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                  <text>12- The

•

Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Thursday, .Htn. 11 , 1979

ELBERFELD$

POMEROY

Nation's unemployment rate rose last month

(

JANUARY

By MICHAEL DOAN
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) The nation's unemployment
rate edged up from 5.8 percent to 5.9 percent last month
as the number of persons
holding jobs increased by a
relatively small 104,000, the
Labor ·Department said
today.
However, the department
said both black and white
workers and adult men and
women scored strong ga ins
for all of !978, the thitd year
of sharp expansion in jobs.
December's employment
growth was much slower than
that of previous months and

•

MANY MORE CLEARANCE PRICES. ALL SALES FINAL. NO EXCHANGES OR REFUNDS • .

OPEN FRIDAY TIL 1:00·
JANUARY CLEARANCE

GIRLS
SPORTSWEAR

3 pi ece veste d suits in light and dark solid
co lors and patterns. Sizes "38. to 46.

SIZES 3 TO 6X,
FROM

EUREKA '99.95

JANUARY CLEARANCE

UPRIGHT SWEEPER

GIRLS
Swea ter s, blou ses, kn it tops . Toddler sizes.

Ch rom e plat ed stee l bea ter ba r s v ibr ate dirt loose.
Sturdy br ushes wis k dirt out to be power ed away . Six
dif f erent. sweeping heights, light, edge kle ener .

4 t o 6x, 7- 14.

'79

REG. 14.50 ....... ·•. -.......... .... .... SALE '3.15

REG. '6.00. ..·.... . . •...... ..•..... ... .. SALE s4.20
REG. 19.00 .............. .. .. .... .. .... SALE '6.30
REG. 111.00 .... ........... .. .. ...... .. SALE '7.70
REG. 114.00 ........... ... ;............ SALE '9.80
REG. 117.00.. :... ........ .. ........... SALE 111.90
MEN'S

'

l ~ n gth

Speci al sale prices .

$1 2.95 Fashion Denim Jeilns •• .'$7.99

Sm all lot tor quick clearance . S,M. Land X L
si zes . Whil e they last .

an~

JANUARY CLEARANCE

Specia l cl ea ran ce pri ces on our entire stock
of fa ll and wi nter dresses for little girl s.
Si zes 12 'to 24 months, 2 to 4. H o 6x, 7 to 14.

SS4.9S Jackets and Coats

'35.70
$79 .95 Jackets and Coats

FROM

'52.00

Shirt waist s, pant suits, dressy dresses.
Junior . missy and half si zes.
'
Reg . $11 .00 to $58.00

..

REG. 111.00 ..... .. ..... ................ SALE '7.69
REG. 114.00 ....... ..................... SALE 19.7$

~

JANUARY CLEARANCE

CHILDREN'S
SLEEPWEAR·

CHILDREN'S COATS

Warm w inter sleepwea r for
littl e boys and gi rl s.
Month s sizes thru 14.

SNORKLE, CAR COATS,
SNOWMOBILE SUITS

FROM ONLY

BOYS' LONG SLEEVE

MEN'S SPORT SHIRTS

FLANN~

AND
KNIT SHIRTS

Our entire stock of packaged and hanging m en' s
sport shirts in sizes small thru extra large.
fl annels, polyester knits, cotton pol yester bl ends.
weste"rn styles.
•

Clea rance prices on our
en tire stock of wom en's
wi nte r coats.

Clearance
Sale
Prices

Man 's 59 .95 Sport Shirts . . . . ...... .. . .. ....... $6.40
Men's $10 .95 Sport Shirts .... .......... .-..... .. $7.10
Men's $12 .95 Sport Shirt s .. . .. .... .. ....... . .. . $8.40
Men's $14 .95 Sport Shirts ............ ....... ... 9.70

Sizes 8 to 20: Good seleCt ion
of styles a nd patte rns .

Boys $5.95 Shi rts ... .. $3.99
Boys $7.95 Shirts..... $4.99
Boys 58.95 Shirts ..... 55.99
Boys $10 .95 Shirts •• •• S6 .99

JANUARY WHITE SALE

JANUARY CLEARANCE

WOMEN'S SWEATERS
Si zes S,M, Land ext ra sizes 40 thru 52 . Pull over s and cardigans.

SAVE 20%

fROM $599

$2.95 Caps .•• ••• • • •• .•... •••.• •. : •••• • Sale $1.99

JANUARY CLEARANCE

MEN'S

SAVE 20% ON
CANNON SHEETS

TURTLE NECK SHIRTS

Our entire stock of Cannons, solid color and
pattern sheet s in thi s Januar y white sal e.
FulL twin . king and queen sizes.

LITTLE BOYS'
Sizes 2 - 7

SAVE 20%

SHIRTS, TOPS, SWEATERS
REG. 13.75 ..... ........................ .. SALE '2.60
·REG. '4;00. ....... ........... ...... ..... . SALE 12.80
REG. 14.50... .. .. . . .. .. ... ....... .... .. .. SALE '3.15
REG. '6.00 ........ -- .... ............. .... SALE 14.20
REG. 17.00 .. ........ .. ................ ... SALE 14.90
REG. 18.00 .. .. •.. •. . .... ... . .. ...... . .... SALE 15.60
JANUARY CLEARANCE

LITTLE BOYS'
SUITS

JANUARY CLEARANCE

JANUARY CLEARAI'j_CE

Boys' Slipover Sweaters

LimE BOYS'' JEANS

V-8 neck and cr ew neck s!y les. ·Sizes 8
to 20. Whil e th ey last .

Asso rted
color s.
Not all sizes.

REG. 5.00 ••... .. .. .. . . ... ..•... ••••.. SALE 3.49
REG. '6.00 .. ......... ......... .... ...... SALE 14.19
REG. 17.00 ............... ......... -..... SALE '4.89
1

1

Special

Broke n si zes , sup er
buys. Wh ile they last :

Good selection of dress and casual styles in
sizes S, M , L. and XL. Regular prices$7 .95to
$1 7.95. Her e's how you save.
.

January Clearance Sale
Prices now on our Van Heusen'
Oren Shirts for men.
Neck sizes 14% to 17%

BOYS' '8.95 SWEATER~........... ... ...... 15.00
BOYS' 110.95 SWEATERS ....... .. .. .. ........ '6.00

Boys' Winter Jackets
Denim , nylons, wool plaids. Sizes 8 to 20. All
warmly lined, good ~el e ction .

Boys' '12.95 Winter Jackets ........ ... ......'11.50.
__ Boys' 119.95 Winter Jackets ........... .,..... '12.90
Boys' 122.95. Winter Jackets ............ :••.• '14.90

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

8.95 KNIT SHIRTS..................... ...... '5.80
110.95 KNIT SHIRTS ................ .. ...... '7.10
112.95 KNIT SHIRTS .............. :......... 18.40
114.95 KNIT SHIRTS ........... .. ........... '9.70
1

WOMEN'S BLOUSES
30 thru 38 and 40 to 46 . Clearance prices on
our entire stock of women 's winter blouses .

1

f

REG. 14.00 ......... ...... .. -........... . SALE '2.59

REG. '6.00.····························· SALE s3.90
REG. sg.(J() •••• ••• •••••••••••••••• ••••• •• SALE '5.85
REG. '13.00 .......... ·•. ... . ... ........ SALE '8.45
REG. 117.00 ................ .. .......... SALE '11.05
REG. 123.00 .... ......... :... ........... SALE 114.95

'
\

•
'

~-

MEN'S
SWEATERS
"Sl ipov e r s l c ard igans ,
- ves ts,
good
ove rall
se le ction of st y le s and
-col or s In all sizes. Regular
prkes $9 .95 t o SJ4.95. .

SALE PRICES
$61X1 TO

'$21 60

OPEN SATURDAY 9:30 TO 5 PM

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

to 15.

If at first you don 't succeed, n

-

Sizes small , medium, large and extra large.
Solid co lors ;mel white.
$7 .95 Turtle Nec'k Shirts ... .............. $4.77
$9.95 Turtle Neck Shirts... ........... . . . . $5.97
$10.95 Turtle Neck Shirts... ............. $6.50
$13.00 Turtle Neck Shirts ..... . ...... . .. . $7 .80
$14.95 Turtle Nee)&lt; Shirts . . .... .. ....... . $8.90

Council must
meet Saturday

KNIT SHIRTS

Excell ent se lect ions in all sizes of t able
co ver s. Cloth a nd vin y l st yles, solid col ors,
white, patterns.

CLEARANCE SALE

Lined caps and hats for co ld weat her wear .
Ent ire stock ·in clu ded .

$3.95 Caps ilnd Hats....... ... . ...... Sale S2 .49
$5.95 Caps and Hats .. . .. .. .... ... ... Sale $3.99
$8.95 Hats ....... ...... .. .... . .. . ...... Sale $5 .99

MEN'S

TABLE COVERS

JANUARY CLEARANCE

MEN'S
WINTER CAPS AND HATS

"Jf2 .PRICE

REG. 17.00....... .. .... .. ... ............ SALE '4.89
REG. 19;00.............................. SALE '6.29

25% OFF

WOMEN'S
COAT SALE

A proposal offered by Richard (Dick) Roderick
Local 2359 of ·the In- took the union's proposal to
ternational Brotherhood of t h e Coo p e r a I i v e
Ele ctri ca l
Wor ke r s management.
(I.B.E.W. ) which would have
According to James , the
called for an immediate Cooperative considered the
return to work by the union, offer for appro ximately two
on the condition that arion- hours before rejecting it.
union crew being used by
!Wderick was quoted as
Buckeye Rural Electri c saying that the company
Cooperative to mainta in would not negotiate if it had
power lines be removed, was to dismiss the Pike crews.
Workers Reaction
rejected la st night .by the
Cooperative.
I.B.E.W. members man·
James Offers Help
ntng the picket line
State Rep. Ron James met established in front of t)le
with
union
members Coop erative offices in
yesterday and helped draft Gallipolis said this morning
the proposal desig ned t o · thatthey would not work with
renew negotiations and help · the crews from • North
restore
power.
Som e Carolina .
The striking electrical
customers have been without
power six days.
workers said thel:)Yould be
According to James, th e afraid to work on the same
l .B.E.W. proposal called for lines with-the non-union Pike
an immediate return to work, employees.
'
on a temporary basis, in an
The local union workers
effort to restore service to said this morning that had the
Bucl&lt;;eye members on the Cooper ative accepted the
following conditions:
proposal offered last night
- That contracted crews they could have full service
from the Floyd Pike Con- restored to all Buckeye Rural
struction Co., out of North customers within 24 hours.
Carolina, be removed. Tile
Calling the Cooperative
Pike employees were hired decision to reject the offer a
by the Cooper ative t o "serious error,-" Fep. James
maintain and repair lines sa id this morning that he felt
during the strike.
the proposal presented last
,... Thai the Cooperative night was fa ir to all parties
sign · an agreement com- involved.
James has been quoted
milling the company to nonstop negotiations with the as saying he thought that the
union until the ;"trike is set- use of non-union crews, which
tied.
. are unfamilia r with the
- That an out..f-state territory, has unnecessarily
.law fi rm , Jacobson-Wa rd , prolonged efforts to restore
which has bien bargaining power to custorners who have
for the Cooperative, not take :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:::::::::::::;:::::
part in the 24·hour a day EXTENDED FORECAST
negotiations proposed by the
·
·
Su n da y through
unton.
Ga lli polis · Att orn ey Tuesday : Clearing Sunday.
Fair Monday and mostly
cloudy Tuesday. Continued
cold with dayilme highs in
the Zlls and overnight lows 5

Red, brown , navy and beige. S,M, L, XL.

JANUARY CLEARANCE

LITTLE GIRLS' DRESSES

'26.00

517.95 Fashion Denim Jeans. •• $10.,9

'7"

Coats

16.00

ST6.95 Fas hion Denim JeanS••• 59.9.9

WOMEN'S TOPS

WOMEN'S
DRESS SALE
.

FLANNEL PAJAMAS

st y les .

S39.9S Jackets and Coats

'

Wai st si zes 29 to 42. Most lengths are

JANUARY CU'AR.4NI:E

lf2 PRICE

inflation rate this year of 7.&gt; 1!166 to ~:14 ,!j57 in Ht76. The
ag~:·ncy also sa1d prop~rty
percent to 6 percent .
A govctnmcnt repo1t on taxes m·en1ged $45 .33 per
wholesa le prices 'lltursday $1,000 of person~:~! mco me in
gave littl e encouragement to 1976, down from $46.36 inl956.

Admini stration official s
are not predicting a recession

but they expect the economy
to grow by about 2.5 percent consumer s hoping the inthis vear. That should in-, nation situation will improvt .
crea se unc mp l·oymcnt
Wholesale prices rose 0.8
slightly . poss ibl y to 6.5 percent in Decembe r. the
percent. they say .
s~tme as in Novembe r ~:.~ntl
Walter Hoadl ey, chief about average for the ~· car .
economi;t for the · Bank of Prices of gasoline went up 4
Amer ica, predi cted Wed- pNccnt, prescription drug.s 1
nesday that the economy will pe rcent and food 0.9 pcrccut.
grow by about 1.9 percent and
In ~ther economic news
the unemployment rate Thursday :
- The Cens.us Bureau said
should rise t~~o nearly i percent bv the end of the year. the Hveragc resa le pr ice of a
Hoa (l!c~' ~ 1 &lt;:1\ ln rp • ·~,..,. ;.1 p house rose from $15,8i8 in

•

try, try again. This adage is
apparently being follo wed by
Middleport Village Council
which so far this year has
been unable to pull off an
organizational session.
The first meeting of the
yea r was to have been
held Mond ay. Two co unciitnen, Allen Lee King and
Wllllam Walters, along With
Mayor Fred Hoffman were on
ha ~d.
·
With no luck pn Monda y,
another
meeting
was
scheduled for Thursday night
and things were better. On
hand last night were Mayor
Hoffman, Clerk-Treasurer
Gene Grate and three
councilmen, Dewey Horton ,
Carl Horky and King. It was
report ed that Co un cilm en
Marvin Kelly and William
Walters are ill. It was not
determined if the · sixth
counciitnan, Charles Mullen
had received' his notice of the
Thursday night meeting.
So .:. another meeting was
set and perhaps, the third
time will be a chann, for 8
p.m. Saturday night.

PROJECT APPROVED
More thOR $185 million in
propose.d constru cti on
proJects was approved by the
Division of Factory a nd
Building Inspection of the
Department of Industrial
Relations during the month of
December . Among the
projects approved was a
storeroom addition to the
Grocery Market on Route 7 In
Tuppers Plains ' to cost an
estitnated $8,000.
)

COVIC

been without electricity for
da ys, some since Sunday
aft ernoon.
Future Uncertain
James, who has offered
to serve as an infonnal
mediator durin g the strike,
said this morning thathe was
unsure what sfeps would be
taken next to end the 42-day
old strike, but implied that
state intervention might be
necessary.
The Associated Pr ess
reported today that many
rural residents still refuse to
leave their homes for shelter
despite widespread power
outages in southeastern Ohio.
Between 1,500 and 2,000
dwellings were still without
power aft er a Sunday ice
;to nn knocked out power to
about
&gt;.000
elect ri c

ce_rtified

PAUL S. SMART

R et•lr'nd
ban k er ·.
clal•mnd
.::/ •

The Meigs County Budget
Commission has certified a
$69, 116.17 bu!lget for th e
county department of health
for 1979.
The bu dget, as approved by
the commission will now be
sent to the board of health
which will sc rut inize the
expenditures:
In cl uded in the total
-budget, is $31 ,669,50 in federal
.. moneyreceivcdforprograms
of the health department;
$56,090.47 local monies and
$:1,468.70 in rc'Ceipts from food
service operations of the
department.

.::;.

resi dent

Ray Crabtree, executive
director of KYOVA lnter.state
Planning Commission will
add ress tire reg ularly
scheduled meeting of the
Central Ohio Valley In·
du st ria l Council (CO VI C)
Thursday, Jan. 18,. at the
Holiday Inn, South Point. Mr.
Crabtree's subject will be
"The Pos itive Thinking of
Power.''

COVIC is an organization of
representatives of chambers
of comm erce, boards of
trade, civic interests, firms
and oth er ·ind iv iduals in
communities along the Ohio
River from Parkersburg, W.
Va., to Portsmouth, Ohio,
who are interested In the
. industrial development of the
region.
Crabtree is a native of
Kenova, W. V~ .• a graduate .
of Ceredo-Ke nova High
School
and -Marsha ll
Unive rsity . He has been
a~ive in regional develop·
ment programs since !966
and has served as executive
director of the KYOVA Interstate Planning Commission since 1968 . KYOV A ·
provides technical assistance
in the areas of transportation
and water quality to' local
governments in Kentucky,
Ohio and West Virginia.

1\

customers.
A spokesman
for
Buckeye Rural Elect ric,
hardest hit of the utilities in
the region, said lin emen
made good progress- Wednesday night and Thursday.
However, Phil Skidmore
refused to spec ulate on when
power would be full y
restored.
Refuse Shelter
Officiais sai d many
person s, especially older
resi dents, re fu se to see k
shelter.
"Some of these old people
wo uld tear up the floors and
burn them rather. than
leave," sa id Robert Walton,
director of the Scioto Community Action Organization .
Walton sa id wood, fuel oil
and coal have been delivered
·

$89' 116
budget

Paul S. Smart, 76, Lincoln
St., Middleport, prominent

speaker
named

Thr government was
urged I.Jy t~n organi7.Htion of
s~t\'in gs and lott n associations
to stop taxmg t h~ intcre::.t
paid people sav in~ mone~ for
m•w hou:;;cs
' '11JC International Unio n of
Building

. Soc ieties

and

S&lt;.~v in gs 1\ ssol·i&lt;.~ tlOns

sa id

that exempting long-t e rm
saving s from taxation would
hPlp hold down innation by
di\'crti ng 1110ne) in to Investments.

1975 and h P rrf'rliMf&gt;fl in-

•

e
at
enttne
Union offer rejected

. 34 and 36 inc hes . Easy to shorten .

NICE GROUP OF COTY AND
REVLON PRODUCTS

JANUARY CLEARANCE

MEN'S VAN HEUSEN
'14.00 AND •14.50

WINTER JACKETS
le ngth and drJ:SS coat

95

Including free $1 9.9S" Tool Se,t .

Sizes 36 to 50. Good selection of wa ist

1

COSMETIC CLEARANCE

VIBRA GROOMER II

-··

nation will be partia lly under
'"ntrol by late 1980.

PoUH' I'Oy-M itltll t• )101'1. Oil io
Friday, J anua ry f2, 1!178

S14. 95 Fashion Denim Jeans ... 58.99
$15.95 Fashion Denim Jeans ••• 59.49

'249

S24 .9S Jackets

Sizes 38 to 46. So lids and pattern s. Good
selection .
,,

uncmplo~ed

and the slower economic growth.
Two, Arthur Okun and Alan
billion dollars to create more Greenspan, agreed Thursday
that the chances of a
jobs.
Since then, th e unem- rcces!&gt;ion are strong.
Greenspan, chief economic
ployment rate has dropped to
nca rly · 6 percent and the adviser to former President
government has described Gerald Ford, said the
innation as the nation1s No. I predicted recession would be
problem. The administration modest unless home prices
plans to reduce some job decline.
Okun, chief eco nomic
programs in an attempt to
adviser to former President
ba lance the budget.
In fighting innation, the Lyndon Johnson, said, "the
government has also been odds are 2 to I we will sec a
trying to make money more recession sometime this
5carcc by driving up interest yea r." However. he predicted
rates, and· most economists that the recession will not be ·
believe this will lead to as bad as the one in 1974 and
was

administration spent severa l

•

MEN'S
BLUE· DENIM
FASHION JEANS

SPORT COATS
SPECIAL SALE PRICES

SPECIAL SALE PRICES

7 TO 14

population.
In its year·cnd review, the
l.abor Department said th e
number of persons with jobS
increased by 3.3 million in
1978, with 2.1 million of the
new jobs going to women.
Tite department said th'e
only group with a worse job
situation for 1976 were teenagers. Abo ut one out of every
four unemployed person was
between ages 16 and 19.
The unemployment rates
for most categories showed
little change last month.
Wh en ~ r eside nt Carter
took office in January 1977,
7.8 percent of the work force

JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE

MEN'S

MEN'S SUITS

was down sharply from
Novell'ber, when 51,000 new
jobs were created.
' Some private economists
say the
Carter
administ ration' s success in
bringing down the unemployment rate is clouded by
the prospect of a business
downturn.
Because of the emphasis on
fi ghting inflat ion, th ese
economists expect the jobless
rate to rise later this year.
They say new jobs must be
created steadily 1o keep the
· unemployment rate · from
rising because of the increase
in
th e
workin g-nge

and

cfo rmer

Brca kdO\\'n
on
the
$56, 09 0.4 7 in local monies

tncludes - sa laries ; health
commissioner, $3,400; senior
public health nurse, $11 ,300;
senior clerk, $7, 498.16; senior
san itarian, $7 ,030 plus
$1,181.20 from food service
funds ; nursi ng cle rk,
$&gt;,359 .92; deputy cle rk ,
$5,359 .92, and techn ician,
$610; 'supplies. $2,400; travel
and expenses, $3,400; advertising and printing, $125;
p u bli c .e mp l o yme nt
retirement , $5,657.84 ; work·

to about 30 fa milies. Only six
fa mil ies were evac uated
fro m the area. He sa id these
people were taken to homes
of friends and relatives.
Few people stayed in
shelt ers
organized· 1n
Lawre nce Count y. Sheriff
'James H. Howell said people
are heating their homes with
coal or oil stoves and some
are building fires outside to
keep wann.
Th e powe r outage is
es peci all y hard on dair y
fa nners who need electricity
to operate milking machines
or re frigerate milk. Cat!Iemen with electric feeding
systems also have been hurt.
Four-Wheel Drive Needed
Howell sa id four-wheeldrive vehicles are needed to
transport coal intu remote
hi ll cou nt ry. He sa id
emergency vehicles of the
Law rence Co unty Civ il
Defense are inoperable. "I
don't know of anything that's
working," he said.
He also said portable
generator s are needed to
power oxygen equipment in
the ho}Tlcs of some elderly
residents of the co unty.
Rep a irs to Buck eye
Rura l lin es• ha ve been
hampered by cold weather,
rough terrain and a strike by
com pany lin emen. Crews
from Kentucky are making
repairs, and the company is
using a helicopter to spot
downed lines in remote areas.
In so me in aocess ible
spots, repair crews ha ve had
to hand-dig hol es for
replacement poles.
"BurnOuts"CouldOccur
Additional power "burn •
h
h
outs" co uld occur w en I e
ice melts, releasing tension
on the lines and causing them
to spring and touch one
another.

hlk•·n ( ·,·nl-..

\'ol. ~! I , .\co. I H~

F'A!H BOARD HONORED - John M. Stack.house, Ohio Dir eclor of

,\gncllltlln'.

pr..esents a ·'certificate of achievement'' to the Meigs County t\ gricultur&lt;ll &amp;•c1et ~ . Fn111l t11 e
left are Stackhouse , Wa llace B radf or~ . president of the Meigs Filii' Hoctrd . Hnd H:-dpl1
Welker, Pomeroy , leg islative lietison person.

Meigs fair directors
awarded certificate
COLUMBUS - Dir ector of
Agriculture John M. Stackhouse presented the Meigs
County Agricultural Society
with a " Certificate of
Achi evement" at the Ohio
Pair Managers' Convention
in Co lum bus during t h ~
Di rec tor of Agri cult ure
Breakfast and Meeting Jan .
4. Accepting the award for
th e
Mein0 s
County
AgriJ; ultu ral Society was
Wall ace Bradford, President,
a nd
Ra lph
Wel ker,
Legislative Liaison Person.
The annual Director of
Agnc ult ure Breakfast was ;;~ n

o

vention which involved over
1.&gt;00 people from throughout
Ohio and parts of East crt) a11&lt;l
Midwestern United States.
Stackhouse add ressed th e
convention delegate s an d
commended them -for their
progressive and ·outstanding
leadership in pr ese nti ng
Ohio's 9&gt; in dependent and
coun ty 'Jg ricu ltural f&lt;ti rs
during 1978.
Stackhouse stated. "We arc
extremely fo rt una!" to ha "'
in c.xcess of 1,800 ca pable fa ir
board dtrectors throughout
Ohio1 . Th ese com
· munity
lea( crs, along wtth many

integral part of the Con-

Committee receives report
on service program needs

•

other local h•;!dl'r'l. lmsi nes:-:;mcn und govc rnmen t offidab

l!IJ&lt;~ble m to have
f&lt;.~ir program iu

grea test

the

the

Nat ion. Of the multitude of
&lt;Ht h·Itics at tllC f.:urs. those in
whiCh )'oung people compete
or ex hi bit c.~re the ones to
whi ch Ohioans ct:~n pomt with
j u ~t ifiaUl c pride . Ohio's fairs

are kno\1'11 througho ut the
t'Ountry for having excellent
.Junior

F'air

Pt!rhaps, the
r es ul~

Progra ms.
s uc.:cc.s~

is the

of the fact that Ohio

was !he fir ~t :--."tate to esta blish
co rnp ctiti\'C cln sscs excl usive ly fo r youth. 1919
mark s the fiftiNh anni ver sary of th e first
st:Jt ewidt&gt;
.J uni or Fair

competition and this Golden
1\nnivcr s :.~ry

will

be

celcbnttcd aL the 1979 Ohio
St:tte Fair. The succl'•s of the

l'ounty cJ nd Independe nt
president of th e Citizens
:.~grku lt urc.tl fairs h&lt;:~ :, l!nab\cd
National Bank , died unexthe
Ohio !:itatc F'mr to enjoy
pectedly Thursday afternoon.
the
la r ges t junior fair
Mr. Smart was placing
1
program
in th e Nation with
'stamps on mail in the MidA &gt;3-page report ad- the Comm un ity Research development of a rcsidcntia I
over
30,000
young people
dleport Post Offic e when he
dressing the non-secure and F'orum .
.and
non-res
idential
alt
erp:nti
cipatipg
in h1~t year's
collapsed. He was dead upon
secure program needs of
111e-rccommendations are
the arrival of the Middleport m an 's co mp e n sa't i on , youth iii Gallia, Lawrence, to be viewed from the "stand- natives, wi.ll r eq uire a State Fil!r. '' ~
i\lso nttcnding !he conemergency unit which was $1,049.63; other expenses, Meigs and Scioto Counties po int of total systems P.lan- significant commitment. in
both financial and policy venti on from Meigs County
$2,900.
called at 2:29 p.m.
A breakdown on the federal -was •delivered to juvenile ning," said McMillen. "Each terms. toward providing the was Mrs . Walla ce Bradford.
Borb Nov. 16, 1902 in
court 'Officials Wednesday option presented is but a level of sefvices envisioned in
:Scc r ctar~ of MC'igs Fair
Racine, he was a son of the prog ram expe ndit ure s morning in Galli polis.
single component of a nexible this report."
Hoard .
late Arthur J . and Nellie through Se pt em ber, ·J979,
The report, which is an and interactive network of
should be noted at the
Cross Smart. He was a lso foli o ws: hypert ens ion; outgrowth of a youth services alt ernat ives designed to out"It
set," explain,ed McMillen.
preceded in death by two sa laries , $7,608 ; su ppli es, planning meeting last Sep· provide a comprehensive "that procedur'al and Mil- ... ...... ...................... .....
$360.75; travel, $1.331.25 for a !emb er , is the res ult of
sisters.
system of services at every residential option s shou ld ,. .;.;-:-:·:··&gt;;.;.; •. &gt;.;.;.;., .. ·.;:-:·.··.·.·.·.·.·,·.·.·.·.·,·,·, ·.
total
of
$9,300;
Bureau
of
Mr. Smart had been a
tech nica l ass istance con- level for youths awaiting
DISTIIICfS CLOSEU
priority
conded ica ted work er at the Crippl ed Children program, cerning the development of court app earances or receive
Two
s(' hool distri c t!' in
. "'·mt he four counties,, . sideration in that the imMi ddleport First Baptist sa la ri es , $7,608; supplies, programmatic and facility dectswn
l\1f'igs
Coun
ty wt· rr cloS('d
plcmen,tation of such option•
Ch urch where he had been a $360.75 ; travel, $1,331.24 for a base d opt ions regardin g he explained.
Friday.
will substantially reduce the
member fo r 55 years. He had total of $9,300, and Well Child juvenile court practices for
"It must be emphasized, " need for res idcnfia l bed They wt•r,~ Eas tern Local
Program;
salaries,
$7,519.50;
served as clerk of the Midyouths
awaiting
court
aphe
added,
"that,
while
some
whith
has lwt•n C'losrd for
dleport Board of Education ·suppli es, $4,140 ; tra vel, pea rance in the four counties. options will be more prac- "spaces along with th(' capital
thl'
entirL'
\\L't' k a nd
con1-&gt;truetion and continuing
for a total of $13,069.50.
Preparation
of
the
report
for 32 years and was a $1,410;
ticable
and
usef
ul
than
Suulh
lTII
L4
H';ll
\\ ilkh held
operi:ltions costs ' as.soc:iatl'd
Members of the budget was done by Michael J.
member of the Middlep6rt others,
the
effectiveness
of
c·la:o.st•s
on
Wt•thu:sday
and
with
thi
s
development.
Pomeroy Rotary Club fur 40 com miss ion are Howard McMillen, a consultant with each will depend entirely on
Thur
sday
hut
closed
Recom
m
end
a
ti
ons
in
·
years. He was a past Fra nk. co unty auditor; the Commun ity Researc h t he adequate prb\'ision and
Friday as \'-CCithcr conpresident of the Ohio Ba ptist Geor ge Collins, treasurer, F'orum at the University of continuing availability of a eluded in the report are tli~
llitiun
~
thr ea t e ned to
Convention and served on the and Fred W. Crow Ill, Illinois. Arrangements for broad range of unified ser- following:
worsNL
Sdwols
opened in
1- A
rep re se nt at i ve
convention 's
boar d _ of prosec uting attorn ey.
the technical assistance were vices geared toward meeting cbmmitt ee
the
Meigs
Loca
l
District
on
be
trustees for several years.
made through the Office of the needs of all youths who designated andshould
Friday
morning
but
were
appropri~te
' Mr. Smart, friendly and
Criminal J ustice Services, a have come to the attention of staff identified to monitor the
dosed later in the day and
outgoing, was a member of
unit of the Ohio Department · the court ."
students
se-nt home as snow
implementation of the int ake
the Ken Amsbary Chapter of
A number of the recom- criteria
of )';conomic and Community
"onlinued
to fall . Meigs had
and the network nf
the lzaak Walton League of
Development in Columbus. mendations are di rected resident ial
started classes on Thurs·
and
nonAmerica. In later yea rs, he
Reco mm enda t io ns in - t owa rd defining certain residentia l alternatives in th ~
da y after being dosed the
has been fr equently involved
cluded in the report arc based procedural aspects of th e fou r co unties.
lirsl
thrtc days of the
.
in carrying out pro jects
upon survey data gathered tourt process and will require
week
.
2- The juvenile courts in
conducted for Meigs senior
over a six·weck period this a minimum of additional the fo ur counties should Hdopt
citizens.
paSt fall. During this period fun ding. if any. lo implement. a qmmtifit'd intake c r ittori ~l
Highly regarded in the
juven ile cou rt off icials said McMillen
.cuJw t·rrdm~
tlil'
r ckt•s t··
I 'LO,,!:tl \lW(Jl,\ Y
business corlununitt, Mr .
''11w\·:al't• mTSl':·ll ' " lh" ddcution ch:tisiOns .
tabulated all cases in which a
The
rommunit) Act ion
report
.
a:s
·a
lll
l!C.n:s
of
Smart served as cashier, vice
juvenile was charged with an
3- Thc juvenile courb Agency office in Chcsilt(e will
president, president of the
offense. These statistics were achieving the advancement so uld consider the continuing
Ohln Lotte ry " 'inncrs:
Citizens National Bank anti
fo r wa rded to techn ical oEjuvenile justice goals," he development of the program be closed Monday ut ol&gt;Blue, 060. While, 61. Guld,
president of the ~a nk's Board
ass
istance perso nnel in stated. " Other recom - of StiOCniscd release, or ser.vance of Martin Luther
8. Wlnathon , 1579A.
King Day.
(Continued on page 12)
Columbus for transJI!iltal to mend ation s, such as th e
(Conti nued on page 12)
'

'l

,

'i

;

�.. '

.
.
. 2- The D-dily Sentinel, Middlel"'rt·Pomeroy, 0 ., Frida~·, .lHn. 12. t97n

~--····***************************************~

.

~

*

!.. Editorial
opinions
-

~

COMMENTARY
.

