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                  <text>lt-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tllursday; Sept. !8, 1980

.

Massive :nlanhunt hegins for Somoza killers
ASUNCION, Paraguay (AP)
l'lrapayan authorities pressed a
IDUIIve. manhunt today for the
guerrilla aquad that assassiNited
ouated Nicaraguan dictator
llnt*•to SomOia In a hail ot
IIIICIIine-Cun and bazooka fire so
devutaUng his mlBti'ess could Identify tbe body only through his wristwttcb.
Somclll's financial adviser and
chauffeur also died In the Wed~Y morning . attack in the
Paraguayan capital.
Police clll!ed the Asuncion airport
and sealed the country's borders
-.rith ArgenUna and Bra#! in an effort to keep the attackers from
leaving the country. Paraguayan
autborlties say they think six people
.• IQok ll8rl in the fusilade that left the
K-Y8aMM Scmaza riddled with
some two dozen bullets and his
1lmoulllne demoll.sbed.
Authorities say Somoza' s
bodyguard~, who returned the at·
tacllen fire from a car trailing the
OUited atronpnan'slimosine, wounded ooe of the •!W!IIants. The goverIIIII8nt baa called on citizens to
report anyone seeking medical at•
tentt.on for a bulljlt wound.
..
· Tbe ·right-wing government of
~·&lt;'~: :. . :· Paraguayan President Alfredo
· ~"". ·· su-ner, the friend who granted
Somclll uylum after his ouster by
Nlcaragua'a Sandini8ta guerrillas in
1J'I9, dlatributed photographs of a
man and a woman believed to have
taken part In the ambuah. The two,
identified as Hugo Alfredo Irurzun
and Silvia Mercedes Hodgers, were
delcrlbed as members of the
Peoples Revolutionary Army, a leftwing Argentine guerrilla group.
Offlclala offered a reward of
ftQ,OOO for lnforn\ation leading to the
capture of the two, whoae photos
were picked out of police files by wit~ to the alaylng . .
Police aald ~ persons had
been arrested for "investigation in
cmnectlon with the •!W!•sfNition."
Tiley gave no details.
Interior Minister Augusto Montanaro described the alaying as "a
crhnlna1 attack almost certainly
pe.pea aled by a group of foreign'
terrorists heavily armed with
ba•ookas; automatic · rifles and
platolll of U.S. fabrication."
In Washington, the Carter ad- ·
mlntstration, accused by Somaza of
contrlbaUng to his downfall by
faWDg to provide suppofl, reacted
with cauUon. "Naturally we deplore
any e•ee•"naU.oo no matter where lt
occurs or who is affected," said ·
· apr*emwnJobnTrattner-.
NlcaraguanB by the thousands
gretJted JleW8 of Somaza's death by
pouring Into the streets for
celelnti0119. Violet&amp; Chamorro, the
,pdow of Blain joumallst Joaquin
Olamorro, said: "Sooner or later
God had to do justice." Chamorro's
· deatli, blamed on Somoza's governrilent, sparked the final, bloody
upr1a1na which toppled Somaza In
July lfl9 and ended a years of
Sclmola family rule in Nicaragua.
· Sclm.u'a mangled body was taken
from a holpital to the villa where he
had lived with his mistress, Dinorah

Sampson - a Nicaraguan - and an
undetermined number of bodyguar-ds. Tile woman was taken to the
hospital to identify the body, but was
Wl&amp;ble to recognize it, .,Ollce said.
She identified on his ann a wristwatch he custOmarily wore:
1be .Paraguayan government
identified the other. men killed as
driver--bodyguard Cesar Gallardo, a
Nicaraguan, and financial adviser
Joaeph Peittner, a Colombian.
Sources said Somoza' s son
Anastaaio, a fotmer colonel in the
Nic,raguan National Guard, would
arrive in the Paraguayan capital
today. They would not discount the
possibility that he would take his
father's body to Miami for burial.
Somoza first fied Nicaragua for
Miami, where he owned considerable real estate, but left the
United States to avoid the possibility
of enradition.
The attack occurred at 10 a.m.
time as Somaza, Pelttner and
Gallardo followed by three
bodyguards in an escort car, left the
walled villa on a trip to downtown
Asuncion some 15 to 20 minutes
away.
The two cars had gone only seven
blocks when they were Intercepted
by a Chevrolet pickup with three occupants who opened fire with
automatic weapons at Somoza's
vehicle, police said.
·
The bodyguards in the escort car
Immediately retumed the fire, but
Somoza's car suddendly ·exploded,
PTA MEETS TONIGHT
The BradburY PTA will meet at
7:30 this evening with Principal Don
Hanning to speak pn school policies.
Teachers will he introduced during
the open house observance.

hit by a bazooka shell fired from a
nearby house, pollee and witnesses
said.
Several more explosions were
heard, witnesses said, and the
pickup sped out of sight. The vehicle
was found abandoned several blocks
away. It contained ·a bazQC1ka,

· several submachine guns and
pistols, wigs . and jackets, pollee
said.
Three attackers who had fired
from the house ran to a nearby
avenue and stopped at gunpoint a
car driven by Julio Carbone, an
Argentine architect wllo lives in

SHOP EL·BERFELDS.

FRIDAY, SEPT. 19th and SATURDAY, SEPT. 20th.

For These Special Values
OPEN FRIDA

NIGHT
- TILL - 8
-

Four out of 12 questions de;~it with that, prompting
C.arter to say he does not consider Reagan a racist and
to reject any assertion that he is running a m~an campaign . .
"I think my campaign is very moderate in its tone,"
hesaid.
.
But what concerned the Reagan camp was the
opening statement. Reagan's campaign director,
William Casey, called. it "an obvious partisan annoWicement" and asked that the Republican be given
equal time Wider the Federal Communications Act.
Network news executives seemed concerned, too.
CBS News President William' Leonard said the ·
statement was "preity obviously self-serving. I was a
little bit shaken, frankly."
And David Burke, vice president of ·ABC News, said
it "did not distinguish the press conference in the
traditional sense, And we will keep that in mind when
requests are made In the future."
The ·equal-time law specifies that broadcasters who
permit candidates to "use" their stations must give an
equal opportwtity to other candidates for the same of-

•

e

'

WRANGLER $1995

For the Cool Mornings! Evenings
CHILDREN'S
-

BLUE DENlM
JEANS ./

JACKET SALE
sweat shirt jackets- windbreakers ·
lined jackets· unlined jackets.

:voL3t

at

NO Ill

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

lice. An exception is coverage of "bona fide news even.
ts."
Despite the opening statement, the president's 59th
news conference since taking office was dominated by
Carter's campaign conduct.
Itl Atlanta on Tuesday - two weeks after Reagan
had mentioned the Klan - Carter told a partisan
audience of black sPutherners that the campaign has
seen '.'the stirrings of hate and the rebirth of c~e words like 'states rights"' and the Klan.
"Hatred has no place in this coljlltry," Carter added.
"Racism has no place in this COWltry."
But when pressed on the dlatter Thurtday, the
president said he did not believe Reagan was " running'
a campaign of racism or hatred and I think my campaign is very moderate in its tone."
" I did not raise the issue of the Klan nor did I raise
the issue of states' rights," he said. " And I believe it's
best to leave these words, which are code words to
many people in our COWitry who suffered from
discrimination in the past, out of the election this
year."

Terry. cotton/polyester, nylon, popl in and

enttne
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1980

Band assistant still sought

Tie vote blocks
hiring motions

NfW SHIPMENT

10 hurt in missile silo explosion

METAL CABINETS

=~c~t

your aportswear

-

Todoy'J octive ,patsweo looks
stat a1 YOU! lee!.
AnC:I Hush,Pupples • sport Vices ·
prom 'l lt more lhon just CO$meties. Durable poriOI'monce
1eofUf95 01'9 1r0rilf01'med
inlo l!ghtwelgrot . comrortoble CCJUOI5. Mck91he
mo5t ~~ o1 vos word!Cbe ol a comlcrtobiiJ
prjce.

I

DAMASCUS, Ark. - An explosion rocked an underground Titan II
missile silo early today, sh~ting flames into the sky and injuring at
least 10 maintenance workers, the Air Force said. The Strategic Air
Corrunand would not say whether the missile carried a nuclear
warhead.
Gov. Bill Clloton said Air Force officials told him that no nuclear explosion had occurred and that one could not have occurred.
It was not Immediately known whether the missile ltseH or only fuel
exploded. The silo, covered by concrete doors, was " just a big rubble
inside" after the blast, Clinton said.
The explosion occurred as a maintenance crew tried to neutralize a
fuel leak In the first-stage of the missile, said SAC spokesman CoL
Richard Kline.
·

WARDROBES - UTILITY
CABINETS - CHINA CABINETS
BASE CABINETS

Hlilh

-Baked Enamel Finish
-Heavy Steel Construction
-Many Uses Throughout the Home

"

I

Cuban hijackers returned to U.S.

-

a&gt;LUMBIA, S.C . ....: With the cooperation of the Cuban govenunent,
• two disenchanted Cuban refugees are back in the United States - held

on $750,000 bond each - to face trial on air piracy charges and a

SAVE 20%
·ELBERFELD$ WAREHOUSE
.

I like
the service.
I like
tlte peotle.
That's why
hank at

SALE

Wrangler and Mr. Leggs Brands
Two pockets · long tails. Colorful
plaids. small (14· 14112), medium (1515'12), large (16·16'h) and extra large
( 17·17'1•). Friday &amp; Saturday Special
Price.

99

$

SLACKS -SKIRTS ,
. ~ BLAZERS
·-

-

-

All .of our boys'- leans Included for this
sale - Corduroys• - blue denims .
painters leans.

REG. $14.00.... SALE $11.20
REG. s17.00 .... SALE $13.60
REG. s22.00.... SALE s11.60
\RLQo $28.00 .. " SALE $22,40

CHAIR SALE
· Lay-Away for Christmas at
these Special Sale Prices.
Swivel
rockers,
rocker/ recllners, wall-away recliners
&amp; recliners.
Large variety of styles and
fabrics.

Regular sizes 8 to 18 - slims and huskies. Plus :
student sizes 26 to 30, lengths 28 to 36.
Basic and fashion styles In straight legs and boot ,
flares.

BOYS $9.95 JEANS •.•• • •• , •• , • $8.15
BOYS $12.95 JEANS ••••••.•• • $10.60
BOYS $14.95 JEANS ..• • .••••• $12.20
BOYS $15.95 JEANS ••• , •• , ••. $13.00
FRIDA

RDAY
SALE .

.

CARHARn

BROWN DUCK

carhartt WORK

underw~y

CHARDON, Ohio - Jury deliberations were to begin today on two
ebarges of theft In office against Geauga County·Sheriff Carl E. Hen-

BOYS' JEANS

-·-

WARDER, Ethiopia - Charred tanks, spent shells and rotting
bodies litter the landscape around this tiny oasis, symbols of what
Ethiopia claims is its ongoing war with ethnic Somali rebels and
Somali regular troops fighting for control of the Ogadeil wilderness.
Warder, a commwtity of 1,300 dwellings, boasts one of the few water
sources io the spraw)ing Ogaden wasteland. It was a major batUeground in the 1977-78 Ogaden war between Ethiopia and Somalia.
Ethiopia won the war, with the help of Soviet aid and Cuban troops,
bat it claims this oasis and other towns and military strongpoints in
the Ogaden remain targets of rebels of the Western Somali Liberation
·
Front.

Jury deliberations
TWO DAY SALE I

\ Misses Sizes B to 20.

possible life prtson sentence.
The two men are accused of hijacking a Delta Air Unes Boeing 7'll
headed from Atlanta to Columbia on Wednesday with Ill people
aboard. It was the loth hijacking In six weeks in the United States.
Most of tbem were carried out by disgruntled refugees.
The hijacking came two days. after the Cuban government announced that Cubans who left the COWitry in the "Freedom Flotilla"
this year made " one-way trips" and wamed that hijackers would be
severely punished or sent back to the United States.

Area filled with bodies, tanks

MEN'S
FLANNEL
SPORTSWEAR SPORT SHIRTS

$A.VE 20%

CLOTHES

Save these two days on our entire•
selection of Carbartt Brown Ducks.
!lib overalls - Insulated coveralls •
blanket and quilt lined lackets · snap·
on hoods - vests. R~gulilr and extre~
large sizes. All arranged for your easy
selection.. ___ _
·

PRICES
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Furniture Dept-3rd Floor

JRD ~T .• RACINE, OH.
MembP.r FDIC
) .

~-

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IIIDDUI'DRT, Ollll

- -

POMEROY, OHIO

MECHANIC STREET

The Shoe Box

FIFTEEN CENTS

-- ·-

5 66

REG. $6.00 ............ SALE $4.79 .
REG. $8.00 ............ SALE $6.39
REG. $11.00 ••• , •• ;, •.. SALE $8.79
REG. $17.00 ••....•.•• SALE $1,3.59'

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

When it was pointed out that Ca~r' s secretary of
Health and Human Services, Patricia Roberts Harris,
first questioned Reagan's endorsement by the Ku Klux
Klan - an endorsement that Reagan already had
rejected at the time - the president said:
"I am not blaming Governor Reagan. That is
precisely the point. The press seems to be raising this
point.''
He also said: "I do not indulge in attacking the per-sonal integrity of my opponents and hope I never
shalL"
While his campaign director was concerned about
getting ,equai time, Reagan still was trying to get Carter to join the League of Women VoterS-spo1180red
debate Sunday night between him and independeJ1t
candidate Anderson.
The fanner California governor, in a statement, said
the news conference was "Jimmy Carter's desperate
attempt to fill the empty chair at SWiday night's
debate."
" It is time for Mr. Carter to stop hiding in the Rose
(Continued on pagelo )

•

STRAIGHT LEG or BOOT LEG
Sizes 27 to -42 waist, lengths 30
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poly ester/acrylic.

_I

. WASHINGTON · (AP) - President Carter's
: nationally broadcast news conference raised not only
: I!OIIle expected ire from his Republican opponent ...,.
• whose aides called the performance a "political com: miercia\" - but also some surprt.ing concern by
· ' televisio..network executives.
·
: Carter, who has refused to take part in a televised
· debate Sunday between ·presidential candidates
: Ronald Reagan and John Anderson, held sway before
, the 'IV cameras Thursday for about 30 minutes, four of
: them devoted to an opening statement·in which he gave
: a ''load news" report on his admint.tration.
He talked about the admint.tration's bfforts on
: Mideast negotiations, the economy, noimallzation with
: China, the h~ges in Iran, autp imports, energy, and
: nuclear arms talks with the SoVIets.
• When it got down to questions, the preamble was
· liiOIItly dropped and the president was asked
: repeatedly about recent campaign statements In which
: he linked Republican nominee Reagan's pronoun: cements on states' rights and the Ku Klux Klan with
· racism and hatred.

-·

.

.

I

rented only a feW days ago, neigh-:\.
bors said, to five pe1'80118 believed to: .
be Argentines l!fld Uruguayans and;,
including at least one woman.
.
Pollee said blood waa found Inside
the house, leading to the belief that
at least one guerrilla had been woun- ·
ded.

Asuncion. He was ordered out and
the gunmen sped away in the car.
Carbone later told police that the
gunmen had been fair-skinned and
had spoken with definite Argentine
or Uruguayan accents.
The house from which the bazooka
was fired had been vacant bat was

President's conference upsets GOP

clenon.
Visiting Cuyahoga County Conunon Pleas Judge James J. McMonagle told the jury he would instruct it on legal aspects of the case
when Prosecutor John F. Norton and defense attorney Lawrence J .
Dolan finish their concluding ·remarks today.
Henderson has been sheriff in the COWity for seven years but was
defeated for a third tenn in the Republican primary election io June.

Medicaid recipients won't pay
COLUMBUS, Ohio - Ohio lawmakers have decided against
requiring Medicaid recipients to pay part of the cost for prescription
drugs and eyeglasses.
The payment provision was eliminated Thursday as the Legislature
completed work on a catchall bill covering a variety of unrelated
,
topics.
Sen. Harry Meshel, (}.Youngstown, said a section under which
Medicaid recipients would have to pay at least 50 cents for prescriptions and $1 for eyeglasses and frames should be cut. He said it could
place a hardship on elderly people and nursing home patients.
. The biU appropriated $10 million in capital improvements money to
tJie state Natural Resources Department.

Professor feels other debates out
CLEVELAND - President Carter's refusal to be part of a three-way
debate in Baltimore Sunday could kill the chances for other presidential debates this year, says a Cleveland State University professor.
Sidney Kraus, who has written books on the 1960 and 1976 presiden- ·
tlal debates, said independent candidate John B. Anderson might
blmefit from Carter's absence.

.

..
'

Weather forecast

' .)Clear tonight. Lows near 60. Mostly siumy Saturday. Highs 80-8S.
Cblnce of rain near zero percent tonight and 10 ~.rcent Saturday.
Winds southerly near 10 mph tonight.
Extended Ohio Forec•st- SWiday through Tuesday: Fair Sundsy.

&lt;h!nce of showers Monday and Tuesday. Highs from the mid-70s to
·~ow IMls. Lows from

the mid-50s to low 60s.
I

NEW FACE - This Pomeroy structure, built in 1891, and now an annex for the Elberfeld Department Store, E. Main St., Pomeroy, is taking
on restored beauty thanks to the efforts of the Meigs County Jaycees. The
facelifting is being provided by the Jaycees who are permitted to use the
second floor of the structure for their headquarters. During the work
processes, it has been found that some of the accent points of the 1891
structure, originally a jewelry store, are made of metal.

Three districts
still on strike
By The Associated Press
Classes resumed in Hubbard
schools and buses hegan running in
the Edison l..Qcal district Thursday,
but three strikes continued to
disrupt classes for more than 10,000
Ohio students.
.T!Je walkoutt continued in Boardman and Miamisburg and at a
school for the mentally retarded in
Mahooing County.
The 161 striking teachers in Hubbard began returning to their
classrooms after ratifying a new
contract early Th~y following a
late-night bargaining session. Base
pay under the ·agreement was
boosted from $10,280 to $11,400.
The walkout, which affected 3,100
students, began on Sept. 3. Teachers
ignored a back-to-work order from
Trwnbull County Common Pleas
Judge.David Griffith and the school
board had threatened to seek an injWiction.
A tentative contract agreement
was reached with bus drivers in the
Edison Local district in Jefferson
CoWity oo Thursday, ending a
walkout that began last Friday.
Superintendent Harry Swartzlander said virtually ail of the 4,100
students in the largely rural district
ride buses to school.
He said all issues between the
district and Ohio Association of
Public School Employees Chapter 35
have been settled.
Details of the tentative agreement
were not released, but Swartzlander

said it would be with the full chapter,
not only the bus drivers. The chapter
also includes cooks, custodians and
other non-teaching personnel.
In the statement, Swartzlander
implied that the 46 bus drivers and
mechanics lost their bid to become a
separate bargaining wtit apart from
the full chapter. H.ll said that was the
·only issue in the walkout.
Talks continued Thursday in Boardman between school officials and
about 300 striking teachers. A wtion
spokeswoman said talks resumed at
1:30 p.m. after breaking off at midnight.
She said the Boardman Education
Association accepted two of four
counter-proposals from the board on
non-economic issues and was
waiting for offers on three other
issues. Salary demands have been
about $500 apart.
The 9-day-old strike has affected
5,300 students.
_

Lottery winner
CLEVELAND (AP) -The winning numbers selected Thursday
night lo the Ohio Lottery's daily
game "Tbe Number" and Its weekly
"Pyramid" and "Lucky Buck"
games are:
lbeNumber- 298
Pyramid-01; 539 ; 2874
Lucky Buck- 21; 969; 9508 ; 04320;
951994
The lottery reported earnlogs of
$439,233 from the money wagered on
the dally number drawing.

Two persons injured in accident
Two persons were injured during a a tree, continued over an embankment and overturned.
o:~e-vehiele accident ivnestigated
Schevalier and a passenger, Klare•
Thursday by the Gallia-Meigs Post,
Kimes, 16, Reedsville, claimed inHighway Patrol.
Called to the scene in Meigs Coun- jury and were transported by
ty on TR 'l/4 at 7:15p.m., officers private vehicle to Veterans
report a north bound auto operated Memorial Hospital for treatment.
by Maurice S. Schevalier, 18, Reed- , Schevalier was cited on a charge
sville, went ou~ of control passed off ·of excessive speed.
the right side of the roadway, struck

I

BY BOB HOEFUCH
Two motions to hire an assistant
band director were blocked by a tie
2-2 votes when the Meigs Local
School District Board of Education .
met In special session Thursday
night.
At Monday's meeting the board
could not come up with an
agreement on hiring an assistant
director, hence the special session
was called.
At last night's meeting, Superintendent David Gleason told the
board approximately 20 persons attending that the district is financially unable to employ a full-time
assistant band instructor. Gleason
said the district has $150,000 less iri
its operational budget than it
believed several weeks ago. The
problem, the SuPerintendent said,
revolves around the purchase of
$150,000 worth of certificates of
deposit in 1970.71. The certificates
were sold in 1979 to pay for a new
roof on the high school building.
Gleason reported that former
district clerk, L. W. McComas, met
with the board in executive session
recently to explain \hal the $150,000
was being · carried in the general
fund accounts. The bonrd and administrators were not aware WIUI
then that the $150,000 in certificates
was being carried in the total
general fund accoWits, Gleason
stated.
As a result the district has $150,000
less than it was believed several
months ago. Gleason said efforts
must be made to curtail spending.
A lengthy discussion was held with
some parents and with Ed Harkless,
vocal music instructor; and Douglas

Hill, new hand director, on the employment of an assistant, at last
night's meeting.
Needed repairs for some of the
district buildings were discussed by
Gleason who pointed out there is not
no\v money to make the needed
repairs.
Gleason said Charles Hollidsy,
who is serving as principal · of the
Salem Center School, could be
named to the assistant's post for an
additional $475 a year on hill present
salary.
However, parents and the music
instructors complained that
Holli~y could not leave the Salem
Center School in time to be of service
to the band in the evenings.
On a motion to name Holliday to
the post, Dr. Keith Riggs and Carol
Pierce voted yes while board members, Richard Vaughan and Bob
Snowden voted against his being
named to the position.
Snowden then moved that Jeff
Myers-a music major recom·
mended by Harkless and Hill-be
named to the position. Again a tie
vote evolved with Snowden and
Vaugluln voting in favor of Myers
while Dr. Riggs and Pierce voted · :
against Myers. The fifth board
member, Larry Powell, was not
present for the meeting.
The board accepted the
resignation of Diana Williams, a
jwtior high teacher, effective immediately. J'yirs. Williams will accepted a position in a talented and
gifted program in Florida.
Kitty Cassell and Bonnie Sue Cantrell were added to the substitute
teachers list and Diane Crosby and
Brian Windon were added to the substitute bus drivers list.
·

Assassin suspect
killed by police
ASUNCION, Paraguay (AP) Police shot and killed a leftist
guerrilla sought in the assassination
of Anastasio Sonioza and arrested
anPther. The remilins of the ousted
Nicaraguan dictator were flown
early today back to the United
States, the country he felt abandoned him in his hour of need.
Police identified the slain man as
Hugo Alfredo lrurzWI, and said he
was killed In a shootout Thursday
night in the Asuncion suburb of Lambare after he opened fire on security
forces coming to search the house in
which he was hiding. Police said
they were tipped off to Irurzun's

presence by a businessman who
recognized him from a photograph
shOwn on television.
Pollee reported the arrest of
another guerrilla suspected of
taking part in the assassination. He
was not identified. They also sai!J.
one of Iruzun's cohorts escaped
during the exchange, and that the
suburb, about nine miles south of the
capital, was sealed off.
Authorities said Irur:zun was a
member of the Argentine People's
Revolutionary Anny. The government had distributed photographs of
him and a female member of the
(Continued on page 10 )

Three youths tace B&amp;E charges here
Three Rutland area juveniles have
·been charged in Meigs County
Juvenile Court with the breaking
and entering of the Rutland
American Legion Post last Sunday
morning.
Taken from the building was a
microphone, pop an~ candy. The
juveniles were released to the
custody of their parents according to
the Meigs County Sheriff's Department.
The department investigated a
minor accident Thursday evening
that occurred on private property.
Mrs. Howard Barber, Rt. I, Reed·
sville, backed her car into the right
I

side of a pickup truck owned by Clioton Holsinger, Rt. I, Reedsville. Tile
Holsinger truck was parked in the
Barber driveway.
Traffic was tied up on SR 7 south
of Chester for a short time Thursday
evening while a wrecker was attempting to move a loaded ensllage
wagon that had rolled over a steep
embankment from a cornfield on the
east side of SR 7.
The departm:ent was notified WednesdaY · that fqur medallions from
hubcaps were taken from a vehicle
owned by Fred Kessinger, Reedsville while parked at the S)t;ate-AWay.

�3-The Dlllly Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Sept. 19, 1980
•

2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport· POmeroy, 0 ., Friday, Sept. I9, 1980

Sets ·six records

Opinions &amp;
Comments

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Jug winner becomes
' all-time mQneycham

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m E DAILV SENTINEL

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(USPS 1&amp;5-9101

DE VOTID TO lliE

INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
IAttert'of oplniiKi are welcomed. They 1bould bt Ins tbaa 300 words loac (onabj« l to reducdH by the editor) and must be 1lgned with the slpee's addreu . Name1 may be wltbbeld upoo
publkadGD. HoweVer, oa request, umes wtll be diJclosed. Leiters siM!ukt bl! In good taste, ad-

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draolo&amp; IJsueo, DOI,.......uues.

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Publlsllcd clllly u etpt S.blrday by Tbt Ohio \ 'alley Publlahlag Compaay· Muldmedla, lac.,
111 Court SL, Petmen~y. Obict4571t. Busioa1 Office Phoae stz. t iS&amp;. Ectitorlal Pbooe 19Z-U57.
Secood elat1 pot&amp;ICt paid at Pomeroy, Oblo.

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441U.
Tbt Auodaled Preu fa exclustni)' eotJUed to the use for pubiJcatlou of i'U ~:M:ws dispatches
cf'ftiJtrd to lbe oe,npaprr and also the local aewa published herein.

NaUoul adnrtillq represeatattve, Lalldoo Associates, 3111 Ellclld Ave., Cleveland, Ohio

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Publisher

RoMrt Wiqett

GeDtl'lll Mgr. ' CUy Editor

Robert Hoeflich

New• EdUor

f.

Adv. M.laqer

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(:]~

Bm~ r-T"'L-A._-r.~d •.-;;;11

Dale Rotbleb, Jr.
C.riGheeo

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Letter to editor

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·- Dear Sir:
f.

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,:
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A big thank you
J

As Helene and I prepare to leave
Pomeroy Health Care Center and
this beautiful county of Meigs, we
feel gratitude over the past few
weeks. Many Meigs Countians have
thanked us and .praised us for the
work that has been accomplished at
the center. We have worked hard,
there is no ·doubt about it, and we
loved every minute of you. Yes, no
matter how good or great a leader is,
if he does not have the co-operation
of his people he will certainly fail.
We found instant c~ration when
we came to Meigs County. Yes, we
are grateful; to our staff that we
carefully picked to care for our
loved ones, to all the volunteers, and
they are hundreds, who have at one
time or another manifested the
goodness in them by sharing themselves and their talents to our

I

residents. Grateful to the commwtity at large for being open to U.s
in every way with the sincere desire
to help or encour11ge.
All these people have made our
lives here enjoyable and our work
rewarding. We came to serVe the
people of Meigs COWlly, even for
such a short time. Helene and I have
never left a place that we did not try
to leave it a litUe better than we
found it. If we have accomplished
this we are grateful, for one of our
favorite sayings is:
"I expect to pass through this
world but once. Any good therefore
that I can do, or any kindnes that I
can show to any fellow creature, let
me do it now ... for I shall not pass
this way again.
Thank you.
s • Ron and Helene
Ron and Helen Zidian

Bill reduces
..
·trailer tax
''

The Senate has virtually completed passage of a bill
which, for a second time, tries to Correct an error that for·
ced Ohio owners of boat trailers to pay higher license fees.
Approved 31~ Tuesday was a House-passed measure
, · classifying such two-wheel utility trailers as nonvehicles.
.
-·... conunercial
They had inadvertently been placed in the conunercial
category by legislation last year which raised the price of
'•• license plates by $10.
_ The General Assembly's first bill to correct the mistake
~ ·. was vetoed by Gov. James A. Rhodes because of amend: ments which he said . would have blocked full reim•~ bursement to those who paid the higher tax.·
·
The latest measure puts the trailer tax at 'its original
•&gt;., level, depending on weight, of at least $5.
It also allows for those who paid the higher fee this year
.,
•'• to btl reimbursed in 1981, with the amount of the reim•·'.• bursement computed by the Registrar of Motor Vehicles.
It would be equal to the difference between the license tax
• paid on the trailer this year and the tax that would have
• been paid in 1979 under the weight and tax schedule then in
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The bill defines a nonconunercial trailer as "any,trailer, ·
except a travel trailer, having a gross weight of no more
than 3,000 pounds and used exclusively for purposes other
than engaging in business for a profit."
Aprocedural amendment sent the bill back to the House
for concurrence.

Liability insurance
for twp. trustees
Township trustees soon may be able to buy liability in- ·
surance policies for themselves, the township clerk and
their assistants.
House-passed legislation on the practice cleared the
Senate 30-0 Tuesday. It now goes to Gov. James A. Rhodes.
Current law does not specifically authorize such purchases, sponsors said.

Today in history.

..4
By Tbe Associated Press
,
Today is Friday, Sept. 19, the
; •263rd day of 1980. There are 103 days
~ · left in the year.
f ; . Today's highlight in history:
Z On Sept. 19, 1881, President James
&lt;~-?~ Garfield died of WOWlds inflicted by
::1 : ail assassin in Baltimore, on July 2.
"': • On this date: ,
~~: : In 1777, American soldiers in the
:1 Revolutionary War won the the first
; battle of Saratoga in New York.
l
In 1934, Bruno Haupbnann was
t arrested in New York and charged
~
with the kidnapping Of Charles Und' bergh's baby son.
~t ,' In 1956, President Juan Peron of
~ • Argentina was ousted from office in
g: a revolt by the Army and Navy.
;~
In 1974, fonner President Nixon
~&gt; ~·was subpoenaed by special
•• •Watergate Prosecutor Leon Jawor·.
. ~F
.,. ·ski to appear at the .Watergate

• •

cover-up trial.
Ten years ago, Palestine
Uberation Army reinforcements en·
tered Jordan from Syria to fight
againstKingHussein'sanny.
Five years ago, a U.S. District
judge in California denied' ball to
Patricia Hearst.
Last year, the State Department
said it opposed any Intervention In
Afghanistan's internal affairs,
following confinnation that the
United States had noticed Soviet ar·
my activity near the Mghan border.
Today's birthdays : Defense
Secretary Harold Brown iS 53 years
old. British actress Rosemary
Harris is 50. Supreme Court Justice
Lewis Powell is 73.
Thought for today: Men hate those
to whom they have to lie - Victor
Hugo (1802·1885 )

"I'm happy to announce that we have finally got the candidates to agree on a
format for the debates."
'

Cure is worse than the disease
construction costs went down 8 per·
cent in the first seven years of the
1970s. But the finance and land share
of the price of a new home increased
by more than a third.
In those same seven years, food
prices went up fJI percent. That's a
frightening rise - but hardly as
frightening as the 150 percent in·
~rease in after-tax profits earned by
the food-marketing industry .
There's no selfish fanner in this
equation; for every $i you spend on
' bread, he gets only 3 cents.
Ten years ago, a typical hospital
more than .5 percent. In fact, the bed cost $50. Today the price is
Congressional Budget Office closer to $200. Don't blame nurses or
estimates that cuts almost twice as other hospital workers, in the two
high as those requested by the ad· decades from 1956 and 1975, the
ministration earlier this year would labor share of hospital eosta dropped
reduce the inflation rate by only .3 14 percent.
percent.
Compare that with the 62.7 percent
But how about the drug companies
by which fuel costs increased last
that spend $5,000 per doctor to ad·
year. Those increases were due to
vertise their wares while fighting to
the greed and seUishness of OPEC • keep the consumer from cilmparing
and the big oil companies, not of thCI drug prices? And what about the iJI..
American consumer. A contrived
surance companies that have
recession won't convince OPEC to
become doctors' collection agencies
lower oil prices.
- even collecting billions for unReal-&lt;!&amp;tate prices have doubled in
necessary surgery?
the last 10 years. That wasn't
There are means to combat these
because greedy carpenters, elec-real causes of our economic woes.
tricians and plumbers demanded
But none of them lie in putting more
more money, their share of homepeople out of work.

even harder. When there is budget
prove your economic condition.
cutting to be done, most of the
The theory has been tlJill iJI..
creased unemployment will force · . money seems to come from those
least able to enforce their claims to
down prices and wages. Sut like so
it. This bitter medicine, explain the
many economic theories, this one is
budget cutters, helps more than it
absolutely wrong.
hurts.
More than 80 percent of today's inBut no one has proved that spen·
flation .is concentrated in four sec·
tors of the economy that none of us · ding cuts reduce the infiation rate by ,

By Jallan Bond
"Trying to cure inflation by
budget cutting is like trying to lose
weight by chopping off your legs.
You'll weigh less, but you won't
solve your real problem and you will
create painful new ones."
So says the Blueprint for a
Workibg America, an economic
prescription for the United States
prepared by the Full Employment
Action Council, a coalition of dozens
· of labor, civil-rights and religious
groups.
Just as amputation is an extreme
solution to the conunon problem of
extra poundage, cutting programs
that create joba for the W)employed
or rebuild decaying cities or feed
hungry children produces more
f:llisery than . the inflation it was
designed to cure.
Neariy everyone agrees that
something must be done about the
persistent inflation in our economy.
But they cannot agree on what to do.
So far, the winners of this debate
have been those in govenunent who
have insiBted that artificially in·
duced recession can halt inflation.
The losers are the growing numbers .of unemployed who are lear·
ning harshly . what generations of
black Americans have always
known. Joblessness is no way to im-

Today's commentary
can do without : food, housing,
energy and health care. The combined costs of these four necessities·
increased at a rate of 18.2 percent in
1979, while the combined costs of
everything else rose by less than 7
percent.
But as costS of these necessities
went up, real take-home pay went
down by 5.2 percent last year and by
another 2 percent in the measurable
portion of this year. · That's one
reason 60 percent of U. S. households
are now drawing two paychecks and still struggling to keep up with
inflation.
The decline in the American
family's ability to 'maintain itself
makes one wonder why the popular
solution has been to make things

Congress plods toward recess for November
favorite sport at his news con·
ferences.
Some recent examples: "What if
be became president? He'd have no
political party to inVIte to the White
House for leadership meetings. If he
went on a foreign trip, who would
greet him when he came back? 1'
"He has no chance of being elected
president of the United States. He's
a figment of the media of the United
States."

WASJUNGTON (AP) - Presiden·
tial politics are never far beneath
the surface as Congress plods
toward its recess for the November
elections.
Democrats in Congress have l!een
continually denouncing Ronald
Reagan and his pronouncements,
Republicans have been having a
field day with the Billy Carter and
"Stealth" aircraft affairs, and
House Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill
Jr. has been verbally beating on
Rep. John Anderson.
.
For O'Neill, a Massachusetts
Democrat and strong partisan for
President Carter, getting in digs at
Anderson, the independent presiden·
tial candidate, has become a

Few senators have ever gotten the
upper hand on Majority Leader
Robert C. Byrd, [).W.Va., in floor
debate. Sen. Daniel Patrick
MoyniJ1an, [).N.Y., is no exception.
Moynihan was arguing against a
Byrd amendment to a water-project

appropriations bill eannarking $284
million for a West Virginia flood·
control project.
•
He said big money was at stake,
reminding the Senate that a
measure they had just voted on had
a $1 billion pricetag. And a billion
dollars, Moynhihan informed the
Senate, was equal to roughly $1 a
minute since the death of St. Peter.
Byrd told the Senate MoYnihan
had neglected to mention "that the
cost to the taxpayers of the last flood
in 1977 (in West Virginia) was over
$200 million, That represents for
every minute going back 400 years,
prior to the settlement of
Jamestown, prior to the publication
of the King James version of the
Bible + $1 for every minute; $200

million down the river, washed out."
Moynihan WBll speechless. A
clearly impressed Sen. Pete V.
Domenici, R·N .M., · asked Byrd :
"Did the leader just do that
calculation right then?"
"Oh, yes," Byrd said.
"Here is how I did it," Byrd ad·
ded. "It has been 1 billion minutes ·
since Jesus Chr.ist Willi born 2,000
years ago. Two hundred million
being one-fifth of I billion, then onefifth of 2,000 years is 400 years + the
year 1580. Jamestown w8llsettled af.
ter 1580 and the King James veralon ·
of the Bible .. . first appeared in
1619."
Byrd's amendment was adopted
without further fuss.

Home purchases : ·. a depressed market
NEW YORK (AP) - The people
who lend money for home purchases
aren't offering much good news for
the rest of the year. In fact, they are
depressed about market conditions,
present and future.
In a survey of its members, the
U.S. League of Savings Associations
found 119 percent expected mortgage
rates to be at least 12 percent by the
end of the year, and 29 percent said
the rate would eXceed 13.
The lenders say rates must be
lower if they and the homebuyer are
to survive, but they maintain gover·
runent regulations and policies have
in effect forced them to charge 11\e
double-digit figures.
A le,~~gue official commented, "We
see no relief in mortgage rates. We
see no strength In the market for the ·
foreseeable future." For the rest of
1980, he forecast, "the market will,
at best, be moribund."
The league, whose memberS constitute the biggest institutional fac--

•

tor in mortgages, is now distributing
advertising material that refers to
the posslbillty of the homeowners
becoming "an endangered species."

@)

And at a news ·conference
scheduled for today in Washington,
the league's president, Edwin B.
Broo~ Jr., was ready to Ialk about

19&amp;0 b'J' NEA Inc.

"Johnny Carson Is celebrstlng his 18th year on
the 'Tonight' show on the 29th. Isn 't that
FASCINA TING7"

•

the "anti·housing, anti-savings"
programs of the federal governinent.
His prepared statementa included
the bitter commentary that ''faced
with extreme and frequent chahges
in interest rates, Americans who
want to save for the future are
throwing in the towel."
While It I~ debatable wether or not
he has thrown In tbe towel the
American saver ~rtalnly hal! tuen
.a pummeling, losing round after
round to an Inflation rate that has
exceeded interest earned.

The savinguod IJIIIOti&amp;Uona
see in this relu~ til . Mve a
threat to their vet, · .exlatence,
because without depDiite they can·
not make mortgage l011ns. And
without profits they cannot lliake
them either.
Deposita and profits ue equally ·
haf;d to accwnulate these days, the
S&amp; say,

DELAWARE, Ohio (AP) - Only a
thoroughbred can keep up with
Nlatross, harness racing's super
horse.
·That at least is the opinion of Clint
Galbraith, his tralner-ilriver, after
Ntatross wiped out six world pacing
records and became the sport's all·
time money winning champion
Thursday.
,
The Albatross colt's miles of 1:55
and 1:54 4-6 produced easy straight·
heat victories in the UtUe Brown
Jug at the Delaware (Ohio) County
Fairgrounds and made him virtually
a shoo-in for pacing's Triple Crown.
"No harness horse can push him,"
said Galbraith. "Only the thorughbreds we use in time trials can slay
. , with him. They can go with him in a
jog cart."
Galbraith is going to afford
Nlatross that opportwtity in the Red
Mile at Lexington, Ky., on Sept. 26 or
'll. He's aiming at the time trial
record mile of I :51 that Steady Star
set on the same track nine years
ago,
Joe O'Brien drove Steady Star
that day and finished fourth and
second behind Niatross In •the Jug
heats. He says there's no com·
parison between the two horses.
"Steady Star was not a real good
race horse. He got too racy and too
eager a lot of times before he even
got to the gate," said O'Brien.
"Niatross is the best horse I've
ever seen.
"Niatross can pace whatever Clint
wants him to pace, either in a race
or a time trial. I think he can go in
I:50 In a time trial."
Del Miller, the trainer of Tyler B.,
who finished third in both Jug heats,
said, "Nlatross had to skip one
evolution. He'sjustsofast."
•
John Hayes Jr., the driver of Jug
ai»ran Tyrant, looks at the horse
another way. "He has extra foot·
steps over the other horses. No one
can stay with him," he said.
Nlatross' $104,717 payday gave
him a career bankroll of$1,738,796 in
less than two years.
Rambling Willie, another pacer,
has taken almost eight seasons to ac-complish the previous earnings

lengths in the first heat. He beat
Storm Damage by three lengths In
the second heat. He never was
pushed, although Denali once led af·
ter an eighth of a mile in the second
race.
Niatross, who was bred on Mrs.
Elsie Berger's Niagara, N.Y. ,
Acres, has 'lost twice in 31 starts.
Both losses came this year: His winning percentage of .935 ranks second
behind the .937 of Bret Hanover,
whose record was built on ·45 vic-tories in 48 starts inJ964 and 1965.

Meet the Meigs Marauders

Mter the Red Mile, Niatross will
head for The Messenger Stakes at
Roosevelt Raceway in New York on
Oct. II. That's the final leg of the
pacing Triple Crown.
Most Happy Fella is the last pacer
to win the Triple Crown. His
achievement came nine years ago .
Niatross' world records were for
the first and second heats for 3-yearolds, for combined tw!Hleat times
for any pacer, and for a baH-mile
track for any pacer.
Dave Barr
5-11, :iiO lha.
Fresbman Tackle

Larry Cotterill
~·. 1771ba.
Junior Tackle

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD
AMERICAN LEAGUE

NATIONAL LEAGUE

JtA.&lt;M'

EAST

W. L PeL GB
81 6&gt;
.156
.Ill
I ll
79 66
76 70
.121
5

Montreal
PhUadel phl a
Pittsburg h
St. Louis
New York
Chicago

66
62

66

WEST

110
II
119

Los An ~Jel es
114 62
Houst on
83 63
Cincinnat i
79 68
Atla nta
77 119
San Francisco
69 77
San Diego
64 63
Tbundly'11 Game,
Houston 10, CincinnaU 2

New Yort

.m

-

.568

I
511

.527

.472
.135

7

II
21111.

Milwaukee
Cleveland

Detroit

Toronto
:~ · Kan s a s

WEST
91

City

O.kland
Texas

74

11

Mlnne!lota

·55

Ch icago

.603

s

.538

14\'o
15
18\1
19

.534
.110

.507
.125

5C
71
75

.611
.500
.486
.442
.128

U

62

S3

59 88
.107
$3 93
.363
I-cllnched division tiUe
1'1wndly'• Games
Milwaukee ~. Minnesota S.O

California

at

Pittsburgh
St.Louia

(Alexander 13-8) at San Diego

(Mura 6-7),. (n)
ctncinnaU (Moskau 9-7) at Los Angeles
(Reuaa 17~/' (n)
Houstm Anduja r 3-S ) al San Fnmclsco
(Griffin ..1), ( n)
S.tard.ay' a Gamu

Philadetphl.a at Chicago
Houston at San Francisco
Montreal 11t SU ..oui!lo

31
17\1
19~

26
26
3t
37\1

a, ClevelAnd 3

Boston

Chicago

(B.Fo rsch 11-9 ), (n)

Atlanta

11 sa
71 00
79 69
74 71
71 72
62 114

SeatUe

(Zachry 6-10) at
14-11)

IS

19
24\1

.537

Atlanta 2, San Franc[x() 1
lH.J Angele5 7, San Diego 3
Only games scheduled
Friday'• Gamee
Philadelphia (Walk l lh'i) at
(Reuachel 11-11 )

(RIIoden S.O ), (n)
Montreal
(Rogers

.m

.125
.336

; W. L Pd. GB
11a ~
.637

New York
Ba ltlmure
Boston

Baltimore 1, Detroit 3
New York 1-1, Tvronto 7·2, l!it game,
completion of Wectnesday'l SUBpended
game, 13 iMings

Tew 10, Oakland 6

Kanaaa City 5, California 2

Chicago

~.

Seattle 4
Fltday' l Gamet

Toronto (Todd 4-1 1 at Ballirnore (Palm., 11-10), (n )
Cleveland
(Waits
11-13)
(Schaczeder 9-ll), (n )

Bostoo (Renko

~7)

Detroit

at

at New York (Tiant

6-9), In )

SeatUe

(Honeycutt 9-18 ) at

Milwaukee

(McClure :&lt;-7), (n)

California (Tanana 9-10} at Texas (Flg·
ueroa 3-10), (n )

New York at Pittsburgh, (n)

Cinc!nnaU al Loa Angeles, (n)
Atlanta at San Diego, (n)
SIUidly'a Gamn
New York at PlttsiJurKh

O.kland (Kingman 1·18) at KallllaS City

(Splitwrff tZ.lO), (n )
Chicago (Baumgarten 2- lJ)
nes&lt;lla (Williams J.7), (n)
S.Wdly'aGamea
Cleveland at Ddroit

Phlladelfhia at Chicago
Monlrea at st.Loui.s
CincinnaU at Los Angeles

at

Min-

Morgan puts another
nail in R .e ds' coffin
CINCINNATI (AP) - Joe
Morgan, who took his free agency to
Houston, stomped on the fingers of
his fonner teammates, the Cin·
cinnati Reds, dangling on the edge of
the lead in the National League
West.
"The Reds are absolutely not out
of the race, but to be perfectly truthful about it, they certainly don't·
have a good shot," said Morgan,
whose two-run home run helped
drub the Reds IG-2 and put the Astros
hack in contention with the Los
Angeles Dodgers.
"We had them where we wanted
them but they got away. That's happened to us a lot this year," lamented Cincinnati third baseman Ray
Knight.
The Reds returned from a 10-4
road trip last week, only to lose five
of seven at home. Now they head for
Los Angeles tonight.
"Our job is just a little tougher
than it was," said Reds Manager
John McNamara. "By this weekend
we should know for sure where we

stand" in the race for the division
championship.
Morgan and Jose Cruz each .
blasted homers for the Astros to
sweep the two-game series, piling up
nine runs in the last three innings of
Thursday afternoon's game.
"I don't think that I try any harder
agait¢ the Reds than I do against
the others," said Morgan, who
ptayed on five championship teams
in Cincinna~i.
''This is what the game of baseball
is all about. This is the reason you do
those two extra pushups in spring
training.

