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                  <text>Jones' body identified by FBJ specialists

28- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Nov . 22.1978

Be grateful, thankful
When George Washington
was a young man, he enjoyed
a military career that got off
to a sensational start with his
trip to the Ohio County to ask
the French to vacate their
forts here and as an aide to
General Braddock. He was
also much stricken with
illnesses that kept him
bedfast for months at a time.
At the age of 16 or 17 he
caught
malaria
while
camping outdoors as a surveror. At the age of nineteen,
be was stricken with
smallpOX while on a trip with
his older half-brother to
Barbados. He returned to
.Mount Vernon, his brother's
!rome along the Potomac
River ip Virgini&amp; 1 -and came
down with tuberculosis,
which kept him in poor health
for two years. Then came
another severe · attack of
malaria.
At ~. he contracted severe
dysentery accompa~ed by a
high fever and prostration
that lasted for several
months. Four years later,
another attack of malaria
came, also accompanied by
pain and prostration for
several weeks. During this
illness he was fearful he was
near his Hlast gasp. l l
George Washington could
later be thankful for these
and
crippling
long
sicknesses.
Dr. Rudolph
Marx, who made a study of
the health of Geor~e
Washington, commented,
"Long periods of physical
disability gave Washington
the time to find himself, and
to plan his role in life. Men's
virtures are not born with
them; they must be attained
with great effort. Much has
been written about the selfcontrol and patience of
Washington as a leader ... The
sickbed is the best school in
which to learn patience.
Knowing that healthy people
do not like to hear others
complain and moan, the sick
man tries to !).ide his resentment and pain under a forced
smile, and to play the good
sport. In time he learns selfcontrol. ·
So the early sicknesses of
George Washington played
an importanct part in his
making as a great general
and president. His patience
enabled him to presevere
through the years of adversity during the War of
Independence when forced to
retreat from New York
through New Jersey and

across the Delaware River to
Pennsylvania where he spent
an inglorious winter at Valley
Forge. He finaUy emerged
victorious.
Success cheers the spirits.
Adversity, if properly encountered, develops patience
and self-&lt;!ontrol. Therefore,
the Bible says, " Rejoice in ·
the l&lt;lrd always; again I will
say, Rejoice." (Philippians
· 4:4) " Rejoice always, pray
constantly, give thanks in all
circumstances; for this is the
will of God in Christ Jesus for
you." (I Thessalonians 5:1618)
-Albert Dittes , Pastor,
Seventh -Day Adventist
Church, Pomroy.

t

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

Christmas Opening Sale
... ~ ~HPIIL liP

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 24th
AND
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 25th
Friday &amp; Saturday Nig.,t Til

MURDER AWARD
CLEVELAND (UP!)
Standard Oil of Ohio (Sohio)
has olfered $10,000 for
information about the slaying
of one of its service station
managers and his wile in
near
Lake
Milton
Youngstown Tuesday.
Tom Henderson and his
wife, Donna were found shot
to death, apparent victims of
a robbery at their Sohio
station at Interstate 76 and

'

~

See our fine seledion of
qualify ties by Wemb ley Ready -tied and tie yourself
Solid colors Neat
patterns - Ask for free gi ft

Buy your

box.

holiday outfit

SALE PRICES

or party dress
and Savel

SALE

Junior, Missy and

FRAMED
OIL PAINTINGS

extra sizes.

Beautiful hand painted art
work. An appreciated Gift.

SPECIAL

REG. '15.95 ............ SALE 112.88
REG. 119.95 ............. SALE 115.88

PRICES

REG. '29.95 ............. SALE 123.88

-~

w
w
w

By MARTINP:IiOUSEMAN
GEORGETOWN, Guyana
(UPI) - A Peoples Temple
member who escaped the
mass suicides of Jonestown
today said the hundreds of
Cultists were told their fate
was death by poisorilng, but
~ly one woman tried to
object.

The followers of the Rev .
Jim Jones shouted down the
protester and branded her a
''traitor.''
Jones
practiced
the
" revolutionary suidde " he so
grimly preached. His body ,
one of the t08 found at the
cult's jungle compouixl, was
positively identified by
fingerprints.
The witness to the suicide
ritual, OdeU Rhodes, 36, of
, Detroit, siud Jones calmly
decreed death for his
followers last Saturday, and
they obeyed his command.
Infants and children were
first in line at a table in the
group's assembly hall,
Rhodes said, where a nurse
squirted suicide poison down .

Pajama s,

*Weddings
*Portraits
*Passports

VOL XXIX. NO. 156

*Anniversaries

* Specia I Occasions

Big selection of Hallmark
boxed Christmas cards and
individual cards Buy
what you need now - Also
Hall rha rk tree decorations,

HUMBUG ...

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

!

Death toll
put at 149

W

Furniture Dept.

$359

i ~-1301: 1301: 1301:1301:"""' 1301:1301: 1301: ~ 1!001 ~ ..

~
~

FROM

BOYS

MEN'S s395
NECK SCARVES

WINTER JACKETS
Sizes 8 to 20 - All warmly
lined, Nylons, denims, cotton
polyester blends. :Vou'll like
this selection.

Warm practical gift - 100
percent orion, fringed
ends. Big selection of solid
colors. Two days only.

SALE p'ftiCES
Scrimping and scraping can take
all the fun out of Christmas and
make you a Scrooge. That's why
a Christmas Club savings plan is
so great. You have money when
you need it. You can get into the
holiday spirit and enjoyl

LAMP
SALE
Table Lamps
Swag Lamps
Floor Lamps
Pin-Up Lamps

SAVE
20%
TIMEX
WATCHES
FOOTERS POURED - Construction on the Meigs
County Multi-Purpose building located near Veterans
Memorial Hospital on Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy, is
underway. Karr Construction, the general contractor, wiU

s3.33

REDUCED

20%

PIERCED
EARRINGS
Styles tor
every occasion.

SPECIAL

2 PAIRS
FOR

WINTER JACKETS
Sizes 36 to 50 - Our entire
stoc k of men's ja ckets and

coats -

An excellent

selection Perfect
Christmas giving .

for

SALE PRICES

10 Appliances in, one. Brazier. broiler,
g'riddle. electric ski llet, deep fryer, ' oven,
wok, warmer, server, steamer, poacher,
omelet. Crepe .Maker, Chaffing Dish. Easy
to Wash .

REGULAR $54.95

Five persons were treated
for injuries sustained in eight
accidents investigated on
Wednesday and Thursday by
the GaUia - Meigs Post , Highway Patrol.
·. Officers investigated two
accidents on Thursday.
The patrol was caUed to the
scene of a one-auto mishap on
SR 588, three-tenths of a mile

west of CR 5, at 1:24 a. m.
Officers report an eastbound auto operated by Joey
Hall, ~. Ewington, swerved
to avoid hitting a deer. His
car ran off the left side of the
roadway, strilling a ditch and
an embankment.
Hall displayed visible signs
of injury, and was transported by the Gallia

j,J_r_h_e_w_or_l_d_To_cJ_a_y_
·
Bloodless coup su~cessful

Friday • Saturday Salel

11, Men's sizes 9 to 15.

PONTIAC, Mich. (UPI)- Four persons were found dead
in a mobile home Thursday, apparenUy of asphyxiation from a
faulty gas furnace. The victims were a deputy slieriff and a
W&lt;man and two of her three children.
The ooly survivor, a 5-rnonth-()Jd girl, was hospitalized in
serious condition.
· Oakland County Sheriff Johannes Spreen said deputies
want to the mobile home in Highland Township, west of
Pontiac, at the request of friends of the victims.

Slipovers, Cardigans,
Vests, shaw l Sweaters.

beds, king or queen size.
There 's an excellent
se lect io n . Our entire
stock in this sale. Also
included for this sale,
match ing drapes and

Sizes : Smal l. Medium,
Large and
Extra
Large - An excellent
selection of styles and
colors . Our entire
stock included .

pillow shams where

People

Four persons asphyxiated

MEN'S
.
.
SWEATERS

Sizes for lull beds, twin

Me_igs County

Big selection - White with
color tops - Boys sizes 7 to

SPECIAL TWO DAY SALE!

QUILTED
BEDSPREADS

~--!-~~~~~~fA Home
Bank
~
For

Bolivia 's armed forces
overthreW President Juan Pereda in a ·bloodless coup d'etat
early this morning, and radio reports said Pereda had fled the
, country.
The radio reports, as yet unconlirnned, also said army
·
.!(]lief of Staff Gen. David Padilla will be new president of the
South American nation.
'Jl)e radio stations reported Pereda Jeff the country early
today by plane headed perhaps for Chile or Paraguay .

gg~ PAIR

SALE $3699

Big selection

available.

SALE PRICES

SALE PRICES

RACINE

United Press International
Icy highways and poor
visibility in many areas of the
nation and roads packed with
Thanksgiving travelers combined to push the weekend
holiday death count past the
100 mark today.
The National Weather
Service said snow, ice and fog
would pose problems for
holiday motorists in wide
areas of the Midwest and
P lain s states Thursday.
Dozens of accidents were
blamed on the conditions,
including a four-fatality
wreck in dense fog in '
southern Arkansas.
Safety
The
National
Council predicted 470 to 570
people will be killed in traffic
accidents by Sunday, the last
day .of the first cold· weather
holiday weekend of the
season. Last year 498 people
were killed .
build the structure at a cost of $1 ,129,930. The building will
The official count began at
house the health department, senior citizens center,
. 6 pJn. local time Wednesday
mental health center, and other officers will tie available.
and ends at midnight Sunday.
Shown is concrete being poured.
The worst single accident
during the first day of the
period occurred on a foggy
highway
in
southern
Arkansas . State police said a
car containing four persons
slammed
into a bridge abutVolunteer Squad to Holzer went out of control on the wet
ment
and
burst into flames
Medical Center .
pavement, ran off the right
Hall was admitted for side of the road, struck a
treatment of lacerations of ditch and overturned.
the scalp and knee.
Spears was transported by
Of!icers report severe a passing motorist to Holzer
damage to the Hall vehicle. Medical Center, where he
No citation was issued.
was treated for a laceration
Officers investigated a one- of the left elbow and released.
vehicle accident at 2 p. m. on
The Spears auto was
SR 325, six miles north of U. demolished. No citation was
s. 35.
issued.
According to the patrol, a
The GaUia - Meigs Post
southbound auto operated by investigated six accidents
Bobby Spears, 17, Vinton, Wednesday.
Two persons were injured
CLEVELAND (UP!) in a an acciedent on U. S. 35.
This week's winning Ohio
Lottery
numbers :
Mostly sunny and coo l· Officers report that an auto
operated
by
Dennis
Dodrill,
Gold
numb
er-4.
Saturday . Highs in the upper
19,
.
Vinton,
had
been
passed
White
number-63.
40s.
Probability
of
Blue number-095.
precipitation 30 percent by an unidentified vehicle.
Win·A-Thon
After
passing,
_
the
today, 20 percent tonight and
52495.
(Continu ed on page 10)
10 percent Saturday.

Weather

'

•

.•

0

'

'

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'~· { '- ~ ,.- .(!&gt; , ... ...:::&gt; , . . ~ ,.- ' -.

DAYS TO
CHRISTMAS

fiGHT

NEW HAVEN - Two men
have been named to positions
at Appa lachian Power
Company's
Mountaine er
Plant, under construction
near New Haven, West
Virginia.
Robert W. McDaniel,
production superintendent maintenance at the company's John Amos Plant,~ll
become
maintenan ce
superintendent at Mountaineer. Charles A. Powell,
performance supervising
engineer at Amos , will
become plant performance
superintendent at Mountaineer. Both promotions are
effective January I.
McDaniel attended West
Virginia State College and
has studied through In-

ternational CorrespOndence
Schools. A native of Winfield,
W. Va., he began his career
with Appalachian in 1970 as a
maintenance man B at Amos.

President Fidel Castro
ATTEND TRAINING CONFERENCE - Mr. and
Mrs. Pat O'Brien, Pomeroy, recenUy attended the 1979
training conference, sponsored by the American Cancer
Society, Ohio Division, Inc ., held in Cleveland. "You do
make a difference" was · stressed throughout the
conference with many examples of individuals who

contribute outstanding ideas "ani! novel approaches
towardoftcquainting the public with cancer and its warning ·
signals. Shown with Mr . and Mrs. O'Brien is Mike
Connors, center, star of "Mannix" an.d the 1979 Ohio
Division Honorary Crusade Chainnan. Mr . and Mrs.
O'Brien are Meigs County Unit Crusade Charimen.

He was a maintenance man A
and maintenance fonneman
before being promoted · to
production superintendent maintenance in 1974.
McDaniel is married and

has two sons.
Powell, a native of Princeton, West Virginia, holds a
bachelor of science degree in
mechanical engineering from
Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University .
He was employed in 1969 as a
performance engineer at the
company's Philip Sporn
Plant and tr-ansferred to
Amos Plant the following
year. He was senior performance engineer before
bein g promoted to performance supervising
engineer in 1977.
Powell is married and has
one daughter. He is a
member of the Trinity United
Methodist Church in Point
Pleasant, W. Va .

Meeting changes
okayed by board
The Eastern w eal School schools' activity accounts.
A school spokesman anDistrict Board of Education
ha s changed its regular nounced today students atmeeting dates for November tending vocational classes at
Meigs High School will attend
and December.
The board will meet for its classes at Meigs High on Dec.
regular November session at I.
The regular vocational
7:30 p.m . Thursday . The
December meeting will be school bus will run from the
held on Thursday evening , Chester school to Meigs High
School in the morning and
7:30p.m., on Dec. 14.
Meetings follow 30 minute from Meigs High School to
discussion and review the Chester School in the
sessions . The board has afternoon .
Other buses in the district
accepted the resignation of
Susan Dye as special will not run on Dec. I bee a use
education teacher and has classes will not be held due to
approved Francis Benedum the parent-teacher conas temporary replacement ference on Dec. I. All
students in the district will be
for Frank Upton.
Benedum will serve as bus dismissed at 2:30 p.m. on
mechanic during Upton's Thursday, Nov. 30.
Conferences will be held on
leave of absence due · to
Thursday
evening from 6:30
illness.
p.m.
to
8:30p.m.
and again on
Debra Rose has been
Friday
morning
from 9 a.m.
named clerk-custodian of the
to 12 noon.

United Press International
At least 13 people were
killed in traffic accidents
around Ohio during the first
40 hours of the long
Thanksgiving
Holiday
weekend which ends at midnight Sunday.
The Ohio Highway Patrol
said 12 people died in nine
accidents Thursday and one
person was killed Wednesday
night shortly after the
weekend officially started at
Bpm.

Freedom will be offered

R. W. McDANIEL

Superintendents
named for plant

13 die in Ohio

OOLUMBUS (UP!) - City bus drivers and maintenance
men voted 245-00 Thursday night to accept a contract offer
from the Central Ohio Transit Authority and end their 11-day
strike in the morning.
.
The walkout Nov. 13 left 30,000 Columbus riders without
public transportation.
· Bert Miller, the union president representing the 500
striking employees, recommended rthe union membership
approve the pact at an afternoon meeting, following which the
llliikers voted on the pact which included return of a cost-()fliving coo\ract.

America offers \hem sanctuary and said "I don'\ think . the
United States can deny them."
Castro, in a swipe at America's intelligence community ,
a1Jo said Cuba has had Soviet MiG23 jet fighters for a year and
the "idiotic" American inteUigence agency should have known
it all almg.
.

Racine, Ohio

••

Columbus buses running

HAVANA, Cuba (UP!) -

BANK

A United Press International co unt at 9:30a. m.
EST showed at least 149
persons had been killed in
traffic accident s.
A breakdoun of accidental
deaths:
Traffic 149
Fires 13
Planes 9
Total 171
California and Ohio each
reported 13 traffic deaths.
lllinois reported II, Pennsylvania 10, Virginia 9 and
Texas 6.

't

announced today that Cuba will free 3,000 political prisoners II

HOME NATIONAL

C. A. POWERS

early Thursday , burning the
bodies of aU four beyond
recognition .
Operation
CARE,
a
cooperative
program
between state police to
increase patrols on the
nation's
most
heavily
traveled highways, was
implemented again for the
four-day
weekend. Its
success in other holiday
periods this year has been
limited .
Three children were killed
and their mother injured
when fire blamed on a heavy
concentration of .heat in a
wall behind a fireplace
destroyed their wood-frame
home in UhrichsviUe, Ohio,
Thursday.

Five hurt in eight accidents

LA PAZ, Bolivia (UP!) -

-

MAKE 49 PROMPT
PAYMENTS AND WE'LL
MAKE THE 50TH .
FREE GIFT WITH EVERY
CHRISTMAS CLUB
ACCOUNT OPENED.

ss.95

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1978

Sizes 2·fo 4, 4 to 6X , 7

Sizes S-M- L- XL

party goods, gift wrapping.

en tine

to 14 .

AS LOW AS

~
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•

sun, had been removed from
the Jonestown commune to
Georgetown for transport to
the United States aboard the
aircraft shuttling between
North and South America.
The grim collection of the
bodies completed, Guyanese
authorities
aided
by
American military personnel
pressed on with the nearfutile search lor the hundreds
of people reported to have
fled the commune to escape
the suicide ritual in which 405
of Jones' followers drank . a
deadly cyanide potion while
three others died of gunshot
wounds.
One family t hat did survive
painted a harrowing picture
(Continued on page 10 )

sleepers,

Colorful winter fashions
by Wrangler, Red -i and
Doggonits .

Bob Hoeflich

at y

•

SALE

JUNIOR
TOPS

CHRISTMAS
CARDS

•

second of the flights bringing
home the 408 victims of
Saturday's mass suicide
ritual at the Peoples Temple
commune in Jonestqwn ,
Guyana .
By early today more than
200 bodies bad arrived at
Dover, and Air Force sources
said they hoped to bave aU
the bodies at the base later
today .
As soon as Jones's casket
arrived, 10 FBI fingerprint
specialists verified the body
marked 13-B was indeed
J~nes, ending speculation it
might have been the body of a
double.
By late Thursday, aU the
bodies, bloated from days
under the steamy' tropical

He went out the .back door
and hid until nightfaU, when
he made his escape through
the jungle.
" I have no idea how many
sw-vivors there are, nor how
many people 'were at tbe
Peoples Temple, " said
Rhodes, a slender black man
who described himself as a
drug
addict
former
rehabilitated by the Jones
organization .
Jones' casket, marked
simply 14 Rev . Jimmie Jones,
13-B," arrived with 80 other
aluminum ~~transfer boxes"
aboard an Air Force C-141
cargo plane on a dreary
Thanksgiving Day at Dover
Air Force Base in Delaware.
Jones body was on the

gowns and r obes.

SALE!

HALLMARK

Uleu- Ups and many were
crying."
The group became panicky,
and Jones shouted into the
camp's loudspeaker system:
"You must die with
dignity ."
Rhodes said he leaned
against the fence while
waiting his turn in line and
thought about trying to get
out of there. AI that time the
commune's doctor, Dr. Larry
''traitor!"
Rhodes said the poison Schacht, called out for a
worked quickly and each nurse to bring a stethoscope,
cultist died within four to five so Rhodes followed her past
minutes - a brief period of the guards and walked to the
nursing sta lion .
agony.
The nurse told him to look
" It was evident that this
for
the stethoscope there
was not a drill ," Rhodes said.
"People started going into' while she looked in· the
convulsions, roam came from doctor's office.

United States and we will all
commit suicide," Rhodes
quoted Jones as saying.
Jones asked if there was
any objection, Rhodes said .
Only one woman spoke up .
She said suicide was not the
only option, that the cultists
could go to the Soviet Union
or Cuba .
Rhodes said she was
shouted down with cries of

I"

109 High 51.

Pomeroy

tl)eir throats by syringe, then
gave them a grape drink for a
chaser.
"The first adult to die was a
young woman who went up
with a baby in her arms, had
the poison shot down her
throat, walked into a field and
sat down and died," said
Rhodes, who managed to
escape when he was sent with
the nurse to get a
•
stethoscope .
Jones caUed a meeting
minutes after California Congressman Leo J . Ryan and
his party had left Jonestown
for the Port Kaituma airstrip,
where Peoples Temple
cultists ambushed them and
killed five people.
" They will never reach the

e

SALE

DRESSES ~ CHILDREN'S
~ SI.EEPWEAR
AND
~
PANTSUITS ~

WEMBLEY
TIES

Henderson , 33, a former
TrumbuU County · Sheriff's
deputy and a weU-known
stock car racer, had
managed the station for only
two weeks. His wife, a nurse,
accompanied her husband to
the station on her days off.
They lived in McDonald with
their four children.

THE PHOTO PLACE

WOMEN'S

GIVE HIM

Ohio 534.

STILLWATER, Okla .
(UP! ) - Oklahoma State
head football coach Jim
Stanley, whose Cowboys just
completed their worst season
under his direction, was
relieved of his coaching
:holies Tuesday.

~

BUlLETIN
. By ROBERT KAYLOR
: WASHINGTON (UP!) U. S. troops conducting
reeovery operations at the
Peoples Temple &amp;eltlement
In Gny81111 bave so far
counted Ill bodies and are
eollmatlllg there may be
"up to 800" victims of the
mass suicide, govertlDlent
sources said today.

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

EXTENDED FORECAST
Rain or show Sunday aod
fair Monday and Tuesday.
Highs will range from tbe
mid 30s to \he mid 40s
Sunday and Tuesday and In
the 30s Monday. Early
moraing lows will be In the
20s Sunday and range from
tbe mid teens to the mid 20s
Monday and Tuesday.

ENGINE DESTROYED
The
Pomeroy
Fire
Department was caUed to E . .
I
Second St., at 5:39 p.m.
near
the
Wednesday
FREE CLINIC
The Harrisonville Senior Pomeroy Post Office where a
Citizens Club will sponsor a car owned by Leo Vaughan,
free blood pressute clinic, · Pomeroy, was on fire. Fire
from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Chief Charles Legar said that
Tuesday at the town house. the fuel line apparently broke
There is no charge lor the causfug the fire around th&lt;
clinic and the public is engine which was completely
ruined by the blaze.
welcome.

&gt;

�•

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

The open road
REMEMBERING WITH THE HEART
Several years ago, 'a saUor plunged into the cold waters of
Plymouth Harblr to rescue a small boy from drowning. A few
days later the saUor met the same boy with his mother on the
streets of Plymouth.
'
"Are you the lllall who pulled my little boy out of the
water?" asked the mother.
With a boylab grin and a salute, the sailor replied, "Yes,
Ma'am!"

Then, the mother, with a stern face and bnsmiling lips,
scolded the saUor f&lt;r not getting the boy's cap, too, when he
rescued him.
It is a sad commentary on any people that they are
ungrateful and unappreciative, but the selfish,
unaccommodating spirit of an unthankful attitude has been the
recurring characteristic of many generations. Sometimes, we
who have so much f&lt;r which to be thankful are the least
appreciative.
An animal will seldom bite the hand that feeds it, but not so
with the human kind. We are often so discourteous, unkind,
and unappreciative in our relationships with others.
Some psychologists tell us that we only remember about
six percent of the information and experiences we receive and
have. What is so tragic, however, is that so many of us do not
remember with our heart at all.
Jean Baptiste Massiew, writing in Letters, said,
"Gratitude is the memory of the heart."
We are all the beneficiaries of the countiess generations
who have preceded us, as well as being interdependent,
directly or indirectly, with others, today. Ours is a great
heritage which has been purchased with blood, sweat, and
tears. Ours is a land of plentitude, where even the poorest have
more than most people in other parts of the world. We need to
remember with the heart the many bless\ngs that are ours.
We all feel the pressures of life from time In time, and we
are sometimes victlmired by the inequities of this world, but
instead of counting ·our troubles and disappointments, let us
count our blessings. Feeling sorry for ourselves will only
compound our problems and rob us of the potential good that_
would pass us by. Keep a positive attitude Inward life and be
appreciative for what you have.
· By _remembering with the heart we will express our
thanksgiving for the blessings which are ours in thanksliving.
Our dreams, our aims, and our work will be expressive of
gratitude in our relationships with others. And how we treat
others demoostrates how appreciative we are and how well we
remember with the heart.

~i;\~~~.i.l;:::;:ii.'~'~'"li'lj: i~ ..~

"

2- The Daily Sentinel. Miuulepurt-Pumcruy. 0 .. Friday. Nuv. 24. Hl'IR

TELEVISION
VIEWING
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 197B
5:!10-Star Trek 3,4; Beverly Hillbil lies B; Ml•ler
Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33; Gomer Pyle. USMC
10; Dinah 13; Brady Bunch 15.
5:3o-News 6; Sanford &amp; Son B; EJec. Co. 20,33 ; Mary
Tyler Moore 10; Odd Couple 15.
6:!10-News 3,4,B. 10, 13, 15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6:»--NBC News 3, 4,15: ABC News 13; Carol Burnett &amp;
Fr iends 6; CBS News B.IO; Over Easy 20.
7:!10-Cross-Wits 3; PM Magazine 4 ; Newlywed Game
6,13; Muppet Show B; News 10; Love, American
Style 15; Consumer Survival Kit 20; BiQ Blue

Marble 33.
7:3o-Hee Haw Honeys 3; Dating Game4; SL9B Beauty
Show 6; Family Feud 10; Bonkers B; Pop Goes The
Country 15; $100,000 Name That Tune 13; MacNeil Lehrer Report 20,33.
B:oo-Ditl'renl Strokes 3,4, 15; Donny &amp; Marie 13;
Countdown to Michigan 6; Wonder Woman 8;

Washington Week' in Review 20,33; OSU-Michlgan
Preview 10.

8:»--Who's _Watchlng the Kids? 3, 4,15; Wall Street
Week 20,33.
9:00-Rockford Files 3,4,15; Movie " Fun With Dick &amp;
Jane " 6, 13·: Incredible Hulk 8,10; Congressiona l

Outlook 20.33.
9:3o-Turnabout 20; Real People 33.
10:00-Fiylng High B.10; News 20; Marshall University
Arts 33.
10:3G-Monty Python ' s Flyi ng Circus 20.
11 :!10-News 3,4,6.8. 10, 13,15; Dick Cavett 20; SoundStage JJ.
ti :Jo-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Baretta 13; The Immigrants 6: Movie "Murders in the Rue Morgue"

10.
12 :!10-Monty Python 33.
12 :3o-Juke-Box B; 12:4G-Ironslde 13.
1:00-Midnlght Special 3, 4,15; News 8; Movie " Bla ck
Noon" 10.
1:4G-News 13; 2 3Q-News 3.
3:00--Movie "Pendulum" 3; 5:00-Movie " It Shou ld
Happen To You" 3.

