<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="15698" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/15698?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-09T17:49:13+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="48820">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/21508b6a8886d6d960592be7699e1510.pdf</src>
      <authentication>ffb8b82849d0e0b5feff9f514a4711a0</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="50302">
                  <text>11

f'nu tt•n •.• . 11

. l lt!i l'd.c~

. .l;11c

..

- -- -- - -· ---

i' '

-

- - - -...,--·------- -

•

DOLLAR DAYS

Elberfelds In Pomeroy ·

HOUSEWARE DEPARTMENT

s3 SOUP POTS

$159
OUTING FLANNEL

8 QUART SIZE. WHITE ENAMEL

36 inches wide. 100 per cent cotton, solid
colors and prints.

DOLLAR DAYS
40

.,oo

•s••

MEN'S
NECK SCARFS

Size 38 to 48, solid colors and pallerns .

Solid co lors, limited quantity .

TWO DAYS ONLY!

s49.95 SPORT COATS ............... s25.00
s59,95 SPORT COATS.............. s30.00
'69~95 SPORT COATS .............. 135.00

CHILDREN'S

WINTER COAT
CLEARANCE

BOYS'
FLANNEL PAJAMAS
Size 8 to 18, co lorful pallerns. limited
quan tit y.

8.95 SKI STYLE.. ..................... s5.00
·111.95 COAT STYLE .................. '6.50
1

DOLLAR DAYS

All winter coats for littl e boys and girls at
terr ific prices .
Snowsuits, Jacket s·, Long Coats

REG.
REG.
REG.
REG.
REG.
REG.

2

BOXES

•300

DOLLAR DAYS

MEN'S DRESS
FLANNEl ·SHIRTS

$27 SUNBEAM
POPCORN POPPERS

4 quart , se lf buttering, Great Amerfcan

Popcorn Machin e.

WOMEN'S
WINTER .ROBES
~

PRE-TEEN
SPORTSWEAR
Save 50 per cent on our remaining stock of
winter pre-teen s lacks, vests, sweaters and
blouses.

c learance.

1h PRICE

YARD

· DOLLAR DAY$

DOLLAR DAYS

SALE SCARFS

and s2
MILK PITCHERS
1450

89

Po tt e ry .pi tche rs . decorative,
qua ntity .

SELECT GROUP OF SQUARES AND

l imited

OBLONGS, ASSORTED COLORS .

\
DOLL.AR DAY$

s2"' OOUBLEKN IT
POLYESTER YARD MATERIAL

112 PRICE
DOLLAR DAYS

HANES. $325 SLIM
FIT
.

60 in ches wide , 100 per cent polyester, solid

colors. mac hine washable , tumble dry .

BOXER SHORTS
100 per ceo ! cotton broadCloth, solid co lor s
and patterns , •t upered legs. side vents .

DOLLAR DAYS

Men's Hanes $4 A GARMENT
Thermal Underwear
69

50 per cent cotton, so per cent polyester.
Drawers. in sizes S.M. L. and XL. Shirl in
s izes M, L, a.nd S L.

'1 00 OFF AGARMENT
'

Our entire stock on sale. big selection of
patterns and so lids. clip -ons and four -inhand .
'

MEN'S '6,50 TIEL .................. .'4.50
MEN'S i7.50 TIES ......................15.50

2
•

FOR

h PRICE

Earthquake hits Mexico City
MEXICO CITY (AP)- An earthquake hit Mexico
City today 9'&gt;' holD'S before Pope Jolm Paul II was
scheduled to arrive, but downtown buildings appeared
undamaged and there were no immediate reports of
casualties.
The tremor rolled through the city of 13 million
people about 4:10a.m. (5:10 a. m. EST), shaking
·,. .
buildings for more than a minute.
The local seismological station said it could 'not
give the Richter-scale reading on the intensity of the
quake yet, and Red Cross and fire department officials
said they had no reports of any casualties.

DOLLAR DAYS

GIRLS'
SPORTSWEAR
Sweaters, lops, blouses. vests, iackets.
pants and skirts. Sizes 2 to 4, 4 to 6x, 7 to 14.

·y2 PRICE

Sohio' s cutbacks temporary
CLEVELAND ( AP ) - Temporary gasoline
cutbacks for more than 1,000 service stations in Ohio,
iMichigan, Kentucky and western Pennsylv· .&gt;ia may
'be necessary, says Standard Oil Co. of Ohio.
Jolm Hernandis, a Sohio spokesman, said
Thursday decisions on cutbacks are expected soon.
"We are talking about customers being able to get all
the gas they want and need , but they may not be able to
get it at the time or plHce they want it," he said .

DOLLAR DA.YS

Men's T.V. s1 25
Bulky Knit Orion Socks
One size fils all sizes 10 to 13 . Solid colors
and .heather tones .

·various protests planned
WASHINGTON (AP)- Groups ranging from anticommunists to radical Maoists plan a bArrage of
protests when Chinese leader Teng Hsiao-ping arrives
this weekend.
But federal officials say· Teng's entourage and the
demonstrators probably will never get within a block
of one another as authorities plan to tightly control the

PAIR

JEWELRY
SPECIAL

DOLLAR DAYS

STICKPINS, EARRINGS, BRACELETS

SPECIAL

.--Nationwise·-

1

DOLLAR DAYS

LITTLE GIRLS'
'DRESSES

protestors' mOvements.

•

Our entire slo_c k of winter dresses for little
girls

VALUES TO '5.00

HOUSEWARE DEPARTMENT

•

REG. '6.00 ........................ SALE s4.79
REG. 18.00 ........................ SALE '6.39
REG. 111.00....................... SALE s3.79
REG. su.oo .................... ~ SALE 110.39
REG. 116.00...................... SALE s12.79

MEN'S
WEMBLEY TIES

REG. 11.00 ....................... SALE 8.79
REG. s15~00 ..~ ................... SALE!.l1.99
"""" .
1
REG. 19.00...................... SALE s15.19
REG. S25.00 ...................... SALE $19.99
REG. s33.00 ............. :........ SALE s26.39

45 INCH WIDTH
$349 TERRY CLOTH

$200

REG. S12.00oo .........................SALESAI.E z.2999
. , OOPAIR
REG. $14. .......... '.............
.,, t-~~---------·--·-------·--·-'1
REG. s1s.oo ...................... SALE SUJ9
. DOLLAR DAYS

DOLLAR DAYS

1

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Reduction of a proposed
$122.8million Ohio Power Co. rate increase by as much
as two-thirds has been recommended by staff analysis
at the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio.
The PUCO's utilities division concluded that the
company should he allowed no more than $40.4 million
to '$50.1 million in new revenues, depending on the
allowed rate of return .
The staff analysis disputes Ohio Power's contention
that its $78.1 million investment in deactivated units ~t
its Woodcock, Philo and Tid&lt;! P.Ower plants should be
credited· for rate-making purposes.
Overall, th e staff credits Ohio Power with an
investment for rate-making purposes of $1.72 billion,
which is $278 million less than claimed by the
company.
The PUCO will consider the staff findings and
arguments by the utility and other parties before
making a final ruling on the request.

Boys sizes 7 to 14, Men's 9 to 15. Spring foot.
full cushion tube socks. white with color
tops .

Winter gowns, pajamas and robes for little
boys and girls, broken sizes.

DOi.LAR DAY$

Lim ite d quant ity for quick
Patterns an d solid colors .

REG. '6.00 .......................... SALE '3.99
REG. $1.00 ........... :.............. SALE s4.69

MEN'SLAND BoYS~
$125 TUBE SOCKS

Pajamas, wa lt z length gowns and long
gowns.

1

95

WINTER STYLES IN LEATHER,
VINYL AND CANVAS

Reduction asked

.

4 different models including styles with
radio .

Sh,prl and long lengths. S, M, L,XL.SSL.

DOLLAR DAYS

DOLLAR DAYS

CHILDREN'S
SLEEPWEAR

REG. 126.95 ..................... SALE 121.59
REG. s39,95 ...................... SALE 131.99
REG. 159.95...................... SALE 147.99
REG. 179.95 .................... SALE '63.99

Y2 PRICE

·HANDBAGS

lf.,·PRICE

•1 oo

DOLLAR DAYS

DOLLAR DAYS

WOMEN'S COORDINATE
SPORTSWEAR
Junior and regular sizes, famous makes
like: Devon, Aileen, Red-i , Bradley and
Douglas Marc .

SAVE 40%
DOLLAR DAYS

WOMEN'S SWEATERS

MEN'S sl695
BLUE DENIM OVERALLS

Elberfelds In ·Pomeroy

.,

· · ·1 399

.

Roof collapses on store

DOLLAR DAYS

ROUND LAKE BEACH, lll. (AP) - Part of the
snow-laden roof of a K-mart store collapsed Thursday
night in this OJicago suburb, and two women and three
children_ were rescued from inside. No injuries were
reported.
.
.
Authorities said all people known to have been m
the store were accounted for, but rescue workers kept
searching.
R01md Lake Beach patroiman Dan Veil said, "As
of 9: 12(.CST) all employees had been accounted for . As
of 9:30 we have received no report of injuries and ha':e
no reason, 1 repeat, no reason, to believe anyone 1s
trapped inside the building." .

.REGULAR sg PlAYTEX ,
CROSS YOUR HEART BRAS .
50

Good selection of sizes, selected styles.

•425

Berlinguer'ssupport gone

DOLLAR DAYS

ROME (AP) - Italian communist leader Enrico
Berlinguer declared today his party finds it impossible
to continue supporting the government - an attack
that virtually ensures the fall of Premier Giulio
Andreotti's cabinet.
Berlinguer gave· his party's position at a crisis
meeting of the five-party alliance which has supported
Andreotti's Christian Democrat minority government .
for 11 months.
• The communists, stung by a new refusal of the
OJrlstian Democrats to give tj!em cabinet posts, have
been unleashing attacks against Andreotti capped by
today's blast .
·

MEN'S 55'j TO s1495
TURTL.E NECK SHIRTS

h PRICE

1
•.

WS ANGELES (AP)- Lee Marvin, starring in a
reaWfe courtroom drama, has testified he called
Michelle Triola Marvin his "sweetheart," took her to
bed and vowect he loved her- but his profession of love
was a lie.
·
The white-haired, craggy-faced Marvin, who was
to continue testifying today, averted his eyes from his
former lover, who sat frozen in her seat as he spokes
Thursday.
"Did you love her?" asked Miss Marvin's
attorney, Marvin Mitchelson .
"No," Marvin said bluntly.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - ,The director of the
Columbus Zoo says an Akron man ought to abide by
the old maxim "once bitten, twice shy."
Zoo director Jack Hanna says 24-year-old Paul
Beaver's plan to ·keep the cobra wjtich bit him Sunday
in hopes of selling its venom is "ridiculous. It's like
giving a 3-year-old.a loaded gun.
"No one in this country has ever made a dollar off
of selling venom," Hanna said.

SmaiL medium, large and extra large size.
good selection of styles and colors, while
tney last.

OPEN FRIDAY: 9:30A.M. TO.8 P.M. SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 5 P.M.

Marvin didn't love lover

Owner's plan 'ridiculous'
. .

Sizes 27 to 50. Select proper length. 100 pet.
cotton. sanforized Shrunk.

Entire stock. S.M. L' and extra sizes.

REG. 18.00 .......................... SALE '4.80
REG. s12.00 ........................ SALE 17.20
REG. '17.0(L ................... SALE $10.20
REG. '23.00 ............ ,........ SALE '13.80
REG. 132.00 ...................... SALE '19.20

Courthouse. To his left is Pat Gallagher, director of Public
Information for the Department of Highways. Ga llagher
presented the details of the project to the public at the
hearing which lasted approximately two hours.

\

WOMEN'S
WINTER SLEEPWEAR

Regular price $11.95 to $20.00 , S,M, L and XL
sizes . Western styles included. excellent
selection .

·HOUSEWARE DEPARTMEN

'

CHILDREN'S
RECORD PLAYERS

FANNY FARMER .
$1.95 MINT SQUARES
m int squares, net

18.00............................ SALE 10.79
122.00 ........................... SALE 113.19
126.00 ........................... SALE 115.59
132.00 ........................... SALE 119.19
146.00 ........................... SALE 127.59
154.00 ........................... SALE 132.39
1

1

PRESENTS VIEWPOINT - Del. Jimmy Joe
Wedge (R·Mason) expressed his views on the proposed
renovation of the Shadle Bridge during a public hearing
'11uu-sday evening on the subject in the Mason County

.
.
'2.50
'3.95 SCARFS
.................
~····· ··~··
' ·
.L
18.95 SCARFS ............................ '5.50

FRIDAY, JANUARY 26th &amp;· SATURDAY, JANUARY 27th

DOLLAR DAYS

•

POINT PLEASANT contract to renovate the
deteriorating Shadle Bridge
may be awa rded today by the
West Virginia Department of
Highways, according to Gary
Chernenko: who was one of
several lJOH officials at a
public hearing Thursday
evening at the Mason County
Courthouse discussing the
bridge renovation .
Over 100 people, including
all four m·embers of the loth
Delegate District, a state
senator and nwnerous local
office holders, turned out lor
the hearing at which time the
DOH again reiterated its
feeling that the Shadle
Bndge,
spanning
the
t1

YARD

MEN'S
SPORT COATS

Frenc h and fro sted
weight 8 oz.

Repairs . planned

DOLLAR DAYS

DOLLAR DAYS

'

----·--·-------

I,.

•

e
(USPS 145-960)

Kanawha Hiver here, is a Gallagh er . ·the DOH has However. at a later point in
sa fe structure to travel over. estimated the projc'&lt;1 to cost the hearing he sald there
Pat Gallagher, director of approximately $900.000 and always exists the possibility
Community Affairs for the sa id a possibility exists that that something unforseen
lJOII . wa s the main the lJOH could reject this bid co uld happen which may
spokesm an and he said work as .well as three others and cause the span to he closed.
on the bridge " Will begin as rebid the project.
· In trying to reassure the
soon as the weather break s. "
He told the people at the mmmunity that the bridge is
He predicted it should take . hearing, that if this should sa fe despite the !act that a
six months to do the job with happen there is nothing to be sheriff's deputy fell through a
an expected completion date ala rm ed over since th e hole in it a couple of weeks
of Oct. 1'. However, he pointed pro ject would be read- ago, he said : " We· 1meaning
out that this was dependent vertised, bidded .and con· the DOll ) do not view the
on the weat her a nd tr acts pos sibily a warded Shadle Bridge as an unsafe
availability of supplies.
within the next 30 days
structure, but it does have its
Earlier this week , the DOH
"The bridge will not be problems. 'l)lese problems
received lour bids on the closed ... there ·Will not be a will be improved."
project, with the apparent ' time when the bridge will be
Karl Kahle, engineer with
low bid ol 11.194,681 from closed," Ga llagher stated in the department , said the
H1ggms Erector and Haulers. reference to the period when renova tion will inc! ude the
However, accordmg to construction takes pla ce .
(Continued on paKe 10)

•

at

VOL. NO. XXIX

NO. 199

enttne

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY, OHIO

FRIDAY, JANUARY 26, 1979

15 CENTS

Heavy snowstorm hits Cleveland
By The Associated Press
The other .shoe fin a lly
dro pped and Cleveland,
.which previously had lucked
out, is shoveling out from
under its first major storm of
the winter.
After two of the worst
winters in the city 's recorded
history, this season kept
residents of th e. Greater
Cleveland area· waiti~g
nearly eight weeks longer
than usua 1 for the expected
blizzard-like weather.
About five windswept in·
·ches of snow dropped on the
city and up to 10 inches fell in
the eastern snowbelt _along

Lake Erie Thursday , tying up today and tonight in the mid·
traffic, ca using innwnerable Mississippi valley. It -will
accidents and leading to the move northeast and spread
deaths of three elderly men snow atross Ohio Saturday,
while shoveling snow.
according to the National
Ohi o continued under the Weather Service
influence of an east coast
Only five of the Clevela nd's
storm today . The storm was '200 pieces of snow removal
centered southeast of Cape equipment were out of serCod. It was to drift east vice Thursday, according toll
tonight allowing winds to city repairman, but there was
slacken and flurries to end. immediate criticism of the
The respite from snow, snow-clearing job.
.
lrowever, will be short-lived.
"This was their first big
' A trough of low pressure from
test and they flunked it," said
Minnesota to Texas was to Clevela nd Counc ilm an
move east today.
Robert E. Getz , chairman of
A iow pressure .center was the city's service committee.
expected to develop late • He sa id the Cleveland crews

let the snowstorm get the
Mary Brister, supervisor
jump on th em.
of "Operation Snowbird" , " When you have this kind th e ina yor 's operation al
of storm, with heavy snow name for the snow-clearing
and freez ing conditions and operation ~ deni ed the
high winds, it's suicidal not to charges by Getz. She said
get an early jwllp," Getz salting and plowing wa s
said. " You can give them under way late Wedne sday
1,000 trucks, but unless they night before a steady drizzle
have a plan, they are inc!· turned·to sleet, then snow.
fective. ''
"There is no way to
Getz charged that th e prepare for anything t hat is
ad ministr at ion of Mayor continuou sly fallin g. Most
Dennis J. Kucinich diu not ,peopl e think the snow should
put its crews on the street disappear as soon as it's
until rush hour, well after the down ," she explained . "The
storm started, so t hey would roads look good, considering
ha ve a higher visibili ty the drifting."
among motorists.
Buses were up to 40
minut es lat e durinK the

Chase ends in tragedy
SPRINGFIELD, Ohio 1 AP)
- A 6-year-old girl is dead
and her father is in the Clark
County-jail today after a high
speed chase and shooting
incident along Interstate 70
Thursday night.
Ohio Highway Patrol of·
ficials identified the girl as
Joy LyiUl Nagy, who was
reportedly shot as her father
Joseph D. Nagy, 28, and an
Ohio Highway Patrol trooper
wrestled over a gun after a
chase th;&gt;t at times led to
speeds exceeding 100 miles
an hour .
Lt. Paul Mclntxre of the
Highway Patrol post here
said Trooper A. W. Burke had
responded at about! :15 p.m.
to a citizens band report of a
car traveling we~tbound at a
high rate of speed on 1-70 near
Springfield.
Mcintyre said Burke
caught up with the car and
pursued it for three or four
miles at speeds of more than
100 miles an hour. The patrol
sa id the car attempted to ram

the patrolman's cruiser
several times .
Burke said the car fina lly
stopped near the 1-70 in·
terchange and the patroiman
approached it with hi s
revolver drawn. When the car ·
door wsa opened, Burke said
the d riv er atta cked him
causing the revolver to fire.
· The girl was taken by a
Bethel Township re sc ue
squad to Mercy Hospital
where she died a few minutes
after her arrival.
There was no immediate
word on • what wounds she
received .
Nagy was booked into the
Clark Co unty Jail at 11 :30
p.m. on charges of speeding,
reckless driving, fleeing an
officer, resisting a rr est ,
assault and felonious assa ult.
Patrol officials said a
thorough investigation of the
incideot would be conducted.
A nei~h'bor where the girl
was living in Habitat, a
L'Ondominium development
south of Dayton. said Nagy

had been working as a train·
man from railyards in
Willard, and commuted back
here on his days off.
Another neighbor said the
incident was due ''to a per·

Hostages
held by
gunpoint

TOKYO (AP ) - Blasting
away with a shotgun and
demanding a quarter of
a million -dollars, a masked
bandit charged inti&gt; a bank in
Osaka today and seized as
many as 40 hostages, officials
said. The siege was still going
on eight holD's later and
police said they believed the
bandit had killed folD' people .
Officers said they were
negotiating with the gunman
and that two of the four
persons believed dead inside
the bank were policemen.
The bank, in a popular
shopping area of Osaka, was
surrounded by fire trucks,
ambulances and about 500
policemen. Mobile police
units with officers clad in
bullet-resistant ves ts and
helmets
, fanned out arotind
PORTSMOUTH - The of the river and directly the bank.
Automobile Club of Southern . opposite the other side .
Osaka is 'a major Japanese
Ohio has issued a call for (Present distance is 8,000 feet 'industrial city about 250 miles
immediate action to improve but it could and should be southwest of Tokyo.
auto ferry service across the under 3,000 feet ).
3. These recommendations
Ohio River at Portsmouth,
be
in full progress within 30
citing constant behind the
days
resulting in an increase
scenes involvement since
of
three
times the number of
July and a review of
recommendations made by cars moving across the Ohio
NEW DELHI, India (API
the club at that time. River in a 24 hour period
Recommendations included: (maximum now is 1500, - II passenger train packed
with men, women and
That docking site locations . minimum should be 4500 ).
John Irwin , President of children ran off the tracks in ·
must be directly opposite one
another
and
that the Auto Club of Southern western Bangladesh today
specifications
lor .the Ohio and Vice President of and as many as 500 persons
operation of ferry boat ser-' · Transportation for the were feared dead, the United
vice must be carefully Portsmouth Area Chamber of News of India reported. It
developed by experienced Commerce. said that if co uld be one of the worst train
solutions are not immediately wrecks in history.
Ohio River authorities.
forthcoming
these
UNI,
quoting
the
Club officials decried the
organizations
will
request
a
eastern
News
Bangladesh
many months of ·inadequate
service and talks without meeting of all interested Agency , said the locomotive
solutions. The present ferry parties to determine why. and four passenger cars
boat operation has developed "The people are grateful for jumped the tracks and landed
animosities because of the the funds supplied," he said, in a ditch.
It said the accident ocroute, equipment, pers&lt;innel, " but consider a lot of it is
and all views have polarized, wasted until proper changes
thus progress towarli a are effected."
" Mistakes arc generally
solution is nil.
made
when emergency ac·
Proposals have been sent
lion
is
required,_
but mistakes
by the Auto Club to local,
call
for
corrective
action
state and national govern·
which
has
not
.
been
taken,
ment officials requesting
thus forcing us to become
that:
1. The auto ferry equipment publicly involved . We cer·
be upgraded to standards set tainly hope that it will result
by qualified authoritifs and in obtaining the one imd only
the substitution of another realistic solution which is to . ~
operator if this becomes matcrialiy in crease the
.Weekly Lottery: Blue number .of vehicles being
necessary.
068
; While - 46; .Gold - 7.
mo
ve
d
"cro&amp;s
the
Ohio
2. A new site be selected
Win·a-thon
: 45070.
Hiv
er"
Irwin
concluded.
and activated on either side

AAA club seeks
•
prompt actions

sonal tragedy that happened
to the family in the last two
days.
11
1t was marriage. marital
problems that led to one
disaster after another, and
now this," the woman said.
Officials at the child 's
school. where she was in the
first grade. said the child's
·m other was taken to a
hospital Wednesday even ing.
A neighbor described th e
girl as "a nice, quiet, loving
and sweet little girl ... very
pretty ."
FIVE KILLED
TEHRAN , Iran lAP )
Troops in Tehran and the
western city of Sanandaj
open ed fire today on
thousands of supporters of
Ayatullah
Ruholl a h
Khomeini angered by the
government's delaying his
return to Iran, and there were
reports of at least' 10 dead and
32 wounded.
Hospital sources said at
least five persons were killed ·
and

seven

wounded

in

Tehran.

•

EVENTS SATURDAY
The 4-H and FFA steers
will be weighed Saturday,
Jan . 27, at Royal Oak Fann.
Time of the weigh-in has been
changed from 10 :30 a. m. to 1'
p.m.

500 may have perished

.

·-

' .

•

BUS CHAHTERED
The Supporters Club of
United Mine Workers have
chartered a bus to travel to
Columbus Tuesday, Jan. 30
to attend Environment31
Protection Agency
hearings at the NeJI. House.
Anyone wishing to go are
to contact Patsy Oiler at
992-6163 or Hallie Eblin at
992-7366. Those who plan to
attend the hearings are to
be on the Pomeroy parking
lot by 7 a.m.

curred ' in Chuadanga, about
95 miles west of Da cca in
Kustbia district near the
border with India.
Offi cials in Chuadanga
were unable to give the exact
number of casualties. The
injured were being rushed by
truck to Chuadanga hospital
because no ambulances were
available, UNr' reported.
There was no indication of
what caused the accident.
The world 's worst train
wreck, which occurred near
Modane , France, on Dec. 12,
1917, killed 543 persons.

EXTENDED FORECAST
Sunday
through
Tuesday:. Cold throughout
the period with snow or
snow flurries Sunday and
Monday and
ending
Tuesday. High In the mid
20s to mid 30s. Low in the
20s early Sunday and in the
teens early Monday and
again early Tuesday.
·:::;::::::::::::::::::::: :;:;:;:;:::::::: ::::~::::: : :::::::: : :: :;:::::::::::

HEADS
SYRACUSE
VILLAGE COUNC IL Herman London, Syracuse, ·
Is president of Syracuse
Village Council for 1979.
London has served the
\'illage of Syracuse for a
period of 28 years. He
served on council from 1950 ·
to 1960 and was mayor of
the village from 1960 to
May 1978. He assisted in
securing the water system
and annexation of three
quarter miles and extended
the water system to Rustic
Hills. The swimming pool
built in the village was
named after London .
London also ass!sted with
'federal grants obtained to
build the pool and the
tennis courts. Dedication of
London Pool was held July
4, 1976.

Weather
Variable cloudi ness
tonight , low near ~0 . Cloudy ,
with snow Saturday. High in
the mid to low 30s. Chance of
precipitation 20 percent
tonight , 80 percent Saturday.

morning rush hour a nd 20
min utes late during the af·
t crnoo"n
ru sh
hour .
Greyhound bu ses were
rurming 45 minut es to one
hour late, while Trailways
sa id its buses were between
one and two hours late into .
Cleve land.
Amtrak trains wer e running mie-to two hours behind
schedul e into northeast Ohio.
Several flights out of
Cleveland Hopkin s In te rnati ona l Airport were
canceled and United Airlines
redirected fo ur flights,· to
Detroit while runways were
bcin~ cleaned.
Elsewhere in Ohio. snow
acc urnlation s Thursday
ra nged from two to four in·
ches. 'Ine weather service
sa id more sno w or rain is
likely in southw"'tern Ohio
by Saturday night from a new
storm developing in west
Texas.

Meinhart
resolution
presented
Rep . Ron James annoWlced
Thursday afternoon he will
introduced into th e Ohio
House of Representatives a
resolution honoring the late
George A. Meinha rt who
served seven terms in the
legislature. The resolution is
expected to be acted upon on
Feb. 6.
It .reads : ·•Whereas the
mern bers of the House of
Representatives of the 113th
General Assembly of Ohio
have learned, with deepest
reg rets. of the passing of
George A. Meinhart . an
outstanding publi c servant
from Middleport, and wish to
pay tribute to his memory ;
and whereas recognized by
hi s many friends and
associates for his outstanding
service to the citizens of Ohio
as well a s hi s man y
praiseworthy persona l
qualities, George A. Meinhart
will long be remembered as
an individua l who contributed
so much to his community
and to olir society.
His paramount concern for
the welfare of his fellow man
was clearly demonstrated by
his seven terms in the Ohio
General Assembly during
which he served as a member
of the House of Representatives from Meigs County:
and
wherea~
this
distin guished individual's
personal sacrifices of time
and energy to family, family
and community will live
beyond him.
" Though the void his
death has created can never
be fill ed, the legacy of
dedicated service which he
established will remain in· spiring to all others who may
look towards his life as an
exe mplar~
model
ol
Christian devotion ; and
whereas the warmth and
understanding George A.
Meinhart always extended to
others will stand as a
monument to his personal
character and his memory
will remain forever in the
hearts of everyone who knew
and loved him .
·"Therefore be it resolved
that we, the members of the
House ·of Representatives of
the 113th General Assembly,
adopt this resolution in salute
to the memory of a truly
honorable and magnanimous

SUIT FILED ' ..
TIIllrsday in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court a suit
was filed by the Pomeroy
National Bank in the ~unt
of $1,690 agpinst . Joe Me·
Conahey.
man." ·

I~

�.
.
~
Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, Jan. 26,
-~

--

--

--- --

-

•
'I

.

\
·3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Jan. 26, 197~

1~79

IN WASHINGTON

COMMENTARY.

Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

Coincidence and posterity

'*********************************************:....
~

If

! -Editorial opinions
lt:

lawrence E. lamb, M.D.