~of$1 , 728,447 .

The original heavyweight
un-washed Levi jeans.

•FLARES
•STRAIGHT LEG

•New Chevrolet
Cars &amp; Trucks
•U sed Cars &amp; Trucks

•Genuine' ·
Parts

Chevrolet

• AI'ignment and Frame
Straightening

NEW YORK
CLOTHING HOUSE

• Collision Repair

991·21

Oakland at Kansas City, (.n )

Nlatross beat Trenton Time by 3+

Chicago at MiMesota, (nl

LA has distinct advantage
LOS ANGELES (AP) - The Los
Angeles Dodgers, who lead the
National League West by one game
over Houston, would appear to have
a distinct advantage tonight when
they open a three-game series with
the still-hopeful Cincinnati Reds.
Jerry Reuss, who has beaten the
Reds four times this season and has
won 11 of 12 decisions against the
contending clubs in the NL, will start
on the mound for Los Angeles,'
against Cincinnati's Paul Moskau.
The Dodgers retained their one-

Levrs
" ..... '"

EROY MOTOR
COMPANY

Bostoo at New Yort
Toronto at BaltimOre, (n )
SeatUe at MUwaukee, (n)
CaWornla at Teua, (n)

Atlanta a t San Diego '
Houston at San Francisco

Todd Fife
U, t:IIIIJs.
Fresbman Wingback

gaine edge by defeating San Diego 7·
3 Thursday night, with their biggest
offense in two weeks.
In the only other NL games played
Thursday, Houston beat Cincinnati
1().2 and AUanta sneaked by San
Francisco Z.I.
Los Angeles clubbed three Padre
pitchers for 13 hits, three of theni
homers. Most productive were Steve
Garvey and Dusty Baker, who com·
bined for only eight hits in 55 at-bats
on Los Angeles' recent !riP to
Houston, Cincinnati and Atlanla.

'

DOG FOOD HEADQUARTERS ·

Ron Cey and Mickey Hatcber hit
consecutive homers in the eighth iJI..
ning off the Padres' Mike Ar·
mstrong.
The Dodgers had a :&gt;-1 lead and
starter Bob Welch had restricted
San Diego to four hits over seven iJI..
nings. But in the eighth, the Padres
filled the bases with only one out and
Bobby Castillo took over. He gave up
a bloop single to Dave Winfield that
scored two runs, but retired
Broderick Perkins on a dribbler
back to the moWld and struck out
Luis Salazar to get out of the Inning.

Buckeyes-Gophers battle Saturday
BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
When Earle Bruce replaced the
legendary Woody Hayes at Ohio
State many conversant with college
football figured the Buckeyes would
attract less attention natiOil8\IY. /,
And It would be hard to argue that
they dldn 'I when the pollsters forgot
to rank Ohio State in the Top Twenty
last season. With the tempennental
Hayes cooling his heels not far from
the giant horseshoe where he rose to
fame . in Colwnbus, Ohio, the

Meigs volleyball team
loses

p~

to Athens

ROCK' SPRINGS - The SEOAL's
Athens volleyball squad defeated
league foe Meigs in two games, I:&gt;-2
and 1:&gt;-5 respectively, here Thursday.
Athens has only one defeat this
year.
Despite the ·wide margin of defeat
Meigs played a better than average
floor game. According to Coach
Karen Walker Meigs played "much
better than what the score showed."
The improving Meigs squad kept
pace for a long period of time in the
early stages against the strong
Athens club. Athens, which has a
bench full of talent, put six players
on the floor with four years of ex·
perience playing together as a team.
At one point several ong volleys
highlighted the game and during one
period each team rotated one com' plete time on serves without scoring
a point.
The Meig:::- reserves won In two
games by I:&gt;-13 and 1:&gt;-12 scores.
The Meigs varsity is now 1~ while
the reserve club is at 24.

Buckeyes quleUy rose from obscurity to an eventual No.4 ranking.
Under Bruce no sideline markers
were fractured, no officials grabbed
and no linebackers punched out in
the heat of batUe. He had managed
to make the coach anything but the
center of controversy.
A year later Ohio State, IJ.I last
season, attracted enough attention
to grab the top spot in the preseason

Friday's games
Nor th Gatti a at Southwestern
Parkersburg Catholic at Eastern
Ross SEat Hannan Trace
Piketon at Kyger Creek
Southern at Wahama
Pt. Pleasont at Hurricane
Coal Grove at Wheelersburg
Rock Hill at South Point
Gal ttpalls at Meigs
Logan at Athens
Ironton at Jackson
Wellston at Waverly

national ranklngs. But don't blame
Bruce. He's doing his best to focus
that attention elsewhere.
On Saturday his second-ranked
Buckeyes, 1.0 after a come-from·
behind, 31-21 victory over SyracUse,
entertain Big Ten foe Mlnnesota,I.O.
And Bruce has managed to turn the
spoUight on the opposition.
"He broke every recruiting rulecar use, things of that nature,"
Bruce said of Gopher Coach Joe
Salem. "But I don't think we can call
him on that."
The reason . simply put is that
Salem has housed and supported his
starting quarterback since the lad his son Tim - was in diapers.
And with one week gone In the 1980
season it seems the investment has
paid off handsomely. Salem, who
will go on display Saturday before a
national television audience, scored
his team's first touchdown In Minnesota 's opening-game victory

PARK RESERVED
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 20TH

.SUGAR RUN FLOUR MILLS
POMEROY, OHIO

Terrific Values On These

NEW &amp;USED CARS &amp; TRUCKS
1979 FORD FIESTA
19'77 V.W. RABBIT
1977 LTD 2 Dr.
1977 LTD 4 Dr.

-.

Air con d., radio, 13,000 miles, local owner .

AM· FM rad i O,

~

speed trans .• one owner.

V·B, auto. trans., q ir,

oneowner1

ra~ l o,

speed cont rol ,

V-8, a uto. trans., air, windows, AM· FM 8
track. (SHARP)

$4695
$3295
$2595
$2595

UNTIL 5 P.M.

FAMILY OUTING

1981 TRUCI&lt;S NOW IN STOCI&lt;!

OF

SOUlHERN OHIO
COAL CO.

I

1910 GRANADA$ SOLD AT INVOICE

1980 T-BIRDS SOLD AT $100 OVER INVOICE
1910 PINTOS SOLD AT $200 OVER INVOICE

I
U. S. 60WE$T

HUNTINGTON

�3-The Dlllly Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Sept. 19, 1980
•

2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport· POmeroy, 0 ., Friday, Sept. I9, 1980

Sets ·six records

Opinions &amp;
Comments

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Jug winner becomes
' all-time mQneycham

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m E DAILV SENTINEL

......

(USPS 1&amp;5-9101

DE VOTID TO lliE

INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
IAttert'of oplniiKi are welcomed. They 1bould bt Ins tbaa 300 words loac (onabj« l to reducdH by the editor) and must be 1lgned with the slpee's addreu . Name1 may be wltbbeld upoo
publkadGD. HoweVer, oa request, umes wtll be diJclosed. Leiters siM!ukt bl! In good taste, ad-

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draolo&amp; IJsueo, DOI,.......uues.

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Publlsllcd clllly u etpt S.blrday by Tbt Ohio \ 'alley Publlahlag Compaay· Muldmedla, lac.,
111 Court SL, Petmen~y. Obict4571t. Busioa1 Office Phoae stz. t iS&amp;. Ectitorlal Pbooe 19Z-U57.
Secood elat1 pot&amp;ICt paid at Pomeroy, Oblo.

•

441U.
Tbt Auodaled Preu fa exclustni)' eotJUed to the use for pubiJcatlou of i'U ~:M:ws dispatches
cf'ftiJtrd to lbe oe,npaprr and also the local aewa published herein.

NaUoul adnrtillq represeatattve, Lalldoo Associates, 3111 Ellclld Ave., Cleveland, Ohio

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Publisher

RoMrt Wiqett

GeDtl'lll Mgr. ' CUy Editor

Robert Hoeflich

New• EdUor

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Adv. M.laqer

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Bm~ r-T"'L-A._-r.~d •.-;;;11

Dale Rotbleb, Jr.
C.riGheeo

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Letter to editor

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·- Dear Sir:
f.

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,:
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A big thank you
J

As Helene and I prepare to leave
Pomeroy Health Care Center and
this beautiful county of Meigs, we
feel gratitude over the past few
weeks. Many Meigs Countians have
thanked us and .praised us for the
work that has been accomplished at
the center. We have worked hard,
there is no ·doubt about it, and we
loved every minute of you. Yes, no
matter how good or great a leader is,
if he does not have the co-operation
of his people he will certainly fail.
We found instant c~ration when
we came to Meigs County. Yes, we
are grateful; to our staff that we
carefully picked to care for our
loved ones, to all the volunteers, and
they are hundreds, who have at one
time or another manifested the
goodness in them by sharing themselves and their talents to our

I

residents. Grateful to the commwtity at large for being open to U.s
in every way with the sincere desire
to help or encour11ge.
All these people have made our
lives here enjoyable and our work
rewarding. We came to serVe the
people of Meigs COWlly, even for
such a short time. Helene and I have
never left a place that we did not try
to leave it a litUe better than we
found it. If we have accomplished
this we are grateful, for one of our
favorite sayings is:
"I expect to pass through this
world but once. Any good therefore
that I can do, or any kindnes that I
can show to any fellow creature, let
me do it now ... for I shall not pass
this way again.
Thank you.
s • Ron and Helene
Ron and Helen Zidian

Bill reduces
..
·trailer tax
''

The Senate has virtually completed passage of a bill
which, for a second time, tries to Correct an error that for·
ced Ohio owners of boat trailers to pay higher license fees.
Approved 31~ Tuesday was a House-passed measure
, · classifying such two-wheel utility trailers as nonvehicles.
.
-·... conunercial
They had inadvertently been placed in the conunercial
category by legislation last year which raised the price of
'•• license plates by $10.
_ The General Assembly's first bill to correct the mistake
~ ·. was vetoed by Gov. James A. Rhodes because of amend: ments which he said . would have blocked full reim•~ bursement to those who paid the higher tax.·
·
The latest measure puts the trailer tax at 'its original
•&gt;., level, depending on weight, of at least $5.
It also allows for those who paid the higher fee this year
.,
•'• to btl reimbursed in 1981, with the amount of the reim•·'.• bursement computed by the Registrar of Motor Vehicles.
It would be equal to the difference between the license tax
• paid on the trailer this year and the tax that would have
• been paid in 1979 under the weight and tax schedule then in
•

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The bill defines a nonconunercial trailer as "any,trailer, ·
except a travel trailer, having a gross weight of no more
than 3,000 pounds and used exclusively for purposes other
than engaging in business for a profit."
Aprocedural amendment sent the bill back to the House
for concurrence.

Liability insurance
for twp. trustees
Township trustees soon may be able to buy liability in- ·
surance policies for themselves, the township clerk and
their assistants.
House-passed legislation on the practice cleared the
Senate 30-0 Tuesday. It now goes to Gov. James A. Rhodes.
Current law does not specifically authorize such purchases, sponsors said.

Today in history.

..4
By Tbe Associated Press
,
Today is Friday, Sept. 19, the
; •263rd day of 1980. There are 103 days
~ · left in the year.
f ; . Today's highlight in history:
Z On Sept. 19, 1881, President James
&lt;~-?~ Garfield died of WOWlds inflicted by
::1 : ail assassin in Baltimore, on July 2.
"': • On this date: ,
~~: : In 1777, American soldiers in the
:1 Revolutionary War won the the first
; battle of Saratoga in New York.
l
In 1934, Bruno Haupbnann was
t arrested in New York and charged
~
with the kidnapping Of Charles Und' bergh's baby son.
~t ,' In 1956, President Juan Peron of
~ • Argentina was ousted from office in
g: a revolt by the Army and Navy.
;~
In 1974, fonner President Nixon
~&gt; ~·was subpoenaed by special
•• •Watergate Prosecutor Leon Jawor·.
. ~F
.,. ·ski to appear at the .Watergate

• •

cover-up trial.
Ten years ago, Palestine
Uberation Army reinforcements en·
tered Jordan from Syria to fight
againstKingHussein'sanny.
Five years ago, a U.S. District
judge in California denied' ball to
Patricia Hearst.
Last year, the State Department
said it opposed any Intervention In
Afghanistan's internal affairs,
following confinnation that the
United States had noticed Soviet ar·
my activity near the Mghan border.
Today's birthdays : Defense
Secretary Harold Brown iS 53 years
old. British actress Rosemary
Harris is 50. Supreme Court Justice
Lewis Powell is 73.
Thought for today: Men hate those
to whom they have to lie - Victor
Hugo (1802·1885 )

"I'm happy to announce that we have finally got the candidates to agree on a
format for the debates."
'

Cure is worse than the disease
construction costs went down 8 per·
cent in the first seven years of the
1970s. But the finance and land share
of the price of a new home increased
by more than a third.
In those same seven years, food
prices went up fJI percent. That's a
frightening rise - but hardly as
frightening as the 150 percent in·
~rease in after-tax profits earned by
the food-marketing industry .
There's no selfish fanner in this
equation; for every $i you spend on
' bread, he gets only 3 cents.
Ten years ago, a typical hospital
more than .5 percent. In fact, the bed cost $50. Today the price is
Congressional Budget Office closer to $200. Don't blame nurses or
estimates that cuts almost twice as other hospital workers, in the two
high as those requested by the ad· decades from 1956 and 1975, the
ministration earlier this year would labor share of hospital eosta dropped
reduce the inflation rate by only .3 14 percent.
percent.
Compare that with the 62.7 percent
But how about the drug companies
by which fuel costs increased last
that spend $5,000 per doctor to ad·
year. Those increases were due to
vertise their wares while fighting to
the greed and seUishness of OPEC • keep the consumer from cilmparing
and the big oil companies, not of thCI drug prices? And what about the iJI..
American consumer. A contrived
surance companies that have
recession won't convince OPEC to
become doctors' collection agencies
lower oil prices.
- even collecting billions for unReal-&lt;!&amp;tate prices have doubled in
necessary surgery?
the last 10 years. That wasn't
There are means to combat these
because greedy carpenters, elec-real causes of our economic woes.
tricians and plumbers demanded
But none of them lie in putting more
more money, their share of homepeople out of work.

even harder. When there is budget
prove your economic condition.
cutting to be done, most of the
The theory has been tlJill iJI..
creased unemployment will force · . money seems to come from those
least able to enforce their claims to
down prices and wages. Sut like so
it. This bitter medicine, explain the
many economic theories, this one is
budget cutters, helps more than it
absolutely wrong.
hurts.
More than 80 percent of today's inBut no one has proved that spen·
flation .is concentrated in four sec·
tors of the economy that none of us · ding cuts reduce the infiation rate by ,

By Jallan Bond
"Trying to cure inflation by
budget cutting is like trying to lose
weight by chopping off your legs.
You'll weigh less, but you won't
solve your real problem and you will
create painful new ones."
So says the Blueprint for a
Workibg America, an economic
prescription for the United States
prepared by the Full Employment
Action Council, a coalition of dozens
· of labor, civil-rights and religious
groups.
Just as amputation is an extreme
solution to the conunon problem of
extra poundage, cutting programs
that create joba for the W)employed
or rebuild decaying cities or feed
hungry children produces more
f:llisery than . the inflation it was
designed to cure.
Neariy everyone agrees that
something must be done about the
persistent inflation in our economy.
But they cannot agree on what to do.
So far, the winners of this debate
have been those in govenunent who
have insiBted that artificially in·
duced recession can halt inflation.
The losers are the growing numbers .of unemployed who are lear·
ning harshly . what generations of
black Americans have always
known. Joblessness is no way to im-

Today's commentary
can do without : food, housing,
energy and health care. The combined costs of these four necessities·
increased at a rate of 18.2 percent in
1979, while the combined costs of
everything else rose by less than 7
percent.
But as costS of these necessities
went up, real take-home pay went
down by 5.2 percent last year and by
another 2 percent in the measurable
portion of this year. · That's one
reason 60 percent of U. S. households
are now drawing two paychecks and still struggling to keep up with
inflation.
The decline in the American
family's ability to 'maintain itself
makes one wonder why the popular
solution has been to make things

Congress plods toward recess for November
favorite sport at his news con·
ferences.
Some recent examples: "What if
be became president? He'd have no
political party to inVIte to the White
House for leadership meetings. If he
went on a foreign trip, who would
greet him when he came back? 1'
"He has no chance of being elected
president of the United States. He's
a figment of the media of the United
States."

WASJUNGTON (AP) - Presiden·
tial politics are never far beneath
the surface as Congress plods
toward its recess for the November
elections.
Democrats in Congress have l!een
continually denouncing Ronald
Reagan and his pronouncements,
Republicans have been having a
field day with the Billy Carter and
"Stealth" aircraft affairs, and
House Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill
Jr. has been verbally beating on
Rep. John Anderson.
.
For O'Neill, a Massachusetts
Democrat and strong partisan for
President Carter, getting in digs at
Anderson, the independent presiden·
tial candidate, has become a

Few senators have ever gotten the
upper hand on Majority Leader
Robert C. Byrd, [).W.Va., in floor
debate. Sen. Daniel Patrick
MoyniJ1an, [).N.Y., is no exception.
Moynihan was arguing against a
Byrd amendment to a water-project

appropriations bill eannarking $284
million for a West Virginia flood·
control project.
•
He said big money was at stake,
reminding the Senate that a
measure they had just voted on had
a $1 billion pricetag. And a billion
dollars, Moynhihan informed the
Senate, was equal to roughly $1 a
minute since the death of St. Peter.
Byrd told the Senate MoYnihan
had neglected to mention "that the
cost to the taxpayers of the last flood
in 1977 (in West Virginia) was over
$200 million, That represents for
every minute going back 400 years,
prior to the settlement of
Jamestown, prior to the publication
of the King James version of the
Bible + $1 for every minute; $200

million down the river, washed out."
Moynihan WBll speechless. A
clearly impressed Sen. Pete V.
Domenici, R·N .M., · asked Byrd :
"Did the leader just do that
calculation right then?"
"Oh, yes," Byrd said.
"Here is how I did it," Byrd ad·
ded. "It has been 1 billion minutes ·
since Jesus Chr.ist Willi born 2,000
years ago. Two hundred million
being one-fifth of I billion, then onefifth of 2,000 years is 400 years + the
year 1580. Jamestown w8llsettled af.
ter 1580 and the King James veralon ·
of the Bible .. . first appeared in
1619."
Byrd's amendment was adopted
without further fuss.

Home purchases : ·. a depressed market
NEW YORK (AP) - The people
who lend money for home purchases
aren't offering much good news for
the rest of the year. In fact, they are
depressed about market conditions,
present and future.
In a survey of its members, the
U.S. League of Savings Associations
found 119 percent expected mortgage
rates to be at least 12 percent by the
end of the year, and 29 percent said
the rate would eXceed 13.
The lenders say rates must be
lower if they and the homebuyer are
to survive, but they maintain gover·
runent regulations and policies have
in effect forced them to charge 11\e
double-digit figures.
A le,~~gue official commented, "We
see no relief in mortgage rates. We
see no strength In the market for the ·
foreseeable future." For the rest of
1980, he forecast, "the market will,
at best, be moribund."
The league, whose memberS constitute the biggest institutional fac--

•

tor in mortgages, is now distributing
advertising material that refers to
the posslbillty of the homeowners
becoming "an endangered species."

@)

And at a news ·conference
scheduled for today in Washington,
the league's president, Edwin B.
Broo~ Jr., was ready to Ialk about

19&amp;0 b'J' NEA Inc.

"Johnny Carson Is celebrstlng his 18th year on
the 'Tonight' show on the 29th. Isn 't that
FASCINA TING7"

•

the "anti·housing, anti-savings"
programs of the federal governinent.
His prepared statementa included
the bitter commentary that ''faced
with extreme and frequent chahges
in interest rates, Americans who
want to save for the future are
throwing in the towel."
While It I~ debatable wether or not
he has thrown In tbe towel the
American saver ~rtalnly hal! tuen
.a pummeling, losing round after
round to an Inflation rate that has
exceeded interest earned.

The savinguod IJIIIOti&amp;Uona
see in this relu~ til . Mve a
threat to their vet, · .exlatence,
because without depDiite they can·
not make mortgage l011ns. And
without profits they cannot lliake
them either.
Deposita and profits ue equally ·
haf;d to accwnulate these days, the
S&amp; say,

DELAWARE, Ohio (AP) - Only a
thoroughbred can keep up with
Nlatross, harness racing's super
horse.
·That at least is the opinion of Clint
Galbraith, his tralner-ilriver, after
Ntatross wiped out six world pacing
records and became the sport's all·
time money winning champion
Thursday.
,
The Albatross colt's miles of 1:55
and 1:54 4-6 produced easy straight·
heat victories in the UtUe Brown
Jug at the Delaware (Ohio) County
Fairgrounds and made him virtually
a shoo-in for pacing's Triple Crown.
"No harness horse can push him,"
said Galbraith. "Only the thorughbreds we use in time trials can slay
. , with him. They can go with him in a
jog cart."
Galbraith is going to afford
Nlatross that opportwtity in the Red
Mile at Lexington, Ky., on Sept. 26 or
'll. He's aiming at the time trial
record mile of I :51 that Steady Star
set on the same track nine years
ago,
Joe O'Brien drove Steady Star
that day and finished fourth and
second behind Niatross In •the Jug
heats. He says there's no com·
parison between the two horses.
"Steady Star was not a real good
race horse. He got too racy and too
eager a lot of times before he even
got to the gate," said O'Brien.
"Niatross is the best horse I've
ever seen.
"Niatross can pace whatever Clint
wants him to pace, either in a race
or a time trial. I think he can go in
I:50 In a time trial."
Del Miller, the trainer of Tyler B.,
who finished third in both Jug heats,
said, "Nlatross had to skip one
evolution. He'sjustsofast."
•
John Hayes Jr., the driver of Jug
ai»ran Tyrant, looks at the horse
another way. "He has extra foot·
steps over the other horses. No one
can stay with him," he said.
Nlatross' $104,717 payday gave
him a career bankroll of$1,738,796 in
less than two years.
Rambling Willie, another pacer,
has taken almost eight seasons to ac-complish the previous earnings

lengths in the first heat. He beat
Storm Damage by three lengths In
the second heat. He never was
pushed, although Denali once led af·
ter an eighth of a mile in the second
race.
Niatross, who was bred on Mrs.
Elsie Berger's Niagara, N.Y. ,
Acres, has 'lost twice in 31 starts.
Both losses came this year: His winning percentage of .935 ranks second
behind the .937 of Bret Hanover,
whose record was built on ·45 vic-tories in 48 starts inJ964 and 1965.

Meet the Meigs Marauders

Mter the Red Mile, Niatross will
head for The Messenger Stakes at
Roosevelt Raceway in New York on
Oct. II. That's the final leg of the
pacing Triple Crown.
Most Happy Fella is the last pacer
to win the Triple Crown. His
achievement came nine years ago .
Niatross' world records were for
the first and second heats for 3-yearolds, for combined tw!Hleat times
for any pacer, and for a baH-mile
track for any pacer.
Dave Barr
5-11, :iiO lha.
Fresbman Tackle

Larry Cotterill
~·. 1771ba.
Junior Tackle

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD
AMERICAN LEAGUE

NATIONAL LEAGUE

JtA.&lt;M'

EAST

W. L PeL GB
81 6&gt;
.156
.Ill
I ll
79 66
76 70
.121
5

Montreal
PhUadel phl a
Pittsburg h
St. Louis
New York
Chicago

66
62

66

WEST

110
II
119

Los An ~Jel es
114 62
Houst on
83 63
Cincinnat i
79 68
Atla nta
77 119
San Francisco
69 77
San Diego
64 63
Tbundly'11 Game,
Houston 10, CincinnaU 2

New Yort

.m

-

.568

I
511

.527

.472
.135

7

II
21111.

Milwaukee
Cleveland

Detroit

Toronto
:~ · Kan s a s

WEST
91

City

O.kland
Texas

74

11

Mlnne!lota

·55

Ch icago

.603

s

.538

14\'o
15
18\1
19

.534
.110

.507
.125

5C
71
75

.611
.500
.486
.442
.128

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62

S3

59 88
.107
$3 93
.363
I-cllnched division tiUe
1'1wndly'• Games
Milwaukee ~. Minnesota S.O

California

at

Pittsburgh
St.Louia

(Alexander 13-8) at San Diego

(Mura 6-7),. (n)
ctncinnaU (Moskau 9-7) at Los Angeles
(Reuaa 17~/' (n)
Houstm Anduja r 3-S ) al San Fnmclsco
(Griffin ..1), ( n)
S.tard.ay' a Gamu

Philadetphl.a at Chicago
Houston at San Francisco
Montreal 11t SU ..oui!lo

31
17\1
19~

26
26
3t
37\1

a, ClevelAnd 3

Boston

Chicago

(B.Fo rsch 11-9 ), (n)

Atlanta

11 sa
71 00
79 69
74 71
71 72
62 114

SeatUe

(Zachry 6-10) at
14-11)

IS

19
24\1

.537

Atlanta 2, San Franc[x() 1
lH.J Angele5 7, San Diego 3
Only games scheduled
Friday'• Gamee
Philadelphia (Walk l lh'i) at
(Reuachel 11-11 )

(RIIoden S.O ), (n)
Montreal
(Rogers

.m

.125
.336

; W. L Pd. GB
11a ~
.637

New York
Ba ltlmure
Boston

Baltimore 1, Detroit 3
New York 1-1, Tvronto 7·2, l!it game,
completion of Wectnesday'l SUBpended
game, 13 iMings

Tew 10, Oakland 6

Kanaaa City 5, California 2

Chicago

~.

Seattle 4
Fltday' l Gamet

Toronto (Todd 4-1 1 at Ballirnore (Palm., 11-10), (n )
Cleveland
(Waits
11-13)
(Schaczeder 9-ll), (n )

Bostoo (Renko

~7)

Detroit

at

at New York (Tiant

6-9), In )

SeatUe

(Honeycutt 9-18 ) at

Milwaukee

(McClure :&lt;-7), (n)

California (Tanana 9-10} at Texas (Flg·
ueroa 3-10), (n )

New York at Pittsburgh, (n)

Cinc!nnaU al Loa Angeles, (n)
Atlanta at San Diego, (n)
SIUidly'a Gamn
New York at PlttsiJurKh

O.kland (Kingman 1·18) at KallllaS City

(Splitwrff tZ.lO), (n )
Chicago (Baumgarten 2- lJ)
nes&lt;lla (Williams J.7), (n)
S.Wdly'aGamea
Cleveland at Ddroit

Phlladelfhia at Chicago
Monlrea at st.Loui.s
CincinnaU at Los Angeles

at

Min-

Morgan puts another
nail in R .e ds' coffin
CINCINNATI (AP) - Joe
Morgan, who took his free agency to
Houston, stomped on the fingers of
his fonner teammates, the Cin·
cinnati Reds, dangling on the edge of
the lead in the National League
West.
"The Reds are absolutely not out
of the race, but to be perfectly truthful about it, they certainly don't·
have a good shot," said Morgan,
whose two-run home run helped
drub the Reds IG-2 and put the Astros
hack in contention with the Los
Angeles Dodgers.
"We had them where we wanted
them but they got away. That's happened to us a lot this year," lamented Cincinnati third baseman Ray
Knight.
The Reds returned from a 10-4
road trip last week, only to lose five
of seven at home. Now they head for
Los Angeles tonight.
"Our job is just a little tougher
than it was," said Reds Manager
John McNamara. "By this weekend
we should know for sure where we

stand" in the race for the division
championship.
Morgan and Jose Cruz each .
blasted homers for the Astros to
sweep the two-game series, piling up
nine runs in the last three innings of
Thursday afternoon's game.
"I don't think that I try any harder
agait¢ the Reds than I do against
the others," said Morgan, who
ptayed on five championship teams
in Cincinna~i.
''This is what the game of baseball
is all about. This is the reason you do
those two extra pushups in spring
training.

~of$1 , 728,447 .

The original heavyweight
un-washed Levi jeans.

•FLARES
•STRAIGHT LEG

•New Chevrolet
Cars &amp; Trucks
•U sed Cars &amp; Trucks

•Genuine' ·
Parts

Chevrolet

• AI'ignment and Frame
Straightening

NEW YORK
CLOTHING HOUSE

• Collision Repair

991·21

Oakland at Kansas City, (.n )

Nlatross beat Trenton Time by 3+

Chicago at MiMesota, (nl

LA has distinct advantage
LOS ANGELES (AP) - The Los
Angeles Dodgers, who lead the
National League West by one game
over Houston, would appear to have
a distinct advantage tonight when
they open a three-game series with
the still-hopeful Cincinnati Reds.
Jerry Reuss, who has beaten the
Reds four times this season and has
won 11 of 12 decisions against the
contending clubs in the NL, will start
on the mound for Los Angeles,'
against Cincinnati's Paul Moskau.
The Dodgers retained their one-

Levrs
" ..... '"

EROY MOTOR
COMPANY

Bostoo at New Yort
Toronto at BaltimOre, (n )
SeatUe at MUwaukee, (n)
CaWornla at Teua, (n)

Atlanta a t San Diego '
Houston at San Francisco

Todd Fife
U, t:IIIIJs.
Fresbman Wingback

gaine edge by defeating San Diego 7·
3 Thursday night, with their biggest
offense in two weeks.
In the only other NL games played
Thursday, Houston beat Cincinnati
1().2 and AUanta sneaked by San
Francisco Z.I.
Los Angeles clubbed three Padre
pitchers for 13 hits, three of theni
homers. Most productive were Steve
Garvey and Dusty Baker, who com·
bined for only eight hits in 55 at-bats
on Los Angeles' recent !riP to
Houston, Cincinnati and Atlanla.

'

DOG FOOD HEADQUARTERS ·

Ron Cey and Mickey Hatcber hit
consecutive homers in the eighth iJI..
ning off the Padres' Mike Ar·
mstrong.
The Dodgers had a :&gt;-1 lead and
starter Bob Welch had restricted
San Diego to four hits over seven iJI..
nings. But in the eighth, the Padres
filled the bases with only one out and
Bobby Castillo took over. He gave up
a bloop single to Dave Winfield that
scored two runs, but retired
Broderick Perkins on a dribbler
back to the moWld and struck out
Luis Salazar to get out of the Inning.

Buckeyes-Gophers battle Saturday
BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
When Earle Bruce replaced the
legendary Woody Hayes at Ohio
State many conversant with college
football figured the Buckeyes would
attract less attention natiOil8\IY. /,
And It would be hard to argue that
they dldn 'I when the pollsters forgot
to rank Ohio State in the Top Twenty
last season. With the tempennental
Hayes cooling his heels not far from
the giant horseshoe where he rose to
fame . in Colwnbus, Ohio, the

Meigs volleyball team
loses

p~

to Athens

ROCK' SPRINGS - The SEOAL's
Athens volleyball squad defeated
league foe Meigs in two games, I:&gt;-2
and 1:&gt;-5 respectively, here Thursday.
Athens has only one defeat this
year.
Despite the ·wide margin of defeat
Meigs played a better than average
floor game. According to Coach
Karen Walker Meigs played "much
better than what the score showed."
The improving Meigs squad kept
pace for a long period of time in the
early stages against the strong
Athens club. Athens, which has a
bench full of talent, put six players
on the floor with four years of ex·
perience playing together as a team.
At one point several ong volleys
highlighted the game and during one
period each team rotated one com' plete time on serves without scoring
a point.
The Meig:::- reserves won In two
games by I:&gt;-13 and 1:&gt;-12 scores.
The Meigs varsity is now 1~ while
the reserve club is at 24.

Buckeyes quleUy rose from obscurity to an eventual No.4 ranking.
Under Bruce no sideline markers
were fractured, no officials grabbed
and no linebackers punched out in
the heat of batUe. He had managed
to make the coach anything but the
center of controversy.
A year later Ohio State, IJ.I last
season, attracted enough attention
to grab the top spot in the preseason

Friday's games
Nor th Gatti a at Southwestern
Parkersburg Catholic at Eastern
Ross SEat Hannan Trace
Piketon at Kyger Creek
Southern at Wahama
Pt. Pleasont at Hurricane
Coal Grove at Wheelersburg
Rock Hill at South Point
Gal ttpalls at Meigs
Logan at Athens
Ironton at Jackson
Wellston at Waverly

national ranklngs. But don't blame
Bruce. He's doing his best to focus
that attention elsewhere.
On Saturday his second-ranked
Buckeyes, 1.0 after a come-from·
behind, 31-21 victory over SyracUse,
entertain Big Ten foe Mlnnesota,I.O.
And Bruce has managed to turn the
spoUight on the opposition.
"He broke every recruiting rulecar use, things of that nature,"
Bruce said of Gopher Coach Joe
Salem. "But I don't think we can call
him on that."
The reason . simply put is that
Salem has housed and supported his
starting quarterback since the lad his son Tim - was in diapers.
And with one week gone In the 1980
season it seems the investment has
paid off handsomely. Salem, who
will go on display Saturday before a
national television audience, scored
his team's first touchdown In Minnesota 's opening-game victory

PARK RESERVED
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 20TH

.SUGAR RUN FLOUR MILLS
POMEROY, OHIO

Terrific Values On These

NEW &amp;USED CARS &amp; TRUCKS
1979 FORD FIESTA
19'77 V.W. RABBIT
1977 LTD 2 Dr.
1977 LTD 4 Dr.

-.

Air con d., radio, 13,000 miles, local owner .

AM· FM rad i O,

~

speed trans .• one owner.

V·B, auto. trans., q ir,

oneowner1

ra~ l o,

speed cont rol ,

V-8, a uto. trans., air, windows, AM· FM 8
track. (SHARP)

$4695
$3295
$2595
$2595

UNTIL 5 P.M.

FAMILY OUTING

1981 TRUCI&lt;S NOW IN STOCI&lt;!

OF

SOUlHERN OHIO
COAL CO.

I

1910 GRANADA$ SOLD AT INVOICE

1980 T-BIRDS SOLD AT $100 OVER INVOICE
1910 PINTOS SOLD AT $200 OVER INVOICE

I
U. S. 60WE$T

HUNTINGTON

�:;-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, Sept. 19, 1980

l-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, Sept.J9,!980

Your Libraries

GARY GEORGE
Mr. and Mrs. Gary GeQrge of
Zanesville are announcing the birth
of their first chi!~, a seven
ounce son, Marc Alan on
Bethesda Hospital.
Maternal ' grandparents
Thelma Osborne of Pomeroy and
Lou Osborne of Parkersburg. Pater·
nal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Fred George, Rutland. Greatgrandparents are Wilma Osborne,
Pomeroy, and the late Harry Osbor· .
ne; Fanny Robinson of St. Paul, Va.;
Violet Jarrell, Salem Center, and the
late Fred Jordan and Earl George of.
Eno and the late Faye Palmer.

By Ellen Bell,
Meigs County Librarian
Some time ago, the 1\leigs County Public Libraries (better known
as Pomeroy Public Library and Middleport Public Library) bought a
'used photocopier from the Health Department and were given another
by the County Commissioners.
I'm sure you know the old saying about never looking a gift horse
in the mouth. Well, one copier for$100 and another for free could not be
turned down. Yet, every item thrown away is thrown away for a
reason. In the case of the copiers, it turned out that the two machines
were not working right.
Bob Bell of Langsville, who has the misfortune of being married to
a librarian, did his best to fiil: the copiers because the cost of
professional fiXing seemed quite high. He succeeded in making one
run fairly well. But it eventually would not work.
So Patti Dugan and I took the copiers to a firm north of here. They
quoted a price of $500 to fiil: the two copiers, told us the copiers were
worthless, and showed us another copier.
On the way home, we stopped to see another dealer. "Worthless?"
they cried. "$500? We can fiil: them for less and they are very good
copiers.''
Patti and I headed north again, collected the two copiers, and left
them with the second firm.
Now all of this is just to let you know that the Pomeroy Public
Library has a copier which works pretty well. The Middleport Public
Library will have its own copier as soon as possible. The repairs,
although under $500, were e;.j: '~sive (and supplies cost money, too);
so we can't mak.e copies for free. However, making copies is
something we will do for you as cheaply as we can, because these are
YOUR libraries.

County-wide revival
September 21-27 here

Rev. Paul Hawks
The United Methodists of Meigs
County are sponsoring a county·
wide revival at the Pomeroy United
Methodist Church, beginning Sept.
21 and continuing through Sept. 'n.
The Rev. Paul Hawks will speak
Sunday through Friday. The Rev.
Benjamin Edwards will preach on
Saturday, Sept. 'n. Services will
begin at 7:30 p.m. each evening.
Special music is to be arranged by
the county 'ministers and churches
taking part.
'
The Rev. Paul W. Hawks, formerly of Gallipolis, is presently

senior pastor of Epworth United
Methodist Church in Marion. A
native of Michigan, Rev. Hawks
rec~ived his education at Asbury
College, the Methodist Theological
School in Ohio, with post graduate
work at Michigan State University.
His pastorates have been in Detroit,
Kentucky and Ohio. He is a frequent
s~aker at colleges, conferences,
conventions and retreats. he has.ser·
ved in the U. S. Navy, U. S. Marine
Corps, and the U. S. Air Force. He
has made three world trips visiting
mission stations and preaching in
different churches around the world.
His preaching theme for the week
will be "Growing in Christian
Maturity."
The Rev. Benjamin Edwards is
the new District Superintendent of
the Athens District of the United
Methodist Church, with offices at
The .Plains. A native of Wilmington,
Rev. Edwards served as pastor of
Linworth United Methodist Church,
Columbus North District, from 1961119110. Other pastorates include
Laurel, Spring Valley, and Swanton.
Rev. Edwards is conunitted to the
ministry of the local church and
makes his home at 60 Wonder Hills,
Athens.
Thi~ county-wide revival is
another project of the County Council on Ministries of tbe United
Methodist Church. The public is invited to attend.

'J. R. ' to appear locally
J . R. will be at the Heath United
Methodist Church, Middleport Sunday. J . R. is not J. R. Ewing of the
famed television show "Dallas" but
the brother of the Rev. Robert
Robinson, who is the pastor of the
Heath.Church.
J. R. is James Robinson. J. R. and
his brother are being reunited after
a six year period of separation.

WIN ART AWARDS - Eight Rutland Elementary
School students won awards for their art entries at the
annual Meigs County Fair. The students have been
presented their prizes which include $1.50 for blue ribbons; $1 for red ribbons and 50 cents for white ribbons.

_Salisbury PTO outlines fund raisers
Education and fund raising activities for the school year were
outlined at the Tuesday night
meeting of the Salisbury PTO held at
the school.
John Lisle, principal, extended a
welcome to the parents arid teachers
and noted that enrollment this year
is 164. As for improvements carried
out during the summer, he noted
that a new walk-in freezer has been
installed, and that the janitor, Russ
Eschelman, had painted the canopy
at the front of the school and sanded
and varnished all the desks.
Plans call for the dental program
to be continued this yea~ in grades
one through three. The supplemental math program initiated
by Ed Bartels last year will be continued again this year and will be
started within two weeks.
A school communications council
will again this year be organized and
Lisle asked for those interested in
serving to contact him. Membership
will be limited to 18.
Lisle also reported that new scien- _

Entertain with party
Mr. and Mrs. J . R. Kennedy of
Tuppers Plains entertained Tuesday
with a party honoring their
daughter, Tammy, on her loth birthday.
A Holly Hobby theme was carried
out. Attending were Jamie Chapman, Amanda Cozart, Tammy
Welch, Michael Wabber, Jayne Ann
Ritchie, Toby Swartz, Joy Swain,
Chris Spencer, David Rice, Erik
Sams, Tony Kennedy, Jalonda Root,
Kate Brown, Linda and Grant
Newland, and her grandparents,
Martina and Andy Van Metre and
Dorothy Yount.
Cake, Ice crema and punch were
served. Games were played with
prizes going to Jamie Chapman and
Tammy Welch.

ce books have been provided for
grades three through six. Workbooks have been eliminated for fourth, fifth and siil:th grades: Parentteacher conferences are also on the
agenda with the first ones to take
place in . late October. The school
also plans to issue a newsletter for
parents periodically.
Lisle expressed a need for a
copying machine at the school and
asked if the PTO might be interested
in purchasing one. Cost and other information will be secured on the
equipment and presented at the next
meeting.
Membership was discussed and
Karen Sloan noted that to date there
are 36 paid members. The fee is 50
cents, and a membership contest
will continue through Nov. I. A prize
will be awarded to the room having
the largest percentage of membership. During the meeting it was
voted to change the room count from
$6 to $10 and to increase the membership award from $10 to $15.
Yvonne Young reported for the
kitchen chairman noting that a dinner will be served Friday to the
Jackson Production Credit
Association and that on Monday a
dinner will be served to the Milk

CLUB TO MEET
Christmas favors for tbe Pomeroy
Health Care Center will be made at
the October meeting of the Bradbury
Variety Club. The project was
discu.«Sed at the recent meeting of
the club at the home of Mrs. Carolyn
Searles. Mrs. Eileen Searles was '
hostess for the meeting attended by
six members and a guest. A report
was given on a household products
party by Sandy McDaniel. A potluck
dinner was served at•noon. Mrs. Ber·
nice Winn will host the next meeting.

Producers Association. Members
are asked to assist and to report to
the school at 6:30p.m.
Mrs. Young also noted that
proceeds from R. C. bottle caps will
be used to purchase prizes for the
fall festival. She encouraged members to save the bottle caps and also
said she would welcome fund raising
ideas.
The purchase of new basketball
uniforms was discussed and named
to a committee to· check costs were
Martha King , Barbara Fry, Don
Hunnel, · Eva King, and Susie
Pullins.
Officers of the PTO are Mrs.
Pullins, president; Martha King,
vice president; Jennie Warth,
secretary; and Judy Whaley,
treasurer.
Junior Troop llOO opened the
meeting with the pledge to the flag.
Mrs. James Corbitt had devotions
using scripture from Romans 14.
Teachers introduced were Martha
Hoover, first grade ; Kim Ohlinger,
second grade, replacing Mrs. Helen
Dais who has retired, Rosalie Story,
third; Lisle, fourth; Dorothy
Chaney, fifth, and Ed Bartels, sixth.
Other teachers and personnel are
Karen Walker, Title I; Ed Harkless,
vocal music; David Bowen, instrumental mujsic; Debbie Hill, art;
Donna Ohlinger, secretary;
Eschelman, janitor, and Sylvia
Neece and Velma Douglas, cooks.
The room count was won by Miss
Story's third grade. Lisle in closing
. stressed the importance of the PTO
'and its role of support to the school.

Whitney Roush
Mr. and Mrs. Warren Wright

BIRTHDAYS TO BE OBSERVED
Quarterly birthdays will be observed when the Harrisonville
Senior Citizens meet at 7 p.m.
Tuesday at the town house. Ice
cream, cake and coffee wiU be ser·
ved.

AUTUMN HARVEST
RUTIAND CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE
SEPT. 21-0ld Fashioned Reunion Day Eat Noon Meal
Together
Rev . E. E . Cox, First Pastor, Preaching.
SEPT. 28-old Fashioned Songfest
OCT. s-Old Timer's Day - R~v. Frank Noel, retired
minister will preach. Old fashion dress for evening
service.
OCT. 7·12-Revival with Rev. Paul Stewart, an out·
standing minister.
OCT . 19-AII Hands Day - Entire Sunday School enroll·
meilt present. Dr. Terrell c. Sanders, Dist. Supt.,
will preach in evening .
OCT. 24·26-Special services with Rev. &amp; Mrs. James C.
Leonard. something special for children .
Sunday School9:30 AM
Evening Service 7: 30PM
Morning Worship 10 :30 AM
Prayer-Praise 7:30PM
(Wed. )
Young People 6: 45PM Sundays

SQUAD CALLED
The Rutland Emergency Squad
was called to Route 143 at 8:28p.m.
Wednesday for Mrs. Herbert Smith
who was taken to Holzer Medical
Center.

PRISATIUN
SIP ll20:1l'

YOU ARE INVITED
LLOYD D. GRIMM, JR., PASTOR

IJSTWHAJ'
WE AUNEEO...
A really good hit!

AMC ,.. Spirit

,--------------~

I
MEIGS
I
I EQUIPMENT CO.

Mr. and ,Mrs. Warren Wright of 846
·south Wayne Ave., Columbus, will
celebrate their 30th wedding an·
niversary on Sept. 23.
Former residents of Middleport,
the couple hilve six children, Jean

RANDY GEORGE
· Mr. and Mrs. Randy George of
Cincinnati are announcing the birth
of an eight pound, three ounce
daughter, Katie Lee at Bethesda
Hospital on Sept. 7.
Maternal grandparents are
Daphine Meiners, Gallipolis, and
Uoyd Lee of Cleveland. Paternal
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Fred
George, Rutland . Greatgrandparents are Violet Jarrell,
Salem Center, and the late Fred Jordan, and Earl George of Eno and the
late Faye Palmer. Mr. and Mrs.
George also have a daughter, Brandl
Dawn.