There are hermit souls that live withdrawn
ill the place of their self-content;
There are souls like stars, that dwell apart,
In a fellowless firmament;
There are pioneer souls that blaze their paths
:- . Where ~hways never ran But let me live by the side of the road
And be a friend to man.
-Sam Walter Foss

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 197B
6:!10-Sunrlse Semester 10.
6:3G-Saturday Report 3; Vegetable Soup 4; TV
Classroom 8; U.S. Farm Report 10; Kentucky
M~dl3 .
'
.
7:!10-Go 3; Mario &amp; the Magic Movie Machine 4:
Matters of Life 6; Mr. Magoo B'; Public Polley
Forums 10; Animals, Anlinals, Animals 13.
7: 3G-Land of the Lost 3; World of Survival 4; Dusty's
Treehouse 6; Porky Pig &amp; Friends B; Pink Panther
13; Vegetable Soup 15.
8:!10-Galaxy Goofups 3,4,15; Scooby's All-Stars 6,13;
Popeye B, 10.
8:»--Galaxy Goof ups 3,4, 15; 9 :Oo- Godzllla 3,4, 15 ;
Bugs Bunny-Road Runner 8.10.
·
9:3o-Superfrlends 6,11.
'10 :3G-Datfy Duck_ 3. 15; Movie " High Society" 4;

The grass is always -neighbor's wife doesn't insist
greener on the other side of that he cut the lawn 11 times
the fence because our/ per week.

11 :!10-Yogl's Space Race 3, 15; Fangface 13; NFL
Gpme of !her Week 6.
11 :»-Little Rascals 4; CountdOwn to Michigan 6;

Tarzan -Super-7 8, 10.

Action News for Kids 13.

12:!10-Fabulous Funn ies 3,1 5; Weekend Special 13;
Movie "-Genesis H " 4; Space Academy B. 10.
12 ;3G-Bay City Rollers 3, 15; College Football
Pregame Show 6 , 13; Fat Albert B. 10.
12:45-Coltege Football 6,13.
1:co-Famous Classic Tales 3; Ark II 8; In The Know
10; PTL Club 15; Oasis Is Space 33 .
1:3()-S how My People 8; Hogan's Heroes 10; ConSumer Survival Kit 33.
J. :OO-Big Blue Marble 3; Movie " The Voice of Terror ''
4 ; Viewpoint 8; Mov ie " tt's A Bikini Wor ld" 10;
When the Boat Comes In 33.
2:3()-Bewitched 3; Movie " The Autobiography of Miss

Jane · Pittman" 8.
3:DO-Star Trek 3;- Wrest ling 15; Movie " Th.e
Firemen' s Ball " 33.
3:Jo-Movle "Sherlock Holmes &amp; the Secret Weapon"
4.

4:0Q--Movie " Lost Flight" 3; College Football 6,13;'
Nashville On The Road 10; Better Way is.
4:3()-Sports Spectacular 8; Pop Goes The Country 10;
Gil ligan 's Is. 15; Catch-33 33.
5:oo-Gong Show 4; Dolly Hi ; Rebel Slave 15; The
Long Search 20; Studio See 33.
S:JQ-Cheap Show. 4; ,.Porter Wagoner 10 ; Cliffwood -.. .

Ave . Kids 15; Freestyle 33.
6:!10-News 3,4, 10; Gong Show 8; God Has The Answer
15 ; Cockelt's Victory Garden 20; Over Easy 33.
6:3()--,NBC News 3,15; World War 11 : G.l. Diary 4;
Porter Wagoner 8; CBS News 10; Ohio Journal 20;
West Vi rginia OutdOors 33.
7 :llO--Abbott &amp; Coste ito 3; Lawrence

Welk 4, 13. 15; Hee
Haw 6,B; Bugs Bunny 10; Onedln Line 20; Sugar In
The Gourd 33.
7:3G-We Think You Should Know 3; Please Stand By
10; College Basketball 33.
8:!10-Chips 3,4, 15; Welcome Back, Kotter 6,13; SpiderMan 8;, 10; Once Upon A Classic 20. .
·
8:3o-Carler Country 6.13; Live From 'The Mel 20.
9:!10-Dick Clark's Good 01' Days Part I_I 3,4,15; Love
• Boat 6. 13; Movie "Orca" B. 10.
·
9:3G-World War II : G. I. Diary 3-3.
10:!10-Fantasy Island 6, 13; Movie "Hedda" 33.
11 :!10-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15 .
11 : 15-ABC News 6.
II 3G-Salurday Nigh t Live 3,4, 15; Movie " A Bullet for
the General" 6; Movie " King Creole" 8; Woody
Hayes: Football 10; Movie " The House That
Dripped Blood" 13.
12:!10-Movie " Lisa &amp; the Devil" 10; Rippino Yarns 33.
1:co-Movie "Die! Die! My Darling " 3; Movl£
"Gargoyles" 4; Movie "B lood Rose" 13
2•:30-News 3; 3:00-Movle "C hortle M~-Carthy,
Detective" 3; ABC News 13.

Rate request shocking...'E

Columbus Dlspateb
It is Shocking oo Jearn that
the Columbus and Southern
Ohio · Electric Company
wants to boost Its rates 25
percent at a time_ when
President Carter has called
for business restraint In the
battle against inflation.
While the White House has
exhorted business to keep
'pric e hikes below 5.75
percent, the local electric
company apparently has not
received the message. Not
ooly does it want a 25 percent
jump in eleclric -rates next
year , it would raise charges a
similar percentage in 1980.
If all businesses and labor
copied C&amp;SOE's "inflationfighting" tactics, it' is
reasonable In think the U.S
economy · would
have
galloping double digit
inflation and widespread
social unrest.
We recognize the need for
an economically strong and
viable electric&gt;company and
appreciate the difficulty of
financing expanded facilities
when interest rates are high
and stock values low. Still~

KILLED IN CRASH
HAZLETON, Pa. (UP!) AU . S. Air Force officer, his
wife and daughter were killed
Thanksgiving Day in the
crash of their Cessna 172S on
Devils Mountain near Lofty,
Schuylkill County, during a
dense fog and rain.
The victims were identified
as U. Col Wayne Kanause,
46; Vivienne Kanouse, 411, and
S:QO-Movie " The Milkman" 3.
Usa Kanouse, 10, all of Tabb,
Va. They were enroute from
Langley Air Force Base in
Virginia to Berwic~-. Pa., to
meet Kanouse's son, Terrill,
Police said the suspect in . 20, when the crash occurred.
ONEDEAD, the slaying , Guadalupe
TWOINJURED
CORPUS CHRISTI, Texas Carbajal, Sr., later tried to
$2 FOR MILK??
(UP!) - Even before the kill himself but failed. He
WNDON (UP!) - Two
Thanksgiving t urkey had · shot himself through the
been carved, an argument lower jaw. Police said he was dollars a bottle for a pint of
broke out, resulting in the taken to a hospital where a milk?
That's wbat Americans and
shooting death of a 19-year- report on his condition was
Europeans living in Bahrain
old man and the wounding-of not available.
and Abu Dhabi are willing to
his mother and sister.

,.

the difficult ctrciimstaix!es oo
not appear oo justify a 25
percent jimlp in electric rates
in both of the next two years.
What C&amp;SOE 's pricing
proposals demonstrate,
again, is that the local utility
is too small to function
efficiently and effectively. In
approving a proposed merger
with the American Electric
Power Co., Inc., the U.S.
Securities and Exchange
Commission emphasized the
acquisition was "likely to
produce substantial savings
and efficiencies" for present
C&amp;SOE customers.
We _!ruSt the PUCO will
keep this point clearly in
mind a:s it examines and
evaluates the $126 rnillioo
boost in charges. The local
utility must be made to
justify its request for
emergency
relief
on
legitimate grounds, ao as to
remove any public suspicioo
the utility is seeking simply In
improve the position of its
stockholders in a future

l:

usua.1

,·. ~_
'••

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GALLIPOLIS AND POMEROY STORES

;;
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GREAT

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merger.
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This rate request requires ' ·
even closer scrutiny than .: -

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pay for milk fresh from the · ·~

10'' BAR

cow, or as tlose to it as ~~

refrigerated containers can :::

make .'' .

REG. '99.95

·:

r-------~----------, :
THE DAILY SENTINEL
DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
J10RERT HOEfLICH
• City EdUor
1 PubliW~ed&lt;'Haily e:tcept SM.l un.l~y
Qy The Ohio Valley Publishing
Compail)'·Multimedia, Inc.,
lH
Court _St., Ponlt!roy, Ohio 45769,
Business Offit't! Phont! 992· 21561
Editorial Phone 992·2 157.
i
Ser.:umJ da.s.s postage paid at
Pomeroy, Ohio.
1
N~::~tiunal adverllslnl!l represen·
talive , Landon Alil!iocillh:!S, '3101
Eudid Ave ., Clevelimd,Ohio441 1~.
Subst·ription rates : Delivered b~
· c1:1rner where available 75 cenl.s per
Wet!k. By Motor Route where ce~rrier
serviL-e nut available , One montJl,
$3.25. Bl:: mail in Ohio and W. Va.,
rOne Yelir, $22:00; Six month.!!,
$1UO: Three months, · $7.00 1
Elsewhere $26.00 ye&lt;tr; She month!!
$13.5D :. Th ree month:;, $7 .5q.
Subscr1ptiun prtcc indudl!s Sunday
L.;,;Tu:::n:::•lhl&lt;:..:
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CHECK OUT OUR SHARP NEW CARS AND TRUCKS

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1974 FORD MUSTANG ·yellow
1918 LTD II • 2 dr~, ·black, 5,000 miles
1979 FORD LTD • 4 dr., dark blue
1975 CHEVY NOVA • red
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1975 PLYMOUTH DUSTER • blue
1973 FORD GALAXY 500 · copper
1975 PONTIAC VENTURA • 2 dr.
1978. FORD T·BIRD • tan
1976 PINTO • brown
1975 CHEVY CAPRICE • station wagon, green
1974 FORD LTD· yellow
1975 PONTIAC LEMANS • white
1918 FORD T~81RD : green

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men of Ohio during the deer
gun season , the Ohio
Department of Natural
Division

of

calls reference emergencies

•

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As a service to the sports-

Wildlife is providing an
emergency contact service
for hunters away from home .
With approximately 110,000
hunters afield during the deer
gun season and numerous

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Stations offer service
Resources,

M,

Bobby Roush· Bob Crosswhite· ·Bill (Ole} Hoss
t
OPEN MO-NDAY • FRIDAY,~..............
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Lions upset
Denver, 17-14

MSU cage

••

POINT PLEASANT

Middleport
The contest was sponsored stand, the
The second half was played Mick Childs on offense and to John Wolfe, defensive
Emergency Squad, and the
by
the
Meigs
Athletic
bet ween the _3(}.yard lines. Chip Haggerty on defense. lineman, and Chuck Faulk ,
Boosters. Booster president players on both teams.
With six minutes left in the P omeroy's MVPs were offensively.
Charlie
Hamilton expressed
game, Middleport took a
For all your home
his
appreciation
to the
Pomeroy punt on the 48. Two
Entertolnment ond
following people :
Pomeroy penalties put the
Apptlonca Needs
Coaches Bud Stivers of
ball on the 22, but quarPomeroy and Dave Ashley of
DOXOL
terback Ron Quillen was
Middleport, Wally Hatfield
thrown for a 15-yard loss and
who coordil)ated the game,
SERVICE
Pomeroy took over. No one
officials
Bob
Burtoq,
Andy
threatened after that.
Baitey, Dick Vaughan, and
Whitlatch led Middleport By RICHARD L. SHOOK
Craig Morton tnrew a 1(). Bob Brown, announcer
backs with 42 yards, Charlie
UP! Sports Writer '
yard touchdown pass to tight Kenny Wiggins, Spotter Jerry
TV &amp; Apeiiance
Marshall had 18, Quillen had
PONTIAC, Mich. (UP!) - end Riley Odoms the first Davenport, Rev . Harvey
Gas Serv1ce
8, _and McKinney had I. While the Detroit Lions were time the Broncos had the ball
Charlotte
Kock,
Bill
and
Middleport had just 69 yards getting all steamed up about oo tie -the game 7-7 and
Recine, Ohio
Chester, Ohio
rushing and 36 yards passing. being on national television , directed a 711-yard drive 00 Willford who arranged
Young connected· on 3~ with the Denver Broncos were · put Denver ahead, 14-10, tickets and the concession
Marshall catching one and boiling over referee Fred early in the second half.
Davenport two.
Silva and his crew.
Larry Cilflada scored the
Pomeroy rolled up 122
"The best people they (the second touchdown on a twoyards on the ground and 85 Uons) had out there were yard run but Denver's only
yards in the air as Swisher their front four and the other threat ended with aging
connected on five aerials. officials ," fum ed Bronco kicker Jim Turner fallin g far
Terry Qualls led the rushers coach Red Miller a fter short of a 51-yard field goal
with 53 yards, Faulk had 38, Detroit had taken a 17-14 lry as time ran out.
Swisher 16, Dan Buffington 8, vicoory Thursday in its only
The rest of the time Morton
and Ron Coats 7. Bob Werry national televi sio n spent running for~ life
caught two passes for 15~ appearance of the season .
against a Delroit defense that
yards, Coats had two for 38,
"That's what did it. I leads the
lea gue
in
and Faulk had one for 32. thought it was ridiculous," quarterback - &amp;acks and
Swisher threw two in· Miller said. "We got beat - wanted to make 1ts only
terceptions.
we're man enough to admit country wide appearance
On the muddy field, that- but it was a bitter way memorable.
Pomeroy lost 4 of 5 fumbles oo get beat.
The Lions' foursome of end
while Middleport lost just one
"Every time we had a gain AI Baker and Dave Pure if ory
of 4.
they (the officials) brought it plus tackles John Woodcock
The most valuable trophies hack . We hadn 't been caught and Doug English increased
went to Middleport lineman of late for holding, but it was their sack ootal to 48 with six
one holding penalty after the nailmgs of Morton and forced
other out there. When you're the Denver quarterback into
constantly facing third and 20 roll outs to get his passes off .
situations you're in big trou- English was credited _with
ble."
four of the sacks.
Silva and his crew threw
"They made the biggest
enough flags oo get sore arms impression that they could
By Greg Bailey
and the penalties accepted have to anyone - a national ·
Rabbits are down, down, down. At least that's the report showed a definite tilt . Denver television audience, " Coach
from most of'the area. But so are landowner-hunter relations. drew nine for 79 yards while Monte Clark said after his
This relationShip has got to improve, and only we sportsmen Detroit was called three Uons' fourth victory in their
can do something about it.
last six games raised their
times for 15 yards.
The law states that a hunter must have written
Last season Silva was in- record to :HI.
permission from the landowner before hunting on his volved in two controversial
Detroit got the only two
property . Of course, sometimes you know the owner and calls, one of which erased a first downs of the first half
perhaps a simple okay from him might get you by because he fumble by Denver running after the teams traded
must press charges before the law can take over. Strangers back Rob Lytle.
opening
touchdown s.
Firestone 36
who have no close relatlonshlp with a landowner take note. If
Denver, despite first half Pureifory slammed Morton
3 -year wa rra nt-ed, quahtyyou're given permission oo hunt without something in writing field position, was only able down on the third play of the
c onstructed va l ue fo r
and you turn out In be a slob hunter, the owner can still to mount three serious second half and caused a
vehic les w ith l1ght to norprosecute because you have no written permission. Even if you - threats in the contest and the fumble Woodcock fell on.
needs 1290 cra nking
happen In be a friend and the owner changes his mind for some defeat slipped the Broncos a
On fourth and one at the
rnps)
reason, no written permission could bring you a stiff fine. So half-game behind first-place Denver one yard line Clark
everyooe, let's please cooperate: get written permission and Oakland, their next opponent, ignored the pleadin~s of
aiso be a good sportsman. With deer season approaching, this in the AFC West. The Broncos quarterback Gary Daruelson
is especially important.·
are 8-5.
and drew boos from the
Speaking of deer season, it begins Monday and runs
majority of the 71 ,785
through Saturday. It has already been in for a week in West
customers when he sent in
Virginia and will run six more days next week . I h~r the klll is :::::;;;:::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::;:;:::::::;:::;:::::::::::::::::::: Benny Ricardo, who kicked a
roundly jeered 19-yard field
up quite a bit .
Did you get your antlerless deer permit? If you haven't by
goal.
·
now, you probably won't. But 200 more in Meigs were issued
It turned out oo be the
this year than last . However, t~ere were nearly 200 more
difference in the game when
requests. You landowners should remember you still must tag
Danielson responded to the
your deer, even if it 's on your own place, before it's moved .
Denver score with a 77-yard
CHICAGO (UP!)
drive which Horace King
Make up your oWII tag and carry it with you. Then when you
Michigan State Is the finished off by breaking the
bag your deer you'll have no trouble . All deer, no matter where
selection
of sportswriters goal line plane from the onekilled, must be checked in by noon the following day.
.
and
sportscasters
to wiD· yard line.
Let's clear up a bit o! misunderstanding. The landowners
the
Blg
Teo
basketball
title
who have these yellow coop signs have signed with the Division
this
season,
it
was
anof Wildlife In allow hunting on their land. Some o( you hunters
nounced
today
.
mistakenly think that the Division is closing some of this land
PRICE AND
Michigan
was
picked
to
to you. Far from it!
finish second followed by
SERVICE
Many of the landowners in the cooperative program at one
Indiana,
Ohio
State,
A Great
time or another have had !roubles with slob hunters. Many
Combination
Illinois,
Minnesota,
Purtimes the owners have closed or nearly closed their lands to all
For Southeastern Ohio
due, Iowa, Wisconsin and
hunting. So to keep more land open In us hunters, the Diviaon
Northwestern.
has talked oo these owners convincing them In keep their land
Tbe all-Big Teo preopen, but still retaining the right oo refuse someone who seems
Firestone 48
season
first team as
4-year warranted , qu alityto be a poor sportsman.
selected by the sports·
constructed for ve hicl es
But to all true sportsmen - this has helped us, not
writers and sportscasters
with no r mal elec tnca l
hindered. Our image perhaps now may take on more
Included Earvln Johnson of
Starcrall.
Mercury
needs in stop-start City
importance and we may be more conscientious in what we do.
Michigan
State,
Ronnie
clri v &gt;ng . 1322 cr ank&gt;ng
On the other hand, if a hunter abuses the privilege the coop
Outboards
&amp;
Lester, Iowa, PhD Huf&gt;.
8rnps
)
landowner gives him, the owner can call upon the Division and
Mercrui ser, Johnson
there will be a quick crackdown without the owner having all bard, Michigan, Greg
Bass Hawk. ·
the hassie. Remember, In the real sportsmen, this coop Kesler, Michigan State and
program is a real help. Let's support it. By the way, the coop Mike McGee of Michigan .
The second team conowner has official slips he will sign for your written
sisted
of Kelvin Ransey
permission.
and
Herb
Williams of Ohio
Good luck in deer season, but be careful, courteous, and a
State,
Jee
Barry Carroll of
good sportsman. Don't forget to obey the laws.
(614) 992-5652
Purdue, Mike Woodson of
Indiana and Kevin McHale
808 w. Main St.
of Minnesota.

By Greg Bailey .
Th e Pomeroy alumni
outplayed the Middleport
alumni offensively but where
it counted, on the scoreboard,
the Yellowjackets came
through with a :Hl win on the
toe of Lou McKinney.
McKinney booted a ~yard
field goal with just 25 seconds
left in the first half for the
only score of the game.That only score c~me as the
result of a fine drive by the
Middleport crew. With the
hall on the Pomeroy 48; Terry
Whitlatch carried to the 37,
Kenn'y Young then connected
on an aerial to Charlie
Marshall to put the ball on the
20. A penalty moved the
pigskin back to the 25, but
Young then connected with
Mick Davenport placing the
ball at the 12. Then came
McKinney 's game-winning
boot.
Pomeroy took the kickoff
on the 26. A peanlty moved
the ball back to the 42. Then
former
Marshall grid
member Don Swisher connected for _32 yards to Chuck
Faulk to put the ball on the
Middleport 26. With just one
second left in the half,
Swisher carried the ball to
the 16 before he was hauled
down as time ran out.

$

•

lr-.......................................................................................................................................................................... ••-~

TWO RIVERS ·FORD, INC.

Pomeroy takes stats, Middleport wins game

Den Talk

•

:!

1 ,,

RT• 62 NORTH

AUTO
PARTS

MAKES

~realGift"
G&amp;J PARTS
IDEAl

AUTO

GALLIPOUS &amp; POMEROY STORES

apply ; Athens (614) 594--2211
or (614) 593~933) .
The following radio stations
will broadcast the emergency
message at the time stated
below from November 27
throu!ih December 2, 1978:
W.A .T.H., Athens, 12:35
p.m.; W.M.O .A., Marietta,
12 :30 . p.m.; W.M.P.O.,
Middleport, 12:50 p.m.;
W.N .X.T., Portsmouth, 11 :45
a.m.; W.C.H.I., Chillicothe,
12;45 p.m. and W.I.L.E.,
Cambridge, 12:25 p.m.

lit home, the Division of
Wildlife exp-r esses special
interest in the sportsman
afield, as well as the family at
home .
The emergency radio
service is being provided with
MIAMI (UP!) - Guard Ed
the cooperation of the
Newman,
who was injured in
following radio stations and
Monday
night's game at
other news media throughout
Houston,
will
undergo knee
Ohio. Should you be hunting
surgery
ooday
and
will be lost
in Zone 4 (Southeastern
to
the
Miami
Dolphins
for the
the
following
Ohio),
rest
of
the
season.
emergency numbers will

Pomeroy , OH 45769

"The Dealer That Cares About Quality"

1976 CHEVROLET
MALIBU CLASSIC
4

door hardtop, auto .

frans., a.c, p -w, p-b,

IB,OOO miles.

4 WHEEL DRIVE
1978 JEEP
CJ-7 RENEGADE
speed ,

.

V-8, 3

white

spoke

wheels .

$AVE
1974 PONTIAC
CATALINA

1977 FORD
F-150
Heavy

Duty

1/:2

ton

truck , auto., A-c, P-s, VB. bed cap .

" Fu lly equipped " . A
great deal of car for just

a little bit of money .

We invite you to com pare our used cars
to anyone's in the area. We truly care
about the quality of our used cars .

Firestone Forever

FREE replacement warran ty
for as long as you o wn you r
car Built for ultimate electri·
ca l car service lite. especially
f o r cars with above normal
needs Exceptionally resis·
tant

10 high under-hood tem -

pera tures and overc harge

damage . Our best baltery.

FIRESTpNE LIMITED WARRANTY
•"36:' "48;"'60" BATTERIES If any of these batteries fa ils to
hold a ch&lt;~rge , and is not merely di sc harged , in nor mal pas·
senger ~ar service . within th ~ first nmety (90) days after pur·
chase , F1restone w1ll re pl ac e n FREE to the original purcha ser
The~eafter, within t he w~rranty p eriod, you pay only a prorat~
port~on of the curren t pnce based on months of service already
rece1ved . Damage due to accident or abuse exc luded
•F~REVER BATIERY Put the FOR EVE R battery in your ca r.
If 1t ever fa1ls to hold a charge f or vou in that ca r. and is not
mere_ly discharged. Firestone will replace it FREE with proof
of pur ~ h ase, providing the battery has not been damaged due
to acc•dent or abuse . Commercial or marine use excluded.

POMEROY
Pomeroy, 0 .