SWlll11111ng
·
. ~Jf~;:-~~~:~~~~lhhte~y~ar~e~fr:on.
pr
rheumatoid

'

4•xt•rci St'
"·
DEAR DR. LAMB _ I am a
37-year-&lt;ild male and I have
arthritis. I have found that by
keeping my . body weight
down I feel better. I am 6 foot
3 with a large frame and
weigh 190 pounds. I am interested in jogging. My stress
test was OK The problem is
that there is too much stress
on my legs for jogging.
Since strokes are common
in my family, I'd like to stay
as light as I can and still be
hea lthy. I would also like to
be active to the extent that
this might prevent problems
later on. Is my calculation of
an optimal weight of 170
pounds correct? Because of
my arthritis, I should do exercises that work my heart and
develop my circulation but
ones that do not stress my
joints. Are lbere any that I
could do at hom
DEAR READER- Regardless of how tall you are or how
big·your frame is, the rule is
always the same. The way to
find out if you are too fat is by
measuring the fat under the
skin. That means literally
getting hold of your skin
around the waist. If you have
a half inch or more, you
usually have some fat you
could lose .
Since you are only 37, the
probabiliti es are that you
have rheumatoid arthritis. I
am sending you The Health
Le tt e r number 4-11 ,
Rheumatoid Arthritis, to give
you more information about
this condition. Other readers
who want this issue can send
50 cents with a long, stamped,
Self-addressed envelope for
it. Send your request to me in
care of this newspaper, P.O.
Box 1551, Radio City Station,
New York, NY 10019.
You 're absolutely right
about your concepts of exer-.
cising. One of the best exercises I know for people who
have joint disorders. of any
\

arthritis or . osteoporllllis is
swimming. The buoyancy of
· thewaterhelpstosupportthe
body and eliminates the
undesirable strain on the
· · · t At th
ti
JOins.
e same me,
swimming is a good endurance exercise and can
build up your heart and lungs.
Now 1 don't expect that you
have a swinuning pool in the
back yard and since you are
frQIII New York , I doubt that
you would be able to use such
a pool yea r round anyway.
Most conununities do have an
indoor s wimming pool
someplace. I would suggest
that you check out your local
resources for a swimming
fa cility that you might be
able to use on a year-round
basis.
DEAR DR. LAMB -I am a
15-year-old girl and I don 't
wear a brassiere. All my
friends joke and jeer at me
about it. I am writing to prove
them or me wrong.
What are the pros and cons
on bras? One friend says that
I can get breast cancer. Is
that true ? Should I stay comfortable and not wear one or
wear one for health reasons ?
Or, does it really make any
difference ?
DEAR READER- It might
depend on what you have to
put inside your brassiere.
A brassiere does provide
support to an ample breast
and helps prevent sagging. If
you don't wear a brassiere,
the ligaments in'i~e the
breast tend to stretch. That
mea~·s the amply endowed
woman is apt to have sagging
problems earlier in life if she
doesn 't wear a brassiere. ·
. If you happen to ,be a jogger
or are physically active, you
might find that not wearing a
brassiere ·could lead to il:rltalions merely from tht•
clothing rubbing you.
No, you can1 get breast
cancer from not wearing a
brassiere.

"i."1"'

~

"

t*************************•******************····

Union official calls
~UUer big dictator

As coincidence, it couid not have been more apt.
The last day in public office for George C. Wallace came on ·
the birthday of Martin Luther King Jr .
·
Both Wallace and King played major roles in the shaping of
recent American history. Both were merely men, flawed as
are all. But both - through force of personalities, chance of
position and the acciuents of human affairs - became larger
.;·~,than life representations of contending social forces of their
limes. Their essential difference was that one looked to the
future and the other to the past One said "I have a dream,"
the other vowed "Segregation forever.''
·
Wallace closed out his long tenure as governor of Alabama
listening to his successor promise " all Alabamians a new
beginning free from racism and discrimination.'' There was
irony not only in the message and the timing but in the setting
of the swearing-in ceremony, only a short distance from the
Montgomery church from which King a quarter of a century
ago launched a civil rights movement that was to challenge the
nation's conscience and change its way oflife.
Through most of that turbulent period, Wallllce's was the
most influential voice in opposition. In later years, he has said
that his position was misconstrued, that his years-long campaign against desegre·gation was not motivated by racial antipathy but by opposition to big government dictating to the individual in lllillters essentially the individual's own concern,
that he himself was not "anti" anyone or any group,
Perhaps. It may well be that he was misunderstood by much
of !lie public and misrepresented , as he so often charg~d, by
the media. But if so, he took singularly little inte~est in personally setting the record straight at the time. Distortion in
news columns and by television cameras may have been
beyond his control. But few exposed in person to his rhetoric
COLUMBUS, Ohio ( AP) could have come away doubting that at the very least he was
Former Lt. Gov. Richard F. anti pointy-headed intellectuals.
Celeste commented that a
· There was and is no question as to King's position, or the im·
pair of "country boys" are · pact of his message. It came through loud and clear, chailengrunning Ohio's ship o! state. ing the justification of injustice by whatever a~thority and
But the Cleveland-born Ce- moving both blacks and whites toward a transformation of
leste wasn 't bitter when he society that is still in progress. His concept of a broader
referred to Jackson Couniy freedom was color blind, it applied to all Americans.
native James A. Rhodes and
Although he consorted with presidents and kings, King never
House Speaker Vernal G. held public office. His·power came from his message, the hope
Riffe Jr. , a Democrat from it generated and the respect it invoked.
New Boston on the Ohio
There is currently a movement underway, with wide support
River.
including that of President Carter, to designate King's birth- :,
Celeste, narrowly defeated day a national holiday. Such a tribute may. be deserved and apby Rhodes for governor last propriate, but it is not essential. Martin Luther King's name is
!aU, indicated he was more already writ large and indelibly in American history .
bewildered than anything
That of George Wallace, three times governor of Alabama
else how Rhodes and Riffe and three times a serious presidential candidate, very likely ;
rose to power from smaU will be a footnote.
'
towns
and
meager
Wallace appea.led to our fears and uncertainties, discouragbeginnings.
ing us from rising above them. King demanded the best from
He didn 't mention , but us, exhorting us t~ the largeness of spirit of which we are
might have, that the two capable and through which a society progresses.
country boys are a lot alike '
It is that sort of message that posterity remembers.
old fashioned politicians wbo
know how ID strike the right 'r---...,..--_._._.__ _ _ _ _ _ _--,-~.., ,.,
kind of deals . .
Riffe, 53, admits openly
•
&lt;
that the 69-year-&lt;Jid governor
••
•
has been a tutor over the
' j
'
years, and ranks hini as a
.
'
..
,
master politician, next to the
~
;
speaker's father .
He shrugSed off Celeste's
'.
~tr*
characterization of him an~
,
Rhodes. "What's wrong with
LOS ANUELES (AP) -Actor John Wayne will probably "
being a country boy ?," he
be released from UCLA Medical Center early next week a
asked.
hospiLa.l spokesman .says.
',
""'
Wayu.;
was
reported
to
be
in
stable
condition
Thursday.
"::
Secretary of State Anthony
Hospital
spokesmen
said
he
is
able
to
walk
around
and
is
J . Celebrezze.didn't know la~t
·
,,:
year, when he sponsored a eating soft foods.
The
71-year-old
actor
underwent
91&gt;
hours
of
surgery
Jan
.
!
bill as a state senator, that he
12
when
doctors
removed
his
gallbladder
and
his
stomach,
would be the one to administer it when it became where cancer was found. Gastric lymph nodes also were
removed and subseqUent tests showed they also contained .,. '
law.
·
He won passage of a law cancer cells.
Doctors have said there's no evidence of any remaining ·~
that requires non-citizen
·
aliens to record their cancer in Wayne's body.
purchases of land in Ohio,
NEW YORK (AP) - The formation of the National
and provides that the
secretary of state shall keep Committed to Draft Sen. Edward M. Kennedy for. President
,,
bas been announced by a black civic leader.
track of them.
Nathaniel Martin Jr. said Thursday that his group would
The
newly
elected
try
to mobilize millions nation-wide in a "Kennedy '110
secretary s8id he thinks it is a
Campaign."
•
· ·
g90~ laJll, · ah4 Jllill . enable
"Ted
Kennedy
is
the
magic
name
in
the
South
aronx
because
~·;
state " offici'als • and the
of
his
empathy
and
willingness
to
express
his
concern
for
what
•
:
legislature to be aware of
what iS happening to Ohio we believe in ," said Martin, former executive director of the U
·1
property, particularly its Bronx Urban Lea1rue.
M~tin
~id
his
151J.member
!!!Oup
had
infonned
Kennedy
valuable farm lands .
His bill becomes effective of thell' act1on, but has "not received any official response. "
in mid-March.
BARNSTABLE, Mass. (AP) -Norman Mailer's divorce . 1
trial was recessed for a month after his fourth wife switched · ·•
Senate President Oliver lawyers and the author disclaimed knowledge of his financial "'
Ocasek, D-Akron, denies affairs ..
reports of a political rift
between him and the office of
"I write books. I don't read contracts," Mailer said ThursDemohratlc Secretary of day wheo pressed by his wife's attorney. ·
·~
State Anthony J. Celebrezze
Ruth Eudd, lawyer for Mailer's wife, aeverly, was '••
Jr . - despite evidence to the questiOning the ,author as to how much he has received in book ..
contrary.
advances. ·
.,.
·,
Ocasek said, "I can't afford
· , Mailer's wife dismissed her lawyer arooks Potter . ••
•
to have him mad at me. He replacin~ him with Ms: audd, who had ~n helping Potter: ,,
•
owes me $10,000."
~s. Mailer said she d~issed Potter "because there was a
•
The
Senate
leader disagreement over the way he was handling the financial
"
apparently referred to a questioning ." ·
campaign loan to Celebrezze . In dispute is a property settlement involving Mailer's •••
last year from the senatOr's mcome, homes on Cape Cod and in New York, and custody of ~•
election fund .
·
the coup)e's two children.
•

Berry's World

...

. ..

s·p 0 RT
· .s

PIZZA
50e •OFF
Good

LAFF- A- DAY

on Any Size Pizza

RIVERFRONT DINER
RIVERFRONT DINER
Pomeroy, 0 .

991-9990

,---~--"-1

"

638
629
Kyger Creek
621
Federal Hocking 707
Hannan Trace 526

Md;cc and Victor l{cgillad o.
BOWLING

GII M•IJ I'II AIIUE,

Texas

- Joe Berardi held a

~lim

lead after the fou1th round of
the $100,000 ProfessiO nal
Bow lers Assoc iatio n open
tourn ament .

llerardi, looking for his
fir st title on the PBA tour,
held 5-poin lead over 15time titi ist Dave So utar after

a

the first

L

eight gamci:i of

match play .
Berardi

\\tOll

four of his

eight matches while spillrng
1,669 pins -- a 208 av c ~ age
to bring his tot al pin s for the
t oumm cnt to [l, ti!lfJ.

Sou t:.1r

mo\"l!d from Hith pl ace to

second in the fou rth round IJ\'
posting a 6-2 m:~tch pl :~)­
recurd while knocking down
1.184 pins fo r the session.

N ame d

Dan

BiiS ketball

National Ba ske1ball
Association
M ilwa ukee Bucks
Signed
Sam Smtih , guard , to a 10 day

contrac t

Hock ey
Nafi ona I Hoc k e y l -a ague
Minnesota North Sta rs Signed Greg Smith , defen sem an, to a mu lt i -year con t rnc t . Sent Jim Robert s, l eft
wi ng , to Oklahoma G t y of t he

Central Hoc key Lea gue .
St. Louis Blues - Recall ed
St eve Du rbano, defenseman,
from Sa lt La ke City of the

Cent ra l Hockey League .
Soccer

North American
Soccer League
Sa n Jose Ea rthguakes -

Named Pet er Stubbe director

pl ayer personnel .
COLLE GE
ArilOnn Wes tern - An nounced th e resignation o f
Chorll?s Dine. head foo tba ll
co a ch, and narned J im
Sht&gt; rrnan to replace hi rn .
Yal e· - Na rne d Joseph
Arn anto inter i m vars ity
of

bnscball ro actl.

Sec es s ion is t Biafr a
strrrendered to Nigeria after

a 30-month strugg le for
independence during which
two million persons are

reported to have died of
starvation

-0.4
0.5
3. I
4.4
5.6

7.9 .

-12.1
. J &lt;1 . 2

16.3
- 17 .4
-29.1

1977 CHRYSLER CORDOBA

'4795
1974 CHEVY MONTE CARLO

'4695

'2495
'2895

.

'

.

.

1976 FORD TORINO

1978 FORD T-BIRD

'2895

'6795

''•'

I Th. Daily ·~entinel

SHARP USED TRUCI&lt;S

•

•••

I~SPSU~ l

•

-~·~dDEVOTED ·au l 'HE

'

INI'ERE'Sf OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT HOEFLICH
Cl!y Editor
DAVIDBUSRIRk
I
A.~rtlalq Maaqer
Publbhed dally excepl Saturday
by The OUo Valley Publlshing
Company·Multimedla, Inc.,
111
Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio 457e9.

,
,.

,.
.,
•I
~

BusinelJl! Office Phone 992- 21541.

,

dau P9Slil8' paid Hl •
Pomeroy, otuo.

l
l
,11

·;
,..
'•

;Euclid Ave.,CievebmdL..Ohio44115.
Sul:lrll(:rlptton rajes : ueltvered by - ' ~,.
I. Carrier where avaU1:1ble 7&amp; cent.! per
·~
week. By Motor Route where earlier
:•
serviL'1! not .vllilllble, One manth,
~
J'J.25. By mall in Ohio and W. Va.,
One Year t27.50; Sill months,
''
$14 .50; Three monlbs, · S8.50:
·.'
Elsewhere '-12.00 year; Sl11 months
'
117 .00; Three Months, tf.OO.
:•
Sul:t5erlptlon prtee Include! Sunday
1Tlmes&amp;r:tUnel.
~

1977 FORD F-100 EXPLORER _ _ ___'4095
1977 FORD F-100_
. _ _ _ _ __ '4595
-1976 FORD F-250 - - - - - - '2895
1976 FORD F-100 EXPLORER---- '3395
,,
'4650
1977 DODGE .CUSTOM 100--~~--..:.
'·

1977 CHEVY C-20
1977 CHEVY
1975 FORD CURRIER
1973 CHEVY C-10
1976 FORD RANCHERO

'1595
'4195
'3295
'2495
'4495

'
.

.

See Our Sales .Staff

,,

.,,

1977 FORD T-BIRD

976 FORD COUNTRY. SQUIRE WAGON

,.,

Bill Ole Hoss

•

Bobb

[·"-_....

Roush

•

Bob Crosswhite
,.

R ada kovic h

off ens ive line·coach .

11 sa.o
11 57.2

•

••'

. National advertiallll representaUve, I.andon A.Noclatea, 3101

Eastern
Gallipolis

1975 PONTIAC LEMANS

,·

1 •

PHILAlJEI.PHIA - Tenth
- seeded Arthur Ashe upset
No . 2 seed Guill ermo Vilas of
Argentina, 6-3. 7-5. to gain the
quarter-fi nal round in the
$250,0 00 U. S. Pro indoor
Tenni s Championship.
In other mat ches, topseeded J immy Connors. the
d e fen ding
chamoio n .
defeated Wojtek Fiback of
Poland 6-4, 7·Ci ; John
McEnroe topp ed Hank
Pfister , 6-2, 7·6 ; V it as
Ceruiaitis defeut ed Johann
Kriek of South llfrica, 4-6, 6-2.
7-5: Harold Solomon beat
Gene Mayer 6-4, 2&lt;i, 6-1. and
Roscoe Tanner defeated
Eddie Dibbs. 6·7, 6-2. 6·2.
GOLF
I.AKE BUENA VISTA , r' la
Defen din g chompion
Bryan 1\ bbott defeated Rocky

for a 2-shot lead in the first
round of the $250.000 !Indy
Williams - San Diego Open
golf tourn ament.
Cri er Jones W:lS one of fo ur
0\(·n tied for tiecond ·at 71.
iilc!to .~ ·, g Hilly Casper. J ern

York Mets - Si gned
Vio lette· a nd L&gt;av id
Mi chael , pit cher s.
Foolball
National Football league
Los Ang eles R am s -

765 13 · 58.8

..•

.,

Secon~

progress ional t enni s tour ·.
nament.

Na1ionil I League

New
John

.•

.

Editorial Phone 992-21$7,

IIIJI.I.YWOOlJ , F la .
Sc\' en\h - seeded Virginia
l(izici of Homania defeated
Betty Ann Stuart 6-4, 6·2 and
&lt;;recr Stevens of South llfrida
beat Janet Newberry 6-1, 6-4
in second · round l:lction in a
$15 0 , 0 0 0
wom en 's

( 1laritpimtship
In another lfl Jtch. fun11cr
I'G A cht.Jmpion Lionel HdJcrt
was eliminated 4 and ~ by
Strvc Ben son of li len E!lyn ,
Ill.
Tommy
SAN ' DIEGO
Aa ron fi red a 3-under-pa r ti!J

..

~

SUNDAY
·~
EVANGELINE CHAPTER
172, Order of the Eastern
Star, 2 p.m. Sunday with
practice for initiation.
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT · Literary
aub, 2 p.m. Wednesday at
the home' of Mrs. Emerson
· Jones. Mrs. Richard Owen to
review "The Thorn ·Birds",
and Mrs. Ben Philson to
rliscuss James Michener. For
roil call members are to give
either a comment on the program ur a modern novelist.
THURSDAY
EVANGELINE cHAPTER
172, Order of the Eastern
Stari o:30 p.m. Thursday,
rcgu Cfr mt&gt;~ting.

TENNIS

.. ,
SCORING MARGIN
TEAM
MARGIN
15.5
11 56 .5 ' Ironton
14.2
13 54.4 Waver ly
13.5 W ahama
10 52.6 Southern
Vin ton Coun ty
Nelsonville-York
12.8
Eastern
Athens
10.4
1
. TEAMS RANKED .
Point Pl esant
8.8 Federal Hock 1ng
DEFENSIVELY
.Alexander
· 6. 1 War ren
TEAM
Pis G Avg . Mi ll er
5.2 Kyger Creek
Waverly
559 12 46 .6 Ga llipoli s
4.2 Trimble
Ironton
551 11 50. 1 Logan
Well ston
2. 1
_
tf#H"u" "' •·•• Point Pleasant
404 8 50.5 North Ga llia
1. 5 Jack son
"Little ladies do not go around Galli pol is
583 11 53.0 Belp(e
1.4 Meigs
Hannan Trace
biting people, especially their Nel s.· York
538 10 53.8 Southwestern
0.9

.

I

Tht' As:o-;ud;ttt•d l'n· ~1-

A meri Ca n L ea gue

Clevel and India ns
Signed Tom Veryz er , short Slop, Tim Glnss, catcher,
n,lVI?' Rivera . out fie lder , and
Gary Melson and Bobby
Cuell ar . pit chers .
Kansa s City Ro ya ls Named Ken Frailing minor
league pi t ching i n s tr uct o r
and John Schuer hol z club
v1ce presi dent . ·

.

in the news

Calendar l.
·
t

Sports In 'HriCf
H~

Nelson o.f lia icnu , Ohio, 4. ""d
3 in second-round play of the
i'G1\ Na tional Match f'lil)'

".

Names •••

I

Trimble

Thursday's

By Tht&gt; Associated Press
BASEBALL

·',.

(·'

I .Social

°

Sports briefs...

daddy's boss!"

-·.....,

.

strrrting Mci•~
lineup will bt·
0
sonwthing like thi~ . Britt
llotlson and Becker wil!IJ&lt; at
the guards. and Hay Andrews
.... t
and St eve Ohl'mger WI'II ""a
forwards . 'fom Hawley will
be back at center, and &lt;-'h uck
Kennedy and Bob Ashley will
. lots of actton
. off be gettmg
thc be nc h.
!Ill in all, things couid add
up to one exciting ball game.

The Daily Sentz'n.e/

Country boys
running state

International Exec uti ve to work as a utility miner at
By STRAT DOUTHAT
Board. Lamb says he refused the Consolidation Coal Co.
Associated Press Ed itor
ST. CLAIRSVILLE, Ohio to obey Miller's order to tum Franklin 25 mine near
(AP)-Bill Lamb is a rangy, in expense reports for travel Flushing, perhaps the biggest
muscular coal miner with a on union business, was ac- deep mine in Ohio.
His opponents for the iEB
deep, soothing voice that cused of insubordination and
takes on a lullaby quality voted off the IEB by the other sea t are Dave Ricer of
Woodsfi eld, Ohio and Vicent
when he talks about the 20 members.
United · Mine Worker s of
His seat, \~_flcant since he Lucido of Bealsville, Ohio,
was suspended last August, is two North American Coal Co.
America.
But his lyrics are not to be filled in a special miners. Luddo and Lamb
bedtime fame when he District 6 election March l. each were nominated · by 12
speaks of Arnold Miller, his Lamb is one of three can· locals and Ricer received
nemesis and president of the dictates for the remaining two • support from nine. Two other
. years of his four-year term. ca ndidat es failed to get
international union.
"Arnold Miller is a dictator Lamb expects less than half sufficient nominating support
who has surrounded himself the 2,000 eligible miners to to get on the special ballot.
The race has generated
with 'yes man, ' '' the 44· vote but others say the tum·
year-old Georgetown, Ohio, out will be heavY . The district intense interest among
coal miner said. "My big . encompasse~;·ohto and . four miners of the district that
trouble was that I wouldn't counties in the panhandle of refused to ratify the present'
UMW contract and who have
say 'yes;' I'd say ;why.'"
West Virginia.
His big trouble cost him
After he was voted off the backed a coniinuing move to
his job as District 6 $24,000-a-year IEB job last remove Miller from his job.
representative on the UMW's November , tamb went back Some of. Miller's more outspoken foes in the district say
they see the election as an
opportunity to repudiate the
current leadership.
•,
" There's ·no doubt that this
election boils, down to a
WHY PRAYER?
choice between Bill Lamb
I Thessalonians 5:24-25 "Faithful is he that calieth you, who
and Arnold Milier," said Jim
also will do 11. Brethren, pray for us."
Russell, a District 6 board
This week while on the radio we have been looking into
member who supports Lamb.
"Basically, the reason Lamb
the subject of prayer. How pra)'Jt is essential to the ongoing
was removed was because he
relationship between us and God our Father: Jesus plays a
stood
.against Miller at
very important part in our prayer life. We saw in scripture that
contract
time . Also, he made
Jesus is seated at the right hand of God, making intercessions
IEB members look
the
other
for us, when needed. We found within scripture that God
bad
when
he refused to acencourages each of us to come to Him with an expectant hope,
cept the pay raise tl\ey voted'
remembering that God wants to communicate with us about
themselves after iast ' year's
everything we do.
One of the things that excites me about the two verses I
stfike."
Russell also said he felt
used at the opening is their fa ctualness. God, through Jesus
that Miller had thrown the
Christ His only begotten Son, is faithful and will do it, that is,
· preserve you faultless until the coming again of His Son Jesus • int ern ation al's support
behind Ricer, an articulate,
Christ. Do we reaUy need much more incentive to believe God?
28-year-old belt mechanic
The second part of the reading is for each of us to be willing
and tqe UMW's Ohio director
to accept the need to have others pray for us. Should we not ask
of COMPACT, the union's
others to act as intercessors in our behaH also? In closing, let
me share an invitation from Jesus to you. Matthew 11:28 lobbying arm.
Ricer denies he has such
"O&gt;me unto me, all ye that labor and are heavy-laden, and I
support.
will give you rest." Believe Him! -Harvey Koch, SyracUse
" At least I haven't seen any
Ouster, United Methodist Church.
evidence so far that I'm being
supported by Miller," said
Ricer. "I 'Was one of the in_ternational's strongest opponents during the contract
-strike and I don't feel we got a
good contract."
'
Ricer said he ·had made
mine safety the keynote of his
campaign.
"My background as Ohio's
state chairman of COMPACT
would put me in a good
Private sector employees
position to - work toward
could
review their personnel
strengthening Ohio's mine
files
under
a bill being pushed
safety laws," he said.
by
Rep.
Tom Fries, D"However, I feel the election
Dayton.
will be close. Tiie winner will
He points · out that
,\ ·~
-''' ~· ... . . ""'!,.!.
be the person that works the
employees
of the state and
t! A I ~ .. o/ J '
hardest."
local
governments
already
;, ,.. ";· .,\~·/
Lucido, a DistriCt 6 board
are
permitted
to
examine
,,
member, agrees the race will
their files. Nornially, they
be close. He said one of the
contain information about
biggest problems facing the
such things. as family,
district is division among the
medical hlsto~y, military
miners.
records aild credit ralings,
" We· need to stabilize
among other things.
district and local relations
Fries said his bill would enand we need to keep fighting
able employees to dispute
the EPA clean air decision, "
correct false information
hesaid. "Also, this election is and
the files might contain. "Tbe
very important because it people of Ohio have been de·
will provide the winner with a nied this constitutional right ·
good chance to go up to long enough," he asserted.
Washington and have a hand
in
negotiating the next'
"I KNEW it would .be just a matter of time.
contract.''
Thought for today: Ufe is a
Someone is advocating Western-style litter
Like the others, Lamb SL'eS series of experiences, each
in the streets!"
•·
a do'e election. He says he one of which makes us bigger .
•
has no proof of rumors that - Henry For.d, auto pioneer;
Milirr is supportin g Ricer . 1863-1947.

hitting 30 of 38, and the
1
• D
ro1101cn s ave Evans is
fifth , hitting 38 of 67.
.Jackson usually plays a
strong first half, and they like
to run and shoot. Evans leads
them. along with Ed Martin.
1bey each had ·23 and 12
. t
ct Jvey,ina93&lt;i7
' I
poms.respe
loss
M k to
S dIronton
h d 1.tTuesday .
ar y ow a '·
Last Saturday, Athen•

I

!978-79 BOYS.' HIGH SCHOOL BASKETBALL
ilncludesgamesthroughJan. 29)
OVERALL SCORING
NAME - TEA M
FG FT PTS IGI AVG .
Ri ck Penrod . Nel son ville Yor k : 10 u• 349 1101 34,9
Dan
Spencer .Ironton
Eastern
'1'1
29
221
111 I 20.6
DickJames.
9r
40
224
1111
Jim l!arl, Federal Hockrng
115 22 252 11 31 l~ - ~
Von Taylor. Kyger Creek
. 91 30 21 2 11 11 19.3
Herb Epling. Belpre
15 32 182
1101 18.7
Rob
Norman. Wellsloh
89 21 199 Ill I 18 :1
DaveBu rgess.Mi ll er ~
93
111 11 31 16 7
G
1son, southwestern
•73 31
Dreg N
Leh
33
179
I 11)
16 .3
ave e man, Logan
55 37 147
(91 16.3
SOUTHEASTERN OHIO ATHLETIC LEAGUE
NAME- TEAM
FG FT PTS CGI AVG .
R1bkNorman, Wells I on
73 14 160 (81 20.0
0
.._
c James. lronlon
60 16 146 c81 18.3
Da ve Lehman. Logan
47
34 118 (7) 18.3
Meigs, ·currently . at the
Dave Evans, Jackson
41 36 118 (8) 14.8
bottomoftheSEOALwithan
DavidMathews, Athen s
51
9 113 C81 14 .1
0-8 record, 2-9 overall, has
Joel Gordon , Waverly
45 22 112 (81 14.0
Pete Clark, Logan
48 10 106 (8) · 13.3
everything to gain in
Gr - J Becker, Meigs
38 30 106 (81 13. 3
tonight's contest. A win would
Gary Bentle~ . Athens
47 11 105 (81 13 .1
put them in a tie with
.
Jrmmy Hams. Gall 1po!is
46
13 105 (81 13 . 1
Jackson . It could gJ·ve them
SOUTHERN VALLE Y ATHLETIC CONFERENCE
'-----·---~__:_;_
· -----.,.------.:.1 NAME- TEAM
FG FT PTS IGI AVG .
Dan Spencer, Eastern
46 14 106 (51 21.2
some incentive to stay off the '
· bottom the rest of the way.
""
Von Taylor , Kyger Creek
36 11 83 (41 20.8
18 _1
3 n
'th
'T'oniuht's
gnmes
S~m Smtth, Nor th Ga lli a
35
{4 )
N e1 er team sports im.I.'
..,
u
T1m McComas •.North Galli a
15
16 66 (4 1 16.5
pressive statistics.
SEOAL
Je11 Goebel. Eastern .
29 " 82 lSI 16.4
Jackson is last in field goal At hens at Gallipolis
NON-LEAGUE
Greg Nelson, Soulhwestern
40 17 97 161 16.2
Mar.letta at Athens
Paul Shaffer, Hannan Trace
36 11 93 161 15 s
percentage, and Meigs is just Ironton at Logan
four percentage points above Ja ckson at Meigs
Nelson ville .. York at Logan DwightHill, Southern
23 11 57 141 14 :3
Well ston at Waverly
Meig s at Wahama
Ttm Brt~ager , Southern
25
15 65
(5)
13 .0
them. Jackson is also last in
TR !.VALLEY
Mi ller at Millersporl
Stacy Wmslon , North Ga ll ia
22
6 so (41 12 .5"
foul shooting, but Meigs is Nel sonv ille . York at Alex . South Webs ler al North
Ga llia Imakeup game)
holding'down a solid fourth in ander.
Athens
623 11 56.6
TEAMS RANKED
that category.
Federal Hocki ng at Belpre Gillmer Co4nty at Rav ens.
Sout hern
521 9 57.9
OFFENSIVELY
. The Ironmen · are first (or Trimble at Warr en
wood
Logan
582 10 58.2
TEAM
Pis
G
Avg
.
SVAC
164
13 58.8
Fed.-Hocking
North
Ga
ll
ia
579
8
72.4
TUESDAY
,
JAN
.
30
last, whichever way one looks Eastern at Southwest ern
Alexa nder
175 13 59.6
South ern
643
9 7l.A
SVAC
·
at it ), in the number of fouls Kyger Creek at Southern
11 1 12 59.8
Wahama
A81 7 68.7 Vinlon Cou nty
Souther n at East ern
committed. That's a big plus
NON -LEAGUE
Sout
hwestern
666
11 60.5
Miller
·
881
13
67.7
NON -LEAGUE
671 11 61.1
for them as they commit-&lt;Jnlv ~~~~~nglon CH at Teays Fort Frye at Belpre
Athens
737 11 67.0 Eastern
M il ler
813 13 62.5
Nels.- York
666 10 66 .6
Warren at Williamstown
15.9 per contest while Meigs
North Gallia at Wahama
Be lpr e
632 10 63.2
Alexander
854 13 65 .7
Symmes
Valley
at
Hannan
is third, committing just 16. Portsmouth at Greenup
Kyge r Creek
108 11 64. 4
Ironton
722 11 65 .6
Trace
Each team has a leader in
SATURDAY
Warren
6'9 10 64.9
Belpre
.
.
646
10
64.6
Nodh
Galli
a
at
Pike
Ea
slern
484 7 69 .1
foul shooting. Meigs' Greg Waverly atSEOAL
So uth west ern
675 11 61. 4 Wahama
Ripl ey at POint Pleasant
Ironton
922 13 70.9
673 11 61.2 Tr imbl e
Buffalo Putnam at Waha ma Ja ckson
North Ga llia
567 a 70.9
730 12 60 .8
Barboursville at Portsmouth Waverl y
824 11 74 .9
668 11 60 .7 Wellston
Greenfield at Wash ington CH Wellston
844 11 76.1
Logan
603 10 60.3 Mei gs
WEDNESDAY, JAN . 31
Wellston
824 11 74.9
Vin ton County
71 1 12 59 .3
TRI.VALLEY
852 11 77 .5
652 11 59.3 Jackson
Nel sonv ille-York a't Vinton Meig s
817
10 81.7
Hannan
Trace
Warren
593 10 59.3
C,ounjy (Makeup Game)
Poi n1 Pleasant 474 8 59.3

-

Sermonette

HEALTif

It will be a battle to stay out
fth 11 to · ht h
h
o e ce ar mg w en t e
Jackson lronmen come to
Larry · R. Morrison Gymnasium to .meet the Meigs
Marauders.
Coach AI Berger's lronmen
are only one game out of last
. th e SE"AL
'th 1'
Pl acem
v
WI a· .,
That
record,2-10overall.
,
M one
.
league wlll came over e1gs
lit J ackson, a nine-point
victory that came as the
re. suit of a 63 percent shoot.ing
mght.