*

t*********************************************~
'

Get serious,·FEC
WASHINGTON (NEA l · When pursuing hannless ect'lm·
tries, inmates at federal prisons and others with little power,
the l(overnment officials who enforce the law affectin!( the
fmHnci ng of campaigns for federal offi ce are snarlmg tigers.
But those officials - till! members and staff of the Federal
F:ktlion Commisswn (FEC ) - ~re redueed to harmless
pussycat• whenever they're pressed to investigate the president, members of Congress or other mfluenhal poht1c1ans.
As a result, .both the commission ami the law face growmg
criticism frdm those who ont-e viewt'!lthe statute as one of the
most significant governmental reforms of. the 1970s but now
are disenchanted with the double standard ofenforcement.
Tne· FEC is 'a model of prosecutor_ial zeal in ·dealing with
those who fail to meet the legal deadline for filing detailed
r"cjxnis listmg campaign receipts and expenses.
Among the recent targets in that category were two inmates
at the federal penitentiary in Manon , Ill . who declared
themselves candidates for president in 1976, an art that requires only completion of a simple FEC registration form.
But when the prisoners ignored the FEC's subsequent
demands for quarterly financial reports, the commissiOn
dispatched a series of letters and telegrams threatening court
action and other dire consequences.
II similar FEC campaign was mounted against I.ar Daly, the
Chicago man whose red, white and blue Uncle Sam costume
was the hallmark of his perennial but ineffectual campaign for
the presitlency.
•
While on his deathbed in a hospital, Daly was still receiving
-a nd ignoring - FEC demands that he account for every penny spent in his last campaign. To the dismay of the commisSIOn, he died without filling out the forms .
Fmally, there 's the case of John Adams, a 61-year-old Navy
veteran of World War ll who stumbled into the 1976 campaign
as a candidate for a House seat from New Hampshire.
Adams ' only response to FEC demands for full disclosure
was a telephone call to Washington announcing that he had
solicited no money, received none and spent none.
But the commission wasn't satisfied with that disclaimer ll
filed suit against Adams in federal court, then di spatched a
lawyer to Concord, N.H., to demand both-conviction and fine
for failure to complete the official forms .
Adams failed to appear at the court hearing and the_government won its case. Relentless federal officials then tracked
down Adams, finding him in a retired soldiers' home in
Massachusetts and forcing him to fill out the forms .
But the FEC displayed no such enthusiasm when a national
magazme alleged that a fund-raising aide to Sen. Lloyd Bentsen, D-Tex., requested a campaign contribution from a
representative of an unidentified "Mediterranean country."
The federal law specifically prohibits solicitation of political
donations from citizens of other countnes: But the commission
dldn 't even investigate the charge, claiming that the magazine
article didn 't provide enough information
Another magazine article identified a woman who allegedly
allowed a member of a "prominent family" to use her name to
disguise the source of contributions to both major-party
·presidential candidates in 1976.
· The federal law is equally explicit in prohibiting contributions made in the name of another person. But the FEC again
declined to make even a cursory check, acguing that too little
information was available. •
Another case involved a Washmgton-based news service's
report that then-Sen . Hugh Scott, R-Pa ., maintained a secret
fund that disbursed unreported campaign contnbutwns to col·
leagues in the Senate.
Again , the commission d ecide~ that the original account
didn 't provide enough information- and it certainly wasn't going to open an investigation that might actually produce
dama~in~ infonnation about a powerful politician.

Names •••

in the news

LEWISTON, Maine (AP) - If you think that what some
people spend to win a U.S. Senate seat is "scandalous, disgraceful and shockmg," you're not alone.
Those are the adjectives former Sen. Margaret Chase Smith,
once the grand dame of U.S. politics, applies to Ute price of
electioneering . "I can't believe it 's necessary," she says.
Mrs. Smith was the first woman ever elected to both House
and Senate terms. She spent 24 years in the Senate before ~r
defeat in 1972 by Democrat William D. Hathaway, and she 's
not pleased with the caliber of the people in that body these
days.
TUCSON, Ariz. (AP )- Gen. Alexander M. Haig, commander of-NATO forces in Europe, says there's no presidency in his
future.
"I have absolutely no political plans whatsoever," Haig said
on Thursday. He will leave his current post at the end of June .
It has been reported that Haig might follow in the footsteps
of Dwight D. Eisenhower and U!!e a successful military career
as a steppi"1 stone to Ute Republican nomination for the
presidency.
"My recent decision to retire from the Army was a decision I
gave to President Carter a year ago: I merely reaffirmed that
with my recent announcement," he said.
'
ONEONTA, N.Y. (AP) - The Carter administration's re'
. sponse to SOviet foreign policy gets low marks from Sen. Dan·
iel Patrick Moynihan.
·
Moynihan, who served as U.S. ambassador to Ute United
Nallons, says the Soviet Union is on a "rampage" around the
world , but the U.S. appears to be avoiding its challenges.
The New York Democrat spoke here Thursday en route to
his farm.
TEL AVN, Israel (AP) - While she was prime minister of
Israel, Golda Meir kept secret the illness that eventually
claimed her life by making nighttime visits to a hospital, her
personal sec•etary says.
" I think she was a real heroine ," Lou Kedar. said of the
woman she served for 30 years. Mrs. Meir died Dec. 8 at the
age of 80 after a Iii-year battle against lymphoma, a cancerlike'
dise"iike .
"She was going a . night to get cobalt treatment many times
because people were not supposed to know, " Mrs. Kedar said
in an interview with radio station WGRC in Spring Valley , N.Y.
VATICAN CITY (AP) - Archbishop Marcel LefebVI'e, the
traditionalist French prelate who has often questioned papal
decisions 111 the past, now 16 answering Vatican questions.
Lefebvre met with Vatican officials Thursday in talks that
• he said could lead to a reconciliation with the papacy or a
complete break. He had met with Pope John Paul II in November.
The 72-year-old archbiShop, stripped of his priestly functions
In 1976 for opposing ref..-ms decreed by Pope Paul VI, was
questioned on points of doctrine, said the Rev. Romeo
Panciroli, Vatican spokesman.

'(

r;

Donald F. Graff

Farm
report

Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

r
)

By DON KENDALL
AP Farm Writer
WASHINGTON (AP)- It's
easy understand how a big
federal agency that built
much of its reputation on
research has helped farmers
develop better crops and
livestock for a hungry world.
But when the Agriculture
Depariment starts talking
about weeds as a potential
valuable resource .&lt;for
medical purposes,
as
livestock feed and even ·hu-'
man food, It may seem a bit
far-fetched.
At IBM, however, weeds
are part of the giant
corporation's computer
business, and the possibility
that some of the grubby
plants farmers try to kill may
be 11l8hiy beneficial is a
captivating idea.
According to a recent
article by IBM, scientists at
USDA's medicinal plant
resources laboratory In
Beltsvllle, Md., built a
.computer
6ank
of
Information about weeds that

Trouble in Turkey

to

~~:~v~~~to!:~i:~ plant Ufe,"

Information about weeds
and the ir envIronmen t
already is being used as a
basis for . recommending
crops foc some remote areas
of the world.
Dr. James Duke, head of
the laboratory, said the .
program was begun several
years ago "in cooperation
wtth the Stall! Department in
an attempt to find profitable
alternative
crops
for
countries that were big narcotics producers," the article
reported.
The laboratory has about
100,000
records
on
environmental factors such
as rainfall, soil alkalinity or
acidity, and length of growing
seasons that affect more than
300•000 P1ants throughout the
world.
"When the climate or some
other key environmental raetors of a region are entered
Into the computer, the data
bank can match up what has
been successfully grown
under the same conditions In
other parts of the world," the
article said.
Duke said that in some for·
eign· regions botanists found
that the only existing vegetation was weeds. F&lt;&gt;rtunately,
he said, weeds are an
excellent indica tor of a
region's climate and soil
conditions.
"Weeds themselves have
certain positive values for
man, which we're just
beginning to fully realize ,"

Duke said. "For instance, "

b

Sentem
er news notes
r

•
Sept. 1- Merri Ault passed
the test for her license to be a
managing cosmetologist.
Sept. 5 - Two tennis courts
were completed for use by th e
public at the park m
Syratuse.
Sept. 6 - Two excursion
type boats, the J . J. Julkast
Ill and the Bayer Island
owned by Capt. and Mrs.
Cltfford T. Deane stopped off
at the Pomeroy levee on thw
way to the boat regatta 111
Manetta.
Sept. 7 - Rev Dwight
Zavitz, pastor of the Mid·
dleport
and
Syracuse
Presbyterian
Churches,
announced his plan to retire
on Sept. 30 ·
Sept. 8 - Drew Webster
Post 39, American · Legion
shelved plans to construct a
new post nea r Rock Springs
Fairgrounds.

· Sept 10 - Mandie Rose would soon be in use.
received the Minnie Price
Sept. 18 - A delegation
Scholarship award for 1978-79 from the Rutland P.T.O.
sc hool yea r. Miss Rose appeared before the Meigs
became the first Meigs Loca l Schools Board of
countian to receive the Educafion to ask for ad·
award.
ditional improvements to the
Sept. 11 - The Middleport Rutland Elemeqtary School.
Village .Council voted to take
Sept. 19 - Robert Wingett
a bid on ·a backhoe, but named co-publisher of Ohio
treasurer Gene Grate warned Valley Publishing Company.
that the village was in no
Sept.. 20 - Streets in
position to make such a Pomeroy still In the process
·
purchase
of being paved.
Sept. 12 - Randy MarsMII
Sept 23 - Ann Thomas
was named new' sanitarian became the ftrst .. L\leigs
for the Me~gs County Depart· Countian to be named as a
ment of Health.
Avon Product district
Sept. 13 - Carol Tannehill manager.
was named·coordinator of.the
Sept. 25 - Simon's Gift
Child Health Services Well Center opened at a new
Child Clinics of the Meigs location 128 W. Main.
County Department of
Sept. 26
Ohio 's
.Democratic Treasurer, Mr,s.
Health.
Sept. 14 - The new bridge Gertrude loolil!hey, visited
on Route 33 near Burlingham Pomeroy '1f' part of her
campaign for re-election.
Sept. 27 - Meigs County
Local Bowling
received $79,000 to update
Frfday Night Ladies
Upholstenng 444
county plat rrraps.
Bowling league
Tea m high series - Bill' s
Sept. 28 - Celebration at
- Standings
Qua l•ly Body Shop 1349 ;
Dec. 8, 1978
Pomeroy National Bank to
H onaker C B. 13 14, Dan' s
Team
Pts, Upholslering 1281.
honor Edison Hobatetter for
Kenny's Angels
80
his 50 years at the bank.
Bill' s Quality Body Shop 71
Mrne No. 3
57
Wlonday Nite Late
Den's Uph ols tenng
50
Hon ak er C B
42
Parker's A . I. Ser v ice
36
Ind ivi dual game - Donna

Powe ll 184 , Dottle Wi ll 180;

Ettamay Norton 170,
Indiv idual senes - Dott1 e
W ilt 454 ; Peart Ru ssell 435 ;
Ellamay Nort on .4 19
Team game - Honaker C
B. 540 , Ken ny 's Angel s 493 ,

Bill' s Qua li ly Body Shop 455.

Team senes Honaker
C. B . 14 15; Kenny's Angels

January 8, 1979

Team
W. L.
Roach's Gun Shop · 104 32
Powell 'svk l.
86 50
Salem Sl. Mkt (ttedl 86 50
Frye's Pennz01l
Heiner 's Bakery

70

Meigs Co. Ad Taker
Tea m

high

66

38 98

24 112

serie s

Roach 's Gun Sh op 2264,
Sa lem St. Mkt. 225&lt;: Powell' s
Mkl . 2122.
Team high game - Salem
St . Mkl 809 . Roach's Gun

Friday
•
The word " horn" used
nearly 70 times in the Bible
is often used metaphorically
to signify strength and honor
since horns are the chie!
weapons and ornaments of
the ammals possessing
them; sometimes used as a
type of vtctory. For one to
" lift his horn" is to be
" arrogant" (Psa. 75: 4-5 ).
To "exalt one's horn" is to
strengthen and prosper him.
(I Sam."llil) Fugitives seeking asylum clung to the altar

some h~been suggested as
energy sotu'ces when the oil 1360: B•ll's Qua lil y Body Shop Sh op 775, 761 .
M en 's hi g h se ri es wells ""n dry . Just as 1276 . Dec. 15, 1978
Raymond
Roach 538 ; Roger
important, when we look at Team
Pis. Carpen ter 536; Dave M cC unn
all the weeds that grow in a Kenny's Ange ls
80 509
Men 's h1gh game - Roger
region, we can make Bi ll's Quality Body Shop 79
59 Carpenter 199 , Da ve M cCunn
predictions about the crops MIMe No 3
Dan's Uphols tering
58 192, 188.
that will grow best there." H
onaker C B
48
Women 's high ser ies The plant lab has worked Par ker 's A. I. Ser v ice..
36 Naomi Floyd 502 ; Drema
horns.
Indiv idual h1gh game
with the National Institute of
R oach 494 ; Bess Hendri cks
Etlamay
Norl
on
183
;
An
ne
d93
Health to obtain and record
Hatfield 170; Pearl Russell
" And Adonljah feared beWomen's h1gh game Information on some 30,000 151
N aom1 Fl o yd 187 ; Bess l . cause of Solomon .. . and
varities of plants, including
lndtvidu a l high series Hendricks 186; Na om i Floyd
caught hold of the horns of
weeds, for cancer research. Ellamay NQrt on 465 , Anne 180.
the altar." I Kings 1:50
Thus, according to Duke, if Ha tfi eld 426 ,· Dottie Nelson
394.
medical scientists discover
Team high game - B1 ll 's
that a certain kind of weed is Qualtl y Body Shop 471 and
I'
essential in a drug treatment -452_.H-'on-aker_c._B-468_
. D_
on's
of cancer, the data hank can
tell quickly where in the
worldthatkindofweed grows preferable to the animals.
best.
A report last year said that
Weed research has been ·of 12 weeds subjected to the
carried outfor many years by taste testing, eight came
USDA, state experiment sta- through with high ratings, inlions
and
private eluding six that were "apparresearchers. But much of this ently enjoyed" by the sheep.
work was aimed at easier
One objective was to see if
control of weeds so that crops some
common
weeds
planted In fields could grow scattered in newly planted
more easily and yield larger alfalfa might he less of a
harvests.
problem than many farmers
Some kindS.oi weects often suppose.
are the final survivors of
The r es e a r c he rs
vegetation during drought determined that "some of the
and have provided meager weeds found in bay fields are
forage for cattle and sheep just as good as alfalfa if they
long after regular. pasttu'es are harvested at early stages
have dried up.
of maturity."
SO it is no speeial news to
Further, the report said
ranchers and farmers that that nine of the 12 weeds
weeds sometimes are benefi- tested "contained more crude
cia!, at least as minimum protein than does oat hay,
food that ean mean survival and 10 weeds were more
of herds.
digestible than oat forage ."
But
some
modern
The weeds were tested also
researchers are looking at for content of so-called trace
weeds even more closely and minerals found in plants such
with more . sriectalty than as potassium, phosphorous,
even Duke's computerized iron and calcium.
data hank provides.
"All the weeds tested conAt the .University of Min- talned 'adequate minerals to
" / look forward to shifting my role from
nesota,
for
example; meet the requlrementa of
coming-here-to-solve-problems
to becomscientists have used a panel ruminants," the report said.
ing-a-part-of-the-problem!''
. of sheep to taste weeds to Ruminants include cattle and
determine · those most • sheep.
L - - - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - - -- - -.. . 1

Berr y s Wo rId

,,

{'

/

Marauder gals
beaten, 54-45

v.·

lly Greg Bailey
Ja yna Riggs tossed in 22
points as the visitmg lroriton
Tigre sses hand ed Mei gs'
girls their second loss of the
seasl:ln last night, ~4-15 . The
hosts were outscored 25-2 in
the th1rd period as the Ironton
ga ts ra&lt;Sed then· record to 7-1.
Metgs Jumped to a 2-0 lead
on foul shots by Terri WiiS&lt;ln,
and went on to take a U-0 lead.
But the VLSttors came roarmg
back to move ahead and held
the lead the reot of the way .
Me1gs was tratling 2.1-19 aft er
two qua rters
WiiS&lt;ln was held to just 12
points. far uelow her

Ami nuw Turkey.
/Is if the chaos in Iran were not enou~h of a threat to a region
in which so much of the world has a stake, religious strife has
prupt&lt;'d in the country tha.t had been the Mideasi 's most stable.
Ankara had to &lt;·all the h-oops oQt to quell sectarian rioting
that t&lt;M&gt;k more than a hundred lives in a broad region of
&lt;outhern Turkey With more than a third of the 43 million
Turks under martial law, the bloodshed may have been halted
hut the threat has not been removed .
And that, aceording to Prime Minister Bulen! Eeevit, is
nothing less than a challenge to national unity.
There are in the Turkish developments both similarities and
marked djfferenct'S to the ~pheaval in neighboring .Jran. The
1
c!ashes have mvulved Shiite Moslems, whose faith is also that
of the majority of lramans. But in Turkey, they have not been
directed agamst the government but at another sect, the Sun•
n1s.
_
And..l'thnic hustilities enter m.The trouble areas are heavily
~&gt;pulated by K~rds, a people split among Turkey, Iran and
lrHq. Kurdish separatists, who have carried on a guerrilla war
with the Iraqis off and on for decades, have taken advantage of
the disorder~push their own cause.
The most si nificanl difference, however, is that the Iranian
revolution is large part caused by and directed against the
government' efforts to modernize the country according to
the pattern the industrial. democratic West.
Turkey has already gone a considerable distance down that
road, starting a half century ago with the collapse of the Ot·
loman Empire. The founder of modern Turkey, ~emal
Ataturk , pushed through his modernization program with a
detenmnation which, m many respects, makes Iran 's Shah
look half-hearted in companson.
Among other il\llovations, Ataturk fostered the development
of political parties The failure of the Shah to do likewise has
been suggested in recent months as one cause of the
vehemence of the opposition to his policies. Iran in transi\jon
lacks channels for expressing political and social differences
other than rioting in the streets.
Not that Turkey has been any democratic paragon. It has
seen enough of coups and strong-arm governments in recent
decades to be fully familiar with the politics of power at its
must basic. But through it all , the multi-party system has surVIved and an essentially parliamentary fonn of government
has continued to functiOn.
With the special case of pre-civil war· Lebanon, a hybrid
society that was atypical of the region in many respects,
Turkey long has been a heartemng example of a functioning
1even 1f imperfectly I democracy 111 a Moslem society.
Now, it . too finds its stab1hty and unity threatened by
rehginus forces. The current Turkish experience - taken into
ennsideration with the instability that has characterized other
regimes throughout th e Moslem world, often very different 111
the deta ils but with religion so often a significant or dominant
factor - might suggest that tl)ere is somethmg incompatible
· between Islam a nd the modern, democratic state.
1f so, ft is bad news nut only for Turkey and the Mideast, but
the world .'

READY TO SHOOT - Meigs ' Dodie Chapman (13I
gets ready to try a field goal attempt against the Ironton
girls Thw-sday evening. Guarding her 1s Ironton 's SuSie
Fitzpatrick. Chapman scored eight points m the game

Illinois edges MSU,
Bucks trip Hawkeyes
By The Associated Press
lllinois edged Michigan
State 57-55 in a battle of
nationally ranked teams, but
the clash didn 't settle the
question of who is No. 1 111 the
nation or who is going to be
front;unner in the Big Ten
race .
The Illini's Eddie Johnson
sank a jumper with three seconds go Thursday night to
g1ve his team the viaory over
top;anked MSU.
In other games, Ohio State
kept pace With Illinois by
downing Iowa 72-&lt;;7, Purdue
upset 16th-ranked Michigan
77-67, Minnesota routed
Indiana 8tki3 and Wtsconsm
dropped Northwestern 95-82.
Johnson led the lllini with
16 points while Greg Keiser
had 23 for the Spartans in a
game of sharp contrasts.
MSU dominated the shaky
Illini at the beg inn ing,
doubltng the score 22-11. A
little later Illinois burst open
and outscored the Spartans
19-2 on the way to a 32-28
halftime lead.
MSU outshot th e Illini 51

to

HEALTH
Lawrence E. lamb, M.D.

i~ ~~~ pt·rior

DEAR DR..LAMB - I read
your colllrnn about skim milk
being high in calcium. The
nutritionist who was talking
to that woman in your column
was trying to tell her that
calc1wn from milk cannot be
properly absorbed without
the cream. I wish they would
outlaw skim milk.and 2 percent fat milk It does no good
for the adult either. You ca nnot fool Mother Nature She
put the fat in the milk for a
purpose.
DEAR READER .. I am
afraid you are expressin~ an
opinion, not a fa ct. Your opinion isn't supported by the
facts. You're absolutely
wrong about the idea that you
have to have fat to absorb
calc1wn.
C-alcium absorption is affeded by the blood ca lciwn
level. If you have a lot of
blood ca lcium you may not
absorb much fr om th e
digestive tract. But, if your
burly needs ealciwn, the basic
meehanisms in the wall of the
small intestine change and
you'll absorb a greater proportion of the calcium that is
in vour food .
-.
The only advantage of
whole milk over fat milk is
that it mcreases your' calorie
intake, if that is what you
want to do. Also, it increases
vour total fat intake. Worse.
about half of butter fat is
saturated fat. Individuals
who need to limit their fat intake. and particularly their
saturated fat intake, often do
a great deal better on fortified skim milk.
As I · pomted out in my
1-::::~-::-:::::::::::::~-;,
TIIF. OAILYSENTINI':I.

n~iir~~~-~o~r.

MF.tr.S-MASON ARF.A
IUIHF.RT HOF.FT.IC1 1

r uv F".dltur

Pnhli~h..~l tllt ilv l'xt:..J» &amp;lt urtlay
Oluu V~tt t u,\' Publislun~
rmnrlf-l n y- Mu l tlmt·~hu . lnt·.
Ill

h~ Ttw

r.111111 s t .. P11nwroy. Ohtn 457fi9
RtL~t m•s..s Offin· Ph~•nto m. 2J5fi.

F:dthirl.tl Phom•!m'l-2157

sc·t·nlul du!'!' 1 ~,.~ ta~o~l' puul t~t

P~&gt;mPrny . Ohio

N111inr1nl (!•h·t•rt!slnt! rt•pn•ston·
litI I'•~·. I ~lll\klll AS!UICIItlCH, :HOI
Rnd tll ,\w .. r Jt•vt•hmll. Oh111 44115.
.~uh M'I"il'tilln •~h·s· Tlt liwn•d tw
•·m·ril'l'
\\ 1«'1"1' avnl1ablt• ~ ~., 11 ts 1,.;..
1\l't'k Rv M11!111' Rnuh· lfht'l'l' ~·~rrll'r

.,.,\ ;~ •· ,,,,r

·" ·nlluhlt•. Otw nwntlt.

$.1 :'f• r n) mall in Olti ~ 1 ltml W. V1t..
o 11,. I Yt·m-. tn.os Six mm•lh".

$1-Uift

Tllrt• t• m 11111 hs. ffi .SO:
F:lst•"lwn
$:I:!Ofl \t•m : Sill murtlhs
~17 !10
Thr· , · ~ ·
tn1111lh s. fi!l M
:\u h.~ c·r1 ptrmt I~~"' ' ''' hwhul~·.~ Snrulm
' 1 ''' 1 "'!&lt;-.~• ·Pt&gt;m·t.
•

1

earlier column , fortified ski
milk contains more prote111
and it's milk protein so it 's
good quality. To give you
some facts based on the U.S.
Department of Agriculture
data, I am sending you the
Health Letter number 7-2,
Milk Products : Good and
Bad.
others who want lh1s issue
can send 50 cents with a long,
stamp ed
self-addressed
envelope for it. Sen~ your letter to me in care of this
newspaper, P,.O. Box 1551,
Rad1o City Station, New
York, NY 10019.
Just to make your da~ com·
plete, you might like to know
that the American Heart
Association 's · most recent
position concerning children
and diet to prevent heart
disease recommends that all
'those children who are found
tu have hi gh fat and
cholesterol trouble should be
put on a correc!tve diet.
In their overall report they
also see no danger 10 modifymg the d~et for children to
hmit the cholesterol and
satura(ed fat intake. If you
translate those observations
to milk , you'll 'find that what
the committee is saying is
that the relative absence of
cholesterol and saturated fat
in fortified skim milk is not
harmful and for children with
a higher risk iactor for
developing heart disease, it is
reconunended.
The committe that drew up
the report for the ' American
Heart Assoc1atlon pointed out
that 80 per cent of U.S. infants
are fed on fonnulas that contain very httle cholesterol
and a high portion of polyunsaturaed fat as opposed to
saturated fat. The committee
oilscrved that there had been
no long tenn adverse effects
from using such a formula .
They also observed that
ch1' ldren who had low
cholesterol levels either
through diet or on the basis of
inherited characteristics appear to be perllifectly healthy
and have pe ectl,f, nohnal
development.
S 1 11 f rt'f' d k'
0 , ong Ve 0 I Je S 1m
milk - for its improved nutri11 ana1 qua litY, name
· 1Y 1n·
creased calciwn (which certainly is absorbed if needed
by the body) and its increasrd good quality proteir.
Wl' thout llV~rJoading
the
...
system·with fat, in particular
saturated fat and cho1esterol.

, 'i·

FLYING THROUGH THE AIR - Ironton's Beth Rist
tl2) and Meigs' Kristin Anderson (33) seem to be flying
through the air with the greatest of ease 111 this Greg
Bailey action shot. Ironton won the SE::OAL contest, 54-45.

Tonight's games

.

percent to 39 percent, but
Illi nois outrebound ed the
Spartans 52-20.
The VIctor y pushed lllino•s'
season record to I ~ wh1le
MSU dropped to. 9-2.
Illinois Coach Lou Henson
and M•chtga n State Coach
Jud Heathcote wouldn't say
who should be No. I in the
nation , but noted Heathcote:
" I know we're not No . 1."
Added the llhni 's Johnson:
"We have to play Ohio State.
If we can beat Ohio State, we
should be No. 1 "
Both Illinois and Ohio State
lead the conference with 3-0
marks and meet 111
Champaign on Sa turday.
Michigan State IS 2-1 in the
Btg Ten, along with Iowa.
Purdue, Mich1gan, Indiana,
Minnesota and Wisconsin are
l-2and Northwestern is in the
cellar, 0-3.
Ohib State guard Kelvm
Ransey scored 24 points at
Iowa C1ty and center Herb
Williams dumped in 16.
Will iams
grabbed
16

U1 e ha lf and staved off Iowa's
second~1alf rallies which tied
th e score three times, the last
at 61-1&gt;1.
Iowa 1 S Honme Lester was
held to SIX points m !he fir st

half but exploded for 19 in the
last stanza to lead all scorers
with 25
Guard J erry S1chting)ed a
balanced Pw-due attack With
24 points as the Bo ilermakers
beat Michigan.
Arnette Halbman put the
Bo ilermakers ahead for good
at 55-52 by making a 3-pomt
play that started a strmg of of
eight con secutive pomts.
M1ke
McGee
pace d
M1ch1gan w1th 19 pomts.
Mmnesota ce nt er Kev in
McHale got 26 points leading
the Gophers over Indiana in

Minneapolis . The 6-foot -11
center connected for nine
fi eld goals and hit eight
st r aight
free
throws .
including four m '8-IOW.
Ray Tolbert scored 16 to
pace Indiana. Mike Woodson ,
the Hoo siers' leadmg scor er,
f1mshed w1th 13 pomts.

rebounds.

The Buckeyes led 35-24 at

In

Madison,

Wisconsm's

OVERALLSCORtNG

NAM ERick Penrod. Nels-York

107

79

IGl
293 IBl

Dan Spencer. Eastern
Dick James, Ironton

70
68

21
36

Jim Hart , Fed . "iocking
Von Taylor . Kyger Creek
Herb Epli ng , Belpre

BJ
69
52

18
21
20

161 (7)
172 ( 8)

Rob Norman , Well st on

53

15

Greg Nelson , So uthwe stern
Pau l Sha ff er . Hannan Tra ce

WILL PLAY SATURDAY
Th e Eastern · Federa l
Hocking basketball game at
E::astern Saturday night will
be played weather permitting
Joe Mitchum , athleti c
d1rector . announced today .
Game time IS 6:30 p.m.
The game scheduled for
th1s evening between Eastern
and North Ga llia has been
cance lled

TEAMS RANKED
OFFENSIVELY
TEAM
Pis &lt;Gl Avg.

Sout hern
North Ga lli a

no

504 (7)
3.43 ( 5)

At hens
Miller
Belpre
Nels. York
Wahama

61 3
603
467
532
261

68 6
68.1
67.0

(9l
(9l
(7l
181
l4 l

66 7

66.5
65.3
708 ( 11) 64 4
559 (91 62.1

Alexander

Wa verl y
Jackson

555 (9)
432 (7l

Well ston

61.7
61.5

Vm ton Counl y 49 1 (8)
Warren
&lt;; outhwes tern

484 (8)
482 (8)

Metgs

541 (9l

Trimb le
Ironton

595 ( 10)
476 (8)

529 l9l
460 IBl

509 (91

Point P l easant 280 (5 )
Hannan Tra ce 351 ( 7)

It d~es everything a Wagon does.
.
'

nd plenty a Wagon wouldn't dream of doing

TEAMS RANKED
OFFENSIVELY
TEAM
Pis (Gl .Avg .
Waverl y
396 l9 l 44 0
Po1nt Pleasant 246 (5 1
Iront on
414 (8)

Ga lli poi&gt;S

438 IBI
398 .17 I
516 l9l
464 IBl

58 5
58 6

"

Federa l Hocki ng
556 l9 l
437 181
Eastern
Nor th Ga tli a
312 Il l
446 (7l
Belpre
Kyger Creek
518 (8l
Warr en
533 (8l
Well ston
513 l7l
737 (!Ol
Trimbl e
673 (9l
Me1gs
Wahama
301 l4 l
Jackson
695 (9l
Hannan Trac e SIB (7l

61.8
62 4
62 a
63.7
64.8
66.6
73.3
. 73.7
74 B
75 3
77.2
82.6

•'
',.
•
•
•.

SCORING MARGIN
MARGIN
Waverl y
18 1
Southern
15 1
Nel sonvi ll e· York
11.7
Athens
10.8
Mtll er
7.9

Mtl ler
532 191 59.1
Sou lhwestern 486 181 60.8

'

.•

,.

Snow. Sleet. Rain. On the road or off.
When the re's a JOb to be done, Cherokee
is ready and able to take it on! Th e
Cherokee is a far cry from your run-ofthe-mill station wagon. It's got rugged, dependable, full -time 4 -wheel drive , full y
synchronized 3-speed transmission, solid
state electronic ignition and power front
d;sc brakes-all standard. Plus one of the
biggest cargo capacities in its class.
With all its toughness, there are plenty of
luxuries you can add to a Cherokee. Like

foam-cushioned bucket seats, sports steering wheel, color-keyed carpeting, chrome
bumpers and the unique good lobks of a
special 2-ione paint treatment with disti nctive body striping.
.
Jeep Cherok ee. The .WiJ.9on that ta m ed
Jeep Cou ntry . Th er e's one ~a iti ng for you
now at Riversrde AMC &amp; Jeep. Stop by to ·
day! ·

Jeep wrote the book on 4-wheel drive!
,,·

·"
~
:~

~·

177

(7)
(9)
(8)
(7)

28

8

65 (4}

25

15

65 (4)

16.3 ,
16 3

Southwes tern at Kyge r Creek
Ea stern a t North Gal lia
( Non. l ea gu e)
Sou thern at M1tl er
Clrcl ev 1lle at Wa shmgt or. CH
Ravensw oo d
at
Po 1nt
Pl easant
Ashland at Port smouth

SATURDA Y
ISEOALl

Well ston at Ironton (makeup
game)
Non League
Waverly at Whee lersbur g
Mllt er at Al exander
Federal Hocking at Eastern
Port smou th at V1nt on Coun ty
Hannan Tr ace at Wahama
New Boston at Sou thwestern
Williamst own at Ravenswood

TUESDA Y
(TR t-VALLE YI

wirmcrs' six .

l.au ra Snuth led Me1gs "llh
eight points wlule Brya nt led
the wumers Wllh mne. 'Jl1e
Hescrvcs are nov. Jw3 on the
)ea r wtth all three lasses
bcmg b)

home

at

one

Tu esday

ag a1nst

M ergs
Dodte (hqpman
3 2 8,
Kr isl tn Ander son 00 O; Sonw
Ash 24 8, T o n1a As h 00 0.
Betll Bart r u m 0 1 1; Apr1l
Kmg 0 Q.Q, An drea R1ggs 4 8
16 , Tern Wils o n 5 212 l"otals
\4 . 17-45

Ironton
Je ane 1te
Vtm on

102
Lauren Trip l e ll .JOB . Susie
F tlt pat :-1ck J 2 B Denise Cla y
1"0 7 Jayna Riggs 6 10 22 .
Bc 1t1 R t!&gt;l 6 o 12 . Tota l s 1 1· 11

54.

ISVACI

Tra ce

t Y..O or

Eas1crn.

Alexander at Belpre
Nel son ville. York at Federal
Hocki ng
V1nt on County at Tnmbt c
Hannan
western

JUS t

points Mei gs· nrxt game is at

Sou th

Non-League
Wah a ma at Eastern
Miller a t Nor th Gallta
Southern at Wat erfor d
Point Pleasant at Milt on

Don't be a
heart
breaker

Cage Scores
Thursday 's College
Basketba II Scores
By zhe Associated Press
East
Conn ec licut 63, Bos ton U.
62 . Q1

Fa1r le1gh Dt ck 1n son 66,
Stena 53
Hol y Cross 113, A ssumptiOn

Some 5utl date-palm shoots
,.,.•ere· recently airlifted from
California to Bombay and
New Delhi. The shipment,
arranged by the Un1ted
Nation s De velo pme nt
Prog~am, is part of a .project
to assist India to re-establish
its se lf·suffl clcncy 111 the
cult!vallon of date paims
Ill

Playwnght '11oss Hart died
196).

Exercise regularly.
' WE 11£

FIGHTIN~ fOil

YOUI1LIH

Q

lnd St Evan sv ille 97, Ky .
Wes l yn 78
Ja ck sonvi ll e St 78, Troy 64
Kentuck y St 78, Car son
Newman 61
MISS St 101 , MI SSI SS tppt 92,

ski ne 59
Ten nessee 116, Fl onda 73
Tennessee St . 83, Nort h
Alabama 73
Tenn . Wes leyan 72, Tenn
Temp le 69
Tu sk egee 82. M 1les 76

WE RAVE-THE FARM BOSS®
AND IT IS ASTIBL:

TEAM

-:-

·.,··,

121
160
129
109

wh1 lc Mei gs

52 6 2 ot
NE LOu1s 1ana 69, M cNeese
51
64
54.8
t M or ri s 83, ~ Georg e
56.9 MaRober
son 72
57.3
S. Carolina Aiken 80, Er·
58.0

473 l9l

Nel sonville York

Sou lhern
Athens
Logan

.---'

49 2
51 8

Al exa nd er
643 ~ 11)
Vmt on County 469 (8 )

~.