606 E. Main

"

992 -2094
End
•

�4- The Daily Senllllel , Middlcport-Pomemy, u .. HIO&lt;t y, Nov. lq,

~~~

'

Dallas bombs 'Skins, 37-10

.

Pardee , who did not
elaborate. " We have a
chance to make the playoffs
as long as everyone is trying.
And everyone is."
The Redskins had the ball
for only 3:34 of. the first 15
minutes and fell behind,. 1~.
Laidlaw plunged I yard for
the first score and, on the
final play of the quarter, he
reeled off the longest run of

I

P ATIENT'S
RIGHTS
REGARDING
SMOKINGA pal ient's rig hts rega r ding smoking will be
honored at Veterans Memorial Hospital .
Effective thi s date, Smokers and Non Smokers are not to be admitted to the same
room .
To insure the effectiveness of thi.s policy the
persons in volved are to adhere to the
follow ing procedu r e :
( l ) Admi tting physician will note on
admiss ion orders w hether patient is a
Smo ker or Non- Smoker.
(2) Admi tting clerk will note on face
shee t whether a patient is a Smoker or NonSmo ke r .
(3)
Admitting nurse will check
physicia n ' s orde r s along with patient's face
s heet , to make certain a Smoker or NonSmo ke r are not admitted to the same room.
SMOKINGFor the benefit of the patient, smoking is
proh ibi t ed except in the hospital :s lobby .
,. Smo k ing is not permitted in any patient
cor ridor and only the pat ie mt may smoke in
his ro om . Smoking is not permitted under
any ci rcumsta nces in a · room where oxygen
is being used .

string fullback Larry Brinson
ran 39 yards for a score.
Washington scored on
Mark Moseley 's 48-yard field
goal in the third quarter and
on Jean Fugett's 16-yard
touchdown reception with
less than three minutes tD
play.
In games Sunday, Los Angeles will be at Cleveland;

berth. Purdue has accepted a
bid to the Peach Bowl against
Georgia Tech, and the loser
of the Michigan.Qhio State
game is conunitted to the
Gator Bowl against Clemson .
Should they play a tie, the
Buckeyes would go ·to the
Gator Bowl. "'
Michigan
Coach
Bo
Schembechler, admitting
that he has considered the
possibility of playing for a tie,
said "there are · too many
circumstances involved to
decide in advance what you'll
do .

"My feeling is we want to
win the title . I do know the
team wants me to go for a
win . We can't take a vote on
it. We 'II only have 25 seconds
to decide and they'll have tD
accept my judgment"
Ohio State Coach Woody
Hayes said he "expects to be
sharp. We expect to put a real
good team on the field."
Defense should be the key
to victory for each team.
Michigan has allowed fewer
points than any other Big Ten
team. Ohio State has the
fourth best record in

United Press International
smart as well as a good
· Even though a possible football team physically."
~~\i~nal. . cham~ionship is
Two years ago, unbea(en
Withm .his teams sights and tojH'anked Pittsburgh
two games away to be exact · met Penn State at Three
- Penn State Coach Joe Rivers Stadium in the
Paterno still has that "let's regular~son finale for both
take 'em one at a time" teams. Behind Tony Dorsett,
attitude.
Pitt broke a 7-7 halftime tie
"There's nothing that · and beat the Nittany Lions
matters until thatfinalpoll at 24-7. The Panthers the~
the encj of the season, " wrapped up the national
Paterno said, as he prepared championship with a victory
his team for today's game over Georgia in the Sugar
with arch..-ival Pittsburgh. Bowl.
" We've got a tough football
If Penn State 10-0 gets by
game with Pitt and it doesn't Pittsburgh, it, ioo, ~ have
matter wbere we stand ~ess an opportunity to win a
we wm that . We're gomg to national championship at the
have to be very alert and very Sugar Bowl. Right now,
though, Paterno is worried
about the Panthers, currently
8-2 and headed for the
Tangerine Bowl in Orlando,
F1a., where they will meet
North Carolina State.
"Pitt had some problems
TOA
early, maybe because they

1978 MONTE CARLO LANDAU .•••'6695
Lig t1t b l ue wi th wh . v inyl to p , 23 1 V 6 engine, fu ll pow_er
incl. windows &amp; doo r locks , Afllo: FM_ ste r e~ rad• o.
cr uise. tilt st . wheel , r adi a l w stnp e t.r es, a•r cond .,
tot sOl othe r ex trns'. Dealer Demo. SAV E

1978 IMPALA COUPE ••••••••••• '6495

were young," says Paterno,
"but they have great
personnel and they seem to
have put it together the last
two weeks. They could be the
best team we have played
this season."
A key to the game could be
Penn State kicker Matt Bahr,
who needs one field goal to

Local 1 owner &amp; only 11 ,000 miles, AM· FM rad io, fX)wer
windows &amp; D. locks, cruise control. tilt st . whee l, air
cond., digital clock, 305 V-8, P .S. , P . B., and sharp car,
silver with red vinyl top .
·

1977 PINTO 2 DR, ••••••••••••• s2995
Local owner, clean Interior, AM-FM CB rad io, good

tires.

.1976 MUSTANG II CPE•••••••••s2795
4

cyl., automatic, good tires, blue finish, radio, good

economy &amp; real sporty.

1975 FORD PINTO WAGON ••••• !2295 .
c:yl., ·automatic trans .• good tires. good economy &amp; a
local 1 owner .car . Radle. color white.

.-4

1974 CHEVEL1E ••••••••••••••••• s1695
2 Seat Wagon , v.a engine, automatic trans., P.
steering, needs some pa int work , radi o, like new tires .

1976 CHEVROLET.•••••••••••••• s3495
Sport Pickup, 350 V-8, automatic trans., P .S., P. B.,
radio, like new tires, bed rails, orange with white trim .

1976 GMC % TON ••••••••••••. s3695
1 owner, gOod

t~res,V-8,

automatic, P.S., P.B ., radio.

1969 CHEV. 112 TON PICKUP. ••••• SS95
V-8, auto ., good tires. See it now. Only

1976 CHEV. T.E.C. MINI MOTOR HOME
·See Us, We Have New Chevy

.._j

Suburbans, Vans, Conversions,
Mini Homes, El Camlnos,
4-Wheel ancl 2 Wheel Drive
Pickups In Stock.

Don 't forget you owe it to yourself to check with us
before you buy any car, New or Used. We c1n s1ve you

money . We are the Friendly Dealership. See or Call
ooe of these Friendly Salesmen : J . 0 . Story, Ra)
Douglas 0&lt; Bill Nelson .

ITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
500 E . Main, Pomeroy, 0.
992 -2174
Close at6:00 p.m. We.ekdays

New York Giants at Buffalo;
New York Jets at Miami;
New Orleans at Atlanta;
Cincinnati at Houston ;
Minnesi&gt;ta at Green Bay;
Philadelphia at St. Louis ; San
Diego at Kansas City; Tampa
Bay at Chicago, and New
England at Baltimore and
Seattle
at
Oakland.
Pittsburgh Is at San
Francisco Monday night.

j

r·

!;._
t!7:·
,,.,'

'"l:

POMEROY

I I RCO.

Chevrolet
, "Your Chevy Dealer"
992-2126

¥'
.¥
·'

opponents' points allowed .
Ohio State has the second
highest scoring total and .
Michigan the third highest .
"It seems to me the big
games are all low scoring/'
Schembechler said. "Our defense has been fine, and in
this r.eries defense has been
dominant. Ohio State has not•
been run on consistently by
anybody."
Minnesota
plays
at
Wisconsin in the fourth game
on the Saturday schedule,
closing the Big Ten season.

Penn State just two games
away from national title

BmER USED CIR

"YOUR
FRIENDLY
DEALERSHIP"

I

Spartans could be Big 10
champs if Bucks, Wolves tie
By ED SAINSBURY
UP! Sports Writer
CHICAGO
(UP!)
Michigan has two ways to
beat Ohio State Saturday in
the usual " crucial" finale to
the football season for both
teams.
. While the two engage in a
tossup contest·, Michigan
State, the third co-leader of
the Big Ten race, entertains
Iowa and the Spartans were
heavy favorites to win and
grab at least a share of the
conference crown.
But Michigan State, on
probation, is not eligible for a
bowl game. So, the prized
Rose Bowl berth awaits
either Michigan, which can
receive the bid with either a
win or a tie, or Ohio State,
which needs to win for the
Rose Bowl and a share of the
title.
Should the Wolverines and
Buckeyes tie, Michigan State
could be the undisputed
champion with a 7-1 record
compared to 6-1-1 for
Michigan and Ohio State.
Purdue would also be 6-1-1 if
it defeats Indiana .
Should there be a tie in the
standings involving
'Michigan, Ohio State and
Purdue, the team with the
best overall record would get
the Rose Bowl bid. Michigan
heads into the final week 9-1
and assured of a better
record overall than Ohio
State, now 7-2-1, and Purdue,
now 7-3.
All three are sure of a bowl

SMOKING POLICIES ARE BEING .
STRICTLY ENFORCED AT .
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

his career - 59 yards. When
Staubach hit Pearson in the
second quarter the Cowboys
began to coast.
Rafael Septien, who kicked
field goals of 33 and 21 yards
in the first quarter, added
another of 44 yards in the
third. Laidlaw also scored in
that quarter on a 2-yard run.
In the final period third- .

Pomeroy
Open Evenings Til8:00 P; m-

C-M will wear

break the NCAA singleseason record of 21 set in 1975
by Don Bittertich of Temple.
Pitt's only losses of the
season came to Notre Dame
(26-17) and Navy (21-11) both on the road.
In Saturday's big game,
No. 6 Michigan and Ohio
State play for the Big Ten
title and a spot in the Rose
Bowl against Southern Cal.
The fourthranked Trojans
host Notre Dame in another
key game Saturday.
Also on Saturday, · No. 5
Houston is at Texas Tech, No.
9 Texas visits Baylor, No. 10
Clemson hosts South Carolina
and Arkansas Is at Southern
Methodist.
Michigan State, could grab
a share of the Big Ten
conference crown with a
victory over Iowa Saturday.
But the Spartans are on
probation and inetigible to
play in bowl games.
Houston can clinch the
Southwest Conference title
and a C&lt;ltton Bowl berth -to
play Notre Dame - by
beating Texas Tech .
Southern Cal beat UCLA
last week to win the Pac-10
Conference. The Trojans will
be seeking revenge for last
year's 49-19 loss at Notre
Dame, which has an eightgame winning streak.

~

PITTSBURGH (UP!)
Carnegie-Mellon University's
football team will be wearing
special type shoes on the
artificial turf Saturday when
it meets Baldwin-Wallace in a
NCAA Division III semifinal
game at Berea, 'Ohio.
The shoes came from Penn
State. CMU coach Chuck
Klausing had hoped to obtain
the special turf shoes from
Pitt, but it promised its shoes
to high school teams who are
playing for championships
Saturday at Pitt Stadiwn,
The Tartans have been
practicing for the game this
week at Pitt Stadlwn so they
wUI be used to the artificial
turf. CMU's home field is
regular grass and it has
never played on artificial
turf.
CMU moved into the
semifinals by upsetting
Dayton 24-21 in overtime last .
weekend.
meets
Minnesota-Morris
Wittenberg in Springfield,
Ohio, SatUJ:day in the other
NCAA III playoff . The
winners will clash Dec. 2 in
the Amos Alonzo Stagg Bowl
at Phenix City, Ala ..
PHILADELPIDA (UP!) Caldwell Jones, the Philadelphia
76ers'
7-fool-1
starting center, may sit out
hla first game of the NBA
season Monday night with an
inflam!!d nerve In his right
elbow.
Jones, with his right ann
encased In a splint to
inunobilize the elbow, is on a
"day-t&lt;Hiay basis" with the
Sixers, who meet San Diego
Monday, according to team
physician Dr.
Michael
Clancy.

..

·,··,

1f

ScoutH Dtary
fli h

B Ch 1

.

Y

ar ene

oe

C

.

I;:;:
. ;:

Amana H{ldarange Popcorn Popp er . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $29.95
grease.

No Smokin g)

Kooker Kit ''""''"'"' •c·"'e~"'"~~ ,. " ''· ~" ~,., .• "'"'' ' d••• . .. . . . . . .
·Country Cooker il',.. """" " ~"""' . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . .. • • . •
2 Cooking Schools - (One basic, One ad vanced) .• , • . . . •

Total Value

of

29.50
12.50
20.00

$91.95

Bonu s Extras . . . . . . . . . . . . .

..

·-~"":.
.r.

f'l.;.

.'

Mrs.--Charles Blake and meetinc held a t th e
Mrs. Hobert Harden of the Brookwood Pres byte r ian
Syracuse Presbyterian Church in Col wnbus TuesChurch , and Mrs. Dwight da y.
Wallace of the Middleport
Presbyterian Church accompanied the Rev . Tura
Practice for installation of
Hayes of Gallipoli s to the
officers of Pomeroy Chapter
Scioto Valley Pres bytery •186, Order of the Eastern
Star, will be held Sunday at 2
p.m. at the Middleport
DANCE TONIGHT
Masonic Temple. Installation
There will be a dance
will be held on Nov. 30 at 7:30
tonight from 8 p.m . to 11 p.m.
p.m. also al the Middleport
at the Senior Citizens Center.
Masonic Temple. All of the
Admission is $1 with children
new officers and the installunder 12 accompanied by an
ing officers are asked to atadult to be admitted free .
tend the practice ~ssion .

LARGEST SELECTION
OF
CHRISTMAS BARGAINS

ASK FOR A FREE

SHOP

DEMONSTRATION TODA Yl

AND

INGELS FURNITURE
&amp; JEWELRY

.I

SAVE
AT

"TWO /1\J OlliE STORE

106 N. 2ND AVE.

MIDDLEPORT. 0.

APPEARING THIS 'WEEK AT

DUTTON DRUG CO.
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

N. 2ND AVE.

THE MEIGS INN
10 Trl 2

5 PIECE BAND FROM
PORTSMOUTH,.OHIO

S•

• •

B H } B
::
y e en otte1:,_·

, Several girl scout troops will be marching in Ihc Middleport ::::
and Pomeroy ChriStmas parades next week.
Syra cuse Troop 1204 meeting Tuesday night at the school
OFFICE WOLF NEEDS A BARE TRAP!
made plans to meet a t Gateway at 6 p.m. in uniform to fon n DEAR HELEN :
for their parade participation. At the m~eting the scuuts made
In our company there's a jlandsome older man who feed~·
1· ·
turkeys out of art foam . Paula Winebrenner led in the girl ego by seeing how many s kirts he can lift . He thinks he's l'Y
scout promise, ·Tra cy Hubbard , the flag pledge , and Kim clever, but since women 's liberation, females talk . Many f us
Cogar, the prayer.
.
have discovered we've been victims .
POMEPOY BROWNIE TROOP 1261
An a ttracti've divorcee is new here. She refused to date any
An .investiture ceremony was held at the Brownie Troop of the other fellows, but guess who scored with her : Old Mr .
Ego. As !he res t of us once did , she probably beli eves he's been
meetmg Tuesd•y evenmg at hte Pomeroy Elementa ry School
Mrs. Janice Haggy, Mrs. Martha Graves and Mrs. Kare~ a faithful, loving, unappreci .. ted hus l&gt;" nd who had never
n·iplett are leaders of the troop and at the 'meeting rea d the strayed before but he cou ldn't resist " the chemistry be tween
girl scout prom1se and explained its m eaning. Li sa Piltterson th em ."
Dena Manley , and Belinda Whitlatch lighted the candles and
Do you think we secretaries should keep quiet and let him
ShellieTripletttedinthepledge.
'
continu e with his "secret " affairs whi ch demoralize women !
Receiving pins were Sarah Anderson, Trina Bachtel , Jem]y Or should all his former loves confront him, preferabl y in the
Buck, Barbara Colman, Melissa Dailey, La ura Fry, Eli zabeth presence of his wife or present sweetie ? - VICTIMS
Graves, Jennifer Graves , Deanna Haggy, Penny Helll!ley , ANONYMOUS DEAR VICTIMS :
Doreen Hadsell, Lisa Patterson, Gail Pierce, Greta Riffle,
Strike one for women's liber"li on: Confront him ! -H .
Tom Rutter , Becky Sturgeon, and Shelly Triplett.
· Plans were made for a visit to the Meigs Museum·, and lo DE AR HELEN :
carol at the hospital som etime during the holida y season
A while back a mother of grown children wondered if she'd
SYRACUSE BROWNIE TROOP 1120
·
hurt the family 's combined feelings if she and her husband
- Thanksgiving proj ects were completed at the meeting of the took a Christmas cruise instead of pl annmg the usual holiday
Syracuse Browme Troop this week. Arrangements wer e made bas h that left her exhausted and the kid!; feeling guil ty because
for the Brownies to ma r ch in both the Middleport and Pomeroy they didn 't enjoy it more.
Like her , we had copious chil dren and grandchildren 115
Christmas p&lt;trades. Angie Grueser led in the pledge, Michelle
Harris m the promise, and Jane Ann Williams served the stnmg) for Thanksgiving and Chri stm"s ·ever y year, and
refreshments .
·
sometimes the younger kids brought along friends .
POMEROY JUNIOR TROOP 1216
Then I overheard a conversation between our offsp1·ing. The
Christmas remembrances for the residents of the Meigs gist of it was, " We wish we could just once make our own plans
County Infirmary were pl"nned during this week 's m eeting of for the holidays ."
the Pomeroy Juniors ,
No, I wasn't hurt. My hus b.. nd and I were glad to enjoy
The scouts will make tree ornaments and present several to Christmas in our own way after so many years of wor·k. We
the infirmary for its Christmas tree. Thanksgiving decor a- took a wonde rful trip, met new friends and discover ed ou1·
lions, pilgrims constructed of-paper and s tyrofoam, were eom- family loves us just as much as they did before . I rec01mnend a
pleted at the meeti ng and plans were made for a hike next change of pace to ever y older couple who is ca ught in the
week. The pledge a nd promi se opened the meeting. Ml'S. Betty "home for Christmas " syndrome.- MHS. P.K.
Lane is the leader.
DEAR MRS. K:
... And so do I! -H .

Practice planned

AT NO EXTRA CHARGE

'

special shoes
in big battle

' :-: : : : : : : : : : : : :.:: , , , ,,:, , ,: : : : ~ircles hold meetings, plan projects
I:: Helen Help )
grO&lt;.'CI'lest~WoodrowCall.
I :: u
:·

Three attend meeting

(f'OOS WilnD\JI ell 0!

·

rG~ l-:---~----:--r--1 ':1'''''':'''': '''''''

WATCH FOR__THE

I

Dallas went over the 500By MIKE TUU. Y
!;PI Sports Writer
yard mark for the third time
After a spell of wondering if this year , with 507, and
fullba ck Scott
their string of 11 playoff backup
berths in 12 ye"rs migh t end Laidla w ran for a career-high
t hi s se ason, the Dalla s 122 yards and scored twice.
C&lt;lwbn;s have solidified their Quarterback Roger Staubach
positi on - and their old completed 218 yards in passes
a nd threw a , 53-yard
l'Onfidence is back.
"We played as hard as we to uchdown strike to Drew
r an," C&lt;lach Tom Landry Pearson in the second
said Thursday, after the quarter.
Co wboys hammered t heir
The Redskins, losers of five
ar ch-rivals , the Washington of the iast seven, now must
Redskins, 37-10, to asswne concentrate on wiruling one of
f1rst place in the NFC East. two con fe r en ce wild-card
It was a switch from a playoff spots after winning
&gt;eason-long pattern of unin- their first six games of the
s pired victories, losses, and a season.
~eneraJ abscence of the awe"I did see some signs I
someness that the Cowboys , liked today, " said optimistic
can generate.
Washington Coach Jack

.

5-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-POIJleroy. 0 ., Friday, Nov . 24, 1978

· DEER M

Zllfrtlls

RIFLE
SLUGS
12 to 6 gauge 5 pk.
20 to 4-10 gauge 5 pk.

BAUM TRUE VALU
Hours

Weekdays7 :30-5:00 P.M .
Sat . 7:30ill4:00 P.M.

985-3301

DEAR HELEN:
In response to the gas stati on manager who defended
m ~tered C:lir, non-free mHps, locked rest rooms, etc. , we recently traveled from New J ersey to Kansas. and m et som e of tile
rmlest people in AmericC:I 's gHs stati ons. Only once or twice did
anyone offer to clean our windshield. even though we filled to
the tune of $14. Nor did they check tires, water or battery
unless we asked, and then they did so grudgingly.
Once we had a fiat tire and the manage r ki cked us off the
edge of his property . And forget directions! If we asked , they
eithe r didn 't speak Engli sh or steered us wrong.
So attendants are underpaid , and put up with bad weathe r.
My nursing job is also underpaid, ""d I have a lot more tha n
bad weather to contend with! - WEARY TRAVELE R
DEAR TRAVELER:
You got equal time space. So ... no co!Tunent. - H.

Residents of Meigs Co.
Infirmary to receive
•
gifts for Christmas
A family will be assisted for
Christmas and gifts will be
given to each of the residents
at the Meigs County Infi rmary as s pecial holiday
projects, it was decided at the
Tuesday night meeting of Xi
Gamma Mu Chapter of Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority.
Members were reminded of
the cookie sale on Dec. 5. A
·communication from 0 . U.
Television to participate in

rund ralsmg program was
read and the chapter decided
"gainst participating but did
send a donation for eduational programming.
The Chris tmas coupl es'
dinner party was announced
for Dec. 15 at 7: 30p .m . at the
Meigs Inn .
Kathy .Johnson and Beth
Dawson gave the cultural
reoort and refres hm ents
were served by Libby Sayre
and Jane Bourne.

Winter carnival planned
Plans for the winter carnival to he held Dec. 2 from
6:30 to 8:30p.m. were made
during a r ecent meet ing of
the Bradbury PTA.
The carnival will consist of
games, refreshments, sale of
homemade Christmas articles, and door prizes .
Several by-laws of the PTA
were changed and copies of
the revisions were distributed
to the membership. Mrs. Betty McKinley, ways and

means chairman, r eported on
the bake sale .
Studentss of Mrs. George
Korn led in the pledge, and
the Re v. Ge01·ge GI .. ze gave
devoti ons. Room eount went
to Tt:!resa Casci 's homeroom .
A film on drugs was shown by
Carl Hysell, Meigs County
·juvenile officers. Mrs. Korn 's
homeroom mothers ser ved
refreshments. Several pl'O·
jects in r egard to the ·
playgr ound im provements
were discussed.

Sixty-five attend

~--·---- ·-·-r

Rock Springs Grange

!

Approximately 65 attended
the annual Thanksgiving dinner of the Bi g Bend Citizens
Band Radio Club heldat the
Rock Springs Grange hall
Sunday. The child's ddor
prize we nt to Brent William
Hanson, son of or. and Mrs.
Harold Hanson, and the adult
door orize, a coffee maker,
went to Pal Aeiker .

!
!
I

Social I
Calend ar II

CirdesoflheB. H. Sanborn
Missionary Society of the
Middleport F1rst Baptist
Church . meeting Tuesda y
hight planned remembrances
for m•sswnarws, schola rship
student , and shutin and other
confined persons for the
Christmas season.
Me mber s were al so
reminded that good used
clotlung for the Dayton Christian Center should be at the
church by Dec . 1. The Sanborn MISSIOnary Society
meeting was announced for
the first Monda y in
December and at that time
the Christmas stockings ar e
to be turned in with the
money to _be used for soJTie
spec1al holiday pruJed.
.. DORCAS CIRCLE
Meeting at the home of
Mrs. Sarah Fowler , the Dorc"s Circl e members told of
visiting shulins and Freda
Hood and Martha Klein noted
tha t they have visite d
Young's Home in Pomeroy
and took a tray of fruit for the
residents there. Mrs. Anna
Grimm and Mrs. Lula Murray were remembered with
Ideals for Thanksgiving.
For Christmas the circle
will send a gift of money to
John Kennedy , Baptist student at Judson College , along
w1th gifts to the Stew"rt family , mi ssionaries, and will also
send a , birthd"y gift to C"rol
Stewari.
It was noted tha t the circle
Will have charge of the devot iun s for thP ~: tnh n 1· n

l)leeting. Trays of cookies
and frmt Will be prepared for
shutms .
.
.
Mrs. Eloise Wilson gave devot ions on "Thanks" using
scnpture from the 40th
Psalm.
The program by Mrs.
Kathern Metzger was entitled
" Thanksg ivi ng" with a
r eading " Why Should I Say
Thanks." Scl'lpture was from
Matthew 5. Mrs. Mary Ann
McClung was a guest. othe~s
attendmg were Mrs . Kat1e
Anthony, Mrs.
Alwilda
We rner, Mrs. Beulah White,
Mrs. Pearl Hoffman , and
Mrs. Leora Sigman.
Refreshments were served
by the hostess .
ELECT A CIRCLE .
Mrs. Cla r e Bell Riley was .
hostess for a m~et~ ng of the
E Jecta C1rd~ which opened
with poems on Thanksgiving
a nd prayer.
Miss Rhoda Hall gave devotions u~~ ".Dorc_a,'~ A Woman
of God usmg scripture from
Acts. Mrs. Texanna Well
repo~~d on sendmg th~ I deal
magazme to Mrs. E hz"beth
Gardner for ThanksgiVIn g.
Arrangements were made to
g1vethe_program a~the Sanborn _M1sswnary Soc1e~y : . .
. ThanksgiVIng proJects carned . out mcluded makmg
cookie and candy trays for
Mrs . Dana Ha mm _and Mrs.
Ad~ Rotot, ta~m~ som~ pt!rsuna1. I emfs•do r,'. 1~1 a n
Titus, con me to a nursmg
home , · and prov1dmg some

Weight loss of members

wHs n9ted and new members

THE NIGHT WILL FLY BY WITH
THE EXCITING SOUNDS OF

FLYING MACHINE
AT THE

INN PLACE
992-3629

POMEROY,O.

Shop· Edwards Gun Shoppe for All
Your Hunting Needs. Deer Barrels,
Rifles, Slugs for a II Gauges of
Shotguns and Deer Lure. Special
Sale Prices. on Many Items.

EDWARDS
GUN SHOPPE

were welcomed at the week's
Slinderella Diet Classes held
in the tri-&lt;:ounty areH.
At the Mason class, two
new m embers were taken in,
a 20 pound ribbon went to
Sonya Roush, and 35 pound
ribbons to Phyllis Kin g.
Daisy
Patterson was
recognized for havi ng lost the
mot must weekly wei ght.
At the Middleport classes ,
Vicki Houchins lust the 11101;t
weight with Judy Crooks,
Ruth Bmngardner, Jovce
Sisson and Jean Cooke tying

runner-up.
Geralding Blessing lost the
most weekly weight with Lizzie Stover a s the runner-up at
the Point Pleasant daytime
class, while Glenna Hollani
lost the most weight ,- and
Denise Scarberry and Gertrude Holland tied for runnerup at the evening class .

Meigs 4-H Club News
HAWK MURPHY
The C&lt;luntry Kids 4-H Club
met November 11 at the Rita
Maust residence with 2 advisors and 5 members in
attendance. Business
discussed was meeting time
and places, projects and
activities. The next meeting
will be held December 16 at
the Rita Maust residence. At
this time the club will decide
what projects they will be
taking for the coming 4-H
year.
ANGIE SPENCER
The
Meigs · County
Shepherds
Club
met
November 20 at the Meigs
Extension Office .
The sheep show at the fair
was discussed, some old rules
changed and new ones added.
Project books, certificiates
and pins were handed out to
the members. The club voted
to donate to the Canter 's Cave

Fund Raising project.
The next meeting will be
held Jan. 8 at the Meigs
Extension Office. At this
time, ·new officers will be
elected.
Attending the meeting were
Nick, Eleanor, Dan and
Nicky Leonard ; Sonia, Red
and Rose Carr; Tam and
Scott Bearhs, Alvin, Rodney
and Todd Trip and Angie and
Jean Spencer.

REVIVAL
The Rev. Chester Lemle:
will be speaker for a revival
at 7:30 each evening at the
Racine Bethany . United
Methodist Church, Sunday
through Dec. 3. There will be
special vocal nwnbers. The
pastor, the Rev. Steve Wilson
invites the public.

S.ed and .Mihlng
.HEADQUARTERS

'mR'

SATURDAY
.SPECIAL SONG SERVICE
at Jublle Christian Center
Saturday 7 p.m. Featured
will be the Shaffer family of
Crown City and the Gospel
Tones of Crooksville. Public

POMEROY,

~~~

GUEST MINISTER
The Rev . Bruce Davis of
Delaware will be guest
minister at the Syracuse a nd .
Middlepo•·t Presbyterian
Churches Sunday mon)ing.