. Donald F. Graff

More tax cut converts
By Martha Angle and Robert Walters
WASHINGTON (NEA)- Politicians who hopped aboard the
tax and spending revolt bandwagon lor Campaign '78 are still
riding it for all it's worth this year, with converts signing up
every day .
.
Even before President Carter unveiled his " austerity"
budget for the next fiscal year, publicity-seeking members of
, O&gt;ngress from both political parties were scrambling to go
h1m one better w1lh a plethora of tax cut and-or spending limit .
proposals.
·
None, of course, coldd quite match the dubious splash made
by California Gov. Jerry Brown with his call for a constitutional convention to consider a balanced budget amendment but it wasn't for lack of trying.
Rep. Jack Kemp, R-N.Y., and Sen. William Roth, R-Del.,
didn't even wait for the start of Congress to begin beating the
drums for a jazzed-up version of their proposal to slash income
taxes by a third.
.
'
And a variety of others, including Sen. Robert bole , R-Kan.,
Sen. John Stennis, D-Miss., Sen. Gary Hart, ~lo. and Rep.
L.A. "Skip" Bafalis, R-Fia., came charging forth~ the first
day of the 96th Congress with their own balanced
budget and tax cut plans.
.
Tax relief, tax refoi'm
At least a dozen state legislatures will be grappling with tax
cut and spending limit schemes this year as the after-shocks of
California 's Proposition 13 continue to be felt.
State constitutional amendments to limit spending and-or
property taxes are scheduled for consideration in ConnecticutIllinois, Georgia, Massachusetts, Virginia and Minnesota
while a half dozen or so other states will debate various
legislative moves along the same lines.
While the emphasis in most states is on tax relief and spending restraints, Ohio legislators will take a look at a tax reform
package pressed by a public interest group in that state. It
wouid provide significant relief to low-income families while
graduating income taxes for those earning over $30;000 a year
and closing corporate tax loopholes.
Public employee unions and other liberals fighting tax cut
plans in most states are expected to work for the Ohio reform
package and to press similar proposals elsewhere.
An appreciated Individual
The AFL-CIO, anxious to prove that it rewards its friends
regardless of party affiliation, is sponsoring a $5(10-a-head fundraiser next week in Washington for GOP Sen. Robert
Packwood of Oregon, up for re-election in 1980.
Packwood, newly elected chalnnan of the Senate
Republican Conference, backed a number of high-priority
labor bills in the last Congress, including the common site
picketing measure and labor law reform. His most likely
Democratic opponent, Portland Mayor Neil GOidsclunldt
would ordinarily be expected to win union support but
Packwood appears to have pre-empted the field this time.
Not that business groups don 'I appreciate him, too. Later
this year, the head of Oregon 's Chamber of Commerce and the
AFL-CJO chief for the state plan IQ c.o-sponsor an "appreciatiOn dmner" for the senator's loth anniversary in the Senate.
Seleclloa sllenee
The Republican National Committee is having a hard time
rounding up participants for hearings on vice presidential
selection procedures.
Sen. Robert Dole, former President Ford's 1976 running
mate who was chosen at the lith hour in the traditional smokefilled room, has agreed to testify. But neither Ronald Reagan
nor Sen .. Richard Schweiker, R-Pa., the~ he designated as
his ri¥Ulmg mate well before the conclusiOn of the primaries in
a stunning break with tradition, will appear.
A good many Republicans feel Reagan actually made a
smart move in selecting his rumiing mate well in advance includ~ng some Ford backers who fought against Reagan's ~on­
vention effort to force his opponent to follow suit.
Looks like the fonner California governor doesn~ want to be
held to his own precedent this lime around, however.

··B~~~~ent""~~~~~.~~~~~.! '""'' , ../

SEO cage stats. ..

Thur'iday's
Sport s lransactions

�'

.

4-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. o .. Friday. Jan . 26 . 19m

senttin~!l, Nlidcllleport-Pomrro~ 0 ., Fri.iay, Jan . 26. 1!J7~

OSUremains unbeaten, Michigan State lyses

Dorothy

Northwestern 73-lil Thursday with less than three losses.
By GEORGE STKlHIE
night to protect their two- The Hawkeyes are 4-2 and
AP Sports writer
game Big Ten Conference alone In second place after
COLUMBUS, Ohio tAP ) lead.
knocking off Illinois.
Tenth - ranked Ohio State's
Nearly everyone had
" If they ! Io wa and
basketbaU players happily
buzzed the word around their conceded the league crown to Michigan State I lose two
dressing room : Michigan Michigan State again. But more before they play us, I'll
now the Spartans are 4-3. be happy," said Ransey,
State had lost again.
"Everybody is faUing by They are three full games in ' whose I 7 points paced a
the wayside - · except us." back of the surprising balanced Ofilo State attack. ·
said a beaming Kelvin B~ckeyes , breezing along at
Eldoo Miller, tfie Buckeyes
conservatively talking coach,
Ransey·, moments after the . 7-0 in the conference.
Iowa .is the only contender . concedes he did not envision a
Buckeyes had whipped

honored

'

Reds' offer rejected

~in'-

,

LEBANON
LEBANON, Ohio (A P)
Boy Prince sprinted to a
three-length victory Thursday night in the $800 featured
pace mile in the eighth race
at Leb_anon.
The winner paid $5, $4.60
and $3.60. Satin Sheets was
second, returning $6.60 and
$4.40, and Jersey Silk was
third, paying $6.20.
Seven Year Itch combined
2-2 with Racearena for $22 in
the double. The crowd of 1,264
bet $151,181.
'

Buil~

~~ Thmorrow's
\

'.

.\ '

PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES. VICE PRESII;lENT
OF THE UNITED STATES• SENATOR. CONGRESSMAN
• SUPREME COURT JUSTICE • STATE
REPRESENTATIVE• MAYOR •GOVERNDR.LAWYER
• DOCTOR • ENTERTAINER • PLUMBER •
ELECTRICIAN • BANKER • CARPENTER • PRINTER.
WRITER • MUSICIAN • ATHLETE • ARTIST •
SALESMAN • MANAGER • MECHANIC • PAINTER •
EXECUTIVE • PILOT • ACCOUNTANT • SOCIAL
WORKER • CIVIL SERVANT • TEACHER. SURGEON •
INVESTOR. STOCK BROKER. REALTOR. ENGINEER
• DENTIST • SOLDIER • SCIENTIST • ENTREPRENEUR
• OPTOMETRIST • EDITOR • REPORTER •
PHOTOGRAPHER • ACTOR • NEWSMAN •
TECHNICIAN • TRUCK DRIVER. FARMER. SINGER •
· . DIRECTOR • LABORER •
No matter what a man's
occupation, he can be a
leader. For 59 years now.
J a ycees have helped young
men develop their leadership ··a bilities and
improve their communities. Realize your
potential. Help build your town 's future . Be ·
a leader for tomorrow . . and today!
Be

a Jaycee .

aU against league opposition.
So why did Ohio- State
founder early. losing at
Toledo anct

Rt1fl ,.r

hnforc

Jayceenee
·u r. k

January 21-'Z"/' 1979

:~u~o": t~~e 8~~Y~~f~::c~

Jackson
defeats
Meigs

consecutive victories.

The Buckeyes stay home
for Indiana saturday while
Northwestern draws the
a wesome assignment of
playing at Michigan State.
/"

Purdue - Indianapolis at
Wright State, Gannon at
steubenville, Central State at
Wilberforce, Otterbein at
Capital, Kenyon at Marietta ,
Mount Union at Ohio Northern, liJuskingum at Oberlin,
Wooster at Ohio Wesleyan,
Bluffton at Findlay, John
Carroll at Thiel, Washington
&amp; Jefferson at - Hiram,
Bethany at Case Reserve,
Ohio Dominican at Mount
Vernon Nazarene, Dyke at
Shaw and Tiffin at Malone.
. MID-OHIO
CONFERENCE
I League Only)
TEAM
WL
Rio Grande
Cedarville

0-0. Totals 14-8-36.

o.

Jackson {41) ,- K im
Connolly, 6-2· 14 ; Jewe ll, 2-1·

5; Exline , 2-1-5; Chery l
Massey. 3-4-10 ; Stiffler, 3-1-7.
Totals 16-9-41.
M.
J.

16 21 36
6 11 31 41
B

New York at Washington
Cleveland at Kansas City
Philadelphia at Portland

Ohio Domin lean
Mt. Vernon
Urbana
T iff in

TOTALS

(All Games!
TEAM
Cedarville
Rio Grande

Wl
10 6
10 10
9 9

Malone

Walsh

7 9

Ohio Oom inican

5 10

Urbana
Mt. Vernon

6 10
5 15

Tiffin

SaturdaY's games :
Cedarville- at

Rio

(7 :30p.m .)
Walsh at Urbana

Tiffin at Malone
Ohio Dom i nican

4 18
.
Grande

at

Mt .

Vernon

JENELLE HAPTONSTALL, 1979 Valentine Girl
Ohio Eta Phi Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority.

Conference

MULBERRY AVE. POMEROY, 0.
992-2115

· Norris DIVision
Montreal 32 9 7 71 199 120
Los Ang . 20 21 7 47 177 17l

Pitts.
Wash .
Detroit

19 21 8 46 167 168
15 26 7 37 159 205
9 25 14 32 146 179

Thursdt~y's Games
New York Islanders 4, Boston
2
New York Rangers 5, Bulfalo
4

Montreal 6, Atlanta 0
Colorado 5, Pittsburgh 3
Detroit 6, Los Angeles 6. lie
Frid•y's Glines
Toronto at Atlanta
St. Louis at Vancouver

Saturday's Gomes
Chicago an'Jashlngton
Buffalo at Detroit
Los Angeles at Pittsburgh
Boston at Montreal
New York Rangers at New
York Islanders
Phi ladelphlo at Minnesota

rt&gt;t la Ail"lg d i ~!li( l i" wh " h rh1 h o vu uo il•• h o 1 ' '' ~rhn r he l'll •n&gt;mum leu '' SJ6 00 per
l'i o..,llv!r ,i f t lrt mi, i mum

l tu

ol rh" ' l' ' ' '" d ollurr ;, uppl i1 oble to a house

It o iler

1'101

l t~c("l t "J d in

thi' ,1("114! Or&gt; th l! flr u day rof Jttllvtll'( •he lux ;, cl~ t ~rrt'i t~l! d h y Ml \l lt ip l y~o"lg thr ee
doll ur\ b~ the t1vmb~ r t•f tv ll t" e.. •· th \ r" moini.,g to th e fo l! o·,o.• ifl!J !hlrty -fi rst''of Decembt:r
ro mm'!! I'1 Ci'1U w; t!. the: 1;in1" of ocqui'i' tO•I '" ~n lr " n r e ,.,to 11.:, ~1o:r

PAYABL,E AT TAX DUE
AND PAY ABLE -

Co uo t~ Tre.uur r: r '\

'
DELINQUENT
TAXES -

When e houJe ruilcr hu • ~itus in thit t to~t e, n p•ovided in this sertio", on the Itt
d1r of Januu., the full 1mouru of tke pro '''" Ioi ii. is d ue tnd P •lyo~ ble on or before
the llsl d1y of Jt"uilry .
·

tr••'•,.

h• .,i ng • tit~s in the Sute of Ohio •nd subject to the
tu u pro•1ided 1b011e MUST regitte r tu~t! tr.1aer wtth the County Au ditor on of
prior 10 the d"'• rhe tu it d~.te .1r1d p•~ ab l e .

Ali ow nen of hou'•

•

'

No petton who it thr. owner of • t! Guse tr ;uler 1nd who h required to regiuer •
h n u~e ,~,. , ll!r ,h .. U f•il to dilpi•y on •he fra011 of Su(h 1r1iler the ~e rrHiute or " Oe u l''

Mid.American Conference

BliThe Af~cioled Press
Coni. All Games
W L Pel W L Pet.
Tol~do ·n o 1.000 13 3 .813
C. Mich 5 I .833 11 5 .688
~all St.
5 2 .714 11 5 .688
Bowl.
Grn .
4 3 .572 10 6 .625
Miami 4 3 .572 7 10 .412
Oh io U 3 4 .428 8 7 .533
E. Mich. 3 4 .428 6 10 .. 315
Kent St . I 5 .200 6 10 ,375
W. Mich. I 6 .143 4 15 .210
N. Ill .
I 6 .143 5 11 .312

/ 'E. (
·"""'

('

'

'

in ued by the Coynty Treuurer .

OPERATOR' OF
A HOUSE TRAILER
COURT -

\

hcr y oJ ptrator ot 3 h o uu: tr3 •l tr cour t or JUtk or CY(ry owm.• r o f property used "'"
,.,, s uch pwrpos oe wh~n th c:rC 15 no Cf'I'.'I.Jfor ~h.JII ktep _ a · rc(i!t~r . o t all house
rr.-iltr" whi ch m.1ke ust of . th~· court , p ,H k\ or property.

''
~

•I
I

!

COUNTY AUDITOR

I.

1

rt
I

,j

Mrs-

st'&lt;Tctar y; MrH. r.n•ttH Simpsun ,
trcrt:-;urer:
Mr s.
naclglt·y , f!m\·er fund: ami
Mrf'i. Wanda PowpJI , program
&lt;'iiHil'man.
Durin g

bu s i1w ss
rm'Cting condlll'tl'd by Mrs.
Hell'n SlcH'k . members
answered rnll ta ll by r~adi n g
a seriJllure verse. Mrs.
R&lt;ulgley read a lettl'r from ·
flal'one College acknowiL,lgmg gifts of money. The
ll&lt;K&gt;slcr Class and the Sunday
sehoul gives $50 a month .
Mrs. Mt:tJ'jorie Grirrun will
t he

host the next meeting w~l h

~ilt~~rt
OIU£Q~
Pomeruy
Flower

E. Main, Pomeroy, 0.

.PLATFORM

$6400
$588

ROCKERS
SPEED QUEEN

WASHER
&amp;DRYER

SOFA BEDS

$11800

3 PIECE, SOFA, CHAIR. LOVESEAT

LIVING ROOM GROUPS

sssoo

IT'S QUIETER

IT COME;&gt; WITH A BONUS.

.

Over $30 wo rth of free accessoncs mcludu1g a spare cuttmg
.
cham really rna.ke the Farm Boss a Shhl

II
·~
Pomeroy, o.

E. Main

992-2094
"Front End Alignments"

''

SAVE YOUR R.C, NEfti, UPPER 10,
DIET RITE &amp; DADS ROOT BEER

MANY MORE DOLLA~ DAY VALUES
NOW IS, THE TIME TO' SAVE$$$

BOTTLE CAPS FOR CHARITY

POMEROY
HOME &amp; -AUTO
606

992-2039
&lt;'r99? ·S1ll

~&amp;O@P
~Jet.relers

MANY
25" COLOR CONSOLE
TELEVISIONS

,

· &amp; 'CdUse 1ts large bdHied muff ler ts more than1ust a lln box
•
IT COSTS LESS.
Because d saw that 'UlasJ about IWlce as long will only cos t
dboUt half as much .

992-6681

V•nMeter

See our complete
selec ti o n of pendants
and c hain s in 14K Gold
and Gold fil le d, specially
pri ced for Vale nti nes
Day.

9X12 RUGS

IT'S MORE POWERFUL.

-

Shop

l'aeh member to takl· Cl
htnnkmade va lentine.
Mrs. Slack brought to the
mcl:'ting a prognun prepared
by Vera lleegle who is confined to her home ' due to ill
hea lth.
Reading s incl uded " Whot

Because 11hils Lhe b1ggest power to WeH;ht r~tlo of any popular saw,

ERIE .Ja
INSURANCE ERIE
...siR vicE
......
GI\OUP
AGENTS
JOHN KAUFF
DAVE J ENKtN.S

pn•siclt'nt ;

Mo-triP Roy, vit'P Pl'l'!-iidenl ;
Mr s. Oorotl1y Rad g.lcy,

•100 OFF

IT'S MORE RELIABLE.

'

I'

HOWARD E. FRANK

j' •

SOU'IHERN (1110
INSURANCE SERVICES

P.kl'tt'cl WL' I't' Mr."i . Ht•l,•n

Simpson,

Me and my

Becau se of a hotter spa1 k. bener carburebon and n flood-free destg n

.

,A.R t;&gt;,

\

MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO

RIDENOUR'S

Beca use 11 hds lo ngc r·We&lt;mng movmg parts that won' t break down.

Compare With Us

RESPONSIBILITY
Of HO.USE TRAILER
OWNER-

Vllwn time comes to stcut ·

DEAR POLLY- we are go- seedlings in the house, I
ing to paint the w~lls in our water the sl ices I h~ve saved
new house and wonder if you and soon ~ve tomato plants
could tell us of anyil1ing that
"can be u'sed to kill the paint
For all your home
smell'. ~ MRS . D.M.L.
Entertainment and
DF.AR -MRS. D.M.I.. - A
Appliance Needs
' reader once wrote that she
did this very successfully by
DOXOL
putting slices of onions in cold
SERVICE
water and placing the bowls
in the freshly paittted room.
The odor was absorbed in a
few hours.- POI.J .Y.
TV &amp; Apeliance
DEAR POI .I .Y - During
Gas Servtce
·the winter months when I find
a tomato thai seems vet)'
Racine, Ohio
choice and navorful , I cut off
Chester, Ohio
a thin slice with seeds in it.

IT STARTS EASIER

ANYTHING 10
COMPARE!

Mrs . r. t'Ptl.a Simpson.

•398 - •498 - '598

IT OOESM'T OOST

th r col lcct1 on o f t.l-CS .1nd penalt ies . ~h .1ll c niOh"(' cfl llc ct•o n o f s u c h . l.u:es
.1 nd J~etultiu by Ct\· il .lction in th ~ ,.:~n.c of -s u c h tr~.nure r ar;.ttns t t he o wner
for th., reco 11 ery ot th e unp.aid hk\)\

First tht• Kingdom of (;od '' by
Mrs. Rmi)(Jey and Wanda
Powell; " Put Your Pr9blems
in (;od's'Hands" hy Florence
Adams; "Today, Tomotrow
·and Always" by Marie Roy :
"Make it a Two Way Prayer"
by Mrs. Cora Webb ; "There
is Peace and Ca lm in the 21rd
Psa lm " by Mrs. Mildred
Hart.
"How to Fmd Peace of
Mind " by Mrs. Slack; "The
Rest Medication is Medita tion" by Mrs . (;retta Simpson:· "Nul by the Years We
Live , But What We Give" by
Mrseo Ora Hill ; ~~ we Never
Walk Aione" by Velma
Taylor ; " A Prayer for Those
We Love" by Marjorie
(;rirrun. Mrs. Helen Simpson
had a reacting " How II All
Happened" by Helen Steiner

11il'e. Prayer to OllCn and
dusc the pro~ ram were given
by Mrs. Slack and Mrs.
frrimm ,
Cards were signed ror Ura
Morri ~ who is confined to lht·Jcu·kse;m CC:tre Center Clnd
Kathryn Brown at homt•.
Refre shments were servt.'d
hy the hostess and pil'lures
Wl're taken at the meeting.

POLLY"S POINTERS

homeowne~s

"'rh c:- 'o unfy T rc.u ur cr . in otdd ition to .1ny oth e r remedy p ro vided by Llw fo r

Will YHu D&gt;1 With This Day
Thr1t'S So Nl•w?'' by Mr~ .
flt'll'/1 Sirnpsnn : ''Seck Vt•

Snowmobilers and skiers
should know that long , '
Polly Cramer
.trailing scarves can get ..
caught in machinery, on trees ...::.~.:.!.::..:_~-----'--------.,--­
or shrubs and can cause
Onion deodorizes 'rhis slice is put into a p~n d.
injury.
!;Hnd in th e basement C~n d
paint
covered lightly with the sand.

insurance
Give Us A Call

lf the paymcrH of the to k is not mod r: os pro vide d oho v.: a Pena ll y uf fi ve dollor1
or te n pc r¢cnr of the toa cs dut.', whid•cver is !,l reoter. \ hall ~c impose d and
collect(;d ;..., ~ddition to th e to• du e o nd owtng .
., ~

n ffi1 ·1·1's

t&gt;ltot ·tt·d &lt;11 lht• n'I 'Pnt
nH'I'I in~ of ltw Ron~tc r '-la ss
.,r tht · R ~ t dnt&gt; First H;Jptist
C'lmrch lwld at llw hurnt• nf

DEAR HELEN :
"A Collector Who Knows" offers helpful hints on credit buying, but one question remains :
He says you must pay in 30 days to avoid interest, but 30 days
from when • I regularly get bills from a gasoline company and
a department store dated two or three weeks before they arrive . This gives me ·only a week or ten days from arrival date sproutin g from the !;ueds. K.S .
to their printed "due" date. What's the law here? - MRS.
OEAR POLLY - To help
E.E.C.
my
very long-haired cat with
DEARMRS.C:
her grooming, I brush her
You have 30 days between "billing date" and "due date" no
matter how late your bill arrives. This gives a month between with a regular hai r brush
your last possible purchase and the day you must pay' to avoid &lt;'vti'Y day during the hot
Wl'a the r . Som etimt.&gt; s I
interest.
dampen
the bristles on the
Most companies are quite prompt with their statements. A
,brush and brush out Handful s
Complaint to the sl~w credit departments might ~ elp . - H.
of hair every time. She loves
it. The rea l puqll!se b to prcDEAR. HEI.EN :
venl those hair balls from
J'm another mother whose child has been abducted, but
forming in ·her stomach tha(
because the kidnapper is Dicky 's father, I ca n't gel the help I
ctrl' caused by her con.st8nt
need. My divorced husband had week-end rights . One day he
halhin g of
he rst'lf .
just kept on going- with our son.
Snmelimes it is necessary to
I've spent thousands, bui each time I almost track them
make a trip to the vet to have
down, either Social Security won 't give me the forwa raing adsueh balls removed. Also, this
dress on-federal authorities won't cooperate unless I can prove extm brushing reduces the
Dicky might suffer bodily harm .
'
munber of long !nose eat
When a pa~ent leaves the state with the child, it docsn 't hairs in my house.- RETTY.
much matter that the other ex-mate has legal custody . I'm told
DEAR POLLY - I remove
that some 100,000 children are kidnapped each year by ctivoreblack heel marks from my
ed or estranged parents. Yet Congress won't pass a law forbid - no-wax floor with bC:jking soda
ding . this child-stealing. What can we do ? - BEREFT
mixed with a few drops of
MOTHER
water. This is also good for
DEAR MOTHER :
removing some marks frum
Write to Sen. Alan Cranston, 0--Calif. He's a leader in the ef- vinyl wallpaper. Baking soda
fort to pass such a law.- H.
is the favorite cleaner in this
house . -JE.

WE HAVE THE FARM aoss·
AND IT ISA STIBL:

If you feel ·• ·~ · Y'-"
are paying too much
f~r
your auto or

Vancouver at Colorado
Sunday's O.mes

Detroit at Atlanta
Los Angeles at Boston
Minnesola at Buffalo
Tor or.to at Washington
St. Louis at Chlcagq ·

DEAR HELEN .
I pitied wives whose husbands fell for younger women, but
felt smug because "this would never happen to. mer"
Then a 22·year-old girl at my husband's office started calling
him. First it was "car trouble," th~n her refrigerator "died.
and she knew how good he was with machines." He 'd break his
neck getting to her nearby apartment. Yct when !lost my keys dow11toWn, he made me wait an hour in freezing cold llCfore he
.
brought the extra set.
He kept insisting they were " just good buddies, after all he's
twice her age" but when I found her picture in liis coat pocket,
I got mad. He said she tnust have slipped it in as a joke and
that I needed a bead doctor for my jealousy.
Next a frien~ told me she saw his car at her apartment house
on his poker nights. He also "goes down to the office" a lot of
evenings. When I call, no one answers, but he says that's
because the switchboard operator is off.
He insists other wives wouldn't mind if their husbands
helped out a young woman who docsn 't know how to change a
tire or fix an electric switch. But would other wives believe it
·was only that? -VERY DOUBTFUL
DEAR VERY DOUBTFUL:
So am I. A talk with this young woman may not h~lp, but it
could let you know how the land lies (or how the husband lies ).
Next? Ashowdown. It's better than guessing games. -H.

.

Otl ice . Court H ouH

When .1 houu lr•il•r .uquir-. • , itus in this Stille u provided In thi1 n&lt;tio, , ilfler
thl flru dtr of Janu•rr •ad o n or prior to th e Jht d.ay of De cem ber , the full
•mount of the pro rilloi tu it due 1t1d p.t y•ble in1med••tely upon the npintion of
• lO ll•y period ~ ommenci"t with the d•te the 1ihn is uquired.

PENALTY --

TIIAT 'SAMF. 01 .II STORY' UNT il.
IT HAPPENS TO BE YOUR HUSBAND

-------------------"'1

C!&gt;... nly Audiror b f lflu ltiplyi!lg rh,. ''''t'n (l bl• vo lul! o f t he hotru lr!lile-r by the h:1,. role of

'I'''"

IL \t' I NE · Nt'w
\\l'rt '

Valentine Girl of the Ohio sura nee clerk at the Southern Pomeroy. The basement is
Eta Phi Chapter of Beta Ohio Coal Co., No.3 mine and underway and as soon as the
Sigma Phi Sorority is Jenelle the course will be beneficial weather breaks, full con·
struction will begin on the
Haptonstall of Middleport.
in her work.
Jenelle, only a second year
A graduate of Meigs High two-story southern style
member of the sororit0 , was ·School, class of 1972, Jenelle home which will have solar
selected by vote of the completed a year at the Col- heaL The cmljlle1lave done
~ chapter members who will umbus Business University some redesigning of the inhonor her in February at a and another year at Mountain terior on the plans which they
purchased and will actually
'lltate College.
sweetheart dance.
As a part of being selected
Since their marriage, Mr. be doing much of the finish
"Valentine Girl" of her and Mrs. Haptonstall have work themselves and with the
chapter, Jenelle now enters resided on Fifth St. in Mid- help of relatives.
Their sununer life includes
the sorority 's lnfernatiol)lll dleport. They look over the
camping,
boating and skiing
competition. Winners in the homeplace of Haptonstall's
on
Ohio
River
and they have a
contest will be pictured in the grandparents, the Sharps,
camper
on
the
West Virginia
Beta Sigma Phi magazine , and completely renovated it
"The Torch."
· into . a south ern style side.
' While Beta Sigtna Phi may
J enelle is a second year showplace in the community.
member of the sorority and
The house was recently
be lakingsomewhat of _ ..
was named social chainnan, sold' however, and Jenelle abackseat now due to
a position from which she bas and Bill will mqve into a J enelle 's studies at Rio
now taken leave due to some mobile home in upper Mid- Grande, she's looking for·work at Rio Grande College.
dleport until late sununer or ward to becoming more ac: Both Jenelle and her hus- fall when a home they now tive in the group which gave
' band, .Bill Haptonstall, an ac· have under construction is her the mark of '·'being
popular" with them by selec,
:countant at Foote Mineral , completed.
ting
her the 1979 Valentine
They have purchased 25
are taking classes three
Girl.
nights a week at Rio Grande acres j'ust off .of Beech St.' in
In accounting. For the past
four years Jenelle has been
employed as a medical in-

Revised Code Sections 4503 .06 and 4503 .061 as amended by
Sub . H. B. No . 330 and Effective August 26, 1969

150
151
1St
162

the
·

.