The winners from the school, I to r, are Tracy Michael,
blue; Sabrina Wilson, red ; Jim Cleland, April Russell,
Mike Walls, Shawn Fetty, Melidda Clay and Regina
Eblin, all white ribbons.

J. Robinson has earned a B. S.
degree, an honorary doctor degree
and a doctorate in psychology. He is 1r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~:;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~l
a retired Colonel of the United States
Anny chaplaincy. He is also an or·
JAMES A. RHODES
dained elder in the United Methodist
Church.
J . R. will deliver the Sunday mor·
ning sermon '~ Claim Your Power."
Services are at 10:30 a.m.

:

AMC ,.. Eagle
AMC ,.. Concord
AMC n Eagle SX/4

I'ITU IOTI.I • I!U. MUUAY

I

I
I
1
Pomeroy, 0 . Ph . 992· 2176
1
I
1I
Hours : 8·5 Mon .-Fri.
I
I
I
1I

ALL MODELS IN STOCK
READY FOR DELIVERY TODAY

8·12Sal.
Closed Sunday New Idea
International

~~~~~----:~~!~~!

Governor

Loomis gives -demonstration
A demonstration on making ar· 26, 6 p.m. at the Route 33 roadside
tificial flowers was given by Alice park if the pastor is able to attend.
Loomis at the recent meeting of the Refreshments were served by Mary
Willing Workers Missionary Society Voss and Donna Koehler. Agnes
of the First Church of God,. Mowery had the closing prayer.
Syracuse.
Joy Clark gave prayer to open the
BOOK SALE PLANNED
meeting with Mrs. Virginia ·oiler
A
book
sale will be held next week
reading the minutes of the last
at
the
Middleport
Public Library.
meeting. Scripture by Mrs. Loomis
All
books,
fiction,
non-fiction, and
was from I. Cor. 15.
will
sell
for
10 cents each
paperback,
Plans were made for a Christmas
and
many
new
books
have been
bazaar the first week of December.
placed
on
the
sale
shelves.
Tl]e sale
A workshop for crafts will be held
will
be
held
through
Saturday
of next
tonight from 6:30 to 9 p.m. at the
week
during
the
regular
hours
of the
church. Plans were also discussed
library.
for a Sunday school picnic on Sept.

NOW ON SPECIAL
BEST SELLERS BY
FAMOUS AUTHORS SUCH AS
DALE EVANS ROGERS,
CORRIE TEN BOOM, AND C. S. LEWIS•.
MARKED DOWN TO

Couple notes 30 ·years

Babies arrive

~

1 99

MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE
99 MILL ST.

RIVERSIDE
AMC-JEEP

J. GORDONPELTIER
Director of Commerce

NOW THROUGH SEPT. 25th

Steve McQueen

HEATH Redwood

Information concerning the amount of the fund and any necessary
Information concerning the presentment of a Claim therefor may be
obtained by any person possessi ng a property (proprietary) interest in
. \. th e unclai med Funds by addressing a written inquiry to the Director
of Commerce, as follows :

W~ID B~iRD

BARGAIN MATINEES ON SAT &amp; SUN
ALL SEATS JUST$ !.50
ADMISSION EVERY TUESDAY $1.50

Director of commerce
Unclaimed Funds Section

899
East Broad Street
Col.umbus, Ohio 43205

unadvertised
unts lessFunds
!hanby County, City and Name:
Register ofacco
Unclaimed
CHESTER
Goreen,
R
&amp;
N
,
216
9th
St.;
Hamilton. W.MD, 8277 Copper Nail
Way ; Waite, Raymond, 247 Virginia Ave.
DEXTER
Tour
ley,
Clair
Ross,
Rt.
1
.
Frye, Denver, Unknown; Hensley, Henry, Rt. 1.
MIDDLEPORT
Eppelin,
Antonia
L. , 3538 Shadeland Ave.; Evans, John, 85 Elm
St .; Foodland Market 2, Unknown ; French, Marion L :, 499 Fisher St.;
Klein,Timothy,
Edith M
Pearl St.;. Parsons, F. S., P.O.Box84 ; Ruther·
lOrd,
70.. 462
N . 2nd Av.8
Anderson, Dave,Box 48MINERSVILLE
; Ritchie, Larry, 980 Mgs.Co. Rd.32.
POMEROY
Cohen,
Ellen,
Rt.
Eblin,
James, R.D.3; Heilman, Albert, Route
4; Heilman, Albert, Route 4; Heilman, Albert, Route 4; Heilman,
Albert
&amp; E., Route 4; Jacobs, Pearl C
., RD 2; Jonas, R. M.. 24 Plum
St . ; Killingsworth, David, Unknown ; Laudermllt, R., Star Rt .; Me·
Mary, 545L.,S329ly'Twp.
Rd. 165; Pierce, Betty J.,329 W.2nd St.;
.Cumber,
Pierce,
Sandra
w. 2nd St.; Wing, Barbara. 8Maple Ave.;
Young, Gordon, Box214; YoU&lt;Ig,
Mae. 240 Cander Street.
PORTLAND
Harris, Jeffrey.Rt.1. Box
34; Sell ers, G ., Rt.1.
REEDSVILLE
Meigs Trucking Co., Unknown .
RUTLAND
Crabtree, Harry G., CITY
PO Box
9.UNKNOWN
OF
Baker. CE&amp;M, Unknown: Burdell, Lewis H., Unknown; Rupe,
H .L . or M ae, Unknown .
Total- 38 Claims.

·Tile Sift of Year-Round Pets

S31 JACKSON PIKE ·Rt.35 NORTH

- PhOne

446· 4524

• L.lrgt

A M.wtWArt• U,hftotlte liMit.
FllmedlnAiftll'fk• by lhtproduc.,. of
'fnler lhe Orqort!

JACKIE
CHArt

'"

Bib

f!ElEDIER5

•,

A
y:

Sttd Capacity with Ease

of Load inQ
• Modetn Oestgn 10 Co mpliment

Your Grounds
• Redwood Construction

IY'k-~

~-

BAWL ~

1s t WE EI(! 7: 00 &amp; 9:00P .M .
SAT &amp; SUN MATINtES ONLY 1:00 ,t, 3:00

5 LB. WILD BIRD SEED

4;

WITH PURCHASE OF ANY
HEATH WltD BIRD FEEDER
Thru

ber

Whitney Dawn Roush, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Roush of New
Haven celebrated her third birthday
onSept.\0.
Cake baked in ice cream cones, ice
cream, and Kool-Aid were served.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
William Roush, New Haven; Mrs.
Scotty Hayes, Pomeroy, grand·
parents; Charles Hayes, Joe Roush,
Mike Roush, Machelle and Cheryl
Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Roush,
Jason, New Have~ ;· Mrs. Bonnie
Freeman, Dianna, Brian and Gary,
Pomeroy.

Social calendar

FRIDAY
SOUP SUPPER Friday, 4:30 to 7
p.m. at Pomeroy Elementary School
by P.T.A., homemade vegetable
soup, hot dogs and desserts.
SQUARE DANCE, 8
11 p.m.
Friday at the Meigs Senior Citizens
Center; music by String Dusters;
Cora Hilton and Paddle Lambert,
ca llers. Admission $1 with children
under 12 accompanying parents,
free.
SATURDAY
CHICKEN BARBECUE Saturday
beginning at II a.m. at New Haven
Fire Station under sponsorship of
auxiliary.
MINERSVILLE
UNITED
GOSPEL GROUP appearing
Methodist
homecoming
Sunday
with
Saturday 7:30 p.m. at Ash St.
Freewill Baptist Church in Mid· Sunday school at. 9; worship at 10
dleport with featured singers to be and basket dinner 12 noon to I :30
Linda Carter and The Sounds of p.m. Afternoon program featuring
Brisco Run Singers from Vienna, W.
Praise; public invited.
Va. Public invited.
COI.j'NTY-WIDE prayer meeting
SUNDAY
Sunday, 2 p.m. at Rutland Bible
YOUNG PEOPLE'S singing group Methodist Church with Glen Bissell,
will present a program at worship class leader.
service, 10:30 a.m. Sunday at the
MEIGS COUNTY Genealogical
Sutton Methodist Church , Racine- Society meeting 2 p.m. Sunday at
Bashan Road.
Meigs Museum, Butternut Ave. ,
Pomeroy; everyone welcome.

to

.

399 w. M;~in Streel
992·2164
~.omeroy, 0 .
The Store with" All Kinds of Stuff
For Pets- Stables - Large and Small Animals.
Lawns - Gardens

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IrS NOT TO
EARLY TO THINK
ABOUT

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PomM~J

TIRE SALES

Fklwer Shop

N. 2nd AVE.
Middleport, Ohio

Millard VanMeter
99?·5721

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LOW PRICES!

lt.m!~in~~rt
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PH. 992-7161

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SIMMONS OLDS-CADILLAC, INC.
BAROA·IN
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1973 DODGE DART SPORT
1978 CHEV. NOVA SE"DAN ...................... S3695
1978 OLDS CUT. SUP. CPE ..............~ ..... s4995
1978 OLDS CUT. SUP. CPE. ................... SS495
1980 AMC SPIRIT CPE.......................... s4995
1979 CAD. DEVILLE CPE..... ··...... ·· ......... · s8795
.
$3495
1977 CHEV. CAPRICE SEDAN ...... ··........... · ···

1295
1974 PINTO WAGON
1974 98 SEDAN
1975 CUT. SEDAN
1975 ROYALE SEDAN
1975 BUICK ESTATE WAGON ·

See One of These Courteous Salesmen
Pete Burris, Marvin Keeba.ugh, George Harris

SIMMONS OLDS-CADILLAC INC.
" You'll Like Our Quality Way of Doing Business"

992-6614 POMEROY
Open Evenings 6:00- t il 5:00P.M , Sat .

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WINTER!

SPECIAL--------....-.;_-,

1977 CHRYSLER CORDOBA ••••••~i:·.s.h:~p•••s2795
1977 FORD LTD ••••••••••••••••••••••••• sz195
1976 FORD STATIONWAGON •••••••••••••• s1895
1976 CHEVY NOVA ••••••••••••• ~~.v~!·:~:~ S1895
1973 FORD STATIONWAGON •••••••••••••• s1295
1975 DODGE DART 4 DR.:.c~~·:~!o~ ·::::: ••.s1295
1973 .CHEVY IMPALA ••••••••••••••••••••• S995
1973 PLY. FURY 4 DR •••••••••••••••••••• s1095
1973 FORD LT().~ •••••••••••••••••••••••• SS95
1973 VOLKSWAGEN ••BUG'~ •••••••••••••• s1295
1971 OLDS CUTLASS•••• : •••• ~ •••••••••••• s595
1971 VW' "BUG'~ ••••••••••••••••••••••••••5895
1971 OLDS••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• s295
1970 FORD GALAXIE ••••••••••••••••••••••s295
1965 CHEVY •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• '295
Pickup like new. s5495
1979 FORD F• 100 ••••••••••••••••••••••••

'

10 A.M.to9 P.M.
Wednesday
Friday
10A.M.to6P.M
.

HUNTIIS

318 V·B, auto., P .S., P . B., moon roof. Reall y sharp .

.

of Mark Mora.

Two children have birthdays

•

MODERN SUPPLY

Winding Trail club meeting

ch. Door prizes were drawn and
A program on medicinal and
edible herbs highlighted the open
awarded.
The Oct. 9 meeting of the Winding
meeting of the Winding Trail Garden
Trail
Club will be hosted by Mrs.
Club held Wednesday night at the
Marjorie Walburn. Fol' roll call
Riverboat Room of the Athens Counmembers are to name their f;lVorite
ty Savings and Loan Co.,.Pomeroy.
Mrs. Peggy Crane, chairman for
fall flower. Mrs. Alice Thompson
will have the program and garden
the open meeting, introduced Paul
Strauss of Rutland who presented
calendar and Mrs. Addalou Lewis
the program. He showlld slides for
will install the officers.
Mrs. Crane and daughters , Donia
identification of herbs giving their
and Jo Ellen, served a dessert cour"everyday" name and their
se to those named and Ruth Moore,
biological name. He discussed the
Jackie Brickles, Cora Beegle,
uses and properties of each herb.
Wilma Terrell, Pat Thoma, and
Strauss who studied and gathered
Marianna Mitchell of the host club;
herbs in Europe and Hawaii ex·
Pat Holter, Bunny ·Kuhl, Shade
pressed a preference for Ohio as a
Valley and Che~ter Garden Club;
collection agency. He noted that he
uses Japanese gardening tools for
Neva Nicholson, Star and Rutland
.Garden Club; Edith Williamson,
harvesting roots. The speaker told of
niarie Denison and Binda Diehl,
living with an Indian who taught him
Rutland
Garden Club, May Holter,
how to identify herbs for eating and
Evelyn
Hollon,
Wildwood Garden
medicine by sight. An instructor on
Club, and other guests, Jody Hysell,
herbs, Strauss noted that he teaches
Joyce Davis, and Helen Davis.
classeS.
His program included a display of
ointments made from herbs and he
Tammy Cremeans
told of the use of gensing and may
Thank you , Customers
apples for medicinal purposes in
hospitals. Among the ' herbal
Hope to qmtinue my
service to you at Hair
medicine in use today is the Park
R: emedies, 44 North
Davis throat lozenges, he noted.
Court St., Athens .
Following his talk , he was given a
Hours:
The lith birthday of Tammy
Mon., Tues., Thurs.
gift by the club.
Cremeans, daughter of Chief of
Mrs. Margaret Parker presided at
Police and Mrs. J. J. Cremeans,
&amp;
the business meeting with Mrs. Ruth
Middleport, was observed recently
Moore giving devotions. Mrs. pat
Ask for Mark, 1-592-4779
with a party at the Skate-a-Way
Holter,
Region
II
director,
an·
Rink near Chester.
nounced the regional meeting and
Punch and cupcakes were served.
the
Meigs County Garden Clubs
Door prizes were awarded to Shanmeeting
for Sept. 25 at Trinity Chur·
non Hindy and Eric Johnson.
Attending were Julie Hysell, DonTOPS QUEEN NAMED
nie Becker, Chris Becker, Amy
Jo
Ann
Fetty was queen at the
Roush, Julie Roush, Brenda Wright,
Tuesday
meeting
of TOPS OH 1456,
Amy Wright, Melissa Wise, Amy
Pomeroy,
with
Clara
Phillips as the
Radekin, David Hoover, Todd Hood,
runner-lip. The queen wa~ presented
Jeff Hood, Eddie Kitchen, Kim and
a dollar. Members were reminded·
Kelli Stewart, Margie Smith, Tamthat Autumn Inspiration Day will
my Wright, Belinda Hadsell, Lisa
take place in November.
Frymyer, Gina Follrod, Eric John·
son, Jeff Nelson, Karen Gilkey,
AND
Richie and Paula, Debi Whitlatch
GIBSON PROMOTED
and Nikki, Mrs. J erry Cremeans,
Kenneth M. Gibson, son of Nellie
Judy Cowan, Ryan and Sam, Mary
M. Gibson of New Haven, W. Va.,
Beth Brewer, Jason and David
has been promoted in the U. S. Air
Smith, Pollie and Kris Chadwell,
Force to the rank of master
WINTER TIRES
Kim Chadwell, Melissa Downing,
sergeant. Sergeant Gibson is a
Tommy, Michael and Mary Beth
ARRIVING DAILY!
medical service supervisor at
and Shawn Cremeans, Shannon HinWright-Patterson Air Force Base,
dy, Wendy Barker, Kathy Arnott,
Ohio.
and the honoree's sister and brother,
Peggy and Jay , Christopher .-------------t
Cremeans.
Sending gifts were Mark Smith,
Isabel Powell, and her aunt from
Germany, Elisabeth Kaltenbach.
GENERAL

'1495

THE HUNTER

NOTICE OF NAMES OF PERSONS
APPEARING TO BE OWNERS
OF UNCLAIMED FUNDS
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO

Prescribed forms will be furnished upon a request of inquiry in
writing.
Name and address must be given exactly as listed.
NOTICE : Names and addresses of uncla imed accounts advertised
in prior years are on file with your County Treasurer as well as
of
$10.00.

Gallipolis, Ohio

Wood of Reedsville; Diane McEihat· .
ten, Galion; Lavona Ebert and
Anita, Bob and Chip Wright, all of
Columbus; and six grandchildren,
Michael, James, Kelly, Bryan, Patty and Jody.

Program on herbs highlights

�:;-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, Sept. 19, 1980

l-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, Sept.J9,!980

Your Libraries

GARY GEORGE
Mr. and Mrs. Gary GeQrge of
Zanesville are announcing the birth
of their first chi!~, a seven
ounce son, Marc Alan on
Bethesda Hospital.
Maternal ' grandparents
Thelma Osborne of Pomeroy and
Lou Osborne of Parkersburg. Pater·
nal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Fred George, Rutland. Greatgrandparents are Wilma Osborne,
Pomeroy, and the late Harry Osbor· .
ne; Fanny Robinson of St. Paul, Va.;
Violet Jarrell, Salem Center, and the
late Fred Jordan and Earl George of.
Eno and the late Faye Palmer.

By Ellen Bell,
Meigs County Librarian
Some time ago, the 1\leigs County Public Libraries (better known
as Pomeroy Public Library and Middleport Public Library) bought a
'used photocopier from the Health Department and were given another
by the County Commissioners.
I'm sure you know the old saying about never looking a gift horse
in the mouth. Well, one copier for$100 and another for free could not be
turned down. Yet, every item thrown away is thrown away for a
reason. In the case of the copiers, it turned out that the two machines
were not working right.
Bob Bell of Langsville, who has the misfortune of being married to
a librarian, did his best to fiil: the copiers because the cost of
professional fiXing seemed quite high. He succeeded in making one
run fairly well. But it eventually would not work.
So Patti Dugan and I took the copiers to a firm north of here. They
quoted a price of $500 to fiil: the two copiers, told us the copiers were
worthless, and showed us another copier.
On the way home, we stopped to see another dealer. "Worthless?"
they cried. "$500? We can fiil: them for less and they are very good
copiers.''
Patti and I headed north again, collected the two copiers, and left
them with the second firm.
Now all of this is just to let you know that the Pomeroy Public
Library has a copier which works pretty well. The Middleport Public
Library will have its own copier as soon as possible. The repairs,
although under $500, were e;.j: '~sive (and supplies cost money, too);
so we can't mak.e copies for free. However, making copies is
something we will do for you as cheaply as we can, because these are
YOUR libraries.

County-wide revival
September 21-27 here

Rev. Paul Hawks
The United Methodists of Meigs
County are sponsoring a county·
wide revival at the Pomeroy United
Methodist Church, beginning Sept.
21 and continuing through Sept. 'n.
The Rev. Paul Hawks will speak
Sunday through Friday. The Rev.
Benjamin Edwards will preach on
Saturday, Sept. 'n. Services will
begin at 7:30 p.m. each evening.
Special music is to be arranged by
the county 'ministers and churches
taking part.
'
The Rev. Paul W. Hawks, formerly of Gallipolis, is presently

senior pastor of Epworth United
Methodist Church in Marion. A
native of Michigan, Rev. Hawks
rec~ived his education at Asbury
College, the Methodist Theological
School in Ohio, with post graduate
work at Michigan State University.
His pastorates have been in Detroit,
Kentucky and Ohio. He is a frequent
s~aker at colleges, conferences,
conventions and retreats. he has.ser·
ved in the U. S. Navy, U. S. Marine
Corps, and the U. S. Air Force. He
has made three world trips visiting
mission stations and preaching in
different churches around the world.
His preaching theme for the week
will be "Growing in Christian
Maturity."
The Rev. Benjamin Edwards is
the new District Superintendent of
the Athens District of the United
Methodist Church, with offices at
The .Plains. A native of Wilmington,
Rev. Edwards served as pastor of
Linworth United Methodist Church,
Columbus North District, from 1961119110. Other pastorates include
Laurel, Spring Valley, and Swanton.
Rev. Edwards is conunitted to the
ministry of the local church and
makes his home at 60 Wonder Hills,
Athens.
Thi~ county-wide revival is
another project of the County Council on Ministries of tbe United
Methodist Church. The public is invited to attend.

'J. R. ' to appear locally
J . R. will be at the Heath United
Methodist Church, Middleport Sunday. J . R. is not J. R. Ewing of the
famed television show "Dallas" but
the brother of the Rev. Robert
Robinson, who is the pastor of the
Heath.Church.
J. R. is James Robinson. J. R. and
his brother are being reunited after
a six year period of separation.

WIN ART AWARDS - Eight Rutland Elementary
School students won awards for their art entries at the
annual Meigs County Fair. The students have been
presented their prizes which include $1.50 for blue ribbons; $1 for red ribbons and 50 cents for white ribbons.

_Salisbury PTO outlines fund raisers
Education and fund raising activities for the school year were
outlined at the Tuesday night
meeting of the Salisbury PTO held at
the school.
John Lisle, principal, extended a
welcome to the parents arid teachers
and noted that enrollment this year
is 164. As for improvements carried
out during the summer, he noted
that a new walk-in freezer has been
installed, and that the janitor, Russ
Eschelman, had painted the canopy
at the front of the school and sanded
and varnished all the desks.
Plans call for the dental program
to be continued this yea~ in grades
one through three. The supplemental math program initiated
by Ed Bartels last year will be continued again this year and will be
started within two weeks.
A school communications council
will again this year be organized and
Lisle asked for those interested in
serving to contact him. Membership
will be limited to 18.
Lisle also reported that new scien- _

Entertain with party
Mr. and Mrs. J . R. Kennedy of
Tuppers Plains entertained Tuesday
with a party honoring their
daughter, Tammy, on her loth birthday.
A Holly Hobby theme was carried
out. Attending were Jamie Chapman, Amanda Cozart, Tammy
Welch, Michael Wabber, Jayne Ann
Ritchie, Toby Swartz, Joy Swain,
Chris Spencer, David Rice, Erik
Sams, Tony Kennedy, Jalonda Root,
Kate Brown, Linda and Grant
Newland, and her grandparents,
Martina and Andy Van Metre and
Dorothy Yount.
Cake, Ice crema and punch were
served. Games were played with
prizes going to Jamie Chapman and
Tammy Welch.

ce books have been provided for
grades three through six. Workbooks have been eliminated for fourth, fifth and siil:th grades: Parentteacher conferences are also on the
agenda with the first ones to take
place in . late October. The school
also plans to issue a newsletter for
parents periodically.
Lisle expressed a need for a
copying machine at the school and
asked if the PTO might be interested
in purchasing one. Cost and other information will be secured on the
equipment and presented at the next
meeting.
Membership was discussed and
Karen Sloan noted that to date there
are 36 paid members. The fee is 50
cents, and a membership contest
will continue through Nov. I. A prize
will be awarded to the room having
the largest percentage of membership. During the meeting it was
voted to change the room count from
$6 to $10 and to increase the membership award from $10 to $15.
Yvonne Young reported for the
kitchen chairman noting that a dinner will be served Friday to the
Jackson Production Credit
Association and that on Monday a
dinner will be served to the Milk

CLUB TO MEET
Christmas favors for tbe Pomeroy
Health Care Center will be made at
the October meeting of the Bradbury
Variety Club. The project was
discu.«Sed at the recent meeting of
the club at the home of Mrs. Carolyn
Searles. Mrs. Eileen Searles was '
hostess for the meeting attended by
six members and a guest. A report
was given on a household products
party by Sandy McDaniel. A potluck
dinner was served at•noon. Mrs. Ber·
nice Winn will host the next meeting.

Producers Association. Members
are asked to assist and to report to
the school at 6:30p.m.
Mrs. Young also noted that
proceeds from R. C. bottle caps will
be used to purchase prizes for the
fall festival. She encouraged members to save the bottle caps and also
said she would welcome fund raising
ideas.
The purchase of new basketball
uniforms was discussed and named
to a committee to· check costs were
Martha King , Barbara Fry, Don
Hunnel, · Eva King, and Susie
Pullins.
Officers of the PTO are Mrs.
Pullins, president; Martha King,
vice president; Jennie Warth,
secretary; and Judy Whaley,
treasurer.
Junior Troop llOO opened the
meeting with the pledge to the flag.
Mrs. James Corbitt had devotions
using scripture from Romans 14.
Teachers introduced were Martha
Hoover, first grade ; Kim Ohlinger,
second grade, replacing Mrs. Helen
Dais who has retired, Rosalie Story,
third; Lisle, fourth; Dorothy
Chaney, fifth, and Ed Bartels, sixth.
Other teachers and personnel are
Karen Walker, Title I; Ed Harkless,
vocal music; David Bowen, instrumental mujsic; Debbie Hill, art;
Donna Ohlinger, secretary;
Eschelman, janitor, and Sylvia
Neece and Velma Douglas, cooks.
The room count was won by Miss
Story's third grade. Lisle in closing
. stressed the importance of the PTO
'and its role of support to the school.

Whitney Roush
Mr. and Mrs. Warren Wright

BIRTHDAYS TO BE OBSERVED
Quarterly birthdays will be observed when the Harrisonville
Senior Citizens meet at 7 p.m.
Tuesday at the town house. Ice
cream, cake and coffee wiU be ser·
ved.

AUTUMN HARVEST
RUTIAND CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE
SEPT. 21-0ld Fashioned Reunion Day Eat Noon Meal
Together
Rev . E. E . Cox, First Pastor, Preaching.
SEPT. 28-old Fashioned Songfest
OCT. s-Old Timer's Day - R~v. Frank Noel, retired
minister will preach. Old fashion dress for evening
service.
OCT. 7·12-Revival with Rev. Paul Stewart, an out·
standing minister.
OCT . 19-AII Hands Day - Entire Sunday School enroll·
meilt present. Dr. Terrell c. Sanders, Dist. Supt.,
will preach in evening .
OCT. 24·26-Special services with Rev. &amp; Mrs. James C.
Leonard. something special for children .
Sunday School9:30 AM
Evening Service 7: 30PM
Morning Worship 10 :30 AM
Prayer-Praise 7:30PM
(Wed. )
Young People 6: 45PM Sundays

SQUAD CALLED
The Rutland Emergency Squad
was called to Route 143 at 8:28p.m.
Wednesday for Mrs. Herbert Smith
who was taken to Holzer Medical
Center.

PRISATIUN
SIP ll20:1l'

YOU ARE INVITED
LLOYD D. GRIMM, JR., PASTOR

IJSTWHAJ'
WE AUNEEO...
A really good hit!

AMC ,.. Spirit

,--------------~

I
MEIGS
I
I EQUIPMENT CO.

Mr. and ,Mrs. Warren Wright of 846
·south Wayne Ave., Columbus, will
celebrate their 30th wedding an·
niversary on Sept. 23.
Former residents of Middleport,
the couple hilve six children, Jean

RANDY GEORGE
· Mr. and Mrs. Randy George of
Cincinnati are announcing the birth
of an eight pound, three ounce
daughter, Katie Lee at Bethesda
Hospital on Sept. 7.
Maternal grandparents are
Daphine Meiners, Gallipolis, and
Uoyd Lee of Cleveland. Paternal
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Fred
George, Rutland . Greatgrandparents are Violet Jarrell,
Salem Center, and the late Fred Jordan, and Earl George of Eno and the
late Faye Palmer. Mr. and Mrs.
George also have a daughter, Brandl
Dawn.

The winners from the school, I to r, are Tracy Michael,
blue; Sabrina Wilson, red ; Jim Cleland, April Russell,
Mike Walls, Shawn Fetty, Melidda Clay and Regina
Eblin, all white ribbons.

J. Robinson has earned a B. S.
degree, an honorary doctor degree
and a doctorate in psychology. He is 1r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~:;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~l
a retired Colonel of the United States
Anny chaplaincy. He is also an or·
JAMES A. RHODES
dained elder in the United Methodist
Church.
J . R. will deliver the Sunday mor·
ning sermon '~ Claim Your Power."
Services are at 10:30 a.m.

:

AMC ,.. Eagle
AMC ,.. Concord
AMC n Eagle SX/4

I'ITU IOTI.I • I!U. MUUAY

I

I
I
1
Pomeroy, 0 . Ph . 992· 2176
1
I
1I
Hours : 8·5 Mon .-Fri.
I
I
I
1I

ALL MODELS IN STOCK
READY FOR DELIVERY TODAY

8·12Sal.
Closed Sunday New Idea
International

~~~~~----:~~!~~!

Governor

Loomis gives -demonstration
A demonstration on making ar· 26, 6 p.m. at the Route 33 roadside
tificial flowers was given by Alice park if the pastor is able to attend.
Loomis at the recent meeting of the Refreshments were served by Mary
Willing Workers Missionary Society Voss and Donna Koehler. Agnes
of the First Church of God,. Mowery had the closing prayer.
Syracuse.
Joy Clark gave prayer to open the
BOOK SALE PLANNED
meeting with Mrs. Virginia ·oiler
A
book
sale will be held next week
reading the minutes of the last
at
the
Middleport
Public Library.
meeting. Scripture by Mrs. Loomis
All
books,
fiction,
non-fiction, and
was from I. Cor. 15.
will
sell
for
10 cents each
paperback,
Plans were made for a Christmas
and
many
new
books
have been
bazaar the first week of December.
placed
on
the
sale
shelves.
Tl]e sale
A workshop for crafts will be held
will
be
held
through
Saturday
of next
tonight from 6:30 to 9 p.m. at the
week
during
the
regular
hours
of the
church. Plans were also discussed
library.
for a Sunday school picnic on Sept.

NOW ON SPECIAL
BEST SELLERS BY
FAMOUS AUTHORS SUCH AS
DALE EVANS ROGERS,
CORRIE TEN BOOM, AND C. S. LEWIS•.
MARKED DOWN TO

Couple notes 30 ·years

Babies arrive

~

1 99

MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE
99 MILL ST.

RIVERSIDE
AMC-JEEP

J. GORDONPELTIER
Director of Commerce

NOW THROUGH SEPT. 25th

Steve McQueen

HEATH Redwood

Information concerning the amount of the fund and any necessary
Information concerning the presentment of a Claim therefor may be
obtained by any person possessi ng a property (proprietary) interest in
. \. th e unclai med Funds by addressing a written inquiry to the Director
of Commerce, as follows :

W~ID B~iRD

BARGAIN MATINEES ON SAT &amp; SUN
ALL SEATS JUST$ !.50
ADMISSION EVERY TUESDAY $1.50

Director of commerce
Unclaimed Funds Section

899
East Broad Street
Col.umbus, Ohio 43205

unadvertised
unts lessFunds
!hanby County, City and Name:
Register ofacco
Unclaimed
CHESTER
Goreen,
R
&amp;
N
,
216
9th
St.;
Hamilton. W.MD, 8277 Copper Nail
Way ; Waite, Raymond, 247 Virginia Ave.
DEXTER
Tour
ley,
Clair
Ross,
Rt.
1
.
Frye, Denver, Unknown; Hensley, Henry, Rt. 1.
MIDDLEPORT
Eppelin,
Antonia
L. , 3538 Shadeland Ave.; Evans, John, 85 Elm
St .; Foodland Market 2, Unknown ; French, Marion L :, 499 Fisher St.;
Klein,Timothy,
Edith M
Pearl St.;. Parsons, F. S., P.O.Box84 ; Ruther·
lOrd,
70.. 462
N . 2nd Av.8
Anderson, Dave,Box 48MINERSVILLE
; Ritchie, Larry, 980 Mgs.Co. Rd.32.
POMEROY
Cohen,
Ellen,
Rt.
Eblin,
James, R.D.3; Heilman, Albert, Route
4; Heilman, Albert, Route 4; Heilman, Albert, Route 4; Heilman,
Albert
&amp; E., Route 4; Jacobs, Pearl C
., RD 2; Jonas, R. M.. 24 Plum
St . ; Killingsworth, David, Unknown ; Laudermllt, R., Star Rt .; Me·
Mary, 545L.,S329ly'Twp.
Rd. 165; Pierce, Betty J.,329 W.2nd St.;
.Cumber,
Pierce,
Sandra
w. 2nd St.; Wing, Barbara. 8Maple Ave.;
Young, Gordon, Box214; YoU&lt;Ig,
Mae. 240 Cander Street.
PORTLAND
Harris, Jeffrey.Rt.1. Box
34; Sell ers, G ., Rt.1.
REEDSVILLE
Meigs Trucking Co., Unknown .
RUTLAND
Crabtree, Harry G., CITY
PO Box
9.UNKNOWN
OF
Baker. CE&amp;M, Unknown: Burdell, Lewis H., Unknown; Rupe,
H .L . or M ae, Unknown .
Total- 38 Claims.

·Tile Sift of Year-Round Pets

S31 JACKSON PIKE ·Rt.35 NORTH

- PhOne

446· 4524

• L.lrgt

A M.wtWArt• U,hftotlte liMit.
FllmedlnAiftll'fk• by lhtproduc.,. of
'fnler lhe Orqort!

JACKIE
CHArt

'"

Bib

f!ElEDIER5

•,

A
y:

Sttd Capacity with Ease

of Load inQ
• Modetn Oestgn 10 Co mpliment

Your Grounds
• Redwood Construction

IY'k-~

~-

BAWL ~

1s t WE EI(! 7: 00 &amp; 9:00P .M .
SAT &amp; SUN MATINtES ONLY 1:00 ,t, 3:00

5 LB. WILD BIRD SEED

4;

WITH PURCHASE OF ANY
HEATH WltD BIRD FEEDER
Thru

ber

Whitney Dawn Roush, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Roush of New
Haven celebrated her third birthday
onSept.\0.
Cake baked in ice cream cones, ice
cream, and Kool-Aid were served.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
William Roush, New Haven; Mrs.
Scotty Hayes, Pomeroy, grand·
parents; Charles Hayes, Joe Roush,
Mike Roush, Machelle and Cheryl
Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Roush,
Jason, New Have~ ;· Mrs. Bonnie
Freeman, Dianna, Brian and Gary,
Pomeroy.

Social calendar

FRIDAY
SOUP SUPPER Friday, 4:30 to 7
p.m. at Pomeroy Elementary School
by P.T.A., homemade vegetable
soup, hot dogs and desserts.
SQUARE DANCE, 8
11 p.m.
Friday at the Meigs Senior Citizens
Center; music by String Dusters;
Cora Hilton and Paddle Lambert,
ca llers. Admission $1 with children
under 12 accompanying parents,
free.
SATURDAY
CHICKEN BARBECUE Saturday
beginning at II a.m. at New Haven
Fire Station under sponsorship of
auxiliary.
MINERSVILLE
UNITED
GOSPEL GROUP appearing
Methodist
homecoming
Sunday
with
Saturday 7:30 p.m. at Ash St.
Freewill Baptist Church in Mid· Sunday school at. 9; worship at 10
dleport with featured singers to be and basket dinner 12 noon to I :30
Linda Carter and The Sounds of p.m. Afternoon program featuring
Brisco Run Singers from Vienna, W.
Praise; public invited.
Va. Public invited.
COI.j'NTY-WIDE prayer meeting
SUNDAY
Sunday, 2 p.m. at Rutland Bible
YOUNG PEOPLE'S singing group Methodist Church with Glen Bissell,
will present a program at worship class leader.
service, 10:30 a.m. Sunday at the
MEIGS COUNTY Genealogical
Sutton Methodist Church , Racine- Society meeting 2 p.m. Sunday at
Bashan Road.
Meigs Museum, Butternut Ave. ,
Pomeroy; everyone welcome.

to

.

399 w. M;~in Streel
992·2164
~.omeroy, 0 .
The Store with" All Kinds of Stuff
For Pets- Stables - Large and Small Animals.
Lawns - Gardens

•'

I .

,I

I

•
'

''

l
''

I,

'

I •'I.

IrS NOT TO
EARLY TO THINK
ABOUT

l
i

PomM~J

TIRE SALES

Fklwer Shop

N. 2nd AVE.
Middleport, Ohio

Millard VanMeter
99?·5721

I

CHECK NOW FOR
LOW PRICES!

lt.m!~in~~rt
aruLQuottM

PH. 992-7161

..

SIMMONS OLDS-CADILLAC, INC.
BAROA·IN
,,

1973 DODGE DART SPORT
1978 CHEV. NOVA SE"DAN ...................... S3695
1978 OLDS CUT. SUP. CPE ..............~ ..... s4995
1978 OLDS CUT. SUP. CPE. ................... SS495
1980 AMC SPIRIT CPE.......................... s4995
1979 CAD. DEVILLE CPE..... ··...... ·· ......... · s8795
.
$3495
1977 CHEV. CAPRICE SEDAN ...... ··........... · ···

1295
1974 PINTO WAGON
1974 98 SEDAN
1975 CUT. SEDAN
1975 ROYALE SEDAN
1975 BUICK ESTATE WAGON ·

See One of These Courteous Salesmen
Pete Burris, Marvin Keeba.ugh, George Harris

SIMMONS OLDS-CADILLAC INC.
" You'll Like Our Quality Way of Doing Business"

992-6614 POMEROY
Open Evenings 6:00- t il 5:00P.M , Sat .

l

I

\_:

WINTER!

SPECIAL--------....-.;_-,

1977 CHRYSLER CORDOBA ••••••~i:·.s.h:~p•••s2795
1977 FORD LTD ••••••••••••••••••••••••• sz195
1976 FORD STATIONWAGON •••••••••••••• s1895
1976 CHEVY NOVA ••••••••••••• ~~.v~!·:~:~ S1895
1973 FORD STATIONWAGON •••••••••••••• s1295
1975 DODGE DART 4 DR.:.c~~·:~!o~ ·::::: ••.s1295
1973 .CHEVY IMPALA ••••••••••••••••••••• S995
1973 PLY. FURY 4 DR •••••••••••••••••••• s1095
1973 FORD LT().~ •••••••••••••••••••••••• SS95
1973 VOLKSWAGEN ••BUG'~ •••••••••••••• s1295
1971 OLDS CUTLASS•••• : •••• ~ •••••••••••• s595
1971 VW' "BUG'~ ••••••••••••••••••••••••••5895
1971 OLDS••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• s295
1970 FORD GALAXIE ••••••••••••••••••••••s295
1965 CHEVY •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• '295
Pickup like new. s5495
1979 FORD F• 100 ••••••••••••••••••••••••

'

10 A.M.to9 P.M.
Wednesday
Friday
10A.M.to6P.M
.

HUNTIIS

318 V·B, auto., P .S., P . B., moon roof. Reall y sharp .

.

of Mark Mora.

Two children have birthdays

•

MODERN SUPPLY

Winding Trail club meeting

ch. Door prizes were drawn and
A program on medicinal and
edible herbs highlighted the open
awarded.
The Oct. 9 meeting of the Winding
meeting of the Winding Trail Garden
Trail
Club will be hosted by Mrs.
Club held Wednesday night at the
Marjorie Walburn. Fol' roll call
Riverboat Room of the Athens Counmembers are to name their f;lVorite
ty Savings and Loan Co.,.Pomeroy.
Mrs. Peggy Crane, chairman for
fall flower. Mrs. Alice Thompson
will have the program and garden
the open meeting, introduced Paul
Strauss of Rutland who presented
calendar and Mrs. Addalou Lewis
the program. He showlld slides for
will install the officers.
Mrs. Crane and daughters , Donia
identification of herbs giving their
and Jo Ellen, served a dessert cour"everyday" name and their
se to those named and Ruth Moore,
biological name. He discussed the
Jackie Brickles, Cora Beegle,
uses and properties of each herb.
Wilma Terrell, Pat Thoma, and
Strauss who studied and gathered
Marianna Mitchell of the host club;
herbs in Europe and Hawaii ex·
Pat Holter, Bunny ·Kuhl, Shade
pressed a preference for Ohio as a
Valley and Che~ter Garden Club;
collection agency. He noted that he
uses Japanese gardening tools for
Neva Nicholson, Star and Rutland
.Garden Club; Edith Williamson,
harvesting roots. The speaker told of
niarie Denison and Binda Diehl,
living with an Indian who taught him
Rutland
Garden Club, May Holter,
how to identify herbs for eating and
Evelyn
Hollon,
Wildwood Garden
medicine by sight. An instructor on
Club, and other guests, Jody Hysell,
herbs, Strauss noted that he teaches
Joyce Davis, and Helen Davis.
classeS.
His program included a display of
ointments made from herbs and he
Tammy Cremeans
told of the use of gensing and may
Thank you , Customers
apples for medicinal purposes in
hospitals. Among the ' herbal
Hope to qmtinue my
service to you at Hair
medicine in use today is the Park
R: emedies, 44 North
Davis throat lozenges, he noted.
Court St., Athens .
Following his talk , he was given a
Hours:
The lith birthday of Tammy
Mon., Tues., Thurs.
gift by the club.
Cremeans, daughter of Chief of
Mrs. Margaret Parker presided at
Police and Mrs. J. J. Cremeans,
&amp;
the business meeting with Mrs. Ruth
Middleport, was observed recently
Moore giving devotions. Mrs. pat
Ask for Mark, 1-592-4779
with a party at the Skate-a-Way
Holter,
Region
II
director,
an·
Rink near Chester.
nounced the regional meeting and
Punch and cupcakes were served.
the
Meigs County Garden Clubs
Door prizes were awarded to Shanmeeting
for Sept. 25 at Trinity Chur·
non Hindy and Eric Johnson.
Attending were Julie Hysell, DonTOPS QUEEN NAMED
nie Becker, Chris Becker, Amy
Jo
Ann
Fetty was queen at the
Roush, Julie Roush, Brenda Wright,
Tuesday
meeting
of TOPS OH 1456,
Amy Wright, Melissa Wise, Amy
Pomeroy,
with
Clara
Phillips as the
Radekin, David Hoover, Todd Hood,
runner-lip. The queen wa~ presented
Jeff Hood, Eddie Kitchen, Kim and
a dollar. Members were reminded·
Kelli Stewart, Margie Smith, Tamthat Autumn Inspiration Day will
my Wright, Belinda Hadsell, Lisa
take place in November.
Frymyer, Gina Follrod, Eric John·
son, Jeff Nelson, Karen Gilkey,
AND
Richie and Paula, Debi Whitlatch
GIBSON PROMOTED
and Nikki, Mrs. J erry Cremeans,
Kenneth M. Gibson, son of Nellie
Judy Cowan, Ryan and Sam, Mary
M. Gibson of New Haven, W. Va.,
Beth Brewer, Jason and David
has been promoted in the U. S. Air
Smith, Pollie and Kris Chadwell,
Force to the rank of master
WINTER TIRES
Kim Chadwell, Melissa Downing,
sergeant. Sergeant Gibson is a
Tommy, Michael and Mary Beth
ARRIVING DAILY!
medical service supervisor at
and Shawn Cremeans, Shannon HinWright-Patterson Air Force Base,
dy, Wendy Barker, Kathy Arnott,
Ohio.
and the honoree's sister and brother,
Peggy and Jay , Christopher .-------------t
Cremeans.
Sending gifts were Mark Smith,
Isabel Powell, and her aunt from
Germany, Elisabeth Kaltenbach.
GENERAL

'1495

THE HUNTER

NOTICE OF NAMES OF PERSONS
APPEARING TO BE OWNERS
OF UNCLAIMED FUNDS
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO

Prescribed forms will be furnished upon a request of inquiry in
writing.
Name and address must be given exactly as listed.
NOTICE : Names and addresses of uncla imed accounts advertised
in prior years are on file with your County Treasurer as well as
of
$10.00.

Gallipolis, Ohio

Wood of Reedsville; Diane McEihat· .
ten, Galion; Lavona Ebert and
Anita, Bob and Chip Wright, all of
Columbus; and six grandchildren,
Michael, James, Kelly, Bryan, Patty and Jody.

Program on herbs highlights

�CHURCH
NEwsTRINITY CHURCH , Rev W H. Perrin
pastor, Roy Moyer, Sunday school supt.