Me and my

for ·runners-up. That evening 's class a 20 pound ribbon
was given to Rho nda Roush
and Billy Jo Krawsczyn. Judy
Laudermilt lost the most
weekly weight, with Dixie
Sayre, Sarah Johnson, and
Edwina Scott tying fo r

SAVE YOUR R.C., NEHI, UPPER 10,
DIET RITE &amp; DADS ROOT BEER
BOffiE CAPS FOR CHARITY

R. C. BOTTLING CO.
MILL STREET
Middleport , Ohio
992-3542 or 992 -3344

IT'S NOT
TOO LATEI
GALLIPOliS BUSINESS
COLLEGE
IS STILL TAKING
APPLICATIONS FOR CLASSES
Classes being offered can be applied
toward yoor diploma. G.B.C. is a
college with you in mind. We can
give you the training that you need
to qualify fot: the job of your future.
We have more calls from employers
in the area for our graduates, than
we have gtaduates.
Join the employables, take the first
step. Enroll at G.B.C., receive your
marketable skills and then the jobs
will come to you .

• - - - - - . - - - . , . , invited.

DEER SEASON OPENS
MONDAY THE 27TH

PRE-HOLIDAY
CLEANUP

Weight loss noted,
members welcomed

·

SATURDAY
GOSPEL SING , Saturday,
7:30 p.m. at Mt. Moriah
Church of God, Racine,
featuring Dan Hayman and
County Hynmtimers and the
Heavenly Highway Trio.
Public invited.
CHRISTMAS BAZAAR and
bake sale, Saturday, 9 a .m. to
4 p.m . in basement of Trinity
Church, Pomeroy, sponsored
by the Ohio Eta Phi Chapter
of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority.

Christmas party ar_e to conFor Chnstmas the circle tact Mrs . Juh" Norns.
will send a gift of money to
th e Re v . E lw in G ibbs,
California, and one to Emilie
B"llard servmg 111 Thailand .
The Baptist scholarship student will also r\!Cei ve a gift of
money. The shu tins will be
taken homema de candies,
flowers , and some P""'onal
1tem s as their Chnstmas
from the circle.
The program by Mrs.
Lillian Demoskey was enlltled " Burma " and was taken
from the American Baptist
Magazme. MISs Hall furmshed the refre shments whi ch
were se rved by Mrs. Riley
Ronl o BLUE LUSTRE Sllompooer
an d Mary beth Brewer .
to gel me scruDOing oclion IW
neeo 1o loosen ond Iiff 0111
others attending the meettng
ground-in dirt and grime. And use
were Mrs. Ethel Hughes,
BLUE LUSTRE shompoo lo gel
Mrs. Elizabeth Slavtn, Mrs . . · ~Ur carpets bright . clean and
Mrs. Freda Edwards, Mrs.
plush'
·
Isabelle Winebrenner , Mrs_
Mary Brewer , Mrs. Judy
RENT only 52.50 per 4•Y
Riley , Jill and Brent Moore,
and Amber W~ll .
SOCIAL CALENDAR
TUESDAY
AM E: RIC AN , ~EG ION
AUXILIARY, Racme Post
602, 7:30 p.m. at the h" IL
Those who plan to attend the

Seeds - Bird Seeds- Oyster Shells and Grit Fertilizers - Lime- Cement &amp; Mortar- Stock
Salt - Water Softener - Remedies - Salt Litters - Vaccine - Roofing - 'Paints - Red
Brand Fencing - Baler and Binder Twine ·
Sprays - Gates.

SUGAR RUN MILLS
Mulberry Ave.

992-2115

Pomeroy

CALL TODAY AT
446-4367
OR STOP IN AND·
VISIT US .AT THE.
SPRING VALLEY PIJZA
~ag.

No. 75::02-04728

.
. .

�7- The Dally Sentinel, 1'\llddleport-Pomeroy 0 . Fnday Nov 24 1978
DIOK TRACY
' .
'
. ..

MEIGS TIRE
CENTtR, INC.

MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE

John F . FuHz. Mgr.
Ph. m-2101
TR INITY CHU RCH, Mev W H
Perrin pastor So b Buck Sunday

sc hoo l s up! Church School q I 5
o m ., w o r sh1p ser v •ce ,

10 30 a

m

Cho•r r ehearsal Tuesday , 7 30
d• reC1 1on of A lic e

p m under
Nease

POME ROY CHU RCH Of

THf

NAZA RI::NE Co rn e r Un ion and
Mulberrv Rev Cly de V Hender

so n pasto r Su nday sc hool 9 30
a m , G len McC lun g supt mo rn
H'Q wor sh1p , l 0 30 o m , evemng
ser v•ce 7 30 m1d w eek serv •ce ,
We dni:!sday 7 30 p m
G RA CE EP ISC OPAl CHURCH

32b E Mom St , Po m e roy
He¥

Ro be r t 8

The

G r aves, rector

~ unrloy

se rv 1ces II a m mo r mn g
pr ayer ( Hol y Co mm unton hr sl

Sunda y of e a ch mont h) a nd se r
man Ch ur ch chur ch sc hoo l a nd
nu rsery core prov •d e d Coffe-e
ho ur .n par 1sh hou se foll owmg
the ser v 1ce
POMI::ROV CHURC H O F CHHIST

717 W Mom St John McArr hu r
pas to r fl,b le schoo l 9 30 a . m
rno rn• ng wo rsh 1p , 10 30 a m
You th m ee tmgs 6 30 p m even
'"9 wor5. hip 7 30 Wednesd ay
n1ght pra yer meellng and Btb le
study , 7 30 p m
THI: SALVA TION A RMY 115
Sullernul A¥e Po mer oy l:n¥oy
a m·l Mrs Roy W1n 1n g offt cers m
char ge
Sunday ho l1n es s
meett n g 10 a m Su nday Sc hoo l
10 30 o m Sunday schoo l leade r
YPSM El o1se Ad am s 7 30 p m
sa l ¥ohon
rnee t •n g
va fl o u s
speake r s and m us 1c spec•a l s
Thu rsda y 10 a m
to 1 p m
Lodoes Ho me l eague all women
mv 1ted . 7 30 p m pr ayer mee l mg
and Bt ble stu dy
Bob h tep
l eader
Rev
N oel
Hermon
teacher
BUIWN G TON SOU THERN BAP
l iST CHAP EL , Ro ut e 1 ShadePastor Bobby Elk m s Sunday
s&lt;:hool 5 p m Su nd a y worshtp
5 45 p .m Wednesday pray er ser
VICe 7 30 p ITl
POMERO Y WES TSIDE CHURCH
OF CHRIST 200 W Matn 51 Jer ry
Paul , m 1mster , p ho ne CJf12 .76b6
Conse r vattve , non -m strumental
Sunday w o rsh 1p 10 o m Btbl e
stu dy II o m wo rsh1p 6 p m
Wednes da y B1ble st udy 7 p m
Ol D DE)(TER BIBU CHHISTIAN
CHURC H
Rev Ro l ph Sm tth ,
pasto r Sun day school 9 30 om ,
Mrs Wo rley Fra nCIS supj!r lnlen·
dent Pr ecchmg ser v1 ces f1rst &amp;
th 1rd Sundays f o fl ow mg Sun day
School
GRAHAM UNITED METHO DI ST
Pr eoch mg 9 30 a m , fu st and se ·
co nd Sun days o f each month,
th 1rd and fo urt h Sun days each
month , wor shtp ser viCe at 7 30
pm
Wednesday evemngs at
7 30 Pr ay er and 81b le Study
SI: VE NTH DAY
AD VENTI ST,
Mulberry Hetgh ts Ro od Po meroy
Pcmc r A lbert 011tes Sabbath
Sc hool
Sup ermtendent , R1t0
Wh1t e Sa bbat h Sc tiool. Satu rday
o!ter no on at 2 00 , w ith Wor sh1p
Ser v1ce fo llowtng a t 3 15
RUTlAND
FIR ST BAPTIST
CHUR CH Sts l e r
Horoett
Worner , Sup!
Su nday Scliool
9 30 a m
m o r n mg w or shtp ,
10 45 om
THE HILAND CHAPEl Goeorge
Costa pasto r Su nd ay School
9 30 a m , even•n g w orsh1p 7 30
Th ursda y evenmg p rayer ser vtce ,
7 30 p m
PO M EROY
FIRST BAPTIST
Dov1 d Mann, mtn 1ster Wdltom
Watson Sunday schoo l su p! Sun·
day school, 9 30 o m .. mormng
wo rsh ip 10 30 o m
fiR ST SOUTHERN BAPTI ST 282
Mulberry A ve Pomeroy , Pa ul J
White , Pa stor G o ry Ba sham , Sun·
day schoo l sup t Sun day school
9 30 a m
mo rning worsh1p
10 30 even tng w orsh •p 6 30 p m
M• dweek pray er serv1ce , 7 30
pm
M IDWAY COMMUNITY CENTER.
Oel( ter Rd Langsv tll e Oh1o, Re v
Clyde Fer rel l
Pas tor Sunday
Sc hool
II
o m
Saturday
pt eochm g serv iCes 7 30 p m
Wed nesda y eve ntng Btbl e stu dy
at l 30 p .m
f AITH TABERNACLE CHURCH
Bm ley Run Rood Rev Emm ett
Row son , pa sto r Handley Du nn ,
supt Sun day sch o o l 10 a m Sun·
day even1n g se r v tce 7 30 Btble
teoch• ng 7 30 p m Thursday
D Y !: 5V I LLE
CO MMUNIT Y
CHUR t '-l oger C Turn er pasto r
Sunday , c, JOI 9 30 o m Su nd ay
mortJ'" 9., wors htp 10 30 Sunday
even•n g se r vu: e 7 30
MIDDLEPORT
MI DDlEP O RT
CHURCH OF
CHRIST IN CHRI STIAN UNIO N
Lawre nce Manl e y , pastor , Mrs
Rus se ll Young , Sunday Schoo l
Supt Su nday Sc hool 9 30 a m
Even 1ng wors h tp 7 30 Wed nes·
day pr aye r mee t mg . 7 30 p m
MT MORIAH CHURCH O F GOD ,
Ro&lt;:1 neHev
W
H Lyk 1n s
pa stor Mo rn mg worshtp q 45
am Su nda y schoo l 10 45 a .m ,
e""en•ng worshtp 7 Tuesday , 7 30
pm
lad tes pr ayer mee tmg,
Wednesday 7 30 p m YPE
M IDDlEPO RT FIRS T BAPTIST,
Corn e r Stx th and Palmer the Rev
Kr rbv
01 ler
pa stor
Robe rt

M~igs

Property
Transfers
George F. Glaze Jr .,
Rebecca L. Glaze to Berthil
Baylor, .344 acre, Middleport .
Larry Hoffman, Danelle
Hoffman to Ralph Patton
Hess, Barbara Hess, 19 acres,
Lebanon.
Jerry C. Brown, Charlotte
A. Brown to Buckeye Rural
Electric Co., right of way,
Rutland.
Granvel V. Wamsley,
Juaruta Wamsley to Buckeye
Rural Electric Co., right of
way, Rutland.
Everett E . Sanborn to
James Wisecup, Marilyn A.
Wisecup, one-sixth acre ,
Pomeroy.
Dallas Cleland, Geraldine
Cleland to Larry E. Spencer,
Wilda I. Lawson, .22 acre,
Sutton.

Pa rke r supertn l endenl Sunday
WMf-10 Hodt o rrogro m 7 45 o m .
Sund oy Schoo q 15 a m M or n ·
tng Worsh 1p , 10 IS o m Youth oc ·
l t'V tfles and fetlow sh 1p fo r 1un•or
a nd sen tor h1gh !lude nls 6 p m
Sunda, ~ e v eni n g worsh1 p , 7 JO
p m M 1d w eek. prayer ser vtces ,
Wed nesda y 1 30 p.m.
CHUIK H OF CHRI ST
M •d ·
d lepo rt 5th and Main, George
G lo ze mtnt s. ter M ike Ger lach ,
supc"r mtendent
Terry Yank e y
youth m•mster 81ble sc hool 'I 30
a m . mormng wo r sh op , 10 30
o m
evem ng wors htp
7 30,
prayer ser ... tc e 7 p m Wednes
rlay
M IDDLEPO RT CHURCH Of T H ~
NA.ZAHENE , Rev Jt m 8room e .
pastor , Btl l Wht te , Sunday sc hoo l
sup! Sunday school ' 30 o m
morn.ng wonh1 p
JO 30 a m .
Sun day eva nge l• sflc meetmg ,
7 00 p m
Pray er m eet tn g
Wed n esd a y
7
p m
U NI TED
PR ES B Y TI:: RIAN
M INISTRY O f M~IG S COU NT Y ,
Owtgh tl Zov tt z director
HA RR IS ONV I L L E
fl WfSBYTE RIAN
Rev
Ern est
Stnckl m , pa sto r Sunday church
sc ho ol 9 30 o m
Mrs. Ho me r
Lee
su pt
morn tng wonhtp
10 30
M IOOLI:: PO RT Sunday sc hool
9 30 o m , K• chord Vaughan supt
Mor ntn g wors htp. 10 30
SY RACUS I: M o rmng worshtp, 9
a m , Su nday sc hoo l , l Oa m M rs
Sampson Hall supt
RUTLAND CHURCfi OF G OD
Rev Bobby Por ter pastor Su n
da y sc hoo l 10 o m Sunday war ·
sh1p , 11 a .m. , Sunday e11ening
se rvtce 7 p m Wedn e sday Fom1
ly Trou ng Hour 7 p m Wednesdov
wors htp serv 1ce , 7 30 p m
HAZH COMMUNITY CHURCH ,
Near l ong Bo llom. Ed sel Hart
pastor Sunda y schoo l 10 am
Ch u rch
7 30 p m
p rayer
mee ting , 7 30 p m Thursday
MIOOl~PORT
PENTECOSTAl
Third Ave the Re¥. Wtlltam Kn tt
tal. pa sto r Ronald Dugan, Su n
day School Sup t Clone s lor all
ages. e 11ent ng ser vtce , 7 30 8ible
study Wedn esday 7·30 p m
youth serv•ces. Fn doy, 7 30 p m
M IDDLEPO RT FRE~Will SAP·
li ST, Co rner A sh and Plum Noel
Herrman pa stor Sat urday even ·
mg serv1ce 7 30 p m
Sunday
School, 10 30om
MEIGS
C OOP~RA TIVE PARISH
METHODIST CHURCH
Robert T Bumgarner,
Director
POMEROY CLUSTER
Rev James Corbttt
POMEROY , w o rsht p serv tce ,
9 15 a m , S~Jnday school 10 30
o m
Re v
Robert
M cGee
m •m ster
ENTERPRISI:: , Wor shtp ~ a m
Church SchoollOa .m
ROCK SPRINGS Worshtp 10
o m
Chu rch Sc hoo l 9 15om
UMYFb 30 p m
FLATWOODS, Wo r sh tp , II a m
Chur&lt;:h SchooiiO a m
MIDDlEPORT CLUSTER
ReiJ Robert Bumgarner
HEATH , Rober1
Bumgarner,
Pastor
Worsh tp
10.30 a .m .
Chu rch Sc hool 9 30 a m UMVF b
p .m
Mutlond Sol em Ce nter Charge
RUTlAND. Wtlbur Hth, Pastor.
Worshtp 10 30 a m Church School
930 o m
SALEM CENTER Church School
9, 45 o m worshtp 9 a m .
SYRACUSE CLUSTER
Rev Harvey Koch Jr
ASBURY , Wor sh1p 11 om
Church School 9 50 a ·m UMW
ftrst Tuesday . Btble Study Thurs
7 JOp m
fOREST RUN , Wo rsh1p 9 a m
Ch urch Schoc llO o m .
MINER SVIllE Worshtp 10 o.m
Ch ur ch Schoo l 9 a m
SY RACUSE Ch ur ch School 9 00
o m Wo r shtp serv1ce 7 30 p m
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
Rev Oov1d Horns
Cluster leoder
ReiJ Ste ve n Wil son
Fl orence Sm1th
H1llon Wolfe
As soc totes
BETHANY , (Dorcas ), Worsh1p
9 00 o m Chur ch School 10 00
am
CARMEl Chruch School 9 30
am Worshtp 10 ·30 o m . 2nd ond
4th Sunday s
APPL E G ROVE Sunday ' Schoo l
9 30 o .m Worshtp 7 30 p m lst
and 3rd Sunday s Prayer meeting
Wedne sday 7 30 p m Fe llow shtp
su pper l1r sl Saluroay b p m UMW
2nd Tuesday 7 30 p m
EA ST LETART, Chruch Sc hool 9
o m Wor ship ser vtce I 0 o m
Pr aye r m ee ting
7 30 p m
Wed nesday UMW ltr st Tuesday

7 JO p m.
RACINE WE SLEYAN - Sunday
schoo l I 0 o m worstHp II a m
Cho1r prochce , Thu r sday , B p m
LETART FA LLS- Church School
10 a m W orsh1p seriJ tCe 9 o m
MORN ING STAR Wo rshtp 9 30
a m , Church Sc hool 10 30 a m
Mtd Week SeriJIC e Wednesdo-r 8
p m
MORSE CHAPEl W orshp II
o m , Ch urch School9 30 a .m
PORTlAND , Worshtp 7 30 p .m
Church School 9 30 a m
SUTTON , Churc h Schoo l 9 30
o m Wo rshtp 1st and 3rd Sundays
10 30 o m
NORTHEAST ClUSTER
Rev R•chord W Th oma s
~ as tor

Duane Sydenstr tcker
John W Douglas
Charles Do mtgon
As soc totes
JO PPA
Wor sh •P 9 00 o m
Church Sc hoo llO 00 o m
CHESTER , Worship 9 am
Chur ch Schoo l 10 o .m
lllblv
Study Wednesdays, 7 30 p .m .
(Communto n ft rs t Sunday each
month)
LO NG BOTTOM Sunday Sch OO
ot 9 30 o .m Eventng Worsh•p at
7 30 p m Th ursday Htbltt Study ,

7 30 p

m

REEDSVIlLE Sunday School 9 30
a m . M or n• ng Worshtp 10 lO om .
h en1ng Worshp 7 30 p m . 81ble
Study Wedn es days at 7 30 p m
AL FRED , Sunday Sch ool at ' .CS
o .m Mornmg Wo rshtp at I I a .m .
Wed nesdqy
Night
Prayer
Mee hng, 7 30 p .m .
~
ST. PAUL , (Tuppen\ Plains) .
Sunday School 9 00 o .m . Mornmg
Wonhtp at 10 00 am Monday
Night 81ble Study 7 30 p m
Umt&amp;d M et hod1st Women , second
Wednesday ol each month 1.30

pm
SO UTH BETHEL (S•I...,er Rtdge).
Sunday School• 00 a .m . Morn1ng
Wosh tp 10:00 o .m Wednesday Bt ·
ble Study , 7 30 p .m
TUPPERS PLAINS Wor ship 9

Pomeroy

Church &amp; Oft ice Supplies
GIFTS

PHARMACY

We Fin Doctors'

Proscriptions

Compltle
Automotive
Service
Locus! &amp;
Str!f!JIIIe

KERMIT' S KORNER
M111

LOHSE

ELLIS &amp; SONS SOHIO

NEW YORK
CLOTHING HOUSE

sr.

Middleport

Pomeroy , Oh io

Pomeroy

These Messages Of Our Religious Heritage

..,

RIGGS USED CARS,
~

..

r

RANKUrl;
Pomeroy, Ohio

FURNITURE &amp; HARDWARE
14omellle Saws

Ray Riggs
St. Rt. 7

This Sunday

RIDENOUR SUPPLY

J ~

4

of Your Choice

aEN :POMERM

Are Sponsored Each Week By The Following:

fJl-2955

Attend the Church

' Ph. 985.Jl08 1

Chesler

C'MO'-Jl S HAKE A lc6 •
'IOU 5WA&amp;5 ~ I T'~ TIMe
T' TUR'-J TO~

Chesler

OR DO I
HAFTA I!&gt;OOT

WHY, YOU MI%RA&amp; LE5C IJM1 '-lO W 'r'E R
KEALLY MKIN'
FeR IT- 1

'IOU OUTA
THERE·~!

ROSEBERRY'S
PENNZOIL

Whirlpool
APPLIANCE II
Sa in-StrYJC!·ACCIIIOrin
220 E. Me in 51.
13 -

Ph.,.,.9130

~
~

RACINE
FOOD MARKET
Tho Sloro
With A Heart
R1cine
Ph. 949·1626

ALLE}'OOP

510 N. 2nd

EASY, NOW! ",QU'RE
Al."''ST A'T '1W LEDGE !

P. J. PAULEY,
AGENT

Midway Market

NO, BUT IT WON'T TA &gt;&lt;E
LONG "TO I"IN D OUT !

CAN YOU S EE
WI1ERE IT

G OES?

Nationwide Ins. Ca.

Bob's Market

ot Columbus, 0 .
804W. Meln
992-2318 Pomeroy

Pomeroy 991·1512
Muon 77l·l721

Sales &amp;

Athens County
&amp; Loan

Co.

c- .... .... ~

216 E. Main

''

J •

ORPJIAM AMNm-ON THE SUCKER LIST

Tractor Sales, Inc.
Otull Tractors, New Holland

MAIL? WOW 1 HM "' THIS

Farm Machinerv

CHARACTER NEEDS F IVE
HUNDRED FOR A TRI P FOR HIS
HEALlH ··· AND THIS COU PLE NEEDS
DOUGH F'OR A NEW C'AR·"

Ave.ll925101

VIRGIL B.
TEAFORD SR.

Reuter-Brogan
Insurance

COM IN' HERE··

WHERE NOBODY
( AN r-IN D M[ (I t l
1HI5 BlOWS O VER
"· UNDER TH '

BARN , .

Did

Dan Thompson Ford, Inc.

Groceries Gentnl Merchandise
Racine 949-2550

461

LjOU

brinq

shovels?

s. Third, Middleport
992-2196

WILl'S LOCK &amp; KEY
SERVICE

For Tho Best In Til \llewlng

Ruttan" , o

Rl . 1

A

0 PE.OPLE •• •

992-3325

WAID
SONS STORE

....... c

WHERE
ARE YO U
GO ING ?

1

Pomeroy

214 E. Main
1192·5130 Pomen&gt;y

.......

ANN IE " ' lOOK
··· HUNDRE D~

216 Second

Services

.,

THIS GUY SAYS I MUST SHARE
MY WEALTH .. HM· M·" WONDER
HOW MUCH THAi WOULD BE
FOR. EA CH PER SON IN THI S

MIKE SWIGER
STAT£ FARM
INSURANCE

Attend The Church

Of Your Choice

Equipmenl
Sales· Service
Fire Extinguishers
Fire Otpl, Equip.

This Sunday

143 s. Third
Middleport
Ph.m-nss

WINNIE

Rulla~c!J42 ·2777

Ken Gnwer

PIZZA SHACK

Ltl us capture lhe story
ol your Wedding.