SV AC

19.9

61.4
61 0 89 Northeaster n 81. Harva r d
60 .5
60 3 61 Rutg ers
80, . Ge o
60 I
Wa
shJj)g
ton
72
59 5
St .
Bona ve ntu re
77,
59 5 Duquesne
76
58 8
Se ton Ha ll 80, Pr ovi dence
57 5
68
•
South
56 6
A uburn 84, Georg ia 77
56 0
Georg1a Tech 72. West ern
50 I Carolma
50

&lt;BB IBl

Federal Hocki ng

•
·•
'"

23.0
21.5
20 .4

17 J
Dave Burgess. Mill er
64
22
16.7
Greg Nel son . So uthwe stern
5&lt;1
21
16. 1
Claud e Gregory scored 22 Dave L ehma n, Logan
40 29
15.6
SOUTiiEASTERN OHIO ATHLETIC LEAGUE
, )l&lt;1ints lD leaq the Badgers
NAME- TEAM
FG FT Dis IG I Avg ._
past Northwestern.
D1ck J ames, Ironton .
37
20
94 (5}
I 8 ii
Th e spee dter Badgers Rob Nor man. Wel lston
40
11
91 (5)
18.2
edged ahead 11-10 w1th etght Dave L ehma n, Loga n
32
26
90 (5)
18.0
40
8
88 (5)
17.6
min utes elapsed and never TedWilliam s, Well ston
36 18 .90 l6l 15.0
tra1led thereafter, leading 39- Joel Gordon, Wa•erl y
Dave Evans, Jackson
31 26
• 88 (6)
14.7
:14 at intermiss ion. The Gary Bentley. Athens
32
7 83 (6l 13 B
Badgers broke the game open Gr eg Becker, M e1gs
- 27
27
81 (6)
133
35
9
79 (6)
13.2
w1th a 12-point spurt in the E d M ar t1n, Ja ckson
Dave M athews, Athens
37
3
77 (6)
12.8
second ha lf.
The renmnder of the
SOUTHERN VALLEY ATHLETIC CONF~ RENCE
Saturday schedule has NAME - TEAM
FG FT Pts IGl Avg .
32
10
74 (3)
24 7
lnd•ana allowa. Michigan at Dan Spencer, Eastern
Jeff
GoebeL
.
East
ern
23
20
66
(3)
22 0
Wisconsin , Michigan State at
Tay lor , Kyger Creek
21
2
44 (2)
22 0
Pu1·due and Nort hwestern at
ght Hill. Southern
22 10
54 l3 l 18.0
Mtnnesn ta .
Smi th , North Ga lli a
26
I
53 l3l 17 .7
Ttm McComas, Nort h Gallia
21 1.1
53 IJI 17 .7
Stacy Winston, North Gal lia
15
3 33 121 16.5

Ga llipolis
Kyger Creek

-,

184 191
159 IBI
124 171

36.6

differ ence wa s m th e nusnber

canned just :1 of 6 Meigs had
se ven held goa ls t o the

3elpr e at Warr en
•/ m ton County at Federal
Hock mg
·
Nel sonv ille York at 1 rt mbl e

Avg .

wilh 12 markers. The team

hit 21 of 56 from the fie ld fur
37 percent a nd also had a
good mght at th e chanty
stnpe , 1 S1~km g 12 of 18.
The Me1gs Heserves lost an
ovcrt1mc thrill er, 19·1 7. The

made fieven

TRI.VALLEY

( Includes games throuah Jan- 6)
TEAM
FG FT Pts

Logan

-:. "

Waverly at Ath ens
Gal lipoli s at Loegan
Ir onton at Meigs
Jack son at Wellst on

SEO cage statistics

were outrcbounded, :35-26
Their record is now 5-:::2.
Ironton's Riggs wa s joined
in doubl e figures by Beth R1st

of foul shots, t aken and made.
Ironton shot 16 Urnes and

(SEOALl

&lt;l'

Skim milk

won by Ironton, 54-15. L,ooking on are the Tigers' Jayna
R1ggs Il l l the game's top scorer and Meigs' Sonia Ash
I 24 l.

avera ge. Andrea Higgs had u
fine night for Me1gs as she
poured in 16 pomt5 on four
field goals a nd eight foul
shots. Dod1e Chapman and
Sonia Ash ~&lt;~ch had eight
pomts.
• Mc1 gs d1d well at the foul
hnCl, sinkmg an excellent 17 of
2.'~ chanty losses But from
the held. the lo cals Jut Just 2U
percent of their shots and

•

RIVERSIDE AMC &amp;JEEP

195 UPPER RIVER ROAD

.

446-9800
•
'

'iAWPOUS, lliiO

Ir onton
Pomt Pleasa nt
Nor th Gallia
Ga ll ipo li s
Alexander
Logan
Belpre
Vmton Co unt y
Southwes tern
Federal Hockmg
Eas tern
Warren
Kyger Creek
Wahama
1Wel t.ston
Tr imb le
M e1gs
Jackson
Han nan Tra ce

7.7
6B

62
62 •

5.9
3.0
3.0
2.8
- 39

-

52
5.3
6. 1
7.3
- 10 0
- 11 B
- 14 2
- 14 7

- 15 5
- 32 5

LEBANON RESULTS
LEBANON, Ohio (A P )
Stacy Diann captured the
$600 featured pace mile in the
eighth race at Lebanon by a
neck Thursday night.
The winner returned $4.40,
$3 and $2.00.
George J . paid $3.40 and
$2.80 for a close second and
Satin Sheets was th1rd,
paying $5.80.
The 8-5 double of Woody's
Clay and H. J . IIndy paid
$YU.IW.

The crowd of 1,073 bet
$117,962.

IT STARTS EASIER.
Because of a hotter spark, better carburetion and a flood-free destgn

ITS MORE RELIABLE.
Because it has longer-wearmg
moving parts that won't break down.
.

IT'S MORE POWERFUL.

Because it h a5 the btggest power to we1ght ratio of any popular saw..

·IT'S QUIETER. .
Because 1ts large baffled muffler 1s more than just a tin box.

IT COSTS LESS.
Because a saw that'll last about twice as long will only cost
about half as much.
.
IT COMES WITH A BONUS. .
Over $30 worth of free accessories including a spare cutli,1g
chain really make the Farm Boss a Stihl.

POMEROY
HOME .&amp; AU'i'O
992 -2094

Pomeroy, 0 .

606 E. Main

Front End Alignments

�5-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, .Jan. 12, 1979

4- '!'he Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, .Jan. 12, In7H

Sports Transaction s

Rio cops third
•

•

COLLEGE
VANDERB IL1

BASEBALL

BOSTON RED SGX --

Nrtnlcd Wayne Britt on and

HOCK EY
. LOS ANGEL ES KINGS --

Clark

ST.

J.0 -2;

uavena

1·0·'2 .

TOTALS 38-23-99.

Halftime score -

Rio 35

· Steve Lones all hitting key Steubenville 34.
buckets, Rio graduall y pulled
away to a 16 point lead, 95-79,
with 44 seconds showing on
the clock .
Mi d-Amer-ican Conference
Besides James 22 points,
Bv The Associated Ph~ss
Mark Swain, held scoreless
Con fer ence All Games
W L WL
the first half, finished the
4 0
9 3
game with 20 points. Bise Ball Stale
Toledo
3 0 9 3
added 13, Phelps nine . Ohio U .
2 I
7 3
Purce ll and Lones eight and • Bo w ling Green 2 1 8 4
C Mich igan
1 I
7 5
Royse six.
1 2 4 8
Brad Hall's 26 points paced E. Michigan
Miami
1 2
4 9
the Barons. Solomon added 25 W. Mi chi gan
1 2
4 10
and Brian Pruitt 19.
Kent State
0 2
5 7
0 4
4 9
Hio Grande hit 38 of 7U field ·N. Ill in ois
goa l attcinpts for 54.3 percent. The Redmen were 23 of
30 at. the fou l line for 76.7
SAN DIEGO (AP ) percent. 11i11 had 27 rebounds.
14 ossi&amp;1s, nine by Phelps, J:l Moseo w Dyriamu, one o! the
wor ld 's premier socce r
•1cab and 16 turnovers.
The Barons . had 32 teams, will open it s biennial
rebounds and 21 t urnovers. U.S. tour Feb. 21 with an
lt was Rio Grande's final exhtbition ma tch against the
non-league game of the year . Sa n Diego Sackers, a
Saturday, the Redmen will spokesman for the North
play Ohio Dominican in a Ameri can Soccer league
Mid-Ohio Conference game, team said.
Dynamo is an 11-time
starting at 2 p.m. in the
womcu ·s gym,
Capital champion of Russia a~d eig ht
Unin; r :-;ity
of its current players have
Thur~d~ty' s box:
been on the Ru$sian Nationa l
Team.
•
STEUB ENVIL LE (851 ~
Th e
Suc kers
also
Hnll 17 ~-?6 ; Solomon 11 3 25;
Pruitt ~3 19 ,· Maher 328;
Der·ry J 0 6; Ell is I 1 I .

TOTAL S 37- 11-85 .

RIO G RJINDE t99) Jo mes 13 6 ']'}; Swain 9 2-20;
B1sl' 6 1 l8i Phelps J-3 -9;
PurCf&gt;ll ,1 0 6; Lones 2-4-8 ; ..
R uysc- /2- 6 ; West 2- l -5;
Dor sey

0 2-2;

Niday

0-2-2;

announced

t h"f!

si gning

'l11ursday o! rree agent Jose
· Neto, a 24 -year-&lt;&gt;ld centerforward whose 74 goals over
the last !our seasons make
hun one' of the highest scorers
in the American Soccer
League.

LOUI S

Thursday Night

Reca ll ed
Nei l
Labat l e,
defense man ,' and
T ony
Currie, right w ing , t fom Salt
~k e City of th e Central
Hockey League . Sent ' Bruce
· Affleck, de f enseman, Bob
Hess , de1ensem an. and Btl an

Sp1orts -W orld

E. IHiriois 67 , Youngs town
.
Other Games
Ri o Gr~nde 99, Steubenville

St. 57.

VELVET

••EPIEPAIED

"
""

Bruce will be named
new Ohio grid coach

...

4 Piece Group
From Lancaster, Ohio

BIMD FEEDER
.

.,

5 lb. bag
PURINA WILD
BIRD FOOD

Free With
Purchase of Feeder

,.

10-2

Clloose ontt soan/

Feed Purinal

"

TO-NIGHT &amp; SATURDAY

We stodr many
sizes and slyles

MODERN

"

.,

THE MEIGS INN

SUPPLY
SftW.MiitiSt.

ORGANIZE
OFFICE SUPPLIES

WINTER COM£5

'

MOB!IE, Ala. \AP I - Nolan of the New Orleans .up as running back, and tackles Keitll Dorney of Penn Alabama
and
David
William Andrews of Auburn State and Jack Matia of Simmons of North Carolina ,
Practice sessions for tbe 30th SainL•. ·
annual Senior Bowl football
' Drake, guards Greg Roberts cornerbacks Vaughn Lusby
In the glamour positions, at fullback.
. game have begun to resemble . tlle starting call went ID .. Behind them are Steve of Oklahoma and Eric of Arkansas and Ricky
a mini-convention of pro quarterback Steve Oils of Atkins of Maryland and Tony Cunningham of Penn State
scoots
and coaches.
and center Chuck Correal of
Stanford for the N orlh and a Nathan of Alabama.
Ry Will Grimsley
Starting
in
uie
North
back·
Perm State .
The
college
seniors
taking
homestale
star,
Jeff
Rutledge
AP Correspondent
field will be Kenny King of
The starting North defense
part in the North-South of Alabama, for the South.
contest on Saturday will have
Backing them up at Oklahoma at running back will be linemen Steve
NEW. YORK (AP)-_ If he hadn't s~nt his wayward youth
In wait awhile before those . quarterback will be Ed Smith . and Bob To~rey of Penn State Hamilton of Missouri, Fred
hanging aro\Uld the city park courtS, Eddie Dibb.s might well pro officlals ·c ast their votes of Michigan State fll' the at fullback . Other North Smerlas of Boston College,
WITH
have wound up jerking sodas at tlle corner drug store or o~r­ in tlle 1979 draft. But some North and Steve Fuller of I'Wlners are Earl Gani of Mark Gastineau of East
ating 8 ear wash .
jumped ahead in the Clemson for the Soutll.
Missouri
and. James Central Oklahoma and Ruben
Or, as he himself once quipped to an Italian reporter in campaign Thursday.
Vaughan of Colorado,
There were four highly Mayberry of Colorado.
Rome, "Except for tennis, I probably would have been a bag
They ·were named to the tnuted rUMers seeklnK the
The rest of the North linebackers Gordy Ceresino
boy in the A&amp;P supennarket."
Senior Bowl starting lineups two ball:carryinB positions In . starting offensive lineUp is: of Stanford, Daryl Hunt of
Sometime this weekend at Madison Square Garde!!, the by North · Coach Walt the
South's
starting Tight end Kellen Winslow of Oklahoma and Larry MiUer
sponsor of the Grand Prix Masters Tournament wUl present Michaels of .the New York backfield. The call went In Missouri, flankers Robert of Brigham Young, cor."
Eddie with a check for $300,000 - just like that. It's a.modest Jets and South Coach Dick · ChP•Ies Alexander
of Gaines of Washington and nerbacks Nesl)y Glasgow of
tip for his allegiance tn the Colgate circuit during the past
and
Tim
IAluisiana State, who will line Gordon Jones of Pittsburgh, Washington
year .
Lavender of Southern ·
Eddie will stuff it in his pocket and go about his business of
California and safeties Jeff
trying to pick up an added UOO,OOO first prize in the windup
Delaney of Pittsblrrgh and
Masters, altllough he must stand in line behind Jimmy
Carter Hartwig of Soutllerp
Connors and yo\Ulg John McEnroe.
California.
"How much prize money have you made altogether during
Filling out the South
tlle past year.?'' somebody asked him after he had won one of
starting offense are tight end
his Garden matches.
.
Ronnie Lee of Baylor,
"Oh, 1don't know," Eddie replied, shrugging his shoulders.
flankers Jerry Butler of 1
"Half a million, I guess. Maybe more;"
Clemson and Ernest Gray of
He hadn't counted lately.
Memphis State, tackles Kent
This little scenario is a microcosm of tlle mad, orbiting world;
By GEORGE STRODE
to make. He said the only Hayes as a Maryland ali- Hill of Georgia Tech and
of tournament tennis - money cascading like a waterfall,
AP Sports Writer
school he'd leave Iowa State state halfback, but an injury Cody Risien of Texas A&amp;M,
players getting rich ahnost in spite of thei!Uielves and the old
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) for was Ohio State," White cut short Bruce's college guards Mike Burrow of
_game on the verge of fouridering on its own success.
Ohio State called a news con- · quoted Bruce as saying.
Auburn and Randy BUtler of
playing career.
· EdWard George Dibbs is a bandy-legged little court scram- ference tnday In anno\Ulce
Southern
Mississippi and
"He's a super coach, a
He's a 1953 Ohio State
bler 5-feet-7, 160 pounds - Brooklyn-born, Miami-educated Earle Bruce will become the
center
Robert
Shaw of
and world-seasoned. Mention his name ala cocktail party and Buckeyes' 20th football heckuva man," Wbite said of graduate and served as an Tennessee.
SEE US:
you probably would get a blank stare and a query : "Eddie coach, following in the Bruce. "He really cares assistant coach under Hayes
The starting South defense
from
1966
through
1971.
about
the
athletes.
Getting
Who? What's he do?"
footsteps of tlle legendary near the kids is the most ~ Before that, Bruce was a will be linemen Jesse Baker
Eddie Dibbs is not exactly a household name. You don 'I see Woody Hayes .
success at tllree Ohio high of Jacksonville State, Willie
important thing to him."
it in the black headlines oilt(lf sports pages. You don't see him
An Ohio State spokesman,
The Cumberland , Md., . schools, Salem, Sandusky Jones of Florida State, Marty
on the TV tube when the big eye i.s zeroing in on the center who asked not to be
native was recruited bv and famed· Massillon. He Lyons of Alabama and Dort
court at Wimbledon or the U.S. Open.
identified, said Bruce, 47,
produced a 211-9 record at Smith of Miami , Fla.,
99 Mill St .
Eddie has never won a major championship. A gutsy little Iowa State's mentor f&lt;ir six
Salem, 34-.'!-3 at Sandusky and linebackers Jon Brooks of
guy with a two-fisted backlhand and ability tn rally an day, he years, would be introduced at
Clemson, Barry Krauss of
20..().0 at Massillon .
wins a few tnur events but he is a perennial semifinalist. He a 2 p.m. EST confer~nce.
Bruce's first venture intn
collected the Grand Prix bqnus check because Jimmy Connors
The Ohio Slate official said
~ead
college coaching was a
and Bjorn Borg defaulted on It while he chose to hang in tllere Bruce's r:esignation at Iowa
ltl-2-0
performance at the
and plod it out week after week.
State, annoWiced Thursday
University
'of Tampa,
It's hard to imagine a relatively obscure little guy like Dibbs by tllat school's president,
including
a
Tangerine
Bowl
earning $500,000 while golf's Jack Nicklaus settled for half as Robert Parks, was a stepping
victnry
over
Kent
State
in
much - $256,672 - while being voted Sports Illustrated's stone toward his new job.
Nationa l Basketball
1972.
Sportsman of the Year.
Association
Bruce, because of a state
Then he lifted Iowa State to
.. At A Glance
Yet the Eddie Dibbses, Wojtek Fibaks, Jose Higuereses, law, can only be hired for one
football respectability
By The Associated Press
Harold Solomons ani Tim Gullicksons -sharing in the Grand year as a state university emPltOVIDES
Eastern Conference
starting in 1973. His last tllree
Prix' $11 million circuit and $2 million bonus pool -should be ployee..·His salary will be beTHE
TRAINING
YOU NEED
Atlantic Division
teams went 8-3 and the last
concerned lest others deprive tllem of the mother lode.
W. L. Pel. GB
tween $35,000 and $45,000,
FOR
THE
BUSINESS
WORLD
two played -in tlle Peach Bowl
27 13 .675
If Connors, Borg, Vilas, Gerulaitis and McEnroe carry out plu.s an in-season weekly Wash .
and Hall of Fame Bowl. The
2.d 13 .649 lli2
their threat to break from the tour, the whole tournament television show and other Phil a .
Months
New Jersey 19 19 .500 7
Cyclones were 36-32-0 under
structure faces collapse.
'benefits. ·
New York
20 22 .476 8
Not
Years
Prepare You
Bruce.
'
13 25 .342 13
Hugh Hindman, the Buck- Boston
To E•rnl
Bruce's 1976 Iowa State
Central Division
eyes' athletic director,
San Antonio 26 16 .619
team finished second in the
neitller cohfirmed nor denied Houston
r--~-------~--------------1
22 17 .554 21/ 2
1·
'
.
I the
nation in total offense and the
selection of Bruce. Both Allanta
21 21 .500 5
I · Leiters of opinion are welcomed, Tbey should be l~ss 1
season he was named
same
1
17 22 .436 7 h
as assistants on the Cleveland
For Day
I tban 300 words loog 1or subject tO reduction by the editor) 1 served
The Associated Press' Big
Oetroi'f
~ 13 28 .317" 12 1/-;,
Hayes' staffs for four
1
Evening Claue•
I aad must be slgued with the signee's address. Names may 1 same
Eight
Conference
Coach
of
New Orteans 13 30 .302 13 : ,
Western Conference
I be withheld upon pubU.,ation. However, 011 request, 1 seasons from 1966 through
the Year. ·
Midwest Division
I ·oames wUI be disclosed. Letters should be In good taste, 1 1969.
CALLI (614) 446-4367
Kans . Ci ty
24 16 .600
Iowa
State
University
I ,addressing Issues, not personalities.
I
1
Denver
21 20 .512 J / 2
NOW ENROLLING
II assistant coaches and players Chicag o
17 24 .415 7112
World Hocker
also confirmed Bruce · was Milw .
18 17 .400 8'12
Associa1ion
FOR NEW TERM
'
leaving the Cyclon·e s to Indiana
15 26 .366 9112
wltptsgfga
Patific Division
Quebec
20 13 4 44 141 123
return to Ohio tn succeed his
f end 11 month• ClrMr Protrams and 11
Sea llle
26 14 .650
New Eng . 19 10 6 44 155 124
m011ths •uociol.. Oogrn In Spoclollred
former
boss.
II •. • e
•
II Before Hayes was fired for Los Ang .
26 16 .619
Winnipeg 16 13 5 37 143 124
Buslnen Progra ma.
Phoenix
26 17 .605 l h
Cinclnnali 16 20 4 36 140 147
hitting a Clemson player in Golden sr.
22 20 .524 5
Edmonton 17 16 0 34 127 118
Jr . A~counltr ~
.Busin~ss Admlnislralion
19 19 .500 6
the Gator Bowl Dec. 29, Porlland
Birmingham
General
Office
20 24 .455 B
Executive secretary
.
' 15 18 3 33 132 138
Hayes directed the Buckeyes San Diego
Thursday's Games
'x-lnd.
5 18 2 12 78 130
Secretary
In two national titles, 13 Big
Oet roll 104, Porlland 101
x -s uspended operations
San Antoni o 140, San Diego
January 8, 1979 Ten championships or coThursday's Games
championships, 11 bowl trips 111
No games scheduled
Dear Mr. Edltnr :
ALLIPOLIS
Kansas City 94, Golden
Today's Games
., This Jetter is intended for the parents of the Soutllern and a record of 205-61-10 in 28 Slale 89
Quebec
at
Cincinnati
.
BUSINESS
basketball team. I have heard that the parents told Coach seasons.
Seallle 1119, Phoenix 106
Winnipeg at Bh'mlngham
PHONE _ __.ZIP-----1
1
Wayne
Stanley,
a
current
Today's Games
Wolfe not In yell at the boys during tlle game. I think you
Saturday S Games
COLLEGE
Portland at Boston
Edmonton at New England
should have directed your complaint more toward some of the Iowa State assistant, said
Los
Angeles
at New Jersey
Winnipeg at Birmingham
asked
Jim
Williams,
Bruce
fans because what they yell is a lot wors~ than what Coach
Atlanta at Chicago
Sunday's Games
Wolfe says. After attending tlle Southern- Eastern baUgame I Steve Szabo and himself In
Philadelphia
at
New
Winnipeg al New England
ho~ you realize what an effect this had on yoiU' team. I saw a join the new Ohio State staff Orleans
Birmihgham at Cincinnati
Golden Slale at Milwaukee
Edmonton at Quebec
very upset and disoriented team which was not the same one during a meeting Thursday.
Stanley fold the Cedar" Cleveland at Houston
I've been following all year.l'm not trying to make excuses for
New York at Denver
Southern losing tlle game because Eastern played the best Rapids (Iowa) Gazette that
SalurdaV'S Games
Sen Diego at Atlanta
game and deserved to win. The main point is who benefited Bruce would not have left
Golden State at Detroit
•
HOUSE TRAILER
from the complaints; certainly not the l)oys and really they are Iowa State if he did not have
Cleveland
at
San
Antonio
tJie ones that winning means the most· ln . Every since Coach tlle right In hire all of liis
New Orleans at Hou.ston
OWNER'S
Wolfe has been at Southern we've had a good basketball team assistants at Ohio &lt;State.
Indiana at Phoenix
Rick
White,
a
Cyclone
Sunday's Games
and no one has interfered wltll his coaching, so why now? The
Houston at Atlanta
TAX PAYMENT CHARGE
boys don't seem to mind the yelling and shouldn'i mistakes be senior starting defensive end,
New Jersey at Boston
tnld
The
Associated
Press
corrected when tlley are made and not next week in practice
New York et kansas City
when tlley can hardly remember what they did wrong. Anyone that Bruce informed the
Revised Code Sections 4503 .06 and 4503.061 as amended by
ChiCago at Milwaukee
Portland ·at Philadelphia
who attended the Miller game saw what good ball these boys squad he was leaving at a .
Sub. H.B. No . 330 and Eflective Augusl 26, 1969
Indiana at Denver
are capable of playing and when they don 't produce you expect training table Wednesday
Los Angeles al Sealtle
.
the coach to sit quietly on tlle bench. Now is this really what night.
San Diego at Washingt on
"He told us it was the hard· J'I&gt;U want from your coach? I think we should let Coach Wolfe
(&lt;'Hinry Aud :t ;,r by tr u ltip lyi ., 9 11"-!l' a• re- n c bl., vcl 11e of t he houu lr odrr b y Ike _1111..- rot e of
COMPUTED AND
do the coaching as he has done a su~r job and I know everyone est decision he will ever have
rl- 11! r-a_. '"9 di~ r r i rt '" wt-.•&lt; h tht hou'e : roilr r 1-tos rU •ilul H •P """'"H.Ir'l' to a 11 536 .00 per
ASSESSED 8 '!'wants a winning team.
year ~ 0 ..,.,v~r if t~r mi .,: mum to• of th orlf-1!1! doll or1 ;, appl icable to o h o•U f !rgi ler not
"Also some of the people at the ballgames could care less
l ocnr~d i·n rhi, dnll! o" thr fin! dt•y .,.f hw ~ory thp IOl it de te rmined hv rmJII iply " '9 tl--rl'l!
what is going on. They never clap their hands or even stand up
LET~
d o llu r ' by 1h" numb!' . l•f full •n ~r l h\ rtmo inin g ;-J rh e follo.,·ino lki;ty- rrr 11 of Decemb- er
when the school's fight song is being played. These boys
rommoen ro n •J .,.,,h th n dnt,. o l ocqui•i•ion m tn: ro n ro:&gt; tnlo tf.:, 1 ! 0'~
deserve some entllusiasm from their home crowd. Whenever
tlleY play a good series of ban how about getting off YQ\1'
~hil1ds and showing them you're Wiih them . If you just come
Co~t"lly T rc:,uur'!rs Off, ~ t Court H ouH
PAYABLE ATto th'e ballgame tn sit then stay home and listen to the game on
tlje radio and let som~ne else who will cheer the team on have
· ynur seat. Come on, Southern fans, you've got a good ball team
~
When 1 ho"11st tr.ai lu hu 1 situs in this st1te , .n provided in tl'li1 11ction , on the ht
TAX DUE
l!l'td coach so let's all get behind tbem and just see how far they
d.a.- of Jt-;.. utry the fwll •mount of the pro ••t• tu is due .an d P~'r.able on or ,befOre
SCRAMBLED EGGS, ·
Cl)n go. - NAME WITHHELD UPON REQUEST,
AND PAYABLEthe lht d.ay of hn11•rr .

.

·'

Mid -Continent
Akro n 86, W. Illi nois 8.4

85

Sanford of Soutll Carolina and
safeties Doo Bessillieu of
Georgia Tech and Jeff Nixon
of Richmond.
Punting and plat'€-kicking
for the Soutll will be Russell
Erxleben of Texas. For the
Nortll it will be Uwe von
Schumann of Oklahoma.

Practices resemble··m -ini-convention

Today's

.•

INN .PLACE

Conference
Big Ten
Ohio St . 71, Iowa 67

BLUE S-

'•
'

'

APPEARING THIS
WEEKEND
AT THE

Ohio College Basketba II
By The Associated Press

Recalled Charlie Simmer.
lefl wing, fr om Spring fi eld o.t
American
Hoc key
the
League.

wzn zn a row
Swiiin, D,m Purcell. Greg
Jamca;, Vince Phelps and

An .

n1 vncpd the 1. rcsiqnali on Of
Larry
ScmilloU ,
he ad
J:&gt;asebatl cnt=~ch.

Paul lava res scou ts.

•

Greg James tossed in 22
points and picked off nine
rebo\Ulds to pace Coach Art
Lanham's Rio Gra nd e
College Redrr)en to . a 99-l!S
non-conference basketball
victory over visiting Steubenville at Lyne Center Thursday evening.
The triumph, third in a row
for the Redmen, left Rio
Grande with a 6-10 season
record . The Barons of Coach
John Klomas dropped to 1-!l
on the season.
It was sweet revenge for
the Redmen . Last year. Rio
Grand.e dropped a 30-point
decision to Steubenville.
Thursday's conte•1 looked
like it might be ·another
Baron rout as the visitors
jwnpcd off to a 12-2 lead
during the first five minutes
of play.
However , Vjnce Phelps and
Dale Royse came off the
bench to spark the Rio
Grande offense. Rio kept
chipping away at the Barons'
lead and finally caught the
visitors just b efor~ intermission to take a 35-34
halftime lead.
Behind James and Royse,
the i{edrncn scored the fi rst
.six poirlts of the second twlf
arrJ never looked back.
Hio increased its lead to
nine points before the Barons
rut it back to two, 67-65, on a
short jum'per by Dwi ght
Solomon with 6:20 remaining
in the game.
Wi th Dan Bise , Mark

Ogdvtc , h·r:w.Md , tc ~illl LcJI( e
City

By The Associa ted Press
American League

(

Phone 992-2164

POMEROY, OHIO

'

T"•

Sto111 With "AlliiNDS OFSTUFF'
For Pets-StablesLarge &amp; Small Animals

MIDDLEPORT
BOOK _STORE

------------,.
l Pro . !
!Standings 1.

992-3629
Pomeroy~ Ohio

Lawns- Gardens.

I

Offer Good 1hru January

..
"

'

I

I

·•'
'

'·
• I

'

! s~~t41tfft-

I
·I

!

FORD T-BIRD

1978 FORD LTD

'7395
976 FORD COUNTRY SQUIRE WAGON

..

{J

1974 CHEVY MONTE CARLO

·$2495 ·

'4695

'

I
G
I

Southern fan backs coach

DEALS!

INQUIRE NOW: or

GET TOGETHER OVER

•

1976 FORD TORINO

1978 FORD T-BIRD.·

'6795
1977 CHRYSLER CORDOBA

1976 fiREBIRD FORMUlA

'4795 '

'3595

1977 fORD F-100 EXPLORER--~-'·4095
1977 FORD F-100_
'4595
1976 FORD i-'·250
'2895
1975.FORD CURRIER
~2,95
1977 FORD F-100
'4.195
1976 RD F-100 EXPLORER'
5
·~··

•

:...· STANDINGS
'

..

·1977 CHEVY C-2'0_ _ _ _ _---=
'A595
1977 CHEVY
'4195
1975 FORD CURRIER'3295
1973 CHEVY C-10 _ _ _ _ _ _•2495
__
1976 FORD RANCHERO'---~-'4495

De lroil 3, Ph iladelphia 3
Buffalo 6, Washington 2

Pro Hocby
••
,~
AI A Glante
;: By The Associated Press
'
National Hotkey
League
Campbell Conferente

Vancouver 4, St. Louis 3

Today's Games
Cplorado at Washington

New York Islanders
Atlanta ·
Saturday's Games
Los Angeles at Detroit

Patrick Division

wltptsgfga
N. Y. Islanders
27 5. 8 62 194 107
Ill. Y. Rangers
·'
24 13 4 52 173 136
!l'hlla.
22 14 7 51 ·143 125
' Allanra
22 16 4 48 170 149
.

Chicago 15 17
Vancouver 16 24
Colorado 9 27
St . Louis 8 30

Adams .P,Yi.s!p~
Boston
28 6 7 63 181
Buflalo 17 14 10 44 1~
'!Toronlo : 17 19 7 41 138
Minn .
14 21 5 33 124
MNorris DivisiOn
Monlreal · 28 9 5 61 168

Los Ang .
Pitts.
J:)elro it
lilash .
1

17 19
16 17
B 22
10 25

6 40
8 40
13 29
7 27

149
145
129
129

Thursday's Games
"Boston 6, Minnesota 4

•I•

New

127
m ··
140
143
·

York

P'ni lildelphla-

Islanders

.

per person

sro·· children
under 12 and

Vancouver at St. Louis
Sunday's Games ·
Vancouver at Washington
New York Rangers at

Wales Conferenu

(o/l e(h. J On

DELINQUENT

··

.

-

NEW
HRS:

..

~- h r C o unt~ T t c .nurt:r . in Jdd1ti or- lo any ot.,c r rcrricdy o r o~ id~d

by l.1w tor
th t·. c.o tl a t1 on o t - ~.,~c~ and pcn.Jities ( hJ il c rHOI((' co l! cc t1 0n o t StJC ., t.ut' s
.1n d 1, cr1 .:d t in b'r' cr1·it .H rio n in ,,·c "~01C of s ~o~ch hCJSIHCr .1~J i nsl the owner
l o r ·thr rcco~tcry of th ~ unpa id t .ncs

RESPONSIBJLITY
OF HOUSE TRAILER
OWNER-

it 0 ...,,..,,

of house ,,., ,,.,, h11 wi rtg 1 1ihn in th1 St1te of Ohio 1nd subject ·' to the
I\ p r ~·•• dtd 1bewt MUSf reg i,ter 1w'h U1iler wtth the County Aud ito r on or
ftti Or to the d.1tt tt&gt;e "" is due .an,d p1yabl• .
~
.A

'• •

N e penon

...,ho ;, the owner "· of 1 ho111• tr11i liu • nd w ho is r1quired to regi1t1r •
hou\1 t•1iler ,na H '1il lo di,pl•y on the fr ont of w,h tr •il•r the certific•te or " Deul "
.$1ued by •ht County Treuuru .
--

OPERATOR OF
A HOUSl TRAILER

COURT -

e~ e ry .:. per~f ;r ,~ .t.l h o uu: t r~ :l tr c:ourt or p~rk or_evtry owner of proptrty "used
suc:h purpos-: wktn the re is no opr.r.ator $ha ll ~eep a rtl iste:r of all house

fllt

t r.ailtr ~ Which m.1kc "use: of th~ court, p ,H k . or propert~ .

Pomeroy, 0.

lOOMain Sl.

Jo the tox du e a.,J owi ng .

.'

RIVERFRONT
DINER

T or Onlo at Chicago

t~dd i tio n

I

EAT AND ENJOY

at

105
Airfreight agents, trurlnly
148
143 based' in Britain, say tbe air156 freighting of.books to export
191 markets is becoming a rnalor
.Industry.

senior citizens

.

If the p a.ymi. nt of tlu to ll is not mcdr. Os pro Vide d ah o,..: o pcnO~It y of five dollars

'" t ~ n percent o f Ut f' tou~ s due , whic:t&gt;cver i' ;reo tc-r , sl'lo11 be ln'IPO'cd o t'ld

TAXES -

$1J50
£-

Chicago at Minnesota

Allanla
.
Los Angeles al Boston
Pilfsburgh at Buffalo

PENALTY--

at

Colorado at Toronto

8 38 126 144
3 35 134 167
6 24 120 174
6 22 126 202'

Whtn 1 how11 tt•iltr .acqu ires 1 1itu1 in th i• 1 111e u prowid11id in thi1 tectio" , .1fter
tht flrst d•y of J.anu.ary •nd en or prier to the l'•' d•) of Deumber ,. t~e full
•mount of the pro nh ttx i• due tnd ptytble immtdie te ly wpon the ••PHi lion of
. 1 lO d 1 y period commtncing with _ the d•t• the silut it uqwirerl .