Chu rch School . 9.15 a .m . worship service, 10.30a m Choir r..,eortal , Tuesday ,
7 30 p m. under direction of Allee Nease

A~:,:~~~:. A
~
~~\

Sorvlco
"
LOcust &amp; S.ch tree1

"'"''M~~DOrt

__

Henderson. pastor Sunday school 9 30

Phone U14 l 742· 2117

Hall immediately followmg the service
POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST, 212 W.
Main St Ne1l Proudfoot. pastor Bible
school , 9:30a.m .. morning worship , 10 30
a.m Youth meetings 6·30 p.m .; e't'en1ng
worship , 7.30 Wednesday night prayer
meeting and 81ble study , 7·30 p m.
THE SALVATION ARMY , 115 Butternut
Ave Pomeroy Envoy and Mrs. Ray Win Ing, officers m charge Sunday -holiness
meeting, 10 a .m.; Sunday School , 10:30
a .m Sunday scf1ool leader, YPSM. Eloise
Adams . 7:30 p.m ., salvation meeting,
't'Orious speakers and music specials.
Thursday- 10 a .m 10 2 p.m. Lad1as Home
League, all women inv1ted. 7.30 p.m.
prcyer meet1ng and B1ble study Rev . Noel
Herman, teacher
BURLINGTON SOUTHERN BAPTIST
CHAPEL. Route 1, Shade Bible scnool, 7
p m Thursday; worship service, 8 p m
POMEROY WESTSIDE CHURCH OF
CHRIST, 200 W Main St . 992-5235 Vocal
mus1c. Sunday worship , 10 a .m . Btble
study , 11 am . worship , 6 p m . Wednesday Boble study, 7 p.m.
OLD DEXTER BIBLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH ,
Rev,Ralph Sm1th, pastor Sunday school,
9.30
a .m • Mrs. Worley Francis,
superintendent Preach1ng services first &amp;
third Sundays following Sunday School .
GRAHAM
UNITED
METHODIST,
Preaching 9:30a.m., first and second Sundays of each month, third and fourth Sun·
days each month, worsh1p ser.~1ce at 7:30
p.m Wednesday evenings at 7 30. Prayer
and Bible Study.
SEVENTH ·DAY ADVENTIST Mulberry
Height, Road , Pomeroy. Pastor, Albert
Dlttes. Sabbath School Superintendent,
Rita White. Sabbath School , Saturday
afternoon at 2 00, w1th Worship Service
followlngat3 :15
RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCHSister Hameft Warner, Supt . Sunday
School 9.30 a.m .. mornmg worship , 10 . ~5
a .m.
THE HILAND CHAPEL, George Casta,
pastor Sunday School. 9·30 a m evening
worship. 7 30. Thursday evening prayer
service, 7·30 p.m
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST , David Mann ,
minister William Watson, Sunday school
supt Sunday school , 9 30 a.m. , mornmg
worship 10·30o m
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST, 2B2 Mulberry
Ave , Pomeroy, Hershel McClure, Sunday
school supermtendent Sunday school,
9·30 om , morning wor.shlp, 10 30, even·
tng worsh1p, 7:00 p.m. Midweek prayer
service, 7.00 p.m.
MIDWAY COMMUNITY CHURCH , Dex·
ter Rd , Rd. Longsv1lle. Rev A . A
Hughes, Pastor Sunday School 10 o.m
Services on Tuesday, Thursday and Sun·
day, 7'30p m
FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH , Bailey
Run Rood, Rev. Emmett Rawson , pastor.
Handley Dunn, supt Sunday school, 10
a m Sunday evening service 7 30 Bible
teaching, 7:30p.m Thunday.
DYESVILLE COMMUNITY CHURCH ,
Roger C. Turner, pa;stor. Sunday school,
9 30 a m , Sunday morning worship,
J.O 30; Sunday evening service, 7 30.
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION, Lawrence Manley,
pastor. Mrs . Russell Young. Sunday
School Supt Sunday School 9·30 a m
Evening worship 7.30, Wednesday prayer
meet1ng, 7·30 p m.
MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD,
Racine- Rev James Satterfield pastor
Morning worsh1p, 9 ,45 o .m , Sunday
school , 10·o45 a.m , evening worship , 7
Tuesday, 7.30 p.m. , ladies prayer
meeting; Wednesday, 7·30p m YPE
MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST, Corner
Sixth and Palmer, the Rev Mark McClung,
Sunday school , 9:15 om; Randy Hayes,
Sunday School , superintendent. Dan
Riggs, asst. supt. Mornmg Worah1p, 10:15
am Youth meeting , 7 30 p.m. Wednesday , mcludmg wee tots, eager beavers,
junior astronau ts, and junior and senior
high BYF; choir practice , 8:30 p m.
Wednesday prayer ' meeting and Bible
study, Wednesday, 7:30pm .
CHURCH OF CHRIST. Middleport 5th
and Main, Bob Melton, minister, Scott
Salhman
associate minister. Bible
School , 9.30 a m ., mormng worship ,
10 30 a m. evemng serv1ce, 7:30 p .m
Wednesday 81ble Study and youth group
meetings 7.30 p.m .
MIDDLEPORT
CHURCH
OF
THE
NAZARENE, Rev Jim Broome. pastor, Bill
White, Sunday school supt
Sunday
school , 9:30am : morning worship , 10·30
am .. Sunday evangelistic meeting , 7·00
p m. Prayer meeting, Wednesday , 7 p.m
UNITED PRESBYTERIAN MINISTRY OF
MEIGS COUNTY, Dw1ght l Zav1tt dlreclar
HARRISONVILLE PRESBYTERIAN , Rev,
Ernest Stricklin . pastor Sunday church
school, 9 30 a.m , Mrs . Homer Lee, supt.,
morning worsh1p , 10 30.
MIDDLEPORT, Sunday school, 9 30a.m,
Richard Vaughan , supt Morning worship ,
10:30.
SYRACUSE FIRST UNITED PRESBYTERIAN
Church. Worsh1p serv1ce 9.30 a .m Sunda(
School 10 30 a.m. Mrs. Sampson Hal ,
supt.
'
RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD, Rev Bob ·
by Porter , pastor Sundoy school , 10 a m ;
Sunday worsh1p. 11 a.m ., Sunday even1ng
service, 7 p m , Wednesday Fomdy Tral ing Hour. 7 p.m Wednesday worshtp service, 7 30p m
HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH, Near
Long Bottom Edsel Hart, pastor Sunday
school, 10 am. Church , 7:30p.m. prayer
meeting, 7 30 p m Thursday.
MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL, Third
Ave , the Rev William Knittel pastor .
Thomas Kelly , Sunday School Supt Son day school , 10 a m Classes for all ages,
evenir19 serv1ce , 7·30; Bible study,
Wednesday . 7 30 p m , youth ser'Jices.
Friday, 7.30 p.m .
MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST, Corner
Ash and Plum, Ralph Butcher, pastor
Saturday evenmg service, 7·30 p m ., Sun
day School , 10 30 a m
MEIGS
COOPERATIVE PARISH
METHODIST CHURCH
RlchardW Thomas. Director
POMEROY CLUSTER
Rev Robert McGee
Rev. James Corbitt
POMEROY , Sunday School 9 15 a m
Worsh1p ser\IICe 10 30 am. Cho1r rehear
sol, Wednesday , 7 p m Rev Robert
McGee. pas tor.
ENTERPRISE. Worsh1p 9 o m Church
SchooiiOa.m.
ROCK SPRINGS. Sunday School 9 15 o
m Worah1p serviCe 10 o. m
FLATWOODS, Cnurch School 10 a m
Wo rship 11 o m

CENTER, INC.

....

John F, Fultt, Mgr.
.Ph. 992~2101

MLL'S

Attend The

~-:~ANKLIN•

·Church
Ch of
•

v

~ OUr

OICe

!b

II&amp;C JEWELERS

Keeoe*'
_._._

'

..

212 E. Main StrM1

~~~m~H~o~y. . . . . .J..~~h~JS~·~~~~~ l.~.....M~Id·d·le.~.n.,·O·h·lo. . . . . .~~==~~=tn~·=ni~5:,:Po::m:o~~y~
of Your Choice

S,t.LE!i J~nll!iERVICE
Rutt•ncl, OhtO 41775
J Wm " lrll " Brown , Owner

tog prayer on the th~rd Sunday Morning
prayer and sermon on all other Sundays
of the month Church School and nursery
care provided Coffee hour In the Parish

MEIGS TIRE

_.~==~~

Brown's Fire &amp; 5afei\!
Equipment

POMEROY CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE ••
Corner Union and Mulberry, Rev Clyde V.

a.m , Glen McClung , supt .. morn1ng wor ship, 10 30 o.m . evening service 7 30
m•d week service, Wednesday , 7:30p.m .
GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH - 326 E.
Mcun St , PomerOOfi . The Rev. Robert 8.
Gro'leS, rector. Sunday services at 10 30
a. m. Holy Commun1on on the first Sunday
of each month , and comb1ned with morn -

.

,~.~t

ELLIS. &amp;SONS SOHIO

P r;:'RINITV Chnstlan Assembl~. Coolville
_ _ Gilbert Spencer, pastor. Sunday
school. 9 30 o 1m : mornmg worship, 1t
0 m . Sunday evening service 7 30 p.m. ,
midweek prayer service Wednesday , 7 .30

S~day.

This

.

FRENCH'S

P. J,_PAUlfY,
AGENT

~·

SUNOCO

SERVICE
CENTERS

N1tionwk:lt Int. Co.
of Columbus. 0 .
IIMW. MAin
992-2:111 Pomeroy

212W.MIIn

"''"''''"' m.,..,

Attend the Church
o£ Your Choice

. second

I!(

Pomeray
" '·3325

This Sunday

.11. 110 ~

Pat Hill Ford, Inc.

4i1 S.Thlrd, Mlddlo~n
m-t1t6

PIZZA SHACK
E•t In or

C•rr_Y Out

of Your Choice

1:16 E.

This Sunday

They've come a ion« way

Th~y

were m1m~ m thu Mme church

fifty Y"" ago when she was )USt t~nty andhr was t~ty · two Youth
seemed eterNII life pro m11ed a sucreu10n of sunny d.toys

MILL

Built wu n't logo on thai way forever

Th~rfirst child died 11birth

Then flna na1ltroubln a busl n n5 fa1lu~ . the lou of a h ome when they
rouldn't meet lhe mortgage ?"yments Sometimes rt seemed u 1f the
d(MJds oulw~l!hed the sunshh~

MillWork ·

Clblnet MoWing

Syrac~t~e992-3971

B11t then!' were good limn, too Times of lOYand l a ugh l ~r , u cceu,
wonderful children wond~dul granddnldnm Through 11 all lhcH faith
1nd love for r1ch olher ne\'er fl l t~red

HEINER'S
BAKERY

Throu ~ hOUI

Bakers of
Goodii&lt;Hd

.wnHngton, W.

our own life Ciln we all~)'

Montt•r

Tvasday

/I C!Jflnlfrllns
4 I II

lil 4!15S

Lulfe

Safvrda~

M1trhow
19 27-3()

~5

much '

Wedn1sd1y

Tlll.lf51Jiy

'"'"

12 J l .17

1025-37

, ,._COOl

__,

We Fin Doctors'
Prescriptions
9H·29l5
Pomeroy

Insurance
Services

Attend The Church
of YQur Choice

214 E. Main
tt2-5130 Por111rov

MIDDLEPORT CLUSTER
HEATH, Church School 9 30 a.m. Warship 10·30 o m . UMYF 6 p m Robert
Robinson , Pastor.
RUTLAND. Church SchoOl 9.30 a.m .
Worship 10 30a m
SALEM CENTER. Worship 9 am. Church
School9 ..sa m .
SYRACUSE CLUSTER
Rev. Stanley Merrifled, Minister
FOREST RUN: Worshp 9 a .m Church
School lOam.
MINERSVILLE, Church School 9 am
Worship lOam
ASBURY: Church School9.50 a.m War
ship 11 a m Bible Study 7'30 p m Tnvrs·
day. UMW fistTuesday.
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
Rev. Dav1d Hams
Rev Mark Flynn
Rei/ Florence Sm1th
Hilton Wolfe
BETHANY, (Dorcas), Worsh1p 9 30 a.m
Church School 10:30 a.m. Bible study,
Thursday, 7:30p.m.
CARMEL. Worship second and fourth
Sundays at 10: ..5 a . m. Sun~y School, second and fourth Sundays. 9:30a.m. Wor·
ship and Sunday Sctiool at Sutton Un1ted
Methodist Church on f~rst and third Sun days. Bible study together each Wednesday at 7 30 p.m Family night dinner
togethereachthlrdThursdayot6·30.
APPLE GROVE. Sunday School 9:30 a.m.
Worship 7:30 p .m . 1st and 3rd Sundays;
Prayer meehng Wednesday 7·30 p.m.
Fellowship supper first Saturday 6 p.m.
UMW 2nd Tuesdoy7:30 p m.
EAST LETART, Chruch School 9 a .m.
Worship serv1ce 10 a.m. Prayer meeting
7 30 p m Wednesday UMW second Tuesday 7:30p.m.
RACINE WESLEYAN - Sunday school 10
a .m , worship, II a.m Choir pract1ce,
Thursday . 8 p m
LETART FALLS- Worship service 9 a .m.
Church School lOa m
MORNING STAR, Worship 9 30 a .m.;
Church School 10 30 a m.
MORSE CHAPEL , Church SChool 9 30
am Worship 11 a.m.
PORTLAND, Sunday School 6:30 p m..
Evening Worship, 7 30 p m. Youth
Meeting, Tuesday 7 30 p.m Bible Study,
Thursddy, 7.30 p.m.
SUTTON , Sunday School first and third
Sundays 9,30 a m. worship, first and
tnlrd Sundays, 10·45 a, m Woranlp ond
Sunday School
at Carmel United
Methodist Church on second and fourth
Sundays. Bible study together each
Wednesday, 7 30 p .m Family night dinner
together each ttlirdlhursdoy at 6 30p.m .
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
Re\1. RichardW. Thomas
Duane Sydenstnckar , Sr
JohnW. Douglas
Charles Dom1gan
JOPPA, Worsh1p 9.00 a.m. Church
School10 OOo m
CHESTER , Worship 9 a .m. , Church
School 10 a.m. Choir Rehearsal 7 p.m .
Thursdays. Bible Study, Thursdays
7 30 p m .
LONG BOTIOM, Sunday School at 9.30
am. Evening Worship at 7.30 p m. Thurs·
dayBibleStudy. 7:30p.m
REEDSVILLE Sunday School 9:30 a. m .
Morning Worship 10 30 a m Evening Worshp 7 30 p .m. B1ble Study Wednesdays at
7 30 p.m.
ALFRED Sunday School at 9·~5 a.m.
• Morning Worship ot 11 o m Youth, 6·30
p m . Sundays. Wednesday Night Prayer
Meetlng, 7 30 p m
ST. PAUL, (Tuppers Plains): Sunday
School 9 00 o m . Morning Worship at
10 OOa.m . Bible Study 7:30p.m. Tuesday.
SOUTH BETHEL (Silver Ridge) . Sunday
School 9 00 a.m. Mornmg Woshlp 10·00
e m Wednesdov Bible Study, 7 30p m
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST, Clover
Swo1n Superintendent Sunday school
9.30 every week
HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION, Rev Keith
Eblon, pastor. Sunday School 9 30 am .:
Leonard Gilmore, first elder. e"enlng ser·
v1ce , 7:30 p m . Wednesday prover
meeting 7 30 p m
. BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH . OF
CHRIST. Duane Worden mimster 81blo

Tttis_Sunday

Attend The
Church of
Your Choice
This

Middleport
448 Locust
99Z-lt93

Mlddtopon

HIM-- TAI&lt;E

5t;FO~E YOU HIT'

O~F

THAT RO&amp;E!

ER •• ANNIE ,.

PMHOT SURE 1CIIH

THEREIS

COULD Y&lt;XJ

00 IT, EVEN

ASli'IPI.f

.. IF
COULD CHANGE YOU\

WAY OF

TO · MRS. JED 6ARR -

\'i iTH

MY LIFE AT RISK, MR.
6ARR' 1HERE'S
POPPY TO THINK
AHD ...

- AN'

MAY'S SUPFOSED

\'lt1AT ABOUT TilE
REDHEADED
KID'? SHE
WORRIES ME-

T'BE SMART! I GUESS
THERE JUST AREN'T
ANY GENIUSES IN TilE

HANDLING
THIS ..,

ROMANCE

BUSINESS~

Apple Grove
News Notes

THE DAILY
SENTINEL

WAID CROSS
SONS STORE

of Your l.awice
This Sunday.

CH STER CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE
clo5s.- 9 30 am , mormng worship lO 30
Rev Herbert Grate pastor Fronk R1ffle,
evenmg worship , 6·30 p .m
Wednesday Bible study 6 30 p.m
supt Sunday School 9 30. o m Worsh1p
NEW STIVERS VILLE
COMMUNITY serv1ce. 11 a m and 7 30 p m Prayer
Church, Sunday School serv1ce, 9 o45 am
meeting. Wednesday , 7 30 p m
LAUREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST
Worsh1p service 10 30, EvangeliStiC Ser\liCe. 7 .30 p.m. Wednesday
Prayer CHURCH Rev . Floyd F. Shook , pastor
Lloyd Wnght , O.rector of Chnst1an Educo·
meat1ng, 7 30
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST, Pomeroy - t1on Sunday School . 9 30 a m , Morning
Harrisonville Rd , Robert Purtell pastor; Worsh1p , 10 30 a m . Cllo1r Practice, Sun B1ll McElroy, Sunday school supt Sunday day 6 30 p m , Evemng Worsh1p , 7 30
school , 9·30 am , morning worship and p m Wednesday Prayer end B1ble Study
communion, 10:30 a m. ; Sunday worsh1p 7 30p m
1
servtce, 7 p m Wednesday evening
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST Charles
prayer meetmg and B1ble study 7 p.m
Ru ssel: . Sr
mm1ster , R1ck Macomber,
ST JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH, Pone supt Sunday school 9 30 a m worsh1p
Grove. The Rev. Wilham Middlesworth , ser\IICe 10 30 am B1ble Study , Tuesday ,
Pastor Church serv1ces 9 30 a m Sunday 7 30p m
SchoollO 30a.m .
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS
, BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST. Jerry CHR IST OF LATTER DAY SAINTS Portland
1P1ngley, pastor Sunday school , 9 30 o .m , Rocme Road W1ll 1am Roush , pastor .
morning worsh1p 10 30 a .m . Wednesday Phylhs Stobart Sunday School Supt Sun ·
day School 9 30 a m , Mornmg worsh1p ,
even1ng serv1ce , 7 30
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST. Rev Earl Shuler
10 30 o m Sunday e\lemng serv1ce 7 p.m
pastor. Sunday school 9 30om, Church Wednesday e ven1ng prayer serv1ce, , 7 30
service, 7 p.m .. youth meeting 6 pm
p.m .Tuesday Bible Study, 7 p m
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST Re v Earl Shuler ,
RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE, pastor Wor5h1p serviCe, 9 30 a.m Sunday
Rev John A . Coffman , pastor Martha school , 10 30 a m B1ble Study and prayer
Wolfe. Chairman of the Board of Christian serviCe Thursday 7 30 p m
CARLETON CHURCH Kmgsbury Road
Life Sunday School , 9·30 o.m , morning
worship, 10 30; Sunday evemng worsh1p , Gory Kmg pastor Sunday school , 9 30
7·30 p m Preyer meet1ng, Wedne5doy, a m , Rolph Carl superintendent, evening
worship
7 30 p.m Prayer meetmg ,
7:30p.m.
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST , Don L Walker
Wednesday 7 30 p m
LONG
BOTTOM CHRISTIAN
Tom
Pastor, Robert Sm1th , Sunday school
supt .. Sunday school, 9 30 a m mormng R1chason pastor Wallace Damewood,
Sunday School Supenntendent Worsh1p
worship , 10 ~0 a .m ., Sunday evening war
1
ship, 7 30, Wednesday even1ng 81ble serviCe of 9 a m 81ble SchoollO a m
HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH, Tnurs·
study , 7.30
day evemng serviCes 7 30 Rev Cart Sun DANVILLE WESLEYAN , Rev
R 0
day mornmg ser\'lces 9 30 and e"en 1ng
Brown, pastor. Sunday School, 9 30 a.m.
serv1ces 7 30 p m Rev Durham
morning worsh1p 10 ~5 . youth serv1ce
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION at Bold
6 45 p.m., evening worsh1p , 7 30 p.m.
prayer and praise Wednesday. 7 30 p m
Knob located on County Rood 31 Rev.
SILVER RUN FREE BAPTIST, Re\1 , Morvin Lawrence Gluesencamp paslor , Re v.
asshitant pastor.
Markin pastor Steve Little Sunday school Roger Wdlford
supl. Sunday school , 10 a .m ; mormng Preachmg ser'JIC&amp;s Sunday 7 30 p m ,
prayer meetmg Wednesday 7 30 p. m
worship II a m Sunday e\lening wor
sh1p, 7·30 Prayer meet1ng and Btble Gory Gnfftth leader. Youth groups , Sun·
study, Thursday 7 30 p m, youth serv1ce
day eve1n9 . 6 30 p m . w1th Roger and
V1olet W1llford os leaders Commumon
6 p .m . Sunday
, •nESTER CHURCH OF GOD. Rev R E. serv1ces f1rst Sunday each month
WHITES CHAPEL , Coolville AD Rev Ray
1Robmson, pastor. Sunday school, 9 30
\a.m .. worship service, 11 am , evening Deeter pa3tor Sunday school 9 30 a.m
service 7 00 youth serv1ce, Wednesday, worst·up service. 10 30 o m Bible study
7.00p.m .
and prayer serv1ce, Wednesday 7 30 p m
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST, Brad
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH ,
Robert Musser, pastor Sunday school, Henderson , pastor , Herb Elltotf Sunday
9·30 am Roy S1gmon . supt morning school supt Sunday school 9 30 a m
worsh1p 10 30: Sunday evening serv1ce, morning worsh1p and comumon , 10 30
7·30, mid- week service . Wednesday 7 om
RUTLAND BIBLE METHODIST CHURCH
p m.
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE. Amos Tillis pastor Donny T1lhs . Sunday
Rev. James B. K1ttle , pastor, Norman School Supt Sunday School , 9 30 a m .
Presley , Sunday School Superintendent
followed by morn1ng worshtp Sunday
Sunday school 9:30a.m. mornmg war . evemng serv1ce , 7 00 p m
Prayer
ship 10 ~5 a.m. evangelistic service 7 meeting Wednesday . 7 00 p m
p m. Prayer and Pralle Wednesday , 7
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE,
p m .. youth meetmg , 7 p m Men's prayer Rev Lloyd 0 Gnmm Jr . pastor. Sundoy
school , 9 30 am , warsh1p service , 10 30
maetmg, Sqturday 7 p.m .
a .m . Broodcost live O'Jer WMPO , young
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN CHRIST
Elden R. Blake, pastor. Sunday School 10 people 's serv1ce , 7 p.m EvangeliStiC sera m , Robert Reed. supt . Morning ser· viCe 7 30 p m Wednesday serv1ce, 7 30
man, 11 a .m . Sundav night service' p.m .
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST , Corner of Se
Christian Endeavor 7 30 p.m , Song sercond and Anderson Mason Pastor Frank
.vlco
8 p m. Preaching 8·30 p m
Midweek Prayer meeting, Wednesdav . 7 Lowther Sunday school , 9 45 a .m .. worship service 11 o m and 7 30 p m Weekp m ; Alvin Reed , lay leader
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST, located at ly Bible Study , Wednesdav 7 30 p m.
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST MUier St ,
Rutland on New L1ma Rood , next to Forest
Acre Pork, Re" Ray Rouse, pastor, Robert Meson , W Vo Aunce M1ck . pastor Sun Musser Sunday School sup! Sundoy \ day Btble Studr. 10 a m Worship 11 am
and 7 p m B1b e Study Wednesday 7 p .m .,
~Chool , 10.30 a .m , worsh1p 7.30 p m.Bi ble Study W.dnesday 7 30 p m , Satur· Vocal musiC
MASON ASSEMBLY OF GOD, Dudding
day night proyer serv1ce, 7 30 p.m .
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN . Roger lone Mason W Vo Rev. Aonme B Rose .
fWotson , pastor; Mildred Z1egler, Sunday Pastor Sunday School 9 45 a.m , Morning
Worsh1p 1 I a m Evenm~ Ser't'ice 7 30
school supt Mormng worship 9 .30 a m
Sundovschool , 10:30 a.m.; a'lentng ser - p .m Wednesday Women s M1n1stnes 9
o m . (meehng and prayer. Prayer and Bl ·
I vice , 7 30
r
MT. UNION BAPTIST , Joo Sayre , Sunday ble Study 7 p m
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
ScOOol SUperintenent. Sunday school , 9 45
a m : evenihg worship, 7 30 p m Prayer CHRISTIAN UN ION , The Rev William
Campbe ll , pastor Sunday School. 9.30
meeting 7 30p m Wednesday .
o m Ja m es Hughes sup! evenmg ser TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF CHRIST
VICO, 7 30 p m Wednesday O'lenm~
Vincent Waters , pastor, Howard Bla1r Col
wall , super.ntendent Sunday School 9 30 prayer f'"' eeflng 7 30 p m Yputh prayer
o m . mormng church. I 0 30 a .m ., Sunday ser v1ce 1ch Tu esday
fAIR \ ,r:w 818U: CHURCH Letart W
evening service 7 30: Wednesday Bible
Vo, Rt I Mark 1rw1n, pa sto r Worship
Study 1 30 p m

am.:

MARK V STORE

tD9).""'1 t 980 K"ltt• A4vtlftl10!''l s.......,
Po RO o 11121 llllmnn~ Ytrlt"'' 12111&amp;
~"-"'

liASY.. HHTI

FAITH BAPTIST Church, Mason , meet at
un 1ted Steel Workers Union Hall , Railroad
Street , Mason Pastor, Rev. Joy Mlkhell .
Morning worsh1p 9 o45 a m , Sunday
School 10 30 am
Prayer meeting
Wednesday . 7 30 p m
FOREST RUN BAPTIST Rev. Nyle
Borden , pastor. Cornelius Bunch,
supenntendent Sunday school. 9 30 am. ;
second and fourth Sundays worship ser vice at 2 30p m
MT MORIAH BAPTIST - Fourth and
Main 'st , Middleport Rev. Calvin Minnll,
pastor Mrs. Elv1n Bumgardner, supt Sun day school , 9 30 om . worship service,
10.45o.m
had
NORTH BETHEL
Umted Met
1st
Church, Re\1 Charles Dom1gan. pastor
Sunday School , 9 30 a .m , Worship Service , 10:"5 om .; Sunday Bible Study , 7.00
p m Wednesday prayer meeting, 7:30
p.m .
BURLINGHAM SOUTHERN BAPTIST
CHURCH , Route 1, Shade Pastor Don
Block Aftil1ated with Southern Baptist
Convention Sunday school . 1 30 p.m
Sunday worsh1p, 2.30 p. m Thursday
evening B1ble study 7 p m
PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY , Racine
Route 124 William Hoback . pastor. Sun
day school 10 a m .. Sunday evemng ser·
v1ce , 6 30 p m Wednesday een1ng ser
vice 7
CARPENTER BAPTIST Rev Freeland
Noms , pastor Don Cheadle, Supt Sunday School . 9 30 o m Morning Worship ,
10 30 o .m Prayer Serv1ce, alternate Sun
days
NEASE SETTLEMENT FREE Will BAPTIST,
Donald R Kerr Sr .. pastor Friday even
ing seNICe , 7 30 p m , Sunday school 10
om

Mtddleport·
Pomeroy, 0.

Lult9

SWISHER _&amp;LOHSE
PHARMACY

Reutei-llrogan

~In

pomeroy

ALONG WAY

RACINE

CAPI'AlNEASY

m

VIRQIL B.
TEAFORD SR.
Zl6 s

p ~OUNT Olive Community Church.
Lawrel"!c• Bush, pastor; Max Folmar, Sr
Superintendent. Sunday School and morn·
lng worsh1p . C) 30 a .m . Sunday eventng
serviCe, 7 p.m .. Youth meeting ancl 81ble
study, Wednesday , 7 p.m.
UNITED FAtTH CHURCH - Route 7 on
Pomeroy bypass Re\1 . Robert Smith , Sr. ,
pastor , Rev James Cundiff, asslstan~
pastor Sunday School , 9:30 o.m : morn1ng worsh1p , 10 30 a. m .. evening wOf'shlp, 7 .30. Wednesday night prayer s~r·
v 1ce, 7 30 p m Women s Fellowshlp,
Thursday , 9 30 o m

sen~1ces 9 30 a .m. Sunday school, 11
a m , evening worship , 7 30 p m Tuesday
cottage prayer meeting and Btble study,
9 30 am Worship se~tee Wednesday.
7 ·30p m
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH now locoled
on Pomeroy P1ka , County Road 25 , near
Flatwoods . Rev Blackwood , pastor Services on Sunday at 10 30 a m and 7 30
p m . w1th Sunday school 9 30 a .m Bible
study , Wednesday 7 30 p m
INDEPENDENT HOLINESS CHURCH , INC
Pearl St
Middleport Rev O 'OiJII
Manley, pastor, Arttlur Barr , Sunday
school supenntendent Sunday school
9 30 am ., evening worsh1p , 7 ·30 p.m .
Prayer and pro~:se service Wednesday .
7 30p.m
RUTLAND APOSTOLIC CHURCH OF
JESUS CHRIST , Elder James M1ller B1ble
sludy , Wednesday , 7 30 p.m
Sunday
School , 10 am Sunday n1ght serviCe, 7 30
pm
POMEROY WESLEYAN HOLINESS Harrisonville Rood Dewey King pastor
EdiSon Weaver , ass11tant, Henry Eblin ,
Jr . Sunday school supt Sunday school .
9 30 o .m , mornmg worship . 11 o m Sun day even1ng service . 7 .30, prayer
meeting, Thursday , 7 30p.m
SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF GOD Not Pentecostal, Rev George Oiler ,
pastor Worship sen~lce Sunday , 9.45
am Sunday school 11 o.m worship
service, 7 30 p m Thursday prayer
meeting, 7 30 p m
MT . HERMON Un1ted Brethren In Christ
Church Rev Robert Sanders , pastor Don
Wdl, loy leader . Located m le)fos Com
'munity off CR 82 Sunday school 9 30
a .m ., Morn.ng worship serv1ca, 10 "5
a m evemng preochmg serv1ce second
and fourth Sundays , 7·30 p . m .. Chnshan
Endeavor first and th1rd Sundays, 7 30
p.m . Wednesday prayer meeting and 81
ble study . 7 30p m
JEHOVAH S WITNESSES , 1 mile east of
Rutland, junction of Route 12• and Noble
Summ1t Rood {T - 17"). Sunday Bible Lac
ture , 9 30 am , Watchtower study , 10 30
o .m , Tue~day , B1ble study , 7 and 8 15
p m .. Thursday. theocratic school . 7 30
p .m. ; service meet1ng, 8 30 p m .
RUTLAND FREEWill BAPTIST Church Churck McPherson, pastor ; Guy Priddy
supenntendent Sunday school 10 a .m
Sunday evening and Wednesday serv1ces ,
7 30p m.
CHURCH OF GOO of Prorhecy , located
on the 0 J Wh1te Road of highway 160
Sunday School 10 a m Superintendent
John Loveday. First Wednesday night of
month CPMA services, second Wednesday WMB meetong, third tnrough lllth
youth service George Croyle , pastor
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL - 570 Grant St .,
M1ddleport Sunday School . 10 a m , mormng worsh1p, 11 a m. evening worship , 7
p m Wednesday evemng Bible study and
prayer meeting, 7 p m . Affiliated with
Soutl1ern Baptist Con\lention
BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHRISTEugene Underwood pastor Harry Hendncks superintendant . Sunday school ,
9.30 am . morning worship, 10 30 am ..
evening worsh1p, 7 p.m Wednesday Bible
studv 7 p m .
JUBILEE CHRISTIAN CENTER - George's
Creak Road . Rev . C J Lemley, pastor,
John Failure, su,.rlntendent Church
school. 9.30 a .m. morning worship,
10·30 , evening service, 7 p m Youth
meeting Sunday , 6 p m . B1ble study in
depth Wednesday 7 p m CkJsses for all
ages Nursery provided for worship ser vJce
ST PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH, Corner
of Sycamore ond Second Sis , Pomeroy
The Rev. Wilham Middlesworth, Pastor.
Sunday School at 9 &lt;45 o m and Church
Serv1ces 11 a .m.
SACRED HEART Rev. Falher Paul D.
Welton , pastor . Phone 992-2825 Saturday
evening Mass, 7.30, Sunday Mass , 8 and
10 am Confess1on Saturday , 7~ 7 30
p m.
VICTORY BAPTIST - 52S N . 2nd St ,
Mtddleport . James E Keesee , pastor
1
, Sunday morning worship 10 a m e't'anlng serv1ce , 7, Wednesday evening worship , 1 p m , Vts1tot1on Thursday 6 30

By Mrs. Herbert Rousb
Mr. and Mrs. Moe Miller of Columbus visited Mr. and Mrs. Wallie
Stover, Mr. and Mrs. Gerald
Hayman and Mrs. Bertha Robinsoo
at Racine Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Dorsa Parsons
visited Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Wells at
Gallipolis Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Laurence Balser,
son Roger, of Tuppers Plains, were
dinner guests &amp;unday of Mrs. Allee
Balser.
Mrs. Pauline Hill and Mrs. Lori
Hill have been returned to their
homes from Holzer Medical Center,
Gallipolis.
Mr. and Mrs. Hoyt Ferguson of Pl.
Pleasant, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Kane of
Sununerville, New Jersey; Mrs.
Elba Warner visited Mrs. Pearl
Norris Sunday. Mrs. Vera Norris
Craig of Bashan Rd., visited Mrs.
Norris Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Moton Higley and
two sons, Mrs. Edna Clark of Ravenna spent a week with Mr. and Mrs.
Owen Anderson. Mrs. Bertha Bar·
nette of Huntington also Vtalted Mrs.
Anderson.
Mrs. Bob Montgomery spent a day
recenUy wtth her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Fred Brown at Gallipolis.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Manuel,
daughters Robin and Donita, visited
Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Hupp at PorUand. Sunday VISitors of the Hupps
were Mr. and Mrs. Randall Roberts,
son Chad, Mrs. Clarence Laurence
of Portland and Mrs. Brenda Johnson of Bashan Rd.
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Russell,
children Mandy and Michael spent
Saturday with Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Russell at Wolf Pen.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Findley and
daughter Angle of Columbus spent
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Findley and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Hupp spent
Sunday evening with Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Bass and daughters at Clif·
ton, W.Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Russwell Roush,
Cindy and Ed, were dinner guests
Monday evenmg of Mr. and Mrs.
Ronald RusseU and children.
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Hart spent
Monday mght with Mr. and Mrs.
Don Bell and vistted Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Hart at Racine.
Mrs. Lois Bell visited Mrs. Edna
Roush, Mrs. Gladys Shields, Mrs.
Pauline Hill and Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Cross. Andrew was recently
returned to his home from Veterans
Memorial Hospital where he had
surgery.

TELL ITTO 11IE MOUNTAIN
QUARTZ MOUNTAIN, Okla.
(AP)- Dedicated students trek up
steep hills and arrive at 4:30 a.m. for
the "Sunrise On MoWttaln" session.
Class is limited to painters, printers
and photographers.
The Oklahoma ~umrner Arts Institute here encourages gifted high- •
school studenis to seek profesalonal
careers in the arts. It is one of the
few programs of Its kind offered in
the nation. Students compete for admission and are supervised by
nationally recognized artists.
TWODAYSLATER
During World War II, the Soviet
Union did not declare war on Japan
until Alll!. 8, 1945, two days after the
Uhited Slates dropped the atomic
bomb on Hiroehlma.

GASOI.J NE AILEY

doqs would
be raisinq holy
Ned, Clovia 1

Someone's
hidtnq up

there, Slim!

1 1&lt;7VOW HER A11L050PHY
W~AT S~E i.!kES AND
W~AT SHE tJELIEVES ...

""
"

Evening television listings

..''" '

C1J il2l.

SEPT. 11, 11180

FRIDAY NIGHT MOVIE
'Onca Upon A Spy' 1980 Stara
Eleanor Perker, Chrlttopl'ler Lee
fl llJ iliD THE DUKES OF HAZZARD Country Weetemaln11erlor
etta lynn guest etara u heraell ,
and get a kldn apped by atrlootln epl
b.tndlta (Repeat , 60 mlm1 )
C1J t'ID BILL MOYERS' JOURNAL
Campaign ' 80' Ptrt II Hott Bill
Moyera continues hie roport on the
Presldentlalcamptlgn of 1980 (60

"
AND

,',

''·

..

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..

0 ordonllddy Part Ill
FAMII.YFEUD

...

t'''

7'tllt
1:00

..

'"

.., '..
0

111

• FACE THE MUSIC
NEWS UPOA Tl
eCD SHOGUNMarlkomtkea
a..cret deal with lha Portugeeeto
ttvahe,belovadBiackthorna 'ellfe
ae Toran1111 prepar11 for the f!nal
battle to become eupreme military
dlctator·· Shagun Start Rlchrud
Ctlambertaln Tashiro Mll11ne
(Concluelon,
3
hre)
(_(;lol8d Ctptlonad)
(J) IN TOUCH
ffi FOOTBALL' INSIDE THE NFL
HaetaLen Oawaan and Nick Buon•
lcontlare bac:k to brtng you weekly
tctlon highllghtt, anatyeas end
~dlctlona from the grid~ron
l.IJMOYIE o(SCIENc.E-FICTION) •
"WarortheQergantuae'' 1tee
C1J J!UJ!I't!TB SHOW
.(]){Ill TH!:INCRI:DI8LEHULK
David Banner eutpecte f'le might
actuellybeakilleraftarheemergaa
from one of hla bltckoutaaalhe
Hulk et the tcena of a murder
&lt;B•I!!eat, 80 mini)
ill 1111 WASHINGTON W!EK tN

lll:.N80NJeiiiC:ITitlvlaila
the governor' a manalon for ttle
weekeOO and prompllymanageato
involva h•raalt In a acandaloua al
tualion with a French playboy
1:30

~,,,

§.!n Ol,!iO Padraa
UI(I)Wt.JOALLASPimeleianetur·
ally exc1ted about her news, I hat
1he Ia expecting ach il d, and hopee
It wilt help eliminate the long
llandlng feudbetweenJockEwlng
and her father (Repeat, eo mint)
())MOVIE -(DRAMA) ••• ' 'David
1nd Uee" 1M3
NEWS
10,28
NEWSUPDATE
10,30 ; RICHARO HOGUE
HI!ROI!S 'Pelton The Man
Behind the Myth ' 'Old Blood and
Gula t'llmeelf ie the eubJect of this
documenta,y Tnrough peraonal
lattera and dlariea. thla one·hour
biographical feature ahada new
llghl on the m•n behlnctthamllitary
maak
()]) OVER EASY 'A Pl1ce to live
Heal Hugh Downs (Cioaad
Captioned)
tCU8 (J) 1\UUPDATE
u,oo
~m
NEWS

rn

11

t0

11

t87D
(fi)DICKCAYETTSHOWGueat G
G ardon Liddy Part Ill
11·28 ())NEWS UPDATE:

11 •30

CllecrJ THE TONtGHTSHOW
Gueett Suzanne Somere, George
Carlin (80 min• )
ROlli BAGLEY SHOW
. . ~RIDAVS

W~

CBS LATE MOVIE 'NO

HOLDS BARRED ' Kelly Monlatth
taket a look at a New York achool
where atudenta learn the art of
comedy 'THE NEW AVENGERS
Target' AHer five top agent a dle of
'naturalcauaaa' SteedtndPurday
ra• r they •r• next (Repel!)
(I) ABC CAPTIONED NEWS
(!g) MOVIE ' Drac:ula Haa Rlaen
FROM The Grave' 1989 Chrle·
topher Lee, Rupert Oavlaa 2)
Daughter Of Dr Jekyll' 1057 John
ar , Gloria Tllbel

12:00
12,30
12'.00

12:58

MO

l!l•i•Jl• IENJIATWORK

ill
ill

WALUTREETWEEK 'Gold
in Tham Thar AI~•· Holt Louie
Rukeyeer
1:51 ~ NEWS uPDATE
UlO
700CLUI
ON LOCATION 'Oon Aicktee
and His Wlae Guyt'

m m e m em •

()) DAN GRIFFIN
(])MOYIE-)cOMEDY)•••~

MACN~IL·LEHRER REPORT

'"

·"
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10.00 W BASEBALL Atlanta Braves va

1:30
2:00

~

DAVID__IUSSKIND SHOW

crl THE MIDNIGHT
IAL
TBS EVENING NEWS
IIERG!NCY
MOVtE-(SCtENCE·DRAMA)
•• "Deedty Mlnllt" UJ57
(J) NEWS UPDATE
I]) 30 MINUTES WITH FATHER
MANNING
(I) MOVIE -(.-.DVENTURE)••• ~
'~hunderb•ll" 1185
C1J MOYtl! -(SCIENCE FtCTtON) •
"Ye•r 2881" 1MI
~ ,/!liMY SWAGGART
NEWS
I BELIEVE
•

C
e

2:11 ;
2:21
2,30

2.50
3:1I
3,58

4'00

4.45
!5·30
!5·PII5
5:1!58

·NEWS
NEWS UPDATE
ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
MDVIE o(DRAMA.COMEDY)
••• " Amazing Or. Ctttlerhouae"
!!!38
CJ) MOVIE o(DRAMA) •• ¥I ''Circle
tron" ten
NEWS UPDATE
700 CLUB
MAVERICK
JUST PASSING THRU
RAT PATROL
NEWS UPDATE

l

SEPT. 20, 1880
EVENING

e·oo ffi 88CIJilJi NEWS

CHAMPIONSHIP

WRESTLING
GOD HAS THE ANSWER
CATCH33
l!)(l];NStONS
el]) NBC NEWS
5·30
NEWS
ill CONCERN
OLD FRIENDS, NEW FRIENDS
'Lorin Hollander HoatFred Rogart
vlaita wittl lnternatlontlly ac:
eltimad concert plel'!lat Lorin Hal
lander who ditcuaael hie little
known work on behalf of child
prodiglat end prlaon lnmatu
ooed Capt•mod)
CBS NEWS
CTOitYGARDEN
NI!WSMAKER
7'00
DANCIFEYER
KWOODIROTHEIIS
HI!E HAW Gua'iii:""Merte
Heggerd , L~• Wllllama, Tennet·
••e Moonahlna Ctoggert (60
mint)
crJ LAWRENCE WILK SHOW
(J) EVENINGATPOPS 'Steph1ne
Grappelll end Bucky Plzzerelll'
Conductor Harry Ettie Dicke on and
the Boaton Popa are joined by jazz
viollnlet Stephane Grtppelllend
gultariel Bucky Pluerelll, whose
aalectlonalnclude the Venuti com·
poaltlon ' Limehouea Bluaa' (80
mint)
iliD BUGS BUNNY
iJlJ ONCE UPON A CLASSIC
'Dominic. Beyond Grevlty' Strahle
killed. bullaavealucy the mlaelng
~~ (Cloud Captionad)
CUlt850LtDQOLDCo·hOIII Olen
Cemptl•ll, Dionne Wtrwick 13old
record winnere perform I heir hit
eonga Gueata P..chetandHerb ,
Blondle. Supef1rtmp. Nicolette
Laraon
7:30 ~- ANtNStDELOOK
THE LUNDSTROM&amp;
CONSUMER RIPORT8 PRE·
SENTI 'The Good Buy ,Show' Thla
ftct· pecked apeclal entertainingly
acanalha consumer mtrketplace
and of1era helpful health. ulely
tnd money ·ll~lng pointe
iJlJ li_Rl!_UCHO
8'00 Cll •&lt;D CENTENNIAL 'Only The
Roct(eLiveForever' Peaqulnel the
lira! wtllte man to enter the Indianland tlong the Colorado River,
lltrta a tur-ttading bu11nee1 wllh
hit friend, Alexander McKug
Star e A1 eha rd Chamberlain,
Aobetl ConrAd (Pt I , 3 hrs )

I
li

~~

';11}~~ fj)" ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

ti~.ua~~ VJtr

byHennAmoldandBobLee

by THOMAS JOSEPH

~ ~ ~~ ®

Unscramble these lour Jumbles
one letter to each square to form
tour ord1nary words

ACROSS
I Mtler
or mudder
6 Sebast1an
or Bruce

BIBER

I KJ

~':'".,:J..~-~-

__ ,,.,. ...

I NARCH
I K) I
ITARREY I

D [J

tDOAZICj

J

1

r

WHA'T SOME V I51'10R'5
A'T 'Tl-lt: I!IA'ZAA ~
WE'R'E, 'TO SAY

'THE:. l..EA&amp;'T.
Now arrange lhe circled letters to
form the surprise answer as sug·
Qested by the above cartoon

Prlntanswerllere·

rI

I I I I I )
(Answers tomorrow)

Yeslerday s

DOWN
I "R .U R."
c haracter

2 B1bhcal
mountam
11 Hold forth
3 Dreamer's
12 Habttuate
overseas
13 SWISS City
abode"
14 Base
4 Bardot 's
15 Useless
season
fragment
S Manum1t
16 Greek letter 6 Romero
18 Allow
7 Lmcoln's
19 Fonner chess earl y love
champion
8 Pla n on
20 Vent1late
foohshly
21 Bunnese
9 Trymg

Vesterday's Answer
17 Unr esolved Z9 - Ma teo,
conlest
Cahf
23 Scorpmn 's 30 Squirrel
monkey
s outhern
ne1ghbor
32 Wee
24 Yugo 1sle 31 Equals
26 Shaw play 39 Movmg
pero od
27 Old World
tru ck
10 Grow molars herb
U Japanese
and such
28 Guarantee
com

kmfe
22 Pester
24 Actress,

Jamce -

25 Choler
26 Stockong

I Jumbles

VOUNG BRAWL ANYWAY WOEFUL
Answer How the masseur rubbed himTHE WRONG WAY

Jwmbtelootl No t3,containlno 110 puutea, Ia avtlltbla lor It 715 poiiPIId

Irom Jumble, clothla newapaper, 101 S4, Norwood, N.J. 07MI lnch.tdt ,our
nam•, tddreu, zip eode and mate eMekl PIYJble to Ntwtpaperbookl

32 Hostery hue
33 Calmp
35 Cleo's
36

Goal

37 Get II'
38 Urbane
LAST TIME

THev' EIOToiOOI&lt;C
FIIIIIT 01&lt; THE
GLASS 'THAN 111&lt;1'
w OH me

""""'""

40 S&lt;:fln8 fed
42 Of a

Greal 'Lake
car b+-1-.,+-+-+

43 Ratlroad

44 Hoffman

ftlm
45 SA

mountatns

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work it:
AX\'DLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW
One letter s1mply litands for an other In thiS sample A IS
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc Smcle le tters,
apostrophes, the length and forma t1on of the word s ue all
hints Each day th e code IE'Hers are ditrer ent

CRYI'TOQUOTES
KV

KT

LKVR

TPGOSZET ZDS

LQDAT
VRS

WQGASGTSA

ZT

LKVR

E QDS

VR SC

VR S

ASSBSD

VRSC
OPDG. - DQOSDV
TQPVRS C
Yeslerday'o Cryptoquole: THAT ACTION IS BEST WHICH
PROCURES THE GREATEST HAPPINESS FOR THE
GREATEST NUMBERS.- FRANCIS HtrrCHESON

�CHURCH
NEwsTRINITY CHURCH , Rev W H. Perrin
pastor, Roy Moyer, Sunday school supt.

Chu rch School . 9.15 a .m . worship service, 10.30a m Choir r..,eortal , Tuesday ,
7 30 p m. under direction of Allee Nease

A~:,:~~~:. A
~
~~\

Sorvlco
"
LOcust &amp; S.ch tree1

"'"''M~~DOrt

__

Henderson. pastor Sunday school 9 30

Phone U14 l 742· 2117

Hall immediately followmg the service
POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST, 212 W.
Main St Ne1l Proudfoot. pastor Bible
school , 9:30a.m .. morning worship , 10 30
a.m Youth meetings 6·30 p.m .; e't'en1ng
worship , 7.30 Wednesday night prayer
meeting and 81ble study , 7·30 p m.
THE SALVATION ARMY , 115 Butternut
Ave Pomeroy Envoy and Mrs. Ray Win Ing, officers m charge Sunday -holiness
meeting, 10 a .m.; Sunday School , 10:30
a .m Sunday scf1ool leader, YPSM. Eloise
Adams . 7:30 p.m ., salvation meeting,
't'Orious speakers and music specials.
Thursday- 10 a .m 10 2 p.m. Lad1as Home
League, all women inv1ted. 7.30 p.m.
prcyer meet1ng and B1ble study Rev . Noel
Herman, teacher
BURLINGTON SOUTHERN BAPTIST
CHAPEL. Route 1, Shade Bible scnool, 7
p m Thursday; worship service, 8 p m
POMEROY WESTSIDE CHURCH OF
CHRIST, 200 W Main St . 992-5235 Vocal
mus1c. Sunday worship , 10 a .m . Btble
study , 11 am . worship , 6 p m . Wednesday Boble study, 7 p.m.
OLD DEXTER BIBLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH ,
Rev,Ralph Sm1th, pastor Sunday school,
9.30
a .m • Mrs. Worley Francis,
superintendent Preach1ng services first &amp;
third Sundays following Sunday School .
GRAHAM
UNITED
METHODIST,
Preaching 9:30a.m., first and second Sundays of each month, third and fourth Sun·
days each month, worsh1p ser.~1ce at 7:30
p.m Wednesday evenings at 7 30. Prayer
and Bible Study.
SEVENTH ·DAY ADVENTIST Mulberry
Height, Road , Pomeroy. Pastor, Albert
Dlttes. Sabbath School Superintendent,
Rita White. Sabbath School , Saturday
afternoon at 2 00, w1th Worship Service
followlngat3 :15
RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCHSister Hameft Warner, Supt . Sunday
School 9.30 a.m .. mornmg worship , 10 . ~5
a .m.
THE HILAND CHAPEL, George Casta,
pastor Sunday School. 9·30 a m evening
worship. 7 30. Thursday evening prayer
service, 7·30 p.m
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST , David Mann ,
minister William Watson, Sunday school
supt Sunday school , 9 30 a.m. , mornmg
worship 10·30o m
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST, 2B2 Mulberry
Ave , Pomeroy, Hershel McClure, Sunday
school supermtendent Sunday school,
9·30 om , morning wor.shlp, 10 30, even·
tng worsh1p, 7:00 p.m. Midweek prayer
service, 7.00 p.m.
MIDWAY COMMUNITY CHURCH , Dex·
ter Rd , Rd. Longsv1lle. Rev A . A
Hughes, Pastor Sunday School 10 o.m
Services on Tuesday, Thursday and Sun·
day, 7'30p m
FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH , Bailey
Run Rood, Rev. Emmett Rawson , pastor.
Handley Dunn, supt Sunday school, 10
a m Sunday evening service 7 30 Bible
teaching, 7:30p.m Thunday.
DYESVILLE COMMUNITY CHURCH ,
Roger C. Turner, pa;stor. Sunday school,
9 30 a m , Sunday morning worship,
J.O 30; Sunday evening service, 7 30.
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION, Lawrence Manley,
pastor. Mrs . Russell Young. Sunday
School Supt Sunday School 9·30 a m
Evening worship 7.30, Wednesday prayer
meet1ng, 7·30 p m.
MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD,
Racine- Rev James Satterfield pastor
Morning worsh1p, 9 ,45 o .m , Sunday
school , 10·o45 a.m , evening worship , 7
Tuesday, 7.30 p.m. , ladies prayer
meeting; Wednesday, 7·30p m YPE
MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST, Corner
Sixth and Palmer, the Rev Mark McClung,
Sunday school , 9:15 om; Randy Hayes,
Sunday School , superintendent. Dan
Riggs, asst. supt. Mornmg Worah1p, 10:15
am Youth meeting , 7 30 p.m. Wednesday , mcludmg wee tots, eager beavers,
junior astronau ts, and junior and senior
high BYF; choir practice , 8:30 p m.
Wednesday prayer ' meeting and Bible
study, Wednesday, 7:30pm .
CHURCH OF CHRIST. Middleport 5th
and Main, Bob Melton, minister, Scott
Salhman
associate minister. Bible
School , 9.30 a m ., mormng worship ,
10 30 a m. evemng serv1ce, 7:30 p .m
Wednesday 81ble Study and youth group
meetings 7.30 p.m .
MIDDLEPORT
CHURCH
OF
THE
NAZARENE, Rev Jim Broome. pastor, Bill
White, Sunday school supt
Sunday
school , 9:30am : morning worship , 10·30
am .. Sunday evangelistic meeting , 7·00
p m. Prayer meeting, Wednesday , 7 p.m
UNITED PRESBYTERIAN MINISTRY OF
MEIGS COUNTY, Dw1ght l Zav1tt dlreclar
HARRISONVILLE PRESBYTERIAN , Rev,
Ernest Stricklin . pastor Sunday church
school, 9 30 a.m , Mrs . Homer Lee, supt.,
morning worsh1p , 10 30.
MIDDLEPORT, Sunday school, 9 30a.m,
Richard Vaughan , supt Morning worship ,
10:30.
SYRACUSE FIRST UNITED PRESBYTERIAN
Church. Worsh1p serv1ce 9.30 a .m Sunda(
School 10 30 a.m. Mrs. Sampson Hal ,
supt.
'
RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD, Rev Bob ·
by Porter , pastor Sundoy school , 10 a m ;
Sunday worsh1p. 11 a.m ., Sunday even1ng
service, 7 p m , Wednesday Fomdy Tral ing Hour. 7 p.m Wednesday worshtp service, 7 30p m
HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH, Near
Long Bottom Edsel Hart, pastor Sunday
school, 10 am. Church , 7:30p.m. prayer
meeting, 7 30 p m Thursday.
MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL, Third
Ave , the Rev William Knittel pastor .
Thomas Kelly , Sunday School Supt Son day school , 10 a m Classes for all ages,
evenir19 serv1ce , 7·30; Bible study,
Wednesday . 7 30 p m , youth ser'Jices.
Friday, 7.30 p.m .
MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST, Corner
Ash and Plum, Ralph Butcher, pastor
Saturday evenmg service, 7·30 p m ., Sun
day School , 10 30 a m
MEIGS
COOPERATIVE PARISH
METHODIST CHURCH
RlchardW Thomas. Director
POMEROY CLUSTER
Rev Robert McGee
Rev. James Corbitt
POMEROY , Sunday School 9 15 a m
Worsh1p ser\IICe 10 30 am. Cho1r rehear
sol, Wednesday , 7 p m Rev Robert
McGee. pas tor.
ENTERPRISE. Worsh1p 9 o m Church
SchooiiOa.m.
ROCK SPRINGS. Sunday School 9 15 o
m Worah1p serviCe 10 o. m
FLATWOODS, Cnurch School 10 a m
Wo rship 11 o m

CENTER, INC.

....

John F, Fultt, Mgr.
.Ph. 992~2101

MLL'S

Attend The

~-:~ANKLIN•

·Church
Ch of
•

v

~ OUr

OICe

!b

II&amp;C JEWELERS

Keeoe*'
_._._

'

..

212 E. Main StrM1

