norns and
Tra~y ; Mr. and Mrs. Mar·
shall Rouslj, Joey and Cort·
ney .
Mr . and Mrs . Bruce Hart of
Colwnbus spent t he weekend
with Mr. and Mrs. Don Bell.
Mr . and Mrs. John Fisher of
Pomeroy also v1siLed the
Bells. Don is improving.
Mr. and Mrs . Don Hupp of
Pennsylvama spent the
weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
Steve Hupp at Racine .
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Dorsa
Parsons, Mr. and Mrs .
Russell Roush, Cindy and
Edward , Mr. and Mrs .
Ronald Russell , Mandy and
Mike. Mr. and Mrs . .Eddie

Hupp, Effie Pickens attended
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) the wedding and reception of Steve Oils of Stanford and
Brenda Lawrence and Joe Charles White of USC
Johnson at the home of Mrs. continue to lead the Pacific-10
Helen Pickens at Racine statisllcal derby.
Fnday evening.
Oils is lhe total offense
. Mr. and Mrs. O.arles Burri leader at 262.1 ·yards per
of Bolivar Dam, Ronald game . Quarterback Rich
W1lson spent the weekend Campbell of California,
with Mr . and Mrs. Wayne which
faces
Stanford
Wilson and family , Mrs . Saturday, is secood at 201.7.
Kathryn Hunt. They also
While is the top rusher wilh
visited Mrs. Erma Wilson at a 139.8-yard average. Only
the Arcadia nursing home at Theotis Brown of UCLA is
Goolville.
also over. 100 yards per game
al
118.1. While and Brown will
The first televised
lead
their
teams in
preSidential debate was the
Saturday's
game
at Los
R•ch"rd Nixon-John Kennedy
Angeles
with
the
Rose
Bowl.
debate series dunng the !960
invitation
at
stake
.
presidential campaign.

---------,
! MEIGS I

PUBLIC AUCTION

II Equipment Co. II
I
I

,OMEROY, 0.

PH. 992-2176

I
I

·1 lnletnational Open F r1doy I1
I Hamster To Ill ''' p.no . I
·1. N'" ldea
For Your
Snapping
I
I Equipment r,. .. v&lt;&gt;nience '

.L---------J

MONDAY EVENING, NOV. 20, 1978
AT 5:00 O'CLOCK P.M.
AT ntE AntE~S COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS,
AntENS, OHIO
The Athens National Bank, 2 5auth Court Street,

Athens, Ohio will offer for sale the following described
vehicles free and clear of all liens and encumbr•nc:es:

1978 AMC Jeep CJ5-4 WD. 6 cyl .. std. trans .• p.s .• 12.975
miles.

1978 Ford F100 PU 4-wd .. short bed , V-8, auto. trans.,
radio, p.s, p.b., 10,392 miles, blue .

1.977 Ford F100 PU. 8ft. bed. 6 cyl., auto. trans .• p.s.,

AM-FM stereo. 14.915 miles, freen.
1978 Dodge Monaco with p.s., p.b., air, crul5e, AM-FM,
maroon w -v inyl top, 13,207 miles.

"Finally, I've found
· a MAN-SIZE tractor"
ECONOMY

to~~glltl

tr1t hlll . . . . ' " ' "·

itltt. Mow , ,tow , till, '-'l*ue. lD 11t1cfl·
dHvt.

rcoNOM¥

~· FII'AIC7011

1977 Pont iac Lemans Spt. Cpe., p.s .. p.b., air, auto.
trans., white w -blue int., AO,B49 miles .

1975 Duster. 318 Motor, "·000 miles, clean.
1973 Che"alet Impala Cpe., V-8, auto. trans .• p.s .• p.b ..
viny l top , low mileage, runs like new .
The aforementioned vehicles 5:hall be sold at public

sole at 5:00 P.M. EST. on Monday, November 20. 1978
at the Athens County Fairgrounds to the highest
bidder. The vehicles will be sold as Is without any
ex press or Implied warranties. Vehicles may

be

seen

prior to the sale at the Athens County Fairgrounds on

SEE THEM -T'GOAY
POCATELLO, Idaho (UP!)
- Brand -Robinson scored 23
points Ia• night to lead Idaho
Slate University to a IOU!
victory over the AUBI.ralian

SERVICE/PARTS

See one of these courteous salesmen: Pete Burris, Marvin Kej1baugh
or George Harris .

lowlf tutl con, all 1111

992-2174

GMQUAUTY

"KEEP THAT GREAT GM FEELING
WITH GENUINE GM

mlfttl Mor1 -•• 110•111 ,

Closing at 6 : 00 On Week Days
500 E . Main
Pomeroy, 0.

S3295

GENERAL MOTORS PARTS DIVISION

News Notes

SAVE ON
CARPETING

Buy - · you can Clllffle In
and- what you're getting
- GGoclwlectlont.;.. Fully
stocked.

'.

1

S3495

l

Apple Grove

.•

Floor CMring In Stoq

Needs paint job.

1

6:00.

and 12' Vin,l

Dark green

p b.. AM-F M. 3 seats. lug .

4 or, automatic

F'lat b ed. good cond 1f1on

FROSTY'S CB radio equipment.
herything 1n two-way radio ,
ontennos and acces. Phone
Po r tl and 843-2181. Open evenings till 8:00: Sunday 2:00 till

9~

DEVILLE CPE.

1968 CHEVY NOVA

Coli .

'4.88 ~,.:;;

DEVILLE SEDAN

rack .

,.- ~

OPEN Tll7 P.M. ExceptThursday &amp; Saturday lil5 :00. Closed Sunday .

AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE been
cancelled? l ost your operators
l1cen5e? Phone 992-2143.

AI Low As

WAGON

1973 CAD.

'3495

4~

•

S1995

1974 CADILlAC

New tire s, air, auto., p.s ..

~' .

. .. .

A n1ce work car .

~

PULLINS EXCAVATING Complete
Service. Phone 992-2478.

Rubber Back Carpet

r

ROYALE CPE.

Runs good

¥2 TON

&amp;.

blue.

1974 OLDS 88

S4295

... where the Better Ideas keep coming!

4 Dr .• a1r, automat ic, p

M.

ttres,

1975 CHEV. CAPRICE

DAN THOMPSON FORD
See Rocky Hupp, Darrell Dodrill or Pat Hill, General Manager, for a
Good Deal on a New or Used Vehicle .
•

S495

S1395

Station Wagon, auto .

good

S4395

Sporty mi d size.

•4395

Town &amp; Country Wagon,
auto. Loaded .

1973 TOYOTA

Clean ,

CPE.

driving.

s1495

Phone 992-6144
992-7547
J.I0-18·1 mo.

1963 10 , 52 ONE BEDROOM

----

S1495

Aula .• loaded .

S1095

1974 "5CHULTZ l21Cb5 . Total electri c. Fully furnished . Househo ld
furnishings . For solo. $8500.
Con be seen at 825 S. 2nd.
Ave ., Middleport.
Wind sor trailer . Gas furnace,
fur nished
Underpinning . '
992 -3897 after 5 weelc.dovs.