11 A.M. to3 P.M. ONLY

Boston al Plllsburgh
Buffalo at Monlreal

Smythe Division

,,

See Our. Sales Sta ff
Bobby Roush -Sob. Crosswhl(e · Bill (Ole} Hoss

-HOT. CAKES, HOME
FRIES, CHOICE OF
'
BACON, HAM OR SAUSAGE,
JUICE AND COFFEE

'.

.ii'

'

SHARP USED TRUCI&lt;S

.,

Mon .· Thurs . 6 a.m .· ll p .m .
F ' I;· Sai. 6 a .m. · 1 a.m.
Su.nday 11 a.m. ·8 p.m.

HOWARD E. FRANK
COUNTY AUDITOR
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO

.r

•.

.,

..

1I

I

'I
I

I

�6-

)

The Daily Sentmel, Muldlcport -Pt&gt;rTil'"'', 0 . F'11d.o) , .Ian 12, I ~7~
do , trymg to cook up stones,

Today's topic:

Brother Billy
By WILLIAM E. SCHULZ
Associated Press Wrih·r

l:il ate

ATLANTA (AP ) - Btlly
Ca rter,
a beer-g uzzltng
gasoline dealer who 's made a
habit of makmg people boil
since hl."&gt; brother became

prestdent, 1s m hot wa ter
agam

This time he's upset Jews
and a n~twnal Republi can
Party
leader
with
antt-SemJit c
purportedly
remarks made durm g a \'ISJI
by members of .a Ltbyan

delegatiOn, who are m t he
Uruted States as his guest
No one seems Immune
from brother Btlly's wit His
targets ha ve mcluded the
Carter family, the Whtte
House staff and even hunself
He called his cousin, Hugh
Carter, " a self-made son-&lt;Jf·
ab1tch" after the Georgia

Seed

senator

wrote

aOOut

lhe f"nul) . and sugge;ted
Hugh belonged m a mental
hospttal
Apparen tly his current
troubles do oot mark the ftrst
tune Billy 's devtl-may-care
blend of humor and folk
cor tHnl•ntary has de.sc€nded
mt n the -mmefwld of antJSrnttltc comment.

1\t et Urlnquet

In

Georg1a, he

~;nd

lw tho ught Atlant a
Bt ol \ OS plt&lt;ile t Pin! Nwkt o,
ti n.: guest of hon or , was a
'i&lt;•stardtzed Jew " He also
r. olled hun "a Polack ··
Ht lly bur st onto the nattonal
'1agc when he left the fa mily
pe.onut bul!i{ess to help
brother Jm1my m his 1976
presulent1al campaign.
"Th ere were about 100 reporters 111 Pla111s, sttltn g
down the• e wtth nothmg to

~nd

Millina

HEADQUARTERS

Seeds· Bird Seeds- Oyster Shells and Grit Fertilizers - Lime - Cement &amp; Mortar- Stock
Salt - Water Softener - Remedies - Salt L1tters · Vaccine - Roofing - Paints - Red
Bran d Fencing - Bale r a nd Binder Twine Sprays · Gates.

SUGAR RUN MILLS
Mu lber ry Ave.

992-2115

Pomeroy

and that's how it got started,"
he satd last fall wh1le filmmg
a
televis10n movte tn
Califorma
After the election and an
unsuc'Cessful campaign for
ma yor of Plains, {he
president's home town, Billy
went

on

the

road

as

a

pcofesstonal entertamer, reportedly commandmg $5,000
or more for appearances.
" I thmk that most of the
things I do tend ro offset the
unage he (the president) has
- you know, his posltton, the
rebgwn . r think it gives
r.~eople the 1dea that we're
JUSt a regular family like
everyone else. Besides,
there's a black sheep m every
fam1ly," he satd.
Hts antlcs somehmes
mtght seem to more
appropriate for a court Jester
than a member of Amertca 's
f1rst fam1ly
Billy judged the third
annual World Bellyf lop and
Can nonball
D1vin g
ChampiOnships in British
Columbia, where he JUmped,
fully clothed, tnto a
swunmmg pool - a rose m
hts teeth and a beer m hts
ha nd.
The beer can IS hts trademark , and a LoUisville, Ky ,
brewery named a new beer
for Billy It was, the label
smd, " Brewed especially lor
and With the approval of one
of America's all-time great
beer drmkers, B1lly Carter."
But •t was a commercial flop
Last September, Bt lly
VIsited
Libya,
where
terr orists
who
killed
lftembers of Israel"s 1972
. Olymptc team had been welcomed as heroes.
When he served as host for
the Lt byans on a return vtstt
thts week , he called them
"the best friends I've had m
my life "
At a Georgia press conference, Btlly was quoted as
saying, in urging fmndlier
U.S relattons with Ltbya,
that " th ere's a hell of a lot
more ArGtbians than Jews."
It was the fmal straw for
the Atlanta Journal "The
Joke ts Over," the newspaper
said
"Billy Earter isn't funny
any more In fact, he 's not
even just embarrassmg any
more. He's getting downnght
dangerous," the Journal said
in its lead editorial on
Wednesday.
Jewtsh groups condemned

Ch~H rman

B11l

Brock sa1d R•lly IS b1goted
and urged President &lt;;.mer
~~ disavow the statements.
"Mr. Brock is trymg to run
for prestdent and I think he's
full of ..." Billy said ot a news
conference Thursday. He
said hls comments were " not
intended to be antt-Semitic "
lromcally, one of the first to
respond from the Wh1te
House was press secretary
Jody'Powell, who Billy said in
a recent Penthouse magazine
interview "would be better

RIO GRANDE ..:_ The four
Polly Cramer
part seminar entitled
I grate thiHfrozen ball "Current Issues on Death and
What work:s on &lt;Tnst
nf &lt;Iough over the top of the Dying" Cilntinues with Part II
grout?
I nut to make a top CrtL,t. Thts. Monday, Jan. !5.
Held from 7-9 p.m. in Anduugh can also be slivered
niversary
Hall on the campus ·
fJF.AR POLLY -- My with a sharp parmg knife. of Rio Grande College and
Point&lt;•r 1s for those ladies Thts makes a mce-looking pie Community College, the
who are troubled by the rub- after tt '" baked to a mce semmar is a series of inbt•r hackmg eommg off thetr hrnwn -HILDA
DF.AR POLLY and all you formal discussions dealiii'g·
rugs. Never wash such rugs
with ·varlous aspects of death
wtth detergent but always usc wnnderfftl people who have and dying. Part II will center
soap and always use cold sent in so many hints over the on euthansia (mercy killing)
water rPolly's Note - Also vcars - ThoHe olus who w1sh and the methods of assisting
when drymg the rngs out of io help cut the htgh cost of liv- terminally ill patients and
doors put them in the shade ing Hhould turn each ga rment their famllles.
and the heat of the sun works instde out before laundering
Dr Dan Whiteley and
it. Thts helps the fadin g prothe same as the hot water )
Registered
Nurse Betsy
I would like to know if any blem and also cuts down on
reatlers have aiscovered the hnt t~at some things ;~)..~ ~~e H~~e~s~~~~~l
anythmg thai works better gather. -1\!YRTI.E"
DF.AR PoLLY - Our a1r Whiteley, a general and
lhan cleanser and a scrub
&lt;·nndtlloners are 10 U\e upper thorastlc and vascular
brush on llle grout. - C.S.
surgeon, jomed the Holzer
DF:AR READERS - How walls and to keep a draft from ' staff U1 1973. He received his
a buut thiS • I feel sur~ some of cmn10g 10 during the winter degree from the State
you wtll be commg up with a my husband covers them Umversity of New York at
wtlh white plastJe garbage
new Idea for C S -POLLY
Syracuse and did his
DEAR POLLY - We put bags that he fastens all residency at the University of
tndoor-outdoor carpet in the around with masking tape . Cincinnati.
kt!rht•n of our mobile home They look fine since our walls
Simpson Is a graduate of
find had some left over so I are whtte. Maybe others
cut it to line my cabinets and would hke to save fuel this
drawers and they are easil y way. -MRS. C.G.W.
Polly w1ll send you one of Hospital School of Nursing.
cleaned with the vacuum. her stgned thank -yo u
MARIAN
DEAR POLLY - After the newspaper coupon cltppers tf
bottom crusts for fruit p1es she uses your favorite
The four part seminar IS
are tn place m the pans I roll Pointer, Peeve or Problem in free of charge to the public
the leftover crust scraps into her eolumn Write POLLY'S and each session 15 open to
a hall and freeze tl When the POINTERS in care of this new participants
pit•s :.~rl' rearlv for the top newspaper.
The January 8 Part 1, attended by 20 persons, was a

off runmng a fann."

Satd Powell : " Billy is a priCitizen. He doesn't make
foreign policy for the Uruted
States, nor 1s he, as far as I
know , an offictal or unofftctal
adviser !JJ the prestdent m
Lhat regard."
And Powell added : "As far
as any remarks that mil!ht be
anti-sem1t1c. It is clear that '
&lt;loesn 't represent the president's view."
"Ain't no way I could drink
as much as they say I do ,"
Btlly satd once. "Maybe some
days I do smoke SIX packs of
ctgarettes. Some days maybe
I drmk 20 to 25 beers - but
not every day."
"I've run a business for the
last seven yea rs th at grosses
about$10 million a year," he
said. " I'm a damn good businessman."
Ruth Staple!JJn, the pr esident's and Billy's sister. said
m a book that Billy's public
hfe nearly wrecked his
marnage . She said her
co ntrov ers t a l brother
believes he has "created a
monster" with h1s beerdrmkmg, redneck una ge.
"He created an unage that
Mr and MrH Harnttl Whitwould keep hts heart
l&lt;'ktntl ant! son. Shawn .
anonymous," she satd "The
PmnProy, entcrtaim~rl hl•r
result was a public image
farmiy
ChriHtrnas afternoon.
which B1lly soon found he was
Then·
wus &lt;m cxt•hange of
going to have !JJ hve with for a
girtH
with
pie, cakt•, l'hipH.
while."
Koo!-Aul and ice &lt;-ream belli~
vat~

general discussion. A film,
''The Final Proud Days of
Elsie Wooster," was shown
and an attitude questionnaire
and MrH .Jam&lt;•s F'arlt•y ant! was distributed.
suns, Rwk y, .Jami e, Dou~ and • Representatives of dif.Jm•v of Marietta: Mr and fering faiths will lea[! a
Mrs. JPrrv Colmt•r and Htms, discussion on the religious
Tirruny aiul Rilly, daughter, aspects of death and dying in
Shari, and ht•r daughter, the January 22 third session.
Amber, Mtke Hmdy·and Roy Part IV will feature a morF.hhn.
Si.' I"Vl'd.
ttcian discussing the care of a
Wtlluim Stephenson was body so that death can truly
Attl•nding
Wl'rt;&gt;
Mr1" .
unable to attend due to Illness
Mftfnll' ~tephenson ami sons,
.Turumc and Randy, Mr and hut m the evemng htH step
Mrs Davrd Jnhnsnn and Mr. chtldren vt slted him and
pn•sented gtfts

Ten years &amp;eo : Hundreds of
demonstrators
smashed
police lines in .London In an
effort !JJ storm diplomatic
mtssions of Rhodesia and
South Africa.

Convention of jehovah 's
Witnesses concluded
Jehovah's Witnesses in the
Middleport area resume their
regularl y scheduled
scheduled activities this week
after attending an assembly
at the Huntington Civic
Center. There were 1,169 in
attendance Sunday afternoon
to hear Mr. Paul Allen,
Dtstrict Supervisor from
Brooklyn, N.Y., speak on the
subject, " Meeting the Test of
Christian Loyalty."
Allen pomted out the need

In 1966, President Lyndon
Johnson satd in his State of
the Union message that the
United States would stay m
South
VIetnam
until
J communist aggresslon In that
· countxy was halted.

Gibson
REFRIGERAlOR

In 1971, the head of the militant Jewislt I&gt;efense League,
Rabbi Meir Kahane, was arrested in New York.

GIBSON

Pomny
Flonr

SALE

"".

,

SALE
PRICE I.

,PI .---...11. w. COMPTON, O.D.
OPTOMETRIST
II1
to

OFFICE HOURS: 9:30
12,2 to 5 (CL.OSE
AT NOON ON THURS. ! - EAST COURT
ST., POMEROY.

·,

~
.~

~
~

!t

;!!

~

r,
.li%
ill,
;:

'1

No other love

;,

1s like yours.

'."'cl

No other d1amond i,
th
~
1s J"k
1

1,,

·

e

~

IS . . .

;;

,,

m Engagement Dimrwnd
I;
•

I

~ lhe magoc of your love, your life
together reflected on the per- ,
fect10n of the stunmng d~amond ~
' sol 1ta1re Here IS classtc beauty W

~J

~~ :~~~ ~!J.":,;r' 1~::;:n"~:O~~;,~:~. ~·

and every day •n between we I·
thmk you'll apprectate our alford- k
11 able value and quality. toe
!
·:.
Solitaire Ring
~
, .;:
:-:
Sli:Ril
··

N

.

:; ·

t

·:··

fREE I

@
··:;
;
~ Matching
Wedding '
,; Band thru January. •·
~

I

I

CANors

I

.1:

aASS1CS

~

I!'

~;

INGDS FURN.
&amp; JEWElRY

~·;

~

"Two in one Store"
,
106 N. 2nd Ave ./ t '
.
Middleport,
'
Ohio

""'"~

Brent Wilham Hanson,
year old son of Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Hanson, was honored
wtlh a birthday patty recently at hts home. A Mtckey
Mouse theme was ca rrt ed out
m the cake decoratiOn
Games were played wtlh
Pam Haggy wmmng the
prize. Brent's grandfather,
Harry E Clark, won the door
prize. Other members of the
fam ily attending were Harold
and Irene Hanson and Mrs
Joann Clark , grandparents,
Mrs. Evelyn Spencer, a '
grea t-gra ndmother, Dave
Hanson, Romie Hanson ,
Terry Clark, Shern Clark,
Rick, Ann, Brandon, Kimberly Neal, Allen, Kay, Allen
Lee, Apn l and Ada King
F'n ends attendmg were B•·enda, Pam and Kun Haggy,
Robtn , Kathy and Tonya
Phahn. Sending gifts were
Mrs Bessie Qwllen, great! grca t-grnndmoth er, and
; Rory Karr.

, Tounst spending m New
' York State has increased $287
. million during the past 16
; months, according to state
officials.

HlnfY w. Block

H&amp;R BLOCit
THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE
E. MAIN ST.
POMEROY. O
Open 9 A.M. to
6 P.M. Weekdays,
9-5 Saturday
Phone 993-3795

I

I1

NOW

GREA ~f LY REDUCED

R~CtNE,

CH EST ER, 0 .

915-3307

0.

949·2020

.•

•'
•

-

.____ _-..._

_

_,__

{

Th1S lightning system-in -a·box 1ncludes
23/B-•nch lag bolts
1 11 '4 or 2x 12 mch mounting bracket
230-i nch , 7-s t ra nd No 16 cables
1 top hood
...
1 opt1ca l assembiV
1 175-watt delu xe white m ercury lamp
ThiS fixture is ballasted, '' saves vou
replacement bulbs.

1

REG. 43.95

SPECIAL

After a had scene, she occasiOnally apologizes and blames ~

menopause. but usually Hhe blames me and --husbandsnatchers" out to mHke her a divorcee
What can I do• - OVF:RW ATCHF:fl, UNflf:RTRUSTF:fJ
Df:ARO.U :
Your wtfe's jealous insecurity should have been treated

cathedral ,' a lovely locatwn
on a btg beqd of the Mississippi R1ver and a warm,
fnendly people, this Queen
C1ty of the Delta has lacked
but one thmg in tts long
colorful history.
It has never had a cardina\
of the Catholic Church to rule
and serve the c1ty's dommant
religion and wa lk m redrobed splendor down streets
and alleys that seem to
signpost the way to heaven.
St Ann . St Philip St. Peter.
St Loms. St. Charles.
Indeed some of them do

-I ·- -·----··- · -I·
1

1
Social
I
I
Jt
pathologtcal problem.
I Calendar 1
Stop givmg to her every whnn and ins1st she seek profes-

years ago,

befort&gt; · menopou~e

exaggerated

mtu

a

tn

FRIDAY
counse1ing Perhaps your chtldren can help convmc e
her. ff she'd "die for you and the ktds," then she should cer- RETURN Jonathan Meigs
Chapter, Daughters of the
tainly try learning to hve ratiOnally for you too.- H.
Amertcan Revolution I 30
p m. Frtday at River boat
DF.AR HR!.RN ·
I am a government worker who has HI ways been reqmred to Room, Me1gs Brimch, Athens
wear a Sllll and necklle on the job At the same t1me, women County Savmgs and Loan , W
can get away with almost any ktnd of garb , from hH!ter tops in Mam St , Pomeroy Slide
presentatiOn on •Tamassee
surruner to pants and boots in wmler.
After my lie got caught m an off1ce machtne and I nearly DAR" School by Mtss Luctlle
choked, I started AA!.M rAdam·s Apple l.lberflllon Move- Smtth ; , hostesses Mrs.
menU. Bosses frowned on 1l. but when half the male Patri ck Lochary. Mrs.
George Skinner,
Mrs .
employees shed their neckties, some even jmned our cause
Anyone m favor of a Natwnal AA!.M, please let me know. Clarence Struble and Mrs.
Mark Grueser, Jr.
- MAC
DF:ARMAC
FRIDAY
!.tberating your Adam 's apple must have made you g1ddy . , MARY SHRINE 37, Order
How can people let you know the1r thoughts on AALM when of White Shrme of Jerusalem
you sent no name and address')
Friday a p.m at Pomeroy
WeB, a nyway, 1t 's a good ulea , and those m favor 1or Masonic Temple.
against l may write lome, ca re of thlH newspaper - H
SATURDAY
PUBLIC
ham - chtcken
DF:AR HEI.EN.
dmner
at
Coolvtlle
Semor
About Betty Crocker coupons ·
Counctl of Volunteers of
C1t1zens
Hall,
Mam
St.,
Coolthe Porterville (Cahforma l State Hospttal for Mentally
vill
e,
4·30
to
8·30
pm
Retarded needs them to help pay for our wheelchair bus. Ask
Saturday
to
ratse
funds
for
your readers to send extra coupons to· Purtervllle State
purchase
of
"jaws
of
life"
.
Hospttal Volunteers, P.O. Box 2000, Portervil le. Ca hf. 93257 . .
rescue
equipment
for
CoolThank you.- Mrs A H.tJ . ville
Volunt eer
Ftre
ment sponsored by
saturday, Jan .• 13
Krautters entertain Depart
Modern
Wood men
of
--=-====~=-=---=-==-=
Amen
ca.
Camp
10900,
Alh
ed.
dinner, lifts
SUNDAY
Bernice Bede Osol Mr and MrH. Han·y Kraut - OHIO Umverstly Wesleyan
h.'! . PnrmToy. entertcuncd Chotr Sunday 7· 30 p m at
w1th et buffd dumcr C~nd g1ft Ractne Wesleyan Untted
exchange at then home dur - MethodiSt Church. Pubh c
mg th&lt;.• hnlule:tys
InVIted
Th etr guests were Mr. anct
MONDAY
Mt:" Ke1th Kruatter and
RACINE
Elementary PTO,
Wend• . Tuppers Pifl ms. Mr
J1nuary 13, 1978
7·30
Monday
at elementary
and Mrs I A&gt;yd Smd a11·, Kyle
Thts comtng year you may
school Refreshm ents by
ancl
Sht•lly,
T11ppef'
PlatnH:
become tnvo lved tn a proJeC t or
room moth ers of ftfth grade
en terpnse wit h a person whose Mr fi nd Mrs . F'raok KrauttJ•r
and habysttting provtded.
abtllltes you truly respe ct Yo u and 1\my, and Darrell Kraut RACINE
Annexatton
Will gam from th1 s assoc 1at1 o n . h•t Pomeroy Oth1•r vtsttors
both Intellec tu ally and matenal- w&lt;•n• M1 and Mrs Alf1 etl
Commtttee meeting at 7 30
ly .
p.m Monday at town hall:
CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan . 19) Wlutc and Mr c~ nd M rs. some 200-&gt;00 acres betng
Betng self-suffiCien t IS env i- Hdru](!\Vtll
considered for annexation to
able but you may carry 1t to
Racme Village wtll be
extremes today and la11 to ac t •
1n proper harmony 1n a st tuadtscussed Interested persons
BURGLARIES
lton callt ng for teamwork Fmd
may attend
NEW YORK (AP) - More
out more of what ltes ahead fo r
TUESDAY
yo u 1n 1979 by sendtng fo r yo u r
than 3 millton burglaries
AREA
Volunteer Ftre and
copy of Astra-Graph Letter
mvolving private homes and Eme rge ncy Assoa•atton
Mat l $1 for each and a long , businesses took place in the
self-ad dres sed , stamped envemeeting 7·30 p.m. Tuesday at
lope to Astro-Graph , P 0 Box United States during 1977.
Galltpolls Ftre Department
The Insurance Information
489. Radoo Coty Statron. N Y
station with representative of
10019 Be sure to specify btrth Institute says the figures
th e· State Fire Marshal's
stgn
come frojll the most recent
1
Office
to speak on arson
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 191 crime report released by the
Election o! officers and
Yo.u do not perform we ll und er
pressure today, so don· t leave FBI.
progr am chairmen.
11 adds, "Nationally,
Important tasks 1111 the las t
Mlflfl!.F.PORT MA!&gt;ONIC
mtnute Take charge of your burglaries accounted for
dut1es or th ey II take charge of nearly three of every ·10 Lndgl' ~fl~. spt•CJ&lt;·d tnt'l-'t mg
you I
crimes included in the FBI's Tm•stlay 7 p m ;.lt ttw h•mphPISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) 1977 Crime Index. Losses Twfl Jl'ld:-il &lt;•r mason degrcPs
Spend today wt th persons you
home burglartes to be eon fen Nl AJI mHsh'r
Sincerely en1oy 1nstead of from
mm·;nns mv1tt·d
bemg w1th those you fe el obit- amounted ro $977 million
gated to entertain If you're nationwide in 1977, according
XI
GAMMA
MU
wtth the latter, no one w111 have !JJ the FBI report."
CHAPTER.
Beta
S1
gma
Pht ·
a good t1m e
Sm onty. Tuesday mght at
ARIES (March 21-Aprll19) Tro uble coul d remain on the domes7 :10 p.m at the home of Mrs
tiC scene today 1f you all ow 1t
fns Payne Cultural program
to Try to stay calm tl there's an
by
Mrs Doris ~wtng and
mctdent Don ·t let your tem per
Fonner Japanese dtctator Mrs LindH Kmg Mrs lm;
gatn the upper hand
Htdeki Tojo and stx of hiS Payne and Mrs Carolyn SatTAURUS (April 20·May 20) In
your haste to get thmg s done collaborators were hanged in tl'rf•eld to be hostesses There
today you cou ld ftnd yourself 1948 for war crunes
will be a while elephant sa le
~JOni:tl

carelessness in f11i ng receip ts
or reco rd s o f your material 1
transactions could res ult m a
loss today Pa y ·spec1al atte ntion to thes e deta1 ls

CANCER (June 21-July 22)

Don't let a hothead upset you
today and goad you tnto a

confrontat ion Walk away Arguments never solve anythmg

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) More

HEADQUARTERS FOR

BULOVA
AVELL

The affordable quality watch ...

than the usual amount of tact
and pat ience may be called fo r
today in your dealings w1th
coworke rs Why 'not set th e

•

(

I•

We have a superb selection of Bulova Caravelle

for everyone today . lf you know
such a characte r, don 't tnclud e
h1m In your soc1al gathenngs

watches. Atl with Jewellever movements All

magnificently styled .

LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) Normally you rely upon tact and

$3495

Come and see that fine
watches don 't have to
be expensive.

gra ce to achteve your atm s
Today, howeve r, you may do
thmgs 1n a way others f1nd
unbecommg and abrastve .

Hl11 Nutt)l hllored In chrome
IRCI Utlnlus steel With silver
dlal
With l ilt d11l.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov 22)
Make suggestions to associates If you mu st today . but be
very careful that you don't do

Mint SUverton• wltn
Sl UR dial •

so too forcibly Upnecessa ~;.y
ugly Incidents could result

,
J

TRUE VALU
BAUM
·
CHESTER O
Hour&gt;

,

•

!1) Be wary of JOin t venture

Involvem ents today,that plaoe
the greater burden on you ,

both physically and financially
The load must be shared

ll..~WJe~e~kd~a~v:s~7~:3~0~·5:·o!o~P:.M:.-----.!!~!!2!--J equally If
-·
Sat, 7:30 tll4 . 00 p

M

to work

il"s ENTERPRISE
(NEWSPAPER

lead to Elystan Fields, where
the
streetca r
named
'' Des1re" used to rWJ.

Soon John Paul 11 wtll hold
h1s f~rst con s1stpry and award
red hats !JJ new princes of the
church.
The Umted States already
COLUMBUS ~ The Pubhc el udes more than 40 new
has 10 cardmals, an aU-time
Relations Office of the Ohto events These range from l:i
high, and other parts of the Htstoncal SoclCIY now ha s dinner and moonhght canal
world w1th large Catholic avatlable for dtstrtbulton the boat nde on the General
populatwns, espt!cially 111
1979 calendar of Soctet y Ham son at the Piqua
South America, would seem spec1al events which l"ts Historical Area, to an ap!JJ have a higher "claim to the
mor e than 125 actlvttle s pearance by author Alex
honor of a red hat .
planned for the coming yea r Haley at th e Soctet) s Annual
But there ts more to thts
This year's calendar 111- Mee\lng m Columbus All of
jewel of a ctty that tis
the popular events whiCh
mapmakers' hltmg litany of · Kniahts or p,,thia
have been heJd m past years
saints New Orleans, wtth the
"
~ J
. arc being schedul ed agam for
adj01mng
dioceses
of
·
l"' ,n;
1979
Lafayette, Alexandria, Baton . to znsta; OJpCers
Cop1es of th e new Calend ar
Rouge and Biloxi, embraces
Men of the Kmght s of of Events CJ I c avatlaUle fr ee
one of the largest con- P,1hla flnll Te,nn ;md Gr,md
of charg e b y wnttn!l' ·centratwns of Catholics any- Chancellor of Ohui wtllmstall
Ca lendar,
The
Pubhc
where.
nffl ct·r s for the Kmghts of
RelatiOn s Offt ce, Ohto
Her famed St Loms Cath- PYthia and Pvth1an Ststelo m
H ~;ton ca! Center, 1-71 and
edral, named for the samted a ·Jnmt" lllstaliatwn lo I&gt;• held
17th Ave . Columbus , Oh1o
Kmg LoUIS IX of France, IS .J.m 26 al 7 r Ill d! tlw 4:l21 1
the second oldest in the Wt lkesvJIIP Tt•mplc 591
Uruted States. The origina l
A potluck supp&lt;'l w1 11 fo llm'
plan for the city, founded in w1 lh members to t o~kc·
1718, ca lled for a church and covered diShes R&lt;•gul.ll
presbytry exactly as they are me.-tln g of th e Py tlmm
lUll lil A Y GUE&gt;TS
located today
SISI CI"S Wil)iJl• h!'ld on .Jan 19
Mr .1tHI ,\ 1I s l•lhll t\ncler
The ongmal diocese, spht at 7 "0 p m Tlw •nstallaiH ln so11 of f\1\ rnt!to n , r..~ wN·t
off from Havana m 1793, wlll i&gt;•opentotlw publw
tlw Chnstrf1,J s holtday guest c.:
stretched fr om the Gull of
nf lwr par ents , Mr ~1111 1 \~rs
Mextco to Canada and from
li n~ rl W11ght
the Rocktes !JJ the border of
the dwcese of Baltunore,
where lite Umted States had
nr ctnd Mr s P.n!l M,1nski·,
1ts ftrst bishop
ttu• fmmt•r S:t ndr; r l h•nFor a !: yo ur home
If nomina lions are in 6rder, dirf'k s. of Ktrkwond Mo art •
Entertamment and
the mcumbent archbtshop c~ nnottn('tng tht· hwth of till'
Appliance Needs
Rev. Philip Matthew Hannan ftrst r htlcl. r1 snn , f:th :-111 Po~ul ,
would look great 111 a red hat. horn on DPI 2R at !1r!l'rll's
DOXOL
As an auxtllary btshop of Hl"PIIal St 1.11111'. MO TlH•
SERVICE
Wa s htngton,
Hannan tnfdnl \\t' tght•d rtl tlt' pou n d~.
preached the eulogy at the lhtl'l' (lll JH'(' !-i
r,rdndprt l t•nls .u t' Mt r1 nd
funeral of John F. Kennedy .
He touched millions of hearts Mrs Hlltle~ Ht•tHh 11 k ",
TV &amp; Appliance
w1th hts openmg quote from. Rnu tP :1 Pt1merm , .nul Mr
Gas Service
Eccles1astes . "There ts an dtHI Mrs Alfn:d M,mo..;ke.
appotnted
lime
for Por l WaynP, Jnd Mr s M.llldt•
Racrne, Ohio
Chester. Oh1o
everythmg a t1me to be born F:rwm . M1ddkpnrt. :1t1d M r s
and a time to die."
r-:,·:1 Dt•ss:-rut•r . PomP roy '""
A cardinal m New Orleans gn •, 1t-grrl nflmotiH•r&lt;..:
would serve a c1ty hooked on
death and redemption. Jazz
began here wtth the brass
hands watllng "Swmg Low,
Sweet Chartot" for funerals
headmg out to St. Louts
Cemetenes I, 2 and 3. Mardt
Gras, the smner' s last flm g

Announce bz'rth

RIDENOUR'S

Me and my

before Lenten reform, IS still

the c•ty's biggest tourist
draw
So please, Your Holmess,
crown th1s City of Jazz and
Superdome, of pralmes and
prelates. of sin and samted
stt eels, of heavenly foo d and
earthly temptaltons w1th a
cardinal, a prmce of the
churc h ,
to •save
syncopated sin ner s

ItS

CEMENT INDUSTRY
ATLANTA (AP) ~ Three
cement - industry executives
were elected to the board of
directors dr the Portland
Cem.ent Assoctatton at tts fall
meeting here
·
They were Edward H
Bovich, pres id ent of In dependent Ce ment Co rp ,
Kenne, N. H., Robert L.
Forde,
president
of
Rochester Portland Cement
Corp., Rochester, N. Y., and
Brtan Whttft eld. prestdent
and chief executive ofltcer of
Ctt adel Cement Corp .
Atlanta
The assoctation is a
rcsea•ch , market development, a nd educattonal
organiza ti on
whi ch
represents the U. S. and
Canadtan cement industry

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

R. C. BOTTLING CO.
MILL STREET
Mtddleport, Oh1o
992 -3542 or 992 -3344

Attention Dog Owners
DEADL IN E FOR PUR CHASE OF 1979 DOG LI CEN SE IS JA NUARY 20 1r' ONE
DOLLAR l$ 1.00) PE NA LTY IF L ICE NSE I S PURCHA SED AFTER THAT DAT E
FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE USE THI S HA ND Y APPLICATION BLANK AND
MAIL TO THE COUNTY AUD ITOR AT THE COURT, HOU SE NOW F EES ARE
TWO DOLL ARS ($2 00) FOR EACH DOG M ALE O R FEM ALE I KENNEL
LICE NS E PENALTY S5 00!

To obta in license by ma ll, f1l l m and ma ll th iS form to HOWA R D E F RA NK
COU NTY AUO I TOR, Metg s County. Pomeroy, Ohta
Enclose self-add r essed stamped envelope and prr ce of ltcen se
Mate

Dog 12 oo

Spayed Femal e 52 .00

F e mc:~le

Kennel L•c en se SlO 00

S2. 00

Owner's Nam e

Township ... , ..

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopt. 22) A
bully type could spoil the fu n

up to $12 .00 on

Ohio. Historical
Society Calendar
of events available

, Add~iis s

tllvlr

....•.•.••... ..••............... ... .........................•.................. . ,.....
!

• -·

COLOR

:

H(llr

: Breed :

ge
, Sex •
•
• 11
• Fees
r . M o: M •F.: Blk : Wh1te: Gray: Bri nd leTan:Brown: Vellow:Lonq ·ShOrt: Kn ow n : Pflld

.: .: .: .: .: :. .: .:
.. ;...... ,... .;,. ..:,.. ... t·······i·
····;. ......
. .. . . .... .... .... ...
o

t

\

o

o

o

o

'

f

I

o

o

o

.. ·:· ... ~· .. .;.. ·:· . .. ~·· ..... ~- .... ~ .•... . ":" ... ·~ · ..... '! ...... ·: .. ....... ·~· ... ... -~ ... .

.: :' :.
.: · .:
.. ... ....
.... ...... ....
••• ••• , ••• .:.. , ; ···-:o·····•C••••••:•••••••o:-•••••••••••:······ •···· ······\••••····:····
:::··::
.:
. .
;
:.
·=·=:
.
.
:
:
:
.
:
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
,
.
... I . ...•.. ...................................., .....• ,. ... ... .......... ... .. . .. . . ,...•.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
. .. .. . .. .. .. .. .. .. .
.. ...
: . : ....
...............
"' . :.......~ ..... ~· ······=····~·· · ··········· ............ ~- ·· ··········
:····~ · ·····-:-······\···········:

· ~·····

~

-~

·~·

'

Howard E. Frank

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec .

I -

•

JEAt.OUs ~ lll "l HF. N-1 H ll~:t;REF.
DEARHF:LF:N
My wtfe ts a wnnderful woman . She'd rile for m•· ~ nd the
kuls !.ately, I thmk she mtght ktll for me tno
She has always been jealous. Rut now she WdnlH me to keep a
dltiry of every smgle mmute of my day away from her . . wtlh
limPs and people involved As in- Lunr h, j2 15 p m at !.mdy"s
WJth Burt (my co-workerl . back In olfJce 1·08 p m If I'm held
up 10 traffic and a half-hnur late at mght, I've got to "prove"
where the traffic jam was
My boss asked me to work late laHl week, and she wa nted to
hear tl from htm. When I wouldn 't put him on the phone, she
called three bmes dunng lhe evemng to check on me .
I hallb never gone out on her. How could!' I don't even look
nt other women m restaurants, but she etccuses me of og:Jing:
every fema le ms1ght
She's 47 and very fearful of losmg her looks Her Jea lousy
has about doubled in a year and tt 's gettmg worse every day .

ex~ mp ie?