HOUSE '!'RAILER .
OWNER'S
TAX PAYMENT CHARGE

COMPUTED AND '
ASSESSED BY -

o(

;'Volentine
Girl'
.
chosen by sorority

;,

Pro Hockey ola "la~ce
lit The Associaled Press
National Hockey League
Campbell Conference
Patrick Division
W L T Pts GF GA
NY
Island. 32 6 9 73 208 121.
NY Rang. 27 16 5 59 198 169
Phlla.
22 15 11 55 158 145
Atlanta 25 20 4 54 191 172
Smythe Division
Chicago 17 21 8 42 140 161
Vane.
16 26 6 38 145 185
Colo . . 1l 31 7 29 139 200
St. Louis 10.32 7 27 140 219

Service party
announced
A community service party
to be held at the Athens Mental Health Center on Feb. 16
was announced when the
Junior American Legion Auxiliary of Feeney-Be_nnett Post
128, Middleport, met recently
althe hall .
The juniors will prepare
favors for the 55 male and
female veterans at their Feb.
14 meetin·g to be held at the
hall . Get-well cards were
signed for Mrs. Velsia· Roush
and Marvin Kelly.
Kim Roush presided at the
meeting with Andrea Batey
giving the prayer, and all of
the members joining in the
pledge of allegiance to the
flag. Officers ' reports were
given.
A New Year's Eve party
was held at the hall with the
juniors assisting in preparing
and decorating the snack
platters and tables.
The door prize provided by
Mrs. Becky Tyree, advisor,
was won by Christi Smith.
There were seven juniors present along with Mrs. Tyree,
Mrs. Lisa Roush, and Mrs.
Paggy Caton .

Mi lwaukee at Las Angeles

Adams Division
Boston 30 t1 7 67 199
Toronio 20 19 9 49 153
Buffalo 18 17 il 47 155
Minn.
16 23 7 39 144

•

GROUP TO PERFORM - A local group, "Russ anQ
the Gospel Tones" will present a concert of gospel music
at 7:30p.m. saturday at the Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
Church. Included in the group are Russell and Juaniia
Spencer, Willard and Lois Ebersbach, Jan Lavendar,
Joanna Lanham and David Strausbaugh. Pastor Floyd F.
·Shook invites the public to attend .

2

3
4
4
4
I 5
24 24

SUGAR RUN MILLS

- 1!_.!.~.!2~.!.!!2!.; ___________ ~----'

New Jersey at Phoenix

4 2

4

3
2
2
2

*WILD BIRD SEED
*SUNFLOWER SEED
*SEEDS
*CRACKED CORN ..

l

7; Wilson. 6-1-13; And er son

6 0

Walsh

Malone

FEED THE BIRDS

·
·-------:---,
I n. W. COMPTON, O.D. 1

Wt~les

~·· .~

Dorothy . Young, 'former
owner of Young·~ Market and
Jolanda Root, an employe,
were honored saturday..evenin~: with a surprise retire·
ment dinner at the Meigs Inn.
Hosting the dinner were
Mrs. Young 's children and
gran~children. Attending
besides those honored were
Mr. and Mrs. J . R. Kennedy,
Tony 'a nd Tammy, Tuppers
Plains ; Mr. and Mrs. Jerry
Swartz and Toby, Middleport ; Sandy Yates and
Roeky Wade of GaJlipolis.
_ Mrs. Young's daughter,
Patricia Slavin, was unable
to allend due to her employment schedule at the Holzer
' Medical Center. Also unable
to attend was another
employe, Catherine Brown,
who is vacationing In California with her son and family ,
Mr. imd Mrs. Robert Brown.

I

COLUMBUS, ohio (AP) 4-2. Walsh travels to UrOhio State, Toledo, Hanover
bana (2-4) .
and Rio Grande try to keep
Wittenberg, the heavy
their solid conference leads in favorite, and BaldwinOhio college basketball
Saturday.
..
Ohio State shoots for its lead. The Tigers entertain
eighth straight Big Ten winless Denison while
Winn.ipeg at Quebec
victory over v)sltlng Indiana. Baldwin-Wallace, also 6-0 in
Sunday's Games
The Buckeyes, the nation's the league, visits Heidelberg
Winnipeg at New England
loth ranked team, are two I 4-2).
Cincinnati at Edmonton
.
games ahead of their closest
In other Mid-American
rivals in the conference games Saturday, defending
National Basketball
chase.
champion Miami plays
Association
Toledo's Rockets can grab visiting Ball State, Eastern
· AI A Glance
a 2'.&gt;-game lead in the Mid- Michigan is at Bowling
By The Asso«!iatt!d Pr'ess
American Conference If they · Green, Kent State at .Western
Eastern Conference
The Meigs Marauder Girls
Atlan·tic Division
win a regionally televised Michigan and Northern
hit just 19 percent from the
W l Pet. GB
PBB, 12 noon EST shooiout at lllinois at Ohio University,
32 14 .696
flor last night and fell to Wash .
Cincinnati riding a threePhlla.
27 16 .628 3'1• . Central Michigan. The
visiting Jackson. 41-36.
Rockets would be 8-ll to the game winning spell, takes on
N.
Jersey
21
21
.500
9
The Marauders hit just 14 , New York
22 27 .449 11'12
Chippewas ' 5-2 league record. visiting Florida State In the
of 72 shots, but hit well from Boston
16 30 .348 16
Hanover, at6-I, owns a two- Metro Conference.
Central Division
the foul line, canning 8 of 11
glune lead over Wihnington
In major independent
San
Ant.
29
18
.617
free throws.
and Defiance In the Hoosier - action, Xavier goes to Butler,
Houston
27 19 .587 111'2
Meigs held a slim 8-6 lead Atlanta
26 24 .520 4'12 Buckeye Conference.
Ashland to Dayton and York
after , one quarter, but by Cleve.
20 27 . .426 9
Hanover
entertains
to
Cleveland State.
17 31 .354 121f?
intermission its cold shooting Detroit
Man&lt;;hester while Defiance
Elsewhere
Saturday,
New
Orleans
17
34
.333
14
'had allowed the visitors to
can assume sole possession of Northern Michigan is at
Western Conference
take a 21·16 lead they never
Midwest Division
second place by winning Akron, Northern Iowa at
relinquished. By the third . Kan . City
29 19 .596
against visiting Taylor . Youngstown, Indiana
26 24 .520 Jlh
period buzzer, Ja~kson was in Denver
Wilmington,
tied with
Mi lwau .
22 28 ..440 7'12
control, 31-21.
.
Defiance af)d Anderson at 6-3,
Chicago
18
29
.383
10
Meigs committed 20 tum- Indiana
l7 30 .362 1t
Bobkittens romp
is idle.
overs, but cleaned the boards
Pacific Oi~ision
In
lhe
Mid-Ohio
Con30 15 .667
witli 64 rebounds to just 40 for Seattle
With three players in
ference, Rlli Grude's 6-4
30 19 .612 2
Jackson. Terri Wilson led the Los Ang .
double
figures, Coach Kathy
Redmeu await Cedarville's
Phoenix
29 19 .604 2'12
losers with 22 caroms. and Golden St. 23 26 .469 9
Weeks'
Kyger Creek girls
Yellow Jackets, tied for
tossed In 13 points to leud in Portland
21 24 .467 9
defeated Hannan Trace, 45-12
second
place
with
Walsh
at
San Diego 22 26 .458 9V,
that category also.
Thursday evening at MerThursday's Games
Jackson was led by Kim
cerville.
Seattle
100.
Atlanta
98
Connolly's 14 points and Detroit 135, Los Angeleo 100
Gloria Amos had 13 points
Cheryl Massey's 10. The team Portland 108. Golden State
Ohio College a..k.tbo II
while Judy Drast and Sherry
hit 16 of 53 shots lor 24 percent 103
By The Associated Press
!:Iarrison tossed in 10 apiece.
Fria: y•s Gomei'
Thursday Night
and sank 9 of 16 charity.
Church Jed the losers with six
New Orlean's vs. New Jersey
Conference
tosses.
at Princeton , N.J.
points.
Big
Ten
Meigs is now 7-4 on the Boston at Indiana
Ohio St . 73. Northwestern 61
The win pushed KC's
year, a nd Tuesday they Seattl@ at San Antoni o
Mid-Continent
record
to 4-3 this season.
San
Diego
at
Chicago
N. Iowa 70, Akron 65
travel to Alexander.
The girls will ·host
Washington at Kansas City
N
.
Michigan
75,
Youngstown
The Meigs Reserves Los Angeles at Denver
s't . oa
Nelsonville-York
Monday.
salvaged the night with a 28-5 New York at Phoenix
romp. Susan Zerkle led the Philadelphia at Golden State
Saturday-'s Games
winners with seven points
San Antonio at Atllinta
,..---~~---------- ·
while Shari Drehel had six. San Diego et Cleveland
Juhasz had four for the Seattle at Houston
Sunday's Games
losers.
I
OPTOMETRIST
1
Golden
State al Boston
Meigs (3&amp;-l - Chapman, 4OFFICE HOURS: 9:30 to 12,2 to S !CLOSE I
0-B; Bar1rum . 1-0·2 ; King, l -2- Chicago at Denver
Diego at Detroit
4; Llfhtfoot, 1-0,2; Riggs, 15- San
1 AT NOON ON THURS.) - EAST COURT I
San Antonio at Indiana

By Quarters :

,.

Cart er Scott and sub Jii!J
Ellinghausen both 11 joining
Ransey in double figures.
And it's the best confer~ce
start since Jerry Lucas, J1Jhn
Havlicek and Company led
the 1962 powerhouse to 12

R·
i
o
!Standings l
cla·s hin MOC battle
. -

Toronto Blue Jays and the su~er d~aft.
.
Reds asking them not to ·
I m .~opmg for a d1ff~r~nt
select him in the secondary· res u~t. . he s~.ld.
I m
World Hockey
phase of the Major League hangmg m ther~Association
Draft last month. The Reds
Bordley sa1d h1s reasons for
w I t pts gf ga
picked him . He wanted the wantmg to stay close to home Quebec
24 14 4 52 165 135
Ca lifornia Angels , who mvolve h1s family. He sard New Eng . 20 14 6 46 163 .i41
picked fourth .
.his father recently underwent Winnipeg 20 17 6 46 168 160
Edmonton 22 17 0 44 158 130
Bordley hacj dropped out of hea rt surgery,. a broth~r was Cine.
19 22 5 43 166 166
USC and enrolled in a junior se riOusly mJur ~ d In an Birm .
]6 24 3 35 153 177
college, making himself· automobile ac~rdent and
Th-..rsdav's Games
No games scheduled
eligible for the draft in the another brothe~ IS going into
Today•s Games
fall quarter.
m1htar~ se~v~ce. A 'th1rd
New England at Bir Now he Is back at USC and brother IS still· m school.
mingham
Ci ncinnati at Edmonton
said he hopes a California
Saturday's Game
team selects him in the

Leaders Thday

i

seventh - successive victory,

upsetting Louisvi lle and could have made it a real
tied for seven points, but
Duke'?
game." said llich t'alk , the Brian Gibson 's 16 points, 13
"Our heads were too much Wilcats' rookie coach. " It's by J erry Marilke and II by
into the offensive end." he fruo1ratlng when you battle a · Bob Klaas helped keep the
replied. "We weren 't com· tea m and play as hard as we Wildcats close.
mittcd to defense ."
did .
Ohio State, inlthe midst of
Northwestern ,· who se
·:.Ohio State is a great club. its longest winning streak
records of 0--7 and 4-12 are just They showed patience. They
since the 1971 team won 11 in
the opposite of Ohio State, put hit the boards- well. They
up .a stubborn fight. The didn't let us establish any a row, showed its best·
balance of this season. Six
Wildcats rarely were more ·dominance."
Buckeyes ranged from 7 to 17
than 10 to 12 points behind.
Rod Hoberson, North' points with Herb Williams 15,
"Just onP offensive thrust west ern '~ Nn. 1 ~('Or,.r . .;:f't ·

------------,
I Pro I Yellow Jackets,

•

CIN CINNATI (AP ) - All·
American college pitcher Bill
Bordley has enrolled at the
Universit y of Southern
Califomia for a s~cond time
rather
than
sign
a
professional contract with the
Cincinnati Reds. ,
Bordley said he did not
want to go far from his
Mission Hills, Calif., home for
family reasons. He wants to
sign with a California team,
he said.
~· L don't see anything
changing," said the 21-yearold pitcher in a telephone
interview Thursday evening.
He said the Reds last week
offered him a Class AAA
contraat wjth th e Indianapolis Indians in the
American Association plus an
undisclosed bonus.
The 6-foot-3, 200--pound lefthanded pitcher compiled a 262 record in 2 years at USC.
He was the winning pitcher in
the NCAA champion game
against Arizona State last
June.
Bordle_v
wrote
the
Phillies ,
Philadelphia

two-game lead at this early
stage of the Big Ten race. ·
"11Je only thin g before the
season.! thought we would be
a competitive club. Now I
think we can pla y with
anybody," he told a cluster of
writers after the Buckeyes'

Young

SALE FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY

R. C. BOTTLING C().
MILL STREET
Middleport, Ohio

BAKER FURNITURE
MlllOI £PORT. OHIO
OPFN m 8 ON FRIDAY, ALL DAY SATURDAY

992-3542 or 992 -3344

r

'·

PR.

�26, !!J79

/

MEIGS TIRE
CENTER, INC.
Perrin pastor, lob Buck Sunday
schOol sup t Churt h School 9 I 5

TRINITY CHURCH , Me\1 W H

ly Trom•g Hou r 7 p m Wc d nf'ulay
w o r:.krp se rv •ce 7 30 p m
.HAZH COMMUN IT Y CHURCH
~ ci ~ t- 1 Hart

o m . wonhrp servrce 10 30 o m

Ncar Long Bottom

Choir r •h~orsol Tuesday 7 30
p m under d1redt on of Allee

pas tor Sunday school 10 om
Chu rch
7 30 p m
prayer

Neose
POMEROV CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE Corner Umon agd
Mulberry Rev Clyde V Hender

meetmg 7 30 p m Thur!odoy
MIDDLEPORT
PENHCOST AL
Thnd Ave the Rev W!l!.om Knt f
tel pasto r Ronald Dugan Sun

son pastor Sunday school q 30

day School Supt Clones fo r olt

a m

ages evenr ng servrce 7 30 Brbl£&gt;

Glen McClung supt

mg worst'llp 10 30 o m

morn

evenrng

study

Wednesday

John F. Fultz, Mgr .
Ph. 992-2101

Pomeroy

SWISHER &amp; LOH.SE
PHARMACY
We ~•II Doclors'

Complete
Automotive
Service

l{eepsake'
~oodf);_....

......

212 E. Mam Street
992 37115 PI') 1eroy

Locust &amp;
992-9921

Middleport, OhiO

Of Our Religious Heritage

These Messages

Are Sponsored Ea~h Week By The Following:

Prescriptions
992-2955

Pomeroy

I..JZZ-

Attend The
. ' Church
of Your Choice
This Sunday

R EMf,;MBER
WHAT OUR
PRETTY

Tl-t/N~?

M1Ll
Mill Work .

Cobinet Milking
Syracuse 992-3978

C APTAiio.J: D ID YOLI
HEAR WHAT THE;
LOOI&lt;OLJT JUST
SIG HTeD !-

tAN SPLICE US
IN A JIFFY!

I/N'12lla S. Tfur1,
Middleport
Ph . 992·7155

I'LL SAY

'

THE SHARK WITH THS SOLD{J MINUTES LAT ER .. CA PTAIN MA I&lt;( O 15
STATU E WORTH MltL/OIJ!? IN
LOWERED OVER 'THE SIDS IN A ~. nARk
HIS ~ELL y •• ALOI\IS WITH
CA6E·· WITH HIS' ~OCI&lt;Cf · P C , • .:RED
MY RI0HT ARM!
POISON · T IPPED SPE-AR GUioJ!
-- -~EVER.
M IND THif&gt;
LU88SR·- WS'L.L
TEND TO HIM

I. HEARD!
WE'VE FOUND

llTTILA!

P. J. PAULEY,
AGENT

L:~~~~ 68tfl•
MV PIVIN~

Nationwide Ins. Co.
af Columbus, 0.
, 804 w. M.•n

Ph. 949-9130

1

•
~PTA,NEASY
. .,THe; CAPTAIIoJ

ROSEBERRYIS
PENNZOIL

HERE ,
SAYS SAM ,
''WITH A
COMPUTER
FOR
A CORPSE.
WONDER
WHAT
TRACY iD

RACINE
PlANING

MIKE SWIGER
STATE FARM
INSURANCE

7 30 p m

serv •ce 7 30 m•d· week serv rce
youth swrv1ces Frrdoy 7 30 p rn
Wednesday 7 30 p m
MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL SAP
GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH
TIST Corn er A sh and Plum N oel
32b E Mom St
Pomeroy The
Herrman pastor Satu rday even
Rev Robert 8 Graves rec tor
rng servrce 7 30 p m Su nday
Sunday se rvrcets , t 1 o m mormng
School 10 30 am
prayer (Holy Communron firs t
MEIGS
Sunday of each month ) and ser
COOPERATI VE PARISH
man Church church school and
METHODIST CHURCH
nursery core provrded Coffee
Rob~rt T Bumgarner
hour rn pamh house following
Orrec tor
the servrc~
POMEROY CLUSTER
POMEROY CHURCH Of CHRIST
Rev James Corb1tt
112 W Morn StJohn M cArthur
POMEROY Sunday Sc hool 9 15
pastor, Btble school 9 30 om
am Wo rsh1p serv 1ce tO 30om
morning w orsh1p, lO 30 a m
Cho rr rehearsal , Wedn esday 7
Youth meetlng5:t. 6 30 p m , even·
p m
Rev
Robert M cGee
ing worship t 30 Wednesday
mtnr sler
night prayer meelrng and 8rble
ENTERPRISE Worshrp 'I a m
study , 7 30 p m
Church Schoo l 10 o m
THE SALVATION ARMY 115
ROCK SPRINGS , Worsh1p 10
Butternut Ave Pom..-oy Enwoy
a m
Church School 9 15o m
and Mrs Roy Wrmng ofl rurs rn
UMYF 6 30 p m
charge
Sunday holiness
FLATWOODS Wors t·up 11om
meeting , 10 am Sunday School,
Church School lOam
10 30 o m Sundov school leader
MIDDLEPORT CLUSTER
'r'PSM Elo1se Adams 7 JO p m
Rew Robert Bumgarner
salvofton
meeftng
venous t
HEATH
Robe r1 Bu mgarner
speakers ond mus 1c spec1ols
Pastor
Worshrp
10 30 a rTl
Thu rsdo~ - 10 om to 2 p m
Chu rc h School 9 30 am UMYF 6
Lod res Home League, oil women
p .m
1n11rted. 7 30 p m prayer meeting
Ru tl and So lern Cenler Charge
and Bible study, lob Es teJ)
RUTLAND W1lbur Htlt Pastor
leoder
Rev
Noel
Hermon, Worship 10 30 a m Church School
teacher
9 30 o m
BURLINGTON SOUTHERN BAP
SALEM CENTER . Church School
liST CHAPEL , Route 1 Shade q 45 a m worsh1p 9 a m
Pastor Bo bby Elkrns
Sunday
SYRACUSE CLUSTER
school 5 p m . Sunday worsh1p ,
Rev Hor11ey Koch Jr
5 .t5 p m Wednesday prayer ser
ASBURY
Worshrp J I o m
v.ce 7 30 p m
Chu rc:: h School 9 50 a m UMW
POMEROY WESTSIDE CH URCH l1rst Tuesday 81b le Study Thurs
OF CHRIST 200 W Morn St Jerry 7 30 p m
Paul , mrn1ster , phone t'l9:2 7666
FOREST RUN Worsh1p 9 a m
Conserwotwe, non rnst rumentol , Church SchooiiO om
Sunday worsh1p 10 om 81ble
MINERSVILLE. Worship 10om
study 11 o m worsh1p 6 p m
Church School 9 a m
W~nesdoy Bible study 7 p m
SYRACUSE Church Sc::hoot 9 00
OLD DEXTER BIBLE CHRISTIAN o m Wort-hlp serw1ce 7 30 p m
CHURCH ,
Rev Rotrh
Smrth
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
pastor Sunday schoo , 9 30 o m
Rev Oavrd Horrrs
Mrs . Worley FranCis , super~ntenCluster Leader
dent Preach1ng servrces lrrst &amp;
Rev Steven W1 lso n
th 11d Sundays followtng Sunday
Flore nc:e Sm1l,h
School .
H1llon Wolfe .,.
GRAHAM UNITED METHODIST
AssoCiates
Preaching 9 30 am I rut and se
BETHANY , (Dorcas) Worsh rp
cond Sundays of eoch month, q 00 o m Ch urch School 10 00
th11d and fourth Sundays each o.m
month worsh1p serv1ce at 7 30
CARMEL Chruch Schoot 9 30
p m . Wednesday evenrngs at a m Worship 10 30 o m 2nd and
7 JO Prover and Brble Study
.Cth Sundays
SEVENTH -DAY
ADVENT IST
APPLE GROVE Sunday School
Mulberry Herghts Rood , Pomeroy
9 30 a m Worsh1p 7 30 p m 1st
Pastor , Albert D1ttes, Sobboth and 3rd Sundays, Praye r meetmg
School
Superrntendent , Rita W•dnesday 7 30 p m Fellowsh1p
Wh1te Sabbath School Saturday supper f irst Saturday 6 p m UMW
.afternoon at 2 00, with Worsh1p 2nd Tuesday 7 30 p m
Servrce follow1ng at 3 15
EAST LET ART Chruch School 9
RUTLAND
FIRST
BAPTIST om Wo rsh rp serw1ce 10 om
CHURCH S1ster
Homett Prayer meet1ng 1 30 p m
Worner , Supt. Sunday School , Wednesday UMW f1 rst Tuesday
' 30 o .m
morning worsh1p , 7 30 p m
10·45a m
RACINE WESLEVAN - Sunday
THE HILAND CHAPEL George school to a m wonhrp 11 a m
Casto, paator Sunday School . Cho~r practice . Thu rsday 8 p m
9.30 am evening worship , 7 30
LETART F~llS
Chu rch School
Thursday evening prayer service
10om Wors hrp serv1ce q o m
7 30 p m
MORNING STAR, Worsh•p 9 30
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST , om Church School 10 30 om
David Mann , miniSter, WHilom M•d Week Serv1 ce Wednesday 8
Watson , Sunday school supt Sun
p m
day school 9 30 a m
morn1ng
MORSE CHAPEL Worshp 11
worshtp 10.30 a m
a m Churc::h Sc::hool 9 30 o m
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST 282
PORTLAND Wor sh1p 7 30 p m
Mulber,.y Ave
Pomeroy Pout Ct:lurch School9 30 a m
Silver , Po1tor Woodrow T Zwi l SUTTON Church School q JO
ing Sunday school superlnten· o m Wo rsh1p 1st and 3rd Sundays.
dent Sunday school , 9 30 o m , 10 30 o m
m ornrng wonhtp 10 30. evenrng
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
yvo rshtp
7 00 p m
Mtdweek
R ~v R1 chor d W Tho mas
prayer service, 7 00 p m
Pas tor
MIOW~V COMMUNITY CENTER ,
Duane Sydenstmker
Dexter Rd , longsvrlle Ohro Rev
Johr.t W Dougla.s
Clyde Ferrell, Poator.. Su nday
Charles Oom1gon
School
11
o.m
Saturday
A ssoc iates
preach1ng serv1ces 7 30 p m
JOPPA
Worsh tp 9 00 a m
Wttdnesday ewen1ng Brble study Church School 10 00 o m
at 7 30 p m
CHESTER
Worsh ip 9 o m
FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH. Churc::h School 10 om
B1b le
Ioiiey Run Rood , Rev Emmett Study Wednesdays 7 30 p m
Rowson , pastor Handley Ounn , (Commun1on lrrst Sunday eac::h
supt Sunday school, 10om Sun· month)
day evenmg servtce 7 30 Brble
LONG BOTTOM Su nday Sc::hool
teochmg 7 30 p m Thursday .
at 9 30 am Evenrng Wors hrp at
DVESVILLE
COMMUNITY 7 30 p m Thursday Brb le Study
CHURCH , Roger C Turner pastor
7 30 p m
Sunday school , 9 30 o m , Sundav
REEDSVILLE Sunday Schoo19 JO
mornrng worship , 10.30 Sundov o m Mornrng Worsh1p 10 30 a m
ev•ntng serv•ce. 1 30
Evemng Worshp 7 30 p m B1b le
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF Study Wednesday s at 7 30 p m
CHRIST IN CHRISTIAN UNION
ALFRED Sunday Sc hool at q 4S
Lawrence Manley , pastor Mrs
a •m Mornmg Worsh rp at 11 a m
Aunell Young Sunday School Wednesday
N1ght
Praye r
Supt Sunday School 9 .30 a m
Meetmg 7 30 p m
Evening worship, 7&lt;JO, Wedrres
ST PAUL
(Tuppers Ploms)
doy prayer meeting, 7 30 p m
Sunday School 9 00 a m Mornrng
MT MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD, Won hlp at 10 00 om M o nday
Rodne R...,
W
H Lylfin1
N rg ht 81b le Study 7 30 p m
pastor Mornmg worsh1p, 9 AS Unrted Methodist Women second
om. , Sunday school , 10 .CS o rn .. Wednesday of eoch month , 1 30
evening worshrp, 7 . Tuesday, 7 30 p m
p m. lad1es prayer meetmg .
SOUTH BETHEL (Sr lver Ridge )
Wednesday 7 JOp m YPE
Sunday School 9 00 am Morn rn g
MIDDLEPORT . FIRST BAPTIST
Wosh1p 10 00 om Wednesday 81
Corner Sixth and Palmer the Rev
ble Study 7 30 p m
Mark ~Clung Supdoy school,
TUPPERS PlAINS, Wonhrp q
9 IS
a m
Don
Wilton , om Church Schoo l10a m ..
supertntendent
Lacy
Borton ,
I&lt;ENO CHURCH OF CHRIST , ser
asst. supt Morning Worshrp vices each Sunday 9 30 a m
10 15 o m . Youth meetmg 6 p m. . George Picken s . pastor w1th
evemng worsl·up, 7 30 p m
preochrng on frrst and ttmd Sun
Wednesday night 81ble studv and day of month Ol1 ver Swain Sup!
lJrayer service, 7 30 p m
HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION ,
CHURCH OF CHRIST , M id · Rev Kerth Eblm , pastor Sunday
dleport , 5th and Ma in , ~rge School,
9 30 om
Leo nard
Gloze. m1n11ter, Mrke Gerlach, Gtlmore, frr st elder , evenmg ser
superrntendent
Terry Yankey
vice 7 30 p m Wednesday prayer
youth minr~ter B1ble school 9 30 meeting, 7 30 p m
0 m
morning worship 10 30
BEAAWALLOW RIQGE CHURCH
a .m ., evening worship , 130, OF CHRIST,
Duane Warden
proyer aervlce, 7 p m . Wednes · mm1ster Bible clan 9 30 a m
day
~orning ' worsh1p , 10•30 a.m
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF THE e11enrng worship
6 30 p m
NAZARENE , Rev . Jim Broome
Wednesday 8rble study 6 30 p m
poator, Bill White , Sunday _school
NEW STIVERS VILLE COMMUNI
aupt Sunday achool, 9 30 a m , TV Church Sondoy School ser
morning worship , 10 30 am , v 1ce , 'AS a m . Worsh1p serv rce
Sunday
evangelistic meeting, 10 30. ·Evangel r~ trc Servrce , 7 30
Wednesday ,
Prayer
7·00 p . m . Praye r meelrng p m
Wedneadoy
7
p m . meeting 7 30
UNITED
PRESBVTERIAN
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST
MINISTRY OF MEIGS COUNTY, Pomeroy Horrlson vdte
Rd
Owighr l . Zovit:r , director
Robert Purtell ,
pa stor
Bdl
H A R R I S 0 N V I L L E McElroy , Sunday schoolaupt SunPRESBYTERIAN , Rev
Ernest doy sc hool , 9 30 am , mornmg
Stricklin paator Sunday church w orsh1p and communron . 10 30
tehool 9 30 a m
Mrs Homer o m Sunday wo rsh 1p servr&lt;e 'l
L.. . aupt
morn.ng worship p m W•dnesdor. evening prayer
10·30.
meetmg and Bib e study 7 p m
MIDDLEPO~T . Sunday ochool, ~
ST JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH
9·30a ,m Richard Voughot1 , supt Pine Grove The Rew W1llram
Morn•ng wonhlp 1 10 30
Middlesworth
Pastor
Church
SYRACUSE. Mormng wonhlp 9 serYrces 9 30 o m . Sunday 'Sch~ol
om . . Sunday school , 10o.m Mrs
10:30a m~
Sampson Hall , aupt
BRADBURY
CHURCH
OF
RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD, CHRIST Mr, Donald Roley po.,or
Rev lobby Porter pastor. Sun Sunday achool , q 30 om , wor
doy achool 10om.: Su nday war - shtp service, 10 30 om Sunday
ship, 11 om ~ Sunday av•ning servlcea,' 7 p .m ; youth group
serv•ce . 7 p m Wednesday Fo!J'Ii· Wednesday 7 p .m .

b

K&amp;C JEV1_ELERS

GEAR!