4 Dr., ,auto., air :

~~S1~~-+~~~~~~

698·7331

1970 Amherst 50x12 2 BR
1970 Champio n b0x 12 2 BR
1965 Genero160x12 2 BR

1976 BUICK REGAL

.. Dr., p .b., p.s ., auto., air,

1.
., ,

air, good t1res.

1975 OLDS 98
lS SED.

Years · Experience

1976 NASHUA 1.4 x 65 3 bedroom
1'1 both ,' underpinning , SISOO
. ond assume loon . 949-2683 or
S43 -3311.

Had valve JOb, has some
rust

1

1974 FORD GALAXIE

,s1"11 Work Guaranteed

Mobile Homes for Sale

Radio. AM FM, aula, p.s.,
p.b

1973 MERCURY

Building
Any Type Improvements
To Existing Structures
All Type COncrete Work
No Contract Too Large Or
Too Small

BATHROOMS AND Kitchens
remodeled ceramic tile ,·plumbmg. carpentry, and general
maintenance
13 years ex _P~-~~'::._~2-368~ _ __

SUPREME SEDAN

1974 CHEVY LUV

WAGON

l~dustrlal
•nd Home

ClEANING.

CPE.

S1295

1974 FORD PINTO

Price Builders

9n-SS87

S.E. CPE.

'1795

42,000 miles .

~URNACE

1976 OLDS CUTLASS

S1695

2 Dr., stand.

2495

1975 DATSUN 210

S2895

S1695

Mourning and

1

'1995

'l Dr. auto .. P .S

Pickup. good condition.

I

Dark blue. v. roof. AM-F M,
50-SO seat, air . Good tires .

1973 DODGE CHARGER

1975

Au to ., P.B., P.S., radiO

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

OLDS 88
SEDAN
.ROYALE
•

Air , AM-FM, good tires &amp;
mor e

S5295

1976 HORNET WAGON

.

Commercial

Low mileag e, sharp, nice
famtl y car.

'2195

_
-.... .....
Type

I

2695

'

Pomeroy, 0 .
3-.15-tfc_

1973 OLDS
TO RON ADA

NEWPORT SEDAN

FORD MAVERICK 1975 FORD MUSTANG
II
-4 Dr .. automati c .

...

All

1977 CHRYSLER

1975 GRAND TORINO

(/)

SPECIALS • THANKSGIVING

2-Door Hardtop

pkg., auto., 6 c yl.,

"
s-

z

p .s .• p .b , radial ttres

FORD GRANADA

Service
.._

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweepers, toasters, irons, all
small applia nces lawn rriower ,
ne~Ct to State H1ghwoy Garage
on Route 7. Phone (614) 985-

1976 GREMLIN X ·
Spor t

Dr ., auto .• p.s.

z

Ci)

'2395

Muffler
Bi-akes
Shocks
Tires
Battery.
Installation Service '

CHESTER
Good 5 bedroom house with full
basement &amp; 2 baths. Nat. gas heat, approx . 1 acre land
and large storage building . Price 521,500.
BARN SIDING, hued timbers . 1973
Su.zuki 500 bike for sole or
__ _rr~e for pi ckup~~: 2_!1:1~·- _

1976 FORD MAVERICK

~----~------~4~-~~~~ ~··~--~~--~~1~1-~
3-~1~m~o~._.

JH~~~ ~ l~~~~~-,~~e-h-~-m.-i~

gas

$$$SAVE$$$

MOORE'S

BRADFOHD
Auctioneer . Com j Real Estate tor Sale
p lete Serv1ce. Phone 949-2487
or 949 -2000 Rodne , Ohio, Critt
HOMESITES for sole, l acre and
Bradford.
up. Middleport , near Hutlon d.

Asking S23,000.
POMEROY -

'2295
"·

For The Best
Price In Town
See
Denver Kapple
At

.

;;

THANKSGIVING

NEW BREED

'J Dr .• st~ndclrd shift. 33.000 mli rs .

ReaiOflable Prices
References Available
Phone 742·2029 .•
\0-22·1 mo.

11 ·3-1 mo.

•

-f

USED CAR

!'

Construction
Maintenance
'

(/)

I

C.rpenlry, Electrical,
Palntlng

J&amp;L INSULAnON
JIM KEESEE

Chester, Ohio
10 30·C

BoX J ,

H08SIEIIER .
Real

t R. Construction

CEllULOSE
INSUlAOON
'6.50 per bag

~

VALUE
RATED

.'

A

BIG CHRI StMAS Auct1on . Fn .
bpm ll1 g truck load all new
guorenteed name brand toy s
a nd other gdt 1tems at O hi o
R1ve r Auct ion , 537 High St. ,
MiddlepOrt , Oh1o No sole on
Saturday n1ght

Complete

(")

•

- ----·--~--

1967 CHEVHLC 396 4-speed . Good
condilion. $.450. 9.49-2860.

-

-- ...!-------~

natural

1970 G ALAXIE 500 2-door sedan .
Ai r condi tioning. P S P B , AT .
Good conclilion mside and out.
~xce llent ga s m ileage Good
fi res. Must drive to appreciate.·
Ca ll after 5pm . ~92 - 2995 .
. --------

--------~ORO 4-door seda n Good

-- --

ANTI -FREEZE

992-76B9

1975 DATSUN PICKUP . Good con dition
low mileage. Step
bumper Truck mirrors Pnced
to se ll. 985 -3979

--

19b9 CE HVROL ET DUMP tru ck
Also, 1907 Chevrolet picl.. up ,
$350. Co ll 992-5524 o r 992-391 "1 .

1975 MONTE CARLO. Excellent
condition . Lots at extras S2700

992-2995

cleaning The Chimney Sweep
Cal l b 14-:173-6057

1976 FORD F·350 cattle ro ck s. 10'
bed ,
20,000
mil es
Co li
&lt;149-22n .

1977 MONZA SPYOER 305 engine.
Power sleenng . Power brakes.
AM-FM rod1o More ex tr as Call
742-2f:l26.

TA8ll: . P.S. 0 .8 ., push butt on
top con trol. In dash factory Strock tape player. Good runn ing condi tio n . Ca ll alter Spm .

DUSTLfSS f1REPLACf onrl &lt;h,mney

992-6227.

--~-

RISING STAR Kenne ls. Boarding
and g roomi ng . all breeds
Che shire, 3b7-0292

~pponent .

~NEWSPAPER

HAY

-- - -

_ _!6..'.~L 69B -3290 _____
· -· _

-- -

--~--

RI::OUCE SA~E g lost w 1th GoBese
Toblet s &amp; I: Vop " water pdl 5 ·
Nel son Drug.
- - - .
RI::BUIL T 6 &lt;yl Chevrole t motor
w1th 3-s peed sfd tro nsmi5s ion

HOOf HOLLOW Ho r ses. Buy , sel l
trade or tram . New and used .
sadd le'S . Ruth Reeves Albany .

when you ' re u nder pressure .