LADIES WILl MEET:
POMEROY
EAGL£S RECEIVE FREE SPAGHEITI DINNER
.
AND DANCE FROM 5:00 PM THRU 9:00 :pM·
~~~--------~---------------------""'

--

GE's
Dusk To Dawn
Outdoor
Area Light

·AT TH·E MEIGS INN
I

·· grea t
musi c,
, fme
architecture, a historic

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Your

-

SUNDAY, JANUARY 1-4,__ 2:00 P.M·.

RID

NF.W ORLEANS (AP) Ble,;.&lt;;ed With deliCIOUS food,

runn mg around m c1 rcles Take
the ltme to organtze your actiVIties

DISTRICT MEETING

TV &amp; APPLIANCE
BOnLE • GAS

EATING OU..
SUMMIT, N. J . (AP) - An
energy consultant says the oil
Ameneans use for eating is
adding !JJ the, oil shortage.
"We're now starting !JJ feel
it in a most unexpected place
- the local food store," said
Leslie G. Cook, president of
L. G. Cook Associates, Inc.
In a research ·report titled ,
"The Energy Crunch," Cook
said Americans invest 10-12
calories of oil in txactors,
trucks, fertilizers and
refrigeration to put one
calorie of food on their plates.

Appointment Available But Not Necessary

EAGLE MEMBERS AND
AUXILIARY
MEMBERS
-

FAMOUS BRAND

Brent Hanson

2nd &amp; BROWN ST.
MASON, W. Va .
OPEN TUES.
THURS. &amp; SAT.
9 A.M - 5 P.M.
PHONE 173-9128

ATTENTION

BUY

By HUGH A. MULLIGAN
i\P Spc,•ial Ct•rreNptmdent

ASTRO•GRAPH wiih

I

I

Helen Help
··
.en BotteI :.H
I
•
By
e
Us. •

Mulligan's Stew

The

Alignt
W upfor
outaoor
·l iving
with •••

If you qualify for the Short Form, we charge
a very low price. But even if you, need the
Long Form, the simpler the return, the less
we charge. That's another reason why you
should let H&amp;R Block do your taxes.

618

provrdt•

Turns One

I

;§
,"

Wi th

"'llfl[llws, «'amplng _l!{'&lt;lf, nnd
spi't tal nt•t•r lioi. Sponsoring

orgamzatwns manv times
mt·t•lmgmg. place!-\ .
cmnpt•rshJps,
.md srwt·tr~l
The service unil team'
supplies
tH" t'&lt;Jlllpml'nt, but
meeting sc heduler! for
Wednesday night al the tht•n• are still muncrotJ:;; ot ht•r
m•Pds wlllch can only l)(&gt; [lrllMe~gs Inn was eaneellcd due
vidcd
through thP enmmumt\
to the snow anil1re. Mrs. Pat
t'nntnbntwn s
·
Thoma, s'Crvice umt diredor,
RL'Il\g
11
non-United
Appeal
wtll be sendmg out tnfonnallon to leaders so that lht•re cmd Corrununity Cht•sl cnunwill be no g•p m commumca- ty. ML•igs County haHtht• SIIHt.nlll ng mt•mbership drivP to
tJon .
Plans arc bemg formulated reuse funds lu mamtain the
now for the annu• l girl scout yt•a r-rouncl u-unpmg fetdhtu•s
• cookl&lt;' sale lo lake place later for seouting, handle tht• ('tl.sls
this month , and for the sus- of off1ec and field st•rvH.' t's,
taining membership dnve g1ve te&lt;.'hnJt'al ~ lll dam•t• on
whtch will be conducted in nrganizatwn and 1n ~em•ral
makP possJblt• H fuJI program
March.
ofscoulin!-!
· Mrs. Rhea Jean Norrts 1s
SYRACUSE RROWNJE
the sustaming membership
TROOP 1120
dr1ve chairman and will be
Tht•
Brnwnit•
troop mt•l at
hcadmg a sohc1lation .camtht•
sehnnl
Thursday
night to
patgn 111 the county sinee
prad
ie
t·
lo
r
tht•
flag
there ts no Umted Fund from
f't•remm1)
at
th~· Januan•
whtch gtrl scoutmg recetves
PTO mt&gt;t·ting of tht• Syrarusl•
fund s
S('hnnl.
Linda Lt•mh•y lt•d in
With approxtmately 250 ,
tht•
plt•dgt·
tn the nag, and
girls and 50 adults involved 10
Angit•
Gru&lt;•srr
gave tht• girl
Meigs gtrl scouting , fundmg
srnut
prumi
st'.
Wt·ndy
is always a concern .
Triplett
had
th
l"
l.nrd's
The girl who belongs to a
Prayt·r
with
Wt· n~ Fry and
troop pays for her own
Harns ~ving tht•
un1form, handbook , personal Micht•lle
rt•frt•shmt•nto;; .
equipment, ins igma, ca camp
avatiable ln scouts

iJ

"The
your return,
the less
we charge:'

·---------:------------------•;
I

deca ls, ~1U' kcr s, cmd cmbrolden•d petl{'hes etrt•an•arlv

.. ..··

hml ~t'S. ~ ..

rwnfH 'I\'0&lt;'{'

Girl senutmg, hHs &lt;-~ fn•:.ih
rn!istn-ttiun 1t·nup dnt·~.
new fact• for '79'
.
wlule
tht• troop pays for tr·nnp
A new lrt•fOJ! emblmn-has
Jn('eting
l'qmrnm•nt . prt1gra1n
bet•n designed and poHlt•rs.

,,,,

~

By Charlene Hoeflich
t'OStS,

'~

%;'

for Christians to be loyal in
their dealing wtth others, to
do good toward all and not be
insisting on their rights. A
Christian worker will be
diligent and respectful to his
employer. "And thts would
apply especially to employers
who are hard to please,"
Allen said. " Loyalty always
moves the Christian to be
tho~ghtful and kind as
illu strat ed by the 'Good
Samarttan' of Jesus' parable
at Luke chapter 10," he
contmued.
Allen concluded by relating
to the audience how to meet
the test of Christian loyalty:
Study the Bible, know what
God requires, submit humbly
to God's direction, hav~ faith
m God, be assured that God
loves you as an md1vidua!,
and do not be overcome by
Satan's maneuvers.
There were 23 baptized at
the gathering in dedication of
their lives as subjects of
God's Kingdom

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

'

t

be with dignity.
Interested persons can
obtain additionallnformatton
by Cilntacting the Rio Grande
College and Community
College Off1ce of Continuing
Education, 2454353, ext. 255.

Shop

~ · IK)DUCTS

· '~'~-._o

GiriS;;n;;,' '

f1z
•
'
~~~thGra~:r~li~~lle\eap~~~ I l;j asszc ~:
s
l•t
•
'
;;~~~~~~~~ei~::ru~~~~: ~ a zazre i
!

Whittekinds entertain

Five years ago: The
government
of
South
Vietnam detained at least
half a dozen opposi!ton
leaders

7- The !)ally Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. F'nday.'.Jan 12. 1!17~

.

_Death and Dying
POLLY·s POINTERS seminar contin,-ues

the remarks as · 'Irresponsible, boorish and
desp1cabil•." and Republican
N:.ltlllni-11

---- ·-

-

~~
'QfJwelers
212 E. Main, Pomeroy

ASSN ~
l

-

County Auditor of ·Meigs County
License must be ob1ained nor tater 1han Jan. 20, 1979 to avotd paying penalty Afler
1his dote pen a t!y.will be $2.00 tor s1ngte lag and $5.00 for kennel license.

'

�..
'

8-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Jan. 12, 1979

EWS &amp; SONS SOHIO

.TIRE
CENTER, INC.
John F.

.

J(el£

Fultz, Mgr.

Complete
Automotive

I J

~-

....·

Servi~~

Attend The Church

f!f Your Choice

RUTLAND CHURCH Of GOD.
Ph. 992-2t0t
212 E. Mol~ Street
Mlddloporl, Ohio
Rev Bobby Porter , pastor Sun
Pomoroy
sc hool s up! Chur ch School. 9 15 day se t-l oc i 10 a m , Sunday wor·
shtp I I a m Su nday evenm g
a .m. : worsh
&gt;
'
LUn.J~;
TRINITY CHURCH , Rev . W H. 5erv1ce 7 p m Wedne5dOy Fom•
'
~ _;,
~
""
Perrt n . pastor Bob Buck Sunday ly Tro1ing Hou r 7 p rn WedllE&gt;sdoy
PHA~MACY
. 1 : : "'- . :'
school s upt Chur ch School, 9 15 wors hip service 7 30 p m
.
·- '
'
~'
HAZEl COMMUNITY CHURCH
Wo Fill Dactors'
om wor~hip sePo~• ce, 10 30 a rn
·Neor
Long
Bo
ttom
.
Edse
l
Hart,
PrtJCrlptions
Cho1r rehearsal. Tuesday , 7 30
Mill Workp m unde r du ection of Alice pas tor . Sunday school, 10 a m ..
992·2"5
C.blnel M.oklng
Church ( 7 :30 p . m .
prayer
Nease
Po moray
992·3978
POMEROY CHURC H O f THE meehng 7 30 p m Thu r sday
MIDDL EPORT PENTECOSTAL .
NAZARENE Corne r Un •on and
Mu lberry . Rev Clyde V Hende-l"· Th1rd A ve theRe¥ Wd ltom Knit·
son . pas tor Sunday sc hool 9 30 tel pastor Ronald Dugan Sun ·
am Gl en McClun g, sup! , 'T\Or n - doy Schoo l Supt . Cl a sses for oil
•ng worsh1p , 10 30 o m ., even1ng age s evenmg se rv tce , 7 30, Btbl$
service, 7 JO, m1 d-wec k servtce , study Wednesday 7 30 p m
143 S. Third
youth serv1ces Fnday 7 30 p m .
Wednesday . 7' 30 p m
Middleport
MIDDLEPORT
FREEWILl
BAP·
GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH -Ph . 992-7155
l
iST
Corner
Ash
onCI
Plum
Noel
326 E. Mo1n 51 , Pom eroy The
Herrm an , pastor . Saturday evenRev. Rober t B Groves rector
Sunday se rvices. I 1 a m mornmg mg ser v•ce , 7:30 p m , Sunday
prayer (Holy Commumon lrrst School 10 30om
MEIGS
Sunday of eac h mont h) and serCOOPERATIVE PARISH
Nationwide In!. Co. ·
mon . Church church sc hool and
METHODIST CHURCH
of Columbus, 0.
nursery core pro ¥1ded Coffee
Robert T Bum g arner
hour tn pansh house followmg
804 W. M.oln
Director
th e $ervice
_992-23t8 Pomeroy
94Mt30
POMEROY CLUSTER
POMEROY CHURCH O f CHRIST,
Rev James Corbttt
212 W . Mo•n St.John McAr th ur ,
POMEROY Sunday School q, 1$
pas tor B•ble sch oo l 9 30 a m .
rflorning worsh1p
10 30 a.m .. o m Wors h1p ser¥\Ce 10 30 a m
Youth meetings b 30 p m even· Chmr rehearsal , Wednesday ,
M~RKET
Re¥
Robert McGee ,
tng warsh1p 7 30 Wednesday p m
Tho
Store
n1ght prayer meehng and B1ble mtm si E.&gt; r
With
A
Hearl
ENTERPRISE , Worship 9 a m
!l tudy 7 30 p m
Racine
2t6 E. Mtin
THE SALVATION ARMY , 115 Chu rch School10 a m .
949-2626
ROCK
SPRINGS
Worshtp
10
Bullernut A ve , Pomeroy En..,oy
and Mrs Roy Wmmg otf1cers m o m Church School 9 15o .m
ch a r ge
Su nd oy - hol1 n ess UMYF6 JOp m
1
FLATWOODS. Wor sh•p. 11 o m
meefi/"IQ , 10 a m . Sundo)' School
10 30 a rn Sunday sc hool leader, Church Schoo110 o m
MIDDLEPORT CL USTER
YPSM Eloise Adams 7.30 p m ,
Rev Robert Bumgarner
solvation
meeting ,
ven o us
Cht$1er 985-3307
HEATH , Robert. Bumgarner ,
speakers and mus1c spectols.
R•clne 949-2020
Pa stor
Wo rsh1p
10 30 om
• Thursday - 10 am. to 2 p m
Lad1es Home League . all women Church Schoo l 9 30 o m UMVF 6
tnv tled . 7 30 p m. prayer meeting pm
Rutland -Salem Center Charge
and B1ble stud)' . Bob Estep,
RUTLAND Wilbur Hdt , Pastor
Rev
Noel
Hermon ,
leader
Worshtp 10 30 a m Church School
teacher
9 300m .
BURLING TON SOUTHERN BAP
SALEM CENTER , Ch urch Schoo l
TIST CHAPEL Route l , Shade- S.Jn-S.!!rvi~·Acceuorles
Pastor Bobby Elk1ns
Sunday 9 45o m worship9o m
220
E. M.oln St.
SYRACUSE CLUSTER
sc hool 5 p m . Sunday worsh1p ,
992-7113 --.Rev
Harvey
Koch,
Jr
5 45 p m , Wednesday prayer ser
ASBURY , Worsh1p 11 o m .
VI Ce, 7 30 p m ,
POMEROY WESTSIOE CHURCH Church School 9 SO a m UMW
OF CHRIST 200 W. Ma1n St , Jerry ftrst Tue sday B1ble Study Thurs .
Eallnor
730pm
Paul , mtntster, phone '192 7666
Carry Out
FOREST RUN . Worshtp 9 a m
Conserva tl¥e non-instrumental
126 E ~ M.oln
Sunday worship, 10 o m , B1ble Church SchoallO o m
MINERSVILLE , Worship 10 o.m
study , 11 o m worship , 6 p m
Churct-1 School 9 o m
Wednesday B1ble stud", 7 p m
pomeroy
The Christian rehgion and the English language have one
SYRACUSE, Church School 9 00
OLD DEXTER BIBLE CHRISTIAN
m
common.
They
let
us
grow
at
our
own
pace.
great
thing
a m Worsh1p se r vtce 7:30p.m
CHURCH ,
Rev Rolph
Smdh
SOU THERN CLUSTER
pastor Sunday schoo l. 9 30 a.m .,
'fall:~ the word CARE,m our language. If you want , it simply
Re¥ Do,...•d Harris
Mrs Worley Fronc15 supennt~en ­
Cluster Leader
means being aware of another person ' s problems. Or it can
dent Preaching serv1ces f1rst &amp;
Rev . Steven W dson
mean devoting one ' s skill and concern to the well-being of
th1rd Sundays followmg Sunday
216 5 .. second
Florence Sm1th
School
another
Or it can mean feeling and understanding for another
Pomeroy
Htlton
Wolfe
GRAHAM UNITED METHODIST
214 E. M.oln
992-m5
with whom we share life' s opponunities and frustrations .
A ssoc1otes
Preaching 9:30 a m ftr st and se992-5t30 Pomeroy
BETHANY
(Dorcas)
,
Wor
sh1p
cond Sundays of each month ,
Our religion, like our language, allows time for us all to
third and fou rth Sunday~ eoch 9 00 o m Church School 10 00
grow. It recognizes that caring for one another is just one of the
month wor~h1p service of 7 30 om
CARMEL , Chruch Sc hool 9 30
areas in which it takes folks a while to apprecia1e QUr depen·
p m f.. Wedne~doy evenings at
o', m. Wor ship 10 30 a m . 2nd and
7·30. Prayer and B1ble Study
dence on each other-and on God.
'
~
SEVENTH DAY
ADVENTIST . 4tt-l Sundays
Tr•ctors:
New
Holl•nd
APPLE GROVE , Sunday Sct-lool
One
thing
is
sure
.
At
every
level
of
human
expenence
we
Mulberry He tghts Road Pomeroy
Mlochlnery
46t Third, Mlddi&lt;lnort
Pastor , Albert Otltes Sabbath 9 30 o m Worship 7 30 p m hi
learn to care for one another because God cares for us.
Spring Ave. 9925tOt
Copyright 1979
Superintenden t , Rita and 3rd Sundays Prayer meet ing
Schoo l
992-2196
Ketster Actveru~ng SeMce
Pomeroy
Wh1te Sabbath School , Soturdoy WE.&gt;dnesdQy 7 30 p m . Fellowship
Stt.uburg, Vnginia
supper
first
Saturday
6
p.m
UMW
olternoon at 2·00 , with Worship
2nd Tuesday 7 30 p m
Serv1ce foll ow•ng ot 3 15
EAST LETART Chruch School 9
RUTLAND fiRST
BAPTIST
CHURCH - · S1ster
Homett om . Worsh1p servtce 10 a m
7 30 p m
Warner, Sup! Sunday School , Prayer mee t1ng
9 30 a m , mormng worsh1p , Wednesday UMW first Tuesday
7 30 p m
10 45 am
RACINE WESLEYAN - Simdoy
THE HILAND CHAPEL George
sc hool 10 am , wors htp, 11 am,
Casto , pastor Sunday School,
Chotr practiCe, Th ursday , 8 p m
9.30 o m .; evemng worsh1p 7:30
LET ART FALLS - Church School
Thursday e:ven tng prayer ser&gt;J tce
10 a m Warsh1p se r vice, 9 a m
7.30 p m
MORNtNG STAR . Worsh1p 9 30
POMEROY fiRST
BAPTisT .
Oav1d Mann, mmtsler W1lltom om Church School 10 30 a.m .,
Grocer~ts­
Watson , Sunddy school supt Sun· Mtd Week Serv1ce Wednesday 8
Gener•l Mtrchondlst
doy school , 9 30 o.m · mormng pm
MORSE CHAPEL Worshp l l
Racine 949-2550
worsh•p 10:30 am .
·
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPT IST 282 o m Church Sct-lool9 30 a m
PORTLAND Worsh•p 7 30 p m .
Mulberry A¥e
Pomeroy , Paul
Silver, Pastor , Woodrow T Zwil - Church School 9 30 a m
SUTTON Church School 9 30
lng, Sunday schoo l superlnten.
a m Wo rs hip 1sf and 3rd Sundays
den t Sunday sc hoo l. 9 30 am.,
morntng worship 10·30 ; even1ng 10.30 o.m
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
worshtp , 7 00 p m
M1dweek
448 Locust
Rev R1chord W Thomas
" prover servtce , 7 00 p m .
'
992·3093
Pa stor
MIDWAY COMMUNlTY CENTER .
Middleport
Duane
Sydenslr•cker
Oe,.; ter Rd , LonQsvdle , Ohto, Rev.
John W. Douglas
Clyde Ferrell , Pastor
Sunday
Char
les Domlgan
School
11
a m
Saturday
A ssoc totes
preochmg se rv•ces 7 30 p m
JOPPA
Worshtp 9 00 a m
Wednesday eventng Bible study
Church Sc hool 10 00 a m
ot 730p m
CHRI SI , Mr Oonald Roley , po ~ • o r
Sunday School 10 a m
Robert schoo l 9 30 a m worsh1p ser · Jr pa stor . Sunda~ school, 9 30 o m morning worship, 11 a.m , S.B.C.
CHESTER , Wors h1p 9
,m .
FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH,
Sunday schoo l , 9 30 am ., wor·
Reed . supt .. Morntng se rmon 11 v 1ce 10 30 a m Bible Sturly , lues· a m worship serv•ce 10 30 o m
eyening service, 7 ·30. Wednes·
BRADFORD
CHURCH
OF
Church
School
10
o
m
Bible
Bailey Run Rood, Re v · Emmett
ship serv tce , 10·30 o.m ., Sunday
am ; Sunday mght ser¥ices Chm · d oy, 7 30p m
Broadcast live over WMPO, young day evening service, 7·30 In
CHRIST- Gabriel Mra z. pastor
Wednesdays
,
7
30
'
p
m
Study,
Rowson p astor. Hendley Dunn,
serv•ces, 7 p .m , youth group. tton Endeavor. 7 30 p m
Song
REORGANIZED CHUR CH OF p eo pl e's
5ervice , 7
p . m. terdenominat1onal . full gospel
Sunday school , 9·30 a .m .. morn ·
{Communion h rs t Sunday
ch
supt Sunda y school l 0 a m. Sun
WednesdO)' , 7 p .m .
ser ":,ICe 8 p m ' Preoch•n g 30 JESUS CHRIST Of LA TIER DAY Evangelistic service 7·30 p m.
RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD ing ch urch , 10 30 o m . Junior
month)
day eventng se rvtce 7 30 Btble
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST Rev Earl p m M tdweek Prayer meeting , SAINTS , Portland Roctne Rood Wednesda)' serv1ce 7 30 p m. Pastor Denn is Boles. Sunday church program under directton .
lONG BOTTOM . Sundov School Shu ler , pastor . Sunday !chool Wednesday 7 p.m , Roy Adams ,
teach•ng . 7 30 p m Thursdav
fiRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST , Cor- Schoo l, 10 o rp . worsh •p servtee, of Karen Mraz for ch ildren 2·10.
W•lhom Rou sh pastor Ph)tll• s
DYES V IllE
CO MMUNITY at 9 30 a m hening Worship at q 30 o.m , Church service, 7 p m , loy leader
Stober! Sunday School Supt Sun · ner of Second and Anderson. l l 30 o m and 7 30 p m Prayer during r egular church hour in
7
30
p
m
Thu
rsd
ay
81ble
Study,
CH URCH , Roger( Turner , pastor .
youtt-1 meeting 6 p.m Tuesdoof Bi ·
CHURCH OF JESUS , CHR IST
day School 9 30 am, Morning Mason Pasto r Fronk Lowther. meeting , Wednesday , 7:30p.m
church ba sement Sunday even ·
Sunday school , 9 30om .; Sunday 7 30 p.m
ble Study , 7 p .m .
Located at Rutlond an New Limo worsh•p . 10 30 am , Sunday Sunday school , 9 45 a.m.; wor·
RUTLAND APOSTOLIC CHURCH mg service, 7 p m , Wednesday
REEDSVILLE
Sunday
School9
30
morning worsh1p , 10 30 Sunday
RACINE CHURCH OF THE Road naxt to Forest A cre Pork
even ing serv1ce 7 p m Wednes· ship se rvice 11 o.m and 7:30 OF JESUS CHRIST, Elder James serviu , 7 30 p m
o m. Mor'n1n.g Worship 10·30 a.m
evemng serv tce 7 30
NAZARENE . Rev . John A . Coff
Rev Ro)l Rouse, pastor, Robert day eve ning p rayer serv1ces 7 30 p .m
Weekly
Btb!e Study. MHier. Bible Sludy , Wedne•doy .
JUBILEE CHRISTIAN CENTER Evenmg Wor shp 7 30 p m B•ble man , po5lor Franklin Imboden . Musser Sunday School supt SunMIDDLEPORT CHURCH Of
pm
Wednesday , 7 30 p.m
7 30 p m. ' Sunday School. 10 a .m
George's Creek Rood. Church
Study
Wednesdays
at
7
JO
p
m
CHRIST IN CHRISTIAN UNION ,
chairman of tllle Boord of Chris· doy school, 10 30 a .m .. worsh1p
BETHlEHEM BAP TIST Rev Earl
MASON CHURCH Of CHRIST, Sunday night service, 7 30 p.m
school , 9·30 o m.; morning war·
ALFRED . Sundav School at 9 45 l•an life Sunday School , 9.30 7 30 p.m.Btble Study Wcdne s
l awrence Manley , pastor • Mrs
Shuler , pastor W orship se rv ice , Mdler 51 , Mason W Va. Aurice
POMEROY
- WESLEYAN sh 1p, 10:30. eventng service. 7
om Morn•n g Worsh1p at 11 om
Russell Young , Sunday School
am
mornmg worsh•p . 10·30; day, 7 JO p.m , Saturday night 9 30 a m Sunday sc hool, 10.30 M1ck pastor Sunday Sible Study HOLINESS - HarrlsonYille Rood ; p m. Prayer meet1ng Wednesday ,
We dne sday
Night
Proysr Sunday evening worsh1p , 7 30 prayer s~rvtce , 7 30 p m
Supt. Sunday Schoo l ~ 30 am
o m 81ble Study end prayer ser- 10 a.m ., Worshtp 11 o.m and 7 Dewey Ktng , pastor : Edison 7 p m
1
Meeflng,
7
30
p
m
.
E¥cnmg worsh•p 7 30 Wednes
p m Prayer meeltng .. Wodnes·
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN , vice Thursday, 7 30 p m.
p m B•ble Study Wednesday 7 Weaver assistant; Hehr)' fbltn ,
ST. PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH,
ST
PAUL
,
(Tuppers
Plains)
day prayer meetmg , 7 30 p m.
Roger Watson , pastor, Kenneth
day , 7.30 p,m
CARLETON CHURCH Kmgsbury p m., Vocal music.
Jr .. Sunday school supt. Sunday Corner of Sycamore and Second
MT MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD . Sunday Schoo l 9 00 a m . Morn1ng
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST, Don L
Byer, Sunday school supt. Morn- Road Gory Ktng pastor Sunday
MASON ASSEMBL V OF GOD, school, 9 30 a.m .; .morning war · Sts , Pomeroy. The Rev . William
Wor~t'11p
at
10
00
a
m
Monday
Racine- Re¥ W
H
Lykms ,
Wa lKer, Pastor, Ronnte Sa lser, ing worship , 9 30 a .m .. Sun
sc hool q·30 a .m
Rolph Carl , Duddmg Lane , Mason, W Va
sh ip, 11om. Sunday evening ser- M1ddl8swarth, Pastor, Sunday
pastor . Mor. nmg wor ship 9' ,45 Night Btbl e Study 7 30 p m
Sunday school su pt
Sundar doyschool . 10·30 om .: evenmg supertnlendenf , e¥ening wor5hip , Chester Te nnant , Pastor Sunday vice, 7 30, prayer meeting , Thurs - School at 9 4$ a m and Church
Un•ted
Methodist
Women
,
second
o.m , Sunday school , 10 45 am ..
sc hool , 9 30 a .m morning war . serv1ce 7 30. Wednesd ay B1ble 7 30 p m
Prayer meet•ng , School 9 45 a ;,., , Children's day , 7 30 p m
Servlc:es 11 a m
eventng worsh ip 7 Tuesday , 7 30 Wednesday of each month , 1 30 ship, 1040 a . m ., Sunday evemng Studv . 7 JOp m .
y+Vednesdoy
,
7
30 p m
Church 6 45 p ~ Young People's
SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF
SACRED HEART Rev . .' Folher
p.m.
worship . 7:30: Wednesday even
p.m.
lad •es prayer meet1ng·
MT
UNION BAPTIST , Don
LONG BOTTOM CHRI STIAN . Serv ice 6..45 p .ift' Evon9elist1c GOO - Not Pentecostal , Re¥ . Paul 0 Welton , postor. Phone
SOUTH
BETHEL
(Stiver
Ridge)
.
Wednesday , 7 30p m YPE .
•ngBtblestudy . 7:30.
W1lson
Sunday
schoo l Bruce Sm1th , pastor Wallace Serv•ce 7·30 p m . Women s M1s· George Otler. pastor Worship 992-2825. Saturday evening Mass.
MIDDLEPORT fiR ST BAPTIST , Sunday School 9·00 a .m Morn1ng
DANIJILLE WESLEYAN, Rev R superintendent . Sunday school , Oom ewood , Supt. B1ble Sch oo l', stonOry Council 10 a .m. first end service Sunday 9:A5 am., Sun· 7:30 ; Sunday Mass, 8 and 10o.m.:
Woship 10 ·00 a m Wednesday B1· 0 Br owh, posfor Sunday School, 9 -45-a.m , evening worstiip , 7:30
Cornar Si ,.; th and Palmer , th e Rev
Preochtng se rvice flmd TuesdO)'S Prayer and Bible day sct-lool, 11 am , worship ser· Confesston . Saturday. 7-7:30p.m.
9·30 o.m
ble Study 7 30 p m
Mark McClung, Sunday school,
9 30 am .
morning worship p m . Prayer meettng, 7 :30 p.m
10 45 a m No evenmg servrce
Study, Wed.\esday 7 30 p m.
v1ce , 7 30 p m. Thur1day prayer
VICTORY BAPTIST On the
TUPPERS
PLAINS
,
Worship
9
10 45 , youth .service, 6 _.5 p.m ., Wednesday .
9: 15
o.m ,
Don
Wilson ,
HYSELL
RUN
fREE
METHODIST
HARTFORD CHURCH Of GHRIST meeting , 7:30pm.
Route 7 bypass James E Keesee ,
a
m
Church
Sc:hool10
o
m
superintendent. Lacy
Borton,
evening worship , 7·30 p.m ..
TUPPERS PLAlNS CHRISTIAN CHURCH , Rev Herbert Ailing , IN CHRISTIAN UNION, The Rev.
MT HERMON United Brethren pastor . Sunday school , 10 a.m.,
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST, ser- prayer and protse, Wednesday . CHURCH , Eugene Underwood,
ass!
supt. Mornmg Worshtp,
pastor . Sunday School 9:30 am., William Campbell , pastor , Sunday Church. Sunday School 9:30a.m
morn•ng worship, 11 a.m .: even·
vices
each
S1.1nday
9·30
a
m
J0· 15a m Youthmeelmg , 6p m ,
7 30 p m
pastor . Howard Co ldwell , Jr , Morn1ng serv1ce. 10 30 a .m .. School. 9 30 a.m .; James Hughes. Worship aer¥ice
10_.5 a .m
mgservlce, 7.
George
P1ckens.
pastor
wtth
worship
7 30 p m
evening
Sunday School Supt., Sunday Evo ngeltsfiC servtce 7 p m. Prayer sup! ., evemng ser¥1Ce, 7·30 p.m. Preochtng services every Sunday
SILVER RUN FREE BAPTIST, Rev
TRINITY Christian Assembly ,
preoch1ng on f1rst and third Sun· Morvin MarKin , pastor Steve Ut
Wednesday n ight Bible study and
School , 9 30 a .m., Morning Ser
and pra •se se rvtc e Th ufsd ay 7 W ednesday evening prayer alternating with C. E. Wednesday Coolvillt Gilbert Spent:er ,
day
of
month
Oliver
Swoin,
Supt
prover service, 7 30 p.m .
lie Sunday school supt. Sunday mon, 10 30 a .m ., Sunday evemr.~g p .m
meet.ng, 7 30 p .m Youth prayer prayer melll'ting 7:30 p.m Rev. pastor . Sunday schoo l, 9·30 a.m ..
HOBSON
CHRISTIAN
UNION
,
CHURCH OF CHRIST, Modschool 10 a .m , morning wor · service . 7 p.m .
&gt;REEDOM GOSPEL MISSION ot service each Tuesday
James Leach
pastor . David morning worship , 11 a .m Sunday
dleport , 5th and Mo~n , George Rev Kei th Eblin pastor . Sunday st'ltp, 11 o .m Sunday evening
LE TART
FALLS
UNITED Bold Kno b • Rev
Lawren ce
fAIRV IEW
BIBLE CHURCH, Holter, loy leader.
evening service, 7:30 p.m .;
School.
9
30
o.m
.
Leonard
Glaze, min ts ter M1ke Gerlach
worship ' 30. Prover meettng BRETHREN . Rev Fr eeland Norris, Gluesencomp, Sr., pa stor, Roger letart W. Va ., Rt . l , Rev . Charle1
JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES 1 mile midweek prayer service Wednes · •
Gtlmore.
ftrst
efder.
e'.leni
ng
ser
su pe r~nlendflnt
Terry Yankey ,
and Btble study Thursday 7 30 poster Floyd Norris, supt Sunday Willford , Sr. Sunday school supt. Hargraves. pa stor. Worship ser· easf of Rutland . junction of Route day 7 30 p.m .
youth minisler Bible school 9·30 vice 7 30 p m . Wednesdov prayer p.m youth ser¥1ce, 6 p.IT" Sun· school . 9·30 o .m , morning ser· Sunday sc hool 9.30 a : eventng vtces. 9·30 a .m .; Sunday school, 12A and NOble Summit Rood (T·
MOUNT Ol1118 Community
meeting,
7
30
p,m
a.m , morn tng worshtp , 10 30
day
mon , 10 30 o .m ., Prayer service, wors l·11p, 7 30 p.m
Prayer I I a.m .. e&gt;Jenmg worship , 7 30 17A). Sunday Bible Lecture, 9:30 Church, Lowren~e Bush. pastor ,
BEARWALLOW
RIDGE
CHURCH
CHESTER
CHURCH
OF
GOD,
Wednesday
,
7
30
p
m.
o.m.: evening wo rshi p , 7:30:
meeting , Wednesday 7 30 p m
p m. Tuesday cottage prayer o .. ; Wptchtower study , 10:30 Bethe Pigott . Sunday school supt
OF CHRIST , Duane Worden , Rev Donny R. Coolo: , pastor 4)un·
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE Youth meetmg . Sunday, 5 30 p .m . meeting and Bible study, 9 30
prover Jervice, 7 p m Wednes
a .m , Tuesday, Bible study, 7 and Sunday Schoof and morning wor ·
.. mtn1ster 8 1ble class , 9.30 a .m .; day school , 9 .30 om. ; worship NAZARENE. Rev. Herbert Grote,
day .
with Don and Mart ha Meadows in o m Worship serv ice, Wednes· 8. 15 p.m .. Tt-lurtday. theocratic shtp, 9 30 a .m. Sunday e\lenlng
morning
wors
h1p,'
10:30
o.m
.
serv tce , 11 a.m ., eventng serv1ce. pastor. Wor~hip service , 11 o m
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH Of THE
charge
dov, 7 30 p.m .
7 30
p m ..
service ser..,iCe, 7 p.m. , Youth meeting
sehool
6:30 p.m . 7.00. )lOuth servt ~e . Wednesday , end 7·30 p .m . Sunday . Sunday
NAZARENE, Rev Jim Broome, evenmg wors h1p
WHITE'S CHAPEL, Cool¥tlle RD.
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH . now meeting . B 30 p.m
and Bible study, Wednesday , 7
Wednesday
Bible
study
,
6·:1)
p
m
7 00 p m
School, 9 30 o m. R!chord Borton, Rev. Roy Deeter, pastor , Sunday loca ted on Pomeroy Pike, County
pastor, Bill Wh•fe , Sundov school
RUTLAND FREEWill BAPTIST , . p.m.
NEW ST IVERSVILLE COMMUNILANGSVIllE
CHRISTIAN _ supt . Prayer meeting, Wednes
supt . Sunday school , 9 :3Q o.m :,
sc hool9.30 a .m .. worsh1p 5ervice, Rood 2$, near Flat woods Rev, Church - Leland Holey, pa1tor .
FAITH BAPTIST Church, Mason ,
TY Chu rc h, Sunday School ser· CHURCH, Robert Musser, pastor
day 7.30p.m .
morning worship, 10 30 a.m.,
10 30 a.m B1ble study and praye r Blackwood, pastor Services on Sunday school, 10 a .m .; evening meet at United Steel Workers
VICe
,
9·45
o.m
Worsh1p
s.ervice
,
Sunctay school , 9 30 a.m ., Roy
BRADFORD
CHURCH
OF ser¥ice, Wednesday , 7 30 p m .
Sunday evangelistic
meetmg.
Sundav at 10 30 a.m and 7 30 service , 7:30
p .m . Praye r Union Hall , Roilrood Street ,
10 30, Evongel•st•c Servt ce 7 30 Sigman, supt ; morning worship , CHRIST, Gabriel Mus, pastor
7 00 p m
Prayer
meeting
RUTLAND CHURCH Of CHRIST, p m with Sunday school, 9 30 meeting , Wednesday , 7:~P·!!"·
Mason Pastor, Rev . Joy Mitchell.
p
m
.
Wednesday
Prayer
10·30, Sundoy even1ng ser¥tce, ble Sunday School9 30 a m . mor· lorry Coleman , pastor ; Co- Sun· am. Bible study, Wednesday ,
· Wednesday ,
7
p m
CHURCH OF&gt;GOD of Proptiecy , Morn ing worship 9:_.5 Q.m., Sun·
meetmg 7 30
7 30 m1d· week se r¥tCe, Wednes· ning church 10 30 am , Sunday day school supts. , Sam McKinney 7·30 p m.
UNIHD
PRESBYTERIAN
located on the 0 J . White Road day School 10:30 a.m . Prayer
ZION CHU RCH Of CHRIST
day , 7 p m
evening ser..,lce, 7.00 p m . and Herb Ell •tt Sundov school and
MINISTRY Of MEIGS COUN TY ,
INDEPENDENT HOLINESS off highway 160 Sunday School meeting Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
Pom er oy -Horri 5onv itle
Rd .
SVRACUSE CHURCH OF THE Wedn•sdoy sllil'rv•c:e, 7.30 p.m
Dwight L, Zavtt:z ,.dlrector .
commun ion. 9 .30 o.m Worship CHURCH INC. - Peorl St., M;d. 10 a.m Superintendlll'nt John •
FOREST RUN BAPTIST - Re¥
RC"bPrl PurtPI !
pastor
Bill NAZARENE
Rev
Dole Bon ,
LAUREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST andcomunlon . 10.30o m
HARRISONVIllE
dlepart . Rev. 0 Dell Manley
Lovedav . First Wednesday night Nvle Borden , potJor. Cornelius
Mc~lr o y , Sunday school supt. Sun
pastor. Bob
Moore, Sunday CHURCH, Rev. Floyd F Shook .
PRESBYTERIAN , Rev
Ernest
RUTLAND
COMMUNITY pastor S0'1,1'JY Hudson , Sunday of month CPMA services, tecond Bunch , superintendent Sunday
day school. 9 30 o m .. morninf
School su pt .; Sunday school . 9:30 pastor: Lloyd Wrtght , Sunday CHURCH, Amos Tillis, pastor
Stricklin , pastor Sunday church
sc hool supt SUnday school , 9 ·30 Wednesday WMB meeJlng , third school, 9:30 'o 'm.; second and
wors hip and commun ion, 10 30 a.m .: mornmg worsh•p. 10:45 School Supt .; Morning Wor~hip
school , 9 ,30 om , Mrs. Homer
Danny Tillts, Su.nday School Supt
a
m. evening worship, 7:30p.m . through flhM youth service
fourth Sundays worship tervlce at
o m Sunday worr.htp Sflrvice, 7 o m . evangeh st1c serv tce, 7 p m, 9 30 a m . Sunday School 10 20
Lee, supt~ : mormng wors hip,
Sunday School , 9 30 a.m . war
Prayer and praise seryfce
George Groyle, post~r .
2:30p.m.
, ..,
p m Wed,., ... ~ rlov e¥ening prayer Wednesday servtces ·- prayer a m , Wednesday Prayer and B•·
ship serv1co... 11 a.m , Sunday Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
·1030
HOPE BAl'TIST CHAPEL - 570
MT. MORIAH BAPTIST - Fourl~
meeting and Btbl o study 7 p m
and proise , 7 p m , Nazorenf'l ble Study 7 30 p m , Sunday e¥on· even1ng service, 7 p m Prayer
MIDDLEPORT, Sunday sc hool.
THE PEOI'LE'S CHURCH Of Gt-~nt St ., Mldclfeport Aev . Bobby , and Main St , Middleport. Rev .
ST. JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH
tneohng Wednesday 7 p m
9·30o.m , R1chardVaughan . supt . Pine Grove Thr Rllil'v . Wifl1on youth 7 p .m . Dolly pra'jler ' ing wonMip 7:30pm , Choi r Proc
POMEROY ·- Corner Main and Elkms Sunday school , 10 am.: Colvin Minnis, pastor. Mrs. Elvin
meeting 8·30 o m . Men's prayer tice Thu rsday, 7 p m
third floor over morning worship, 11; evening Bumgardner ,
WMPO Radto br.oodcast, Sunday Court Sts
Morning worship , 10 30 ~~o
tupt.
Sunday
Middlesworth, :•astor. Churcl , meettng Soturrloy. 7 p m
Of.XT£R CHURCH Of CHRIST
morrung 7 45
SYRACUSE , Morni11g worship, 9
Uohthuo"e Restaurant
Henry worship, 7~30 p ..m,: Thursday school, 9:30 a .m.; worship ser·
servlcr!l Q 30 "' m. Sunday Schoo
EOE~~
UNITED
BRETHRt:N
IN
(!,orles
Russell
,
Sr
minister
OUTLAND CHURC" 0&gt; THE Cook , post~ . Su~~~r ichool , 10 evening Bible study nnd prayer vice , 10·-45 a.m.
o.I'JI .. Sunday school 10 o .m Mr s
10 30om .
CHRIST, Elcfen R. ,.lo~,.. pastor . Rick Macomber, supt. Sunday NAZARENE , ~ev lloyJ 0. G1uurn,_
Sampson H~ll . supt .
nteetlng 17:30p.m. Affiliated with
•BRADB U RY
CHURCH
Of