992-2318 Pomeroy

RACINE
FOOD MARKET
The Store
With A Hearl
Ractne
Ph.

l..Er.S SEE

rcw...

I WISH I I&lt; NEW! I SWEAR

IF' IT WASN'T TH'

ITS S'rRANS!:! MY INSIO!:S
FEEL ALL REARI«A.NGED !

NON· Rl-l'YlviiNe;
I='ORMULA ...

2 Convement

MEBBE IT WA5
'TOP-5ECI&lt;"'T

wo&gt;I&lt;'T

ReMo . cR J

TV &amp; Appliance
Gas Service

Markets •

Midway Market
Bob 1s Market
Pomeroy 992·2582
Mason 773-5721

The lrt!lt· f1.um dnlll:h

111 tiH~

vall ,tg't.· hit s ti s t.tll sp1re .thm t'

se nf11tl'l gu .ml1rr~ ,r s.rr.: 1t•d t1u st

lh

Chester 985-3307
RICinO 949·2020

snuw. bl.mkt•tccl mountam

fiiAA~ d cnvmmment llkt'

,1

m .1 hghthouse un ,, rockhou nd

ElliOTT
APPUANCE II

tO.lS I

h . tlllt.ttmm;-Jn th e hle.1k
w.tstc s ol tht pnl.u tt ').!H m "i, uud t'l tlu~ hl.tzml-( trnptc,tl su n, nr
m tbc nuldt•l d nn .. t e~ ol tht world--h e h.t!'i h111lt h1 s c h ut c:h es
\ Vhl'tl \ Ll lll.tll

h.ts pu shL--&lt;IIm

GR ....... L
I - ;J..7

dcdu.:.tt cd to th t' \\orslup ol (.ud

OOUG'S
MARINE
SALES &amp; SERVI

CIITLE ORPHAN ANNIE

1 h e lcu t th.tt n o to mmumh see n'l s co mp lt;l c Wlthuut I hi
house uf wm ~lup hc.us cloctucnt tcsiJillo ny to th e muversal
reco~nrhon of m .m s net.·d of lt'h,l(ron

PIZZA SHACK

\11.11 p.~rt m the hfe of the
~t.tnd,u d s of th e people are

Th e vJIJ,I,LW e]wr ch pl.1vs .1
('OIIlllllllllt~

riH' sp mt 111l
fush to nt.•d thert.&gt;, m.u n .tge vo\\ s .an' spoken ,11 11:.; .alt.u and th e
hun o r ed de,l(l slee p 111 1bi s.lut•d M?tl

1

llf~:.• ,

,L!Jvmg

th e m

stJ ength .md l.nth for

t:' Vt&gt;r \

A ND f HlS (A~ I .. SE T
DOWN ! HOSE BU CKE TS

TELLIN ' WHA'T

AND STAY OU T --

VIRGIL B.
TEAFORD SR.

need

216 S otcond
Pomeroy
992· 3325

FuHon-Thompson
Tractor Sales, Inc.
New

~: ~~~,T~g~ 6?M~};~~~~

SHE 'S GO T .

pomerov

214 E. Matn
992-5130 Pomeroy

Tractors,

~IA'I OUT! NO

126 E. Main

Tlrelt.' 11 st.tnds 111 t'\l'l\ lommunJty- the little frame
~:: hut &lt;.:h- po1nt1ng tlw jlt:'! rp lt' tn (.cKI , tl'. rdun g the m the w.ty of

Reuter-Brogan
Insurance
Services

HERE • I LL CAR R Y
THAI• • l- E T'S BRING
MO RE WATE R, TOO •

Ealln or
C~rr_v Out

Don Thom DSOn Ford, Inc.

Holland

Machinery

·'""..-

461 S. Third. Middleport

Spring Ave. 9925101
Pomeroy

.

•

it. M1ster
Walt! One o' Zeb's
customer&lt;; 1S comin'
.:..,~0~,...,.., up behin' ~ou~

n"'T.T.I-: 1

An4bOd4

let

can
quit!

'im come

aroun'!

992-2196

Scrrplures selected by The A.mencan Bible Society

Attend The Church
of Your Choice
This Sunday.

I

WAID CROSS
SONS STORE Groceries-

Weddings
Chester 985-41 ss

OVER ll'E YEARS OH , PAW, WHY [70 YOU

This SundJJy

General Merchandise
Racine 949-2550

Professional Service
Aertai-Schools-

Of Your Choice

Attend The Church

THE DAILY
SENTINEL
Bakers of
Good Bread

SHE'S SEEN '
PLENTY OF

MARK VSTORE
Middleport

Middleport·

Pomeroy, 0.

448 Locust
992-3093
Middleport

Attend The Church
of Your Choice

MEN 'THAT
REMIN[7E[7
HER OF

..._____..,._:

HAVE 'TD BE .5UCH A
C YNI C ? MAYBE AT
LONG LABT, WI NN IE'S
WAITI NG HASN'T
BEEN IN VA IN .'

YEA H BUT JUST TI-l IN K OF
HOW

leT //OWN .5HE 'LL FEEL

WORD COMES O UT 0 10
WASH INGTON TriAT SHE'S
IF

WI'T71A COMPLETE

DOCTDR .
~ IS JU ST
A~R'.JVED

' OU R '-1'15T5-~ IOU S J O HN DOE ' IS
1

IMPROVING .. RE SPO NDING 10
BUT STILL NOT
A WORD OUT O F HIM

TREAH~ENT

STRANGER/

BILL

'

'

This Sunday

•

'

J~

...

........... ..._. ._. ..........

~-

ANTIQUITY BAPTI ST Rev ~orl
Shuler po s1o1 Su nday sc:: hool
9 30 o m Chu rch serv1c:: e 7 p m
you th mee tr ng 6 p m Tue sd ay B1
ble Study 7 p m
RACINE
CHURCH OF
THE
NAZARt:NE Rev John A Coli
man past o r Frqnld m Imboden
cho~rmon of the Board o f Chns
lion L1fe Sunday Sc hool 9 30
am
mormng worsh1p 10 30
Sunday e ve n rng wors hrp 7 30
p m Praye r meetmg Wed nes
day 7 30 p m
RACINE FIRST BAPTI ST Oon L
Walker Pa stor Ronn 1e Sa l se r
Su nda y s c hool ~ supl
Sun day
sc hool 9 30 om mornrng wa r
sh1p 10 40 om Su nday e venrng
worsh1F, 7 30 Wedn esday even
rng81b es tudy 730
DANVILLt: WESLEYA N Rew R
D Bro wn pa stor Sunday School
9 30 om
mormng wors h•p
ID 45 you th serv1ce 6 45 p m
evenmg wors hrp
7 30 p m •
prayer ond pro1 se Wed nesday
7 30 p m
·
SilVER RUN FREE BAPTIST Rev
Morvm Morkm pa stor Steve Lrl
tie Su nday sc hool sup! Su nday
school 10 o m mor,nr ng w o r
sh rp 11 am Sunday eve nmg
wo rshrp 7 30 Prayer m eetm g
and 81ble st udy Thursdov 7 30
p m ~outh se r vice 6 p m Sun
day
•
CHESTER CHURC H OF GOD
Rev Donny R Cook pas tor Sun
doy 'S thoo l 9 JO a m
worshrp
service 11 a m evenr ng ser vrce
7 00 youth serv1 ce WednesdaY
7 00 p m
l
LANGSVILLE
CHRISTIAN
CHURCH Robert Musser pa sto r
Sunday school 9 30 am
Roy
Srgmon sup! mornrng worshrp
10 30 Suntloy evenmg se rv1 ce
7 30 mrd week ser11rce , Wed nes
day , 7 p m
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF TH~
NAZAREN E
Rev
DOle Bo ss
pastor
Bob M oore
Sun day
Sc hoo i .supt Sunday schoo l , 9 30
om
morn1n g woro;h rp
10 45
o m evange lr strc servke, 7 p m
Wednesday se rv1 c:: e5
proyor
and prarse 7 p m
Nazarene
youth 7 p m
Oo rly prayer
mee ti ng 8 30 a m Man s prayer
meetrng Sa turday 7 p m
EDEN UNIT ED BRETHREN IN
CHRIST , Elden R BlakE' pastor
Sunday School 10 om
Robert
Ret•d sup! AAorn rng sermon 11 ,
.om Sun day nrght serv1ces Ch m
tran Endeavo r 7 30 p m
Song
!&gt;er v•re 8 p rn « Preachrng B 30

p m M rd week Prayer meetrng
W rl l.orn Ro ush pastor
Phyl lr s
Wednesday 7 p rn Roy Adam§
Stobart Sunday School Sup1 Sun
loy Ieeder
day School 9 30 o m Mornmg
CHURCH OF JE SUS CHRI ST
worsh1 p
lO Jd o m
Sunday
l ocat ed at Ru tlan d an New L1ma evenrng ser v rce 7 p m Wednes
Rood next to Fo rest A cre Park
day evenm g prayer se rwrces , 7 30
Re., Roy Rouse pastor Robert p m
Mu s~ er Su nday Scho ol supt Su n
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST Rev Eorl
day schoo l 10 30 o m w o rsh1p Shu le r pa stor Worshrp serv1 ce
7 30 p m B1ble Study We dn es
9 30 ~ m Su nday sc hoo l 10 30
dav 7 30 p m Satu r day nrgh t om Brble Stu dy and prayer ser
prayer serv1ce 7 30 p m
\l if e Thursday 7 30 p m
HEMLOCK G ROVt: CHRISTI AN
CARLETON CHURCH Krngsbu r y
Roge r Watson pas tor Ken neth Road Gory Krng pastor Sunday
Rye r Sunday school sup! Morn
schoo l 9 30 a m
Rol ph Cor l
mg wono hrp 9 30 o m
Sun
superrntendent even mg wor sh1 p
dovschool 10 30 am
even1 ng 7 30 p m
Prayer m eetrng
ser v 1ce 7 30 Wedne sday B1ble Wednesday 7 30 p m
Study , 7 30 p m
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN
MT
UNION BA PTI ST , Don Bruce Sm 1th
pastor
Woll 6ce
W r ls on
Sunday
sc h ool Damewood Sup! B1b le School
supe nnt endent Sunday schoo l 9 30 a m
Preach1 ng ser vrce
9 45 o m evenrng wor sh1p , 7 30 10 45 a m No ev,nlng se r v rce
p m Prayer meetmg 7 30 p m
HYSELL RlJN FREE METH ODIST
Wednesday
CHURCH Rev Herbert A1lrn g
TUP PE RS PL AI NS CHR ISTIAN pa stor Su ndov Sc hoo l 9 30 o m
CHURCH
Eugt•ne Underwood
Mornmg serv rce
10 30 o m
pastor Howard Co ldwel l Jr
Evr5ngetrshc !iot?rVICe 7 p m Prayer
Sundoy Sc:: hoa l Sup!
Sunday and prarse servrce Thur sday 7
Sc hool 9 30 o m Mornmg Ser
p m
mon 10 30 o m Sunday even1ng
FREEDOM GOSPEl MISSION at
serv1c::e 7 P m
Bald
Kno b
Rev
La wrence
LETART
FALLS
UNI T-Eo G l uesencamp Sr pastor Roger
BR ETHREN Rev Freeland Norm
Wrllford Sr Sunday schoo l su p!
pa stor Flovd N o m s sup! S un~ay t Su nday sc hoo l 9 30 a , e ve nrng
schoo l 9 30 o m morn mg t ' r
worsh1 p
7 30 p m
Prayer
man 10 30 a m Prayer serv rce
meet1ng Wednesday 7 30 p m
Wednesday 7 30 p m
Youth meetrng Sundo~ 5 30 p m
CHE STER CHURCH OF THE w rth Don and Martha Meadows In
NAZ,o\ RENE Rev Herbert Grote
ch arge .
pa stor Wors hrp serv1 ce 11 o m
WH ITES CHAPEL Coohnlle RO
and 7 30 p m Sunday Schoo l , q 30 Rew Roy DeSter pastor Sunday
o m Charl es 81ssel l, sup! , Prayer sch oo l 9 30 o m , worsh1p ser v rce
mee trng Wedn esday 730p m
1030 om Blbles tudyandprov&amp;r
BRADFORD
CHURC H
OF se rv 1ce , Wedne sd o~ 7 30 p m
CHRIST, Gobrrel Mzr s pastor Bl
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST
ble Sunday School9 30 a m ·mar lorry Co le ma n podor
Herb
nrng church 10 30 am
Sundov Ellrotl Sunday sc hool su pt Sun
evenrng serv•ce
7 00 p m day school q 30 om , mornrng'
Wednesday serwice . 1 30 p m
' w o rshrp and comun1on
10 JO
LAUREL CUFF FREE METHODIST o m Sun day ev~nmg servtce 7
CHURCH Rev Fl oyd F Shook ,
RUTLAND
COMM UN I TY
pa stor
lloyd Wrrght
Su nday CHURCH Amos T1llrs pastor
Sc hool Supt
Morn1ng Worsh1p Donny T1ll1 s SUnday Sc hool Sup!
9 30 om Su nday School 10 20 Sunday School 9 30 om
wor
a m Wadnesdoy Prayer a nd 8• ' shrp service 11 om
Sunday
bte Study 7 30 p m Sunday even ewenrng serv1ce 7 p m Prayer
rng worsh1p 1 30 p m Chorr ProC"
meet1ng Wednesday
7 IJ m
lice Thu r sday 7 p m
WMPO Rodr o b roadcas t s'"undoy
DE XTFR CHURCH OF CHRIST mornrng 7 45
Charles Russell Sr,. m rn rster
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE
R1ck Macomber , supt Sunday NAZARENE Rev lloyd 0 Grrmm
school 9 30 a m
wdr sh rp ser Jr pas tor Sunday school , CJ 30
v1ce , 10 30 o m Brbl e St udy lues- u •n worsh rp serv1ce 10 30om
day 7 30 p rn
Br o odw sl lr ve o ver WMPO y C'IlJng
J&lt;EORCANIZEO CHURCH Of r " ('P I ~ s
!o&lt; NVr C"c
7
r. ,.,
JE SUS CHRIST OF LATTEf' DA Y f vongch!&gt; lr( o;f' IIII (C 7 :10 r l r'1
SAINTS Pmttond Racrne H'oorl WcdrH.· ~d ay :.e'IVIC" e I 30 p 111

'

f'

HRST SOU THERN BAPTIST Cor
ner o f Sec::ond end Ander son
Ma son Pos to r Fronk Lowther
Sunday s.choo l 9 45 a m
wor ·
sh1p servrce 11 o m ond 7 30
p m
Weekly
Brb le Study ,
Wednesday 7 30 p m
MASON CliURCH OF CHRIST
M11ler St Mason W Va Aurice
Mrc::k pastOr Sunday B1hle Study
)O am Worsh1p 11 a m and 7
p m 81b le Study Wednesday 7
p m Vocal musrc
MASON ASSEMBL V OF GOD ,
Duddmg Lone Mason W Yo
Chester Ten nant Pa stor Sunday
School 9 45 o m
Ch1ldren s
Church 6 AS p m Young Peoples
Serv1ce 6 45 p .m . Evangel is tiC
Se rv rce 7 30 p m Women's Mrs
s1onory Counctl 10 am firs t and
t h~rd Tu esdays Prayer and B1ble
Study W edn es day 7 30 p m
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST
IN CHRISTIAN UNION , The Rev
Wdl1am Campbell pa stor Sunday
School , 9 30om .: Jome5" Hughes,
su pt evenrng ser11 rce . 7 30 p m .
We dnesday evenrng prayer
mee lr ng, 7 30 p m Youth prayer
serv rce eoch Tue sday
FAIRVIEW ~IBLE CHURCH ,
l e ta r t , W Vo Rt . 1 Rev Charles
Hargraves , pastor Worshrp ser·
111ces 9 30 a m . Sunday school.
11 o m even1ng worshtp, 1 30
pm
Tue!lday cottage prover
meetmg o nc;l Bible study 9 30
o m Worshrp service Wednes·
day 7 30 p m.
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH, now
loc::o ted on Pomeroy Prke , County
Road 25 near Flatwoods Rev.
Blo c::kwood pastor Serv1ces on
Su nday at 10 30 a m and 7 30
p m w rth Sunday school 9 30
am Bible study , Wednesday ,
7 30 p m
INDEPENDENT
HOLINESS
CHURCH INC - Pearl St .. M 1d
Rev
0 Dell Manley
dl c por t
postor Sonny Hudson, Sunday
schoo l sup! Sunday school , 9 30
a m , e11emng worsh1p 1 ~ 0 p m
Prover and pro1se 1erv i ce ,
Wednesday 7 30 p m
THE PEOPLE 'S CHURCH OF
POMEROY - Corner Mo1n and
Court Sis
th~rd floor
over
l 1ghthouse Restourllnt
Henry
Cook ' pmtor Sunday sc hool 10
a rn , morning worship 11 a m ,
evonl ng ser"&lt;Jice , 7 30 Wednes ·
da y evcn1ng serv rce , .7 30 ln
te rdonom1natronal full gotpel
•uTLANO CHURCH OF GOD .
I' m lor (lc nrw• Boles
Sunday
School , lOa m , w orship ~ e r v1u ,

11 JO o m and 7 30 p m Praye r
me etrng Wednesday 7 30 p m
RUTLAND APOSTOLIC CHURCH
OF JESUS CHRIST Eld er James
M1ller Brble study Wednesday
730p m , Sunday School, 10om
Sunday night ser11ice , 7 30 p m
POMEROV
WESLEVAN
HOLINESS - Horrr sonv1lle Rood
Dewey Kmg
pasto r
Edrsan
Weaver assiStant Hen ry Eblrn
Jr , Sunday school sup! Sunday
sc hool 9 30 a m morning wor
shrp 11 a m Sunday ev.enrng ser
11rc e 7 30 prayer meehng, Thurs
doy730pm
SYRACUSE FIRST CH URCH OF
GOD - N o t Pentec::as tol Rev
George Orler, poster Worshrp
servrce Sunday 9 45 a m , Sun day school, 11 a m , worship ser
vtc e 7 30 p m. Th urs day prover
meetrng 7.30 p m
MT HERMON Un1ted Brethren
Church Sunday Sc::hool 9 30 a m
Worsh 1p ser111ce
10 A5 a m
Preaching service5 every Sunday
ohernat rng with C E Wednesday
prayer meetrng 7 30 p .m . Re11
James Leach . pastor
Oov1d
Holter loy leader
JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES 1 mrle
east of Rutland , 1u nction of Rou te
124 and Noble Summit Rood (T.
17~ ) Sunday Bible lecture 9 30
a
Watchtower study
10 30
am Tuesday , B1ble study 7 and
B 15 p m Thursday , theocratic
schoo l
7 30 p m
serv1ce_
meetmg , 8 30 p m
RUTLAND FREEWILL BAPTIST
Church - Leland Haley pastor
Sunday school 10 o m evemng
se r vi ce
7 30 p.m. Prayer
m ee tmg Wednesday 7 30 p m
CHURCH OF GOD of Prophecv .
located on the 0 J White Rood
off h1ghwoy 160. Sunday School
10 a m . Superrntendent John
lovedoy F~rst Wednesday nrght
of month CPMA services second
W ednesday WMB meet1ng, th~rd
througH ftfth youth serw r&lt;e
Georgt Croyle, pastor .
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL - 570
Grant St , Middleport , Rev . Bobby
Elkins Sunday school. lO a m .
mo rnmg worsh1p 11 . ellftnrng
worsh 1p 7 30 p m , Thursday
•wenrng Bible t tudy ond prayer
meeting , 7 30 p .m Affiliated with

~

'.,

ourrng regu lar churc h hour tn r
c::hurch basement Sunday even· ·lng ser v1ce 7 p m Wednesday
se r 111te 7 30 p 111
l
JUBILEE CHRISTIAN CENTER
~
George's Cre ek Road Church r
sc h ool , q 30 am , morntng w a r
shrp 10 30 evenrng ser11rce. 7 .
p m Prover m eetr ng Wednesday •

7p m

ST PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH
Corner of ~ycomore and Second :
Sts Pomeroy The Rev Wrll ram •
Mrddlesworth , Pastor
Sunday 1
Sc hoo l at 9 .f5 a m . and Church ,
Servrces t I o m
SACRED HEART Rev Father :
Pau l D Welton pastor Phone ~
992-:2825 Saturday ewen1ng Moss :
7 30 Sunday Moss , 8 and 10 a m ~
Confession, Saturday 7 7 30 p m .'
r VICTORY BAPTIST - On the :
' Route 7 bypass James E Keesee c
pastor Sunday sc::hool 10 am ., !
morn1ng wo rs hrp 11 o m. : ewen
109 service, 7
TRINITY Christian A ssembly '
Coolv1lle
Gdbert Spencer pastor Sunday school 9 30 a m :
mornrng worshrp 11 a m Sunday ,
even1ng servrce
7 30 p m 1 ;
m1dweek prayer serviCe Wednes 1
day 730 pm
1
MOUNT Oltve Communrty :
Church, Lawrence Bush, pasto r 1
Bettie Pigott, Sunday school supt ~
Sunday School and mormng w or· ,
sh1p 9 30 a m Sunday evenrng '
serwtce, 7 p m . Youth meeting ;
and 81ble study, Wednesday , 7 •
pm
'
FAITH BAPTIST Church, Mason :
meet a' United Steel WorKers '
Union Hall. Railroad Street :
Mason Pastor , Rev Jay Mitchell •
Morning worshtp 9 AS a m , Sun ;
day School 10 JO om . Prayer ~
meehngWednesdoy, 7 30p.m .
FOREST RUN BAPTIST ·- Rev ,
Nvle Borden , pastor , Cornel1us
Bunch superrntendent Sunday._
schoo l. 9 30 a m , second and
fourth Sundays worship serv ice at
2 30 p m
MT MORIAH BAPTIST - Fourlh
and Main St M1ddleport Rev
Colvin M innis, pastor Mrs Elv1n
Bumgardner ,
supt .
Sunday \
ss:hool, ·9.30 a .m .: worship ,.,..,..
vrc::e 10 .-sa m'
• 1
NORTH
BETHEL
United \~
Methodist Church Rev CharleJ •
s~c
BRADFORD
CHURCH
'OF Oo m1gon pa stor Sunday School, :
9·30 am , Wonhlp Service, 1 10 .t5 1
CHRIST - Gabriel Mraz pastor
a m , Sunday Bible Study: 7 00 '
Si.Jnd~;Jy school , 9 30 a m morn
Wedneadoy
prayer ~
ing church 10 30 a m JUnror p m ,
•
church program u nder d1rection meetrng 7 30 p .m
·'.
of Koren M~o:r for children , 2-1Q.,

'

"

. ..h

• NoN,SeN$!:, M I.S"-rf:R

'l .

On taking your best shot

SUJDMAN! •• "fOU
~uST THINI&lt; You'~
A HYpot:f.:IONDRIAG!
0

0

NORTH

WEST
• AJ
n ti JV trv &gt;ll•

EAST
• 98 5

• 10 7 54
tKQ109

"" IU "~~US f'• o u

1 26-A

• 763
¥A 2
• 8 6 54
+A 7 4 3

+ J B2

• J983
• J 73

• Q 10 6
SOUTH
•K"Q !0 42

BORN LOSER

'iO FlilSf i U~T~ AA'I~

'1~. VJ~ ~~sw
fOiit A ~AJl.'/,

A f'!;~ AT '/OJIZ.
'
'
~!&gt;LJM"' .

Mi9.&gt; Hlif'Pl..f' ...

'li'JU !miD \..ITTl.~ #IJJl t
I mJ'T ltl IIJI( 11M
ltn'mS\W I~ '!HISJ00 ~
1

¥ K Q6
t A 2

+ K 95

Vulnerable Both
Dealer South
West

'

'0

j

'•
~

Norl~

East

South
I•

Pass
Pass

2•

Pass

Pass

Pass

a

_,

""

1y In History

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag _

kmg Culbertson won wtt.1
lhe ace a nd pl ayed Lwo m or e
dtamonds

M1ke r uffe d, went to
dummy w1th the ace of
clubs, led a second trump,
rose w1th h1s queen, dropped
Ely 's jack and whJle he s till
had to lose a club he had his
game home .
Why did M1ke play for tha t
Jack drop?
He expla med la t er that m
similar ctrcumstanoes , Ely
a lwa ys ducked With ace·
small Hence , when E ly won
Lhe f1rst spade w1th the ace
and EasL followed low on the
second spade, Ely e1ther h ad
he ld ace-jack doubleton,

ace-Jack·small or stngleton
ace As there was no way to
avoid the loss of a nother
spade tr1ck agamst the lasL
two, M1ke utlhzed h1s only

-Y The As....,iated Press

Today IS Fnday, J an . 26,
Ute 26th day of 1979 There are
339 days left m Ute year
Today ' s
highli g ht m
rustory :
On Ulis date in 1942, the
first American expeditionary
fore~ arrtved in Europe
during World War II. The
troops were put ashore m
Northern Ireland .
On thts date:
In 1827, the South Amertcan
country of Peru seceded from
Colombta
In !837, M1ch1gan JOined the

\l'fti}Nl IDll

Openmg lead • K

'

~

.;

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

~

BARNEY

LIKE MI./ NEW
lUXURY MULE I
: SNUFFV?

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~~ !&amp;

byHenrlArnoldandBoblee

Unscramble these tou r Jumbles,
one lener to each square, to form
lour ord1nary words

'

.

FECEN

I I I

.;&amp;i!! 'liH~:H.tb:l l ALQUI

0

HOW DO 1./E

Uruon as the 26th state .
In 1841 , Bnt1sh sovereignty
was proclauned over Hong
Kong
In 1661, as the Civil War
was begmmng , LoUts tana
Withdrew from Ute Uruon
In 1962, the Uruted States
launched a
spacecraft
des1gned to land sc1ent1f1c
mstrtunents on the moon for
Ute first time
In 1971, Ute Sov1et Umon
announced that an unmanned
spacecraft had made a soft
landmg on th e planet Venus
after a four-month JOurney
through space

chan ce

.

I

WHAT'S

LUXURY
ABOUT IT?

M1ke Gottlieb, one of the
g reatest players of the Thir·
..-...,---~-:--::-:-::-:-:-~::-:=--~.:---;-----1 ties who had a lread y won
IT'S GOT A BODACIOUS
three vanderbilt cups before
he retired m 1936, has
'
SEA:f
RECUNI N
started playmg bndge aga m
m California. He recently
pla yed m a sectiOnal Swtss
team in Palo Alto where his
team won with a score of
e1ght wins out of · e1ght
Here IS a ha nd he played
against Ely Culbertson back
m 1933 The play was s hort
effective . Mike won the
~~ ~:~~~~a l ead, entered
!
with the ace of
hearts a nd led a spade to his

I

...,..,.., .

BRIDGE

FRANK &amp; ERNIE

~

You hold
1·26·8
• AQ 2

1L-_,_1__._1

~-"'['"""J

IRUBBGYI

¥ K 87

I KJ I

• A Q8
• J 7 53

II

A M1chicagn reader asks

our

rebid after

partner

responds three hearts to our
one-notrump opemng
We bid four hearts. Every·
one hkes to play notrump
but we would look m1g hty
silly if the opponents ran
clubs aga mst us

I

(J

(For a copy ol JA COBY MOD·
ERN, send $1 to · Win at
Br~dge. ' car~ ol th1s newspa·
per P 0 Box 489 RadiO Co ty
Statton Ne w York N Y 10019 )

I

Now arrange ttie circled leners to
fonn the surprise answer, as sug
gested b)l the above ca rtoon

Print answer here. "

rI

I I ]"

(Answers tomorrow)

I NF.WSPAPim ENTI&lt;:HPHISR AS.'iN l

,

A l..OOK TO
MAKE ONE REEL
I!IACI&lt;WAR'DS!