~atter

MIXED

Pets tor Sale

Edward T. Baer, Ruby
Baer to Betty Ann Jewell

..--H-.-L--WR---=E-SB.-----,
11

WAIHI WEll dril ling Wdlmm T.
C '9nl 74'J .'Jff'ICI

NI::W

DELTA TIRI::S. Quality onrl per·
formonce . On
sole now
742 :232M .

Yard Sale

IF YOU hove o serv1ce to offer
Larry E . Spencer,
wont to buy or sell somethi ng.
Clerk of Court
oe lookmg tor work .
or
'Y'e igs County, Ohio
wha tever
. you'll get results
fo'!iter with o Sentinel Wont Ad
(11 1 17, 24, &lt;121 1, a. 15, 22, 6tc

decree), Me1gs.
Trus .
Penn
Central
Transportation Company to
Penn Central Corp . In·
denture Meigs"
monkey is off of your back .
'
d
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) You
Jacqueline M. Denney, ec.
do your best thinkmg today to Walter L. Denny, Cert. of

St1ck by your guns no

For Sale
COAL . li M~STONC , sand , grovel
co lc1um ch loride, fertilizer . dog
l oad . and all types of sa lt. Ex
ce ls1or Sal t Works . Inc.. E. Main
St . Po meroy 992·3891

JUNK BATTERIES , S2 . Copper
35cper lb. Clean alum1 num 15c
per lb .. no con s. ~ or lim1ted
l1me only . R1der's Sal vage SR
124 .
WANT TO buy : ol d -45 and 78
pho nog raph
reco rd s
Cot!
992-b370 or Contact Martin Furm ture

WI LL (AfU: for th!? elrlerly 111 our
home. PhoneC/92. 7:114 .

Real Estate tor Sale

doss rings, wedding bonds ,
diamonds . Gold or silver . Ca ll
Ro_g:.r ~~~s l!y ;__ 7~'2: 233~ __

regardmg the matter.

ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19)
You'll have an opportunity to
change something 1oday lhat
has been bugg ing you lor a
long time You 'll leel like a

B om

fARM HOU SE to rent o good rent
on Tonn e r' s Hun Hoc1ne Oh1o,
Rt 'J 3 bedrooms insulated
home, o1l furna ce, garage.
garden . rumpus room , Iorge
basement , bath hor and cold
water
!&gt;pr1ng . drilled we ll
Avail able about Dec 1, 1978
Rent $125 per month in od·
vance Also secunty deposit of
SJ25 To see clo l Mrs . Csther
We'!it . Rt . I PhOne 94926ti9.

-------.-----OLD COINS, pocket wat ch es ,

that rne last publice tion will
be made on the 22nd day of
Oecem ber, 1978

Properly
1\QUARIUS (Jan. 20· Feb. 19)
You'll be ab le lo pick up lhe T ansfers
loose ends of a pro1ec1 lefl
. ·r
undone, due to something unu·
sual lhat occurs today . The
comp leted task greally ad&gt;ances your 1nterests.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) If
you make. and lollow certain
guidelines you 'll not only be
abl~ to keep a difficult promise,
you II have plenly ol spare t&lt;me

before

HI:NHHS ASSISTANCE for Sen.or
Ci t1zens Yo u may be ab le to
l1ve m our apartment lor l e~s
thon S50 Vil lage Monor .Aporl ments . 992-7787.

complete househol ds Wri te
M .O Mil ler , Ht. 4 , Pomeroy or
coH 99'2-7760.

specify blrth sign .
- time following twenty eight WANTED TO buy : 8 or 8'1J. truck
camper Coll992-71bl between
SAGinARIUS lNov. 13·0ec. days from the date of the last
B-S
21) 5
I 'II ' t0 d0 publication of thl!. notice and

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)

ed. apt. Call

APPlES fi TZ PAT~I C K Orchar d
Stole HI 689 Phon e Wd~esvi ll e
669 37E:I5.

TIMBEH . POMEHOV ~crest Pro ducts . Top pnce for, stond.ng
SHOTGUN SLUG Match eve ry
sow timber . Ca ll 9Y'l-S9b5 o r
Sun day in November. Isaac
Walton Form near Chester . __K':_nt_H~~by_.~ 4~6.:.8~7? __ _
l pm. Hams , turkeys , other OLD FUHNITUHC , 1ce boxes, brass
meats. Shells ovo11oble. All
beds. iron beds desks , etc ..

and beneftcial nature.

· omeone s Wt mg
something for you she
wouldn ' t do for others. It would
prove awkward for her if any·
one else were to learn of it .

TWO 8EDHOOM , k 1tchen furnish-

69B -BOl2.

Wanted to Buy

e~&lt; -

traord lnary dream you've been
harboring. It will be of a lasting
(Oct.

DAILY SENTINEL

POMEROY LADY wi ll sit w tth pa tients tn home or hospttal

PRIVATE

3 AND 4 RM furn ished and un ·
furn1sher:l
opts
Phorie
Y92-543d .

8URROU G HS SE NSI ·MAT!C oc
counttng
mo c h~ne .
Phone
9'n 2156, The Doily Sent1nel
111 Cour t Str ee t , Pomeroy .
OhiO .

lHE

---

--------- - -----NEW · ROOM ANO BOARO

---~

Pork
Route 33 , nor th Qf Pomeroy .
large lots Coli q92 -7479

---

for

trapper . 985-3984. Will con tact
tn person for stgned permtS·
sian

ASTRO·GRAPH

SCORPIO

MOTOR ROUTE
DRIVER

Club .

opossum , beaver etc? Ca ll the

Saturdlly, Now. 11

~ou bring

Hfi.P WANTED

~

-

Swnlay
4P.M.
F'mlay &lt;!ftenmun

. -

8AHTENOt:::R WANTEO. I:xper1ence
preferred but not necessary
Welt paid Interesting occupa tion. Pl easant a tmosphere with
best clientele. Apply in person ,

GUN SHOO T. Hocine Volunteer
Fire Dep t Every Saturday 6 30
pm at their bui lding in Ba shon
Fac to ry choke guris only
- - . - -- - -,
ARE VOU troubled wtth wild
animals? Fox , mink , r acoon ,

Tt!esday

~

M ~i !;! S ~n~ . _, _ _ _ _ _ _ _

!:very Sunday I pm

lhru Frrday

.

NO HUNTING o r trespossmg on

.

Monduy
Noon on &amp;iturtlay

---. . - --

OEPENOABU: 8AR help . M us t be
a v ailable
n1ghts
o rHf
weekends , occas ional days
f1ve Point s Grill , Rt 7

Notices

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
'"""'·

PAYROLL CLERK l or constructio n
o ff ice at the Mountainee r
Plant ,
New
Ho ven . Send
resumes
PO 8ox 47l:l . Park e r sburg WV
2b101

-

respunsible fur more Uum Uflt' uwor-

NOTICE

LOST: tRACK and wh11c female
Walker 1ri Hocme Portland
a reo . Coii94Y-2281 or 949&lt;J1 'JY

CAR HOP and waitress at once
Apply m person . Crows fami ly
Restaurant . Pomeroy Ohio

card of Thanks

Tl~ Publi.sher reserves the rrJ(hl
to edit or rejet.1 ~my &lt;1ds d~ult'd obje&lt;.·tiorwl The Publi!dwr wrllnot !lt'

~--

Help Wanted

That God ca lled you away

tmel.