TRINITY CHURCH , Re v W H.

· ThV. Sunday

Perrm , pastor, Bob Bud11 Sunday

SWISHER &amp;

.1

These Messages

EVEN A TOP AUDri'ING
TEAM FINDS IT NEAR
IMPOSSIBLE TO DETECT
COMPUTER - RELATED
EMBEZZL-EMENT.

Of Our Religious Heritage. .

Are Sponsored Each Week By The Following:

RACINE
PLANING
MILL

.

--

•

STATE FARM
INSURANCE

YOU LUI!BE;;:."y S WAB~ WHAT
1.\AI&lt;E S YOU T HINK YOU CAN GET
AWAY WITH I&lt; IS$1N0 THE
C I-IIEF MATE'!'

•en; RUN

PON'T ASK ME~
MU~T'VE GONE
TEMPORARILY

l

THR OU0H Tf!AT
AErA IN .S HA LL.
WE--AND S EE IF
A NY AN ?WEK',;

~UT.S!

P. J. PAULEY,.
· AGE_NT

ROSEBERRY'S
PENNZOIL

TURt.J UP!

Ph.

RACINE
FOOD

7

Athens County
Savings &amp; Loan
Co.

HISY,

l-ISTEN,

I"'OZY. I

GOTTA MAKe MI: A NI:W
AX! 'o''KNOW WHE&lt;I'!E I
CAN F=IND A GOOD
SlONE H&amp;\D FOI&lt; IT?

TV &amp; Appliance
Gas Service

APPLIANCE II

PIZZA SHACK

DOUG'S

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

LITTLE ORPHAN

MARINE
SALES &amp;

Reuter-Brogan
Insurance
SeiYices

ANNIE--"DAR~

QUICK , SA~D Y •••
JHAr OLD U\DilER --GRAB 11 ··· IT 'S OUR ONLY

Yl · .. Y/fl~T 'S A HEAD ? A
ROTTEN OLD BARGE ... LOOK
AI TH ' WATER RAC IN ' AGAINST
IT .. · WE'LL BE DUMP!:D, SURE ···

YIPE -· 11 BROKE OFF
SHORT··· WOW' NOW

lOoK WHERE WE'RE
HEADIN ' •••

PASSAGE"

CHANCE •.. tlOW .'

TEAFORD SR.

'

FuHon-ThomDSOn
Tractor Sales, Inc.

Don ThomDSOri Ford, Inc.
s.

1 thinli. l'll fetch
m' juq'

What l.lOU doin' here.
Mister Walt?

Attend The Church

of Your Otoice
This Sunday.

WAID CROSS
SONS STORE

Attend The Church

lliE DAILY
SENTINEL

1uwc~u s. the4 don't. ~&lt;,noVo~ th'
qroun' here lilt.€ I do~ Could do
1
a heap o' damaqe to ~er

Whatis a fren' fer?
I'll have 40u out
in a jifh~! ...--

Perhaps
l should
call
a tow
truck.
Joel.
L

Of Your Choice '

MARK V STORE
Middlepof:t

Attend The Church
of Your Choice

.

PLOOE, P1EASE HELP
U5 MAk= IT BACK TO

OH,MIB?E 15'rnAT PILOT?
WE'VE GOT TO GET YOU
TOA HOSPITALh'IST/

CIVILIZATlON

OKAY, I 'VE GOT
A

,BEFORE

500D G R IP ON
LET HIM
GO !

HIM .

IT$ lOOLATEi

-"

HE'&amp; PROBABLY

DEHYOR'ITED-

MOie&gt;TEN HIS LIPS WITH

ANP KEEP
HIM COVEREPl

WATER ...

'""""

YOU MEAN YOU

.6TILL DON'T

KNOW IF HE'S
YOUR HUSBAN D
OR NOT?

This _:Sunday

a

8•·

FRANK &amp; ERNIE

Massachusetts Coloey on
grounds of heresy .
In 1737, the first 5\gner of
the
Declaration
of
Independence , John
in Hancock, was born in
Braintree, Mass.
In 1919, the U.S. House of
Representatives rejected a
proposal to g1ve women the
right to vote.
In 1933, an Arlcansas Democrat, Mrs Hattie Caraway,
'became the first elected

.:t THINI'C:t.'L.L.. C::HANGoE

•
'
MY NAMe To
.
'
~~ NG fln.. t.Y GeNE. !.

Friday, Jan. 12

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Luck is what you make it
NORTH

+-AQJ 5
" J 87

•Q

+ AJ963

woman senator.

BORN LOSER

1-12·A

WEST

EAST

• 93

.. 8 7 4 2

"K 4 2

•A

• 108743
K82

• Q 10 7 4

+

• A 9 52

SOUTH

• K 10 6
•QIIII53
• KJ 6

t---tj TOYUG

10

.'~ 'J,'; ,,.',!'.!.o"""" ~ ·

[B UJOM

+5

t

YONDER COMES
''MUDCAT" MEDDERS
AN' HIS NEW BRIDE

Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass

WHAI THINI&lt;.IN&lt;S 0"'
C.H ICK5o AL.L iHJS
liME MI&lt;SHT MAKE.
ONE DO .

BARNEY

LOOKV, PAW··

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North
East
West

.... ~· .. ""

I GIVE HIM
CREDIT· -· HE'S
BEEN FISHIN'

FER I.{EARS fER
A ltJIFEMATE WITH

·-AN' FINALLV
HOOKE!) HISSELF

- A WHOPPER

Now arrange the Ctrcled letters lo
form the surpnse a nswe r. as sug
gesled by the above cartoon

ii . I KJ

Print answer here:

THAT Ot: LINE OF

HIS ···

"[X XI XJ"
(Answers tomorrow )

Veste tday s

I Jumbles MOGUL

I

FRAME

PI CNIC

D EF IN E

Answer . A rathe r one-sided v1ew , no doubt A PROFILE

Jumbl• Book No. 12,cont1lnlnv 1 f Opuulll,lt 1Wiiltblttor$175pottpald
from Jumblt, clo tl'lia n..~•peptr, Boll 34, NorwDOCI, N.f:ll7MI. Inclwdeyour
ntmt, tddrtu , :zip eodt tnd .mtkt chtcks ptyablt lo Nlwtpaptrbooka.
\

Pass
Pass

Pass

Opening lead : +9

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sonlag

The student won the spade
lead in dU9"'1Y and went
right afteq trumps . East
took his ace and returfted a
spade. The student smiled
happily when West had to
follow. Then he led a second
trump. West took his king,
put his partner in with the
ace of diamonda and ruffed a
spade for the setting trick.
"Should I have pased at
three hearts?" asked the

student. " Or was I Just
unlucky '?"

"No, you s houldn 't have
passed aL three hearts," replled the Professor. " In one
sense you were unluc ky
Without a spade lead you
would have wrapped the
contract up , but in the main
sense you just misplayed the
hand. Four hearts was a
cmch."

The student should have
left trumps alone and led a
diamond at tr1ck two. East
would win and lead back a
spade, but the student would ·
have been in complete con· . ,
trol. He would wm In h1s own

hand and di scard dummy's
last two spades on his kmg •.
and jack of diamonds. Then
he would go after trumps
and nothing could hurt him .
'·

The biddmg has gone :
West North Easl Soulh
Pass 1 Club Pass 1 Heart
Pass 1 Spade Pass ?

You, South, hold ·
.. K J 5

1-l 2-B

"AQ965
• 32
+ K 10 4

A New Jersey reader asks
what you should bid now.
This is a tough one, but we
favor a jt,.np to three "luba . .
(NEWSPAPLt\ ENTERPP:~ E ASSN.) '

1

(For a copy of JACOBY MO[ .
ERN, send St to: " Wrn • • •
Bndge, " care of this newspaper, P 0 . Bo• 489, Radio Clly
Station, N&amp;w York, N Y. 100191

�.•
11 Th, 1l .. ily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy. 0., Frld~y, Jan . 12, 1!!79

10- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Fnday, Jan. 12, 19'19

·=~~~~~~.~~:~r.1~.: -~O~T=~~~:~~~~S~h~~~~~ ;0"

December 31 , 1978
Col umbia Township
Meigs county
Rt . 3, Albany , Ohio
January8, 1979 I c erti fy the follow ing
repor t to be co rrect
Glor.a H utton
Townsh• P Clerk
Tel. No . 614 698 3462

SUMMARY OF CASH
BALANCES , RECEIPTS
AND EXPENDITURES

CASH BALANCE
RECEIPTS AND

EXPENDITU~ES

BY FUND

Bal anCe , J an

197S

1,

1

.

WANT AD

CHARGES

LOST• IN l e tart or Eo!&gt; t lelorl 4
mo o ld coon dog , w ht1e w1th
brown loc;e and lew blo c k
spo ts 747 2015

15 Words or Under
Cull
1.110
1.10
1.11
3.110

b9b

1285

!day
2daya
3dlyJ

&amp;day•

CborBe

1.2!1
1.10

1.25

3'11

Eactl word over lhe minimum lll
lfOI'do II 4 centa ll"' word per day.
Ads running other than eonaecuUve
days wtll be charged at the 1 clay

Hei.I!__Wanted

Nf l:i D SOMFON~ to core foi 1ody
m her own home l1 ve 1n fax
mea ls
dr1ve
car s ,
get
g•ocen es ~ uperv1se medtcc
hon , e tc . Ideal woman would
be mtddle aged trustworthy
ond willing to make her home
1n Syracuse, Oh 1o ~1 - 7 034 o r

992

7b71 .

WAIT RESS AND g olf work on
Saturday s an d Sunda ys Apply
a t Ri ve rf ron t Dmer

-

In memory, Card rl. Thanka and
ObltiUiry· S cenll per wtrd , p 00
mlnlrnwn. Cash in Advance
MobUe Home sales and Yard aales

ing lkt:i Nwnber In C.re al11le Sen-

- - - - - ---

--

SNOW

TIRE SALE
SNOW TIRES
ON SALE AT
POMEROY LANDMARK
SERVICE STATION

NOTICE

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES'
Monday

Noon on Saturday

ly

Tueoday
thru Friday

BAR HELP needed Coli betwee n
8 30 and 9 30om 992 3860

tP.M.
the !b y before publlcMtlon
Sunday
4P.M.

Friday afternoon .

-----Notices
- --- ---GUN SHOOT Rae~ ne Gun Club
Ev ery Sunday 1 pm Fa ctory
_ch_o ke ~u_ns_ o~ly
___ . .
GUN SHOOl , Rodne Volunteer
F1re Dept Every Saturday 6'30
pm at the1r bu1lding tn Bashon
Fa_ct?rl' c_h~k ~ guns ~n~y _
INCOME TAX Servtce Federal
ond State To )(es 9&lt;12 -'1'172 lor
appts o r see Wando Eblin ,
41000 Lou rei Cltfl Ad

1 15,184.25
Rece ipts
Gen era l Prope rty Ta x Rea 1 Esta te and
Tra11e r (G ross )
11 ,993 81
POSITION AVAILABLE
Tangib le P e r s ona l
Private,
non-profit
Property Tax
( publi ely controlled I
(Gross)
5,24 1.92
seven-county advanced life
Esta te Tax (G ross)
350 19
Local Gove rnment and
support service seeks
State In come Tax
2,954 .49
Executive Director.
C•g a rette L1cense 12ees
Responsibilities: Overall
INCOME TAX Service Federal
~and Fin es ( Gross)
37.51
administration
of all
and State Wallace Russel l
Ad1us t ments and
phases: filtee&lt;1 stations, 28
Re runds
1, 140 76
Bradbury Co~l ~&lt;12 7~2~ .
O ther
2,675 38
fiLS Vehlcle'iJ full-lime
Total Rece1p ts
24 ,394 06
staff of 70 and support
Wanted to~ To tal .B eg•nn m g Balance
servIces,
execution of
Plug Rece1 pts
39,578 31
Poles
ma x
seven
annual
co\mty ' CHIP WOOD
EJCpendtures
d1ometer 10" on lor~s t e nd
Total Expend itur es contracts, etc . Answering
S17 per ton Bundled s lob $10
Admm1 s lra~
·v
30,717 08
to 22 .member regional
pe r ton Oe ltv e red to Oh1o
- Town Ha ll,
emo r1a l
Board
of Trustees .
Bu 11d1n gs a
flol let Co
Rt 7 Pomeroy
Salary
:
15K
20K
Grounds
930 55
997 ?689
negotiable
by
- F 1r e Pro tecti o n
350 00
TIMBER POMEROY Fores t Pro
661 00
qualifications,
benefits
- Cemeter .es
- L 1g ht ing
15 1 41 I 1nclude Health , Life and
du els Top p nce for s tanding
Gran d Total Ex p
.sow t1mber Coli 992 -5965 or
Disab i lity
Insurance ,
Ge n er a l F und
32, 810.0-4
KPn f Hanby , 1-.4.46-8570
Ret1rement.
Balance , Dec . 31 ,
Qualifications :
191B
6,7 6S 27
OlD FURNITURE . ice boxes . brass
Total Exp P,lus Ba l
Bachelor's degree and five
beds, tron beds , deslocs , etc
Dec 3 1. 1978
39 ,57831
years emergency medical
complete hou se holds
Wn te
Mo1or Vehicle License
services administrative or
M 0 M11le r Rt 4, Pom e roy or
TaJC Fund
coll997 7760
equivarent minimum .
Ba la n ce, Ja n uary I,
1978
3,606 15
Bu slness,
financl a I
OLD COINS , pocket watches ,
ReceiptS
background helpful
class nngs wedd1ng bonds
Moto r Veh1cle L1cense
Submit resume including
d1omonds Gold or sil ve r C:oll
Tax
6,652 27
salary
history
to:
H~ger Wo~s l_:y _ 742 2~3 1
Other
15,000 00
President, SOUTHEAST
Tota l Re ce 1pts
21,652 27
WANT
TO buy · old 45 and 79
Tota l Beg mning Balance
OHIO
EMERGENCY
phonograph
reco rds
Coil
P lus Rece1p ts
25,258 42
MEDICAL SERVICES,
QQ"} 6370 or Contact Marhn Fur·
E xpe nditures
INC ., P. 0
Box 80S ,
n1ture
Total Expenditu res
!&gt;alltpolis, Ohio 45631, by
- MI SCel laneous 12,592 26
WANTED
TO buy old jewe lry
- Mamt e nance
7, 143 88'
~anuary 16, 1919.
Call ~2 5262 or write Kay
Grand Tota l Exp CeCi l E17 S 2nd, Middleport
Moto r Veh1 c le Li cen se
Tax Fund
19,736 14
OH
Balance , Dec ambe r 31,
____Y
_ a_r&lt;!_ S=a '-"
le' - - - - WANTED TO buy Rura l property
1978
5.522 28
nr ocreoge ( 10 to I 00 acres or
~1 1 a1 Exp P lus Bal ,
IF
YOU
hove
o
S{&gt;rv•ce
to off er
Dec 31 , 1978
25 , 258 .4 2
more) Meigs Co notlve look wo n I to bu y or se ll so me thmg
Gaso l•n e Ta x Fund
mg for relirement s1te Pr e fer
oc look1ng for wor k
or
Ba lan c e , Jan 1,
HoCi ne , Ches le r , Portland a rea
• who leve r
you 'll get results
1978
10,956 05
Please wnle Sox 7?'1 R C· O The
R eceipts
fos te r w1 1h o Sent 1nel Wont Ad
Oo1ly Senttnel . 11 1 Court St
Gasottne Tax
14 ,400 00
Co ll992·215b
florner'?y OH &lt;457~&gt; 1
Total Rece• pls
14 ,400 00
Total Beg inning Balance
Plu s R ec e1p t s
25 ,356 05
For ._ Jnt
Ex pe nditures
- - - - --Total Expe nditures ~
COUNTRY MOBitE Home Park
-- MI SCe lla neous
15,75 6.89
By Mrs, Herbert Rousb
Roul e 33 , north of Pom e roy
- Maintenance
4,501 .61
Lorge l_ot~ Co li ~q? ~1. ~9 __ .
Gr and To ta l Ex p Mr. and Mrs, Harry Roush
Gasolme Tax Fu nd
of
MlnersviUe,
Mr,
and
Mrs_
'J AND 4 RM furni5hed and un 20,258 50
l u r n •shEfd
opt s
Phone
S1d Manuel of Long Bottom
,Ba ~a ~ce, Dec em b e r
997·5434
1 7
09 7 55
VISited over New Year's
Total E x p, Plus Bal
weekend with Mr. and Mrs. TWO BEDROOM , k1tche n furn1 sh
Dec 31, 197S
25 ,356.05
ed opt Co li be fore 8 om
R oad and Bn dge
Joe Manuel and Tim.
&lt;1&lt;17 ns8 .
Fund
Mike Rhodes of Griffin Air
Rece1pts
BEDROOM mob ile home
Ge n e r al Proper1y T a:f Force Base, Ind., spent the ONf
adults only 9C/1 751jl8
Rea l Est at e and 7
- - .
. . . .
New Year's weekend with his
Tr ailer (G ro ss)
8,395 67
, 3 bed room 14 )C 70
parents, Mr , and Mrs, Bob THAilER
Tangib le Pe r so n a l P r o~er tv
992·5030
Tax (G ro ss)
3, 669 33
Rhodes,
Othe r
72 9 72
Mr, and Mrs, Ed Kane of
Tota l Rece1 pts
12,79-4.72
Total Begln n . ng Balance
Summerville, New Jersey,
Auto sa le"s',___ _
P lu s Rece1 pts
12,794,72
Mr. and Mrs. Hoyt Ferguson
Expenditures
CHEVROLET NOVA 2·door 6
Total Expen d itu r es
of Point Pleasant were 19b9
cy l , auto ., P S Studded t.res
- Mi s cellaneous
5, 086 20
Christmas Day guests of Mrs.
Good shope . 304·773·5707
- M a intenance
5,343 89
' Ett Warner.
Gr and To1~l Exp 1975 BLAZER 4 wheel dnve
Road and Br 1dge
Mr. and Mrs. Edward
55 000 miles S3500 985 -3875
Fund
10,430.09
Lawson and son, Eric, of 1970C HEVY SPORT 4-wheel dr1ve
Ba lance , Decem ber
31. 1978
2,364 63
Syracuse, Mrs, Charles
Short bed stepslde 350 4 bbl
Total Exp Pl us Ba l ,
Lawson spent New Year's
auto . tran s 36 000 mi. Ve ry
Dec 31 , 1978
12,79.4.72
good condition lots o f extras
Cemetery Fund
weekend with Mr. and Mrs,
Ba lance , Jan . 1.
Coli afte r 5 pm 99'1 7786.

--=-------

Fairview

RISI NG SlA R Kl"nnl" ls aoa rdmg
onci 91 nc11n1ng
oU breeds
r· h P~ hlr£' 'JtJ7 O'J&lt;n

Pomeroy Landmark

SIAMf SE RABBITS

5 100fe

..

Service
..........
....
.., ,. ....

TOTA l

ELECTR IC

'"'" " ned

3

Hammond

J&amp;L

Blown Insulation
JIM KEESEE
~
-

mobile

bedr .

TWO BEDROOM mob,Je

hom e furn 1shed
fro clea n w1th

471 DETROI T OI ESH w1th dut ch
on ci Iron s , 5750 16ft flat g roin
be d ! 350 40 It flat low
tondem !ruck I rolle r !750 1000
It 7 mch p1pe S:lOO 74'1 3093
1ens CADILLA C ElDORADO full
powe r an d 01r Adu ng $4700
Ph one 'IQ'J 7 4b'l

__R~_al Estate tor Sale _

REDUCE SAFf and fa s t w1th
Go8ese Tabl e ts 8 E Vo p " wate r
p1lls' ~el so n Drug

NtN E ROOM hou se Iorg e b ose
me nl and root ce llar $10500
Ne ar grade school Rutland

Don't leta chimney fire put

a damper on your. life
Call. ..

Will Make
Service C. lis
1

651 Beech Street
Middleport, 0 .
992-2356
1-4-1 mo. (Pd.)
216 E- Second Street
STORAGE Approx
36x80 above all floods . Has
electric, city _ water,
natural gas, loadmg docl&lt;,
gasoline tanks, and park·
ing. $40,000.
5 BEDROOMS - Wood
frame house with large
rooms , · 2
fireplaces,

U PRICES
JACKW.
CARSEY
Mgr.
Phone992-2181

'J.t " ROUND MHAl !~repla ce w1th
Mogk heat blowe r a nd g rat e
S150 tJ67 3778

natura l gas furnace , cl1y

water and large lot . Reduc ·
ed to $21,500.
FINE NEW HOME - With

PART FOR 1973 Vega Al so fi res
949 7379

fA RM FOR sa le House '1 barn s
troll er Lorg e pond 10 a cres or
87 a cr es 742-75tJb
rn oney
dow n·
(e ltg 1ble
Vr tc re ns) FHA As low as 3,,....
clown (all non Vetere ns ond
ge ne ral publi c) To purc ha se
re al est ol e o r refinance 30
YFARS TEHMS IRElAN D MOR
TGAGE CO 77 E Sta te St
Athe ns Phone b l4 597 3051

woodburnlng firep lace, 3
bedrooms , carpeting all

lhru, 2 full baths, 2 car
fihished garage on one
level acre. $69,900.00.
BUSINESS AND HOME Want to try your luck at a
small shop and live in with
all utilities for only $12,000.
This is your chance.
WARM - - Large natural
gas furnace, bath, 3
bedrooms, new carpeting
a ll the way . Glass sliding
door, nIce kitchen, base
men! and backyard . Only
$16,500. A bl~'We11" "with

--- ---------Real Estate for Sale

HOBSIEIIER

REALTY
George 5_Hobsle"tr, Jr.
Broker

.55

ACJ!_

......

YYIItl

pump, !Oxso mobile home,
gas furnace in the cduntry
for only $6,000.
LAND - Buy what you
want . Plenty of firewood on
some and water 11ne by
some. 2 mobile home lots.
WE LIVE REAL ESTATE,
SO CALL US AT 992-3325
FOR YOUR ANSWER ON
REAL ESTATE. SELL
THROUGH A REALTOR,
A PRO,
G, Bruce Tuford
Holen L, Teaford
Sue P. Murphy
Assocl•tes

OUr properties ore selling,
We have many buyers and
financing available, C. II us
todoy to see if we con sell
our llome, WE NEED
ISTINGSII '
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.
New Limo Ad.
Rutland, Ohio
Phone 742-2003
George S, Hob&amp;le"tr J r ,
1
Broker
Phone H2-5139
Hilton Wolfe, Assoc.
949-2589

r

.

Housing

31,

Headquarters

HOU SE FOH so le
locoflon
Ma son WV Fovr bedroo m spill
leve l built 10 k1tchen w11h
oven rang e , garbage d1 spos ol
nnrl bar Family roo m dmmg
roo m who le hou se ca rpehng
Full s1ze basement Ce nt ra l 011
and forced 01r go s hea t All
riropes plu s was he r a nd dryer
Back yard 10 fr h1gh ced ar
ff' nce and cedar decks for
rn vocy He ated garage Close
to school store pork and tenn1 s
court Contra ct Go ry l Gtbbs
Call b14 -949 -2'14b
'J'

a cres 1n Pome roy Secluded
wooded oreo on top of hdl
O ve rlook s n ve r Water e lec
tr1c ov01 lob le 992 3886
1

HO USE IN M1nersv dle
4
be d room hvmg room k1tchen
both and ut1hty ro om N1 ce lull
s ize bosmne n1 9'}2 5823
5fCLUO ED IN tOw n ltv1ng All
o lec tr1 c 3 be dr c.r::~ m . 1 1 '1 both ,
carpet e d fomtly room w1th
1-=ronklm stove garage 1 1
acre la nd Ne ar Me1 g s H1gh
Sc hoo l To see dol q9') .6787

.

·-·-·

··---

W!;:Ll ESTABLISHE D groce ry w11h 7
roo m upsta1r s o pt o n Solem St
m Rut land Oh1 o 742· 2424 or
741-3 141

---·· ·- ---

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

197S

I, 109 .35

Receipts
Sa le of Lots
50 00
Tot a l Rece 1p ts
50.00
Total Begmn•ng Ba lance
P lu s Recei pts
l, 159.35
Expenditures
Sa lar ies
•
5B6 50
Other Expenses
24 45
To ta l Exp
610 95
Bala n ce , Dec . 31.
1978
548 40
To t a l Exp , Plus Ba 1 ,

Dec . 31, 197B

1,15935

Federal Re\,.e nue
Shari ng Fund

Receipts

Gra nt s - F ede r al
3,77 6 00
Total Rece1 pts
3,776 00
E Xpenditures
Mamt. and Operation
Su pp lies
3,776 00
To t a l Exp
3,776 00
Anti -Recesston

Receipts

Other
121 00
To la l Re c ei pts
111 00
Expenditures
Su ppl i@S
121 00
Total Expe n di ture s
121 .00
Ba l , De c . 31 ,
J97S
TOWf)Shipo Debt- Notes
Purpose For Wh1ch
Note Debt Was
Created
1977 Chev r ole t Truck
Outstanding Jan . 1. ·

J97S

6,000 00

Red eemed Dur .ng Year
1978
6,000.00
Rate of In t.
8 Pet.
Date of F inal Mat .
9 12 1980
1978 Ca5e .eeoc Tractor With
Loade r
Backhoe and
Motrrm Rotary Mower

Gary MiUer and children at
Bellwe, 0,
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Lawson
and family were New Year's
Day guests of
Charles
Lawson :
Mrs. Pearl Norris, Mrs, Ett
Warner went to Colwnbus
Tuesday with Arthur and
Janet Warner and spent the
day.
Russell RoUSh called on
Mrs. Edna Roush and Mrs.
Gladys Shields New Year's
Day at Racine.
Herbert RoUSh and Ed
Roush visited Ott Boston at
Racine New Year's Day,
Ne w IssUes During
Year 1978
20,995 .00
Balance Outstanding

,Dec . 21, 1978

Ra»eof Int .

Daleo! Final Mol.

20 ,995.00

Total - Ba lance
Outstend ing Oec

1978

( 1)

12, l!C

·- - --·-

...

std 5350. 378-6349
1q73 DODGE POWER Wago n .4 wheel drive 985 3378.
1975 DATSUN PICKUP, good con
d1tion , low milage good tires

_H~n! 9_?~d ~n ~ n?~ ~8~-~9~9 :_ _
1971 FORD .4 -door station 'wagon
good tire s , new bottery
automatic ewcelhtnt wnrk cor
! 450 Call 9C/'J 7080 after Spm

·----

,,.,.,~

·-

ASSUME PAYMENT· l. x.t 4-wh&lt;lel
d1rve . 1978 Ford s hort bed
p1~ k~p- ~14.:~7 - 330~ __ _ .

1975 JEEP CHEROKEE . 6 cyl
auto , 4-wheel dnve 985-3551.
Harold Brewer long Bottom

OH
00 YOU need o tran sportation
co r? 197.4 Chevy Mollbu , 514q5
1 1977 Chevy prckup . 6 cyl , std
$900, 1q73 Olds Custom wagon ,
!1495
1975 Ford Mu stang
Gh1 n , std , $1995. JOA -173-5..17 1

8 Pet .

.

11 ·6·19S1

Total - Outs tanding
Ja n . 1, 1978
6,000.00 ·
To t al - New tss ues
'Uurmg Year; 1978 20,995 .00
Total ~ Redeemed During

Year 197S

.