Yesterdays

I

Jumbles META L
Answer

TI TLE

RAREFV

ABSURD •

Where your baby Is concerned. thiS m rg ht
come to m 1nd i - A SITTER

'

Jumblt Book No. t2, co,..lnlng 110 puu:l••· ls1vatl•ble for $1 75 poalp•ld
tromJumbl•,clottlllnawap•:r.r,Baa3.t, Norwood, N J 07648 lnclud1your
n1m1, addrea1, :rip code 1n m1ke Ctltcks p1yablt to Newapaptrbooks

'

�8-The Daily Sentinel, Middle.;rt-Pomeroy. 0 ., Friday, Jan. 26, 1979

=-car_d~~s~-~

·

THE FAMIL Y of B&lt;'n Oo vui son
wtshc~ to thank all those who
sent

flower s a nd donot1or1s

etc Also to all those m('mbers
of the f~ mdy an d espcc tolly
friends and netghbors lor thPtr
kmdness and thoughtful ness A
• spertol thanks to Ve terens
Memo ri al
Ho spttol
and
Rowlm gs Co ot! Funera l Horne

for theu cooperolton
unde rs tanding

and

IT IS at a ti m e like tht s w e know

the true meontng of l o"c Thy
N etghbo r "

and

we

wont

to

thank a ll our wpndedulln end§
and n e1ghbors for the beautdul
fl owers letters and cords of
co ndolence phone calls ol en
courogement fhe abundance
of food f rom Bradbury , M•d
dlepor t , Letart lau rel Cliff
Health Club and Mulberry Hts ,
the mmtsters who IIISited th e
Rev Art Ma rc um lor ht s wo rd s
of encouragemen t Mr and
M rs Arnold Grole tor lhetr
special mus•c
Dr
John
Ri dgway, the Ew•n~ Funeral
Home , lhe S_tJe nff s offt ce,
nurs es at Veterens MefT1or•ol
Hosp ttol ond oi l of you who
helped' " any way We m•ss our
Mom but tf helps to know we
ho11e so many reo! lnends who
core and who wont to shore our
grtef. May God Ble ss you all IS
our earnestp royer
Yours Tr uly
The lyd1a Beach Famt ly

~

· 'JI!anledtoBuy

CHIP WOO P
l' 1•h•s
nu:t~o~
ciiom C'It:'t 1 0 o n lo rgr ~ t ('lid

For Best Results Use Sentinel Classifieds
.

$1 1 prr ton 8undif'd !- loh SIO
j"t't
TCln
Ot •llvrt('ci to Oh• 0
Poll e t Co
Rt '1 PClmNn y
Yfl'l lb 8'1
TIMSEN POMEROY ~ores! Pro

WANT AD

CHARGES

ducts Top prtrc !01 stondtng
sow limber Call Qq'}S%5 o•
K('nt Hanby 1 446 M570

OLD FURNITURI:: , •ce boxes brass
beds . tro;i beds desk!. et c ,
Wnl£'
comple te hou seholds
M 0 Miller Rt . 4, Pomeroy or
coll991·77W
OLD COINS pocke t watches ,
doss nng s weddmg bond ..
cl t amo nd ~ Co ld or s1lvcr Col i
Roger Woms ley 742 2331
WAN T TO buy old &lt;15 9nrl . 78
ph onograph records
Coli
9'1 '1 6370 or Contact Mortm Fur
ntlul'e
WANTED TO buy old 1cwelry
Coli q92 5'lb'l or wn te Kay
CeCil !l7 S 2n d Middleporl

OH

Yard Sale

I~ words

or Undt!r

100

' ' II

!00

8dayJ

Ea.l'h word over \he rrummwn I ~
wurdtl W4 Ct!ni.B per word per W.y.
~r

Ads r\WllnM

Uwn eonsecutivt"
days Will be charMed •l lhe 1 day

_ _F~r _sale

rat~ .

In memory, Citrd of Thanlu

COA l llMI::STONf ~a nrl g•ovel
r oktur" rh lon dr lcrtd trPr dog
food cmd all typl'!':. o f sal• f)!
ce l ~ 1 0 1 Soli Wnr!l s Inc
f Motrt
51 Pomr&gt;•oy 99'13891

~nd

Obilwl.ry 8 cents per word, 13.00
minimtun Cash In Mtlvance
Mobil!! Home AI. and V~mi ~les
1:1re atc.:cept.ed only wtlh c~&amp;.llh with
order 25 l'eflt ct1arge for ai:ls carryinK Boz Num~r In C...re of Thlt Sen-

APPLES IIT ZPAfHIO&lt; Orchard ,
Stole Rt bH9 Phone Wilkesv ille
669 3785

Une1.

MIXFD CONDITIONW h oy Very
good
qt1ollly
D c lt vc ry
o vo• lohl e flhont" Q9'} 7201 or

1lle Publl.&amp;her reserves the rtght
to edlt or reiect any ad! tk!emed 00.
jec:tlorutl The Publisher will not be

99') 3304

responsible for more lhln one mcor-

reet instrtlon

river Amon, and from the

NOTICE

middle of the river ... " Josh. 12:2

WANT-AD

ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

TELEVISION
VIEWING
FRIDAY, JANUARY26, 1979
7: »-Hee Haw Honeys 3; Dating Game~ ; $1.98 Beauty
Show 6 ; Family Feud 8, 10; Pop Goes The Country
15; $100,000 Name That Tune 13; Sanford &amp; Son 17:
MacNeil -Lehrer Report 20: So The People May
Know 33.
B:IJO-Diff'rent Strokes 3,4, 15; All-Star Family Feud
6, 13; Wonder Women B,10; Washington Week In
Review 20,33; Night Gallery 11 .
&amp;:»-Brothers &amp; Sisters 3,4,15; Wall Street Week
20,33; Night Gallery 17.
9:IJO-Turnabout 3,4,15; Movie "The Pink Panther
Strikes Again" 6,13; Dukes of Hazzard 8,10; Capitol
Beat 33; Movie "To Love a Vampire" 17; .
Congressional Outlook 20.
9:»-Hello, Larry 3,4, 15; Turnabout 20; They'll Cut
Off Your Project 33.
10 :IJO-Sweepstakes 3,4,15; Dallas 8,10; News 20.
10:3Q-Monty Python 20 ; 11 :IJO-News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13,15
Dick Cavett 20: Hogan' s Heroes 17; Soundstage 33.
11 :3Q-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Bareffa 13; Movie
· "Dingaka" 6; Bonkers 8; Movie "Witches Mountain" 10; Movie "Blood on Salon's Claw" 17.
12 :IJO-Gong Show 8; Monty Python 33; 12 :3Q-JukeBox 8.
12 : ~o-lronsl;le 13; 1 :IJO-Midnlght Special 3.~.15;
News 8; Movie "Faces of Fire" 10.
1:»-Movle "Elephant ' Gun" 11; 1:4Q-News 13(.
2:3C)-News 3; 3:IJO-Movie " Angel in My Pocket"

3.
3:20-News 17: 3: 40-Movle "Loss of Innocence" 17;
5 : ~vle " The Adding Machine" 3.
Friday- Ch. ~ HBO5 PM . Let' s Do it Again ( PG) ; 7 PM · Inside tl&gt;e NFL;
a PM . World's Greatest Lover !PGI ; 9:30 PM ·
Opening Night; 10:30 PM. Casey's Shadow: 12 :30
PM . Upclose; 1:30 . Opening Night.
SATURDAY,JANUARY27, 1979
5:40-World at Large 17; 6:IJO-Sunrlse Semester 10;
6 IG-Discovery 17; 6: 15-Pe
\
6: 3Q-Saturday Report 3; U.S Farm Report 10;
Kentucky Afield 13.
·
7 :IJO-Big Blue Marble 3; Matters of Life 6; Mr. Magoo
8; Public Polley Forums 10; Animals, Animals,
Animals 13; Three Stooges 17.
7:3!f4:11ffwood Ave. Kids 3; Dusty's Treehouse 6;
Porky Pig &amp; Friends 8, Pink Panther 13; Vegetable
'
Soup 15.
8:IJO-Galaxy Goof-Ups 3, 15; Scooby's All -Stars 6, 13;
Popeye 8,10; Cliffwood Ave. Kids 11.
, B:»-Fantastlc Four 3, 15; Partridge Family 11 ; 9:IJOGodzllla 3.15 ; Bugs Bunny-Road Runner 8, 10; Star
Trek 17.
9:»-Superfrlends 6,13; lO :IJO-Movle " Mr . Skeffington" 17.
10 :30- Dafty Duck 3.15; Movie "Hard·Bolled
Mahoney" 4, Tarzan 8; Movie "Beneath the Planet
of the Apes" 1o
11 :IJO-Yogl's Spoce Race 3,15: Fangface 13,
Vegetable Soup 6.
1l :3Q-Gigglesnort Hotel6; Action News for Kids 13;
PTL Club 15.
12 :IJO-Fabulous Funnies 3; Weekend Special 6, 13;
Movie "River of Mystery" 4; Space Academy 8;
College Basketball 20.
12:3Q-Bay City koilers 3; American Bandstand 13;
Point of VIew 6; Fat Albert 8;movle " The Night of
the Grizzly" 17.
1:IJO-Stu Aberdeen : Basketball 3: Aware 6; In The
Know 10; Capitol Beat 33
I : »-College Basketball 3, 15; Columbus Bowling
Classic 6, Bob Jones 8; Hogan's Heroes 10; Marlo &amp; ·
Mogle Machlne13; So The People May Know 33
2:IJO-VIewpolnt 8; Movie "The G irl Most Llkelv" 10:
Kids are People Too 13; Garden Show 20, When
The Boat Comes In 33.
2:3Q-Bewltched 6; Gale Catlett: Basketball 8; Movie
. " The Time Travelers" 17; Other School System 20.
3:00-0utdoors with Julius Boros 6, Trlnl Lopez 8; Tri
State : Today &amp; Tomorrow 13; Soundstage 20;
Movie "Aiendander" 33 .
3:»-College Basketball 3, 15; Pro Bowling 6, 13; .
A:IJO-Golf 8,10; Beethoven Festival 20; 4:»-Movle
" It's Only Money" 17; Catch-33 33
5:1J0-Wide World of Sports 6, 13; Sports Spectacular 8;
Dolly 10; Growing Years 20; Lowell Thomas
Remembers 33.
5:»-Bewltched 3; Porter Wagoner 10; Joshua's
Confusion 15; Wild Wild World of Animals 33.
6:IJO-News3,10; Concern&amp;; God Has The Answer 15,
Wrestling 17: . Cra&lt;:kett's VIctory Garden 20; Over
Easy 33
6:»-NBC News 3,15; News 6; CBS News 8,10;
Newsmaker ' 79 13; Ohio Journal 20; Life Around
.us 33.
7:IJO-When, Jenny? When? 3; Lawrence Welk 13, 15;
Hee Haw 6,8; Bugs Bunny 10;; Onedln Line 20;
Sugar In The Gourd 33 .
7:JO::-We _ Think You Should Know 3; Colleqe
Basketball 33; Please Stand By 10.
8 :0D-Chlps 3 , ~.15; Delta House 6,13; White
~na&lt;Jow 8; Once Upon A Classic 20; College
&lt;b•kl!tbail 10; Hee How Honeys 17.
8:»-Welcome Back, Kotter 6,13; Marty Robbins'
Spotlight 17; Live From The Met 20. ,
9:IJO-Movle "The Sentinel" 3, 15; Love Boat 6, 13;
Movie " Fighting Mad" a ; Doily 17; 9:30-That
Nashville Music 17; World War II : G.l. Diary 33.
10:IJO-Fantasy Is. 6,13; White Shadow 10; Pop Goes
The Country 17; Movie " South Pacific" 33.
ill:».- ·Nashvllll! On The Road 17; 11 :IJO-Nows
3,6,8, 10,13,15; Porter Wagoner 17.
11 : 1.5--ABC News. 6 ; 11 :3D-College Basketball 3f
Saturday Night Live 15; Movie "Revenge!" 6;
Movll! "Tension at Table Rock" 8; Movie
" Cheyenne Autumn" 10; Movie "Nightmare In
Wax" 13; Don Kirshner's Rock Concert 17.
1:IJO-Movle "Night People" 4; Movie "The Human
Vapor" 13; Juke-Box 17.
1 :30-Movle " House of Cards" 3; Movie "War Paint"
17; 2:3Q-ABC News 13; 3:oo-News 3.
3:30-Movle ''Two Rode Together" 3; Movie "That
Certain Woman" 17; 5:00-Movle ''20,000 Years In
s1i,g Sing" 3.
- •

GRAVElY TRACTOR and mower
Hoy t or sal e f./49 '13bH

your

---'

GUN SHOOT Roone Gun Club
Every Sunday 1 pm Factory
choke guns only
GUN SHOOT Roctne Vo lunteer
Ftre Dept Every Saturday b 30
pm at their buildtng 1n Bo shon
Fac tory choke guns only
INCOMf TAX Serv1ce Federa l
and State Taxes. '192 2771 for
opph or see Wando Ebf1n
41000 l ourei C"'l Rd
INCOMf TA X Servtee Federa l
and Stole Wallace Ruc;se ll
Bradbury Coli ~2 7228

HHP WANTED m ftndtng Real
Holiness Chu rch Ad s II
thru l Bth 992·3456

17th

Lost and Found
---- - LOST TIGER cot short l o1 l II
seen
coli 949 2679
Carl
Gheen
FOUND 8eouttl ul bl oc k long
hatred mole cot wt !h ltttle
w htte on f eet and stomach
Humane Soctety 9'127680
lOST FEMALI:: Slue T1 ck coon
ho un d
Hemlock
Grove

MfT At TOO L box lor
It uck '1 rnotorcyd es
aAd Su tuk l
needs
f./4q 1813

Auction .
- -

--

-

BIG AUCTION ol Oh1o Ri ver Aur
lion Fri bpm Truddood of
new furmtu re tools m1sr fr om
Cmcinnat t Also some used
merchond1se 537 Htgh St M•ri
dl eport Oh1o
AU CTION EVE RY Su nday at 1pm
Color TV s, black end wh tt e TV
M e)(ICOn p ottery
1ewelry
tools
upholstery motenoJ
many tl ems too numerou s to
mention
Aucfto n
every
Wednesday mght ot 7pm New
and some used tlems Har tfo rd
Communtty Ce nter Har tford
WV m1les up form Pomeroy
Mason Br_t d~e

HO USf
IN
Mtner sv tll e
4
hr. cironm ilv1ng room . kttchen
holh and ullltty room NIC e htll
s 17c hosernent 9&lt;12 5813

PRICE REDUCED -

pKkup
Hondo
repa ir

RISING STAR fennels Boordtng
ond groom1.. ell breeds
Cheshtre 307 029'1
COlliE PUPPIES Beautttul
1I
weeks old Soble and w htle
lu ll blooded ro llte pupptes $'10
99'l noo
All WHIT!: full bl oode d German
Shep erd puppies 7 weeks old
304 773 5967 Cliti on

·--··-

BOSTON TERRIER pupptes
10
weeks old Call alter Spm
9C/2 5!167

Auto Sales
1973 OLDSMOBILE DELTA 66 , lull
power, good ltres- runs good
SHOO Coli Spencer 949 71 SO

- --·-·-·
1975 CADIL LAC ELDORADO lull
power , c lr clean Excellen t
co ndttton Ph one 992 7462

-

Pomeroy Landmark
~=.·Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.

TWO BEDROOM h ouse trailer or
apartment, preferably in the
Mtddlepon
ar ea ,
wt th
reasonable re nt 992 -7814 .

For Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Home Pork
Roule JJ . north ol Pom er oy
.t o_rg~ l~t; ~':1 1 99~ 747_9 ._ .
3 AND 4 RM furms hed and un·
furnuh ed
opts
Phone
992·S43ol

·-----

TWO BEORQOM , kitchen furni sh·
ed , opt Col! belore 8 om
9&lt;12·2288 .
-··---TWO BEDROOM mobile homP
near Oe)(te r near No 1 Mtne
'l'1'l
. . SBS6
. . . . . Fl~t::

ROOMS ond bath upstotrs
opt
1n Pomflroy
992·2205
before
. 5. .

FIVt:: ROOM upsta ln unfurmshpd
opt , fu lly ca rpeted . Centrol
heat Al so ground fl oor offiCe
or storage sp9ce wtth pork1ng
loctli l ies
L ocu~t St
Mtd
dleport
Ca ll 992 .347 1 01
'f9'1 337~ .

LV $17,700.00

-

In

RANCH

-

---- -

------

FORMER
AD OlPH
Grueser
restdence loca ted
tn
Dut
rhtow n, Mtnersvd le Approx
10 acres good garden lo ts of
wood two ston es wtt h Iorge
fr ont porch
1''
bolh
2
bedrooms wtlh sleep tng enclos
ed proch country k1tchen dm
mg roo m , lt ving room sotrm
wmdows , nol urol gas furnace ,
unltmshed basement
d~e p
rock w alled open we ll wi th
sheltered cover also ctstern
Drapes and carpeting tncluded
4 to 5 good buddtng spots Tup·
pers Ploms water, Ohio Power,
Cabl e TV , General Te lephone
Pm e 525,000 Coli Wilham
Ru ssell at 992 56,4 . Ch arl es
Gru eser at 992 22 11 or Wolter
Grueser
ot 992 ·3270
lm·
med1ofe poss es sion

216 E: Second StrHt
ROOMS

-

56,000.00 Will buy thi s nice 2
bedroom home in the coun ·
try near Langsville . VE RY

GOOD CONDITION - But
t he hou se must b e moved
15 acres also available
WE HAVE BUYERS &amp;

Phone992 -2181

19'/ 6 CHRYSLER CORDOBA . lull

wanted to Rent

With barn and
f encing, 1n Long Bottom,
good 1 floor plan home,
fru 1t trees, g arden space,
nice kitchen. view of the
beautiful Ohio, b asem en t ,
manv other features ON

Close to town, 3.4 acre, 3
bedrooms, n 1ce butlt-in k1t
c hen,
family
room ,
carpeftng,
woodburnlng

•

1978 FORD BRONCO Custom
under
10 000
m d es
~4 - ?7~·~ 1 ~2_?f~e~ 6~~ __ _

10 LOTS -

ltreplace A GOOD BUY
AT $20,500 .00.

LARGE

C~ll THE

3

bedroom s, all have c losets,
~ 'h baths, new nat. gas fur ·
nace with all c1ty uttltt1es.

Only $25.000
MODERN - 7 yrs old Lol
100&gt;&lt;125, 3 nice bedrooms,
family room , in town sub·
division wl1h c ity w ater

and good repair . $29,500. "
RENEWED - 3 bedrooms .
new oil furnac e, L C .
water, modern k1t and
large tot near town . $23,000

BARGAIN - 8 roo m older
home with balh. nat . gas
and lot tor only S12,000
I YR . OLD Ni ce' 3
bedroom ranch home . Kit.
and dining area with vi ew
of natu re. Garage and one

acre . $35.500.
INVESTMENT - 5 renta ls

_;__~
-----'

FINANCING FOR All
TYPES OF PROPERTY
ANO NEEO LISTINGS,
CAll TOQAY
REALTORS
HENRY E . CLELAND SR .
HENRY E . CLELAND JR.
ASSOCIATES
LEONA CLELAND
KATHY CLELAND
992·2259
992-6191

1974 OLDS CUTlASS •••••••••••. '2495
Ai r , auto .. P .S, P B., radii:'! I f1re s

1973
HORNET SPORTABOUT..... '1495
4 Dr . • wagon, 6 cy l , auto, P S, cltr
Or ., a uto, P S., vinyl roof

,_ I

--------....,;.

Armstrong Carpeting

Hammond &amp;
Lower
Organ 1, Story &amp; Cllrk
Planol. s 11es &amp; Service.
(New a used), Ser,rlce on
Current
S1le1 .

REYNOLD'S
ELECTRIC M010~
18 Ye1rs Experience
Will Milke
Service Colis

APPLIANCE II
220 E. Main Street,
Pomeroy,O.
Ca 11992-7113
For Free Estimates

651 Beech Street
Middleport,

0.

Phone

992-2356

11 -9·1 mo.

etter

1-4-1 mo. ( Pd.)

Contact

Depend On ....

10 Years Experience

;.12-1 mo

1·19·1 mo.

--- Business Services
Wlll CARt: lor the elderly
h ome Phone9917314

tn

our

WATER WEL l dnllrng Wtl l•om T
Gron r 74'1 :2879
.

TH'H ' TRIMMING and r emova l
742 3167 o r 742 2573
Will CAR E l or elderly person tn
prtvote h ome rn Pomeroy
bu t
l::very thtng furntshed
medtcatton $250 per mon th
Coli f./92 60'21

WATER AND mt sc
9'12 S858.

houlrng Co l i

Estate for Sale
-Real
- --- - -- - ·
HOMfSITt::S lor sole I cere end
up Middleport , near Rutland.
Co li Y9'} 74f:l1
TH~H

BI:OROOM frame home in
Mtddlepo rl Cal1992 3457

FAH'M ~O R so le House 2 barns
tro1ler large pond 10 acres or
(!2 acres 7 42 2566

HOBSIEIIER
REALTY
GeorgeS. Hobsteller, Jr .
Broker
Our properties are selling.
We have many buyers and
financ:ing available . Call us
today to see if we can sell
your home. WE NEED
LISTINGS! I
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.
New Lima Rd.
Rutland, Ohio
Phone 742-2003
GeorgeS. Hobsteffer Jr.
Broker
Phone 992-5739
Hilton Wolfe, Assoc .
949-2589

ELWOOD BOWERS

Sweepers toas ters trans all
small apphonces lawn mower,
ned to Stole Htghway Garage
on Roul e 7

dozer , loader and
backh oe wo rk dump trucks
ond lo boys for h1re wt ll hau l
!til dtr1 to sot ! ltmes tone and
grovel Coli Bob or Roger Jef fers , cloy phone qq') 7089 ntght
phone '192·3525 or '192· 5232

~••urday,

Give Away

,,
\

. - - -.!..'

For Sale or Rent

HO WERY AND MARTIN fx .
covottn g , se ptt c sys t em s
dolcr back hoe dump truck ,
blacktop
ltm e5 10ne, grove l
povmg Rt 143 Phone I (614 )
b98 733 1

BU SINESS BUILDIN G 22 x 31 ' in
Syrocu5e ,
O h• o
Phone

992 5249

SAVE ON
CARPETING

DRIVE A LimE
&amp;.
SAVE A LOT

AUTOMOBILI:: INSURANCE been
ca nce lled? lost your operato rs
l1cense? Phon e 992 21 43
I: ·C HKTRICA L Contractor serv ·
tng Ohto Volley regton S1x
day s o week 24 hours servtce
l:mergency ca ll s Coli 882-2952
or 882-2305

All carpet lnstallocl with
padding at no charge.
Expert lnstallaHon.

CHESTER - Good 5 bedroom house with lull
basement and 2 baths Nat. gas heat , approx. 1 acre
land and large storage building. Price $21,500.
TWO ACRES- A beautiful ~year old, 2 bedroom home
wllh large eat-In kitchen, 2 bedrooms, all nice\¥
carpeted , 2 baths, full basement wllh TV room. Many
more extras, low heat bill wllh nat. gas forced air
furnace . Alllhls and lwo nice acres of land In a good
location . Will go quick fer $35,000.
ACREAGE - with large beef barn ne~r Pomeroy.
SPACIOUS BI -LEVEL - This may be your dr~m
home. It has a large kllchen wllh lots of cabinets,
stove, refrigerator and dishwasher . Beautiful dining
room with sliding glass doors. Large living room and
family room , and to finish this well-laid out home we
have live bedrooms, ullllty room and garage. Very low
hea.tl ng bill. Red barn-like storall" building . Located
about ten minutes north of Pomeroy just off Rt. 7.
Asking $55,000.
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION - Good 11h story house,
completely carpeted with 4 bedrooms, dining room and

1' ' ACRt: 12 x flO mobt le home
near Dexter 992·5858

As Low As
, 4 .81 sq. yd.
&amp;up

,967- -rorAL- ELEcrR'IC-

-,;,b-;-1~

,

- -

--- . - -

- - - --

1955 Prairie Schoone r 28 x 8,
bdr.
1905 General, 60 )( 12, 2 bdr
l9b6 Elcono 52x 12, 2 bdr
1969 Buddy 00 x 12. 4 bdr
1970Sylvo, bQ)( 1'1, 2bdr
1910 Costle 60 x 12. 2 bdr
1973 Arlington 60 x 12 2 bdr
1973 Ridgewood , 70 x 14, 3 bdr.
1973 Kirkwood , SOx 12, 2 bdr

B 8 S MOBILE HOME SALES
PT PlEASANT WV
675·4424

9' and 12' Vinyl
Floor Covering In Stock

' I '

home, fu rn1shed
3 bedr ,
washer end dr yer A tr rondi ·
! ton ed l lol , 210 It fron tage
$12,000. Phone 742 2820.

·I
I

Helen L . Teaford
Sue P. Murphy
Associates

.
......
H01/Stfl_(J

Headquarters

446·3643 .

and one

. .... $2395

• • •

THE FRIENDLY DE4LER

Do n't forget you owe it to yourself to check with us before you buy any car, New
or Used . We can save.you money . See or ca ll one of These Friendly Salesman: J .
D . Story, Ray Douglas or Bill Ne lson .

• •

SMITH NELSON MOTOR, -INC.

$2395

POMEROY, 0.

500 E. MAIN

2 Dr. H T., P S , P B , a 1r

1978 Chevy

992-2174

Team

Pfs

ARIES (March 2J·Aprli 19) AI- Headquarters

22

though you Will be most anxlous for soc1ai1Ztng , yo u may

18
18

SmJth. Nelson Mtrs
Young's Mk t

haue troubl e leel tng 1n synch Zide's Sport Shop

16

w1 th

14

what othe r s are do tng

Long Shot s

Team
H 1gh
Game
Young's Market 719.

1977 Ford f-250 •..
Long bed, auto .. P 5 , P B

-

1972 Ford Van

· ed
Early Sunday Mtx
14
1
January • 979

$ome thing of va lue A gtve-andtake attitude ts needed 10 order

Jack 's Dairy Bar
Royal Crown

der:stand1ngs wtlh co-worke rs

M ei gs I nn

.•• $1695

ii&lt;EAIY

.,APS'~Sr

MOVe US /0 HAWAII .

ACROSS
ha bJ tat

6 NUisa nce
C d

~

8
8

8

Stephanie Rought 513, Ellen

[er UnloriUna te iy, 11 wtll then
hau e lo be don e al a lar less

Rought SOl .
Htgh Game - Bill Willlord

Con11entenll1me

225, Bill Wtl1fo r d 213; Ell en

TRI -COUNTY
January 23, 1979

Pomeroy Cement Block
Columbia Nati onal Life
H&amp;R Fire stone

person

10 a r game
11 Athena's

forego

any

release
25 Function
27 New Jersey
c1ty
28 Perfonned
at 1 Across

29 Rcg1ste r
30 Daslln·
adocd
33 Pungent
31 Nose 37 Pl_ay mg
marble

Pts

16

V 6. auto tran s, P S , P B , a1r cond , AM- FM 8 trac
stereo. viny l roof . P dr locks , speed control. mor e

Sharp

1976 ELITE 2 DR......... ........... ....... 14195
p S
V 8. P B ,
A M FM stereo tape, P sea t s,
' tnstrumenta f mn grp. ltgh l grp , v1ny l roof. luxury
inten or , ftlf w heel

1975 MAVERICK 4 DR ..................... .'2495
6 cyl , auto trans , P S.• AM rad1o econom tca l

1974 GRAN TORINO 2 DR ....... .......... '2195
V 8. auto trans , P S,, P B , air cond. vmyl roof, lots

ga
d ocumen t

more

1977 C-10 CHEV ..................... :...... '4395
v.a. auto

name
DOWN

Equipment Co.