-· ---- -COUNTRY -M081LE Home

LOST PART Poodle and pan
Pek ine se, fem al e . block w1th 4
brown paw s. Go rey on bock red
collar . Chester Rt . 'J4M. Phone
1185-4312.

- -Services Offered
-·- ------ -·- --- --

Business Services·

_.,........_ -

-

'192-728B

No heart so kind and true
No sorrow life cou ld bring us
Could equal loosmg you
11 was just three yeor s ago

order. 2S cent char~e rur ads t:arryin)( Bux. Number In Carl:' of Tire Sen-

- - --·--Foun_d_ __ - - ·- r
'
For Rent

SPECIALS • THANKSGIVING •·
n

minutes of play to pace ISU to for lhe Australians .
a 5~3 halftime lead. Idaho , Robinson was high scorer
Stale jumped out in front !HI for lhe evening. Andy Blicavs
in the first two minutes paced lhe AII.Stars wilh 21
before Bill Palmer connected points.

REED'S COUNTRY STORE
Reedsville, 0.

"

November 17,
arrangements .

1978

at

~:00

P.M. or by

prior

The Athens National Bank of Athens, Qhlo restrves tht
right to bid, the right to withdraw any or 111 vehicles
from sale prior to confirmation.

Terms of sale : cash, certified or oHiclol cllock, or
financing

confirmiltion .

Phone 557-3411 .

Auctioneer -

8111

J•nes,

�. . . . ...........

12- The

Daily Senti nel, Middl eport-Pomeroy , 0 ..

Friday , Nuv.

17. 197R

Airliner death toll climbs past 200 people
.

.

.

By JOSEPH SWERA
pushed the toll in tlie worst flew its flags at half~taff.
CO{.OMBO, Sri Lanka chartered airliner crash in
As
President
J.R . .
(UPI)- The death toll today history past the original 200 Jayewardene's commission
climbed past 200 in the crash deaths and authorities feared of inquiry setUed down to
of a IBlandic jet carrying 200 that other burn victims might determine the cause of the
Indonesian Moslems horne die .
DC8's fiery end, Civil
from a pilgrimage to Mecca.
The crash of the Oight AviaUon officials sealed and
The official Sri Lanka carrying the
Moslem
Broadcasting Co. said three. pilgrims was ahnost an exact
victims who survived the duplicate of the Dec. 4, 1m
crash o( the DC8 airliner died airline disaster at Colombo
of their burns in Colombo airport when 191 Indonesian
hospitals, increasing the . Moslem pilgrims were killed I
death toll to 203.
in the crash of a .chartered
JACOB ELBERFELD
There were 56 survivors, Dutch airliner taking them tQ
Jacob
Elberfeld, 81, son of
which an aviation official Mecca.
the
late
Mr:
and Mrs. Jacob
said 1 "passes
all
Moslems haye the duty tQ
Elberfeld
of
Pomeroy, died
Wlderstanding." Witnesses make one pllgrimmage to
Thursday
at
his
home at 63
had said the plane "came Mecca during their lifetime.
West
College
Ave.,
Westerdown like a ball of fire from
A day of national mourning
ville.
Mr.
Elberfeld
was
the sky."
began today for the victims
retired.
He
attended
the
The plane carrying 259 who died when the airliner
of
the
Messiah
United
Church
persons, came down j\lSt ca rry i ng Indonesia·n
short of Colombo's airport' Moslems home from a Mecca Methodist.
He is survived by hls wile,
runway Wednesday night, pilgrirnmage erupted into a
breaking into three sections fireball and crashed into a Mary Elizabeth; sons, Dr.
Jacob Hansel Elberfeld,
and killing 192 of 246 coconut grove.
passengers and eight of the 13
Priests, beginning at dawn, Marysville, and Edward
crew memhers.
chanted in mosques filled James Elberfeld, Columbus;
The three deaths . today with mourners arid the nation two daughters, Mrs. David
(Sara) Deever and Mrs.
Robert (Jo) Ruhl, both of
Wester ville ; six grand·
c~ildren, three brothers, five
Sisters and several nieces and
nephews. Among those
preceding him in death was a
brother, Alfred, who operated
the Elberfeld Store in
Pomeroy for many years.
Friends may call at the
Moreland Funeral Home, 55
E. Schrock Road, Wester·
ville, from 7 to 9 tonight. The
funeral will be held at 10 a.m.
saturday at the Church of the
Messiah United Methodist
with the Rev. Larry Hard and
the Rev. Eugene Griffith
officiating.
'
Graveside service and
interment will be at Scotts
Creek Cemetery in Logan at
12:30 p.m. saturday. In lieu of
flowers friends may con' tribute to the Otterbein
Development FW1d in care of
Otterbein College.