Bakers of

9BS·4155

Good Bread

Chesler, Ohio 45720
o .m Chu rch Sc hool10 am
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIS T se r
vt ces each Sunday 9 30 o m
George Pt ckens, pasto r w 1th
preodH ng on f trs t a nd thtrd Su n·
dov of month O ltve r Swam Supt
HOBSON CHH ISTIAN UNION
Rev Ke1 th Ebltn , pa st or Sunday
Sc hool, 9 30
am ,
l eonard
Gtlmb r e ftr st elde r , e~Je nmg ser
'V tCe , 7 30 p m Wedn esday prayer
1
meetmg , 7 30 p m
BEARWAllOW RIDG~ CHUR CH
OF CHRIST
Duane Worden.
mm1 ster B•bl e do ss 9 30 o m
morntng w ors htp , 10 30 a m ,
cvemng
wo rshtp
b 30 p m .
Wednesday Utble study f)·JO p m
N~W STMRSVIllE CcDMMUNI·
TV Ch urch , Sunda y Schoo l se r·
viCe , 9 45 a .m , W o rshtp serv iCe ,
10 30 Evonge!1 stt c Servtce 7 30
p m
Wednesday
Pr a ye r
meet 1ng, 7 30
ZION CHURCH OF CHRI ST,
Pom e r o y -Horrt sc n vtl l e
Ref
Robe rt
Pur te ll
pa stor
Bil l
_ Mct:lroy Su nday sch ool sup I Sun ·
day sc hool , 9 30 o m ., morning
wo rshtp and com m unt on , 10 30
a m Sunday wonh tp ser1J 1ce , 7
p .m Wednesday evenmg prayer
mee ting and Btbl e study , 7 p m ,
ST JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH ,
P•ne G rove The Rev Wtlliom
Mtddleswarth , Poste r
Chur ch
servtces 9 30 o m Su nday School
10 30om .
BRADBURY
CHURCH
OF
CHfUST, Mr Donal d Rol ey , pasto r
Sunday school, 9 30 o m , w o r
shtp serv tce 10 30 o m , Sundov
ser viCes , 7 p m . yout h group
Wednesd ay, 7 p m
ANTIQUI TY BAPTI ST, Rev. Earl
Shuler , pastor Sunday s&lt;:hool
9 30 a.m Church se r v1ce , 7 p m
yout h mee ting, b p m Tuesday 81·
ble Study 7 p.m
RACINE CHUHCH OF THE
NAZARENE , Rev John A Coff ·
m an , pasto r Fronkhn Imboden
chatrmon of the Board of Chns·
!ton ltfe Sunday Sc hoo!. 9 30
o m , morning w or shtp, 10 30
Sunday eventng w orsh tp , 7 30
p m . Pray er meettng , Wedne s
day 7 30pm .
RACINE FIRST BAPTI ST, Don l
Walker , Pa sto r, Ronnie Sal ser
Sunday school supt , Sunday
schoo l 9 30 o m morntng w ar·
shtp , I 0 40 o m . Su nday evening
w orshtp 7,30, Wednesday even.:..
tng Bible study , 7•30.
OAf'.I VIlLE WE SLEYAN Rev R
D. BrOw n pastor Sunday Sdi oo l
9·30 a m , morning worsh1p
10·-45 youth serviC e , 6:45 p m ,
~ventng
wo rsh 1p
7 30 p m
prayer and pro1se Werfnesdoy
'lJOp m
Sll VER RUN HfH BAPTISl Re¥
Mor ~111 Mo rk 1n posl o r S te11~ l 1t

BROWN'S
FIRE &amp;SAFETY

Eat in or
Carry Out
126 E. Main

w.

ti e Sunday sc hool su pt Su nday
sc hoo l 10 o m
m o rmng wor ·
shtp, 11 a m Sun day e .... e m ng
worshtp 7 30 Pray e r meettn g
and Btble study , Th ur sday I 30
p m , you th seriJ IC e , 6 p m Sun ·
day
CH~ S TER CHURCH Of G O D
Rev Donny R Cook pa stor Sun·
cloy schoo l. q 30 o m , wo r sh •p
ser v1ce 11 om eiJentng se rv iC E! ,
7 00 youth ser vtce Wedne sday

7 OOp m
LAN GSV Il l l:
C HHI ST I A N
CHURCH, Ro bert Mus ser , pa sto r
Su nday school 9 30 o m
Ro y
S1gmon sup! morn1 ng wo r sh• p
10 30, Su nday e vem ng se r iJ IC e ,
7 30 mtd w eek serv iCe , W ednes
day I p m
SVRA CUSI:: CHURCH or: THI::
NAZARI::NE, Hev
Dol e Bo ss
pas to r, Bo b Moo re
Su nday
Schoo l sup! Sun day sc hool 9 30
o m
mormn g wo rsh •p . 10 45
a m , evongelt stt c se rvtee , 7 p.m
Wedn esd ay se rv tces pray e r
Nazar ene
and prat se 7 p m
youth 7 p m
Do ily pra ye r
meettn g, 8 30 am M en' s pr aye r
meetmg , Saturda y , 7 p m
EDEN UNITED BRETHH EN 1N
CHRIST Elde n R Bl o ke, pas tor
Sunda y Schoo l 10 o m .. Ro ber t
Ree d , sup! ., Mo rn tng serm on 11
om Sunday n1ght seriJICes Ch rts
lion Endea vor 7 30 p m
Song
serviC e , 8 p m ., Pr ea ch1 ng 8 30
p m M idwee k Prayer mee tmg,
Wednesday 7 p m Roy Adam s
loy leader
CHURCH O F JESUS CHRI ST,
l ocated at Rutland o n New l tmo
Rood , ne)lf to Fores t Acre Por k
Rew Roy Rouse . pastor Hobert
Mus!i er Su nday Schoo l supt Sun·
day sc hool 10 30 a m wor sh tp
7 30 p m Btbl e Study We dn es
day , 7 30 p m . Sat urday n 1ght
prayer ser vice , 7 .30 p m
H~MlO C K GRO V E CHRI STIAN ,
Ho ger Wol!i.on pastor K'!!n ne th
flyer , Sun day school su pt M orn·
tng worsh ip , 9 30 o .m , Su n·
dayschoo l 10 ::JO o .m
evcn tng
ser¥1ce 7 30 Wedn esday Btble
Study I 30 p m
MT
UNION BAPTIST, Do n
Wil s on .
Sunda y
sc h o ol
supertn lendent . Sunday schoo l
9 45 o m , evening wor ship, 7 30
p.m . Prove r m ee ting 7 30 p m
Wednesday .
TUPPER S PLAINS CHHISTIA N
OIURCH , Eug ene Under wood ,
pastor Howa rd Colclwe l! Jr
Sunday School Sup!
Su ndav
Sc hool 9 30 a m M orn ing Ser
mo n , 10 30 o rn Sunday even mg
ser v1ce , 1 p .m
LETAR T
FALl S
UN ITE D
fiR H HRI: N Rev Free loncl N o r11 5
pas tor Flo yd No ro s, su p! SunnCJy
~r h n (ll
q JO 0 Ill fT1(}111 11'1 r••

man 10 ~ 0 om Praye r serv iC e ,
Wcclncscloy 7 30 p m
l HES I EH CHURCH OF THI::
NAZA I-IENE Rev Her be rt G ro t e
pasto r W orship serviCe, I I o m
and "/ 30 p m ~ un d oy
Sun d ay
Sc hoOl 9 30 a m R1chard Bo rton
sup! 1'1oyer meel 1119 W ednes
doy 7J0 p m
f3RA U FORD
CHUR CH
Of
CHRIST Gobr 1el Mzr s pastor Ht
ble Sunday Sc hoo l 9 30 a m m o r
nmg ch ur&lt;:h 10 30 am
Sun d ay
eve n mg
ser v•ce , 7 00 p m
Wed nesd ay se r111ce 7 30 p m
LA UREL Cli FF r: R~ E M n HOOIST
CHURC H Rev Floyd F Shook
pasto r
Lloy d Wn ght
Sun day
Schoo l Su p!
Morn 1ng Wo rs h1p
9
am
Sunday Schoo l I 0 20
o m .. Wed nesd ay Pra yer and Bt
ble Study 7 :Jop m , Sunday CIJ en
mg w or sh 1p l 30 p m Cholf Prac
h ce Th ur sday 7 p rn
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST
L harl es Ru !&gt;s ell Sr
m •n• sl er
RICII Macomber supt Su nday
!!i Chool 9 30 o m , w or sh 1p ser
v 1ce , 10 30 o m B• bl eS tud y , Tu es
day I 30 p m
1-/I:: ORGA NIZED CHURCH O F
JESUS CHRIST O F LATTE R DAY
SAI NTS Portla nd Hoctne Ro od
Wd lt om Rou sh pa sto r Phyll•s
Sto bor l Su nd ay School Sup! Sun
day School. 9 30 a m M o rnmg
wo rsh 1p , 10 30 a m
Sunday
e ... entng serv1ce 7 p m Wedn es
da y even mg prayer serv.1ces 7 30
p m
BI::THL EHEM BAPTIST Re v Earl
Shul er past o r Worsh1p ser vtce
9 30 o m Sunday schoo l 10 30
am 81b le Study and prover se r
VICe Thu r sday , 7 30 p m
CA Rl ETON CHURCH K 111gsbu ry
Woo d G o ry Kmg pasto r Sunday
schoo l, 9 30 o m , Rolph Carl,
supertnte nde nt even tng wor sht p,
Pr ay er meetong
7 JO p m
Werl nesdoy 7 30 p m
LO NG BOTTOM CHRI STIAN ,
Bru ce Sm tth , pas tor
Wol! oce
Dam ewood Su p! B•ble Sch ool,
9 30 om
Preach 1ng se r vice,
10 45 o.m No even 1ng se rv1ce
HY SHl RUN FRH METH O DIST
CHURCH Rev Herbe rt A 1ltng
pa sto r Sunday Sc hool 9 30 o m ,
Morn1 ng se r ¥1Ce , 10 30 om ,
Ev o nge list• c ser iJ tCe 7 JO p .m
Praye r mee l tng Wednesday 7 30
pm
FR ~ EDOM GOSP H MISS IO N al
Bol d
Kno b
Rev
l aw r e nce
Cl ues encamp Sr , pa sto r , Roger
lfhllf o rrl ~ r Sun da y sch oo l su p!
Su nday schoo l 9 30 a , ev e nm g
w o rsh ip
7 ~0 p m
Prayer
me e t1119 W erlnesdoy 1 30 p m
Yout h mee ttng Su nrloy 5 30 p m
w dh Don a nd Ma rtha M eo cl ow-. 1n
tl •u rge
•'J .. II T J: o.; CHAt-'fl Cnn lv tllf, "' D

ao

./ iJ

-

MARK V STORE

Middleport

1-/e v Hoy Oeeter poste r Sunda y
schoo l 9 30 o m , w o rsh1 p ser viCe,
10 30 a m Btbl e stu dy and prayer
ser v 1ce , Wednesda y, 7 30 p m
HU TLAND
RU TLAND CHURCH O F CHRIST
Lor ry Co lem an , pastor , Co· Sund ay sc hoo l supts , Sam McK1nn ey
an d Herb !:: llttt Su nday school a nd
co mmumon , q 30 o m Wor sh tp
an d cc munton 10 30 a m
C OMMUNI T Y
R U TL A N D
CHURCH Sunday Schoo ! 9 30
om
worsh• p se rviCe , 11 a m ,
Wed nesday prayer m ee tt ng , 7 30
p m you th ::.er v!Ce s Su nday 7
p m Sunday mgh t worshtp , 7 30
RUTLAN D CHUR CH OF TH E
NAZARENE, HeiJ Ll oyd 0 Gnmm ,
Jr
po slor Sunday sch oo l 9·30
a m wors hip serlo'ICe 10 30 a m
Broadcost l1ve over WMPO, yo ung
peo pl e's
se r v tce ,
7
p.m
E¥ongel ts11C seriJ !C e, 7 30 p m
W{&gt;d nesday se rvtce, 7 30 p m
M A SON COUN TY
fiR ST SOUTHERN BAPTIST, Car
ne r ol Seco nd on d And erso n ,
Mason Pasto r Fron k Lowt her
Su nday schoo l , 9 45 a m ., war ·
sh1 p servtce , 11 om and 7 ·30
p m
Weekly
B1bl e Sludy
Wed ne sday 7 30 p m
M ASO N CHURC H O F CHRIST, P
0 Box 487 Mtller St Ma son W
Yo Sunday Btble Stud y 10 a m
Wor sh 1p 11 a m and 7 p m fltble
Study Wednesda y 7 p m .. Vocal
mu s1c
MA SON A SS EMBlY O f G OD
Durld lng l one , Mason , W Vo
Chesle r Te nnant, Pastor Su nday
Sc hool 9 45 o m ,; Ch1ldre n's
Chur ch b 45 p m . Yo ung Peopl es
ServiCe b 45 p m ho n~eli s flc
ServiCe 7 30 p .m Women s Mts·
ston a ry Counct! 10 o m . flfst and
th trd Tuesday s Prayer and Btble
Stud y Wednesday , 7 JO p m
HARTFO RD CHURCH OF CHRIST
IN CHHISTIAN UNION , The Re"'
Wtlltdm Campbel l. pa stor Sunday
School, 9 30 o m James Hugh es,
sup t. , eiJen •ng service , 7.30 p .m
Wed nesd ay
eiJening pray er
meetmg , 7 30 p .m . Youth prayer
ser v1ce eoch Tuesday
fAIR V IEW
SIBLE CHUR CH ,
letart , W Vo , Rt , I , ReiJ , Charl es
Hargraves , pa stor Worship se r·
VICes , 9 30 o m Sunday sc hool.
11 o m e¥ e nln g w orsh 1p 7 30
p m
Tuesday co llage pr a yer
mee tmg and Bible study 9 30
o m '('/ors htp serv1ce Wedn es·
rloy 7 30 p m
CA LVARY SI BLE CHURCH n ow
l ocated on Pomeroy Pike, County
fl o od 25. nea r Flatwoods RG IJ
Hlad..wood p asto r . Ser v•ces on
Su nday ot 10 30 om a nd 7 .30
p m wtlh Sltndoy school , 9 :30
a m 8 tble study Wednesd,oy.
/30rm

BECAU5E IT TRIGGERED
YOUR MIND, BTARTED
YOU THINKING
ABOUT BILL

YOUNG'S
CARPETING

AGAIN.

OH , MAYBE NOT
CON5CIOU 5LY;
BUT IT18 111ERE
IN YOUR6l/BC'ONBC/OU5 !

I THOUGHT THAT WAS

I ...I TRY m REACH HIM,
RESCUE HIM Ft&lt;OM 11-iE: SA ND
11-IAT'S AI)OUT TO CON SUME HIM BUT HE 5
ALWAYS A BIT
BEYOND MY

THEY'RE ALWAY8 THE
SAME. HE'S HALF

• I DREAC7 GOI NG
TO SLEEP LEST I

ALL e&gt;EHI ND ME . ..
ESPECIALLY AFTER
TH AT "OMEN If I
RECEIVED.

BURI ED IN :&gt;AND
AND PLEAPING
FOR HELP.

HAVE ANOTHER
NIISHTMARE:

/ ---....J

ABOUT BILL

GRASP !

--iND- EP ENDENT
HOLIN bS
CHUHCH , INC - Pearl St , Mtd·
dleport
Rev
0 Dell M an ley,
past or Sonny Hudson , Su nday
s&lt;: hoo l su p! Sunday sc hoo l. 9 30
a m '
emng w c rshtp , 7 30 p.m
Pra yer a n d praise
se riJICe
Wednesday, 7 30 p m
TH~
PEOPLE S CHURCH OF
POMEROY - Corner Matn and
Co urt Sts , thtrd floo r o'o'er
l tghthouse keslauron f
Henry
Cook pa sto r Sunday school , 10
a m .. morn tng wo r shtp 11 a ,m
eventng serv1ce 7 30 We dnes
day event ng serviC e , 7 30 In·
l erdeno mmollonol tull go spel
RUTLAND CHURCH Of GOD Pastor Dennts Boles
Su nday
School 10 o m . worshtp se rv1 &lt;:e
11 30 o m an d 7 30 p m Prayer
meet1ng, Wednesday , 7 30 p .m
RUTlAND A PO STOLIC CHUR CH
OF JESUS CHRI ST l:lder James
Miller 8tbl e study Wed nesday ,
7 30 p.m , Su nday Sc hool, lO a m
Sunday ntght se r viC e, 7 30 p.m
POMEROY
WESLEYAN
HOLINESS - Hamso nv•lle Rood
Dewey King , pas to r; Edi son
Weaver . os ststont Henry Ebltn
Jr , Sunda y school supt Sunclay
sc hool , 9 30 a .m , m o r nmg w ar ·
shtp , II o m Su nday eventng ser
v iC e, 7 30 pra yer meettng, Thurs
day 730pm
SYRACUSE FIRST CHUR CH OF
GOO ~ Not Pen te&lt;:o slol. Rev
George Otler pa stor. Worshtp
serviCe Sunday , 9 45 a m , Sun ·
cloy sc hoo l , II o m , .wo rsh1p ser
viCe, 7 30 p .m Th ur5d9y pray er
meettng , 7 30 p.m
MT HERMON Un 1ted Br ethre n
Ch urch . Sunday School 9 30 a ,m
ser vice
10 45 a .m
Worshtp
Preochtng services ev ery Sunday
a lternattng wtlh C. E Wedn esday
prayer meetmg 7 30 p m Rev
Jam es Leach , p astor. Dav id
Holter , loy leader.
JEHOVAH S WITNESSES , I mile
east of Rutland , junclt o n of Route
124 and Noble Summit Rood (T·
174] Sunday Bible Lecture . 9:30
o
Watchtower study , 10 30
om , Tue sday Bible study . 1 ond
8, 15 p.m ., Thursday , theocratic
sc hool , 7 30 p .m . ; seriJ !C &amp;
meet mg . B 30 p.m
HOPI: BAPTIST - 570 Grant St ,
M1ddleport. Bobby Elkins, past or
Sunday Sch ool. 10 a .m , worshtp
serv1ce II a.m .: &amp;IJentng serv 1ce ,
7 3C p m
Thursday pray e r
meeltng and Bible study , 7,30

e. .

pm.
RUTLAND FREEWill BAPTIST
Church - leland Holev . pas to r
Sunday sch ool, 10om .; evening
se rvice , 7 30 p . m . Pray e r
m eet mg. Wednesday , 7 30 p m
CHURCH OF GOD of Pro phecy
l oco tetf on the 0 . J. White Rood

olf h1ghwoy 160 Sunday Sc hool
10 om
Supenn tend ent Jo hn
Loveday Ftrst Wednesday nt ght
of mon th CPMA ser¥ 1Ces, seco nd
Wed nesday WMB mee ttng , thtrd
through fifth yout h serv1ce
George Croyle pa stor
HOP ~ BAPTI ST CHAPEl 570
Gran t St , M1ddl epo rt , Rev Bobby
Elk tn s Su nday school. 10 a m
mormng worshtp 11, even mg
worsh1p 7 JO p m
Thursday
evenmg B1b le study and prayer
meet1ng, 7 30 p .m AHthot ed w 1th
SBC
BRADF O RD
CHUR CH
OF
CHRIST- Gobnel Mroz , pa stor .
Sunday sc hool 9 30 a m , morn·
tng ch ur ch 10 JO a m Junior
church program under d tr ec tt on
of Kor en M roz for chtl dr en 2- 10
dunng reg ular church hour 1n
church basem ent Sun day even·
ing serv iCe 7 p m Wednesday
ser v1ce 7 30 p m .
JUBILEE CHRI STIAN CENTER Geo rg e' s Creek Rood Church
sch oo l 9 30 o m , morning w ar
shtp 10 30, even tng serv tce 7
p m Prayer m eettn g Wed nesday ,
I pm
ST PAUl lUTHERAN CHURCH ,
Corner at Sycam ore and Second
Sts, Pomeroy The Re.... William
M 1ddleswarth
Pas tor
Sunday
School at 9 45 om , and Church
Se rvtces 11 o m
SACRED H~ART Rev Fa th er
Paul D Welt on , pas to r Phon e
992-2825 Satu rd ay eiJenlng Mo ss ,
7 30, Sunday Mo ss, B an'd 10 a m ,
Conlesston . Saturday, 7-7 30 p m
VICTORY BAPTI ST On th e
Route 7 bypa ss Jame s E. Kee see
pa sto r Sunday school 10 a m :
m orntng worshtp 11 a m , eve n·
tng servu!e , 7
TRINITY Chmtian A ssembly
Coolvtlle Gilbert Spencer
pa stor . Sunday schoo l. 9·30 om ,
m ormng worshtp , 11 o m Sun day
e venmg servi ce , 7 .30 p .m
m1dweek prayer serviCe Wedn es·
day , 7.30p.m
MOUNT OltiJe Commun i ty
Church Long Bottom lawre nce
8u5h pastor, Bettie Ptgott, Sun ·
day school supt , Sunday SchooliO
o .m Youth group and prayer
meetings Wedne sday 7 :30 p .m
Church services Sunday 7.30 p m
FAITH BAPTIST Church , Mason ,
meet at Untied Stee l Workers
Union Holt , Ra ilroad Street
Maso n Pastor, Rvv. Joy Mitchell
Mornmg worship 9 : ~5 o rt;'l , Sun·
day School 10:30 a m . Prayer
meetingWednesdov . 730p.m .
FOREST RUN BAPTIST Rev .
Nyle Borden , pastor . Corneh us
Bunch, superintendent. Sunday
school, 9 30 o .m , second and
fourth Su nday s worShip servtce at
2.30 p.m ,

, Nov. 24

FRANK &amp; ERNIE

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

••
•

Selecting Stayman or JTB

"••
g

HOME
for the
ACCIDENTPRONE

~

•

•
l
"

NORTH

11-24

+A J 10

e

•

•KJ743
t K 62
• 85

~

!I

WEST

EAST

986
• 93

9A95
• J 10 B 5

+ K9752

+ 863

+K964
+J3 2
SOUTH
• Q4

BORNUlSER

• Q 10 2
t AQ74
+A Q 10 7

Vulnerable : Neither
Dealer : South
West Nortb East South
Pass
Pass
Pass

2.
3•

Pass

Pass

Pass

I NT
2t
3 NT

Pass

Opening lead : • 5

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

BARNEY

I

SWEPT UP IN THAR, PAW -THROW THAT 'NANNER
PEEL ON TH' FLOOR

~-----------------1

When you use Stayman m
preference to JTB with a
1good hand, the a ction im: plies that .you e1ther have
i four cards m the other major
; or a very strong three-card
' holding . In other words, it
! tells partner that he should
; be wary of notrwnp when
i wea.k in a minor suit but can
', play notrwnp when strong in
; both minors.
·
• North's jwnp to three
! hearts after South rebid two
diamonds was a forcin g bid

I

to offer South a cho1ce between a bid of four hearts or
three notrump and South
e l ec t e d to btd thr ee
notrump.
Actually , it makes little
difference except to a match
pomt player. With the king
of spades in the pocket and
the kmg of clubs of! side,
South makes either five
hearts or five notrwnp since
he must lose one club and
the ace of hearts.
Suppose South held a maximum of Ill-point notrwnp
w1th the black kings instead
of the black queens. Then six
hearts would make without a
finesse provided South managed to ruff one spade in his
own hand. Could they get
there aft er North's jump to
three hearts ?
They just rmght. South
would try for a slam by a bid
of four clubs. Not Gerber,
but merely a cceptance of

LAUREL CLIFF
Att endan ce at mornin g
servi ces at the F ree
MethodiSt Church was 85
Ch01r members present 10
Mr. and Mrs. Phil W1se of
Be lpre att ending m ornmg
serv1ces at the local church.
Howell
ente red
Roy
Umvers1ty Hospital SWJday
lor a general checkup. Mrs.
Howell and Mrs. Emma Fox
a ccompan ied him to th e
hospilal.

Ms Kathy Pullms has been

returned home from Pleasant
Valley Hosptt al
Ms
Edna

Howe ll ,
Columbus, vtstted wll h he r

da ughter and son-m-la w, ~ r
and Mrs J ames Will and
family .
Vern Story \\ ho ts employed in Columbus spent a
week' s va c at10n \Ht h h1 s \\ 1fe,
F ern Dora , and son , John.

Ralph Swan remain s a
patient m Holzer Hospttal

Unscramble these to ur J umbl es,
one tetter to each square , to form
fou r ordmary words

LALAM

b
b

G A GA

I YAASS
I CJ
;;;;~I NATFULI
aJ [j
A California reader asks if
it is ever correct to pass as
dealer with 14 high-eard
points
We don 't ·think so, but if
you should pick up Q J x x, K
J x, K J X, Q J x you might
break the rule, as those are Prlntanswerhere:
little spot cards.

ICHELEK±

I I

r

J
"(

WHAi 1..11'iLE 6Al5 1ES
SOM ETIMES
INDUL-G E IN.
Now arrange the ctrded !etl ers to
form the surpn se answer as sug ·
gested by the above canoon

I I I Xr r I XI ]
(Answe rs tommrow)

I NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN )

!For a copy o f JACOBY MODERN, send Sl to · " Wrn at
BridQe, '' care of th1s newspa·
per , P D Box 489, Radro City
Sta lron, New York, N Y. 10019.)

Yes terday s

I Jumbles
Answer

FOAMY

K IN K Y

NUTRIA

GORNEA

Doesn 't sound li ke p reparat ion for war when
they arm th us- " IN ARM" (arm 1n arm)

Jumble Book No 12, canl•lnlng 110 puultl , lt anll•ble tar 11.75 po stpai d
from Jumblt, clothllntweptper, Box34,Narwood,N J 076&amp;8 lncl 4deyour
nem•, 1ddrt11, :z:lp cadt and mtkt chec ll l ptylble to Ntwl paperbaoks

.,

�....

' '" ·· · ·~----·

8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., friday , Nuv . 2~. l!l7R

1 ~ Wun.b ur Um l~r

Cush
1.00
1.50
I. ill

I dtiy
O!d&lt;iyS

Jdavs
Stle~)·s

Cltart(t'

,.,
'"

2.25
:1. 75

100

F.aL·h wurd uvcr tht• mimmum

wurtl'; is t t.'t'nts

pt'f

For Best Results Use Sentinel Classifieds

In Memory

· WANT AD
CHARGES

l~

lW.~·­
l'II\L.o;t·~· ut ive

wun.l pt'r

Ads runmn ~ utht.'f Uldn
dli )'S Will lM• dmr.:t'l! al tlw I duy
ratt• .

In mt&gt;mury, Card uf Ttumk:; ami
()l)ttuar} : 6 el!nt.s per wun .l , $.).00
lllU\IItlW II."Cotsh inaU\'C
Uin' .

Mu!Jill' Humt' !)llles a11d Yan.l sales
an· t~t•reptt'd unly With t•ash with
unk•r :l!i t't'lll c hur~t· fur ;u,ls t'tl ffyU \~ Hux Nwnbcr In Ca r~ uf Tiw ~11tillt&gt;l.

Tlw Publi slwr rt's'"rves lht· r11::hl

to t•thl or r1&gt;jed 11 ny e~ds dl't'lllCd utr-

jt't'Liullitl. The Publisher will not bt&gt;
rcspol~ tblt• fur mure thanunt' mt'urrct.'l mSl'rllun

Phurw 99'l-21511

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
MuntWv
Noorl un SatUnlay
Tuesday ·
thru F r i(l&lt;t)'
4P.M.

IN LOVING memory ot our ~on .
bro ther and uncle. Harold f .
As h. who goflontly lost his life
two yeor5 ago to~ay .
There -is no death I
The stars go down
To ri se upon some other shore.
And bright in Heoven)(nown ,
They shine forever rrnWte.
Sadly mi ssed by oil the Family .
-

.

-

-

-

Notices
NO HUNTING or tre spauing on

my property w1 thout perm1s·
~iC:n.:. J ~d:; ~':_G.':_O~ . _

GUN SHOOT . Hocine Gun Club .
hery Sund ay I pm . Foc;: tory
ch~ k_e ~u~s-o~ l y..: _ ~ _ _ ·-GUN SHOOT. Racine Volunteer
Fi r~ Oept . hery Saturday 6:30
pm at thei r bui lding m Boshon.
_ ~o~ct~2:_ 0o_k ~~~n_s_~· n~Y · .. _ _
NO HUNTING or trespassing cio y
or n1ght on the Char les Yos t
and the Ivan Well Forms .

-- ---SHOTGUN slug Match every Sun·
--·--~--

day in November. h~ooc Walton
Form near Ches ter . lpm.
Hams . turkeyS . other meats.

: h~~s-~i~~b l e..:.~~.o~jJ_e_~ PHYLLIS YOUNG will be wo rki ng
ful l time now th ru the Holidays
at Kay's BeoutySolon . Co li
992.2725 for on appointment.

--

the da}' bt'furt' pu!Jlkation
SUIIdav
~ P. M ~
Fnda y &lt;~flt'I"IIW I I
ORDINANCE NO . 497
BE IT OR DAINED by the
co uncil of the Village of
Pomeroy , a ll
members
thereto con ·cu r ring :
Sec . 1. That the office of the
Vil lage Treasurer of the
Village of Pome ro y , and the
office of Th e V ill age Clerk of
The Village of Pomeroy , _shall
be combine d into one office to
be known as Clerk -Trea!urer .
Sec . :1: . That the salary of
the Clerk .Treasurer Shall be
53 .600 .00 for The year, and in
add ition thereto t he Clerk ·
Tre asurer shall be entit led to
all other benefits provided
any other employees of the
Village of Pomero y under its
insurance pr og ram s.
Sec . 3. That a copy of this
ordina nce sha ll immediatel y
be certified to the Board of
E lections of Meigs County,
Ohio. not ifying said Board of
the sai d combi nation of said
offices to be known as the
Clerk .Treasurer .
Sec . d. That the Clerk ·
Treasurer !l hall be elected for
a term of four years com .
m enc ing January 1, 1980.
Sec .
That the said Board
of Elections is hereby notif ied
that the office of Clerk ·
T reasu r er shall be placed on
th e ballot for the pr i mary
elect io·n in 1979 as prov ided
by law.
Sec . 6. That th e Clerk .
Treasurer shall perform the
duties prevailed by law for
th e Clerk of th e V illage of
Pomeroy and the Treasurer
ot the Vlll~ge of Pomeroy . All
laws pertaining to the Clerk
and to the Treasurer shall
be construed to apply to th e
Cl erk · Tr easurer .
Sec. 7. That th is Ord ina nce
is hereby declared . to be an
emergency
ordinan ce
necessary for the immediate
preservation of the public
!o!fety in said ·village of
Pomeroy and sha ll go Into
immed ia te effect .

s.