I

Pomeroy, 0.
Ph. 992-2176

I

Moynihan

I
1Starting Dec . 2, our store I
I hours wtll be 8-5 Mon.- Fri. 1
Closed
Saturday and 1
I Sunday.
I
_.
II International New Ideo 1

__________
Harvester

Equipment 1

KARR &amp;VAN ZANDT
1973 CAD. CPE. DEVILLE.. •........••.....• 11595
1973 BUICK CENTURY SED............... ·11395
1973 FORD TORINO SED........ .......... 11395
1975 DATS~N 210 CPE.. .. ............... '1295
1974 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX ............... 12795
1976 PONTIAC CATALINA SED............ '2995
1977 CHRYSLER NEWPORT SED.......... 14895
1975 CHEVROLET CAPRICE WAGON .• •~ •• - 13395
1976 OLDS CUT. SUP. SED................ 14195
1973 BUICK LS SED... .. .................. '1695
1975 OLDS 98 LS SED................... '4195
"
'
1973 OLDS TORONADO .................... '1995
1974 OLDS RtlYALE CPE. ................. 11995
1974 CAD. SED. DEVILLE ••.•. -...... -••••• 12495
1974 CAD. SED. DEVILLE .............. ... . 12795
1974 CHEV. IMPALA CPE... ........ :...... 12495

tr ans , P S N I C- E

DAILY CR:YPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it :
AXYDLBAAXR
is '1. 0 N G F E I. I. 0 W
One letter Simply stands f or anoLher In th1s sample 1\ IS
used for the three L 's X f or t h e l\\'0 O's, etc · S1nglc l etters,
apostroph es, the length and fortnalJ~ n o f the words are all
hints. Each day th e code l etters ar e different

•

CRYPTOQUOTES
JEUP

Roa ch
deals 211 ; Dav e Pe t erson 210
Da11e
H1gh lnd Series mlgnt llrs l
gelling .a Peterson 623, Gary Denner

AFHV

CP

RSW

sup.

c

p
ME;

NQP

ME

NQP

NQP

J E UP

J E UP

G P T-

tbday . Allhou gh 11
appear like you're
HFUP
CP
QSIP. QSXGTNN
"
4e,l , you'll be the one who ts 575 , Ed Voss 566 .
Hig h · Team Game Yesterday's
Cryptoquote:
THE
BEST
EDUCATION
IN THE
lt~n .
CA,PRICORN (Dec . 22-Jen. 19) Pom.eroy Cement Block 925 ; WORLD IS THAT GOT BY STRUGGUNG TO GET A
It's a ve r y li n e thing to be Roach Gun Shop 91 5, Eagles - UVING.-WENDELL PHILLIPS
Club 877
~ejplui , but to d~y lake care you
H igh Team Series (f.) 1979 King Features Syndicate, Inc
aren't drawn tnto something
only 10 find yourself left hold· Pomeroy Cement Block 2581;
Roach Gun Shop 2558; Eagles
IMihe bag
Club 2535.
,
lNEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN I

1-98 REGENCY SEDAN (White)
1-88 ROYALE COUPE (Black)
1-88 SEDAN (Silver)
1-TORONADO (D. Red)
4 - CUTLASS SUPREME COUPES
2-CUT. SALONS CPE &amp; SED.
1-CAD. SEVILLE SED. (White)
1-CAD. DEVILLE CPE. (Beige)

V 8. auto tra n s, P 5 , P B, air cond. Ranger Pack .,
sl1dmg rear window , box r ails, AM FM s tereo , n ew
t1res &amp; whee ls, lots m ore

1974 F-100 FORO.............. ..... ........ '3295
Ranger XLT Pa c:«. , VB. auto trans , P S , P B.• air
cond .• AM FM rad10 -slid 1ng rear window, lot s more

1974 F-100 .... ..............................'2895
1974 C-10 .................... :.............. '2495
1975 F-100 ................................. '3495
1974 E-200 VAN FORD .......... .'.•••..•.• '2695
1974 G-10 BEAUVILLE CHEV. window van '3695
OPEN TILL 7 P.M.
Except Thursdav &amp; Saturday ttl5 : 00
Closed Sunday

DAN THOMPSON FORD
See Rl)cky H upp, Oarn: ll Ood nll or Pat H1l1 , General
fo r a Good Deal on a New or U sed Vehicle

MIDDLEPORT . 0

•

READY FOR DELIVERY

Drive Home A Winner

1

See one of these c ourt eous sa lesmen : Pete Burris,
Ma rvtn Keebaugh or George Harris.

·Karr &amp; Van Zand~t
" You ' ll Like Our Quality Way of Dotng Business"

GMC Ftnanctng .

997 SJ&lt;l2

1
1

AT:

1975 F-250 FORD........................... '3695

P.

14
6

1977 LTD 4 DR........... _....... ... ... .... '4495

1977 LTD II CO. SQUIRE WGN ............. 5195

guardtan
Le 1

N Qp

Less than 19,000 miles 9 pa ssenger

1

1:-::--+-+-1--

14
12
10

Loaded

302 VB . auto tran s , P S . P B . AM FM st ereo , speed
con tr ol, less th an 19,000 mtles Sharp. atr cond

speech
Imrnedl·

1-

1978 LTD CO. SQUIRE WGN ................ '6895

1977 GRANADA 2 DR ...................... '439S

CP

bu siness

24 Prison

38 Different
39 Forest
40

VALUES!

.

Yesterday's Answer

:~ ~;:s~:;~

JEU P

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec .
fl) Yo u mtgh! be beller oil lo Peterson, 244; Ra y

ED CAR

6 Facbonal
7 Astolat lady
Iitle
8
Fisherman
12 Brmg on
9 Ankle-length
13 Bamste r
p
ct 1 · t
robe
14 seu o og1s
10 G1rl· Fr
16 Check copy
20 Prospered
over
21 Cza rist
18 Eatery
conunune
19 He brew
teller
23 Sign of
,Las Vegas
21 Cheapskate
22 M1ss Bn•ant

Da ve

H1gh Ind . Game -

GREAT

2 41 Tanunany

could ca u se your work to suf·

Team

2 Attack
3 Bustle
4 Jazz fan
5 Unusual

ately

~:

1

by THOMAS JOSEPH
1 Go-go g ~rl 's

..

·--------1 MEIGS I

THE PRICE IS RIGHT

z

Crown 733.

SC RPIO (Oct. 24·Nov . 22)11 al Eagles Club
all possible. try nol to bnng Roach Gun Shop
oroblems home th at haue noih· Bill's Body Shop

•

v.a

NOTICE
Hobsteller,
E~&lt;ecutor of
the Estate o l
Merle E Rtc e, o ffer s for sa l e
the foll ow1n9 descr•bed real
property
The followtng descr1bed
r ea l estale s1 l ualed m the
Vil l age of. M 1ddleport , m the
County of MetQS and Slate of
Oh 10 Bemg 125 teet off of the
east end of Lot No 88
Deed Referen c e Vo lu me
255, Pag e 199 , M e tgs County
Deed Records
Btds wt l l be rece•ved unttl
J · OO o'clock P M , January
26, 1979, at the off1ce of
Bernard V Fultz, ' Box 723,
Pomeroy ,
Ohto,
45769.
lel ephone 992 2186
Terms of Sale Cash, r~p
pratsa l pn ce and mmunum
b 1d of $1,800 00. pur chase
sub t ecf to all real properly
l a)(es now owed
{1) 19 , 26, 2tc
Ed•son

'- '

iHEN WHY NOT SAVE

2nd High Game- R ichard
Russell 197, Mary Porter 19-4. 36

J"~:~e

order today You are ltkely to
qlace m o re attention on that
wh1ch ts easy , caus1ng your
resgonsibllttles to pt le up

See the Grate Family at

• • • • •

Ready to go camping auto ,

a poem

liBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) You r Rou ghl190, Slephante Roughl
~riorlli es lend lo be oul of 183

furniture .

YOU MOVE. US F&gt;&lt;OM
PcNNSYt.VANIA TO DAKOTA
iO UTAH 10 AJ&lt;IZONA

Au to , 26,000 m1

554; Carolyn Bachner 536

dloappotnled
CANCER (June 21 -July 22) Be
prepared lo make some conoession today where you share

proportion ts great

3. A Iorge building full of
beauflful carpet,

• • •

$2895

-

VIRGO {Aug. 23· Sept 221 Too
High Series - Bill Wil)lord
muc h fun and games Ieday 615 , Jeff
W&lt;ison 569 ,

WE OFFER YOU ...
1, Two lull floors of ail new
furniture .
1. Nice selections of used

$3995

8 24 Ustmov
26 Knot
30 Part of

should be sellled prompliy
Team Hig h Series - 3 in
{oda y Olherwtse, lh e c ha nce One and Royal Crown 2083
~I lhem be mg blown o ul ol
Team Hi'gh Ga me _ Roya l

RUilAND RJRNnuRE

• • •

1976 Chevy luv Pickup

you lhoughl. When you

lOr etther parly lo gain
T . c
Out
oms Grocery
arry
LEO (Jul ,v 23-Aug. 22) M1sun · Gibbs

SHOP AT.,. ..

4

is

Local Bowling
January 17, 1979

k&gt;o much emph asis on mate:naltsm yo u are gom g to wmd u p

Rutland

. $6295

whee l dnve.

High Series- Russ Carson 31 Scurned off
I
2nd Htgh Series John 32 ea ous
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Stme Tyree 547; Pat Carson 505 . 34 Tttt
lo be more ph tlosophtcal tha n
High Game - Charley Van 35 Part of
~raten al l stt c today . If you place M eter 199, Pat Carson 197

RUnAND
FURNITURE

• • • • • •

Auto, P S, P .B, W+ TOPPER, 14,000 m i.. C- 10

picture.

them. They'll have a way of
lmdmg out everythi ng you satd

ing to do w 1th th e fa mtl y You' ll
Qet everyo ne all sttrr ed up for
no reaso n .

OWN .6R M .UST SELL- The owner ot thi s
charming 7 story_stone home in Middleport
must sell now so she is offering this fine.
home for a low, low price of 520,000&lt; There
are 2 bedrooms ( 1 is extra large), spacious
living room w - fi~~place, formal dining, eat'" k1tchen. batll w -shower, garage &amp; a king
s1zed yard . Good location on Mill Sl. Call the
W1~eman Real Estat·e Agency, Gallipolis,

'

The response of family
histories has been very encouraging, but there are
many , many families not
fepresented yet The only
cost to you for a story of 500

POMEROY LANES
Early Wed. Mixed

fS

in produ c tion .
Fou r 2
bedrooms
and
one
business. All
for only

168,000.
IF YOU CAN AFFORD
Sl,OOq.oo DOWN , WE CAN
SELL YOU A PLACE .
CALL 992·3325.
G. Bruc~ Teaford

. . . $1795

1975 Ford Grand Torino •

wm soon

today unl ess you haue something flaller ing lo say aboul

present yo ur case , be sure 11 IS
believable

laundry room . Also almost new 2 i:ar heated garage .

This home is nicely iocaled In Porlland and PRICED
FOR QUICK SALE al $22,500.
LOTS- 1 Acre and up near Pomeroy.
•
50 ACRES FREE GAS - Good 1'/o story house with full
basement. Large pond stocked with fish . Priced for
quick sale . $40,000.
SYRACUSE - gooe 2 bedroom home. almost new
kllchen cabinets, all nicely carpeted, laundry room, all
Insulated, natural gas heat, utility building, 2 lots.
$21,,100.00.
Talk to a loco I real estate agent before trying to soli
your home. His ••perltnco can help you. We ntocl
many types of' property, alva ua a call.
CALL JIMMY DE EM, ASSOCIATE 949-2311
or NANCY JASPERS, ASSOCIATE 94t-26S..

:b:~ing ~ories

words

Sons rmp ortant to your cause
inay not be as easy to wtn ove r

c:Ail742-2211
TAt..K-TD
Wtncleil or Herb Grato
or Gone Smith

742-2211

301 en~ine, 4 bbl , automatic, &amp; air, crutse contro L gauges. AM 8 track.
stereo, rall y wheels &amp; many more optto nS
Sf1 cker Pnce $7936.84
l ess Ot scount
986 .84
Ta ~~:es &amp; Tttl e Fee
Not Included
Stock No 1307

Auto .. P S, P B

whatto dolo pass the time ? If
you haven't written your
fanuly history for the Meigs
History Book yet, now would
be a good time to work on it .
The February s' deadilne for

loday Don' l collect gutil lrom No. 3
11
Htgh Team Sertes
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Per- Young's Markel 2046 .

Buy where you can c:omo In
anti- what you're gifting
- Gaod Hlwc:lktns "- Fully
r-•kicka_d._...,.==----:1

.

bbl

NEW CAR SPECIAL
1979 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX LANDAU TOP

your time. Where can you
find a better offer, in these
January 27, 1979
days of high prices, to leave a
,Much to your de ltghl you'l l be lasting record of you
able this commg year lo lun c- family?

b~sn~,E~ait."bb~ut ~~~~r~~en~ 1

Rubber Back Carpet

MOBIL!: HOM!:: repai r s Furnaces
electrtca l work pipe s sowe d ,
plumb~n~ . ~9~ · ~8~8

&lt;l

._engme, dual ex ha us t.

1976 Maverick 4 Dr..r.~.42195 .

Also~ if you haven't ordered
your copy of the book , now
would be a good time to do so.
··AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19) Remember, books will be
')'o ur inlutli on Is prelly sharp
loday Howeue r, there's a good sold only on a pre-publication
'chan ce you'll 1gnore 11 and go basts. The number of books
a long Wll h anolfier agamsl yo ur ordered and patd for will be
beller judgmenl. You'll be sor. the number prtnted. There
ry. Learn more about yourself ' .1 "br sendtng lor yo ur 1979 copy wtl ""no extras l&gt;rLnted.
,o Astro-Graph Leiter Mat l $1
Help make thts book a
lor each and a long , se ll- success by sending your
addresse~. stamped enueiope family history and-or book
lo Astro-~raph , P 0 Box 489, order to Meigs History Book
~adto Ctl y Statt on, NY 10019
Be sure lo specify btr th stgn . Pomeroy, 0 . 45769 .
2
0

-···-·· -·----

BATHROOMS AND Kttchens
remodeled cerom •c !tic plum
bmg carpentr y, and general
ma tntenonce
13 years ex
.P":_ri~n~e _ 9~'1: 3~8~ ~ ____ •
PUlliNS EXCAVATING. Comple te
Sent ice Phone 992 ·2-478

ONLY '3~95

'6950

1975 Ford LTD

!ton in a more Independent
manner. Many restr ic tion s o l
,l ~r - ost are hltmg , and an
.~aSier road IS ahead.

Mobile Homes for Sale

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

Jan . 27 , 1979

ASTRO•GRAPH

TWO MONTHS old kttlens Tabby ,
mole . all block pett te female.,
Me•gs
Hum ane
Society :;

992-2592

$895

USED -CARS

Bernice Bede Osol

t::XCAVA TING doter backhoe
and dt! cher Charles R Hot
f ield
Bo ck Hoe Ser viCe ,
Rutla nd , Ohto Phone 747 2008

$1295

4 Or, dar k blue, v iny l t op, P.S P B. low mtleage, atr

By Margaret Parker
Meigs Hlstorleal Society
· • With all the ice and snow,
. have you been wonderin~

Agentfor
MOTIRISTS INSURANCE
COMPANIES and SANDY
&amp; ·BEAVER INSURANCE ,
COMPANY, Lisbon, Ollio .
AUTO, HOMEOWNERS,.
FARM,
LIFE
&amp;
BUSINESS .
'
1-26-lmo

~XCAVA TIN G ,

.A~'o.

-

Power s tee nng &amp; brake s, Se 1rra Grande Pac kage, 2 ton e pa 1nt, 350

Std , radi o

There 's still time to
write family 's history

Oav1d Coleman

SEW ING MACHIN!: Repotrs ser
v tce, all rnok es 99'1 2784 The
Fab r i C Shop ,
Pomer oy
Authomed Sm ger S al e~ and
Service We sharpen Sc1ssors

1976 GMC% TON

2 Dr .• auto , P S., P B' .. good condt l tOn

Washington St ., Albany, 0 .
Phone 698-617l

RE~AIR

USED TRUCK SPECIAL

1974 Chevy Nova ..... . $1795

AN
INSURANCE AGEN

BRADFOH'O, Aucttonee r
Com
plete Servtce Phone 949 2487
or 949 2000 Ra cme Ohto, Cntt
Bradford

1976 Chevy Chevette.

1 mile north
Tuppers Plains, Ohio

St.Rt. 7

PII)NE 742-2328

992 -7583

$1095

1973 CHEVROLET IMPAlA 2 DR ...... .. .......... ~. ~:~~~.:~: .. '795

1974 Buick Regal. ..... . $1795

See Roger Riebel
985-3345 or 667-3463

.'

1974 Toyota Stationwagon
1974 Pinto Runabout

v.a, auto.

RIEBEL~S

. $1195

2 door , fu ll y eq uipp ed

1973 FORD CUSTOM F-100

Qua lily Work You Can

• •

Auto .

ACy l , A speed

Ceramic Tile - Formica 1
Counter Tops · Ceilings ~
I Suspended, Texture) · Tile •
. Floors . PaiN! ling &amp; Trim .

$1395

2 Dr ., auto .• P.S, P 6, air

s

Ton, L WB , V 8 , auto , P

• • • • • •

1973 Buick Century . •

1974 CHEVY LUV ••••••••••••••. '1195

~
;

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

. - Services Offe-red
- -·- - -- -- - - - --

1'7

l

For Competitive Prices
t-tome Remodeling
General Repairs
Masonary Works

4-

12 ·31 -1 mo .

$1495

4 Or , auto , P B , P S , 6 cy l

1974 DODGE CWB CAB •••••••• '1695

-Room Additions'
-Custom Remodeling-

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

1974 AMC Hornet.

V8.auto.P .S, PB

Weekends

• •

Std , good shape .

1974 FORD RANCHERO GT•••••• '1995

Evening

AI. TROMM OONST.

A New Home Bu•lt?

Auto&amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5682

5 P .M:

1fter 12 noon .

Thrnking Of Having

.

949 -2111.

• $1895

1974 Pinto Stationwagon

4 Whe el drive, ' ·~ ton, LWB, V 8, 4 speed

Tyree Blvd ., Racine, Ohio,

• •

.

1969 MUSTANG MACH 1••••••••• ~95
TRUCKS
1974 DODGE POWER WAGON ••• $3695

'SALES REP. FOR
SUN DINS
•
HAMMOND ORGANS

$1895

1977 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX ........... ........ :::,~:.. :·:~ •• '5295
1977 BUICK ELECTRA 225 LIMITED 2 DR ... ::"::.~-:-~::... '6995
1977 CHEVROLET IMPAlA 4 DR ............ ~ .~~~.~~;.~~~ - '4295
1975-FORD ELITE 2 DR ................... ~.;~~ -~'. ::.':~:.:~~ '3195
1975 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX... ..........~ ~~~; ':.n.'. :~.·:;~ .'?;. 13695
1975 DODGE DART 4 DR .... .~ .~·:;. ?~~.':'..":~'~. ~~~'..':':'.".': ... .'2895
Cleun a s a wh1stle
S
1975 ,FORD LTD 4 DR .............. -......................... 2795
1974 FORD LTD 2 DR .................... DISCOUNTED TO '1795
~
Loa~ed &amp;
1973 CHEVROLET CAPRICE 2 DR .• ~~~ .~~!~~~';,;~~.~~ ...... '1495
1973 PONTIAC CATALINA 4 DR ...............~~~.~~~:.~~: •• '1195
A clean car
1973 BUI CK CENTUR Y WAGON............................. 1l 895

4 Dr , au1o , P S , P 8 , air

•4 Dr. , V-8. auto.; P S. P. B, air.

PETE SIMPSON

SHOP

EWOlT

• •

1975 Mercury Montego

1974 FORD TORINO:.o:,·.w:~~~ .... 'J295
1973 CHEVY CHEVEllE..'.~r••••••• ~95
'1973 MERCURY MONTEGO.~~r~ ... '895
1975 FORD CUSTOM 500
'1495

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS,IIItC.

Sid

1976 AMC racer 2 Dr

1973 FORD MAVERICK•••••••••• '1495

~

Your Headquarters For

RIGGS
·usED
CARS

4Dr. wagon , 4cyl , 4sp

--

SWEEP

This

monln ly payment CP&amp;I 1.

$20,000.00
SECLUDED

1970 DODGE VAN Excelle nt con
d1tton lo w mdeoge $3500 Inge ls Furntture Store '191 2635
power , AM ·FM stereo tope
crut se control rear wmdow
defogger, lo tr cond1t10n 5.3700
992 bl24

FHA APPROVED -

b ea utiful
ne w
ranch
f ea tures a hearth centered
family room, basement,
garage ,
l 1/ 2 baths, 3
b ed rooms , 1 acre Appro)(
imately 10% downpay ·
men t, mortgage amount
$49,500, 91h % 1n t erest , 30
y ea r term . Apprax. $416 23

NEIGHBORHOOD

.

-

ha ndyman's spec1al ca n be
yours for the low price of
$8,000 - In Pomeroy on 4
lots, 2 stories. bath , kit
c hen, 3 or 4 b ed.room s. T hts
won't last tong

Middleport. 2 story hom e
that looks nice and ca n looK
ntcer Close to schools,
shopptng, etc
ASKING

1969 DELI VE RY JEEP 2·wheel
drive $400 1J week old pure
bred gree t dane, $100 Call
74:2 2406 .

+

Thts

1975 HONDA CVCC CIVIC ••••••• '2495

S.rvlce

JIM KEESEE

Cellulosic (wood' fiber!
Thermal insuliltlon
Save 30 pt;t. to 50 r t.
19th Century service with
on hutlng cos
20th century l&lt;naw-How .
Experience and
Specllllllng In
fully IMurocl
wood1tove , 011 Furn•ce
FrHIW.
&amp; Flrepl.ce Flues
calrnMm
Phone : 742-3110
"
Kim White, Proprietor
11 -3-1 !!mi

E X C E L l E N T

SNOW TIRES
ON SALE AT
POMEROY LANDMARK
SERVICE STATION

~-

•

o.

POMEROY, 0.

SNOW
TIRE SALE

-

Don't let a
flr"e pu t
a damper on your life

l OTS O N Peorock A11f'
Pomero y Ohto Over 3 acres of
rr nmry 997 1342 or 992 :-' 449

MAIN . .IIlii

Real Estate for Sale

Pets for Sale

ln1ured

St. Rt. 124 toward Rutland,

-----

~'

Blown Insulation

Swetpl Guild

'II• mile off Rt. 7 l'Y·pass on

RUTLAND HAROWARI:: two doors
fr om the Rutland Post Olltce
742 '7'l55 10 sheets ga lvantred
underp tn mn g '28' 1&lt; 5 S5 15
eoch 1 wood hur'n ing lrreploce
W illi grate sqle priC e S50 1
KING coo l heator, ti r oom si:re ,
SJQ9 q5 w1th lrec stove board
Tnp le wa lt Ul appr oved otove
ptptng, One on ly lovorotory
s rn~ wllh marhle
l op so le
pn cPs at S38

.

-

on(&gt;' 111 Pomercyy Secluded
woorl&lt;&gt;rl orp.o on lop of htlt
Ov~r!ooks fi ver Wot&lt;'r , c ler
tm avot lahte 99'J 3886

Chimney

GARAGE

CHAIN SAWS one demonslrotor ,
1 used Homeltle , 1 used Mr·
Culloc h 2 used Sthtl Pomeroy
Horne and Aut o bOO 1: Mom
Pomeroy ""

•

1

_
.... _
- .....

J&amp;L

Member of

Appliance

Reedsv 1lle

'•

"

ROGER HYSELL

JACKW .
CARSEY
Mgr.
Phone 992-2181
G RAIN Ft::D beef
61&lt;1 378 63 11

L_....:._,_______,...;.________________

1

SALE PRICES

Notices

-

HOUS!
FOH
sol&lt;'
lor otJ Clll
Mno,on WI/ Fou l h~rlraom o,pll t
lo'vrl hu1lt tn ~tt c hf'n wll h
cwr&gt;n rongl' gorhogr- dt .,pn&lt;, ol
o nrl bnr Fomtly rnn m rltn1119
ron rn wholr&gt; housP (Orpr&gt;ltllg
~u ll S17£&gt; hasmnunt Centml au
ancf lorrerl otr go s h nc11 All
rl • e1pc s pluc; washer ond d rpo"1
Borkyord 10 It htgh rf'lrlar
fr ncf' and cedar decks for
riiVOCy Hooted garage Close
lo 'rhoel , o;tore pork and tennt s
rctu r! Controrl Gory l Gtbb ~
t"oll614 949 1'146

HEADQUARTERS
For all
Needs .

•

nl ("'' IOl {' 0 1 1r&gt;flllUIICf' :JO
VfAH'S ffHM S li-IHANO 1\'IOfl
TCAGt- CO
n f Stofr St
Ath("' ll '&gt; PhonP b 14 54 7 ;JOSI

f AlRV If W HEIG HTS b yeQr o ld oi l
f' l(; c!rte hom e 3 bed roo m, I' '
hnlh lo... ely lomtly room wt!h
wood
hurntng stove
l ul l
co •peted goroge 1 acre Near
M e tgs Hgth School To see, co li
99'1 b'1H7

Sunday
4P.M.
FrldMy a~f\t!rrJ(.l(Nl

· - -·--

(t~ ltgtbll '

HAV 99'1 1877 ahcr 6prn

Tu•!doy

Business· Services

N0

14

lllruFri&lt;lay
I P.M.
lheW..y before publication

-

VA

RfDUCI:: SA FE and t os l wtlh
Gn Beso Tobl c t5 one! f Vop
wntAr p dl s NC'Ison Drug

Monday
Noon on Satunlly

992 3992

lOANS
d rwn

1r

3'

HAY LARGt: ROUND bale s SJO
SC]uOr£&gt; holes S1 M M Corn
sheller ems 4131 985 3537

t~

J , •., ,,..,..) I HA A ' lt•w n · .,, ..
rlrw111 (ni l l t (H ' Vf'f("' I C'Il~ nml
CI('IIC' Ifli f•llhlu ) To run l10'1'

ffOUND BALED hoy !!43 :1514

Phont 992-2158

"Sihon king of lbe Amor·
ltes ... ruled from Aroer,
which Is on the bank of the

Pf /1.1 1 J J\
1 •• • llPy

,·, hoh ,.. ,.
ynull q• •l rr . ""
fn , 1, ., wtth 0 St' ntn •t I W tu, tl\d
(ni19'1171Sb

1.26
1.90
2.26
3 75

1.50
1.80

2day:~

3day!

otf ("'l

IO

wmll lfl , , , 1 ' •I
~n nu•tlufi &lt;J
!h
1 11 1 , ~ ,, '_ I ! 0 1 WfH ].
1'1l

Chai'"K~

C.•h
I day

1J y~)ll hnvi" 1r q''1VIf f"'

.

•

Real Esta te for Sale

..'

.
Pomeroy
Open Evenings until 6: 0o-til5 p .m Sat

�..

~

.

~

•. ..-,

•

...

•

~.

..

•

-

I

.... . .. . .

~.

--"··-·-~ . . . J ..

·

·

··~

·

,

··~···

. ..

·

•

...

••

••

••

...

..

-

••

t

..

~-

•

"

...

•

-~

'
10-The Dail)'Sentinel, Middleport-Pom~roy , 0 ., F'riday, Jan. 26,1979 ·

Governor~ s

school financing

,---·---------------------.