1967 '', ton Ford p1ckup, 6 cyl

6,000.00

21 ,

20,995 .00

--

For sale '
- ... ._ ·--·-

COAL UME S TON~ . sand grovpl
folc•um chloodo , fertllmtr, ci')g
food and oil type s of soh , I' I('
ff~ ls1or Soh Work s , Inc . E M01r1
~~ , Po meroy "'2 3691 .
APPLES FITZPATRICK Orchard
Stole Rt bf!&lt;i . Phone Vfilkesv•llf"
M9 37H5

MAIN
POMEROY,

0.

ABOUT 6 YEA I&lt;&gt; ULD - 3
bedrooms, nice kitchen,
dining room, al l electric,
storage building, nice lot
$28,500.00.
MIDDLEPORT Nice
home, 3 bedrooms, dining,
nice kitchen. 2 mobile
homes, all rented .
$29,500.00.
ONE LOVELY ACRE All furnished, small creek
through,
almost , new
mobile home, large con
crete parking area . Many
other features. $16,500.00.
MIDDLEPORT - Lovely
home on corner lot. Three
bedrooms, two baths ,
modern kitche n, lots of
remodeling, a ll
very
modern. $27,500.00
48•;, ACRES - 191S Holly
Park m obile home, 8' ex.,
pando, new addition ux36 '
add·a-room, large deck
Many, many features . All
for lust $.18,000.00.
TWo
MIDDLEPORT buildings,
both
with
business rooms and apart
ments, also well eslabll~~
ed tawern and restaurant
business with good Income
Many other features . .. If
really lnterestecl, please
call for particulars.
IYOU'LL END UP BEING
PLEASED WHEN YOU
LIST YOUR PROPERTY
WITH US TO SELL.
REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
ASSOCIATES
Leon• Cleland
Kattty Cleland
992·27U-992 .. 1,1-H2·2SAA

-

.A

.w:

~------

OWNER MUST SELL -The owner of this
charming 2 story stone home in Middleport
must sell now so she is offering this fine
home for a low, low price of $20,000. There
are 2 bedrooms Cl is extra large), spacious
living room w-fireplace, formal dining, eatin kitchen, bath iN-shower, garage &amp; a king
sized yard, Good location· on Mill St. Call the
WiSeman Real Estate Agency, Gallipolis,
446-3643.

•

POMEROY, 0.

500 E. MAIN
992-2174

pe rs Plains, 667 3095 Small all
breed mol e. white and brown
667 · 3267 or 992-3895

MACHINE R ~ p01 rs , ser·
v1cc , al l makes , 99'1.2284 The
Fobnr Shop
Pom e roy
Autho m ed Stn ge r So les a nd
Se r v~(~
S~O_! p_:~ S: l s!o~s- EXCAVATING , dozer loader and
bockho~ work
dump truck s
and lo boys for h1re w1ll haul
fdl d1rl , to so d lir"nestone and
grolo'el Coli Bob or Ro ge r J e f
fe r s day ph o ne 99'1-7089 mght
p~o~e-'19_7 ~5?S_or_ 9~'1 _ 5~3?, __
EXCAVATING , d oz e r backhoe
and d1tche r Charl es R. Hot
f1eld
Bock
Hoe Se rv 1ce
Rutland Oh1o Ph one 742 7008

Services Offered
our

~-·-----------.

WATER WEll drdl1ng . W1 lhom T. •
Gran! 742 - 287~

-

---- ------

TREE TRIMM ING a nd
741-3 1b7 or 74'1 -2573
-

remo\lol. •
•

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

t

HAVE ROOM board and olundry :
1n
pnvat e home Will toke •
se mt 1nvohd 992·5422 . Elderly •

Will do roofmg , const ruction ,
lo~ y- _ _ _ _ __
_. _ _ _
0
p lumbmg a nd he a lin g No 1ob
too Iorge o r too small Phone . - - - - - - - - - . . ; ._ _

742·234H

•

•

•

•

•

•

-

PULLINS EXCAVATING Comple te
Se rv1ce Phon e 997 2478

·- -------- ---

-·----------SNOW PlOW ING service Co li
gc}']

3309

I

•

v .8, 4 sp.

1973 GMC VAN •••••••••••••••• $2500

As Low As

•4.aa

·v:,;

V-8 auto., p .s ., p . b ., air, finished inside.

RIEBEL'S .USED CARS

9' and 12' Viqyt

Floor CIMring In Stock

See Rbger Riebel
985-3345 or 667-3463

E·C ELECTRI C A~ Contractor se rv- I
mg Oh1 o Volle y _re gi on Si)O
Buy wner• ;vu c•n come In
day s o week , 2.:1 hours se rv1ce
ond
... what you'r•geHing
!imergency calls Co lt 982-2qs·
oocnhlllttctiBM=Fully
o r 882-2305
.

~

-· .

Nearly 200 persons who
qualified for a provincial
grubstake · in
British
Columbis
this
year
represented the largest
nwnber of prospectors in the
past deeade,

St. Rt, 7

1 mile north
Tuppers Plains. Ohio

'licked,

-,
c:AII74H211
rAt.K-TO
Wendell or Herb Grat•
or"Gen• Smlttt

.'

RUnAND
~URNITURE
.,
Ruttend

· RUilAND fURNilURE

,.
~,

1974
CHEV. WV•••••••••••••••• s1195
4 cyl., 4 sp,
1950 FORD %IDN. ••••••••••••• s395

Rubber Back Carpet

M &amp; M Home Improveme nt se rv In g Goll1po hs and orca. We 1 ·
in
viny l and
s pec10I1ze
alummum s1dmg . Fo r fre e
es timates ca ll 614 -367-0128
Ga11•po1t s

6 cyt. aut_o., p.s., air .

Club cab, V-8 auto , p.s., lwb.

All carpet lnll•llod with

AUTOMOBILE INSURAN CE been
ca nce lle d? l os t you r ope rator s 1
1
li cense? Phone 992 '1 143.

1974 OLDS CUTI.ASS •••••••••••• s2495

1974 DODGE •••••••••••••••••• .'$1595

•• no charg• ,
I padding
E•perl lnllall•tlon ,
1

4 dr. Wagbn, '4 cyl , 4 sp

2 dr. auto., p.s., vinyl roof .

SAVE,A LOT

I

1975 HONDA CVCC CIVIC ••••••• s2495

1973 FORD 1 MAVERICK •••••••••.s1495 ·

&amp;,

I

4 cyl. , r sp., ttl! steering wheel, Hatchback

~r.:_ w~gon,

QJliVE. A,LITTLE

1

1978 CHEV.
CHEVETTE .••••••••• ,$3295
.

)

1973 HORNET SPORTA_BOUT••••.$1495

CARPETING

BATHROOM S ANO Ktl c h e n s
remodeled cero mt c tde plum - 1
b1ng , carpent ry, and general 1
momte nonce
13 yea rs e)C ·
per1ence 99'2 3685
I

WE OFFER YOU , ••
1. Two full 11-s of all ,1~w
furniture,
2, Nice selections of uood
furniture.
J. A large building full of
beautiful carpet.

See lhe Grate' Family

dl

1974 CHEVY NOVA ••••••••••••• $1895
') Or

j

TELEVISION
VIEWING
FRIDAY, JANUARY 12, 1979
5:30-Carol Burnett &amp; Friends 3, News 6; Sanford 8
Son 8; Elec. Co , 20; Mary !vier Moore 10; Odd
Couple 15; Ooctor Who 33.
6:DO-News 3,8,10, 13, 15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6:30-NBC News 3,15; ABC News 13; Carol Burnell &amp;
Friends 6; CBS News 8, 10; Over Easy 20,33,
7:DO-Cross-Wits ·3: Newlywed Game 6,13 ; Muppet
Show 8: News 10; Love, American Style 15; Con·
sumer Survival Kit ;!0: Big Blue Marble 33.
7:30-Hee Haw Honeys 3; Sl.98 Beauty Show 6; Family
Feud 10; Bonkers 8; Pop Goes The Country 15;
S100,000 Name That Tune 13; So The People May
Know J3.
•
8:DO-Dift'rent Strokes 3, lSi Donny &amp; Marie 6,13;
Wonder Woman 8,10; Washington Week In Review
20,33,
8:30-Joe &amp; Valerie 3, 15; Wall Street Week 20,33.
9:DO-Rockford Flies 3,16; Amerlcon Music Awards
6,13; lncredlble Hulk 8,10; Congressional Outlook
20,33; Turnabout 20 ; Close.Up 33. .
10:DO-Eddle Capra Mysteries 3,15; News 20;
American Shorl Story 33.
10,:30-Monty Python's Flying Circus 20.
11 :DO-News 3,6,8,10,13,15: Dick· Cavett 20; Soundstage
33.
11 :JO-Johnny Carson 3,15, Braretla 13; Movie " The
Hero" 6; Gunsmoke 8, Movie '' Frankenstein Must
·Be Destroyed" 10; Monty .Python 33.
12:30-Juke-Bo• 8; 12 :40-lronslde 13
1:DO-Midnight Special 3, 15; News 8; Movie "Devil
Doll" 10.
1:40-Nows 13; 2:30-News 3; 3:DO-Movle "Secret
Ceremony" 3.

• s:QO-Movle
1

"D~dlock"

SUPERCAB 4X4

!'1u lo , P S, P B . o oCl rl co nrl i!IOI"l

1974
FORD GAlAXIE ••••••••••• !1295
4-dr., auto.,
p.s., p.b.

V S _450 trans ., AM. FM stereo , traction
rear axle. gauges , slid tng rear

air ,

dow , and much more .

1974
TOYOTA STATIONWAGON .•• s1295
Auto
1974 PINTO RUNABOUT.:~~o~ ••• $1295
1974
BlJICK REGAL ••••••••••••.$1795
2-door, fully equippd
1972 PLYMOUlH VALIANT' •••••••• '995

2-F·l50's

4Dr , a uto , P . S, P B . 6cyl

133" WHEELBASE
4X4

1.978, CHEVY 4x4 •••••••••••••••'6495

V-8, auto trans, 1 w1th a~r tract ron ,
lock rear axle , gauges &amp; more

auto.,'p.s., p.b., w-topper, 14,000 mi , c . JO

'

.

1976
CHEVY LUV PICKUP••••••• $2895
Auto., 26,000 m1
1975 CHEVY LUV •••••••••• : •••• $1695
112

ton ,

hours Will be S-l Mon .-Fri .
Closed Saturday and
Sunday.

__________ ....
International
Harvester

3.
'

"

Open Tlll7 P.M. e~cept Thursday &amp; Saturday Iii S:OO Closed Sunday .
See Rocky Hupp, Darrell Dodrill or Pal Hill , General Mo•ager, for a Good Deal on a
New or Used Vehicle.
992-2196
MIDDLE PORT, 0.

985-4100
Chester, 0. - Ray Riggs

Pomeroy, 0.
Ph. 992-2:176
Starting Dec. 2, our store

DAN THOMPSON FORD

RIGGS USED CARS

One year ago: President
Carter accused the Soviet

Union " of ' 'unwarranted '

1

interference in the SomaliNew Idea
Ethiopian fightmg over the
Equtpment • Ogaden border area.

. ""· ·· air, auto., p.s., p. b.• radial tires . -

•

I

698 7331

•

SAVE ON

HOWERY AND MARTIN
covotmg . sep ti c s y stem s 1
dozer backhoe , dump truck ,
l1meston e
grove l
black top
pov1 ng , Rt 143 Phone I (614 ) 1

? Dr H.T., P S, P B , a1r

Equipment Co.

"!"e

1n

1975 FORD GRAND TORINO ••••• $2495

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

992 76BO

Will CARE lor th'e eld e rly
home Phone992·7314

a~r .

1972
FORD VAN ••••••••••••••••s1695
Ready to go camping , auto., v .s.

Will PARTY who los t ca l1co k1llen
pleas e coli ~ Humon e Sooety ,

SE~ ING

CENTRAL REALTY CO.
CHESTER Good 5 beoroom nouse wttn full
basement and 2 baths, Nat. gas heat, approx. 1 acre
land and large storage building. Price $21,500.
TWO ACRES-Abeautllul4year old, 2 bedroom home
with large eat-In kitchen, 2 bedrooms, all nicely
carpeted, 2 baths, full basement with TV room. Many
more extras, low heat bill with nat, gas forced air
furnace. All this and two nice acres of land In a good
location, Will go quick for $35,000.
ACREAGE - with large beef barn In Pomeroy,
SPACIOUS BI-LEVEL- This may be your dream
home. ~~ has a Large kitchen with lots of .cab nets,
stove, refrigerator and dishwasher, Beautiful dining
room with sliding glass cloo&lt;s Large living room and
family room, and to finish this well-laid out home we
have five bedrooms, utility room and garage. Very low
heating bill. Rod bam-like storage building. Located
about ten minutes north of Pomeroy just olf Rt. 1:
Asking $.55,000,
.
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION- Good 1'12 story house,
mostly corpeted with ~ bedrooms, dining room and
laYndry room, Also almost new 2 car heeled garage,
This home Is nicely located In Portland and PRICED
FOR QUICK SALE at 522,500.
.
LOTS - 1 Acre and up near Pome~oy ,
50 ACRES FREE GAS - Good 1'!2 story house with full
basement, Large pond stocked with fish. Priced for
.
qu lck sale, $40,000.
SYRACUSE - good 2 bedroom home, almost 'I""'
kitchen cabinets, all nicely carpeted, laundry room, all
Insulated, natural gas heat, utility building, 2 lots ..
521,500.00,
Talk to a loc•l re•l est•te •gtllt befors trying to Hll.
your 11om•. His •x,..rtenc• con help you, We n...cl
many types of property, give uo • all,
CALL JIMMY DEAN, ASSOCIATEt4f.2311
or NANCY JASPERS, ASSOCIATEt4t-2654

.

3825

.
~--~--------~-----------~
i

t

·------.,.----- -- ·
BEAGLE BASSETT . YOUNG Tup·

Sweepers toa s te rs 1rons all
sma ll oppl1on ces lawn mowe r
ne )(' t to Stat e Htg hwoy Garage
o n Route 7 Ph one (b 14} 985 -

99'2 7201 or

.

SMITH NELSON MOTOR, INC.

LONG HA IRED fe mal e pu p Call
Humone Soc1ety 992 7680

ELWOOD SOWERS REPAIR

No

Don't forget you owe it to yourself to check w1th
you buy
any car, New or Used. We can save you money.- See_QLE II one of
These F~iendly Salesmen: J, D. Story, Ray Douglas or ·Bill Nelson :

Give.,_A way
PART BASSETT dog, 9 mo old
9B5·3920
- ·-- h-- -------h
FIVe PUPPIES . 992-751S

B'usiness Services
BRADFORD Auclioneer , Com pl e te Serv 1ce . Pho ne 949 2487
o r 9 ~9 - 2000 Racine, Ohto Cntt
Bradford

FORD
TRUCKS

1976
MAVERICK 4 DR••••••••• ,$2195
Auto ., .p.s., p.b.
1976
AMC HORNET••••••••••••• $2195
Station Wagon , auto., p s., p.b ,

A1 r P S, P B, a1r

u~re

Mounted &amp; S.t•ncod FrH
Phone 742-2328
'

Proprietor

.

REAL ESTAH lOANS VA

Frnplace Flues

F·250 133" WHEELBASE
¥4 TON 4X4

1971 FORD LTD STATIONWAGON••$495

THE FRIENDLY DEALER

$42.4~

Phone: 742·3110

BED ROOM frame bo rne 1n
M1ddl e port Coii'992-3A57

family room that has a nice

CHfRRY AN D wo lnul lumber and
wood work1ng tools Fo r more
1nformol1on call 997 193b o r on
790 Mapl e St , Middl epor t

&amp;

THR ~E

-

~"ivice

Know-How.
Speclollrlng In

20th Century

- ----

-

ES
7110-15-6 Ply Hwg,
$31.36
700-15-6 Ply Deep Lug

Woodstove, Oil Furnace

HOM!:=SITES for sole , 1 acre and
up Mtddl e port , neo r Rut land
Coll 992-7481

. .

•

lHE SWEEP with
19TJI Cin,ury

Real Estate for Sale

-

•

..

sweep's Guild
Insured

18 Years Experience

Huclquarters for all you~ .
· G,l!. T.V.'s &amp; Hotpoint
Appliances,

·~

Member of
Chimney

SHOP

LANDMARK

'·

pt. .. no 992-5682'

-

REYNOLD'S
ELECTRIC MOTOR

POMEROY

Auto&amp; Truck
Repair
-Also Transmission
Repair

Ttr•• Blvd., Racine, Ohio,
P one 949·2111. Evening
after 5 P.M : Weekends
after 12 noon .
12-Jl-1 mo.

-

w1th qu1 ve r and s1ghts . Phone
Y97 7108

0.

"

I

'lj

Oft

St. Rt, '124 tow•ril Rutlend,

SALES REP. FOR
SUNDINS
HAMMOND ORGANS

_.;,F~.
9!__:2772
11 -3· 1 ro2i
.. -.
-

742·2153

B~AH WH ITETAIL fo mpou,;d ' b~w

~.mil~~~~~~

Pm SIMPSON

r··

gas hee l ell ·
und er p1nnmg ,
po rch wmtenzed ready to
move tn On rental lo t 1 m1.
from New Ho ll'e n Rl 33 !.5000 I
304 6EI2 '14bb

ROGER HYSB1

Sales .

c.urr1nt

Save 30 pel, to so
on healing cos
Experience and ,
fully Insured

'

1974 Ford T -Bird, red &amp; white, has everything . . . , .. . $2600
1973 Mazda Rx2, Rotary engine, needs some work ... , $600
1973 Buick Electric 225 4 Dr., has some miles .. . ... _. $1000
1973 Mercury Montego 2 Dr . HT , not a bad car . . . . __ ._ $800
1972 Chrysler Newport,
4 Dr. sed,, vinyl top, local owner .. •. . ....... .. .. $650 ·
1972 Chev, Imp, Custom, 2 dr ., body extra good, Only , ·, $900
1972 Ford Gal. 500,4 dr. HT, vinyl top, runs real well , , $600
1972 Pontiac Lemans 4 Dr. sed ., make a nice work car . $500
1971 Ford L TO', runs OK, body is really rough , • , , ... , $200
1971 Buick Skylark Wagon, auto , , p,s,, p,b , , runs well . $450
1972 Chrysler Newport, 2 dr . HT, needs one door fixed, $400
Chev . Caprice Classic 2 dr , HT,
body &amp; motor extra nice .. ' .... -- . ...... • . ... . $1200
\1973 Ch~v. Nova 2 Dr .,
vinyl top, V-8, auto ,, p ,s ., p,b ,, only , .. , .. , .. .. .. $1300
1976 Pontiac Lemans sport coupe ,
has one dent, Below wholesale ,,,,,, . .•. , ,,.,., $2500
1974 AMC Gremlin, low mileage ,
one owner, a good buy ..... _ . .. . . , ,, , .. . ,,.,, , $1600
1971 Pontiac Catalina 4 dr . sed., runs good, body rough $300 ,
1967 Pontiac Lemans 4 dr .,
overhead cam, six, local car , , ,,,. , ,,. ,,. , ,, ,, . $200
1975 Ford Elite, 2 dr. HT.
A sharp car, below NADA wholesale ...... , . • , , $2400

- ·: .

-~-

organl, Story &amp; Clork
Pianos. Salts &amp; Service.
(New &amp; Ustd). service on

I

•

220 E, Mil In Street,
Pomeroy, 0.
C. II H2-711 ~
For Free Estlm•tes

Lowe~_t

&amp;

v .s , auto, trahs., AM-FM

'2395

11·9·1 mo,

1

wa s her and dryer A1r candi ·
Cellulosic (wood' fiber)
t1oned 1 lot 710 ft fr ontage : Therma I insulation
$12 000 f'h one 747 '1826
I

1974

APPUANCE U·

l'tl. H2·Z114

STOCK

117" WHEELBASE
CUSTOMIZED 4X4
stereo, 4-10 : 00x l5 off r oad
ti reS and m l,lc h more

EWOTT

i-12-1mo.

1' '1 ACRE 17 K bO mob de home
ne a r DeK ter 99'2 51:158

~

li!!!S!l.t_:P~ho~n~e~9~92::·~2~1~81!__j

Pti)NE 742·2328

F-150

rtr , r1,1r1&lt;
b lur , v 1nyl ton,
p c;,, pb , ;pr ,
low m1I P.;lCJI"

•

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Depend On •• ..

B&amp;S MOBilE HOMESA lE S
PT PlfASANT W VA

nome

.....

NOW ·IN

rt

Yoor Headquartets For
Annslronl Calpetinl

_

N. JROMM OONST.

1973 Roya l Embass y 6H x 14 3 BR
195qstm 50xi07 BR
1973 Star bOK 14 '} BR
196fl Star b0~12&lt;2 BR
1970 Sy lvo 60KI 'J 'l BR
1968 V1lloges 60x12 2 BR
196-4 Wmdsor 51 x 10 '2 BR
I Q/0 K1rkvvood I 2)C60 3 BR

19tJ'/

·.

.

fl"mcde 9H5 'J55S

~---Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.

•- ·

FORD
LTD

.

Business Services

AK C BRINOEN boller 11 , year!
n lrl. moll" w ~ ll h1 ed .qq'}. 75 19

-Room Additions- M- -b,-l _H
____f_ S I · • - Custom Remodeling.
o ' e omes or a e
- - - - - - -- - - - - Ceramic Tile . Formica
19'7 0 l'.mh e rs t 50x 1'218 R
Counter Tops - Ceilings
Plo10s Oh 10 614 bb7 3368
1970 Chomp1on 60K1'} 2 BR
I Suspended, Texture) - Tile
JCI65 General bOK11 2 BR
. Floors. Paneling &amp; Trim .
GOOD MIXED hoy Aller ) roll 1Yb8 PMC 57•12 2 B~ .
Fronk Broderic k , 99?757 3
1955 Pro1ri e Schooner 7Bx8 I BR
Quality Work You Can

The Publilllet' ......... the rtgltl
to «&lt;ll or reject any ada deemed objectional. 1fte Publbl&gt;er wtU not be
responaible for l'llOft than one lncor·
n!Clll"'Rrtlon.
Phone 1191-2116

1975

~------

PIGS 'OR solo 9&lt;97S57 ofter 5
·
HN ST AND second ru ttin g hoy
S 75 ond S.H5 bol t! Tupper!i

tinel

PHY SICAL THERAPIST full lime
por i tun e or consultant lPT
Must ha ve O h1 o licen se Well
eq u1pped p hy s 1col thercpy
dep t 1n a 70 bed general
h osp dal ,
l ocate d
1n
So utheas le rn Oh1o 30 mH'I ules
from Oh1o Umvers tly Send
rpsu mes to W S l uc a s Ad ·
m1n Sirotor , Vete re ns Me monol
Hosp11o l Pom eroy, Ohto 45769
or co li co llect 6 14 992-11 04
Equ a l Empl oyment Opportani ·

MEDI CAL TEC HNO LOG IST, mo le
or female Acceptmg opphcc·
. . li ons for full l1m e pe rman e nt
tec hnofogt sl MLT or CLT w1th
HEW. Re s um es or opphcal1ono
may be mo1led to
Ve tera ns Memonol Hos p1tol. Box
749 Mulberry His Pomeroy
Ohio
45769
Ph o n e
61 4 992-2104 , Equal Employ ·
_m? n! C?Ppo_rt~n ity __

PFA HAUlERS f B Sn les Equ1p
men! nnw o n ~ole all 1n s tork
Rod1 os and acce\ s On ~s through
Ch11slmo s Open every day £' K
rrpt Sunday o11 d Monda y
FVcnmgs by oppomtm e nt
P or r lopd ,
Ohjo
Ph e n e
~4~ 2064

ore ace&lt;pled only with cuh with

ct'der) 25 cent charge for ada carry.

•

Pets for Sale

QU/\UT'I' CON DITI ONHl rn1w r- ci
hoy W1l! cirliver QIJ'J n01

rate.

__

-

-For
- -Sale
-.

FOUND PUR E wh1t(' long ha tred
adu lt mole cat 190 N. 2nd St
M1dd lep~rt qfl'} 159? .

LOST FEMALE ENGLISH Sprtng er
Span 1e l on 6tH
tow ard s
Pog ev ill e
Ca ll
ca ll ed

'

'

For Best·R.e sults Use Sentinel Classifieds

pood le&gt; b lock pupp1 cs PC'ppy
onrl l urk-- lorne St 8crn ord
•
u
ShPporci ro xce11ent wolchd ng
Abo ve
Rrl?d sv1 l ll"'
61 4 37B b301

Balance Jan 1. 1978 "'
Ge neral Fu nd
s 15, 181. 25
Motor Veh1c1e
License Ta x Fu nd 3,606 15
Gasoline Tax Fu nd 10,956 05
1,10935
Cemetery Fund
30,SS5 so
Totals
Total A. ece1pts
Ge neral F und
24,394 06
Moto r Ve h1cle Li cense
Tax Fu nd
21.652 27
Gaso1 1ne Ta x Fund l~ . ~Otl . OO
Road and Br 1Gge
12,794.72
Fund
Cernetery Fund
'
50 00
Federal Revenue
Shanng Fu nd
3,776.00
Ant i-Recession
121.00
Totals
77 , 188.05
Total Receipts &amp; Balances
Gener al Fund
39 ,57&amp;,.31
Motor Vehic le Lice nse
Tax Fu nd
2S,258A2
Gasolme Ta x Fu nd 25, 356.05
Roa d and Brid ge
Fund
12 ,794.72
Ceme tery Fund
1,159.35
Federal Revenue Shari ng
Fund
3, 77600
Ant• Recess •on
12100
tota ls
108 , 0~ 3 es
Ex pend it ure$
General Fund
32,810.04
Mo tor Vehicle L1cense
Tax Fund
19 ,736 14
G aso l me Ta x F und 20,258 .50
Ro ad and Br1dge
Fu nd
10,430.09
Cemetery Fun d
610 95
Federal Revenue
Sh armp Fund
3,776 00
121 00
An ti Rec-essi on
Tota ls •
87 ,742.72
Bala nce Dec . Jl , 19 78
Gen e ral F und
6,768 27
Moto r Veh •c le Lic ense
Tax Fund
5.522 28 ,
Gasolme Tax Fund
5 ,09 7 SS
Roa d and Br1dge
Fund
2.364 63
Ceme t e r y F und
54S.40
Total
20,301 .13

.

SATURDAY, JANUARY 13,1979
6:DO-Sunrlse Semester 10, 6 10-'b iscovery 17
6.30-Salurday Report 3, Vegetable Soup 4; U.S. Farm
Report 10; Kentucky Afie ld 13; 6:4()-News 17.
7:DO-Go USA 3,6; Mar io &amp; the Magic Movie Machine
4; Matters of Life 6; Mr Magoo 6; Public Polley

KARR
&amp;
~~M IAMDl

~
by THOMAS
ACROSS
I Cutu:tless
&gt; Consecrate
10 Hautboy
II Ma riner
12 Pm
13 Descendant

JOSEPH'
6 HST's
birthplace
7 Rousseau
book
8 Suppressed
9 Golf great
11 Old Chinese

Forums 10; An ima ls , Animals, Animals 13 , Three

Stooges· Little Rascals 17 .
7:30-Ciiffwood Ave. Kids 3; World of Survival 4;
Ousty's Treehouse 6 , Porky Pig &amp; Friends 8; Pink
Panther 13; Vegelable Soup 15
8:00-Ga laxy Goof.UpN._4,6,?, 15; Scooby ' s All Stars
4,6,12,13 ; Popeye 8l10iCiiffwood Ave . Kids 17.
8:30-Fantastlc Four 3,4,6,7, 15; Sesame St . S; Par .
trldge Family 17
9.DO-Godzl ll a 3,4,6,7,15, Bugs Bunny. Road Runner
B, 10; Star Trek 17 .
9:30-Superfnends 4,6,12,1 3; Once Upon A ClassicS
IO :QO-When the Mov 1es Were
" Decision Before Dawn, 17.

Young

9;

Movie

10 :30-Dally Ouck 3,6,7, 15; Movie "C razy over Hor·
ses" 4; Tarzan Super -7 e, 10 .
ll :DO-Yogl' s Space Race 3,6,7,15; Fangface 13;
Vegetable Soup 6 , E IIzabeth Lives 9
11 :30-Little Rascals 4, Glgglesnort Hotel 6; Jacques
Llpchltz 9; Acl1on News for Kids 13.
12 :DO-Fabu lous Funnies 3,6,7; Weekend Special
4,6, 13; Space Academy 8, 10; PTL Club 15, College
Basketball 20.
'$'
12 :3()-Bay City Rollers 3,7; Am e1' 1can Bands tand 4,13;
Hollywood Teen 6; Point of View 6; Fat Albert 8,10 ;
Crokcett's Victory Garden 9, Rat Patrol 11
1:DO-Big Blue Marble 3; NFL Game of the Week 6;
Senior Bowl8,17 , Lowell Thomas Remembers 9; In
The Know 10; Wall Street Extra 33.
1: 30-Sto Aberdeen : Basketball 3; Movie " High
Sierra" 4; Columbus Bowling Classic 6; Movie
shal of Madrid" 9; 30-Minutes 10, Mario &amp; the
ovle Machine 13; So The People May Know
Magi
33.
2 00- Colle
Basketball 3, 4, 15 , Exploring the
Restless Sea 9; Movie " All Hands on Deck " 10;
Kids Are Peop le Too 13; Garden Show 20: When
The Boat Comes In 33
2. 30-Mod Squad 6; Nova 9; Other School System 20 .
3:DO-Gale Catlett . Basketball 4, 12; Whales: Can They
Be Saved? 13; Soundstage 20; Movie " Eiv)ra
Madigan" 33.
3 30-Pro Bowling 4,6,12,13 ; Movie "The Pigeon" 9.
4:DO-Golf 3,4,7,15; GaleCa+lett : Ba sketballS ; Sesame
Sl. 9; Nashville On The Road 10; Movie " L1vlng It
Up' ' 17; Beethoven Festival 20
4·30-Sports Spectacular 8, Pop Goes The CountryJO;
Catch·33 3J.
5:DO-Wide World of Sports 4,6,1 2, 13, Pro Soccer 9;
Ool~y 10; Growing Years 20; Lowell Thomas
Remembers 33.

5:30-Nashvllle On The Road 6; Porter Wagoner 10;
Wild, Wild World of An imals 33.
6 : DO-News3 ,~,6 ,7, 10; Gong ShowS ; Pro Soccer 9; God
Has The . Answer 15; Wrestling 17; Crockett's
Victory Garden 20, Over Easy 33.
6:30-NBC News 3,6,7,15; ABC News 4,1 3; Dance
Fever 4; News 6; Porter WagonerS ; CBS News 10;
Ohio Journal 20; Life Around Us 33.
7-:'00-Arlbott &amp; Costello 3, Wrestling 4: Lawrence Welk
4,7, 13,15; Hee Haw 6,8; So The People May Know 9;
, Bugs Bunny 10; Onedln Line 20; Sugar In Thhe
Gourd 33.
7·30-We Think You Should Know l, Footsteps 9,
Please Stand By 10; College Baskebbatl 33. _
B:DO-Chlps 3,4,6,7, 15: We l ~ome Back, Kotter 4,6, 12, 13;
While Shadow s, 10; Once Upon A Classc 9,20; HeP
Haw Honeys 17.

One lette r Simply sla nds (() r another In thts samn lc /\. IS
u sed for th e three L's, X for lhe t wo O's, c Lc. S in g le le ll ers,
apostrophes, the lengt h a nd formation ol the w o r ds a re a ll

hmLs. Each day the code ietlers are dtffercnt

Drive Home A Winner
See one of these courteous salesmen : Pete Burris,

Marvtn Keebaugh or George Harris ,

CRYPTOQUOTES
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PYZYOQ

LV B X

karr &amp; Van Zand·t
"You'll Like Our Quality Way of Doing Business' GMC
Financing.
992-5342
Pomeroy
Open Evenings untii6 :00-IIIS p,m , Sat,

LG

p y z X .
s X P X 0
p X J J X C Thought for today : A man
Yesterday'sCryptoquote: ANYONE WHO IJMI~
VISION mu,st no I swallow more
TO HIS MEMOR,IES OF YESTERDAY IS ALREADY DEAD.- beliefs than he can digest, IJLY LANGTRY ~ychologist Havelock Ellls,
(!) !9791&lt;111(! FNtures Syndicate, Inc.
1859-1939.

ms

•

foday's blrlliilaYB: Civil
rights leader James Fanner
is 59 y~rs old. San Franellco
Giants infielder BiU Madlock
is 28.

•

�,

SOme 200 homes still without power

12- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pumel'oy, 0 ., F'riday, Jan . 12, l!l7D

Sources still unknown
COLUMBUS, Ohio lAP) charges in connection with
A Franklin County judge nine or the killings in three
ref~ to order reporters to
counties. Gary Lewingdoo is
divulge
their
sources also charged with a. lOth
Thursday during a hearing.on murder in Franklin County .
a proposed gag order in the
Marshall is expected to rule
rase of the so-called .22- Friday on the gag order reraliber. killings.
quested by defense attorneys,
Common Pleas Judge . which would prohibit P.,rsons
George B. Marshall turned involved in · the case from
down repeated requests by making statements outside
public defender James Kura the courtroom.
to instruct reporters to reveal
The f.ree press-fair trial
where

"''they

r eceived

issue aros e

information used in reports
on the case.
Two brothers, Thaddeus
Lewingdon, 41, of Glenford,
and Gary Lewingdon, 38, of
Kirkersville, are due to face

anonymous

to reveal such information .
Kura contended in vain that
the defendants' rights superseded a reporter's protection
of sources. · He cited ..the
recent case involving New
York 'Times reporter Myron
Farber,who served 40days in
jail for refusing to turn over
his notes .in a murder trial.
Officials from Franklin and
Licking counties will meet
soon to detennine where the
Lewingdons will be tried
firsi.
A Jan: 29 trial date was set

By The . Associated Press
Alow pressure system over
Oklahoma today will move
oortheast into Kentucky by
Saturday morning, spreading
milder air over Ohio tonight
and Saturday. The system
rain

in

southeastern Ohio, snow in
northwestern portions of the
state and S!19w mixed with
rain or freez~ng rain elsewhere in the state tonight.
-~ the low pressure zone
moves northeast through
West
Virginia
and
PeMsylvania Saturday, raili
will linger in southern Ohio
and snow mixed with rain will
cover northern Ohi'l.
Colder air will move into
Ohio again ·SaturdliY night,
according to the National
Weather Service, with the
precipitation changing to all
snow Or snow flurrieS before ·
Sunday morning.
Travel could become
difficult in Ohio during the
next couPle of days.