Help wanted
PAVHOll AND mvoicing clerk for
field constructi on site at Moun·
loineer Pla nt , New Hoven. WV.
Send resumes to: Resume. PO
Box 478, Parkersburg, WV
26101
...

-

HfLP WANTED

MOlOR ROUTE
DRIVER
for

THE
DAILY SENTINEL

(ll)

2d, (12) \ , 2t c

- - --

HOOF HOLLQW Hones . Buy . se ll
trade or 1ro1n. New and u~ed
saddles Huth R~e ves . Alba ny
(014) o9H -32'10
RISING STAR Kennels. I:Joordi ng
and groom ing , all breed s.
Cheshire. 367 -0292 .
J YI:::AH old silent dog , $150. Tw o
bmon ths old 81 uetick Ell--hound
pups . lawrence Donohue ,
742·3048 .
For Rent
COUNTHY MOH ILC Home Pork .
Route 33 , no rth of Pomeroy .
l arge lo1s. Coli 992 -7479 .

COAL. LIMESTONE . sOnd. grave l.
calcium c:hlor'ide, fertilizer , dog
food, en d oil ty pes ol salt. b ·
ce lsior Sail Works , Inc. , E. Main
~ ~ ~ . ~o~~r~. 992:2~91..:. __ _
BURROUGHS SENSI-MA TIC accounting mochtn e . Ph one
992·2 150, The Doily Sentinel .
11 1 Co urt Street, Pomeroy .
Ohio.

'--·---·--- -------

DELTA TIRE S. Quality ond per·
formonce. On sol e now .
742 7378 .

APPLES. FITZPATRICK Orchard .
Stole Rl. b89 . Phone Wilk esvi ll e
oo9-37B5 .
LUMP HOUSE cool delivered. $35
per ton cosh. CO li anytime
992-7170 .
TWO NEW 230 bu . McCur"dy grovi ·

ty boxes on 10 to n running
gears with e11dendoble tongues
and Ill flotati on inplement
tires. 1 new 195 bu . McCurdy
gravity bas. One 9 ft. John
Deere disc. Gehl 90 grinder·
m i)[er. Two 197d 1972 Ford
F·250 pickups. l 197d Ford F.2SO
pick up. I 1975 lnternolion ol )•
ton p1ckup . One 1964 Interne·
ti on ol 2 ton with ca ttl e rocks.
Case d· l6 bottom plows . Minn..
Moline corn shel ler . Portable
roller m1/l . 965·334 1.

SNOW
TIRE SALE

TIMBER . POMEROY Forest Pro·
duel s. ToP. price for standing
saw li mber . Ca ll 992.5965 or
~e ntHonby , 1 · ~6 - 85~-

SHOW TIRES
ON SALE AT
POMEROY LANDMARK
SERVICE STATION

0 LD FURNITURE ,. ice boxes. brass
beds . iron beds. desks. etc.,
complete households . Write
M.D. Miller . R!. 4, Pomeroy or
co li 99'1.·7760.

Pom.-oy landmaill

~

OLD COINS, poc ket wat ches .
class rings, weddi ng bond s,
diamonds. Gold or si lver. Co li
Roger Wam sley. 742·2331.

·! • i c k W. C1ney, Mgr.
Phone 992-2181

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

-~

WANT TO bu~ : old 45 ond 78
phon ogr aph recor ds. Call
992·6370 or Contact Martin FUr·
niture.

20 CU. FT . chest fr eezer . l year
ol d. 5 pC. drum ouH it. blue.
197b Hed Pacer, 3· speed .
742· 2B7d .

- ---------

8 FT . LONG, 32" high ca mper

shell. $155. 742-311 4.
1973 CHEVROLET ' '1 ton V-8 4 .
speed . std . tran s. Also, 9 ~o .
old heifer . Bl ock An gus Polled
Here'fOrd Cross . 992·2826.
2 H.Jf:l. l S w heels and tires, $50 .
Mi xe d hoy . 949 ·2 413 or
9d9·2849 ,
MEN'S AND wome,:;-:s 9~ 11 clu bs.
new and used. John Teaf ord
b14 ·985·39b l .
TRUCK TOPPER , msulo ted , panel ·
ed , $150. 247·203 1.

Wanted to Rent

1962 FORO 1/ • ton flat bed. $250.
' Runs rea l good. 992. 5191 .

WANT TO RENT : for Recine or
Syracuse oreo , with 2 children . fo!E G ISTERED
Quar ter h or~e
247·3303 .
Gel ding · Can be shown or con .
tested. Regis tered Appaloo sa
mares to foal in Apr il. 18 mo.
and 6 mo. registered Ap ·
pol oos o colts. Good color .
Phonel .59J-7390. _ __
per m it t'l install
Ohio Power Company
Racine Twp ., Ohio , Issue
date 11 . 14·78 .
Fac i lity
d esc r i ption :
wastewater
App lication No . 06-412
3. 000
GPO
e&gt;&lt;tended
aerat ion sewege tre atmen t
plant with 15,000 GPO ter ·
t i ary treat ment plant &amp;
chlorina t ion to serve R.!cine
Hydroelec tric Plan t.
lssue nce of cer tif ic ation
u . .S. Dept . of Army ,
Be llev ill e Locks &amp; Dam
Reedsvi lle , Ohio, effective
date 11. 13.79
Receiving waters : Ohio
River
Pertains to
401
ce r t ific ation .

POMEROY
Christmas
Headquarters
for all your G. E. T .V.'s &amp;
Holpoint Appliances.

' ·. ' ,.,.,.,,.
SALE _PRICES

~

1

·

't .

JACKW.
•
CARSEY
·,
Mgr.
Phone 992-2181

OLD SINGER sewing machi ne.
treadle type, about 50 years
old. Good ~h ope . 992.6028 .

( 11 ) 24, ltc
PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY
ESTA TE OF WALLA CE W .
AM BERGER , DECE AS ED
Cas e No . 22520
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On November 18 , 1978, in
the Me igs County Probate
Court, case No . 22520 ,
Margaret Amberge r, Bo x 6.4 ,
Ch ester , Oh'lo ..45720 was
appointed E)Cecutrix of the
estate of Walla ce w . Am ·
berger , decea!e d, late of Box
6&lt;4 , Chester, Ohio .

.

FIREWOOD $25 pick up
84:.:_._ __
992- 70c::

load .

MIXED CO NDITIONED
99H201.

hoy .

WOOD FOR sole . $25 ond .$35
pickup truck !oad . depending
on mileage . M ostl 11 Hickory ond
White Oak: Colt Carl Findling.
985 -41 37 .
1959 % TON Ford with tool bed

and wrecker boom. 992·6229. ·___
.......,_

1907 CHEVROLET PICKUP . $350 o' ·
best offer. 9n-5524 ,

Mann ing 0 . Web!ter
Probate Judge.Cierk

ANTI -FREEZE

(ll J 24, (1 21 1, 8, Jtc

PUBLIC NOTICE
The Five Points Grill , Inc .,
an Ohio corpora tion with Its
principal place of bus iness In
Meigs Count y, Ohio, has filed
a certificate of dlnolutl on
with the Sec reta ry of State
and hereby flies not ice that It
Intends to diuol ve the cor .
poration .
James Stewut,
D irector of
Five Point s Gr ill, Inc .
(1 1) 2. 112) 1, 2tc

- PERMANENT
ANTI-FREEZE
Why PlY $3.99

""\o'fl 'o~q'f-gal.
·,~ $347·
(&amp;,

~

!

Towri &amp; Counlly
Pomeroy Landmaill·l t i J •.ck

'

.

\IV-

1973 Roya l ~mb o~sy bf:! ~t~ l4 : J BJ.!
1959 Star SO.~t~ 10 2 BH
19TJS to r bO~t~I478H

1%f:l 51or b(), 17 7 BR
1970 Sylvo' bO.~t~ 12 2 BR
1968 Vi llages b0 ~t~ 112 BR
1964 W1ndsor 51 .1t1 1U "1 HR
1970 KirkV.:ood 12x60 3 Bf-1
B&amp;S MOB il ~ HOMt S AL~S
Pf. P(EA SANT. W.VA .

ELLIOTT
APPUANCE II
220 E. Main Slreel,
Pomeroy , 0.
Call "2-7 013
For Free Estimates

1' , ACRE . 12 .1t1 bO mobile home
near Dex ter . 992· 58Stl.
196'1 TOTAl H CC THIC mobile
home . furn 1shed , 3 berlr ..
wo'&gt;hE' I and dryer A1r condi.
tioned. I lot, 210 lt . frontage.
512.000. Phone742 ·2CI2b

CCRTIFIW BABY sitter . Man - Fr i.
!:lam to ? Con t(fc t ot 329' 1 N
J rrl Ave .. Micldl eport

Se tt er . 992 ·3287 or
R ea l Estate for Sale

COLLI E and 5 co llie-type
pup!'&gt; 3 mole and 2 fem al e.
742-2714 .

~~MAL~

H~A l t~TAH:

l OANS . CAN 'l ~ IN O
MO~TGAG~ MONJ::Y? W e have
plent)l at conlpel itrve roles wit h
t e r m~ to JO .,ears. Ve tera ns
end non·veteren s VA &amp; FHA
loons ore ava ilable I~ J:: L A N O
M0H TG AG~ CO., 77 E Stole
Athe"n s .
Ph one
St .
b l4 ·S92-J05 1.

six week s old . lob .
Se tt er . Shephard mix . Good
Chri stma s g1 ft s. Ca ll evenmgs

~RE f PU P PI~ S .

tN6 -10b7 .

THREE ~EMA H puppi es . m1xed .
mosl ly col lie 8·10 weeks old
Alter 5, coll992·635q.

CELLULOSE
INSULATION
SS.SO per bag
J&amp;L INSUlATION
JIM KEESEE
PHONE 992-2772
11-3-1mo .

N~W

THRI::E bedroom hom e.
hreploce su n dec k . Jl. acre
woorled lot . bb7 ·3890. Tuppers I
Plains.

BLACK LABRADOR
Rehieve r .
mole. Goorl wa tch dog . Friend·
ly wi th children Giving away to
good home because we hove
ano ther Iorge dog. PhonE'

L AHG~

l i::VH bu ilding and lot s.
C1ty ·water, Tupp ers Plain s.
Wr1 te Po f:!ox 1071 , A thens . OH
45701

992 -'I'J 12 .

EXPERIENCEDc_

Radiator~

S
ervicePt-.- t.._ ..,...t rrvcl! or lull4o.-

......

. . . . ..r

Real Estate for Sale

Housmg
H eadquarters

I

~!!~.
I , ~~w·
992-3325

216 E . Second Streel
BFciCK - o rooms , J up
wi th bath , na t ura l gas fur ·
nace,
f u ll
b ase ment ,
garage, equ1pped kit chen,
next to bus iness sec tton .
$25,000.
MIDDLEPORT - 3 larg e
bedrooms, bath , natural
ga s hea t, c ity water , nice
back ya r d, and 2 car
garage . $15,000.
•
NEW LISTING - 3 apart ·
mentS, all r ented, with
$265. 00 a month inco me . Ci ·
t v utilit ies, $25,000.
ABOVE FLOOD - 6 room
f rame hom e,
lot s ot
remodeling , bath, c ity
water, gas fur nace, for on ·
l y $17,000 .
NEAR RUTLAND 10
room home, 4 bedroom s,
bath , carp etin g, natural
gas, car port , on h ard road .
CONDOR STREET 3
bedroom home on e)Ctra
l arge
l ot , . base m en t ,
n a tural gas hea t , parki ng
and above f lood . On l y .
$9500.
NEW LISTING - 4 1 t2 acres
of land. 8 room house,
natu ra l gas h ea t, r ur a l
w ater , and 2 car garage ,
$27,500 .
IT'S NOT WHAT YOU DO
THAT'S RIGHT, IT ' S NOT
WHAT VOU SAY BUT
HOW ,
MAKE
NO
MISTAKE CALL 992-3325
FOR A TEST.
GORDON B ., HELEN L .,
AND SUE P . MUR~HY ,
REAL TOR ASSOCIATES .

Housing ·
J:leadquarters

tiJBSIEIIER .

REALTY
GeorgeS . HobsteHer Jr.
Broker
Complete Real Estate
service. Ca II us tor what we.
have available. Listings ·of
all kinds wanted . Home.s,
farms, commercial . Your
satisfaction is our goal .
Give us a try .
Cheryl Lemley
Associate
New Lima Roid
Hutchinson Sub. Div .
Rutland, Ohio
Phone 742¥2003

to tho

-

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Real Estate for Sale

Plione 992 -2111

.

.

o.

Auto&amp; Truck
· Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phuoe 992 -5682

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING
ReSidential and commer ·
cial. call for estimate. 24
Hour Service. Any day ,
anytime.
~hone 985 -~806

Jack Ginther 985-311J6

Jack's Septic
Tank Ser'lice
Chester, Ohio
10-30 -c

BoXl

CENTRAL REALTY CO.
LOTS - 1 Acre and up nea r Pom er.oy .
50 ACRES FREE GAS - Good 11h story house wllh lull
basement. Large pond stocked with fish . Priced for
qui ck sale, $40,000 .
SPACIOUS Bl -LEVEL Th is may be your dream
home. It has a large kitchen with lots of cablnels,
stove, refr igerator and dishwasher. Beautiful dining
room with sllding g lass doors. Large living room and .
family .room , and to finish this well ·laid out home we
ha ve f ive bedrooms, uti lity room and garage. Very low
heating bil l. Red barn-like storage bull~ing . Located
about ten m inutes north of Pomeroy just off Rt . 7.
Asking $55,000 .
•
MIDDLEPORT - This well cared for newer home has
3 BRs. liv ing room, ba th, mostly ca rpeted , ki tc hen is
equipped with refrigerator and stove, utility room,
natural gas for ced air heat, outside storage building .
Pr ice S27,000 .
CHESTER Good 5 bedroom house wi th full
basem ent &amp; 2 b a th s. Nat . gas heat, approx. I acre land
and large storage buil ding . Price $21 .500 .
TWO ACRES - A beautlful4 year old, 3 bedroom home
with la rg e eat.l n kllchen, 2 bedrooms, all nicely
car peted, 2 baths, full basemen! wllh TV room. Many
mor e ex tras, low heat bill with nat. gas forced air
fur nace . All this and tw o nice acres of land in a good
localion . Will go quick for $35,000.

Wee need large &amp; smaii .Farms
and Many types of properly,
CALL JIMMY DE'EM, Associate949-2388

FOR SALE

Spociols

Moum1ng ·and
Price Builders
All
Type
l~dustrlll
Commercial ·•nd , Home
BuildinG
Any Typo Improvements
To Existing .. Strudures
All Type Concrete Work
No Contract Too LarQe Or
Too Small
25 Yea.r s Experience
,All Work. Guaranteed
Phone 992-6144
"2-7547
, 10-18-1 mo.

· J.R.~

Co.

MOORE'S

t'Dmeroy, O. ,
3-15-llc

Business Services

Save 30 pel. to 50 pet.
on healing cosl
Experience and
.olully insured
Free E.s.t.
·c:aJI99i-V72
1l-3- L"l.O..

H. L WRITESB.
ROOFING
&amp;HOME MAINTENANCE
New or Repair
Gutters and
Oownspouts
Free Estimates
Phone ~49- 2862
or 949-2160

SEWING MACHtNf Repairs , ser·
vice, otl makes. 9q2 .2284 . The
Fabric Shop ,
Pome roy.
Aut horized Singer Soles and
Service. We sharpen Scissors .

11 -17-1 mo.

EXCAVATING , doze r . loader and
backhoe work : dump truck s
and lo·boys lor h1re; w ill ha ul
Auction
• fil l dirt . to soil , limestone and
. grovel. Ca.ll Bob or Roger Jef fers, day phon e 992·7089. nig ht CHRISTMAS AUCTION Sole. Fri.
7pm , Toys ond gi ft item s. Alas.
phone 992·3525 or 992· 5232.
Sot .. 7pm. New ond used m1sc.
EXCAVATIN G, dozer. backho e
ot Ohio River Au ction. 537 High
and ditcher. Charles R. Hot·
St., Middleport, OH. Identificafi eld , Bock Hoe Se rvice ,
tion required.
Rutland. Ohio. Phone 742·2008.
WILL do roofing. cons tru ctio n.
pl um bing and heating. No job
too Io rge or too smal l. Phone
742·2348.

SAVE ON
CARPETING

DRIVE A UTILE

&amp;.
SAVE A LOT

BATHROOM S AND Kit chens
remodeled . cer amic tile, plum bing. ca rpen try , ond general
maintenance . 13 years ex·
perience. 992·3685.

CLEAN IN G .
FURNA CE
992-55B7.

HONAKER'S CB ond electronic
equipment . Rt .33 SOb 2nd St .,
Mason, WV_2
:c5c:7.:.
60:c·_ _ _--c
ATTENTION· HOME owners . End
your pointing worr ies. Let
Go llio Home Improvement install sol id vinyl sidi ng on your
home with fhe omozing Styro
Foam lnsu lofion. Comes w1t h 40
yea r worrenl~ . Free es timates.
Coll 367-0209 , Ga llipolis. Ohio.

Rubber Back Carpet
· As Low As

'4.8$

~ql:p

9' and 12' Vinyl

Floor Covering In

and - what you're gtHing ,
- Good Ht.cllllns· ;... Fully
slocktd.
I,
call742-2m
TA1.K-TO
Wendell or Herb ()rate
or Gtno Smith

RUTLAND

FURNITURE
tfui!Mf

A SOFA TH!AT
MAKES A .
Well built older home lhat has been completely
remodeled . 2 story with full basement. 3 bedrooms
upstairs with hardwood floors and a modern bath.
Slalrway, living room and dining room has rich thick
carpellng. Kitchen Is complete with built In cabinets,
range, dishwasher, dis posal and even the breakfast set
goes. For your coovenleo:&gt;ce there Is a half balh off the
kilchen . And you II love the basemen! family room . II
has deep pile, shag carpel and paneled walls with a
wood or coal burning Ben Franklin Stove . The laundry
has a washer and dryer that also goes with the house.
And this solid home Is located on over :lf"' acre. Shown
by appointment,

'35,000.00 .
CALL 992-2342
EVENINGS 992-2449

DOWNING-CHILDS
Rodney Downing -- Realtor
Bill Childs, Manager

stoci

Buy Wtlert you c•n came til

---·

Camping Equipment
1977 9 11, foot truck camper .·
247·2031.

1975 DATSUN 210

'1295

'4395

1975 OLDS 98
LS SED.

1976 BUICK REGAL

1974 OLDS 88 ·
ROYALE CPE.

champ

Ocarina,

DOWN

.. Poet's time
of day

:Skin

· Lacrosse
lewn
1Make more

1Purpose

! Hwnan

11
Yesterday's Anllwer

river
5 Attach
1 Fess Parker,

19 Gala
22 Rome's

iqterest
8 Kind of
wagon

largest Selection 1tn The Valley

'

.

RANGER
LARIAT

Air , auto., p.s., radio .

Yellow . go ld

*1795

SAVE UP TO

'3295

GMQUALITY

SERVICE/PARTS

F-150
RANGER
XLT
SAVE UP TO

-------

-~-·--

or buffa
GREENWOOD BACK
PITISBURGH ( UP))
end
L.C .
D e f ensi ve

navians
36 Czech
river
38 Celtic
sea god

Green\'..·ood, the Pittsburgh
Steel ers' to
leading
pass
rusher , •
returned
full-sca
l e practice
.
Preparat l.o n f or Moridav
night'sgamewithth e49ers in
San Francisco.

container

Greenwood

S Virile

missed

the

Steelers' pasttwogameswith

7M.

Los Angeles and Cincinnati

Descartes b-+---l8Dangerous
-McGrew

games because Of a knee
.
mj' w-y .
Also partic ipatin g in
T hursday 's rar e morning

Leaguer
10 Moees on

film

13 Trouble
M ''SailShip
of State!"
35 Luau

l

dell~cy

37 U.S.A.F.
marksmen

*FULL SERVICE BODY WORK
* FREE ESTIMATES
*QUALITY WORK
*REASONABLE RATES

CHECK INTO ITI

CLIFTON AUTO
SALES BODY SHOP

40Group of

nine
how to work

. A X Y D L BAA X R
LONGFELLOW

W.

Va .

e

1'1Arillfrfll'7 ·

wor kout was Ray Oldham, a
· ve
b ac k· S"
.1· •ne d
d ef en s1
0
Wednesday to replace spt:!cial
t ea m s

player

Ra 11d y

· Reute rshan 1 who remains
hospita1ized after an auto
accident.
Oldham ,
veteran of

a
the

five-year

•

(304)

773-5777
773-5475

- PUBLICNOTICE Diana K . Wel l s, w hose
re si den ce is unknown, but
whose last k nown address
was Box 22, Lon g Bottom ,
Ohio , will lake not ice that on
the l &lt;ll h day o f Nove mber ,
1978 . that Ralph Well s,
Pl ain t iff , fi led his complaint
aga in st her in the Com man
Pl eas Cou rt of Meigs Co unty ,
Qh ,· o, Case No . 17024 P'av ·,ng
'
tor divor ce upon the ground s
of gross neglect of duly , for
custody of the two m inor
ch il dr en , tor se ttl ement of
property r ig ht s,
d l lwill
.ce an
lh
furth er lk
a e no 11
a h1' s
cause can be heard at any
t ime tollow ing twen t y eight
d a ys from the date of the l as t
publi c a lion at this not1ce and
tha·t th e la st publ ica t ion will
be m ade on th e 22nd day of
Decembe r . 1978 .
L arry E . Spencer ,
Clerk ot Coun
Meigs county, Ohio
{ l\ J 17, 24 , (12) 1. 8, 15, 22. 6tc

A Wealth
of warm
Wishes For You
We hop e you and
yours sample all the
happy times and ~arm
feelings th a t this
Thanksgiving holiday
brings.

•

a

l-9~9~2-~2~19~6~---------------~M::;ID~D:L!E!P~O~R~T~,~o~..!,~~~::.i..J

Ba ltimore

Colts, i s expected to see
action on the special teams
Monday night.

OPEN TILL7 P .M.
Except Thursday &amp;
Saturday lils,oo
Closed Sunday

See Rocky Hupp, Darrell Dod r'ill or Pat Hill, Genera l Manager, for
Good Deal on a New or Used Vehicle.

•ilf&lt;&gt; of the Pomeroy- Mason Bridge .

(304)
One letter simply stands for another. In 1his sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Si ngle l etters,
apostrophes, lhe length and formation of the w ords are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
who does a lot of tal king , but ·they mi ght und ers land your
never has anything to say . Try position .
CRYPTDqUOTES
to be kind .
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23,
O E PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20, The " In si de' ' in/ormati on should be
ALJTE
GVVR
VG
RLTY
M
chances of an associate seeing taken with a grain o f salt tod ay .
your point ol view is slim, so if a Beli eving all you hear co uld
RLTY
M
V G controversial subject com es up steer you off a wrong direc tion .
KTMWYK,
DVRLWN
today, drop il qu ickly .
SCORPIO ·(Oct. 24-Nov. 22) ll' s
,, 0 E
y H M F _ ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19, Pro- nice lo be genero u s, but don ' t
ALJTE
UTVUWT
ductivity will be imposs ib le if il waste your hard-ea rned money
E V
W
_ is ba sed solely upon w i sh lui on in grates . Seek recip ienl s
0
YKT
ZOLWWLYN. VG
!htnktng . Be IOQICal in your who are as open -handed and
•
appraisals and you 'll stand a appreciat ive as yourself.
D T H F MH R L F
R T
E Y ,
U L T H H T chance 61 gelling thi ngs done.
!NE WSPAPER ENTE RPRISE ASSN 1
Yetlerda)"l Cryploqllelte: POVERTY DOES NOT PijODUCE TAURUS (April 20-May 20) ConUNHAPPINESS· ITPRODUCESDEGRADATION.~EORGE suit thos e Wit h whom you WISh
·
to""Spend your day be fore makBERNARD SHAW
ing pla ns. To assum e they 'll
;£)1918 Kin1 Futuna Syndieat.e, Inc.
want to go alo ng wi th your
ideas m ight cause embar rassPITI'SBURGH ( UPI I ing probl ems.
Defensive
end
L.C .
lion. no matter- how Interesting GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Fam F~d1y, Nov. 24 ·
Greenwood
,
the
Pittsbwgh
your topics are, won ' t be good . ily topics that get everyone
for )'Our image today . Take a upset s~oul d be avoided today . Steelers' leading p ass rusher ,
back seat and let others have The solutio n to the d i sagree~ r eturned to full -scal e practice
the floor . Ftnd out rrior e Of wh at ments isn ' t l i~e ly to be found Thursday as the team began
lies ahead fo r you in 1979 by yet, so why spoil a nice da y?
preparation for Monday
. sending for your copy o f Astro¥ CANCER (June 2t-July 22)
night's
game with the 49er s in
\Yl
·Graph Letter. Mail 50 cenls foi Don't take il for granted lhal
San
Francisco.
each and a long , se lf - one who has helped you kn ows
Greenwood missed the •
addressed , slamped envel ope you appreciate his ser\lice . A
lo Aslro-Graph , P.O . Box 489, " thank you " is C'"''i nitely Steelers' past two games with
L!JUIIIIWl!J~ll Radio City Station , N.Y . IOOt9 . needed or this person will feel Los Angeles and Cincinnati ·
Be sure 10 specify birth sign .
imposed upon .
games because of a knee
CAPRICORN (Oec. 22.Jan. 19, LEO (July 23, Aug . 221 You slill
November 24, 1978
injw-y
. Also partic ipating in
Many c~anges are In slore for Although yo_u're not prone to won ' t be able to figu re out how
Thw-sday's workout was Ray
gossip
,
you
mlght
·have
a
hard
to
get
the
cash
·
lor
your
you this coming year. Some
will happen slowly and others time keeping qulel about some pleasurabl e pursu its. Better Oldham, a defensive back
In the lwlnkllng of an eye . This ju icy tidbits you ' ve heard . Seal face up lo the ba re factS and signed Wednesday to replace
should appeal lo you, variely your lips. It's beneath you to plan youi day accord ingly.
special teams player Randy
1
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22) Ma kbeing tne style of life to which spread rumors.
R eutershan, who remains
AQUARIUS (J1n. 211-Fo. 11) Ing excuses iS not the soluti on
you aspire.
.
hospitaliied after an auto
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. You might be bored to tears tq getting along wi th others~
accident.
21) Domlnatlna the conversa- today when you run lnlo a pal tdday . Be honest with them an d

u[!)(!J(]

DAN THOMPSON FORD

Thursday as the team began

39 Beak

30range

Ia

FORD
TRUCKS

•130000

"You'll Like Our Quality Way of Doing Busine ss" GMC F ina nci ng
Open Evening s Until6 :OO + Til 5 p.m . Sa l .
Pomeroy

32 Scandl-

Out" star

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's

RANGER LARIAT

•1400°0

%8 Make naked-------------------------~-.J

- •Angelo
23 Be iDventive
24 Trustworty
25 Type of dye
28 "Odd Man

9 Opprobrious

9'2 -5342

30 Golf great
31 Comlque

Castel

Bernice Bede Osol

15 IN STOCK

F-150

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
14lnterlace

7 Esthete's

heJDP

'1795

See one of these courteous salesmen : Pete Burri s.
or George Harris .