~~~m~H~o~y. . . . . .J..~~h~JS~·~~~~~ l.~.....M~Id·d·le.~.n.,·O·h·lo. . . . . .~~==~~=tn~·=ni~5:,:Po::m:o~~y~
of Your Choice

S,t.LE!i J~nll!iERVICE
Rutt•ncl, OhtO 41775
J Wm " lrll " Brown , Owner

tog prayer on the th~rd Sunday Morning
prayer and sermon on all other Sundays
of the month Church School and nursery
care provided Coffee hour In the Parish

MEIGS TIRE

_.~==~~

Brown's Fire &amp; 5afei\!
Equipment

POMEROY CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE ••
Corner Union and Mulberry, Rev Clyde V.

a.m , Glen McClung , supt .. morn1ng wor ship, 10 30 o.m . evening service 7 30
m•d week service, Wednesday , 7:30p.m .
GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH - 326 E.
Mcun St , PomerOOfi . The Rev. Robert 8.
Gro'leS, rector. Sunday services at 10 30
a. m. Holy Commun1on on the first Sunday
of each month , and comb1ned with morn -

.

,~.~t

ELLIS. &amp;SONS SOHIO

P r;:'RINITV Chnstlan Assembl~. Coolville
_ _ Gilbert Spencer, pastor. Sunday
school. 9 30 o 1m : mornmg worship, 1t
0 m . Sunday evening service 7 30 p.m. ,
midweek prayer service Wednesday , 7 .30

S~day.

This

.

FRENCH'S

P. J,_PAUlfY,
AGENT

~·

SUNOCO

SERVICE
CENTERS

N1tionwk:lt Int. Co.
of Columbus. 0 .
IIMW. MAin
992-2:111 Pomeroy

212W.MIIn

"''"''''"' m.,..,

Attend the Church
o£ Your Choice

. second

I!(

Pomeray
" '·3325

This Sunday

.11. 110 ~

Pat Hill Ford, Inc.

4i1 S.Thlrd, Mlddlo~n
m-t1t6

PIZZA SHACK
E•t In or

C•rr_Y Out

of Your Choice

1:16 E.

This Sunday

They've come a ion« way

Th~y

were m1m~ m thu Mme church

fifty Y"" ago when she was )USt t~nty andhr was t~ty · two Youth
seemed eterNII life pro m11ed a sucreu10n of sunny d.toys

MILL

Built wu n't logo on thai way forever

Th~rfirst child died 11birth

Then flna na1ltroubln a busl n n5 fa1lu~ . the lou of a h ome when they
rouldn't meet lhe mortgage ?"yments Sometimes rt seemed u 1f the
d(MJds oulw~l!hed the sunshh~

MillWork ·

Clblnet MoWing

Syrac~t~e992-3971

B11t then!' were good limn, too Times of lOYand l a ugh l ~r , u cceu,
wonderful children wond~dul granddnldnm Through 11 all lhcH faith
1nd love for r1ch olher ne\'er fl l t~red

HEINER'S
BAKERY

Throu ~ hOUI

Bakers of
Goodii&lt;Hd

.wnHngton, W.

our own life Ciln we all~)'

Montt•r

Tvasday

/I C!Jflnlfrllns
4 I II

lil 4!15S

Lulfe

Safvrda~

M1trhow
19 27-3()

~5

much '

Wedn1sd1y

Tlll.lf51Jiy

'"'"

12 J l .17

1025-37

, ,._COOl

__,

We Fin Doctors'
Prescriptions
9H·29l5
Pomeroy

Insurance
Services

Attend The Church
of YQur Choice

214 E. Main
tt2-5130 Por111rov

MIDDLEPORT CLUSTER
HEATH, Church School 9 30 a.m. Warship 10·30 o m . UMYF 6 p m Robert
Robinson , Pastor.
RUTLAND. Church SchoOl 9.30 a.m .
Worship 10 30a m
SALEM CENTER. Worship 9 am. Church
School9 ..sa m .
SYRACUSE CLUSTER
Rev. Stanley Merrifled, Minister
FOREST RUN: Worshp 9 a .m Church
School lOam.
MINERSVILLE, Church School 9 am
Worship lOam
ASBURY: Church School9.50 a.m War
ship 11 a m Bible Study 7'30 p m Tnvrs·
day. UMW fistTuesday.
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
Rev. Dav1d Hams
Rev Mark Flynn
Rei/ Florence Sm1th
Hilton Wolfe
BETHANY, (Dorcas), Worsh1p 9 30 a.m
Church School 10:30 a.m. Bible study,
Thursday, 7:30p.m.
CARMEL. Worship second and fourth
Sundays at 10: ..5 a . m. Sun~y School, second and fourth Sundays. 9:30a.m. Wor·
ship and Sunday Sctiool at Sutton Un1ted
Methodist Church on f~rst and third Sun days. Bible study together each Wednesday at 7 30 p.m Family night dinner
togethereachthlrdThursdayot6·30.
APPLE GROVE. Sunday School 9:30 a.m.
Worship 7:30 p .m . 1st and 3rd Sundays;
Prayer meehng Wednesday 7·30 p.m.
Fellowship supper first Saturday 6 p.m.
UMW 2nd Tuesdoy7:30 p m.
EAST LETART, Chruch School 9 a .m.
Worship serv1ce 10 a.m. Prayer meeting
7 30 p m Wednesday UMW second Tuesday 7:30p.m.
RACINE WESLEYAN - Sunday school 10
a .m , worship, II a.m Choir pract1ce,
Thursday . 8 p m
LETART FALLS- Worship service 9 a .m.
Church School lOa m
MORNING STAR, Worship 9 30 a .m.;
Church School 10 30 a m.
MORSE CHAPEL , Church SChool 9 30
am Worship 11 a.m.
PORTLAND, Sunday School 6:30 p m..
Evening Worship, 7 30 p m. Youth
Meeting, Tuesday 7 30 p.m Bible Study,
Thursddy, 7.30 p.m.
SUTTON , Sunday School first and third
Sundays 9,30 a m. worship, first and
tnlrd Sundays, 10·45 a, m Woranlp ond
Sunday School
at Carmel United
Methodist Church on second and fourth
Sundays. Bible study together each
Wednesday, 7 30 p .m Family night dinner
together each ttlirdlhursdoy at 6 30p.m .
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
Re\1. RichardW. Thomas
Duane Sydenstnckar , Sr
JohnW. Douglas
Charles Dom1gan
JOPPA, Worsh1p 9.00 a.m. Church
School10 OOo m
CHESTER , Worship 9 a .m. , Church
School 10 a.m. Choir Rehearsal 7 p.m .
Thursdays. Bible Study, Thursdays
7 30 p m .
LONG BOTIOM, Sunday School at 9.30
am. Evening Worship at 7.30 p m. Thurs·
dayBibleStudy. 7:30p.m
REEDSVILLE Sunday School 9:30 a. m .
Morning Worship 10 30 a m Evening Worshp 7 30 p .m. B1ble Study Wednesdays at
7 30 p.m.
ALFRED Sunday School at 9·~5 a.m.
• Morning Worship ot 11 o m Youth, 6·30
p m . Sundays. Wednesday Night Prayer
Meetlng, 7 30 p m
ST. PAUL, (Tuppers Plains): Sunday
School 9 00 o m . Morning Worship at
10 OOa.m . Bible Study 7:30p.m. Tuesday.
SOUTH BETHEL (Silver Ridge) . Sunday
School 9 00 a.m. Mornmg Woshlp 10·00
e m Wednesdov Bible Study, 7 30p m
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST, Clover
Swo1n Superintendent Sunday school
9.30 every week
HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION, Rev Keith
Eblon, pastor. Sunday School 9 30 am .:
Leonard Gilmore, first elder. e"enlng ser·
v1ce , 7:30 p m . Wednesday prover
meeting 7 30 p m
. BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH . OF
CHRIST. Duane Worden mimster 81blo

Tttis_Sunday

Attend The
Church of
Your Choice
This

Middleport
448 Locust
99Z-lt93

Mlddtopon

HIM-- TAI&lt;E

5t;FO~E YOU HIT'

O~F

THAT RO&amp;E!

ER •• ANNIE ,.

PMHOT SURE 1CIIH

THEREIS

COULD Y&lt;XJ

00 IT, EVEN

ASli'IPI.f

.. IF
COULD CHANGE YOU\

WAY OF

TO · MRS. JED 6ARR -

\'i iTH

MY LIFE AT RISK, MR.
6ARR' 1HERE'S
POPPY TO THINK
AHD ...

- AN'

MAY'S SUPFOSED

\'lt1AT ABOUT TilE
REDHEADED
KID'? SHE
WORRIES ME-

T'BE SMART! I GUESS
THERE JUST AREN'T
ANY GENIUSES IN TilE

HANDLING
THIS ..,

ROMANCE

BUSINESS~

Apple Grove
News Notes

THE DAILY
SENTINEL

WAID CROSS
SONS STORE

of Your l.awice
This Sunday.

CH STER CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE
clo5s.- 9 30 am , mormng worship lO 30
Rev Herbert Grate pastor Fronk R1ffle,
evenmg worship , 6·30 p .m
Wednesday Bible study 6 30 p.m
supt Sunday School 9 30. o m Worsh1p
NEW STIVERS VILLE
COMMUNITY serv1ce. 11 a m and 7 30 p m Prayer
Church, Sunday School serv1ce, 9 o45 am
meeting. Wednesday , 7 30 p m
LAUREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST
Worsh1p service 10 30, EvangeliStiC Ser\liCe. 7 .30 p.m. Wednesday
Prayer CHURCH Rev . Floyd F. Shook , pastor
Lloyd Wnght , O.rector of Chnst1an Educo·
meat1ng, 7 30
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST, Pomeroy - t1on Sunday School . 9 30 a m , Morning
Harrisonville Rd , Robert Purtell pastor; Worsh1p , 10 30 a m . Cllo1r Practice, Sun B1ll McElroy, Sunday school supt Sunday day 6 30 p m , Evemng Worsh1p , 7 30
school , 9·30 am , morning worship and p m Wednesday Prayer end B1ble Study
communion, 10:30 a m. ; Sunday worsh1p 7 30p m
1
servtce, 7 p m Wednesday evening
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST Charles
prayer meetmg and B1ble study 7 p.m
Ru ssel: . Sr
mm1ster , R1ck Macomber,
ST JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH, Pone supt Sunday school 9 30 a m worsh1p
Grove. The Rev. Wilham Middlesworth , ser\IICe 10 30 am B1ble Study , Tuesday ,
Pastor Church serv1ces 9 30 a m Sunday 7 30p m
SchoollO 30a.m .
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS
, BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST. Jerry CHR IST OF LATTER DAY SAINTS Portland
1P1ngley, pastor Sunday school , 9 30 o .m , Rocme Road W1ll 1am Roush , pastor .
morning worsh1p 10 30 a .m . Wednesday Phylhs Stobart Sunday School Supt Sun ·
day School 9 30 a m , Mornmg worsh1p ,
even1ng serv1ce , 7 30
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST. Rev Earl Shuler
10 30 o m Sunday e\lemng serv1ce 7 p.m
pastor. Sunday school 9 30om, Church Wednesday e ven1ng prayer serv1ce, , 7 30
service, 7 p.m .. youth meeting 6 pm
p.m .Tuesday Bible Study, 7 p m
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST Re v Earl Shuler ,
RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE, pastor Wor5h1p serviCe, 9 30 a.m Sunday
Rev John A . Coffman , pastor Martha school , 10 30 a m B1ble Study and prayer
Wolfe. Chairman of the Board of Christian serviCe Thursday 7 30 p m
CARLETON CHURCH Kmgsbury Road
Life Sunday School , 9·30 o.m , morning
worship, 10 30; Sunday evemng worsh1p , Gory Kmg pastor Sunday school , 9 30
7·30 p m Preyer meet1ng, Wedne5doy, a m , Rolph Carl superintendent, evening
worship
7 30 p.m Prayer meetmg ,
7:30p.m.
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST , Don L Walker
Wednesday 7 30 p m
LONG
BOTTOM CHRISTIAN
Tom
Pastor, Robert Sm1th , Sunday school
supt .. Sunday school, 9 30 a m mormng R1chason pastor Wallace Damewood,
Sunday School Supenntendent Worsh1p
worship , 10 ~0 a .m ., Sunday evening war
1
ship, 7 30, Wednesday even1ng 81ble serviCe of 9 a m 81ble SchoollO a m
HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH, Tnurs·
study , 7.30
day evemng serviCes 7 30 Rev Cart Sun DANVILLE WESLEYAN , Rev
R 0
day mornmg ser\'lces 9 30 and e"en 1ng
Brown, pastor. Sunday School, 9 30 a.m.
serv1ces 7 30 p m Rev Durham
morning worsh1p 10 ~5 . youth serv1ce
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION at Bold
6 45 p.m., evening worsh1p , 7 30 p.m.
prayer and praise Wednesday. 7 30 p m
Knob located on County Rood 31 Rev.
SILVER RUN FREE BAPTIST, Re\1 , Morvin Lawrence Gluesencamp paslor , Re v.
asshitant pastor.
Markin pastor Steve Little Sunday school Roger Wdlford
supl. Sunday school , 10 a .m ; mormng Preachmg ser'JIC&amp;s Sunday 7 30 p m ,
prayer meetmg Wednesday 7 30 p. m
worship II a m Sunday e\lening wor
sh1p, 7·30 Prayer meet1ng and Btble Gory Gnfftth leader. Youth groups , Sun·
study, Thursday 7 30 p m, youth serv1ce
day eve1n9 . 6 30 p m . w1th Roger and
V1olet W1llford os leaders Commumon
6 p .m . Sunday
, •nESTER CHURCH OF GOD. Rev R E. serv1ces f1rst Sunday each month
WHITES CHAPEL , Coolville AD Rev Ray
1Robmson, pastor. Sunday school, 9 30
\a.m .. worship service, 11 am , evening Deeter pa3tor Sunday school 9 30 a.m
service 7 00 youth serv1ce, Wednesday, worst·up service. 10 30 o m Bible study
7.00p.m .
and prayer serv1ce, Wednesday 7 30 p m
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST, Brad
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH ,
Robert Musser, pastor Sunday school, Henderson , pastor , Herb Elltotf Sunday
9·30 am Roy S1gmon . supt morning school supt Sunday school 9 30 a m
worsh1p 10 30: Sunday evening serv1ce, morning worsh1p and comumon , 10 30
7·30, mid- week service . Wednesday 7 om
RUTLAND BIBLE METHODIST CHURCH
p m.
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE. Amos Tillis pastor Donny T1lhs . Sunday
Rev. James B. K1ttle , pastor, Norman School Supt Sunday School , 9 30 a m .
Presley , Sunday School Superintendent
followed by morn1ng worshtp Sunday
Sunday school 9:30a.m. mornmg war . evemng serv1ce , 7 00 p m
Prayer
ship 10 ~5 a.m. evangelistic service 7 meeting Wednesday . 7 00 p m
p m. Prayer and Pralle Wednesday , 7
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE,
p m .. youth meetmg , 7 p m Men's prayer Rev Lloyd 0 Gnmm Jr . pastor. Sundoy
school , 9 30 am , warsh1p service , 10 30
maetmg, Sqturday 7 p.m .
a .m . Broodcost live O'Jer WMPO , young
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN CHRIST
Elden R. Blake, pastor. Sunday School 10 people 's serv1ce , 7 p.m EvangeliStiC sera m , Robert Reed. supt . Morning ser· viCe 7 30 p m Wednesday serv1ce, 7 30
man, 11 a .m . Sundav night service' p.m .
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST , Corner of Se
Christian Endeavor 7 30 p.m , Song sercond and Anderson Mason Pastor Frank
.vlco
8 p m. Preaching 8·30 p m
Midweek Prayer meeting, Wednesdav . 7 Lowther Sunday school , 9 45 a .m .. worship service 11 o m and 7 30 p m Weekp m ; Alvin Reed , lay leader
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST, located at ly Bible Study , Wednesdav 7 30 p m.
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST MUier St ,
Rutland on New L1ma Rood , next to Forest
Acre Pork, Re" Ray Rouse, pastor, Robert Meson , W Vo Aunce M1ck . pastor Sun Musser Sunday School sup! Sundoy \ day Btble Studr. 10 a m Worship 11 am
and 7 p m B1b e Study Wednesday 7 p .m .,
~Chool , 10.30 a .m , worsh1p 7.30 p m.Bi ble Study W.dnesday 7 30 p m , Satur· Vocal musiC
MASON ASSEMBLY OF GOD, Dudding
day night proyer serv1ce, 7 30 p.m .
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN . Roger lone Mason W Vo Rev. Aonme B Rose .
fWotson , pastor; Mildred Z1egler, Sunday Pastor Sunday School 9 45 a.m , Morning
Worsh1p 1 I a m Evenm~ Ser't'ice 7 30
school supt Mormng worship 9 .30 a m
Sundovschool , 10:30 a.m.; a'lentng ser - p .m Wednesday Women s M1n1stnes 9
o m . (meehng and prayer. Prayer and Bl ·
I vice , 7 30
r
MT. UNION BAPTIST , Joo Sayre , Sunday ble Study 7 p m
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
ScOOol SUperintenent. Sunday school , 9 45
a m : evenihg worship, 7 30 p m Prayer CHRISTIAN UN ION , The Rev William
Campbe ll , pastor Sunday School. 9.30
meeting 7 30p m Wednesday .
o m Ja m es Hughes sup! evenmg ser TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF CHRIST
VICO, 7 30 p m Wednesday O'lenm~
Vincent Waters , pastor, Howard Bla1r Col
wall , super.ntendent Sunday School 9 30 prayer f'"' eeflng 7 30 p m Yputh prayer
o m . mormng church. I 0 30 a .m ., Sunday ser v1ce 1ch Tu esday
fAIR \ ,r:w 818U: CHURCH Letart W
evening service 7 30: Wednesday Bible
Vo, Rt I Mark 1rw1n, pa sto r Worship
Study 1 30 p m

am.:

MARK V STORE

tD9).""'1 t 980 K"ltt• A4vtlftl10!''l s.......,
Po RO o 11121 llllmnn~ Ytrlt"'' 12111&amp;
~"-"'

liASY.. HHTI

FAITH BAPTIST Church, Mason , meet at
un 1ted Steel Workers Union Hall , Railroad
Street , Mason Pastor, Rev. Joy Mlkhell .
Morning worsh1p 9 o45 a m , Sunday
School 10 30 am
Prayer meeting
Wednesday . 7 30 p m
FOREST RUN BAPTIST Rev. Nyle
Borden , pastor. Cornelius Bunch,
supenntendent Sunday school. 9 30 am. ;
second and fourth Sundays worship ser vice at 2 30p m
MT MORIAH BAPTIST - Fourth and
Main 'st , Middleport Rev. Calvin Minnll,
pastor Mrs. Elv1n Bumgardner, supt Sun day school , 9 30 om . worship service,
10.45o.m
had
NORTH BETHEL
Umted Met
1st
Church, Re\1 Charles Dom1gan. pastor
Sunday School , 9 30 a .m , Worship Service , 10:"5 om .; Sunday Bible Study , 7.00
p m Wednesday prayer meeting, 7:30
p.m .
BURLINGHAM SOUTHERN BAPTIST
CHURCH , Route 1, Shade Pastor Don
Block Aftil1ated with Southern Baptist
Convention Sunday school . 1 30 p.m
Sunday worsh1p, 2.30 p. m Thursday
evening B1ble study 7 p m
PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY , Racine
Route 124 William Hoback . pastor. Sun
day school 10 a m .. Sunday evemng ser·
v1ce , 6 30 p m Wednesday een1ng ser
vice 7
CARPENTER BAPTIST Rev Freeland
Noms , pastor Don Cheadle, Supt Sunday School . 9 30 o m Morning Worship ,
10 30 o .m Prayer Serv1ce, alternate Sun
days
NEASE SETTLEMENT FREE Will BAPTIST,
Donald R Kerr Sr .. pastor Friday even
ing seNICe , 7 30 p m , Sunday school 10
om

Mtddleport·
Pomeroy, 0.

Lult9

SWISHER _&amp;LOHSE
PHARMACY

Reutei-llrogan

~In

pomeroy

ALONG WAY

RACINE

CAPI'AlNEASY

m

VIRQIL B.
TEAFORD SR.
Zl6 s

p ~OUNT Olive Community Church.
Lawrel"!c• Bush, pastor; Max Folmar, Sr
Superintendent. Sunday School and morn·
lng worsh1p . C) 30 a .m . Sunday eventng
serviCe, 7 p.m .. Youth meeting ancl 81ble
study, Wednesday , 7 p.m.
UNITED FAtTH CHURCH - Route 7 on
Pomeroy bypass Re\1 . Robert Smith , Sr. ,
pastor , Rev James Cundiff, asslstan~
pastor Sunday School , 9:30 o.m : morn1ng worsh1p , 10 30 a. m .. evening wOf'shlp, 7 .30. Wednesday night prayer s~r·
v 1ce, 7 30 p m Women s Fellowshlp,
Thursday , 9 30 o m

sen~1ces 9 30 a .m. Sunday school, 11
a m , evening worship , 7 30 p m Tuesday
cottage prayer meeting and Btble study,
9 30 am Worship se~tee Wednesday.
7 ·30p m
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH now locoled
on Pomeroy P1ka , County Road 25 , near
Flatwoods . Rev Blackwood , pastor Services on Sunday at 10 30 a m and 7 30
p m . w1th Sunday school 9 30 a .m Bible
study , Wednesday 7 30 p m
INDEPENDENT HOLINESS CHURCH , INC
Pearl St
Middleport Rev O 'OiJII
Manley, pastor, Arttlur Barr , Sunday
school supenntendent Sunday school
9 30 am ., evening worsh1p , 7 ·30 p.m .
Prayer and pro~:se service Wednesday .
7 30p.m
RUTLAND APOSTOLIC CHURCH OF
JESUS CHRIST , Elder James M1ller B1ble
sludy , Wednesday , 7 30 p.m
Sunday
School , 10 am Sunday n1ght serviCe, 7 30
pm
POMEROY WESLEYAN HOLINESS Harrisonville Rood Dewey King pastor
EdiSon Weaver , ass11tant, Henry Eblin ,
Jr . Sunday school supt Sunday school .
9 30 o .m , mornmg worship . 11 o m Sun day even1ng service . 7 .30, prayer
meeting, Thursday , 7 30p.m
SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF GOD Not Pentecostal, Rev George Oiler ,
pastor Worship sen~lce Sunday , 9.45
am Sunday school 11 o.m worship
service, 7 30 p m Thursday prayer
meeting, 7 30 p m
MT . HERMON Un1ted Brethren In Christ
Church Rev Robert Sanders , pastor Don
Wdl, loy leader . Located m le)fos Com
'munity off CR 82 Sunday school 9 30
a .m ., Morn.ng worship serv1ca, 10 "5
a m evemng preochmg serv1ce second
and fourth Sundays , 7·30 p . m .. Chnshan
Endeavor first and th1rd Sundays, 7 30
p.m . Wednesday prayer meeting and 81
ble study . 7 30p m
JEHOVAH S WITNESSES , 1 mile east of
Rutland, junction of Route 12• and Noble
Summ1t Rood {T - 17"). Sunday Bible Lac
ture , 9 30 am , Watchtower study , 10 30
o .m , Tue~day , B1ble study , 7 and 8 15
p m .. Thursday. theocratic school . 7 30
p .m. ; service meet1ng, 8 30 p m .
RUTLAND FREEWill BAPTIST Church Churck McPherson, pastor ; Guy Priddy
supenntendent Sunday school 10 a .m
Sunday evening and Wednesday serv1ces ,
7 30p m.
CHURCH OF GOO of Prorhecy , located
on the 0 J Wh1te Road of highway 160
Sunday School 10 a m Superintendent
John Loveday. First Wednesday night of
month CPMA services, second Wednesday WMB meetong, third tnrough lllth
youth service George Croyle , pastor
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL - 570 Grant St .,
M1ddleport Sunday School . 10 a m , mormng worsh1p, 11 a m. evening worship , 7
p m Wednesday evemng Bible study and
prayer meeting, 7 p m . Affiliated with
Soutl1ern Baptist Con\lention
BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHRISTEugene Underwood pastor Harry Hendncks superintendant . Sunday school ,
9.30 am . morning worship, 10 30 am ..
evening worsh1p, 7 p.m Wednesday Bible
studv 7 p m .
JUBILEE CHRISTIAN CENTER - George's
Creak Road . Rev . C J Lemley, pastor,
John Failure, su,.rlntendent Church
school. 9.30 a .m. morning worship,
10·30 , evening service, 7 p m Youth
meeting Sunday , 6 p m . B1ble study in
depth Wednesday 7 p m CkJsses for all
ages Nursery provided for worship ser vJce
ST PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH, Corner
of Sycamore ond Second Sis , Pomeroy
The Rev. Wilham Middlesworth, Pastor.
Sunday School at 9 &lt;45 o m and Church
Serv1ces 11 a .m.
SACRED HEART Rev. Falher Paul D.
Welton , pastor . Phone 992-2825 Saturday
evening Mass, 7.30, Sunday Mass , 8 and
10 am Confess1on Saturday , 7~ 7 30
p m.
VICTORY BAPTIST - 52S N . 2nd St ,
Mtddleport . James E Keesee , pastor
1
, Sunday morning worship 10 a m e't'anlng serv1ce , 7, Wednesday evening worship , 1 p m , Vts1tot1on Thursday 6 30

By Mrs. Herbert Rousb
Mr. and Mrs. Moe Miller of Columbus visited Mr. and Mrs. Wallie
Stover, Mr. and Mrs. Gerald
Hayman and Mrs. Bertha Robinsoo
at Racine Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Dorsa Parsons
visited Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Wells at
Gallipolis Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Laurence Balser,
son Roger, of Tuppers Plains, were
dinner guests &amp;unday of Mrs. Allee
Balser.
Mrs. Pauline Hill and Mrs. Lori
Hill have been returned to their
homes from Holzer Medical Center,
Gallipolis.
Mr. and Mrs. Hoyt Ferguson of Pl.
Pleasant, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Kane of
Sununerville, New Jersey; Mrs.
Elba Warner visited Mrs. Pearl
Norris Sunday. Mrs. Vera Norris
Craig of Bashan Rd., visited Mrs.
Norris Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Moton Higley and
two sons, Mrs. Edna Clark of Ravenna spent a week with Mr. and Mrs.
Owen Anderson. Mrs. Bertha Bar·
nette of Huntington also Vtalted Mrs.
Anderson.
Mrs. Bob Montgomery spent a day
recenUy wtth her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Fred Brown at Gallipolis.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Manuel,
daughters Robin and Donita, visited
Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Hupp at PorUand. Sunday VISitors of the Hupps
were Mr. and Mrs. Randall Roberts,
son Chad, Mrs. Clarence Laurence
of Portland and Mrs. Brenda Johnson of Bashan Rd.
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Russell,
children Mandy and Michael spent
Saturday with Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Russell at Wolf Pen.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Findley and
daughter Angle of Columbus spent
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Findley and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Hupp spent
Sunday evening with Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Bass and daughters at Clif·
ton, W.Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Russwell Roush,
Cindy and Ed, were dinner guests
Monday evenmg of Mr. and Mrs.
Ronald RusseU and children.
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Hart spent
Monday mght with Mr. and Mrs.
Don Bell and vistted Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Hart at Racine.
Mrs. Lois Bell visited Mrs. Edna
Roush, Mrs. Gladys Shields, Mrs.
Pauline Hill and Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Cross. Andrew was recently
returned to his home from Veterans
Memorial Hospital where he had
surgery.

TELL ITTO 11IE MOUNTAIN
QUARTZ MOUNTAIN, Okla.
(AP)- Dedicated students trek up
steep hills and arrive at 4:30 a.m. for
the "Sunrise On MoWttaln" session.
Class is limited to painters, printers
and photographers.
The Oklahoma ~umrner Arts Institute here encourages gifted high- •
school studenis to seek profesalonal
careers in the arts. It is one of the
few programs of Its kind offered in
the nation. Students compete for admission and are supervised by
nationally recognized artists.
TWODAYSLATER
During World War II, the Soviet
Union did not declare war on Japan
until Alll!. 8, 1945, two days after the
Uhited Slates dropped the atomic
bomb on Hiroehlma.

GASOI.J NE AILEY

doqs would
be raisinq holy
Ned, Clovia 1

Someone's
hidtnq up

there, Slim!

1 1&lt;7VOW HER A11L050PHY
W~AT S~E i.!kES AND
W~AT SHE tJELIEVES ...

""
"

Evening television listings

..''" '

C1J il2l.

SEPT. 11, 11180

FRIDAY NIGHT MOVIE
'Onca Upon A Spy' 1980 Stara
Eleanor Perker, Chrlttopl'ler Lee
fl llJ iliD THE DUKES OF HAZZARD Country Weetemaln11erlor
etta lynn guest etara u heraell ,
and get a kldn apped by atrlootln epl
b.tndlta (Repeat , 60 mlm1 )
C1J t'ID BILL MOYERS' JOURNAL
Campaign ' 80' Ptrt II Hott Bill
Moyera continues hie roport on the
Presldentlalcamptlgn of 1980 (60

"
AND

,',

''·

..

.'

..

0 ordonllddy Part Ill
FAMII.YFEUD

...

t'''

7'tllt
1:00

..

'"

.., '..
0

111

• FACE THE MUSIC
NEWS UPOA Tl
eCD SHOGUNMarlkomtkea
a..cret deal with lha Portugeeeto
ttvahe,belovadBiackthorna 'ellfe
ae Toran1111 prepar11 for the f!nal
battle to become eupreme military
dlctator·· Shagun Start Rlchrud
Ctlambertaln Tashiro Mll11ne
(Concluelon,
3
hre)
(_(;lol8d Ctptlonad)
(J) IN TOUCH
ffi FOOTBALL' INSIDE THE NFL
HaetaLen Oawaan and Nick Buon•
lcontlare bac:k to brtng you weekly
tctlon highllghtt, anatyeas end
~dlctlona from the grid~ron
l.IJMOYIE o(SCIENc.E-FICTION) •
"WarortheQergantuae'' 1tee
C1J J!UJ!I't!TB SHOW
.(]){Ill TH!:INCRI:DI8LEHULK
David Banner eutpecte f'le might
actuellybeakilleraftarheemergaa
from one of hla bltckoutaaalhe
Hulk et the tcena of a murder
&lt;B•I!!eat, 80 mini)
ill 1111 WASHINGTON W!EK tN

lll:.N80NJeiiiC:ITitlvlaila
the governor' a manalon for ttle
weekeOO and prompllymanageato
involva h•raalt In a acandaloua al
tualion with a French playboy
1:30

~,,,

§.!n Ol,!iO Padraa
UI(I)Wt.JOALLASPimeleianetur·
ally exc1ted about her news, I hat
1he Ia expecting ach il d, and hopee
It wilt help eliminate the long
llandlng feudbetweenJockEwlng
and her father (Repeat, eo mint)
())MOVIE -(DRAMA) ••• ' 'David
1nd Uee" 1M3
NEWS
10,28
NEWSUPDATE
10,30 ; RICHARO HOGUE
HI!ROI!S 'Pelton The Man
Behind the Myth ' 'Old Blood and
Gula t'llmeelf ie the eubJect of this
documenta,y Tnrough peraonal
lattera and dlariea. thla one·hour
biographical feature ahada new
llghl on the m•n behlnctthamllitary
maak
()]) OVER EASY 'A Pl1ce to live
Heal Hugh Downs (Cioaad
Captioned)
tCU8 (J) 1\UUPDATE
u,oo
~m
NEWS

rn

11

t0

11

t87D
(fi)DICKCAYETTSHOWGueat G
G ardon Liddy Part Ill
11·28 ())NEWS UPDATE:

11 •30

CllecrJ THE TONtGHTSHOW
Gueett Suzanne Somere, George
Carlin (80 min• )
ROlli BAGLEY SHOW
. . ~RIDAVS

W~

CBS LATE MOVIE 'NO

HOLDS BARRED ' Kelly Monlatth
taket a look at a New York achool
where atudenta learn the art of
comedy 'THE NEW AVENGERS
Target' AHer five top agent a dle of
'naturalcauaaa' SteedtndPurday
ra• r they •r• next (Repel!)
(I) ABC CAPTIONED NEWS
(!g) MOVIE ' Drac:ula Haa Rlaen
FROM The Grave' 1989 Chrle·
topher Lee, Rupert Oavlaa 2)
Daughter Of Dr Jekyll' 1057 John
ar , Gloria Tllbel

12:00
12,30
12'.00

12:58

MO

l!l•i•Jl• IENJIATWORK

ill
ill

WALUTREETWEEK 'Gold
in Tham Thar AI~•· Holt Louie
Rukeyeer
1:51 ~ NEWS uPDATE
UlO
700CLUI
ON LOCATION 'Oon Aicktee
and His Wlae Guyt'

m m e m em •

()) DAN GRIFFIN
(])MOYIE-)cOMEDY)•••~

MACN~IL·LEHRER REPORT

'"

·"
"'

I

!IlL•• )

10.00 W BASEBALL Atlanta Braves va

1:30
2:00

~

DAVID__IUSSKIND SHOW

crl THE MIDNIGHT
IAL
TBS EVENING NEWS
IIERG!NCY
MOVtE-(SCtENCE·DRAMA)
•• "Deedty Mlnllt" UJ57
(J) NEWS UPDATE
I]) 30 MINUTES WITH FATHER
MANNING
(I) MOVIE -(.-.DVENTURE)••• ~
'~hunderb•ll" 1185
C1J MOYtl! -(SCIENCE FtCTtON) •
"Ye•r 2881" 1MI
~ ,/!liMY SWAGGART
NEWS
I BELIEVE
•

C
e

2:11 ;
2:21
2,30

2.50
3:1I
3,58

4'00

4.45
!5·30
!5·PII5
5:1!58

·NEWS
NEWS UPDATE
ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
MDVIE o(DRAMA.COMEDY)
••• " Amazing Or. Ctttlerhouae"
!!!38
CJ) MOVIE o(DRAMA) •• ¥I ''Circle
tron" ten
NEWS UPDATE
700 CLUB
MAVERICK
JUST PASSING THRU
RAT PATROL
NEWS UPDATE

l

SEPT. 20, 1880
EVENING

e·oo ffi 88CIJilJi NEWS

CHAMPIONSHIP

WRESTLING
GOD HAS THE ANSWER
CATCH33
l!)(l];NStONS
el]) NBC NEWS
5·30
NEWS
ill CONCERN
OLD FRIENDS, NEW FRIENDS
'Lorin Hollander HoatFred Rogart
vlaita wittl lnternatlontlly ac:
eltimad concert plel'!lat Lorin Hal
lander who ditcuaael hie little
known work on behalf of child
prodiglat end prlaon lnmatu
ooed Capt•mod)
CBS NEWS
CTOitYGARDEN
NI!WSMAKER
7'00
DANCIFEYER
KWOODIROTHEIIS
HI!E HAW Gua'iii:""Merte
Heggerd , L~• Wllllama, Tennet·
••e Moonahlna Ctoggert (60
mint)
crJ LAWRENCE WILK SHOW
(J) EVENINGATPOPS 'Steph1ne
Grappelll end Bucky Plzzerelll'
Conductor Harry Ettie Dicke on and
the Boaton Popa are joined by jazz
viollnlet Stephane Grtppelllend
gultariel Bucky Pluerelll, whose
aalectlonalnclude the Venuti com·
poaltlon ' Limehouea Bluaa' (80
mint)
iliD BUGS BUNNY
iJlJ ONCE UPON A CLASSIC
'Dominic. Beyond Grevlty' Strahle
killed. bullaavealucy the mlaelng
~~ (Cloud Captionad)
CUlt850LtDQOLDCo·hOIII Olen
Cemptl•ll, Dionne Wtrwick 13old
record winnere perform I heir hit
eonga Gueata P..chetandHerb ,
Blondle. Supef1rtmp. Nicolette
Laraon
7:30 ~- ANtNStDELOOK
THE LUNDSTROM&amp;
CONSUMER RIPORT8 PRE·
SENTI 'The Good Buy ,Show' Thla
ftct· pecked apeclal entertainingly
acanalha consumer mtrketplace
and of1era helpful health. ulely
tnd money ·ll~lng pointe
iJlJ li_Rl!_UCHO
8'00 Cll •&lt;D CENTENNIAL 'Only The
Roct(eLiveForever' Peaqulnel the
lira! wtllte man to enter the Indianland tlong the Colorado River,
lltrta a tur-ttading bu11nee1 wllh
hit friend, Alexander McKug
Star e A1 eha rd Chamberlain,
Aobetl ConrAd (Pt I , 3 hrs )

I
li

~~

';11}~~ fj)" ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

ti~.ua~~ VJtr

byHennAmoldandBobLee

by THOMAS JOSEPH

~ ~ ~~ ®

Unscramble these lour Jumbles
one letter to each square to form
tour ord1nary words

ACROSS
I Mtler
or mudder
6 Sebast1an
or Bruce

BIBER

I KJ

~':'".,:J..~-~-

__ ,,.,. ...

I NARCH
I K) I
ITARREY I

D [J

tDOAZICj

J

1

r

WHA'T SOME V I51'10R'5
A'T 'Tl-lt: I!IA'ZAA ~
WE'R'E, 'TO SAY

'THE:. l..EA&amp;'T.
Now arrange lhe circled letters to
form the surprise answer as sug·
Qested by the above cartoon

Prlntanswerllere·

rI

I I I I I )
(Answers tomorrow)

Yeslerday s

DOWN
I "R .U R."
c haracter

2 B1bhcal
mountam
11 Hold forth
3 Dreamer's
12 Habttuate
overseas
13 SWISS City
abode"
14 Base
4 Bardot 's
15 Useless
season
fragment
S Manum1t
16 Greek letter 6 Romero
18 Allow
7 Lmcoln's
19 Fonner chess earl y love
champion
8 Pla n on
20 Vent1late
foohshly
21 Bunnese
9 Trymg

Vesterday's Answer
17 Unr esolved Z9 - Ma teo,
conlest
Cahf
23 Scorpmn 's 30 Squirrel
monkey
s outhern
ne1ghbor
32 Wee
24 Yugo 1sle 31 Equals
26 Shaw play 39 Movmg
pero od
27 Old World
tru ck
10 Grow molars herb
U Japanese
and such
28 Guarantee
com

kmfe
22 Pester
24 Actress,

Jamce -

25 Choler
26 Stockong

I Jumbles

VOUNG BRAWL ANYWAY WOEFUL
Answer How the masseur rubbed himTHE WRONG WAY

Jwmbtelootl No t3,containlno 110 puutea, Ia avtlltbla lor It 715 poiiPIId

Irom Jumble, clothla newapaper, 101 S4, Norwood, N.J. 07MI lnch.tdt ,our
nam•, tddreu, zip eode and mate eMekl PIYJble to Ntwtpaperbookl

32 Hostery hue
33 Calmp
35 Cleo's
36

Goal

37 Get II'
38 Urbane
LAST TIME

THev' EIOToiOOI&lt;C
FIIIIIT 01&lt; THE
GLASS 'THAN 111&lt;1'
w OH me

""""'""

40 S&lt;:fln8 fed
42 Of a

Greal 'Lake
car b+-1-.,+-+-+

43 Ratlroad

44 Hoffman

ftlm
45 SA

mountatns

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work it:
AX\'DLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW
One letter s1mply litands for an other In thiS sample A IS
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc Smcle le tters,
apostrophes, the length and forma t1on of the word s ue all
hints Each day th e code IE'Hers are ditrer ent

CRYI'TOQUOTES
KV

KT

LKVR

TPGOSZET ZDS

LQDAT
VRS

WQGASGTSA

ZT

LKVR

E QDS

VR SC

VR S

ASSBSD

VRSC
OPDG. - DQOSDV
TQPVRS C
Yeslerday'o Cryptoquole: THAT ACTION IS BEST WHICH
PROCURES THE GREATEST HAPPINESS FOR THE
GREATEST NUMBERS.- FRANCIS HtrrCHESON

�li-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, Sept. l9, 19M

....