scheduled to arrive tonight to national Airport had given killed 345 people.
Newepaper repolu have I
join
the
commission goOd guidance to the craft's
President Jayewardene de· ch&amp;rged tbat the lnllrument
comprised of ·Chief Justice pilot, H. Hervinsson, before clared !Qday a period ol system at the Colombo
Victor Tennekoon, Police the crash.
national mourning even airport wu defective and :
expertS.
Criminal Investigation
In addition to being though ooly 7 percent of Sri that alra-aft were having ;
Investigators
from Director A. Navaratnam and history 's worst chartered Lankans are Moslems. The trouble
making
night:
,.
.
Indonesia and Iceland were Civil Aviation Director S. jetliner disaster, the crash bulk are Buddhista and landinga.
"
Athulathmudali.
was the third highest air Hindu.
Foreign Minister A. crash
casualty
toll.
Hameed told newsmen the Aviation's worst crash was
flight crew standing by in . the the 1977 'Canary Islands YA"CCPro~
Colombo to take over from
of a KLM Royal
(Continued from page I )
I the crew of 13 aboard the collision
Dutch Airlines 747 into a Pan Forked RWl State Park. There 8l'e currently 11 young people '
jetliner issued a statement to American World Airways 747 employed in the program Wider the supervlalon of Mark Ervin.
Ward. He was also preceded his ministry affu-ming that
that killed 582 people. The
Ervin reports the program already hal! provided v•ble
in death by two sons and bis. the control tower at 1974 crash of a · Turkish
service
to the areas and with expansion Into new areas and
wile, Katherine, in 1970.
Colombo's Katunayake Inter- Airlines DC-10 near Paris new projects, It will be a great a!lllet to the state as well u to
A retired coal miner, Mr.
Meigs CoWlty.
Ward is survived by five
daughters, Mrs. James
(Elizabeth) Milton, Mid·
dleport; Mrs. Jack (Ruth
MIDDLEPORT CHJUSTMA8 PARADE
Alice) Winchester, Colorado
Count on us to take part in the annual Middleport Clamber
of Commerce Christmas Parade at 6:30p.m. Nov. %1.
gprings, Colo.; Mrs. James
(Betty) Fields, Dayton; Mrs.
Name ________________________________
Glassco (Kathy Faye)
Farrow, Chillicothe; Miss
Marcella Ann Ward, Dayton;
Ad~ess------------~----------------~
five sons, Jerry Ward, Jr.,
Canton; George H. Ward,
would tie the Israeli- Phone----------United Press International
Columbus; James F. Ward,
Three words areholding up Egyptian treaty to an overall
Dayton; Richard A. Ward, Israeli Cabinet approval of a Middle East settlement, Type of EntrY--------------~---------;
Lucasville, and Robert E. · treaty with Egypt, Israeli involving the West Bank and
Please complete and
to Candy Ingels, In care of
Ward, Dayton; a daughter-in· reports said today. ,But both the Gaza strip.
law, Mary Ward, Winona, Israeli Defense Minister Ezer
A
total
of
700,00 · Ingels Two4n.One Store, N. Second Ave., Middleport, OhiP
Miss.;
several grand· Weizman and · Egyptian Palestinians live in the 45760.
children, great • grand· President Anwar Sadat said occupied West bank of the
children and great - great • they
confident Jordan and 400,000 in the
were
grandchlldren and several agreement on the historic Gaza strip which Egypt
nieces and nephews.
pact soon would be reached. administered W1Ul 1967 when
WORKSHOP PLANNED
Funeral services will be
Negotiations on the first Israel took it along with
A workshop for Tuppers
held at 2 p.m. Monday at the ever pact between the Jewish Jordan's West 'Bank.
Plains
area residents in·
(Continued
from
page
I
)
Rawlings-Coats Funeral state and an Arab nation have
President Carter has fash·
terested
In writing their
Home with the Rev. Ray been stalemated for two ioned two compromises and
A spokesman for u.s. Stee_l
family
histories
for the upRoush officiating. Burial will weeks over language that pleaded with Egypt and Corp. In Pittsburgh said 10 ID
coming
Meigs
History
Book
be in the Beech Grove
Israel to reach agreement. 12 percent of ita shipments
will
be
held
at
2
p.m.
SIUiday
Cemetery, Pomeroy. Frienda
Sadat sent his vice president had been delayed.
may call at the funeral home. Cag~
"We have probably over 20 at the home of Mra. Agnes
to Washington Thursday to
Hlll in Tuppers Plains. Those
Mr. Ward was a member
lry to break the logjam with a plants involved and haven't
and deacon, and trustee of the
proposal that Gaza and the had the trucks to move the attending are to take paper,
pencils and any pictures
Church of Jesus Christ in
West Bank be treated steel," he said.
which
they might plan to use
Rutland.
Hill claimed that steel
Saturday's SVAC Cage separately.
with
their
history.
The EgypUan compromise industry statements about
Preview at Rio's Lyne Center
will be broadcast over Radio could delay Israel's first ·the strike having little effect
Hospital News
Station WYPC-FM Gallipolis withdrawal from the Sinai tQ on their shipments were
MARRIAGE LICENSES .
beginning at 6 p.m. Bill Gray, the holding of autonomy elec- false. It's "tremendously
Holzer Medical Center
Christopher Charles
Tom Spencer and Ed tions in Gaza - which Israel effective," he said and
predicted that ''within the Dinguas, 30, Mllldleport, and
Discharges, Nov. 15
Wildermuth will provide the would like.
Tia Armstrong ; Christopher play-by-play.
The Cabinet will meet next week" small industries Dottie Marie Cremeans, %1,
Brown; Aaron Bryan; Rev a
Action hegins with South- Sunday to debate the in the midwest that depend on Middleport.
Cardwell ;
Virginia western's reserves !lleeting Egyptian postion
and receiving steel by truck will
Jeffrey Arthur RIISieU, 20,
CArpenter;
Kristi Kyger Creek. The varsity will compromise U.S. proposals have a11 emergency that Pomeroy, and Janet Lee
Chambers; Laureen Cook; play following the two on the linkage issue.
could precipitate productim Neal, 21, Middleport.
Li!wrencene Cordell; Ronald quarter reserve tilts. Other
Israeli reports said the cutbacks and layoffs.
Ernie Lee Kleakl, 26, &amp;ute
"We don't want to see any 1, Tippecanoe, and Jennifer
Davis ; Jame s Fields; games find Hannan Trace Cabinet has objected to three
Richard Hall ; John Hansgen; and Eastern playing at 7:30 words linking the treaty to· layoffs," he sald. But if the Caroline Chapman, 21,
Larine Harless; Conda Irwin; p.m. and North Gallia the future of the occupied ter· situatlm gets to that point Pomeroy.
Cinda Irwin; Mrs. Edwin meeting Southern at 9 p.m. ritories: Tiiey said the worda maybe "the government wW
Jones and daughter ; Mrs.
sit down with us and the
were, 11on .the basis."
and
the
Willie Keeton and son; Jessie
Weizman told reporters at companies
FUNDS DISTRffiUTED
~ GOOD OONDmON
Kerns; Mrs. Hubert Kimbler
State Auditor Thomas E. Ben-Gurion Airport on his Teamsters and make some
Steve Dunfee, Pomeroy, ill
and son ; Hulda Leedom; Ferguson reported the arrival from Washing!Qn tQ decisions."
reported in good conditio'\
Dolores McAsee; Carolene November distribution of brief the government that
following
surgery
at
McDaniel ; Fannie Metcalf; $6,408,123.58 in local govern· ·Egypt does not want to claim
Riverside
Methodist
HOI(Iital
OMISSION NOTED
Opal Meyer ; Erin ll&lt;tder; ment fWld money to Ohio's 88 any territory in the Gaza
Mr.
and Mrs. Arlee Abbott in Columbus. Carda may be
Nancy Rickard ; Mrs. James counties and 388 cities and Strip as part of an
attended the birthday sent to him at 7th Floor,
Riggs and son; Patrica villages levying local income agreement.
Riverside
. Room
758,
Sdtes; Walter Shane; Brian taxes. Of the total Meigs
"The problem is the Egyp- celebration of their great- Methodist· Hospital,
Sheward; Brad Speakman; CoWlty received $12,500.
tians view of the relationship grandson, Tra~s Abbott, son · Columbus, Ohio 43201.
Barbara Steele; Mrs. James
between our agreement with of Mr. and Mrs. Roger AbStewart and daughter ; Rhett
them and the close problem bott, Pomeroy, Sunday.1l\eir
Peart;
Charles
PrWlty;
Paul
Stidham; Emma Swon ; Molof the future of the autonomy names were Wlintentionally
THANKSGlVINGSERVICE
Reynolds,
Jr;
Tina
Rice
;
ly Tr e panier ; George
in Judea, Samaria (the West omitted from a listing of
A Thanksgiving candlelight
Waldron; John WEstfall ; Curtis Riffle ; Roger Bank) and Gaza," Weizman guests at the party.
and
communion service will
Paul Williams; Pauline Saltsman; Anthony Smith; said.
be
held
at 7:30 p.m. Wed·
SQUARE DANCE
Wolfe; Sharon Valses; Judith Pauline Starcher; Joseph
" But, at the same time ...
nesday
at
the Long Bottom
Strong; August Trapp; Byron I'm also convinced ... that
The Shade PTO is spon· United Methodist Church.
YoWlg.
VanMeter.
Births, Nov. 15
there is wlllingness on the soring a square dance from 9 Guest speaker will be the
Births, Nov. 16
Mr. and MRs. Larry Smith,
Egyptians part to cootinue to 12 saturday night at the Rev. Steve Wilaon. There will
Mr. and Mrs . James discussions and to lind a Shade Elementary School.
son, Point Pleasant.
be special music. The pubUc
daughter, Kerr.
Kemper,
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Foster,
solution to the oulstanding The Shade Valley Blue Grass is invited.
Mr. and Mrs. Michael problems."
Band will provide music.
daughter, Gallipolis.
Caldwell,
daughter,
Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Gibson:
Gallipolis.
daughter, Vinton .
Mr. and Mrs. Edward,
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Alfred,
Johnson,
Jr, son, Gallipolis.
son, Ravenswood .
· · Discharges, Nov. 16
Stella Burnett ; Jeanell
Byler; Lottie Coheen; Nellie Veterans Memorial Hospital
Adtnltted - Anna Wheeler,
Curnmions; Bobbie Dunfee ;
Roy Fox ; Charlene Garri&amp;on; Racine; Edna Wiggins ,
Carol Gilhert; Mrs. Clifford Minersville; Etoille Cassell,
Griffith and daughter ; Clifton, W. V'!.·; Marlon
Margaret Hardin; Angela Riggs, Mason; Merle Evans,
Diane Fry,
Henry; Kenny !son ; DAvid Portland;
Pomeroy
;
Walter
Brown,
Jaques; Linda Jenkins;
Letart
,
W.
Va.;
Callie
David Jones ; Margann
Metheny,
Ewington;
Henry
KEaton,; Harriet Leport;
Cunningham,
Pomeroy.
Pauline Markins ; Mrs. Frank
Discharged Evelyn
Martinko and daughter;
David McCarroll ; Debra Me· Wood, Nell Graves, Paul
Coy;
Lonene Metzler; Paiterson, Debbie Davis,
Virginia Morris ; Worthy Catherine Mees, Charles
Nibert; Orville Parks; Nadia Evans.
packed the black box flight .
recorder for shipment to the
Ul)ited States where it will be
examined by
;lviation