4 Scottlsh

in TV rei'WlS

cultured
&gt;Bowstring

'3495

"KEEP THAT GREAT GM FEEI.ING
WITH GENUINE GM

1% Desolate

girl

problem

Needs paint job

GENERAL MOTORS PARTS DIVISION

1 African fox
2 Cringe
3 " Goodnight"

infonnally

Dark gr een.

TEST DRIVE
THE TRUCK OF
YOUR CHOICE
AT DAN THOMPSON
FORD!

•1200 00

1973 CAD.
DEVILLE CPE.

Sil ver , black slripe.

by THOMAS' JOSEPH

Entrance

1974 CADIUAC
DEVIUI SEDAN

I~

SAVE UP, TO

'1995

1974 CADIUAC
DEVILLE

6Lw.'Hd'
metal
43 Ex-heavy
' weight

'4295

'3495

CUSTOM

A nice work car.

1973 BUICK LS
SEDAN

Tuppers Plains, Ohio

or amino
Mortify
Vexed

Spor ty mid size.

1975 CUT. 442
CPE.

I mile north

u 'Gaellc
U Type of

CPE.

'3495

See Roger Riebel
095-3345 or 667-3463

!\CROSS
Boric

F.l50

'5295

WAGON

RIEBEL'S USED CARS
7

Clean, good t ires, M . blue .

New tires, air. auto ., p.s .,
p.b., A M -FM, 3 seats, lug .
rack.

6 cylinder, automatic.

St . Rt .

Had va l ve job , ha s some
r us t .

'4395

with prices that are easy to take.
Great Selection Of New Trucks

CPE.

dri vi n ~ .

•

'2495

1976 OLDS CUTLASS
SUPREME SEDAN

Equipped for you and easy

1967 CADIUAC. .... 7~?.~ ............... '795
1_972 MERCURY MONTEGO .......... SS95

ASTRO•GRAPH

.

1977 CHEVY
MONTE CARLO

1973 PONTIAC VENTURA ............. s395

1972.vw ..... ~.~~::'~: .......................1695
1970 vw.....~~:~:':~~~:~ ..................... s495
1973 PLYMOUTH DUSTER.............5395

Dark blue. v. roof , AM -FM,
50-50 seat , air . Goo d t ires.

'1995

1973
MERCURY MONTEG0........... '995
4 Dr .. V -8. auto .. P.S., P.B., air . ·

4 Dr., 302 V-B, auto., P.S., air.

A ir , AM.FM. goad tires &amp;
more.

:9lvy

All carpel · lnstallicf with
padding 11 no charQI . ·
Expert lnstallallon .

Cal l

FROSTY'S Cl::l radio equ ipment.
Everything in two·woy radio,
ante nnas and acces . Phone
Portland 843·2 181 . Open evenings ti ll 8:00: Sunday 2.00 till
0:00.

1974
PIN10 WAGON. ...................
'995
A cyllnper, 4 speed. ·
·

1974 OLDS 88
ROYALE SEDAN

'5295

Landa u, Rcidlo, auto . P-.S.,
P.B ., Low Mileage, Sol id
Black .

Has Tough Ford Pickups.

1973 OLDS
JORON ADA

poetically

· - - - - :----c

AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE been
cancell ed? l os t yo ur operator s
license? Phone 992 ·2143.

1973
HORNET SPORTABOUL .......'995
Wagon. 6 cyl. , aulo., P.S., air.
·

being,

HOWERY AND MARTIN f:.: .
cove ting , septic systems,
doze r, back hoe. dump truck ,
limes tone. grovel. blacktop
pa ving, Rt. 143 . Phone I (614)
09B ·7J3l.

PUlliN S EXCAVA TING . Complete
Service. Phone 992-2478 .

Wagon, V-B, aula., P.S., P. B .

Construction
Maintenance

Cellulosic !wood' fiber)
Thermal insut.tion · ·

Muffler
Brakes
Shocks
Tires
Battery.
ln•bllation Service

1973 CHEVY CHEVEUE............. ~ .. '995

4 Dr ., V-8, auto .

Reasonable Prices
References Available
. Phone 742-2029 ..
1
11 ·16-C

'
Low mileage, sharp, nice
family car.

A

1973 CHEVY CHEVEUE. ................5795

Blown Insulation
JIM KEESEE

See
Denver Kapple
At

1974
CHEVY WV PICKUP............. ~
4 cylinder, speed.

C.rpenlry , Electrical,
PaintinQ

J&amp;L

For The Best
Price In Town

1977 CHRYSLER
NEWPORT SEDAN

SATURDAY ONLY

Hatchback, 6 cyl., aulo.

" GIV E US A TRV"

HOME SIH S lor sol e, 1 acre and BRADFORD. Auct ioneer, Com·
plete Service. Phone. 949·2d87
up. Midd leport , near Rut land.
or 949·2000 . Racine, Ohio, (rift
Coll992-7481 .
l::lrodford
THR EE l::li::DROOM lrame heme in ----- - ~ -·---- · : - - - Middl epon . Coli 99:2 -3457
ELWOOD BOWERS RI:::PA IR ~
Sweepe rs. toas ters, irons, all
~AHM FO R sole. House. 2 barns,
sm oll appliances l awn mower,
trailer large pond. 10 acres or
nex t to Sta le High way Gara ge
U2 acres 742·2506.
on Route 7. Phone .(614) 985·
3825.

REAL ESTATE

Carsey, .Mgr •.

7 bY-Pill on

St . Rl. T24tpword Rutland,

Ph. 992-2848

S1S,OOO - Good 5 bedroom house with 2 fu ll baths.
Natural gas forced air heat , loca ted In Chester.

MODERN
b edr'oo m s, ·
ca rpeting,
pa neling, nal . gas fu r nace,
storms, pa tio , ga rage, ut il i
t y, por ch, love l y yar'tl . Ex ·
cell enf at just $25,500.00.
THIS HOUSE
TALKS
OUTCH - Love l y 2 story
fra m e r emodel ed home.
Natural
gas
f ur n ace,
stor m s, f irep l ace, enc losEd
front porc h es, 2 ca r
garage,
and
st ora ge
buil di ng _
1. 17
ac r es.
$29,500 .00.
DOLLARS AND CENTS Why pay r ent? House and
mobile hom e. Live in th e
hOuse and re nt the tr ai ler .
·$15,500.00 .
LOOK - Her e is a 2·story
hom e, 4 bedroom s, bath,
natura l gas· heating, par·
c hes, worksh op, 41ots. Just
$9,500.00.
A FRAME 2112 acres
recr eation r oom, 11'"1 ba th s:
central heating and air con ·
dition ing,
own
water
system . New $37,500 .
OVERLOOKS RIVER Lo ve l y 3 bedroom, natural
gas furnace, storms, base·
m ent, 2 car garage, S
acres. $32,000.00.
II' S THE "LITTLE BIT
E " THAT COUNTS.
GET THIS FROM
CLELAND
REALTV,
WHETHER BUYING OR
SELLING .
i
REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
REALTOR -ASSOCIATES
Leona Cleland
Kalhy Cleland.
99 2·2259 - 992 -6191

'~'• mile off Rl.

L------~---' 1~.:-·- - - - - - , _ ;4.,:
-3&amp;-;..;11,;,;;1
'--.,

1963 10 1t1 52 ONl: BEDROOM
Wmdsor troller. Gas l urnoc:e.
Underpinning .
l ur n1shed _
Q91.::Jf:l97 altE&gt;r S weekdays

---Give Away

ROGER HYSELl
GARAGE

11 -9-1 mo.

RANCH~~3~1;-------------------~------------------~

lANDMARK

~

Your HeadquarteiS For
Armstrong Carpeting

1955 P1airie Schooner 28xB 1 8f-l

99'1· 'l496.

For Sale

01

l%1JPMC57•li2 B~

WILL C AR~ for the elderly in our
home Phone 99'1 ·73 1d

~~MALE I~ I SH

949 - 26~8

19/0 A rn her ~t50x 112 tiH
1970 Cham pion 60 x 12 "2 BH
19b5 General bO~t~ 12 '} BR

Services Offered

5.

·Business Services

ld x 6S 3 bedroorr

and o ~ s ume loon .
84J-J3 11.

------,----

Will BABYSIT in ou r homfi. in
Portland . 8&lt;tJ .4HOJ . I have
references .

NA~HUA

l ', both . underpinn ing. Sl50t

1977 MONH CAIHO . Good conrli tion. P.S., P.B., A .C AM . fM
radio, tilt steering . Price $5000 .
Call Qq2 -288 1.

RENTERS ASS ISTANCC for Sen1ot
Cilizens. You moy be able to
live in our apartment lor less
tha n $50 Vi llage Manor .ApOrl ·
menl s. 992· 7787 .

CHIP wOOD
Po les ma x .
diameter Ia··. on largest end.
$12 pe1 ton Bundled sl ob, $10
pe r ton . Delivered to Ohio
Palle t Co .. Rt . 2. Pomeroy.
992·2689.

lf.ll' b

1974 4 CYL . 4-speed . new fir es.
Mu st
se ll
im medi at ely
c,I9'J.7bH5

Wil l DO bobys1 ft ng w1th pre·
school chil dren . e"perien ced .
9Q2.b309 .

f URNI SHED ROOMS rented week ·
ly . Moicl service. Excep t10 nal
ne ighbochood . 992 ·3489 alter

Homes for Sale .
- Mobil
-- -e ..
-·-- ---.--

19b9 OLOS CUTLASS CONVi:H ·
TAIU E. P.S., L} _B push bullon
lop con trol. In dash loc tor)l lj .
track lope pla.,er . Good rur'n ·
mg con dition . Coil alter 5pm .
992·2995

TWO i:JEDHOOM , kitchen fu rnish ·
ed . ap t. Call bel ore 8 am
992·2:t00.

wanted to Buy

IF YOU hove o se rvice to offer ,
wont to buy or sell something,
oe lookin g for wo rk .. . or
whatever .. . you'll get results
faster w ith a Sen tinel Wo n! Ad .
Coll992-215&lt;&gt;.

Sales
--- Auto
----·----

WAffH WELL drilli ng. Wdl1om T.
G10nl. '/42·7879

Pomeroy, Ohio

Yard Sale

-

3 AND 4 RM . fu rnished onrl un·
fur nished
opt s.
Phone
992·5434 .

Apply in person
Ill Court St.

YARD SALE through Wed. New
mercha nd ise ,
Iorge size
dresses. Corner of J rd and Col ·
lege in Syracuse .

COUNTY : MEIGS
PUBLIC NOTICE
The follow ing docu ments
were rec eived and prepared
by The Ohio En vi ronmental
Protection Age ncy dur ing the
previ ous week . The effective
date cf each final action is
slate d. The Iss uan ce da te of
each proposed action is
stated . Anyone agg r ieved or
adversely affected by B f inal
action to Issue, deny, modify ,
revoke, or renew a per mit.
license , or var ia nce ; or to
approve or disappro ve pla ns
and speci f icat ions , may f ile
an appeal with The Envi ron ·
mental Board of Review,
Suite 305, 395 E . Broad St.,
Co lumb us, Ohio 432 16, within
th irty (30) days of the ef .
fective da te , pursuan t to Oh io
Revised Code Sec t ion 3745.07 ,
unl ess suc h f inal act ion was
preceded by the same or
the
same
sub stan t i ally
proposed action . All su ch
f ina l act ions are so Ident if ied.
Such persons may request an
adjudication hearing be fore
The Ohio EPA on a propo sed
action to Issue, deny , modify ,
revoke, or renew a permit .
l icense, or \l arl ance ; or to
a-pprove or disa ppro ve plan s
and specifications , within
thirty 13 0) days of the
Issuance date . ORC 3745 .07
does not prov ide for ad ·
i udlcation hearing reQ uests
or appeals on orders , \le r lf ied
compla ints , or enforcement
compli ance sche dule letters .
Within 30 days of publlcetion
in a newspaper in the affected
county , any person may also :
(1) sub m i t wri1ten com ·
plaints re lati ng to act ions ,
proposed a cti ons, verified
com pl aints, or enforcem ent
com pli ance sche dule lett ers ;
(2) request a publl c meeting
regard ing proposed actions ;
and -or (3 ) request notice of
further
actions
or
proceedings. All requests for
ad iudl cation hear ings and
publi c meet ings , and other
com m unlca t lons concerning
publi c meetings , adludlcat ion
h ea r i ng s, verif i ed com pl aints, and regulations ,
, sh ould be addressed to The
Legal Records Section , Ohio
EPA , ~ - 0 . Box 10A9,
Columbus, Ohio A3216, (6U )
.466·6031 . Unless otherwise
stated In par tic ular not ices ,
a ll ot her communi cat ion s
com ments on
in c luding
proposed act Ions, should be
addressed either to The Air
Perm its and Compl i ance
Monitoring
Div isi on
or
Perm it and Approval Sec tion ,
whl.q;hever Is appropriate. at
The OhiO EPA, P . O. Box
10.49', Columbus, Ohio 0:216.
Proposed
Issuance .of

-

Pets for Sale

--·--~--

Passed : November 6, 1978
ATTEST :
Jane Wa lton
CLERK
APP RO VE D :
Claren ce Andrews
Mayor

- -- .... --- -·

- -·-·

------------.-- - - - -

CHR ISTMAS BAZAAR , December
I , . 2. Meigs County Humane
Soc1ety . across from Dr . Conde
in Midd leport
Hon d·mcde
itE&gt;ms, house plant s, hand
pointed lamps, Amis,h food.
and much more.

"

SlOP IN AND
GET THAT
BETTER DEAL!

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIG SC OiJNTY , OHIO
ESTATE OF WILBUR E . BAKER , DECEASED
Case No . 22S l :! Dock et 12
Pag e 78

A~POOTI~fMo:NT

OF FUDU CIARY
On Novem b e&lt; 6, 1978, ;n the
M eigs County Probate Court.
Ca se No 22352 . Pearl I .
Baker, Reule 1, Reedsv;ole,
OhiO was appoin t ed Ad ·
m in istra tr ix of lh e esta te of
Wi lbur E Ba ker , deceased,
late 01 Ro ute 1, Ree dsville .
oh ;o

Man n inq D . Webs ter
C k
Prob&lt;'liC Jud qe lcr

r--------.MEIGS -..

1I
I
I

1
I
~ I
I
I
1
I

Equipment Co.

Pomeroy, 0•
I
I
Ph 992-2176
1S
' De
t
II hours
tarting
c. 2• ours ore
will be 8·5 Mon .. fri.
Closed
Saturday
and
15unay.
d
I
IIInternational New ldea 1

I

.,!!:.!!!!!~--~'!!!!,~.:!.J
----------

( Ill 9, 16. 23, 3t c

SALE
George Hackett Jr. Residence
93 SEVENTH AVE.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER2STH
BEGINNING AT 9:00A.M.
Furniture i ncluding beds, chests, dresser, range,
dinette setr china cabinet, dishwasher, chairs, lamps,
sofas, also deer and moose heads , glasswear, dishes,
linen s, knickknacks, clothing and much more.

"Finally, (ve found
a MAN-SIZE tractor"

ll:'cONOIIIY

~· Tlf.CTIIIf

SEE THEM TODAY

REED'S COUNTRY STORE
IMMEDIATE OPENINGS

FOR R.N.'s AND L.P.N.'s
ALL SHIFTS ON CCU, OB,
AND MEDICAL-SURGICAL
Competitive salary. excellent benefits, shift
diHerl! nl ial,
and
tuition
assistance
program.
Contact : Holzer Medical Center, P . O. Box
280 , Gallipolis , Oh. 446-5105.
·
· An Affirmative Action
Equal Opportunily Employer

•
·I

.

�• .,. .. .... .,..., .... ., w.,.,,. ,. . _ •• p,, , .

.,

.

~,

-

•

&lt;r

•

•..
10- Ttle D~:~iiy St..•ntirlt'l . Mulll lepnrt·PtiT ll••ro~, 1) . F' rula~· . ~~ ,,. :!4. l!IIR

SQUAD RUNS
Two calls on Thursday and
one Friday morning were
answered by the Pomeroy
Emergency Squad.
At 4:33p. m. Thursday, the
squad went to WetzgaU St .
where Mrs. Donald Pierce,
Pomeroy, was lying in the
road. She was taken to Holzer
Medical Cenier.
At 8:52 p. m. the squad
went to Vale St. for Tom
Ables who was having difficulty breathing. He, too,
was taken to Holzer Medical
Center.
At. 8:38 a. m. Friday the
squad Went to Minersville for
Albert Keaton who was taken
to Holzer Medical Center.

Ohio cult members fear lives
havoc that Jones and his
Peoples Temple wrought
etched in the memory of a
mother's brain splattered
over a small airplane.
Patricia Parks, who was
shot to death in that plane,
was the daughter of William
and Daisy Chaffin of
Springfield, Ohio.
Nor could Parks easily
forget the three days and two
nights he spent eaten by
anxiety until his baby sister
emerged alive from one of the
world's densest jungles.
Dale Parks, 'l:l, and his
sisters, Brenda, 18·, and
Tracy, 12, were among the 39
known survivors of the
bizarre temple of death rite in
which Jones and 407 of his
apparently blindly obedient
followers killed themselves.
emerged
late
They
Thursday for the first time to
tell their part in the events of
last Saturday at Port
Kaituma, the airstrip near
the
Peoples
Temple
commune
where
the
massacre of Rep. Leo J .
0-Calif.,
three
Ryan,
American journalists and the
mother of the Parks children
triggered mind boggling

By ALVIN B. WEBB
GEORGETOWN,_ Guyana
(UP!) -Three members of a
Springfield, Ohio, arpa
family who escaped the mass
suicides and murders at the
Peoples Temple commuune
in Guyana say they are still
fearful of their lives.
Jim Jones, the leader, is
dead. The aluminum coffin
with the scribbled "Rev.
Jimmie Jones" and the
number "13-B" said so.
But that doesn't make Dale
Parks, of the Springfield,
area, any less fearful.
"We are still very fearful
for our lives" said Parks, the

oHo Ho Ho Ho Ho Ho
o Ho HoMo Ho Ho Ho
oHo Ho Ho Ho Ho Ho
oHo Ho Ho Ho Ho Ho
oHo Ho Ho Ho Ho Ho
o Ho Ho Ho Ho Ho.

Jones' corrumme, and leave

The Parks family - Dale,
Tracy, Brenda, mother Pa-

ann sure they went up there
with Ryan's party.
They were aboard one willingly and took it."
plane, Parks said, when . But the 'Parks wanted no
Larry Layton, 32, one of part of this.
"We knew that this mass
Jones' loyal followers, poked
a rifle inside and started suicide was inevitable ,'~ he
firing.
·
sald. "We took the risks of
One shot hit Parks' mother. leaving there instead of
"!ile was shot in the head staying for a mass suicide."

tricia , father Gerald " Jerry "

•

FREE GIFT----.1
When you OPEN .y our 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 50th payment for you .

7 1h Pet. per year on a
4 year .certificate of
deposit.
$1,000.00
minimum
deposit
A
I penalty is
all certificate

Our Christmas Club for 1979 is now open .
Join this week . ·

pomeroy
rutl~nd
tuppers plams

prior
ma1urity,

pomeroy
nationa
bank

Meigs Co. Branch
~

the bank of
the century
established 1872

'CSh.
The Athens Cou~iv

S~vings

&amp; Loan Co.

Second AI.
Pomeroy, Ohio
296

--·
FSIJC
----

HO!HO!HO!
-COLA

BUY A
COKE
OR FAVORITE
SOFT DRINK
FOR 59• AND
TAKE HOME YOUR

CHRISTMAS
GLASS
DIFFERENT GlASS OFFERED
EACH WEEK; 3 VARIETIES.
OFFER GOOD NOW THRU
.

his movement," he said. "I

mass suicides.

and grandmother Edith were all members of Jones'
Peoples Temple sect. ·
The problem was, they
wanted out.
It was not immediately
determined what happened to
the father Gerald or the
grandmother, Edith.
Another sect member was
Hyacinth Thrush of San
Francisco. She was not
leaving the commune at
Jonesvillle,
!50
miles

ur Christmas Club
makes it all the merrier

northwest of Georgetown. and her brains were literally
!ile simply slept through the splattered all over the
entire orgy of death - and plane," Parks told reporters.
While Parks was wrestling
awoke to find herself alone
with hundreds of corpses the rifle from Layton, he said,
sisters Brenda and Tracy
nearby.
The body that U.S. officials were fleeing for their lives
say is Jones landed in the into the nearby jungle.
"I found out my mother
United States today in a
coffin bearing his nanne and was dead," Tracy said, ~~and
the file number "!3-B". He the rest of us ran into the
apparently took his own life bust.. We was running in
by gunshot at the commune circles for days and days ... "
Finally they heard the
death scene.
Hyacinth Thrush was at the sollJl(l of a generator and "we
commune, but she really kept looking for the 59und and
kriow
what found some Guyanese. In
doesn't
between, she said, for three
happened.
While her friends and days and two nights, "we
family were outside drinking slept in swamps and didn 't
Kool-aid laced with cyanide, eat."
Memories of Jones were
she had "gone to bed early
not pleasant.
because I was sick."
"After we got here ,''
When she awoke the next
morning "I knew something Brenda Parks said, "I
was wrong. I didn't see _ thought it was terrible. I saw
him beating people when they
anybody."
When she saw the bodies, said they wanted to go
"I didn't know what to say ... home."
Dale Parks had no doubt
the first time I had seen
Jones'
followers
anything like that in my life ." that
Dale Parks' memory was marched docilely to the
sharper - and more grim. corrugated metal tub to sip
He and his family had cyanide.
"For those who really bedecided to desert the
"bondage treatment" of lieved in Jimmie Jones and

JANUARY 1, 1979

AT CARRY-OUT OR DINING ROOM

Crow's
Family RestaUI'ant
OHIO

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

! Area Deaths I
I

I

CHARLES H. OAKES
Charle.s Howard Oakes, 88,
Route I, Little Hocking, died
Thursday at the Parkview
Convalescent Center in
Parkersburg following an
extended illness.
Mr. Oakes was born in
Washington County, a son of
the late Charles W. and Lucy
Sedgwick Oakes. He was a
member of the Little Hocking
United Methodist Church; a
graduate of Coolvillle High
School and was a 65-year
member of Coolville Masonic
Lodge 337, F&amp;AM. He was a
well known fruit grower ii1
Washington County where he
owned and operated the C. H.
Oakes Apple Orchards for
many years.
He was a member of the
.. Belpre Area Chamber of
Commerce and was active at
the Belpre Senior Nutritional
Center. He was a fanner
member of the Washington

County Farm Bureau and
was a life member of the Ohio
State Horticultural Society.
Surviving are a daughter,
Mrs. Carolyn Russell, Parterfield; six grandchildren ;
three nephews, Charles
Greene, Parkersburg; James
B. Greene, Marietta, and Olin
B. Hall, Jr., New Orleans,
and a niece, Mrs. Tom (Mary
Louise) Fuller, LancasterHe was preceded in death by
. his wife, Chloe, in 1970 and by
seven sisters.
Funeral services will be
held at I p. m. Sunday at the
White Funeral Home in
Coolville with the Rev .
Wesley Thatcher officiating.
Burial will be in the Newbury·
Cemetery at Little Hocking.
Friends may call at the
funeral home after 1 p. m.
Saturday. The Coolville
Masonic Lodge will conduct
services at the funeral home
at 7:30 p. m. Saturday.

HOSPITAL NEWS
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Wednesday Admission Waldo Neal, Harrisonville.
Wedoesday Discharges Samantha Hall, Chester
Mundry, Walter Brown, Ben
Davidson, Brenlja Fry, Joann
Justis, Roy Jones, Eugene
Fisher.
Thursday Admission Marvin KestersOn, Pomeroy;
Clifford Jacobs, Pomeroy;
Louise
Allen,
Sardis;
Rebecca Stiltner, Rutland.
Thursday Discharge
Marion Riggs .

Racine.
Dlscbarges, Nov. 23
Karne Boggess, Earl
Burks, Effie Buskirk, Keith
Carter, Patricia Casey, Mrs.
Denver Casto and son,
Tammay Crabtree, Clinton
Craig, Rebecca Hazlett,
Arnie Jayjohn, Elizabeth
McClaskey, Beryl McNerlin,
Cindy Perry, Mrs. Jeffrey
Smith and son, Mary Thornton and Kenneth Ward.
Blrtbs, Nov. 23
Mr. and Mrs. Gregory
McKinney, son, Pomeroy;
Mr. and Mrs. Philip DeVeny,
daughter, Rio Grande.