.••
.·..

Circles meet locally,
discuss future works

Donahues get together

.•

The loth annual teunlon of the
fanulies of George W. and Augusta
Raul! Donahue was held Sunday at
Fortification Hill, Gallipolis.
A dinner was served at noon in the
shelter house wtth grace being g1ven
by Lawrence Peggs, president. Mrs.
· Mane Hawkins gave the secretary's
• report. Officers elected for the 1981
reuruon to be held on the fourth Sunday in July at the Mcintyre Park,
Raccoon Creek, were Peggs,
president; Mrs. Hawkins, ~cretarytreasurer.
A poem was read In memory of
"deceased members. Pictures were_
·taken for the family albwn. Two
were added to the family tree,
Dorothy Lou Miller, daughter of
jane and LeWIS Miller, born on July
27, and Barbara S1mth, wife of
Lawrence Peggs.
Attending were Mrs. Anna

'·
,.
'

..
·•
;:

Donahue Peggs, Mr. and Mrs .
Lawrence Peggs, Mr. and Mrs.
Melburn Tackett, Charles Cochran,
Garro) Sheets, Mrs Leslie Beck and
daughter, Lisa, Mr. and Mrs . .
Raymond Cochran, Mrs. Carroll
Burnett, Mrs. Helen Davis, Mr. and
Mrs. Lewis MJDer and children,
Carne Beth and Dorothy Lou, Mrs.
Angela Queen, Mrs. Ann Atkins, Mr.
and Mrs. Ronald Cochran and
children, Franklin, Raymond, J.D.,
Tonya, Donnie and Lisa, Mrs. Penny
Moore and daughter, Susan, Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Lambert and children,
Peggy and Laura, Carroll Burnett,
Jr. and sons, Brent and Cratg, Mrs.
Torruny Beck, Mr. and Mrs. Buel
Burnett, Mrs. Gary Fallon and
children, Justin and Shannon, Mrs.
ManeHawkins,andguests,Mr.and
Mrs. Dale Saunders and Mrs. Myree
Smith

Group plans annual banquet
The 41st annual banquet has been

chase a case of soap. A box will also

plaMed by the Homebuilders Class
of the Middleport Church of Christ
for Tuesday, Oct. 21 at 6:30 p.m. at
the church.
Meeting Tuesday night at the
church, conunittees for the dinner
were named. The Philathea Women
will prepare and serve the dinner
and committees named were Mrs.
Flo Grueser and Mrs. Dorothy
Roach, tickets; Colleen Van Meter
and Peggy Brickles, program; and
Mrs. Nora Rice and Mrs. Shirley

be placed in the classrooms so that

members may leave items there.
The project which iB county-wide

will contiriue until Oct. 20 at which
time the trucks will he loaded at the
Bradford Church of Christ preceding
the Men's Fellowship meeting.
Church of Christ Women are invited
to he guests that rught.
Mrs. Van Meter presided at the
meeting which opened with prayer
by Raymond Cole. Clarice Erwin
and Mrs. Roach gave reports. The
meeting closed with prayer by Mack
Stewart. Mrs. Erwm, Mr. and Mrs.
Cole served refreslunents to those
named and Ed and Edna Evans, Bea
Stewart, Bud and Hazel Wilson, Her·
man and Margaret Kincaul, Thelma
Boyer, Raymond and Dorothy
Baker.

B~ardner,decorations.

The annual drive for things for the
Grundy Mountain Mission School
was noted and the class voted to pur-

AAUWTOMEET
The Meigs County Chapter of the
· American Association of Universtty
:. ,Women will hold a potluck dinner at
:., ·6:30 p.m. Tuesday in the senior
.:. cttizens dining room of the new
:""' multiopurpose building, Mulberry
Heights, Pomeroy. The beverage
will he provided. Those attending
are to take a covered dish, tllelr own
table service and a guest. The
,. program Will he presented by
,.,. Rosalie Story and Lee Lee.

DEEM REUNION SUNDAY
The annual Deem Family Reuruon
will be held Sunday at Royal Oak
Park. A basket dinner will he held at
!2:30p.m.

Nehaclima Garden Club meets,
Mrs. Carroll Adams, Jr., Mrs.
Douglas Miller, Mrs. Dannie Harbour and Mrs. Bill Howard were
hostesses at the September meeting
o! the Nehaclima Garden Club held
at the New Haven Public Library.
Devotions were given by Mrs.
Adams wtth an repeating The Lord's
Prayer.
The president, Mrs. Roy Jones,
called the meeting to order. Mrs.
Douglas Miller read the secretary's
report and Mrs. Dannie Hatbour
gave the treasurer's report. Roll call
was the bringing of a piece of
nature's beauty from woods, fieid or
stream.
Mrs. Greg Blessmg was accepted
into the club membership.
A letter was read from Mrs. Virgtl
Burris, District Director for the

cream SOC181 sponsored by the Church Council last weekend was successful.
Cards were signed for Mrs. Phil
Globokar, home from the hospital,
and Mrs. James Fugate. Mrs.
Leonard Jewell gave the secretary's
report, and Mrs. Elza Gilmore, Jr.,
the treasurer's report. Mrs. Gilmore
and Mrs. Dorothy Woodard served a
dessert course to the 14 members attending. The table decorations
featured butterflies. A silent auction
was held following the meetmg. . .,

Dorcas C i r c k - - - - - - - - - - - - - A report on VISits wtth shut-ins
was given by Mrs. Eva hartley at the
Tuesday night meeting of the Dorcas
Circle of the B. H. Sanborn
Missionary Society of the Middleport First Baptist Church held at
the home of Mrs. Helen Bodimer.
Mrs. Sarilh D. OWen, chairman,
gave a ading and had prayer to open
the meeting with Mrs. Bodimer
giving devotions. Her meditation
was entitled "Let's Gat Personal
When We Pray" and she used scripture from Luke II.
Misstonaries to he remembered
dunng the year are Bette and
Robert Varnan of Cordoba and Em-

Jrulie Ballard, Thialand. Gifts of
money were sent to Robert Varnan
and Miss Ballard for their birthdays.
The overland white cross quota was
presented and arrangements made
to fill that.
Mrs. June Kloes had the program
on the theme "How Much of My Life
is my Own." Others attending were
Mrs. Janice Gtbbs, Mrs. Katie Anthony, Mrs. Bernice Baker, Mrs.
Clara Ben Riley, Mrs.' Freda Edwards, Mrs. Alwilda Werner, Mrs.
Elizabeth Slavm, Mrs. Pearl Hoffman, Mrs. Roms Hawkins, Mrs.
Sarah Fowler, and Miss Rhoda Hall,
a guest.

STORE BOOM
Department stores are capturing
an increasmgly large share of the
retail dollar, The Conference Board
reports. In 1956, they accountt;&lt;~ for
qnly 26 percent of lhe $43.5 btllion in
sales of general merchandise, apparel and furniture. By 1976, they
earned more than 44 percent of the
$154.3 btllion in sales of those kinds.
Over the same period, the share of
busmess earned by specialty shops
and variety stores declined. Mail order houses also showed gains.

Sentinel Social Calendar
WESLEY CHAPEL homecornmg
Sunday with Sunday school at 10
a.m.; basket dinner at 12:30· p.m.;
afternoon service at 2 p.m. with
special singmg.
,
ALFRED UNITED MEmODIST
Homecoming, Sunday. Basket dinner 12:30 p.m. Afternoon program at
2 p.m. featuring the Angelaires;
public invited.
HOMECOMING SUNDAY at Mt.
Hermon United Brethren m Christ
Church, Texas Community, with
Sunday school, ,9:30 a.m. and morning worship at 10:45 with carry-in
dinner atnoon. Rev. Roy Deeter

COWAffi
The amount of cold air that enters
a house can he reduced by pluggmg
the cracks around doors, wmdows
and stdings.

speaker for afternoon ervice at
I: 30 p.m.; public invited.
RETIJRN FROM N.C.
Mrs. Eleanor Thomas, executive
director of the Senior Citizens Center, has returned from Ashboro, N.
C. where she was the guest of the
Department of Hwnan Resources,
DtVlll!On of Agmg for the State of
North Carolins. Mrs. Thomas served
on a panel on program planning and
serving senior cttizens with other
Carter representatives from Ken·
tucky and Alabama.

VISITS HERE
Tory Brown, 11 year old son of
Mrs. Ray Cornelius, Pleasanton,
Calif., and Robert Brown of San
Jose, Calif. visited recently with his
grandmother, Mrs. Kate Brown,
Middleport. He was met at the atrport m Colwnbus by his grandmother, Mrs. Dorothy Young, and
Mrs. Jolands Root. During his visit
several parties were held m his
honor.

,.

.'.·

7453

Ohlo-{;uyan Region, concerrung the
annual District Meeting to be held
October 21 at the Pearidge United
Methodist Church m Huntington.
Registration will begin at 9 a.m.
Members were urged to attend.
Members voted to contribute to
CARE for the "Operation Self Help"
project.
·
It was announced that Mrs. James
N. Roush, Mrs. William C. Gibbs and
Mrs. David Ftelds, Jr. will serve as
hostesses for the October meeting.
Miss Terri John8on, a student of
Wahams High School, gave a very
lnterestmg report on the "Environmental Protection Worksnop for
Youth" that she attended at Cedar
Lakes in Ripley. She was sponsored
by the club
The door priZe was won by Mrs.
Roy Jones.
Others attending the meeting
besides the hostesses, Mrs. Adams,
Mrs. Miller and Mrs. Harbour, were
Mrs. William C. Gibbs, Mrs. David
Fields, Jr., Mrs. Pete Burris, Mrs.
Donald Bumgardner, Mrs. James N.
Roush, Mrs. Harry Miller, Mrs. Roy
Jones, Mrs. Phil Batey, members
and guest, Miss Terri Johnson.

p m .. Modern two story
country home Wtth doubl e
car garage x breezeway,
four bedroom , 1tv1ng room,
kitchen, dtning room , ba t h,
aluminum · vtnyl si d1ng,
new shingled roof
Nice
frontage With redwood f en
ce Southern Loca l School
Distnct. 4 1h m tle on Co

Rd 28, from Racone off 124
on black top road ha s 1 33
acres Phone614 949 2830

NEW HOM E on Khester

garage

$47,500 00

percent

COND. HOUSE

Jack

dleport, close to schools
Ready to move tnto 992

6051 after 5 p m
IN

Salosbury

Relocating, owner must
sell Ftve year old b1 level
home with J bedrooms, 221J
baths, large famtly room
w1th fireplace, fully car

w1th ba t h, mostly carpeted,
4k1tc
65 acr es, SI X room house
hen el ectr ic stov e,
dOOble ovens. diShwasher,
dtsposal , gas furnace, cen·
tral a or Large number of
good bu1 ld1ng lots, near
schools on Vme Street,
Rac me, Ohto Call 949 2491 ,
1mmedtate possesston

~~;;;;;;;;;~;~~~~~~~~~=-~
31

Homes for Sale

3 or 4 BEDROOM HOUSE
All electnc
n ing stove
car garag e
St. Rt. 79B5

wtth woOd bur
&amp; f~replace 2
2'h acres land,
3934 .

'

PubliC Nohce

Public Not1ce

Public Notice

were, on tne dates stiwon,

dress and iolle, Date of Ap

•'
'·'

PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FlDUC.lARY

...

The

following

persons

po.ntment,
Decedent s
Name and Address, and

appomted to admmister the

tollowong

Public Notoce

decedents '

estates pend1ng '" the
Me1gs County Probate

Court

Fiduc•arv's Name, Ad

r-----------------------·

_.I Curb Inflation. !
: 1I
Pay Cash f or
1
·! I
I
::: Classlfleds and 1I
•: I
I
Savelll
1
I coupon
Wrote your own ad and order by maol with this
Cancel your ad by phone when you get

Case Number are listed
Fred W Crow, Ill, P. 0 .
Box 329, Pomeroy, Oh1o
45769, IAdmonlstratorl,
July 8, 1980, Clifford Hall,

Syracuse, Omo, 23081.
Herman Will,
36443
Peach Fork Rd., Pomeroy,

Ohoo
45769
!Ad
m•n•strator). July 14, 1980,
Cora Will, 364-4J Peach
Fork Rd, Pomeroy, Ohoo
I 45~69.
23139

I Name

I

1 Address _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

I
I

" !·-----4------I

1
1I
·I

5.

', .

6.

·1

3

7

LB.

'• I

9

1 10.
1 11.
1 12

1

13.
14.

I
1 1~
I

~

1
1

&lt;IJ-Wtnttct ro Rtnt

• 4t-Equlpment tor Rent

e MERCHANDISE

eEMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Sl - Housettolct Goods
52-CI, TV, Radio Equipment

,,_Help wantld

n-Antlqun

12-Silualed Wantftl

S4- MIIc Mtrchandlte
55--lullcllrtt Suppllts
st-PttsfttSitt

n-jn•urance
14-lu•lntu Trtlrllnt

u-Schoolslnstrucflon
,._
Rtdlo, TV
&amp;CIIItt,_lr
It-Wanted Tc oa

eFARMSUPPLIES
&amp; LIVE;STGCK
•t-F•rm Equipment
n-W.InMd to Buy
7l-Trucks tr.r Salt
U-Livutodl

eFINANCIAL
:zt- IWslnns
OII,OMIInlry
22-Money to Lotn
Strvlcts

e REAL ESTATE

JI-Avtos tor Salt
1l- Vans&amp;4W D
14-Mottrcyclts
15-

~uto

Ptrts

&amp; Acctuorlts
17-Auto Repair

eSERVICES
11 - Homtlmprovtmtnts

Want· Ad Advertising
Deadline•
l JD PM

I

.

I

II
I
I

I
I
I
1

1
I
I

~-----------------------J

..........
·-··· ..... ...
................
~'

Oa•tv

12 Noon Saturdrt
Itt Mond.l¥

U-Piumt.lnt ~ l!ltCIVItlflf
ll-I!IICIVIfi"l

14- Eitdrical
&amp;

' I

Announcements

•etrittrarion

15-0tnttll Hauling

N-M H Rtpalr
17- Uphollltr'"

C:llh

Chlrtt

'"
"'
,.. '"
'"
Eult word ovtr tht minimum IS wort11 It 4 cents tl.tr word per dfY

6d.lyl

Ads runnlnt other than conttcufl\llt days wlll be chilrted •• tht 1 d.l'll

rate

l

In memory, Carel of Thank, and Oblhlary • cann.
l r tr word, n 00
minimum Casllllltadvanct
I

route 12-i close to Curt1s

&amp;

adult ' s

mums, locally grown by

Talbott
sday,

Mobllt Homtt.llltl.llnd Y.1rd IIIII Itt ICCtjlftd Oi'tl'll with CIUI wltPt
order U ctnt elllartt tor ads carrylnt 8o1e Number In Ctre ol Tht
Se"tlntl

Pomeroy , OH1 or call 992

Lots of good 7760

Grocery .

chi l dren ' s

Growers
Friday,

Thur

Saturday,

September 18,19,20, from
10 5
CARPORT

SALE .

Bob

''---'W=an!!.t!:!ed"-"to,_,B~uy
z.__

SHOOTING

coins or any gold or S1 lver
Items Anttque furniture,

MATCH

Gold, sliver or foreign
glass or china , will pay top
dollar, or complete estates.
No item too large or too

100
1.50
1.10

ldtyl

TWO FAMILY yard sale, etc. Complete households
Barb Talbott's restdence m
Wrote M D. Moiler, Rt . 4,
Portland, lust two mtles off

Washongton Co. Rd 248,
Lottie Hocking, OH 6676133

6

15 Won:ll or Uncltr
1 dty
2dtyt

dollars, sterling, etc , wood
tee boxes,Jars antiques,

slaughtering,
custom
processing, retail meat

Oh 12 00 noon ~undays

'
Rates and Other Information

Wanted to Buy
FLEA MARKET 1 mole IRON AND BRASS BEDS,
South of iuppers Plaons 20 old furntture, desks, gold
nngs,
tewelry, sl iv er
&amp;21 lfraln27&amp;28

Help Wanted
GET VALUABLE traonong
11

as a young business person
and earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Sen
tmel route earner Phone
us right away and get on

19BO COLONA DE By Fair
mont 14x70 woth expando.

Real Estate- General

I ~·IRGIL

1973

ESHIR E - Beautoful old home ove rlookong the

Phone
H 614 )-992-3325

Oh1 0 R1ver If you ' re look.tng for peace and qUtet
w 1t h p lenty of room and a home you can be proud of.

HUNTING CABIN -

Has 2 bedrooms, elec
baseboard heat. and 79
ac res of I and m good
huntmg country and
panoram1c vi ew

callu s onth os one You'vegottoseeot $4B.OOOOO
- LOTS

•

SYRACUSE - Large build1ng lot tn center of town
on the ma1 n ht ghway $6,500

CALL BILL CHILDS 992-2342
RODNEY DOWNING, BROKER
MIDDLEPORT OHIO

No ce

p1ece of land that would
make a retncted sub
diVISIOn
Wat er a nd
el ectn c tty avatl ab le
31 5 acre s A f 1rm

REALTY
I

NEW LISTING - Noce

LOST

Lost and Found

1 whole baseball

shoe. Brand name, Brooks

Reward. 992 6298 or after 5
pm 9923231 .

7~ ---------Yard Sale
YARD SALE women ' s

men ' s, children 's clothing,
mtsc
Items, household

goods From 9·7 Seplember
16 19 on CR 10 Dexter
Road. 141 ?1168.

small . Check prices before
selling Also do appraiSing .
Osby IOssle) Martin. 992 6370
WANiED TO BUY:
GOLD,
SILV ER,
PLATINUM, STERLINGCOINS, RINGS,JEWELR
Y, MISC . ITEMS AB
SOLUTE
MARKEi
PRICE GUARANTED. ED
BURKEiT
BARBER
SHOP, MIDDLE PORi,
OHIO 991 3~ 7 6

PART TIME Bar tender
Apply In person No exp
necessary. Meigs Inn.

Sl DING APPL ICATORS
Experienced woth tools
Sfeody work, good pay
Also helpers 992 32B3
10a.m. -10 p.m

Ne w

Real Estate

full or part tune pos1 ·
ttons avatlable lor MT ,

Salary

General

HOBSTE II Eff,
REALTY

commensurate wtth e.x ·
penence. Please con·
tact the Lat:: Supervtsor
at Veterans Memonal
Hospatat ,
Mulberry
Hgts , Pomeroy, Ohto at

PHONE 742-2003

1614) 992·2104 Ext. ss.
Equal Opportuntty

Georges. Hobstetter Jr.
Broker

Employer

NEW LISTING - Solod
Bu olt Home
3

Sltuatoons Wanted

bedrooms, l1vtng room

with bay window, kit
chen, bath, full base

WILL care tor one or two
elderly women tn my
home Expenence Phone
B-43 4694

ment

garage Also deta ched

tole Call Fred Moiler at992
633B

workshop or
Stts on over

no hourly sottong 992 5264

firepla ce, 2 baths, full

WIL L DO babysottlng In

basement
$26,500 00.

f lve days a

Jane Holliday, Box 224,
Rutland, Ohoo 45775

A s kt n g

• ACREAGE n1ce

laytng

5 acres
land on

Hysell
Run
$7,000.00
POMEROY

Insurance

ners, advanced, ad ults
Send
name,
address,
telephone number to Vera

Two

story sol 1d bnc k home,
stx extra large rooms,
kitchen &amp; family r oom
comb has n 1ce bnck

home, ages 2·8, references,

1S Schools Instruction
PIANO LESSONS Begin·

garage
1 acre

$39,900.00
POMEROY

GOING OUT ol town a day
or two for an all noght par
ty? Woli babysot In my

AUTOMOBILE
IN ·
SURANCE been can·
celled?
Lost your
operator' s lt cense? Phone
992 2143.

Pomeroy ,

bedroom ranch home,
lvtng room, dtntng &amp; ktt
chen comb , bath, 1 car

paneling, floor ttl e, ceiltng

week ; any hours Contact
949 2516 after 10 a.m.

In

$27,000 00
NEW LISTING - No ce 3

WILL do odds 8. ends,

1l

"ANXIOUS" to sell thos well kept hom e Plenty of
I1V1ng space, easy clean ttlt out wmdows, eat in k1t
chen . lorm al dtntng room , also a 2 ca r gara ge Call
on tht s on e $57,500

Housing
Headquarters

Medocal Lab Technicoan
RCLA,

a year. W111 se ll for on ly

11

Rd
Two

story home, oak and
p1ne
woodwork
throughout Large liv
ing room w1th love ly

torepiace. dining room,

famtly
room,
3
bedrooms, with 4 walk
in closets, 1112 baths,
mOdern kttchen. Garag e
has 2 rooms &amp; bath
'overhead Ca II for appt

MINI -FARM - 10 acres
with two all electric

homes - both have 3
bedrooms and many

qualoty
extras.
$87,500.00. Can be divod
ed and so ld separately

PART
TIME 1an1tor
evenings, lew days a week
992 3471 . 9·5

ATHENA ACRES - 24
acres, beautiful 2 stor:y
nome, •nnex bldg ' pool

THREE bedroom home

CAREiiR SALES: II you
would like to earn a 5 figure

newly

income while performing a
valuable serv1ce in Meigs
x surrounding counties,
send name, address, x

new paneling, new furnac~
&amp; water heater, full
basement,
off
stre et

decorated

new carpet
parkong ,

mslde:

throughout

Woll

take

phone number to; Sta te automob1le or mobtle home
Manager, 1855 Fountaon on trade at Moddieport
Square Court, Suote 102, S1B,500.
I 304·882 2466
Columbus, Ohlo43224
anytime
(

LAND - Lots of land, loc ated 1n Southeastern Ohto
hill s Peace ful and pnva te, also mtnera l nghts

CALL US TO BUY OR SELL
NANCY JASPERS- ASSOCIATE
949-2654
Or To Leave Message-949 2591

worth $38,500.
NO TIME LIKE NOW
TO
LIST
WITH
TEAFORD ,
FOUR
FULL TIME SALES
PEOPLE .
CALL
992 -3325 OR 2NO
992·3176.

. M s. Taylor, Route 1.
Box 247 , Lollle Hocking,
Ohoo 45742

All monerals. Shown by
appt . only .
,
RUTLAND - Noce 3

bedroom,

home,

all

living

elec frtc

room,

modern kitchen, utll tty,

' 1 car garage $36.500 00
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc
Phone 742-3171

Velma Nlctnsky, Assoc.

Phone 742-3092

Vi.~YI . ~?d ,Aluminum

TOWERS &amp;

Siding

ALL STEEL

Farm BuHdings
SIZes
•' From 30xlO''

BISSELL
' SIDING CO.

INSTALATIONS

T..HREE rooms of f ur
n1ture, poster bedroom
su1te, bookcase bedroom
su1te, ett , can be seen at
106
Un1on
Avenue,
Pomeroy.

SMALL

Ulility Buildings
Sozes from 4x6 to 12x40

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

TV, CB &amp; HAM

PARK
FINANCIAL

tn excell ent cond1t1on Un
derptnnlng •nc luded tn

Gallopol os
3942

$6700 00

REA L ESTATE for sale
corner lot on ma 1n h1gh
way , over 250 foot of fran
tage, 95 percent ftnanc1ng
to qual 1f1ed church group ,
organ•zat1on, or successfu l
bustness mana gement

992-2259

ATTENTION
liM
PORiANi TO YOU) Will
pay cash or cer11f1ed check
for ant1ques and collec
t1bles or entire estates

YOU!

NEW LISTING - ALMOST 6 ACRES - of no ce
qut et countr y 1tv1ng .The 3 bedroom s, l1 v1ng room ,
diO iOQ room, and bafh were r ecentl y r emodeled and
ar e georgeou s Has a n1ce f enced yard and an area
fence d f or farm antmals Qu1 ck sale pri ce

$?8,500.00
NEW LISTING - SOUTHERN DISTRICT ABOUT AN ACRE OF YARD - goes woth this one

co1n "ollectrons
54

M1sc. Merchanise

Mob1le Homes

NEW LISTING - SOUTHERN DISTRICi - i&gt;IO
NOISY TRAFFIC - You wol l rest easy on tho s 2
bed room home woth full basement that has wood

burner to suppl em ent f or ced atr hea t Dishwasher
1n k1tchen, carpet Also storage budd.ng $29 ,900.00

NEW LlSilNG - NEE,DS SOME WORK - Hou se
nas 2 bedrooms on 13 76 acres w1th road frontage for
2 3 butld1ng sttes Some fru1t trees, some tllable and

pasture land, located near Apple Grove . $11.200.00

NEW LISTING - 5 ACRES - 5 minutes from new
brodg e v ery gobd 4 bedroom, 2 story house, com
pletely r emodeled, all carpeted, many e)(tras l 1ke
dtshwasher , stove , bar, n1 ce k1tct.1en and dining
room . extra large 11vmg room with heatolater

foreplace Large pond could eaSilY be buolt Call for

TWO

bedroom

mobile

uttltt1es

paid,

requored 992 7479

AVAILABLE OCT

2

bedroom furnished apt tn
Ra cme $150 month plus
ut11tttes No pets, one chtld

949 2B75

INCREDIB LE' Fully 'carpeted apts on downtown
Middleport. All utololles on
eluded, 1 bedroom from

$170 Special rates for
Senoor Cotozens. Equal Op
portunity Housing. Village
Manor Apts Call 992 7787
tor appointment.
992
TWO BEDROOM un
turn1shed

apartment,

Pomeroy, $150 00 plus
deposo t 992 6130 or 992
7511

2 TRAILER LOTS for rent
Call 742 3122

46

5 ace for Rent

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy

Large lots. Call

47 ~ -W~ !'.I!d to Rent
WANTED TO RENT. ni ce
house tn the country, to
responsibl e coupl e with one
ch ild
Very clean, have
r eferences . Prefer utilities

paod
pm

Call 992 51 26 aft er 5

Nice Select1on of Carpet Remnants and
Linoleum Remnants at Big Dtscounts.

watt
742·

f~rm .

RUTLAND FURNITURE
Main St.
63

742-2211

L1vestock

vans &amp;4 W.O.
1978 Scout, 304 automatic ,

73

56

used on 4 t-t . 992-3126

Board.ng , all breeds. Clean
Indoor-outdoor fac•l•t•es .

drive , 25,000 actual moles,
$3,700 00 Call 992 7770 ask

TEN YEAR old registered

for Roger

appaloosa mare, gentle,
brok.e, good d1sposit•on .

74

(614) 698 3290

$450 00 Also, registered 18
month old appa loosa colt,
•;, quarter, good blood
lines, good conformation,

call after 4 p m 593 7390

3
REGISTERED
Corrledale rams $125.
each 742 2753

pnmered.

The D{f 1ly Sentinel

llo. 163, Old Chtbeo Sta., New

YO&lt;I:, NY 10113. Pnnt Nome,
Address, Z1p, Pottern Number.
Catch on to Ihe coal! boom' Send
lorouo NEW 198 1 NEEOLECRAfT
"CATALOG il'ler 112 desogns 3
free paUerns onsode $1 00
AU CRAfT BOOKS.•$1.75 uch
133-FIIhlon Home Qulltin1
132-Quilt Oril'llb
131-Ad~ a Bloci Quilts
130-SwNler Fllhlons-Siza 38· ~
129-Quic~ 'n' bsy TriiiSftrs
121-(melopt Potchwodo Quoits
127-Af...... 'o' Dolloa
12&amp;-TIIrifiJ CrafiJ Rowers
125 Petal !!!tolls
124-Eay Gotts 'o' Ornomenls
123-Stotch 'n' Potch Quilts
122-Siufj 'n' Puff Qull15
111-trochet with Squora
II Hay Art of NIHitpoont
IIUtfiJ·Filtj Quills
liS Eay Art of Ropple Coochet
114-toonptlll Alehan BGOio
112-Pnzo Alalllns
107·1nsllot Stw1n1
105-lnst.ot Crochet
1113-Qoilts lao Today's livon1
101-Qtilt laalo-CGIIKIIGII 1

a. wormed

992·

6260 Hours 12 7 daoly,
clo sed Tues Tabby ' s,

71

wheel

1977 G S 550 SUZUKI rn

good condition . $900.00

Phone 992·5640

1974SUZUKI GT750motor
cycle, ltke new. $1,000.00.

PhoneB82 231B

1 ransaarrauun

requ1 r ed

four

Motorcycles

ser •ees

GEi A Noce soft lovab le
Donat1on

3 AND 4 RM furnoshed ap
ts Phone992 5434.

Sq. Yd.

5 YARD NON Regostered
Appaloosa mare 15 hands,
n1ce blanket over htps,

Socoety Shots

equopped kotchen adn foreplace ALL FOR
$,3,000 00
.
FOR A SONG - Thos 3 bedroom house has a large

992 5692
OFFICE 992·2259

$225

100

and ponies and riding
lessons ·
Everythtng
tmagmable m horse equ1p
ment
Blankets, belts,
boots, etc Engltsh and
Western
Ruth Reeves

Th e mosl useful lacy lashoon IS
quock lo crochel'
Pretty scalloped detail oulhnes
ih iS dramatoc bolero Crochet ol
Pompadour yarn on off whole or a
pastel color Unoque goft lor a
specoal l11end' Pattern 7230
S11es B 10. 12-14 16-18 oncl
$1.75 lor each patleon Add 501
each pattern for hrst class all·
maol and handling Send to:
Alice Broob
NIHlecralt llttL
~l i ·:

•9"

Cash &amp; Carry

InclUde 1n
slalaf1on l

E lectron1 c

k1tten from your Humane

992 7479

Jean Trussell949 · 26~0
Roger &amp; Oot1tc Turner

wtth

HOOF HOLLOW: Horses

Apar1ment
for A: ent

.

Any regular carpet tabs installed w1th free pad.

Also AKC regi'stered
Dober mans 614 446 1795

Com

q.

Reg . 55 9

Toban

Pets tor 5ale
HILLCREST KENNELS

home with utt1 1ftes pa id
Adults
only
Depostt

'5"

(Pr•ceOoes Nol

Co 614 992 2205

TWO BEDROOM mobole

44

'3"

LeIar I

Summer Pnces Excelstor

depos1t

requored. 992 3647.
pl ete ly furnoshed

F arm,

HEATING OIL. Buy now at

home 10 Ractne Depos1t
requtred Phone 367 7811

NEW LISTING - HERE IT IS! Gravel Hill on Mid ·
dleport Thts post caret hom e can be yours 3
bedroms, 2 full baths, k tt chen, dln1ng area , large
l tv1ng room , screen ed r ear sun porc h, pnvate s1de
Sitting porch, full basement. lar ge lot, plus a garage
apartment (furni shed and r ented), plus a nice
ga r age and workshop, many f eatures tncludmg an

REALTOR
Henry Cleland, Jr. - 992-6191
ASSOCIATES

"Drive A Little Save A Lot"
SHOP IS FULLY STOCKED
CARPET
GRA55 CARPET Rubber Back
WI p a d
" TURF"
Installed
Sq Yd
s Yd

SEPTEMBER SALE
GIGANTIC SAVINGS ON ALL CARPET

speaker
2236.

requored1 992 2749

more deta tls Prtced only $45,000 00

llv1ng room and 1S 1n w a lkt n,g dtstance to town
Could be yours for not mor e than a song Ca ll today 1

CARPET SHOP

POTATOES Red Pontoac
&amp; Kennebec 145 West Bed·
ford Townshop Rd Cecil

. s 1r en

EASTERN

ed sun porch, house shows ex cellent care 3 car
ga ra ge, t he small house has 2 bedrooms, good con
dtton, all on ov er an acre of land Will cons1der sub
divtding or a ll3 places can be yours for $58,000 00 .

RUTLAND FURNITURE'S

Mosc. Merchandose

FEDERA L

k.ttchen furn 1shed, adults
preferred No pets Depos1t

2 BEDROOM Mobole
Home Adults only 992
3324

NEW LISTING - SERVICE STATION
RESTAURANT, BIG HOUSE, LITTLE HOUSE The bog house has 5 bedrooms, lots of closets enc los

54

R1vers 1de
Falls

992 3090

11v1ng room. k.1tchen has n1 ce cab1n et s w 1th mat
ch 1ng stove and r ef, util1t y r oom and bath , a ll
OISTR tCT - 10 acres wtth road frontage for a
buddtng s1te - $6,000 00 - Also 23 acres wtth a
buildtng Site, has bottomland, approx 10 acres
t tmber, stream, plenty of W1ld l1fe $18,000 00

!~::::=~~~=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~5~e~r~v~oc~e~&amp;~~~~~~-

BEANS Pock
GREEN
Your own George Holl,

HOUSE FOR rent, four

and Laundry
• Carpet
• Ora penes
• Furmture
c"We're No 1 m

Phone 367-7560

Roush lane

Lacy an d L el y.

rooms w 1th bath, fully car
pe ted, mce &amp; clean, ready
to move tnto. $115 00 a man
th, deposit requ1red Phone

PH. 992-6342
TRY US!
complete Dry C1eanong

Water-Sewer-Electric-Gas Line·Dilehes,
WATER LINE HOOK-UPS
SEPTIC TANKS COUNTY CERTIFIED

9FT.
RIGGSCREST Manor $275 w va
case, DOUBLE
stainless duty
steelmeat
ex·
month
Call Cleland ~-----------"1 tenor, S100 BIt showcase,
Realty 992 2259
t•
glass front, top, and slodon g
1
doors. $40. B tt. counter,
RIGGSCREST Manor S275
0V
shelves on front and back,
mo nth
Call
Cleland
$20 Call 773 9151.
Rea lty 992 2259

story home t hat has a large rec room w1th
f 1r ep1ace, glassed 1n sun porch, ut1l 1ty room , and 3
bedrooms Al so central atr, 6lf2 acr es, a large barn,

carpetd Real noce for $24,900 00
NEW LISTING - ACREAGE -

317 N. 2nd Ave.
Mtddleport, Oh10

Ca ll 614

6·18.
The St.
Watermelon
Pat
ch, 5th
, New Haven,

Houses for Rent

Trenching Service

767 3167 or 557-3411

reduced 25% Maternity
jeans $15 00, Fall mater
MATERNITY
lo ngeroe
n1ty tops &amp; 1umpers,
sizes

FURNISHED trader for
rent $150 00 per month ,
$100.00 deposot Adults
only 992 5B34 after 5

storage buol dong Jusl$39,900 00
NEW LISTING - cozy 2 bedroom house, woth large

1·2? tfc

Federal Housing
Veterans
Adm tnostration
107 Sycamore
Pomeroy
Olfoce 992-7544
Home 992-6191

Reese

Nothong too large Also,
guns, pocket watches and

1 BEDROOM. Furnoshed,

NEW LISTINGS - WE HAVE THE HOME FOR

$8,000 00

53

for Rent
MOBILE HOME for rent,

608 E. MAIN
POMEROY, OH......~~~

REAL ESTATE LOANS

247

Lots &amp; Acreage
35
SU ITAI)LE LOT for mobole

42

Real Estate- General

9

• New Homes - ex·
tensive remodelmg
•Electrical work
• Roofing work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph . 992·7583 ,
9-141 mo.

1975 VI Kl NG traoler 12 x 65

41

dleport Leading Creek

wtth proven tra ck
record . $17.500 00 second
year Send brtef resume to

B&amp;D
ANTENNAS

Rts 7 &amp; 35 Ga ll ipolos, Ph
446 3670

furntshed , washer, dryer ,
underpmned W1th pat10 top
Excellent cond•tton call
99? 2721 after 5 p m

Rentals

Bu tlding or tratler lot on
hard road near Mt d

carpetmg, new k1fchen
and bath ftxtures 4
bed rooms, 2 porc hes,
basement and well

fireplace 1nserts, free stan
dtng stoves, warm atr fur
nace adapters, m obile
home wood heaters, and
trtple wall chtmneys. Out
door Equipment Sal es, Jet.

10 x 55 Elcona comp letely

Want $45,000
NEW LISTING

f~rm

Pomeroy, Oh.

2

992 57B6 or 992 2529

home of 3 bedroom s on
one floor 3 bedrooms,
step saver kitchen for
mom Garage and 3 lots

INCOME - Over $6,000

12x65

town 992 5786 or 992 2529

Real Estate - General

have the best year s of
your
lif e 1n fh1 s
renovated house Room
for pond, lots of woods
Near Chester F or only
$37,500

resodents Old establoshed

your home

EAGLE

home. Easy terms, close to

$53,000.
NEW LISTING - You' ll

seektnQ success minded '"
dtvtdual to serv1ce farm ac
counts In the Me1gs· Gallla
area We work m estate
planning &amp; many other
fields of servtce to rural

V.C. YOUNG II

992-6215 or 992·7314

9 10 1 mo

51
Househ~ld Goods
STOVES , We have

bedroom , l l!2 baths, exc
cond. Furn1shed, 2 a.c ,
10x20 patto and porch, un
derpinnmg 992 7255

1 1&amp; E Second Str eer

$35,000
BRICK

(Free Estimates)

742 3030 or742 272B.

B. 5R . , , '"0'

ACREAGE

work

- Concrete work
-Plumbing and
electracal work

central atr, 3 bedrooms, 11/2
baths Movtng out of state

TEAFORo[B ,

Hel Wanted
EXPANDING company

12

Mobile Homes
for Sale

32

Oflousing
Headquarters

11

MLT,

RACINE, OH. 6 rooms,
hardwood floors, storm
wtndows, needs updattng ,
hobby shed, work shed,
garden 1 614 235·6569 or

7132.

VAN METER HOSPITAUZED
James Robert Van Meter, Route 3,
Sandy Lake, Pa., 1614li, suffered a
stroke on Aug 27. He was a patient
In both the Greenv1De and Young,.
town, Ohio hospitals. He is now in
Room 356, Greenvtlle Hospital,
Greenville, Pa. Carda may he sent to
the hospital address. Van Meter is
the son of Mary Van Meter and the
late Ralph Van Meter of the Stiversvtllearea.

9

t1omes for Sale

wrote 2974 Castlewood Rd ,
Columbus , Oh 43209

pat10. Wtthin walk tng
d1stance of schools 992

HOLINESS A&amp;&gt;N.
TO MEET
The Metgs Area Holiness
Association kickoff meeting will be
held at the Rutland Church of the
Nazarene at 7:30p.m. Sept. 23. The
Rev. J. Broome, president, extends
an inVItation to the public to attend.
The evening willlDClude a songfest
with each church of the Association
to present two songs. There wlll be
~o preaching at the service.

Black res1dence Sept 19, the elogobiloty lost at 992
9 4 2 mtles out New L 1ma 2150 or 992 2157
Rd . Rutland Boys clothes,
Contact Ed Burkett Barber 6 12
OFFICE MANAGER Must
Shop, Middleport
have the followong sko lis
filing ,
YARD SALE. 18, 19, 20. In Typing ,
Piano Tuning
Lane s1de city llmtts of Rutland bookkeepong
Abollty to
Dantels 742-29511 Tun tn g above the Church of God
meet people &amp; pleasant
and Repa1r Service s1nce Thurs., Fri ., Sat. Lots of telephone manner
Send
1965. If no answer phone good clothtng, mise resume of background in
992 2082.
Someth1ng for everyone, formation to Box 242,
lots of goodoes tor 25 cents Pomeroy Oh 45769.
MASON HOME REPAIR Rain cancels
THE POSiiiON of teacher
heatmg and a1r con ·
ditton.ng furnace clean tn g, YARD SALE at Marvon for the multi handicapped
plumb.ng, repatr, restden - McGu1re restdence on os now aballable at the
tlal elec tr~c W1rtng, sales Route 7 bypass, Saturday Meigs Co Board of Menta l
Retardatton Th1S person
serv1ce and 1nstallation .
September 20th from 9-6
shou
ld have MSPR Cer
992 2364 .
tofocation and be avaolable
tmmedlate
em
THREE FAMILY yard for
SHOOTING MATC'H at sole, 660 Beech Street, Mod· ployment Please se nd
Corn Hollow in Rutland dleport 9 6 Ra1n cance ls resume to Meigs Co. Board
Every Sunday startong at Saturday, Septembor 20th. ' of Mental Retardatton, 36
noon
Proceeds be1ng
East Ma1n St , Pomeroy,
donated to the Boy Scout
Oh.
45769 Resumes will be
Troop 249. 12 gauge factory B
Public Sale
accepted
until Sept. 21 ,
choke gun only •
____,&amp;,_,A=uc~t:::oo,n_,__ _ 1980
OSSIE 'S AUCTION House,
GUN SHOOT Racine Gun 20 N. 2nd Street, Mod· THE MEIGS Co. Health
Club Every Sunday star dleport, Ohoo We sell one Department is now ac
tong 1 p m Factory choked p1ece or entire households
cepting applications for a
guns only
New, used, or antiques, tn
Publoc Health Staff Nurse
eluding homes, farms, or Applicant must be a
PRE SEASON
SALE -- llquodatlon sales. Get top Registered Nurse Benef1ts
$649 00--Mobole home wood dollar List w1th the man five 15) day work week, all
who has over 25 years In paid Holidays, pleasant
burnong systems, the only the
new, used and antique working conditions with a
HUD 8. UL approved Wood
furniture
business
We chance to meet and help
burner for mobtle homes.
the public.sQuahfted, '"
Untt comes complete with take consignments. For In
and pickup ser· terested persons should
wall vent stack. See them formation
at Kmgsbury Homes Parts vice, call 992·6370 or on contact the Meigs Co
&amp; accessories at Route 124, West vorglnla 773 5471 Sole Health Department at the
Mtnersvtlle, Ohto .
Or every Friday noght at 7 Multi-Purpose Health Cen
p.m Auctioneer Howard ter, Mulberry Heights,
phone 992 5587
Beasley, apprentice auc- Pomeroy, Ohio. Phone 992
tioneer, Osby A Marftn
6626.
JONES Meat Packing
(no 0unkl

Amencan Leg ion, Rutland,

I
I
I

Mail This Coupon with Remittance
The Daily Sentinel
Box 729
Pomeroy, O,hio 45769

e TRANSPORTATION

:n- Homes lor S.ltl
n-Mtbl ltHomes
for Stlt
U- F.1rms for Salt
J4-luslnns lulldlnts
U- Lotsl Acr••t•
n - Rtal Euatewent.ct
J7-Rulton

27 - - - - - 28
I
29
I
JO

M-H.Iy&amp; Gr.lln
U - Sttdl Ftrtlllrtr

2)--Pretfftslon•l

26. _ _ _ __.__ _

16.