--------------------------

! Area Deaths I

Don't be

caught short•.

Up in the air over Christmas bills?
Join our Christmas Club.
Get your feet back on the ground.
Be extra jolly next Christmas.
t·
~

FREE GIFT---..
When you OPEN your Christmas Club receive a Santa Helper Tree Ornament while the supply lasts .
Open your Christmas Club before January
1, 1979, make 49 prompt weekly payments,
and the Pomeroy National Bank will make
the Soth payment for you.
\
Our Christmas Club for 1979 is now open.
Join this week. ·

pomeroy
rutl~nd
1uppers plams

pomeroy
nationa
bank
the bank of
the century
established 1872

MARY GALLAGHER
Mary Edith Gallagher, 99,
former resident, died at her
Columbus home, 883 S. Ohio
Ave., on Nov. 12. Mrs.
Gallagher was born March I,
1879, a daughter of the late
George Gilbert and Mary Coe
Webster of Great Bend in
Meigs Courity.
Mrs. Gallagher was a lifelong member of the United
Methodist Church and was a
Charter member of the
WOmen's Auxiliary of
Columbus and Franklin
CoWlty.
She was preceded in death
by her husband, Dr. Frank M.
Gallagher, a former resident
of the Racine area, and a son,
James.
Surviving are two sons, Dr.
Francis W. Gallagher and Dr.
Clarence M. Gallagher, both
of Columbus, seven grandchildren and six greatgrandchildren.
Funeral services were held
Wednesday in Columbus.
Burial was in Green Lawn
Cemetery.
JARRY C. WARD
Jerry C. Ward, 78, died
early Friday morning at his
Beech Street residence in
Middleport. Mr. Ward was
born April 5, 1900 at
Kihnichael, Miss., son of the
late Jerry and Betty Love

LOW, LOWGET-ACO.UAINTED

•

Words holding
off approval

maU

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Elberfelds In Pom.eroy

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SALE ENDS SATURDAY NOV. 25TH
9'12 -3748
or 9'12-5020

405 N. Second Ave.

Middleport,
Ohio

Convenient
Free Parkinq
r

-

Elbertelds In Pomeroy

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Local min.e is .closed, utility firms blamed

BY LARRY EWING
GALLIPOLIS - . Attempts by Ohio
utllities and industries to comply with the
Environmental Protection Agency's aii
cleanup order by buying out-of-state, tow
sulfur coal, is apparently having a
signifacant negative impart. on local
miriln g.
Urban Baldwin ol the B, B and M Coal
Co. on Williams Creek Rd., reports that
laot Wednesday the mine in Gallia County
was shutdown.
According to Baldwin, the importation
of western coal into the area is responsible
for the discontinuation of operations at the
mining site; as well as the lay off of the 32
employees of B, B and M.
'
.~ Interviewed Saturday, Baldwin said
th@t massive imports of out.()f-State coal

into the area are placing a heavy burden
on the operation of Ohio mines.
Many Ohio utilities and Industries
have decided to·comp1y with the EPA's air
cleanup order by buying out-of-state lowsulfur coal instead of installing
..scrubber ." device~ for eliminatin~
sulfur dioxide from high~ullur coal.
lmpusslble To Ship Out
Ralph Z!nn, of Zinn's Coal Co., said
Saturday that there is so much out-of~tate
coal being moved on the Ohio River into
the area that it has become nearly
impossible to eyen ship the roal out of
Southern Ohio.
"We can't bid on out-&lt;&gt;f-state
contracts, ~cause we can't get' a
commitment for the use of barges," Zinn
said.

"The shipment of coal into the area
has tied up the river's locks to the el&lt;\ent
Utat we can't even sell OW' coal out of the

3rea,'' Zinn continued.
It is further reported that cutbl!cks in

coal production, brought on by a lack of
markets and transportation in and out of
the area, has hit most, if not all mines in

and around Gallia County.
" It 's worSe than the coal strike," Zinn
said, "at least we knew that the strike
would end sometime - with this situation
there's no way of knowing."
Cheaper In Long Run

VOL 13

NO. 42

.Junior Miss
Pageant set
(or today
'

MIDDLEPORT - The Junior Miss
Pageant will be held beginning at 3:15p.m.
\odily at Meigs Junior High School's
auditoriUm here.

Nine high school senior girls from
Southern Ohio will complete .for two Junior
Miss titles. Candidates include Miss Carol
Morris, Rt. 1, Long Bottom; Miss· Lori
Chapman, Syracuse; Miss Sherr! Rishel
Rt. 2, McArthur; Miss Becky Crow',
Racine; Miss Debbie Pickens, Syracuse
and Racine; Miss Janis Carnahan,

Racine ; Miss Dollie Rousey, .Pomeroy;
Miss Belinda McGraw , Racine, and Miss
Cindy Patterson, Syracuse.
Sponsors are Racine Home National
Bank, The City Loan, E!llott Appliance II,
The Meigs Inn; Meigs Inn Pizza Plaza and
Francis Florist. AdmiSsion is $1.50 for
students at the door and $1.75 for adults,
The Junior Miss program is sponsored
by the Southeast Ohio Junior Miss, Inc., a
non.proflt organization.