Pictures AnYone?

*•Weddings
Senior Portraits

*Passports
*Portraits
* Spec;ial Occasions

THE PHOTO PLACE
(Bob Hoeflich J
f09 High St .
Pomeroy

who

provided them ·with information for new s articles
.llbout the killings. They cited
the state's shield law, which
protects reporters who refuse

rainfall

produce

sources

our

C':tse~

firc;t

would be more orderly;'
Smith said.
The elder Lewingdon's lawyer, George Tyack, has !Ued
motions in Franklin County
Common Pleas Court asking
that the trial be moved to anQther county. He claims his
client caMot get a fair trial in
Franklin County because of
publicity surrounding the
case.

T th ink 'it

the

hearing when two Columbus
repOrters refused to name

SEO area
will get-

will

during

County Commoo Pleas Court,
where Gary Lewingdon is
charged with six s!ayings and
Thaddeus with five.
Prosecutor George C.
Smith said he understood that
the trial in his munty would
be the first in a series
anticipated for the brothers.
" We had the break in the
case, we were .the first to
indict and we would like to try

earlier this week for
Thaddeus Lewingdon by
Licking County · &lt;;ammon
Pleas Judge Winston C.
Allen. Common Pleas Judge
Neil M. Laughlin of the same
county set dates of Feb. 28,
March 7 and March ,14 for
Gary Lewingdon ' s trials.
The brothers have been accused of three murders in
Licking County and one in
Fairfield County, where
charges against them will be
presenjed to a grand jury oo
Jan . 26.
The Lewingdons earlier
had been scheduled for a joint
trial F'eb. 26 in' ·Franklin

.

SALE CANCELLED
The "white elephant" sale
sponsored by F'riends to
Meigs C0 unty Libraries
scheduled for Saturday, Dec.
13 has been cancelled. The
sale will be held on Saturday,
Jan. 20, in the upstairs of the
Middleport Library fronl
10:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Volunteers of the RSVP
program will assist in the
sale. All donations will be
a ppreciated. The proceeds
from the sale will be used for
the libraries. The public is
invited to attend. ·

- · Nationwise----;
Report drawing criticism
WAsHINGTON (AP)- The new surgeon general's
report on smoking is ,stirring fierce criticism from
tobacco states, but 8" major ant!,smoking group
gleefully predicts the repo•t Will help !Well the ranks of
America's 30 million ex.,o;mokers.
Legislators from Kentucky and North Carolina led
the criticism Thursday after HEW Secretary Joseph A.
Califano Jr . and Surgeon General Julius B. Richmond
issued the 1,200-page repdrt. The report concluded that
evidence linking cigarettes to heart diseases, lung
cancer and other illnesses is "overwhelming."

'Duke' must have surgery
LOS ANGELES (AP) -John Wayne, the 71-yearold box office king of Hollywood westerns, wiD undergo
a gall bladder operation at UCLA Medical Center on
Friday, spokesman for his film company said.
. Wayne, a veteran of 200 Qictures over five decades,
checked into the Westwood hospital Thursday, said
·Tom Kane, an executive with Wayne 's Batjac
Productions. A hospital spokeswoman said Wayne was
in good condition after preliminary tests.

DANNIE L. BRICKLES
Daniel L. Brickles, 85, Rt.
I, Shade, died Thursday night
at O' Bieness Memorial
Hospital following a brief illness. Mr. Brickles was a
lifelong resident of Meigs
County, a timber cutter for 17
years and a retired farmer.
He was preceded in 'death
by his .wife, F'lossie Meeks
Brickles in 1914. ·He was also
preceded in death by . one
granddaughter and one
· "hrother, Bill Brick!es.
·
He-is survived by five sons,
carl, Athens; Earl, Ashland,
Ky.; F'!oyd, Rt . I, Shade;
Robert, Coshocton, arid Jesse
of Athens ; two daughters,
Mrs. Estella Colburn, Rt. I,
Shade, and Mrs . Evelyn
Cornelius, New Concord; 22
grand~hildren , 15 greatgrandchildren, one brother,
Roy Brickles, Pomeroy.
Funeral services will be
held Sunday at I p.m. at the
Hughes-Van F-ossen Funeral
Home, Athens, with the Rev.
J .ohn Elswick officiating .
Burial will be in Meigs
Memory Gardens. Friends
may call at ihe funeral home
Saturday from 2to 4 and 7 to 9
p.m.

BELVA K. MLER
Mrs. Belva K. Mohler, 52,
Mulberry St., Middleport,
died Thursday at Veterans
Memorial Hospital. Mrs.
Mohler was horn June 3, 1926,
in Meigs Coilnty. She was
preceded in death by her
father, Henry Mllilt:on, in
1915, and by her husband,
Harry Mohler, in 1971.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A program to
Surviving are two sons,
customize each of the 25,000 ·telephones in state
Tony and Gerald, both at
buildings around Ohio should save the state enough
home; her mother, Mrs.
money to more than pay for telephone rate hikes over
Marie Rusk Mohler, Midthe past two years, an official says.
dleport-; a sister, Mrs. Ronald
The program began last Oclllber when the state
(Alice) Jacobs, Chester; five
installed a Centrex 11-plus system in Columbus, and
brothers, Marvin Milliron ,
, should be completed by mid 1979, according to Cliff
Middleport; Delbert Milliron ,
Kimber, state communications officer in the
Letart Falls ; Norman
Department of Administrative Services.
Milliron , Racine; Dick Milliron, Dayton, and Orville
· Milliron, Reynoldsburg. Also
surviving are two sisters,
Mrs. George Walters and
Rope Milliron, both of
COLUMBUS, Ohio l AP) -A special report to Gov .
· Nelsonville, and several
James ·A. Rhodes on the scandal-tinged Ohio Lottery
nieces and nephews.
recommenda drastic structural changes aimed at
Mrs.
Mol)l~r
was
a
member
removing politics from the operal,ion.
of the Hobson Church of
The Plain Dealer said in Friday editions the report
.
Christ
in Christian Union
by Richard L. Krabach calls for reducing the authority
where fune.al services will
of the fiv~ember lottery commission to an advisory
be held at 2 p.m. Sunday with
board and strengthening the power of the director, who
the
Rev. George OUer and the
is appointed by the governor.
·
Rev. Keith Eblin officiating.
Burial will be in Gravel Hill
Cemetery at Cheshire.
Friends . may call at the
Rawlings-Coats Funeral
CLOSED
MONDAY
Home
any time lifter I p.m.
Court actions
Judge Manning D. Webster Saturday .
armounced today that the
Meigs County Courthouse will
filed Thursday
be closed Monday in ob••
servance of Martin Luther
King Day.
(Continued from page 1)
SQUAD SUMMON~.
" home detention ," for
In Meigs County Common
selected
youth who return to
The
Syracuse
emergency
Pleas Court a suit in the
was
called
Thursday
at
their
own
homes pending
squad
amount of $3,736.15 was filed
4:08p.m.
for
Bernard
Cook,
a
court
release.
by Credit Bureau of Point
4- The juvenile courts in
Pleasant,
'Inc.,
Point medical patient, who was
Pleasant; _against Larry E. taken to Pleasant Valley the four counties should
expand their utilization of
Bailey, Middleport. The suit Hospital.
emergency foster care
is for amount due Holzer
placements for juveniles who
Medical Center.
CLASSES OFF
Filing for divorce were
Gloria's
Baton
and are unable to return home
·Daphne Gay Cremeans, Gymnastics classes for this pending court appearances.
5- The juvenile courts
Athens, against Marvin Paul evening have been cancelled
.
should
consider
the .
Cremeans, Rt. 2, Coolville; due to weather conditions. ·
of
residential
development
Diana Taylor, Pomeroy,
· facility for ·those youths who
against Donald Taylor,
FREE
CLINICS
require secure detention
Pomeroy;
Dana
H.
The Harrisonville Senior while awaiting court apBlumenauer, Jr., Pomeroy,
against
Edna
Mae Citizens will hold a free blood pearance. A 24-hour · intake
pressure clinic Jan. 16 from service component for ' all
Blumenauer, Pomeroy.
F'iling for dissolution were 10 a.m. to I p.m. at the town youths alleged to have
Jimmy Lambert, Rt. 4, house. The public is Invited to committed a criminal offense
Pomeroy, and Annette K. take advantage of the free should be attached to the
facility.
clinic.
Lambert, same addre~.
The report emphasizes the
use of one or more of the first
four options, Statlrig that
Something New At Our Drive-Thru Window
these methods are more
· effective and cost efficient.
According to the report,
construction and operational
costs for secure facilities, for
detentiOn purpoSes, present a
number of disadvantages and
often result in court systems
opting to adopt programs
which are more treatment
related.
Membetsofthe four-county
Juvenile Attention Committee (JAC) wiU be meeting
this month io study the
report's recommendations.
The JAC membership
includes Gary Bane, GaUia
County Juvenile Court; Pat
Mamas, Scioto County
Juvenile Court; Carl R.
Hysell,
Meigs
County
Juvenile Officer, and Randy
Wood, Lawrence County
Juvenile Court. Bane iB jthe
Our Roast Beef and Roast Ham Sandwiches start with
·acting spokesman for the
specialty selected USDA inspected meats: The meal is
group.
sliced .thin and STACKED HIGH on a sesame seed bun .

a

Program should save money

Drdl;tic changes proposed

-

Committee.

We Will Be Closed Monday, Jan. .15th
In Observance Of

Martin Luther King Day
_ pomeroy po~eroy·
.. rutk!nd
tuppers:pla1ns ~ank

natlona -

the bank of
the century
established 1872

FDIC
'

PHYLLIS RO"AN
TUPPERS PLAINS '
Phyllis Rowan, 77, Tuppers
Plains, died Thursday af.ternoon at Holzer Medical
The Natitoo's Weather
Center.
By The Ass..,iated Press
Mrs. Rowan was born June
Rain
and unseasonably
15, 1901, daughter of the late
warm
··
tempera.ttires
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Mctriggered
minor
flooding in
Clain. She was also preceded
Idaho
and
avalanches
in
In death by her husband, R.
Utah,
while
thousands
were
K. Rowan and two sons. She
is survived by one· sister, still without power today in
Doris Oavis, Tuppers Plains. Portland, Ore. despite
Funeral ·services will be warming temperatures.
Th~ temperature was 42 deheld Sunday 3 p.m. at Ewing
grees
in Salt Lake City early
Chapel with the Rev. Robert
today
,.as
an unusual January
Bumgarner officiating .
thaw
continued.
Heavy rain
Burial will be in Tuppers
Plains Christian Church Thursday plummeted walls
Cemetery. Friends may call or snow onto roads in the
at the funeral home any time:. ·canyoos east of Salt Lake.
To the south of Salt Lake
City, 10 snowslides were
reported in American _Fork
CH;!.RLES STEWART
Canlyon,
including . one 200
Funeral services [or
feet
long
and
20 feet deep.
Charles
Stewart,
67,
Officials
said
35-degree
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy,
temperatures
were
recorded
will be held . at 2:30 p.m.
Thursday
at
the
9,500
foot
Saturday at the Rutl~d Free
Will Baptist Church rather level, melting ihe motmtain
than at the Rawlings-Coats snow surface.
The wet conditions were
Funeral Home as armounced
for at least one death
blamed
earlier. Friends may caU at
a
truck
driver who died
the funeral home from 7 to 9
when
his
semi-trailer
skidded
this evening.
on a curve.
· Police identified the victim
as Keith Schwager, 33, of
Boise, Idabo : They said his
truck slammed through a
guardrail, rolling· down a 3().
(Continued from page I)
foot slope. Acids in the truck
of Directors over a long - hydrofluoric and sulfuric
career which extended from acid - were contained and
-1929 to 1978.
·
neutralized by Hill Air Force
Surviving are his wife, Base personnel.
In Portland, where more
Frances Miller Smart; three
30,000
electric
daughters, Mrs. George than
(Phyllis) Hackett, Jr., customers have been without
Middleport; Mrs. George T. power since Wednesday,
(Jean) Siddall, Cincinnati, outages continued despite
and Mrs. MaMing (June) warming temperatures.
An ice storm downed
Kloes, Middleport; a son,
Paul M. Smari, Perrysburg; electric lines in Portland
a brother, Robert E. Smart, Wednesday, affecting up to
Chicago; a nephew, George 75,000 customers.
"We'r.e going backw.ards, '·' .
R. Thomas, Radnor; 14
grandchildren, and two Steve Loy , a spokesman for
Portland General Electric
great-grandchildren .
Funeral services will be Co., said Thursday. "We
held at 2:30p.m. Saturday iit getting outages from people
the Mid~leport First Baptist who didn't have problems
Church with _the Rev. Mark yesterday.,.,
In Idaho, flooding was
M~Ciung off~Clattn~. Bu~ial
wtll be ~~ R1verv1ew reported ln many areas .
Cemetery. Frtend;s may call Sandbagging began in Boise
at the Rawhn~s-Coats and Albion, and part of U.S.
F'uneral Home any hme.

Retired

95 was closed when six incbes
of water backed up ooto the
highway,
"I've been up to my waist
in water all day," said Albion
Mayor Chris Cagle.
Snow continued· today in
Utah, Nevada, Montana and
the Colorado Rockies, and
from eastern North Dakota
across the upper and middle
Mississippi Valley.
Travel advisories were
posted in parts of WiscQnsin,
Minnesota, Iowa, Ill'inois,
Missouri, Indiana. Kentucky
and Nebraska. ·
Rain fell in Florida and
southern Georgia, central
and southern California and
the western parts of the
Pacific Northwest.
Temperatures around the
nation at 2 a.m., EST ranged
from 27 below zero in
Warroad, Minn. to i4 in Fort
Lauderdale, Fla.

Holzer Medical Center
Discharges, Jan. Jan. 11
Dorothy Camp, MArilyn
Campbell, Walter Carpenter,
Charles Conrath, Glenna
Davis, Mrs. James Davis and
son, Carrie Diamond, Aretta
Dowell, James Elias, Blanch
Gibbs, Lewis.Hayburn, Leslie
Hazelbaker, Shannon
Holcomb, Randall Johnston ,
Neva Kennedy, Gertude
Klees, Mrs. Charles Mahone
ane and son, Lynn Mallory,
Mrs. James McDougal and
daughter, Charles McGoon,
Sybil Miller, ·Matthew
Milliken, Mrs. Roy Pierce
and son , Walter Sands,
Rosina Saunders, Robert
Schuler, Terri Jo Smith, C.
M. Grant Stanley, Joseph
Stanley, Elnor~ Woosley,
Josie Yinger.
Births, Jan. 11
•
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hoffman., daughter, sOn, Letart,
W.Va .
Mr. and Mrs. carlos Gillenwater, Son, Crown City.

FLEXSTEEL
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admitted - Salem Yates,
Racine; Maggie Arnold,
Pomeroy; Carol Hubbard,
Syracuse.
·
Discharged
Margaret
Fortune.
SQUAD CALLED
The Pomeroy emergency
squad was called to Wolf Pen
Road at 11 :56 a.m. Thursday
lor Maggie Arnold who was
taken to Veterans Memorial
HosP.ital where she · was
admitted.

JANUARY·
SALE
Whatever your taste in furniture , you can
choose with confidence from Fiexsteel.
Whether you select contemporary,
traditional, modern or colonial. you will find
an impeccable elegance in every piece that
will be a proud addition to your home . This
distinctive Flexsteel styling is available in
sofas. sectionals, suites. chairs, and a
unique sofa-sleeper.
Hundreds and
hundreds of fabrics, all decorator-selected
for beautiful correctiveness, give you a
choice of solids in a variety of rich weaves,
prints, quilled 'fabrics, matelasses,
brocades, and other fashionable fabrics.

BAI\tR FURNITURE

SQUAD RUN
The emergency unit.of the
Middleport F'ire Department
went to 515 Grant St., at 9:12
a.m. Friday· for Mrs. · Edgar
Wolfe who was taken to
'Holzer Medical Center.

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

ELBERFELD$
•

JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE
BIG SAVINGS NOW ON:
'
•MEN'S 3 PC. SUITS
• II)YS' PAJAMAS
• atii.MEN'S Sl£EPWFAR • II)YS' .JtO(EfS

• MEN'S JM:KEIS
• Dill.DREN'S OOATS
• DEN'S OOATS
• MEN'S SPORT SHIRTS

ROAST BEEF OR ROAST HAM

• MEN'S DENIM JEANS

• GIRLS' SPORThWfAR
• GIRlS .JIO(EIS
• MlMEN'S ~TERS
'
• MEN'S SPoRT OOATS
• GIRlS' SPan'SWEAR
• MEN'S SWEATERS

SANDWICHES

• \WMEN'S BlDUSES

• DEN'S DRESSES

,.

• PRE-TEEN .~

•AND MArtY MORE .

There is plenty of lean me~t nutrition that the enti're
family needs daily.

EVENT CANCELLED
The
4-H and FF A steer
Try Our Drive-Thru ln•lllnl Seroicel
weigh-in · scheduled for
Saturday, January 13, has
been
postponed
until
Saturday, January 27, liecording to Jolm C. · Rice,
Pomerny,
Ohio
Extension Agent,
, _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. , County
Agriculture.

Crow's Fal:nily Restaurant

I

..

DURING OUR JANUARY WHm SALE
20% O_FF - ENnRE .STOCK BED SHEns,
TABLE COVERS, BEDSPREADS .

.

OPEN FRIDAY TIL 8 PM .. '

ELBERFELDS IN 'POMEROY

GALUPOUS - Only ,about 200
homes are stili without power, one week
after an ice storm knocked out power
over a wide area of southeastern Ohio.
Additional 1&gt;9wer outa~s could
still occur as ice melts from lines,
allowing the lines to spring up and
touch other power lines, say officials of
the
Buckeye
Rural
Electric
Cooperative, hardest hit of four power

•

eooperatives in th e·area .
Power was knocked out last Sunday
to as many as S.QOO rural su~cribers in
the rugged hill country, forcing
residents to flee from homes turned into
ice box~. Most persons who left their
homes stayed with friends and
relatives, but a few residents reFused to
leave.
~.
Repairs were hampered by iniense

cuhf. terrain •nd a strike by llut·keye
Hurctl lin emen. In some areas lines
were cut by fall en trees and branches in
as many as 20 places.

n111111ls gu ddrk after

few minutes .

"We felt we were •!most deserte-d
down here~·· said Nell Pa~· 11 e , who
nper~tcs (t
180-acre dairy farm in
l.awr·ence County with her husband,
Hi chard .
Mrs. Payne said eight-how· out(.tges
are not uncommon but they weren't
prepared for being without power for
four days .

Crews were frustrated a fter fixing
linl'S only to have · them knocked out

again in another location, said Phil
Skidmore of Buckeye Rural. Residents
also were frustrated to have power on
after two or three days, only to have

unba

OJ

•

Tht&gt; temJ)erature in their house
druwed w 4 degrees and the y wore
lwe~vy winter clothing inside a"nd to bed.
·n oe Paynes dumped milk because
electric re!rigeratiTm units were not
IIJ")ef ating. f•:xcept ror a 90 minute
perifld , the farm wa s without power
fr om Sunday afternoon until Thursd•y
afternoon .

'11re eows were milked by hand, but
" It wrll be some time before the cows
will be back up because we couldn't
milk them as clean as the milker " she
said.

'

Homes still without power are
linked to Buckeye Rural Electric
Coo perative lines in Gal)ia , Lawrence,
Meigs·, and Vinton CoWlties.

••

tmts

ttdtttt

---~~~--~~~~~~~~~----~~~~~--~----------------------------VOL 13 NO. 50
GALLIPOLIS- POINT PLEASANT
SUNDAY, JANUARY 14, 1979
MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY
PRICE 25 CENTS

In-service education
day planned by board
GALLI PO US- The Gallia County
Local Board of Education has planned
an in-service education day for the

certified staff of the Gallia County
Local District.
The sessions, which are scheduled

to meet on January 15, at 8:30 a .m.,
have been develope d by Central Office
Superv iso rs A,pelaid e Sanders and
Robert Lanning :
Tlie elementary staff will meet at
Kyger Creek H. S. and the secondary staff will meet at Southwestern High

•
t
Two JU dgmen S Sc~~~~
·

,.

•

filed m case
GALIJPOLIS - Common Pleas
Court Judge Ronald R. Calhoun filed
two judgment entries ~day in an
arson ·charge, State of Ohto Vs. Rita
Meade.
In an entry filed at 10:14 a.m.,
Meade was sentenced to not less than
six months nor more than five years in
the Ohio State Reformatory for Women,
following a guilty plea by the defendant
to the charges of arson .
In the secon_d judgment, filed at
11:50 am., Judge calhoun states that,
"The defendant did not commit a .
crime," and ordered that the action
brought against Meade be dismissed.
Judge Calhoun expla'ined ·the
unusual aetfon of filing two separate
judgments iri a criminal case by stating
that the first judgment, the sentencing,
would be in place if the second
judgment , the dismissal, were
appealed by Prosecuting Attorney Joe
Cain, and if the dismissal were
overruled by teh Appeals Court.
Admitting confusion, Prosecuting
Attorney Cain sald F'riday that he
would need to study the Judge's
actions, and that he would eonsider ·
filing a bill of exceptioo to the dismissal
of the case with the Appellate Court.
The following is an edited partial
transcript of Judge Calhoun's judgment
dismissing the case :
"The defendant, Rita Meade, was
originally charged with aggravated
arson and after the selection of a jury
and the opening statement of the
Prosecutor, Joseph Cain, there were
negotiations between defense (Atty.
Dean Evans) and the Prosecutor and
the case was dismissed with the
agreement that the defendant would
plead guilty to arson, a crime involving
a lesser penalty ."
"In his openiqg statement Mr. Cain
stated the facts were that Mrs. Meade
had intentionally set fire to a mobile
home which was the property of her ·
husband."

"The record reveals that the facts
are undisputed. The mobile home was
occupied by Mrs. Meade and her
husband, Roger Meade, and the trailer
belonged to her husband. Mrs. Meade
did intentionally set fire to the trailer
with intent to burn it."
"And, when the firemen arrived
she asked them not to put the fire out.
Mrs. Meade did not attempt to defraud

anyone ... "
"Neither action 2902.02 nor Section
2909.03, Ohio Revised Code, etates it to

Roof collapses,

no one injured
By SANDRA LYNN BAlMER
Associated Preas Writer
CHICAGO ( AP) - The roof of an
indoor racquet and. tennis club
collapsed during a heavy snow storm
Saturday but there were no injurjes,
officials said.
.
A fire battalion chief, '--Rona Ill
Maloney, said everyone made it out of
the building safely.
Three hospitals near the ·Lakeshore·
Indoor Racquetball Club on the North·
Side had been notified to receive
possible victims but none was brought
in.
.
Maloney llSid firefighters chopped
through sections of the collapsed roof
and could find no one trapped in the
·
rubble.

be a crime for , one to burn his own
dweUing or the dwelling house owned
by a spouse and occupied by the parties
where no fraud is involved nor where
there is any intention to cause personal
physical harm to another."
"It is clear from tpe facts as
related to the Court that a crime has not
been committed, the defendant made
no attempt to defraud anyone, nor to
cause anyone physical injury . " The
defendant did not commit a crime ."
"Accordingly , it is hereby ordered,
·
adjudged and decreed that his action
against the defendant, Rita Meade , be
and the same hereby is dismissed with
prejudice.''

Major stonn
hits midwest
By The Associated Press
A major winter storm staggered the
Midwest Saturday; collapsing the roof
_of an indoor racquet club in Chicago
and closing clown operations at the
city's O'Hare International Airport.
A witness said it appeared as though
the entire roof of the Lakeshore Indoor
Racquetball Club fell in during the
storm. People could he heard screaming inside, the witness said. The
number of persons in the club was not
known .
In Portland, Ore., more than 6,000
homes and bu si nesses remained
without power Saturday. Six persons
bave died in storm;elated incidents
since an ice storm hit the Portland area
Tuesday night.
Six inches of - new snow fell b}
Saturday morning on portions of
eastern Nebraska, where the
combination of snow and high winds
brought about blizzard conditions, the
· National Weather ServiCe said.
A near blizzard swep_t parts of
northern Illinois while snow and
freezing rain covered central and
southern sections. Up to B inches of
snow was reported lo have fallen in
Chicago by midmornilig . Weather forecasters predicted a foot of snow by
Saturday night.
All major airlines suspended
operatioos at O'Hare, the nation's
busiest airport, before IJO()n. Runways
were closed because of the snowfall.
·Overnight temperatures in Illinois
were expected to drop to as low as 15
below zero in the north and to 10' to 15
degrees in the 'SOuth.
Blizzard warnings were hauled down
in the Texas Panhandle, but travelers'
warnings remained in effect. Arctic air
spilling down from the Plains lowered
readings across the state into the teens
· .
and 20s.
All roads in Oklahoma, · except a
small portion ol Interstate 35 near the
Texas line, were covered with snow and
ice, and a travelers' advisory was in
efffect for the entire state .
National Guard troops with
emergency power generators were sent
"to Grant COunty in north eentral
Oklahoma After a storm knocked out
power for about 7,000 residents before
dawn.
In southwestern Kansas, about 100
· Oklahoma State University students,
returning by ·bus from a ski trip in
Colorado, were stranded and were put
up_in a high school gyrnasium and a
feed yard office in Deerfield.
Kansas Gov . John . Carlin activated
the National Guard in Abilene, Salina
and Garden City to aid stranded
motorists.

Evans from the Economy
Reading Company will . make a
pre se ntation in Reading and a
representative from Harcourt , Brace
and Jovanovich will orient teachers in
the new English textbook during the
elementary session.
Also on the schedule for the
elementary staff meeting are Linda
Bauer, Rio Grande College, social
studies ; Ben For-shey, Rio Grande,
mathematics; and Ronald Tucceri, Rio
Grande, science.
Dr. Sally Schaaf, Ohio University,
will conduct an afternoon "Make and.
Take"
workshop · during
the
elementary staff day .
School nurses Donna Nibert and
Gail Huestis, of th e Gallia County Local
District, will conduct a mini-first aid
workshop .
·
Scheduled for the secondary staff
meeting are:
- Sharon Yates, Rio Grande
College, "Reading in the Content
Area."
- Dr. Tim Reardon, Xavier
University,
" lndiv idualiz e.d ·
Instruction."
~ Dr. M. Herman Sims, Director of
the Division or Elementary and
Secondary E&lt;lucation in the State
Dcpc!rtment, ''Competency Ba sed
Education ."
- Dr. Corey Locke, Marshall
University, "Motivation and Classroom
Management."
.
According to the Local Boards
Communication Director Charla
· Evans, the program for the secoodary
staff was designed to meet needs that
were evidenced in an in[ormaf needs
assessme nt with a sa mpling of
secondary teachers.
All special education teachers will
meet with Mrs. Jean Gardner in the
morning and will choo se one of the
elementary workshops in th e afternoon.

"STOPPING BY THE WOODS on a Snowy
Gvening , " a popular poem by Robert Frost, might
have tJeen inspired by this winter scene last night

Man dies Friday
after accident
SCOITOII'N .:I:ogs tum bling from "
truck fi ve miks bcwk of Point PlP&lt;~sant
injured :m.year-old .John M. Plese
Thur: ~' moming , IH'&lt;'L' ~s itati ng amputaTi On· of a leg, and he di ed Friday
t~ftcrrwon at Holzer ML'&lt;Ii&lt;'al Center.
r:hcli n holding the logs broke, rf'lcasing them upon him. Scene of the fatal
aci.'idt•nt was &lt;I sm~o1 nill on US ~5. , He
w;~s ttn ironworker. His hdme &lt;H idross
was Rt.l , Scott own.
He wm; born Aug. 28 . 194 2, in rllinoi s

to Mr·s. Ann Arufcr smr , wlw lives at
Juliet. Ill. He was a Unitc'i Slates Air
Foree vett•ran of Uw Vietnam confli ct.
Othe r survivors mt' his wife, th t•
former Gloria C&lt;trpcnter, a son, John ,
Jr., a daughter, ChPril' Lyn, and two
sisters, Miss Jct-tn Plese, Napierville ,
Ill., and Mrs. Susan Meyer, IA~ ckport.
[JJ.
Sprvices willlw held at2 p.m. lornorruw rMondi:iy) ttt Good Horw r. tmrdl,
Pastor Martin Wt•h(~r officiating, anll
bur1til will bt• in C:nn&lt;l JJ op&lt;.' Ct•rrwtt•ry .
F':·icn\l. may ca ll afh'r 4 p.m. tod;ty
1S!rn&lt;lay 1 at tilt• Hall F'mwnd HnmL',
PnH ·tr1rvillt• .

Pomeroy lad suffers
gwishot wound
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
emergency squad answered a ca ll to
the Richard Demoss home, ljberty
Ave ., at B:56 p.m. f'rida~ for Bobbie
C.1onch , 9, who had a gun shot wound in
the leg .
.
·
, flobbie was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital and later wa s trans. [erred to the Holzer Medi cal Center .
Pomeroy police s•id U1at they had no
report on the , incid en t Saturday
morning.

EXTENDED FORECAST
Monday through Wednesday,
~ now nurrics and cold in the mtrtht~ast M4mday. Cold, with snow
~ pn•mlin g: a('rnss the state Tuesday
;urd Wednesday. Highs between 10
and 20 Monday and Wednesday aud
inlhe 20s Tuesday. Lows betWeen 5
ix•luw and 5 above Monday and belwt•t•n zeru aud 10 Tuesday and

-

under the full moon in Gallipolis. The mooruight lent a
magical abnospherc. to the trees and caused the
photographer to wooder if she hadn 't wand~red into an
enchanted forest.

Expect work to begin
soon on -Shadle Bridge
project consrsts ot completely
resurfacing the structure .
Concern over the safeness .of the .
lor idge has come under fire lately when
a Mason County Sheriff's deputy fell
through a hole in it while directing
traffic recently.
Meanwhile, in another development, the DOH has included the Shadle
Br idge as one of six bridges that 1t is
recommending to the ~'ederlli Highway
Administration for replacement
funding under the Surface Transportation ilssistance Acto[ 1918.
Th e DOH is seek ing $17,740,000 for
this ' bridge. Other bridges include :
Market Street Bridge in Brook County,
$26, 190,000; Chelya n Bridge in
Kanawha
County ,
$13,340 ,000;
Huntington 's Sixth Avenue Bridge,
$26,160,000; the Williamstown Bridge,
$33 ,190,000 and the Wheeling
Suspension Bridge, $13,320,000.
Under recent legisla tion, $200
million has been made available at the
discretion of the U. S. Secretary of
Transportation for replacement or
renovation of major bridges over major
waterways.

PT . PLEASANT - Deparbnent of
Highways Commissioner Charles L.
Miller has given additional reassurance
that
w.ork will)&lt;e_gin soon to renovate
Wt·clnesday .
the Shadle _)Bti~ spanning th e
Kanawha Rtver and linking Point
Pleasant to Henderson . . .
Miller told Mason County Del.
Jimmy Joe Wedge that bids will be
advertised on Jan . 23 and this will be
followed by a Jan. 25 public hearing at
POMEROY - A Racme man was
the Mason County Courthouse
cited to Pomeroy's mayor Clarence
beginning at 7 p.m. Wedge urged all
Andrews' Court on charges of -driving
interested residents to attend this
left of center following a two-&lt;:ar
·
hearing .
accident Saturday at 10:09 a.m . at the
Wedge also said that Miller told
intersection oJ the Pomeroy-Mason
him construction will be completed
Bridge.
within eight to nine months after the
Ptl. Kenny Hoffman reported Mrs. • bid s are advertised. He added that the
,.
Avery S. Searles, Rt.l , Middleport, wa'
.
stopped on Pomeroy's West Main Street
Gallia hoard to meet
at the traffic light headed west when an
auto driven by Charles T. Hill, Rt. 2,
in special session
Racine, headed east crossed the lane of
traffic str iking U1e Searles 'Vehicle
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County 's
l.ocal Board of Education will meet in
hcadon .
HiJJ · was Iuk en to Veterans special session at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday .
Memorial Hospital in the polic-e cruiser
Purpose is to work on matters
. where he was treated for minor pertaining to a l;!x levy and bond issue.
The session will be held at the central
injuries.
,. There wa s heavy damage w both office on Jackson Pike.

Racine man cited
following mishap

Three citatiOns issued

vehicl e~,

Three terrorists

killed Saturday
TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) · - Israeli
. soldiefs killed three Palestinian
terrorists seeking hostages at a guest
house in the northern city of Maalot on
Saturday, police said. A woman died
when she fell (rom a third ··,ry window ·
&lt;is visitors scrambled down knotted
sheets to safety . •
Maalot police said the raid was
thwarted when a soldier on routine
patrol hecam e suspicious, dashed to the
scc'Ond noor and killed one of the
Palestinians . The other two raiders
were slain in a separate gunfight . Five
Isradis were injm·ed, nonr :;erivu.-;ly .

Gallipolis commission

by city police Saturday

to ~eet again. Tuesday

\.
GALLIPOUS - Gallipolis City
Police issued three citations Saturday.
Edsel New. 44, Gallipolis, was cited
oo charges of DWL
Cited on charges of disorderly
conduct were Gregory A. Rece, 22,
Gallipolis, and Chuckie Earl Roberts,
18, Northup.

GALIJPOLIS - The Gallipolis City
Comm ission will meet in spe cial
session Tuesday , Jan . 16, at 8 p.m. in
the Municipal Court Room.
Agenda items include :
- Co nsideration of gas rate
ordinanee.

· - Consideration of · PoinTView
Cable TV ordinance.
- Motion for r''tv Clerk-Auditor
and City Manager to act .;. ~gents for
the city's srue deposit box.
- Setting public hearing lor
budget.
- Discussion: Combs &amp; Associates
hn C. D. R!Ut·k flood Program

SCHOOL.~ CLOSED MONDAY
"GALLIPOIJS - All schools in the
Gallipolis City District wili be closed
Monday, Jan . IS, in observance of
Martin Luther King, Jr , Day. Classes
will resume as usual ori Tuesday.

. .'1

!

I

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          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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