Jones,

Holzer Medical center
Discharges, Nov. 22
Monica Bass, Elizabeth
Bauer, Mldra Beetle, Donald
(Continued from page 1)
Bell, Andrew Burkhart, of Jones' personality and life
Nancy Carter, Elanore Cobb, at his jungle commune.
Merle Conley, Ray Conley,
"Jimmie Jones was
Tammy Dalton , Harold terrible. I saw him beat
Dillon, Tamale Ganley, people when they said they
Martha Edelman, Rachel wanted to go home," said
Elias, Alfred Farley, Ginger Brenda Parks of Ukiah, Calif.
Miss Parks' brother
Fisher, Leona Gibson, Carol
Gilbert, Danriy Gilkerson, Gerald, 45, said Jones used to
John Goett , Lois Green, pr~ach that the only "true
George Gwnm, Ross Har- way to die was through
ding, Clarence Harless, Hal revolutionary suicide." He
Harmon, Walter Harrison, said Jones often dlsc\lssed
Byron
Miles,
Charles suicide with his sect.
He said cultists who diso·
Johnson, Marjorie Johnson,
Thelma
King,
Arthur, beyea Jones were punished
Lanham, Donald Lipscomb, and sometimes placed in
Shirley Markcwn, Marilyn bondage and that "the
Matthews; Joyce Mayo, treatment we got there were
Marjorie McCarley , Mae just atrocious."
·
McGuire, Samuel McKinney,
Thus far , only 39 of the
Cinda Mink, John Mont- cultists who escaped the
gomery, Gary Moore, Pearl suicide ritual have reached
Payne, Leslie Phillips, Betty Georgetown and there were
Ragland, Elma Richards, growing fears that few if any
. George Roberts , Albert ·more of those who fled into
Sawyer, Robert Shaver, the dense jungle could have
Helen Sheets, Edwin Smith, survived its deadly perils Judy Smith, Mrs. James jaguars, scorpions, vampire.
Sparks and daughter, Harry bats, pools of quicksand and
Stover, John Straight, Gussie rivers infested with fleshTaylor, Matthew Taylor, eatiilg piranha fish .
Wllmer Vencell, Donna
American lawyer Mark
Villtoe, Theres' Warner, Lane, among those who
Mlldred Wells, Melissa escaped, said more than 400
Wheeler and Mable Wykle
fled into the jungle and he
Births, Nov. 22
doubted many could have
Mr. and Mrs. Glen Ousley, survived. Lane also had
daughter, Dundas;. Mr. and expressed. belief earlier that
Mrs. Paul Rollins, son, Leon, ' Jones, 46, might have
.w. Va.; Mr. and Mrs. · escaped death and fled with
Richard Sayre, daughter , the commune's treasure.

Louis R. Ford, Jr. elected
~~~!!:'!!:.~'!:D~?t.Af!.S1!. ~~~I
a~1 :R~et!:InMd

• 1'1s, 1s the new cha1rman
·
GaII 1po
of the
Board of Trustees of the Holzer Hospital
Foundation.

Engmeer
·
· 19.,,
.. he be came asststant
·
111
plant manager at the Kyger Creek Station

ln 1966 and was promoted plant manager

. was announce d saturd ay by Hugh
Th 1s
. keI , presldent oI HoIzer Medl caI
P . Ktr
Center.
Ford was elected chairman during the
annual meeting of the board of trustees of
. I Foundalton.
.
He sueth e Holzer Hosptta
ceeded Max W. Morrow, who had served

·m !970.
A mem be r of the Amer~ean
. So cte
. ty of
Mechanica!Engineerssincei957,Fordisa
registered Professional Engineer in Ohio
and Connecticut. He is active in local civic
. aIfatrs,
.
.meIud'mg th e
and . commuruty
Galllpolls Area Chamber of Commerce,

as chairman since January, 1976.

havmg .served as Dtrector,. and

a

Contmumgassecretaryoftheboard ts

Other officers elected recently were
. cha1nnan;
.
Emerson E . Evans, f.ar st viCe
Max W. Morrow, second vice chairman;
John F. Stiffler, Sr., secretary and .
Thomas E. Tope, treasurer.
Ford, who has been serving as
treasurer of the board, is plant.manager at
the Kyger Creek Power Station of the Ohio

member . and past ·president of the
Gau·tpo,.ur. Rotary Cl ub. H.e . be came a
member . of the hospitals Board of
Trustees m 1974.
. He and his ~ife, Marion, the parents of
f1ve children, hve in Galilpohs.
. Evans IS chatrman of .the _board of the
Oh10 Valley Bank m Galhpohs, pr.es1dent
of E~ans Enterprtses, Inc. , and sentor v1ce
president of Bob Evans _Farms, Inc .. He
has served on the hospltal board smce
1978.
•
.
Morrow, wh~ Will n?w serve as the
second v1ce cha1rman, 1s president and
general manager of the Miami Gravel

John F. Stiffler Sr., chairman of the board
. res1.dent
of St1·fn er Stares, Inc. A l.f
1 ettmc
of Jackson, he became a member or the
Holzer Hosp1tal FoundatiOn Board also m
1963. He is an active member of the board
of trustees of R10 Grande College servmg
as cha1rman of t~e execuhve committee,
and 1s a past pr1!stdent of the Jackson

vane·y Electric Corporation. A native of

Brooklyn, N. Y., he attended Columbia
University and graduated with a
Bachelor's Degree in Marine Engineering
from the United States Coast Guard
Academy. He served in the U. S. Coast
Guard from 1941-47. Joining the Ohio

IS

°

(Continued from page I)
unidentified vehicle slowed.
Attempting to slow to avoid
collision, the Dodrill auto
went out of control, passed off
the right side of the roadway
and overturned.
Dodrill, and a passenger,
Ginger Dodrill, 18, Vinton;
were
transported
by
SEOEMS to Holzer Medical
Center where they were
treated and released.
There was severe damage
to the Dodrill auto.
The patrol was called to the
scene of a one-auto accicent
at 7:30p.m. on SR 588, fivetenths of a mile east of
mileport 3.
Officers report that a
westbound vehicle operated
by Nathan Thomas, 17,
Gallipolis, went out of control
in a sharp left curve, passed
off the right side of the
roadway into a ·ditch, overturned, and came to rest in a
·creek.
Thomas displayed visible
signs of injury, and was
transported by the patrol to
Holzer Medical Center.
Thomas was treated for a
mild cervical strain, and
released:
Officers report severe
damage to the Thomas auto.
No cltiatlon was issued.
Daniel Louden, 58, Shade,
was cited on charges of OWl
following aone-vehicle accident in Meigs County at 8:10
a.m. on U. S. 33, at the junction of SR 681.
Officers report that a
southbound auto operated by
Louden went out of control on
33, passed offthe right side of
the road, and struck a ditch.
There was moderate
damage to the Louden auto.
The patrol was called to the
scene of a two-vehicle
colllslon on TR 122, one and
one-tenth of a mile north of
SR 124, at I: 10 p.m ..
Officers report that a
northbound auto operated by
Robert Roush, 16, Syracuse,

Care, officially organized in February.

1978, with Vaught "Doc" Smith serving as
the chairman of the new development
corporation.
In closing his report he said, "This has
.
·
Contmued on Page ·A·2

•

tmts

CANCELLATION
A meeting called for this
evening to discuss the
dispositon of the Bedford
youth center building has
been cancelled. Another
meeting will be set .later.

HOLINESS ASSOC.
The Meigs Area Holiness
Association
will
meet
Tuesday at the Pomeroy
Church of the Nazarene with
Rev. Amos Tillis of the
Rutland Community Church
bringing the message. The
time is 7:30p.m. The public is
invited.

GRANGE2612
Ohio Valley Grange 2612
will meet in special session at
7:30p.m. Tuesday at the hall.
There will be potluck refreshments.

Denison will present ideas for
December.
Members are reminded
that the annual county
Christmas flower show will
be held Dec. 2-3. Members
are requested to take two
dozen cookies or candy and
one dozen sandwiches. The
club will also help provide
Christmas
table
arrangements for the Athens
Mental Helath Center and
these are to be taken to the
meeting.

MEET TONIGHT
A special meeting of the
Southern Local School Board
will be held at the high school
at 7:30 this evening rather
than 7 p.m.
·

MARRIAGE LICENSE
Phllip Joseph Custer, 32,
Pomeroy, and Patricia Lee
Craig, ~. Pomeroy.

.;._ R
1

__ _•__.·--,00

went out of control, passed off _..
"W~WMPrt1_0_N_,
the right side of the roadway,
1
came back on the highway
and slid into the path of a 1
OPTONU:TRIST '
southbound vehicle driven by 1
FF CE OURS· -9 . 30 t 12 2 to (CLOSE
Donald Weese, 63, Syracuse. 1 0
I
H
· ·
o •
Roushwascited.oncharges . 1 AT NOON ON THURS.)- EAST COURT

s

-

VOL .13

NO. 43

I1
I

!-!~~2~!!~~---~-------~-~

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
OPEN FRIDAY AND
SATURDAY NIGHTS TIL 8
;-

TAKE ADVANTAGE OF ntE SPECIAL SALE PRICES DURING OUR
CHRISTMAS OPENING SALE. MAKE ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
YOUR ONE STOP CHRISTMAS SHOPPING CENTER. EXCELLENT
SELECTIONS OF WELL-KNOWN BRANDS OF MERCHANDISE IN
EVERY DEPARTMENT AND AT OUR WAREHOUSE DN
MECHANIC STREET.

OPEN FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
NIGHTS TILB

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1978

GALLIPOLIS-POINT PLEASANT

EXTENDED FORECAST
Monday through Wednesday, rain
or snow Moriday, with snow flurries in

oortheaste.-n counties Tuesday and rain
over the entire state Wednesday. Highs
wlll range from the mid 30s north to tbe
mid 40s south on Monday, while highs
Tuesday and Wednesday will range
from near 40 north to the mid 50. south.
Overnight lows wlll be in the 20s early
Monday and Tuesday and in the 30s
early Wedoesday.

WORKSHOP SET
· A workshop will be held for ·
anyone interested in writing
their family ·history for the
Book;
Meigs- History
Tuesday, 7:30 at the Modern
Woodmen Hall, Burlingham.

RUtland Garuen
.J
CTt-Ub met
"A bird I coax to my
feeder" will be the roll call
response when the Rutland
Garden Club meets at 7:30
p.m. Monday at the home of
Mrs. Harve:.: Erlewine.
A highlighf of the meeting
will be a review of the book,
"That Quail, Robert" written
by Margaret Stauger and
given by Mrs. Paul Winn.
The regional director, Mrs.
Charles Kuhl, will present
workings of the Ohio
Association of Garden Clubs,
and ap arrangement of dried
and glycerin plant material
featuring a bird figure will be
displayed by Mrs. Erlewine,
the hostess. Mrs . Carl

d

lupnteerns w. rk atl g' th e to a a athn
vo
o e erfor otheassure
finest
possibleo hospital
area wee
serve. We have a great hospital family ."
He c mmented
th ddt
f
new me.::her of the ~arde d:ri~g'"1~ 7 ;, Ja
Tim Evans. He also said that a milestone
for the hospital was the establishment of
the Holzer Foundation for Tri.State Health

The new treasurer of the boa rd, Thomas
E. To~, beca~e a member of the
hosp1tal s board 1n 1976: Part ~wner of the
Tope Furmture Gal!enes, he 1s preSident
of the Galhpol&gt;s Area Chamber of Commerce, chairman of the Gallipolis Zoning

no doubt turn to looking forward to a visit from St. Nick. These thoughts were going through
the mind of &amp;!sie Shamblin, daughter of Mr . and Mrs. Roger Shamblin, as she explored the
toyland of Stifflers in Pomeroy.

Five

the atie ts· He s 'd '''fh 1 t l•st ff

Chamber of Commerce.

IS CHRISTMAS FAR OFF? With Thanksgiving past the thoughts of the younger set will

of operating an unsafe motor
vehicle. Both vehicles incurred slight damage.
Officers mvestigated a twoauto mishap in Racine, on
·Pearl St., one mile east of SR
124,' at 10:30 a. m.
The patrol reports an
auto operated by Garrett
Circle, 78, Racine, turned
onto Pearl left of center and
sideswiped a vehicle driven
by Ben Philson, 67, Racine.
Circle was cited on charges
of!eft of center. Both vehicles
incurred slight damage.
At 5:05 a. m., a deer ran
into the path of an auto
operated by Charels Fisehr,
36, Gallipolis, traveling west
on SR . 141, five-tenths of a
mile west of milepost 16.
The deer was killed. The
Fisher
auto
incurred
moderate damage. No
citation was issued.

P 1

! ? . ?:
Ga
I
I
pash·t resAident.of the
he 1s
. a d.~rector of th e M'lt
a 1poth1s ha'a1 a 's
ere an1s ssoc1a
0n.
1 on
rt t 1th
Banking Company , Ohio Aggregates b 1~ f ~ c st Inn~ annua 1repo d ~ the
Association and the Miami Gre~ve1 Cu. He hoar_tol' ru eeasg, orrotw commendet t el
. d hts
. Bache 1or of 1nd us Ina
. 1 stosp1 ar s man em en group
an o a
rece1ve
1oyees, a 1ong w;.th th e many
Engmeermg
.
.
Degree from Oh.10 St at e
alu11 oteeemp
s includi the v 1 t s ·
University after which he became a ~an e ~a l..ad~gs V 1 °~neer
Re~VIC~
Registered Ohio Professional Engineer. A S nfur ' C~t fzen ~ ·1 tun eens, de 1 [~
trustee of the Holzer Hospital Foundat.ion v"tuote
Ch. a Ia · 0 unA eers tan
he
. 1963 , h•.Just
. compete
I d a1most threc work
o ntogether
er
p msthe hospital
ssoc&gt;a lonMedical
, wo
s1nce
with
years as chtnnan of the board.
.
Staff to provide the best possible care for

we11 ston,

Beard seeks
lien to pay
for tragedy

RECEIVED AWARD OF MERIT - Max W. Morrow, left, outgoing chairman
of the Holzer Foundation, receives an award of merit from Louis H. Ford , Jr .,
incoming chairman, during annual meeting of the hospital 's board of trustees.

tntintl
MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY

PRICE 25 CENTS

Columbia T~. barn
destroyed by blaze
POMEROY - A 40x100 barn in
Co lumbia Township was comp letely
destroyed by fire Friday afternoon.
Pomeroy Fire Chief Charles Lega r
said his department was called to the

scene at 3:50 p.m. The barn was located on
Rutherford Road, off Route 143 in
Columbia Township near the Temple
Cemetery.

The barn was owned by Kathryn
Lawson of Dayton and contained two old
automobiles, crates from an orchard

CRANSTON, R.I. (UP! ) - Rep. Edward
P. Beard, D-R.I., says U.S. taxpayers
should not have to foot the estimated 19
million bill for removing and identifying
the hundreds of bodies in the IJUISS suicide
in Guyana.
Alvin B. Webb, fonner UPI Europe and
Beard Friday said he will ask President
Asia
news editor aod chief reporter in
Carter to direct the Justice DePilrtment to
put a lien on the assets oi the People's · Vietnam, is head of a special UPI newsTemple to help pay the costs of returning phutu team frum North and (so uth America
the bodies of the cultists to the United in Guyana to gather facts on the mass
suicide that the State D~parlmenl reports
States.
"They had to be nutty as hell to follow took the lives of 900 members of the Rev.
the command of that guy to commit Jim Jones Peoples Temple deep in lhe
CARTER &amp; EVANS BUYS FIRSI' GIFT CERTIFICATES - Merrill Evans,
suicide," Beard said of follower s or Jim Guyana jungle. In addition, UPI bureaus
(standing on right) representing Carter &amp; Evans Contractors, Saturday purchased
Jones, the leader of the People's Temple. in San Francisco, Washington, Houston,
the first gift certificate in connection with a new servke being offered by 211
The'congressman said Jones was •·nulty Inodianapolis, and many other points have
Gallipolis stores and business firms. Making the sale ts Jan:'es MuU~ns, left,
conlributed addt.tlooal information on
as a fruitcake ."
president of the Downtown Gallipolis Retrul Merchants Assoc1at1on . Looking on m
State Department officials Friday said Jones and his sect ·for this story.
front are Mrs. Thelma Elliott, left, executive secretary of the Gallipolis Area
the cost of the U.S. body recovery mission
Chamber of Commerce and Mrs . Jan Thaler,•chairperson of the gift certificate
at Jonestown is approaching $3 million and
program. (See story &lt;11 A-2 today) ,
By ALVIN B. WEBB
the total cost could be three times as high.
GEdRGETOWN,Guyana
(UP!) - 'They
"Some one decides to take the stovepipe killed the babies first.
at my expense, I don 't like it,'' Beard said.
Mothers brought their infants to the
"They have at least a half million in cash
of death, cradled in their arms.
altar
and assets in California. In Jonestown,
they found cash and gold that brings it up
See D-5 today for complcle wrapup
w a million 'dollars .
on
the
Guyana tragedy.
"It would be another tragedy on top of
this tragedy if the taxpayers got stuck with
the total bill," he said.
The real tragedy is the death of the Children were led by the hand. Nurses
children, who died because their parents moved from one trustin g child to another,
told them to, Beard said.
squirting cyanide down their throats with
syringes while their parents looked on.
Near the altar the Rev . Jim Jones, 46,
GALUPOLIS - THE 1978 Gallia Horse units and antique cars will join the
County Area Christmas Parade will be parade at the corner of Fourth Ave. and
sat on a throne·like cha ir on a platform,
held in the Old French City on Saturday, Spruce St. at 11 a.m. At 11 :10, children's
presiding calmly over this great ex·
units will join the parade at the corner or
trava ganza of death.
Dec. 2.
Within moments 'convulsions began to
James Mullins and Jan Thaler, co- Second Ave. and Spruce St.
MIDDLEPORT - Sixteen - year - old wrack the tiny bodies or the children, white
From there, the parade will move on
chairpersons of this year's event,
reminded area.residents this year's theme downtown- between 11 :15 and 11 :30 a.m. Steven Fife, Middleport, seriously foam frothing from their lips.
Units will circle the Public Square and wounded in a hunting accident Friday
The children began to cry, small voices
is: "A Simply Beautiful Christmas."
wind
up on the park front along the 300 morning, was in stable condition at ·wailing in a wilderness of murderous
· Units will begin forming at 9 a.m. at
Veterans Memorial Hospital Saturday suicidal mania. They trembled, fear in
the corner of Sycamore St. and Fourth block of First Ave.
Three individuals will judge units as morning, Meigs Sheriff James J. Proffitt their eyes. For one brief moment , panic
Ave . Floats will enter lhe parade from Mill
reports.
.
swept the disciples of the Peoples Temple.
they pass the judges stand.
Creek Rd.
According to the sheriff's report, F1fe
Members .of the parade committee
Jim Jones sensed it. He leaped to his
The parade will start at the Gallipolis
was
rabbit
hunting
with
his
father,
Roscoe
feet,
exhorting, shouting. "We must die
besides
Mullins
and
Mrs.
Thaler
are
Golf Course, and come down Fourth Ave.
Thelma Elliott, Ferrell Houck, Sally Fife, and Don Roush, just off County Road with dignity."
As if by godlike command, ail doubt
Icard, James Mirrison, A. A. (Red) Suiter 10 near Dexter.
According to the report, Steve had just
and Dave Tawney.
Five hands are scheduled to march in crossed a fence and had started down a
this year's parade. After the parade, all small embankment when he stumbled on
hands (approximately 300 youngsters) will some brush. His 20 .gauge shotgun
combine their efforts wider the direction discharged. The blast struck Fife in the
of Mr. Suiter to present two numbers (be- upper left thigh and gro in area .
GALUPOUS - Gallia County of- tween the bandstand and Second Ave .).
A SEOEMS ambulance transported
ficials have warned, for the second time in
him
to Veterans Memorial Hospital where
Twelve trophies will be awarded to
the past six months, that if the abuse and units in the following categories: Antique he underwent surgery. A supply of blood
misqse of the li6 Green Boxes, located cars, oldest, and most interesting. Bands was relayed to him from the Huntington .
throughout the county, continues, the · will xeceive participation trophies.
Red Cross Blood Center .
program will be 'discontinued.
Float awards include: Best religiollil,
Officials said Friday that the practice best theme, best walking unit, most Yearbooks arrive
of throwing garbage on the ground next to original and best 4-H entry.
the boxes has had the effect of delaying the
POMEROY - 1977-78 Meigs High
Dr. Charles E. Holzer, Jr ., will serve
pickup schedule, and raising the cost of the as parade marshal. Santa's Helpers will be School yearbooks have arrived at the
program.
.
under the direction of Connie Bradbury, school and are ready for distribution, John
Littering is a misdemeanor offense Kyger Creek and Irene Barcus, Gallia Biaettnar, faculty advisor, said Saturday.
punishable by fine.
The books will be distributed from II
Academy.
A spokesman for the County Com211 . Students are
Thaler Ford will provide vehicles for a.m . to 1
missioners said Friday that the Sheriff's queen entries.
to present their receipts of payment in
Department has been advised to be on the
The event will be concluded with a tree order to get their books. There are also
look-&lt;&gt;ut for those misusing the boxes, and lighting program in the Publlc Square.
some extra copies on hand and these may
assured county residents that when
be purchased for $10.
'caught, violators wlll be prosecuted.

Sending tankers to assist the

operation, an a pple press and oth er

equi pment.
The blaze was completely out of hand
when the Pomeroy department arrived.
Another similar barn started to catch fire_
when the firem en arrived . However. that

Pom~roy

dcpartmcnl were the Albany and Rutland
fi re depart ment s. moneti:l.ry loss was
no t set but tl1 crc is insurance, Chief Legar

reported.
'Ibc dcpartmenl answered a call to the

building was saved. The home , abo ut 25

lower parking lot at 11 :32 p.m. Friday . A

yards away from the str uctures, was
blistered as a result of the fire.
Glen Lawson. a son of the owner,
occupies the home. It was believed that

cigarct un a car seat had ca u!,l; ht. the seat

on fir e, causing ;tbout $25 in dama ge. Chief

Lcgar repo11ed. The ca r is owned by
Juanita Harrl:}, Route 1. Middleport.

defective wiring caused the fire .

Rev. Jones claimed he was God

Gallia parade
slated Dec. 2

Youth reported
stable Saturday

vanished and as the !a#'! rays of sun
filtered through the Guy nese jungles,
hundreds of followers of Jif.t Jones drank
poison 3nd died in satanic ritual. Most
were Californians . Most were black.
"The first adul t to die wa s a young

womari who went up with a baby in her
arms, had the poison !:;hot down her throat,
walked into a field and sat down and died ,"

said Odell Rhodes, the only known living
witness of the mass suicide.

·

That last hour is almost impossible to
visualize. Rhodes, 36, a recovered drug
addict with a long arrest record in Detroit,

provided a rambling account :
"They (the medical teams i took
equipment into a lent, used as a li brary
and school, large syringes m inus the

needles, plastic co ntainers with the
poison .''
The }X)ison was eyan ide and contained
tranquilizers and painkillers to ease the
agony of the deadly poison. It was washed

down with grape Kooi-Aid.
"They would draw an amount out in the
syringes and administer it by simply
squirting it in people's mouths .
"Then they would give them a small
drink of punch to wash it down.
"Many of the chiildren volunteered to
take the poison . I can't say why most
people were found fa ce down . They were
falling different ways ."
"Then the children started to cry ."
Rhodes said he escaped when he went
with a nurse to find a stheloscope .
"I went out the back door and crawled
under a building,"he said.
Most of the disciples went into the main
auditorium to die. At the back of the hall,
moWlted on a stage, was a placque in
black , It read: " Love one Another. "
Not since the Nazi death camps of World
War II has a scene so stunned the world .
Fields covered with the dead, many

lying in embrace , surrounded the Peoples
Temple, a ramshackle wooden structure in
the center of the commune ~ victims of
one of the mos t awesome mass suicides in
history .
Wilhin lhc ~pace of a few minute...;; at
dusk on Saturday, Nov . 18, the lexicon of

history's hor rors had to be expanded to
include : Jonestown.
James Wa rr en Jones was born in 1932 in
I.yrm , Ind ., the son of a poor 'famil y which
li ved mainly off a n a rm~· pension the

father received for being gassed in World
War l.
A childhood friend, Thelma Manning of
Fort Myers, Fla., r~membered that Jones'
mother was a ·•strong, independent,
intense " person who worked at diffe_re nt

jobs to help support the family.
"Old Jim 1The fa U1er ) didn't do much ,"
Mrs . Manning said. "Just went uptown to
play cards with the boys."
Jones loved animals as a child and
Barbara Shaffer, a first cousin who still
lives in Lynn , reca lled, "sometimes he'd
have six or seven cats or dogs following
him around ."
" I also remember we always had

funerals for our pets,' ' Mrs. Shaffer said.
"Anoth er thing I remember is he was
always interested in being a minister :•
' 'He wa s alwa ys int~rested in tile
chu r ch, " Mrs. Vera Pr ice, an oth('r

childhood playmate from Lynn recalled .
"We used to play prelend church and he's
be the preacher, standing up and making
sermons. ··

Jones used to "baptize" the other
children in a creek that ran through the
town .
"He never drowned anybody I know of,"
Mrs. Price said .
"I had a hunch something bad was going
to happen to him ," said a for mer acquaint·

Cnntlnued on Page A-2

.County issues
another warning

p.m.'ai'fioom

Shoppers warned to lock their vehicles
SQUAD CALLED FRIDAY
POMEROY The Pomeroy
emergency squad was called to former
Route 33 at 6:45 p.m. Fdday for Harry
Clark who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

POMEROY- Meigs Sheriff James J .
Proffitt Saturday reminded area residents
Christmas Ahopping - whether locally or
' out of the connty - to lock the packages in
the trunks of their cars to prevent possible

theft.

.

If shoppers are

unable to lock
packages in the trunk,; they at least should
put them out. of sight inside the car and
lock all doors, the sheriff concluded .

VANDALS ST1LL SOUGHT - Gallia County sheriff's
deputies are stili seekjjig clues in the recent vandalism of
seven monuments in lht Cdmpaign CemtPry in Addison

Twp. During the tiast two weeks, vandlils have broken
monuments, knocked down an old s.torage building and
destroyed flowers a nd vases on vartous graves.

"

..

'\

~.

j

.!

.(

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