With

the nelrt several months. TechnolOIIV is
available to permit clean air standards to
be achieved and for Ohi o'S high-suilur coal
to be burned."
''Ridding Ohio's air of sickening sullur
dioxide pollution without wrecking the
state's coal industry is difficult, but it can
and will happen ," the E?A official
concluded .

the sulfur dioxide pollution control

$landards is October 1979.
The EPA orders on how to settle this
iss ue,

which

has

divided

environ·

utilities' move toward western coal is· mentalists, utihties and coal miners will

motivated by Ohio's fuel adj.ustment
clause, which allows higher costs to be

have to be issued before nel&lt;\ fall . '

passed on to conswners.

best way to go is now being weighed by the
EPA," David Kee , Federal EPA official in

''There are avenues to do it and the
charge of enforcing clean air standards in

LOT WILL BE BLOCKED
POMEROY - The lower parking lot
along U1e Ohio River in Pomeroy will he
blocked off from traffic early Monday
morning due to patching of the lot. Mayor

Ohio, said Friday.
.
Kee, while emphasizing tha t no final
deciSions have yet been reached
continued, "Decisions and announcemen~

on how to proceed wilt be forthcoming in

Oarence Andrews announced Saturday _

tntintl

SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1978

PRICE 25 CENTS

MIDDLEPORT -POMEROY

Lhe period, with a cbance of snow

Hurries. Highs wUI be In the 30s
Munday, warming to the upper 30s or
the lower 40s by Wednesday. Lows

wm range from the upper teens (o the

lower 20s.

:;:::::::::;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:::::::::;:;:::::::::;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::::::::

Mason Center
may get floor
POINT PLEASANT - The Mason Recreation Center apparently will get a new floor - and if
everything goes as expected, the flooring
will come from the old gym building at
Lakin HospitaL
The State Farm Conunission agreed to
transfer the wooden flooring to the
Mason County Conunission, according tO'
Secretary of Agriculture and Cbainnah
of the W.Va. Farin Management Commission Gus R. Douglass.
In a letter to \he. vario.us parties Involved, Douglass stated: "It is to be
further Wlderstood that this floor is to he
rem'ov.ed at no cost or liability to the
State, of West Virginia or the West
VIrginia Farm Commission.
This action on the state level resulted
from a formal request made by Com·
mission President Bob Powers on behalf
o( the Comrrission and the town of Mason
to obtain the wooden floor. At a recent·
meeting of the Commission, it
· unanimously agreed to install a new floor
for the building.

Pi!IL MILLER, left, Jackson Production Credit Assn., presents a trophy to Ed
Holter representing the Meigs High Future Farmers of America which had the
land judging contest .
,·winning team in the Meigs SWCD sponsored
.
".

BOB

ADAMS, left,

of

the

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia County
Ministerial Association Saturdav invitP&lt;l
community residents to Join in a service of
thanksgiving, to be held at the Church of
the Nazarene,!103 Second Ave., Gallip!&gt;lis,
on Wednesday, Nov. 22, at 7:30p.m.
A community choir composed of
members of the participating churches,
will sing a number of anthems.
It is anticipated that the choir will he
comprised of about 60 people, combining
the talents of Methodists, EpiscopaiJans,

Tom Theiss were elected for three year
temis on the board of supervisors of the
Meigs Soil and Water Conserva tion

year representative. Mr . and Mrs. Arvin

District (SWCD) durin g Thursday's Holter and Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Upton and
annual meetlrtg and banquet held at the sons, Scott and Trent, ·received the
appreciation award plaques from Roy
Racine Junior High School. .
Miller, district supervisor . These awards

and appearance of the Meigs SWCD.
Phil Miller of Jackson Production
Credit Association presented a trophy to
Ed Holter, representing the Meigs High

Rex Shenefield a.nd

Sam Michael and son, Gary Michae]
received the Goodyear Conser vati on

('ward plaques from

Bo~

Adams, Good-

School Future Farmers of America for

Fifth annual service

winning team in the Meigs SWCD
sponsored Lond Judging Contest held in

scheduled Wednesday

scoring individuals Patty Dyer, Billy Dyer
and Blair Windon.
Charles Call , Chi ef , Division of

October . Cash awards were gi\'en for top

Christians, and Nazarenes. The quality of
the choir will also be excellent as Merlin
Ross directs the choir and Edie Ross plays

service which Will feature music as the
main expression of Thanksgiving.

•· GALLIPOLIS - William J . .'' 'Bill" immediate Past-President of the
Gray, 30, has been appuiilted Vice Southeast Ohio Athletic League SportsPresident and General Manager of writers and Broadcasters· Association.
.Wagner Broadcasting Corporation and
· For a number of years, Gray was
will assume his new responsibilities in the responsible for all arrangements for the
operation of the firm's two stations, WJEH WJEH-sponsored Reds ' Appreciation
and WYPC, effective immediately. The Banquets which brought to Gallipolis such
announcement was made Saturday by· stars as Cincinnati Reds' Pete Rose, Joe
Paul E. Wagner , President of Wagner Mor•an. Don Gul\et, Lee May, Jack
Broadcasting.
Gray succeeds William C. Miller who
was the victim of a recent airplane crash
at-the Gallia-Meigs Regional Airport.
.
A native of Paulding1 Ohio, and a 1966
sr,aduate of Paulding High School, Bill
Gray started in broadcasting at WLMJ,
~ljckson, in October, 1966, following
gr_pduation from Career Academy of
Broadcasting, Milwaukee, Wisconsin. He
joined WJEH-AM-FM ln July , 1967, as
SIJff announcer. He was granted a leave of
abaence during 1968-$ to serve two years
in the United States Army at Erlangen,
Germany. He attained the rank of
sergeant and became an operations NCO
In the 4th Armored Division.
. Following his discharge from the
army, , Gray returned to Wagner
Broadcasting in January, 1970, as Sports
Director and staff announcer. Since that .
tilj)e, he has averaged a total of eighty
play.!Jy.play, live sports broadcasts a
year, covering area college and ' high
school football, basketball, baseball, 5oftBILL GRAY
ball and track events. he is currently the

company

are given for outstanding work in
conserving and improving the basic
Mtural resource of soil on their farms and
by that work improving the agriculture