I
I
1

u-APirtmtnf for Rtnt

Avctlan
9-WIUited to Buy_

25. _ _ _ _ __

tar RtnT

.S-FRooms
4...,_5Ptttlor R..,t

&amp;

31
32
33
34
35

eRENTALS

Yard Sale

clotho ng &amp;household Items,
also houseplants &amp; hardy

1 PAY highest pnces
poss1ble for gold and silver
co1ns, nngs, 1ewelry, etc

tor R;tnt

t-Public Slit

24. _ _ _ _ _ _ __

1980, Helen R Slack, R D
2, Racone , Ohio45771, 23171
!91 5, 12. 19. 3tc

J

42-MobileHome~

Founcl
7- YarCIStht

22. _ _ _ _ _ __
23. _ _ _ _ _ __

Rac1ne ,
Oh 1o
45771
(Executnx), August 29,

45769, 23140
Bernard V Fultz, P 0
Bo&gt;c 723, Pomeroy , Oh•o
45769, ' !Ancollary Ad

41-HOOMS

~Lost 1mt

17 _ _ _ _ __
18 . _ _ _ _ _ __
19 _ _ _ _ _ __
20 _ _ _ _ _ __
21. _ _ _ _ _ __

Oh•o

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

&lt;1 - GIYtiWIY
5-HapPy Ads

These cash rates
onclude dlscouQt

Pomeroy,

or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomero~, 0., 45769

l-Announcements

Phone number of used.
You'll get better results
of you describe fully,
give price The Sentinel
reserves the roght to
classify, edit or re1ect
any ad Your ad will be
put on the proper
clasotocatoon of you'll

"I
'I

Wayne Sw1sher, West Ma1n

e ANNOUNCEMENTS

I Print one word in each
I space below. Each in
otoal or group of figures
I counts
a word. Count
I name as
and address or

I
I
I
I
I
I
I check the proper box
I below
I
I
Wanted
I
For Sale
I
Announcement
·I
For Rent

Ohoo 45769, IExecutrox),
July 17, 1980, Charles

PHONE 992-2156

r-c;ard of Thinks
2-ln Mtmorlam

r

t

M1na Mae Sw•sher, West
Ma1n Street, Pomeroy,

Ethel P Ferrell, Chap
manvolle. W Va 25508,
23149
Pearle Woll os, R D 2,

'

1
I
I
1
I

I Phone___________

45769, !Executor!. July 16,
19BO, Rochard Quails, 32B
Beech Slreel, Moddleport,
Ohoo 45760,23127.

WANT AD ,INFORMATION

1

'I
I

0 Box 1486, Pomeroy, OHIO

mlntstrator ), July 28, 1980,

_,

1

I. results Money not refundable

Frank W Porter, Jr , P

Street,

7

Public Notice

31

peted. Large sundeck &amp;

•

remodeling
- Roof1ng and guHer

Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph. 992-2772

Merebandlsn

ROOFING
REMODELING
Serving your area
tor 25 years . Call
now for large sav·
ings. For Free
Estimate CaJl
Eugene Long
(614) 843· 3322
8 18-1 mo pd

-Addons and

elnsutatton
• Storm Doors
• Storm Wmdows
• Replacement
Windows

Save $120 00 a

VINYL SIDING

7

rooms, 1112 baths, 2 car
garage, exc
ne1 g hbor,
good locati on tn Mtd

HOME

Vinyl &amp;
Alummum Soding

m onth tnterest 992 3454

G •nther 985 4349

EXC

INSULATION

butlt home , 1600 square
foot, 1tv1ng space. plus
garage , laundry room ,
plenty of storage Radt ant
heat, rhermostat •n each
room No closmg costs, Wtll
arrange ftnan c1ng for 9 11J

three bedroom, two baths,
dming room, livtng room,
family room With ftrep lace
Central air , g as heat, fully
carpeted, 1700 square foot
of l lvtng area , attached

"YOUNGS
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

J&amp;L BLOWN

NEW BEAUiiFUL custom

FOR SALE CA LL after 5

water and electrte 1ty
available Only $6,500 .

,.

Business Services

shower , f ull basement,
alummum std lng , storm
wt ndow s &amp; door, btg porch,
large lot, metal bu 1ldmg,
pa rti a lly f e nced tn 992

Small investment, large returns, Sentinel Want Ads

,•

-

8 ROOM House Bath &amp;

hears from Wahama student

Friendly C i r c l e - - - - - - - - - - - Mrs. Arthur Slusher was program
chairman when Fnendly Circle met
Tuesday evenmg at Trinity Church.
A reading, "If God Should Speak"
and a poem, "Life is Worth Living"
were given after which members
took part in a Btble qwz. Mrs.
Slusher closed the program with the
poem, "My Saviour Lives."
Miss Elizabeth Fick used "God's
People," a paraphrase of Psalm 100
as the thought for the evening. Mrs.
W. H. Perrin and Mrs. Pearl Mora
were named to tlle nominating committee It was noted that the ice

3]--=Ho~is for s~ le

Autos for Sale

1977 PONTIAC SUNBIRD

81

Sun roof , auto , good gas
mileage, exc cond 985

s a.

Home
Improvements

G carpet Cleaning

ttgers, &amp; a pure black, all
males

3596

Steam
cleaned
Free
est1mate
Reasonable

AKC

1973
OLDSMOBILE
Toronado. Good cond 985
4225

rates Scotchguard
6309or742 2211.

19/B MUSTANG Ghoa, am

83
Excavahng
J X F BACKHOE SER
VICE loscensed and bon·

REGISTERED

Cocker Spantel pu ppies 6

weeks old .
Blonde ,
females, champoon blood
lines 843·2684
57

Musocal
lnstrumen1s

fm radto, atr cond1tiomng,
four speed, 15,000 m1les, ex·
cellent condtt1on $3,000 00

992 7689

USED clan net in good con

dotoon $35.00. Phone 9925786

1972 PLYMOUTH Sa lell ote
Sebr~ng

P S,

a~r ,

con&lt;!, $675 247 2192

good

barrel P S., p.b , new ttre s

&amp;wheels, 247 3B61
Farm Equtpment

1978 JD 450C Dozer, 6 way
blade, winch, canopy limb
risers, 1700 hrs. exc: . cond.

S2B,ooo. Aller 5 p m. 752·
2372

ded,
septtc
tank
tn
stallat1on, water and gas
lmes. Excavatmg work and

transot layout. 992 7201 .
EXCAVATING

Wahl e ~

Dozer work or t1 mber to

1974
DODGE
CHALLENGER . 31B , 4
t.l

992

Trucks for Sale
1979 ONE TON Chevy flat

72

bed truck tn good condttion

tut

985

3507 or 992 3208

84

Electrical
&amp; R efrtgeration

SEWING

MACHINE

Repa •rs .

makes1

serv1ce,

992 -2284

a~ l

T~e

Fa bn c Shop, Pomeroy
Authortzed Singer Sales

woth low mo leage. Phone
446·0762 Gallipolos

and Servoce We sharl)&lt;!n

1976 CHEVY

ELWOOD
REPAIR

Scissors.

62
Wanted to Bu
CHIP WOOD Poles max
diameter 10" on largest
end $12 p·er ton Bundled
slab 510 per ton Delivered
to Ohoo Pallet Co., Rt 2,
Pomeroy 992 2689

Werry 9B5 4255

toasters, ~rons, all small
appliances. Lawn mowei"

1972 Chevy pock up , flat
bed, 350 VB In excellent

Next to State Hoghw&amp;Y
Garag e on Route 7, 985
3825

OLD COINS , pocket wat-

$550 00 Ca II 992 7770 ask

mechan1ca1

ches, class r1ngs, weddmg
bands , d1amonds Gold or

solver. Call J A Wamsley ,
742 2331 Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, Athens, OH 592

6462.

Suburban,

three sea t s, good gas
mileage, pnced l ow Phtllp

con d 1t1on

for Roger

1967

CHEVY

Pickup.

Rebut It eng 1ne Exc cond .,
everythmg works
S800.
992

20BO

BOWERS
S\l(eepers,

APPLIAFCE service, all
mBk.es washers,
ranges ,

dryers,
dish

washers,dlsposals, water
tanks Call Ken Young 985·
3501 before 9a x or otter;6
pm

�li-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, Sept. l9, 19M

....

.••
.·..

Circles meet locally,
discuss future works

Donahues get together

.•

The loth annual teunlon of the
fanulies of George W. and Augusta
Raul! Donahue was held Sunday at
Fortification Hill, Gallipolis.
A dinner was served at noon in the
shelter house wtth grace being g1ven
by Lawrence Peggs, president. Mrs.
· Mane Hawkins gave the secretary's
• report. Officers elected for the 1981
reuruon to be held on the fourth Sunday in July at the Mcintyre Park,
Raccoon Creek, were Peggs,
president; Mrs. Hawkins, ~cretarytreasurer.
A poem was read In memory of
"deceased members. Pictures were_
·taken for the family albwn. Two
were added to the family tree,
Dorothy Lou Miller, daughter of
jane and LeWIS Miller, born on July
27, and Barbara S1mth, wife of
Lawrence Peggs.
Attending were Mrs. Anna

'·
,.
'

..
·•
;:

Donahue Peggs, Mr. and Mrs .
Lawrence Peggs, Mr. and Mrs.
Melburn Tackett, Charles Cochran,
Garro) Sheets, Mrs Leslie Beck and
daughter, Lisa, Mr. and Mrs . .
Raymond Cochran, Mrs. Carroll
Burnett, Mrs. Helen Davis, Mr. and
Mrs. Lewis MJDer and children,
Carne Beth and Dorothy Lou, Mrs.
Angela Queen, Mrs. Ann Atkins, Mr.
and Mrs. Ronald Cochran and
children, Franklin, Raymond, J.D.,
Tonya, Donnie and Lisa, Mrs. Penny
Moore and daughter, Susan, Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Lambert and children,
Peggy and Laura, Carroll Burnett,
Jr. and sons, Brent and Cratg, Mrs.
Torruny Beck, Mr. and Mrs. Buel
Burnett, Mrs. Gary Fallon and
children, Justin and Shannon, Mrs.
ManeHawkins,andguests,Mr.and
Mrs. Dale Saunders and Mrs. Myree
Smith

Group plans annual banquet
The 41st annual banquet has been

chase a case of soap. A box will also

plaMed by the Homebuilders Class
of the Middleport Church of Christ
for Tuesday, Oct. 21 at 6:30 p.m. at
the church.
Meeting Tuesday night at the
church, conunittees for the dinner
were named. The Philathea Women
will prepare and serve the dinner
and committees named were Mrs.
Flo Grueser and Mrs. Dorothy
Roach, tickets; Colleen Van Meter
and Peggy Brickles, program; and
Mrs. Nora Rice and Mrs. Shirley

be placed in the classrooms so that

members may leave items there.
The project which iB county-wide

will contiriue until Oct. 20 at which
time the trucks will he loaded at the
Bradford Church of Christ preceding
the Men's Fellowship meeting.
Church of Christ Women are invited
to he guests that rught.
Mrs. Van Meter presided at the
meeting which opened with prayer
by Raymond Cole. Clarice Erwin
and Mrs. Roach gave reports. The
meeting closed with prayer by Mack
Stewart. Mrs. Erwm, Mr. and Mrs.
Cole served refreslunents to those
named and Ed and Edna Evans, Bea
Stewart, Bud and Hazel Wilson, Her·
man and Margaret Kincaul, Thelma
Boyer, Raymond and Dorothy
Baker.

B~ardner,decorations.

The annual drive for things for the
Grundy Mountain Mission School
was noted and the class voted to pur-

AAUWTOMEET
The Meigs County Chapter of the
· American Association of Universtty
:. ,Women will hold a potluck dinner at
:., ·6:30 p.m. Tuesday in the senior
.:. cttizens dining room of the new
:""' multiopurpose building, Mulberry
Heights, Pomeroy. The beverage
will he provided. Those attending
are to take a covered dish, tllelr own
table service and a guest. The
,. program Will he presented by
,.,. Rosalie Story and Lee Lee.

DEEM REUNION SUNDAY
The annual Deem Family Reuruon
will be held Sunday at Royal Oak
Park. A basket dinner will he held at
!2:30p.m.

Nehaclima Garden Club meets,
Mrs. Carroll Adams, Jr., Mrs.
Douglas Miller, Mrs. Dannie Harbour and Mrs. Bill Howard were
hostesses at the September meeting
o! the Nehaclima Garden Club held
at the New Haven Public Library.
Devotions were given by Mrs.
Adams wtth an repeating The Lord's
Prayer.
The president, Mrs. Roy Jones,
called the meeting to order. Mrs.
Douglas Miller read the secretary's
report and Mrs. Dannie Hatbour
gave the treasurer's report. Roll call
was the bringing of a piece of
nature's beauty from woods, fieid or
stream.
Mrs. Greg Blessmg was accepted
into the club membership.
A letter was read from Mrs. Virgtl
Burris, District Director for the

cream SOC181 sponsored by the Church Council last weekend was successful.
Cards were signed for Mrs. Phil
Globokar, home from the hospital,
and Mrs. James Fugate. Mrs.
Leonard Jewell gave the secretary's
report, and Mrs. Elza Gilmore, Jr.,
the treasurer's report. Mrs. Gilmore
and Mrs. Dorothy Woodard served a
dessert course to the 14 members attending. The table decorations
featured butterflies. A silent auction
was held following the meetmg. . .,

Dorcas C i r c k - - - - - - - - - - - - - A report on VISits wtth shut-ins
was given by Mrs. Eva hartley at the
Tuesday night meeting of the Dorcas
Circle of the B. H. Sanborn
Missionary Society of the Middleport First Baptist Church held at
the home of Mrs. Helen Bodimer.
Mrs. Sarilh D. OWen, chairman,
gave a ading and had prayer to open
the meeting with Mrs. Bodimer
giving devotions. Her meditation
was entitled "Let's Gat Personal
When We Pray" and she used scripture from Luke II.
Misstonaries to he remembered
dunng the year are Bette and
Robert Varnan of Cordoba and Em-

Jrulie Ballard, Thialand. Gifts of
money were sent to Robert Varnan
and Miss Ballard for their birthdays.
The overland white cross quota was
presented and arrangements made
to fill that.
Mrs. June Kloes had the program
on the theme "How Much of My Life
is my Own." Others attending were
Mrs. Janice Gtbbs, Mrs. Katie Anthony, Mrs. Bernice Baker, Mrs.
Clara Ben Riley, Mrs.' Freda Edwards, Mrs. Alwilda Werner, Mrs.
Elizabeth Slavm, Mrs. Pearl Hoffman, Mrs. Roms Hawkins, Mrs.
Sarah Fowler, and Miss Rhoda Hall,
a guest.

STORE BOOM
Department stores are capturing
an increasmgly large share of the
retail dollar, The Conference Board
reports. In 1956, they accountt;&lt;~ for
qnly 26 percent of lhe $43.5 btllion in
sales of general merchandise, apparel and furniture. By 1976, they
earned more than 44 percent of the
$154.3 btllion in sales of those kinds.
Over the same period, the share of
busmess earned by specialty shops
and variety stores declined. Mail order houses also showed gains.

Sentinel Social Calendar
WESLEY CHAPEL homecornmg
Sunday with Sunday school at 10
a.m.; basket dinner at 12:30· p.m.;
afternoon service at 2 p.m. with
special singmg.
,
ALFRED UNITED MEmODIST
Homecoming, Sunday. Basket dinner 12:30 p.m. Afternoon program at
2 p.m. featuring the Angelaires;
public invited.
HOMECOMING SUNDAY at Mt.
Hermon United Brethren m Christ
Church, Texas Community, with
Sunday school, ,9:30 a.m. and morning worship at 10:45 with carry-in
dinner atnoon. Rev. Roy Deeter

COWAffi
The amount of cold air that enters
a house can he reduced by pluggmg
the cracks around doors, wmdows
and stdings.

speaker for afternoon ervice at
I: 30 p.m.; public invited.
RETIJRN FROM N.C.
Mrs. Eleanor Thomas, executive
director of the Senior Citizens Center, has returned from Ashboro, N.
C. where she was the guest of the
Department of Hwnan Resources,
DtVlll!On of Agmg for the State of
North Carolins. Mrs. Thomas served
on a panel on program planning and
serving senior cttizens with other
Carter representatives from Ken·
tucky and Alabama.

VISITS HERE
Tory Brown, 11 year old son of
Mrs. Ray Cornelius, Pleasanton,
Calif., and Robert Brown of San
Jose, Calif. visited recently with his
grandmother, Mrs. Kate Brown,
Middleport. He was met at the atrport m Colwnbus by his grandmother, Mrs. Dorothy Young, and
Mrs. Jolands Root. During his visit
several parties were held m his
honor.

,.

.'.·

7453

Ohlo-{;uyan Region, concerrung the
annual District Meeting to be held
October 21 at the Pearidge United
Methodist Church m Huntington.
Registration will begin at 9 a.m.
Members were urged to attend.
Members voted to contribute to
CARE for the "Operation Self Help"
project.
·
It was announced that Mrs. James
N. Roush, Mrs. William C. Gibbs and
Mrs. David Ftelds, Jr. will serve as
hostesses for the October meeting.
Miss Terri John8on, a student of
Wahams High School, gave a very
lnterestmg report on the "Environmental Protection Worksnop for
Youth" that she attended at Cedar
Lakes in Ripley. She was sponsored
by the club
The door priZe was won by Mrs.
Roy Jones.
Others attending the meeting
besides the hostesses, Mrs. Adams,
Mrs. Miller and Mrs. Harbour, were
Mrs. William C. Gibbs, Mrs. David
Fields, Jr., Mrs. Pete Burris, Mrs.
Donald Bumgardner, Mrs. James N.
Roush, Mrs. Harry Miller, Mrs. Roy
Jones, Mrs. Phil Batey, members
and guest, Miss Terri Johnson.

p m .. Modern two story
country home Wtth doubl e
car garage x breezeway,
four bedroom , 1tv1ng room,
kitchen, dtning room , ba t h,
aluminum · vtnyl si d1ng,
new shingled roof
Nice
frontage With redwood f en
ce Southern Loca l School
Distnct. 4 1h m tle on Co

Rd 28, from Racone off 124
on black top road ha s 1 33
acres Phone614 949 2830

NEW HOM E on Khester

garage

$47,500 00

percent

COND. HOUSE

Jack

dleport, close to schools
Ready to move tnto 992

6051 after 5 p m
IN

Salosbury

Relocating, owner must
sell Ftve year old b1 level
home with J bedrooms, 221J
baths, large famtly room
w1th fireplace, fully car

w1th ba t h, mostly carpeted,
4k1tc
65 acr es, SI X room house
hen el ectr ic stov e,
dOOble ovens. diShwasher,
dtsposal , gas furnace, cen·
tral a or Large number of
good bu1 ld1ng lots, near
schools on Vme Street,
Rac me, Ohto Call 949 2491 ,
1mmedtate possesston

~~;;;;;;;;;~;~~~~~~~~~=-~
31

Homes for Sale

3 or 4 BEDROOM HOUSE
All electnc
n ing stove
car garag e
St. Rt. 79B5

wtth woOd bur
&amp; f~replace 2
2'h acres land,
3934 .

'

PubliC Nohce

Public Not1ce

Public Notice

were, on tne dates stiwon,

dress and iolle, Date of Ap

•'
'·'

PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FlDUC.lARY

...

The

following

persons

po.ntment,
Decedent s
Name and Address, and

appomted to admmister the

tollowong

Public Notoce

decedents '

estates pend1ng '" the
Me1gs County Probate

Court

Fiduc•arv's Name, Ad

r-----------------------·

_.I Curb Inflation. !
: 1I
Pay Cash f or
1
·! I
I
::: Classlfleds and 1I
•: I
I
Savelll
1
I coupon
Wrote your own ad and order by maol with this
Cancel your ad by phone when you get

Case Number are listed
Fred W Crow, Ill, P. 0 .
Box 329, Pomeroy, Oh1o
45769, IAdmonlstratorl,
July 8, 1980, Clifford Hall,

Syracuse, Omo, 23081.
Herman Will,
36443
Peach Fork Rd., Pomeroy,

Ohoo
45769
!Ad
m•n•strator). July 14, 1980,
Cora Will, 364-4J Peach
Fork Rd, Pomeroy, Ohoo
I 45~69.
23139

I Name

I

1 Address _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

I
I

" !·-----4------I

1
1I
·I

5.

', .

6.

·1

3

7

LB.

'• I

9

1 10.
1 11.
1 12

1

13.
14.

I
1 1~
I

~

1
1

&lt;IJ-Wtnttct ro Rtnt

• 4t-Equlpment tor Rent

e MERCHANDISE

eEMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Sl - Housettolct Goods
52-CI, TV, Radio Equipment

,,_Help wantld

n-Antlqun

12-Silualed Wantftl

S4- MIIc Mtrchandlte
55--lullcllrtt Suppllts
st-PttsfttSitt

n-jn•urance
14-lu•lntu Trtlrllnt

u-Schoolslnstrucflon
,._
Rtdlo, TV
&amp;CIIItt,_lr
It-Wanted Tc oa

eFARMSUPPLIES
&amp; LIVE;STGCK
•t-F•rm Equipment
n-W.InMd to Buy
7l-Trucks tr.r Salt
U-Livutodl

eFINANCIAL
:zt- IWslnns
OII,OMIInlry
22-Money to Lotn
Strvlcts

e REAL ESTATE

JI-Avtos tor Salt
1l- Vans&amp;4W D
14-Mottrcyclts
15-

~uto

Ptrts

&amp; Acctuorlts
17-Auto Repair

eSERVICES
11 - Homtlmprovtmtnts

Want· Ad Advertising
Deadline•
l JD PM

I

.

I

II
I
I

I
I
I
1

1
I
I

~-----------------------J

..........
·-··· ..... ...
................
~'

Oa•tv

12 Noon Saturdrt
Itt Mond.l¥

U-Piumt.lnt ~ l!ltCIVItlflf
ll-I!IICIVIfi"l

14- Eitdrical
&amp;

' I

Announcements

•etrittrarion

15-0tnttll Hauling

N-M H Rtpalr
17- Uphollltr'"

C:llh

Chlrtt

'"
"'
,.. '"
'"
Eult word ovtr tht minimum IS wort11 It 4 cents tl.tr word per dfY

6d.lyl

Ads runnlnt other than conttcufl\llt days wlll be chilrted •• tht 1 d.l'll

rate

l

In memory, Carel of Thank, and Oblhlary • cann.
l r tr word, n 00
minimum Casllllltadvanct
I

route 12-i close to Curt1s

&amp;

adult ' s

mums, locally grown by

Talbott
sday,

Mobllt Homtt.llltl.llnd Y.1rd IIIII Itt ICCtjlftd Oi'tl'll with CIUI wltPt
order U ctnt elllartt tor ads carrylnt 8o1e Number In Ctre ol Tht
Se"tlntl

Pomeroy , OH1 or call 992

Lots of good 7760

Grocery .

chi l dren ' s

Growers
Friday,

Thur

Saturday,

September 18,19,20, from
10 5
CARPORT

SALE .

Bob

''---'W=an!!.t!:!ed"-"to,_,B~uy
z.__

SHOOTING

coins or any gold or S1 lver
Items Anttque furniture,

MATCH

Gold, sliver or foreign
glass or china , will pay top
dollar, or complete estates.
No item too large or too

100
1.50
1.10

ldtyl

TWO FAMILY yard sale, etc. Complete households
Barb Talbott's restdence m
Wrote M D. Moiler, Rt . 4,
Portland, lust two mtles off

Washongton Co. Rd 248,
Lottie Hocking, OH 6676133

6

15 Won:ll or Uncltr
1 dty
2dtyt

dollars, sterling, etc , wood
tee boxes,Jars antiques,

slaughtering,
custom
processing, retail meat

Oh 12 00 noon ~undays

'
Rates and Other Information

Wanted to Buy
FLEA MARKET 1 mole IRON AND BRASS BEDS,
South of iuppers Plaons 20 old furntture, desks, gold
nngs,
tewelry, sl iv er
&amp;21 lfraln27&amp;28

Help Wanted
GET VALUABLE traonong
11

as a young business person
and earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Sen
tmel route earner Phone
us right away and get on

19BO COLONA DE By Fair
mont 14x70 woth expando.

Real Estate- General

I ~·IRGIL

1973

ESHIR E - Beautoful old home ove rlookong the

Phone
H 614 )-992-3325

Oh1 0 R1ver If you ' re look.tng for peace and qUtet
w 1t h p lenty of room and a home you can be proud of.

HUNTING CABIN -

Has 2 bedrooms, elec
baseboard heat. and 79
ac res of I and m good
huntmg country and
panoram1c vi ew

callu s onth os one You'vegottoseeot $4B.OOOOO
- LOTS

•

SYRACUSE - Large build1ng lot tn center of town
on the ma1 n ht ghway $6,500

CALL BILL CHILDS 992-2342
RODNEY DOWNING, BROKER
MIDDLEPORT OHIO

No ce

p1ece of land that would
make a retncted sub
diVISIOn
Wat er a nd
el ectn c tty avatl ab le
31 5 acre s A f 1rm

REALTY
I

NEW LISTING - Noce

LOST

Lost and Found

1 whole baseball

shoe. Brand name, Brooks

Reward. 992 6298 or after 5
pm 9923231 .

7~ ---------Yard Sale
YARD SALE women ' s

men ' s, children 's clothing,
mtsc
Items, household

goods From 9·7 Seplember
16 19 on CR 10 Dexter
Road. 141 ?1168.

small . Check prices before
selling Also do appraiSing .
Osby IOssle) Martin. 992 6370
WANiED TO BUY:
GOLD,
SILV ER,
PLATINUM, STERLINGCOINS, RINGS,JEWELR
Y, MISC . ITEMS AB
SOLUTE
MARKEi
PRICE GUARANTED. ED
BURKEiT
BARBER
SHOP, MIDDLE PORi,
OHIO 991 3~ 7 6

PART TIME Bar tender
Apply In person No exp
necessary. Meigs Inn.

Sl DING APPL ICATORS
Experienced woth tools
Sfeody work, good pay
Also helpers 992 32B3
10a.m. -10 p.m

Ne w

Real Estate

full or part tune pos1 ·
ttons avatlable lor MT ,

Salary

General

HOBSTE II Eff,
REALTY

commensurate wtth e.x ·
penence. Please con·
tact the Lat:: Supervtsor
at Veterans Memonal
Hospatat ,
Mulberry
Hgts , Pomeroy, Ohto at

PHONE 742-2003

1614) 992·2104 Ext. ss.
Equal Opportuntty

Georges. Hobstetter Jr.
Broker

Employer

NEW LISTING - Solod
Bu olt Home
3

Sltuatoons Wanted

bedrooms, l1vtng room

with bay window, kit
chen, bath, full base

WILL care tor one or two
elderly women tn my
home Expenence Phone
B-43 4694

ment

garage Also deta ched

tole Call Fred Moiler at992
633B

workshop or
Stts on over

no hourly sottong 992 5264

firepla ce, 2 baths, full

WIL L DO babysottlng In

basement
$26,500 00.

f lve days a

Jane Holliday, Box 224,
Rutland, Ohoo 45775

A s kt n g

• ACREAGE n1ce

laytng

5 acres
land on

Hysell
Run
$7,000.00
POMEROY

Insurance

ners, advanced, ad ults
Send
name,
address,
telephone number to Vera

Two

story sol 1d bnc k home,
stx extra large rooms,
kitchen &amp; family r oom
comb has n 1ce bnck

home, ages 2·8, references,

1S Schools Instruction
PIANO LESSONS Begin·

garage
1 acre

$39,900.00
POMEROY

GOING OUT ol town a day
or two for an all noght par
ty? Woli babysot In my

AUTOMOBILE
IN ·
SURANCE been can·
celled?
Lost your
operator' s lt cense? Phone
992 2143.

Pomeroy ,

bedroom ranch home,
lvtng room, dtntng &amp; ktt
chen comb , bath, 1 car

paneling, floor ttl e, ceiltng

week ; any hours Contact
949 2516 after 10 a.m.

In

$27,000 00
NEW LISTING - No ce 3

WILL do odds 8. ends,

1l

"ANXIOUS" to sell thos well kept hom e Plenty of
I1V1ng space, easy clean ttlt out wmdows, eat in k1t
chen . lorm al dtntng room , also a 2 ca r gara ge Call
on tht s on e $57,500

Housing
Headquarters

Medocal Lab Technicoan
RCLA,

a year. W111 se ll for on ly

11

Rd
Two

story home, oak and
p1ne
woodwork
throughout Large liv
ing room w1th love ly

torepiace. dining room,

famtly
room,
3
bedrooms, with 4 walk
in closets, 1112 baths,
mOdern kttchen. Garag e
has 2 rooms &amp; bath
'overhead Ca II for appt

MINI -FARM - 10 acres
with two all electric

homes - both have 3
bedrooms and many

qualoty
extras.
$87,500.00. Can be divod
ed and so ld separately

PART
TIME 1an1tor
evenings, lew days a week
992 3471 . 9·5

ATHENA ACRES - 24
acres, beautiful 2 stor:y
nome, •nnex bldg ' pool

THREE bedroom home

CAREiiR SALES: II you
would like to earn a 5 figure

newly

income while performing a
valuable serv1ce in Meigs
x surrounding counties,
send name, address, x

new paneling, new furnac~
&amp; water heater, full
basement,
off
stre et

decorated

new carpet
parkong ,

mslde:

throughout

Woll

take

phone number to; Sta te automob1le or mobtle home
Manager, 1855 Fountaon on trade at Moddieport
Square Court, Suote 102, S1B,500.
I 304·882 2466
Columbus, Ohlo43224
anytime
(

LAND - Lots of land, loc ated 1n Southeastern Ohto
hill s Peace ful and pnva te, also mtnera l nghts

CALL US TO BUY OR SELL
NANCY JASPERS- ASSOCIATE
949-2654
Or To Leave Message-949 2591

worth $38,500.
NO TIME LIKE NOW
TO
LIST
WITH
TEAFORD ,
FOUR
FULL TIME SALES
PEOPLE .
CALL
992 -3325 OR 2NO
992·3176.

. M s. Taylor, Route 1.
Box 247 , Lollle Hocking,
Ohoo 45742

All monerals. Shown by
appt . only .
,
RUTLAND - Noce 3

bedroom,

home,

all

living

elec frtc

room,

modern kitchen, utll tty,

' 1 car garage $36.500 00
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc
Phone 742-3171

Velma Nlctnsky, Assoc.

Phone 742-3092

Vi.~YI . ~?d ,Aluminum

TOWERS &amp;

Siding

ALL STEEL

Farm BuHdings
SIZes
•' From 30xlO''

BISSELL
' SIDING CO.

INSTALATIONS

T..HREE rooms of f ur
n1ture, poster bedroom
su1te, bookcase bedroom
su1te, ett , can be seen at
106
Un1on
Avenue,
Pomeroy.

SMALL

Ulility Buildings
Sozes from 4x6 to 12x40

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

TV, CB &amp; HAM

PARK
FINANCIAL

tn excell ent cond1t1on Un
derptnnlng •nc luded tn

Gallopol os
3942

$6700 00

REA L ESTATE for sale
corner lot on ma 1n h1gh
way , over 250 foot of fran
tage, 95 percent ftnanc1ng
to qual 1f1ed church group ,
organ•zat1on, or successfu l
bustness mana gement

992-2259

ATTENTION
liM
PORiANi TO YOU) Will
pay cash or cer11f1ed check
for ant1ques and collec
t1bles or entire estates

YOU!

NEW LISTING - ALMOST 6 ACRES - of no ce
qut et countr y 1tv1ng .The 3 bedroom s, l1 v1ng room ,
diO iOQ room, and bafh were r ecentl y r emodeled and
ar e georgeou s Has a n1ce f enced yard and an area
fence d f or farm antmals Qu1 ck sale pri ce

$?8,500.00
NEW LISTING - SOUTHERN DISTRICT ABOUT AN ACRE OF YARD - goes woth this one

co1n "ollectrons
54

M1sc. Merchanise

Mob1le Homes

NEW LISTING - SOUTHERN DISTRICi - i&gt;IO
NOISY TRAFFIC - You wol l rest easy on tho s 2
bed room home woth full basement that has wood

burner to suppl em ent f or ced atr hea t Dishwasher
1n k1tchen, carpet Also storage budd.ng $29 ,900.00

NEW LlSilNG - NEE,DS SOME WORK - Hou se
nas 2 bedrooms on 13 76 acres w1th road frontage for
2 3 butld1ng sttes Some fru1t trees, some tllable and

pasture land, located near Apple Grove . $11.200.00

NEW LISTING - 5 ACRES - 5 minutes from new
brodg e v ery gobd 4 bedroom, 2 story house, com
pletely r emodeled, all carpeted, many e)(tras l 1ke
dtshwasher , stove , bar, n1 ce k1tct.1en and dining
room . extra large 11vmg room with heatolater

foreplace Large pond could eaSilY be buolt Call for

TWO

bedroom

mobile

uttltt1es

paid,

requored 992 7479

AVAILABLE OCT

2

bedroom furnished apt tn
Ra cme $150 month plus
ut11tttes No pets, one chtld

949 2B75

INCREDIB LE' Fully 'carpeted apts on downtown
Middleport. All utololles on
eluded, 1 bedroom from

$170 Special rates for
Senoor Cotozens. Equal Op
portunity Housing. Village
Manor Apts Call 992 7787
tor appointment.
992
TWO BEDROOM un
turn1shed

apartment,

Pomeroy, $150 00 plus
deposo t 992 6130 or 992
7511

2 TRAILER LOTS for rent
Call 742 3122

46

5 ace for Rent

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy

Large lots. Call

47 ~ -W~ !'.I!d to Rent
WANTED TO RENT. ni ce
house tn the country, to
responsibl e coupl e with one
ch ild
Very clean, have
r eferences . Prefer utilities

paod
pm

Call 992 51 26 aft er 5

Nice Select1on of Carpet Remnants and
Linoleum Remnants at Big Dtscounts.

watt
742·

f~rm .

RUTLAND FURNITURE
Main St.
63

742-2211

L1vestock

vans &amp;4 W.O.
1978 Scout, 304 automatic ,

73

56

used on 4 t-t . 992-3126

Board.ng , all breeds. Clean
Indoor-outdoor fac•l•t•es .

drive , 25,000 actual moles,
$3,700 00 Call 992 7770 ask

TEN YEAR old registered

for Roger

appaloosa mare, gentle,
brok.e, good d1sposit•on .

74

(614) 698 3290

$450 00 Also, registered 18
month old appa loosa colt,
•;, quarter, good blood
lines, good conformation,

call after 4 p m 593 7390

3
REGISTERED
Corrledale rams $125.
each 742 2753

pnmered.

The D{f 1ly Sentinel

llo. 163, Old Chtbeo Sta., New

YO&lt;I:, NY 10113. Pnnt Nome,
Address, Z1p, Pottern Number.
Catch on to Ihe coal! boom' Send
lorouo NEW 198 1 NEEOLECRAfT
"CATALOG il'ler 112 desogns 3
free paUerns onsode $1 00
AU CRAfT BOOKS.•$1.75 uch
133-FIIhlon Home Qulltin1
132-Quilt Oril'llb
131-Ad~ a Bloci Quilts
130-SwNler Fllhlons-Siza 38· ~
129-Quic~ 'n' bsy TriiiSftrs
121-(melopt Potchwodo Quoits
127-Af...... 'o' Dolloa
12&amp;-TIIrifiJ CrafiJ Rowers
125 Petal !!!tolls
124-Eay Gotts 'o' Ornomenls
123-Stotch 'n' Potch Quilts
122-Siufj 'n' Puff Qull15
111-trochet with Squora
II Hay Art of NIHitpoont
IIUtfiJ·Filtj Quills
liS Eay Art of Ropple Coochet
114-toonptlll Alehan BGOio
112-Pnzo Alalllns
107·1nsllot Stw1n1
105-lnst.ot Crochet
1113-Qoilts lao Today's livon1
101-Qtilt laalo-CGIIKIIGII 1

a. wormed

992·

6260 Hours 12 7 daoly,
clo sed Tues Tabby ' s,

71

wheel

1977 G S 550 SUZUKI rn

good condition . $900.00

Phone 992·5640

1974SUZUKI GT750motor
cycle, ltke new. $1,000.00.

PhoneB82 231B

1 ransaarrauun

requ1 r ed

four

Motorcycles

ser •ees

GEi A Noce soft lovab le
Donat1on

3 AND 4 RM furnoshed ap
ts Phone992 5434.

Sq. Yd.

5 YARD NON Regostered
Appaloosa mare 15 hands,
n1ce blanket over htps,

Socoety Shots

equopped kotchen adn foreplace ALL FOR
$,3,000 00
.
FOR A SONG - Thos 3 bedroom house has a large

992 5692
OFFICE 992·2259

$225

100

and ponies and riding
lessons ·
Everythtng
tmagmable m horse equ1p
ment
Blankets, belts,
boots, etc Engltsh and
Western
Ruth Reeves

Th e mosl useful lacy lashoon IS
quock lo crochel'
Pretty scalloped detail oulhnes
ih iS dramatoc bolero Crochet ol
Pompadour yarn on off whole or a
pastel color Unoque goft lor a
specoal l11end' Pattern 7230
S11es B 10. 12-14 16-18 oncl
$1.75 lor each patleon Add 501
each pattern for hrst class all·
maol and handling Send to:
Alice Broob
NIHlecralt llttL
~l i ·:

•9"

Cash &amp; Carry

InclUde 1n
slalaf1on l

E lectron1 c

k1tten from your Humane

992 7479

Jean Trussell949 · 26~0
Roger &amp; Oot1tc Turner

wtth

HOOF HOLLOW: Horses

Apar1ment
for A: ent

.

Any regular carpet tabs installed w1th free pad.

Also AKC regi'stered
Dober mans 614 446 1795

Com

q.

Reg . 55 9

Toban

Pets tor 5ale
HILLCREST KENNELS

home with utt1 1ftes pa id
Adults
only
Depostt

'5"

(Pr•ceOoes Nol

Co 614 992 2205

TWO BEDROOM mobole

44

'3"

LeIar I

Summer Pnces Excelstor

depos1t

requored. 992 3647.
pl ete ly furnoshed

F arm,

HEATING OIL. Buy now at

home 10 Ractne Depos1t
requtred Phone 367 7811

NEW LISTING - HERE IT IS! Gravel Hill on Mid ·
dleport Thts post caret hom e can be yours 3
bedroms, 2 full baths, k tt chen, dln1ng area , large
l tv1ng room , screen ed r ear sun porc h, pnvate s1de
Sitting porch, full basement. lar ge lot, plus a garage
apartment (furni shed and r ented), plus a nice
ga r age and workshop, many f eatures tncludmg an

REALTOR
Henry Cleland, Jr. - 992-6191
ASSOCIATES

"Drive A Little Save A Lot"
SHOP IS FULLY STOCKED
CARPET
GRA55 CARPET Rubber Back
WI p a d
" TURF"
Installed
Sq Yd
s Yd

SEPTEMBER SALE
GIGANTIC SAVINGS ON ALL CARPET

speaker
2236.

requored1 992 2749

more deta tls Prtced only $45,000 00

llv1ng room and 1S 1n w a lkt n,g dtstance to town
Could be yours for not mor e than a song Ca ll today 1

CARPET SHOP

POTATOES Red Pontoac
&amp; Kennebec 145 West Bed·
ford Townshop Rd Cecil

. s 1r en

EASTERN

ed sun porch, house shows ex cellent care 3 car
ga ra ge, t he small house has 2 bedrooms, good con
dtton, all on ov er an acre of land Will cons1der sub
divtding or a ll3 places can be yours for $58,000 00 .

RUTLAND FURNITURE'S

Mosc. Merchandose

FEDERA L

k.ttchen furn 1shed, adults
preferred No pets Depos1t

2 BEDROOM Mobole
Home Adults only 992
3324

NEW LISTING - SERVICE STATION
RESTAURANT, BIG HOUSE, LITTLE HOUSE The bog house has 5 bedrooms, lots of closets enc los

54

R1vers 1de
Falls

992 3090

11v1ng room. k.1tchen has n1 ce cab1n et s w 1th mat
ch 1ng stove and r ef, util1t y r oom and bath , a ll
OISTR tCT - 10 acres wtth road frontage for a
buddtng s1te - $6,000 00 - Also 23 acres wtth a
buildtng Site, has bottomland, approx 10 acres
t tmber, stream, plenty of W1ld l1fe $18,000 00

!~::::=~~~=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~5~e~r~v~oc~e~&amp;~~~~~~-

BEANS Pock
GREEN
Your own George Holl,

HOUSE FOR rent, four

and Laundry
• Carpet
• Ora penes
• Furmture
c"We're No 1 m

Phone 367-7560

Roush lane

Lacy an d L el y.

rooms w 1th bath, fully car
pe ted, mce &amp; clean, ready
to move tnto. $115 00 a man
th, deposit requ1red Phone

PH. 992-6342
TRY US!
complete Dry C1eanong

Water-Sewer-Electric-Gas Line·Dilehes,
WATER LINE HOOK-UPS
SEPTIC TANKS COUNTY CERTIFIED

9FT.
RIGGSCREST Manor $275 w va
case, DOUBLE
stainless duty
steelmeat
ex·
month
Call Cleland ~-----------"1 tenor, S100 BIt showcase,
Realty 992 2259
t•
glass front, top, and slodon g
1
doors. $40. B tt. counter,
RIGGSCREST Manor S275
0V
shelves on front and back,
mo nth
Call
Cleland
$20 Call 773 9151.
Rea lty 992 2259

story home t hat has a large rec room w1th
f 1r ep1ace, glassed 1n sun porch, ut1l 1ty room , and 3
bedrooms Al so central atr, 6lf2 acr es, a large barn,

carpetd Real noce for $24,900 00
NEW LISTING - ACREAGE -

317 N. 2nd Ave.
Mtddleport, Oh10

Ca ll 614

6·18.
The St.
Watermelon
Pat
ch, 5th
, New Haven,

Houses for Rent

Trenching Service

767 3167 or 557-3411

reduced 25% Maternity
jeans $15 00, Fall mater
MATERNITY
lo ngeroe
n1ty tops &amp; 1umpers,
sizes

FURNISHED trader for
rent $150 00 per month ,
$100.00 deposot Adults
only 992 5B34 after 5

storage buol dong Jusl$39,900 00
NEW LISTING - cozy 2 bedroom house, woth large

1·2? tfc

Federal Housing
Veterans
Adm tnostration
107 Sycamore
Pomeroy
Olfoce 992-7544
Home 992-6191

Reese

Nothong too large Also,
guns, pocket watches and

1 BEDROOM. Furnoshed,

NEW LISTINGS - WE HAVE THE HOME FOR

$8,000 00

53

for Rent
MOBILE HOME for rent,

608 E. MAIN
POMEROY, OH......~~~

REAL ESTATE LOANS

247

Lots &amp; Acreage
35
SU ITAI)LE LOT for mobole

42

Real Estate- General

9

• New Homes - ex·
tensive remodelmg
•Electrical work
• Roofing work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph . 992·7583 ,
9-141 mo.

1975 VI Kl NG traoler 12 x 65

41

dleport Leading Creek

wtth proven tra ck
record . $17.500 00 second
year Send brtef resume to

B&amp;D
ANTENNAS

Rts 7 &amp; 35 Ga ll ipolos, Ph
446 3670

furntshed , washer, dryer ,
underpmned W1th pat10 top
Excellent cond•tton call
99? 2721 after 5 p m

Rentals

Bu tlding or tratler lot on
hard road near Mt d

carpetmg, new k1fchen
and bath ftxtures 4
bed rooms, 2 porc hes,
basement and well

fireplace 1nserts, free stan
dtng stoves, warm atr fur
nace adapters, m obile
home wood heaters, and
trtple wall chtmneys. Out
door Equipment Sal es, Jet.

10 x 55 Elcona comp letely

Want $45,000
NEW LISTING

f~rm

Pomeroy, Oh.

2

992 57B6 or 992 2529

home of 3 bedroom s on
one floor 3 bedrooms,
step saver kitchen for
mom Garage and 3 lots

INCOME - Over $6,000

12x65

town 992 5786 or 992 2529

Real Estate - General

have the best year s of
your
lif e 1n fh1 s
renovated house Room
for pond, lots of woods
Near Chester F or only
$37,500

resodents Old establoshed

your home

EAGLE

home. Easy terms, close to

$53,000.
NEW LISTING - You' ll

seektnQ success minded '"
dtvtdual to serv1ce farm ac
counts In the Me1gs· Gallla
area We work m estate
planning &amp; many other
fields of servtce to rural

V.C. YOUNG II

992-6215 or 992·7314

9 10 1 mo

51
Househ~ld Goods
STOVES , We have

bedroom , l l!2 baths, exc
cond. Furn1shed, 2 a.c ,
10x20 patto and porch, un
derpinnmg 992 7255

1 1&amp; E Second Str eer

$35,000
BRICK

(Free Estimates)

742 3030 or742 272B.

B. 5R . , , '"0'

ACREAGE

work

- Concrete work
-Plumbing and
electracal work

central atr, 3 bedrooms, 11/2
baths Movtng out of state

TEAFORo[B ,

Hel Wanted
EXPANDING company

12

Mobile Homes
for Sale

32

Oflousing
Headquarters

11

MLT,

RACINE, OH. 6 rooms,
hardwood floors, storm
wtndows, needs updattng ,
hobby shed, work shed,
garden 1 614 235·6569 or

7132.