Area Deaths

·1

1

New regulations
caused layoffs

ll(,:S!ilE M. SIIOWAL'n:R
uncle, Narhe Hysell , BradMrs.
Hessie • Ma)· bu ry , and several" nieces,
CADIZ , Ohio (AP) Showalter, 75, died Thursday . nephews and cousins.
installation of expensive antiCo
nsolidation Coa l Co . pollution devices , . some
.
afternoon at her home in · Besides her parents, she
was preceded in death by two 'Officials say the layoff IDday utilities have been switchiilg
Langsville.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) services. ·
11le lbincsc for centuries now lim ited to . ophthaof 124 hourly and salaried to low-&lt;Julfur coal mined .in
Mrs.
Showalter
was
born
daughters.
Gov. James A. · Rhod es'
·schools will get a major have used needles, made mologists, who are ph yemployees
in eastern Ohio western ~ates . ·
Oct
.
4,
1903,
a
daughter
of
the
Funeral
services
will
.
be
.
school financing and budget share .. probably more ·than mostly of gold and silver,· to sicians.
..
resulted
from . .federal
late
Charles
and
Rose
Hysell
held
at
1
p.
in.
Sunday
at
·
thc
The EPA said late last year
proposals will go before . $600 million, of the $1.5 billion puncture certain areas of the
Orlett pointed out that the
regulations it may use a section of the
Walker Funeral Home with government
Ohio's lawmakers when they anticipated from the growth body in the treatment of bill establishes 180 hours of Denney.
limiting
the
use
of
high sulfur dean Air Act to force utiliti~
On
Oct.
14,
1932,
sh
e
burialfollowing
in
the
Hannin
return Feb. 6 from a mid- of tax rev.enues. aU have disease.
extra training before an married Roy Showalter who Cemetery. Friends may call coal.
to install anti-pollution
winter recess.
agreed . ·
The Senate and House both optometrist . could lise the survives along with three at the funeral home anytime
"The
cutback
in
the
work
since a study
equipment,
His aides said Thursday he
At a skeleton sess ion held brief sessions, with no diagnostic pharmaceuticals.
for
ce
was
a
&lt;llrect
result
of
showed
that
a widespreajl
siste;s,
Mrs.
Wes
(Winnie)
after
2
p.
m.
Saturday
and
probably will reveal his long· Thursday before the recess, bills up for floor con· He said they c;m help detect
the
federal
Environmental
Goble,
Pomeroy;
Mrs.
Jesse
until
the
service.
The
famil
y
switchover
to
out&lt;()f·slate
awaited school funding plan Rep . Terry Tranter, D- sideration, before ,memhers such diseases as , diabetes,
Agency's
overly
Protection
coal
oould
cost
Ohio 15,000
Sta~sbury,
Middleport,
and
will
receive
friends
from
2
to
in his State of ·the State Cincinnati , offered
a headed home to allow time hypertension , and glaucoma.
stringent
sulf11r
dioxide
jobs
and
$350
million
a year .
Mrs.
Dora
Elli•.
Albany
:
an
4
and
7
to
9
p,
m.
Saturday.
message that same day, but previously announced bill for bill printing and book·
Positive findings would
which
caused
a
regulations
the budget details likely will allowing Ohio chiropractors keeping chores.
result in the patient being
shrinking market for eastern
come Feb. 7.
to engage in the Chinese
Rep. Edward J . Orlett, D- referred to physicians for
Ohio's
high sulfur coal," said
The
governor
and · practice of acup"!'cture. He Dayton, introduced a once- treatment , the Dayton
a
spokesman
at the Lettuce workl!rs
legislative leaders ha ve said it would provide another vetoed bill that would allow lawmaker said,. adding that
·company's
Pittsburgh
agreed on how much new health care option for optometrists to administer that the bill " would reduce Veterans Memorial Hospital
reject mediation
headquarters.
Holzer Medical Center
money will be available in the ·Ohioans.
certain diagnostic eyedrops unnecessary referrals, while
Admitted
Amanda
Hardest hit by the layoffs
. Dis charges, Jan. 25
1979-1981 biennium. - ahout
Tranter said he expects during
SAN DIEGO (AP) .;..
patient s' Increasing det ection of Morri s, Pomeroy ; Donna
was
the Egypt Valley surface
JaNe
BOMnan,
Frances
$1.5 billion - but they still opposition from
some exa minations.
Pickers
walked out at two
serious problems."
Roush, Pomeroy ; Cindy Bryfan, George Kalandros, mining operation near here
have not joil)tly decided how medical groups to the in·
more
letiuce
farms as the
He denied Rhodes' claim,
Orlett noted that fewer than Crabtree, Albany; Cleatus
Gary Canterbury II . Alice which was put on a standby United Farm Workers
to allocate it ·among the traduction of acupuncture in in vetoing the same bill last 40 of Ohio's 86 counties have Arnett, Pomeroy.
Casto, Kelly Cummons, basis, idling 93 employees.
various state programs and the state.
year, that it is dangerous practicing ophthamologists.
Discharged - Ann ette Richard Evans , Flora The giant Mountaineer power rejected federal mediation ·as
a way to end a dispute that
because optometrists lack while 86 have optometrists. Lambert, Leona Stewart,
Grueser, Wilmer Halfhill, shovel , which has been down threatens the nation's winter
skills
to
use
diagnostic
drops
Frank Wolford, Helen Carolyn Hall, Mary Hughes, for the past week for repairs,
Something New At Our Drive·Thru Window
,
Augustine , Nelson Lewis. Michael H'u.mphrey , will not be reactivated in the lettuce crop.
Growers
spokesman
Denise Tillis, Freeman Lawr ence La uderback , foreseeable future, the
Richard Thorton said enl·
Williams, Lena Heilman , Shelbie Myers, Ca rrie Neal, company said.
ployers
would comply with p
George Radekin, Roberta Clayton Poling, Jr., Janie
Another 31 employees at
government
request and
Young.
Randolph, Michael '\Valker, Consolidation's central shop meet with the mediator today
Peggy Walton, Jenna Welker, at Georgetown in Harrison in Los Angeles.
Terry Lee Wolfe, Elsie ·County were terminated , , But UFW spokesman Marc
Wolfenbarger, Beatrice according to the spokesman. Grossman said: "The federlll
The central , shop does
DINNER MEETING .
Wood.
maintenance and repairs for mediatDrs are not needed. We
Past commanders, trustees
Births, Jan. 25
can reach an agreement if the
and all interested members
Mr . and Mrs . Randall both heavy surface mining growers will just negotiate in
will attend a dinner meeting Baldridge, daughter, Bid· equipment and underground good faith."
mining machinery.
of Drew Webster Post 39, well.
About• 2,700 lettuce pickers
···we have 500,000 tons of
American Legion, to be held
have struck six of 28 majot
with
'rfh . coal stockpiled right now at growers in the Salinas and
at 7:30 p. m. Tuesday at
Egypt Valley and another
which time proposed im·
DeltexFaucets
of
Imperial
valleys
Mr. and Mrs. · Daniel 5~0,000 IDns at Georgetown," southeastern California:.
provements to the post home
spokesman
said
will be discussed. Those Sublett, Middleport, are the
0
Strike votes have been taken
Wednesday.
announcing
the
birth
of
their
plaMing to attend are to
11
N
That 's over 1 million tons at other farms, .Grossman
contact Paul Casci so that the first child, a seven pound, two
said.
proper amount of food can be ounce son, Bryan Edward, · of coal ' and if we had not had
L
Ahout 95 percent of the U·.
born at 8:10p.m. on Jan. 23 the market uncertainties S. winter iceberg lettuce crop
plaMed.
y
at the Holzer Medical Center. caused by the EPA sulfur Is grown in t.he Imperia)
c;.wo~eFrum
Mrs. Sublett is the former regulations, this most recent Valley, and a prolonged
Two
Styles.
Bea. Jay Autherson. Grand· layoff would not have strike could lead to severe
our Roast Beef and Roast Ham ·s andwiches start with
specially selectecf USDA inspected meats . The meat is
parents are Mr. and Mrs. occw-red," he said.
Colonial white
sliced thin and STACKED HIGH on a sesame seed bun .
The latest layoffs bring lettuce shortag~ s.
Ralph Mays, Jaspar, and
There ' is plenty of lean meat nutrition that the entire
or Mediterranean Oak.
Mrs. Beulah Autherson , work force reductions a(
family needs daily .
(C:ontinuedfrompage I)
Racine. Great · grandparerts Consolidation's eastern Ohio
SEE US TODAY
replacement of the open grid are Mr. and Mrs. Joseph operations w 724 durin~ the
deck with a partially filled Emrick, Piketon, imd Mrs. past two years, mostly
Try Our Drive-Thru I nlllllnt Service!
concrete deck. He said that in Lydia Hysell, Racine.
~mong
surface mining
MEETING OFF
order to allow traffic to
employees, the company
The regular meeting of the
continuously cross the ~---------, said.
Big Bend CB Club scheduled
Hours
bridge, one side will be
Because
the
EPA for this evening at 7:30 p.m.
CHESTER,
0.
Weekda Ys 7: JU -} : UU P .M .
completed at a time.
regulations would require has been cancelled.
Sc1t. i' : )O tii 4 : 0U P .M .
Later, in reference to a
985-3301
Pomeroy, Ohio
question regarding vibrations
causing separation of con·
.crete, possibly caused by
SUNDAY .
traffic going over the bridge,
'
REVIVAL at the House of
Kahle said this could happen Prayer and Praise, Uberty
Consolidating domestic subsidiaries of the
and admitted that the final Ave., Pomeroy, for one week
product would prohlibly not beginning 7:30 p.m. Sunday ·
be as good as if the bridge with services at that hour
were closed entirely to each evening. There will be
traffic.
gue5! speakers . and special
Gallagher also reported music.
in the slate of Ohio, at the close of business on December 31, 1978 published in response to
that the Shadle Bridge is one
call made by Comptroller of the Currency, under title 12, United Slates Code, Section !61.
of six bridges in the state Student~ going
being given the highest
Charter number 1960
National Bank Region Number' 4
priority by his department to· China soon
for replacement. He said an
SPRINGFIELD, Ohio (AP )
Statement of Resources and Liabilities
application for $17.6 million _ Four students who are part
has been made to the Federal of Wittenberg University's
Thousands of dollars - - - - - Highway Administration to East Asian studies progr'!fll
Cash and due from depository institutions .... ..... .. . . ... ...... .. ... ...... $2,~7 ,000;00
replace
the bridge. He said are part of the first trip to
U.S. Treasury securities ... ·.. .. .. . .. . .. ..... . .. .... . . . ... , ..... . ....... .. 9,001,000.00
If you come to a participating·H&amp;R Block office
the current renovation China by United States
Obligations of States and political
•
before February 1st. 1979, we·ll do your 1040A
project will bring the bridge students since the U. S.
subdivisions in the United States ...... .. . ... ......... .... ...... ........... I ,891 ,000.00
Short Form for only $7.50, and then we 'll do
up to date "until it can normalized relations with the
All other securities . ............. .... .. . .. . . , .. . .. . . . .. .. .. .. . . .. . . . . .. .
53,000.00
any state or local return for even less. Remem·
Peking government.
eventually be replaced."
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
ber. you mu st come in before February 1st.
While
the
DOH
officials
They
are
among
22
students
under agreements to resell .. , ........... .. ..... . ....... . , .. . ... : . ...... 2,050 000.00
feeling
that
participating
in
the
program,
expressed
their
Loans, Total (excluding unearned income) . .. . .. , ..... .. ... . 11,936,000.00
'
the bridge ' is safe, many of · sponsored by the Coimcil on
Less : Allowance for possible loan losses..... ... .. ..... . .. ... ... 97,000.00
the
·people present had their International Education
Loans, Net : ... ..... . ..... ................ . ........ . , ... .... ......... 11,839 000.00
doubts.
Exchange,
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures , and
'
THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE
Among
those
present
were
Only Michigan State
other assets representing bank premises .. . . .. .... . ......... ... .. .. . .. .. . . . 303,000.00
• School Board President University and the University
All other assets .. .... ....... . ...... .. . .. ....... .......... .. ........... .. . 226,000.00
618 E. MAIN ST.
2nd &amp; BROWN ST.
Harry Siders and Supt. Jerry of washington, with fiv e
TOTAL ASSETS ... . ... .. . .. . . ...... .. . .... .. ...... . .......... .. ...... f2Htonoooo - - - - POMEROY,O.
MASON. W.Va .
Brewster who reported that students each, have larger
Demand deposits of individuals, prtnshps., and corps . , .. . .... . . . , . .. , . . . .1.... 5,627,000.00
'
Open 9 A.M. to
,OPEN TUES
at least 750 students on · 13 delegations on th~ trip.
6 P.M. Weekdays,
Time and savings deposits of individuals,
.
Ill
school
buses
cross
the
span
The
Wittenberg
par· 9·5 Saturday
THURS. &amp; SAT.
partnerships, and corps ... ... ........ . ......... ..... , .. , . ... . .. .. . .. .. 16,640 000.00
Ill
PHONE 992·3795
9 A.M. · 5 P.M.
one way dally,
ticipants are Jeffrey F-ilcik of
Deposits of United Slates Government . .. .. .... .. . ........... ... .... .. .. . ... . . 6'000.00
PHONE 773·9128
! : Deposits of States and political subdivisions
In
his
presentation
,
Cincinnati,
Lil!da
Might
of
'
G~llagher mentioned that Canfield, Christine Dalgetty
in the United States .... .. . .. .. .. . ... . .. . ... ... ... .. .... .... .. .. .. ... .. . 2,315 000.00
Appointment ·Available Bu1 Not Necessary
I ll
school
buses crossing the of London, England, and
Certified and officers' checks .. . ...... . . . . . . . . . .. .... . ..... .. ... ..... . ..... 114:000.00
bridge would receive priority Phillips Winter of Macatawa
Total Deposits ........... . ...... . ..... ..... ... ..... . .. , .... .. .. ........ 24,702,000.00
over
other vehicles. He also Park, Mich.
Total demand deposits . .. .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. .. . .. . . .. . .. 6 409 ()QQ,OO
Total time an~ savings deposits ..... . .. . . . ... ...... .. . .... . 181293,000.00
said
would emergency
be given top vehicles
priority. · •----------'"'!'ll!llll!llll!llll!llll!llll!llll!llll!llll!llll!llll!llll!llll!llll!llll!llll!llll!llll!llll!llll!ll•
All other ltablllttes ...................... . . . .. .. .. . ...... . ...... . .......... 142,000.00
To ensure the safety of
TOTAL LIAB,I.LITIE;S (excluding subordinated notes
those
crossing the bridge,
and debentures ).. . . ......... . ... , .. .. . ..... .. ..... . . .. . .......... . .. $24,844,000.00
others suggested that truck
'
traffic
be
rerouted .
Common stock :
Especially
trucks
carrying
!::: ... a. No. shares authorized 12,000
coal
to
power
plants.
One
b. No. shares outstanding 12,000
(par value ) . ·.. . ... _.......... _........ . $300,000.00
·person
suggested
that
they
be ·
Oa. &lt; Surplus
.. . . . ........ ..... .. . . . .. ... ... . ....... . ......... . ...... . , .. .. .. 1,500,000.00
rerouted
through
Ohio.
IU oC
Undivided profits and reserve for contingencies
·
u
Gallagher ·said that there
and other capital reserves .. ·. . ....... .. ..... . .. , ....... . . , .... .. .. , ..... .. . 766,000.00
no plans to reroute the
are
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL .... .. ........ .. . . ... . .... .. .. . .. .. ..... ..... $2,566,0\)Q.OO
traffic,
butthat the idea could
TOTAL LIABIIJTIES AND EQUITY CAPITAL ... . . . .. . . ... . . . ..... .. . . . . $27,410,000.00
be studied.
•

·plans ready for ·legislators

CETA funds red.uced, 29 Gallians .affected
BY LARRY EWING
GALLIPOLIS - New fed eral
regulations governing the operation of .
the Comprehensive Employment and
Training Act (CETA) and a reduced
budget has led to the lay-off of 37
percent of those participating in the
program in Gallia County.
The termination of 29 of. the 7~
CETA workers in the co unty will
become effective on March 2. Those
affected were notified Friday. ·

· According to County Administrator Joe
· Alley tbe reduction in manpower was
brought about by a cut in federal
funding of the program on the coWtty
level of $186,6lli.
•·
According to Alley, the 37 percent
cutback in emplnvment of r~&gt;'I'A.
Workers will affect service throughout
the system of county services . The layoffs extend from secretarial workers to
sanitation personnel.
Alley's office is currently working

to reschedule and redistribute the
remaining. workers throughout Gallia
County offices and departments.
Alley said Friday that thos'e
'affecte d by the lay-off would
imr0 ediately
be elig ible
for
unemployment compensa tion· paid
through the federal goverrunent.
The schedule of lay-()ffs was based
on a reverse seniority system. Those on
the program longest were the first to be
terminated .

The count y admini!itr ~t n r ...::-~i ,. thrtl

those employed in the future would be
governed by new wage guidelines.
Participants will be limited to a
maximum salary of $3.29 per hour, and
will be eligible for empioyn)ent !hrough
the program for no more than . 18
months during a fi ve yea r period.
Some of those affected by the layoff had been on the program for close to
three years - some making nearly $5
pe r hour.

,...
tmts
+

HOSPITAL NEWS

VOL 13 NO. 52

S~illoDAY,

GALLIPOLIS- POINT PLEASANT

'

JANUARY 28, 1979

...:· :;.~" j
~'""
___..,
.._,..........

_.

......

Repairs

Social

1

I Calendar!

$7.50

Special reduced
price for Short
Form income tax
returns

POMEROY NATIONAL BANK .

H&amp;R BLOCit

-...
:!:
...

'ELBERFELD$

...
&gt;-· c

:.

oC

Ci

z

oC

III:

0

!
I

Amounts outstanding as of report date:
Time certificates of deposit in denominations of $100,000
or more .... , ........... . . .......... .. ..... .. . .. .... ......... , ... .. ... 2,100,000.00
Average for 30 calendr days (or calendar month ) ending with report date:
Total deposits ..... , .. .. ...... , ... .. ..... .... . ....... . ..... ....... .. : . 24,691,000.00
I, Joan Wolfe, Assistant Cashier, of the above-named hank do hereby declare that this
Report of Condition is true and correct to the best of my knowledge and belief.
Joan Wolfe
January 17, 1979

We, the undersigned directors attest the correctness of this statement of resources and
liabilities. We declare that it has been examined by us, and to!he best of our knowledge and
belief is true and correct.
,
Edison Hobstetter
Warren Pickens - Directors
HoraceKarr

Also present was Del.
Jimmy Joe Wedge of Mason
County who urged the ell·
zenry to write U.S. Senators
Robert Byrd and Jennings
Handolph, Cong. John Slack
as well as state lawmakers
and let them know that they
want the bridge to be
replaced.
l!e expressed his gratitude
to the DOH officials for
holding the hearing.
· Other notables present
included : State Senator Mike
Shaw, Delagates John Reed,
Dan Shumate and W.F .
" Bill" Carmichael, Point
Pleasant
Mayor John
Musgrave, County Com·
missioners Bob Po"'ers,
Michael whalen and Charles ·
~~ Horsey " Fowleri Circuit
Clerk Howard Schultz,
Sheriff James Hall and
several Point Pleasant City
Councilmen .
.

~

OPEN FRIDAY,NIGHT TIL 8
•SAVE FRIDAY NIGHT AND ALL DAY SATURDAY
ON MAN( ITEMS OF READY TO WEAR FOR YOU
AND YOUR FAMILY AND FURNISHINGS·FOR YOUR .
HOME .
-cHECK THURSDAY'S PAPER FOR SPECIAL SALE
PRICES

Elberfelds In· Pomeroy

HOMER HYSELL, left, receives special recognition plaque from Coach
Charles Chancey during Rriday night's second annual Meigs High School
Hall-of-Fame induction ceremonies in Morrison Gym at Rock l)prings. See
~ for story and additional pictures .

DONALD WOLFE, left, received a special award during Friday night's
second annual Meigs High School Hall-&lt;&gt;f·Fame activities in Morrison Gym
at Rock SPrings. Charles Hamilton, president·of \he Meigs Athletic Boosters,
presented the plaque. See C~ for story and additional pictures.

Appoint .Evans .bimk director
GALUPOLIS - Morris Haskins,
of the Hol zer Foundation for Tri.State
president and chairman of the hoard of
Health Care : organizer and past
the Ohio Valley Bank, announced
chai r· 1an of the Galli a County
Saturday the appointment of Merrill L.
American Cancer Society Century
Evans to the bank's board of directors.
Club ; a pa•t director of the Jones Boys,
Mr, Evans will replace his father,
Inc.. and active supporter of 4-H in
Emerson E. Evans, who recently
Gallia County.
resigned as a director to become the
Evans is presently an active officer
bank's consuHant.
and a director of Carter and Evans,
Evans' early days were spent far·
Inc,: Carter and Evans Transportation,
ming and in 1955 he became associated
Inc.: Concerted Investments, Inc.;
with Evans Packing Co. Later, he
Planned Properties, Inc.; Gailia
became an officer and a director of this
Development , Inc.; Smith Leasing &amp;
company, serving in these capacities
Sales, Inc.; Evans Enterprises, Inc.; M
until 1972 when it was sold to Land&amp; T Investments, Inc., and Quail Creek,
mark. ·
Inc.
Evans, his wife, Charla and son,
Evans is a charter member of the
Gallipolis Planning Commission;
Matthew, reside in Charolais Hills. He
charter member and tru•tee of the
is also the father of Jay and Alan Evans
Community Improvement Cor·
who are both employed by Carter &amp;
poration; member and former director · Evans Transportation: and a daughter ,
of the Gallipolis M ea Chamber of
Jodi Davis.
Commerce ; vice chairman and trustee

GALLIPOLIS - John Paul Jones ,
been charged ,in
connection with . the Wednesday
morning armed robbery of Zim's
Ashland Service Station, Kanauga.
Arrested Friday night by Gallia
County Sheriff's Department Deputies,
Jones has been charged with armed
robbery.
According to a report filed by the
department, at 3:18a.m. Wednesday,
. two subjects tfl'red the station, one of

in

PRICE 25 CENTS

them carrying a long-barreled gun, and
made off with approximately $45.
Clinton Murphy , 20, Eureka Star
Route , was arrested Thursday night
and charged with complicity in armed
robbery .
Murphy appeared Friday in
Gallipolis Municipal Court where a
. preliminary hearing date of January 29
was established. Bond for Murphy was
set lit $20,000.

years in AgrtcuJture and · also the
surrOlmding area, and ;
"Whereas, the people of Gallia
County would like to show their
appreciation, and ;
"Therefore, be it resolved , that
Janimry 28, 1979, is hereby declared as
"Bill Smjth Day."
The ' proclamation is signed by
Gallia County Commissioners Paul D.
Niday, ,James C. Saunders and Lonni e
W. Burger.
An appreciation reception for Mr.
and Mrs. William P. Smith will be held
t&lt;Jday from 2:30 to 4::10 p.m. in the Rio
Grand e Co llege and Co mmunity
College Dining Hail.
Sm ith, former Gallia Coan ty
Extension Agent and current Jackson
Area Extension Ag e nt , in farm
management. will retire on Jan. 31 .

Eleanor Thomas to ·he
honored F ehruary 17

POMEROY - Eleanor Thomas
will be named "Woman of the Year" at
an awa.rds banquet to be held at Royal
Oak Park on Feb. 17 at 6:30p.m. The
event will be sponsored by the Pomeroy
EXTENDED FORECAST
Monday thrnugh Wednesd ay , Chamber of Commerce.
Eleanor Thomas graduated from
mostly cloudy with a chan ce of snow
Rut
land
High School where her
flurri es each day . Afternoon highs l!i
Mr.
and Mrs. Clair Taylor, stili
parents.
th e 30s. Overnight lows mid teens to
reside. It was in Rutland that she met
mid 20s.
and later married James Thomas.
·-:·:-:-:.;.:::-:::::.:::-:::::.:::::::::·:·:·&gt;:·:::·:·:·:·::::::::::::;.::::;:::;:::::::::::::;.::;:,
Aft er residing in Steubenville and
Columbus for several yea rs, the
Thomas · family returned to Meigs
Co unty in 1969 to make their hom e in
Pomeroy, James, affectionately known
by friends as "Jim," became Plant
Accountant at Foote Min eral Co.. at
New Haven. W. Va. Mrs. Thomas acPOMEROY - Tickets for a dinner
cepted employment with the Fanners
wbe held by the 12th Masonic District Bank and Savings Co.
in the Rio Grande College Cafeteria at
Before returning to Pom eroy, Jim
7:30p.m. on Saturday , Feb. 10, are now
was Chief Accountant at the Weinm an
available.
·
Pump Co., in Columbus. Eleanor was in
Expected to be on hand at the
rea l estate sales.
dinner will be Daniel E. Iceman, Grand
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas reside in the
Master of Ohio Mason s. A number of former McQuigg property on Lincoln
other Grand Lodge officers and their
Hill in Pomeroy. They have three
wives have indicated that they will
children who include Mrs . Dale
attend .
(Karen) Saunders, Gallipolis : James,
Tickets may be secured from the Jr., of Syracuse, and John , at home.
secretary of any Lodge in the four
Mrs. Thomas fo und her niche in
counties, Jackson, Gailia , Meigs and
Meigs County in 1972 when she was
Lawrence, for the dinner at $5 each , appointed executive director of the
acco rding to Jame s Clatworthy , Meigs County Council on Aging. After
· Middleport, a nd Andrew Lemley, 'conducting a survey on th e needs of
Gallipolis, who are District Deputy Meigs County's Senior Citizens, she was.
Grand Masters of the 12th Masomc instrumental in obtain ing funding for
Distri ct .
the operation of a Meig s County Senior

Citizens' Center. The popularity of the
Center, as well as the need for its
services, is exemplified by the fact that
110 senior citizens visited the Center
during its first month of operation while
I Contin ued on page A-2 )

Tickets available

for Masonic event

•
Charge second man zn
robbery
29, ViniDn, has

n~ rti.-.i r;;~firm

GALLIPOLIS - Today, Sunday,
Jan. 28, 1979, has been proclaimed by
th e Gal li a Co unty Board of
Commissioners as "Bill Smith Day."
The motion to declare the
proclamation, which was un animously
passed Thursday by the three member
hoard, reads:
" We,
the Gaiiia
County
Commissioners do here by declar e
Sunday, January 28, 1979 as Bill Smith
Day, and ;
"Whereas, Bill Smith, Jackson
Area Extensi'on agent , Farm
Management, and ;
"Wher eas, Bill Smi th , former
Gallia County Extension Agent, has
worked faithfully witli the Agricultural
an d Ohio cooperative Extension
Service for a period of 31 years, and;
"Whereas, Bill Smith, who has
served his area people for the past 31

SANDWICHES

1

for

Gallia proclaims
'Bill Smith Day~

ROAST BEEF OR ROAST HAM

Crow's Family Restaurant

~e eligibl ~

MIDDL,EPORT- POMEROY

Announce b'

BAUM TRUE VALU

To

the CETA program in Gallia County, a
persOn must be a resident of the county '
be economically disadvantaged, and
have been unemployed for from 10 to 15
weeks (depending upon the Title
fuoding) of the preceding 20 weeks.
Instituted in Gallia County in Sept.
1974, the federally funded program was
designed . to suppl y temporary
employment and train ing to the
unskilled .in areas of high
unemployment.

tntittt

' '·

Vanity &amp; Top
Combination

Those currently working under the
program not affected by the lay-off will
continue at their same hourly rate until
they are ·terminated.
Alley said . Friday that new
regulations governing the operation of
the CETA program call for a greater
emphasis. on training.
Future operation of the program
will include classroom and vocational
training, counciling, and instruction in
job pla cement skills.

MERRILL L. EVANS

COMMISSION MEETS TUESDAY
· GALLIPOLIS- The Gallipolis City
Commission will meet in special
session Tuesday, Jan. 30, at 8 p.m. in
the Municipal Court Room.
The commission will meet fo r ·a
budget study session.

A series of po~aits focusing on Unit D

ELEANOR THOMAS

•

The changing fac·e of GSI
PART 1- BACKGROUND
By Chris Gallup,
Psychology Assistant
Many changes have occurred at
the Gallipolis State Instltule during
the past three years. The populalioll
there has dropped drainatlcally;
residents are now ability grouped to
Improve their performance and
Increase
administrative . ef·
fecllveness; 'the direction Is toward
training and away from mere
custodial care.
.
A lot has happened that makes
GSI a ·different place for residents
and staff.
How GSI Is dlffeteot. and what
that means for both those connected
with the Institute and for the CO!"·
munlty as a whole Is the focus of a
series of articles beginning today In·
the Times-Sentinel.
·
. The spotlight will be on Unit D·
tone of five administrative subdlvlsloni) as this Unit demonstrates
well the changing face uf GSI. lntereatlngly, residents who go down
town to stores or restaurants on their
own from ihe GSI are usually from

floor , the same room of the-same cot·
tage or building.
Quite a mismatch .
At the same time there was an
invisible line down .the middle of GSI :
one side for women, the other for men:
GALLIPOLIS - Before April, 1976,
Men 's coitages iypically were on one
John, a multiply handicapped,
end of grounds , women's on the other;
profoundly retarded individual could be
interaction was limited and de facto
found residing next to Bill, who could
segregation
of the 'sexes existed.
read, write, get around and generally
The
administration
was centralizes
take care of himself, and whose main
were
the
professional
disciplines
problem was occasional seizures. Both
(social
work,
etc.
).
As
a
result the
persons · lived along with others at
organizational
machinery
wa
s cum·
different ability levels, .on .the same
bersome and slow moving .
In general, GSI remain ed a
custodial
care facility. The emphasis
Public hearing set
was _upon keeping people safe and
sec.ure : that is, well-clothed, well-fed,
Wednesday, Feb. 21
housed comfortably and cleanly, and
.
tak
en care of mcdicull~. ~'cw , if any
GALLIPOIJS - The Gallipolis City
programs
existed to habilitate or im·
Planning Commission will hold a public
prove
the
resident'S level of funchearing on Wednesday, Feb. 21, at 7:30
tioning
.
in the city building.
All the factors noted ahove: the
The meeting will be·held on behalf
mismatching,
the sex segregation, th e
of' Mrs. Stanley Earwood who has
admini
stration
structure and th e
requested that the.present road named ·
custodial
care
model
made it very hard
Hixon Rd. in front of her residence be
ff\mt.inueu on puf!o A-2 1
named ".Birch Lane."
Urtlt D.
The following gives a little
background on Unit D, unitization
and how the cltanges started.

as

•

.

\

'

!;,..,

'be'

\

~,,
i~:

from Columbus and South ern Electric and Ohio Power: as
well as by members of the United Steel Workers, Un~ted
Mine Workers, ~nd Communication Workers of Amertc~ .
During a rally held at the V.F.W: Hall prior to the marc~ 11
was announced that a negotiation session between the union
and the cooperative has been scheduled for this Friday .

WITH APPROXIMATELY 200 participating, Local
2359of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers
(l.B.E.W.) conducted a peaceful march through the
business district of Gallipolis Saturday. Local 2359, which
. has been on strike against Buckeye Rural Electri~
Cooperative since Dec.. 1, was joined in the m~rch by l?ca!s

''

. '·

"! '

I

•

J

'

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="812">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11458">
                <text>01. January</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="50304">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="50303">
              <text>January 26, 1979</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="99">
      <name>denney</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1080">
      <name>showalter</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