POMEROY -

Re clamation, Ohio Dept. of Natural

Resources, talked and showed slides of
mining operations in Ohio. He st ated that
reclamation work should ideally

immediately follow the removal of coal
from the ground. With the proper drainage
provided for and collection basins
strategically placed and managed , erosion
and acid run off on strip mine sites can be

members, . their families and a y other

visitors to the hospital.
Gallia
This special religious ser Ice will
Parents are asked to contact respective Countians witt take this opportunity to include seasonal hymns, s ripture,
schools regarding conference appoint- worship and praise God on Thanksgiving prayers and a medi tation c ntering
. ments or return their _appointment cards Eve ,'' an association spokesman $3id around the theme of·Thanksgivin to God.
which will be sent home from each of the Saturday.
Organ music will he provided by Mrs.
To encourage attendance, a nursery Corrine Lund. A vocal solo by Miss
elementary schools of the district.
Thursday evening conferences will will be provided for infants and tQddlers . Margaret Ehman, instructor at the Holzer
begin at 6:30p.m. and on Friday morning
Medical ~nter School of Nursing, will also
conferences are scheduled to begin at 9
be a part of the Thanksgiving Eve
a.m. and will last until 12 noon.
TOOBSERVE'HOLIDAY
observance. Holy Corrununion will he
Students will not attend school on
EAST MEIGS - Schools of the Eastern offered for those who wish to receive it.
Friday, Dec. 1, and they will be dismissed Local School District will recess for
The Reverend Arthur C. Lund,
from classes one hour early on Thursday Thanksgivin g vacation at 2:30 p.m . hospital Chaplain, will lead the worship
afternoon, Nov. 30.
Wednesday. There will be no classes on service. The patients who wish to attend
Thursday or Friday.
will be taken to and from the Chapel by
members of the hospital Volunteer Service
League and the Red Cross Gray Ladies.
teacher conferences are scheduled.

Co., presented

.Shenefield, Theiss elected
to . Meigs soil, water hoard

GALLI POLIS- The Chapel at Holzer
Medical Center will he the site for the fifth
annual Thanksgiving Eve Worship Service
the aceompaniment.
.
on Wednesday, No·v. 22, from 7 p.m. until
EAST MEIGS - Parents in the · Hymns, Scripture Readings and 7:30p.m.
Eastern Local School Distrirt are being special music will comprise the service.
Patients, their families and g ests are
asked to attend one 30-minute conference Area clergy are particularly excited by the welcome as are the hospi I staff

on either Thursday evening, Nov. 30 or
Friday morning, Dec. 1, when parent ·

Goodyear

conservation award plaques for outstanding conservation practices to Gary
Michael, center, and his father , Sam Michael a t Thursday night's soU and water
district meeting.

Nazarene ·
Church will
host services

"It is hoped that many

Bill Gray named vice president,
general manager ofradio station

--

Local mjners further insist that Gallia
County coal, although it does have a highsulfur coo tent, lies within the EPA's sulfur
dioxide limits.
Some local operators charge that the

'

'
EXTENDED FORECAST
Monday through Wednesday,
variable cloudiness and cold through

attend conference

• GALLIPOLIS - · David L. Shaffer, a
re.ident of Crown City, has been named
manager of the Commercial and Savings
Bqnk, Spring Valley Office on Jackson
Pike.
" Shaffer became associated with the C
&amp; S Bank in December 1976,
· The new branch manager graduated
from Hannan Trace High School in 1976.
H~ was a member of the varsity basketball
and baseball teams at Hannan Trace, and
pr&lt;!sident of the school's Future Farmers
ol America chapter.
- Shaffer attended the Gallipo li s
Business College.

western coal sells for $28 a ton, or more.

tmts

Lutherans, Presbyterians, Covenant

Shaffer to head
C&amp;S branch bank

the EPA must consider saving the state's
higher«ulfur coal industry.
·
Deadline Next Year
. The deadline lor utilities to comply

+

GALLIPOLIS-POINT PLEASANT

Parents asked to

DAVID L. SHAFFER

Gallia County coal seus commercially
for approximately $16a ton. The imported

Congress has amended its original
mandate to the EPA that the air
Ohio EPA officials insist that use of be cleaned up by saying that the economy
the controversial scrubbers will be of an area is not to be disrupted by
cheaper in the long run tha.n buying out-of- whatever plan the EPA designs. '
state, low-sulfur coal, which is what a lot of
Implementing that congressional
utilities are doing, oc want to do.
''save the jobs'' amendment in Ohio means

unba

(

•'

_..,.

controlled . Slides taken before and after
reclamation work on Ule Shade River
Reclamation site in Meigs County were

shown.

Brent Patterson , Bob Taylor and Dennis
Wolfe provided a selection of blue grass
WAYNE UPTON , left, and Arvil
Holter are pictured with appreciation
award plaques presented to them
Thursday evening fur outstanding work
in conserving and improving the basie
Datura I rest~uree uf soil on tbeir fanns.
The awards were presented at the
annual dinner meeting of the Meigs Soil
and Water Conse rvation District

meeting.

musiC. A ham dinner was served by the
Southern Band Booster As sociati on

headed by Mrs. Ramona Yonker. Rex
Shenefield was master of ceremonies and

Herbert (Pete ) Shi elds · gave the
invoc~tion .

Supervisor election was conducted by

Jim Rush , Program SpeciaiJSt, ODNR
Dave Fox, County Director, ASCS headed
the nominating cOmmittee and repor ted
results of tile election.

New satellite station erected
.•

WEST COLUMBIA -Subscribers of

cable television in the area will shortly he
viewing programs hea!lled from 22,300
miles out in space.
The soon-to-be completed "earth
satellite station" is being built by·
PoinTView •Cable Television on a hill
station was nearing completion, Gray was overlooking West Columbia.
promoted to Station Manager of WYPC,
According to Richard Newell, general
which went on the air in June of that year. manager of PoinTView, the facility will
Gray resides in Jackson Estates, Jackson
Pike, Gallipolis. He is the son of Mr. and feature a 4.5 meter satellite receiving
antenna which will pick up signals from
Mrs. Raymond A. Gray, Paulding ..
RCA's SATCOM Space I satellite. The ·
sateilite is situated above the equator
22,3011 miles away ·from the earth.
Gallipoli!! commission to some
Supervising the installation of the
antenna and terminal facilities is Jeff
hold special meeting
Holmes, a field engineer with Hughes
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis City Aircraft.
Commission will meet in special session
"We will begin receiving programming
Tuesday at 4 p.m. II\ the Municipal Court Dec. I from Home Box Office out of New
Room.
York City," Newell said. The added fare
The agen!la includes the reading of the wlll indude movies and other special
following ordinance items :
programs, he added.
- Magnetic recording computer.
Two new stations will be added and
- eonu;act for progranurung of
another station dropped from the current
computer.
12 stations on the cable system. Additions
- Police Wliforms.
are WCTG, a 24-hour station from
- Easement on Gallia Manor.
~Contract foc snow and ice removal Atlanta, Ga., feaiuring ·movies and
spurts, and the Christian Broadcasilng
salt .
- Authorization to purchase Kirhey Network from Virginia Bearh, Vii.
'
Newell said the new equipment will
Property.
- Amending Ordinance 78-6R mean a base increase ol Sl on the month
Authorizing purchase of real estat.e.
for subscribers, subject to approval by
tht affected communities.
Blllili~ham

and others, including former
General Manager Bob Howsman, now
president of that organization.
In March, 197'7, as construction of
Wagner Broadcasting's new FM&lt;~tereo

EARTH STATION - Examining the control panel in PoinTView's new
satellite receiving station are, left to right, Richard Newell, PolnTView manager,
and 'Jelf Holmes, field engineer from Hughes Aircraft.

.'

,.

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