VAN METER HOSPITAUZED
James Robert Van Meter, Route 3,
Sandy Lake, Pa., 1614li, suffered a
stroke on Aug 27. He was a patient
In both the Greenv1De and Young,.
town, Ohio hospitals. He is now in
Room 356, Greenvtlle Hospital,
Greenville, Pa. Carda may he sent to
the hospital address. Van Meter is
the son of Mary Van Meter and the
late Ralph Van Meter of the Stiversvtllearea.

9

t1omes for Sale

wrote 2974 Castlewood Rd ,
Columbus , Oh 43209

pat10. Wtthin walk tng
d1stance of schools 992

HOLINESS A&amp;&gt;N.
TO MEET
The Metgs Area Holiness
Association kickoff meeting will be
held at the Rutland Church of the
Nazarene at 7:30p.m. Sept. 23. The
Rev. J. Broome, president, extends
an inVItation to the public to attend.
The evening willlDClude a songfest
with each church of the Association
to present two songs. There wlll be
~o preaching at the service.

Black res1dence Sept 19, the elogobiloty lost at 992
9 4 2 mtles out New L 1ma 2150 or 992 2157
Rd . Rutland Boys clothes,
Contact Ed Burkett Barber 6 12
OFFICE MANAGER Must
Shop, Middleport
have the followong sko lis
filing ,
YARD SALE. 18, 19, 20. In Typing ,
Piano Tuning
Lane s1de city llmtts of Rutland bookkeepong
Abollty to
Dantels 742-29511 Tun tn g above the Church of God
meet people &amp; pleasant
and Repa1r Service s1nce Thurs., Fri ., Sat. Lots of telephone manner
Send
1965. If no answer phone good clothtng, mise resume of background in
992 2082.
Someth1ng for everyone, formation to Box 242,
lots of goodoes tor 25 cents Pomeroy Oh 45769.
MASON HOME REPAIR Rain cancels
THE POSiiiON of teacher
heatmg and a1r con ·
ditton.ng furnace clean tn g, YARD SALE at Marvon for the multi handicapped
plumb.ng, repatr, restden - McGu1re restdence on os now aballable at the
tlal elec tr~c W1rtng, sales Route 7 bypass, Saturday Meigs Co Board of Menta l
Retardatton Th1S person
serv1ce and 1nstallation .
September 20th from 9-6
shou
ld have MSPR Cer
992 2364 .
tofocation and be avaolable
tmmedlate
em
THREE FAMILY yard for
SHOOTING MATC'H at sole, 660 Beech Street, Mod· ployment Please se nd
Corn Hollow in Rutland dleport 9 6 Ra1n cance ls resume to Meigs Co. Board
Every Sunday startong at Saturday, Septembor 20th. ' of Mental Retardatton, 36
noon
Proceeds be1ng
East Ma1n St , Pomeroy,
donated to the Boy Scout
Oh.
45769 Resumes will be
Troop 249. 12 gauge factory B
Public Sale
accepted
until Sept. 21 ,
choke gun only •
____,&amp;,_,A=uc~t:::oo,n_,__ _ 1980
OSSIE 'S AUCTION House,
GUN SHOOT Racine Gun 20 N. 2nd Street, Mod· THE MEIGS Co. Health
Club Every Sunday star dleport, Ohoo We sell one Department is now ac
tong 1 p m Factory choked p1ece or entire households
cepting applications for a
guns only
New, used, or antiques, tn
Publoc Health Staff Nurse
eluding homes, farms, or Applicant must be a
PRE SEASON
SALE -- llquodatlon sales. Get top Registered Nurse Benef1ts
$649 00--Mobole home wood dollar List w1th the man five 15) day work week, all
who has over 25 years In paid Holidays, pleasant
burnong systems, the only the
new, used and antique working conditions with a
HUD 8. UL approved Wood
furniture
business
We chance to meet and help
burner for mobtle homes.
the public.sQuahfted, '"
Untt comes complete with take consignments. For In
and pickup ser· terested persons should
wall vent stack. See them formation
at Kmgsbury Homes Parts vice, call 992·6370 or on contact the Meigs Co
&amp; accessories at Route 124, West vorglnla 773 5471 Sole Health Department at the
Mtnersvtlle, Ohto .
Or every Friday noght at 7 Multi-Purpose Health Cen
p.m Auctioneer Howard ter, Mulberry Heights,
phone 992 5587
Beasley, apprentice auc- Pomeroy, Ohio. Phone 992
tioneer, Osby A Marftn
6626.
JONES Meat Packing
(no 0unkl

Amencan Leg ion, Rutland,

I
I
I

Mail This Coupon with Remittance
The Daily Sentinel
Box 729
Pomeroy, O,hio 45769

e TRANSPORTATION

:n- Homes lor S.ltl
n-Mtbl ltHomes
for Stlt
U- F.1rms for Salt
J4-luslnns lulldlnts
U- Lotsl Acr••t•
n - Rtal Euatewent.ct
J7-Rulton

27 - - - - - 28
I
29
I
JO

M-H.Iy&amp; Gr.lln
U - Sttdl Ftrtlllrtr

2)--Pretfftslon•l

26. _ _ _ __.__ _

16.

I
I
1

u-APirtmtnf for Rtnt

Avctlan
9-WIUited to Buy_

25. _ _ _ _ __

tar RtnT

.S-FRooms
4...,_5Ptttlor R..,t

&amp;

31
32
33
34
35

eRENTALS

Yard Sale

clotho ng &amp;household Items,
also houseplants &amp; hardy

1 PAY highest pnces
poss1ble for gold and silver
co1ns, nngs, 1ewelry, etc

tor R;tnt

t-Public Slit

24. _ _ _ _ _ _ __

1980, Helen R Slack, R D
2, Racone , Ohio45771, 23171
!91 5, 12. 19. 3tc

J

42-MobileHome~

Founcl
7- YarCIStht

22. _ _ _ _ _ __
23. _ _ _ _ _ __

Rac1ne ,
Oh 1o
45771
(Executnx), August 29,

45769, 23140
Bernard V Fultz, P 0
Bo&gt;c 723, Pomeroy , Oh•o
45769, ' !Ancollary Ad

41-HOOMS

~Lost 1mt

17 _ _ _ _ __
18 . _ _ _ _ _ __
19 _ _ _ _ _ __
20 _ _ _ _ _ __
21. _ _ _ _ _ __

Oh•o

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

&lt;1 - GIYtiWIY
5-HapPy Ads

These cash rates
onclude dlscouQt

Pomeroy,

or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomero~, 0., 45769

l-Announcements

Phone number of used.
You'll get better results
of you describe fully,
give price The Sentinel
reserves the roght to
classify, edit or re1ect
any ad Your ad will be
put on the proper
clasotocatoon of you'll

"I
'I

Wayne Sw1sher, West Ma1n

e ANNOUNCEMENTS

I Print one word in each
I space below. Each in
otoal or group of figures
I counts
a word. Count
I name as
and address or

I
I
I
I
I
I
I check the proper box
I below
I
I
Wanted
I
For Sale
I
Announcement
·I
For Rent

Ohoo 45769, IExecutrox),
July 17, 1980, Charles

PHONE 992-2156

r-c;ard of Thinks
2-ln Mtmorlam

r

t

M1na Mae Sw•sher, West
Ma1n Street, Pomeroy,

Ethel P Ferrell, Chap
manvolle. W Va 25508,
23149
Pearle Woll os, R D 2,

'

1
I
I
1
I

I Phone___________

45769, !Executor!. July 16,
19BO, Rochard Quails, 32B
Beech Slreel, Moddleport,
Ohoo 45760,23127.

WANT AD ,INFORMATION

1

'I
I

0 Box 1486, Pomeroy, OHIO

mlntstrator ), July 28, 1980,

_,

1

I. results Money not refundable

Frank W Porter, Jr , P

Street,

7

Public Notice

31

peted. Large sundeck &amp;

•

remodeling
- Roof1ng and guHer

Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph. 992-2772

Merebandlsn

ROOFING
REMODELING
Serving your area
tor 25 years . Call
now for large sav·
ings. For Free
Estimate CaJl
Eugene Long
(614) 843· 3322
8 18-1 mo pd

-Addons and

elnsutatton
• Storm Doors
• Storm Wmdows
• Replacement
Windows

Save $120 00 a

VINYL SIDING

7

rooms, 1112 baths, 2 car
garage, exc
ne1 g hbor,
good locati on tn Mtd

HOME

Vinyl &amp;
Alummum Soding

m onth tnterest 992 3454

G •nther 985 4349

EXC

INSULATION

butlt home , 1600 square
foot, 1tv1ng space. plus
garage , laundry room ,
plenty of storage Radt ant
heat, rhermostat •n each
room No closmg costs, Wtll
arrange ftnan c1ng for 9 11J

three bedroom, two baths,
dming room, livtng room,
family room With ftrep lace
Central air , g as heat, fully
carpeted, 1700 square foot
of l lvtng area , attached

"YOUNGS
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

J&amp;L BLOWN

NEW BEAUiiFUL custom

FOR SALE CA LL after 5

water and electrte 1ty
available Only $6,500 .

,.

Business Services

shower , f ull basement,
alummum std lng , storm
wt ndow s &amp; door, btg porch,
large lot, metal bu 1ldmg,
pa rti a lly f e nced tn 992

Small investment, large returns, Sentinel Want Ads

,•

-

8 ROOM House Bath &amp;

hears from Wahama student

Friendly C i r c l e - - - - - - - - - - - Mrs. Arthur Slusher was program
chairman when Fnendly Circle met
Tuesday evenmg at Trinity Church.
A reading, "If God Should Speak"
and a poem, "Life is Worth Living"
were given after which members
took part in a Btble qwz. Mrs.
Slusher closed the program with the
poem, "My Saviour Lives."
Miss Elizabeth Fick used "God's
People," a paraphrase of Psalm 100
as the thought for the evening. Mrs.
W. H. Perrin and Mrs. Pearl Mora
were named to tlle nominating committee It was noted that the ice

3]--=Ho~is for s~ le

Autos for Sale

1977 PONTIAC SUNBIRD

81

Sun roof , auto , good gas
mileage, exc cond 985

s a.

Home
Improvements

G carpet Cleaning

ttgers, &amp; a pure black, all
males

3596

Steam
cleaned
Free
est1mate
Reasonable

AKC

1973
OLDSMOBILE
Toronado. Good cond 985
4225

rates Scotchguard
6309or742 2211.

19/B MUSTANG Ghoa, am

83
Excavahng
J X F BACKHOE SER
VICE loscensed and bon·

REGISTERED

Cocker Spantel pu ppies 6

weeks old .
Blonde ,
females, champoon blood
lines 843·2684
57

Musocal
lnstrumen1s

fm radto, atr cond1tiomng,
four speed, 15,000 m1les, ex·
cellent condtt1on $3,000 00

992 7689

USED clan net in good con

dotoon $35.00. Phone 9925786

1972 PLYMOUTH Sa lell ote
Sebr~ng

P S,

a~r ,

con&lt;!, $675 247 2192

good

barrel P S., p.b , new ttre s

&amp;wheels, 247 3B61
Farm Equtpment

1978 JD 450C Dozer, 6 way
blade, winch, canopy limb
risers, 1700 hrs. exc: . cond.

S2B,ooo. Aller 5 p m. 752·
2372

ded,
septtc
tank
tn
stallat1on, water and gas
lmes. Excavatmg work and

transot layout. 992 7201 .
EXCAVATING

Wahl e ~

Dozer work or t1 mber to

1974
DODGE
CHALLENGER . 31B , 4
t.l

992

Trucks for Sale
1979 ONE TON Chevy flat

72

bed truck tn good condttion

tut

985

3507 or 992 3208

84

Electrical
&amp; R efrtgeration

SEWING

MACHINE

Repa •rs .

makes1

serv1ce,

992 -2284

a~ l

T~e

Fa bn c Shop, Pomeroy
Authortzed Singer Sales

woth low mo leage. Phone
446·0762 Gallipolos

and Servoce We sharl)&lt;!n

1976 CHEVY

ELWOOD
REPAIR

Scissors.

62
Wanted to Bu
CHIP WOOD Poles max
diameter 10" on largest
end $12 p·er ton Bundled
slab 510 per ton Delivered
to Ohoo Pallet Co., Rt 2,
Pomeroy 992 2689

Werry 9B5 4255

toasters, ~rons, all small
appliances. Lawn mowei"

1972 Chevy pock up , flat
bed, 350 VB In excellent

Next to State Hoghw&amp;Y
Garag e on Route 7, 985
3825

OLD COINS , pocket wat-

$550 00 Ca II 992 7770 ask

mechan1ca1

ches, class r1ngs, weddmg
bands , d1amonds Gold or

solver. Call J A Wamsley ,
742 2331 Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, Athens, OH 592

6462.

Suburban,

three sea t s, good gas
mileage, pnced l ow Phtllp

con d 1t1on

for Roger

1967

CHEVY

Pickup.

Rebut It eng 1ne Exc cond .,
everythmg works
S800.
992

20BO

BOWERS
S\l(eepers,

APPLIAFCE service, all
mBk.es washers,
ranges ,

dryers,
dish

washers,dlsposals, water
tanks Call Ken Young 985·
3501 before 9a x or otter;6
pm

�..·

•
10-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, Sept 19, 1980

New car, truck buyers given tax 'break:·..
,

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ohio's
lawmakers have given new car and
pickup truck buyers a break on the
state sales tax and are now headet!
back to their home districts for fall
campaigning.
As soon as the bill iS signed by
Gov. James A. Rhodes, possibly
today, dealers aroun&lt;t the state can
reduce the tsx from four to two cents
on-the-dollar on 1980 and 1981
models.
However, the tsx reduction can
only be offered if they comply with a
provison in the bill requiring
'manufacturers to match the tax
break with a rebate of the same
.amowtt.
In effect, the temiJorary (60-day)
law will mean that Ohioans can buy
paSSiinger cars and pickup trucks
over ·the next two months without
paying any sales tsx.

Rhodes and legislative sponsors of designed to boost sales of Americanthe bill hope it will boost em- made cars except that it uses a
ployment in the Ohio auto industry
gasoline mileage formula under
which currenUy has about 75,000 which siune dealers in imports can
laid-off workers.
also qualify.
The Hoilse completed action on the
II provides that the tsx cut be
proposill Thursday when it went
provided only on cars with manufacalong 82.J with Senate amendments.
turers who have Improved their gas
· Rhodes had said earlier he would
efficiency by at least 20 percent over
sign the measure into law as soon as
respective 19'74 models.
it reached his desk.
All four major U.S. manufacturers
Lawmakers, in a flurry Of action,
~ Ford, Chrysler, Anerican Motors,
completed passage of about two
and General Motors - meet the
dozen other measures. They in- . criteria, along with the foreign
eluded a bill that would give the
makers of Mazda, Mercedes Benz,
Hamilton County Municipal Court
and Peugeot, sponsors said.
·four additional judges. Another bill
Sen. Harry Meshel, Dwould prohibit awardlitg state conYoungstown, the Senate sponsiJI',
tracts to firms cited for unfair labor had wanted to Include trucks other
practices by the National Labor
than pickups, buses, vans, and
·Relations Board.
recreational vehicles under the bill's
The temporary tsx reprieve Is
provisions.

20 cases terminated
THERE WAS NO CAKE lor Mandy Hughes wben she
r..,.nlly celebrated ber first birtbday at Children's Medical
Center In Daytoli, Obio. Mandy, w~o was born with most of
ber IDiestlnes oultilde ber abdomen, bas. never eaten; she
subsists on nutrients led directly through tubes Into ber
stomach and IDto a large vessel near her heart. Her doctors
are bopelul tbat she will be able to eat normally once her
remabliag intestines grow and adapt to feediilgs.

Area deaths
Harry Criswell
Mr. and Mrs. James Criswell,
Middleport, received word Tuesday
day night of the death of his brother,
Harry, at Bridgeport. Funeral services were held at 2:30p.m. Friday
at the Wilson Funeral Home at
Bridgeport
·

Dorothy ,Fern

. •
QuiVey

Mrs.Dorothy .Fern Quivey, 57,
Columbus, formerly of Meigs County died Wednesday at Mt. Carmel
H~pital,
Sl)e was born May 12, 1923 in Hart·
lord, a daughter of the late.John M.

and Ella Elizabeth Gibbs Gilland.
She .was formerly employed al the
New Haven Porcelain Co.
Surviving are her husband,
Charles E. Quivey; ason, Charles E.
Quivey, U, both of Columbus; two
brothers, Robert M. Gilland, New
Haven, and Lewis R. Gilland,
Mason, and a sister-in-law, Mrs.
Survil!a Gilland, New Haven.
Funeral services will be held air
11 a.m. Saturday at the Foglesong
Funeral Home with the1Rev. Jotur
Campbell officiating, Burial will be
in the Kirkland Memorial Gardens. ·
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
today.

Livestock report
OHIO VAllEY

LIVESroCK CO.
I

MARKET REPO!\T

Sale every Saturday at l p.m. AI). prices taken
from the aucUon of Saturday, Sept. 13, 198l.
Trends: Feeder cattle .steady, cows $1 to $3
lower, vealcalves $2 tofllower. Total Head 590.
·Feeder Steers: GOOd and Cholce 250 to 300 lbs.
72.~1; 300 to 44lQ lbo. 7IHO: jOO to500 lbo. 68.SO.
80: 500 to 1100 lbo. 67-77.50; 600 to 700 lbo. 62.5().
72.50; 700 to 800 lbl!l. 66-68.75; IMX) and over 57.5067.50.
F~ Helfers: Good and Choice 250 to 300 lbs.
60-73.7l : jOO to 500 lbo. 58.9M7.00; 500 toiiOO lbo.
57.50-65; 600 to 700 lbs. 56-84.50; 700 to 800 Ills. M61.50; eooandover ~2.50-60.
Feeder Bul~' Good and ChOice 250 to 300 lbo.
70-«1.5(); 300 to tOO lbC!I. 67-78; 400 to 500 lbs. 6574 .50; 500to 600 lbs. 62.50-68.50; 600 to 700 lbs. ~766.75; 700 to 5» Jbs. 5fi.50·6UO; lXX) and overS+62.75.
•
Ho~in Steen and Bulls 300 to 800 lba. 52.54)..
71.
Bulls (1,000100. and over) 61 .00...00.10.
Slauchter ewe Utilitie.s 44 .00-f!UO; cow Cannen and Cutters 36-43.
Cows and calves (by the head ) ~ .
Veal calves 30-41.
Baby calves t$-110. '
HOGS
Top hogs (l!U lo 230 ) 48-&lt;3.75;
Boors :ll.SO-M.50.
Piga by the head 7.50-22.
Sows4501ts. and over 4 1. ~ .
September 24 - Fall Feeder CaU Sale. Sa le
time 8 p.m .. SJ)OIUOred by Tile Ohio Valley
Feeder Ca If Committee.
Atbeu Uveatock S.h~•
S.tunlay, Sepll3, 1980
CA1TLE PRICES '
Feeder steers: (Good and Choice) 300-500 lbs.
~; 51J0.7001bo. IJ0.73.20.
Feeder Heifers (Good and Choice) 301J....S00 lbs.
83.l0-72; 5011-700 lbo. 53.:iH4.
.'
Feeder Bulb (Good and Chok e) J00.500 Ibo.
Ga.l0-74.7l: 500-700 lbo. 59. ~.
Slaugh"' Bulb' (Overl ,1100 lbo.) 53.50-6li.IO.
Slaughter Cow&amp;: Utilities 43.50-61.10; C!l nners
and CUtters M-41.75.
Cows and CaU pairs (By the Unit ) 44.5-6115.
Veals : (Cbolce and Prime) 63-86.
Baby Calves: (By the Head I 32 .5C~lln . ~ .
HOG PRICES'
Hop (No. 1, Barrows and Gill.ol ) ~230 lbs.
46.80-47.90.

Butcher Sowa 37 .50-ti .7S.
ButclM:r Boars 36-38.85.
Feeder Pig&gt;' (By tho H.. d) Il.l0-29.
SPEED PRICES'
Slaughter Lambs 5+69.

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - Hogs
1,800: Barrows and gilts moderately
active, firm to 25 cents higher; 1-2
21(/-245 lb 49.50, approximately 225
head 49.75-50.00; 1-3 200-250 lb 49.0049.25.
.
Sows: active, 50 cents to 1.00
higher in limited test; 1'il 3011-400 lb
42.50, a few 40!h'iOO lb 42.5().47.00,
over 500 lb 47.0G-48.00, many 47.5648.00.
. Callie 800 : Compared to Monday,
slaughter cows 1.00 to 2.00 higher.

Slaughte steers: cboice 3 9251,100 lb 69.75-70.50, few' good 2-3 850950 lb 66.~. 25.
Slaughter heifers: package choice
3 950 lb67.25; mixed good and choice
2-3 775-1,025 lb 64.~.75; few good
2-3 72:H!OO lb&amp;o.00-62.00.
Slaughter cows: utility, and commercial 2-4 47.()0...t9.75; few utility 2
50.00-51.50; cutter 1-241.5H7.50.
Slaughter bulls: 1·2 l,JOO.l,700 lb
56.00oro.50; few 162.00.
Sheep 75: Held for noon auction.

HOSPITAL NEWS
VETERANS MEMORIAL

Admitted-Virgil Carl, Pomeroy;
Jes8ie Swan, Langsville; Opal Cummings, Syracuse.
Discharged-Martha Hanel, Laura
Pickens, Marilyn Powell, Fred
Mack, William Morris, Robert Cwnmlns.
Admitted-Julia Williams, Middleport; Charles Landers II, Minersville; Vonda Johnson, Pomeroy;
Chester Wigal, . Middleport; Olive
Winebrenner, Middleport; Lave
Duncan, Vinton; Richard Martin,
Parkersburg ; Leo Vaughan,
Pomeroy.
Discharged-Linda Bailey, Veima
Siders, Willard Lowman, Vicki
Sauters.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DJSCHARGF.'l SEPT. 18
Malcomb Arnold, Ronnie Blazer,
George Burkett, Melva Davis,
Vivian Day, Bill Dowler, Vicky
Elliott, Trudi Franks, Phillis Gilkey,
Rita Gresham, Emory Hart, Jeffrey
Howell, Elmer lhle, Paulu5 Ison,
Amands Johnson, Otho Keefer, Fred
Lanier, Joshua Lewis, Matthew
Loveday, Hazel McCalley, Julia
Mitchell, Evelyn Nicholson, Marcella Phillips, Robert Sclmeider,
Robert Shifflet, Anna Fitzer, David
Sprague, Mrs. Danny Spurlock and
daughter, Ellen Stewart, Paula
Swindle, Eloda Webb, Mildred
Wolfe.
lliRTH
Mr. and Mrs. Danny Stapleton,
son, Vinton.

Fifteen defendants were fined and
five others forfeited bonds in Meigs
County Court Wednesday.
Fined by Judge Patrick O'Brien
were Gordon Betz, Gallipolis,
Charles E . Shotwell, Vinton, Kathy
Fry, Syracuse, and Dorsey Daniel,
Jr., Barboursville, $22 and costs
each, speed; Guido J. Girolaml,
Pomeroy, $10 and costs, improper
turn; Steven Yonker, Racine, $24
and costs, speeding; Steven Beller,
Belpre, $21 and costs, speeding;
Kenneth I. Wise, Cheshire, $35 and
costs, speeding; ·Tholll8ll Burnside,
Pomeroy, $50 and costs, disorderly
conduct; James Hayes, Pomeroy,
costso only, reimburse injured party, 90 days conljne~nt with 60 days
suspended, one year probation,
assault; Ronald Andress, Coolville,
$25 and costs, littering; Jfdlchael T.
Guard, Reedsville, and George Ratcliff; Reedsville, $25 and costs each,
hunting without permission; Dayle
Brooks, .,'l'uppers Plains, $25 and
.cOstS, ,,~tiilg without license;
Wallace Reuter, Pomeroy, $10 and
cOsts, failed to yield half of roadway.
Forfeiting bonds were Roger
Atkins, Middleport, and matthew
Wickline, Willowick,, $40.50 each,
speed; James Sharp, Red Horse, W.
Va., $35.50, failed to display valid

However, he said he was advised:
by researchers that some of these:
manufacturers, including some ~
located in Ohio, would not be able to·
utilize the bill because they didn't .·:.
make 19'74 models.
~
In successful floor amendment, ·:
Meshel provided for the establish- i
ment of an economic recovery task ~
force, consisting of legislators, lo tn. ,;
vestigate the results of the bill. The :
task force then would study possible :
changes in tsx policies that might •
stimulate various kinds of consumer .
purchases.
The bill already provided that the' ;
department of taxation shall":
monitor vehicle purcbases during ~
the 60 days and provide the. ~
Legislature an evaluation of the :
bill's impact.
The Senate and House adjourned :
until Nov. 12.
·

SQUAD RUNS
Two calls were answered by local

units Thursday, the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services
Headquarters reports. At 2::12 p.m.,
the Rutland Unit picked up Jessie
Swan at his borne In the Langsville
area and took him to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. The Tuppers
Plains Unit transferred Eloda Webb
from Holzer Medical Center to her
home in Middleport.
HOMEVONDNGSET •
The annual homecoming of the
Morse Chapel Church will be held
from I: 30 to 4p.m. Sunday.

ASK TOWED

Marriage liceJIBes were issued to
Brian Duane Knapp, 23, Rt. I,
Racine, and Donna Marie Persinger, 20, Rt. 1, Racine; Dennis Lee
Musser, 20, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, and
Karen Denise Barrett, 18, Rt. I,
Langsville.

~

•

tmes

Assassin•••
(Continued from page 1)
same group /shortly alter Wed~
nesday's bazooka and machine-gun
assassination of Somoza, his chauffeur and a financial adviser.
Security forces have thrown a
dragnet over this entire Californiasized country in an effort to capture
the four to six members of the
sssssination squad still at large.
Paraguay's borders with Argentina,
Brazil, and Bollvia were sealed Wednesday, opened for five boors Thursday, then closed again. Police
detained more than 100 people for
questioning,

RIO GRANDE - Americans apo •
preciate traditions, using them to
establish order in daily living. There
are horns and hats on New Year's
Eve, hearts and flowers on Valentine 's Day, fireworks on the Fourth
of Jujy, and now that autuinn is
here, hayrides, bobbing for apples
and Indian corn.
In its loth year, the Bob Evans
·Farm Festival has become an
autUIIUl tradition in itself, held annually the second weekend in October. Rich with demonstrations and
displays of Anierican heritage, the
19110 edition of the festival is coming
Ocober 10, 11 and 12, from 9 a.m. until 5 p.m. daily, at the Bob Evans
FafiTI in southeastern Ohio, near Rio
Grande.
The first Farm Festival featured

TIJPPERS PLAINS- Bids on the
extension of water service were
opened at noon Thursday at the Tupo
pers Plains-Ch~ster Water District
office.
Appar.ent low bidder on the pipeline itself was Brunner Building and
Supply, Inc., a~ $1,589,278. After a
careful check and tabulation of the
bids of the two lowest bidders a
notice or' ward of contract will be

The Racin.e Emergency Squad
transported Richard Martin, 45,
Parkersburg, from the Ravenswood
bridge site to Veterans Memorial
Hospital after he had fallen on Wednesday rather than the Syracuse
Emergency Squad.

WE ARE CONTINUING OUR POLICY OF

RIO GRANDE - Rio Grande
College and Community College has
received a $500,000 ! grant for a
stud~t-community center to be
built on campils.
The grant, approved recently by
the Appalachisn Regional Comniission in Washington, D. C., will go
toward construction and equipment
of the 29,000 square-foot center.
The structure will serve the
student population by providing
dining, study and . recreational
faciliti es; s)iace for continuing
education programs and house the
offices for student health and
student development.

Additionally, the facility will accommodate the four-county (Meigs,
Galiia, Jackson , Vinton ) Community Education Center as well as
a l!kounty Model Project on Aging
serving 56,000 senior citizens.
The grant initiates the beginning
of Phase II of the project which will
witness the actual construction of
the center scheduled for completion
in 1982. Phase I, which is now near
completion, was also funded by the
ARC and provided . for the
acquisition of land, site development, and payment of certain ar·
chitectural and engineering ac·

.., .
'

On a Siladiume Deslgnere class
ring . Strong, durable and .
comfortable and now
comfortably priced too!
BriQg in this ad for this very
special'offer.
·

·'

~

.

"NO SERVICE CHARGE"

•

ON CHECKING ACCOUNTS TO
PERSONS WHO ARE 65 YEARS
OF AGE OR OLDER.
•

We remind oar many customeJS to stOp in the

• Favorlte activity
• First name
• Maseot under stone
• Fireburst stone
• Initial inlaid into the
stone
• Sunlight stone
• Full name engraving
inside ring

bank

'
j

and notify us of their choice of
'

''The Economy Account", ''The Balance Account"
or the ''Combined Statement Accounl" It is .

!980QUEEN - K.J . Bash, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bash of
New Haven, was crowned 1980.Wahama High School Homecoming Queen
durin~ halftime ceremonies at Friday night's Wahama-Southern gridiron
clash. Shown crowning K.J . is Ron Vance, vice principal at WHS. At
·right, 1979 Queen Annette Campbell presents the new queen with a
bouquet of roses while royal escort Sheldon Gerlach looks on.

possible that JOU may also qualify for a free

checking accounl

~~
~Joel en
m I._Miln, Jlomeroy
Olte, ,. 0 ,.,...m..,. 31.1100.

THE CENTRAL TRUST COMPANY,N.A
t

as a three-day celebration of ching the greased pig contest or
America's heritage. More than 100 challenging the horseshoe pitching
,
old.time demonstrations will be champions.
Craft demonstrations throughout
taking place and country entertaimilent continuous, combining the ·three-day festival include rifle
to create the atmosphere of yester- making, lye soap making, black-.
day.
smithing, stone cutting, log hewing,
Dalcimers, original mountain coopering and shingle splitting. The
musical instruments, will hot only most'talented craftsmen are·invited,
be played but rr.ade right there at and so many more wish to parthe festival. Dancers will ask ticipate that a waiting list is mainfestival visitors to join them for a tained throughout the year at the
!ariilliar square dance and also show farm.
them how to clog - a dance from
An admission fee of $1 per car is
days gone by in which the rhytlun is · charged (bus groups are exempt) ,
beat out by foot.
and primitive camping is available
School and Senior Citizen Day is f~r the entire weekend for $5, which
Friday, October 10, when buses and Includes festival admission. .
caravans full of visitors from nine to
For a brochure or more in90 attend the festival equally .en- lonnation, write the Bob Evans
joying themselves, whether wat- Farm, Box 330, Rio Grande, Ohio
45674.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

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

1 '•

approved by the funding agency,
Farmers Home '1\dmlnistration,
may still sign as an extension
customer until Oct. I, this year. After that dale the prevailing tap fee
will be appUed and this will amount
to more than triple the present extension tap fee .
·
The reason for this is entirely
becauSe construction money allotted '
to this project will be fixed and

limited as of Oct. 1, district officials
state. Funds for constru~ion are
lliiPPlemented by a probable 50 percent grant. This grant is a gift from
the federal government to assist new
areas in availing themselves to the
present Tuppers Plains-Chester
rural water program.
This explains why 'there is a large
difference of tap fee after Oct. I sinContinued on A-3

Rio Grande College gets $500,000 grant

ATTENTION
SENIOR CITIZENS

SS995 FREE
¥'~1~E

CIUS R•ngt . I(IC .

given to the contractor in the next 30
days and within 60 days of the bid
opening date, the contractor will be
notified to move his equipment onto
the site to start construction.
The apparent low bidder on the
storage tanks for the job was P. and
P. Construction in Louisville, Ky.
Any would-be customer who is
located within the proposed lines as
they are designed and having been

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY·

FEATURES

lfl1980 ArtC II"\\td

only 25 or 30 craftsmen and crowds
of not nearly the size that attend
only, but it was the realization of a
dream and one of the region's first
craft festivals.
By hosting the festival, Bob Evans
.gave people the opportunity to see
the kinds of skills and intricate crafts necessary to keep our ·country
growing and developing before the
era of giant machinery and the local
department store. He was excited
that the festival was. well received
and because of that, encouraged to
make it the best exhibition of its
kind.
Each year, plans are expanded
with more crafts, demonstrations
and live entertian,ment added. In
this anniversary year, the festival
enjoys the reputation it has earned

Bids opened on water service project .

ICt-em now ...•

.------- ---------------------1

NOW

•

'

lady blacksmith, will be working 1n
Louise Roush and her conunittee
and Mrs. Taylor they will have
the 'Blacksmith ShQp both ·days. will operate the Country Kitchen,
everything for sale from clothing to :
Raymond Ueving will fire up his old which will feature cornbread and
golf clubll.
steam engine and grind cornomeal beans, and other goodies.
Mrs. Hazel Smith said there were
on an antique stone-burr grist mill.
Blanche Hickle and Delores
other activities and demonstrations
Howard Schultz will use his steam Taylor, with the help of their complanned for the entertainment of the
engine to ~rate an antique mittee, will conduct a gigantic yard
public.
threshing macllln!!.
sale during the Festival. People
All of the museum's buildings will
Sunday morning at 9:30a.m., the from as far away as Belpre have
be open for visitation during the
st: Mark's Lutheran Church of Up. donated a large variety of Items for
Festival. There is no admlsllion
per ·Flats, and St. Peter's Lutheran lhe sale. According to Mrs. Hickle
charge.
Church of Point Pleasant, will hold . - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . . . . . ; ' - - - - - - - - - church services In the old Log ChUrch, followed by Sunday School. Rev.
George Weirick of Ravenswood will
conduct the service, wblch Is open to .
the public.
At 2 p.m. Sunday, the Mason
Grade School Cheerleaders, under
the direction of Mary Smith and
Peggy Hupp, will perform. .
other activities include cider
making under the direction of VerTOP QUALITY -IMPORTED
nal Johnson and Alton Roush; thuaic
\
by Frank Thomas and the Sound
•DAFFODILS
' •TULIPS
Senders (old-time music that people
•HYACINTHS
•CROCUS
love) . There will be Square Dancing
•ANEMONES
•DUTCH
IRIS
Saturday evening.
On Sunday afterrioon, Keefer's
Service Center will sponsor a cross1ST FLOOR- HOUSEWARES DEPT .
cut saw contest.
A new attraction with a modern
slant for this year's Festival Is a
Static Display' of UHI helicopters,
provided by the 146th Medical
Detachment of the West Virginia
National Guard of Parkersburg, W.
Va.
SQUAD CAIJED

35 CENTS

Tenth annual Bob Evaris
Farm Festival Oct. 10-12

·Second Mason County farm festival
MASON - The Maso.n County
Fann Musewn will hold ita second
annual Country Festival this
weekend, Sept. 20 and 21. Hazel
Smith, General Chairman of the
event, said that this year's Festival
will be larger and better with the addition of a number of new activities
and demonstrations, depicting farm
life of the early 1900s.
Jane JohnsOJ1 and her conunittee
will demonstrate the separating of
milk, the churning of butter, and the
making of sclunierkase (cottage
cheese). Marie Elias and her committee will stir off a ketUe of aiJple
butter. On Saturday 'afternoon
Karen Luckeydoo will d(\lllonstrate
goat milking. She will alao show the
people how the pioneers plucked
geese in on!er to make "feather
tiCks" for t,l11#r,,be&amp;.
.The . FIAteRock Volunteer Fire
Department wiU make sorghum
molasses during both days of the
I
Festival.
Gewanna Johnson, the museum's

MIDOLE PORT- POMEROY

· SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 21. 1980

GALLIPOLIS- POINT PLEASANT

. VOL. 15 NO. 34

''

(Continued from page 1)
1
Garden and participate in open debate where I can
have the opportunity to refute his false and partisan
version of his record," Reagan declared.
Carter Insists he' wants a one-on-oile debate with
Reagan before he debates other candidates. He said he
would debate Reagan at the White House if the GOP
candidate agreed.
Questioned about pubUc opinion polls that now show
him appro:dmately even with Reagan, Carter predic- ·
ted a "sobering" among Americans voters as Election
Day approaches.
"The issues begin to become paramount," he said.
"The personal characteristics of the candidates ... become less important."
There were also these developments on the political
scene Thuisday:
-The U.S. Supreme Court ruled that Anderson's
name must appear on the general election ballot in
Ohio. The court upheld an opinion thai found Ohio's
March 20 filing deadline for Independent candidates
UllCllDSiitutlonal because RepubllCfD and Democratic
candidates did not have to file until later.
-Secretary of State Edmund S. Muskie said the administration plans $1 trllllon in defense spending by
1985 and assailed the Republicans for saying that was
not enough. It wu an unusually political statement for
a BeCretary of state.
-Ralph Nader, . the consumer advocate, said he
woUld not endorse a presidential candidate but added
that he found Carter to be probably the best choice
lronn a consumer point of view.

VMI . • . . . . . . . . . • . • . . . . . 17 Maryland . . . . .. ........ 14 Notre Dame . . . .... .. .. . 28
Marshall . . . •. . .• . . ....•. 3 West Virginia .. ... . ... . . 11 Michigan ........... . . . 21 .

Indiana . .. . . : . .. . , . • . . . 36 Georgia • • • • • . • • • . . . . . • • 20
Kentucky . . , . .. . .. .•... 30 Clemso11 •.•• • ••••.••••• 16

a

President's. • •

registration; Hubert Lemaster,
Lucasville, $30.50, failed to step for
stop sign; Bernard Kingsley, Bid.
well, $35.50, speed.

,.-------------College football s c o r e s - - - - - - - - - - -.....

·Extended forecast, state .weather
Mostly sunny today. High in the mid 80s. Low tonight 60 to 65. Chance of
rain, 10 percent.
. Ohio E~iended Forecast Monday through Wednesday , a chance.of
showers each day. Warm Monday. High temperatures in the 80s Monday,
cooling to the upper 60s and mid 70s by Wednesday. Lows in the 60s Monday
and in thdOs by early Wednesday.
r

I

•

tivities.
Rio Grande College President,
Paul C. Hayes said the grant
"marks another very important

milestone in Rio Grande's continuing commitment to higher
education and· community involvement."

Government ups VA,
FHA .interest rates
WASHINGTON '(AP) - The
The chief economist for the
government is raising Interest rates
National Association of Home
ak much as a full percentage point Builders, hOwever, said the climbing
oil FHA and VA mortgages to make
interest rates in general will make it
harder lor many Americans to afthem more competitive with conventional loans and therefore more
ford to buy houses - whether loan
acceptable to lenders and home
money is available or not - and
could bring a new slump in housing
sellers.
Government officials said Satur- starts.
day that allowable rates lor morThose starts increased in Auflust,
but Michael Sumlchrast said it will
tgages hacked by the Veterans Ad·
ministration and the Federal
probably be some time before they
rise again. The escalating interest
Housihg Administration will rise to
13 percent on Monday.
rates, he said, "are simply going to
Lending Institutions now are
k11l housing."
Meanwhile, several bHnks in New
limited to charging 12 percent inYork and other cities raised their
terest on FHA and VA mortgages for
single-family and multi-family
prime interest rates - the rates they
charge their best eorporate
homes, so they make up !he difference between that rate and
customers - from 12o/• percent to
higher prevailing rates - 14 percent 12_ percent on Friday.
In other economic news, the Comor more in many markets ...!. by
charging sellers extra cash paymenmerce Department reported that the
· nation's economy sank even further
ts known as "discount points."
than previously estimated during
Each "point" is equal to l percent
the second quarter of this year. But
of the total mortgage, and common
the department's top economist,
charges of 9 points or higher $4,500 or mote on a $50,000 mortgage
Courtenay Slater, said the worst of
the recession appears to be over,
- are making sellers less than eager
to see buyers boping to use VA or
and she said a modest rise in
national economic output will
FHA coming up the sidewallt.
"As a matter of fact, many home
probably show up in the third quarsellers are refusing to consider FHA
ter.
and VA financing when placing their
The department had estimated a 9
homes on the market," said Moon
percent drop in the nation's inLandrieu, secretary of Housing and
liation-adjusted gross national
product - the value of all goods and
Urban Development.
"The increases (In VA and FHA
services - during the April-June
interest rates) are necessary to
quarter, But the department said
reflect the realities of the money
Friday the drop was actually 9.6 permarket," he said. "With respect to
cent, the sharpest quarterly decline
single-family mortgages, under
since World War II.
current conditions the, federal inThe worst recent drop was 9.1 persurance programs are practically
cent in the first quarter of 1975 at the
useless.''
bottom of the last recession.

Inside today. ·.

•

Area deaths •••.••••••••• •••••• •• .••.•••••.••.••..• A-6
Class Hied • .•. . ....••... ~ . • • . . . • . • • . . • . . • . . . . . • . . D-2-7

Edl.rlal ......... .. ...... . ....... . . . .. ... . . ........ A·2
Farm •.............•......•.......• . .... ·••······ 0-8

~al

• ... • .. • • .• •. . • • • . .. . . ·•• • .. •. ....... . . • •. • . A-3-6

Ufestyle .....•..... . ••..• . .•. . ............••.. • . B-1-8

State-national •... •..••.•.•. . ••..••. ••. .• .. ••• .. .... D-1

SP&lt;trts .•. ~ . •. .. •..•. .. •• . . .. • .•. •• . ..• . .•. .. ..... C·l-8
TV guide .....• , . . . ..... . ....... . .. . .. .. .I.. ..... Insert

OLD TOOL COLLECTOR - Among the traditional craftamen at the
loth annual Bob Evans Farm Festival October 10, 11 and 12, will be
Chester Wood, Huber Heights, Ohio, a shingle splitter for more than 15
years. Acollector of old tools, Chestet decided he wanted to actually work
with them and taughi himself how to form wooden " shak~s" (sl)ingles).
He is pictured here at his shaving bench using a draw knife to form the
shingles from a piece of oak.

Future of Chessie
System 'uncertain'
CINCINNATI "- Future of the
Chessie Railroad System's HobsonPomeroy and Bidwell-Logan
segments remain unclear following
an abandonment hearing in Cin·
cinnati on Sept. 15.
A three-judge panel of the Sixth U.
S. Circuit Court of Appeals
questioned Interstate Commerce
Commission procedures in the
proposed abandonment of the
Chesshie System (C&amp;O) Logan to
Pomeroy (via McArthur and
Gallipolis ) rail line during the 40
minute hearing.
Attorney Mark Adams, representing rail employee unions and an online shipper , presented oral
arguments supporting continuance
of the line. An attorney-representing
the ICC, accompanied by R. J. Gunning of the Chessie System, defended the commission's position.
Attorney Adams concentrated on
three points in an opening
statement:
Lack of conditions attached to the
abandonment in spite or the recommendation of an ICC Administrative
law judge; the need for a new local
ICC hearing to review developments
since the April 1976 hearing, and the
need for more effective employee
protection.

Following his opening .statement,
Adams responded to questions
regarding the line's current status,
future prospects , and ICC
procedures. The ICC Attorney
primarily responded lo questions
about the commission's handling of
the case.
The abandonment application was
filed by C&amp;O in April 1974. A three
day hearilrg was held at Gallipolis to
gather data from the railroad and
those opposed to the abandonment.
The presiding ICC Administrative
law judge issued an initial decision
which approved the abandorunent
but attached a condition requiring
continued service between Kerr and
the end of the line near Pomeroy by
Contrail.
The full commission approved the
abandonment, but removed this important condition, the decision was
reaffirmed in an appeal to the commission, and the matter wsa taken to
the Federal Appeals Court.
The ICC was slated to issue an
abandoninent certificate in 1978.
However, it did not, due to an ad.
ministrative oversight, only recenUy discovering the error. It is not
known when the commission or the
appeals court will take further acContinued on A-3

Supporters of tax issue
say language misleading
COLUMBUS, Ohio (APJ - Supporters of a major lax issue to be
considered in the Nov. 4 general
election say ballot language used to
describe the proposal is misleading
and deceiving.
They want the Ohio Supreme
Court to order Secrelary of State Anthony J . Celebrezze to reconvene the
board which writes ballot descripo
lions. They are asking the board to
prepare language for Issue 2 that is
truthful, fair and accurate.
" What's clear here is the
politicians are joining the banks and
big business in trying to mislead the
voters, whether it's deliberate or
not," Merrill Goozner, spokesman
for the uves on Two" conunittee,
told reporters.
"1'1'{1 not ascribing motives here,"
he said. "The wording on the ballot
is not a fair and accurate representation of the issue - period."
Backers say that if it is approved
by voters, Issue 2 would provide tax
relief for low-and moderate-income
homeowners, family farmers and
renters. The tax credits would go to
abou! 45 pe rcent 'ef Ohio's
;(

households. Taxes of high wage earners and corpora,tions would be increased under the proposal.
. Goozner said Friday that the wording of the issue that will appear on
the ballots given to voters was written in a partisan manner and contained glaring omissions.
He said it fails to inform voters
that certain tsx exemptions which
apply to banks and financial institutions would be lifted if the law is
approved.
The group also takes issu• with
part of the ballot which says Issue 2
would grant Income tax credits of up
to $~00 a year for certain
homeowners and renters.
.
"This item fails to mention that
people earning $30,000 or less will
benefit from the credit," the com- ,
millee said in its court complaint
filed by Columbus attorney Stewart
R. Jafly.
The five-member State Ballot
Board drafted the wording of tbe
ballot alan Aug. 8 public meeting In
Celebrezze's office. Goozner. said
backers of tbe plan did not learn fl.
rontilrued on A-3

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